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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-05-02 - Orange Coast Pilot• ,. He,aded Bureau 48 TUESDAY· AFTE'RNOOlll, MAY 2, 1972 \IOL •.S. NO. UJ, Z SECTIONS, 2' P.llifS • • • I au • I Served 4B :Years J. Edgar Hoover, .. . FBftegenil-;1)1es WASHINGTON (AP) -J. Edgar Hoover, embodiment of the FBI and focus of law enforcement achievement and controversy for a half century, is I dead. The 77-year-:0ld director of the Federal Bureau of 1n\.estigatiol:i died of natural causes in-hiS home Monday night, the J ustice Department announced. ... Wilson, a recent Nixon law enforcement favorite, had been prominently mentioned as ' possible successor before Hoover's deaui. . Acting Atty. Gen. Richard Kleindienst issued a one-paragraph statement In which he said Hoover's body was fOu~ by his maid at.approximately 8:30 a.m. today. ' ' • ' • , ..,._., --- • e1ze Police Hold 1 Suspect; 0 By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of Ille IHlly PIJ.t S!IH ht Oife illSpeCted drug smuggler Is jailed today, following Newport Beach police seizure or 294,500 illicit pills, probably the largest such confiscation in Orange Coun- ty history. Value of the 250,000 amphetamine pilll and 44,500 barbiturate tablets-of M,exican origin would be about $3i,00l on the street sales market, police said. Arrest warrants were issued more than a week ago for three suspected principals In the case, two of whom have not yet been taken into custody. President Nixon, upon hearing ot H90ver's-de2th, called him a "truly remarkable man who served the country -for-48')'ears-uil0er ei~resllknt~i -;mparallcle<h:levot1on lo " uty and dedica- tion." Nixon spoke emotionally of his t•pro!ouna sense of personaIJ~ss." F!Jgs at all pltb!1c uildings and_ installations were ordered-to llalf staff. "It is t\'ith profound personal grief that I announce that J. Edgar Hoo'\_er passed - away during the night at his residence," KleindiensHa~His~per.sonal-physicia - informed me that .his deaJh was due to natural causes." ,. , .-,.,. ...... ~--FBI DIREC"TOR-DEAD- .. J. Edi1r Hoover, 77 =--=AmHJtmeetneaf~t?EJinl.-s~,~~=I captur:e of!)):'. J.'h bloc~s from Ne~port Beach Pollce Department hcadquarter1 Eight Lives __ t!f'.Go UPI Ttk.iitM \Vilh out waiting !or a· 'net, a· c:lt leaps to s'atety from the fourth floor o,r a blazi ng Broolqyq .. building as firemen carry· hose lines up the !U"e escape. The lelirl@ landed on all fours and walked"away .appar-ently-and incrcctibly~unharmed. · ' ~ . . ' .. N. Viets T aktl Section .... ~ • ·1 ' , 01 New Defense Zone floover was a virtual lengend in the United States. an "untouchable" who died in office despite effo"rts by critics in re- cent years to have him retired. He shaped the FB{ into a massive, powerful federal agency during his career. Across Pennsylvanir A\'enue from Mle office where Hoover worked. a massive powerful federal building to hotise the FBfis under construction. Even before Hoover's death, there had been continuing specultlion a b W whether the building ~·ould be named-fol\ him or perhaps might even house his fin al resting place. Speculation on a succesS(lr to Hoover also began •Jong before his death as political pressure to retire Hoover alternately waxed and waned. It had seemed almost c'ertair. he would retire or be retired if the Democrats beat President Nixon in the November elec· lion. Nixon n~w will be able to pick a successor. \Vashington, D.C. police chie£ Jerry The jut-j awed FBI hcaUls_m:rmitled by presi dential order to continue in his $42,500-a-year government job after reaching the mandatory retirement age or 70. floo.,.er, unmarried, dominated the bureau during his lifetime like no man in any other federal agency. Wielding vast power. he wa s said to lavish on the FBI the pride and possessiveness cf a stern and watchful parent. Hoover's No. 2 man in the bureau was Clyde A. Tolson, the associate director. The two were long-time colleagues who spent.much lime-logether,...l'olson,....71,Jias been in ill health. Hoo ver groomed no one for his shoes, but often expressed the wish that the next director come from within the FBI ran1's. " During the years of Jloover's reign, there never was i! known case of scandal inside of the FBI and Hoover's stock remark .about his agents was : "They can't be bought." Accolades fer floover flowed almost immediately from Capitol Hill and other !See JIOOVER, Page ZJ Hoover's Career S pan11ed Nearly Half a Century WASHINGTON (UPI ) -John Edgar Hoover wielded power among the mighty as the nation's top law enforcement of· ficer for nearly a half century. • He . also wrui highly popular with the public. Two presidents round the combination unbeatable enough to keep the bulldog- faced Hoover in office ye4rs past the mandatory retirement age of 70 with the results that he served longer than any other federal bureaucrat in modern times. His last }'.ears were among the fr fr fr fr 1f fr stormiest as the F'llf came lj1Jde~ In- was initially withhela tolvofd alerffiig· his alleged accoriiplices. Lyle P. Rodgers,. 32, of 305 32nd St., Newport Beach, remains·.fn-Orange Coun- ty Jail, unable to post $30,000 bail set by the court. Rodgers,· who said he is unemployed, races a ~ray 12 preliminary hearing on charges of conspiring to smuggle narcotics and possess dangerous drua:s for sale. Detective -Sgt. Leo_ Konkel, or the department's narcoti cs detail , identified the other two suspects as Pierre jacques Bertolino and Hank D. Kuykendall , botb- 22-year-old NewpOrt Beach rcJidents, Bail !or both men, who were last known to be in Jtawali. was set at fS0,000 on the same charges on which Rodgers was ar- rested at his homf!. _ The case has been under inveslt~ation for about two months. involving Newport Beach and Huntln~ton Beach police, plus t (See SEIZURE, Page II Orange SAIGON (UPI) -North Vietnamese midday rush hour, killing six civilians l'" .--... Creasing fire from politicians.· Je(l wing troops rollowed Q.v: tanks drove today into and . woundi~g 19 ?lhers. ~ui Nhon is the L al o·.rf · . I E.. groups, civil righLI organizations, and 1'' th .. Artillery Base N'anc:itthe anchor of ·the capital of Dinh Dinh provJnce. oc ~ 1c1 ~ ~ xp1:ess even some of his staunchtst admirers ~. e ~z:-n' ..... ..,.... • ...,._ ~ , -• --~ UPJ .. corr~tnt' St&wart Kellerman • -~ ;AU: .... ' -. . . ~fio""felt 1l: W3sTinte ortlOO~tr s1ep --~lore sun. shi·ne on~W-ednesday. a~ .-ew ;:,oudi v1emamese deleMl-ttne-onJy reported that Allied 1 lod · u: do " ·-0 ·1 h f H d ·ed Wanes ay wn . cording to the weatherlady. Le w 2 mi es nort o ue, an occupi at bombed amt strafed at least 30 govern-He paid them little heed. clouds along the beaches will clear least part of the position. ment tanks left behind in Ule Quang Tri s Ove 00 er Death In ~ "law ~~ ord~r" framework of by mid-morning leaving temper.a- field reports said by nightfall control settor. .. 01 .. row r v the Nixon Adm1n1strat1on, Jloover spoke · lures of 62. Inland high 70. or the base was In doubt. Field offit:ers The U.S. command reported 462 air out often and )oudly, apparently confident said South Vietnamese ma rines held.part strikes including 8$2 heavy bomber raids ,. the President and his immediate ho!!, df the base and the North Vietnamese in QUang Tri province in the 24 hours en-I Attorney General John N. Mltchell, .,..·ould held part. \ ding at noon Tuesday -the heaviest con-By 0tJ~;!,11?,!~r..~~ torney Cecil lllcks rom the county. rise to his defense. They did. fifore tho 500 11aclita ltavc , "There are man)', n:winy (.anks at ?.1y ccntrallon of air raids in four years. In the "''a..ke of the death of J. Edgar "I'm sure 1'fr: lloover ·s place will be Jn l970 and 1971, lawsuit' were filed Newport Jrtt 1i14rsda11 for U1e Chanh heading for Na ncy," one officer "I believe Hue is the major objective," 11oover. orange County officials ex· fil fed from within the organization.'' against lloover by dlsf!lruntled former annual 125-m · e race Ip E'n seii~ said. . Brig. Gen. Th?maa W. Bowen, deputy pressed both sorrow and hope that the Enright said . "But whoever succeed.\ him employes, by a would-be female agent, by ada. Yo11. can't tttl wh& thty are My Chanh ls wtthln small arms fire seqlor U.S. advJJet on the northern front, great crime lighting organization he built at the FBI will ~ well Content to ursuo leftist groups who accused him of without a program. Ste entrt1 distance of Nancy, 12 miles south'<!! the told ret><>rters at •$m~capilal-td"1:;::~=~;=;;;;,;;;;:;;;;;,;:::;;;=:_~~g~oa~l~!~o~rn;i:~ w rnlihffii magn n•'"-_,,,,reateninirthetr-clvlJ ·~ghts. , list, Pag• 20. jEte1y lawmalrtn oran-ge-CO\n'lty-wlll e~stnrrtm"e'"he~!ittd:"'' He~wa!t"accu!ed-by--Hou!M! Dtmocratie---t;M. .... -,_ &1111 t.•l!Rn ,. The threat to Blnh Dinh province on the The Conynunlst lhreat·was also strong feel 8 deep sense of personal loss today State Senator DeMls Carpenter (R--LeaOer lfale Boggs (D-La .), an6 others of ::~:~. ': :',~.=~.'= 1 : central coast increas.ed and military elst""·here. , at the death of J. Edgar Hoover." Chief Newport Beach), a former FBI agent ·wiretapping congressional telephonts and c••••lllnl ,..,, O..Mff c-IY ' sourcts sajd conU.ct had been lost with !'n Loe. ~ miles north or Saigon, was Deputy Dlstrkt Attorney James Enright l58ld . ''Mr. J.loovtr was tht eptlome of the or exceeding his authority In the field of ~:_~,., ~: =""'-rte.!. , .. :: Landing Zone English, the Jast""AJlled<(lut· still under sieg~. said this morning. perfect civi l servant." civilian surveillance. =:'n:'':,':. : i=:•1• 1•~ poet in the upper one-.thlrd of the prov-Kontum cUy in the. Central H,ighlands "Hoover built an enduring organization . He was a gre.'.lt ad m I n i st rat o ~, His troubles peaked after a· fuss with ••ttri•1-.t " '"''•"" '' Ince. • was in d.angtr .or an lmmln~t attack; th.at will be a monument to his ability.'' C:,rpenter 1ald. 1"He had the overwhelm-former Democrat Attorney General ::-:: •.c.r• 1•1: :=:::. "'-•• u.1! Four Communist rockets dropped on In ne1ghbor1ng cambod111 a a:overn.-Enright said~ The chief deputy was tom-ing desire. to do hi!! job 11s well as it could tumsey qark who suggested 1n a book .,..,._ 14 • .,. ,,.... • lhe m1fktl plaee at Qui~ dllrinl! th< ' (Sie VIETNAM; ..... I) , menting in the aboeoce o1 District At· ~S.. REACTION, Page I) (See POPULAR. Page 11 INSIDE TODA\' = - • '.:J DA.ILY JoJLor c .J~Jlyfish Hit Beach , . n~e\vport J1onJes of sl imy jellyfish continued their two week invasion or Newport Beach beaches and many o! the 200.00J weekend visitors were on the receiving end of painful stings, lifeguards reported today. Elsewfiere on th~ Oringe Coast, 1.aguna Beach lifeguards reported some jellyfish victims but no great numbtr1 of them. San Clemente's surf was clear as was Huntington Beach. "We had al least 100 first aids Saturday and Sunday and a lot of those were iitlngs," said a Newport ~ach lifeguard spokesman . De.!pite the small surf, strong riptides took their toll of swimmers . "We made at leJist eight ar JO reacues over the weekend," Newport lifeguards reported. Sunny balmy weather and water temperatures In the 60s drew most ol lhe crowds to the sand. The jellyfish invasion has been a con· tinuing problem on the beach for the past two weeKs. The creatures ·are carried by currents and as the seasons change, the currents .sweep them closer to shore where many are beached by the tides . Lifeg uards said a number of swimmers were stung over the weekend by jellyfish lurking in the waves: But they said some .beachgoers were stung by creatures that h11d already washed ashore. Tentacles draped across the sand can still infli£_t the painful sting even if the jellyfish I dead, lifeguards said. Boat traffic ln Newport Harbor over the weekend wa1 heavy according to the Orange County Harbors, Beaches and Parks Department and "It looked a l<>t -,--Il1fe-i·~'lwntneneekday:"-~ "Things were more . conlwiing than usual ," said 1 Harbor Department spokesman; "the boats entered in the Ensenada race thlJ week began comin& in to ask for ruoorlngs." Final Arguments Set in Murder Trial of Mesan • Lawyers for botlNidea today prepared their flDal arguments 11 ·the Orange C.ounly Superior CoW't murder trial of James Noel ~ipult of Costa Me1a moved into its final houn. Prosecutor Ted Millard and de!ease at. Mond11y, M11y l, 1971 COASTWISE 'B' P•fl Jnterlattdl - APllllOA._ •llNt ttotr -ltltlltl *A • AWIO -OIMTr lit #1'/t lllf:JVl_I Orange County Inmate Slain at San Quentin SAN QUENTIN (AP) -An Inmate was fatally slabbed today on a tier of. San QuenlilJ prison, officials said. second tier of the prison's east block, where he worked as a barber. Cook died half an hour later in the prison hospital . ~O'Brien said there were no suspects and no_ weapon had been found. • ·itJesa Verde Control • Costa Mesa Kids Explore Stars at School By JAN EDWARDS Of IN n.lly 1"1191 S11ll I What would It be like to spend i day in a spaet r;:tatioo? Two fifth grade classes at Mesa Verde Elementary School in Costa Mesa decid· ed upon equipment and needs for such a sell-conta ined space vehic le and built one. After studying space exploration and travel or the pa st from books and more trediUonaJ methods, the cluses used this project tO study and create method! for spaet .travel tomorrow. Students transformed their classrooms into a 'space station. One room contained all technical equipment and the other J'OOfll offered all recreational facllltle.s neeessary to maintain the station and its passengers. Then they sPent an entire school day operating their station. The Apollo moon mission was also uQder way that day. By giving the students something to build. teachers Sally Strobl and Bill Bragg hoped to stimulate learning 'and interest in space travel. "They all showed extreme interest and good imaginations," said Bragg af- terwards. "They learned a great deal. ~·students took the project seriously, and we could see a great deal of growth and maturity taking place," he reported. Simulation day was °also Mesa Verde's open house, and all students gave groups of six adults a tour through their 1tation or explained their individual duties and equipment. ;'This was good for the kids because not only had they done the wh~thing but also had .to speak to adults Y whit they had done. They built a rapport with them ," Bragg said. • All passengers, except the adults. had to wear space suit! to leave the 1Station. To monitor the fl ights of all shuttle craft and spaceships in the area, student! DAILY r1LOT Sl•lf ''"'" ONE SMALL STEP Space Walker Kevin Conover used a et1ntrol tower ;ind command center in the technically oriented class· room. A shutlte cralt berth , repalr area a11d passenger debarking facilit ies we~e situated next to a docking station . Throungh t~is opening, the shuttle craft guided the space.ships to~·ard and 3\\.'ay from the space station like a tugboat and travelled to earth as well as to other sta- tions, A computer room, an observatory ~ laboratory for study of other p!a~et~ and wea ther conditions and a spacesu1t·f1ttlng rOOm were some other features. When passengers netded food or rtlax· .atlon, they headed ror the structure at the other end of the tunnel. tiung with sheets died black. the recreation ce nter was divided into room• used as a library, a telavlslon and game r,e6m, a gymnasium with jump rope111 a kitchen and medical examif11 rooms. Several plant!rand ·caged animals were being \\.'atched in 1 laboratory area. Sta· tion technicians wanted some reaction& lo life in space from rabbits, flsh,.parakeets and bean sprouts. And for the health of paa.wngers and station workerii, a psyc.hotogist, doct or and dentist' tnalntalned office hours. A general practitioner was equipped to handle broken bones or faint ing 1pells. And a psychologbt provided muscular coordination and visual pe.rttptJon tests to determine passible space adaptation problems fro m extended restriction in· side the station. Throughout the day, each student had a separate sct\fdule. Each spent some time in every room. Therefore, they afterwards could evaluate each iiection and tell one anol~tr about the success of eech part icular area. "Nearly every parent came to aee our space .station," Bragg said. And Brau ~ays he overbelrd students talk.lnc into microphone·s and studying the anlmall simply for their own cr1tlf1c1tion. And fle teachen? They initlaltd the sa me tfiing in 1971 and "ere 1imUarly re\\.•arded by the students' responH to their approach to future space travel, "This year," reealls Bragg, 111 tblnk lhe most succtssful was the kitchen peo- ple -they rea lly put 1 lot of time into their work. The food "as rtally lood - I could probably Jive on it.'' Inlormation Officer Joseph R. O'Brien said that jult before 111.m. Marian Dale Cook, S2, wu atabbed in the back on the Cook, from Orange CountJr, was serving · a five r eirs-to-life sentence for armed N. . t:i.. .I-;· --Four Capo Beach ~--~':,~· _ e had a Nov ·~;-1m~~l~ --:-· IX-Oil -· b lt IS Residents . Held From Pagel On Drug Charges PARKING· .•. the current "parking standards. Four Capistrano Beach resictents \\.'ere Ham,~la reports that ;n apartment com- arraigned' on narcotics charges this: plexes largei:: than 100 un its, 55.55 percent morning following their armt Friday of the residents deelared the parkiJlg a.fttr allegedly stlling-50-pounds..of-.mari· inadequate. ln !mailer units ther' ap- juana to San Clemente detectives. pears to be no pressing need to increase Sgt. Frank Yerger said the four were parking. taken into custody al 26982 Avenida las About 63.8 percent of residents Jiving in Palmas. They were identifled. u Susan apartments with 30 to 70 units .said the Gay Levine, 25; Jeffrey Feller Levine, parklng was either adequate or more 28; Randy Thomas LaMotte, 21; and than adequate. In apartments with les.s S~even Wayne Oavi.l!, 20, all 9f the La than 30 wUts aboot 72 percent oi the ~almu ac!dreaa. residents gave similar responses. 1· They wUe arrested without incident, With respect to guest parking, greater dissatisfaction was noted. . President's Family Has Jet Fleet for U.S. Trips By FRANCES LEWINE WASHINGTON (AP) ·;c.' While ·Pr~'i' dent Nixon sticks mainly to foreign travels that probably will dominate front ~ges this spring, his w_ife and two daughters will fan out across the. country in Jest-publiclzed goodwill appearanets. The women's vote is expected to be l big factor in the presidential race.i the pollsters say, and the Ni:ton .fam ily's Newporier Convention ) ' Hall Eyed by Planners trips will be a low-key bid for It. But \Vhite House spokmnan Helen Smith contends these travel• -1liead.1, under Wl~art not u.~lusively cam- paign trips. She says the presidential family is just accepting some of the uaual run of in~ilation!I it 1et1. In recent weeks, though, 11 the Democrats fight it out on tbi primary battlegroundl, fhe Nilon name i1 kept tn the local newa by Pat Nixon, Julie Eisenhower and Tricia Cox appearing ia places from Florida to California. Yerger aaid, and were held on $15,000 bail For eJ"aniple, 94 percent of the tomey Lawrence Buckley planned to Of. e_ acl> pending their arraignment. h -residents in complexes with more t an And, Mrs. Smith predicts, such trips . A proposal to add a 30,000-square foot not really sure "'ha rs going to go in will be ste d u . convention hall to the Newporter Inn will----1here,''-Edm~';,:.-· ~.:::>'-"'--''°--"'---'":Th~e";;N;;ix:'o':ln"_><w:'o'l:m"e=-n'"'h"a"'v"'e-t°'be~"n'",.::t--:col;---ll----ill go before Newport Beach planning com-James E. Nuzum. senior planner, In a presidential jets at their dlspoaaJ. And fer. their final statements to the Jury after · · The 1erge.aQt a.aid San Clemente police~~i~t111~..1wtmmt units 3aid it was Jess than Millard has questioned wo re ffal 6'Came Involved lri lh~Wiiki adequate. In the 30-70 urur range, 68.6 witnesses -the last witnesses in ·the ago when one of the suspect.! allegedly perce11t declared it inadequate ~d in thre~week· trail before Judge Robert L. 90Jd 10 pounds of marijuana to an un· apartments under 30. unit s, 50 percent dercover narcotics agent. Followlng.Jhe found guest parking inadequate .· Corfman. aUeged purchase or the marijuana; the The new ordinance, planning staff Sipult, 48, of 2924 Peppertrtt Lane, ls undercover agent made a-second members said, would bring Costa Mesa accused of !irst degree murder in the purchase, this one allegedly of 1,000 into Ube with parking standards of· death of h.ls daughter-in-Jaw Kathleen , Ji, benzadrine talbets. neighboring cities. last Aug. 30 at her Huntington Beach Yerger said. detectivet obtained 1 Similar formulas determining the home.• search warrant and went to the ·home number of parking spaces according to Fr'd nd th •-f bu · u. bedrooms ate being employed by Hun· Prosecution witrfesses have teatlfled 1 ay u er e pre"'nae o ymg - d f rtj F It · th II tlngton Beach, Newport Beach, and Santa that Slpult left the house at JOIU poun s o ma uana. o owmg ea eg-' Kamuela Drive, following 1 family ed purcnase, the.palice officUs identified Ana, planners 11ald. squabble that also included his three sons themselvo, arrested the four· and and hTs estranged wife and later returned searched lht home. · , to nre the·:rinj(,~,~e.!c~~n titT,~~~=-~:iJ:!'!.:a!.: ._Qi.pp Beac~-,..ot The dead woman's husband, Jack pills, Yerger said. 'B.i'gg.i'e' Foun~ Sipult, 22, told the jury the shot narrowly ~mWed him and struck""his wife·who"W1r -= . standing heside him. He-testified-that he You Ca1i Smoke grab!)e(t his father and shot the older man in the knee as he-wre:stled him to ... the ground. Jt • 01 • Jf The elder Sipult was Isler arrested at in lW- his Costa Mesa apartment. He wept on the witn ess st.and during the trial as he testified that he never intended to shoot his daughter-in-law. It is expected that the case will go to the jury for its· ruling later today. Ol.t.N•I COAST CM DAILY PILOT Tht Or1n;t (OIHI DAILY ,ILDT. w!Tl'I wtllcJll Is CD<Tlbl"id lllt. NtWl•,rtll, It jlVtlll ...... 111J th• O~•nv• (Ollll Pv'oll1hlftt (OlftNny. s... rt~ tdllfoi.i '''° ~l1h.cl, Morl!f1, "'"""" Frkl•v. ffK '°'" Mn•, N"'llOl"I llMdl. Huntl119!0!! !lff<:h/Founllll'I Vtllty, U,W. Bttch, 1 ..... 1,,ttstlkllt!Mick ""' S•n C'"-lt'I Sir> Jut" C111J1!r1,., A 1lnt11I• ""loMI ...:ili.0t0 ;., 111Jbll1!14"f S.lu ... ty. !Ind SWMltVt. r~~ prirclp•I Pllbllthlnt """' 11 ti W Wtll lh f $trtff, 0.1• Mftl, Ctllfwnle,~f1'»- Jtobtrl N. w,,4 Prtokltr.t illd P11bll"*' J1c\: It C~l•Y Y01• Pr..,~I llllf OtMnl Mtntflt You're a Nark . COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -From now on, it will be lettf to smoke marijuana in Ohkl -as long as you are 1 police urr derco\·er agent Intent upon arresting persons for smoking marijuana. The Ohio Supereme Court ruled that pollct plain.clothes officers may possel!iS as well as smoke the illegal weed in order not to blow their cover. The decision was made in the case or Leon M. Graham of Akron, convicted last year of possessing marijuana. Graham contended that Summit County Deputy Sherill Gene Chicoine, wha ar· rested him, unlawfully smoked mari· juaria. · The state's highest cow-t upheld the Summit County prosecutor's ·office con· tention that : A raid on a Capistrano Beach motel room during the weekend yielded • h1ul of more than SO pounds of marijuana and . two men accused or peddling lt, Orange County sheriff's officers said. Deputies booked Alfred Martin Zelkind, 35. of 31567 Florence Court, South Laguna and Robert Ensign, 22, ol Missoula, Mon- tana into Orange County Jail on charges of possessing marijuana with intent to sell Both men were arrested In a motel at 34826 Pacific Coast Highway, Capistrano Beach, by investigato rs who said they worked on a tip that "biggies" in the South Coast -drug distribution business could be round there. Court appearances are being scheduled today for both men. Officers clilim they found 39 "bricks" ·or high class marijuana -about 86 pounds of the drug -stacked in their motel room. The{t of Racing Boat Reported Th•111•• 9(,,.,jl EflllW ....b .I. f\0111'~ • ""'~ ... -.. ..,._ 25 _ V ""''"'.a~ fif"£'c,.___,__;R!;a,!'ge C\l~®'t.sherlff's.'l.!ficers ~rt_!. ~ -..L..,..a.o" ~"-~vesl1gating tne· 11 e t o • ,12,000""ta,m M•~lnt lflllltw Cht1lt1 H. l•o1 R.iclri•"' ,, Nt)I AnflfMI Mlnlflns h lttn c.... ..... OM.. JJO W•tt l1y S1r,,t Mtll1111 A44r.111 r.o .... 11•0. •2•2• --Nrwperl ... di: JUI NfWllOl'f lotilf~I,., ~ INdlt m ftrftl A- Hll!lllntltl'I llHIH 1111S tMdl IOlllcw ... $tt1 Clt-'-1 as Nenll II Ce"*'9 AMI 1..-.,.._ f714J '4J-4JJI c-''"''~­C•vrlthl, 1tn. ~ CM1t '°""""'"" c.r.iMny. No ..,... 1IOl'lft, ltluOrtlltnl, •UIWltl ft•I"' W tfll'litr!IHmlm1 --IMY ... ~ Wl"-t .WOC'91 ,_.. '!ft~-~ ...... • 5"'"' CltU ....... NN II C.t1 Mot-. (tfltorflll. kAlta'foil'llfl W Otfltr R,.,; -"tl•t .., 11'1111 U.lf _,..I,, ftllllit...., *9tlflt•• ti.ta INftlhlV. boat taken from the dry dock. a:rea al. the To Be . D1' scussed Ilana Point Marina during the weekend. The Thunderbird Formula sport! boat, the prOperty of ~1lch1el Dean Larson. 236 . - Wh11t changeslha ve taken place on the Ora.nae Coast C.Olle1e campus during tbt: put 25 years? Milts Eaton, cha irman of the college's social tclencea divilion, will outline them for the Costa Mesa Hut.orl<al Society May 9. His talk , "~ Yun at OC:C" wW I P!'tl"'1l•od-1t : p.m. ii nge Coast Coli•B• F1culty HOWM!, The l!l!bllc u lljYlliC!li> illfna wllhouCciiar1e~ - Eat.on hu bttn on the OCC staff slnco the colleje'S l""'ptlon In IHI. He WU the school'• first ·varalty basketball coach and-taught tconomlc1 and pollUcll sclenct. H1 became 1 diYblon cbtlnnan in 1961. E. 17th St., Costa Mesa, was last setn by iia owntr Friday, dt;puties said. ' Offfcer1 said inhder1 in the docking area amashed tbe Jock In the boat bay and drove off with the vessel. 'ZOUlips-Building LOS ANGELES (UPH --A chartered Britannia AirwaYi Boeing 707 with 13S pal!engen clipped 1 bjllldlng and liaht standard 11 It taxied t.o take off at Los Angelt1 International Airport. Tbtre were no Injuries" Sunday. Damoge t.o the bulldlnfl ind alrcran was estimated at lttltl,OOll. ' missioners Thursday night. report ~o commissioner! recommending use the military planei for peraonal trips ' The structure is planned in the parking approval of, the use per1nit, said he .has because of Secret Service an.1leties about .)lot between the Monte Carlo room and 1~·0 concerns. a:eial hijacki ng. • the row of shops along the main entrance ~ Nuzu m said he '\.'ants commissioners to d · The only acknowledged campaip a~ rN1ve. B h I ff make sure adequate total parking for the pearances are lour b1'g reg1·onal women'a _ ewport eac p anning o icial1 said • today the Newporter will replace the variety of uses at th e Newporter will be conferences. The White House sald the parking by creating a new lot on the site provided and that the effect of . the ad· GOP National Committee would pick up of the present heliport, which has been di!i6na l trafflc on Jamboree Road be con-the travel tab for those appearances. abandoned. sidered. .. Proposed in the plans before city of· He rec"'Ommend approval on the condi-Hardly a week has 1one by th11 yur Ucials are three meeting rooms: a 10,000. lions that ··au parking areas be ... in ac -without some scheduled appearance for square root exhibition hall and ~dditional • cordan·ce \Yith the-city ofiStreet parking the Nlxon_women. They have ranged into 1tor~ ~p.J. __ __ standards and .tha_l the parking and a dozen states -some of them NVeraJ irowever. orfiClatsor tht"NiWj)ofter fnn ~ vehlCUlar clfcolatlcut ·ptan-... be subject.,.... umes ~ and v-ijlted 1 vuit.ty of' disclosed th is morning thatPhins for the to review and approval by the tr8ffic organizaUons, including f.H -clubl, m; convention ball are really 5till tentative engineer." stitutions for the blind an·d retarded; and the project may not wind up the way Newporier Inn officials th is morning garden clubs, historic sites ·and event& it hits been presented to commlslloners. declined to give cost figures on the new tlfat President Nixon ha1...betn unable to "We had to put somethl~wn (on the .addition and ... ·oajd-not comment on plans attend. application)." said Phil Edmonson, an of· for high-rise tower to contain a.dditiQnaL But-latt Week, on-a·trlp lnto-Ntit'-Yort ficial of Del Webb Enterprises. guest rooms. -State, Tricia said flatly she wu out cam- "Before we spent a lot of money we There ·now are 327 rooms in the resort paigning for her father and predicted·. had to get an okay from the city to •et If ·11>1 bullt nearly 12 years ago by George there will be many politlc1l 1ppe1ranct1, -We can do it. Buccola and now owned by Del Webb including triple on behalf of othe~ "No plans have been drawn and we're Enterprises. Republican candidates. -------------~---- • E I 0 f e troo Arti "e"\Why oiir diamonds a gaad investment ... _ ..... ..lo...~"""""'""~ ...................... ~ .... -.... ~:.i.. ·-~--1 ..... .;a...,,,,,;·r1 w • ...,. .. , ..... "'""' .._ ... ,... ......... _ tltractty ... '" ...... ...... '"" .. -......c ... _.,,. . ....... Cosh Refund G1arante.d .......... 1•••..,.,. ...., ... ···-··· "....,.. ... .,,,.. ...... 1-...... '" ,.t4 .... "'I I • ., • .. .............. . -.. i.. 11 ....,. ., '"" ..rJt.n M••lttl"!I'• '"' 1holct .t...,,. or ,-flew. 14• t•lcl • F'lnd fl Firil at lht Fun Plact la S~op 1838 NEWPORT BLVD. PMONE 646°7741 DOWNTOWN COSTA MHT -fletw-ff"'* & •nn•t 20 leas Fi or t &aid or t held .. Gha said cent sour _Lan pOlt Ince. F lhe , .. ' • /' --;i • I ' . He.aded Bur~au 48 Years • •• . -.. I ' l ,. ' • .es • --··-'L •-0--.·-- • TUESDA'(.AFTE'RNOOJ<i; MAY 2, 1972 VOL, •s, MO. 121, 2 llECTIONS, 2• PAGES e1ze Eight Lives to .Go VP'I ltltlOMtt \VJthout waiting for 3 itet, a' c:it leaps to s'afety from the fourth floor o.f .a _blazing Broolq>'n, building as firemen carry· ho~e. lipes up the f1re ~scape. The felin~ landed on all fours and walked ·away,.appat· ently---:and incredibly..1.......unharme~. · • · N~ Viets Take· Section . ·. ! . .. Of New.Defense Zone • Served 48 Years ~1 •• ~--. -~ J. Edgar Hoover, -~, . L -·-F-Bl-L-egend, Die'llli--i ' WASHINGTON (AP) -J. Edgar HOOver, embodiment of the FBI and focus of law enforcement achievement · and controversy for a half century, is dead . The 77-year-old director of the Federal Bureau of lhvestigatio-n Qied of natural causes ·tn .his home · Monday night, the Ju~ice Department announced. Presideilt'-Nixon, UPo?J hearing of Hoover 's death, called him a "truly r-emarkable man_who ser.Y~ the country -for 48 yea rs under eiiht presidents with unp3raileled devotion lo duty and dedica- tion." Nixon spoke emotiona lly of his "profound sense of personal Joss." Flags .e.Lall public _buildings_ and installations were ordered to half staff. lloover was a virtual Jengend in the United States. an "Untouchable "~who died in office despite efforts by critres in re- cent years to have him retired. He shaped the FBI into a massive, powerful federal agency during his career. Across PeMsylvani<' Avenue from the office. where Hoover worked. :i massive powerful federa l building to house the FBf is under construction. Even before Hoover's death, there had been continuing speculltion ab o u t whether the building would be named for him or perhaps might even house his final resting place. Spec.ulation on a successor to Hoover also began long before his death as political pressure to retire H,oover alternately waxed and waned. It had seemed almost certair. he would retire or be retired if the Deinocrats beat President Nixon in the 'November elec· tion. Nixon now will be able to pick a successor. Washington, D.C. police chier Jerry ,.. Wilson, a recent Nixon law enforcement favorite, had been prominently mentioned as ' possible successor before Hoover's dca.11. · .. Aeling Alty. Gen. Richard Kleindienst issued a one-paragraph Statement in which he-said Hoover's body was fo"und by ·his matd at approximately 8:30 a.m. today. - -nit is-lvith. profound personal grid that .I announce that J. Edgar Hoover passed away durjng the night at his residence." Kleindienst-said. "His personal physician inrormed me that his death was due to natural causes." The jut;jIDVed FBl head was permitted by presidelltial order to continue-in-hi! - $42,SDO=a-year government job afte.r reaching the mandatory retirement age of 70. Hoover, unmarried, domin3ted the bureau during his lifetime like no man in any othef federal agency. Wielding vast power. he ·was said to lavish on the FBC the pride and possessiveness of a stern and watch£ul parent. Jloover's No. 2 man In the bureau was Clyde A. Tolson, the associate director. The two were long-time colleagues who spent much time together, Tolson, 71, has been in ill health: Hoover groomed no one for his shoes. but often expressed the wish that ,the next director come from within the FBI ranks. Dufing the years of Hoover's reign, there never was a known case or scandal inside of the FBI aruj Hoover's stock remark about his agents was : "T hey can't be bought" Accolades for •loover flowed almost Immediately from Capitol Hill and other {6ee HOOVER, Page Z I ' .Al"""" FBI DIRECTOR DEAD -1. Edg•r Hoover, 17 • Ho ove r's Car eer Spa1ined Ne arl y Half a Centur y WASHINGTON (UPJ ) "-John Edgar Hoover wielded power among the mighty as the nation's top law enforcement of- ficer for.nearly a half century. He also was highly p:ipular with the public. Two presidents found the combination unbeatable enough to keep the bulldog- faced Hoover in office years past lhe mandatory retirei;nent age <>f 70 with the results that he served longer than any other federa l bureauqat in modern times. His last years were among the -{:( -t:f -{:( -{:( -{:( -{:( stormiest as tht FBI came under iq- Police Hold 1 Suspect; Panought . ' By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of tfHI DIUr l"Ut t l llff one s11speeted drug smuggler Is jailed today, following Newport Beach poU~_e seizure of 294,500 illicit pllls, probably the largest such confiscation in Orange Coun- ty history. Value of the 250,000 amphetamine pilla and 44,500 barbiturate tablets of Mexican crigin would be .about. $3$,000 on the street sales market , police said. Arrest warrants were issued more than a week ago for three sufpcCted"Pfincipals· In the case; two of whom have nQt yet been taken into custody. • AMouncement of the first suspect's capture only l 'h blocks from Newport Beach Police.o Department headquafterl was initially -withheld -to avoid ·alerting his-alltged aecom]Sliccs. Lyle P. Rodgers, 32, of 305 32nd St., Newport Beach, remains in Orange co~ ty Jail, unable to post $30,000 bail set by the court. Rodgers, who said he is unemployed, faces a 'A1ay 12 preliminary hearing on charges of conspiring to smuggle narcotics and po~sess dangerous drugs - for sale. Detective Sgt. Leo Konkel. or the depa~tment's narcotics detail , identified the othCr two suspects as Pierre Jacques Bertolino and Hank D. Kuykendall, both 22-year-old Newport Beach residents, Bail for both men, who were last known to be in Hawaii, was aet at '50.000 on the same charges on which Rodgers was ar· rested at hi! home. The case has been under investigation for about two months. involving Newport Beach and Huntineton Beach police, plu1 (Seo SEIZURE, Pago %) ' Oraage SAJGON (UPI ) -North Vietnamese midday rush hour, killing six civilians creasing fire from p:iliticians, left-wing troops followed by tanks drove today into and wounding 19 others. Qui Nhon is the L al Off• • I E groups, civil rights organizations, and 1''eather Ar!illery ~:r J:,~:~ ~~ft~~f o! t~~~ ;~:;:~~~:~~~~~ •• .Q.~, ·~ ~~ l~!!~._JP~~~~W-""1.'!.'11e~;rc :~~~~d~i;;~ ")" .. ~tt0rt~ihfne~ c~~Sdai'.-1~~' . e e" ~"1 Y reporteal.5ar-Altfe(f--Narplanes today· . own. cording to the weatherlady. Low 20 mlies north of Hue, and occupied at bombed aqtt strafed at least 30 govern-He paid them little heed. clouds along the beaches will C'lear least part or the position. men~ Wlik.! \rt behind in the Quang Tri So' rrow Over Hoover Death ln the "law and or<ler" lramework ol by mill-morning leaving tempera-Fleld reports said by nightfall control sector. the Nixon Administrallon, lloover spoke lures or 62. Inland high 70. or the base was in doubt. Field officers The U.S. command reported 462 air <>ut <>ften and loudly. appnreritly confident said So"uth Vietnamese marines held part strike~ including 852 heavy bomber raids the President and hls lmmcdlatJ boss, l.NS IDE TODAY · of the base and the North Vietnamese in Quang Tri province in the 24 hours en· Attorney General John N. Mitchell, wOuld r · held paft.r ding at noon Tuesday-the heaviest con-By JACK CJIAPPEU. torney Cecil flicks rrom the county . rist to his defense. They did. r.rore tlu:in 500 11ach~ leavt\-°' "" 0•11" l"lltt staff "I'm sure 'lr. lloover's pla•• will be Ne'"N•rl Jtll" Tl1ur1dau for tile "There are many, many tanks at My centration of air raids in four years. 1 h k r th d th r J eo.1 1• "" Jn mo :ind 1971 , laWiiull.5 were filed w,..-II' II' ~ h h . I " ff "J bel' H . th n I e \\'a e o e ea o . l:Algar -1,led from w•'thln the organ1'••tlon," ed I annual 1iS-mllt ract to Enstti• \)oan cad1ng or Nancy, one o leer 1eve ue is e major objective," lloovcr, Orang e County officials ex-n . -against Jloover by disgrunll ormer -• said. Brig.· Gen. Thomas W. Bowen, deputy pr.essed-1xlth sor{llw a.nd.JlOpe that the .. Enr!ght said "But whoever S!!Cceeds him employ.ls. by a. would-be female agent,_by __ ada. You ~n't teU wlto !hey are ---~fy Chanh is within small-arms ftre . seq.lo! y:s. advts"er on the norUiern'""front. great crime fighting organizati on he bullt at the F'BI will be well content to pursue ltftlst groups who :i:ccu.sed him of without ~ proyram. See etlfry distance of Nancy, l~ miles south of the told rtporters at the old imperial capital would endure. -.. lhe goals of Hoover withi n the magnifl· threatening their civil rights. list. Po(Jt 20• tallen.provlnce-.capitaLoLQuang Tri~iql. 1\1esday...oigh1--------"Everrtawmah-1n Orange County wtll cent-structure~he created." . He was accused--by House Dtmoctatie-\;.M; ..,. '' ..... '"'"""' 1• The threat to Binh Din~ province on the The Communh:t threat was also stroi\g feel a deep sense of 'personal loss today §tate. Senator OeMls Carpentef <R· Leader Hale Boggs (J'.>.La.). and others or ~:~1• ~ ::1';'~1'=. '! central coast increased L~ military elsewhere. at the dtath_of J. F.dgar Hoover," Chier Newport Beach), 11 former FBI agent wiretapping congressional telephones and ~!:~JH "·:: :;=,="' ,: 60Urct.S said contact had oecn lost with An Loe. 60 mlle.1 north or S.lgon, wa1 DtN•ty District Attorney James Enright said . "Mr. Hoover was the eptiome of the _ of excieedlng his euthority in the field of c..__,. 11 ,_,,, '"'' Lan •-E 1 h "-1 All'~ ~·u nd 1 ~ ,.... ~ -1 o..t11 ~ • s"'' Mt111•11 , .. ,, _ ding ~ne ng is • u1':: ast Aw.-out-,,~1 u tt SJt:ge. · said this monrlng. pe.rfecl civil strvant." ,'""' civilian aurvell Anet. •••ttr1•' ,... • T•"""'-,, poll in the upper one-third or the prov· Kor&m city in the Central Highlands "Hoover buUt an enduring organization Ile wu a great ad m l n i s t rat or, His troubles peaked after a fuss with lflttrl•I-' 1• • 11tt11-'' inct. was In danger of an imminent attack. that will _be a monument to.h~ ability.'' carpenter said. "lfe had the overwhelm· former Democrat Attorney Central :::; 11_, 1•1! · ::!."':.'. ,..., 1,:.1! Four Q:lmmunlst rockets dropped on In neighboring C.mbodia; • govern-Enright sili:t. The chief deputy was corn• ing desire to do hl~ job as well as It could Ramsey Clark who suggtsted In a book ...,...,. ,. • .,,. .. ,.. .' lhe market place at Qui·Nhon during tht (S..·VIETNAM, .... , I) menllllg in the absence ol D~trict Al' (Ste !IEACTION, Pogo I) (Ste POPULAR, P1ge I) . . .. r1' DAILY PILOI S,000 Marines Evacuation Unit· Ready Since '6? SAIGON (UPI) -The Uolled SlattsJ. has kept updated since 1!>69 conllngency plans tor a .force o~ l,flkt Marines to llCTee!ll a hasty withdrawal or remaining. U.S. forcts from 8oulh Vietnam If Com.. munlltl threaten the country, military toUrcet 1ald today. Fleet, t!>e sources said. At ltaJt one carrier, the Trlpali, with l ,800 t-.1arlnes aboard. Is off the coast, and Jonts has -visited the Vietnam mainland -his lastest trip was Friday - to discuss plans to put landing · teams ashore U ne~ be. During the current Communist of- fensive, U.S. advisers have been pulled by helicopter fro m bases about to be ove rrun and taken to rear areas. However, the contingency plans are to be used only if large numbers of Americans are threatened, the sources said. A Marine amphlblou1 ready group, under the command <>f J...L Gen. William K. Jones, is stationed on helic6pter c~r· riers off the Vietnam coast with lhe 7th FromP .. eJ VIETNAM •.. ment attempt to retake a IO-mile stretch of Comm.unist-conlrollid Highway 1, - ~tailed and the high command said at leas t 100 troop! were kJlled, wounded or missing. Six AmerJcan aircraft were ahot down and fi ve U.S. helicopter crewmen killed trying to rescue U.S. advisers and se nior South VJetnamese officers from Qu ang Tri. The U.S. command 1)50 said a Navy F-4 {>Jlantom jet was shot down by a Com- munist MIG21 on a mission over North Vietnam on April 'l1 i!nd a. Navy A7 Corsair wu shot down Monday over the north. The pilot waf'l"escued. In Saigon U.S. Ambaaador Ellsworth Bunker and Gen .. Creighton W. Abrams. the AmerJcan commander in Indochina. met .with Soutfl Vietnamese · Pr.esldent .Nguyen Van Thiett· .. .or. -lht-wocJening military situation. Details of the hour· long discusslon'were not reve aled. The increased Communist activi ty in South Vietnam's Central Highlands rein- forced beljef the Communis~ planned a major .move in the area to try to cut the country Jn half. An estimated 20,000 North Vietnam~ &roops oyerran Qu&ng Trt, a provlnc1il capital only 18 miles below the . Demilitarized Zone and prepared for a JX>slble northern attack asalnst Hue. Thtrt are other CODtingency plans, too, Including one for rapidly building up U.S. forces to protec t South V i e t n a m • However , the buildup plans have received scant aUention at U.S. command head- quarters in Saigon because Nixon ad· mlnlstration officia1s up to and includ ing the President have vowed . that fl() '.'mertcan ground troops will be involved m the current fishting. The most likely plan to be put into ef- fect if any large American uni ts were threatened by Communist attack would allow SOuth Vietnamese soldiers and civili~ns to accompany U.S. troops to the Ame rican ships waiting offshore. -~ versions, however, include pro- v1s1ons for fighting disgruntled South Vietnamese soldiers on the beach 3s the Marines pro tect the withdrawal. "Le.t's face ii:" said one high-ranking American of!Jc1al, "some Vietnamese commanders may· get pretty angry if they aee us leaving. You can't rule out the possibility they 'd attack t he Americans." The first contingency plans for ma ss evacuation ot ·{}.& iorces • frofn"-Uouttr Vietnam were written in 1969 when Presi- deni Ni xon ordered the beginning of the ·v.s. withdrawals. They have been updated at regular in-- tervals as ·troop sti:ength fell. There are fewer than ff,000 Am erican servicemen now based jn South Vietnam . • Preseiating· ·Petition • Boat Waste Stanaards . '~-Weakened DAILY l'ILOT SlaH ,11111 ... WASHINGTON (UPI) -Federal llan-~ dards for treatment or human w1stes from boats have deen weakened 11 response to protests from a lobby or angry boat owners. it was learned toay. ?!1rs. Shirley Deaton. rig ht. deputy registrar, accepts petitions fr om California A1arijuana Initiative repre. sentalive Mrs. Betty Armacost. The organization claims to have 22,000 signatures from Orange County. Before the issue of legaliza tion of marijuan;i can be put on the baJlot, 330,000 signatures arc needed statewide. The deadline is June 1. See .story on Page 5. A spokesman for the Boat OWnerll Association of the United States a:reeted word or the revised standards with 1Ied aJtd said the regulations appartn.Uy would permit use of impr~ved machina- tor-chlorinator devices, }Vhich oost $200 to iioo. /\n Environmental Protection Agency source described these devices u "not much more than a mixmaster" which adds ch lori ne before discharging human wastes into the water. Fron• Page J From Pagel The new standards. scheduled for public announcement shortly, would im· pose the standards on new boats in two vears and on old& boats three years iater. REACTION ... HOOVER DIES ... be done, regardless of his own personal locations of government. inC<>nvience." Eve n former Atty. Gen. Ranuey Clar k, Mr. Hoover was a great horse race fa n, who feu ded with Hoover while Hoover's and had a quick wit and good sense of nominal boss, said "I am saddened to humor, Carpenter said. hear of his death. He has been a major "I can remember one occassion when figure on the American scene for a long he was speaking to a class of new agen ts. time. He loved this ocuntry and we shall miss him." J had been in the bureau for a year or so and was looked upon as an old timer by Sen. George 1'.1cGovem (0.S.D.), ex- the new guys. pressed 10IT0W-at the death. "One or the men asked him if it was "I think we can only be sad over the true that FBI agents hatl 10 wear their passing or any American. ·any citizen, any guns at all times. He replied •no, it is on-mortal." l\1cGovern said. ly necessary to have your gun when you The presidential contender said he need it.• " disagreed with many of Hoover's vieWs, Carpenter mentioned that while he was but added, "I am sad at his" passing." · with the bureau, they \YOU!d have ""·ild" Sen. Ed1nund S. Muskie (0-Maine). Christmas parties. "Peanuts and cola, declared the nation owes HOQver '~its aild1hat W-aS if."""ili!"Siiid~-... __ _,:"1:J1.!jpiije_and....pll!>ef;:L:..A1US~.s!_~!e-:. l·loover was a great stickler on the way ment added : "J . Edgar Hoover devoted his agents dressed. "I remember one his entire life to the serv ice of his coun· time. he told us that he expected all his try. \Yhile some of us may have queS- agents to dress like •successful yqung tioned some of his approaches In recent lawyers. And l mean Boston, Washington or New York lawyers, not Chicago. Los An~eles or Miami lawyers.' " he said. Senator Carpen ter said that he hoped a successor could be found to carry on the great tradition or the bureau that l\1r . Hoover founded. From Pege'J POPULAR ... A year ago, the EPA proposed atan-years, no one could question his loyalty dard s ,.,.hich would have required more and dedication to his country." • refined treatment, matching that Sen. Hubert H. llumphrey or Min-prescribed ror municipal sewage plants neso ta, an associate of lfoover during and designed to keep boat wastes from four years in the vice presidency and making la kes and rivers too tllthy for many years in Congress, mourned him as swimming. •·a man of unquestioned ability, personal Jlut EPA sources said that no integrity ibd. professional competence. economica l device attaining 1uch a treat- "Few men in our time have made such ment level was' available for boa(s. a strong impact on American public.life," Th~ EPA s~~S?ested hold!ng tanks with said Humphrey: ,..-fump-out faciht1es at marmu, but boat House Repulican leader Gerald R.l, ~wn~rs complained of odor, ~~of IJ>&Ce Ford described Hoov.er as 0 a veritable and inadequate marina ~acllities. rock of strength" and one of the most One agency source ~d the ~ capable public officials ever to serve in ~,tan~ responded to the boat ownt~ the government: ~emendous lobby and the .fur<r 1t . "He was incorruptible." Ford said. "He ra_i,sed. , was unswerving in his devotion to duty. 1 \Ve were deluged by 1,000 ~ves. tcM..t>;zt :! !8¥ e!Mr--Azuri'.'!D..~any of . them from ~. the ever served li1s na tloft more faltbiully ~~~thw ... artz -;~ec'.uuve ~f---and steadfasUy " w iqi ' " Se B Gold t . (R , ~"" 'd the Boat OWners Association, 11td his . n._ any wa er :nr•1. mu · brgantzation originated the postcards Hoo~er_'s0death,waJ "a tremeod9u1 loss" slvlng members a choice of.slgnlag ~ adding. I don t see. at the ·moment ho~ message protesting the proposed 1tan- Mr. ~oov_er can possibly be re placed. His dards or endorsing them . contr1buhon was almost beyond measure- ment." From Pagel --~A~nother. 20,000:_Communist troops moved against the former imperiaJ capi- tal from lhe southwest and set up heavy artillery at captured arUllery base Bastogne only 12 miles from the city. 1bere are 2,000 American servicemen The sources said. that versions ot the plan envision withdrawal ot a 11 Amer icans from South Vietnam on short notice, using ships and military and civilian aircraft. If North Vietnamese troops appear likely to overrun all or South Vietnam U.S. servicemen would be lifted to thrc~ major American airblises -Bien Hoa near Saigon, Cam Ranh Bay on the cen- tral coast and Da Nang in the north-and flown. out of the country to other ·Pacific bases, the sources said. "Our nation has lost one of its greatest law enforcement figu res. u Orange County Sheriff James Musick said today. "He is going lo be greatly missed by his · organization and those of us who hi d such tremendous respect for hi s ability. "For all that." the sheriff said, "I don 't think ' we're going to see any great changes in the organiz~tion or operation of the FBL published in November. 1970, that lfoover had so ,slominated the FBI with a "self- center concern for his reputation '' that the agency sometimes sacrificed ef- fective crime control in a pursuit of House speaker Car l Albert (D-0k1a.'), said ;'the burea u will forever bear the ·imprint of this dedicated and patriotic man." Sen. Strom Thurmond (R.S.C.), called Hoover one of the country's greatest citizens -"a man or unimpeachable character and jntegrity who always put duty first." SEIZURE •.. the State Bureau or Narcotics Enfor~ ment and the District Attorney 's olfict. "I would guess it's probably the largest seizure of pills in Orange County.I know it is in Newport Beach," said Sgt. Konkel. sfiltioned at Phu Bai, the· northemmo1t U.S. outpaat, 10 miles aouth of Hue, but so far there have been M attacks against the base. Most men are communJcalions · specialists but there are also fOO in- fantrymen staUoned thtre. Pretident Nixon baa sa id M American ground troops .. m be used In the Com· monist offensive which start!d March 30 and the American troops were expected to be evacuated U Hue fell. UPl's Kellerman aald many Qf the 300,000 refugees who fled to Hue were moving south towafd Oa Nang to avoid the new Communist threat. Ke11ennan said many or the 50,000 rerugees he sa w today were panicky and they were interested mainly in getting iiOUth. The refugees, KeJlerman aaid, traveled by root and in cars, trucka, motorcyles, bicycles and oxcarU. 2 Personalities Of Pilot Pages Win, Pulitzers Two DAILY PILCYr editorial page peraonatitles have won 1972 Pulitzer prizes for their outstanding journalisti c achievements. (Complete li st of Prize winnen on Page 4.) Columnlat Jack Anderson was cited for national rei>ortlng. Jeffrey MacNelly was given the Pulltur Prize for editbFial car· joOnJll. I ''Hoover built up a tremendously · capabl e organization ~nd all ft needs is a capable administrator to follow· in hi s footsteps," the veteran Orange County lawman said. "Th e FBI will have no dif· ficultly finding such a man." Ranking Newport Beach police, includ- Jng Chief B. J ames Glavas and Detect ive Capt. Donald F. Oyaas respanded "'ith shock and regret. "We like to think of him as immortal and going on forever, but or course tha t isn't .a fact," Chie! Glavas said this morning following the \Vashington an- nounce ment. personal glory. i • An intensely feacti ve man, Hoover saw red. He called in a Washington Post reporter for a rare interview to denounce Clark as a "jellyfish." From then on. his every action drew attention. Every time he disciplined an employe and it became known, there were headlines. He got a reputation for shipping agents who incurred his wrath to fara way posts. Butte, Mont.. became both a fS:vorite and a joke. . ' Hoover surprised everyo ne, however. when he told joke after joke on himself at a June, 1971 party in honor of the at- torney general's bombastic, blonde \1-'ife~ Martha ~fitchell. He gave official Washington a rare look at this legendary figure and an ev en rarer glimpse o( an unsuspected sense of humor. Sen. James 0 . Eastland (0.Miss.), chairman of the Senate Judictary Com- m'ittee, to which the nominatiOn of Hoover's successor will be referred, com- mented: "AU who believe in the Jaw as the foun- dation of an orderly society have Jost a leader who spent his life for the public good." Paper Edits Out lndia11 Nickname FARGO, N.O. <UPI\ -The use of In- dian related nicknames for athletfc te&ns has been eliminated from the sports pages of the "Fargo For~.~ He said there was no diHiculty 1n ar- resting Rodgers when investigators from Orange County's Narcotics Task Force shOwed up at the suspect'• cottlge. The narcotics officer said the con. traband . pills, packaged Jn plastic bags, origina ted in Mexico but he didn't 1ay how they we re linked to the three suspects. The evidence was confiscated during the probe of the suspects' activities. Reagan Critic Back to Work He aald about one in 10 or the rerugtt1 were so1diers still wearing unifo"rms or remnants of unlforrna. including some of. -ficen: in shiny jeeps taking their limUie1 IOU th. ~ capture of Quang Tri was one o( -'l'hoUih Adman· has, himself, been mucb.Jn.the_beadlines recenUy, h1a award wu for his reporting of American policy· declsJoi> making during the !Jldo.Pakistan war of 1971 . "I would view it as tire passing or an era, and I hope the man selected to fill the big shoes has an equal amount or dedication to the cause of Jaw, order: and justice." ~During his term of study last spring at the FBI National Academy, Capt. Oyaas met the venerated Hoover twice. "There isn 't much of a comment nn yone can make except that he was a brilliant man and it's a terrible fuss " _ Q:lmplaints aga!!l.st his regime were ~J:lOthing new to_the director. Tltjrty years earlier, disciplioed agents complained he was a tyrannical martinet. "\Ve felt the American Indian h~d a case 1n their attempts to create a new image in their life styles."' said Ed Kolpack, the newsp~per's sports editor. LOS BANOS (UPI) -An employe of a state-owned power generating plant was back on the · job after being sent home because of a-sign on his pickup -truck -cr.jtical of ~ov. Ronald Reafan. "Reagan PaYrhis-employet like . he {!~.Y.S his .!_axes," read the .sip ... the biggest vjctorJes of the war for the North Vietnamese. They have never cap- tured a South Vietnamese provincial Ca pital al though they held parts of Hue for 28 days during the Tet offensive in 1968. The victory gave the Commwtists con. 8 trol of the top 30 miles of South Vie tna m. U.S. military sources said 8 o Americans were airlifted out of Quang Tri Monday, along with 49 senior South Vietnamese ofricers. A spokesman said 11 other advisers decided. to stay behind and they had all been rescued or ac- counted for. O~NHCOAST DAILY PILOT ni. or.,.. eo.,, OAll.V ,,LOT, '#1111 ftkft I• comblM'd "'-,,,._,'"'-6t M UWIH 'Y !tit Or1.-qe CN•t P\l.il1hlnf COfroMll'(. s~ •<'i!t edUionJ 1r1 llllblltllt'll, MIMtY ftlr°""" Frid1~, lw C•11 Mtll, friltw111rl •tl(I\. Hunllnt1tln l'Khl~-llln Vt11f'f', ~I ll!udl, ll"l'in,ISlddltNd W St11 ClftntnlU !~'! J11111 C..1fs1r-. A 11ntlt' r .. loMI f!!l1;o11 lt MU~~fll' Sa!\lrcr1 y1 .,wr 111n111ra. Tnt 11•i11Cl1MJ S111bll1hlnt Plltlt Is 11 JJO w'at 8.1~ !i!rt tl, CMt1 Mhl, Ollltotflll, t:U., R1lt1rt N, W•-4 ,,.,lcltn, ..... PvlllllMr \· ~ ... -..,./\1 t,_,.,,;!~•c,k,1 ~:. ~'J•v.,,'f;<. ' .. ..::l.-1.1. i 1t1 "''""'' '"" .,_,,r ,,..naw n.,,.,, 11: .... , 1!1Utw Tll•Mtt A. Mvrithl~ Mtfllllnt IClllor Ch1 rft1 H. loot Alch1t4 r. Nill Aulat111t MeNIO ... Ed!Mr1 --.. C&ill Mm r DI .... , ky STrttt ,...._. lffd'I: »» """""' loll ....... ....,_ INdl1 m ,._, A""'" H~l"""" ... di: Trl7J •IKl'I MvltwN sen c~ at """' 11 c-111• •..a Tll.,._ 171•1 HJ-1121 a.-.. .u ...... '4J.1611 '""' °""' ""'" '""' ......... 'ltldl ....... ,.,_ .... tr-e-itr CJ 11 c .... _,121 ~. ,.,,. Ot... Cllict """" .... ~,. ... lltWt ...... ''"""''""" .. ,..,... n.ltw w ............ ,.lfl W M fC'llY M-1,_..._ 11114 .... _.. .... ..... .. .,.,,. . ...,,.,.,., ~ t i.. ..... Mw .. c. ........ "'"""" ........,. .., Urrilr u.u fMftfMrt ., lt'ltll ti.IS IN'llltl)'1 ,..,.,..,., .............. fMi'itMV. • A 25-y~ar-okl fdltoriat cartoonist who h&9 moved-to the-top of his profession in a compara ti vely few years, MacNelly is one of the youngest cartoonists ever to be given the Pulitzer Prize. MacNelly's work appears on the editoria l page of the new Sunday DAI LY PILOT. He has been a cartoonist on the staff of a daily newspape r (the Rich- mond, Va., News Leader) for Jess than two yea rs and has had his y,.·ork offered to other newspapers through syndication for an even shorter time. , Columnist Anderson, 48, is a former Long Be.sch newspaper reporter who under-studied the late Drew Pearson fo r 22· years and inherited P e a r s o n • s powerful "Washington Merry-go-round '' column at the time of Pearson 's dea th . A devout Mormon and r o r m er preacher, Anderson likes be ing labeled a muckraker and ca lls .himself "the voice of the voiceless." 69th Anderson and MacNelly have bee n Hdded tn the past year to the stable o( syndicated talent whose y,.·ork is regularly published in lhe DAILY PILOT. said Capt. Oyaas... ' "He had to be a brilliant man to stay in office that long ... " he added. Wes t Orange County police officials ex- pressed surprised and shock today when informed of the death of Hoover. "It 's a tragedy," said Capl. A1ichael Burkenfleld, head of the Huntington Beach Patrol Division. -"lioover epitomized the professional policeman. He can never be replaced as a personality." he said. "This comes as a shock to me." said Fountai n Volley Police Chief Charles Michaelis. "I didn't even know he was Ill." He said he wanted lo be a Jaw enforcement officia l to the end, and he was, f\.lichaelis said. Both o!ficers expressed admiration for the job ~fr. lloover had done in his years as FBI chief. "It's amazing that a man could \VOrk so T~ng to m~ke an organization grow as he did . He , never became stale," said BurkfnIIeJd. Tl1ree Countians Accused . ~·i-~ . ~~ .... -"'._:,":.<'-s."-.. .....,, ·~~~"' ¥ ............ v . \. Of StoleJ). Stock Cl1~ges · Complaints have been filed aga iost thrre Orange County businessmen who authorities allege wert Involved In a plot to ust stolrn stock certificates as collater.. al for bank loans. One of the accused men Is the manager of an OrAnge bank. The three county men and three from L<ls Angeles were arrested over the WetRnd-..h!le a-atv~nlh 'Jus-pecrrnief!ll sought. Arreat.d tn Orange County were Mertie Schroer, 45, manager of the First National S.nk of Orange County branch tn Orange; Filln I. Konsmo, S7. of TusUn and Ralph Emsll<!I, 44. or 1!90! Santa Clara St., Fountain Valley. Schroer la accused or accepting • 16.000 klckbock for approving a 165,000 ~IO - l\onsmo. The latter reportedly used sJ:llen l ntcma lional Chemicnl and Nuclear Corporation Stock certlficatrs as security for the lon n. Emsten Is bllSiJies.s__puimot.er and Konsmo. 'Mle atttr reportedly med stolen tractor, Others arrested in the alleged conspir- · ecy are f\fartin Cilaway, 46, or Los Azlgeles, .an attorney; Gerland Kassap, 40. a Montebello raR cnmpany owner and f'redertck K. Ryan, 47, 1 Los Angeles promote r. _ Still so ught by police Is H. Cabot Jones, 61 , a Beverly Hills stockbroker. Ailsli: men amsttd •have been fretd on boll ·ranging from 15.900 for Schroer to f!>.000 ·1or ·Emm..u. But · it was this iron discipline . that enabled Hoover to make the FBf a respected, world-famous organization, noted for its integrity. Hit said , no • sr.oup' or individual at- tempted to pressure the newspaper into eliminating the Indiai1 -nlckil3mes from - the sporls section and "we're not telling any school to take action along1hi.s line. • mou nfed. on a_truck owned by William lt. Ingram. His rigid methods were the only basis on Which Hoover-would accept the job of housecleaning the then ._ Burtau or Investigation, a scandalridd en haven for political hacks, in the early 1920's. "The point is we're not changing any names at all in our wire copy, wi're just editing Jt out." Reagan admit ted last year that he paitl no state Income tues for 1970 because of 11 busine1a: reverses." • AROUND THE CORNER AND UP YOUR STREET .. .. • r W,E HAVE BEEN ASKED HUNDREDS OF TIMES WHY WE LOCATED OUR STORE "OFF THE BEATEN PATH." SEVERAL ANSWER5 POP UP. FIRSTLY, THE COST OF STORES IN SHOPPING CENTERS IS ASTRONOMICAL. SECONDLY, WE WERE ABLE TO OBTAIN MORE SPACE, WITH OUR SHOWROOM, OFFICES AND WAREHOUSE ALL IN ONE LOC~TION. THIRDLY, THERE IS AMPLE PARKING WITH UTILE TRAFFIC CONGESTION LEADING TO US. ~ ..__1RIS SlnJATION HA'S MADE-US-M0RE-COMPETITIVE--AND~ ... WE ARE PROUD AND GRATEFUL TO SAY THAT WE HAVE INCREASED OUR VOLUME EVERY YEAR FOR FOURTEEN YEARS, AND HAVE EXPANDED FIVE TIMES ~T.THIS LOCAnON. • ALDE-N'·S. ns-. DOPE 1663 . l'lactntla Ave. • COST A r.lfSA 646-4838 .. • di hg lh lht nii ju, en ', ' I I r I his Is the lhe \ roa wa \ mo lhe sh too mo Jou Sc loo Eu SC Ire hi. lh el th yo sa va " at fhi pr ri , -- J . , -·, - • 1 'tutldar, May ~._1_9_12 _____ ::s ____ ..:o._•.:.:IL:...'f_P..:JL:.•..:r_,,;r . C~enaente FeliD~_T_~h~s ·stage Encore By P~MELA HALLAN 01 lh• Diiiy Piiot Slall _The babble frorn the-impatient .au- dtt'nce \•,:as suddenl y silent as: the house tight s d!!nmcd and the curlll in Y:cnt up on the, S.in Clemente lligh School production. Ner.vou s cast members. not on stage in lh~ first scene . hurriedly applled last ~111nute touches to their 1nakeup and ad- JUSled their costumes, \.•:ailing for their entrance. . All,. that is, but one. Barbara, walking with deliberate feline gra~. slowly approached the wings, nonchalantly making her entrance. Giv· ing her audience a cursory glance beyond the footlights. she studied !he set aod jurr.ped up on the nearest couch to lake a 11ap. . l::larbara is a cat. "'She 's al so the biggest ham we·ve ever had ," said ?i.1rs . A1arian Sykes. drama teacher. "She only comes around when ' we have a play either In rehearsal or pro- duction.'' Barbara has appeared in ~everal school pl ays whether or not the cas t called for a cat. ·' .. I allow her to come around.because 1 think it s good for the kids," said ?i.trs. Syke s. •·11 forces them to ad lib and work ·around her." On one occasion during "The lmpossi· ble Years" Barbara jumped up on a table !ull or hors d' oeuvres and id lull view of the audience began munching on them. On another occasion she got between a boy and a girl engaged in a Jove scene and the boy had to get up, pick up the cat \vilh an impro,·ised "this cat has got to go" and remove her fron1 the stage. "When she takes a seat someone is supposed to use during a performance, the player must find another." said Mrs. Sykes. "Often she'IJ just walk across the stage and do nothing else ... The cal, a gray and white foundling reSC\led by a custodian, now belongs tn the school. Students keep'. ht'r v.·en fed nnd • :r.trs. Sykes ad1nittt'd to bringing hl'.I' food on weekends. She's now a prrn1:1n('nt prop or the drama departn1en1. She t'\'fll has .1 definite part in lhr ne1v play. ··s1 agl· Door" which \\•ill be presented ~lav 12 and 13. - Bul Barbara almost pulled a faux i>U~ one night durin g 11 presrntallun or ''Oklnhon1 a." A full house "·as prestnl College Defers ~E Ruling Action on Move to, Abolisli Prograni Movecl Back ' George llartman. chairrnan or the and Barbara could .not resist the tcmpta· tion or showing off. Prancing tn the back door, she scurried for the stage. But th is lime she wasn't al one. Son1ething dead "'as hn111ing from hrr ja"·s. "Fortunately \\·e caught her before she made it on stage.'' said ?i.1rs. Sykes. "I don't think the audience would havt ·~ plauded. '' 'fhe dead creature was a small rabbi t. Poultry Flocl( 111 Sa11 Diego Area Striclien • After many words about arbit'rary standards li.1onday night, trustees of Sad- dleback Communiiy College agreed to table until June 5 action on a motion to abolish mandatory physical education. '" "It students are emancipated at 18 \Vhy should they take physical education 'vhcn they can vote and do other things," asked Backus. physical educi1llon departn1e nL s:ud hi.~ rlivision is ··very opµos<.'d" to doing <l\\'ay \\'ilh the physic al ('dt11:ation requirt'rnent. " ' -· ' BARBARA HAS FELINE GRACE BUT IS A BIT HAMMY She Has Appea ~ed in Several Plays Without Billing El Toro Students Seek Clues in Ancient Tree \Vhen Commodore Robert Stockton and his men rode throug h the hills or~u·hat Is now El Toro an d ~1ission Viejo on !heir \vaY to lake Los Angeles in 1846, the tree was there. \Vhen the land boom came and rail- roads 'vere first built in 1886. the tree was th ere. \Vhen the drought came that killed al- most all the cattle in 1891, the tree was there. But progress. the construCtion or a ~hopping center on El Toro Road. finally took the 140-year-old tree dO\\'O three months ago. Bill Gard ner and !he students In his fourth grade at Olivewood E\ementary School in El Toro saved an almost three. foot hi gh stump of the once-to\\1erlng F:uc;:a lyptus tree and brought it ta_ the school. _ They hope that through study or the tree's rings. they can learn some of the h istor~ it Jived through. _.._ 'They are having som<' trouble '''Ith t h~ sanding-down operations. - 1'\ten though the nine-year--0lds have electric sanding equipment. the top of the stump is still a lit lle rough forlhe young muscles to "'Ork do"·n, Gardner said. · They want to get it perfectly sanded, varnish it and then pl ot with dated mark. er.s on th e rings, how big the ttce was at certain points in El Toro's history. "If somebody coul d come smooth off this lop in a profess ional way, \\'e'd ap- preciate it," Gardner said. An amature dendocrinologist. a tree- ring expert, told Gardner he thought the • • t~ was 14-0 years old. Normally trees grow one tree rirtf in wid.th each year, Gardner explained, but in Southern Cal· irornia trees might sometimes grow three a year, because of longer growing sea- sons. _ Another of the students ' laments is that the tree continues to crack despite repeated applications of wood filler. That '"'as a problem early El Toro settlers also encountered. After growing groves of blue gum Eucalyptus, intend· ing to use it for rurniture and railroad ties. they found it cracked too much, Gardner explained. The early residents ended up using the trees mainly for sha de. . The students at Olivewood, have al s() tiad to piit their tree stu mp to a second· ary use, at Jeast u'ntil the laminating job is _done.:-:' Student Council Sco1·es Officers WALLA WALLA, Wash. (AP) -The Student Congress of \Vhitman College has voted to censure four st udent body of· ficers \l:ho las t week demanded that President· Nixon return a football jersey presented to him by the school's !ootball team in September. ·The censure motion, which cited the of- fi cers !or "gross misrepresentation of the student body in a knowing and secretiVe manner:·· was approved by a 16-5 vote. A co mmitteC of board members Patrick Backus of Dana Point and John Lund of Laguna Beach was .appointed t() "·ork with the ph ysica l education depart- ment and. the administrative staff in formulating a recommendation on the physical education progr am. The motion to table the iterri follo\li·ed a motion by Backus to abolish 1nandatory physical education for students 18 and older. Bac kus argued that 18-year--0tds are now adulls due to passage af re.cent legislation and should not be required to take physical education. Trustee. Hans Vogel or Tustin said to retain the physical education requiremenl until a student is 21 would be ··~,bsolutely arbitrary:· Th e ~ge of 21, added Vogel. is a .. meaningless figure." '·Everything "'e do is arbitrary.'" resrsonded trustee li.1ichael Collins of A1ission Viejo. "We ha ve to rocus on th e point of \vhether '>Ve think physical educa· tion has an in1portant role in our cur· riculum. Talking alxlut arbitrary stan- dards is not focusin g on the issue. '·A student doesn't have to go to .school here. I think rigor or the mind and the body is important,'' added Collins . Closed Session Testimonri . . -€aHed for · by Jou~isJs: LONG BEACH (AP\ ...: The Sigma Delta Ch i regional convention has passed a resolution calling on a San Bernardino County judge to release testimony taken in closed seasion in the prostitution case. The Region ll chapter of the pro- fessional journalistic society passed the resolution at a banquet here. The resolution calls on Judge Don A. Turner o( San Bernard ino County Superior Court to release testimony taken a week ago Mooday~ in the prostitutioo case of William Northrup. The resolution said "this is a denial Of a public tria·l in terms or the public's right to know .11 Northrup was arrested by sheriffs deputies in San Bffnan:lino 1ast fall and charged with prostitution. The defense has contended in the trial, wh ich is in erogress, that the arreSt jn- volved entraf>ment-because the house of prostitution was operating with the f'ull knowledge and consent of the sheir(f's in- telligence division. Testimony of sheriff's offjcials bro~ht out that the house was being used for an information-gathering function against various city offic ialsp The closed session last week heard testimony from an unknown lawyer sub- poenaed by the prosecution. The request for . the closed session came from the defense and was approved by Judge Turner over objections o( the district at- torney's office. Judge Turner told a reporter for the San Bernardino Sun-Telegram that he wanted to protect the attomey's.-reputa- tion. The newspaper has requested the transcript and tha t requ est is pending. The lnland Professional Chapter 0£ Sigma Delta Chin, representing San Bernardino and Riverside counties, pass· ed a similar resolution Wednesday. "The education of 11.1~ body in rl'laxing- is itnportant to the df've\op1nf'11t of tile 1JJ.ind." arg~f'd llar1111an. "1'he pt•rson \Vho \vould C"hose not to takl' physicill education is usuall y 1he one 1\•ho nerds it the most." · The physical «111cation d i v i s i o 11 Hartman added, is intl'rested in dt'\'t•loµ- ing skills th;1l (X'rsons n11iht use lu1~ ex- ercise l<i ter un 111 IHe. 1-lart man prcsrn!ed trustees \l'ilh a brier report outlininj.! his dt'partrnen\'s feelings on mandatory physieal education and asked trustC('S to delay action on Backus' mollon unlil !hey had rend the study. R1\.\lU~A (i\!'1 -A poultry flock here is str ie krn \1·1t h Ne1vca stle 's diseast, n1 arking the t1r~t ron fir1ned case of the illnC'ss in Sa n 1)1r1io Count~~. a spoke s1nan for the slate Bureau of Animal lleallh said i\1ondn\'. 'l'he con1.1nt>rcial flock \1°ill be ex· tcrniinated :ind an in\'estigation con· Uoctecl Ill delt'r1nine th€' source of the in· letllon. thl' spokes1nan said. The flock hart l>er n vaccinated ni::a in~I the disea se hut \\•as stricken before buildi n~ up im- rnuni!y. he sa id. In rl'rrnt \\'el'ks mort> than ll\•o 1nillion infec ted birds in Southern Cal!furnia ha ve been killed in an effort to eradicate' the 1·ontagious disease. "As n( todav, 41.966.000 poultry and other bird~ in t igiit counties. including 10.2511.000 in San Diego C.olfnt y. hnve been varcina.ted :is a prn- lertion Rg:i in.~t thr d1sl'11sr." 1h1· spokesn1nn said. Vogel. ('vr1lihough he volf'd in f:1vor of tilbli ng the it em. s:1itl it would be "just ;1 matter or lime"' hcft1re court easl'S aris1· 3round the physical education re· quirement. The courts, contrndcd Vogel, Clot/•ecl Bo'dies "·ill rule against the requirements. ~ Backus sa id he v.·ould like to see the physical ~•doc•tioos-deµ"''"""'-''•el l -.,p_h.f•-n...-4:1..b~en" :---. their program" to !he st ud ent s by or-\.JU, " DC U t'lL • ~ rering courses i11 sailing. surfboardin {! and scuba diving. "These are the kinds of thing~ pe<iplc \\•ill use later in life," said Backus. Hartma1l said proposals for such courses were stalled because or facility and fin ancial problems. "I've neve r seen any of those proposals come before the board and I've been here since the college was formed." Backu s commented. Man Da1~ccs in Aisle Nude a t 30,000 Feet . ' LOS .ANGELES (UPI t -A young man emerged !rom a rest room aboard an American Airlines jet on fl ight from Boston and pranced nude. up and down the aisl~ 10 minutes before !he plane landed at Los Angeles International Airport. Pi\LO /\I.TO (UPI i Sheriff's depuli\_S chasing burglilrs from a hclicoprcr \Ve.re grf'Cled 1\·irh 11 n "obscenl';, • student body displ:iy at Ravenswood lligh School. The helicopter was in pursuit ti.Ionday or three youthful burglary suspects who led to the high school. changed clothes \Yith several !tudenls and mingled with the cro'"'d. \Vhen the chopper buu:etl overhead, groups of students dropped to the ground and used their bod ies to form several "\vell kno\\'n obscenities," a deputy !laid. 1'he suspects escaped. Wallace Aide Dies CUT·N·SllOOT, Tex. (AP J -H. W. Matthews, 67. chlinnan of George Wallace'! American party In Texas, dJfd Monday. Matthews became cbairman of the state party in 1969, after reUrement from the }fumble Oif Co. CONTINE-NTAL·S ... ··--- wifh the ••• ''Golden Toucli'' MARl{IV Lt-Dr. SEDAN • • • _) ' I I ' I I I • ' ' . ' -2-Dr. COUPE . ~- • ... _ • -• OAILY PllOT Sllff PIMlt IT'S GOT HISTORY BUT IT"S A TOUGH OLD BIRD Tony San Mfgu1I, Christ in• Dor kin Work on Stump ··--------"'··---·-"---:.-,.._._._.,;.._ .') .. ~ .. -----·---..._ .... ....__..._ __ ,. We have an outstanding selection of these fine car's! • Home Of The New Car .•• "Golden To11cll" "Orangt County's Family of Fine Cars" ohnson & son LINCOLN Ml 11LlJHY ( ,\pr~I 2826 HARB0,11LVD .• COSTA MESA •. 540.5630 llomo Of The New Car .•• "Golde n '{ouch" -• OAILY PILOT Hoover Death End of a11 Era· RECALLING THE FBI : Years ago lA·hen Orange cfunty was still mostly citrus groves, the Federal Bureau of Investigation dispatched one of its agents to our region to uphold the U.S. arm £If the Jaw in these parts. His name 'va s Edward J. Kirb~. Kir-Oy wa s a trained and efficient federal agent, a holder of a degree in lav• and all the things that the late J. Edgar 11oover wanted in his G·Men. Today, Kirby h~s gone on to take over the task · as director of California's Department or Alcoholic Beverage Control. In those earlier days. however, when he v.•es FBI-Agent-In-Charge for Orange County, he often operated out of the Orange County Sheriff's Office where my late father worked as an arm of local law enforcement. KIRBY AND DAD became good fr iends, although a~mittedly there was ·certain professional rivalry and no little kiddin~. Kirby would jibe at Dad being a "hick counly lawman" and Dad would ·in turn ! .. ~. ·' -. ~. ' , .. Aslronaut Charles Duke stands beside lunar rover near Stone itoun- tain durin&_ recent excursion on moon's surface. His comrade in spa~e, John Young, took photo. Scientists say Apollo 16 rocks appear dtf· rerent from any brought back previously. J.udge Nullifies Boyle'~ • ' • ··Eord,_GlVI ~Q Hotc Sea.t· 2 Firms Indicted on Fleet' Price Charge DETROIT (AP) -Officials of General Motors aad Foid Motor Co. ·deny charges In a federal Indictment accusing them or fixing prices on automobile flfet sales. A federal grand jury, concluding an 18- month investigation, contended Monday th;.·~ "pri ces of automobiles in the flee~ m8rket have been raised, fixed and maintained at artificial a n d non- competitive levels." It was charged the two auto giants with conspiring to to fix prices and with at· tempting to mainlain a monopoly in the A!.ltomoblle fleet sales market The "accusations in the indictment are not true," Ford f\·lotor claimed . Tbe charges have "no basis in fact," sa id GM. The National Autoniobile Dealers Association and the nation's largest auto- leasing company, Peterson, Howtll & Heather • Inc., were named a s co-conspirators, but were not indicted. Both GM and Ford face $SO,OOO fines on each count. The charges were filed with a 12-page companion 'civil suit in U.S. District Court in Detroit. py the antitrust division of the Justice Department. The fleet car market consists of letrge- volume automobile purchases. lt ac- counted for about 12 perc.ent of the new cars registered in the United States in 1969. About one million autos -valued at approximately $2.5 billion -were sold or leased that year in the fleet market. According to the indictment, Gl\f and Ford now account for about 75 percent of ttlat market.. The civil suit asks for a pe rmanent in- junction against any cohtinuation or renewal of activities lo eliminate fleet market competition. The government claims the alle~ed conspiracy ended the period of price competition that had existed in the fl eel market among. primarily, Ford, Gl\1. and the Chrysler COrp. Accord ing to U.S. Atty. Ralph Gu y. the alleged illegal actions stemmed from a 1962 Chrysler mov~ granting price con- cessions to fleet market customers. At thaf time, Chrysler had about 4 percent of the fleet market while Ford and GM • . had about 92 pe rcent. F'ord and Gl\I follo\ved s-.il . and the th ree giants !ilruggled for years, he ad- ded. In 1968, the Indictment charges, bot ll 1;-ord and G~f "subst antia lly increased'' 1.'.0ncess ions. and In b01ne cases sold cars .. at or bt>Juw th e t.'Ost of thei r manufac4 lure.'' In f\.1ay 1970. the indictment continues, G~I and Ford eli111inated the concesslons but allegedly told competitors they would '"retalia te" if other fi rms granted con· cessions in ·an att em pt lo ge l {l bigger slice of the muJtibillion-dollar-a-year pie . Re-election by Miners Humphrey Seeks . ·i . ~.lit , •. TOPS REPORTERS Jack Ander10n UPI Ttltta!llJtt CARTOON WINNER J!ffrey McNelfy refer_ to the FBI· as _the .".f..utlle Burea!! or \VASHINGTON (UPS.) -Citing a •;tide eharges brought by the. u.s. ~bor Double Victory I ."' 4 ___ ~ ~;0~~j~\:fK'-~~'c!s:'l &~i;~ft;---o·r-eV'fdtl\CC t oo SlrO-ng '10 · ·resis1: a St!emed slow to make arrests. Dad federal judge has nullified the 1969 claimed they always had enough evid· reelection of W. A. "Tony" Boyle as ence to convict the stispect se~en times United Mine \Vorke rs president. ~:i':a;,~ ·;~~z:~;·:;;"~~;~~n 'Miilwest Vote against the tide of evidence too strong to · res ist." By United Press International Yablonski, his wife and daughter. were Pulitzer Ho;uJr SS-wept --· - over perore they'd move out to nab the us o ·strict Jud \v ·1ram B. Bryant culprit. But you could be assur::ed when · · 1 . ge 1 1 • they nabbed one, he almost always stiyed made the ruling Monday. J1e said the nabbed. union showed "little regard" for a K.idding aside, when it came to the stipulation that the voting be held by business of Jaw enforcement. local or-secret ballot · ficers could.always count on the FBI and · the FBJ coilld count on them. Thal was Bryant also found that Boyle forces the kind of organization J . Edgar Hoover conducted campaigning in polling areas, built. interfered with observers for defeated WE HAVE SEEN the kind of men that Hoover drew around him right here in our own region. State Senator Dennis Carpenter \\'as one. So was the fi ne ~l­ torney and friend or mine, the late Tom tleffernan. So now the mfjn who founded the modern FBI is dead at age. 77. The man who early in his career iii 1917 started signing his name "J. Edg"ar" rather than "John E." Simply to avoid confusion with another Justice Dep'ilrtrnent employe. J. Edgar Hoover was steeped in con- troyers~ right up until the day he died \vhen columnist Jack Anderson accu sed candidate Joseph A. "Jock" Yablonski, and used the un ion 's newspaper to push !h~ Boyle candidacy. • To accept the union 's defense against Leaders Stifle Riot in Belfast By Protestants the FBI or preparing secret memos for BELFAST. Northern Ireland (UP I) - President Johnson on the love lives of Protestant yout hs have stoned Army certain public figures . troops and set a store ablaze but older CLEARLY , HOOVER hated Com-members of the extremist Protestant munists, crlminals ("rats" he called Vanguard movement inter\'ene'd lo pre· I.hem ), radicals, rabble-rousers and spies. v.ent a sixth consecutive night or all-out As fo r social justice, he once suggested. rioting. •·I am sure that if more emphasis were · Earlier l\.1onday. the first mu ltiple placed on the gospel of salvation ~nd less ~mbing in Northern Ireland's three on social justlce.J the latter would become •rs or secular violence killed one a greater reality ... '' worker and injured 15 otherS. six of them Hoover and his FBI have drawn much seriously, in a chain of eight blasts at a criticism in recent years. Perhaps synthetic fibers factory in Carrickfergus. murd ered in their Chtrksville, Pi .. home Challenged from tht right and the left, less than a mOnth afler the December. Hubert H. Humphrey today is going after 1969, election .• One defendant in the an unprece?ented double victory in the murder case, Mrs. Paul Gilly, has im· presidential primaries against George S. plicated Boyle in conn~ction with the slayings , in her confession. Boyle has McGovern in Ohio and George C. \Vallace denied the allegations, and he has not in lndiana. been charged. Going one-on-one against two major op- Federal labor laws require the union to ponents in the bellwether l\fidwest immediately start preparations for a new primaries, Humphrey was given an even vote, even while an appeal is being made. shot at beating Wallace in Jndiana and The decision also affected the re-elec· was rated the favorite to beat McGovern lions of lhe union's vice president, in Ohio, despite a late surge by the George J. Titler ; and See re tar Y· surprising South Dakota senator. Treasurer John Owens. Victory in both states would give Vablonski 's son, Kenneth, iaid al llumphrey , who returned to the Senate "Pittsburgh that he was "more convinced after losing the 1961 presidential election , lhan ever before ·that my father was a major, possibly decisive boost, in his murdered because the leadership of the erforts to capture the Democratic United Mine Workers knew that the elec-presidentia l nomination and another run lion \11ould be set aside and that in the se-at President Nixon this fall . • cond election they would be defe~ted by Humphrey claimed that a loss to rny father." \Vallact in Indiana would be no more The younger Yablonski , said he ex· than a "blister" on his campaign. peeled the f\1iners for Democracy A win by :f\.1cGovern in Ohio, however, (MFD), an insurgent group in the.190,000-\'lould be a major upset that could pro· member union. to meet soon to pick vide the South Dakota senator the candidates to oppose any slate put up by momentum he needs as the primaries the union's international leadership. head west; and could leave Huphrey"s Earlier this year Boyle was convicted candidacy seriously wounded. of 14 counts of conspiracy and illegally The Ohio and Jndiana primaries far channeling $50,000 of union money inlo overshadowed· two others being held to- political campaigns. He faces up to 32 day in Alabama and the District of years in jail and $120,000 in fines. Columbia. ' ·By·Andetson, NY Times NE\V YORK (AP) -The Ne\\' York friend of the late firs! lady, Eleanor Tilnes ha s won the 1972 Pullizer Prize for Roosevelt. meritorious public service lor its publica-The generat nonfiction prize ""ent to tion ·or the Pentagon papers, the 47-••stihvell and the American Experience in volume. s.ludy of ho\'I the United States China. 19\l·l!HS... by Barbara ,V. beco111e involved in the Vietnam "'ar. Tuchn1an. her se~ond a\\•ard in the Th t. 1 · d t 1 k -category. She \\'Oil in 1963 for '"The Guns e na 1ona reportin g a war wen o of August. .. -· · srndi~ated columnist {a~k An_dersonr~or For the fi~t time since 1968, there was his ?1sclos~re of ad~in1str~tion po 1 Y· no Pulitzer ai\•ard for dr ama this year. making during the India-Pakistan war. as . . the trustees of Columbia University an-A. ri1. H.osenth.al. 1nan~gu.1.g 7 editor of nounced the annual prizes tvlonday . the ~e1'I Yor k .. T1mes., s_aid \\e are at! But the trustees, in an apparently un· parlt~ularly proud of Neil Sheehan fo~ the precedented action. issued a 5tatement in te~a.c1ty. knowl~dge and . professional which they expressed "deep reservation s . ab1l1ty that contributed so P.1vol~11ly to the about the timeliness and suitability of 1"1hole Penta gon Paper project. certain of the journalism awards. Other journa lism a\\'ards were : They did not specify which awards they Horst Faas and l\lic hael Lau rent of The reftrred to. but the Times said today it Associated Press. spot news photography. had learned that the co11troversy involved fo r their pictures of Bangladesh soldiers the awards to the Times and Anderson exec uting turncoa ts after the Jndian- because of the way in which official Pak sitan \\'ar. government documents had fallen into . Dave Kennerl\' or United Presw journalistic hands. lnternatio nal ";on the re a tu r e The a\vard for editor ial ca~tooning photogra ph~ all'ard for his Vietnam wai went to Jeffrey K. McNeily, R1.chmond portfolio. Va., News Leader, for a portfolio of· IO p t R K 1 th \V tt SI I -cartoons. \ . , e er . ann. o ~ a r~e (Anderson's colun1n ·a~ars regularly J ournal, ,~·on the mternall onal re_portmg on the editorial page or the -DAILY aw~rd for: combat coverage during the PILOT. ?.IacNelly 's cartoons appear .Sun-. ln~1.a-pak1stan \'lar. A h h 0 p .. ' 0 ,. t 0 " r. • h p <. n c ·\' 0 r l' h of p ---~ Ii th t' w w th d ' l-'l fo r c " to to G lo history. ho1'lever. will put the man and an all-Protestant town eight miles north ___ his bureau in better context _ in__ of Belf~ -·· ~ · -- DiSci r11iame1it Ta1ks =Cet Boi>st Ohio presents the first direct con- frontation 'between McGovern a n d 'Humphrey, both naUves of South Dakota and U.S. 1'enators from the Midwest, and now considered the principal challengers ror-the Oemocratic:;:presidential nomina· tion. day's on the PILOT 's editorial pages.) Richard Cooper and John r..ta£hacek . of In the awards .lor-letter.s;-the:-trusttt!