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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-05-12 - Orange Coast Pilot') • ID DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * • FRIDAY AFTERNOON, MA·Y ·12, :1972 VOL. U. NO. 1U. • ••CTIOMI,. • rA••I • • • • ex as 1 • .-------------------------------------------·· • arpent er Bill Bached I By Coast Association • • • • • • • • . . • I County Gears for Antiwar Protests Boy, 2, Falls 15 Feet-OK A 2-year:<>ld toddler from San Clemente reu t5 feet from an apartment ba1co~ onto Jlard pave- ment short!Y bef«e noon Thursday but suffered no apparent serious in- juries. Firemen said they were sum- moned to the scene of the tall by a iquor store owner whose business is nearby. They round Al arc " A 11 an Brotherton crying on the pavement Oelow his mother's apartment at 3109 S. El Camino Ren!. Marc, son of Mrs. Carol Brotherton, was taken for treat- ment and observation at Aiission Community Hospital. Bomb Dropping Extortion Plan Revealed-by, FBI SANTA MONICA (UPII -A would-be extortionist pl anned to drop bombs on Lu Vegas casino! from a private pl~ne to force them to pay him $2 m1U1on, federal authorities say. FBI agents arrested Nathan N. ~tarks, %8, Thursday, on a federal warrant. Bail was set at $500,000. Assistant U.S. Attorney Brian O'Neill said Marks, a self-employed radio and sales promotion man, proposed the ex- tortion scheme two months ago. to an unidentified Texas man, who notified the FBI and agreed to inform authorities. Special delivery letters were sent from Austin, Tex., April 23 to 11 casinos in the Nevada gambling capital, saying they would be blown up one by one unless they paid $2 million, O'Neill aaid. No money was paid. Th! bomb threat was to go into effect this weekend, \\'Ith an attack on the Circus-Circus Casloo, the federal at- torney said. Marks was carrying an airline ticket to Paris when arrested, federal agents said. Retarded . Girl Scalded to Death NORWALK (UPI) -Juan~' 36, and his wile Eulalia, 34, have been ar- ralgn~on .charges they bound their JS.-year<>! daughte< hand and loo~ put her tn a bat tub and scalded her to death. The body of the girl , Adellane, wu found buried beside a road in September. SdPerior Court Judge EU-U. M. Gum ordered the n.teon., who hove eight ehlldrcn, to enter a pl.. to the charges on Monday. Margaret Del.eon, 17, the dead glrl'a sister, told sheriff's deputJtt in April that she saw Adtllana, who wa.s mentally r<tarded, being taken nude into I bothroom. and heard ••ter ninnlnf. Her lister dltd rour d1y1 lattr, llbe llid. She Aid oho did not r<port the Incident urUer liecouoe she wu lfrlid. ' Carpenter's Coast Bill . . . Supported By TERRY CO\'ILLE °' "'' o.ur "II•• s"" Orange County Coast Association direc- tions Thursday threw their support behind the c<>astline preservation bilt authored by State Senator Dennis Carpenter {R-Newport Beach). They picked his, rather than other coastline measures, because it relies on local rather than regional controls. "Carpenter's bill is the only one that proposes constructive control in the hands of local government," James MacNab, president of the Coast Associa- tion, told members at a luncheon in the Huntington Harbour Beach Club in Hun- tington Beach. Members of the association are also urging cities along the Orange Coast to support Carpenter's bill. The Coast Association has about 338 volunteer members and city officials. It was, formed in 1914 to "preserve, uplift and protect" the coastline. Carpenter 's coastal bill wlll be heard Monday in the Senate Natural Resources Committee. It sets up a 15-man state coastal review board with final authority of over coastline development. Most of the groundwork for coastline p r o j e c t s , however, is left ln the hands cf cities and counties along the coast. '-like Neal, an assl.stant to Carpenter emphasized that the bill sets up no regional government. Another coastline measure, sponsored by Assemblyman Alan Sieroty ( D-Bever- ly Hills), establishes a series of regiona l agencies with total power over coastline development, even within cities. Under Carpenter's measure, each coastal city and county will be given time to develop individual general plans for the future of the coast. Those plaM will be submitted to the 15- member state agency which will incor- porate them into a set of guidelines and cMtei'ia for a California general plan of coastline development. Each city and county, however, \\'ill have jurisdiction over its own boundaries. A pro~t which Ls denied, can be ap- pealed to the stale agmcy. The State agency will also review all locally approved projects in case of con- troversy, and it can rtverSe the loceJ ap- proval. carpenter defmt0 the coutal zone u stretching three milts to sea and a max- imum .of three miles ·toland or a minimum ol 1,000 yarda Inland. Hts bW ts SB 8!0. NeaJ said lhere is also a companion blll, SB •t, wbich 1utborim 1 public bond lssut ol $200,000,000 oo the .Ute can buy privatt belch bnds. "Tht 1enator feels if the public wanta that private land, tt wW havt to pay for it," Neal uplalned. on Coast DAILY PILOT tl1ll ,.11111 MARCHING DOWN TRAFFIC LANES OF MAC ARTHUR BOULEVARD IN UCI PROTEST Thur1d1)"1 Antiwar Act ivity Was For Most Part Pe1ceful on Irvine C1mpu1 Bulging River Expwdes Killing Eight in Texas State P rotests Fade; Militants Keep Up Fig ht NEW BRAUNFELS, Tex. (UPI ) -The ·Guadalupe River, bulging from a week o( rain, rushed ~ to its banks todaf, pour- ing "'ater housetop hlgh and sweeping a\\•ay cars and homes and the. people in them. At least eight per.90ns drowned. More than 4,500 persons were evacuated from riverfront homes along 25 miles of the muddy river. Entire familles \\·ere missing. Six person,, drowned at New Braunfels and two more at Seguin, 15 miles dO\\'TlStream. -1 More rain was forecast ·io· add to the foot that fell over the past week. "So many peopl e were \\'ashed a"·ay," . said New Braunfels Police Chief Royce Couch. ··we fear the total will go much higher." fo~loodwater!I, turned a gooey black by oil from broken drums, rose 18 feet high. Gov. Pres(on Smith called out the Tex- as NaUooal Guard to help evacuation and clea1H1p work in the aouth ctntral area or New Braunfels, a town of 18,000. Seid New Braunfels dispatcher Thoma s "Cluton: "Several houses noated a\\·ay. \\·e are swa mped with calls -people aayin~. 'llelp me, please. My house Is float ing away.' " All bridges In New Braunfels were covered by tht water. The. only ufe w:iy tnto lhe town wu by hellcop1er or heavy IOUt"-1 drive trucks. Couch said hu.ndreds or persons \\·ere evacuated from residentlal areas of New Braunfels apd taken to four Red Cross centers. Hundred more at ~ were evacuated to city hall, the courthouse and shelters . By The A1soclated Preti The current round of California antiwar protests ,bas subalded a bit \but militants still clashed with authorities and blocked railway and highway traffic. ~1ore than 230 persons, including UCLA Police Dispatcher Tom Glore at san All-American basketball center Bill Marcos, site of the state's last bad fiood, Walton. were arrested during : Vietnan1 May 16, 1970, said more than 400 persons war protests across the state Th ursday. were taken before dawn from areas (See related story on Page 16) But the crowcb taking part in the flooded by Purgatory Creek and housed demonstrations Were sma.~r than earUer Jn three centers . .,,/ in the week. Onl y a few demonstrations Cibola Creek in northeast San Antonio attracted more than l,000 persons. Oooded, for cing Bexar (.;ounty workers to · Demonstrators were urged to avoid eva~ate more tha n 200 persons. violence by a number of student body "We just got them out before the ~ter . presidents at campuses of the University got here," said Officer Jame.! Bowles. of California and by Berkeley Mayor Guadalupe County Sheriff Phil ~tedlln Warren Widener'; who said v~ence was at Seguin said most of the Oooding there "Nixon's trap." was in riverfront subdivisions ln the The largeJt number or arrests, 135. (See FLOOD, Page !) came when demonstrators attempted to No 'Dirty Movies' Fo1· This Utah Town LAYTON, U!lh CAP) -The Layton Cl· ty Council h:is voted 3-0 lo enacj. en ordinance baming "Immoral exhibitions, motion pictures or s I m 11 a r en- te:rtalnmcnt:-0 The ordinance prohibits all forms ol !e;(Ual activity on movie screens. The maximum penalty ts a S299 fine and six months in jail. block traffic on a freeway near Santa t'ru2. A group of demonstrators mtt brieOy with ·Stanford University Pr e.1 Iden t Rlchard C. Lyman, who refused their r~ , quest to suapend $11 mJlHon wor1h of defense contract1 held by the unlver1ity. About 350 Univer1ity of Pacific studenll marched to 1 downtown Stockton courtllouk for a rally. Atttrwardl, they picked up their lltttr -an 1<Uon that prompted Police Chief E. Jtlst Delaney to remart<, "I'm very proud of these klds1" At the other end ol the spectrum, • (See PROfES'IS, P11e I) • Sit-i11 Eyed On Freeway By St!J.~~J!lS Dy CANDACE PEA RSON Of tll• Delly !'l)tf 11•11 Anll"'<lr demonstrations ln Orange County continued today nt a quieter pace compared to sharply contrnsllng protest& Thursday, whlch included street fires, ar- rests and peaceful prayer.•. A group of UC Jrvlne llltJdcnts incl at 12:30 p.m. today in the school commons to organize people for arte moon plcketlnj at county and city offlce11. TI1ey planned lo march on government offices, read prermred statements agalnsL the wBr and re1n1:1in until city offlclal11 agreed to ieild tel efiriufu1 to President Nixon in protest of the stcpup ln U.S. In- volvement In Southeast Asia. Saddlcback, Colden West and Orange Coast Co mmunit y Colleges all report~d no activity planned for t$y. Those cam- puses were also quiet Thursday. At Cal State Jo"ullcrton, Ute tcene of wmc violence Thursday, students held a noon rally against !he war and ten- tatively planned a sil·ln on the ltlverslde Freeway lhl.!!1 afternoon. Thursday, Cal State Fullerton 1tudent.1 nnd street people attempted to bUm down a I0-11\0ry office building near the cAmpus and light bonfires on busy State College Houlevard. Fullerton poHtt!laid the demon.~tors used street repaJr barricades nnd tree limbs to begin lhe fires:whlc:h were con- trolled In about 30 minutes. . Those street disturbances , polJcc said, were apparently the work of the ~ame group which .et fire to the Honeywell Jnc. Institute of Information Sciences early Thursda y morning. ~loneywell manufactures one type of mlMile used ln Vietnam. Fire damage was estimated •t $50,000. (See ANTIWAR, P1ge II 1''e•ther ~fore sunny weather predicted ak>ng the Orwnge Coast, following the u.sual low clouda and fog. HIJ1h., at the btach In the high 60'1, rising to 80 Inland. U..w1 a..$8. I NSIDE TODi\ \' Tiit T....a(l tm.4 Btach Civic Bal· lt t 1tagt1 it,, ta1t 1n a serie• of fo ur chi!drtn'1 prograrm. See the 1tor11 in toda11's Wtelcendtr. t L.M ... ,. 1 • •• ,,"' 11 <~11,.,,,r, 1 (l•nlll... n.q (-k l 11 (rftl_,. ti 0tm H•tle" It .. ..,.... ..... ' , __ . ,..,, ... ... .... .,. ,. "-""'" ,. .r. .......... .,, I I ... ,.... ' ~' ... M1h••• ''"'' JI H9fl-I ........ I Or•-C-'1 If lt•tlWflllll ..... "11'11 .. .-JI ..,.,... '"" '""' ... ,.... ,..,. TM"4.... • TlM•flr• ... W'tllMf' • .,.._.., ....... ,,.,. ........... .,. . . . . . . . . . . . . . bAJLY '!LOT _ __:<c_ ____ _:Tlllfld:.=;.::'::1:_• ;;;M'1:::....:l::;l •c.l:...9...::72 FDA Recalls Tanya Sun Tan Lotion WASITTNCTON (AP) -The Food and Drug Administration is reca lling n1ore than 300,000 bottles and lubes of Tanyp Htwalian isun tan lotion wh ich It said are L'i){)laminatttl with ba cteria. The agency a.aid Wednesday the lotion PQRS no health haz.ard to sunbathers who purchased seven to nioe million units in the last 31h years. One FDA official, who a.sked to remain anonymous, said, however, that at least some of the lotion contained a type of bacteria that couJd ca use sk in infection if applied over an open wound. The recall affecl.J up to nine million unlt.s of Tanya produced between Jan. J, 1969, and Feb. 2, 1972, although the FDA estimated only about 310,900 bottles and tubes remained on rtore shelves by March 8. The recall was begun by Bristol Myers on Feb. 17 but was not announced by the f'DA until Wednesday. FDA ofriclals c:ould not explain the delay. The FDA said the contaminated lotion was produced by Amcon Industries, Inc., of Buena Park, and Oxzyn Co., Trenton, N.J. 'rhe recall also affects all Bristol Myers production of Tanya up to Feb. 2 although the FDA said It was free of bacteria. Bristol Myers declined immdiate com-ment. Nixon Assault On Press Seen, WASHINGTON (AP) -The Nil· on AdmlniJtratlon Is leadln& 1 government assault on p r e 1 1 freedom that goes far ~ond "10ph.isllcated news manarement, calcutated dteepUon <>r public rel a- tions Oackery.'' llep. \Vllllam S. ~loorhead (0.Pa.) sald today. "Jl Involves g o v ~r nm e n t a I censorsh ip, intim idation, the uiie of naked legal po\\'er lo i;lop the 1e~:spaper presses. grand jury hllr· ts.sment, legal action against legislators and publi.~hers, and lther, less direct methods of a~ ac k," he added. School to Off er Cycle Me.chanics Summer Course An experimental course in motorcycle mechi nics will be offered at Costa Mesa's Estancia lfig h School this sum- mer as an attempt to ea se the severe shortage of skill ed technicians in the Southland's motorcycle indu stry: The recalled lotion is packed in tubes that are crimp coded and bottles that are ink and heat coded at the bottom, the -FDA-IOid. - The seven·week course, open to both boys and girls, will be the first high school level motorcycle mechanics course to be taught in the County and perhaps in the state. In s t r ucto r Chu c k Johnson , 33, says the st udents will learn both tw!>and four-cycle eng!'!r_ worh_ repair of telescopic forks, and ignition and carburetion syslems. I l The Amcon produ ct. bea r a five or six ncmericaJ code: the Oxzyn products, a code of· one Jetter followed by thrtt numerals and 1 Z; and the Bristol Myers production, one numeral followed by a Jetter and two numerals indicating the ye1r month and day of the month. Tanya Hawaii was an independent firm acquired by Bristol Myers in 1970 as a wholly owned subsidiary at Hillside, N.J . The FDA announced also the recall of nearly 14,000 pounds or sliced Californi a a lmonds it said. are contaminated with AOatoxin, a cance r-c auslng substance 'c>c- curring naturaUy In lhe environment. The FDA estimated that abOut hall of the almonds, labeled "Tri-CO Shelled Almonds, premium sliced nonpareil," re. main on the market in Minnesota and Califoniia . 'Pl• recall II being handled by the rcWiufactum-, catlfomla A 1 mo n d . ~. Inc., Bakenfield. From Pagel BURKE ..• lhl Burke proPoSA], though some coun-ci~en have stated they are now opposed to:the coast freeway. The entire coastal freeway situation was tossed into murky waters in 1970, \\1ben Newport. Beach residents turned out in -heavy nwnben to vot~ 2-1 forbidding their city to sign a freeway agreement \vlth the state. In 1971, the city of Long Beach went on reCord against lbe Coa&t freeway along wb.h other beach cities in Lo!: Angeles County. Officials at the U.S. Naval Weapons Stalion, Seal Beach also an- nounced they d.1d not want the free way crOssing their land. Congressman Crai g Hos mer (R-Long Beach) has introduced capitol Hill Jegislation to create a wildlife sanctuary on the ground!! of the weapons station. \vhk h would In effec t kill the freeway route through Seal Beac h. The state's Little Hoover Commission Is . now calling for the state Highway Commission to establish a meeting in- volving all Orange County cities to solve the coast fr eeway puzzle. "A county wide meeting would allow in- land cities the opportunity to voice their leellngs on the coastal freeway," says I.es Halcomb, executive director of the Liitle Hoover Commission . "In the past, the co mmission has only heard from affected coastal cities \\'hich don't "·ant a. freeway in their backyard." he adds. OIAN61 COAST CM DAILY PILOT 1'h• Oninoe COllU DA.IL V "'ILOT, Wltf! Mlkll Ii combined th• N•Wl·Prnlo I• M ii"'" b'f ,~. Or•ftO* CO.II ,.111111,1\1111 COmPll"'· s.,.. rt 1' edUlon1 11r~ 1111b1l,Md, MOl'1d1y th"91111h Frldt y. "for C111t• M$. H-siorr ll etith, Hu .. tlnglon llH<h/FO\ll"llllln Vtltty, L11111111 ll~•cn, l r\•lr1t1 5tdd l.ii..t~ .nil Sin Cltment1/ Sin J 111n C10IU•1no. A 1l11qt• r1'1!1Dnll ""11'°'' 1 .. oubll1ha:I s1111n;11y1 11'1d Svnd1y!. l nt prln(:l~I pUblft.hlrtt pl1nt 11 11 lJCt Wttl A~y s1r111, C0$11 Mtu, C1111ani11, t:i.Jt, ll 11b1 rf N. w,,, ,./ftkltnl •nd P'~l.nw J 1ck l . Curlty VKt Pr.,ldtt1l lftld ~I ~tfr l hoM•• Koevll IEllltw Tlio"''' A. MUTphi11e MINltir9 E.mi.t Ch11le1 H. l oo1 Ri1li-1" P. Ni ll At1l11 ... 1 M.111911"'9 M lf'Orl c.... ..... O"'- l JO Wo1t l1y Str11t M1mAt A4ilro11: P.O. 1011 1160, t262• --H..,,., ... ch: 1"J NllWll0'1 ... 11¥1tl UOllM t tttll: :m ,., .. ,. ~'"""" H1111llf!QIOrl l t ttl'I: l111J llN(ll lov!tvlni M ii (lotnttllt: •s Jffrl!\ I I C.mlM ll:MI T ........ 11141 641 ... JJI Cl•trW A4lllft"I .. MJ•lf71 ' C~t. 1111. Or.,.. c.rt f'vllllllllfll ~r. Ht ....,. stOl'lrb, flkntr1tlo•11, lilflMtlll 11'\tllW W ICl""'llll!Mnh Mrfiot """ .. ,..,......, •lt!lwt lfl'Citl ~ "''••Ion If c~t ""'*'· s-'llf ......... -• c.t• MIMt Cl illWllJ&. lubM:rWt• W UrTltt 0 .U , ~I '1 "11,11 SJ.If l'!WlltlPr1 Mllitwy ........ ""' ll'Wlltw\\ "Since the course duration is quite short, we're going to teach them the kind of things a rider-owner might do· at home," said Johnston. "This includes changing tires, which is one of the most difficult operations for the ne wcomer to motorcycle mechanics." ShouJd the summer offering prove suc- cessful , the course may be included ln the regular curriculum of Estancia 's in- dustrial Ft5 division. "In that case, we would try to teach our stud'ents a marketable skill which would allow them to go right ln and start work at a motorcycle shop," Johnston said. Motorcycle courses, though offered by some junior colleges, are still somewhat rare, especially in Orange County. In 1970, alone, an increase of 400 percent in motorcycle registrations was noted in the county but mechanics have not been able to keep up with their work. "As a result, the dealers are begging for help," said Johnston . "Wherever I go, they always say, 'Please send us some mechanics.' " Johnson. a motorcyclist since 1953 and an industrial arts teacher for the past seven years, said the course will be open to aU qualilied students in the Newport.. Mesa Unified School Dis trict. stuaents will meet for two hours each day and learn their new skills on engines and components Jobnsto. tiopes to r e-- ceive from industry doncn. "We want the m to learn by doing as much as possible and I have a small budget which I hope to appl_y t~w~d the purchase of me.Irie too~s, dtal indic_ators and timing lights." the instructor sa id. An advisory comm ittee composed or mechanic-racers Malcolm Smith, Dall as Baker, Bill Cody and Kenny \Vcems is now helping Johnston prepare th e course for a June 26 starting date . Enrollment will be limited to about 30 juniors and sen iors, but Johnston said some freshmen and sophomores may also be admilled. F rom Pagel MINES . • • tumcd away from the approaches to Jfaiphong . Asked "-'hethrr Russ ian naval ships are en route to the Tonkin Gulf area, Friedheim said , "I have nothing to report this morning on either Chinese or Soviet neet mo \"ement s ... Meanwhile, North Vietnam claimed U.S. planes attacked llanoi anew this afternoon and three American planes were shot down and "many" pUols cap- tured. The U.S. C<lmmand said it \VOUld have no comment on the Radio 11nnoi Broad- cast, a long·standif18 policy. U.S. informants said, however. they had no reports of any rene,,.ed heavy ai r strikes in the immedl:ite Il<"tnoi area to- day. although raids were cont inuing in other parts of North Vietnam. The U.S. Command had ;:innounced he.1vy raids in the Hanoi-Haiphong military complex on \\'ednesday. The command announcement said 10 ~tIGs were shot down and three American planes lost in Wednesday's raids. The intense U.S. air and naval bom- bardment continued against military targets in North Vietnam for the third successive day. The 7th Fleet said the most po\verful cruiser-destroyer force as- sen'"lled in lht western Pacific since \\' I \'Jar JI \\'as ranging up and down coust hitting "'ithln rour mlles or Haiphong. Quake Rocks Japan TOKYO (UPI ) -An eart hquake nicked northern Japan today but no damage \\'AS reported. The quake was felt In Hok- kaido, J apan's norther rvnost Island. and the northern part of Honshu, the qatlon's lorgest Island. The Sendai Meteor;loglcal Obstrvatory aale the qµa ke rtglstered an intensity or 4 on the Japan scale of 7. Morton OKs Oil Pipeline In Ala 8ka WASHINGTON (AP) -Secretary of the Interior Rogers C. B. ~torton an· nouneed today his decision to authorite construction or the controversial Tra~ Ala ska oil pipeline. An attorney for envtronment grou ps, anticipating A1orton's action, said It would be challenged in court. The project has been stalled for two yea rs by a court decision won by the en- vironmen t groop:i. Under that decision, Morton was re- quired to give the court and the en- vironmentalists at least two-week notice of his intention and today's an- nouncement serves as that notice. Morton said right-of-way pennita for the pipeline "eannot be issued at this time," but "wll( be i~sued as soon u that .,can be done wit hout violating any court order.'' Seven <lil companies in partnership as the Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. applied for permissio n to construct an Dmlle pipe!Jne, 48 inches in diameter, acrou rederal land to carry hot oil from Alas ka 's North Slope to a tanker port at Valdez on its southern coast. From there, the oil would be transported by tanker to the U.S. West Coas t and perhaps other destinations. En vironment groupS argued that the pipeline itself could break because of POLICEMAN STANDS OVE R CAR SET AFIRE AT UNIVERSl'l'Y OF MINNESOTA CAMPUS Authorities Used Tear Gas to Dis perse Hundreds of Ant.~iw::.::':..':..A.::':..':..iv.:.i':..'.:.'-------- From Pagel Students Off er earthquakes, landslides or other mi.maps, PROTE STS sp ilHng oil; that its heat would mell • • • -T""' •-S -• pennanenttrfrozen laooB!Oiig llii! path~ ~ --. 1teir ervices and that the tankers and port facilities highway patrol and a base spokesman By a 3-1 vote, the supervisors approve? \\"OUld create chronic oil pollu Uon at sea said traffic was moving smoothly. Wednesday night the measure to the 0 v • and the threat of major spills. He said the demonstrators dispersed cheers of persons attending the meeti ng. Ver llCllt l,Oll They argued that an al ternate pipeline about 9 a.m. One supervtsor walked out before the route through Canada would avoid or Sentries also checked individual Iden-vote was taken. Jes.sen these haz.ards. tificatiorur at the ga~ instead of waving T~e supervisors aJso voted . to 1tnd Morton said, however, that arter through cars bearing base decals. The ch~11man ~hll Harry. to Washington to months of deliberation he concluded that move apparently was aimed at prt!ven-deliver their reso.luhon personally lo granting the Alaskan route is in the na· · ting any protesters from getting into the President Nixon. llis expenses would be tJonal interest. base. paid for by voluntary contributions. "Development of the Prudhoe Bay oil In Berkeley, police ducking a barrage Hundreds of antiwar demonstrators discovery and the transportation of that of rocks used tear gas to (ijsperse marched around the campus at San oil for use in the 'lower 48' states will in-demonstrators near the UC campus and Diego State College. Some repl aced the vol ve some environmental costs and to clear 500 persons from the former American nag with a _Viet ~ng flag. some en vironmental risks regardless of People's Park area. Two c~rnpus security police removed how th.e oil is transported and over what Police said 44 persons were arrested the . foreign flag and ran up Old Glory route," he said Wednesday, bringing the three-day total again. "On tl>e other hand, the United States to 74 Officers called it "the worst riot in About 1,000 persons atteDded an an. virtually needs the Prudboe Bay oil and two Years." ti war rally at UC San Diego~ we need this oil delivered to our West A majority of the estimated 2,500 Coast as prompUy and as safely u poui-rioters were "street people and others hie ... from outside the city," officers said. Only Mea~while, President Nixon today 1,000 came from the univers ity 's student authorized a 15 percent Increase in oil enrollment of 26,000, they said. F r om Pagel imports for the balance of 1972. Police used a helicopter to spot crowds Nixon .signed a proclamation .increuing and a jeep that !prayed formidable n---d of Supervisors to enter into such by 1'0,00J bamls •day the quotas on im-clouds of tear gas from both sides. street D\HU. FAIRVIEW ...• As much as they love their children and their homes, some people dread the long summer vacation. The children are home every day and neglected "spring" cleaning or yardwork stares them in the face, with little escape in sight. But here comes the Icthus Team to the rescue. College-age members of St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church in ..Newport Beach, the Icthus team Js looking for work to IUPPort their summer ca mp program. For $15, the team will do babysi tting for 24 hours. SU: to eight members of the team wil1 ~tertain at parties for a minimum of $20 or will paint the exterior of an average t.hree-bedroom stucco house (labor only) for $200. For more information and fl'ff estimates, call the: team at 6'6-7147. port& of petroleum and petroleum ~ fighting continued intermittently until 1 an agreement. ducts from the Middle EHi, Latin this morning. Meanwhile, officlsls from both Aslihrook Suppor ted AmerJca and Canada. At Santa Cruz, police broke up a governments are planning to form an Ad Deputy .Pf• secretary Gerald L. War--candlelight parade through the business Hoc cOrnmittee to continue negotiations L. ren aaJd the move} rec0im1ttnded by the district when they said they saw some SACRAMENTO (AP) -Sen. H. Office of Emergency Preparedness, was atore and car windows were broken. No with the state over the prope~. Richardson (R-A·rcadia), endorsed Rep. prompted in part by the failure of arrests were reported. The commlttee will include Hammett, John Ashbrook of Ohio Wednesday for the domestic oil production to meet expected The Santa Cruz County Board of Caspers, Fred Sorsabal, the Costa Mesa Republican nomination for president. levels. Supervisors supported the so-called "AJr city manager, and Kenneth Sampeon, Ashbrook is challenging President Nixon For Latin America and the Middle war Initiative" to end the war in Viet-Orange County director of harbors, in the June S GOP presidential primary East, the daily quota on imPorts is ral!ed beaches and parks. In California. from 965,000 barrels I<> 1,195,000. ,..:=::._---------=~::::=::=::=:::::::========= • Harbor Judicial Cou rt to Mo ve Ending nearly 20 years of dispensing justice at 18th Street in Costa Mesa, the 1·fu nicipal Court of the Orange County Harbor Judicial District is moving. The court's new home will be at 4201 Jamboree Road in Newport Beach. New telephone number is 833-0411. Operation there will begin Monday (15 May). . The last day at the old Costa Mesa facilities is Friday. The new location is on the northwes t side of Jamboree Road, just east of A-facArthur Boulevard, in the vicinity of the Orange County Airport. Burgla1· Foils Dogs, Ge ts $800 in Tools A discoorteous burglar who timed his visit before vicious guard dogs were unchained ·at Costa Mesa 's Courtesy Dodge agency got away with $800 worth of tools. Mechanic WUliam J. \Valker told police his equipment had been locked inside the storage room at 2888 Harbor BJvd., Tues- day night but was gone Wednesday morn-ing. ~ Police investigators termed it unlikely the theft occurred \"\1hile the German shepherd guards were on duty. '7' Cleared Of Conte mpt ClilCAGO (UPI) -A U.S. ap- peals court today overturned con- tempt of coW't convictions of the "Chicago Se .... en" de fendants, their l\\'O attorneys and a Black Panthtr party leader . Imposed at th•lr trtal on charges of inciting rloU at the Democratic National Convention, Three judg•• of the U.S. 7th Circuit Court of Appeals. voted unanimously to overturn the-con· tempt sentences imposed at the fV:i:-month trist by U.S. District Court Judge Julius J. Hoffm an. Hoffman imposed the contempt sentenc@s for the behavior of the defendants. attorneya W I 11 1 a m Kunstler and Leonerd Wtlql1u, and Bloclt Ponther 1 .. ci.r Bobb)> Seale. atlantic music is having a Super Stereo choice sale! Now, you can chooM frOM llllOnJ famous nuL10S and put together a Systo111 tallor mallo to your nootls. 357 Ro9, I '9.SO "1.:."'! ; '>..N1f/l • • •• '-.!. &A 8H ER."\.VO OD ' . -. . _ .. ~ ....... ,., .. ~ ' '"?"\\1 +. .. , • ,~..,.Ii:~"'~ . ..... l!S SL65S Re9. 139.00 240XE llOA Re9. 224.90 240XE Rt9< 144,0~ C1J RECEIVER-111 TURNTABLE· (2) SPEAKERS . ONLY '379'7 Save up to $128.23 KLH l2 Ro9. 99.95 pr. L1nctr 9114X Reg. 139.00 .pr. BARGAIN ROOM SPECIAL COIT NI W ...... TAPE SPECIAL ;~ ..l . Advent FEW Eiiualizer • • ID Oct1ve Cont rol I Demo. I •• $230 lt\EMORIX RICORDING TAPI $150 ~enwood KT-3500 AM-FM ••• $150 $60 $299 UPIODUCTION so nur IT CAN IHAnD •LASS Stor10 T11h•r "'"ith IC (Tr•d•·inl Panasonic 60 Watt Stereo ••• $410 M111ic Cent•r with "Qu11dn.1pl11:" 4-CH. SYSTEM f D1 rno.•N1w G11•r•nt•e ) rue 1250 Aat11. Reverse • • • $499 $399 l ~orT•p•D•ck (Dtmo. Ntw Gu•r.J Dyilaco A·25 "Best Bay" • • • • $84 loo~ih11f1 I Oem~twGu1r.J MMeN• Lew Noi1..Hi9h Output 1100-R .. 1 re,. MoM•r•• LowN•I•• C-60 C•110H•1 ll1nk I-Trick .,. ft'li~ C.rfrt~te• Lht SALi ''·" $4.35 $2.71 $1.38 ,l.21 $),99 I . • • . 7 i· I I ) I 7 i ) ·::-- DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * FRIDAY AFTERNOON, MAY '12, ;1972 VOL. U. HO. 1». 4 llCTIONSt 41 PA•l f • • • • exas I Carpenter flill Backed • By Coast Association • • • • •• • • • .... "" • I County Gears for Antiwar Protests Boy, 2, Falls 15 Feet-OK A 2-year-old toddler from San Clemente fell 15 feet from an !partment qaJ con7 onto hard pave- ment shortly ·befOre noon Thursday but suffered no apparent serious in- juries. Firemen said they were sum- moned to the scene of the fall by a iquor store owner whose business is nearby. They found Marc -A I I a n Brotherton crying on the pavement .below his mother's apartment at 3109 S. El Camino Real. Marc, son of Mrs. C a r o l Brotherton, was taken for treat- ment and observation at Mission Community Hospital. Bomb Dropping Extortion Plan Reveal ed by, FBI SANTA MONICA (UP!l - A would-be extortionist planned to drop bombs on Las Vegas casinos from a private plane to force them to pay him $2 million, federal authorities say. FBI agents arrested Nathan N. Marks, :S, Thursday. on a federal warrant. Bail was set at $500,000. Assistant U.S. Attorney Brian O'Neill said Marks, a self-employed radio and sales promotion man, proposed the ex- tortion scheme two months ago to an unidentified Texas man, who notified the FBI and agreed to inform authorities. Special delivery letters were sent from Austin, Tex., Aprll 23 to 21 casinos in the Nevada gambling capital, saying they would be blown up one by one unless they pald $2 million, O'Neill said. No money was paid. The bomb threat was to go into effect this weekend, with an attack on the Circus-Circus Casino, the federal at- tornty said. Marks was carrying an airline ticket .to Par~ when arrested, federal agents said. Retarded Girl Scalded to Death NORWALK (UPI) -Juan DeLeon, 36, and his wile Eulalia, 34. have been ar· raijne~· on .charges they bound their 16- yeat-ol daughter hand and· loot, put her In a ba · . tub and scalded her to death. The body of the girl, Adeliane, was round buried beside a road in September. Slipe:rlor Court Judge Ellsworth M. Ge.tm ordered the DeLeons, who have eight children, to enter a plea to the charges on Monday. Margart! DeLeon,. 17, the dead girl's sister, told sheriff's deputies in April that she aaw Adellana, who was mentally re:14tded, being taken nude into a bathroom. and heard water running. fler 11Bter died four days later, she said. She Aid she did not report the incident earlier because she was afraid. Carpenter's Coast Bill • • • ~ f • Supported By TERRY COVILLE Of ft!• O.lly Pll•I Stiff Orange County Coast Association direc- tions Thursday threw their support behind the coastline preservation bill authored by State Senator Dennis Carpenier (R-Newport Beach). They picked his, rather than other coastline mea~ures, because it relies on local rather than regional controls. "Carpenter's bill 'is the onJy one that proposes eonstructive control in the hands of local government," James MacNab, president of the Coast Associa- tion, told members at a_ luncheon in the Huntington Harbour Beach Club in Hun- tington Beach. Members of the association are also urging cities along the Orange Coast to support Carpenter's bill. The Coast Association has about 338 volunteer members and city officials. Jt was, formed in 1914 to "preserve, uplift and protect" the coastline. Carpenter's coastal bill will be heard Monday in the Senate Natural Resources Committee. It sets up a 15-man state coastal review board with final authority of over coastline development. Most of the groundwork for coastline pro j e c t s • however , is left in the hands of cities and counties along the coast. Mike Neal, an tssistant to Carpenter emphasized that the bill sets up no regional government. 1 Another coastline measure, sponsored by Assemblyman Alan Sieroty CD-Bever- ly Hills), establishes a series of regional agencies with total powef over coastline development, even within cities. Under Carpenter's measure. each coastal city and county will be given time to develop individua1 general plans for the future of the coast. Those plans will be submitted to the 15-- member state agency which will incor- porate them into a set of guidelines and criteria for a California general plan of coastline development. Each city and , county, however, will have jurisdiction over it5 own boundaries. A projegt which is denied, can be ap- pealed to the state agency, Tht state agency .wnt al!Kt review all locally approved projects in case of con~ troversy, and Jt can revert& jhe local aP"' proval. ' ' Carpenter def'mes the ~tat ione as stretching three miles to aea and a mu- imum .of three miles 1inland or a minimum of .1,000 yarda inland. His bilf is 58 860. Neal said there ii 1150 a companion bUI, SB llSI,. which authorizes a public bond lssu• of f21JO,Oll0,000 so th• stal• can buy private beach lands. "The senator feels If tht public wants that private land , tt .will have to pay for it," N ea! ezplalned. on Coast. DAii. Y PILOT fllrf l"hol• MARCHING DOWN T,RAFFIC LANES OF MAC ARTHUR BOULEVARD IN UCI PROTEST Thursday's Antiwar Activity Was for Most Part Peaceful _on Irvine Campus Bulging River Explndes l(illing Eight in Texas NEW BRAUNFELS, Tex. (UPI) -The Guadalupe River, bulging from a week of rain, rushed ou\ 'to its banks todai; pour· ing water-housetop high and sweeping awa y cars and bomes and the people in them. At leas t eight persons drowned. More than 4,500 persons w e r e evacuated· from riverfront homes along 25 miles Of the muddy river. Entire families were mis sing. Six persons drowned at New Braunfels and two more at Seguin, 15 miles downstream. More rain was forecast to add to the foot that fell over the past Wffk. "So many peopl e were washed away," . said New Braunfels Police Chief Royce Couch. "\Ve fear the total will go much higher." Floodwaters, turned a gooey black by oil from broken drums, rose 18 feet high. Gov. Presfon Smith called out the Tex· as National Guard to help evacuation and clean-up work in the south central area of New Braunfels, a tov.'n of 18,000. Said New Braunfels dispatcher Thomas Claxton: "Several houses floated away. \\1e are swamped with calls -people saying. 'lie.Ip me, please. My house is. floating away.' " All bridges ln New Braunfels were covered·by the wate r. The only safe \VAY into tile tewn was by helicopter or heavy four-wheel drive trucks:· C.oucb said hwxtreds of persons were evacuated from residential areas or New Braunfels apd taken \to four ~ed. Cross centers. Hundred rn re at Seguin were evacuated to city hall , the courthouse and shelters. Police Dispatcher Tom Glore at 5an Marcos, site of the state's last bad fiood , May 16, 1970, said more than 400 persoils were taken before dawn from areas flooded by Purgatory Creek and housed in three centers. Cibola Creek in northeast San Antonio flooded, forcing Bexar County workers to evac:.uat,e more than 200 persons. "We just got them out before the water got here." said Officer James Bowles. Guadalupe County Sheriff Phil Medlin at Seguin said mos t of the flooding there was in riverfront subdiv isions In the (See FLOOD, Page Z) No 'Dirty Movies' For This Utah Town LA VTON, Utah (AP I -The Layton Ci· ty Council has voted 3-0 to enact en ordinance banning "immoral e1hlbitions, motion pictures or s l m I I a r tn- terta'ioment." The ordinance prohlhlfs all "!onns of sexual activity on movie screens. The maxim um penalty is a $299 fine and six months in jail. J State Protests Fade; MiliJants Keep Up Fight By The Associated Press The current round of California antiwar protests ·has subsi4ed a bit ~t militants still clashed with authorities and blocked railway and highway traftic. More than 230· persons, including UCLA All-American basketball center Bill Walton, were arrested during Vietnam war protests across the state Thursday. (See related story on Page 16) But the crowds taking part . in the demonstrations Were smaller than earller in the week. Only a few demonstrations attracted more than 1.000 persons. · Demonstra,tors were urged to avoid violence by ·a number 'of student body presidents at campuses of the University of California and by Berkeley Mayor Warren Widener, who said violence was "Nixon's trap." The largest number of arrests , 135, came when demonstra tors attempted to block traCffc on a freeway near St1nta t'rui: A .group of demonstrators .mtt briCOy with ·Stanford University P r e• s t d en t Richard C. Lyman, who refused their re-- quest to suspend · $1Z million worth o( detens~ contracts held by the univergi ty. About 350 University of PacUic students marched to a downtown ·stoclcton courthouse for a rally. Af,terwards, they picked up their litter -8J1 acUon that prompted Police Chier E. Joi,. Dlllafie)" to remark, "I'm very proud of these kids.'' - At tlle other end of the spectrum, a (Ste PROTfSl'S, Pac• l) ' • Sit-i11 Eyed On Freeway By Stµ!JeJ!~S By CANDACE PEARSON Of l~e Delly ?'llM Stiff Antiwar demonstrations in Orange County continued today at a quieter pace con1pared to sharply contrasting protests Thursday, which included street fires, a~ rests and peaceful prayers. A group of UC lrvine students met at 12:30 p.m. today in the school commons to organize people for afternoon picketing at county and city offices. They planned to march on government offices, read prepared statements against the war and rema\n until city officials . agreed to &eild .. felelfrilffis ~to President Nixon in protest of the step1,1p in U.S. in- volvement in Southeast Asia. Saddleback, Golden West and Orange Coast Community Colleges all reported no activity planned.for today. Those cam- puses were also quiet Thursday. At Cal Stale Jo'ullerton, the scene of gome violence Thursday, students held a noon rally against the war and ten• tatively planned a sit-in on the Riverside Freeway this after noon. Thursday, Cal State Full erton students and street people attempted to bum down a 10-sk>ry office building near the campus and light bonfires on busy State College Boulevard. Fullerton poH~said·the demonstrators used street repair barricades and tree limbs to begin the fires,· which were con- trolled in about 30 minutes. Those street disturbJnces, police said, were apparently the work of the same group which set fire t.o the Honeywell Inc. Jnstitute of lnformation Sciences early Thursday rnomlng. •Ioneywtlf manufactures one type of · missile used in Vletnam. Fire damage was estimated at $50,000. (See ANTIWAR, P age I) Oraage Weather ?.lore sunny weathtr predicted along the Orange C.oast, folloY.'ing the usual low clouds and fog. Highs at \he beach In \he 'high SCrs, rising to 80 inland. LoY.'S 48-~. I NSIDI<: TODA\' TJl t LagU'na Beach Cit:ic Bal- let stages it.~ last ·~n a series of four children'1 programs. See tl1e 11.()ry in today's Weekende r. L..M, ltYd 1 l•1ll"t n C1lll1r11!1 t c1111lti•• n·•• Ctmk l )1 Cret1w.r.i ,1 .,. ..... lol•lltlll 10 l lflt.'111 ""• • ""'-· lt -21 ,Of' .... lttcOf'<ll ,. ~,.-" " A1111 L1Mtt' IJ Mflll... ' \ I MtYltl '9·)1 Mu1111t f'vM1 lt Nltl.,,.I N•M 44 Of.ilt1 CWlllW I~ ltt1twr111tt U-'li k1Y11 ,..,,.,. lt SHftt 1 ... 1 • Sf'ltlt Mlrtltll 1t-tl Twl•"'l•lM ' • JI Tlltlf'lrt ' ... Wt•01.,-4 Wf1'1111'• ...... IJ.1S .......... ., ,,.. I . I lkyjackei· Apparently Made Escape TY_,f;LJCJ(;AJ..PA, Jit~u fAP) - 'The l'..al&A!m Alr IJn~ txp.der who ballttl tAJl 'lVf!f lirnduroa •J6rth l)'l! rJA In f~Jm ilpp:a.rt:n!l j ),.ndl--i a.oft ly wld dCIJ)td inti' tti--111 Jn::try1iti.f.. 1'11! go,·e-mm,.n1 a:.Jd ·n,und:ty nif')d that a parw.ilu~ hamta and jumpiUft hdir1t'd diltar"'°...d by Ult hJjat-ktr W'1'e f"JUnd b)• l(fJVtnirn.mt ·~ Wtd~y ''" 1-fl. S-1r(l(,:(,n, 'Jfl U-,. t1:1rdtr tif Alli;n- lida and YtKo O"lllllU"1 1n nt1rthr·rn Jf1,on. dUT.ru, Crtpt Carlos Rtne-Sagutumt-, directm' 1,f the S11t11mal lov~til(mwm f)f>pJtrtmtnt. u1tl tht parachute -.·as ~r1Jb::itlly carrH:d 1,ff by poor fatmJ In tM art:i:I and dt"dikd tht hJJ-ck.t-r !,.ft the coontry. Rci:Jdl.-nta: told SapJrtume '1 men they l1ad ~rn "' man wJt.b .a back padc and ~mall aulWa.ae 11ittlng 1Jn tht' a.round coun- ting money uud W1ln,1i1 t11wt1 to wipe ti weat fror11 hll face and lhlit ht dlup- reo.rtd Intl> tht JunaJe. Agents aald they lound WJed llllUt'I In the area. The re1ldent1 ablto 'aid tht m1n'1 11111.ulder :Jnd hond11 were Injured, but • M!arc;h of MKplt;J/11 ;111tl 1:llnlr.:11 In the :Jrea 11r11duced ™' ln ft1rrn;1tl11t1 11n J1lrn 'Ilic hijack~r. dc11trlt>t:d by tht: F:1111tern 1·rcw aH 11 VittnSJrn W<ilr veteran 11h11ut 4!i ytttr1 old, hlJaclr.ed the pll1ne 1hc;rtly <i.fttr It tlll'>k o(t from Alltnl.tiwn, f'a,, J..-t Yrlda y on • flight to Miami. 11~ collected lhe ran1'0m from the <1irlll'lf In Wa1hlngtoo, D. C., whtre he allowed the 43 Pl•teneeni lt1 11et off. 11M!n the pilot 11ew-tn-New-Orlean1,hut • rrttchanic1l-- f1Jllure develop..>d, and the crew and hi· jucker 1wltched to 1oother plane. 1be hijacker l'lttld he wanted 1" go to t~ell1.e, c11pJto l 11f HrlU11h Jfondura11. The plilne did fly fiver Jtrlli.~h llondur:is, <ip- 1mr cnlly on ordcr11 1.1f !he t1IJ11ckcr, who hud lr1 hl11 pot111C11ion 11 1'Un, two huHh knlvc1, two c:r1ud1 hclrnct11, food, drink nnd cluurcttc11 . lie IH IM!llevcd to htJve jumped between '4 11nd 6 a.n1 . S11turd11y, 80me 21 hour!! ilfter he took over the nirllner. A '1.6.000 reward hn11 been offered for lnformallon Jcadln,g to the hijacker'• cap- ture. llalf way l{ouse Pair Arrested LON{; IU•:AC:ll I AJ>) -Two re1ddcnt1 of 1 federally funded Jlalrw .. y I louse here were 1rretted ftnd booked for in- ve11Ugatlon of rs~NJlon of hen1in for 11alc, police Ml . ArTe11 led WednelW'lay were Eduordo !!;, GBrcla, 36, Mild Alherl Arclniag11, 29. !DAILY P ILOT ll1n l'M1't THREE LONELY PROTESTERS CHALLENGE U.S. NAVY At Long B•1ch, UCl'1 Ktyak Ag1in1t Mini SwMper From 1•.,11e I ANTIWAR ... N() arrc«1l11 were ytl reptlrlcd, Rllh11u1ih demonslratirinii al the Stal Beach Nav;1J Wcapon.11 Stalifln and at the C~uccn A·lary 'fh1,1r1fla y tnt:1lf·d nine :1rrc~t:-1. Most of the 1lcm11n~trat1Jrll in lh(1Sc ac- tion .. were frum Lal Stale Loni( Beach. UC I confined lhl'ir 'f'hur11d11y actlvltie~ to o march d(lw11 M11cArthur·1Joulevard tollowlnl( a noon rally on campus and an early morning symbolic rnlning of Long IJeach harbor. Remalnlng on campus in their own unique ver!'llon of ~ de1nor1!ltrntlon were about 80 11tudcnl'1 ;Jt Southern Culifornla CoUcge in Costa .. Mesa 'fhursday night who offerl:d prayers tor pe~ce. About 15 nf the s.;:1nle Southern Cal 1tud ents 11howcd up this murnlng ln tl1e .school chapel arxl read a telegram to l'rt$ldent Nixon whlch said: Frona Page I PROTESTS ... rally in favor of President Nixon's Viet· nam policy drew 50 persons in Sacramen· to. !\Tayor Sam Yorty of Loll Angeles bla med "hardcore Communists" for stirring up demons trations. "The most charitable thing one can say about the young American dupes of the Olmrnunists is 'forgive them, they know no l what they do,'" the mayor said. In San Francisco, 25oO persons rallied on Market Street. Officials reported about 600 persons took part in an uneventhiJ candlelight protest march from UC Riverside to the county cou rthouse. They were escorted by police. Walton was one of 52 persons arrested at UCLA when they refused to obey pollce orders to tear down barricade!! erected in front of the administration building. JloJlce 11Jd hoth were pnroled from Termlnul l11t1uwJ a low 1nonlh11 ago. "We the studenl.J or SouU1ern Callfornla COiiege have 1et aside specific times to remember you and ou r nation in prayer. We wlll be praying that God wJJI give you wisdom as you guide our nation ." Nearly 40 persona were arrested for blocking traffic during a demonstration in front of a Bank of Amer ica branch in Northridge, a suburb of Los Angeles. Five Youngsters Held ~Gun Theft, Assault Protestors at Davis blocked Southern Pacific railroad traffic for six hours when they straddled the tracks for the second time this week . Five persons were arrested. . A <iand lelight rally continued Into the early morning hours today. Traffic was stopped brieny and a hand ful of demonstrators arrested at Santa Barbara Th ursday when youths tried to block U.S. 101 and interchanges near the UC campus. Snnln Ann pollre arl'ested four juvenllr:'ll nn<I un nrtult Thursday on !luapl- clon of slc11 llnR pil1tols from 11 14un sho1> 1.1nd .. l!cftcdly n,11.ic11u ltlng lhree Marine:'! with o dcudl y wenpon. Sgt. ltnlph Curlale !'lnld the quintet were nn bl:M-d Moncluy night nftr.r lht.y hod iu:costrd thr Mnrln<'$ und pulled a Colt revo lvr:r on lheni. "No RUnflre en!'luecl," Curinlti :Jllld, "bu l !he 111crvl1·c1ncn were thoroughly shaken IJy tht1 4•xpr.rlcnce." A HUhiic11ue11t lnvestl~ntlon by ~ttnta An11 pollct dcl<'t;ll ve11 dl.!covered 1nore lh nn two dozt•n llhllolic lh11t h11tl hoen Nlolrn by lh~ ~r(l11p rro rn St11nlcy'.!! C.iun llf"lf.1111, 21 311 S. Mnh1 St. 1'he ndull 11111Jlwd wllh lhc juvenile!! Is 1111vld l 1lt•1·~u11, 18, of 50~ S. Noltlnghain .St.. Sftntu Ann . C't1rlli1t snld 1)(llir t' riuel'llloned the juvC"nl\~s. 11•host• HKI'~ rnn~e fron1 12 lo 14 IT DAILY PILOT lh• O••no• CN1! DAILY PILDT , wllh wlll<"h I\ (OfllblMd lh11 NtWl•f'ftHo lt "'1tllli.hfd b'j' IA• Or•ol\ll (0•1! F'11blf1M119 (OnllNllt'f, $tp ... '~" Mlllon1 "'' 1Nbll1hll(I, ~l'i' lllfOWQh I ' •ti•~. 111r ,.,,,. M•••· N-POrl lh•(h, l1u11lln11r1n n11fhl1'ou .. 111n \'.ilty, L•t\lft• "•~th, lt~lnM~•tl(lltb•tll .. nc1 )1n c i.rM11!1/ $•11 Jv~n (Aj!l>U•M. A \lntlt ttillOtOll •dlti.n 1, 1111n111hr"1 ~~lunt•Y• tilt! S111>C!Ay>. rn1 ptlncl1M I 11<ihlhh1110 1>l1r r 11 11 JJO \\'1•1 tltf Shffl, Co1l1 M••t, *-tlllOtnlt, fltlt, Rtib1rl N. W11d ,., *'"'"'' .on<J f>11bll•hrr J 11• It. Curl1y Vll.t r rt1kl1M afMI Otntrtl M•n• .. r Tho~•• K11vil .i111tor ll111m •t A, M11rphiri• M~n•llnt r."lltf' Ch1rl•1 H. loot •i•lri•r4 r. Nell At•hl•Fll M•""Olnt &tlTW• Offk• C-ut• Mflll 1X1 Wttl 111¥ $ltffl HIWPOrl l!lirK fll "" Ht•flt<'I IWltfl nt L..-INdl! Ht '"'"I """'"' Hilillflel.-rl IHtlU 11tlJ I NC't\ ~tYl!I k ll Cltfntlltel * Nt1lfl 111 C•mlne llNI Ttl.,.._ C714J 641-4Jl1 Cir 1 W4t• A'"rfkMt 6tl~lt11 ,,_. 0-. .. Arwt S..tfil .. L ...... INCll 4fl .... 411 fl-....... o.--C-ty Ctmlf!llMtld ..... 1JJt . ~l. 'W'I. ~· CM.ti flvlll!lll .... c'""""'· H• ntw1 ''°''"· 1u,.11at1to1•. •!•111 -''-' ............. "'*"" !Wf•lfl fT\lf IN ,..,,.... w[!flwt uirclll _..,.. "'I''"" .t cwrrfflit twMI'. a.c-.t t.11111 ~ Miii M C•lt '9\'M• (all,.,,.i.. HllM'oi.t• W Ct'TW 11 . .., -lfllYI _. -II &J,11 IMlltll~I fll!lltwY -.11-IM C..tJ n.lfll't-, years, and with the cooperntlon of !heir pnrents uncovered the gun shop booty. "Four teaml'I of investigalors worked through the nlRht Thu rsday and are con· linuing their work today." Curlale said. Srulta. Ann Pollce Chief F.dward J. Allen ls11ued a statemen t whith read , Jn purt : · "\Ve now have the ~pcctacle of young lt1en11gers viciously nnd without prov· ocatlon, nttncklng 11nyone whose op- 1.enr1u1c1~ or co1nplexio11 lhry don't hn1>- pc11 to like and lhrcnten in" the lives or in- Cl!lt'e11t c:il.i~.ens v.·llh r1)votver.'I. '"l'l1c i:un 11nd olhcrs rccuvcrrd \Vrre stolc!n fro1n the sa1n1> gun ~hop wl1erc lhe r1•vnlvcr th11t killc<I Sunl:i Ann officer N1•l.o;;on Sns:;ccr in 19ti9 \\o'ii!I stolen. "Suc l1 nrtlvitits by lhe!'le youni;::sters 1':111 only le11d to nnt• thiu.: -n1urdcr . l•:vl•ntunlly unc or their vlcli ms will rc~isl and they will pull the trlggrr." (,;hlcf Altt•n plarcd !he blnmr (or the lwh:ivlor or thr yvungstcrs lln "hand holding, mnudlin permissiveness" of Jll\l't'llhl. The largest demonstration or the day - estlated at about 5,000 persons -was a peaceful candlelight procession along the Santa Barbara seashore to a park two miles up the beach where a rally was held. Actor Robert Vau ghn was one or three speakers at the rally. In San Luis Obispo, 1,500 marched poocefully by candlelight Thursday night. Businessmen were asked to close down today In the cause of peace. At Berkeley. the scene of violent an· tiwar prolests !his v.•ee k, 400 pe rsons su r· rounded the office of UC Chancellor Albert Bowker \vith about 100 persons in· vading the building. They \Vere evicted by police. Son1e 300 persons rallied :it thr former Peo ple's Park in Ucrkrley later and spent the night. Police reported no trouble at the pnrk. The cily council dcclated today a dny or 1nourning. Spa1·e Ti1·cs U11sigl1tly- Pose Ecology P1·ohlems Jlcrc i~ a s.1n1pHn~ of the :1rUclrs co111· i~ 111> in Sur1dny's <'ditlon of !he DAii. Y l'll.OT : ltOL.LING Al.f)NG -Old tirt:! Mvrr die, th<'y just k~p bounrlnjt nrouncl. Th11t's nil rii.:ht for youn,:stfrs \vho <'rzn1•I through Uu~m and S\\·ln~ on lhf'm nt plAYi;,?rouncls but n1os1 old 1irc1 thnt refu~ to ~o a"•ny prtscnl nn ecolo~ical IX'Oblem. That problem is e:xnmintd b)' S1111fr \\'rlter Enrl \lt111Min . ~ \\'A!'\Tt-:FUt. SOCJJ<.:Tl' -If you u·nnl 10 set it, \'l~ll n ('Quilty du1np and )'QU'll._ find dlsctirdtod 11ppliances. st't'mingly'k1"' only 1 minor state of disrepair. and n1any useful ile:ms of furniture. The story i!J lhis '''<'tk's Sundny Special. EMERGENCY ROOM -!low dot! • \\1lman fare 11s chief or n l'H>spitnl emerii:cncy roon1! Dr. Clnlrt \\'etdenlltr, chit! emergeocy room physlclAn nl Cost11 rttcsa Mtm0 rl1I ll!13pi tal. has hnndltd th e ~ stnee l111st January and finds Ifs quite 1 clu1Utnge. SPORTS STARS -Th•rt"s an ln<leplh "1'«I In tho 1po11:< Pl&•• on ll.S. pair• sknt lng chan1pions Jo Jo Starbuck Ken Shelley \.\'00 turned professional this \\'C-Ck. UNSPOILED TOWNS -The cover story of Family Weekly describes a couplt''s search for snfe places to Uve. lov.·ns unspoiled by crime where door.s can re1n3in unlocked. They recommend 12 places for couples to spend their retir· ing,.yenr~ in peace. PSVCllOU>G!CAL TESTS -Many firnt~ use th('se tests In deciding on key pron1otlo11s or appclntmtnts. And if thrrr's ~ third person In th~ roon1 when you are lnlervie\\·ed, that figure. whom you have not seen htrore. ls probably a psyrho logist annlyilng your reactions. It's the lend story In the 0 YOU" section . l'OWER PLANT -Southern camornlo Edison Compony iJ trying to locel• an nlternate po11.'('r plant al Fry Moun tain In &in Bernardino Coun ty but Southtrn C."allfornia Focus on the editor'-1 pages "ports that d•9trl farm are mobillllng •&•!Mt tht proposal. Reds Bombard An Loe - Most of TOU?n Captur..ed • in Tank Assault SAJGQS 1ur11 -North Vie°'amese troops bombarded the provinc!Jil capital (If An Lt..c r..o m.ile11 north of Saigon with ii record JO,IXXJ round• ol artillery and ..;.? * '"tr rocket• ;iod captured moal of the town to- day in a tank·le<I a"auJt, m.llilary spok_eamen repo-rted. 1 U.S. B52s hit Commurust..httd mas N. Viet Port Blockade Reporwd 'Successful' W ASlllNGTOS (UPI) -The Penta~on !l id today the block.age of North Viet· nam's ports had been JOO percent ef· fectlve during its first 21 hours. Sevtral ship! believed originally bound tor ffajphong have changed course, or. ficials said. A Defense Dtpa.rtmen"t !pOktsman, Jerry \V. Friedheim, aLllo said two or three addltional fre ighters tbat were in llalphong harbor when mines were .sown by U.S. planes got out before the weapon! became lethal at 4 a.m. PDT Thursday. That raised to seven the number of ships tha t voere said to have left in the three daylight periods after the mining. Twenty-Eigh t-or perhaps 29 -ships re· mained in the harbor. Friedheim said his report on two or three additional ships leaving Haiphong represented an updating or inteUigence rather than departure of an y 5hips after the mines became lethal. One more Soviet freighter and anoth er flying th e Dag of Somalia t:ot out and another Soviet ship may have, he said. "We think several more ships that were en route to Haiphong have diverted," Friedheim said. lie refused to reveal the localion or na· ; tlonalities of those vessels. Friedhcim also said two Chinese ships "'ere caught behind mi nefiel ds at the port of Vinh and two Soviet ships v.•ere stuck at Can1 Pha, north of Haiphong. The possibility of a military con· frontation of super powers over the U.S. minin g of the North Vietnamese harbors appeared eased amid suggestions that the Uni ted States ha d private understandings with both the Soviet Union and China that they would not attempt to run the minerields. In tum. U.S. officials said it was unlikely American ships would attack Soviet or Chinese mineswecepers if they attempted to clear the harbors. Instead, U.S. planes would replace the mines as qu ickly as the Communists could pick them up . However, the officials said they sav.· no evi dence so far of any effort by Enemy Downs Daring Pilot ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) -A dar· Ing pilot who once ate a peanut but- ter sandwich while making a parachute jump or 102,800 feet is miss ing after being shot down by enemy alreraft over North Viet· nam. Lt. Col. Joseph W. Kitt inger Jr., went to Vietnam on his third tour of duty in May last year to "get a ~fJG," according to his mother, Mr s. Joseph W. Kittinger Sr., of Orlando. Kittinger, 44 , realized his goal March 1. But on Thursday Kittinger's Phantom jet was shot down follow- ing an aerial duel only 17 days before he was to return to the United States ror reassignment. minesweepers to clear explosives block· ing entrances to se\·en ports. L'.S. sources 1n Washington, Saigon and Phnom l'enh said priva tely that there was at least a tacit agreement between the United Stales and the Communist powers that the U.S. blockade coul~ con. tlnue indefinitely ~·ith neither Russia nor China trying to ruii it v.·hiie denouncing it strong ly in pubic. ' . Pentagon· offic;ials sai d there was little prospect or any confrontation in area of the mine fields for several days at least. Tiiey predicted llclion in the Indochina war would sh ~rt from thc.!1arbor areas to the Communist ground o{~sive in South Vietnam , which has been in a lull for a Wl<!k. The mining of the harbors and other acti on! to slop delivery of war material to Hanoi by land, air or sea are not ex· peeled to ha\·e any impact on fight~ng in South Vietnam for the next three weeks because of existing Communist stockp iles of fuel, ammunition and food, the of· ficials said. n * * N. Viets Ordel' Hanoi Resid ents To Leave City SAIGON (UPI J -North Vietnam has ordered all residents of Hanoi out of the city except for essential government. military and industrial ~·orkers. a diplomatic source said today. The source, who travels regularly from Sa igon to Jl anoi, said t~ evacuation of the North Vietnamese capital obviously 11.·as well planned and orderly. The evacauation began with the first U.S. air strikes on the city April 16 and "the streets are now deserted except for old men and critical g o v e r n m e n t employes," the. source said. Diplomats from Poland, Canada and Ind ia travel between the tv.·o Vietnams as members of the International Control Commission. which is charged ~·ilh main- taining peace in Indochina. The diplomat .said he saw a children'~ hospita l in J1anoi that had been hit by Ainerican bombers early this month, despi te the fact a large red cross \\'as pain ted on thehroof. •le said he saw "up to 10" dead children in the rubble. The evacuation of Hanoi ~·as carried out by goverrunent vehicles, \.\'hich moved the population lo the countryside, he said. "The people know where lo go. There are signs telling those from each part of the city which area they will go to," he said. \\'hole city wards are being reestablish· ed in the countryside, the diplomat said. Schools, now closed for the summer vacation, will be reopened at new areas outside •l anoi in the fall, he said. The evacuation is the second from the North Vietnamese capital. U.S. air strikes from 1965 to 1968 forced the civilian population out of most of the cities. around OW: destroyed city with 2,000 toot of bombs In what spolttsm m called tho most concentrated bombing or the war. But the Communist posltlonJ were weJJ.. camouflaged in the ru bbe r planlatlonl and effecti\'eneu of the raldi 'i''as not known. Jet fighle r·tx>mbtr pilots said they knocked out two Russiawmade PT'/6 tanks and di.sabled two others, but the two damaged tanks slllJ !ired into the town, once a beautiful district capital \lith wide. pahn·Ctinged strett.5 and French colonial bungalov.·s. ~lilitarv sources said the Sorth Viet· namese ~·ere thought to ha\'e brought iD- to the An Loe area their newe!l weapons -hand-ht Id . heat·seeking S t re I I a missiles introduced during the battle of Quang i'ri. U.S. Navy fighter·bombers plasttred the area with bombs and pilots said tbty thought they spotted SAM missiles. But military men in Saigon said they more likely were the new heal;setking missiles which. are somewhat similar to the American Sidewinder and which could play havoc with supplies to t.he An Loe ga rrison which gets all sup plies by air. 11ere w:is the ·military situation el sewhere in lndo<"hina: -In Cambodia, the Cambodian high comrnand in Phnom l'enh announced the fall of four more government pos!tons in the southern provinces, bringing the total to 11 since the border tovm of Kompong Trach v.•as overrun April 30. Con1munist victories in this area open a new supply route into the Mekong Delta below Saigon. Takeo the capital or the pro vince where the four towns rell, itself was ex- pected to fall al any time. . The Con11nuni sls also incrt'ased their pressure on Highway 1 linking Sai.gon a~d Phnom Penh in hopes of opening still another supply rout e into the area barely 30 miles northwest of Saigon . -Hue: The Commun ists \\'ere stift trying lo buildup for their expecte4 of- fensi\'e against Hue, but t~ere was scat- lered fighting in the vicin~ty and an alr strike northwest of Hu e which spokesmen said killed 185 Communists. A spokesman said 32 Communists were ki!\ed in an unsuccessful attack on Artiller\' Base Birmingham, seven mil es south Or Hue; the Communists shelled King Base. 10 miles southwest of Hue, vl'ith 90 rounds. -Konlum : In a small firefight around beleaguered Ben llet Fire Base 33 mi_les northv.·est or Kon tum, 30 North Viel· namese v.·ere ·slain. Heavy tank.Jed assaults .,.,,ere beaten back earlier thil \Veek by U.S. and South Vietnamese air str ikes. f'rona Page 1 FLOOD ... county and not in the city's res idential areas. "At lhi! time ~·e are In the process ol picking up all the peop le who failed to evacuate earlie'r," he said. "The river is above flood stage here but it is receding above New Braunfels. \Ye're getting a lot of water. llelico pters are picking up peo- ple stranded on rooftops and in trees. "\Ve're feeling some effects in the low\ying areas In the city but most of the trouble is along the river, the divisions built along the water. Mos t of them are out on Lake Dunlap and La k t ~1cQueeny. '' Billy t.-1oore, a National \Yeather Service spokesman at San Antonio, said his rain gauge showed a ra infall or 10 in- ches for the past week and he said more than that had fallen at many places in the area. UPHOLSTERED CHAIR SALE FINAL WEEK Don 't miss this rare opportunity to purchase from our fine selection of upholstered chairs at sale prices. We f~aturo n~thing. but ~he fine'.! quality in our selection of upholstered chairs. Happiness is own ing I ~air of custom upholstered chairs from Ted von Hemert, Inc. at a sale price. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE -KARASTAN 7tJ11111 " NEWPORT l!ACH 1727 WHtcllff Dr., 642·2050 INTERIORS LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Cotst Hwy. 49<M.551 -.. t .. ' "'" ,.... , ............ 0.-.. c....., .... 12lJ TORRANCE 23649 H1wthorn1 Blvd. 12u1 n 1.1m o,......,"' ,,_.._.... ,......, Da11••• .AN ... I• AID-NSID ... I ' ' r I I Stu Br ere lor' c T Cone !<> he Capistr perfo beginni The student school p.m. i gymna The by the or chest jemon music The r«entl the 0 F Th men day fire .. Fir " \\'iii fire with tecti the Jam H loca City 285 Gte l900 Alta I . ' 'F • Con~ \Vor utili 3Ut lrvi1ie Art 01i Clothesline I.JAIL f .. ILOT llfll t'lltlo Students Roxanne Kelley (behind smile) J anice Brown and Steve Buxton manning dye bucket create han ging batiks as part of te:tcher Jeff Tay· tor's art class at Ran cho San Joaquin lntern1ediate School in East Jrvine. Class also does othe r art\vork in leather, macrame, ceramics and the usual me· diun:is of drawing and painting. Concert Series to Begin To~~ght in Capo District Concert lovers will have many chances t.o hear mu sic students from the Capistrano Unified School D i s t r i c t perform durin g th is month and next beginning toni ghL The series of concerts. which climax student achievement for the current school year. will be launched tonight al 8 p.rn. in the San Clemente High School gymnasium. The program will include presentations bv the districtY:ide cadet and honor oi·chestras and the honor choi r as well as 1emonstrations by basic elementary music classes. The San Clemente High School band recently earned a "superior'· rating al the Southern California Band and Operi House Set For Fire1ne1i The Laguna Beach Fire Depart- ment will hold an open house Satur· day from 10 a.n1 . to 4 p.n1. at all fire stations to commemorate ··Fire Services Dav." Orchestra Association festival at La Habra High School. The J\.1arco Forster Junior High band achieve~ an "ex· cellent" rating and the elementary school honor orchestra \Vas judged "superior." r-.1usic students have also participated in other musical happenings. More than 500 elementary school and junior high music students were guests at a concert by the L<is Angeles Chamber Orchestra at the Uni versity of California, Irvine . An equal number of choral students \Viii witnes.ci the opera . "Barber of Seville" later this month at Anaheim High School. The schedule of spring concerts. by schools is as follov.·s: Atay 16, Capistrano School (in San Juan Elementary auditorium), 7:30; May 17, Viejo School, 7:30 p.m.; May 18, Crown Valley School. 7:30 p.m.; May 23. Richard J1enry Dana. 7:30 p.m.; Ma y 24. Ole 11anson, 7:30 p.m.; May 25, Las Palmas, afternoon and San Juan. 7:30 pm .. : May 31, Marco Forster Junior High. 8 p.m. Junr concerts include: June 2, Pali- sades. 7:30 p.n1.: June 6. San Clemente, IUgh School Orchestra and Band, 8 p.m.; June 7, Concordia, 7:30 p.m.; June 8, San Clemente J.Tigh School stage band , 8 p.m.: June 13, San Clemente High School Choral group. 8 p.m. Three Withdraw From Viejo Race For School Post Three of 20 candidates for the l\1ission Viejo Unified School District Board of Trustees have withdrawn from the June 6 election , Denis C. Duffy, Don McGregor. and Jesse R. Noriega have left the race for personal reasons stemming from employ- ment or health. Duffy ran third in the recent special election lo fill the seat vacated by James Nelson of Aegean Hil ls ll'ho resigned from the San Joaquin Elementary School District. The seat was won by Joseph Peterson Jr. who is also a candidate for the unified district. The 33·year..ald resident of 25252 Oakglen Ave .• Mission Viejo, left th e race because of a six·monlh transfer to Denver. He is a pilot for Continental Airlines. M~regor, 44, ll'ho lives at 25412 Pike Roaa, Laguna Hills withdrew because of employment pressures. He is quality assurance director for Coleman Systems. Noriega, 50, of 248&1 Spadra Lane, l\1ission Viejo expects to undergo surgery in the near future and withdrew for health reasons. He is on the staff of Autonet ics Division of North American Rock\vell . rrld<\J, Mil.1 12. 1972 s OAfl.V PILOf .. Challenger A1·reste1 Dropout Held i11 Shooti11g of 3 Lawr11 er1 ?t1AOISON. Wis. (UPl l -A Unh·ersity of \Visconsin dropout who this yeM challenged · Sen. F.dn1und 1\1uskie to smoke marijuana has been charged "'i lh three counts of attentpted first degret" murder follo"·in~ the "·ourKling ()f three JX>licemen. Oliver \Y. Steinberg. 21 , of l\1adison. also was charged Thursday "'ith <'Qn· spiracy to co1nmit arson ;1t a su bu rban 1t1iddleton life insurance con1pany o!fict Four othtr pttsons. three of then1 un iversity students. also y,·ere ch;irged. Steinberg disrupted 3 can1p.ai~n 11p- pearance by fl.1usk ie in !\lildison this year when he confronted the Democrat from l\1aine during a discussion on "'hether to legaliie tnarijuana. Steinberg v.•alked up to 1\luSltie and of- fered him a puff of what he aaid \\'as a marijuana cigarette. After r-.1uskie refus· ed. Steinberg blew smoke in his fa c('. Bruce 1\1iller, 22 ; his brolher, Jeff, 21 -sons of a former UW professor -and !\lark E:1senberg, ?O. !\1ndlson. \\'ert l'harged v.•ith conspiracy 10 L'Onirnil nrson 111 the life i~urance building. l)(obbie Htintz, 22, a gr.1dunte ~tudent "'ho "'as working nt the un iversity, w11s chllrged \Vith criminnl obslruction. Olfictrs John llntfurd, Dfru1is Gustin and S.1lvatore Bnllstrcri. an 25. \\'tre \\'Ounded at a duplex near the university tampus severRI hours '1fter an anti"·ar demonslration. Q[fi cials said they believed the shootin): \\'!IS not connected with the protest. although the fi\'e v.•ere belie\·ed to be an· li\\1ar activists. Distric t Attorney Gerald Nichol said the policen1e11 follov.·cd a car occupied by at least tv.•o of the fi\'e ptrsons :irrt·~ll'd afl rr the alleged <1Ut1n1pted arson in :-.l id- d\('1t111 'l'hr shots \\'Pre HrC'd after thr oc1·11- JllllllS left the ca r at the dup l1•x 111 thr student neighborhood near Ill<' l'\V t'arnpus. ·'· A "'-· " Wi•r11i11g Fiftli Graders 1-l ea r Ex-ucltlicts By CANDACE PEARSON For both Doris :ind llod. \\•ho said thcv 01 •h• 01i1., l'not s1111 came fro1n good hon1es, the ans\\·er tO "It 1 "'ere a pusher and I came up to their drug problc1ns c<imc thro11J!h you to sell some drugs · • .'' the young religion. At 1\1elod~·l:uKl, people use their man began telling the fiflh graders. belief in Jesus Christ to k~p then1 fron1 As he spoke, he rolled up his coat collar needing drugs. they s:ud. and slinke<I sinisterly _tow.<U.d.s ~ 1 .• 0-~-I d he ped h' ·-:-But !hey 11re tT-ying to-htlp you year-old an t n stop is acting students like those al Cordillera never abruptly. h "But it pl'obably won't happen that start t at experience :1t all . way. It probably won 't be some guy in They also asked the stud ents to pa~i1 black who asks you to try marijuana. It the V.'Ord on to friends or older brothers could be the person sitting right next to and sisters who mi~ht already be in· you. It could be your best friend." volvcd : call the hotline and talk. The fifth graders at Cordillera School "\Vhat y,•nul1l you S:l) if your he.~l in Mission Viejo laughed nervously and friend asked vou to smoke some n1:1ri - jostled those next to them in the mulli· juana.'' Hod u'skl'd !he J!roup of uhout 100 purpose room . firth and sorne sixth gT<nlcrs. But soon their joking settled down and ··1 don 't dig ii. No thanks. you're killing: many began asking serious questions yourself. You 'll proh;ihly lose y(lur about drugs or the two speakers. throat." were a few student sugi;:eStions. themselves former drug users, from the Rod and Doris both ;ulv ised thr Ol'ange County Melodyland Drug Preven· students to warn friends or the dangers of tion Center. graduating to other drugs, which you nR.ff Rod Walker, 19, of Melodyland. told the ,people succumbing to peer pn•ssures <:an students that the biggest decision they do. They both warned about !ht> other - "'Ould make in taking drugs "will be "unfun" -side of drug s, the b;1d trips whether to smoke marijuana the first and the ''hummers." time." Instructor Jim \Vilson ex pressed con· Arter tha1. taking more serious drugs is cern that "ours is a pill-takini;: n:il.ion.'' easier, said Rod, who knows. lie went lhat people take legal dn1gs every d11y. from smoking grass to taking am· The v.•ell-stocked medicine cabinets ;it phetamines and l.SD. home can give children the unfortunate Rod and Dor is O'Tese, also from impression that all drug:s are okay. he Melodylaod, tried to prepare the students <idded. with v.•ays to turn drugs down. The students wanted to know what kind Doris was open and se rious as she of hallucinations LSD could produce and spoke of her own experience. graduating a few asked if it would really be wrong if from marijuana ("It was fun, a good marijuana were legali1.ed. A nurnber of feeling") to LSD, lysergic a c i r -them were naturally restless. wailing for diethylamide, a hallucinogenic drug. recess to come. HELO IN SHOOTIN G E•·Student Steinberg Poli(•(' <:apt ain ~ To Slvitc h J obs In Laguna 1;('<11·'1 T\\'O Lagun a Bca(·h 1w>h!'1· 1 ·~1111:1111 11111 S\\'ilch jobs al the end or !hi.<> 1nonlh 1rt · keeping \Vilh a pulil'y dcs1glll't.l lo g11 •' :1\1 · nlf•mb('rs nf thr f)(lliec 1,11'1'(• a lin1.11!1 •r ha<'kgrour11t ol t'Xpt:ri~nt•'. 1'11lu·1· r '1111.f Joseph Kelly has ann1itH1<·1.·d C;ipl. Frank Sehope1i V.'dl h1 ·1·11u11· ti~·:1<l of lhe Srrvicrs 11ivh~inu of !I••· 1'1111 r. l">t!partmcnt. tradinJ;l pl:11•1•s w11l1 c .•p l. David Brn\l'n, who \\'dl t:1ko· u11 r- Sehopen's a1'S1g11r11cnt ;\' ll1·;1d 10! II!•• Operations IJ1vis111n. For tht:> past I~ 111on!li'>. t\1111111 h.i"' l>c«n In 1·h:ir~l' of pol 1r1• sPr Vll't" 1\1111 h 1nclut.le rt:tords, l·un1n1u1111·at1un:., 111·r· •ir1-, llf'l. lr:1111111g , t'UU!'I 11.ll"lll .. n d suprrvision of the jail, &hopcn, as head of 0111.·r11t11111s. h.11 been responsible for patn1l ~. park111J.1,. traffir.. detention. invesli.i:::it1t1n und,.. juvenile cases. ''The exch11nge," s aid K1•1Jy, ""·111 enable each of the captnins to .i::ain n txii.. ter understanding flf 1111: pl'obh·n1!! :111d responsibilities ol both t11v1slonM :11111. lhrnugh 110 cxchan~e of kno"•led"•" 1nak1: for a smoother overall operation." "A visit to your 'local fire stalion will enable you to meet your firemen, and to acquaint )'ourself with the equipment used in pro- tecting you and your property from the ravages of fire," Fire Chief James F. Latimer said. 2 Old Water ~fains Rupture in Laguna Vacation Time ... Wagon Time ' . • ' Headquarters firr station is located at 501 Forest Ave. next to City Hall. Fire Station No. 2 is at 285 Agate St. /corner of Agate and Glenneyre l. Fire Station No. 3 is at ?9()(1 Alta Laguna Blvd. (comer of Alta Laguna and Tree Top Lane.) . ' r i f !. l I ' •• • 1-> -' . -' • ' .. -- - r--. t • ..~ [ • • d -· ' • I ' Two Laguna Beach water mains rup- tured early this morning knocking out service to residents of Cress Street and Camino del f\1ar for about one hour. The six-inch main at Cress and ·Carmelita Streets broke at about 5:30 a.m. The other main was located at Camino del Mar and Wilson Way. -' ' • " • ' -~ . • - ... ! . • . ' ' > 0..IL.Y I'll.GT Staff "-te " • • • 'Forest' i1a Laguna Hills • Consider the corner of Rocklield and EI Toro roads near Leisure World ln La guna Hills. U you look carefully between the forest of utility poles, you can almost see the freewa y. It 's behind all the nu tomobiles. Colony Park .. • ' .. . IF CONTINENTAL RUIL'I' A ST ATJON WAGO N, COLONY PARK WOULD BE IT! Colony Park offers the new look or luxury in s l;.ition \v1.1gU1 1..:; for 1972. Long the leader in the station wagon field • - . ">Ce for yourself the most magnificent collection of better \l'ai:o n ideas under one roof .•• Test drive one today .•• Montego ... Villager "Car Of The Year" ABSOLUTF.J.Y BF.AUTJfUL IN A STATION WAGON •.. THE HOTl'EST STYLING ON THE ROAD TODAY ! e GREAT SELECTION e ALL WITII AIR CONDITIONI NG ohnson & son LINCOL N r11l! I'( 1Jt1Y COUGl\H 2626 HARBOR BLVD., COST A MESA • 540-5630 I . \ 4 DNLV PILOT r11a1. MIY 12. 1972 Mine Core Yields Last War Protests Enter Third Day;· 40 Victims \Slackening of Violence Noted KELLOGG, ldlllo (UPI) -After nine ...,.. ol -chine underlfOUlld In the ..,. tloe'I 1lrsat tUftr ml.oe, rneut CN'WI .... found the -of the lut 40 ..... mluloc ill the -.,. mine. AU -. deod. In all, ti ,.... died ill the worlll catallltopht ill ldabo'a hlltory. Of tlioee ortctnaJ1J trapped by .. undersround tre, ooly two aurvlved. -loams ""1nd the bodiel of the <.at 40 mlalln( minera deep In the mine 'tbunday, en.dine an al"C)UOd.tbe-<lock ef. bl !hit llt1an May i when a fire ~ In the "old workinp" of • mut flhmntla. A mine olllclal Aid ..,. of the men 4led lnatantly of amoke or oosloua carbon -pa, many 111111 alttlnf ... , lbeir lunchea, olhon ill pu11pway1. A tolaJ ol tm mi-. mao11ec1 to ocram~le lo Niiiy. Wlvaa, rel1Uvea and friends maJn. lllnioC a vlcil outalde the mine'• ..,. tnnce wept when the ntwa of the de1tho wu announced by SWllhlne General Manaatr Marvin C. Owt. They were quickly c1r1 ... from the compln, lea•inl <11ly empty chain and winclawepl debria. "'Ibey lied to WI," screamed one llysteric1J woman belnc led throulh the company porkill1 lot. "They Aid they were pumplni a1r to them •nd they weren't." Newsmen and photolf'tpher1 were kept 81 1 dlatlncl by N1Uonal Guardsmen. U,.I Te~ 'SAW· CANNON BLARING' Lt. R1ndy Cunnlnih1m U.N. Orders Doors Closed To Tourists . By TUE ASSOCfATED PRESS 11.N. officiab ordered the world body's New York headquarters cktsed to tourist.• today be<!ause of the "riling tide of demonstraUons '' aga inst President Nix· on's new Vietnam poUcy. 1lx>usands again took to the streets and campuses Thursday In the third day of widespread protests against t h e Pre.sldent's decision to mine North Viet- namese harbor•. At the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, Dr. Ferrel Heady, it,, president. called off an earlier state of emergency proclamation and campus curfew 1bursday rllght and promised to stay with the dissidents if necessary. ---'"-· .i;<>rnPJIU'JlOctaLllld thaL_'.'l.ltry'-4 conceivable meam" w11 taken to keep Reports from across the country showed significant antiwar activity in at lea.st 23 states and the Di.strict of Col~ ~· Violence appeared to ebb somewhat, however, and though there wei'e more than 500 arrests most dem1>nstratiom were peaceful. De.!pite the demonstrations, a poll con- ducted for the American Broadcasting Co. and aired on a special Vietnam pr. gram Thursday night indlc1ted a major· ity of AmericaM support the President's decision. the trapped men alive and reach them. --!tams worked night and d1y in Ille daol ..... booeycombld mountain or ..... 11 In bopto of finding aurvtvora in tbt nation'• larlffl lllvtr mine. llopet -. buoyed 'l'lleadly when two mlnen wm folmd" alive after lptDdlni a weM: at a mile-deep level "air pocket" llvlnl off the llndWlchea of dead co,,.. radea. Tom WU-. 29, and Roy Flory. a, Aid after lhelr ,_,,. that moet of the men ...,.. not trolned In the -of tWr ..-lllllon and would throw them ..,,,, If they sot bot. which meant that they were wortJn1. 'l'ht hope foded quickly 11 !tarn• found dtad mlnen at teveraJ different levels during the poll -tnl dl)'I. 'l'ht finof ltYtn bodiet were dJicovered Thursdly nlll>I. three at the 4,JllO-loot ltvtf, two at the 5,IOIJ.fool levtf and two 1t the 5,000- foot level. A U.S. Bureau of Mines official, S. M. .Jarrett llkl thlt there 1UU wu a •blllly of more fore in the mine. He Mid an lnvatlpUon would belin lm- mtdlai<ly. "We hive to find the c1Ulf for rec:om-- -lo prevent fu-auc:h lhu," be Aid. lnopoclionl will a1lo take piece at tho other 21 metal mine• In Northern Idlho'1 c:our D' Alene 1rea, berlnnln1 with the nearby Bunker lllU Mino, Jlm!tl Aid. Smelting Plant Ordered to Pay Medical Costs EL PASO, Tex. (AP) -The American SmelUnc and Refining Co. has been ordered to 11ap dllcharsinl danrtroua JevelJ of helvy _metal• into tbh at- mo1phtro and will be required to bear all medical upemes ol local children btln& treated for bii:h levels of. met.11 in their blood. Judce C. R. Schulte on Thursday also lmtructed the firm to pay •too,000 in penalllee: and court cost& and to imple.- menl ....,. 1750.000 wwth of pollution control improvement!. 'l'ht judge'• rulinl wound up three months of court proceedlnp m a ault broucbt against the firm by the city of El Pato and the Texas attorney ieneral. The flnn also was required to finance the medical ex11min1tlOM of affected children for 30 montho. Teatlmony durlns court proceedlnp nveakd that numerous children tested by authorities have been contaminated in IOllle degree by lead front lhe amclttr. NARROW ESCAPE LATER LI. (j.g.) Wllll1m Drluolf U.S. Fliers Down 5 MIGs-First Aces in Vietnam SAIGON (UPI) -tt was a big turkey shoot In the sky orchestrated by the Red Baron. At least, that's the way America's first two Vietnam air ices described their exploit... Navy Lt. Randy Cunningham, 30, of San ott10 (Mira M ... ). the pilol. and his radar orficer J~t. (j.g.) William Driscoll, 24, of Fr1mlngham, Mass .. met the press tod1y to descrlbe how they shot down three North Vietnamese AflGs two days before In Hollywood-style air battles over the skies of Hanoi. The three Soviet-built ~1JGt7s the pair ahot down Wednesday raised their total "'kills" this year lo five , the magic nwnber required ,to become an ofrlcial alr "ace.'' Cunninaham, whose call sign is ''Duke," sakl the first word he received about the f.fIGs Wed.J)esdny came over their Phantom 's radio. The wavy, br0\\1l·h11ired pilot, \\·ho sptaks with his hands and race as much as his mouth, said, "there was a MIG so clole that I could almost see the guy's eyes." "He had hi.! cannon blaring out of both wing roots" CUnningham said. "I broke into him ind he overshot. We reversed. and that was the first kill." He brushed off Wednesday's other two downings of MlG17's as "just a typical ha ssle you get with MIGs." CuMingham said only one of the pilots he shot down managed to get out or the plane and parachute to the ground. "He di~n't wave, but he hnd a good chu te," he 1aid. The Phantom pair, who eventually got .1way from the remaining MIGs and headed sooth toward the sea, finally ran into more than they could handle -a Soviet-buUt surface-to-air missile (SAh1l. "It shook the airplane but the airplane new rJne ror about 30 seconds," Cun-· ningham said. "And then I started losing all my hydraulics systems. And '"e coasted over the water and then J lost just about everything." Clinningham and Driscoll ejected from their Phantom five miles offshore. "You feel mighty small in a chute floating down and It'• probably the most petrified. J"Ve ever been in my life," the pllot said. The survey based on 991 telephone in- terviews by Lieberman Research, Inc., round st percent agreed with the mining, 28 percent disagreed and~ 13 percent had no opinion. The United Nations was closed follow· ing a dtmonstration by 300 people and two incidents in which a group of protesters chained themselves Inside the Security Council and another attempted to climb a fence outside. Radical lawyer William Kurl.!tler told the demonstration, "Now is the time to get to the streets. We are in the grip of a dictator. We should disrupt every public runction." The protesters called on U.N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim to bring the war issue berore the Security Council. The state of emergency at the University of New Afexico campus in Albuquerque followed an incident in which police fired shotguns and wounded at 1eut to persons, none seriously. The incident occurred when a group of protesters rushed police and threw ::itones. Police fired shotguns at a hlgb 1ngle and the crowd retreated up a knoll. "All we want is a peaceful demonstra- tion, but every time we try to get off the campus we 1et gassed, .. said one student after the shooting climall"ed in a day-long series of demonstrations. Jn Cambridge, Mass.. riot-equipped police fired 60 to 80 tear gas grenades to disperse hundreds of demonstrators \Vho barricaded the city's main artery in front of the Massachusetts Institute o f Technology. Seven persons were arrested and at least rour were injured in the melee which followed a peaceful rally by 1,000 demonstrators in Bo5ton .1nd a march back to Cambridge. Between IOO and b demonstrators marched three miles from the University 1 of Iowa campus Thunday night for a planned symbolic blockade of Interstate ao. Most were stopped •hort of the highway. DAILT rlLOT DELIVERY SERVICE Delivtry of lN! Dally Pilot Is guaranteed Morid1y·Fr11Hy: II you do "°' 111.,,. .,.our pape-r by 5:)0 p.m .• c1H Ind y01,1r copy wUI b• brou11111 la ya.u. C11t1 1r1 !&ken until 7::111 p.m. S1turd~y &nd Sl,llld1y: If you cl• not receive YoUr copy by t 1.m. S1!urd11y, or t 1.m. Sund1y, Clll Incl I copy will M llt'OuOlll .. YOll. Ci lls 1r1 llk•n unlll 10 1.m. Telephones Most 0rlfl.9t County ..,,...~ •• ,, ... , Mll-4111 Nor111..,.t1 Huntlnetoit lwcn 1nd Westmlrut1r .••••.•• , ............ I_. Sen Cllt'Nntl, c..,i1tr9"" llldl, $1n J11911 (lpl1ff"1111, 0.111 l"olnf, Sovlti Llt\llll, U.-Nlpwl ·::·..,,.... 4 Drown • Ill Texas Floods New Braunfel,s Deluged by 10 l1iclies of Rain Alblr1y. c.1t1r ,Aitll'ltl1 c.IOINIY lltlftMetMlll. CIO¥ilY IMIM+ deuaY '""""" (.ie.t" .... d•r • clMt .':"ii:::; Mltll u. rr. ... n )J . " ., # .Ot .. " " .. .. ll '~,' ~ .. ~ .10 H " g ll .. .. " r. .. y li H # II ,.,, " ':ll • ! MAllOMM •IAIHll •t l'llCI IOtfC AS1 11 7AM I $1 ) • Ii• 77 :10.ll rff·· !:;;!)JI,..!~/ ~'"""'°"'" U.rl.i l"•Jidl1 """&ud1 •1111 '" '#!ti !wlld 11• ''-tM IOU!llern Cellfoml1 ~11 tollleM -" s.fvf11ey mom!,,. 11111 •~ terlllJ llf'tU Wiii 1M1 WMl' 1M werm, ,.,.~ "'' TM N~ WMtMr SIN\te Mid ............... "' .......... \11111 bt S1 tfld "'9 Miii II"""' wlH .. 1 .. (Coa.staf '""''"°'11 and lldol dol4 oppear todow on Pag1 ll.J Freightei· Towed To Port-With Cargo of Dead MONTEVIDEO (UPI ) -A Brilish frei ghter with all 74 persons aboard fea red dead arrived in h1ontevideo under tow today following a collision with a Liberian oil tanker in the River Plate. Eight of th.e tanker's crewmen were missing alld presumed dead. The 10,292-ton freighter R o y s l o n Grange, described by authorities as a charred hulk of melted steel, was an- chored two miles out in Port Montevideo. Uruguayan C'Oast guard officials said the 220 degree heat in the hold prevented a search of the passenger and bunk areas, where most of the 6.1 crewmen and 11 passengers were sleeping when the col· lision occurred at 7 a.m. Thursday 2 a.m. (PIYI'). 'lbe Royston Grange was en route home with a load of frozen Argentine beef in its refrigerated hold when, ac- cording to one of the rescued crewmen from the 9,QOO.ton tanker Tien Cheung, it suddenly veered sharply toward the center o{ the river and its prow etruck the tanker amidships. The crewman, Lo Kam Wai of Hong Kong, said the freighter's wheelman apparently feared he was in danger of grounding. The crash touched off a raging fire on the Tien CheWlg, which was hauling 20 tons of crude oil. The fJJ'e engulfed both ships in names. Coast guard officials said the collision may have burst carbon monoxide tanks servicing the British sh.ip's refrigeration un its and that most aboard the freighter probably died of gas poi!!Oning. The Argentine coast guard cutter Delfin. which responded to the Tien Cheung's S.O.S., rescued all but eight of the tanker's 41 crewmen -Hong Kong and Nationalist Chinese who jumped from the burning ship. The eight were given up for lost. Cmdr. Luis Farraco Silva, chle£ o( search and rescue operations for the Uruguayan Coast Guard , said. "We presume, and we have adequate grounds for so doing, that all those aboard the Royrton Grange perished.'' The collision occurred 30 miles southwest of Montevideo off Punta Indio, 40 nautical miles from Buenos Aires. The Liberian tanker was being · towed to Buenos Aires today. Bombs Rip Army Base iii Europe Officer Killed FRANKFURT, Gennany (UPI) -U.S. military officials tightened security precautioM on bases throughout Europe today following a chain of e:c:plosionR which ripped through the headquarters oC the Army's V Corps Thursday night, kill· Ing ooe ofCice.r and injuring J3. An Army spokesman said commanders we.re instructed to take measures "ntctssary to insure the security of their lns1allations.'' including checks of license plates and identi!icatlon cards of all persons entering bases. The dead orncer was identified as Lt. Col. Paul Bloomquist, 39, of Salt Late Ci· ly, Ulllh. a member of the Army Medical S<rvlct Corpo. 