-Lbe_Rochesler ..... ..Ji. Y.:!t Ti1n~s-Union, t®k-•---- gave the fiction prize to "Angle of the general local repor!ing prize for their -E remembering the l930s era or gangland "The whole idea or the attack was to crime tn America. kill or maim maximum casualties " an IT WAS IN THOSE years that Public Enern,Y Number J. John Dillinger, slayer or at least 10 persons, was trapped and. gunned down by FBI agents. And th e FBI also. eliminated such public enemies as George "Bab.v Face.. Nelson. Charles "'Pretty Boy" Floyd, f\1a and Fred Rarker. Alvin Karpis and George ''f\1a chine Gun" Kelly. ' ' Army spokesman said after the ex-' WASHINGTON (UPI) -'l'he United States and the Soviet Union have set in motion a new round of talks on limiting the size of their nuclear arsenals, one \'lhich 1he \Vhite House. said could "lead to an agreement \Vhich is mutually ac- ceptable to both sides". · ~fachine Gun Kell ..... In !act. gave FBI agents their nickname u·hen cornered in his Memphis hid eout;""l\elly pleaded, ''Don't shoot. -G-Ma tl .. :· And so J . Edgar Hoover. the man who headed the FBI at the pleasure of eight presi dents , is dead. Jt is clearly the end of an era. plosions at the British-owned Courtaul<ls rayon fa ctory. "Whoever left the bomb:i ' knew exactly wha1 they were doing.'' A police spokesman said East Belfast appeared headed for another explosive night until the Vanguard intervention. Twenty rioters and 14 pol icemen have been injured in five prel'iOUS nights or trouble in the area. The spokesman said youthful .. Tarllln·· gangs -so ca.tted because of the Tartan scarves and slacks ttiey Wear -stoned ~ AnnY and police vehicles, then headed for the city's small Sho~strand District, a Roman Catholic enclave sijrrounded by Protestant neighborh~. There \'lere indications that · the ne1v phase of discussions u·ould include for the ' fir'tt time some limits on submarine-bas- ed miss iles. a subject the Soviets ha ve been reluctant to discuss. The \Vhite House al so indicated Presi· dent Nixon would engage in direct talks wiht the Soviet leaders when he goes to Moscow later this month, if the negotiators meeting in Finland have not hammered out something by then. Spring · Storm #Slacks Off But Wind, Heavy Sno·ivs 'Caiise<J, Damage, .ii'l?_!!'!,ins '.l'empe1·n1.11re1 Hl•ll l tw l"rtt. At1M11y, ••In .All•l\1•~1 -IUrrnl119Mm, t loudt llMIOll, r1l11 11. )' .ll 8utt•l9, tl0o;d¥ " " ' ff • " .. " .Ol " C hi 11tt tori, (111 r CMrtett1, Clou>d'f Cl.tt .. o. t lO\ldv - Ci!'tl-11, Cl&lldy M " " " " SJ ,M '° ,13 Clt....,otfld, <1111191 • I• 61 Ofil .... r. C"lftr 41 14 0., MolMI, 00\ldY •• ~· Ottrllllt, tit•• 1• .s• Oulufll, r1l11 •• 31 M~tofl, rt l!I 11 6.1 ll'ld/IMPGlll, clt l f " 51 IC•llN• City, tit•• ti $1 I.ff VfoO' .. Clttf 11 j5 ·'' " • " . ·" L'"'' •oc-, c1011C1., .!.!!-i"~''-i"r-f(.!S~:tJ~ -l"eilitVOlt, d(M;IC!y ,. Ml1mr. cttlf I I 11) Mllwau1<H. clOlldY ,, ., ·" N11111'h-1t. "•Ill, r al11~ u ~ ,, .... °' ...... ttovll-; " ., Htw v.n:. clollfy "J• • .to • Qlil......,. Cl!\'. <Mer 19 41 °"'*-doWY Jt •1 '-'"' ,.,,,... dMr lGt 11 """1Mtt...... dMY 11 .. ·" l#'t wt Ahl t tOIOC .UI • ~. cWt' '1 " "1~t..., '., .... ......... Ott •• ,,_,. 11 .. . .. (] .s. s ......... ..., ·~ ~ 11 ,. .. !-,..,.,.. ttOl'tPI tfltl swn ! ~rl!IJ,.,.. s~ .. clt:tr .-;';'. --:";;--"~'--........ , ..ia1rrt tltc1<~!l,. 111..- Stll ~ dMfo ~:;":,Jl~·w ft'"'""' I s... ..,._ttc:• clrt•r n ..tl ·~ ,.._,"-• ,, w tt ,,.,," Sa""-dM'i "1 ~ w._.. ctecQll .t f! .... 11.., •~ '>GI" tW..,.,,...IWI. ~ • ' CMS !hf r1ll)t cfl .r IN'ld ... 1• lt••!4 ~..,, s.o .. t11•1. .. '":A'" .Oll!tt"l. ~I di,• ne lifr• ••..,•tftl " tltoet 1\u' So\111'1 D••,1•, IMlf 1111 "'"., ;., urin "'' •..0-1... . To ltlf tttl •M twlll ot lftt ,,_..,., ........... ''"' ft!I ... 11,. ~·111' • ,,. ..... In other: primaries. their finishes '"ere clouded by the presence of Main's Sen. Ed'htund S. Mus·kie and Wallace. but Muskie has pulled out of the primaries althoUjh hls name is on the-ballot and \Vallace decided not to makl a stand in the state. With the backing of organized labor and a la rge black population. Humphrey v:as considered a solid favorite to win his- second straight primary. He substantially beat the field in Pennsylvania April 25. But a week-long blitz by l\1cGov ern bas closed the gap. Wicks -' •• "'"IG 'l ran into Hubert HumP/Jrrt today!' • Repose,'' by Wallace E. Stegner, a pro-cov.erage of the bloody riot at New York 's fessor of English afid director of the Attica State Prison last September. writing program at Stanford U_niversity. For editorial writing. the award went Joseph P. La sh received the prize for to John Storhmeyer of the B$thlehem, distinguished biography for his best-sell~ -pr, Globe-Times, for· an editorial cim. ing "Eleanor and Franklin." He was a paign to reduce racial tensions. ' llprooted lJy Reds A yo un g boy and baby bro ther wa it with o lh~r refugees to troS! river by sampan and escape to Danang along H~gb way I. More than 10-0,000 persons ha ve fled Quang•Trl. • . I fe "' t m s h .m t .-- ... , OAIL V PILOT ,_, ·-- Pa1•ts M,.de Paablic ---- Com1ni~tee Oka ys . LAS VEGAS Revi se We1to11w• Me ... '91-WtttfJ l&rtnl - -f-+.ua.ttuu •-• ~•-1.tziJJlut.....___.__ ltU-a -1.,....--I S1•1~w1l lleltl, tlftts tkiH 1114 Ri.ltft ~.,, I On Davis Djary SAN JOSE · I AP) -Passages rron1 Angela Davis' hotly contested diary ha\'e been disclosed to the public but a }ud~e has not yet decided v.•hether jurors •will hear the black Communist's declaration of \O\'e for George Jackson. In excerpts of the diary. revealed dur· ing a secret chambers session ma~c public ti.1onday. ti.1iss Da vis said she wa~ ··madly in love" 14'ilh Jackson and could see herself h~aring down the steel doors of his jail cell to free him. Prosecutor Albert Harris Jr. considers lhe jtidge's ruling crucial -to the slate's case· a·g·ainst Miss Da vis. He said during the chambers conference that if the jury is not permitted to hear an edited"version of the diary "we might as \veil all pack up and go home." The stale contends f\.liss D a v i s rurnished four guns and helped engineer an abortive escape atternpt at the l\1arin County Civic Center on Aug . 7. 1970 hl\cause she was driven by uncont rolled passion to rree Jackson. Four died in the,. escape try. Harris said the di ary "may convince the jury that filiss Davis ha d a state of mind by "'hich she "'ould undertake a tons piracy, and she "·ould undertake .\•iolent means to bring about the rreedom of George Jackson." door fighting my \vay to you. ripping do11·n your cell door and letting you go free. I feel as you do, so terrible is th is Jovt,'' she v.Tole. Someti mli"s passionately, sometimes futilelv and sometimes co Id I y realisiically, ~1iss Davis ipelled out her lol"e for Jackson. At one point, she said : ··George, I IO\'e you, everything about you ... It 's inco nceiva ble that any black n1 an or woman \\'ho is halfway sane can avoid. after the slightest contact. falling madly i11 love Wit h you. ··sometimes I wonder how t '\ould react if 4fOU told me you loved another \\"Oman as you loved me. It \'tOUld. of course. be painful , but l "·ould oot love you less and \\'OUld not be spiteful. Only if you stopped IO \'ing me.., would I be hopelessly crushed." she sa id . Jurors at f\.1iss Davis' murder-kidnap- conspiracy trial have heard three love letters she wrote to Jackson in the months before the Aug. 7 escape at- tempt. They arc under court order not to · read or listen to news accounts of the trial. }Vh ile a1\•aiting the judge's decision. I . " Pot Backers Report Half Of Goal Met SACRAM ENTO 1.•Pl -A whole new Art icle I or the California Constitution. adding an article on diserimin<tllon bv reason of sex. color and creed, 'and dropping one on "the right to fish." has gained 7-0 back- ing or the Assembly Com- mittee on the Judiciary. The propo!ed constitu tional amendment would also require state promotion of "in- tellectual. scientific. n1ora[ and a gr i cu 11 u r a I i1n- provement." The committee voted lo ad- vance the measure ~1ondav. If it rective! two-thirds apprOv;il in both the houses. the con· sti tutional amendme nt pro- posal would-go on the ballot next November. The proposal was prepared by the California Constitution Revision Commission ahd in- troduced by Assemblyman Ken !loJeade {0-0akland ). ·It Would add several SAN FRAJ~C I SCO (AP ) -Backers of a features lo the California ballot initiati ve that "'outd legalize Declaration of Rights, and personal use of ma rijuana say they are \vould also drop some. ha lf way lo their goal of l500 .000 petition Si d t .. by-side compa rison sho\\'S that one new art icle signatures. "'ould stale : "A person may · The California !\1arijuana lnitiati\Pe, the not be disqualified from tn· cantpaign organization ~hind l he tering or pursui ng a business. measure. Monday reported the filing of profession. v o cat i o n , or employment because of sex. 308.000 signatures in all 58 California race. creed , color. nr national counitcs. or ethn ic origin." ('(lurt could releasr ri deft'n- ct:int \l'ho does not unrlrrst:ind recogn1zanc:r." 1111d :i drfcn- dant who dor.s !lot und erstan<'I English \\•ould tw provided with 1:1 free interpreter. On the rights of nont)Jizrn~ to hold prnpcrty, the proposed le11:t would drop thf re- quirement that they be "eligi- ble to become citizens." Another proposed '"arl ic lt savs 'Property O\l'ned beforr 1nii.rriage or acquired during marriage br gift, will. or in- tieritnnce ls separate prop- ertv." Ii also specifies I h a I California r i g h t s arr not dependent . on !ht' U . S . Constitution nnd that a local or special st<t turr· is in\•alid if a general statute t·an be 1nade appliCable· Considerabh• 1vording iiµ· pears to be dropped l ron1 1 he Articlf I no\v in thr Constitu- tion. Dropped completely is Section 25 entillcd "Right to Fish." So are sections on "Ex- cess Conden1nation " a 11 d "Sale s and Hent<t\S o [ Residential Rrat Property." The present arlicle on tl1e liberty of speech and press is reduced to the basic declara lion of those liberties. drnp- ping 11he texl 11,hich dea ls \\•11h tru th as A "defenSC'. And 11·hirh directs 1vhcre libel tr1ills should be held . i BBDVCBD /-~;;;~ l : WIN'l'BB BATBS!l I LAST C~A~Cl t WIHflR lATES IX PIRI MAY 21, lt71 I M1dw11k Spec1•t -Sunday thfoup T.burslay J On Z0-4 Sptc ial Rooms Offefed 1t l1w1st Wiater lltt: I l•sa~.~.•IO!.~. '12~.~ ..... ' Olll ,lRIOIC" J ~llf'll r11 J "'"-' 1 O~f'r 800 Ott.er Ro'oms & S1.1i11s St1r1ir.9 11J2 00 Addltiofll l I I On Fri, Sal, Hohd•)'ll I. Summer S•1son. Add $2.00 I I I I I I HING THIS COUPON TO rRONT DESK WHEN TDU Clf(CK IN I ~~:~;~J.~·~;,~;.r:~~.~:.;~~. : ~--_·: c .... ,., .. ''"'· •• ht• ,, .. , ,. I hill ~., .. , .. _ • I 1 fr11 TV, 11 l'ools, 24-hr. R1stJur1nt. 100% air CHd .... _.., I 1f 'tamlly 1nit1. lankA1n1rlcard, M1sl1r Char1t~ sit The defense contends the diary is ir· relevant since it \\'l !r wr itten nearly a year after the courthouse shootoul . Defense attorney Leo A. Branton said it has nothing to do ·with l-.1iss Davis' "stale of mind or her intent, or her motivation, prior to Aug. 7. 1970.'" f\.-lis s Davis startrd Harris put two Sa n Quentin guards on the witness stantl !\1onda.y. Both testified that Miss Davis accompanied Jackson·s 17- year-old brother. Jonathan. to San Quen- tin Prison Aug. 4 and 5. 1970 -two days bclore the shootout. To qualify for November ballots, the in-Under lhe proposed It'll. a lliati\'e requires 326,504 valid signatures. _____ _c..._.:_ _______________________ , _____________ _ Bolina.s Signs Robert Asbford, state coordinator, said -. the group hopes to fife 300,000 more , 1--u•e...diau' .July 0. 1!!1J-=. tru;_ di!Y o.L.D.tr first fa ce-to-face mcctinl! \\•ith Jarks1 1n ;11 lhe J\la rin County Ja41. Both \t·cr~ prisoner.~ at the tlrnf' and i\lis.:; Dai 1.~ \\TOie of her fir.'>! glin1pse ol Jackson, \\'ho n•as shackled and chained. . V-<1~i~li:-Wlia.t, • s-afeAuard ag?inst up to 45 pe~cent being . signatures during tbe next seven weeks. • A total of 600.UOO signatures woul~ .....__ -1mrn-inv-atid;t\~hfon:t-said:-Most1J'titio ------ She recalled her ''ho t-cold rage \vhrn lhe chains begin to rattle as you slo1\·ly descend the stairs surrounded by that ilrrny or mindless but armed automalon.~. ""I, your 1\·ifr. your con1radc "'ho is :-upposed to lo\·e you: fight \Vilh you. fij!hl for you. l'n1 supposed to rip olf !he <·hains ... but I am helpless. po\\·crless. I contain the rage inside. I do nolhin~. ··As I re-txpt>rience this no1v. my pu!sr bei!IS raster. I bc_gin to hrcathC" harder, and I see myself !caring down !his s1ccl Harry Joe Bro_wn , Director, Dieii LOS ANGELES !APl -Funeral services "'~re planned here today for long-time moti on picture produce r-direc- tor Harry Joe Brown. Brown, a silent film pioneer who latf' became prominent for wester:n movie~ starring Randolph Scott, died Saturday at Pa.lm Springs. He \\'as 81. Among films he produced !'tarring Sc<itt "'ere "r.-tan in the Saddle." "'Han~an 's Knot." "Stranger \\'ore a Gun," and Ten \yanted !\,en."' His main love in 'the film industry was \liesterns. Crash J(iJls _ Cyclist lVo Tourists? SO LI NAS (A P\ -This v.•inds\vept \"i!lage on the Solinas Lagoon would like the rest of the \\'Orld to think it has Oisap- Peared. Road sig ns telli ng motorists '''here Bolinas is hiding and ho1v to get there have disappeared. Dozens or signs have been chopped do\111 during the night. County officials <'rcet nc11· ones and these too are elimi- nated, ··EJiminaled is a kind v.·ord." fretted road superintendent Henry \V. ~1iller. '"\\/hat they do is take a chain 5a\v and hack thcn1 oH." He complained at least 20 signs costing $~Sf>O each ha ve disap- peared in the last half y~ar." ··1 g~ss they-don 't \\•ant anybody lo kno\\' 1rhere it is.·· guessed t.iiller. ··They \1 ant to keep that little place all to themselves." "'The-people in thi s to11"n \V ant to feel it's-a lOWn. nol a tou"rist lrap." declared Dan Deevy Jr., manager of the only groc ery store. "Taking do"·n the signs is one solution. And it works," he said. campaigns sustain a Joss of about a third in invaJid signatures. he added. Ashford announced that Gordon S. Brownell . a former campaign worker for President Nixon and Governor Reaga n. will be joining the CMI staff. "The lack of government credibility of 1narijuana has llelped foster a growing drug abuse problem in America," Brqrnell. 28, told a news conference. ·:The facts regarding marijuana's rela ti ve hannlessness have been known but disregarded fo1' years." he added. Ashford said the petition drive has pic ked up 250,000 signatures in the seven weeks since March 13. Ashford said a statewide confe~nce of county coordiantors to plan the closing drive will be held ~l Cabril\o Community Olllege in Santa Cruz next Sunday. The petitions filed Monday JDCluded 96.000 signatures in Los Angel es County; JJ.000 in fan FranciSco: 22,000 each in Orange and San Diego counties; 30,000 in Alameda: 15.000 in Santa Clara; 13,000 in Sacramento: 10,000 in San Matto and 5.500 in Fresno. I Teacl1er Refused Ge11etics Cour8e On weekends and summer days, thC main street of Bolinas is tramped wllh camera-clicking tourists riding bumper- 1o-bumpcr amid \veathtrbeatcn pastel cottages. ~lomemade si_i?ns point out '·Smiley's." the saloon, "Scowley's." a restaurant. and •·Snarley's, . " a . STANFORD {AP J ,__ Dr. William delicatessan open Sundays only. '-. · _ShockleY has been refused aulhorifY to Solinas is nestled in heavily wooded teach a course at Stanford University on coasta l foothills. about 2LmJk_s.._no~t.h-~-research m_ethods i11v0Jve<t in his theory Sin ~.f.rancisc~'s -Ooldtl'l\1ate and just that blacks are less intellijenl "f_fiin south ollhilaY Where Sir Francis D~ke v.1hites. RIVERSIDE (AP) -A 23-year-old crashed his "Golden Hind " in 1579 artCr -A special faculty committee had ._-Encinitas man ha s died t f:._injurie11-iuf--= hnnissedi.ht~Gi:i!Clen Gate inlieavy"fog:-:-=~e:commelR:led"""'d-to.,,,.~~t-Shockley~ - fered when a Pickup truck struck his -Residents include retired folks· and allowed to teach a graduate.courle_jn.the motorcycle at Lake Elsinore, where some young families who like the quiet and the su~ect for one quarter without credit. 150]10-persons flocked last weekend for nca r15:v-=sea. Jn shOrt, Bolinas ii isolated . -Lincoln E, Moses, dean or graduate n1otorcycle races. but fso late"l1-in picturesque territory just studies, said Monday he vetoed the Sheriff's deputies said Robert L. perfect for a Sunda y drive. course because of doubts about Shields died at a hospital here lifonday or "\Ve close on Sundays beca use of the Shockley's objectivity and· expertise in head injuries. The truck driver hit his lourists." says Deevy. "They dirty thf genetics. Shockley shared the 1951 Nobel .motorcycle from behind at an in· place up and they only buy potato chips Prize in physics as 1 coinventor of the tersection and fled, officers said. and little things." transistor. , . -I $1.2 Million Allegedly ' ..-----_,___ --- Spent Against Ecology CUSTOM TAILORS t. SHllTMAICEIS IN ORANGE COUNTY 'P.MANINT IHOW•OOM • Fiberglass belts o9er 2 polyester •Computer designed, 7-rib tread. • One of a wide selection of Ailas Tires !or every car need and every p:x:ket book. • rormed to find out how much lobbyists spent on e a c h h1wmaker, the C n as I a I Alliance said. SACRAMENTO IAPt -An Informal coalition of 34 lob· byists ~pint nearl y $1.2 n1illion Ja~t year trying to dcfe:it rn- vironment bills. ~a~·s the C31ifornia Coastal Alliance. The Coastal Alliance, \\'hich ANCIENT BONE FOUND: aay~ it.I represents over 100 LONDON \AP -A bone ' '•"M-·"·•"•'""',-,,~,.= .. M,,,..,,.,,,-,.. SPRING SAU 2 SUITS $135 M•y l thrv 1 c• 1.111. tt t '·"'·> DOUlll KNIT SAYI UP TO JK 1,ICIAl ,lKI l eg. NOW o..~1. k•ll .... 5t } 11• $Ilk M•heif ••••• II •I Ctr1h-•• ••••••• ti st 5~Dr>•r.:i ....... I} •2 l!l>W ••••••• 11 It Shhfl .••.•.•.•. 10 • • ~· ..... .,. ' 1.1, 700CI FINllT IM,OIT'I WOOLINS f. OOUllf llUU •~ If•~• 1•11•tff C11tt1m 1111• 5.;,,_ s .... 11-. si ...... ih'•"· • WI rlT ANT Siii • ANT STTLI C0,.119 • fll.11 ALTP.AflONS • I.I.ST ,.ATMINTS -......... , moo ...... .. ' 10.t cpnservation groups, including beli eved that of a 200,000-year-ffie.. Sierra Club, is chief 1 old straight-tusked elephant , ... .-...,,.i_ .. 11 Y••hl . ....._ tJJ-e2 11 ., ,., ..... , •• ha' ~.n found on an Englt.,h 101:1 MICNUSON-SUITI IO~IWPOlf llACH '~n"'r or br.lls that would ~ 1 , 1 ,.,... JV • 10~ ... ,1 .. o. •• ,. C•. ,-1,.,.n-"-..,.,_,.. 1~~.., ......,.,,~.., t • . tighten controls over develop--~ea~s~t ~c~oa~s~t~b<~a:c~h~. ___ ..;:::Jiiii;iiiiiiil;iiiiim:i:l=:;;;.;.l:ii:i;;illl;;;;llll:i:l==iiii•tl ment along Calirornia's 1,087- mile C{lastline. tn a statement ?\londay, the Coastal Alliance said its • estimate of e1pendJturcs of ~.-oppoitt11nr·1obhj1st••"'' b1sed on JVeragts of all their eipense! ind apporlieRment , 11:ccording to public records . But 11: comm itte e \\'ill be • LET'S BE FRIENDl Y 7 of the·m~ ~-· convenient Banks in Orange County are called lt you h•"'" ""''" 111·lt::hbo~ nyf)I" 111ovttnr-H-1i-::"1 to our a ttt., fllca~e h •ll us First a 10 ·Bank a ao thilt "'e m1y ~xtPnd I -trfcndty """lromt '""' hf'1p them to bc:!comr aCQu!'lnted In their nt:W turroul'ldlng1. So. Coast Y'ISitor 4M57t 4M-U61 ltDr Y'ISitar 64MU4 O ~ OlltANQIE" COUNTY ., ___ ,, • • cord body plies. •Wide tread tire concave molded !or better road contact and addi- tional mileage. • Chevron Dealers · Standard Statioos • 0&1111 === • ~ ' ' • ' ... DARY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE . ' -------- 1 ' j t ( ' I I I •• • ' ' • The Danger or Overkill Proposition 9 -the 1'Environment Initiative." on the June 6 primary ballot -has far more flaw s than assets. Most Californian~ who have given it thoughtful study conclude that it is a serious tflreat to the state's entire economy,v nd \vouJd hurt the environment more than It helps. ' Ironically, there .is so much power· behind the move- ment to de.feat Prop. 9 that it Just might benefit from overkill. Prop. 9 is exactly the kind of action President Nixon had in mind when he warned against seeking "ecologi· cal perfection at the· ~o'St of bankrupting the very tax · paying enterprises which pay for the social advance the nation seeks." (See Editorial Research belo·w.) More specifically, Prop. 9, if passed, would impose so many restrictions in the name of improving the en· vironment that transportation would be crippled, the food su pply would be endangered and power shortages would be almost certain. With these reactions, thousands of jobs wcittld be at stake. But enough big guns are lined up against Prop. 9 tO make many voters seriously wonder why such power· ful groups are spending so much. Leading· contributors to the campaign fund to de· feat Prop. 9 include most of the state's gas and electric companies, some major banking institutions, companies working in the atomic power field and a few oil com- panies. Organized labor also is opposing the proposi tion. The organizations opposing Prop. 9 have raised nearly $850,000 so Car. The group backing it reports receipts of $172,000. · . There is nothing legally or intrinsically wrong about this. Large companies have as much right to defend themselves from external political threat to their exis· tance-orwell being as the local shop owner does to de· fend his business·irom unfair or ill-considered city coun· cil actions. But the chief worry among those who have exam· !ned the content of Prop. 9 and found it badly flawed is that too much high-powered opposition could back· fire and bring about a strong "underdog'' vote. As Dr. Thomas H. Jukes of the UC-Berkeley Division (If Medical Physics, an expert in pesticides and a $ierra Clu b member, has said, "lf. this half-baked initiative passes, the resultant backlash will set back the legitimate causes of environmentalism and conservation for at least a decade." IJ?voluntarily Retired County Supervisor David Baker (who is celebrating 20 years as an Orange Coun ty employe) apparently thought for a while last week he'd like to take on the additional job of news editor. The supervisor suggested that he and his fella~'( supervisors vo~e to Censure . TV and the p~e~s for their failure to report the war and related act1v1t1es the v.•ay Supervisor Baker thinks they should be reported. Supervisor William Phillips signed on as Baker's "associate editor" with a supporting vote. Cooler and. at least for that moment , \\•iser heads prevailed, and Supervisors Baker an~ .Ph.illips w~re in· voluntarily retired from the ne\\'S ed1t1ng profession by a 3·2 vote. We are tempted to suggest that Supervisor Baker ""'-.. \Vas short-sighted on at least two counts. In the first place, Vice President Spiro Agne\v al- ready has squatter's rights to the _job as th~ nation'.s ne\VS·editor-without-portfolio. And since the Vice Prest· dent has almost nothing else to do, that may be all right. He presumably has plenty of time to read and watch the tube during his working day. But Supervisor Baker and Siipervisor Phtllips have a good deal of 'vork that needs doing as county super· visors -more than enough to keep them busy seven days a week, judging from the uncertain state of county affairs. \ ' fl< '<;:; ~.;."""- 11Hf lOOK5 LI KE IHf ON£ WHO WA5N'f ~UN OVER 8Y THE 5Gl00L 8U).' ---Political Center ls His Probletti ---· ---·,.----~ -·-;--·---: -Navy-F-ails - 111 Sewag e -What· ·Is -N eed-e·d · McGovern Faces Dilemma To Save Nation WASHINGTON -Tecbnically speak· Ing, George S. McGovern, the peace can- didate, is now considered the front-runner for the Democratic preSidential nomina· tion. Edmund S. Muskie is running sec- ond and George C. Wallace and Hubert H. Humphrey are neck-and-neck in third ·place. This rating is Dased entirely on the number of delegates won by various can- didates in 11 slates: McGovern, 2411h; Muskie, 1361,1; Wal· lace, 77; Humphrey, 17. This tells us lit- tle except t h a t McGovern · has proved much slrong-) er than expected. Muskie much w~aker than expecta:I., Wallace somewhat-strong- er than expected, and Humphrey about as · strong as expected at this stage. the right· combined are ahead in popular victories. It is this dilemma which faces Senator McGovern .as the current front- runner, peace candidate and spokesma n of the lei\. • HE IS THE MOST vulnerable to circumstances growing out or the Viet~ narrl War or to &~reaction a@inst tbe left jn the remaining primaries. He also may profit most from an adverse turn ln the Vietnam War. Eicept in Massachusetts. McGovern's showing was impressive o~ly in th~ sense that he had done better than expected. His Wisconsin share of ~ percent of the vote! is compared to the center and right vo te of Wallace, Humphrey, Muskie and BUT THERE IS A conclusion to be Henry M. Jackson of 61 percent. He drawn : overwhelmed the center and right in In primary elections, the candidates in Massachusetts with 52 percent of the the center suffer from the drain~ff o( vote. But in Pennsylvania he could claim ,. votes"!or candidates on· the left or right. only 20 percent of the vote against 80 per- But the c~nter is stilf !h~re, W!ll st.ay cent for the center and right. McGovern ' . being on the ri se. McGovern has. a momentym least suspected .when his campaign began more than a year ago. In the earliest tests in Iowa and Arizona caucuses, it was revealed'' that his organization was better than his oir ponents had realized. Disposal Tr y Muskie's decline. it can be surmised, was not so much due to his appeal to the J ACK ANDERSON center as to.his inability to make an ef-WASHJNGTON -The sewage that fective appeal. stilps dumP into the open sea orten BUT. AGAJN, TffiS does not illustrate washes up on the shore. that the center is not there to be ap-President Nixon. fOr one, has had pealed '"to. H.limphrey has .clearfy in-personal experiehce with this problem at dicated he will continue on this line and his Florida beach hbuse where mar itime that he will seek to attract support from wastes have fouled his ·swimming area. Wallace by apJJ7aling for the "family To fight beach and harbor pollution, he vote,'' which is a kind of crypto-Wallace assigned the Navy as the "lead agency'' approach to problems of security, jobs, to set an example of and independent choice of life-style. maritime sanitation The front-runner's position in .the early to the world 's ships. laps of the race is not a comfortable one, A 1978 deadline as McGovern undoubtedly realizes. Now \\'SS set for the Navy he becomes a center for determined at· to stop the discharge 1!3Ck and pursuit, whereas before he was of sewage, garbage, You know, the irony or lhe '"h'?le capitalist-Co mmunist conrrOntation is that neither side really strikes at the vulnerability of the other. \Ve don't really understand \Vhat's wrong v.•ilh the Russian syste m any more than they really understand what 's \vrong \\'Ith ours. ln our c.ase, we sheer at their eco- nomic arrangements \Vhen aclually their economic arrange- ments have d o n e more foi them in 50 years than all the Czars did in 500. And they sneer at our economic arrangements, when actually ~ (despite our continuing in e qui Ii e s ~ capitalism has raised the ordinary man's level of living to unprecedented heights. SYD~EY J. llARRIS · v.•ea lth. frecdoin and historical heritage to perJ>eluate and sircn gthen the ideals of Jefferson and his colleagues -so that politics \vou\d not degenerate into a cock· fight on a dung-heap. and public life \\'Ould not run a poor last to television, sp<Jrts. cookouls , and market quotations. The American stale has encouraged ii! citizens lo concentralc on status and materi al competition so exclusively that most citizens today would not sign the Declaration of Jndependence. have no kno\vledge of the Consti tution . know little and care !('ss about the intellectua l, ethical and religious baSes on "'hich our society \\'as bred and nouri shed . oil and other debris regarded as an amiable underdog. into the sea. Locked WHAT IS BASICALLY \\'rong \l'ith IT IS TllJS pr<igmatlc preoccupation CERTAIN llARDER. traits in his in the Navy's confi· their system Is polltlcal and social : tbe \vith getting and spending that will even· character and his approach have come to dential files, ho\\'· state tyranny, repression, conformity, tua!ly \vreck us. not "alien propag3{1AA.'' the fore and, as is so well known. the ever. is sad evidence that this billicin dot· fear, and the rule of Jaw replaced by the It is our O\Vn fnilure to remain tho kind 'ol American publi c loves an undi:rdog who lar program is failing. rule of (mostly bad ) men. people' ou r Founding fi'athcrs \vere, lO: -shoWs.figbt.. THE NAVY HAD counted heavily opon \Vhat ~is basically-\.\'rong ith our nut intaln a rirm hie!·ar~hy of valu~s. to The dedicated dove p"OPuration-·of-the a compliCiteirSewage'S}'St'fl'h 1rf3'tfufac!~·-'System·'i:s~intellectual-a,nd~moral ;....WC-.!ail _as ure th.aj ~c; c~a~sm get s richer, -!.here -durm~--:--the___rero~1~~g 1runar1es -will-b~~furlher__tested J_.2. Jhi.s.. respect in anOmust f1nally-rie won c»'er Y ·the Ohio Where the cenfer candldatesare candida~e who tak~~ the nonfinat~on. -thou8ht lo be stronger: Muskie _a.Dd Hurn..].hrey are 1n the • · · center. r.-tcGovern •is en the Tefl and IT IS-POSSIBLE,_fhOUgh-not predicted , Wallace W-on the -r1glit:-McGoveFil has-thaf McGoverrr in the late'r prima ries -· won..two_primar:ies,-Muskie has· won two, could-fade as-much as has-Muskie when ~ country. however. may be no more than · tured by Fairbanks-Morse. But Rear signally to practice what we preach abou t democracy gets st ronger. 20 perCfnf. as some-p;ollers think. and Admiral Nathan Sonenshein, the ship's...., equality mid~11pportunity;-and;-mosLof-frW<fs ~ t~laJ idea-:abOut..man:.~naturtt- McGovern will be compelled to mak~cm_ commander-rhas--comp!ained-in a"'Point-all;we fall to eclucate our cilizenry to the (and hence his "inalienable rights") that ' -ani:f·WaTiace-ana Humphrey have won;one -tested-in=big..;;..state=::industriaJ~-oon-. even broicler appeano attract the center Paper" to Admiral Elmo Zumwalt. the resJ>Onsibility of a democratic order. inspired the creation of th is country. not than~~s done. ~Jar,if he-i!. to ~e. --.Ntivy....chiel,~that the ne~wage,..egu,!p... _ _Their people have_ be~me_ dull, an e--.~-o~n om i·c: s-y_s-t-e-J'ILAl.Q_n-~. ' the commanding lead which will be ment is "unreliable" and "not operating'' stereotyped. doctrinaire, antlike in their ''Individualism" cannot save us, sny necessary for a convention victory. in~ test Ship USS-Conopus. reactions: our peOple ha ve be come ig· more than "collectivism" ca n save the Indeed, the failure of the sewage norant , vulgar, sensual, cynical and Russians. Only grasping what the human disposal units could cause a smelly in· barbarous. peison is. and how he mu st behave. can -each. stituencies . ......Numericallia.J.herefore, th_e center and But -he clearly has an advantage in Now: Ecological Bac.klash cident at Holy Loch, Scotland, where the save us. There is no indica tion that we Conopus has been berthed. THE CHIEF CRIME of capitalism i" even consider this question as imPortant "In the interests of congenial relations that it has failed to use its enormous as the color reception on our set. v.•ith the British," Sonenshein .warned the Navy's top admiral. "it is vital that these units be put back into operation as early as feasible." The "Save the Earth" movement, after a short season of successes, is coming up against stiffening resistance t h a t challenges the realism of its goals Celebrants of Earth Week have good reason to fear that the ecological. honey· moon is over. Earth DaJ. tv.·o Aprils ago marked a high point of harmony on the issue or en- "ironmental protection. The enthusiasm overrode political and generational dif· fe rences. Earth Day was lengthened to Earth Week by presidential ptocliimation in 1971 , and this year it carried the bless- ings not only of the Prfsident but of at ]east 45 governors. But the festive spirit seems to have laded and. according to some reports , the movement has passed its peak or influence. ON TOP OF THE ''unacceptable • PERHAPS TUE MOVEMENT pushed -Mark T wain's W ra th EDITORIAL RESEARCH too hard against the immediate interests reliability" of the new sewage units, they of powerful sectors or the economy. Yet also take up too much rOQIR. This will , · ct ·1·ta That old i·ournalist Mark Twain would it is not <inly industry that cries for a have "significant tmpa on m1 1 ry rf · th JI h" h be right at home in today's underground slow.down. The poor have viewed the pe ormance ... 10 e sma er, 1g ul t. d ·ty ships " warns the press. Take this line, delivered more than ecology movement as a middl-class act pop a ion ens1 , ,~ ~--t Old a d g a 1 J t 70 years ago: "Let us abolish policemen of 1970, the cut-off of federal funding for wi·th nothing 1·n it for them. Now organiz-.....,,....,_ .. en s. se 0 s re a so sp u • le · J n to pull out gu s to who carry clubs and revolvers, and put a the development of a s u Pe rs on i c ed labor •as become cool or hostile ring over a P 8 n " k c age uni"ts 0 some squad or poets armed to the teeth with transport , delay on plans for constructing because it fea rs loss of jobs from shutting ma e room or sew n poems on Spring and Love." ( TlIE BOOK]IAN ) eagle pul its taloo s 6n7iny other land." an oil pipeline in Alaska, and others. Ef· down plants that can't meet anti-pollution delhro~~~s. trouble with the Fairbanks-Much of what he wrote concerns fective lobbying. public education cam-standards. Morse equipment has forced the Navy to v.·rongs evidently inescapable in con-THIS IS A REVEALING, refreshing paigns, and extensive liligRtion did the Among y:ientists, Norman E. Borlaug. fall back, at least temporarily. upon a temporary society, Frederick Anderson, new look at the crusty critic. serious. job. But the pace may be sloi\'ing. a Nobel Peace Prize winner, has attacked system Or "holding tanks." The tanks are who is editor of the Mark Twaln Papers ironic; of I en very funn y, as in his "Bl'ltt le THE RECENT DEBATE in the House "the current vicious, hysterical pro-supposed to retaih all sewage while the at Berkeley. notes in a "new" Mar~ ijymn of the Republic" l"Brought Do\\'11 of Representatives on· the water pollution paganda against the use of agricultural ships are within .50 miles of, the shore. Twain titled "A Pen Warmed-Up in Hell: to Date") which opens: ' control bill may be indicative or the shift chemicals." Cost·beneflt analysis in this Then, in theory, the sewage 1s supposed Mark Twain in Protest.'' "Mine eyes have seen the orgy of the o( mood. The House approved the bill on frame of reference is concerned not with to be dumped at the pier when the ships iThe old gentleman we find In these launching of the Sword: -lie is l\farch 29 -but not before turning down ro:inom ics but human suffering from in· dock. miscellaneous pieces and letters. was bit· searching out the hoardings "-'here the ' A so-called ecological backlash hit the a series of amendments that would have sect-borne ~isease an~ insufficient food UNFORTUNATELY, most piers aren 't ter about the terrors"'im posed by useless strang'er's \\'calth is stored; -He hath se~ a firm deadline for compliance with suppl.y. Env1ronmentahsts recognize the equipped to handle the sewage or, for war: the squalof 'of racia l injustice, the loose4. hls fatefuJ lightnings. and with Y:oo movement after ,jt had chafked .. up such . ,.,.... i l!J{l•i ~!!i!g~ •W>.1cH•111,\,lr~A~l OllANGI COAST DAILY PILOT strict cl.ean water standards. vaUdJty of these arguments, But ~hey that matter the liigger naval vessels. To . fraudulent distribution of wealth, the and deat h h11s scored; - HJs lust is • =Envlronfnental protection sUll .. in' • ~ear ,tbey .... wUJ be-used, to.stymi~,i>rogress-r~ get ·around ftits; thr"Navy11taris'to, •pen aor.di9nes1 .of.,.politlcs • ...-tfl&.exploltation. ,of mar.e.hing-on.J --• .,'). ... . ideal' that everyone professes. But many in pollutloh control that the nation can af· millions to build special "lighter.barges citizens by indifferent governments. .. . The title 111 taken from a Mark Tv.·ain ford .nd must have to rrotect future f h a al t '' 1et ter to Willi am Dean llowells 1·n 1•••. on talk more about "C06t·benefit analysis" or eac n v por · NJ TICE h • I be f -gcn.r.tl·on• Th N o'" c-<>wage experts e~la1·n I! US w erever tt m ght ound the frustration at not having been able to than about clean earth. Their message "· e av," sea-~ "" h b" f hi h H t d ~ t I th t th tlghle W,·11 "colle l was t c o Ject o , s _wr.at . e was no say all tile' things that he believed in "A is a cautionary one : "Slow down." they e ca e Y a e rs c h bo 1 I ho h tr I 'hi board Was t.'" to appy a u m ss1onar1es w preac Co nnecticut Yankee," ·Jn this nice teslY 1u1u, "First Cigure out ,..hat It costs. Then an ans er. · · · P J t be ch h b "-' d 'id shore. But the shipboard salts. less loya ty o t .urc ul are . mways addition to the Mark Twain canon, the old ec e if we want to pay the price.'~ D delicately. are already rr:ferring to t.hc ready and wllhng and anx1~ Jcr--.. curmudgeon seems alive apd well heJI· Robtrt w. \Vttct._ Publis her Industry leads the new cost·benelit Cctr lighters as "honey barges'•· and persuade a Chirlaman or an lndiaq Ofa warmed pen In hand n1arper & 'Rowi resistance. But it has major backlna "1'oughnuts." . Kanaka to desert his church.'' . $6.95). Tholll4S Kttl>ll, Ed itor lrom ~lenlist., tecbnicians, economist., Gloomy Summing up', ilie]iavy documents-~'""'·'·' II'•! agaln!l tmpeMatlst wars !!J1d __________ .._1w!.Uam. Uog:an. __ _ J_,;__z_ ___ l~---.11tJ'1t"-W;-1J¢e~---~--Hol. ltfctHeadeis. n-htnnemgnm-, cede that. on the one hand, their sewag-e his tirades ajilnSL the 11.S:-frWo vemen .. T_ Editorial Poot Editor Ne~vironment1 two1 yea1rs ~1goW. Pteb~~:~~t Gus units are a Oop and. on the other, there in the Phil 1 1'ppine 0 ssare cc: 1 hoed t~davy· in The HltorfeJ Jll.fe of-the 0.tly PUot 1ttks to ihlorm and 1timu• late rtaden by ptttenting thb. newspaper'• .oplnJoM and com· / mtnta.r)' on topics or lnltmt t.nd aianiflcance, by provfdlnc • forum tor th~ exprtUlon of our readf!rs' •r,lnJon&; and by ,pJ"HCntlnf the d \'«'It vltwp0lnt1 ot Jn:tormed ~I> _ M:cveta..and-tpoktlmm...Ol\JOPl<1 _ " flf the di.)'. Tuesday, !day 2, 1972 1xon s.imp y cal ed or ' o mo bu.a· • are persistent "political pressures to protest aga nst .. lnvo vement 1n 1et- tlon'' to clean up the environment, then demonstrate accomplishments." naJTI. Ye& he called for wars of revolution outlll'lei! a comprehensive plan or action. After we have weakened our de· to free the oppressed from despotic Nineteen months later he Jwarned lenses by diverUng funds frorn_.the rulers. He fervenU y endorsed the Russo- . against seeking ''ecologlcal perfection at military budget to clean up our en-Q Japanese war. the editor oC th ls book tho cost of bankrup<lns tbe very taxpay-vtronment, what • beautiful place no tes shows us, as a m•<U)s of overthrowing the lng enterprises which Pll' for the social this will be for the Russian and Czarist regime -.. emancipation from an advance the nation seeks." And in an ad-Chinese fonns of pollution -com· insane and intolerable slavery'" -and dress to the Economic Club of Detroit a. munism. ~ Jo Ann Soden. Corning -"I have some aeplottd that tar's peaceful reso lutio!!_ nth later, he said: "Wo-are-not going-· cc__J~ ~ Dlogenc.-'12--<)'mpathy for Women's-Lib-but I defy by the Treaty ol POl'Umoulh. to allow I.be envlronm!lrtaJ iSsu~. , .to T~l• ,..111,.. "'lfm ,. ... ,.. ....... "" them to find as much happlness with "I am an anti-imperialist,'' he dechlrtd destroy tht Industrial iyslem that made ""'_..,.,1, ..,. "t11e .....,...,. ••"' fhtlr 1c1ust' as l have wlth.my ·hus~nd In a 1900 Jntentiew, qain re!erring to the this lhe grea.teountry u b.'' ''"' "'""'" f*"'' 011'" 0''"' '1"1• and (amUy." Philippines; '1l am opposed~ having the B11 George --~ Dear George : Why is it that dogs, even tho m06t gentle dogs, brlstte at m~ . bark at me and even try 10 bite me? Dear H. R.: , H. R, This is.. because dogs do not like you. (Sec1 'Vhen I promJse snap judgmenl, you GF:I' a snop judg· menl.). • • ~~ . ,, Touching ' • . -·-·-.. -· ~-- . ' • • • t • ' "-~. ·=-=--~...,~~ --·~ --.--~--. ----··--------~___.....,..___-.._.,... --· -~· ---, wlth· \ • •, . • ' ~ ~ .. , ..... ,,, ..-. ...... ~...-... -I "' ··~· ' . . • .. ~ , .... .. •• Just how good is Winston? It's America's lal'gest-sellin,g cigarette. · That's how good it is! Yes, Winston Tastes Good Like a Ci2arette Should . • ··I t J I • J flTll.5 !Ottt(O (0M ,tll,,W!lllf0N•5t~(N , II (, .. KING, 19 mg. "tar". 1.3 mg. nicotine. SUPER KING, 20 mg."ta!'. 1.3 mg. nicotine.av. per cigarette , FTC Report AUG '71. . . • • • I - r • -----------" --. FILTER· C-IGARETTES . • .. . . ., • , .If PAIL~ PI LOT Kissinger Got an Early Taste of Nazis I / I/I; 1~·111e .~('CIJlld in (I ,,w e& 011 prcsu.Le.11tta.I ad· r i.tl'r /f('111tJ 1\1,\\lllf)Pr). ll,· (iA \'l.fllll> SllA \\' '11uocil!H P'••n Wfll•r \\·ith a centuries-old lrad1t1on oLr.eligious_toler~ Jewish children, "'hen 1 hey ventured onto the streets (Jf playgrounds. ~·ould be c11r· nercd and beaten by ll uJcr l·1or 1/11· .Jt·w ~ 1t ,v;J~ a t1111e youth. nf terror , Among the children aetlln& An Au.~trian 111ul'1cd AdoH th ili rarly. bloody leaaon In Hitler was g<1 ther1r1i; power politics was l·leinz Klulncer. Rnd his antlsc rnll1c harangur:-,*"' lte remember• well tha ear· "'f'rc echoing across Germany. l.v humi\lation , but won't t1lk Thr Na7.i hysteria reached about it except to ln1l1t It did r ven to Vu f' r t h. a smoke-not shape hi5 lift. slaincd Bavarian l.?u·tory city lie told a G e r m a n QUEENIE By Phil lnterfandi newspaper . "my lift in F'uerth passed· without-lea.Ying any lasting in1pressions. I can't remember any intercs1ing or am using incidents.·· Kiss inger 's rather, l .ouis. was a teacher at the local high tchool. ' lie was himself. the son of a village achoo! teacher. H.•- w11 3S In 1922 when he mar· rled .Pauli Stern, 21 , 1 pro- duct of 1 n1lddle-clas1 Ger- ma11-Je~·l1h famil y. . Thty moved Into • third· rloor flat on a cobbltd 1treet "·here, a yeBr later. their flrlll aon wa!I born. His n11.me w111 Jl3led a' Alfred llelnz Kis3ln1er in the flourl1hi1.1& Cierman acr ipt on hl11 blrlh t•e rtlflcate. But he . wu calltd Jlelnt, ind would be until he later changed his name lo Henry Alfred Kt11· Inger .•. 'The followi ng year . 1924, Louis and Paula Kl.!111Jnger had their !4t1cond ion, W1lttr Bernhard who is now a millionaire bualneas executive of· a Long Island electronics firm. From all accounts. the Kiss-the ~'ake of J.!itler't reign of inger family was 1 happy, !error. close.kn it one. Jn 1~38, just as the suffering ~1 rs . K i 11 i n g er i s of Fuerth'1 Jewish community remembered as a superb cook began ln earnest. the Kiss· of Jewish delicacies and as the inger family was able lo ob. family disciplinarian . Papa 1s !ain visas. They first wen t to rec1Jled 111 a aentle, quiet London and the home of Paula aoul. Kls11naer '1 aunt. From there The Nazi• rise to power in they ull~ for New York and IW 1J1n1led an end of the • new life. ple111nt IUe for the Kls1lnaer Tbe Ki11inaer1 found an ramlly and Germ1ny'1 ha lf· apartment in tht Fort Oeor1e million other Jew1 . Hill arta of Manh1ttln'1 upper Louil Kl.uinaer waa branded we1t 1Jde. Most or the a full Jew and 1trlpped of his nel&hborhood'1 five-and 1lx· teach lne credentials. Young s Io r y apartment bulldin&• He inz i nd hl1 brother were ex· were then, and 1UJI ire. well pelled 'from public schOols ind kept and quiet. forced to attend Jewish In· Henry enrolled In September i1titutions. Whenever I h e )' 113& a1 1 junior in nearby _ played soccer. there was George W11hln&ton HJ 1 h always a scuffl e with the ir School. School reeords list him schoolmates. as havlng a "fore ign lan1uage _ Some who were In Germany handicap." at the time cringe 1 t Within 1 year, he switched memories of the outrage11 suf· tO nlaht claises. He had found fered by· the Jews. But ac· a job In a.Manhattan shaving cording to Kls1lnger, "I w1 i1 brus h factory. first working at not con1clou1ly unhappy. I squeezing ac;:ld out of brush was not IO acutely aware of bristles and later being pro- what wall golna: on." moted to delivery boy. Whatever lmpict the rise or He worked elaht to ten hour! the Nazis had on development a day, but school records sho\v of youni Heinz' character. It he managed to be 1 stfalght·A Tl S • ('&Used a crills for th.e Kiss· student. tiH lot•e ~ Inger family. Louis Kissinger, Ki.!llllnger was such a whiz in fired from hill teaching job. rnath that he dec ided to Bttl'!!laJ'fll'OO( wall unable to find llatlllfactory become an accountant -"as u em ployment. 11 refuget , It was the eRsiei1t fonc1 1111 l'lastic membrane th.1l hdi-: 1b:lofb the .hocks of b.tll'IC and chew1nr. \V1th F1llOOP.~T many dentu. wrarers m.1y t-at, tprak, /1u1h • ..,,~ hllle worry of drnlut6comin1 IOOil'. One 1pplic1lion may l11t for houri. l:>enturts th1l tit are f'!l~n­ tial 10 he11lth . See your den!ut reitul11rly. Ge.teasy· l.o-u:;e F1xoo•: .... r .Denlure Adhesive Cream. IS IT TRUE THAT M 0 RT UAR IE S MAKE AN ADDITIONAL CHARyc WHEN THEY ARE CALLED OUT AT NIGHT OR ON' SUNDAY ? lty EUGENE 0 . BERGERON It It Ht ,..Mltlti fet • ,. .... fw ttfiltr. ••rh1CM'le1 ln1t we c.•11 1peali fer laltl•IMfef•ll p1119rel H•• w._ w .., ......... ••tr• char4e. Th•t• h 11eter a11 addltl•11•I cesr, •• ••ttlf what tlN •f ...,. ., •ltflt wt •r• called a11ywhere in • 50 111Jle r•dl111. We l'f••hil a••""'"" re~lllll ta..,.. afl4 ti••• •11r •w11 rhoro119hly tro.IMd p1tso11111I •11d .. ,., ~·l,IMflt •• ...,.... .......... !• • I If ye11 •••• • 11Hlfte• -... fNtNI ••Ice, l'l•••e write tr cell. Wh111eter peu lbl•, 11...,._ wlll Ila ........ i.4tia. ul••· ; Balt:·Ber.geron Ft111e1•al Boane COSTA MUA '2 LOCATIONS CORONA dtl MAR '46·2424 '. • 673-9450 ~'TOCKHOLM tAP i-When , _ __'.T~h~e ~J~t~w~s~be~i~'""_'f~le~•~in!g_l~"~~pr~o~f•~·~·l~o"~fo~r~m~e~to~g~e~t~ln~l~o._".!.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: lhieve.!J broke Into a radio shop here they triggered an alarm that ) 1wltched on fioodllghlll , at1rt~ ! I v e motordriven cameras i nd 1et off a tape rect'lrder that bellowed over J-d ,, ,. · ·· loudspeakers for the police. ~~n.r--5-1~1oc.;1 9a;w.;11~--One man WI~ causht ·...Jind "\Veil } .i f you ·won 't buiz the door opeo, how about police were lracin~ an~er l*eoPie an S\Ycri ng some questions from here?" . tha L .appeaJed in . t ht ----"!~=~-"'--~ -__::..~ -..---:-'""" "": .Al:;;.=·-·~--r===;=..!lb.~~....!-~----=-~·.-. -= -..=c··--' ----. . --c~witll j)IW-!S~ ', -~··- -· fhc rc·~ bee n a lot of ta lk abo ut ·CJil·r.i.:y ~hort :1grs l11cly. And perhaps . '1111"1c 11nndcrin1t if the G:ts'Con1p.1ny 1 .. r11 n11111,1t out (1f ~.1 :-i. \\"c·rc 1101 .1br1111 to. New resources ewn c1osertbhome. Evrn ,.,.nhin thr Sou1h,.,:es1crn United \t:itl"·, 1hr1e ~rr undi~co\rrcd ;ind un1.1pprJ -"l1prl1e\ o! ri.11u: .11 .i:.i\. \\'c"rc i;:o1ni; to ):IC,ll lr11,c:h' lo line ·r11 'Jll·td the .-.c:irch 11·c\r Hlintd tip ·upp!tr ... for 1hc futurr . :'\Ol tO 11 uh othr r 1.'01npan 1l'!> 1n dcl'elnping 111.-n t1011 tht prl''l'llt . l hl·~c fC'1)t1 ri.:c~. Allcrc~t:'.!_c~ul n, Synchedcgas. \\cc.1111.u1 n co:1l .---llVID lntosyn1hctic~asw 1 1h :1ll 1hc pu1rcr- i;... • ·'' ~ end the ean.dian Arc.de tics 11nd heat ing :ibih11 of natur:d • ..1. lslarm. 'Hu,gc drposits of natutil :a~ This may be a good .-.ourc1.1 of g.a c ~nd.J gv rcd Jn._,1,,he.,1,.,.,,_ .. Vf!pl~1 Unce-l%ofth~n~~~:al =....i:..,-£~ 'Arctic. We aan br1n1 t\e 1as here rtscrvcs arc in the Rociy ~\ounta 1n ' ' ' t throu1h a J>ipchnc. But C:ln w.c build StJtcs. But wr won't pr ttd wilh it wit hout harm ing the delicate thr~c pla ns unless we c . mine coal ccolog)• of the Arctic7•To fin4 oot, \\ uhoul dlrHliil\Tth-c cnvtronmcn t. \\'C re no"'' involved 1n Arctu.: rc~ca rch . Mort unda11wnd *"'CC- .Liquid naru.ral(~ from To tnnLr i.urc "''C can tore up enough counaWlall iiOUitd us. ~ .. 1'!"' n th.c \u mmcr lor your cold ltquchcd na-1Ural ga~, can bt ~hipped 1,·C'# hrr need \ we've bcrn 101ng b) ocean tln~crs from just about und rr tnund:Wt'rc 1c uiring :in v\"'hcrc. Th.1.s 1s vcr)' con\•t'Jl irnl for port ions of th'CXliso 1 t-1-niJ•---l--- Snuthrrn Californ i;i, sincr wr have tas f1tld. This will be our fifth -sC'11..ports nc3r our lnr~e c111cs. Con~ }lnd~rg1ound stora.gt fie.Id . 1cqucntl y, the Ca ... Co mpany h:i:. been All of 1hc!1e projects tnvolvc huj!c 5carch1ng for ga 9 •upplie~ in South !OU n1 ' (it money, but we're prcp1red Ala!ika a nd in Central-and .. --.. 10 ')xnd the money, In order South .. Amcrica. ~ 10 keep vour pilot.light lit. Souifiem C.Ufoml• Gu Comp1ny ~ I •• t 11, ef ,..:,fie lit"'""'~;-gas W.'r" lnVUtln& In romo;,.ow. save at Impcnal. The great American vacation. It'• whatever people ' ' with plans make it. A welcome opportunity to unwind from our work·a·day world. A customcmade plan fo r active recreation. Relaxation. Whatever. And no matter how you enjoy your vacation , you 'll '' probably agree It goes .t>y toQ f11t. That's why proper planning can really help out. And that's where Imperial Savings comes Into the picture. At Imperial Savings we' believe ln11ound financ ial planning. 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 f!~ your needs. 1h• hlgheat rates on Insured savings. And friendly full-family savings and .•'>il~ loan service. • · ' · · · -' , t'.' These are Just f!>me Of th9 reasons why so many · people with plans lll\le ~t Imperial. Why not come ' In, start favlng, a,nd .a~ what we mean. We're sure you'll l!ke the auoclatlon. ~ ~ :i..------~~-c..--..r.o.-..-..-Plt-aMwn-ori..S5000 depo1it1-kleld 6 OO DL two ye.rs or more.Actual al'lnual'yleld • 70 when uvings and interest accumulate ~J!!! ... ~--- 6.1&% ~··; l I --=----per--.nnum on-ttooo-depoalt!I held 5 750.lO one to two years. Actual annual yletd • 7C when savings and Interest accumulate one year. 5.92% 5.25% perannum on ~ay certificates, Ac· 5 39% tuar 1nnual yield when savi ngs and () intwl'Mt accumul .. ont )'liar. • • per annum on paHbOOk,ccounta compounded dally. Accounta eam 5 130.lO from dat. of depoelt to datl or wllf't.o • 7C drawal. Actual aMlal yWd Wf'l9n NY.. · in ga and lnteresl •CC1tmulata one year. ~~ • -- :.lmRE.RIAL _SAVlnGS and loan association Executive Office : 3366 Via lido, Newport Beach, (714) 673-3130 Newport Center Ollice :.550 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach, (714) 644-1461 Other offices In P~sadena (main 9fflce: 61 South La ke Avenue) Easf Pasadena, Glen dora, Redlands, Woodlend Mills A WHOLLY OWNED SUBSIDIARY OF 2 BILLION DOLLAR IMPERIAL CORPORATION OF AMERICA U 111!1 - • ... -... . .. ~ ~· • • ) • Of.IL Y PILOT 8 . Fo1· The Record Rapid ~Trans!.~-~peratiori Gets Shove for Next Year The 18th annual 1neet i11g of the OrAnge County lleart Association ·is schcdult.'d for 6:30 p.111. \Vednesdo:v. 11l !he Newporter Inn In Nt>1\•port Bfach . Births ST. JOS\l!l'M )IOSl'ITAL . ,.,,11 1J Mr. 1""' /Ar•. Bruct (, Ol(rl1tlri1, 11JI BtSUI Orivt, We1!mln11tr, t irl. Mr. 1rl<I Mr1, 1'r1ri~ l(upl1nt, Sf52 Abr1~1m. Wt1lmln11er, t lrl, Mr. I MI Mr1. Tl\cm1s I(, T1vlor Jr., 1•?• Sl1rr1 Vl1t1, Nt-rt 11.e~. .... Mr, anCI Mrs. Art~ur H. Htv,1. l6HI 1>11. 11~en Powt lt l'cun•1lri v 1111v, "'· ARE YOU AVAILABLE * FOR DATING ? * IF YOU ARE. YOU SHOU LD PHONE THIS NUMBER -538-3591 AND LI STEN TD TRE 24 HOUR RECORDING Corivn lhl C. L. W1ll1ce Atrll U 1 ·~jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliii;;;::---1 Mr. •NI Mrl. Jl lc"•rd HIYl l. 16H1 M1l111 1!1rit. tlun!lnq!on ltlt~. ber. ~ Atrll '' ~" °"" Mr. 1nf Mrt, Goer" E. Slou~t,'10•73 M1rt1r!U Avf .• 1'ouril11n V1ll1y, bcv. Q rll 21 • Mr. 1nd Mrl. IC1n1mc Nitt o. S" Plt r l"olnl, Co111 Mt1•, bor. M•. i nd Mri. Curlis J. Ct11, 109 D1I Mir, Co1t1 M1,., 1irl ,,,,11 11 rAr. t nd '-1•1. Ptlff Winlel'• ''° Ootw004. Cos!I /.'t11. 1lrt Death. Notices JAMIS Men! You owe it to yourself to try a PENWEST ® Double-knit ., •• . --r.1rv D. J11T1t1. A1e :J.I. of 11417 lrl1 Ave .. F11111111!n V1U1y, Otlt of dt1lll, #MY 1. lt17. .Survlvt<I by lt!Mr. o .... ver C. J1mff; two IOflt, A1n<lv ind Jllct!lt ;11m.,, tlt'Oll'ttr -Glt!m· J1me1. ~~. Tllu•ld•YL 11:'wi PM, Pttt 1'1mllr Colonl11 ~untr1l.Hom1. t ,,_ --- llYIJIONIE JuH1-M. lt'ltr_. °'"~:-of 1161lL-Krt· ltt r Lint Hun1l119tori ll11cn. 01fw cf <111111, APrh 'lt, ltn. Survived bY llu1i..nc1. Gtort11 lhrtt d1119M1r1, J udllll •rid 0tnl11 Lt veront . 1nd f,\r1 J1ntt Polley; fl!Mf', P1UI O•'ffcn: brctlter.1, Wlllltm l'rtnk j lld f'111t Dtvtori Jr; 1l~ltr, Ann N1rv. crvlce1, WtdMtdtV, 11'.lO PM. Pttk l'amUy Colo;.111.~uri1r1I tlome. • . T1ndy JI. Ylflt.J61 Otll St .. (Ollf MHI . 0111 of dutll 1'1' 1. ltn. Surv vM IW w111, su111 il1u111t1r1, 01111 Jlutn All· lriaMm. L11un. Bue~; l/lrt l11l1 Si;s • Oe1r.sortt 1nd Mt rHrtl Mfrl• Bur"ck, ~~ bO!ll of Coron1 del Mtr; 111«1_ M1tlld1 Kidd, Ntwpert Buell; Uvt ._,1noclllldr1111 eltvtn 1ro1l·1r1ndtlllldrt n. S ' r Y I c I I , Wectn11a1r. PM, f'1clfic Yltw Ch1HI. lnttrm1nt l'•cltl View l"'t morltl 1'1rk. ARBUCKLE • SON WESTCUFF MORTUARY U7 E. ni. St., Cot .. • Mt .. -• BALTZ BERGERON FUNERAL DOME • CGroaa del Mar m-1411 Cotta Mou 14f.ZC4 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 111 Broadway, Co511 Meu LI 1-14!3 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY • 1711 Lqna Canyoa RAl CK-9411 • PACTnC VIEW MEMORIAL 'PAlllt Cemetery Atom., ,CMpol ~ , ___ ,__v...,Drlft N...,.... Beldl. Ca!Uor.la 144-f!lt • PEEK FAMILY · COLONIAL FUNERAL ROME 'lltl Boin A.._ Wt1tmilsttr m4US • SMITHS'. MORTUARY m Mala Ill. . ..,,-~._, HdDUngtoa Bt1di - KIDS WVE UNCLE , LEN s.·-· ' ' .. ' .. . ' I ' EXPERIENCE -"". PE""E$'f e__, You'll know why it's so easy to weir i nd e1r1 for , Tlit P11nWiit Wellington doubl1knit jacket of 100% polynter is 1 rtfltction of your good taste. $47.50 ALSO OTHl• STYLI$ OT SS5 .00 DEPAftTMENT •TOIUI 1 i •• "I • '~· REBT.A.'t.T.RA.NT9 THICK STEAKS THIN PRICES LONGHORN : A32 oz. Porterhouse 4.95 LUNCHEON SUGGESTIONS SOUP'N SAN: Soup of lhe .Day and your choice of grilled Cheese, or Tuna San .95 HAMS " . . So Good It \f/111 lilWlJ Haunt You 'Tll It's Gone" Our l>•m• ••• 1111 llntll ccrn.t.11~ / oonc•r. -Our •low ll"J' ~urlno metl>od, re•I W!scon•ln hlckor Ind 1ppl1WOOG 1mOkln9 ind JG '°Our o~•n 1>Ji~1n9 ll1>111y 'n tPlc:• 1111 1r1,unlqu1t In Ill tti• world. So dt !IClout 1r>d 1pp11!1l11G \'Ill lutl wouldn't know llOW t• tmprove th•• prOducl wt 'vt Detn n'Mlklll9 tor 3• V••tt. Splrtl 11~ tco, !•am 111p to b011om so !1111 M th dtlKltbloo u11llorm 1llc:1 Cl" tit rtmovKI t ll11rll11SIY, CompltltlY lllkld Ind rtldy 10 ''"''· 0,... dt• ye~• Hon1v l'ttkld Htm toc11y, 111 1dv..,1ur1 In 11trn.jOYll'ltlll vou·u ritvt• rorvet. 1nAIL STOllS 3700 I. C•nt Hlthw..,, C9fffe fff M•t -671°9ltl 1222 S. l r•o•h1r1t, AMMI"' 6Jl0 J461 FO.dMaveitlcli.- ~comfo1•table 6-cy~inde11 A111e111G1n ca11 act11ally. p~1ced $19 than avolkswagennJ. --------- - • Surprising as it may be, our Maverick is actually in the same price class as many of those little imports. l...o!>k: FORD·MAVE'.RICK ,..,,,. """ -5 cyl .$2140 · VW ll3 (Super Beelle) 2·000• '"" 4 cyt ·$2159~ TOIOJACOROL\..A J600 2<1op•"d'" 4 cyl $2109' DATSUN PL-510 '"'"'' ,. • ., 4cyt $2306' •M1"Yll tlurti'l IUIJHl~d flltll ttrk • !Dr 2·11i10! mad, ls. b ctyOtt dttlfl p!!PltilhO• c~1r1u. It '"'' d11h n1ti1• ch1r1e5 !l lf.000). C1h!oin11 .,,,1u oo" lfll"•1 l5ll I I~ title tnd tu n. So if you can afford a little import, you can afford a Maverick. Here's why we think you'll want to. SIX CYLINDERS VS. FOUR. With Maverick 's six-cylinder engine, you can zip into turnpike traffic with con- fide nce. And hold your own on steep hills. But there are other advantages. A six is basically smoother than a four . You can hold polite conversations in a Mavericl~go!rig at top highway speed ... Generally, a six doesn't need to work as hard as a four to deliver the same speed ,:.. ,and power. __ :"I;. • _.. ·~-;,. ~ 'l--!~ .. . -v-t\AHHH, c;OMFORT. - Maverii;k is over eight inch~ wider • than a VolksWllgen 113. You get over eight inches more shoulder room in front, over five inches more in back. S.lter idu I« llltly, .. buckk up! -·- It 's ajso longer and heavier than the VW, which makes a n0ticeable difference in the way it drives a,nd handles. the open road. Around town. ough, you11 find t.-ha-ct~M~a~ver1cfisremarlaibly ea t,......= -- maneuver and park. Maybe the best wayJp describe it is that Maverick feels.a lot like th~ big,!:lll'S when you're drivi ng, and a lot like the little cars when you're parking. YOU CAN RELY ON IT. We designed Maverick to be a simp le , dependable machine. We also de signed it to be an inexpensive .machine to maintain. You can do many jobs yourself. And oil changes are recommended only every six months or 6,000 miles, whichever comes first.' One more thought: there are over 5,600 Ford dealerslhroughout the country. 1 [you ever break a fan belt in Lake Preston, Sout h Dakota , Clarence Hedberg of Hedbe'i& Ford~\l be happy to supply a new one. A GOOD CAR FOR BIG TRIPS. , Act~ly, the. icjea .of driYi!1&1!! Lake. "Preston, South Dakota may be the best WBJJ tO sum up all the differences between Maverick and the little imports. You wouldn't think twice about going in a Maverick. FORD MAVERICK fORO DIVISION .. See your Ford Dealer • Saturdayi in · I "" Nrwron •LYD. The DAILY PILO~l~c1~•~ro!•!•~~Y!1!o!c•!1!10!•!1~H!1W!"""!ro!.1!1!•!•!•!H~••!1!0!1!n!•~Ds~.~~-~~~'~~~~~~~~~~-·~...:..~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~--'~~~~~~~~~~~~ ' • J 0 DAILY PILOT S Tulld•y M•1 2 1972 ~~~~~~~.,,.,.._=---~ • FllWIC£ • 1""""!1'• ll'ol'll• Rea sons For Food Cost Hilic By SYLVIA PORTER \Vhllc food prices Bre lctel 1ng off now the 1nforn1ed fo1 ecast Is that the r1!!c for 72 \\ 111 be In the S to ti percent The r 11ngt' \\ell tibove 1971 s 3 percent In Miide Rotary Engine For lnformall<ln on thr stock ot Toyo Togyo Co 1 60-1 6S Apr 1t 71 , Crill T JY Bnrlholo1n('v>' ( n'Rl I nclflr. Sf'curlt1rs J ~:.?9111'\lnt' Bl\d Tustin 714 -SJ2-8000 0XEROXING 0 ANSWERING SERVKE 0DESK SPACE OLA. LINES _OVER' THE -COUNTER - NASO Ll1tlng1 h>r Monijoy, Moy 1, 1972 ~EEOS ,ou"-0 SECRET ARIAL SERVICE 0 BOOKKEEPING 0 MIMEOGRAPHING 0 m.EGRAMS, TWX, DOCUMENT TRANSMISSION 0 MAILING LISTS 1'b's COMUNICAT1011S SERYIQ IUWU. ""bNlf'UTt ~ M YOUI ~ IRVl .. ·AIRPOll INDUSTRIAL COMPLIX 111•1 s•1 -1m ' COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK LIST l•ltt ~-- 111111 I Hltlt LIW Cine <119+ " . ~ " . ti •7 : 36 -... !\"I \ ·~ ·-" ' ". " " ' " -11 1-1 ~·­" " " 1tf -~. ' ll ,., t .. ·-~ -41 I f ' ·-~ -" -" " . 4}1.-_,. . ·-79'--• 111 -'• . -' " • • • 1J ~-' " -1J ·-" ~J .~ • • • • • - ' ' ' • .. , 1972 s OAILV PILO T J ... Monday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Excha11ge List ,Price of Stocks Fall off Sharply NEW YORK (AP) -Sta<:k prices tumbled Mon· day as the market reacted \p concern about the Commuolsl offensive in South Vietnam and th e price rollback plans of the Price Commission ., .. Mo I 10 """' l" Nt~ 10 ""! ~h f'lll NL ndll" 1 NlT C11 Ud Norto1t.W1 s Nornnc 1.s.:i Norrl•I I IW NA Co.11 60 t4AMI I 20d N Am Phil I NoA Ak lAO NoAR pf ~ No.ti UI 91 NOCrll01 60 NOlllG1 1 12 NllGIPI' 1 90 Nl11 PS1 J2 N<INIGI 2 60 NoSIPw 1 70 NoSP~ ) '° NoSI' 1 10 No&t llf 1 NoSPpf I to Norlhtltlt E NorthrOPC 1 Nw11Alrl 'J Nw 84n l -o Nwsl 1n »d N'w1t Ind ws f'fWll 111 pf j ~tip! £.10 HWlll11p!C 5 f'fwMut 1511 Nwtl 51 2 20 NowilStt wl NorlllCo 1V, HorSm 2\fioll Nrt~t pf I to NVF Co ISi Ool Ek 1' Ookllel"r 1!111 ~dpt 1th ldPf pf .. P!pf 3 to OC:cPtpt t 14 °"""'' " Dodi! pl' 1 ., QhJotd 1~ ""' •r ~ OllE p ''' Oh£oJ'!olt ... 01ci1G'!' 1 '?I El1NG 1 14 "'°'" .. •rk 'k 1d1L 70 8Ptlk• M I r ltckl 1 20 0tt1 Et Co 2 Oufbord M 1 Oullll c '5 e m " ' n ,, , ... Owtflll1 pf ' ()Wflll pf '"" O.:lrdhMI to Ne., l'ork Sclu Vohnne 1 J ... l te15ti. -'tlJl• "'"' .• 10" "" IO e.1f I IMI. li?tN .... ,.:1;;: I ) "°"' w 1 tO !·~··· ... If , •lit I W 1 » 11,de\N Pl: j "w" 1 ~ 11bP01 1 If UCrrO .IO 11nc11,,., ~ !'"811(11 111 Un ID! )II, Sunt>em to $11111lrnd IO SuMl<DI 3 ~ ~11n1lllnt M l 11111 011 1 rO ulM!rGn JO 5111)1' V~l 76 ~UrYtY F WI Sw~nk t.Oll Swl,. Co 10 !Y'>ron C 60 'l'I l'(IA Don "'" ·-·-~~~~~~~~~~~~, fML) Hllll Lew (19M Cl\f,. Complete Closing Prices-A1nerica11 Stoel{ Exchange List SI" Htf lhdl ) Hltll low CIOM Cho ,.1 .. (lld• J ... H th Low (lt\t Chg • Stltl 1hd• I "" Hltll Ltw C °'' (hg • itltl Htl 111111 I Hltlt L1w Clllt (,,.. Briefs I 1 • • I I 1% DAI~ Y PILOT L. Jtf. Boyd ' -Runiples~ Hens Lay Blue Eggs In an exten.atve aurvey of newlywed3, it was teamed that 32 percent of the 'bridea felt their wedding tripS were lOO Short'. While two percent Lhought Mid trips too long. Anot~e~ eight ~rcent said they didn't go anyplace. And the rcma1n1ng 58 percent told the pollsters they had no com· IJl~ints -either they recalled everything was just dandy or they couldn 't remember anything , one . WHEN YOU listen to Jean Stapleton sing th e intro. ductlon to "All in the Family," please bear In mind she's the daughter of an opera singer. JF A VARMINT gets into a chick- en coop, those hens left ali ve during the next few days Jay eggs with un- usual!>.'_ thick shells. A most peculiar phenorilenon. · .r4 °AM ADVISED 11 .000 U.S. families f}()W have worki ng TV sets in every room Irr the house, even - lhe bathroom. ·That's bad. The advisors frown on that bath· room set. \ ' C}UERIES -Q. "o0 any Eskimos have blue eyes?" A. Certainly do. Ult of them. Up J~abrador way. Nor Is the bluC>-eycd blond Eskimo unkn ow n to Greenland, .I 'm told. • Q. '.'LEGA~LY, can a girl mar.ry her uncle?'' A. Not in any state except Pennsylvania, Still, the science boys i'1&ist there's nothing wrong with that notion biologically, providing the family stock is sound. DID YOU ever watch the waves roll onto an ocean beach? Here's a fair technique to figure how rast th~y travel. count the seconds between two arriving crests. Multiply by 3.5. For instance, if 10 seconds elapse between the first and second waves, they're rolling along at 35 m.p.h., count on It. E:>\RS -Shape of a man's ears don't change over his lifetime. At least not significantly. Such is the contention of a lawni.an whose bu siness it is to check identification ---1-photns,..,.------· ·------if · "Show me two pictures of the same man. no matter hOw many years apai-t they were taken, and I can match lhem up by the ears," this expert avers. Incidentally. he does not clai m such Craft with pictures of women whose • cars frequently are not revealed to the camera. ..Jl WRITES a feminine Toledo subscriber: "Your incom- plete list of the qualities of a lady should have read: Sim. pli city, Sincerity, Serenity, Sympathy, and Sensitivity." Quite right. quite right. THAT SOME chickens of Chile lay blue eggs has been reported. But did you know said chickens are rumpless? Come dinner , pass out the drumsticks, breasts. necks, sure enough. But nobody gets that thing called the preacher's nose. Isn't uny . Address tnait to L. M. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1815, Newport Beach, Cali/. 92660. Sehool Tuition De1nand . Turned Dow11 by Court SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A sending their children to San Diego pnrent group's de· parochial and other nonpublic mand that the state of schools. California established "tu ition The Court of Appeals' three- grants" for chi ldre n sent to judge panel said "we find no nonpublic schools has been re-support for any contention jected by the 9th U.S. Circuit that the , CaHfornia public Court of Appeals. schools system. is hostile to The 'group led by Harvey II. religion." Jackson of San Dii!go con-It cited the 1962 U.S. tended that-the -state public. Supreme_Court_decision ban- _schools system esta.bl~_dUl _ ing"=r.equired prayers in "irreligioil," or a "secular public schools. __ -~ .. _..!1:uryi..!1nism hoJlti! !O i_:e!ig~n:" .It said the purpose of ban-"Tlle ouftO f:-;\-pp;eats-sa1d-nmg -rigular -prayers was -to • the U.S. Supreme Court decid· maintain neutrality-toward . eel the same issues-April-17-ln--differing religionsic. ----1 n ~tissouri case, Brusca vs. l-::===·====---1 1'1lm uri. 1'.he circui t court affirmed the Au)lust 1970 dismissal of the .1,1ckson group's suit by U.S. District Court Judge E. J . &h\\·artz. l'h<" pnrents contended their Isl A1ncndn1e11t freedom of rrlii.;ion ri ghts were violated hy bt·inµ: contpcled · to send thr~r children to p u b 11 c sC'hools. They ari::uNI. th at a system of state tuition i::-rant vouchers v.·nulct gi\'C lhent a choice of I ANTHONY SCHOOLS HAllOI CINTll 1>00 H•rMr C9fll•t tOlll Mo1.a, (f lit.ml• .... 1714l t7t·235J 111 7 $. lrOOlllWt11I St. A,..Mlm, C•I. nlf( .... 1714} 771·1100 WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY , COLLEGE OF I.AW OF ORANGE COUNTY now •<cepting m9" •nd women who ,,. olthtr: • • .,,, 1 I ..-1111 l Y•• .. et 1u1,11~ .. ,,u.,. ..... ih 160); •• • IVW lJ 1114 h1v1 111•1"'14 I"' "'"'"'' 1,.,. 1.11,....,.1 .~1u1y tt.. .,..,r •• 1, ... 1 ,, •""'· '"' ~·,,--..,~-... ~~~ I ·-~~ ....... .-..,:· tt J.D. or ll'.11. df9f" c11"1 ••med In -4 Y"'" of p•tf·trme fl•IM'lo 3 clu\tl fl"'-~\: 3~ hout1 ,...-ti.tit. A Sf>tti1I Pn!gr1m ~f !II,.,. cl11M"t °" S.l\lrd.ty Ii ._·1il1bl1 f« firlTy.~Y,:--- Apply Now for September 7th Day or Evening Classes WllTI Ol '"OHi fOl 1Nf-OtllllA1"lON Ott (AfAtOOU• 800 South Brookhurst An~i..im 92104 (7141 63~53 ... TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY GRAND OPENING SPECIALS! Briggs & Stratton 2 H.P. POWER EDGER '·,;Makes Everything Neat In.a Hurl.riy=l="=====i'l . • Ea sily converts too trimmer. • 2 h.p., 4 cycle Briggs & ~trotton engine with recoil starter and wid e wheels. 0 Heavy duty yet light enough to handle easilyt . REG. $59.99 SAVE Si2.00/ TUES. a. WED. ONLYI l K'nip-K'nop MINI PING PONG ·SET ''Year 'Round 'un for the Whole famllyl'' . • 2 position height adjustmei\t. .• Folds flat for compact, easy storage. •Complete set includes 30''x54'' table, paddles, net & bells. •Also ma kes a great extra d ining table. $1 95 REG. $17.95 TUES ... WED. ONLYI Complere 1-------· ---2-.- • • SAVE( SAVEi Delux-6old Anodized -~" I' SCREEN DOOR • 2 1/,. inch x 7/a " frame-extruded corner locks. 45" Diameter SK~~~~of POOL • Brig ht yellow po 1 • h Surnrner fun/'' •Two 1 Ye'' push bars-12'' built-in diamond embossed kickplate. • o wit colorfMI. daisy flower Tough , seamless polyethyl pattern. ,easy cleaning & durabilit;.~e construction guarantees • • Two antique gold Peacock grilles securely built-in. • luxury & prestige for discriminating shoppers. REG. $29.99 SAVE $6.001 99 TUES. I. WED. ONLYI Dou -le ~lght -·12-Drawer • Stays brighJ- a real favorite with the kidsl WOW/ $J99 Shell's" --- ~8lJ:tL-SWA6 --DRESSER ---~0-PEST-SlllP---. • Lots of space for oll your things-- = i 'features'ifeavy.glasscglobes with,the look of hand cut crystal. plus it's an-attractive-piece-of-furniture. • 55" long x l5"-Cleep x-'33u tii91\.~--=­_ ~ _--~A-T~ed=-&"-f'~e Way a-eont"!_l~i$tsl!!. • Rich cast bJass fittings--complete with all necessary ha rdware. · REG. $14.99 SAVE $5.001 TUIS. & WED . ONLY! .• , . ' SAVE $12.001 .--Quolity knotty -pine--ready for · the finishing touches. REG. $41 .99 $29 99 TUES. I. WED. ONLY! Ready To Finish , BOSTON ROCKER • Rock.a -bye baby in this colonial styled rocker with ' its stately spindles, graceful arms and turned legs. • Ready ta point, stain or antiq ue. REG. $1'9.99 ·•>-·:SAVl:-$1l>99--' . $6.QOI • ~ TUES. ti WID. ONL Tl --··-";'"" ........................................ . .... '''"' ........ ····················-· .. ·····"'"""" .... ····\···-· .. .. • Specially prepared inJecticide formvlo _ controls fli"es, gnats, mosquitoes, ek. for up to 3 months. • Complete with gold foil holder- looks attractive anywhere. '. REG. $1.69 SAVE 70c 99' TUES. I. WED. ONLY! • 16 Inch Wide DELUXE HAND MOWER • 5 Sheffield steel cutting blades whit merrilv through the gross. • 8" solid rubber tires for easy handling. , • Ad justable cutting h~ht, .• RIG, ~ 18,95. J i •• 1 • • - ta of ·. i/ to ha kl \ ... ... .. ......... ~ ., .. __ _.. ... -... "" -..... ~ ,._ .............. ~ .. . .. . . • ~men IEA ANDERSON , Editor T\ltlAr. Mir a. 1m ""' 1J Innovative Touch ·~~Easr-off rR.ecycled ~ ·-By-MARIAN-IST-Y--.. --~. ;:::£:;· ;:;!'~; ;!;·'"~·1~· ~;t;;· z;• ;;'"""'~-~ ~y ~~ .. • .. "-~,,,.-. '[ --;m:w YORK 'Li!y_Tomlin,_a natural . ~===== --· ' Bitup rrom Detroit, is huddled at a choice 1!hle in a semi-dark Sardl's with nearby oftlookers. ,.Art audience! In a Dash the comic streak surfaces. Qulckly a telephone LI Heposited oo the· bible arid Lily extemporizes a fake con- 'ffrsation -nothing more than a staccato of gag questions -between herself and a · t¥>DHistent manager on the: other end of the dead line. \uHooat? They want me for a Playboy centerfold? So bow much is in It for me? Oh? They reellv ~ant Ernerfrie, the • telephone operator? Yeah? They want her to wear only her centerpart hairdo, U)e jewelry and her ankle-strap shoes? Sexy-say!" • Lily's famous switchboard operator matµ>tfisms -a swift lick of the top . ~th with 1 curled tongue and purposely squinted eyes · -are darlin,11: Lily's lliJ'nalure peculiaritie1. She uses both mo- tiiml with exaggerated freq uency during a.•qutct ucbange . . Marriage? "An outrqodld institution." Women's Lib: "Something had to be done 1bout teaching U-yeor-<lds bust es·· tttlses." Man-woman love: i 'Ab1oluteJy • .. Lily Tomlin wears a . fashion ·by - Aurelia Steiner. Her maxi skirts are made from thrift shop scarfs with cigarette holes. ........ ~ • . · ~" H-'"' -. ;''J--dfll ..... lbt Mf....,l>-'8f~ttie~ eternal child'" Coaftnlioo Ind tradilioo7 "A lot of lllll>WU . Uly. 31 and on the bridi of super-suc- cess, OOfl'S penonal dialogue. The natunl loquactousneu fiuolultes. roller· coaster alyle, between the sublime and tht rldlc1l!ous. Lily cllims not to be Intimidated by her background. Sure, she's just bought 1 "Duby" brick house wllh black •wi.Jn. rn!Dg pool In Ult Angeles. Do<1 she have plinl! . "I'm 1oq.to deconl< It lllte 1 sblock pllCt oat ol my put. ~m going to find 1n old 1lnt wltll loll Of st.sins on It. The !IY. !J\p'oomJlailt.11 \eakwood.JluU.~golng to ci.n.r It witll 1 flowered linoleum that has wom. 1J10t1 Ind .tom comm. 'J'be kltclltn. won't have 1 refrigerator. "l'D put In 1 dllapld•led lctbox. Tht bqjlprtod •W be old chenWe, laded peach maybe, with the tufts worn. 11len, to re<:reate my old environment, I'm go mg to Insist that the lurnilure company come calling to repOsseas the living-room set ." It's an obvious put-on. Stan wear couture. Lily's clothes are made by a Los Angele s -ba sed dressmaker, Attrelia Steiner. "She's »- Lib and says what God took away In youth and good looks, He made up In talenl." 11ys Uly. ' Certatily the pair art 1nnovallvt. Lily's ma.ti sl!lrts are made from thnn r shop bureau scarfs with clgaretl< 11o1 ... There'• a vest from old ties. There's even · an amu sing patchWork dress created from Japanese satin pillows that World War ll aoldiers sent to mother, 1i.ster, sweetlieart -" the ones punctuated with soppy poetry. Stars hav. elegant cars: "I drlve a 11111 Pontiac." - Why doan't the play the llar llJlle! Succc:s Is a myth, she says. And myths are rwttl but crutl. 110ne day you awU. en I n>m the drum Ind are forced to faef harah "rtallty." • ... ,..,. "" . ......... .. . . . . . .. . .. ·-. • • -/ Bathing -·Suits--Bare~ BoCfy- Sun orshippe Bathlng suit s are definitely getting briefer and briefer. But ii set ms the less there: is of the suit, the more there is of a matching cover-up. Unronstructed brief bikinis are featured for this summer's sun worshippers and most of them come with matching rover-ups . ToPs range from wrap-around long skirts to pullover T-shirt s to zip-front shirts. Some look like jackets. others are overblouses that look like dresses . They are seen fl brilliant prin ts of flowers and make-believe ani,mals: Colors are clear and t rue in ye llow. red; green, purple and blue. Fabrics run the gamut from · stretch knits to soft jersey to terry cloth. The message in swimwear this summer ls soft and natural. Bathinc suits do bare a lot of the body and in one exciting print group, all the pieces are sold separately according to size which makes wearing a two-piece suit a lot more comfortable. No matter what shape you're in. there is a bathing ' suit for you. The suits are soft and brief with some that bare a lot of back, a lot of leg and a Jot of girl, but there is always a cover-up to camouflage trouble areas. These suits are available at J . C::. Pen• ney. Sunny floral print bikini, left, has matching cover-up. Lilies and lace cover pert suit, right. Halter-top bikini with wrap skirt, above, and clauic navy · and white on• piece make summer scene. • • I ' \ . . I • I '· ,. ' ., -. -- • • J 1J DAILY PILOT TutSday, May i. 1<172 All News That Fits Available in Child's Size By ERMA DOMBECK Tu·o .cd u e-a t ion a I psy· chologists have announced IC you are a parent who Is half· crazed from your chrtdren fighting , lake heart. They are probably only fighting for you r attention and are, in fact, showing their love for you. If my children 1how their love for me tomorrow like lhty showed thtlr love for me today, 1 am going to be the most beloved woman evtr to 1race a mental health poster. For the last week, l have jewels by joseph sHrches for jewe~ ~ ....... '""'"" " lllt!Mf~ ... '"" .., .... "' . "''" .... ~ u""tM,. .., llll'ltrlty ·-,..~ .............. .... Meruf ...... - Wt ••• " ,.....,. " n •MMt ""' ..................... ,.... flltlr .... -· e.• "''· ...... ., Mt. '"" ..... -· li.atened to more complaints than '.1The Godfather." To begin with, there is absolutely no logic whatsoever Jn ~·hat little boys fight over. 'fhe other day they \\'ere taunting one another because one told a secret he had prom- ised to keep. I told him, "Big deal. Suppose Jack Anderson told a secret. Do you th ink it would he important enough to make the cover of Time magazine? Forget lt ." l.ater that same evening, one came out of his bednxim in tears because his brother AT WIT'S END unkind thing about his "'·ire·~·· Yesterd ay, they a r g u e d about a wild pitch and refused to play ball with one another. ·Their fat her admonished, "That's not very professional. Suppose the pros went on 1trike'!" Several minutes later, it ~·as another confrontation. One said his half or the bedroom "'·as clean, but the other hair needed recycling. I pointed out to them that Ralph Nader dfdn'I shout anctbecome vocal about every little thing that bugged him. ' But this didn't stop them at all. They bickered be<:awe one said his brother told untrue stories about tiim in school. ("So did Clifford Irving, but who believed him?") Then his brol.htr said he never wanted to_lff him again un til he played by hi.a rules. ("Suppose George f\.1tany left the control board to pout?'') U I live ta be a hundred, I will never understand 1ibling rivalry. They must know we notice them and they must know we love them, yet they carry on over some of the dumbest things. Just the other night they were silting side by side at the dinner table when their elbows touched. "He's on my side," 1aid ODe. "Make him ktep hit e.\bows on his side." said the other. "Look, my knife is where my side begins and ends," aaid hl.s roonunate. "BOYS!" I si.id, "Just lmag. lne if the Paris peace talk.! gOt bogged cwwn because someone couldn't arrive at the siu: of the table. Now isn't that ridiculous when you think about Jt?'' I don't know what's the mat· ter with kids. Sometimes they act like aduJts. had said his girl friend was so c I • homely &he broke her ann and • they took her to a vet. I p pl n g 5 I !aid to him, "Is that any . a Little Hairy reason to argue? What if Sen. ' ~ Muskie broke down and cried 1 • becal.\se someone 6aid an DEAR ANN LANDERS : You \\'ere Jt, but read the next letter: wrong when you attributed the world's -r;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;=\°-llongest beard to a man named Phillip Henson. You said he was 6' 2", had a 10- year growth, and his beard, which swept the carpet, measured six feet eight inches in length. DEAR ANN: PbUllp Demon's beard was. nothing compared to my greal WOMIN'S '!WI &• "'" ' .. JO llll I . C111j Hwy, C1ren1 M l Mir U>mt S1r~ing Coron• del Mir for o~•r .25 Yt•'1· Y•ur t h1rg1 1ccount w•lcom1. per1l!nt1 IMl!lnd oore. According to th e back fil es or the Beckley W. Va. Raleigh-Register (we run your column) an item and picture dated June 8, 1923. reported that a man named Zach T. Wilcox of Carson City, Nevada had a beard 12 feel 3 inches long. It had been growing since 1881 and was 12 feet 3 inches long when the article appeared in print. -TH E MICRO-FJLh-f WIZARD OF BECKLEY DEAR ANN : I hope you don't mind being corrected, but the longest beard, according to the Guiness Book of World's Records, belonged to Jules Dumont, born in France in 1856. His beard measured 11 feet 111h inches long when he died in 1911. -PONTIAC, ILLINOIS READER DEAR AN!'\ LANDERS : You r DEAR ANN LANDERS: The man with beardologlst is in error. PhUllp Henson's · graidlatber's. Haas Langseth was born and raJsed ID Norway aod Uved mosl of his Ufe In Barney, N. Dak. Whe n he died in 19%7 bis beard was 171n feet long. The beard ls now on di splay in tbe. Smltbso. nJan lnsllM lcm. Many articles and pie· lures were .published about my great· gri.ndfat.ber's fantastic beard. The Mlnot Dally News clipping is the funnlesl so I am sending it along with lbJs le.tier, 1'..nyone wbo wants proof can go to Washington and lff for blmself. -LYNN LANGSETH -GREAT GRANDCHILD OF '!'HE WINNER tbe longeS't beard was not-Phillip Hemon, beard was not the world's longest. As the DEAR ANN: By this time you 're prob-il was ¥ B. Norton of Dallas, Tex. General l\fanager for f.be Believe It or ably p 1 e n t y sick of b e a r d Norton, i coUege 1tudent lo 18«, vowed Not Museum, we have specialized in the · measurements. Did you know the longest be would not shave until Henry Clay was unusual for 50 years. 'The wor!d's record hea d of hair in the wor ld belonged to elected president ,,of the United States. ls held by a man named Valentine Swami Pandarasannadhi who lived in the When be died at the age of 80, !\1r. Tapley. He \'owed that if Abraham Un-Thiruvada Thurai monastery In India? It Norton's beard was so long he had to coln were elected president be wouJd was 29 feet in length. -S.P. of J. co me meet Vi rginia ..• learn all about Elura® G hed ini's personal representative will show you the Suzy. Skin-T;llote and True You ... t hree delightfully different new wigs in EIU ra® moda- crylic. In our fashion wig bar, J 0 J , I a.m. to 5 p.m., tomorrow. 01n us. 25.00 fo 35.00. f•shio" wi9 bar 748 -street floor MAVCC> SOUTH COAST PLAZA . • ~ roll It up and keep It tucked In his vest. never shave again. FUiy years later. The undertaker who buried him was my when !\fr. Tapley died, bis beard DEAR ANN: ~inct yoµ seem interestedl~ii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:ii::ii great.grandfather. lie wrote in the (amily measured 12% fee t. -BELIEVE IT OR In halr·ralsing 1tories, did you know lbat ' ----,,:-- ' ' . . :: " ,,, • . Blble, "-We buried a man-today-whose-NOT-J.-H.-1.0NG,-IUFLEY-MlJSEUM r, -<ittMie-•wwkl!l-loagest -meu~-lttlonged beard measured 1% feel ! inches." So be CHICAGO t6 Masurtya Din of . CaJcutta? H;ts bolds the record, Ann. -FIFTll mou1tacbe was 10% inches from llp to tip. GENEll,\TION TEXAN. DEAR MR. LONG : I'd lllte ta believe -CHICO Your Horoscope Tomorrow Sagittarius: Div idends Paid 'RITZY GYPSY" PERM Go from shags to riches vi a our ow n Cut-Without Shortening, sha mpoo and set plus a body· WEDNES DAY MAY 3 By SYDNEY OM ARR 'Taurus and Virgo are dra"·n to each other. Taurus is physically attracted to Virgo, while Virgo often makes long· range plans in conjunct ion with Tauru,s. The two signs harmonize. Children often are invo h'ed ; travel, too, is in the picture. Good news upcoming in con· LIBRA t Sept. 23-0cl. 22): · nectiop with work, associa tes Living quarters may seem and your health. You will have cro\vded. Do so me rear· something to celebrate. Key is ranging. Steer clear of one to aim toward center of goal. "''ho sings blue note. Avoid any \Velcome social contacts. Keep tendency to brood. Relatives med ical, dental appointments. reay offer constructive sug· CANCER (June 21.July 22): gestions. Listen. but don't Check diet resolutions. You make definite commitment. may be throwing caution lo SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21 ): \vlnds for no good reaso n. Gai n shown throug h journey, Mate, partner has right to ex· communication with relative. press ideas, opinions. Be Develop deas. Invest in your receptive. Protect legal in· own ab i I it i es. Accept terests. Avoid extremes, push responsibility. Heed advice of ARIES (March 21·April 19): away from table. Capricorn. Respect voice of Wonderful opportunity exists LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Ele· experience. for advancement. Take in- "'ill be hap pier, 9.•lser and richer. AQUAR IUS (Jan. :W.Feb. 18): You are provided with. privileged information. Keep confidences. Don't tell all you know. Another Aquarlan figW'es in key role. You may have to tear down in order to rebuild. Be sure stiiicture Js solid. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Some fond \lo'ishes are on brink of fuJfil lment. Know it and be optimistic. o· v e r c o m e teJI.. dency t o \Var d self-doubt. building Nature Wave with protein co nditioner that keeps your ll,itzy Gypsy coif pennanently curly. All just $2D · MAmC Mrnro~ 13eautySalons itiative. Aim high. Be con· ment of change overcomesa SAGmARIUS (Nov . 22· fident. Message from a dis· tendency to re main fixed. Dec. 21): Past effort s now pay tance reinforces basic beliefs. Gemini and Vlrgo individuals dividends. You gain recogni·/~=~~~~~;::­You can go places and im· figure prominently. People tion . You get backing, cash I press professional superiors. who serve you make special and moral encouragement. ~ Outline ~oal. ... requests. Be flexible, but Financial picture is brighter. FRANCJS-~ TAURUS (April 26-May 20): adhere to basic principles. Round ou t plans. Stand. tall for · Now ls time for travel, VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): prin~iples. You ar e ap-'\ ORR ' ~ Optt1 M-...y "'"""' l 1h11"My, T .... ly ... T ........ y l¥Mlng1. ,.,_. fw .,,.....,,_.I ....... writing, es~_blishing bridge of · Bring forth c reativ e prec1ated. \g el · goodwill. Teach and Jeam. resources. Refuse to be in-· CAP RICORN (Dee. 22·Jan. Foijo.it-Jtif.ough.onhunch .-Give--timidated of limited. Sp rea!I 19): r.-1ake ne1v starts in 1n_ew ilill rein to intui tive intellect. Infl uence by expressing views dirf!ctlons. Build t.o..w-a r d 1620 NEW MacARTHUR .BLVD. HARBOR . VJ )i;}Y .SHOPf!ING,<;BNTER'-___.. _ ___...., . " S1do1quin:Hillr-R.oad-at-New:::MacA rfhur-- NEWPORT . BEAC H -Accent-is.Qlk__ed.utation~added .i!Lpositiye __ m_a n.n.e~-.:--Ad-futwe.-Stop-c~n c..i;,~nj .n knowledge. Aquarlan may be justment occurs w h _tr e yo~i:.se lf w!th _past. Cyc e is involved. domestic situation is con· high and your judgment.Ts .on GEMINI (May 21.June 20): cerned. Buy gilt for lov~d one. target. Exude Cpnlidence. You •-1972. MAGIC MlltltOll iNC. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii . NEWPORT 5-T·R·E·T·C·H & SEW KNITS AR 1E r TIMELESS Learn to sew them TODAY f'JW YOU CAN MAKE TWO OUTFITS IN LESS THAN IT NORMALLY TAKES YOU TO MAKE ONE. LEARN ALL OF TH E EASY KN IT SEWING TECHNIQUES FROM OUR PROFESSIONAL NEWPORT TEACHERS. JOIN THE THOUSANOS OF WOMEN THROUG HOUT THE COUNTRY WHO HAVE LEARNED THIS SUCCESSFUL METHOD OF SEWING WITH KNITS. It's Fun, Exc iting and Inexpensive! It 's So Per;onall y Sati1fyingl KNIT SEWING ·CLASSES -ENROLL NOW " aASIC TICHHIOUl 1 M•. CLASSIS l! ... CH W(ll( 1"011: I WlllCS UJ,11 Fr1., Mtr 11 •·············-· ....... 9;.Jll A.M, MQn,, MIT IS ... , .•..• ,,,, .. ,, .. « ...... 1:00 P.M. CHILOlllN'S Wl!All THll;l( t·Hll;, CLASSl!S -U SllOrltwt•r . Nl(lht·Ore:u Mon., M1 y • ...... , ... ,. .............. t :IS A.M. CHEESE OF THE WEEK FINE STA'l'IONERY MOTHER'S DAY . 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Corner 17th & Irvine (Nut to Coco's) -_ .. ...... --~ Mt. .. fkn. t I.flt,""""'· PHONE 645 5120 .............. '.... . . ·-. • Regular- $1.49 Lb. 20·--=: s-1-2-9- 0FF w .,.. I Lb. I offer 9oocl Mtv. I thru Mer 71 This uperlt ,..._. h • c1e11 ~ ... -. IHW: MNI • chellds ........ tt wn nm 11oM •• ..,_ ..., M.-.rey, c.ttftnl1a, eMllt 1 l tJ. A c'""'f, Nit ~•••~ ctr.ffw _. tr.111 ,_,...,._. wkle RM•. c._ le ...i ,_,. W... JM '"1· -DAVIS-SROWN--can--· help make every day otJiers GJJay with a MAYTAG DISHWASHER t-Yffl'rO'I COSTA MESA Newpon a-h 411 I. S...ltflf'fttltlt St. Deity: ,.,, hf, t -6 646-1614 nl•grlty-and-Oi)li'nd•bili(y - EL TORO Saddloboeh Votlfy J4J6' ••• ,.." •4. I n~d t• s.. .. n I o.Jty: 10.•. n ...... ftl. , .. , 831-lUO HUNTINGTON I EACH-l'OUNTAIN VAUl'f l roMlt1nt 6 G.,,,_.d '"" .. l.ay MMetJ M ... • Thrt. 10 •·•·,. 7 P·•·: ,,._ It• t : W . II• I 962-!>528 Nearly Ev~ryone Listens to Landers I ,; . • . . • DICK TRACY TUMBLEWEEDS Mun AND JEFF You MAY GO IN NOW-- MUTT'S OPERATION WAS A SUCCESS-· +IE'U... BE COMING TO SOON! . FIGMENTS • ;_. _.JEWll~ WHEN.WAS .m;_ : LAST TlMt lOU \111\TERED )(XJR fUllT AND FE!> 'rQJR FJ6fj 11 ! NANCY .. 4-• I 1'HUIU.Oltl QU1961. VJ: /IN FIRST PAPi;R!Kll'! 6~1 1 11laU! WAS A PROll/t>Y. WHYIS rr SOOA'RK IN +!ERE? ANll HIS · IMMORIAL. WORl'S? , PEANUTS . j DAILY CROSSWORD • · •• by R. A. POW"' I ~ ACROSS · J· LEARNED TW1HIN651N SCHOOl'IOfJN( • l-£dlbl11etds 5 RKtraln through ,,., , 10-Ttadltl.onll · Ramanllll : dante 14 Hausthald : firm • 15 Baffle "" : 16 ConfHS 45 Plant I JirW -lawn · (1 Brlnp btfn lht cublic SO Rl11~l way of l ift: Confucianism ___!_~t~y's Puzzle Solvtd: JUDGE PARKER By Tom K. Ryan AH,THe WONDERS OF THE CREAi!Vf MINll By Al Smith by Ernie Bushmiller YES I tEAANED THAT I~ 1(()1 DON'T WATCH lolHEREH00111E GOING, 'ttlll CAN 6ET l()IOQ(fD OOWN IN THE HALL - -GASOLINE ALLEY -. • ' T11esday, M.tr 2, 1972 An~ deeper encl !'II ,trike oil! lookinq for Mom's car ke~s? ~~ DAIL V PILOT ji By Dick M- SALLY BANANAS l~~afuut :th<.a~ .. By Charles Barsotti ..,...~-. --;.,.'"""--~ .-.Th-.-n-•m-.-,-ha-.,.-u-e-en-.,, {..J&Q,~~ ~-changed to protect M ~. GORDO J D£ L:i SOC.A A BOG ADO ,i MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS • '·'° ltll~rt.-• By Charles M. Schulz ANO I AlgJ I.EARNED 1llA't lHE ORIHKIN6 fOOllTAllj IS OllT Of ORDER! the po<.1<r(vl." _.q By Gus Arriola By Ferd Jahnson .. · 1 .. By Ro9er Bollen • THE GIRLS · 17 Eic c1sslvely joy rut 19 Staporl of · 51 Cardinal numbtt SZ·Plumblng fixture ~Wears away •O As .straight n --: 2 words THAT PHONE CALL WOKE ME OUT OF A DEEP SLEEP! I WONDER WHETHER MAYBE A UTILE WNl.M MILK MIGHT >£T A5 A SEDATIVE! By Haro!d _Le Doux THAT SOUNDS. LIKE THE OOOR8ELL! : MDl'OCCO 20 Laugh at ln • contempt 21 Vrxrd 2l Footbalt's -""' 26 Prtvloos to 27 Fine IOll twill1.d fabric 30 Made COl'TtCl 34 N111ltcl 35 Ri ms 37 Cuttlrtg: tool 38 Vohntm: '1ltt. 39 ... ,,, employ1d ta locatr mlssln; ""'". ~ l/1000 of an '"'' C1 Wapiti 43 V"'haprd' fortlfltatlM 44 Ututrt of lltdlclne •l B'rlght Idea: Informal M Small brook 65 Garden d11111oust '6 II !acts were dlffmnt 67 Residents ct: Suffix f:i8 wons to get ~9 fret: lnfoonaJ DOWN l Act mcnotonously 2 Roof rdgt 3 Of tht USA: Abbr. ~ Pixie: Vil'. 5 Efface 6 Highest note 7 lnt!rjrcllon of lmpaUtnct I Adam .,d Evt'S hcllle 'Christ )OH.., ll Egg-shaptd l2 Part p!aytd by an IWlr l3 llightlly lrflprtssed 3.B NtthtrlU!ds ,,.,, 22 lock of• woman's tllit 2• NyrnJti In Gnok "ytholoirr 25 "'"" emplO'J'HC 27 Overlay .28 Mexican ag~ i9 Jock!y's shlits 3!-..t Pythlu 3 Livi • 3J Erasts ~ Vatlpty 39 Pltutn ' 1 I 9 ·-41Cl Steame fotr timtS as lllUCb 44 lndicatrs 46Miss ~ and athrrs -'B Occurmictt • 49 Wei!lhls of India 52 Actress Lynn- 51 Mini! tntril!CI 54 Floor coverlng SS Reslno.rs thorny ttl!t of s. Am«k• fa~ language !1 Cmltd clxi. '2 Alrl htt •bb"tvlatlOll 63 Charged pmtic:l"e : I SAN\ DRIVER GETS • THESE CALLS OFTEN? G ,,0o IT 'S ONE O'CLOCK! ':-0 ~ft MISS' PEACH J:AA 1 TElL MIO YOWl DIU'AMS. ~t.=IF1'+"1="1<';::l;~+-~ii"'fri+-4!' -~ -.. ,. PERKINS I ,, ,, • .. • YOU MEAN MY DREAMS, "40~5 AND AMS<TJON~ 1 ORMV DREAM· DRE.AMS? • By John . Miles DENNIS THE MENACE • . • • ' ' ~ . •. :: " :: ~ -~: .; ' ~· • .. ,. , .. .. . . ,. " DAILY PILOT .. " ' Wi11 ----. ' Ali Gets ,,_-...,,,__~ .. VANCOUVER, B.C. (AP\ -Alter bat· tling 1\!uhammad AU the full distance for the second time. Canadipn George Chuvalo predicted heavyweight king Joe Frazier will beat the ex-<:hampion again. The speedy Ali punched out a unanimous decision victory fl.fonday nighl . at the Pacific Coliseu1n over the IZ.-round route but couldn't achieve his goal of put· ting the toug h Toronto fighter dov.•n. Against Chuvalo. Ali danced and jabbed and put over some solid hooks and rlght hand shots . • Chi Chi 's Win Wa s ' ' A Dream DALLAS (APJ -Chi Chi Rodrigu ez had a dream and, corny as it may seem, captured a sudden·death playoff from Billy Casper and Jived happily ever after. A story a fiction wri!er wouldn't f.ouch turned into real life .drama Monday as the downtrodden Rpdriguez, ·who hadn't won a tournament in four years, dreamed he would beat Casper in a sudden-death playoff for the $2.5,000 first prize in the Byron Nelson golf classic and did it. , &till, the l4-year~ld Canadian declared. ''I never \Vas wobbly." .. A Jot ot people ;ay Chu\•alo is washed up. but that's a lie." Ali declared in the post fight interview. "'Anyone ~·ho can take my best shots is going to· be arou}'ld for a Jong, Jong time. •· 1 thought I could drop him. but I couldn't, He took all my best shots and he hurt me with a couple of hard rights and a hook ... Chuvalo's best rounds \Vere the fifth and ninth. In the sixth, ~·hen Ali came VtOA BLUE out fast , the Canadian suffered a one·inch gash on his forehead just over the right eye. The cut bled much of the rest of the fight but didn't appear to bother George. A( times tie taunte4_.1Ali to "use your best punch and see if you can knock me down." At other times Ali dropped hls hands and dared Chuvalo. A crowd estimated at 8,800 watched .in person with closed circuit television a!1d :;ome bo1nc television bean1ed in- ternationally. The gate \Vas expected to approach $200,000, the amount guaran· CHARLES 0. FINLEY Be's Ready . to Play • Goal • tee<I All. Cnuvato gets $05,000 ind 1.t rr· malned to be seen what the overall ftnan· cial outcome would be for rookie pro-- mater Murray Pezim. After this rematch, GeQ'l'ge declared. "Ali was· in better shape than I tt'!Oughl he would be in. better shape than m our last fight." Pressed for hi s choice between Ali 11nd Frazier. he repHs,d , "I've got to go \V~tll Joe." Frazier stopped Chuvalo on facial injuries in the fourth round when they met. but George never has been knOcked dov.·n in a career dating to 1"6. Selma E11ds Three-year String, 2-1 LOS ANGELES (AP) -The baseball season is only a fe\V v.·eeks old, zind Frank Lucchesi, the manager of the Philadelphia Phillies. isn't gloating. yet. But he's smiling a little . "All the experts said our pit~hing wasn't good." Lucchesi said Afonday night. "But I've said it a dozen times. Our pitching is better than a lot of peopl'-' think it is.'' The Los Angeles Dodgers would be the last to argue after bo\ving to the Phillies 2·1 in the opener of a three-game series. Dick Selma, a man who hadn't pitched a complete game in more than two years, \Valked out and checked the Dodgers on three hits, 2·1, lor the Phils' tilth straight -· ·- "I can't believe I dreamed the whole thing," said Rodriguez, the fonner clown prince of the PGA tour, who has' turned serious so he can cOncentrate. The 36-year--0ld Rodriguez rammed -l ---·---~----·~-------·-· ---------· home a five.foot putt on the 15th hole for BI w • 11 s • T d complete game pilching perfonnance and -... ue. . 1 . ___ lg,~J~ __ o __ ~)'. ____ _'.11~,:e~~!;.~.~~~,..,statts'101 ·--·="- • . t Philadelphia, elevated the ~hlJs into a , • • ' • . ' U~I TtltPl!oto GEORGE CHUVALO MISFIRES AGAINST ALI. Sports in Brie f • New Owners __ Say Celts Will Rem.ain in Boston • v BOSTON The nc11• 01\•ners of Ille lhe 10th lap of the 90-lap race and Jed the rest of the v.·ay. He covered the 190.5 miles over the 2.11-mile Jararna Circuit at an aye.rage speed of 92:2 miles per hour. Bo.ston Celtics are residents of the \Vest Coast, but they insist the Nationa l ,-Basketball Associatio:n club will remain in Boston. "! don 'l kno1v how that got started,'' Fittipaldi is no1v lied \Vith Hulme for Irving H. Levin said ri1onday in spiking a the 11'orld championship standings with 15 report that the Celtics were moving to points each. San Diego. Jacky lckx of Belgium, u1ho started his '.Levin said he met "'ilh Red Auerbach, Ferrari ·in the pole 'j}OSition finished sec· the Celtics' president and genera l ond in the Spanish Grand Prix, about a 1nanager. in California ·fa st week, and half.mile back of Fitt ipaldi. Clay a birdie to beat Casper. who has been in a slu1np tor a year but showed signs of being the portly par.buster of old. Both fini shed with seven-under-par 273 over the long Preston Trail Golf Club course. ."I dreamed last night that I woul d have a playoff with Billy today." Rodriguez said. "I told him that befofe we started today , too." Casper confirmed that Rodriguez told him about the dream but-added: "He said he dreamed he knocked it stiff on the 13th hole and made birdie. But he was confused. The 13th is a par three. He meanl he knocked his stiff on Lhe 15th.'' Rodri guez chimed in ··1 hit a nine-iron on the 15th but in the dre am it was an g.. jron. For me, it \Vas a dream come true." The straw-hat wearing Puerto Rican, one of golf 's biggest dra\\'S in the mid· 1960s, had been in such a deep spiral that only close friends and re latives believed he still had a game. . "Everybody at hor.e thought I \Vas wash ed up but me," aid Rodriguez. '"ho had to qu aliry for each tournament in which he didn't receive a sponsor's ex· emption. "They gpt to the point where they were calling me the ''hot dog' pro," Rodriguez said. "You know, the gallery would see me coming and say: 'Lets go get a hot dog.' '' Rodriguez said Joe Dey, commissioner of the Tournament Players' Division, lee· tured him 11.bout being a gallery clown. •---... -.-io.'Red told us Jhat~is -and the Celtics'-ReRazzoni of-Sw,j lzerland, also in a Fer~ : basketball home is in Bostcin ana ---w~. rifJ;was-lhird..while.Andr_ea.Jie Adamich agreed wholeheartedly. of Jtaly finished fourth -in a slir1ees'3i1CI'. "He told me I would be a muCh better player if I concentrated,'' Rodriguez sai4 "J decided he was right." · "\'Ve also told Red }re would brifig New Yotk's Peter RevsOn was firth in a stability to the O\\'nership of the Celtics. J\fcLaren Ford. thus enabling hin1 to do what he has done so 111ell in lhe. pasl, narnely build a chant· pion ,-he added . ' . SALT LAKE CITY -· Second-hat! · heroics by Roger Brov.•n and Freddie .... Le,vis sparked the Indiana Pacers to a ! 117·113 Victory over the Utah Stars Mon· : day night, giving Indiana the American i .Basketball Association \Veste rli Division l lltle and eliminating the defending ABA champs. I ..- ! t:NIONDALE. N. Y. -"\Ve beat them at their 01vn game -running,'' dec1ared • Ne\v l'ork ~els to a 146-136 victory over after he teamed \Vilh John Roche and • Billy Paultz for 113 points. leading the : !'\cw York Mets to a 146-136 victory over • the. Virginia Squires. • : That evened their bes t -o r -s e v e n American Basketball Association Easlern Division championship pla yorr series at .. lhree games.a piece. The decisive seventh game of the pla~1offs 1\•i ll be held Thurs· : day night in Norfol k. Va. ~ Barry led the 11'.ay \\'ilh 43 points. 11•hil~ : Roche tallied 37 and Paultz scored a pro f career, high 33. ... ROl\-fE -Petite Linda Tuero. a 21· year-old from l\-1etai rie, La .. gave the United States its third "'om_en.J;.s.ingles.ti· lie in the last four years of the Italian Open Tennis Tournament, beating Olga 1\-lorozova, the Soviet Union's top player, 6·4, 6·3 Monday. Meanwhile, Jan Rodes of Czechoslovaki a and l\.1a nuel Orantes of Spain advanced into the men's final. The third seeded Kodas gained the ·final. The third seeded Kocl es gained· the 6-4. 1~. 6-3. 6-3 victory over second.seed· ed llie Nastase of Romania. Orantes. the No. 4 seed. overpowered Barry Phillips Moore of Australia 7-5, 6-4, 6-2 in the other semifinal. DeBu ss chere Doubtful For Wedne sday Struggle LOS A:\'GELES (AP) -\VUI Dave center. Wilt Chamberlain, took care of DeBusschere play for the New York . both in Sunday's game when he scored 23 MADRID _ Emerson fjttipa\dl Of Knicks \Vedn;s~ay nigh~ 1he th~rd.. points. and hauled down 24 rebounds. t==~-'f''ilriil1-f0arca 1nto4rtl? 0 tllft!ii'cfli'lt ~.N•t1$1•~Ba•"r"V A§m ·--11SChm.-wa~uri:o.i""s...seconc1• t Denis tluhne of New Zealand in the tion champJOnshJp playoffs. · quarter collision 'vlth Chamberlain when ! championship for Formula J cars by 11·in· The Knicks and Lakers pondered the both went for a rebound. He started the : nlng the Spanish Grand Prix h-tonday. q1.1estion Monday as they took separate third quarter but had to leave when he 1---7--IRtUpaldi-moved his--JPS-to-t-ht-trom-on lights t.o..-Ne\v ¥-Ork i\:hei:e-the -bcil-o couldn 't raise.his rigbt.hand..to rebound._ • seven series resumes at f\fadison Square Lucas picked up his fourth foul try ing :. Garden . , to guard Chamberlain in the third ~.:TWO //O LES-I N-ONE "He's fee ling a tittle heller," a Knick• quar ter and had to join DeBusschere on spokesman $8.id of the 6-foot~ forw~rd the bench: :.·_; M ~DE JN SAM' E DAY •·ho pulled a musclt near bis rigJlt hip in The takers broke open a SJ.SO halftime .11. Sunday's 106-92 loss to Los Angeles at the game by out-scoring the Knicks 28-11 in ~ JEFFERSON CITY, 'lo. fAP i _ Forum . the third 12 mln"'5 of play -nappy .-J• -"He has a little Sl\'elling. It's on a day-•Iairston pumping in U points for th(!: ~Roles-in-one are something'Ol a rarity but to-day firaJts,•· ht added. "Wt •'On't know , Laken in "the quarter. : It's even more so when two come al the . unlil came Ume. '' ·Jerry West. the IAkers guard who : same course the same day. ~ Meanwhilt. the New York Post qooted managed 15 pointi despite another sutJ.. ~ Mike Scheper-le.-of Lincoln Univtnlly a Knlcb' !J>Qkesman as saying the par shooting trperitnct, tald: ; shot one on tlie Hull Park course Monday cbance or DeBusscbere-ptay,lng Wed-"Offenslvtly, U we'rt going lo do well ; •I the.par 3, !:JO.yard !Ith llote. Tim ntlday ~is "•rtremely doubtful." ag1tnsl the Knlcks, WUI bu lo score t Downey ol Rocknµ~st nit"" i>iS'tte shot. 111e-Laken believe th< outside sboolinJ well. We don't want lo atop our running ; oo the 17th hole. a par 3, t!JO.yardt<. and rtbollndlng strfni1b ol DtBuS!chere . g1me but II we go into our oet offense, we • Sdleporle and Oc•ney are ®tttge .,,·defmite tey~ to th<,.,;.,_ along with """ to gtt th( ball in lo Witt. When we ~· 'ntiir teams were facing each the plar of a..root.a Ne• York center:J~ do, Lucas bas to be more conscious about ;;ahtr. Uncoln w911 11-6. ry Lucas. •lopping fiim. It simply puts much more Los AJlidtt' l·fool·L) 5 'ca r . o Id .. riressurc ~ Jbtir~clensc." . • • • -Gets $63,000 Contract ,,,.v ' M•v J MIV 4 1· 55 D."1. 7:15 p,m. BOSTON (AP) -Vida Blue. the Oakland A's sensational young southpa\v, was set to end his holdout !nd sign a 1972 contract today as prol;lably the highest paid major_ leafil!!! sophomore l!I histQry. "rm ready to play ," the 22·year-old pitcher said late Monday night afte.r ar· riving in Boston on a non-stop flight fron1 San Francisco and then going into secJ usion. Blue was met at Logan International Airport by Joe Reichler, assistant-to baseball commissioner Bowie Kuhn. lie was polite, but not very communicative with the lone sports \Vriter to meet him. He looked fit, but merely shrugged and occasionally , smiled when asked ques- tions, ~ch as how long did he thinlC it would BkeOffOre he's ready to pitch. "I've been working out on my own." the 1971 American League's most valuable player and Cy Young A\vard ~ \\'inner said. "I don't have any plans. I've been on a -plane and haven 't talked to anyone. All I 1vant nO\'I is 11 good night's sleep." Blue, 11•ho had been holdng out for virtual tie with Montreal and New York $92,000, agreed to :accept a total package for firs t place in the National League's of $63,000 to sign with the Athletics. All Eastern Division. that's needed now . is his signature o~ a Left·h11nder Woody Frymaft, 1-0, will contract. That business had to come f1r~t attem pt to keep the streak rolling tonight today·betore he left a motel and moved 1n \vhen he opwses the Dodg~ AI fklwn· \\'ilh hlsleammateS at al3acKBay-horer.-ing, J-2. ~ --~ -- a short dis~ance (rom Fenway P~rk A tv.•crrun homer by \Villie '1'.1ontanez In \1·h~re the A s n1ecl the Boston Red Sox the eighth inning gave Selma all the run~ lontghL he needed as the right-hander survived a h:uhn ~and A·:; 011·ner tharlie Finley a\:;o bases-loaded threat in the eighth. Hot·hit· \\'ere due in Lown for the official signing ting Bill Russell had h\'O of the Dodgers or one of baseball's top gate attractions. three hits. "I wouldn't miss it," Finley said in ''.Selma was super tonight,'' Lucchesi Chic11go, adding he was "extre mely said. "A lot of people thoughtJ was crazy pleased" that Blue was ready to sign. to put ·rum in the starting rotation, with "Needless to say. Vida \vill be a his bad arm of last year, but look at hi.Jn welcome addition and will be most no\v ·" welcome," Finley added. Selma; \\'ho didn't put together five Finley said the contract terms will be C?nsecutive innings last yea:·-m~cb Jess the same worked out last week in a pitch a complete game, said his ann, meeting with Blue, Th~ club owner ad-"'hich restricted him to just 25 innings all ded "The contract will read $50 000 and year. feels great. on the side will be $13,000 in cash'.• "It's great now." he said, "but J'n1 In his first full season in the league in sure I'll be worrying aboµt it again 1971. Blue earned $14,750 whi le com· tomorrow. I'd be a liar if J said J don·a piling a 24·8 record and pa cking in fans \vorry about it. \\'herever he pitched. '.'But there \.\'as never any doubt in my n11nd J could pitch nine innings tonight. I Angels'-Season on Line; A nily, Wriglrt -~x-amined- kno1v J'm one of the keys on this club since Y.•e ha ven't had much right·handed pitching. But Frank said he'd put me in the rotation if my arm is sound." Only Russell, who has-now -collected nine hils . in 14 at bits since replacing fi.1aury. \VJlls at shortstop, was ablt to SOive Uie 2!'J.year-old. Selma, who wound up with-his--firsrcomplete·game-since Ju~....; Jy 20, 1969. • . NE\V YORK (AP) -As a soolhsayer: Lloyd Allen is just fine but nq__w_th~_ California Angels are turning To a physi- cian for a diagnosis that could have great impact on the season. ' The Angels. idle Monday after roo.m· mates Rick Clark and Allen combined to pitch Sunday's 4-3 victory at Baltimore, want Dr. Robert Kerlan's opinion on con· ditions of the team's pitching aces, Andy Messerstnilh aid Clyde Wright. They were to be examineflP today by Kerlan, who accompanied the Los Angeles Lakers here for the National Basketball Association playoffs. Left-hander Wright was supposed to have pitched Sunday but could not because of a sore left shoulder. Right· bander Messersmith has a bruised mid· die finger on his right hand. - Angels manager Del Rice, juggling his pitching rotation with Messersmittr-and Wright questionable, planned to give Rudy May his first start of the season Ange ls Slate AH )l mff on KMPC 1711) , 11 MIY ' Anot ~!I NIW Ycrk •:)5 o.m. Mt v l AncJe•· 11 New Yor~ 10:~ \·'!!:. MIY • Ooen L'lle M•'I s Al!Cltll VI. Milw1vkte 7:15 p.m, tonight. Nolan Ryan will \Vork \\'ed· nesday's game, getting. another chance to gai n control of his pitches and remain in the starting rotation. The Angels, after their longest trip of the season, return to Anaheim for a day off 'Thursday, then open a 13-game _ homestand Friday night a g a i n s t Milwaukee. > .. . Russe.II doubled in th~ third a~-skJgled In the eighth v.1Jen Los Angeles __ID>rtd its only run, averting its flfSt Shutout of the year. \Villie Crawford drove in the run with a sac-ritice fly. Pllll•dtlphif UJ Lt1 Ant1i.1 (I) 1ll rllrlli 1ll rll rlll ecwa, u t<armon, :lb M.onla~e:. ct LUI1n$kl, If II.Only, lb Hv!!cn, lb 'AndtrlOn. rf M.Rv1n, c St!m.t. p l O 1 o .,.l.Parktr, lb J o a o l 1 0 0 Crawford, II 2 O O I • I 2 1 Brewer, p O O o fl ' o O o W.Davls, cf ' o a o J 0 I 0 F.Rcbtnson, rl J o O o •Dl0 lefebvrt,2b 30 0 0 •Ol OSlms,c •Oii •O OOWlll1,pr 0000 JO OOG~rvey,lb 310 0 Russell, 11 J o 1 o Oiletn, p 2 I O D Mola, If 000 1 TOMI! 32 1 • 2 To!~ls 21 I 3 I PMlaElelp~I• WI 000 020 -1 LOI Anoeles 000 GOii O!O ~ 1 E -w, P1rker. 01' -l'llii.11etP11f1 I, LOI 1.nge!1s I. LOB -Phlll!delphi• ,, LOI Ano11u '· 18 -R11S1ell, Mcro1y, HR -Mim!1n1: (1). SI - C•lwford. S -Mota, SF -Crawford. II' H ll l!ll II I Q Seim~ (Vl,1·1) f J I 1 J 1 01111n (L,21) I S 1 ' J l llrtwtr llOO lf Time -2:Dt. ,t.tt1ncl1ncc -lS.IOS. ""''~ THE PHll,LlES: Q9_N.bl91jEY !.!_6). F.INOS_NO PAY_oFF AS J IM ,~EFEBVRE ~Y{Al.TS ...... _.·. •• 'I- " -· -·- • .. •. :~. '· • " •' " '• ; ' •' • ' ... -• • • ..... 4 ... ·-.... • • Vikings Heart Murmur Isn't ' Gain CIF St · · S · t St opp1ng a1n ar Playoffs ?>.1arlna'1 Vikings clinched 1 CIF AAAA postseason playoff !t. !>tr-th and assu'red themselves of no "'Orse than a tie for sec-~· o.nd place in the final slan· dings by nicking h o s t Anaheim, 3·2. in highlighting Monday's Sunset Le ague baseball hostilities. In other Sunset tiffs, host Westminster's Lions topped Western, 7-4; the Newport Harbor Tars, blanked Santa Ana. 2-0: and Huntington Beach stayed winless by losing to invad ing Loara, 4·2. With their victory over the Colonists of Anaheim. coach Ray Allen's Vikes remained within one ~ame of paceset- ting Loara and moved th ree games ahead of the Colonists and Lions, who are deadlocked for third. Marina did it the hard way, though, scoring two runs in the top or the seventh to erase a 2-1 Anaheim edge. In the seventh. the victors 1 got down to their final out with. no runners aboard when Scott Wheeler walked . Consecutive singles by Rod Brown and Scott Wilderman plated Wheeler while Brown tallied the decider on a base hit by winning pitcher Brock Pemberton. Pemberton also got an rbi in !he sixth, when he produced Wilderman on a long s11.crifice fly after the latter had doubled and ad vanced to th ird ba&«:~3- a wild pitch: 'fhe senior \efthanrler racked up the 13th win of his Marina diamond career to set a school record. Frank Munoz' Westminster nine. mean"·hile. got Its runs in small bunches. The Lioni; scored t"•ice in th e firsl on an error, stolen base. walk and Bob Nodland's single:. 'fhey-idGed t"'·o more in the third when Nodland si ngled and stole second. Mike Tessier walked and both scored on Gary Rungo's three-bagger. The Lions put it away in the filth on Bob ila\e's bases-load- ed sacrifice fl y and Nodland's aingle with the sacks full . Western picked up all four •' of its markers in the th ird on ·' 8 two-run error and a two-rbi 1ingle. Righthander Bruce Wingerd of Andy Smith's Newport Tars , bandcuffed Santa Ana on three " singles as he struck out ri ve and only allowed one free pass in chalking up his second sue- ·, cessive shutout. Wingerd was so aweso me that the Saints didn 't get 8 runner around to third and had only one man reach sec- ond. that on an error. The Sailors got all they needed with a stcond-inning tally. ~.-Jn that frame, Doug-chard ;, laced a one-out single and moved (o second on a passe4 _ball. after whi ch C u r t By PHIL ROSS 01 lht 01Uy ~llol Sltlf Undoubtedly, the amazing triple performance ac- complished by Santa Ana High track phenom Robert Harrell at the recent Arcadia Invita- tional is one of the best of all time in prep spike annals. Harrell toured the 880 in 1:51.4, came back an hour later for a 47.5 440 victory and then capped _ the evening by anchoring Santa 1 Ana 's mile .relay foursome to a 3: 16.8 with a scorching .46.4 anchor leg. What's more, he trailed in each of those races. The half and quarter mile clockings were n a t i o n a I seasonal prep bests while the sizzling anchor \~g ·by the Saint senior enabled bis squad to establish an Orange County record in the baton event. Harrell did all this despite a slight heart murmur -some- thing hf!'s had to Jive with ever since his freshman year. Heart ailments notwithstan- ding. recollections can only revive one other triple to match Harrell's -that of Los Altos' Rick Brown in the 1970 state spike finals at Berkeley. Brown led Los Altos to the state team title by running 1:50.6 for the half. 47.8' in the open quarter and then an- choring his side to a 3:15.6 mile rela y triumph with a 46:7 anchor. The latter performed his tri- ple with a little over an hour 's rest bet"·een th e 880 and -440 tid'"'at>Ou a-5tmriTiute respite between the 440 and re\av. Harrell. for compar.ison's sake, had a l 1h-hour break between his first-two races and approximately an hour and 20 minutes 'twixt the quarter and relay. Also like Brown. the Santa Anan hopes to put together a simila r triple in the state Un als, June 2-3. at Oroville. discovered lhree yea rs ago but he claim~ it hasn't curtalled him since. "But my mother worries &bout it," he says. "She read before the Southern Count ies meet (at ~luntington Beach High\ that I mentioned it and ask.ed me • if it was bothering me again." While the murmur has not · nared up recently, ·in the past Harrell has been confronted "'ilh \vhat he refers lo as, "something which happened to me every other "'eek . One time it might be a slight mus- cle strain and another lin1e it· might be a bad cold . But nothing has bothered me lately and I feel great now. . ''The heart murmur hasn't bothered me but I know when to stop in practice without Howvever. the come-from· behind finishes aren't Har·--~~~-'-'- relrs cup of tea. Says Harrell , in glancing ahead to the ClF Southern Section and -State finals. "l have a reeli ng that later on the coming from behind won't work out too v.•ell. "It'll be tough er at•the Cir and state finals than it was at Arcadia because of the com- petition. In !act. the quarter doesn 't worry ·me as much as the half -except in the ClF fina ls. "You have a problem resti ng then because you ha ve very little time in between the 880 and 440 tapproximately .25 minutes )." • Santa Ana's team co-captain • ... -:· (along with 8:53.3 two miler ' . . pushing It." Harrell was born I n Arkansas but has spent most of his life in Santa Ana. llis junior brolher Henry high jumps 6·1 and has run an occasional mile relay leg y,·hile cousin Ron , a senior, played \'Brsity basketball and also runs in the 880 and Bee 660. In addition to being hopeful of getting mounds of points for coach Earl Engman's Saints in the seclional and slate finals,· Harrell has individual goals also on his mind. The targets includ e a 46.0 open 440, 1:49.6 880' and 45.9 anchor leg in the rel ay - not bad for a da y's work. "If I stay healthy, I'm sure I 'll get dov:n to those," con- cludes Harrell, wh<l has plans of attending UCLA after graduation in June. I • ! . \ .~ -· Marc Genet) likes to catch up ... -....., ._ ... on his slumber right before "" · •, --"'~'W.:.!;" ~ompeting shooince his bkusy day ~ ;: ~ ~ • ... ~· ~ ;,,~~ ~; .--'; .;.~~--..,"' includes sc I. lrac prac-• • -• I,., '-f -....&. _ .,.. •• ~"'t'.": ~ .L ... lice. homework and 16 hours a :~ ... ::...::_ --""~, ~ ";>-~ = ....._ ":;-• "';'~ '.', :...- week part-time employment at .t:·:. k _ •• _-,.__ "L __ _.,, .-~~ -_: ~·.:0~ the Posl~Offir<. BOB HARRELL, SUPER SAINT. Harrell's heart murmur was ------------------------ -.. - U11iversity 8-2 Victor; Artists Fall University 's Trojans strayed for a day from the Oran ge Lea,l!:ue baseball ra ce to take Rn R·2 non·loop· verdict from the host Pac ifica Mariners \l'hile Laguf a Beach's Artistit were "'hifewashed, 4·0, at Sonora in an Orange loop en- counter. Coach Ken Tratar's Trojans rode the strong pitching of junior righthander K e v J n Moughan, who hurled a four- hitter, striking oul 10 and pitching shutout ball until the final inning. University tallied three runs in the filth when Pacifica bob- bled a grounder to third by Trojan Ric k Peregud "'.ith the bases loaded and turn~d it into -a· lhree-ba~e -erl'or with _.Dan Ruckel. Phil llancock and -Steve f'argo scoring. The same trio was aboard in the following stanza , wh en Peregud slammed a grand slam homer. One batter earlier, Fargo walked ~1ith the bases full to push across mate Ed Call. taguna's ~1ike Moorman. meanwhile, broke up a no·hit bid by Sonora 's junior lefty Martin Frazier wit h a \eadoff single in the seventh and final inn ing. L&IWll& •ucll Ill It• • " rbl ~o..,.in. :)ti &rlMltl. lb "' lb ~lJlt~i.. o r1wlord, c on..,, II Moorrn1n. n O!trck1, (I Wlll!t, rl "'''°"'· rl Tcll!J i i g i l I l ' " Stiner• 10 .. I 1 " j t f f • ' I i ' r II rlli r . 1 , i i t • f • ~ 8 g g i ~ • • rueWUy, Ma, 2. 1972 DAILY '1LDT Jf, Title Dreams Left On Base in 6-3 Loss Edison H4gh 's Ch a r g er s v.·ere frustrated in their bid to seriously challenge L n s Alamitos 1-l lgh in the Irvine League baseball race ~·l onda y afternoon as the hosL Santa Ana Valley Falcons laced the Chargers, 6-3. The loss dropped Edi!!(ln '"'n games off Los Al's pR ct and the Chargers now lead Santa Ana VAiiey by a precnr ious half-game in the race for a CIF playoff berth 1second place \ \Vith three games left in the 1972 loop-campaign .• Los Alamitos slayed in tile driver's seat in the title ra C'e \\'ith a 7-4 conqurst of visi ting Costa l-.iesa. Jn other· circuit action it 11'i\-" Fountain Valley flndin12: the right combination in disposing of host Corona del l\1ar. 2·0. \\'h ile Estancia h A n d I e d Ma gnolia, 4-2. ~1agnolia's loss keep!> the Sentinels a gan1e behind Edison. Joe Glaspie had a pair or li-iples and three rbl for Santa Ana Valley. but the big item of tile da y was Edison',; l.itck of punch with runners in scoring pos ition. Eleven potential scores v.•ere stranded and twice t he . Charge.rs we:re turned away 'i\'ith the bases loaded. The final dig by the host Santa Ana Valley Falcons wa s in the se venth "'hen Edison scored !'.'•ice and had three runners on "''ith one' out. Mike Jeffers wl\iffed two F.d ison battrrs to end the threat. Los Al got 11 seven-run jump on ~lesa and' then the latter \•1as forced to try to play catch up. Chuc k r.tasp}' scored thr first Mrsa run 11ftrr gaining the base paths on an error and ~C'Ori ng on a nother Los Al miscur. Andy ~lartiner. and ~iark Schn1pp came up 1with rbi base hiti; in the fifth and 'f1ro l\iays ~ripled home a runner in the i;ixth. Fountain Valley pitcher Ra y Ecklr.~ stifled Corona del MRr on 1wo hits in getting his shul out \'ictory. .. Corona's Sea Kings stranded eight runners, v.•ith four slashed al. sE'<:'ond base as Eckles turnt'd tough when in a jan1. Rtecl Johnso n and Jerrv Kohler accounted for the onlY i;ingles off Eckles. hi ean while:. the Ba rons got rich in !he third on si"gles by • Baseball Standings OftAHGl ll.l.OUl w l oa ' 11--: ' l 7·. • l ' ' .I .. ! • • • • l , 1 •''I Ll!AOOl W L Ga LI Oul11!1 I 1 l o••• '· H1'"tlrtttlon 9~•tl> 1 ~ ... WO!!rl H•rllo< 1. Sa~ta Anl f, -Wtlfrnlf'st~.-1. we-,1"',...... -_,-Tllurad•V'1 G1111•1 1'.\1r1~1 II Lo1r1. ·--Ntwoort H1rbor 11 W!-i!mln1•••. Hu~!lnoton &~tell 11 S1nTI Ant, An~l>tlm •I W11&t~rn. oCC Nails Golf Title ~Chi G•ln<lt 6 J I', P:;~fc'e "'""' i ! ~" Orange Coast College's goU ~~~11::::'.oc. l , 'i" team p!Rced fir:i;1 at thP South linct>c A••,::;:~~1,., Sc•••• 1 '• Coast Conference al Mission L~ ou1n1~ •· ll111chn A••mllo• .J Vi~.1·0 this \\·erkcn<1. \v•lh ·()(,"(," ~8rden G•ovf •. Sol" G•lnlk l. 81111100./iiti~n.~~·io: ... 0,, student Bob \V h i 11ingto11 ~:~1~1c~·:~11c0:1A~1~~~ 1.••rn110•. postinR lhl' lo"' round of the se111i1ao 11 G1rdirn Gr()¥•. lourney, a 71. ,.\llHIE LIEAG~I! L T GI \Vhit tinRIOn also pl aced third 'i':is:~1"'1101 ; ! 0!. l overall in ihe twCHiay event M~c':.::l:v '! ; 0 3'h "'ith a 36-hole total of 151. E•Mnc11 ' 1 'tl Team member Thom as CCKll Mt SI • 1 0 J Foun11111 v~~~d•"''' scor••' ' o ' Schauppner placed fo'urth with Foun1a1n vall(v 2. Coran• dfl M1r o. a !52, and, John Free was third Lo' Aelrnltos 1. Cc•I• M111 •· .s1. v111,v '· Edl1tn J. with a 15.l E'te'llfl1 '· M1oncllt ). Los Alern~~~r•:,1r~1~~m•1 San Diego Mesa came jn se- ~c~1:0il~s!' ii'''F'~,,f~~~ '¢:;,,v, cond at the evenl and Santa ,.sA \11ll!N 11 Este11cl1. Ana wa5 third. · Clarence Austin, Bill Hatfield, Don Coleman and B r I 1 n Havmes. Eslanc l R damaged !\-1agnol i11.'s ph1yoff chances v.•ith a three.run outburst in !he St\•enth inning. f\tagno ll a errors <'Onlributtd to the three--run payoff for Estanr 111.. The fina l blow for ~1agnolia frrors c<>n!rlbuted on a dropped 1nf1eld fly ball. .I im Postel got !he -'i\'in, striking out four and allowing SJX hits. 1611811 C II .. , Ill Piii l I ! : i \ ~ ' ' I • l I. \ ! g l ' " I .1 I '" \/tilt" 1~•1 f II rtl l l t i I I I ! M•'""· lb c;1,J111,, :lb G,, ltlflDl~IOll. '<~ lit Ttrn11lt10fl, cl 'T,vior. c J~llt"· '"'" O'Rou•ke. lb (1rttt, Pt ......,,11,. II .... .., ... IO s • l I ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • I ' ' ' ! ~!1::;.1. '°~ lot111 111 • s sc1r1 tv 1111111111 11 14 • E!l150"' t'CI l'Gl )-l 11 1 SA Vil~" OGl 11'!1 •-6 I • CO'lll M111 441 .. ' (,ll•flV• II C.olot11. 1b Fr~I, fl l'on, II M•V'• t C1t<111rna,,, H• M•rllMr, p.rl·ll \c~rUP41• (1.)11 (;il!1~11 , rl.cl 8tU'"8· rt c••·~· la • ' ' • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' " ' . ' ' . ' . ' ' ~ . Taltl, LM •11rnlto1 If) •• • . ' ' I ' ' C1rptnle•, lb Lll~-­ K\"9, It • w11n1, c Harnlllon. 1~ c11r1,1oo111,,1111. 1b Vtll""· ~b ' " ' . ' ' ' 0 , . . ' ' L1rs1,,, (I W!lll1rn1, P . ',. 1 \~Ml llY 1111111111 Tol•l1 . '" ' . ' ' . ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • • ' ' ' ' ., ' " ti , •• ' ' . ' I f ' I ' 1 ' ' • , , ' • • ' ' • •• CosTI Mtll (1111 O'll 8-' ll 0 LOI Al•lflll~I 1loe 000 w-7 t l ~11111111!11 Vtllt\' 11) Hellleld. 111 'llrnm.,., 3b Coltrn1n. lb f (kl11. It H1vrne1. II R'nk. cl C1rroll. 11 V1ltnll , r1 A~1!111, ( 'Tot1l1 •b r -ti rlll .l t 1 tt l I 0 0 l II 1 1 l o o e ~ O 1 I ] 0 0 0 1 o I 0 ) 0 e II 1 11 1 o 1~ 1 • ' (erlllll ti .. Ml• Cl! .. ' ' ' ' . Jnllnll!r\. rt KtOUQll, '' ,.,,~.;,, cl ' '" ' . ' . ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' . Palm••· c M.111. If Ot11fler, lb IColdtr. 3" Andr1w1, lfl C""ftv, 1D Wll~!111l)tl, o O~Mll!A. pl\ C1rn1r!l<t, "" Grlg1b¥. p ' ' ' ' ' . , . I O ' ' ' ' 1 ' ' ' ' ' ' --. Tct1l1 " ' Sc-11'( lnlll...- ' ' . ' • 0 ' ' ' ' ' ' SVHSIT LlAOOEW l GI The occ team will compe!e II M I. L(ll!rl 10 1 Ft n. V11!1v (1111 DOC! 0-1 • I M~r1n~ ,• j ,• J\1onday in regional com· Ci11•11111 d.r M•• DOC! DOC! ~ 1 o ~~~~:;:,,,r petition Rf Escondido in hriiws 111•11cf• u i ::~;, H••bl!t' ! ' ! Of qualifying lor .the State '0' ', ti '~ sinl~ Anl 4 1 , h . b" . Ca I M khullr, lb O s,.,. ..... 1111111111 L1CHJn1 Btl Cll 000 ODO ~ 1 S-1 Ut1 001 •-' ' Hun11rio1a11 11eech e , 1 10 c amp1ons tp in rme ay H~ ...... ct ' t 1 a Unl\'IPlllJ c11• Mondl\'11 ICIWIS 15. John•1111. c ', ' • ' ID , 11 1~ M1r!n1 J, An e,,,rm 2. ~!ti, It O 1 0 RU(ke!, 11 H1ncoct1., lb F1r~. 1b R. Ptrecud, rt P1ttl!n0fl, ,, N. P1rf'Oud. c Mellert. 111 C&U. 11 M-"•"· o Tor.is I ' \1 1 D •-uma.lb ,' o 1 ,1 ~, Gr111t,11 o 0 0 g ~ 8 Area Sports Calendar =~~~ ,, : : : : ' ' • ' ' ' M ,0 o' 0 o l1rMll. II I I I 0 ro1111 '1 • • r o o ~ WHl!Hil1~ fM1T n Sw!mrnl_nt -s1111 lu11lor col''" Mttlloll• ctl • II J----' lle111Nll~ 5lryli1-I M1ttr Del .,.....1 •• c;.oldtn WMl-lt-t.lrl-l--•• ,-.. -"" fl·1J). Tennl• -CorG"la del Mir. 1t I• 3 l o • P1dtlc1 Ul . 'Ttnnl1 -P1ooerdlne 11 UC lflllne M111noll1, Founl1ln V1lltY •' CCKll u-r. t • •" r ti rbl C1,1lJ. Mtu, tdl•on 11 Lo• Al&rnlloa, E•t1nc11 ~•!ntrr. 311 J O 11 l I I I Trtck ·-'°""" Cuti C111ftr...c. at SA \la!lt\', S•nli An• 11 ...-untlneton K1Pn1Mf,Jt J _e, I t D 0 0 11r1llrn1 •I FuUerlOI\, Rttch, LOlrl 1r Mirlnl, W1srrnl111T1r M1rtl11, 11 1 I 0 l I! ' Thwr:,01111¥,J'('•V '' •1 N1w.,,,r1, Unl,,.,ri ll¥ 11 L'J!''"~ Sttw•rl, ti l O O t --O---o--9a,e-Den-1~•• -<-1 del lttctl l1ll-11 ··)~IJll ~Seuttl c ... 1 -Ontt,..r~. rf , , 1 ' 1 • . "%~::1~:i~~~i..n ~in•d on•-Coast A-re-a 1-n~ di"via _ua_ -_-,:::. 3 to .thitd._bul thLiall got a~Y. - -_. .. -. . '1S _J_ when-the~Saints tried to double --------"= ' o o 8 Mir, (01!• Mttl at 'l'ounl1ln V1U•Yf Conlt•lflC• lcurntv 1 Ctr r I! o I , t o o LCK Alamlros 11 Edl11111, .SA V1ll!v • .Southern C1Uft1rnl1 Conltrtnct lourritY Kettv. 211 3 o l I i 1 1 E1t~ricl1. Huntll\jl!Qn 8•1ch 11 1nl1 ' 11 Goldtn Wnl. Sm\!lt, lb ' 8 9 I • • ! -~llj Mif.ln._ •[ Lll'lt•· New110rt •I --'""""""T'--•l(• ..... l•·---~-=="=ol'=' -t=--•; ___ • ·· I O • ·' "'17",,;fMl\'.:'lr-;--,,--,~·=··-• I O_ 0 ~ rtt•n• tr1--1.0Ulll ti•Cn I 81•1ba!I -ln!cn_ Viti!! 11 Sin..-Olll'fllll, C 9 0 9 1 o o o U!!lver11tv \U 11 J:ISJ, P11om1r 11 CJimtnti Tl!fi, cvot•» •r-crord111 Total• 2.1 i , -t up Chard al second with the '· latter scoring. Tabbed to Do Well Friday 1 0 0 O Slddl1ba<:k t ;301. ..., lll 1 ' 1 Trick -lrvln1 L11Qut ltt 1nd Ctt Wtll 17 ; ... J. SCIPI llV lnnhtft. Cll' ciu1lllyl"ll mHt 11 l"' Al1mllc1 _Tennis ~ Sin Cl1m111t• ti ,Ml10lcn ••• 000 I OD :i.-. • r MO 900 0-f ' I Newport's insurance counter Scort llY 11111111n (l 1Sl Vltlo (1 ,1J) Sou•lt Co1•I Con~renct Go11' -.Sou1hern C1IUornl• In· tournt\' 11 C'trrltc1, 5outi.ern Calllorfll• E1l1nc11 M19noll1 ,, came in the fifth , when J ohn Bowman reached safely on a fielder's choice. stole second and then was knocked in on Wingerd's single. U11lv~_r1ll\' 00! OJS 0--1 11 ,o P1clllc1 (1(10 000 1-2 • tercolltol1tt1 1t Tt1rrt¥ Pr,,., cc. Conf1r1ric1 lournt\' •l'C.!!lden w11t ' ' Only runs for Don Ter- ranove's Hun tington Oilers came on Jim Ashford's home run with 'Kyle VanAmersfort aboard in the sixth. Months of 'preparation come to a, head at Friday night 's ClF swim linals at Long Beach's Belmont Plaza and it marks the 1972 peak 'Jir many of the Orange Coast area's best ~wimmers. IL gets und'er way at 7 o'clock. Nltktl, rt • .,.,,, 11 0tH1fl, ~ I OOfl , ,,..)0 J1n1e111. o 0t11••· lb Wttk1. t llu..,, (·lb l)tlU, c:I k9rt•. Jb 000•" H Cltfl10f'I, ltll Totllt' M1rl111 Cl) .. ' l : l g l ! ! ,I i -.11a11e1m l/1 l ~ ,.~ And although the Orange Coast area ap- l ~ pears to be shut out of team title consider- ! i i eration, there are a number of people "·ith ! shots at individual championsh ips. • 0 0 1 Corona de! Mar's junior Bruce Krumpholz i I ' . "' 8 i ! i.. , . i ---- I ! I· ! f I I 0 I I I ' . ' ROGER-- CARLSON ___ ,_..,,,_..._,. • ''tC. ,, ' • • • ready owns lhel!tt fw -tYle cit iiiii\l-' gn !ll i = j : i ard and figures to part his 49.1 clocking an· w,,,.,. "li'l other notch or two Friday. ... , Ill r1ll' < I ' ' ' . ' ' '-'i-,..-',F'ounta.in Valley~s junior Jack Babeshoff Is ! a 1n 6e200 and 400 free finalS with 1:4{'8 111d : : 3:45.l times. o o And Huntington B<oacti's Clay Evans leads ' . I 0 ' . ' . ' . I I I 0 M ' : ~ butterfly qualifiers with a 53.4. 1 • Ills 53.l in Lhe Bee 100 fly is a CIF' record . Wnll'!llllflK 01 ! : San Clemente's Tim Springer figures to bet. o o ter his bf:st of 22.5 in the finals -but he'll s 1 have a tough time bealing out Sunny Hills' ,... Mark Newlon, who spun a 21 .9 in the prelims. : AJid if the .meet runs as smoothly 111s the 0 prellms at Santa Monica High It should be a i breeze ror all hand1. W~1ttltv. q, Hitt! .... --Nodli.md. H .. , " J I I • • • ' . . . ' ' • • • ' I I J I I ' . ' I I f ractor in both of those meets. * * * And bow about FootbUI Hlgb's ninth grade 1wlm tandem of Peter Spunem and Brace Furniss? Bas~ball Standings __, NATIONAL LEAGUE East Dlvisioo Spurzem tipped 1o a qualifyi ng l:f&.4 ln the 200 free and 48.4 In.the 100 free. W L Pct. GB 9 • 4 .6.Q2 9 " ,692 Furniss we nt 3.44.3 In tht 400 free at the prellms, third only to North Torrance'11 Joh n Halladay (3:41.0) and Foothill's Rod Stracb· an (3:t2.S). Mon treal Ne"'' York Phil11delph i11 St.. Loui11 Pittsburgh Chicago , J() 5 .667 ...! Gary Hall 's ClF record is 3.39.t and Foot· hill coach Tom Delong predicts that mark • wOi fall Friday. * * ' 8 .38, 5 g .357 4 10 .286 West Division llouston 11 4-.733 Dodgers 11 5 .&AA Atlanta 7 8 .467 Newport Harbor High's twin bill aqua Cincinnati 5 s. .311~ coaches Bill Barnett and Bill Jewell are ~an Francisco 6 11 .353 \ guilty of a cardinal ~rror. San Diego 5 11 .313 They trusted If completion date for tlte fin-N•w V0tk 1, ~::-:;~~~c~1~"'1!' lsb of the 50-meltr Olympic 1lze pool on the HOOJ"llll •. J'111it1ur11t • Pl)!11dtlotll1 1. l ll •"ttltl 1 Newport campus. °"'"' ,...,, • .cllldul~ Barnett and Jewell figured on presenting T ... ,., 01rn11 l 4\i 511 \I l 5 6 61> A ll•~l1 flll!'ll 1•21 11 Ct.IU10a CH•r•th Hl .1i..,wat&£-(lolo.,dasbu,h<lw ... u~ .. ~~ ,.. , ~·!<, .. ;;.ow ""'"'1·.!I' ,.,,_ Ed Newl1nd11 NlMA forct1 against 1ucll Ch'ICl~"•'I 1GuU111 t.n 11 sr. Lou!1 iWh~ 1.11, powen as OtAnza. etc. beginning May H. 11l1ht That prospect now agpear1 off with filter '11~:6;''.fi".1'":!'~,"'m111 1..0 l•t L•1 •"•11t1 1~wn. Proble:ml lff..malJL.Jo'lru of Jrrit.~_tlon. H'"' Vorlf !Gt"t"" l·ll 11 Sin Frtt'ICi~ jC••• ="°"'~-1---~1t11tt1 1,11,. nlolt ----. The Newport faclllt y, Incidentally, will 'I C· Mon••••' c11tt11~0 1.11 or IM(,1.11111v !Ml •• sin commodate %.000 sptttators. \... Dltltl !Hor"'•" 0.11 11111>1 .Wllil111tda~ 01rn11 * Pl\1110"11'11111 11 L8' Ant~ltl, nl11\I * * Foothill Hlg"h has loSt another 11tandout basketball player vii the transfer .route . Mon!•••' ti !tn DltM N•w York I! S,.n F••nt\0<0 l'lou"an 1! PUl1bur•t1, 1>ltM A!!•nll •I CMc190 Cl1>(\ftn11l •I !•. te.111. ni1M AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit BAitimore CIE'Veland Boston New Vnrk Milwaukee Minnesola Oakl::ind Chicago Texlls Ka nsas City Angl'I~ E11t Division W L Pct. 7 l .636 7 g .5.1' 6 6 .5<JO 4 7 .3fi4 4 8 .d:l.1 3 7 .300 Division 8 3 7 l 8 5 7 8 6 8 5 8 M•""''"t It'"''" Ho ••'"*• Ktledul•d TM1J'1 •-tt .727 .616 .fil!i .5.18 .429 .385 GB I I\\ 3 3'/2 311 I I ' 2 311 l o-~l1'1d IHoll'rrttlll l·H •• llOtlOll ICu!lt l•JI, '(r~~lf IC1f~7• Ml"( ~ ,._-Vert!, ISl!lflltmf•f o-ll, ,.i.1>• (.nlt••a 111~1111111 1·2) 11 ltlllmor~ (McMlllY 2·11, 111t1tt M!111111.olt (l lYllW!lft ,.,, II Mllw1UkH (~•rlOl'll I.JI, nltl\1 Cl~v,,lnd l"'1rry l U 11 'T•i1' tlo1tr11'1 1-Jl, r1!fhl Wtt1111M•V'1 Gfl'PIH Cl1v•l~nd I' I •••I· 1101111 1(1nui1 Cllv .i Ottro•!. 11l1ftt (nl(ttfl 1t 111Urnor•. nltfl1 Mh'Wlf\Clt '1 Mllw•ukt• nl1~I (thler~1 •! H•w Vork 01kl•ncl ~t 1111111('1, ~··~' The. Knights' 6-6 sophomore Jeff Wtlshans Is r.urrently enrolled at Katella High. A couple of years back it was Bill Boyd who left Foothill for Crescenta Valley. He oamed first ·team All·CIF AAAA honors the ·follow;ng ytar at Crescenta Valley. DEAN LEWIS Welshans i! another ticketed for plenty of honors. * * *· 1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 646-9303 lrldlf'r, If lltktt.y, ,., T.utw, rl l llflt!I, ( Sltllltftt, lb Albert, lb t1otM1i1. ct ACU/'l'ltMo. D Stfl(flef, , I f I I I 0 I I I I I I ' . . ' . ' l Wlth.wo;kers Peg Morrell and Co. keeping e CIF representatives Daro! Roundy, Tom Gor· : man find Mike Peck out of mischief the. pre:- ' Urns wtnt orf without a hitch. : Annually the best run meets or lhe 1tason llettr Oti Is dlsdalnln1 Us annual football o ·that 9/t vie• are the OrAnge County cham· aerlmmage prior to tt1 opt.f'ltr with Slnt1 Service arid P1rt1 for' All lmporttcl Cir., Modern Body Shop for All C1r1 Orange County's Largest and Most Modern Toyo ta and Volvo Dealer 27 ) ' P1g1 Ill lldwdt. "" Hi lt;• -TO!llt S<O SUN~tT, OVUllAS DILIVUY "ltlALllTI l plonshlpo at Foothill and th• Anaheim lnvlta,. An• In Stpl<mber. Says 1lblot\c dlro<W ' tiO_!lJI. • /~tarv BllJI: .. 1\'t ju1t want to toaceatr11e. on ~ 1fomntntlooed distaff ·cte~· b-" t;'Y Sl.1tt .Au.!1 -· ••• ·-, -· .. ·- DEAN LEWIS 1972 TOYOTA CARINA WITH FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING s7200 .... MONTH $H.70 T•t•I D•wn -$72.0I T•tal Monrhly P1ym•nt. •21520 fer Forty· IEl9ht Mot. 0.f•rrt4 - tJSS0.00/C••h -$27'4.70 • APR 12.76 •n 1pp....-I c..-lt. 1972 VOLVO 142 ·SEDAN • WITH FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING -IJl-1·"6 -Tot1I Dowft -_o.t.,.,.._ $4057 .ff. C•th Prlc• 14246.27 Inc.I. T & LI A'R 1 S.U •n ap,, ctllllllt 1972 \TOYOTA MK II STATION WAGON WITH FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING s9300 ,.. MONnt . ,, $\47.1.S Total Dew11/ltl.'6 Tot1t Monthly itymt. fer '«tJ 15tftt M•nth1. r>tf•rrMI MIUJJ A._ 12.&I (lT7toM -141'1 9ft •• cr*tlt. RT7M • r • 1 ·• I• DAJLV '!LOT Harness Entries Cl•M I Pill, •l,11 ""t I J.111, JJ l •Kll If! I 11 •Ht ................ ""'·-· Pl.IT llA(I, 0.... mlw Ptct S Wtr ml!Jt, & ~ fl'l•I ............... WOfl 1 •K il. Alwo •llOllllt J y .. r .. dt & ........ • ... , ....... --0000 ""' ...... . ._...,...... OWtl ~ ••• , !J w •• ,..,,,.., l l<t<); ....... 11 ......... ,..1 ••11' 1;..,. C• Wlllll "'lll kfty Ma•tl'I-. (l...-.1! lU(~f Hu !Trltlffl J• I ,._,., '*"' u ....... , •O'IC!Yt I"• IQ•MI., I SICONO IA(I, 0<\11 "'''' T•ot (ltl"'I"', All ..... ,_ tJCOO Cl1lm- l110 IH'l<t '"°'· &PMdV I OI ll "1 .... d 1 .... 1.,, O.~t ll.._I ( )'I H ...... ll-l Ttrrt<I IJ-•I l.OC:l>lfl l(tV !TOd<ll S11pr•-Mir 14<tt r"'t fll S L klll flt11-) Wld~ Mllll1 !Gr.,,ltr) THllD IACI . 0,.. ... 111, "•et, Cltl"'l"'1, AU tlOtt, "'1-rf tll'lft M.irUI jtrt1t rt1Jd, P11•'f \l!'OI), (lt lm. !"-""'" nooo. MlllMf •col(h IJI . Wllllt m tl ''"'' , •• , llllllM:k ..... ,, .,.,, $It•,.. I l oydl 01-l'ltlld (!>or-) "''"'' ol Cllanct tMt'f'l\l rdl Ce Piiot fltrk~d Gom.r Htflfl'ltr lftt"'llvfOI Armt...11 (h•m11 IL•Cnt!I ) POUllTH IAC•. OM "'Ill . Ptct . c1.1 ... 111q, .. u "'''· P11•,. t)!ll)(I. c111 .... 1,. l!f'lc• t1~. OttW'lv 10¥ T1tt ICr.,.lr •l Moc~ll'ICt Ort•"' IP Wlltlt ,.,t l El Ot (1!1m lrr rwlna•d ltM 1 111 l11t IM•vnord) 01r~ 11111011 fL1 C111 t~l <':10<• Cllltf I JOM•I V'IClt SMIHIO• l~r) Nld<•w•"""" lloy (J Wlltlomt) l'lll'TN IACI. 0"" ,.,111. P1(1. Cl1lml"11. All 111••. Puru 11'1)1) Too fl4J,.,1.,.. prlc• l,:Klll, Ttw Clt n Andll• . r1•I,,, No JOJ t.l.DGW P rlot• OI f~Ynl 1n,,....,.,, f)ll!O'I! p.,.,1,,. lf"l~M IMt v"(t<\ C)j(IOI ~llotl!llM IWltlloMt ll\1"111 llX~Y '""'' l 51v•ul~I l•!.(IO) b.i11110 ll:ld IH~lll llSOOl LldV Cl1tl1 ~ !Tr!tt111 Jr l !'?001 111<1v.c1 L1dv 111111....,1111 1notn S1tW'll1 S1tW'I /Tith••) !000) ' SIXTM IACf. nn" mll1. Trol. All Mfl, flllfl·wl,.,,•r l t.000 lh•I 1•1 _,,. '°"""'' tl'ICI Anrlr 1• i nd ""'"'' lo k twi......i 1 .... t)OOll ,.,.,,. t1'00. Swfft "To Mkt (M!l"l T111\d11, M1y 2. 1912 Tennis Result,s ' For Area Preps Harness Racing • Results \I o•ul ~ Wtt1'"1•1l ... (U''tl tlt\<tl WM1ir111 lU•t lM k.11•1•! IW"'l llM lt>lt l (NI /.1, le••t'l"'I lo Ol1t ll (W , ~•I I r.Of •""" IW) •7, lll"lt1t..i 1c Ct nlt ll IW) II (111•~111 OY"') !Ml M , &, •• I .. : "'°" ' I i~n•• ll<m) l<H! 0-4. '"""tt•ill WCI" 6· '1,,!'..,c~:1.,,.,. '""'' io.1 ,,., '"'' to•t•ntd, 11111 l ·f ~·'" W1!W'< 1111"11 .I N"') llt f IJ llt •· 51'11!••1 rw , ''· ~·11 o•t Ou-•·P l)tt. <• 6.I, /.J s ... 11~.~·•I! IN ... , ,,.,,, ~'· •-J; W<in 1·1. l ·l J~ftlllt' lll'lilY Wt1t ... 1n1•1< U'1tl 11111 W11ltrn Sl•t ltl Ptnl11 rw m1 1~11 10 "•111111 IW) 1.1; d.I! St •!/ • i A•m"' <Wml "'"" ,.J: loll J•I •1v1.,,, tWm, C•f Jt ••o .. 1~, 1Nl 4-l, Ofl 01v11 M . w~""'"'"'' l"''"''"" °' ... ". Ctunt!I Foortc~ !Wm ) 1011 Io McGul•f'OullttnoU i •· 1111. ll •un11er-Ltnc l ·J lltht t •GIYlo• l .,,.,l IOtl 1 .... !e11 0·'· V1rtlly N•wl'Of"I 111 1 011 11"!1 An• Sl•tltl O'lltllly (N) 1011 lo G11ntl I·'· dtl. FOtllr l •l, 11~1. HtrVf1 I J, IOU Ill <:1~1,, 1·1 s .... 11 1111 1 ... 1 6·l. 1.1. 6.1. 1.1 llow111< 1NJ lotd 1·1, l<HI 1.0, !oil I· ,, Wl)ll 6-j Nlchcll1 {NI l0tl l·I; 11M 1·11 WOt1 l·I, l·J. Dllll'lt• E11t,.,1n·JOn1'1 11' I lltl. ~ " I I t . TQ111U1n (SJ l·J, 1.01 llt l l'•fl<nl n· Al•w111dtr l .C. 1.0. JKDll1fn•5Pt lr !N) won I•], 1·1l 1·0. ... Ju11lw V1r1Uy NIWl'tlrf (21) p j 11•11 ,llftl Sh191t1 (!Wiii IN) dtl Cn1m1>teu ($1 4.1; !Id , W11111r l·I; def, 510•111 1.0; dtl. 5c~!ck 1.0. l •own (Nl •on l ·J, I·'· 1.0. 4.1. O'lttUty 1NI WOft 6 J, t.0, •-e, 4-1. O'Co11n1r IN) won Ii, l ·J; let! 4-0; won l ·J. Do.iOlol l •011·$Cot! IN! 11•1 Ed1111rd1·Lt "ll lSI •1. 1-e, dt t. Spt n<1l1t-Llnd 1.1. 4.1. llOY·lldl'l1m t NJ •on 1.0. 6-J, 1-e, t {I. Jlr0th·kp/I l<ltWl'O'I 01 !OJ 51nr1 A ... Vt rolfv 1111'°" CU! U! SA V1ll11 Sln11111 l ie• IE1 "'' H•n•• IVI 6-0: ~~'!~t;: tt·J; lltl Z•••m~1 1 J; Ptrkl"' (I I We>n ...... ,, •.•• l ·L e oci1rd \ 1 w"" ••· •o. 1-0, •-l. Cle~ «E IOtl 0.4: wOll l ·f, IOtl Wc.rl 1.J. Oo.ibl•t '" '" , ... Prkt·S1evtnwn /El Ile!! Ftrnt "dtl· 01rml11t ·!VI •J, J6. Ot! O!tl>"· V111dt rltoes1 l ·l. '°'· SUNSET. • • IContl.nued from Page 171 ,,.,. ., lt1111iotl WI\ ff•" Wt.l!r"lflt!tr S111.l1 C••,,...,.d, •I ffrt \to, Jo """1"""'· ct 01•t' II Sm•'"· ., "'°''"'· )0 '"'''· ' ~•w•. 10 Wtoo. p Tq11I• . ' . OOI 000 0-<t J I 2'Jlm 'l-7 1 J AM lf l .. ' ' ' ' ' , ' ' ' • • • • • • • • • • ,. . .... • • • • • • ' . ' . • • • • • • ' ' ' . .. ......., Nlrbof' 111 1-m•"· 10 w 1...,.,d. o H•ld~•m1~. d W"•!t, ' O"l•!>u•a •t c .... ,,, lb MrrMrrt 1t Fol•l!m II '•""· ID To•••1 ... ' ' ' . ' . ' . ' . ' ' ' " ' . ' " " , . "' • • ' . ' • • ' ' ' ' . ' . ' ' ' ' ' . ' . l'/YIO')C~ 1 C '~ ~!G A-2 J LDl •I ti) .. F ll'if l, lb S S1<1n!••, ti 1 Y/•~'I•~!. c 1 l~omp111n, II l<1~p1~. U Ho•119, r l lllto•t1ton, lb P•lr11u1~, lb 1-i•••ll, p l!lcn, "" St obb•. p~ Cc11n~!I. p To!tlJ J\ Munt""t tOft 11! J~r A1~f11rd. II f""''"'"" '" Lunt. p11 1Ce11nt d¥, cf Ot~1.,, c P ru1l1. '1 ~°11:.··1~' Trc1tl. Jn V•nAmt r1,ort. 111'1 MD!I. P Jim A,hf~•d, pfl l-lo'toY9k, '' Tott l1 Scort ~r .. • ' ' • • • • • ' ' 1 • " lnftlnlt • • • ' ~ ••I ' . . ' ' ' ' " . ' ' ' ' , . , • • • • ... . ' • ' • • • g 8 ' ' g • , ' ' . : 1 • " • ' '· • • • ' Huntingtoi:i Surfers Dominate Division 8o)11 01\'ltlon 1. Phil Johnson I Ut guna P..e;ich~ 2. ~fike Cruickshank . 3. Jeff Ham1l1on, •· Nick r.1on- ta1ne, 5 J>;•na }\r n11ln11, J .l\l asters Oh•lsioa L flick ~latrhcws 1 Dan:i Poin! 1, 2. George r.tunsey, 3. Chuck Linnen 4 H1c hard Dietz, 5. Bruce Gabrielsen. Ifs Tlit Ptrftet Timt To Givt .A Stiko W11telt o .... , .... "'"' "''""· It ••I H "''"'Ill••'• l•a• """ii .... , W.• II '"'' f" • -· Lli• ilit"• h-• 1•o t a11 D•lt (••"I• "''' lolo '"' '"'"' ""' A t• •''" I"'' '"'"'"'""_....,;.. 1i.•t "' _., l'on • ti ............ "" fl -· .......... tti<•, ,.. ••• ,,....1, '""' .. ,.., -, ....... 11. SEIKO\)¢¢¢ HONDA JEWELERS ~~ ,, .. , ,., .... ,. .. llUltTlNGTOlt lfOClt H•·Hll It ~'111 a s1rong south swell iha1 produeed e:1cel!en1 waves that v.a"> 1he primary i.igh SJ'W)I for man y outstand ing surfers Sunday in the annua l Doheny Beach surfing contest sponsored by the Ca pistrano Chamber of Commerce and th.e Y.'est ern Surfing Assoc1a- 11on. \Va\'e Trek surv ived lhe challengt' of 20 o 1 h e r su rfboard co m pa n i e s in registering its third straight team title. ' Se niors Oi\isioo l. Ha! Sachs ( Sa n ;liiiiiiiiiiiiiiPP.i~~ji!ijii~~~ijijii~iii Clemcnt c 1. 2. c;eor~c Draper.I I 3. Ray Kunze. 4. Rlchardf Scott . S. {:ary Stellern. Greek Surfboards finished second. Huntingt on Beach Surfing Association ~omi nated t h e surf club di\:1sion \\•ith ~n Fernando Valley Surf Club captu ring second p lace~ Indivi dual winners: J\·leo's lli\·ision I ~ John Davis (Huntington Beach i. 2. i\1 ikc Armstrong. 3. Jo hn Ashton, 4. Randy Lewis, 5. Dan Flecky. Junior Di\·lsion I. David Van Dru ff I Hun- ·tington Beach). 2. Bob Grieve. 3. Jeff Smith , 4. G reg Escalante, ~ Randy Weeden. Prep Volleyball Kneeboard Dh.:ision ' I. .Joe H!Pes 'H untington BcachJ, 2. Dean Cleary, 3. Craig Peterson, 4. John r.tohns, 5. Dave Lester: Dance, Swint At Costa . J\fesa The Costa ~lcsa llig h girls' physical education department \1·i1! prel'ient its an nua l s1·n- chronized swim and moclCrn dante program Thur~1lav. Fri- day and Saturday at 8: 15 p.m. The program . titled "Aloha Centauri," featu.res 25 modem da ncers and 19 svnchronized. S"'immers, including a solo performance by S h au n a Knight. Tickets are available 11 lhe door for a dollar for adults and 75 cen ts for students. DAY! ROSS PONTIAC 'S lXClUSIVE Nl!W CAR At No Extra Charqe P1 rt1 & L•~r on '"11111 Powu lr11ft • ,LV"'lwf' G•l!nn l ff lvlnol l.!OOlll -~'"' D•rt /It w11u .. ,.,,~ oM.urtlo H•MYtr If. Wlllltm1 I - """"",-~~~!!!9!~~.~t.i J~d:.. ':.~c1.t.2t --Miif•f· Mtt , n 1r Ju11l« v1r111I ---~>--•••-<-=-~ 'Tt•l!!lrf M1rt fW!•h••dl «~I ).o.1111v 0 Sh•• !Jt~Ol!•I -1C1Uv1 M•ll «D•"!!~11l !50ll(I) _J)..,..11•" '"''" 1r.~•••"'"1 • t•Vt"NTM •Act'. ,, ... mil• ,. ••• Cl•1r & l'•ll .----ldlNn llll<j U'41 A V1U1Y •llllST IACI -On• Miit . '°l(t. ln•I•• fllDCk .,IEI df! Ltrtn tVI l·AI del M•l~en J v••• 11!!1\ a. undt•. '°u"• Ntuotrt 6.0. l lltOO. , Stlll~t i E1 won &.J. •o. Summt• ll•t uty !O•nnl•!l.IO '60 JM l •••< lf ) Mf Pt!trton tVl 6 1; dtl tl•lmll'IO. All """' Purtt l:llllCI. T111t • r,.,ina prlcl m 11. $ D•Vl!l'tak f ... •rd!•I lrtJl'lll\ "''"..,. Jtl'llt IK11m•lt rl 1141X1l Fortv Tt.1"''' rw 11111,.,1I A.10 7MI Co11Cll11 I·!. H••m't 81"" (Wltfl•rd! 7 ~ Sunon /f l wnn ..0. l·I . Timi -J,OI. ltuud·Mlllt CE'r"'1,:i1 Prl11t1·8olD1ky Alto r1rfd -Lord 9ron11, V1ll1n!'1 /VI/./: lltf l l <1on.Con<t ll "''· .. ,_, Drlv• (L!IN"'! f100ll• Jilftr•"" 5~1!'M• llnv;fl 1'3751 Mr, Mii• " (Jft~•I !IOMl )-.!" Oulrlr fVnll•r,.1 lfOOO) }ohll''OH Ul•!l•vl 110001 lun""Wll L•u 11'.rnnk ! lt/IOll1 • llOMTM l•fff. o ... Mil• P~I. All )""4 ......... fl !50IJ TOii tll lMl"f l!f'ICI 117.«ll'I: Menl•n• llt•""""' 111 llQOI 8..., A"lo• IR. Wllll•m•I !',,,Ml(ll 8111• Ofv,.,nl• IR•ll•vl IU ,IMI Avr SIU(l•11t-1J l"llll•M•\ 1!7-) nwv•r H•l\Ovt• !O•nnl•l rn .fltllll (\f"""!"" 111•11"1!!1 !II loOOI' c~..,,, M.,....,, •• 1M111•» ru !lllnl MlMtH IACI . On• milt. P1r•, r111 ... 11111 (11·1!'"!1 11r•l•rrl'!I. A!I """'· ,..,,.... 1'1M. 111<' tl•l,.,l<>O ,.,,,. 11250, }tilldV'• Tai•"' ro 1ultl!lll t1'~l w ... Mtrll tRl••k,.,•nl 150001 M..,rv r · IM!lltrl 1•7501 So.c•t11111r IJ w1111 .... ,J l~l'Olll Alldv'o M•rc tr.r~nltd !}Ml'll C~!tl lttv•lir tM1•11•d UOllOI l(lm111m lf.l•v~•nl !6MO I locfl NDlt (W!"IJl r! (.60001 Vike, CdM Gals Win Singles pl1yer M"ry Jane House of Corona del Mar 1nd fi,farina's double~ team or Kathy Ya n~ey and Shirley Straten won the Orange Coun- ty-B11dmlnlon Jnvit11tional-co- ~Ponsored b.v Estancia and COsla Meu Jligh sc hools )a!lt weekend. -Pt1ist House dcfelftel! run - nerup Diane PArker of _..A1ar:ina1s _V1ki11g:; 2--0_in -lhe --Cinafs . .,.hir,d _ _11nd rourth rui'l- neri-uP wet~herry Ringer of Laguna? Btaetr· a'nd Karen Runge of Hunt tnglon Beach. Joyce Means (Cosl.1 Mesa !, Linda Ziegler ITustinJ, Liz Noll !Corona de! Mar l and Alice Henderson !Villa Park) \vere quar ter-finalists. In !he doubles competition at Estancia, the Yancey· Straten duo defeated Da rlene Tesh and Linda Smego of \Vestern 15-10, 15-11, for the championshl(\ tropby . Defend· Ing chan1pions fron1 Estancia lost in the quarter finals. l1mlll••l1 V111C1V-St•1t•n IM\ d•f N1w11111k!. M,,1n1~1 !Wt JI 11 !5. IJ 1f i.i.~,7~r;;r,~.twr/.~ 11•1. nome10t1·0 '· He1rt, Sptl.,. 1'1v.,,, A<Kkln Stocklll't, Wt•O·J t ulltr !El loll 1·6. WCI" M . l(/wl ""'""'· V1r1!ty ~c••l(llf<! -El J1v fl. L1111n1 (H! (Ill U111r1 12 ll~ll 1•1Yll'lmlr lttUlf & 4·Fl)f'· Slntllt IY ~flVM•••llll I H .11. lltnvhlll Ill lo.t to Sc~mldl 1$1 J·': 'l!CONO IA(I On• mil•. Pie•. ~'7,'v~~:;:o1~1.0l-6; 1011 In IC<Kll J.11 f!, (!1lmln111. Alf ..... l'uru l!JOO. I VIM !L! 101! 1·6. 2·6, 2·6; WDll 1-1. 51lvt • ll•c11<d rw 1111t•I J .40 lllG 1 .0 So•ldh111 fl ! w0<> 6-l-'kl•I 2·1· :J.6; G 8 00 CSl•tulkf 3.60 300 won 1·1. M11tv He<lf' !0. ...... ff) -J )(I JIY Ill lOll 2 6._J.6. ]-.. 1-6, • l l"'t -1 11 7/J. llHl~ll Pttr<OI °'°:'l'l'" dtf I l O O d · ·-'1•11 r•rHI -Vt •nllfl Adlll•. $1,.l•'1 MtYtlff'~ !Sl 1-,, 1·1: Orf. LltKlll· (t rlll, Httd Chltl: Nt<htko 0«, l!l lt rk•tldt • !!l 6-0. •O (•1l1Dr11lo (111•1. MrCt rltr·J rcob1<>11 !Ll "'°" 6-2, 1·6, No 1er1ltlltJ. 6•0. •1. Ju"!"' V1rolty L11un1 !1tl Ot) s-r• Sina It I THlllO llACt' -Ont milt . Pltf . Cl•lm.n•. All •t••. l'u,.• 11500, Doc:lor Vonl1n (l ocld) 1\,00 I.loll 010 On·L ••~ITil• Soul• flo"1ol 1.60 J ~o BrntllftlD" !\I dtf. Shaw rs• 6i: lcll 1D Hulchlm" .,; d,f. Vl0<kl•nd 6-•: d•! Scnmldl 6 !, All Kty.cl Ut Cl llDtnlo"I 1.60 J lmt -2.11. -'l•o ••ctd -0.11 H•v.,., Cllllkt r k oll, l!mm• 51u1rt, Ni lly GUI. 5cr11ch.cl -MlliklW M••1~•· d~ -Fl"l•~ttl 11•1!, dlt11u1lllltd •"" "l~C.cl IKOnd. FOU•lM llACI Cn• milt . PICf Cl1lmln1. All 11••· Puri• tnco. V•l l •n1 '1 Lo v 1 t 01ult~"I tl.loO 1.10 S40 ll rolflt r·ln•L•w !Mt¥0<k•l J.00 J fa CMM ll1tml11 (Wll111mll J .60 Tlm t J 01 311 Alta rlcfd -llOC:-t l lerl, GIDW IUClll •d. Mu•~ll Hll'IOvtr, Ht'U Sully, Vtll•nl't lf l111. FIFTH ltACIE -o ... m ilt eoK•. Con· dlllOAtd. 4 t t1r old1 •llcl undt r. PurH l lllOG. Luck~ John V (lltrrY) I.to Otncfr Gto•t• !C1nnll) Andv• Ou<I U1111•~) Tlmt -1.0! J/5. J.00 J.Ml J.IO J.XI '~ AllO ••<rd -Judy llocln••· c~o·1 ll••u. Pr0<>f llfr, Ml•• P1l1 '1e1. Otbutt nlt Sll~dO•. No K•llch•I. llXTM llACI -Ont mil•. P1(I. Condition.cl. • Vttr old1 •nd un.trr. Purir l :IODO. llov1! Go ! 0tn11l1l l!t11on11/ty (AC1'trm1") ~Ph11111I• llv•d IC•t"t) Tin,. -7.C1 '''· .... 2.80 J IO 5.IO •-ro .... Alto •te:td -l •td.J Allt rr\00"· M111 Qvlk1t1p, A"dVI 1111, Sllvt t l lll!t r, Hurryl11t Htmy. krtttMd--= J t iii!Oft Moll1w~ IJ IE••<f1 Fl1rel .. I l ·'°l'IO"IUlf, 1tlltl 1111 .M. llVIN!l'I llACI -Off "1Ji._ tml. COiiiffiOil~ Alli "•v11. '°""' 10000. A<mtl<'t l.lll(le- cw1l111m1) A1btl fit~•! rMlllu) T1r'°'I Ptlt !0•"1110 Timi ~ l.OJ I..,_ 11.to 6 10 '·" Alie r1cfd -Tht l, '•btlh1, ll'ldft J VII. Lumbtr Jon, Gu"lmllh. ND •(r1!ct.••. llC2MTM lt-'Cl -Ont m ilt. Ptct. C l11mlnf All •tfl. Purtt llSOCI lluddr J im• !W!lll1m•l I.OD 2 IO J "1 S(or<htt WAvt (llenlifll) J &o J 80 Suri llotird !Wl+!lt"'I) '·00 l>m•-'OJ .-.110 rtctfl ·-Fit ld Olt mond, l1Ylor Cr•ek . Andv• ltlltt, C1tt.u"11 Chit!. No •crtlcn~,. NllrttM llACI -On• m ll•. p,,,, CIAom•n•. All •<111. Plll'JI IUCO. M•ltOllc:. Ltt G. !MUllH'I \1 10 t .40 SI() N"l••1m11111 Sl1r 1w11i11m1l f.IO J I) P11:ltk Chit! 1 Sl~:ulk l 5.00 Tlmr -1.Cll Ill. "i." r•cPd -Frt•m111'\ Cb111<t, F•MI• Av11on11. d<1•Llnce1"1 J1m<o, Fr•tmon'• O•e•m, Adlos Sino•. No 1cr1tchn . d~ -Flnl\hfd flr11, dl1au1lllltd l "d Pll CPd li lt. II IJICll l •MllllllC LN O. & t• Hlck1w1m..,, lt~r, 11ltl 114'.Jf, ' M•ttlllt ld Il l 101! J·I: 111011 •1; loo! •·l :won l l McCl111111 IL) lotl 7·1, J.1. 6-I ; won .. J. C11h 11-l•0<> Ill to.1 O·l. ?.6. 1.6. 4-l. Doub It• Lt1te-F!n 111 tll d•f. $ J m o "\· WIU!t m\ f5) l ·l, 1-1; d•!. S!OOl'.ll·Clt l'- ltnotr 1-0. t·I. MIVIOC:k·LIYfn tl) won I·'· l·ll 6{1, 6·1. V1rillv Coo!I Mt11 111\il (111/d Lfl Al1m llot Sln11r11 l ndllt v !Cl Ml. Crouin !LI 6·J; ,, •. c ... 11to IL! •O: dlf. t mlltl• Il l '·~,1fi1.~1'll111 1';sl t.k. 1·6; •on '"t; l~ol 1·1 Grtl"f' !Cl 1011 7-6. l·I. •·•· 1.6. s ... uk !<1 1011 0.1. O·•· 1.4, •·•· Doubltl H~"'·"Old1n !(! dtl. llMl ·C!1rln•r Ill 6-J, l·I' a•f. Sml•~·L11n!kl11l1t fll I· •· 1·' nomn1on·Nevlllt IC1 IDll ~I; !ltd 7. 1: 101! ,.,, l ·6. Jwnlltl' V1rtll, C11l1 Mtu !J) fill Lal Ai.'"1t11 Sl1111IH Gt n\lfr !Cl ID\I la l t vla.-Il l 1.61 fltl. Srtlttn IL! "''· H1rrl1 IC/ kl•t 1.1. 2• Mutrvt n Cl ftP!, !cnntld,r Ill 4-1; dtf. Clt rk !Ll 1.0. L1w111nOurlH'r or.• 1MT J..6. 7·4. OtuM11 Mytr1·ll•11w11 IC> l111t 111 V1111·l1bb•lt «il l .... O·•I loll lo Kw1n·lllrnt1 !LI •· '· Smti!W®d-..6•_..llWllO!t 1cr lOir ·•i 1· •• Deep ~5ea Fish Report t.llW•OllT IO•v11'1 L0<k1rl -lr t nal•"· IJ eel/co btn. XI rock coo. htllll>ut SfAL l lEACM -40 111aler.: 100 rll(k COii, ' cow cod. l lillO CCIII. )t) Cl ll(a b•u. t l!tflb\I!. ll••ot -ll 1111111<1: 10 Ot,,t t..Ot . 16 bonito, t 11"d 0111, I fltlll>u! . CANA WHAll,_ -ol 1nal•ri; J" 111\d ri•n. JOJ mtcke•tlt ! btrr1c11 1. bon to. OCIEANSIOI! -11 1nal•r11· SI ~e•11 b•n. 1 rcKk cOll 1'S m1rk••t . $AN Olf~O \MunfclNI Lllllllnti; -1't 11111lrrJ1 I J vt t'-1•11, l1 btr· ''j~\8 PlfCllO 1n"d St. L11H1i11t) -JI 1110!tr<J 1 wtllowlt ll. l'9C t 1Uco !Nu. • ll•lll>ut1 l stlld 01u. 45 '"Ickert!. '"°"" 1 1110111<11 -JI 1nolr•1: 160 •«k end. • c11• u1d. 110 c-Uto b•••· '1 mco~NG'1i1.t.cH lltlmont Pl1r) -'} •n<1!•ri: 11 H iid b~u. ,, •«~ tO<I. II•••• -70 111gltrt1 • o-rr1cud~. 11 111'1!1 IMtn. 1 htllb!Jt, 60 · m1c~1rr! IPltrNl111 Ll"dl11tJ -U t110l,r1: /" •Cc-coo. I CO• CCIII. , 1xl11lto. 50 Ct l co o.u. 2 "'llbu1. 1 b1rr1cud1. • tlme1 I didrom Long ll11ch. Or smile owoy to Sacramento or San Diego. C~ll your lr1YOI 1g1nt or PSA and u k •boot our HIY·fo·btar, low faro. '8A 1i-fOU ,.IHI. ValueCenters Check1these May es at .. Enco ValueCenters. Spt iag RaclaJor Service. Wheel Balancing. Atlas Mile-Pak WlitewalL $ $695 • Orein radia1or. • Put in up to 2 011rrons of Atlas Perma-Guard yea~· round cOolant. · • Visually ins pect radla!or, __£Q_g1JD.g.1Y11lm hoses and 1111 be lls. • Pressure-test cooling 6YStemc·--- • f ' 4wheelsfor s491 2 wheels for $2.97 • Includes weights. • Helps cor1ect a common cause. of vibration arrd tire weer. Free Battery Check. It's a good Idea to mak11 sureycur battery 'ts still delivering full power after rough wln1er' driving: We'll be glad to give your battery e free spring check-up. rt only takes a minute and It could save you some problems later on. Atlas Plycron WlitewalL • An economy Ure with four lull plies ol sturdy nylon cord. will! lr•<l•l1t, lllU• SJ!T2 F1d. E•. Ti.it lcr 77$-14 lub1l1•• whlltw•rr. •Our best-s11111ng tlrt. •Four-ply rayon cord. • Wrap-around tr11ad. Atlas 2 plus 2'Belted Whitewall s39· 49 wllh lrrdt·I", •Two plies of Vlcron pt11112.10 •A good ··second car" l ire !or around·!owndrlving. ,.,..,, r...tt, '•" .. ., ··~ Wt!'"""·'-•><• •~, ... -.. ~ .. •·•··""""'·,------t- The a bow priees on tns a(ld teM.:lllatt Miitie nallonarry at stl1ton8 Ol)Mted btj tt.imtleOi & Refining ~kx:aled In many 11llltrOpOlilln1~ and communltllL ~and offef1 ml)'VIO'f II par1/Clpol/rg ~ Enco- c;i, • .,. c .... j•. ~. c .. ,... °""'00• ···~ •. .... _,_, ..... , .. • •'ii• ....... , •. ,,,_ -··" _o _ ValneCent<'t., -------~ ·--.. - polyester cord plus !WO F1<1. E-:. li• l11rc11-14 bu ill-in belts of fiber· IY~tles• du11 whlt1w111. • glass cord. •Low and wide for the sleek, modern look. .. ' . / 1:00 --- ,, ,. 7. 7: •• a· 10 .. .. . , . ' • ,j ~ • . . . • .I ~ -.-~ . .~-~ -.. • •. Tur!day. MAY 2 l qn ________ o:_•_.;IL_Y_l'l_Lo_r_.1,_,9"', • A111acfeus Quartet Co1111ty Theaters Vie . . TONIGHT'S • ' U11even Concert 5 Enter Riverside Onc-(lct Festi vnl TV HIGHLIGHTS ' ABC D 8:30.-.. The Falling or Raymond .'' Jane Wyman plays a spinster teacher marked for death t by a former pupil In the Movie of the Week. Also starring are Dean Stock\vell, Dana Andrews and " At Lagu11a Beach Orange Cowuy t ht a I l' r ~roups \\'ill b;t in the l1U•Jdr1t:r this weekend wltb five o( th<' nine entries in the t3lh annual Southern Californin Tourna· 1nent of One-aC't Plays at Hl\'ersidr. Lauri\ Blaek. Also on thr rrtda\' bill 1111r bt' lh<' lr\'ine c.:Om111un1ty Theater, closing the evenin,i;: with Stan O'Casev's "A Pound on Den1and. '' Richard Do11• directs t1 cast con1postd of Aaron 1'~\ttchu, Bob 1'.l illir, Joanne ·\\'olcott . Kaelht 5<'()11 1,uJd Peter Gallngher. Phelp:c. J:ty D1'n Black. Ttrt Lynn (ierbt'r nnd Doris. Donna and Debbie Bhu:k. Oiher thtaters .con1peting In the tourh:nnent , »ind their eu- trll'S. \\'Ii i bt the Satclllht 1'1111 ers or Hedo:ld<l Beach, "1'1it> C'asl' of lhf' C.:rusht>d Petuni R:f': Aprenda Playerll of Snn Pt"'dro. "Cc111vrrsation at N1~h1 \Vilh :1 nf'spised {'h<1rae1tr". l'nllon Li 11 I u '\'heattr. :1 ('Ultln~ from "A Funny Thtng I lnppencd on thn \~1 ::11 to 1ht rorunl'': Gu ild Pl:lvPrs or S.:u1to1 Ana . a ru1- 11ni lnnn "l'yg111nl1011," and 1'01no1111's V~iley l'orn111uni1y 1'h('ntrr'. "l'n1 lll"rbt.rl " fron1 · \'1iu Know I (':in't lltar You \\'htn 1hr \Vatr r's Running '' By TOM BARLEY Of lhl D•ll1 Pli.t 11111 Paul Henried. p NBC 0 9:00 -"The Da rk Side.'' David Wayne, ~ Robert Webber, Wendell Burton and Geraldine i Brooks star in this original drama of a pfivate de-1 tective searching for a missing heir. Jt seemed for a long time Thursday night in the Laguna Beach High &hool auditorium that the work or the Amadeus Quartet \vould have to go into the re<X1rd as being ~IO\\' 1he brilUant par the9 s et CBS II 7:30 -.. Campaign '72" -Walter Cron- kite reports ~n the presidential primaries in Indiana and Ohio in this election special. themseJves. That is a reluctant observa- tion from a critic \Vho has never heard anything less than a magnificent performance from the London -ba sed KCET ll!l 7:30 -Young People's Film Compe· tition. Youn g movie ·makers present tlteir a'vard· ~ winning films in th is special . ' ' ensemble. But it was, "'' felt .. at intermission lilne, a valid KHJ G 10:00 -"Th95p•ilers.'' John Wayne and Marlene Dietrich -. the stars of this 1942 ·•conclusion in the light of the t Haydn and Mozarf th at had ~ gone before. ~ Amadeus enthusiasts, ·and r dra.ma. .,·.~~~~~~~~~~ I Tuesday Evening MAY 2 1:00 II D D 1111111 ai1t... ma - • Alpl1 111111111 (cont'd f~ 4:30 PM) C.lif, Arlltlt n. Ntill Yor~ Y•nkfft •t"Ntw York. ~-cft Cll "'" ""' ••• m""-. ID I .._ tf Jt1111l1 ( tDI '""' rm....,_11 L11111• a-"'"' m!DAMI (!~-..... l :IOO-: (C) Ill! "Cou- Cond (dr1) '68 -Charlttll Htdon, Mu lmlli1n Scll1U, K1th1Jt1 Ha~ leslie Nitblll. (fl CU ,.,... W11!1r Cronkit1 tfjJlatilul "'°""le "'Tiit Wo1td of JttqlllS Couste1u~ m Andy l ritftt11 Sllow m ,.,.., '" a. P'nl...., m Q]J """" wtlMut failure m1-9 .,_ Aal1 lliJ Q"" ........ ._,,, m---11Zl"'- l :U ·-w..,.u, 1:0011 (D Ill m -81111 ... Cleek CIJ Trllltl W """'UlltCll (1)-,-gn.r. MJ Lift1f m1 LM lKJ m1-~-lDl "-'""" fD.....,... Ke!h!Hn Hitchcock ti U111 PletMa •II ca• llllllil loll (II) (sus) '71-J•n• WJtMft. 0.111 Stockwtll, Dt1111 Andrm. h ul Htri· r11d, MurrtJ Hamilton, TiM O'Co~ llOI. Miss Wym1n portr1ys 1 spinstir hi&h .chool tttchtf m1rked !or d"th by 1 fw mer pupil, Recently rtleM fflfll • rl'ltntll Institution, lh• boy fMIS th• result If 111 his problems 1r1 dut to 1 test !ht hither l1iltd him 1n 10 years earlier. ({) Relllt' II till Riwtr m Merv lriffi•' ..... Sc.hedult4 a:utst is [ve Gtbor. SI (}j) Tiit Mnuln "Should Cu• thlfllSil le P'11mitted?-'' m AMtr1a11 1cH1111r IB Tt II A1111e11IKM t :Ol 8 (() Hrni fiw-1 (R) Alb'rt h ubt11 CUlfhi n • uir111 synd ictt• ban and bolin1 Nlll(V who sHb fl'ttl\P. D Oi llllHCW!TllthrlSide Slars ol thlt oria:in•I df1m• 111 D1vid W1yn1, Robert Wtb_ber, Wen. dett -!urton. Geraildint-l ftXlks.. A - wealthy wo1111n ~ies 111Yln1 every· 'thin1 to her SOil. who him 1 priv1l1 deh div1 M loe1t1 hil mi1si111 fl. lhtr. HOWIVlf, tl\I ~1tKliv1 ha1 plan$ of his ewn. .fl) LI CfWI lilll CriaU Cll""-llil- uoam-(\j) ..... .JllllMI fl!lllM ._ .... l•l Ill" ..... (U) MlllpwlM hit •••• ,,159-•u.> 10:00 II(() CaitllH (R) M1rti n Sh Mt flllSb 11 1 crlp!Jltd b'mtr ll!Ohlr· cycll ,olictm111 who enlisb C11t11011 In hi• w!ldtttl 1pinsl: the hood· lu111 tfllt finls!IM llis polict caner.' 0111 •·--·-(R) MCHit Jot" Nichols decides to 1:3011 (() c.,.ip '72 W1lttf Cron · 1111, I local did escape I JOSS• Iii!• rt'10fb °" tM P'nsidtntlll ll'ri· ifler it is dtlc:Mml thlt he 1:s 1 l!'llri • Ill lnclilnt and Ohil. • fu&ltive frDt!I dlltll row. Guest ll Ill ill m OldiM '7Z CM191• el P'1ul Wi111litkl. lndllrit 1111 Ohio prl111117 1lldions. ..... --.. ···--... -a _, tc> ·-· """ . o rn Ill m ...... """· · f1 MancW' (dre) '57-christo· (R) "Asll Mt Arain Tomorrow~ ." "" phlr l11, M1rit Vi'1inl, Dolta:lts · fimtd Nuro111rpon ..... ,.,.,, hit Wilmer. . a retr 1M 1Nrrit11 wllen ht pushts D CJ)@ aJ 1llt MN S.U• (R) hinuelf ~· endur1nc1. Willilm ''Tht Slnds of A.npr" Thi 111Llld Windom 1M Sh1ron Atklr 1uut. !!'!mtiatn.n txe:Jolion ltllt ki~ 0 -Mtwil: (Zttr)~ ~il1n" • drivn II I d11111 .,UUY r1lly. (WIS) •47::...JohilWijh . Shenr NO¥eck 1nd Arthur fr1111 ID Drqlltt R d' ~ 1Uul:. • t1ll °"" 'TIIHtrt ''LI on Int G MmitA $ Mnil: IC) (2Jlr) "b· Im fedwtl MtUclne l1nd ill tllt Slllr <dr1) '57-Jimts (SZ) ll lfJtnN Ii llftlMt Mason, Jotn fortt1lne, H1rry l el1· \O:lO U "'"' P'utnaM't T1lk lick lonte. • m lill Colby Sitt• m tfttln I M1t111 fD llWM tM Utu "Minorily JOur· 81 lrlpll: · 111Hsts" tDI"" ...... Soc• Ill" -• I IHCW I YMI Pllple't fM• IB llMI: -n. l!Nt Mceil!lf C1 IJ ,._ !oafll flll!lllMbrt 11'11· ...... C. l11 ri1 C.i,.Me .nt tlle!r 1Wanl-'Wlllll• ftllnt,. la· ,_ dodlnr ·•-• ...,.. ., Tom U:OO 1111(I)ill11111 '""' Valeftlint, ind "Olotl1111" t nd "Al-e °"' .., ..,... polntm111!: Room 512" bJ Ctora:t Ci)..,.... lillH l.oc"-d. ·ft ... ""'"" o rn m -m C.N)trt C.rmr.. m Trlllil If CIMl!lllfltll (U) ..... (2ttr) "Flllf ••• Ciwl' • MerM: ..,,,... .. ,,., ....... (com) •31' Errol fl)'ftn, Rosalind (dr•) '51-hul Ankl , Ruth Romtl\. Ruuell. (SZ) Mt....., C:OO 11 ••· Co-(!) lllddy !11<1· ll:IO B (I) C1$ "" ...,.., tcl """ Ill ind .lotln l)'rltr t1kl 1 11,dil Mttm•_.. (df1) II -lttlil look It Amtrle1n llittory. , Caron, Gtorp P'tppard. am-1•> ·01""'"' 0 11 ..,,.,.., -io"""' Pints, Samt Wind" Joe Clrtwrl&f'lfs Mtthls, Shelley Wlnttrs and Ctor11 1tt1mpt to ltOll' timber ll'fllfll~ C1rlln 1r1 scll1dultd a:uestt. b frust11hd by 1 lfubbor~ rnoun· D Mt!M: ....,.., TeMtr,..... 11in wom•it (lrtn• Ttd111W). (dra) ·~RrWrd C.rbon. (I) I -~ *"" 0 ill ill 11 M C.... "" g (jHC@: I Africt.. h rt I of fu111 YDB CJfJ Strtlt p nll 111 probff. 2: liltU M IM OK.GO f'flY • EXCLUSIVE I.NGA.GEMi.NT ~-i;i~ D• ~~~ ··--· --Hiii ·AODfMY AWAIOWIM!t llST IMOIT IUIJICT ··su1111ru Df SllEICE .. l•1• Virti• Mt.cit• ,..,,..rwa--Wt111 •• ... •ll!AC::H •&: • AT •u1s -..T. COA9T ....... A ..... Dll.•O PW'/', •47•eeo• • HUM!!_N~·~H 111~1:~r-t1 tp1d 11 01 Afrlcl , drflttC'bJ Q~-• Tt ltl t9!1 Tnllll , .!!1.M> ... I &'J '1-0it.•T=l'fi ·---(IW)'ll:....-, ... . ·-""'-£!11o1Wmn ·---T ..... ("") 11111 lott Rlwlrl IUtll 'S!-0.'* '°"'' MIMI Kulll -•" ... _ 1--....... ·------~~(J)··~·--- WG (DGJ lll-.... - (C) tlO} .,.. '""" .. -· W ed'lflsclay ,, • • '1 • > t:119 ,,..., (11'1) 'IO -1Mn11 fotf, 1tH111ca Cr .... ~••!Cl --·-l"'l ~~ .... '""'· °""" P'lf\tr. 'll:Ol (D "lllo --(lll)S} '51 -JlitNrd ,,..,._ lo4' Kel'llH. io:11 a .,,,,... ..,,I '52-Wll< am Et.0. "llO _. ( ... ) •N-JollO Apr, Alldtlr 1tttll'. 1'11 •-: "lllo Iii ,,..,. (dnl '41-~rt Mltdium, bne Grm there were many in that auditorium. should not be too shattered by those comments. l\·tusicians arf' human: the quartet may well ha,'e be('n feeling the effects of a gruel· ing tou r and the 1vanin,,:: season inevitably lakes its toll of the most indefeatigable con· cert artist. .. - H unti1igtou 'Catc h Me ' Cast Liste£l ll may well have been U1at tt:i~y y,·ere · ·~nly too I\' f' I I a\vare of a pre-intermission Casting has been announced performance that carried a by the \-luntington Beach pang of disappoint ment. For Playhouse for !hr final pro-, their final offering. t h e duction of its 1971·72 season, Brahms .Quartet No. I, was the mystery·comed y "Catch much more in the Amade us Me If You Can." , mold. a vibrant rendition thjl John Loughman. ~1.errell reached a splendid climax in a Ann Hnddan and J\1artin H. gripping final mo\'ement. FuC'hs \viii play rlhf' leading roles of a man 1\'hose wire· is Our greatest disappointment missing. the lady ll'ho tries 111 was in the work that opened the Laguna Beach Chamber take her place and the deice· Music Society's final concert live investi gating the case. flf the 197!·72 season. the Completing the cast will b<' Three regularly perforn1ing t.'()111n1unlty playhouses -th(' 1-luntington Stach Playhou.sr . lr\'ine Community ·rheatcr and santa Ana Communi ty Plavers -are entered iu thr frst'i vn l. along v.•ilh '"'o other l'{)unty groups. J e k .· ~I ~· d e Produc tions or Costa !\\esa :tnd the Guild Pliiyer~ or Sa111a Ana. 1'he lluntlngt on B r 11 1· h Playhouse "'ill pone I h 1· ' tournament Friday nicht .'ll 8: 15 v.•ilh it~ production of "This \Vay to He;iven." 11 T\' t)rlginal co1nedy ' directed by Ilandv Keene. Cast membel'.o; nre Katheryn Offill , 1:rnn k Rutherford , Bill Cullen Rlld The Santa Ana rorn11lu111!\' Players arc thr S('{'()nd :11 traction on Saturday 111i;hL prtsentlng "Tht ShOC'k u( Hecognilion'' frorn Rob r r l Anderson's "\'011 Kno111 I C'an 'I lltar You \Vht>n !ht> \\'atet·'s l\unning." A li~·e \V:tlkcr 1.~ d I rt ct l n g , y,•ith Jtrrl' Carpt'nt,r. llonna !\l\·S11•:iu1 Al Jones :..11d \\'lbt· van <h'r Veldr L"o1npris1ni: !ht' r:isl Jtk·H\'df' Procha·lt111t~ \\'lll fol\011· 1i·ith an orig111al play hy director f'>ohn Sha11· entillt•d "II Cou ld llapPt""n." rris1 111c1nbers arr ;\lichaet ~l;-.y, l.illi:in 13rot herson, D o 11 i.: 'Hi9laly Bi11sed Claa1·ade' Curln in Ume is S: I~ f"rld"y ;ind 7 o'r lock S~lurday and Slflldtl\' at the Rivtrside Co m-111ur11t~· Players' I he 11: t e r. \11•artt~ "'ill bf' prrse nted 1nl!t1111ini;i Su n d ti .v '~ prn· <lttC'liOn.!!. Jeani Greischeimer, Da,·r llaydn Quartet in D minor that has so orteh provtd to be C:ilmore 11nd A "surprise actor'' the piece de resistance or an "'hose iaentity \\'ill remain a Amadeus concert. mystery opening night. Vidal Diat1~ibe Rip s-Nixo11 . . Alex Koba is ~irecting the The hnal vivace moveinent sho"' his fourth ass ignment in By WILL.IA~I Gl.O\IEll 11u1 il'lule rtlt'\'Rlll photos arr and lhe and~~te were almost .. the Past year. Co-producer:: up to trad1t1onal Amad~us are Gwilym \Villiams and l\'E\V YORK tAP I projected on 1wo 01·erhe:id st~ards but the o~n1ng Greta Smith, while Mary Nobody's partisan political S{'rnes. Aboul a third of lh1• allegro and the beautifully Solomon is stage manager leani~gs are going to get any "'ay through thr unrertaiu sc.:irtd menuetto f!lOSt ce.r-and Burt llarrington is in, aid or encouragemtnl rron1 drn1na1ic rttital, ho\vever. th1· tamly were not. ·Cel~1st Marhn charge or technical effects. Httthor''· \\•ide d;stres!ll "·i!lt Lo It f bel h bet f lhe Gore Vidal diatribe "An ve . ar ow is s or Joy Lobell is !el designer. and . . . . current history ·and the na- most of the pr~gram. may props will be handled by Lou Even1_ng \V11h Richard Nixon tional life becomes evident. \'ldal told an lnterv\,1vtr rt· 1't'11tly thal •·An F.vening \V\th H1chard Nixon l\nd-" y,·oukt ht hl l'I 111.st piny . Thr tht:11ter i~ not threnten.t with the los5 uf ;i potrnl crafts1nan. --- have been the ma1or culprit at l~eims and Jean Kyler. And-'' which prel"(iiered Sun-"A • bl. . 1 ,· this segment of the work. ''Catch Me If You Can" will . , ... r~pu ic canno sur\1\'e -Their· Moia:rrQuarte1 "No. 16 - -n Ma ~ 19 for a fivl.'-day_Jught ~ ~~.~~-~~Mt'llK .to. r_ule-.Qtk--:-;-·:-:Y:mED wasJ much more iil keeping ope d ) 1 . F .d Sh1Jbert Thealer. V1dnl 1s 1n1· 11011,o;, \Va sh1ngton del11et.s . weeken run. p ay1ng r1 ays . -d th k k "You with Amadeus standards but , and Saturilays through June partially sru e. . r , t' ':I rem~r · , ... agai~, there was •a lacklu ster 17. Advance reservations may \Vith con~1~1endable 1.1oncsty. ~laughl<'r,ed 11~ c ~uhanl:ih quality about the menuetto be obtained by calling ~8861. the sometimes novelist and 1 et?rt;t . Ken~,~~ 10 d ~~ ~ ." portion of the work. A splendid unsuccessful congressionol negat v1s1n a unce . e1e s aUegro vivace·did mueh to candidate has one characttr a . lot 1nor,e .ba~k a~ forth, Sometimes a Grt!<lf '!riot ion eradicate that impression but Santa Ana refer to "the author or this 1\•1rh the f 0~1nd1ng I· ~ther 11t it was not, candidly, the kind highly biased p 0 J i t i c a t last . su~gcsllng !her~ 11 .some of Mozart we expect from the charade ." JUst1ce '"the ass3ss 1nat1on oflll~~~ml~~~)li group. To Prese nt It starts as a th inly veiled tl~t> leader or "a predatory em. The final note or sadness in continuation of those te levision pirE' I ~ ,. L--···· ........ _ A ED lftlI UIA"U~ I,)' our adieu to a most successrul de.b aJ e..s _Den1oc r1tl liberal . ~idal's enthusiasm ~~r r~· season 0 r-the La guna Beach 2 0 l Vida l has had with {'on-\'ISJng ~ehoolbook~tr~d1t1on IS:\li~~~~~~~~~~ chamber organization : the Oe•8C S servati"e \Vil\ianl F. Buckley as foohshly simphsllr . ns the resignation and departure of during election campaigng. lli!f f;1ull he assault.!!. The p1tx:e hns Dick Lewis. their in· Two one-act plays will be alter-ego·s target is Presid1•n1 a. hc:ivy-h11nded in:inncr drs- defatigable liaison with so prese nted Friday night by the Nixon. his purpose "lo prni c 111 11' 11 lot or s1n1u·l 21lt;<'k many ()f the internationally Santa Ana Community Players in his own words he is 8 con· 1·ra1·ks, no one or \1·h1rh ----.. t';i, acclaimed artists who have at their regular board nf scienceless fraud." scen1f'd lo amust more than been brought to the Arts Co-directors meeling. 1'he public a haU·dozen spectators. Jony \s invited and no admission Then • foreground curtain Ed\\•in Sherin directed the r't · was even more regrel· will be charged. goes up and, with a .bit of fer-participant:ii throug,h 5~ listed .Ible that DI.ck ,·ni·ured ,·n a b.le theatrical. sleight~f-hand, ro les as th-Ough 11 were 11 , The first P.lay let will be the G w h t motorcycle spill last weekend. !healer groUp's entry in t.hc e~rge as ing _on emerges n1al k·ious hi gh school pageanl. . to Judge the encu1ng cradle-lo· --__ could n?t be ther~ to re~e1ve Ri verside o n e ·a c t festival. l972 e\'ents. p r e s i den ts I the tribute he so richly "The Shock of Recognition " Ei.~enhower and Kennedy are deserv~s. Fo.r no one has done by Robert Anderson from hi.~ summoned as chief opposing ~· 111.11••~ mort' than Du~k to adv~n~e thu'r· comedy "You Know I Can't witnesses. A further. bit of ~··~ I cause or cham~r music in o •!ear You When the Water's stage business uses two other . •• 1 area to the poi~t that we ha ve Running.'' actors to deliver purported ex· ~ i;:.,',,·:• .<;:-· .. :;·· 1 become recognized as a center The second play. "Trees," is t.'trpts from actual speeches for the performance or good directed by Bob Burke and in-by those chief executives while cha~ber work.. . eludes L. F. Euzarragh, San-the pair up with Washington His many friends will ~ die Brown. Lance Salling, mouth erratic Vidal com· glad to . know that he. ts Judi€ Gottfried, Bob Utz. ments. How's that for multiple. recuperating well . from the Hild• Perry and Lo r t n confrontation? broken foot he. su~m~ In the Humphre}. accident. Au revo1r. Dick. for Curtain lime is ?:30 p.m. at E"ery. l~rg~ and a good those of-us-who know too well the Playm Theater in the citr-!.1;1.any trlv.1al items from lilt who keeps _the .banper of hall annex building at 530 N. N1.1on background are trotted chamber music Oy1ng proudly .Rosi St., Santa Ana. in our county. Ill Jefflf1r O'Ntll "SUMMER OF '42" Bargain Matin•• Every Wednewlay, 1 p.m. frM l1frelli,_.f\ ""•th S1 .f0 -=-~ • "MARY, QUEEN ·OF SCOTS" Cl"Gl ... ~ ........ .,.,.. 1111 s-. "SHAFT" 1---••e tRI Mkhotf C.SN y, .... , "•••' Jeck H•wkl .. I• lMt. le•h Ste.._..•, "KIDNAPPED" "' a· w 1 • .., •f ' le..._., Aw•lh IKllHfh1t Int Pkt•r• ' Act1r Pnl Sceffll4 "A MAN FOR All SEASONS" Cllllflff- "OfRTY HARRY" ... ~--ANO "SKIN GAME" (Rl Jr4 lorfft W ... ler Office o,.. 6:JO "THE HOSPITAL" George C. Scott •-,4 ,. ...... Pleyt .. "SUNDAY BtOODY SUNDAY" Peter Finch Glenda Jackaon ...... - -4Cetltl~_ .... ~-; -"!-• J :OI '!'!'_' --1'1111111iiiiiiiiiii ---CtNEDDME lD . " .-·. '...J .r · ~ .J., --CtNFDDME ll ' , • ':J. .L'..'... ~ L ::. ---.. STADIUM I ' -r , .. I --- -,, SIAD/UM l . .. _ ........ ,· ----.. S1AO!UM '3 ' -... .------.. SIAD/UM J .. --··"• ·····- -v-...... ,.",- -O~•hdr:-- "MAltY, ou••• 011 SCOT,,. "ANNE Ofl TMI THOUIAND DAYS" Ac•my AWtnl W'-t' Jt111 ,,.,.. "kt.UTI" Ill I t lM "SUMMlll 0 ,.. 'fl" l•I Ac•1t1Y Aw•NI W!Mtt" "MOSPITAl" Pl\" "IUNOAY &LOODY SU .. OAY" Wl11"fr ii s ,,,.,,"'¥ Aw1nh ..,~. P-ttl!Cll C-tlfll" Ill.I . ... ''V1111111Mt '•""''" c•> "DtltTY-NAlla Y" I "SICIN OAMI" :.M~ Al NEWPORT "BRAVO. BRANDO'S 'GODFATHER ... "TIE YEAR'S FIUT IWU SATtlfflM, Ill -llCW. l•lltcH Fl•. Ill If Titl •OST llllfll .. ••• CllllOlllCUS If llllltcll If£ HU 1£111111 - 111£ L•rn 11,., ••• 111n111t••£1T." -Vlncea.Ca'!_b_y, tjew York Time• , .. TME ltlflTllll. IJ"J SPICTICUUI •m. llll If IN[ flllUT llllHTll .. ,Ill HH •Hll .. tM S1'111l1 N8C·TV • ,ICTITIOUI 1\JI Uftll N°0TIC:I TO <llOJTO•' • • .... l'tlt NAMI ITATIMIHT .U,1!111011 ccw•T o• TMf tTATtMINT Oii AIANDOMIMT - T.. -·1ow1 f1ttl1 .,. 11101~. $TAT• 0, C.ALl,o•H•A ..... • \Ill OLI' ,ICTITIOU$ •u••H••s ·~· It~s Here: Ensenada Ra~e LEGAL Nones • LEGAL NO'MCE LEGAL NOTICE ""' nt ,_ THf COUNTY O' OUN TN to!IOWlllt ,..Miit ll1vt 1M,..,_.. li<ll1-1 I I! JM, ....,,.,, JN \IM 9f 1f1t flcftfJM ... lllltU 1111'1\f More Than 500 Craft to1 Sail Tliursday From Newport ISLAND INYISTM!e:NT COM,.AN'I', fJllll or TOM w. HENDEJIM)N. •Ito ijACll!NOA Jll!5T HOME •• 1'0 ··~ ll1 !10 l•Y jllronf, lolllOt l1t1"11, Cel· kllOWll t s THOMAS W, HE,,,,.Dl!!llSOH, tfld c;anltr $trtf1, Al'!llltlm, C1ill9tlll1, llou1J1. 11 TOM HEN0£1SON Olaaud. 1,.,. nc'llttou. 1Wtlnt1t '"""" rt ,_,, .... '""'' 01111111, in "''' ••v Ftonl. NOTICE 1$ HEREBY Gl\IEN IO 1111 Wl l lilMI 111 Ott nH (tyllty • l1lllCl1 h lt fld, (1IHt1111l1. <rtdllcwl If IN 11tov1 111mH o.cfdlont '"°"'' 1 ltl2 ~IN1 0 . il't!t/I, ll)C, A Otu lll CtlUll, lllll t ll NtloOtti "-Yins Cl1im• 111i11J1 1111 Ftb~ltV J W ,.frklru lNI l!t 11 C.l'lltf l1llMNI hlt lltl. C1lltor1111. H id dKtd1n1 ••• r•ulrH It lilt "'''"' ""'' ii.1111 c 11it Tl!lt M/1IM11 !1 Mlllt 'onduCltd bt I wlffl 11\t 11Kl11t ry VOUCl>trl, In !Ill offlcl $1fttl, ~M St~llll ' Uf JMl'I W 1 lt'1 th1 t lime aaain. Jt'a Cllled May Madne:ois. ll'1 calltd Cinco de t¥1ayo Derby. Jt'11 c1lltd Derby. the Tequ i1 a It's called the Enchilada nun. What It 11 is the annual 12$- ·mile Newport lo Ensenada .YICht race which annually draws more than 500 sailin~. craft r1ngin1 from 22 tO 90 Leet. This ye.11r thl!re are $M1 e.n- lries, sliahtly ihort of the 579 lallt year. The "racl!" getll under way Thursday at noon from the Newport Jelty. Starts "'Ill be at 10.mlnute in'tervala with the c al1maran1 getting the first 1ignal at 12 o 'clock. Subsequent s t11rts will be for ClaMi A i'n both Ocean Racing ;1nd P1cific l~andlcap Racing f'ler:t at J2 : 10; C laii;s B at 12:20: Cla ss C at 12:30: C la ss D at 12:40:· Cla 1111 E at 12 :40 JHld the Midget Ocean R acing Jtleet at 1 p.m. As has bten c ustom ary for the past 15 years, the DAILY PILOT publishes thl! entire list or entrlc$. Here they are. Count 'em -fl n d your own or your friend's entry: c;.,111·5L l 'l'C•Col. 11. (l!YC·-0 CUT S0.0¥1 II -f , Xoti 111,t-\'l'l'C·COL llmllecl 11r1n1rV!l1 • \ ol 1111 '"'k of tllt 1tioov1 t nll!IH to<Jrf, 01 .,1Mt rv11,M,Ct lrf. ' 1 ' Jlll.k" -C!11k J.., .. l·L l'l'C·C~ntr. 011111 -WlnlhtOP Jol'ln~)OVC• ~4. Pllllll (i P•lcl! i. ertMf\I tllM'I, .,.1111 1M llt(tllltV .-t ct 11 • ,.Jr.c:~·,_.~trlt -lll:obtrl J. Alt ndl-·~ )5, Sl"?y 11ttd II -Altn W, tlt$1n:toer.. Ttill 1i,tt,,..nl !UH wltll the Cou11~ woud\fr1 IO,.... ulllklllt ntd al IM ottl<t Tl!lt b;/1111111 rir'*' Conlllll<lll lt'f I SS~o~~M~r~ ::r -!!t1w1rd A. Wllll1» Ei;::V~~::, : ;l:~ 11::'.;~~~~C:~· ~!~ .. :~8~;: -G.H. C11rlllen1· ~~tr~l~tr?;·~~ ~e::iz. M~:;~ ·t~!IY ror.:.~o.~~w~isoHi~,~~l~:~~; .. ~~·cc~!I~ Gtntrtl/:/~:;:~:~·.:•rkl~I Je1•pll NE -Mtlurnty/Otll)rici-7'. So Lot1t -01ry s.,.t n1Ml·A'l'C-lll:NG Cit•~. M111, Ct tlk1tnl1 91611, wl!fcll lt1 '"',,''",' '~~:~~Ji AT LAW LAVC·Clk. '°· fl' rion ti -Sllnlt~ Pllll·Sf ... YC· ,. P'llllt of bu$lrMH cl Ille ul'l!Ml,.ll Mtl n • Mt ... Jublltt -T.o Mthor>•ABYC·Ct r. ''· E lll:i '' S. ~•ct Ill Johll T. Sl'l'lilfl.LBYC• "ublllllff O(l'lllt (Nit Ot l\J "lfOf, 1tr1 perttlnlnl It, .... ,,1111 OI llld dfKI '," .. II 1Wtl~1T'°~~l~~=f '2ltl JullffQ -lltlYmontl M. llrun...C:H l'I'(· SL Pt oll'"t -lltrn•rd Flt m·Ll'l'C .. 1 SLOOP. A1rll 11, 2S. t nd ~y 1, ,, 1,72 101J.72 dent, wllhin IOUt rnon!lll •lttr Ille rl T1:'.!..-·"'foll-G31 Cct. ''· ,,•,•.•,•,1m1 -Edwt•CI l(lltm J1 •• sssc. Scll!04111v -Ko:n e run$-SM'l'C·12 P11bllc1llon ol ffllt notlct. • ,llt NI. , IM72 JuUI<• -Jt nin A. llllldttll·WVC· Mtlff. LEGAi:. NOTICE Dll9d April ?I, lt72. C 0 11 ,.I Cot, ).j-1, 111:.ndy Tar -J. M<L111n/J Gl~i,. So.ifher11 C•ou llli vmond A ' THOMAS W HENDERSON "ublldled Ort "t1 Dltf I Y rer, IC11;un• -8 111 C••ho11·l "'C·llpt )Or SS'C·~LOOP. N•vtrro-CIYC·O" IO, • £llKlllDf ol '1n11, WUJ o! 111• April n, tnet Mil' 2, f, JI, 1'11 IOU-11 Kthlll -W, 'o'/rlgltl/E. "rft~tr lltn.om -O•V•<I A. OelO>V Vt'·l"CC. Scwthlrn (roll -l Vtn HOUfl'llOll• ,ICTITIOUS I US!HllJ t bOYe ntm9d ~cedtnt ttl1V(.(11I. ll. RIKt l -Wllllt M H. Wll-5B'l'C··f l'IC'l'C·l1 'LP. NAMI ITAT•M•NT TMOMAS W, HINOlll$0H, Jiit., IC•ll rl!J/ -•. I/! Htm!Uon·LIF ·l~I 'f.a.WL. • Splndrllr -JUU tn N, &t lltY·SSSC· Tiie IOllowlnt "'IOfl 11 dolnt •uslnt n J)t l •ll 11111 SlrH I, 31. CA~~. Il l -GordOll II, C1n1t-L•YC· SLOOP. 11: C&1lt Mn•, C1lU1r"l1 tH,I ICt lu• IPO -llotf\t"I M, N•h.O~· R 1191 ~ ,Siwtv ICuc.11 -JI~' We"t!lnd Jr.-JIM'S litOCKSCA,.!NG, )101 SO. F1lr• Ttl' l114) 5*1U6 CIYC·(tl 1.1. so.:c·cv't:E"'R -Otvlcl s. Fo11om. \I C·IEllM :;o, vllW R:d .. Sp. n. S1n•1 Ant , c •. tt101 ............ , "" ••t(Ult>r SU l"•••o• COUlitT 0' THI 37 Kttvn Jon11 G. Murptiv•HH'ft.CC ·~\lttllo\ _ 11,1, Wllt l R:. I! ll SPr!IO -H~"Y LunOt Dft ·Sl 'l'C·SNT JUMJ L. 51w11I, JOI Awllt t OO No. 22, l"uDll tlltd Ort nOt CW$! O•!IY ,.!IOI, STAT• (gp N~~L~:~~:HGf! k1ml ICtlll -Otvld A. ll09tr•·L,F-s1 .... "~•t1·L'l'C·COR ~. S11r -L'Oyd W, .. _.u.carC-l!lltC Cotll ~,., Cl lifcr.nll . '""·, AMII,, •net MtY 1, '·JI, 1112 107~·n FOR: Tl1E N: A·PUJol NP!. )0. Ha~.E11xcoo;,,-11, E I UI 11trltt• l•. T,lll• bVilMH II 119•1\f tMdu< eel -y t n NOTICIE D, NEA••NO OP' Pa'TITIOM Ktr•mt -Rl(htrd G. Wl\t"@•· o Si.r l r•k -W1U11m Sttin·MYC· lnd<\Oldu~I. l Slo••ll ,OR: "ll:OIATI OP WILL ANO Ll'Olt 50YC·IO ll••I••. ed Roallu -Jonn CtUty·CVC •I TllJMAll,.N. ..t mts · LEGAL NOTICE LETTlll:S TISTAMINTAll:T ''. 1(1r•n -JG'lln W. 5!•Pll•"'·"V'l'C·P SL:... Sttr!IU'!'il -CttlGI. SwtlllOl'I. M 0.• l f'lls Sltltmtnf fllto:I wllh Ult County -' f1t11t of l(ENNETH W AL T f It tM -L1rry Mtlo-SOYVtAt SL l'l'(.(OL fl • C!er• If Drtn11 Coun1y lft A11rft 11, 1'12 OWLING D d Kttpll -G. I!". '·"n ... y ll·SSSC·S<h. 40it1nt11 -Mo~@ So•kfn·ltl<Y<·C•L ft ,,",''!1,•! -iiltlpll E. Fledlt r·WYC· bc'1,,'°,, vt rl'if J. Mltltla~. Depul~ Counlr NOTICli 'to" r.t:otTOll:S N NOTICE' IS .c~:'11:E 1Y GIVEN tl'llt. -'. l\t llt -s-y Sln1t1·PM'l'C-cc1. 111 II . ,. .. 0 ,~ • 4 • 1~. ' eu -Jt ck A. ll:trt ft·FYC·COill SJ•rllgh! _ T. C. M-•SSSC-:-ll SLP. PUHi SUl"lltlOllt COURT OF THE MAUilllNE M, H WLING ,.., ••• ntrt,I\ ltllllll l -lll:obul G Wlll'•CY< Co ·o 1 I I Sl•lo M••I• ~ A·"•• , Smll" -·>11·•" "'oooo Coool Dolly PllDI, STATE OF CALl,OltHlA l"OJI t Ptllllon for 1rllbalt ol wlU I nd ID( '• • ' , r, CAL!;:,• 1 -llcC.Wt A. Smlt,..PMYC Cl'IYC·lO SLI" -.,.. .,, "' A;ri1 1i'.' 2i ~;My 2 t , UJJ 1011·11 THI COUHT'f' 01' Oll:AHGIE l1"'1nc1 of L1tler1 Tnl•mtllt1rv to '•II• • Lt Aptrltll -"nUl11 D. J0/111-W'l'C· lltVt ltll •• , '' . v ' ' Ht. A·71JU l!Olltt r1f1r1nc1 lo wlllcll It m.dt for Eic 3'. Cc! 11. EllC 1·lS.on -W. O, Fotll!t nl·LYC-~. i"I -Lorin C. Wtlss·l!IC .(-CAL ---· Ei!tlt of LESTEll F. LANOElt.S, httlht r p•rtlcult rl , •net !~ti lht tlflll tl'll Chl ndl! -Jol!n N, NtlHiht m·SMYC · c.~.· ,~~.·11• -AllOf! G. lrown•l!l:"'C· llevlre1co -C•d !11ro1n.WYC·COll 5trt itMlfrOW -Thonltl J. Sl"U"IS-LEG.\L NOTICE 01c11Nd. p1,,. ol 1'111rl119 '"" lllM ~ fMfll '" Cfter. 1!, • LI VC·CAL 19. NOTICE IS HEAEIY GIVE N le lht fW M1y '· 1,n , •• t~JD 1.m., ht "" llOlltt -l lm Mt ck•WYC·Ctl l1 Lt Lt JOlltn -A. H119 /J, SUv11iri· lill!umb ltunn1r -J Ptrlil"i/M. Sum•lrt -AIDtrl C. Mt tllrt·LAVC·L ,ICTITIOUS IUUHl'll cr1dHor1 of !ht 1DOV1 ntm\d "'1t1d1nl <OUrlrOOl'l'I DI Dlptrl,,,.,,I N" ) tt Ml. l""'btr -John t Klmlllt ·BCVC-SFVC·Col. ll. Cal>ll·SM'l'C·NPT jO ' SO. NAM• ITATIMINT tto•I t ll otr11n1 h1v!n1 cl1lm1 111•ln11 Ille courr, 11 1'llO Civic Ctn!" Ori._. W11I, 111 ~lopp_ , J-La "'1"l1 -Vi L0<ktbt1·BYC ·ll: 4J, illlv11 II -Htr'rv M 11,,,, ., • co',••,~, 1""11111 -8901 81nl\l!ll·IYC· l lle lollowloo oi rion 11 11111111 butlntu 11ld d1clden1 ''' 110111rH to Ill• 111,m, Ille Cl!v of S1nt1 An•, Ct llf0tnlt . Clnnt mfl!'I -u. Leo•n I JO.t· L1l1111 Ft lrt -lil""A'' S<OOO•I· NVCL8 HOL ' " • I I W'!'(.'fnk 11 !l(YC·l,I, 9I. ~• ' · S bo, t i : .,.Ith !ht ntcr111ry VllUChtrt, In !he Of te 0.llCI April 1,, 191?. C!r<• -Cnt r!e1 Sll1tvMt•·AYC·<-o• Ltnt Ollt _ Guv T. Elll comb·KHVC· lltcbln '1/111 -J. f leld/T Hoa!I :a un w -Mlkt Hleilns·Sl 'l'lltC-CAL C·C· COM,AN'I', 2~ Op1I, lltlbtt er lht Clt r-ol lht 1bove tnlllled court, or W. E. ST JOHN )I. Clll. 1!. CYC•EPC 4'· • • .Sunct1 -Grt ht m C Gibboni·ll¥C·3S h !•rwl, C•lll. t,.42 !a ptllrnt them, with Ille rttet utrv C11Unty Cltrk ~llm11t -Wm. G. Morrh·PVY(. Lt"lru -Grlllt"Htrv~y·IYC·Trl. SL~~Jl'.1 Nell II -Mel "i!cbln.Sf,\Y(. SL P ' LOult J CH'l'll r 1C16 0p11 llalbol VllUCherJ, IO !ht undt rtl1119d ti lht cfllct l•WIS I . IC•Afrt T1 mttt rt, Lti• LOO• , , ' 0 >SSC ' ~-S11~1nctr -Ed Sullclbo•o·CYC·CAL lolooO C•.lll .~,· ' of hh Allo•ntv: JACOB N. PEIL TE, 1'10 1441 Wlltfllrt l oul1v1"' ~lou11 IX -SI"' Dtn!th·LSF·E•e 11 40. -~•c or · -Anv. O&U<>lt -Mt•lln Ao ... SllVC·C~L )I •l Tllii builness..ai'.~i..lnt conclucted by An Etsl l;hll'"'ln Av1nve, Or1n1e, C1llfo1nl• L .. Allttltt, Ctllltrlllt ... 11 :i,!~o ::: .~~~~ H(~~i$vC(~:f ;,. Ltll~ -Ct rllr GIQt·ICHVC·Ctl. JO, c:~,~~ -E. $Hn<e• Conw1y-PVVC. Sunrl1e -C. S, IC1mp!I Jr . .COlll:VC·L lndlVldUt f tlUt, whlcll 11 !he Pl•ct of tM.11lr>t~ cl Ttl: CJUI lll•tJ.11 OllQUf ll -Wlllltm PoilY•Ll!I V(·llol LfltCY II -Jl lCllt tG A, Hoell"''"" Jlo11I T., WIUI l6. Lo'..i1s J. (lfntr lht U"Cltrslgnld In I ll .m•lltrs perlt1n!nt AltlrftlY f'lf Ll'ltltltlttt' 41, WYC-Yrilt, 'JO, PVYC·•' ll:l(H, tm GrcltktU• liwen1h1 Flick• -L1t1t11 /C1rt1r/ TlliJ 111",,..nl li ltd wllh 1111 Caun!v Ip, .... •stilt of !he &111~ "'"'l!Clent, wllhln •• l"llt.$U 0.llo Pll•'I, (04!1,H!Hf -Frt nk G. ~vr!<ch·O(C.!J Ltprtell•un -Wh/111ey A. Collin\· Jl~G1ln1nit -Tom l ln<:l!·!'>llVC·Sl n F•v·Mll'l'C-OHL ll. Clerk of Ortntt County i n: A•rll J, ltl1. f1111r man1hl tlltr ll'le l1r11 publfc•tlcn ol 'ubl!tllff Or•n11 CNll "c'" 1 E I Cal. U. Swln -V. At1lgo/J . Edino1on· lly lltvtrlv J. Me"'dow, D~rv county !his riollct. AprU 25,,. •nc:t Mt Y J, ltJi 1oeo.11 Oii• r -tl.,.t (Cll JOflnUor.