'M'le of[lcer was killed when three bombo went off almosl slmulta.-slY near lhe l.G. Farben Building and the ad- jacent Terrace Officer's Club I n downtown Frankfurt. Police uld the bombs m1y have been planled by U.S. Amr/ delerlerL liam Kunstler. (Left to right, bottom), Bobby Seale, Lee Weiner, John Froines, David Dellinger and at· torney Leonard Weingla ss. Seale wa!i severed from the trial and tried separately. Chicago 7 Conviction Of Contempt Overruled By ROBERT BENJAMIN CHICAGO (UPI) -"l want to com· ment on this, your honor, because l think what you have just said is about the most outrageous statement J have ever heard rrom a bench, and I am going to say my piece right now, and you can hold me in contempt right now ii you wish to." U.S. District Court Judge Julius J. Hof- lman eventually did hold attorney William M. Kunstler in contempt for speeches like that one. He also meted out contempt sentences to Kunstler's fellow attorney Leonard J. \Veinglass. the "Chicago Seven" defendants they represented. and Black Panther leader Bobby G. Seale, whose case had been severed from the trial. On Thursday, the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overtl!rned the contempt sentences and ruled that those found gui lty of contempt by Hoffman should have jury trials -with the exception of one .defendant who received a term or leSs than the generally accepted six months for contempt. The Appeals Court ruled, J.O, that any contempt trials should be held before a different judge. U.S. Attorney James R. Thompson said the government would take tbo.se ruled as deserving of jury trials to court again. The judge's contempt sentences - ranging from two months and 18 days for defendant Lee Weiner to four years and 13 days for Kunstler -had been as con-. troversial, in and of themselves, as the rest of the trial. The "Chicago Seven" trial began Sept 24, 1969, with eight defendants. Jt ended Feb. 18, 1970. Seale was severed from the trial. He had been shackled and gagged for three days on Nov. 5. Hoffman gave him a four-year contempt sentence. Seale called the judge "racist •.• Fascist .•. pig" for not pennittlng him lo be represented by San FrancisC'O at- torney Charles Garry , who was ill at the start of the trial. But Seale's absence did not make the rest of the proceedings tranq uil. There was a brawl between the defendants and U.S. marshals: a birthday cake was brought into the court for Seale: the defendants tried lo drap the defense table \\'ilh the Viet Cong flag : Yippies Abbie Hoffman and Jerry Rubin sho\vcd up in judge's robes; and there was a rag- ing controversy about \\•hether the defen· dants should use the men ·s room in the hall or the one in the courtroom lockup. And attorneys Kunstler and Weinglas~ engaged the judge (who today is 76 and on senior status) vigorously about hi~ deci sion, claiming that the "atmosphere·• in Chicago led to the disturbances· at tht 1968 Democratic National Convention, for which their defendants were being charged with conspiring to incite riots. Teacher Won't -So Dad Does IL KESTON, England (UPI) -A rather became angered because a school head· mistress refused to punish his son \\'ith a cane. So he caned the headmistress. The story was revealed Thursday when Brian Draper, 37, father of seven children, was jailed for six mon ths for assault. He pleaded innocent. Prosecutor David Seddon said Draper's son had been barred from school dinners for misbehaving. The father then went to the school and suggested a caning would be a better punishment. Miss Beryl Biggs, the headmistress, told the court that she told Draper she did not cane children. "He then told me, "I'll cane you' and pushed me over a1 table and hit m• several time.s on the back with the cane," she said. S~hools Raided 59 Students Ride to Jail on Buses CllAITANOOGA , Tenn . (UPI) -11 was an unusual route for the two yellow school buses to be b"avellng. The road led to the city jail. The 59 students aboard the buses were part of 120 perllOll3 rounded up by police Thunday in the larstot drug rlld In Ttlr nestee history. "Ronny, Ronny. Oh, Sweet Jesus. Why?" implored one mother, tears streaming down her cheeks. A pretty blonde In hotponts ran to 1 heavyset woman with #Iott hair. "Mama, 1 didn't do it," &be cried . "J know you didn't, honey/' the woman repllcd. Undt......,. a1enu. uslaltd by student informcrr, allegedly made HO pun:buts of marljueoa, It of LSD, u of heroin and 32 of other .-led drugs from the studenu and 61 •dulu collared In the roundup. "We're not dealing with a tier ex· perimentm, with a .Uck of marijuana," DilRrict Attorney Gtnerll Ed Davis sai d. One investigator said he was offered 1.000 doses ol LSD from 1 single pusher for '310 . Another 11id one pusher or- fered to ..U him IO pouncb of marijUIDI for 1(,000. Using the IChool buses, pollce btpn the roundup of SUl(l<Cled drug pushers al 10:30 a.m. Visiting eight Junior and two senior hi.h schools, police turned over to the principals lists of suspects named in secret warrants issued after the 31,i month undercover investigation. ','The princi pal just sent ~ngers io the various classrooms aod asked the students involved to. report to the prtn.. cl pal's office," Police Commissioner Gene Robtm said. "When the students got to the office they were taken into custody." A sprinkling of students c r i e d throughoUI the ams! proceos, but mo•l laughed and clowned -until the p1tt11la reached the police station. E\len with lhe mw ll?TesU, Davia laid "only the surface of the trouble has been scratched. We have one hell of a problem here." Davis. who said there were m separale offenses listed in the In- dictment!, Indicated he felt authorities had been too lenient In Such Cl ... In tho post. "We've taken a son attitude on this long enough and it's lime we began to treat them like push<rs -that's what they art." he Rid. Juvenile Court Jadge Dhie Smith bu set 11lde two ....U. beginning May 21 to lry the juveniles. ' l ( r c 11 " r ,, 11 c 0 n c s n Ii " 11 ti " ,. ' ' " p g " " p w h r T SI u p it ti S: T w c I II • I Student Ecology Units Plot Strategy IQ Lower This Year SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Conserv ati on groups today planned legal strategy to halt the Al askun p1petl11e and at- l::icked the Interior Depart· 1nc nt for granting oil com· panic s a right-of-\v ay perntit for the n1ulLi-mi!Uon dollar project . Sierra Cl ub Executive Dir~tor J\1ichael l\1cClosk~y said the Thursday's decisi9n by Interior Secretary Rogers C. l\t. l\'forton Would lead to the .. \\'urst possible com- binat ion of long 'r a n g e " UP'IT ...... results. Free to Dusent F'ri~nds of lhe Ezirth, an oc- livc t:nviron nicntal group, said Capitol tour guides in Sacramento can wear "every legal strategy th at all the arm bands and might "'Ork" u•ould be Used to buttons they want as stop the construction. David far as the J oint Rules Brower, the group's president , Com mittee is con· called ii a "destructive, un-cerned. Members in an necessary project" that ,vould en1ergency meeting re- only lead to th e , , L 0 5 jected a move to stop Brett Marshall, shown, Angelesization ot America." from wearing hls anti· Bro\\•er said his organiza-\var symbol. tion, the \Vilderness Society,---'------- :ind theE n v i ro n me nta I Defense Fund \.\'ill \.\'or k togt:lhL·r to halt the pipeline. ~1cCloskey said the Interior Tk p:ir tn'K'nt decision will lead to .. !h() adn1illed dangers" of tn'1 rint> pollution and ac- celcrate the dep letion of U.S. oil reserves. In Hcllevuc. \Vi1sh .. officials of Alyc!'ka Pipeline Service Co. said construction of the sys ten1 cou!d not start unt il TIC'Xl yc::ir l>ecause of pending litiga tion. A si}Okesm.in for the rirm, ·which v.•as set up by seven n111jor oil con1panies to build ll1c pi1X'li11e. said the company \\'aS •·c1rcply com mitted to cunstructing and operating the safe st and most secure oil transportation system in the \\'Orld.'' l·le ~.:iid ''ever y prr caution will be taken to safeguard a g a I n st en- vir11n rnery tal r isks." The Sierra Club director gavt• a different opinion, sayi ng that T\lorlon ha s "chosen ::i short term ex· pedicnt \Vhich v.•ill confront us v.·ith the worst possible com- bination of long r a n g e resu lts.·• * * * New Charge To Be Filed In Accident REDWOOD CITY (UPI) - The San Mateo County District Attorney's office has an - nounced that aew charges of vehicular manslaughter would be lodged against a dentist married to a daughter of retired ~1afia leader JoM!ph Bonanno. Deputy District Attorney James Niven said Tlwrsday the new charge would be filed against Dr. Gregory W. Gen<r vese, Daly City, in South San Francisco Municipal Court and it would be based on "other evidence." A similar charge against the dentist was dismissed Wednes· day by Superior Court Judge W. Howard Hartley on grounds ~novese had been given a blood test without his consent. Club Wants Coast Vote S:\N FR1\1'lCISCO (AP) - The Sierra Clu b says it will st:1ge an,.., intcnsiv~ petition dri ve over t~e'-'b'eXt' month to put a coastal protection in- it ialive on the November elec- tion ballot. John Zierold. the club's Sacramento lobbyist. said Thursdav the club u·ould work with thC Coasta l All ia nce, a coalition of some 100 groups, to co\lec1 325,000 si~natures by the deadline of June 9. "The people will have t1> rnaC"t for themselves what the le.!!i!'!<'lture has refused to give thcn1:' Zierold told a news conference. He said the initiative would require the state to prepare a master plan for the preserva- tion of the co astal en- vironment. It would also create machinery to institute controls on development in areas 1,000 yards ln1and from the beach and three miles out to sea, he said. . The lobbyist said the pro- posed initiative would be almost identical to bills in- troduced by Assemblyman Alan Sieroty (0-Los Angeles), and Sen. Donald Grunsky (Jt. Watsonville). See If you've won this wee!L May 12 through May 18, 1972. 21 12 FREE 7 5 6 24 11 16 4 . 20 14 15 13 17 . ' .. 3 9 2 19 22 18 10 8 23 ' 25 • Pick up a Bingo Card from a /lllnola 60648. partlclpeling Shell dealer today or send a self-addressed envelope lo Department BFC #1. P. 0 . Box 279, Chicago, Every Shell Bingo Card Is• potential winner. So uve your carets-if one doesn't win this week, it could win next week. • r r!doy, Moy U , 1'7'2 • DAILY PIL'Jf (i Mills in MiM"le Severely Edited Of Women's Bill .Jurors to See Diary the Aug. 7, 1970 Marin County Civic Center escape attempt that ended in shooting and four deaths. by J ackson's atlomry, John Thorne. and ordered juror:s to return Monday -for whnt may be the l\'rnpup or th• state's cast. DeeRWell Ranch in Palm Sgrings. One qf the Nations finest investments. \.Vhen yo u lhink uf real estate investment, think of Decp\\lelt Ranch ;ind l'.llm Springs. You 1 .111 O\o\'n .1 !1Uperh new condon1init11n or lnd1v idu.U rcsiclC'11cP in thJI i,1hlt~l l,111d of Sunshine. f11 1t •y it .1s .1 pcnn.1ncnt la11 11c 11r a 1k•sert rclrt'.ll rr, lhf' <•;i.;i rst w.1y in th(• wnrld 10 s.ivc r111J1 11·y. And the n1o~t pli·.i,:ir1tl l'al111 Sp rinp:s: whi:·r1, :-;~1 11shinl' h.il hes thL• ;11r )'C',U·around. l)CC'PW<·ll R,1nch priv;1cy is n1 ;1in1.1ined wit h,, w>lll l'•I security entry. En joy 5win11ning :and tennis or rcl .1x in ste.1n1ing thf'r.1py pools. All yours Y.·11h. out work, ~incc hui!d1ng exlerior and grouni l 1n.1111tenan cc is prr1vidc<l. But hurry! Qv(•r S'i1/i n1illion \VOrlh of Dccp\Vcll Ranch hornc~ h,l\r .1!rt•.1Jy hc('n sol<l. Only 111 families wtll b1• .1ble lo rnjoy DcepWl'll R;inch invr stn1cnt. II,.. one or thl'm ! 2 & 3 Bedrooms, 2 Bilths:. fron 1 $51,950 fee simple. DeepWel.l. Ranch II. ~!Ol cf IN Wol~-.._ c......-...-i AlOOU: r_.,<o!_ Write r()( cornplelc infornu\lun ~ l~I Palm Canyon U11ve al DccpWcU ~ ~.~ Palm Spring~. Calirorn1.t 92262 The Smasher. Everything you want ·from wood and cant get from steel. Wood has always meant feel and control. Then, steel added punch and power to the game. But players using steel soon missed their old controL So, Spalding came up with the best of both worlds: the aluminum Spalding Smasher. The sheer power of the new, tempered with the reassuring feel of the old. An aluminum frame ior power and control. Strung conventionally so it doesn't cheat you of accuracy the way suspended- string arrangements can. Spalding Smasher. A powerful racket you can be friends with. /~umoii -----..... , 1 • MASH SIX FREE BAIJ~~-. 1 ; ~you buyyou•S~h;,~ll!~:.~~~: I I in thl1 coupon, thtn 1tnd It to u1 ailons later thanJunt: 9, 1972. Pluff allow two I with your u.111 n«lpL We'll thm tend you wttk1 for dtlivtry. I •Ut SpaldJ.nt: heavy-duty tmnl1 t,aU., • ~rel• celor preferNd: I I "'70ftlgalcdrctailvalat,ablolutcly£m! Wtltt• YtUow fuch1ll I I Name I I _,.,.,> I I Oty I•" ZIP I I !WMoh!Orewhm,..pardw<dyoarStMW< 11 I Pl..,. don't fot&fl lo attach yoar """ mdpt-llW of,.carmot be 1tonor•4 wtthoot IL Sf>AtDf NG I , • I ·L Stndcoapaund sales receipt to Spalding, P.O. Box1051, Pico Riven, C.lif. 90660 J --------------------------- r Spilding tennis products are at your local sporting goods store, department store or tennis pro shop. . ' _I 8 DAD.Y PllOT EDITORiil PAGE For, Truth • Ill Selling A "truth·ln·selllng" policy !or developers In the Capistrano Unified School District has been suggested by the Laguna Niguel lfomeowners' Association. II adopted, the policy would place the re>"Jionslbility for dispensing information about schools on the school district., not the developer or salesman in the tract office. Various methods of providinj information· to pros- pective home buyers in the school dJstrict exist. One adopted by the neighboring San Joaquin Elementary School District, is the placement of a large Poster in each tract sales office with a printed card attached ]isling the school which children from th,e tract will attend. its en· roUment, double-session prognosis, the number of port· able classrooms on the e:rounds. whether or not it will be considered for all·.vear school and other pertinent !acts. lf a new school site exists nearbv. it too is listed with the possible date of the school's construction and whether or not the district yet owns the site or has plans for it. In addition to all this, San Joaquin has provided written material listing all of its schools, their capacities, their attendance areas, and their double-session prog· nosis. lncluded in the materials is the phOne number of the distri ct office so furth~r information can be obtained. Fears have been expressed by some school officials that the district might be subject to legal action ii the information it provides fails to be updated. This seems a little far-fetched, particularly if the information ls periodically checked for accuracy. The suggested policy is a good one because it re· moves the responsibility for providing current school Why Latin Should Be Reinstated Dear Gloomy Gus (SYDNEY J. HARRIS)_ . Wouldn't it be great If the street sweeper followed the trash colle<:· tor! -F. C, Tlllt fl•lun r•llKI• n•dtrt• vi.wt, !'Ill MCffMrllt lhOM ., ltM -·-· kM ,..,r iM1 ,...... • OloMIY Gin. Dtllr f'U.t. Jf the Human Engineering Laboratory ln Boston Is to be believed, the un· derstanding of English words in the U.S. has persistently declined for the last 50 years, dropping at the rate of one point a )'ear on the laboratory's "general scale" of vocabulary. What is important about this, JI true, is that the laboratory 1 e es a one-to-one correlation betwee1 vocabulary and vi. olence : if the level of verbal expression is low, the only <lther form of expression is physical. A continuing study of some 50 years by this group lndJcstes t h a t violence and crime predominate among those who score low in "recognition vocabulary," es~lally of abstract words. Without the appropriate handles, it reports , "such abstract ideas as justice, honesty. per· sonal property. law. courtesy and thoughlfulnes.s for others seem impossi· hie to comprehend.'' Fascinatingly enough, the "level of education" does not play as important a part in augmenting vocabulary as we might Imagine. After the age of 12, roughly -judging by a study based on 29,000 persons -"neither high schools nor college contribute to E n g I l s b vocabulary." Anyone lislening to a group of "college-educated" businessmen or clubwomen nattering away at lunch would sadly have to agree with this. WHAT PARTICULARLY intere!!led me ln this study -apart from the menacing relationship between growing illiteracy and rising violence -was the flat state- ment by the laboratory that "with the fabul ous sums spent on education," the understanding of English words has declined in large part because of the removal or Latin from most school pro- gram!!. The number of years of Latin studied in school correlates with a large and exact English vocabulary, it was found : "The structure of English is Anglo-Saxon; but the words which give color ' to writing, and definition to thought . are Latin. The Latin language, though dead, furni shes a background for"English, a foundation on which to build." I HA VE LONG maintained this, although I had no real factual basis for my belief. The laboratory recommends unequivocally that ''to retard the downward trend of the U.S., reinstate Latin in the high school curriculum." (It turns out that even money earnings , with minor exceptions, have a high correlation with a background in Latin.) Everyone has remarked the difference in verbal levels between the average Briton and the average American; the former is far more fluent and expressive, more respectful toward precision and form in language; and th is flex;ible use of language may account in large part for the civility, the courtesy, the Jack of violence in British life. What the tongue can't articulate, the fist {or gun) is forced to express. Study of Humcin Society Anthropology, the study of the origin and development of man, is usually ttx>ught of as a scientific approach to primitive peoples. In fact. of course, anthropologists have come to reject the Idea that any group can properly be thought of as "primitive." Furthermore; anthropologists can be found studying the peoples of America, F'rance, England, and other highly advanced societies. This background conveys the depth and scope ol Prof. Jan C. Jarvie's book. The Story of Social Anthropology: The Quest to Understand Human Society (McGraw- Hill, $5.95). JN THIS NEW volume In the History of Science Series, the author sho ws how anthropology grows out of comparisons ind contrastl between one society and another; that contact o( cultures and .societies lllmulates reflection on why IOCial llfe ls ordered the way it is, and not tome other way. The book concentrates on three main aru1 of aoclety: religion and magic, family aod kinship, and IOCial control ( THE BOOKMAN) The former are seen as man's attempts to understand pnd master his sur- roundings and hfs life -precursors to science and technology. Family and kinshi p are the most widespread means of organizJng the groups necessary for social life. Social control is necessary because man lives in a hostile en- vlronrnent and must organize to survive. SOCIETY, THEN. is seen in !his book as the most aophlstlcated piece of man's technol~. But at the same time. social mechanisms work only because men ac- cept them as beneficial and co-operate . Failing this mutuafl.understandlng, social arrangements break down. Ur. Jarvie is .a.uoclate profeuor Of philosophy at York Univenity, Toronto. earou .. Harkl.....t B11 George--------.. Otar George: I have operated a filling station tor )'ears and am eolng broke becau" a new 1tatlon across the .street bu hlred female aervice at- tendants. 1bey wear abo'rts and haltm. What ..,, I do to fllbl lhls kind ol compeUtloa? OLD TIMER Dear Old Timer: Advertise tor some t o p I es s mechanics o·r cl3e Install a go-go car wash. !Wilen all other advice co)· umnists ha ve failed you, let George do il l He can fall )'OU better than anybody in ~ tntlr1 rackel) • \ • information from the salesman ,lo the school districl We encourage its adoption. Laguna 2s Ahle Citizens When the J"'1gunat '!leach Planning CoJUmlsslon 1 i;ought city council autho'rization to appoint citizen com- mittees to help review eleme_nts of the General Plan, the council went a step fun.her and told the commisSion to appoint as many citizen commJttees as needed to speed Its 'labors. In recent years, Laguna has had very good luck with this procedure of appointing sn1all committees to zero in on knotty problems, help get them unsnarled and guide them through legislation. Latest is the Main Beach Liaison Committee, as· signed to work with the Beach Park design team throughout design and construction of the park. The Coastal Development Committee iS' studyi ng goal!! for the important property south of the Main Beach and will maintain liaison with property owners and develop· ers. Earlier, the Main Reach Development Committee and the Library Committee did yeoman work on their projects. ' Committees of this type can s a v e an enormous amount of time by gathering background material, cut· ting through red tape and eliminating duplication of effort. ' It's another unique advantage of having a town ' peopled with able, civic-minded citizens, willing to give time and talent for the benefit of the community. s ~CHEER UP, PADDY. ODDS ARE IT WAS A BRITISH BUllET~ Family Car Killed Public Tra1asportation Opposed to Mass Transit To the Editor: Re: Letter, ''Support Mass Transit," by Fern Pirkle (Mailbox, .May 4). Forty years ago every city of any size had public transportation that was ef· ficient and inexpensive. When I first came to Long Beach as a bride, one could stiU tide lhe bus for a nickel! But as cars became more plentiful and priced so that more people could a[ford a car, and then as people began moving to tht: suburbs, the transit systems could no longer operate as economically as before because they had lost lbe bulk of their riders. Once people experienced the great con· venience ()f stepping into their cars at their door and riding directly to their destination, the buses lost their populari· ty. I WHO WANTS TO walk several blocks to a bus stop, with another wa lk at the end of the ride, and probably transfers from one bus to another on the way? And at the height of bus travel during peak hours having to stand swaying in the aisle because all the seats were taken? We have become too spoiled by the ad· vantage of going in our own cars, com- fortably and conveniently, to want to go back to public transportation on a scale to make rapid transit feasible. Now the only ones who would support a transit system are the aged, and those who can- not afford to own a car, and they are not always financially able to pay the high rares to ride the buses. IT HAS BEEN suggested that another tax be added to the price of gasoline to subsidize the public transportation and rapid transit systems. This pu ts an unfair burden on those who are already bearing the cost of their own vehicles, plus the cost of operating, upkeep, and insurance. Public transportation died a natural death v.'ith the advent of the "family car." Please don't try to revive it at taxpayers' expense. IF it can be done, let free en· terprise do it! PAULINE E. MOEN Agrees With Nlxo11 To the Editor: f just listened to President Nixon's speech regarding the war in Vietnam and our mining the port or Haiphong. A!! an American, l was in accord with every word he said. HaVe no fear that Russia or Red China will retaliate against the judgment of our President. In the first place, both Russia and Red China gained their power and maintain their power without honor . They rule through fear and oppression like a gangster mob rules a territory through threats of violence aga inst honest, God· fearing people. BECAUSE OF TIUS 1hallow foundation or strength to rule, wl)en It comes kl a real crisis they have only one course to follow and that is to turn tall and run. No, never in the history ()f the world has the real villain against the 1'ood of TQ&nkind ever won out. The judgment of our President , Who reprc,sents the• people of America , wlll pi;evoil !or the good -of all free peojft throughout the "orld. • GRANT HARDING PHILLIPS . Thfnk About It To the Editor: The sky now Is black, many rivers are dead . millions of cars, planes, boat!, fec· torics are contHbuting to our pollution. A smog alert rings, school children must go Into the school rooM. This Is not the future -It Is right now. Man Is destroying the world .. Man and animals are going to die unless we .St<lp pollution now! The lactories ca ll)W down the r•te of pollution and we: can atop it. ft will cost money and tlrnt. We must 1t<lp it now befort time run1 out. ( __ MAIL_B_ox_) Lettfl'I tn111 ,..1d«1 •n -k-. Hllrfnll!Y wrlf9n IMllld nnvey !Mir '" ....... Ill lOI WWII• •r Ins. the rlt lll .. ~w lttttrs fl tJt •9CI tr 1Hmh11t. llkl h N Ml'Vtd, AH ltthin ll'llllt 1 ... ell.Nit 1lt111111r1 l'IMll m1IH111 eHr"'' IHtl &1111u ,..., H wllll~tlll "' rl'lffll It wttkltlll rn-I• ...... f'tllt, f'Htrt Wiii Ml IN "Ml ....... When it comes to decide what to do about pollution, think about it. DOUG PARRY Age 14 6asoHne Prfring To the Editor : r was very interested in recent com- ments on ou·r retail gasoline prices in the Orange Coast area . Perhaps I should explain first that we have no control at all over the retail gasoline prices that are charged at Chevron Dealer stations. The dealers are independent businessmen and set their own prices according to their own best judgments. That accounts for some of the price differences you have noticed between stations. The only statiows where we can set the retail price of gasoline are our own company· operated Standard Stations. And even there, prices often differ from one station to the ne1t, according to the market conditions in the area ser\l'!d by each station. To run a sound business, we must stay abreast of market conditions and keep adjusting to them constantly. Our prices, therefore, cannot always be the same from one station to the nert -or even from one da y to the next. R.A. VANDEHEY Manager Customer Assistance Western Operations, Inc. Marketing Department Standard Oil Co. ot Ca!il., Concord Defends Chiropractors To the Editor: Re : Jean Crum, M.D. vs. Chiropractic -Dr. Crum seems to take great delight in continuing the big lie about chiroprac- tors. tt is ln lerestlng (and infuriating) at times to see what many misguided people do to make a point about which they have strong feelings. They take certain ideas and use them to illustrate their point, meanwhile carefully ignoring I h e other side of the coin which may detract from the believability of their argument. Emotion takts over, logic and true facts ny out the window. DR. CRUM KNOWS that the chiroprac- tors are well trained In all the basic sc iences and must diagnose and treat the sick according to state law. His argume nt • Is the 11me old rreha.sh of the meQ.ical (A.M.A . .C.M.A.) mooopqty. It Is shameful that chiropractors are · not on the 1taU or every state and county bosplW and all Jl\ll111c lnstitutlOnl. Many oripplld chltdreo .iire denied th~ very tfiie aiMt -sclenUCic treatment. Throo,~ hlgh·powered pollliC!I and the gr .. t medical lobby, the elderly people ire denied the right to chiropractic medlcare. Why is thb allowed to continue in • great free America! ls this a pert tl( our clvll rlghta? , GEORGE H. STRICKER Or. Jean F. Crum fs prt1ident o/ the Coll.fornia Medical Association. -Editor c..,,, Sereeelt, M-11 To u,. Editor: Wily 1r1 ao many rldlo •lotions foolishly playing rock-and-roll today? The reason Is actually quite simple. Rock-and- roll as bad as it is , has somehow mysteriou sly produced an enormous listening audience. But who ls listening to !his rubbish? It is the manipulated youth of our nalion who feel they have to be total duplicates or their beloved peers. The youngsters of this country appear to be mere computers v.·aiting ignorantly for their peers to program them. FURTHEM10RE. the tenn "rock music" is completely inappropriate. Probably the perfect name for it is .. rock sewage." By the use of these two fan- tastic words, a person is not only able to vividly give another a picture of "rock- and-roll," but can instantaneously e1plain exactly what it smells like as well. You are probably wondering why 1 ()m itted the word music and substituted the most appropriate word in its place, I did this because rock-and-roll is not music . Rock-and·roll is a cry, a screech, a moan. a groan, a dirge, and a gasp. "Rock-and-roll" is no more music than l'm Christopher Columbus. IT HAS OFTEN baffled me how many ()f today's youth can sit listening to such CRAZY trash for so long. It is truly !rightening to contemplate. Most likely, programmed young~ters will disagree with much or all of this. But, unfortunately, their disagreement demonstrates how et f e ct iv e I y pro- grammed their computers are. Isn't it pitiful? TERRY J, NIENHUIS Kids Shun Water To the Editor : The recent hullabaloo concerning fluoride in city water (San Clemente ) and the coming vote in the west Orange Coun- ty cities is ridJculous! Has anyone lately seen a child take a drink of water? Not I. In the years when we had kids at home I prayed that they would, just once, pass up the fr ig and try a glass o( water. Believe me, it never happened. It always had to be milk, Koolade, Coke, pop or just ;'anything" but plain water. "Gee not water, it tastes funny.'' "If it's ·so good for you, you drink it, Pop." "We notice you put Scotch or Bourbon in It to drink it." THE ONLY TIME the kids get a serious look at drinking water is at school, looking through the mJcroscope at "the funny bugs in the stuff," I don't blame them for not drinking the stuff. (In six months in the European countries I never drank tap water, used Solari and La Casera, as the best bottled waters, or San Miguel beer or Scotch), What'!! to blame? If the dentists want fluoride to enter the mouths of babes then why not put it In candy, cereal, cakes and pies? Maybe hot dogs? Hamburger? Fiuorlde doeSn 't help after age 1$, I've been told by the dentists, and besides rm not sure It would help my dentures. And ' Quotes Etbel Wa&era, li.qCT', 1ctre11. on Calli. evang:ellltk:-tour -"I've been called a star, you know, but •star's' just 1 nicer wont f<lr sen-ant, baby. It's tbose people ()Ut there in the audJt:nce what pays your salary." Seo. M1rprel Chott Smid! (R·Mallle), 111ftlfa1 lier on q11 .. lloe of w!ry die Seaa&e doe1 ant act on abseDiffitm - "Because lhe SeMle ls a club of prim.a donnas intensely self-<>rlented -99 kings IDd ..,. queen -d<dleated to thctr own penocal 1ccnmmoclatJon. '' • I ., Subsidy what percent age of the people are under 15? Or do we count the dogs, cats. horses, etc ?? BILL HEARD Lag1111a'• Free Cli11ir To the Editor: The Laguna Beach Free Clini c has received a "shot in the arm'' and it 11 just what the doctor ordered to perk up all ()f our regula r \'Oluntcers, wh ich in· eludes our medi cal and adm inis lrative staffs, for the big job ahead of gelling settled in our new home a n d simultaneously providing service as usual . The Rx was the enormous support from the community that surfaced when wa were searching for our new quarters, the help provided in gettin g il together, and the heartwarming participation and al· tendance at our open house, whi ch we celebrated jointly v.•i th the new South County Regional Service Center on May 1. WE HOPE OUR community knows how grateful we are and how encouraged we feel. Yt'e thank Mrs. Leslie Bell. who headed the marvelously capable and ef· ficient volunteers who arranged the open house event. We tha nk the Laguna restaurateurs who graciously provided the food. We thank the busy Orange County Health Department and Laguna Beach city officials who took time to participate in the event, and certainly '(lie thank the many Laguna residents who showed their interest in our effort by their attendance and our Laguna press for the excellent newspaper coverage or it all. Those who were unable to come to our celebration and are interested in knowing what we are trying lo do and what we are doing at the Free Clinic are always welcome, either to just look or to help us. Our new home is at 460 Ocean A venue ( 49j.()76 t) . BERT ALTEMUS Chairman, Board of Directon Laguna Beach Free Clinic Valuable Respo11se To the Editor : The South County Regional Service Center would like you to know how much we ~ppreciate your coopera tion in in· forming the community bf our new quarters at 670 S. Coast Highway and our open house, which we celebrated jointly with the Laguna Beac h Free Cl!nlc on May 1. J?le interest and res ponse from your articles have been valuable to us in our effort to assi!it those who need the services we can provide. Thank you for your help , WILLIAM ROU'IT, M.D. Director South County Regional Service Center OltANGI COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Wttd, Pub /Uher Thoma..s Kttvfl, Eciil<lr Alber t \V. Botti Editorial Page Eduor The editorial .P&Rt or the Olllly Pilot •t:-eks to lnlonn 11..nd 1llmu· late reader• by vtt1cntinr this newapaper's opinions 11.nd cl'lm~ menUU')' on topics of ln1orc1t a.nd algnlflcanc:ct, by providing a fnrum for ~ht ttXJH'tulon of our tt11ders' oplru()ns, and by Prl'!M'n.tlng the divcne vifl'i''PQlntt of informed ob-serwrs and 1pokcsmtn on topics ol tht dly. Frid.ay, May 12, 1972 • ' Ins mo us pe wa pa to spi ag ce kn die spi ve ma sta No wit b ica wit pr pat the ten ba act mo !er 6. p the po s • • A m s is tu ha w fo ti a c • • L. M. Boyd Harpists Usually Young and Pretty . ~1ost harpist& own not just one but two of those $3,500 instruments. They, the harps, weigh 220 pounds each. And most harpists -exactly 95 out of 100, ln fact -are girls, usually slender pretty things. Almost all possess great ap. peal to members of the opposite sex. That's good. No lady harpist would get far without the help of men. IF YOUR dad told you to go get the snath under the soffit, what would you look for and where? So inquired a Montana client. Shrug. B4t research illuminates. I'd check the little closet beneath the hall steps. A soffit is the underneath side of a staircase. A snalh is the handle of a scythe. WHAT YOU suffer from, my little wallflower, is lalophobia, if you're afraid to spea k up at parties. Prevalent ailment, this. Most common treatment to date is self-administered measured doses of medicinal spirits. But that 's bad. Knowlegeable doctors advise against it. STOCKS -Women in general tend to be more suc- cessfu l than men in stock market investments, that's known now. A study at the University of Oklahoma in- dicates such. HOW CAN you call yourself a connoisseur of fine spirits if you're not familiar with Reverendine and Con- vent? The sacramental wi nes. THIS NOTION has been traditional among the movie makers: That almost any girl looks good coming down stairs. And almost none looks good going up. Exceptions? None, they say. PHOTOS -Most analoriiV textbooks are illustrated with pictures of naked men aiive or otherwiSt;!. Such has been the custom. That, too , is changing. About 20 med- ical sc hools, it's now reported, want anatomy textbooks with pictures or nude women . This is not the whimsical preference of scholars who like girlie photos, oh no. Most patients arc fem ale. Thus, it's clear the medical students, they themselves insist, should concentrate their ea rly at- tentions on the female body. Certainly. JN WASHING the hands, a man tends to rub the soap back and forth between his palms quickly with a piston action while a woman is more apt to rub it in a rotary motion. IN TREffi choice of instruments. music students pre- fer : 1. Piano. 2. Guitar. 3. Violin. 4. Accordion. 5. Clarinet. 6. Trumpet. 7. Flute. 8. Trombone. 9. Drums. 10. Saxo- phone. In that order. DID I ltfENTfON there are 30 times as many deer in the country now as 35 years ago? Addres s mail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0 . Box 1875, New- port Beach, Calif. 92660. Special Olympic Preview-May 7 A FAMILY WEEKLY Report: America's Best Bets to Win 1972 Olympic Medals Larry Bortstein's essay on the young Amer icans most capable of "grabbing the gold" in the 1972 Summer Olympics is the cover story tor the May 7 issue of FAMILY WEEKLY magazine. For this fea- ture, Bortstein chose seven ath letes who he fe els have to be at or near the top of everyone's list of potential first-place Gold Medal winners in Mun ich, West Germany, August 26 to September 10. Look for rundowns on the pa st performances , t he aspira- tions, capabilities and handicaps of the young men and women he predicts will prove themselves world champions. • CELEBRITY PROBLEMS -Amy Vanderbilt, bearer of an honored American surname and famous in her own right, too. tells of the pleasures -and the pains -that go with being a celebrity. • THE CARPENTERS -Music's richest family act is the brother-sister team of Richard and Karen Carpenter. Their fame and its attendant fortune have come so fast that these young people hardly realize they're superstars. _All Coming Sunday With the STUWS, CUPS PAPER PLATES ' 100 6" plates, 50· 7 Ol. loa m CUP"· ~50 o;traw s. 39~ RODDY 1 GALLON CAMPER'S FUEL ~or stove5. lantrrns or catalytic heat - ers. Red rnPtal cnn- tainer with handl~. 79c 3-SPEED CONTROL G.E. MIXER h~~·'l•P r~"!ln( •n· t ·- fi"~· '!I 11ftg "'" ~~ ":. Pu•n ~11tton D•a1•r ~ tnr. M ll. 9ss 1 r rld1Y. MIY 12, 1972 DAIL V PILOT 1 OPEN SATU•AY 11L 9 PM-PRICES GOOD SAT., MAY 13111 ONLY· BOLD PRICE SLASHING ON MOST WANTm ITEMS THAT .EVBIYONE NHDS •.. DON1 MISS OUT ON THESE G~EAT MOTHER'S DAY GIFT BUYS! ' . ' , I J·, . I --'~·--·~ ' t • I •. ~ ·~-. "'\') -• < ,. ~ .. -.......... • 34-PC. BROOKPARK DINNERWARE FOR 6 ~~ .. ~~.B.~~~~d~•~AM~m~~"~'""' "'"'' 99 !or Pveryday U~f'. altract1ve enoue.~ !or ~pec1al ncrac;:nn· W 1 d~ a'sortmPnt of rolor~ and pattPrn . • 10 LB. BAR·B-QUE ALBERTO BALSAM ULTU·SHEER PANTYHOSE WOMEN'S· TEENS' TERRY CLOTH SCUFFS Charcoal BRIQOETS 12 OZ. CONDITIONER Quick lighting. long lao;ting, llOt burn- ini:; du sl!e~~ bri- • QUl'l'i. • 58c lmes hair healthy, 1 09 soft. manageable. In rPgu!ar. super, e~tra. flody. Save now! Sheer flattery in 1 5 I c ~trefch sizes. F~~h- 100 tones of beig e, - ~pice, coffee, grey. PR . Colorfol cottn~ !Pr'¥ uppl'r~. foam ( u -~•on· PO r1~oe ~nl...,.. $11''" !n JO in a";11i!•d Clll\i! •• 88~ ~,, .. n •or .IVAllllr II IN lfJC• .. TOIH•Cf !~DIS ·~1 JVlllllll 11 ll~I 1£&CW ~I lOUINCI DELUXE 20-IN. CUT POWER MOWER Special buy . Powertul rotary mower fea- tures 3 HP Briggs & Stratton eng ine with sta ndard r~coil starter. Controls on handle, heavy gauge steel deck and dis- charge chute .. 6" wheels. Super value on a super mower t #I 00 .-----, ,----, r--.-ST-0.,11 HOUU: OAll f ANO SAT. 10 AM TO 9 rM • SUN. 10 TO 7 • THfll 'S A WHITI f •O ;.H~f~H;f§A~· ;;f O;U~l'.::rooli'Giiiuffliiijijl~>o(il I D1&1IV p1•·01 J le CHAIGllT ... WFCUDITCA M L~ a; ::=,~=~-~=·::...~:==:::;::::::::::: :~?.\~~~ .... ·- , .... ••~!("l ( .. 'ftlllll(llliffttlH t ' I DAILY PILOT Frld11, M11 12, 1972 Lobbying 'Misunderstood' Tijuana Await,s Echeverria TIJUANA, Mezioo (AP) -/rom El Cipres mi J l tar y He arrives at 4 p.m. Snturda)' A twnultuous welcome is airfield north into Enaenada, in Tijuana. No Payoffs or Blondes-A1iy1nore-Say Lawmakers being prepared for President &n advance spokesman said. The party will tour the ·ri.. Luis Echeverria At var e z , r th whose visit Saturday is his A prtsidential motorcade juana River area o e pro- By SUSAN SWARD SACRAME~"l'O (AP) Some Colifor:via legislators t h I n k the voters llavc a very old-fashioned conc;ept of lobbyisls-imagining them often ilip- ping money to a Jav.•maktr or providing a floshy blonde for the night. Not so. say the majority or legh1lators Int erviewed. While infl uence peddlln1 by ·~ ID-t,erest groupt 11 1tron1, 111• ~acramento IA ltt:':far remo treiil the doys when Artlo Slmllb, klll(l>ln of lobbyists ii\ lhe l!HOJ tnd 'IOlt bouttd he controlled the Le11llatun. In his autobiography, Sam111t recalled that era fondly, telllnl ho" be kept "block books" on U. tloin11 ol ,...,, state senator and assemblyman. "IT ALL WENT into those black books," Samish wrote. "Come election time . they co uld prove mighty handy." Assemblyman Walter Karabian, a ilonterey JJark Democrat who's been in the .Legislature for six years, said the public today "grossly exaggerates" the r o I e 56.S registered lobbyists play in Cali/ornla government. "People believe that lobbyisis control legislators,'' Karab lan said in an in· tervicw, "but even the legislators with the lea st amount of guts aren't controlled like puppets. Most people think lobbyists represent pople that are very bad, but we simply live in a world where special in-- teresl groups organize and h a v e legislative representatives." Former Assembly Speaker Jess Unruh, Democratic head or the lower house from 1961 to 1969, said he thought some ifl.. stances of blatant lobbying ''go on in the best-0 egiSJitures-aM -1 thin Cal ifornia is the best legi slature in the nation." Unruh added that he felt the press had failed to do a quality job of reporting on lobbying-"only putting the stick in the pot and stirring a little until the smell rises and then going off and looking fOr another smeUy pat." ~1ANV LEGJSl.ATORS will tell an ln- terviewer-streSJing "this is not for direct quote"-that while morals ha ve changed and it's rarely necessary to purchase sex anymore, a few legi slators still oc· c11lon1lly t1ke a bribe. Moot 11y th•y only know of 1u<h lot> bylllf technlq1tt1 1econd-hond. A1 one ltllllltor put It, "I '11,vt heard m.n · •ar111e1 "" '''" ,..,. J11111 -ln1I .. • ,Jlmltell ...... , ........ , ..... """' on the old uiholesale pat• tern.' sources who should know that It can hafr" pen-on a limited rttail basis rather than on the old wholesale pattern." The pall cast by the Samish era still hangs heavy, though, and the whole issue of lobbying-and if it works as it should-remains touchy. Democratic Sen. Randolph Collier or Yreka, a 34-year veteran of the Legislature and one of the most po\verful senatoni during Samish's reign, refused to talk about lobbying at all. The white-haired, ruddy-faced legislator shook his head and said that when hls niece tried to interview him about lobbying for a political science paper, he "kicked her out" or his office. TWO PIECES of legislation are held primarily responsible for the evolution in }Qb_by..lng Jdyle ovn the last two decades. One is a 1949 law requiring paid lob- byists to register and state for whom they work and how muc h they spend on their job. Last month, for example, lobbyists spent $138,795 on food, liquor, parties and COMING SOON TO SANTAANA Our beautiful new 100,000 square foot outlet in Santa Ana, will be one of the largest and most modern building supply centers in the notion and will offer the world's largest selection o f building ; materials under one roof~ over 100,000 builder and do·it·your· self items! "Angels Sells for Less" because of its tremendous pur· , chasing power, control of its own distribution facilities, its own import division, and its own wholesale marketing divisio n sup· plyi ng many other retail organizations. Yes, you con b uy for less at ANGELS, because you ore vituolly buying at wholesale. But, if you are a dealer,.;.. ntUSf insist that you bring your resale permit. WORLD'S LAllGIST llTAIL OUTLIT FOi •LUMBER •HARDWARE •PLUMBING •PAINT •ELECTRICAL• NURSERY •SMALL APPLIANCES •HOUSEWARES •COMPLETE BUILDING SUPPLIES OVER 100,000 DO -IT· YOURSELF ITEMS A Division of DayJin, In c. 3309 SOUTH BRISTOL, SANTA ANA NEAR BRISTOL AND McARTHUR Check Regular Wffktnd Specials at: GARDEN GROVE I HUNTINGTON BEACH 12662 CHAl'MAN 7800 EDINGER 100 YdL Eut of Harbor 11¥<1. Ono Block Well of Booch Bl•d. other expenses to influence legl.!latlon. The other measure, passed in 1966, allowed legislators to increase their own salaries-rather than going to the voters each time-and to hike the size of their staff salaries. These measures had the collective er. feet of making the Legislature a more in· d~pcndent .body, o~ IQ', capable of depenchng ltM pn lobbyists for in· form.1t lon on bUla. TBl!lY AFFICI' tllo 'lillolt -r•na• of people ca"* tht"*1YW '..0bbyist1" In the Capitol, fllllllnl .u Ille "" '"'"' student and. ecoqy group lobbylltt wllo work for small retainer• or u_penae allowances up to an •1114 CO<PI Qf II"" fessionals who are paid more than Gov. Ronald Reagan's $49,100 annual salary. Republican Assen.blyman John L. E. "Bud" Collier, author of the 1949 Lob- bying Act . says no law can stop all im- proper lobbying. "If anybody wants to make a con· tribution, all they have to do is give cash in private and nobody can accuse you of anything. You can't legislate morality," the Los Angeles legislator said. The biggest tool the lobbyists wield today, observers agree, is the campaign contribution. Sarnish turned campaign funding i'nto a major tool for power-in what he called his system of "select. and elect"-by stepping into the void created by the lack of formidable state political machines. THIS VEAR Secretary of State Ed- mund Brown Jr. ordered lobbyists to report the source or all funds they con· tribute to election campaigns. This move ls .to P.revent them from cloaking the con· tr1but1ons under Uieir own names. Most legislators say they get about 10 percent of their campaign funds from lob?ying interests that range to big business concerns such as oil companies and railroads. Veterinary Program Scheduled UC Irvine's College of Medicine and the Sc hool of Veterinary Medicine tit UC Davis will present a short course Saturday and Sunday for veterinarians on proper care of seriously ill ahimals. The course t i t I e is "Cardiovascular . Respiratory Function and Structure as it Relates to Intensive Care and Anesthesia in the Veterinary Hospital." Extension credit is offered. The studies aim to upda te available information on the function and structure of the cardiovascular and respiratory s y s t e m s in animals, said William J , Winchester D.V.M., coordinator or Veterinary Medical Education at UCI. India Murders CALCUTTA (AP) -There \Vere 1,751 political murders in the Indian state of West Bengal between 1969 and last February, the state govern-- ment reported. • ' UPI Ttl..,.... Yesterda11'• Star From 1919 to the 1930's Pola NE:gri \Vas a big movie star. She was once a princess, and her name had been linked romantic· ally with Adolph Hit· ler. Today, at the age of 72, she lives like a hermit in plush town· house in San Antonio. She's shown in 1922 photo. Citizens Protest-· No Taxes PRINEVILLE, Ore. (AP) - Citizens are so unhappy that city property taxes have been set at zero for next year that a city council committee is look~ ing for projects that would re- quire expeditures -and a tu. The budget committee re- jected a proposed $1.7 million budget and scheduled a hear· ing on the ne\v plan for next week. A hearing this week brought numerous complaints about the elimination of the property tax and city hall has received about 50 similar telephoned complaints since then , City Administrator Jim \Vatson said. City taxes jn this central Oregon town of 4,100 were $1.35 per $1,000 property value this year, making taxes on a $20,000 home $27. The vast bulk of the town's operation budget is covered by fines, forfeited bail, licens e and franchise fees and income from the City of Prineville Railway. The 13-mile city-ow ned railroad , which handles short lumber and produce hauls, is expected to add some $150,000 to the city CQffers next fiscal year - a bit more than usual -and no taxes are needed. Prineville schools a r e financed through a separate, property tax. When word of the zero tax levy got out, people began complaining to City Hall. .,_ j begins the next day, taking posed flood control channel. wat to Ba a California. sinct Echeverria to Tecate and 1-ionday. Jinal day of the stal e campaigning in 0 e c ember · vi'so't, wo·11 be spent in ~1exica1L )......, tours of public work.! proJects. ~. .~::.:.::..!:::::.::..::::.:--:::=:::::::::::::::::::=:=:::;::;::;::;:: An entourage of J~ personsl" including 7S newsmen and photographers will accompany the Mexican president. His jet was \o 1.il\~ today al Cedros 1lllnd aboUt •miles south of Ifie U.S. bonier. After j · britf visit \Vilh flaben:MI\ Ind 1 a 1 t w o r k _..lon"'f!ll tht is I and, = plans to fl y to wUh Gov. 1'1illon Cut naa Everado of Baja C.l~ornla. · in.u.anu cf persons are expected to line the high~ay Conductor Selected SAN JOSE (AP ) -George Cleve, 35, conductor of the Berkeley Free Orchestra and classical music director of radio station KPFA in Berkeley, will become con· ductor of the San Jose Symphony Orchestra July t. Edward Meece, president of the San Jose Symphony Association, said the Vienna- bom Cleve was selected from more than 200 applicants and given a three-ye ar contract. .....;__~~~~~~~~~. WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF LAW Of ORANGE COUNTY now .accepting men and women who .11re either: • •¥11 11 wilt! 2 Y'"' •I u<•pl•~I• 1•ll*f• crtlflt• t•Oli •• • ... ., 23 iftll h1vt •tl•lfttlf !ft .,.,,,.ftt ift· ltl'4od11•1 1~1llly !tit ••whr•l•ftl ti •IMY• (to ~ ...... ,.,lftlHI lioy 19•11 Tht J.O. 01 lLB. d~r" <tl'I bt •1111td lfl .C yttt5 ol p•1t·f~m1 clu11" 3 cl11111 ptr wttk; 3·.C hou11 P" <Ins. A 5pt(i•I "'oV••m of thrn clu1t1 on S1turd1y b 1v1llab!1 for flr1l·y•tr 1tud111t1.. Apply Now for September 7th Day or Evening Classes WllTf 01 l'MONf fOl INfOlMATION 01 CAT.llOGUf 800 South Brookhurst Anaheim 92804 17141 635-3 453 Gr•Ou11t1 1r1 eligible to ttkt th. C1llforfli1 Sr1re Bar E~1min•1;011. l'lOY'ISIONAU.Y ACClHllTIO IY 1Hf CAUfOINIA COMMIITTE Of AAI IX.lMINllS JUlY 1, lt72. • A1PIOVIO fOI \lfTllANS • Our GiftF or MOilier THIS WEEKEND ONLY HANGING LAMP TIFFANY LAMP Follo\\1ing styJ~: Play· Ing Card. Fruit, Cocoa Cola, Floral, Banana. R.,.. $49.95 ' 'Q;2163 I Coto1·;, P.<'<l, c;,.,.,.,., j Gold, YC'llfl\I. \\'hill', • OrangC', \Valnul. R09. $48.05 ELECTRIC & LIGHTING 222 Victoria St., Costa Mesa (Across from GrMnh1ven Nursery) Phone 646-3737 -IAllMl:ttUll -• •" ' I~ ,. CONVENIENT LAYAWAY PLAN II ·"~ ·:1 I 1 ' )I; ' I ' VICT "" ST WOW! fr 'A!lie<I Elecf~ic t.Li_g/Jfi11s , • • l ' ' • • • • • ., ' '• Del Taco -Sonia Ana Del Taco -Anaheim Doi Taco -Fullarton Del Taco -Buena Pa rk 2320 E. 4th Street 430 S. Euclid A•e. 2408 E. Chapman AYO. 3060 W. Lincoln at Newport Frwy. near Broadway at Stale College Bl•d. near Beach Blvd. Doi Taco -Stanton Doi Taco-Garden Grove Doi Taco -Newport B11ch 12100 Bt1ch Blvd. 13242 Harbor Blvd. 2112 Brl1tol St. (P1U11dea Rd.) nur Gordon Grove Frwy. n11r Ctmpus Ori•• - QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi '.'tO ...... ··Po . I have anything·?· And spare me the 'Are you · k1dd1ng ' line ... " Given Life Mother's Day Observed • By Orphans in Mexico '"ENSE N"AlJA' -( A P ) itother 's Day "'as something special for 92 boys and girls "'ho live on the ranch- orphange operated by the Rev. and l\lrs. C. E. Freeze. None of their molhers were present but the children of the Door of J<,aith Orphanage celebrated the Mexican holi- day. as if they were. The youngsters include some born to prostitutes in Tijuana -infants rescued fro m the discard dump in that border city. A fel\' \\'ere simply aban- doned or taken lo the orphanage by parents '''ho promise to return "'hen times get better. "They almost never come back.'' said l\lrs. Freeze. .. Sometimes. they "'ill come 10 VNITED STATES NAT IONAL BANK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH NOW OPEN SATURDAYS 9 to 1 P.M. MON.·THURS. 10·5 l".M. FRIDAYS 10-6 l".M. (7141 540°5211 . Located 111: So. Coast l"lcno, Coate Mn11 H. M. STOLTE visil, ut may onlyonce a year." In retirement from missionary work at Puerto Rico, the Freezes opened a sm all church in Tijuana in 1962. ~1r, Freeze recalls: ''There "'e sa w these helple.ss children on the street. They were hungry, ragged, begging and stealing." The .mayor of nearb y Rosarito Beach found a place with low rent. and the Freezes collected unwanted beds, cook- ing supplies and provisions throughout California. Freeze says: ''We took in eight children at first. Then there were 15. and we had to move to a bigger house." The one-time dude ranch which they finally found has been turned into a tidy orphanage which California church groups and others sup- port a few miles inalnd from La Pi1ision. just north of Ensenada in Baja California. There are college students from as far ay,•ay as Ohio who make pilgrimages to help out. Navy dentists from San Diego make regular visits, and an officer \Vives club is con- tributing costs of a new patio. Freeze's son, Van, and daughter-in·law now carry on the responsibilities with the he lp of several other volu nteer Americans. The children are Jess than 8 years old when the Freezes accept them, but "'ith good behavior stay as many years as they desire. The oldest boy is 18. The youngest are l4-- month-0ld twins. N·udeg Gambol on Beaches LOS ANGELES (AP) - Nudes ma;y not oulllumber scuba divers and surfers on (;alifornia's public beaches. bot they definitely, ah, are Senators Approve Shuttle bqlnnlnf! to be """· On warm weekends. hun· drtds show up at sen1isecluded spots along tbe coast. They're generally I g n o r e d by authorities and , for that mat- ter, by bathers in suiu. One such beach is Pirate's Cove, near Malibu, north or Los Angeles. It can be reached by walking over a small hill. On a recent weekend, the crowd hlt 1,000 at Pirate's Cove. Mo.st of the bathers were nude, although some wore suits. Men outnumbered women about 2 to 1. There \Vere many families. their backyard swimming pools. In ree:tnt years, as "bot· tomless" dancin~ b e c a m e commonplace, n u d e sun· bathers began gathering on secluded but public beaches. In Santa Barbara County, several hundred naturalists romped every weekend for more than a year at one beach, Sharks Cove. fJ..t 'ti popu larity then was diluted by several arrests for .. public WASHJNGTON (UPI I -children cavorting on the The Senate has overwhelm-sparkling white sand end playing in the suri. 'l' 011 go up ntid talk to a chick and yo11're 11aked a11d she's tinked. so you 111ake 11olh· 1119 of it.' ingly approved President Nix- on's program to develop a reusable spacecraft capable of shuttling men to and froni a space station in orbit arou~ "It feels good to.,b:;i.1tr the., sun all O\'er your body," observed a young man "'ith shoulder·length blonde hair, disturbance," including those lounging \Vith a group o! other of a pri est and a nude youths. "You go up and schoolteacher. The cases of earth. • 1 talk to a chick and you're nak· several "'ho refused to pay $15 !\-1embers defeated 61 to 21 ed and she's naked, so you ·fines are no1v in !he courts. an attempt to kill the program make nothing of it ." The s"afest county in wh ich by denying $227.9 million in Nude sunbathing has alway s to bathe publicly in the nude th r· I be · · J I been popular in s un n Y on the bea ch now appears to e isca year gtnrung u y Southern Ca11·rorn1·a but , unt1·1 be Lo A I Co t A 1 for research and develop-s nge es un Y. ment of the shuttle. recently. usually in private. county ordinance a ga in s t The Senate then passed by Robert G .. Johnston, head of "outraging public decency" voice vote a $3.4 billion space the 20,000-member American was thrown out in the courts authorization. Sunbathing Ass o c i at ion, because state law pre-empted rest.s unless a private clthen first makes a formal com- plaint. There have been few complaints. "If no one complains, v.·e ...."<>n't make any arrests." says Lt. Ed Douglas at the sherifl's substation at Malibu. Santa Barbara Co u n t y authorities, too, have eased up. "About 500 regularly use the beach, most just throwing Frisbees and playing foot- ball," a deputy there said. "\Ye, as a sheriff 's depart- ment. have nothing against nude bathing as long as it's not offensive to people." The nudists on p u b 11 c beaches are looked upon with a trace of envy by members of nudist camps. Their camps are inland. "Going nude on the beach is kind of an ambition or all nudists." said Sue Latimer, \1•ho with her husband owns ' ''Swallo...,·s Sun Island," a nudist park 15 miles inland fron1 San Diego's shoreline. GENIE "automatic garage door opener SEA COAST IUILDlltS SUPrLY 1651 r1ece11tM, C"t. M ... -642-3490- WE'RE MOVING TO A NEW LOCATION Our last day at th11 •ddress will be M•y 29th. Before then, we must sell out io the bare wells. We will r..apen in e11 rly July at 14700 Golden West St., Westminster. FANCY KOi ALL SIZES 50% OFF Most I IMPORTED I · K"o''1'''r'o'o' .. D .Acce5sories 1/2 P'llCE STOCK UP NOW "ARIAKE" Polld Fllterh19 r'lilflpl Spaci11I 89" FROM Pacilic Goldfish Farm OPEN DAILY 10·5 Phon• 893 7105 Clo•ed Tu•Ml•y 714 • 14842 EDWARDS ST., WESTMINSTER Sen. Walter F. Mondale ([).. estimates at least 100,000 peo-the field. Even thoug h state l\1inn.), charged that this pie attend nude get·togethers law still prohibits indecent ex· year's space shuttle euthoriza-in Southern California every posure, Los Angeles County li on was "merely the tip of a weekend. Most _.:a".:re:_,....'•'_t:___'.'o'.'.l("'ic~er:.".s_:a".:re:'.n'.'.'t_'m'.'.a"'k'."in~g:_:a"'n'!'.y...'a'.'.r:!-===========-'-- multi-billion dollar iceberg." He said the program would end up costing taxpayers over $42--billion-over a 12-yW Nearly Everyo11e Liste11s to Lander!' period. Mondale, who offered the motion to delete the shuttle's money, said the $5. l billion wh ic h the N a t ional Aeronautics and S p a c e Administration uses as a total cost estimate was "grossly and , I think, consciously misleading." That figure was what NASA estimated it would take to develop and get the shuttle flying by 1978. The NASA authorization bill was almost identical to a measure approved by the House last month. Senators added only $12.5 million to the administration's budget re- quest. The authorization included $540 million to de velop the manned orbital Skylab space station, and $128.7 million to complete the Apollo moon ex- ploration program. The space shuttle, when com pleted, will be ca pable of carrying three-man crews to an orbiting space station and return to earth llke a plane for up to 100 flights. Se n. Howard Cannon. (D- Nev.), noor manager or the bill. said the shuttle would "substantially reduce the cost ~f space Oight operations ... which is not now possible with expendable launch vehicles." The last of the moon shots. Apollo 17, is scheduled to be launched in December, and the s p a c e shuttle-manned space station project is NASA's next major space ef- fort. But critics or the sh.utile said there were more pressing problems on earth to solve. Toke Your Pick! USED TIRES lots of •1111-dlid treod General Tire Pre-Memorial Day a General m• Jet-Air"lll COMPACT WHITEWALLS CARS I AND IHTfAMEDIATf BLACKWAUS CARS • J"" :lll'IOllS dual tread de$igll lilTANOARD •Long m11e1ge CAAS Ourage,,.. lreild ~ rubber • Euv 'leering l AAGIE conlOl.l•Od shouldefs CARS rice ae! Charge it at General Tire Complete BRAKE RELINE NOT JUST A BRAKE RELINE But we do all this . •• lnlllll NIEW ""u' 11111, 11111111 Ill Ill 4 wMtlU 1. Rtblllld lfll cy!llldt,, tn 111 ~ ..niHIU J, a i." br•k•s -ln11111 he1wy o:l11ty br1•t fluid. 4. llllPICI br•k• r1tur11 '"'""· J. Tu"' 11141 lr111 1U .f lir•k• 1rum1, '· lll11Mck 11"9111 111\etl bt;irln11. 1. Alllv•I ll'rNll Incl cfttdl ern.r· ·-· 111111191. $ 95 M01I 0.$.. Compecl C1,.. OiK 8r•klS Sllghlly Hlfl,..,. SUPER WIDE! BEL TED-RAISED WHITE LETTERS "60 SERIES" F&0-14 or 15 $35.95 ...E. T.-1.ll·J.OO G&0-14 or 15 $39.95 ... E.T.-J.t l-J.11 U.S. INDY MAG WHEELS FORD-CHEVROLET PLYMOUTH-DATSUN- TOYOTA 8 hol• mMJ• o••lloble for "'4 to• C0Mper1 011d P'lc.ti• .. ,., 1llthttY hkJher . WURLITZER Deluxe Spinet CAMPER TRUCK TIRES and YIHEELS OUR PRECISION WHEEL BALANCE USED ORGANS $1695 . CAN HAMMOND SPINET ORGAN WURLITZER Console Organ Super Single Duplex 10-16-5 • 6 PLY FORD-CHEVROLET-G.M.C. -DODGE ADD MILES TO YOUR TIRE WEAR! Mohot••Y Wn $1395.00 •••.....•. NOW $995 =~;ISO.OD .... NOW $2595 HAMMONO DELUXE HAMMOND SPINET ORGAN SPINET ORGAN With 0111omotic rhythm Wot $1729.00 , • NOW $1495 e:~ $2155.00 .... NOW $1495 CONN Sl"IHn $399 HAMMOND CONSOLE & DELUXE SPEAKER W.tollt, sold ""' fof SJ700.00 HW ooly • • · • $1595 OOAJIAMTllO JtALL l'IANOS 111,..,,._ '"" 19111"' LE~LIE SPEAKERS W1 c•rrv 1 eem,ltt• 111- tdlMI er 11•w •Ml 11M uui. ,,..111rs.. C•"'* kl 11"41 httr .,.y ff tlltlll.. "lh 111 lftl~tl M •l"llllL ,.rk• f,..m lllfJ' ••• $199 WURLITZER SPINET THEATRE Wolo1t, WOii $179$.00 NOW ••• $1495 $599 llMIAL CONSOLI $1249 $1195 south Coast Plaza --Costa Mesa 3411 Bristol St. --Ph: 540-2830 2 TIRES $13995 2 WHEELS l'.5.T. $4.,)4 H . tlrt . FRONT END ALIGNMENT Crooked whHls rob your car of m1xl mum performance, rJde, stHr• ing and ti re wear. We \:orrect ca'" ter, camber, to•ln. toe-out to your car manufacturer's speclflc1tions, ind ufety check and •diust your stffring. $850 ONLY Contt«I A'"'1<111 Ct,.. ((1,.. wllll Air Cfftlt. •ttllfrw tenlM .. ,.. cttl ••tr•,) · Don Swetlluntl COAST GENERAL TIRE Come In Today! ~ COMPLETE CAR CARE Since 1959 Hours: 7:30 to 6:00 Dai ly PHONE: 540-5710 646-5033 J DAILY PILOT UCI Plans CarnivaJ For Zotfes t Students 11t UC Jrvine wUI celebra te the 10th anniversary of Daniel G. Aldrich'a at' point1ne11t as chancellor at the Zotfe~t. 11 festival of evenl8 cll m11xing wllh a carnival on the Antenter campt1!1, ~1ay 20. The carnival In Campus P11rk from JO a.m. to 4 p.m. v.•111 feat ure games, music, food and crafts boothll, hot·air balloon demonstration and the first aMual Irvine Grand Prix Bike Ra ce. ' A highlight of e ve n ts precedinfll the cnrnlval "'ill be the second annual Lauds and La urels Banquet ~tonday, at v.•hich l'lpe<:ial tribute will be paid Chancellor Aldrich. The Laud111 <ind L.iurels Ban· quet, s ponsored by the UCI Alumni As$0Ciatlon, will be held at 7:30 p.m. in the Airporler Inn. The program will include a speech b.v UC President Chnrlel!I J . Hitch and the prel'lentalion of awa rd s for 011t:J t11nding contributlorui to the campus comrnunlty. ~1r.i:. Aldrich will be honored by the UCJ Town and Gown at 11 luncheon ot noon \Yednesday , at the Bahia Corlnthian Yacht Club, Newport Beach. Other major events on the toth aMiversary calendar In- clude the seventh annua l Author Awards Dinner of the UCJ Friends of the Library tonight at the Balboa Bay Club and a studen t dance in Gale\vSy Commons Saturday. Bookmaking Suspec t Se11tenced SANTA ANA -Ono or two men ronvlcted last month of bookmaking charges filed by Newport Beach police has been sentenced in Oran ge County Superior Court to three yea rs probat.ion. . Judge Byron K. rt1cMillan entered the tenn for Roger fl.1eents. 29, ()f 1008 Huntington St.. Hun tington Beach, af ter ordering Harvey D. Kagasof!, 34. Ga rden Grove. to return to his courtroom Pt1ay 22 for sente ncing an d the hearing or a motion £or a new trial. Both men were convicted last month by 11: jury after a trial in which three other co- def enda nts rounded up by Newport police and distri ct nt· tomey'a investlgalors were cleared of all charges. All fi ve defendants were in· dieted by the Orange county Grand J ury on the baa!s of evidence that identified them as principals in a nourishing Ha.rbor Area betting racket Attorney Faces Theft Charge SANTA ANA -A Founta in Vafley altorne.v accu sed or 1nisapproprlating a client's funds has be tn ordered to fnre trial J une 26 in Orange County Superior Court. Judge Will in m Murr ay se t the trial date and a June 9 pretria l session for Joseph D. Powers. 35, of 18395 Santa Carlotta st. Powers is free on his promise lo appt>ar. The lawyer was chnrged "'ilh grnnd lheft following allegations by Bevtrl~· Tlil1s lawyer Leonard Baum !hat Pow ers personally spent $5.000 gl\'en to him by Baum on in· structions thal it be held in trust for settlement of a civil action. Powers hns filed picas of in· noccnt to l\\'O C<Jllnts ()f grand their . GWC Pnper Wi1is To ul Editors of Golden 'Yest College's student n~\\•spa ptr have c::aptuttd three 8\\'1trds in a slate journa lism contest. echool official! said. Ed Koclel•, executive editor or the ,;Branding 1ron,'' 't\'Oll eecond place In news-feature pbotognphy with • rock con- cert photo of Grand Funk 11.ilroad. Judges In the AMUBL contest or the Journalism Associntlon of Co1Jroml1 C o-m m u n I t y Collegos also cited I t I rf pho"'Cr•pber Jim ConneUy for a Sporll adloa pbolo of I 'llTtS!lllltJ maid! aad editorial edllor Ken McMllllln for • news 1rtlclo about 1 l'tlC)'dlna proJ«I. Frld•Y, M.1y 12, 1972 For the Reco1~cl Marriage Lic e1ises ARBUCKLE I< SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY 1%7 E. 17111.Sr., Cotta Me11 111-1111 •• BALTZ BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del l\lar 673·9450 Cosia ?ile11 mzu.t BELL el oADWAY MORTUARY lit Broadway, CMLa Mt11 lJ WCI McCORMlc\ LAGUNA BEACH l40RTUARV l?N Lapa1 Canyo1 Rd. 01-9115 • PACIFlC V1.f;W MEMORIAL PARK Cemet«y Mo'1oary ci..,.r -Paclflc vi... Dri .. Newpott 11<1<•, Calliofllla fl4.ml PEEK ,MIIl.Y COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME '1UI Boba A\-'t, WtsrmU..ltr 1111 ius SMITllil' !lfoR1\IAllY 1%7 Mllll"St. llutl .... -.... 'Fiestas ' School Gets Title Breakfast Tabs Taken Ho pefuls To Debut Cal State, Otlie rs Noiv Universities SANTA ANA -A batch of 1,500 tickets to a charity pan· cake breakfast \Yere .stolen in 1962 to 1964; California from a Santa Ana print shop State College al Fullerton until this "·eek. DRAWING • GIFTS • May 13th Saturday ' • lft time for just Mother's Day May 14th • 1968, and California State Imprinted for a\ 1A1other's College, Fullerton, from 1968 Day brenkfast. sponsored by Bethel No. 166 ol Job's until now. Daught ers, lil 1fie J\1asonic Transcrip ts or s tud ent Temple in Santa Ana, the records thua might show both tickets. pink and red in color names, aince the official seal and selling for SI . will not be t honored . Js placed on the docurnen A. new set or tickets have when the student's work is been printed with a different completed. seQuence of nu1nbers and are Pu:uled penonotl depart· yeUo'v in color. ments or unlvusity admis-Anvone being approached lo sions officers might v.·ell won-purchase the pink and rtd der lf a student has lied about tickets should notify police. his college education. .-------,,==--- Thus, state 'i!!iversity or-1 ___ L_E_G_A_L_N_'OTI~ccCc-E=~- !icials suggest Ul3ing the new NOTI Ca OF AYAIUllLITY nl l n.. OF ANN\JAL lll!f'Olt T name on emnoymen a t-P , to s.c11°" 41CM tdl et 11-.. plications. If contacted by an lnl•~'n-:1'~ ..... n11e Cvdt. 11auc1 11 1>1•11>..-I bo t t t coll given !ht! "" 1nn111I ftl>Qrf tor .... -'empd ~yer ad U .a s a ed 1. eg1 e C•ll~r Yei r 1,11 01 '"" eorothv "''("1~ gra s aca em1c ere en 1a S1 su111v1n FouNlatlon, • or1v111 1ou111111 °"' th ·11 I I the 11 ilYl lttble 11 lne foullll1llat1'1 prlncl111I ey WI exp a n, Y Say· otflce tor ln,PKllon durlnl 1119ul1t That is assuming the ad-bu'lnt u Mu•• rrom 1 :oo p.m. 10 3,00 a.m. dre r • · · r by 1nv c1111en wno r911u1111 II wll~ln lit ss con us1on resulting rom dtvi 111,, "'' dot• a1 1h!1 oubllcsllon. the naffie Change does not Tht h>und1tlon'I prlnc1NI (llflct I• • . located ;it 18 H~rbefr 11111111. Newaor! keep the letter from arr1v1ng. e111eh. c 1tnornl1. . Cal State University Fullerton T~e 11r!n,11111 m1~aet at tnt tounda"~" • ' 11 M1r-r Ftll. 1s located on State College "· Ant11111v Kur11, c.l'.A. B I d I F ii rt !75' Wll1htrt l tul9Y1111 ou evar n u e on. L•• ..... ,11u c1111w"1' '°°" University officials said to-Publl1Md ' or1n1e co.111 D•ilv Pl!o1. day they have asked the cities w v n. 1"' 12"·7~ of Fullerton, Brea a n d LEGAL NOTICE Anaheim to consider renarningl---===c-==::::::---,.1cTIT•ous I Ul lNl'JS the stree t. NAME ITATIMINT I 'T~ lollow!1111 "'"°" Is dolnt ~11~:» Colonel To Speak To Officers es: WESTFIELO UJl.llAN (OMP'ANY. 11I02 Sk-r P1rk Cltcl1, P.O. I Oll 415•, lr1J n11, C11ftornl1 '16'-I W11!1!1tld DtY<llOPl!'ll n! Con!Pl rl'r, tnc:. fC1tlf, CorP.) 17I01' S•v 1'1rk Clrde, P.O. l!lc»r ~. I rvine, (1lllotnl1 t'lW Tllll bu•IMU 11 condud~ tl'r • Llfnlled Ptrlntr~hlp, W111fl1ld Dtv1kopmtnl Ce., Inc .. Gnier1t P1rlntr By: J1m11 E. Jtoc111rs. Prtsldtnl This sllffmtnr w11 filed w!th TM Coon· t\I Cltrk al OrtnH Coun1Y cm M1v 10, lt11, l U·OC EL TORO -Orange County ,,,,,. Chapter Or The Rell• ed Or f'11bll1hed Of'1n1e Co.1st 0.lly Piiot, r · MtY 12, 'lt, '" ,.,.. Jun1 J, 1•n 114"·'2 ficers Association will hear 11 ------------ report by Lt. Col. Thomas A. LEGAL NCYI'ICE Kelly, national headquarters ,1cTiriou1 1 u11Nis• representative, 8 p.m. Satur-NAME STATl!MENT day at the El Toro Marine bu~~n '~~~win• pa•M>fl• ,,. •0;119 Corps Officers Club. OLO TOWN ANTIQUES, 2350 NtwpO•I I K U d. I 1 1\td., COl!t Mt••· ,,,,., Lt. Co . e y, irector o 0.111111 Re111111. 111'1 SIO"f<rtM ,..,.,., th Ofl·c or Chaple Air . f ounlt ln Vt tltv. '170I, e I e r a1rs, lltrbtr• Hope 11.tlndl, 11tt1 SIOMCflll will discuss administrative Ave., FOllfl111n v111e-,, '17111. Procedures on local and na-TPll• 1>u11n111 11 btl"' conc1uctM ~., , f'1rFnt1tJ.lllp, tional levels in a general B•rblor1 HoH 1111n111 t t t•-Or r. t Th11 1111..ntnf tHtd wlln 1"9 CllUfllY rtpor 0 1tc ange vvun Y c11rk 01 0•1M1 Counfl' en; ,..,,,, 10. 1•11. membe!'ship. !ly Btv.rtr J. Mtdllo• Otpul'f cwn1r (l1rk, Reservations for the dinner '" 1nu · I · ed 'ublls.llHI Or1nv~ co.11 D•ltv Pllo! • meeting are a ways requ 1r . Mt Y 11, 1•. :u. •net Ju ... t. "n 1iu.n and prospective members ma yl---LE-G_AL_N_OT_l_CE __ _ contact ~1aj. Gene Spencer (Ret) at 532-3561. •---------- Complete selection of • Exclusive floral designs • Attractive potted plants • Permanent flowers for the home • Accenting flowers to wear Free Delivery 495-0500 CROWN VALLEY MALL LAGUNA NIGUEL ALl"HA. IETA IHOl"~HG C£HTEll DiFF8UNTfa floral designs of distinction . ' LEGAL NOTICE 14He l"ICTITIOUI IUllNlll , NAMa ITATl!MINT TM fo11ow11111 l'lr1<1n 11 dol1111 tu1ln- 11; llOMANOFF•S, f2t E19I Sev..-.tMnl!t •tretf, COl!t M111, C1lltornl1. C ... D RESTAURANTS. INC:., 1 Ctlll'G'rnlt Corpor1llOft. '11 W. '"' St., Suite 7)1, LOI Antt l11, CtlH, tool, Tht1 bu1IM!11 11 canclu<;I"' "'1 1 _. PCll'l lkln JAMES L KELLNElt, Stt;rtll•• Tiii• 111i.rnent w11 flltd wllll tN c:- IY Cltr~ ot Or111111 CClllftfy on April It, un ICILLNIEll I ITl!l",Lltl '11 W. ,,_ St., 1u111 1• L• .......... ,.17 Tt11 IUJI 41J.IMI """ l"ubUsllld Ort l!Otl Co.11 01llV 1"11'!, AP!'ll 21. 7' I ncl M1t S. n, tt72 104N! LEGAL NOTICE PICTITIOUI IUllNI SI NAMI! STATIMINT TM follo<wlnt --1r1 dllill bv1IMU tt; ROYAL SERVIC E AGENCY POil llESTAURANT PERSONNEL, JOO! llM Hiil Avt., Sullt 210, Co.II M1H ,,,,, Sneron LH Ge!f.,.-,. 114 Av•. Colt, Stn C Jtf'n1nl1 nt12 Jtnnfler setv1n1 Fo-. '"11 AtolTli Ave., L11un1 Nltutl "671 Tll/1 butlneu 11 betnt COl'lllllCt " , l"••ll'llf'Jhlp, J1nnlfet' I . Fo;ii S"'''°" l. Gl ffl'Mf ' This 1!11-1 filed wl!ll ttlt c.imty Clerk of Or1111t C1111nl't tfl: ~I It, 1'71 8-r 8n>tl'lf J, MMhto~. o.ity (ountY , .... """ ~... 0,..... c..et Dlflw ~lal,, Aprll Jl, JI, Ind -.r .t. IJ, tm ICOf.12: LEGAL N<mC! 30242 CROWN VALLEY PKWY. LAGUNA NIGUEL I • J i . ~. r. ' r s i ly SC th ly co 0 be B w N Se B ' ,,, ... "' ' .. " s .. • . ~. Whitney Performer Counterpoint, a Cal-33 sailed by Dick Deaver of Newport Beach, swept Class D in Los Angeles Yacht Club's Whitney Series with three firsts in class finishes and two firsts overall. The Cal·33 was de- signed by Bill Lapworth and built by Jensen Mar- ine of Costa Mesa. Relocation Announced Of West Jetty Beacon The Ne\\'port Bay West Jet- ty marker radiobeacon is scheduled to be relocated to the outer end of the West Jet- ty in the near future, ac· cording to the U.S. Coast Guard. The long overdue move will be made at the behest of Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona , \\•ho maintains a boat on Newport Harbor. In response to a Jetter by Sen. Go ldY:ater, Adm. C. R. Bender commandant or the . . -.. ' -· .. Coastal Weather SvM'( lod•y. LJ9hl va rl•ble winds nlghl •nd morn1....., "°"'" b«omJ"" Wtlltrly 10 lo 11 kl\011 lt1 Ifft•~ today •n<I Stlurd•f. High lod•Y 15. Co1sr11 ltmper.,urts ring, from JS lo 1~. lnl•nd temPtr•lure• r1ng1 from 52 to 61. Wtlt r ltmPtra1urt 61, Sun, Moon, Tides Coast Guard, said the beacon was also being considered for a higher output level. The Newport Beacon now operates on 285 kiloHertz with a rated output of 75 microvolts at 15 miles. The beacon was formerly located on lhe end of the jetty but was relocated to the center of the jetty in 1965 to allow easier maintenarlce dur- ing periods of foul weather and attendant heavy seas. Local yachtsmen com- plained bitterly about the move, main taining it was a hazard as a homing signal in foggy weather. Adm. Bender said the Coast Guard has re-evaluated its radio beacon servicejn certain areas and has investigated methods to more effectively house the electronic equl~ ment at eiposed location! '·' such as Newport Beach. • • l'IUDA'f" SecOl'ld h'911 ~ ........... t :Dfp.m. ltCOncl low ............ ';4 p.m. 1.l "The favorable resultJ of SATUllDA'f" FJr11 high ••......•... 10:'51.m. Fl'11 low .............. •:1•1.m. '9cond high ............ t :4 p.m. keand low .. , ....... J:30 p.m. this investigation have promp- •-0 led us to issue orders to ·!:: relocate aU harbor marker 1., radiobeacons to the outer end IUMDAY First hig h ........... 11 :l•a.m. •·• Flrar low .............. J ;OS 1.m. ·1.• SKOnd hillh ........ ,, IO:J1 p.m. '·' Stc:ond tcw ........... •:11 p.11\. l.t Jun llltn J:n 1.m. SIU 7:lS p.m. ~ lllM1 s:or •.m. S.b 7:41 p.m. .,.,,,...,..,._ .... ~' or the jetties, if at all possible. In this regard, the Newport West Bay Jetty marker radiobeacon is planned for relocation to the outer end of the West Jetty," Adm. Bender said. Newport Man Named To Yacht Sales Post NEW SALES REP Dave Anderton David Andttso:i of Newport Beach has been appointed na· tional sales representative for Alexander-Roberts C.Ompany of Santa Ana, according to Nick A1e.1andtt, president. Anderson was formerly West Coast sales manager !or R. C. Marine, and prior to that was associated with the W. D. Schock Co. Alexander-Roberts is the na- tional Importer-distributor or Barlow winches, R o n s t a n sailboat hardware, Seafast turnbuckles and rlne sewage fittings, Austral propellers and IYE travelers. In addition, the company warehouses the West Coast back-up stock for such finm as Danforth, Mlrax Chemical Products C.Orp. and Garelick Manufacturing C.O. T h e warehouse Is located at 1151 Langley St. Santa Ana. I See by Today's Want Ads •~~,~~J;~~1 e FOR SOFTNE$ UNDER FOOT, Buy 110me carpet from an expert - a car- pet layer! ' • e SUNBA111E ON 111E ROOF of thlt '6.9 Glutron. It'• a 1713' tri-hull .wltb a llUltDp. The '72 Mel'CUJ')' engine ls a 115 JIP out- board. Many extru. e SPUT PERSONALITY; thl1 ·n Klwua.ki 125 E ts ltf'eet or dirt ready. With bN mlleare it'• in beauUful condition. Some - 55 Years for Club • Opening Day Fest Set in Neivport The Newport Harbor Yachl Club wilt celebrlte 55 years or pleasure boallng SUnday when m'mbera ind guests gather tor the &Mual gala Opening Day ceremonJes. The club wu founded In 1917 under its present name, but prior to that had been aperated for six years as a station 9f the now extinct yacht club of Los Angeles Harbor. The season opening festivities will actually be ex- tended over three days begin- nlng with an lnformal itexlcan fiesta type dinner and dance. The traditional Opening Day race will be sailed Saturday from Loa Angeles to Newport. Club yachts will go to Lo.! Angeles Harbor early Satur- day morning to be on band for the most colorful events in the noon start. The race ends at Newport Pier. Trophies for the winners will be awarded at the Sunday celebration. ·nie formal ceremonies on Sunday are traditionally one or Newport Harbor through~ut the year. Many or the club's .. drtssed" yachts \VIII be brought alongside the club dock for the aMual inspection. Trophies for the best main· tained. boats In the squadron will be awarded as part of the ceremony. Fonnal actil•ities s!Rrt at 3 p.m. with music by the 3rd ~iarine Corps Air \\ling band from El Toro. Commodore Jack O. Vance will preside over t h e ceremonies and introduce nag officers. and s t a f r com- modores. - Ecology Step TTBERIA, Israel (AJ>\ The Israeli government says It has suspended all construction around the Sea ot Galilee to preserve the ecolo!:ica l balance of the Biblical lake. Communily Events Fdd,y, M,y U. 1972 DAJt.V PILOT lll Pawer Squadron Will Teach . Kids Tht Balboa P0\1'er Squadron is Inviting children 12 to 14 years old to el\l'OU wllh parents in the IS-week basic boating sum~ sessk>n \\'hich begins next Monday at the Newport Harbor Yacht Club, 72fl S. Bay St.. Newport Beach. Registration for the luitlon- free course. held on ~1ondays, \1'ill be accepted at 6:30 p.m. OJl the first day of the class and again the foll o1ving \l.'etk. No pre-registration of boat OY!'nersh ip is required. According to the ney.· sum- mer policy. youngsters may enroll is accompanied by at least ont parent. Fourteen to 18 year olds ~ aJ50 invited to enroll provided t.hey make ara rangeme.nts for a ride homt aft.tr each class session. Flying High \\'!GAN, England (AP ) Fifteen·year~ld h-fichae l Cun- ningha1n said he left on wha t his mother thought wii.s a school trip to London, but ~n­ stead he disguised himself Ill an ai~ine steward and new 8,000 iles to Kenya and back '''itho4 paying a cent. Artist of Tiie Moflth JESSIE RAY POWllS Newport Harbor· Co1ta Mesa Lions 27th Annual May U t~ru Junt 1' RED IA.IRONS OF ORANGE COUNTY Saturdoy Nl91tt, Mirr 20 MIS.A YIRDE COUNTRY CLUI Dinnt r 11\d • , • Gunt Spt:a•er -Hal fhh11ta11 cnanner 5 Newt I FISH FRY JUNE 2.3.4 IEAUTY-IAIY-IAND CONTESTS PINTO STATION WAGON DU.WING FOR ALL TICKETS CALL CLIFF WESDORF -546-2300 Natiods largest Federal offers Nation's bPestinterest oniilsored savings 6%, $51000 minimum certificate accomm-two.to five year terms. 5% P"-boot ICCOll!lts available a'.so. FREE % FREE . Money Orders With St,000 miu.immn baJ•nct. FREE Photocopy Service · FREE Travelers Checks Witb SJ,000 miJlimWD balance FREE Notary Senice Wit!I Sl,000 .111-..•1...,, FREE Excbuge Cbecl<s Trust Deed Note Collection Wida $1,000 ... , ... ....,. Willa s11000 mjnlmD' btl•act. FREE Sav&-by-Mtil Poslllge FREE 0 FREE FREE Monthly Parking SaTings Money Plan While la Banks -- FREE l.olll c-liDc Community Rooms for charitable and edoe1tional groups. --· IDdlit<ratlreonbome, pool, property imprm:slftlt udmoMJe .... louL .a.. CALIFORNIA FEDERAL SAVINGS --- Costa Mesa Office: 2700 Harbor Boulevard 646-2300 c FREE Payroll Savings Deduction Plan FREE Interbnnch De ·1s an:l'Witbdrawab •t 1ny of oar oflkts. Anaheim Office: 600 N. Euclld Avenu"e 776-2222 FREE On-Lille Electronic Instant Service FREE Check Holden for gift -u. Orange Office: 4050 Metropolitan Drive Jn City Center - CfS 1372 I I I l ( I • ' ( , 1 I ( ( ] 4 • ' ' J ' I • . I -r I ( l ( . I ' • • • • • I I • I ( ( r I ( • ( • ' I • f I t t r I ( I ' ' I I I ' ( .1 .f % DAILY PILOT Friday, May U , JC,72 ears .. •• l sAvE .w201I Sears Deluxe Lawn Swing Regular $109.95 Sat. May 130nly! Aluminum frame. 3 seater 39ss for ''lie down '' comfort. 3-in foam filled cushions l.lmh<d . • • Qua1111t1,1 $74.95, 2 Seat Law n Swin g ... 59 .88 Patio Furniture Dept. Custom Bedspreads with Matching Custom Headboards Super Value! Sat. May 13 Only! Choose from Sears com- plete line of fa brics in many color~. and pattern s. 20 o/o OFF Regular Price tl.ABOR EXTRA I •. •.. Drapery Dept. ,.,. Decorator F lorentine As htray s.c. May 13 Oaly! Regular $10 711 Women's Knit Pant Suits Sat. rttay 13! 597 100'70 stretch nylon pa nt suits ~·ith turtleneck. tunic top. Mi sses' sizes. Sportswear Dcpl. SAVE'/ to '3 ! $2 to $3.50 Scarves M~ti3 ! 50 ~ch Polyester and acetate scarves in fashion colors. Plains, plaids. Accessory Depl . E legant Long and Short Nylon Gowns Sa t. May 13! 244 A fabulous array of silky ny Ion t ricot gowns in colors. S, Mand L. Lingerie Depl. Hostess Set of White Milk Glass Regular $5.99 S.1. May 12 o.Jy! 388 4 cups • nd ~less pll tes. Limp-Qiu Dtpl. S~ecially For Mother! Exotic Orchid Perfect For A Corsage ¢ Garden Shop I CUT66%! I Were $3 Bath Towels ' SAVE $35! Kenmore . Undercounter Dishwasher Regula r $23 9.95 Sat., May 13 Only! 199 88 Forced air drying. Two level wash ac- tion. Exclusive roto rack. dual detergent dispenser. In white. coppertone. avocado. gold. Custom Kitchen Dept. I CUT 50 %! I -. ··- Women's Colorful Swimwear Were $14 to $20 Choose from a wide choice or mi sses' and women's swimwear in many colors. Sal. t.lay 13 Only! 87·810 Sportswear Dept. I CUT81 %on J!j Cling-alon'" Replacement Hose Sa t., May 13 Only! 9 9 ¢ ''Dynasty," \\.'Oven jacquard to\vels in viv id color com- binations. Fringed ends. Were $1. 79 Sal. May 13 Only! lltra sheer mesh knit 3 s1 replacement hose to wear in fashion colors. Sizes Petite. Shapley. Classic. Prs. Domestic Dept. Tall and Statuesque. Hoslt ry Dept. SAVE 50%! All Wool Rya Rugs Regular$99.9' 49 9 9 Sat., May 13 Only!- "Rya Sapphire" rugs imported from Vienna. Shaggy. texture. Terrific! Floorcovering Dept. • Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans I S.4 VE '4 0! I 18-In. Table-Model Color TV Reg ul ar $389.95 Sat. May 13 Only! 18-in . diagonal measure picture. Automatic 34995 chroma control. VHF and UHF antennas. #4168 TV Dept. --· I S.4 VE '26! I Gas Grill on Permanent Post Regular $134.95 Sat. May 13 Only! Dua l control gas gri ll $10 8 with two temperatures. tights instantly . #22500 Major Appliance Dept . SA VE '6! $14 .98 Power Toothbrush 747 Sat. May 13 Only! Quad action combines both up-dO\\'O and ba ck and forth . 6 colored ,J,ll<==l:::.l brushes. ApOtbacary J ars Reg. $%.SO Sal. May lSJ }99' Fill~ wilb dried nowers.' Cos metic Dept . Women's Soft Decollete Bras Sa t. May 13 Only! 299 100% Dacron& polyester. In sizes 32-36A, 32-38 B-C cups. Bra-Girdle Dept. SA VE'3! $1 Women's Girdle Sat. May llOnly! 399 Mid-leg. . hose hugger girdle 1n ivory color. Sizes S, Mand L. Bra-Girdle Dtpt. Decorative Pillows S.I. May 1:1! 99¢ Choose from a wide choice of color1. o ... prry~. !Sears/south Coast Plaza -5403333 PARKING -FREE 3333 Bristol Street Phone . • • 0 I y ~ • a J d e a ' 0 tr gi c h Is • p • A. B. A v· Si Ch G. 0. Jo R L. Wi M N p ~ Ha Sh Ca Al P. de pa G. Le )I • • Have 'Bus: Will Travel By ALLISON DEERR Of the D•lly l"lt.t 51.tH ?>.1arlon Harryman drives her ofrice to work each day. Her office is a schoo l bu s converted to a bookmobile through funds under Title I of the E\e1nentary and Secondary Educa- tion Act. It's been in operation for three years. For young students in the Newport· '-lesa Unified School District it's an ad venture. "Children love the bookn1 obile,'' ?-.-!rs. Harryman said . "It isn't like an ordinary trip to the library . For them it is an adventure. I taught for man y years but I really enjoy working with children 'his way." BOOKS TRAVEL The bookmobile travels through the district on a rotating basis among the eligible schools. ?-.'lore than 2,500 volumes are carried and changed regularly. Librarian du ties on the bookmobile in-- elude driving the converted bus. A new dri \'er-librar1an is being trained for an anticipated second bookmobile. l\1rs. Harryman is no stranger to education. Floyd Harryman has been pri ncipal of Estancia High School since it opened eight years ago. The couple met and married shortly after World \Var II while both were teaching at Newport Harb:>r High School. She taught English, her h u s b a n d chemi stry and physiology. ONLY SCHOOL "That wa s when I-Tarbor l-lip.h was the only hiJ!h SC'honl in lhe area \vlth a stu- dent population or 700 to 800 and 25 teachers." she explr1 incd. "Now there arc four high scho9ls. llarbor High alone has well over 2.000 stud ent s.'' ' Harryman was a teacher and counselor at Harbor High and then principal of Corona de! l\1ar •lig h School berore tak· ing the post at Estancia. \Vorking late at ''lhe office" gets i\lrs. Harryman·s approval. The couple spend many leisure hours at Estan cia High athletic . dra1na and rnusic events . Conventions and conferences c:u1 be shared by the couple who arc b:.it h ..,. ed ucators. PRINCIPAL'S \\'JFE ··~1y husband is a conscientious man. Educat ion is his JHe. I decided ;1 Ion~ tin1e ago that H I couldn 't lick hi m. J"d join him," she said. Duties of a principal"s wife can be ex· citing. As a teacher she traveled in Europe and Japan. Recently the tables were turned . A young Japanese college \\Testier spent a ~·eek with the Costa a.1esa family. "He spoke no English but we got alo ng somehow \\'fli"l a Japanese-English dic- tionary," l\1rs. Harryman added. Jn bo th he r roles she has seen ma ny changes in education "mostly for the good. ..The space age challenge has brought n1uch n1ore ex p erime ntati o n to teaching. Ball Patrons Honored Dr. and Mrs. Theodore Maravich will open their Newpart Beach home for the traditional patrons champagne buffet, given by Harbor Key o( Orange County Child Guidance Center. Patrons financially suppart the annual Empire Debutanle Ball, and i~ tum the 1uxlliary thanks them for their support at the champagne party. Greeting guests wiU be the patrons chairman, Mrs. Robert H. Wood and her husband, Dr. Wood, Mrs. Jame~ C. Evans Is chairman of the eighth annual ball which benefits the center's low-cost psychiilric clinic for children and 1dolescents with emotional problems. Patrons include Ors. and Mmes. Louis A. Gottschalk, Robert N. Helton, David a: Kagnoff, Frank Erwin Kendrick, ~rthur J. Nies, \Villiam M. Pivarofr, Dr. Vincent C. Kent, Cc!. and Mrs. L. Ross Sin1pso n, and the hlmes. Joseph Beek, Charles G4 Boice, Rinaldo Carll, Arthur G. Coons, Richa rd E. Duffy, Jean Loubet, O. B. Phillips, Samuel James Tuffree and lohn ·F. Yittrup. Others are the l\1essrs. and Mmes. S. Roy Howell, Loren K. Housley, Robert L. Humphreys. Eugene E. James, William ?-.'loselev Jones, William G. Loose, Rich&rd T. l\lar"ln Jr., Dean M. l\1cCann, John J. McKerren , Jack Nemeth, Anthony Otting and Paul A. Palmer. fl.tore are the l\1essrs. and 1t!me11. Robert S. Bardin, Aubre W. Berry, J . T. Callaway, r-.terrill V. Duncan, Fred V. N. Ellis. Richard J. Footner. J. Ra y Fortune, G. Robert Grant , Sam Graves, Robert Guggenheim, Leonard R. Hall and Charles W. Hostler. Concluding the list are the Messrs. and ~\mes. Paul J. Queyrel. George R. Ray, Harry Rinker, Wllllam Rothwell ;-Jahn E. Shearer, Mario Silva, David M. Smith, Carl E. Sturdevant, Robert Lee Swofford, Al Tiffany, Robert H. Warner and John P. Wright Among special guests will b e debutantes' parents and h o no r a r y patrons, UCJ Chancellor and Mrs. Daniel G. Aldrich Jr .. Dr. and Mrs. Leonard I. Lesser, the ~fe.ssrs. and ~1mes. Arthur R. McKenzie, John M. Rau, O. W, Richard and Walter BurTOughs and Mrs. Noonan A.ndenon. -· Toasting debutante ball patrons are Mrs. Robert H. Wood I left I and Dr. and Mrs. Theodore Maravich. I '·The media had a big in1pact on ch ild ren, especially in their reactions to reading. ··But schools aren 't sitting still. They're adjusting to each new cri sis. trying hard to kee1> up with new issues," she said. The bookmobile. for example. is aimed at children who need special rein· forccment in reading skills. \\1ATOI GROWl'H Hesidents of Costa f>.1esa since 1949, the l~arrymans and their children Carla, 20, and Joh n 16. have watched the city grow. "I ca n remc1nbcr when there were open fiel ds across the i;trcet. Over th ere.'' she points "there \Vas a turke_v ranch. Across the street there \vas a ya1n ranch." Commun ity work with the League flF Women Voters and UCI Extension cla sses keep her up to date on current issues. ··1rs just pa rt of my job." she c.-..;- plained. BEA ANDERSON, Ed ltOt' Diet Monotonous ''". Marion Herryma ~ is at home in driver's •eat of bookmobile, left , with Rosemary Clark; and family van. Employe' s Fed Up DEAi{ ANN LANDEllS: Ple<isc tell nle what is happening in our society to make everyone so \veight • and -caloric -con- scicus? I've hrid women who are darned near s11·angers tell n1e they lost four irK·hes la st month. Th is morning !he elevator operator confid ed between the fir st and fifth noor that she has lost rive pounds. The guy whose desk is behind me asked me this noo n what I usually dream about. \Vhen I Wld him. '·None of your business," he looked surprised and said , "I dream about strawberry shortcake." This afternoon at about 3 o'clock I felt a little weary so I went to the vending machine and bought a cand y bar. The woman whose deSk is across from mine looked up and said , "You don't need that. A couple of carrots would be a Jot better for you." I told her they don·t sell carrots in the hall. She sui::gestt>d I bring some from home. J lost my cool and said I wasn't in· tcrested in a lecture on nutrition. She snapped back, "The people who need it nev er are." Please ex plain thls sudden ir'iterest from the health nuts. -NOT STAR VING Dt:A R NOT: These people aren't 10 nul5. \Ve've learned a lot about nutrlUon the&e past to year1 and ll'I bt lpln1t lo prevent heart ottack5 and other dlet- rcluted diseases. Women who starve themselves for vanity'• sake are balmy, but It's smart to eot 11enslbly. exercise regularly and watch your wel~ht. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'll come right to the point and hope you wll\, too. Joe :ind I wen t tQgether two years be.fore we were married in a church. We talked about having a famil y. The Idea appealed to him a lot In our courtlng days. "A boy for me and a girl for you·• -in fa ct he aald•he'd like. three or four kidJ. Now, a year late r. he says he's chanp:ed ~i. mind . lie claims his brothor'1 kids make hi1n nervous. He has decided that we aren 't going to have any children - not even adopted ones. The thoujthl or a life without a fa mily upsets me terribly. I feel as if I have been betraved. Whenever I see a tiny baby I haVe to fight back the tear11. Please help me. -2.1 AND l\1TSERABLE JN MONTANA DEAR Pt10NTANA: If you're miserable now, wail awhUe. Vow-misery will grow with your resentme.nt. Frankly, I don't see how ynu can find oeaee and con- tentment with tbls man. Dl1e1111 tbf: prob- lem with the clergymaa "''bo married you and ask hJm lo guide you.' DEAR ANN LANDERS : Recently you printed a letter fr<fm O-Hi-0 who wanted to know what ordinary. everyday people can do abo~ullon and the ruination of our environment. \Vhen I read that let. ter I recognized a terrif ic opportunity to let the world know about our non-profit group or dedicated people who are work- in g tirelessly to preserve our e1~ vironment and the quality of life. This group was formed less than two year1 ag.'l by 10 concerned Americans, i~ eluding Apollo astronauts \Vall Cun-- ningham and Rusty Schweickert. "Awareness'' is our middle name. · "Earth , I care" is our rnotto. When enough concerned adults and young peo- ple join forces to get a job done, there·• ho stopping them. Please, Ann. tell anyone who 11 l~ terested to write to Earth Awareness Foundation. 350 Grove Street, Somerville. N.J. 08876. Enclose a self-addressed stamped envelope. \Ve 've got lots ot ideas. What we need now is people who will help us. -JOHN HART (AUlhor of com ic stri pe;, \Viza rd of Id and D.C. l DEAR JOHNNY: I di g Earth and r .. with )'Ou, friend. Good luck. Even U tlrlnk ln~ 1$ the "in'' th ing ht your cro\\'d, it needn 'L crowd you out. Learn the facts from Ann Landel'S' bookM , ''Boo"' and You -For Teenagers Only." Send 35 ctnll in col.n and a long, seU·addresscd. stamped enveiO(l< lo the DAlLY PlLOT wilh yout rtquesl . 14 D41L v PJLDT Fr'd•'f. May 12, 1m Spring Brings Flurry of Fashions, Parties • Sprmg brings a rluny of ap- propriate. 1cti\11l.Lt1. including .1 strawberrv brunch. fuhion 1ho~·s and installallon lunch· -·· Lawyers 1 Wives Spring Is a Ne~· 8eg1 Mlng "'di theme the 1nstallapnn lunche<1n of l..Aw\·ers· \\'1\·U rir Orange Coun1 y Thursday, t.1ay 18, in Lorenzo's re stauranl. Santa Ana. featured 1n an art e1hlb1t 111'ill be signed etchlnga by Charles Bragg, noted for hls work! depicting doctor• and lawyers. ~tr.s. William Byrnes of Tustin will be seated as pres!· ~ . • ~ . deot. and tnstalltd with her will bt thf ~1.mee. Jamea Booth, Arthur 8 r a d I e y , Wilham Murray and Robert Bewley. vice pr'!!idents: Jack Lincoln 11nd Paul Wiimer. secretaries. and F u r m a n Rnberts, trea~urer. Also. the ~tmca Kennerh B r y 11 n I . parliamentarian; J ames Batchelor, st a 1 e representative, and Clarke ~tiller, director·at·large. Garden Club A Conservation Day tour is plaMed l)y the Llguna Beach Gardf!n Club for Friday, May 19, htginning at 9 11.m. with a \'isi t tn thf! Back Bay. Conducting the tour will ht Pau1 Col burn . naturalist, who also 1''ill lakr lhf! croup to Tuckf!r Btrd Sanetuary lhtn Bloom Ranch for a picnic. Civic Playhouse The seventh anni versary of the Costa Mesa Ci v i c Playhousr will be celebrated during ;i pa rr y Fr iday. May 19, fol\ow1ng the opening night ptrformance or "My Sislf!r Eileen." The !f!stlvilif!i!I 10 the com· mustily rf!Crf!ation cf!nt!J"" alM will salute the Patron 's As.soclatlon for its support. Art Le ague Members of the Costa Mesa BROADWAY STAR -Maggie Ha yes. who made her Broadway debut in 1938 has turned to designing jewelry. Her designs include large rings, bracelets and gold circlets for the neckline. Childhood Collections Transformed to Jewels By GAY PAULEY NEW YORK ( UPll -Since childhood Maggie Hayes. the actreS5, has collected things . Colleclln.g stafted \Yi th decorative eggJ used for paper v.·eights and the like. Then il was miniature boxes. Collecting expanded t o roaming antique shops during the days while she wsi,; perfonning even i n g 11 on. Broadway or on tour. buying beads, ornaments. other things that caught her eye. What resilly turned her 1nto what she is toda y. a jev.·tlry designer, was a trip 10 Japan jusl before Expo 70 n•hen sht brought back some I in y ivory and wood carvings to decorate with gems from the famil y jewel bo1 and wear as unusual accents. She wore ont of the carved Ivories !S a pin one day to lunch with a friend \Vho ad- mired it and a ~ked its source. .. J made ii ." said Miss Hayes. The friend asked n•hether Maggie could do some jewelry for her and so began a new eareer for the actress from Baltimore, Md .. who made her Broadway debut in 1938, Now. in less than tv.•o years, Miss Hayes is being honored with a special display of her designs at New Y o r k ' s Bergdorf Goodman. JEWELRY She plans to visit other f111e sfores around !he country and has written a complete guide to makin~ your own jewelry. The guide 1s called simply "Maggie Ha yes J e v.· e I r y Book ." v.·rilten v.ith Atfr~ Allan Lewis who also cci-- authored two other VA n NoSt.rand Reinhold titles, ''Thr. Svlvia S i d n e y Needlepoint a'ook" and "The GI or i A Vanderbilt Book of College ." Mi~s Hayes' book is pro. fusely Illustrated with how·to photos and sketches. She says To avoid dJsappo1ntmen1 . prospective brid., are reminded to have their wedding atDiies with black and white ~lossy ~holo­ graphs to the DAlLY PILOT Womens D~ partment one . week before the wedding. Pictures received alter that time will not be used. For engagement announcements It ts Imperative lhat the s1ory. also accompanied by a black and whlte glossy picture, be su b- mltttd si:r weeks or more before the wedding date. U deiilllne Is not met, only a story will be used. To help till r1111uJrements on both wed· ding and engaiement stories. forms are available in all of tbe DAILY PILOT oUlcO.. Further questions will be answered by Women 's Section 11.ltf members 11 642-4321. that any "·oman can turn je .. \'elry designer with a few tools and good taste. "You can find v.'hat you want In antique shops," she said . "lf you travel you can pick up 11! sorts of things you can use together." Maybf! you won 't move into the rarified world in which M i 8 s Hayes operates - customers includf! Princeu Grace of Monaco; Mr~. Joseph A. Ne.ff, wife of the investment banker: Mrs. Paul Manno. wift. of the antique dealer and interior designer : M r 1 . Charles Revlon . wife of the cosme1 ics tycoon. and Virginia Graham. the television star. Hayes ' prices run from $.125 to $750 for gem-encrusted rings on up In S5.000 for gold chain~ srt with stones or je .. 1;elled crosses. Thr other day Miss Hayes brought by some of her designs, roJJing out a col· leclion of necklaces made from antique beada she'd got· ten. from Africa. TRADER BEADS They're called t ' I rad e. r beads," she said, because they once were used for barter. She wore numerous rings. the first item she'd made from the. oriental Ivory -a face ~urrounded by assorted col· ort:d stone11 to mike • pin. and a gold collar with huee clrtlets art1ched. "It's Tlholln <n f .. lina." •he said, and "11-carat. every bloody bit or 11." The auburn-haired, brown· eyed 1ctress-deslRf'U I n private life in Mrs. Herbert Bayard S11t'Cpe Jr .. the p~ ducu • director · writer cur- r .. ay hoad of lho 1elevl1ion deptrtmf'nt for Ne' York's Off Track BeUIJll •Y•!tm. The couple hos two children. Rusty, 23. actor and musician. Ind Trtcy. 20. 1tmlng in 1 dlytlm1 television aeries. I Art League wtU dbpt1y work& ln South Coast Pla1111 Thura- day, Friday and S.turday, May 111-20, with proceeds from sales going t.o art teholarshlps. ' ' YWCA Brun ch The. Spanish courtyard of Bowers M~!le.um, Sa~a An• will provide the 1ettlnglfor rhe. Santa Ana YWCA '11 14th an- nual Strawberry Brunch Fri- day, May 19. A highlight of tht. 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. affair will be 11 fAshion show nf co u I u re. gafments made and modeled by atude.nts nf Mrs. Marge Swenson. teacher at the Y, author And le<:turer. FV Frien ds New officers wUJ be in· stalled by the Fount.a In Valley Friends of the Library during 11 luncheon Thur&day, Maf 18, In the FishermAn reataufant, Huntington Be.11ch. l Seated will be the Mmes. Lorin R. Lammers, president: Joseph Ditte. vict pre1ident: Ronald Murphy and A I K r u k e n berg, secretaries : Chester Venning , treasurer : ChriJ Schneider, auditor. and James Dick , historian. Charles A. Dixon Jr. will 1e.rve a.! parliamentarian . Ea stern Ster f.irs. Res Albright , who serves as Grand Ruth , one of the Grand Star Points of the Grand Ch!pler in California. will be honor@d by the Order of the Eastern Star during a reception Friday. May 19. The the:me of the: 7:30 p.m. event in the Seafaring M1.1sonic Temple . Newport BeAch wUI ht The Sun11hine of Her Smile . Woman's Club FashioM Round the Clock v.·ill be sho~'M during the an- nual spring luncheon. f;illh lnn show and bridge party of the Woman 's Club of Laguna Beach, to take placP at 12:30 p.m. Friday, May 19. Spring colon of apricot and yellow will fUl the clubhouse for the benefJt , wltich will ra isr funds for kitchen equip- ment . HB Metho dist Stt..ak Jgorl baked pot~toe~. vegetables. sa lad and dessert will~ nn the menu of the fund-raisi ng dinner pl1nned by !hf' First Unittd Method ist Church or Huntington Beach for Friday, May J9. The 5 to 7 p.m, event will lake plaee at the church and ra ise funds for a floor bufff!r. Sponsor is the Women's Soci~ ty of Christian Servit't. Art Festival ·All form s ,,f 11rt will be 1,,.. eluded in the seventh aMual Art 11nd Cullu.r•I Festlval planned by the Huntington Beach Stake Relief Society fnr F'rida)'. MAy 19, and Saturday, ~11ty 20. Location will be lhP Hunting· ton Beach Stake Cf:nter. The fesl i\'al's purpo~ Is lo en· CflUrage i:ind devtlnp tbs talents of all age groups. Climaxing the Activities will hf-a presenl1tion nf "Bec1use. of Lo\•t ". 1 music!! dramatir.aJion by Mrs. Val Palmer and Mrs. Lester Holstead. Horoscope: Leos ·· Find Truth· Hurts SATURD AY, MAY 13 By SYDNEY OMARR Mrs. Marie Hieburn of North Bergen , N.J., inform!! us: "I am a Taurus: my hus- band. our S.month-0ld son and our French poodle are all Leo. Tl's true that Leo wan ts center stage. But Leo people Also are thoughtful, considerate of the feelings Of others And definite· ly are born leaders. They are a little Jealous at times and Also mul!t have things lht.ir way or no way at All . I speak from esperience!" Response : Jt is ve.ry nice of 11 Taurus to 'say at leAst a few good things .about Leo. ARIES (March 21-April 19l: Travel plans are subject to c h a n g e. Fa m i 1 y re- sponsibilities co u 1 d cause you to cancel plans. Cancer in- dividual is in picture. Check messages, dire<:tiorui. reserva- tions. Relative ex h I bi t s ten.deney to be argumentative. In OCC Cente r TAURUS (Apri\ 20..Ma y 20 1: Avoid extravagance. Be a comparison shopper. You now can obtain qualily without breaking back of budget. In vestigate . Ask questions. GEMINI <Ma v 21·.lune 20 1: Opposition is bluffing. Your position is strong. Mat!!. partner Is not seeing too clear· ly, Stick to principles. Aim toward goal. Be dynamic, original and independent. Get going. Take iniUati ve. Lead the way. CANCER !June 2\·Julv 22 1: Nothing is apt to remain the same. What appeared ~olid could evaporate. 81! ready with alternatives. Gemini and Virgo individuals a.re in pic- ture. Accent is on secrets, clandestine meetings. changes of scenery. LEO (,July 2.J.Aug. 22 1: Plenty of excitement i s featured and involves oppo!ite sex . You get al truth and it might hurt. Howevl!r. you will know where you stand and Food Fair Set where you are going. Taurus and Libra persons figure prominently. VIRGO 1Aug. 23-Sepl. 22 ~: Don 't dece ive .v nur s e~f . Eschew "'ishful thinking. G,t on solid ground . Re r u s r burden v.•hir.h acluallv hpln nJ;?s elstwhere. Strive 10 perceive. AQUARIUS (Jan. 21J.Feb. 18 1: Friends may not be rt.liable snurces of In- formation. Make personal in- quirie!'I . Stress independence. integrity. Many now ser.k to flat ter you . Perceivl! motives. l~o individual will aid. PISCES ! reb. l9-M11rch 2t)l : Study Virgo message. Strive for more practical procedur e5. Properly v11lue should bs studied. 0nn ·t give u p something for nnthin,R. Con· dilions on domestic front 11re subject lo change. Plan ac· cordingly. LIBRA 1Sepl. 2.1.flcl. 22 1: ,----------------------, Check reser var inns. lmprovf' line.o; of communication. Take time In read bf'tween lines. .Postpone journey if possible. SCORPIO IOcl. 23-Nnv 21 1· c_onsolidate position . Prolect valuables. finish rathf'r than be~in projPcls. One clo~p to you confides prnblem Arie~ is likel y to bf involved Avoi d cnmm iting yourself to long.- range money program. WA il and observP. SAGITTARJlJS 1N111· 22· Dec. 21 1: Separate ill usion frnm reality See prrsnn s. si tuatio ns as thev actu allv ex· isl Accent on ho.ldin,!! logf.ther tenuous rela tionship. N P v.• outlook is necessar\' \Vhal sufficed in past ma ~· iin longer be pffecti ve. CAPRICORN I Dec 22·Ja n. l\'.1 1: Obtain hin t from Cancer message. Be fl exible. A1·oid brooding . Outlnok is brighler than you mighr nnw imagine. Improve w n r k techniques. Insist on quality ser1·ice.. Don't becbme invol ved in gossip. Fo r Press Chairmen Workshop Set The DAILY PILOT \\OUt conduct • series of ~'orkshops for press 1 chairmen of Orange Coast women's organizations. Presidents are also '''elcome. ·r,vo workshops will be conducted each afternoon during the week of May 22·26. Eacn v.·iJl be limited to 40 persons and reservations will be taken on a first-come. first ·served basis. The sessions. scheduled at 1 and 3 p.m .. Wi rrlnclude a tour of lhe newspaper plant and a question and answer period. conducted by Bea Anderson. v.1oman's editor. To make reservations. call the D . ..\JL \" PILOT at 642·4321 and ask for the \\'Omen's department. Lecture-demonstrations and continuous exh.ibits will bring Foods of the World to Orange Coast College fr om 10 11:.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, May 20. department director : Carol Heinz, homt economist for the 1---------------------------------- The special food fair will be presented in tht Student Center and the public is in· vited lo come and go as they wish during the free event. Ron Deutsch, educational consuJU.nt for the Orange Co u n t y lnteragency Nutri· tinnal Council, will speak at 11 11 .m. on What You C!n't Believe About food. Eight other le<:tures will be presented during the day. Several will be repeated to avoid conflicting interests. Guest speakers in c I u de Virginia Piper.Carn a Ii on Company's home s er v I c e Home Wedding Southern California Edison Company: Lorraine Cr a f t . man.ager of special products for Thcrmador, and Karen Owens, chief nutritionis1 for the Orange County Medical Cenler . qthers are Sandy Petrov. consumer services director for Lawry's Foods ; Mary Roberts . consumer service director tor the Western Growers As.socia· tion. and Doris Robinson. home economist for the Na· lional F'isher'ies Service. Exhibits and i n for m a I demonstrations \I' i 11 be presented by numerous local and nati on.al food and food service concerns. July Date Selected JULAINI STURDIVANT June Date Revealed A June 10 wedding in the: garden al Hiatoric Lou111bery Farm. Brooklondalt, N.Y. la plaMt:d by former C11ifomi1n Joan Gale S.l .. bey 1 n d John C.ntlne Lounsbery. Miss S.ieebey Is l he daughter or Mrs. Alvin L. HoU of Thr,. Arch Bay and Ted Soleebey ol San Dleao. She Is 1 ar1duate ol UCLA where abe w11 president . of Chi Omega aororlly 1 n d selected for Mortar Bolnl. Her fiance holds a def" lrom lhe Jutllianl Schoo ol ~1usic in Ne'A' York and Is 1 member ol the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra. ~1r. and Mrs. Clayton R. Sturdevant of Costa Mesa have announced the en.gag!!· menl of their dAughter , .Julaine Sturdevant to Gary George Newton of San Marion. The. wedding will take place .July 29 in the homf! of the bride's 'Parents. ~f I s s Sturdevant is A graduate of lht. University of California. Santa Ba r bar A where she earned A BS in physical education. and now is .attending UCI g r a d u a t e !Choo I. Her fian.ce is the son of George Newton of Balboa tsland And Mrs. Bailey Muller of San Marino. He is a graduate· of Pasadena City College and teaches at Morace: Emign Intermediate SChool. Newport Beach. JOAN SALlllEY I :Ii I i j ! I I ._'_· _"_1-Jti I ,. llH ,...,,... I ;; j ;.'/#.' lhat911•• •• , ........ , ...... ... the most unique gif t in the entire Wes t ~ a blosso ming garden that hangs freely fro m a ceiling .•• adorns a \vaH .•• or graces a fl oor area. Brin g Mother along to choose her own. The entire fam· ily wil l enjoy the spectac ula r co lor sho~v of the tho,usands of livi ng, hanging gardens on d isplay. S'/o discount on your purchase If you bring this •d with you. Open 8 10 6 Tu•sd•y through S.u v1d1v. 10 to 6 Sund.ays M1t1dtlM1r 2221 falrview ad. Cott• Mtt• Ph.611- Mbtktr'I Vttio 14741 Chtft1nu Dr. Mltsion Viejo Ph. ll7-7111 • ' • DAit V PILOT Modif iers Unl imited TV Star Enters ·other Oroits Multl-t1lentod 1t 62, Robert Cumm ings 1h1re1 'mind dynamics' with h is wife Rag in• Mlrla. UPI Ttlffl ... lt By GAY PAULEY NEW ''ORK \l1P I) -r<i·leet Rob~rt Cumminss. phiJoiopher, preacher on 'f>ro· ~r n.lllrilion. pilot and of courst. performrr. Cummings. who will bt fi2 in June, is involved in enough projects to make the average .Joe or .Jant look likt a dropout If involvtd in only one or tv.·o. Cum1n ings and his m:ond wife, Reg inA M11ria who's of Chinese de scent, v.·err ju st beginning an around-the-v.·or!d tour in behaU or one of Cum· mini;s' latest ven1ures. a CQn- J.!lomtr11te specializing in na- tural cosmetics. He 's vict' president. membtr or the board and the su pt>r travtling salesm11n for the lint', sold through distributors. Tht' ~mbrtlla ror so man~· of the 11ctor's business activities- is Bob Cummings. Inc. of "•hich he is bo11.rd chairman. Two subjecls stood nut repeatedly in nur talk . One is Cummin~s· "mind dyna mics'' philosophy, which c111ls on a person to · .. 11ct with all you r heart as if it v.·ere already done." Distributors !Ake mind dynamics courses too "You can a cc om p \ 1 s h Childhood Esteem Reaches CYNTHIA McCLUNG Wedding Plans Told l\Ir . and l\'1rs. Eugene F. 1'1cClung Jr. of South Lai:?una ha\'t announced the engage· menl of I he ir d au !'1 ht er . C.vn1hia Lynne 1\1cCJung to Gary \Vayne Flood. , By CA ROL ~IOORt 01 ll'lt 01Hy Pll1l Stiff ''Talk sociably to your children. Don't talk down to them because the)r don 't have the s1rrngth, money or in· fluence you associate 1vith adult friends,., said Dr . Gordon 1'1cCoy, Fu 11 er ton physician lecturing on Love - family Style. He reminded the UCI Ex· tension cour.!;e on ~1olherhood Mystique th11! · a I th o u g h children seem too young to un· derstand. they do absorb the maxims of learning to love by Director Sees Dream A nev.• child care cen1 er is in full operation at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station and ii is the drearn. of a lifet ime for its director, f\1rs. Lauribel Pierson. She has been \\'Orking "'ith the children of Marines for 21 years and has hoped durin! all these y<'ars for the estab ish- mcnt of such a center. Fulfilled center v.•as housed in quonset huts 1ht1l had been lemporary ofncers' quarters during \Vorld War II. In November of J;ist ye11r a new facility "''as comple1ed at the station. Tv.•enty·tv.•o staff members are on duty full t i m e lhroughout the day and even- ing . providing services for children tv.•o months and older. Dcf}('nden1s of all Armed F'orces personnel in the area being loved and seeing lo,·e and learning lo respect others by respecting oneself. "A high sense of seU-esleem determines every other rela· fionship in life -fami l~ cupational. marital or social." he said ... The ability to love is not intrinsic. A baby is absolutely selfish but we gro\\'. hopefully, lo realize how much depends on what we can do for others, rather than vice versa. ''The best insurance for a mature. happy life is to suppl y children \\"ilh self·esteem and love so tht>v will leave home emotionally. satisfied. having tnjoyed lhe togetherness ." Dr. McCoy urged parents lo abandon a I I ego·satisf.vini;:: ideals pushed onto children because the '"why'' is wronli(. ''Expecting a child to be a lop scholar or athlete or prom queen is pract ically pros· litution -using somebody else"s body for your pleasure. If such goals ;ire not Achieved. children fee I di sappo inted because they have not pleased the ir parents. ''But that"s tht w r on g An early 5eptember wedding in J.aguna Beach is being planned . !\1rs. Pierson began her career in Saskatchcv.'an \\·here she "·as an elementary school reacher. She came to El Toro in 1951 lo 1rork as a teacher of preschool children in the El To ro Officers' Club. ma y use the center. as well 11s !;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ll children of civilian employees at the station. The bride-to-be is a gr;iduate of \Varren High Sc ho o I , Do"·nty and a11ended the L:ni,·ersiiy of Redlands "'ith a seme15lrr in Sa lsburi?. In 1954. Brig. Gen. J . C. !\tunn. nol'-' reti red. extender! the service to children of Marines of all ranks. Preschool and kindergarten classes are available. with meals ;ind snacks served from I the center's new kitchen. I Her !iance. son of l\1r. and l\1rs. Dez fo~lOO<l of Ani'lheim . is a graduare of Anaheim High School and at1ended the U of R. Bolh are students at South~rn Oregon College. Shirting the Jocalion v.'as necessar.v \'!·hen !ht un its of the Third Marine Aircrart Wing mo\led into the child care center building in 1956. After seeing the ~ulfillmenl of her dream, Mrs. Pierson v.·ill s1ep do11•n from the direc-j lorship in June to retire. Her as~ist.;inf. !\!rs . Mary Yard , ~·ill take lhe reins. For the ne~t 15 years the NEWPORT S·T·R·E·T·C·H & SEW KNITS ARE TIMELESS Learn to sew them TODAY NOW YOU CAN MAKE TWO OUTFITS tN LESS THAN IT NORMA LL V: TAKES YOU TO MAKE ONE. LEARN All OF THE EASY KNIT SEWING TECHNIQUES FROM OUR PROFESSIONAL NEWPORT TEACHERS. JOIN THE THOUSANDS OF WOMEN THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY WHO HAVE LEARNED THIS SUCCESSFUL METHOD OF SEWING WITH KNITS . It 's Fun, Exciting and Inexpensive! It's So Personally Satisfying! KNIT S·EWING CLASSES-ENROLL NOW PRl·P'AIO JIEGISTIATION RIQU lllED •ASIC J TECHNIQUE l'IVE 2 Hit . CLASSES l!ACH WEEK l'Olt l'IYI WIEllS -111.IH T ue .~•Y.10 100 PM, Tl!u•'. Ju"" I ~ (! ,.. M. IEM tillS'E l"OUlt J HOUR CLASl'EI -N .M Tflu•Ml•v. M•Y JS l ;JO p ,M, l'ASHION ll'L.l.llt & ll'INISHll'IG TMltE'E LESSON 51Elt11!5 -14.M C1tV1rl"ll ,,,. l•1>e ""'"" ft1 11 .. 1,111nQ IL 1•w;>1C1 • QlHl!!y k"I' 0"'"'""'· (l•n •1 Ot1H11. :-1 J•c-111. rJ COo'lt1 & Cllt>t'I T1'11•td8y, July 6 .... , .. . .. f '' ' M, rltfld~v. Julv 11 • 1·00 I'M. SPOltTSWl!Alt l'OUlt t Hit, CL.1.151!5 -W.M LHMlll #1 Ten1>>1, ~l $(!(1y S'l.•I 11"'1 1-foD 1-<uqo•• PA~li. ~J Golf 50.l•t-;-S0.1n1>y lt•lt Too, ~' Jum11 !.u•I Wtd"etdlY. M8V Jl f •)l'I A /Ill. I.I.SIC I TICHHIOUI 2 Nit. CL.ASSIS EACH WllK l'Olt I Wf'Elll Ut.M MoNUV. MIV U 7·00 P.M. Tl111nd•V. JUM l t ·..S AM SWIM SUITS THiii!( 2 Hit. CLASSES -14,M M~nd•Y, M•Y 72 •. . 7 II PM. T~u••d•Y. M8V U f :1(1 AM. NEW 101!.l.S 1'1VE 1 Hit. CL.ASSIS -Ul.M fllut5d4V. Jlll'lt! 1 .•... . I IS PM. CMILOltEN'I WI.I.It THltl!l 1-Hlt. CLAISll -U 5POr11Wlllf -Niql!I -Of"tu \ilOl>!lftY, M11y U • t 11 • M. MIN'I ATTlll:I $!)( J•Hlll . (L.1.1111 -Ul.IO """'· O<t!ll Sl!lrl1. J l ,O.t!I\, NKkt!e1 "°'fd.-.e!odey, Mir '' . 10 1111 AM. LINClll:IE l'tV e l·Hlt. CLASSES -tit.It Tl'ltJl'"tdllY. M~y 11 .... . .....•. l ·Da PM MfH•t l"it.INTI TWO 1·Mlt . CLAlllS -1,.N WO'lttlf'S08Y, M•V 1' 111.(IO AM .. IS MOTHER'S DAY-SUNDAY, MAY 14 Gossard-Artemis ·. On the go? Li ke to keep moving? Choo se Satin Class ic for yourtravels. Slick . t rim styli ng in packab le, easy·care nylon tricot. Blue with von il!o cream. Pa jama $12. Short coot $14. The pa jamo in siz e'.> 32 lo 38. The coo t ;n petite, small. medium, Iorgo. Motch;ng scuffs $4.50. Veta's FREE DEMONSTRATION-SAT., MAY ll-1 :00 P.M. LADIES ROBE-PLEASE RSVP NEWPORT S-T-R-E-T -C-H & SEW1 I ~ mtllAfl APfAHL ............. ,.._ ....,... ..... ,. I 2121 Wtstcliff Dr. Corner 17th & Irvine {Next to Coco's) Mtfl.·Ttlllt•. ' '·"'· " ,. ,,,... l'"rt, & Ill. f 1,lft. ft l t .111, PHONE 645-5120 \ 642-1 197 0.._ Mtitll"f I Tlrt"""' ,.,.., 'tO ' • '·But I only eat about 76 pills 1 da~ ,"~he i1a1d. All those who 've labelled C'umminii;~ 11 .. food fadd ist." 1 '·\·iramin hypochondri11r .'' ho11·e\f'r. should takf' a look .111 Cumming~ ne.11r1n~ 62 . HI' has f"I() paunch . nn double l'hln. he v.·ater ~k1~. S"'im'.". and holds A co.-nmercial certificate to ny ~i ng!e and mullien~1ne pl11ne~. eat as: 1t•hat you don't get "'·hen you eat " \\lhe.n he and tua wile are not tr;ve\ling. they eat as ma~Y raw foods RS they can at thett Bel vE'dere home Onr of his farher's fr iends, And onre a pallent. wa! Orvillt \Vrl~hl. the actor'! godfather and hence his mid· dle name or Orvill e. He's al readv chrckrd nu! nn jtl.'-loo, he s.ii rl . And he plans/!.-;;.;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;o to participatf' 1n thP u.·nrld Air racts in Saskatcht'wan 1n J une. A gre11l de.:il rof v.·h11! l'h11pe~ run1mings is film1l.1 hf'ril!ll!f' A n;i1ivt of Joplin . h1~ f;irher ChArles C.larf'nrr C)1n1m1n,I!~. a former .lesu1t prteia. 11::1.~ a ph~·siria n·sur,l!M'ln u. ho mar - rif'<I a rrote.~111n1 rn1n1~trr . '"It ,.,.as 1111 d::irt"s thf'flr1 !hat natur,. · usu11llv kncn1:s bf'~t." sa1rl !ht 11c!or". I ~".=·much what you l Siz es 12 V2 Contemporaryfurniture Gift .'lt19!1P.iiHt1.• ----. D•ESSES e SLIP'S e ROl!S e ILOUS!S e C.t.P'RIS • SP'ORTSWt.t.• e GOWNS e SWl.t.TlRS Und11cidfld? let Mom choose her own with 11 gift certificate. ~~~'s HALF-SIZE SHOP, COSTA HUNTINGTON MESA CENTER >1;14 1105 NEWP'O•T BLVD. OUTSIDI .M.t.LL I 'Ii Block No.ti\ I N111t to ------/ .... , 1 ''Love that ~ G . . I" I ~', en1ep · , __ --- You never I eave the comfort and safety of your car, rain or ahine, day or night. Just touch the button on the portable transmitter inside your cir •.. ga1;1ge door optns, light floods in· terior,'f and in you go. Once inside Genit rev•rs•s tht proctss ind locks up whtn you're rt1dy. You're protect· ed 1g1inst thre1t of burglary lite 1t night. Investigate this IUJNrb conven· fenc e tod1y • ·~ .... 11$.Ht "MJ.trtU C111•ttM Prlcn l'h" 1~•U!llll6it VISIT OUR SHOWROOM SEA COAST BUILDERS SUPPLY 1651 PLACENTIA -COSTA MESA -PHONE 642·3490 Jj. DAILY PILOT 'Frld1y, M1112. 1972 ,_,i(,J UP'I TtltJlll019 THE RED SOX'S TOMMY HARPE R SLI DE S IN SAFELY IN 8·1 ROU T OF THE ANGELS. Sports In Brief UCLA Star Arresred ·· At War Demonstration LOS ANGELES -UCLA 'a player of the yeaz:..-ithis past college aeason , Bill Walto,( iays he's dedicated to protesting against the administration's handling of the. war in Vietnam. He's dedicated to the point of going U> jail for it. .. The 6-foot--11 All American, who led tM Bruina to a 3G-O record and their 1ixth cotiaecutive NCAA title this past season, wu one of about 50 persons l!"rested for laill11'1! U> dilpene Oil th< UCLA campus durillg an antiwar protest Thursday. An official of the school said erpulaion ts only a remote pouibility and said other dilciPllnary mea&W'es ci.n't be discu11sed at this tilne. E4irller in Ute week, Walton wu asked why he w11 willing to be arn1ted. "Beine m1sttd is nothinc compared to what the administration is trying to do,'' Walton said. "It's very impartant thal the administration know how I feel about their aetions in Vietnam ." ~ FORT WORTH -Bruce Crampton joined Tei:an Fred Marti as the first round leaders in the $11.5,000 Colenial Na- tional InvitaUonal Golf Tournament Thuraday after getting around a water b~zard known as Crampton's Lake . Qoampton, one of the hottest players on the tlJur this year. blew a victory here 10 years aco on the 18th hole, collecting dou- ble bogeys on the third and fourth rounds Revson Reach es 191 at Indy; Racer Cra she s INDIANAPOLIS (AP) W it h qualific•tions for the May 27 Indi~-polis 500-mile auto race set to start Saturday, three drivers have zoomed around the 2i.1-mile Speedway at speeds of 190 miles an hour or better. The latest driver to surpass 190 was Peter Revsen. last year 's pole position wiMer and owner of the Speedway record, 178.f96 m.p.h. Revson pushed his McL11en Te4111 car to an unofficial 191.123 Thursday. Bobby Unser and Gary Bettenhausen earlier posted l•ps in excess of 190. Unser drove his Dan Gurney Ea1\e at 194.721 and BetteMauun a Roger Penskg McLaren at 111.011. Saturday is the first of four days of qualifications to determine the 33 starters for the May 27 race. The IO.mile trials continue Sunday and May 211 and 21. Lee Brayton. 38. Coldwater, Mich., washed out a perfect Speedway safety record for the month when he Jost control ThursUy coming out of the fourth tum. The Cll' crashed into the outside will twjce but be escaped injury. President of 1 centent plant and a veteran or the aprint car circuit. Brayton had a top lap 'lburaUY of 173.144. EarUer. A. J . Foyt. who has won here three Umes, caused some anxi"us momenta when he rocketed dt1wn the front 11raJ1huway wilh flam., traUlng from bil Ceyole Ford. Foyt broufht lh• car tb a stop in the first turn and flames wm ertinguished. He returned to the track later. Gordon Johncock, Revson's team.mite in a pair of Brltiah-!maff McL&rens, posled a lap at 187.227 m.p.h .. a poraonal bi~. Mike Mosl~f. ran a lap at 188.245 in a Leader card Offy. RIJ~t behind him WU Jim Malloy at 181.0ll iii a Gerhardt !oaf•· ' • with shots into the lake. The leaders are four-unde.r·par at 66 and hold a two-stroke le&d over sil" other players. ~ PASADENA -Th< financl1Uy troubled P!sadena Bowl. after 26 years as a post- season football attradion, was cal'lceled for 1972 Thursda y and may not be reviv· ed. officials aaid. During the first 20 yeaN of the game. when it was known as the Junior Rose Bowl and featured junior college teams. some $400,000 went to local charities but in recent years it was plagued by poor at- tendance. ~ BRUSSELS~ Manuel Oranl.e! of Spain defeated Ove Bengston of Sweden 6-2, 6-'2 Thursday in the day's top match in the Belgian International Open Tennis Cham· pionships. In another match, TOm Gorman was ousted by Patrick Hombergen of Belgium tMI, 6-3. • ~ BOURNEMOUTH. England -Stan Smith. the U.S. Open champion, isn't at h"is best but he·s hot and he 's in the semifinals of the British Hard Courts Tennis Championships. Smith was off form Thursday but bat- tled his way into the semilinals with a 6- 4, 9-8 victory over Jurgen Fassbender of West Germany. Smith was to meet France's Pierre Barthes in the semi-finals. Barthes beat South Africa's Peter Cramer~. IH. 6·3. Jim Connors, the only other Amer ican in the quarter finals. lost to Bob Hewitt of South Africa, 4-6, 7-5, 6-1. Hewitt was to play Die Nastase of Romania. 4~. 6-J , 6-2 conqueror of Jon Tiriac of Romania . ~ LOS ANGELES -Coach John McKay Isn't sure yet wlto'll be doing most of the passing for his University of southern California football team next fall . Bot the Trojans will be throwing the football . And if TI!ursday night was any in· dication. a fellow named McKa y will be doing most of the catching. Young J. K. McKay. sophomore son of the coacl'l. caught 16 passes from another sophomore, Pat Haden ,· in the 29'-29 tie between the Reds and Whites in USC's annual spring football game at the Celiseum. Rie ss en Duels Laver Tonight DALLAS (AP) -Marty Riessen thinks a night out with the boys jwt may bt. the tonic to carry him to the World Chan'I· pionship of Tennis title . "I'm learning to control my nerves. said Riessen &fter he outlasted Cliff Drysdale ~7. 4-6, 6-2, 7-5. 6-3, Wednesday nigh t to advance to tonight's semifinals against favored Rod Laver of Coroni del Mar. "I've been staying out late and the later I stay out I.he better I 1~m to play:• Riessen asid. "It takes all the nervousness out." While Riessen was playing better on sleepless nights . Arthur Ashe got 11 hours of winka •nd thrtshed Holland's Tom Okker In 1trat1ht sets 6-1. 6-1. &-3 lo set up a semifinal match tonight with defen· d!ni champion Ken Ro8'wlll o f AustraU1. Ashe ripped off 18 acts In I n1asterful serving performane:t. "I know how to Stl'Vi and Ill I" h1\Ye lo do ii )Ult "'n· c<n1ra1o and 10 0ut and do ft," AW 111d. Messersmith Joins Ailing Hurler Ranks ' By CRAIG SHEFF Of I'll• O.lly I'll•! Jllff California Angels manager Del Rice says he isn't a.bout to throw in the towel in the American League West pennant chase. But he certainly has good oawe. For instance: (1) the Halos' three top pitchers are all nursing injuries of one kind or another. t2) the club still lacks that ~tra punch when runners get on base. Thursday night at Anaheim Stadium. it wu Halos pitcher Andy Messersmith.'! tum to head for the infirmary. Bothered by a bruised. middle finger fin his right hand in the p.!st oouple of weeks, Messersmith was thought to be gound once again. But the finger flared up again in th! A ngela Slat e All Gt l'll•I •R KMl'C (nt Mt'/ ~l An4t1\ vs. Ntw York M•'1 1) Al'l{lt'' ~I. Ntw Yarl Mlv ,, Al'l~tli VI. N-Vari< M Y IS Al\lltll 11. 0..~lt.-.:1 M•v I' AllO•I• vs. O.~l1nd ''" o.m. 1:15 fl.m, l;Sj o.m, 1:.11 ...... !:SS ~-"'· second inning against the Boston Red Sox and the ex-Western High flash was generally ineffe ctive in an 8-1 setback. The previous ~ight Nolan Ryan t1uf- fered a groin injury and the repcrt. is iitill out on the hard-throwing right-hander. . And lefty Clyde Wright has been nurs- ing a so~e ann for most of the campaign . But Rice doesn't. appear worried -al. least not at this stage of the season. "I had the same thing happen at Salt L.1ke City last. year,'· Says the Halos manager. "We had six pitchers with sore arms early in the season and at one time we were 111,2 games back in the middle of June. It ll'as Ju1y before we got back in it." Salt Lake went on to win the Pacific Coast League title and Rice was named the _mino_r l~gue manager-<>f-the-year, . Ric_e 1nd1cated that if the Angels' pitching proble ms continue, he might h~ve to go to the bullpen for a startin& pitcher. ''\Ve might have to go to Fisher (Ed) or. Lloyd Allen iJ this keeps up. Or we might have to call a pitcher up from Salt Lake City." Meanwh!le, .the Angels continue to get a batch of hits m each game with very lit- tle results. In 20 games (8-\2) this season the Halos have outhit their oppcsition, 161· 152, but have been outscored, 86-50. And they've only 11lugged eight home runs- all with the bases empty. ·•we just can't seem to get. the hits when he gets runners on base." says Rice mat ter-of .factly. Thur~day night it was the pitching of Boston s Ray Culp and the hitting of Tomm.v Harper that wtre the key factors in the Red Sox victory. Tonight the Halos ~in a three-game geries with the Yankees with Rick Clark scheduled to duel New York's Ste ve Klint, IOlton (I) Cillft""I• (!) •• ,1'1rtt •• ,~ .... Mt""'· <I J 2 l J AICP'lll• 1'0 j O t O ""rlc!o,ta 4 1 2 J IM'nl.·CI Jo 1 1 lt.SP'llltf> rl • I 1 J llll'ltoft, 11 ' 0 I O llttf'Ktfi1, .)fl J 0 0 o lt.Ollwr, rt • o o o Jat._,,ton. 111 J 1 O o L.A!!t11, p o o O o lt.Mlll•r, U 4 0 0 0 $0tl'l(tr, 111 ' O t O J ,ICtn~ed~, l'b J I 0 0 Ctrllfl'llt, 11 J O 1 O ¥.t~llotmry, c ' ' l O Lhl~111 .-' O 1 o Cu!p,• 'OOOT••ll&r.t. 4010 M"Wf'lrilll'll, • 1 t O 0 SUy•rlo, oll I 0 1 0 OvMn.o oeoe ltiv.rt r1 ' l I O 'lot1ti l2 I f , Tit1 /, 15 1 t 1 ."'°" uo OJI! 200 -• C1lllo<"11!t llOO ODD tit -I Oil -~let" I, LIJI -l•ten J, Ctllltrnlt • 21 -Aoerlcfo, A1&ri11r, Cil'fll'ltt. JI -HtrPfr. Mil -It $P'l\llR (lJ, s -Culri ,, SI' -ANrk:lfl. J,. H • I~ II SO Culo IW.t.31 f t 1 I 2 ' ¥.•~nml!ll IL»•I ' ' 1 1 1 t 0-tltJll L.JU .... 10001' Ht" -IW M.-1m1tti IJ...,.....,,l. t it -MMYl'linl!ll. tltM -1 :Jl. ATNN1t"¢t -I.JIU. Pleased That People Still Want Me--Ma ys NEW 1YORK <APl -"It pleases me," said Willie Mays, 1'that people. still want me." With those modest words Thurgday. the baseball great began a •·new career" at age 41 with the New York Mets. The San Francisco wonder player, ac- quired in a much-publicized deal. re1ponded with enthusiasm at the idea of playing in New York. "I love baseball itnd I love this town ," 11aid the second best home. run hitter in history. ''I'm looking forward to playing -I'm not looking forward to eJll· barrassing myself. I'm glad the Mets didn't worry sbout how old I was. "That tells me something about "'illie Mays. It tells me that ma ybe I've got something left ·· For awhile, it looked as if the Mets weren't going to get the great center fielder at all. ~1ey;·s of the prospective deal broke last ... :eek. but it was reported· ly cooled when the Giants' asked too much. Interested in one of the Mels· starting pitchers. the Giants settled Thursda y for minor league right-hander C h a r I i e Williams and an undisclosed amount of caab. The deal wu quickly closed Thurs· day morning after Mays was personally brought in on the talks. Other than the sentimental reason of returning to the city where he started his playing career with the old New York Giants in 1951, Mays will be made happy In other ways, Do.nald M. Grant, chairman of the Mets board . pointed out. "As soon as Willie decides he doesn't want to play anymore," said Grant, "he has a three-year contract from that day on with the Mets' organization . He'll prob- ably be a coach. but he c\)Uld do other things.'' Mays. currenUy making t 165.000 a yea! under his playing contract, wouldn t make quite that much, naturally. when he decides to quit. But he won't be a pauper. either. , ··we 've settled on his f ure contra,ct already," said Grant. " n't say how much it is, but 1 wil say It's enough to keep \Villle happy and to keep us out ~f · debt." Mays, squeezed against the press room wall at Shea Stadium by scores of ' I f Ul"I TtlWIMM BOSTON 'S KEN HODGE REA CTS TO BO!BY ORR'S GOAL Bruins Capture Cop Turning Point Was Orr, Sa ys Rangers Captain ' NEW YORK (AP)-ln the end. as ii had been in the middle and the begin· ning. Bobby Orr made the difft:rence and now the Stanley Cup is on its way to Boston. Orr scored the game's first goal Thurs- day night and then set up the second as the Bruins blanked New York 3-0 on the shutout. goaltending of Gerry Cheevers. It came as no surprise that Orr was voted the $1.500 Conn Smythe Trophy and the new car from a national magazine as the playoffs' most valuable playe r. The surprise was that they bothered polling the writers for their choice at all . Orr, just 24, dominated the playoffs as he has dominated the National Hockey League since joining the Bruins six years ago. "He played another tr eme nd o us game," said Boston coach Tom JOhnson. "He does everyt.hing out. there." Everything, that Is, except clean the Ice between periods. orr. desperately disappointed when the Bruins were knocked off in I.ht oPenlng round of the playoffs last season , h11d vowed to make up ror1lt this year. And he did. "It is 1 great thrill." Orr said. "Win· nil)g IJ !he only thing." In !he New York dressing room. there was deep gloom. "You wanr to know what turned th is 1ame 1round?" asked captain Vic Had· field. "It w•s tbt same thing that turned the whole series around -Bobby Orr. Wt wtre evM In fact0ffs , tven in power playa and even In ponally kUllnJ. Everthing was pretty eve.n, exctpt they had Orr." Later, thousands of happy, chanting Boston fans converged on Logan Airport early this morning to welcome home the 1972 Stanley Cup heroes. Hundreds of cars clogged the milt-lofig Callahan Tunnel and the expressway leading from downtown Bo!lton to the Peninsula where the Eastern Airlines terminal is located 11nd where the Bruins' chartered plane landed about 2:30 a.m. Many walked the whole way. cars were left parked in the road from the airport entrance back through the tunnel anc;t the crowds pressed on by foot to pack the huge terminal. A handful of the Bruins . in cluding Ken Hodae. Wayne Cashman. COich Tom Johnson and general manager Milt Schmidt and club owner Weston Adams Jr .. braved the screaming crowd and foucht t,heir way through the ma.in lobby of the jam·pack(d terminal. Most of the pl1yers !tit !he 1lrport throufh !he hangar building, away from the fan~. State police reported that ibout a half doze.n persons fainted because of the press of the crowd and wtrt given first aid. Police reported the crowd noisy and "almost too la.rce to handle,'' but tbt.re were no arreats or troubJe. C3hantini "We're No. t,1' the throne finally left the airport ond be1an 1tra1· gling bAok homt, leaving Mhlnd an airport terminal flDtd wllh tom paper, 1*r c1n1 and, frien Jell and lrulna pouanta. cameramen and reporters. was the 'true plcture of c<lntentment Thursday, "Ifs a wonderful reeling," said Ma y8. "I'm very thankful 1 can come back to New York and pla y baseball at age 41 . Used In the right way, I can do a real good'job ror the Mets ." New York manager Yogi Berra acknowledged that Mays had lost some steam out of his throwing arm, but s:tiU could play Centerfield with the best because "he knows ~H !he hitters in this league. He knows where to pla y them. '"I'm sure he'll help our team. Maybe some or his knowledge 'A'ill rub off on the other 24 guys. He should make a good ex· ample for our players 1n follow.'' Berra doesn't expect Mays to revert lo his power·hitling rnrrit or old which helped hirn rollect 646 career homers, second only to Babe Ruth. But lhe man · ager insisted that his new player 'A'Ould be tough in the clutch sittlations both at bat and in 1tie field . Mays will be used essentially as a first baseman again st left-handed pitchers and a centerrielder when regular Tommie Agee·g problem knee acts up. Berra saw no problem of conflicl 1n the arrival or a super-star among his col· Jection of less-gaudy names. "Willie? He"s the best team player there is.'· said Berra. Mays confirmed th;:it immediately. "I'd rather see 2.'i happy guys than just one happy guy:· said Mays. 'il-'ho played in three World Series, two with the New York Giants and one in San FrAncisco . Mays said that he "definitely h.11d regrets about leaving the Giants, but hQped lhat the more enthusiastic New York fans would lirt him spir itually. '·You have In have regrets after playing with a learn for more than 21 years," said Mays. "It's not easy going to another team and another town even if it is New York, and trying to fit yourself in· to their style of play. But I don't th.ink rll have any problems 'A'ith Yogi. we·re greAt friends ." Mays certainly hopes that he doesn't have the same beginning that he had with his first New York team. when he joined the Giants in 1951 and went hitless in his first 21 times at bat. His dis.11strous major league start prompted Mays to announce to Giants manager Leo Durocher "Mr. Leo, take me out. I can't do it.. I can"t do it." Durocher responded·· quickly: "You leave the wnrrylng to me . I"ll worry if you can do it nr not. Just go out there and l!w ing the bat." Mays then hit his first major league homer , a "ghot over the. left fie.Id roof at the Polo Grounds off the great Warren Spahn. Team Better Than '71 Club, Sa y Dodgers ' NEW YORK tAP) -The. Los Angele.! 000,ers are ' better. Better than what depends on whom you ask . Manager _Walt A\l!ton says they·re bet- ter than last year. Outfielder Willie Crawford says they're better than Dodger teams of the past l!everaJ years. Thursday night. they were at least bet. ttr than the New York Mets en route to a Dodgers Sla te , ., •:lO ]~;)II~ ..... I 1J O.'l'I. 1.lJ '·"'· 1, 15 D.P'!I, 6-4 victory in the serond game of a day· night doubleheader. The Mets won th1 opener 2·1. "I won't compare teams," said Alston when asked it Los Angeles was stronger than. say, the team that bad Sandy Koufax and Don Drysdale in 196fi. "We're better than that team ,'' insist.I Crawford, part or the. new power hitting Dodger image. "Thi~ team has l!peed. better hitting than those Dodger teams and is just a stronger all-around team. It's the best team in a long time ." Another thing Crawford didn't mention was that this year's Dodger club has 1 five-man pitching rota tion, one of the best in baseball, and perhaps an even stronger bench than that pennant winner in 1966. "It'1 really something to have a fiv e. man rotation like we have.'' said reliever Pete Richert. who not ched a save in Thursday night's victory . "Nnne of those five guys can be sent to the bullpen. They·re all too good." Richert referred to Dnn Sutton, Bill Singer. Claude Osteen, Al Downing and Tommy John, Thursday night's winner. Sl(ONO GA.Ml l•s ArittlM (.i N•• Ytr11' f., ••rllt\l •tr1!"4 ltuut!I. u J 0 , , H••r•llolll'I, 11 s o o o l tKklltr. 1b • 0 0 0 T.Mtrlln•1. NI $ 1 2 o W.Plrktf, l b I 0 0 II AtN, er J I 1 1 W.Otvl•, Cf 4 I l I S!~ull, rf 4 O O O ,..ltotlnM!I, rf ' 0 II II C.J&ntl, II 4 1 I 1 Cr1wfonl. II • f J 1 l"rtget!, Jb • I 2 0 Gr•INlr-.·w111 ,311, 1 l I ltfucR8mo, lb • o 1 1 c•11n!u•••· < ' 1 1 1 Gro••, c ' o o 1 V11e.itln•, 111 l 1 1 0 McAl!drtw. fl ! 11 O O Jo""· * ' 0 0 0 C.T•ylCr. fl 0 II 0 0 ltlditr"f, ,, I 0 I 0 Ht "n, 1111 ' 0 a 0 l<oeim•~. o O O o o °"'''· ""' , 0 l 0 Tort1l 3' 6 10 $ Tot111l 11 4 11 f let "~''" OOll 20ll 400 -' N ..... Ver11' 000 tlOO llO -4 l -1t1111•ll f:r.INIX"tmo. DJO -Lfl Aflfltl• t LOI -LOI rill\ $, Nrw Yark I. ,. -Crtwierf, Gr1Mrk w!tr, ll;ui1rl!, "-OM. Oyt•. ti -T. Mt rtll'IU, Cr•wft~. Hit -IN. 0.¥!' (a), Crt..-fflr!f lJ), II -W, DlllY!t, S -Jel'l11. Sit -Greti, II" If It llt II SO J t t111 (W,J.~.) 1-,Jl 10 4 1 1 I lil ldl'" !·Ill I G 0 O 0 MtA,,.ffW ll ol·I) • 1 ' ~ O J C.T•V"' I I 0 0 O I IC••""•~ '''oo ; a,v. ll:lcllfl"f (IJ, Hll' -"'f MU11drtw !VII• HMl. ,.i .-C•ttntu•,_, Tllftt -J ... 11. A."nl•• -··· 1' I Bi H ~· Bi Fi 0 B Har heads Golde coach fertn Cur pitche Klun first . select Rus Phil~ were Cur ~ea so .373 in 47 hit ;even tn ~nd The the Ji "'·eek ALL· Poi. P ' .. l b 11 " "' " M (F Je " " ' " p " J< M )F J~ U!ol Jo ' M ' 0 . ' P St p ,. . " " ,, " " " .. " • • M ' T• ' 0 Sil 0 p ' ,, M "" ... r<e Phi Mo Chi St. Pit Ho Lo• San All Cin San ' ' p ' ' ' p 1 , OA ILY PILOT 11111 Photo Big Cu1iyo1i Golf Win1ier H;.rry Dodson (righl ) is presented v.•ith lhe Presi- dent's C.up for victory in the first annual event at Big Canyon Country Clu b of Newport Beach. Pre· sent.lng the award is tourney chairman Jim G1anu- lias. Five Ru stlers Top Shot Put Field On All-circuit Westminster Hosts CIF Baseball Team Spike Prelims Saturday Hard·hilling oulfielder Pa1 Curr;.n heads a five-player delegation from Golden \\lest. College named to the coaches' 1\H-Southern C11 tifornia Con· rerence basebrtll team today. Curran, !he SoCal player-of-the-year. pitchers ~1ark Barr and D a v e Klungresettr. c<itchrr Bud Bullini;t and first. baseman Blaine Calder "'ere all selected to the 17-mcmbcr firs! unil. Rustler outtielrlers (iary Simpson and Phil hlcCarrney and infielder Tony Cresci were named lo the second team. CUrran. a second te11m seleclion la:sl season despite hillinjl over .4-00. batted .373 in 31 games in 1972 Included in those t7 hita~~re 10 honle runs. 12 doubles and M>ven triPle~. He also had 38 runs batt ed rn and a .. 185 conference averaJ;:e. The Ru11tlers f;i ce host Fresno CC in the 'flr~t round of the state playoffs a "·eek from today. ALL·SOUTHElllH CALl,OANIA CON,EltlHCl 'Int T11m Pai. fl llyer C1111q1 Av1. "· ' ... lt1ll•n1 Galdi" West .HI ... " 81•1•1 C1!01, Goldin Wist ·"' '·' " Seo I! MUc~.tY LACC "' .. " M1rv T~O..,pKln ... """"' .~' ... " J!trY Gt"rls CyprttU ·"' ... " """ Gu111 LACC .us ... " '"" LOl>fl " Hl'l'o' ··' " " Pll C11rr~n O.•M ""' ••• ... " ""' """"~ Cv11rf'n '" ... " M'r!11~11 £dw1rds LACC .lll .. " JOt lcJorelli E••• " ·"' " Uhl Jg~~ H•..,;11on CYll•f'I~ .]~· ... ' Mo• Birr Gold I" W•1I ., ... • Dm K!11~9r1ttltr ,., ,., ... • J:r1n~ Pin.ck LACC ., ''· ' $1~¥! E.ng1i1h E•u " ., ,, • JDlln Morrl1 Cyortsi ., "· SKOnd T11111 ' Mickey Crnft LACC .. .. " 11.l""Y Cr1111 " Htrllc• .U• ... " Tony Cr11cl Gcllll1n Wt\! .JU "· ,, ,,..,r (~•~ti E1•! " "' ... " "'" lOPl'I E11! " ,. ... " S11v,111, WIJl'longton LACC "' ... " .. ., Slmoi.an Goldt!l W111 .... "· " Pili! McC1rtn1v '"' .211 ''· " 11:~011 "~tneric•d E11t " U! .. • ll:Jtk Mort '" Hondo ,., ,, • Ml~t Grimwood C11prt11 " ... HoM•tbft M1nue" -Golll1n Wes t: Scot! wnson. Pity II • ... y11r -'" Currin. Westminster High Will be one of four sites hosting CIF Southern Section track. and field preliminaries this Saturday. In addition to Westminster . other prelims locations are Redondo High in Redondo Beach. Ontario's Chaffey Hig~ and Azu sa's Citrus College. Starting times in all four cases are 10 a.m. for the Bee pole vault. 11 :30 for the \'atsity pole vault. noon for the other field events and 12 :30 p.m. for the track events. The Westminster portion will showca se the best alhlel.es frnm all seven OranJ;:e County leagues (Angelus , Crestview, Irvine. Freeway, Gardtn Grovt. Orange 3nd Sunsetl, in addition to 1pikers Crom the Sanla Fe and Suburban loops. Si x contestants in each event \vii i Ad- vance from e11ch prel im site lo next Fri- day night's semifinals al Norwalk's Ce r- ritos College. Three heat races will be contested in every running event except the two mil e . wh ich will be conducted from a scratch start. The lop two qualifiers in each heat will advance to the sem is as will the six best in the tWo mile and all field events. In the shot put. NewPort Harh<ir's Ter- ry Albritton f66-9 1fil and Huntington Beach's Tony Ciarelli (59-I J are 1-2 in the seedings. Here are the area entries: ¥1nl!'t' 100 -JOl'ln Miies flld C1rlo Tm!I ICorOl\I dfl M1ri. •!ck O.,m1t !Coltt Mesi), Boe Frv1 f$1n Cltmtn!f) 170 -Mllr , 0.1m1t. Fr111. JDf! WMld lt IFount1ln V1H1v>. 4-IO -Mitt COll ICotDN dtl M1tJ , Erl~ 0110" CE1t111tl1), Do111nl1 M't'ltl /il'1H,1nl1ln Vtll1y), ~COii Kl1>11r1 fMlulon V!tlo). 11-0 -Ol10n. °'°"' l(n11111. /Coron1 d•I M1d, 01v1 M1rtr (Founlt ln V1lltYl, Boh llr1dford fUnlwrs!fv). Milt -Ti"' Gollnlc~ rco111 M111 \. M'~I i&.lv•••I 1Edl1on). S"t11t Scl'l11r1m1n (Es!111tl11. l(rn M1r111n Mt •l.,..I. E~ r1derm1ci'lt• 111d Ktn Hower !Minion Baseball Standings ~ATIONAL LEAGUE East Dlvlsloa w L Pct. GB New York 14 7 .667 Philadelphia 14 8 .6.16 'I ~1ontreal 12 9 .571 2 Chicago 10 II .476 4 SI. l.J:iuis 10 12 .455 4'1 Pittsburgh 9 II .450 4'1 \\'est Division Houston 13 8 .619 Los Angeles 14 10 .083 'I San Diego 10 13 .43.1 4 Atlanta 9 14 .391 5 Cincinnati 8 13 .381 5 San franC'lsco 9 16 .360 6 Thor1d1y'1 ll1s11lh St Lou•1 •, Houuon l New York , .•. L111 An11 l11 '"" $1n Fr~ntllto 6. Mo.,tretl 1 Pl'lllldtlohTt 6. Sin Ol""o 1. 1' 1 .. n1no• Only ~"'"' ''i'll'dulf'(I Ted1v'1 G1m1s Lo1 A"ttlt• {!ut!Ol'1 •·O) 1t ,.~lt1d1IDfll1 IStl!'nl 1.21, nlgi'lt SI~ O•~o (Gr ief 11.J) 1! Mo""rftl fMar"!on 1.11, nlohl $In Fr1~(•ICG IS SIDnt o.n II New YOO'• IG•n•rv ).11 .. -••I'll Chle1q.o (Hind\ 1·11 fl At11n!1 (llltt<I 1-ll, nltll• S.•. LOU ii !Cl•vet1rld }(I) 11 Cfnc1n.,111 /Grlmto lev 0-0l. "'•hi "ll"llut"I~ !l!ltS\ 211 ti HN"C!l'l (l'orKh l·U. "'•hi AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division w L Pct. GB Cltveland 12 7 .6.12 Detroit II 7 .611 'I Ba.ltimore 11 8 .579 1 BosU>n 6 II .353 5 New York 6 13 .316 6 ~1ilwaukee 5 12 .294 6 West Division Minnesota 14 4 .778 Oakland 12 5 .706 11.; Chicago JO 9 .526 4'h Texa11 9 11 .450 6 CalUorbla 8 12 .400 7 Kansas City 8 13 .381 7'1 TllUl'tdll''l ll1wlt1 Tt~ll l, 81ltlmor t I 80.SIO!'I I, Caflferill t I' O"IV ''"'ti Jellldultd TH11''1 01111tt ttJ<1• (&ol"'I" l·I) 11 Clllllllrod (II/II~ j.1), "Ith! Mllw1u-1e ffltrton1 l·tl ti Ml.,nesoll !Wood· .1en 3.fll. ,.,,,., ~•rt1•t floll!'.11 .\.I) 1t K1nw1 C!tv (Dr"o J•ll, night 811111•"°'' rcu1t11r 1.)\ 1t Clllc•tll 1 e1~nt•n ,_.,, nlgl!t 15nston IS!1fle'1 2·11 11 01kt1nd (Mcl1ln 1-'1 , n .. i'I, N•w voni (1(111'11 l·ll 1t CtllPVlll• 1c11rt J·tl nlthl 1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 646·93~3 Service and P1rt1 for All 1"1ported C1r1 Modorn Body Shop for All C1r1 Orange County's Largest and Most Modern Toyota and Volvo Dealer OVIUIAS DILIVllY l'ICIALllTI V•1io\. Jonn l"iolcome ~Nfwl>!)•IL Jim 1'1111 'W111,.,1n111r). Two milt -Jo<>n ••Id tom Ol!wlno lCo~lt f1•u l. OOuo M1cLt1n fC11111 Me:s11), M•rlt Ttrrv (Mt!tr 04!1). M••-(1nol•no fM;ssion Vifiol. 170 HH -M.r~ Wynn• !Co•e>n• d~I M1•). 01v1 Pow,11 (f:'lll1orl. Sieve l'lcltlord !Huntln<1ton 811cl!l, s11;: c~cullc~~:;~r. ~~~ t':.:!~H~~iJ~,!~,,'"t~;!·i. Gtnt ~•vlor !M1r ;n1l, JOl">n vanLltld1 tMalfr O.il, M1•k 510ddlo r 11"•'-.,n '/oriol. uo rtl•v -Ce>ron• dtl M•r. Foun11in V1ll1y. Miit ~•!•v -Coron• clel Mir. Fountain V1!11v. MUJ' -°"~eo~~;~~~11'!~'orr.~:~~:· ~~;~;'~~~-Mtl~n 11.•0UM Bt~<hl. PM FHntv and Chuck Henthln tM1ttr Dell. l'•t HonevwtU !Nt"'l>Ofl!. Ooua A•lls CS•n C!fm,nttl. LJ -Hone•wen. Slrvt Mtl cAlf /Coron• dtl M1t!, Pe>n Colllna1 <Ed••Dn l. Ken G•oU1 «M1rirw.) Pv -!lob Schenk !Founi.ln V111ev), T-01s1 .. n11l"o 1 N• ~,oor1 > SP -JOf' To\li C(oron1 d~I M1rl. Steve Tim· m•r"11n !EJ•>0'1 1. Tonv Ci.,rtlli (Hunlin<1!on Btlci'I ), Ttrrv AIOf•llOll CNtwr(lfl ... M~~oold «1.~~~!M~.tklPmon lL.,QIJn• 81.,ch!, Ltrrr 110 -MtrlQokt. !lob Coll'1!! !Uni111t11tv). "'60 -Coll11!i. Scot! Cro;>o1<1r C(rona dtl Min, Josi'! Brloi'lt (L.,oun• 811chl , Preston Ctml?Olll CM.arln1 ), Jlm l'~llo•n lMaltr. Dlil. ll'l'I -Joi'" V."PSlon (Edison). Karl Webor CL1~un1 811ch), Oo\IQ TAiiman (MArlnAI. MA•~ Hower !Mlulon Vlt!ol. John Al••r11 (We•tminsllf). 170 HH -JOI' Ol'natr !Coron" <!el Marl, Jot Tro~-111 fEdhonl. O•v•d Kituttbllch (L•oun1 8e1chl, Wllbyr Gre<1or11 (Mi~si<m Vi•j"ol. 170 LH -Kl11~tlb1ch. S tvl Ad lMi !E1l1ncl1), Jerrv II"'"'' fMi•sinn Vlelol. &l!O r,!Av -Lftouna ll11ch. M1rln1. Mi1slon Vltlo. HJ -Otnoe• An<:! M'1rt Ch.,rr1n (Coront del M1rl , Kevi n Wlltln<1i'l"m <Es!11"1Cl1), Nt&I Amlden «L11un1 l!'"chl. Oouo Mlrlln (M•ltr Del), Premlt Wh i!t jS"n Cl'"'"nTe), 0•11 P£rktr (W1srmln1t1r} . LJ -Ad1ms. Tl,. Ccu,.ev !Marin•). lll ltk Cum· mi•Klt lfld Tim Minn !Mission Vl1io). PV -MlrlY Gr,..ll•m IM8rlnal. SP Mann. Mir~ H"l!•lld Bruce C1•1141n!1r ICo<nna del Mar), Art ll ioelow {C:di1on), l(urt $11ull L"ount Be•cll). '~ 100 -Ptll Norton Ind lll•I TO\l~r IM•rlnal. (lldt Ma•l•n fMl lPr 01il. D"llf: CaldwPH IMl,•lon Vltlo\, ll•l•n Thtrlo! INewnorO . 110 -Ti,ltr Ne>r!on Thtriol. Don Giron fEd ison1. O<'lv<I wvesr !Minion V!•lo!. Steve llrloo• IS1n Clem1nt1 ). 6o60 -Cll••lei Jfnn•nos afld Tom Lloy !Ed l1on). Laul1 L .. urll>t• !E•l~rn:l1 )! Mi•e Btnnlncr CL"OUlll 811chl. Jell l'lurlbut !San l"'rmente:I. A~? ,Hunt".:~So .. ·~~~'h)'. j~on10o!1,:.a "/U!;,r'1~1: Lee B•l•Dn fNewPDrtl 11'0 LH -sie~e lll•mstv tE1t1nc ltl. Jlm Ml,klfn /Huntlnoton B•ach l. ~~O •tllv -M8rln1. M&!tr Dti, Ml11lon avltlo, tol twDOrl. HJ -L•rr~ CAirnn<1u•v Hun!in<1lon lleaclll, ~ C•s• !Laoun• llt•clll M<~e S•n• •ncl l\ob W1rit (Ml1•ion VltlG>. M"rl< Eiienholm !San Clement•). LJ -Glroo, Mite .. ll••ne:! ""° ~l•Ye Saeer fE 1!anci1), O.On llut11m110 (Ml<S•On V•eio). PV -C•ld-"I. c~s!Dn<:IUIV. JI"' ... ,,.,m.~ !Edl•Df'), Ktv!o O"Cnnnell fM il\IOn V1eio). SI' -Wad• 81n!tv (L•auna Be.,cll ), Jo111 lll lto !M•rlna). llen S1rlo• (Mi~slon Vi•io). DEAN LEWIS 1972 TOYOTA CARINA WITH FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING $7200 PER MONTH $94.70 Total Down -S72.00 Total Monthly Payment. •31520 for Forty E l9ht Mo1. D•f•rrH - $3550.00/C•th -$2794.70 APlt 12.76 on approved crHlt. 1972 VOLVO 142 SEDAN WITH FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING PER MONTH 1117.46 Tot•I Down -O.f•rrM $6057.46. C•sh Pri ce S.246.27 Incl. T & L/Al'R IS.36 on app. cr•lt 1972 TOYOTA MK II STATION WAGON WITH FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING $9300 PH MONTH 1147.IS Tot1I Down /Sff.66 Tottl Menthly Pymt. fer ''''.J 111ht Mantf'11. OtftrrM $411). S A.Pit 12.61 (1tT7tOOO -Mlt7 .,. 71' crttflt. ltT Friday , May 12, l97l DAILY PILOT 1 ( Sunset League Dominates Hypothetical Spike Meet The spike-minded Sunset League has 11rh~en ror thf! 1ecot'ld ye1r in a row as the ch•mpion of both the CTF Southern Ste-- lion and Orangt County in th!! DAILY PILOT'5 11nnual hypothetir11J, inter· league trAck and fitld romPf!llti~. In the pair of on-pa per meets based on y.•inning marks compiled in league fin,11\i; 1neet~ throughout !ht CJF-SS and county. the Su nset tmerged as a decisive winner in e8ch. · Rolling up 37-1 S poin1s, lhf' Sunset circuit far outdistanced the runnerup Bay Lfa~ue. which !Allied 2.1. Next county loop down the srnring Iii:~ In the CIF met! was !he Irvine League with 10-4/5 poinls and a 10th place finish In the 4:l-league competition. Jn order in the CIF scoring. lhe other county leagues were the Orani;tf' !11 th \, Creslview (l 4fh l, Carden Grove (1 6th ) and Freeway 12."ilh •. Suni'let spikeri'I amassed 65-4 5 vic- torious points in the county on-paper meet with the Freeway taking second at 41. 1'he Sunset loop picked up fir~t place points in 1hi CIF merl "'ith a I :52.2 880 clocking by Santa Ana'io. Robert Harrell and a 3:\B.2 "'inning mile relay combo, which H111 rrell anchored. Also. the Crestview. Irvine and Sunse t t'On (ederations rigured in a five-"•ay tie 'for the CI F 220 leadership "'ith the Foothill and Northern leagues. all at 22.0. Hypoth~lical Cit' Meet 100-1. Colden 9.6 2. Northern 9.7 J. Sky 9.8 4. tie F'ree\~·ay , Irvine. Moore, Orange and Pacific 9.9. 220--1. tie Crestviev.•, f'oothill, Irvine, Northern and Sunset 22.0. 440-1. Sunset 411.3 2. Sierra 48.7 3. Foothill 48.9 4. Cilrus Belt 49.0 5. tie Moore end San Andreas 49.4. R80--1. Suruet 1:52.2 2. Sierra 1:54.2 3. Irvine 1:54.4 4. Moore 1:34.7 5. Carden Grove l :55.6. Mile-I. Northern 4: 12.4 2. Pioneer 4:16.3 3. Sky 4:17.0 4. Bay 4:17.2 5. Channel 4:111.7. Two mile-1. Bay 8:53.7 2. Northern 8:57.2 3. Sunset 9:03.9 4. Irvine 9: 11.8 5. Sky 9: 13.2. 120 HH-1. tie Desert Valleys and ~ioore 14.1 3. lie Golden and San Antonio 14 .2 5. Sunset 14.4. 180 LB-I. Desert Valleys 18.5 2. Sunset 18.9 3. tie Gold en arid San Antonio 19.2 5. Moore 19.4. 440 relay-I. Bay 41.11 2. Moore 42. I 3. Sunset 42.4 4. Irvine 42.9 5. P11cifiC' 43.0. Mile relay-I. Sunset 3: 18.2 2. Bay 3:21.i 3. Moore 3:22.5 4. Sierra 3:22.i 5. Coast 3:24.9. • l!J-1. Ile Bay and Sky 5·8 3. Orange S-1\.oi 4. ~1oore 6-6~ 5. lie Camino Rtal and Channel. L.l-1. Camino Real 13·311 2. Sky 23·1 3. lie ,\itoore and Slln Andreas 23·0 5. Marmonte 22-ll. PV-1. tie Can1 in" fleal. Orange and Sierra 15·1 4. Del Rey 14·9 11 5. Sunset 14- 8''· SP-I. Canlino Rr11l AA·9 2 Sun~et 64-0 3. Ocean 55.4 1,., 4. Garden c;ro\'e 57-3:\~ S. Crestviev.· Si-2' ,, FinAI sror1nR : Sunsrt 3i-l 5, Ka_\' 2.1, \loorr 20 .. 1 5, Northrrn 17 I 5. <:anuno RPal 15-4 5. Skv 1n. S1rrr11 14-1 3. ()f>sert \la\lr\'s and (ioictrn 11 rm:h. lr\·int 10·4 5, Or11n~P fl. Foothill fi-t 5, S11n 1\nlonio 5, Crest\"lf'\I" 4-1 5. P1one<>r 4, (iarden tirn1 r, Ckean and ~n Andreas 3 ('aC'h, Citrus Rrll and !lei Hrv 2 rnch, r1tc1fic 1·3 :l, Channel 111 , CoaSt and \1Rrmonlt> I each, Fref'll'RY 3 5. Hypnlheliral C)ranAr t"nun1~· \lrt"I 100 -I. lie Fret11'R.\' And Oran~e !l.9 J lie Gardrn (;ro1·e anrf S11nse1 10 0 ~ tie Crestvie"' anrl lr1·ine tO ,I. 220 -L tic rreslv1c11·, lrl"itle and Sunset 22.0 4. rree11·Ry 22.1 5. G11rdf'n Grnve 22 5. 440 -I Sun.~rl 18 .. 1 2. FrC'l'"'a \" 4!l.7 ~ Creslvie"' 5.0li 4. tie lrv1111~ and. Orange 50.7. 880 -I. Sunset I ?52 2 2. Irvi ne I. ~4.4 3. G;.rden Crovt I 55.6 4. Frctv.•ay J ,56 7 5. 20 Area E1itries OrRnge 1.57 &. Mile -l. Freeway 4:20.l 2. SUnael 4:22.7 3. Or3nj:e 4:25.4 4. Crestview 4:27.I 5. Garden Grove 4:29 .ti. Two mile -l. Sun1;et 9:03.1 2. lrvlne 9:11.8 3. Freeway 9:20.7 4. G&rden Grove 9:28.3 5. Oran_t:r 9·3R I. 120 HH -I. Sungef 14.4 2. Irvine 14.S 3. Garden (;rnvt I~ 7 4. Crestview 14.8 S. Free,1•ay 1::i.o. 1 180 LH -I Sunscl 18.9 2. Ur Crest vie• and Garden Grovt 19.6 4. Irvine ll .8 5. f rccw<i.v 20 0. 440 rrl11y -1. Sunst1 42 4 2. tr1·ine 42.1 J. Fr~11 n.v 4.1 4 4 Garden Grovt 43.5 5. Oran~e 4.1 R. ~liir rrla.1 -l Sun~Pt 3 IA 2 2. Carden c;rn1·r J 2;. fi 3. Frt>r"'!IY 3 26.i 4. Orange J 27 O 5. lr11nr :!.2i .4. HJ -1. (lrno~p !i-7 1'1 2 l r1·ine 6-4 !. ~·rre11·av fi.~ 4. lie Crest1"1e"'· Crarden (;rol"e .inrl Sunset li-2. t .. J -l. 11·11ne 22.g1• 2. lie Crestview and Free11•ay 22-0·'t 4. Sun11et_ 21-914 5. Gardrn Grnve 21 ·7. P\' -I. l)r<in£:e 15-1 2. Sun~l 14-8 ~ 3. tit F'rce11·ay and Irvine 14-6 5. Crestview 13· IO. Sr -1 !-iunse1 fi4·0 2. G11rrl,.n Grn\'e ~7· .1~, ."\. Cre~1 vir11• 57-21• 4. Frre"'"Y 55·101,\ 5 Irvine 5!;.311. Final ~coring . Sunsrt 6fi-4 5. Freeway 41. lrvint> 311·4 5. Ga rden Grove 18, Orange 2!>11. Crestview 2.1-2 3. l(o11a Tour11ey Nears Twenty ()ran~p Cnns! •area res1df'nls are included 1n tht> lisl of 120 tx11l'lcri:; seeking lhe. 12th annual \Ve."t. Coast Maleh (;;ime f~liminations rrov.•n. Thr lhreC'·nlon!h tournament opens fire Monday 111 Kon;i Lanell in Cos!R ~1esa. Allhou_flh the 1971 champion -Santa Susana's J;iy llohinson -1\•ill nol return lo defend his 1ille thr.re is stil1 a slar· studded field. Robinson is t:nn1pctin~ on the PBA tour. F'ormer thamps L;irn<ir Keck nf Rcseda (19611-6!1 1. Anh Ramirez or An;ihein1 11961 , 64 1, Rob Knipple or Long Beach j 19fi6) and G;i ry 111adison nf San Bernardino \ \970 1 are All in th\~ ye;ir"s classic, accordinJ:? to 1ourney ori~in11tor and directnr Dick Storffler. ToppinJ;: the li11t nf area cn1ries is Cnsta f\1esa·s Fred D nu g her I y, Westminster's F'rtd R1ccilli end Dana Point's Clyde LBcher 'rhe rnurne~· J,teL1; under way Mol\day at. ~ p.m. with the first fou r-5il:ame blnck. t• C<1ntinues tarh Mond11y (except Ma y 2f and July 31 "'Ith the fitld cut to &fl 11fter 28 games. The fie,ld will be sliced to 18 following 36 games and to the final five after 52 ~amr s. Here's 11 li.~1 nf area enlrie.!i : (::Ost.a Mrsa -Fred Doughe rty, Nick Sti~Rilo. Robert Schneeweis, Charles Sihillin~. Larry &hoenfelder, Brian MC'MAhon. Huntington Beach -Ray ~1cKean, Robert Prnbert, Terry Shannon, Geor1e Fisher. Mission Viejo.:_ Gery Coulter. DWaynt Hirks. \\lestm1nstrr -f'red Riccilli. Torri. Loni;t. Eddi' Barnes, Chick Romano, Ra.f. Bryson. • Fountain Valley -J11n Fishburn, Johll_ Hall. Dana Point ·-Clyde La cher. 00 ••• but Newport Beach is crawling with Pttss)icats. ' The Early Times Pussycat. Now on sale at your favorite liquor store or supennarket. H's out of sight. Not exactly a sour. But not exactly not. Sour bu t sweet. The new, new, new Pussycat: It mixes up, as qui ck as a cat. , } Buy Bartender's Instant ~~ Pussycat Mix and ~-Early Times. ~ A purr-feet couple! KctUIClq ;.., ·ti:,~· ·-..,4 -· ... ~ ..... -.. llNT\ICllY ITllAlCllT IOVRION WlhSlt'f •&I P•OOf • Wl.Y 11MlS DllT IUl~Y '°·• LOUIS'l'lll.l, KY, Cl•K 1•1t .. • • r 1. i • ' ! ' ' I DAIL V PI LOT Alrunitos Racing Entries ....... , ........ l1tl•lt1 .. , '''""''' Cl .... & 1'111. l'l,11 ''" I 1.m II 1t:11cl1 .., hi •ttt. IJ l 11t111 .,, ''" & till r1c11 •1•1t •ACI -On~ ,..u, "•ti. ...... '1d1 • Vf'IM<, -• ..,; .. ..., 1 ••t•• ~ .. lt lblt S v111 el1h & U'IC!lr, ,.,,.... wi .. ,.., 11000. """' 0(1(1(1, l umblr llrt! IJ, Wlllj1m1, J"! ~Id\' Stlltr I J. Mll!t r l "'''"' Mlr11~ !P ll:O<t~lel Lucic.-H11 IA, trill"'' A~ll>;t Gt11t IJ O'llrle.") .M ... rou llrry /J, Wl•lit •dl Hl llW' G•m IJ O.Oflnl•I -T1kom1 Tt tt !AA Sml!~) · Al .. 1"11,l~lt 11r1"<11111 f D C•.,,,kl 91Jlttr lllY 4J MtC.rffllrl llCCND •AC.I~ o,,. ''"'~ l lt l c111 ... 1,,. . .I.II '"'· ........ 11'00 Teo (t1!mh1<1 '"'' UJli l t dY Ct•tlt 5 IA l rltt•11! Mtl...,.,. (O(!l (G. L""W) M1111"" M1I I . McGon11111 SM11un CJ W!Stw'll) ........ S11tl1 !IC. Ct r!lll ll ·~•idfo Of Elyfll "· ~•Ol"trl Icy s-tG. 11-,1ui~J roslv "'Yl h'M I . llnv<11 " AIM l!lltlMt c.i..1~• M1ri. 10 IC•lm•l••I l"avfd L•~ A ll"ll!llllhl T+tl•D •AC•-=-On• ..,,!t P~c' Cl1Jm/"'· A.II 11t1. Puru IJXIO. Toe c••'"''"" r>rlc,. S1$llO. Sloe:and Rl!d ! J. llilt v) I( W G IA. Wlr>Otr ~' l av T111 !l. Cron•f SQr•lt!"llo T111 IL. t Co,lt! Me•c Pt!er !J. M•rkweu\ Weor•Htrb (Iii. fll1ckm1nl Lt.1mbi>r lel1 IJ. WllU•m1t Wlnfl!• RMt <J. O'llrl,.nl l'OURTH RAC --=-O..e molt l'1~f c111mJ.,.. AU 1oe,. Pu"' 1noa. T"" (ltlml"' prlc• 1n1•· Pec11k Chltf IG. ly1ulli \ Cllltl Rtvrlt• fM. Ht•~r) Lar..-1 Noli ! A. Wln<1tf! Orbit Min IG. IJ1mbllral • Al'\dv '1 T•ltnl fl. D1ullonl ~::~"1!f·1k.°"/.:11~r-tnl Ctrnlv1I S!1r !R. lll•rkm,.nt P'UllTH ll•Cl -=--l'ln, m •t• p .. ,,. c111m1.,.. All •oe•. Pur1t '"°° TOii d1lmlf19 prlct 111."". •v• ~'"'""'' IJ WUll•m•l Luc~ Ou JM!• !G 1(1rm•l•rl t •ncotn l•ntl ll•Mll /!If 1'ltllf•I W"' Rl• .... •d r) IF. ll1llev) '~""'•~• !J O'Pl•!~"l r.-1(1"4 I L I 1 (.,.t•l Ttvlor Creek !G. Ltl"901 tlX"l'H •ACl -=--O~t ,..lft . Pltf. 1n .. 1i.11...,,.r p,,,,,. vnco. ~::,·;,·.~ 5:!"1~/· s:~::i"'' J• t ..,_,.. 1-'M!• lo•,... 11 Cr•nt t Pt! 1'tVI,... CJ. O'Pl•lt nl I•• f'llf' •J. l'•nnhl Wlnov W •v /It Wll!l•mtl Mr J •n ti( 1i•,..rl L1d1 !J. ll1it1yl 11".Vl!NTH ltA~ nn1 ,..,,. ""f•~• l"vl!•H11n•I. N11n•wln~r \500!t tlril g-:;~.,.o~~".tt ,jl'B'.~1~~1 ,..,.,. SICIO!l. ,. • ...,r. lll~fnl '"' V•U•\ Kt•) Stlltlll• (II:. Wllllt Mll iil~1~":'f /_ L~';,",,1~f~1"1 l're.•t" V,onk1• !J. o ·Jlrl•n) ltflvl'"" n .. t• 1n ,,. ••• ,,.,,.nl T,....,,, Vlc•o•Y IK. 1'1!he•l """"•" V,ont•' •nd T••"v Vlt•~•• • \IT1C01111I" Ill• w11erlnt 1>ur11r:u•s 11nlv. • llOHTM ltACI -nn• mll•. Pet t tnvlt•11.,..,.1 Puro• ~n.~. . 111'•11 1'1m' JJ Mlll••) loll~k" "•I~••• 11. r>•nnhl llrt mblt H•ll fO. Ack~rm•nl krtrtl• WooU•n !It 11•11•1 ICt Y) V1nkff C•~ed rA. Wllll•m•l M1r1h1ll D•"I• IJ, ll•lltY) NINTH •4CI -'1n• mil• P••• Cltlmlnt. Alli 1111. ~u .. 1 IJ..tllO. Toa · ti::.:i:~sr;~~i ;~~ct!""."' l•llY "-~"Ill• IL. l 1 CD'l!f) Attee IC. 8ovdl I V P IA. Wln•••l Mr. J•ck IL. O•ultonl l'r•llC'll 0 U8H"y II(. l l1,...•I '""°"""" Li u ro. C"flnltl eru 1111!n• 11. n •11rt.•" -Alst llltlbl• CS D•ver1ak !J. O'llrl•nl Deep Sea Fisl1 Rep ort Gyro nasti es Glrls Grmn11Uc1 Wt1lml11tlft I" !lSI C<1sl• Mttl V1ult1n1 -I, Sut~rl•f'ld 1w1 1·• ?. !eauldlnt IW/ 1.l l . Malllc1 C/ 1 U. ll•n -I. •rl1r !Wl I.I 1 •II !WI 1 n l . 111r1on IC) l IJ. lletm -1. l=rtlt r !Wl ,,,J 1. Nobl111 !WI '·" J. Su!h••lln(I /WJ •.•J. "''' ll!••cltt: -1 Fr•IH !W\ '1' 2. Not>ltll tW) J.IJ J. Mtltllct !WI J <13. ·San Harness Results Tl!~tl'11V. Ml ¥ fl. 1tn Clt1r & fl'IU fl'lltSl 1t•CE -0"• "'II• Pl<I. Cl•om1,., All •oe• Pu r1t 11.SOO Jfl"''ll•bol !lo (e•lt) !60 JOO lOO Sll•MW llM ll.M>q~ 16fJ 1 ~ HOftllv ~~·1• 1tn11 fl11<1.,I •Ill T•m• J 10 •~ "'"" ·~ct<! lf\1, H41•Y Mo"'· V••nnn Adlo1. e ....... SIUl tl, WO\lf191 e .. 1. S.Cr •ltO\ffl • (lin~"''<COJI, /'rlnc:• 0 1 ('1,<'I>CP. 11 l •I CU. ) -Jtl1''1 lllbt & Jl!•do.,. Rtd, pt ld t 1'.'0 !£COHO ltACE -0"l mllt P•r• (nn11i110,.rd 6 veer old• •M (Jnder. f'•"W IJlr.O. Judv ltodnev 1w:"11•r\ ~(I> 110 1 Aa ll"nnlt L•<ldl• N !Acl.,m•nll 70 ? loll Celltt Cllitl !(•Ant i 4111 Time -1 C6 ]/,, ftl\.O raced -Tlmt r 110111. L•l Jne. M•" l tl••m, L1dv "'~yd, T11mmv·, Flr1t. THlllO llACE -O<>e tni+t Ptc•. Cl•iming. All 111e1. Pur~f UOOll C"Unlry Ou!Cl'•I• flOf\..,I l.ltl l 70 1 60 C•IC" M• Fir>! !O•ullnn) 9 60 S ?!' We11ttn lilaldtr !ll••levJ •('O Tim• -1.06. ol!•o r1c•<1 -M11<l lflq O•t,..., W•• Judy D .• J11rd1n A<l•n•, Succ1u Yeotk. l'OU.llTH RACE -On• """"• 1•ol. (l"l"'in1. All ~<>e• l'ur1e tlliOO H"'H A• CCll"'<>Vl ~ 10 j 20 l •O ~"' !M<Clim•"•I t 60 S ·~ Fl•V.v Tru•' (!)otomt•I •00 Tim• 1.08 1 S, oll'" '"C~ D••nlt• (•ltn, •tb!nn V"!!ord I . Clrdoft, Armbrn l"v1ct1, Aom•o T 1u . ll'lll'TH ltACE -!•, m ile• P•t' Cl•l'"i"a n11 •Q••. Pu"e ~1800. Tn~ Wll.lon Hi<1n 5thll01 F1cul1v In Ern>r IHnl!I U.•o 6.~n I (1(1 (nlvln1 L•ll (Ot!\om9r) I .ri J _, Nic~w•mr>1J• ~'"' (W •lhom\I 4 60 Time -''°· Ail" '"''" -P1n1t!I•, 51m111nn F•llto. ll!ltoln• J•m••, .cti11v Rlc!l••d. l!l(TH •ACE -0"• m•I•. P~t•. Cl"i"'"'~ "II •~~1 Pur\• l.lM)O. G!n!ly'~ Gtne JH•r<1iel U,00 • 0Q l Ml Mr. J1t k IL. O•ultnnl J . ..0 l •O M·S• M,.lrn1• ICO!l•ov l 1lo0 1 lme -? 0• •IS. All<> ••c•d-Grarelut 11•.,u, Ill; V•t>Ct . FO•Y "'"''' Htlrv Alli,., 'J 1!•1C1a l -G!"nV'I Gt~• & 1 -Mr • .Wck, pild S7f.OO S•VENTH ltACE -0"' mill P~ct, CIA!mino olU AO•< l'u"• ll?OO ~~""'' l(ay A re •• k,..rJ 4.111 l MJ l on Al'\dy's M1 .. ;te 1s,,...,,,.1 ":Ml t •O Niii> Metdow D. tl1 Co1tel J IQ Time 7&1. Al•n raced -N~w<11~11. P•lt< Ml inn H•nry l , C••!liv~I 51~·. L"mfl•r L•1~. ~cr&rthe<I LOCAi Ncl•. W estminst,e r Gals Discus Final Set May 22 In Clean Sweep NORWALK 11le CIF Southern Section discus finals are set (or the afternoon of May 22 at Cerritos College. \Ve stmln:;tPr Hliih School !ilnlP thP 111r1s· s n t I ha I I spotlight this \\'t'ek as all !iieven Lions 1ram.~ defeated the visi tors from Oran~e by wltlt milrJtins. I ff>unt;iin V.:illrv. ~;dison . Cost:. :\1c,;;i anrl ESt;incia also rh11lkerl ur nverllll pla f da y \·iclnr!e!I:. tr 1( ·t( W111mh"''' 111 !f) 0•11••• '•nl<>r I W••t.,,,n,191, lA O••n<1•. 1 J11~!o• 1 w~"mln•!•'. 15 fl•~"'"· J Junia• I! W•••"'l"1't'-II, Or1nat, " '""~ 1 W~•lm•n•l•r, 1). ()t•t>fll. 11. ~""" !I .,., ....... 1 ....... 7J 0•• .. q•. 0 r•o•~ I W•1•m•n•TI•. 11 O•u•o•. 1. Fro\O\, II W•"m'"""• 1l O•&n<1t, 0 l!dlt"" (I I Ill H~"lintlOI' llt1Cll Stfl"I• I Flll•n" <. Hunl•nt lOll 81ach S•n•n• ti Fd•\f>n ?l, Hunt•nolnn II•••" • Ju,.lor t· 111,1 .. un""" 11••~11 '· Ed•\Cltl '· San Clemente won lts only game against Fountain Valley in a lopsided 21·5, Senior I vie· lory, wirh Debbie YvunJt. JRnet Wilkes and Jo11nne J ohnslon scoring three runs each. T~·o of Miss Young's runs were ho·mers. The highligh1 of Cos t ~ J\1esa ·s encounter wi1h El 1'1odena was In the freshn1an I J?ame where Sandy Allen pitched a no-hitter and then batted a home run for a 6-0 ~lesa victory. Compel il ion begins al 3 and ent ries are open to all platter tossers in the l'iection who have surpassed 150 feet 'Ille top fi ve finiiihers in the secti on tus.'\le will qualify for the June 2·3 state finals at Oroville. Among top contenders for the CIF-SS title is Corona de! Mar's Howard Royister, who has a seasonal best of 172-11 1-'.. Other top area throwers vying for sl ate meet berths in· el ude Newport Harbor's Terry Albritton (163-71. CdM 's Joe Tosti (155-JJ, Fountain Valley sophomore Alan Powell (151· 9cv,1 and Laguna Beach's Judd Binley (150-3). Westminster ·s.scn111r I ieam defealed Orange. 25-3. with a litlle help from Cathy Hopson and pitcher Judy Mettler, both of whom made triples during ei~-;;o; II· E"''"" u. H""""q'"''1--''~he"..'.o~n~e~-s~;d~ed'.".~g~a~m~•::·-----riiiiiliif!i~i!i!iiiiiii!ii!iilii l J\lfllo• II · Edl1<>n ll. Hun!Onafon 11•••11 IG Sooh I f.<1•~"" I•, Hunlono•on llettll ' ~-.II H11n!onotM lle~t" 11, E<I•""' ,, .'>01111. 111 · Huntlna1on 1!"•<11 17. Edl\On 1 rro,11. 1· Fll"O" ~. 1111nl•ng1~n ee~tll r '"'" lle•cll I. GENIE ® automatic · garage door opener SEA COAST IUILDIR.S SUPPLT 1651 Ploce1ule, Coit• Mffo -6'42:)490- •II•• I, £an (lem"'t• ---------------------------1 • lit~ 11. £•n Clt.,,•nte •llev ll, J,n (l•me"'' 111 Fin Vtllf• 1?. S•n 1SF1n. Vall•v 1'/, 5~~ Cltmenl• Frn,~ II. Fin. Vollt• c1emen11 I Coot, Mt tl !4 1 Ul El Modena Sen1M I [I MM• ... '· (oo!I Me•• l S•"I"' 11 (n>!a MtSI t. El Mod•n1 J. ~ .... n I ,.,.., •• M••• I .. El Modt n• s. £.,on !I Cn"" Mn• l . El M...rtn• ) £ooh. 111 El MO<lenA /, CD,11 Mt•• • rro,n I· ,.,,,. M,,. '· Et Miiden~ O rroih II ; El Mll<Mn• l •. CoSll M•11 I. Cft fO"• 11•1 -M., 111 /U E,11.,<il Juno0r I E•t•,.c•• 6. oron• ""' MAr J ~""· I. Coriint 01! M4r II. El r.ntl1 1 ~•f!.1!\ml<l 1. [•t1nc11 l/, Corona d•I Ml• U . Top Award -... 'f o Y ar,\'ood < - CHAMOIS Pants Shirts Jackets That Whats Happening ' ' along with Mom's Apple Pie! ·--- -... = 3 ·-~ .,,, ~ :::t ;t:r ~ -~ ,-$' <?c:!' 65 Fashion Island _\.' THE LOOKI ~!" Yn '"-'YA.1.,r ·.,,,, L,f~ /. Newport Beach ~ .y II~ 644-6500 ~~" 11;-jwne\~ BRING THIS AD IN TODAY FOR ••• $PRING SERVICE SPECIALS DAYE ROSS PONTIAC 'S EXCLUSIVE NEW CAR OUR FACTORY TRAINED TECHNICIANS WILL MAKE YOUR CAR COME ALIVE FOR THE HARD DRIVING MONTHS AHEAD. THEY HAVE THE KNOW-HOW AND USE FACTORY AUTHORIZED PARTS. YOU GET THE JOI DONE RIGHT AT THE RIGHT PRICE! I ~ to ISCO. ENGINE TUNE-UP SPECIAL New 1pa rk pl11qs poh1tt co11denser, P'CY Tiii••· {siies sllqhtly ln1}. "'· $28.80 OIL & FILTER CHANGE SPECIAL l11c.l11dh1q oil filter pac.k a11d lobor. $6.85 SHOCK ABSORBER SPECl.AL PAIR INSTALLED. $24.70 EX HAUST SYSTEM SPECl.AL R.eploc•in•11I of 1h19te 11111ffler 011d tollpipe, cto"'ps htclude4. 532 .40 lopplln to MOii Ferd er Mercury 11"1INlel1I. BRAKE INSPECTION SPECIAL Cleo:>11 011d l1t1pec:t fre111 011d reor broltn. h11jNC.t li11l1t91 011d 9re111e 1"'h. Check for whMI cyl· hider l1ok1, 1t1e1ter cyli11der fl•ld WY•I odlirst• 53.90 1119 me-cho11J11n e11d power booster. Adlflt fro1tt whMI bffrl1191. Froltt dr1H11 brokn 11i9htly lets. FREE BONUS SPECIAL! Free coolinq syst1m check with a"y of the above specials. Includ es checkln9 all hoses, clamps, b~lts plus radiator pre1sur1 t1st ond coolant efficiency t1st. A pre-vacation must! GOODYEAR TIRE CENTER SPECIALS 30°/o O FF SUGGISTID llTAIL WITH TOUR. TlADI ON CUSTOM WIDE TRlAD WHITEWALLS. SIZES: H70X15 G70X 15 F70XIS NO ILEMS-NO SECONOS FIRST LINE TIUS ONLYI Fr•• B•lence Inc luding W1 i9ht1 On E•ch Tir1 Purch•s1d f All Tin~ Priet-s rlu~ rro. E"cl.~r T11"l ALL sr•VICI AND TUtl S,l:CIALS VALID WITH THIS AD ONLY. 4 ltmN I d1y from Long Beach. O• smUo •w•y 10 Sac•amenlo o' San o;ego. Call your travel •oent or l'SA t nd ask about our casy•IO·bear. low fare . PIA glnt you • lift. • UNIROYAL ZETA 40M ST££' Radial Tir~ Guaranteed _401 000 Miles A Whole new driving experience, 7$'/. MORE HAZARD PROTECTION' 20"/. MORE CA R CONTROL" 12 % BETIER TRA CTION " 'Jhan convenlionol 78. series bias pl)' tries • 'i'---,=-:~".":':'.".-:::----i"' !\"), 1£TA TIR( WARllANTY If,.., "'°"'! t•I lhe ..,,i..,,, uo•od •• •~• o;o. .. oll fM ~1hou1andl •r Ii<• io:J• lot ••1 ,.o••• o•h•< !~on "'llH•I abu1• o• coli.1100, )'&Uf <~••l•••d Zfl<1 doal•r will ,;,, r•u " ""''' •t••••t I~• P¥"~"'' of • ,..... Zolq Tit1 of'"'"' h~ or H poir pun<!u•ot ol no '"°'''· C"d•I will •qual ..,;,, You ,..;d .. ulllpliod by p<rt<0n!o1• of 1lal•~ ,.;1001• yeu did nor •bloin. (i.,j,r will bl aophod a9aonu •~•Zora Guo•o•,,.~ a ••• ,,,,. ln•li•no\ odi~•1•••• bo•• ••• , .. ; ...... , oduol ....... 1. 0...lor """' odd ,.,.11 c~q''' lo• '"''to• ~· porfor"'' in ,.oloci•t 1i•o •. TI111 •IWI ,.IOl•d ••~ido <ondi1;on1 tnU•I boo P"J>O dy "'''"'•;-4 a•d 11,.• •-~:;;,;;;~ broothl In l•t ''" ,,000 .. a. 1qlo!iOJ>1 ond <~ul·UP1 f.,. 1101•0;1 peu;,~ •f 1uat0•l-lo aoplr. UNIROYAL ZETA30M INTER ST££' Tire Guaranteed 301 000 !'r1iles 72"/. MORE HAZARD PROTECTION ' 5 .S "/. MORE .DURABLE AT HIGH SPEEDS' 20-J, MORE MILEAGE ' 'than conventional bias belt ed tires. f78·14 ... $37.451 G78-15 •• $39.45 G78-14., $39,45 H78·15. -.$42,45 H78·14 ••• $42.45 J78·15 •••. $45.45 sr••' RADIALS FOR IMPORTED CARS! I UNIROYAL ZETA GUARANTEE NOT APPLICABLE) ,.. In tests by two of fur-TUBELISS STEEL BELTED BLACKWALL ope 's leading mofor ma· si •• •••I•••• si.. gazines, !he Unir oyal 155SR12 6.00-12 14551!:13 5 . .S0-13 Steel Rad ia l won firs! l.S5SR13 S.60·13 l o5SRl3 6.00-13 place rafings against 17SSRl3 6.50-13 l65SRl4 6,4.S-14 of her manufacfurers of 17SSRl4 6.95-14 155SRJ5 S.60-IS fab ric and steel rad ials. I 65SR IS 6.00-15 FRONT-END ALIGNMENT ~ Oil• ,,,...,, ,..,~••In td(vd carter, ~o.,btr. 1••-1" o•i IM·••I IO tn•••• f1ctu••r" orlfl~ol •J>O<ll!<oti•n•, 1111•1 thl <ltl•n "~l,mo•I. Am~:;:,. $555 C1rs $8.50 l11. V1l111 • I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I At Our IYeryifoy l oW 'rlc• IUY J fer $7 .9.J each Get the 41h for only 70' rAMOUI llAMO SHOCICI rill JNllAllATIONJ l'rlco lath • Tt-.: $28.45 $1.<S $26.45 $1.38 $30.45 $1.53 $31.45 $1.76 $32.00 $1.99 $32.45 $1.79 $33.00 $2.00 $34.00 $1.70 $37.45 $1.95 * SPIN IALA;;~*-1 WHEEL I BALANCE .I .-I ~~~l I ~u~~fi\ .,i (lncludts Weights) I Reg, $3.00· I COLJJ'OM GOOD UNTll MAY 31, ltn I COUPON cooo UNTH ~lY '', 1f7J FOR $200 I ONIY ea •. J COUl'QM GOOD UNTIL .11..11.r JI, ltn . ------------------ ANAHEIM 8961 B'ookhurst ............. 6ll·1 87G·• WESTMINSTER 7135 Wes1m ;ns1er Blvd .... 89J.JS21 '' GARDEN GROVE 8601 Westminsl er Blvd ... 89J.JlU •. HAWAIIAN GARDENS 11973 C"son St ... 86l.0227 " HUNTINGTON BEACH 19411 Beach Blvd ... l3~7sn SANTA ANA 115 N. Harb°' ........•••. 839.J700 : SANTA ANA 121 1 W. Warner Ave. ,.,, ... 540·8646 TUSTIN 131 E. !st Sl"et .............. l44-94l1 ' COSTA MESA· NEWPORT BEACH 322 E. 171h St ......... 642-413 1';· CORONA B36 W. 61h S"eet ............ 735-601 9 •. SAN CLEMENTE 927 N. El Ca., I no Re•I .• •.. 492-ll4$ ·: · '• O'IN•DAILJ' 1·7 •·SATURDAY l·I fint inl·oduc r d Ib! {~!I! tier"& TJGERPAW.. " I. I ' ?: ~. " • I< •· •• ,., !" ' tirn :. • ~· • ~· .. "" t• :. ! ., ~· ' w• • •• ,. • •• ' ~. *" "" ... ... ... M .. " "' '" ,. ,.,, "' j:y •• "" ... ... ., ~ •~cl • ... lrn '" ... "" " ' , .. llltll .. boM ''" ... t~•I .. ,, " . ... .. • " ,, • .. " ••• . ... '" "'" '"" 111, . .,. .. "' "" "" LEGALNO?!(;g ' U iG.U. 1'011Ct ,IC'tltlOUI tUllHlS1 lllAMI STAtl~fNl •~1-1"4 IJ°'OM I• 11111 ... '°"""'" CN,>fllV t, 1tl1. (I!'.!"'~ DOILV Fil~ Evidence • Of C11c111g·e Abou11cls 'Wrong Numbers' Bn ck /<1 sli Ri .~es lo Plio11 e S11 rve)'S 8)' JflHr\ l"L"Nl'\'IFF ... ll1tt•N11 a~11v~• Nfo:\V \'IHlK -1'hf'rf' ii!' 11 (etllna in the l!nhrri S111!t! nf 11 nted to rh•ni;:i-. • prPss1u·e th11I causr!I pitople rn rt+e11:· 11minl' old hf>lief.•. fort~Ake lrad1tu"ln ,11nri ~nmtlirne.~ fftk expeditnt itn!lwer(. It \~ t~emp1Hle<1 by 11 11·\fte r•n11e nr f'l'l'nl~. 1nrludin1 1111rh tfi.•J)'lr.:11i-rno1·e.e. as r11i~­ tn.i: J!nlri "~ prirl' frnm !hi' nnf'I' sPK'rtd 'fiR"ure nf $.15 an ounrl': In S.~. lhl' npen1ni nf f;ilk11 \l.'ilh China . thP fi('rce rPbl".llion 111!'.llin~h p<11111t1>r11 11 i11 Sl"f'O in lhf' pohliral pr imane.~. wh1f'h .~ugg,i;t that nlri tr.iit1,itinn~ 11rl' ti t i n It 1r:implt1( It i.e. 11111t.£!f"!lltd h.v lhP rnn,e.1,ml'r poll.•. whirh shnw !hi' i111111e~ nf rr(lnnmlr 5\11 r v i \' 11 I (l v'" r r i d I n g ph ilnsnph i('lll hf-lief!!. ANll QUITi': f1rAnHl!1c11!1~". It i" shown in the '!ISP 11nd pvpn relit! with \\" h i c h Amer~c11n inrlu.~lriali.<t!i i:ir· cPpted ftdtr;il cnntmli; in lh,. market ph1ct. which fnr lhl'm Amnun1s In thP ultimate Nln· trarl iclinn or principle A poll b~ the N11tinn11l A~sociatinn or (11anuhtcrurer.e. :;how~ that nnl~ 13 ptrrerJf"·flf 7:111 respnnrilng cnmpanie~ Aln· !lirierM1 "'Ag,...prire cnn!rnJet:tn be 11 oeRflli \'" h1clnr in thP er.n nnmic nu11nnk. Slim" 114 Pfi"rcent fell tha t conl.rnls "'f!rP 11 positivt fRrlnr : th,. rt.Iii h111d mixf'rl l'irw~ nr "'erf' un- cerl:iin. NAM r1111tinn"d readrrs nf the pnll tn rnnsirlt'r the find· infl(!! in rf'latinn to lhe lim'. the q11e.1;1inn~ were a~ktrt. "·hif"h "'"!I riurinJ!. !hi' 111.~l l\\'l'l \1·eeks nr April. or before the Price Commission rtitll~ got tn11"h. Rut. lonr;: hcfnre lhf' l'(lm- mi!l!linn hep:an rlemitnriin11 th11t cPrt11 in firms redu('e prire:'I. lhe !tvel n( conlrnl.~ wris greittPr lhan al ;iny timt this cent ury exrept for periods (I( war. Ancl NAfl1 supported I hose controls. I.A ST f'Al.l. NAfl1 rlirtclnrs "tfmpnr:i.rily re~inded it~ nf. ficlal position npposin~ Wflit· price control!!." And in mid· Apri l ii 1nlrl C:on 2rl'S~ th:it th e prn2rflm wa~ successful and \l'orlhv of its ,11pproval. On ·principle. s;:iid NAM. it i·Rnnot rl cfenrt such contro\11. Aul. principle. it 11pptar~. is snmelhinl! to ~ rf.sc\nded. suspendtrl or hrnken for gre;iter "ood . "We Ar!" lnnkin11: f(lrWRrrl 1.o the time when cnntrnl!! cRn ht elin1inaled and A m e r i c ;i n businr.~.• can revert In nur tr::iditinnRI rtli.11nre nn frte m11rkels." ii lnltl Cno,1?Tess. The questio n lhRI I he m.11rkrl place f;i cP.s is hnw tvnpori!r~· is t hi $ "er- pf'dienl? •· And j11dgin5! b\· hi11tnry. lhf. 11n!!wer sugp:Pflilf'<I ill th11t 1.hPrP is sin element or ptrm11nency in l.em por11ry. Lenrtin)t credf!nr.e In lkil! belief i!! the persi.~1tncf' nf in· O•tion rit!loitf! the severe m1>11surei'i th:it hsi ve bef.!n ts.ken. F'onrl prirc.c; hllVP. (alJP.-n, hut. the.rP 11re .=tlre1Ht,\' hints tha t they m11y push higher 11R11in. And thi-"'hnle1a\p price in- dex. litter tn he refler tf'd in C'nnsumer prices. continue!!' to 11scend. B~· LFJ\o,· ror•: '.\'E\\! \'ORI\ ~ l'r11 -1'!ie Amerir.-n pohlir hR!'I htfi1mp lnrrei:isingl~ sinno_,,c-rl h(>r11u~P of thf' in\'ll,!iOn nf 11~ priv1try h,v lelephnnt m11rkPrf'rJ1 An e1tperi in tht bu11ine~11 SAY~ "If irrtsp<in~ible 11nrt ir· ri1a1\ng pr11rrices "r,. n 't $1oppt'f1. 11•e'll l>f! ln ri11ni;:er of A h11rd t•r·11ckdown hr I he Fed tr 11 I ('omn111n11·Ar u1r1.s Cnmmi.•11i<ln and .~litlP 11,i:Pn- <'ies." s11id o\'l urr11~· Rnnu1n. ht11d of r 11 m p 11 t R n ('nn1 - munir1111nn.< lnst1tu1t o f \mrrir11. Inc .• Nt w York . "'Thert'.1 M excui;e rnr ch1pli<'11lf' itnd triplif":i tc 1·1111~ rn lht samt hnu.<ehnld JU ~t btcAUM ii nrm ill Inn l'llrP ll'~< tn ~rt>cn ii!> li~lll pn1prrly,'' hP !tlliri. "Ii'~ \\'Orst to ('flll fWOjllP in (;111 A'n~elt11 111 !