·fll/!YC· L!eb<f\tn -lltabt r! G, Htlltr·HHY(· lll:u"aw11y II ~ ... L1e Eslep.SOVC-Nli'f(.tl l'T l l. Clerk Dtltd AJ:lr/I 15, ""· Moc' '1. Ll!IVC·lltw-ltf'. CDL 36 Syn Sys -C. Howtrd S!ave"~\I VC. • o>oolT Kll lST!AN LOR IN U.NOEll:S ot111t.rP01n)-I . Ht tdden/O Dt•Vlf'· >o'. Ir Fllckt -51t n Glbbs·WCYC·Ca!, S•br• JI Gri 1 D l "C fO £ IVC<tl n. sovC.JINC 1-;, n • eor"'"' 111· · ,.ubllsll.td 0r•fl9t CH•I Delly ,.1101 Admln;sHir.or 01 11\e 11111 ol Covrler t!l-•••ll~ Dom1110,...,_ Llnutr L~r -ltlchtrtl Winn. s .. 01111rlus _ liltlph o. Morrh·,.VYC. 15(•1!•mtn -Aobert N. Willl•m•·t:YC· Aprlt 11, 11, l$-""' Mt ' J, 1tn tlt 1i lh« •tiove ntmtd dt<eclen1 .SS~C·$7 Srfl, CllYC·Ct l, :W. Trimtr•"· T ll, , JACOI H. ,..ILTll l4J1t C • llltlt 01•0 Willi o I I CY • II l VI tmure -lltobtrl S. Lt ll1•!·l<VHC· UZI •. Cli•lfll•R AVtllUI S"PIO>OO CO"IT OP ••LiPOOOi• oven1111-•vll'\O<\d A. A1>r1ht m· Cnl ,..7 -t m · lld<I· C-J• ' e -O. Oubc1110 . Wold· COL '8, 0<'•1111, Cttlltr11I• nw .. " -,. Lll\'C.C:tl, :M. .Loli -Jotin M. sr.euev-3Ll!l 'l'C·Cot. VYC·E 11C 7t. T111•1d1 -L•" Mil!H'·SS~C·lltAW :ie. LEGAL NOTICE Ttl: w~ .. COUHTY o' Oll:AH41 ~uffo:io-;01,n E!lioll·NliYC·CAI I ] J,, ~.::r: = =~~f! .·.·.·.~:,c',',,cc".,',',r ~~ Tt"Oltfcof -"•trick E. Z1lll•r·OYC· AtltrftlY fw A•mllli1tr1Nr ., ,.. Civic '""""', •,.r.~ . ....., · LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NonCE c:~~!o7, ~.' ~.o~;:.~1~~:&~;(:~01 Lolt -Wiii! 01vls·COlltYC·tlPI. •I. :.tlfJlltklf' -Wllllt,'.; L lloyti·AY'C. 'lllTO. ,ICTITIOUS •UllN•SS Pulllls/ltd Or•ll9e 0-11 Otlly "ilOI. l•~~=":.'u,!l'U.'"1 Mltt-Dldr M<CUl\WloYC·C•I ~. ~I ll~O!>l·t -Jll>n H. B1r'"ft .ICMYC0S111 llNG :tt, C1'~nif."''~ -Ot~Jd 511r!n•·IC H¥C· NAMI ITAT•MIHT MtY 2. t, U, n, 1f1J 11,..n O.Nttt .'"'!"'•, S.~lfl M, k0 ll111!1·Ll 'l'C-sl?..?l'.)',M!tnk-M•rv Jt,,.. Sw•rt· ,Lwtt lll II -Oofltld O. Ll.,.4·SM'l'C· i!~~~1;-, U.S. 'i'_"'..V·VSN It Y'JIL. Ttnau~r,y II _ Mt lVVll F •• W•"'e-~.!,"',-. .',",~. Int PrrJtl•ll 1'1 CIOlnf IUMMOHI fMAlllA411 kttch ' . COL ••. -.....,,,Jd Novt ck·V'l'C· LIYC •oC 1 -,._ I 10 <I• -00111'-Ahlllll-LOll Comyn1·CIYC<1I tll Ot1111nf9-R, M. (t'lltllllnt1·LAYC·L .IQ, • Mr:"'•'>.""" -lillcltt rd M .• fOJl•·B'f(. -• • · Mii:. MITTY'S, .301 M.trl111 Avtfllll, LEGAL NOTICE n re 1 m•r 11 "" """'"· AJt •nt-Atfti\!r Iii .... MD.·Al'fC·Nl. Da•t--0 Wt ttt• l\Vk·L~YC·SIO"~. II ::tt~tMtrllns -I Oll l"OOle-I C'l'C,,L:DL l•nvt -WU ll1m StltJl'IOll·Stll'l'C· Ntwporl Bttcll, Ct lUotnl• L YOIA MARIE WILLS 1nd· lll••POn<11111: 11 OtU..r-! IC Frolf·IWCC·Ll"W 37 mt tt n -1111 lltoltrt·VYC·COL l6 $ --ETC :ii. ,./1,,1 Julttu, 121 Jt "!I" lent, llOIEAT CiAll llAll:O WELLS .. Aum1l-D1wl• C. HtneV·LA'l'C·K~I· l),iiuntt1n--Ath Wtlr·~M'l'C<"I ,,~, 64L'IJu"'i'.llD -Gtoroe P, Ctr\Otr•tH~Y(. ,,'c~-f.'--. Nixon G11tow1Y..KH\I(• 111 -J •mtt A. Mur~hY-SL8YC-Antllllrn. C•ll!ornl•. NOTICE TO CltlDITOlltl To ltlt lletPOndlnl: Jtoblrl G1r11rd WtllS Otllnlln t-=-T•vtor M°""llllll-LI VC· C $ ~ F I C~L 1t. • •• H Sl'lt rron Julttu, nl Jt rrltte Lint, IU,.•ltlOlt COUlltT OI' THI TM pellll-~ hit flltd 1 P1llllon ,0,... ~ v11n1 ....... 11ci..l1rMlll•LAYt·Mfl (,ti. 2,, • lfJM•druot dor -1 111 Alt• .... NHYC·CAL CD~yr/ ••e -Rick ACltml·SL IYC· NH~~~coi'. :u.-y -S11n Pi11curt· An11letm, C•Ufwnl•. STAT• 01' CALIPORNIA 'Ollt cerrttnr YO!lt m•rrlttt. You mtY fllt I A I •1t1tts-t'dwln il'ounllltr·CI YC· Ot bbl• T•nl-Dr, lilobl llr1nlloi1· M•olc II -lll:lc~1r"' Ci. T[omtltntl· Sc~p1'r _ J . l1ollywood/M, Aullln· T111ru1 -MiChl tl R:l)9fr>Oll·CTC· Tlll1 buth>tH Is ttelM co""'1tctid _, an TH• COUMT'I' 0_, Ott.ANOE .,.rll11n rllSllOMt wllllln tlllrlY dlVI fl/ lht lr'l'C·~Pt JO, AYC.(AL ID, LIYC·COL J•. ERC Ji. lndlVldutl. Mt. A-41•11 dill ,,,., 11111 111mrnol'lll It H•vM CMI l'Oltl. I l<Ntl ltlll-NYCLl ·Cor )I, ri~:.~rt -Rlclie~tl 0, lltull·S5SC·R, l(~'ffil• -Al1 ~ d t m'. C 8 'I' C . 3' Sct PITt _ 0th Cilllllt ncl·llYC,CAL t l T1t~lltr1 Pt! -C.A. DirlVIS·~LIYC· "ltrrt Julttu EI I I t t of R: A y M 0 N 0 T • If """ 1111 la 1111 t wrltlt n r1.-ont1 c I. Wt lllr ' ltoeirt·NYCLI· Otbulln!• I , Ktlclltm/R. H, M-~HH•b•r H 5 h ' S(crplo -!lob L Don lltnv•LSF'F; 3l CUT. Thlt S11t1m1n1 llllld wllll !ht county HORSTMEYEll, ~tff'd, within 1vch llme, YOUf Rltull· m1y be °Ilwi11<1 11-Alllll '°U<ktll<'YC·C-1 •0. l111nd•tll·LAYC·Cftl, '~· SltYlilC·CAL )I -e"rv c ""1r1 II· CAL 11. T1ouila -CUl1ot1 Ek·,.MYC·CAL ?t . dtrk of Or1n1t CllUnlY 111 ,1,prll 10, 1911, NOTICE 15 HElilEl'IY GIVEN lo lht t111trl'd t nd !l'lt court mly 111l1r t lllClt • __,JrMrl<• IClrk M \ltlenllnt SW'!'( ~el1lcn WllH I DO Mi l Tt l Eu11 F 1 S'CYC ·->>'°.-'._E_!!_lle.-=. F_._A. M_l!!lfl:J(.tfV_C·lSL _,.h _rn -~~· -·~nl·\IYC·Nl".T by •·~o''" 1_ Mtdcloll o,,D: CllUll!> crltlllcri of lht 1bov1 n•med dtctd•nl mt nt canltlnlnt lnhtllCflvt 9t 9""' etde,. _ _ ••• -·--· · • .. A.A -_•'!' •r11r· v . •~ -M •mtr· .,_ • _ ___ _ ___ _ -·~--. ,,,.,.._'A.<.~ ___ --··--""' _.~, .. __._ _ _._.___..,,, •• ,,, 1 1 •• , ....... ....,,,,.----.-. -......,. -Mt lko 11 Tt rnt -Ct rol 51leti•n·S'SC·EllC l~. C1ft1< "''" ,.... ....... '""'"""""'...,.,..,,.---.. coflC't •nlnt 'd ull or ... ,,.."''" •~I .l!'l'IOl.lrtli-Tlltmll1 L1'1!tr11C1n·SO'l'C• 4).0.111nl -Jt. Nlcllol Smlrn·(VC·CCL NP-fl:~ II -GorOQn L. Murollv·PVYC· r Ll~~.~~;-;:~,-;, llt1vmond E. Wttlt ct· Tht H4w• _ Joltn I . l'lunlni ·LYC. j<INI' 11ld dttt dtlll trt rtONlfed lo lilt lh•m, IUPl>Otl, child cu1todY, Clllld tllll-1, •f.;t K •39· M I II •1 J o , 0 K "'''"' H '' 11 · s c ''' ''"''' _ '''''' .. _,,,,,, .,. EillC 'i': Publtsh•d Ortntt c w d 0 11lv 1"1101. wllh Ille neceHtr'Y vouchers, In the ollltt 1orn1y'• IHI, c0.111, t lid t11<lt 9'1'1tf' rltltf ·•1· 1r I -.. CllOlll•rm1n· tmt• • o -ent>elll K, Crt blll· l'l l). -1ro . MIG1.1on·S 5 . • ~ 10 00 < •• ' 1 M , -1 '"'<I 0 1 1, bo ''''" 1 l t'I' -C1I ~ • "MYr;.Nnl, 21. ~ I CVC-lltNC .J3. " • Oitv'C.ellC 7~'."' -ont ti • o.et-AIJ•lr n, 11, 25, t nd Mt y 2, lf72 H l·n ° t r o "' • ve •n ccur · or 11 mt Y tie 1r•nle<:t by lht court. · All 1T-rof,, 'l'llllo,.LBYC·C•I J7 llP. ,,0tu111w -llt lclt•rd llttm1.C:I YC·C1I. M11m!t -Milt Smllh·CYC·CAL Jt. ca"v'c. Shell --R:k nt rCI I . HMn!tn· ,,',":!.•PY -M•lttlew L•rher-SLBYC· to '''''"' lh•m, w!lll lht MCIHlfY II YIU Wll" It ..... 1111 i•v•c• ti·~ I I· Andllt-Gordon -T. Crlllt n'l·SSSC·C•I ::....,,.,, _ A<-/d M. C-··••·LIYC·•S ""f:" -Eel V1n1blt·ICHVC·ISL 31·1. S _ 1--------------· voucher1, lo tho undtt1l1n9d It 1'91 .N. l .. ntY' ill !hit m•Utr. YH illtWlf .. M l •30. l(:i-jh " ""' ,,.. Mt r l~n -~!'I• Cir•nl·\l'l'C·COL 1•·7. fl Soni 11 -Svtncl H, Nlthr,.,. ThtrHt II _Ale• L•.,.·0'1'1'.·f"O'I .10. LEGAL NOTICE MllUnlt l" Awenut , Onllrlo, C•lllorn••, Jttm,ll, M llt•I y...,, -Hit• ''"*'It, ii ~~~'i':='J.abL..S,,Dll:~TZ~t~~C~•I ,o t b.!l<tl Ill _ Mi rcl• L. Como .. ll-F~s'[8"'ol.'' ll -J1me1 H. ltroto.,.. NH5YC·CDL 1f·7. Tit re -K11!h Har!t r·Cl'l'l'C·30 SL,. whlcll II ffle place of bt11l1Ms1 of lht lllY m•i M Ill .. 111 lltM. ) ,.,_ ... c (. c I ll !ch f9Undo .... ~ Cht rl•• E. florn s -Gii Knucl<M·S5Sf"·R:OB JS. unc1er1T11ned lrt Ill m1tt1r1 ptrl1l111nt lo D~l•d Mirth JO 11n '•--ij~ 0 I -D( 11 0;-• Jt-Mt mtklN' -J, Jerry Ci1n1111· Ruu2ll·lFVSC-VNT 1~. Tiki O!llphl" .-Hu1a "1111ncl1-,ICTITIOUI BUllH•IS 1111 91111~·.,i i •lcl dlt:l!llnl, wlllllll tour WILLI•"'•. II. JOHN, ,,,_... I __ , I n J. ltft1tr·Cl 'l'C•lltc '' 1 -imon Sprll!lt r, MD.· Sl!ISC·SLOOP. S1mlnole -F.H.R. SCIU(l'IV·CI YC ~\l'l'C·SLOOP. HAM• STAT•MllfT monllls t Ut r 1'111 flrsf publlc1llo" ol ffll1 Clt rll. ...,., AlllTrH•~« ·~lo"'"M'l'C·IO '"/ C~ ~). Jotin l .... 1 "YC M1d1111f II -Don Adt m'1, M.0.-~7 V't'IL. -NPTTlhlOo.11 -Mt fVln A. Scll.,.•rll·SMYC· Tiii! followfM ot•tcnl t •e OO!ni nollco. I " ''* L -.., •-, I _ , •• , l o oo •oo·PMYC ,·1 ••. · -r ·'"" ·C•I. 5M,C.ERr -5eo•-•• -Jomoo E ••-·•SSSC b I y "'' .... , -" ... r. Jo ... CAL;;, • ..,..... • Tl~!V -K. Ill:. Ausl!rt·FYC·SLOOI' UI 'lt!H ••; Otlld April ,,, 11n Dffuly • ' .... olo-Aloo Y, .A .. ,_, Md I YC· ,!1','c~'~"·'· 0>. -Rebert IS11ucll1m1-Nift'LuJ!m,s 11. Jt mto L. McAloln~ Strtt it II _ llUI Btrry.aC'l'C·COL T~m•lllnO. II -Jol!ll E. Ar1"t·l'l'C-JACO'$ FDlt. HAIR, :!Oil Wt1kllll 1/ Gr•et 1-~00 I J PAllltllS """ •~ " Jj Ml Cor11on " td " CI YC SO OHL ll Or,, Suitt 105, NtwpO.rl lttc~. Ctllf. AO I I 1 <-.J• E I 1 · · ""' .U. Doto! ¥ 0 -Altrt Ci. Orotioorn·Cl \IC. l!'X~ ii -r DOr•· " -T..,_i -A Mot-tnc/E, "ilil...C:I YC· J" R W J I"" Co "' m l'I I r1mx .., t S I t 21't M••W 11....,., 111111 117 "'"81-J C Al~1rm1n-NYCLI Ctl Slnot> j 5.,-,,.. -Byron IC. Ch1mblrtt l1t-'"'11 · ,_,, r., -'' of 1111 •bow Nm9d dlitldent C I Mo ( lifer I ... ,,. 2' ' . . OOS Loc:ci _ Ot vid L•vln·WC'l'C· ,,Mc le -Gtora1 G. Llnk·LYC·OL SSSC IJ SCH. ''CUT. ,.L, TuUln, C1lll. JOfot•I I TUCICllMAN •• II, • Ill•• A..i.1t 11-Jtmtl C. H1r1 Jr.·CYC· Ct l, ,5, '""Ll'°'I _ <ollo ". ooo•••-P"YC· ~rent -Alt• \l•n 0 Yk•LB'l'C· ,Toro -ToSml Yo0'4,11•1•r,:JCSCF;C0•LL,?5. Collttn O. W.-r, Jr., 130» Cltt tltl A ,,.,,,, ••• , c~oll-(IU I ,......... Cor 3'I. Outllo -Wltllt m •. Wlll,..LIYC· co":.1o·>. v ""ff " SLOO,., oioc:o -i n / .... .._ .... ,.I,, Tuttin, C•tlf. ' • > -_,...., "'" Publlllllcl Or1r11e Cot11 Otllr .,,~!. Ao!lilrl"~· Jolln H. HDllill Y·Ll'l'C• Cit. '°· Mlk cnt n -Cllt rlti T. "'''~·l"l,!YC-Sfr•nt -l ob Morr!t •KHYC·COR JD. 21 TorHda -Nell KDlllll ·I CYC·'l'Mlt Tiiis bu1lnt11 11 belnt con11hJdecl tiv • ttt •. M-ltl" AvtftW, A!l-y fW """'-!11,.~:•,1c c•·i,, "oo~n.(''I'(.''--o>. >•.OUIChtU -Mlkt Hlll,...11-SAA.C1I, AMl!lt, !i.,,..n Stn -W, S. ltoblt lt-•h11n· . Join! TtM•MV "•rlrMrlhip. Olt19rlt, Ctll,.1'1111 ti'~ Publ(Jhtd Orll'IOI Co.st D1Ut il'llot Ar19t-G.1y"'T,,;nl~·NYctITor 1S. o...,1oc.11 -Srlt n E. O"nbobi·••YC· ••"P.c"'•'•' "'· "'"I L. Wt•mtr. M.C.-VYC·t.flW 40, -M~n~~l.<11 Thonw• St ultf'·SL!YC· Jol!n Ill:. Wantr Jr. l t l: cno "'"1149 . April II, 25 tnd M•Y 2. '· 1m 1001·72 ' C I >-30 ·~ .( •• 5n•dow -1111 NtWN111·1'1C'l'C.MAR Tr1111lfnt -Col w. Co•NYCL I '"l Tlllt sl1ltmtnl !UICI wllll !tit CllUn!Y Allff<llYJ fer A•mlnlttr11r11 ::~:;;.~~~f, 11J~~~;.~:-$c~t~i3~i·2 1E'•sr P•1111e -Eddlt Arl'lllld·I CY(. n". 110l•1tr -Oontld l1tln.tv·BYC·CAL :n. ,I. .-...,., Cl•r-or Ort ftte CllU~h' on: AP•ll 21, lt /1. Publllhecl Ort n" C11111 Otlly l>Jlot.J _____________ _ All\lev T-lt.oM•t J. Attn·AYC..Cor hi. l', l sn111m1• -It G. 51tpllf111on·CI VC· •l Tr""d -J im LJ"dt rm1n·l 'l'C·N"T l'IY ISevtrlv J. Mlcklo•, o.iiwrv CO\mlr Aprll II," • ..., M111, ,, 1tll lliOl-11 LEGAL NOTICE ,J, ,!31" ltld1r -l"1ul Mlllr•·LBYC-(rc c:i'L1~10r Lu<O.y -P~H "•vn•LAYC . '°""s.'o.•m· -Do•lo Sli•o•moo·•YC·(D• >>'rri!llll• _ J t ck licllt fl n·LI YC<Ol Cl!r-. _ Pl/••o·'·---,::::::-c:c-:-":'.::-=:---·1--:::::o;:;-::;--;;:;;;-;;;-;;;;--;;;-:;--~--•H-Or, THI l!dl11-LIYC.C:1I. 1S, E 11o It 111: 01 I . • "'I AlllHl-N111m1t1 (. '""'••·SL IYC· ... C -I Y Oll'ICIU '1·SMYC·••1• MltlrHJ -Dk k 'o'/ll~lns·Ll 'l'·CAL ?$, • Trlnkrt -lltobt•t Crildil--s•A ..-Al l"ubll111et1 Ortnte (KJt D•llY l"llOl, LE.G 'L NOTICE NOTICE OP TR:USTlll'l IALB ,,, " ,, • :t>t n. Slllbul -Ted tll:otllHm••AIYC.C:AL 3'., -~ ,,...... M•Y' 2, '· li, JJ, 1'12 1129·72 r'I. UHO•llt DllO o" Tt\lll' °"'\~.1 ro -llta119rl £ ,,•0011i;y. V -Allrt o O, Hollt nd·l'ICC-.io bt R:\I TF JJlll • A11pl' cl11i1t-ltob 4tlclltr·SW'l'C./l\Otll:·. Hlf'lll \Olllc•..SS ·hi. JO. . ~ SllOw Iott _ llt tnMll H, JtHllP• YA~~. dour -111 E. Milltr·SSSC •S IU,•JllOR: COUll:T OI' Tiii' • L .. n Hi. VA •JftJ $.U0 l T1,f. l fl -hnnell A, Wtls~C· SAMN"'>'>•. ~ Glr• E. Ofo~n•v·SM'l'C· T • s · STAT OO C IPOON>A POO ,.. NHYC·,..PT 30. ru,. crumol1011s -("'~~ L LEG" NOTICE • · AL Nv!lc1 Is 111f'9bt llYI~ ffltl' Wl:STSIOE AYr.'U' ..... fl!lf" '14. .,..0Qdo$LIYC· Eltc111 -MlllY·W. Slur1n Jr.. Molollt f Glrl U -Grt• NtMn·AYC-IC Stlf1-., -Frtd Gwler·AYC -CAL 1"1. C¥~~/;i~~lll:lli _ C•ooo L loo•lil: ~ TMI COUl'OIT'I' 0, OJtAlfOI TITLE (OMl"AN'I', A Llmllld 1>1rf11tnllO. 11l'Y .... 11-.Johll Jll. T11rlrno~o•·50YC-LAVC-S lp :Ii. '°· • Sl!Vtt Ettlt -J01111! J, Kellt r· CYC<AL )J. " , • • Nt. AntM IJ trunt t, or lu<<e»or tn.ilttl, II' ft 111 ll>~U• SP;ltd -BM LlnPtt·SSSC<•I. IOMY-C· '.'-'Lo.-Wtlll1m G. ICi'"bt U-NYCL l!l·COL 3'. Tur-IH _ Stev• C. VYn•SYC·LWP ,ICTITIOUS IUllH•tl OJIOl!R TO SHOW CAUJlf 'Olt iubsl!tuttd fr1111te p11r1ut11I 11 I"" dft'd I/I 'j~ll-1!1 Ler•.:r:La'!'C-4t 1111· iimily ~1'111 -Joteplt a. Clt"I' MD.· M'C·TI ( Cl C cJ1ln 4't_lecll> -J t ck f . '°lllHlrs-Lll'l'C-l6. NAM•JITAT•MIMT CHANOI! •AM• tru!I utculld by MAit.iON Olt.VILL• lt~t tf 11-rwc:t Mt(lll•t·Ll'l'C· C'l'C·Cl l. io. SSS~All "','!." -''"' J, onnt ll· s ''"•_L.A. Vt nlman-SSJ(.OHL 3,, r.r.~ -Lll\YeUyn a l•b• Jr.·Atl'l'C· Tiie toti-lns 11rson 11 OOlnt 1'u1 lrt1U I" !lit Mt llt r o1 1'111 Al>Pllclllon ti TACKETT, JJt. 1nc:t CAllOL ANN • II l11l..r1rl 11:. H!n1·CIYC·C1I ·~'c"'>•tl11t11r1 -Sll'll M. Cook -W'l'C· Moon Sltlnt -l lU Vt11 l(l1l1111'1'1ld-51rlu1 II -aPb L•nc ... NH'l'C·ll SLI', ... v._".~iid HOdlt i/lt.oberl/Wlllltm tt : Mt rY IC. (Sftvtnt) Luchm1n, for el'llnM TACICE TT. llusD1t1CI •ncl wll• lf'ld tKOf'4•, ~. -lJ.._ NH'l'C·COL JO, SlrOC"Co -l l'lom11 Gt tlltnDl•!J-llYC· W -• I, U.S. 1t1cln1 or n1m1 Id Otc. '9, 1'61 In 11oo1t IOt 11" 1• fll llntllt -CortY M~tr Jf,·l'l'C·lll:n• OjllH IUmmer -O•~lcl· McMl!l+n. MOP!lclilf4 -P1ul Mclnlollt•Ol"YC· CAL Jt. 'l'C·IAI XI. 2. U.S. ll:Kf"I C,,,ln Tiie tPPllctllCM'I of Miry I(, Stevens Of!lcl1I •t<:ordt In lhl·olllce of lllt CPl!n. :3.J. O~~ai~1· ~Ummer _ Jt mts J. COL 11. Slroc.co -J im Mct•1ll·SSSC·CAT 11. \'~bend Lid¥ -Lltfl Snomtll·l'l'C· ~. U.S. lil•c!ng Wl'IMI• L11chm11n for chtnut ol ,..me, ll•wlng 'Y llt cor"'er of Or•nt• Cwnty, C1rllorn11, 3'~•n•hll -' ltfl)rt L. Sl!t•ll-ISSC·Ctl GlltriPlt,N'l'C·lil, 32, 15r o/lb•ck -Oon•1d M. MOU·llCVC· Slroc:co II -Joti11 C. Car•ovoll·W'l'C· ,",if.,•ctlli,t,"L -,..w'" E. MeFt rl•nd Jr,. ~.U.S. R:1cln11 8 r•k11 ~•en flied In Court, 1'1d 11 •ope1rl111 from •nll pur1u1nt to lllt Nclkt of Dll'tult •nd ltll!nt 1\1 -Tom Scllo<k·NHYC·San Enl1t 1 -LH I . Kll,,._llYC·Ct l l•. Mo1lvi to M II J H I I CYC 1'.llC l5. -.. J, U.S. lt.•<l"lf Su191n1lon 11lt1 t J:1Pllc•llot1 11111 Mllry IC. S"ve~s EIKflon to Slit tllfflllllllllr rteordtd Jtn. 11 F!ICIM -Sl"'ntY 1111,M·L~F'·iS $ch, SLOOP lJr -er n . or°'." • Sl1u -,1ul Slt..tun ... M'l'C·5L00". V1tll•ll1 ti L1ndson/AdklnJ. II. U.5. lll:tclng Ll'rOduc:ll, 7U Jt l'l'lel Lt1cltm111 fits Iii-.:! •n t pPll<i llon pro-11, ttn In 11ook "75 1•111 72~ ol 11ld Or. .lll1v·lte -ltobtrl Wltll•m1·LA'l'C· ftelH -0. lilambtrg/E, Jllcllllr· Mv F1Jr LtG~ -W, H. Godslllll· ---'------------SI Vll C·CAL ?I. SI., Co1t1 Mnt, C1lllor11le, t1'27. p01ln1 rw:r ,,.me to be c1ting9d to M•rY !ICll l lil1cor111, will Jill, 1111 M•1 23, 1t1S Col 11. I YC·Ntw-ltr. S!IYC·SIL :IJ. • Vtl-ytlt -Cr l!lob Ffnclte....PVYC· 11.J. Llllltr. Jli J1mn SI,. CO.It I(. 1C1rrtn Lttcl'lmi n. ti 11.00 • m., ti tllt llOl'lll Ir""! tnlr!lfl<t llf'bo fl! -l ob 011_fltl/·\IYC·l~I JO. EK1H1l1 -llobtrl f . Grllll11-55SC· N•!k• .... G1org1 E, Ll'MIO•U·LSF· Trlm1r•n. Mt1•, C•llfor1111, 11•21. Now, tllef't lort, It IJ titrl'bY ordertd i nd to 1111 Or1n111 C°"nlY Courlhou• /Dttltlll 1•11• l l111C:• -Ci r s. Mi nion. C•l, 1-11. HOL 30. V•lot -I HI Enln1tr·Ll'IVC.C:OL so. T~l1 but!nfli 11 1tt1111 <onduct9d by •n dlrt<ttd, ll'l•I •JI P1•11C1ns lnternttd in 11 100 Civic Cetiltr Drlv• W11f formtrlw 1\~fi~~~n• _ Trumt n Htn•lll.,. MG.• y1E~ll.rttll -Hut ti F. l!t!IV·"OYC· 2 N1n1 -Mlthttl Lt.,.fs-L 'l'C.C:OL 111-c1/r;1~mtJ -Ed.,.•rd Ktnt-SLl 'l'C· lnd!vldU•I. St ld mttr.r oo •Ppell bllort ffl!• CllUrl 1,. Wt ll l!lt 51rH I, Sll'llt Arif, C•llltrl'll• 1t "YC·Cjr ''· Evl111 -Ctwrl11 Ullm11'1·LA'l'C·•l 'N•n! J tn -A, C1tmmo,.1·SLllYC· °"'l'Clln'ltf' -o1n Shllburnt-W'l'C· l!l .J , Llll!tr OtPlrtmtl'lf 3 en !lie 'Mtll d•Y Pl .Mtv, FUblk •u<llCIOI, ID lllt ltl911tll bllfOtr tor ,,.,,. t Lii -ltrnt•d F. 511111-IYC· Sil, CAL 'f· EA n. This tl1ltm1nl flied ... 11~ lllt CounlY lt n. t i t:lO P'<lock A.M., cf ••Id dl Y IO [tslt l••Ylblt •I , .... 11..,. el N it I" ll~l:iitclltd Norm1n kcll LI Y( Ct 1 cu,!..,:-.AuiwHlt J1Ck1«1 Jt.·FIV(. ,,·.·.rt~o. I -Huolt s. Wlltrrlll..SLl'l'l'C· Vtsl!o -Frt nk ll"rkk·Sl 'l'C<OL so. Clttk "' Ot•l'l9e Counlv 9rl A1rll 11. 1tll "'-c•U$t why IUCl'I •l>•llc•lloft for 11wlul mDrMV of 11\e Unljtd St•tt•I •!I .U -' • Fiil' WIM• _ (hl rlti lt.11tk ..... I· Ni rtlmt r _ Olck "li w•<t-llC'l'C-CA.L \/KIO!" II -Htrb JoltnlOn·SO'l'C·HZ by IStvtrly J. Mlddoll. Otpu!y (11Un1Y clt tnM of n11mt l/lould ttDI be t rt n11d, rltllt, l!llt, •rid 1 .. re1nt, tol!VIYllll II I ntl •i "'II... -M•rk Town••'"'· I C'l'C-42 Ywt. l •a. Clt•k If It furllltr tnltred .n.it • C#'f If tlllt MW lllkl..,. It l!ndtr Mid''" 111 ..... ..,.. •• l<.' ~ '' • '' • .. M • "SC V .'. Ol'ln H, Lane--HH'l'C·CAL 21, Pll > .. "'"' To s•·--Co•"• " ••Oll·"ot I• •· 0.,-ty 1nuat1 111 Mid Coun!Y 111111 ._,, • Ft mlty Af,.lr -Otnnl1 GoldN rt •u t Vt -6 rt ur11 V• -Ind'{ T A11s!'lt'()'l'C """' w~ ~ .., ,,,. •1it1 -• Mlrllll s.trt11nno,l '1'(.. MO·W'l'C.C:l'll. :n. c L J.i. GLO-OYC. . I • "ubli•lltd O••nst Co•tt 01111 l"llDI, OAIL y ,.ILOT, I nl!WIPI-• l'lrM••I 111u:rlbld II fltllOWI• Col'!l\I I $ I I Y Fl.,1111 -0.1111 •wli.lt 1·VYC·Sl1 M Nfl..-ll -:-~s-Ill:. 5t1l1·1SYC·L SO. ••'o"',',o -Dlv1 O. N1wm•11-SG'l'C· At rll It, ll, t ilt! MIY 2. t, 1,72 Jtl·72 <l•-·itllon, orlnltd In o•ld counlY, I I lttJI l.ol n, TrlCf 4l2. '" tht City If C0tl1 I t ell -MC/lell -llrMt>I C--• · · NelY l lr lt.lcl'lt rd Oilllul<hP\IYC·'" ~w Mooo • .... ,, " O••-Slolo 00 Col .. .., SC -onc;t ffcll WJt• IOI" four JllCUHIVt Wffks . IR-• .. , ' ' "llttli:*<<~ -Hlw•r• I'. Jedi...,._ lc Ut Dvc:' -GMrfl II SChmldt-HH, I O T Tob' SO'l'C Vtlo> -J•Ck SI IYC.CAL U . 1---------------1 rlor ta"' dtY ol ll ld Nennt Ct llfornl•, 11 Mr m11 ltlfrMI r.:or_, l.~. >. J M'l'C.C:1l.O. •''"'"' -" om •n· -V1rv1 -Cll1rl~111 1-SOVC·K tl. LEG" NOTICE O ! Mo i•n In 11oa11 14 , •-s JI Ind 11. '°lntJW -Ht/ Ll'llde"·Cl'l'l'C·V•n, F. C lt. · Vll<lnti -O•n "IU 'l'C·NPT V tu. . Otled ll'UI Jll'I Cl1V ol •· · l'l'lltct ll.,tlltl'I m•llJ, rftotdl ti Iii.I ,.1 MOOtn -lt.ICll1r• N. MOOll-A'l'C-Flrtbtlnd -(udJt'l'/Wtll·NH'l'C· Neotnlhl -ltl<~trd ... c;1rfl-SO'l'C.I( Viv• -Iii. Wt bll/ • l ulfr•Y·SFvsc. HAltMON G. SCOVILLE o,.,... C111111h'. A.IC.A. JPl1 Cit rllt l• 'i ... $r.J"' -C"1r1t1 M, w.111.... IE•c. 41, JIN ....... 1111 -Or. s. w, o ..... ~l·IYC· CAL ll, su,.11110i COUll:T 01' TM• JU09R of tt ld Superior Ceurt Avt ·coitt Mtll c:.rn $CC\IC I M, Flvi JC -M1~r1 LM·WCYC·N•I • .!O IElll:C 41. Vivi -(.I. A•Plfby.WC\l(<.AL ?f. ~ITATW °'""CALlll'H•IA Ml'l' IC. ISll'llfll) LH<Jtm.. s eii ' N it ....iu b. mtdt , but wl--"' ti•• ...... Ill G. Smlll'l·KKY<· •.Fii ""' -Okk lil•mt61·a WCC.Col. Neunllll -Con \llCkt rs<l 'l'C·CAL Vlfl Cl'\11 -Tony Ct111·WYC·E1l C lt. POO TNI COUNTY ... ''"' .. oil SI ,,_, ..... •• V1¥•c1 ... G ...__ o" O•A • • -. -<OVlfttnl., w•rr•l'lf'r. "'rts,.r lm1Utd, !111"1'..JO. Flt!!.,.lnd -Jolln P1t1tr1on·5Ll'l'C· 30N-11tlll -Alll9tl H. Alllft..OR 'l'C·K 1-SbY·IC '3."'" .. ._._ eorH ....,,lift' Jr., HI. A·1'1N W•1fll'llftll4r,_C:_i!,111.__ _ _ rR11lrd!l7I" tl!ll, ...... atjon__,.. • 1~ lklot Mtrll~ -""" Murr1Y•,.M'l'C-Ere. 31. 11,, A Vlv1c1 -Otte l . Hoak·WC'l'G-CAL •0T1ca 0 1' MliA•tNO 0' 'l!TITtON l"ullli•llffl Or1ntoe Cwst O•itY "ilol, cumllrtncts. r1 1111111 ·1111 lndtblti'ntia (11 .t(I, Flwlnt FilWI -O. W, lltwl·VYC·Etc, "lwtbtv -J1c• l•llU .. I YC·lf ,5. "Ol Ll'lt09AT• °' WILL AND Ll'OR A11rU 11. 11, 25, 11111 Nllf 2, l,n '-"'~ ttcurl'd by tlld Otffl, fnclud!nt 1111 fH t.f~"t-cwH'rr -W W. Sullfvt n· .)(l;;,IVif'lt LMy -lilt¥ lurti'S&-OY<·E•' M~lt111 Jol'tll -L-M, C-·LAYC-cl("fjlous -lll:Obert C Morris0tt-3SA· LITTll&t ·T•tTAM•NTAll:'I' -~~ •rlf -n"°"...-11111 ll>t tnrs!ft ft;-wt IM l luJ Orp,_.u, -~lclttr• Joruuon· 3) .OHL..U. V1V1li1~-lt.Obtrt ~irtwrll.CYC-c..(L !st111 r CAll:L l'Jl:TSCO, Dec11sN LEGAL NOTICE trust• c~ttld !_>1 "Id lllttcl, N v1n<e1 L\Y,C-.\1c.->t. F.111 .., llfti M1lho·Clil'l'c:I( 31. NlltOt -iithl rd 1<..:f!I YC·C·Al lol, :II. NOTICE IS HEll:IEIY Gl\ll!N lhl l 111tr111r1<11r, .,.ltti lnllrttl 11 !''~ldltll Cl l ~ lrH~ .. -G••Y L. MV.,J·NHYC· Lo'w'"l'> 5tv•n -Ti:-11 It ltm11r.C8Y(. Nlkl It -Jo1'111 F. Klnkt l·\IYC·CAL V!~tn -Clltrlu H. Cl'leVntY·SD'l'C-MAXINE FRISCO l'l•1 tit.cl lllrllft t 8Alt ttll !hertfn, tnd lht unP•l• 11lncl1• If ffll 21. ' l!'•vc.00tt _ , Y _ .,11t'--1·· '''"'' -"''' ,,, •• , 1,. '"''''•• couoT o• ,,.,,,,,,. note 1ecu1 ... bv 11rd dffd; to-Wlt l lut fln -ll. (, W1nrlck-SSSC·l•c 1· ,.;., .. ,·, _ w,,,, ,,,,,.SDYC·Col. NlmOi••l ••• -Joe~ L. l rll'\ll.·W'l'C· ,,. Jom E T 11-PMYC ""' .. "' "' '" ""' ~' -• " !Iii( 3-3J. -" ' u ""'"" • 1111n<t of l.tlf1r1 Tt1!1m1n1try to Perl· COUNTY O' Oll:ANOE 111,110.22 Wiii! tlllere1t lhtrton 11'11'1'1 Aut , """"'*" -Bfll""'Grjij;m-AYc;:src~-10;:o~y LldY -o~, lert LDC:kWOOd· c1cl~~itd -Al!drt . .,. Ctt•rn.Dtr1 Jr.: \lol1n11. fl -Ml<l'I•~ c. Hlrth·l'l'C-!loner reftrt"'' to wl!lch rs m•d• ftr ,.. Civic Clfllli Dfl.,., 1, 1•71 11 PrDvkltd 111 Mid llPle. 12., il'MVC·Erc. 1t, MH ·CAL :tt. CAC-2·:11. .-• ·--rurtlllr p1rtlcol1n, 11\d ll'ltl 111111"'9 t rld S•111t.A"1IC1JHtl'llil-.-,r::--011td'!-l\f"'/H1. 1 · 11on Btllt -Gtrro/,.tltlll~IC'l'C-Fo~i LICIY -l ruct Grcvtr•,.MVC. MDC ur111 -Ctr1 H, Noecker·I CYC• W1lnrll1 -Compt~/H.OcCNifl!ll·SSC· pl1ei 6f lll•rlflll lhl ••mi II•• blen •el ~ CASt: NUM l!I 0.5'J.U WESTSIDE"'TITt"E' COMl'~NY ktlc;r.!· (ti.,. l!L.l1. -2i SlOOLI' -,._ f •••••• , II ll!{lt,TruttM f!OI' -Mll1n 'f Cojj<ll'('l'C•Ccl n, F,.tll'(f• -s. Clct~iLl11pold·NH\I Non,1nJ1 -Rollin lll:tnd•ll·V'l'C·CAL Wtlr111 • WUlltm M-1<r-.wt=SMYC: for-Mt¥-•r-ttn.-•n :.., 1.1'1'1 .. rn lltt SUMMONS MA ev Wl!ST l!JIN 01!11:0 •1.• It -M, A, llldilw:Ll\IC·IO ·~ >l • -ll • -iNG .......... -' ' 'ourlroom cf Dtptrlmt nl Na. l of 11!t1 IR rt t111 mtrrftM ef '°fllllt111r: COll:Ll'OlilAT ION m•t, ' ' · . -=-=----e-iwii:l 'Vt-IC -~·· c t 11 JOO er ·! C i. O t W "ATRICIA MAJll!! •STl'I' l ~d 1,1~11 --01rt--ft1~,mlii·SS5C;IO~. rl'l'!W-iotot11rd-J r-t1•1r•CCC·Cl l -~~~1"~~--f~~~:"":v1~:;~~Wd·(IY~: MiW~ .. t' 31-:-Jtlc"-rd E. 01nl11 .. 1:u;~ Cll~ cf S1::1 A~~, rC1U~o~:11. Ill, lt.tlf>IMl•I: DONALD H. llTEY !:1i::~1~: ~it~::l'ltws m•,!tr. I J I • I I y [ r.~Utlln -Jtoblrt Lfflf!l·SCC'l'C·lfl CAL ?7, \V1nt1trlv•e II -J1rrv HtmPllln· Oiltd APrlt 11, ltl? ,,','ev'!'." lt1$P<lndt nl: OONA.LO H. UtN . r1ur no -Irv II I It O·A C· re ktlCh. • Nu"• _ Mtrctl Hotsslv·I C'l'C• 5SSC·lt SCH. w E ST JOHN -7' r~Hapln (•tel -Jlobl<'I s. M1111•• ,.wvv"i'Lr.,.llclt -Wll!lt m O. H1U.C:IY.C cc'.uni'v Cltrll Tll~ ptl!llontr 1115 filed • ~1111.,,, <on· Publ!1~ed Or11111t Cotil Dtlty f'llel, lrl1M St•• -WllH1111 T, l"l•fM 111. Sll YC·C•I. it . SLOOP. TO REVEAL SECRETS c•r~lnt your Mttrl•e~ "'°"' m1v 1111 • Mt y 2, t, Ii. 1t1' lf.U·1l tf TH!C ·En .. Ci•nd•ll -Ml~t ChoaPkl•LIVC.Col. Nun-I '°tt Ltwl5-WY(-!;RC: ll. Wtt HOO$ -VI. F, Sampson·ll:HY(. ll:Oalll:T M. KAUjllMAH .,.,lllen rfl-lllf wl!ll in lhlrly !Hyt of lhtf--------------f!rlO•I -!d WllMl«-·CYC·C•I. " >l NuvoloJO -Clt mtnl LambtrPl·L 'I'(· ,., • F. klJ COR !J. U•t loft ltH.Ktlflt ""' f!ut~n\' ll~Y u _ Jof\n o Snoo•· G11fld~ Otfll'•o -Cll•rl11 M. 10111111. 411 ~1 "· w Ofl IC n9 \\'11tt~v. -llobt rt JOIHI I OllCl·CGVC· l• Miftd•, CttllorRlt d1!1 11111 Tiil• wm,._,• is 11rvl'd o" '°"' LEGAL NOT1CE • 1\'ICC i y • .,.1 l!l~C 'l'C.S.n. 11. Odin -Dun Prltt ·S5SC·ElilC 1.J?, IO' ICET;rH· Ttl• U12J J21•n ti YllU f1fl to 11111! I wrlllen r1!1POn11f--------------C. i.t r-_. Wt !lt r Clir•·SOY(,)j ,, tMCltr -Je~fpll A, ,Gt r>n·SO'f(.I(' O<l\fr ty _ 0 1..,10 llt omt.C:VC·CAL lt. Wt lltrv -JD1'111 T. Hotl n·Mli'l'C-41 All .. lllY ttr Ll't!Ul-r .,.llh•n su<ll limt. YllUr deltl/11 m11 bt NOTICS OP' TltUST••'I SA'I 'l'wl · < SLP • '' ••• Mlertd t nd 1111 court mtt tf'lltr 1 tuot-" Cidll!<• _ J Oll" I, RtYntrd J• . G1unllt1 -Ed l.. WWdluld-SM'l'C· Oll!lell1 -lll:cblrt It.. Jcf\ns·LAYC· 'f~~l~tr -Jt fTIH 11. M1"••.C:Olll:YC· '"~Id Or•r!lll (o1$I Ot llY l'HOI, n'llf'I conltln•lll lntunclive or c<ffltr ordtrs HO, ,I C '*' Ill CB'l'C·C<'ll l!rG<. n, 1 J" M' K SD '° c l .. _ N" K .,,,,., __ Ao•ll l o '"' Mo, >. <>I> OOH•n t11Kt•nl119 "'lvl11on cl P'l>PlllY, 1pou11I On M1v 26111, ltlf, t i 11:00 A.M~ Cttul"'• -OOll Murphy/L, Ctbol-)O. I VO I --·11 • tt Jt-YC.C:t J 0•~1!11~ l !oSM>M -,_\lch•e! l(i"MV• • .. ,.y "' -l rwk •• Id t NOlltfl-fWESTEll:N TITLE COMll'AN'I' 0" • C< ,.i\YC·CAL :1t 0 lt11lll'St SCCYC-CAti, 15. 1upporl, Clttld <UJ!Olly, c~ I tuptort, t • OA COUNTY ...... y 11 1' • C•i•ll• -Frt nk •. 0.lr<l!IYC·Alb Orient -J1mt1 0 . l t nl\fll·CYC· " CDW•"",, Cl'l~d -ltt Armslf'VMo\IYC·1 ___ _, __ ,__ ________ ,,0fntY'• lett. costs. •rid sud\ otller rt!Jel ALAME ' • Ctr-•11 ..... II ,~ r,1111010 -GtorH A Chaltt n,.l 'l'C· J), SI 001" 1 11 mtY M vr•ntl'd bv t11r cour1. itulr 1pPaln"4! TrwllM. undff •nf "C11I. )I . Git•n• -G~r.td . LtrktY·WYC·DI• Orfc AIM I s.~ ... roll·"V'l'C· WlndltH -lltor l . Wihon-PMYC· LEGAL NOTICE If Ylll •• .,, It Nik"" ""1cll ti .. •I· lltlrtUI"' ni om •• TIUSI rtc1.,,.. APrll C1!yp111 -R111>or1 11t11en•WCYC .C:ll Glotl• -H1rt1n )II, CiUtllfton·SSSC-Oii -r NPT 30. ltr~tJ 1f1 "'i• mtlftf, Yff s~tuMI .. ti 111. 1tn, 11 l<11!r, Nt. 112(), In book HGI, !t 3$ vv.t. IC&T,cH. 1v, Zcrn-AYC·CAT To Wri•te ,,ww'",.llov•r -w. E Hoskt11-LA'l'C-l1 HOTICl TO c11:~0110Jt.1 "tm"'Y '° lfltl ~ wrtn. ,.,,._, 11 P11e '!•·of Olllcf•I R:words In the lltJc1 e~rvp•o TllOml o •loml-JI.• GOl!ltn MINI -Wt !ltr \/. Al\flt fto"· fl 'c<> -Mlc httl --' fflt oun"" Rt<:or<ltr of Or-C•<0• ITf'Y~Alb 3i ... O'l'C·Col. ~.. WlndlPtll -0.tt I . Gt lfort.NHVC 41 ..... mn 111y mtt .. fllltl Ill ,.,,.. .,. " ..... .... '..I ' .,,. ,10 _ Wm I l o<··•·O'"Y""· Gol~n w111lt """· Wm.. M l11lsm•n-Our Joy -KUl'I Gllden·l llYltC·Olll: •l(f lCH. lu-ftr C:tul!' tt Wll D~ttd Ffb 4 1t 7'l " Sttle 171 C11:1wnl•, WILL SELL AT ... • ~ 5FVSC·Slooll 21 WlNllDl'lt -w.11.. E. Glt<:ltler· . • • ,.U!ILIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST 811> ~~~Mtr -W 11f 5ullltrl•nd· y Gr1ci1 -• JOl'l11 "-HcWtll•l'IC'l'C·le 0utw•r11 Bourwl -Jl mtl L~nthtll· A!IYC·CAL 1S. Sltlt C~~a11:r.;;:.: lllt ~~r:· SI. JOHN DER: FOii CA~H tP••tDlt •I tlmt el 11!1 Mlliyt.51,., llwl, Cl'l'.::·c.AL lJ. o T WlndlCflll Ill -AOberl H. L.,.l!lfl EJll lt ol (HAlll:LEI ZEN MAllTIN 1 EUGENE J il'ETEAS.• In l•wful monf'I of lflt U11fttd Sl1f11) t i C.,rlc:lou1' -tit~ W•lllln11·LAY(Jf Greycf lrtnt -Fr11'1l< lit, C011m1n• P•clllc (hlltlf -(ht t S1i1sD11rw II· fl aste ''w"';._D~1YY0t,·-C~LW!O•.ll-H, foOl·SDYC· y ' 1111 1«1!~ fronl t nlrl ll(I t. Ille Ol-•llM 1111 LSF·SO Cut. I YC·".1 5LP O hn.. -.., SEAMAii,, Ot<ttMCI, 1•,-,,'L'i Cou11t1 old (OUtlhOU lt. CllY crt l tnl1 An• (•••"'1• -111! c;.,~··d•·VYC·Co• G•t l'T'fln ti -Ht•IY Amold·l"MYC· "A1:11c1 -511nlt v E. W!tlll. c M •I. Nollet b lltrtbv t llftll ,. !I'll crtdllor1 ~ ..... of Ctlllor-nit Jt-' Ct!. )t. "•cllltr IV -Byron L. JetJUP·OYC· Wlt1t1 el 2M Mor~ln1 -Wiiiiam A. of lllt •bO~t "'mid OKMtnl ffltl •II OAlftfl Jt. IUCICHUNI •n rlohl !Ille .,,d lnllrttl ·-Id II Cttltnbl -F•ed M••lill•!Cl'C<or Cr0t -lt-t M<IClllft.Oll ·l 'l'C.Ja F.tll:C JO R . d h r-\osti 11-3SSC·VAN JJ. J>t•IO'll l'ltVlnt d •lm1 1111lntl 1111 $tld AllerlllY ti Ltw ' ~···• 1' Sl ip, • P1n1ef1 -v1n "-'mt,.LllYC.C:AL ec1pes an OI er secrets wlntom• H1rrl$Pn sre-ns· dt<l!Clel'lf ••e rtctultld to 1111 t11tn1 w1111 • ,,._., c et 11 1 tnll no.,. held ey 11 undu ••Id Oted a' ·c1r!11t -(•rlttc" 11. Srt'!!..SLIY(. Gult•ITll .... -ll1rl T11ttl1·IC'l'C·l1i, 4IJ f f lh t f WCVC·CAL '5. lhe Ml:l llt !Y \OOIJd'lt'1, Ill tllt ottic:i DI I I• o>> 1 If' t•t Trull In 1111 .. OPlrfl' tllu<tttllll In tti. (o• 2J JI, PAPfr Ooll -Gltbtrf l !IOmpSOl'I• l'Om SOl'M-0 e m os 3moUS Wl11rd -l ab Wcodwtrd·I YC· 1~, Cl••' ol IOO o"-·-lnllll" court or 1 C -... · CllUnlV end.5!tle de1crlbtd I I! Ct 1ll• -Ot~n•i ('h¥!1~<k ·KH'l'C·ll GV•1V St ncltt ,l'llllltl·'\IYC· Staurant " ,. t C ht n f SLOOP " ~ """" ' N.-1 IHOI, •~ u Loi Jt ti Tr•cl Na. 61J7 I~ 11\t City 0, tttr~ ' l rim111n. 1 tt~IY'C,;:0~G_!'T,,Gmt• Armitrot1o·CYC· re ,.. S 0 Woll•Y T1ot1 -M1rc111 A. Htll·l 'l'C· to Pf'•ttnl lhtm with 1111 ~u•rv PlllM; 1714) '44·11JI Cotlt Me•• 11 lllown on '1 mi p ftler""I c.~!10vc~r:..· ,;-. Mt"''" ··~"·"~11 :::!CJ:":: e~l.~~7•·:~.t"'\;~l~ • . CP '.!I, Southern CaHfornh1 will be .SLOOP. \00\IClltr• lo Ille unlltrt!t ned 11 '"' t itle• Attol'ntY "' """"•' rtc:ordtd 111' llook ,~ ''" » •net l7 "'f OC Do "•••llP~ _ F•fd Cit!l•rl Ht l w1111r. \'lotvt d nt II -Ellwlll v. 11nt• Jr.• crl llurke, WllU1m1 tnd Ser1ntt11. '-'' Publlshtct Ortnt! Cots! Dilly ,.;1o1, Ml , ll•n-· M~•' ~~do " 0 ,,· C 1n:ilv~ 1>n~1 -£•"''' ~,~, .• ,. tt•ld! -I . ••n11tr11/1t. l1re·I YC· re,·eale d to DAT{ y PILOT 1.1eyc.c:o11 lll. soutlt ouve, su111 1000, LH An111l11, A 11 '' M , , '' 1-, 1-,.1, 1 e -s ... _,.., "" 1 fl!MY(·Mn 21 l"J JI ORYC.C4L 11 . • WoodW'/'rlf -G. Btktrl ,.. JICCIOI• C1lll0tni• t001• wlllc.lt It 1111 .-l•t• ol ., '•n.G I Y •• ' " ... Or•ntt CounlY. ~•r••r1 -51tl~M llarnt,d·N.,Vl· Htf Thlnt -Mtl WIUJ.COlltY(.llt "t. '"l"lclin -Ala• llrt t lM'11·RN'I'(. rtade.rS, Starting Wedncsd:i.)'. l"M'l'C·LVIP :U. tiuslntsl If llle un<ttrslt llld 1",111 mtlltll -EXCE PT tll oll, ti11 l!rdrDClrltoll c, .• * ... •· -Oift llrrY-L0'"''' '~., •• ," -,,, .. -., .... ,, .. ,,c. E~ •• ~·c~1 •• -Or. J ,I', ""''''u.1r c That's' th• promls• of Glori 21CI -G. lu•r/111, ~trslolt·\IYC· Mrl11n;n1 lo""••'•'-of llld dKltlt nt. LEG" NO.nCE l ubtl•nc•i •nd t11lt11t1IJ 11, wfl111v1, :-t ·I(• •• '"" " CA,',',~Alt.J AN.0010 ... .~~sc ,.1 •l SLOOI' wltl'lln four m<>nl~t t f1tt Ille fir•! l'UDllc t • tu. n•m• known In. on or u""''' !ht tt>ll vt (1!t tt•v -J1mt1 A 1t1111~-IT C·ttl H '•"• _ E. O•vld C•Htf'ltltr·SWY(. -1 00 ~(lrfl,• ~, .. ,,,, ~~icltling. 11n Orange County z.,.,~ II -S1tw1r1 .o..11c001H1tll• 110~ 01 '"'' Millet. dttcr!btd 11nd below t dtolh of r.oo 1~1 11 10 Mfl•t "~•r• .i..; fllt:m•1 N, I ow•r1· · NM 'r:Ji..,"'ElCH 50, Oa!ltl APrll H ltn rn.e•surff Ylrllctlly frltll tht tlll'fll:• Ct n!urio" -L1rrv Ftli!em·!Ll''C· 11 1lt fil -fr111-. Arll1"6CYC·'1'1wt. E'7,;1,ilf.;_ Jt m..., fl'lll"l•llCY(.l~l ·" resident and "'filer "·ifh an \n· lilllll ' -Jo~" R:, C•rn11H,BYC-OML Lllll•n M.i •lne' Sttmi n :¥:~:·:: c~t~::11:r.. ~== 1n1 trcund, buf wl,~1 !ht rlt ll! el tll• "~"~~c. -w ...... K lf~!~O'l'C..::o ,,, ,,",a11..': Wllldl -lloblrl J. OOOl..O'l'C· Ptllc•n -Ptl•r ,..r,on1.0'l'C-ALB tcrnational reput ation, Her i:tMVntt 11 -Gv• L1w ..... •u· E•tculti• of !ht Wiii TMI COUNTY OF OlltAMO • ,,.,. Ul>Oll lnV llOl'l ... n DI 11\t 111'''" ot t lit O Fii · ,.., T StCYC-Of'S J 11111 t t lcl dtCl<llM A~ fflt t round t beYI t •1111111 If JllO ttll le, (._ :/1"' -~ · l!l"f·l.JIY(. Motil v 1.ft.' W'/J'.t n -J•intl L. )J,•i\orl~I _ Ito¥ E. Ollnt~·('YC· new "G)Ormtf ' column m lllke3 zero Ziii -1111 lrtCl!lllrn-30'1'(· ,.,.,, WUli.1911 .... llf111111t1 AMEHDlO CITATION 11:1./C:OHT IST 0 , 11'1! 11t1rP1H ti t••l«l!!t fllr. MrlMit ~---OrMl1 ""' C11t1• .. L"c S~•,,•w c,-~·,,·1 , ot•i·•ovc ,..l'>lt..., 1•15 DAILY PILOT debut 1·n 'L "· w ... oiiv., si.. i• WILL .,0 ••-,. ••••-• m.111111. dr!Mhm, ,.,....Int. ulf1cllntl'tr Ila! lt. .., , 1,i"",a. Ott -.. ~• r """" • l'!tt• O Clkt -FrH W1U•t1.0'l'C· lAI ........_ (.allferlt141 "'" Jiti r,,. of L.AVRl°TTE L.AN'E l kf m1rkt1l111 11lct J11ltlt1ncu , '9fftllt!" ~m,..;:._ ~· ~ ' . -. .ttetltt ,11~ Mhti-W ........ ~m~~!r==~~~~~~~~:::::::-:-:1~~= ~~ l.AUW&T.TI ;..t}M lf • 41t-\:~~~~-:-... i--:~~=~ -~l!i -D>d: '"'-lrlll-KHYC· ,,~1" OWi -R-ld W. wiof.vvc. WC'!' • .COl. " II. • lfilJ become J regular felt\Jre ' , , I PllOf L.AUllETTl!'-ANN LANE, DtnlMd. tr rt<nll1nt u ld MIMfirw:n,, 11 1c. H l"twl• -(lln TMol'l'lt"1n·SW'l"C-OL ,ICTITIOUS S\lllHl:ll "llbl1dlld Ol'1nt1 Cotti 0 1 IY • Tht il'tt11t1 ol1111' Stm If Ct lllornl• rtMrvtd In lllt *tel _ .... 11'1 .... Murnut>\11'11\ll'!Uli;llflVl<1,11 -J.C. ICemRf ,Jl"ltttcftt _ Ill.. I(, SmYlft·Cl!l 'l'C·C•l. Of the "'ttkl~• section. H.AMI JTAT•MINT MIY f. t •. "' D. lm lllr-n Tt: Flll:ST WElt ElltN IANtl ANO 11)1, p-,..,, Otnd•I lt1<ordt. .. L. Klm.-l'l'C Clll/Tllrt l'\ :w M F ickl1'ng b•s -ked TM IWUll'flll"' --II dOI"' lwlll'llll • Tlll UST CO.M,AH'f'J M LP'M I EACl'Ol1 The •Ir"' ~ti Ind ....... _.,. HVf'¥ IC•nt -MIU\111 Kt nt-ICYC· iiol•'tfll8n (-'°"' -C1'1rl11l1n t"S. , ,.v. 1': l\IA ICUlll..11!; IVA JCHElll:Elll.1 'ffft'LMA llllli,..!11111, II '"'· •I ltlt I'll! 11'--'1' 1.1 ... ,,,"' l!kf ... PYC..CATM\At:AN. • "'ith c:ht!$ for many years. in-1t:u1 r1 M Gs.101t 11 c.t111no. ctt11 LEGAL NOTICE LEIECICi. DON E. IEACH1 1Cl!NNl!TM 0nu111ec1 • ._.11_._,..11 1111 JUI '1w!-Y -.-11111 Nl Sml!h-t'l'C·i•C )j., ~flt -MIC,,11'1 Wtum •I YC:• • • t•· •· Wn Ml•t, C•lif, n'1' IEACHi lt!CKAll:O G. IEACH 1 VIOLA Orltlt Drift, C.lt Mitt, Ctllflr'llll. ~':!~~::. La~~ •• ;i-:.i~::.~.rc'~'C: 1• ... .:.,1--c J. il'lck .... V•Snlft>c;tr · ttrvtewmg n~m on u1;:r 0 Jtull'o' E. 11'1111. •h Cit-" Or., CISI• IAll: JJ)I IUJILIHGAME1 CHAlll:l.ES 'VLlUM1 'nit ""°''llt'ntd Tnr!I'" dl.clalm• ... ., Mt!. JO !'l'C·C.ll .u tell!\lislon sho\\' and Jlso In-Mttt . (l lif. ntl• ,. H011CI 10 C•IDITOR$ CHILOll:EN·s HOME $(1!.:IETY OF ll•bllllY lllM' •nr IMWfK!ntU el IN .tfllt •• llVln.t -Tilom11 ~. ll•r..i·I C'fC·I( 0.,, ..... _ ''' 1 , .. ,.00Y(-COL . • th f rtJ I I T~lt-lllltlntU 11 belnt <tntluclH bv t rt IUll'•llOll: COU•l O' TMI' SOUTME •N CALIFOlltMIA1 SHll:INl!ll:S lddreu •nd ti'l'llr tlnllftll'I llttJtfll""" If .... ·~·"' terv1twtng em or • c es 0 lnctlvkt\111, I TAT'I °' CALt,o•••• 'O• "0 s,. ITAL 5 "0 It c Ill: I ,,. l. E 0 .... ,. llMrtlrft lltrtill. SI~,..,; Lo--Vit Slent-$Ll 'l'(.()r(.lll D~~" -Ntrmln A, .. C"Ott·~DYC· bf br hed ' .• r i 0 us litubf I!. St>jll Tffl CDUlfTY °' OlAlfO• CHILOllEH; Ll1 ~tu _unit; ..... AU l•id Slit wlU l>t mtelf, blrf wltl>tUf C lmvt -llt"'tftl , lobfl'\l~l'O·l 'l'C.-lll:!M llt•N. pu UIS In \ T"ll 116""""1 flllf wlTll ~ ~ Ht. A•PUJ' Pff$Pl'\1 l111trttled In lllt Wiit llf S•ICI COYlntnl tr wtrr~, f.11Pf9'1 tr ln'lll'lled, 4llfNfl n. •111JV~I -J°"" s lr•t•\O·f!CYC ·l!L pubUca on$. (ltl'lt of o-(tl/l'lfY 11'1! .....n a. 1m. e.i111" ti AOI EltT OLIVER IAICElt.. ~"'"'· m1trlllnt 11111. _,..,, .,. <!II" ,.OQF" TO GUNH It »· So-of th•'• m•terl•I will be IY ....... ,y J. ~. DePlll• CounlY Jlt Ot<•••l'd TNOMAS It. IEA(H, Jlt. Ind MAit· Cl.lmllrlnctl, If HJ ,.,. """ ........ ,.,, ... ll'ICN:nrtt -JONI Crt.,!G'l'C·0\111. Jlt. ou-11 '" "'""'" It•-'· ..... .. Cltrk. N'Ot1c1 IS . MEREl'f' Gl\IJ'IN ,. lltt flH ltlCH ,; ... ,. """' el lht "°" llCUN'f "' ... w~~"""'e -JOlln J , Ll11P...,.. published in book form next '""' ,,...11.,, 11 ll'WI '°"'' 11.,,...., "'"'"' ri.vi-. 1e0H rtd •net .ni.e -lldtd Wfli. °'" 11 lnn1, i.w;r: M.)IJ,Jl, "'4111 '"" 1"4;r.:-· ..,. • "'"' I r -JtrM' y ear by 'Je-dllh Press of ,.llblla;l'llld Or•net (Hal °"'" f'liol, ""'' '" "rtolll l'll vllOI C.lalmt' ••tl1td 1111 "" "OVl'ldl .i .. Mtllilll It lltt "'""°''-It lfft11 .,..,~ .. •OT\ftf "' tti. """· '1....-4.IFF-1.rt. .)J, ' . n "'' M•Y 1. t. It, U. 1Nl llM-7' Mid dtc'ftltnl I'' '""l!'ICI to lilt "*"· JM wrll llcrtttl: ldvtncft..i: II' .i!t , ilttditr !he Wms ti •1111 '"""'•cit -SUft'll'tll/Noblt-Cl'l'C p C d Ntw York. Wl1lt flt 1111Ctss ,., ~ l!I.,. t1n" wow. llltfffort, 11t1r1011~1 ie "•r111t, l'W Ottd ti lrvst, ""· c:Nr'" ...., ~ 1 rlm••1"' rogra111 ite 'leanw hlI• •• ~ -111 ,, .•• •·r LEGAL NOUCE tA""' clerk ., "" ..... •~lllltd (O\jrl, ... ,. .... ,..,., di~ II "''" .. w ld of 1111 Trllll9r ... " .. """' aMtM llllff'ft161'9 -J.a 111111-I YC•Col ~ n 111:.,. uc; .J·--------~-~~--I .. ~ .,...., "'tt'lt 1111 llt(ff.Nr'Y 1mt f'ldtll ,.C11tll1I 'fllrl111n 11'1lrly dl YI l lllr I ll' H id ONll 111 TMI. IJlllll'tl>kl u --.. Cv11ftKl vc:C11: o• "Y PILOT c 0 I u m n • '"'''"' • I ..... ~ It "" lllMMtt1111H t i"" oftke fffYl('f"' "'" cfftllln. Tiii bttltfkLtrr ~ M fd °"" "' HELSINKI F • I d ( 'P ) n..i.u 1 u lft ' .t lltf ..,.,,....,1 AN10N ou~MAllf, CllAll TMt hfrttotert tlltcll!M 1,_. ........... itmlrelM -Owb Jerwi.-'HO-S•Vc. . ' In an ,,_ -rtad'rs an ad\•anc• vie• of llAIU 11ATSMIJllT 1Jt20 8Mdl a.tttv1r1t W1ttl!il",,., WrTHESS, Holl. .. "" Vl'ldll'""'" I .,.,,,,.,, Ctc•-- Strll09, Nation111 priJOn authorlU's •·hal lo ·~1 w"'-....... ..___.. T'Ptl t111ow1111 ..,_ is dll111 bl/II-c1tr1em11 '*1. 'fllflkl'I ti "" ••.n .; Ji..ow fll ,... Su"''°' Cturt " "" Otl1Vtt ""' o""w "' 1111, "" • lldr"-lc -f <lfTWM "rartcfl.W'W't(A ,.....,....., llQI Uflll! UUUA N l . llUll-II tht U"""°"llld' I'! i i "'ltt.r\ #It Sit • of (.lli .... 1111 IW ,,_. "'1flM Ntib f/I DetliM ... lllrftM flt "'r~ -MICNll e.--···•c .uld I new Pf'Ott•m in which comes out. ILl(TltOftlC.S ~litlNI, •t.a .tht ...,,,, ............ .,. .. ti H id W<ldtn1, c-t\' II Or~ wllrl ... klL '"' II,., ...... c--11141 lflltiM.. ,.....~ --.-..I!"'· N""f!Wt htc:l\t Cllll•rftl• '*'· w{~n flOljf:,,.........""",... ""' ,..1e.. II.It" Mkt Coufl t tri•td "''' .. o.feull ... •1te11111 "' ltfl .. A t~ ... -... Slll'lOtlOl'l4.l 'l'C·I.. r.:IOnttl •ft gl\•tn •teltend Mn. Flc:klinl ts a fo~r 'TlltfMI '· 1( ...... 41' tt" ,,,..,, ""' • ""1• ""'"' I A•r• JC, lt12 rK'"'911 l!I ""' c.writr .....,. .. I'll! ~· h -~-1 ed''·· f L " "'""°'' h id\, C'tUfllnllt .,.. °""' AMII ~ 1•n AnnT: .......... llCINd. .. • l ftl IJ: SUCCl!SSnu and wort -.-.; .. t lWI 0 0 0.. Tiii• ~ I• lllllll MMttl ... M COHNll .. 'TiJ JtNllt \\'ILllA.M I:-St. JOMJf °'": Atl'll 1'. "" ,....., -'"°"Jct hif Jr,.f"Y'C. conUnul"'" e\'tn ,........,,., about Miletritlf. co-aulhortd 15 1~. Mmltcttt13'!ll t1 "" ll:rtti. ti Ce1111tt Clrrli ,,... C1'1'l H01:ntW11t n11 .... ,.... ·~ --I TJilllMt , """' IN ...... -~ or' I $llMtfer C:""'1... llTLI (Of.1.1'.A.HY C.I. l't-:----Mlll"t EHr.c.!'-'•'rC-JOO or the first t• prilOOen boob and I JO WIS co-aftlw 'nib ~ ..... --._ ~ Alif'Tlll IUllllMAllT 111i. tf,c..llhnllil ........ (.wftrt o~ Al..M'EDA. COU.fffY ri!.""t: Ill -Jtf" A. \:"'°'4.1'1'(. ~dpitl!Q c 6'rn Iii It t •• and CG-4Utbor -~ Ute Dt4•'1 ~~ ::.·= \!~ ~~ =.·:::.::.t...;, :., r.': ... SUU.fVAll. :~ '::.Z\~. ,_ ._ JtM ,....,.wYc.1-. n. crimes out.aldl. Tbt7 11id tv strtts, "ffont.)' wm, c.... ..., -... -o..er • ,,,..,..,...., -,~,-M1""-AY(.l!11t.H -moll nf the viol•tions Wtrt -a.w, lfittd on ABC ae""1 """Mt1r11tT"'••1f lal••*• ,,..,·-.._.,""!"~-, ... __ .,1'1 ---r::; "--i--~!.. L -flinL•VYC·ll'"I. .... "''~" l'\IM... °"""" C-..tf 0.U, Ji:ttt. """1..... Or... C-.... O.ltr Ll'iltt. tl'llill _, •-,.......,._ .... "' "' ...,......,, Knfl rl. ptUy thr:flJ. &tUOnl igo. Alt#t4 II, M, • -Mitt a,. "11 MWJ Mn a, ,, N. U. ttlt ~ W it JS .... Wt t. f,' U. 1m 111~ ~ Ir ,, M. tm 1 • - • .... .. . .. ... . ...... ' . ' • ' .. ,.,.. '· . ..... ' • .. "•;>i't- DAllY PllOf Ev.eryone Has Something That Someone Else Wants DAILY ·PILOT CLASSIFIED ·ADS · You C.n Sell It, Find It, Trad• It With " Want Ad The Bigges' Mark~tplace on the Orange_ Coast -Dial 64 -5678 for Fast Results l~ I l~I I~ I l~I Gener•I Gener•! C. F. Colesworthy & Co. Realtors BIG FOR YOUR FAMILY and in beautiful most sought after EA5T~ BLUF~~ .. Ru st ir country· style, 2 story 5 bed- room home with 3 baths and a lovely park· playground right across the street while you relax and admire the view of the hills from • your yard an d pati o. Walk to sc hools and shoppij,jg. Won't last long at $55,950. BAYFRONT BARGAIN A truly beautiful family home that needs some redecorating, but is priced according- ly. 5 big ~edrooms,· 31;:..1: baths, formal dining room and family room p I u 's a 2 bedroom apartment. A great investment! Shown by appointment. $150 ,000. Eastbluff Office • 640-0020 Bayside Office • 675-4930 G•neral General DOVER SHORES Ge neral -General • General READ THIS LA CUESTA HOMES, close to the ocean In Huntington Beach -h•ve 4 credit re- tection1 In their tth Unit -•t origin•I price! Occup•ncy in June. .! U~IVUI' liUMt: LEON 'S INTERIO_RS -The famous Newport designer \viii offer suggestions regardinj!'. the HUGE RUMPUS ROOM tralfice rlow and layout on this Bavcrcst 4 Unit 11 opens -M•y 6th bedroo1n pool ho1ne. Fantastic neighbo rhood • FOUR BEDROOMS. and Leon's services make this an outstand i n~ Shake Roof leauty On Eashide • 3 Bdrrns lr!l"al locatkin on lotanolla ~trerf. A~$um,. I~ aMuat fl"1·ren11v ritlr r.1-l<1111n 11·11h monthly p1 yn1t"nls ol t'lnl)' Sljl pf'r month In· rt11ding 111·0•1 J 1MuranN. ('111rpet11 and • rlt•Pff W'llh lot~ ol pa ni•hnr;. ,.~llA-VA frrn1~ l\'11 lli\hlr, ~" !hi~ .,n,. btfono: ~t'~ 'ion,.. Onl)' ~2~.DOO tull pr1rr and f':ctra tarRr lot 15 f~. Walker & Lee IN SANDPOlNTE -All wrapped uo in this Homaa hove 4 t. S BR, 2 t. 3 BA, shake buy. Offered at $77.900. PHONE UN IQUE nice TWO STORY 4 bedroo m. 3 bath, HUGE roofi, wet b•rs, full buillins, carpeting, NE\\'POR'f BEA C ~l 645·6590. ~rAllnr~ RUMPUS ROOM that will lake a poo l table, etc. A MUL T!PLE LISTING REALTOR '1:>416.1 t>.,.n E~•· builtin kitchen . large yard \Vi ii accommodate "!!!11!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!""'!!!!!!!11111!!111!!!!!11!1 i A BIG ONE your 30 foot boat. and a spacious feeliJl j! s .. the Models •f ;; ------Don't lel this Bia J lldnn prevai1s thruout. It's only ........ $3~,900. G.ener•I Gener•I llonle i"' lll\'fl..Y! 2 Btthll, ---------CHARM. COMFORT. VALUE? Brookhursl & Atlonla Fonta1tic 4 Badrm NO DOWN VA-,.,... ch.,rtul Kltch•n with S31 000 $3000 DOWN FHA 9""11"'· PLU> •nother WE HAVE IT ' room, P"-11enl 1.Y t11~ i1 4 BEDROO;IS. f Y • b from $36,,440 4 spaciou~ bror00nti1. 2 Pe11et'I ho1ne for your1i;: 1·tulrl· rhlldren~ play arr.«, I• ttwrre . it , · A1.UL . R001'1. 2 alh.$, b~th~. i!«llall'fl !'ear 11\•in.c,: ren. [)f"coralh·r f.-nrln.c,: 11'11 for )IOOt imaainatkln, Vl'f)' atrium, builtins with self cleaning oven, shag t61-2929 roont "ith pirtuN" l\·indo""· f\1om kno1v "'hf'r~ thf'y Al'f'. Sharp in anti out, with carpeting and custom drapes. Large covere0 O\'erlook~ "' pool i:izrd SpaciouJt 4 Brlrn1, :.! Oaths. Sprlnkll"r-J<'tont .l R.l!ar. BpaEtLio1EwVith super landscaping. WOULD YOU y11rrl-neatly • n1nn1curl'.'d -~:::~:.1 s~~n~~JR~7~.' f~~~~'. 5hakP. Roof. i35,500. E ....................... $47,900. tas1t'fully J"'n<llicap,.rl. "IT•S IMPOSSIBLE'' Elea:ant f'inopl11Cfo. builtin VA, S;;.2,500. ~ \\'ife AA\'et· k11f'h f'n , TO FIND A BmER BUY dish•""''· B"'"'" BBQ In Jo\'ely patio. Gara.gt' \Vifh Fabulous Galaxy Prive home. 2 doors from ·-'--Galaxy -PaFk~ge-indoor-entfftilrr:¢g.:a:red' - with pool. jacuzzi. wet bar, fireplace. plus formal living room . $122,000. CLOSE TO BEACH & SHOPPING -Good~45~~~~~~~!:!~~~~~~~·~ork """'"· LoAd• or iWlf!.dtio:tJbe.1~llMbmilYb ·,_ ~\t,V_CAJ!P_fil' .. _;,al __,,,.. --.-=Gewa!..--~..:... ~to1~1J_~Plush 1·arprting, 3-De rooms, 7,i -baTh-:-crose :o-lfee\va~ r11po: .. , .wrn: 9rr;-o-,,a·t .. r· school & shopping. Smit ll investment down · ~ttencr k t.'Onditiontr in- can ''beat the rent race.'' ONLY .. · .. $27 ,900. clu~rl. NO do\1•11 1t'rm1. I Evenl,,...--C-111 StS;saT- DOVER SHORES · FINEST ADDRESS - BILL ·GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161 General VACANT AND READY Yo u can see t}\i.o; 3 ~room. 2 bath rondo any time. Ju"t step11 to the pool &: i·tub- housc area. Nice patio & enclost>d 2 car .i:arage. r.rove in \lfilh credit approval. Priced at only $21 ,500. Call 546-2313. 1-01 THE REAL \"'\/'. ESTATERS • •, L, ',TI: o f'I? Gener•I ueneral - INVESTORS PARADISE Over 1 acre parcel \VIS uni&, possibtr R-4. zoning. [dear ror addi!ional uni1s. Good Costa !\1e.~a location. Call for detail!). Call 546-58*) rOpen 'til 9 PMl l~=I I \\'hitc Elephant Dime-A-Line ·Gener•I "EVERYTHING IS BEAUTIFUL" . IN IRYINE TERRACE PANORAMIC VIEW · NEWPORT HARBOR. Let us show you this enchantinJ?" two year old home. Atrium entry. open spacious liv- inj?' room with fireplace. 3 I..ar~e bedrooms 2 baths. LOVELY DlNlNG ROOM + room to store your trailer or boat. $62.500. TWO TRIPLEXES • CORONA '.DEL MAR· Buii t in range and oven. di shwasher and disposal, carpets and drapes. 2 Units have 2 bedrooms. l bath : 1 Unit has 2 be(lrooms. 1 'h bath w/!ireplace. Each unit h'as 2 car· portS:maintenance free yard· and pool privi- leges. . ................... Each $79,500. . . . ~ #CASSCcW.£J HARBOR VIEW HILLS . . . probably the BF.ST BUY on SANDCAS· Tf,,E. Spacious 3 BR. & family rm. home. Carp.. drapes & complete kitchen blt-ins. Poolsize yard PLUS ample play. area. Price just reduced to $54,250. DOCTOR HAS MOVED . .. his prac.tice to the Imperial Valley, 110 it is imperative thaf we find a buyer who will appreciate hi s lovely 5 BR. HACIENDA in the Back Bay area. Prop. only 3\0 yrs. old & it reflects a Jot of thought & "tender, loving care''. Realistically prjced at $62,500. • REALTORS A good ·real estate Investment m11y <?qual a lifetime of toil. 675~3000 PRICE REDUCED· LUSK Harbor View Hills with ocean view. Nearly new 5 BR. 3 Ba . Won~t last at this price. $86.000 • Fee. Ho ward Wells BAYSIDE WATERFRONT RambljJ!g custom beauty with beach & har- bor view. -Hiit'feshvaterfront home-bu.y to- day at onlv Sf65.®0~ ca!lme today! • Jim /\ofujler CAMEO SHORES VIEW ESTATE · Nelitly 'h-Ac. Perr.-entetrllll!InTJiome; l~e. rooms, pool/cabana, fabulous Dar. 4 BR .. 51h baths. Call for pictures. $175,000. George Grune 'OWNER MUST SELL A be t1ut iful cu stom buil t, corner·location, in BA YCREST. Lots of privacy V•ulted ceil's.; ~ BR's 3 Ba .. F.R.; nMt patio. $89.9CKl. Bud Au stin NEWPORT BEACH -VIEW · Gr acious 2-story. quiet Joe. Bay & ocean \1iew. 4th BR. is upstairs \V /own bath & li ving rm. Huge yard w /trees. A C.B. ex- clusive. $69,000 Bill Com stock CORONA DElL MAR -VIEW Easy Hving, viev1 location. 2 BR .. 2 Ba ., D.R.: it sparkles. Near ocean beach. park. Only $5~.950 . Call Paul Quick FANTASTIC BUY -LIDO ISLE Lovely rambling estate on 3 lots. Choice end 0£ Island location. 7°BR., lanai & pool ; in perf. cond. Bring offer. !15~,500 Eugene Vreeland · NEW PENINSUL·A LISTING Cu .~t ., spacious 5 BR. home: Jlh baths. up- stairs fam. r 1n. & laundry. Near N.H. Yacht Clu b. bet. bav & ocean. $85.000 -Best Buy! Bill Bents Gtnl!r•t * 644-7270 2821 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. General /% .. BAY & BEACW llr'ALTY General General * * * * * G~~~l~~INS Open ·Houses Daily I Beautiful split level 5 4 Bedroom1, 2 bath11 I A VLOR co bedroom. 220 sq. ft. in all. 245 Tulane, CoUe,&e _fk. __ --•·-H ·~ New burnt 'orange 11ha1 --• carpeting, 2~ batha,· time 3 Bedroom!, 2 baths ~~ ~vlryg bii11t:lnleitchen wi "274--shmwod -Sl.,-C.~T. LIDO ISLE SO' BAY FRONT $149,500 ·dishwa'""'· wry •ha!« _ ... -Slip & OoCk for arge boat. eaufifulVieW of roor, forced air li_U l, :t•BR_, 2 BA, Baycrell the bay and immed11ile}>ossessiorr of-·-tbis--mu~ive stone-fireplace,.-0~ .2o36_Commodor~. N.~. lovely 4 bedroom home. New shag carpeting ly ,8 yea~ old. FHA-VA Leaseholds ttrms. Call no..i.•. S39,900. CALL ANYTIME Red Carpet Re 11 I t or 1 . ~3921 or Eve. 673-7575 ''Our 27th Year" Geneial TRIPLEX V<?ry nice J BR. 2 BA o\l.•nrr·s un it + 2-2 BR 1 BA. Good location. $~1.500. conAGEESTATE Cozy l bednn, shake ·roor. double car. 2 story J, \rn. Large lot y.•ith room to build. $21,500 .. Roy McCardle Realtor 1810 Newpart Blvd., C.M. 541-7729 General 541>8640. Lachenmyer: Rt>.11Por 962-886:1. T ARBE.Ll "COLLEGE PARK Bottles in the pool, what a m•11! Tenant movtd out &: the owner ( whG Jives In Palm Sprlna:sl say& "1et. rid of that thing!'' Vacant & in need of TLC. Cotil(I be a beauty. r ix it & 1111.ve ... $28,flOO a~ i11. Call JIO\V 546-2313. 10 THr: Rf.A I, \"\, EST/\TEHS . ------- l,Bnng~~~~·bru~~~~.~ • bara:ain on !his 3 Bedroom 2 bath hom~. Good •rea near J1Chooh1 .l ·lhoppJng, LO\V DN f HA-NO· DN VA $28,950 Newport at F•lrview NO DOWN! FORCED SALE! Wow ! Hugi! livinr room with cracklina fireplacP.! Gow-· met kilchrn. Buill ·in~. Giant family roon1. 4 Bedroom•. 3 Rath~. P rivatf: riOor entry Ma~trr !luit~. Only 360 mo. pay, or $244! NO JX)\VN PA Y~fENT! 7~~ ann •,:, rat!! . Cnll fa111. 64fl-0303. IOlll\I I 01\0\ .. ' ,, . Executfve holT)f\ • w I t h privacy • Lo\v n.intena~ with magnificent view. You w111 ·1i\'1" in pea c eful P.!qa~ In thl• l bedroom ramlly room, formal dlnlnc room, 1paelnu.11 livlne room. 2 run bllth1 IL'! \\•ell a1 'l pl'.)\'i:lrr room.11. Jtome com- pl~rly uprradl!d wilh tl'\)11' 11plerulo1· t h rl'l u thout . $110,00.l or f\lf'ganet, · call 673--85.'iO. '-O]THE RE.'\L \"\L ESTATf:l!S .. 6.. fll•wport ElfWt9 BEDROOMS Ex~:i.i:c:ci?~~ For the JaraP. family htre t, REDUCED '$21XM1 UNO.ER that home you'ff been l~k· APPRAISALI 'J'hll OfCU- lng tor .s bedroorn1, ramlly five value,hU .Wned 1lau room with. ti ... place plu1 an t11try. Engllih tudo.r thnNJh- extra den up11laln1. Located out. Formal llvlna a dlnlnc on a cul-de-11ac 11reet. \Valk room•. Five craw:o kllchtn. 10 .~an and golf soorse. Family room. 4 Btdroomi. Th1,1 ~-a Pre1llge horn,. Jn a Hurry to aave. Call &f5;030.1. pre111ge a,rea. Onl)' $46,950. Call 847~10. 646-1111 f -'========= <•nytimeJ i---,5~2~5~·"9~5~0~,,-- 0 'I l l 1. FI:/\ I. ''-/:'-;'I'•\ !'I .I·'> Th NO DOWN NO COSTS 1 ~1 THEREAL ' ESTATERS ' • '•. I FINER HOMES . IRVINE TERRACE-4 BEDROOM Beautiful family horn•. 3 lull baths. Car· pets. drapes -like new '. Room for pool. $67,500. Tom Queen 644-6200. A SPARKLING JEWEL , . TARBELL r-r;,, THE Rf:td, '"""f:STATLHS REPOSSESSION • 'tr.rJ.. .. ' fi1Nf-Foir BbSY'c6UP"t' F""'-=-<1' On one level. 2 BR. i. den. wet bar lovely etec. kitch; care-Cree & comfortable. Univ. Park. A BEST BUY at • lee $36,900. • ·"!NGO 'PROPERTY M°'a del Mar 3 BR. -popular T Plan - ,~p~l(e~r-~b ildren:S ,plar, uef .-~,m•t space.-·pai'k-like lot w/oeaulilurC>'l)tess· trees. iJS,900. Now 01¥h~ by Ve-ttr1n1 Ad· mini~ra tion. $950. down PlY· mf'nt lo an)'l>n... 2 lltOr,Y bricJc front Colonial 1t;lt. 5 BR. 3 Ba, fam ily room, for- m•! dlnl~ on iarit comtt lof:-C._ .. ..,.li'Wf- Tull price only sn,e, • .· "Chuck" Lewis ' CUSTOM VIEW HOME . Dover Shores residenre "'ith 3 bdrms., 21h baths: fa,Y,ify rm .. \Vith s pace for pool ta- ble plus sitting area. $93,000. Eileen Hudson EMERALD BAY-PRIVATE BEACH 3 BR., convert. den, cathedral bum Ceil's. view. 21 Hr. security. Tennis cu. $86,500 ' Bob Yorke · Build )'OUf O\\'TI inrome prop· 1 t'rty en !hi~ 69x1~ lot 7.0TI«I R-2. Nice J bedroom on lol flO\V -a~ 2 lot~ availablr that ·\\·ill takr apflroximatrl)' 7 unit~. Prime localion. Call 842-Z>l.\. l o~THEREAL '"\L ESTATERS ·. . .... "" e GOOD BUYS e Low!)' hOmt', 15 )C :'16 Pool. No dn. pyt. vtls or fllA -- 1m11. 3 2·BR. hour.es on a 1o1; li\·t TARBELL ,........ I lt-J-in one, rent the othrf11 29.'6 Ha:rbor, Cost• 1olctP .....,.,114 DSW 2 JtOURt on a k>l. Room to associated 9R OKF RS-RfAtiOAS JOJ S \flw laibo00 //1J.J••J ~EALTOR~ build morP 3 2-BDR.\I. bou1t1 on a lot. -" UnltJ Van NU)'• Stll ar VM:andft C'.Olt money' Rent t.k·e tn Ont k ft'nt hrn ... fXdwlp for hou~ or unl1,t. )'OU.r bowie, apt, · i.ior. FORTI~' P.e-&ll« 6&2.-f.000 5't NEWPORT CENTEf\ DR,. N.I , Onnao eo.nry I bldg .. ""· thnl a DaAy ptlof DAILY PIL01' for action! fl•••••!!!!lllll!lll!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!lll!!!!!!!!lll!!!!!I!!!!!!!! FORTIN, P.F.ALi'lfR 642-5'f11 • n,.1<ifie<i Ad. j Ca.II 6'fl...56it .l S.\'1"! IOlil\I I. fll \O\ /..{,,,,.,,,,. ESTATE SIZE LOT 12,00J 1. f. kt at t!M ot rul· d~ Jtrett, S19,500, AIM 70· x J35' C:Or'nl'f'. Onl1 sn.soo. submit on tnma. "6-TITI, O THr: Rf.AL "\, F:ST/\'l'l:l<S Don't fiw up tht sbfpl "Ult" U ill da•xitit'd, Ship to ~ Rt'-1ul11 ! '42-&71 DOVER SHORES Vt EW Beautiful 4 BR atrium model Ivan Well s home. Ma rvelous view -3 full baths. 3-car gange. $93,500. Tom Queen 644-6200 . LINDA ISLE IEST BUY ONI,Y $129.500 ! and you can enjoy lhc imenities of this prestige Bay!ronl borne w/3BR'• & 3 ba Lhs. Large beamed ceiling LR & DR. Boat slip. Dave Cook 642-3235. • .. , __ 142•1211 !Ml_,,,_ Ml•UOO Call 540-1151, (Open £ws.J :!~.:1 ·~~~I / • Spanish Adobe• Solid built J bedroom, double t'ar aarart. c• ... IOWI I city partc. ~ richl II 12!.!l<!O. Ph: m1m. ~r21 . • ' Tllfi<l17, Moy 2, 1972 G1tMN"1I ·• I l---------l'"'~ener• • BaUIO• Penin1ul• . ~o DOWN GI ASTSIDE BEAUTY PENtN'"L' ro1NT LOW DOWN TO ALL 3 BEDROOMS 3 BR. 3 BA, XU BJ! kll. dw, (Huntineton Bt•ch) trplc. we lb&r. Yew door• to 3 Bedroom. 2 bath, bl& lol + POOL bay .\ Of'f",n. Lovrly pa tio. •!lot. ol tree• A: l'CIMI. ThU: home ii abloiutdy im· $62.500, 0 1,nr-Bkr 548--0715 Boat .... fn:a aUq. Prio-macWate in ft'ft'Y wa.Y·l~•""-·-~;...,.~--­ ed at $27.500, but awntr Cllftenl111 hardwood floors Cori:tn1 dt l M ar dellptrate, submit today. apatiom: bui.11 .. ln kitchen: --------- -1.,,., bedroom.o, 2 batM, *· DU.PLEX * SOL VISTA separate service porch , Ma~ nght 1n: delw;e 2 BR, (Huntington Beech) 'Jparldlng 17 x 31J rwtmmlng 2 Ba. • 2 BR. &: 11pack>u1 l Bedroom, 1550 Sq. ft. honw, pool, front and ·rear family 1m., 3 baths. Bit-in~. cloM II> IChooiJ A sbopptnr. beautifully l&ndlcaped. Ex· carp • rlrapes, frplc, &am Owncn ntw home ll ftady cellrnt valt».. Priced at rf'll. Walk to l"Vff'Ylhing. and he rtally .,,..nta to sell! s:J6,!',00. Red ca r pe t r.h1y trade for small hom e Thi• must be the: mast im· Realtor1. 546-8640. in Corona drl r.l!IJ'. m•cu!ale horn< you'"',..,: MORGAN RE AL TY Prlced rlaht at $33,950, with 67U642 675·6459 • Huntington a.ach Huntins:ton Beach •s=P=A=N;;IS;;H;;;;;;H;;;A;:;;C;;;l;:;;E;:;;N;:;;D;;;A;;o l, Br, bath. '1· 'I ml. to State heh.. Fitncei:I. Auto. Eleaant near new Spani&h aprWdtts. Dbl pr, on home In excellent area. This alley. p1riring for, trlr. or lovt'ly 2 story home features 1-000 .,. "'14 boat. lllJ, • u.;MP'""JQ ' 4 Jarae btdrooml. roomy famlly room, 3 car prq:e. OWNER. 4 Bdrm., 2~ bL. 2 Priced at an unbelievable car J&r.. 1,900 sq. tt., $29,950, with only 10-:iO down $29.500,. close to schoob. payn1I. 962-7421. BED DF ROS ES lrvlno Th~ C1wner of thi1 darlln.i; 4 bedroom house really hu a green thumb. Ex· quisire landscaping, added fan1 ily room. beautifully decoratt'd. AJI this tor $29,950. 5'k Down. PAN ICSV ILLE L:;;ldo~..;l:;;•l;.•· _____ 1Acroago for stlo 150 NEAT and dean 3 BR. 2 bl,. 6-lam· Uy room home. Larat 1trad1 patio. $51,000 boc-6_,. -· .. 3416 Vla Udo ""' 615-4562 Newport 81•ch IACK BAY 3-BDRM. SAN MARCOS ACREAGE Approximately· 35 a e Te n tate. zoned on Rancho Santa Fe Road, in fut ;rowin& San ~tartO&. Hqld tor appreciation or develop now. All utullies to pro- perly. $143.500.' REALTORS SINCE 1944 673-4400 all temw &\'a.liable. l1 rwln re.tty 968-4405 AnyUme ----------I Ownt'r has already moved and must Rell immed. Large 4 bdrm .. 2 1!1ory home with formal dining area and family room. Only $29.500. See it today! NEW LISTING Beautllul, practical, ~ver brick nooring from entl')I thru fabulous 41 ft . kitchen/ tamily rm. 4. BR., 2~~ ba's., 2 frplc11.: ne.wly decorated; brand ne1v lush, plu11h car- peting. No olhl'r home-like it in Thf' ~age, Asking CONDOMIN IUMS Builder.!! cl(l!l;eout, In beautiful Newpart Riviera.. 3 muter aiu BRa. (1650 IQ. fl.) 21,ii ba.., floor to ceilina: tittplace. w·w 1hag carpet thruout, custom drapea I: di11hwash· er. Hlll'T)'! Just 4. ltft. YOU OWN THE LAND. $2;,250 F.P, 4 ddnn. modela from $28.600 1.0% dn, 6%% int. GOV'T J..and $5 ac. Write: Call ~8555. SH ERWeeD REAL TY 18964 Brookhurst. F. V. No Down _$28,000 4 Bdr + Den )Wit ~2'000-~ "/ 111!1 'f 'i·lltl. - - -''I li,11liu 1· "SINCE 1946" lsl \Vf'stem Bank Bld1. Univrrsity Park, Irvine Day s 552-7000 Nights FUN LOVING HOME Spectacular greenbelt loca· tion, well designed patia with built in BBQ: lovely 1vall· paper. 3 bdrm .. 2 ba. toY.'TI· house 1vith bonus room di· vided into cozy panelled df'n and sunny ~rwing room. Near pool s and te-nnis. $49,500. Land Grant, Box 5341 San Bernardino, Ca ( s e n d stamp). Take Irvine to Santa lubel Commerci•I Ave. Fallow the al(Clla to Property 151 model or call 541)-5147 Agt. ...;:.;.;::;.;.~---.....;:;;; First Tim• OfferH BAYfRQNJ, PIER C.O.St Hwy, C.mma def Mu 3 Commercial .Ir. duplex Charming S BR beach home bn aandy shore. Exciting harbor actk>n -choice locale. 2301 Bayside Dr. $168,000 By Appoinbnent Ted Hubert 675-8500 BIG CANYON FAIRWAY LOT ~1agni!icent vltiw, lake•, club- .house, \vaterfall I; NewJ)Ort Center. By Owner 644-785,l $95,000 O\VC TD@71,J~ E. 17th'St., Cost• Mes• Top location. low down ll.5% Spendable return Realonomics, Bier. 675-6700 · Condominiums for ••le 160 l BRD. Condo. \\lsh I Dryer I Retrig. Close to shopping center. Soft water. $14,500. 64~959/~3234. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, ir.olatrd rear liv1ni;:-room \\'llh "·"· quii;ile firEiplaCi". Queen'• pride kitchen, cleluxe builtin rani;r, oven & new Kil· ehE"naid dish\lo·asher. New ~hag carpeting, n;any added fl'!atur~s. Df'l ightful pe.lio. N e all y m a nicu red g ro und s -t as t efully landscaped. Near all school• & St. f"rancis par i sh . Duplexes/Units ••I• 162 962-1373. No Dowll ,. d h II Horbor View Homol $28,000 E·SIDE C.M. -scarce 3 Br. .~ ', re ,· .t Bedroom, family room, din. DESPEIA TE 4 Bdr + Den dining, bltns, frplc, · dhl . . .. : ing room. $53.750. Fee. 7% NE\V DLX Dana Point IUBMJT AMY OFFER. on G.1. tenn&-low do\\-n -"111 detached gar, ln xlnt co nd. REALTY Io an : OWNER--AGENT duplex $49,9j(). 33952 Silver this ~ii 4 BR, l" yr, aid athen. 2 baths. 1*:ilated Asking S27,750. Ca ll 540-1151 644-7722 ar 6#-3134. Lantern. \Vebb, Bk r. homt.~ller HASTOMO\'f: ~ar living room enhanced Herit•ge Realtars POOL·SIDE PARA1>1SE Univ. Park Cl'nter, Irvine _.,_,_.-__c_· _____ _ A-will TAKE A.LOSS. at this by charming f Ire pl 1 c e , 4 BEDROOMS + POOL Call Anytiinl', S33-0820 NPT. 1s\. • \Vaterfrnt duplex. Income Property 16' !:'1ceof,fJl.950,butheays bullt1n ~ream kitchen ,.£. us:c..a. VERDE* $36,950. • R ch ..... -Take 30' boat. 0 \vner · SELL!!!-Au-+mproyements dil~BBQ-lt --~ -'"'1l, Plush -\\"ill=-t~~-nt"'l't 18~Q.~U:=w:___. Wtfinc-:"'.,-.,,:-.. Xnn-COa~. 6 Units E•stbluff are in, bis back yard. Xlnt 1moker, 11~ing I: ~iayhouse. By o~r. 3 BR. ,) BA.. Carpet and custam drapes, ALMOST •• , -64 2-19 8 9. COrbln-~lartin NE\\'PORT BEACH No Costa M' ,,. .,.a COME n .. t t •· II crpls.. drps. S 2 1 • 7 5 0 . . k f I . • . 2 BR.. 2 bath unita. 2 vrs, · · .,..,... . JI. e wr a ey en· S45-4iJ2S hr1c irep act', formal din· oceanfronl -beaut., older 2· Realtors. .,. SEE Tr! f'rance . Pool 1i1ed grounds. ="="".'=-c--,-----,-1 Ing room, all new push-but-sty. stucco wi red tile roof. 1------'-----1 old. Fully carp. I: draped. r-.tany ~rras, 540-1720. SPACIOUS It ch• rm Ing ton applWu\ces, huge Acrosi the strel't from * BY OWNER * Covered parkine ... ~ COATS 2955 J:larbor, Colla Me&a throughout 3 br. 2 ba, iluge coverl'd patio plus Jovel)"' oceanfront. Bit. by old world Best dup,lex buy in Newport Best Location &. patio, Easta\de. $33,500. Use fret;-form pool. Nothing to craftsman in one af Laguna'• Beach. Freshly painted. ~ WALLACE your VA. Kinga&rcl Real ~JUst move Jn. GI or FHA fineat areas. 4 Spac. bdnns., Term.. Call aft. 6 PM _,, .' 11MOll .. ' a · S•l~IE •. A 1 _L TORS l~~~~~~~~~l_E_<t_•_t:;:•.:;:6':;2;;·=2222--:. :::::::--tl'rms. call 847-1221. 2 baths. Huge living rm. ,v/ l---'*-"6'15-:o.::3589:=,_*;_ __ • EST A TE SALE BEAUT. REPO m•n;v. lrpk. & rn"'. Harbor View Homos (Open l'ilnlfttll) 3 Bn, 2 RA. modern kitC"hen wrought -iron stairway to 5 BR _ SUmml'net _ xtrai NEW DLX Dana Paint MESA VERDE Under SJO:\t. BKR 546-7739. 2nd story. Lge formal-dining _ 6444917. 1353 Port Mar· duplex $49,950. 33952 Silver rld Lantll!'rn. \Vebb, Bkr. 642-4905 * PACERMO * Harbor View Homes Lovely J bedroom, 2 bath 2 BR, 1 ~• B"ATlf 17141 Beach Blvd., H.B. rm.; b st. are_aoffkitchen, gaJJ'. NB. home in exceptlonal condl· c nd · · overlooking the \\'aler. One 1-==="------PRil\lE 4-Ple'X3 Bt= .. 2 Ba., o onunium. $19.500. SAVE $5,200 off app•aisal -f k. d • h d I 1· d HARBOR · Vie\V Hame11 4 . 1700/ $62 500 N lion. Plu1h carpeliIJI, dbl 2400 Elden. S4H384 o a 111 « ar o 1n . me. mo. . . . liT'f'placf', all bltins, family your price $46,800. R'Cec. S92,500 BR .. COl'ller Palermo, lush Costa 1.·tesa. 557-61;)1. room, covered patio and V.A. REPO. :\ BR. 2 ba. home -prestigf! area, 5 Br., * 499·2800 * xtras. $64,950. 0 w n er , 1,l,..:;Uo:N::,l.:,T=-::,W.:coc,l..:k:ct::co_Bc~h~I A family home which can double in lrarp irouP en- ttttalnfna. 3 14<1. ltdnm>. AU with the ttal!an Rlvten influence. Owner ha1 IPf.l"t!d nothlnc In eo1t to complete th!• tine home .Ir. now it hes outgro\\'TI htm. Call to view. 172.950. excell location. Try $32,500. ~.950 $950 DN, $261 MO. 3 car garage. Sl5,000 extras: .•.. ~ 644-6249. 1 &: 2 B1t. $UO M, 116 M dn. -What a buy -subject to Authorlied Broker 548-6570. c-u.stom drapes c r Pt s' .:g. Newport Heights 70!! Palm, HB 847-3957, court approval I aJ r /C Ond •\r g y r d., , , ~ CU "'5 8124 co' E . )' H\ft1tlngton h•dt \v allpaper , praf . :ii:.ll llo.COAST ltwY. 2 HOUSES BY O\VNER .. 21 U'?it·Nr. Shop!f. a .,.. · pen ves. 80lllM ~ CAOr. 2 • 3 BR 2 Ba Bubbling Fith Pond I d l' c o r a I e d/landscaped-2 A!JN-~~ Owner Ii quid at i n 1 pro. "" , . 8231 Ellis \auth (. oast Pond! $32, 900 ~t~l~-lam. rm. !l68--01?7, 4 UNITS =;r. 3 RB: m ! ~: ~ ! ~ ~ LA;:·::;· ~=: M?·39S;~O Attracti''" fishpond cotn· -4 2-bdnn., I bath apts. wilh redecorated. Beaut. loc. ~ -plimenl" .restful lighting In $650.-MOVE IN individli\.l garages. A 11 $36,000. 7S':x120' M-1 lovely patio. 4 bed1-ooms, 2 3 BR, 2 BA, $21,500. Sho\vs fttllhly "'nmodeled, with Complete w/3 bedroom home CORBIN-Constant lncom. baths, builtin n nge, oven & like model. Din nn, !iv rm le built-in appliances, garbage 3 BR rustic ranch home. -livable, on good C.l\f. d i 1h"'a1 her . Elegant master BR, C'Om pl. 50und· disposal k. refrigerators. Remodel~ & redec. + ~ Westside location. Priced lirepl11ce. Sp rink I e.c s . proof.~ Elec bltn RIO. FA New landscaping &: new ex· per plumbing, heavy shake only S2S,450. HERITAGE MARTIN l\leami peace of mind so in· vestige this fint time af· trred choice duplex in Corona de! r.tar. Extra li;. 4 Bedroom unit \vlth 3 bath tittplac•. Rustic de co r , lovely bit-in .kitchen -Vlew trom Balcony • Plus -Nice 1 BR\aflt ttar. A muat aet at $65,500. Excellent terms. Call 1'1)W, 613-3S5(). Retlecti;: pride of ownership ht, crpls. drps. !pl, patio. terior make this the b!lf: in· TOO( + much more. $37,950. REALTORS, 546-S880. inside & out. 84~91 . Gd loc. vestment buy in Laguna See anytime-or open house llf.AL TORS 644-7162 GOOD IUYS 1 \.9 BR. Well built stamr borne near Newport Heilhta an R-2 lot w/space to build. Alley acceu. $19,500. Newport Htlghtllj lge klt. w/brldst rm . $22,900. • TARBELL CLOSE TO BEACH 4 BEDROOMS+ 3 BATHS 2,000 SQ. FT, $29,500. This young · .2°1Jory · -home fl'!ature1 brick fireplace, C.1\t. l\tstr BR ts ~r blJ:. f~nnal dini~ ~rea, -family Lp Jivlnc .t: .tining rma $200 DOWN size k!tch~n v.-lth range & O THE RE/\!, "\.. E:ST/\TERS "'/frplc and \Vood paneling. _ avt'n + d1sl1w~hr. Sundeck Lie kit w/brkist "ilooJi:. Like 3 bedroom, 2 bath two-atory ._J)fttio. Subn1it €all nev.·. $Jl 9oo home. Plush carpel!> Ii 847-1221. ' · drapes throughout, built-in CA.L!:_ _(i)_ _t·41 ·J ~ ra~ !___ o~n --and _4.,. 7.,. iiliiiu~•riilPi!W -,.,..~ \\ifl11all o aretnery. Mwl N••r Ni!p~:1L:•~t Ofrltt be IClld. Ca.JI now. 17141 Beach Bl\'d., J-1.B. Shopper Stopper!! Walker & Lee stort Sprint Hor•' ti's an immaculate adult oc-Realtors Here! $2f,500 No do\\1n G.J. 3 bt-drooms, bt1illin dream ki tchen . Patio. J r. f'~la1t' grounds. Nf'\11ly painted lnside &: out }"'resh All i;pring. Beautiful manicured yard. 842-2561. cui*d home. 4 bedrooms 2 54!).9491 Open Evf's. bait'_. a.nd an Intercom system. A beautiful d!chon· BY O\\'llf't, mu~! aell in 6 dra lav.'n with aprinklf' "'etks, Channing French tront &: 1'1!ar. Only $34,~ Country 'home in dt i;irablc Call 847-6010 for more in-\Ves~cllf!, 5 BR, 3 Ba, tormalion. Toda • sunh.tl' glass ~arrlen ~m Y opt>n1ng to latllced paho k O THC REAL "\.. ESTATERS g11rden. Reduced to $55,000. 64Z-6330. TARBELL DUPLEX BAYFRONT APTS. 1-========= Vista Del Lido. Pier le slip One yr old, 1 bedlin , shag $32 950 1 avail. 1-~rotn $33,500. carpet1, drapes. VA/FHA ' ' t Only 0 '1 000 Call 4 Canal \front lot $20,000 rrm1. <#>). • , Big Btclrms George Wllllamson 9684141. rr.s•1y ""''"" 1""io" 2 Roaltor CREST REALTY bathl, huge fam ily room 541-6570 64,S..1564 ., t'2.44711=1l4Ml•J -Q\\'NER - LEAVING COUNTRY l Bed.rm .. 1'4 bath, builtlns. Price reduced to $21,950. RED . CARP.ET Realtors 962-77TI O\VNER ANXIOUS n-tit'f'd, 1op cond. 4 BR;--like nc\V shag. Lg. lot, boat gatf', fruit trees, beaut ldscp. FHA appr. $31,!KXI. 847-8507. =u '.S.·AFFl l:l1i'FED Brokers Really REPOSSESSIONS For infonnaiTon and location af thue FHA A VA homes, contact - KASABIAN 147.9604 Real Ett•t• CUTE COTTAGE 2 BR. l BA co!lngl', family room w/brick firepl. \Valk to be11ch. 10~~ Dn k l\To paymts $201. Roborts & Co, 942-5511 -O\\'NER - TRANSFERRED 4 BR, 2 BA, buil tins. Near bearh. All tt'rms -~.500. RED CARPET Realtors 962-777t Beach. $102,500. sun. 11-4. ~93 days, Mount11n, Denrt, 673-1658 eves. Resort · · 174 A6tan REAL ESTATE 1190 Glenneyre St. 494-9473 549-0316 BEACH HOUSE $29.SOO Quaint home atta; clo1e tn. _Beam ceil's,, fir. to eeil. frplc., picture wlndmv, ref., wa~hcr. 1.,SR w/bath. MISSION REAL TY -494o0731 Newport Shores OPEN DAILY -1 to 4 p.m. 309 Cedar, Newport Shores. Vogel Co. Realtors 548-9346. Santo Ana Haights 2 Lott:, secluded S24,SOO Moonridge cabin $13. 750 Lakeaide cabin $3.l,000 Call 833-4641 or wrlle; Spenttr Real Estate, P. O. Box 2828, Big Bear Lake, Calif. KENNEL Lie. ~ BR. older RETJ~T cabin near · J:!Qme. m., _pn.___road-llJ--we Oroville. 3A. ">ith RC. S29,995. 545-2100. stream $14,500. Box 166 South L•gun• ::;°"""o=c:·1.:.:1'=""=~-- R•nch1s, F•rms, Grov•• llO TRADE BY 01vner, 2 BR country cot· 3 BR., 1plit-level, on dbl lot. tage. Open home Sat. A Full oceanview, deck, frplc, ~ 1-~pm • .(99-3142. ~~.Be JndJ_cpd .rncd~bclfyl'd "w_,,.0~,tm-i~n"st"•"r=='-­ $42.000. 9l0'3oja S t • • I ;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;, Laguna Bch. 494-8468. 1 • $8'1.000 equity"tor Boat. llave BY 0 1vner: Vie1v home, 4 LOOKING FOR 880 acre ranclt plu:i: 30,000 B•., 3 Ba. Lower Myatic YOUR FIRST ""' BLM. G,.,;,,.. Tot•I H·11 price S250,00J. Ca11 ~1600. I . $65,500. Call 613-5260. M JNVESThtENT DMSION 3 BR, spHt·fevo~ on dbl ~L H'O E 7 Full oceanview, deck, frplc, \\18.Jhf"r, dryer, & refria in· I:~ lnscpd tncd bckyrd. eluded. 3 Lrg BR's, l~ BA. $42,000. 970 Baja S t, , on cul--de-aac streel Lui'e Laguna Bch 49'-8468 lot nr IChls, parlt 6-shop. Lido Isle ping, Easy acce11a to fl'\\'YS- $31 ,500. * BAYFRONT * -., Beautifully decorated, im· mac. p;er " •lip. ' BR, S 5J1•5111 I :J 531•5111 ba, lam. rm. $197,500 LIDO REAL TY INC. 3377 Via Lido, N.B. .673-7300 r ;....._ 11-1 Daily PUo! Wan! Ads havo 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~ borgafns plor'e. • Mobile HomH 125 \-Qj THEREAL \'.'( ESTATERS ' ·. -.1 ' •. Real Est•te Exch•n1•--112 Tr1de or Sell-4 Bdrm. 2 Ba homo in N. E. Orange for •bout s•me in beach •r••· Princ j.. pal1 only, 633-32n, Rool Eotttt Went.cl llol CASH$ CASH$ '1ith tnviting f I r f'p I~ c e . delwct buUtin k i t c h f' n dlshwaa""'· Hug• 1Cl 11: * JUST.LISTED * scretned &: CO\'l!red patio. 3 BR .. 1~ bl .. bltm, carp. New sha1 carpet.Ina thruout. A dra~11. 2 Patios: \Valk to new custom d r 1 p,,, Mach! $32,900. • · S©\\~lA-l&~~s· ''°' Salo BAY t. OCEAN VIEW 2 STORY MOBJLEHO!\tE Far )®r home. Have buyers \\"lil.ing or \\~'II buy it up to $4:1,000! Call WA~R It.. LEE Realtars 111t ~11 or 546-1757. o&i-5566. CAYWOOD REALTY * 54S.1290 * Th e Punle wifn fhe Built./11 Chrdl• LIDO PARK, 5'0-3672 I ~~~~~~~~~ '61 Arru• · deluxe mobile I : 1 ,' 1 ~ borne. 10'x55'. Gaod N.B. fftlntill loca-.,,_ .-1 lrom .• Buy · a Border to Border \ Bargai .. Every cl1ssified w1nt 1d in tho °'AIL Y PILOT 1ppt1rs in overy odition ovory doy. Thot moans ·your od wiR bo 111n in papen doRvorod to homos ond sold from ·nowsr1cks from bordor to border all along tho Or1n91 Coos! ••• en tho wey from ----· -·k Seal Beach to San Clemente You Get It All ••• Huntington Beach Fountain Valley Costa ~esa Newport Beac_ ---J.,agona Beach Irvine Saddleback San Clemente Capistrano ' . (Plus the daily newsrack edition) For One Price With A TARBELL l • * 2 FI XER-UPPERS NO DOWN "'"""t't "';'""'· w1poo1 ·t. No COSTS ""' "°""· t19.l00. ... be'lcto. -· • con • lOl!lt'f~ciiiiiiiii 52 642-2912 aft. 5 (11' wknds. 10 WIDE rod 'Rt.ti -Adult Parle, Cotta l\18'. Sp. renl 18), 548-3501. lu1lnes1 Opportunity .. DAILY PILOT Colt1 Mesa, romer lot The awnen \\'In\ out ! 4 Both C•'fa1 Polentl al . R A M E K 1 1 bedntom. l bath homo o' a BALBOA BAY PROP, 1 I I I' 1 • aootl nold<mfol , t rr" . * 641-7491 * Price only $27,750 .00 -°""" may ,,., all ,...... $ Instant Cash $ mot~ Call su.~ ~ m. !or >~ur oquhy. we PAY'°'''· • L Y D 0 M I t "---'"" fCJnnation. T~! ,. hr. lf't\', 847-8507 I' I I I I' U.5. AFFI LIATED ~ h's when yau'no run down Brol"1• Real'> · that yau'no molt llkoly to go) 1Z Tiil.: l./f 1\J. . '-,''' .", ']Tj.>, . . ' . . ~ . II-hlltld H CJ J J E R 1--. s~a f-""'M=::l=N=I =llANC==H== 181l 2BA" d<n. lri ~t. rm I I I' I' I' ~ ~~1~~~. SAlfTA ANA HnGffTS 1_ to bulld w/plans. $3T,l89. - - - -• • 1~ '"'""'" f1 ..... '!'.,.No. 3i _,... Hone ..,,....Kenntl °"11· Ctll ST.J..4l811. PRINT·NUMlfifD lfTTIU """· 2 ~ home + Fnm 0'Chr1&tm11 Xttkllta" IN 7HESf SOUAt! ~ double ranp. ,.1. ~ outgrown Levis • m can UNS~RAMMf~LfnW ,.,.., AD tar $32.teO. PETE ftml "trash to eutt." tD .& fOI ANSWflt ;run R!:ALT1' I'll. DAILi PILOT <11,.;&.s od ~cm. ;\<OJI -,,__s_e_u_. .. ~M-_U..:...f_S_:A_:NS.:..;__WE-"-'RS.:._IN_cµ......_s_s_1F1_C_A_:n_o_N_t_:' o~o -TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT ~D 642..5671 • LARGE beauty Mk>n. loJw; establlahed bueinn1 In ahopp\ng center. Bu 1 y clientele. Cuh or terms. $ft..3790 after 5: JO p.m. YOU mq qualify lw BIG MONEY m Ofnd Sain. -tlnmm:bandl• req'd. Nita Brl~ltt , 830-J939.' -DAILY PILOT CWSIFIED ADS FOR ACTION ••• CA':L ~642-5671 Classified Ad Phone 642-5678 , • I • ' .. T M 1 i 1.0 N Cp R 4 ' • y B Bl .. H w c R c N < s c • st s A • . . . .. , . -· I 041L V PILOT . f ,~.,.,., I~ l -.. ·~· .. , I~ I -·~-I~ I -,~ ... , I~ I~~~ tu•lnesi Houses Unfurn. 305 HouSN Unfurn. 305 _Duplexes IJnfurn. 350 Apt. Unfurn. 365Apt. Unfum. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 36S Apt. Urifum. 36.S Apt. Unfurn.- • Opportunity 200 ,-,......c-----------------:::--"---:--------"".:"'-------.~ -Costa Mesa Irvine Cost1 Me1a General Gtner1I Cotta Mesa Founttfn V1fl1y Newport Be1ch ;:DISTRIBUTORSHIP • --------;;;=-=-=-=:1-----'----1 }.:arge Corporation d'sire1, rP.-e HARD In F'lnd -2 BR , ,;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;::;~I 'o_U_P_LEX-.-.,-.-R-.-.-.,.-.-,,.,,--, p-t1 • KfNCS Rd. View Home. ·Sponaible ptrmn 10 di s-tnz;l gar, tncd yd, kidslpets 3 R. 2 baths·· S31S/33$r~ pa tio. sh.a.ii:' crpl. drapn, EL CORDOVA APTS. 3 BEDROO'.\t CONDO. Xtras 1..a.rtf! rooms, ad u 1 ts . :tributP,· PRODUCT~ PRO-$140, ' R. 2 ba., fam., fl.Im·· $400 bl11n--k11 . $170. 545-6889. From $145 &&lore. Plush ne~· &hat:; Available J une lst. 642-6889. :o ucEo BY '1ULTI·Bll-ALA Rentel e "S 3900 3 BR. 2 ba., fam. rm·· s340 H · B h Furnished & Unfurnl1h-..1 ~~t SJ~ P<r month S C :i.ION DOLi.A~ °COMPAN\:. • -• 3 BR. 2 bo. fom . rm. " t'l65 unltngton HC Dishwasher . Shag Carpeting -w';ik·in Clos-HARBOR GREENS lorw l~ rHlty '1-•-n_l_•m_•n_,_. __ _ ,-Are for UAP in AUTOti.fATJC • l'.;XTRA Room! 3 Br, tnetl 4 BR. 2~:r barhr; ........ $J75 NICER THAN CONDO ets. Forced Air Heat· Extra Large Rooms· 968·440.\ Anyti me. 3 BR, 'Z &, cp11, drp•. hltn•. ,tQUIPMENT. Can stan full )Tri, kids petAls\ngle~. Sl60. i d h II 2 Bli, 3 RA , frplc1in BR &: Beautiful Game Room· liea ted Pool. BBQ's· near hl!ach . .Sl.80 mo. No. ::~,.~,~";"~1~,,~~1;,r.: AL~ :~~·~~:l~~3900 •. · .• re i ~~:m~::;~~1;.,~1;.~~:,:;: ~~~o:~~h~~f~:·(N~~~~ti!,~'r'~~~tif~n'sW 2 Bedroom or 1,H•";;;"'•' :::l";;;g;;;to:;n;;;;;llo;;;;;•"';;;;;;;;;;;;;.1.;::·~.99&.197' <Orange• bua1ness Jor d1'tr1butors, Crpt~. rlrra A bltns. Spani~h dPC<>r. View of val-Adult Living . No Pets. 2 Bedroom & Den 1" ON BEACH! Furn. or Unfurn. 370 NO SELLING l.A.RGE FF.NCED YA.RD REALTY lt>y & oeean . $250. mo. 20n Ch1rle St., Cost1 Mesi 642M70 "' qo tishir1g Or ·spenrl niore F'OR CHILDREN & PETS. Univ. Park Cent,r. Irvine 536·6Q07_ 11h Ba or 2 Full B•th1 Costa Mei• tim e \.\•lrh Your fa vori!! Pvr .i::arage. $154. ""'!!!C.!!!!U!!!!Aoyt!!!!!!lm,.•,.·,.833,....(!820!!!!!!!!! IN c~.-w-po_r_t _B~e-e_c_h __ _ hobby and 11"1 The machinf' 811 Paular1M, C.~I, 549-1746 ~ age f'arn you money . CASH ClllLDREN-Pt:r O.K. L1gun1 Baich DELUXE 3 BR. Z BA. M~' ~EQUIRF:O $2498. Seeured. s · duplex. lrplc, d sh w ah r . Pll.ClOUS 3 BR homf', dbl • OCEAN V•'•w -nr beach, LIMITED · lsundr;', g11rage, open beam g11rag£'. large f,neE'd rPar· 2 Br, •love, '''''"· •ml -"t. ' • OPPORTUNITY o "" cf"ilings. Steps to beach. 1 ~·<i«I. Perfrct for family, $175, n:i·ite no\\' for more informa-SZ'll mo. 646-98fi6, 962-2421. ALA Rentals e 645-3900 S300/mo. 'YPsrly. 547-i667. ,&.ion, lncludf' phone number 2 BR, crpt/drps, iar, yrtl., 3 BR., 2 BA. Frple .. top ' REDl-BRE\V · i·plr. only. No ittls. $l70. e STEPS to Bf'ach _ 2 Br shape: 2 blks ocean. Yr ty. CORPORATION' 2.11-Avncaclo, 5 4 g. 8 2 SI , .,~,./lrpJ, e-nC'l gar. sml yard, $320. Adlte l'IO pP!s. 673-8088. a_ 1001 Howard Ave. 547-140.i. child/pet ok . $225. ..,.n !\11tlf'Q, Ca lifornia 94401 ALA Rentals e 645-3900 ~lesa v~rde _ lg·3 .Sr ... )"'· I L """PARTNER ha._ tarn nn., trpl .. pa.tio, STEPS TO OCEAN . Ap.111mert11fr1r Rent IGHT !\-1AN UFACTURER 11.,·aila h\P 6/1. $ 2 7 5 . Immaculs!e 2 BR. 1~ Ba. ~TST in r.1anagemen1 or 545-3.i'JO. Lrg living rm w/ocean/.c1ty ;P'rodur lion nf expanding su p. E:ASTSIDE 3 Br. 2 Ba, 2 ear v1e11• & frplc. Stove, refrig. .ply blilllnrss. Gross shoulrl t'rpl•. <lrp•, lovelv ...,,rch. . ... . ~ar, frpl. pri fnerl yd. " r-.exce-=u mill ion $ mark !h ip; Child ok. S2S5 util -i. .,1:: Chlrlrn & pct ok. $300/mo. t'" ')•tar . ...:;,ooo cash t~ulred. 6t·1--fi0.14. NU-VIEW RENTALS .1350 u!ary to start + equal 673-4(130 or 491-324.8 ·.P,are in profits. for in!er-NICE 4. br, 2 rnl. erpt, drp1, vif'w. v.·rite Classified Ad dsh1.,·shr, cornPr. Avail June L1guna Beach .a J1<1 paily Pilot, P.O. Box t, S26Q. 1156 Paularino. 3 BLKS BEACH lli6o, Costa J\IP.sa, 92626. 519-2771. Large 2 Br tripleJ<. Blt·1n1, ; "Convale1cent Hosp. * 2 BR. 1 Ba Toil'nhou~e. new gold shag & drapes. 44 bed-cf!'rtif1rrl. Ideal lnr Patio /gar. Pool. S205. Good storage. Private & RN or. epl. Priced to lil'll , Child/OK. no per5• 557-8400. nice patio, childfsma.U pet ~avp otherA. \Ve l'ipet'uiliz!? COLLEGE PARK 3 br, fen e· ok. $200. . all areas, Rll .sizes. Adobe rrl sd. crpt, drp~. bltn1. NU-VIEW RENTALS :15usiness Broktis. 64~7:».5. ~$~'~"'~· ~m_o_. 24_25_Bo_w_do_i,_. __ 1 6.73-4030 or 494-3248 TELEPHONE Ans. Service 3 BR 2 Ba 11pt-r;ummer ren-EXCEPTIONAL :ln South Orange Coas t re~ tal-ariprox 6 mo. No VIEW! : ~ort area. Thrf'f! switch-children/{M'1 S, yrd. &l:>-5581. ; i>o;i1'rls • xlnt grrn11h po-NICE 3 BR, 2 Ba rn. Double ')enlial. ca~h 01' trrm~. garage, fo.1e sa v,roe. $245. :\Yri1e.Cl,11ssilicd Ad No. 401, Call 545-3298 . .J?_!.il.,i_filot, f -..Q.J!9ti569, . .-c~fl ..... 926 . Money to Loan 240 1st TD Loa-ns · 6% % INTEREST 2nd TD Loans Lov.·est rates Orang,. Co. .. "WE BUY_ TD 'S" Sattler Mtg. Co. 642-2171 ~11 Serving Harbor Arra 21 yrs. I: HoUln for Rent )~ ~use1 Furnished 300 Balboa Peninsula Baeh Pads -$70 utl pd' Bal- boa , S95 ull pd H.B .. $85 utl pd C111. Rent-A-Houu 979-8430 Laguna. Beach 2 BLKS BEACH ~uliful vie11". 2 BR. Fully f;urn. 11.1/Frplc. Double ga- ragt, yard & d&-k. Child/ Ok . S300. \'early. NU-VIEW RENTALS 673-40:l0 or 494-3248 1 :& 3 BR. houses. Alw partly furn. Mature, A a la r i~d e&ta b. gentleman. N o pe.t1.'childrPn $128. to $154. Refs, 494-al70. Newport Be1ch ' . Cpls·Sngls 2 Br 111obile utl ·'Pd• Alf4~soo each ont>Ch:- Rent;\.tiouH 97.9-8430 Apts. Furn. 360 General A Bold New Concept FURNITURE RENTAL w J\fgnth to Month + 100% Purchase Option * Wide Selection • Style.Colon. * 24 Hour Delivery HACIENDA HARBOR From $150 DELUXE I & 2 BEDROOMS Furnl1hed & Unfurnished Heated Pool -Gara~es '-Shag Carpeting Di shwasher -All Utilities Paid. Adults Only · No Pets 241 Avoc1do St., Cost• Mesa MESA. VILLAGE APTS. 3 BEDROOM-$150 2 children welcome, no pets 646-1204 Forted Air Heatin .G? · Water Pa id -Carpets - Drapes · Built·in Stove · Carpet · Stall ShoY.·· er ·Laundry Room · Fenced Yard. 1046 El Comino Dr. #A 546-7331 Costa Mesa FURN. k U?\'FURN'. l\.luter slze btodrooms w/hls;h 2 BR. E'rom $265 btam cellin1s. l&ri! livinr ADULTS ONL y room w/gas or ~·ood burning F\lrn1rure Av11Uablr. tireplaee. Convenient Iaun-C a r p ets-drapes~ish"·asher dry area otf kltehen. En-heated poo.l-saunas-tf'nnis closed paUos. 2 S\\'immlna ree room.ocean \"ltv.•a pools. 1auna. recreation patlos·amrle pa.rk'i ni: taeilitles, Secut1ry Guards. l\fODELS OPEN 546-0370 HUNTINGTON PACIFIC 7ll OCEA'.'l AVE . H.B. (7141 ~1487 Ote open 10 am·6 pm DaUy \VILLIA~! \\'ALTERS CO. Summer Rentals PALM MESA APTS. ~f1NUTES TO NPT. Bot. FURN. OR UNFURN. Unhf>lievably llll'ge apllll., huge ('!001, Jacuzzi eleet blt- lns, .!ihag crpls, drps, sa.una P!r. Arlults, no pe\l'l. SINGLES ..... Ftbm S13S 1 BEDRrir .••••• f'rom $140 2 BEDRJ\f. ••• : From $160 You·!"'!" ri&:hl, they're \1nder- pr1ced! 1561 l\tesa Or. IS hlks from Ntt11'POrt Blvd.) 546-9860 NEWLY DECORATED LIKE Prnocy •d i "'"' We8li8JIU 2)- 2 Br. 11•/a;ar; $140. fned yrd sehool. park. tennis cr s~ v.·/pa.110, \11t pd. 2526 Sa nt11 Come to 16.lS.2 ~lton Circle. Sparkling 2 Brlnn. 1ar,d~ HIDDEN VILLAGE APTS. Ana Ave (El Call bt\\'n 1-S H.B. Dtluxe 2 BR, l 'J Ba. aprs. Pool, spa, I us h Home-Like Livi"g 636-4120. apt in 4-plex. Children ldscpg, garages. A~ults - Families Welcome! \1'eloome. Call 847--056.'I. front $175. Also avail. furn- 2 BEDROOM-2 BATH A PRECIOUS FEW SEA AIR APTS . $115 151 E. 2111. c.M. 6'6-8666 From $159 can enjoy r111rn·ay Vtll a llV· Lrg. 2 BR. Crpts. drps, blln&. I. SPA.CJOUS e Carpets • Drapes · Air Conditioned · Enclos· ina: -one 01 !host small 1 blk N. of Adams off Bearh \\ell-Designed Apts. ed patios • Heated Pool • Forced Air Heat . elegant compte'\es. kno"'" Bl vd. 729 No. fi Utiea . 1 & 2 BR. w/TetTa~s. C t & St tor unmatched managtment 536-2791i 53&-7070 From $140 • $275/mo. arpor orage. and impeccable detail. Just or Shag epls, drps, u.unas. 2500 South Salta, Santa Ana 546· 152.S now there a.re 111,0 3 bPdroont 2 Bd. lBil . shsg rllll, hlt1nr.. pool, jaeuzzi, encl. gar. (enter 2 blks \V. of Bristol. off Warner on apartments available -1vt th rlra_pe~. no childrf!n. S175 Q·i;et Adult llvi111t Linda \Vay .• south to W. Central)_ all thost rl!!l;Jrable extra11; Close to ghop & bank. 7f.Sl MERRIMAC WOODS -pool , patio, f1r!pfare, Elhs 11.ve_ Apr. A 847-7st7. 425 .~ttrrlinac \Vay, CM VILLA MARSEILLES laundry, 1.1'alk·tn closets, 111 \\'ALK to be11.eh . DrBper1es. El SPACIOUS 1 & 2 BEDROOM APT. baths -\\'e could go on, but carpetln;, baleony, 2 bdrm. Puerto Mesa . • Furnished & Unfurnished comt and aee. Adult!, oo pehf. 84&-3927 or 1 BR'S--.$130 UP Adult living 5J6-0492. All UtllltiH Peid Dishwasher color coordinated ap pliances !"'I Fairway Villa 2 BR, apt. New w/w crpt, Poo.1 & Recrell.lion Area. No ~h.lihag..F.r_pet ~mirr~~r:drob1t.doot.oc..+----A . rt t ,,,, ~~~· G.a .r__a__1.,~, children, no pe_ts. indirect lighting iri kitchen . breakfast bar • pa men ' iiiliaiP" dispoial. 962-l51 l9J9 MapleAvrr.M~ huge private fenced patio · plush landscap-20122 Santa An11. Ave., S46-62l5 tor appt. I & 2 BR rurn or Unturn. ing · brick Bar·be-Ques ·large heated pool$ DELUXE' * Hunttna:ton Harbour * Ch1lcl~n·a. 1Pet1on Pool. & lanai. ' APARTMENTS 1 Br. apt., 2 yrs. old, Sl47.50 $140 lip. ELM GARDENS 3101 So. Bristol St., San.ta Ana 557-1200 Air Cond · Frple's • 3 Swim· All bltns. 6-t2-3347. APTS. 177 E. ~2nd St., C.M. COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. ming. Pools • Health Spa • 2 Br. Dupltx. Downlown 642-3645. MANAGING AGENT · Te:~11 Crts • Game & crpts, drps, stove, S1451mo.1 ·A~PT=.~-~,~,~,,-,-_-,,-,-,-lou-, .. ~ ON TEN ACRES 1 A: 2·BR. ~-• Unfum. Fiteplaeel I prlv. patlol. Pools Tennit Contnt'l Bldst. 900 Sea Lane, CdM 6f4..E.1 (MacArthur nr CM.st Hwy) BWt~ :~;ROOM 5.\fi-3507. Bungalow. Pvt. paho. $150. BA"FRONT 2 BR 2 BA m.,. to r11ht s du 11 •. FROM $165 ~ · · ct•"\3l3 ho.It slip 1500 M1 ft 1 yr lse "~=~.=:::· _____ _ MEDITERRANEAN $4'5. m'. ,......gg, . 2 er. med ,.n1. crp11d.,,.. VILLAGE NE\V lar&e 1 BO $1l5/mo. 26$ Orange Av~. 2400 Harbor Blvd., C.ltf. Yard, \'Valk to Huntington M~·l 6S7 (TI4) 557-802{1 Ce nte r. Call "'14-527-3144., Huntington B•ach RENTAL OFFICE Irvine OPEN 10 Ar.I TO 6 PM ---------J NEW SANDPIPER THE BEST FOR YOU! Euly him speciols-1 BR PARK WEST fmm $125, 2 BR from $15!> Live in a 1uden, handy for shoppifl& and eating-out - yet have plenty ot spa~ tor all yaur pouiessions. Here's APARTMENTS Furn/Unfurn, cml color in· 1 Bdrm. From $160 terlors. pool, Jaeuzz!, more. 2 Bdrm., 2-&.: 8081 HoUand Drive, Hun- From $195 tinzh:ln Bea(h. 847-9595. J883 Pa.tkyle1' Line HUNTINGTON G a rd e n 1 1~ ~· fl ol worry-fret !Mm CJuM ott Apts. Hell at Bolaa Chica. l1V111g me. 2 bedrooms, 2 San Diego~ atCtliver Jtd) 846--1323. Com ... -• s .. baths, den or &\IP St room. .,.... ~ what ,YOu're mluinr. Fr. $121).$24<}, THE VENDOME Lagun1 BeKh 1845 Anaheim Avenue PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS 171')() \\/e!llclitt Dr. Adult Llv1r11-No pe t• Deluxe 1 & 2 Br. Pool ~-~....a; 84.1-6274 --- • , • • ' , O.\ll V Pl~OT Tuesdf~. IAaJ 2, 197l ·-l~I ..... ~ II.,..] I i.,., .... ~ ·Room.• 400 lndu1tri1I R1nt1I 450 L°'t SSS E loctrlca l Ha u li ng ROO r.t with •~u, folle1. a .. COSTA MESA "" .. -,,-,,-,-,-m-l._lot_t_<_1"6-.-So. E_l._E_CT_R_l_CA_l._W_O_RK_.-A-11 walk·in (~I. Private· en. l t46 & 2880 Sq fl, Coa.\t Ph1.V1,. Dttparate! Kindt. Bir or 11nall t.lc'd Ii: tra.nOP . S'ia i~I. u t I I "'-CABINET f\.1AK:ERS-Pita&" c11U ~.\-9165, S46·43M, lru. Free es!. 546-02ll. Complete Hovse Free E&ttmlllflt. Save * ll.~0072. Clean In&' Call and 543-1005. Non ~JIOJl FIBERGLAS.Ci 642-4/l3fi. Rrwarrl! G•rdeni- dr1nlter. Nr. Nwpt frwy &. S.O. frwy "• f.fESA Clt>aning. Carpets, "'1nl'.lo"''• noorio; l!'I", Resid/ cnm'l , 557-670, 548·4111. 1..ARGf: Rtw11rd -no quell· DELUXE. Pnvate entra.nce 2930 Grace ' l,.n tlon~ 11.sktll. Lost . Jrhih S..t· AL'S CARDENINC & baith. No ' mo k ,. r •. ISo. "' Bitktr, E. ol fauv1""'' ,,.r, • . 15/J7, Balboa area. !or garde'nlnr &: •ma 11 fJmployerl 1.,nl/rman. C.M, 1,1 !\II ) R"PTl!:Mntahve lhi>re 67.1+44AA. landgcaping ae.rv!ces, call •.rta 6'rrHl310 or S48-7l9'7 9 am-12 noon. 541}.5198 evf!a. Ser v f n g e D0t.1ESTIC \\'ORK e EXPERIENCED ,n 4, B'ffi-44l4 f>t ·87!l-47\J I.O.~: l..!>ng-haittrl, b!k fml N rt Cd"~ t ., G•-11 Hom• 415 \\'Ac-· e~-i>0 • .... s a ... e.sa, -R I • ""A "aL -.~ exf)f!cluig. Lldo Dover Shore!, estcliff, ---------ente 1 W1nted -Psrk Dr. NB Rt\\'ard, 01~'n transpnrll'llion ~3 Ded ica ted Cle~ning PRVT .\'. ~mi-Prvt, rnomll HELP! 67~50. AL'S Land11caping. Tree avail. f.,r n·u•n & women . removal. Yard remodelilJlit, * \VE 00. EVERYTHING * R"fs. free t.'51. 646-2839 Landscaping lhvlng cart, n n tr I t lo u J: Reap. yng man w &IYll'I 1oh REWARD • 6 mo. nld-lem . Tr1111h hauling, lot cleanup. ,meals. ~25e2 or 64~9862. &. rel'11 nf!Pd~ h~ w1ya rrl. \Ve1mar11ner. f;rf'y V1": Repa ir sprinkleTII, 673--llr.6. _HB, CM. &iurh La11:un11 'lr Seen 4-211'. Maroolia & e TOP SOIL e New Home. Lovely lri. Rms , ~fy ~nlor Clllzens art happy, v.·eJI ltd & cltt'an. 71l Shallm11r St. 6-12·9278 8 O'A R 0 IC a rt/Laundry, Good meals. Sl!ml 1185. Pri J22S. Men·Women. 5314114. Summtr Renti1l1 420 BAY VIEW 2 bedroom, Bl~pg 4 romplelely furnlM· fld, Avail June to Sep! $750 pr month. Adult11 only agen1. 675-4930. Litt!• Belboa lola~d 3. hr furn ished l'.luplex. June J7 to ~pt. 16. $5(Kl /mo, 6Th-5612 af!tr 6 pm, 430 SHARE 3 Br. home, H.B. Every1hlnf inc lur!ed. 3 5 )'1'11/over. 536--0487 alt 5 pm & 111! day \Vknds. canyon llrea. To im. 2 rl•111:~. Slater. f .V. 9AA--2.l~. EXP. Japan1>~e GaMf!ner. Fill du·1, l'fltqtilllng & 5 catio;, Oldl"r fJnl', will /ix R"WAR funpl1>re Yard Servic:f' ~ D. 6 mo. old black Clf'!ln--u_p, Fr"e E .1 I. gr<1d1no:. ~7. up. PleAll". "1111 NO·Vi""•' lab. One vih lt" Apnt tmnt or Rflntal!. 673·4030 or 4!J4 .. ~24R 5!1R-2G6t. Painting & k "he11t. Vic: Ct:IJ\1. 67:l-8930. Pa perhanging YOUNG phv..u::ian \.l.'llih"s 10 UJS LANDSCAPING. New ~"-na .,-• T; fr! 4/28, large male & Sprinklen1. Res id · I , re'MI or J.Uh-IM' houM>, Iris h Setter." V1r. H.B. Comm. State LI c , d. P A I NTING : Inter/Ext . Laguna . Ju~..&pt. 'fo $:GO Re\\'ard! Ca.JI 536-ll169. Sll-4446. \\'a!li "''ashed & minor mo. ·J94..2fY.ll'l ·hm . 0 t c t;ermirl! at prices you can af· 547-515.l PROfESSJONAL tro>e. "'orK. f d F t R f [ or .. ree es. e 1 , RESr ;iu,ung \~:orniln w/sm S«Ylottand, -1~ pruning, irimminif, spra.y· 673-1166. ~. I 0 , 2 RR ho•m•, •'oc,-' 1ng, i;prinklerio;. Landsca.p-. ti '-"'6 ~.. 4 " • "~" o:a93 FOR clean & neat pa..1n ng, •d, HB/C,1, •lot ••! .. •fl 111g. Cll'anup. Gtorg" .,..., . ..., . " ... • ln!erior or exterior &: reas. 6:30 968-7Yi6. NEW lawns, 11prinklers, r11.te1t, Dick, 968-4065. Babysitting rotollllin~. tree.-. & llhn1hs JULY-Au~!-2 Br. Apt. or Hse. \Vrlte: 30l \V. Camelhack. PhDl'nix, Arit .• UNFURNISHED 2 bedroom, 2 bath 1vlth or wirhOut pnol. YeBr le11u. Adultio; nnly. Want hy June 10th. 64-4·134.1. 3 BR. hou~e in Nwpt bch or 11unl Sch, JunP Jjth for S.12 -mos. 213-3.16-1402. Babysitting In my home • 642-0084 • Cos111. ~1eAA area Carpet ;;ervlce , No Wasnng removed .. y11rrl l'IPanup. * WALLPAPER * Vic: 01/lfB. 96.1-3258. \\/hen you call "/t1ae·• * LANDSCAPING * 548-1#1 646-lm New l11wns, Sprinklr5, decks. cleoanup. Stale lic'd. S.16·1225. INTER & Extrr Painhng L1c'd & ln.o;, Refs. Rea&. Japanese Gardening Service r.i1s1>. free e.~t. Chuck, Al~ C!Pan-up. frPe Est. Fi4~. e ~S..0029 e INTERIOR & Exterior Pain- ROOMMATE ~ fnrl ~~~~~~~~~~ llha.rlng apt (~nl $130.-$170!. I 1 G•r•e•• 54~5:~nt 435 [._·mmpii"ii''ii"ii''ii'm~l~l ii•~-J ,JOHN'S Carpe:t & Uphol1!ery Cleaners. Extra Drl-Sh11m- poo free Scotchguard (Soil Retarcfantl!l. Oegrl'ilser,; & all color brigh teners & JO minute bleach for white carpel&. Save your money by saving me exlra tri ps. \Viii clean living rm., dining r m. & hall Sl5. Any rm. JIM 'S Garde'Tling, romplete ting. minor repairi:, non- l;nvn & yard c;ire, cleanups. drinkPr. free e~timates. 54;;_,'\662 aft 5pm. Call eveniogs, 646--0477. c 0 f.1 p L E T E Lawn & I ·p~,.,.,~,"'T°'IN~G"'' --"""'H"'"on"e""st'". -,"'1ea=o, Gardening 11ervice. HauH!ti gusiranterd "'ork. Licensed & cle;in-up. J im; 548--0405. & insurf.'d . 67.>-5740. FEMALE roommate . w11nteii • Tu1tln , 83!-3000 t v es. &l~3'22 d11y1, aio;k for Announcements 50CI S7.50, couch SlO. Chair $5. 15 n..c . GarrlP.n & La11·n Csire. EXTER. Comp!eJe 2 coats, 1 ""'°"':=,_~,.,,,,_---! yrs .. exp i! \\'hat counts, nor Cles.nup serv. Free ana ly&is story $240, 2 story s:ioo. SUMMER CAMP Boys &. me1hod. I do work myself. & rs!. Cat! 97!l--074.i. Nt'al work. Rn,\'. 847-IJ.ill. J<a thyE. SINGLE c11.r gar11ge, $20, per month. Girls 7-J.l Out!ltanding pro-Good ref. 53l-'110L rd EXP. Ha1\•ali11n Ga encr PAINTING, prof. All \ll:lrk gram-Top notch It 4 f I· STEAM Carpet Cleaners, Cnmplett garrleni ng 1ervice guarn. Color e p e c I a 1i1 t Reasonable ra1e11· -f'REE: prr,fcsslonal 11t Io we 1 t J<amal:an i, &£-4676. 