\ n'l'IO<"k in lhP morn in~· h t 1· 11 u ~ P 1 h ,. ttlephnnP solirilnr in ~rw Ynrk ha~ fnrgollf'rt nr rlor~n 1 knn"· Ahout !he 1in1p rl 1f ferential '' THflSE .4,ft F. nnly ' <'Ol!fll" nl m11n.v ahuses rle1•rlnrurc: ' . ) ',.' • FINANCE ~ ! 11 f " (' !t•li•phPIU' !11,11 ~!'1 ltl:._ tw•1'fltllr 11 nali11nal h11~1nr .. ~ rnlln11 1ni:: thf" 1nlr1"111rl1nn (•( \\li.1.i;, l1nP '1rlrpho11r ..:rr-1 u·r Fnr 1f'a1'!i r r l P r h •'!11' n111 rkrt1n,c. 11 :1~ a ln l"a l h11~1nr~~, l'fl ~I 111 ~·,.nt rnl Thi.~ \ rar' llH•1·r p!'nhA hlv 11111 hr :1 IP1 11f pohti~·i1I f':llll p::1 1.:n1n'1 h,1 lrlrph1111r ii~ 11'1'11 ;i.~ 111r1·i·hnnrl 1sr lPllin ~ a~ !hi' rrr.~irlrnt ial I'll/'('~ .~h;i rr •!fl If lPIPph nnp <:(\llC'!11'11'~ :li'f" t. o I I r~. ro d <J 1 !.ori~ r o my ,,...,, ,,.,..,,, {'ay ( ,./<Id I a ,'d•>'T h•V< At r.7 11~~1 7. I '1 •r 1 ~• ~r •r•Tor ~ l 0.dr , ~ 1 "Y P '"< e,r T~< P>•"i: v~v t .< 71,;, was qn . .l l!aO l ~ys w r D nCj ro ~ q,, 'v ft"r"f HE n ( 11 e r~1 :rl r ) · )1 ( r; ~ ' I I Df.me's W ortla [J I j "'f. '-· ~· r "Honesty is th e be.~t pol if'y," i-f\.vs ~1 1 kP ("arpenter of Marietta, Ohio. AhovP ts cnpy nf le.lier lad sen! to Ken Spre ngel , Ohio Bell Telephone ntanager . after incident. \11ith pay phone. Sprengel li ked letter. .11nd printed it in company publication. He also tre11terl l11d to ban;1,na split. I taliaris Givirig Heck to Shell l\1EW ROCHELLE. N. Y. F'rank Slriintnn. a Shell (UPI) -A coalition of Italian· !!pnke!lm11n. 11aid th' firm American org.:t nir.atinns h11 vt rt('RiveO thrre oth er s-imilar gi ven lh' Shell Oil Cnmp;iny 10 compla int!! from I t a Ii an dayii f{) inrlurie It 11 I i an · grnupt1: in the NtM' \'ork :irl"a . AmericRn.~ in it.~ "r.reAI 1'hp omi.ssion he .~id , ~·as Anleric11ns" gam' nr f:i ce an "strictl.v an oversight." ecdno mic bnycoH. S1ainlon said that befnte The groups. mee.linj? here. Sh,.11 intrndtJc:ed the game it !laid throufl(h 11 !!pnkesm;in lhal nht;iinf'd ;:ipprnval from ' lhe 1.ne boycott could invnl vf'. the fedtrlll Trade Gn mm·issinn. ma~" rt lurn nf Shell credit "l)nrler thrlr rcp;ulAlinns \\'II" cards. A rf!fU8R I to hu,v Shell rllnnnl <'hRnJ!r. th!!· ,11rimt> nr RA!loline And lht llrfl(ing nf withrirAll' rt until rvpri• j?Ame union members not !n deljver h piect i.~ riistr1hute<l. In ol er to Shtll 11t111linn!'!. wnrri.• w,,·re ln<·kf'd in. com-" We 11re 11erlnu~ abnu! this 1-nilled l.n thi!'!" promotion," th ini;r and are def!nllely golr1111: ln mo ve." ~11ld D. Anthon y At-The RA Ille, he ."'1id, "'it.~ tl1iani. cheirmAo of the United hcinii; held In only t11-·n states. Snciely nf JL11lian-Amf'nr11ns. Nrw Vnrk and lnnneclicut, to "Wf hAv t decided to notify Lc~I 11!1 pithlic arcrptance. INFl.ATION. OR lhP lhreal Shell ;11ld give them 11 fin;:il np--If Shrll de<'idrs ln use the nf II. :iutnm11ticallv tr11 nsl<'llts pnrtunlt~ to eorrect the in· g;ime n:itinn11lly. "Vn•: can lake lnln a .se.rinu!! politiral r.=irtnr, equity in thei( 'Gr t 1t t slep.s tn re1·\se. it anil intrOOuce 11 bein11, an tlt<:tion ye.:i r -Amerir11ns' g11me." he actderi . ft;ilian-Amt'rican11." he said. Rnri Rn election ye11r In whirh , ,------------------------, poll!! shn\11, Amrrirarut .:ire preoarcd tn ·vnte on pnckel honk is.~oes. No Pi~kle En.~t Meets West rll!rele.!.! ln "PPf!lli~ lo voters thev Ml nrily will eost t.he it c;:in,lld •. :t !I 1·ott!I, the>' al5!1 m;:iy p;et him 1n trouble with the f'CC'. Rnman :ti:iid 1nosi irr1t1llng prfletu·rs sil'm fron' 1gnnr.11nre ;uu1 poorl1· tr1'inrd t;1lltrs snd :<urrr1 1~ors l!I 1 e \ e p ho n't .s<1lle111111: l'ocnpan irs. H1• s11u1 the inrlulltr~· mu~t 11o.1l1t'r !\t{rlf hr<·ause nf fici&I r1•J!111111 inn •·ou \rl hf> 5"\'"f~ r not•,!!h tn kill I ,. l e p h n n t .sl\hc11 1n2 ""~ ;:in efft ct1ve 1n<1r ~t>l in~ incd1u 1n, .\;.: rr 1:-;, t " 1 " r h n n ~ ~11r1 r11111. t~ a h1.i:hl" rie s1 r11ti!e. 111('c1t11 n1 1111 f'fl~'~ tenil 10 gn d .. 1.1n at a l ln1f "hr n rhe ro<t• n1 111hrr i:;rll1oi,; n1rlhclr\s &r:e rl~l!li(. ... Thr ri11 pli1·a te 1•a\I rt'::illy tnllkl'~ rnpm1r11. Rnm111n sitid. l\ 1101'111n i.rl"l(I i11 1nr~rrupte'd b1 ~li!'h a call l1'h 1ll' r'h:ingin; 1hl' ba h~ 's di iq>tr 11r bAk1n~ • .o;ru1fflr 1s ~nin,11 !n hf. 'lllllf' Rfl• 11<\\'('fi. "\11rl rrn1r111hl•r." hr o;11id , ''o!l" prrsnn ~01 1 o(frnrl r;i.rrie.1 1n.11·i> ll'ri.i:ht lha n tn 101JC· 1·1'<1.;:!111 phonr rall~. Tl1e ir· n t;:i tl'rl hnu.~pw1fp 1111~ 11'1 lf'fl!I. hrauty p.:11·lnr anri Sl'f'< ynvr ad 1n ;:i ma11.11 1.1ne ln11!;inlly, ~hr ~t<lrt~ !t1trin11. vnu and 1 nu r product ap11r! tn. lhi-lad:-J si1t1n,:: nfxl to her"' AMlher pritrlic·,. th-.1 result • in rompl aints In lhr Ff\ i.!I IPlrphone snlicita110. on Sun· dav~ "!11 man~· part.• nf tht C'OW'J - t r\. 11 lu!it ran'! bf' rinne~~· R.Orn;1,n sairi. BlJT THE MOST p.-rv1sive: 11in i.s ~:irrulntL~n~ss. wastint; lhr prn.~Pf'rl"~ :inrl t h',e ~nl 1cltnr'.s lln1t'. "Proplt' rP!ien! Orin,:: kept nn lhl' phnne ;i f1er thr.y MY 'no' p<1l1rcly." he arlri<•rl. ThP "'ay In prr1•tnl R<'r- rulnusnc.~i; hv M>licil.nr!! \~ -lG exercise tiRhi. control nver the s:ilrs pilrhes :incl tn:ike ~1u-1 t/lcv art fQllnwtd In thl' letter. ,;f"lnn't let 11alr.s Pf"'lple irft- prn\•i.!ie niurh 11 \\'CA ken~ the ~:i lf.'s p1t('h. in add1tinn \fl con• sum 1nR timr ,_1orfflver , 1l Cln lr:id to unrruthfulne!l:it.'' Rnmfln :-:ri 1d ~Ale:<. .:i ppeal! ~hnuld be slric1ly tr111hr111 at Jll time~. "It 's abi;urd In m11ke claiil-1! 1n .11 telPphone so1icilatfon that you wnuldn"t put in medja advertising or a follow up Jit- ter." West Bay Finance Tells Loss ' ~'est Bay F l n A n c I I ·1 Corporarinn. Oranizt Cour\lJ aparlmt.nl h u i 1 rt t r ... ntt ope_rator. h;i:;: r,.por!trl " 109! of $.12fl.!;86 or $.O!I ~r ghare for tht s11t monthc; ~nn1n1 f)f>Cpmbf>r 31 . lflil, This co'"· pare~ \41ith 11 profit nf S.121.000 or $.00 f1Pr sha rf' for the cqr4 re!!pondinfl( period e n d I flt: Dtt:ember :11. 11170. .~ The company c urr en tfY ' m1'0R1Z:f's O\'Pr 2.flOO ap:irtmeJtt un its in Sou!hern ind Nnrthe!it C:iliforni;i .11nd has an M· clit ion;il llOO 11n il11 unrter cqa· structlon_ Thomas 1\11. Y trior hu resigned a.• prtsident ind board chairman of West 811 Financi111I Corporallofl sue· ceeded by Edward R_, Borcherrtt. a former director, Humble: Nan1e Set As 'Exxon' In fart . af 1ea.~t nnl' majnr pnll w::itc:hcd hy lhf' White Hnu,., inriir.11IP.!. th.:it millinns of Amerlran~ Are prenArerl lfl vnle rnr the m11n ::inrl the p111rty wtm sf'W!! up I.ht.: rip In lhtir pncke 1hnnk . fl·IOUNT Cl.EMEN~. Mich. (AP ) -Three Arab pi ckle Hn PS'TON fl!Pl 1 The The poll i'iU iRt.~lll. Jn f:icl. llnd pe pper packrrs hRve gnne kosher. Humbl !" Oil 11nd Rtfinin,: Co, that lrilriilion. p n 11tIr a 1 It all slRrtPrl whf'n !ht SR.fie Rrnthtrs f;irm Pi ckl e wlll i:h11n~t Its name and th;, 11llcJ!h1nrf' Antf nlhP.r nlrl Aili· Cn. nt8r Mnunl Clemrn~ dttlderl In fu rn nut a line of nAme of i!S A<l!IOlinf! to "EX• .11nc-t':s m11 y bfi suhmf'rJtl'd b.v kGsher pickle!! 111nri peppers namf'ri "Klnrt Oa\'lrt." xnn" r.ff~tl vt .Ja n. I. the orrr1\·hrlmin11; nf!<'f'!!Shv of The lhree hrolhl'r!I _ <.~e<irRr. Ch:irles and Louis The brand namt. Exxon wa!I ctnin~ .,omet hlniz About tho~ nttdf'rl 11 r"hhi In m.:ike II ko~h,.r. chn~,.n 10 replace thrtt name1 ri~ioJ! price~. RAbbi .Jack finltfn11tn of nr:l rhy Q::ik Pttrk si.1ri hP in ll~t' nf Hu mhle products - And th:tl rn11ld mr:in thai wn1Md hf hRppy ln nhliRt. anrt !h i~ ""ck the thrr" Ar111) F.~sn. F:n('o 11ncl Humhlt.. lhl' "lrarlilinn" nr !ht frPe brothers &nri the r11hhi celr:hr;iled rhr b1rlhd:iy of !he nt11.· f.xxnn . ii word rnmp:iny (It. m11 rkol plRrt . wh ich lndustrv, fir tRl!! !la id wa.~ u nu !I u 8 I pickle. in!!i~l!I w11~ !IU.~pendf"d nnl,., "We've ht11rrt llfl murh 11bnu1 l'ini;:-flnni;: rllplom;iry." htc~u~e or lL• <louhle x. ~·M kt-C'll U!lf' nf Rn Pmer,Rr.nry that Rahhi r.nldmAn ii111ld, "Wf'i th'O\lght ~·e "d try i:i little pfrkl t pickt'd ~rli:illy bccan.,e ft "'nu1d p1111~. nll•ht "'" 1 Inn" 1 .. cnulcl hf' u~Nt in llumble ,,.,. ' dip nm11r.y. lime re;i!lsertin• il.,tlf.:_ __ ..'..:::::-===-:=:--::=---=:---=c--c:---=,-:==='--~''.::nterrr\~e.i'i 1ntfl:rna~All~ ' I • • 20 Dlll V PILOT s OVER THE COUNTER T'ft • <lll'fl " ,\!~·· l'O " ... l'I• o(lro A)"'( 4 II" C \ot<it • o. .. i.. :.,; ~ "'n."":,..'' ~· j ......... .,.. . ,,. . .. ~ .. . . . . ~ ., .. .... , ... -. ~" "~ ..., ""' ~· • • .... t119 ..... tt'orth Sellit1g Pomt: Do It Yot11·self 8) S' I\ I r\ POR1 F.H Hr:i1,1: .,.,ould }OU l1kP tn r.n }OU rseH 1nln E;irn frorn $40 oon " \'tillr Sol scheciules pace \nU r o.,.,n dt11ril1ne<; for '" -And all 1h1~ w1thnu1 any exper1ence necessary ' Dnor ln.fionr io;ilrs lh" world !i sn1allcs1 1nc1t>prndent business might :111 11 .... r.r 11 .. l l these rlrr:1n1c; lf you l1kr l hf:o. !Ype n( ~ ._.nrk 11nr1 HI \OU hfl\!(' J2 '"hat H tn kes lo make a go of ti P'Olttf.• Door tnrffnnr ~IHn~ is our <Cnuntr\ s (lftfest me1h Kl nf in err h And I s 1 n r An1nn., f:imr11:ir prnrluf'ts In 11nllv In trnriuccrl tn thr Amer rRn pubhr hy rlnor lo dqor .a;ile~mcr ;ire !ht> .,.,;ishlni:: machine silk ;ind nylnn sl(l{'k 1n.11:s the 'atuum <"leaner 1etvlng mnrhlnr rnr11n 1 nda y 1 ftOO noo Io 2 000 000 Iii e 111 dnnr tn c1onr st;:ll n1: - ;ihnur hnlf nf th('m .... omrn And the numbers cnnltnue to _grow as m11llon:o. nf :111 ::igrs \t'Rrn fnr lhc. nd\anriu~es of Jh1s ncr11p;it1on i;turlrn!s turn Jn 11 In f1nnn<I' 1hr1r IU Inn ens!< tr~c hers nnrl nthrrs !r:i11 on II to bnoi:t 1h('1r 1ntnnH'J: "omen mtllf' tn t1s1pplrmrn1 the r:im•h .. 1ncnmc and fl/I up their fdlt> hnurs The f1rlrl of ri rr'< r srlhng 1s ~xprind1ni: rnp dl\ "Pllrrrd p::irt1culn1 Iv hv \ n 1 r 1n crPa<1n,i.: .... 11hnµnl'J:!I tn p~y a prem1um fnr the I 1xur v nf <hopp1ni:: a! hnm(' The f E>lrl ls fll!IO di\ ('f!i. f~ 1ni: In ll 11 Ide r::in.e:e or ,!!:nods nnd srrvk cs TherE> ere nn cstnnRlcd Z1:ino l n :iooo rl rct !1.Cllnr;: tnm p:.in1es n111nv nr 1hrn1 :glan1or ~tock~ 1n r('1 rnt ~r11rli r ssrng :ibout $4 b11l1nn ~n puall1 double the 1olutn{' nr onlv a drc::ide ago Should \.'OU il1t('tnpt 1ri i::n 111 In !ht c1ucr.r 'rll r ~ r rlrl~ ~c.re are: somr r I' t1 11 s 1 r TODAY! \\ "''h1n,i::1on h11,.Pri 111~ A .. -.nr1:Jt1nn 1h" "''(lf'l<illon v.h rh put R I' n d P nr ethlCS memhrr~ I ;irnln~~ If vnu Rrr '"' pnrt 11mr \0 Ir r lrn n~~ hr Rhnllt $:lfl lo $7ifl ll \() J re horn flrld supt:r\ wrs 1 1nRnJ1ge $40 000 or nuRll) 'nu Wnmrn ('::irn ;i! lr;isl as nun h ;is mrn rln Arl1anl::iJ.!l'!1. Ynu rr nn }fllr 1wn and l"llll st>I ynur n\\n ~nrk loac1 t1mf! srhcdulrs hnRnc1Rl i;:n;ils Ynu ran i:rt st::irled w1lh v rlually nn rxr11• 1rnrr c;in gr\ 111 nr o 11 or rltret t s::il c~ R1 Rnv t mr nnrtnt1ll\ need no capital fn bc,1?10 v.11h 1W;irn1ng strrr clear nf 11n\ rl1rl'rt J:Rlrio cnmp;iny lha1 re rru1rc~ \nU rn mRke a b J.! in 1 ('sfm('nl 10 srtlr~ J::CRr before \•IU ,.,rn I I the rn;irl I -01slld va nl:igr~ Yo 1 mR) not he flble 10 J1Ch1eve !he n Personalized • Stylish • Efficient Ord•r For Yourself or 1 Frrend Me y be used on envelope' •1 return addreti libel, Also "ery hendy es dent1f11:"t 1on l•bels fo r mar~ ng per1on1I 1ftm' 1uch '' bo o~' retord1 photo• etc l•bels 1f1ck on gl•'• .ii nd mty b• ustd for me r~1n9 home canntd fotd 1f1tn'lt All l•btls ere printed with styl sh Vogue type on fin • quality wh it• gum med peper COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK UST t.1oi. II .. 1.,. .. J "• L-ci.u o.. \Ii. ,. .. (Mt I M .... Ltw Ci.i.. (flt " ' • .. • .. , ' • • "' '" • • 'l"' n .. \JI,,, \t I ,,, n • 3f \<Jii! • 't ,, .... I• 1• Sto ll4 16\t ,, .. " ' ,, ._,..., ... " U\i !J'tt .... '"' JI .. l1't r.h 1'21'> • l• '4 ,,. ,, ,.. 16•~ ,. • • ll ,,. ~10 .. ,, l ·~· ,.. ~ l' ~ ·~ I ll lo ~ ,, 11 ,,...., .. -:n Uh :n .. •1 1' ""' 11 Uh Q!oi • JS,. lSl'I 101 •5 u\.o s lO ... u..O ~ ' ti \I fi 10 • )111] -•• lO Ill , ... , .. " a • ~ .... I&~ -"-• I • ~t. ' n • ~lH 11 .... , '" ~· l • • •• "'' . d ll'> 1• Sl : fl » •• II J • ~ u· 1, 11"' . "' ,. ,..,, ' ·~· ~ .~.: " 'l ' "' ·~ " " ~ " ' " " , " • ' • " " ·~ ' .. f, u -· ~· " .., • • • •• .. •• ' •• I' •• ,, ., ~~ i~ •• ~~ •• ~~· 'y ~ 1: i ~ 0" "" "" "" "" "" "" "' ., '" .. •• •• ••• ••• ••• ••• ... •• •• .. ... "" "" "'" :::: '"' •• ,. ::i; "'"' "" .. ,, .... .. ~ .. ~ .... ... .. .. ... .. "' '"' ~i.:~ " .,. ' ~~I "" =~ ~ =~ "' '" :i· ., .. "' ... ~Jin ,1 .~ > H• ~:~ '. '" ~:-· ""' ..,, ,.at£ ,, ' "' ... ... ' . ·~ ''" .,, "' .,. "' '"' "' , .. "' .. I., " . ' ' ... '" •o•• "' /;,J ' ~" '" ' '"' • • • . Thursday's Closing PriceS4:omplete New York St~k Exchange List Stocks Tradh1g Remains Light NEW YORK\ (AP) -Although lnd1ng 1ctiv1ty was as 11ght a~ oh Wedne5day stock market prices managed to move a littl e higher today Aided by some nf the glamour issues advances on the New York Stock Exchange gradually bmlt up a margin over losers that came close to 2 to 1 Trading i!!ppeared to be affected httle 1f any, bv ne\\ s lhe Sov1el Union demanded thal American for ces r;top their steps to block the coasl of North Vietnam Rut analysts cautioned that investors re m11ned nervous ' ' • \• \Yt chw I l• "' w1c!;•1 1.20 • W•NIU , '" l\lft ,..., 1 '11 W1I H I 10o • .~ ' n " .. "' ·~ "' " "' '" " '" " " 1: "' " •• • ~· " " _ , »•• " -D" .. "" a• "" ~ '" ••• JI'• 'l" '" ' ... ,,., " "" u ... • 1•'• ru-1 '" , _ ... . .. "" D•• ,,, . U\o '"' "" m. n 1Jh " . " "" .. ' ., ... " 11•• n " . ••• '" ... " . 1!12 s OA!l 'r' PILOI " 1~· :r.a ir.v ~1~ ., •• j .... "' "° "' "" "" 11 llh lit !'° I I i II ll\ot I • ,ll IOI;, • 6 1 11 .... llf'' !TO I , .i J<ll o Jo 11 l , ... , .... , .... dO .. .. •• • JI . "'• 11" ' tl6il iO SCI iO " llj 111 .. "l l JJ\i)l•jj" Ml l• 1J\o •• • • , » • :is • ,. 11 JI II , II o lllJ 1l\• 71 '1 • l'I• 1 ~ 10 • 1 II d i.I, >llo Ol•o 13 "• "• l\o U d •t•o •11., • • ~ • • oOo II , 4 •• ~ 1 t , fh ll'• Jf I I • 1 , If 41 OJ o tilt •o duoll•o Dlo .. t tl)A(l tO • ., )f l I~ • 'I'' ,. 1 •f )llo ) \o 1"' ,100 I Ill 1 I j I/ 'I 'I•' o !llo Hl o • • 16 • • ,f'• I' 1011 • 1' s! ~ ~~1· ,: ' .: u n l: n, 111M: 1:1 •• 1 1~. • -XY!--llJ 1!1" Ill " .. 'l IJ 1 • 'l ~ I ; '"' 11 • j \to \\o '! ""'' .. II 1 • lf'I 111'• 1!~ n. ' ' • u~ i: ""' '• I ·~ o Ii i.I "'' I latt1 l M~h llw ('-<• (hil S•lff t..tr IM• I H .~ LI"' c .. ,. (~I ' ' ll ' ' tt "" • " ' " " ~ "' " ,. , •• • " .. " ' ' ' " " ' • ... ... ... '" ' " '" • '" " . " '" '" '" '" ' . " . I ' ' . " " ,. '" " .. " m ti~, '. " .. " '" • .. '" ' " 11 ' • • 1"" 1• I~ "' ' .. ' ·~. '!" ' . f l\o "' " '" "' ,., lJt, .. "' " . )~ 11•0 " ,. • " . • ' . "" ••• •• " • • " ' '" " .. ' " ' " ' " " •• " " ''• I " 1 ,., .. . IJ'o • " .. " '" " ' 111 .. l \ " . I " •\~ . n , tl 'i '" " j~1o ' .. • " ' " ' ' " ' Ill 1 ID " . ... • • ' V• 11• ilk \o IV•!•• M•ll I V• nl ( I ... :1~: .,:• I ~ VA fllll n lt 1 V I •• <I In! IV• n I {O•P II V~ft~h IMI Vt <•+n 70 V• n! nn (11 ' ., ' 1! i: # ,,, j J" ' .. i, 1: • .. ' I ' . ' " . ' Jl ll " , u • • " • " ' " I " ' " ' . • '" " ' " .. ~. l• ' • I IJlo _,,_ I I 71 , l •• , JI II t ' . I) •• .I• IOh '~ u . " ' . I I I} ,, " ' ... 1 ' " ' • " ' " •• .. • •• lti. '' " • " ' ' . .. ' '"' ... ... " • ' .. " "' ' . " .. " 'I , "!l "' '" '" 4 I ~ '4 .. ' ' ,. • ,~. ,.. .. .. '" 1-·· • ' ' " ' '" • • ... '" JI ' I ... '" • .. .. • • •• • •• lj;J ; ~ ' • • t " •• .. " ' ' ' II 11 • I• • ' • IV•••I• (~ ' "'•llo Off\~ • ~ : .. '7.~ II~ ) •l o II 1 l • 100 ,, ' ' ' " ,, . • "' '" ' ' '• • • • 11 1 I ' • ~· '" "" .. ,, ' ' . ' . ' ,. 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IOi.-\o W1t l'cl UO .. ~ u,11 J• l4!1 ' '4 U•o I ~ W•\111 0 l>lo !.: J•1--. I to II • I W•1P•~· wt "11 .!'• lt1+ :. 10 10 W••I U11 1111 .,.. ) 1"" 't 10 o 10'\o • W•<lrAnl In U 1f'o io~ lol,o IJ~ 12 •WI llC:I D j(I O 11,, 16 > 1~-'> I.to ., . 1~ . wn i.1111 II JO I l"t ,,,. ll"\(, •i .. W~ll h1t11C11 I OO\> ",'" 1•,'oo' °',I', • I l'l•-'•w~!l•k••wl , ''~ IOh Wlc~ll• llld 7 7" 1lt 1'1 13~ [~'~I llo :1\\'i:IJt Glb ~ !~ ,,,, i! 1l I~ ·I : :1t:~·rr1 r. ~ r: 1~ 1 ~ 10* I~ i' w 111• "' llO 11 IV. I\• '!'", llo I · wll~n c• 10 ~ 1nw 10' tli o 11 w llDnC• WI 111 ,., ,, 1 1 ..., n,, ""'w111nl'~ n ri A't A\ 111' lJ\o I • Wll•n1!n «I 11 A 4 ~ • l'l'i ).... WI SoGtl wl 11 JI )II ~~ )f 1 w lnklmn «I 2 '• '' 1Jl'o 11 ... Wlnd1111 Mb ,,1 10\'l I~"' 12i,., 1""1 ,wa11 H1 1• 11• 'I' i.~\ lj ~ Wolvt rln l7 1 I to I • lt~ 1 I ,WllN llld Jc • 1,,. 11 t ,1_,. " t-, W&r~ Wr M u ''"' 11V1 I '' I'"\ 1,w•~lht• Cit 61 Ill II • ., l•l,,. WT CAr tt!1 11 11'• !~ .. ll~ •. 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SAi T I AKE C ITV -<1J hrl•ls ol rhe Unlnn P11r1fit Cnrp h1t11r. rl!pnrted lncreA~t.d eR rntr\g!I' 1n thl first qu1trter nt 1972 to Sii mllhon or AO ct,,ts A sh1tre frank E Barnell 1 ha1rm1n O( lhe boRrd And l hlef f'X• tculht orf1rer Sl id l'Rrn1n1~ for the first <"1u11rter In tt7l were '17 1 million or 11 rtnts a llhRre c.ross rtvl!nUt!I' 1tnd !tllles ln- 1 re1t11ed SIS 5 mllhnn 1n ll'ut f1r111 q1u1rrer lo UM~ rn1lh1Jn, comp11rtd w1lh '241 4 mlllton 1n the 1!171 per1nd Barne tt Sltld SA' f RANI ISCO -r'o I 1nes 1n •n effort In r ut ~sl!ll 11nd hQost prorns h~!t 111 \d oft . 1100111 nne rourlh nr l1s North Amer1 c11n work rorcf' 11nd w\11 aim 8f a RrtAter percen111lt ot !ht c 1 Ul!'tf marktl Thi' tutbar k1t 1n\n\11td sbout 40 rier1t•1ns 1n tht Un11ed ~'"''" llnd (,An11d11 Tht 6r1111th nw~ td rompAn\ Al~ 11nnnunr ed It w•-closing JAleit offlre!'t in r\Pw 'ork l hlr•an ~1111ml And St11ttlt ;11nd w nu I fl "1thd r11 " 111 11'•!'11 IVin of Its nldf'r hnf'r( Imm SPrv1rr otxt \-f'Jlf :1,,.-:=---==-========; • •• KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN SATURDAYS IN THE DAILY PILOT . - I \ JJ DAI LY PILOT B~ehers : Reagan ~ Bullish From Wire &rrt~'-1 Gov. Ronald Reagin says Friday, May 11, 1?72 ~NIMAlogk """'° T~~'~· K6.'[P RIGHT ~lalpr.~~•i~e ._;vieti~~ Dies Mi.I ' ,. (UPI 1 -•• when ... u~' ~' handouts from paying Cir 'us ~.000 ~ lam Uy unW alt~r Mn. Holl '• the hospital, but was stiU !ti\· Ellen Holl died, she was a relatives. but DT!.L·J.:eroy :.Ta1cott ap<t death. ing: · . . . mill ionniress -o~y she didn 't fl er husband left her and Don L. Andrus appealed, tying ~f ftoll't •lll leaves her Wednesday momui.g the m· know it. ,. , her mother took care of her up the money. rs. v. vali d told her mother she was f\1rs . lfoll. 46, died \Vednes-three children. The final possible appenl estate to her three sons and dying. day of a virus and of coin· But by 1967 she was begin· failed last \\'tek when thf names her mother as execu· "Ellen said, I'm going to die pllcalions from a paralysis. ning to improve and was able Florida Supreme Court ruled trix. today,,,.. Mr!. !iforgao, 1\ ' there Is no evidence of John .' +.;;4 Birch Soc~ty members caus-:- suffered in 1959, which the to talk. 1 there was no cause to review Her mother. Mrs. Robert related. ''l told her you are not • courts have ruled was the A Dade County jliry a\vard· the case and the money was Morgan, aald her daughter -not until your time. But she l;:s'~~P.ll1111,~~~~ resul t or medical malpractice. ed her $LS million, believed to available for Mrs. Holl "'as undergoing therapy and said 'I want to die. I want to 11 !\1rs. Holl u•as paralyzed by be the largest m ~ d I ca I Her attoi'ney, W i 11 i am was impfoving, although still die.' I ing a spil t within t he Republi can party in California. The Governor told a news conference in Sacramento: •'Jt's been so long since you've heard the v.'ord. l thought they'd gone !he way or the buffalo." * * * John E. Dt.Coste. ~·ho plays a black detective on the "McCtoud" television series, has been a."''arded $750 in damages and ·an equal amount in altorney fees from a San Francisco n1otel where the night ,clerk a 11 e Ji!·e d I y discrimin'ated against him. U. S. District Co1111 J ud ge Aibert C. Wollenberg ruled PEOPLE that the clerk, John Keane, denied DeCoste a chance to see a room for himself, wife, and small son at the Doyle Motel although later Keane showed the room to a while customer. * * * Former U2 spy plane pilot Francl.s Gary Powers was named to an executive post with a Canadian-based subsidiary of Garrett Corp. of Los Angeles. Powers became a worldwide figure when his spy plane was shot down in the Soviet Union in 1960. This led subsequently to a cancellation of a schedul· ed summi t meetin g between President Eisenhower a n d Premier Nikita Khrushchev. Powers was appointed senior project sales administrator for Garrett Manufacturing Co. of Rexdale, Ont., which makes communications eouipmem and rescue beacons f o r aircraft. * * * Dean Rusk, the former secretary of stal.e, has been elected one of the new at.\arge trustees of Davidson (N.C.) College. Rusk, a 1931 graduate or the Presbyterian · related School. teaches at the University of Georgia. * * * The Dude County (F'ln,) School Board chairman. WWlam Lehman , proposed a plan which he said would keep young visitors too busy to demons!fJtle during the na· tional Political conventions in ~1iami Beach this summer. "I think if you gave out 10,000 Frisbees to them every day, that should keep the1n busy and they 'll ne ver think a bo u t d emonstrating," Lehman told the Greater Pt1iaml coalition during a discussion or ways to prevent trouble during the Democratic 1·onvcnlion in July and the I' .... 1.,·;-·1 ""··c lave "in .'.l!vL:. • * * * Actor Richard Burton ended three months of film work in Budarest in the tltle role of Edward Dm ytryk's "Bluebeard," the \engendary n•ife-killer in modern settin~. and new to Rome to join his wife Elizabeth Taylor. "This "'a s a fam i l y record -lo h;ive been a11·av from each other for a full 11·eek, as the earlier longest u·as a bare t"·o days," said the 47-year--0ld Burton. Liz. 40, ~·ho did not play in the rilm ""hich is due lo be released in Au gust, left for Rome a \\'eek a~o. "It w:is triple agony here \1'ilhout Liz," mused Burton. * * * C1trole Fernci, n•ho sai d her singing job offers slopprd after she disp!a~1ed an an!i111ar poster i11 the While House in J anuary, has an engagen1ent to perform. Connie Ste1•ens hired ~fiss Feraci to rejoin her act for season--0peninp: performances May 27·28 at ~1agir Mounlain. an amusement park at Valen- cia, a spokesn1an for tifi~s Stevens said. The spokesman. r r a n k Liberman, said, "Connie has no political ax to grind. l'arole has worked very ~·ell in her acl for several y e a r s , particularly in Las Vegas." * * * Qottn Ellubeth II ex- prt.Med 1 desire to iiee Atrs. Qwies de Gaulle durin g the BrJliah aoverelgn's visit lo France next week, but f\·trs. De Gaulle declined. lnfonnants Aid Mrs. De Ciaulle senl profound lhank.s to the qu..n, but 1141ted she llOUld prefer not ta 1ru1ke an moplloo Jo bot. Nit IO , .. main In Iola) retlttmenl since tho dellll lier bUlbond. I ail Improper dosage of flrugs malpractice award \in the Colson. said he heard about bed ridden, until she had to be "At quarter 'til 5, she just and for the next seven tears United States. the ruling Sunday, but had not hospitalized March 2Q. She closed her eyes and she ~·as lay like a vegetable, living off Victoria llospltal b egan gotten around to noti£ying the returned home after 16 day11 in gone. So peaceful." "'GUE.55 WE. BC'N'tK.. MOVf. "TO T"J/£ LE.F t ... Adverti1ed 1pKlc l1 ;ood lhru !he Happy OCly ol Mo.r1. which i1n't May 17. b111 lha1'1 lhe day the ad 11 ;ood 1hr11. TILE SALE l>Efl' 1'H0 ill!Ck' JOHNS MANVJLLE SHAG CARPET if TILE . 57~Q.FT. Deep luxurious shag, can'I beat. and the tiles are 10 ea1y to lay. Adhesive backed and ln color1. PLASTIC DECORATOR PANELS 66~'x4 " 'fou can make up dividers. or u1e it in some way to make a little privacy. Comes in blue or pink. 10 maybe yol.l ca.a do somethlng for the klds room. BELLFLOWER STORE CLOSED TEMPORARILY DUE TO FIRE PLANS FOR REBUILDING ' NOW BEING DRAWN ··we Shall Return'" ZIP WAI CAR WASH GUN· Funny name. but those guys on Madison ATenue do the strangest things. Your own wash n' wax gun, to do it at one time. 2'7 TAKE YOU Pl C KS) FOLl\SIES! TRAVERTINE CARNIVAL NEXT WEEK! 12xl2 CORK TILE 49c PACK OF 4 The thick dark chunky cork that adds so much in a striking interior (Hey. lookit me. ma. I'm writing fancy). Elegance for the seventies, to suit your most discriminating tastes. (Whooee, that wore me out.) 19~D. • 30" PULLMAN TWO-DRAWER McCULLOCH MINI MAC 6 CHAIN SAW You've beard me say this before (stop me if you'T• heard this), but this is a beautiful pullman. the top is perfect. molded marble. The cabinetry a in't bad either. Faucet Included. Lightest deal made {almost). Pow•r plenty. and easy to handle. U you have to do a lot of big sawing. you should ••• 11. Must be the price 11 great or why would we run such a cra1y thing? BIG SHOW REIT WEEK 4777 11495 6' RUSTIC CEDAR FENCING 77~IN.FT. INC. POSTS • RAILS Cheapie price, but why? Cedar is good stuff, I wish more people would buy cedar beCause it keeps the moths away and who wants a moth·eaten fence? ASPHALT DRIVEWAY SEALER 66~AL. Gunk it on. I do (ev.e,.Y year). It does hold the surface together and retard erosion. And it looks just like new for awhile. (What am I going to do? Lie to you. Say it lasts a lifetime! Hah). TERI TOWELS This bas the nylon mesh reinforcing. to make them stronger. you1can get a lot of mileage out of the stuff. If someone finds them cheaper in the market call me. my number is 9B7·9846877S.87-l. Don't call collect. '°' SEE TME T~££, ~-CITRUS TREES WITH FRWT 2 97 5 GAL. SIZE Can you dig this? Some even have the fruit on them. (Unless th• stock boys ate it all). Lemons, limes, and others. Good to grow your own. all it takes is care. ! • .. CAJfE·TIFFANY 'SWAG 18'9 AVOCADO, TANGERINE. COCOA. WHITE, & GOLD Not a bad copy (not bad. considering Tiffany never made a lamp like this). The cane eUect gl••• it class. ChoiC. of · colors in the shade. STEEL PATIO POSTS 3~ Decorative metal columns, as we sar down at the ad agency. Choice of 1ome nice patterns. All wrought iron type llniab. SlllL PELLETS 29~¥.·LB . BOX I know you. think they me funny little things. Make a choice. 1nail1 or your plants. cause they really eat the green stuff up. DECORATOR BEADS 144 ! SMALL PATTERN 25' \,,,~ I LARGE PATTERN 20' Many faceted beads reflect and throw light. Make a sparkly doorway entrance acrun or just do some funny thing you'ye had on your mind. (Like hanging the landlord with a strand). NEXT WEEK "National Home Products Carnival" *' 90 ~lanolacturer's Booths * Prizes. Thousands or Give-awaJN * Bands. Games. Free Colt.on Uaodl'. Popcon, Slnshies. Pepsi's. • . TON OF FUN & EXCITAMUNT Under th e Big Top at our HUNTINGTON BEACH STORE ~lay 20 and 21 • Many patterns. sticks at a touch. (Hey. 1 rf.-J~...._>,,..._ understand that Tom Brown reads these ads and neTer buy1 anything at Notional. (Get with the program. Tom. We'll be walchlng you!) ' I • '.A ... •• •• ., ., . -., ' . I 1.-, • r I / s F .I D.t.JLV PILOT IS !(nights Dance, Duel • Ill Civic Ballet SCENE FROM ''THE NIGHT'S GAMBIT" From left, Hal O'N11I, S1ndr1 Winieski, Kristi Moorhead.and Louise Fr1Mr ,. Cowboys Take on· Broncs Championsliip Rodeo Opens at Foru1n A rodeo cowboy's luck iest break ls the meanest, roughest mount on four legs. Some luck. For the beast, it's just about the softest job in the world. That's how it is in Ut~ topsy-turvy world of rodeo. Bad iS good. "Cowboys can't win on· tame stock," says Cotton Rosser, pro- ducer of the forthcoming Cham- pionship Rodeo at the Forum from Thursday through Sunday, May 25 lo 28. A rodeo bronc works less, lives better and lasts longer than any Dther working horse, Rosser said. "When they're bad, they're really, really bad," he said. "One of our renegades -a bronc called 'Cheye nne,' hes been in the business longer than m o s t ::ow boys." Rodeo horses buck in eight-sec. ond stretches. EYen the saddle can be a menace. Cowboys have a healthy fear or getting a boot caught in a stirrup. Judges score both the horse and rider. A good cowboy who rides well on a really rough horse can finish high in the money. Competition in all events will be held at the Forum Rodeo during !!ach perfonnance. Starting times are 8 p.m. Thursday, Friday and Saturday (May 2$-26-27) and 2 p.m. Saturday and Sunday (May 27 and 28). Tickets, available at the box of. fice and the usual ticket agencies, vary at 25, $5,25: $4.25 and $3.25. A discount $1 is offered to groups of 30 people for children under II. ,. A new ba11et, 11The Knight's Gambit," \Vhich combines the arts of dance and fencing, will be featured by the Laguna Beactl Civic Ballet Company on Saturday, May 13, at 8:30 p.m. and Sun· day, May 14, at 2:30 p.m. in the Laguna Moulton Playhouse. Chosen to be perfor1ned on ·t he gala program during the Regional Ballet Festival in Seattle at the beginning of ~tay, the work was choreographed by the company's director, Lila Zali. 1.Iusic by Tchaikovsky was selected and fen cing master Alex Dilts \Vas in charge of the fencing sequences. Also to be seen during the final membership program ot the season, is a 20-minute version of "Carmina Burana," the Don Quixote Pas de Deux, and a comedy "Golden ~foments of Ballet,'' Choreographed by Leona Norman of the 1i1arin Civic Bal"' let, "Golden ~foments" is a hilarious spoof on the so-called "fancy . dancing" of the 1920's. It features unbelievable music by the Guckenheimer Sour Kraut Band and such characters as a moth, flame, Apollo, muses and Miss Liberty. Lead dancers include Louise Frazer, Joan Gair, ~1ichael Hillman, Molly Lynch, Merilee Magnuson, Kathy Mason, Kristi Moorhead. Hal O'Neal, Stephen Smith an d Sandra Winleskl Tickets fo r nonmembers at $3 for adults, $2 for studenll and $1.50 for children un der 12 are available from the Ballet Cente r, 1863 South Coast Highway, Laguna Beach. For reserva· lions call 494-7271. BIRTHA: FOUR GIRLS WITH BIG MUSIC . From left, Liver, d.rums; Shel1, gult1r, voc1l1;. R0Hm1 ry, guitar, and Sherry, organ, vocals. Birtha Strikes a Beat Two recording groups, who have origins In Orange County, will play for a benefit rock concert Saturday at the Mission Viejo High School auditorium, Birt.ha, a group of four girls with one sound, and Honk, known along the Orange Coast, will play during the benefit, !ponsored by the Mount of Olives Lutheran Church, Mission Vie- jo. Proceeds will help finance a youth group's summer trip to the Paiute Jn.. <Hans near Reno, Nev., according to the Rev. Paul tn"llar. Manager MJke Plnlizoto said the all· girl, aolid "blue-eyed'1 soul group bu signed to join the Rolling Stones dur· ing the latter's national .concert begin- ning June 9 in .the Hollywood Palladium. Birtha will be the support group In three other Southern Callfor· ' nia and San Diego engagements before headlng east. The all-woman band records for Dunhill. Honk, comprised of Orange Coast residents Steve Wood, Richard Stekol and Don Whaley, along with vocalist Tris Imboden , are known for their engagement at Laguna B e a c h ' s Orphanage. But their popu1arity is growing as the surfing film, "five Summer Stories" is shown throughout Southern California. Honk scored tht film . The Mission Viejo church bu sponsored youth concerts !or three years, Rev. Uh Jar said, The funds have enabled the church's youth group to travel to an Apache Indian reserva- tion in Arizona. There the members painted classrooms. church exterlor 1nd interior, varnished floors and other maintenance jobs. Tickets, available at the door, 11re $1.75. llisney Formula: Warmth, Pathos, Adventure WEEKENDER INSIDE FEATURES \ By JERRY BJJCK HOLLYWOOD (!If>) -Ron P.tiller ·leaned his massive frame back In his black leather chair, smiled and said, "People think • if It's clean it's Disney. But we re quire stOry and conflict just tike everyone else." Miller, &-foot..S, 24$-pound former end for the Los Angeles Rams, has a Jot to smile about as executive producer !or Walt Disney Produc- tions. At a Ume when production is at a !tandstUI for many series wblle they await their fate in the fall network schedules, Miller's crews are hard at work on "The Won- derful World of Disney." Not' on next season, but on the season after that. The show 11 1\gned 'with NBC through the IVll-74 season and bu on optJon for the following year. The long lead time is needed for lbe nature study films, which take up to 111.a years to complete. After 18 years, the Disney fonnula re-- mains the same: warmth, pathos, visual comedy, high ad venture. It is difficult to tell from a look at the series that Disney, who died in 1967, i.s not still at the helm . In fact , at the studio he ls still spoken of as though he were ln the next room and might walk in at any minute. "IJ we tried to change our image I think we'd be .ln ~al trouble." said Miner, who is married to Disney's eldest daughter, Diane. It was Disney who pcrsfladcd Miiier to give up football and eceept a job as an assistant director In 1007 on "Old Yeller." "When I come to hn area in a script that l question, I try lo Im· aglne how Wall would have handled ' It. I try to go tn the direction I think Walt would have taken ." Unlike other studios, there Is 1 close alliance at Disney's Burbank operation between television and (eature filmt1. Sometimes, when a production i.s begun no one kiflows whether it eventually wUI wind up first In the theater or on the home screen. The philosophy is to pump a little extra money into any two-part TV story th•t looks especially prom· lslng. 'Ibat was the case with "The Biscuit Eater," whlch started out for television and Is now in theaters around the country. But never mind ; one of these years It will be sliced up for the televlslon sertes -u are all Disney films except such highly profitable perennials as "'Snow White.'' 11Mary Poppinl,u and 1 a • ' (ew others. The studio's syndicated chUdren'a show, "The Mouse Fac- tory/' is largely pieced together from old cartoon shorts. Disney no longer makes cartoon shorts, becausi of the high cos t, but the studio does tum out a fulJ. length animated movie every three years. At present the anlmaton are at work on an all-animal version of Robin Hood. In this Sherwood Forts! epic, Robin Hood will he a sly !01 and Prince John a mangy lion. Miller said that because or the studio's sma ll alu -it ha,, only four 1tagea -feature and TV film production must be c I o a e I y :oordinated. In the •Prinll ol IVl3, for Instance, "The Island at the Top or the World'' wW Ue up all four 1ta1es for four months. Jt will be the most e1pensive Dlaney movie ever made. That movie, like many other TV and feature films , Is one of high ad. venture. That means action, and action in TV terms Is 10metlme1 translated as violence. Miller saJd, "I don't think we can make our productions without ac· lion. We have right.J 111d shootouts. But we don't do It the way other people do. I think you have to evaluate violence by degrees. "In 'The Biscuit Eater' we have a fight. They throw seven or eight blows and there 's a trickle of blood from the nose. But It's a Dl!ney fight. The bed guy" knocked Into the water trough. It's not really played for laughs, but It 11 light. Disney Ls not without violence, and It's absurd to HY that we don't have it. But we don't dwell on U." Friday, Moy 1%, lrlt The City or Huntington Beach la ustling ti gel ILi annual festival ready for the big day Saturday. See story on Page 24 ol today's Veekender. uide to Fun od Squad t 'N About retta King urling Film 'Flaherty ay Dunaway 1ovle Gulde ·ve Theater Page 24 Page 24 Page 21 Pagt 27 Page 21 Pqe n Pa11e 29 Page 29 PllJe 311 Ptp30 ' .. Frlrtay, May 12. 1972 . . Your Guide i'O Fun SP.~iilg Musicale TonJghi ' I '>,,. . ... "ACROSS THE 'NATION WITH' INFORMATION" Children 91fher around lndi1n Booth I f l r BOOTHS GOING UP 1DtnlM WesMI, 11, at work ~od Squad Produeer Festival· Flares Up 1'hey throw darl..s in New Hampshire. don't they7 And sell hot dogs in F'lorida : or Chil e i.n Ohio: Almost anything might happen to the 50 states Saturday 11 the third annual Huntington Beach Clty- \liide Festival. Thi11 year's festivaJ theme is "Across the Nalion \vith In formation.'' so festival sponsor~ have al· tached ~omethin g of an "all states" flavor to the ac- tivi ties. ~:ach J:;ame or food booth wilt rerresent one of the 50 st.ate.i; and will pa ss out name tags to vis· ito rs who were born in that state. The objert is to get acquain ted \vith people "'ho are now your neighbors 11nd might once h11ve been in another Jiilate. 'l'h e festival itself features more than ~O booths. exhibits and activities. as well 11s co ntinu· ous entertainment Crom 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. KYMS di!C jockeys Paul Gibson and Rich Men· ard will emcee the daylong entertainment wh ich features dance groups, chorale groups, individual singers and rock bands. All the activity takes place in Murdy Par k, of[ Golden West Street, north o! Warner Ave nue. More than J 5.000 visitors are expected to at· tend the one-day restival. There is no admission ch,rge. On·e highlight or the event wi ll be a collection of historical photos and mementos of Huntington Beach, dating •• far back o• 1sg2. Spelling Puts Faith in TV Series Ry cVNTHI A l.OWRV v.·nund up its fourth ABC 9fr.ii' and other dr11m11 11erie11 in viewer11.'· he added. "Tl means NEW YORK 1AP 1 _ ''There 11eason and ha11. been renewed the old Golden Age on the 1 play with a 11.ad ending taped exisls onlv 8 limile<i numhrr for a fifth. He lutntd out a fingers of one tland .'' in New York -u11ually 8 of rtrtim~rlc form s !hilt eoin•f'rt rnund do1.en "Movie of the The movie-m11de-for TV. of revival.'' tnlo a lelevi!iiOn series." said \\'eek'' 90-niinute proJ!r"'m.~ which llollywood turned out His primary inlere.~t i.~ in A;iron Spelling. tlu1t included two pilol shows close lo 100 thill season alone. n1aking a show entertainini;i. "The dHfrrencr 'has lo be in projtcting serie11 ide as . hall been a shot in the arm for The messajl:e. if 11ny. is in· the WRY it is donP. But when a "We know lhal our business the trou bled film business. ciden tal. "'riler ·lf'lls me. 'Thill shn\v is iii enlerhi innient," Spelling "Anylirne there is 11 need for "lf a show is entertainin,I!. sAirt . "We Riso know thAI the h about @CO]ogy, dru1i1:11. 11bortion 100 scri pt s a yeRr. I ere are you can drop other element 11 MAYl!·l3 THEATER -"Merchant of Venice", by Santa An1 C.olle1e The1tf!r Art Procluclion under the direction of Btib Bl1uatone 11 I p.m. Mey 12·13, in SAC Phillip!!: H•ll. 17th at Brlstel, Santa Ana. Tickela, Sl.50 adult.., SI llludenta. 1t the door . MAY 1% SPRIN(; A-1USICALE -Southern California College Mu&lc Deparlment presents Spring Mu11icale program. including ''The D'ly or Resurrection.'' h.v Fred Prentice 1nd "Seven Angel,." by f\1ichael Fink. at 7:45 p.m. Ma.\' 12 in college auditorium, 2324 Newport Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Adm i11sion is fret. i\1AY 12 l )ANC~ -Dance pre~nted by Gay Students Union and ' A!l~iattd Students of UCJ Concert and Dance Committee, RI 9 p.m .. fl.fa.v 12. in Gateway Commons. UCI campus. Tickets. $1. MAY lt-31 STORY HOUR -Costa Mesa Library. ~Center Sl.. Costa MeAa, preJents e story hou r for children et 10:30 a.m. Thurs- dayll and films et 10:30 a.m. Saturdays. Admillsion is free. l\fA Y 13 OANCING WATt:RS -Synchronized music. water and lighls combine during "D;incing Waters .. 8 p.m., May 13, at the Los Anaelell Coliseum. Exposition Blvd .. Los Angeles. Admission . SS, at all ticket agenciell and at the Coliseum . MAY 13 CHINA NIGHT -Orange Cou nty Chinese Club presents China Night, a cultura1 entertainment program at ! p.m .. ~tay 13. in Plummer Auditorium, 321 E. Chapman Ave., Ful- le rton. Chinelle opere and acu puncture demenstratlon to be seen . Ticket!. $3 for orchestra seat. S2 general admission. Information, Mrll. Frank Wong , 540-4401. l\.1AY 13-14 SCIENCt: f'AIR -Or1tnge Co.µnty Science and Engintering fair displays research projects developed by local high school llludents. May 13-14. al Or11nge County F·tirrrounds, Fairview St., Costa Mesa . Admission Is fret. MAY 13 . H RENAISSANCE FAIR -10th Annual Rtnaissance Ple.as- ure F'air and Springtime Market at the Old Paramount Ranch in Augura. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m .. Ma y 13-14. 26-21. and 2'1·211. A re-cre11lion ol old English countryside fairs. Spectatnr11 art encou raged to wear costumes. Admi ssion, $3.50 adulls. SI ch ildren. Information , t213J 65M665. ri ;' ' ' t I '!I l .• ' Art Talents Brushed Up • MAY I~ JAZZS™ION -Jazz~· . =J t.iOll featuring Bob HIVOlll/ lrtlllill!Jllll ~ O r.lk ltpd at 2 p.m .. May 14, in Elb llUIJ4lll\I, Ill t. 1,.,.., or ... o. AdmiS1Jion. 12. MAY 17 -tt OCC DRAi\1A -Orange Coast College Theatre Arts ~rodue­ lion presents Shakespeare's "Hamlet". adapted and directed by J . 8. f"erzacta. at 8;30 p.m .. fl.11y 17-20, in OCC auditor· ium. 2701 Fairview Road. Costa i\fesa. Admission is free. i\IAY 18 fo'OLK CONCl'.:RT--Guv C;:irawav . fol ksinger and instrumen· laJi11t. will present a ' lecture and performance. ''.A Folk· ainger for All Seasons", sponsored by UCI Extension. 1t 1 p.m .. May 18. in Social Science Hall Room JOO. UCI campll!. Admis11ion. S4.50. i\1A Y 19 DRAA1A -Tom Noe.I portrays the life of Mark Twain in I ''living bi&uaphy:·. sponsored b.v S1ddleb1ck Collece ~m· h\unity Services. at 8 p.m .. Ma y 19, in San Clemente Hia:h School Cafetorium. 700 Avenida Pico. Sin Cle mente. Ad· • miasion is free, fnr reserved ~eating c1t.1l 837-9700. l\1A'Y 19-!I, Z3·~ DRAMA -Christopher Marlowe'! "Doctor Jt'aulllus'', st11ed by California State College al Fullerton Theater Depart· ment at 8:30 p.m .. May 19-21 and MR· In Rtcltal Hall. Oft campus. Tickt.tll, Sl.50 students. $2 l'neral. l\1AY 19 PRESIDENTlAL CANOIDAT E--Pre1idential candidate Shir· Iey Chisholm. sponsored by ASUCJ Speakers COmmittee. will llpeak at 8:30 p.m .. i\fay 19. in Crawford Hall. UCI campus. Tickets. $I.SI.SO. studen ts. S2.51).S3. gener1l, 1t ASU~I Ticket Offit'e and Ticketron Outlf!ls. ~1AY 28 ZOTfEST CARNIVAL -UC! presenta ZoUest carnival at 10 a.m .. May 2.0. in camplL! park. Music. booth!. food and g1mes celebrate 10th anniversary of campus. Admission l! free. MAY !O CHORAL CONCERT -UCLA Madrigal Sin1ers. directed by Don Weiss. in mncert at 8 p.m., May 20. at Mission Viejo High School gyrnntllium, 2502.'l Chrisanta Or .. Mi11sion Viejo. Progr1rri;1 i~ sponsored • by Saddleb1tck College Community Services. Admission is free, for reserved 11eating call ll3'7·1700. ' Ann Brooze and Margaret Eichler of Laguna Beach School of Art and Design prepare for All Co llegiate Art Show in Laguna Nig uel ·rown Center Sunday, May 21 . All senior and juni or colleges in California can participate in the one-day affair, noon to 6 p.m. Po11sible award money totals $2500. nr whal~ver.' I know it'.11 1tudienees like lo \Yateh pol iee nol goi ng lo be 100 good ones in it without lecturing." he show!! 11nd doctors shows. 1'hat ·d wrnn1i1:." 11round." he said "But be-sa1 . doesn't 1nean aud iences "'alch <. ~.1 1,·010. who started out \!l c11use of et•oi1on1 ic circunl· Snolling, 8 011 111115 n;ith·e . .,. t'" "' only those serits and t think d "' l ·~ .. !Q&WJ&44 @:Vt . Cha plin Films ~ SUNDAY MAY 14 "MOTHERS DAY" \•ear~ lll{O II! ;in Arlnr llnd now lelev isinn and audiences are stance!! this past yea r, we ha rived in Hollyll•ood in 19fl.l full ' he.11d ~ his own busy produ ction much underrated in terms of had many more good 11ctors of show ideas. f or the fir st company, ill the fellow ~·ho qualily sho"'S. and directors available to two years he cut in a suc-1, l1tunch td the ·word "rele v11n-lelevillion. Some directors are cessrul swalhe for a newcomer •1 On the Screen cy .. in Holly"·ood jargon. He Rl<J\1 ARKABtE JOR product.'I uf tele vis ion who had -more than 50 TV roles and Columbia Pictures h11s com· » hall lived In t·ri:irel ii. ''Ry and large. tele vision moved on to lhealric11l film! parts in a dozen filmii. pleted nej(oliations for the ''We starttd wilh ·~fod has done a remarkable i·ob _ -llnd llCJ\\' lift l'Ominl{ bark to He 1noved inlo writ ing ·wilh U.S. distri but ion riRhl111; lo TV whtre the action is." h Squad.'" ht' exph1ined, "and it i·ust lhink about some recent 11 1 1 . . od h t e ''Zane {;rey Theater.'' sevrn Charle!! Ch11plin films . \\"il.!'I a hil. so everybody e evision pr ucers ave eventually ~ld hosl Di ck The first Olm to open na · · iu1nprci on the yout h b11nd"'81i!:· stw111'S like 'Tribes.' 'The learned anylhinjl during the Powell a script -and wound tionall \' will be "Modern :. on 11 nrt t:ilkrd :i.boul !K'ing '11('-ll onitcotning.' 'My .Sweet palll yea r. Spelling sllid . "It up writing 11bou1 one-t hird of Time.~>' the n!hers are .. The lf>\'il!ll' \\1ha! hl'ppenf'rl lhrn Charlte' 'The Snow {;oose,' has lo bf lhAI you c~n·1 just the series' programs. Chaplin Revue." ''Ci I y ' \\'RS a srason full of positi\'P. 'Brian 's Sung.' ~uitl pa rlit·u lar· sign some bi• mo"Yit> siar, give Spell ing, while on top at the Lights.'' 'The Great Dic- r rell"ntinuii sf'rie!ll 11bout lhf' ly 'l'he (;l11ss llouse.' which him poor material and expect momll!lnf , h•ll \e11rned his littor." "Mnn.'lieur Verdout." ~011n.1t-rell'\'ilnt ;ind dulL ivlls nllkl"d. realist it· look at the public to buy the result.'' les-'Ons under the Nielsen "Lime liitht." and "A King in ~ prison IHl'. T'tn ralber proud He believes lhal. with I.he New \'•,k." V'NT gun~. " IJl'llf:l.INFSS BEi.to: "' of 'Th(' La.c:! Chilr.' Rnd even 11rriv al of made-for·TV films\Ji"""•;...-..;,_ __ ..;-;.., ___________ iiiijil~ "llrll. 1r1r,·1~1Pn had been nf 1he wa.v ··rhc Ni~ht Stalker.' ;ind rising costs. the days of doin .1: 'rrle,·1111!' sllO"'S 11lmosl ti v111npi re Joost• in I.as Vr11as.1 the bill! one-shot dramatic (rnn1 lhr bri::lnninl'?. Wht>n I \vork('d out for 1111.., spet·ia l ill past. itirl :i \Vrste r11 \1•;1y baek on Spellin~ p:u1sed and then 'Z:inr (;!'('\' 'l'hr11ter.' about sug~cstt'd st.vly: "IF you look-SP .. ;CIA I~ Mt:ANING lonrlinr.c:s. 'that \1as relev11nt : ed hack. rou 1..-011ld count the ''The wordll drama special ! ~nrltncss i~ a l w;n~ relt\'Rnt." numlM'r of supt:'rb 'Playhouse no'' has A specia l meaning for • Speltin,it -fr:tnk\,\', oj)('nly -::-....................... j ... l!liijjjillllllliijjiiiiijiiijjjjiiiiijifl and pAlrntly -I~ 11 pr:tclir11I I m:u1 \\'ho c11rt:l11ll\' .... ·ork!i ·i1 hin lhe rli~i plinr!I of 1·on1- !'""rl"1a l lt'le1·ision. The r('~ull ·# 1hal he has 111•axed rich and Especially for MOTHER'S DAY FREE ORCHID FOR MOTHER GIGANTIC STEAK & LOBSTER SPECIAL Order 1 Steak & Lobster and gtt another steak & dinner for Y2 PRICE lobster ' w,·11 h.;v e thousands of the "Freshest Flowers In Town " (We 90 to the market et 2 ,,m. every d1 y, they toulcln 't be fresher ) •ncl you 11ve "the midclla man•' profit by buy in9 your flower• in our flower shop! IA lot of florist• do ). Come in •ncl s•• our f•bulous •rr•y of Fresh Flowers •nd Pott1cl Pl•nt1 ! AU profa1• sion•lly wr1pped to ''Y "H•ppy Mother's Da y." We'll h•v• th1m a ll-Orehicl1 , Garcleni11, l ircl1 o P1r•cli1e, Chine Mum s, Rosas 110,000 of them!, C1rnation1 11 0,000 of them, too l •nd m•ny more •nd we sell th•m at ••l'lsibl, prices. Come See, Come 5,.,, the "midcll1man '1 profit." w, Deliver Sund1y1, too, OPIN ALL DAY MOTHll'S DAY • • I • I • I I I • • I I • ~ a I • I I I I • I • • • e I I • • Lecll Grown Now DILICIOUI • 100% Pure-• Medium Sire • • Nathl"t Added • CUCUMBERS • SALAD • Fresh Squeezed • "'~:.0 • • • I TOMATOES I ORANGE JUICE I LmUCE • • • IT'S TIUI I • 25C ... • 39~ ouAu • 5c Ea•~ • • Limit 2 l••M I Lht1lt-S 411uirt1 I ·LIMlt 4 Of l•ch • I With Thl1 CltU'4"'1 I With This Coupon • With Thi• Ce\l,eft I . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... COUl'ONS IXPIH MAY 17, 1972 , Crf'5sful arid yet in~ist~ he )"! he:tn able to make !Timt ~uo~nphielll._ evrn palilical, points lrnrn 11me to l1n1t Hi~ "~100 Squsid '' rerrntly • SOUTH SEAS TROPICAL FISH GIVE AWAY BOOK SALE! Thousands of New looks DRASTICALLY REDUCED I 100'1 of books were 2.9S.J.9S UNIEUEVABLE? • Not when you dint at SIZZLER --SANTA ANA Spoci al include" The1 a restaurant• Jamtncl the 'fin ,1i for their tustomet1, that'• why they fa1tut1 N•wpen ..-eel Ptlroniu l~t..,I WN4y'l WlMlrf, N1wpott; Tht New Rutty PeUceR, Nawpo,t; D•ey'1 s .. Shoftty, Newport : lttlllhlr1'1 "OR n1 8-y," Na....,port: Hettk's Oc,. ,,...t, N•wport, and over lOO others. How 1bout your t1llin9 u17 0,.... Ce•"'Y'• ...... ·~ ...... ef Tre,k• ,._. 411M11 aelMI .. ·AfUAlllMS MAINTINANCI lllVICI '"' N>Otl Lift P\ANTI •· w11."'4, cos•• Ml.I• ,,....,._ .... ...,.., HUfifiT!NlfOff .. ACM .. Nt• t IM".)-f'll ..... ' 59c EACH 1 ,REI WITH EACH 5 BOUGHT BARGAINS GALORE! HUNTER'S BOOKS o,_,. c....,·. ,...._ .. ••••• FASHION SQUA~I ·SANTA ANA e .Austr11ien Lobster T1il e Top Sirloin St11k • l•ktd ldoho ~untt • Drawn Butter • Sinlar Chetst Toast • Lemon WHtt .. Remem~r only at SIZZlER FAMILY STEAK HOUSE 2121 So. lrlotol St., Santo An•-$46.t270 Suncloy Houn -12 Noon 'Tll f P.M. fSorry, no t&k• outt Ofl thltl' Also low prl~111:1 on KiddJ@ Platts . ' "Oranoi Couniu'1 Fas'-'1t Growt1lg Prciduce and Flowtr Organization .. ~ N~~rg~j~~CE ES: ·as v .... et --.. whtr< q"411tv 11 1h1 ,..,,. ,,.,.. ~ •I th• Houn" ...... 11au"! IMIH'I•. lll04I • .,,. .. ,. •• I m 111 h< let to at to pr pe jur the wh' ao tri ca din ti vi res tot to aro ho lav cha ha T wh Bet tio Uy is • I I I I I I I I I I I ' • DAILY PILOT i'S Forecast: No Chores for Mother No matter If the weather la sunny or Many of the area's restaurant! have overcast, Sunday will find the year's been gearing for weeks to meet the largeat crowd of out 'n' abouters on the special demands of l.h.is one day. Ranging move. from elaborate brunch spre1ds to ex- By limousine. family jalopy, motor bull pressly designed dinner menus. an and on root . record numbers wUI be unlimited range of possibilities will be of-h d. lertd to patrons. ea J.ng to Orange County restaurants to 1rs brst, of course. to check with the fete a mighty special guest of honor , restaurant of_ your choice to obtai n Object of all the fuss will be precise details. everybody's favorite girl -mother -Jn a random. and therefore incomplete. Laguna Niguel. J\1other's Day will be BEN BROWN'S who'll be basking inl..lbe Vmelight as we survey, Out 'N' About secured the foUow. observed with brunch from 9:30 a,m. to 4. A Mother's Da.v repoast that can be en. acknoWledge her unsung f.Cndlng o~ our Ing Information on places primed to giv e p.m., anQ dinner from 4 to 1 I. 1 joyed in quiet 11nd rustit' surroundings i-' needs the other 364 days Of 1the year. mom the royal taatment. The br'unch menu will offer a 'A'ide the promise for holiday dinners at Ben She who la bors week-ln-and·month,out A happy holiday and bon apetil to all! assortment egg. seafood. pan c ~ k e , Brown's restaurant, loc1ted in ~ecluded to keep lhe household pulled together Can chicken and beef dis hes while the dinnt'r Aliso Canyon. 31 106 Coast Hil_i!hway. South at last let dad and the kids lake over the BOB BURNS bill of fare will provide an even lar~er Laguna. towing. Jf only for tltis one brief da y. Even if mother doesn't tra ce her variety of entrees. And either meal can There will be two offerings b~· '"BY nf a E h 1 ancestry back to the Scottish highlands . get und"er way with one of l'A'O dozen ap-br unch served from 10 a.m. to 2:3'1 p.m .. v~ sot' l ~ kamilby is 1goding to be ha~d she'll be accorded just recognition as petiiers served from the oyster bar. and dinner served from 3 p.m. on. The press 0 a e 1 e 8 y's place in matriarch ()f the clan at Bob Bums bill of fare for both events 'A'iil gi\'e performing some tasks around the house. restaurant. 37 Fashion tsland. Fashion NE\\'PORTER IN N patroni; a i;ubstantial number of entree Like jumping into the kitchen and con· Center, Newport Beach. Del \\'ebb's Newpnrtfr Inn . 1107 Jam-selections from steak ind seafood to fO'A'I juring up a little culinary magi c to create More than 1 wee touch ol Scotland in boree. Road, Newport Beach , is offering a and Jamb dishes. the main meal. the decor will combine with savory en· J\1other's Da y double header. F'or earl}' i\tARQUIS Out 'N About NORMAN STANLEY Mom can take her ease up lo that point trees such 'IS roa st Long Island duckling, diners there 'll be a champagne brunch They "re pledging a red carpet we.lcome whilr: admiring the card s. flowers, gifts grenadine of beef tenderloin and veril from 9 a.m. lo 2 p.m .. complete with a lot and follow through for the r-.101her 's Day and candy offered as pa1t of the day 's cutlet Oscar to generate a ~leasant of fan cy trimmings. guest of honor being feted at the r-.larquis tribute. But there's no hoping the others repast. Dinner will be served from I p.m. Starting at 3 p.m .. th(' Inn will ser\fe a restaurant, 1670 Newport Rtvd.. Costa can duplicate her efforts in whipping up special dinner menu that ()ffers a wide Mesa. Sunday service, getting under way dinner. HUNGRY TIGERS · choice of entree selections. Jn either-case ea rlier than usual, wil l be from 2 p.m. on. The answer is to cap the day's ac· Extra car'i has gone into the planning the Inn is promising to pamper mom with" Entree selections, 11ccom pnnied bv 11.ll tivities by whisking mother of! to a fine tor mother's big da y at. both of Orange 11 lot of extra attention. the trimmings. include Nfw York sieak, restaurant for delicaciea and a tew hours County'!! Hungry _Tiger restaurants -353 lop sir loin, cha rcoal broiled rack nf lamb, total relaxation . Giving her the strength E. Coa~ Highway (at Ba yshore Drive l, SAM'S SEAFOOD tournedos of beef bc11rnR ise, veal chabli~. to carry on until Moth er's Day rolls Newport Beach, and 1641 W. Sunflower Sam 's Seafood. 1627& Pacific Coast kin~ crab leg and file t mignon. Monterey around in 1973. (near South Coast Plata), Sa nta Ana . Highwa.v, Huntington Beach. will open abalone steak. In addi tion to the tempting array of ap-Mothcr·s Day al noon to serve a special 'C G. f' \ • Be sure to pick a spot where the petite.rs offered by the oyster bar in each holiday menu of seafood and steaks. Top· PARIS INN 0111ltf•y •If• ! 1•1•1t..~(•S honored woman can partake of her establ ishment. the menus will pro vide 8 ping the bill or fare. including chowder or A ~1other"s Day observance 'A1ith the favorite dish . Whether it's turbot au wide selection of steak and seafood en-salad Bnd potato. are red snapper. file! of accent on French and continental cuisine .lason l{ilh<1rc1s. :'\lau rer11 .Sta r lcton ;ind 1...;eorge champagne. scallopine ala marsala or trees. A champagne brunch. is offered halib ut. scallops, seafood platter and will be offered by the Paris lQn, 501 W. Grizzard !'tar irt ('liffnrrl Odrts' "The \ountry hamburger steak . from 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., and dinner will mahi mahi. 30th St.. Ne1A·port Beach. Special holiday Girl." C<'llllTIJ! d irer1 fron1 Rroadu'ay to the llun· · I ho I ·1· Th 0 N dinner service will fitet under way at 3 h · II Time's a·wast1ng or t se am11e!i be served after 3 p.m. e " eep Sea el"' is a combination tinglon l larlforrl 'l'hratre "' ere 11 ,,.,, open ' who haven"! made arrangements yet. of lobster. shrimp. scaUops. crah legs and p.m. tinlilC'd C'll)!agf'1nrnt J\·l o nd a~'. !\lay 15. 1 he d ran1a Better get on the phone now for resuva-CROWN HOUSE ni1sters. Also no .the menu are i·umbo A wide range of entree choices wijl in· · th f t bl 1•ter1'no hi!i ''av to a At Bill Peters' Crown H o u s t elude truite 11mut1 sautee Grenobloise, I!' C' storv n :'Ill rtr or 1 " ~ • · tions. or set an early hour for departure restaurant. --r.,,, H1"ghway tin· fried shrimp, lobs~thermidor. lobster filet rte sole bonne femme, medallion de f'CHllrhack a1 nr cf hy his stcadfasl Y•ife ;ind .II self· lf you 're going to a place where service ""°"'" '-A.I tail. top si rloin, andhthe steak and lobster 1-..i cf" is on a first-come, first-served basi!. tersection ot Crown Valley Parkway), cnmbo. · ~S.:c 011t 'N About. page !61 con 111rnt ~·nung 1rrc-1nr ~~~~~--------·z:m~~F/lfiil...,~:::S-11~ =======-==========~------------------~ INTERT!i==EN~-~!l!~WEEK~ ~SITOLDl~PAN m1 T II.fl Exclutive lut Com• A1 You Ar• Dinner Nightly 6 to 11 DANCING G;::,·.;;~:~LI / • \ MEXICAN RESTAURANT * HAP HALL ouo '"'-..... 1 . . ~ ,, .. ! m 1 YA KO MOTHER'S OAY SPECIAL Dh1.., Sene4 ft1111 J P.M. M.U 1 .. rftft•• New With 01111 WIUl1.., •••• LARRY L.AK _ , ~ WED. THll.U SUN. _......_...___. ~ F E I R. d L Pl -:~ r/ t,""'h•on n;.,., C0<kl"'' or Ir y 1sers 1n 1te 1yer1 (;Iii I I Open Daily from 6 A.M. to 2 A.M. /If/ P\~o\nl~\.o\1l9S.1.n:o;Hrohlri;•795·'."nn:i;: MESA ( //. O R.-\:\GE 3J1n\\"O .\ l "nunlrr • 5.&1·J.10 l ltear-Me11The1ter sou.-..ciE Costa Mes• I'-~~~-~~~--------~----·roRR.A.:-JCE :.'-I Del 1\n10 Fii ~hio n S11.· 54~·11677 141 L I fttl St. J .. t 1ff Ne.,,.... lhod. Our Kitchen Una~r The Direction of CHEF MARIO LE FRANC COCKTAILS e CLOSED MONDAY llii"=========•oi;"iii-.· oiiiii===-.1 501 W. JOtlt ST. NEWPORT HACH 675-0JOO ~-Chinese Cuisine BAMBOO tnum: COMBINATION LU NCHEON PLATES FROM $1 .25 COMPLETE DINNERS FROM $2.95 "f\ -Fe11.turing TropicA.l Drinks . "~M~ ANCHOR INN HOUSE OF SEAFOOD NOW OPEN FOR LUNCH 11 :30 to 2:10 TuH. thru Fri. ~ightl y Dinner-Cockt1ils 4 to 11 p.m, Sund1y 2 to 9:30 pm-Closed Mond•y' :¥.:_ 'it Ori~nt11.l Cocktail Lounge OPl!lol DAILY 11AM11 ,M I "0 "0 •0•••v 1814 N. Coast Hwy. !El Camino Real! Ill -11 "~ ..-1t-l l""S""A""N""·c,,,,L,,,,E""M""EN,,,,TE 492-6571 PHONE •••• 645·5550 I S3 EAST 17TH -COST A MESA. I·-- - - - - - - - - -• RdN SHY WID. THOU MON. I I GINO LANZI Tuet. Nites Only I TIM MORGON Coming M1y 17th I I I I I -- < -·1-·~\l:'. I MOTHER'S DAY ~ '-! SPECIAL $3.95 COMPLETE DINNERS FOi TWO 1nw11N I AND' P.M. PRIME RIB !Fri. & Sat.I 5so TOP SIRLOIN DOCK·A·BOB ,., Tw• I 'MAHI MAHI I COCKTAIL HOUR JUMBO DRINKS DAILY SATURDAY I. SUNDAY PATIO HUNCH I CHOICE OF 1. I J. •• , 3010 HARBOR !AT BAKER! COSTA MESA 549-0319 MOTHER'S DPY ~ The Greatest Champagne Brunch 9 A.M. TO 2 P.M. (('.l~ ~ A Very Special Dinner FROM 3 P.M. A SELECTION OF OEU CIO US ENTREES (?///a:;~ o/tm 1107 Jamboree Road/Newport Buch For tt11erv11tioo1: 64.4.·1700 • • SAM'S SPECIALS Served Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday dinners include salad, garlic cheese toast~ choice of baked potato or rice Hawaiian RED SNAPPER •••••••••.••••••••• 1.95 MAHI MAHI ••••• , ••••••••••••••• 2.25 TOP SIRLOIN •••••••••••••••••••• 2.45 CHICKEN BREAST HAWAIIAN., •••• 2.75 NEW YORK STEAK ••••• ._ ••••••••• 2.95 LOBSTER TAIL •••••••••••••••••• 3.95 STEAK ANO LOBSTERS ••••••••••• 4.95 ·~~ 16278 Pacific Co•t High-v, Huntington Be.ch (2 IJ) 592·132 1 luncheon • dinner • banquets OYSTER BAR FOR THE FINEST ON MOTHER 'S DAY IRUNCH-•:10 to 4:00 DINNER--4 :00 lo 11 :00 o,.,, Seven Days LUNCH • DINNll • SUNDAY llUNCH 11 •·"'· 4 I'·"'· •:JO •.111.-4 I'·"'· 32802 COAST HWY, (II c .. ..., v11i.y P111fw1yl LAG.UNA NIG.U£L TREAT MOTHER ON HER DAY SUNDAY, MAY 14th OPEN 12 NOON Gourmet Dinners From $2.95 Phone For Reservations H.A"Y HOUR COCO All PllCIS 11 :JO •"'·' I'"' 11 •• 1 v.1..,, ;,. N•wport l111 ch l ' C htf E•t1•1lo R1comm1nd,- N)w Yor~ '•PP•• S+•tl'. -Au Poirrt , Jl1,.,h1 Ro11t Lo"' l 1l ~nd D11c•li 119, Fltmbt !Far Tw1l Cl-11t11ubrl1nil l ouqu•ti1r1 !For T ... ol DANCING 8:30-fi:M. iOI :JD A.M. GREAT LAS VEGAS IANDS MARY WEii DAVIS FA-SHION-SHOW Frid•v• 12 :10 lo 1:)0 P.M. ~~~-----NOW A.PPIARINO. HERB & JOE TRIO "'""...... 1617 WESTCLIFF DR. "FINEST MEXICAN CUISI NE IN ORANGE COUNTY" FOR YOUR DINING. & DANCING PLEASURE MARCOS AND TH£ LATIN MARKS TRIO Fri. and Sat. Nlqhts 8 p.m. to 2 •·"'· 547 W. 19th STREET COSTA MESA 642-9764 THE BERLINER RESTAURANT ,.,_. ·~· ,.,,"~'·"" wlt~ Ptt•re Du..,,u,,~, D11'(E & DANCE TO TH E ASTORIA TR IO 11512 llACH ILYD , HUNTING TON llACH 1'0\lll'N ANO. COUNTllY CINTlilt During A "NIGHT IN BAVAR IA", THIS SATURDAY A COMPLETE CONTINENTAL DELI SECTION tll'IN 1'"011: LUNCH .M.01', tflPlt ~ltf. -11 :)1 t. Ji JO OIHNl'll: PllOM l !".M. llftOI Mlllldly OANCllolO TO Vlolt!OUS Ot•MAN llANOS l'ri.11y •'141 S•rvf'f•• 0 ,.IN SUNDAYS IANOUIT l'AC ILITlll MAY IJ TREAT MOTHER TO TH E VERY BE ST ON MOTHER'S DAY SU NDAY, MAY I~ D!t1111r S•rwtd f-ttPfl 2 P.M. A Gift for l••ry Mother • I • I -· • • . . • • -'f D41L V 'ILOT • OUT 'N' .ABOUT,. • • ~ • I others'rfJag ,,Brunch... Special 'Brunch Menu' Served 9 a.nt. to 2 p.m. ar Reuben's -f 6f 7 .AAac.Jl.ril1 ur '&ultvard.. J"'"tc'C '5tttch. ------. ------·- } · Come early. \ • . Avoid the · Mothers· Day Rush • to--the- REUBEN E. LEE ·OPENllAM 15 1 EAST N£\\IPOR.T COAST HIG HWAY BEA CH -------~--~--- ff~m P•I' ti) fl let de "''' rit 1 e111 poel~ ~nrm1nde, capon s11utr gr~nd mf'rt, cnq 1u \'in ifAl!lU!t, c 1n1rl'f 1 l'nr•n,R11, b nu I ll1bJ11~e 1\tar.~Pil\111! r-.·t l'I' Ynrk 1te11k 1·ert prll". oF:nev All !he 00.1~" .11 p1"ri11fi t ic~ from prime rib and st~ak lo lob111er arid lt1h11n di.~he1 will bt ftaturtd on the Mother 's Olly menu 11 rnt' Derbv Restaurant, 1281 Rr istol. Olsta Me11a . There will be cominoous din· nt r service from noon . STUPT SHJRT Mothers .11 nd 11:r111ndmothers will rec:rive all tht iltltntinn 1t an eh'!ganl champi.gnt hrunrh and Javi,11h Molhrr'a 0.11.v din- ner al tht Stuft Shirt. 2241 W. Coa~t Highway, fi...t "' p n rt Rt11ch. The brun~1. lltrved from 10:.)(1 .11.m. In 12 :~ p.m., i.IJ prired 11! SJ 75. $2.75 for , children under 12. Dinner. 11trvr.d from l:ln t.o ~:JO. i.11 priced 111 $5.25. 11nd S:1.:}t) for chilriren. Fe11turin11: rnaii t. le• or lamh. au ju11, it wlll 11IMJ include r.hoire l'lf MIUP llr .~11lad, rice pi\11f . mini jrll_v, grPrn pt;i,11, brl'lilt'!d tnmalo, F'rr nrh hread 11nd des~ert. THF: Rf';Rl.JNJo:R An.v <;erm11n d1~h th11t hnlris ,c.ptri11I iiinraction for 11mothf'r , COCKTAIL.S '" Hi.1w1 Qu.IUr N01lee Mui-r-. W•ff ltiyt: 11 :JD A,.M. Je 1 J :JD ~I. ••tis ... 11 :10 A.M, Pe 1:)1 S••-'•YI: 4:00-11 MIDNl•HT from .t11uerbr11l•n "'1th dump!· in1~ lo champlgnon tthnltul or Ki11sler ribsl>""tr. c1n be hers fnr lht asktng at lhe Berliner re,11t11urant . I 8 S 12 Rl"a rh Blvd .. Tnwn and Coun · try ~nter, Huntingt on Beach . 0~' nf'r !'rrvic·r \VIII grl und r way 111 2 p.n1. Ry wa.v of a<'k wledging 1he ,11 p ~ c i 11 I da,v, tht Re rliner i,11 .11l,110 of- fering 110 importf'd .G~rm.11n gift for rvtry mother in at· tend anct . DON THt: ftEACHCOMRER A Mnlhtr'• Da ~· doubleheader 111 Don th,. Beachcomher. 3901 r.. Co;i~t High"·ay, Coren.a de\ Mar. wilt gel undu wAy 111 10 a.m. with a rorts of Call buffet tablP brunch. With the close of brunch Aervife al I p.m., din- ner service \.\•ill e<1mmence and carry thrcugh tn II p.m. Cantenese and American di,11heii will be ft.atUred on tht dinner menu a,,d 1111 mothers in attendance will recei vt a free s~rpriu. TAl.F. OF THE WHAJ.F. A special Mother's 0.11 \· men11, with ~erv ire from 2 p.m., will highlighl holiday AC· livitit:.~ .11t the Tall" of Wh.11le re:;;taurant. loc11trrl io the 8a!bo11 Pavilion. 400 M11in, Balboa . Al l l.11ci1es d1n1ng at thr re.!ltauran! will receivf' com- plimentary c-orsaef'.•. ENTE;RT Al.'VAIE/\'T ! Optn 7 Days ~~ LUIS MORENO At Th• Piano Bar Tu•s. thru Sit. .1' ! 9011 E. ADAMS, HUNTINGTON !EACH 962-7911 <Enjoy .~-~titers' Day ~: 1'inner MEADOWLARK COUNTRY CLUI LARK ROOM .. • ' OPEN 12 NOON Reuben's • 1n Santa Ana DINNER SPECIALS Cheic• of Seup er 5,1.4 l•k•d Pot.toe, ll:iee Pil •f e G.rlic 11••~ l•~••~t• e Ot111d WID .-Top Sirloin. Sttak THUR.-Primt Rib FRl.-Se•lood N•wbur9 SUN .-Lob1ter Ta il INTllTAINMINT -WN!telffy Jilr1 S1111dey $2.'5 $3.10 U .'5 ~.35 . 2.3 1 3 NOR.lH 8 R.OAOWAV The Only Ones .,,, ,.,...., ,.,,m, IUDDY A HIUN-Wod., Thur. A Suo, l•11q~e! F•c iliti ~1 up lo •~O P·o~I· • DIN E IN A PLEA~~NT HACIENDA ATMOSPHERE 16711 G•AHAM AYlNUI IA! Wer11erl OPEN! COM E IN FOR MOTHER'S .DAY.••. Ml CllSll • ~9~ F.. I 7rh S'l'R F.F.'I' • ~111.L.GREri..' ~Q. l'OSTA MESA PHONE 645-7626 OP£N I I A.M. DAil )' ~ •• NOT THE SIZZLER AN YMO RE • BUT THE FIN E T FAMILY MEXICAN IUSTAURANT \ ' --... -· RECBEN>S M'nst nf tht l t'911's RtUMn'I rt.'ltaurenu will be (eaturlnc 1perlal hoJida)I ' 1• t n t 1 • Rtubf!n '1 Co.'lta Mesa. IM5 Adam11 . will offer a brunch menu from S a.m. to t p.m., and dlnnf"r service from 2 p.m. A .'lpecial Mothet'11 llay bru.nch menu will l;>t ,11erved from 9 a.m. ,In 2 p.m. 111t Reuben·,11 Airport,' 4 8 4 7 !\1acArlhur Alvd.. Ntwpc'lrl Rt!:1tch. Rt.ubf'n'.!I Santa An11. 1113 N. Rrnadw111•. will 11erve Mn1hf!r'" Day dinner l>eginnini .111. nnnn. Th~ ReuMn E. Lee, !Sl fi: Coast Highw"y, !\11!.wporl Reach, will npt!:n fnr Mother's Day dining at 11 i..m. Htahlishment . !tomanotr1 r!!-" burant, 428 !:. 170! Strttl. will fe1ture a Mnthtr'• Day 1ptcl1l -bAktd ham l'C- comp1n1td b_v candied yams -as Wf!ll lll!I the re1ular prim t rih, tle8k and Jt,11li11n speclalti~s. All dinners "'ill inrlurlf' a gl111s of champagne lll n d ' service will be cOntinuoos from noon en. F'ISHJo.:RMAN Mnther'.11 Day brurn:·h or din- ner, c<1mplete with " view of lhe P.11('Hic, i.!I the twf'>.part holiday nffer ,.,, the F'i11herm11n re11!1u1r.11nt, 317 f'Acific Coaiil Highw.11.v. at tht Pier, Hun-- tingtnn Beach. The hill of fare fnr bolh evenL"I wlll 11:iv, p11lrnns " 11ub.o;i.antial numbtr nf en tret 11eleclion,11 from i;te;ik and 5oealood lo fowl and l11mh dishes. The huff'I brunch . labbed I'll •· 4 S2.25 Pf!r ptr.'lln, will ht f servM frnm 10 t .m. to 2 p.,m. ·., '. - Dinner. featurinR ai special J _ o.e; menu, will bt served from 2 * 7' to 10 p.m. '~ ~ ." CORAL llEEF" Dep.11r1i 'og from lhf> regul 11r pclicy of being closed ·on ~unda:-i.'I. lhf! Cor11J Rttf rt.11tauranl. 264$ Harbnr Blvri., Co:;;t;i Mt:~.11. will ht open May 14 to acromm0011te Mother's Di:i.v dinrr.!I . Specb1[ dinner service from l to t p.m. ~'Ill sp<>tlight 1uch t.otrl'"t offering!'! a1 prime rib, s,_.,rood . steaks and con- tinent.al dishes . ROMA NO F'F''S C-O!ltA Mt.!111 '!! nrwf'll1 riinin.R Jack son ·St.a rs · Ju Ron1ance Fiim produrtion is beginning io EnJi;\and on "A Btqufllll To The N.11tion." starrin,r Glenda .Jackson \vhn will p<>rtray l,1 dy F.mma H:tmill.nn durin,R" the time or the latter's romance \1•ith Lord Nelson. Real -C1nlonese f Pod ••t here er take home. ST AG CHINESE CASINO 111 211t pl., Newport Beach "'"" ltalia11 C:ulsittf! Cocktatb 2325 E. COAST HIGHWAY 673-8267 R•1erv1tions Open Daily -5 p.m. to 2 CLOSED MONDAY •·"m- OPENING MONDAY, MAY IS SOUNDS ROY ALE Mondey thru Saturday · 1:30 p.m. te l :aG 1.m . GLORIA ALTMAN ,IANO -VOCALS Mon. thru Thurs. -5 to I P .M. ~ ~~·)j •; ~· D110 i:ti Deuta1td The sound s for the Rob ind Rn.c;ie l)uo are c11 rrenUy drifting through lhe lounge or the Fishern:ian Restaurant, :ll 7 Pa cific Coast Hi,llh"•ay 1at the pier) Huntington Beach. Thev share voral .chores with Rob al lhe guitar and R0sie on the ba~s guitar. The pair perform Wedne.o;d1y through Sunday from 8:30 to 1 ;~0 p.m . ---· -·------ .. , prttmlt« r"" 11t, r.rry 8,,, OrU.n1nf Dinin1'' Kn1n Yt>l', 01'·ner LUNCH • DINNER • COCKTAILS O'IN 7 DAYS A Wl!JI I POOi TO 00 • ,,,CIAL OIKOUN'T ,Klm'S Restaurant · · Suprtm,/y R,.11u1ijul 1421 (. 17th Strttl {Nt1r Grind) Stnt1 An1 • 551-9111 ~illJB'W' RESTAURANT PRIME RI B e ·STEAK e LOBSTER ITALIAN SPECIALTIES ENTERTAINMENT -DANCING OrENINCO TUISDAY, M/IY 1' GERMAINE AND THI BILL MALO TRIO MOTHll'S DAY DINNll SHVINCO FROM 12 NOON nu IRISTOL·PALISADIS' lOAD COSTA MUA S4'0 IHO MOTHER'S DAY "BRUNCH" IUFPIT $2.25 AT THI PISHIRMAN ftMEftA lt&TAUMNT SllVID Fl OM 10 A.M. It l P.M. USllVATIONS HCOMMINDID • Continental Cuisine Ceclct1lls FOl AN INJOTAIU DINNER WITH AN OCIAN VllW l'HONE IJ6·2555 A .,ICIAL MINU IHV,D 2 .. 1t P.M, IOI IURTON DUO IN THE IARNACLE LOUN•I J11 PAClflC COAST Hl6HWAT HUNTIN6TON llACH OVIRLOOKIN6 THI PACIFIC OCIAN AT THI Piil Sl!rvrno Luncheon nnd Dinur ftfonda11 throuoh Soturdq. 1 Cl~d Sundays W• •t• lo<•ttd neri te the M1y Co. in Seutk Co11t Pleit. JJJJ I. ltimt c ......... 14 .. JUt KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN SATURDAYS IN THE DAILY PILOT M M fr re of fo B Cl En Po D • • f"<!q. "'" 12, 1~71 Bup ching Up in the Homestretch , ~"" •OU•MIT i\i -~ANtlll•tTt The parting shots of what has been the most exemplary season of locaJ theater in at least seven yeaflli are being fired ·this month -and between the co mm u n i t y I theaters and the c o 11 e £ e drama departments, there 's a bountilul seJecllon for the playgoer. Tonight. for Instance, is the big night for Joe Del Rosso. 1 local aclor who's won the last tt\'O best supportina aclor awards al the Cnst1 Mesa Civic Playhouse. Joe will be on stage tonight -as t1 late replac~ment in his own . play, "Swinging Singles," for the Santa Ana Co mmunil 'J Players. TOM TITUS ., .. lnterml11lon i; the close of the play. Any g\Jesses! • s-.... Shlk • •Htt • D.11 • ,.,.., s.,,n .. e Cet.ri .. ~"---NEW WINES __ , PA UL MASSON PINNACLE~ C~I S.••lt11•11, ""' CHt4•1111t1y, ''"' Helt , Je• -.•11•ltMrt •i.tll•t. ''11•1 ltMc. ftrt' •httef• •• ff'•• Coretta Kin g S peaks F'or the Santa .Ana group, it "'ill be the second original of the season. following Bob Paver's "Mayhem." And , ac- C(lrd ing to director Lee How- ington, two additional characters were added after some re writing d u r I n g rehthrsals. Welcome to the • clu~ Joe; we've got a membership of three now. Repertory in Co!iita t.1esa with the West Coast premiere of "Pueblo.". the dramatiiation of the 1968 capture of an American ship. It's only the second production of the play. The college thespians are busy tbls month as we.JI Next Wednesday John Feriacca unveils his "new" production ! of "Hamlet" lit Orange Coast ' College, and UC lrvlne has Its / first te8m working on Co le Porter's "Ki_ss t.1e, Kate.'' for j A May 23 opening, Other , undergraduate efforts t h i s/ month include "The Visit" at Golden West . "The Merchant of Venice" at Santa Ana and l "Dr. Faustus'' at Cal St11le 1''ullerton. I P•wl M11t••t1'• f•...i $4 00 Ph1•t1el• v1 .. y.,41. • + T•1 SEIAST IANI KU INHRGER RIESLING A• e1ttl ... ly 41ffff._, wlli. 11e11•r .. f•re .. .... M•l'\et. O•ly • ""•" •••11•' r•l-ff ••4 •Ill $4 75 Meet Me9a11 Megan McDonough, 18, fre~h from... Chrystal Lake. Ill.. \vrites si ngs, records a persohal kind' of musir. She \Viii per- form al Cal-State Long Beach's Bristol Bay Club Salurday night. Mrs. l\1artin Luther King. Jr. will be seen and heard tonight lit 10:30 p.m. on Chan- nel 4 during a special, "Mrs. Coretta King ." Mrs. Kiog will discuss the "dynamics, strength, sensttlvi· ty and insight" of Dr. King in the hall-hour program taped in Atlanta. Ga . De"·ey Hughes will be the moderator. Dr . King 's phrases have been im mortalized. "I have a dream ," "I have bee n to tht .·mountaintop .'' and "Free at last , thank God almighty, I'm free at last" sparked an ·THE UNDERGROUND PRESENTS DA NCE MUSIC BY CLAY CHRISTOPHER AND THE CHANGES Ni9htly Wed. thru Sat. WAYNE GABRIEL Tuesday thru Sat. -9 p.m. to 2 a.rn . IN THE LOUNGE SUNDAY AFTERNOONS Les Czimber Trio From 3 p.m. on SUNDAY CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH II to 3 -LUNCH e DINNER n . COCKTAILS e DANCING Uoo NKS3333 w. COAST HWY. "r\ NEWPORT IEACH v"' 642-4298 others'©ag Grune~ · Special 13runch Menu Served 8 a.m. to 1 pm. at-I Reuben·s· • 1555 Adams, Costa Mesa RESERVATIONS 540·9672 MOTHER'S DAY DINNER Served from 2:00 p.m. 1555 ADAMS I at Harbor I COSTA MESA 540-9672 HO ST TO DIPLOM AT, BEACHCOMB ER, PRI NCE, Pl RA TE AND MOTHERS , FOR OVER 38 YEARS Mother's Day Brunch 10 A.M. to 1 P.M. Enjoy our. Cantonese, South Seas Brunch from our Porls·of·Call table. Adul ts $3.25 Children (under 101 $1.7S Mother's Day Dinner I P.M. to 11 P.M. Cantonese and American Dinners From $4.95 WE HAVE SOMETHING SPE CIAL FOR YOU MOTHER -FROM US DANCING TO CARLOS ORTEGA AND HIS BE ACH BUMS THURS.·FRl.·SAT.-SUN. 3901 E. Coast Hwy. Corona del Mllr R111rv1 tion1 675-0900 awareness in the minds of the American people and peoples over the world. From ~er Atlanta home. Mrs. King will highlight her life with Dr. King. including his works, the Nobel Prize, his non-stop civil rights dedication and his untimely assassination four years ago. Tonight also is one of a number or periodic ' • b i g nights'' for South Co a s t Parl{Festi val Planned Next Friday will launch "old home week'' at lhe Costa Mesai Civic Playhouse when Pali Tambellini presents "My Sister Eileen." Included in the 21-character cast life such longtime Costa Mesa stalwarts as Jack Murray, c; en e Benedict, Barbara Garlith, Lois Wilson and Genevieve l\1urral'. Jack and Gene were in the cast of the first Costa Mesa show, "Send Me No Flowers." seven years ago. Rounding out the rnerry l month of May in local theater are the Ana -t.1od •jes kai Players' "Critic's Choice," I opening tonigh1 : ' ' D e a r, Ernest" at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse, debuting I May 2.1 : the Fullerton 1-~ootlightr.rs' "Don't Drink1 the Water." C'oming May I 26, 11 n d t h e Lido Isle Players' "Absen('f' of a 1 Cello," ticketed for a Ma y 30 arri val. ti I 11et lte •w•il•ble ... 111 1111111 197•. • + Tet MIRASSOU MONTEREY RI ESLING New fre1111 Mir••••11'1 M•11 tetey Vhteyor4•. lSfllt lloe41ff •''" • '"'t!••t b•11-t11•f ••4 • •••'It ef , ... ,....., "9· th1ceili fr•• s.,1,, • .,., G1•P" e11lll h $2 79 1•'"it1bc•11t ef fl1te Gff'"•" wl11e1. • + T•• W I N E S P ECI A L H AUJOL AIS VILLAG E NOUYEAU-1970 A flfl• y•u"t fruity W•• St.49 1 99 k•u1'•l•lt fren1 fr•1te• NOW , , • + T•r CHA TEAU LA COURONN E 190 A Clt• .. •11 H1tl.d wh1• ff-the hi'"-' P••lllt1e ,.. •'•• of We• SJ.•9 $2 99 fto•e• NOW . • • "+ l •1 v ... 1 ""' •r rl>O•••'"'• dlnhOO!l'CI .,;..,.f''"''"" w!no t•"•• w.,lrn eoo••h ono "' !lie l•nf•! !fl•<l•ll<>• in $eutll••n (•II t~•nl• · The annual arts and crrifts festival. s po n so red by Halecrest Park Association. will take place May 19 through 21 fro m 10 a.m. to dusk on the parkgrounds. 3107 Kellybrooke Lane. Costa Mesa . A comm.unity organiz.alion of 300 families , Halecresl Park provides ils members with adult and youth groups, S\\'im · ming. tennis and social ac· tivities. The Huntington Be a c h Playhouse also raises its cur· tain ·next Friday, this lin1e on •·catch Me If You Can.'' directed by the ubiqUitous Alex Koba. whose production of "The Little Foxes" winds up this weekend in l...ong Beach. The H unting t o 'n players are adding to the suspense of the show ~y withholding the name of a character who turns up near The 1971 -n season may not 'have opened too auspiciously.1 with nearly every theater put - ting on "Plaza Suite," b111 there's enough variety in !.he homestretch to satii;fy jui;t 1 about any thea lergoer. Anri there's more CQming up in LIQUOR · MAY 1/2 GALLON SPECIAL........, Orange County artists and craftsmen can exhibit their "·ares for a $10.50 fee . All prof- iLs go to the individ ual. Contact Mrs. John Goettsch al 546-7562 oi:. Mrs. Joe Moun- tain at 54~6887 for further in· forn1alion. PETER WICKERSHAM Former Lead Shu,., With THE ROAD HOME Monday thru Thursday Night~ MUSTANG Friday and Saturday Nights June too. -----I SOMETHING SPECIAL FOR MOTHER'S DAY AT THE AIRPORTER INN Ctow11 Rutt• Vedlio ....•.••.•. , $1.11 WAS St.Jt Tu'IM" Hlthl•1ttl CrooM Sc•tc:ll S14.tl SAVI tl.00 O••r J Qt. Prlc• '"'••'•" G i11 ,,,, $14.45 WAS SI S.6S SAVI $1.10 At1cl••' At• l ourb•fl Sl 1.)9 WAS S1J.tl SAYI S.St l oord'1 Gh1 , •• ,, • SI.I I WAI S 9.tt SAVI Sl .11 Cutty krl , •.••. S16.7S WAS S11.•9 SAVI Sl .7• Alw•v• it•. Ol1co11111 •v Tiit Ct•• •" ,,..,,,. ,, • ...,, S•vt U"• IV TIH Cett 011 Hl·Tlmo1 il'rlvl lt L 1~ol, JAN DENEAU TRIO:-•' And Open Jaz:z Session Sunday Nights CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH 49S E. 17th St.-Co1ta M.,. ''CLUI 21 " Mon.-Frl. 4 to 7 GARGANTUAN DRINKS Served 10 1.m. to 3 p.m. DINNER Served 4 p.m. to 10 p.m. • LAGUNA c,Airporter qnn DANCING NIGHTLY OP'EN Sl!'VEN DAYS FLEUR DE LIS 1460 S. COAST BLVD. LAGUNA BEACH Fifi PA•KIN• IN II.Al aI t 1· 11700 MAC ARTHUR BLVO. -no e (O!lll011'9 ...... •lrport) N£WP'OllT PHONE 833-2770 VOLCANO HOUSE WE·LCOMES YOU TO OUR NEW Tll\.1-TIME TWO. WELL· DRINKS· FOR· THE ·PRICE ·OF· ONE Monday thru Friday, 4 to 6 p.m. HOT HAWAIIAN HORS D'OEUVRES For a RelaxlnCJ Interlude • • • THE SOOTHING SOUNDS OF HAVEN I et A M .. tM c-..,.. Telepho,..: 541°9314 Nearly E ve ryone Listens to Landers FOR THE FINEST IN MEXICAN FOOD• STEAK & LOBSTER HENRY'S AEROPUERTO PROUDLY PRESENTS SHANNA AND THE BACHELORS For Dancing & Entertainment MOTHER'S DAY SPECIAL 5 PM • 11 PM * 2 MEXICAN DINNERS C~mplete .... 55.00 WITH HER SONGS AND GUITAR Monday thru Friday-4 to 8 p.m. <Briston 557-7057 1400 PALISADES ROAD COSTA MESA 2 COMPLETE STEAK DINNERS •.... 58.00 2122 PALISADES (Bristol) SANTA ANA (Near Orange County Airport) 545-5579 ROMANOFF'S r This Coupon Good :ml FAMILY RESTAURANT PRIME RIB • STEAKS ITALIAN SPECIALTIES MOTHER'S DAY DINNER Served from 12 Noon on ALL DINNERS INCLUDE CHAMPAGNE MOTHER'S DAY SPECIAL Baked Ham, Candied Yams • \ $3.95 . Prime Rib •• $4.45 • Steaks •• $4.25 COMPLETE BUSINESSMEN'S LUNCH MONDAY TH RU FRI DAY Sandwiches-Entrees Startin9 at $1.50 -We Feature An Excl u5ive U1e of U.5.0 .A. Choice Beef - FRE E ICE CR EAM SUNDAE FOR ALL TH E KIDS We mak• all of our own t0up1. bread, 11 uce1 and 11l1cl clre11in91 HAPPY HOUR ••• 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. -DRINKS , 69• 428 E. 17th STREET COSTA . MESA 645·6633 I I I TWO TERIYAKI STl!AK ~NNERS I •· ~pe~ially pricod $4.95t0<bolh I MonlFrl tam-10pm TueWedTltu l S1t 91m-8pm NOW OPEN SUNDAYS TOO 9am-5pm On The Mall In Ftlhlon llltnd · 144-2414 Coupon oood 7 day1 a week Sorry, no credit cards I I l\F11'-9er L~· ..... _ I •OFFER EXPIR ES-JUNE YOU CAN CLIP US FDR TWO STEAK DINNERS. .. That'.• right Two steak dinners. Specially priced at just $4.95 tor both. Why are we making this offer? We simply want you lo lry one of lhe greal steaks we serve. Teriyaki. Marinated in our own special Oriental teriyaki sauce. Dinner: includes soup du jouror fresh garden salad. Choice of potalO. Piping hot homemade bread. And a grilled pineapple ring. Plus a bottomless cup of our own special blend coffee. Of course we want you to meet our friendly peopl e, too, and dine In the "'arm atmosphere that's become a Rigger trademark. We hope you try us. And we hope you coma back often. It means a great deal to us. ..a.I __ lt'l&lsoagreatdealloryou. fti•~ ~9F.- • ' I . • ,. • l . • • l I I " I -l THE BLACK KNIGHT RESTAURANT INTI MATE DINING COCKTAILS • DANCING SEAFOOD BAR ENTERTAINMENT MOTHE,'S DAY DINNER Servln9 From 1 :00 P.M. 330 EAST 17TH STREET COSTA MESA S41·7791 I Jt1tni;e Cou nty'~ /.lost Beaurlrul And SeclUdi"rt R .. 11taurAnt MOTHER 'S DAY $Prvin1t BRUNCH 10 ,00 A.Kii. TO 1,30 P.M. DINNER F•om 3 ,00 P.M. Re1erv11.t1on&-499·2663-Amr1I,. P11rkinr 311 06 COAST HWY .. SOUTH LAGUNA Q~~ RESTAURANT LUNCH e DINNER COCKTAI LS SEA FOOD-STEAKS-PRIME RIB INTERNATIONAL ENTREES COMPLETE DINNERS FROM U .75 MOTHER'S DAY DINNER S•rving 3 to f P.M. Tht '•llHlleut HAltltY I JIRlll.Y In The L1un9t "Happy Hour" 3-7 p.m. Priv tfe 81nqu1t Rooms Av1il1ble Your N1w Ho1t111 1ncf Chef-Jill & Claud• 2645 Hari... ti.d., Cntoi M.,. 545°9471 CONTINENTAL CUISINE • SEA FOODS CHARCOAL BROILED STEAKS SOMETHING SPECIAL FOR THAT SPECIAL ONE MOTHER'S DAY SUNDAY, MAY 14 OPEN AT 2:00 P.M. . New Ap,._1.., NORM PANTO DUO 0,.1 Delly M11. tttt11 frl. -11 A.M. tt I A.M. o,.. At 4 ,,M. 11 let. n4 '""· 1670 Nowpon 8"'d., Cotta MHO 642°1293 .. c::" • ~ = = "Hungry Tiger would like to have you •.• for Mother's Day 1 j SURFER CARVES A SWEEPING CURVE Former L1gun1n Bill H1milton on Pupuke1, Oahu 'Five Summer Stories' Told A new surfing-adventure film by South Co a 11 t cinf'matogr.11phers G r e g M a c G i I J i v ra y Rnd J im Freeman opened Wednesday at the New Balhoa Theater. 'fhe fi lm <'apt ures the same beaut y, ethereal mnod , and humnr nf their previous hits, "W;i ve~ of Chan)?e'', "Free Rnd Ea11y" ::ind their 35 M~i theater fi lm, ''The Sunshine Sea ". and recorded the sounds of the surfer as he ride~ I h e t re R c h e r nu s Pipeline. Inco rporated in the film is the unU!ua l high s p e ed photography for w h i c h MacGilli vray ;:ind Freeman have become known. Using their $7,000 Mitchell camera, the duo can shoot the surf at "Five Sun1mcr Stories,'' the nln!h film surfinjit-ad venlure produci'd by the team. will he sbown through May 23 al 8 Rnd 10 p.m. weekdays. with a fi p.m. sbowing weekends , While tra veling to Europt, South Arnenca. Puert o Rico. :ind Hawaii, M<1ct:ill ivrav and f'rrcman have filmed wllflt is. 1hey believe , the true vision of surfing and surfers . 1'he 600 frames-per second. giving producing movie11 tor 10 years. MecGill ivrsy and Freeman have bttn recognized in· lernRtionallf for their shorts and commercials. B e 11 id es winning over 25 internalion1I film festival awards for films about" surfing and dune bug- gying, their films h a v e represented the USA at the Olympics. This year a film that they photogra phed for a Mexican Production Company. ·'The Sentinels of Silence·• was nominated for an academy awerd in two categories. film presen1 s a surfer as wh<1t an effect 25 times slower tha n he is, one \\'ho enjoys surfing regular speed . lliC' UtrHordinary t,Mark_. "DAVIDSON,_ ., Nleupert 17 • ., .... , more than anything else. The Greg MacGillivr<1y and Jim film criticizes the current Freeman. at ages 26 and 27 trend of disappearing pu blic respecti vel y have now been coasUine, as well as 1he surf--·---'------------------ ing cha1npi onship structure and commercialized aspects of WEST COAST PREMIERE-OPENS FRIDAY - r.J\.1Hy 9 thru May]() the sport-art. . MacGillivray Rn1d F'recm;:in have gone tn cxlrerne leni:tths in photography And sound . They ha ve harnessed surfers with a tiny waterproofed -microphone and transmitter SIDMIY ""'=-...._ llAIUrr POllllR 111..UOMIE Th•v·n t•k•on the gunoof th• whole . d•mned ., Weit after they take on ••ch ·~ other! UBY DEE ·CAMERON MITCHELL· 1,.;" ':"Nov . ~ " ,.,..., .. . ....,., ,..,\, •. , ~··• ~·•"• n · "' .,., •tn•n • .VJE.Ll 1lk.·, ~.!·\N • :i'{Ji'.[ )' PQITlffl ~·l •O"{I .... ~).· <V; PG :;:J,i:.~'i!:"'.ot (e.Mll Co-Hit "THI PIO,ESSIONALS" Oprn 6,00 -Show 6:.tS MODEIN TNUllE Al ITS FINES!, H i1t1111 ,.rsoul sloty el ••• i1 crisis set ai11itst t•e ~r11~1r ~1tk1r111' tf 11- clur t11sill i1 tU caters 1f nr~ ,.litical ,.. ... Al E•.,.·a•lfll •inil( ntW hs lntilllll I •lrl1I, cMllill IM tlw ~ Ktul tit• 11n _. ....... 11 • .. 1 '"' .., ---PUEBLO ".:.::.r: ... . · · Jouth Coas t Repertory Costa Mesa• 646-1363 or Mutuol A encies WINNER 5 ACADEMY AWARDS OF INCLUDING, Best Picture 0;J..~E Best Actor -HA~~~AN Best Di rector -~\~Lcl~rt ~ ......... ***NOW PLAYING ''The niftiest ch111 nqu1nc1 since silent filmsl" THE FRENCH CONNECTION 20'nl U~IA'l'-m.: P1'£SfNTS "M flll04 CIHl<:TDI" A MF IJNf11)I ~ ,,_ ClNf ~W.11 fJltWO'.lltY "1"50fU~ TtlN'l'LOIWrn WJ£.8. l!On\JA -ao• M.lWil fAlCltfl -• PILl'D'.uil(N ..,.,_ KDf£1M trrr !v,.,, .. -,,r,QA~SCllN[ -••£11NES'f l'O'!'liWI -----IOl'lllli ' . AL TNEATRE FOR SEC ND F INCOLN DllYl·lll u .......... ... •fllMn-sn.ms CINEMA W(ST II ..... 1.""' & ····-·-1-c..t ... "'--...s SHOWING NOWI Champagne Brunch ier'v'9d 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Mothers Day Dinner r' '-'""°"'.c.;;...;:;..:;;_,... °'-. ~s• 1011 ~·-·--- Hfved from 3 p.m. h All m•jor er•dil~•rd1 1cc1pl1d ungr,y tiger ::'~~::::~ ... i ~e~rl Bt•ch1 353 [. C<>asl Hi1hw1y (at B1yshore Or.) 673·;;;: fl L::' An1: 16•1 W, Sunllo:r (ne1r So:h Cot!! Pl1r1~ :9·~ • MotJ1 cr's Da y Sund1y, Mty 14 Dinner S1rved From I P.M. 37 FASHION ISlAND NEWPORT CENTER .. tw"" •wfh•m• it •,..•-'•• A1111M ,..,111 .. , .......... "."' •••• 20H• F9r Top Sports Coverage Read the DAILY PILOT • .. a screwball comedy rerTBTber them? HILD-OYER 8THWllK ~.JT~POPUlAR DEMAND ~O~fiill.-. ~°&UP, -..1,, Cb<7" Pf A ~ -'!Ion A P1T1• BoGti~~o>.i ;t# ~•01"'"''0" llC11NrC¢1 on \"1• r ro'TI 1v~•1••• flrt"\ A \V~trlf" \l\"lf";i"lo(~I""'~ ("<'·• r .. 1-~ S111Di•1• 'r11.-11 al -I Ptoli h111r11 1S1.1•tl1·24•1 _ 111•• 11a1n '' 1111• (•Ill-Iliff•• II'"" SHOWING NOW! •<od""' •-4 -B•ll S~Grt Sub1H!/ "St•tl••h •' Sllt•t t" .. ' ' or things lllce jail and crooked narcs and sta.ke·outs and the "mob' and bullets. Rea.I bullets! • in lolJ!l. Friday Evening MAY 12 Saturday Morning MAY 11 1,00 9 DD Ill llll 111-1,00 ill TY I tt1..- (l)@l Nn1 ,:,.§"'""" ........ 8 Th• 8'1 V111eJ lltcl (l,.,;.a G (i) WIW Wll4 Wtlt ltt't •• , G) n. fll11bto1111 7:00 fl ,1£Mlllt HNdt Up MW 11J I Dru• et Julfllt Cllild11n's 11rits l]JJ A tlllMfUtiM Wlttl Dr. lrap 19 I) Of. Dllfttll Col4!11t {II) ()) J•"7 ltwh .._ fJl) lltn Alt A .... (conllnuu to Jij11rtN 11t1111ttr mldnlt lll) l•P 111• Hit '""* m Mayblrry llfl • SI-• (!) Tt It A11111uMlll 7:30 IJ O.tly't Tmlllil• (51) Tll,.. StH1u D m n.,.,.,. .... 1:30 8 Iii.vii: (te) ''nl Mllflb" Conti. 8 C..~u1 h1lill (drt) '61 -tlut G1blt, Muily11 0 Cl!(JJ 11141 l 111111tr M1t11ro1, • Mont1omery Clltt. SH (])TY I Cl1tm1• Thursd•J 6:30 PM li1tin1. 0 Mltlf: .,,..it Mtll,. (d") 'II (J)ltiCIS N1wt -8rl1n lhith, l1rb1r1 H1!1, G) AJtdr l ritlitll SllM \1i Uncle llwu OJ 1111111, 111~ tAe ,,.,..., ID ltttller Im {fjl Thit WNk d) Movie: "f'tril llpr•" (rnytl Em TrtlSUll 'S3-Cl111d1 R1ins. Mtrt1 To1•11. 9 lrH11 Acnt l :OD fJ (() l~p l111nr G) D•le "' PttlMI Cl m WoedJ Wtodpec.ker m Yldllril .11 ... lhnr .... ~.,. ''"' rr1111d1 (52) HlldtlllJ f) (I)({) 11111~ •11111•• 7:00 8 (]) D m "*"' m tllt 111.w1n : "H•rl•• 111~ g ltll IM Clcict brrs" ($ptlrts) '51 -The Gr• (J) Tru1tl w Celttl4lltflCll trt1thr1. "t}d.tredt I" (tt!V) 'U- !]) Driptt Ch1 rl1s Qui1ley, Linda Starli111. CJ Wl11t'1 MJ U111? 1;!11 8 (() kMtJ·h m 1 L.v• tlt(J a @J m P111• ,.n1111r at I Dtt111t •I Ju1111ie g Ce nt AutrJ cm EIKUen ·n 0 Cil 00 J1d:IOll fin fl) KCET Art Airetlltt ga U111 Pl111ri1 111 ti C.1111111 !:00 8 H1rl111 Gltbltrotltrt -,lhn: (C) M•rrfll'• M1raudlrs• D a m JM Jthlns ~ D Movi•: "had I• Ml5f9«&" 1:JO f) Circu1! "Tht CirtUS el !ht Brotb· er' ind Sis1 trs" (com) ''2-Bob Hllft, Bini Cmsbr. ~ (f) (I) llwltth•if II H•llJwoel 141•11• C1rtffn C.rnJ,11 1J MM: (C) f21tr) "War If tht l1r1111lu•1" (ICl·ff) '70 -Russ CJ Movl1: (C) "Slcrft •I lllt '1lf1ll 11t11r (16v) '60 -Jett Richa1da. Tamblyn. Ci) T1 TtH .... Trvtt • Movil: "Teurllcllt M111 hi T••ito (J) I Dr11• " 111111111 110111" (wes) '!I! -Geo•r• Mell!· 0 Mlllle11 S Mavl•: (C) (211r) H,bl 1om•I)', 81-..rly Ty!tr. Any Cirl" (tom) '59 -Shirl11 Mtc• £)tint 111 SI C.ui L1i111, David Nivtn. l:JO 8 Hair a.ar l unch ID Kt1111'1 ti..... 0 9l m l1rrilr IHI II) CD Drap.t (JJ Ttiu1111: Wlll4ow t. 1t11 Sol!UI (JJ) W•tl stnitt WMl 0 (}) Lldl'tillt t?3 Urit1119' Wttlif lO:OD 11 (I) Pebbln 1llCI 111111 lld fiE Porter W1pn11 lhft 0 ®) fD Ttkt 1 Cl1rrt ... (U) Mnit: (211r) "Alpll Wad T11•h u CUCil Curi•titf she, r1cts" (d11) '39-Ann Sheridan. CJt Movie: (C) ''SM!ltll v.,.,. el 1:00 IJ CIJ O'Kara, U.S. Tt11SllfJ (R) SinbM" 0 !11 m Sa11flt'lll 111111 Stl (R) 10:30 G (]) Ardlit'1 lV fullflles o ·oo·oo·TI• 1rHJ •·• (t ) 0 Movlt: ..,.,.!PtoM .. <••> ·•r m A•dr Critflt' lltew -Rlth1rd Dir, fr111cts Gtff6rd. (!) Dml 'rNt sa..w O Mevle: ,...., S.11" (cem) 'U (JJ W1"11rtu WHk II lewiN -G1iy ~tr, Ann Sh1rld1tt, fD llCET Alt Alld!N m CMptl llllPI Jullllte @II [nihtl AIP• P111111t1 Q) IUJ Lltl1 CI!) NMll CE O.llrt AlldlN l1hry (211r) 11:00 8 s.trln1 ,,,.ao m•oe '""" """' tc1 D"'" ,,. wiw fl~ ''S11ry If 1 W .... " (R) (lllra) ~ ;;l:llt ~ntlll '69-Bibl An~traon, ~ob•.rt Stack, ()) AIA a.":.e"-lf Pl.,.orll J1mts Far111l1110, Ann1t G111dot. tlJ MIP .,._. LMna fJ CiJ C1J !h' f'•rtrllll11 f1Mitf (JI) m L.U UM Wrtltllnr m Merr Cnlli11 5'law e;) If J'ttlept (IJ) fil111 Odyatr "Our Dan1 Br11d" ~ 1 ~~ 1:00 IJ (J) CIS ,rider lllMI: (C) ft:!) ""' 11 1"' "M"'11r ha ......... (II) (dr1) ll;JO fl Jnlt t"4I tlll P.,ub '71 -John F1rsyth1, l1r\1r1 ltln, 1•-1 D l1l (J) -m 1•1 Cil ""'"' u.t IE 1Y Mltll"' .... Adlell ,,."" 9 TIM ~r1ll1it11 GI [_.ltltoit II:) Te le A11neu11et4 d) Mtvie: "Hitld111 Mt111I~ 1:30 g Stcend LIOl (mys) '54-Griffitlt .lon1s. o ~ (j) T111 ..., CeuJM <11i a Owtlllolr w.n111 I u ,":::' Alternoon (SZ) .. d111 f~ NellYWM hrt: 12:00 fl Tiit Men ... 1111 Certez H111t1ie.a, I D lltl m Mljlt' l••rut ....... 10:00 8 m News BMtOn 11 01kl1nd. fJ CIJ ({) I!) ll'l'I AIN!ium ltJI• 1J Jtlln W1p1 Th•lrt IJ Cttnldl Delliltl Jld Rourke ({) Mlrit: "OIW. Ur' (wa) '51 hosts. -M1 ri1 Wintlser. m Dr1plf D (1) m A1111ri&111 llnlllsblllll .. (lj) Vibt1tJ.111 . G Mnit; "LIM 1011" (WIS) '54- ll)' ACET Alt Alldi111 G111r11 MOntiem1ry. a:! Pr1111l11 -40 m USC 11111 UCLA Tfld Miit (SZJ l1 l.,.n~e 1111 l1fe1111t 18 Un dt Wtldt 10:lG IJ fl) Doll Rttkln Shew (R) 11z•so 0 Child ' 111 , stint {I) OllflCLALIMfl. Coretta li"I ' 11n1 • • Dewey Hu1hu !lolls t Mlf·hour In· fJ (])OJ Celtnlll IJIVttltitll1I leff I . • , ,. ., ot ~ M fl) f111f1m. r11t.1n 11V1ew Wtl nt wr GW "'· tr· -1 ., _, frJt--' tin luther 111111 Jr. o IC Ill• .... 0 Cw11 f'utria11 '1 Tt,. l1tk 1 :00 0 NHL Action !I) PtCMI["[ The l11azln1 Werllll (I) You Art Tlitrt ., Xre1~l11 Thi ftfMIK m111t1lif! II· IJ NINI Nitk Carltr plores p:tythic •htllOIMftl 111; (.S.I'. S Chit lfl 11 T•rlll• ! lill ColbJ hw ft LllMI If tM Sllllb LI Stb11lt1 l:JO 9 This Wlff: 111 t111 NU Or. SilNlt Lich (J) U•Wl1 MtMI $ltew 9 trutun Tlllltrl Cl) Clllllllr1n'1 'M• Fllthtl cs2> c.11e1tnd1 c.t,1•11 e MO'ril: cc1 "BrH Y111111 T• 11:00 II D ([) 9J e G NIWI • 1111" (w11) '5' -.ltffrey Hurrt"• 8 Ont Stt, ")'llMI II Mevle: "l'Jldl " tti1 M1rl_. (1) M1rstr1I Dillin (dra) "•5-John G1rtitld. fJ (I) 9) Nn1 2:00 fJ llllty's Tr111M1H f) Mrtlt: (C) "On MMnllpt ltr" 8 UCLA S,rinf ,Mttllft (mus) 'Sl-Do1is Da y. Cl) Mewlt: "Mlllllll DoH1r M1n~1.111f' m Ttutll If Ctntttj1t11c:• (mys) 'S7-Rit11trd. DlnninL m M1rit: "Tiit bnr Walt" (ir•) D Sa1,.n11 a.trt '54-AnlhMy Quinll, (I} lrlftnlltilllll tfeur m llCCT Art luctitn ID S.ul Train f5Z> ... .,., m .. .., ,.."'. 11 :1 s z e1 ...... u : ,.1111. .., "...,... a Tl•• r u111111 ll:JO CIS LIU Mlvle: (C) "LM Mt Cl Cfri1s1tf ht! " ll•M Mt" (mus) '55 -Dofis !:JO fJ TM Slllll b 0..r Dny, James C11n1y. m CtMlllllllll u ([6) m .ltllllllf Clrlett Jean Btu 1u1sts. J:OO 8 lllfTUlllN Tiit hM lttldt11 Dll II Uevi•: "Sll11tH Slden" (com) e A(rlcwttur• USA ·•s-Veronk. L1k1 Joan Ctulfltllll. I C.ltllrtty ltwll111 fJ (]J 11J G Did Ctwttt Jehn ,., Out fllc•1: "li.d: F!Wlf Len1111n ind Yoko OM 1r1 tht tftly ' ""'1•: (C) '111• Tiie..,.. autits. Hillt" (wes) '5! -Oen Murr11. (J) Nl1ht.,r1 , 0 Sci-~ Tkltni: "ltMlll If tlll ID T• TllH ti!• Trdr filllplrt 11:00 11 M~: '"Twtlwe O'a.d HIP " ~ Mewll: '11tm C..relllea" (lllr1) (tit•) '50 -Grci~ry Peek. ll-Jlobtrt T•Jler, 1,oa rn eDl!I •.., Ill•••·-. e Mwlt: .,.. hHll" (mftl) 'SI I~:"~-.:."' Tr1r • -Tttmmy H011n111, Ptt•r M•rih1l1. Q)..,,.,,. Q!.1111 l :JO IJ Mewlr. '1'11l If ltlt Tift" J:JO. IMldlf'/_.., (cem) ''2~ry Gren!, Je111 Arthur. 8 111 c..,.. Cl Ml'tit: "tbN1111 hlfl OMJ" I C.llnill •lfJIMI lilt {toftl) 't4-P11.1t1H1 Gadlll1td, S,.rb Artlell Prtontt 2:JO tD All-NIPt ._ "llMlll • llill s.c-"8ry Su11," llftfl tf IN Ctnl ..... a11d l 11lt1r, tlhw, teur• W•• a-15'. .... ,.: "Jl111, •••ti••••· J:tll 8 MM: "Tiii ....... flel••,-,..._ .. (td·tl) 'Sl-Cr1ttt WlllltfM. (IZ) I**' I... l.Mlp ... Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers w ,, I 1 I ~ y be an ti cl Cl A Faye Debut,s In LA Faye Dunaway, an actress "'ho developed hf'r di sti nct ive style in · a succession of New Yofk stage a pp ea r a n cf' s before winning st ar sta!us 11nd an Academy Award nomina- tion for "Rest Actress'' in the classic fil m "Bonnie and Clyde," will make her Los Angeles stage debut in Harold • Pinter's "Old Times" at the Mark Taper forum. A recent nominee for lhe 1971 Tony Award , the play "'ill be directed by Jeff Bleckner. It "'i ll run Mav 25 throu i h July 9. Miss Dunaway's stage ex- perience began du ring her university days when, wit h no ~I ARGOT ) Ill 001.Pll FONTEYN rNUREYEV 011ecttd ~r_A~l~~n·1.l.11Ju1tn alld .l.nl~ony Mav!lntil .1.1111 A8 M£ Prtld!Jtt on A S.if11t Ill llrlta1! SPECIAL ONE DAY ENGAGEMENT TUESDAY· MAY 16th Speuol Group Roles Avai!abl1 -Pl~se cookie! individvm lhea!rts lor turlher inlormolion. Pl ay previous ~ppearances In her credit. she \\'On the t 11!e role in '' M e d ea ' ' during her sop homore year. At Boston University School of fi ne and Applied Aris. Lloyd Richards directed her in a learling role in ··The Crucible'' and recom111ended that Elia K;:iz;:in ;:ind Robert Whithead aurlilion her for the then new Lincol n Ce n t e r Repertory Company. She was immediately signed as a chArter mem ber of that fam ed fi rst com pan\' :ind made her first appearance "'ith !hem 1n K;iza n's pro- duction of "t\fter the Fall." JI "'as followed by ~oles in "But for \V h n ni Charlie" and ''Tartuffr." During her begin- ning d;i ys of training al Lin- coln Center. Miss Dunav;;:iy <1\so appeared in I he Broad"•;iy proouclion of "A Man for All Seasons." f ollo"dng lhree years of THE PlRTlNI Of THE 1'[0 IU Th i l ln111 f11111t l pKUcul1r lc1ne E11r flhntd, .. DAILY '1LOT f:I -What Happened to Martha?! . . r By Tern.are O'Fl1btrty Early this year NBC &n· nounced that "'Is going to can- ce l "Br ight Promise," one or those daytime thing s no one has ever heard or -no one. that \11, except ~ million American housewives a n d other shut-ins "'ho have be.en follo"•ing its ups·and-do"'ll (also Ins-and-outs ) for SfVeral years . In sickness and in health. 'ti\ death do us part. "5ayonara!" I s11d and hung up. to mention NBC a;:aln in !his t:ess ful deferue-be went bac- spact, the network hired a to his 'tl'l!e." Since then the show dl5ap- peared and so had my tntertst in II but suddenly lhls week I have all these letters asking "\\'hat hapf'l'ned lo ~lartha?" Apparently it.J rans will not allow "Bright Promise" to tarnish so easily. mind reader lo starch !he 1'ls that All"" I asktd brain of "8 r11.ht PromiSt.s" "F'rankly," ii:a1d fhe networ' script writer and came up gpokesman, "T'th1nk that 's 111 with the following conclusions : murh as ANYONE need11 te "~111rth11 Fer~uson. who is know 111bout a girl 11k 1 on trial for lhe murdt.r of ~tart ha ." l , Syh•ia Bancro ft . is acquitll"d . And that's lht lruth-nl Htr plan lo marry Dr Ed ith Ann "'ould say. Graham in jail was thtrtfore/-::======;::;;;=== Being fearlessly de\'Oted to "·omen In di.!!tress, I checked NBC immediately to set "'hat they planned to do about ty- ing up the dangling plot lines of l~ soap optra. The n~work 's first rea('tio n \\'as to bristle al the words •·soap opera." f\'olhing t i c k s ·of f nt:l"'ork publicists faster. It's ahnost as if t~ey had taken a • n1u1ual pledge in a secret JS!ace some"•here i n Atr ~-palilchia . I A 11 net work personnel refer const ant \\'Ork and study. sh". to them as "daytime dramas" Ifft Lincoln Center lo "'Jn the and their eyes gla7.e over plum part in the surprise hit slightl.v. They dn not laugh at of Iha! season The thfm any mnre th.:in a monkey American PI a <' e Thea ter's grinder woul d disparage his production of "Hogan 's Goar." monkey. It 's b11d for business . It \\'as !hat !our de force role ''No information "'ill be -one "'hich she recently re-divul~ed about the outco me of Now . let me tell you. therP Is nothing mo re difficult to trace. than something tha l never happened in the first place. But after I threatened nevtr unntrfssary Afttr her rflease they "''trt nlarried 1n a more conven1ional ~ellin,e . As fnr ~1arlha ·s brothtr Stuart-I ht la y\\'tr "''ho conducted hPr sur- "\J./ren y:iur rusband v.alks oot there Ole thrrze things y:JU gotta do. getojob. get a k:Jwyer, a nd geta man." One Is A L.oneiy Number MGM Prtstn1s ~ OAVID l WQLP[R r1mour.110N "(" .. [ ff, A tO~~(V llU ~S!ll" S1amn1 TRISH V~N OEVl~t' ~'0'-iE ~t'~~HlM J'NEI L£iGH '"1 Mttl/IN OO!J~t;s 5'.i!tn~la'/ ~y 0~1'10 S[lllfR Mu5,. -~1 "~ll lfGR~~D · PrGr:b·td ~I Sl~N M'~(,i:Ltr~ llit@<!edb~MflSTUARI · Ml1110f.OLO~ ~~ '"'•0 IN HARBOR SHOPPI NG ClNTlll 2nd Out standing HIT created for the Na I i on a I 'Bright Promise' prior to its The 1\...-...:ile EducaLlon al Telev ision version replacement. In fact, there are '· ~.J't!-.~. ~ -\\'hic h brought her to the at-no plRns for divulging it al ~ lent ion of film producer Sam a 11 .'' said one NBC v r,..~ .. ._:,.. Spiegel "·ho int rodured her lo spokesm an. Lit• ~1 i nn,.lli ~··r -,. the mot ion pici ure publ ir in "You mean it "'ill just ~~~~~~~~~~~:;;;;;:::;;:::;;::~ ''The Happen ing" opposite disappear-POUF?'' I asked. l"iiiijjjiiiiiiiiiiiiii An1hony Qui nn. "Pcecisely." he said. "The best Among her other no!able ''No explanations?" morion pictures 1n addition to ''N th ' ,, Comedy "Bonnie anrl Clvrle" are 0 ing. "Puzzle of a 00\\•rlfat Chil d" "Just silence?'' of the year "The Tho mas Cro"'n Affa ir".· ''.Just silence ." "Hurry Sundown". "The fa. "~ol <'en one tiny good-and the best traordi nary Seaman''. ''The by? I persisted . Arra ng ement". "A Place for "Sayonara ~" IOVe Story!' Lovers ", "House in l he "It "'as a Japanese soap ·•·tws.:11 .. ,,~:.~i .. : Trees", "Doc". a·· guest ap-operR?"hl asked.Id I k I fl I pearance in "Little Big Man", . "Sa¥. 01~ wou Y?U 1 e -i·~ anl her fort hcoming role in 1nter\•1ew 811! Cullen instead . the her.:ilded television special "The \Voman I Love" opposite Richard ·chamberlain. Tickets fo r "Old Times" are now on sale at the Mark TapP r Forum box office and all agencies. Spec ial · Jow-pnced previe"'s begin nightly except Mondays on May 13. Akins Signed-- HOLLYWOOD <UPll Claude Akins signed to co-star with Charlton Heston and Yvette Mimieux in MG~1's "Skyjacked." l~~ " NEWPORT 12:30, 3:30, 7:00, 10: 00 Made For Each Other Color by Deluxe• !Jrno ONLY ORANGE COUNTY RUN llM~ "BUENA PARK 7:00& 10: 15 P.M. :~~\fl~~s~~ -> T14( C1 ff °''"''. (71•1 6J•.noo SOUlM C04ST 'l •t4 o..~ (,.,,., Mooo • O'l 'l 3.0 flll I••••••• ... . ... . . . .. .. ' rn•~• MWV u •our•••M"• ~"" • N(Wf'ORT BE ACll • 1>44 0160 SHOWS OAILY 12:30 · 3:30 . 7:00 . 10 p.m. "'·-tlVO •T •Ollll" tr, cosu 1115• ••• 0)11 y,;,~ Vo" 01w •• M•lllV" 00t>4lo1 Al\e. Warren !leo!'V ·Loi loyll!I!' "THf ONLY GAMf IN TOWN" ~~iillliiiiS~HiOiWTiiliMilEi5-iiSi·iJii. e1';';.Mi.iiiiiiiii~-11 ~MllrJJ.C#:9 .a PA.ulrlOll~f IEULWI: i,,"~'"''ric 1 1d e '"''l'r cht tg• "THERE IS ONLY ONE BRANDO. HE IS THE GODFATHER. THE CENTERPIECE OF WHAT PROMISES TO BE THE 'GONE WITH THE - -' -:.ir.r• S !AO/UM ' I ,w t..~tr.~ _. -' --L~I• SrAotUM •l :.1· "~=- --·-'-::':ill S!AOIUM •3 \', .... ~ .... ..:":.-=- --. -m ' SrAotuM ,, ·i. t.. .-n.:<a::JIT7-~ VlnHM lled'llt•v• Cl-1 J1d1so~ "MAR V, QUEEN 0 1' SCOTS" "'WUTHERINC HEIGHTS" IE•cl!Jllw• Or1n91 C111nty lt•wrvtd Se•t IE"t•t•mt~I Norn on•led fir I Ac..:ilf"V Awtrdll "FIDDLER ON THE ROOI'•' Ac1dtrnv Awi rd Wlnllff J•n• l'olld• "KLUTE" ftll l llMI "SUMMElt 01' '4J" (II) "D11llng, Or Thi e1.-1ltV·• 101ton 40.erk-Loll ll•t llutt" "M "T t~t T~I Monty 1nd ll1111" Winner al s Ac~lltrnv Aw11'111 "Tiit l're11eh C1nntcllen" Cll ... "V1nl1hln9 l"tlnl" Clll "SWEDISH l'L Y Gl'tl!" . .. "SWEET I ODV 01' OEIO•.AH " WINNER OF *THREE* ACADEMY AWARDS "fiddler on the Opfl'I ..,.,., day 12..00 Noofl ~ til 9:00 P.M. R111rvtd 11011 olto roreilolllo ot MuMJI, LIMr· tr,. Aoftlll end Wollich's Mu- 1lc Cify. on the screen r&r SDttltl Afft"Ol"'"'l1 l'or Gr~1111t ol U O• MM• Giii i»·l"' ltvt.rlY s,r1y, MATINllS Wff .• hf .• s ... 101 Offko Open• 6:4S Conth1111111 Ru1111ln• S1111day Sho-2:DD P.M.. 7 ftsh ion i1loncl, n1wp1HI c•nltr '44-5070 S ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS . who ruled with the heart of Production '"'""'Redgrave · ~'"'d' fack so n INCLUDIMI YAMISSA llDGIAYI llST ACTllSS ELIZABETH, QUEEN OF who reigned with the power of ""~1 ~1 cGoohan · T'mo<h' Dalto n · ~;~1 Davenport .. Marg. Q11een of Scots CINIDOMI 20 JI01 W.<H APflolll ·Ol lHGl tJ1.JJ71 l AllTA AJIA llWT at CiW"U~ l ~T•"I {~.Iii« lrlO'Cl•'ltll ~·t\• U.J, S,COA$T CINIMa 50UlM (01\i VlllAGE OPP, S. co•sr PlAlA OM w su-inowut lrO• IRl\101. S•N'TA .a1r1.a S •G· QSt4 UNl.tY.ITfD { ''-'k'ING 6thlMAIH WllK WIND ' OF GANGSTER MOVIES." -Paul O. Zimmerm•n. Newswflftk '"THE GODFATHER' IS A SPECTACULAR MOVIE, ONE OF THE FINEST GANGSTER MOVIES EVER MADE. IT'S RARE TO COME OUT OF A 3-HOUR MOVIE AND WANT TO MAKE .A U-TURN AND GO IN AND SEE IT ALL OVER AGAIN. BUT THAT'S EXACn Y MY FEELING AFTER SEEING 'THE GODFATHER'." -Gene Shall!, NBC. TV "A TAUL Y EPIC FILM IN THE BEST CLASSIC SENSE OF THE WORD! EVEN MORE ENGROSSING THAN MARIO PUZO'S BOOK, IF THAT'S POSSIBLE!" -llBC-TV "A MARVELLOUS MOVIE! A TOUOH. BEAUTIFUL MOVIE!" -CBS-TV ... • • • • c.oa1t HWV •r ,...,.,TMUll Ol'l'D • NEWPORT BEA CH • 6CC -0 760 la• Olli(• ft,...."' .......... MlTIJlllS DA/LT frot11 12130 ""'o•t.t.T w11.: "HOSPITAL" u, ,.,, .. ...... ..I , 'f & Zll" Ill 1--••• ..... "MAl:Y ou11M o• KOTI" "GI••• HouM" (lit} 2nd lop hit "MADI FOR IACN OTHER" P111t · Ellioboth Ttl"fl0ot 1• "XY &Ill" i.11<~""' c .... N MIS ION VI.JO E'OWAf'.fU ~ CINEMA VIEJO I . ~ ., '.. -. ' . . ~ ' . '" Je,.,.·f••O'lt.t.,.il ht "TMI ClllY TIU TMIMT"' "PUPPET ON A CHAIN" '" 111'" ('Jl1 t \l~I "' ' ..... '.ti,,. I• I Ill ll'" ' • ' •• • . . . \ ' 30 DAILY PILOT Your Gulde to Movies 'Last 8 di tor 'I Nott: Thi.I movie guidt is prepartd bu thfl films committet of Harbor Co14ndl PT A. /.frs. Harry Afellor i.s president and Afr,. Bruce Nordlc11d ii committee chairman. Jl is intended as a reference in determining suitable film 1 for Ctrtain ope group.1 and wilt appear wee kly. Your views are solicited. Afail them to M<r vie Guide, care of !.he DAILY PILOT. * ADULTS Cabaret (PG!: Musical set 1n decadent days of pre·Nazi Picture Show' Teens Grow Up Germany. starring L i 1 a Minelli as English cabaret singer in l<lve with bisexual English teacher. ~1 i ch a e J ''nrk. C a r ry Trratm,nl <PG I: James Coburn stars I n medical drama concerning ahorlion and murder. Dealin-: Or the 8f'rkelt)'· To-Boston forty Brick Lost- Bag Blues (RI: Harvard stu- dtnt long s for hi!i Berkeley mL'itress and has htr shipped East "'ilh a delivery of hidden marfjuana. Dishonest cop cap- tures part of the haul. and a giant cops veri;us college students game 1.~ on. Comedy. ---' . , ' The French Couec:Unn !RI: Stars Clorls Leachman. tPG)t Sidney Poitier and .story of llfe of Moses directed Suspense mystery starring Little f'a uss and Bi g Halsy Harry Belafonte oo-star in by Cecil B. DeMille. Stars Gene Hackman and Fernando ~ R 1: Story of profe~1onal story of a pseudo preacher Charlton Heston and Yul Rey, Brooklyn police delec-motorcycle racing. Big Halsy and a guide for ex-slaves. Brynner . lives move in on the American suspended for d r 1 n kl n g ... ~1ary Queen of Scots IPGI : * connection to f' re n ch · Hustles drinks and gJrls at Vanessa Redgrave is Ca!holic The lette r Immediately American heroin nng in a track, finally makes deal "'1lh Mary Stuart and Glenda after the !if.le indicate.1 the chase story of vk>lence. gullible country·OOY. Little Jackson portrays Protestant rating given the picture by Frlti The Cat r X I : Fauss, whereby he uses his Queen Elizabeth of England in the Motio n Picture Code. Animated cartoon or sexual bike, license. and name to this historical dama or English The Code A·nd Rating pro- escapades of cat involved in enter bill race. political and personal intrigue. gram may be found on one campus revolutions and pnt. ~1ade For Each Other I PG l: One ts A Lonely Nu mber -of the motion picture page.1, The Godfather IRI: film Dram a .co med y ol l\\'O (PG ): Trish Van Devere \•ersion ()f Mario Puzo novel mismatched lovers who meet portrays a newly di\'orced San teUing of life and death within at a group therapy session. Franciscan. Co·stars Janet a gangster family. Politics and Neither has ever been able to Leigh and ~elvyn Douglas. intrigue. brutality and murder de velop a heellhy love si lua· Only Game In. Town (PGJ : Or th. Maria. Stars ~1arlon 1· bef R T I ion ore. ene ay nr Gambling film set irl _ Las Brando and Al Paci no. portrays the ,Jewish neurotic, Vegas stars Elizabeth Taylor Hospital (PG I: George Scott and Joseph . Bologna th r and Warren Beatty. , portrays hard-drinking doctor. fl irtatinus llallan The Ten Commandments t who copes with an unsuc· s r '42 1 R ) Nostal~ic return to early w;1r -----LIVE THEATER ' cessful marriagt> and the ummer 0 : ~PG): Re-issue Bible history emergencies of an under· ~·eajs depicling thrff' teenage 1 ...... staffed . overcrowded. big cl!y boys awakening to romancC' 'f;.;~~VJ "Pueblo" South Coast Repertpry opens its West Coast premiere of the factual drama toiiight al the Third Step Theater, 1827 Newport Blvd .• Cos ta Mesa. Performances are Wed· nesdays through Sundays unt il June 18 with an 8 o'clock cur· ta.in. Reservations 646-1363. "Never Too Late" ~ hospital. and sex . They while awayLclll:llf Klute ~R l: .lane Fonda E •-available at the c 0 J I e g e !!ummer at an astern s11ure bookstore or at the door . portrays aspiring RClress resort p I an n in g conquests turned prostitute. Unllble to Se .,. H · f 11 · I "My Sis ter Eileen" _ h ns1 1ve erm1e a s 1n nvc . establish real relationships s e "'ith beaut iful Army wile Jen· A large-cast comedy opens regards her husiness as a nifer O'Neill and Gary Grimes next Friday for I hr e e form of a ct i n g . Don star. I weekends at the Costa Mesa Sutherland is policeman on Civic Playhouse at the west hu nt for a missing friend in Swedish fly Girls ~ R ! : Lnve gate of the Orange County this murder mystery. and sex life of S"•edish fairgrounds. Performances The Last Picture Shnw IR ): stewardesses on international Friday and Saturdays at 8:30 Story filmed in black and nights. p.m. Reservations fdaysl &14-wh ite showing the past X''Z fRI: Elizabeth Tay!o r. 5303... generation of film making and Michael Caine and Susannah 01 0N ANY SUNDAY" ALSO llTTlt FAUSS AOD llG HAlSY POllTIVILY LAST Wiii I Ac~ Aw..-4 ... t Act'f'* Ill IT NOW I .. JAN[ d ........ ~ ., In 11.i J Diklila croict41 'lllut•' Ill "SUMMER OF '4211 CONTINUOUS SHOW SAT. ind SUN . ·FROM 2 P.M. Kids Like To Ask Andy ~~ _;;!!_'4.,~,.. ,•"> .**** .. ? ... -New Yorj( Dally N•WI .. 'CAIAltll" II A SCINTILLATING MUllCALr- -ll•H•r'• OIOttl (lll..et11M411 EC1t!Ofl) .,LIZA MINNIUJ -T-.. NIW Miii SHOW 1111" -Tl_U .. llhlfl "LIZA llUNNIW IN 'CAIAJIET" -A ITM II IOANl"-Htwt-lt U....,_ "LIZA MINN!LLI GJVll A MOYIE P!R,OAMANCI IO IEAl1Tl,UL THAT I CAN THINK OF NOTHING TO DO IUT orvE THANKlr" Nt• Yoril T'-• NOWP~YING ···-ot ........... . SOUTH COAST l'UU I Costl Mesa · )46.2711 WN11~1~0: ''*· l ;IJ, ll:U ... M. Sil •• 51111. I:•. J:U, 6:M, t :ll, H:1t f'.M. Winding up its two.weekend run for the Hamslers of Coslll Mesa is this family comedy, playing tonight and Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday al 2 p.m. at Pomona School, 2 O 5 I Pomona Ave. Reservations "Caleb 1\fe If You Can" the part it played in our livei;. York star in story of infidelity, ldnftia,lHfl'ISIJK9 A comedy·mystery opensJJD~e~p~icil~s~d~y~in~g~T~e~x~a~s~t~o~w~ngn~l=P=a~s~s~io~n:s~a~n~d~r~u~lh~l~es~s~n~e~s-~•·~~l ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~===~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;-----next Friday for fi ve weekends the l950's. the sex and 1\1ature Teens and Adults ljl ~~~~~~~~~~.;;;;~ at the Huntington Beach dreariness of its inhabitants. Buck and the Preac her 1~ Playhouse. 2110 Main St.. Hun· lington Beach. Performances Friday and Saturdays at 8:30 p.m Reservations 536·8861. -· "th< Visit" Two f i n a 1 performances tonight and Saturday at 8 p.m. in Golden West College's Com· munity Theater. T i c k e t s HELD OVE R AGAIN! Tlleln••ftM ... ... 5 ACADEM y 1 AWAR DS h1tl1dt119 llST rlCTUltl IHT ACTOI llST DlllCTO • • • ' 00..M BY OE LUXE• -JIHI OUTSTANDIN• .t.nlACTION J.,.. .. Ceb1111 .Jetudt.r O'N•lll "THE CAREY TREATMENT" I I nn i I ,. I. 1 "Haml et" An a dap tation of Shakespeare's classic tragedy wilt be presented at 8:30 \\'edncsday through Saturday of next week al Orange Coast College. 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Admission is free. ......... .. ,_ Sl5 J5l• l-·-.. ...... 1 ... ~-1 911·"010 Olll Y OU'll-111 lllOWUIG "GODFATHER" (R) F•I. & 5.e!. 1:1! & 11·30 tim Su".·Thur. l :XI t1m ;:=~=-=.=~::;'' , __ ...... _ •tl .. ~S ·--........ _ 5ll·LJ11 l 111 Jl•TUllS .1 .... 1 ...... d ..... 1. "'U,,fT OM .l Cll.llN" !'lil 1. "TM( WlftllM.lJ:ll" ('G) J. "llOOO Of 01.lCUl.l'S C.lSnl" ........ "' .. G.,_G_ .... ~ .. ~l• tJl t -·~ ·-.. ---5!1• ,(I ,, 1;••., ,,1,..,.., tuu• li4fl, •• , .... "'"'"' l tl•...,., "l!JCI & Tiil ,llACllll" !'fl ...... l ........ i\•• ........ "1111 ,IOflSSIONAtS"' !'GI , ........ ·-· ..... c--.. t l ?IOll 111 ...... 1.,i .. MtcMol Celllfll••-• f...t "lT&.211"(1) + "Tiii ON\ Y CAMI HI TOWW" ") -·-·-,_.S.JJIJ KOlll IHfllt ........... okf "Dflll#'n !IJ ..... ,..,..../W ........ O.f911 "TWO lAlft 11u.cno,• 111 ·--~-· ..... -Ml·MI l OAD l llf f T.tfUll' 1. "PAlllf TOU '#AIOtl~ fP•I 1. "lllVlll" !'t) S. "WtlO IOVllS" CPtl * * * I * ! I " ·- '* • • ' f • • I ' ' > t ' t , ' .... ' ., ' . r . • • • ' .. ., ·KEZY's GRAB BAG THAT IS ••. IT HAPPENS ALL DAY LONG * * * * * .. ~ -·-- ' .. '1 A 1" fl "" l G ltl , .. IH l & ts • 17 Ve in " 2!1 Sp 21 P'r 21 er • 25 HI I• 21. Str 27 Ha 2!! Sh !31 ,, 33 Cu 3' 01 3& ltt " •o ... , " to •z Grl 44 Ind spl l•I .,. .. '" '" "0 ., lO. 14 -DICK ru·ey . JOll\l itl!: l.T.11 S.H. l.ll.T.W. F.H.W.llM.u.as. MUTI AND JEFF FIGMENTS NANCY D IP YOU PE LIVER THOSE EGGS TO MRS. JONES? JO IN 1\11: l.f.fr.~!l LUI.\\! F.H.W.HM.lll!.5. Si.lE WASN'T HOME, SO I LEFT THEM IN A 51'.FE PLACE--- I DAIL y CROSSWORD • :-: by t. A. POWIR I ACR OSS 1 l'IUl!lbing fiilurts 6 Shet Piii 10 RJyrr b1rrl!rs 14 Wading b!rd l s Rtvt rbfrate l6 hsut with I UthOtity 11 V11uc:ht s fM l CJ Tht dishes av1ll1ble 20 Sp.anlsh tltlt 21 l'rt dt termlntd 23 Clips with · short stroltt s 25 High-: Mtll In Britain 2Ei Stt lvt 21 Hat 2CJ Short t lttp J 31 P'trfonn!d 33 Cuclcoo ~ Dlfllntss j!. Pltsldt ltml*'•rlly 40 Arran9r ltcordlflg to site ~2 Grind iflg lootll .44 lfld6110illbll spirit: lnfar111a! •S Wtr1r d(>l)91! ~th hands 47 Put in dif- f1rtflt plact A9 Dock workt1s' union : .lbbr. " '"' , 52 C1llfom!1 roclrlislr 5) GfllW 54 lfltOlllt \It allv lstr: Abbr. 57 Htsital!an syllables S9. Break lartlr lr1 ,rl lM'ets 1g1ln 61.JIMI st1ttrn1nts ln dlplom,ue negat!a!lans 64 Palm er or !!aiding, r.g. 67 Cavt1!ng lhat al>Jti..res 68 lihrtltll rnslrumtnl '70 Ad)tt\IV t sullir 71 Pi1no, drum and Sit, t .g. 72 Plant disease 71 s ... 111 drops al 11111istufe 7( Rtndtf successfully 75 Carst lt l part DOWN I Asks for a1"'s· Z Ftver J !leCOOM 1rna'll'ft A WAdlfllJ bird S Looking with boldfltSS 6 Obs!ac!t 1 Saur I Artrc!t of bfddi fl Kind~ s1f1d 10 Lt sstr: Pref ix 11 Ending us"f with lint and om 12 Fnl lowtf of John L. Lew is ll Attr'n!lvt serutlfly 18 Jelly ustd lfl bombs 22 Bottom part 24 Tr~t1r al 1n anlmat 27 Cont1 lner f0t Ii Quids 21"'" 30 Sh~aktf 32 Afllma! JS E!telta· 1111gnttlc radla!ion dt vic r ' I 37 Culain pro• eessfd fruits: 2 wonls 38 -ll(lllSl~r Jfj Statt : Frrncl1 41 Gllil*tn'spne 43 Fail ta follow suit '" Judgf 41 low stool without hick 51 ExNnsts S4 ftom1n g!ld 5S l'ttllc sat11re S6 A!temty - ·-: 2 WOfds 58 Rtt1U tst1blislimt!ll 611 Extrtme &2 Tro~les ,3 YI. l~dlts '""" 6S Mr. S1~ugl!\tf 611 Cast flfr unit fi'i M01.11t1in ~•ss ···HER MAIL- BOX I ly Clielter G1.W ANO 'TllAT NOllV CAT! '1 ~001' 4 .:WJ GO! ly Tom IC. Ryan ly Al Smith t ly Dale Hali by Ernie lusll111lller . . --. .,:.,.. I I I I • JUDC5E PARKIER MISS PEACH fUTU!tE l'ocfoas of M£RICA ~HT ·Hew . PERKINS . ··o"··· . : .. . . ' ·. . . "O." ... . . . .. .. . .· ,•.,' . GASOUNI ALLIY SALLY IANANAS ' T~l l\lO<.J ~ SM~~' GORDO JAG&/f.C' GI.A.SS" f\11/Ar ,I WAV TO 11.~C'ICLI!, aorrJ.es. MOON MULLINS ANIMAl. CRACKERS rT WOULDN"T" t• FAllt TO VOUll:. PAT I ION TS- ·o." ... . .. .. .. ... '' ;; • ly Charles M. Schlllz ., !I •• Ii ·• I: I' OUR. 00.W ~£!MS To 6ET ALL 1HE WEIROOS ! ly Harold Le DoUll ly M•n -DO YOU REALIZE Wl4AT 'THSY'CI HkVf TO !!TO 'TM!tOUGM TO GIT S!CCND OP1NIONS ~ ly Jelln Miles . :a·:": . . .. . . .·., ·. l'rlday, M•y U. 1'12 JIM T~ING 'TO l>iell>I WHETH!r:t Wflf>! c<orN<i TO "1EFU!t81SH OR 1'eFURN15H ... DAIL V 1'11.llf 31 By Charles Barsotti By Gus Arriola By Ferd Johnson . , .. , ..... -· ... -~ ... ·- By Roger Bollen THE GIRLS DENNIS THE MENACE • Weu.1!14T~ ~ER THING ME t\'.JN T LI K! _ <5(1£SSJN' &1V£s.1 • y • • • . " ..... • v .,r DAILY PILOT frld1y, May 12, 1972 • ATLAS SUVICI DlPARTMtNT WILCOMIS AND HONORS AU CHRYSl.U CORPORATION VIHI• CLIS U9UIRIHIO SHYICI AND WARRANTY WORK, UIOARDllSS O~ WHIU CAR WAS PURCHASlD. WI HONOR MASUR CHARCH, ANKAMIRICARD, CAlTI IUNCHf, AMERICAN IXPRISS ND DINOS CLUI , • • ,. llAND NEW J DR. COUPI . '72 DUSTER • YLJf•IJl•J111J7 l~ND NEW '72 SATELLITE 2 DR. COUPf ••• OFF MANUFACTURE STICKER PRICE ... EQUIPPED WITH: All CONDITIONING, POWER STEERING, POWEi DISC BRAKES, POWEi WlfilDOWS, POWER SEATS, POWER DOOi LOCKS, AM-'M STIRIO RADIO, TINTED GLASS, VINYL lt.00,, WHITE WALL TIRES, ETC. #CH21-RC·111327 GIANT USED CAR CLEAN-UP '69 DODGE GTJ40 DAU 2 DOOR H.T. Automatic, Radio, Heater, Power St••r· ing, Vinyl Top. IZRGl741 •1495 '71 FORD PINTO 4 cylinder, radio, heater, white wall 1;re1 . I 208CBN I •1695 '70 ·DODGE POLARA 4 DR. H.T. VB, •utometic, r1dio, heeter. power 1teerin9 & brekes, 1ir cond., vinyl top. l6JSAKVI 52 095 '69 PLYMOUTH SPORT SA TlUITE 2 dr. VI, automatic, rad io, heater, power steering, wsw, •ir conditioning, vinyl roof. IYOM82 I ). 1 '68 PLYMOUTH 4 DOOR SEDAN VB, eutom etic, fec:tory eir condition ing, power ste•ring, radio, heater, white wall tires. IWFH812), 5895 '67 CHRYSLER 4 DOOR SIDAN V8, •utomatic, power steering & brakei, white side w•ll1, •ir conditioning. IVZV8181 •sos '68 DODGE GT 2 DOOR HARDTOP Automatic, radio, h1et1r, power steer- ing, vinyl top. l340CKKI •1 '095 '69 CHEVY CAPRICf 4 DOOR HARDTOP va, •utomatic, r•dio, heater, power steering, power brak111 fectory air. ITHVJ751 •1795 ALL PRICIS PLUS TAX AND LICEN ALL PRICES VALID UNTIL SOLD '71 PLYMOUTH DUSTIR Automat ic, r•dio, he•t•r, white wall faos. l921CPF I '1795 '71 DODGE CORONfT 4 DOOR SIDAN VI, automatic, radio, heater, po er Steering, vinyl top, fectoey air. I 29 ... CBH I •2395 ... _ -· .... .................. ............. • . I , • • BRAND NEW 1972 NEWPORTER VAN CONV·ER SION BRAND NEW SAYE 4 C•. ft. h1fllect. refrii., M•ik tMf'4 Hn1-er "9Y1, fl•emetttt litllit (#120167) BRAND NEW '72 RAN C·HERO 250 CID Auto. trans. Full fact. equipt. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY (2A47li42053) $ FULL PRICE COMPLETE CAMPER PACKAGE BRAND NEW 1972 FORD PICK UP • F2503/4 TON OPT. RA TIO REAR AXLE, 800x 16.5 8 PLY H.D. TIRES, HEATER, DEFROS- TER. WEST COAST MIRR.ORS (F258RN8~070) WITH A 1972 KING 'O' THE ROAD 8' DELUXE CABOVER CAMPER 6 SLEEPER, SIDE DINITTE PLUS ALL THE CAMPER GOODIES. (7500RV) $ BRANDN!EW SPECIAL FINANCING AVAILABLE COURIER • 4 Speed trans "'411Reorend •3910GVW • 60 Amp bottery • 35 Amp alt. $ PICK·UP FOR '72 e 1100• CC E119. e Vinyl ttt f e 6001d 4 b wtw ply liret e · R••r ltaf 1p ring1 e Ind. fr. 1u1p. e White well tiret e SGTAM07541 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY '66 DODGE Wgn '68GLOBAL CUSTOM 10 1/2' CABOVER CAMPER • DAIT V8, Auto Irons.. power steerilQ, (TGG·9S1) --------...,....,,,~~~ - '64FORDWgn Gas/elec. refrig.," oven, toilet, jocks, 6 sleeper. "Super luxury.'' No. S209 a.1,..a.•w~.·.~~·:,_....,,_,_..,. '68 ALASKAN 10' SPECIAL --~. '""'' """i.l•M" "'· ~w•92 TELESCOPING CAMPER '70 RANCH Wgn $23 88 This u~ique camper is ju~t the thing for.a.happy • vacation. Includes toilet, fully equipped. va , •ufo. trans., power 1f11rin9, fac-# 10932. . tory 1ir. IZEV7581 • ' F"®I, Mar 12, 1972 • Fully setf contained •Sleeps 4 •Toilet •Shower • Range & Oven "'Etc. -"~ ~~ IMMEDIATE DELIVERY DAILY PILOT 3$ l ION CHASSIS CAMPER SPECIAL • V-8 eng ine • Auto. trans "' Power brakes • Power steer ing • 12 Ply roted tires • E30GHN69774 FULL PRICE BRAND NEW IMMEDIATE DlllVIRY '72 KIN G 0 THE ROAD CABOYER CAMPER $ FULL PRICE 4 Sleeper, 75 lb. icebox, stove, sink, drapes, plenty of clo~et space. BRAND NEW '72 FOR D ICK CUSTOM MODEL 8' Bed Styleside Full Factory $ Equipment. H.D. Suspension ORDER YOURS TODAY FULL PRICE '62 FORD Pickup 1/2 TON E•cellrnt workhorse. ticrnst No • .189639. • 34 DAILY PILOT Everyone Has Something That Som eone Else Wants * Gen1r1I (r'"r, MIJ 12, J972 DAILY PILOT CLl\SSIFIE.D ~DS You Con Sell It, Find It, Trade It With 11 Want Ad ·The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast -42-5678 for Fast Results IRVINE 5-BEDROOM Gtn•r•I n e,vrort Shore& 52 FT. ON THE CANAL . Swim, sail, plar or just loaf on the water· front deck! Bright & sunny 4 BR ., family room, different! F.xciting! $55 .000 GOV'T. REPOSSESSION Gener el General WE ALWAYS WORK HARDER FOR YOU IN SELLING YOUR PROPERTY OR \Vould you belleve a 5 BEO- ROOl\f 3 BATll TOWN· II 0 USE'! U:-OIVERSITY J•AP.K NO LESS! Secluded atrium f'ntry. Formal living room and dining. l\lantled white brick tlttplace. Real f'nrden kitchen w /hreak· Fa.st bar. Separate maicter su1!e-and big too ! Plus clou.. hle allac:hl'd garage, pools, ll'nnis rour111 and hike !rails: )furry-call 66-0303 ON A CORNER MESA VERDE Sparkling 4. bedroom, 2 baths, deep shag carpeting and fantastic location. Fireplace, family room, all bltins and heavy shake roof. \Valk to school & shopping. Every- one qualifies -Best value on the market -$31,950. Call 54:)-8424 (Open eves.) FINDING EXACTLY WHAT YOU ,WANT TODA Y'S BEST BUY Extra larg e, Corona del J\1ar duplex. Sharp 2 bdrm.. 2 bath front unit (now leased). Rear unit has 2-sty. Hving rm. w/me12anin e familv rm . 3 Bdrms .. 21h: baths. Priced at $71 ,000 . Attractive term s. ~ UPPER BAY· 5 BEDROOMS An excellent value in this attr. Back Bay 5 BR., 3 b11. home. Paneled family rm . ,.,; wet bar: rormal tlinin~ rm.: many custom features that lend to the charm. $65.000. Small enough to know you. Larae enough to serve you. I Ol!l \I J 01 \0\ N£AtTQR, $32,500 Garden Home with most b eau tiful landscaping, lovely patk>, nt>atly manicw-ed, colort'ul trtts, flowers. 4 bedrooms, 2 pullman baths, family room boats Inviting fircpl~. Queen's pride bu1lt-in kitchen, diSh\vasher. Gorgeous shag Carpt!ting, 10 l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""I months new ~ show!! better General than a model! 846--0604. OWNER WA TS llitiilililiil ACTION! BEST BUY -EASTBLUFF OPE N SAT. & SUN. 1·5. 915 CHESTNUT. Beautif ully decor. 3 BR. charming home. Poolsized yard. All this, only $42,950. Harriett Davies CAMEO SHORES -OCEANFRONT OPEN SUN. 1·5. 4521• BRIGHTO N RD. SOph isticated elegance. 4 BR., 51'.i baths. Patio & pool. $340,000. Carol Tatum PRIVATE COMMUNITY Traditional 4 BR. home in desirable B~y~ shores. w/private beach. Shuttered wtn - dows & a cozy frpl. make this a real home. LaVera Burns OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 1-5 ACTION JIE \VANTS, Bui he had to drop his price'! Formally -On the market at $59,950 anti Reduced to $53,txXJ, and he'll carry a Se- cond al that price! BUT HE CAN 'T WAIT, HE SAYS "BRING ANY OFFER"! It yOO want a Newport ad- drel!I, a pool, 4 bedroom11, etc., and you have a desire for "DICKfo~r:ING'', then call us 64&-TI71. 'i-o· THE REAL '.'\. ESTATERS " .· . HARBOR HIGHLANDS Needs love & .vou . Onl.v $4.000 do,vn on this roomy 4 BR., 21;, bath borne. Big pl ay yard plus pa!jo. $36,500 UNIVERSITY REALTY , 3001 E. Coast Highway Coron• del Mar 673-6510 General General MACNAB IRVINE FINER HOMES * HARBOR ISLAND * Prime southside location. Artistic rolli ng , grassy terrace, tall palm trees, sandy beach. Large pier & slip. Charming 6 BR home. Marvelous harbor view. $290 ,000 UNIVERSITY PARK JEWELll Professionally upgraded 3 BR, den. High beam ceilings -central air cond. -pri- vate heated pool. Super Landscaping! $44,950. Tom Queen 644-6200. SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO VIEW ESTATES 3 gorgeous 1 lh acre parcels high above the San J uan Capistrano"' Valley. Perfect location for the horseman and family. Ocean, mountain & valley views. 5ecluded yet easy access to S.D. Freeway. $21 ,000 & $25,000 per acre. J oe l Smith 642-8235. \outh" (~ oast * MESA VERDE * 10°lo DOWN Sparkling clean 3 bedrooms, 2 h11ths, surrounded by beautiful hqmcs on cul-de- sac .stre£'1. Ne1vly p..1inted in.side & out, nc1v crpts & drps. 2 firepls, buil!ins, dbl gar, shake root, JargC! yard Yo'ith patio. 3277 Colorado. Open doily, CALL ANYTIME 646-3928 or 645-4375 Lachenmyer Realtor ADDED FAMILY ROOM You can use this large fami· ly den for you r pool roo1n, ping pong eourt. or just plain \1·atchini; T,V The loca tion is grl'at-close to lhe ocean and a fc\v n1ill's from !he trec1vay 4 bedroon1s, 1 for each child and large one for your king size bed. Price is $33,250 and the seller will consider all terms. IT'S GOOD TO BE HOME Do You Want Better Than the Best Service in BuyinlJ or Selling Your Property? PLEASE CALL-us TODAY LITTLE RED RIDING HOOD Could trip thru this quiet setting of beautiful big. trees and no t see the bi g bad wolf. 3 large bedrooms, 21/2 baths with the living room & fam ily room lookin g out onto a beautiful big pool. Seclud· ed \Vith fully gro\vn shrubbery & trees \vith connecting patio. 0"1ner anxious. 548,500. Please call today. THE 3 BEARS \Vou ld love this furnished or unfurnished condominium in Costa l\1esa. 2 bedrooms, 11/i baths. All the great buil tins. Just move in. $22,000. Open house Sat. 1 to 5. Please call today.• ALICE IN WONDERLAND Lives in this near ne\v Mission Viejo view home. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, full.v air conditioned. neat all electric kitchen, thick shag carpeting throughout. Badminton court. patio and much more. $35,950. Open house Sat. & Sun. 1 to 5. Please call today. SINBAD THE SAILOR Would rent this terrific duplex on Balboa Island. 4 Bedroom. 2 bath upper unit, all furnished 3 bedroom, 2 bath lo\ver unit. All carpeted & draped, fireplace in both units. $106.000. Open House Friday, Saturday & Sunday 1 to 5. Please Call Today. GEORGE WASHINGTON Would be proud of this Colonial 2 story house in Costa l\-1esa. 3 bedrooms & den, all electriC kitchen, carpets & drapes. $37,500. Please Call Today. THE OLD LADY WHO LIVED IN A SHOE If she hacl too many ki ds she would kno\V \Vhat to do. She would bu.v this 4 bedroom, 2 bath, dinin,g room, large fenced yard . J ust reduced $3,000 to only $32,950 and its almost brand new. Please call today. > CAPTAIN AHAB Could see the terrific value of this estate sale 100 yards to the beach in Balboa. 2 bedrooms & 1 bedroom, lovely patio in $100,· 000 home area for only $44,380. Outstanding financing avail· able. Open House Friday & Saturday l to 5. Please Call Today. HANSEL AND GRETEL ·• \Vould have th is gin ger bread home \\'ith a large brick fireplace an d 3 bedrooms. 1314 baths. Large dining room, covered patio, beautiful landscaping. Just reduced to $28,900 for a quick sale. Open House Saturday 1 to 5. Please Call Today. POPEYE THE SAILOR , • . . .. ;: . . • • . • ' • • . .. . , .. • •. . -• • • • .. . . . • . . ' ': 1140 \V. BAY AVE. A choice location nr . Newport Harbor Yacht Club. 4 BR ., 4 ba's., roomy patios & deck. P ier & slip. $199,000. M. C. Buie Cozy cnl ry to hug~ living room. Giant family room wi!h <"rackling corner fire- place, Formal dine, Comfy kil,:hen. 3 huge bedrooms \\•ilh shuttered windows! Scrvicr porch. 2 patios. Tool she1'1. Room ror boat-trailer. Hurry on 1his rare one! Call 645-0303 EXCLUSIVE BAYCREST BEAUTY Enjoy the pleasant comfort of a Lanai- Family Room overlooking a sparkling swimming pool. Spacious 3 BR -21h: bath home, amidst delightful landscaping. OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1·5 p.m. 1623 Trade- winds. Dave Cook. Could park his boat next to this great corner lot hou se. Special " boat gates, 4 bedrooms, 13/l baths, extra bonus room , great :; NEW DOVER SHORES HOME Costa Mesa area. $27,500. Please Call Today. :; ATTENTION BUILDERS Final opportunity to ow n a new Ivan \Veil s Galaxy Drive custom home. Choo5e from 5 spectacular new custom homes \Vith sweeping view of bay & mountains. From $110.200 to $154,500. Furnished model OPEN DAILY 10 am .• 5 pm. 21>18 Galaxy Drive. .. ANTHONY AND CLEOPATRA :: LIDO ISLE -XLNT LOCATION. Home worthy of remodeling, in addition to vacant lot. For fur ther info. call Edie Olson. $78,500 It the love story that goes with· this house. 3 bedrooms, 1 % baths, ! ' front & rear patio, fenced yard, fully carpeted & draped. ~31,950. •: Open Sanday l to 5. Please Call Today. •: __ ....::$=2=8=,=9=5=0=== 1 '"""w~o"h:"•'"v"'•"•,.v"'•~ll"'•'.'b~l•,..•'"n"'u"m~be"r-o'1"1~;n"'o""':h'"o"'m"o,.s,.f~o"r"g.,r"•"c~io"'u"s~l::'lv'l1"ng".""''t k~; EXTRAORDINARY HOME & VIEW Dream by your O\Vn sunken frpl.; 4 Lg. BR., 14X l5 din. nn. 3 Car gar. Lanai overlooki ng pool. Priv. beach, Cameo Shores. $92,500. Mary Lou l\1arion I OKI.\ I I. Ol \O\ !i'r11'0R~ DECORATOR'S DREAM In estate area. Elegant 4 BR -FR - 21h baths -2 fireplaces -wet bar -pool -jacuzzi. Beautiful fla gstone patio for graceful entertaining. $56.500 . Lois Egan 644-6200. 4 BEDROOM ThHo c•n be shown only by oppointmont •nd only to quollfiocl •: FAMIL y ROOM 1.._,;.b;,;",:..Y•;.;•.;.•·,.Po.,r,..ic,,•,.• ,..•._••.;9;,,•,.f.,ro._m,....$4-1,,.500....,1,..0..,$,.l,..7'"5,,..000._. ____ ._.._-<!~ 1 J $38,500! Fenced·in \\'ith wrought iron i rail ing, huge 500 square foot covered patio el ec tr ic garage opener, a.ir con- ditioned, 4 bedroom, family rm., fireplace, built·ins, din- ing room, beau t i ful landscaping. 540-1720. FINE LIDO HOME La rge 4 BR. w/family rm. & spacious liv. rm., on most sought 50' lot. South patio great for entertaining. $89 ,500. Mary Harvey OCEANFRONT -OPPROX '4 ACRE Beaut. terraced gardens surround lovely, lge. split-level home ; heated swim . pool & spac. gues t house. Steps dn . to priv. beach. $290,000. Kathryn Raulston 20'.XI sq, ti. beauty in model condition with 4 master r;lzed bl:'flroom.9, 2 baths, huge famlly room -decorator'!! dream come lrue with mir· ror'C'd \\'Bil dining room, cus- lon1 fcalures, wallpaper ac- cents, ankle deep ca~ling, cu.stom drapes. l..ogely patio. Prime financing! 540-1720. DOVER SHORES Gorgeous atrium model -4 BR. 3 bath. Great entertainment home. Beautiful VIEW. $93,500. Tom Queen 644-6200. FEE SIMPLE Vacant canal-front lot -Ne\vport Shores. R·l, 30x80 -$25,000 - suggest terms. TARBELL 2955 }{arbor, Costa Mesa ' •• ,, ' " •I • LOT -BAYCREST -TRADE VIEW! O\vner of thi s prime lot on Leeward wilt trade !or home, up to $100,000. $29,500. Eugene Vreeland TARBELL 2'155 llarbor, Costa f\fcsa C·l CORNER LOT In Newport -$35,000 -terms -discount !or cash. Gloden Fay 642-8235. ''No Time For Quibbling" General You must ~C'e this im---------- ... •:, ---------!:\·:· $24,500 maculate 2 .story, 4 * DUPLEX * • Spanish Adobe • Solid built 3 bedroom, double car garage, close to town k city pork. Priced right al $Zl.950. Ph: 642-lm. oi-·-------bedroom, 2 bath home Walk to beach. Nearly new located in f'ountain Valley. studio apts. 2 BR., l~~ ba. Beautiful landscaping with each, w/patio, Pri ced at sprinklers. Priced at only $42,500. PRIME OCEAN FRONT '·~i 4 Bdr + 2 Baths '·' Beautiful home, dream kltch· :1 en with built-in range & ;..! oven + dishwasher, dinning }• room, entry hall, patio, ~: _...... Irvine Ml!Cn•b·•rv,,,. R•ltyCompany ~21 Coldwell, Banker 644-2430 ~ 133-G700 IOI Dowr Drive 142·1235 • $32,950. Call 847~10 for Call: 673-3f,6J 675-8886 Eves. more detail. B A LB 0 A PENINSULA POINT -Priced lo sell, 4 bedroom, den, comer lot. Call for particular:s $112,fJOO bric, 54()..1770. 15" MacArthur 144-1200 Newport Beach, California 12113 associated PETE BARRETT -REALTY· 642-5200 TARBELL 550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.B. BROKERS-REAL TORS 2025 W Solboo 67J·l66) Uener•I General Generel General Generel General SUISIDIARY OF COLDWELL IANKER SERVING NEWPORT BEACH, IRVINE, CORONA DEL MAR, COSTA MESA. 31 OFFICES IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA. WHISTLE SHARP-$25,500 I IRVINE RRRACEI OVERIMPROVED-IARGAINI' AIR CONOmON UNIT STAYS! See this \\•bls tlt clean home LOCATION, LOCATION, LOCATION thb ls It! Prestigious WORDS CAN'T DESCRlBE THJ$ C:HARMERI Upgra4ed today! llu~e living room. Formal dine. Patio kitchen with Irvine Terrace. Uively Palos Verde stone fireplace hlghlighl!I throughout! Formal living room. Dining room w/~torn natural "'ood s:r11in ct1.btnt'ts. Qu('('n size l)edrooms. Beaut!-large living room with wormwood walls! Huge den with one built-in lighted hutch. Giant family r oom. B~akf'lst nook. ful pA rk like Yard \\'Ith bl~ covert'd patio. Crape arbor. Boat-I enllre \Vall ot stone! 3 Riant bedrooms. Cozy kitchen. Irregu-Ultra modern designed kitchen wtth desk built ln! Giant tnlller •torai.::r. 'fool shed. UnbcJievably priced at IM\', low 1 iar pet1o with trople#l \\'aterfall, Lo-m&lntenance y&rd -bedrooms -bunk beds buiJt-ln. Park like grounds. Almo,,t 123,500! J u.st listed -\1on't IMt -call today 645-0303. flood Jlghtt. Must st.-e.'Ca.11 no"' -645-0303. nothing takes it! Bargain priced at only $32,500! Call - FIRST HOME? $18,000 NEWPORT HEIGHTS! 645-0303. A LOT FOR l JT'fJ.fo:! r('rfe<:t start<'r homt' 'vith big Uv· Thia N~port charm('r his 11. new roof ·anO all new, copper HEIGHTS COnAGE-IY·SIA Ing room. Dining room. Cabin kitchen. Quil't streclt. Boot plun1blng tor lt&rters! SOLD lo rtd brick entry -J ust listed! NEWPORT HEIGi-ITS LO\VEST PRICE! }t11!.m· door thru back of ~nm.:('. \V1lk to !!hopping. Close to beach-ahnrp as a tack ! Big "OOm wilh narrow red moth living room. Cou: SOLD hen -a gouhntl.9 de· ff. Vt.ry 1mall dO"'n lo l~uaH fled buyer ! 001 now--645-0303. brick firtplat!e. l.arR:e bedrooms. Extra large covered patio. light. King size bed.rt> ~ back yard. lotds of IALIOA PENINSULA! ONLY $32.000! Call "645-0303.. shade trees. Giant red brick BBQ corners 400 aq. tt. patio. LOOK AT nllS! 1-short block 10 BAY or OCEAN! And $16 000 PRICE REDUCTION! \V•lk to Newport Bo.y, or ocean. Don't wait-mlllt aee ! OCEAN VIEW1 Enllre ll lllVE\VAY lN RED SPANISH TILE ' ' call 645-0303. . 'J\ldor ityle ll~tna i·0-0n1 ~'iti1 lava stone ti.replace. J<'ormai , \VO\V! DONT r.nss TIDS ONE! Executlve mansion l block COASTAL COTTAGE Dine. RUL SPANISlt TILE kllr.hcn count<'n It fioor! Ra· to <'XCluslve golt " country club. Trt-.Jevel on cul-de-sac lot. Bargain hunten ta'ke'a look ! All upgraded from brick plant· dar oven. Bit-In rtfrla: and i;;rui BBQ! 6 Bedrooms. 5 bath~. Step up to huRe formal living ~n1. Formal dine. GIMt tam · ers to super 21' x 18' fNfilly room. Wall to wall cuatom ttre- 1.e.u.ndry room. 2 ~tonte room!'!. G1ant rtcrtation room wtlh Uy room, all paneled. 4 queen-size bedrooms. 2 covered pa-place. Gourmet kltcheil' whh RED 1'IL£ n~rl formal dln- wct bar! h1us t at'e to btlie,•c• Offcr('(f at $135 000. Call for tloa PLUS balcony PLUS 3 e&r gerage! Bejt otf,r t&kta ttl tne. 3 large bedrooms. Htu::e ))ttlo. Jog to bt!aCh. A1n>ratsal IJ>pt. -645-0303. , ' Don't "-'alt! PRJ~lE MESA VERDE LOCATION -CALL Is In. Owner Is anxious.. Pr!C<'d \VAY UNDE!t $30,0001 Call UNIVllSITY l'AaKI NOW -645-0303. today 645-030:1. Ste tbb unlqu• 'll BEDROO•l 3 BATI! IRVINE TOWNE-HARIOR HIGHLANDS! NO DOWN-fORCED SALE! fl0t1SE todl.y! Secluded atrium ,ntry, Formal living Rnd Co:ey" entry to huge living room. Giant family room wll.h big Wow! Huge living room with crllc.kllng flreplacel Gourmet dining room. \Vhlte m.anU('d brick flreplact. Open aal"dtn brlck comer fireplace. Formal dining. Comfy kltc.~n. 3 kite.hen. Bullt·lna. GiMt family room. 4 Dedroonu. 3 Baths. kltclten with breaJtfut bllr. H'ugt ~pa.rate m&ster suite. queen alze bcdroomJ with all shut tered windows! t.aundry Private door entry AfJster sultt. Onl., 360 mo. pay. of $2~41 Double attachf!rd P~· Plus poOla, tenniJ and bike tr1Jl1! sc.rvtce perch. Tool aht<L 2 pe.Uoa.. Room tor J>oat-traller. NO DOWN PAYMENT! 7s;. ann ~ rttf. Ownt!r extrtmeb' Hird to btUeve price -$41 ,000. Call now 645-0303. · ll'uny -thb ls a rare ont:! Cell now 645-0303.. anxious! CALL TODAY! 645-030..1. 645·0303 • 2299 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA ' .. ' STARTER HOME-$11,950 See th.ls world beater ! Mesa cottage with deep, deep lot. Perteet starter home or for reUred couple) :r.tuat see to ap-precl11.te! Close to everything. Small down. 'Call fast -won't lut 645-0303. REDUCED $4100-MISA VERDI Excutive CWltom -Country Club. An enter talncra home - bar none! Separate formal Uving room and dining room. Intercom. Chefs kitchen. Den 11.nd secluded family room with sunke n tavern bar! Plus lllvn stone \vall - a real mM'a family room. 4-king size 1 bedrooms. Laundry room. Owner "'•ntt fast sale. can no\v ~~. MESA SPANISH 1t1ssslve double door Frnnclscan til t' entry. Curv~ Span.Ith fl rnplace In giant living room. Vaulted ceilings. Lavish ~ and pliuh carpets. Sunken family room with wet b&.r. ·a.r.. , den kltche.n wlth pantry on entire wnll. 4 queen slie bed· rooms. Raiud red\.\•ood patio deck to lmmaculatelf' land- 1 scaped )'l'lrd. 3-car p rage. Offered at only $43,500. can tor appt. -64?;0303. • I IAYCRIST-llLOW ArPRAISAL Excluslve llaycrest. JUST REDUCED $2000 UNDER AP- PRAISAL! Thlt execu SOLD 1 11.alned glua t:ntry. English tudor through lvlng le dlnlntJ rooms. Five crown kitchen. Family room. 4 Bedrooms. lmma~la.t.e I Inside plus . park like gtounds. Hurry to save. Oqly $31;0001 Call 645-0303. • 645-0303 . •• • -~: "' ~: ... -.. ,, : :">: ~: •, I ~ ~: ~i : . ' ' ' ,, '" " loca Wi 11 .. F I -... -I~ I _.... l~I ---·.1~ I • BAYSHORES VIEW & POOL Waterfront custom home, 4 bedroom & den or 5 bedrooms. 516 balhs. Top ouality car- peting, draperies, wallpaper & fixtures. View from most rooms. 87' lot, spacious yard with beautiful gardens. $240,000. BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR Islanders Building 341 B•yside Dr., Suite I, N.B. 675-6161 General FOUR BEDROOMS ·CLOSE TO BEACH • · Ten Units Looking "4" Units? Short di stance to beach and golf course. B tif I FAMILY ROOM, used brick fireplace, 2 located Eastside Cosra 1'1esa, With an actual incon1e of $1660. a month, n~x· groS$ at - eau u baths, builtin kitchen. close to shopping, Mesa del Mar schools, Jr College & freeway. Try your VA Pride of ownership condition or conventional. . .... , .... , ..... $31,500. $150,000. -E.'>;tra large Apts, Large .., comer lot -Annual income $7,020, \Viii exchange up to CORONA DEL MAR -TWO TRIPLEXES -FULL PRICE CALL FOR FURTHER INFO. Newport " Fairview 646-8811 (onytime) 8 units. $66,500 -$6, 700. Down. THE REAL ESTAT· ERS INVESTMENT DIV. 546-1000. BAYFRONT Channing 3 Br, 2 Ba, Condo. Pool, pier & slip -$79,500. TED HUBERT & ASSOC. 34U Via Lido 675-8500 1.., ttill -.dy d"9chlry wltli fH tllls .... MCI • yn to )lo_....ullft ... All the toe.ti-lh t..:1 below ... dftcrllMd ,. ,, .... , detoJI by ~rthliMJ •"-" wlior• 111 today's DAILY ,ILOT WANT ADS. ,..,."' ....... o,.. ltoldft for Hi. or to ront •ro w"lff to Jiit s1tell l•fMmotict111 I• tll1 col••• eocll ffldll'(, s .... •rday &: Sullday. HOUSES FOR . SALE 12 Bedrooms & Family Rm or Den) 417 Dahlia, Corona del Mar 644-2430; 833·0700 (Sa l 2·5) (3 Bedrooms) 1158 Dorset, <iosta Mesa 6454040 , (Fri. 104, Sun 1·5) 1514 E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa Peninsula 6454040 !Fri & Sat 1·5) **4401 W. Coast Hwy., N'pl Beach 675-6820 (Sat & Sun 10-Dusk) 1084 Salvador (Mesa del Mar) C.M. 644-6200 (Sat 1-5) (3 Bedrooms & Family Rm OI' Oen) ·i338 Colgate Drive., Costa Mesa (714) 728-6037 (Sat & Sun 12·6) .2030 Galaxy Dr., (Dover Shores) N.B. 646-1550 $110,200 (Daily 10·5) * 1623 Tradewinds, (Baycrest) N.B. 642-8235 (Sat & Sun 1·5) **324 Morning Star (Dover Shores) N.B. 642·8235 · (Sat & Sun 1·5) 1837 Pt. Kimberly (Har. View Homes) NB 644-2430 $52,900 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 1114 White Sails (Har. View Homes) NB 644-2430 $59,500 (Sun 1·5) 2000 Santiago (Dover Shores) NB 644-2430 $93.000 (Sun 1·5) 915 Chestnut (Eastbluff) NB 644-2430 $42,950 (Sat & Sun 1·5) (4 Bedrooms) 222 Via Palermo (Lido Isle) NB 673-7300 $79,500 (Sun 1·5) Built in range and oven, dishwasher and disposal, carpets and draoes. 2 Units have 2 bedrooms, 1 bath: 1 Unit has 2 bedrooms, !lo> bath w/fireplace. Each unit bas 2 car- ports, maintenance free yard and pool privi· leges. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Each $79,500. CLOSE TO BEACH • AND SHOPPING • Good starter -for the young family. NEW CARPET, 3 bedrooms, 1 % bath, close to freeway, school. & shopping. Small investment down can "BEAT THE RENT RACE." ONLY •.............................. $27,900. DELUXE DUPLEX -CORONA DEL MAR - SOUTH OF THE HIGHWAY -Spacious identical units -3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, builtin kitchen, FIREPLACE, 1800 sq. ft, Large mas- ter suite (16'x17'). All this and close to the beach too ................ , ..... $76,500. 4 BDRMS. • RUMPUS ROOM • SANDPOINTE • All wrapped up in this nice TWO STORY 4 bedroom, 3 bath, HUGE RUMPUS ROOM that will take a pool table, builtin kitchen, large "yard will accommodate your 30 foot boat, and a spacious feeling pr__ID"~i!§_tlm!_~ _ out. VA, NO Down ...... :-:-...... $39,900. * ~ MllAS!DCIAllS REALTORS 644-7270 2821 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. * * * * TAYLOR , CO. ' * IRVINE TERRACE Refreshingly bright! A rare find in this exclusive area. Sliding doors of this sharp 3 BR home open to an inviting patio and delightful pool. Some view. $57,500 ... "'Our 27th Year'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 General General General Pele Barrell f<ea/t';f · pre6enlJ FIRST TIME OFFERED BAYCREST -Tbe warmth of wood with contrasting Palos Verde rock provides an interesting entrance to this well planned, custom 4 bedroom home. Tbe original owner has kept the home in immaculate move-in condition ........................ $64,500. Please visit us at our open house. 0 2015 Commodore, N.B. S•t & Sun 1-5 CHARM AND TRADITION · WESTCLIFF -Today is the day to give MOTHER that home she always wanted with •plenty of room for all the family. 5 Bed· rooms, family room and dining room. on a quiet play-safe street. Two stories of com- fort. ................... , ....... $96,500. 1418 Lincoln Ln., N.B. Open Sot & Sun l·S RELAX-ENJOY WESTCL0IFF -Like to have time with that young, growing family of yours? See thi~ 4 bedroom 3 bath home with large self clean· ing pool and cement paddle tennis court. En· tire yard sprinklered & lighted, on Lincoln Lane for ....................... $81,500. See a realtor at open house next door. (1418). EUROPEAN ELEGANCE SPACIOUS BAYCREST-Custom 3 bedroom 3 bath with formal dining room, r oomy kit· chen and breakfast room. Charming court· yard with fountain. trees and flo\vers. E-Z maintenance yard. Builtin temperature con· trol ............................ $81,500. 2030 Holiday, N.B. Open Sot & Sun 1-S BUILD YOUR OWN -close to beach. Drive by 116 Via Mentone or call 642-5200. Office Open Saturdays & Sundays PETE BARRETI REALTY 1605 Wutclilf Dr,, N.B. 642-5200 General General Genet al General OCEAN VIEW G.nlral Gener at HARBOR ISLAND ROAD 5 Bedroom bavfront home with pier & slip for large yacht. A family size home of the finest construction. Bayside formal dining. Large bayside terrace. Delightful family roont, separate from the main house, with fireplace, & professional bar. Cozy, book· lined den Vlilh fireplace & '''et bar. Heavy shake roof. E.."<cellent location. Quiet street. $225,700. J. CORONA DtL ·MAR DUPLEX ~{odern design. Spacious home ,\·ith apt. Q.Ver the garage, on tree-lined street. Con· veni~nt to y0uth center & shoppin~. 3 Bed· roon1s & 2 baths. 1'~irep1ace. Nice private patio & vard. S59.500. BA YCREST FAMILY HOME On quiet street. Immaculate thruout, \Vith large rooms. including paneled family roon11 for1nal dining room. 3 bedrooms & .baths. Lovely enclosed yard. One of the area'.s best values al $64.500. MEDICAL OFFICE FOR RENT Mesa Verde area. 900 Sq. ft. Garden selling, a1nple parking, 3 examining room. lab area, private of Ci c e & reception area. 38c Per sqµare foot. H .ARBOR COMPANY REALTORS Selling Real Est1te In Newport H1rbor Since 1944 673-4400 Gentral '7eneral READ THIS LA CUESTA HOMES, close lo th, o<Hn in Huntington Be1ch -h11 on!__ cr~lt r• jection in their 9th Unit -1t original pricet Occupancy in June. UNIT 11-NOW OPEN Homes have 4 & S BR, 2 & 3 BA, shake roofs, wet bars, full builtins, c1rpetlng, etc. See the Modelo at Brookhurst & Atlanta from $36,+IO THE eRUITS OF THEIR LABOR$ Beautiful custom home In 1 ;;;Ge;;n;;;e;;r;;;•l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==Geno=='";;;I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==;;;, Newport Heights with J I' spacious bedrooms, 2 large baths, sparkling hardwood fioors a n d magnilie<."tlt kitchen. Exceptional landscaping with beautiful flowers and shrubs. $39, 7S(). OPEN HOUSE Thurs./Sat./Sun. 1-5 -4606 WAYNE RD., Cor-del Mar **1140 W. Bay Ave., (Balboa Penin) NB 644-2430 $199,000 (Sun 1-5) ***4521 Brighton Rd. (Cam Shrs) CdM Now that this home is com- plete w i t h professional decorating and land scaping and more improvements and features than most homes will ever see, the owner has been transferred iiiiiiijjjiijjiiijiiiijjjiijjiiijiiijiijiiiiiiiiijjiiijjiiiiiiiiiiijjiiil to San Diego. Immaculate throughout and ready to en- joy this home features ~ Walker & Lee Realtors ~3 Westclitt Drive 646-Tilt Open 'ti! 9 pm Best buy in Cameo Highlands. 4 BR., 2 baths, plus powder rm., big living rm. w/frplc., family rm. opens to kitchen. Home circles the heated pool. Many extras Incl. private beach -hurry -only $62,500. 644·2430 $340,000 (Sun 1·5) (4 Bedrooms & Family Rm & Den) *2025 Swan Dr., Costa Mesa 540-3986 $53,500 (Fri, Sat, Sun 10·6) 3608 Surfview Ln. (Harbor Vu Hms) CdM 644-0289 $66,800 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 104 Via Orvieto (Lido Isle) NB 673·7300 $89,500 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 2024 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) NB 646-1550 $124.800 (Daily 10·5) 1389 Galaxy Dr .. (Dover Shores) NB 642·8235 (Sat & Sun 1·5) ** 1645 Bayside, Corona del Mar 875-1935 Yachtsman's Cove (Da,ily) (5 Bedrooms & Family Rm DI' Oen) 971 Lansing Lane. Costa Mesa 546-5713 $35,000 (Fri, Sat & Sun) 1337 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) NB 642-8235 (Sat & Sun 1·5) {6 Bedroonis) *1848 Galaxy Or. (Dover Shores) NB 642·8235 · (Sat 1·5, Sun 11·6) {6 Bedrooms & Family Rm or Oen) 1924 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) NB 646-1550 $122,900 (Daily 10-5) CONDOMINIUMS FOR SALE (2 & 3 Bedroom•) **4401 W. Coast Hwy., Newport Beach 675·6820 (Sat & Sun lO·Dusk DUPLEXES FOR SALE (2 Bedtooms each Unit) 2195 American Ave., Costa Mesa 979-1050 $34,900 (Sat 12·5) (1-4 BR, & 1·3 BR! 200 Agate. Balboa 6454040 (Fri, Sal & Sun 1·5) TRIPLEXES FOR SALE (1-3 BR., & 2·2 BR! 2293 Fordham Dr .. Costa Mesa 542-6148 (Daily 104) WATER LOTS FOR SALE ** 1645 Bayside, Corona del Mar . 676-1935 Yachl$man's Sove (Daily) * , .. , **w~ r *** WNffr•t•'"' ' BAYFRONT CONDOMINIUMS PREVIEW SHOWING THIS WEEKEND 28 New homes on the bayfront Complete with boat slips. Xlnt Terms. YOU OWN THE LAND Pacific Coast · Hwy. at Balboa Blvd. NEWPORT BEACH TOWNHDUs'ES , LTD. 4401 W. COAST HWY. 675-6820 I bedrooms, 3 baths, family room with brick f.irt"place, formal d ining area, sunny garden kitchen and 3 car garage. Very close to beach, all schools and shopping, To appreciate this beautiful home, please ?.hone 546-2313 for appointment 10 S«". Price $47,950. ATTENTION LADIES HOPE GERRIE REALTY 645-4400 H.ave you a deslre for a home 1 '!'..,..~!!!!!!""'""'""'""""""~""""""""'""""""""""""" in Newport Beach with the I General General Complete Living Area built '""'::-::::':':':::''::"~:":".:0:.-­ to your •pecilicafon•? You DOUBLE YOUR may attain this desire by having your husband buy INCOME this view Jand for you. Wilh this truly fine Income $23,500. can 646-0555. Even-property. Has 4-2 bedroom ings 545-5887. homes on large lo! -OJ<'d COLWELL HARBOR VIEW HILLS YOU OWN THE LAND Beaut, home; beam cell'a., formal dining rm.; 3 BR., family rm. Self-cleaning oven; 3 car garage. $79,500. VIEW HOME General FMt results are just a phone PROPERTI ES. IN C REALTORS for 8 units. 2 story -each ho1ne hns !fl!; own yard & private patio -single gar. ages for each home -epls + drapes -stoveg, Immac- ulate condition -never a vacancy. Only $62,750 -or 2 can be purchased. Call 67J.8550. 3 BR., den & !amity nn., with 3 baths. The bt1t of evtl')'- lhing. $~.500. Fonner Model Has Beautiful Pool This former model home has a completely finished gArage which was a sales office. · 4 bedrooms, large fa mily/dining area, carpett'tl throughout, And to top these fine features there is a lovely pool with room to swim. Bring your VA buyers -ALL lerms, Tutal price $36,!jXI. Call 847-0010. 1-o THEREAL I~ ESTATERS ' ' I I', ' r $28,750 3 Bedrm + Den Beautiful Rf'OUnds with many trees, outdoor Ughting, + a cascading waterta.11. cover- ed polio, built·in range & oven, dishwasher, no down terms nvailable, b T k • >4().]7~ TARBELL 2955 Harbor, Costa Mw. STEPS TD BEACH 3 BR. 2-sty, Recently decor, neu new carp. Open beam ceil8; 1JBrge patio. S.13,900. CAYWOOD REALTY * 541-1290 * $28,000 • No Down call away· 6'2-5678 G.J. terms -low-low down General Ganer el -vets. Walle to all schools, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii shopping, park&: Swim club, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, den, elegant family room tends added charm lo isolated rear living room. Builtin dream kitchen. Patio. Quiet tree lined street, Access for boat or camper, New shag car- peting. 2 peach trees and lemon trees. 540-1720, TARBELL 2955 Harbor, Costa f\.1esa Formal Spanish Arches? You must see this one! ?n Collt"ge Parle. Fonna.l d in- ing and liv ing room. On the? other xide oC those beautiful arches a luf'l!e ('07'y famU y room. plus 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, laundry roon1. Many unique features in this D~am Home $33 ,700. 64&-7171. \RLTHE REAL ~ ESTATERS '' ,1o.• • •'" POOL-PRIVATE YARD • 3 br 2 be, tam rm w/mtnk· en bar, Westcliff area 139,900. Call 6'.l-IS2Q. DaUy Pilot \Vant Ads have bargains galore. MODEL HOME FOR SALE RACCj)UET CLUB IN IRVINE $43,950 The beautiful WIMBLETON. Four bedrooms, three bathrooms, formal dining room, separate family room with wet bar and fireplace. Air cond· ditioned. Upgraded carpets through· out. Lavis h use oC expensive wall- papers, Best quality draperies. Com· plete landscaped. Fenced. Just one block to park and tennis courts. Located on Culver Road, north of the Santa Ana Freeway. Open dally from 11 a.m. to 6 p.rn. (except Friday) T•lephone 132·5762 ·• !-Ol THE REAL \"'\( ESTATERS '._ H < ., l <, T I/ HARBOR VIEW HOMES YOU OWN THE LANDI 3 BR., family rm. I: 3~ bl.tbs; Portofino model w/ bonus nn. $65,900. HORSES DON V. FRANKLIN Newport Beach addrcas on 1 REAL TOR acre tot With comili, rldlno -,-•-6_7_3-_2222 __ • __ ring and' tack room. Plu. an NEW HOMES ARE Immaculate home with 6 SCARCE IN bedrooms, 4 baths, large lamUy room , and FORMAL NEWPORT HEIGHTS DINING ROOM. Everything however, we have 3 yr, new, for lhc large family. AJ>" beaut. 3 Bdnn, 2 bath, lov· pofnt.ment only, $64,950. ely crpts & drpe, 3 car gar, Walker & Lee , patio & """'· 16th Pl, I< Tustin, C.M. $37,500, Realtors IDt3 \Vcstcl\ft DrtVt? fi4&.nll Opr:n 'lit 9 PM EXCLUSIVELY SAN CLEMENTE REAL ESTATE MARY CAMPBELL $12.000 level lot 50'x.100', d oiie w 1he ocean. 1644 No. El Camino Ra.I, san O emente 492-3119 Have some thlng )''OU want to tell? CLIMiUled Ads do It ... u. e&ll NOW 6U-0678. 1-0'5i·, THE REAL \ ESTATERS . . ' . . "'· DAILY PILOT weneral 0-r•I *PALERMO* Harbor View Homes A film~-homo \\'hJch <'AA doubll' lh IUl'Jl'e group en. tertalnlniC. 4 Lge, Bdrnu1. All \Vilh the Italian Riviera innul•oct. Owner bas s-pnn>d nothing in cost to ron1plcte this fhM} horn~ &: mw 1f h:1.~ OUIJ::'"l\\'11 hln1. Citll lo \llt'I\', $02.!l<~. Waterfront Pier Cuslo1n duplrx, Ne wpor t Island •. , , This is a btaut. 11·t'll·kept propr11y • Loti:: llf pride 1n 011·tu•rship. O\\·n"r u·ilJ..can-y 1st T.D. 1011.n \l'ilh no lonn COllt~. Offf'l'td :1! SS2.000. ' CORBIN- MARTIN REAL l'DRS 644-7662 Lived In A Little- But Loved A Lot This single story slUC{'O. :: bedroom home hai:: just the space }'OU need at a p l'i1·e l"OU can afford. 2 sp:irk!ln~ baths, all e.lN-lric kitC'h<'n, carpets and draprs 1hrun11t. Double garnge. Only 2~~ yt>ar! old nnd prittd 111 $32,900. FJIA 1n1d (;J i,uyf'n; v.·f'lcom~. Call Walker & Lee Realloni ~ Harbor Blvd. nr Adflms S.15-M9l Opci1 F:ve:or. EASTSI DE--·t F1XER UPPER POOL Walk to We,tcliff shopping. Popular 3 bedroom home with hardW<lOO floors, 2 haths, ramily r o o in, hreaklast room. h e a v y : - shake rool and sparkling pool, Name your tern1s -' .Jlloess lorces_sa.!f!_-$36 •• >"n,.t~ Call 5"5-84.24 <01>en l.'Vc:s.) : ' $31,000 ·No Down :· G.I. terms -Low down all ~. others! 4 s paelou• ~ betlroonui, 2 batl\s, large ;. family room boa s ts ' hand!Ome fireplace, bulltin ' dream kitchen, dishwasher. Deeply padded wall to wall • carpeting, drapes 6: pretty : ahuttl!l'S. Patio. Pool 1iied : groundl! Brk. 962-5566. ' TARBELL ' CHINA COVE 3 BR VIEW &"e this charming 2 story , home vacant and ready for : immtdlate occupancy. Only • 3 houses away from your , private beach. Excellent • view of &y and Ocean. Bit-• ln kitchen -modern design • · fil-eplc. Only S 8 5 , O O O , 673-85511. -~ THE REAL ~E STATERS _,, J »< t, .., "fl I G r;/,' Bayfront Bargain A truly beautiful frunily home that nttd1 .,me retlecorat· lng, but is priced tccon:Hng-.'; ly. 5 big bedrooms, 3% .; baths, formal clinin~ room :: and famlly room pl us a 2 .; bedroom apartn1ent. A great > investment! Shown by ap-:: pointmenl, $15-0,000. ~ C. F. Colesworthy ; & Co. Realtors E&stbluff Office Bay11hore Office $9SO. DN. . '• REPOSSESSION Fantptic 3 bedroom, 2 bath . home -freshly Pftlnted, ' newly carpeted, all builti family room, double garage -and excellent residential location, A must to see • • $29,950. Call 56-3424. <Open eva :· " ' :· No Down 4 Bedrm • $28, 900 · G.I. term11 • Lovely large family home with eJ~ant til-eplace deluxe b u 11 t I n kitchen, dl<ihwa.'1her, !'!ch v.'Ood paneling, \Vlred for stereo. Patio. Prime Hun- tlnaton S.ach to e a f I on . 962-1373. TARBELL TRIPLEX Very nice 3 BR. :l BA o....·nt•r'1 unit + 2-2 BR 1 0;\, Good ; location. $51,500. Roy McCordle Rultor lBlO Newport 81 .. 'd., C.~t S41-n1' • 38 DAILY PILOT f rldlp, Mir 11. 1972 I ...... ,.s. 1~!r _,,,_ I~ r I~ I _,,, .. l~I -··-l&iJ I _,,, .. 'I~~=~~ I~ I ---I~! __ .. --. ! ChMral Corona ct.I Me.r BY OWNE.P- llARBOR VIEW JllU..~ l.usk "Santlptptr'' -4 BR. or c.os11 '-lcN GoU CoW'IK' Attrntion hilfRain hunt .. ~· ?11 BA·, 1o·am rm, 2 trpb, from th.I; nM ;1 l,oetfmurn 2 8"tt tnr the ~ney :'\ ~-oi.n. art>a , P'°!· landiCIJlt'd· t.A th hom,., bllin kllc;h lnt:li rtit>m home 141th 2 b81h~. 1 1·1'J)Lk_itll!l•l67,500. e 644.2009 bll1n fl"frh:··frttU>r. Allt>y family room, f1rrpl.11rr , '"\"t,,,..Sat/Sun *FIXER UPPER * VIEW l'fltral'll'f' fQr 00.r fir Trallf'rl !hake ahlni:Je roof, ik"lul,Jr llAP.BOR'""""'v°"r"1.w=~1~u~w~s­ w perldng Miah I< rk>ohlr garag:e anc~ '""'Ing around B) O\l.tK'r beaur. 4 BR, 2't .:at,. t'nlry. \!f'll'"t'iuu, OY' ct'ment dnv~. Xln1 rr~1· RA Lu"k hom f', 2 Jrpl~. your r l\.alblllty tln th11 rlrnl1AI lfll·.llll!nn .:.nrl r,nl)' Itani rm, dlnlng rm• home. ,.lutTy! S27,00'>, Subm11 1''11A or VA unrC11 tr1ctcd c&n)'on view, $28 500 terms -best hurry. h'f' tlmplt'. 169,500. 64+-(Ml, ' • Call ~8424 IOpcn l!Vlf.J SPACIOUS ramUy Horne Newport " 1 v.1rwir11. 4 Br., 21.s Ba .. fam ! rm .. Irr;. crnr. 101. ()pe.n Sat. J 12·5. 4(;JJ Wayne Rd. Cost• M•sa fairvi•w Sl,100 DOWN--I By Owner 644-881 l TO ALL. 2 RR, f.·STDf: Spal"l!>ta ~ Bedroom 1 .11tory ( .' ) CHAP.,\tER. DECORATED ht>m.. In t'xcellen l quit'I i nytime . IN HAR VEST GOLD, YE!. nt>ighhorhOOd with a large !!!!!!!!!~'!l!l!!l!l!!!!!!!l!l!!!!!!!!!!,J LOW I WH IT!!:. IJ)TS f)' I laundry mom and sewing PAD AD--TILE, W/W CPT. .._ rt.om. Pr1vat.c oftet'. and I I f·~NCED R·2 tm . ~EE I 10x.10 M:l"Ct'ned porch. l.ol.!I dr 11 location for bacht'lor <1r .. · J,.4 SAT, SUS, 125 ,\f()\'.Tf; nf ex tras: F1replat·e. Car· h1'1e away. ShArp ~Ji a fark ~ 1 •·d hom . h I VJ;,i A. C.l\I. On C1\LI: p<'I~ and drape!! thrunu!, Ex· '""' room e ,,.111 p ush BKR &46-8226 r11rpel!1 anrl d rar)t~. Washer · · 1:oens1ve paneling, F rt'!lhly • dQ·er. And relrigcrattir in.'. Ba lbo,, Peninsul• ria1n!cd ln!11de ci nd out, nr w J lded · h' Jo · fl1shwashcr: new dispo!lal, (' t ~ 111 t JS I.lo'. prlCf' of ELEGA!'.'T RA Yf'!RO;'\T nf'~· 50 gal waler heater. SIS,950. ldl'AJ Jricalion ckl!K! fte '" b' .. ~ 1971 p 1 10 pool Ir. rec room. At th is 'll"r llhai:u . . anor~am c con"rete tltivcw8y, etc., elf-. price, ~'hy rrnt! Call view. New pier. 8 B~ .. 1 Ba. Within one mile are fill Courtyard entry. $195,000. 11<·hool11. churches, and shop. Walker & Lee Mushau Roalty sis-ieoo P'"•· '"·ooo """· m Lan· 811yshor•1 l'ling Lane. 546·57L1. Be!wttn RealtoN ~·a1rv 1ew and Bristol. Take 279'.l llartJl'.lr Blvf!. at Adams 3 BR., 2 Ba .. din rm. MJst. Paularinn In !Jayes and J.:O frl5--0165 Of)f'n 1'..:ves. ci:iit/Multcr' & drp.;: f:!C'c I north one b!OC'k to Lansing LOW-ON WAMPUM? kit Low l.4c. holrl. 67.l--08-10. Lane. N EED TEEPEE? Capistrano Beach ---;;B7Y,-,O'"W°"N=E""R~- Great "1hltc r·aiher Ln Wadi· BY owner, new borne in Capo ina"ton Make Big Medicine. Ikh area. 3 BR, 2 Ba, llv Warriors Need No 0o~rn to f ,. bl rm. am nn, in rm, lnll. Ruy fhll'! '1 Bdnn. 2 Baths -trplc, shag cpl/drps. PatJ(I f'onn11J Dining Room -111ab11 & walk.'i, ~nc·d y1!, Jo"lrt'plarr -f1·1A and \V11r-S."W,000. Tennl'!. Call 496-162!). 1 r lor Term11. $32,000. Call 646-055.5, Evening• 545-5&117. Collesr-Park COLWELL PROPERTIES. INC. REALTORS POOL size Inf, 4 Ar., 3 Ba. ' c111m . Nr. schls. Bt1ow ·ap. praisal VA , FliA. &10-8376. Corone de l Ma r COLLEG EP ARK I CAN'T BELIEVE I HATE Botllcs In lhe pool, wh8t 11 THE WHOLE THING mr11s~ Tenant moved out & , , . . the nwnf'r fwh() Jivel! in .. 1. anrl I fkln L Love 11, I~· Palm Spring!!) Mys •· et rid ".cad. 2 BR., 2 ba., hit-in Spac1ouic 5 bedroom one story homr in excellent, quiel neighborhood, with a large la undry Ii M'Wing room, pr i- Vftll' office and 10x30 !!Creen· rd rioreh. r.ots or rKtras; firrpl<ice, r arpct &: drape!! lhruout. t:xprn!!ivr panf'I· linj(, fre!!hly painted insidf' & nu t, new flishwllliher, fl('W d i1posaJ, new 50 ga llon water heater, concrele driveway, rlc., etc. \Vl!hln one mile arc H!I school!!, churrhes and 11hopping. S.".S,000 f irm. 971 Lansing l..;irir, ~·5713. Br. rwcen t'airvlcw & Bris1ol. takf' P11ularlno lo llaye!I & J:fl nnrth one hloc:k to Lan· ~ing Lane. Founl•ln V•lloY * WELCOME * .. JUNE BLAIR· Hunll"""" INdl Hunll"""" ...... ~ ...... ~ CLOSE TO THE 4 BR, booul "''" home. BY Oomer: View home, 4 I EACH Prftdp artt. Near all Br., 3 Ba. Lower Mystic A C'ffl 3 bodn>on\ horn< ...... li!c, """'°" 4 ,,..ch, Hill 165,500. Call~ with a lo,Ytly teeluded fud, juat i:li.UX>. By owner, fitA located al 1M. end of a cul· w ~. Call aft 7 pm or Sat l 119una Nlguet de-s.tc, do&e l'D achooll. .&: Sun. M6-nll e f'lXER UPPER e ideaJ tor• young Wni.ly and 1..:lrv:.:ine=:..::..:.c.=----3 BR. 2 BA., trplc .• Jarsr only $24,500. J ;;;:;;;;;;i;::;;;::;;;;;;;::;;;::;;;;;;;;;;. ! yard. Anumable I <1 a n . PAYMENTS LESS THAN RENT Lowly 3 bedroom home with flttplace, alal~ entry , cwrtom carpt'll Ir drapt's, large family room, eltttrlc kitchen and builtlns. Jara:e patio, profe11 i onally Jand.tcaped tropical yard. ntA/V A 11i·elcome. PANJCSVJL L E Has already rooved andwife is ttally getting anxious. l..arge 4 bedroom •. 2 1lory bJme with formal dining al't'a and large family room. Oruy 12!1,il50. Call 540-8il5 SHERWeeo REALTY L89&I Brookhurst, F.V. EVER·YTHING NEW 4 BR + 2 BA $27,990. Features NEW paint in and out and out NEW shag carpet, cozy fireplace, bltin RIO. and it's located on a lovely tree-II~ street. rrs in mint condition! Submit your terms. Call 847-1221. PALATIAL PALACE TRI-LEVEL 5 BR + 3 BA $37,000. Big pool size 101, plus crpts & drps, xtra large king 1ize muter bedroom suite, all push b u t to n appliancts, FORMAL DINING area. I 1 &IZ-21!5, After 5 pm. SCARCE . . . . . .. As H1n#s r .. tn THE most IOUght atter fioor plan 1n Univenity Park! The dramatic "LaSalle." Com· pletely redecorated thruout, 2500 Sq. ft. of rood family livinf! 10 Steps from the major ireen~U~ OHeN.'d at $44,950 INCLUDlNG THE LA.~D! An incomparable va.lue! "I l11l1 -I 'i·lld, ---'I I l'11 ll11 r "SINCE llM6" lat \\'elltt'm Bank Bldg. Universify Park, Irvine D•ys 552-7000 Nights LOVELY MASTER BEDROOM with cathedral ceiling, fire- place and a view. This lwo- story townhou11e has been meticulously maintained, ha11 4 bdrms, 2 ba. and 1 beautiful landscaping with lightll. $36,500. (ired hill REALTY Univ. Park Center, Irvine Call Anytime. 833-0820 Lido Isle NEAT and clean 3 BR. 2 bl.. A: fam. ily room home. Larte strada patio. $51,CIGO ~l-Jr&. ...,,, .. 3U6 Via Lido 61M562 DOUBLE lot, 4 Br, 3 Ba . magnificent ma:tr 11 u i t e w/trplc, den Ii pv1 dedt. 1 bt'autitully lndscp'd patlos, bltn ki t, sep din rm, sunny breakfast rm w/&:arde n patio vie1.1.·. 14 lret's, 3 car gar. $129,:A:M>. 673--0l!M onr. J BR + tam . It din rms. 45' Ult. 1treel to atrttt $69,500 75 Ft. k>t, lge. home. Slreet to street •... ~· .•.••. $90,000 LIDO REALTY 3377 Via Lido, N.B. 67).7300 Newport Be•ch BY <1wner. 2800 llQ f1. ~ br, 21,.2 ba, lam rm. new cpl, lge kit w/bltns, 2 car garage + hobby shop, patKi & pro) + fenced play yd on 1/3 ac. Cul-de-sac. 3 bib trm Back Bay. 6% decreu- ing int. $64,950. Open sun, 11-5. 1863 Bayport Way, &12-5473. Submit your tenm. Call I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""' 847-12'll. NICE 2 Sty Turtlerock Qwming 5 BR beach home BAYFRONT, PIER 4 BR., 3 BA, tam. nr. schls. on sandy 1hore. Exciting 18805 Tabor. Ownr. 83.3-2929 hartior action -choice Laguna Beach locale. · ----------2301 Bayside Dr. $168,000 1n41 Beach Blvd., H.B. * GRACIOUS LIVING * By Appointment $30,500! In !his lge. 3 BR. home; for· Ted Hubert 675-8500 No Down Terms mal dlni.ng rm., b~L rm.; PANORAMIC VIEW glas~·m recreation nn. w/ Beaut. m .. ; .... ~:~ ........ m, 4 Spacious bedrooms, 2 BBQ Be 1 -·~~ m I · · aut. poo w/dress· 2 Bedroom11 &: largt' family g earning pullman bahtll, ing rooms &: % bath. Enjoy P 1 500 dream of a kitchen, deluxe I r · Pr. ed rm. 00 • $64. · Mobile Homos For Sa~ fas !o.f OB I L.£ ho me .a: tumlshing&. Eatatt' Sale. ~44. 1970 liomelle In t'~cd cond. r-.tAny extras includirc nearly ne~· WeaUna:hou• washer Ii dryer. Al.Jo f\lmll\lre It m a n y ae; ceuorie1. Spact> 1 I 2 , Brookfield :\1anor. Open Sat It Sun, 10-4. 9850 Garfield; ll.B. ,• 12x:60, 2 Br, 2 awnings, 1kirting, 1torage s h e d : Adults !>each pa.ri1. $499$. Avail. lmmed. 536-0229. ; 12x55 l\1ayflo"·er Double EJif. pandc>-2'BR, all extras, arl ult park. Foun!ain Va ~ 1 e y , 968-1368/64)..1186. 0 ! LATE '69 LANCER • 2 bedroom, 2 ba th. ~44. ": &t&--75-i9 • Acre11ge for l'ale 15' ' F'ALLBROOK 15 acres lir ~vocadoli, oranges & liml!'S~ /.lain house, 4,000 sq ft, a br( 4 ba. Guest houise, Jge pool. Prlce, $150,000. If you haYIC profUs in quality •toe~ listed <1n N.Y. or Americarf Exchange, seltt'r may ac- cept s!oc ks as I rad e,j olherwlse 25',~ <In. Sell~ will carry 1st T.D. Ca\l "·eekdays only, 64f>.-2S20 .; LASSEN COUNTY RANtj( 4().80.16().acf't' ranches t D Lassen County·fishing·hUr>- tl ng-mountains-lakell • pa(( of a 10.fKKl acre Catt!• Ranch -from U'.XI PEJ:t ACRE-XLNT TERl\1S, 1 • term financing. • Call Owner BAKERSFIELD 9.18 acre shopping center site, cor • Ming &: Stine, P r i c I:; $655,000. Terms, 25% dn~ Seller "·ill carry 1st T.D. oP balance at 7!~. Ca lf ~·eekdays only, 645-283) ·~ 80 ACRES, New Mexico, nt, national forest. $61.2'5 PE~ ACRE. $49 Mo. ~7. ----,,., ha f fflfrig!" Vac!I~ fi1 -k1lchen~~ Tow.n·JI OU!IC f1ccd of Tl.:.C. Could be a !ype apt. plus Pl~tn Jane Bcauly. Jo'ix ii & save. , . 2 BR. 2 ba., bJl.1ns, frpl. S28.500 u: Ii. Call now unit, 0t.·rup1cd by old fr iend, UTILE PLUM take s pride in announcing that "Mrs. Hunt- -ington Beach" f JUNE BLAIR ) has joined the Fountain Valley office, at Talbert and Magnolia, 962·7771. MRS . BLAIR has over 15-years experience in real estate, and has sol d over Sl million in residential property each yea r for the last 3 years since her ar- rival in Huntington Beach . She has special- ized i.n merchandising and selling HUN T- ING.TON CREST Homes. ranging in price from $35,000 lo $60,000. She not only finds homes for ou t-of-town buyers, but person.. ally ha ndl es all the paperwork to prove that a job worth doin g is WORTH DOING WELL. She is a frequent winn er .of special ~awards fo r li stin gs and sales from the Huntington Beach·Fountain Valley BOARD OR REAL- TOR.5. 'fhe real estate profession is better forllav1ng people with the ta lent and caliber of JUNE BLA IR, builtin applianci!s, dl'sh· ~~ iving. ic at Georg• Williamson -washer,-Elegan fireplace, ' * · EXCITTNG-* -; Re•ltor Commercial beautiful shag carpeting, MOOcrn homt' with white 541-6570 -~645-,564 ProperfV 15f freshly painted. Decorator water views, protected by an IMMAC. 2 BR., 2 BA Condo ---'--------j wallpaper accents. Sure 10 extra lot included in sale at charming Cap! Sek es. F irst Time Offered ..,• 11,;, BR. \VC'll built .'itarter M&-2313 Mr11. Whrit's-Her-Nan1f', Besl area & hest price ~·THE REAL \'"\... ESTATERS 168.500 University Rea lty please the most particular · h · 3 bdrm 2,, Crp d frpl 1 COast H\\'Y, Corona del ~I • pnce, av1ng a., ,. ts.. rps. c., poo . people! 842·2561. baths. Quick poneu. &: you $29,500. By owner. 714: 3 Commercial It. duplex homr nr. NC'wporl !-!eights RED CAR p ET nn R·2 Int w/spooc lo b"lld. Alley Ar·cesi"!. Sl!J,500. 1,1 1" • : ... 3001 £. Cst. Hwy, 6T.l-6,')10 2 R~Sl~nm:C?,TI.,~!~t l!![!!'l'!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!R!!!E!!!A!!!L!!!T!!!'O!!!R!!!S!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!lll TARBELL may try leUt" with option. .c.m.~.:.14.:.78:_.______ S9S,OOO owe TD@71ti'7• Compare this price, oUt'red NPT. Isl. • Waterlrnt duplex. VA REPOSSESSION HARBOR VIEW BROAOMOOR Heights. Ne"·Jy painted. Lge Costa M1sa Fountain Valley kit w/hrkfsl rm. $22,!m. --------- UTILE GEM SUPER DUPLEX! MEADOW HOME 5!:.~r t.,';';';-, ! , "!',';'~: :i Rn charming Eastsidc Drive by & sec these. nc~t Ir. pensive new shag carpet &: •l•a" •· t t d $32,800--4 ,BR, 3BA, new shag homr. entry, yarrl. Quiet .. ':. • ....:au · main aine even more expensive entry i1trrel $21500 unit!!! Xtra lrg lot w/side crpls & drps. Has tile. Xtra cabinets, over!!iz- at $45,900. Take 30' boat. Qv.rner w/tin. Englund Re•I Est11te Ph. Ann Coal!!, 642-8989. 318 THALIA 494-8003 Corbin-Marlin Realtors. FIXER UPPER HARBOR View Homo 5 Br. 4 Bctrms., 2~ bath!!, den plull Sommel'Set, xtras, fet' land. E. 17th St., Costa Mes•. Top loc:ati<>n. low OOwn • U .S7o Spe:xlable return Realonomics, Bkr. 675-6~ Dupl•x•s/Units sale 161 1n 0>9111 Me1111. 3 Bedroom 2 ha!h t\nd ramily room , Any- onf' can buy for only $9:.IO. rlo~·n. Full price $29,950. l furry, W()n'f. 11111! Jong. Call 540·1151 {Open eves.) Do you nerd a largrr hon1r . nrar rverythin,e:? A 4 lx'rl· room . 21Ar bath ~farOOr Vie1v llome wifh tile roof. Entrr through tall iron ~alr11 1nlo a Ju11h atrium. AU th L~ and a c'OmmunHy ponl and play arr a. Call 67~ 72~. . · · · yard big enough lo park an assumable loan or will ed fenced Jot & under pri~ CALL ~ 64•·141 .f ark! $34,900. Coffee served rerinance. Sharp house , W ~ ood ,.., at $27,500. $0. down to Veta. dJSCllfC.. all day Sa!. 2195 American g area. ..ear F.V. Hi Owner ha11 booght and R74\:TY Av., C.M. or Call 979·1050. School. Only $1640. dn. wantll to !!ell now. library; 2 car garage A 644-4917. 1853 Port Margate: vit'W, makes this 3,000 sq. ~N:_B.:.·--------! 2 DUPLEXES. Xlnt coll4. ft. family home a deliiht to HARBOR VIEW HOMES $30.500. ea. C.osta l\.'le • ' live ln. Priced !or quick 1ale 4 Br .. FR, DR. Palermo on Ownt'r. 548-9695. ~~HERITAGE . • REALTORS COLWELL PROPERTIES, INC. REALTORS $33,750!--* OCEAN VIEW* 4 Bdr + Family rm Sharp duplrx; So. of Hwy. 2 4 Spaciou.s bedrooms, 2 Spacious BR. each. One \v/2 pullrnan ha ths, huge family baths. f .A. heat, open beam roon1 e n h a n c r 11 hy 1•eil's., sep. laun(!ry rm. handsnme fin'platt, A 11 Copper plumbing. Very cJean f'leclrlc drearn k i I c h r n , & 1 hlk. lo the bcal·h. All riC'luxr huilrins, t1ishwa.~her. this ror $75,000. N'•r Ntwpor1 Po•I o rrlc• Ontu ll larwin realty -No rth Costa Mesa ft/' 96&-4405 Anytime 3 RP. .. 2 RA. l~r'° tlvl"' ~'''21 531·5100 ( r~:.J 53J·5!D0 BY Ow""· 4 BR, 2 Ba., IC'. rnom , lrplc. N<"1v shag cpts rumpus room, sha.g crpl., & vinyl no wax file. New 2 Year!! old. 4 BR, 21,.2 Ba, drps, bltns, dshwshr., auto 1lish1vasher. Cnvered pat io.I----------:l car, garden kil., fam & sprinklers, 21,2 car att. Room for boat or trailer. Open Hous• din rms, shag, Jg lndscpd garage. Close t<1 llCbools & Nr. S.D. F'rwy., close to 1-falecrest. 11:00 AM to 5:00 yard. boat ~ce $42,950. shopping. $31,950. 16 5 21 shopping $28,900. 51A;<1o Joan. PM. 4 Bedroom and healed By O....·ner 839-8466 Fnln Vlly Fountain Ln. Open Sat, &: !!6.1.2187. pool. Drapes & carpeted BY OWNER, 4 BR, l-% BA., _s_un_._1._s._8<l_·l_"'4_. --- OWNER HOLDS OPEN thrnout. . Including kit . &. tam. rm. shag cpt .. 1800 sq. BY OWNER. 2 sto-home. haths. Dishwasher & Built· "J * A BIG HO~SE * inl'I. F'.A. Heat. Large hrick ft . S.11,j()() ~2146 <1r (21JJ 21,J ·yrs. old, 5 BR or 3 &: A lot or new ~;ood ies. Looks paved covered patio. $1l,900 37!}..6721. retreat & study, 3 BA, din nrw. rvcn sn1ell!! nf'w! Come Low do1vn pmt. 1395 Shannon Gar den G r ove rm., gas trplc., liv rm. cath. at S47,000. comer. Lush extras. Owner. AG/an REAL ESTATE 1190 Glenneyre St. 494.9473 549-0316 FAMILY DREAM 2·Sty. stucco w/shake roof. 5 Bdrms.. 2%. balhs; living mr. w/frplc., formal dining rm., lge kitchen. w/brkft. area. Good neia:bborhood. Asking $44,500. • 499·2800 * 644--6249. MONTEGO Harbor View 4 BR, 2 BA. fam. rm., formal din., cov. patio, pr 0 r . Jandscpg., $57.500. 644--5819. Newport Heights 512 REDLANDS, 3 BR, 2 BA. frplc, forced air, shag cpl. fenced yd, a.llt'y acce~s to boat or trlr parking. Open house Sat &: Sun. 646-2440 Owner, asking $36,000. pa ss thru 10 gardr.n patio · MORGAN REAL TV lde&I for cntcrlaining . Ter-673-6642 · 675_6459 raec<I en!ranct'. ro m An,, _________ _ haths. \Valk to beach VIEW HOME 812-6691. 6.".0 Cameo Highlands Dr .. 3 TARBELL Br.. lam rm., breakfa.'it nook. p11nclC'rl rlr n w/wet bar, 2 ba. Nicely lndl;(•r)d. srr , you'll like it. Take your Lane. ----------I ceiling, patio kit to the time, you will have a lot to By Owner • $1000 down. No loan qual. eaataide, GE bltns. view to B= i1re. E·Z rr rm!I. I.A:: N.E. 548-2750 4 Br., 2 Ba., pool. g<>U course, nr beach, walk mrncr Killyhrook &: Belfast ---------Bkr. 5.l6-6007 to stores & schools. $34,000. - a_t l:l28_ll<_._11_.,_!. FOR liale or lease by owner. i:H.,--• ..::c.c:..:..=B:...::.:;. ___ 874&-~521_9. _______ 1 ~~= .~==-I unt1ngton each BY OWNER 3 BR, Spanish channer. Re- m o d e I e d , redecorated. Beaut. k>c. $36,000. 645-6193 days, 673-1658 eves. See any· time. NEAT & VACANT Pool. "'""1· 3 BR. 2 8 '· $ Instant Cash $ ---- TALLY UP , . . corner lo!. Lovely oc:ran thr J.(OOd !hingli! Nrwf!Ol1 Vi<'WS from S('Vf;'r:\I rnll'!. A s lge playroo m w/trplc & ~·et 4 B d $2S 500 · po!less, spacio us 3 BR. on .. 15 " I e rm. , for your equity. We pay costs. 'l'lif'I i1trnct. Hdwd. firs, .,ar. x ..... hcaterf pool w 24 ' t ·d b c 4 bedrooms. 2 separate bath hr. serv. 847·8507 BEACH HOUSE $29 500 3 BR. Vacant. R-2 room ff> Qu aint home ~a; close ln. build. $29,900. Agent. lighl & airy home w/lots of ll;::h!.~. ~pu· & ~pun :i BR.. gl ass-pv·r bchs. pl ush c11rp. lO':i Dov•n ! ou Sl e ath. pis. drp", US AFFILIATED bltns, J~e separate fcnct>d home -only 2 yrs. new. Bet· •• Beam cril's., fir. t<1 ceil. 675-0144 646-7414 f;1mily r m., 2·sly. homr. 2 Asking $6.'i.OOO • By Owner ~·rrl1·x .. riininJ.: rm., gourmrl OPEN SAT ,~ SUN .J.s ---·GEM-patio yard. Owner on the !er than new condition. Brokers Realty 1610 \V. Coast 1-lwy .. N.B. pn'miscs Sal & Sun. 12 am Short jog to beach! Family ~=~--~~--trplc., picture window, rel., S11n Juan C•plstr11no washer. 1 Br w/bath. k!lrhr n w/1•ating area.1----'-"-"...::.:.:.:...:..::._ REALTORS 642·4623 10 6 pm, 2338 Colga te Dr.. ~m, wife saver builtin 25 Vacant Homes behind Har bor Shopping kitchen, wall to w a 11 MISSION REALTY 494-0731 4 BR, 21% BA .. fam. rm., din. rm. trplc., bltns.. fncd yd., OCEANF"RONT $47,500. Lge sprinklers. 1 mi. Dana own.your-()Wn 2 BR, 2 BA Harbor, Reu 493-3743. S.t t 7:il. Owner leaving art:a. * NEAR OCEAN * Call : 673·366.1 673-8086 Eves. Older 2 BR. houst' on 40:<118 l\1F:SA OC'I Mar . 4 IRe. BR. 2 CE'nter. 17141 728.fi037. carpeting, drape!! & window 3 &. 4 Bei;'room!! in good area, BA. fan1 ily rm., 1800 sq. ft .. 1----------c<>verings. No OOwn G.I. ~me ~th pools. FHA It GI associated BROKERS-QEALTORS 2025 W lalboa 67J·l66l n.2 lo!. Good lrn1s, S.">5.000. Newport Beach Realty 2627 Ne\1,tport Blvd. 675-1&12 patio w/COVC'r. sprinklers COLLEG E Park . By Ownrr. terms . low . low down non-lmanc1ng. $400 to $100 total fmni & back. new crpt. 4 BR·2 BA-plus family. vets! Owner very anxloua! down and rent 'ti! escrow $36 .000 o~'ner. 546·9633 prin. Crpl!I, drapes, :m !niil trees. 962-8865. close.11. apt. Fabulous view, beaut. ~~~~~~~~~~ beach. Also lease avail. ; St'curity elevator, pool. Bkr l[tMP j HA RBOR VIE\V HILLS _ only. Open house 396 Princeton Roberts & Co. 962·S51l Lu!tk tCarme]J 4 Br. 2 Ba. Have something you want !0•1-°'-"_54>-__ 1_768_· ____ _ 499-3005, 213; ~ Mabh Hornet . SEE nulCK '"'~ rm, frplc, pool sz lot. St'JI ? CIR!!sllied &d11 do it 4 BDRM. REPO. T Pr1flC Only. $66,800. 644--0289 ~·ell -call NOW &12-5678. E. Side-frplc, huge lot, 3 car This lovely 2 ht-<lroom, din· Co t M Costll Mesa ga r. Make oficr, under 1ni:. single story 1'0t11lo. AH 1;;;;';;;;•;;;;;;;";;'•::;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;. SJOM. Wills Re a I t y , bulltlnli, lovely p11rk·likr ~f'l· 11 546-T139. 11ng. R<l uH ~1ion. o nly If you've one more move to make, ,, ________ _ s<n.9.'iO. BY Ownt>r. Back Bay art>a Co.II ri40·1 1 ~il IOrwn t.:vri;:.) make it hOW to Condo. 4 BR. 3 BA . fam. ~"--HERITAGE . • REALTORS "MESA VERDE" .MESA VERDE rm .. ocw <rpt .~ drp,. 642-6129. Fri aft 4pm. S BIG 4 BEDROOM Sil.I /Sun all day. , • . $30.000 for .ale by ow...,r. 3 HOMES READY FOR BR·2Ba home. Excel Cond. Quiel oelghborhood - College Park -location, ::>11 TARBELL DUPLEX 3 BR, 1plit-level, on dbl lot. One yr old. 1 bedrm, ahag Full oceanview, deck, frplc, carpets. drapes. v A/H!A &. larg@' lnscpd fncd bdcyrd. Mobile Homes For S11le 125 BIG FOUR ''"""· Only 131,000. ean 142,ooo. 970 Bala st. , BEDROOM 968-«<l. Lagu"" ll<h 494-.!468 24x45 Custom buill, 2 Br & M'"'" FP Xl 1 CREST REAL TY BY Ownero Modern 3 BR, 2 Igo livi'1g rm, dl"i"" area. ., .... l,......., • nt oc:., lrg. BA, view, single story, 1% ba.. 2 tool 1he'l'.ls, fonnal liv. rm., fam. nn.,i-.,-..0--a-,-.,..~~~.,-,-P-l.t-.,.-.-.-.-d! $46,000. 908 La Mirada. Sat. landscaped, adult park. sep. pvt. bath off master Call 642-5678 & Sun 494--5305 968-6732 bdnn. Plent y of storage 1.;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:=::=======·===========·==;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;-cupboards, queen kitchen I with au mod. blU" app1·,., S@~~~·-1'£f/'S• w/w crpts. drps, oversized ,. dbl. gar. Your down will haodlc paymt•., less than The Pun/e with the Bui/t./n Chuckle rcnl. • 4 lk<fl'OOIYl!t * 2 BAlhs * f~Arnily Roorn MOVE IN Now l Loyola Rd., CM. 540.3814 1, • M!:SA Verde Trl·lev.I. •lbr -1llage Real Esta te • Sprlnklrr.-front .t. near * Super Sh11rp & Clean * FHA-VA TC'rms * 111.950 '* CALL 546-2313 N0\\1! ! 111M! * CLtFFHAVEN * . Owner MUST Hll 1 S Bf\.. Lovely pool arPa + -.drU'I, )19.l'd & lrtt' hou~e. Bring I.he famlly! $3G.9:'i0. BALBOA BAY PROP, * '42-7491 * SOlO, SOLD, SOLD Our aalcsmen m ~t ! 