842-4386, :'147-1441. ' ffil l.___-_, .... _____ flll1 [ ,,....,.... ][U] [ L ........ ' ] IJ ;;;;;;;;;~~/~;;;;;;;;;.;; ""*• 4. H•lp W1nted, M & F 710 H•lp W1ntod, M & F 710 Hilp Wintod, M & F 710 H•IP Wanted, M ~ F 710 Assemblen Electronics llrm needt U • per. ""'!'!mbler& for pro- duction dept. f ull b.me emplo.vmtnt & xlnt beneflts. Just 15 minutes from Santa ""'· CaJI ror Appl. Jndusnal ~lat1on1 (714 ) 494-9401 . TE LON IC INDUSTRIES, INC. Laguna Bt ach Equ.11.l Oppor, Employer Acc'ts Rec. to $450 Do you 1,1•an! to work for a solid growing ro. lhat is mov ing into 11 bf>autiful mod· ern building in Irvine~ GrE>at benefil5 in"!uding profit &haring, This fine co. pays !eP. AIM fee jobs. Cal! Nancy May, 54(1.605,S CiOati!al Agency 2790 Harbor BL, at Adams ACCOUNTING & C re d i I Clerk for retail credit olflce, Full time. Expet in posting lpeg board 1ystemJ & all phaSP.s of credit. Send resume to Clas,.ilied ad No. 365, c/o Daily Pilot, P. O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Ca 92626. ACCOUNTING CLERK, lite typing, Financial business. Call Dia ne, 644-4360 for ap. poinlment. AEROSPACE Hydraulic EnginHrs Draftsmen Courtesy Personnel Jobs Galore I All o\>onlng1 In ' Or1n9t County CL'EANJNG V.'Oman, nl1e "'Ork, 40 _hr \\'Cf'~ ln nffi.N' Exp'd Secretary bldg. Paid vacauon & 1~ . i urance. '.\1n! \1' 0 r k i n R Shorthand &: ,d1ctaphone. cond&, Write cta11sirif'd Ad Some bclOkkPep1ng exp. S No. om, Daily Pilot, P. O. Da y 1\'f'Pk, apprn;o.; .. s hrs • Box 1560, Co~ta Me5a, Calif. t:111y. f.f11y work 1~ )'Our 92(i26. hon)e. PPrrll. JMl .. ~.B. or \.i\1. \\'n1f', Cla.~.~•htd td #:191 , Osi ily Pilol, P.O. Box 1560, Co~ta Mesa, Ca. 92626. CLEAN-up & dPliver hoy. •pply In pt>J~(!n, $1.6:-l ~r, hour. HulChf'Wn'lt, 14 01 Induitlrial \V11,y, (;.~!. • 22 Of 1b, Job< Li•led CLER-K-TYPIST--........ A .... C~T"'O"!!!'!!R~Y!"'"I Below Att Employer Paid Elec. lypt>writrr. 50 \\',p.m. F Fee Or Reimbursed Fee. 10 Key arldin.c:: nlllt'h. TPle· JRA,INEES Others Att App I I c a nt phone f'XPf"t' n~""ll5, Apply Paid ... 90 Day Terms. 1741 P!.11.<·enri;i , CM 1·3 pm. Adm As.st ............. $6SJJ+ Ole w/ocean. view, Top skill&-details-developer. See??tary ..•.••...•• , ... S625 1 Girl ofc, no sh. xln't typist, lots ot P. R. \Vork for V. P. . Exec Sec')' ·., ........... $650 To $700 in· 90 d&yz. 1 G&l olc. Constr background. ~·y-Supv ............. $600 Type 60, 1h 90. Supv 15 for ea1y gd natured gal. COMMERCIAL TELLER Experienced Full Time & Part Time -UNITED- CALIFORNIA BANK 7901 Edinger Ave. Huntington Beech 847-2581 or 54'-898S Equ11l Oppnr, F:mployer NO "·~perience nttt'UIJ'Y. Immediate pogition11 avail· ahle on l 1hifl1, Costa Mesa, Irvine k Newport areas. 9 TO l PM ONLY 5.I.S. TEMPORARY SERVICE 1420 Sb. GRANO, Santa Ana s.17-5736 FACTORY HELP L:~f~r~~~N High quAli ty W<l rk a5soci!ttit 11" aircraft component!, Ap. ptir.11n!:1; should have aero- Le 1 01 spare exper. 40 hr work wk, ga c .•.•...••... $600+ · LA!gal exp not ne e -be COS~ET ICS-Subsidiary .of day shirt. Apply in ptrson, recept-sec'y In N 1 Bh. ~en I foorl:1; no1v screen1n« Elder lnrlwtries, Inc. p for per.~onahle men .t: 2101 Dove St., NB Sec'y-Engr ............. $6j() \\'Om!'n to IP11rh m11kr-up 1Acm1!5 from 0.C. Airport) Work for controller-xln'I w/high earninli!:~ JlO!f'ntial. FEMALE-run errands, lite ikills, l!tat typing, young For intrrv\v, call 842-6449. 1 Y Pin fl;, good phon~ firm. COOK, exper. Contact 1ut. personality, non-sm<lktt - mlnistrator, Park l i do must drive. $1.75 per hr. Call Sec'y · .. " ·• · · "· · · .. · .... Sfi()(I O:mv. Cnt .. 642-8044. 549-3756, for in trrvieW. Busy-b~gy 1~t for lop ~ills. COOK, exper. p 1 t 1 m,. .l•iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ~~l&stJc firm, dea!J'able Female, Richard'1 Coffee FIGURE JO • Shop, 508 OcPan, Hunl . B('h. S.o'y : .. """ .. "" ..... $600 COUPl.E lo .,,;,\ 'P"'"''"l \Vant )!'.ln't akilis. 5et up ·fiJ. manaJ?f.'r. M11~t be 11hlP 1'1 ing..a)'Vf!m. Work for V.P. do maintenancf', 1"1 c. Nri _ <"hildl'f'n or pP1~. S11lary & ON AN EXCITING JOB &gar.~r ... ten1 530 · pr. monfh 111 N~1vPQrt Jmpts. ~2-9405. Br nchu,re . CA hf P price!. 3 avg rm1 complete. --C4\X0CQS-CillJ,&QU,,..Ca.r . ~~"11&~1"i.-.. ...,~..... -~~~~·-~';'._i~~r~ . __ -~£RO~. J!<il~~ag,_inte~~er. 9?430 . • (fuahry-\\'Or ~s.. LlC ·• . * CARPET LAYING * BY ~oose : Lt elect, plumb,· lnli. 557-74.'15, 548-2759. Ptr1onel• 530 c. A PA GE fence, lnstln5, carpentry, Mus! be e.xp'd-in component design. Steady, secure employment \\'ith 1trong gro"·ing c ompany. Op- por!unity tor Chief EngincPr. P-NEU-OR,\Ul.1.G&- 8961 Central Ave.· Montclair 213:628-9024 714:624-l'l67 An equal o p portu n ity f>mployer Mktng Sec'y ............ Sf,00 apartm,.n t furni.~hed. Call -bl1e-=ghr-.-rd"=&¢~rc1""1m ~s$.91l\li!r--""·~-::.::::;;:;,,;:. ;....;.;;;-"+r---~=~-------+-­ phones .. Occas. prenure, DENTAL Re<-epl. want~n.1 0 Sec'y.Steno Electronics. Expcr & rf'Jiablr. Som.--Openings avail. now: Office Rental PRIME l.OCATION Otfice Suite A v-11 i J a h I f!. cu~tom decorated for es.ch tf"nan t. Pl'kini;: -•lcfind .• fu ll ma.int. 335.l Vi11 Lido, Newport Bch. Und,.r new M1tnllf!'r'ment .• Ne1vly de<"- or1ttl"tt. Renta l Office i;uitr 301. 71 41673-9091 , - MF.DICAL. df'ntal, beauty 1htlp !'Ir real estate. S1reet vlAabl\\ly. P11rklng. 2 al $150 or rombine in!n I. 1770 Ora.ngl" a! ROC"hester. C. ~1. Klng1111r.d Res.I E g I 1 f e , 64~2222. OFFICE sp on Newport Bay opp Linda Isle. S p e a c BAyfmnt I~. Grl Park. Crpts -drps -1tlr/cd. The Islander Blrig. 341 Bayside Dr. 673--1620, S4S..-1019. DESK I Pf.<:1! avdlable S50 mo. Will provide furniture at S5 mo. An~g serv\Ce aVBilable. ]7875 Beach Blvd. Huntiniton Beach. 642-4321 ARCHl]'ECT, Englneer, eh". Ole's, 444 Old Ne1vpor1 Blvd . Se~ to •pprCciate, F:x- ter. entrance, $110. 548--5.100 OPEN. ..._ ,... BEST location Corona df'I 1'-far nr. Post otfice·Snsck Shop. Priv. pa r k I n a-. s;J • R!!alnnomlrs Bier. 67!Hi700. BAY VIEW-OFFICES f)JSCOVER DISCOVERY Find YOURSELF in Somrone Call now • No obligation (714) 8.~ 1213) 387-3393 NATIONALLY RECOGNIZED ALCOJ.IOLICS Anonymou~. Phone !142-7217 or ,vrite P. 0 . Box 1223, Coi;t11. !<.ICM. PROBLEM Pregnancy. Coh· fldent, 'l m p it I he tl c pregnancy coun,;eJing. Abor- tio n & Adoption ref. AP- CARE. 642--4436 SINGLES DANCE ltfEADOWLARK COUNTRY CLUB • 16782 Graham, H.B. Fx Trt • Lati n . Witz· Swing Friday 9-1 • Adm. $2. sso fND, Lr1. btk bird. Cro11•/Raven : Vic: Carl· .lngford & College, C.M. Sl!i:hlly injur~d. j45-2345 I clipped \1•lng.~ l. f"OUND in vicinity ol Balboa Blvd. Newpnrt Bch. very smA~I black puppy or -dng. Scotty looking i n ap. pcarance. CaJI 545-4075. FOUND: Young male cat. \Vh ilf' w/hlue 'eyes. ·col l.11.r. \?ic: f\-1agnoliA & Edinger, * 642-2070 • tile. B -A I M -C c:ard Carpenter CUSTOM "'oodwork pant'I· 1ni;:. Cabinets. Gf'n'I rej:iai rs: Aft . 5 Ph. Duke DaDurka, 646-i.i98. LARGE OR SMALL All Types \Vork: Cut door!'i, pa ne I , remodel, fl nli;h, frame, repain, etc. 962-1961. RETIRED Carpen1er will rlo li~hl rep11ir.s e1c. free e!t. Re11,11.nn11hlp! &16-5292. MINOR home rrpairs. Plum- bing .. carpentry .. pa_inl1ng -roofing,_ Call 540-5560. Ctm~nt, Concrete CEMENT \VORK. no job too 11m11U, reasonable. Free Estim. H, Stuf l lck. 548-8615. FREE irleait, advice 11nd f 5tim11t1>,o;, All T charge for l~ 11. llf'autiful job .. 11t 11 reas. pric". ·M5-507J. ,. PATIOS, "'Rlks, drive, inslall ne1\' la1vn~. ~aw, hreAk, remove •. 548-8668 for est. For A C~ment Contractor C11ll ror r-.1a~ At * * * 644--0687 552-11949. TOT AL ·SERVICES CO. Pltiinhg Install 's.CarpentrY Elec Rep11 lr e 646-1809 Hauling YARD, gart1ge c I ea nu p 1. Remove trees, dirt. ivy, sk l p l oader , ba ckhoe. 847-2666. LOCAL moves, hauling, ,clPenup. Exp college ~tu­ drnt Lrg truck Re11 5.14-11146. YARD trash, garage clean- up. Move & haul. Trf:e trim- ming, rntotill ing. 548-586.1. Y11.rd & Garage Clean Up. Tree Removal, Frtt E!'it. Reas. Ral!!s. 646-3488 ''ARD & Gara.gt' Cleanur. f'pe esl. 7 -./1-ays Call 11nytim1>, ~R-5031 Yara .& Garage Clean Up. Tree RerTl(lval. Free Est. Rea~. Rates. 646-3488 YARD & Garage Cleanup. Free est. ·7 da.ys. Call anytim e, 548-5031. Heating & Air Conditioning NE\V con~truction or existing hldg~. Res. or commercial. Air Conl'.l ili<lning, Htg. R. ~· J~uggin!I C(!. 642·0515. 486 NPwf)Clrt. Blvl'.I., N1vpt B<"h Holl..t.e~leani ng PROF. painting, also roofs, accous, ce'1l. lnter/ex!Pr. Lie/Ins. Free e!'i!. 645-5191. PAINTING SERVICE llouse.-. and Trailers. L.T. prPferred, 642-1Z15. ALTERATfDN lady, exper for dresio; sh<lp. Full or p/timr. Call 5-18-.1383. Sec'y .................... s;ioo Sh, typing, w<lrk alone for 11cct. mgr & prop mgmt. pve11>/t10n1e Sais. N.--:i.t in appea.tarice, 646-9671 . DENTAL t'ffePfionial, f"Xp'd, x-ray1, full time. Gal Fri • •• ........... $5-$600 646·35.1'"i Ins . f'Xp. necess. Plea1ant ----------1 Type 50, Ute steno. Type 60, Steno 90 e Acctng Clerk 1 Yr exper. necess. Good communications 1kills. Type 45 v.'.p.m. spot for gal alone. DIVORCEES & \VJDO\VS Hunt . Bch Au!h<lr needs ~taliio;tical ·docmi>ntation for • Math Clerk PAINTING & PAPERING, 19 yrs in Harbor llrt'fl. Lie & I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio bonrlcd~RC'f'.i; furn. 642-2.\16. AIP Construction to $575 SP.c"y-Sales ............ $541 F IC Bkkpr-Constr • $650 PAPER -HUNG $30. Legal Sec'y-Criminal to S565 Any rm. + paper. 646-2449 Legal lfrne (S.A,) $450 \Vork w/l men, no lh, Sales engmg.-Wants smarl.'1, new book. Ability to can-3-4 Yrs coll~ge w/math t:lidly vrrbalize your <lpin· or accounting n:iaJor. ions &: a. 1 t it u d,. 9 im-\Vork exper. desirable. per11tivr. Your confidence • a.11i;urt<1 a~ you \\•oulrf re· • Keypunch Exterior Painting Sec'y (R.E.) to S6.10 Sec'y-Sales .•.•••.•...•• isoo 642-R14l't Med. Back Ofc $450 Lile sh, diet. Want looks. Work for several men. Plaster, Patch, Repair Transcriher (n1ed. e.xp) $450 X-Ray Technician $600 msiin 11.nonymou11. Libera.I Must have 6 mo'.i; l':Ork1ng fre paid to tho11e 11elected. exper. on either• keypunch. Call 536-6666 a-7 pm wkdys keyh1pe, <lr key disk device. & 9-11 a.m wknd11>. • PATCJ-1 PLASTERING Srcret.:iri~ (&A.) S.">25 Sf>c. y . • . • • .. • • .. .. • • • • • $600 All types. Free el'itimates. Sec'y/Recep!. (Orange) S500 W<lrk for V.P . .\ gen'l mgr. Call 540-6825 Exec. Sec'y Con!'itr. $650 f"ahulous beneht.s. Helproutl ---E-L_E_C_T_R_O_N_IC--· I Pcof Service & Bkkpng m11ch trne to $.100 Typi5t/Recepl ionist $450 when nf'cessary. ASSEMBLE~S INTER VIE\VJNG Mon &-Tues 9am-~ Wed thru Fri 9a.m-l2pm ON Installation PIT. Bkkpr La g. S3.50 hr Legal Sec'y ...... , .. s~-$600 {TraineesJ POOL owner,;-Spring Sl>f'cial-ACid wash $39.95 - f'Qo! ,;en•ice $23. m o_. 54f>-8~2.1. Plumbing PLUMBING REPAIR No job too miall • 642-3128 * COLE PLUMBING 24 hr. i;ervice. 645-1161 SA VE on home ··pp:1in;. Free est., plumb, paint, install· ations, hauling. '139-0372. Rtmodtl & Rep•lr • •••••• FATHER &: SONS~- Sales INe\\'!I Ml'dia) Sl2K Need 4 Ga.ls. i h k typing. Finger dPxlerity req'd, El Sr. Accnt <CPA l J14K diet. X1n 't Mnefita + cost P11.c Inc. l~l Von Karman, Progr11m Analyr;t S12K of Jiving raise. Irvine, RJJ.J7J7., PersorinPI Director $12}{ Equal Oppor. Employer !\fed Fmt Ofc s400 Sec'y • ·:.'' • ··'' ·•''' •• • ~ EX PERJENCE broker&ge Corp. Sec'y to $600 R.E. firm. Sh & typing. · 1 nttd d 1 Girl Fri (Anaheim·, $650 Greet public, \Vork w/men. WI~· <lpel ra ~;,.11 e . m-o-,, l500 mo:ulll.le y, n 1 ntgof1ate NEWPORT ~" J '""" •• ., "' ···" • u.lary, Call 6«-2292, Mrll. Personnel Agency E k 833 D D N B Lite sh. compm;e own letters./;;;;;;';;;;;";;;;;;;;;;m;m;;;;;;;;;;;m;,. over r., • • Young lively ........ Want ex· 642-3870 ... ~~~~~'!'l'l'l~"'I .,,, AUTO POLISHING . ESCROW SITE or OUR NE\V BUILDING PACIFIC MUTUAL F ASlflON ISLAND (Corner Santa Cru:r: It Ne1vport Center Drive) * F"REE rlaily b u 1 1ran.sport11.lion Jor work ln Los Anii!:elP~ until move kl Nc11·port: SP17t. '72. Sec 'y Mktng ••.••••••... $520 Sl"vpral poSiliontll tor aato Work w/1 man in com· d•l""'" Waxmg, poLish;og, pulero. ~;vely gmw;"J firm . OFFICERS f'RY COOK' eng. pa.int & clean. Metro Experienced Car Wash, 2950 Harbor Bl., Steno ......... : •• ~ ...... $450 P /Time 646.-4202 C.M. Purchasing Dl!pt.-Smart gal Immed1a!e placemPn! fnr ~~-Surf & Surloin AUTO · • to work w/buyera, no sh, 1 , Cl'O\I' OU1ccrs 1\ i:ent'l'.1[ ex-59.10 W, Coa~I Hwy .. NB Deluxf', air-condit)oned FountJl in Y&Ue~-SJL-2478. Re.ai!CO"l'lmf:=tJdo..:-Area Realonomici , Bkr. 675-6700 FOUND: Lrg. n1ale dog, rrd- dish coat. Vic. Santa Ana ,Additions--+ Remodeling Gf'rwick & Son, Lie. Wint .,.Y.our,..HouM~­ Cleaned For Summer? _D.ecor~de~Ur; ca~n­ ffy, Pfuml51iig, wiring, e!c. 4 generations exp .• 25th yr. in buk .. LiC:d Ir bonded. , ~ . MIC~A".flC ~ ;.up-supv ••-. •••.•.•••••• $700 =----perie~-~n handling-sale-~ FUU. I: pt tlme-meclwlio, __ Exper11>ncect 1n et th er BMW Cod' S 1 _, 1 Joan esCl'Ows. st~-m""t:aiilcir; '-~pe;:.-.--.----,.. 673-0041 * 549-21i0 T-A X 0 l f-i-C',e , 1 o ve. l Y H,ight~. 642:o5'1J. 546-1308, JACK Tau I a ne-Repair -crpt/drp11. JR60-8 Ne.v.'porL &l&.·fi'l"'. M ... ...,. •..-..,. Call Dutch for cat'J>('f~. wlndo11's &-noors-:-S.17=1508. An!ll11f'r ing ~N:-24··hrs-. 838~- 1ng, upv. giu or com· . , """ rren" '" • -or MERC~[)ES. Top -pay ule.t' input ln acctna: dept. ar1f'l!_ are comme~surate w/ lion attenda.nts. Interview ' J)la.n, &!l company-benefits. P --.lndlv1du!1 . exper1enc": Ex· p.m. to 6 p.m. 1500 W. Si>P. Hl'inz at F/C Bkkpr ··-.-.•••.• -.... $600 _Eellent _hing~ ~~ef'.t~ ~-B.al.boa..Bl_~d .. _N,B., .. ..,mon .. au 11. ,.,, yn:. exp. BL. C~t. S85 mo. Ag!;-"a"u'""c"'K"°"M=a1'",-,-,.,.l "'t'"ou-nd~-on Llc'rl. 1\1y \Vay Co: 547..0036. 646-3928. or-'i73-4577. Eu,l;d "''' -. HOIJSE OF CLEAN • • • • • • Roofing CREVIER MOTORS \Vant varied exp. Plus.h ofc. pleuantworkingcond1hon11. . ~0 II' 1,1 Si •--fa A-a So\'d ·Id d cl ' FULL or p/t1me. Servi<:i! " SandlP\\'Ood ·cont"ractor Dl::SK 1pace aval.lable S50 Park. S.A. 546-7308 or --------- mo. WW provide furniture 642--0.;45. ROOJ\1 Additions, Estimates, at $.i; mo. Answering service FOUND ComplPte lipper pla ns & layou!, &ingle or 2 Complete Cle11ning Service Floors, Ca~ts, \Vlndo.,vs •vo • ·• ~· " 1 o 1tea Y 1ent1. estsblish•d Fulltr 835-3171 PIHaa Cell Brush WalJio;. 642-6824 1va!111ble. 222 Forest Ave, 0 ,,0 •.• ., '.T, Coo•lruc\o'oo. • • Be h 4"' ••66 Pnture -Harbor Shopp ing • ·' "-' -~~na ac · :rr-.,.. 847-1511. JANITORI AL Couple Io clean <lffirrs. 'Ve furnish equipment &: suppl i es, "545-.1617. • T. Guy Roofing. ·Deal Direct. I do my own \\'Ork. 645--2780. 54$--~590. Sewing/ Alterei'ion• 2 ROOM office_, busy corner. Cost11. ~feAa. $90. utilities in- cluded. &12--6560 OFFICE Suite,., do11·ntown Laguna. Les.~e. ml Jq, ft. Cprs, drps. Re:is. 494-3028. • Offlc•Costa Me1e 600 sq. fl , • 646·2130 Business Rental 445 LIVE ABOVE YOUR BUSINESS Center, Sat. April 29. ------------.... -6-16-3424. Ur 3:30 p.m. Dime·A·Line 642-5678 Alterilions -642-5845 Neal, accurate. 20 years exp. GERMAN Shepherd m ix pup.8 mo. Vic. H.B. f>n !\lain St~et. Wearing c n 11 a. r , 536-2023. * * * * * *· SlerlO Rep1lr I -------------------.... , I STEREO equipment repairs, romplete -fa cilities for 1111 ma.kes & n1odels • discount Trader's "'arad1"se "i"' ' ""k 1",. dock. LADIE'i; \\'llfch.. Found In r-1 cle11n & adju~t $8.00. lhis Laguna BeAch. Call 494-3!'161 1rt>t'k $1.00 off to D11ily Pilot A Preciou!I hfoagle-Snoopy·8 rnn. n1Alf' j11io:1 a lovr. VIC' 5th & f\-1ain. 5.16--7031. !.• id,.nlify. lt"nes rt Aders. iRepl11ccn1Pnt ner-rlles & rartrid~e~ 1; off \. BLACK pupp,v. blk i·eu·eJed u 0 • "t E · ..... 11. • ... ('N'O q u 1 p . collar vie. 7·11 f.1arkel on ti"mes \VarehoUM', 179 F.. 17th St., 1ndiana.polts-, H.B. 962-7258. Costa f\-Jen, 64!'1-2442. SEALPO INT Siame!le malf' r/\uhcl on M<'sa Dr., c.~t dollars Television Repair 546-T.JM !'Ir 642--0.545. + BLAINE'S TV * 3 SLEEPING , bags, 2 Servicing All BrAnfhl: flu~hlighls & alarm clock. "--------------------"'I Kno.,vn for honesry 540-4313 B ABY SITTER/Hskpr, 3 chil dren. live-in. Colle«e age pret'd. Must spe11k English & tlrive. Pvt heh. pool, tennis crt. 1lef!. 494--004R. BARTENDER F,'time, Pxper. Apply Jn Person HamhurgPr Hamlet 1545 Arlams Ave., CM Beauty &Ion RECEPTION!Sf Mu.~r he rx~T. Ll:trge prof. Mlon. Al~. curlinji: iron styli!lf nee rl e rl , 837-4T;i>, 847-4743, A~k for Ru th BOYS , Age 10-14 10 del1v@!' pa~n in the Dana Point, San Cle- men te are11it. DAILY PILOT 492--4420 Unlqur hullr1ing "'Ith n111.ny r-t'n!11 I pn!s1hilif1,.!l 11nr1 nn apartn1tn1 for thr n"'nl'r, A'arli1inn11I 1nromt lrnm 11 1n1aU duplex 11io; "'"11 ~ Grrnt location for Interior l'.les1J:;n· ('r11, e"'1,i::ineer11. 11rrhilt'rl~. 11rt1sl!I. pholographrrs Anri 11dvcrfl.11trs. 642--6626.' HAVE C2 lot on Lincoln Av. FND. Chi hu11 hu11. Vic. 19th & in .Oranae, $9000 eq, \VAnt PlaC't'!ntia. C.M. 642-9525. hl'Bch 11rea or moun1aln11 Or FND-\Vat<'h:""Clll~.£ ldlffftf;y. _,"9Wdr.r ,:..CJ;l!.i.ttU:" • ow.bile An11..heln1. 549-1681. home. 5.'16-1 131 Or·S29-I33.1. Waol \arg.S bdm\bay!mt. *Bkkpr' F/C to $700 t;ULWELL PROPERTIES, INC. REALTORS :l.'~ l.1>1 C11.1.,1 H1~h11.11 Corona dl"I MB" 675 ·7225 lri.sh SettPr, ;i--011ng age, Costa ~1eit11 548.4463, Lost vie SSS \Vant ·'{ lo '1 ton pick up !nick. ~fE'r Forri. Have land &. or tru~t rl~~. M. DeviS-6112'7000 LO~: ~·Roc1'l'." 10 mo old e MOTEL e RETAIL spaciStfil "''ail. In lon11: h.11lrM black cat "'rat· 2'J units out of smog. Ha vt misc AAA equitie1. I CarPer po.-.itinn w/top co. Madge Di1vls, Realtor , r,,.,.,n•ll f.18.~,v ~efi!~, • 1t , ""> • -'42·'71)(M) -, ..... · ~-==-=· =i-"-""114':...1,f>,'!-.~l'Vice Ct\i!b A eney HAVE 14-2 BR furnished unitg. r..fonlclair. \\' .s n t Soulhfl'rn Orange Co. prop . s12. 7731 or 546-8169 A,J), Rf:AI. TV~ Job W1ntod, Mil• 700 r..tATURE· min a eeks rmplcyn1ent 'fn N.B. Atta. BAck.llmund in Ari II dttnrfllin«. Call hel\l<ttn fi·9 PM.67l-29AA. 4262 Can1j'>us Dr., NB Suite B-4-~7·ml Helen Schaf/er BUSBOYS, t;tp, pre.fit. Ap- ply ln pe~n. A\11>y We~t. 2106 W. O<:ee.nfronr. N.B. 6iaoo171t bustling -.hopping tt.nrtr, Ing !1('11 C.01111,r. Vie. oi H11m-36 AAA un its. ';l'r8Cle. for 600-2600 aq. fl. 31401 Camino ilton, Vlr1ori11 , 88.y St. Arr• A~r1~nts. land, !1 CASUAt. LABORiRS Clplsttt.no. SJC. 496--961S of Co111t ~len. II 11n.v 1nl0f'-. .SA2·173LAD~ty. 536-688( $18,fXX} equity In 2000 !'IQ ft Arro,vhea.d homr JM' a trg molor hnmr -~ Ext'CU· tlve makt of l"qu81 . \!8h1e. 6<2'21511 Job Wentod, F1melo 702 11o 1 NEED helfl 1111 h<lme? \Ve Ur-ntly Needed STORE front bldfl:.' for lea~. ma n concern 11.1 hi• HA VE: Big Bear 3 br, furn. ELECTRONIC .co u n t e r ha\•e Aides e 'Nurgr~ e .,., M'·l zcn'lt.' 2>72 Pl&ctnti1. whr1"'Jboul! plen~ rill S8.'IOO tc1ully. Hew!P.tt Packard 5238 for Hou!!tkeepers e Com. • Musr hav• transportation 0,,.1e ·Mt11. $43-i69S. 541-7811 i1ft 5:30 pm \Vant: Palm t>.escrt Ut-4 • Sti?l'f!O Microscope or 16mn1 pe.nlon.s e Homema.kerJ • A ltlephoM. Reward hOuse or Jot or 11 1.f,ytta. sound projector. 548·2429 Up.iohn. 547-fi681. Interim lndu1 trli1I Rental 450 BURl.fESE car. sa.blt col· 673.fi756. 11.fte:r 5 PM. 1 -~-------Personnel Service ~-Ind a1..a... Ol'td, altered male. no m). ~fJTURE Lido Rt1 ide nl 778 \V, ru. c.r.t rww ua; ..,,. ' I& HAVE: 2 hr .house. Colt• lfiO Actta. e,ch11.nre for in· ,Wuld !Utt babysitting fop 642.7523 5f6.2592 lb! 911, tt. w1oftlt't •-3 r, "Sabou ", Capbtr/\no ~JeSA, V11lu11ble: lot. Equity oomP. or 117 AlfO .2 BR dsy,11, ri 11"e 1 /wk., n d 1 , JIM• P'f\'l', 71.7 Ohms \)'ay, Be:•ch. Re"'•&rd, 496-lOOO. SI0,000. \Vant: Palm Df:&&rt houM>. lge lot, 85x2S5. Tnidt 67S-4SG4. . A~1t Bkkpr , •.•. , , , ••.•.. $575 846-3321 cu!rtomers. 962--0416. A/P, A/R, xln't benefits. Ext. 20 oc 22 *Gal Fridey $SSO !:xciting, fasl pace for pt w/gd figure aptitude. Constr. exp. desirable. 1 Asst Bkkpr ••.••••••••. $500 Fabled flrm. A/P, coding prep for computer, xln't benefits. TO DISCUSS YOL1R QUALIFICATIONS SECURITY Service Center AgentY 4262 Campus Dr., NB Suite B-4 557·m.t Helen SchAUP.r A/P Clerk , ....... ·"to $660 PACIFIC Manual entries, books. on GARDENER. 1 day per C<lmputer. Want top exp for wee.k on T n du" t rJ a I top SS$. BANK Properties. Mu~t have car _ $100 per mo. 847-2344. A/P Clerk • ............. S-476 Generel Ofc Clrk Set up credit file. ~ 50, 10 Equal Oppor. Employer ExpPr. in bkkpng, lllcctnc. key touch. Lively group. pret'tl. Gd typing & _10 k~ 1600 EXCHANGE •-·rd & t1dl'.I. mach skill.~ req"d. Con-"f /C Bkkpr .. , .. • . . . • • • . •iu« room Sev 1ets, fab ore. For carttr plus m~erate salary for tact Mrs. EdwArds, ' ininded, amall ofc. light Miisekeeping, cookin« L. M, Cox ; & care for, elderly lady in M11.nufac1uring Co., Inc. Bkkpr , , • , ..... ., ,. ...... $.i20 her O\Vn home. f\tu~t b11ve 1505 .E. "'af{nPr, SA Prepal'f! tor computer. Wants lrsin~port11ijon. Rcl<"rtnCf',o;, U,u11I Oppor. Employer varied backgrnd. Cont1tct Mr. Clark, ~J.-0444. -GIRL FRIDAY • · f\f11ture, depe:ndable, Type 60, A"/p a .. k ""' ••• ""' 143.1 EXECUTIVE SH l\O, R«'•Plioo;.,;s.cy fnr Lite exp, type chttkl.· Solid stair, Salary dependtnl on ,fu tu re"w/soHd finn. exp & abili ty, 1733 l<~• · .......... ; ....... isi\ r~SECRETMY,u or .. .,.'Sl"A!"''''""'· • ' ' Exp .. dual h'an•l•r. l•r•I IRVINE COMPLEX. PAGTURAORLDM$.EN firm, plush 11laee. Glamorous !Of\&'. term ani.gn-Pernlllnl'nt usignment, c. mel'!t as attrtl•ry .to M. Lllguna Artas. Full ft general manager of mAJOr JM!rl time Pertn pay Llfe corp. 'top 1t<UI~ r!!q'd; ins .. Bonu~. Pait! v11. • 9 TO l p,\f ONL'r ' Apply Suite G P lus II OrYonlnns for S.t:S:" TEMPORARY 52.l No Gr•nd SA •-• SERVICE ''··· general ,office per1on-14J> so. GRAND ~AJR dre~~r: Al'l' Yl'l1 Jook· nel w/typing 45 or OY· Sa.nla Ans S4i...S736 t~ for 11 Jun place fo ~1'd er: S1l•rle1 from $335 h111r? B~ shop. CaJt Bo~ "' $450.' o.pondi"ll on i: s , "50 b;•, 548-991" experience I 1klll1 • • • T:9:.r. ec Y t'ee Pa.id. 'H).JR srvLSif Fret/Fite ~fth:lns Part time. &t>-7781 EXfXUTTVE ., .John Gariepy &: a~ PERSONNEL AGENCY H.lir M111a11:e1t1ent TRAINEES 507 Bank of Amer. Tower •to W, CoUt Hwy .. NB HANDYMAN wanted 1rr.-ortt SUitt H &CS-271& 10 llrt pt:r wk tn exchal'lp! ·' W h It t Elephtints" nper· for l'l'nl. 54~2l29. Ont City Blvd. We.st OL 646·11JJ., \Vhlte (em Peklnarse, "Little mA hott!f't or lot or ?? tor TO's or ?! :4g1. ---------Ir's alY."'l)'I the Heh• rime k Bil," \!lc-BhiP.blrd Cyn, ..... Myera-. 613-67S6. Tt4:'93-15l6 da,·or nitt. _ M'EDJCALTech dtms back 11lv.•l.)'1 the r1aht pl8ce if 17141 6'MOSO ' NEW OEUJXE: M•l ttttftl. J 8 Jtev,o Mftog .,rncc. or Lab ~1!Uon. )t)U \\'lilt RESULTS! Call *. • l---~H1!~~'=:~~1ooro>11-t:::::-.·~~an1::.:::.·~<1M<~11132~·-,___j1""'--"'*~--"l11"--....,!r-~~~-~~f-t~·"*'"~''-''~r1~111-XllX11'n11~ei..~42-l'1*-'.;i1&'*-"'"·L-•"'f---1e1 1•1-'""46 54)..31.,: 13&-ltM t'Vft.• "'hlte Elephant Ol.m&-A·lAM 4.964Ul. todt,v!' --4------ runn1111 tour houser Tum Put a little "loot" tn Yl"lr th em inlo "CASH" • Mii LeYiJ • ae.11 thoM: baubla far _llfem _ thru Dttll.Y U91."'buck>", -~ .Cl.wl&d OUlllJ<d. ~· ,_w-__ r.6_:1_. ----- . ---------------- • ' fr . ' ... ,. .. • .. ' . . " ' :·· • • 'I ' " l ! , . A ;.·-J • ., " l s ~-•:' A .-·j I I -..;,.,_ ... -• . . . . . . ..... . .. • L_1::1~, ~/~l ~~~I~~· \~~I~~~,~~~~~~~ ff . E .,,_ ][fl] I E~ ,, l(Il] I 1"t11••• l(Il] I ....,,,.. l[Il] .___[ _L ... _ ••• _. _,l..,1 l~J , .__[ _ ...... _ .. 0__,J~ !.___••_·· ·__,![§) [ ~· .. -]~ I .. b .... :_ I~ Tllt1dQ, Ml)' 2. 19n DAILY PILOT 21. "" ·' .- " Help Wanhd, M & F 710 ~Hu;l;p~W;a;nt;od;,;M;;&~F~7~1~0 Help.;.,....., Ma F 710 Help Wanhd, M & F 710 Halp Wa-. M & fl 710 Gar~ Sale · 112 M iscollanoous Cats 152 Honu 11°""kttprr -rompanloo MACHINtSf A. tnterv!tws PORTRAIT STUDIO TELEPHONE Sales. 'lbp MOVING-MUrt ..,u -ct..ap Wanhd l20 PERSIANS 'sod ltlmatay'"'· -.-A-Y_M_U_S_T_A_N_Ci_I :r.~ ~.5 Day 'W!«!k. li-1on ttizu Wed I to 2 pm. Sales Per.on. p/tlme. P~u-ROBINSON1$ a.mml11kma &rid boDuL Ap.. nlck-riackl-diahts, IOD'W' an-WM'TED: 4$'1 Glut top blackl, 1nwktt, sil\'eni and Vought Div. Com p uter antpmionallty,aalelexper. e NEWPORT e ply tn pulOCI bet1'wn 9.00 llquPs, 232t Eklen Apt 4, patio table, C0t1llnenta.I <'tt.mro$. Also Ptorsian stud · ' INDUSTRIAL single nttdle Equipmt>nt Corp. 2 9 o helpful. 892·33.11, ext. 283. BEACH and l.2t00 noon at 83.U Bolu. <:\I. hf'lghl. 6' SOfn btO In 1en•lt.'f. 892·~70~ •ewlna mach. operator 1-lscher Av{, Co.!ita Mesa. 11).1 PM Ir 2-'4 Pt.f. A\'e?Wr, ?i11dwa.Y CUy. M"l"'s-co°'l"l•-noou--,--"""l ""ll Contt"ITipol"IU')' •t)•lf'. Both o,.,.1 154 BeauHlul. splrilf'd mart. Gl'f'at buy for experil'fM!f'd ritl1?1'. Can be-rfSjat~rtd. lla11 "·on llt'\'t>ral ribtion... llA\'r romplrll" !Ack. C'..all 546-71117 ft!ft.r 6 p.n1 . ' " ,. " v.·anted. 8 71 Production ~1024. mus! ht-In gt! rond & rtaa ,..,.·•;,,,.,,-------p PROFESSIONAL pho n e Jllls QPf'nlng for \\I ANTED -daytlme bab)-•111!-, , , __ _. :::. lace -NB "~e. "IV'n, 11,_ 5 , 7 A STEREOS prK."'"• ~>-t;J,\ B;\SSl:.T hound, 7 ,\'r old l'lliiiOiiiOiiiOiii~OiiOiiii;;...,,..lt.tAIO \\'Ork in exchange for soUdtor. Dana Polnt, San terfor2ch wTn-• . I ~ . . I" INJECTION apartment. 237& Ne\\'J)Orl Oemente, Capistrano area. Part T im • home Cd~1. 12...£/5 days l!tr.? GtUTAJ'd rquipptd \vUh P i1no1/0 rg•n1 826 nirill', ,.<"n' AtfN'11on1tll'. Bh'il CM 548-975.5 \Vork in )'OUt own home. \\'ef'k. Call 675--383.<i n.ft full 111.e prof e 1 ~ i o 11 a! Nf'<'<ls lot· in' honif'. $25. MOLDING . . . .. .. d•al In .,.. •. Pt"'"" LUNCHEON 6/ .... od.. "hMger, ' Ahl/1'1/MPX *PUBLIC NOTICE I • ..,,,,, OPERATORS '-1ANJCURJST: ~lusi be Xlnt 835-l4G5 betwttn g:oo a.m. \\'antf'(f fl'<-~it('l', sealed 1.ur Bclore 3'0U b1~y .\UUr piano l\lalt' Hl'-.,.-,1-,.-,1-,-.,-,-,-0~,d"'.~11~,1. (Or T ra inees} in all phases. Apply In and noon. WARRESS llo~kePpt>I \\'/ear !SUliPt'ns1on ~pe&Jr;ers, tape or1oo"'aan, be s!!lllrlt' & ,;re us Jl:lpt'f~ • .sho\!(, 979.35TI ~Jon, For Plastics 1'18.nufacturer. person at the Newponer Inn ~"""~"""~~~-,,.,-d~k & he-adphone plug u1 r ••t e ectlon & Tu1•;.;. <"all :tit l :JO D Sh Beauty Salon. PUBLIC Rel. dept seeklfli 673-9033 i'acks. \Vas lett "O"la•'m-'. for the bc.-st Sf'l"\"l"f' In · ay lft. 1'1ust be neat l.r: / t · ood n-.. ' " ~ ..-u ... I RI S ti s J.·t EC HAN I C S N~~. me-n li'Omen o give av.·ay r ri ~paration \\'anted · Brnnd nt>\\' in box #. Southrm Cnlifomla • ' t' 1 t,. r p u Pl· dependable. Female pref'd. =>.I..._. J doo t d .~ B"'f t "' (' 11. I .. r· Id ~fwt be able to y,·ork Sat. or tuneup specialists. Call for nmp es r 0 oor. or ..... e Housekf'ept'r \1•/car guarMtef'd. Orignally pril'· At Lowest n H ' 1 a 11 ·" in "r lt' s appt. 6r>5154. Absolutely no selling-No 673-9033 ed at $279.9;). Take over tor Disc ount P rices t'hanip~. 9 '''k!i. l\I.~~·. ~hot~. un. lead-getting. Simply giving Exceptional Ben<'1it. 673~Ri Apply 8:30-U:JO A:>.I ?.1EN Wanted,, f/time for away u.mples. Other job \\'AITRESSES over :n. tor S90 cash or small paymPnts. COAST MUSIC le :"'o"u-;-;J'°'~";",,..-,k,.-7!.,.t-b~t~ Cosla ~1esa, c.1,·1. \'al'ious car w--....... .,,,, ti 65 "-& ""W J.1exican re!ltaurant lo I. ft Ya 11· A)' Dt-plU'tm<'nt. SERVICE · · · · \\'to 0 1 • sa r I: <LMJ. uuu oppor. avail. SI. '"· up Appl~ in person 10·5 p.m. '"' 7 '''I !It> \l\C G X>d f 8jO \Vest 18th St. )1>U're reJiable 4: k>oking for s d nd opt'n soon. E'xpe!rienced only 14/~'93--0501. 1839 Ne .... ·port Bl sl Harl-er 1 • ' rr.::. o1 ami-* Oran...,. Coast Pla,t•'"s * steady 'A'Ork: Apply in + bonus. tea Y yr arou #2 Fashion Isl., N.B. need apply from 9-10:30 "' EREO: u ",.,, ,· "'. d Costa life,r.:a &12-285.J. ly tloj:. ~i-59:u e~ ~ job. Call Mr. Al!ih, 956-0980. Equal opportunity employer ~· ... prrson to mgr, Fountain 1~ So. Allee, Anaheim. a.m. or 4-5:30 P~I at lay1t\\'1l)i Garr:m·t 4 spd O(W'n Sundnyo:: 12 to Spm \\'F.1-~I C<1ri::1 tPt>n1hrokf'I. INSTAILATION s er,. J t e Valley Car \Vash, 10035 Ellis PUMP Is.land S 3 I es m 4 n, "':le=:-ltliCau, 298 E. 17th St., t'hangpr, 8 1 r suspen&ion ORGAN -PIANO AKC. ? mtt~f', 3 f~nuil:, I'! .. !, man. Garage dooroprs. Har-1 .,,A:;;':::':::"c:F:;;.v-._~-~-~ Cd~t area. 5 do.ys:, so hrs. • C.t.1. speakers 1vith mu 11 i p I e WAREHOUSE s11;1Jtr & "•hill'. S.16-191$, bor area. Top wa.ge1. 642·3830 MODELS v.·anted, y,·ill train. Nlte shift. Top \\'ages. SALES \\'AITRESS \Vantf'd, a little <'l'OSs o\'er n f! t 1\·o r k , f\t'\\·-Usf'<I rnmou~ Brand8 ;srrn;-.:r. sPF<·1At ., $:!. 1hi.· 3 llORSES Appy ~nlllon 3 ynt, R1>g. $400 Jtnu. Ra)· Grldina Sli(), Uut"kskln aeldllll nx> or n1akt' offer. 3.\G-~3 1fr 6 pm \\'llh u~ hrf,~n-ynu mow. All ftlt"I[, \ighlt'd 8rtn& 962-&i79 ::•, ~ r oltl Bay Ct'ldinf, 'i qu<it1l'r 1, thorouithbtf'd. $:?;~ •. 894-1197. --~~-· Wa nt.cf: Horse tri1iler 5'fj."j'jijl • •.• BANK Call evenings aft. 6 pm, Phone 673-7233 for appt. <'.'\pl'rlenre neceS11ary. Food lape de<'k. Still brand ne\\'. Sl'EIW.\'A\', Kl f.I BA 1.1 .. , cowil, nil br(•eds, Koah'.i. 539-6498. AGE lS AN ASSET & t'Ol'kiail. Evf'. shift. Tues Mt/.f~1fl\IPX radio & OllCKERING, f'IC. (0t't'r Gruo111i11g Pnrklr 642·!1!<"..'::, [ loot _, . ' :~· !.' " ... Installment Loan Clerk (Huntington Beach Join The Exciting d 000 . . · • • .., NEEDEtk>xp. cosmetologist h thru Sun. A good job! Apply tape C'Ck. Still brand ne"" l pu1 uos avn11. l <)le\ Ell~l!iih ."hf'1'ii r\1g Jlul'~. Marine (quipm«lt follo\ving pref. 558-3855 or Happening •t t • "''IP' need a good mature per· in petl!On. 3 to 5 pm Tues Originally S419.97, PRY olt HAMMOND, KIMBAU. k 1:? 11·ks., Al\C. Stud ~<'r1 fl'" 494-6139. Elmor• Co. R••I Est at• llOn 40-60 )'I'S of age. lhru Thu~. 4·10 Helio!ropc, small balance of $197.88 or CONN, etc., Ol'R:tns, 1,1 11uall1y bitrh<'S. 5.'i7-IS IS Offic• Ne\i·port Beal'h Co. "·ith Corona dl"I Mar. paymt>nts of $8.25 ntonthly. Br forc you buy.Give us fl try! -. -· General 900 OPENING for female Lap 1. Beller than the best com· u S l..a""'P~t Drall'r 111 thr '\\'rst IRISII Sel 1•·1· PUJJi>, Al,C, t.1f)l ·---------·I n1any benefits WAITRESS · .A. Stereo Equip ... 1 1 1 t -" • opera t n r \\'/progressive mission program. · w PE.~NY O\\'Sl..1-'.\' CO. s IO\I' int'll, np JL't't"UUt.,: SCRAM·-LETS .1. Good pay &: a \ve.ekly cas.h Food & c~ktail. ·arehou!t', 179 E. 17th St.. 1·1y 9 k •. , lt " Costa ~tesa A!fg. linn. 2. \Ve will need sale!> m&n· """' C TI<! 'R92·:l:'.14 <llll\ 1 11· !I'. "0 -~:.i. R · 1 d bonus plan. Nitei;, Apply 1n Person osta J\.1esal 64S-2442. ap1c a \'ancemt'nl. $2. per agers for future new lo-\Ve havt .,..,,pie with us ovl'r N lll:i2 Beach U1., S. of l\'.nt1•1ln llASSF.T llound (lllPPh'.(. ANSWERS hr. to start. \\'ill traln. catioll!, "'"u COLONY KITCHE •SEE TI~IS • Daily 10·9, Sat 10-6, sun 12-6 /\I.;{·. S<>r 10 hr Ii r v !' 1 An lnteroslln• posit=-a.tS--0401. 3, Prestigious offices le io. 1 1h2,Y1'.:'.,,'1 .'."",,·.y '1>()rking in 3211 H•rbor, CM llandsomr old Nalional cash B·J llA~ll\IOND. p .... j.,,., \I'/ 6.:i.l-7329 ,.1·ri;:, • -· · and th be fl '-"' ... regisler. OrnatPly t'mbossed for •n individual to ORAL Surgery Asst. with X· cations o er ne 11 Plt>ase phone for a.n inter-\\'Al~ESS. EXPER. brass, good \\urking order. string bns~. Sl.!l~ll. !'>i\~10\'F:O Pupi;:, 4 ,1·ki;: In\'rnl -Mnkf'r -?iloldy- h•ndle credit ch•ck· ray experiellee. Immediate \l"e can discuss privately Vie"'· eBLUE DOLPHIN• Great for family rm., bar, CONN TheRtf'r. Sl ,:14j 1·1'..:<•1"\'r r101t·? Chnnip hrM' 111Jurt' -RUN O\'F.H. Ing, iniurance, title opening. 5-18-7110. &: in ronfidence at a 3355 Via Lido. N.B. boutique, etc-. (Y.'Ould make THOMAS full l'Onf:. Sl.39:i $i;,, !NiS--6.120. I1'i; \\'ht'n )iiu'rf' run do~-n followup, lo•n booking OnNA:>.1ENTAL iron \\'Otker, Callbre:::.ast;ce:~~gner, 64+0212 \\/anted: ~taturr-, responsible a handsomr-lamp -think \\'URL pl11yf'r dt'n10. $1 ,1 44 S('JINAUZER P\Jps. ~rud ll1a1 you'rr n10~1llkf'ly10 rf'I & O'hor <larl'cal r.a!: r-xperienced, for full time. tttnage girl for occasional about ii!!)_ ~Just sell, no Nu piano,;. No ~hort ('Ut.5, S•'l'\'ii:<'. groo1ning, 1Prn1~. R_U_N_O_V>_,_11_· -----·I -C tt '" ,.~ ~tarkellng Director, foi;, ap-, d nM tponiibllities In th• in--'-'.,~=~'~"'"=~~--I polntment. SALESLADIES ex Per , babysitting llarbor ViP"' place Ln our lit tle house ror GOuw t.'fUSIC CO. • S·IG--ORi!l • 1 i ·~ • 1. A p s ·r n AK F. 1tallm•nt loan area. OVERSEAS 20-45, Full &: Pt time. llills area, Call 6"-1536. It. Asking Ult), 6-12-~9 2045 No. l\1ain, S.A. SIU.:\· Terr1t'r puJlg, ~ H u.n ~ b o.u I ' Amt"rlean W. would pr•ftr en In-MORE JOBS THAN PEOPLE ~ Bergstroms 01.ildrens Store, WANTED Barber. for high _E-,',-"'-'_,",,"',,',,'=°"~'=· =~~-1~7-06.'!l * • Sint•,. 1911 n1al1'5, ghols, AKC. Crill Tr1.11lt'~, JUlll t>VtThaulf'<I dlvlduel with prex ioUI . All . skills Ir professions • -South Coast Plaza. Apply 650 class clientel, Irvine Gout * AUCTION * riflrr ~ pni. SJ.."'-1149 llnr111•h1 r n~r. Ant·hor, 1lt experience in the proc· • lf1ghe:r wagH • ~r .A . El Camino Real, Tustin. Oluntry Club. 673-9131, t.lr. *PIANOS*ORGANS* --~ol. h'll\k, rn. firT f':'f· •tsl-of 'onstallm nt I expemes e Tax benefits _...... I 1 I ?..1on-Fri Only. Smith. ~ 1-~ine Furniture Going Out }'or Businrss * 1'11E CLIP JOJNT, S4.riO r h1gu i~her I.. 11.d1io11s, $800 . .. ., e e Free 'l'nln ............. "tlon mil. . 4 ~ =SALE==s"LA""o=y""".-.-•. ~.-,-,,,.-,,..,~ins & ApplianCl's Best quality • pricf'S • serv. & up. GrnduRtr groorner~. l\•12-832:.J. l .. n.. CALL 54•1~-4·345-· - ---• .... , \VANTED 1nan or woman ex· A 1• Fr d 7 ~ · f I · . uc ions 1 ay, :.xi p.m. 1..::a11•ai·Slt'in"'·ay-Bllld1vln, elc J)11·11h\'n llnt,::n lk·h 536-441''6 ---------1 ., . ' ~ &: drapenes, ul !Jme. per1enced fry cook. Lunch It w· d . A~1· 8 Sl'll idle llcn1s flO\VI Call W ff f Service Guaranteed Real Es!a!e Sa.Jes Udoff's, So. Cst. Plaza. dinner, age· 35 to 4.5. Fast, in Y S u'-ion arn Player Pia~11 l.r: Rolls" \\'c'U help you itell! 642-56711 642-56m No11·! • o •r • in~artlng Until employment accepted LARWIN REAL TY 546-6812. neat, jome background & 2075~{: N4.'\\•por1,"'0t 646-SGSG ~r~tal.~ , , • \\e Buy • Sri"! I liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiil--... _. +;';~!-'.;;.;::: & 'P';:·",. .... "',~si~"3'·i<'·ililF'D1v:-.ifLlll'Wfli·or.-~"""'S)ll:J'Sll\EfO---.,."""'1.,.--.wk -.xp;-m -Bt!ttlo• Tony·s·Bll!g1fai'l -·Daii>j1~t;;:s 1~~,.1~m-1~51 teee •••••.••• . · ===~~""'"-"-.w="~· . 2Ir>62 BrookhW"llt Av., 1-1.B. Need-men v.·ho are ready lo Orange County. 310 Wf'Rf. BEAlITlrUL new Japanesi· • AN S • ••••••• •nt workint environ• PETITION circulalors, 18 (TI4) 961-4405 / (213) 592-3211 learn the car business and 4!h, Santa Ana. bulfcl 52" x 30" x 16", hanrl Cosla l\1c!la f7l4) 645·:1:.l;io m,nt. yrs & over. Regis. to vote in OPPORTUNITY for tv.'O full ar'<' willing to train. Afust car\'ed black Jaqurr, ran' I WOULD YOU ~· O:>. 3~ per valid time, experienced Real Es--have good personality, be use, paid $375 -fast sale BELIEVE ·~;~ . . ~:;~'fl/~~~ Pl•••• Call For Appointment Bob McCollom (714) 536-9371 9 AM-4 PM, Mon-Fri SECURITY PACIFIC BANK Equal Oppor. Employer MMe or Female Sec'y/R.E. Mktng to $700 ·'. Sec'y/Crim. law lo $GOO Sec'y/sharp 10 S600 , Sec'y/alrporf .to S5SO ' Sec'y/plte bkkpng $550 Sec'y/lite sh to S5Zi : Involcing clerk $<130 • Accounting clerk to $500 Girl F'rida.y to $500 Auto Rating/Utl(.!ernT $500 ... Oictaph. Sec'y $400 File Clerk $32,; P/time Typist S2.30 hr. · Prod. Control Clrk to $433 • Free &: Fee Positions . 488 E. 17th (at Irvine) CM -.i,, ~ "4!-lA!.L.. : · JANITORIAL maintenance : · man dally for 2 hrs aflcr -4 ; pm . .Age, o_\!t>:r 18. MS..-2057. . " " . . ; ; :· ' ' LOOKING FOR APRESTIGE POSITION? Unlimited Eaming Potential! Earn \Vhile 'You Learn. No Exper. Necessary. : You will i.. taught tho : most advanced busi· ne11 technique& throu9h o u r for m•I ·:( training program. " : No fancy r•1ume~w1 hlru peopla , • • not paper. Added Incen1ivf'S: Preatige Automobile Bonus Program signature, Bnfli proof of ·tale Salesmen. Better than interested in a tututt, dress I -Ii"'" J $12.5, Call 642-6468 after 4 FREE ORGAN LESSONS regtstration iJ av a l I. average commission, com-\\~II. salesminded. Benefits : ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:· ;V~~l,£pm~~"~"~'k~d:•:>'~o:•;":''"':·m:e· i a~ long as )1>U like! No reg. 83&-'TJ.45. 666 E. 17th St., pany paid major medicaJ. Demo.. group ins.. high "·eekt'nds. l~tration. No obllgntlon, Just _ \ A COIWl:Nt[NT SttOPl'INC ANO Suite 217 S.A. Tremendous oppty. for man-commissions. Unlimited in-Com!! Mondays 7:l0 pm. Anti loo BEAUTIFUL REINDEER -<7 SEWING GUJOf roR THE , ('".A.LON THC CO. 'i;l:f1' e PLASTICS e Injection molding operatotJ · or trainees. Graveyard. Mwt be real nnt and de- pendable. Female pn-lerred. lttust be able lo \\'ork: Sat. or Sun. Apply 8:30-11:30 AM Costa Mesa, Cali!. 850 West 18th St. * Orange Coast Plastics * agement. We have 10me-come. Apply in ~n. __ q_ue_• ______ 1 llIDE direct trom Lapp-COAST MUSIC thing dllfi!rent. OLDSJ\.fOBJLE, 2850 Harbor LARGE ROUND OAK land. \Vould m:tke a 1>4:?-28!it :A.~ -----1!!!!· Drop in and talk it over. Blvd., Costa ~ft;~. TABLE Dolphin carvinJi, bl'atiful are.Ii. rug or hang it TOP PRICES PA ID 1-'0R ~ SALES -·Aurnet \\1>men, dbl pedHtal. origiMI finish. on the \Vall. For the f'cology Steinways & l lammund.o:: Rear E1tet• CerHr Nf!\v or experimeflf, lotn the Company that's gt'()'\Ving, U you do oot haw a license, check on our $49 Real E.tate L ic•n1i"1 Course Beelim! fashions need 4 $,lj(l, lt1isc. • 830-6499 minded. Reindeer are PE~'NY 0\VSLEY CO .. "'Omen, earn S4 lo $8 hr. l 'A7"p-p'°'li_o_n-co-5----,.I02-. domt>sliroted $50. 644-4687. 892.-3314 For intervie"' 968-6869 F.V. i----------* MINK * BABY Grand Piano, Chase' Sew or 962-6180 F.V. btv•n 10-12 MAYTAG repairman has Autumn Haze Tant•h mink Bros .. frulhvoorl finish. or 4-6 pm. washers $35. lo $100. Can short jacket. \\''hill" niink $G50, * 5$-7296 SALES c I e r k -ma I u re deli\'er wll yr. guarn. rape. Both xlnt. $300. f'a. 1 J\ll\1BAU.. B.'lhy Gr u n •I , women-exp. dresses and 839-l77S. ~anch mink stole, needs Jin· Loui:1 XV 11tylf', \1·al11u1 !11port& wear. Steady part REFRIGERATOR le Stov_c -ing S250. 675-6774. Perfect con<!. 536-877:1. time. 894-6232. look like new .$50 ea. 1130 p I For •n •d in Woman's World c.11 M•rv Both 642·5671, ext 330 And Crochet Smart Traveler Full saJes b'aining program PEST Control trainee to do -no cost. Management op. route work. sales, n1ust take portunlti et. Ask for Mn. s;;tate exam, have gOod ap< Jones ·rcrr information at pellJ'ance, have r i n i 1 h e d M2-5581. • m<uta,.,,. s>JO. Startlnr "'' Tarbell Realtors tno. + bonus, comm's., pro.1 ~~~--~---­ fit Shari"&"._ en>up health. Real Estate Sales \Vestminster Blvd., Westm. 00 owners . SALES-P/tlme. Neat young New hydro-bru&h ~omatu .. map ~ 2 eves & Sat OVER 200 washers, dryers, ally sweepa pool. 'only $99 TV, Radio, HIFI, SftrM 1972 ZENITJJ 136 RCA am. S2.23 Hr. 534-3081. refrigerators from $39.95. Installed, 1 yr guaranlC<'. Secr•tary 545-078,). For free demonstration call Tt•lcvision1 at cloi;:e our Lite ish, good typing R•nt Wa1her1/Dry•r1 892-0962. prices. Some '73's 00\V in . ~===~==-~•I .-;tock. L(l\vesl pri<.'f'S of llK' DictaphOne, local _. $2. Wk. Full maint. ~t EM B ERS H I p I N year. Priced ht-low tht' di&· Call Lorraine * 639-U02 * LEADmG N E W p 0 R T ======-,..,,.--,,I counters:. Wilh J yr picturf' \YESTCLIFF REFRIGERATOR, 1? cu. rt. BEACH P RIVATE SOCIAL 1ube, 1 yr partis & 1 yr Personnel Agency Auto defrost, very clean, 5 CLUB FOR SALE AT 50% service. Antrnna.-: at cost ir Ca11 for appt only. Ban:len's Real Estalt' Sa I es m <' n: Exlenninating Co. 696-A · Village Read Estate offers 2043 '''estcliff Dr., NB Yrs. nld. 893-9060.• SAVING. P .O. BOX 296, ncaJed. ·~v .. ..., ,.-,·tabl• Randolph A\'e.. C . 1\t. complete lp.ining program 6-15-mO COSTA MESA. "' "'J ... ~'i70. fn listing &: selling homes:. Furniture 110 ,....,~~-~---~ n1odrl in stock a11d on PUB. RELATIONS SECRETARY Long .term position. II )'OU enjoy the outdoors you'll love this asaignrnent Lots call Bill Hau or Phil l'ttcNamee, 531-5800 or 962-4471. R. E. SALES -Exp'd. only. \Ve oller Door tfmt', fUll time secretary and good advertising. LEADERSHIP R.E.,!42"4466. NEED Secretary A Private party must sell 3 display. 11urry for full for one girl office. A«Urate OFF-white 6' 9-drawer Electric / typewriters, cost sell'ction, ABC Color TV, typiflt. 60 \\'pm. &: sh. ·ror dresser & mirror. White over . $500 each, will take Ornngf' County'is largt>st period June 1-July 31. round Formica tbl w!lt'al, 4 $2:i0 each. 2 Calculators cost Zenith-RCA Defllf'r, 9021 Newport Center. 644-1801. chairs. Dark COl'rlt'r cup-over $600 each. will take Allanta. Jluntington Beach, \ ' SILK Screen: firm settmrup board w/gla.ss Qoora.. ~ but-$275 each. 842-5945 before 2. 96.~3.r.?9. ne,V Jine. Need Jlienilif tel. &43-t.125 wec1., Thura. l't°'m"v"'r"'N;;'G"'SA;;;L-;:E;;r"'r"um'°'lt:::,::..,:1, f;LA""'T"c". -m.,.od=•"'f'-;RC""A;-,::~"'"'"•"'"1-1'--J-.-! • .... . 1 l Wkends. 501 Tustin Ave. 1. . .__,ll~) man to ass1 ... 1n equ pmen NB drapes, 1rK'ns, fa b r 1 ca, color 'TV $145. 2 o o ,,.. selec:f.ion, starting &: opera-· . ell.shes, oil pa Int 'g !II • Broe.dway,'Cogta Mesa. 9209 ti£!1 line. 1'1ust have :ttrol,ll ~).NG ~Slltsta_nt, care for hide-a-bed $35, -pans, odds hncl<ground in all phases of-senu .. ~valid l_ady, musl be & elld!, 2927 Paper Ln. silk. _sc.r~ing &:_ paiol ~xper1enced, lite housckct'p-548-9409. [ ;,~n::1"bl1"-'°~-"~~·"-.. -t:_!==:11 n1ECEPTIONISr l[i 10-11 12'h-22~- APPLY JN PERSON • 9T01PMONLY s.r.s. TF..MPORARY SERVICE 14J> SO. CRAi'JD- Sa.nta AM -547-1736 PROGRA~t~tER, Se n i or $1200-$1450 mo. Write ap. plication programs f o r typesetting 4: graphic ~·ork !ti crcalivl' profit making environmrnt. Utilize COM devices, photo . typesetters, 360/30 DOS &: Datacratt computers. Must be exp in BAL or other Joy,• level languages. College grad. 3 yrs min exp. Send resume. \Vrite, Cla!!!l'ified Ad l'\o, 382. Daily Pilot, P. O. Box 1560. Costa Atesa. Calif. !lj626. PROOF OPERATOR -UNITED- CALIFORNIA BANK -Super •. job tor a perky gal lhRt enjoys lots of variety. Xln't co. needs your sparkle &-enthusiruim. Must be ac- curate typist~ 9T0l PM ONLY S.I.S. TEMPORARY SERVICE · 1420 SO. GRANO ..,/ Santa Ana 547-5736 matt'hing. Viny1 exp. Oe--!OJ!'. Sillidijr& rellef-\\'Olic UNTIL the end of ~-montfi • . Frie to You '·,,·cd 9~1623 $225. per hr. 673-3547. ·11 h . lty I -• 1:r-• we wl c emita c ean, 3-L" 2 Tl c.7 00 SINGLE .needle & ovcrlock ~ Units -book shelves and oil Ir adjust any typeWrlftr inw, mes, ~ ~ - l'lflrli. F.xper. only. Top pay. matching desk11 i;ultable for or calculator for $19.9:5 • .Elec· 6-l&--OJO,t teenagers must dlspoae "of trica $24.ri." Call 968-1797. SERVICE StatiO. "· N~-' 2 imn1ediately, 1212 So. Ro1u1 MODEL H ll " ~u SI. 'Santa Ana, 542-3120. omes cance a.,~n part time Eve & Wknd ?.fen. forces decorator to samf. A1UST giyc away due to O\\'ncrs ill health Tawny col· or dog-some retreiver/5 yrs old-shots-lie. 646-5780. " --- Neat. Apply in person SOFA 8' and love seat -crpts &: drapery fabrics. Chevron Station, 604 .so. never used. Bolh $140. Se\\-'-SO'M disc. Jason, 492-2247. FREE sn1/ blk feml TtilTit'r. Look }'Otll' bell! C?Vf'f1' \n Coast Hwy., Lag B91· !,'.!~ ~1,0ch SZ>. Pri. Party • CH ARTER me-mbership lfou~f' trained. Vt Ty • nP~'f!st crochel .cpara),t'i1! RECEPTIONIST _ $e('.retary :100"''" T lovnblr. To good home l'lnly. INSTANT • CR o C Jt ET Sml archlteclural office. SF.RVICE Station atteodanls, SAC ~egant Louis XIV Nbeewport &ho enn~~" <;1,!!h, 838-6&12. poncho ·ind ~kiri are marl maJe or fema1e full or part · sl oUer. ys ~16, ' , Varit'd duties. R.~1. Thomas. time. Apply in . per&0n. 200 AmKlire $850. 17th Century eves 67:r5960. LAllllAOOR Re Ire iv l' r , f __ -11f ..,_,,... 1lf 4\T..... slimmilli; in a notterirw AIA &:: As90C. 645-7474. \V. Coast Hwy, NB. oil $00!. Tables, chairs. $10•f..;;0:;;R;;-<Sal;:;::o-cchfi;;;:"c'0'"-;1-,1-:,c:m:-,::-. I AKC, reg is. qu11.Hty puppies. "'f design ot eraclualed sht:llfl. nii:ECEPl'F:i'E'.PiiiiCoiiiNiiJST;ii"'i&<',;;anou:i<· ""'' 1-~~~~~~~--up. fi42...6889. Bedroom sel-eouch-baby Call 5:ii~Zl9 aft 3 pm. lln\'l' Use larg,. OOok, lmlHlna SE\VING •1ach•'ne o~rators •hole 11·ors1ed. Pal. 1109·. --,, .. duties. Evening !hift 4 to 1 " .,.. • ~1ATCHING contour w h I bed & chest-2 chrs-bes:t of. ~="'==,,.,,--,-.,..-,I Everyhlin" )'Ou Ol'('d -.,.,..,. """ Ell'.""'r & trainees Good op-:;::-• l1b1 Misi;e&' 8-16. 12:30 Sal & Sun. Thl' J.lun-· .-· rolas, naug., sh.Jrdy, good fer. 963-1048. OBEDIENCE Clan lo start 11llrnminti:, skimming, lo~'-~t:Vfl'\'TV·Flvt~ CENT8 tington 842-7788. ~;K~~bFn':~f ~~.~ ~~~ conct. $50 ta. 5'18-8232 11.ft 6. EXTENSION laddcn _ \Ve<! ~lay 24. in N.B. Jrvinl' plf'ul dress, 1unic, pantx !or each pnllcrn _ add 25 S N'r Herculon Sofa & ,,.ood,n, 12., -·. -·. 1212 So. area, Open lo all dof.cB 5 plu.~ ('8S)'-CT'OC'hel l'llmwl lo RE 'DE l Jndustrial Comple:'f. 540-3684 .ru .,, tHMa Cf'nls for tach po,lttm for ' Love9ea.t, Sp. 0Rk tablts-Ros!ll St., Santa Ann , _m_o~"-&_o_td_"~>t __ .. ~~~-• toss OVl'I' all. Air Mnll and Special JIMtll· APT. MANAGER SHA'.\1POO GmL LTKE NE\V! 645-1701 542-3120. AKC Samoyed Pup11. G \\'k'K, Prinled Pattern 9209: NEW Ina; otherwl11e lhird-cl&M for new 20 units adult, no Part timt', &ta-7788 \\'ANTED: OLD TREADLE CANDLES. Give ill'r flowers Show qualily SlOO Ir up. Pvt. .M!AAt•s' Sizes 1,0. U. 14,216, dellvcry "''Ill lllkCl' thttt' pet, complex, Costa 1'1e1a. John Gariepy & Co. SE\VING l\tACHINE. CALL in·,.. CRndlt', Flower Fan· Pty /\vall fi/13 G'F,,..4;,1 .1. 18, Nt:w llnl S!ze11 1 %. ~·eeks nr rnort. Srnrl to Apt. + small "Jar" + Hair 1'1e.nagemenl • o'"8219 • v11~.·N, S, 7 w"· "l<l, 1 11~~. Hi"", lll'r~. ~H~. 22!~. AllN-Brook11, lilf! DAILY • ., OJV' tasy. $7.~ radi 20 9 2 "' '" "" ., 1•u :Ast: ~TA'rE l>Rt~s.-4 bonu~. Call 548-0137 noon-4 1!0DERN 8• SOFA ~'allnce, CM 548-7-011. fen1nlr, J malt'. F'rCf" IQ PILOT 105, Needlten.tt '" TELLER " I 0•7 """" SIZT.. ~pt .. Box 163. Old Chel11ea pm. on..,. • with ottoman, l{()Od .cond. VA LET chair $6, record g'()()( h<1me!I . .,.., -.lO')',. St~Vt:STY·•1 Vt: CENTS I "'2..3200 Slatlon. Nt.w York, N.Y. RESTAURANT-male ov:e r 'Po11ition, availabl~ o: per-$40. ~ player $12. 1tudlo 1-ouch tll, * * ·2 Euny, ,lova.blr, mule. for f'a<'h patt.ern--add 2'S lOOU~ lrint N••nt', Adctnu, 18, Gt'n·1 du!1e8. Apply 8f1er ~nabll"· \\·ell g1'9C..,mf<t'" .,n• CO:>.IPLETE he!tiroom Met vacuum S9, 962-071l9 ~ Pet!liRn kihf'nit N'n1~ lor en ch pia•ttrn lnr 7.lp, J!i11tna N'ninl'wr. 2pm, Jedro'1, JOO) Bristol, div idual 1v/pleai:nng pi'r· $175. Refrigerator $So, KENMORE gas dryer. <.'OP. 962-21118 /\tr M11ll and Special 1-landl· Nl-~F.DLECRAJ"T '72! ~ Start V04Jr New C•reer -: ~Wl11\. Dlgnjey, Prustlge . & Unllmittd Compon- C.:\1. sonnJity '"ho enjo)-'6 dealing 66-:;;>43. f)('rlone t7:i, Toro rotnry G~R:>.1AN ShcJ)h<'rd mo.le, !l lnl:': (11~rwist• third<ln11s 1<'hl'l, knll, .-11·. f'rtt dltTC- "'/lhe public. TIP'llf'r f'Xper. GAi\IE SET v.·/4 naugahytlc la"•n mo\\·er $43. 962--0709. m4nlhs old. tlcl1vtry will takr UU'N' llrin.~. 50 ("rnt11. l ... ~·d. XJ~:Jiki.ng P1'~a dlair•,...2 leavu, .SIOO....GoodjiS'Fm!:Ri!. iiro:X1;;::,,.....;;;;;;;r:li!G<)~~::;;;;H;~,o=""°e.:.· ,!.&r.~:..4021~~-~-I Y.l!l''ks or 'T'IO!f· ~nd .10 .. NE.'\Y! ~•,..l•nt ftla~ & fr!nRe r .T ~ cond. 67l-4879. aacrlflce. S225. 9' w rn. h~e llURR,. -3 PrtRnnnt t'R!Jll. ""'Mi&'t'ft!\"1mirntr:"'the"'D/l lf.Y mt,;rc-r&ncyltMtr,palfttns. Apply ln Pcnon o: fr: l"fEDROO.,I. li"~ng room 11t'W SM. 83.'J.-0108. A.lllO 4 kitten!! C \\'H!kJll old. Pll.Q'f; 4•12, Pallt 1'n Oi:'pt.. SI. 6 ~1onarch Bay Plaza -., ,8o)·taguna1""'""' .... 1·.,_,r~=···~~ - feut enj " sa.tlon. Call Nowl Mr. Pet•r1on (714 ) 133-Hn LADIES -learn &: teach Pf"I> fus1ona1 rnake--up .. Vlviane ' Woodard Cosmetics, -·· 96.'-2905. LVN·R.ELIABLE }"or Steady Position •Call ~~I * 'I=""'=-"""""""""';-;, ' MAINTENANCE MAN , tot larye •~enl com· ' plo:. 1i1ust be thoroughb' ex· periencdl fn all pbues of malntmance. SSlO mo kl otart. 546-51125. Any·dl.y 11 U>o SESf DAY to run ll1I ld! Don• 1 a.lay. ·"" todoY "~ 496-1273 or 499-1361 • Equal Oppor. Employt:r PROOF OPERATOR E>eptrienc.d . -UNITED- CALIFORNIA BANK 309 Main St .. llurU. \kb. 53'-all Equal Oppor. Employrr ' • \\' h I t e Eltphanll" ow.r- runntng your house? Tum thtm into "CASH'' -aell Ah<m R Daily P 11 -, Oust ~ - Santa Ari• Now tntervlf'\•ln; for DAY HOSTESS & BUSBOY Apply In Pertoti Before 11 or aftf.r 3 2313 No. ·Broadway Equal Oppor, Eoipleyer llnrvey. D ... 64.!;.4."''92 212 \\IP'~t 18th SI., Nf'w r:uy Art Of Ha~ er.. GLENDALE fum. Le.mp!i, tablea. ilei;:ki. CARPET FOR SALE · ''orlc, N.Y. lOOU. Prtnl chet -over X des1lM to FEDERAL SAVINGS dishes. 644-4248. by Carpet l.a).·tr. Call Zit'. !4rtt; and s1·,·1.1: nillin". SJ. SOO Newport Cenftt Or. f1NEST lrg rnd eonference • 540-2086 • I J[L l NU~fnt;n. 11111111nt Crec!hd Boot - Nl'\vport Beach ' or din table, Brown Jon/an II'• in to be thin. , . . hl• .and 5'ippliN r. ~t:F. MORf.: S p r I n It ltarn by pictutn! Patterns. F,.qual Oppor. Employer table & chra. 673-013!'1 The Diet Work.shop \Vay . . Fa.<1h inn!ll tilld choov 011(' $1. . G•ra-Sa1e 112 For lnfonn1'llion 531-tilO?l pnHf'rn l1~r frum ™'"' Compl~t11 lll11W1l tau Boc1t TIME FOR .,.. Cats 152 S.prlng.S.un1mPr Ca111lo1t. All -moN" th:m 100 «1111. -$1. , QUILT, handmade, Limagrs . 0 1 r.n-1 ... -kUi Al h -i\tOVING ~ndOn SAie: J .111no, Plates. pr, tall tanips. un· )IZ<'I! n y ;JV\c, """"P .. t a11 -~ furn., anhqwi lramn, ChlM port rug '.\1'M' 6"'.Z..Bt.ffl 6 \Vk oltl 11\311" IX~A/\"'T !'F.\\'lf\'G ROOI< SL QUICK CASH painttrt blank China, )c\ln, • · '· • · Sral PnlnL Sll. """' IOflt'ly, ,l·rar !Qmorrow. '" Jilly Rut' l'ook!I -riO crystal, collte,liblc1, rv; SLIM.GYM $25. 1 yr. old· ren111le SI. rf'nt,, tools, \\1t1har. drytr, miS('. 531·7294 Seat Point $15. INSTANT J.' AS JI IQ N Uoor.r. of U P 1l1t1 AJ1bu.. THROUGH A Fri It. Sal, Aprll 21, 2Z until 842<M80/642-3643 BOOK -• lfundn!ds of ;A)crnt11. ?? 27llS Temple llllls Dr., * NE.WPORT Iknrh Tvn· PlJr·1~. h"d ."'•amc•• klltto1 f<\st1io11 fact.,. St. Qullf ftoolr I -16 pt1U:nw. • ;>" nl& Club Membership, V>9J r. :-. ""' 00 cents. DAILY PILOT t.aguna BC!ach. Phont835-UOO 4ht1NlM:1megenaavall, $~. ''Whlle Eie11hAnts" Over· Ma!Wum q.nt Boot! - CAP.ACE -Sale. Eve1. nnly 673--5~1. ninnlnt your house? Turn 50 tfn!~. ~fecjl&nic moving. V\V F.;n. EL~JC Extrcytlr. l ~r· ;\fOTitF:lt'S Dny Spt>elal, IJ-.em in1cf-••CASJt" -stll Quilt• fOf' Today·-fht .. From .. 0-.rlstmu Ncclrtlet" WANT AD gines-puts. Call 962-t9ll, delux. Xlnt cand.' S2.JO Slamrsc kiUcrui;, Stal Po\nl. the'lt thru ~Uy P 'llot -15 bfautdUI palttm&. ~ to outgrow.'JI Levi.I -you can Put a liltle 'b)t'" In your (Orig, $!00). &73-811~. ;Qi-2761 Ouslflf'd. 142-0071. ct"nlJ. turn "tnuh IO .... •h" In a • 8 Ltvls -1ell ttmt ba~tll for lla,·e 10mtthl"" ):"OU "'llnl 1~ Onn't <rit·l' up lhe. ~hip' DAILY J'ILOT ci:.me<1 •d _ 642-5&7 ~-'.:buck•:;.. Call Oaalll<d .. ui 0u111i;d w do 11 "L"r··j, ln dasaUJ"1, Sblp1•••••••eeeee,eeeeee4 -call ~ l~ ---_------_.... M2-56TS. l'\'tll -caJt O\V 6.J7....jfii8 I .!"'~Sho~<'~R•~•~ul~tl~! ~6~1Z-Sm .~_!.J!!!lll!!!lll!!!lll!!!lll!!!lll!!!lll!!!lll!!!!!!!lll!!!!!_!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!imf ' - -- DAILY PILOT lutsda:y, M112,1972 • -""='-I~ I ,__ lil I · -.... 1§1 I -·-l§J I _,,,.. l§J I uo..... l§l I ~ .. ow .. • 1§1 1 .__-_""_ .. __ §: I _ .... llO.t1/MorlM Equip. . to4 Cycles, Bikes, Trucks M2 Autos, lmp1 ..... HIL1MAN 970 A-. lmportod PORSCHE 970 Au*, UMd VOLKSWAGEN CADILLAC 9'0A-. UMd JEEPS 990 Aulol, Und PLYM( -I -.~5coot.-~"~----~t1S-"IO~-%-TO_N_M--&'Y~d-u~--~~ NEW 1972 65 hp. Johnlon o.b. "5 HP new "Cat" mini Pantl truck, MW rubbfr. S1W In packi111 case. $1l00. blkHJ.Std only J hoW', $125. xlnt O>nd. Balance of ~.(QI 642--8323. Call 642-6468 aller 5pm ml wamy, Best otter. 1962 Cornmtr (RUlman) Van equipped wHti o \' e r h e ad stetl rack, interior llned with shelves eool10nUcal to run. Priced for q u I c k sale-1tl2 So. Rmls St., Santa Ana. 542--3120. PORSOIE 9llT. l.97U. SC!pia 1964 VW bus. Need• e lne S Ma M t '56 Stat. Wgn. Chev eng. '67 Plymouth ru.. Ill. '- brown cpo, 5 IP•• d, . •otk. Hu new tU.., ee rCU$ 0 0fS Bendix brakes-tow oor· dr., P.S., P.B., Al< ..,. Bo.ts, Power 'DI weekdays, anytime 642-ll.M weekend!. A""u~t"°o°"L;-e-e-171n_g __ _,ff4= AM-FM, chrome wheels. 1 tery & pancllng, Body l<ljld. Citizens radio, 644-4197 dltloning, Like new. Prlv. owner 22 t)X> miles $8450 Re t t .,~ i· CLEAN party. $UOO. 545-0041 alt1 6 llEAui~;c)' T/S Chrlt. Ex· tru r0:-· WIU &CCf'pt ~ T. P. u . or large camper Tlg a& full or down payment. 962-4283. 1'10'l'ORCYCLE trailer. 4 rails. ?tl•ke ot!er. And 6.s«. 1 lfarley Davidson, ma k e otter. 712 Victoria, Costa llfesa 54S-&300. ' . . ,..n uoe-up. ~ um. ' 7 CADILLACS '56 , Stat. Wgn. °"' eog. p.m. TheotJore Robin.! Lt~lng. Call 549-4348 after 4 pm. · 6 s e n d 1 x b r a k e s -I o \\' .!'.:::::'..-..,.,..,,,--,,,,...,..,,,.. ::1'~:~ Don Cr e v,J e.r ~ '66 VW STA WGN l'JU _____ .. "41~.6--. bar-Citizens radio. 644-4917. '67 Plymouth Fury IIr. 4-dr., $950 I~ ,,,,.,.,. P.S., P.B., Air Conditioplng., Ponche '67 "9U" CLEAN. GOOD CONOm~N 2100 Harbor Bt,d., C.M. LINCOLN Ulm new. Pri,, party. $1100. JAGUAR Mint cond. 2 new Pr' Ply c.. -~ .,A., "A"" 545-0041 aft 6 p.m. "· . uw 962-3822 , -CO L "' • d Ures. Bah. yellow ;;;;;,-,=:'::--';C-.--'=c;-i=-:o=-"'~',-,=-,-,. NTINENTA U'J .,. r C 20' BERTRAM Bahia Mar, 1970. Xlnt cond. Fully equip- ped. n4: 673-1763. 1970 HONDA SL 175, dirt & s!reet. Only 2300 milt'll, a.1c1:t.11lc orange. BeautUu/ S·IOO Call 646-2486 9 to 5, atlt'r 5 646-8180 Try our lease expert. tor Savlnp • SatWaetlon • SU· vice-. WE LEASE ALL POPl.n.AR 1972 MAKES AT COMPETJ. TIVE RATES. 1963 JAGUAR XKE roadster, 4 spd, chrQme "ire whls, luggage rack, $1295, 496-1303. J(onl shoCks. AM/Fa.t 19'n Square Back. Auto; '62 CAD f'1eetwood, All bani top. Black v:/whl!e PONTIA $2,995 Pri/pty 673-6806 AM-F!\"1 ; Mqs: Pirclle1; . po1,1T, Ideal to cherry for vinyl top. White leather -----~---:- ,70 Porsche Sll-T AM/fl>f , luggage rack; 673-4774 aft 6 limousine. $400. Pr!, Party upholstery . .Full l)O\\ler. Ex-'67 Pontiac T·tmp11t CAPTAINS &lg 12' inboard, spiffy bay boat. Top cond. 6~1441. 1959 J1gu1r auto, 3.4/$450 642-1311 Pm ~;.,sg -1 -net -61' ·~ 2 Door Jlardtop. V8, au~ Alloys, 4-spd, Immac. Pri. • "-" Lv • ,.,.,,, .,._,J 10 Spd. Raleigh Superoou~I". i\1int condition. Asking $110. Priv Ply 675-4514 . Call Malcolm Reid for further detafb. THEODORE ROBINS FORD 1965 JAGUAR. Lilce new. %i,OOO mi Every pouible extra. $2.600. M4-0028 Ply. "4!>0022. '59 VW BUS, 2 oew t...,, CAMARO MERCURY maUc "'"'" power •!""' new paint. SA C R I Fl c E Ing, only .S.000 original 26' STEELCRAFT, gd family & fi&hlng boat Slip ava il. $1250, 546-9390, ?o Porsche 911T "~"" <N · 1_.,,,...,...,.,,...,,.,.....~~....,.,.,.,I ---------miles. P.tu.st see to appre-~. _ ot run n 1 n & ) • '71 CA!.IARO, Z-828. 8,cn> '61 P.1onterey. Runs. Good S=, ~~v!Jie ~~ 494-4572, miles, sllv'r le black, $3400. tires. $100 or best offer ciate, Like ne\v UHR99!· 28' Tolly Loaded 8"<1l' Extra sharp. Sleeps 5. $5150. firm. 673-8700 Boats, S..11 HODAKA 90 engine, bored out to 100. Good condition. $85. 847-3291, aft 3 pm. SUZUKI 1968 ,Savage 250. $250. Days 675--1700, eves 642-G!O. Motor Homes 940 2000 H.-Blvd. Costa Mesa 642-<mO Auto• Wanted 961 WE PAY, TOP CASH lor -can A --. jllll can aa f<I frte ..-ttmatee. GROTH CHEVROLET '68 Jaguar Roadster, lo miles, new radials, Xlnt cond., body &: eng, $3000 645-22111. MAZDA 833-3155 '65 V\V -Recent enr o(baul or oUer. ~-* 557-3032 * ' $675 or best oHer. '61 Roadster-New 1 7 5 0 cc 548--6200 eng-ll'Bns-brak~tc. $1700. Call &l~ aft S-wkend1. CHEVROLET MUSTANG ~146. '66 VW Bus. Excel Qmd. '69 CAPRICE '67 Mustang Fastoock 390 Crpt, Cabmets, paneled, Cobra Jet eng, HoUy carb. i\Jake offer-846-l«M aft 3. 4 door hard top. Automatic A t P/S-P/B Lo i '66 Porsche 911 Elec. Sun transmission, power steer-u 0• • \V m ' Roof. $2995. Call $'69 V\V Bug. Xlnt cond. Ing, power brakefi, air eon-~""2coaftnd.7 ~ake o:;:. ·e !J68.g92 e unrool. AM/FM $1350. dllioning, vinyl roof. Ex-· ,..........., :<111 or any e • 540-TIS9 • ceptional 1 owner clean car.1 "'w"',,."k_•nct.,...s • ....,,,..__,,--.-0 TOYOTA '61 Ghia, Needs paint&: seat No. 1353, '65 Mustang Htr,.radio, auto, 445 E. Coast Hwy. NEWPORT BEACH 673·0900 Ext. 53-M DENTIJRE cat 15'x2'' \V/furl1ng gtb, boomfang & trailer, u~ed 5 llmes, $800. aft 6 & wknds .-675-()SM, 197lKITE \V/traller, like ne\v, $725. 64M394 Put a little "'loot' in your 1.3631 Harbor, Carden Grove Levil. sell those bauble:ii for l Blk, So. ot G.G. Frwy. ' Aak: for SU. Manqer Unt BescbBlvd. Huntincton Rueb ln-6081 IQ JI.ml --------- \VE buy all makes of clean used sports can. paid for or not. Ple&R drive l.n tar free appraisal, covers. Good Mechanical. ~ good cond, Private Party. '72 TOYOTA s.1;x,. Eves. 830-58()1. $895. 675-7817. $2029 4 speed trans. Dix AM radio. '59 VW Bus e Xlnt cond ft ~ '65 MUST ANG 289, auto, Heater, defrosters. tinted "$3~7~5=~-· 64_5-6_5~95_C_.M~. ~~-0 ~l;ry good cond. $750. glass. White wall tires. '66 VW Van, new paint, xlnt • s -="""'· ====-=-- Pop-out,..., wndows. Vinyl cond. $895. 5'!&-2543 betw"n '" ~O; OLDSMOBILE trim. Carpebl. Front disc 6 & 8 pm, ask for Fred. ...... P '68 GTO 81g engine, vinyl top, factory air, factory mag wheel s (\\•ith locks) 37,CKK> mlle1, Max·X. tire&. Beautiful cond. $1550 phone 826-1256 •• "bucks", Call CJauilied 636-2333 642-5678. TEST DR.,,IV-.:E.-- 36' Di('scl \Vood Cruising THE MIDAS MINI Ketcl>. Top Quality. $27,000. MOTOR HOME NEWPORT IMPORTS brakes. Reclilllng bucket ,66 BUG good cond. New "'\ • '66 OLDS F-85 Hol~ay Cpe, seats. KE 20-300785. b k ' . t 1u~,.... .,a.n auto trans. R&:H, llll', extra .pw.. lttoi4 W TOYOTA ra es, JUS rn:u, ,,,.,.,..,. 445 E. Coast Hwy. shtu'[I! $800. Pvt party. Days 49-1-9076, room l03. NE'\VPORT BEACH 673-8655, eves. 644-5585. •i!I V\V bug. Auto stick. 673--0900 Ext. 53-54 '63 Catalina, rum gd., ta~ deck, $32'5, bsl oHer. Pol\W se\1.· mach Singer $75 • 897~. Call 1213> 83>4684. Distributed by KITE No. 9041 never bttn Ken Craft Products """'· McK;bbln aaU $650. CREVIER MOTOR$ lS66 Harbor, c .a.f. 64&-9303 70 TOYOTA STATION WAGON 40,(0) miles. New tires. $1,295. 673-3302 alt 6 pm. VOLVO 1960 Olds '67 IMPALA SS •Dr. Rew Good VB. automatic, po\Ver steer-Oean. $250. 557-9303 ing &: brakeSr factory air, The fastest draw in the \Vest vinyl f.oot (TRA701). $1295. • • • a Daily Pilot Classified Tommy Ayres Chevrolet, 946 1.,..Ad_,·-=-.....,~~---= S. Coast Hwy., Laguna Autos, Und 990 '67 Le P.fans, 2 ot, AIC. auto, gd tlres. Good cond.. SlflXl. 645--3400 Jell. ' * 645-4730 * 208 W. 1st Sf., Santa Ana 3100 W. Coast Hwy., Newport BeaCb 642-9405 CAL 2Q excellent cond, hull 835-3171 "'"nt pa;nt. 2 "'' ""'· *Marvin Pearce* slip avail. $2800. 644--4088. WE· PAY TOP OOU.All 13' CA\: catamaran. New Motor Homes FOR TOP USED CARS trailer. $500. U YoUr car ls extra dean. Call 968-l107 , 1er ua first. · l·~~=:""'ii"';""~~·~co°'naOi·-'~=t=Sflles~9o-Rifiiials • -• · ·. w.:..,.,,.-BUieK -· · /$jiiJ~-1213) 798-92<1 558 · 3222 2:Y. E. 17th St. -After 6PM • Cotta l\.fesa 548-7765 26' Luders-16 racing filoop. F.xcd oond. $2.900. Includes free slip. 4~2'130. 1411 S, Village \Vay, S.A. IMPORTS WANTED RECREATIONAL Vehicles Orange Counttei' lor rent from $75 to $190 .per TOP i BUYER week, plus 7c J>f'r mile. BILL MAXEY TOYOTA Sleeps 4 lo 8. Offer expi~ 18881 Beach Blvd. '69 MGB GT Real Sharp. British racing New car trade In. 4 speed, grttn. 974AGA. radio, • heater. 748BZU. $2095 $1495 S.nt1 Ana Toyot1 --.t>tmrlfAoi& .. ~j;-,;.,~~=~~ VOLVO d&>PHONE ~2512 1966 Harbor, C.l\f. 646-9303 * * :5.5 MG TF 1500, good shape, needs some eng \\'Ork. $1300. 492-4900. '17 \V, \Varner, Santa Ana • ~1lt\"\\l\$ 16' Cat, Includes sails & trailer. Very fast, Cd. cond. $750, 546-2824. 8 ~lcter sloop modified for cruising, xlnt cond. Privt Prty $17,500. 642-5146. June 1, 1972. 546-0091, 299'J H. Beach. Ph. 847-8555 WILL Buy """' car paid for 1 ____ M_G_B __ _ Britsol, C.i\1. LOVELY mobile home in cool quit>t park % mi from Neu'J>Clr1 Beach. 12'x55', 1 BR, lrg kit -~ liv area. Beaut ldscpd, $ 4 , 9 0 O , 548-7366 or not. Call Ralph Gordon '67 MGB GT ~"-11lt\m Toyota A Jaguar Dealtr Authorized S&.le1 It Service 900 S. Coast H1ghway SO.II, Sllp1/C'xk1 910 \VANTED s.lip for 83' cruiser. Newport Harbor. 833-0272 days or eves * Slip Avail • Nr Lido * 673-6450 * SAIL BOAT SLIPS Newport Beach 548-2253 * RENT now! By \Veek or month 25' Sightseer '71, all xtras. Prvt. Prty. 642--5158. 30' GMC & Turd bus con- vected into motor home. A· 1. 5.16-0350. Tr•ll•r1, Trevel 673-0900 -445 E. Cout Hwy. Newport Beach. A-. lmportocl 970 ALFA ROMEO ------Alfi Romeo BOAT slips available, Choice slips in New Marina. (n4l25 ·-. _D_AL_TO_N_tra-,-e-1 _tr_all_e_r·. l 673-6606. fielf-eontained with EZ lift SLIP AVAILABLE in ex· Change for use of sailboat, up lo 40'. 557-9494. hitch, dual wheel, rooler, NO\V ON DISPLAY 11Ce to apprec. $12l0. Owner Sales Servtee 531.7294 Parll Body Shop e ARISTQllRATS COAST IMPORTS e NEWPoRTS 100).1200 W. Cout Hwy. 4 speed, Radio, Heater, Air conditiorling, wire \VheelJ:. only 27,000 miles. Extra nice, VZY744, $1799 Laguna Beach 540-3100 '68 TOYCTfA. 4 dr, Excel Cond. air/stick/shift/owner/ $1095. 6,,_ LIKE New '71 Corolla. 4 1pd, tape. dck, 18,(0) mi, $1499. 675-6854, m.-6360, Cb-~O~ '1t~J · * TRIUMPHS * o.._".tp: 71 CLOSEOUT TRIUMPH ~ , 1 SPID'IRUASLO\VAS$2399 GT-4 SAVE $500 445 E. Coast Hwy. NEWPORT BEACH 613-0900 Ext. 53-54 OPEL 1 FRITZ WARREN'S Sport Car Center ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGES!' 710 E. 1st, S.A. 547-m&t ~· SPMCI & ~I 911 20' CHRIS,. Craft lkt~boal, good oond. 185 hp inboard. Skis, too. $1,:nl OT' offers corulidcred, Call 644-8547 , e AUTO-MATES Newport Beach SG-Oa Allo, ... era1 """' 1395 a up AUDI OPEL GT 1910 Low fi'ORSHAM TRAILER SALES mileage, orange w/bleclc 1972 VOLVO l:"e•se Today •t Beach, 494-77441546-9967. Best Rates '58 Chev Biscayne. Xlnt $88.74 Per Mo. . rond. l lawnmower, 12' ~.f; . .A.ML.;M...Auto._--tr.w4.0 _.hoiit....$4""'-~!"!~r .. disc'OraKes:-36rru;:--· H.B. 963-3915. • For Leasing or buying '67 Impala, auto .. p/s, p/b, ·;o" n.ul•n.:I lactoric .~. Am-Fm. e WI" tM!w;t CLEAR! Dys 213: 437-3748, eves 557-2504. · VOLVO '6.1 O~vello. 2 dr, now •ng., 1966 Harbor, C.1.t 646-9.303 r/h, xlnt cond., must sell! $375. Otter. 54()-4013. Autos, Used 990 1 ====~--,-,..--.., _________ 1a-IEV '66 Caprice. 4 Dr secl. '70 FIREBIRD A/C. J>.T w;rulow. v;eyt 2 Dr HT lop. Sgl. ()1V11er. 548-6111. ., , bucket seats, l:;;c"'=:~=-,-..--=-- radio, ·beater, 3 spd (floor GI~ 'r.6 deluxe 9 pass. shift) trans:., pv.T, disc CapnC!'. Very good oond. brakefi, l'l!maining 50,000 $800. 673-0967. ntil• factory warranty. '71 VEGA GT _Pvt_.""Pt'°'y;-,::53W996=. ='"7',.,.--ISPORT CPE. 2 Door. 4 fipeed, AMERICAN Radio, Heat", mag wh .. 15, only 10,000 mil ... 9460LL, American Moton $2399 ,_.,.Gremlin1 ,.....Hornets ~ Jlill'M•t•dor1 ,.....J•vellns Jlill'Ambas1•dor1 ft ' al "•~~&i~0's:~~~· .. ~. so" Harbor American '0'"'~ Home of Convenient ,,, Payments 1969 Harbor Blvd. CD1t1 Mesa 646-0261 BUICK 445 E. Coruit Hwy_ NEWPORT BEACH 673-0900 Ext. 53-54 after 5 pm. 2709 w. 17th street interior. Best offer, Owner. CORYEITE '71 Triumph TM, am/Im, beauty rims, 13,cn> mi's. lmmac. Will sac. at $7700. 675-4619 eves. Santa Ana ln41 531-2595 '70 Audi 90 548-1239 aft" 6 pm. '63 Electr•. Rblt. tran•. 15' Aristocrat low lwr 4 speed, radlo, h'8ter, co. PEUGEOT VOLKSWAGEN T".....,P & tU.•. Al<. Good CO_R_V_E_l'_IE-'1-0.-350-Tur-~ FOR sale 16' ski barge, 85 hp Evinrude rnolor, like new New blue cover. Ac. ccssorles. CaU 673-1698. trailer w/extras. $950. owned car. (690CQQ). Super lransp. S275/offer. 4 7 2 0 air-pis, lthr inter, headers, Call 543-8890 aft 4· 30. saving. 4 doo'r sedan, * PEUGEOT * '63 VW Caper, lg wheels, James SI., Cl\1. fWliilold, am/!m p I \I s. • S $2299 ••-1"""'-1969 Buick Skylark P/S, $3600. 673-8261-""'" orvic1, P1rt1 949 ~.s. ~~c. .,.t, """J'S. As low u $2.m. (No. 55C5} J1ttd9 paint. $850, Pri. pty. P/B, Fae air, bucket fieats, CORVE'ITE '70 350 Turbo TtlnlpOrt.atlon J~ arj.Li~ -_FJU'I"";: WARREN:S...-847-162L New tires, $1!m, 54~2133.. air, pis AM{Fr..f, silve; ·LiiJ in ex~~1:~i=~-Pric,ed ft~-~ Sport Car Center l'.l,;Xl9;;70,ot-VW~I ~~'"""nc1°"1a1"""$2900"'ea,.m_pe.,....r. Runs~utB::11;:k-,-~-=~~er, mxriP! I ~iiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiii;;;;;; I Transmission ... o •ORANGE CO U NT Y ' ~ n n • oul or e 54s..zi93 • 11 A!r Conditioning Unit l s LARGEST best otter. 968-2123.· DODGE Campers, Sale/Rent 920 Radio O ,_ no E. I.st St., S.A. 517--0764 'lO Y'.11. Bur..whl.W/"'1 In-CADJLLA__ C -;J ·• __ .....,.,....""',.;:;;;~""""' -'70-Dodge Moliaco-station -~~~ ~~~~a:1;e~o~~~--12l2..S9~~~~santa Ail~ '" PORSCHE -~~5o.•::=.s,_Xlnt cond. -~~n,d~!~t ~~rnd~~~~he: trans., P.B., P.S, 5 )'l' guar '6.'; CORVETIE fuel in. 445 E. Coast Hwy. "'"o"VE' R-·2•5· '65 vw 9 pan bus, reblt 1500 ~ ~ Magnum eng., loadect .W7 nn po\\·er Ira.in, v:alk thn1, jcction, Complete, s 2 o o, NEWPORT BEACH eng. Xtru. $1095. U equip, Call Ralph Brown. fully cptd., sliding gloss Quadrajet man if o Id & ·673--0900 Ext. 53-SC Cle•n, Rtconditiontcl, 842-1681. YOUR ONL y 714: 833-8110; eves. 714: door, drp d\~rn patio, self carburetor, $2Q. Chevy bell & Gu•r•nteed. '69 VW-Perfect aerv record FACTORY 494-0167. cob nt.,. m(u21ch mo><, XI"! ho"5;ng. 542-1134 •ves. BMW PORSCHES $1'00. AUTHORIZED l o,68:;;;-,Dod,,..-,g-,°"~"°i -,-to-n-,-a-n,""P"".,,.,-arga1n. 3J 597-J2:Jt aft 6 -· -. ~ ..... · 675-5624 p.m, or wkerul•. Can he IMMEDIATE 911'1 • 912'1. 914'1 CADILLAC & carpet, 8 track Steroo seen during \\·<'<'k al 1T8i5 ll·.~·1 DELIVERY 1957 to 1971 * '67V\VSquareback , tape ideck, radio, heater, Beach Blvd., 11.B. Autos tor S-ite Sacrifice $899. RAH. DEALER A-1 condition $1995. Owner ----& 494-7995 Largest selection of Cadil-531-7294. '69 OIEVY pickup, l}.& ton, . 1971 VW lacs In 9range County.1·,69~~Po~la-ra--w-a_go_n--P-/S all can1pcr equ ip. PIS, Sales-Leasing. Look for our . ' • P/B. Air, like nc"' "'/9' General 950 lJke new, $1775. 6'4-094 full page ads every Wed P/8, air. Jmmac. Owner. camper, slcC'ps 4. E."crl • Friday for our fipecials. S2,DJ. 536-7693 alt 2 pm. Cond. 113&-0.1!3. '6S Toyota Corolla, R/H. SEE us ABOUT 1965 Bus l;oo 'ng; 0 '' Nabers Ca .. illac FORD $600. '57 Austin-Healey, ntw Overuas Delivery 1100 W. Coast Hwy. · .paneled, crpt'd, wide oVllis. ¥' 'G7 Ford ~ T. Auto, air, p/s, eng. le paint $600, 962-4701. C Newport Beach $1200, CaU 673-77ll, 2600 HARBOR Bl-, p/b, 8' CID comper. D B REVIER MOTORS 642-9405 COSTA MESA ' • '70 Ford LTO . 646-laJO. une uggies 956 2Cf \V. 11'>1 ~1 . !' nla An1 1966 VW. radio, chrome 540-9100 Open Sunday V-8, Auto Trans, Air Cand, T C SALE or Trade, v \V 835-3171 1969 Porsche 8-llE whcels. Blue. S695. CAD '70 Conv. New tires, Power Steering, Balancr of $22.l co:;i~c. ampe~t f.ibcrglau Dune Bue g y. Visit our nc1\·cho;-.,-m-0"°1 --Perf~~;,,:i, ~er. 1----968-04 __ 19____ 38.000 mi's. Xtra gharp, 5 yr. 50,cn> mile W&JT8Jlty Cycles, Bikes, 54>.16:i7. Concoune Sp•edste'r BEST OFFER. Sell the old stuU. Buy the $2795 S1re('t legal, 1.-lake offer & 19TI VW SUPER BEETLE. $4795. 675'.-6247. available C14.5BXQ) _s_coot __ •'-'----92~ Trucl:s 962 * 673-3756 * 962-6031 new stuff 305 Honda Scrambler, condition. $3.1'.(), xln't -VA-NS-·Pl-CK-UPS ROY CARVER, Inc. =~:;:;;;;====::;::=:;::;;:==1wa.rd S.Lee ' Call &l6--04i!1>' '49's to '66's Jfonda mlni-trail 50. 234 E. 1711! SJ. Amlrfcm Maeills n Costa Moaa 516-44« 547-5126 Run5 good. 84G-'>136 ON SPECIAL DATSUN 1234 So. Main St - '66 HONDA 305 $150./make ~errWl"trf'tf'T't!'Jl.m:"""-- , 548-,1122 FOR SALE: ·n J{ond& 750 Good condition $1000. * .,._,!. 1K.it" . 7 . .,.,, ,FCJR SALE. l;!1.! llltsuo UOO ew ~ an~cello.i ncl. Gets :m mik1 per gallon-and tt 2100 1-fariJor Ulvd., C.l\1. moves, too. $1500. Call 645-0466 &M-8581 for turtbtr--tno '64 ~ Ton Dodgt 6 cyl, g'OOd condition, SQX), * 837-9Sl7 * tormaUon. 1971 YAMAltA 360 Enduro, Super clean, $695. Call arter 3 pm. QJ-7278. '59 CEV. plumber truck, util hody, 6 cyl, 3 •pd.. $515 '67 :105 Honda. Scrambler !inn. 536--3912. 1972 New DAlsun plck""'P. Leaee cancelled. Forfeited ~ii wUI be tt'e'dlted to you _on lease or putt:hue. Pocai Leaslng 548-11!11 '68 D.ATSUN convtrt, new paint, good condition. Make OUer. 646-3692. Cood condition. $250. --;-;;;~-"-7,-.,.-"=",,--* 675--0lM * '•JG COOvy ;, ton P.lT. '68 Mini trail. Very good cond. $100/offet. Call John s.n-uos after 6 pm. '71 HONDA CB "8 • 6i'S-2862 * \'ery Clean. :clnt cond: * 548-006.1 * '67 Olev. % ton P.U. V-8, < 1,,...i, Xlht cone! 11.525 »71.19. 1970 DATSUN Ptck-\lp, chrome Whffl1, Ovtl'lize tiM.$1250.~ . RAT Santa Ana ~~!§!!if::::! ~~"'"'"-'~1.j.''Q-.roRO ,,,,_ Wac. ~ o~. 33,ooo" mi'1,. Dfl tires. A-1 mech. Needs pafnt. 1'fa.}ce otr. 673-6839. '63~ Galaxle 500 XL. New petnt .t: tran.; nms ereat Lots " utru. $350.1 -1967 Ford CUiiom 500. 48,cn> milew. l owntt, air cand. $1,050. 968-2955 '10 FORD VAN, like new. ~ ml. nu tire•, mags .t other xtra•. $2600. 8To-34:JS. '65 Ford Station Wqon, • Cnlry s.dan, $415. 548-2314 1 dy, 811-M96 ~s aft 6. 1964 VW bus. N-onglne Owner. Xlnt cond. WIS. Fast results att just a ph>De call away • 642-5678 Autos, UHct 990 It It tilM to tN4e •P fer • ..-... cs? .hit ...... ... elll Htrt •-to Mwc• M.ron •-' let • .... JM wMt n 'll .... YN fer it I• tNde ht' .. ef .... .,.... .._ 1 .. •••II h•dl IMI )6. 5 DODGE 6 Y, 0Tet1 PU fS571 1tJ H-Tl•ti. 64 oobGE 6 Pic.1o1p (N947791 Utility l ox '64 ECONOLINE · Pie.up Utility 1011: IN95l011 "1>3 DODGE SEO. v.a, Rtdio, He1t1r, A1o1to, T r1 111. I IZF246 I '65 DODGE --Moft'1co--Cpe;::::-full~Pow1r. Air Cond, v.1. IRPH220 1 '67 OPEL -4 Speed. f llODTXI MUSTANG AT, v.1, Air Collcl •• Sh•rp. ( DLRt4151 FORD VAN Eco11oli11•, PentleJ, New Peint, IL455J71 BUICK P.S., Hteler. fQJX5561 &ood ole Sltd. $995 $845 sa45 $695 $495 _$695 $99 $495 s1095 $1295 $225 $1795 s795 . '66 ~!?!~~~~. F,U p,.,., $1245 _Air. ISZH4lll '66 '62 '62 '66 DODGE 6 VAN New P1 i11t. C•rl'•ftd, tV42:6261 '64 CAQILLA~ CPE. Full Power, Air. IDPFJl7) :Difir--·''==----··"": $49$' '62 4 Dr., Auto. Tr1111., Ai,...114. ILYFSl91 ' '64 :~~URY <-:: IDL-f4JSJ s425 $195 '49 FORD 'STAKE 14266Jf) l llft., WM., nm. Sl*Mfl PriA1 hM Tin M., 4, 1972 2100 HARBOR BLVD. T ' " " ., • " '• ' ·• COSTA MESA Nffd a "Pad"f Platt an Id! 64504" • Call 557--0389. l Call 642-S6'1& .. --.,--~~~· ~~:_ • .·~,.._ • • • ·, ·• . _;., I a v w w s j • • I ' " .• .... San (J)e111ente Today's· Final ' Ca . . ' 1strano EDITION N.Y. Steeks VOL 65, NO. 123, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUES DAY, MAY 2, 1972 TEN CENTS Hoover ~s . Death LaJ11ented in County ' By JACK CHAPPELL Of lh1 D•Hr Piiot STiii In the wake of the death of J. Edgar Hoover, Orange County officials ex· pressed both sorrow and hope thnt the great crime fighting organization he built would endure. "Every lawman in Orange County will feel a deep sense of personal loss toQay at the death of J. Edgar Hoover." Chief Deputy District Attorney James Enright said this morhing. ' Eight Lives t~ Go "Hoover built an enduring organization that will be a monument to his ability:· Enright said. The chief deputy \Vas com· menting in the aPsence of District Al· torney Cecil Hicks from the county. \ "I'm· sure Mr. Hoover's place will be filled from . wilhin the organization," Enright sa id. "But whoever succeeds him at the}'BI 'viii be well content to pursue the goals of Hoov.er within the magnifi· cent structure he created.·~ State Sen·ator DeMis Carpenter (R· Without wailing-for a ne~a cafleaps to s;ifet;:.fro m tbe.fourtli floor of -ac::blazih&.1lfool11yn ti dffig asfir.emeacw _o.se Jfue's uiLthe fire. esc~pe.....The-feline_l . ded_on...all fours_and_walkecLaway,_app~ ently-and incredibly-u9.harmed. Newport ~each), a former FBI agwit said, "i\fr. Hoover was the eptiome of the perfect civil servant." ~e was a great ad mini s tr at or, Carpenter said. "He had the over\vhelm- ing de~ire to do his job as well as it could be done, regardless or his own personal inconvience.'' Mr. Hoover was a great horse race fan . and had a quick wit and good !ense of humor: Carpenter said. "I can remember one occassion when he was speaking to a class of new agents. _!_had, l;leen in the bureau for a year or so and was looked upon as an old timer by the ne\Y guys. "One of the men asked him it it was true that FBI agents had to \Year their guns at all times. •le repiied 'no, it is on· ly necessary to have your gun \\'hen you need it.' " Carpen ter mentioned that while he \Vas \Vith the bureau. they \\·ould have ,..wild 'f Christmas parties. "Peanuts and cola, Vitia Blue Ba~k O~~l~n~.-~~~~~r C~lle~_ts ~. BOSTON (AP) -Vida Blue, the scholarship,.which was a part of Blue's American League's 1971 most valuabl~ original bonus arrangement wh en he d d signed in 1967. player an Cy Young Award winner, en . Bue said he thinks it will take 3 to 4 ed his Jong holdout and signed a cohtract weeks to get in condition to pitch. for $63,000 tOday with the Oakland However, his salary is effective April 27, Athletics. the date when the offer was made by The 22-year-old lefthander k e p t Finley in Chicago. Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn. Ordinarily, a major league player's Arr.erican League President Joe Croriin salary does not begin until he's ready to and A's owner Charlie Finley waiting for play. · nearly 11,~ hours before showing up for Blue planned to rejoin the A's for a the contract signing: scheduled game with the Red Sox toni ght. They met at American League head· The contract makes Blue probably the quarters for about 15 minutes before highest paid major league sophomore in coming out for a news conference. history. "I'm signed, I'm happy, I'm ready to Blue was met at Logan lfltematio11a1 play,'' Blue said . AirPort Monday by Joe Reichler , assis- The contract calls for a 1972 salary of tant to Kuhn. He was polite, but not very $50,000. a $5,009 bonus for b t 1 communicative with . the lone · aporta performance in 1971 and an $8,000 writer to meet him~ All-year School Nixed By Capo District Board and that was it." he said. Hoover ·was a great stickler on !he way his agents dressed. "l remember one time, he told us that he expected all his agents to dress like 'suceessful young ' lawyers. And I 1nean Boston. Washington or New York Ja,vyers, not Chicago. Los Angele~ or Miami lawyers.' "he said. ··1 Senator Carpenter said thal he hoped a successor could be found to carry on the great tradition of the bureau that ~tr. Hoover foUJJded. r. •• ' • . , Al',_ FBI DIRECTOR DEAD J, Edg1r Hoover, 77 Parents Capo Score Victory On -Boundaries • Ill "Our nation has lost one or its greatest law enforcen1ent figures.·• ()range County Sheriff James ~fusick said today ... He is going lo be greatly missed by his organ iza1ion ~nd those of.us \\•ho had suc·b trt'n1endous respect for his ability. "For nll lhat ," the sheriff said . "I don't think \\'£"re going to Sf'e nny .:rent (·hnnRf'S 1n the organizntion or operation of th(• FBI. •·JJ001·er built up a treinendously tStr HEACTJON, Pagt' %) Nixon Laud s Devotion, ' Dedication WASllINGTON (AP\ -J. Edgar lloover, embodi ment of the FBI and focus of \a\Y enforcement achievement and cont roversy for a half century, 11 dead. The 77·yea r-old director of the Federa1 Bureau or Investigation died of natura l causes in his home Monday night, the Justice Department announced. President Nixon. upon hearing of Hoover's death. called him a "truly remarkable man who served the country for 48 years under eight presidents with unparalleled·devotion to duty and ded ica· lion." Nixon spoke emotionally of his "pro round sense of personal Joss." Flags at all publi c buildings and installations wei:e ordered to hai r staff. 1-Ioover was 1 virtual lengend In the United States, an '1untouchable" who died In offlfe despite efforts by crltlca in re- cent years to ha\'.e him relired. He shaped the FBr into a massive, powerJul federal agency during his career. Across Penn sy/vanir Avenue from the office where lfoover worked, a m;;issive powerful federal building to house the FBI is under construclJ,on. There will be no ali-year school in the Capistrano Unified School District this year. beginning in July of 1973. Even before Hoover's death, nlere had That was the decision of the board of Parents from northern parts of the ·been continuing specult tlon a b o u t trustees Monday, who made a com· Capistrano · Unified School District won whether the building would be named for rnitment to the probability of having their battle Monday to keep attendance him or perhaps might even house his the 4S.I5 plan at Crown Valley, San Juan, boundaries unchanged for the coming final resting place. Viejo, Richard Henry Dana elementary :ear. . . . Speculation on a successor to Hoover .Clemente School schools an(I Marco Foster Junior High Despite ~red1cted. over~owd1ng at al~O begp.n long befctt_e his death as one year from July. -Crown Valley and San Juan elementary political pressure t9 retire J-loovu . ~ ---schooll,~the..board voted.+3 to.keep SPot· alternately waxed and waned. --·· -Hilbert Keisker.__chairman:. ~f the .AL{ec1 ... Bull~ MiuJOA .HUl'4r:U~dre -haG.-seeriiid almost CerfaiC he wom··~-H olds Bus y· W ee·k~"Veal' Sc00o1.--.eomm1ttee,--was-.to1d to insan J uan sc6001 and .western Laguna retire or tie retired if the~0emocrats beat present a fire recommendation by Niguel children at CJ::own ~all.ey. -President Nixon in the November elec~ December. . A rftcition to iiioVe some·· Crown Valley lion. Nixon now will bi able to pick a But it very probably will be in effect Of Fun Ev ents~ "It is our plan to contin ue information children to Richard Henry. Dana school su ccessor. and fact gathering until that time,'' said and soqte San Juan childrenJo Viejo (two-= Wasb.iogtcm. D.C. Police chief JerrJ~= Superintendent Truman Benedict. uncrowded schools) failed by the same Wil ....r.ecent---Ni1.011=la\\E:enforcmtM -- A week full of activities including,~·=~~· 'ecause-ol--ouc::growthond:limitations 'margin. favorite,lla(f been prominently mentioned grape·-stomping cont.est, a.-klte nylng-con· on district financing a recommendation is VotinR to keep children where they are as a possible successor before floover'• f=&-1-' n~t.lill.ar.d and Cor.oner test, a tricycle race and a slave auction in order," he added. were trustees Fred ·~4tll'hart Jr .. Robert death. are taking place this week at San Forster ,lunior Hig h may be.left out or Hurst, Robert Dahlberg, who represent Acting Atty. Gen. Richard Kleindienst Clemente High School. the program if the board decides to build the northern areas, and Gordon Peterson Issued a one-paragraph statement Jn Launched Monday , the official name of Shorecliffs Junior High in San Clemeinte or San Clemente. which he said Hoover's body was found the program is Greek Week in honor of this year. Voting against it were trustees Donald by his maid at approximately 8:30 a.m. Triton, s6n of Poseidon and trumpeter of The board is curren tly split over the Inlay, Dr. Robert Beasley, and George today. -· Prphe My stery Sea Death Coast Guard and coroner's in· vestigators in San Diego toda y continued to probe the puzzling death at sea of San Jqan Capistrano ranch foreman Manley Thacker, with only two bits of floating debris as clues. Spokesmen for the coast Guard in San Diego said this(fnorning th~t two hatch covers 'rhich could have belonged to 'lbacker's cabin ciuiser "Starchaser" were found noating in the same area where the man's body was discovered Sunday morning. Thacker's body, wrapped in a life. jacket, was found by pleasure boaters floating about 10 miles ofii San Diego. The 4&.year-old foreman of the Lat· timer Ranch in San JuA:n lived at 30291 Camino Capistrano, and was widely known as an avid boater. He left the Shelter Island yacht basin Saturday evening, apparently alone, ' A-... •..i.Cout:Gua:rd...111Qie~i . ' Investigators said they planned to con~·· tact the owners of boats adjoining 'Thacker's 26-foot vessel and try to determine if the debris may have ~ longed to ustarchase r .'' The hatcll covers bear no traces of fire or explosion and were in sound condition. Meanwhile, the San Diego coroner's staff still ls trying to determine wha t killed the man. Aides at that office this morning said they planned a series of toxic<llogy tests to try to determine a cause of death. The 'Propaganda Okayed WASHINGTON. (AP) -·The '11.6. Information Agency has ~ a Senate commlttet's effort to cut sptnding !or propaganda films. broadcastl!tg ·•1111 pamphlets by 25 perctnt. process generally lakes two week s. Thacker's body has been released ot Brown Colonial Mortuary in Santa Ana where fun eral services are platfiled for Wednesday morning. Survivors include the wido\Y-, Mrs. Mildred L. Thacker; a son, Manley, or Norco; a daughter, Linda Lister, of Santa Ana ; Uiree brothers, Will ie, Paul and Lee Thac ker, all of Santa Ana ; three sisters, Nellie Mitchell and· Bertha Chisum, both of S~nta Ana, and ~largie Luge nvil of Palos· Verd es, and five grandchHdre n. The· Rev. llarry L. Dady of Greenville Community Church in Santa Ana will con- duct funeral rites at 10:30 a.n1. at the Santa Ana mortuary. Burial wi ll follow at El Toro Ceqi_etery. the sea. Triton is the school's namesake. a"tlvisability Qf building Shorecliffs at thi;:i W~ite wh? said it is impractical to ke~p 11It is with profound personal grie f that A g6d and goddess profile contest will time because attendance in San Clemente children 1n overcrowded schools when I announce that J. Edgar lloover passed be takin g place all week with a special schools is droppin g. there. is ~oom available in other parts of aw~y ~uring t~e ~ghf at his reside~c~· '' committee of judges searching faces of A resolution to go to bid on Shorecliffs the d1str1ct. • Kle1nd1enst said. His persona l phys1c1an students in an attempt to match them immediately was tabled until the district By voting for Plan C, t~e. district '_Viii informed me ~~t his death wa s due to with Greek god and goddess profiles. growth committee can review it and not be able to plan for add1t1onal staffing natural causes. Names of the Jook·alike Winners will be decide if it should be biult now later or until September when the board Will The jut-jawed FBI head was permitted revealed on Friday. not at all ' ' again look at attendance projections to by presidential order to continue in his The Greek slave trade auction was held · deeide if attendance boundari es wlll sllll $42,500-a·year-government-job ~after today and ·w1n be held again during lunch remain unchanged. re aching the mandatory retirement age periods on Thursday. Slaves will perform • S 'k If growth· exceeds predictlorui, the of 70. ta sks for their masters on Friday. Const r UCl JOll l r t . C distr ict \l:ill be faced again Ylith transfer--Hoover. unmarried, dominated the A Greek kite flying contest will take ring students to less crowded schools or (See HOOVER, Pa e %) place Wednesday during lunch periods Jn SAN DIEGO (AP ) -Work at major moving portable classrooms to the Sa n front of the cafeteria . It was arranged to cons truction sites throughout San Diego Juan and Crown Valley campuses. honor Poseidon, god of the sea and wind. County remained at a st~,P.dstlll today as Superintendent Truma n Benedict said Students will have a ...chance to a strike · by 6,000 construction workers he recommended the attendance boun· Orange C:oalt (See ~~EK, Pagt 2) went into its second day. dary changes to give the district the most ·' · latitude.in coping w~th growih at the least . expense. We a ther ~ D 'Sue ' "We'll be able to mnke Plan C work . ~,{]lpfl ,,.. ,;p. . 4 p• ~ ...-, ay •, _ ~ . ( cessr ~t ~~ifi~~~~.~~f1~*~~-.~~·MOl'f'""""1ne;Clft'Wodn!oldal'f""' A U 1 '"': U'_ predicted. cording to the wea"ther lady. Low .,. Board president Bob Hurtt t>Olnted out clouds along the beaches will clear . Children Parade on Bikes; M.ayor Awards Priz-es The band didn't show, the streets u•eren't closed. but San Juan Capistrano's second annual Arbor Day P,arade was still called a success by the San Juan Beautiful Committee. Children on decorated bicycles rode from San Juan School Saturday to the minipark on ·Camino Capistrano and Yorba Streets:, .Whete musle was suppli~ by "marching" marachis and awards were given for decorating efforts. Speaking to the group was MayOr James F. Thor!"• who earlier dlteettd traroc on his bicycle. He told everyone lhAt every tre"t ~Janted helps replact ox· ygen usea by cars and doe.s that much more ror._the environment. Winners in poster contest• and bicycle decoration rceelved monetary awards and a red geranium plant (the city's or-. ficial flower). Winnen for funniest and prettiest decorating were: Mary Mudge and the duo of Anita Schnitzler and Cincl Cox. firs!; Mark Hilker and Jeff Dunn. sec- ond: 'Michele Baird and Lisa Cox third: Pam Guerrero and Eleanor Lungren. fourth; and Minnie Surle> and Eliubeth Hilker, honorable-mention. Poster contest winners were: Jeff -- Miller, Charles Davis, Janet Baron, Ruth Stoffel, Tom Johnson and Sue Riddle, first; Danny Sales, James Ougram, Kim . Peretti, Diane Vermeulen, Kris Thoen!, Jim· Toumier, second; Donna Hallsted, David HaUsted, DaMi Rldill, Janet M"dge, Shelly Buck, Marx Kalv~er. third • Eavalla Aguilar, Leslie lfini.n James Norris Patricia Cullen, Maryann Carven, Liza Undbald, Patti Hoech, Blena Cruz, Marilee Stubbs, Martin Zuniga, Kathy McCarthy,.. MI c b a e Maldonado, and Marte Rymer, honorable mention. that when the board made revislon5 In at-by mid·momlng leaving tempera· tcndance boundaries last year It wos tures of 62. Inland high 70 . forced to change thCJTl back when the public round out. ' "One of' our pl'Oblems it that people say we don't listen to them nnd don't res· poqd to· their wishes," said Peterson, Justifyi ng his vote in favor of parental desires. "Out parents are less than half' of the people you represent," eid trustee White. , Drng Program Cheap BAKERSFIELD (AP) -Lt. Gov . Ed Reinecke sayt Gov ,Ronald Reagan's $14 milllo• drug abuse procr•m Is cheap compared to the eslimat<d $1.4 billion that heroin is costing the state ,.ch year. INSIDE '.l'ODi\ V • Afore than SOO yachts lcavt Nctcport Jettv Tllttrsday f or t11r anflt«ll 125·mi{e ra ce to Ensell~ ada. You can 't tell wllo i/1ty are. wit/tout a prouram . Sea entry list, Page 20. • L.M. ttr• 11 t11t1nt " ,C11ifOl'flll I (l~nlll.. '1•2• C-l(S II Cr11twtf'f t i Otltfl Ntll(ff •• aflttrlt l ,ltt I •111tri.111111tnt It 'IM!tU 1•11 , ... IM lttclffll f ..._.... u """" l lflllf" u M11TUll ,-~rMll It Ntlk!MI Ntwl I Of111t• Cow111r ' Sfl~t. l'trttr ·• 1• SMr1t 1 .. 1' Sift• M•rll•h 1 .. u T-.ll'l!tl... " f~HllfS 1• .... ...,. . ·-·•Mt-. IMt .,.,,. ..... . ,, • " • ' ' i 1 OAILY PIL01 >C TuHday, May 2, 1'72 ~ ZO 1'cres Police Hold . Palisades Land I Suspect; Pair Sought ,/ r . Annex Gets ·Eye A major annexation o( 20 acres of Palisade~ land into the city or San Clemente - a sometimes controversial Js.sue walling in the wings for months - finally will come before city councilmen \Vednesd ay. And immediately after tackling the an· ne:zatioo of J the property surrounding Grant 'i Plaia shopping center, coun- cilmen will consider requests for rezoning of the land for multiple apartment and duplex uses. The bid by E. W. Rathbun of Sin Lean- dro for merger wilh the city and multiple 7.(ln!ng is certain to bring another outcry from the Capistrano Beach Community Association. That group has battled the plans for many months, bolh ln city hall and before the county's • Local Agency Formation Commission, which already has approved of the change in stewardship over the acreage. The associ ation has conttnded that the high-density use of the acreage will hurt the area along Camino de EstreUa and some members have charged that the annexation is a land grab by the city which a!serttdly hopes to extend its boundaries up to Est rella along its entire length. shaped parce1. but the land fell under an extended zoning freeze. ' The furniture store owner Ulen ap- proached San Clemente last year for an- nexation approval and advance zoning of the land. The city balked at granting the zone changes before formal anne.xaU()n. Rathbun repeatedly has promised high- quality apartment developments on the land; which he believes is unsuitable for commercial development. Under county designations his property is zoned comm~rcial and professional. The Rathbun matter will share the bill with another controversial ioning hearing before the council Wednesday. A request by. the Cortez Development Company of Vista for garden apartment t.0nlng on land near civlc'center and Our Lady of Fatima Catholic Church also comes up at the 7:30 p.m. meeting. The proposa l comes with a recom- mendation for disapproval by the plan· ning.commission and the city staff. Church official spokesmen also dislike the proposal on the nearly two acres of property, charging that high-densi ty apartment uses would not be compatible with the church and school operations nearby. The commercial property . If it n·ere rezoned, could hold as many as 50 Prese1ati1ag Petition Mrs. Sh irley Deaton , right. deputy ·registrar, accepts petjtions from California Marijuana Initiative repre- sentative 1'.lrs. Betty Armacost. The organization claims to have 22,000 signatures from Orange DAILY PILOT ll•ff l'llel• County. Before the issue of legalization of marijuana can be put on the ballot, 330,000 signatures are needed statewide. The deadline is June 1. See story on Page 5. N. Viets Take Sectwn Capo Teachers Ask Living Cost Salary ,Increase Of ·New Defense lone By ARTHUR R. VINSEL • Of lfl• Diiiy ,11.r llfff One suspected drug smuggler is Jailed today, following Newport Beach polic e seizure of 294,500 illicit pills, probably the largest such confiscation in Orange Cou1l- ty history. Value of the 250,000 amphetamine pills and 44 ,500 barbiturate tablets of Mexican origin would be about $35,000 on the street sa les market , police said . Arrest warrants were issued more than a week ago for three suspected principals in the case. two of whom have not ycl been taken Into custody. Announcement of the first suspect's capture only 1 ~2 blocks from Newport Beach Police Department beadquarten \vas inilialiy withheld to avoid alerting his alleged accomplices. Lyle P. Rodgers, 32, or 305 32nd St., Newport Beach, remains in Orange Coun· ty Jail, unable to post $30,000 ball set by the court. Teachers in the Capistrano Unified Rodgers. who said he is unemployed, SAIGON (UPI) -North Vietnamese The U.S. command reported 462 air faces· a Afay 12 preliminary hearing on strikes includino 852 heavy bomber ra ids School Dis trict will be asking for a four-charges or consp1·r1·ng lo smuggle troops followed by tanks drove today into a in Quang Tri province in the 24 how-s en-percent. cost-of-living increase When narcotics and possess dangerous drugs Artillery BaSe Nancy, the anchor of lhe ding at noon Tuesday -the heaviest con-salary negotiatio ns start later this spring. for sale. Rathbun originally hoped to win apart- ment zoning from the county on the lr apartments. new South Vietnamese defe~ line only centration of air raids in four years. Paul Lane, chairman of the certificated Detective Sgt. Leo Konkel. of the ~ 20 miles north of Hue, and occupied at · d rt t' t" d t It "d t""ed "I believe Hue is the ma10r objective," employe council, told the board of epa men s narco 1cs e a , 1 en 111 least part of the position. Brig. Gen. Thomas \V. Bowen, deputy 1 M d . h the other two suspects as Pierre Jacque s Field reports said by nightfall control senior U.S. adviser on the northern fro nt. trus ees on ay t at the group will be Bertolino and Hank n: Kuykendall, both of the base was in doubt. Field officers told reporters at the old imperial cap ital asking for a base salary of $7,800 a year 22-year-old Newport Beach residents. said South Vietnamese marines held part Tuesday night. -along the lines of the current structure, Bail for both men, who were lut known From-Page 1 HOOVER DIES •.. of the base and the North Vi~tnamese The Communist threat was also strong with the hlgliest salary being $15,600 a to be in Hawaii, was set at $50,000 on the bureau during his lifetime like no man in nominal boss, said "I am saddened .to . he'l'd part. elsewhere. . . . year. f same charges on which Rodgers wu Al"" W. Id" t hear of ht"s death. He has been a mai·or There are many1 many tanks at My An Loe, 60 miles nortlJ of Saigon, was Teache-now are pat"d on salary rested at his home. any Other ·federal agency te 1ng vas Ch nh h din f N " ff" 1·11 d · •• . a The case has been "-'·r '"v•atlgat1·on ·. figure on the American scene for 8 long a . ea g or ancy, one o 1cer s 1 un er siege. _ WNe w ,. -;:'!~~u.,~..m..la.viM:J\D.-!l'.!._ . .Efl_L_---=-ti~KNed "tlllS1tC:Omry lft~hmY-"..:..-actd:"-..c=:"""'·" -"-·---~ ""-~c-.-=:_._Kcintum .W.::-~~ .. ..(&,otcaJ,,.__J!i.!•'1$ schedule rangmg from $7,500 to $15,005, for about two months,-lnvolving Newport the pride and possessiveness of a Aern miss' him.•• My Chanh is within srrtall arms fire was in danger of an imminent atlack. . ..... Oe~· Oli'ling'lb.OfSUV!Ce. -----~"11nlt"-lianthlgtonshar!lt'poliet; plus and watchful parent. ..,. Sen. George McGovern (D-S.D.), et-distance of Nancy. 12 miles south of1lhe In neighboring Cambodia, a govern· Lane presented the proposal as rf6 the State Bureau of Narcotics Enforce.. Hoover's No. 2 man in the bureau wa's pressed sorrow at the death. fallen province capital of.Quang Tri city.. ment attempt to retake a ~mile stretch Ired b J d · · · f Ui. ment and the District Attorney's office. Clyde A. Tolson, the associate director. The threat to Binh Dinh province on the of Communist<ontrolled Highway 1, · qu y aw un e~ new provisions 0 e "I would guess it's probably the largest The two were long-time colleagues who "I think we can only be sad over the central coast increased ·and ' military stalled and the high command said at Winton Act. H~ satd he ~as not r~ulred seizure of pills in Orange .Coun~.I know spent m1:1th time together, Tobon, 71 , bu passing of any American, any citizen, any sources said contact had been lost with least 100 troops ""ere killed, wounded or to present fringe benefits but did so it is in Newport Beach," said Sgt. Konkel. been In Ill health. mortal," McGovern said. Landing Zone English, the last Allied out-mis~ing. . . an~ay. . . He said there was no difficulty in ar• Hoover groomed no one for bis 1hoe!, The presidential contender said he post in the upper one-third of the prov-Six American aircraft were shol down Fringe J:ien~f1t proposals rnclu~e : resting Rodgers when investigators from but often exprtssed the wish that the disagreed with many of Hoover's views, ince. and fi ve U.S. helicopter crewmen killed -The d1str1ct shall pay premiums lor Orange County's Narcotics Task Force next. director come from within the FBI but added, "I am sad at his passing." Four Communist rockets dropped on trying to rescue U.S. advisers and senior the empl~ye's family's insurance showed up at the suspect's cottage. Sen. Edmund s. Muskie (0.Maine ), h So th v· t u· f Qu coverage instead of one-half. The narcotics officer said the con. ranks. dedared the natt"on owes Hoover "Its the market place at Qui Nhon during I e u 1e namese o 1cers rom ang Benefits ill be . ed t dd d During the years or Hoover's reign, midday rush hour, killing six civilians Tri. -. w mcreas. o a . ~-traband pills, packaged In plastic baks, there never was a.known cue of scandal · gratitude and respect." Muskie's state--and wounding 19 others. Qui Nhon is the tal, optical an d pa1d-prescr1ptJon ()riginated in Me1ico but he didn't say inside of the FBI and Hoover'• stock meDt a<ldtd: "J. Edgar Hoover devoted capital of Binh Dinh province. coverage. · how they were linked to the three bo t h. •· , ''They hit entire life to the service of his coun· C ' Pl -That teacher aide programs be suspects. remark a u ts agen~ wa : -· UPI correspondent Stewart Kellerman ti in Cl?l°t be bought." try. While JOme of us may have ques-d th "ed I tod apo S anners gre.a Y. Creased to reduce student-adult The evidence was confiscated during Accolades for Hoover flowed almost tioned.some of his approaches in recent reporte at Alh warp anes ay rahos in the classroom and teachers the 'probe of the suspects' activities. ~ C It 1 Hill and other years, no one could question his loyally bombed and strafed at least 30 govern-should be more involved in designing the immediately uV11u ap 0 ment tanks left behind in the Quang Tri El t Off' d · al locations of government. and dedication to his country.'' ec 1cers e ucahon program. Even former Atty. Gen. Ramaey Clark, Stn. Hubert H. Humphrey of Min· stclor. -Three days• personal leave be who feuded with Hoover while Hoover's nesota, an associate of Hoover during granted in an emergency. From Pqe 1 Front Page 1 REACTION ..• capable organizaUon and all it needs Is a capable administrator to follow in hi1 footsteps," the veteran Orange Coun~y lawman said. "The FBI will have no dil· ficulUy find ing such a man." Ranl<lng Newport Beach police, lnclud· Ing Chief B. Jamos Glavu and Detective Capt. Do!13ld F. Oyaas responded with shock and regret. "We like .to think of him as immortal and going on fortver, but of course that isn't a fact ," Oiief Glavas said this morning followllig the Washington an- four years in the vice presidency and In Meet Tonight -Minimwn day schedules be in effect many years in Congre&s, mourned him as C' l D when all teachers are required to return ''a man or unquestioned ability, personal llUrC1J, 00TS 11-'fembers of the San Juan CapistranG to school at night for a specific function. integrity and professlonal compete nce. -That five minimum days be schedul-participate in a Greek olive counting co~ "Few men Jn our time have made such Plan ning Commission will take the oath ed for in-servi ce training. test. For one thin dime students may buy a strong impact on AmerU:an public lif~." Alivays Open? of office tonight at the 7 o'clock meeting -One preparation day be granted prior -the opportunity o{ guessing how many said Humphrey. in the city hall. to parent conferences on the elementary olives are in the jars. House Repu blican leader Gerald R. The adage ab®t the doors of a After selecting their offices, James level. The tricycle race is tentatively achedut- Ford described Hoover as "a veritable church always be1ng open has been Barg, Carol Heim, Jerry Gaffney, Art Board chainnan Bob Hurst said the eel for Wednesday or Thursday, the race rock of strength" and one of · the most manifested at St. Mary's Episcopal d h S d package was "one of the finest ever offering each class a chance to capable public officials ever to serve 1·n La vagni110 an Jo n weeney will a • presented .'' but made no promises about partlc~'pate. It will take place on an Church in Laguna Beach after t' th the government. thieves stole the massive front journ to a one hour work session before gran rng e requests . obst.a le course, racing against the clock "He was inC!lrrupUble," Ford said. "He doors of the building. reconvening the meeting. and not each other. r wa.s unswerving in his devotion to duty. I The commission will be asked to e1tend On the academ ic side will be a Greek Loss or the doors, valued at $200, r I Co l"d t d R k Cl H' h od co t ,. p 1· I will be r cannot think of any other American who or WO years nso I a e OC pro-emente ig yssey n es . oe IC Cues 0 • and a wooden pew were reported to d I • "t t t" u pe 1· · I d In th hoot b ti t" h · ever served his nation more· faithfully uc s perm1 o con m e o ra ions m a ere e sc u e 1n eac morrung, and steadfastly." · police f.1onday morning by chur ch commercia l zone next to city hall. leading to the location of a hidden object officials. Although locked at the R "d t f th m b"le h k 0 H S on camN•s. Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Arlz.), said es1 en s o e o I ome par l r H h time or the theft. the heavy doors across the flood control channel from lhe pen Ollse e ·_ The grape stomping contest will be · oover's deal was "a tremendous loss" Were taken by removing the hinge industrial facility have frequently com-done by boy-girl teams for each cla531 GREEK.~. -.J)QW!Ctm_ent. adding : "I don't see. at the moment how . P,in. plained about noise from the business. San Clemente High School will open its stomping on the fr uit. The winnet. will be --------Mr:-Hoover·can possibly be replaced..lii.s __ -R~lison church Also on the agenda will be a public doors to th. e public tonight putting its the team that provides the most juice r -C()ntrJbution was almost beyond measurf" rector said the doors were oJ souc ~rn.,.... hethe or: noL•" ............. ;, •~t ch ··'th ··" when dra1·ned and measured. · ment " 1 • .1 . ed near e. on w r--.........,....u ...... an_programs,..J~ ea en~ e ww..a. Niguel Man Cited Ho . k Ca 1 Albert (D-Okla) oak an~ each.h~d a '!imall stain arts and crafts fair in the Mission Drive-its students on display. Greek chariotr aces wilt l ake place .-==,-~-oa>·i--~~-apea er ~ ·' glass window in its ce~ter. Pending _jn TbeaW:.gr-®!lds and whether orJlo_t to The__open bouse_actlvities-w.ill-l>egin-at 'th.each.class.providing a chariot,.rlder--_ D , . -_.--the--bu~~.u-wpl:::!or:ev~ beat;:U!e --tlie pu-rcJiase ol-new-doors,-worKers permit Leroy Stevens to bllil<i n wim-T:3'0Jj.m. • -an-d i n elgfil:-man team. ~o nlen will Or Illegal Utnp1ng impr!~t of this dedica~ed and-patriotic have '"covered-t~chureh entrance~ ming pool in his front-yard at-33961-€alle Members of the Parents,--'l'eachers and~pull-at a time for...aJnarked distance. • man. -with sheets of plywood. Borrego , Students' 'Association will sponsor a bake Both the grape stomping and the chariot A crackdown by Orange County officers Sen. Strom Thunnond (R.S;C.). called The planners also will get their fir.st sale and all mothers are encouraged tO races will take place during a special on ·illegal trash dumping in the South ~~ver one .. or the coun~ s greatest Jook at the planning department's 1972-'73 send a culinary contribution to the sC:hool assembly Friday. County area mounted Monday with the citizens - a man of unimpea chable budget and future plans for programs for the sale. All proceeds will be used to \Vinners or other contests will be in- citing of a Laguna Niguel man. chara~ter and integrity who always put 2 p efSOnalitieS and personnel. bellj!fit students educationally. traduced at that tim e. Deputies said they cited William Myron duty ftrst." Shannon Hammond, 33, of 24381 La Sen. James 0 . Eastland (0.M iss. ), Hermosa for unlawfuJly dumping trash chairman of the Senate Judiciary Com-Of Pilot Pages on private property on Crown Valley mittee, to which the nomination of Parkway and Niguel Road. · Hoover's successor will be referred, com- Officers said Hammond dumped a load mented : of grass and chunks of sod in the area. "All who believe in the Jaw as the foun. Win Pulitzers OU.N61 COAIT DAILY PILOT i11t: Or•,.,,. C••I OAILY P ILOT, wl'" wllk:l'I I• c1mOIMtl lh• N1wn°1'rt11, 11 11UIJlftl'I• 'Y IM-Or•"'ll• C••1t ~"'tl1lll"' CM!Hh'f, ltJI+ r•1• edllk>n1 •r• pubU1htd, MW•r lllr111111 '•id1y, lor Co1!1 Mt11, ,.,_,,.,! St•th, l111nunot•" ll11cll/Fo11n!1I" \I.illy. L•o.,,.. llt•<h, ln>ln•/StddttlMdt •nll ·l•n Cltmenlt/ S'n J111n C•pl1tf1no. A 11"'°1' ftlltOnll ..:!\lion 11 1111on1hN l 1turd1y1 11'11f Slllld1y1. ht pdnc!P•I pVOlltl'llnt plenl It •I )JO Wltl •~r $!fnl, c .. 1. M..-, C•lllor"ll, t JU•. ••Dirt N. w,,4 ,.rnodlftl •Ml '"'*ll•her J •tlt •· Cvrl1y , Viet l'tnldll'll •1'111 Gftwf•I M.tnttf!' .:r. lli•'"•' •• m 1E•1• Tliem•• A. Mvtphifte M1ntflfll lditOf' -Ch1tl t1 H. loot •11h•r4 P. Nert • A11lll•11T IMMtlne E<lllllOf'I s-c1 ...... OfftM 305 North fl-C1'"l1te ltttl, t 26 7·2 _....._ C..!1 Mttl: J)t Wf'tl hf 11"'t Ntwplrt 111'11: Wl H....,..... aou11v•r• Hvnll"9*' ltKhl 11111 IHdl ...,...,,,, UfvM aHClll JU l"Of'lll ... Y.,,vt Tot-11141 '41-4111 Cl...tflH A"'9rtl""'9 642·1171 S.. Ci....t. Al Dlpc•l*flft: 1 ........ 4tlo44Jt C.,r,ltftt, ''1l. Of'llltl (Otll P\1111ldllftl Cer1111111r. ~ 11t.n ••"' """"''-.. -ffllWlll 'fNfttr ... """'''--" ""'"' '"'' M ,.,,.._M Wlllllltll .,_1111 "" "'"'"" .. ftP)'tllht --l«W dlM .......... It c .... Mttl. Ctllf9m... MllllCrl-'lfll .., nrrlw U.U -"'"'' .. P!'lfll t.J,11 ,.._,..,.,, '''"itwy '"""'"'"' "·" -lhll'. dation of an orderly society have lost a leader who spent hi3 life for the public good." * * Hoover's Career Two DAILY PILOT editorial page personalities have won 1972 Pulitzer prizes for their outstanding journalistic achievemen,s. (Complete list of Prize \vinners on Page 4.) Columnist Jack Anderson was cited for 'national reporting. Jeffrey f..tacNelly wai given the Pulitzer Prize for editorial car· Spanned Nearly t~~~~•gh Aderson has, himseu, been much in the headlines recently, his award Half a Centiiry 'was for his reporting of American policy-dccislon making during the lndo-Paklstan war of 1971. · WASffINGTON <UPI I - John Edgar A 25-~ar-old editorial cartoonist who Hoover wielded po\ver among lhe mighty has moved to the top of his profession in as the nation's top law enforce ment of· a C'<lm¢u'aUvely few years, t.tacNelly ls licer for near! all co ~ ,_ --.oqe oUlie yowtg~4'artoonlsts-~ver }'> be He Al~ wa highly popular "·ith he given the Pulitzer Prize. • pu blic. ~1acNelly's work a'ppears on the Two president.! found the combination editorial page of the new Sunday DAILY unbeatable enough to keep the bulldog· PIWT. He has been a cartoonist on the faced Hoover in ofllce years past the staff of a daily newspaper (the Rich· ~~tory retirement age C)f 70 with the mo nd, Va., News Leader) for less Lhan resul ts that he 1erved longer than .any two years and has had hls work offered oU!er federal bureaucrat 1n modern to other newspapers through syndication times. for an even shorter time. His last years were among the Columnist Anderson, 41, Is a former stormiest as the FBI came under in-Long Beach newspaper reporter who creasing fire from politicians, left wing unde:r-studiedthe late Drew Pearson lor group.t1, civil rights organizations, and 22 years and inherited Pe arson 's evtn some or his staun chest admirers pawcrtul 'jWashington Merry·go-round" who felt it waa time for Hoover lo step column et the, time of Pearson's death. down. A devout Mormon and f o r m e r H• paid them tittle heed. preacher, Anderson likes btlng labeled • In the "law and order" framew;, k of muckraker and calla: hlmself ''the voice lht Nixon Administration, Hoo Ver spoke of the voice1ess." AROUND THE CORNER AND .UP YOUR STREET WE HAVE BEEN ASKED HUNDREDS OF TIMES WHY WE LOCATED OUR STORE "OFF THE BEATEN PATH." SEVERAL ANSWE·RS POP UP. FIRSTLY, THE COST OF STORES IN SHOPPING CENTERS IS ASTRONOMICAL. SECONDLY, WE WERE ABLE TO OBTAIN MORE SPACE, WITH OUR SHOWROOM, OFFICES AND WAREHOUSE ALL IN ONE LOCATION. THIRDLY, • THERE IS AMPLE PARKING WITH LITTLE TRAFFIC CONGESTION LEADING TO US. • ,-.-.a·T~.,, . SIJV~JJON_HA,S MADE..U MQ&E,CP.M2ETJTJ~ WE ARE PROUD AND GRATEFUL TO SAY THAT WE HAVE INCREASED OUR VOLUME EVERY YEAR FOR FOURTEEN YEARS, AND HAVE EXPANDED FIVE TIMES AT THIS LOCATION. ALDEN'S CARPETS ·• DRAPES 1663 Placentia A••· COSTA MESA 646-4838 , ) -.. out ofttn and loudly, apparently confldenl Both Ander1Q11 and MacN.Uy"""' been the Pmldent and his ·Immediate boss, added.In the pe!I year to the stable of Attorney General John N. Mitchell, would ayndical•d talent wbosveJiwoi.(rki'.il::.•:_re::gu_:l:_ar~ly~l_J,-------------!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!'!!!!~~~~~~~~==~~~~~~~~~--P"l>lillltd "' tlla.llAIL~ ---. , • • _1 /II In lo \\"i ad ea at T fa or rx D ti pl fa ta p t r w at in 1 th ca bu ~I fa th th ev m ce br cu th a st m ev \'i " n w b on si Ju th a p • (' JO DAILY PILOT , Jtlnt1e11's Worll1 Reaso11s For Food By SYLVIA PORTER \\bile food prices arc level 1ng off nov.1 the informed fore cast 1s that the rise for 72 \ 111 be 1n the S to '6 pc1 ccnt range '~ell above 197 1 s 3 percent ln Tho M11da Rotary Engine For 1nC01rnal1on on lhc :.tock of Toyo T ogyo Co 1 60-1 65 Apr 19 72 Call Roy BartholomC\V Greal Pac1f1c Sccur1lH!!I 17291 Irvine Blvd Tustin 714 -832-8000 QXEROXING 0 ANSWERING SERVICE QDESK SPACE OLA LINES SC Tutsday May 2 1972 OVER THE COUNTER NASO Listing• for Monday, May 1 t,f.OS " '(0\)\0. ~ [J SECRETAR1Al SERVICE '~ 0 BOOKKEEPING 0 MIMEOGRAPHING 1972 0 TELEGRAMS, TWX, DOCUMENT TRANSMISSION 0 MAILING LISTS 1'b's • COMMUNICATIONS SOYICE BUREAU COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK LIST • • ' ~ h • ll '" m • ~ • " " , " "' 'l 21, ' " " ... ' ., • • ' . ll • .. • • ~I ... " )11, • • " Jj J J~ :~ ~I.. J • l • ,..~. 34•· .. 1; M r- '°,, ' ' !t -· •• • • • ' I . . . -,, ,. J ~ • l '. ' ,. . ... .. " .. ' " " ' ' ' " ' . • ' ' l• ' " 'I " ll • ' . •' ,• ' • .. " " " ., . " ~, . ' ' " -.. -,,_ " • " ' " l ' . ' . " q " ' 'l ' • • '" ' ,f " " ~ tt • • • • • • • ' I • • • - • Fo1' The ' Record .. Births .. Wiii CM1t C1mmu111tv "4._11•1 l l•THS A•rll t Mr. •fld Mr1. Tlwrm111 S1m!ord, llOll All'! '''"'· Hun1\nu!011 B11c11, bo~. Ml. i ncl Mr1. T11om1J O. N1w1tl. JUI DofMI LIM, COlll M111, bOy. Mr. 1rld Mra •D1vld Ltnto11. )OJ "J" Srt11r, 811-. 1lr t. Mr. 1'111 Mr.., K111~111 Murr1v. 1nn Hl rtllnt LIN, Hu11t111gton B11c11. bOY ..... u 11 Mr, Incl M•t.. Cl1r111<1 l(unPI', '2J Mori!~ v1111, Co111 M111. t lrl. Mr. 11111 Mr•. c.1rv F•~•. 1ns1 L• (Olle!lt l"IKR. Ylll'b,I l llld1, t lrl. M•, 11111 Mr1. Frfd B1ut.. tJO Soutll "'""' No, E. AnatMlm, 1lrl, ~. I NI M•1. Melvln Kro.111. lfl51 PUI Orlvt , H1111ll1111on llr.cfl, boy, ...... 11 11 ""'· l l'd Mri. J0/111 Wllll CI Mutt> 111 ol IXI& lluffll Vl1!1, AP!. l,. $111 Cl•'""'''· olrl. A1rll n Ml. lrld Mfl, Jtmn f . l 11lllH Ill ISi lo'lr1i11l1 P1ri; Drhrt, L11un1 klch,, boy .• AiOl"H 11 Mr. trld Mri. L1rrv J1..,11 Otvore of Ill t"h Plact, Cotle Mnt. t lrl. • A1rll lJ Mr. l lld Mr1. AolHr! J. illol"I J r. of 11' flT'ltr•kl 81y, L•tun• 8••<11, bov. ... ,,u 1, Mr. 11'(1 Mr1. Mlcll1t1 NMm111 L1rl1010 t>I JUll C1ll1 Mon!t , CtPlllrlllO ltl(ll, bo\I. Al'!"ll lt Mr. I"" Mr1 . ThOf!\ts JI, Yoii nttr"1tn ot lll Av111IC11 Stnt• //11r11rt11, ~111 Cl•m111t1, bov. HOAG Ml!MOlllAL HOll'ITAL A,ru 11, ''n Mr. I nd Mr1. Tim ln!U\11, 111'0 Sin /ill ttt. Eou11tt ln Vo lle;', l>Qv , f.t.r. Ind Mr1. Albert Plncek, 3111 ll1rb10o1 Pl.w:t, Cos!• M111 bov. Mr. Incl Mr•. Mlcll1tl Ctldtn •1 ~ Wt~! Octtnfront lltlbot 1:·1. Mr. I ncl Mr•. HOW,11!1 Me1n1, lflO Wt lltct, Apt, 0, Cosll Ml'I~. boY. /lir. t ncl Mfl. s11111.s111en Hseu. J1! AYOCldO Slrttl. A~. 10. Co•i. Mes1, 1lrL ... ,,11 12, lt12 Mr. Incl l,/,r1. Ctvld L. Mur1w1kl. 2110 ltumDll Ori.,., f l TMo. bov. Mr. llnd Mr1. RlcMrd It. Jubert . 7~1 llrt ll!Wood Slrffl, (°'It Mtlt. boy. Ml. t nd Mr•. Lou(1 f . LI llontt , tll Mlr1m1r Streer. Ltgunt llttcll, 1lr l. Mr,'"" Mri. Ctvld A. L"' 11!1 swrll Ml11nlt S!reet. S1ni. Ant bo'I. Mr . 1l'ICI Mr1. Jtmts JI. cl.rvslt r, 1171 Wttr ltll)OI Boulrvtrd.~tWllOl"I lttch, bo~. Mr. t lld Mr1. JM!n S. Johnson, 71~ Wtlt JOl!CIUll ltotd, S111t1 Ant, !win 9lrl1. ....... u lJ, ,,,, Mr. tlld Mr1. ,.!t n Jttedf. lt:JC S1n- ll110 Crlvt , NtWPOrl Btt(h, t l•I. ... ,,11 u, lt7J Mr. Ind M ... ROl!lld Pt ulJOI!. 379 Mtr•utrllt, Corflnl dtl Mtr. t>oy. -"'·n•.M Mr_1,_WJ1J11rn .S: .... Jtunt.,., 20JJ2 -l( nt DrNt, ·s:l!il1 Ant, ""9. Mr. Ind MrJ. Alldrtw Polt~. l4SIZ f:r!n ltotd, W111mlnJ!er, t it!. • A1rll 1J, 1•n Mr. t'ld fAr1. Jtkt Plvtrolf, '':u. Junloer, AP!. J. St n!t Ant, boy. Mr. Ind MrJ, WflUtm Ou1tln1, 1t3J2 Clrldv L1111, H11n11n11on ll11ch, t lrl. \ ' • Rapid .Tra·nsit Oper~tion • G~ts Shove for .Next ' Year The 18th aMual ~eeting ot the Orange Coun\y Heart By JACK BHOBACK ment or operational transit estimated costs and possible Association Is scheduled for 01 '"' 0•111 ,.,101 u 1u directly by the Orange County financi ng figures were based 6:30 p.m. \Vednesday, 11-t the SANTA A'!l..A -Orange Transit District, using its O"'" on experience of other cities Ne wporler Inn in Newport County's long-sought rapid equipment and .stflff. and counties throughout the Beach. • tr;:insit system could be in "This ser\'ice should be nation. Guest speaker \.l'i ll be operation early ll<'Xl year if started as soon as nine ne\Y A 2-pessenger per mile co n-Douglas \\'hitaker, executive county Transit District diret· buses can be ordered and · ce pt \\'BS explained . It calls for T1.1t~ay, MaJ 2. 1972 o.,JL v PJLOr D ~ST.A.UJlAM'l"tl THICK STElKS THIN PRICES LONGHORN: A 32 oz. Porterhouse 4.95 LUNCHEON SUGGESTIONS SOUP'N SAN: Soup of 1he Day and your choice of grilled Cheese, or Tuna San .95 tors follow a progr;1 m outlined delivered (probably . si x an average load of that size \'ice president of Results Inc. l\1onday by their consultants. months)," Bouman u r g e d . for each mile a bus travels. of L11guna Beach. The topic ls REUBEN SANDWICH : Corned Beef with The first year's 01>eralions .. The district should hire a bus "At that average there ··\Vha t. I Didn't Kno\v About • Sauerkraut and Swi5s Cheese would be modest Th c manager and aide s to prepare would be a loss and nec~y___ the fl eDrl Assn .. and \\'hy?" ·~~~ on Rus sian Aye 1.75 ~' preliminary report -0n a for the service \\•hile "'ail ing subsi dization of the transit The business port ion of the ,~ 'l ... Special Bus Needs study. done for the ne\\' buses.'' services." Bouman explained. e1·ent \\'ill be th~ election or . · COCKTAILS FINEST WINEI V by Alan Voohrers A-ssoeiates ~ 0Yerall in the first year. "But if the su pport is ci-eated the.. board of directors and COITA MESA• 3010 H1rbor Blvd. {•I Bakt1} l Phone (714) 549-0319 of Virginia and VTN of Orange 1r there wou ld be one million an-a profit could be realized." recognition ~f \:olu.nteer.s. ro••RAN£_E. • 0111 Amo Fashiml Squire (Enlr1nce #5). (i?13J M2'·733t County calls for 45 ne"· buses ftDUU!t COlmTW nual bus miles traveled in in· other pert inent information: liiiii~T~h~e~p~u~bl~oc~i~s~i~n~v~i~t~c~d~.~~g·g~~gg~~~~~~~~~~~~~~g~ in operation by ~uly 1973. Vfl'll"ilL Wtl,J tracity service and the same -Few public tr an~ it .. A cost of $1.95 million for ~---·-in interarea lines. systems in the U.S. make capital outlay and operati ng Jenkins sh 0 \\' e d district money. Some of the Southern expenses for the yea r begin· Costa ri.·tesa. and the Laguna directors 28 proposed in· California Rapid Tran sit ning July 1 was forecast. T\\·o-Beach city lines, as soon as tercommunity bus routes with Distri ct areas are profitable. thirds of that amount is ex-fiscally possible. 3(}..-60 minute service intervals but not the whole system. peeled · to come from federal A takeover of Santa Ana connecting all activity centers Currently. the district has g r an t s. The countywide Transi t System Jines, now and interconnecting w it h but $800,000 for programs district would provide the re· operated by the same firm facilities to bordering coun-fron1 a 2-cent per $100 of maining one-third. \\'hich owns South Co a st lies. and transit service within assessed value of real prop- Martin Boun1an of the Trans it, !llight also be in the cities. crty. A 5-cent rate is allo\Yed. Virginia consult ing firm and cards for the inltial year. ac· Bouman said all current bus But $9.6 million is expected Tom Jenkins or VT N cording to the consultants· lines in the coun ty 11·ou!d even-in the coming fiscal year from presented an eight-yea r pro· report. tuall y be taken over by the the sales tax on gasoline and : gram with an esti mated total The consultanls em phas ized distr ict. "\Ve should try lo an additional $10 million or l cost of $4.45 million in locnl that ncll' buses should be reach an agreement on value. more in federal grants. HAMS " . So Good It Will Haunt You 'Til It's Gone" Our html 1r1 the flntst ecr11:1ec1 lowt p0rk1" -Our JIOw tlry curlno mtll!od, r•~I Wlscontln 'hickory and 1pp11wooe1 1mokl119 tnd :JO·llour oven ~k itlg hOl!IY 'n 1plc1 t l•zt art·unlqut 111 t ll ftll world. So del!cio111 and 111i:>ttlz!n1 we lv11 W11u!!tn'1 kl!Clw how tv lmpraYfl 111!1 prOOuet Wt'Ue betn mt~lfl9 lor 3.1 y11rs. Splrtl t lkMI too. !rom 1op to bOltom 10 1h1r eacll dttt<llb~ Ynl~rm s!lct un be removed tlforll111Jv. Compltlt ly bllked Ind r11dy ta 11rut , o,. a~r your HOl!tY Btked H1m loclty, t n tdv1n!v•1 111 l'lt tn-IO'frnenf you'll ntvtr lorgtf. llTAIL STOlES l7GO I. Comt Hitllwoy, Ceron llkl Mor -67J,f0H 1JJJ S. lrookl111nt, A11ehei11t '11·2461 funds. About 187 buses would purch11scd as soon as possible but if necessary, condemnat ion The gas tax money isl be in operation by 1978, travel· on the basis of customer ·.ac-procedures may be used," he earm arked for new equipment I ing 9,600.000 bus n1lles per ceptance ;ind <.'Ost. advised. but so me can be used for plan· I year. An innovative transit sefvice 1 _~T~h~c~c:"o~n~s~n~l~l~•~n~I ~':"~.d~~n~in~g~·-------~-~=================================== The Orange Coast area and rcaluring on-call lrans porta· the g_rowing southeastern Sad-tion. such as Dia!·a·bus. would dleback \1al\ey figure prom-be ini tiated under the plan as inently in the transporlation a demo nstration proj ect. prob- plans. i!lhlv in !hr north centri!l l part In the fit-st ye ar, South of ·the county in cooperation Coast Transit C-Orp. rout es \\'ith a city and a contract serying Santa Ana-Newport operator. Beach and Santa Ana-Costa Bouman explained that the Mesa-Laguna Beach would be concept. fails "between fixed takel!_. over by the transit route bus lines and taxi distrlct::-Tne Sifrfie":'f1rm. or--nrvta'." ----, .. · another, would be hired to • En visioned in !he first year operate the routes for the also. are ti70,000 bus miles -0f district in the plan outlined by ne\Y intercity service to pro- the consultants. vide corridor lines in the north __.foNl~ick.,~ --- Mr tnd Mr1. 01nnl1 Potierd, 11!6 Norlol~ ltnt, A111h1lm. t lrl, ""'"-''· \f1J Mr. t nd Mn. fdwerd llosMLu, :1011 lltllrt, (i)'.11 M111, t lrt. Similar treatment would be Orange Coast beach areas and -g!Ve""n-the UC} f~perimental in the Saddleback Valley. -~.. Acomfo11 table ·&-~inde11 Ame11ican ca11 act•lly p11iced $19 less. M•. •l'ICI Mr1. J1mes Pll •«· t lJ MIHIOI! Drlvr. No. 1, Co1t1 Mt11, t lrl. Mr. 1l'ICI Mr1. ltol>ert Lt nl, :10511 GnhtWk LIM'. Hunllnt lon llt•cfl, "" Mr. 1nd fArL Allt n Fulmer. 1~!1] StMI Clt rt , Dtnt Po!nl, bo~. Mr. tnd Mr1. HfCl<ll" Gomer, l!ll ~unllcrwtr. No. ]4, ~1nt1 ""'' bo'I. Mr. ind Mn. Wll!fllm Slfll!fr, $191 Slrt•bou•O Av~ , 1rvlnt . boy. Mr. Ind Mrt. "Thomt l M11ool, ?4'32 0Vt r1alld Orlvt , Lttun• Hiiis. boY. Mr, t l'ICI Mrs. Gtorot lltber. IHl2 lltntt. Hvnlfn1ton Btach, ,;,1. Mr. t lld Mr1. Mtllri(~ H1r11v. '"' Cornwt ll Orlvt. Hunllntton lttch, Death Notices bus line in Newport Beach and This would be the first ele· DATE·IANI Men! You owe it to yourself to try a PENWEST ® Double-knit ... , ---·--- -. than a vol nJ. • Surprising as it may be, our Maverick . i.s actually in the same price class as many of those little imports. Look: - It's also longer and heavier than the VW, which makes a noticeable difference in the way it drives and handles the open road. Ar2J!nd town, though, you11 find • \ . ' ; FORD MAVERICK ""'"" ""'" 6cYf $2140• that Maverick is remar ao y easy to ----"'--' maneuver and park; -- ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCUFF MORTUARY • 4!7 E. J7UI St., Cosk• !\tea Ill 1181 • BALTZ BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona dl!I Mar f73.MSI Co1&.1 Me11 Mf.Ztu • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 111 Broadway, Co1l1 Aftsa LI S-1433 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1795 Lagunn Canyon RdJ .494-~415 • PACIPIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cl!mell!ry l\lor1u1ry Cbop<I '50I P1clflc Virw Drl\'e Nett-'J)Ort Btach . Calllornla ....,~.,_..__.. au.1111 • ""'1'1 ;. • PEEK FA~DLY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 'IHI bolsa Ave. Wt1flala11er lt3-SUS • •SMITHS' MORTUARV 12'1 Mal• SL HunUng-taa Bcacll $!Hilt KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN Soturdoy1 in The DAILY PILOT ' ·i • EXPERIENCE PEMWEST '' ,. • • • ~.w'-'-1' .. ~,, .... _ .... ~ ~~-'--•. You 11 know w "V rt:'s:""SO l!artio-Wof ind---_.._ · ~·· ,,.f-i > · ca re for. The PenWntWelllngton doubltknit jacket of 100% polyester is 1 reflection of yoor good taste. $47 .SO ALSO OTHll STYLIS OT $5$.00 IN COSTA MESA IT'S -~inerls 1116 fr4lWPOIT ILYD. CINT•ALL 'f LOCATID AT fr4lWPOlT Afr40 HAllOI ILYDS. • I • WI 113 (Super Beetle)'~""'"'" ---· 4cyl $2159 • TOYOTA GGROtbA 1600 2-.-,"''" 4 ·Gyl $2109" DATSUN PL·510 """°' """ 4 C\'I $2306• ·M1nulit1uttr"~ 1u11e1tid rt!11I pr1c1101 2-door ll'OG~I~ hrl~du dti lt • prenu111D~ t"•JJe5. it 1ny. dn1+n1t<gn ch11ie1 (~ltOOOI. C;ihfornr1 uruuoon i11tem (i!Jall l1i111nd tun. So if you can afford a little import, you can afford a Maverick. Here's why we think you'll want to. SIX CYLINDERS VS. FOUR. With Maverick's six-cylinder engine, you can zip into turnpike traffic with con· fidence. And hold your own on steep hills. But there are other advantages. A six is basically smoother than a four. You can hold polite conversations in a Maverick going al top hi ghway speed . Generally, a six doesn't need to work as hard as a four to deliver the same speed and power. AH!iliH, COMFORT . ' -~""'"' Maveric:'kis over eightlni:hes-wider. than a Volkswagen 113. You get over eight inches more shoulder room in front, over five inches more in back. Setler idea for safely ... buckle up! . . Maybe the be$! WEY to de.scribe it is that Maverick.fecls.akl · e the bi cars when you're driving,-and a lot l*e the litt!~ cars wh en you're parking. YOU CAN RELY ON IT. We designed Maverick tllhe a simple, dependable machine. We also designed it to be an inexpensive machine to maintain. You can do many jobs yourself. And oil changes are recommended only every six months or 6,000 miles, whichever comes first.' One more thought: there are over 5,600 Ford dealers throughout the country. If you ever break a fan belt in Lake Preston, South Dakota , Clarence Hedberg of Hedberg Ford will be happy to SUPP\Y, a new one. A GOOD CAR FOR BIG TRIPS. Actually, the idea of driving to Lake Preston, South Dakota may be the best way "to'SllJti upall ~diffelences between Maverick and lhe little imports. You wouldn't think twice about going in a Maverick . FORD MAVERtCK FORD OJVISION .. < . 1 See your Ford ~er ' ) • ' ' -· • . I Tuesday's Closing Prices-Co~plete New York Stock Exchange Li st ket Slides In Ligl1t Trading NEW YORK (AP) -Stock market prices re- sumed their steep slide today after a rally attempt failed Trading was moderate Tracing a sawtooth pattern, the market declined al the opening turned upward around mid session, and then dectmed again toward the finish Analysts said the downturn at the start was a carry over from Monday \Vhcn the DO\V Jones aver age of 30 1ndustr1als los t nearly 12 points for its biggest loss 1n six mon ths The br1ef upturn was purely technical they sa1ct fO FllOll I'' NI Gen ,JO NI GVll I OS NI Hom lOd N~ lnd111t "'el "1101 '° NPes 110. Hci S.rv " S1t111 Htt (hd1 l Mlt ll L•W ( .... Cllt • ' "' • ' "' • " ~- " • ' • ' ... .. ' . • l•! '" SC ' . ' . .. "l1 -~ ' . ' I DAILY PILOT hlH "' .. 111111 I Mltll L .. ClltiM Cltt> " .. '/, -J11Tt- "' " •• .. l . • • ' • • .. ' ,,, -. 'n1J7 11\ lr. . • '''• l'' -• ,, ' ' 1 3•'> l•~ w- lO :M • J!' o • !' JSo l ..,._t• 1 10\l"' '"' '' .,_ • l•J •lO ·~·l \I " ! S!lind 15 a Stir 64!1 a sr.i :w, N Tei 10 N V~EI 12d "la om11 :LS Ne uni 40 HrvPw l :io N IMI V i.o ~~:;"IE~ Ju NfWIM I JO NwmnDf •'h '.11'1' on 05cl N YSEG JOI h 'l'JEol I IQ NYSEDf 3V. N ~oMr , , N •Mo )60 N Mol JtO Nl1MDf 5 ts N iKI Sii •'<I NL h1dutl I NL T (P 15cl fllorlokWI 5 Nor nC 1Scl Norrf1I 1 N NA Co.I 60 NAM! llOd N Jlll'I Pll I 1 NoA Ak 1.40 N~llA Ill 1\li N AAkllf 1 35 Nfll'~ Ut .. NoCntG1 60 No Cen AIU NollfG1 112 N A,.... 1 tO N n PS 1 1 N~ IGI 260 NoNGDf S to Co1nplete Closing Prices-A1nerica11 Stoel\: Exchange List • N '"' 1 10 N <;pj!f 4 10 ,.. ..., • 11 N ,of Ito " .,e ~ e ~--·"";i'--"~op( 1 ·-~r 1 •s- " rl .-IS ,.. ~ 1 •o • I" "' ,... rid WI N '?P1 s ~ ~pf~ ~s ~ ult ;;i t 0 11'1 ~ '"1 1r1A NVF Co lJI 0 cc 1, on• rrP to 0 ' 1111 Occ !!Plltf 4 0cf'> DI l'O OccP pf 1 16 OICCll(O M Oodn of 1 17 (lh~Ed \Sol OhEPllfO O~ E ol •..O O~E ol416 00. •CE 111 Ok GEltf IG O~ tNG 111 o ,,Corp .II Om• ~ 41< Ont'lc!tL 10 Oot f~ M I Or "ckl I )II 01 • Et Co Ou bo!"ll M 1 o u r-C 6S OVerTrn JO Ow1~l"F 7t OWtnlU l 40 O•/'l"dlnd '° New York llps -. - St.l•I NII lhd1 I MIOll l ow C O'I Chi S1 ti tlla1 I "' H 911 LOW Ck111 Chi SI ti NII l hd1 I H 9h Low C 111 ctlt \I r~ NII llldt I M gh Low (Jo 1 C~q -------r •• "" SI 11 NII lhd1 I N 911 Llw C10M Cllt & I 7 I 12 "•ll•l''• 66 J)o ?J Jl i1J o 71 o • I 1 1 1 , 1 1 • 1 • 2" 0 l• lio Je• J , • J J 1 • • • •..->fl t u. ) JJ6 1 J6 ..16 l lJll t J 171 +11 llo J\ I"• 11 4 II \J.'.o l o ll. . \ ) . ) ~~:l~l~· l:\.::, ,j ,j . - • • • ' ,, .. ' ... ,, ,_ . ' '"· ,, ' Ii \>I • t I \o ' -' I • I~• lo • " . ., -'" ... "' 1~::: • ...... '·-. Phone (>42-1321 For Weekender Adverli • ' (.2 DAILY Pi~OT Tuttday, May 2, 1CJ72 L. ltl. Boyd Rumple ss HeJis Lay Blue Egg s In an extensive 5urvey or newlyweds , it was learned that 32 percent or the brides felt their wedding trips were too short, while fwo percent thought said trips too long. Another eight percent gaid they didn 't go anyplace. And the rcmajning 58 percent told th e pollsters they had no com- plaints -eilher they recal led everything was just dandy or they couldn 't remember anything, one. WllE_N, YOU listen to Jean Stapleton sing the intro.. duction tO ''All in the Family," please bear in mind she's the daughter of an ·opera-mn·gcr. - Jfo' A VARMINT gel.$ into a chick- en coop, those hens left alive during the next rew days lay eggs with un· usually thick shells. A most peculiar phenomenon . .a>· AM ADVISED 11,000 U.S. families now have working TV sets In every room in the house, even the bathroom. That's bad. The advisors frown_pn that bath· · room set. QUERIES -Q. "Do any Eskimos have blue eyes'?'' A. Certainly do. Lot or them. Up Labrador way. Nor is the blue.eyed blond Eskimo unknown to Greenland, I'm tO!d. Q. "1.EGALLY, can a girl marry her uncle?" A. Nol in nny state except Pennsylvania. Still, the science boys insist there's nothing wrong with that notion biologically, providing the family stock is sound. DID YOU ever watch the waves roll onto an ocean beach? Here's a fair technique to figure how fa st they travel. Count the seconds bet.ween two arriving crests. Multiply by 3.5. For instance, if 10 seconds elapse between the first and second waves, they're rolling along at 35 m.p.h., count on it. EARS -Shape of a man's ea rs don't change over his lifetime. At least not signlricantly. Such is the contention of a lawman whose business it is to check identification . photos. ' ~----!:Show-mo.. two-picturoi. oLlhe,...same._rnan,.JJ_o, • .mi!Aler_. bow man y years apart theY were taken, and .1 can match t'bem up by the ears," this expert avers. Jnc!dentally, he' does nol claim such craft with pictures of women whose ·cars frequently are not revea led to the camera. WRITES a feminine Toledo subscriber: "Your incom- plete Hsi or the qualities or a lady should have read: Sim- plicity. Sincerity, Serenity, Sympathy, and Sensitivity." Quite right . quite right. ·THAT SOME chickens of Chile lay blue eggs has been reported. But did you ~now said chickens are rumpless'! Come dinner, pass out the drumsticks, breasts, necks, sure enough. But nobody gets that thing called the preacher's nose . Jsn 't any. Address mail to L. fif. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875, Newport Beach, Calif. 92660. School Tuition Demand Turned Dow11 by Court SAN FH.ANClSCO CAP) -A sending their c·hildren to San Diego parent group's de-parochial and other nonpublic mand that the state or schools. California estrtblished "tuition The Court or Appeals' three· grants'' for children sent to judge panel said "we find no nonpublic schools has been re-support for any con tention jcclcd by the 9th U.S. Circui t that the California public Court of Appeals. schools system is hostile to The group led by Harvey I~. rc\igion." J ackson of San Diego con-It cited the 1962 U.S. tended that the state public Supreme court decision ban- schools system establishes an ning required prayers in "irreliglon, •t or a "secular public schools. ·~==~h":u~manisn1 hostil-to--religio . ' It said:::the=purpo_s_e_oLba~ t-~he-Golll't-of-Appeals-said-ning....regular__prayer_,s was to . the U.S. Supreme Court decid· . ~aintain _reutrality tow!l;r~ ed the same is sues April 17 in differing rell gior\S. ti Missouri case, Brusca vs.I-:========~-! ! if1ssour1, - The Circu it. court affirmed t e Adgust J970 1sm1ssa ~of the .Jackwn group's suit by U.S. Di:;tr ict Court Judge E. J. &h\\'arl z. The parents contended their Jst Amcnd1nent freedon1 or religion rights \.\'ere violated by being con1peled to send their children to pub Ii c schools. They argued !hat a sys tem of state tu ition grant vouchers would give then1 a choice of a ANTHONY SCHOOLS HAllOI CINTll 2JOt H11'Wr Ct11Mr Coit• M.,., (•'ll•ml• P,11. 1714) tJt.JJSJ ITI7 I, 1'91t1Mlnl SI A111fttll'A. (II, ..... "· C.714) 776·HOO WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY. COLLEGE OF LAW OF OltANGE COUNfY now ;t<<epting men .and wom•n who ilirt •ith•r: e •••• 11 wllh J Ytfn 11 •U•jllt.lt coll .. t cr.lllh 1601: or e over JJ •nil ht•• '"•l,.tll In .-ll'fi'l"'l'll l>1• • l•lltcho•I •hlllty !11• "-"lw1l1>1t •I •ltl•o ! .. h• oiltt ..... 1 .. .-hy '"'' Th• J.D. Of U.11. dtg''' tan bt t Qr"td I" .C y.•r• of ptrt·time d1Uth 3 tl•11•1 I"" w.tli:.t J • .c hoi.ir1 ptor tl1u., ' ~~,. ~1~~;--.... ~ti't-"lltiii~~~~l~, ... ..;l.. f•t!l,Yflf 1tudMnl1, Apply Now for September 7th Day or Evening Classes Wttff 01 l'HOHI ,Ot INJOIMAl lON 01 CAfAlOGUI 800 South Brookhunl An•h•im 92804 17141 '°15-3453 Gl-td111tu •~ el lg obit 1'0 Jt~I •hi Ctl!fomlt ~'•'-91r [•1mln1!iotl, PIOYISIOHAUY-ACCltOITlO ,., "ntt CAllfOltNIA,' COM~1m1 Of IAI lXAMINtH Nl'f' 1, 1t7J, , •• 11~~~~,..;;"'"°;;.;;.:~"'°;;,,.c'°';;;;.,vm;.:;.::~""';;;... ~~~~ • • 1.IN·IROOK HARDWARE aM-LUMBER .TUESDA ~ & WEDNESDAY . GRAllD OPENING SPECIALS! •.:: ......... ,.,,._ Briggs & Stratton 2 H.P. 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ONLYI Complete 12 Dro"!•r 45" Diameter SK~~~~of~OOL • Bright-ye// . umrner fun/11 . ow pool with colorful dais ff •Tough sea I Y ower pattern. , m ess polyethylene .. easy cfeqning & durability. ,$Qnstruct1on guarantees • Stays bright- o real favorite witli the kids! WO Wt Shell's• DRESSER NO-PEST . STRIP ~tots-of-space~for-oll-your-thingS= __ • features heavy gloss globes-with·the -- ~---1<o>~ok of band cul qys!.au"I~, --=~- plus it's on ottractive piece of furniture. --~'~•-cl& Tru• Way~to_Control_lnsecJ:sl'' -•55" 1anQ X15"-deep x 33" high.. l~~~~~~~~ii-.--QVolity~"'no=.-~~-~~~rspec1ally prepored insecticide -formula - • Rich cost brass fittings-complete with all necessary hardware. REG. $14.99 SAVE $5.001 TUES. I. WlD. ONLYt -' ; pine-ready for controls fl ies, gnats, mosquitoes, etc. th~ finish_ing for up to 3 months. touches. REG. $41.99 $2999 SAVE $12.001 TUES. I. WED. ONLYI Ready To Finish BOSTON ROCKER • Rock.o-bye boby in this colonial styled rocker with , It~ stately spindles, graceful arms and turned legs. . • Ready to point, stai n or antique. REG. $19.99 ------~---,. • Complete with gold foil hdlder- looks attractive onywherh\ REG. $1.69 SAVE 70c 99' TUIS. I. WID. ONL YI 16 Inch Wide DELUXE HAND MOWER • 5 Sheffield steel cutting blades whiz: merril" through the grass. • 8" solid rubber tires for easy handling. ~ ! Adjustable cutting heisjht , REG. $18.95 1 1 ~- 1 ..... -.:..r; I ,• H p g w le al ' ' Sw r9 ho Bi M Gh la ne re ho ; • • 'I' • -. Lag11•1t1 ~.-Beaeh . . ED" TION Today's Flnal voe. 65, NO. 123, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 2, 1972 TEN CENTS Hoover~s Death Lanaented in County By JAClt CHAPPELL OI tllt o.llY 1'1111 Sl•ff In the wake ol the death of J . -Edgar Hoover, Orange County officials ex- pressed both sorrow and hope that the great crime fighting organization be buUt would ..endure. . "Evt:ry lawman in Orange County will feel a deep sense of persona l loss today at the death df J. Edgar Hoover,'' Chief Deputy· District Attorney James Enright .said this morning. • ' Eight Lives to Go "Hoover built an enduring organization that will be a monument to his ability," EntlghUaid. The cjlief deputy was ct'.lm- mcnting in the absence of District Al· torney Cecil Hicks from the county. "l~m sure 1'1r. Hoover's pla,ce \\'ill be filled from within the organization.", Enright said. "But whoever succeeds him at the FBI will be well content to pursue the goals of Hoover within the magni fi- cent structure he created." State Senator Dennis Carpenter (ft.. 'U'I Te ........ Ne\.l•port Beach). a former FBI agent said, "A1r. Hoover was the eptiome of the perfect civil ser\1ant." He was a great ad m inist rat or, Carpenter said. "He had lhe overwhelm- ing .desire to do his job as well as it could be done, regardless of his own personal incon vience." "" Mr. Hoover was a great horse race !an, and had a quick wit and good sense or humor, Carpenter said. "l can remember one occassion when he was speaklng to a class or new agents. I had been in the bureau for a year or so and was looked upon as an old timer by the-new.. guys. "One of the n1en asked him If it \.\'as true that FBI agents had to wear their guns at all times. He replied 'no, it is on- ly ,necessary to have your gun \\'hen you need it.' " Carpenter mentioned that \Vhile he \\'as with the bureau. they would have "wild" Christmas parties. "Peanuts and cola, Vida Blue Ba~k Oakland Pitcher Collects $63 ,000 BOSTON (AP) -Vida Blue, the scholarship, which was.a ·part of Blue's AiTiiricaii 'Le3iue's ~ t!rll Jn0st -Va1llabl6 ·-o~gi!f3T. "'itmml-M"f!nifemcnt-'When. he . d signed 1n 1967. player and Cy Young Award winner, en . Bue said he thinks it wjll take 3 to ' ed his long holdout and signed ~ contract weeks to get in conditlon to pitch. for $63,000 today with · the Oakland However, hi s salary is effective April 'l1, Athletics. the date when the ofrer WlrS made by The 22-year-old Jefthander k e p t Finley in Clii~go. Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn, Ordinarily, a major league player's Arr.erican League President Joe Cronin salary does not begin until he's ready to and A's owner Charlie Finley waiting for play. nearly 1 * hours before showing up for Blue planned t~ rejoin the A's f?r a the contract signing. scheduled game with the Red Sox tonight. They met at American League head· The contract makes Blue probably t~ qu8.rte rs for about 15 ininutes before h!ghest paid major league sophomoi:_e m coming out for a news conference. }ustory. "I'm signed, I'm happy, I'm ready to Blue was met at Logan .lntematio~at play," Blue said. Airport Monday by Joe Reichler, ass1s~ The contract calls for a 1972 salary of tant to Kuhn. He was polite, but not very $50,000, a $5,000 bonus ~or h 1 :s .coi:nm,unicatlve ~Ith the ·1?~ , sports ~formance in l9i1: ! ~ an ~~ ~l:~to ~t.~ •. ,' ,_, · Occupational Program Budget Eyed by Board and that was ii," he satd. lloover was a ~reat stickler on the \\'ay his agents dressed. "I reme1nber one time. he told us thnt ~ expectedall his ·agents to dreS.!I like 'successful young lawyers. And I mean Boston. ~Vashinl!lon or New York lawye rs, no1 Chicago. L<iii Angeles or ~1la1ni lawyers.' " he said . . . Senator Ca rpenter said that he hoped a. successor could be foWl4. to carry on the great tradition of the bureau tllat Air. Hoover founded . r • Three Credited "Our nution has l~i oot of Its gr"ntest la\v toforcernent figures ." Oran..:e County Sheriff Jam.c.s Musick said today. "'~le Is going lo be i;reatly 1ni~~td hy his organizatiC11 and lhose or us \\'ho h:id such tremendous re~pecl for hi~ nb11ily, ''For all !hat ," the she rirr s.1id, "I tlon't think \\'r 're going to set 11ny grent changes in the organization or operatio.11. of the FU!. "~foovrr h11ill • up <i trrmendousl1 (Srr ltEACTION, Pagt. %> Nixon Lauds Devotio11, _:_Dedieation - WASlllNGTON (AP) -.I . Edg8' lloover, embodiment of the FBI and foqis of low enforcement achievement and controversy for a hall cen tury, ii: dead. ·· · The 77-year-o\d director or the Federal Rureau or Investigation dit'<l or natural causes in his home Monday nig ht , the Justi ce Department announced. The District of Columbia coroner el· tributed the tleath lo "hypertensive car- diovascul;ir disease'' -an ailment linked lo high blood pressure. The coro ner, Dr. Jcimes L. Lu ke, s:iid after ·examining the body that the im- mediate cause of death might hove been a he art attack. lte 1nid an autopsy wall not indicated. President Nixon, uµon hearing of Jfoovcr's death, called him a "truly remarkable man who served the country for •B years undtr eight presidents with unparalleled devotion to duty and dedlca· With Savi' ng L1'fe !Ion." Nixon spoke emotionally or his "profound _sense of personal Joss." Flagtt at .all public· buildings and lnstallatlona I L ' F• were ordered to' half staff. Approval or the preliminary budget for the Regional Occupational Program. a look at test results and adoption of a policy dealing with federal funds will ll 3 gun a Jre Hoover was a virtual Jeng end In the come before trustee's or the Laguna Unitro Stales, an "untouchable " who died Beach Unified School District tonight. Three youi,g men, only one of whom In of!ice despite efforts by critics in re- '11ie 7:30 p.m. meeting will be held Jn has been identified, apparently saved the cent years to have him retirc.>d . the Education Center, 5:-,0 Blumont St. life of a Laguna Beach worilan whose He shaped the FBI into a massive, home burned Saturday night, Jt was po_werful federal agency during his Trustees will be asked to approve the · di.!IClosed Monday. career. Aci-oss Pennsylvanit Avenue $215,000 ROP budget to fund a much ex-from the offiCe where Jloover worked, 1 d d OC tl·onal program dur1'ng the Mrs. Boyd C. McElhany, 547 Emerald pan e v a massive powerful federal building to • Without waiting for a net, a cat leaps to safety from the fourth floor -of·-a-blazing Brooklyn . building as~ firemen carry hose lines · up the fire escape. The feline landed on all fours and walke"d away, appar· lently-and incredibly-unharmed. ~Hotel_Ro_om Tax l97i.?-3 -school-year. The.Jl0£_pnliect.s Bay, said she learned of the hero role ho. th FBT .. rid t r are jointly funded by the Laguna Beach plaYNf-by her-son-Rolaruf-20 -when-1he -use e . IS u er cons rue .,•o"n:=. ~,,.---- p I SI ' d and Capistrano Unified School Districts. went to church S~day 11~ f~lends who Even before. Hoover'sOea:ih:lhere had --=Beaufiflcation -£forts Lauded by Cof C Mermaids Led by the Laguna Federal Sa vings Sifeepstakes Award to Mission Bank, iiore than 25 beautification efforts were honored Monday evening at the annual Be8utification Awards Celebration of the Mermaids Division of the Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce. The Spanish design and distinctive Jandscapin8: of ~tission Bank , 800 Glen- neyre St. made it "a high quality, beautiful and appealing structure,'' Jiafold Frank, executive vice president of ~guna Federal told bank president Thomas Wingett in presenting the award. ' In Board of Realtors judging, .the top ruidential awA'rd for new and remodeled homes went to Craig Corbell and his partner Dale McCarty for their home at 7,65 ~ay View Drive. dall, 461 Locust St. "Flower lined 'walkways, a rf.triating driveway through the trees and ao amber tree has been ad- • ded to enhance the home," judges noted. Landscaping credits were gi ven to her son, Ten Kirkendall AIA. Mennaid's ~lerit Awards In the re sidential category went to the foll ow- ing: • -The remodeling or the home of Courtney Jahnz, 475 St. Ann's Drive; Chris Abel, designer; John Williams, builder, Courtney Jahnz, landsca ping. -Improvements to the home of hir _ and Mrs. Ronald Lane, 67 Emerald Bay ; Ri chard Martin, designer and the Lanes serving as builders and landscapers. -The restoration of the home of Cra ig Corbett, 765 Bay View Place;· Craig (See BEAUTY, Page Z) Designer Corbett -who received the S,"eepslakes Award in 1970 for a former residence and in 1971 for work on the~ ~pper-...Tret: Paaeo-:~f~ the ., -,; ~~----,_ diab •Bay Vtew m~nce 1.nto a home nollier tt»&t "captures a _ romantic aura of yesteryear with cleiTI cut lines and fresh color [rom frame to garden," judges iiOted. Hill~siCie Plan Due roposa . ate ' d t h' th . h be' been continuing specult.t1on ab 0 u t The C~pistrano board has ·approved the l1a me im at a party e nrg t io~e whether_Jbe__bulldinf-WOUk!;be named for preliminary budget. . . as~cd if he had recove~ ~ro!Q. .• ,)J-15-=11.~4)erhap1 might eVen house hlr -Eor. U•n~J_'S ~tudv_ Vern .Dahl. of... the . l\'estingbouse---"dventure. final resting plact. • _,. t..LU. ~ ;_ · COrpotat1on will appear before the bo.ard Young McElhany later explained that Speculation on a 1ucce1sor to Jloover . to report on his recent review of dittrict he. '_'smelled something burning" while also beian long before hit death ., --.The Laguna Beach c1tr_ council is ex· test results. dr1v1ng up Temple Hills Drive en route to · pollt1C3r-pressure to retire Hoover peeled to increase the OO:tel=-motel r~m -. Board meffibcfi wUl-also-bc asked to tj:le party shortly' before 10 p.m. Saturday -~ternately waxed and waned. tax from five percent to six ~rce_nt atJts adopt a board Policy which would require sto pped""to-check out-the c3r-and,-flnding ad seemf<f..ilmost--CJer-tair, he-wouli<>---- regula: session Wednesday night. . review of a preliminary report stating nothirig, proceeded up the hill. • ret1 e r be ~etlred if the Democrats beat The mcrease, proposed by ~uncLIJ'!lan the goa ls of federal projects before staff Almost immediately he spotted names Preside_n5xon in the Nov ember elec· Roy Holm at the l~st C<!8J1c1l meeting, time ls spent writing a forma l grant ap-Jn his rear view mirror, the houth said, tlon. Nixon w will be able lo pick I has ~en drawn up 1n or~1nance form by plication. )tunning back to the blaz~g house at 943 sucee~r. . the city ~ttorney and will be presented The proposed policy has been through Temple Jfillf Drive, he was joined by two ~ashing . .C: police chlel Jerry for adoption. tls fir st publ ic hearing before the boa rd other yo ung men, .as yet unidentif ied, and W1lso~, fl recent Nixon, law enforcement Holm estimated the one percent if-and is expected to be adopted. three succeeded In breaking In the door favorite, h_ad been prominently menllone,<1 crease could generate · ~pproximately of the hoU.!le. as a possible successor before lfoover 1 $28,000 in additional revenue, based on -Alter letting out a terrified cat, they death. . current annual bed tax revenue in the T'•'O Teens Found made their way th rough the smoke and Also among those mentioned : Assael. neighborhood of $140,000. .,. aroused ' ~1rs. Dorothy Jordan Sykes, who ate Justice Byron R. While of the .Su· Enabling legislation adopted by the was sleeping in a bedroom, McElhany preme Court and Robert C. A1ard1a11t, state last year would have made the in-Down 1•0 Ravi'ne said. .former assistant attorney gene~al who crease possible for the current fiscal headed the Jus_tlce Department internal h ·1m ·d b t d · I t Mrs. Sykes escaped through the soo.irlly dlvh1lon. year: t e counci ~n s~ • u ur~g as bedroom window, and the" three youths The White Jfouse announced last monlh yehl' s budge~ sessi~ns 11 was .~ecided to .$IMI (AP) -The bodies o! two Simi Jcft the scene when firemen arrived, that Mardlan left the government to join def : the action until Orange ~unty and Yalley boys have been recovered from McElhany continuing to his party. (Ste llOOVER p1 e !) perhaps Ne wport Beach had increased the bottom o! a 7~foot ravine where ' the ir rates. they apparently fell while looking for "lie apparently arrived with hl3 "The rounty has gone to si1 percent," crows' nests. eyebrows and hair singed and a cut on Holm said today, "and 1 unde_rstand Michael G. lluff and Mark C. Frye, • his nose from breaking glass trying lo get Newport is waiting for us, so there se~ms both 13, were last seen leaving their Jn a windo w," his mother said Monday, to be no further point in delaying. The homes Saturday. "but he didn't say anything about it at new city of Irvine also set its bed .tax at 6 -Authorities recovered the bodies Mon-home till he woke up Sunday." percent and this apparently will be the day afternoon with the aid of ~ The .unsung hero's rather, by coin- accepted rate ." helicopter. Autopsies were planned. cidence, Ls president of the Emerald Bay Volunteer Dire Department. Afore sunshine on Wednesday, a~ .J..\Ji!Ulf."Tneac Jjre__P.lie ma'-=·""'"'colrding to lhc weoitherlady. Low Latfrh<r saia~fie fiad .. )r.· young' -louds ·~ boacheo>wlll;.cJtac McElhanrt-parents Monday evtnlng to by mid-momln,i: leavinR tempera. apologize for not giving him credit for his turu 01 62· Inland high 70. heroic act and e1plaln that the youlh lelt IN!'rDE TObA Y the scene without contlilctlng the flrtmen ·0r .... Coan • The Park Gleiin Professional Building, owned by ·L3guna Beach dentist· Dr. 'nx>mas R. Judy -..1s presented with the board's award for best commercial butlding. The professional b u i r d"1 n .... located at the corner of Park Avenue ~ Glenneyre Street was cited for its tisleful Spanish design, e 1 t e n s l v Iindscaping and concealed ,underground Parking. The strucrtir e wu designed by ~rfcr Ostrander and Jack Cressman, tonslructed by Beach Conslructlon all! landscaped by designer Darwin Black. ¥The realtor's top landscaping award 'ent lo the home cl Mrs. A. E. Kirteo- S. Laguna Property Group t;o Get Amended Proposal who were busy fighting the blaze. The Ore chlef said his investigators will seek to lntervlf!w McElheny later toc111y when he returns Crom classes at sad- dleback Colltge and "1)drts to his gss lrfort than 500 yacht1 lt(Jt)t Newport Jettu Thur1day for lhe annuol 12S·milt rac.i lo En!en· ada. You can't tell who lhtU art without a program. Stt tntrv li!t. Pagt 20. 1 An alternative general plan calling for llmlttd developt'l\ent of the hillsides In South Laguna will be .,presented to lhc public Wednesday at a-lllee\ing or the \neWly Conned South Lagur\1 Property Ow}ler's Associ~Uqn. . :nie new· plan has been proposed lo Ille county Planning Commission u · an alt.emattve to a masttr plan pftpared ~ der the leadership of landscape architect Fred Lang. Lang'• plan colts ror no development cl the South Laguno hillsides, claimin g that seismic and transportatJon conskterations we,i&b • agala.!t such developmeait. -, • 'j'bo • Orange County Atnnlllf • cam. mldion will hold. 1 Jll!blie 1lelrtl!l:,all !'!"'} pie. If v:it plll.~#ir10111 J\llif.~ Jn 8iJUll\ ~ • • 'Ille pfesiiiiatlOti o! the iltmtativ< plln Is scheduled ror 7:$0 p.m. Wtdnel\llY ll th! United Methodist Church. 21631 Wesley Drive." . According lo property owner's ,,...i. lion spokeswoman · Marie Esslinger, the eri~UOll. wu fonned reetotly lo at• 1'mpt i;,1.1oct iltld8! ldopUon ~Lang'• plan. ll!e ulll·~li"".Jl!'!llbe" own '°'"' '1111 *"" 111•,.lld In 'South 1'1\Pl• -·nearly llll ·ol !fit hUbidt land which !Mtc'• gr1>up·of plannl(J'9' believes should remaln undeveloped. Tbe preaident of the proptrty owner11 assoc.laU6n ii Frank cankar of Laguna Beach. atatlon job In .. Laguna. Propaganda Okayed WASHINGTON (API -The U.S. Information Ag(ncy has survjved a Se'Rate tommlttet'a tffort to cut 1pencUng ror propaga nda filml, broadc:utlng and pamphlets by 25 ptfctn~ ... --------------.} L.M...... t1 h•tl~ • c11:1tirfil J (ltt1!11M n>li C-k• II C'"-' It OMfll "9Jlc" f . ... ltlttlt ..... ' • ..,.,....._. tt ,,lllMI M-11 ,., ....... ' ...,__ 1• .... w.Mn ,. MllJNI ,.,... .. ... , ..... ,.... . Ol'Mtt C•fllY f ' .,lltl. ~~... •• ..... ,. , .. ,. SMck MWMtt lt·ll T..,,.... It -" W111Hr • ... _.,.. ""'" , .. u ~-.... . .- ' .. • 2 DAll Y Pll0_1 ___ ,_o_c:._ ____ ..;T.;;ut;,;;l<lll=·.;;Mll;:!..2.::...:l""°972 Red Assault • Fire .Base Nancy Now Threatened ~tGON (UPI) -North Vietnsm"e troop5 followtd by tanks drove today Into Artillery Base Nancy, the anchor of the new South Vietnamese defense line only 20 mlles north of Hue, and occupltd at · least part or the J>O!ltlon. UPI corre1.pondent Stewart Kellerman reported that Allied warplanes today bombed ind strafed at leaat 30 govern- ment tanks lefl behind in the Quang Tri sector. DAU. Y 'llOT lllH l"lotlt Field report~ said by nlghtfall control of the bm was In doubt. Field officers 1ald South 1{1etnamete marines held part Of -Uit base 1rid the North -Vie name11e held part. The U.S. command reported 462 air strikes including B52 heavy bomber raid! in Quang Tri province In the 24 ho\11'1 en- dinl at noon 1\Je!day -the heaviest co,,. Presenting Petition centratkm of air raidl Irilour years. ---'"' -- - ''There are many, many tanks at My Chanh heading for Nancy," one officer said. My Chanh ta within small 1rm1 tire dl!tance of Nancy, 12 miles t0uth of the fallen province capital or Quang Tri city. The threat to Binh·[)lnh province on the ctntral coast Increased and military sources said contact had been Jost with Landing Zone E9glish, the last Allied out- post in the upper one-thlrd of the prov- ince. Four Communist rocket.I dropped on the market place at Qui Nhon during the midday ruah hour, killing aix civilians and wounding 19 othen. Qui Nhon 11 the capital of Blnh Dinh province. "1 believe Hue it the major objective," Brig. Gen. Thomaa W. Bowen, deputy senJor U.S. advl!er on the northern front. told repor.ter.9 at the old imperial capltal 1\Je!day rlight. • The Communist threat was also strong elsewhere. An Loe, SO miles north or Saigon, 'vas Stlll under siege. Kontum city in the Central Highland.t was In danger of ID Imminent atta ck. Jn neighboring --Cambodia, a govern· ment attempt to retake a 60-mile stretch of Communist-controlled Highway I, 1talled and the high command said at lefst 100 troops were killed, wounded or missing. From Pagel Mrs. Shirley Deaton, right, deputy registrar, accept• petitions from California Marijt:1-ana Initiative repre-- sentative Mrs. Betty Armacost. The organization claims to have 22,000 signatures from Orange County. Before the issue of le galization of marijuana can be put or:i the .ballot, 330,000 signatures are needed statewide. The deadline is ~une 1. See story on Page 5. All-year School Nixed P~rents in Capo Score Victory On Bom1daries . By Capo District Board There will be no all-year school ln the Capistrano Unified School District this year. But it very probab ly will be in effect beginning in July or 1973. trustees Monday, who made a com· Parents from northern parts or the mitment to the probab!Uty of having Capistrano Unified School District won the 45-15 plan at Crown Valley, San Juan, their battle Monday to keep attendance Viejo, Richard Henry Dana elementary boundaries unchanged £or the comitig schools and Marco Foster Junior High year. Police Hold .. I Suspect; Pair Sought By ARTDUll R. VINSEt Of rlll DIU~ llllat fllff One suspected drug smuggler is jailed today, following Newport Beach police ') seizure of 294,500 illicit pills, probably the largest such conflscatlon In Orange Qiun- ty history . Value of the 250,000 amphetamine pills and 44,500 barbiturate tablets of Mexican origin would be about $35,000 on the street -sales market, police 1aid. Arrest warrants were issued more than 8 week ago for three tuspected principals in the case, two of whom have not yet been taken into custody. Announcem ent of the first suapect"s capture only lYs blocks from Newport Beach Police Department headquarter• v.·as initially withheld to avoid alertina his alleged accomplices. Lyle P. Rodgers, 32, o! 305 32nd St., Ne,vporl Beach, remains in Orange coun- ty Jail, unable to post $30,000 ball set by: the court. . Rodgers, who said be is unemployed, faces a May 12 preliminary hwing on charges of conspiring to smuggle na rcotics and possess dangeroW: drugs , for sale. .. HOOVER DIES ... That was the decision of the board of one year from July. n~ · v.:sp1te r;redicted overcrowding at Jiilbert Keisker, chairman of the All Crown Valley and San Ju an elementary Detective Sgt. Leo Konkel, 'of the departn1ent's narcotics detail, identified the other two suspects as Pierre Jacques Bertolino an'd llank D. Kuykendall, both 22-year-old Newport Beach residenta. . Bail for both men, who were last known to be in Hawaii, was set at $50,000 on the same charges on which Roda:•n wu .,.. rested at his home. Year School Committee, was told to the committee coordinating President la:aued 1 one-paragraph statement fn 'S d S 1. ' present a fire recommendation by schools, the board voted 4-3 to keep Spot· Nixon's re-election effort. which he said Hoover'• body WIS found an tea 1ng December. led Bull and Mission HUis-area children The White House decllned to d!acuss by hla maid at approllrrtately l :30 a.rn. "It is our plan to continue information in San Juan School and western Laguna who would succeed Hoover. Deputy_preu today. D .00 Op and fact ga.lhering·until that time," said Niguel children a~ Crown Valley. secretary G~~at~ L, Warren told report~ "It J1 with profound personal grief that em ; eratOr Superintendent4iJ'uman Benedict. A motion to move some Crown Valley ers because th!~ sad develop.ment ca!fle I announce that J. Edgar Hoover pa11~ "Because of our growth and limitations children to Richard Henry Dana school rather recenUy, he had no information aw1y during the ~1.jht at his residence, . '1 ....... WT • , on district financing a recomm(!:ndation is and some San Jual) children to Viejo (two The case ·has been under lnvelllgaUo!' for. about two months, involving Newport Beach and Huntington Beach police, plus the State Bureau of NarcoUct Enforce- ment and the District AUo~y·a office. t~ re_Lty. _ • , . ··-. . . _ Klelndlenll ~Id. Hll peroonal phys~<!•• _ xu;!,S ... ;..n'..l!JD;tllg ·~~n..9raer,'.: he added. _ • uncrowded schools) failed by the same Warren did d1Jcl0tt, however,-that lnforrhed me ~~t hll'lteatb 1faFcrue to Forster Junior mgh may tie felf" ou,..,,o•f-""'m"'a"r'gin ---:;;· ;:;::=-:===·~::-·---==:-----=~ Presldent Nixon telephoned.font?er PN!S·. natural CIURI. A charge that silnd from a public beach· the program If the board decides to build . Voting to keep childreni:here they are 2 p ersonal.i·=~s--· - idept Lyndon B. Johnson at his Tei~s . The jut-j1wed FBI hetd was permitted was being "stolen" to build.up volleybal_l ShorecUfrs Junior High in San Clemelnte Here tr~st:i Fred New rt Jr., Robert w.c- ranch to teU him peraonatly of Hoover $ by prelldentlal order to continue in his courts at Blue Lo goon was exaggerated, this year. hurat, ho Dahlberg, who represent death. $0,500-a·year government job after d. to L B h c· The board is currently spilt over the t e nort ern areas, and Gordon Peterson Of p "l p Asked whendtbeJtlHoover bh•d 1 If~ Nixon re1chln& th1 JJ)and,atory retirement age accor tng aguna eac ity Manager advisability of building Shorecliffs at this of San Clemente. f.. Ot . ages 1 recomme 1 on on s aucceuor, of 70 . Lawrence Rose, but a tractor operator ti be tt~ d in Sa Cl Voting against it were trustees Donald Warren said : "I have nG informatJon on ' engaged in the sand-moving operation me cause a en ance n eme.nte Inlay, Dr. Robert Beasley, and George private talkl the President may havt Hoover, unmarried, dominated the was warned not to traverse city streets. schools Js dropping. White who 1ald it is impractical to keep w: 11 Pul:tzerS had with Mr. Hoover!' burtlU during h1I Wetlme like no man In The sand-stealing complaint , backed up A resolution to go to bid on Shorecliffs children In overcrowded schools when " " Acting Atty. Gen. Rlthard Klelndlenat 1ny other federal agency. Wleldln1 vast with pictures, was presented to the city Immediately was tabled until the district there is room available in other parts o[ power, be wu old to lavish on the FBI council by J. L. McCann, 2750 Highland growth committee can review it and the district. Church Doors Always Open? The adage. about the doors of a church always being open haa been manifested at St. Mary'• Episcopal Church in Llguna Be1ch 1fter thieves stole the maulvt · front door1 ol the bulldini. Loss of the doors, valued 1t $200, and a wooden pew were reported to police Monday morning by church official!. Although locked 1t the time of the theft, the he1vy doors were taken by removing the hinge pin. Rev. Robert Cornelison, church rector, said the door• were of 110l!d oak 1nd each had a small ltllned glass wlndow 'in Its center. Pending the purchase of new doors, workers have covered the church entrance with sheets of plywood. Niguel Man Gited . For Ille~al_Dumping the pride ind poue1sivtnes1 of 1 stern Way, who also claimed the tractor decide if it sbOuld be biult now, later, or By votlng1for Plan C, the district will 1nd watchful parent. operator had damaged a city street en not at all. not be ablf'lO plan for additional staffing aoover'a No. 2 man tn the bureau was route to the beach. He used the street to until September when the board will Clyde A. Tolson, the auoclate director,. avoid taking his tractor across the ex-again look at attendanct projections to The two were long-time colleagues who elusive residential community south or Protn Page 1 decide if attendance boundaries will still spent much time together, Tolson, 71 , has Laguna, McCann charged. • remain unchanged. bten in ill hea.lth. "Investigating the complaint,'' s,aid BEAUTY If growth exceeds predictions, the Hoover groomed-no one for hill shoes, Rose, "I learned that on the day in ques4 • • • • district will be faced again '1ith transfer· but often expressed the wish th at the tion the· street department received a ring students to less crowded schools or next director come from within the FBI complaint and a street inspector went Corbett, designer and Dale McCarty, moving portable classrooms to the San ranks. down-and advised the tractor operator he lands caping. Juan and Crown Valley campuses. [)µring the years ol Hoover's reign, should not return ·from the beach via the -Landscaping at the home of Mrs. A. there never was a known case of scandal city street because he had no permit. But E. Kirkendall, 461 Locust St. with inside of the FBI and Hoover's stock there was no actual damage to the remark about hi& agents was: "They street." landscaping credits to Ted Kirkendall. can't be bought." Rose added that the tractor operator Commercial Merit Awards from the Accolades for Hoover flowed almost was required to sweep up sand that had Mermaids were presented to the follow· Immediately from Capitol Hill and other been pushed onto the street during the ing bulldinga: locations of government. operation. -Larry Hunt Auto Center, 1825 Laguna Even former Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark, There was no "stealing" of sand, the who feuded with Hoover while Hoover's manager added , since the tractor was Canyon Road; Charles Johnson 1 nominal boss, 11ald "I am saddened to being used to move sand from one part or del!llgner; Beach Construction, builder, hear of his death. He has been a major the ieach to another, which is frequently Larry Hunt, landscaping. figure on the American lctne for a long done following tidal erosion. -Park Glen Professional Building, 330 time. He loved thls ocuntry and we &hall With regard to an additlonal charge Park Ave.; Peter Ostrander AJA and miss him." that private guards employed at Blue Sen. George McGovern (0.S.D.), ex· Lagoon and Lagunita were chasing pressed 110rrow at the death. beachgoers otr the sands adjacent to the -0 t"thlnk we"'Caft only be"'iad over-the-Ptlvate_commlin1Ues,_Rose_s_al4. ,'j.That passing ·of any American, any cltlz~n, any wo~ld be a matter concerning the coun· roort~,'' McGoy_q_n_aald. _ ty. ~The prealaentlal contender sail! he disagreed with many ol Hoover'• views. but added , "I am aad at his pa11slng." s.n. Edmun!I s.:.Muskie (l>Maintl Rites Conducted Jack Cressman, designers; B each Construction, builder, Darwin Black, landscapJng,,"-~-------~-- -Mission Bank, 800 Glenneyre St.; Chris AbeJ, clesigner : Lyle .P-arkl, -builder,..Eugene_Kins.el_, land5Clp1ng, -Klsliiig-COnstrucUQ.n-COmP.an , 1711--'- Laguna Canyon Road: Mike and Mickey Kisling, landscaping and Jigna. Nita Carman's Park Dedicated Laguna Beach city officials aiid civic beautification leaders headed a crowd of 80 persons honoring longtime resident Nita Carman Mcnday morning at the dedication of the Nita Carman Park . A hand-carved sign , created by Mogens Abel, was installed at the mini-park dur· in~ the ceremony attended by Mayor Richard Goldberg, Citr__:_ ~ouncilmen_ €11arlton-Buyd-8nd~y Holm, City ?-.'lanager L'awrence Rose, beautificat ion rommittee ch3ifnlan Harry Lawrence and members of the Nature Study Group a n·d_the::Friendt_ of tbe Library, in which ~. . , . ...,.,.. --?-.1rs. Carman has been active. -- A crackdown by Orange county officer• declared the nation owes Hoover "its ' Two DAILY PILOT editorial page personalities have won 1972 Pulitzer prizes for their outstanding journallatic achievements, (Complete list of Prize wiMers on Page 4.) . " Columnist Jack Anderson was cited for national reporting. Jeffrey MacNelly was given the Pulitzer Prize for editorial car- toonist. Though Aderson bu, himaeU, been much in the headlines recently, hiJ award wa!I for his reporting of Amerlcan .pXtcy .. decision making during the IndO-Paklatan war of 1971. A 25-year-old edUorial cartoonlst who has mbved to the top of hls profeuion in a comparatively few years, MacNelly ie· one of the youngest cartooniltl ever to be given the Pulitzer Pllze. MacNelly's work appean on the .editorial page of the ne~_SUnday DAIL" PILOT. He has been I cartoonlat on tbo staff of a dally new1paper (the JUdt. mond, Va., News Leider) for lea than two years and has had his work offered to other newspapers through lyndlcation for an even shorter time. Columnist Anderson, 48, ii a former Long-Beach--ntwspaper -reportUWhii under-studied the late Drew Peanon for 22 years and inherited P e 1 r s on ' 1 powerful "Washington-Merrf·g~rowid" column at the time of Pearson's death. A devt?._ut MQ.rJDon and for-me r preach.er, .Anderson liltes being labeled a muckraker anQ calls ,l)imself "the voice or the voiceless. tt ~ on illegal tr11h ·dumping in the South 1ratltude and respect." Mu111tle's state.. >-~-County area mounted Monday wlth_llie_ ment-added : ••J. Edgar Hoover devoted citing of a Laguna Niguel man. his entire life to the service of his coun- For Ex-educator E. L. N. Voorhees The Good Neighbor -Award Wa! ,presented to the Neighborhood Congrega- . tional Church, 340 St. Ann's Drive for ex· tensive landscaping around the half block parcel which It covers. Following the dedication, installation of the sprinkler system was started at the little park site below the high school foot- ball field, prior to planting of trees donated by friends of the Laguna beautification leader. Both -Anderton and MacNelly have been adl:led in the past year to the atable ttf" syndicated tale!Jl whose work is regularly publisheiUnJhe.DAILY_PJLOT.- Deputles said they cited Wllllam Myron try. While aome of us may have ques- Shannon Hammond.---». of 24381 ~ _Uoned-some-olhls approaches in recent Hermosa for unlawfu1ly-dumping trash years. no one could question his loyalty on private property on 't'Crown V1Uey and dedication to his country." Parkway and Niguel Road. . Officers said Hammond dumped 1 toad or 11rasa end chunks of sod In the are;i , .. DAILY PILOT Tll• 0NOI09 c .. 11 CMILY 'IU>T. wllfil -~ It COl'!lbltltd ft!e Nt_,,..,. II ""lll/lell bY fll• Oreriiii C11111 l'VIJl!1hl,_. c:MilltftY. s.,.. relt .,dll(Onl .,,. • ~ll1Md, HMtlf'I ........... Frld1y, tor COS!• M•••· H..,..., INCl'I. Hvntl,,glon llc•ch/Founlt!n VtllfY, l•tllft• l••ch, 1r .. 1nr/S1dclltlback end Sll'I Clt!Mf'llt/ S'•11 J118 n (1pl)!r1no. A tlntle ,..lo!\ll tdUIOll IJ POJbll,hed S.llln:l lY. end Sunch)'a. Tft~ f)l'l11CID&I Wblllhlnt '"'"' b 11 lJO Wftl B•v Slrffl, CO.Jiii M••· C•lltornlfl, PH1'. .~.,+~."Wr.Y'-, ,.,.idtt'lt •nd ,uttlllllll' J1cL: 11:. C11,l1y Viet ,, .. IOtnlJ"" Gl'f\ll'll M•1111aer. From Pagel REACTION .. .- capable organi1.ation and all it needs is a capable administrator to follow in his footsteps," the veteran Orange County lawman said. "The FBI will have no dlf· flcultly finding such a man ." Ranking Newport Beach police, Includ- ing Chief B. James Glavas and Detective Capt. Donald F. Oyaas responded with shock and rtgrtt. "We like to think of him as Immortal and goJng Qll fore ver but of course that isn't a facf;" Chief Gfavas said thti morning following the Washington an- nouncement. Private services were held ln Sierra Madre for Edward L. N. Voorhees, former associate profe!ISOr of English at Columbia University. who died in Laguna Beach Saturday at the age of 84. A longtime Sierra Madre resident, Mr . Voorhees recently had made his home with his sis ter, Mrs. Mildred Barkas, 375 1\ster Street. Surviv ing, in addition to Mrs. Barkaa. are two nephews and a niece of Son1erville, N.J. Mr. Voorhees was a gradu1te of Han1line University. where he taught for ·two years prior to service In World War I. and later recei~ degrees from Boston and Pri nceton Universities. He taught English and public speaking at Stephens- Bard College. R unit of Columbia University and was a prolific writer, publishing many columns on hla traveis, al ong with essays, verse and :1torles. AROUND THE CORNER AND UP YOUR STREET WE HAVE BEEN ASKED HUNDREDS OF TIMES WHY WE LOCATED OUR STORE "OFF THE BEATEN PATH." SEVERAL ANSWERS POP UP. FIRSTLY, THE COST OF STORES IN SHOPPING CENTERS IS ASTRONOMICAL. SECONDLY, WE . WERE ABLE TO OBTAIN MORE SPACE, WITH OUR SHOWROOM, OFFICES AND WAREHOUSE ALL IN ONE LOCATION. THIRDLY, .• .JHERE IS AMPLE PARKING WITH LITTLE TRAFFl.C CONGESTION LEADING TO US. Following his retirement to Sierra Madre. h~ continued his research and THIS SITIJATION HAS MADE US MORE COMPETITIVE AND - -\ Tholl'lfl K11vll 1><"-'-=-1""" ... ""~"''""-"'-J!~ ... 1;%1t, .. _.:~ 011'111 A. Mvri-~l~• M111111!nt ldltor ~·~8·='""""""'==.;,..,.,.,_,,,,.,~fftt~~ · _J>rpiect "W l~='lll!l!!!l819!4 ~ ~ , ="-' -..,."WkARE,..£RQU.Q_AND-~J!.~J:EEUL-t SA Ttl ViE ,HAVI!,.,, · __ , __ __,,,.ii', """""' l.Jll ear < y. INCREASED OUR VOLUME EVERY YEAR FOR FOURTEEN YEARS, " AND HAVE EXPANDED FIVE TIMES AT THIS LOCATION. Ch,rl11 H. loet l ich1r4 f , Nill Allhlllll Mtn.t11'19 (d!l'Or1 ~ ....... Offlq 221 ,..,.,, AY•~U• M1flfflltl ..,,,,.,,: r.o. ••• •••· •2•l2 --c .. to M .. 1 a Wwtt •• ., SftM •5e~: :JUI Ir!...,... lel/tn'tN Hwll lwl ... n<t: 1711$ l .. th IOlllfY•N kn ( Nl lOS NIH1JI II Clf!ll• ltMI Ttf ...... l714J 641-4111 c....,.., """""' .... "41·1671 ........... A.hpa1 .... : Teilf•111 4MoMU ~t, tm, OrMll C.I "**"lilt ~. ... ... '"''"! """'"~ eifltorltl Ml..., ., WftttlM!Mfttt ...,. _., • ,~.,_ wl"*'f tfll(itl ..... ·--~ ....... . ....., ..... _...... ........ hlto ...... C.11..,,,... ~*' ... _ ''".. • ... MM!fll'(J llY 11'110 U.la. Mtflffll't'I lftll.,.,., ...... """ ., ... """'""'· · Campus Official The communicatlona director of cam- pus Stud!" Institute (CSfl will addrtss the Wedneoday brtald11t meetin& of the Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce. Greg Topper Is acheduled to tell the Chamber mtmbtrt about CSI and how the organization d isse minates in· fotmatlon on political Issues to college studenl.t. CSI Is baltd in San DleiJO ind malls Informational brocl;ures o n pol1Ue11 tnun to 1tudints uound the COllJlley. Topper wtn 11pe1k following the 7:45' 1.m. bre1k!aat meeting at the Hotel Llguna. RewvotiOOI may be m1d1 by calllnr the Chamber at 194·10t8. • I Sleepy Hollo'v B:iirglary PrQbed Laguna Beach Police are Investigating the theft o! 11.028 in ·-uvings bond.I, jewelry and 1 coin collection from a Sleepy Hollow resident Sgt. David Avers uld the crime was reported Monday by Jane P. Clperton, ol etl8 Sleepy Hollow Line. The loss Included 1625 in U.S. savings bonds, 100 ailver dollar1,. several 12 bills, 1 l1old ring ind other colns .. - Pollce investlg1ton could find no 1"'11 or a forctd entry at the caperton reai- dence, Sgt. Avert said, • AL-DEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Plac•lltla A''· COSTA MU.A 646-4838 • • .. r " l I l j Cfjj Ilk .. "!' un tw la • th~ SW " In ' r fel p r h' ' • w I ~ lli - " . -S~ddleha~k -Today's Fbtal N.Y. Steeb EDl11 0N ' VOL 65, NO. 123, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES -· ORANGE COUNTY,,CAUFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 2, 1972 TEN CENTS Hoover~s Death Lanaented in County By JACK CHAPPELL Of IM Dlllty Plitt Sl.tf In the wake of the death of J. Edgar Hoover, Orange County oUicials ex- pressed both sorrow and hope that the great crime fighting organization he built would endure. "Every lawman in Orange county will feel a deep sense of personal los.s today at the death of J. Edgar floover," Chief Deputy District" Attorney James Enright · ·said this morning. " ' "Hoover bullt an endurl.ng organiuation that 1''ill be a monument to his ability," Enright said. The ch\ef deputy was cOm- menting in the absence of District At- torney Cecil Hicks from the county. "I'm. sure Mr. Hoover'ti place will be filled !tom wilhln the organization," Enright said. "But whoever succeeds him at the FBI will be well content to pursue the goals of Hoover within the magnifi: cent structure he created. 11 State Senator Dennis carpenter CR- DAIL 'f PILOT le.ff l'tlm -HE IS CONTRIBUTING A LIFETIME OF EXPERIENCE Bill Taylor, 65, Work& With Rocky Mote1 at School 'Grandpa' Taylor Teaches Children at Gates School _By CANIMCE P~ARSON Of TM D<lllr Pitel Still For.many, being M yean: old ts living Iii-a pt&lined ... 'senlor-citizens " CQrJl!llUOity like Leisure World in Laguna Hills, ~ciaUzing with people of similar ages. But for some, this type of life can mean an isolation from other age groups arrcran uDnecessary unwanted feeling. BUI Taylor, 65, is living proof that the tWo don't have to go together. Taylor, a Leisure World resident since la St September, spends ~a lot of his time · there playing bridge, shuffleboard and swimming. But away from home he ls known as ••Grandpa" Taylor to 15 children in a juilior first grade at Ralph Gates School tn El Toro. . . ,.,I was enjoying life so much (since he retired recently )," Taylor said "that I felt guilty for not giving; servic~·''. . Taylor a high school pr1nc1pal 1n SPokane ' for 35 years, volunteered his tirhe once a week as a teacher 's aide at "'\ Gates, only a few miles away from home. '•1Aren't they cute kids?" he -asked, beaming as the children In Marge Pratley's class waved from across the rOom. "Who could blame me for working hire'" · · · Principal Arnold -Be.rman hopis 1hat Tfylor will ~an example to other residents of Leisure World or the-sur- rounding community. "It enhances our program and helps them too," he said.-"They-are an older friend to the child, get involved in- dividually or with small groups or two to four-kids." -- Berman calls this aspect of teaching the "cream" and says the aides have none of tht 11awesom~ responsibility'' or a teacher. Taylor agrees. "This is so different from rny experJence with teenagers," he said, looking about the busy room. "It's wonderful to work here and serve without a:n the tremendou s respanslbility, constant worry and pressure. "I love it," he added. The children love him too. teacher Marge Pratley said. Sometimes they cheer when "Grandpa" comes into the room and many volunteer to work on their phonics or reading if they can do it with him . Junior-first grades are for childre n of averaiJ:e or above~ average intelligence who may lack the. maturity to go on to first grade after kindergarten , Mrs. Pratley explai ned. "The idea is to give as much individual attention as you can," she added. With T3ylor there, getting the special thin~s. "the Icing on the cake,,. Mrs. Pratley said, Is possible. "You just can't hire enough teachers/' Newport Beach), a former FBI agent said, "Mr. Hoover was the eptiome of the perfect civil servant." He was a great ad mlnistrator, Carpenter said. "He had the overwhelm- ing desire to do his job as well as it could be done, regardless of his own personal • inconvience." - Mr. Hoover .. was a great horse race fan, and had a quick wit and good sense of humor, Carpenter said. "I can remember one occassion when he was speaking to a class or new agents . f had been in the bW'eau for a year or so and was looked upon as an old timer by the new guys. "One of the 1nen asked him U it was true that FBI agents had to wear their guns at all times. He replied 'no, it is on- ly necessary to have your gun when you nef;:d it.' 11 Carpenter m;nti oned .that \Vhi\e he was ...._'!ith the bureau, they would have "wild" 'Ulristmas parlies. "Peanuts and cola, and that v.•as it," he Said. · Hoover was a great stickler on the wny his agents dressed. ..l remen1ber one time, he told us that he expected all his agents to dtess like 'successful young lawyers. And I mean Boston, Washington or Ne\v York lawyers, not Chicago. Los Angeles or Plfiami lawyers.' " ht said. Senator Carpenter said that he hoped a successor could be found to carry on the gr_,at tradition of the bureau that Mr. lIOover founded. 