7 Sold 1n 3 day•! Jt )'OU need lo 1e:U )'Ollt home. Cid UI l .nd l"ld<. Bmktt ll62MSI. • • Neitcl • bi9. femily lio"'• ln !lie p1e1li9\ou1 Coile Mes• nt i9hborhoocl 7 Fi .. , •f our bi99etl 1°1lory, '4 beclroo"', 1 bell! liome1 tr• now <omplele end reedy fo mo"• i11to •.. FACING A NEW COSTA MESA CITY PARK! Thr11• of the fiw• •t• ri9lit ecro11 Ille 1!teel from 11 new ptrk. 1e llurry, you <11n t1kt you r pick of 1ome of th• mo1t •ltqent lurury hom•• ewtil•blt enyw~tre fn Ortn'll• County ! luill by luccole Ho'"''· they fe •lu re O•t r 2500 1quere feel of 9rtciol(1 11 .. tn9 •• , • l car 9ere9e, bv11!./ft wet ber, fo rma l clinfn9 room, pool01ht loh encl m11ny, m1ny ether deluxe fe1lur••· Other liom•• In Me1e Verd• for ltltt d•li,.try eto priced frotn $'4 1,500 lo $59,500. Hurry for bait 1tl•ctioft l ••. ANO RIGHT NEXT DOOR TO THE COSTA MESA COUNTRY CL UB! MESAVER!)E Fron\ Ht,bot 11.,d. in Coile Me1e, ! 1011111 of .Sen Die90 fwy,) 9• "''''on Acl•m1 A.,e, •bowl • ~elf mile It out fvrfti1hed '"odel1. Phone: (71 4) 557-8352 3bo · 2frplo • Complete HJ.4471 ( ::::.J 54MIOl sprinkler system. custom !~~~~~~~~~ crpt & drapes. Swim pool. Maoy oxtras. s 5 3 ,5 0 0 ' Low, Low Down 540-39.16 BY °"'OCr. Mesa del Mar. 4 BR, 21~ SA., tam IT!l., lge. bonus rm .. \\'etbar. 1 frplcs., 2 patios. boot storage. See 10 a pprec . .S42.0C'Al. 546-3671. BY 0w1K'r • Lovely 3 BR, tpJ .. cor Jot, rm for boat, camper 2835 Portola Or. 546-1031. 2 BR., Ill BAnl Condominium. Sl9,500. 2400 E lden. $45"'384 V.A. REPO. 3 BR. 1 Ba. $21.500. $500 0". $188 MO. Aulhoriztd Broker 548..SSTO By Qwn(>r -3BR·2BA. Fam Rm, Frpk:, 129,500 ph: -alllO Lm. Mlnlmum <town roov~s you into this large family rm home. 3 Bdnns, 2 baths. Full price only S28,SOO. Call now, 11 ~-on't Ja~t! REAL ESTATE FAIR (714J S3'-2SS! REPOSSESSIONS Fnr information and )()cation of these f1{A Ii VA homes, contacl - KASAllAN 147.9604 RHI E•l•I• OWl'IE:f\,,126,900. 4 br, lll b~. 14x24 tam IT!l, cv'd Pltlo, N' .ehool• Ir: bch. Oa.ya 068--2800. alt I I: wknd1 96J..1017. ' I e P!\'liE~~~~~stETTEIS IN I' I' ,. I' ii r r 6 u~~R~ot!N~~~'. lfTIEIS I I I I I I I SCRAM·LETS A.NSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800 BRAND new delwce triple 2293 Fordham Dr., C.~ Bldr/Owner, 543-6148 eves; Income P roperty 6 Units Eastbluff NEWPORT BEACH 2 BR., 2 bath units. 2 yri.; old. Fully carp. A: dra Covered parking. .' Best Location &1s.&0se " -··· lllJCI.,& 2 4-Plexes, good cond. Ii k>c8t~n. 10% Down. ~ S Un1l!l on lge. lol, nr:I hospital &. shopping. • · 10 Houses on a lot, exchan • up or sell. FORTIN, Realtor 642-5000 ' Sell or Exchan9e: . 14 Units Good inco ~ · A-0 REALTY , 142-7731 54~816 A'ITRACTIVE Tri-plex aide Costa Mesa. Ide.al owner occupier. Prine. ly. Owner. 549-lMG. --------Ii * 0.t triplex by owner. br .. Jg yrds/garages +. 11). ro"Ai d n • $46,500/oUcr!: 557-8400. ~ CdM Triplex, nice view, Br., frplc .. bltlUI., walk beach, pool, <1 w n e r~ 644-6344. NEW DLX Dana Pol duplex $49.950. 33952 Silve Lantern. Webb, Bkr. 642-4 21 Unlt-Nr Shop'g. 1 2 &: 3 BR, 2 Ba. 8231 Elli' Ave, HB. S4ro M. 847·3957. t 4 UNITS for ea.le by owner.• Xlnt financial return. C after S: 30. 531--0350. lndu1trl•I Praporty 16' 32 UNITS Over l actts ol easy livi g.nJen apartm,nla ne Santa Ana Country Cl Schedule a.hows 15% ret on 15% down. May tPc change. Listed p r I c e $445,1111, call our lnvestm ' Oiviaion, 546-1600, Loh for Sale 1 * ATTENTION * ' BRDKEflS.BUILDERS Baycrest vtew lot. Fee 1 9Cht115 ft., comer Santiago H'olldf.)'. PlJN for • Bfq home lncludtd, Owner ~ sell! Full 6% commlu\o n t6 selllna brok,r. For price ft.rm•, Mr. ~- DAVIS REALTY 642· .. . ,. ) / / :· •,----- ' Buy a Border to Border Bargai Every clossifiod wont od in tho DAILY PILOT appears in every_ edition ev~ry day . That means your ad will be seen in pl!lpers delivered to homes and sold from newsracks from border to border oll olong the Oronge Coos! .•. oll tho way fro m Seal Beach to San Clemente You Get It All • • • Huntington Beach Valley Fountain Costa Mesa Beach Ne'''port Lag11na Beach Ir,rlne Saddlehack San Clemente Capistrano (Plus the daily newsrac:k edition l For One Price With A • ~•ldlY, M'l 12 1'72 DAJLY PILOT Z)[ 11 ~~:1" l~I _,__ l~I -··-l~I _,__ 1~l 1 ··~•~•1>t0<•:'.J ~' .. .,lm""1"'""'~· [ ..... :..~•«11•1 Lots fer s..1, 170 [~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; --------1:----------------J HoVMI furnished 300 Houw• Unfurn.. 305 Houns Unfur n. 305 Apts. Furn. 3'0 Apt. Unfurn. 36S Apt. Unf'um. 365 R .. l lol, .. irond ttn11J aN!a , 1 _________ ..;...;.;,I~-;.;.;.;....;....;....;...;. __ :.;;~ F'.l11:iM. CM. Sll.5M. 182 •Coron• ct.I M•r Huntington IHac:h Newport Beach Costa M••• Gtntr•I General CN'tl PL. l".1'-f. ~'· 1 BLOCK BEACH 2 BR • $l~!i + l Br. nr. J.t:Ast: Sp111· '.!IOO Sfl tt-t RR 1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J Mount1ln1 De1ert1 : A.ttrac::t\v,. 2 RR.% RA t-ousf', ON"1t1, Sl85. h:id1/prl•. L.A1~" 101-S·tr.1. R<,11·k hAy. ~aQUl~TA H~RMOSA Resort 174 ! tu/ty tumlAh.-d, Xlnt Inc. Rtnt·A·House 979-1430 A\~1!Jun1·1ti.6lt-~'61\I. 1 :-11A 111sh l•l\Hll~ 1'~111111 \.t\•· GArllaf' A love Iv patio' l 'kl'I -----. , ., -~ -" -1J1o; & f'l'\llt'l<"lllS ,\l)t<t. Tf't• CAROL' N COO ... ~ ' ~·· ' BR. D"pi••. ··-.,,, ) ,,.,, ;..: ~ \\ HP. 2 A:\ , '""'' 'I ' f\T. I A&llOC. ''rllrlv " ' '" ' • " '· '" -•' ·· 1'11•·~f pl''I()/• cu11k >:o\5 · · 11:11iragr. boa t 1.;a1P. Qulf'I. hlk 1 .. !1, S I"!~. !TIO. Yr. I~ HRQ. Unhl•l;r\';hll' ~.1111 Jn i: 'ffiOUT LAKt:: R~ .. 1111·rrs NU-VIEW RENTALS Sl~'i. 2•16 t :11K!H11•I :'•.JI B iH!-7~1:.>::. \,1, f•11· J).'N'f'll, 11n1,, 673·4030 or 4!14 .. '2•8 ---mor? or lr,..1. l1l<'ludio111 "-. -~RR .·onrlo -l'.pl-d r1• Newport Shores 1 BR -FURN . $1 75 !'rrP rif lrni·MI l111kr. F'Ml by ' OF.LU:\"F. ('Ot'I! blue \.\"Ill~. "'ithr/rlry, f1·i11:, R/<), (11 11 ,\\.!. l"Tll .rTlf·:~ P.\111 1r.-ro11riri R.11rhlv>rn Crtf'k. :.! Rr. hn1 Mnve M\.\'! pt!. S"l;'il. a1~1•Kt:'i/~~i-!'l:l~~ "!. Hl>l<\I , t'IP1'. bl111~. dt~h111-, f!f'ilutift11 p1rn1r 11.re.11. Rtnt·A-House 979-1430 38nR'I r ci --.. 1 • \.\/w ,·pr, rlhl l.:fl1•11 i::r. 11 l hll..s~.l1f ~anl)iri.:n~·r11 1 /tt.I hhq II --,, .. rrp "· rp!'. "Ill!<, _hl.-1o·t.: "' 11,~u_·h. !'IR'!-IS."'11 / '''' "'"'<"I>. I "I'· \\, "'' \lol.1 II' "·· & t11. h'f'"S. Costa Mt•• i::prinldrr!l, lrnN'd, S:!tiil. --.. n .. Thrrr ll! ~1"'1 1 11'1. t·ampln.it -1 !II 1 / ,. San C lemente tn 16Zl ! l'nri.:,,n,. l.lllr1P .I 1 RM a\·11.1 .. ~~opt ... 3-:.>:m2 HIDDEN VILLAGE APTS. Home·Like Living F1milies Welcome( 2 BEDROOM-2 BATH From $159 l'aroei~ • l lrapf'~ •• i\ir Cn11rt111onerl • En('lns· E>ct patin~ · llen!Pd I'ool • Fo rced Air l-feat • t ·arport & Storaj?e. 2500 South S11.lt1 , Stlnla A na 546-15'25 tent er 2 hlk~ \\'. nr Rr1stnl, nff \\'arncr on Linda \\'a~·. ~nut h to \\'. l 'entrt1 I) arPa, inclucie11 all tool~. co! ! a g, , w/klt-1~~.-------171 1 L~l7-.).l·H 1 Pqu1p., f'J'c . Al~o. a ff'll('f'd \. 1,.•lwrlf'l lf', ii11alP n111Jr l'.lnly. Irvine 'J. HH . ff'n•·i·•! 111 ~n. Icy< p;itin, VILLA MA RSEILLES 11r, v.·/A stahlt. A lovtlv SlOO/n10. 1".o pr111.. 646-8726 [;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:, rvi~ & !li·p~. all hlliii::. Cstll WEEKLY.MONTHLY SPACIOUS 1 & '2 BEDROOM furn, 2 BR homP l~ lik~ Newport Be•ch 3 BR., 2 Ba., lam. rni. S'l54"l. f'l'i''( ti.:\!! .\)t,;t;. Executivt Suites F urnished & Unfurn islied ""\.\", /\.n lciP11I i\jl)m "Pop 3 Bil., 2 M.rh.oi: ......... s:r,o. Duplexes Unfu ~JSO I 2080 Newport Blvd, Adult Living APT. husinP~.oi:. rhun·h f'fltr"ar , Sl.l0.-1 I Ar. v.~H.: llrh. sm'l J BR., 2 twi. .. 1111·1 ... S:J'.l:> J."1::1 Co•ta M••• I I I I • I C d I M -l,~ 1 n·~-: H'l' rn nr l'1111rd1natr11 ar>I' 1:\11 ('P" yroofh r11mp nr ;~~ $11.\.000. Rr., ~021~. r pl11. Ul l pd. :\BR., 21>1.., tarn, 1·n1 .. s:t:r, orona e ar J 642-2611 O.\\'.C, & \.\·ill 11r 1·rpt rr11111• R ent-A -House 979.9430 S Plush ~hflg l'Arpf'1 • 1111rrr1rt•ct \\ Arct rnhr dnnr!-· ... h 1 RR.A;o.lO :'\'!-;\\'-1\\~tl. 1n 1 TUOIOS & l BR'S 111dirf'rt ll ••hlin•· 111 k11 1·l11•11 -h1·r:ikf~·q hAr • l<"rmll! ...... m I ynur offu! • * \\'F:.,...'CLIF'•· -.~BR. + J I • I'"\ I' I • ' L' M n 1 ·'' · unr. lu!;!f" •11' •\1111ri··~ • "· · -·11 •rn< hu,!:!e Jl l'l\':Hr ft~nt·r<I !\:'1 110 • pt11 ~h la nrl ~r~r- . 1~1: •.P-""1• II I Dt:N home .ot\•ail, • JI 111111. :i Bn.. ~ h.\. r 1rrpl;h'I', I· ~ 11FF l'111!11rs Rox Tl:> 81.r &ar La~ suninirr. 5'18-fl642. hl!-ln(, JSPO ·'"I fl. + _1 • l'ull i.:::Jr,•hrn n1p: • brirk R:ir·he-()Ut'" • 1:-irge hr:llf'<I p onJo;; 7141 Ni6-l4M/~2,',44 - ------~.-S.: lA 11ai. .\ir rn11 dit1111111\!!. Hous s Unfurn 305 • dt>1·k• '' /1 ir11 .1f h11,\. • 11 .. iit1'<'t r n.11 RF:ACH Coll•••. 1 m·,,,1 e • 3101 So. B ristol St., Santa An• 557-8'.200 "' '"SINCF: 1946" l\i'!'<ltl, ,r., h ill•. \\'alk lo h.·h · • 1.l<.1111.try 1'11.-t11hr( ~!n,", 1 1 b,~~h'. 1.,~~'A.'.,.ri,2 Genef al •JAi \\',.,.1.,n1 Hionk Rh!.i.;., & slv•1111111-: l )t' 1~"· $1!:i. e T\' .ti 111a1.t ~"n 111 • .11 11 COLD WELL, BANKER & CO. L. .. • • ----------t TniYE'l'llir.Y Piu•k, li·vinP J{{'I". l'<'t!llll'f'd , f;~'.j.0!1fi0. e Pli"tl•' ~•'1"\'h·r l••••••!'!!M~A-N0A!iiGiiilNiriGmA•G•~iiiNiTm••••••l l IO ~s'. """" h'""<h. R) LANDLORDS! ' . -ii11,·nrr, R1trP firut, S27.000. Days 55'2-7000 N ights N ewport Beach $30 W EEK & UP Apt!.. Furn. 360 Apt. Unfurn. 36.I \\'.,n"1 1:..~I! \\'ritr c1.11,s1firci U'e !'r>e<'i.otll:r.e in NP \.\"pclrl. .. ~l i ldhl ,(· 1 Hr npts !-----------_... ~ R1>11.rh e Cnrnn.1td~I M.11.r • ·--:: ~I : .. 2 H:\, Frf'llC .. 1"fl . nrw•1u~s1~.(·!'1•. N rt B h Costa Mesa Arl N• ... ~. '" O!tily P iln t. • 1 "''''''· 011• R••l•I ."·•. :l BR. 2 h,11thJ1 •• S.'U5;3J5, :14~1 .~harv-! 2 hlks n.;·ra!I. Yrl,,, ewpo eac PO Ro 15"0 c .... ' " .~. ... • 'r \' ,(i \1:11.1 ~f'!"\!l"I' AvAil l--.C..--------I·----------- . . x •.. M. \'lr'f' 1,.. ~'REF: Ill \'ou! Try 3 RR. 2 halh.~ .......... S.12~) s:YIO .. ·\dlts no rrts. li7:1-ll~ .• l:····rt'A l11111 1:111 -!'no! HAYrfll)NT n~:NTAI. A FEELING BIG BEAR l-..\1( E- 1 Nu-Vir"·! 3 BR. 2 ha. fan1. nii. .. S.l6j e 1·1 lri ' 1, "Ill t·'1!~1>1.1atrr t' ,, " o" r 11 1"r11 · r1 srvt u111~ ·· · OF ELEGANCE By 0 11 nf'r NU-VIEW RENTALS ' d h ~I l'<'ns1un"r' \l'rli·t""" 1""""111 !-• 3 Kn 2 b1111i<. :1 RR hornp t"On1pl 1·rplci.16'?3-40?.0 or 494-:\248 . .. re .,, ApattmentslorRent ;·::h .\1'1lp!H'l l~l1 d. ;.1.~·17:,:1 i.;.11",.i.:•· l 'I'\\ IN'i•··h. \\;ti! hltn.'. frplr. r~ )nl . 4.,hlks 1.n I VACANT AND CLF.AN-3 'RR . ' ; . I I ~;;;;;;;;.;;,, Thi~ ,\d \\,,i!h 1';, !Ill 1:r111 1 .11111 L-r \!r f:••h111,..111 j, .\•\Iii"' 11h1•11 1•'11 d1 l\r int ... IAkP. 6 hlk!< tn Snrm• ~umm11 L-. h ·,,1,-2 "-, . -l)\\'I...; n~:Al:l'Y "'-1'.!-71'11~1 · lhl' 11'ftr1 ,l:A l'd•'ll~. pa~I thr ,,. 1 rr 1~ ,_ A ·~·nit w11 fi>rn·rci varrl. ,...,. 111 11 ~rl 111,.,1 · ·1 I · £<>, •• ,,,. -~sun1P FHA ., I 'I . · R~:AI.TY '" • . , , .,., -11-I ~rl~~hllll:'. fn11nt111r1 Anrl f'l ll! I ,.,14 1 =•.741 4 "•""""'" ,,r,.p.111·r. hu1t1n.~. n 1>11r Apts. Furn. 360 1!.,,.f' 1•• ,hop.~ .\1t1111, ""l·'l \1\ 1-" 1,.11tn.11rn """1 ~--~...:.~_...:_·_~:c.:·c~c··:::""· South CORlll PIR7.ll . S25ll prr Univ. P.otrk CrntPr. Tivine tll'I~. ~·rn111 s 1:11. , ·~ I I :.' 1:1..:t hn11<r.; lr11n1 lw':l«h 1lnC. J::t"N'll nnr! pull Ill• !'1 ' ' ·1 I ri·" 12 C 11 A 1· 0 ·1,0•·• G I I 10 I • , frnn1 nl ·''"" '111;11111 rl,. ...,, If, s,..r ll "' .450IJ nm. Agent. 546-4141. R ny 1n1r, ..... · ~u enera f'nninn.-1. 1 '\1 a\:" .11111" 111·u -N'pl , Mnrinrirl<• i·.1thi.. '''''" / \·! .. "'I ''""'· c II ,,1 • 1111l••d i::111dr 11 .11 rv11r1urnt -" · · ·•• SlJPl::R Sha...,, 4 Rrlrm • •II ±S -----• "' ~ 11 ' ·' -t..;ikP..!iciP t·Rh in sr ooo '" Laguni Be•ch * S2S PER WEEK * 1;~:1 ;..:11; "!'tu' 1~1r11 1•111r11rl.1 lr>ral•·<i ".· ' hh in kitrh., QUiPI cul-t!f'-SllC'. A J C,11 "°'4641 0• 1 & 1·11 -P·••I G.· 11111111 ~,..,.,. -• 1·11n1 rlr.\ l•ll' H•hil l~ rr.1!11rrt "<lU" 'wn .. : S170. Hf'nl&RI! RP~hnrs . 2BRW/FRPLC B ldN C lo.iti•hrn«~i;i ilal>lr 11,.\1d.!'it .. ..:.1nnll;ip1nr SpPnrrr RrRI F.!<htll>, P. 0 . ' k """'''' 0 ew onc:ept I ,. I l ' . I '• " ''n·1·1·.1.1·111r·1·1 -~11 ·· •'\.\"""'· ;o.in'"r Rn-.; 2823, Big &11r Lltkf', • ~ ' · · · ..... tovr. rrfrii;: .. !'!'PL~. rlrr~. ·-· .. C:alif. s1go Month. 2 Ri>ctrnom. Jtl!r11ge, llll'i!f" privalf' frnrrrl ((',,r·111•r lln1•l1t1r \"11 1nri11\ urlull f\-41-:~'l,\:.l 2 RR ho . 0--N•wly riPronlM i0<iri• oori P"'"· N"' t..>ch & FURNITURE RENTAL ml' In, rg. nn I ouf. No F'tt. 842-6691 or 00\1111n1.1•11, sn: •. Furn~Bt'!l chelor & I Br'~ especially nice. 2110 Nowport Blvd., CM. ·1 Hll !iflftt'I'-<! t1011~ro;; 111 llf'Ai·h. 1lr11rll'~. i::hac •·rr1~. S:t:..o ~ 1'11' Ira_""· h-11-:-1-t-I~. H 12 h \\ ~ Y • l • iirr"~ 96:t-·,,.,,,, NU VIEW RENT 11·/rrf'Pk. Ntxl to .t"n ~toi·r. · ;,;"'°, • AL S • S9:il0 r a .•h. No rrrn111. Zl24 1 Corona del Mar ~73-<IO:m ___ nr 194-.121\R * '-lonlh tn f.•lon1h 100"'~ rurrh11se Option \Vid e Sclccllon- --e \\'lN"l't:n HENTAl~" e F.lciPn Apl. 4. O.t. 2 BR. rpt/rlrp~. lrp1r., * ! AVAIL. JunP 1.~I. l ,vP11 r g11 raj;!P. w111k to hr111·h. 2 RI"!, rluplr\-f111·n-11r\.\·ly \\'I'~! Nrivpnrt !1r~Pl"\'e 1W11\: rlr,-or"ci 111s1rlr ,r, 1111t, 1111 AHl~l-:Y !{!<A l.TY !i42-1~:"1 Style-Color. I RF:TTREM'E~T e11h1n nel\r IP11.11e. 4 BR, 2\t, h.11.., frpl. in Rent-A-House 979-8430 I..ake Orov1llr . 3A. w ith I liv. 1·1n.; rlin. rn1 .. l.otundry ---------. I 11trf'11n1 i 14.JOO. Box 166 rm. rlr S600 Monlh. ONF. y1>11 r LPA~P nnl,v. :J RR, 0m~·1H~ I Hopf' Grrrif' Rlry n4;...44{)f) 'l RA liou.•P. r)l'rP1n vir.,.·, no R I E I I W I ·• 1•• l.R_V__ pf'lll. 4!+t-~71. ea 1 a • an ~ -1 INF: Ttirracr grHriou!'l!y ----- QUAl.I F'l"O "· ri • c-dN'.'flnuPd. 1'·11 mily homt . 4 Laguna Niguel ' r. '"1""r '°51""·• RR 21 b 2 tr I -0<-rHn\·irw hnm~ Cnron11. f1f'I ' " 1· Pc. p~tll> 4. RR. '.2 RA, vi,.w home •1fl 3.4 RR 2' .] 8 & I.~ yrrl. S600mo. Owner. " r. · " "' · .11., l\7!>--:'!002 By appoint11u~r11 prlfll. Prinrip.ot.I.• only. ~nit ',·~0·-=-~---p~rtirul11r11 t11 Cla.~11. Ad f"ll. HARBOR View/ClinnPI. 3.1----------- .. 1':31}-9:).1!..'"I ... :wi. r/ri 01!.ily Pil.,r. P.O. hr. 2 hR. fam rm. rlin rm . Mesa Verde Box 15611, Co11111 Mei<J.11, C11lif. Exln i shflrp. S4.'il'l mo. Jmo1arulatr 3 RR-2 R11- !l2fi26. 6'14-J75!l i>vPll . .-.r v.•krnrls. GarrlrnPr inrl Al"Ail CASH S CASH S I Cost• Mes• >121. '"""' '" '·. f{'lr )'ottr hnmr. H11\·• btr~rs 11 15--1 BR h11f', 1tovr /refrig, Newport Beach v.·~ir ing or "''e'll bu.v it up lo I fn<.·rf yrd, Pf't ok ........... . S4:1.000~ c~11 \VALJ...T.R & $141)-2 Rr hllf' in l'rl, g11r. THE BLUFFS l.F.t:: Rrl!tlton; Al 968-3371 or yard, 111111 pel ok ......... , ~-i rst le&se ofrt>rini:: 11r11r ~"16--1757. j $11)..\-util_ p<I. 1 Br ""~• xlnr nrv.• HI~ ~-fl. :: BR., 2'i PRl/plv ~liirr11: 10 huv 11.rri:1 .. rru11 11-.. ,.~. Plr. . ..... h,11., !Amity kil<"h .. fnrrnAJ rlupl .. ~-\\1. Newpnrl. 64~lil $175-l ri+PO:n "'./frpl, hltn11, rl in. rm.; 2 frplr~. l':nrl u111t. 962 2029 aar, yr. rt p11t10 .......... "\.\·r11~11munrl w 111!1rci p11ti11." nr, · -· · S20!>--Ni4·f" 2 Br 1."Qnl'lo v.• 'pool. {~r,.Pnhrlt IMnlit11t. Onl.v I hl1n11. g11r, pat in • •. •• . .. .. . . 11l<"ps 10 h11i;:1> pnnl, Av11.il. ~ S2'2.'i-:J Br h.~f'. gar, fn('d yrrl, now at $450 pPr mo. I [ FN1anc~i !~1 , P~~·-~:~~ .. 1RENTALS'· .-t~ ~;;;;;;;;~~; I"'·""" ., ..... ,,., c:: '') 11 Business • c.uzv cortA11: .. -l''ncrt (,Ci".Sf ~.~ ·-OJ...~r Opportunity 200 1 y rrl . .,h,, ri>tri11:. pr{ rik. SI JO. _...;..; __ _; ___ _.; ALA Rentals e 645.3900 -:./'~-rcn It}~ \\'ANTE D-Inv1"11lor ...,,ith I 'O.,:'-· 1•11.pil~I for ~ung roupll'.' tn • ~'Al\11LY Nf'l'.'drd -2 Br. 241 4 Vi,..111 1!1>1 l)ro huy Antiquf'tll . \Ve know ho\.\· I fn1'ff yrrl, encl 11:11.r, kid.oi:. Nrwpnrr Rr~,·h f., \.\·here 10 hi.Jv. Mikr !,, pi>I!<, S140. 644·1111 AN,'1'1M~: I fW1s,v. ';',. Srrv; .Hillitir. 431 I ~~A Rent•ls e 645-3900 ,WATERf'RONT \.\)rlor~ F:. l!h h Ai·f"., CJ•rl. 3 BEDROOM MESA VF.ROE Ri11l tri Ch11nni>I. CnmplPtrlv ILLNESS force.o;; ~Air n-f inie-1 H 0 M F: • C ~ m ~I r IP I .v fl11\1'1i>rnizM . 2 Br .. 2 Ra .. 2· r Pssful la\.\·nmowPr shop in rPmodrlf'l'I. in xlnt ron-.o.!01y. Llll'gP hv1ni:-f11rnily Cnsra J\1Psa, ALSO rock ditinn. $275, J)f'r nll)nlh. CAii r on m. 1'-l r I'! p I B r I'! • shop >rva il. C111t DANIA I Larry· Agtnt. 546-5&80. land.~c11pPd, p11vrrl y11.rci , : RF:ALTY CO. 64'.Hi560. l\1F.SA Ve.:rl;-:-1ge. l Br .. J ·~~ fltl!Klligh1.~. wa 1f't !.· pn11rr b' I'm --le 1· al ~f"!l \.\'811. ,.rl,\' Al S4.'i0 111n. GROWING I . 0 "_ J .. .,.,., .. ., .. pa 10, • • rvine-·:>'"'ppinit A1·.11 ilP1ble 6/1, $265. C11ll AM or PJ\1: , Ci>ntrr Bl'.'auty Salon ror 5t:....l"l30. fii~-'J.:!54/67:J·4:l.1~. IPA.~e or SAi ... 83:\-0270. 1-- , 2 BDRM.. "Pill., iirp~ .. e TINY Rur1J1[elo\.\' -1 Rr, Business Wanted 210 Jit:llrAfi:"· No pi>t~. 2 smell rnC'rl yrrl, rpL'drps, ptivl\lf', ----------rhildrf'n . S145, 2()7'7 Walla.~. Sl lO. I N ,t; U RA!>.' C E: HJrell<'y, &i&-.9211 r;isu~hy, w11nlerl. Will JIAY ·1· · ALA Renfal!. • "45-3900 lop S for Or,11nge Counly ~INGLF:S rir (emil~:' $1 35. • VA CATION yr tQunrl _ 1 A2"i>ncy. C.ot.!l 714/8.~!lO Vac11n! 2 Br. hm. Kid.•. B "· I SI ' R I A H 979 •• 30 r. stf'p~ tn 1.•rA l" 1 .ti) Money to Loan 240 en • • ouse ·--ALA Rent•ls • MS-3900 * 2 BR, 1 Ba To\.\·nhou,,.,. 1 1 t TD L Patio /gar. Pool. S205. ~'OR l..l-t1."4', Nti:11,port 4 RR .• AvA il. J une .l1:l. Sl85. i-,;vr s. s oa ns I Child/OK. 110 pPI~. 5S7-MOO. 2'-i FW .. nr. ~horlls k !lhl"!PJ:. 61%% INTEREST ·1 1 Bdrmh ... 3 ,~:th, n .. ~~ un-21:\: 799-611.1. lll'TII!< ..... L[JU mn, ,,...-nllll' 1------------2nd TD Loans '"· cM. "'·5017. HARBOR Vi•w hqm• _, R~ I U:i1o1·e-st rates 0Dn~" C.... "WE BUY TD'S" S•ttler Mtg. Co. 642-2171 541>-0611 \\'e. 811y 2hd Tn1.•I DPt!l'ti!l Th'! lr\.\·in Cn. 1 Re11lto1·s fi44-611 I lilO NP\\'Pflr! CPutrr Dr. ! Suil P 44.'l Ne\vporl lkflrh Koulet for ftlnt I~ 2 BR, rpl .. drplarlull11: t"Jnly no r!Pn-2 l:ta -h~~ rvl'rylh\ne:. 2 S400. lnclurlr11 pool dur.' I.· Pf'lll. :Jl Nn. D AYOClldo SL, :i.l~~l/;i.4R.--1405. garrlener. 644-4!Hfi. __ _ e llard lo Beal! 2 Br, rt.J'lcl VIF:W HOUSE KINGS RD . yrri, f'll<'l 211r, kiri~ ok. Sl3fl, Sumtnr r l'Pnll1I A~·.ot.ll Junr ALA Rentals e 645-3900 l!'t fi42-6AA!I. I ~~~~~--- • " · 2 B 2 3 RR., 2 B11 .. ti.11.s .. ,,,r!J'1·hin1t. ,,pAr10u11 r . Ba, <"rpt. ri '"ri I S:'IOO. l\icis/prt!' ok. rps, "' 11 J>f'l!'l 11k. S145. ALA Rentals • 645-3900 Rent~A-Housa 979-8430 HuntinJ;fon Beach *WE ht1ve a large 1election nf 3 and 4 bedroom home11 th11it ctr:n be-JJ'IO\'e-d in!t1 Almost irnmedl•tely nn our Rent·Optlon pl1.n . I Hous•s Furnished 300 I Sl-IERWOOO RE A LTY, -------s-.a5s5 I General I -'"' ---------l BR. 2 BA .. elr<'t hltin RIO. SUMMERTIME '" h• .. «•'" 1i1J'•100• '"'" Inf, flhl 2.1tr., lnrl.~r,pii . VJI· Bl.VO, Stf'p11 to * 24 llour Dcli\'rry 517 \\'. 191h, Ci\! 2i.-..G !'.'. '.•rlain. SA SIS-:\-181 54i-ll314 B a lboa Pen1nsula e S2:"1 \\'~ 8: UP-l)n 0 1·r11.n e U11· .. 1y Ra1·h. 1 Rr. -R1101n~ i\111 irl ""r. u·r-P•lt'll-litd Pd, e ('alt +i7~7,10 e -----Corona del Mar UleStiBJIU 20 Sf'li'ltklinSI; new 11111111 apls 1 Rrt furn. SIX:i. 2 RP.. flU'n. S:.!1;1, 2 Rll 1111furn. SJ!lO. P vt. pnlio~. lush /111·rs1 srl- linJ;, "Pll"f'IOC'1i:;, 1.!A~ prt. 114 E. 201h S!., (,j\f. 5'1R-01.17 Unbelie-;.ablYBeautiful \"Al. l)'JSERF: (;amrn Apts. Ad11lrs -no pr!.~. 1-·10\1t·r~ r1·r1')'\.\•hr rp, Srrr11rn & \l'Al<'rfall. 4$' f'l"llll f~I"(·. n 111, s.<iuna, .\i;il.~ 1.2 Hrl rn1, I •1rn· l"nfurn. fr'fltn $1.~. s~:f: IT: 2000 Par~ri.~, fi-12-Sfi70. El Puerto MeSCI"' l BR .. ·$130 UP ' Furni!.hed Apt!. All Utilities Paid Pon! {I., Rf'1"1"1•111 i1111 l!l:.:-1 i\lnpl<' A\·r .. C .. \L Alsn ~11r11grs t11r trnt e Tf)P°JCAI. r<JOL-- 2 RR i;tud10. I•~ RA. frpl1•, srir11I ~ta 1r1.1·:i·'" S210. 11:; F:. 1i:1h St .. .\pl 12. :~·1.11-l lfil:. AP'l'. :\1£;P... .\'fin. rl11 1i;;: J,i\·P-iti. $."1:1 1\fr 1"1'!11. 12 f11rn_ 2 Hr. untl.~. \lflllll'f' \.\Ornan pt'{'f'ci . +il :l-9:1'1.0 11ft :i. ATI·RAc. 1'0n1rl. furn. 2 R1· .. l'~ h11 . hlci . pool, nr. ~rhli:. !!:h'1f'I. ft. fl"\lo y~. /lO J"f'IS. fi4.'t--4'1'&. :oh11_i:-··•·pr.~. $1:1!, fl(\ rr1s. '. '' . ' ... :1 1~t!h0 ri·l's .~· ii knd • ,J.){1\ 11 , Ill, 1-.AN~f10NI ].ri: --. 1 P.r, \l11v/.l1111r s11:. 11\ ... l,Jl'(; 11f'IVI) rlr r'!lr. I hr Plpl in ,..;111111111'1 ,."1.:11 i1~:, 1::1.\ ·,;•,117 fJ1 1ir 1 i-:-~1rl,. ~ r•I\. $1.~l. C'!rtsrd i::;ir, Nr \'ii pl F l'll\, Santa Ana ~··l~-1.-.17.__ . _D_E_A_N-ZA-P-LA_Z_A_ I RR-~i.:lr l-lrl11l t 51 '.!0 p1•1· 111n 2:.::s \'r11, por1 Rl1·rl. f l'll! rn1· a p11t-h-12-(f.A(L ))\~"\; 2 Rr furr1 /11nl. Pnol. Arllt~. nn fl"I.". l'hl pr! 1RR \ \1.,111111·111 :.1s-o:{lf' f.., ~ nn -~·u1·n ,I/, l l11fun1 P·~•ls. ··~irpor!'< '-o/hl'I' r \ h'H~ \'1•. ~.1\. !..-:'-1111 Fr1'·1~. F1· .. ,11 Sl l'.l 11 r . A'lulr~ •111h , 1111 p•·I~ 1~f1'! Fru1r SI ., S.A. • :.r~l=.hW • Fl"llN-2-Rn. s 1 -, -, , 111,,,Apt. Unfurn. Arlull". 11il p<'lq. 8'10 ('r11trr St .. C.\I 012-:~111s. B .. lboa Island 365 1 BH l't•d<'<'., 111•11• erpl . $1<\:o. S/po'1o1I. l~l{'al fur h111·hrlnr!<. 1~:1 Chu1·,.h. ~-1S-9fi.l1 . 1 1 ~ Rn .. :l HA. ('!tAr1 f, '1111rt. I •·hil rl nk. 11n pr!!<. $17.i inn. Yr11rl.\. 1;7:,_)l7j1, Sl.\i. Bf'Hll!. I RR .~ n~ Co,:;n .. del M•r r \'•'!')'\l"hrrr. \1 lk 111! !lhl\p.• liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I Qu1r1 11ci11IJ~. 5-111-IOAA. H u'Mti;;gfon Beach--~; $1<1."1 • $16:"1 Qr. F>111·f1rlr1r J 1 RR, 11111 iru:, f1·rl•"s. pnl'. £ 11 r 11 ti: ,. 11 . ON TEN ACRES J)11·1rl,....I h~th ·'° lor~ of t A: 2 BR. Furia, I: Unturn, .-10~ .. 1.~. rlrr hA ll. J'"llll i F ireplaces / priv. patio.I. r:""'J ta hlP.~. !'Hun~ h~rh~. Poo111 TPnnls Contnl'I Bkfst. N"r for y0u r~rll . 17:J(ll 900 Sea La.ne, CdM 644-2611 , K,.....fsnn Ln. (1 blk \V. or (f.1acAr thur nr Co.ot.sl Hwyl Bc11ch, 1 hlk N. of Slalf'r). 812-711<\ll llPPER fl'ont 2 R r . 0\f'rlnnkinS! lAkr p111·1( & hr111i1 , r111•ln.~Prl pa!to !.· r••1I. At!11l1.\ 110 Jlf-'t ~. SHi!I. 1n~:. 12th !'t. :;:lfi..-2f.~i. 2 ROR,\1S., 3 b11th.~: h'plr. F1111111.~1i1· Ol'ran vir11.·! $4'1.."1 Mnnlh. No llf'l.ot \\1illi11111 \Vinton RPAltor 2'19 Mur1nP A1 ·r. RA lho;i lsl 1111ci f;7;;.;Ll11 2 R[)R~~1-R°A~111p11·. shAS: SllAfir .~~C'l<'~r~r.;,:;-n~ 1·1111" &. rl rp.~. hltr1s. $1 7."o. 2'i h11 lh 1.1~lk In h1>11rh. 1110. Nn 1·hil1lrrt1. 7AA1 ~:tl is Air, Afll A. Rili-7~147. ----·----* * SHlll 1110 •• \111y /..· .lunP. N11•r ~ BR tra ilrr. Aciul!s. 61.~5::0. ------ Laguna Beach r 11n1ily rrrrrrrrrl. :\1n11lh !() tno11lh. S.1~ pr 111011th CAil .Mr. B1ulrY:._!i_i:µi_ ;,_.\O~.--c­ (11ARMING 2 Br.. ''rpt~. tlrp.•. rani;:r &_ r rfr i g . l.n1·Alf'rl 011 l"'r11n.~1rlr nf !hi). hlrl ~11oit11 pool & car "'1Al.I . Rn rhrl11r Un it, in f)"irl. l.1"11.~1>. "42~400. • • $7~1 ALJ/)\\'ANrf': •.~ "crlur!rrl ll!'P~, rlo~,. r~ :i:.F:EfNr;-j~ tw-l it vini;::-.-,-.,-,.-, Lr::. 1 RR z11rcirn Slpl Sl :i.>. 101111/hrh .. ul1] ti>t lrl. SI L.., rlr:in :tRR 2RA home :,;; nf 2 Rr:. Sl ll."1. rno1. 710 \\'., 111n. l!ll-:ifi:t1. hii·y., f!rrfll. hf'11m i·t'il, J ~!h !'f, C.:11. i>-1.")-;'iJ:lO. R rr1 h Jr I n~. I 3, ,. I A . Ill C'1·rst<rn! RJ!y. .se. STtu1ln Apl~ .. 1 Rr. $1:l~•. Old<'r Rrlul1.~. ~11 prlo;; 2:1.l!J 1-;\rlrn, \1i;:r. Apl. I;, Sri! lhf' o!rl ~•uff. Buy !he t1r\.\" "t11H ('l'1li\r 'J'V, 11t1I prl. Sl :f.-..MO. fij:..-.l·llli/6"4-()997 I 'P. $•\t'I V."I\, 1~1-2.-il)ll, ·-------2 RP.. hltin!', pool \Valk to "\l11ke f<oom Yor DArl· hr11<'h. S:xw:l ;\'!('!. Or.<111r;::'! d y '' •• Cl(?:ll.11 0111 t hP Cna.~T RrAI ~:~t!l1e, M-4--IMR 1:;i r11t;c .. yo11r rr.<1~h L• CASI/ Cos ta Mes • \\'1111 Pl nAILY r1L<Yr1----------- Park-lilc-e Surrounding QlJ I ET • DELVX.E: .1, ~ & 3 RR APTS Pr\'. p.ot.tlo' * 1-ltrl Pmls Nr !l!ll"!r"g • Adul!~ Only Mortinique Apts. 1777 ,!\1111111 An11. A"""' C.1\1. r. Ant 11.i fi4S....'-'i'12 ----- rllew Villa Cordova guprr DrtuxP Arlult l.iv1n11 .. , "' 2 RR Apt.'. 1rr1a1n1ni;: .11rrA• .. Thr'Pi> IY'rlrl"V•TTI~. h.otlh" * rrr•nn1<I p1111n, hr~l l'd ,~1 • l.<1 unrtry.11i1rk."ho1\ ~·itr·' .,, A nt·11,· 11·.11.y I'!! 111 1n1::. FAIR WAY VILLA APARTMENTS ~~l l"tl S;1111;1 \11;1 .\11• . .'11fih"ll'i JUST COMPLETED Lu,111')' 111 1111.: 111 a rri"" ynu 1•nn 11ffnrrl, '!'hr lr1\ rrn1111n- 1n~ t h1h·111 111111' ,·nn1pll't" 11 Il l\ 1·11'1"111 '.11·1~11n1: l· •h•n1~1·irc t.· 1!1,.h11 nshrri;;. ~·1n;',~1 ;1p;1rtn1••1ir~ in 1hr i't111111y -.111~1 11111111lr~ frnn1 thr l1o •:u·l1 "r s111111 ln ,v(l'lr ""n 11,...:•h'll l""'"'L f'ln l,v \11() R n1nn1l1. nn lr.1~r rN1111rcd . BAHIA PUERTO 2810 17TH STREET fAI IJ••l111111rr) ll;1ul1n1:1n11 Rr,11ch 536-5098 DELUXE APARTMENTS All' C:ond • l>'rplc'!I • :t !'1o1•lm· 111in.1: Ponl.or • HcRllh S!'A • T,.nni,11 ('rl11 • C:;1m l! 4: B lllinrrt nnn111 . J H~:nrtnnM ~·1~nM $1fi5 MEDITERRANEAN VILLAGE 2'1fl0 Jlarhnr Rll·rl, C.M. t'fl<l l :~-·i >'1110 n1·:J1:TAJ. o~·;·rc•: OPf:N 10 A,,! TO 1; PM HARBOR TOWNHOUSE 2'l11 l111 rhor, 11rAr \\'ll'°n I Rl't R;i,.hr!()r AJ'll~ Fully ··111·r11•rr1I ~ rlrAtirrl, til,.t• k1 1,·111·n. $12.) nlo. nn 6 n1n"111 lra~r·. e llrA1 ••d """I Adults only, Nr. gh..,ri'.it no pets srAc. 2 k 3 A1· Rfl1. s1.fll up. Pool, C'pt/drp, hlln,, kirl!I ok. 2'8"16 C 'ollr~r Nn. ~ JV12-701S Sl'/\l'IOIJS !,,. Sunn.1 I RR . C.rpts, rlr-n~. 1'111'1,.., 110 P"I~. s1 :t:../mo, Jru1 : ~72 1..:iSQ!lf', Apt. 'l. (•\\. :1:1i-1.·,ii~ nr 81'1\CIOllS 'J hr ., 2 ha. Afl~ hn111r, h·fll . 2"Hf. hl'A111. lurt.'W"pc. A1lult•. $ 1 ll 5 . ~1fi-401!\. 1 Rn 11/nrn-2 Ft.11~ 2 nn. Arlul1!<, tlfl P"'" RAY f\1EAl10WS AJ"T~ 3A7 \V, R11 y SI., Cf\.1 fi4f; MT.I 2Rn-:-r1;n.-h·[i1-:r;r1r;r10. flrn111. rrp1~. rrrli>r. Aft ~. ;,."tR..R'.'hl nr Mii: 21:1 :,!J'J.-:1227. 1'1F:L11XF. 2 Rr.~ !'i h:1,-;lurhri r rri1,., rll'J'l•, l"""'I. h1111I in• :inrl p\! f)Jlllo!< Sl :-11, 1 r h tlrl 1"\k 1'16-41')1; ---LARGF. l hr .ltf'lllrtmrnt. ! DAILY PILOT ' m'iilflj COVt:, N tr ,. r,11nt • movf' in 11'11111~'. $22.\. J)f'r mo, Aa:ent. 96'2-44n or \In II\ Mri. S\70 <:111J1, rtrr:r• 2 • holrlrrn Of\, No rwt~. :'VY.I ~1nnr,. Vt ~111. :i4R---:t96?. ' Classified Ad Phone 642~5678 YOU CAN CHARGE IT, TOO fumillhM, ~I..,.~ 6. .luly 346-4110.1. s1 .noo. Alig, SI .Min, Mllkf' -=~~~~~--­ )'f!Ur ~rrvAfion' now, c11J1 A c..R F. AG f. · k "., fl f11rm Ma-11424. 0J)f'n t vri, SOUTH f 111n1mal1. ;\ Br .. 2 Bli., 2.11 r, I COA~ REAL TORS. kirl11/pPIJI'., Rent·A·House 9794430 Corona del Mar 1 srAC. • RR., 2 B.ot.., 2 ,,y. SHOREC C IFFS Bl1n1:, c11 rp, dr•J)CA, fncd. yrl. r.hllrlrt'l'I OK. S2'15. 3 hM!l'Oflm, 2 hAth, firrplarr, rlt'tuttlt fArlJ[r. South nf, hitth11•11y, l..l vln.1 rmm OP"flll !ntn f)P.Jiullrul 1\'l"IOdffl y11rrl. All f.-nr .. d, W81k lo hrR<'h. All 67'" ... 72'~. CO LWELL PROPERTIES. INC REALTORS :i4~7•.~. -4 RR , 2 BA. f~mlly rrn CArpPIA 11nfl Drllj')f'~. $'air.. * M7-9l!'>2 3 AR CONOO. I ~ AA. pool1:, p11.11n, 1'1bl tar. trpl, nr ~11n. 962--0!lflfi Aft ~ pm, I The ··'\'ellow -f'ta1to:11.. ot rlullfied , •• Ml--5878 CArll(OI,,. O{C, 1l .!( JA.ii. "~, .. \4.11-11-35( ~ 6l 7l I.•~ N \\'It p11111 :!.~n 1':1rl"n A'""·· r .i\1. l----Mfi-00.tl __ - ** $170 ** l Rr. l \.i Rit , n""'ly J"lll.\n t"rl Rllln•. rrf11 r!rr>t, rnrt l"A!ln Nr 'lf'hl' .Ct ~hnl"'J::. Ch1lrft•r11 nk, r1t1 fll"1JI. AAfl Crnl<'r ·''" ('\1 . f\11 R.140 nr ~-".!F.~1. 2 Rrt 1t"I-l!pT , 1'21'J') ~q . fL 11, hA, )11'1\' )1Alin. 1''11H t::~r. ftflll', n1u1t hf' ~"'"· t 2<1fl n10, ~21 F ll:tf1 -:1 C\l. C'11.ll Afl I p111. ~f~.1;,;~1. ~F\\' 2 Rn urc1111rc. f'IT''•· rlrpc, fnNI ~11"1 ;:;ir., rl'l llci rr,., ""Jltl~ :z.'11) F:h1-n A,\'f', ~1~7. * • RF'.ALllFt'I, I k 2 BR. ('n11 1c-mf'Or1t r1 r.atr!rn Arirll'. r :1111n11. frplr, P'"">I. S1S5- Sl 71'1. C.ot ll ;;.1i; ';lf>l nvt:n:STZEl'l 2 Rr . 2 fill. . 11 />A l'rJl l . hhn.•. p.otl11\, "nrl ;.:ar ~li:• 1\f! f> pn1. h7:\-.f.21'1. • l.Rr. l'1-h1:ic" 2 RR .• 2 ftA q11r. ~n1I flf'I nk. Nr. ~­ C'M•t r111 ·111 ).l~l'\21. ---1 2 f\R, rlfl11n 1"' prt,11-1rpnfJ..,.r nk '11·, 7i1 \\ \\11l'W!n ~I. lll'J7, --+ 2 Rr I B:t bit }'Nrd l«k :za r. ~ t p;\r" i 1;.t Chlldrr.n l'\k, l.\7~ I I I • I l . ' .. t ' •• .'la OAJL Y r/LOT -1.U !(SJ Apt. Unlum. J65 ;A:;:pt;;.;Ui:nf;:u:::m;-.----i.:::::...::::::.:::.,c--_.:W::::Apt!:::... _::U:,:nfu~m::.· __ _:w=. Costa MeM CHt• Meu Newport Beach N.-.por1 Beach Apts.1 Fum. APf>., ., Unlum. m Furn • ., Unfum. 371 * CORONA DEL :\lAR * Creat locatlon, 1700 11q. ft. reta.11 •tore. S::00 month. A\•a.!lable now. SOI> C 0 U:<SEUNC CF.1'"1'En' lndh•iclual. couplt>t a n d ::ro u p ro un st"lin:;:. Pro f(~ional <OO!bClors. Fees based on ;dul1ni,: !ICILlt'. Use of Ce~raH, h 111 • energeric, se n ~ i 1 i \' i 1 y 8\.\'an?nei;s and supporll\'<' ttthnjque~. Call 49+-975.i. FOUfld CfrMlds) >-i''D. ftfale Hll$ky Vk: \\'t st or Harbor -Eut or HrocChllNI rll'aI Wilson. \luM j1lp11llf. ~~7GfU ca1J 1tJ1yumr . I "TIIE VICTORIAN" 2 Br·l---------------------- 2 n.drnom ,..,,..,_,NEW. •I :u. ailh<. cp•ldrp<, WHY PARK NEWPORTERS Saxt; ~Io: Ram!! rtull} bltM , I.nod )Td w/paln Costa Meu Cost• Mew .. 2-5200/f,,., &124<'41, -I "'' pd. CA/I bl•'O 1-5. ST .A y HOME ON l..ARGF. 2 BR .. ·/rpt1 A 63G-41:n SUMMU RENTALS Cniver ity Re-11} JOO! E. Cit. ll"')', 613-WlO RETAIL 11hop a\'ail . .at The Factory, iin. mo. ~No. 9 for info or 67l-9C06. --fOL'.\0, ldt"gt'. }OUn& black """' ehUd ok. IM T1dlp Ln, f,/;l VICTOP.!A "B' 11'5 WEEKENDS. E · 7>1011~. _ _ _ HEA l..'T. 2 l.i;· br dpl~~. i·pt. WO ' 0 ., Jnb.rad,>r. haJI r-ollar, no tag~. S1uf1 :o;111rt Parking Int !;u ndny nu;hl. !las head ln- JUry. 67:rj7;:H. OJ.:t.t:xc~n. 7 BA. frplc,. dri1, hltru., 11111 K1, icnr ULDN T Y U • THE EXCITING PALM MESA APTS. FUN IN THE SUN! 1bh\1Al1r., ""'· SHiil rM \\'P11;tcllll ru ·ei.. S 1 7 ,', I t'~ all here for you to enjoy Saturdays and Sund ays and all \veek tong . too. STORE for least' -on l"e~-port 81\•d., COiita ~lesa. Crpt'& -$350. ~8-3493 Love On i\lother's Day 10 'ALICO Cll.1 "ith ::: kittf'l'L~. l'Jca collar. KilleM appro 2 "ks old Vlf'lnlty Slate le {;l'l\'f'l 'llOr, CM!11 ~I e I a . 612-:oi tOS. i':G-2&.~2 ~1$-:;r..Jt1. ~ l;IR. I '11 BA . r~\\·/y dt1·onur1l. $16:1 m<1 r.;~ Shallmnr. C\I. 61:...007~. .\ff:.l\A VPrtlf .. nr-;.w -lllll· 11rious 2 Br 2 Ba. 1lt.-/111'oht tr11Jc. AtluJla. j,.'j7-llW>. PAT!Oori.lr.:-;:2 Br, 2 Ba , Sl;IJ. Adult~ C;;JJ .>lfr.733!. ~~~-2 8 P. • 1 13 Ba-frplc-hra 11:tt Pf.f>I blllrut-$?25 tno. li1'HJ1111 a.Jt " t·n111 r1 1 s~" $750,000 health spa, 7 swimming pools, 7 lighted tennis courts. bi cycle trails, putting green. !ihufrleboard, croquet. Spacious junior l 's from 3164.50 monthly, plus 1 or2-bedroom plans and 2-storr to\.\'n houses \\.·ith 2 or 3 bedrooms. All y,•1th electric kitchen,;, private balcony or patio. carpeting. draperies. Sub- Minutes to Newport leach UnbeLievably large apts. Decorator ,furnish- ed Huge Pool, jacuzzi. electric built·ins, shag carpets, drapes. sauna & more! ADULTS-NO PETS SINGLES ........ $145 1 IDRMS ......... $155 4511 (frandma RO!W' Grand1na F!ln "nd '.\totht-r I ~tiss You! M-1 FOR LEASE Alwa)• 1200 aq ft -Exeellent lo-I ----'-'~'~"-"--"~"-"'-=­caiion to free"·a,y:;: in l'\orth SU~(j\lER C,UIP Boys & C:O.ta ~re1a. lNVESnlENT Girls 7-13. Outstanding pro- -CO~BJERCIAL DEPART-gram-Tllp notch staff. J\lENT. Call 540-1158. 1 Rea;;onable ralc~ -FREfo: ··-HERITAGE . • REALTORS Broehurr . C.\i\11' CA YU COS, Cayucol'i. Calif, 93430. cc-~,-,-,-~-~ FOUND ~n1all blark t:urly, long h.ur lrn1altt dog, Harhor Blvd .. Co5la )c1esa. ~11-7'.?91 ask for Rosemary. f 1'\0.-:-r-.1.lle -S~agte J1kr dog. Black \\•/brown ft•f'I. Vu· Jo'oott King park· Ill}: ln1. C . \I. <Harbor Shop. c ('1111·r1. ;,r-i:in. DON'T terranean parking, elevators. optional maid service. Gourme t food market. dry cleaner, beauty saJon on grounds. See beautifully fur- nished models today, !) a.m. to 6 p.m. Other times by appointment. .Just north of Fashion PINCH Island at Jamboree and San Joaquin Hills .. Te~~:~~ne (714) U4r1900 for rental information. 2 IDRMS •........ $175 Unfurnished Apts. AvailabJe F'°m $10 to $IS LESS. YOU 'RE 'RIGHT~ THEY'RE UNDERPRICED! 1S61 MESA DR .. Cost• Mes• COSTA MESA 14-W & 2880 Sq ft. CABINET ?.tAKERS- Jo'ffiERGLASS [ I~ FND. Surlflay 7,th Calico Kitty Appro.'{ 6 mos. l yr. old. Vic. Highland. Dr., N.B. li·l.">--28j() day~ Gl2-919.t rvel!. 1\l()STL V B.os~·r Ft' male 11ml. hrn 11 /11•h1 foot.~. H.B. lags N•1. X1;1.; -645-19.itt or 6-1:....tiOSll. YOURSELF (You're Not Dreaming) But You Can PARK NEY/PORT APARTMENTS on the bay Costa Mes.a I Laguna Beach liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I VICTORIA BEACH: Utrge t 5 blks. E. of Newport Blvd. HARBOR GREENS .... Furnished & Unfurnished 546-9860 Rr., cptl'i/r!rps, panoram ic ~an vi!'!w tro111 all \\'ln- do"·s, hll ins, refr., lge Huntlnaton Beach ~ndeck, "'alk to beach. $275 ---------- inc. util. 1:12 Sunse! TerTace. NEW SANDPIPER Can bl' ~n week<"llds or Early hird specials-1 BR c11 ll eve!!, 9112-782!. from $12j, 2 BR from $155 * NEW 2 BR·blk to beach, J''urntunfurn, ecol color in- spe('tarular viC'\v, S225 up. !rrior.!5, pool, Jacuzzi, more. 494-3383, 49'1-2l~. 8081 Jlolland Dri\'e, llun- ....... Surrimer Rentala 420 Nr. Nwpt F""'Y & S.D. Frwy 2931 Grace Ln. I 1So. of Baker, E. of Fairvie11· 13 J\ti) Representative there :. am·12 noon, <7141 979-4434 or 8'i9·4TI 1 576 to 9600 Sq. Ft. 1 .4001 Birch, N.B. 541·5032 NE\V DELUXE ~t·l units. 3 ph, pcl\\'er. 1733 ~fonrovia. au-3145: 836-9798 eve;, Personals 530 * F'ULL \' LICENSLf) * Reno11•nt'<I l-lindu Spiritualis!. Spiritual Rcadin).:1' ~i\·•·u dnily. 10 A'.\1·10 P.\I. Ar!vlcc given on all ma\lel's. 1 c1:tu help you. 312 N. El Camino Real San Clemente 119'2-9136 or 492-903'1 DISCOVER DISCOVERY Find YOURSELF' in Sornconc Call 00\V • l'o obl igntion LOOKING Jo"'OR cn4) 835-£.~ (213) ~-339'J FND. Siami'"' . ff'n1alf'. Violet point. Vit•: Busllard k Bannin;?, H.B. al lea!l t 2 \\'k~. !>62-:J9j.I. ---------VIC. '.\Tcsa drl !\tar C.:\I. German Shrpherrl mix. Call to identify. 557-3670. ~n r ; gt' . Peek-a·poo 111alf'. Vir Nf'\\'land & llannllon, H.B. ;).16....(C6.t, PINCH YOUR From $120 to $215 mo Bachelors e 1 Bdrms 2 Bd r ms • 3 Bdrms 1 V2 or 2 Full Baths ,\f:tlll.!'r !iili:c brdrooms w/ hh.:h beam ceiHni.:11. lar~e livini:: room w/1o:a11 or "'nod hurnlni.: fireplace. Cunvenicnt Jaun(J1·y ar1·n off kiich1·n. f.nrlni;cd ra· tins. "2 llWimmtni; pocils, saunn. rf'crratlon facili· tl1·.~. Securll y guard. lin~ron Reach. 841-959.i Mesa Verde BAY VIE\V 2 bedroom, sleeps 4 completely furnish· ----------IHUr\TJNGTON Ga r d en i> ed. Avail June to Sept. $750 L1J::LUXE 2 &: 3 Br. 2 Ba, Aptll. tleil at &Illa Chica. pr month. Adults only enrJ gar. $1.')5 up. Rental S.16-1 323. Compare • See agent. 675--49"..0. Responsi ble executive fami· NATIONALLY ly, kids lS.14-9 v.<ith pets. RECOG~IZED need nice 4 BR v.ith pool & ho~ facilitiel! tor t yr. \VIOO\VER 46, active, roman· lease. Araund S500 mo. Call tic, sinct're & marriage London 11 (213) 9SG-l100. minded. Seeking lo\'ab!e 11:al. Fl\'D Jrg. fn1l dog nr :\IHgnolia i, Ellis, lt.B. 962-7886. t'ND. Small \\'hite female cat. Vic Ed1\·ards &: Bolsa, 11.B. Call aft 6. 897-:11S6. PENNIES with a PILOT PENNY PINCHER Classified Ad 3 LINES 2 TIMES $2.00 Any Item Priced $50. or less (If more I.hon -llom, the combinld tot1l --$50.1 642-5678 Ofc. JOO~ J\face Ave· • v•hat you'rie mi11sing. f'r. NE\\'PORT Beach. 2 BR. :>JfrlO?A. •1 ""!2''. tu I .,~ k N "' ~ ...., m. AP . ,,....,..,, w . ew \Vrlte P.O. Box 2093, Cap· Newport Beach Laguna Beach 1 <:pl!!. & paint. \Valk lo ----------1 :::.:~;:...:.;;:,;,~---beach. Call fZ13l 596--i922 fo'OR LEASE -2 Br, 2 Ba, for resen·. &\."EC. to lell8e l-4 BR home is!rano Beach 92624. P·A R AKEET. J·lunlington beach citie.s, $300. range, Beach. Ident ify by color or References avail.commence PROBLE~l Pregnancy. Con· band nunibf-'r. 8~7-703~. Models Open 'til 9 pm. 2700 Peterson Way, CM apt. w/i;pectacular view 7'7fA~Yo-·-oJ-""-,-c&-cJ~u~ly-.~,~B~R Priv. deck-pool-~evalor 10 house, 1 BA. Corona de! priv. b eac h -i n te rph , J\1a.r. Furn. or unfurn. securi1y, encl. gar., mature 673-7769. June or July. \V r ite fident, sympathetic prt>gan· Lost 555 Classified ad No. 402, Daily t'Y couS!'ling. Abortion & I-----------I Pilot. P.O. Bo:< 1560, Costa Adoption ref. APCARE. WILL the perso n "'ho stole l\Tesa, Calif. 92626. &12-4436. n1y ll'allr! la~1 'J!'urs noon nr Harbor Blvd & Adams Preview Showing Luxu rY apartment11 with OCP.lln and harbor view1. Smoi free. 24 hour p:1trolled, enckl5ed oonimunity for &ttUrily. $800,000 recrea tio nal complex. Singles, 1. 2 and 3 bedroom lui:ury units up to 2,000 IQ. ft. f,.. SIM •O. to S790 -v;..;1.., ...,..,. 8 IO I ac wri•• ""~~. O.,.C. PP·l adults. J\1ust see to a~ prcciate 11755 S. ())a.!St Vacation Rent.ala: 425 APT or hou~e to share for ALCOl-IOLICS Anonynious. Al \\'ooll,·or1h's on l-lrbr Blvd, 546-5025 H1vy., So. Laguna. BRAND NEY/ I All Ulllilie111 PHirt I $50-0/r l11t !\Io's Rent, on 1 yearly lea111e, when You brin.:: I In this acl. FROM $135 A LIFESTYLE FOR THE 70'S 20102 Birch St. rnr. 0 . C. a ir· pi11 S. or Palisadf'K Rd . I Priv. p.<ttio. Biiiiard rn1 .. jAC'ltZZi. Nr, UC lnrinr. Mgr. 5.i7.4246. ~~~ O'I !Hf llUJfJS A, T N(WP'Ol:T l)urrnld .I. S.:ti>•I,. I. Chtnpcm't 1':!° .. f.•i:ir....':i:-,;~fi:,l - Arc you tired of paying out good money for the i;amc old i;kin1py apart· 1ncnl." y,·ith even .!Skimpil'r facilities and no extras to sneak of? 11hen enjoy tl\e lifcstylr ol the 70'11 at U AK\V OOD CARDEN New Villa Pedro t 'amilir" \Velcomc 2 Br., 2 r1111 Ba, i'lhni; trpl/ 1lrps. patio, br.nm cell: gar. a.:c11. 1''mm $185. Elrlcn Avr., 548-8224 C.M. l\Tov,. ln allo1vnnt~f'. lhii'I arl. 2 Bit drapc11, crpts, crrA;, bHinl!., 11enr O.C.C. No petl'l • Adults only. $135. 9112-38.~. East Bluff 2BH-211a-clin. Rn1 SZi:>. 8-18 Amlgoio; \Vny. •197-1917 or &l4-0!X>6 Huntington Beach ON BEACH! ._ _______ • APARTJ\1ENTS. -l-l-VE_N_E~A=R~w=o~R~K~ There's Sl million In rec· reatlon including I a r g e In Beautiful Eastblufl swlmn1ing pool, whirlpool {Near Newport Center) baths, 11and volleyball and 'l-Bd1·m. Apt. $185 tennil'I courts, a pro shop . & pro \vho offers free group 17s..60SO o lessons. A beautiful club· t• house has 2 henlth clubs, -•••; 11 IL.& snuna.~. i!'ld.oor golf driving ----__ range, b1lhards, color TV WESTCLIFF t.hcnt er. Activities mean CAPRI frPC Sunday bruncht's, b..i_r- . 1700 \Vestclifl Or, b('-q11<?s., s Po r I s tourna· rnenli;, f'lC. Adult J,iving-No pets Custom dp.corated Sin· Deluxe 1 &: 2 Br. Pool. gles, l &: 2 BR's. Furnished Carport. Furniture 11vail. or Unfurnil'ihf'd. Lc),v move· li42.fi274 in rosts 11nd no lcri.se rc- ·_J quirt'd. J\1odels open daily LUXURY Br-dt'n :ipl 1().. 7. 1\'/mn11y extra" -overlook· In~ lrvint> Country club & P11cifiC' ocean. Fu 11 y t l'p!fi-<lrpd-\Vf'I bar~le<" ~ OAKWOOD GARDEN APARTMENTS FURN. & UNFURN. car gnr & much more. S600 (P.esort Living for 2 BR. From i265 1110. &14-21 7ii Adults Only). ADULTS ONLY BRANDNEW-1 -NEWPORT BEACH Furni ture Av111.lnble ADU LTS ONLY-PET OK 16th ,& Irvine C 8 r P els-<lr11pes-<l1sh\vas.htir I DELUXE 2 BR $1S·· 645-0550 or 642..a170 hented pooJ.saun~-tenn1s 1 ,, . . • .~ . '·> . •-,,.,...,.,..,._..,_.,..,.., rec room-ocean vie\\'! ¥ B,1th~. chsh1va~hf'r, frri:· 1~ pat loi1-A.mplc pnrklng plr11·r. privatf' p:ilio, pool, VI-STA DEL MESA Security Cunrds. 20.'M2 Santa Ana Av. 557-212J Apartments HUNTiNGTON SPACIOUS •dull p•I w/frpl. 1 . & 2 BR. Fu•n. & U~t. 2 Br. SIRS or [Q\1.'er \\'/light D1sh\vashe.r • Stove & Ref.ng. PACIFIC mn;n1. :H8-9G95. Sh•g <'1'1'~·4'< Rec 711 OCF:AN AVF:., H.B. (714) 5.'JG..1487 Ofc open 10 am-6 pm Dally \VILLIAl\1 \VALTERS .CO. SEA AIR APTS. $115 Lrg. 2 l:iR. Crpts, clrp~. hltns. l blk N. of Adams off Beach Blvrl. 729 No. 6 Utir:i. ri.16--2796 or 5.16-7070 l·BR. To\\·nhoullt'. Carp .. 1!rnJ)('I!, 11·,.hr/dryf'r. P11tlo. Cn rporl Sl :iO. !lr.:?-6.lt.\fi i\ rt. 5 pn1 . 2 BR. 11µ!. C1'Pl/1lrps. S: ~lo\·r, nr. J)('nch. No pt'ls. Avail J une ls! S 1 3 :1. 5.'!G-00·12. LRG. 2 Br., I ii:ty, •-plcx, rrpl, drp", R-0. l11ud rn1 ., i:nr. fnC'd, child ok,' $135. 527·:1144. ,-~--2 BDRM, 11 ~ BA, crpts, dl'Jl.'!, bltns. c hi l dren \\'f'ICOmf'. $145. mo. 76.~I Ellis Ave, Apt A. 847-7:t-17, 1 BR CondQ Pool, WKhr/dry., cpt/drp, R/0, cpl. ont.v. no petj;, Sl60. 5'13-1405. ---• llU~'TINGTON llARBOUR centl'r. Santa Ana RENT starts $155 ENCL gnr .. fl('I\' decor cul-Irvine & Mesa Drive 1lf'-11ac. 2 Br. S13:J inn. 1 Br liiiim*liiiS4iiiS-415iiiiii5iii*ltiiiii $115 mo, 5.1&6738 549-4109, Apts ., Furn. or Unfum. Corona cMI Mar AVAIL June 1st. 1 or 2 BR. Rooms 400 cluplrx apt .. turn or unfurn. U!i1 ,...-1., adll.~. no pct~. &12-9.~90 flrter 5:30 pm Costa Mesa e SPACIOUS e \Vcll·Designt'd Apt1. l &. 2 BR. \v/Tt'tTtH.'t'I!. Fn'lm $140 -$275/mo. Shng cpts, drps, saunM, pool, jacuni, encl. gar~ Q .el Adult living MERRIMAC WOODS ~ ,;1(•rrimac WRy, CM * PRIVATE ROOM FOR ELDERLY LADY, lN THE H0'.\1E 01" AN RN. 54&--0977. DELUXE w/ba. Pvt, entr. Hedcc. Nu gold crpt. \Vnlk to bch. Yl'ly. 1244 \V. Balboll Blvd., N.8. COMFORTABLE room for ttmployed man, private trance, C.Af. ~. ... LGE. nn., priv fmtr & bath. Kit priv., emplyd only $92.50 mo. Co~t• i\tesa 5-t&-7285. 1 & 2 BR 1',urn or Unturn. Children's section. Pool. BEAUT. rm. In luxury home. $140 Up. f:Ut! GARDF.NS Private balh, phorM!, color APTS. 177 E. 22nd St .. C.1\1. TV. NB arTa. 64~141. 642-3&15. DELUi\'E ix'droom, lrg priv 2 BR. rrpls, drps, filed vd. l: home, foy<::r entrance. ~a.re j;'nrnge. Children ok~ no bll \V/1 lennn1. 646--20-1 •. VACATIO,'\J Cottage on Colo. Rh·cr, Parke r, Ariz. S80 \Vk. $.JO 11·knc1. 968-6187. II entail I~ Rentals to Share 430 ROO:\l>:\IA TE to s h a re ~roovy house in N.B. Call G-l&-8789 e\•c.s. or 673-9606 days. F'?-1L. "'ants lo shr. "·/l!ngl 25-32, home apt, prtt Cdl-.1 Lag or Npt Sch. Wkclys 549-33j4 Doris. 9: 30-5: 30. SINGLE girl to share 2 br duplex "'/Single male 21-30. S90 mo. \Ve .st min s fer . ~5 aft6. f"OR rent -$20. Avail i\1ay 15th. Near N.B.· & C.!t.f. Eves & \\'knds 646--8173. Office Rental 440 21c GROSS Approv 4,000 sq ft offire & bay area. 2nd nr. A/C. At N'vpt & San Diego F\vy in- terse<•t. ample pr k In g. 545-7171. ARCHITECT, Engineer, elc. Ofc's. 444 Old Ne_\vport Blvd. See to app~iate. F.x- te.r. entra~. $110. 548-5300 OPEN. OFFICE sp on Newport Bay opp Linda Isle. Sp ea c Bayfront loc. Gd Park. Crpts -drps -a ir/cd. The Islander Bldg. 341 Bayside Dr. 673-1~. 548-1019. -BAY VIEW OFFICES Deluxe, air-conditioned Redecorated. Lido Area Realonomic.s, Bkr. 675-6700 DESK sp.aC'l' aval!able S50 mo. Will provide furn iture at $5 mo. Answ@ring service available. 2:!2 Forest Ave, Laguna Beach. .f%..9466 DFSK space available S50 mo. Will provide furniture •t S5 mo. An~ve14tig servict available. 17875 Beach Blvd. Huntini::ton Beach. 642-4321 SPACE for lease, 1140 sq. ft., furnished. Newport Flnan- 1-inl Center. 64<1-1860, r.ton- f'ri, • Offic•Cott• Meta 600 sq, ft. • 646-2130 DELUXE l room office suite, nr O.C. Airport. 2172 Dupont Dr No. 2, 833-3621. OFFICES. S59 & $69. Will decorate. Near ti1h SL, bank .& shopptnc. 54~118. &lmmer beginning approx Phone 542--7717 or \\•rite P. C.~1. Ret11rn 1rallel cart'!!! I: June 1. Fem. 11tudent "'an t;; o . Box L?23. Costa J\fesa. important personals. Drop O\\'n nn. fncd yd for dQJ. To in U.S. '.\fail box in C.'.\t. or SlOO mo incl uril . !'\'on HEALTII l~WROVE~1ENTS N.B. 1D.C.1. smoker pref'd. \Vithin :i Guaranteed. By SllAKLEE. CA L I Co C:it -fem. . Call 54S-52:iJ. 1 mi's of O.C.C. 675-3772. 1 Sunflower-S. F kJ1rer & DEPENDABLE ne1\·Jj'\\'eds I Olive SI., SA. Losr: 5/9. in home or apt. near CUi\I. lost 8nCI found Nan1e "Ali" S n1 Ith . \\'ill tend hou!!e for part ren1 ]~ Blut' rollar 1\·/naznc lag. Clay Holly -&14·3815 "·k. RE\VARD. 557.3097 alt 5. 6T"~263.~ homt. f'Ai\1ILY 1\•/"4 chi I dre n \Vishes 10 lse ~ or 5 BR hse, Found C fr ff ads) 550 in Old Farm tract. $2.jl}-$275 f'ND iilver~rey young tml mo. N~ by 6/12/72 cat. Vic. i\tcsa V e r d l' 842-4877 School, C.i\1. :;4&-7308. HOUSE lease "'anted In Cd'.\.1 I -FO-U_N_D~,-Sc-h,-,-;.-,,-c:S~H-ngr-a-y, high area. l-4 bdrm unfurn. Neivpor! Harbor .,. i c. 1 yr from 6/15/72. Aporox. s.t&-4ZIO. t!~Zi41Lindqui!it, ( 213 ) FND: watch, Vic. F.as!Ululf -Cd:...1. H.S. n1usf identi /y, 1 Bah'OOm furn. Apt. or gue!lt h!!e. w /ga rage 644-1726. "'anted. By mature \\.'Oman. * IR!Sll SETTER-Call & Newport Area. 642-5675. FURN. or Unturn. house N.B. area · 3 mo:i;. lo 1 yr . Musi move by 111. 213 • 286-2991. NEED SCOO i.-q. ft. for merchandliie pricing J uly thru Ocl. Close to Irvine. 8J0..373l. .. •. N 0 N • smoking g'ntleman needs relliKlnab!e priced sleeping room. 675-0310 or :H8-TI97. RELIABLE couplti, no kicls or ~ts, \vant to lease comp! furrl Bluffs Condo. June 15 to Oct. 15. Agt. 644-11~. 2 UCLA coeds want rm to r ent for !jUm. near heh-pref. CdM . 213:820-3484 collect. * * * TIME FOR THROUGH A QUICK CASH DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 * * * Trader's Paradise lines times doll'ars LOST lri~h seller, male. An~wl'n lo Cast y. April 22 Vic. Es:ln!lla/F.I 1-ololino, C~po Bch. R l' IV-a rd . 49-1-2871. LOST: Grey Alley Ca1 , stri~ JK'(I 1\·/flt>a collnr. Ans to "Dick". Vic. Baysho r e Park. NR. 6.\;>.-0051 before :lpm. ,~--~----~ SCUBA rrgulator, pressure & depth gauge. Cd'.\1 High. Open l10use nilt'. R~"·ard . 67:J..1110. PLEA SE' rC'lurn f <'ma 1,. Siamf'Sf' cat "Fufo,u". los1 April 22nd, fam ily pet for 8 yrl'i. P.p11·ard! :Ho.-0871. IN ans11·f!r 10 the found ad -I 011·n ··Scrindipity" (dog cli~ pe<ll. Todd)( Sheets 8.\-l-2j()9 or 213: 324-9712. \V~fJTF. Shepherd • Half grown. Near El Camino. Please call 64&-1401. Si\fALL Blk Cocka poo los1 n<>llr l\1agnolia & Ellis, F .V. s:; re11'ar0. 96.'1-1235. Blk and Brn Female MiXf'fl Collie. Mc.~a Verde RE\\i'ARO! 545-5924 WST: <h\•l, l1hr strap.!! & \\'hitr rope on le gi1. Re\\•ard. ~:'.604 Hntgn Beach. !-· .. ··-]~ Carpet Service JOHN'S Carpet &: Upholstery Cleancrl'i. Extra Ori-Sham- poo flft Scotchguard (&Iii Retardant1'). Dcgn!asers & all color brighteners & 10 minute b!Pach for white carpets. SB\•e yaur money by saving me ei.:tra trips. Will clean living rm., dining nn. I: hall $15. Any rm. S7.50. couch $10. Chair s:>. E HAVE S90.000 Beverly Hills yni., exp I!! \vha1 counts, n6t .'"a horn W•nt N•wpo•t n1elhcxl. I do \\'Ork myself. " e. . Jeach area home. \Viii trade Good rcr. 5.'lJ-OIOl. up. By owner, \\'ill roMider * CAR PET LA YtNG * other exchanges. 542-82117. C. A. PAGE 2-.-lt-ol_o_'-70-MOtorcyclff 1 ____ •,.•_·1_2-_20_1_0 _* __ _ TRADE FOR Carpet Service CAMPING TRAILER 645-"'2609 STEAl\t Carpet Cleaners, ;;p==UT=~,~,-v.~I-, 71 ~,,-.. -.~1.-p-ro-,~.,-1 profes..ional at 1 o w e s t bldg, downtown C.M. Ten· prices. 3 Avg nns: mmpletc ant will sign lease, $24,500 $39.95. 962-067:2. equity. Ei:change for va-Carpent•r can!, Daia Realry 642.6560 F.XP. RrnlOdellng, cabinet1, BEAUT. 5200 liq. ft. home: repairs, m11int. No job too pool . jacuni: on I acre, I UR . 2 yn:. old. $147.j(J. All blln!I. 642-.\147, 642-503) eVf!!I. pel,g, ~ No. E Orang,. Guest Home 415 ~ Br apt, new \v/w crpt >i:i-16.11'. d bl ~ "'78 1-------*PRIVATE ROOM* rps, tns, gara~. <N<I....,., Huntin~tOf' Beach tor ambulAtory -r..,,,, C.ood Nicely furn, DN. town 0.1. Rttept. Rm-2 en~ - 1 pri. 675-ll41 26 column ~nack & candy nlachines. S,1500 value. Trd for travel trailer ~· or bet· ler, p.u. camper for Ford or anything of eq. val. 548·1594 \Vll.L Trade California property nc11r Colorado River for Real Estatt in Michigan. 14375 Astibury Park, Detroit, 1.'lich. 48227. DLX lBR, 2BA. Fant nn. Aft. hm+inc bldg ~~. w/ frtage Hwy 18 Run. Sprp. $34M eq for lnd, loc hm/lnc prp. $.16.7904/673-2211, Ex: 29 NEED good r!':ll'lgt.rator, Y.i ll P"l.p NE\V Hitachi auto ste:reo w/11pcak~n. COil $120. * Call 557-6366 * Palm Desert. \Vanr income. sm. Reas. 646-42'14. ro•a, land, or siJbTnll. Cement, Concrete Madge Davi111 Rllr. 642-71XXl HAVE free 4 cleAr iwrta· JOJtN 'S PATIOS c,·es tor •PPI. • .,... APT. 1~1,,.d• Sp cJo food, nice cheerful 1tt.rTOUnd· I rvlne -vv a us lngs Buni:ulow. Pvt. patio. flti(), ~ CaU 548-4?53 * DANA Point. 700 IQ ft, 2 av:.U. Del Pr8do 6 Vk>let L&ntern . .C96-1513. & Uon lotll + small TO: IYA.nl BLOCK WORK home. W. San Fern11nOO An A!MX:lale of PARK WEST APARTMENTS 1 llclrm. """" $16f 1 llclrm., 1 llo. mo. 10 ntht 11duIt1 . -------~-­ S.t&--1323. PVT -Stnll Pvt rooms .tor ambuleiory tr. clllteN. &I .t LRG. 2 BR Bungnlow Apt. meili. 24 hr superv1sion. 4 CnrUe~. 6 pool&. SA.1mas. Laundry tncluded. ~ Hot J'1cun11. Tennt&. From/---~--..,.---, OFFICE !Ulte!I, downtown l.agun1t. tease. m> 1q. ft. Cpts., d~. Reas. f94-.3028. BIG BEAR BOULDER BAY • Nr w!J', 2BR. rum, cir. Val., l 30M, lot vent or tnc Npf.0.1. ~tr. Wt:U!, Ba.mtt Rtty 642-5200 Valley. Von's Landscaping, Orange. Madge Davis Rltr. &IZ.7000 Res. 64&-8149 Bus. 639-9192 UNITS Long &Ach + CDfENT WORK. no job too Honda 350. Trade for lttnd, !lmllll, re1t!IOn11ble . Jo~ re e CAI'!, !!! ANYTHfNC. 1'1usl Estim, If, St u t 11 ck. From $1'5 Sllll. llG--0259. Summar Rontol1 420 lS.\1 P&rlcvtew i..~ !'ht ful'Jt draw In th' "'11t • • • l DaUy PUot CJ...il!ed Ad. 80-56711. brtak u:p pal1.nen.hip, S.18--8615. Call Dave 146-704.1 lrvinlt. (J'uat ott /'Like '° traoi! Our Trade.r's BAOIELOR 81.yfront 'Apt. •....... llilllllllllllll' San Dle;o f"tt.')t at OlJvh Rd \ P&rad!M c»Jumn ls for )'OU! J Adullt. ~ ~fonth • 11~. :; d11ys: ror :i h!1~ 11;7~,.,_,, lluslno11 Rontol t4S RETAIL gpace stUJ avail. In bulltllng lbopp(Dg centt:r, * IOl).,1600 IQ. h. :041)1 Camino * * * * * c .. 1J1ro.,,,, s.rc. -1s '•••••------------ FLOOR Worir 6 petiol. dr1vt"Al'' • ildewalla. LJc'••boJ>d<lf.- --r ~AJLY "LOT ;J9 -~~~-~-~-~~~ ·: [ -~·-1~1 [--...... 1~1 -·-![DJ F-,,, •. iii1 Lt•J•MC • J[Il] [ 1'"''1 "*·~fll)l [+ r..~.,,,.. l[ll];[ ,_,_ J[Il]/~1 _,,, ... _>•••;;;l~[j]J ••• Comont, Concrete Lendscapl"' ·11.;He;;lp;W;;e;•""';i·;;. M-.. ~ .. ~7~11 Help W•--M& p 711 Help w ....... M ... F 710 I Help w ...... ~ M" "711 Help W•nt•d. M" F 710 I Hilp Wanted. M & F 710 Help Wanted, M ... "710 A~PHAt.T Park11U:' l "''•·Jl r ·11 •d,TOP SO~~t · COOi\, p/fim~ for Gourmt t GUARDS· :-.tATl'RF.\vOml"n.-ltf"l,.l'•I Join The Eicclt•n1 t RNt. t!A~t ' '"\''" "h1h. Xln t drh•f'Wll.,V rPpair, ~,. 11 I 1 d. irl: 1"'10 Ill At A Sfolfl!t Position CatPril'll ~rvic., P.O. Bow PATlltOLMIN t1fhr..in mMl('•I r ~I 11; 11" d H•ppenint •t the frinjl;t' hnfl' Rl'\'l"rl) '-l•l'l'lr I cn&tint . ~1ri p ln a .1-r:r_ai11J.54G-0097 . l520SS1.n1aAnaC.. r Cb NR · \INiiAI ElmoreCo.R•1IEtl•tt rnn\ Ho.t~, C'•Jl"I R"arh, P I · & \'OU A"E ...... ~.OED'.•. · .;. __ ._ "'rm•"""' lllll:llt.tnmtnt. , usui,.t.t 1 •rf'A. <' Off' SECRETARIES ~11\n~ 0J>"fl'lfUl:t r mm ~&+:194915.16-Mt'I. ! • nttnt "' •·~r. CREDIT CASHIER M. t...,una a~aJ. Full A •xp. h,.lptut. \\'111 h·11 i" ,..,r 1. Stirrr lhlln 11~~ °tl"st C'Om· 1 l~."i~. PATIOS, Y.'lllkt, nr ive, intlall l P1J)9rh1ngin9 P.tUlll bf' "XPf'r. s day Wttk. ~rt tlm,., Pl'rm. pay . Llf,. \lllON( \\/p&llft!'HJ. ~lf~ ........................... ... """" J11wn• ••1\ .. _,k N ., • Secr•t•ri•• ~ hrJ. r.ooct f'O. kwnflflt.t, in1., Bonu,. Paid va. 11..R"· "'P· 1'1'f, \\'r 11 • tn !ll~\(ln J)rClftr•m . I ROBINSON 'S ' · "'" ' 0 u am'1j!' e G I Offl \ 2. \\'" \\•ill l'lf'l'rl aA IP.8 m,11ri. rt1nnv"'.s1µfiAA rnr e~1. *WA' 'PAPER* entrt c• l.>w90n'• J"w•l~r1 ApplySult•G Cl11aJ1t1f'rlAiiNn. ~~. n11ly f I e NEWPORT • •• e •--Ide p •-r " "'~ a11. • •lit"''"' l"r l\nur• ""'"' Cl· 'h'ld C DOG Hpera Hunrini1nr1 (.'enu•r ~2.'l N<1, Gra~. S.A. 111:1!, • '" "''·' 1:,.,.,, t "~1111 &EACH .. I 1 r1 \\'hen you ca.II ''Mac" ,.._ · · -'I (' I f """"'' C'lltinna. 100!',"r "'"''-' Pair! Ry ....,. 7177 F..dt~Rer Av• .. 1'n."" lfELP \\'anlf'd gllrdenin& J, ~ ~·· II 1 '::'°::• _ -CHILD CARE - -0t'pPntfR h!P - Harbor & Rakl'r 11r"ll 546·4145 ·l ~-----'--­Contractor 545·1«4 &46-1711 H11nt1ntron 8etrh main1Pnan<'4'. Pvt "''"'"· MATI IRF. m11n. P1"m1111 n,.nr & ~. r r,.ttll.ll;fnu, t1N ,.,., It 1n ""'"' ... & • -I Pl C 11 f A t ------rannns •nti l"lh~r l"tnl'lit' ~" .,, ••lM". pap1>r · ""ncng, easf A or pp . DENTAL ASSISTANT ~" • .Juan C11p\,1r11/'lll\. t2.~ nr1I• ,.,..,.mrt ,..,.,.n,.... b~· m·ht'I• t ·• I • k ' ·u-1 "'••· I \1 '-' C'lln ti1-'"".11" pr1".11t•I~ " ~ nrl", \r1.,y, 11()(' •• ~ '"' '"" .. Ooclt1r u •kll\I f'lH..1.\' ,.,x. hr, p1~ftr tl\l#t' 40. 4fll.1~. l11rniture ril"-'!kn 1llnrl" fl'r It in t'nnriiirn('P .,1 11 ~~~. The H an I m a n K11ren ~11bnrn1 perif'n<"td C'h1.ir ilri• tJ1111IJ1.I· HOU~EKEF.J'ER & 11 I • rlPhv,r~. 1n..:1 111!1,11 11nn k hrf'11ld11111 111,,.llf\I;. ant who <'lln work w~ll "' • ,.,.... •.. 3 hat! d•Y• i-~ .. ·-~k-1·,.!11 IPri ri1111M1, f:xp 'ri , f'lt'PI, • .,,,., '·" '"'' I 1 (.'all ?.Ir. Rirk RN"t:ri f'r, Pfflpl"'. G1·P111 ht111111. 8f'aul1· il'll r11othPr & l a irl' 10 I.· I\. Sit. ar.i o1H"n. f'llll ll.i: j ~l lltke>l'lr\t J'l1t'f't'tor. lor a f\-ROO~t Arlt!iti<ln.a:, E~ti!;Yllllf'~. t.r:r. R.F.;INOF.R'~ fu\ ofti1•f', ~!Ary op."n. t.1u~I llkll' kid' "-('I.I. _t!t.!-41 .11_f~r_!PP!_:_ ~ ~ ~:.'ll'l..:... ""lntmftnt. I , I · r11.!Pfl:, f'~e est ChuC'k, PERSONNEi; AGENCY p<.A a~a: ~~~~ r-p 11n' ..-111:.iout. 111~11'; t1r 2 45('W'l C1tmpu~ Or .. ~ """" ~"". 646-8'14~ al1 ~:."1 pn1. MATl!RF. "''1!1111 11 nf'l'riNI ft1r JNTF.R It. F.:xfPr P11 intinR Lir'rl J, Tns. Ref,. ll ~s. $lo,r:.·. L.T. Construction. fH.'K!SO!l. 546_21111 DENTA~i~tant. rlPAnin&: HolJSF.KEEPF.R/cnml)An~ll h11.k:r~ J, ic,11rlt!11irh $ii.Ir\, _•_<_1-_1_51_1_. -----__ PAIN1'TNG • Honest, d l"an, fn~tMIC't~ns. x.raya "-.om• LivP in-P•lni !'iprina~ J ~11r1~11·111~. &·h, hr.~ flf'.>.· Arirl ition' * RPmnr!Plinit g1111rant~ \\'Ork. Ll<:en!lf'd AL TERATTONS. Pf r a o 11 frnnl oltire. NM-minkf'r, 1\l u~I drlvft, ('all 548·i667 rb lP. -i~::,4~ l~.ll~I~ _ r.Prv.•irk I.· Snn, 1.ir. & insurl'd, 67~.\7'1n. nf'f'r1Nl par1 limP Mon.~!. Pl'flersbly u nd tr 30. HOUSF.MAN, m 00-.. r • 1~ MEO~CAL OR-G~·n. (lffirf' -673-£,041 • ;..,1!l--21 j~j r:x~J?R · Complete 2 i;oat~. l Mu'I hf' f'KJI. In <·lnthina: l 644--0611. .illnirori111.I work. pr'f'lftr O\'f'l' r~<11111'f'~ f'>;r'ii h11r k nfhr f' EXECUTIVE SECRETARY To Stor• Mgr Must h•ve ••cr•tari"I tkillt. Elicit ing ch•I· lenging position. E•· c•ptlonal h•n•'itt & libe r.ttl discount. SYW\.Ji'Sll Pf'r ~In, e t nn.tll11t't""1! e Pf'MIMnf'I • r uh, R"'l • rurrh1'lll.1tt • t.l11rl<,..rh1J[ • ~l 11.nuf11c111r1rt& • l/j:'ll.I • ln<11r11nrf'. NEWPORT Per•onneJ Agency Ill Dov•r Dr ., N .8 . 642.3170 ~F.tn r.TARIAI. r n. I t . n n 11 Hh fll~t pll!'" l"(ln1 (l.ll'I~' •~I l)p 111i::: 1100 •hrorth11n'1 ~kill,l 1·~1utrPrl F'.'i:f"'l'!l'n~ •ll Rri 11>r11~1 ni: 111r1h11 h11y 1n~ l\l'll'lfot l n•ro1fi llfiVllnCf>0\('111 i!."rl ,...,111111111~ hl'11,.l11~. If 11"11 ll l'f' nn \(\Ur IN'C Atlrl Ill h11rii 11·nrkrr. r 11ll 4!\~ .• ~fi ;o;r:cnF.TAn\ t;11 1,r1ni: k J Ac K T 11 11 1111 nf'·Rf'p11.ir s tor ~ S2'10, 2 iton SMO. 1nPn~ wf'A r. fi73-87R2 o ENT A L 11 aa i 11 t 1. n t, .$(). Thi!: Huntinaton lAASl .:1rl & front nff\cf' s;:lrl -R9"i"I EState-Ca;;;;.- 1 rf'morl., 11iirli1. 20 yr,, '":>.JI ... ~t 1''0l'k. Roy, ~47-1.l.~. APARTMENT Man a 2 f' r C'h11iraldP.. 1'1lnimum 1 yr ti'lorida. H.8. MZ-77M . I "''11'~01·1111""' ">;rP., .I' :~.'1 /\'"'"'or "'°'lll'l'l•ncl"ri , .in111 1h,. Arr>l.1 111 rr1·~n \fl\ l' 1•1, Lir'ri. 1'1y \\'11.y r.('I. 547-'Xl36. I PROF. painling, 11lso l'OOf"J V<'/h11nfl y huJ:h11nr1 . 30, uni!' f'Xp. \Villina It! learn f'X· -t'f'.•U mP In r .n. :II: ·'·. 2• Cnrnp.11ny th,111 '" ~w1n~. If .'1 r11~h1t1n !cl ' .... R I l I t\-1 pandtd dulie!l. C111J 9 to S. JM~F:DtAry: ('!Pf!nln.a for ir.1-l.1H1,; &-...:h. !lMO~--. I Oriv•w•v• 1 ACC()l.1". rl'JI, Jiuer/Pxtl'r. In :\ "m bd2~. ,11fu1·• Mi-i~<i.. 1,,.1112,..111 girl, '1P.t1til <'l'f'<til ''".Dl"'I. rRO"T Of->'IC"" ~'nu (!(I nnt h11vl!' 11 hce-n,I",1 1':ti11111I "l'l"'r111•11t1 f'rn r ln\•r 1 .okrthnr1 .ok1ll c rn 11'1k" '111"· ta11"11 , t~ f"' .(. c "m p. ~1 a11...i11·11l hp1ni:::, \A 4 ~id nfc $,\00 \\ r 1 ! .. ••l,11,l~j f11'f1 11.rt Nt1 ll" n11 1h· r 11nr, r o .fi<I, 1;;(1,' CM:r~ \Ir~.-.. CAl1! 'l'.11;% Lir/l11J:. Free f'SI. 645--5191 . 11rluh11, 111'1 t'hildrPn <1r Pf!IJll. "" .. 1 ~ ... ,. " .. I chl"ck 011 !'l11r _ I . H 8 ---wnrk 111 youn&:, trnnl n11 ,..., I "!RI . ,,. 2 49 HAWLF.Y'~ ~ .. r \011.ti.nt: PAPE:R-HTJNG $30-.-\V11lk lo hearh tn · · DE NTAL Jl.lo<'f'pti<1ni,1, M()..-:l.2J6 .., •• tor r>nrtnr<11 n 'l('P. s $Al! <P11.n1~l 'l'I'•• 11•111n .. ,. \\rP111thPr, 211 ~. nil rP1:ii.tant. 1 Any rni. + pllpi>r. fi.46-2449 846-:1921. minimum l'll'lf' yr "lCp. • · · ~T' f'>;pPrlf'n1·"· .10.l\ ,\1'1111'< I Eiq•'d p1'PI, Xlrit >1t11'k i'l'lnrl St11.y" bl11rk. ;;4::.-;;1~. I AP'f. MANAC.I::RS . Xlnt op-lns11r11nc• t. bkkpf. M iJ:~inn INJECT ION ~t Atf'. Ronk~,.,.p\n2 1 • r.\.P· Rt•I Est•t• 1 r 111r. "lllJ'.:'~· 1'11,1!"r.\l11'1,. El I • I PAINTING lt. PAPF.RING , ...., .. 1,111it>· 10, •x""r mupl"' Vil'jn, 830-.17!M. .. MO'DING 1n1?. •C'hf'rluhng , Nn in· I N11l~. 1~.it Pn1nnn~ A1 11 , •c r1ca 19 yr~ in Hii.rhnr 11rP11 . t ic k •":'1 . k N .. · ,,·,~ . ... Licensing Cour•• ('\I i;.i~_.,,1,1 1 ----------1 •-d d R r· t ,.,_,~~" WI hn2 tn wtll'. l'I c n~n • Oentlll 111111i11f11.nl, l)'lrl OPERATO~S ~ll!'flll~P. 9.~. s:.on nl(I, Ph· ELEC'TRTCAL \rORK. All uvn " · P ii urn . .,,. ·""'· nr pl'I$ M2-""'.'l. . . .. t~\(6() Nf'w J""'rt ,11.,.11 • I f (1!1 lAll'.~ u·a 1ntn~ pro~r111Y1 ,111,.ot ,,.,.. t1m•. Pxp'rl prr f'tf . Hntan (Or Tr•inets) , , -_ nn t'fl$!. r..1"n"'l?"m'111 np· kinril. Rlii: t>r l1n111J !,ir'ii f.i PROF'. painting, inl,.r/f'xlf'I'. A-.;,.E'~IE"" f 1 Rf'ach 962""6671 . Pl . ' f Mf OTCAI rr<'f'ptl(lnlJ:! 1.11 · ,, f EARN 1 , n.. rtv k R L' 'ri ,,,..., ,1.,.,, • •"""• or r t"an · · for 11~11r,11 . t11 nu 11cturer. • • pnrt11nll1f'~. ,\s" ti~ !\Ir~ nii. fn>f' Pal. ~Zll . ..,.ua.1. wor . ""'· IC' _,, 1. 1 · ,_ DR-APER-Y n •.. hlfl M P111 Mf'liiC'~I Ce-nt ,r . ,1 •• ,, 1 •• l·f•••>•t•·-,1 !;ardtning, -'"·'· ~7-745:'1. 54~1:1_,,_,_:i. ~':,~;~"~1~~;;," :~~~~~ WORKROOM hf'11y:,.111 ;w~~:~~dab·I~. ~:'. R.~l~O~ ---I s~~'.~1 . "' """'" '"' $30,000 to Plaster, P•tch, Rep•lr mftnt11tinn. PIP11~11.nt working ExJ)l'r. hllnrl hfimml':r r.i trnf', "'"'" prl'f'ii. Mu<11t hf 111;ble Motor Home Tarbell Realtors $50,000 AL',O:: GARDENING •'f)ntfitinl'll!. Some 11'.Xp, hPJp. Be11~h Drapery &!rv. 900 \\'. lo wnrk ~111 . nr :-:11n. SALESMEN , Full or p /tlmt !~~na!:;~:;;ng!'!e~i,.:~~ ~~1: I ;11 ';;'~r~~.A~'!;i~~!=~ tul . 17th. C'.1tf. Apply .ll ::\O·ll::lO A ~f 1\111~1 hi' ,.xpr1·if'nC'Prl Siil"'~. I ~ Do yo11 h~ve ... "· "'.10 . .ll ,. .. A,. • .•• ,.lnw rail f>40..682.') lnt•rn•tion•I nRIVF.WAY slllPsman, full CnJI;\ M•~•. C.•llf. m•n A111·nnl"IH'I\' hrnf'fil.l I LARWIN REALTY ,_,.,,,_,, v.-·" ~ ' "" e· h ' C 1150 \\l,.~t lllth St. . ,. · . Nf'\1'ptlrt. C'riM, rn~IR MeRa, Plumbing top ysics orp. k p11r1 timl!:. Mu~f hf! l'Kp. C ln1111·111n1·P, P!C'. Appl,v HI pPr• I f:l';11Alf' 011·. n( !.1111·11'111 C'n, D Sc. \" l'u 2700 Dupont Or. /r.,ri n• in th'f: k 1hnrk 111ll!it. 'T'np " Or1tn,;e tlll!ll PllllJl ir,• * $On tn l\1r. \Villi11m1. 21 ~2 R1·(lt'lld 1111·st A1 .. I! f\ ()l'l'f', J"1/'P.~, •>l!~tr. UL, N'Ell' ,_ ... ·kl PLUMBING REPATR 133-3300 pa y, mmmiAsion, It tringf' DON BURNS 17141 !lAA-440:1 •2111 ,\!12~:111 • Ll'l\\'nJ, ... prln. l'l'.~. --..-INVEST IN R"rniil!i niz. Trf',., k Shrubs l\'n jnh Inn J:mA ll A ~S'T MANAGF:R 1'i + henf'fitR. Apply .I• ck' 1 Or PORTPNITY lnr 11,·n hill rl'fl1('1 Vftd . F'rf'Pe r.,1. * 6'12-.il~ * I...-11.rnm11rkf't injtJ)f'l'SOn nf'I& PhilliP11 li6. ~ w. Cn11Rt YOUR FUTURE OPEN ROAD timf', l'>;prrif'ru·rr! n1'11l .f:J 96.i-.tl:i~. SAVF. nn hom • N'plll ir.~. l'l"f'f' mulf!' 11111'.t. $~7.;;(l "'''""'k In Hwy, N.B., "aily bf!tween 2 F'ull <It n/timP J :lfi.~1 H11rlinr Rl vrL llltf' !'111lr~mrt1, Rrt!,.r 1h11 n Do you wont I h. · · I R ., d I J, 4 ,. · Gllrdl!:n Grnvf' AVf'rll"I" i'Omm li..~1nn, <'fH11 • · • • ,.~!., p um 1nr. p111nt, 10. Jfflr . ap1n • vancemen · ' II YOUk OWN BOSS I " AL'S l...t1I nii,r11piniz:. T r ,. P J I II 1 I 111 I i n n" , ht1 uling. f'nllf"r' Rrush. 113~.I!. J DrlvP'WA.V S •.If' I m.'" Mon or Women NEEDF.D-1'.xJI. C"n•m"'t('!l<lgi't pany J'IA iii m111 ,io r mrri1r111L I • ~Pl!t>r t;1ppt1l'IW'11ty~ rPn1nv111 . \'iirrl rPmnrlelin.1?. T d 1 I e Hi<>h"'r ""'Sirll'lll~ R.19::-0:172. 0 ATTENDANT \\'/lul'M' ,.xp. Ji'/fl m•. Timi' fl)lln\\'il1• pl'l"f. 5.")8-~~ .. s or t'l'ml'n nu.t npp y, l'lr n111 n "' , •. Tral!h hii ulini?. lnt (·leanun. · <• 1 II' h o •·x•cu1t1'" "p~·•unltv., 'Rf'p"1r sprinklf'tll . li7.l-'1166'.. -COLE PLUMBING •Conk & 1 •1 nvPr '10 hr". Mull! ~ Lt••• A. Yellow ~94 -61'.lfl. :'tiin;"~~ff,.rr~t. llVit llOmf" • p~,.~htP 11.;1'1~;~bl\P ~' ----24 hr. ••rv\r•.. 645-Ut;l • Cusrnrli1111 rl""",, flf'11I . Xln'I b•Mti~. T•xl C•b IN•-.• •roM~.R \\'F.,I ,......,MTNG; EXP. .T111p1tllf'~" G111rrlPnPr. "-o-0· A ·~ o 11th r.... r. "'' r>ror in anrl t,11lk 1t n\'rr. • Proff's111on11.J tr11 lnin1? e l.toind"'.' H•lp .,.,.y a rro. ""'' r.. · 1. H <'omp!Ptt! Yllrrt ~rvi<'e R•model & Rep•Jr Ap·p·l.v tn ,..l'5<l11 1Cro1111road Jrvinel CM. • Hn•pll~~· nlllP\'I~ I ~ • S1'1·11r11,v~ • lnrl"Pf'l'lrlr nrf'~ • .~Plf '1111~h~rt1(1n • 1 1 s $ SFf'Rf-'.T . .l.n r , 1111r1 IUTI"' ·\pJ'lt'f'ls \'rim•, h1·• 111":-('l~)r. <ki ll! nrrrl~. 11hr1!111rl, l\'f"• 1111.:. t fR~1 f'>;l'('I, <'Arul111or ro-;,.f'rl r11.r Rt1\ R2f; 'l$.i2. Srnrl t'PsHmP !n I .11c:un11 f'r11rh, SF:CRF4'T AR Y, t lil trl t1ff1t'1', krt11·y f,\'T'ln;:, (1l1ni::: b pMn,~. 1':,r nr<' \lu~r be r11"pendt1hlll' $·1:-.0 :\\7.7f;~ I ~ERVIC'f; ~111 t1nn t·1kf' m11n II l mPrh "'"" f:'l;rl'I l\'llli~ll !. hPn,.llls 1\llif! nl'l'rl i~JIU'Wt m 111 n 11 .t ,. r . Appltt'll.flOI\$ !.\k"n hviru ~ 11m t<1 :l pm. Ar1-n , rnrn.,. nf 19th k Nftwport, C,'11. ----- CJ r E I ,... C-'I for Appt I Tn Call 1~.._Al.L\' nn """' REAL ESTATE-Pan-u1t r,.e · 11 . ..,.....,.. H'I w ~ s r:n v1ct: Statk'ln at!endMI r ltim'. rv11~ i 1,1•\mds. Ex· l'll'r •lnl,\I, NPl.t 1n ap. 1>"'llr11ncf'. A~ly mnrnlnp l'nl,\, 2."f,rl f'.'r 11•1""rt Bhtti , C.M e e e e a e ... ~,.., 1 11r1a A';/ F:ARl.Y Ri~r? W•nl J)Art 546 1311 l"f'.tiiil'nt f11millP~ h r1n21ng 5"R-2&6l . -----·--F'ATHER &: SONS_ NP'\1'J)A1'I Vil!111, ·N,wpnrl Reh. tim• typi1:1. rrom 6:.lO 11m In -rill•,, rivic info .. GMrl pAy· -SALESMEN-Nn 1.• ,... N• '"'M' I LANDSC.APfNr.. "'""' :~1 .... "ll Drrnritt ing, delli"n, ~llr""'n· Mr•. Hl'>Ov'r. M2-586l I li::vlam.C;iU546-M;i(). r 11lml". fo.·lullt h111'e h11pp,v . r..x,~r. c .. 'J SF:FtVICT SIAl !nn 11ttend1nt .1; " kl R rl I I • ~ A k 1 H N,.,.rl 1 <1r 7 ""P<"n rnrl'rl • · prin pr•. • ~ .1 , · trv. plumhing "'irin~. etc. BARYST1"TF.R "-lilt! hou!lt • F.T.ECTRONIC-A1111,.mh· ~ or erml'.n smiJ P, r11 r, lyping Ahil lty. -'•lr.o;pN!p!I', ln!·rnth·"' ,.nm-If th"' flf'l!l;l"Pr tn thrt'f' nr w/,,.xp. PPrm~n•nl . Nfl IOl\f ~1~~4fi Stllle 1. 1 c d · 4 £.,.n,.l't1tion' ~Xf'I. ·25th yr. f'l ,.aning. 1 ~mall b11by. · IPN. Prt>fPr f'XPl!:r. S2 "-i1p Mi-~. I ml~!iOn 11;tiiiin1t ,,..11 1,. pl~n. nH'll'I' 1s .v~s .. vriu 11111.v n,. th f' ~~lr.C~~"1"n Oil. '.'19.' F.. 17th ' · t in bus. • Llc'rl k bond~. 2 rlaya II 1vPf'k. 67.1.0l41i. ·hr. Nlrt 1mall <--n---lrvil'!ll' ~NE PERSQNNEl N~o~w~~,,-,-,~~,,-w~i-,,---o,-~,-, I Pl'l'iV!nAlizf'ii t1·11inin~ h.\' 11 pfl'l'Min "'"'·r,. IMk1 n11: lnr I _:_'_·•:__'--------PRO~F:~IOSAT.. rr·~ 11•nrk. .ll.~·3545 RA R y .i;;JTJ'F.R, R•liahl,., CompleK. 540-166.r, for appt. ~ Cf'l('kl111il \.\111\trf'J:~P! Ai Din. prnfp~~inn11 I. Al ~-.Cl 11•i l1 tr,11 1n Pn~H1n11, •rf' 11v11i!Ahl~ Sftr1·irl' ittannn "11.lesman Ex· pl'1.lnin1t, trimmini. fl:pr11.y· • • • • • • nl'l!'riPrl 21/i <1ay1 111. Wf'l!k in -ESCROW-CfFFICER SERYlCES•~Y n•r W11 ih'PJ:All'11. Plf'11!• 11r-""1v H•·"n"'""~. Sn1•ll nrtirP, NOV.'! pPr. Olrl,.r m11 n nK. Chev· ~g, ~prink!Pr,, !.J1nr1J:Ct1P·, REiVIOOF:LJNr., 1tr10it i"n~. my hom•. RPf11. 96.'l-1 41.,, Sl>nd applicAtion k Tl':llUm• to !"f>c'y/R.F.:. Mktni;: In S700 ply in pPrYln , Vnlr"nn pl P11.o:"nt wnrldn~ N"11u'l1 11nna. CA LL 71~ ll:\.",.M7l l'f'!n. Arl11rnit h MAitool!a. HB. in;:, rlt-anup. IPOrJ?"' fi46-~9~ · · ,. -----o-11· t I """' Hnt111,. 1400 P11li~t1rl~~ Rii P••··'""•I , .• ,,-.,·"''" _ A'k ~l r, \\larrl ----------, ----.--, P".1n~. prompt !l'TV'IN'. fl'f' RAKER, c11kPit k pt1a.,..', full P .O. Box KH , D11na Poinl, ..... crPt1try 1te lh n .1~" · • · " " " • • n ,.._ • .,1fN" 'l h n "UAlTT' I I I "J O'l t 1\-1 , "' --s· ,-s -E·N~-:-~ .... ,, 1•111" 1!11"•1~rarnr: ..,. . . 11wn 11 f' r v \ <'"'. P.~t1n111JP~. l'f'frr•.nc"''· f'l('it timf'. Appl:-in ~rMln morn· Ca!. 92629. Cll'rk TypistJ: to S4~ ~ 11 ""II· nr . 111rt11.i::rr, . AL M 1 ~XJ'IPl" prPl'ii. Xln 't w<1rkin& t'Ph11.b!P. rr11l!<ln11.hle f1'"" huildt:T, 1-10 p.m., 963-9067, llllt''· 1.i10 \\'. Bakf'r, C.M. EXECT.ITIVE 11 trre 1 11 rv Tf'c~/MM ~rltf'r S~ Nu R !\ E ~AirlP-ilpm-7111m , U .S . AFFILIATE D t'\Prii n1r n "'hn 11rl' rP11('1y !n ,..nnds. r.;ill llfl 2 :lO !fir lllppt. "~ 1 im 11 1 f · H a J lnr:i n, 9611--0964. ' ----·-'rl Sk'llfd . r.ho th rwi P/TrmP Typ1~t $7.:\0 hr. F.)(p . prPI. 1\1"'"" Vrrrlt Cnn· Rrnkl'r,. RPllll!y ll'11rn the-r11r huiiinP~S 1tnri l f>.lfi.-(~t1. -!'162-9_10_1_. ----··---* CARPF.:NTRY, Patio'. * '* BARMATD. Niiht 'hifl , l'lCP. '• 1 in r A ·. A/P CIP:l'k In S450 v11ll'.t1'1'nt Hn~iti\I. 6fl I i;:47.i;:;,n7, f:vl'.~ 9fil!..117R 11t'I' \\''111\ns: tt1 tr11 111. ~1JJ"I -----·----2oori pay for right Jirl., typing, tTBM ex ,. c ) . :i:;,. • II'" 11 1 I In S550 + LANDSCAPING* 1 P11inting, Formica. C111J l'Xp'd prPf'd. Apply In <'Alc ulalor. NPl'd rar. Cl"foll· i c Y 1 ~~. · / • · C•nl"'r St-CM. R ECEPT 10NiST-$390 ha1 P i;:nnii !'ll'r1W"n;r1l11~·. M 1 !\TNr.LJt: nll'l'rll"' & """rll)("k N .. w l1111·n,, Sprinklra. dP.C'k~. \\'alt. 646·:'\511. p!"rwn h1wn 2 .. 1 pm, A,k for tive, indf'p!"n~ent, ta11t hut A~~~lln.tinctyC~:::' lo S600 o V ERS.EAS Nirll' ~P<'I lnr mltll!l'll' 11ttr11r 1nlrn•~11'rl in II f11111!'P, rir!'~' nprs. F:xper. only. Trip PllY t:l,.11.nup. -"11111" lir'rl. 536· 122~. , J.IA-NDYMAN -121. plumh /, Mcr.-D11n. THE GREEN 1~murh. ~ar1HI h.r•. Sf:nd Typi,l/TB 11.<.p.ni, to = _.MQR~ .lOBS THAN .PEOPLE tiv"' a:al. C;ooct pbnn~ _I,.. l\'rll, ~11 lr.•n11nrl,.rl .. Rrnrfit~· _MMI __ .,._·---===~ l-----IO C g ~ PI~ F: TE Lawn i.t_ I PlPr! rPp, P h. hll'fnre 9 AM 1.ANTF.RN, 1930 Plt1cfnlia l'l'IUmP lo Bnx 826, Lllgun11 Rl"CPpl/Girl F'rl, 1 S500 All akills &: prof,1~il'lna p11hl ir ••nn111r1 pl'r~n11l 1 ry I O..nir>.. i l'Yllll'I 111"" hitrh SHORT nrrl~r Mnk nc•d@d. r..11.rtffnin2 1Prvlce. Hili1lln&:..,_ or 11.ft 6::1()-!t PM. 492-!"186.'l: A\lt., CM. Bf!llC'.h, !t26.'>2. Prod. C(lnh'I Clr k ,: s411 • HiJrhft.t wajt'f!~ • LOWPr nrNIPii, Ni!"e ~11rmunrlingJ, Mmrnlll!lnn,. llnHmitPri In. t ravf'y11rd 11\il! F'ri ,.. Sat. A • I 1· "'•<' n.-v:: ox-·••• 0 T•x •--,,,.,, r,1.,.1 '-i~,, h•••ft'I•. I ':n"''· Apply ln rer11nn. 1• I" '"kday•. C•pl•ITa.no ""c Pll n-u p. • im, ,,....,,.,.,-,,, Roofing BARMAIDS WANTED EXPER'D Bkkpr-p8«board, Paymll/NCR M11chinf' $500 '"" · .,..,, 11 " " " " .. ~ I o Fr-~,.•-rl•tlon CAii g,,.,,,., •.·,.,. •"''.""~~ 0 1.0SMORIJ.f..:, ~ Harhnr B•h, 4~. 2 .... or·~ -1 l.A\\'N ~n>iC't>. Exl)f'riPtlrrrl APPLY, THE MAVF.RJ~,.. ~rrt11 rf'f'""iv1tblP, payml , f ree&. Ftt Pn,itinn' r " '' ... ,...., "'" _,,..,..,, r ~ '"'"" ,.,., ,"""""°'., • T G R ' ·., M-,1 CM b • CA' ' 541 •345 NEWPORT I ~lvrl., Cn11111. Mft~11. !., r"li11 hl•. Ji'rf'f P.~lim"les · uy "° 1" · ..,... 172'1 NP11..v..r1 Blvrl.. . rtr. C111l 6'13-8895 twn ..-9 488 E. J7th fAI lrvineJ CM ~... -. ·~~,,----• DY ·····" ~ · • ~-•-. G • PERSO.NNEL AGENCY --,S"'A'l!-S"MAN !!TM ~·. """' P'Y. !JG.'l-1071. Dir•rt. I do m.v own work. pni. '42·1470 ...... 1v1 ce .u11r1tnl"'""' "' . I .,, •••.• ,. BF.A trrTCTAN NPeri~ Tm· Uotil f!.mplnymenl lt.f'l'l'pt~d 1, .. (' n NR ( I ·-'rll Repnrt1n1 timP 7:4.<\ Am ri ai· 54,,.. "''' ,,.. -.a!IO. d f h I 11 •S b --·--An1p u.t r._. --'11 t Mr~. ,..,.·hrl'l l I·.· •I 1,1•-Ct r WtJh. •~ ~. F:XP. lf11u.•Aiii1.n C:,11rri"n"r mP · or UJ:)' "lOp. · r f lBERl.l.ASS Molril"~. •kill-OVERSEAS SERVlCF.S \.\'t:~Cl.IF'f' ~ uu ,~~ ~ C•mrlrtP 21\l'rlf'ni n~ ~Pntirf Stwing/AJteraiion1 or IiO'rr romm. Pd v11c11tion. f!d •-un.•killed. All :t ,hiltfl:. JANITOR.C::, expPr., 3-.fi .. ' .. ' '.. · j' 1 Rfl'F.PT!ON J~T: 11li.• I~ ,.. l7!h SL, C.M. • h I . hi M F . 1 ! 1617 E. 17th St S.A. Su IP · 1 . . f h I f'pr~llnnP I A.:,nry I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,1 t\am"-l:tni, ~fi7f;. ---... ~-CRll 548-991!1. Wt will train. 18.'ll Pl1tcfn-rs llllit: <lfl.· r 1., "I -====--cc~-,,---Jll'l'lt j10~1t1nn nr t " it• 11 ---··--·~------Sf.\\'TNG k Alrl'ra;tion~ tinnf' .,.,,nrk in ~an CJ,..menlP, El PARKIN(; 11ttfi'M11.nf11 p11r! wl'wl likr~ v11 riP1y. u~,. .Yniir 'l04.1 ~1"'fl:l~lirf Or .. /111' 'OHN<QNC::' GARO"NIN<-RP11.nh• ~:tlnn fill , C()11t11 Mes11. ~'"'t2770 ' · · · ' r.i · ' in my hnmf'. RP11Mn11h!P k '' ' Tnrn, Cmwn V11lle-y I. tim•. NPll l apl)f!llrA!1('f', J~ ?RX "XP"rirn!"P It kl'Pp 11r -~ ''ii.rrl ~fA i n!l':nllnC'f', Pl11niin1t rffir if'n!. Phnnl"' :i!il--400.~. 1'"al!hinnt1 hlP Nl'wpnrt Rl!:ll<'h F'IELD Sl':rvicl!-/, 1n~t11 ll Larona 8f!11ch 11rf'A11. C111l nr OYPr. M4-1700 r..x1. ;\.">.i. nn ,\'nttr typinit . R11plr1 SA1:-1''..WOMF:N-s;ll--,;;_ ('lP~nl!f'I.• ~2-20.'5 Al • "2 584-5 Salon. l .ir·,..nsf'rl ll.t~ifl:lant lnt'"r-m•. ••-&e rl n n r 11'·. ""160.1. . . S t I'-Steno Secretaries --------ttrat1ons - -• d d 64 •2151 " '" ... .. .,,,.,... 1·1u .. ,.~ .. 111.r .~~" IA ... tit' P1u~tA8ll" P11 ntyhn'•· PROFESSIONAL 1 Nr111.I accura!I' 20 vr.Ar,. exp nee e · ...-· · op P r a tor~. E~rif'-nc.ftii JANT'I'ORJAL Service needll I PERSONNEL CAil .Jr1111 Rrn11111. ~ F.11~ rtirPrl ~"'"· Wo r k <1wn .IA;f'l'll1P .. ,. r.111T!P.:nmg Servlr•p · · BEAUTY Of)f'rii.lnr w i th .,.,.ftool~ or \\1111 tr111n. plflm'-hf'lp, me-.n k women. C'na't"I AitP11ry hrfl:, CnmmiA,.ion. fi4fi. 7~117, f t PP Ed. * ~1~ 1 Stereo Rep•ir rnllnwing. Pair1 vac11tion. fi42-~30. c 1111 979-:'.fiS2. I RECEPTIONIST ~ HRMlnr Rl. 111 Aii11m11 ~ATY-~T.A O\'. ;;-,."hilclrl"n·• 'E;,nf'rt .Japi'ln,. .. P r.11rrlr nPr-~·rr.RF.0 ftquipm•nt r,.p;;;: Costa M" .. 11· ~~3-4 . 1.............................. RF.CF.PT!ONIITT IT .V p i 11 !. •pp 1t r ,. I ,rhnp·Mu111 hi> C'nmp!rt." Y11rii ~,..,.,,.,,..,. I ('Onipll'lll' fa cilitiP,11 fnr 1r tl B0"4:"~1·"·-,~-.--Bn~. -,,,i~.,-.. FIGURE J.C. Pl!NNEY CO, ,Vt\Ung, mAI"' nr t•m11IP, J m11!ur"' J, M\•I' "·"fl· C11JI 1-:xrPll,.nt Oppnrtnnih~ F'flr ~~IAMfll \\11th (}nod Skl!JJ, F'rt>l" r~tim11IP.o:, fi1&-7fi2.f mllkl'~ I. mOO,.J~ _ r1i.•ro1int Rnll•r1:. TouC'h op. Chopl)f'r ll'•shlo" lal•nd rll\,v~ wk ., 8 tn 5. Co11111 Mf'11A MNti. Aulrl t;.14-7014 ,11f!. fipm . ----fl k opPr11 1nr, Mill mi"Yl, C1tbil'lf'f N t I h fi42 :l.R:Ul ----Jl)l'S G111rriP'nin.t. rnmpJ,.te ralf'.': . .ll t1•11<'k !111>"' f"I" • . M twpor ••c Lite PBX ex"'!r. h '"°" IY. p--. · · .'\Al.F:~ ff'mall!, in Jlr htinQ: l!ll\'n l.: y11rrl carr, !"l1'1tnup~. C'IP11n k 11rlju~1 Sii.on, thi' l!.ll.~Pmbl Pr'. Jnlfr\Or al "" Rf'f'Pptinni1:I I ~rrPt111y, fl:i.:tul"ft ~hol.l·rnnm, Santa M~.1f.li2 ,11fl 5pm. \\'Pl'k $1.00 nff "1 Dii.ily Piln1 <',lll'J)eJllPr, F:xp. -" QualitiPtl ON AN R•quir•I Int neceB8Ary, ·' · nnf' yr ,.xp. l.111' t~·pi ng. An11 11rl"I!. S!iOO. mn • --.. -,-,'N-SE.RV_l_rf:--r,." ii Pr!'! IRe-plArPn1•ni onll~ G~11lnd MuWinert YC•.ch•I .~. •XCITING JOB INT"Rl'"'"\\rJNr. C'11!! ~.1fi lnr 11ppf. ~7-fi.1~1 . w iv1. · ~ · n~PrllP' 1' ('11.rtridi;l'l?:J 11 otf ~. l!i :i• :•0 "" "~ ire e. I 1;. HARDWARI ~. •~-' ----------=-~- Cllf·1':ii.tP·Trim o,.n,,nrl11hlf u.s.A. StrPf'n Equ i p . ,v,..~rminllter._~'t'-4747. DEPT. HEAD !!nn JrT11,..11!111m·2pm Rental Agent 1 sAr~r.Sr.AOY . rnr Jl"w,.1r.v C11.1l f'VI'~ ii.I !. fi. ~:.....171ifi ovs·----1. S•c'y~Sten• I w,n lhnJ F'ri !'111.m.12 pm I "".''"· hill Hm f', "''~ rt-• \VarF'htlur;P, 17!t F.. 17th St.,~ 8 ON d l<8-'~l General Strvic•• 2 2 OpenintB ava rl. Mw: · 6 9 ~ 'TUH'f' · · ......, · Co~ta MeJ:ii.. 1\45-4'1 · A2e 10·14 10 rieJJ""'° paper' I T 50 1.1 1 ,.. ,, .... ~ CARPET DEPT. SfTE Of" OUR PVPninJ~ In . pn1, fA1ur,. 1 " .. -,-~-.--r--;-l ,-"'P,.-,-1 theD11naP01nt 811.nCle-ype · l t•l'i "· SELLING SPECIALIST NF.W BUILOtNr. 1vnm~n rnr ll\r.t" rrimplPx,1·1".'r"" ~ 1trty pan. •t RY Mn n ~I": IJ, rlprt, T•l1vi1ion Rep•i r in ' Type 60, Steno 90 Nir.. ""'r.vinii.lih•, w,lJ. \\'Ith w111"' l11.•1ln1 F'ulllp•tr'1 * RLATNF's TV * DAILY PILOT •URNITUR• DEPT. PACIFIC MUT UAL voom,.rl. Hmf'. t:v~ fl?~2470· plumh. ff'llt'f', Yn ll ! In ,. mentP llrPa,, ,. .., I r111'J)f'nlr~1, 1ile. RAl~TC ,92 •4~ 1 e Gtntr•I Cltrlcal ,. ~ l4'l0'l d 5-2 8'"Q S:ervicin" A!I Br11.nci11 ... ~" SE'LING SPECIALIST fASHION TSl.AN n ·-~-·-'-· !'iANOWICH ~hnp h"IPf'r· C'IU' . · .i -""· · "' • • , M11.lh or Englisb b.\r:k-.. -=-- TOT At SEF:VICF.S CO--.-. Authnriz"'ti M11gn11vn:9! ARTc_;H~. 11mhtlKIUJ: wom11n rround rlf'C~A•. Ofr. ((orn"'r S..nt111 Cru7. .(,. RESfAURANT femlll"' 1'V"r -K\. Part Pl b 1 1 II' C Kno\rn lnr hnrn'llty 540-431~ In hv!"-ln 11~ hf'lp!"r 4 mm· "' •I'd Jr 1 Exr1i:llenl wnrkin& rnnrtii. Ntwpnrt CPnl•r r>r lv"'' t:MPLOYMF:NT A\.ENn' tlmP. t!T>.1780 um J:' n~ 11. ,. llrpl'ntry 1 . f ., f 2 xper. pr . • . 1. I \" 1 II ,. h El R · • fi~1809 T'I plll'ltnn or ·mv w1 e nr nr s l'\o..o • A 11 011f!'!f11nr1 1ng h!':nr 11111 "'" tl'f'll"*~ ......... , . ~ r • er Ppt1 1r . i I• :l "'kJ:. Call 'hf"twn 4 Ao Jn 'r ...... ,,.-n1n2s v• . • f'R~:1': rlAily h u II Ru• Rrl.Y" .......... Sl.li!ti kr , Hauling I CERAMIC t. Vinyl Til~. pm. 5.'17-0S.i4 CM. i e K•ypunch Apply In p,.,.""" 1r11nitpr>r111·1in n fnr wnrk In 1 Hn•tP1111PJ1; ..... S2 tn S2.7~ hr! ' •-" h R h ' F. -hi I tn AM 4 Pfvl l.11~ Anl?'f'l"!ll until mnvp In Rrnilr r nr '"''"" rook , , , .$2.~ j : '\"ARD,J?11r11.~er:l e11.11up111 .I "'11" "'""· "1 '., ,n,.y,, C•s •r t.111~1 h1tve 6 mn'ii v.·nrkin1t · I Rrmnve ll'f'P ,. ctirt. h"I',' cu~tnm Wnrk Il l Rf'AMnablf' S•rvlce D•pt. IOXpPr. nf\ ("llhl"r" k!':ypUn("h, 14 Fashion lal•nd NPwpnrr. S:Ppt . '72 . In S2Jt, pfl~ .~hill I d b k .. _·_ RAif'~ Glf'n ~411--776~ F:"ll1tl n 0 ...... r. l':moln.v"r Cnnk, iiA.YltmP , .. ., .... S1 hr ~ k-1 p1 'l a e r, ii.c '"-"'· · · ' · · · r.-1u~1 h11 ve r a•h1l't l"Xp., prP· 1 keytape, or kf'y t11sk dfv1ce. ,,,. ·~· PRINTINC., Olf~,.1 ..;;;niili.it r 121 ,., ,'"'~ 1 . . '"'"'!'~~!"""'."'""'"''"'"":" ,... , 11n1r,\ mAn, .. . . ,,...r • 1 t !1~7-flOI'. , fpr lltJlomohvP, l'l'(JUIN'" 1; I ' R rr k :VC1 LADIES. Gnnri 11ummer joh. 1 pr"''~ npr. '" "· · 1" · · A.t&T . M11.nAR'"'r ...... $7:iel. m<1 Y'•d. r,,., •. ~ •• -Up. I l!i+l pll!A,•nt pll'ntK'lnality. ahil· I • ,.,·,,. "x w 'h ,. I b ' "' '' ' "r '-' " Parl A: full lim•. ll'Xpl'r. mml'ro . I'll' " ... r, · 111 'l'llllfS -~"«" !S A('rf'nl Traf' RPmn\•11.I. f rP,. r,,t_ E,,.ioyll'llnt ity In ml"ft 1 th,. publir. Mu~f INTER.VIEWJNr. t' I '/lt'JYIWinll: I $1 fiii h R R "' 14RR _ kavf' '"XP with 11.ddin11 ma· I •ton •. T•••• 9•m-2pm 5.')7.5()911. ""'JI lnnll nppnr, " · ' r ""~· l'llf'~. .... -. .. "' 1' .... n111'l m . p,.rm. Xln! \1·nrk· FEI-: OMO•f h I' 1·kinf' ,,_ hAVll' tMri h11nr1-w~ fhru Fri 9•m·l 2pm LARGE Drua:~TOl'tl' In H.R. in( t'l'lnd•. k. n11t1tanriin2 ,·ROYAI. SF.RVICf: Altf;NCY ...,. ,, " , mnvr~. 1111 tnir;, ·1· 5 o k ' 1 • ON h ............ ,, for· r11im,. Job ~'l•~teci, Y:emale 702 wri in2. AY "''"'" · · 0 ...,. .-.~ .. ,... "1" · '· hPnPfil11 . Nn. Am,.r. Cnr• F<1 r R,~111ur11n1 Per.'l("lnnet rlf'~nup. Exp ,..,11,.J?P atll· . Tnl,.TViPwinir 1v,.f'k t'li\y,, ~ITE or OtlR "·"P"'r. 11"1i1111n1 m11n11gf'r, I rPspnnrl'n"" Schnnl", 4dlll 30I» RPrlh UJ A''"'., drnt LrJ? tn1rk RP.• 5.14-1_'4_6. N".F..O h•lp al '--mp? w"' DAVE ROSS Pontl•c NEW BUILDING maJ,., S1rick n111n. Pltlm"' I N R M M'I r, mi Rirch St ., ,. r'J, I Pf!, Jt~xpl11n11ria tV, CnalA :\ff'l.111 \'ARD trlll!!h, g,11r11..1te rlf'111.n· ha \le AidP" • Nu rsPit • 2410 H•rbor, CM noor m11 lnt " mAn , F.xJ)ll'r. ~7:wi. .~ul •• llO, :l.i?-2AOO • h 1 T · Hou~ekl!:f'pP.r.~ • Com· 5£1. I017 PACl,IC MUTUAL 1'11t ll'/f,.m Cam,.r• rl"'Jlf . ~===~~--,--,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;= • up. ~fO\'f' All , rPf' trim-. o II k -I .~-. Co"mft tici11n . CIPrk" It PROFESSIONAL p .h 0 n ' -_m_<•_<._M_to_ti~~ ~~~.-:.-it ~l<l~l~ ~-~ .. ~~ema era • CLEANlNG l..AD\' nf'f'ri;d, f~;~l~ntI~!;jL~~ I. C;~rk,.r•. f/rlmP J, p/tunP, ( aoliritor • O.sn11 P~lnt, S11n P.IO "· . /""'(l(l('O • Mo-.• ,,,· , ..• In cl••" ·.t-~ t ~,,, .• -... M llril'a YARD J. G11ra;:t' f'lr.sn11j"I. " "' • "" Nf'wport Cenlf!'I' Drive) ~pl'r. offi? a:irl, 8'17-446-4 1 '·1"'mf'n '"· -" · · frf'P f~l . 7 '111.ys. C11.ll MA 11)Rf: Lit!o R ~' i rl e n 1 l\tt-, 962-4471 , 121.' 1 5'2-l ;i.1l. l'''1rk in yn11r own hnmP;. 11.nytime, ~ll-50cJ_1.___ ~·,o,u~d n \1~~ 1b111~·~i:t~n: d f~r Cl.F.ANING h1d,.v """rlPd -A * ft'RF:F. rt11My h u" LOAN ~~~e·~~ee~r"';ioor~;: • ; · ' hr~ wkly, Ft'w hr~ Mn~ trln"portafinn r<1r wnrk Jn PROCESSOR H ••ting & Air 61:"1-4864 . WPrl.Ji'rL M~141.1/R3.'>-3461. 111" An2'l"lf'11 until mt1ve lo Conditioning . ---~ E:xCf'prinnii.I l1ttly "'ill JivP in COMPANION lnr wnm11n \n Nf'wport. Serr. '71. NP"' 1•nn~tM1r1),.n <1r f'Xifl:tina blrlg,i, Rf'~. nr rnmm,.rch1! Air Cnnrlifinn inJ?, Ht2. R. R. H11.:J?in~ Cn. 642-11.'ilS 4!lfi N'wpot1 Rlvii., N.8 . Hou1•cltanin1 f.Tf:SA CJ1!:11.n1n11:. C11fll""I', "'inii"11·~. flnnr~ "''"· Rt•itt/ C()l'll'l, !i.~j.fi742, 54i.:.ot111. Ji, IAkP. full rhAr'2" fnr P11rl\' t 1 f Ii P •. Llf hl ~~""'""'""'""'""'""'~~ hf'A llh.Y (\\'l'r 00 per.'Wln , hnu;f'\(PPJ)i!'l,!; ~ ri11y "'k. FULi .. or p/hme. ~ce JP•1llPm1tn prl'r. '130-6446. ~5564 11/1 fL P.11t11 hli'h"'d F'ullPr Bn1~h R A R y s 1 T T. I N r. . --c-.-n-.-,,·-.-.-,-lo-.---~~tomer11. 962-&416. Hn11llf'<"lP11nin,1t, H11n111ri11n Superint•ndent GENERAi_, l'lfl ic"', l 1n !ti pJTI. Cookina. G11rliP nina Joh Ctlllliil \t1n.ttrut:"Hnn <:ti., ht('., Typlna, r\ll na, a n-. pMnt.s. \\111n1ed . 5.16-A5.¥.t A m 11jn1 S<t. Callf. 11111'1-rli· .om"' arcta . Apply UH~ AUSTRAr.JA N. • RN ,,.,.k~ vliiPr nPtrl' prl'ljt"t'I m11n11tl'r PlaeentiA, C.M, 0 11 v i rl prlvat• nur.iin2 pn,;itl<ln <1r tyl)f' ,uf1Prln1,.nrltnl l<1r r,.~•· _1_n_d."' __ ri;_·_••-·------- "'lrhildrftn , f21.,t 24•-~2. ii,.nnal '1Pv•lt1pmPnl. ft""P1.Y CENF.RAL nffir11 tlrl, ~ rta,v F:Kpf'-r, fli AIVA (it'.ntf Wnricinr Cnnrti11nn• 54'-10'3 J'l'O.ll.T A 1. f'11rri,.!'1. f)Plivl'r ,YflUr own 11 rP11 . f'<1,t11 M"'l'lll.. HllnL F\i'h.. f'nll'I , Vl~· MAID "'<Irk l n-,:Xrh111 nft-fM I Hou~f'wivf't p r f! I tr r" rl · • 1 11tpartrr111n1 , 2376 Nf':•'J>"'lrt ~:vi...-0402. Rlvrl ., CM . !'>tS..97~'· JfF.. s'AJ.J:~-=-rnmpl;j"' -1;_ • -Ma1"nt•nance "'"~·1 p",.' . I "n. 11 U I trA1n1n1r. pmfr,..m tn m•k• I ,vnu ~IU'<'""'rl fn ,....1 ,.,..,,.,,.. Man "'""" "r "xlJPrl"'nr"'tt. 11mal1 t1lhr"', Rf'()kf'r ""'""rl I. BAY .tr Rf'arh .l11 ni1<1ri11J. rrpt~/1\'\nt'liill·•/f\onr~ ere. RP~h:l/C<1mm 'L 6..S-1401 . r . 0. Box ZWI, N;wport I \\'tf'k. 10 kl"l/ 11.dd!n1 ma(';h .. fnf f')r11.n1" County 8a~ed A.~sltUrMI C"ftmp&11)' 1 "ti ,.r,.1Pt1 . LEAOER~1T' R.F".. M2-4.wti. H•lpWantecf,M&f710 Bt-arh. AllPn: Mr. OT~ l}'pina It renftral dulit!,, 1 •TIME FOR ADVERTISING COOK-SHORT ORDIRS -11M ... 1. '19. D•dlcattel Clta,,ing Grl'at opportunity for hlJ?hly Prll'IC'iJ13tlly 11hnrl nrdl'MI, I· (';fRI. t°RIOA\\', A.l!ellr11t' Phon, rl'lr A('Jpl. QUICK c •sH * \YE oo f',\lf.R\i'HJN<': • mntivat,.d, hi2hly 11killl'd 11Ah1ii~, 111nrtwh:hl'•. Nn ap/11 typina: • .,mt il>torthllfld, <'114 1 ~"92 A. nets. rr"'" P.tl. 64fi..Z\.l!l ~("r,t111ry tt'I work inln hrn11d-11hU1~. no Sun wnrk. 40 .Hr l Jtoora M pm,, Mon. 11\rn er rull(ln,,in11111,.. 111 111.~1. wk I J"tnly I nll• a wk t~ • r rJ Cll.11 Mr11. Cht rmtt. FCllr West THROUGH A CI.EANfNC'°S!>"ci~li~t: \\lin-flll <'ll'fl Nt"'l'IOrt Rt11 th •ii· pm. CIP11 n, mnrl torn lttn«h VIU..AGE RF.At~ t..WATF, Mv.~, rllrfll'l. flmn, tlOV~ VPrti•lnJ[ •rl'nry, Rr111n ... NMJMI"'· Unirnrm lorn. Ap-962...(.(11. Services, fftC, It"\'"'"'· 774-'l.'lZ1. lniliatlv,, It .th rcquirlll'rl, ply Llndhera: Nutrit\twl in ----------·I ' DAILY PILOT \\'HAT Ynu Sf'~ J·-,-Wl>-,-1-Y-nu Call lll-1670 re'ar ol thf' Toy \\'orld 1tor,. DAILY~LOT 1672 llt•yneltl1 Ave Get• Cl~ninc f)nl'l#'Tht ,-:---al .. ' It. nn liiw~r lf'Yl'l. 5n. Cf')UI C' ASSI D' ADS s.nta .. ,.. ' WANT AD ' , u _1 t .t way11 loft r l)t'hl time Pl.alt Shop Ctr in C'.o•ta 1 .,.. .. St't W11...v "''! . .,&-,,,., · I th ~ .. ht place lt • woy• • • .. M•AA. FOlt ACnON t;oull Opoor. Employ« EXPERJENCEO M~ndahl" .YOU wanl RF.SULTS Cal1•1----------1 A • • ••!---~---~~-~··2 5678 ~~. :~~k e~~·~:,u~~: -~-"'-~-'-~-~1•_•_•_1'_'" __ 'h_"_•_d ,,r __ !_. -'~-•-~_,_:_m_P_lochtr_und_•_' _"°_· CAU '42 .. 56 71 Atrt~:n:,:m ut • • eood j __ V'f_· -·----- ., f<euben ~ Costo MelCI fl/fl\\' !nll"!Vl"'W'lnl COCKTAIL WAITRESS 21 Or Over Apply In Ptr1on llll Adams Avo. Coate M••• SATURDAY Interviews PACIFIC MUTUAL Moving Te N•wport Stpt•mber 1912 1mm"'r1111lt p\trf'mi!rtl w11rk in · L/'I' Anaelrit1 1im,. fl1 movf' . ,., until ~:xl'.ll'nt":n1·"' In t.HI", Al'rltil'nt M" H11.t1llh ln"ur•nC'" prPfPr .... r1 huf not "~~,.nt1.s l. Cu('· r"nt nl)l'n1n1rs Airt-: eGEN'L CLER ICAL •SEC'Y .STENO eMATH CLERK Personnel Clerks Pn11iti(ln~ Al'" lmm!!rllall'ly Avsllah!I" Fnl' 2 Exptr- ll!n<'f'rl PPr.llt'lnnrl <':J"'rks \Vil ~ 011t•r11nr1 ln1t Cl!':ril'.'111 Sldlla: Mu•I A"' A S..lt Starll!r • Hiah l.>v"'I PPrrnrmrr. rn11it!nn• (lllr r An r1ripnr1 lln· lly Tn Wl')f·k Jn An f:nvi.ron· m"nt Olf,.r1n.t A V11.r il!ty "' I rh .. l\Pn11n.1t R.P~pontlhllltt11• Alnn2 With A High ~f!'etl nf f'!Praon•I .Jnh f;111111 lar:tlon; Arrtl ir11.n1.~ \l.'111 R,. lniP rv!Pw"r1 \\',.l'kt!11.y.t PHILCO FORD CORP. /\PMnut·mnle nlviSIOJ'I Ford Road Newport Beach F..qu11.I Oppnr. F;mpltlyer Mii.i to nr f"~m&IP ~PER.VlSORS. II II 1 I b ft 8 t pmri. $u~rv1111:1ry ' I( I I t .... '"'"· Rn11t hftfr ":rtP. not n>q 'n . W,. will t r 1t I " • M11rGno~nr Y11r:hl, Cofl>. lfi~l r 111rf'nfl11 , ~1 TELEP•IONE Sales. Top t'f1mm1s11inl'IS 11nd bonu.a. Ap.. ply 1n person belwttn g,oo I 11nii 12:00 ntll'ln 1111 A.Vt &Ju. AVl"f\Uff, ~f ldway City. TIME FOR 1QUICK CASH WANT AD 642-5671 I I . ' j0 DAILY PILOT fr1tl>J. M1112, l9n l.;PG)I••• ,~Lrnri-:_1 !!! -"!!!....,=" ·=l~Lrn~I ~ ... ~ ... ~. ~I~~~ I •Ju 111 I~ I ..... ]I ~ I ..... ,~, •rt ., ]~ ( '"':-- .... , W•-· M .. F 7IO Help Wmi.d, M .. ' 710 Antlqun IDO o .. _ 51.. \ 112 TF..<liNICAL ablll'> Jor , __ A._N_S_W_E __ R_S__ GARAGE SALE "Clean Room" ,.,,... or lite 'VAn'RES.S tor cotJe. shop, ~ ..-~tJna plott! Moving manufaclurlrw. PhoDI! eves Alto, ocptr. CUhltr for din-tortt1 011 to gjvt up 7 yn 6-9 PM , ~t35. ' Ina rm. APPIY lb pcr10n to SCRAM.-LEJS worth ot book•. dilhe1, .TELLER J E xperl1nc1d Pert Time -UNITED- Callforn i• Bank 222 Ocean Av•. L1gun1 Beac~ 496-6546 Equal Oprior. Enir>loyt'r Cottee ShQp HOI~, llote:l .houRbold Items, decorative Laguna, 425. So. ~ Hwy., Items, aome turnllure, La.g 8Ch ~fadcap -Knavt -Llne.r -· · Maiure _ .r.Jrl..KED clothe1, Avon bottlct, p,o.lntJ, \VAJTnESSES: Enalli h a:lrl1 Old farmer'• nyinr: "You 1oy1, tabrlct1, mlilc too num· rtQd for 't11eitlng new 16th don't hllvc 10 be a C'Ow to it• crou11 lo list! 8216 Pennlne- Ce n tur.y.Style tt11a.u ranl MILKE::D." ton Dr. oU Beach&: Atlanta opening in Anaheim. Britiah In Surlalde, H.B. DC<.'t'nl e.ucmUal. Call (7141 Antlqu• Clocks GARAGE SALE 'til llOid: '72 m.3360 Prl/ply. 120 10 chOOM> trom. . School clockt, frent.:h inan-BULTACO 125 cc Pul'!lang l!JAJTRESS, exper. o~ 11. iel clockll, and ., 2, 3• ""/Barum llrt$, P. P. 1 Ck>sed fl1on/Tut•. Apply s Weirhted clockll. Vltna r rg· fenders. sprocket, etc., $650. pin \Ytd. thru sun. Bii.ht& ulalo1'11 -and Grandfather. Bell ~lfaanum ht.it.met $35. CorinH1i;in Yacht Club, 1601 Restoretl or 311 IJJ. 962-6351. New cond. MX racing 1 Blly1ide Or., Cd.\f. lea then. Ill 30. S 2 5, Appli11nce1 I02 fltagnavox stereo 11/1 \fArrRESS, p/tlme 11-2, ~ ~·/am-fm radio, t w , b ovtfr. Cllrl'• "Jr, 6882 MAYTAG repalrma.n has speaken, $100. 24762 La Pai TRAVE GENT \'tj.tner •. H.B. }ofgr, 09.rTel wiu.hen; $35. to SlOO. Can (l<m·er apt,) Dana Point L A Buker. tlellver w/l yr. guarn. Exf)('riencf'd, ll i r 11ne11 . 839-1778. FOR sale, Hoover vacuum, <'l'Ul1e1, tourJJ. J)('pt, storl' \\'A,\'TED, experienced holtl walnut desk, chair , bedroom burt'au, ro11h·N'd Saturday desk cle1·k. Apply in person \\'HIRLPOOI. 1 m Pt r i a 1 11Uit, ample dining table & 4 d ' · "I · JI I • ~ u•uher & Dryer-220 volt or ut)I a lnu1d, . ubm1l ••l'sum4! lo :1uu tor, -ore ...... guna. captains t:halrs, lawn mower • 1 · ·-s ~--1 H '.,_, 110 volt. $100 both. prllpty. • sa nry rrqu1re1nt<nt11 to ·u;;i . ......as "''Y·· ....... una &15-.3669. , &: misc. 3912 Inlet Isle, CdM, ClaaUied ail no. 357. 1~/o Beach. between 11 am &: & · Afay 13 &: 14 only. 8 am to 6 Oali,y Pilol. P. 0. Box 1560, , -e•-"-"--------ELECTRIC u·a1her &: Ory~. pm. · C""I. M.,, · C• 9"""" 1 • White. excellent condition. L • • 'u'"· \VANTED rnan ot. womah ex· OFC dsk~bnt-8 mm camera "Private party 979-2500 or TURRET LATHE OPERATOR perien~d !t'Y eoOk. Lunch I: 979-7245 ask for Cuey. cmp furn-camper jack.CJ· dlnrn?r, age ?.5 · to 45. Fut, misc. 14126 Paul Wy, neat, some background & J-Wedgeu'OOCl-J.lolly 30" ga11 We11 tmlnster. at rt.n rk I itove S50. & 1-Apt. size GE Cln~ A-Ol.ly ~lfl r t ce wo exp. n elecl. $30. Gd cond. 673-7706 3 PC. Stctional, couch, port. Apply 1741 Pln.rrnlui Orange Coimly. 310 \Vest dishwasher, c h a j r & •11 •-·ta •-·· &ft 6 pm OR Sun. CoJJla i\1"~a " 1• ,,..., "'"'· Joveseat. i\fisc. Zl73 !'¥liner TYPIST PART TIME I \\'ATCHMAKm \Van 1 e rl , K!.'Ni\-10RE Gas dryer-S:JO St., C.M. Free malchlng w a 11 h Ing Full tinit ernployel' bt'nt.!fi li. f/time. C0tta· MeM Je~·elry mach needi rep a 1 r, GARAGE SALE -ltou.~hld Ideal po/ii.Ilion for hriuSl'\vife c& 'Loi a,:1;..-~!,3841Ne\vport Blvd.. 549--3888. g1vdai"1 apNt ", 'c .,••v,.'"5~ w/chlldrcn in llChonl lln1. "' · wt~•' · ace o. ·" · ....-01~ 8:30 to :i: pm. !\1ulil lyJ>I' !ill \VOMEN 18 up. Need 10 to Rent W111h1r1 /0ry1r1 (Fri-Sun}. d $2. \Vk. Full maint. "'Or • per min accurately. teach. Learn & enjoy on your * 639-1.202 * GREAT 11ale at 100 Kings Pl, Addrei;liO..Q.Prinl Cr n t "r, O\\'n time. Ill S'•. AlllO po1i.11I-N.B. Sat &: Sun. Bargains Jnr. ~1115.'"1. bl~ bu1ioeM or your own REYRIGERATOR, ft yn. galore i n cl, playground fit-')..