110ur nation has lost one of its greatest l~w enforcement figure s." Orange County Sheriff Ja1nes Musick s11id today. "He is going lo be greatly nlissed by hi~ organization and those of us \\'ho had such tremendous respecl for his ability. "For all that," the sheriff said. "I don't th ink \li'e're going lo see any great changes in the organ!znlion or operation of the FllL "Hoover built up a tremendously (Set REACTION, Page %1 ~ Vi1Ia· Blue Ha~k Nixon Lauds Oakla11d Pitcher Collects $63,000 Devoti.on, ~ ltt>STQ ( · ) -Vida Blue·; The -·s'c~a~hip~hi~ was 3 part of Blue's American League's 1971 most valuable originaJ l;ionus arrangement when he pfay~r and Cy Young Aw~rd winner, end-_sif:: ~~iJ~~· thinks It will take 3 lo 4 ed his long holdout and. signed a contract weeks to get in condit ion to pitch. Dedication f6r_j6.1.J!OO tod~y_ !VJ~ the Oakland However,-his-salary is e!feclive--April 27, Athletics. the date when the offer was made-by WASlllNGT!)N (J\Pj -·~ Edgar lloover, embodiment of the FBI and focu s or law enforcement achievement and controversy for a half century, ll The 22-year-old le!thander k e pt Fin1ey in Chicago. Base ball Commissioner' Bowle Kuhn, 'Ordinarily, a major league player's Arr.erican League President Joe Cronin salary does not begin until he's ready lo dead. · Th e 77-yea r.old director of the Federal Bur.e11u or Investigation died of natural causes in his home Pltonday night, the Justice Department announced. and A's owner Charlie Finley waiting for play. nearly 1% hours before showing up for Blue planned to rejoin the A's for a the contract signing. scheduled game with the Red Sox tonight. They met at American League head-The contract makes Blue probably the The District of Columbia coroner al· tribu ted the death lo "hypertensive car- ..,-diovascular disease" -an ailment linked to high blood pres sure. quarters for about 15 minutes before highest paid major league sophomore in coming out for a news conference. history. "I'm signed, I'm happy, I'm ready to Blue was met at Logan International play," Blue said. Airport Monday by Joe Reichler, assis· The contract calls for a 1972 salary of tant to Kuhn. He was polite, but not very The coroner, Dr. James L. Luke, said artcr cxaminin~ lhe body that the im. mediate cause or death might have been $50,000, a $5,000 bonus ror .his communicative with the lone .sporll performance in 1971 · 'aod an ~.ooo writer to meet hlln .. a heart attack. He said an autopsy wu not indicated. North.' V ~is· • I .. ~ .• ...t • •• Take Part · " _, , ~l , J) , "7 c '' t1 t , • 1 I? Open Space Gets President Nixon, upon hearing of Hoover's deatti, ca!Jed him a "truJy remarkable man who served the country for 41 years ul1der elgbl prnidentJ wltlt unparalleled devotion to duty and dedica· Citi. zen Groups ' tion." Nixon spoke emotionally of hi• . ' "profound ser1se or personal Joss." Flags at all public buildings and Installatlor11 C C"J St d were ordered to half staff. oun I u y Hoover .... a virtual lengend in the Of Ou~post North of Hue SAIGON (UPI) -North Vietnamese soldiers and "many, many tanks" at- tacked the anchor point.o.f the new Sovth Vietnamese defense Jil;ie 20 miles north of ijue today and. toolCpariial-control-of-the base. A -military spokesman said the· 2,000 American troops at Phu Bai just solith of Hile were ordered on "yellow alfrlf ' which means an attack -coukf. be im· minent. ll'Owever, the ch.ief U.S. adviser iii-the Thieves Ransack Irvine Of fices Burglers who smashed a window to gain entry to the premises stripped an Irvine firm of its business equipment Monday night , Orange County sheriff's officers said. - Electric calculators, typewriters, a costly, camera and a tele:1copic len s were taken from the office of O'Brien Enterprises. 17tn Gillette Street. It was the ·second such break in in less than 24 hours in the Irvine area. The two burglaries cost the firms iJ1- volved more than $5,000 worth of business equipment. Borglars have carried off more than $50,000 worth of business equipment from Irv ine offices sinces the community was Jncoprorated. northern provinces said earlier a ~full· United States, an "untouchable" who died scale attack on Hue was not expected for Members of severa't Irvine citizens ad-in office despite efforts by critics in re- 8 week. visory committees will join wilh livine cent ye81'9 to have, hlm retired. In Saigon, U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth city councilmen at 7:30 o'clock tonight He shaped the FBI into ·a massive, Btmker-and-Gen. Creighton W:-Abrams, IQr a -representaHon on open space ptan;:--powerlul federal . _aeency:_dUfiDg ltl!..__ ' the-Ameicil.n commander in Ind~hina, Ding. career. Across .Pennsylvanlt Ave nue met with south-Vietnamese President , _ . . . from the office where Hoover ~orked, a Nguyen Van Thieu, to discuss the current Ri~hard Reese, plaMlng vice. pre:s&t iMMi po~ul federal-bu~na:-to military. situation._ · • of the Irvine Company~ wW ~N t~ house the FBI 11 under construcbon. Th' 1 te mmoned-Ll etn:Jt ~ s~ce and_,L~~emems o(,,.a Even befOl'!""!foovi:r's de·alh;-ifiere"bad X--ie~ 'Uisug v m t-comma::: generalplan. Understatelawdtiesmust been conttnUlng speculttion ab-ou t . uap • e ~ em en -have-incorporated these items ioto their whelher tbe..building would be named for in the north, to.Saigon for an ur;ent con-general pl~.by ·June 30.-·m or perbai:m might ~even hou9e lr ference... . Irvine, to date, his no general_plan and fi nal resting place. U.S. P1.lots. flymg bet~~en Hue and fs nqt exJ!CCt~<tto suf!er the-penalties at-Speculatlon-mra -successcr-to H'oo"~v~et~-- Quang Tri said there w17re .. ~undr~s and tachcd to the planning deadlines because al so began long before his death as liu.n eds of dead soldi~rs along 8 20-it Is a new city. political pressure to retire Hoover mile stre~ch of the highway south of P!-tembers or ~ environm~qt~J q__uaUlY:_alternately waxed and waned:--Qu~ TrJ._ -----. -and parks a-nC!-open space CQmmittees It had seemed almost certai r. he 'l\'ould ArUlle_ry base Nancy ,the k~y m the new have been invited to hear !he presen-retire or be retired if the Democrats beat South Vietnamese defense hne , was . at-tation along with the City Council. President Nixon in the November ~elec-o tacked lat~ n the day and by sunset fie~d Presumably,· these voluntary citizens tion. Nixon now will be able to pick a report s said control of the outpost wa s 1n groupa will be asked to contribute to the successor. dou~t. , city's general plan development. The Washington, D.C. police chief Jerry Field reports said South Vletnam~se Planning Commission has already heard \Vil.son, a rec~nt Nixon law enforcement held part of the base and North Viet-Reese's presentation. favorite, had been prominently mentioned namese held the other part. Other matters before the councll a9 a possible succes90r belore Hoover'• "There ar~ many, many ,,tanks al . My tonight include a report on the traffic death. ~anh head ing f(!r Nancy, one officer problem at the intersection of Culver Also among those mentioned : Assoc!. said. Drive and Walnut Avenue. It has lteen ale Justice Byron R. White of the Su· .ity Chanh is within ~mall arms fi re prepared by the Orange County Traffic preme Court and Robert C. Mardia111 distance of Nancy, 12 miles south of the Committee and urges adoption of a 45 former assistant attorney general who fallen province c~pital of Quan~ Tri city. mile an hour speed limit on Waln'ut. headed the Justice Departm·ent internal The threat to ~inh Dinh provmce ~~ the Draft.s of a personnel ordinaQCe and a security division. central coast increased and military supparting rules resolution also will be The White House announced last month sources said contact had been lost with presented by Irvine's new Assistant City that Mardian left the government to Join Landing Zone English, the last Allied out. Manage r Paul Brady, 30. formerly of ('See HOOVER, Pa e 2) past in the upper one-third of the. prov· Santa Barbara and Monterey Park city mce. staffs. ..... .. C.111& Incorporation Plan Denied • 'Weatller · -Burglars Grab $~00 i.n Gems -gherzald, to do the·thin gs you~d t!ke. "' Although Taylor 'has teaching ex· perience, Bennan said, it is not a necessary Qualification for an aide. ' -... li(j -• -Group Officful Says Proposal ·Stili 'Strong-Issue' More aunabinl-on W~. ac..:: ,.. ... cording to .the weatherlady. Low \ ~ ..¢Irvine Instructor and his wife wLo attends lhe campus as a student lost aaorted jewelry worth more than $2,300 Monday when someone burglarized their Newport Beach home. Tilt Intruder pried a sliding glaSI door. according to police calttd to the home at 4117 Hampden Road' by Mrs. Andret Darling. . ''Sh\, said the loss Included the Jewtlry bQ'r l'Ontalnlng ring! and stveral coins. The victim told Oflicer Larry Galriel 51' dbcovered the break-in 1bout 3 p.m.1 bUt wasn't surf what tlmt of day It bap- pehed because ' lhe Is In ,.ct OIJI. lo UC! cl-. 1 • This week three women from Leisure WC1rld be11;ah 'their first days as aides. "If you have lo.ve in your hPart for children." you're a ~ood aide. Berman said. "The kids spot right away if you do or don't." · Resta urat~ur Jailed .. . LOS .ANGELES (API -A San Diego restaurant owner is to serve the ·first month of his three-year probated se,,. tence confined on a conviction of selling counterl•it gold coins. U.S. District Judge A. Andr.w Houk p1'5"'1 lhe sentence Monday on Fronk•N. Debbu, owner ol Antolne'•by-lh&&a. ,. • . By GEORGE LEJDAL with land s Irvine has said are within tht gest the annezation Is timely to provide a Of lllt 01lly Pllet 11111 The president of 'ihe Saddleback Area new city's sphere of inOuence. balance of resklentlal and Jnduatrlal pro~ Coordinating Council (SACC) believes Further, a 1,600-acre proposed ln1 ertles ln the growing ntw city. The bulk dustrial park and Lk>n Country Safari are ! u.~ a t!.N\ h 'I · •· · I peo ple who have assumed-e-new-eit.v-.is.-~=~~=~"""'~~~-~=o..;.=-~o. lolRl.,.,_.'2re.-parce.-r-vtne-set1U1-IS n ' within lhc SACC mapped area as well as an immediate possibility for the 50,000 Irvine 's 9,600 acre annexation. agricultural prestrves and cannot be acres lying southWest of the city of Irvine developed for 10 years unless penallle~ are mistaken. "The purpose of organWng SACC la to are paid by the developer -the Irvine L. Bart Spendlove of 25381 Pacifica inforin cltlztlll of El Toro, Miss.ion Viejo, Company. The land develqpment firm Ave .. Minion Viejo, said Monday his 35-Laguna Hills and Laguna Niguel 50 that also owns nearly all the Janl"'..fn the pro- member organization "has not made any when incorporation Ls timely for our po!!led 11nnexatlon . incorporation plans." area, It Isn 't at the eod of a shotgun," The LAFC, meanwhile. has set May 24 Last .,...k, the SACC rued an area ot Spendlove said. -· lor the hearlng on the ln<lne 1nne 1tlon concem map wllb the Local Agency .. We Stt no rtUOn or ju,iificatlon for and will receive the SACC area of con. Fomuition Commission (LAFC). Part of Irvine to do this It this lime." Spondlove cern map possibly at Its May 10 mettlng, the SCAA area suggests might someday said, labeling the clty'I Ftasier an-an LAFC sPQke!man said. be the "na.tural boundaries" of a future nexatlon .. prematurt." Spendlove s•id his group's chief .con. city In the Saddleback Valley overlapo On the other hand, Irvine orrleials sug· (See)ADDLEBACK, P•I' II , ·f • • clouds along the beaches wlll.t:lear by mld·momlng leaving tempera- luru or 62. Inland high 70. INSIDF. TODA. l' Mort than 500 vachU ltavt _Newport Jetty ThursdaJL_jor tl}t annual 12S·milt ract to Enstt1· ada. Yov can't ttll who thtt1 art without a proaram. Ste tnl~ list, Page 20. L.M .• .,.. 11 ...111111 ,. Cililorel• J Cl•111liM J1•M (Mlk.t lJ Cttt1_,. tt 0.1111 Hettct1 • t l•lt.riil ''" • .... rteJNMftt ,, ''"'-•11 ... Ille •Mettl ' i:"rwtffft t4 \ • , • ' 2 DAIL1 t ~I ___ ,_, ___ _ Tutsdiy, Mq 2, l!fl ~rlnJJ_ 1' otit19 Students at UCI Hold ·Elections By PATRICK BOVLK Of 1111 Dlll'I' Plltl "'II Students at UC Jr vine, nearly all of then1 now e:Uglble to vote In stale and na· tional elections, are expected to go to the J>Olls in le11 than record numbers Wednesday and Thursday for their own campu ii: election. At stake wlll be the oftlces of i;t udent body president, three vice-presidential l!(>sts, 20 seats on the student council, nnd a propo1ed $1 Increase In student reeJ to 1upport the campus bus servict. El ections commissioner Gary Hoffman said he did not think the natlonal ·war moratorium , scheduled for Thursday, would have 111ny effect on the turnout or outcome or !he spring electl on. Hoffman poln !ed out that the voter turnout usually remains relatively con· gtant for student electlon.'I, "no matter when we schedule it or who Is runn ing." In the :!!prlng election of 1971 , some 22 percent of the stud ents cast ballots. However, Hoffman noted that a 33 per· cent tu rnout of the electorate Is required unde r the student constitution to change the fee structure. Thus, no matter what the outcome of the fee referendum, If the percentage of students going to the polls doesn't reach that level. the student fee will remain nt $7 per quarter and the bus ser\.Tice will have to bc •abandoned or funded in some other manne'Y. The bus service, which carries some 200 students per day between the university and Costa Mesa, Newport !:leach and Santa Ana, is now funded jointly by a county grant and university monies. A $1 incr~ae in the ~tudcnt fees would rai se some $20,000 per year, slii;ht· Jy more than the operational costs o! the serv ice. This sprlng's election 1vlll n1ark a chan((e In the hierarchy of UC! student government. Con.~li tutional revisions pro- vide for the cleclion of a president , three vice president! and 20 cQuncil mem bers Instead of the traditional pre.'liden t, vice president , seerc tary and 28 senate member5. - Campaigning for the ofrices among the students has been low key during the paSt Wl'ek with most candidates relying on posters and flyers lo gel their message across. One enterprising slate o f student s, a ticket headed by presidential cand idaU! Duzz Gladstone, distributed pla stic campal ,iin Utter bags on car \vindshields. The candidates' names have been pri nted on the bags. Besi des Gladstone. the presidential candidates are incumbent vice president Tom DeL:i pp, Michael Jloltnn n, 'fim Whisman and Armando Banuelos. In addlllon, four students are running for executive vice president, five for stu· dent services 1Jice president and three for administrative vice president. Twenty three students arc seeking positions on the 2-0-member student council. Poll ing places will be open on ca mpus from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. both days of the election with students us ing voting machines to cast their ballots. The newly elected officers will take office In June with executive terms runnil)g for ·one year. From Pagel It Figures: Math Set In Summer "Everyth ing You Always Wanted to Know Abou t Math, But Were Afraid to A:;k" ls not a new best·seller -at least not yet. Hut San Joaquin School District of- fici als hope the provocative title will at- tract seventh and eighth graders to take the class in summer school June 26 to Ju· Jy 21. The district ls orferlng 51 different classes at :six of ih1 schools for all first through_eighth graders (by September 1972 ) who sign up. by May 19. ' The schools involved and the levels they . take are Alisu School , El Toro; C<>rd11lera School, A:lission Viejo· Del Cerro School, Mission Viejo · Llnda 1 Vista School. Mission Viejo · and University l~ark School, Irv ine, all first through sixth grades,. and La Paz: 'Intermediate School, Mission Viejo, seventh and eighth grades. · A few o( the classes are offered at only one school. Catalogues listing classes were sent home wlth students Monday. Students may attend any of the six schools. · Third through eighth graders must sign up for at least three classes. Daily sc hedules run from 8: 15 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. No transportation will be furni shed. Class preferences will be gi ven on a first-come, first-serve basis. About 2,500 students attended the 1971 su mmer school and an equal or greater nu mber are expected this year, Ken Lewis, district official said today. A wide variety of cl asses should attract a lot of students, he said. • UPI Ttltt>Mlt Eight Lives to Go Without wai ting for a net, a cat leaps to safely fron1 the fourth floor of a blazing Brooklyn building as firemen ca rry hose lines up th e fire escape. The feline landed on all fours and wal ked away, appar· ently-and incredibly-unhar1ned. ·~ Frona Page J Medical Center Police Nab Suspected Smuggler By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of lllt Di lly "llfl Slit! One suspec ted drug smuggler is jailed today, following Newport Beach pollcl setiure or 294,500 llllclt pllt.., probably the lar.gest such confiscation ln Orange Coun- ty hislory . Value or the 250,000 amphetamine pills and 44,500 barbiturate tablet1 of Me1Jcan origin would be about $35,000 on the -•tr~e~.pa!U:e . · Arrest y.•arrants \li'ere issued more than a week ago for three swpected principals in the case, two of whom have not yet been taken into cwtody. Announcement of the llrst suspect's capture only l 1h blocks from · Newport Beach Police Department headquarters was initially withheld to avoid alertlng his alleged acco mplices. Lyle P. Rodgers, 32, of 305 32nd St., Newport Beach, remains In Orange coun- ty Jail, unable to post $30,000 bail set by the court. Rodgers , who said he is unemployed, laces a l\tay 12 prelif!llnary hearing en charges of conspiring to smuggle narcotics and possess d::ingerous drugs for sale. Detective Sgt. Leo Konkel, or the department's narcotics detail, identified the other two suspects as Pierre Jacques Bertolino and Hank D. Kuykendall, both 22-year-0\d Newport Beach residents. Bail for both men, who were last known to be in Hawaii, was 1et at $50,000 on the same charges on which Rodgers was ar- rested at his home. The case has been under lnw1Ugatlon for about two months, involving Newport Beach and Huntington Beach police, plus the State Bureau or Narcotics En!orce- 1----·_HOO.YER. DIES-~._ Primary classes include a study or Japan, including a trip to Japa nese Deer P~rk an~ a study of Africa, including a SADDLEBACK .. ..:.......··· ·~to L~Qn Counta Sal!rl_!-~·~---asses fcif.iliTrd through six th grad ers cef;-is-·that a "natur3.FooUnd~rfbe· B udg et...,Se.eks..=. __ _..:n1 ~e District At.~omey'1 o~. ~ ·~-'""' - • the. committee coordinating President Nixon's re~Jeclion effort. The White •louse decli ned lo discuss who would succeed Hoover. Deputy press rt<:retary Gerald L. Warren told report. er11 because "this zad development came rather recently," he had no Information to relay. Warren did dt1cl0tt, however, tha t President Nixon telephoned former Pres- ident Lyndon B. Johnson at his Texas ranch to tell him personally of lloover's death. A,ked whether Hoo1Jer had given Nixon a recommendation on his successor, Warren said : ••1 have no Information on private talks the President may have had with Mr. Hoover." Acting Atty. Gen. Richard Kleind ienst Issued a one-paragraph ztalement in wh ich he !-illld Hoover's body was found by his maid at approximately 8:30 a.m. today. "It ls with profound personal grief that I announce that J. Edgar Hoover passed away during the night at his re!ldence," Klelndlenat said. "Hls personal physician Cliurch Doors Always Op~n? informed me that his death was due to Include pu ppetry, dramatics, "Math-a-preserved for what might someday be a natural causes." magic," music, graphic arts and boys' city in the Saddleback Valley. The jut-jawed 'FBI head was permitted cooking. The El Toro Marine Corps Air Station, by presidential order to continue in his Intermediate level students can take rreeways and hilltops are some elements $42,500-a-year government job art er co-ed physical education,· auto mechanics, of what Spendlove ·and the SACC feel are reaching the mandatory retirement age · guitar, drafting, oceanography. typing natural barriers defining an evenlual ol and speed reading, among other classes. city. 70. Jloover, unmarried, dominated the "Our chief concern is more the future $3 Million Hike 2 Personalities Of Pilot Pages Win Pulitzers bureau during his lifetime like no man in H integrity of any city that may be formed th red I WI Id. oover's Career here and not the industrial property While quickly added that he estimate.< Tw DAILY PILOT -••to "al . any o er era agency. e ing vast itself." Spendlove said. o i:w n page A proposfd 1972·73 gross budget of $30 million . up $3 million \li·hen compared to the current expenses, was ptesented Monday by Orange County Medical Center Administrator Robert \Vhite. -·power, he was said to lavish on the FBI As for how quickl y incorporation might that 72 percent of the $30 million will be personalities have won 197l Pulitzer th Id d . ' r I s d N l ed th I ti I f 'fed" Cal prizes for their outstanding journalistic e pr e an possessiveness (I I II ern pa1ine ear y come to the Saddleback v a 11 e y • recover roug l pa en ees, " I· and I hr I I achievements. (Complete list of Prize wa c u paren . Spendlove denied that the SACC was and private insurance payments. winners on Page 4.) Hoover's No. 2 man in the bureau was spearheading such a move. lie guessed that the bud get, if approved Col umnist Jack Anderson was cited lot Clyde A. Tol!On, the asSOclate director. Half a c t "\Ve don't even know the reaction of The two were long-time coll eagues who en ury the citizenry toward incorporation at this by the Board of Supervisors in July. national reporting. Jeffrey MacNelly was .spent much time together, Tolson, 71, has time. Incorporation is a strong issue in v.·ould add about one and one-hall c;ents to given the Pulitzer Prize for editorial car. been in UI health. WASHJNGTON (UPI) -John Edgar our Brea. People came here for the the county general prope~ty tax rate. toonist. Hoover groomed no one for his shoes, lloover wielded power among the mighty area's country environment," he said, He has asked for 131 new positions Though Aderson has, himself, been but often expressed the wish that the as the nation's top law ~·nrorcement of-suggesting that talk of creating another much in the headlines recently, his award next director come from within the FBl fl eer for nearly a half century. ·city might be viewed by some as creating largely clerical which would increase the "-'as for his reporting of American pollcy· ranks. , He also was highly popular with the another urban sprawl "like the one they medical center staf.f to 2,119 employes. decision. malting durini the lndo-Paklatan During the years o( Hoover's reign. public. . , · just moved from to be in the country'.' Also included in the new Judget is a war of 1971. there never was a known case or scandal Two presidents found the combination Like his counterparts in Irvine more computerized hospital service system A 25-year-old editorial cartoonist who inside of the FBI and lfoover·.s stock unbeatable enough to keep the bulldog-than a year ag~ Spendlove indicated his which While said would save $1.2 million has moved to the top of hill profession in remark about his agents was : "They faced lloover in office years past the group seeks "meaningfu l growth Versus over !he next eight years. a comparatively few years, MacNelly is can't be bought." manda tory retirement age of 70 with the sprawling growth.'' The hospital administrator said the one of the youngest cartoonists ever to be Accolades for Hoover flov;ed almost results that he served longer than any "We want to assure ourselves that the proposed spending progra m include.s no given the Pulitzer Prize. immediately from Capitol Hill nnd other other federa l bureaucrat in modern gro\vlh of the area is beneficial and not new innovations pending receipt of MacNelly's work appears on the· locations of go\•ernment. times. detrimental," he sa id. $100.000 health study no\v under v.·ay editorial page of the new Sunday DAILY Even former Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark , His last years were among the The approach SACC is taking is "within \\'hich v.•as authorized by the super visors PILOT. He has been a cartoonist on the who feuded with Hoover while Hoover's slormiest as the FBI came under in-the·system" and to date, Spendlove con-last year. staff of a daily newspaper (the Rich-- nominal boss, 1said "I Am saddened to creasing fire from politicians. left wing tended, the organization is made up only mond, Va., News Leader) for less than hear of his death. He has been a major groups, ci vil rights organlza tiom, and of "concerned citizens." two years and has had his work offered figure on the American scene for a long even some of his staunchest admirers "W~'re just at the point of.looking for a · Niattel Man Citecl to other newspapers through syndication The 1dage about the doors o( a lime. He loved this ocuntry and \\'e shall who felt it was time for Hoover to step part time secretary," he said. ~ __ -=..e-for an .e.1Jen shorter-time. church alw1y1 belfll open bu been--mias him.~'-do The SACC-draws-metilberSfiOm Mission Columnis t Anderson, 48, Ls a fonnei · manifested at St. Mary's Ep~copal Sen. G.Orge McGovern (D-S.D.), ex-~;·paid them little heed. Viejo, El Toro, Laguna Hills. Aegean Fo1· IIJegaJ Dumping Long Beach newspaper reporter who. Church ln Laguna Beach after pressed sorrow at the death. In the "law and order" framework of l{~lls, Laguna Niguel and C~p.1stra~o under-stud ied the late Drew Peamn for =~e~f ~~'buN:inr<~ive-front.-•fflhlnk~·e can only be sad ovef tbe-the Nlxon~Admlnistration-r-Hoover.....s~H~fl1~n~~-~I~ lhese -~mm~~es lie A crackdown by Orange county officers, 22 years and inherited P e ar s on 's o passing of any American, any citizen, any out often ~nd loudly, apparently confident SA Ith' 'he' '"F•Ccre Pat;~· filed[ by on illegal trash' dumpi ng in the South po werful-.. Washington-~ferry;go-TOund" Loss of the doors, valued at '200. moftal," McGovern said. the President and his lmmedlalt,. boss, ,, ..,, ~-as an area o con-County area mount ed f\.tonday with the column at tlle time of Pearson's death. and a wooden pew were reported to The presidential conlender said he Attorney General John N. Mitchell, would ce'~An.11 citing of a Laguna Niguel man. .A devout Mormon and Io rm er. •• • I ia :v H ba police Monday -nlOrning by church dislfgre€d·-with many of l:loover's views, rise to hl~eren.se. The did.__ homeo\\·ners asoociations are Deputies said t~ey tiled William My.£on r _ c_:her, AE~er~n like!_ being label~ 1 officials. Although · locked at the b.uladded~ am 58d at his passln·g.-"' Jn ,970 anTI97t, lawsuits were filed rcpre-sentl<t,"-Speni:llOVe' sa1 , as well "as Shannon Hammond, 33, cf 24381 ha muc a er-and calls--himself "the-voice--~~t----:,,:J Ume of the_thelt..-the heavy doors-Sen. Edmund S. Muskie (0-J\.fainc}, against Hoover by disgruntled former ~~d~~~v~~u~~;~ey civic and service clubs Hermosa for unlawfully dumping trash of the voiceless." no \Vere taken by removing the hinge declared the nall on owes Hoover "lls employes, by a would-be female agent, by on private property on Crown Valley Both Ander.son and MacNelly have been. !C pin 1 rr t SACC is three and a half years old and Parkway and Niguel Road. added in the past year to the stable of a Rev, Robert Ccrnelison, church gratituded and respect." f\.fu skle's stnte· 1~ is 1 ~rou ~. v.·ho accused him of is ·•non partisan, no n prolit and non sec-Officers said Hammond dumped a load synd icated talen t who!:e w~r ·s regularly J rector. 11ald the doors were of solid n1enl ad ed : "J. Edgar lloover devo ted rea en1ng: t e1r civil rights. tarian,'' he added. of grass and chunks of sod in the area. published in the DAILY p . ·Bu his entire life to the service of his coun-He v.•as accused bv House Democratic 1·-,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; oak tllld tArh hnd a small stained try. While son1e or us may ha ve qu es-Leader Ha le Boggs (0.La. ). and othei's of i;ilass v.·lndow in Its center . Pending U · t · the purchase of new doo rs, \\'Orkers oned some of his approa c:hrs in recent v.·1re app1ng congressional telephones and ho\'e covered tht' church entrl\l\C'e ye~rs, no one could questi on his loyall y of excredinc: his autho rity in the field of v.·lth sheets or plyv.·ood. and dedication to his rountry." civilian surveillance. His troubles peaked after a fuss with former Democrat Attorney General Ramsey Clark v.'ho suggested in a book published in November, 1970. that Hoover had so dominated .the FBI with a "self- O•ANOI COAST " DAILY PILOT n. 0f.t,,,_ CH1l OAILY "ILOT, 'llllltl ... lcll k C'Ombl!Wd lllf Nt""'·"l'fft. k Ollblhlltd bY ll'lt Or•"'G• ('Mil #lvolt,1'11"' C•"'Penr, !..-. ,.,. .. n1on1 .,.. ll\lbU\lltd. Mordl11 ""rwo11 .. ,ld•r. '°' C111tt-Mttl , Ntw-t 1111(11, Nlll'ltl"'IM 9HClllFl!\ll\"ln Yt llt r. '*""'' llllCf\. lrw1Ml$•llclltbld1 •nd Sin Clofnlnltl Join Jv•11 C~1>hh 1no. A 1S..,i. r.,loMI tflllioll It rvbll~~fd 5-h.lr"''I'' •NI Sllfld•~ tllo prlrK11)11 flt1llh1111"' 11J tnt 11 ti a V.r1I ltr ... 1,..1, C'Mt• Mt11, C11!10r11tt', f1t1'. lte"trf N, Wot' l'r,11<1...i 1...i ~llbUll!lf" J11t It. Curlt y Viet l'rn.otn• t "ll ~r.tr•I M•11.19t1 ,_ n...,_,, K,,wl .._. -"t' ~ •• u .. ni111111 A. MvrphiR• MllNll.,g f l llOr Cht rlt• H. Leo• Rich1..J P. Nill Aul1!at11 MMlftfnt l!•i10f1 . COlll Mtt:t: IJlt ~ ''' $1""1 ... .....,,, l tK111 :wJ N....,..., lOY/9¥~ l't\IN IHCl'I: 22f F.,f'll A.._ ._,.,,...... l t td'I: 1117t INotti 1"11-r• Ull °"""""":XS NOl1fl II CtM!iii'lhiil- T .. .,_ 17141 642-4121 ci.HW A-.i.o '42·H1' S. C:-A~ lop• ...... : ... ,._ 4f2-44D 0--·· .. li, """ 0-..,. C1tlf """"'lilt ~ ............ 1n. l1'111111t-11-.;. ..itwi.. _,..,. ,,, ......,."'"*'*' ........ ...., .......... .nw ....., ""' ......... .,,... ....... . llfC9N ~ .,...,. ... • c.to Mt-. co..,.,,... ....,.,.. w temw tt.i .._.,., W MOM U.ll ~I MIMlff\' • II 1• tlM fMIM!lf'f. ~ Fr.Pagel REACTION ... cap:tble org:iniialion aiid all It needs Is a capable adn1inistralor to follow in his rootsleps." the vetcrnn Ornnge County lav.·man ~aid. "The FBI v.•111 ha\•e no d!f- rlcultlv finding such n man.'' R11nklng Nr\\'port BC'ach police, Includ- ing Chief B. Jnnlt'!I GIA\'as and Detective center concern for his reputation'' that !he agency so metimes sacrificed ef- fecti ve crime control in a pursult of perso nal glory. An intensely reactive man, Hoover saw red. He called in a Washington Post reporter for a rare interview to denounce (.'lark as a "jellyfi sh." • Cnpt. Donald f'. Oynas respond ed \Vilh shock and rt'gl't't. "We like to think or him .. Immortal La' Paz Stu' dents and going on fort\•er. but or course thot Isn't a f11ct ," C'hltf Gtavns said this ;':.'~~ie~Jnowing th'..r Wosh ington :"·,..,....,,.:...:iJJ :W,a,§}l • (:ar~ ~"I WoUJ<f ,·Jtw 1i[ as u1e-p.1ssing of an er11 . and I hope the man selecttd to rill A group of La Paz Intermediate School tbe big shoes hlls 11n equ11l amount of e.lg~th grad ers v.·111 be v.·crJCing their w11 y dedication lo lhe c3use cf la"'· order and lo Sac ramento this Saturday "'hen they justke." u·ash cars from 9 a.m. to l p.m. in During his t~ of s·ludy Inst spring al ~fission ViejO. the FBI National Academy. Capt. Oyaas The car wash, at $1-pcr tl clttt. will be met the venerated Hoo\·t r l\\'la . At the Union 76 servil't station at La Pu " '1.-..JDuch ol....o-C0111111Ut-Boad-Alld Chrisanta Drive. /..--- anyone can make except that he was a 'The group of 35 students in teacher brilliant man and it's a terrible lo.ss," Judy Afayer's ~fG'-f (mentally gifted said Capt. Oya.,... minor) tlghth gnde m trying I• raise ''.He had to be a brill iant man lo stly in funds to Oy to C..llfomia's capital city orfJce that long .•• " be ed. June 7 and tour the legi!lAture . .Wost Ora nge Count1· ce officials ex-The school b Jundlng p•rt or the trip. pressed 1~iled an k today whtn but the students have to raJse at least lnlonned ol tbt death o Hoover. $200 on U..~ own. "11"1 1 tr1gedy," said Capt. Mlchatl '111ey wlll also stU bll:ed goods at the Burkenli<ld. head or the Huntington car wash. Stach Patn>I DMslon. JI S.turd1y'1 actir!Ues don't ,.acll tbt "Hoover epll•mlud the profw lon•I n .. ded •mount, the atudenls have pollceman. Ht can 11<ver bo rtpll<!CI u • pl1111ed 1 cbildttn's mlWle matinee May pmonalll.)'," !I. said. · lO and a ttclamallon day i•let oo. I . . AROUND THE CORNER AND UP YOUR STREET J .,. t .... ' '• , WE HAVE BEEN ASKED HUNDREDS OF TIMES WHY WE LOCATED OUR STORE "OFF THE BEATEN PATH.': SEVERAL ANSWERS POP UP. FIRSTLY, THE COST OF STORES IN SHOPPING CENTERS IS ASTRONOMICAL. SECONDLY, WE WERE ABLE TO OBTAIN MORE SPACE, WITH OUR SHOWROOM,. OFFICES ANO WAREHOUSE ALL IN ONE LOCATION. THIRDLY, THERE IS AMPLE PARKING WITH UTILE TRAFFIC CONGESTION LEADING TO US. ~ . ..,«-.Jl:ilS Sl1,UATIO~tjAS MAQE U.S MOl!.E-..COM.PEIITIYE "'ND, WE ARE PROUD AND GRATEFUL TO SAY THAT WE HAVE INCREASED OUR VOLUME EVERY YEAR FOR FOURTEEN YEARS, AND HAVE EXPANDED FIVE TIMES AT THIS LOCATION. ' ALDEN'S CARPns • DRAPES 1663 Placentia A-.1. COSTA MISA 646-4831 • • • - ~ m N mi x in fe bu m Q So ta re do he na c sa • Huntington Beae~ I . Fountain Valley. VOL 65, NO. 123, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' . • • •• ' TUESDAY, MAY 2, 1972 . - N.Y. St.ooks T~N CENTS • orator1um Declared • on 1-famil.y Housing r,......~DJcl'ERll.\<-COVlliLE Of 111e D.lllr 'u" si.H -·planned-developments· while Councilman Norma Gibbs hailed them as the new lire style. uncilmen unanimously approved a ay moratorium Monday night ~n all 1, PD {single family, planned dev elop- t) construction in Huntington Beach. oweveT, the unity reflected in the 1toriwn vote may extend to a final ieion on the status or planned develop- s in the city. sharp split in philosophy appeared in the evening a~ Councilman Jerry ey called for total (l:bolishment of . .. ' "If you want to hold down any kind or population curve you have to eliminate the planned development,'' :ritatney warned. "I'm a little worried about the way we're going,'' Mrs. Gibbs said later in the evening. "The R·l (standard single fami- ly) is antiquated and is not the best use of the land.''- "You get little boxes with people more alienated and-no t.'Om11lUnity-feeling:-The · idea of a planned development is to create open space, and a community reel- ing ."' she added. She cited examples of planned develop- ments in \'irginia and other East Coast states as "beautiful Jiving." "You can talk about green space all you want, but it still means you build two more units to the acre," challenged Matney. Unde r a standard R-1 tract. a . developer can build five homes per acre. Amid Applause ·Wtth· a· planned ~elopment he can build up to seve n homes per ncre. In exchange for more hon1es, ho\1't'\'er1 the developer must add green brlts , parks and recreation facilities, \\•hi\e reducing the individual lot size from 6,000 square feet to as lo\\' as ~.000 square feel. ''We're getting hung up on densily, using it as a y,•hipping boy.'' snapped Council- man Jack Green. "Our prin1e ccincern is the environment. l'n1 not fully in agree-- tncnt with this density thing .·• "San Francisco is den~e. b11t ii doesn't have the same police problems \l'e ha\'C in our apartment areas." he added. "I do~ think we really know v.·hat "'e are talking about." Grttn asked the city adn1Jnlstrator to make a report to the c.'Ouncil on wheth« c1ensity in itself is evil. llc.nry Duke, who proposed lhe moratorium, asked for u study of planned developmenls in other cities to determine if the higher density is justified. "\Ve nttd to know whether the amenities are <1s good as they sound.'' he said. ··A planned development challenges ' • !he inte1:rity or a sin~lt' f:11nil~ home nc ii;hborhood " Oukr, "'ho 11•as eta·t<'d on :i 1·:1rhpa lgn :i~ain.~t high de11sily 11t•1·l·hip111t'nls 1hr1•e week s ag11. did nol l'!'lll rnr 1111111{.'(lla lo abolishnll'nl l)f pl:1nnrd fit'\ l'h>p111cn ls as 1t.1[1!ney did. ~1ayor Al Coen suggcsll'd th11t If drn sl· ty \\'as suc·h [I COlll'l'fn tu 'buke an<l ~!Riney, 1>erhnps the l'ounril should r<'study lht' plnnned tl1•v1•!op1nrnts "' they appl,1·.-i npurtn1c11t 1.ones. "O K. but ll'l's SIRrt 1l'h h lhr ll·I righl no1v," replied Dukt. Nixon Lauds Wl'-'apsule Council Action • ijere.J!t capsule form are the major actions taken -Monday night bv the un ··1gton Beach City-CounCtf: ----~ -• ----"'-- . I . fl .,N. T • touneii--ixes-narwin-Devotio~ -' MORATQRIDM: Established a 91)..day moratorium on construction of R.-1, PD (single family, planned development) tracts while city planners study lhe effects of planned· developi:nents. LARWIN: Rejected plans by the Larwin Company to build 572 condomi· niUms in the southeast part of the city. The units would have been built under the planned development ordinm;ice. Condominium Proposal ALCOHOL: Refused to change city rules which forbid the use of alcoholic beverages in city parks or recreation centers. BILLBOARDS: Asked the state to remove 61 billboards on state right-<>f- way along Pacific C.Oast Highway. APARTMENTS: Turned down a 156-unit apartment comple1 planned next to Huntington Harbour, east of Algonquin Street. MEETINGS : Officially set 7 p.m. a1 the new time for Monday night city council meetings. Past council sessi.ont started at 4:30 p.m., quit at I p.m. and resumed at 7:30 p.m. North Viets Take Part Of Outpost North Qf Hue SAIGON (UPI) -North Vietnamese u1 believe Hue is the major objective," A Larwin Company plan to build 572 condominium homes in southeast Hun- tington Beach was rejected by U\e city council Monday nTght. A hardy round or applause from homeowners in the au· dience followed the vote. Councilmen Ted BartleU and Jack Green offered the only opposition as the council turned down the Larwin plan 5-2. "'-~-" :I'he Larwin tract -a Tiburon develop- ment, similar to Ibo JI!!! in Fpun,liill Valley, but lower lir1'1i:iify -was tO·~ built east of Newland .Street, between Garfield and Yorktown Avenues. It sparked further angry exchanges between councilmen over the concept of planned developments, similar t o argurTients made as the council adopted a 90-day moratorium on such projects earlier in the evening. ''We're pricing our homes out of the lower income range," Green said. "The problem is a hell of a lot bigger than just the Larwin project.•• 'IOldiers and "many, many tanks'' at· Brig. Gen. Thomas W. Bowen, deputy "We're pricing people out who would be tomorrow's good citizens. I don 't want us to become snobs," Green added. The project was oppoSed by represen. tatives of the Fountain Valley SchOol District and-the Huntington }!each HOME Council and several neighboring home 1---!ll'Ck_ed the anchor ~int of the new South senior U.S. adviser on the northern front, '\1ietnamese defense lin!21> miles north of told reporters at the-old imperial capital· Hue today and took partial control of the Tuesday nighL base. The Com?llunist threat was also strong ~ .. A military spokesman said the 2,000 elsewhere. American troops· at Pbu Bai just south of An :toc;-60-mlfeS north of Saigon, was Hue were ordered on "yellow alert," owners. Most pointed to the Huntington C.On· tinental Town House tract north of Adams Avenue as an example of what they didn't want. \Vhen John Tapking, a Larwin official, said his development would produce less than one child for every two homes, Councilman Jerry ti.1atney snapped: "There are almost two children in each Jlunlington Continental unit." Tapking said his tract would produce considerably less elementary school chil4rF" than a standard R-1 (1ingle family) development on the same acreage. Robert Dingmall, however, said the tract would produce 80 more children for Newland elementary school if figures fr om the Huntington Continentals were med. · "We keep going back to the Con· tinentals which is Irrelevant. That's a mistake the city made 10 years agO," charged Green. Jack Mahnken, business administrator for the Fountain Valley School District, admitted that Tapking's rigures were correct based on available information. "What we are afraid of is what will happen in the future," he added. "We of southeast lluntington Beach are the most used, abused and confused • residents of the city," Chargea Mis. Cathyryn Swan90n, owne r of a home near the proposed Larwin tract. "We don't want anymore townhouses." I I I ~-..,··­FBI DIRECTOR DEAD J. Edgar Hoover, 77 . All City-owned . Recreational Areas Stay Dry I Dedication \VASlll NGTON (APl -J. Edgar lloover. cn1bodl me nt of the FDI and focus of law enforcement athievemcnt ~ind <:onl~oversy for a haU century, 11 dend . 'fhe 77-year-<>ld director of the Federal J-lureliu of Investigation died of nntural cause!! in his home f-.1ond11y night , the J ustice Department announced. The Dlstriet or Columbia coroner at. tributed the death to "hypertensive car- diovascular disease'' -an allmcnL Jinked to hlgll blood pressure. The coroner, Dr. J amea L. Luke, 1ald · aft.r examlnlo1 the body that the Im. mediate ca use ot death mlaht have been a heart attack. He sold an 1utop1y was not indicated. President · Nixon, upon hearing of lloover'll death, called him a "truly remarkable man who served the country for 48 years under eiuht pres ldtntlf with unparalleled devotion to duty nnd dedlca· lion." Nixon spoke emotlonnlly of hia "profound sense or personn l IO!'l!I." f'lags at all public buildings and installatloiis . were ordered to half staff. floover wu a virtual lengend In the The crty-owned parks, beaches cand United States, an "untouchable" who died ..Il!treattoo.,Mlls oi Huntington Beach will irf office deaplte efforta by critics in re- rems in dry. -cent years· to-have him retired. City council men reaffinntd thelr stand He shaped the J<'B J into a inas.sive. Monday night against allowing the use of powerful federal agency during hJ!I alcofiOlic beverages In any of the city's career. Aci:oss Pennsylvanl2 Av1Mue public recreation racllltlea. from the office where ll°?ver wo~ked, n Ji.Jayol'..-.Al.£.oen was the-Jone ppo t -~assJve_po.lY.t,rful. federal bulld1ng to :]I -ck--t -h d . · h -o -nen =:Muse the FBI JS under oon11tructlon. V •-1-I B 0 t e -f>'. s_tand, arguing t at such tune. Even before llOOVer'1 death, there .had -If a -·11 e - . a -: ~--_:1,'1n,w' ed·~,wn1nth'e~.g.tp1'"•ruh .... ,,o," ... gnhdt -~·mbe been ontinuing-•pecu1cuon-• b 0 u.i ~· . _ '"'"' '"" • whether the bolldinJ;( would be named for which means .an attack could be im· still under siege. minent __ K~tum city in ~-~~l!l Hi_ghl ands H · the h' f u s adv'se in lhe was m danger 9{ an unn11nent attack. '--~;;'o=:w~e"ve"';r '-c 1e . . 1 r I · hbo · c bod' r -safclearlitr fun=---n-netg rmg= am ~ a govem·-no er n provmces ment attempt to retak e a 60-mile stretch Oakland PiJclier Collects $63,000 scale attack on Hue was not expected for of Communist·controlled Highway I , a week . stalled and the high command said at In Saigon. U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth least 100 troops were killed , wounded or ·Bunker and Gen. Creighton W. Abrams, missing. . the Ameican commander in Indochina, Six Atnerican aircraft were shot dow n met with south Vietnamese President and five U.S. helicopter crewmen killed Nguyen Van Thieu, to discuss the current trying 'kl rescue U.S. advisers and senior military situation. South Vietnamese officers from Quang Thieu later summoned Lt. Gen. Hoang Tri. Xuan Lam , the government commander The U.S. command also said a Navy F4 in th! north, to Saigon for an urgent con-Phantom jet was. spot down by a Com- ference. munist MIG21 on a mission over North U.S. pilots flying between Hue ud Vietnam on April 27 and a Navy A7 Quang Tri said there were "hundreds and Corsair was shot down Monday over the hundreds of dead soldiers" along a » north. The pilot was rescued. mile stretch of the highway south of The increased Communist activity in Quang Tri. Sout,h Vietnam's Central Highlands rein- Artillery base Nancy,the key in the new forced belief the Communists planned a South Vietnamese defense line, was at-major move. in the area to try to cut the tacked late n the day and by sunset field country in hall. reports said control of the outpost was in An estimated 20,IXKI North Vietnamese doubt. troops overran Quong Tri, a provincial Field reports said South Vietnamese capital only 18 miles below the held part of the base and North Viel· Demilitarized 7.one and prepared for a Jlamese held the other part. CSee VIETNA~f, Page Z) "There are many, many tanks at Aly BOSTON (AP) -Vida Blue. lhe American League's 1971 most valuable player and Cy Young Award winner, end· ed his long holdout and signed a contract for $63,000 today with the Oakland Athletics. The 22-year-<>ld lefthander k e p t Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn, Arr.erican League President Joe Cronin and A's owner Charlie Finley waiting for nearly 11" hours before showing up for the contract signing. They met at American League head- quarters for about 15 minutes before •oming out for a news conference. "I'm signed, I'm happy, I'm ready to play," Blue said. The contract calls for a 1972 salary or $50,000, a S5,000 bQnus for h I s ~formance in 1971 and an $8,000 Chanh heading for Nancy," "one officer said. Standards l..owered scholarship, which was a part of Blue'!! origiilal bonus arrangement when he signed in 1967. Bue said he lhinks it will take 3 to 4 weeks to get in condition to pitch. However, his salary is effective April 27, the date when the offer was made by Finley In Chicago. Ordin arily, a major league player's salary does not begin until he 's ready to play. Blue planned to rejoin the A's tor a scheduled game with the Red Sox tonight. The contract makes Blue probably lhe highest paid major league sophomore in ltistcry. Blue was met at Logan International Airport tifonday by Joe Reichler, assis· tant to Kuhn . •le was polite, hut not very communicative with the . lone sports writer to meet him. / My Chanh ls within small arms fire distance o/.Nancy,112.Jniles IOUlli,oUhe .. laJfen province capital orQuang Tri city. The threat to Dinh Dinh province on the central coast increased and military sources said contact had been lost with Landing 1.one English, the last Allied o\1\- ·Boaf Owners 'Win ·Battle~· 1::. in the upper one-third ol the prov-_ WASHINGTON (Ul!l.)-.J'ederal ,;,... waslu into the water. Four Communist rockets dropped on dards for treatment of human wastes The new standards, scheduled for 1--ibe..mmeLpla.ceJ._l.Q:uln_d~ts have deen-Weakened j~ublic announceme t shortly, would im~ midday ros. h hour. kit Ung six Ci\•.iliarm response to protests from a km:'!!;. of pose flit slaiiaar-ai on new OOaTSrntwo h Qui Nhoo th years and on older boats tllree years and ~·ound1ng 19 ot era. . lS e angry boat O'i\'ners, it was learned ay, later. capital of Blnh Dinh province. A spokesman for the Boat Owners A year ago, tile EPA proposed ll't.lno UPI correspondent Stewart Kellerman Association of the United State! greeted dards which would have ri:quired more reporttd that Allied warplanes today word of the revl!.ed &tandards with glee refined treabnent, matching t b a t bomJ:>ed and strafed at Jeas.t JO govem,-and sald the regulations apparenUy prescribed for municipal sewaae planll Jl!Cnt uulb left behind in Ille Quoq Tri would permit ..,. of improved .machlnl· and d..tgned to u.p boot wastes from oector. tor-chlorlnator devkes, whic:h cost Ill)!) to making laJw and rlver1 too filthy for The U.S. command reported 411 lit '300. swfmmlng. &trtkts Including llS2 he1vy bomber raids An Environmental Protecllon """"' But EPA ...,..... 1ald that "' In Quang 'l'rl lJ")vlnct in the, M holin .,.. IDlll<I cltscribed 0-cltvica 11 "not economlcal device attaining ouch a -~ ding at noon TueJday -the heaflelt COi)-much more than a mivnuttt" wbidl ment ltvel was available ror boats, c:t0tratioo ol 1ir ralcll In lour Ytll1. adds <!'1"""" before diJdllrClnc human Tbe EPA sugg .. t.d holding tanks with I pump-out faciUties at.-mtrinas, but boat owners complained of odor , lack or space end inadequate mar.in1· fac illties. One age ncy source said the weakened standard!! re spondtd...(.o the boat owners' "tremendous lobby and the furor it raised . . "We were deluged by l ,000 mi511ive~. many of them from post.cards," the IOUN:e said. RJchard Schwarti, encutive dlrtctor of the Boat 0Wner1 Auociation. said blJ organiz.lllon origlnllt.d lhe po!tcanll. glv1"' membm a c:hoict of ·signing ( mmage protatiq the proposed stan- dards or •ndorsln& ~· • • munrty centers: . him or perhaps might even hou11e hi., /\ l~d.v representing the Fountain Val·_ finnl resUng place. , lcy ~1ttlc League spo~e after the m~t· Spteolfi"tion on a successo r to Jloover • ing., ~rglng the council to reconsider Jlit , al!o began long before his deuth 11~ de,7iiuon. .. political pressure to retire Hoover You have adopted an ostrich pos~ure , alteriiately waxed and waned. !;1rs. Roberta Waterman told ~~ncilm,~n. It had see med almo~l certair. he would You go out t~ drink , but say 1t s bad. retire or be retired if the Deniocrnls beet . She complained that.such grouP!J u t~ President Nixon In the November eltc· little league have to go to Fount~un lion. Nixon now will be able to pick a Valier to hold rund raising eventa which successor. m~y involve wine ~r beer. Washington, D.C. police chier Jerry ~nd ~Pl! still get married, they Wiison, a recent Nfxon law ,tnforctment don tall J~t live toge~ber, ,~nd thert are favorite, had been promlnentry menti<ined usually ~rinks at weddmg1, •he added. as a possible succesaor before Jloover '• Councilman Jerrr Matney said he death. • would not change his stand until be was Also among those mentioned : A.~socl· conv.inced that members of the, com-ate Jusliee Byron R. Whil e of the Su· munity re?llY want a change 1h ,t}ic· preme Court and Robert C. Mardi1111, alcohol policy. rormer lt-'J!ist ant attorney general who "Then I'll go circulal.t petitions," Mrs. (See JIOOVER, Pa1' ZI \Valerman said. "That's dhe way to do II,''. ~·l atney replied. Two Teens Found Down in Ravine ' "" ._ ... SIMI (AP ) -The bodJes of two Simi Valley boys have been recovtted from the bottom or a 700.foot ravine where they apparenlly fell while looking for crows' nests. -Mlchticl G. Huff and Mark~c .. Fr.y~, both 13, were last seen leaving their homes Saturday~ , Harbour Win s ~feet The upJ)tr Jcvtl track and field te:im from Harbour View Sch0ol 1wept to a 3(). .point vJctory in the Ocean View School Dl!lr!cL champlon1blpo, school olflclab have announced. Harbour Yiew .. venth ~nd el,hth graders capturtd both dlvl3ionol titles tm'()Utt to a victory over IJ Olbtr achaols. Park Vl<w School WU f1lllll<r1JP· we.titer Mort lllll•hlnt on \\le<lntsll•x,·•.o-Cor~ing to ··t1re'-wt1lheftady. UJw Clouds alO!lg the beache1 will clear by mid-mDming leaving tempera~ tures of 62. Inland high 70. I NSIDE TODAY Afort tl1an 500 l/OChl.t lecwe Neu;port Jeltu Th11r • :Ou }or tile annual 12~·milt 1uct to Enstn. ada. Yqu con'1 lell u1hr' 1heI1 art" 1L'itllout a prooror,•. Set t11tru Ii•<. Page 20. · ....... , •trti II AM LtJIMf' ,. ..." .. " f::i"' .. -..... " C11llenll1 • '*''' """ ·' (....,,,,. .... -·-,_., • c-iti .. l'ff'<t11 P.nw " ,,..,,..,. .. -· '"'' Ot:lft ..... , •• ' ,__. ,,_..,..,, .... a•lttflll "''' • ·--" a""'1.-..tlt " _,.,. " ,_, 1 .. 11 -• •w~lhl ._. • ............ , .. 1. -~ .. --• 1, 'I % DAILY PILOT H Costa Mesa Seeks ·Parl{ Financing Costa Mesa city officials ?.-tonday night aQ!X>Ullted that they would use their ne~'· ly won lo.day grace period on Fairv iew Yark !or immediate ·negotiations lo seek financing or a leasi ag reement for the aurplus propert y. Mayor Jack llarnmetl said caucuses would soon b<! scheduled wllh the Oran~c County Board of Supervi$0CS to preserve the ~7-acre site for regional park • purposes. Jlammett, backed by city and county orflcials and a 26-member <.'Ol'ltlngent of Estancia lligh School student!, were sue· cess(µI Monday lo blocking trade of 36.5 acres or park land to a private developer. • Appearing before the state Public Works Board in Sacramento, they persuaded atate authorities to delay the irade for a period of four .,.:eeks. During that interval they are planning to enter a crash pro- gram aimed to take over the territory berore the state disposes of it through ~uctlon or trade. , Two possibilities exist. The cily, in cooperation with the county, cou ld either purchase · the $8 1nlllion land <iu trlght ()r acquire it under a long-term lease agreement. lfammett said Monday morning that Rvenues are being opened under which the two agencies cou ld purchase the park at a 50 percent discount over several years at ''favorable" rates of interest. The other approach is to lease th.eland for a period or at least SO years. A bill cur· re ntly pending in Sac ramento · would allow such a long·term lease if approved by the Legislature. ......-"" ln1roduced by ,\ssemblyman·.Robert H. ·-Burke (R-Hunllngton Beacli;)-AB-1068· I.Was scheduled .for hearing before the Assemhly Government Administration Committee Monday afternoon but was postponed over lack of a quorum . Origlnatly Burke's legislation would have allowed the two governments to )ease the property at a fee of $1 ,000 per acre per year. • At Monday night's council meeting Hammett. however, disclosed that the fee was "amended downward" to $10 per acre. Councilmen would~not explain-why~ the fee was reduced and Burke was unavailable for comment this morning . During its June 5 meeting, the Public Services Board is expected to once again consider the 36.5-acre tradcoff to the WUllam NeWson\e Development Co. in Squ•w Valley if local efforts to secure lhe land are unsuccess ful. If the trade is approved, Newsome would slve up his concessions at the ski re10rt'1 Olympic VJIJage In exchange for the Costa Mesa property, a bargain he reporteqly is ttluctaqt to make. It was e~plained b,Y ll8mmett that the stale ls ·losing about $2001000 annually on the Squaw Valley property even though Newsome Is making money on his con· c::eulons. The reason for the apparent paradox ls that the state is committed to upkeep of the property, Including roads . Should the leasehold Interest trade be approved neverthele11, Newsome will repcrtedly seek apartment zoning for the Costa Mesa parcel. With the land currently zoned recrea· tlonal and for institutional purposes, it appears doubtful-·that the. council would apProve a zone change allowing the Construction of apartments on-the coveted park property. • Tutsday, M1y 2, 1972 From Page 1 .. . VIETNAM •.. .. pouibles northern attack against Hue. Annlhtr 20,000 C<>irununlat lrOOJ11 moved again.It the fonner lmptrlal capl-- tal from the southwt!t and set up he.a vy artillery at captured artillery base flastognc only 12 miles from the city. '!'~ere are 2,00'.> American servicemen stationed at Phu Bai , the northernmost U.S. outpost, IO miles so uth or Jlue, hut w far there have been no atta1~ks against the base. Most men are communications specialists but tltcre are also 400 in· fantrymen slatloncd there. J>rcsldcnl Nixon has said no Americun ground troops will ~ used in lhe Com· munlst ortensive which started March 30 and the AmerlCfin troops were expected to be evacuated If Hue fell. UP l's Kellerman sai~ many of the 300,000 refugees who Oed to Jfue were rnoving south tow;ird Da Nang to avold the new Commu nist threat. Kt:llcrm11n said many of the 50,000 refugees he saw today were panicky and they were interested mainly In getting south. • ThC' refugees, Kellerman said, traveled by foot and in cars, tru cks, motorcylcs, bicycles and llxcarts. 1-Je said about one in 10 of the refugees were soldiers stl ll wearing uniforms or remnants of uniforms, including some of- ficers in shiny jeeps taking their famili es south . The capture or Quang Tri \~'a s one or the blgge,st victories of the war for the North Vl.ctnamese. They have never cap· lured a South Vietnamese provincial capital although lhey held parts of •lue for 28 days duriog the Tct offensive in 1968. The victory gave the Communists con· trol of the top 30 miles of South Vietna1n. U.S. military sources said 8 O Americans were airlifted out of Quang Tri Monday, along wUh •9 senior South Vietnamese officers. A spokesman said JI ' other advisers decided to stay behind and they had all been rescued or ac- counted !or. -----., --· - From Page 1 HOOVER ... headed the Justice Department inierna1 security division. The White House announced last month th~t Mardian left the government to join the commltt~ coordinating President Nlxon's..,re-election-effort. , The Whlte House declined to discuss who would succeed Hoover. Deputy press secretary Gerald L. Warren told report. ers because "this sad development came rather recently," he had no information to relay. Warren did -disclose, however, that President Nixon telephoned former Pres· ldent Lyndon B. Johnson at his Texas ranch to tell him personally of Hoover's death. Asked whether Hoover had given Nixon a recommendation on his successor, Warren said; "I have 'no information on pri vate talks lhe .President may have had with Mr. Hoover.'' Acting Atty. Gen. Richard Kleindienst issued a one-paragraph statement in which he said Hoover 's body was found by his maid at approximately 8:30 a.m. today. j'lt is with profound personal grief that J announce that J. Edgar Hoover passed aw~y during the night at his residence,'' Kleindienst said. "His personal physician informed me that his death was due to natural causes." The Jut·jawed FBI head was per1nitted by presidential or(ier to continue in his aOUTH ••• I CHINA IOt I L A 0 Evac·uatiori Unit Ready Since '69 :;jjj SA IGON (UP I) -The ,United States has kept updated since J9h9 contingency plans for a force of 5,000 Marines to screen a hasty withdrawal of remaining U.S. forces from South Vietnam if Com· monists threaten the country, military sources said today. If North Vietnamese troops appear likely'l'IO overrun all of Soutlt Vietnam. U.S. serv icemen would be lifted to three major American airbases -Bien Hoa near Saigon, Cam Ranh Bay on the cen· tral coa st and Oa Nang in the north-and llov.·n out of the country to other Pacific bases, the sources said. THU~ THllN !. Marine amphibious ready group, under the e-0mmand of Lt. Gen. \Villiam K. Jones, is stalioned on hellcopter car. riers off the Vietnam coast with the 7th Fleet, the soitrces Said. H u11 tin gton Lanes Closes U,I NIWWM' CAPTURED ZONE~~haded area shows northern 30 miles of South Vietnam that was overrun by Communist troops with the capture of Quang Tri, the provincial capital. North Vietnamese lifted th siege lon g enough for 1,500 defenders to escape. At least one carrier, the Tripoli, with 1,800 Marines aboard, is off the coast, and Jones has visited the Vietnam mainland -hls lastest trip was Friday - to discuss plans to put landing teams Mysteriously ashore if need be. Huntington Lanes, the only bowling During the current Communist 0f. alley in tluntlngton Beach, closed its fensive, U.S. advisers have Deen pulled operation at 4 p.m., 1'r1onday without ex· by helicopter from bases about to be planation. overrun and taken to rear areas. Bowlers v.'ere told the alley v.·ould close Center Mal{es 'Realists' However, the contingency plans are to be and they would hive lo pick up their.gear used only if large numbers of Americans are threatened., the sources said. aod leave. It is still closed today. There are other contingency plan s, too , Dick Sanders, operations manager of Including one for rapidly building up U.S. the alley, said today he doesn't know any forces to protect South Viet n a m. more about the closure than anyone else, Out of .valley Students By MICHAEL GOODRICH Of th• D1!1v Piiot 5111! r.1rs. Jeannine Ponce spends her daylight hours putting reality into career hunting for hundreds of students at Foun· tain Valley lli gh School. As director of the school's guidance center, she helps students explore varied career opJXlrlunilies open to them now .and. inlhe. future._ .. , --·· -'-_ "Most of the ~udents only have a limited idea of all the careers open to them before they come here," says Mrs. Ponce. "They are surprised to discover that there are more than 40,000 pr.; Cessions for them to choose from." The guidance center, a large classroom next to the school's library. has been open to students at Fountain Valley High School ror two years . A similar center ex· ists at Westminster High. The center at Fountain Valley is divid· ed iilto two sections -resource and lee· lure. The resource section has a wide variety or materials to help the students in researching a career. An occupation file has 350 pamphlets on jobs ranging from gunsmith to jockey. The center also has a microlilm reader machine with cards on more than 300 occupations. Additionally Mrs. Ponce ha s varjou.s film strips, movies and tapes to help in erploring careers. -- Mrs. Ponce gives an orientati on talk on the center to rreshlnen. She explains the materials availabl e and encourages students to come in whenever they can. ''After the orientation they begin think· ing about their futures and many of them start coming in frequently . They are made to reel they are individuals pursu· ing their own interests," says Mrs. Ponce. As part or the orientation. Mrs. Ponce has the students take the Kuder General Interest Test which links their interests with careers they may explore. She also has th em fill out a career in· terest card listing three professions they However. the buildup plans have received and he 's the highest man in the organiza· scant a\tlenj!<>n _at U.S. command head· lion next to o\vner John Kovach of quarters in Saigon because Nixon ad· ministration officials up to and including Newport Brach. the President have vowed that no "I hav~n·t been told anything by ~fr. American ground troops will be involved Kovach," Sanders said. "I only know that 1n the current fighting. at t p.m. the attorney said close the alley The most likely plan to be put into ef· d -k h • f t 'f I A -'t an pie up t e money.' ' ec 1 any arge merican uni s \\'ere . threatened by Conununist attack would Sanders did say h,e expects the alley to --aHow·-South V·ietnaritese ·soldiers-and--()pen UJl"<;,pi.-.;-Yery soon ...... u~mployees' civilians tolaccompa.ny U:S. troops lo the pay is tied up in that alley as well as the American snips waiting ·offshore. · bowlers' prize money.'' . ~ther versi~ns,. howe~er. i!lclude pra. "I don't believe it bas anything to do v1s1o ns for f1ghbng .d1sg rUntled South with the federal government " Sander1 Vietnamese soldiers on the Qeach as the added, ' -Marines protect t'fie with-d:rawal.-He Sj>ecuJated thatlf mlghl involve "Let's face it," said one hlgh-ranking legal problems between the current DAILY PILOT Sl•tf f'IMW LOOKING AT CAREERS FV High'• Jin Urban American official, "some Vietnamese owner and former owners but said he did conimanders may get pretty angry if not kno\\'. they see ~s. l_eaving. ~ou can't rule out Bill Carlson, the Huntington Beach at· the poss1b1hty they d attack the torney who represents Kovach, was not in Americans.'' his office-for comment this morning. The first contingency plans for ma ss At least a dozen bowlers phoned the evacuation of U.S. forces from South newspaper, asking \\'hat happened. So Vietnam were written in 1969 when Presi· far, no one knows. Kovach could not be dent Nixon ordered the beginning of the reached, U.S. withdrawals. . The closu re canceled sweepstake1 They have been updated at regular m· presentations scheduled today for the end tervals . as trooP, ~trength fell. Th~re are of league bowling at lhe alley, holding up fewer than 69,000 American servicemen several lhouSal\d doUars in prlze money. now based in South Vietnam. 'Huntington Beach city officials were The sources said that versions of the unaware of the closure, and said the city plan envision withdrawal or a 11 is not involved. Americans from South Vietnam on short notice, using ships and · military and are considering. The interest cards ar• civilian aircraft. Electi'on Pr'otest used for gathering studenl!: together for speakers and field trips concerning cer· tain vocations. H • Cl Fil d • C Mrs. Ponce schedules three speakers a . eanng asses e m Oltrl week on different Careen:. One weeks • speakers may include a pilot, a cos-S l • D' tri' l A Seal Beach woman has filed a protest metologist, and an oceanographer. e Ill IS c in Orange County Superior Court against Students who have listed these careers • the recent election of Councilman on their cards are permitted to leave A special class for dear an'd hard of Thomas I. ~1cKnew to lhe District Four class and hear the discussion. hearin~ students will be started next fall seat. "The speakers are very generous and in the Ocean View School District follow. Mrs. Sharon -~f. Lanti claims -in het" helpful. They can really tell the kids what ing action by trustees Monday night. petition that votes were Incorrectly they're getting into and what they're up The class will involve six students, said counted, valid ballots rejected and illegal against." says Mrs. Ponce. Superintendent Clartnce Hall. and wur1:>e votes recorded during the election-that Mrs. Ponce tries to schedule a field trip loca ted at Golden View School. led to "McKnew's narrow victory March onCe a week to different job sites. Trips Formerly these students had been 28, over two opponents. in the past have included visits to a com· transported to the Newport-Mesa School . The Seal Beach city clerk confirmed rriercial divin_g school'-a garage and a District for.. special i1t11tr~ction. ~ - - -MCKnew'S~ victory--ApriI .. 4. . computer cent er. "We've looked at their programs arid Newport Beach...attome.y-Joe-D1cker90n ''When I firsL$larud..JbLPr.ogram.~we-reel-we-can·dcrjilst-as-gCl6d-11jbb 1n explained that Mrs. Lanz'a petition can S4Z,500-a-year government job alter All S h l reaching the mandatory retirement age •yea1• C 00 N. I M Cit d of 10· 1g11e an e Hoover, unm~ried. dominated the T _,,B n • ed --. -:--. ~ -:irureau an:tm&li!'1l!et1Mc:liu boJnllILin----i.=0-: -e""VISCUSS -• • -~ . ·~ I ' most o e sliiilenl!Wantea-to-b our own-district,~all-said "We..thi.n.L..not be eard_yntil aJler _the: 30-d.ay grace lawyers,. doctors or go orr lo Africa in the that-elimination of the long tills ride to period that-follows iriri0Uncm~nt-of-th1e--·..: Peace Corps,'' says Mrs. Ponce. Newport-Mesa alone will make the kids result ha~ el(pired. _ _ --Fo"l'-Ille-gal Dumprug any other federal agency. Wielding v35t _--power, he was said.!<> lav~h_on the li~Bl F 0 v· A crackdown by Orange Countu officers th ·:.1-d . I Of Ce311 leW ' e·pr1ue an posses51veness o a slern on illegnl trash dumping in the South and watchful parent. {:ounty area mounted Monday with 1he citing of a Laguna Niguel man. Hoover's No. 2 man in the bureau was Deputies sl)id they cited \Villiam Myron Clyde A. Tolson, the associate director. Shannon Hnmmond. 33, of 24381 La The two were long -time colleagues who Jfermosa for unlawfully dumping trash spent much time together, Tolson, 7l;has on private property on Croy.•n Valley been In ill health. P11rk\\1ay and Nigue l Road . Hoover grodmed no one for his shoes, Officers said ll n1nn1 011d du1nped a load but often expressed the wish that the or Ftrass and chunks ()f sod in the nrea. next director come £rom within the FBI HI DAILY PILOT 'fht 001101 CM•I CAIL Y l'ILO'r •Iii! 1111\lth ft COmlllll«I I~ NIWl·l'~u, I• p1,1blllhf'd by ,.,. Ortr1111 Coa•I l'ubll1h l119 Compe11y. $tPt- r•1t itdlllon1 t rt Pwbllth~, Mor.day lllr0119~ Frld•v, IOI' Co»!• """'· NtWfl(lr l 8t•tll, ltun!h'IQ!ori fl••ch/Jo11n1~111 \/•lley. l1t111~• ranks. During the years of Hoover's reign. there never was a known case of sca ndal inside of the FBI and Hoover's stock remark about his agents was: "They can't be bought ." Accolades for Hoov er flowed almost lmmediplely from Capitol Hill and other locations of government. Even former Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark, '"ho feuded 'vllh 1~oover 'vhile Hoover's a..-c.11, 1rv1ne1su1111111•(k -~" :S•" Cl•mtnrtr nominal boss, said "I 11m saddened to ~In Juen (~pl1Tr1no. A ~inOI<! r~Q\On,I hear Of his clCilth. lfe has been ;i major fd il\911 11 J>11b l11"td :S•111•11~v, •nd sunc1~n. flgt1rc <ln the America n scen'e for a Jon~ tllt prl"c4ra .. 'PIJbt!lM119 p!•M il-,.f l)O Wt1I l•Y :strr11, cou• M1w, c1111orni1, ,16:,. lime. He loved !his ocuntry and we Sha! miss him." Rob•'tl N. Wt1d r r111d9fl1 .,. '"'bll1~u Sen. George ~tcGovern (0.S.D.), ex· J.,~ R. Curl1y pressed sorr.ow at the death. V"l(t ftrttM>1111 I nd Grn•r11 MIM9t r J hi k J be I -~~-• ....... -J ...Q'h'"''"*k•...r.J, .. :.-;;....--,1 " t ... n.-"·e ran;1'f.-.:-. s~d ove.r t ie •""' ~P.~m{fil'ai\'fMl>ric'an, ~r-~mik;r,8fif Them11 A. Murp'1i11e mortal,'' ~tcGovern said. r M•n•tlno ldhOf' The presidential . cohtender said he Ch•rl•• H. Leo1 Aitli•rd r. Nill dlsagrttd with many or Hoover's views, Auls11n1 M•n•olno l!011ors , Terry c.,;ne but added1 ~l am snd at his pa_ssing.'' wn1 ot.•'!9• '°"~1v E111e, Sen. Edmund S .. ?.fuskie ([).~Jaine), H•lltl9tf•• .._. OffJce declared the nation owes Floover "its Parents opposed to starting all-year operation or two Ocean Vie\v schools have persuaded di strict trustees to hold a special infortnation meeting to discuss the problem fu rther. Trustees or the Ocean Vie\V School District also informally agreed ~1onday night that the decision to start all-year cpe.ration of Crest Vie\v and Westmont .schools this July ci>uld be reversed if Jn<lre Information is presented. "I Y•on 't consider personal or emotional objections to all·year schools," said trustee· Robert Zlnngrabe, "because anyone could have thosl". "But if anyone can present me with sound inrorn1ation that all-year schools are not a good idea, my mind could be changed ." he said . After .parenl.:; protested that they still have many unans\\·ered questions about all·year,schools. trustees agrud to hold a special meet•ng at 7:30 p.m. May II in- the \Vestmont School auditorium to discuss the matter. ... Trustees left little doubt. however, that unless somethjng unexpected happens, h•Y plan lo 10 ah.l'!_<l\\}tJc•t!:!eaJ' J>tans ..• _ "Wb 'a ·I ike'tok~Jt"'tVf/YOniiiappy-all "- the time." said George Logan, president of the school board, 11but 1 can't even keep my wife happy an the time.,, Logan also said that if 20 to 30 perceot of the parents of students at either school refused lo cooperate-with the all-year "But now they are thinking Jess about more alert learners." "We expect the hearing to be set later the social status of a job and more about Hall said that the entire annual cost of in May after lhe county clerk has record· what vocation fulf ills their needs and the program, about $17,000, will be met ed all the protests to lhla election," he capabilities," she adds. by state funds. said. AROUND THE CORNER AND UP YOUR STREET WE HAVE BEEN ASKED HUNDREDS OF TIMES WHY we LOCATED OUR STORE "OFF THE BEATEN PATH." SEVERAL ANSWERS POP UP. FIRSTLY, THE COST OF STORES IN SHOPPING CENTERS . IS .ASTRONOMICAL. SECONDLY, WE WERE ABLE TO OBTAIN MORE SPACE, WITH OUR SHOWROOM, OFFICES AND WAREHOUSE ALL IN ONE LOCATION. THIRD(Y, THERE IS AMPLE PARKING WITH LITTLE TRAFFIC CONGESTION LEADING TO US • Tl:ll~ SITUALJON lJAS ~DE U MOR~ COMPETITIV~ ~ND WE ARE PROUD AND GRATEFUL TO SAY THAT WE HA\'.E INCREASED OUR VOLUME EVERY YEAR FOR FOURTEEN YEARS, AND HAVE EXPANDED FIVE TIMES AT THIS LOCATION. • • • I 1 1111~ l11ch lovle,•r• gratitude pnd .respect." Musk ie's state- M•ilh11 Atldte•s: r.o. lox 790, '164-1 ment addt'd : "J. F..dgar Hoover devoted plan_whonJt goes info opecalionJbls.J.ub'-----l--------------------=-------------------1---1~-~ he would probably reconsider the _.. .... • e>ttwr OHien )ljs entire life to the service of hi!i coun· '-""""' e .. (11' Ill Forni ,l,'l'tl\llf Whil I ha coo• Mete: JaO w111 IAy '1'"' try. e some o us may \'e qucs· ~ ..... pori •""": nu H•w••' '°"'''"',. ttontd some of his Approaches in recent )tfl c..-111 JQl. Noeffl fl C•mlne ftMI '"•••••• l7141 ,.2 •• 121 · yeftrs , no one could question his loyalty c-.w M:twrlshtt 442•1671 and dedication to his country." ,,.. ,... °'"""' c...,,, t•-1t1tt 8"1. .Hubert H. Humphrey ot Min· '*''lll nesota, an 8S30Ciate of •roover during ' fonr }'tan tn the vice pmldr.ncy and -rt1'l!lj' ytars tn Congress, mounie<t him as· 1'1 man or unquestiontd abillty, personal ' -1n1egrl IY and proltsslona 1 competence. "Ftw mtn 1n our time have made mich 11 strong impact on Ame.rlcan publlc llfe," •••d llumphrey. decision. 44~th Bridge Death SAN FRANCISCQ (UPI! -A 3t·yeor- old poslAI employ• ltapcd !O' hb death from the Golden Gale Bridge Monday, the 4t6lh known suicide sine• the span was built 3$ years ago. The body of Daniel Judkovic was recovued by the Coast Guard. Ills car was louod by the Calllonlla Highway Potrol tn a noffil. bound lane on the bridge. I ALDEN'S CARPETS-. DRAPES 1663 Placetitla Avt. COSTA MESA 646-4838 ' Tursdill)', May 2, 1"72 H DAil V PILOT 3 , Hoover~s Death· L01ne1fted _in Coun:ty By JACK CHAPPELL 0t at SMltr l'lltl ittll In the wake of the death of J. F.dgar Hoover, Orange County officials ex· pressed both sorrow and hope tbat the great crime lighting organization he built would endure. "Every la\\man in Orange Countf will feel a deep sense or personal Joss today at the death or J. Edgar Hoover" Chief De_puty_ District Attorney James 'Enright 1a1d this morning. "Hoover built an enduring organization that will be a monument to bis ability," , Enright said. The cltief deputy WM com- menting in the abst11ce of District Al· t-orney Cecil Hicks from the count1. "I 'm sure 1'tr. Hoover 's place 1,1•ill be (illed from 1,1•i1.h;!l the orgapit.ation," Enrighl said. ''But whoe\•er suceeeds him at the FBI \V:.!I be well rontent to pursue the goals of Hoover within the magnifi- cent structure he created." State Senator Dennis Carpenter (R- Newport Bench), a former FBI agent said. "~1r. Hoover wa.s the eptlome of the perfect civil servant.'' He was a great ad mini1trator . I • Carpenter said. "i{e bad the O\'e.N'helm- ing desire to do his job as well as It could be done, regardless of his own persona] inconvience." ~fr. Hoover was a great horse race !an. and had a quick. wit and good sense of humor, Carpenter said. "I can remember one occassion \\'hen he was speaking to a class of new agents. I had been in the· buriau tor a year or so and was looked upon as an old timer by the new guys. "One of the men asked him i! it was true that FBI agents had to wear their gum at all times. lie replied 'no, it is on- ly nec.essary to ha\'e your gun '''hen you nttd it.' " Carpenter mentioned that '''bile he was with the bureau: they \rould ha \'t "\'\•ild" Christmas parties. "Pennuts and cola. and that was it.'' he said. Hoover \\'as a great stickler on the way his agenlk dressed . "I remember one time. he told us that he expected all his agintl to dress like 'ilJCCessful young lawyers. And I mean Boston. Washington or New York lawyers, not Chicago. Los Angeles or Miami lawyers.' " he said. Senator C<ir!)fntt·r said that he hoped a suc<"C'ssor could Ur lourn:I to carry on the great traditton of !ht bu re nu that ?llr. 1-loover founded. "Our nation hns lost one of its greatest la"· cnforce1nent fiJ.?ures." Or11ngt County Sherif( Jnmes ~1usick said today. "He i~ goinR to be greatly mis."ed by his organizalion l\nd thosr of us \1'ho had such tren1cndous "reSpei.'\ for hi~ al}ility. "For all th<it ," the sheriff 5uid ... {don't think \l'r're going to see any gre:1t chnnges in the organization or operation of the FBI. )~· I• .. '\-. .. Hoover ·Reigned 48 Years His Last 01ies as FBI Director Were Sto r1nie~t WASHINGTON (UPi l -John Edgar IIoover \vlelded pG\\'er among the mighty as the nation's top law · enforcement of· ficer for net1rly a half century. }le also was highly popular \\1ith the public. Two presidents found the combination unbeatable enough to keep the bulldog- faced Hoover in ofiice years past the mandatory retirement age of 70 Y:ith the results that he served longer than any other federal bureaucrat in· modern times. His last years were among the stormiest as the FBI came 'under in- creasing fire from politicians. left wing groups, civil rights organizations. and even wme of his staunchest admirer:ii v.·ho felt it was time for Hoover to step down. He paid them little heed . Jn the "law and order" framework of the Nixon Admin istration, lloover spoke out often and loudly, apparently confident the President and his immediate boss, Attorney General John N. Mitchell, would employe and it becaine kno1vn. t!\ere were headlines. He got a reputation for shipping agent~ 1,1·ho incurred his \\'rath to fara\1'ay posts Butte. l\1ont., became both a favorite and a joke. Hoover surprised everyone. ho\\•evrr. \vhen he told joke arter joke on himself at a June. 1971 ~arty in honor of the a~i torney general's bombastic, blonde 1vife/ Martha 11itchell. •le gave official \\'ashington a rare look at this legendary figure and· an e\'cu rarer glirTipse of an unsuspected sensr of hum or. Complaints against his regi1ne \\•ere noth ing nc\V to the director. Thirty yl'ars earlier. disciplined agents complained hC \\-'as · a tyrannica l martinet. But it was this iron discipline H1at enabled Hoover to make the FBI a respected. world.famous organization, noted for its integrit y. such notorious i.::1ngslers ;1~ Juh1l 11111· inger. tila Ba rkl•r, "Creep y ... Al\'in Karpis, and l:eorgr ··~l achine (iun" Kelly. Kelly \\".'.IS tTed1t rd \\"ith lalwling lhi' hated gorer1unent 1ncn . •·l;.r-.1c11. ·· Hoover bcl'an1e n lcgrncl but l1ltlc fll'r "'<IS kno\1'n of hi s pri,·atr lifl'. Insiders reported hr had little intt'resl in readiug, prefrrr in~· to 11'U!('h footb:ill on tele,ision. llf' h:id a passion ror rncing and boxing . lie had :1 prnrhanl f11r "'rili ng Pt'rsonal 1rott•s tu :igenls l'On· gratulallng tho~e \\'hfl h:1ct p('rforn1ed 11·ell and rrbuk ing thOSl' 1vho did 110 1. Ile reme1n b1.•rrd h i r I h da ys . au· 11ivcrsarics. 1reddings. •1001·er's bullel ·proof cars bcran1t' a source o[ l'Onlroversy . One picked hi 1n ll\l at hi s Roc k Creek l'ark"·ay ho1ne each- mo rn ing for 1hc drive to thf' Juslil'r Deparllnenl, took hirn regularly to luni.:h at the 11ayflo"·er llotel, and home at night. ...., .. lloover built up R rrtmendously capable organization and all It netds Is a e&pable administrator to follow In his foot~lt'p.~."' thr \'r.ler:in Ornnge County la\\'man ~:iid. "Tht> FD! will have no dif- ficultly finding such a man ." H11nking Ne,\'J)Ort Btach policci, lnclud· In~ Chief B. JRmes Gll'lvas and l)(>tcctlve t;:ipl. Donald f'. Oyaas responded with shock and regret. "\Ve like to think of him as immortal and goi1tg on 'forever . but of course that isn't :1 fact ,'' Chief Glnvas said thi:ii 111orning follow lnc-the \Vnshington an· llUUPt'('!nC'llt. "I \1:ould ,·ie.w it as the passing o! an rra. and I hope !he n1<111 seltrled to !ill l l>t' hig ~ho('s hn s an rqu:i l ::1mnunt of dt'dil'fllinn to the cnu541....of h1w. order 3nd Jll~I il'C '' Ourinc hi~ ter1n of study !:isl spring :ti 1lw FB I Nn tionci l Ar:idt111 ,v. C:11)t. Oya:i~ 111~·1 the \('11rr;1ttd tloo\·rr 1w1t r . '"Thrr1• 1sn 't 1nuc:h Ill ;1 l"Onunenl <1!1~0111• ran 1n11kr exc:t'pt lhjH he \\'a~ A brilliant 111:111 :uid irs a trrrihlr los .. " ~aid (':1111 ()_\'aas. '"li e h:irl 10 be :1 brill11111t 11111n to stay In flfri1't: th:it long ... " hr :icldcd . \\'est (lrangt• t:ounty 1t.illl"e otf1t1a ls rx· prl'ssrd su rprised and shork tod:iy \\'hen 1nfonnt'd 1)f the dt'l'llh nf lloo\'er. '"It's a 1r~1grdy," snict l'n1lt. l\1icht1el B11rk1·11fi('!d. ht•ncl uf !ht• llunt inJ:ton Br:t<'h l':ttrol Di\'ision. "lltkl\"1•r cpitu1n1zt•d lhr professiounl polit·111n:111 !Ir (0;111 nt'\'t'r bt rtp\11ced as A µrrsonality."' he s:iid ··Thh) t•on)('S :is <I ~hm·k lO Ill('." ~Aict Fot1nta111 Voll ey Police l'hier Charles J\ I it·hi11•l1s "I c\1dri"t rven know hr 1.ra!i BL" Hr. s:l1d ht• w:ln1 t'<I to \)(' :1 l:nv rnfort'emrnl offic ial to lhc end, and hr 14'1\S, •· l\1irh:it'li!i said. Both offir rrs express ed admirn\ion ror lhc joh J\lr. lloover h11d dont in his ye;irs as FHI l'hief. "It's nn1n2lng lhal a man co uld \\'Ork l!O Jong to make an organizntion grow as hr did. •re never became stnle," s11 id H.urkenfield. . ·· rise·to his·defense;-They·did . His rigid methods were the only basi~ on which Hoover would accept the job of housecleaning the then Bureal.\ of Invesligatiog.,.. a-scandalri<ldea haven ~ror politica l hacks, in lhe early 1920's, Ilul there \\'C're rC'porls he hnd others JI! -hts· dlspoSal •1or \rfstl!I 10-1·'1nr1d;1-;i,nd· California , l\\'O farOtic ''acation S(lOIS. --t~e set up""B"""good'organlzaUon and~ran· ii \Vi th gre at effectiveness," said J\1ichaelis. Ul'I Tti.tll!Olt Eight Lives to Go \Vithout \\'aiting for a net, a cat leaps to safety from the fourth floor o[ a blazing Brooklyn building as firemen carry hose lines up the fire escape. The fel ine landed on all fours and walked away, appar· en tly-and incredibly-unharmed. Medical Center · Proposes New $30 Million Budget By JACK BROBACK Of 1n1 DtllY Plltl s1111 A proposed 1972·73 gross budget of $30 million, up $3 million when compartd to the current expenses, 1,1·as presented Monday by Orange County ~edical Center Administrator Robert \Vh1te. center f6r the sala ries of additional clerks used iR the Medi-Cal progra m. \Vhite's proposal was presented to the county administrative office s t a f r . Supervisors' final budget hearings will be he1d in the latter part or Jul y. \Vhile quickl y added that he estimates thal 72 percenl or lhe 1311 million will be 2 personalities recovered through patient fees, Medi-Cal and private-insurance paymenls•----:n J~ He guessed lbat the budget, if approved vi Piwt Pages by the Board ot Supervisors in July, v.·ould add about one and one-pair cents to the county general property laxJa!f, -i1'r-Pulitzers·--- -----renas as ed for 131 new positions largely clerical which would increase the medical center staff to 2,119 employes. Two DAILY PILOT editorial page ~rsonalities have woo 1972 t ulitzer prizes-for:-thelr ·outstanding journalistic achievements. (Complete list of Pri2.C winners on Page 4.) r----~ Also included in the new ~l!1dget is a_ corltpiilerized-hospita l serv1ee sy.s~m wh ich White said y;ould save $1.2 million over the next eight yea rs. The hospital administrator said the proposed spending prog~am inclu~es no new innovations pending rece ipt of $100,000 health study now under .way which was authorized by the supervisors last year. . He cautioned , however, that the ~hur D. Little Company study woul<!.have little effe<:t on 1972--73 center operations. The consulting firm expects to com- plete their stud y some time in J~e. White said he is hopeful that the flnn will recommend a $1.6 million moderniza tion ~ program for t.he hospital ,whic~ has been earmarked in the county s capital outlay budget for this purpose: . . · The administrator said peruhng legisla- ' tion could reduce the county'11 spending , share. One bill the . state leglslatur~. is considering would reimburse the med1cal Columnist Jack Anderson was cited for national reporti(lg. Jeffrey MacNelly was given the Pulitzer Prize for editorial car· toonist. Though Aderson has, himself, been much in the headlines rectnlly, his award was for his reporting of American policy· dec ision making during the lndo-Pakistan war of 1971. A 25-year-old editorial cartoonist who has moved to the top of his profess ion in a comparatively few years, MacNelly is one of the youngest cartoonists ever to be given the Pulitzer Prize. MacNelly's work appears on the editorial page of the new Sunday DA1L Y PILOT. He has been a cartoonist on the staff of a daily newspaper (the Rich· mond. Va., News Leader) for less than two years and has had his work offered to other n!Wspapers through syndication lor an even shorter time. D Columnist Anderson, 48, is a former Cliurcli oors Long Beach newspaper reporter who under·studied the late Drew Pearson for I ? 22 years and inherited P e a r s o n ' s ,4.l'.'"n. 'VS Open. ' pow~M "Washington Merry-go-round" J;l........_"'11-~J-cohmm -.at the..time of ·Pear100's death. The adage about the doors of 1 A devout Monnon and f o r m e r church always being open has been preacher, Anderson likes being labeled a manifested al St. Mary's Episcopal muckraker and calls himself "the voice Church in Laguna Beach after of the voiceless." thieves stole the massive front Both Anderson and MacNelly have been doors ol the building. added in the past year to the stable of In 1970 and . 1971, lawsuits were filed ag~inst J-!oover by disgruntled former employes, by a would-be female agent, by · leftist groups who accused him of Jhreatening their civil rig hts. lie was accused by House Democratic Leader Hale Boggs (D-La.). and others or · wiretapping congressional telephones and of exceeding his authority in the field or \ civilian surveillance. His troubles peaked after a fuss with former Democrat Attorney General Ramsey Clark who suggested in a book published in November, 1970, that Hoover had so dominated the FBI with a "selr- center ~Qcern for his reputation" that the agency sometimes sacrificed ef- fective crime control in a pursuit of ~r!OJW glory. ,. An intensely reactive man , Hoover saw red. He called in a Washington Post report.er for a rare interview to denounce Clark as a "jellyfish." From then on, his every action drew attention. Every time he disciplined an Born Jan. 1, 1895 ·in the nation'S capital, Hoover received a law degree fron1 George Washington University but neve~r practiced law. He joined the Justice Department on July 26, 1917, at age 22 and soon "'as in the Enemy Alien Registration Section v"ith one of his fir st major ta sks a study of subversive activities. Hi.s conclusion that the Communists were engaged in a conspiracy to overthrow by force and violence all non- P>mmunlst governments in the world, in- cl ud ing the United Sta te s, was to dominate his thinking from then on. On 11ay 10, 1924, Hoover was called in- to the office of Atty. Gen . Harlan Fi"ske Stone and offered the challenge of shak- ing up the Bureau of Investigation. He was 29. , During the turbulent 3011 after the agen· cy became the FBI, Hoover and his agents gained nationwide praise as the "G-men," who helped rid the nation of The onl.v othE>r official in the govern- ment who rated nnr -let nlone several -expensive, bullcl·proof lin1ousinrs \\'as lhc president. •loo ver served under :1 total or right presidents -frorn Calvin Coolidge through Richard J\1. Nixon. During these years, his rapport with the congressmen \1·ho cont rolled lhf' gove rnment 's purscstrings \Vas the envy or all . An FBI appropriation was ne\'er denied. Detractors called hi1n, ' ' T h I' Librarian." They claimed the FB I dirce- tor's power sl emined solel y from the racl that he held hund reds of tllOusands of 1*J'sonal dossiers on criminals -and lots ofl noncriminal, plus at least one set of fingerprints for hall the population or America. During the 40s, lloovcr's burenu in- vestigated espionage, sabotage and subversion. Laguna Beach Polk:e Chief Joseph J. Kell y said, "I'm really shocked by the llC\\'S .. ··1 rnct the dirertor pcrsonnlly on 111 nuntber of ocrasions and hnd several personal letters from hirn. the latrsl 11•riltl'n on my appoinlme11\ as police <'hicf here ."' Kelly said. "(lnt• occasion 1 remember J1Rrlirul:ir1y 11•ns the reception for the i:raduatin,1: t'lass of the National Academy in \VMshington, D.C. in 1005," he said ··1 realized the great hurnnnity rind war1nlh or this 1nan as a watched hin1 stand in the receiving line until he had 1nct the fa 1nilies and relnlives includinR 1nany small children of t!very one of the 100 men in the graduating class. "He had a human side that didn 't often come out because tie's been the target or so much criticlsm, There's no doubt that he ran a tight Rip but tht1t 's what made the bureau." CONTINENTALS ... , -1£itLihe -·-·-·- -''Golden Toucli'' • 4-Dr. SEDAN -' MARl(IV 2-Dr. COUPE We have an outstanding selection of.. these fine cars! "Ora11gt Countu'a Family of Fin t Cars" Home 01 The New Car , .• • ... • ' - A' '"· ........... syndicated talent whose work is regularly 1--~.-l---1.ou.~l~Ull<ILIL~!.......11--1p~uMb~~·b~ed~bin-<-,.tbe-DAIJ,Y-P!b0'!.,__::_..:__~­and a wooden pew were reported to police Monday morning by church officials. Althotlgh Jocked at • the time of lhe tbert , the heavy doors wrre takt11 by removing the hinge pin. , __ "G"Ohlfllt'Olll!fi''.,_ __ _ Home or The New Car ••• -"Golden Touch" Rev. Robert Corntlison; church rector aald the doors were of *>lid oak a~d each had a small stained glass "1n4ow In Its cenler. Pending the purchase of new doors, worktrs have covered Lthe... church entrance wllb !heel.! or plyWood . Man Dances in Aisle N11.de at 30,000 Feet ' LOS ANGELE$ (UPI ) -A young man emerged from • rest room aboerd an American Airlines jet on flight from Boston and pranced nude up and do\\'tl the aisle 10 minutes before !he plane landed . at Los Angele1 fntematloool Airport. Llr<J(,()lr~ r\11 f\( llf~Y 2628 HARBOR BLVD ., COSTA MESA • 540-li630 I • • • J DAILV PILOT with Tom urphlae '»:f: Hoover Death End of a11 Era RECALLING THF. FBI : Year s aao when Orange County was 1UU mostJy cltru.s grovt1, the Ftdertl Bureau of lnvestigaUon dispatchtd Ont or 111 a1ents to our region to uphold the U.S. ann ot ·the law In these parts. ll is name was Edward J. Kirby. ' • .. "'' . •• ~ 'Y • UPI Tt ...... tt Kirby w111 .a trained and efficient federaJ agent , a hold er of a degree In law and all the things that the late J. Edgar Jioovcr wanted In his G·Men. Today, Kirby has gone on to lake over the task na director of California 's Department or Alcoholic Beverage Control. Expedition on Moon In thOtlc earlier days, however, when he W11!\ FBl·Agcnt-ln.Cha,rgc tor Oritnge county, he cften operated out of the <>range County Sheriff's Office where my late father worktd as an arm of locail law tnforcement. Astronaut Charles Duke .stands beside lunar rover near Stone Moun- tain during recent excursion on moon's surface. His comrade in spa~e. John Young, took photo. Scientists say Apollo 16 rocks appear d1f· ferent from any brought back previously. · ' • KIRBY ANO DAD became &ood friends, althouRh admittedly there w111 r.ertaln profe11slonal rlvRlry 1od no little kidding. • Kirby would jibe at Dad being a "hlck <.'Ounty 1awman" and Dad would in turn refer to the FBI 111 the "Futile Bureau of f nefflclency." Tl was all In good fun. Dad would kid Kirby because the FBI Often seemed 1low to make arre1t1. Dad Judge Nullifies Boyle's Re-election by Miners ,...-;---clliliiiOO lhey ·a1w·ay1 h-ad· enough 'evil:!· cnce to convict the .11u.spcct seven limes . <lVer before they'd move out to nab the culprll. But you could be a1111ured when they nobbed one, he almost always stayed nabbed. _ __.._ Kidding asld,, when It came to the business or Jaw enforcement, local of· flcers.could always count on the FBI and 1he f'BI could count on them .. That wa11 the kind of organization J . Edgor Hoover built. WE HAVE SEEN !hr kind of men th11t lloovrr drew ;iround him right flere in our own region . 'State Senator Dennis Carpenter was one. So WIB th~ fine al · torney nnd friend of mine, the late Tom lleffernan. So now the man who founded the 1ncxlern FBt !11 dead al age 77. The man who early in his career In 1917 started llignlng hlll n11me "J, Edgar" rather than "John E." 11imply to avoid confusion wlth another Ju11t lce Deportment employe. J . Edgar lloover was steeped In con- ! roversy right up until the day he died "'hen columnist .Jack Anderson accu sed WASIUNGTON (UPI) -Citing a "tide of evidence too strong to resist," a federal judge haa nullified the 1969 rei!ection· of -w. ·A; ·"Tony'' Boyle· ·as United Mine Workers president. U.S. District Judge William B. Bryant made the ruling Monday. He said the union .showed _"litUe regard" for a 11tlpulatlon that !he voling be held by secret ballot. Bryant also fowid that Boyle forces conducted campaigning jn polling .areas, interfered with observers for defeated candidate Joseph A. "Jock'' Yablonski , and used the union's nrwspupcr to push the Boyle candidacy. To accept the union's defense against Leaders Stifle Riot in Belfast By Protestants the FBJ of preparing iiecret memos for BELFAST, Northern Irel;1nd (UPI ) - l're~ident .lohnson on the lo\'c llvcs of Proleslant youths have stoned Army ccrt :1in 1iublic fii;:ures. ' troops and set a store ablaze but older CLEl\RtY. HOOVER hr1ted C<lm· members or the extremist Protestant 1nunist s. criminals ("rats" he called Vanguard movement intervened to pre· lht•n1), rndlcals, rabble-rousera and spies. vent a sixth consecutive night of all-out As for soclal justice, he once suggested, rioting. · "I am sure that if more emphasis we.re Earlier f.Ionday. the fi rst .multiple plac ed on the gouiel of salvation and less bombing in Northern Ireland's three on soclal justice, lhe !niter would become years of secular violence killed one o J?realer reality ... ·· worker and injured IS others, six of them -lloovtr-and his FBl have drawn·mucb----1Uiousty....,in-a-c:hain or eight blasts at a rriliri~m in recerit years. Pfih1ps synthetic fiber!l ·factory In-Carrickfergus, history. however, will put the ll}ln an,d· an 11IJ>rotestant town eight miles north his burcuu in better context in of Belfast. rc1nemberln~ !ht 1930s era of gangland 11The whole idea of the attack was lo '~rime 1n An1 crir:1. kill or maim rna.1imum casualties," .an TT WAS IN TllOSt~ years that Public Bnemr, Number J. John Dillinger. slayer of nt l'll!>l 10 J)er.~on!i. \\'IS trapped and J,tttn ned rto\\'n b.v t'BI n~ents. And the FBI 11tso elitnin:ited surh public rncm les 11~ f;ro rg(l '"Bah,v f'a ct'' N~lson , Charle.• ''"Preti~ BQy" .f loyd. Ala and Fred Harker. Al\'i n l\urpi!'i and (;eorgc ··~tachint' c;u n" Kellv. r..'l ochine c:un K<'ll.~·. In fact. f?Ol\'t' FBI nf!.e nls their nicknnm e "'hen rornered In h1~ ~Iernphi~ hideout. Kell y pleaded. '"l)on't shool. G-~lan .. :· And so J. Edgar Jloov er , the nlan ••ho 11cadt>d the FBI 1t the pleasure of tight preside nls, Is dead. 11 Is clearly the end u{ an era. · Anny spokesman said after the .. ex·· plosions at the British-owned Courtauld~ rayon factory. "Whoever left the bombs kriew exactly what they were doing .'' A police spokesman said East Bclfa~t appeared headed for another explosiv~ night until ~the Vanguard intervenlion. Twenty rioters and 14 policemen havr been injured in fi ve previous nights or trouble in the area . ~ The 1pokesmr1n said youthful "Tarlttn"' gangs -so called because of the Tartan scarves and alacks they wear -stoned Anny ind police vehicles, then headed for the city'1 small Shortstrand District, a Roman catholic enclave surrounded by Prot.,tlnt neighborhoods. "" charges brought by the U.S. Labor Department, Bryant said, "the court would be -forced to swim upstream against the tide of evidence too strong to rCSlSt." ~ -~· ·:-..., ___,._ Yablonski, his wife and daughter were · murdered in their Clarksville, Pa., home less than a month after the December, 1969, election. One defendant in the murder case, Mn. Pao! Gilly, has im· pllcated Boyte in connection with the slaylngs. in her confeuion. Boyle has dented the allegations, and he has not been charged. Federal labor laws require the union to lmmediateJy _;start preparations for a new vo te, even wh ile an appeal is being made. The decision also affected the re-tier· lions or the union's vice president, C.corge J. Titler : and Secretar y . Treasuttr John OWens. Yablonski's son, Kenneth. said at Pittsburgh that he was "more convinced than ever before fhal: my father Wa!i 1nurdered because the leadersl)ip of the United Mine Workers knew that the' elec· lion would be aet alide. and that in the se· cond election they would be defeated. by 1ny father." The younger Yablonski said he ex· pccted the Miners for Democracy (MFD), an insurgent group in the 190,000- member union. to meet soon to pick candidates to oppose any slate put up by the union 's international leadership. Earlier this year Boyle was convicted or 14 counts of conspiracy and illegally channeling $50,000 of union money into political campaigns. He faces up to 32 years in jail and $120,000 in fines. D_isa.r1nt1;,11ient Talks -Get Boost- WASAlNGTON CUell -The United States and the Soviet Union have a;et in 1notion a ne\v round o1 talks on limiting the size of their nuclear arsenals, one \vhtch the-White House said could "ler1d to an agreement ~·hkh...1s mutually 11.c· ccptab1e lo both sides". There were indications that the new phase of discussions "·ould includt. for the fir st time some limits on subm:lll\ie-bas· ed n1issiles. a subject the S<lviets have been reluctant to discuss. The \Vhite House also indicated Presi· dent Nixon "·ould engage in direct taiks wiht the Soviet leaden when he goes to 1-toscow later this month, if the negotiators meeting In Finland have not hr1mmered out something by then. . ·spring Storm Slac~s Off But Wintl, lleavy Sn.o,t.vs Caused Damage, Flooding Tc1npern111rcs 'ltlt~ L-"r..:. Albany. rtt" n ~• ,11 I Alt•11t1, clO\IO!y 11 '' 111 .... 1119"-"'• ctnvci v t r St llMIO!\. r•I" 7' .. fll _.,/ llllfl•hl. c!Oud\o " w .l• (fll.rlfft~ ~14•r 71 "' b•rl¥'twf1-i~ .. 'rt-S.t CPllttto, tlevc1• n " Clfl(!!lllltl, Cle\ldv 1$ 60 Clfittetld. c•-v It •1 o.ri-. c\ffr •1 ,. °"'Mei'"'" deudy •• .. O.•odt. c•••t •• ~ OVI""'-r1!1' " J? Houston, ••l" t2 U t,..i1MPOft1. t\fJt N $1 K•"11' City, clt•r fl Jl LI\ V...J, cl•e• lj SJ ·" " n ·" l llltt 11«.t., t11,u1tv tr. $11 , )II l euh'l:llte, c~ 1• "° .» ,,.lll"lf, tlNr U Te Mll ... I UI< .. ~ d!Mdy Jt ~I Mfllft.41. P1loll, 11!11 1\ 41 Wt'#°"""'' CICM.1111• 14 t' Nl'W Yort, doudy ?1 .. Oll•hll!N (.fly. (l .. r lll 4 O<lllflt, c.loucfy !' " ,._.,.., \Mtfl(I .. ti••· 101 ,, P'tlllllfrllll\l1, Clo\ll9'f' 11 60 '""""~· clHr tt .!t "'"'~-dWiT ,. ,. ~..,.. °"" ' '+wlr ,, " ll•tlln!Gnl. cl4Mlp 11 .. St. UW!t, ti..,-?t sr w w .... ( ... , !f 1 "",., ~ t~r n ,, S...t!tlt. <*""!' ., • ~ """"V • ... "' ". "' ... "' ' ' .. llGI NO----- llltAIN~·~ f7rn .......... ~'"°""'' ••<>"!' v.s. s--... - f".it '°'9\1. Ufllt Yl rll tilt WllM!t i.itPll .,., "'°"""' "°"" ~oml111 ..... ~~ , ... ll kllOtl Ill .... fl\O'l'll *'" IM w.-..;ey. 1t10ll toclofV ..a .... CM•l•I ~atvl'fl r111tt from SS to u. INllMI """'*•hire• ••• rrem U tt 11. WeW "'""'°41111"1 •1. S••• 111-. Tldu TUllOAY ~ -•••••....• 11:Jt "·"" ·-· • ~ ltw ••••••..•• •!P._m. '-• WllHlllGAY l"I,... Melt .............. JJll._lft. f,t ,.,,. .................. J1Jla.lft. .. . ~ Mtll .•••. ., •• , tt:Dl.1'11. ._, ~ ._ -~-•"·•··• J:lO'"""" J.I N •• e:a a.tfl. """ 1:» ,.,.. ~ 11i.. II:• .. ""-,,.._ 1:• """ • ' ( j Ford, GM on Hot Sea·t, ' • • .2 Firms .Indicted on Fleet Price Charge DE'I'ROIT (AP) -Officials of General Motor1 and Ford Motor Co. deny charges In a federal indictment accusing them or fixing prices on automobile neet sales. A federal grand jury, concluding an 18- month lnvestlgatlon, contended Monday th:.~ "prices or automobiles in the fleet market have been raised, fixed and maintained at artificial a n d non- compeUtlve levels." It was charged the two auto giants with conspiring to to fix prices and with at- tempting to mainta in a monopoly in the automobile fleet sales market . The ••accusations in the indictment are not Jrue," Ford Motor claimed. The charges have "no basis in fact," said GM. The National Automobile Dealers Association and the nation's largest aut0: leasing company, Peterson, Howell & Heather Inc., were named a s cc>eo1111pirator11 but were not indicted. . Both GM and Ford face '60,000 fines on each count. The charges v.iere filed with a 12-page companion civil suit in U.S. Dlstrlct Court in Detroit by the ar:ititrust division of the Justice Department. The fleet car market consists of larg~ wlume automobile. purchases. It ac- counted for about 12 percent of the new cars registered in the United States in 1969. About one million autos -valued at approximatel:Y $2.S billion ~ were sold or leased that year in the fleet market. According to the indictment, G~f and t'ord now account for about 75 percent of that market. Humphrey Seeks Double Victory In Midwest Vote 'By 1Jiilted.Prt.si liitf raltiODll Chalien£ed from the right anCi the left, Hubert H. Humphrey today is going after an unprecedented double victory in the presidential primaries agaipst George s. McGovern in Ohio and George C. Wallac.e in Indiana. Going one-on-one against two major op. J>Onents in the bellwether Midwest primaries. Humphrey was given an even shot at beating Wallace in Indiana and wa s rated the favorite to beat McGovern in Ohio. despite a late surge by the surprising South Dakota senator. Victory in both states would give llumphrey, who . rtlumed to the Senate after Josin& the 1968 presidential electioo, a major, possibly decisive boost, in his r.fforts to capture the Democratic pre.!idential nomination and another run at President Nlxo·n this fall . - Humphrey . claimed that 1 Joss to Wallace tn India na would be no more than a "blister" on his campaign. ·A win by McGovern in Ohio, however, would be a major upset that could pro· vide the South Dakota senator the momentum h.e needs as the primaries head west; and could leave Huphrey's candidacy seriously wounded. , The Ohio and Indiana primaries far overshadowed l'A'O others being held to· day in Alabama and the District of Columbia . The civil suit ask1 for a pennanent in-- junction agalnst any continuation or renewal of activitie s to "eliminate fleet market competition. The government claims the alleged conspiracy ended the period of price <.'Ompe tition that hat! existed in the fleet mar ket among. primarily, Ford, G~1. and the Chrysler COrp. Acco rd ing' to U.S. Atty. Ralph Guy, the alleged illegal actions stemmed from a 1962 Chrysler move granting price con- cessions to fleet market customers. At that time, Chrysler had about 4 percent of the fleet market while Ford and GM .. TOPS REPORTERS J1ck Anderson had about 92 percent. Ford and GJ\1 followed suit, and the three giants struggled for years, he ad- ded . ln 1968, the indictment charges, both Ford and GM ''substantially increased'' concessions. and in some case& sold cars "at or below the cost of their m1nufa~ ture ." In ~1ay 1970, the indictment continues, G~·I and Ford eliminated the concessions but allegedly told competitors they would "retaliate " il other !inns granted con· cess ions in an attempt lo get a biggu slice of the multibillion-dollar-•year pie. UPI T__,.. CARTOON WINNER Jtffrty McNtlly P-ulitzer -lltfJWrs-Swept--. - ' . - By Anderson, NY Times NE\'l YORK (AP) -The New York Tim es has won the 1972 Puttizer Prize (or meritor.Wus public service (or its publica· tion of the Pentagon papers, lhe 47· volum e study of how the United States become in volved in the Vil'lnam \\'ar . The national reporting a\vard "·ent lo syndicated colu mnist Jack And erson for his disclosure of admini stration policy- making during the 1ndia·Pakistan war. as lhe trustees or Columbia University an· nounced the an nual prizes Monday. But the trustees, in an apparently un· precedented action, issued a statement in which they expressed "deep reservations about the timeliness and suitabili ty of certain of the journali sm awards. They did not specify which award s they referred to. but the Times said today it had learned that the controversy involved the awards to the Times and Anderson because of the way in wh ich official government documents had fallen into journalistic hand s. The award for editorial cart ooning went to Jeffrey K, l\1cNelly. Richmond Va., News Leader, for a portfolio of 10 cartoons. friend of the late first lady, Eleanor Roosevelt. The general nonfiction prize went tn 1'Stilwell and the American Experience in China. 1911-1945.'' by Barbara W. Tuchma n. her second award in the t'alegory. She won in 1963 for ''The Guns of August." F'or the first lime si nce 1968. there was no Puli tzer award for drama this year. A. J\.I. Rosll,nlhal, managing ~tor ()r !he Ne\\' York Times, said ''.We are all particularly proud of Neil Sheehan for the tenacity, knowledge and professional ability that contributed SQ. pivotally to the whole Pentagon Paper project." Other journalism a\Vards were: Horst Faas and Michael Laurent of The Associated Press, spot news photography. for their pictures or Bangladesh Jioldiers executing turncoats after the India~ Paksitan war. Dave Kennerly of United Press International "'On the fe ature photography award for his Vietnam war portfolio. Peter R. Kann of the Wall Street J ournal, won the internationat reporting award for combat coverage during tbe India·Pakistan war. r t I ' ' ' • ' I v s A New mor 15 D bud Su has Sa whe -~-Au 7 J pro veh In the rei dcv .. tion roo " Ohio presents the fir st direct ron· rrontation between fl.1cGovern and Humphrey, both naUves of South Dakota and-U~S:--senators-from-the-Midwest; and now considered the principal challengers for the Democratie presidential nomin a· (Anderson's column appears regularly on the editorial page o( the DAILY PILOT. MacNelly's-cartoons-appei r...Sun· day 's on the 'PTLOT's editorial pages.) Richard Cooper anifJCihn Machaeek, of•-----+--- the Rochester. N.Y.1 Times-Union, took the general local reporting pile for their coverage of the bloody riot at New York's ·AtUca State Prison last September. any ""' lion. ~ --In other primaries, their finishes "'er e clouded by the presence of Main ·s Sen. Edmund S. Muskie and WaJlace. but Muskie has pulled out of the primaries although his name is on the ballot and Wallace decided not to make. a stand iq the state. \Vith the backing or organized labor and a large black population, Humphrey "'as considered a solid favorite to win his second straight primary. He substantially beat the field in Pennsylvania April 25. But a week-long blitz by McGovern has closed the gap. Wicks ~l'l '/ ran into Hubert Humph/fly todlty!' . . In the awards for letters1. the trustees 3\'e the-flclion prize to 11 Angle of Repose," by \Vallace..E. Stegner, a pro- -less or or English and director of the writing program at Stanford Univetsity. For editorial writing. the award went to John Storhmeyer of the-Bethlehem. Pa .. Globe-Times, for an editorial cam. paign to reduce racial tensions. • Joseph P. Lash receive~ the priu for distinguished biography for his best-sell- ing "Eleanor and Franklin." He was a U'IT ..... Vpreoted'IJfl Reds I A young boy and baby bro lb er wait »ith olher refugees to =.,: river by sam~n ind escape to Danang ong Highway I . More lb1n1 100.000 persons bav~ nf!l .Quang Tri. ' • ' ' • ' , ' • • s· the lim ,, the " dee' •ald " dee' add co the cou citi " Ne Ste im the bi . .. in ch Orange Coast Today's Final ' N.Y. Stoeks ' VOL 65, NO. 123, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 2, 1972 'N TEN CENTS ' . School Adt1ainistrators. 75 Make More Than $15,000 By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of tM o.nr '11et 11111 A total of 75 administrators in the Newport-Mesa S(:hool district are earning more than $15,000 per year and at least 15 have salaries in excess or $20,000, a DAILY PILOT review of the current budget indicated today. Superintendent of Schools John Nicoll bas the highest salary at $31,000 per year. Salary totals· are expected to go up when the 1972·73 budget is approved ·in . .August.--··-~ -- Recreational Unit to Eye Jetty Park _ The fate of West Jetty View Park in the Peninsula Point area may hang in the balanc,e tonight . as the Newport Beach Parks, Beaches and Recreation Oun· mls!ion decldeJ how to proceed ~ ti... provements planned for the facility over veheme_ot resident protests. In its latest letter to the city council. the Balboa Peninsula Point Association reiterated .strong opposition to any patk development on the point. "Unless we agree on some plan of ac· lion soon. we are going to lose the money for that pro1ect," said PBR Director Cal Stewart. Stewart sai dthe city council approved the project and allocated $8,400 for it a year ago. Plans proposed so far include the in· stallation or walkways, sprinklers and a lawn, but no major facilities such u rest rooms or showers, he said. "The only stipulation was that prklr to any development, the plans bad to be ap- ~prov«1-by--1he....association and the city coun~te.wart said. • Since then, Stewart said the plans for the park have been redesigned several times. "We still haven't gotten anywhere with the association," he said. "Apparently, the association has now decided it wants no park at all," Stewart &aid. · .. Jt ts now up to the commission to decide what they want to 'do about it," he added. The next step, Stewart said, ts for the commission to send the matter back to the city council for final action. The council could approve the park over the citizens' protests. · "There are 56,000 other people in Newport Be.ach who could use that park," Stewart said. He added it would be an important site for the city because it is the ierminus for part of the proposed bicycle trail system . "If we don't do this at the next council meeting ," Stewart said, "we can't get plans, specifications and contra cts out before July 1 (end of the fiscal year)." According to Stewart, the money would revert back to the Building Excise Tas Fund for allocation on projects next fi scal year. The commission meets tonight at 7:30 ln the Newport Beach City Council chambers .at City Hell. " The 37 school principals, whose pay Is computed on a yearly e:xperience scale, make an average of $19,500 per year. Charles Godshall or Newport Harbor High and Floyd Harriman of Estancia High are the highest paid principals in the district, earnlng $23,107 per year. Dennis Evans of Corona del Mar Hi&,h. earns $21,643 and Donald Achziger of Costa Mesa High makes ti!l,919 annually. · · Middle-lcllOOt . pflnciPals m a k • anywhere from $17,527 after one year to $203,344 after five years. _ The range tor elementary school prin- cipals is from $16,492 to $19,298. The 16 assistant principals in the district have an average income of $17,950. They range from a high of $19,313 Ior a high sc hool assistant with five years or experience to a low of $13,548 for a first year assistant at an elementary school. According to the budget, the second- highest salary in the district is paid to Associate Superintendent Norman Loats. He makes $26,317 per year. Qt.her_ a.dministraton with salaries in ~xcess o~. '20.,0QO are Administrative Asalstanf -Jean R.-Hmnon, $22,000; Assistant SUpertnteftdent of Personnel Kerin Wheeler, llS,711 and FiJCal Plan- ning Director Walter Adrian, l21.tl9. Allo .. rnirltl 'more ' !ban 115,000 are Chlef Accountant Ruth Taylor. 115,860; Purchasing Agent Dorothy F i s h e r , $15,540; Director of School Facilities James Heistand, $21,207 and Assistant Superintendent for. Research and Development Leslie Shuck, $25,039. In addition, Development L a b Coordinator Robert Otto, $19,278 ; Assis· tant for Secondary Services Cora Schultz, $15,199; Learning Analy~t for District (S.. SALARIES, Page I) LEAVING SCHOOL BOA.RD . Lido Isle's Strauss Strauss Quits Newport-Mesa Trustee Post • The oenlor mtmber' c{. the Newport. Mesa Unified sctiOOt ·bOard.. todiy· an- nounced be will ifsign' after 10 yean of service to Harbor Area IChoois. Donald A. Strauss, 56, of 101 Vie Vene-- zia , Lido Isle, will step down from the unified district~ board proir to the Aug. 8 election. On that date, voters from throughout the Newport -Mesa di strict ·will elect two persons to the seven-member board. The election was called for that date when another _senior member of the board re- signed to become HRrbor Area Municipal Court judge. Selim S. "Bud" Franklin, a Costa Mesa attorney. resigned his board ~eat April 11, following appointment by Gov. Ronald Reagan to the court bench. Supervisors OK Strauss, who is vice president for ad· ministration ol Beckman Instruments. _) Inc. in Fullerton, said today, "I feel that Four Open Space in J.O years I have done my parJ." Strau" was twice elected -In 1965 """'l:;:;:;;:<f;;:--!•n~dL.:1969 -to the"'unified---school board I unty ~or three years on the New· - pert Elementmy-5ehoo1..Diskid board. He was twice elected pr esidenTOr e T~~ Orange County Board of Super· elementary district and was uni r i e d visors today approved fourtnoves which board presidenl in the 1968-69 school will serve .to enhance the open sp3ce yr~r. _ areas, prov1d~ a larg~ rt~w recreat1o~a l The outspokPn , articulate fi scal con- area, _determme public rights to Irvine_ servative said he -had !>ten consicli>rin~ lands-in-the 'Uppe!' .f':lewport _B~y area resif{ning in. recent months "but did not and st~y the poss1b1hty ol bu1ld1ng set• wish to cause the district the expense back !me~ on beaches. or :l separate trustee election. The actions are: "Mv resignation at this time will per. ADOPTED a very broad open space mit candidates from mv trustee district plan, much broader .than recommended • to be included in the August elect.ion,'' by the county plannu1g department for Str:iuss said. implementation and preservation of o~n Strauss represents trustee area ~ which_ s~~e plans of local a n d countyw1de includer; Portions of the city of Newport s1gnifance. Beach such as Balboa Island and Penin-- SET IN MOTION a possible purcbaEe sula Lido Isle and sections of the ma in- Moves in Of 5,500 acres of the JO,SOO.acre Starr land on the ocean side of Pacific Coast Ranch in the southern part of the courity Ri!!;hw::tv from Newport Bay to west as a natural recreation.preserve. N"Wport. VOTED TO INITJATE legal actions to Frank1in repre~ented residents of ·establish the publics' rights to 4cce55 lo trustee area 6 which irfcludes portions lands ~ounding ~ Upper Newport of both Costa Mesa and Newport Beach Bay. 'Mlis concerns Irvine Company prop-bf>tween 21st Street and Pacific Coor;t ertv in the area. Highway and Dover Drive and Newport lNSTRUCFED tht departments of Boolev3rd . ~ilding Md safety and p!.apning and the Strauss' resignation ietter Is expected county counsel to report on the J>OSSible to be read at tonight's school board estflblisbment of building setbaclt ·1lnes meeting at 7:30 o'cloclt in the Lvceum of on "the coastal beaches ol lhe county. --(S.. 511\AUSS, Page I) - Standards Lowered Reds Hit New , Lines Of Defense SAIGON (UPI ) -North Vietnamese soldiers and' "many, many tanks" at· tacked the anchor point of the new South Vietnamese defense line 21> miles north of Hue today and took partial control of the ba se. ' A military spokesman said the 2.000 American troops at Phu Bai just south of Hue were ordered on "yello\v alert," wh ich means an attack could be im· · rninent. • -· ............ j . I . ' l Nixon Lauds De,1otio11 , Declication \\'ASlllNGTON' CAr 1 -J. F.di;ar lloovtr, embodiment of the l<'BI and ltlC'US (l( la"' t nforce111Cnl 11rhlrvement and ront rO\'Cr!ly for a hnlf ('CUlury, I.a dead. The 77-yenr-old dirC<'lor of th(• F'tder11I J"lurr.nu of lnvestigtHion dll'<I of n11turHI causts in his hon1e ?>.1onday night, the Justice Department 11nn1.iu11ccd. The Distr ict of Colu1nbia t·oroncr 11.t. tributed the death to "hypertensive car. diovascular disease'' -an ailment linked to high .blood pressure. Howevei:,, the chief U.S. advise..t, in the . northern -ptOVinc'is Saiil~ ea rtrer a ·rut!· ... -~·--~·--.~--.· .. ~ ......... --· FBI DIRECTOR DEAD J. Edgar Hoover, 77 The coroner. Dr. Jan1e' L.,Luke,.11ald l'lfter-examining-the ... body.,.thnl lhe··im:----- mediate cause of death n1l!lhl hllvf! been scale attack on Hue was not expected for a week. · In Saigon. U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker and Gen. Creighton W. Abrams, the Ameican commander in Indochina, met with south Vietnamese . President Nguyen Van Thieu, to discuss the current military situation. Thieu later summoned Lt. Gen. Hoang Xuan Lam, the government commander in the north,. to Saigon ror an urgent con- ference. U.S. pilots Dying between Hue aMI Quang Tri said there were "hundreds and hundreds of dead soldiers" along a 2().. mik stretcb of the highway south of Qu'ng Tri. /trtWery base Nancy,tbe key in the new (See VIETNAM, Pogo t) Vida Blue Ends H old(Jut, Signs For $63,000 Newport Pill Haul Biggest Confiscation a heart attack. lie· said an autopsy was not indlcated. President Nixon, upon hearinfl .-,r lloover's death, called hhu a "truly remnrknble man who ser\'ed the country for 48 years under eight president.~ with unparalleled devotion to duty nnd dedic11· lion.'' Nixon spoke en1otlonally of his ''profound sense of personal loss." ~·111~!1 .at all publi c bulldlri&s a11d inslallations were ordered to half :Jtnff. Hoover was a virtual leni;it:nd In the United States, an "untouchab le" who dit•d In ofrice despite efrorts by critics in re· By ARTHUR R. VINSEL t.-ent yeart to hive him retired. Of•• o.11y """ '"" He sha~ lhe _ _F_Bl lnto • maulve. · O.ne J\llpected dljl.C smuggler la Jalled powerful fede.ral agency during his lod.a~. followlf\a Newport "'Beach, poJice career. Acro11 Pennaylvantr Avenue ,.1zure cil 29!,5oo UUclt pills, probably the from the o!Oce where Hoover worked, a largest aµch conli1c1tlon in Oranie COtJn-mwlve powerful federal bulldln& to ty history. · boust tht FBI 11 under conatructlon. V~.lue of the 256,000 amphetamine pills Even before Hoover'• death, there had and 44,500 barbiturate tablets of Mexican been continuing 11peeulitlon 1 b o u t origin would be about $35,000 on the whtther the build ing would be named for street sales market, police fald. him or perhaps might even house hl.t Arrest warranls were issued more than llnal resting place. 8 week ago Jor three suspected principal~ Speculation on a succes!IOr to lloover in the case, two of whom have not yet also began long before his death at been taken Into cwitody. political pressure to retire lloover alternately waxed and waned. . BOSTON (AP) -Vida Blue, the Announcement of the first suspect's It had seemed almost certair. he would American League's 1971 most valuable capture only l ~ blocks from Newport retire or be retired If the DemocrJt1 beilt Beach Police· Department headQuarters President Nllon Jn the November elec-player and Cy Young Award winner, end-· ·11 II · h"·ld t Id I · was 1n1 a Y wit 1n:: o avo a ertmg tion. Nixon now will be able to pick a ed h.is long holdout and signed a contract his alleged accomplices. succeuor. _, for $63,000 today with the Oakland Lyle P. Hodgen, 32, .of 305 32nd St., Washington, D.C; police chief Jorry Athletics. Newport Beach, remains in Or1n1e Coun· Wilson, a recent Nixon l•w enforc:ement The 22-year-old leftbander k e pt ty Jail; unable to post '30,000 baU set by favorite , had been prominently mentioned. Baseball Commissioner B.owie Kuhn, the oourt. at·• possible auccessor before Hoover'• An.erican League President Joe Cronin Rodgers, who said he is unemplo,)'ed, death .. ana A:'s owner Charlie Finley "Wailing for races a May 12 preliminary hearing on ~Afso among thou meritloned: Aasocl. - nearly l~ hours before showing up-for charges of conspiring to smuggle ate J!!_stl~Byron R. White of t]ie Su· the._c.ontract_signing ___ ~-~-~·ar.cot.ics_and~possess_danger:ous_drua:s---Prel'J'.lt Court~~ Robert C, Mardla!,- They met al American League .head· for sale. former assistant attorney general who quarters for about 15 minutes before _ ~tective Sgt. Leo Konkel, of-the headed the Justice De artment lntClrnat coming out for a new s conference. · ·d tlfl:..-' sCeuri v ivislon. department's narcotics detail, I en eu The White House announced last month "I'm signed , Jim happy, I'm ready to th~_.i!Jh..er two Jl!lSpects as Pierre Jacques that Mardian left the government to join play," Blue said. Bertolino and l!ank D. Kuykendall , both the committet. CoordinaUng President The contract calls for a 1972 salary of 2.Z-year·old Newport Beach residents. Nixon's re-election efrort. $50,000, a $5,000 bo nus for h is ho I t k Bail for both men, w were as nown The White Hou 8< declined to di·scu•• performance in 1971 and 1tn $8,000 · ISO 000 1•· scholarship, which was a part or Blue's to be in Hawaii, wa~:~eht !~..1 ' on •1"11 who would succeed lloover. Deputy preu . . 1 ho h same charges on Wun; 1wugers was ar· se<:retary Gerald L. Warren told ·repG~ or1g1na nus arrangeme nt when e ho '~ · ed . rested at hia me. ers becaUAt "thi• sad development cam• sign 1n 1967. Bue said he thinks It will take 3 to 4 The case has been under investigation rather recently," he had no inrormation weeks to get in condition to pitch.. for aQout two months, involving Newport to relay. However, his salary is effective April 27, Beach and Huntington Beach police, plus Warri;!n did disclost , however , thn t th e date when the offet wa s made by the State Bureau of Narcotics Enforce-Presid ent Nixon telepho111ed former Pre~ Finley in Chi cago. ment and the District Attorney's oUice. ident Lyndon B. Johnson at his Texas Ordinaril y, a major league player's ranch to teU him peraonally or lfoover'1 salary does not begin until he's ready to death. play. B } G b Asked whether lloove:r had glvcn Nixon Blue planned to ujoin the A's for a urg 8fS f8 a recommendation on hlJ suettssor. scheduled game with the Red Sox tonight. Warren said: "l have no Information (K1 The contract makes Blue probably the $2,300 i"n Gems private talks the President triay have highest paid major league sophomore ln had with Mr. Hoover.'' history. 1 Actinr Atty. Gen. Richard Xleindlenat Blue was met at Logan triternatio111aJ A UC Irvine Instructor and 1hll wife ISee HOOVER, P•re !) Airport 11-1onday by Joe Reichler, assis-who attends the cam pus aa a 1tudent !l)st lant to Kuhn . He was polite, but not very .assorted jewelry worth =n 12.300 coriimunicatlve with the lone sports writer to meet him. • Monday when someone arized their Newport Beach home. The. intruder pried a sliding gla1:1s door. according to police called to the home at 4717 Hampder1 Road by Mn. Andree er .. ,. ' .... ,.. -• -econd· Bit:e -· . • . Brin.gs Police • Boat Owners ~Win 'Battle .. Dlr.li!IK· ~ ,. • She said lhe ton Included the Je.welry box containinG ringa a~ several colM. The victim told Off'cer Larry Gabritl &he dl.«overed the break-in obout 3 p.m., but wasn't sure what time of day it hap- pened because olle Is ID Ind out to UCf Afore sunshine on Wednesday, IC• cording to the wealhe rlady. Low clouds akln1 the beaches will clear by mld·momlng leaving tempua. turtl o/ 12. Inland high 70. It soon will be against tht law for a dog owner to let his dog bite. a person twice on city property In 1--<-Ntwpon-Beactl • City councilmen M~ are u- pectcd to adopt an orJi,.... esta blisblng 1 fine end« jail term tor any dog owner who does. "ln addition to a llne « Jill term, the court may ordtr that tht dog be muzzled, thlt tile dog be kept in a pen. or that the dog be desuoyed," said Cltj • Atlomey Dennis O'Neil. O'N#I said the low ...... •pply to clop wbo bitt • ,printe property. • WASHINGTON (UPI) -Federal stan- danis for treatment of human wastes from bo.lt.s have deen weakened in ""'°"" to proteata from a lobby or angry ..,boat owners, it wu le.arned today. A apoW!Tlan for the Boat Owners AssO<iation of' the United Stai.. greeted wonl ol the revi>ed s!Ahdards with glee and said the regulations appanntly would permit uae of Improved machlna- tor-dllorjnator ckv1ces, whicll cost $2!IO to $31111. • An Enviro~i.J Pro1<dloe Afet1C1 ...... dtaaibed -dtvlca u "not mucb more th111 a mlxmamr" which odds cblcrlne btl<n dilcbarging human wastes into the water. The new standards, scheduled !or publlc announcement ahortly. would izn. pose the standard.a on new boats in two )'ears and on older boats three years later. A year ago, lhe·EPA propo<ed 11.10- dards which would have requlrtd more refined treatment, matching t h a t prescribed for municipal 1twage planta aod desiped to keep boat wast.es from making lU.. and riven too Olthy for l'trimmlng. Bui EPA sourcu &aid tbil no --ltllining aucb I trul· mtt1t level wu nailablt for boat.I. The .EPA "'lluled boldinJ t.1llU with pump-out faclhtles at marinu, but boat OWQeN complained of odor, lack of space •nd Inadequate marina faQllilies. One agency source 11id' the weakened 1land:irds ruponded to the boat owner,;' "tremeodou1 lobby and the furor It rai.se:d. "We were deluged by 6.000 mlssl\•es. many of them from postcards,'.' the IOUr\.'t llid. Richard Schwarti, executive director of thr: Boat Owners Association, said hi" or1anlzatlon originlled the Po•toard!, atvl"i mtmben a choice of signing a message prolaUng the propoud ltllJ· dllrds or eoclonhlg them. • - ~ daS&eS~ - Two Teens Found Down in Ravine SIMI (APl -'Ille bodlea of two Sim! Valley bc.iyx hi ve betn recovered: Crom the bottom of e, 70().foot ravlne W~rt they apparently fell while looklni for crows' ntm. Michad G. Huf[ and Mark C. Fryt, botJ! U. were lut _, lee•Inc thOlr homes Saturday. lNSIJH! TOOi\ l' /iforc iii.an 500 pocht1 lea~1 Ntwpor t l cttu Thurldo11 for tht annual J ZS·milt race lo En1e1.,. ada. You can't ttll who theu art tcfthout a prQ{lram. Ste ehlry l is t, Page 20. \...M. S"4 11 ... tlttt ,. <•II..,.. I Cl•altllll .rl;M ~' ti <1•11-• P.. °"'"' N.ik.. • ... ~, ... """"'..... ,, .--.u ... ,11 "'.. ..... t AM o,,,..... II lrilWht•I P11M• It ... , ..... ~ .._ 4 Ol' ... M (_.., t t l'IVlto "'""" 1• ...,., ..... ·~ Mri ... 1 .. ll ,.......,..,. 1 It --" -. ................ u ti1w111•r• N "'"' ....... . .. I 2 DAIL' Pll01 " DAtLY ,ILOT lllH ,Mft THIS IS PORTION OF 255-UNIT PHASE I OF VERSAILLES COMPLEX IN WEST NEWPORT Thursd1y's Pl1nnln9 Commission Metting Sh1gin9 Up as B1ttltground Ovtr 738·unit Addition V ersa·illes Hearing Set Additio1i to l'o1np'lex to Go Before City Pwn1iers A 738-unlt addllton to Weal Newport's ncwe11t oporlmcnt complex, Ver1101Jlc.11 011 the Blurr1, will go before 1:1 Newport Beach planning l'Ommlsalon publlc hear- lnA: Thuraday at 7:30 p.m. In city holl, The developer, the Donald Scholz Com· pany qi Toledo, Ohio, wants to build Pfiase II on the remaining 20 acrt1 of the 2&-1cre parcel at the 1ame dtnslly as Phue t, about 35 units per acre. A delegation ot We11t Newport rtsldents t1 expected to attend the hearing to o~ ject to the plan11. They have been critical or Phase I, which hall 2$5 unll11. IJowever, Thoma11 J• e c k·e n pa ugh, lawyer for Scholz. aald this rnornlng he expecls planning commission approval of the project. He point-that ·"'tht-tlllnllllliil) 1lready ha11 1dopt~ a planned com· munlty ordinance for the entire parcel and he doesn't think they would change that now. . drnsi ly was as big a problem in West "We've got an ordinance that set11 forth Newport <.is clse \vhere. deruilty and other requi rement!! for Phnse "Mosl of the outcry about density ha11 11." Peckenpaugh noted. conic from Balboa Island and the "It would be a great shock and surprise l'cninsula, it was not ever directed zl the after the enormous amount of public Versailles project," Pe c ken pa u h hearings and start work we went through 11.sserted. before the ordinance was adopted ,'' "\Ve arc very concerned and will make Peckenpaugh said. a protest to try to save our way or life," "I reco11:n1ze It Is a J)Ol'lsibllity, I don 't Mike Johnson, West Newport Beach really know what the developer would Improvement Association president, said do." he said, th is morn ing. Peckenpaugh stressed that Scholz is providing a view park and an extension of "That 's what this last city council clec- lhe clty'1 bicycle trail system and has of-t io~ was all about," he said. "W~. are fered to lnndAcape itat«>wned property going to try to 'et reasonable plan~1n.g ~ at bluff , points If the city can somehow ~ur nrea docsn t i>et;?me so. dense 1t 1sn L -acquire the exce11s freeway rl~~!-of-way. livable for anybody, he said. -crry-arttc1atr'ltr ne~aurif"'Wnli~thC:--... John~,~st~ .... ~Al...about . state tor purchase or lease or the three traffic from both the Versa1lles and the acres now . ~ewP?rt Crest development a c r o s s Jleckcnpaugh nlllO s11ld he d0<'11n"t think Superior Avci~uc. · . At recent city council hearings on the District Students Bring Nev.·port Crest 500-unit complex, Johnson and others expressed fears that traffic on Superior would become so heavy it would m<1ke it Impossible to reach Hoag Memorial llospital in an emergency. Out Notes on Music Week Band, strlnic and choral concerts will be per!ormed this Wffk by 1tudent1 O! the ~ewporl-Me11a Unlnfd School Ol11trlct In observation of National f\.luslc Weck. Admls"lon lo all concerti· IA free. Today 300 youns musicians will attend a 11lring clinic at Costa Me11 High School. School Stage Band will present a concert at ii'ashlon lAland from 1:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m .. to be fo\l oW"ed by the combined elemtntary orchestras or Esstbluff, llarbor View nnd Corona del Mor schools from 2:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m, Their protests got the Robert ll. Grant Company, developers of Newport Crest, to agree to n•iden Superior along the front of their project and to build a two-lane rear exit road out to an extension of 15th s1rec4, l'rot1t Page J STRAUSS ... -... F,....PGfel VIETNAM .•• • South Vietnamese deltnse line, was at.- tacked late n the d1y and ~Y sunset field roportl uld cootrol or the outeo1t wu ill doubt, Field reporta uld South Vletnamete bdd part or the ba1< and North Viet· nameH held the other part. ''There are many, many tanks at My Chanh heading for Nancy," one officer a1ld, My Chanh Is within small arm1 fire dl11tance of Nancy, 12 miles 50uth of the falle11 province capital of Quang Tri city. The threat to Hinh Dinh province on the central coast increased and mllltary 50urce1 11aid contact had been lost with Landing 1.one English , the laat Allied out- post 1n the upper one-third of the prov· ince. f<'our Communist rockets dropped on the market place at Qui Nhon during the midday rush hour. killing six civilians and wounding 19 others. Qui Nhon is the capit al of Binh Dinh province. UP I correspondent Stewart Kellerman reported that Allied warplanes today bombed and strafed 1t least 30 govern- ment tanu lelt behind ill the Quang Tri sector. . The U.S. command reported 462 air ""11trlkes including B52 heavy bomber r1ida in Quang Tri province in the 24 ho\.irl en- ding at ooo n Tuesday -the heaviest con- centration of air raids in four years. "I believe Hue is the major objective," Brig. Gen. Thomas W. Bowen, deputy Menlor U.S. advl!er on the northern front, told reporters at the old imperial capital Tuesday night. ~ The Communist threat was alao strong elsewhtre. An Loe, 80 miles north of Saigo0i wa.s still under siege. Kontum city in the Central Highlands was in danger of an imminent attack. In neighboring · Cambodla, a govern· ment attempt to retake a SO.mile stretch of Communlst-controlled Highway 1, stalled and the high command said at least 100 troops were killed, wounded or missing. · Six American Aircraft were shot down and five U.S. helicopter crewmen killed trying to r6~~e~l!.S-.~l'.131:l-anclMD!9f. South Vietnamese officers from Quang Tri. • The U.S. command also said a Navy F4 Phantom jet was shot down by a Com· munisl MIG21 on a mission over North Vietnam on April Tl and a Navy A7 Corsair was shot down Monday over the north. The pilot was rescued. Mesa Officials To Scrutinize Filling Stations .. - \ 5,000 Marines Evacuation Unit Ready Since '69 SAIGON (UPI) -The United Statts has kept updated since 1969 contingency plans for a force of 5,000 Marines to scrten a hasty withdraw al of remaining U.S. forces from South Vielnam ii Com· munl!ls threaten the country, military .sources said today. J. Marine amph ibious ready group, under the command of Lt . Gen. William K. Jones, is stationed on helicopter car· riers off the Vietnam coast with the 7th Fleet, the sources said. At least one carrier, the TripoU, with 1,800 Marines aboard , is off the coast, and Jones has visited the Vietnam mainland -his Jastcst trip was Friday - to discuss plans to put landing teams ashore if need Ile· During the current Communist of- fensive, U.S. advilrer11 have been pulled by helicopter from bases about to be overrun and taken ID rear areas. they see us leaving. You can't rule out the possibility they 'd attack the Americans." The first contingency plans for mass evacuation of U.S. forces from South Vietnam were written in 1969 when Pre:si· dent Nixon ordered the begiM.ing of the U.S. withdrawals . · They have been updated at regular in- tervals as troop strength fell. There ire fewer than 69,000 Amerlcan strVicemen now based in South Vietnam. The sources said that versions of the plan envision withdrawal of a 11 Americans from South Vietnal'\1 on 1hort notice, using ships and milltary and ciYilian aircraft. Fro1n Page J HOOVER .•• However, the contingency plans are to be issued a one-paragraph statement in used only if large numbers of Americans which he said Hoover's body waa found are threatened, the 50urces said. · by his maid at approximately 8:30 a.m. There are other contingency plans, too, today. including one for rapidly building up U.S. "It is with profound personal grief that forces to protect South V i e t n a m • I announce that J. Edgar Hoover passed However, the buildup plans have received. away during the night at his i'esldence," scant attention at U.S. command head-Kleindienst said. "lfuJ personal physician quarters Jn Saigon because Nixon ad· informed me that hill death was due to ministration ofliclala up lo and including natural causes." the President have vowed that no The jut·jawed FBI head was permitted American ground troops will be involved by presidential order to contlnu& fn hi.! in the current flghting. · $42,500-a-year government job 1fter The most likely plan to be put into ef· reaching the mandatory retirement age feet if any large American units were of 70. threatened by Communist attack would .Hoover, unmarried, dom inated the aJlow South Vietnamese soldiers and burtau during his lifetlmt like no man in c1villans to· accom~y U.S. troops to the .any other federal agency. WleJdin& vast ~eric~ ~hips ~tmg _off~e;-----powtt, ~hrtas-s&i<rtO l!viili on ·£De FBf -0therver1lons, however, 1nclude pro. . . visions for fighftng dlsgruntle'd South the pride and possessiveness of a stem Vietnamese soldiers on the beach as th e and watchful parent. MaNnes protect the withdrawal. Hoover's No. "2 man in the bureau was "Let'• face it," said one high-ranking Clyde A. Tolson, th~ associate dlrectcr. American official, ,"some Vielnamese The two wer_e long·tune colleagues who commanders may get pretty angry il spent.much hme together, TolJon, 7J, has been 1n ill health. Mesa, Newport Students Voted Merit Grants Hoover groomed no one for his shoe!, but o!ten expressed the wish that the next director come from within lhe FBI ran ks. During the years of Hoover's reign. there never v.·as a known case of scandal inside or the FBI and Hoover's stock remark about his agents was: "They can't be bought." Accolades for Hoover fl-Owed almost Two Newport-Mesa Dlstricl high school Immediately from Capitol Hill and other students are among J,000 high school locations of government. Service stations and the blight prop. seniors named winner• of ,1,000 National. Even fonneri Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark, Jems they sometimes bring to the city Merit Scholarships. who feuded with Hoover while Hoover's ~ Al 7:'1 p.m. a concert will be given In the hJ8h 1ehool 1ymna1Ju1n by elementary ind middle school atudent11. Tile concert and clinic are under the dlrectorshJf' or Kenn<'th and Pa1nel11 G o I d s m t h , n1ember1 of lhe C11 I St11te Fullerton nn1slc stRfL Al~o Saturday, the f;st:incia Jllji!h School Singe Band \viii present a concert at South Const Plnza fron1 11 a.n1 . to I p.m. At South Con.st Plaza from 3 p.n1. to • p.m .. the Corona del Mar lllgh ·schoo l Stage Dnnd \11111 ptrform. · will come under the close tcrutlny or Constance A. Holm of 3000 Country nominal boss. s)id "I am 1addened to Cosla A1esa High School, 2650 Fairview ,,.. __ 1 'M •t ffl · 1 d 1 the t 1 b 0 Co hear of hi"s death. He has •--n a major \.MS a esa c1 y o c1a s ar ng nex C u rive. sta Mesa and Stephanie uee: Road, Costa Mesa. 60 d y hi f p w b Id figure on the American scene [or a long I 'd bl I 1 h t r ays. a.mas ta o 2006 ort ey r ge Place, "It is \Vil 1 cons1 era e rcgrc a At M d 1 h, 11 th c·t N t B h --• t d fr t1'me.,lle loved lh1'• ocuntry and we -•at! S ·d 1 on ay n g ts mee ng. e 1 y ewpor eac were 3Cltc e om more· au '1ffcr lh is resignation,'', trauss sa 1 . " t 'th 1 th d ho miss •1·m." I h Council voted 5 lo O lo charge e pan-an 650,000 stu ents w competed for "1 hns been a pleasure lo serve wt you I d t t Ith th I d h' h th h I hi •-n. George McGovern cns.D.), e1-And the other board members, and wlth n ng epar men w e s u y w 1c e sc oars ps. = u- 011r superintendent:" he told board presi-will concentrate on Costa Mesa's service Mlss Holm, a senior at Estancia High pressed sorrow at the death. rlrnt Jtodcrick McMillian. station needs and means by which their School in Costa Mesa is a physical educa-"I think we can only be sad over the Also today. thf' Cosh1 Mes11 lf igh School Stage DAnd will present a concert at South CoasL Plar.a from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. W•d11<•day U..'l'•Wlnkl• Mlddl• School Conctrt Band wUI perrorm 1t South C0111t Plata · fro1n 7 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. An tle.n1ent1ry choir ot 11pproxht1Rtt'ly too Btudents will hold • concert from 7:30 p;m. to 1:30 p.m. at the En~lgn Middle School gymna1lum . Several chorusts will perform 11cparately and thtn m11u l()gcthrr for the finale , ·:Jamarca J.~arewell." Board Expected To Oppose Bill 011 Tax Lini.its Newporl·"fesa school truslets toni ght nre t.xpcctl"d to oppose the \\'atson prop-. erty lax limitation measure \~hlch could cosi the district _$.f mlllion in Jost revenues ~uring the next Qscnl yc_ar. lf'hur1doy the T<Wlnkle Middle SchOOI Orcht1tra wlll J)frfonn Ill South eoast •--I loaa.Jr::om 1.p.m. to 7:30 p.m,_Thc Cost The \\'atso1 1nc:.lli1!.l1C:llt. facing the Mesa H.igh School Concert Choir vdll voters on the June 6 µrlnu1ry ball ot, __ f. llo~ "·1th_!. ro,tlCl'rl Ir'ooLI p.111. lo 8:30 -would pliice-in~lhe constilullon a ceiling P·;~ldny the. llarbor lllgh School choi r on proptrty taxe.s which rould no-t be ex· • will prl!~tnt n conctrt ot the high school C't'edcd by nny local j!OV<'n1111entnl body, ~udllorium bfglnnlng nt 7:30 p.m. 11ic Sh<'lu_ld the mtnsurt' pnss in Jun~. combined Orch<'slra of f\f "rt n" r s ~l:1!('\\'1dc school f<'\'fnuc losses \\'1ll N@wport ltelghtii 11nd Newport Eltme.n: rtach An t>~litnaled $~25 n1llllon, $4 tary schools "'111 pt'r(orn1 11t Fashion mllllon of which \\'ould be In the Ncv.·port· l~land frnm S:~ p.m. to 7:30 p.m. At ~trsA llnlfit>d School Distri ct. South CoAsl PIAz.A, lhe Rea "flddlf School The board Is also expectt>d to.tgo on \'ocAI Ensrinblr "'Ill prrst>nl .!...S°nct.rl rtc0rd tonight favoring pnssa11e of from noon to 12 :30 p.ni. Proposition 2 on the June bntlot \\'hirh ~nlurdt1\' lhf' C(lron11 dt>I f\.lnr lllf!h \\i>uld provide for the ffO\"lllion or · rep\acf'.ntent of l,iOO st11tt. schools unsafe OltANel COAST • DAILY PILOT • 1'111 Ort"" CA1t DAllV ,ILOl, wllll wfll(1I It comltlllH th• ,,.,.,... l'rMt.. II flYblhhf'tl '' tl'lf Ott"" C04l1t r,.111lolllllf Cempan,, 5~· r•le ldltiet\1 tl't l!Ublllhtd, MlllVUY f!lf"l\11111! f'rld1,, lot Co1!t M•••, N...,,.11 ll••tfl, 1"1111111,.1911 IU•Cfl l,.Clllll•l!t Vtl!rr, LtClll!ll 8tAC.ll, h'vLne/S1..,lfltl(~ ..... 5111 Clfmefllt/ S.11 J11111 C•11l1!rt,,. A 1lnti. reo'-1 H ll ietl Ii t.•11111~ 51!"'1:1•n ...., 51n•Ur1- I~ llf")fl(i.,.t .-.i:.1tt11klt ,i.inr ll .i i lll Wu l St~ $1 ... 1, Ceslt MOI.._ t ll!onlhl!, f )tM, Re~e1f N, W,,, f'lrt1~1 •flCI r.,.~1,J!Mr ~ _ 1 Jtc' I!;. Curley V"11""PnlktMI ~ ~t:ttl .lrkMtn Th•M•• Jl'.e1 .. 1l '.1.1!1•• Th•rt1•1 /., M•rphiflt Mlntflnf ltll'lf in r:irlhquflkes, Ourin~ thrir 111~! 111ttlin~. tru~tt1es 11 1;trttd lhnl ~uch R resolullon should lH" f'n:1 rt~ by the bonrd e\'Cn !hough no district schools \l'Ould hr affecll'd, Thl' truslC'l.'S s:iid It t'11uld ht' \"l1lunbl e nclion for tht futuff . 111r ~rh<-nls, hi 271 ~t:itr ril~trlc•ls. hnvr been dtttnl'd .i.uisufi• at·ro rd int; to currt~nl earthquake nnd disnstrr sn ft"l)' i:tnn· dnrds. 'l"hc projects \''0uld :-iff('Ct nrflrly one million school thlldre[1. Th<' proposition Rl~o sttks t~ eon- tinu:llion ol thr Slat e School Bulldln& Aid Progrn111 for rapidly Rt01~·lnt:. low "'eallh school district~. The board or lrusttts 1nttts tonight Rt 7;30 o~clock i thc,l,y~-tun1 .et • a .Mes.! Hig1\&nool. ·• l'rom Page J L. Peter te n,, N...,..-t IHdl c;lly t.m. .... ,.., -· -SALARIES •.. _ lJJJ New,.rt 111111 • .,.,4 • M•iti AIMm.1,,0 .111 lllSJl•U-----1<'s1ioi John._O:ij.. ll6.Sjl AOd Special °"9t' ~ Projtc:l.S Coordinalt'l.r F&y llerb(oson. a.i. .... : ,. ....... .,. -.... $19.980. ....,..= 1-::::1 1-:n~ "::;:._. AIMt. Guid:1nC't' Dif'N'tot ~It \\1oallt'\", Wt'""""'':• Nor111o 11 c....-1 .. 1 Sl&,.at: 01rtttor of lnslrcutionAI Scrvlcf:s T~.,._ 1110 Ml .. 111 Den llou1, l10.m :Du.ctor ol INtru<- c...,.... ... ., ... 1 64144JI Uoiial ~leclia \\1illiam S:1.nbarn. Stll:,082 ond t>istrlct Ubrarlan l\llda Mc:Clrtn<)\ ltl.107. Other• lncholt. Special "Education Coordint11...-Mart "'"""· 111.211; Wort Elpttltnct Coordintltor Loon Mttb, 111.171; 0.Uclmi, WtUatt, Alltndlll<O Coordintltar f)<d carter ltl,171 and c.rtil1'd Ptn<l!llld Dlr<ctor Vttl)'!I Sedtrstrom. 117,Ht • • "I do not think I'm perjudiced \vhcn I appearanct could be .improved. tlon major and is co-valedictorian o{ her passing of any American. any citizen, any i;;1y th;it ours is an excellent school dis· Councilmen v.·cre careful 1n avoiding class. mortal," fo.1cGovern said. 1rict. J>te1uic try to hold the line with the v.'Ord "moratorium" and implied that She is also Girls' League vice presi· The presidential contender said lle the tax rate !", the retiring board vet-applications fo:r new station! would be dent. Pep Club vlte president, and Most disagreed with many of Hoover'• views, erAn quipped. processed according to their individual Outstanding ~lath Student. but added. "I am sad at his pauing." j I t'd th N rt El merl.ts during the study period. Her other awards include: California Sen Edm··-• s 'lus"-en"·'--) Sin ce Strauss on e ewpo e-· wl\.I • n ~ v-m.auJt • t h I bo d · 1962 t of h' lmpelu• [or the dec1'•lon was -v1'ded Scholarship Federation Gold Seal, Elks declared the nat1"0• owes Hoover "l'-n1en ary sc oo ar 1n • wo 1s "'"' .. .. i:h ikfrcn ha\'~ bet'n graduated rrom Har. by the planning commlaslon, which at the Club Moat Outstanding Student Award, gratitude and respect.;, Mus.tie's state.-Bank of Amerlcan Math A w a rd , t dded "J Ed H d •~ •·-r Arco srhools. Gordon and Nancy. urging o[ the '"member •--Ice station men a : . gar oover evolCIU "'1 .._. ~ v Freshman Girl of the Year, Zonia Girl He nnd •,·, w1'fe, Dorothy. ha ve a son . and Garag• Owntr• and Operators Co--his entire life to '"-service of bis coun-~ .... and Gold "E'' Award. uw::: Duncan. enrolled in the eighth grade at mittee, suggested the moratorium a week Miss Yamashita, a Newport Harbor try. While some of us may have ques-- Horece Ensign &hool. Newport Beach. ago. High School senior, is 1 pre-medicine.ID. tloned some of his. apPJ'(l~be• in rectnt District Superintendent Johft W. Nicoll T_he service station ow,ners have con:-jor and class salutatorian. She is also stu-years. no one could question hit loyalty said.. toclar.. ''I personally regr_et Don plained in -the past that Costa Mesa JS dent body secretary, editor of the and dedicati<ln to his country," Strauss' o r!:lgnalion and will take it as o~er·saturated with gas outlets but th~t Literary Magaine, MIT Journal associate Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey of Min- a. pc.rsonaLiossJ.o lheJOJUonlhs he has oil companies keep pushing-new-station-editor. American Ffeld s e rV i c ·e nesota , an--associate of Hoover-during "'orkcd closely V.'ith..me..lhaMe.!oond_him applications with city officials. trea·surer, and Soroptimist -Youth Citizen. four-years-in the-V.ice-presldeney-and- to be a valuable. motivated and inter· Since' 14 of the city's 91 gas stations Her awards include: Orange County many years in Congress, mourned him as t•slNI school board metnbcr," Dr. Nicoll have been abandoned by bankrupt Fair, Flr11t and Sweepstakes award: "a man-of unquestioned ability, penonal sa id. owners, the committee had asked that fio Bank or America Math Award, First in integrity and professional competence, Nici;ill added tha~ the letter-forwnfdiitf new stations be approved until Costa County, Third and Fourth year French; "Few men in our time have mach! such lo the countv schools office in dicated ~lesa's overall service staUon needs have California Scholarship . Fede.ration and a strong impact on American public life," 11 n Aug. 7 rt•s[gnation date, one da y prior be<'n assessed . AIAA J1ward. said Humphrey. to the spcci::il elcclion. 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;-Borh terms to be filled Aug. II are un-I expi red terms. The su<"f:fssful candidate seC"king the Jo~ranktin board \·acancy -v,i ll ser\·e unt il Junt". 19iS. \\"hlle Strauss' lrr1n rxplr<'S In June, 1973 . Broadside Cra sl1 In.jures Mesan A broadside lnterseclion colllsiOn Jn 'Kt'\\'Jl<lrl Brarh f\fonday night demoUshed n ~tnall hn port c:tr nnd sent Its passenger to !he hospil:il \vll h 1nultlplc injuries. Rob<'rt L. Gilbertson. 29, of 2190 COllege Ave., Cosf:'I ~fesa. v.·os listed 1n saUsfBc- tory condition today ot Hoag ?itcmori1.1l llospllal. . ~ G.ilbertson v.·as riding with Bruce ?i.f. \,Aunpbc>ll , 20. of 9301 Neot11ni Drivt, Hun· lington U..•ach, "'hen It rollldcd with an ®! Ariltfj<an.,sl\d l •I Ot1Ing• -.'Vtn\IC ant"stasnort -oin•e ln \\l'esT'NewpQ>rt: Scrond motorist ln tht accident that <'tl l:l'<i In the smaller vehicle's right side \\·as identified as Timothy L. Armour, lS. of 2'400 ~18rgutrite Avt .. Col"()na del litar. Rubber Raft Piraletl Fro1u Ne~·port Harbor Newport llarbor ts tuU or crpehsl\•t: \\'lllttr tr11ft, nnd lhe tall'.St one to get pirAlcd and sailed IH\'-.V is a $1.000 Nbber raft. .Je3n<'f1<' Sprf(!11 ar 22sa Cbanncl RoJd complaln<d to pol1ce Mondal' that ''""'°"" swiped tht bli Otxlble vtssel from her bo3t doclt . The lou was puWd up lo ,1,010. bt<ause tht p<rpetrator ol lbt (rand then 1 ~ along a >'ll'Dllbed plank u...i as a ctnter btace • • AROUND THE CORNER AND UP YOUR STREET _ ......... ~ WE HAVE BEEN ASKED HUNDREDS OF TIMES WHY WE LOCATED OUR STORE "OFF THE BEATEN PATH." SEVERAL ANSWERS POP UP. RRSTL Y, THE ~OST OF STORES ' IN SHOPPING CENTERS IS ASTRONOMICAL SECONDLY, WE WERE ABLE TO OBTAIN MORE SPACE, WITH OUR SHOWROOM, OFFICES AND WAREHOUSE· ALL IN ONE LOCATION. THIRDLY, THERE IS AMPLE PARKING WITH jLITLE TRAFFIC CONGESTION LEADING TO US. . ' • • "' .... .. -"THIS'SINATION' HAS MADE-·us MORE COMPETITIVE'ANO~ WE ARE PROUD AND GRATEFUL TO . SAY THAT WE HAVE INCREASED OUR VOLUME EVERY YEAR FOR FOURTEEN YEARS. AND HAVE EXPANDED FIVE TIMES AT THIS LOCATION. ~·~-- ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placelltla AYI. COSTA MESA 646·4838 - 1 7 I ! v a ly p fin Sllr WO Co the pur H offi Es A Ne mo 15 DA bud Su h8' Sa whe Aug Th com rnak Ch High High the Ile ear Cost Mi any '203· Th cipa distr 117, for a __cL_ -first- exce Assi Assi Ke vi Ding Al Chi Pure $15, Jam Supe Dev In Coor tanl 115.1 Tes ti Proj $19, n I D .. • " Orange COast Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks voi:. 65, NO. 123, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY , MAY 2, 1972 c TEN CENTS Mesa Officials Race Time for Parli Purcha·se Costa Mes~ city officials Monday night announced that they would use their new· ly won »day grace period on Fairview Park for immediate negotiations to seek financing or a lease agreement for the surplus property. Ma yor Jack Hammett said caucuses would soon be scheduled with the Orange County Board of Supervisors to preserve the 257-acre site for regional park purposes. ' Hammett, backed by city and county officials a,,:1 a 26-member contingent of Estancia lfigh School students, were sue- ' Pay Listed F or-SchOol -- Executives By WILLIAM SCHREIBER 01 1M O.lty ,Hot 11~ cessful Monday In block.Ing trade of 36.5 acres of park land to a private developer. Appearing before the state Public Worb Board in Sacramento, they persuaded state authorities to delay the trad~ for a period of four weeks. During that interv al they are planning to enter a crash pro- gram aimed to take over the territory before the· state disposes of it through auction or trade. Tv .. o possibilities exist. The city, in cooperation with lhe county. could either purchase the $8 million land Mesa Council ~ummary ' !fe'r.. ca~ !Orm, 'ari l'ht ma or actioni lam/ 6Y • lht 'tOs!i ~ •sa City Council Monday night : BOAT YARD -Tabled a r<qutSI lrom Ad\oanct Marine Transport !or ptr· mission to use-a two-offic&ttaJle.r at ·209t Placentia Avenue;-1be controversial boat shipping operation is currently in\-OJ,·ed in litigation with tht city. llEUCOPT'EllS -Dtlmded !ht police depa.rtmtot'1 .,. of btlicoplers lo an Irate midtnl •·ho complained the wblrlJblrda -.. beiJJC used fol; "Jo7 ride5 ... I .. outright or acquire it under a long-term lease agreement. Hammett said Monday morning that avenues are being opened under which the two agencies could purchase the park Bl a 50 percent discount over several years at •·favorable '' rates of interest. The other approach is to lease the land for a period of at least 50 years. A bill CIJf· rently pending in Sacramento would allow such a long-term lease if approved by the Legislature. Introduced by Assemblyman Robert H. Burke (R-Huntington Beach,) AB 1068 was scheduled ror hearing before the Assembly Government Adminislralion Committee ltlonday afternoon but was postponed over hick of a quorum. Originally Burk.e's legislation would have allo"'ed the l\l.'O governn1ents to lease the properl)' al a fee of $1.000 per acre per year. At Monday ni ght's council meeting Hammett, ho1vever, disclosed that the fee was "amended dO\Vn\\"ard '1 lO $10 per acre. Councilmen would not explain '"'hy the fee was reduced and Burke was unavailab le for comment this morning. Don Strauss . -~ To Resign . Board -Post Dur ing its Ju ne S 1neeting. the Public Services Board is expected to once 11guin consider the 36.>n<'re trade-off to lh~ \\litliam Nt'y,•s9nit• ~velopmenl Co. In Squa\v Volley if loc;il effort s to secure the land are UllSUCCl'SSfuJ. If thi lrudr is apprO\'ed, Nt'\\·so1ne \vould give up his ro ncesslons :it !he ski resort's Olympic Village in exchange for the CoslA ~1cs11 properly, a b<1rgo r11 ~c reportedly is rt>luct:u1t to mu.kc . 11 was explained by Ham1nf'tt lhftt lht st8te is losing nbout $200,000 Rnnually on the SquRw Vall ey property rvcn though ' ··-FBI DIRECTOR DEAD J. Edg1r Hoovtr, 71 Vitia Blue · Ba~k \ • • • Nt\\'SOn1e Is rnakln£ llH>tiey on his ron- t-ess ions. The reason for tht• appart•nt paradox l! lhut lht! iilule 1~ ci11nn1IUed to upket')I of 1ht' pro1>erty, ln(·ludu1R ro11d~. Should tht• \east?hold lnt1•rf'~I trude be npprovt'<I ncverthclc:is, Nl'"·son1(• '''ill r1·pt1rl(•clly $ct'k up11rt1111•nt .to11i11~ for the Co~t:i ~les:l parer!. \\"ith th(' land t·urrcntlv zone1I rr<'ret1• llonnl aud fnr it1slitu t1u1;111 purpos.NI, 1t 11p1}(':1rs d(lubtful that lht• 1'0unrll \vould. .'lf)!lrO\'f" a zone chon~r ullo\\'111g 1he 1·on~11·uc1 iun of apnrt1n<'nts ou the t'0\'1·1t~d park property. Nixon Lauds Dedicatio11 WASlllNGTON (AP ) -J. EdRar lloover, embodiment of the re1 11nd focus of lnw enfor<.-en1ent uchlcv e1ncnt 1111d L't1nlroversy for n half century, ia <lend. The 77-ycar~ld dirt.>ctQr of the r~cdcr11.1 Burenu of lnvcstlgnllon dit'ct of na.lur:\I cause!! in his ho1ne Monday nh~ht, . the 'Justice llcparlmeut unoounced. The District or Columbia t.'Orontr at- tributed the death to "hypertensive <:ar. diovascular dlsea1e" - an aliment Jinked to high blood pressure. The .coroner, Dr . J sme1 L. Lute, 1ald after examining the body that the Im- mediate cause of death might have been a heart attack-. He anld 111 au!opsy WLIS not indicated. Pre!ldent Nixon, upon hearing of IIoover·~ death, ca lltd him a ·•truly remarkable min who served the country for 48 years under eight presld.enl s with unparalleled devotion to duty nnd dedlca· 'lion." Nixon spoke cmotlonnlly or his "profound sense of personal 1'1!11.1' Flags at nil public hulldlng:i: and installations were ordered to half sta.ff. o. .. ,. C11•- L,M, .. ,. " ... ........ ~ IM!lftt • -·-C:al.1•• • --• (.._._ .... °' .... '-" • ._ " ~· ."""' • -u -. ... OufOll •ktt • ·--.... l.llter\al , ... • , ............ .. ·-.. -" ·-1•11 :--;. --... : hr"" ........ • -N --• , ' . _2 DAILY.!!:°.!..__ C Tlll1d.ly, M11 2, 1972 'Yellow .. Alert' ·Ordered in Hue North Vwt Troops, Tanks Attack New Line of Defense SAIGON f UPI ) -North Vletn:-.me!le llQJdli'rJ und "many, many tank!I" at· tacktd the anr.hoi: p<ilnl of thl! new South Vletnam cae defcn.!le line 20 n1lles north of llue today and took parti<1t control of the ba!!r.. A rnllltnry 11poke t1mnn said lhe 2.000 Amcrlc3n tn)()p11 at Phu Bal just south of Jlue were ordered on "yellow alert,'' which means an nttnck could be Im- minent. tlowevcr. the chief U.S. advi ser In the northern provlncf'I said r.arl lcr a full· ~ale attack on llue was not c.xpectcd for a week . In Saigon. U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunkrr and Gen. Creighton W. Abram1, thr. Amclcan commander In Indochina, met with south Vletname11e Presldtnt Nguyen Van Thleu, to dis cu81 the current Pinkley Asks Construction Of Fl'eeway councilman Alvln Plnklty r-.tonday ' night urf(ed . Immediate <'Onstnictlon or the PacUlc Coast Freeway to relieve tratrlc b1ck·up problems he prtdlclS would occur In Costa Mesa If the route Is 1topped . "' "A dclt'tlon of the freewny along the coast would cnuso a trartlc snarl that would be catastrophic,'.' the veteran couocllmnn asserted. "Thi!! council must not put 118 hcnds Into lhe sond llke Newport Dench has done." mllllary 1ltuallo1J. Thieu later a:ummoned l.t. c;en. Hoang Xunn Lam. the governmtnt commandtr Jn the north . to Saigon for an urgent con- ference. U.S. pilol11 flying hetwr.tn Uue and Quang ·rrJ said there were "hundreds tt nd hundred 11 of dead soldiers" along a 20- mlle stretch of the h_ighway wuth of Qu1.ng Tr i. · Jtrtlllery tiaii:e Nancy,1he key in the new south Vletnamc11e defe nse linr , y,·ri:. at- tacked late n the day and by !lunii:et field report~ i;uid control or the outpost Willi in doubt. Field reports said South Vietnamese held part of the base and North Viet·, nllmese held the other part. "There are many, many tanks at My Chanh heud!ng ror Nnncy," one officer QUAMe •1NH 0 I µid. My Chanh Is wi thin small arms fire distance of Nancy, J2 milts south of the f11Hcn province capital of Quang 1ri city. The threat to Binh Dinh province on the central coast increa sed and military sources said contact had been Jost with L.1nd ing 7.one English, the last Allied out- post In the upper one-third of the prov- ince. Four Communist rocket! dropped on the market pl ace al Qui Nhon durinp; the · rnldday rush hour , killing six civilians und wounding 19 other1. Qui Nhon is the capital or Dinh Dinh province. UPI correspondent Stewart Kellerman ·reported that Allied ·warplanes today OOmbed and strafed at least 30 govern· menl tanb left behind in the Quang 'l'ri sector. Ml. 20 I CAMIOOIA r-----'.::+===11- ••• oolu::,H• IOI 1 The U.S. command reported 462 air strikes includln_g B52 heavy bomber raids ln Quang Tri province in the 24 how-s e~ dlng at noon Tuesday -th,. heaviest con- centration or air raids in four years. "1 believe Hue is the major objective~' Brig. Gen. Thomas w. Bowen, deputy senior U.S. adviser on the northern front, told rtPorters at the old imperial capital Tuesday night. The communist threat was alao strong elsewhere. An Loe, 60 miles norlh of Saigon, was still under siege. Kontum city In the Central Highlands was in danger of an imminent attack. tn neighboring Cambodia, a govern· ment attempt to retake a 60-mlle stretch of Communist-controlled Highway I, Stalled and the high command fiaid at least 100 troops were killed, wounded or missing. Six American aircraft were shot down and five U.S. helicopter creY(Dlen killed trying to rescue U.S. advisers and senior South Vietnamese officers from Quang Tri. The U.S. command also said a Navy F4 Phanto m jet was shot down by a Com- munist' MIG21 on a mission over North Vietnam on April 21 and a Navy A7 Corsair was shot down Monday over the north. The pilot was rescued . The increased .Communist activity in South Vietnam's Central Highlands rein· forced belief the C-Ommunists planned a major move in the area to try to cut the country in half. * -tr ff Viet Withdrawal Plan Revealed • Police Nab Suspected , Smuggler J . LEAVING SCHOOL BOARD ' l ido Isle's Strauss Fro1nPa9eI STRAUSS ... and the other board members. and with our supe~intendent," he told board prcsi·. dent Roderick Mci\-1illian. "I do not think I'm perjudiced when I say that ou rs is an e'xceHcnt sch~l dis- trict. Please try lo hold the line with ' the tax rate!'\ the retiring board \'Ct· eran quipped . Since Strauss joined the Ne"llOrt Ele· mentary school board in 1962, two or his children have been graduated from Har· bor Area schools, Gordon and Nancy He and his wife, Dorothy, have a son, Duncan, enrolled in the eighth grade at By ARTHUR R. VINSEL OI l~t Otlly 'lltt Sttff One suspected drug smuggler Js j~lled today, following Newport Beach police seizure or 294,500 illlcit pills, probably the largest such confiscation in Orange Coun- ty history. Value of the 2SO,OOO amphetamine pills and 44 ,500 barbiturate tablets of Mexican origin would be about $35,000 an the street sales market, police said. Arrest warr3nts were issued more than a week ago for three suspected principals in the case, two of whom have not yet been taken into custody. Announcement of the first suspect's capture only l 1il blocks from Newport Beach Police Department headquarters was initially withheld to avo1d alerting his alleged accomplices. Lyle P. Rodgers, 32, of 305 32nd St., Newport Beach, remains in Orange Coun~ ty Jail, unable to post $30,000 bail set by the court. Roi;lgers. who said he is unemployed , races a May 12 preliminary hearing C1n charges of conspiring to smuggle narcotics and possess dangerous drugs for sale. Detective Sgt. Leo Konkel, of the department's narcotics detail, identified the other two suspects as Pierre Jacques Bertolino and Hafilt IT.' Kuykendall, both • , 22.year~d Newport Beach residents. Bail for both men, who were last known to be in Hawaii, was set at $50,000 on the same C'harge's on which Rodgers was ar- rested at his' home. 'I Horace Ensign School, NewpOrt Beach. District Superintendent John W. Nicoll The case has been under investigation said today, "I personally regret . Don for about two m~nths, involving !lewport Strauss' resignation and will take it as Beach and Huntington Beach pohce, plus !\Inking it clcnr that he spoke only ror hhnsc U nnd not for the re11t of the COUn· ~r..oflinkftr o~iibt-"'-;:~~r..:aUvc:'" ~ -the rrfitway tan1;le like this : By U C! Sour·ces .a personal loss. In the 10 mof)ths he has ihe State Bure~u ?f Narcotic~ Enforce----•V.-· · --w&i:ked-closely-with-ma.Jrhave--.found-him -11lJml.an.dJb.e_OJfil:!£lhlli>me~J>ffic!!_ ___ _,,.___ ' · _, • ·to be a valuable. motivated and.inter-· . ' "Com plete !he Corona de! Mar J."rcew:iy. Stop Newport Freewoy at June· tlon of Corona de! Mar Freeway. Stnd trn fflc.en!lt to Corona del Mar and back · O\)Cr13oy~Hrldgc to Newport.~' •·Complct.e Newport Freeway on the old ireen line right vver the Archea.lnto city hall or Newport Beach. Not a good aolu· lion. No pl11cc to dump traffic ." "Complete Newport Freeway on the .. .. • , UPI HtwMM• CAPTURED ZONE-Shaded-.rea shows nortbern"3o-mlles of-South Vletn'am that Was overrun by Communist troops with the capture of Quang Tri, the provincial ca pital. North· Vietnamese lifted th siege long enough for 1,500 defenders to escape. Fro111 Page I SAIGON (UPI) -The United States ested school board member," Dr. Nico'U has kept updated since 1969 contingency said. plans for a force of 5,000 Marines to Nicoll added that the letter forward ed screen a hasty withdrawal of remaining to the county schools office indicated U.S. forces from South Vietnam if Com· an Aug. 7 resignation dale, one day prior munist.s threaten the country, military to the special election. . . sources said today. Both terms to be filled Aug. 8 are un- i. Marine amphibious ready group, expired terms. The successful candidat e under the command of Lt. Gen. William seeking lhe Franldin board vacancy v.·ill K. Jones, is stationed on hellcopter car-serve until June. 1975. while Strauss' riers off the Vietnam coast with the 7th term expires in June, 1973. Fleet, the sources said. Board Expected To Oppose Bill On Tax Limits red line to Superior Avenue. Also not a good aolutlon. No pla ce to handle traffic .'' The last two solutions Joki ngly ad· vnne<d hy Plnkl•Y "would be horrible lor . HOOVER DIES , , Coslll f\1csa," he claims. • At least one carrier, the Tripoli, withr. 1,800 Marine! aboard, is off the coast, and Jones has visited the Vietnam Second Bite Newport-~1esa school trustees tonlght are expected to oppose the Watson prop- erty tax limitation measure which could cost the district $4 million in los t "When clrlver11 Met sm9'1. lhey will bf! dropping orr the freeway at Del Mar Avenut. Fnlr Drive, Wilson Street, 1'~a\rvlew Road and 19th and 17th Streets. But wo can't handle our surface lraffl c now." o ld Pinkley. 1• The councilman said Stt'te Sen. Dennis Carpenter's (R·Newport Beach) bill to dt lrtt the P11clftc Coast Freeway front Ventura to San Cltmen te has made hln1 ''no friend of ours." Hla antl-free wny stance coupled with his refu~al to canctl 11 le1se for a onct- proposed Probation Dfpartment branch in the Mesn del Mar tract "suggtet that "'n might be ln better nttd of represen· t11t lon In Sacramento,'' according: to Jllnklcy. l'lnkley urged that Costa ~ftsa let the stRlc Highway Commlaslon 11nd Its engineers "know or our plight and our :iupporl of lhtlr effort lo mO\'t traffic all over our SIP.le.'' r Plnlcley'1" recommendations l\'tl'tl re- ferred to the city's F'rtfwty Committee for study. ~oiu 'Collector' Hits Bar iu Costa Mesa -SOmthod)' kicked in the bac:k...doot-of a clostd €o.!ll8 Mesa bar Monday ind mndt <'lff l''llh $235 In assortfld coins inc:ludlnjt 36 11:old·pll\ttd Blsenhol'·er mtmorlbl ~\h't.r dol\Ar11. ~laur\ce l~ohl rallfd police to the 1.lesn Cluh, 632 \Y. 17th St., when hr dlscovertd the brtnk·ln nnd found tht jukebox jlm· ml('(!. Thl'I f;isenho~'l'lr co1n1nemorAUre coin'." "·err IMk<'n fro111 tht cash rt~1sler. OUN•I COAST CM DAILY PILOT Ttlt Dr•• C0111! DAIL'I' flllOT, wlllt wtlkk 11 <~llltll ,,.._ HIW\•"'"' It _., ...... .., 1t>t Or• .. Co.11 l'..-lltlll"' C.-ny. s.,.. ,.,, fllillllt!ll .... fllll\lllllfo:I, ""'"'" thno\19111 f FldfV, fW C~ll MR•, ,,.,..,., IMtll. M1111l\"9""' IMd\iP'Ot111!•!11 'Ytltty1 l..,uN l•tll, l,...l"•"S•dll leb<l(l *"'II S•" C'""'°"i.I S1" J1t111• (1.i11r....._ A t! ... lt .-.itlOMI , ..in~ 1, !Mllhllll! S~h1H'ftY' tl!C Sllf'lfjYt< 111• prlfll'~I "''"lllllfll jlllnl (t 1 1 UI W'11 a,,y l l!Wt, Olli. MllM, C1ll+Otlll4, ,,.,._ l ell•rt N. W1M """kltnt ..... l'lllllllllfl' Jj(~ •• c.rltv YI« '""&o.,1 1"4 ""-111 Mll\eOf'I' _,. . .:o~~~·~~~ •\ ~ ~ .. , l\e~• A. fMwrpJ.int • .\\INf\np llHIOF C.11l tt H. lee1 Jlic~tr4 r. Hi ll Aolttlltll M ..... lrif 1.tltln c ........ O"'- JlO Wt1I l1y Sbt•I M•nl•t Aiir••u r.o. "• 1 ''°' •1•1• ........... '-"! 1W Mt~ ... ltwtf'll ~•--:m,_,~.._ "-"'f1"'terl ..... 1 lfttl ._ .............. .. " (.._,...! -...,... ,, C-" ~­ -"! .. _ ll'UI 141 .. 111 a uww • ._.ha M1..u11 ~~~~ .......... ==·~ ~ .:=;.:--.: _, ........ c ................. ...... ., ...,,..,...._., • McMt ... ~ "'" .. c:-. ~ Call ...... ..__~llfl IJJ tMtw t1M .....,...., .,. _. R.11' ,_.., ....., ,..,....... RM_.....,.., headed the Ju stice Department Internal aecurlty division. The White House aMounctd last month that Mardlan Jeft the government toJ'oin the committee coordln11ting Pres! ent Nixon's rc-olectlori effort. The While House declined to discuss who would succeed Hoover. Deputy press secre:triry Gerald L. Warren told report- ers because "this sad development came rather recently," he had no information to relay. Warren did dlsclo~. however, thnt Pr<"sldent Nixon telephoned fo rmer Pres• Mesa Officials To Scrutinize Filling Stations Service stations and the blight prop- Jems they sometlmt's bring to the city will come under the close scrutiny of Costa F\1tsa city officials daring the next 60 di.ys. At ~tonday night's 1neellng. the City Council \'Ottd 5 to O lo charge the pin'!· nlng depnrttn('nl \\'Ith -1hr study which vdll conc,ntrntt on Costa MesR's st.rvlce staUon nffds and means by \vhlch their appt':nranct could be 1mpro\'ed, Co ulll'ilrnen \rrre cArerul In avo\dln~ I.he word "moratorium" and implied thiil appllcAtlons for new statlon11 \\'ould be processed nccording to thtir individual merits during the stud}' period. lnlpcitu11 for the decision l''BS provldfd by the planning commlssion, whlch 1t the urging of the 115-nlember Service. Statton and Gnrage Ch\'T\ers ai\d Operators Com· mllttt. suggesieod lhe moratorlum 1 week ttf,::O. Th' strv\('e sUllian owne.rs ha,·e com· plalnfd In the pn$t thitt Costa Mt.!tll Is o,•er-satur:dl"d \\ith t::as outlets but lhAt oil romp11 nies keep pushin& new station applications \l'ilh city ofHC'lt1.ls. Slncr t~ of 1ht C'ity's 91 gas statlon11 hn\'e been nhl\ndo nt>d by bankrupt il\\·ners. the ro1n1nilltt Md nsked that no Ill'\\' stalloni; be approvtd unttr Costa ~1es1's O\'trAll scrYiC'r station need!I have bt;>cn A!i!it:!tst'd. · ··Bro11dside~ t:ra-slr ' Injures Mesan A brondsidt lnlerstct\on-colllston-tn Newpon Bead\ 1'1onday ""ht demolislltd t all Un rt car and stnl Its ~tr to the hospital wllh multiple njur1es. - Robert I.. Gilbert.son. II, of ll!lO College Ave .. Co~I., l\tesa. was listed In satisfac-- tory oond!Uon lodaf at Hoq Memorial HQOJ>llAI. - Gilberlton was ridln& with 8""" M. ClmpbelL JO. ol llOI Neolanl Drlv .. H111>- 11ng1,.. Buell, wh<n 11 collided •ilh an old Amtri<an sedan at Oraoge A...,llC lbd Soa.sllott llrh .. in Wut Newpon. Secol>I -in U>e a<ci-that caved In lht smaller •ehlcle'• r1ahl lido ..... idtnUfied as TllllotllJ 1.. Annollt. 11, or tlOO Marguu1te A,-..,°"""" cit! \lar. • mainland -hi.!1 lastest trip was Friday-revenues during the next fiscal year. !dent Lyndon B. Johnson at his 1'exas to d1'scuss plans to p t I d' t u an mg earns B p l The Watson Amendment, facing the ranch to teil him personally or Hoover'_s ashore if need be r' ngs 0 ice death. . During the ~rent Communist of~ l . voters on the June 6 primary ballot,, Asked whether Hoover had given Nixon r · u s d · h would place in the co·nstitution a ceiling, ensive, · · a visers ave been pulled Jt soon will be against the law'Tor · ~ a recommendation on hls successor. by helicopter from bases about to be on property taxes which could not be ti.'.. Warren said : "I have no iJ1fonnatlon on nd a dog own er to let his dog bite a overrun a taken to rear areas. person twice on city property in ceeded by any local governmental body. private talks the President may have However, the contingency plans are to be Newport Beach. Shou ld the measure pass in June. had with Mr. Hoover." used only if large numbers of Americans stateY.'ide school revenue losses will Acting Atty. Gen. Richard Kleindienst are threatened, the sources said. City councilmen f\-londay are ex-reach an estimated $425. milllop, $4 issued a one-paragraph statement in There are other contingency plans, too, pected to adopt an orJinance million of v.·hich.would be in the Newport- whlch he said Hoover's body was found Including one for rapidly building up U.S. i:stablishing-a fine and-or jail term Mesa Unified School District. by his maid at approximately 8:30 a.m. forces to protect SOuth Vietnam. for any dog owner who does. The board is also expected to go on today. : : · H _ th bulld 1 h . d "In addition to a fine or jail d 1 . hi 1 . 1 owe .... r, e up pans ave receive term. the court may order that the recor on1g avor1ng passage o "It is with profound personal grier tha t scant attention at U.S. command head-Proposition 2 on the June ballot which I announce that J. Edgar Hoover 1'1D•sed qua rters in Saigon because Nixon ad-dog be muzzled, that the dog be 'vould provide for the reovation or _.. · I tr t' kept in a pen, or that the dog be away during the night at his residence," min s a ion official!: up to and including destroyed." said City Attorney replacement of 1,700 state schools wuafe Kle indienst said. "His personal physician the President have vowed that nG Dennis O'Neil. O'Neil said the la\v in earthqua kes. informed me that his death was due to Americ an ground troops will be involved cannot apply to dogs who bite on During their last meeting, trustee,s natural causes." in the current fighting. agreed that such a re solution should be The jut-jawed FBI bead was permitted The _most like!y plan to be put into ef-private property. enacted by the board even though no by presidential order to continue in his feet if an.y large American units were district schools would be affected. The $42,5()()-a.year goveri1ment job after threatened by Communist attack would trustees said it could be "Yaluable acUon reaching the mandatory retirement age .allow Soutb--_Vletnamue soldiers and p f G Id R• for the future. or (O. civilians to accompany U.S.-troops to the rice O 0 -1ses The schools, in-271-stale-district.s, have Hoover, unmarried, dominated +the :American ships w11jting offshore. · been deemed unsafe according to current bureau during his lifetime like no man in Other versions, however, include pro-LONDON (AP) -The price of gold earthquake and disaster safety stan- \•isions for fighting disgruntled South soared to record highs toda y on lree dards. The prOject.!I would affect nearly any other federal agency. Wlelding~v~st Vietnamese soldiers on the beach as the markets in London and Frankfurt, but one million school children. power, he was said to lav ish on the FBI i1arines pro tect the withdrawal. held steady in Zurich. Dealers blamed The proposition also seeks the con--th~ pfide ana poss essiveness Ot-a stern "l.etls f5cF tl_,V said one-:-,high~rankh1g the rise oo-Oemand;;fr.om,industrial users, tmuation of the State SCboofBuil<ling Aid and watchful j)Aren1. American orficial, "some Vietnamese jewelers and others exceediniCurrent Program for rapidly growl.rig, IOW wealth 4 . Hoover's No. 2 man in Ute. bureau v.·as _conimanders JJ!ay g~t pretty .angry if supply:-They said there was no evidence school districts. .. Clyde-A. -Tolson, .the assoctate..direclor. they see us leaving. You-i:an'f rule out yet-or speculators entering the market as The board of tnifjtees meet.!l_tOnight at The l\\'O were Iong·time colleagues who the p0ssibi1ity tlley'd attaclt the a hedge against future weakness of the ?:30 o'clock in the Lyceum at Costa_}-lesa spent much time together, Tolson, 7J , has 1 jiiA;;;;111;;;;e;;;;ri;;;;~•;;;;n;;;;s;;;;.";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;U;;;;.S;;;;-;;;;do;;;;;;lla;;;;r;;;;~;;;;;;-;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;H;;iigi;;h;;;;S<;;;;;;hoo;;;;;;l.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;mt been in Ill health. 11 Hoover groomed no one for his shors, but ofttn exprtssrd the \\·ish that the n'xt director come from "·\thin the FBI ranks . During the years ot Hoover's reign, there never \\'as a known case of scandal inside of the FBI and Hoover's stock re.nu1rk 11bout his agents ;as: "They can't be bought." \ Accolades for Hoo\'er no\\'ed almost immedlRtely from Capitol HUI and other locRtiOn$ af ~O\'ernment, E\'en fornier Atty . C.t.n. Ramsey ClArk, u•ho feuded l''ifh Hoover while Hoover's nominal boss. said "I 1lm saddened to he:tr of his deitth, He bas been 1 major fii;n1re on the ·American scene for a long tin1e. He ln\rid this ocuntry and we shall miss him." • Sen. G.oorge McGovern (~.D.), <X• pttSStd sorrow at the death. "l think \\'C ,~n only be .sad over the passing a( any American, any citizen. any mortal," McC''°'''"' sakf. ·The l!"'•idenlial .. ~!l!~nder •Jld he itrsii'gf~ wn.nrihf(VOf l JOO,'-er's vie,,·s.~ but addtd. "I am Mid 111 hi~ -pl'SSing." Sen. Edmund S. Mu.•kle (O.Maln<l. declared the nation OW'tS Hoover "its gratitude and mpect. '! ~luskie's state- _!O~l addfd : "J. Edgar lhX>\'t.r de\'Oled his ent ire IUe 10 ~the ser\'iCf of hls coun- try. \\1hile !Mtmt o( us may havt ques.. tJontd 90mt--Of his approriches in rf'Ctnt ).....,, no one could qutstlon his lo)'llly and dedication lo his oountrv." . . Swim Show Scheduled Tbe nim pnicl11<11on class or Cosio Mesa High School .-m perform syn-• chr<Jnlud swlmmlnc at 1:11 p.m. 'lbw•· cla)'. Fri~)' and S.lu..Soy. no •lmr will be •t the school pool and tlcktll at the door or flllm the 30 s'lrim,,,... are 'I (or • • • AROUND THE CORNER AND UP YOUR STREET WE HAV.E BEEN ASKED HUNDREDS OF TIMES WHY WE LOCATED OUR STORE "OFF THE BEATEN PATH." SEVERAL ANSWERS POP-UP. FIRSTLY, THE COST OF STORES IN SHOPPING CENTERS JS ASTRONOMICAL. SECONDLY, WE WERE ABLE TO OBTAIN MORE SPACE, WITH OUR SHOWROOM, OFFICES AND WAREHOUSE ALL JN ONE LOCATION. THIRDLY, THERE JS AMP i.f"PARKJNG WITH UTILE TRAFFJ<: CON l:;ESTlON LEADING TO US. THIS SITUATION HAS MADE US MORE COMPETITIVE' AND . ' WE "A'RE 'pfto1Jl3'. 'AND~ GRATE1'ui: .... t6 ~SAYTHAT WE HAVE • INCREASED OUR VOLUME EVERY YEAR .FOR FOURTEEN YEARS, AND HAVE EXPANDED FIVE TIMES AT THIS LOCATION. \ ALDEN'·S CARP~S .• DRAPES 1'663 Placentia Av•. COSTA M!SA 646-4838 ·- • 1dul~aod~nrorstud~~ 11. ...................................................................... ... ·-' E H Sea ror an rro111 after' the ro Pro Susan again Jdj state. Olli forWo Sutclif OSCl! Oran ney J: fears safety. -slie band's their and •• w;iitin Tbe l"''O m sible f ing of ni11ht Th• from month pro• Mi ,_,hen enou monei· Ta the I> hour Lugo ·at the De that S of arr P.trs .• their ·tndica kill M band "Pl the y lor1s Tbe 'their ,,,. . ... with