()990 · old, 2 drs. au10 delrost, equip \YAJTRESS 1vantcd. New I ' · cocktail bar needs food & "roRKJbrlG. mother needs B93-fl000. · HANGING baskets, ferns, <.«:ktalt wailreM. l\fus l be reli11.ble h.s. or, college girl RErnJGERATOR & Stove, variety shade plants, Friday over Zt &. c>XJK'rienced. Nrot ~liter_ Blutfs-some daya-look like new. ;50 en. 1130 to Friday, 378 E. Esther, appearing. Apply 2 pm to 4 llOine eve11 _ own trans. Westminster Ave., \\'e!ltm. CM. 548-5295. pn1 daily, S1"<'r & Stein, &14-521.;, Frigidaire Refrigerator 1170 Boker SI., Ci\1. --~.~------LIKE NE\V! $65 ISO MJsaiCA... iii Mltceftw.u1 Ill ~-. Machines aa Pett, Gener111 * AUCTION * CARPET; "'°"· hub .,.. •• s"1! ...,, · c.1m .. ~ 11 BABY Mallard due,... FRIDAY 7:30 P .M. hi-lo, $175 eq yd, xlnt cond. cbnt: ~ crrwn. hide-away 3 v.its old. Sl each. FRIDAY, Miil 12 522 Catalt.na NB 557-!1135. aewi.ng atta $90 o t r Sandra-5$-9831. £,11a1e Sale ENI ravelle. EXERCYCLE $35. ~ 615--7295. I ·SN=A~KE=8~, ~Ros-y""'Boao---:;120=. &a1JIUul. curved, 11 a•• Rocking Hone $10. Chlld'a Sporting Goods l)O King snake $13. \Vh ip sna.ke b~akfront China cablnel, elecbic car $5. 645-2609. needlepoint chair .l ottoman, SU R F B O A R D S., pad-S5. 549--3838. leather inlay drum table & GO CART dleboarda, slJ.sbt freight 6 Young pigeons black & llep tables, pair of brass f)'ame & \Yhls. SiJO. 673·2916 damage, $M. 1916 Placentia, ~·hite wffeathers on feet. lamps, dining lAble & buffel, Mi1c•ll11naou1 C.Jltl. 548-3486. Share!. Sl each. 548-9832. 1lereo, TV, bedroom aet, W11nted 120 Store R•st•ur•nt chest1, corner units, Mr. &-' , l\1rs. chairs, vacuum clean-WAN't:'Et> -Newport Beach Bllr 132 er. large retrlgera!or, \VaJh· ~~ni• Club membership -Sl'ORE FIXTURES, display er, pay tratl!ter fee. t:all t:ase~, ett:. 19ZT llarbor Manufaclurer irez sell 'em 644-4895. Blvd, phone (n>t> 325-1381. Van load or beautiful ne\v Mu1ic;:11l ln1trvment1 l22 TV R d 'o H lfi dlvan1, Joveseata &: chairs ' 11 1 ' ' maple dlnelte dre.ssers' FENDER Bauman amp. 13.l Stereo 136 bunks, Jamp1, ~tree tables: r .rn.s. 2-IS" Altecs ~300· 1972 ZENml & R c A relrlgerator, eye level gas Fender Col~a00.l2 gwtar, Televisions at cl06e out stov~ & MUCH MORE!. ~oananty, · ~l90l prices. Some '73'1 now tn WINDY'S AUCTION VOX Royal G u • rd s m a n stock. Low"! prices ot the Amp., lotal sowxl effet:ll at year. Prl~ below the d1s- d7ME BRO\!JSE AROUND a reasonable price. 968-6291. counters. With 3 yr picture 2075~~ Newport Blvd. Office Furniture/ tube, 1 yr parts & 1 yr Behind Tony's Bldi. Mat'ls. Equip. 124 service. Antenn21 at cost if c t M needed. Every available os a esa * 646-8686 FOR sail", used air con. model in stock and on OPEN DAILY 9 to 4 ditioners & milsc oUice di!play. Hurry tor full J\-1AGNAVOX Hi-Fi-S75. 18 furniture. 960 ,V. 19th St., selection. ABC Color TV, BANTAM chicks, all <-'Olorll Sl. ea. DUCKS & ~cos. LINGS 2612 S. E. Mesa Dr. C•ts 1.12 PERSIANS and Himalayans blacks, silvers. · cameos, also Persian stud service. 892-2970. FREE killens. Also pure bnd Siamese, 5 \Yks old. $20. 642-4818. 534-3885. * Lovely Siamese kit!ens for !<.!others Day. Call aft 2 pn1 646-2781. PUREBRED SEALPOlNT SIA~IBSE. Beaut. kittens. M/F. 1· wks. $20. 962--7198. SIA!<.1ESE kittens, Seal.point. 2 Female. 8 "·eek! $10 each. • s.IS-2878 • cubic ft re!rig-freezer $150. C.l\-f. Orange County's largest 1 pc wrought iron dl·MON R OE Pri n ting Zenith-RCA Dealer, 9021 Dogs nette-glass lop. SlOO. Mino!· Calculator w/l\o1emory, just Atlanta, Huntington Beach, -;;...=--'O'.-::""'= 854 ta camera-SRT 101 w/F1.4, overhauled Sell $250 968-3329. DOBERMAN PUPS lele-photo and wide angle 67:>-6369. • . SPEAKER system11. shipping lens-many · extru S 2 5 O · S4S-8825. ' Pienos/0"111n1 826 damage lo boxes & packing only. 6" 1.u·ay to 15" 3-way BEAUTIFUL new Japanese * Clearance Sale * air sw;pension s y 11 I ems ' buffet 52" x 30" x 16'". hand sos:i oll reg. retail 5 year carved black laquer. can't '" gunrantee. 892-ll91. use, paid S375 _ fast sale \Ve are over stocked \Vilh --~==~~-­ $125. Call 642-6468 after 4 pre~wned bargains and STEREO ,... pm wttkdays or anytime pianos. Must make room Complete systems, 20 lo 40 '" \Vttkends for ne\v merchandise coming off reg. retail. Speaker sys- • · in. terns, 35 to 50% off reg. KARASTAN rug, 9xl2, sun. Buy Now & Save! retail. 7804 \Vestminster burst pattern in "'ool pile, e ORGANS e Ave .. 'Vestminsler. 892-7952. used 3 mos. $160. Roll of green carpeting, ,,,,.001, never Silver lone S69. PAIR \V ha.~ f d a I e ne;;i used, S5 sq ydr. will cover Orcoa Chord $159. s~akers .• 15 Woofer, 5 llxlS room $?O. -494-485J. Hammond l\f . .] $795. l!11d, 3~ T\veeter, boxes Lo\\'tey TW (AOC) $S95. rK'ver opened, sold $385. Bald\l"ins from $595. Take Sl4•1 cash. 53-3-1148. Champ lines • AKC rl'g, • 962-2662 .. LABRAOOR Retre1ver, AKC, regi.~. quality puppies. Call 557~219 aft 3 pm. Have shots. 6 \\'EEKS old \\·ire haired Terrier, A.K.C. reg., male & female, de w o r med. 8--17~. SREGOR German Shepht'n:I Kennel· has beautiful pups by Oi. Nordic. Terms. 527-49.ll Boah/M11rine Equip. 7'; ltP. Sean outboard molor, starter, ,enerator, bait, other features. $l!i0. :>Jli.li965 Boats, P ow•r 2 Boat owner wants to sell·23' 191J WI NNER FLY BRIDGE-2 s!Hrl~ i;tations. 35mph b:lp speed, outrigger, SIS radio, elect monomatlc head & many other extra11. Trailer. 1971 American taadem w/slde r11.il & ~urge brakt'!I. Can be sren at Dana P ol n I , 714 • 49&-4020 days I eves- 213 • 691·2502. Asking $9950. 28' CABIN Crulser. $3001 cash. Roomy family bout. Good !islling recol'd. ?.larlin chair. Ship to Shore \V/fQll boat cov~s. Hull by G. &. Parsons, built locally. Good operating • 1..'0nd, R . P . 1'1askey owner. \Vk-days 673-600). 22' Custon1 Spo1·t Fisher. VI-lF, Depth ·r eco rder. Che111. head, outrigge·rs, 2 fishing chairs, bnft tanks, 400 niilc r nngr. Also good ski boat. 646-63'1·1. 14' SEA \Vitch-4 new moclel11 'filil'l', Sport. Fishcrn1an, Diver, fi'Om SIJO. 1\1otors .&: lraill'r avail, 546-0060/ 546·0578. 18' California 110. Less than yr. old. Complete ~·/col'er. Trlr, !'.kis. l\1ln! ed. $289,j, 5-16-3107. NE\V Nicson henl'ty duty tdn1 bo.11 1railf'r, fits 17'-19'. Lie. S3i5. or best. 673-499!1 or 67;H;i66. 1957 22' Owens Cabin Cruiser. No engine. Clean! Best offl'r. Call Herman, 548·55.51 9 lo 5 pn1. 1be lo.Mte1t draw in !he West ••• a Dally P Jlot O as!ilfied Ad. 642-5678 \V0 RKINC mothe:r needs e 646-3663 e steady, .. dependabl~ •• r u 11 lim(' babysiltor. Re t 11 . 673-5352. KENMORE washer, old. Sl5. Good cond. ; yn GARAGE Sale. F ri. & Sat 8 to 5 pm. Lots of goodies, too much lo list here. 3257 lll ln- nesota Ave., C.i\1. GARAGE Sale-Fri-Sat. Jncl. Frig. wa&her/dryer, pwr LARGE & small applla.nces, Color &: B/'V TV, Sll'reo, gas BBQ, beds, child furn., bikes etc. Decorator item:!. 246 \Valnut St., Nwpt f!<.'h. Ha mmond cons. 19" Portable color TV. I yr fl'Om Sl695. old. W/stand. Like ne'v e . PIANOS e Cone!. w/l yr guar. S185. Bald1v1n make Spinet S-495. 557-3993. SHELTIE pups (toy collies) 3 males, 10 wks, champ. quality. AKC, shots $75. 847-4909. 19&l Cl-IRIS 28" Cavalier, ll\•in cngif)(', r adio, auto FOR Mothers Day, AKC pilot. l\lany Pxtra/ii.~ Very \Vhippct pups. Champion clf'an. $6,9-j(]. 67>7762 MMJll •••••••••••••••••••• fALORIC gas range, self· clean ov.-n. Almost new. mower. almost new. 328 1911 B/\V TV $40. Stove, apt. Fullerton Ave. NB. size $40. Couch $50. Dre~ser G~A~RA~G=E°'"'&o-=P-alc-K>-Sa"°'le-""""M°'I-,.,-. I ~59:.9 Walnut, C llI . Story & Clark cons. S595. 1---------- i\Telville Clark Grand $595. RCA 25" Color TV. \Valnut \'{eber Console $795. console·u·/ne\v pie. tube. Ex· bred. Part\ colors. Reas I ·F=o=R=-"s.'""'lo--t"•t.,.' -cA7l"-m-a"c""r~att priced. 557-8408 . boa!. Cur lop. 115lbs. OBEDIE!l.'CE Class lo stnrt $4;j...1773 . . 9#~~· ~ ,. . A CONVENl[NT SHOf'PING AN CAL ON THC CO. .::. ... bill For 11n ad in Wom11,,~1 Workl: ' Cell Miry Beth 6424671, 1xt 3'11 . • 673-0014 OVER 200 washers, dryers, N!frlgeralon from $39.95. 54>--0'00. HAVE moved from hon1e lo 11,pt, se:lllng like new G.E. v.•asher, SlOO. 642-2920. Furniture 110 eel Cond. $135 or best oUer . 835-536S. odds & end11 furn. Sat &: Sun 00-5) 1026 Sea Lane, CdM. BRAND new Sears Deluxe Many more to choose from belt mMsager \\·Hh vari· Bank terms trade-ins ''c~B~l.al~-ay_e_n_e~23~c7ha_n_o~el GARAGE Sale, Sat &: Sun 10 speed. Cost $100 • sell S70. \l"elcome. Turner + 3 Mike-Bass to 4. 704 Begonia, Corona 644-1732. COAST MUSIC antenna $100. Aft 5 wkdays d~ Mar (in alley). 675-8144. SERVICE -536-0~. G A RAGE sa1 2606 SO SQ YDS shag gold 1839 Ne1vport Blvd., C.).f. LATE model RCA console e. carpeting, like ne11· w/pad, * * 642·2851 * * Redlands, {off University), ibn25. \Vardrobl' & steamer Open Sunday 12 to 5 pm color 'IV $1-45. 2 0 0 Cosla i\lsea. Sat & Sun 10-5. 'runk $2.i 968-4961. '1:-PVifl:ft~OTlCEi-l;iBi;roaijidjjwjiayi,iCoiii'tjja;i'i'ejj,..ji,' iii GARAGE Sale -1917 Maple, BRAND new shoes for sum-* PUBLIC NOTIC~t C.1\1. Garage 25, Sat & Sun mer 6¥.iA~il~AA S18 50-425 Before you buy your piano ,.-------~ \Ved 1\-fay 24. in N.B. lrvinr area. Open to a ll dogs 5 Sl\IP JAOO: 20· fib, llr., SS mo's & older $46-&92S radior ou1rig~111. Loaded \1•/x:tras. 968-375.i. AOORABLE AKC basset MARLIN & ALBACORE 28. hound puppy-~lale-pitk or Calif. "!\\•In S<.'tt'I\', rnd11r, the lilte• 0 "·k. I -, S • ~-o niany xtras. (71·11 5-IS-8463 968-S993. SCHN/\UZER pupi;, perfect for ::'ifother's Day. llse.brkn. shots, groom & stud serv. a'llail. Tenns. 8--l6-0839. 19 Fi'. E\inrude Rogue \vilh Trailer. ~ HP Oi\1C Drive ~ LI 8-12:6 A Joy In June! N~f l":';.-er '( () LEAVING Stat«.'· }.lust Sell! Kitchen !bl, 4 chrs. $25. lnfonna1 din. tbl., 2 leaves, pads &: 4 chr5. $175. Old teachers dl!sk $35, \Vooclen ski~. sz. 10 boo!~ & poles $25, misc. 675-5717. 0 , 64 ••• 96 ' ' ' · or organ, be sure & see us [ Ifs 1 am-. pm. ~ · ~each. Also su•ealers for Best S•l•ction Free lo You Miscellllineous Ill · for the best service in · . STEREOS NE'\V blank Ampex ~ min Southern California 3 Lin11, 2 Times, $2.00 Cassette tape!, sold S24 doz At Lowest e 4 Tiny CocJtapoos. $10 each. 642-4818 or 534-3885 eves. * lRlSH Setter Pups AKC, Champ Sire, suJ'('rb litter , shov:/pet. 968-6291. STURDY 18 ft . Cabin Cruiser with traMer. no motor. Bes! ofrer over $.'IX>. S.IS-6507, Boats, Rent/Chart"r 908 J I '# . • ' ... ., " ' i I ,.. ' 9134 SIZE S lOY,.18Y2 t.., 1lf 1i .... 1lf ,,..-r ... SOlvt· ~)11· '01\hr11.will·I· V.'f:flt·lll!\a.)''' tl\11)1\111:1 \\'Ith lhl!! crisply l,oo\\f'1I ~k111un<•1· that you C'lln 11£'111· llf'llNI or not. Straight lint's RI'(' ~1in1· min~. I Prtntl'rl P11ttl"rn !ll:J I: Nt-::\l' ll111f Sb:('~ 10'11, 1 2·~· 11 111• 16~w. 1 s1 ~. $17.e I P11 (busr 3T) !Akel!' 21~ ynrd.~ 00.inch. ,. .. \ • 1 ... . . . " .. 7'168 . ' &, A6.& i;i,...iu" I l)o('11 ~'Onr 1'00n1 'nf':ed a ne11• took?' rtljuvrnate your rhairs, sor11s "''ilh fl'tsh slip. CO\'l'l'l! -t'n~)' to make \\'llh thr~r cl<'nr t"!t~y.10-t.,110,v tlirl'rtion~. Jn~l ru1·tkins TI68: .s1tp-hr· i;lrp diroctlon11 for &lip- Co\'~l'S ror chnlrs, sofM. ~·~\'t.J'°T\'·f'1\'t; Ct:NTS tor r:itJ1 1)61!e1•n • arld 23 crnts f<1r c11ch pattern for Air :\!nil nnd Sprclal 118.ndl- ini;:; vthl'l"\\'isc third-class rlclir,·ry \\'ill take lhrt'e "'f'Ck,; or more. Send to Sf;VEf\'T\'·1''1\'J; CF.:'\1'f<i Alict' Brooks !h(' DAILY for ell<"h pnllt'1i1 -n1ld ;c, Pit.OT. 10;i, Nctdlccrart cenl_. for l!R('h pn!lrrn for 11t'pt., ~ 16.1. Old ·Chtlsen Alt Msll iand SJ'l('l·i11I llnndt· St111ion, Ne1,· York. N.-Y. inJ; OUll!t"\\'ise thlrd·rl;~S! 11'1(111. Print Na111r, Acid~. delivery 1\•ill tnkf' ll1rN' Zip, 1'1U.-rn N11mbclr. wctk& or nwrt'. S<'nd 10 N F.: E 0 LE CR A f' T ·721 &tartan l\ll1rtln. th!" OAILY C'rochct. knit. <'Ir. Fret P ILOT, 4U PHlll'rn l)(>pl., dil\--clion,, ~ 232 W6 18th St., Nc11· York. l'\F."': ln!lbnl ~lacnuut. N.Y. l oot't. Prlnl :'\,\~I~:. RAsir. fancy knoll, pert· ADDflr.88 with z rr . srzt~ rrrn~. SL and 8TYLE l'I 'lllt.~R. t:11~~· &rt of II a I r p In SEE ?itORE Sprlni FDsh Crtlt'btl • o,·er 2(1 tlt'1J.a:ns to baa and chooll! one pRll1•rn 11111'it'. 1. rr.. from new Sprlfllt·Sun1· 1r1~11.nl l'rOf'het ~t - mer Cttalae. All slits! Only lr nrn by plct\JN'!s~ Paflt:rns. 111 oenla. SJ. fflSfANT SEWING 8001\ I f'on1plcle btbl•I ()lrt BoM: '"' todl,y, wear tomorroiv. -mort lhan 100 gifls. -SJ. i $1. l"1npli'lo Al111ian Hook -, 'INSTANT FASIUON BOOR II. ~ Hu.frtdl ot &ubioo facls. 1 , 11 .r1rty Rq &okt _:ti. Jl.. • "'-'k GI 11 Prlw. AfJlliut.. It'• alWIJ'I the rlehl time & , :iot. ' aJ~ thf '1Pt plMll _ lf I M ll!lelftl Qll,111 Boek 1 ,._ yoo ,..., ft1911LTSI Call 50c. -6 place tllll ad floil" r.r T...,~ ....... - todql• 1S bttutllUl patttma:. !1Qr. tit••·····~··········· ' j r LIKE ne w wn!nu! & \l'l'Ought Jron dining Set: Duncan Phyre dlning 11et; antlqul' chaiNJ & misc. Items. 962-7079. LEAVING STATE! Misc. furnilurc & f'urnli;;hlngJJ. Xlnl buyJJ! 126 }.1onte Vista, Apt, No. 2. C.flt. 9' gold velvet sofa, $135. r.1atching love s eat -S 8 5 , Chairs $85. Tables $40. Lam p.~ S20. 546-2973 .. SOFA 8' & lovP M>at • Ne\ler used. Both $140. Se\\'ing niach. $25. Pri-Pt y. 968--7910. * * TRADITI ON AL furniture. hand t:rafted In pine, from shop to you. ~958.l COAtPLETE naturnl oak, twin or bunk bed sel, P rovincinl, like n e \\'. 644-203'1. VELVET tultf'd sofa. never u~l'cl, $135. l\tatching love seal SBa. Velvet hi-bnck chair, $83. 538-6281. * * HERCULON Sofa & love seat. \\1orth $600. Sacrifice S2'25. Perfect cond. 645-1701 . tr lllodern sectional sofa, nyJJter color. Xlnt, Cond. Sl20. 549-2832. FRENCll Provincial Bdrm srl, single hed. \11hl w/~Jd, nevPr mar lop, 492-9747. lllDE·A·Bed • queen $125. BM divan S:'lS. Htrculon. All likr nr\\'. 642-11111 . --·-------PORCJI Lounge, aluminum inclurlni maHN!sS & cover $10. G73-6979. • LOVELY Mapll" <Ii net IP round lf1ble. 2 leaves, 6 chrs, S75. 847-M93. PR. of JJtraight bck Rattan chrs. Xlnt cond. $17.50 es. 673-6979. 112 ANTIQUE Iron I-bra11s hed, rtstol'td AnUquc 8Clttt, blck lthr recllnt::r. Dux chr/ot· loman, \\'Iii dre!l!'ll!:r & flegk, 9x l2 Colem11.n ttnl, porl 1V, misc, 19-13 Pnrt Carney, JIVJ-1 , NB, 833-3850. 1972 Gerrard equipped \Vlth full size pr ofessio n a l c h anger, Al\i/FM/lliPX receiver, l!i e a l e d air suspension speakers, tape deck & headphone plug in jacks. \Vas left unclaimed. Brand f'l('\V in box &: gt11U'8.nleed. Originally pric- ed at $279.95. Take over for $90 cash or small payments. I, a yaw a y Department. 7141893--0501. ORIENTAL rug, Dinette Maple drop leaf table, 3 chAirs, 'Vhirlpool 1\•asher. 2 step end tables, 2 milk glass lamps, metal 1vardrobe, Antique pedal \\'el grinder, rolla,vay bed, e om p I e I e Barbeque sel, Tree pruner ,\·I th adjustable pole and many misc itE.'ms. 2433 Fordham Dr. 549-2468. STEREO: 9 piece Garrard component system, AM/F}.J/ r.-rPX Garrard tumtable, air su:qiension speakers, tape deck, headphones. 10 Only \\•ere $299.95. Now $194. Low payments. USA S t e re o Equip \Varehouse, 179 E. 17th St., Costa 1'11! s a, 645-2442. DRAPES, 2 sets. pale grn. boucle 143"x83" $ 4 5. 40"x83" $20. Blue gm, king SJ 111pread, $20. Orange print single spread $5. Sz. 8 . dl!signer cocktail d re s s , never u'Orn orig cost SlOO. for SZ>. ~139 afl 6 pin. CHERRY hardv.'OOd oval dining set, 4 chrs. good cushkln1, matching buffet\ lik.l" new $200. S t e r e o l\1agnawx. Pecan )\Iediter-- rane11n 50 in. "035 \Vall A11trosonic, like nu $:ll0. 645-1483. ONE small d~sk & chair $15. One old de~k & s\vlvel chair $5, 36"' Table lamp $7. Ear- ly Arner. lamp table SIO. ~" high !llatue SlO. 2 lgt pictures SIS ~ach. 531-7294. 1-fAPPY l\10TIJER'S DAY 10 lime Blue Clip Stamps for all ntothe.n Sunday. Rons Enco. 300 E. 17th SI., 01 • Ah1.·1t..'-"!I 5 times 11amps. 548-9143 accept S9 doz. 534-1148. Discount Pric•s FREE to loving family 5 KING Engine Analyzer on COAST MUSIC mOA male Sheltie & &sst't, I-IA V E BO AT-\V I LL TRAVEL Sport fishing Cruising roll away cabinets. $100. SERVICE \\-'ell behaved, 542-1022 dys., 894-3491. 1839 Newport Bl at llnrbor 832-8139 pm. SILKY Terrier, very Silver blue. small. 6'1~9000 644-82ll FUCHSIAS-FERNS-MISC. Costa Mesa 642-2851 1 ;:=""'~..,..~.,..,=--, 50 lat'ge cans 75c-$1. 291 E. Open SundaY!'I' 12 to 5pm FREE long haired ki!tens. 6 -~==""-===',---! ,,·ks old. J.Tou~ trained. 23rd Street, Costa Mesa. ORGAN -PIANO 418~i Hainilton. c. lit. CRAITS}.1AN po"·rr lawn WAREHOUSE 642-1i68 5.11-2433 mower, front fhro"''· Good Ne\V·Used Famous Brands 2~A~voc-,-00,---1,.-.-,-.-ppro--x~3 TINY Toy Poodles Apr icot, condition. $2:>. 548-2708. ~~im~ I!~: A(~~ yrs old, 1 in 'box, 1 tn AKC reg. $75. Registered BEAUTIFUL fK.'lv musical 1000 . '.1) • ground. You dig &: haul. Poodles, $50. 547-3851. YORKSHIRE Terrlf'rs. 9 1vks. Male & female. AKC reg. 675-6'191 : 832-1827. Jewel box from Thailand pianos ava1. 673-6637 i ==~------J20 &16-422.5 HA?itMOND, IOMBA!L & 1 lRISH Sel1er pups, AKC. lop · · CONN, etc., organs, FREE Kittens. half Siamese· sho1l' lines. top breeding 54" Petrillo Knee-ski. Before you buy·Give us a try! \\1hite & Oiag. gray, while-quality U wks. 962-4145. $45. Largest Dealir in the West black striped. 548-8910 e PURE bred BOXER pups . 644·1732. PENNY OWSLEY CO. 6 \Veek old puppies, Golden Cull". beallhy. $25 ea. SHAKLEE PRODUCTS ,,.,.,., BeTih4/l!9Bl2-3JS.14f •·-t n Retriever/Shepherd m ix, 833-1950 days; 837-9670 eve. l ntonnaUon & Sales. ~ ac ·• 0 no. e a Call 645-3903 Call 548-5253. Daily 10..9, Sat 10-6, Sun 12-6 =~~-=-=--BLACK poodle puppiE's, 10 WOULD YOU GERl\1AN Shepherd female wks old. $25 ea. 6-12-4818 or 3 Beaullful Handmade \\IOOI pup, 3 months. 534-3885 art 6. braided oval rugs, approx 5 BELIEVE 642-6037 before 6 pm G=ERM=~A7N~Sb~e-p~he-rd~Pu~p-pl-., x 7. 646-0885. FREE ORGAN LESSONS * ~~ Gennan Shep puppys * $35. ea. Thoroughbred, no GOT man ·ied, must sell-pool a.s !0~~r-ru b~':a!tlNo ;u!'f blk/tan, CUTE!!! registration. 894-3491. Cl•b1t1;·6~!~1'02drum set $50. ~~e Mrrn%a~ 7:30°~~-t-==-54_$-$4 __ 4_· ___ FOR sale-A.KC Shetland a · 'fl1'"""• • COAST MUSIC FREE 1; Manx Kittens, Shel'pdog. Jl.tale-3 ,yrs. old. 7-14-5 Nylon 10 ply rating, 642-2851 also orange Persian. 673--0890. PU or l\1obile Homr tires. *PIANOS*ORGANS* * 5.~1946 * Used 111 miles. 54S-2402: Going Out For Business GER.:.'\-!AN Shep female, 2 LIKE new-wheel chair, S75. Best quality • prices • serv. yn;. Very loving-to gd hrn l\Jachinisl metal lathe $1700. Kawai·Stein\vay·Baldwin, t'tc w/lrg yrd. &a0-1897 64 2-4610. Player Pianos & Roll11 FREE to loving adult family, 100 YARDS + blue/green Rentals .•• \Ve Buy • Sell while toy fcmiale poodle. carp., good co1X1. $1 Yd., $j(I Daily 10-6 Eves/Sun 12-5 &lZ-2920 Takes all. 830-0738 548-1066. FIELD'S PIANOS -y~0-U-N7G_mo_l_h-.,--•• -,--a"U POOL table, antique style, Costa lttesa (n4) 645-3250 "'hite \V/5 one "'k old kit- SILf\-Y Terrier pups, 4 mal~. sbots. AKC. Call after 4 pm. 838-1149. * THE CLIP JOINT, $4.50 &: up. Graduate groomers. 0\\'11t'l\'fl Hntgn Bch 536-4466 IRISH Setter pups, American Field Reg_ Male/female, shot!. 673-0085. 4x8 SIPie. 1.125, \Vill deliver NE\V & used player piano tens. i\flxed colors, 546-59:ll. Horses 156 free. 836-$102. rolls. player piano onrs • FREE killens, all black. .,.."!""-.,..,,..,,----- It"s in to be thin. • . • coml" ln Sat. &: Sun. get ac-females only. BAY Gelding, xlnl for The Diet \Vorkshop \Vay qUalnted & get free roll. 847-4990 children, all tack lncld. For lnfonnation 531-5105 Friendly serv., discount on ~----~---$275. Lynne-Wilson 642-3111 file. order.;. Dave Dupree, KIITENS, l \v~lte, 2 tigers. dys. 979-2149 eves. REDECORATING: Must sell 2940 No. D, Grace Ln., C.1\f. 7 u·ks., box ITarned. all appllanceJJ & furn. Xln't 545-4650. e 540-2679 REGIS. lt1uslang, Annual -'°~nd,,.."54~H6.i0=~·~·=~~--=ro=P"P"'R"'J"CE=s"P""AID="ro=R=-1* 2 \\."hite Boxer puppies hi~hpoinl lronhy ivinner. CARPE"l' FOR SALE nd i·-"ld li'ke to find good Finest trail horse In Orange Steinways & Hammo s '"" Co 1y 6"1724 by CA""'t '""'""'r. Call homes. "'" ••••, 642.~0•. un · ~ · .. 5:°io-i$" e PENNY 0\VSLEY CO. · ~ .. .JW 892-3314 FREE -Adorable black pups """E~ve-re-tt"'"'S"t~u'd"io-,.P"l•_n_o_ 1 w/marklngs. Sml. bred. 6 $300, 536-8TI5 wks old &IG-4043. FOR\VARD seat jumping saddle. Excellent used cond. Complete. $165. 548-08.).I. i\otUsr Sacrifice beautltul pinto mare. Great r ldlng horse. All equip. incl. $200. or best ofter. 646-8882. Boats, Sall * * * 241 Gla ss Sloop Dinf'tlr·GallPy·Lifelines Sails·Tt-aill'rahte Excellent Buy Tl 4-496-1298 30· YA\VL "Nice" $2,500. 12' Penguin \l'/trlr S500. 17' Cat & trlr $500. 11' Lark $50. 20' Viking "ShArp" $ l, 5 0 0 . 546-4900 \\'eek-day11. CAP COD CAT &at, 18'. ~1an!hall fbg. As ne"" f'ull-ro\'er, on shore moor· ing. $4800. 67.)..2625. 27' TARTAN, inbcl, 5 sail!I, race eqpt., knot meter, tach. dep!h stlr., purchd lgr boar. S9JOO. 4!12-7723. 25' SAILING Trimaran & trlr 11•/sails, boat never ln \l.'ater. \lllll trade. 548-8TIS Costa }.!esa. 15' CATAUI ARAN. fiberglaS!i -full <'Over cushions, ~xtras, trailer : $1~. 962-3067. KITE No. f:j), boat yard trailer. full co\'crs, $600. Call after 5 pm 6/a-2592. CAL 2-24. ll1ust M-11 thi., \•:eek. !\lake offer. e Bkr. 645--0222 21' Venlutl'·mAsthcad rig, trlr. 0/B. 4.S hp, )(lras, $195(). 546-5972 LIDO 14 e.'(reptionally clean incl.. trlr, cover & xtras. See lo apprec. S875. 646-8730 BALBOA 20 2/tra l l cr. Genoa, Other opll o ns, 714: 496-5529. 1968 26' Sloop. Best oiler Sat takes all 644-8211/646-900) fOR Sale-lloble Cat 14' &: trailer. $850. Good Cond. Call aft 6 pm-&18-4940. 3 BLACI{ I01TENS 7 'V~ks-* S.~70 * HERCULON hld~a·bed. nice HAf\~tONO H·100 2 yrs. Xlnt FREE. 2 loveable dogs, 1 $50. Herculon chr $10, 10 spd cond. $33'.IO Rhythm Ace Shephc.rd/L41rb. l Cockapoo. ~~~~~~~~~· 15' Racing sloop with M111. ;: JI·* l Excel ~nd6~ [ -~r. .. " bike $45. 673-2462. $.DJ, Ttather o w n ~ d • 8J9..96.16. 54S-98l0. 1--------l Ing riR. DoUy A: full covtn . BOY Sc:ool Troop lM an- nounces their 3rd Annual RummAP Salt!, ~1"l' lJ.14, 9-'ipJ'lt. YSA Building 2903 Jtcd Hill, Santa Ana . It't thfo Bf.uy? E·LEC . I Bl\I E:rt:t!C Type\\'t"lter. Xlnt cond. $375. CbmmOOort adding me.ch. $90. Me:tal cabinets $40. Sf\::. deAk Chair ~. taco mini bike m. 67~7350. ~-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim;;:iii~ I KITE No. 200-New Mil. Rae- ""'°· 673-4335. JO'i IN A JUG! TILT back di rood nd. ArUsl:lc boltle prde!.nl -6~ HAMMOND ORGAN with back yard v:, ~ cooub pllons UI t:a. 642-9ll9. ampllOu. Excellent oondi· Me&a, C.M. ~ore l\1on. , ,,,...,,,.---_,.,..,,.._"'°""° GARAGE Sale, SAi & Sun only. Reaulat1on ·porn table, dlnelle set, Chino cabinet, t l«?tric d1)'f!!\-, po vr tr mower, mt!le, l9t61 Sitm $Mio, lrvl ... MOVING Sak! Ma, 13th t. 1-tth. F\amllurt, appUance1, Ex:ttt)ICI~. cloth!JW, dlliher, tlc. AJI ln xlnt cond. UU2 OtwbtlT)', Irvine antr 10 Lm. DRILL ptt!llt. Cra1t.aman, noor mount. 1i RP, man1 Jigs A cutltr tools, $125. Jta: aw 18", bett dri"'1t floor O'IOllnf, '60· &t8-6965, DANISH Modem Hv!ni "'°"' eroup. tncJudn c 0 u c h • chatr, «ifif!tl tabl~ &. end table aD '°' $95.1111-7191. GOOD ,...,,_ w/vlbretot i3.1. Nico vpltolmrld c:M,, lt5. 138 E. Ulh. C\f. - '64 BU1CK Specla.I Sia \\ten, Oon, SQ), .f96.5880, '69 GIAttron, trt-hull, 17"''· Taco• mini-blke 31A hp. SMALL Collie SIM!p 11~ yn. suniop, '72 Mere, 115 hp, ~ • WHITNEY Spinet dellgnt'd Genllc. To good home pltast. 0/B. Xtrat. $2700 S!M-1008 'IONO"AilC. ll t hit by Kimball, mapte, xlnt 673-8347 bf!tw 7 a: ll a.m. alt 6 pm. , " ,q to e , w e, c:ond. $32.l. S4.1).31i4. w!Jlt renn kl!. 1100. 3 WEEK old k.ltten need• a I ' row ing dinghy $65. e 548-2&16 e ESTATE Sale, Hammond lo\'lna borne. Houaebroken. Can 673-8168 -.,--=-----·! tlec. "Organ. Mod<! &ill, 673-0006 1--------- Boots, Slips/Docks 910 WANTED slip for IS ' cru1ser. Newport ltarbor. 833--0272 day11 or eve11 XI.NT 11.llp for J5..40 rt. bo3t. ·1 "''RY Uc. Pt>nlnsula area. 673-<1700. 10.14 PERSIAN NI~ !!xU li!ot new. $1!00. 673-4766. Boots/~rllle OUNESE NI· Xlnt oond. MIXED Ttniu • -· rd, E<1ulp. Prlv pu;y "' !113-25TJ S.wl"' ~chines 121 bom• w/ynl. Gd family 904 Boots, Speed & Ski 911 -I ~, · Pf!I. Ref.sit ~-CUTE Maternity clothes. REmrOrit ZJ,.zag coosoJt,1--------- silf 10 .i 12. JI to no. $«t. ,. * laeu+iful kitt•n1 ,,,_ • Call 61HlQ ""' • 961-ml \ ' . MARLIN Tack.It • l Rod v.·/Ptrm 50 Jme:rnark>oal l'Ctl. l rod ~11'1n Nor 30 VIJ<OO!tt ,..L U l-Ul5. -~ Jet Dri\'t' 16' Horizon, tuned Otevy 301 C.t. HP. Trailer incl. Smt. &t~ i.ti 5. Vus. 613-652>. c 0 I ( L ,, 0 r ' '6 ' I 1 b n I I N ' I I r i ti 0 ' h b ' • DEMO SALE USED CAR SALE DEMO 1972 DATSUN SIO .( 01. Aulomt lic, AM/FM, 1.d, mldg. Ma91 w/ With the purchase of a new Datsun 1200 or 510 from Dot Datsun your choice of any 2 items listed below for . 99c. 1970 DATSUN 2 Or. w/•11tumafic, r•dio •nd ht •f•I $1495 • rtdi•I tir11. Otrrio # 72-174 ONLY DEMO 1972 DATSUN 4 Or. Sill. Autom.ilic, r1 dio, hetler, WSW. Sile:.!: 72459 Tin w/Cordowan inlt rior. DEMO 1972 DATSUN 5_10 2 Or. '4:1pd., AM/FM, pindriptng , m19 whee l,, f ,re1ton1 tor11. Be.iutif11I or111191 fi n;1h. 72·'491> SAVE AM PUSHBUnON RADIO 69.95 VALUE VINYL SIDE MLDG. 39.95 " " PIN STRIPE 29.95 " " ' -UNDERCOAT 19.95 " " CORAL GLAZE WAX JOB 19.95 " " ROOF RACK 69.95 " " 1971 MERCU,RY CAPRI w/2000 Ce •119 in•, AM/FM, 4 .,p~,.1 lmm.ic ul•t,•. 1845DJE) 1970 DATSUN PICKUP Rad io. Stop b ,Hnpe•, Maroon finid1. (70480F' 1972 DATSUN 1200 Coup1' "'' "·1peod. r4d;o & h~• I•• Only 11100 milet. (Lie. 45~fSFI QMLY $2299 $17.95 $1795 ' " 1972DATSUN S/W '4-1peed, AM /FM Ster10, 11199191 rick, '""ll wheel1 "'/r .. dial tire1, c1nt1r con1ol~. Color11do yellow w/bl11ck interior, w/air conditioning.= 71·512 SAVE BUMPER GUARDS 39.95 THIS WEEKEND ONLY " 1970 DATSUN 510 4 Dr., 1111to...,1+ic w ~ir cond. & "'09 wllecl• w/r1di11I tire1. ! I JOlC EL f 51695 Transportation Campers, Sa le/ Rent 920 '71 Chevrolet Cheyenne 18835 BEACH BLVD., HUNTINGTON BEACH 842-7781 OR 540-0442 Transportation Transportation Autos tors.ale Campers, Sale/Rent 9ft ~~----~~~ Cyc,ies, Bikes, Trailers, Travel 945 Trucks '72 GMC 1 ton 400 S~ooters 925 .,,-...,.,,====.,--962 Autos Wanted 968 ,72 Gi\IC 8~~ pickup. s uper e ARISTOCRATS cus1on1 cam(J{'r. Cam()('r '6:1 HONDA 305 • NEWPORTS ~pccial tinled glass, air C0i\1PLETE .REBUILD e AUTO-ltlATES eond. dual n1i1Tors, ht'avy Top end, bottom end Also, several used $395 & up duly shOC'ks, & sprine;s, carbs, nc\v clutch. \VORSHAM TRAILER SALES po11·er sterring, JX>"'er disc Runs ·e:-:ceHent. $300. 2709 \V. 17th Street . hrflkes, turbo hydromatic, 646-9076, ask for Ton1. Santa Ana (714) ~1·2595 '65 Chevy ~ Ton 4 \vheel drive, P ickup and Campe1·, Must see to ap- preciate !S21162). SAVE HARBOR \VE buy an makes or clean used sports cars. paid for or not. Please drive in for lree appraisal. NEWPORT IMPORTS Daily Pilot Classified ORANGE COAST'S BEST ' SALESMAN-~~ Ton Can1per. ~pccial. pick· up, \7-8. Auto Trans, PO\\·er S!cering, Po1,·f'r Brakrs, 1-·aC'!ory Air Cond, 12.000 original miles \vith '71 Dal· Iron C'above r c a n1 p e r , !ll011Kl. radio, & (5) 950x165 8 ply MOVING-mus! sacrifice 1971 14' Trailer. sleeps 4. Ice box. tires. + bonus of the style Honda 350 CB, Faring large \Valer tank, stove & \radrr "four Star" 9~~ cab \vindshielcl. he Im e ! & oven, sink & lots of storage MOTOR HOMES over raniper. Sleeps 6; big gloves, $62i or best oUer. space. Very clean S59i 913 N. Harbor Blvd. 3100 W. Coast Hwy., ../Ne-.vport Beach 642-9405 Autos, ·lmPorted 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported HARBOR MOTOR HOMES 913 N. Harbor Blvd. toilet room. s1ove, refrig. 96z.Gj64 F'l'flllll' hitch \vith torque Santa Ana rlufll sinks. a real vacation I -M~o7to-r~H~om_e_s--~94~0 bars $30. 637-41::.6. · 839-9560 buy. ·~5·5~95 1M6. i~e:~~~ s~~.se1~~n:~in:! =-w=-=--e-:';-r-e--,M~O-V~.,-n-g- BILL BARRY :;=: · Aw"i"g 19 5 O WINNEBAGO -17' self con· See our unbeatable Prizes WE PAY TOP CASH Santa An a 839·956D Pontiac-GMC.Campers Fiat I96!l Che v :i,. lo n (ls! Sl. at S.A. Fwy.l,_ tained. On1y used 12,000 mi. $2150. 962-4198 H.B. tor used can I: truck&, Just call us fur free e-stlma tes, ~ ~ GROTH CHEVROLET 2100 Harbor Blvd., C.M. 'truck-\\'/l9i0 Can1per uni!. 2000 E. 1st SL. Santa Aha 27,000 mi . Dua! hattcrie~. 558·1000 13631 Harbor, Garden Grove dual gas tanks-3000 lb Cycles, Bikes, 1 Blk. So. of G.G. Frwy. overloads. hca,·y d u 1 Y Scooters 925 ____ 63£-_23_33 __ = radiator ,t· trans-7j{) x 16 ---------PACE-ARRO\V , , CfIINOOK i;plit rims-Excel Cond. $1300 '68 Bul Bandit. Nu eng. 5 port AU top brands , . Discount Equity & lake over pis!, [k>1vn pipe. Nu Tyrell price , • l ilo1MEDIATE DE-payn1cn1s. $104.50 m O · nu paint. depend. A~king -~ GlO LIVERY,. .".11'-8,""· S6'l. Tom 548-l ' BEACH CITY DODGE I · anyti1ne. '69 Kro\\·n Hard1 p Popur. , . _ TENT Trailer 3 dble beds, lg table, storage, awning, xlnt rond. $500. G.14-26.il Auto Service, Parts 949 '71 Chev Pick up i"leater, automatic, 12,000 low miles. 8567211. Low down. EZ terms. $2999 PllONE 645·57!19 HAL GREEN'S ' ?<.11RACLE MAZDA n~ Harbor Blvd. Ask for Sales Manager J82ll Beach Blvd. Huntin&ton Beach Ml.6081 KI 9-3331 \VE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR 'J'cip USED CARS Ir your car is extra clean, see us /irst. BAUER BUICK 2925 Harbor Blvd. raniping 1r11 ilcr. Slpi; s. 71 Kawasa~1 12 . ., E Strl?ct furnace. 3 burner ra nge, ice l'eady or dirt. Beau~ ,con~ .. bx, sink. ,~·a!et' tflnk, di· ~o~u· xlras. Lo m1. $315. Co8ta Mesa 979.2500 Goodyear Blems, all sizes, Costa Me11a 165.'lS Beach Boulevard low pr ices, U.S. Indy m ags, Hu ntington Beach '65 Ford 1'100, VS, 4 :-;p -IJ\.lPORTS WANTED Crager American from nctte, cout·h. '"'ired 12 & 115 ~'-'-~'-~-"~.._.....=,......,= voll. Jnc!ds 8x10 canopy. Honda mini trai1·65cc. Excel Oriir. O"·ner. mint cond. 111nning cond. $75 or best (714) 54-0·2660 ~ overloads -8 rr. bed -Orange Counties $15.95. llijackers $34.50 pr. custom cab. (19062L1 $1095. TOP ; BUYER *Marvin Pearce* !4" Indy mags lor Pl"1o & 22IJ1 s. Main. 557-5242. New BILL MAXEY TOYOTA Vega. S.S. -4 spoke -Pinto Car Defiler. 18.Ul Beach Blvd. & Vega off road tires + 7 8555 $HXXl. :>57-817.:i. offer. 835-5?.68. Motor Hornes wheels. All brands from 1965 Dodge 1/2 ton Pick Up H. Beach. Ph. 84 - 1965 Ford ~~ Ton·Chasis mount open road -OC\\' motor tires, 21 ~ K'V 110 Volt Gen1. Air <.'Ond. thruou! &i gal "·att'r 1\·/s!M>1ver & head. $2875. 5J7-j6()3. NEAR New 8' Cabover. Bu!anc elec. refrig. oven, waler pump. $950. 644-mt. * HONDA 305 Scrambler, $22.50. Baja kits $89.95. Pin· w/camper shell, V-8, autD, \I/ANTED: '68 Mu stang or new tires, brakes, battery, Sales • Rentals to super M:OOPS $36.50 pr. ne\Y tireg. Clean. $700. Call Cougar with air. Mllllt be xlnt cond. $3j{). 64&--043'1. Super deals on fiberglass 6454653 6-8 p.m. clean & reas. 5.17-2096. 1967 TRIU:\1PH 72J 558-3222 parts. J950 Newport, Costa '71 El Can1ino, SS, fl ir. auto, Autos, Imported $,j()I) or Best Offer! l~ll s. Villnge Way, S.A. J\fesa. 645-3554. radials. all xtras. Like n~w. ---------- • 642-5128 • TEST DRIVE * AU1'0 REPAIR* M"'l sell. 546-3'165. ALFA ROMEO '70 12; Yomaha AT-1 3.000 THE MIDAS MINI SAVE MONEY' ALL NEW 1972 ----·-- mi. XM "'""· S35 0 . MOTOR HOME SERVJCE CAU.S 646-<915 *Sport Truck* "'71 ALFA 646-1780. Distributed by #2543 Base Price 970 '68 Harley Dovidso" 65cc, K'" Craft Products I§] $2195 CLEARANCE SALE" Camper Combo vcr,!io mt. $135. CREVIER MOTORS Autos"'Salo ~ , Summerlime is the ri9ht time to put yourself In a better auto- mobile. Garden Grov• Datsun h&s just the car for you some- wher• on our large lot. The selection is 9reat and the prices are right. Stop in today a nd get the deal you've been wtitin9 for. '69 JAGUAR Cpo. ........... i.. $·2872 . wh~ell. I JtXf542 I '65 PORSCHE ;~: •• ~"~:;;; ,., $2472 '68 PORSCHE 912 Gold -""""' $3372 Co11diflo11. IWJU7721 '56 T •BIRD OooHy "''''""'· llEASSCI $1772 '70 v·w DUNI IUGGY • Low ' Mlleo9-lllte 11ew. $1472 '71 DATSUN ~'.~' ,~::;,;; '"• $3772 '64 SUNBEAM 'i~".;'G1011 °'"""' $372 '69 DATSUN .~~~~~ .... IX1H'241 $1072 '70 DATSUN :'°'· "' .. G" ,.,,,1~$1172 , . . . '71 CAPRI c~~~1 .. ro111vF1 $2472 '72 G!\o1C \I. TON CA1'1PER Call 536-2410 208 \V. l s! St.. 5anta Ana '-------' Pl.fONE 645-5199 Th" 1912's A1·c On The \Vay! c 350 ON A C-8~450~ 835-3171 MIRACLE MAZDA " SPECIAL e"'lom cav '70 H D ' mo Harbor Blvd. Larges! Savi""' Ever o" '69 DATSUN "S to" ..... UH. $1072 VS, turbomatic, po\\·er steer· J\take offer 5.16-G768 RECREATIONAL Vehicles Genera• 950 Costa J\Iesa All l\:lodels! This is the 4 .,;. tlflAfW) ing, po"·er disc brakes, "·6=7~l0=5~1.,.lo-nda~Sco-ra-m~b"'"te-•·°"12°"50 for rent from S75 to $190 per ---------1-:----------\Vee kcnd To Buy Your New , _________ .;... ________ _ d. h I · -11dll•"on '67 Cougar • 289. Auto/$109.'l. A I L I 964 ra 10, ea er, air cv ... Ru"' ,d. 675--0l&l {kc"" ·w~k, plus 7c per nrlle. u o eas "I Alla at: '68 CHEV MALllU Hchp. lew $.1072 875 1"" ·a base ... ,, '69 VW bug. Auto. S119S. '65 -----------1 ing, x ,,.,, \\'1 e lryt""g If -'"''''r) SIC("'S 4 lo 8. Offer expires Call • COAST . • "'leage. IJtOC5Zll ·r f s f t "' " '"' " .,, Rambler Stick, $185. tires. beauti u oo cau =~'-'-~=~~-.., June 1, 1972. 546--0291, 2995 ~ over Havasu camper, stove, 1970 Honda CB 350. 2800 ml. aft 6 pm. 548-7"82. LEASING '66 VW IUS. I , .... .,., Or. . l O L"k , Britsol. C.M. refer, full dinette & big over· 1g1na wner. 1 e nc""· ~~=~~---_...-Antiques/Cl•11ic1 953 In ISYUf701 $1172 head bed. A real vacation $4:.,....95_. _6_45-_72_4_3_. '-' --,-• NE\V 23' lu>.1lry motor Tl")I our lease eX"perta for IMPORTS " hom"". Air. Loaded! Best 1~s Ch Cl • ~--pe Runs ta buy #1038 No. 1069. BOY'S Huffy-Stingray type ... ., .,... evy Uu v.>u. ' Savln&s ~ Satls Clion . Ser- $4995 bike. Exet'llent conditiQn rot('s possible, Pri pt)' good. S3fA>, Call all 4 vice. '71 DATSUN "00 "'"'' c .... 4 .,... (fl41lf) $1572 $30 6-\2-0022 968-1397. \\'kdays-5at &: Sun all day in WE LEASE AU. POPULAR BILL BARRY . . * * RENT our'71 El Dorado "Ganie" Grove -BW-11:18. 1972 MAKES AT COMPETT.. SCH\\'lNN 5 at>d Stingray motor home. Sleeps 6, self· B • 95' TrVE RATES. Pontlac·GMC-Fiat (1st St. at S.A. Fwy.) 2000 E. 1st St.. Santa Ana. S>HOOO TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOl WANT Ai> -642:5678 Llke Nevo'! s~s. Ca 11 contained. RE s ER v E Dune u991e1 Call Malcolm ReJd for G/a-Q3Zj. NO\V! 54~9513. '71 Dunebuggy. Co r v a Ir further detl\llt. LlKE new i969 Ka"'-asaki 1---------p\vr'd, N!hlt eng & trans. THEODORE 7'2" 1 DELUX'E '70 Motorhome. ROBINS FORD 175; 1969 Suzuki 125; • Loaded, onty 800> mil.el . Blu F'G body, toe1 over yr. new surfboard, 962-7097 Trac!C Equity S 8 5 OO . $1800 1st $950 takes. 833-8996 D!O Harbor Blvd. SCH\VJNN Supt>r Sport. 10 5.'JG..36..12. aft 5. Costa. Mesa 6.i2-00JO 1pd bik~. 8 mo!! old, mint M XLNT A t W 1-~ -• CLARK ~RTEZ 0.8. 70. anr ~. u 01 an -,.. C:Ond. $1 20. 6#-27G6 "-V Pri/ Xl n't Cond. 46,000 mi'• COND. M&ny xlras. \VILL Soy your c.11r pafd for roR SALE-64 Honda 2ti0. ~ 4!U-7735 pty, Best o11tt. 67~22. or not. Call Ralph Gordon Good· running cond. Extra R-~--9 ,.. ~ eo-~ H 7"~ Trailers, Travel MS Sports, Rae., VVll • .,;a 673-()i',XX) -......, r:.. cui• wy. tank, fender &: tlre. 5-4&. !).JV N wport Dtach. 1971-C T J. Enduro Yamaha. e '68 SllASTA L1', SIC. AVENGER GT 80'~ Oom • ..:..=.;;....--.,.--:--:--::- 370 milt s. Llk~ ne\\'. $425 or 1\'ater, llghl•, toilet; LlKE S1JJO invt1. Mtu1t Sae. Beal Sell the old 'tuft Buy tht Best oner. 644-4ft95 NE\\'! $195. MS-~ cff,r. 6'f3..S622. ·.;;;"':.c":.c':.c".:c'''-' ----- lOOOJ.200 \V. Pac:Ule CSL 11\vy. Newport Beach (714) 642-0~ Alf• Romeo NOW ON DlSPLA~ Sales Service Paru 1lod'y - '69 DATSUN.~~~~::..... 16toCA;I $1172 '66 DATSUN .. ,. .... a .. lhm fS.,, ¥J0Jfl $972 '65 CADILLAC c~. o.vmo trDU7ll $972 COAST IMPORTS 1000.12XI W. 0out Hwy. Newp6rt S.ub 64UIQ6 a,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;. ________ ,. , , ( 910 ' I " ' ' .. \ 42 l§J1-:;!1 ~A·ii· .. ii""ii .. ,ii. ~~~.~".~.,,~ ••• ~,. ~§~1 rr ·~ .. ~$E:J§1 !1 --.. 11~1 970 ~Aiiuii10ii1ii, ii1miiiipoiiriiit•iiidiiiii;:.9iii7~0 I Autos, Imported 970 I ~;;;;;;;;;;~::;,il7i0 I 1~[ _ ... ,._~ .... __,)§],I Auto.5, Imported 970 Autos, lmPorled 970 Autos, lmport9d --------RAT Autos, Imported AUDI AUSTIN HEALEY BMW DATSUN FIAT '71 Fiat 850 '70 Audi 90 t 4 ~Pl'ed, rarlJo. h1>11ter, n11 f'll'rl c11r, lf\.'VX:'Q0 1, Sur r Si!\ ln_i: 4 1l1V1f •"rlllfl, $27.99 "62 A l:~fN llJo'.AfJ•:Y ,\;hArp! ~IO. • 646-JM~ • BMW IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ~, G ROY CARVER, Inc. '69 Datsun Pickup 'lfi.1100 n1ilr~. \lf'r,• nlr"~ 'rxr.ii•.ir11 . Rkr. r1111 fi44 mi hPrnrP 7 ri111 . ---------· --RA~J-:R.<'\LI. 1'f'llirll1 ~rf'ri11l. ·i;ri .. :,10" f1111,.1ir1 w;:n. 1.ua· Co.!'l!I \1"811. ."111>--444'1 i::is:r r11t"k. VPr\ ,.l,.1u1 Xlnl I --CITROEN---1 '''"'',1 ~11no n~ .,,.~r nir,.r. ------~.--1 fi-1f;-7,\~'(). --·-- Cirroen Sports M•1trati ·~• r>111~u n 1£00 Hrrt1ri. m11t"~. ~!Ylrl rnUJ"', ~.tW'I 'ntlts. AM f"M Sh•rM S J.'17'l. $1395 o~,4~ F'IAT Sf'YDY.P., 1~ I Cf(lnd roMlr1<1n Rl'•I offt'.r OVPr snoo. ;ll~f\~fi. -;6SFiAT SPYDER $600 nr h.~1 o/r .. '\.111.11:11 1 HONDA !\'F.\.\' flnllfl11 600 srrl;i n, r.~111 miJ111H!"· rrr·f,.rt fni· 2Md r11r . i\1u~I ~Pil A~l(lJl,I!: Sl~. F.7l-8364 ,11 f1. fl pm . MAZDA Toda_y Buy a Mazda SPECIAL "72 RX -2 [ ·---I~[ ···~··'· J§l. __..,,-: Autos, )mportecf 970 .. • • • •• 0 NONDAS GALORE! ·i n$1 DRIVE THE NEW HONDA COUPE! ' .CW.f : 1 'S ,\Hfll I Ovl!!rs1tas Delivery CREVIER MOTORS r'lrJ11ni;:-,. Cnunry h1111rlq1111rlPr' n11 r~rl111I~. Xlr11 corvl. Ofr fnr !nr.:it k ~: 11 ro pe ;i. n 111,l• ,192-21:11 • '1"111 "''-"'· F-ERRARl- tr, ~;. f 'r111~1 H 11·~ 1\'F:\\'f'ORT R~'.ArH fi7.~ mm F:.\t. ~~. ;.~ KAR-MANN"'-G~H~l~A Rotary Powered 4~~ t;. Co11~• l!wv. ~F\\ Pnr.r Rt.,,c1-1 60~ (!'lOfl f.;\! !"'"'· :,1 1r)p.rn S11nr(,.\ ' 2()1 \\. 1~1 ...:: '01111 An11 8JS.J171 A.YI\\'' 121'lfi~•, 'Ii'), Ji 1 r, S\ih•,.rl:::r".\ l.11 rr11lr~ ,\'.ln1 1•n11rl. 1'7.\ ... 17.Vi. Jim Slomon1 Imports ~l0 1 ~n. Minn, S11ri111 An11 :,:,1-:1212 nn,..n .~un . ---- FEf!f!ARI 1nf'l'n Sunrl11y1 ---1970Ferrari l+2365GT , ,72 l28 FIAT fl.nll~-Rnvr·p rr11rl• in F\1>11urr.} 111! )?Un. mPllll l{tPY .lo\ hlHrk F\RANn 11PIV 1971 l'J.l\T 1~ ·i;; 01'11 1 rlr, 1>Pr!11n . llilln "n£,' \Pllfh,..r 1111Prinr. P1vr, o!r'£. 2 nn. SEf'lA:'\' i\1nrnr TrPnr!~ :°'i"\\ tr11F1,./n P\\' clu1 <'h f 11,.r air ••nnr!, 5 ~flPPr!,1 ''Pro11nnm_11c11rnlth,.,1 r11r.·· /r·lrHn 1n /, nut. $!"19Ci. Tnm $1.1.9.':ill. ,·;n~l)%\\'i, Sr1·1HI ,\;r). 1211A077:,0011. $1!}76 DATSUN !~~ l\~r1111u1n Gh111 .\1200 ('11 11 .i.4~-117:1 111! fi pm MAZDA i.,n !\•J\11'1\gP DPffiO !"Pr. S S122Al(\4723 1\Pl'Pr B""" R"<;i51Pred J-lurry! \.\'nn"t Ui ~t Lnng HONDA SEDANS $ 9 OilCl , "all6MT 163 ANO OIAlll ,. ..... FULL fACT . 19Ull",.ID UNIVERSITY QUICK CASH THROUGH A !)AIL Y PILOT QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT "'·'·'"" I ROY CARVER + T". [,,,._ I'. " n~""" ""' "''"'''"' ROLLS-ROYCE BILL BARRY ~l11r NPw lnp, Rnll A11r Huntington Beach OLDSMOBl ~E ·GMC TRUCKS.HONDA 2850 HAR~OR, COSTA MESA -540:9640 •·w, Ar• N~••r S•tl1fi•d U11til Yow Are':_.. l.11\\ ml s11 ·..n. f;.12-71>2R 2.14 E !7th SJ ,, ('n~IH ~IP~H. F ia t-GMC-Pontiac ---·---I 111~1·,.i1; . .w1~ DllTSU"N 2407.-1970 f:xcrl -------- CLASSIFIED ADS c FOR ACTION .•• WANT AD MAZDA CALL 642 -56 78 _ I ---642-5678 1 r•nnrl. 2:'1.000 milP.•. S.'199!l., r>H.ily r ilol \\'Hnt Ads hll.\'e 2()()(1 t:. l~r ,<;;1., S11n111 An::i %2-1>1;,1 · 1 b11r)?11 in.• ~;1JnN". ;,;v: _1noo __ _ --·-• I -----------990 Autos, U•.cf 990 I Autos, Used !l's a breeze. ~ell your 1 ilenis with f'a~, u~e DAILY Piloi Oll.'lsified. 642.5678. ]7':'\.11 BPl'll'h f:l1 ·cl. Huntini;lfln Beach ~42-hf>f;6 'WE DON'T ·ADVERTISE JUNK OR BAD CARS! THE ONLY DOG THAT BELONGS TO MR. • CONNELL LIVES IN HIS BACK YARD! All Our Advertised Carl Carry our Rep_ulation_ BUY '71 VEGA COU,.E ~•ii'"· J •P•~-1 . l.~5~DFQ ) KELLY llU( IOOK PRICE S2025 OUR '1899 PRICE '71 PINTO Auh•"'•lit, r~di". Su p1r- ie• c•• f716CUrJ KELLY I LUI IOOK "lllCE S2140 OUR $1999 PRICE '71 NOVA CO UP'( '" f nnd .. r s .. •11lom ~ l tt. VI, ,~..,.,~ !r1s1s1 KIL LY l l U£ IOOtr fl'lll CE S2895 OUR 52499 PRICE '70 CHEV. WAGON K i1191wo~.; (!.,II ,;,.d I • ri•n, ••dio. •u!e., ~··· r.~. r.s .. !uqq•9• •• ,:i . Sur~' ni •• , 1 ~16JS I KEllY ILUI SOOK Piii(:( il2'S OU• '2999 PRICE '66 CORVETTE 8 .. 1~ !"t1' J~O t'•. ;. v~ II ~r1, .. , • IO• ,d, I UOf' ,h.,.,. l l F ~ti•2 1 $2199 And Warranty! WHERE YOU ARE TRE·ATED TOMER BEFORE AND AFTER LIKE A CUS· YOU BUY! '70 CAPRICE '65 IMPALA '67 PONTIAC 40-TRUCKS-40 ]SO cu. in. VR, •ir. vinyl CONVllTl lLI LEMANS COUfl'E ,,.,.1, r.s .. r.d<1, b •• 1.-••• ~l•c. 1••h A '•""d"'"''· VANS -CAMPERS -Pl~KUPS -6's, !il t ,,,.h •• I. AM.FM . !OSO· ll •d'"· .-•D••d, VR. tur t r >. .. • .... r ...... ,,.., ..... •'•1 .. !SF! 27.091 ,.,:i • ., , •tdiei SvDttie• cendi!i11 n, Mill Y ILUI 1001( operl fVCllJ 1 ~1 !YCl\060) VS's -AUTOMATICS AND 4 SPEEDS PllCI S3l40 52999 $999 $1099 -SOME WITH AIR-SOME WITH OUR POWER STEERING! SHOP WHERE PRICE ' '70 DODGE '66 MUSTANG THE SELECTION IS! '68 v.w. DAlT COUPE Cu1lem 4 tloo•. Aulo,,,•li,, ,.n;e, P.S. ··~ J:!OW•t !STY42q) Sup••;,,, •••q .. •"· 6 cvl. R•di .... ,.,, 11..diti, 1lit~. (VGJ4J2). 1967 INTERNATIONAL TRAVELALL A11lo, Tr ~f\I . Lew t t rt lul qoed mil•1. 011 • "'"'"''· J(ILLY ILUI IOOK I ew1111 mfl•1. (IJ 88S0 l KILLY llUI IOOK Pt.ICI $1 ltD Such a nice one. Power strg., auto. radio ,.RICI $1 llD trans., $2399 OUR '1099 OUR '999 (only one of those kind). TYP165. l"RICI PRI Cf $1999 '70 NOVA '66 FORD '70 TOYOTA 4 OR . SID. fUTUlA WA~ON VO . ,;, c<'.!11d., P.S .. •u•o· 21 .000 1T1il11 . Air t c'ldi- m•ti(, r•dio. 1 60 JCN ~I f •lcen .-:e""'· A.,1..,,,,.1:c ••~";"9 · ••die. ,,;,~ 1~H1. IClll Y ILUI 10011 lr A'll miu ie11 , ,,.,j ;.,. Wei ~· b~•uti/111 , !4~SBQD l 4 WHEEL DRIVE ,.t:ICI S2410 i nd e~lv. ITEZ47J I K!LL Y ILUI IOOK 5 1999 5899 ,.RICI Sl570 OUR ouo 51433 HARD TO FIND PRICE PRICE OUR Pt: I Cl "70 CHEV . '71 COMET '71 BUltK . 1971 GMC % TON & CAMPER Ill AJl COUPI LI SA IRI ' tl•. Std. R§d te. r.s .. 6, P.S .. ~inyl reOI. ~uto .. C11•t11m ce .. pt . R•-l :o, 4 speed , 4 wheel drive, lock. hubs, 12.00-16.S flo· ~ulflm•t :c, ~" tel\-4, 1011 · ,;, cond., ••die. 14,0 ]0 ~i"yl r1111( ""'""'"tie. P. AOAI e"' t •tt lul ew11•• ..,;1.1. 5 .. P.8 .. •ir !P7S~7 1 tation tires, radio, power steering & brakes, foam KILLY ILUI IOOK J(ILLY ILUI IOOK seats, tint CJlass, hvy susp, perfect for a hunter. Will IC(llY ILU( 1001( l'IUCI 52410 ,..,,. 51 760 ,.lllCI SJ350 12699 sell without camp•r. I 35849Hl 51999 ou• 52599 OU• OUR ,lllCI PRICE l'ltlCI '71 FORD '69 FORD '69 CHEVY '69 DODGE POWER WAGON 10 PA SS. II NOVA 6 ton front mounted pow•r take off driven winch, 4 c .... ~lry \p,j, w•')"n, >,:r, IL COUPI l•19q •q• r ••~ . .tule .. P.S .. VI r.td;o, •ufo..,•l;t , ,,,S .. Cl'/t .. 6 ryl., VA, AT , R .. wheel drive, lock. hubs. 4 speed transmission, radio P,8 .. •uri••;,., condO+ien. vinyl reo( l ~•rp t •• ~ti ! .... ~n.!X l p•tl~ t t •, few. !cw prit•. has 7112 ~. flat bed . Perfect for a welder. Would ,;,. K(LLY ILUI IOOK KILLY ILUI 1001 jUGZ441 ) make into a pickup. I P2702 l PtlCI SJt•S '3760 ,.tlCI SJltl OUR '2016 $2099 WILL TRADE PRICE ouo PRICI 2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA I - ' -HONDA ROTARY"S Immediate De livery \\'hilr-rrrl inr. [,(Ill' milP~. 2 ' tnp~-Tl:r11 [ br.11nt.v-pri 'pty. $,\.'j()fl. n11y 54i-~:12 F:ve I '"·""-I MR ·i;~ 27,0 ~Prl11n. 1111111. -A'M-~'M, 42.000 n1T!P~. Great , PORSCHES! y,.lln\\' 11·/hll'lrk 1ntr 1nr. This immiir:ul;:i!p 1·11r ha~ ~ serviced lnc111l~· 1 Nn. 6.1902). $759S --·-'70 911S r.-1112~.. A~1/F~1 1 ;, :0 Oof'I mili>~. unl'il>liPl'ilhly rlean, 111•11 k1>pr f; maintained. Local c;:ir Jt\'n. ::90211 . $6995 -·-'70 914-6 ~hll fH': $29!t"i. a-1.i-:1774 [)Pror Grn11pt> R.:ir!1;U hres. '67 4 nr. ~,.r1·:-s20(tl~ Firm. I AM/FM ~IPf'l'fl. R.li rf! • l'lO ~riP.~. \1·hi1 ... llllTf'. .i:ttldnm lnunr! in this Im· ·14',fi()(l or\~ n11. fi.IZ-.\.107 n111rulAll': rnnrl1t1nn: fNo. tJfG :i1!1zo 1. $4795 '69 MGB Rn11rls1f'r, hP11utiful yl!:JICl\\'. lmmArul11tP •5."'llAUH. Lo"' dn\\·n. F:Z lf>rm.-.. $1 899 T'Hn!'E ti4.i·.i7!Y.l !\11RA.CL F'. i\1AZnA 2150 H11rhnr Rl\'rl. * l!lff; :vii. ;1.1101.F:T f'.XC"f:l~LENT C'OND!TION , O~'FE:R,.;: .i:ii"-71 11 MGB '67 MGB GT Newport Imports 3100 W. Co•1t Hiw•y NE\\1PORT RF:ACH OPF:N ~llNf'lA Y 17141 fi42-!1411:. Mn!:T F.XCELLF:r>.'T "70.914 Or11 11g1>-,11;pp1>11r. i'roup !\lirhPlln.H'hromP 1t•hl! SIPrl'<I IA~A!\1 r11r!in h111·,1t. 11!11rm. "42--0051 ·i;i POrt.<;;CH f; priwrtrr hluf! ''P"· N"" p,11;int. X!nt f!rP~ lr hriikP.~. rPhlt '6;; su~r f'ni;:1n,.. !\l11kt " f t I!: r , Ml"-:JOMi. RENAULT 4 !lf'P~rl. R11rtin, Hr::.t"r. Air ronr!itinninz. ,.hrnm,. 11·1r" \\'hr"f'l~. nnly 27.f)flf) mtlP!!. ' Exll'A nirr , \"ZY744. _R_e_n-•u_l_t_D_o_m_o_S"'a-lo-·I $1 799 Semi Annual I Demonstr1Jtor ft &J Clearance Sale \il,. -OJ' Th is Weekend 111, oS Unbeatable Prices o .. ,.JtP ALL 1972 MODE LS '\ T IN STOCK FOR 44;, ~:. ("O<'l!<I lhv.v. f\"E\fPORT Bf.ACH IMMEDIATE DE.LIVERY INSTANT CREDIT fii.1-0!lOll F:xt. :i.l·54 APPROV i ()ppn Sun<1i'ly1 I AL BANK FINANCING ''6fMGB,-xlnt cond-. COAST jSlf>.f. ll.15-l;J07 bt>f 4::10 I Mr.R '!i:I, n~\\' p1o11nt , 'e11t~. I ""''' "'"" XI"' "'"'I IMPORTS I $1>:;/l 1!46-:i722 I 'OPE_L __ --,..-.:,..--.,.---,....--'1frOl1-l:l0fl \\·. P:ir1flr C~t. H\vy. I '68 Opel Kad111tt NP111rinrt Br11rh 17141 1142.0.W. Station Wagon 1 ~1-S-, 'En2in" ovrrh;.iulPrl, r11.rho. en1u t ales & Service rnO< htit~AS?:• r!lek. Xtra ! for over 11 r!Pr11r!P ln Or.iinge llf'Hn. X''l\AA';", Co11nl)• ST 195 St>n·. f)('p1. 0f)f'11 fil g p.m. «;; E. CoA ~I H~·y. N,f.\VPORT BEACH m:i.O!lfln Ex1. 5.1-!'4 PEUGEOT * PEUGEOT * As lnw 11~ $2.29!1. rNo. ;1545) FRIT': WARREN'S Sport Car Center e ORA NGE COUN TY'S 1 LARGES'r 710 !:. l ~t SL, S.A, 547-<11f;4 PORSCHE '70 Porsche 911 T Slf'MJ, l-1Ags, Prlvue· Party. DA)~ 8.19·9560, 11.ft ~ - ll.\.'\.:11fl.'i. 1:164 Pnr~f'he • F.:xrel Cnncl. I Sunronf-Mec:h. ~und. MAke 'lfler. ~l-3.SM 11r1 6 p.m. '$;6 PORSCHF. 911 SUN ROOf' 12'00 or ~t Offer 968-61~ , 'fit Ptlr'Chf! Con\', R.blt Sllper \lnnrl11\- .l in1 ,<;;IPmnn~ P.rn11till 2201 Sn. :-.1 ... in . .'\11n11! A"~ I hlk nnr1h nf \\':i.m,.r Stir.·1r~ J'l'"p11rrm,.nt "46--411 4 511.t .. ~ n..1111rtmt n1 ;);,7-~342 R-15 F irst Showing USA Test Drive Jim Slemons Ren1ult 2201 S. Main 557·5242 ' -1971 Rl6 ~'"r!An 11·-.1nn. m.int lhm1.12hn11 t, ,111r, .lllll'l·t'nnf, AM ft\1 ~tPrrn, mich!'!lin. mu~• ~,.,., S2750. llr offer. •~:i.4fl2!1. SAAB SAAB SALE All New SAAB 's Are Alw1y1 sr,ecl1I Prictc:f At Coast n1t1nt Credit B•nk Fin1nch1g Immediate Delivery F1ctory Trained E x~rts In Service, P41rt1, Siles Over1e11 Delivery COAST IMPORTS I lrotl f'l\J, k Trtri~. Xlnt 1000.l:nl \l. Padbc c.1 Hwy mf'ch cond. $1400. 494-4i6S 1 Ne"'POrt Btacti cn-41 64.z-o.1oS A s • II N a " th c 1 N< '19 s " N Se ' d ·n w II '69 -- ·.---Fnday, Mol1 l 2, 1972 DAIL'( PILOJ .J3 SUPER S·AVINGS I • DEMONSTRATOR '72 GRAND PRIX 2 Or. C pe. V8, euto., fectory eir0 P.S., P.disc brekes, P-wi ndow11 AM-FM st11r110, WSW, vinyl roof, tilt wheel, etc, I 2KS7TA 125085) Stl. I OH $4926 95 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY NEW '72 GTO Lo aded including factory air con· ditionin 9. 12D27T2ZI 0000_. I Stk. 72-26 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY NEW '72 CATALINA 2 DOOR H.T. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY P.S., P-disc br•kes, radio, WSW, f11 ctory •ir condit ioning, load ed. I 2657R2CJ 16535 1 Stl. II 75 1969 Mere. 4 1N I 11ttlo!I w~ At, ,.W, 1"5, l'.MIFM 51ttto, llt1d.. 1•1'.,~60HOOl lttlly lllfffttH ..... u ,,u. $2999 1971 T -Bird H1rt:1tc1p c1111.. IMded, l"/S, ,./W tVlnyl to11, AM/FM S11rto, (IJQ 1HJOOlt J1 k1Hy '41tfel"' l.11111 iJl .. $4699 '69 Cheyrolet . ..,...c ..... ·H.T. (ll'f, Full po-. tacto•y 1lr, ~lnyl f09, !'l'Ol050) Kelly Sllftft... I.ell~ '2245 $1899 Cotallt10 HT c,.. V·I. nu10. ltdn>., l~c!ory 1lr condillonln.p, power 1JHrlng, pOwer !dlic) Or•k!i, t,<Jd l11, lltaler, whlt1w1ll !lreo, i.nc11u lu11. (W1A 1691 k1Uy l11Ht"ed fltllll 117'S '67 Thunderbird 4 o •• , Full PGw•r, l•Clory "Ir. v1nyt lop, e.>.cel~r condition, (I~• (XW) $1399 '69 Volvo 144S S-4011 Auto, Tran•., Air Cona ,. o• lgln•I 1 owner. «ZS OUSI $2299 '6 5 Jaguar XKE ....... t ,l)ffd, rH io, Pl .. IM IUI!>. tr ln"•ltf, •i•• ._It. Orlvit ii, .,...,,II CM,oy II (P IMXlll M111ttut v,., •uto. lr1n$., pawt r s~r-1119. roldlo, llH !er, whllewall llr•1, vinyl inle•lor. (fFOlF· ll70Sll ..,.,. 1llff'lllW 11•1•11 "'" '71 Buick El.ctr• Lh1lltt4 Cw!. 22i. LO.>Cled, lull POWe<', r~ciorv •ir. v1n v1 roof. ciual pWr. IHles, AM/FM il'l'l'!!O. elc., etc. BSODDNJ k"r, S11t9e1lfff llellil iUJI $4399 1969 Olds Delto II t <Ir, H.l . Full po"'~'• la~ to•Y lir, •ii tn<,tine, vlnvt rep. (YRAt:rn S..,g''"" lltl•ll 12'9! $2399 '67 Pontiac t.M"• H.T. c,.. vt, 1utom1tk, r&dlo, hNle" power slee•lnt, factor y it ir. CUQJllJJ $1199 C111toM SliyloB H.l . Cpe. VI. IU10mlllk, p0wer "etrlna, power brakes. f~ctory air, vlnvl lop, 1111 wneel. low mllellge. (YSH•l'I KeUy .s ..... .i .... RlllH_ 12440 1969 Olds C11tleM S. HT c,... V ... ofUIO, '''""• IKIOry "' c"""'ltJon,,,., po.... 11M<lflt, rMlo, PIH•tr, i.ri01v, 1'011 tnl!T ... tl~I •tll'f illeloMIM lltl•ll UUt '69 Bonneville • o. H,lrCIToP. Full Pow~r. FK lory lllr C-V•n~I lop IOlt BLPJ Kl!LL'I' SUGGl'STED tt l'TAtL 1Ji.J $1899 '69 VW Bug 4 SllCI.. llloldoQ, He,ue• C II· fOIJ~IJ KELLY SUGCl!STEO ttl!TAll l lJIJ $999 '6 7 Firebird Au1omn11c. P ~ .• ~" ,01111 •• a10, h•ftler. €J<t~l11nr 01rc", E •C•ll!l<ll Con<ll!<0<1, llJ• EOH) k1HV S~it"" lltl•lt "It! '70 Catalina 4 Dr. h8•Clf()f), PI S, P 8, F~' tor• Ai•, Vinyl top. C7S1JfOC101J011 Kelly '"''"'" 11 .. 1it n so $2199 Spoclol Dia. Wo1011 V·I. ~1110. tr~n1., tnctory •Ir CPndlt lonln~. !lit wh~~I !VF P 3761 ktUY 51191 .. ltd lltllll tlllS $1199 '65 lnternatiollCll ..... 4 ~ Orl•t:' H•'111M, l ... CllHZJl1J $1799 1971 Gremlin Slick t111t1, 1.0ict, hHr.,-, c .... · IOm lnltrlor •K k KitOy ~-•I* llitllll U2tl $1899 c._.,. Au10"'~"' •" C-1l10<11MI, r,)0.0, ll•&r•r IHI "''" },OQO mole. if!JL !XI Kolly S119qt1le<I tt111I~ 2 Pintos Run.1!>\ '" ,.,1 1 Coo• • •Pf!l'<I ~"" ~~'"'""'" •vel!e~I• i;: .. lo•IF.lWI 1970 Pontiac SPO<• Cpt., AT. PIS, P iii, Fa(to•r '"· 11uc1i.1r 5t•11 (l llBZW) Kelly i1199n1N llitl•ll 12111 $2299 '68 Pontiac GTO HT Cl»' Aulo. TrA"I., Pow. ,., ~le~r!nv, F1u ory Al• C'.ona , Vlnyl Top, !WOlo'- Jlll ADVERT ISED PRI CES EFFECTIVE THRU M AY IITH 2480 Harbor Blvd . at Fair Drive COSTA MESA Ph. 546-8017 l'h MILE SOUTH OF THE SAN DIEGO FWY . DAVE ROSS OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 8:30 AM TO 10:00 PM SUN. II AM TO 9 ,M ( Autos for s.i. ..... ,,... !§][ L_ _'"'_<IM_S..~_J §] Autos, lm~rted 970 ' Autos, imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 SAAB I TOYOTA VOLKSWAGEN ~;;;--;;:;:;;;:;;--1~~-=--~~. SAAB SONNE TT 111 I '72 TOYOTA '11. V\V bu.~. Cuslon1 rear scat e When You're No. 3 $2029 & bed cabinets. Slidini; sun d e 4 spct•dtrans.f)lx Ablrad10. r o of-p o rt r e fr i J..:. v;'. r;,,; c~:~. er llL•;J IC!I', dl'frosters. tinted Immarulatr-pri/ply. S28.JO. J;lass. \Vhilf' \\'all tires. Call 836-0011 ,,·kdays !l--1. Would Like To Boast I Po5>-0ut rear '"indo11•s. Vinyl NEW J9i2 vw Super Beetle. ''We ·Sold The Most !'' I trin1. Cal')X'ts. f ront disc \Vhiic. A,\l/Fi\I, 1250 miles. /..fr. o( J\·la.rch 3. 1972 \Ve \\'«re brake~. Reclining bucket Xlnt l'Ond. ~toving mus t No, 3 in the Nation (ln r ael scat~. KE 20-~!i. sell. $2200. 613-0143.' U.c \\lorld!) In Sales for the __ __ ---,--.,-- SAAB SONNET Sporls Car. n L1111.:.1 1969 V\\I BUG needs a nc1v \Vr. Want 10 be and 1\·ill he -£41l tAll'IO hon1c. Looks .ti runs g:rcat .. No. l by June ht. Test drivl' TOYOTA 37,000 n1i. rndio. $119:1 .. a Sonnett loday and see \\'hY '195-039fi. n1ore people buy h'Om Const 1966 ll ;irbnr, C.i\J. f~9::0:1 '66 VW STA WGN than any olher dealer In So. S!lfiO Calif. ~ •• ,. •"\•$ CLEAN. GOOO CON DITION COAST IU '" Priv. Pty. c .111 962-~22 ml\ltS 11vw ""'-. '""""''· 1o1<1 oor bed, curtauis, r a d 1 a Is , IMPORTS Toyota & Ja..,"'Uar Dealer a n1/fn1 . 114: '1 95-0 728 : Aolhor;,C<I Sales < &"';"' !>l!l--0211. . , I OOJ s. Coast H1gh\vay -;-66-80G-·ood-· ·d -N-r ~-·~~ Be h 540-3100 ' g c.'On · l"W l00}-1200 \V. Pacific Cs!. lhvy . .....,.; ... 1a ac brakel", jusl luned. $.iOO. Ne1vport Beach (il4) 642-0406 TRIUMPH 49~!X>i6. roon1 ?.OS. , 1971 Saab. 99E fuel \njl'C I ---------·I i~-VQ°Jk-, -;flan-. -p~;f-ec-1. $2100 or be.'t offer. Lik<' * TRIUMPHS * S~i-l5. Jl}j 32nd SI. Ncv .. port new. ~3546. j '71 CLOSEOUT Beach. 673-0717 aft 6. I SUBARU · SPJTFlnES AS JJ)\r ,\S$~ '61 V\\'. very clean, 100 m iles GT-6 SAVE $SOO on l'f'h ll mo lnr. S-HlO. lirm!I SABARU Pick-Up truck. rtp- prox, 1100 miles, extra tires. $650. GT:>-2625. TOYOTA •70 TOYOTA STATION WAGON Ne'" car lrade in. <! speed, radio, & healer. 748RZU. $1495 ~ S•nt• An• Toyot• Service dept open 7::l0 am 'til 9 pm Monday thru FTI· dBJo. PHONE 540-2.511 117 \V, \Varner, Santa Ana 1967 TOYOTA Corona, cog needs rebuilt, $400. ~ st 2322 Palisade!'!, S . A . 91!-1496. •n TOYOTA Corollit station \\'Rg(>n. Going 10 EuroJ>f", Sl%j0., 492-9747. · '69 Toyota Sia \Vag. ~1ark 11. auto, a ir cond., rndio, xlllt oonfl. $1300. :HS-800:.:'-· __ 1969 TOYOTA Corona, xlnt con<l, auto, R.lH, lo mlle11. n095. 644-%157. DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS FOR ACTION ••• CAU 642-5678 J<~RITZ \\'AfiRE:'ll'S After :'! 1>111. %.~-S:~~6- 5port Car Center ·;o vw sus. '""""''· ORANGE COUNTY 'S xlnt cond., askine: $2'200. I LARGEST or besl offt'r. 6-l&-301 5 710 E. l st, S.A. 547-0i&t 196.'i Bus 1600 en g In e . ·f>~1 SPITFIRE -n1n.s good. pan('lec!. crpt'fl, \vid,. ovals. B('SI otter Ol'r.r $4 50. $1200. CBll 615-5:116 all 6 pm. 6~2-!TI.71. 1 s6 Vw:-Grea t buy I VOLKSWAGEN --'"·'"~--_ '6.'i V\\I f AS'J'BJ\CK. Xlnt ·11 V\V 1ius cond., nr1v lirc.s & brake~, lR,000 miles, clean! $97j, C11 ll 49-l-6831. ___ s><XJ __ ._546-_33_79 __ ~ r '68 V\V BUG . Xlnt cond. NCI\' '60 VW. new engine for Baja tire! & painl. Beil o[(er. Buggy, sand buggy. $2:"-(I. l\!}.t-j27i. ~2719. ----~ i1_!l7_l_VW __ Su_pe_r--B-u_g ___ 1000=-m-L ~V\,;--Bug•auto !Slick. Magz, Wide-O-Oval!!i:. Tuned Radio Red, Orig., lo miles, mull. moo. 673-9.'i-16. $10ij. 644--0JSS. LATE '69 VW ~-t ,:,,.'=,,;.=c,.;~---c I UJflV •• au o .. '71 POP TOP Camper, red, Serupefit radlaJs, lo mi. AM /n.t. tent. idnt oond. Like. ne\11'. St395. '67$.5941 8<12-lrol=. ~-----1 * * '69 F~!back, full auto, 1970 V\V Sedan air COllfL, AM/FM. like $1450 ~ riew. $U25. 644-2199. 714-S.16-1770 * -.65 VOLl<S\V AGEN BUS * Pa1~led & Carpeted P..c11t offe.r • 5;;1-Zl27 1961 Baja Bug. Good Condition. ~- LI 8-7932 V\V-'71-Camper. Warr. tent- extJu-$3100 dr n f f e t • 545-0684 The taste11 draw ill the West. , .a Daily PI I o t Classifitd Ad. 6Cl-fi671. '69 VW Bus, 1 pa~nger, $18i5. X\111 rond. * 83.'h~ or 979-1494 * '6.1 VW Crew Cab truck. New 1&00, tri'\nt &. tires. ST:iO. or best. &n-4582 alter 6. TRANSPORTATION car, '60 vw sr,o. 84UIJ7 * VW ENGINE ONLY * $250. Pnfect. condlUon • * i!J&.,2141 .. * 980 Autos, New 980Autos, New -,-980 Auto5, New Step Up To Luxury • • • • \ Excellent selectio11 of previousl y owned Mark Ill's an<l Contine11tals 1971 MARK ID Exce ptio nally Clecui! Beautiful Ginger Moondust exterjor with tobacco Interior and vinyl roof. Luxury equip-- ped including full power. climate control air, individual adjusting po\ver front seats, tiJt wheel. AM/~'M stereo radio. (818462) SALE! OUTSTANDING GROUP OF CHOICE CARS! 1969 Con tinenta l MARK 111 Beauli{ul medium blue metallic v.'i\h leather interior & 1\·hite viny l top. Every "xtra conceivable incl. AJ\1 radio \vith i<te1·PO tape deck Bnd cruise contn1I drive. (YNDl 4'1l $4675 1968 Lincoln 4 DOOa J.ighl blur fini~h \\·Ith dark blul' vinyl top. FUii j)O\ver Rnd factory &jr. (\VJR· 127 I $2375 19(19 Cadillac FLEETWOOD 4 Dlt. ' BPauliful e-bony black finish with black lrathr>r interior and vinyl top. A one O\\'n"r <':Jr that hail only ~onr 39,000 mi. Prit'cd fo r quick :-iale. fZNV9801 $3950 1968 Chev r ole t CAPR ICE 2 DR. HARDTOP Full po111('r, ractory air cond., includin~ 111din "'ith factory stereo tttpf' deck. Al so hn~ rru ii:,. control. f\VXE66.51 $1775 ,- 19(19 L in coln CONTINENTAL 4 DR. \\/hilt' ,.xterio r .,.,·ith black lf'alh"•' a nti vi nyl top. JoU ll puwl'r. air t"und. and v1u ... 11un1 locki ng i::rn up. N1•a r wholesalP. 4 XY 7A581 , r ull pri<·r $3275 1969 Chev1·olcl CAMARO VI r.r,.diurn i;::ref'n fin ish, r11>1v1·r st,..,.rini;. 1n1ln. trAn!l .. only gon,. :.!7,000 n1\lC':o1. $2250 COME IN AND SEE OUR VAST SEL ECTIO NS OF TOP QUALITY CARS! "Orange CountV1 f 'ami l11 of #t'ine Cars" Home or The Ne\V Car .•. "Golde11 T oucl•" ohnson & son I I 11 ' I l \ ( ( ) 1 J l ) I ' f~ • 2626 HARBOR Bl VO., COST A MESA • 540·5630 llome 01 The New Car .• , ··Gold e 11 Toucll" , 9IO I • \ 1•1dty, M.1y 12, 1972 !. ...., __ I . !·,....,...... ·YOU JUST CAN'T~ ' . ' ' I • ;l ' ' . . • • ' ' .. • • • • BRAND NEW BEAT A UNIVERSITY '72 CUTLASS . • f•clfl<V ,;, Cf111d i+i1111•ft9, $ lurbo "vd•t,..,l;t , pow•• •'••ri~t & di•c b•1k1•. d •• lu1t r1die, WSW, .... ~,;! ili1c1 plu1 l'I UC~ "'"''· { 1217 10 1 BRAND NEW BRAND NEW '72 TORONADO BRAND NEW '72 OLDS 98 Power se at, power windows, pow· er steering & disc br..kes, power $ trunk lid, air conditioning , till steering wheel, cornering lamp plus much more. j73'408 I). ORANGE COUNTY'S LEADING 17 • Coupe. Power windows, power steering & disc brakes, air cond i· $ tion ing, tilt steering wheel, rear- . seat speakers and many more lux· ury feature s. 148 1-00S). 52 . e:::0 '72 GMC % TON p .u. WITH CAB OVER CAMPER Sleep• 6, ha1 !ink, 1tove, it"I HONDA DE~.LER bo" aulomot;, ""'m;u ;oo, ,.. THIS $4 9 9 5 . dio, he ater, power 1teerin9, pow .. br1 k ... f1<to ry ,;, ,.,. WEEKEND cl it ionil'lg, (5102t6 ) · ... , 01ur . ,. . - ·' ~ . ' . , .. AJfDING USED CAR VALUES!! HURRY! • '66 CAD. COUPE DE VILLE '65 OLDS 442 '67 BUICK ELECTRA t . '68 FO~~ ~.ONVERTIB~E I! II ~ u~. flfW 't .\ . s;. o· ~9 Full cower •ci u<cr&d . l1elorv ,;, $1695 Aulemt+it lt4nt"'iu it1". r1dio • , ]I 000 milet. i WZF42'f) • I. .17 conclitionin9, !S l-!8004 1 i nd h11l1•. (Zll.Wb26 l. \ i · '\' I ,. ; ,. : .. • • I ' t : T • • '• • I \ '70 HOND~ CAR . ' l 58SS lltcl •o. 1,,,1,,. 4 1p1ecl. r 136800 1 '66 TORONADO R&H, ''"" ''"''"' & '"'"· 5119S 1ulom1tic, ft clo•y t i•, I 0611AZHI l - '69 TOYOTA Aufo.,.1•ie. lt111io l li11!1r. IJJ?IXE ) '72 PINTO 4,000 ,.,;1,1 .. A.utQ.lfttlit , rtdio encl ~tt ltr. 174 1ETX l ' '67 . BUICK SKYLARK '69 TORONADO '66 PONTIAC GTO '65 CHEVROLET 5199S l ,,, .. ,,,, ... ,, "'"'""''"· rtdio 111cl "••'•'· (WYY2721 569S ...... '""'"'"''"· ,.,,, .. i h11 l1•, .,.;11vl roof. !VlVJl bl. '69 DATSUN SEDAN EXAMPLE: New '72 Cutlass va . •utom •tie, r1cfio, ht•f•r. power steering, power hr.tkts, vinyl roof, f1etory 1ir conditioning . I 61) I • • • $79MO. 24 MON;M CL051D·IND - , • • I • 0 DAil Y rllOT ff iiiiiiiiiiiil~§l,! --~I~ ~-"'!!_ lar;;~-~--;"'.u..-~J;.~~~I=-="'::-~· 11~1 1.__._ .... _ ... _ .. ___, ..... "'.... l§l AUtos, Uaed " ---P-IN_T_O __ _,t -A _u1o1, __ u_...i ___ 990_ Autos_,· Ou~.C-l•A-:u":'.tos='=u-::...i=.,.....-"°_ Auto.. u...i 990 •A•utos.-•u...i----,,.,• VOLKSWAGEN CADILLAC t90 Autos, UMoll T-lllD 990Autos,Used ,,. DODGE CHEVROLET '69 VW SUNROOF Sharp! 14,500 miles {ZCC015) Bkr, C41i 644-2900 before 7 • '69 CAPRICE 4 door llanl top. Automatic tnuwnisaion, po\\'er stMJ"- lng, power brakes. air con- ditioning, vinyl roof, 350 VS, power wlndov.•s, till A tele wheel, AM/FM slereo, tinted class. White ride walls, etc. Exceptional 11 o\.\.·ner clean car. No. lMJ. '64 Dodge Coronet. Good ahapt' .. 95. c.u167>-491S alt ' pm. MERCURY DIVORCE force• sale" ·n l>ten:-Mtrqu.b C.01 Pk Sia. ~·a:n. 17,00) mi. Best 'olfer over t3, TOO. 897..6234. '71 PINTO Deluxt. 17,000 miles, kinks Ii runs like MW. 8\g engint, automatie, (59-tCAJ). Bkr. Call 644-2950 belOl'f' 1 pm. 'potmAC -~ 1970 P..;-11 .. Bonneville '70 THUNDElllRD '70 P0tttlac Grand Prix 2 dr. hanltop, alt cond., suto. Full power, alt, lt'"'9, bench Ab~?· trand~·· ~· at~r"'Kc· tram... nuUo, 268.8.CO. seat. Sharp thnlOQI. Prictd pm. EDSEL ' , ... a., I'll io, m;&ltr. iv"' . ...,1'ft<. 00 ~ T L' ve""' rea.1anably CmADL.> ~oo 11 ....,..,.,. ..,.. ax, ic. .., . 12.4~Blll BARRY Bill BARRY :!'.· Call 6'<-2900 b<lote 1 YOUR ONLY FACTORY AUTHORIZED PLYMOUTH __ _,.._,,.,..,,,.,-...,..,,,_.....,-'67 Mercury Cyelone, high A Classic '58 Edsel Citation, performance. 300 cu. in., full power, air. Xlnt mt-ch xlnt cond, many xtras, $900. ~~--,.-,--,,----- "" 6-'766 '67 Ply(noilth Fury 111. 4. VEGA 'Qi VW VAN, new paint, 1500 CCM engine. Must sell. Leaving country. $895 Or best cash <lifer, call betwn 6 & 8. 536-2343 ask tor Fred. CADILLAC '65 VW BUG DEALER co . ,,,..... . 962-7620 I=~===~~~-~<Ir., P.S., P.B.. Air con. 1960 l\fERCURY Parklane, diUonlna:. Like new. Priv. FALCON Pontl•c-GMC-Camper• _ Flat (111 St. at S.A. t\o.•y.1 2000 £. l.li t SL, Santa Ana 553-1000 Pontl•c..GMC·C•mpers F l•t (1st St. at S.A. Fwy.I 2000 E. 1st SI., Sanla AnA ~.}In) '71 VEGA GT 4 speed radio heater rear l.Mi:'est selection ot Otdll· · • • lacs in Orange County ~al aeat speakers. good Sales-Leaaing. Look for ou~ tins, 644-2950 bdore 1 pm. full page ads eveey Wed $2495 ~~~~~-~ $150. party, $975. 545-000 alt 6 • 548-1G81 * 1963 Falcon-rebuilt motor & trans-$.200 firm. ~s...2133 i--.,,M-=u"s"T=A"'""N=G,__ al<er Fri...,_1053. PONTIAC '69 PONT. CTO. Low ml.. P\.\.'r stl'f'r, air. mags. Xlnl rond. $400 Below book 962-<iS-16_ SPORT CPE. 2 Door. 4 speed. Radio, Heater, n1q whfflf,_ only 10,000 mlttt. ·&t6D1..L., VOLVO &: Friday tor our specials. Nabers Cadillac 1972 VOLVO ~o~~.~~s!L.· 540.9100 Open Sunda). 'TI Cad Sed. DeVille, xln't cond. Fully equip!. 19832 Gloucester, HB. 962-1293. Le11se Tod1y •t Best·Rates $88. 74 Per Mo. 0 .A.C. Afi.t /Fl\1, Auto. trans., disc brakes. 36 mo. CAMARO For Leasing or buying ,70 CAMARO "'••w l•1.:1 350 V!, 4 speed, radio, htater. - '*"" Ullwt vinyl root, bucket seats (961. VOLVO AVBl. 12295.-Tommy ~ Chevrolet, !MG S. Coast 1966 IIarbo r, C.M. 646--9303 Hwy., Laguna B e a ch, '67 VOLVO 122S 494. 7744/546--9967. Camaro '69 SS 2 door, 4 speed, 1 ~owner, Lo mileage, Top local car (VCJ555) $1195. condition. 4 new Tommy Ayres Chevrolet, 946 tires. Priced to Sell. S. Coast ll"·y., Laguna Pri/pty 673-6806 Beach, 494-7744/546--9967. ;o,68,----;;c"==--;;;;::---;;~""'=: amaro 396 SS. Rbll. 4 '64 Volvo 122-S 4-d r. 4 spd spd. New mags 3 ~ d trans., rfh, Clean. htUsr Goodyears. Gauges, a i r SELL! 4~3821. shocks, Cust. int. $16!1!1. Autos, Used 990 893-6460. l===-=-=-~-­'67 Camaro V-8, auto, many AMERICAN xtras, Looks & runs good ! ...,...--,.--,..---1 >IS-7048. American Motors 1-----;;.""""ss."'350"-""--oA7;,-_.-u7to- .,Gremlins .,Hornets Fully loaded, Spoiler. $1550. ..-Mat•dors VJavelins 833-U37 VAmbassadors LrKE new, '69 Camaro HUge stock of '71'1 &: '72'1 Loaded'. Low Mileage Big-Big Savings • 962-1001 • Harbor American CHEVROLET '~ 445 E. Coast Hwy. NEWPORT BEACH 673--0900 Ext. 53-54 (Open Sunday) '&8 Impala Custom- 2 door l\ardtop. Radio, heater, power steering, factory air, extra clean. WBJ267 $1295. Tommy A¥res Chevrolet, 946 S. Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach, 494-7744/546-9967. CHRYSLER '64 Chrysler New Yorker beaut car, ps, pb, p11i•, auto, radio, air, xlnt con<!. $675. TI4: 493-1025. CONTINENTAL '68 Lincoln Continental Full Power, Air Conditioning, CVUE263). Beautiful car. HARBOR MOTOR HOMES Home of Convenient 1969 ~';;,.,:",''Bivd. We're Moving t1J N. Horbor Blvd. S•nt• An• '66 FORD F AlCON Best Off(r Takes~ • 548-21.55 * FORD '66 l\t usta.na • Good Co n d . Rad I heat I auto-trans / lo miles I Gd paint & Interior. $150. ~279 '69 Red Mustang -hlach t. '66 MUSTANG pts. ptb . ''"" ••· Full V8, automatic transmission. Price $l525. 8l3-l092 alt 6· power steering, perfect 2nd '65 Mustang V-8. Au.to. R/H. car for the little lady. YR..8-Original owner, 54,CQJ mi. 005. 646--.2348. --~~~~--~ ~!UST ANG '66 xlnt cond. PIS , R/H, $800. Prl Pty. ~1869. .. ,Al auro. Under warr. Orig '-I'' °"·nr. Make offer. 833--0597. 44.5 E. Coast Hwy. NEWPORT BEACH 673-0900 Ext. 53--54 l\.1USfANG '&!i xlnt cond. PIS, R/H, $800. Pri Ply. 64-4-1869. =---=--=o----=--'65 Mustang e 6 cyl. stick. We're Mov1"ng R""' & 100"' •'·Best 0""-540-1504 bet. 5 & 9 pm. s .. our Unbe•teble 1 ''766~M~u-,t-an-g~V~-8-, -.-"'-,-. -.~Ir. Prices very clean. ~ ~1 ~~~"'"-=~-­* '65 Mustang. V-8. auto., 2100 Harbor Blvd ., C.M. pwr. steer.. good tires, 645--0466 mags. $850. 548....()Q) • '67 FORD Country Sedan 390 * ONE OWNER • 2V. air: pwr di9C brakes, 1965 PttUSTANG V-8 P.S., AM/FM, load leveler, * 962-7097 * J\.1ichelin, X tires, 1 owner.1--------- Clean! $995. 675-3539 • '71 Ford Torino • 4 door sedAn. Rad/air I pwr steer/disc brakes. Ex ed. wkdays only, 8-5. 540-7277 OLDSMOBILE '67 Delta 88 auto, P /S, P /B, R&H, A/C, nu tires. Very gd cond. $1 095 . 546-7326. '72 LE MANS Brand new 1972 Lt-l\lan!I fully factory equipped, including p. steering, P .B., radio, heater, -.•1w tires, auto. lrana. + m111ny extras. Sl>r. No. 2D17D2Pl 73050. $2999.00 + Tax, Lie. BILL BARRY • Pont l~c-GMC·C•mptr1 Flot {1st.St, at $.A. Fv•y.) 200'.l E. 1st St., Santa Ana 558·1000 '67 Pontiac Le· Mans 2 Door J-lardtop, VS, auto- matic trans., po"·er sir-er· ing, only 46.000 original n\iles. !\lust see to appre- ciate, Like new Ul-IR997. $1095 '~ 445 E. Coast Hwy. NEWPORT BEACH 673-0!m Ext. 53-54 (Open Sunday) '69 FIREBIRD Radio, ,heater, automatic, silver grey - a beauty. . ZLI-1456. Low down EZ tern1s $1899 Costa Me11 64M261 See our Unbeatable 839-9560 BUICK Prices '70 LTD 2 dr Ht. Low miles: '68 Olds 4 Dr., auto, R&H, PHONE 645-5799 19n CONT. 4 dr sedan, Air, Full pow.. vin. to p. Only tinted glas.~. air. Gold $1350. MIRACLE MAZDA ~ ~ full power, l\-1ichelins, 8500 $239S. (868BEN). Ph: 546-2526. 2150 Harbor Blvd. '60 PONTIAC catallna 389 V'8, P.S.. P.B .. gd. body, Pt-lnt, tires. nt>w certified stnog dcvi~. Run11 xlnt. $~ or ofr. 892-2970. '66 GTO. air, po11i·er. Xlnt rond. Orig. OWllt'r. Pvl. pty. $650 or best offer. ~. 1965 CATALINA 4 dr, AC. J>O"l'._er. Original O\vner, $450., ~7-6t . * * '64 ·Gro. itlnt 389. S-2's, reblt trans: best otter. 6'6-SllJ2 4utos •. Used 990 ·n Pon1i111<" ca 1 a I i n a Brooaham. 15,000 nlilts. All •e:rclras-full p\.\.·r. $3-400. pri. ply. 536-MS6/64~il. 196-1 Pontiac Lel\t11.ns · E:rc<"t'I cond. 16.COJ mile~. $695. Prllpty. 6~2 .. JTOO or MJ...4838. '69 £,,tt.Utive \Yagon. }'u.11 pwr., air, rack, p.>61, 3,COJ miles. Dnmae. 84$-1612. Autos, U-.-990 $2399 ,,, 4"5 E. COMI Hwy, NE\\'POHT BEACll 673-0!XXI Ext. 53-~ (Open Sund•y) · Autos, Usad PUBLIC ANNOUNCEMENT . ' ., ' ' BUICI< SALE ' FLEET PRICES Are Available to the Public on all NEW 1972 BUICKS & OPELS (Except GT) NO SALESMAN-DEAL DIRECTLY WITH OWNER OR MANAGER T1ke Adv•ntage of This Tremendous S•vlngs Pl•••• C1ll for Appointment Since 1933 -Sth & Walnut Huntington Beach • origin mi es, ac ry ~~~-~~~~-1 '67 FAIRLANE wag., air xlnt cond. 962-2354 top, factory air, factory ~ : 4! 990 '67 Buick Le Sabre 2100 Harbor Blvd .. C.M. :!·rr:~~~e~11e::i~ru~~; J im SJ~mons Imports * • .64 Oldi 88 wagon. 9 Costa Mesa ·~ -e I 49 000 -. al -, F to 645-04fi6 Book. 642-4100. 2201 S. Main 557-5242 J>!Ul!i. R/H, air, new tires, '68 GTO Big engine, vinyl l 1 1 ~ Air Cond, '-lust see 1his car '66 Chev Super Sport ·n Continental Mark III heel ( 'th I ks) • 536 6588 '¥•"-t ~ (Cl17819J Radio, heater, aiicond, vinyl Loaded , one owner, private :!:. lu~·ra;:.BNr. ~~: Hav~ somet~i~g you want to ~~ ~iles: M":-x. ~L l~~·~·~~~'"'"~"'"""''"·.,..,..._.,...,.~~Dl'!~BL.=~J~~~=~:~UI HARBOR roof. KRY57t Low down party. 714 : -49!}..1554. ti~s and bric!. Orig. owner, sell . Classified ads do 11 Beautiful cond. $1550 phone l , ' • payment, EZ terms. • CORY AIR $895. (JGATI4), 84.2-5Gl9. we~ -call NOW 64l-5678. 826-1256. MOTOR HOMES PHO SNE7!.! 5199 MUST S.11-'9 Foro LTD Autoa, Imported 970 'A ~-u,--to-s-, .-Im_po_rt7ed---,--"'9=70 Autos, Imported ~fo~Autos, Imported 970Auto~ported 970 .....,. 1964 Corvair. Good Wagon. Loaded. $2500 orl l";;;;;;i;;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;..;;;;;;;;;;;9i1I MIRACLE MAZDA Condition. $300. I~ 913 N. Harbor Blvd. 2150 Harbor Blvd, 846-4187 ~er pa Y men ts, Santa An1 Costa Mesa COR"ETTE 839-9560 'f '63 Foro Galaxi•-As ~ 1150- '67 IMPALA SS '61 Buick Le Sabre. As is. 1971 BUICK Skylark dlx cpe, . . '66 Corvette f/b, AM/FM, lime green. air. PIS, P/B, VS , automat~c, fa~tory air, M-22 4 spd .. ill pogi. ,'69 $50. 548-087 __ ,_-_____ ,I cust. rims 644..{;919. power steering, vrnyl roof, LBS, 4Z7 CID, H 011 e y '65 Ford Station Wagon, . bucket seals {TRA201) $1295 F.dlebrock, TRW, mags. Cntry Sedan, $475. 548-2314 '66 Riviera. Full fXl""'er. Nu Tommy Ayres Chevrolet 946 Will take best offer thls dy, 833-3496 eves aft 6. ti res. Sharp! 2957 Croftdon S. Coast flwy., La~a k Ro .eAo:: uo.. '67 FORD. XL. pwr, t1.lr. gd St., C.M. 5'16·3919. Bea{'h, 494-7744/546-9967, 1,_w,:'>0'::·:::;":::'-'~i.::::;:i";-~~;t-.. ·...,,-i.'l"k I I '69 Co bl ,,.9~ .......,.. , . seals. mmAc. '63 Buick. Skyla rk convt. OLD but still GOOD! •61 rvette, ue _.. ;i. UNV Make 0 • 548-3727. 50 ooo I t d mi. Mag wheels, wide ovals, · mi, x n c 0 n • Chevy wagon with 283 '67 Ford LTD tac air. Xlnl $5()()/make ofr. 831-84.91 en'"ne -runs good. Good 311 rear end. Fully equlpl d 1 -1990 "' 4Z1 eng. 642-0330 aft 6. con . wner, XuctS. • '70 Opel GT. 4 spd, xlnt wide oval tires. Needs head 833-1593 or 673--0191. cond? Take over payments. gasket. $100. 67>1345 eves & '68 COUPE 421, side exhausu. ,69 Country Squire 837-9607 wkends. Many xtras, xlnt condi tion, CADILLAC 1---------$2900., -496-5631. Call alt 6 pm. 6-42-3585 '70 Monte Carlo, orig onr, ---------1 28,000 mi/air/stereo/pwr COUGAR l\fUSJ' SELL $995 '69 Foro 4 d• Sedan R/H Fae. A.ir 6-45--0452 "BlLL WHITUDCES" Sunset Motors cond. $29.:iO. wkdy 547-6892, ----,..-----eves 67J...3745. 1968 COUGAR, air, AM /FM stereo, P/S, P/B, vinyl roof, posi·trac, pvt ply. $1295. 545-5637 ORANGE COUNTY '65 Malbu, 2 dr. hrdtp, auto, LOCATION R&H , air, $695. 645-4040 ask 166 XKE Ro1dster $2795 for Ed Joffe. LocaJ one own~r car wtthl-,65-C-h_<v_•_U,-d,-,-... -,-..,--,-dr 25,000 act~al miles. 4 speed, sta wgn, as is $350/bst ofler chrome \V1re wls., and near &15-S855 new radials. •RVK193, 1---------- Phone 645-6677 CHEV '66 Caprice. 4 Dr sect. 1970 J-larbor Blvd, A/C, Pwr window. Vinyl top. Costa Mesa Sgl. owner. 548-6111. '69 Cad Cpe De Ville '65 V•n-travel'9 apt Fully loaded. 36,000 trne $695. * • 644--6119 miles. Showroom fresh. BABY comes First! Must YOYOSO. l..o\v down pay· Sell REAL Cheap. Excellent ments, EZ terms. 72 Monte' Carlo. 548-9-m DODGE '69 Polara wgn P/S, P/B/ air, 383 eng, tinted glau. Rad/auto/$2200, Whiteslde- 536-5261, SJS.769.1. '66 Charger-383 eng. MI chelin tlres-auto!Msg Wheels-bucket seats-$995. 832-9644-. Have 10mething :you want to sell! Classified ads do Jt 'vell -call NOW 642-5678. $3999 PHONE 61~5700 J\1IRACLE MAZDA 2150 Harbor Blvd. Autos, Used '90 Autos, U-990 Costa Mesa JEEPS '65 Peep Wagoneer, 4 WO. 6 cy l., Au to-lrans. Pwr. SIB. Best offer. 673-5522. '68 Jeep CJ5, V6. Xlnt cone!. 26,00'.l mi. Wide tires, xtras. 846-5039. MAVERICK '70 MAVERICK Automatic. Good transporta· lion. Excellent running car. Priced to sell. Phone 6-442950 before 7 pm. Autos, Used We're Moving See our Unbe•table Prices SPRING · SPECIALS ~~ 2100 Harbor Blvd., C.~1. 645-0466 19TI CADILLAC Fleetwood Brougham, fully equipped, sterro, telt'phone, b 1 k w/vlnyl lop ail leather Int. $7645 or be~t ofter. 833-8780. '70 Sedan de Ville Cad. Ex· ecutive model • Loaded! Xlnt cond. Must sell, new car coming! Days 642-1212 Nights, 846-1492. '71 SEO de Ville, lthr seats, AM/fli stel't'O, vinyl top. new tires, loaded w/a11 xtn..s, lo book. S5600 finn. Dys 532..J338 Eves ~ '68 CADILLAC Sedan De Ville, all power, ftther, ate~. new ttrn, lmm1.c. l2&50. 645--:1415 1960 Cadlll1tc, 2 Or. Rebuilt engine, new tire1 $4 50. Call Bill 61;,--0970. ~'!UST SACRIFICE! 1912 El Dorado, tu.11 equip. m ml. IDJO. 114:54;.&510. '65 Cad Cp. deVllle. Lo mi'11, new llrts. Beau.tllul Cond. $1l00. 64:;.®6_ '62 CADILLAC Belt otfer Taknl ·-· The following used cars have been reconditioned, with special attention ta engine, interior appearance, ext•r· lor paint, and tires. All have been safety checked. See these before yau biiy. We offer liberal terms. '64 CHEV. MAt.llU IS W. 11.1!0., P.S., l•ctory l lr COlltolt, l>Vckll Sffb •1111 , .. dlo. (OQSIOtl s797 ''5 RAMBLER Ct.AlllC V.f. 11.vlo. ff-.• llldl'tldMI ,.. cllnlfio , .. ,,_ oo-,._,..., l!'J i;ltlll. Cl'HK#() $597 'ff TOYOTA t'Ol:OLU ,,...., 1 llr, Wfffr, •lrtyl - r•lt & -'"-· (DJILll s1197 '61 AMBASSADOR t Olt, M,t . A oood dlPlfld•b .. ur. Full ftclOrY 91111lpt IMI. 1lr canct. (VFWU•I 5997 '70 vw -S1497 • '69 IMPALA t Olt. M.T, Auto .• VI, P.S.1. P.S., lmm1cu- l1t1 & ru111 111111 "'"'· IZZA• ,., 51697 '71 DUNE BUGGY llAOY TO .0 Tifft -I'll• t '""'Ill Corwlr engine. Liit """· IJD,JOFC! For . ''6 AMBASSADOR ,.... lni.rlol", """ '"'"' ~ •n1cttt1 to\lfod "'"'.......,._ ..,.. AKI. s997 • ··~ Are Y°" llodl"' It dlfflc•lt te deal wllll "Ito• bit boya." Let'• face It, fncy - ....,_, .... bit ,.,ro11s ... , .... ., • , • tom• of that cost 11 pm1ed .,. ,. the buyer. Al Harboor VW, yH'I find - low nerhead win SO¥e y• m•eyf We may not hne • carpetH sltowroem, but we clo haYe low prlcesl Come Olt 11 ••• we'll play bal wllll yoo, aM y .. 'H •- "' ttle wl•n1erJ OPIN SUNDAY Now is the season! We have ·over 20 VW recreational & busses in stock. Plus over 150 new & used VW's. vehicles '72 HONDA MOTORCYCLE 175 •• ---S14t lHt lfleo11 500 f'!'llie-btoh1!fty dl.....-y. (llEG OJlll '10 OPEL GT . - -----. -.•••• • • • •• -fiot5 lttd wltft •••tk lnl.,tor, 4 •PMd, rMl1111r", d'll"OIM ''""· cm •OCI '10 DATSUN PICKUP TRUCK •••••• -S1710 Chrome whMtt, rldi.-1111:. IMW. (l.n' llHL) '61 VW BUGS • -, -............... .$2tf 2 IO cl!Oolt from. NEED WORK. (FYI-Off} (JTJ01ll ' '68 FIAT SPIDER •••••. -..••••••.• -•1011 $h0w ltoom CondltlOn, Ntw Teo, (XEY •?O), llrlgtlt lted W/lll1ck lllltrlor. '65 KARMANN GHIA .•.••.••••••• trniHI or.,,... •• ltldlo, H•llt, fltcltl'Y lt•*"'llt fllfll>I .. Tr1111, kt It ,,.._1.11i 1'1 IB '69 OPEL KADET •••••••••••••••••• u91 'IP"(I, llldlo, 11LH 2751. "f• '65 VW S(jlUAREBACK •••••••••••• -f7tt New p!lfnt. • tpeed, (ltPP''711 '68 VW BUG .••••••..••••••••••• $911 Llthl l lve W/llKk l11t1rlot, lttdlo, HM!lt, A 111111 lWF"C SMI '10 vW CUSTOM SUNDIAL CAMPERfifn' Gr111 fOf WHl\tnelt. !NJ fl.YI), "lf\la ,,,.fl'ld 111ty '65 DATSIN PICKUP .............. 9j91 llltfHfllfi 4 ........ IM#..IMll , • , '65 VW 'VAN ••••••••••••••••••• ·SUia ••c•lllfll N!Wllna coMltloft. IX.CV "" l '61 VW FASTBACK .............. -fi2tl I tPted, l lt CODl!d., Ilk• MW. IX.CI02JI '10 PORSCHE 914 ••• _ •• _ ••••••••• t- J •PMll--.i ...._,. S. rfllllol llr-ltW, _.. tTllllt. WMll._. ...-J.tL Im a.,ri- '68 MG MIDGET .................. .St91 hu!IMI CON1!1lol\. oc6G ,., '66 VW S(jlU~REIACK •••••••••• ._. fiH • IPMd, r .. M, JIM!.,, (11,M W I '63 VW IUG ........... - -• -• : .. • -fm lttt1u!n .... IM. OtM Hl11! 6 toed¥. lllF ~). Tfllll ~ 111ly, '64 THUNDERllRD ............... .Utl ' VW v•N • --· 64 " .................... ··'"' Mlltllk ll!W w/Dtd c..,,...IW!. lt\IM "Ml. {l"MT Ill) , , : '65' ptDS STARFIRE .............. f"m ll'utl .-WW. 1lr, Windows, fie. lltPJ 4DJ ) r '62 CORVAIR VAN CAMPER ••••••• $itt' lttc.,.lly ,.In '"llM. !OKA tlll • • •' , '68 FORD GALAXIE •.••••••••••• ·f1Jtl- ' DD9t" Kt,,,..,,,..,,.._, jifW, 1oW "'"--(Wt0 lttJ • • • • J • CAD ILLA NINETEEN SEVENTY-TWO EXECUTIVE CAR SALE . BUY OR LEASE • 1972 1972 Coupe · De Ville PURCHASE PRICE Sedan De Ville PURCHASE PRICE Full power oquipmen~ vinyl roof, leather & tapestry interior. $ 6 4 5 6 white wall tires, AM/n.1, soft ray glu1, 6 way seat. doo r guarda, climate control air, tilt tel. wheel, Lumper impact tilrip1, etc. (232744). Full power equipment, vinyl roof, teal.her & tapestry interior, $ 6 62 4 white side wall tiret, AM/FM, !!Oft ray glas!!, 6 way sent, door gu0<ds, climate control ai r conditioning, tilt tde. whee~ bumper strips, elc. (232744). LEASE A 1972 COUPE DE VILLE LEASE A 1972 SEDAN DE VILLE Full power equipment, vinyl roof, leather & tapestry interi or, whitewall tires, Mf/FM, soft ray gla M, 6 way aeat, door guarda, climate control 1ir conditioning, tilt-tele. wheel, bumper strips, etc. (4517). Full power equipment, vinyl roof, leather & tapestry interior, white wall tire&, AM/rn, soft ray glass, 6 way seat. door guards, climate control air conditioning, Lill·tele. wheel, bumper impact 11trips, etc. (3500). ONL~ $165 A MONTH '69 Cpe DeVllle Full power, factort air, Al\ftFP.1 1tereo mutiple~ tilt·tele -wheel, power door Jocka. vinyl top. leather interior. (YRY969) 71 Porsche 911 T Sunroof 9115 1u1penalon, 5 1peed tran1miBsion, At.I/FM radio, m11 -wheel~. Abeolutely apotlees condition. (767DSL) "· '71 Sedan De"ille Full power, faclory air cond., vinyl'top, door loektt Ml/Ft.I rtetio. (lli6Cli8) ,• ' . SALi PllCI SALE PRICE $5777 .~.PlllCE :~~. ~:r~~:..,,~.~!::.~~~:~~,:,ro t"~ < 'l888 player. Lu1i1&&e rack, Jual comfort fronl 8t!PI~ with. indi¥idua/ 1dju11mtnt1. Local 1 owner wi th extremely low mileage. (OOBB HK ) SAU PllCE '71 Eldorado }'ull power, air cond .• tele-tilt wl1etl, 11tem>, door locks, vinyl lop. Jca;lher interior. (403776) '70 Coupe DeVille Full powl"r, fartory air, A~l/F~I ~ler~ multiple"(, till·tele. -wheel, power Joo r Jocks w/auto. 11e11 rclta~. twiligh1 M'nlinel, auro. trunk relea&e, radial tires, vinyl top, Leather interior. Local I own· er immaculate cat.•( 1,%4074) '69 Buick Riviera J'a,.·rr ~leering. powrr brake1. aulo. lran1., radio, astro ventila· tion with heater, lill -wheel, full vinJI interior, wtw tlre1. Aa es· ceptkinal buy, (X Y0654) SALi PlllCE SALi Piia SAU PRICE 24 MONTH OPEN END ONLY $170 A MONTH SPECIAL OF WEEK . MERCEDES 1970 280 SEL .SEDAN V•ry Low Miieage Exquisile Tobacco Drown finish with natur1] full leather interior. power ~leering. hrake1. eleclric window~. factory air CC1oditioning. AM /Fl.I elereo 1nuhitile1. Abwlutely showroom fre~h throughout, (538CEIJ SALE PRICED I A Solid Shield of SERVICE with every sale ·Largest Selection of Late Model CADILLACS in Orange County 1963's to 197l's • Your Only Factory Authorized Cadillac Dealer Serving th• Orange Coast Harlior Area Sale Pdce11 Effective Thru ~f11y 15, 1972 • 70 Eldorado Full power, factory air cond .. tele-tile Hteerini;, door locke, cruise . control, vinyl lop, Jeal)ier inttrior. (019AGC) 70 Sedan DeVille Full power, factory 1ir, Alot/F'~I &lereo multiplex, tilt-uJe -wheel. elec. door locks. twilight aenlinel. Tiny! top, tapet.try & Leather Interior trim. One owner car that .OOw1 exceptkmal can:. (539AGK) _ , - '63 Coupe DeVille Factory 1ir conditioning. eloth & leather interior, all po"·er, ti/I & telescopic llttring, Alot1 F'~t. auton11lic crui~ control, mo1t all dis. eslraa. (llJ.1771 ) '69 Sedan DeVille Full power, factory air conditioning, vinyl top, leather interior, power aeata, tilt wheel, AM/FM 1lereo radio, po-wer door lock&, twilight aentinel. (XSR166) '69 Cadillac Convert. Leather interior. dunl comfort teal~. lilt wheel. A~lfF~I 1lereo radio, power door locU,. twilight aentine!. 1uto cruite oontrol, mmt all option1. ("'l:'EC599) '67 Sedan DeVille Full power, factory air cond., tilt·lele wheel, Ml/FM, vinyl top, leather interior, very low mile!!, uce.llent cond. (YPX270) '68 Sedan DeVille Factory Air Cond itioning. padded top, full lea1her interior, fuJI power door locks, tilt & 1elete0pic eteering. AM/Ft.[ Stereo radio, loaded w/extraa. '67 Coupe DeVille Vinyl top, Leather interior, full power, factol')' air conditioning, AAl /Fi\l radio, till tele -wheel. (UJH529) NABERS LEASING NABERS LEASE· DIREa Immediate Delivery• l•<•llent·S.r-en · ,,.. Pickup and Dollvery ,,... Loan Can Whfle l•ase Cor S.rdced ................ , ..... ef total •utlwu .... Cftlllac hcfllftOI doll ...... lo ...,,.. Mii .... """'" Cadllkic avtomobllo1. ao cwOn: 119111) . anti 45 fectory trained technlclan1. 2600 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa . 540-9100 • SALES DEPARTMENT OPEN . 8:30 AM to 9:00 PM Mon. thru Fri. • 9:00 AM to 6;00 PM Sat. and Sun. • • 24 MONTH •. OPEN END $5444 SALi Piiia $4111 SALi PRICE $999 SALE PlllCE $3555 SALi PRICE $3333 SALi PRICE $2111 SALi PRICE $2555 SALE PRICE $2111 SALi PRICE -· • Ft'411r, MAY 12, 1972 DAILY PILOT fl '71 COLT 2-DOOR HARDTOP IMMEDIATE DELIVERY '71 VEGA 2·DOOR IMMED IATE DELIVERY '71 PINTO $)99 DOWN $39 A MONTH FOR l& $J99 DOWN $39 A MONTH FOR 36 MONTHS RUNABOUT · IMMEDIATE DEl,IVERY $J99 DOWN $39 A MONTH ~~~:~~ AUTOMATK TRANS. MONTHS MISSION, cYUOm $, 28 $19'i1 10lalM,pymt.$39il vm11 inltrior, -rodio. tolol mo, P'f'lll. ird. ta"-littfls• litoltr1 whi1'wo U & 1111 corryif,g chorg111111 oppr. ll1t1, v1n,1 roof. de-8 ,,,,;,for 36 11101. Dtft rrt cl IYKI Whttl tO<ltl pyml. lllic:I 11603 ft:I. llX & + . fyll !ottor1 JVU lie-. ANNUAi. PEJC9HAGI tq11'11)td. JbOOZK. \ PIKI U.Tf 11.75" '71 FORD 500 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY • Custom 500 V-8, auto. trons., power steering, ra- dio, heater. 404 BES fUUPllCI 5199 DOWN 539 A MONTff ~~:~"s S 199 ii IO!al "-,)'!Ill. $39 ii lold lllO. P)"'I'• i..tl lo .. liewe & al conying cho!vn Oft eppr. u.a11 lor 36 l'llOl. Otlwr.d l'Y""· pm $1603 incl taa & lie-. AIMJAL PlRCfH. TAGERATE 11.75%. '70 CHEV. STATION WAGON 9 Po'ss .• V-8, auto. Irons., power steering/brakes, whi- ttwolls. 781AVA $1488 ruu·•1la -. 5)99 DOWN 546 A MONTH~0lN~~s S 199 is Iola! dn. JYml. «6 ii 1atd l!lll. pyrnt.. incl. tu. I lie. I all canyinf chcnt1 °" appr. tr1dil lor 36 '"01. Dtf. pyml. prict $ llSS inct. lo• & Ii<. AHNUAl PIRClHfAGE UTE 11.08%. '71 FORD STATION WAGON V-8, auto. trans., power steering, radio, heater. Y37789 $1588 FUU.PIKE 5199 DOWN 548 A MONTH~~~~~$ $199 is tlltal dn. pyrnt. SU i1 tlllal mo. pYl!lf. inti. tu. roctnst I 1111 conyirig charan °" """'' utdit !.-l6 mo1. DehrAd pj'lllf. pnc:t $1927 ind. lax I lie:-. A/NW. P(RCEH-TAGf U.Tf 10.75% $199 ,~ 101111 drl PY""· SbO i1 rotal mo.11vm1. ind, lax. I .ron• • & oil corr Yl~'l t ~11r9 r I on lllJl)r. cred•t for Jb mo1. ~ltned pym! ~'"' S1JS9 •ntl. rox & lie:~-.. AHNU.t.l P£RCfN '70 MAVERICK 2-DOOR NOVA, auto. tran s., radio, healer, $8 8 8 ZKC407. '70 PL YM. Roadrunner 2 Door hardtop 383 V-8 engin e, $1 · 4 speed, trans., radio, heo~er, vinyl interior, mag wheels, vinyl lop. 5648ZI. FULL PRICE Auto. Irons ., rad io, heater. 'h'.he el s9 8 8· covers. Deluxe chrome mol dings. . 517ARI FULL PRIC E '68 PONTIAC Le Mans COUPE, Rad io.' heater, wheel covers. $6 8 8 Plus much much more . WTFS84 FU LL PRICE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 4 Sperd lrcns .• (0• dJO, hNTtt, buckd seats. lull w1nyl inte- flOl. l26 RF s 19q ,11or~l dn.p1 m1 \J9 .. i.il<JI mo pym! ..:I, lo• lcon11 & all (0"'1"'9 ctu91• 'l'fl Ol'P' uod•t !or l 6 11101 01l1•rfOI ""'""."""'"'' $1288 "'''""'· 4 ~ !roni.-n1•Uion <t NII t.x!ory fUll ~1n•! f ' ''I 'I 603 '" I 111~ & "!'<llPfltd. 946(fQ. PllC( l~•n1~. A~NUAI. r11tt1NIA\il ~·ti \ l ') "- BRAND NEW '72 CHALLENGER 2-DOOR HARDTOP v.,.,1 lrim. b.K'~rt ttou. ,_ fli"otne ~"41" ~rdt. dual hotnt. Mty focrory eq.ff9<1 ' .M1JClUS94 11 FULL PRICf . IMMEDIATE DILIVERY . $199DOWN · $199 i1 lolDI drl. pymt. $114 '' toto! mo. pyml. ; .. 1. .... i;,..,,,.,,.,,.,;.,,..,,., .. $84 A MONTH FOR 36 1 oppr. cred•t tor 3b mo,. D~I. ~yml. pr1re S3223 incl. IOX & l!CP!O•, ANNUAL P[ll(IN-' MO NTHS TAGf RAlf 11.JJ",. Cll TOll f 111 It CDUITl ·Bt SHANDDllVE -THE FAMOUS- YAMPIRI YAN LARGEST $199 ii tolol dn pymr. $73 i1 IOIOl lllO Pt'Jftl i1ttl.1ox, littns1 I oU carrying cho1911 on Gflll' cndir ror 36 n'IOS.. ~ff'l'Ttd pl"ftl pric• $2927 itlr:l lox I !ic~lf. AHNUAI. PEIC(N· · TAGEllAT£10.06 '- SELECTION OF VANS ON THE WEST COAST '70 FORD Custom 4 Door V-8, auto. Irons ., powersteer'lng, $988 heater, much much more 839BEM .FULL PRICE '67 OPEL Kade t t 4 sPeed trans., vinyl roof and inierior, $ 2 8 8 deluxe wheel covers, custom exterior with chrome mouldings. ZQL 163. FULL PRICE '68 JAVELIN 2-Dr. Hardtop auto. trans., radio, heater. deluxe $7 8 8 wheel covers. White vinyl bucke l seats. Much, much more. XRLS59 FULL PRICE '65 FORD Ranch Wagon '66 MUSTANG 2-DOOR . '66 OLDS F8S .'69 DODGE Monaco Hardtop . $5 88 2 Door Rodio, healer, wheel covers. $288 V-8. oulo. Irons. loclory oir condi-$888 lory equipped. 426ASL. •• Rodia, heater. bucket seats, m~g Good tronsporl otion. Wll004 tion1ng, power steering, delu xe wheel wheels. 5VT336 covers, XXG388 This station wagon is equipped with $288 standard transmission and is fully foc- FULL PRICE FULL PRICE FULL PRICE ' '68 CHEV. Malibu 2 Dr.6 H. '68 CAD. EL DORADO Y·8, auto trans., factory 01r V-8 , radio, heater, deluxe wheel $ 8 8; ~oodilioning, fu ll power includ-$218 8 covers vinyl interior ond hos much, 1ng power stee.ring, power ' ' QG · brakes. power windows, pow-much more . 1428 · er seats, radio, healer, l1nled FULL PRICE lass, Londou lop, WWM209 . FULL PRICE • WE APPRECIATE YOUR BUSINESS '69 CHEV. Sedan V-8, outo. trans., factory oir cond., full $9 8 '8 power, radio and hea ter. YNJ745. j FULL PRICE '64 CHEV. Nova Convertible 6 cyl ,, auto trans., powers leering, whitewall tires, deluxe wheel covers, vinyl interior. PSK577 $288 ' I • • • • • Y00'RE INVITED • • BUSINESS IS so· GREAT WE ARE THROWING AN "UNBEATABLE" PARTY. JOIN IN ON THE · MONEY SA YING FUN BETWEEN 8:00 A.M., FRI. 5 / 12 / 72 AND 8:00 P.M., SUN. 5/14/72. Tl1REE DAYS ONLY, FRl.·SAT.-SUN.! NOT JUST A FEW SELECTED PRICE LEADERS! OVER 200 NEW 72's TO CHOOSE FROM! FREE-COFFEE DONUTS SOFT DRINKS . . SPRINTS 18 BRAND NEW '72 MUSTANGS $s400 21 BRAND NEW '72 MAVERICKS $9400 32 BRA"D NEW · '72 TORINOS $104 °0 PINTO-MUSTANG-MAVERICK $ 95 OVER DEALER'S COST OVER DEALER'S COST 27 BRAND NEW '72 GAL 500's OVER DEALER'S COST 70 BRAND NEW '72 LTD's OVER DEALER'S COST BRAND NEW CAMPERS $990 0 EQUIPPED THE WAY YOU LIKE $114QO $124 00 'EM-NOT STRIPPED!! OVER DEALER COST -----~------.......................... ;;;;;::o;;;;;v~ER~DE:;A::LE:.::llrS::' ;;;;c::'°::·S:.:.T_;;;_~--_O.VER DEALER~-COST---15-TO CHOOSE-FROM-! NEW CAR DEALER'S COST INCLUDES, PREP, GET READY, FACT. HOLDBA.CK ANI) FREIGHT. LEASE DIRECT J 6 BRAND NEW 1972 F 100 PEMONSTRA 1'0RS CALL 642-0010 FOR COURIER PICKUPS STYLESIDE We Have Several Law-Mileage, J. MALCOLM REID, MGR. PICKUPS Well Equipped T·lllrds • tTD's OVER 300 CARS AVAILABLE $104 · Galaxie 500's • Torino's & Musta119s FOR IMMEDIATE LEASE $15 9 9 That Have Bun Written Back To -ALSO Way Below Original Dealer's Cost. DAILY RENTALS OVER DEALER'S COST WHILE THEY LAST '70 MAVERICK kadio, Httltr, A11!0. Tr1n1., Chromt Trim, Good Milt 1. (ZCK3'49) - '71 MERC. C1prl 4 1p11d, R.IH, chrome trim, qood milt1 .• 1211BNPI ' '70 FORD Custom 4 dr., VI , auto., P.S., R&H, two tone. ll57VWI $1450 --. ;~, ~~Nv~l~;,G~~. R&H .• ;,,1 $219 6 roof, •ir cond., good mif•1, ll900TBI '71 FORD Custom 500 4 dr., VI , R&H, •1110., P.S., vinyl roof. ,1135092 t .. '70 v.w: W1gon Fully •qtlipp•d, R1d io •nd H•1l•r. Goocl mile1. ISl>SllGI SPECIAL PURCHASE Many To Choose From EXAMPLE: '71 FORD GALAXIE 500 HARDTOPS ~-I, 1ufo, fr1n1., pow1r •f11rin9, RlH, Air Cond., with "inyl roof1. Good Mil11, Good color 11l1c:tion. Lie. numbtr {074· BUOi OR BEST OFFERS '69 MUSTANG s15 9 6 H•rdtop, Good Milt1, R•dio, Httler, A11to. Tr1n1., v.1, CVWTIOOI '70 GREMLIN H.T. F11lly f•cl. •qu ipp•d, 4 p•11., buck•I •••h, roof r•c•, low mil11. I 554IEM I '71 PL YM. Cricket 4 1p11cl,,low mil11, f•c.lory cqu ipp•cl. 1206CXJJ MAVE RICK -PINT O SAL E 4 •Pffdl. 3 .,..... •ntl awtom•ttc modela. Some with wlnyl rooft. e YOUR PICK e '71 PINTO Good mil11, fully f1ctory 1quipp1d. R1d io ind h11t1r, 111f1rior decor grou p. 1142- CCSl 496 '69 OPEL R1llye GM 4 1p11d, r1dio, h11f1r, low mil11, IZIN3241 '68 TORINO 2 cir. H.T. VI , •ulo., R&H, P.S., 9oocl mil•1. IWQ0200) '68 PL YM. S1tolllto · RIH, •ufem•tlc, P.S., •ir cone!., qood mi/11. IVGH6l71 '71 Maverick F11lly F1ctory Equ ippe<I, in- cluding Vinyl roof, low low mil1191. 112900VI . ~11 96 R1clio, H11t1r, Aufo.·Shin, low mil11. IWVJ.9401 '67 FORD v.a <I Dr., R1dio, H11t.r, • Auto. Tr1n1., Pow1r St11rin9, G'ood Mil11. ITSR9761 '63 CHEVY II '4 door. R1Jio, h11t~r. 1utom1tic, good. mil11. llHZ4151 '63 FALCON·Futura H1rdtop, R1dio, H•.,f•r, A11to. Tr•n1., Good Milt1. IOLUlOll '63 FORD G1laxie H•rchop, R•clio, H••f•r, Auto. Tr111t., Pow•r Sl••rinq, V-1, 6oocl Mil•1. IFTUllll '68 BUICK SporfW1gon R•tfio, H1•f1r, Avto:Tr1i11 ., Air Colttf. Good Mil.1. fTHM679) sag& •• SALES DEPT; IAMTOtPM MON ...... H URS I AM TO I PM IAT 0 10 AM TO I PlllUN I PARTS-SERVICE HOURS 7 AM To 9 PM MON • • 7 AM To 6 PM, TUE-FRI I PARTS DEPT. ONLY 8 AM to 1 PM SATURDAYS • • • • .. ~ . . . • • • • d ni In • h 1,; San Cle1l1eit-te Capistrano EDITION • -..' .... .. ,.:,, ... '-• Today's F .. al N.Y. Stooks VOL 65, NO. 133, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY; MAY 12, 1972 TEN CENTS Association Baclis Carpenter Coastline Bill By TERRY COVILLE 01 1~1 01Uy ,11111 Siii! Orange County Coast As.sociation Directors Thursday lhre\V th eir support behind the coastline preservation bill authored by State Senator Denn.is Carpenter (R·Newport Beach). .. They picked his, rather than oilier coastline measures, because it relies on local rather than regional controls. "Carpenter's bill is the only one that proposes constructive control in the hands or local government," Jan1es r.tacNab. president of the Coast Associa- tion. told members at a luncheon in the Huntington Harbour Beach Club in Hun- tington Beach. Members of the association are also urging cities along the Orange Coast to support Carpenter's bill. The Coast Association has about 338 volunteer members and city offici'als. It ""'""""".'.'""""~-.: """~-1~~ .. .........,"'"4"" • • " • •. \Vas formed In 1914 to "preserve, uplift and protect" the coastline. Carpenter's coastal bill \\'ill be heard Monday in the &enate Natural Resources Committee . It sets up a l~man state coastal re vie\v board with finaJ authority of over coastline development. Most of the groundwork for coastline p r o j e c t s • however, ls left in the hand! of cities apd counties along the coast. 1r1ike Neal, an assistant to Carpenter Local . emphasized that the bill sets up no regional gove1·nment. Another coastline n1easure, sponsored by Assemblyman Alan Si~roty (0-Bt'\'et·· ly Hills), establishes a series of regional agencies with total po\ver over,coastllne de\•elopment, even within cities. Under Carpenter's m'easure .. each coastal city and county \viii be giv.en time to develop individual general plans for the future of the coast. Those pla~ will be submitted to the 1> member sl11le agency \\•hlch \\"ill lnt·or· porate the1n into a 5Ct of guidelines and criteria for a Callfornlj general plan of coastline de\'elopcnent . Each city and county. hO\\'e\'er. \\'ill have jurisdiction o\·er Its own boundnrlt's. A project \Vhich is denied, can be nir pealed .to the state agency. The state agency will also re\·ie\\' nil locall y approved projects in case qr con- troversy, and It can re\•erse the local ap- provaJ. Ct1r~nlf'r defines the coastal zone ,.~ stretchlnt! thrf'e 1nlles to l'lf'll and a 1nn:1:- itnu111 of lhree n\lle!i: in\:1nd or a 111inirnu111 11f LfMX> vnrds inlnnd. llis bill 1.~ SB 860. Neul i;nld there iii nl:;o a eo1n1>anion bill. ~ri llfit. 1vhich 11uthor1 zt•s a pu blic bond issue (lf $200,IX!O.OOO so the state c111 n buy prl\'ate beach lands. "The senator fetls lf ll1'~ public \\'ants !11at prh•nle land. it will hnl'e to pny 'for it," Nea l explained. j Protest Con.ti11ues ,Jn uieter Fashion Today DAILY PILOT Jtlft l'lleM THREE LONELY PROTESTERS CHALLENGE U.S. NAVY At Long Beach, UCl't Kay1k A91in1t Mine SwHper Clemente Police Hold 9 In Narcotics 'Roundup' San· Clemente detectives wrapped up several narcotics cases in one sweep during the evening thursday and charged nine persons with a variety of offenses. including one young woman accused of selling dangerous dru gs. The arrests took place al four separate locations in the city. Donna Marie Paola. 21 , \Vas arrested at her residence. 120 E. ~1ariposa, and booked on a $5,000 warrant charging sales or dangerous drugs. The woman allegedly sold undercover officers several jars con· 1'ining benzedrine tablets, or "whites." At 602 Avenida de la Estrella, officers during the evening served a warrant naming David Lea McNatt, 20, oo Assault Charges Filed Against Theft Suspects charges of sale or dangerous drugs allegedly related to Miss Paola's case. ?iicNatt was arrested along with a com· panion, Paul Arthur Beasley, 19, who was charged with cultivation of marijuana. Officers seized eight plants allegedly growing at the apartment. McNatt was held in lieu of $2,500 bail, police added. Police also visited an apartment at 213 Avenida Granada , but allegedly were denied entry after identifying themselves. After kicking in the door, police said they noted the odor of marijuana smoke. At the apartment they arrested Frank Joseph Tubb, 20, a Camp Pendleton lr!arine, accustd of selling marijuana to agents. Others Jn the apartment arrested on charges Gf possessing marijuana were fellow Marines Donald Patrick Kato, 20; James Paul DeHaas, 21; Jack Dale Todd, 20, and Ignacio Ramon Alarcon, 21, aU of Camp Pendleton. One young woman also was taken into custody at the apartment, J Q.¥C e Rousseau Dowse, 19, who also stayed at the apartment. Detectives said small quantities of marijuana and illegal pills were taken from the apartment. Some of the con· traband was retrieved from a toilet bowl. Antimining Acts Differ On Campus By 1'be Auoclated Pres• The current round of California antiwar protests has subsided a, bit but militants . still .clashed. with authorities and blocked • ' • •I railway and highway tramc. ·More than 230 penons, focluding UCLA All-American basketball ctnter B~ Walton, were arrested during Vietnam war protest& acrosl the state Thursday. (See related itory ha Page 16) · But the crowds taking part in the demon!lratlons were smaller than earlier in the week. Only a few demonstration! attracted more than 1,000 persons. Demonstrators were urged to avoid violence by a number of student body presidents at campuses of the University of California and by Berkeley Mayor Warren Widener, who said violence was ''Nixon's trap." The largest number of arrests, 135, came when demonstrators attempted to block traUic on a freeway near Santa Cruz. A group of demonstrators met briefly with Stanford University P r e s i d e n t Richard C. Lyman, who refused their re-- quest to suspend $12 million worth of defense contracts held by the university. About 350 University , of Pacific students marched to 111 downtown Stockton courthouse for a rally. Afterwards, they picked up their litter -an action that prompted Police Chier E. Jesse Delaney to remark, "I'm very proud of these kids." At the other end of the spectrum, a rally in favor of President Nixon 's Viet· nam policy drew 50 persons in Sacramen- to. ~layor Sam Yorty of Los Angeles blamed "hardcore Communists" for stirring up demonstrations . "The most dlaritable thing one can say about the young American dupes of the Communists is 'forgive them, they know oot what they do,• " the mayor said. In San Francisco, 2$0 persons rallied on Market street. Officials reported about &<lO peraons took port ln en uneventful candlelight protest march from UC Riverside to the county court.hoU9e. They "were escorted by police. Walton was one of 52 persons arrested at UCLA when they refu sed to obey police orders to tear down barricadu tS.. PROTESTS, Page %1 Court appearances are being scheduled today for two men accused of robbing bathers at the San Juan Hot Springs after firing a salvo of shots over the heads of the startled victims. Orange County Sherill's officers iden-- tified the pair as John Patrick Gallego, 20, of 33801 Street of the Golden Lantern. Dana Point and Carl Tuck, 18, of 31331 El Homo, San Juan Capistrano. Detective Sgt. Frank Werger said ·that ~ several other warrants naming more ·" suspect!: in the cases rem~in unserved. Boy, 2, Falls 15 Feet-OK 'llley are held in Orange County Jail on charges of assault with intent to commit murder, robbery and assault with a dea<J.. Jy weapon. Deputies claim Gallego and Tu<;k were flientified by a group of bathers as the gunmen who terrorized the hot spring~ area on Ortega Highway between San Juan and the Rh'erside County line by ahoo1ing out tires on the bathers' cars t!;id then firing o\ter the heads of the vie-- Urns. . One bathtr suffered minor injurie.s In a tCUffle with the two men. Deputies sakl \others also reported the loss ol two wallets In the fracas. Both men were later arrested 1t 'l\lck"s .. me. • FfC Accuses 2 Large Oil Firms WASIONGTON (AP) -The Federal Trade Commission has accused two West Coasl·based oil companies of illegally restraining competition In the sale of lubricants by ,·providing new car dealers with credit card programs. Standanl OU CO. ol CalUornit end The Uolon Oil CO. ol C.Ulornla ore cited In the proposed complAlnta, made public Tbunday, The two ore amooc the notion's larpst oil compill)es. A 2-year~ld toddJer from San Clemente fell JS feet from an apartment balcony onto hard pave. ment shortly before noon Thursday but suffered no apparent serious )n. juries. Firemen said they were sum· moried to the scene of the fall by 1 liquor store owner whose business i.s nearby. They found l\1arc A 11 a n Brotherton crying on the pavement btlow his mother's apartment at 1109 S. El Camino Rul. Marc, 10D of Mn. C I r o l Brotl\erton, was taken for .treat· ment and obserVatlon at Mln1oo c.mtnunlty HoopltaL I · · f , · DAILY PILOT Still Plltl9 MARCHING DOWl!i-TRAFFIC LANES OF• UNIVERSITY DRIVE IN UCI PROTEST Thur.sday.1 Antiwar AC'tlvlty W11 For MOtt P•rt Peaceful on Irvine C1mpu1 Port Blockage In North Viet Claimed Success WASHINGTON (UPI) -Tile Pentagon said today the blockage or North Viet- nam's ports bad been . 100 percent ef· fective during its first 24 hours. Several ships believed originally bound for Haiphoog have changed course, of· ficials said. A Defense Deparbnent spokesman, Jerry W. Friedheim, also said two or three additional freighters that 'were In Haiphong harbor when mines were 'sown by U.S. planes got out before the weapons became lethal at 4 a.m. PDT Thursday . That raised to seven the number o{ shlps that were said to have left in the three daylight periods after the mining. Twenty~lgbt-or perhaps 29.-ships re. malned In the harbor. Friedhelm !a1d his re.port 'on two or three additional !hips leaving Haiphong represented an updating of intelligence rather than departure of any sbip11 after the mines became lethal. . One more Soviet freighter and another flying the flag of Somalia .got out and another Soviet ship may ·have, be said. "We think several more ships that v.·ere en route to flaiphong have diverted," Friedheim said. · He refused to reveal the location or na- tionalities of those vessels. Frledheim also s"aid two Chinese ships were caught behind minefield! at the port of Vinh and two Soviet ships were stuck at Cam Pha, north of llaiphong. The possibility of a military con-- frontation of super powers over the U ,S. mining of the North Vietnamese harbors appeared eased amid 1ugiestlons that the Untied Stal.., had private understalldlngs with both the SOviel Unk>n and China that they would not atttmpl to run the minefields. , In turn, U.S. officials ,.Id It was unlikely American ships would attack Soviet or 011nese millffweetpers if they attempted to clear the harbors. IMtead, U.S. planes would replace the mines as quickly as the Communists could pick them up. However, the officials uld they saw no evidence &o far of any effort by minesweepers to clear explosives block· ing entrances to seven ports. .U.S. IO\lrcel in Washington, Saigon and Phnom Penh aald privately tbat there waa 11 least a tacit 1greement between !See ~llN!'3, P ... 11 .. Candidat,e Faces Charge After San Diego Fracas Ap American Independent Party candl. date for the new 42nd Congre~slonal District faces charges or asS!lult on federal officer! today, In an alleged fracas stemming from a taxpayer's pro- test in San Qiego. . Armin Moths of San Diego was freed on $5,000 bond after his arrest wlth six com- panions at a warehouse wltere agents for the Internal · Revenue Service and the FBI were padlocking a building. The .42nd Di!trict encompasses parts of the Orange Coast. Moths was quoted as saying he and his companions were forced into t h e warehouse by the IRS agents, then ar· rested. .. But 1potesmen for the IRS said the Bomb Dropping Extortion Plan Revealed by, FBI SANTA MONI CA (UP I) -A wou ld·bo extortionist planned ' to drop bombs on Las Vegas casinos from a pr ivate plane to force them to pay him S2 mllllon, federal authoritiu say. FBI agenta arrtlttd Nathan N, Mark.II, 28, T.bursday, on a federal warrant. Ball WAI set at $500,000. Assistant U.S. Attorney Brian O'Neill said Marks, a aelf .. mployeil-jlidio and salts promotion man, proposed the el'• torUon scheme two months ago to an un1dentifled Texa1 man , who notified th~ FRI and agreed to inform authorltle11 . Special delivery ltttera: were sent from Austin. Tex., Aprll 11 LO 21 casinos ln the Nevada gRmbling capital, saying they would be blO\llo'n up one by one unleu they paid $2 mllllon, O'Neill 141d. No lllOIM!Y was ptld. The bomb threat wu to go Into cffeq this w~kend, with an attack on the <:wcu.K:lrcu1 Casino, the fedtral at· torney said. Markt w•a carrying an airline Ucket to Parll wben arrested, federal aaenla "'1<1. • candidate, a relative, and several olher1 allegedly assaulted agents and attempted to "rescue" property sel1.ed at the warehouse owned by John Robert lleck. The incident took place Tuesday, agents said. a! they seized lite contents of the Heck Transfer and Storage Company. Three agents were named as victim! in the alleged assnult by the group wht'> assertcdly represent T a x p a y e r 1 Anonymo1111. About 30 protesters rrom the group ar· r1ved at the storage company to protest th e federal action a:ii "unconstitutional." lle<:k allegedly led 11 group of seven protester! to the door or his business, where he assertedly broke the window to gain entry. The arresta took place im· mediately afterward. The IRS claims thot Heck owes the government '8,051 Jn back taxes from 1970. Moths was formally charged In the In. cident before a U~S. Commissioner In San Olgeo Wednesday, then released l11ter when he posted bond. Ora•ge Coa1t Weat•er l\tore sunny weather predicted along the Orange Coa.!lt, follQwlng the usual low clouds and fof1. Highs al the beach in the high 60'1, rlslng to 80 inland. Lows 48-SS. I NSIDE TODi\ l' 'rhe Lagu·n.a Btt1ch Civit Bot· let -5taaes its lrut in a stf'it:• of Jottr children'• prograPnJ. Set the 1tur11 in toda11'1 \Veekc1Uier. L.M, •fftl ' •t1Ultf II C•lllt•~lt I CL111•!1ttl ».el c-k• ,, (,..,_,. II Dtl'll ,..,ittt 1t 1 .. 1.n.1 ,.._. • P'lfllMf lt•tl ,w fM lltc.nl l t tt•...e... u A11t1 L• ... t 11 ..... u... • • • l I .. 2 OMlV P(L01 SC Extension of 2 Weeks Sought • Ill Pier Study The chajrman of a speelal task force seeking meUiods to uparade Sa 11 Jemente'• pl'1" tnlt•noe wd l<lday be will ask oouncihnrn for a l\li'e>-week tl· Lenslon next Wednc!MY. U the utenslon were granted. Councilmen hive placed a hi&h priority on an early solution to the entrance lssue which played promlnentJy In re<ltnt cily elections. s1>eodicg of about ~.ooo to rat.e the ex- isting Otpreulon-era cqncnte storage room beneath 1 1ta1!'.t•Y· removing 1tveral wall• and bulldl".lf new 1loping stairways to the exiJtlnc pedestrian underpass. Councilman Paul Presley, chosen recently to he::id the .11ix-rnah 5ludy group, said that if the two-week deadline t:x· lension were granted, the panel could l.'Omc up v.·ilh •·,evernl so I id alternatives.'' The suggHtlona: thus far have been abundant, but none hall proved con1 - pletf'ly satlsff1ctory to city officials. Co.'lt ill a major ractor. Asserted intransigence by rail"•ay and state utilities officials has been a nolhcr hurdle. The theory behind that pl•n stresstd the <iclv<1ntage tu police officers \Vho finally could sur\'ey the underpass area fro1n passing patrol cars. The problem. all purties hitve 11greed, Is providing an attractive. inexpensive replacement y.·hlct \\'OUld deter loitering Jle added that tOO proje(1td <:<>:il5 of C3Cb altunatlve could be detailed as well An lnltlal city staff ldc11 called ror the ' Traffic Safety Joint Meet Set Cycle Dra1,vi1ig Not To11iglit ''I feel some people out there may be trying to Kawasaki to me." For Master Plan That's not what she ac.tually said. but it's the gist of the message from the F'a,.hion Island shopping center Girl Friday who has been laking ~di the calls about the Kawasaki motorcycle giveav.•ay. A nttr1tly published master plan ol traffic safety (er San CJemente ls ex· 1>ected Lo head the list o( major discus."llon topics later this month ln the first joint study session of the city council <111d commiss ions sinCe reorganization in Aprll. (,;ity cou nclhnen this month agreed to hold the joint session with all members of city commissions at U1e golf course clubhouse on May 31 at 7:30 p.m. The racing cycle will be given -away Friday. May 19. A story published in the Fashion Jsland sec. lion of Wednesday's DAILY PILOT inadvertently left the impression the giveaway was sc~eduled for tonight. Capo Mulling 'Fiesta Day' Once a Month Once a year. hordes of visitors flock to San Juan Capistrano lo see the swallows. a Mission pageant, and all the special events that go along with the FJesta de Jas Golondrinas. But members or the Chamber of Com· merce have begun to ask why does it only have to be once a year? The Chamber's Board of Directors Thursday considered a proposal that \\'ould make one day a month "fiesta day" in San-Juan Capistrano. . Preliminary plans, unveiled b y 111anager Maggie Olson, would include strolling mariachis, charro (Mexican cowboy) demonstrations, square dance exhibitions, arts-and-crafts demonstra· lions and historical "walking toura" of the city. . "We would be capitalizing on our historic and romantic past," uJd Mrs. Olson. "Merchants could dress in their fiesta best azid pne merchant a lllOllth b>uld be featured In all of our prcr motional materials." The manager explained that the Chamber would have to work closely with the •.ltr ,on sign coordination and traffic control. She .aald the event could be well publicized in tourist publications and could become a traditional event to ex· pand .the clty's number-one industry - tourism. If mercha nts agree, the monthly fiesta \viii become the primary sow-ce of retaU- business promotions and development In the Chamber's program. Jn the next few weeks the Chamber 's budget for next year will be presented to the city council. The budget will include an estimated $10,000 for retail promotion. Other Items include $5.000 for industrial promotion. $6.828 l o r informational services and $3,444 for operating ex· penses. The total budget figure thi s year is $25.27~. The total income of the chamber Is $3.000,-thus the group "·ill be asking the city ror $22,272 for the next fisca l year. Other action taKen by the chamber board included : -Appointment or Dorothy Sheehan as publicity, director. Bruce Swartout as parking study chairn1an and Patrick Grant, master calendar chairman . -Presentation of tentative pl ans for a barbecue and golf tourna1nent on the Fourth of July. -Endorsement of a proposal to have southern Orange County included in a comprehe nsive health study being con- ducted by ihe counly. OIANGI COA.ST sc DAILY PILOT 'Thr Or1n91 C..t DAILY ,.ILOT, w111'1 wl\ic:ll i' (Omb!nccl 1'" Ntw1°Pr111, II pi;lllhllM bY 1111 0•111111 Co.11 Pulln,.,.,1111 c;:omo.ny, se- r1t1 1cUtion1 ••t 11110Htlltc1, Mlllllf•I' tlltovtti f'rld•I'· 101" Co1!1 M111, ,,.twport t11cl\, Hunllng!on BtAclllf'ounllln \111!•1'· L•o-811cll, lr.,.lnt/Sf«lleOKk i ncl Sin Clt""'fl''-1 Stn Ju1n (tp11!r1r111, A llf'IOll rt9*'tl irdlllotl 11 P\11111$1\fd St turd$VI Ind SUf\d1y1. ttie prlnc!PtOI pullU1llln1 p11111 h 11 »O Wt1t a.I' Jtrfft, Co111 Mew, C11Uorn11, fMH. Robtrl N. W11d f'ltl!(lft\I Ind Put>U11\cr J1ck R. C11rltl' \l!Ct ,.rttlcltnl Ind Gltfltfll M1n1oi• Thom•1 Ktttil £1111or lhom11 A. Murphi111 Mtl'lftlnt Editor Ch1rl11 H. l101 Rich1rd '· Nill Attl1t1111 M11\19fft11 Ed111<1 s.. ci ....... OHke ]05 North ll Cim ino R11l, •267Z .._ ....... Ce1l1 MM: »O 'N9tl hy Str"9 HtwMN lttCf'I: Jl» Nt"1*1 ltv!1.,.1r1 Hlll'lllftlllM lt1c11 : 11115 IHdi lollth1r• l.111-ltKll: m Forttl -'"- Tel.,.._ f7f41 64J-4JJI ct..Hte4 ..... ,,...., 641·1171 S.. C ....... All Dt"fllClfWlltl: ,...,.. ... ••l-4411 ~'lfht. lfl1,. Ortl'lff Cotti ~lftlllflt ~11r, No '"'"" "''"' 1111110111o11s. tll10rll1 INf!fr or HYtrl!t«Mflt& llt••lot lftlY bt '""ldilCOd wflllol.rt APl(ltl fl"> ... ..., • OllYl'ltfll o-. ltcetil (.le• ... ,.., ...... c.;, """'" (1.111rM111. 1¥'1tct'll'lltll .. (lffirr u.u ~IYI llf rNh tJ.IJ -'tlf¥1 mJiif.,y .. rlM!IOfll A.'5 tNllllth'. And the Topics master plan calling for vast changes in city traffi c control will lead lhe list of subjects. Frona Pftge l PROTESTS.· Several groups and commissions wll l probably have recommendations ready 111 time for the meeting. Among the panels probing the three-- Inch-thick document drafted recently by a Pomona consulting !irm arc the ·city planning commission, the city parking commission. the San Clemente-EI Camino Business Association (SEBA) and the chamber of t'Ommerce govcrruncntal liaison committee. The key to the master plan drawn up by Lampman and Associates is finding a method to provide enough orf street parking in business areas to offset the loss of parking places along El Camino Real , if other phases of the plan were to take place. f;.eft·turn-poc:kets al all major in- tersections, plus changing of traffic signal designs and light timing form the bulk of the Lampman suggestions. But the pockets for left turns eat aw8y at badly needed parking areas near in-tersections. Even tbe consultants admit that such a change could stir heated controversy. Parking commissioners have, for the past several years, periodically examined ways of providing new, offstreet parking, including the setting up of special parking districts, but little acceptance has come from businessmen who would have to pay the bill. Many of the Del Mar area business bulJdlngs have parking lots at the rear, but ttie lots are rarely used to their capacity. Encouraging public use of the rear parking areas, plus Inducement of businesses to install more inviting rear entrances to the buildings could form part of a new city plan to maximize use of the backyard Jots. . The thought of the new left-turn pockets already has caused gru mbles among the chamber or commerce. Some initial steps in the traffic safetr issue already have been taken by the ci- ty, notably last week's approval of about $8,000 worth of improvements at El (',amino Real and Barcelo1u1 where a substandard signal v.•ill be upgraded \vith left·turn lights and more light standards . About three-fourths of the bill for that project will be paid for through a federal Topi cs grnnt. J\layor Art Holmes, who attended a similar joint study session earlier this spring as chairman of the pl;inning com- mission. has expressed hopes that the next edition will yield pr o d u c t i v e discussion. In past years such events took piece once a year, but new city policies call for such meetings during every month with a fifth Wednesday. \\'hile no actual business Is transacted at the public sessions, free-wheellng, can· did discussion is generally the rule. The calendar shows that the council and commissions this ye11r v.•ill ha\ie two more chances after May 31 for such con- ferences -in August. and again in November. • • erected in front of the administration building. Nearly 40 persons were arrtsted tor hlocking traffic during a demonstration in front of a Bank of America branch in Northridge, a suburb of Los Angeles. Protestors at Davis blocked Southern Pacific railroad t.raflic for six hours when they straddled the tracks for the second time this week. Five persons were arrested. A candlelight rally continued into the early morning hours today. Traffic was stopped briefly and a handful of demonstrators arrested at San.ta Barbara Thursday when youths tried to block U.S. 101 and 'interchanges near the UC campus. The largest demonstration of the day - esuated at about 5,000 persons -was a peaceful candlelight p.....,,ion along tile Santa Barbara seashore to a park two miles up the beach when a rally was held. Actor Robert Vaughn was one ot thrte speakers at the rally. In San Luls Obispo, t,SOO marched peacefully by candlelight Thursday night. Businessmen were asked to close down today in the cause of peace. At Berkeley, the scene of vlolent an- tiwar protests this week, 400 persons sur· , rounded the office of UC Chancellor Albert Bowker with about 100 persons in· vading the building. They were evicted by police. Some 300 persons rallied at the former People's Park in Berkeley later and spent the night. Police reported no trouble at the park. The city council declared today a day or mourning, Front Page 1 MINES ... the United States and the Communist powers that the U.S. blockade could con· linuc indefinitely with neither Russi a nor China trying to run it while denouncing it strongly in pubic. Pentagon officials said there was little prospect of any confrontation in area of the mine fields for several days at least. They predicted action in the Indochina war would shift from the harbor areas to the Communist ground offensive io South Vietnam, which has been In a Juli !or a week. The mining of the harbors and other actions to stop delivery of war material to Hanoi by land. air or sea are not ex- pected to have any impact on fighting in South Vietnam for the next three '"·eeks because ol existing Communist stockpiles of fuel. ammunition and food, the of- ficials said. Spare Tires Unsightly- Pose Ecology Problems Here Is a sampling or the articles corn· Ing up in Sunday's t'dlllon of the DAILY PILOT: , ROLLING ALONG -Old tires never die. they just keep bouncing around. That's all right for youngsters who crav.•I through them cind swing on them at playgrounds but mMI old lircs that re(use to go a"''ay present an ecological problem. That problem is examined by Staff \Vrller Earl Wilson . WASTEFUL SOClh'TY -If you wanl to set It, visit • county dump and you 'll find discarded appliances. seemingly in only a minor state or disrepair, and many usefu l items of furniture . The story Js this "'"k's SWJday Special. EMERGENCY ROOM -How does • \voman fare as chief of a hospital emorgeocy room ? Dr. Claire Weldtmltr, Qhie.f emergency room physician at Co!ta !l"a M•morlal Hoopltal, has handled the Job since last January and finds il'1 quite a challenge. skating champions Jo Jo Starbuck Ken Shelley who turned professional this week. UNSPOILED TOWNS -The rover story of Family \Veekl y describes ;i couple's search ror 5.1.fe places to live. IO\\'ns unspoiled by crime where doors can remain unlocked. They recommend l2 places for couples to spend their retir· Ing years in peace. PSYCHOLOGICAL TESTS -Many flrma use these testi in deciding on key promotions or appointments. And It there's a third person in the room when you are interviewed, that figure, whom you have not seen befort, is probably a p$ychologist analyilng your reactions. Jrs the lead story in the "YOU" .section. SPORTS STARS -Th<re's an In-depth report in the sporu pag., on 11.S. pairs POWER PLANT -South•m Callfoml1 Edlion Company 11 trying II> l°"'te an alternate power plant at Fry Mountain In San Bemardioo County hot Southern C.liforni1 FOC\I.! on the oditorlll pases report& that deS<rt forces "" mobilizing against the J>!OP0.'11 • • and vandalism. Aner the Initial staff study, further suagerUons from city commlsslona and private cltiuna alao have been added to the list. ~tost oUclala agree that a failsafe. al· grade crossing of the Santa Fe tracks would be the best solution, and \\'Ould h111ve. the added advan1a11:e of giving han· dicappcd persons a level access lo the Ci· ly beach. But 1n 1969 rail officials and the California Public Utilities Commission swiftly k..illed the city's request 'M>e bltteme11 remalnl from that en- counter, but Presley 11a.id th.la Wffk that the at.grade lde:a still ls a strong one and hinted that minds within the Santa Fe organization and the PUC might be S"'ayed by a re11ewed ca1npaign. Other ideas posed in reccot months have included : -J\1oving stairways or trarru; to UlOve \'isllors across the tracks and onto the beach. -Abandonlng the existing entrance and moving short distances on eiUier side for installation of gradual , s Io p 111 g overpasses without 1teps. The cost o~ either Idea, bov.·evtr, ha\•e not yet been determln~. One eX"pensive proposillon in the pie.r entrance are,. ~ays city englneering aides, is the e~istence of <.'Omplex sey,•er, drain and water lines beneath the £tairways. Those facil ities. coupled with c:ran1ped \\'orklng space, 1nake any project ei· pensive. Eight Drown • Ill Flooding Guadalupe River Overflows iii Texas Disaster NEW BRAUNFELS, Tex. (UPI) -The Guadalupe River , bulging from a week or rain, rushed out to its banks todaf, pour- ing water ho.usetop high and sweeping a\\.'ay cars and homes and the people in !hem. At least eight persons drowned. More than 4,500 persons were evacuated from riverfront homes along 25 miles of the muddy river. Entire families were missing. Six persons drowned at New Braunfels and two more at Seguin, lS miles downstream. More rain was forecast to add to the Coot lhat fell over the past week. "So many people were washed away," said New Braunfels Police Chier Royce Couch. "\Ve fear the total will go much higher." . Flood\\'aters, turned a gooey black by 01! from broken drums, rose 18 feet high. Gov. Preston Smith called out the Tex. as National Guard to help evacuation and clean-up work in the south central area or New Braunfels, a town of 18,000. Said New Braunfels dispatcher Thomas Claxton: ''Several houses floated away. We are swamped with calls -people saying, 'l~elp me, please. My house is floating away.' " All bridges in NC'W Braun/els were covered by the water. The only safe way into the town was by helicopter or heavy four-wheel drive trucks. Couch said hundreds or persons were evacuated from residential areas of New Braunfels and taken to four Red Cross No Smoke Signs Posted in Areas ''No Smoking" signs have been posted in the high fire hazard areas east of' Irvine Park, El Toro, and San Juan Cepistrano by the California Division or Forestry. \ The area comprises the high fire hazard forest range and watershed lands. Jt will be unlawful to smoke in the posted area except at homes, improved camp grounds or specified smoking areas. Smoking is not permitted in a vehicle while traveling through the posted area. Violation of the smoking ban can be pwiished by a maximum fine of $500, six months in jail or both.· Carl Downs, state forest ranger and county fire warden advised persons living in the high fire risk areas io: -Clean all annual dry vegetation from around building for at least 30 feet. -Insure that all off the road vehicles such at dune buggies and motorcycles have an approved spark arrester. -Teach children good fire prevention habits and prohibit them from playing with fire . Downs urged all persons to use caution when smoking and disposing or ash, butts and matches. centers. Hundred more at Seguin v.·ere evacuated to city hall, the Courthouse and ~helters. Police Dispatcher Tom Glore at San ·Marcos, site of the state's la st bad flood, J\tay 16, 1970, said more than 400 persons \\'ere taken before da\vn from areas flooded by Purgato ry Creek and housed in thr ee centers. Cibola Creek in northeast San Antonio flooded, forcing ~ex.er Cowity workers to evacuate more than 200 persons. "We just got them out before the water got here," said Officer James Bowles. Guadalupe County Sheriff Phil liledlin at Seguin said most of the flooding there was in riverfront subdivisions in the \county and not in the city's residential areas. .. Al this time "'r are in the process of pickin~ up a!l the people who failed tn cvacunte earlier." he Said. "The river ii above flood stage here but it' is recedinj!'. above New Bi-aunfels. \Ve're tetting a lot or \\'ater. lleJicopters are picking up peo- ple stranded on rooftops and in trees. "We're feeling some effects in the lowlying areas in the city but most of the trouble is along the river, the divisiont built along the water. 1'1ost of them are out on Lake Dunlap and Lake McQueeny." Billy Moore, a National Weather Service spokesman at San Antonio, said his rain gauge showed a rainfall of 10 in- ches for the past w«k and he said mort than th~t had railer. at many places in the area. New Gas Revenue Cities Unit Endorses Taxes for Environment Use or funds raised by the new sales tax on gasoline for environmental im- provement projects in cities a n d throughout the county \Vas endorsed Thursday night by the Orange County League of Cities. League members, meeting in Orange, urged all 26 city councils to consider adoption of supitJrt resolutions as soon as possible. The league-adopted resolution calls for special budget han·dling of the new revenue and appointment of represm- tatlves of each city to m«t with their counterparts and with county officials to plan overall coordination o f en- virqrunental programs. The resolution was offered by Robert Nevil, La Habra councilman and new alternate member of the Local Agency Formation Commission (LAFC). He said it was based on a suggestion made three ~ months ago by Supervisor Ralph Clark of Anaheim. Nevil estimated that seven percent of the total sales tax revenue which cities receive from the state will come from the new gasoline tax which becoes effective July 1. He added that money earmarked for environmental projects by the various cities wlU be spent within those cities on projects selected by the particular offi. cials but added that they should be co- ordinated with neighboring commun- illes. Nevil also said lh.1t the county govern- ment has agreed to commit its estimated $130.000 in new sales tax income to the environmental program. He said to date that 20 of the 26 cities in the county have agreed to the program. Nevil's report also said that additional funds for ecology projects may be available through federal and state grants, espttially If the programs are joint efforts between cities. Thursday night league members also elected a new vice president to succeed former Newport Beach mayor Ed Hirth.. Named was Councilman ·Bob Harvey of Cypress who won by a narrow margin over Councilman George Scott of Fowr tain Valley. League President Robert Finnell. mayor of Villa Park, also appointed several Orange Coast city officials to the organization's standing committee. Capo Trustees To View Budget A tentative preliminary budget of $10,489,218 "'111 be presented to lrustees ot the Capistrano Unilied School District Monday. The first look at the 1972-73 document ""ill be taken during the board meeting at 7 · 30 p.m. at Serra School in Capistrano Beach. The budget figure represents an in-. crease over last year, even though the general purpose lax rate "ill remain the same. Last year's adopted budget \Va.1 $9.300,346. Expenditures, however, are expected to be under the figure by. $329.244. Salaries for cl~ssroom te:ichcrs con- tinue to be the highest budgetary expense V.'ilh $4,811 ,529. Twenty new teachers are expected to be hired to keep up wlth aa expanding population. UPHOLSTERED CHAIR SALE RNAL WEEK Don't miss this rare opportunity to purchase from our fine selection of upholstered che irs et s1le prices. We feature nothing bot the finest quality in our selection of upholstered chairs. Happiness is owning 1 pair of custom upholstered ch~irs from Tod von Hemert, Inc. et • sele pric•. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE -KARASTAN 7ed11111 INTERIORS NEWPORT BEACH LAGUNA BEACH • TORRANCE 1727 Wutclllf Dr., 642·2050 345 North Cool! Hwy. 494-6551 23649 H1wthorno Bl•d • WIN RJDAY 'TIL I ,J (JlJJ J71·1J7t o,.. Milley 'rll t ,... , .. 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'' > "''" .,_ • m ... •c 20 Jtlone11's ll'ortla Selli.t1g Point: Do It Yom~self By SYLl~A PORTER H ow would you h ke to Go into business \\as mgton as Direct ell 111111 M :t1 10 l ;n (1s. " , 1n. w, o 1 ,, -w,,, "•'•" 1 1 2 ' "'"' "" Gld Clll 'NISY 15 • U' Lol!I" j '> I 1 Sctw EIS.; 11 lf ~ Wtl>b llt , 1 ,,,,_A HU l'I l > for ing Assoc1at1on the trade ~:~n BM'i :io lei \ Loc• : ~~. s111 sace ,..,, '• • w,1 wc1o 1 \.0 • 'Am A• Fl• ""' ,,,,_ LM~oo"'Gc,o, 7• 11 ~Oft! t ).11' )1•1 We di n ~ .. Mt, Alli -tr IOd ...,,, " l•:it 14 t Sor"" G l~U 1~ l Wt 111<1 M 1 1 >.lo A II llCI 11' )Ourself -, Earn from t40 000 a year 115 000 to assoc1al1on which put togethe r a e o d e of ethics tor its members C•nnon II Mtj 111 v o 10 51~"""' 1 ' •l "''t Pt '" 111 A II est I 20 111 , 1n , M1 l(kl '' n s10 A.e<1li ' 'u w1,1 M" .... 1 Am 11e1" n ca .. Te!ll ,.., JV) Mt I "" " '111 Sl•n Hm S? n~ $1 p bl ~~. " ....... (111 '» (1pl Sow .... I \. M 8rowr '3 Al 11 It In f 11.. ..tr F" )6 :U" A (1~ C10 nt A • • J Mtu tncl ~~ 1•0 tit N A e J1 )106 w1n1,..1 ?• \ 1•" Am C""1 .61 ,.,, 1111 ,. 2'>Mc (melt ,, 11 ~lt•~N s 1e lf '-Wnl l'-T M 77 ACnM 1 1'41' Set schedules your own deadlines Eam1ngs If you are sell ~=~ ~,&: /,.; 11 ~ .M~9,u!y n ?J s1e n s1 n, 1Jl -N ,, PLt 111 ,,. Am Cl'I•" t t t I Chma Pl > ~ .,-, .. ,,· 32 1 33 ~I •w ~I 4~ ~ 4•11. W llw En J\1 J ~ Am(l$t I o0 k Ing par 1me "OUr y plCa Iii 17 UbK " ?\lo ) 1/1 O FM l Ii{, J' Am(~'" I \\Or -' Ch1nct A •11 ~ ' MtrCl'I lft )9 ,, I() , ~utcl Fd n 10'4 Ya..nlt 11 27 t, '° ~ A"!. 0111 11 Clles U 11 ' ~ Mtr d 111 o 1 111a•r PJ U\1 • '•n L""' t•\ c~ AOh!T Od tune pace -And all thts "ithout any experience necessary ' Door to door sales the world s smallest independent b usiness might an a 11 earning! 1n commissions Wl c111 • Ir •1 n Mtv• Fr 4e,~ •1,~ vntr c, ''t1 11 z en• ur11 '''' ,. , A 011•1 1111 (II I SI< 15' '6 MldO( -. , AmE~ 11l be about $.10 to $50 a week If c'' u A lSI ~ <11dte• " J ~ ',, _____________ 1-.m E•llO•! (I VII T :>'! dwG T I• 70 ,I ArnE•• pf \OU w ork fullhme and are~1" .. ~""6 J11 Pu~~11"°/,.11 ?1 r. Gaitrer•&l...o,er• :~~"il 1.l3 I k It b bt ~t(lw c D , ... ,. I Mps G•• 36 )I~~ AGn'" J? uc v you pro a y a~erage 0<•C La •' d Mo A \" , • l • A Gn 111 111et SIO ()()(] lCl $15 000 a vear If f~,~H~ Ji ... i~ ::u1Gc: 11 l NEW VOA.1( fU Pl l-Tht 10 mos •< Am Hr' '° Con Aock 141 IS'-1 Moo 1 p ~'• lt l Iv• I OCk• lrl"fod on lh• OTC ml kt! ~ ~~~ p '' ! \OU re in the m1nnntv of born sales people ior their held supervisors) } ou may manage $40 000 or m ore an nuall\ !""orimco '' ,, Moo f Sa 79 3(1"'1 Thut1dt v •1 \UDf>I I'd bv NASO AmHoU> 11 C O~• Co ll 34 Mo Is" j 35"1 I £ I )5' r lJICh II 0 l 10 .. Mo ~ II'. 10 • 'IC ... lock '"'"' '""' •1• A•kl'd Cht A ~.d~1 Cvf> '" l h 1' Maleh M 1 1 i lllnk•mtr Co 11] IOO 4? 'o 4? .,_ -, A M•d <0 ! o~n In I l5 3" witor t "" 01 c '" o 1 •--Oan • M 1 ~ 11 "l~ro, 0 r11 c ~ ~•aurc t1400 o, 10~, .. I'll> ... e,~• PO Oa t 0 • JJ 2\ Na "' ( ::.• 1; • No CM A ~ 11;10 .. , ~•o -1-, AMI( O l Oal• Oe\ • \ •lo Nat GsOl 11 1 ~ Arrn1e Fn • o n 7(111 111, l• ... 1 :::;:;G• Mf1:" Oo a G~n l .S M > Nit L !) y 4l '> u ,. S!or"te TKh 41 000 1• 141 -1-3-\.. ArnR•s OJ OavM r 711'1''1 NI Pltnl •I 41 1,Weln (...,1 A t UIDO I o l 't-1-1 Am !..II 11 Dt<-nr t" 1 ... 1 "° NSK At I 1 t C1vana ... Comm ,, !iOO I I ~i • AmSlll. Oeklb AA 61 It N 11 T (p 72' JJ\/t H• dtt F-5f UICI ll '> '1 + '• A Srn1r 1 'fOl Women earn at least as 0et11 1n11 1 • 1 /'J NE"" GE , , 1 ~ H••' Co Y «ID 2r1o JB'l>+ ~ A 5 ,,., 1 De .... c 61 ~ .. NJ Nit G 11 '"' Sa..!l>l'l•I lnnt "JOO 10 I o .. + 1 A~ s1..J .g much as men do 8:.1~''8~ ~~,. ~~;, ~~~·111P~ !l ~"'NASO v01.,m• --1 ,.:'°""''"s1aa1 '' Ad t Y D 1m C l 16~ 17 N co ti In 39~ Ml>~ Acl.;1nct1 100 cite I ne1 4J.S 1111(1'18ntfll !::::~~T 1 11,.1 van ages ou re on oc~tvc l61ol.11 ,,N1esen,. •v.•6-'. 1611 10••• :io.s1 AmT&lpf 4 d t 011t "r '~ l • N•sen II •6 46:\1 AmT&T w your own an can se your o vrs scr ,. JO No nd co l! 11~ Ntw Vo•k CUP 1 The 10 .,... nt 1111 Amwirr "° Own work load l 1 me &::'e1J l;' ~;~~gt~' ~G • 15"' '"°"'' '~• .rock• 11111 h•~• •• nt<1 1'-AW•1 "' 1~~ Oc.n•lcl• 37 ~ JJ w .. , Eno ~\.lo 1111> mot •llCI 1011 Tiii mosl b11ecl on ..,,,..,, AWlrol I •l h d I ( Cal I Yo Dow Joni •Jl'> 4' "'•• •• G •1 ol '"•ntt on ll'lt OY1• 1111<1111<11tr m1rU I Amt on 60 Sc e U es 'nan I goa S U "· ' .. .. O'~ 01') II <1110lld bv 11'\t NASO A-·10• ... !loo 1-• II """ • 08 ?t It lO NoSP Cm JI ?l Ne •llCI Pt cen ltt c~1n1111 1 , tllf AMF lnc1> r u-uOOr 5e Ing IS OUr t ( led th I I\ O"n El I 13 ~ 74 NwPb Sv 11h ?jlo "tit fll<t bf'lwrtn re11t OIY 1 111 tllcl Amie< 4i0 country s oldest m ethnd of can ge s ar WI v1r ua Y 01111k" o 11~. 1'" No•e c .. ,1,, ~ , 1 rrce •fMI 1ocr1y 1 111 oic1 ••k t t.MP nc ,.,. Ou on ll'llo H'\ NlJC t At 7'4 I'll .AmPCoP r. me r c h a n d 1 s 1 n" Among no experience can ge t 1n or Eron L~1> l ' J~ o.~ cr;tt ,, .. '"' ••••••• •--·• , ,.. Educ S~1 .>ti 1 Oce1n D 4d •6\ I O .. ..,.. fam1har prnducts 1n11!ally m out of d 1cect salesat any time Fl N~c•I 11•, 11 • 01111o L01 21 11 '" 0 "1 '" L ·~•t 1 ua n a Amr .. Corp F ms~ '/'J •• O"I ~., M 6] 61 1 ' W1t11 5 d Co .. ,, i1 Uo ll J Amtt• 1 IO trndu ed t th Am ' • •O >< ''' 8' ' • '' >, l N& En~ Contrl '•+ 10 .. , '' • A1t1 pl l•J c o e encan normally need no capttal to El Paso 13 ll'-1 .. , ''(; , 0 • • s10 •o• 1ec~n 1• ~ 11. Ua 1 3 Am11 01 " PUb\IC by d 0 0 r t O d O Or ~m1>S 0 I 2! )6 I> ymp 8 ,,; ~,,! S P•c Int E<1u It 1 ~ Uo '' 1 Ami td " 1 begin with Enr "" c ni.. n v, Om•h• N 14 'js 6 WleM Con' Ar ' ..... 1 u.. , J Amlf! n 1<I salesmer are the wa~h1ng E11v < •1 ,1 o...n Rd JJ s~ 1 Amt 1n11 01v :H\ot+. • UP 1• 1 A111cond• t Warning steer cJear or any EolJ IV 01 If" IS Oot S<•n 11 11~ I Pllr <k PtlrQ tlot 1 ~ Uo U f Anchor Ho 1 machine silk and n} Ion stock F • Tee 1'io 1" Orr PCm n ~ u ~ t l1•leCn1~ wh Ho ~ uo J , Ancoro Olo {ngS the \aCUUm C\eaner direct sales COmpany that re ~~;! .. '"';: .~' !~'> g '!'o~I p Jo~~? :o Nri::c~e lnc:e: l~'n.i 1 ": 8: n~ ::;:c~ICI ~ t make big In F II Ct~o 1•. J Ove. NA 1 S\t 11 F . •one In >2 1-l'llo u .. 1Jn AOC:tOH •1 sel'i1ng mach ne radio quires vou o a Fa Ln~ 11~ u 01 '" era 11 ') 11 n 811>1> "''' co 1\~t 1 u .. 11 , Aoro Ud Tnday 1500 000 10 2000 000 'eslment1nsalesgearbe(oreFP<lP<E ?S1'76 \P11t111 Br u •~"''"'00••ch "''! •• • u .. n5 A l Coro F I Bo• n J9 40 P~<(• JI n 15 1<1 1er 5 ff 1.P1t 11,J Uo 11 ) APL otll SO .r. In door to door Selling -)OU even hit the road I 11 (omr 3S~. ].II ~ Pa~ Lum )71 ll'' 16 lolllY In . n '. I UP 1 I AD6Po! 1 11 •I w, F ? 1 J>io Pa';o 8 d isV: U' 17 Zen Ill F11ndt1• J • \1o U1> 10 Aot Id Mo .bout hair Or them Women -Dis advantages You may ""KO ne jl 1 J•lt P• 0 At 0 76t. J71Jo I S~• ter co Am J• t '"" u .. 1e 1 AAA Sv 111 Ft ckor 6 161.1 Ptn o,o1 11' ~ lt Cle•rv Pelrol J I v, Vo 105 Ar<t tN 1• And the num bers Continue lo not be able to a c hieve the 1n Po• G nl l • JS P11111 Rtv 11 ~ 1 10 CaYa111oh Cm 1 ! "" ua OJ ArcM On Fr•ttk Co J 1 J PiuPv p 4 '71 Pt O Ovn1m 1~1 0 UP !OC Arcllc Eno g r ow as millions or all ages come you seek unless vou are Fan~ E1 1no 1 • "~"t , 0"' 11:; 11 Comp"''r 1m11 J\'} ,, u1 ion •r1• P5 1 OI d Fr IC~ A 71" 71"-PJ!U (~I •1 , •l 'l M 'II Tr11st .,.,, ~ + \ii U1> t ) ! tn1 0 51 \earn for the advantoges of ~1lhng and able to s pen a Fo:FoE n ,10 P•vN sv 10 ~,1 ~''1(•mav a..nc1 26'\lot?"" uo '' • 111 Rtov ,. F11 1-H '' >• 0 , , 1,,. 75 K Tel nlern I '''" ,~ "• ' 0 Armco 51 1 considerable amount of time G• b'" 11 ,, P:~ t' w 7 ,• 71 " v• " " Arm,, '10 l h!S OCCUpa!Jon Students turn f h y Gari nk 7• t ?$ 'o Pea• WI '~ 1 ! LOS•ltS A mu Of ~ to 1t lo finance !heir tu11ton away ron1 ome ou m ay Gn A m 1 , 1 Pe H&.H 31~1 ,n, 1 Aes,,.... EnY, 1~ -0 11 , s : ~c~ ~ h h t he ample Gn A Esl •• t11o "' r t ,, S• , Dvn••dfnct , -.... 8'' 11 s ""'"'' B 1 60 costs 1eachers and ot ers lean a ve o carry avy s GM s11~ t '' 11 P~ <•• ls , 16 1 C•ml>r dot N11 , -11 10 o A 0 <•• _ Ute The field G ant I :n ? Pho n Inc 11 ' u '< ' Amec<1 ln<o p )V.-"" 011 f 1 "' on 1t to boost their incomes cases o n your ro Gt•A•n w 34 ,, JS Pc NPi y a 1 s1 Hm "' 1 .o 15 _ 1 "I °" Ar~ n Ind • I h h ' h f Gold Med ... 4 P k 71v, ,: 6 BrvMtW G SO llli-1 Of ~~ A1h!OU 110 '-l.omenn10\e1ntnsuppcment as more l an i s sare o Go.;FFd l'••?S•P~e"w 1, 15 '"'d '~ corp 1 .,_, 0 11 ,,•·~ 11rw the ram'!" s income and fill up hard sellers and u nscrupulous G ~oh Cn • 4 Po.., T~I 21 ,., n • sco11 111n1 A"' 1•11s.-s 1 ou 'l •,• .!G, • r. al>fl Sc ?1•• 1l t 1>or1r HK )41 'S" t P 0<llemco In ]'4-Off ' 1"°"' 10 their Idle hours dealers of one tvpe or another Grn Ml "' ''' 15,,. Po' co 1v 11 '> 10 Na1 He11 h sv 1 •-~ 011 , 1 f,'!"'1_,r ~ ~ Grev Adv I~ lA Pott In<!• ll)" I'" I' M~lcenlt 1 A 6 -~ Ott St "~' '"" The rletd Or dlr-t Scli>ng IS SOnle Of \hem J\lega\IV G av• Pr I > 1 o P ewv In 10' 1 1 \. "'' Sowt$1 l ..=_ '" Qlttf St .A~C vE 1 40 <=<-r.1111 n il •'> 7 !'or Goll $" 6'> l Gee.the n1.1I A _ 01 S6 A lhcfld 'l expanding rap1dlv spur red representing their wares and GY•ocr• •• \,, P OP Cu• 11 ~ ,. 1• S<hoh 1nc1 Inc ,,,,_ Oii s 1 All ch 01 lt> I I t I h H•I Fn~" ~l'JoPvbS NM l"'ll\t !.SEOP llesc.uc ,,.,._ ~ 011 s1:.A11«~' ... JIO, Part1cularJv bv yo u r 1n others regu ar y \ 10 al ng I e Harat A 11 ~ u PSN ca 1i._ 1 6 P•koCc a >eb ,.._ ,, o 1 •, , J 14•11 td F 31 31 Pub•~ 4'1o ~ 11 N•tl SllldrnlM 1 -!I 011 ll A1"1 Coro c reasing w 1lhngncss 10 pay a Federal truth1n lend 1ng law Heu1on 1• 11 P11ePac 21 2J 1Enw1 t co ,,_ 1o 011 ••"TOln.: n A d I I k th '~• \.., '' 45,., Pvtn Caa S~ ~ .. '' B! l~her Cora l 'l-\Ao OU 'I Aul""' °"1• premium fo r the luxury o( n a ways ur tng 1n e Ht YW 1 ''"" 21 0(111••• c 1111. it :io °" c• l ttllno Jl\-, 011 4 s :ui ..... 1 t_ndi ho h Th r Id b k d th t f I-Ion "°'V 77'"' 711. ll:"vcm 1~1 Hf )I W111che1lr C1 16'o-14 011 lj ,_:~:ca :ia s pp1ng al ome e 1e ac g r oun 1s e p rospec o ..,.,.,,., 1:P.~ ).llJt t:avmd 21 ?t• ;1 St na Hom•• 5""-2!1 '-• ,.~co 0, 3 ,: 1s also d1vcrs1fy1ng to a l1i 1de str1c~er federal laws and =~~~P~i ,rz J"' =~P;~ ~~ ~1'" zil' Z::i:!•. T,a,,?, 1~.:: ~ ~U ti' :~~r"'" 01; r ange o l goods and services regulations l o set standards Hu•s P '" ,... ""'c' CP l '> 11 ~ J Oo k •I Sein 1 ~-Vt Oii 4 Avonl"d , 15 r I k l"'="""':ll"'"'"'"'"""""'"'"''""'""'"'IW"'lli"'"'"' .... .., .......... ,J"'' IC 011 'I There are an estimated 2 500 or direct sel 1ng a nd crac h h 11•1>&.Wlt SS lo 3 ooo d irect selling com do\\n on the abuses w 1c l:~! rirr M panies many or Lhen1 h i:ive resisted a ll lhe industry s MUTUAL FUNDS R•llG11 1 •• glam o r stocks 1n receni yea rs efforts at self pohc1ng 11~~1•1 1•~ bo I b tt A b h llan•o Pn -grossing a ut 4 1 ion an s one o server as 1.,,.,.,..,.,.,..,..,.,,,::zi..,..,,,...,..,,.,..,,..,...,.z:,..•u•• IA•"''" ,, 1 nually double the 'olume of remarked There a re manv J' =~i:"o ·~v1 ", only a decade ago people who couldn t sell a $5 New York !UP )I eetw F 1J •• 11 " i.1e1 Ft>cl fl 112l11 SPffat ll '1 ll n l~~~t n 11 ~' Sh Id t bllt for It Ir 'our. On. Or'-,'·,•~, ",9-.J',,',.'J,o, .• ,~··. T elf', ....... Fund lfS llJllCUltlTY FOi 'clCll 1J ou \Ouauempl 0~01n , ...... • na.n1,J1n111 Fc1 111111 11 Eo111v ., ••• ,1:~ic rri ... r td ' h d II price• on Mut111 Ort< C1 111 I S7 JH1n 1 II 111 t I! Invest I IJ 1.. .., to the d irect selling ie Iese 1rect se 1ng 1!! an ex Fund• 1 ~.,,,,tel bv1Doc1vC• .1.11 1,John•n 211111J1 u , F 10 N 1in !:!t:o~ H ere are some re a] 1st 1 c cellent w ay to go bro ke '"' NASO inc g11e:~,.js 1~f,.'1 ll xe:vsToNE Sl!Ll!Cll!O 1101 !"n "" 10 'p;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;.,JTl!urt~•v Mt¥ 11 g•vl Fd 1111 14 ll 1~:: l 1 ~ ~~ ~ ~f Am Sh 10 1 U •uscnl I• 1t1l rvl LV 42 •Ot 8 tll lOCj Opo Fd 16 14 14 l•111ch l w lld Al~ SD lncm I• t:n '"1 o SP Sh \ 11 101880 ll•Wlft l l COMMODITIES Abe,,11 1?1 2 '!1 EATON & 111 Kl 1 19 1 9 Sen!nel ti IOU ll•vultCt SO AOMIA;ALTY HOW ARO c:1 ~l ,: ~ 1! :; Sin Y F U 9t II l1 111rl11t1\ S? Gwth 193 7Jf ll1ln Fo 10 0 11 01 Cu~! S1 1149 74i0 $HAllEHLO Gl:I" 11••tFd ~~ FtAE·BURGLARY ALARM SYSTEMS MESIOEf"ITIAl & COMMERCIAL • 1n,u11..:t & Srr"("" ll' ·f·1r, E>P<·<•On<• 1 J v~~rl IM lno H~rh01 A'~~ Call Far Fl'C'e Esti"'ate PORK llLLllS-CATTLI HOG~EGGs-GRAINS SILVER All tro l•1lur1d 11 our w t1~ly "''rkt l r.tt. For I w11k tr 11 "'1 I coupo11 Nim• AdclrHI 'j7 50 Gwh F lit? 1 11 Cu'' Sl f l1tOS• Comsr •sa •tl 11~1;,:0 "" 11111128 ncme 6S6 111 (vs s.i 151 1 1 Ent or Ill 1 0.S a "' J05 S52 5Pttl1 F 11hl l1'10 ADc.tlo 7 .. 1 17 Fii! Fd 1 11 17•1=~~ fl 1 221116 Sick Fcl 1111 15'4 Poll 1 561 •11 H1rbr 111 tU 9 I 15 OJ OEbes!cl 1•51 !'1Knl<kr 714 IOS L•t" L 6JS ,1,1•1CDPI ~ I .)ol '" EO E Sp ,, ., "·~ Knk Gth 10 II 11 •• Pi er F" ll 0711 lt a:1:"",H ~. 13 ll I• J9 EFC MGMT Giii" Ltn-Fd 1 J• I 2• SHl!ARSON 1'05 I ~ l••tliOS E•lv G t ]5 06f:Lfll Grth 101?1 n .AODC ltl1J1•• ~m~~~ IO i fl 1 !' Eoty P • JS I ff L•~ Aesl'I '' '' 1117 lncom 11 6.1 10 37 .6.m O~i 11 SO JI Fncl ,i,m 901 t lllblv Fd ii& ISO lnv111 11 61 114 •M• llO Am EDIV I 01 '" Eo ' GT ll ti 1S • l I• n•~ • ,, t IC Sl'I Orin 11 19 l) 48 11:~"c~ 'i' 1l AM EICl"ll!E5S El!un T I XlfJ Liii Grw ''' IS9 Sdt Fd 1071 I 14 91"!"' j• FUN05 Emeo JO) 7 6'Llnc CIP 1119Ut7 SIGMA Fl.INOI I ncom 9 11 10 IJ £QU Y I" t lO 10 1 LOOMIS nv 0 05 ll 11 ll) SEA COAST ALARM SYSTEMS D•Y• .. Oft 01 Cap 8 '18 10 69 e .... r~y ,, • 7 •j l "" Fnd • so (IP snr 10 n 11 1t I:~ •:,1 '·~ nvs m I 11(1 '7l Fa f d I 15 11 '} S.tYLE5 T 11 917 10 tl tn ppf 1 R J 0 IRllN & Ai1ec IRC Spec! 10 IJ 11 M l'rn But 11" lj 47 C•n•t hl hl V•ntu ll 06 • 11 tt.:~::i ,.,.:: 1 W tiff.I 510<1t ltlltl\FOC1111 OJ .. l':aa Ov1JYJJl5mlll 1111'1 11f1 11t1~$" l !O 64f .. tc r" Am Gr!~ 6}] 6 11 FtOl!LITY M11lu1I lS tD U tD Sii l.G 11 t 1 fl l ie l lnO .S) , .... s~t c""''' o•c1n ~upply 16S I Plotei>tlo-Cosrcr Mirso .. ,.,. ~""'" N le Ji Am nYll 5 tl S 93 GAOUP LOlrO All 5.D Gt nF lJ '' 14 6? I ew,..rf ec Am Mui t j' O 11 81111 deb t 11 fl II All 111 110 7 J1 '"'' tnv t 07 1 75 I :ck J~lr J 6421006 540 4744 Am"11 C. l 1 • C~o I 1JOOU6.1 Am 11111 J:lt )~I Sw nv G t:!O tt5 I 1 i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;~;;~;~~~~~:~~~IAN<;HOA Con! I t II 1051 !Ind deb II 5111 5t Sov n 17 911• :NI !l~kL.?~11 l! GROUP (.; SSte •-: Lu ht II 11 u 1 ~1 Spec!. 111 .,, Clot• tOO 916 Otl 1 11 M1vna 91•1010 STATI: 8HO O•P llt lltll .0 Fnd nv 9 5• 10 •S E•st • 5 69 I !1 MttmC I? Jl 13 S1 Com Fcl s 16 4 lO s:b,,: ell ~~ ~ § Grwh l'•Sll6.1 £.;erst JJI l61Mt nhlll 55t 411 Ovt•I! ~15 ll9SostCt lS 1000 ncom I'll Fun" 11UltSMk!GwtJ4JJllPr11!1• 7ot71Seond Vrntvr ~9661441 "u tn 061160 MA5S CO St Fr Gr •67 '''II Mclut WI N•tl 1u •1 11 Se1rm F J l l 1 35 Frttm 151 •1• $1 Fr Inc IOOllOOl 9~~0 I~ ORDER YOURS TODAY! Personalized • " Stylish Beautiful Stick-on LABELS • Efficient O~der For Your11lf or 1 Friend May be used on •nvelopes es r•turn address l•bels Al10 very handy •s 1dent1f1cat1on labels for ma rk1n9 persona l items such •• boo ks r11 cords photos, etc. Li bels stick on glass and may be us•d for marlung home canned feed items All libels •re printed wit h styl 11h Vogue type on f1n1 qu1l1ty wh1t1 gummed p•per. Attron 5 • 6.1 T encl 11 ff JO 16 1111111 F I 03 I Ill Sii 1 S!r Sit Jl SO 11 11 n Al/di• F 12 11 1 1.S F NANCI AL Ml , F 'OJ 13 11 SlEAOMAN F05 .:~:, I AlC« l"llOOllAMI MASS FNCl Am Intl 111 l J1 B I Ed l " Jo!OUGHTON F n O~n 4 ~ l OS Mil I? ti ll II Al!O Fd )Cl 1 JO 8 O'J<E I 0 '•' F\IM A S7' •1• Fin ncl ~I •U MIG 111 !JI Fdu<Y 759 7Jf OI o Fvnd 9 I G.I I 1 F n •rw: ~ 3 I n MIO 1s 11 •!I STltN ltOE FOS lovr",11 1!1t Stoc:k IJ.l lt3 Vrn •I) l• MFD 1!•l11N llltAnc 1l 11Jll rt n "" A~e 5(1 Sit Sl lstFd V1 Uj0lJ61M1 11 Iv 416 411 C1ot 11?1 1l16ft'1,•0•J 1," 8L C G II 1193 IJ G.I FIRST M1tlle 16 fl 16 '' ~!Mk U 41 li 61 r • Nl'I 10 B•tlson 11 ~1 IO« INV ESTOlll! Md Am 4 • 101 SIS GltOUI" 0' ",M~ ~I 1 11¥roc nt.UOl1cFd 1 17t62MIF Fd l~tOIGf'Wk 190 1 1'1 tit llo:! IYk 1r I 1 •'3 Grl~ Fcl 1 48 1,SIMF Gro ''I •'4 tncom fU10lS8rNllHAlt Be1(n M 12 1'J M S!ock F t t• 10" MuOni I' • ,, 7 OJ SmmU 17 •• 4 ?(I 08,,wyH ol J BrtCOI' 577 h i Mull IOM!lOIOMuOm n 1nt)llllll Tt<hnl ,,. 1 7S OCk GI ,, 9er9e I( !l 10 11 O Isl N1 1 ll I " Mui Sh 1 11 52 17 .SJ \yrw:rt F 10 It! 10 9 rUnGa 1 1l B•rl<1~ 13' '311 Strr 60J,,JM1111 T<• 111Jl0 TMJI A•lll.S11 'Jll Dwn CCI"' llonclslk '61 , ,. Fdtl Gr I 07 s JJ NI I Inell/ 11'!1111 T••Ch•r 11 . ll ,. 8rGrova l\IJ 8011 Fdt1 11J01'-"llOUNDE•S HAT JEC l'D TKM<; l 4J 1 51BrnS~D 20 Brown 4 )I l 1' Gll!OUP 11~t1nc 10 J111 11 Temol G 7 ?J 1 tJ llrFtr I (I.I 11111.LOCI( Gwlh l•07?01t lll>O'KI Sr Sit !•I Tower C 700 745lr11111w1< ' l'UND5 ltw:om U71 l! Olvlcln •?4 ''JTr111C1t tO.S tl(811CvE 1)0 !u ~d 1SISH 1l F Mlue td O/l Pr•I Stk j:NI 71 Tr1~I Et 11J•l1tJ llUOO Como C(ln Fd ,, Ol 23 oe F SPK I 13 .. 5 I ncom " '00 T dor H I! In 1110 llllllC!Ct Of J 0 v Shr I" • j! 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"I' 111111 Fd I' , 1•bo! CD 10 8nd l' ' l 60 117' 1100 Func1l~•,lS1 ~ont.,.. 1 , d fMI (Qm Stk 1 • j~~!'"'Y 12j'11lJ IOl F11nd t111ou oftt Jnc. r 'I !,:=~:wt Grwlll I 11 SSP JS I One Will 11 U114• 11(1111"1 !O 1 i l l l'I lll(Oln 7 t' • n lft S~c '11 '13 Ot ""m 1),,. 14 •• ~clime t1• I' 1·· •hll fl~~ i~iJ.. '1 ' ~(o\_,,. s1l 1 l).I 2! .f~ 1r~,ol~ U1J•nt3c11 11\1 !~1 imll!L~ •J OSfON N>f• F I 11 ' .. o'Vc Se< j I IJ 1 1:1 USAA 'I 1) l l ,, 0 :"'' s 1 ~ !~~" 8c0: 1•0 1 1l l1~ 1 02,;i., "s';f ,; ~ 11' n ~:~f"~ev i ~~ ,:; ~1 L8l1 L1'..7J' ~t{' c:~.r~~ I~. hf• I' All :IS(; n FAm 'l! f, P1 Mui •17 411 Vtl ~ne 110 111 ( ( ~~1 ~d l'§Ji~G~rc1 1no jJ.,JJM~~ i:d 1f~1~: ~:! G~ 1ll;1/~l~::::i:11-1'11 1; 01.0NIAL Hm H OA •11 ,,,.11111 ... 11 •111s1 v. Spe ~ .. 144 •H .. UNOS Jol•m Gr Ii! •;PIM St 1111 "fA1HClf 1r I I ~ J(M'I~·· u ., H•m lllC I "'°" F ~ '4t '~ n AlfOl!ltj lrl I t "° '"" . » l * "'""" '!"' .... " 11. II 1" '"' I H "I ""o' ' '"' \! 1 I 118 I Lv I MI P11nfW1 r t 01 Cm 10 l 1•ro F I M Grwll'I 11tdtltol ! 62 • PL! GllO 11 t o«I 11 ' '!" 1r I" L 1 * lncom 1 H 1 H9d9! I OJ 1'•11;~ ROW ndrbll 1 '1 ., I Ill( ... r-----------------------1 Vf11t11r f~ ~~ fflftl 1~ iTJ Grw111 llt?llf1"''"'~ 1 St OJ 11rtrC iO ,In Ill '"'' couoon ell• IR~ m~H wltll 11.U SI ~'j~t;11 c 1. TI \,; 1.:0~t'! C• 11 H :1 nl =: ~'; ~ I' n l, ~:"1-0 ~ ~'L 11~1 :~;c;:: ~ I l'llt1PrlftlhltllM1Dlv,.1'.0 lnlMI I jllltMOHWLTN l~t. t 1flr0Fo 1jl41116Vl~11IG~ I l l 41 •••t 60 I C•U• ,,,., .... C•llt r.i.u UST Ill( tilAm \I l 1S l'ro ,.orll ff '~ w11 I I ').1 11 n •ltl''fl I "° I I H • J"I 1 ll ll'C •011 1 ~l • Ol l'rovldl I I W•VI M11 11 f l '1 C I Cor• C u •111ncrl"Am !SlfOll'rovtGt Wt f11t1,...11.J ••J C.tCr•tl -• • j ! 11•"1!~" 1 M 11 11 Pr\ld 1rtt 11 1• ,, :rt WILLIHOTOH "(' C• t• Cl"'O "'' ~'""'Ct .i, 1t )t1jfS ,.UfN M (llllOUI" •j•MJP 1 I I emit i' \• lllY Gii {[ 10 • ' .M FUN05 EKllOI' ,,~" n I •111'1 flit I I """ o lff • l"w •fide ,~ ftiuir~ 1!11'"1 1vt11 \!!1 u 111(01ns >0 om11 d 11 "' 'I' 11 ~ ,3 "'° , n~ ror•11 u, '"'... C6'• I I &ll~ld 1 t3 I l IHVIS 0110 "I l)fwll'I I 'l U Cllnlv t l 111H~d 1 ~ ""' Jny n ao 1 1 0~ NO l ~ u !!" I' ' rvu "l)o I! SI f" lllL l.Jll l I :~~1:~ JH ,ad ri~· ~jijPi ~iJ;:. F tt~' '1t5 S1!iE: \l~i~,u ~f?I' {C L---~~L~!_PRI~!!~~ J §~ 1til 11'&1~~·' f:tt re=.~;' ~lj :tuSei~ ?~ ~ 5~1.~: • ,.~~ .~ ... , .., W,..,. • i "' !*lio,. • I w~"'),~,, , «~ ''" o• a_af ' om ,.. • -111tr 1'"' I• il !J 11"1~ ' ,. I M 1f'!-l11·t s _ --------~-----,.,.,o• u 1 ,,, 111 !"1"' '• I ,.~-c111...i• •"flltlf ~~-........... --~-4o?~ Ditti 11.ot 11)0 TP11 S~ 1 IJM Oll'I 11 &.ollnl Yl!!J t IS.tlll.A • , ,.. ... llm.I Mlllit LN C ... "'9, >ll !ill(. lli,~ ll.t ~ 1..0 ,,s1 fl -1,0 ,, .. ,.~~ .. l ll ).I )ol » ·~· jt .. St\lo-_. ,_ 1j 11 • lOl• ' '-)U d\• .0 ,, • ·~ .. ~ ~i~. tt~ I I) o IOI,. IGllt )t ,, ' .. ll I• 1• J I o 1,1.o I 1\<t 1S t 111. I , It »I JO ..... 6.l~ ) , , IJ I ~ ~ . ,• . ~ ~!: ~! I) 11 , l'f I II • »lo ' 1.Slo S•o l:• l"• JI I 11 • 1• \• •• 11 • 1) • • •• J• 1• ' ' .. 11 l• r. • 01 6 • 10 ~ ~ . .. . . ' ~ • " " " " I .. . II '" , ~ • " ' .. " ' '" "' 11 .... im: ~ , ... "' " . " . " . .. 15 ·-1 " 30c\r~\o u • ,,, " II 1 I " -1•1.-.1 1•'4 ~ H C. '" , .... ' •• l•\t~ ,. . • • •• 1•\o I "'~ . ~. • " •• .. .. ' • ' .. ,,,.., • , ' • . - Frldo, M•1 12, 1972 DAILY PILOT Jp LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTlCE IHn t •to tllOITO•f ,KTITIOUI l""WIU ,IC'ftTfO!n I Ull•lll 'ltTtTIDUI IUllHlll • .,... MM ~ ...... ,... IUIMI t'J.&T&M•WT "Mii &T.&TIMIJlf NI.Ml .ITA.TIMl!ll .,.,. 011' tltLll'Oft•t.& ,o. TIW te1iorw1 ... --11 "'"" M r... ""' t&illwt'"I ,..,_, ... d11u" '"• >otlewln• ... _ ........ -. .. ~." Til8 C.cMltlfT O• DUJlll 1•1 M lNU •.t. •1 tit. •. ,.... WUtlllfl.0.Wlt.lNUT CO~ANY, a DOfOUT •10,iat. fl'll t •tllllt"Vf"· CANlft•V \lllLA<O& AJolflOUI! CO • Evidence Of Change Abounds 'Wrong _Numhe-~s'-- )e If lOf C). iff•lltl, ~IMllll liMITIO •A•T~ltlHI•, 17'01 ~-Mv .. 1,.,.1.,. &••(ft _, ft"' l1tH!, H,...M'I &tK,. l"•'•I Backlash Rises to Phone Surveys !Cl " ... , ••• ., Gl\l(M ,. IM '•rlf ci.o-. • o. •aw: ..... 1 ... ,.... am, .......... W\11\f!ty, 1Hllf ~-· """° tt.1 ti ,._ '""" n•"'tll tlt(lofMI CalW'111 tMM Av1 , 111111.._, C.A ~ •iu-1td l ~tw••,.(f l.CI' \•••"O'• I U ... ,_ l\1vl ... cl•looll ltll'ltl It'll W"tn.ld 0.W~ ....... C---jlO(., "'"" M1•to '°""'""'•Y• I_, N~ D•l"I· "0wMt! ll••tll, (•Ill t?MG MU&ltftl ,,. rttl/lttf .. nt. "*"· l"°' S•Y ... ,. Clrtl•. •.o, ·-CJ<!, .... ' IVtlh1. ~ tHll '"'' ..... 11\MI l• ... i .... c-...erM IJ'j I I\ h -II(" YOWl'ltrt, IJi IM offlu ........ ,. (l(jler"1• fM4I 11111 bul• ... n fl fHll ... ~~ltof .. IPWl•Vldu•I ' I <ltrt If 11\t 11>nvt ll!llllH cou"• Ill' 1~11 W.IMU lo CDf'ld'l.CI"" • l l"'lllH l>1rl...,11tl• llllU!ttd L L•w•tlt(• ..,.....,, ,.....,, wl"' 1'1t _,,,.. Jlll'T!fr~1t, llillW .......... MUIOOl•y H"I 1i.ltn\llll 111.0 wh~ ll'lt (Dll"'' ',,"" Ul\6tfll1Md •' IN Qftl" ~ W•ttlllld o.vtio-1111 C•. Inc. ....llfl Mt•i. lfU ... lfY c1 ... ot O••f'lf• '°"'""" ,,.. M t v 10. 1'1) ,,,..._ '•ul " "'•nN• 411 f l t! l y JlfY'" I . •W.tt•, flrllt 1ttt ....... 1 !II ... wl"' "II (OYMY I Y t1W•IY J, M~, D•oU'Y Cev,.!v 11 ""' 11eu "' -....,,., ... "' it>• 1~11 t111 ... ..,, ••• .. , .. ._,..,..., c..u ... tv ,.,...,.., J, M•ddcl•, o .. 11tv c-·· ,111u llrtff, Ct.it ~. C1ttter11l1 IJt,,, •rittlft"' Clt1~ If Dr•-CtVntv OI'' Iii.iv If. 1t n ICI•••. tlffltd I,. 11! "'l1tff1 ••1tlrl1nt fl !'I' (!ff~ t/A Or•-(llllfllv "" Ml~ 10 (!•~ l<uOl•t"~ ();1ftl• (Mii 01d¥ "·le• ,nl~• " "'' foel'IS9ft!. wt!!!!,. '-'' tt11 '"'u ""'' 111 1 1•. i.. -J-l 1tn 11li '1 '"'' fN 11111 ...ie11c111t11 t1 11111 11..oc: ""•11"'" 0t•n1• c.,.,, °''" '•le•. L•GAL NOTICE ,lr7)1 MIY )J, lt, ,., IN! J-), lflJ 11•1 IJ l:.P lflf Mrt ), 1•1' •u111tt1t..i O•tr!ff' Cult D1!1t' lllloi, !--~====~~-,==---! 11c1.iA110 M wH1TtMAN """ If, 1,, u. ,1111 JuM i. lf1J ,1.,.,, LEGAL Nortcr '1cT1T1ou1 s us11rt1ss f•teUIOP ftf""" Wiii NAMI IT•TIMllfT fJI fN 1ooY• "'"""' &Netdt!!I LEGAL NOTJr.!I Tit• 11111rtw•fltl ,...,..,.. it onr~, b<it•ft•n L 4, NAllNl, '-'£> lll1(1t'10UI I USflflll ••: ... , ""' llrMI, NAMI I TATIMINT t •oww 'Y .. LL I ., ... E 'C>lOOL. M-, (IW ..... !W1 ttH, NOTICI IN' TlllUITll'I IALI T~o tolltf'riftt "'''°"' 1rt OOi"-• ldtll Lo •1111 Ot!v•, L••u"' Nl1u1I. 1'14J Ml-1•1 T.0. tl1. """''' ...,l<Mlt 11. (tUlor•u11)&11 ,., I •--•ltA l>Jl t llt IAllT>l INTll•l11$E~ ..... 0.:1 M1• JI(~ A Jiii Jtl>flel OI Y•ll1 ,,,._ I"< """ Or•-CMtt O.•"' ''le! Oii Jurw l, 11n, •• 11:00 '""·· lovt . L1111nt 1-11. C1111 tUJI 11111rio1" u ) ltt•• Sir••'· l rttneft1 J, IZ. \f, H, lf7' lltf.,; MftlTAll t.\Olll fGAOf. CO.til•AHY. 11 lt•C'Ol •d Ot1n WOoctt, tU CIA Mtr Mlellltlft "''*1 ,.-'-'-'-'-'-''-----'.::,:~l ''vt'• U"*' •Ml -w•"' 11 0..0 el J.v•. l•tuM 111e11. c1m PM!! '~·• ~tl"l't\ •• bt•"I tOfldv<'" by • T•utl '-'" Nov .... 111• "· IHI ll<•WUd Mltll•ll J•Mll Ml:C•""· ~ LI (ntpOtMl•'l'I. LEGAL NOTICE •v CPllffet f , Gr..,fr, J• 1tlll CY,."'I• I M"•••· L•fuft• lllell. C1lll. t2'J1 I~•" l IU"" i~-----;;"'------lc.'°""' •nd ,_dH NOY....0.t 11. ..... Gtrv ,, ... (II "'°~''' 1:u O.rrtll ., . T•~llU••• ~ If\ ~ ,.,.,, ,,.,,*·Of Ollltl•I •1<ord1 (Ollt M111, Ct!ll. tU21 , .. ,. llt llMtPI! lllld ..... n tM (f!Unly NOTICI T~~llllDITOJI' I~ "'' oHic-. " "'• ll tcO'lll• M o •• ,... T,.,, ~.1 ..... I• i,,1.,. <OfWIV(tld -y I Cler k et D•t ... t Cnu...., °" >.ltY .\, 1t71 • IU'lllllOI COUltT 0, TNI (OIJ ... y, C1ll!~'"l1, Wiii Ult 11 ll\lllllr IV(· ,,,1,..,,1tl1 llv lov••ly J M.-llkl"' OtllU!v Cou,.!v ITATI OP C•L"O••>• •O• 116" It l>l ..... tt lllt141•r 10' t111t (HY•llll ti •W-fttrt! D. Wtoll\ Clt r•. llOTW OI 111t In ltwful montY al '"-1'1•• ottl-111 llltd "'''" !"t ttyn!Y LEGAL NOTICE THI COUNTY O' OltANOI c• -•· C " -n t l'tl "l'UN U"Utll 51tlttl lri h oflkt ot Hl!ltlTAOE ••'"" ,,,,,_ OUftlv °"' Atr u. lt Pulllh!'ttd O••n•• C11111 01lly Ptlal, ''''"' of l VNHt 'cMAllll~TO MOllTGAGI! COM""""'· lM E. 1 t ., Btvlfll' MllOClt•, 0.PU1¥ Ctu"IY c1 .. ~.,M_.,_ .. _.,_. _ .. _._,_··-"-"-----'-"-''-".I ••• MIL'0 N, ·-· MNltrMt l llld . 111111 IU 1.,.11w-'lfllJI. "' · N CH41tLl$fON, •~• Ci 1l1arn.1, 111 rllht, n1io iflfl' lft i.r•" (Of\. l'111>l"N>d O••n• C•unt Dt lly l'llet, IJlfNNl McCLIAN CMAltl l STnN, ·~· wvM 11 •Ml ,.... .,,111 bv,)i 11...,., 11111 A1ri1 11 •• ..., M•v J. 11. 11. 1•n 1e,..n LEGAL NOTICE l('l'.NN :-CCLIAN C ... AllEITON, ••• OIH !ft tllo pr_,,.., il•iitfN 1~ '"' Ceu~. ·---l·----~---------1 lf~S. L NN CH.t.lt l f5TON, O.t.••:r ty .,i O••nit, Jv41tltl Dlitrltt al O••t1•• LEGAL NOTJCE • llCTITIOUS I Ul lNlll :.N~T ICE II Ml lllllV GIVE N I 1111 c ..... ft!Y MirtlO•, In ltid Count~ .... ll•I• ----~~~-~ ---Joi.I.Ml ll•Tl!MINT ~~I of !"-lllOvt tt•Ml(I di'ftltnl ltl(r~ 11 , 'ICTITIOUS IUllN t ii 'T!tt l11llawln1 PP•Mn f1 dftfftf tlutl"'ll ~L ...... ~. ',,','",:!.',,',.''-,',',',.11"!.!...!!', AH llt•I t trl1ltt It"" •lluf!ed 1.._ l'lt NAMI STATIMINT II. '"' " • .,.. '"•"' ~1111 ftf (I I lo!',.)1 (OU t .... O OAT#IN , :J.<111! Clltpmon, Or1n1• "' tt._ '*"''"' YOIKl!t•t, ltt lf\1 tftltl 1 ' ' "¥ '"'IM . Tiit lfMl!lwlttl ,.,..., lt dnlfltl tllitl"-•11 Wllll•M "'· l1tt1•1ck. 13102 Tu1lln •• ·-· '••• -· ' d....Cf btcl II lall(lwo: / I \ ' ,,.~ '"" O .... •--• '"1 llM touri. Ill l.91 '· T•tCI IJIW. A•, ..,,_ Joll.,..1 •v•, Tu1tlft t4' "'"lflt lh ..... wilt> ~ rtte•lttrv Vttll lttr ... •t ll'I~ on 1 M•I •'Corl lllANCHO MESA ••E·SCMOOL. 1111) T~!t ~llftlll 11 bt1n1 JOnc!Utltd llY l tt ~1. II li'>f y'"""1l1tlld 11 111• ofl'kl Id Iii boell •I 'It I Ml I l!t•I Uttt 5ttMt, C01t1 M1n. Ctl• lflfllvlOvll. lllt' l lltf'llY, CION.l.LD J STl!#Jol .. UIO ""'"· 1., tM •::ti.tr 0 01 ~C4I ~::; ttornl, t?IJJ w1ql1M H Tt rb••<k \11111 llrHI, Suitt 1)1), Holl.,....,, lllKNOt ti ••Id O••n•• c .... n1 Jtcll " JUt $.(ftMI "' \/1111 , •••. 1"! Tllil ''''II"\•"' l1IN '*'''~ 1111 Counlv lof~fl tlilOH, WlllC" lo "'' 11l•c1 el C_m;,. OtKflltl"" 'lt#lt• tr • llll!'IOlll "5 51111 51•11!, '•lmD'!I, ( .. rk ot Orl"lt Coun!v o" 40rol It. 1'72 tw1ln111 Ill tto1 uNltnl'"'' ltt 11! M11!1•1 ' '" 1 ' I ,· 11, 1 t.. UC:t Ml(llll•tt ff•l7 I v ll•vir!y J, MiOOo~. °"'uty counh ~1l11lne It !It• ""'11 It/ wld doteld.,.., 1~:;11 n 1 "'' 1 Ol'rl •. Ti1ill llll• llu1hwt1 It bll,.t to'>01.l(llO llv • Clt rk. llftt ftljr "'0r!Wll 1tt1r "'• l!rll IUllllCI· S1td ••It W•ll ti. Miii• 11111 Wl11\aul C11rpnr1!111'1. ,,,,. If 11111 11¢!c1, 1 1 ' l lvltt L •lptlt Pubh.tltd D•lttGt (!)Jiii 0•!1Y Piiot. lfH AtrU II. u n Covln1n If "''"'" y, 1•11rt11 Of nllllllld, Trtlll.l;fr ."trll )I. H. l ttd Nll Y j, !1, lt72 ·~·7' 0 .. .AYCI! M IM ITM •Htrcll~I tlll1, ltftUIU!"", If If\. Thl'I lltllm..,t 1111<'.1 WPlll li'>f COu~t'I J-------------- li'•lfU1rlJ el .... Win ~~:-::::~1 :,:·;, ~: ::.':':c11~':. ;; Cltfll at Ortntt CllUl\IY IH': MIY J, 1tn at "'-1i..v1 ft.t Mtd dlc""1!f lllO Otld lo.wit· l1' )7J 1J Wiii\ 1,.1.,1" I Y ltYtrllt J. MtO!lo... 0119Uf't COUii!'!' DClitALO J, lflltN ' ' ' Cllrll. !--------------~ lllf'tll \/llM St .. lll'11 Ult Iron> .llllult 1~ 1'11 • 1• In 11ltl flfllt .,,. 'IJJU l'ICTITIOUI IU$1 NllSS lltWMll C .. 11-11 '"1f Ylll<IPO. •OYl "!ft. II tn,. U ... ff lfl• l•rM1 Pultll'"td O•i f\tl Co.u t' Oi lty •lklt. NAMI ITATIMENT tUJ),<W).Ntl ttf 11!d Dtld; t,.t, tll•r1•1 Ind "-Nnlft Mtv J, n. It.'" i•n 11.._n lh1 1o11ow1n1 "'l<l" it 001,.. bl,otln•n ltrllf'I' ftl' ll1Ct1lrl• of lllP l•111! .. •NI Ill lltf lr"Jll f'llltd II. , ut lltllld o''"'' CO'i! Ollll' ,11111, bv u lO D11H1. LEGAL NOTI E c•i..1F01t N11. L.t.ND.,.U. u02 Ac•<'•· .-.rll'fl , U •!Id Mlv ,, 12 1'71 10d·'1 T~I lltn~fl<ol•P Uncl•• ••Id DI-.!. llY c G1rdtn Grev•, CA tl6•' _ ... t-"-------·----'--'1'111811 ttl I brttt~ or tltllull lft l!tt HUGM M Cl"ltV, JlOl Att(lt , ntlli ttlltnl l~C"'"" Mlt•llJ. flerl!Ollfl A 1410 Gtrtftn GrOYI, CA fl'4J LEGAL NOTICE tXltUI.,. '"' lltHYtrltl In 1111 uftd1r1I.,... IU,lllOlt COUlllT DI" TMI 1M1 IM!li"ln 11 coftdvcted llv tn In· -+--'-------------;I wrlH•~ 1)1,cl••llkln ttl Ofl1u1t Intl ()f. ITATI 0, CALll'OltNIA 'Diii dlvlOUl l "''"' 11111' $111, lflfl wrltt.,. ... llt1 el TNI COUMT'I' 0' Oii.i.Nit >lu•!t M Clt•Y fillOTICI 11111\llTINI llDI bft adl ~ al •llClillfl IO CIVM 1111 JM. ••m.t lhil Slt leMt"I w1, lil•O ""''" lflt Ceun• T ""'' It !tt'lllY t lYI"-l~•I 1"-lln1rll el ufldt•lltl'llO tt N II 11111 t reMrt, It NOTICI 0, 141A•lNI 01" ,.ITtTION tv Cltrk ttf Ortnlt C11t1nl¥ "" .t.Pl'll lt, :.r.-: ::,..c~it c1"""~;: Call-11ll1fv 11111 .. lj1t11ort1. l flfl IMtftrttr. "" 1'0# 'lllOIATI 0, WILL .&HD 1011 1tl1. r t oun ¥, 1 111•• Wiii '•br1111ry J. 1tJ1, l!tt u"4l1rtlttlld t1u11f LITT•111s TllTAMINTAll'I' 111·0C r W lfllld llld1 Ut lo lt:OO 1.m .• 11lcl 'IO!lc1 al b•tl(f\ 1MI el tltct11111 tt lw 1!1t1l1 al LEVON •ROOOIJ.N, Dee•••· 'I/HI l v. Mtv JO. ltl1, •' 111• •u•cll11ln1 rt<orfH In llGGk "" 1111 J02 ti 11111 td Publl.,,N D•1n11 co~•! D1l!v "lln!, 0 ' ~ 11111 ICl\oll dl1!rlct IOC:•llld .. O!tlcl•I lttta•d•. ' • NOTICE 15 MEltEl'I' Gl\/l!N tht l A~rll 21. ,., l ftd MIY ,, u. 1''1 IOll·'1 l I ,1111r11 AVtftVo , (Ml• M11•. D1tt: M•Y 2. lt1J l!d ... 1rd PrnoOltn "''filed ~trtln . plfl·l---------------1 ",:",,,"'•·it ~~(fl llMI 1•ld 111111 will Ill Ml!llllTAGE MO"lGAGE t+en Ill' 11•M111• or will •M 10< luu-ntt ftf LEGAL NOTICE ep1,,..., '"'° retd Io r ' COM"••-> I '··· "lllHISHIHG c oM•1tEHENl!Vi .. T u111r1 ,,,,M_,.,,,,, '" 1~, p11 t.,....'l ---~~----------T Ll!•!tOCfSllNO IOl'TWA•E 'lllD• • 11ld lru11... •tlrr111<1 tn wllltfl !1 mll(!1 Ill' furtll1r ,ICTlllOUI IUllHEll G AM. ..., Ill°"" G. Ovlt1m1r1, H •ll<Ull'I, lflfl lhtl ifOt ltm1 tflfl lllltt NAMI ITATIMINT II llla1 ,,. It lit tn •t<o•Olfl(I ... 1111 '•HfdtM .: ';'.~;1":1 'r.>0":'! .. ~~ ::",:,:~,:~'o': TM klll-ln1 ~''""' .,. "1)1ftO l'lll<v<tio. f ftll Concfltton1 Ind .,. .... • • ' ~llMll t i; !lt1ll0111 wftk:ll i rt -Ofl 1111 •Ill "'11111-1\tf N-.ert Htrbel lrl._. ,, ... , O.Nrt1T1ttll Nn. l el ltlO tOul"f. 11 1(111 AS!OC IATED T It .I.N S C •I 8 I HG 1M ll(U•-.1 In Ill• llff!ct el "'' (llll'llllftld will! Olltr l'll!ll. N""'-' ~rv~ ~~,. .. , ~1"'1 wu t, Ill 1111 Cl!¥ of SERVICE. )llJ Duolln 51 .. CM!• MtJI, :d'll Jln• A11nf It/ llld Kflool dlllrlCI. ltteh, C•ll!orn!1, M•r 17. U. H, lf7J 1" 1 ni , ~ f " I· C11tl. r?o!7,, ~tcll llidlllr "'Utl WllrO!lt wl!h fll1 lllll • 1117·'1 O•tHW~~LiA_M.1~ I S!lldev M. M.,.ntu 1v, J37' l!llol1 Lri .. 1111•'1 clltcll. ClrllflH (l\l(k, tr llltl· ' I. JOHN, l•vlno, •71W. 't 110M1 m'tdt PIYlbl• to th• orll•r of LEGAL NOTICE JOHN i~'(;~,C,:.,~ ~'''" AOd1mtn, llJ:I Dvtill n S!., Cotti Cotll Conl1T1Unlh C11ll1H Olllrl(t · M.,,,, Ct . t'62,, I rd of T-..itlHI I" •11 1m...,11t ttof llll .. ltll Cllwl .. I t ..... )VIII NT Tf\11 ttu1lt1111 11 ~I tonOucll'll by 1 "' tlY1 "'tlftl l!"lol 111 !Ill 11/M tit! 11 'UILIC HfAll1NGJ WILL 11! MflO t V ;•~j ~~i:;:I• '11°' Ptrt"'f"ll'tt. I u4r111ttt ,,.,,, ""'~ddtr •llt 1r1ttr lftlG TMI! COSTA MElll. PLANNING COM· 1 ' Slllrltr M. ennt"e' t --•llCI C011tr11<I 11 "'• 11mt 11 MllSJON 11 11\t Cit'/' Htll. 1' Ftlr Orlvi, .&tltrMY IWi 'ltlltt!lir , I 1 T1ti1 1!1teM1nr 11 wllh 1111 Coun!Y • ,,,,.. to l\IM. In Ill• ,¥.,., f1111111.,1 la Cotta Mr••· C•lllMnl1, 1! 7:JD '·"'·Mia ~..ii::~ ,~·~;:: Cot•l Olltv n1i~ri Cl.t<k oLDr11111_£~n !.'' A11r11 1s. 11n r lrito IUCfl t11r1tr.ct. !llt prec1H1 el -11 Nllllllt lh1rHll1r "" Mlfffdty, y ' ' ' I v l1v1rl, J. M.odo~ Oe1111fv (ounly c!'llcil wlH Ill tarfllttO . ., lft"" c•lt M1¥ U, 11n. ll''lt•dl111 "'• tollowl111 ,,.. Cl•r-. fl/I I llofld, lf'll flllt tllll'I lfl1r111I wlU bl -'lt1llont, LEGAL NOTICE "17)SJ I llM 111 11111 ac'1ool lll1lrlc1, I, ·-~•lit .... illlf, 11 ·11•11, let LIN! PuDlilllrd Or1n1t Co••! Otlly '1101, 0 i.leld1r ll'llt' •llflllr•w ~II 11111 11)1' t lvftfullen. t..c,. "11 •llcfllY ll•ttl, S•nltl---------------IAprl! 11, l ttO MIY $, 11, lt, un 1011·11 11 lell ol IMIY·ll~I itlYI Ill•• 1M lltti ••I Aft•. C11.1,. lor Nrml11lon le r•IOllt ''°' OCIAN \/llW ICHOOL DllTllllCT f !flt' -r1l11• lf'll•IOf. P•"• •1 ll•at•!bld In 1111 N llllon •1'111 1tn Wlmtr .lv•n• flt 11)1•11 el Trutt•h •tto•v" "'-ltc11t11 Ill IM '10rlllt11t 110• ti '1ll110t:1 Hl'llliillf!ln hlt:fl, C1~lorr1!• Yll ... ttl rt lt<lln1 1ny lflfl 1lj tlld• fW ll'Cllll, t P11r•-lrr11t1Jy 4'00 II. -II of LllAL NOT IC I to •llYt In~ Jrr .. ul1tlllt1 ti I~· ltOdl'IUI, c .. 11 Ml11. Cttlf .• It-Ml to NDTICI IN\llTING 1101 LEGAL NOTICE "~'1--------------1 'ICTITIOUI IUSINESI NAMI STATIMENT toll<lwln1 p1r1"" II Oain1 1111111 Ir! I,.., 1114 Gr lft lt'lt 11.odlftl. llt.CI' HOll(f IS MEltE I Y GIVEN t!tl! In• l"-N01tM.t.N I WATSON 1 .... _ h!lt .... N1. lt·l1·U, tor COl!t lurtl Ill lruii.tt 1tf l!'lo O<ttn Yl-11: I«"". la.trcl ttf lru1IMl Mtoi •11nnlr11 COll'lll'llllfllft, 11 F•l• k!teal Ohldcl ftf Ortnt• CauntY, Hun· N.lUTl·li:NOlS, ,.11 C111l1, N••-l Pl": MIY :Ill, 117' · 11 ;(11) l _M, Or!vi, C11l1 M .... (•Ill., 1111' lllf"'IU!Dft !lntfllft BttCh Ctlllttnll wfll rtttlv• ltttll. By JOHN CIJNNll'F .,. 111 .. lttft AR•ly1t N'E\li1 YORK -There Is I feelin~ in the United Stel~ or a need to change , a pre1111ure lh11t cause! people to re--ex· 11m int old bel iefs. foresake tradition and ·'°metlmes eeek expedien• anllwer:ii. It is exemplified by a wide range of event!I . including such dispar11te moves as rai11· Ing gold's price from the ont'e sacred figure of S.1S an ounct to $.18, the opening (lf ta lks with China. lhe fierce rebellion againsh polluter11. II is seen in lhe political primaries, wh1ch sug gest that old lradilinns are b eing trampled. It is suggested by the consumer polls. which 5how the issues of econom ic .11 u r viv al overri d in1 philosophlcal be lief!. AND QUITE dramatically, it is shown . in I he ease and even relief with w h I c h AmericRn industrialists ac- cepted federal controls in the market pl1ace. which for them Bn1ounts lo the ultimate con· tradiction of principle. A poll by ihe National Association of 1'.1anufacturers shows that only IJ percent or 7.18 responding companies con· sidered ~·age-price controls to be a negative factor in the economic ou11nok. Some 64 percent felt lhat controlJJ were a positive fac lor : the rest had mixed views or were un- certain. NAJ\1 cautioned readers cf the poll lo consider the find- ln~s in relation to the time the question~ were asked, '''hich \\'llS during !he last two \\'eeks of April. or befcre the Price Commission r eally got tough. But long before the com- mission began demanding that certain firms reduce prices. the level of controls wa9 greater th;in al any time this century except for periods or war. And NAri.f supported those controls. By LEROY PO PE ~'EW YORK (UPI 1 -The American public h11ll become lncrtallingly annoyed btt1use of lhe invasion of ii$ privacy hy telephone markettrs an expen in the business says. "If irresponsible and ir- ritating practices •·re n' l stopped. we'll be in danger of a hard crackdo"''" b\1 t he Fed er t1 I Clmmur\1cations C.Omm ission and state agen- ciell. '' said Murr11v Roman, head of C ampit ign Com- munlc11tions Institute of America, Inc .• New York, "There's M excuse for duplicate and triplica).e calls lo the same househcld Just because a nrm i.~ too CareJPSS to screen its lists properly,'' ht said. "It's worse to call people In Los Angeles al-\ o'clock in the morning b eca us e the telephone solicitor in New Yor k has forgotten or doesn 't know about the time dif- ferential." THOSt; ARE only a couple of many abuses developing Dtqr _5,·,.1 , > s i n cc telephone rnarkc!ing became a nat1nnat busu1e.ss following the introduction of \Vats line telephone service. For years telephone marketing was a I o c a I bu.siness, easy tn control. This year there probably "'i ll be a Jot cf poliUcat cam- paigning by te lephone as "'ell as merchandise selling as the presidential races shape up. If telephone sollcitors are To d<t 1 hot£« T!J co// fT'ly {flori Fr of"!(J f"ye Pho"e cVnd i <(,'d.n•T httv< -.cn7 /1P"'/' I ".JOT I A ~ •f•e•Tor ttnd c.lc(. 1 h~de '"'1 "'Y Pine In b~ r T ,. "Ph•n e vo(AI.( ,.,. r VV'1Yr K, T!. .. Swl).S no(.f r«t., ioy rn•f? qnc.l µ,,v s ~1 s T1.,·s 1v~s w r o n~ To It e I01d ~ ~· J: q'l vel"r/ ~or r !• Me a r 11 Tne /J ,i"l e 1 o w~ you · - t1 1'xe •C/rfenr~,.. 7~1i 'r"~ll'-, YT. Dime's Worth , Ub!llhM Ort"" Cotti Cllllr "!of· lo •l!""t llfllOll'IY II dt!.C•llllll In lllt bid• lo purch~ll OM n) O' mtt•~ It Gl'!G. A. P1l~llth1r, "21 Clll•I• 'u. ''· 1tn 1u.i.ri MllllOI" •flfl locttlld 111 fl'>f ....... 1 I•••"" N111n1•• Jd'ooat 1111111 •flfl OM (1) or Ntwoarl lltCll, nu.o. L'ST FALL NAM direct.ors "H onesty is the best policy," says Mike Carpenter "'• w11t 11dt ol Htrlltlr ll lvo .• lltlw11n 11 1 b llld 111 T~lt busln111 !1 beln• conOut!M by 1n "" f M · II Oh' bo Gl•1tr 1t.¥1nu• •1111 Nu""'' •11c1.,C01t• [;°~~11.,:~·~~n~;·1:'i:C:m .. u:!~~ n.'1;';7. 1nc11v111u1t "temporarily rescinded its of-o ar1e a. 10. A ve is copy of letter lad sent LEGAL NOTlCE .. , .. ,. Me .. , C•11'""''· ''°"" ci 10 t 1·c•. •• "'• AOMlnl••••Hon 0111c1 of ,.111 011. G111. A. P111ncfl8• ficia l position oppo~ina wage. to Ken Sprengel. Ohio Bel l Teleph one manager, ~!•'" ''"::"' Nt. 111·11·1~. flf trlct. 7t1J w1r.,.r Avi .. Hunlintt"" l1•ch, 11111 1l1!tm'-"I tiled with '"' CllUntv " aft · · d I · lh h S J lik I Glll4lln;, Ji11r, ... ~:r"'o,1::• c..°::·~. '· c1111°"n11, 1110. ,, w111c11 um• ... 1t1 11ip1 c1erk at 0•1n" c""~'" nn: A11rfl "· nn. price controls." ~nd in m id-er inc1 en Wt pay p one. prenge ed etter, NDTICa 0' Dl,AULT .I.ND ILf(TION TO SILL UNDllll DllD O' TlllUIT c,111 .. 1~ """1u 1on 10 ,,·,_ :,_::.; wn• .,. _,,.., •"" ••Id 111 ecclf'Nnc• ~r,,:n••IY '· M•!IODJI, DtMv countv April it told Congress th;it the and printed it in com pany p ublicat ion. He a lso 11111t.tr111H1 1" '"• ..iw1~1ot''"'" ~~ ,:i:~k~1~~~ -"' n1e 1" TM"'· · ,,,,.. program was ~ccessful and treated lad to banana split. T. I~ fl•l1 llll 'ulltl"fen. Cnt1 M •Ill .. '"°'" lluo•s MUii bt .,;Uvrr"CI In uw Oltlrlcl Publi v.ed D<Aftll CM~I Dilly Piiot, --------------''---------------111 l'flll .... I~• '°"' or "NOTICE". Ill• lllJ ,. "'· fl(I! lllt r 11\tn IO d•YI IOI' 1' Pllllnflf -'•rll 11, •flfl M1y J. n . , •• 1911 10f).7J \l'Orthy of its approval. . I 1 .. 1 It/ ..... lcl\ Wll llltd ,..,. rl((lrd °" '· z-..... u .. ,..,.., 11.n-w, "' 110 I n II l----,c=-,----------1 0 . . I 'd NAM 1l 11 _'llt tn '"' oltlct et '"' r1te•d•r 11 !of Dion I!. M•,di. 1110 w. Llnc:a1n, ~•t•IPI OI !~~~.:: 0,0.,.P•si•nH• • 1' LEGAL NOTICE n pr1nc1p e, sa1 · 0 :. COUii!¥, C1lllor "l1, 11 llnl IO YOU Ant!ttlm, C•lll,, tar llffml11IOft !e •IOtlln Blas MUil Ill returned 1n OvpllUhl °"'1----,,·==~--~------1 C:tnnot defend SUCh controls . '" 1 di•• •n ~,1m!n1t1on of '"' 11111 10 ' "'' b•• loc:•1td •1 771·1H w. 1••~ our llld 1arm •s 11r111ntl!I ·"ICTITIOUs IUSINlll Bu t prm' c1·p1e, 1·1 appears. ;, u trv1I (M'!llllrly 11>ew1 Yflll "''" Mv1 llrttl t llawln1 !flt rld11tlltln el Sl lln•lltt 1~, 911,11 el 1ru itl!f'; •u••¥11 lh t ~ • lnttr111 Jft '"' ••1111~··· •1111 P•• .... ~1111 1Pl(11 in lltu el w~sn1ut1"' rr1111 to r•l1<I •nv '"' '" blos •nd HI --~-HI.NII tTATIMENT something tn be rescinded, c 1 '" 1t1.>IY•I-otl•sltt 11•r1llM 11 bt IGCl!t<! wtl¥• t nv lrrt1ulirlly lflertlri, ' 11~.,. folloWln111 Pl"'lO'I Is lkllnt llu1ln1u I INSU"AMCf I NO TllUIT •D1•G1lm1i.lv 1Jll II. "II'"' •flfl •llulll111 Otlld M•Y •. 1tn MES• PET ~HO•. '~I Old Nl-1 suspended or broken for . C<JM,ANV, •• l•1111 .. l lrntr w. Hllnlt t, '•l•t• .t.vinw."" ,,_,,., llK•I" .. ""' 0 c I! • N ... 11! w • c H 0 0 L l lY'd .• :N~I ll•tll, C•l•I, greater good . T •ttt S•I• Oltlcl r "'' of ltlt •nd lt25 Wtlltt t .... •Mr II OtSTlll tCT ~I"· L L•"1<1'>f, 2U(t en. l lrcfl. OTICI! u Hlll:f l Y GIVEN: 1HAT 1f7J·l• "l(ll'.111, (0111 M1s1. CtUI,, .... ' I•: M•. Gtorff G. L011n S•ft!• .t.nt. Cttll. "We are looking forward to Tl LI INS UllANCf •1111 T .. UST COM· Cl 1""1· (\ff~ et '"' IMrd •I 1rusltts T~l~ bv•l'llH 11 ,,...Int COflC:U,1tlld llY '" the time w hen controls can be ' Y. 1 COl'llM•llon 1.1 !lulv 1ull1tnuttd 1· 1-••c"11111 •ffmll Ht. !l•lll-41, •ublhllttl D''""' caa11 Dilly '!lot, htcllvidu11. T 1"9 .111111•• • o..o 111 T•11-•r 011.0 1.1r11 111r Joi!" K, K•llv, "'• CIYI"" Otlvt. M• J n 19,1 11ff.n M. L. L•'•(ht eliminated and A mer i c a n '· ,,.. •••c111.o II• E1tw1N ,. '0"' Mesi, ''111·• ~· "'M11111111 1• •fl., --'-·--·-----------1 n.1, 11•1.r"tn1 111"' wit~ ... , c-··-bus'1ne.•.• can revert lo our "" VSHUND, Jlt , •nd (All OL 1t..' CrOtth 11 IHI !"!G 11'11<oaulrltl10 ft. ,,.,1· ,. '" -., ,,,, US!>llJNO, huslll"ll •lld wui. •• v1rd 1t•ll~<t fer lddlllen 111 t11~1M" rOGl'll. LEGAL NOTICE Cl••k of Oren1e Countv on · •11r11 lS. 1t11. traditional reliance on free T 1ror. to ll<\I•• ctrtllft Dlllletlltlnt lft IMdrOGl'll •lld 11e11. Dft 1rep1t"fv IOt•lf'll 11 •~ llfv1rlt' J. M1ooc •. Oetlul'( C1111n1¥ '•or of 0111,HA WOOCl.-..AN , I wlftow •• , :-;'.f·,~= O•lv1. CM!t M•••· C•llf .. 111 .,~·.',','•'• 'c•ou'•'r'•.•'D•,• I Cttrll, ''1lJI maTrhkets." ii 1.old Cohngress.h NEW ROCHELLE. N. Y, Frank Stainton. a Shell 1ci....,., rttt1rded ''""'· •• 111. 1 z 1 ·-• "'', ••-·· .-' H •ut11llfl.O Dr1n11 Co1,1 0111~ Piiot. e· question I al I e (UPI A 1· · f 1 fl(I 100 1n '* ..xi o.,. .,, · -• .. tw 1. ··-sT•T• o' c1.i..1,o•N11. 'o• ,. ho I -coa 1hon o Italian· spokesman. said ihe firm ott1c1.1 il-111 1n '"• ottict of h 1t1t 11 "" J. W•rd. 1* w"''11" 0 •1"'· TH• couNTv 0' 0111.11111 "1'11 ' •"II May J, ''· "· 1tn iott-n market plact laces is w Amerk:an organizations havt received three ether similar erMr flf Or•MO• Ceuntv. c1!11t1tttl1. Ntwlltfl '411dl. Cent· l11t P1rm1111"" HI N1. A·nttt LEGAL temporary is th i s "ex-uGfl'ol -111111 lo• '"' n•lnc:1a11 ......, 111.., • m!nlmuM ''""'~••II 1M:tMct of 10 f.11111 e1 Alll THU• o. MILL, Die•••-.!. NOTICE given the Shell Oil Company 10 complaint.! from · It a Ii a n si,ooo.Oll •tld ,.,1111,111_ '"•1 ,,.. '"1"" ••di 1111 1 .. 1r1C• 1111 •• "' 1to1 NOTlct: 1s Hl!•t:11v G1vEt.' 10 th•l---cc°"'-o-===--~---1 pedient?" d fo · J d 1 t 1 . k t1t111 1"1-11 ulld•• ..,eh Dltd 0, •l1n mlldt • •••I•' 11111 1nllc111111, 111 crtdf•0t1 of l!'lt •bow naMld 01<tiCl•n1 'ICT1T1ous 1us11111ss A d · d . b h ' l th ays lllC U e a 1 an· groups in !he New Yor area. T •tl •lld 1,.. ,.,~llt•tlons vtu•ot1 t1t•r•bv nreperlY 1111:11111 •• now. wi1..,, •••Hf, ttt11 111 """" 111vln1 c11+m1 •••ln1111tt HAM• STliTIMINT n JU ging Y jS nry. e American s in its "Great The om ission he said , 1''as I • ,....,,lly ~1111 bv !lit U'ldl'1ltlltd1 Cotll Mn1. C•lll,, 1 ....... lllJ 1-. 11ld dKtd•l'I ••• •t<lulrt<t •• Ill• lfl..... T"' lollttwlttg P••1cn1 ••t dnl"• ans"·er suggested Is !hat there A . .. r " . h ' "' • llr••Cll "'· 4rld d•l•u+t 1n, 1111 7. z-••nell.,. '""'" N1. 11.n-o, wn11 tl'>f ""'"''' vouc11er1. In t111 eH1ce !M,o1ln111 11: meru&ans game or ace an slr1ctly an oversig t. ' 111111111 ,... ....,1tt1 tucll DMtl 91 ,,1111 ,.,.. .11111111•11 ou CamHnv. ~.,. w. oc1111. 111 "''cl••-,, 1t1• 111ov1 1n1i11td court, a• NE WP01t1 OCE•NOG1tA1tH 1c 1N. is an element of permanency economic boycott. Stai'n•·n .•·i·d that before lt'MCi..tlv llfl ocwr•td In 11111 llflt'l'l'ltflt L-l•Kll, C1t1lor~l1. tor Ptr..,lulllfl te to 11••...,• 1....,., with '~' nktlll•• IT11lJTE , .01 lrvlftt Av1 .. NtWPOl"f in lt.mporary. iu ,,... h 11111 bltfl m.-11 ••. r....oO•I '""""' ..,,,le• 11111ort. 1,. I CJ ¥1111dltr1. ,. "'-llllftor1l1nt0 11 "'' Offlct 8t8Ch. C1HI. ttuo. h The g roups. meeting here. Shell introduoof the game it TM 1,.,.1111m1m of ll•lttCIHI •l'ld lfl. IOM, Ofl p•eNl"fY ltctltll • 2ttO H ..... -1 • l'>fr "'"'"''· 'IUI A ..... nnt. ~,. E••I llAYMONO J, D!IN, '1Xt w~u. Lending credence to t is aid th h k th t Ml wlllfl\ lltclmt dul .\f!•ll I 1f'1 l twl,, (0111 M•tt. Ct tlf 11111 ltr .. t, Co1l1 Miii, C1Ufer11l1 11t11, l~l!I, CorcM'lt 011 MAr, C4 '261.S. bel'ef j' !he persistence f iJ1 S roug 8 sp4l esman a obtained apprcval from the , flt 111,., at •m.1• .,.,,1010"• 111;1nc:H 1. i-••t:..,,..,. ,.,..,u lrtl. Z•·"•· w111<11 11 "'• •l•c• of bv11"11• o1 "'' F•1n11 V1Ju1<1. n' PoPOv. Coron1 011 1 0 • the boycott could involve the Fed l T d Co · · y 111 ... llflt .... In NYMf"t DI llllllMllltfll lor S11PW11rcl 011 Co ... ., W, Oct1n, L-un01r111ntd lri 111 m1ttt•l HMll~l"t l1l M1•. C1. IHl), flation despite the severe tu f <••II ed·t era ra e mmJSSIOO .. ~ .. 11,1 11111 911<11, C1111 .• 1111 p1rmls1lnn '' 11t..., "'' 111111 of 11111 01<..,1n1, w1111111 1our ,,.11 bu1lftt11 h M•ft• conduc1111 bv 1 h l h bee mass re rn 0 .:x~ er t "Und th · a lations Wf "' t • '"""' 1.,t,tof. 1111 .,...,.,.,11".o. wrvlc• 1111111n 11111 11•l•M 11111d•rd tor """'"'fl• •ll•r 1111 11,,1 p111111ctll11n of 11111 P1rtn1rll'l<tt. measures t a a ve n c&rds. a refusal to b uy Shell er e1r re"'u 1 tit lltfltff(l•r' uftdtr u1cfl oeec1 or c11r11tr11ctln11 at ''""''~ '''"· 1ota1..i tt 11011c1. lt•vmond J. 01•n taken. 1. nd h . f cannot chan~e the game or t . "•t Mtc:ulld 81111 11111.,,,ld ie 111, 11t0 M•rllor 11v11 .• Co111 M1,1. c1111orn11. 011tc1 M•v i. 1•n T11l1 1t1t1m1nt 1111d w1"' lh• '"""'Y "'ood pri'ces ha''' fallen. but gaso 1ne a t e urging o \vithdraw it until ever"'. grune d 111M1ntl'd ''"'"'· , w•IH•n '" • c1 10.... ANN M, "'Ill c1,r11 ot <>•1n•• C1111n1Y °"' .1.1r11 J~. 1tn. r union members not to deliver •· ,11111r1 at O•l•ull ,,,,. Dtm•"' '°' 'or 1ur11t•r l"-llfl'l"lt tla.. on 11" t bo¥• •11· J.OM l11luru r1. a! th• E11110 llv ,,.,.,1., J. M1ddnx 0.fttltv Cfll/fttv lhere 8 re alieady hint.ii that lo Shell slati·ons. piece is d istr ibuted. Jn other s 1111 fl•• ,,._lftd wll!t 11111 dutv 11, tllc1tl01"1. ttl•Ol'IOM f).l,JJ~J n• c•ll 11 ltlt of 1111 1bovt ,.,..,.,., OKtdt~I Clerk. d I ked · Trt,1•"9; t11th OtlHI"' T•uar •M e11;c• et"" ,1 ..... 11., o .. ,,,,,_,, •eom 'AUL A. HAJolNA. '11uJ they may push higher 11~aln . "We are serious about this \\'Or s we're oc in, com- • 1 llOCUll'lt"-"' •Yldt<>l'ltt0 abl lt1•H""' 100, 11 F11r o.1v1, Coit• M111. c1111er,.,11 . .,, 1111 11111 1•r11t, 'ut.ti1Md O•~no1 cu11 Dtlly Pllnt. And the wholesale price in-milted to th.is promotion." F lfl.,rtllv. 11111 "'' dtCltrlcf •flfl COSTA MESA 'LANHtNG C•tll Mt1•, C1Nllrtd• "'" 1.,,.11 ,.. •nd Mt 'I' J. u, ''· ••n 10l1·n thing and are definitely going 1 .. ,,,by 11K11.-11 1 "'"'' ••tvr..i COMM1ss10N Tll: 1110 ..... , .. , --dex. later tn be reflected in 1 •• ·d D A tho Al The game. he said, ·"·as ,, '.,., ...... l.,•lv "U• l ftd ~•-•bl• lfttl (H4lllLES 1£(1(. (>l Al•MAH .ltttrnff ,.,. Af"'l~lllr•trh LEGAL, ffOTJCE 0 move. sa1 . n ny . 11 ttctMI •nd "dOI'• llt••ll~ ,11'(1 ,0 w11111M L 01.11n. 5t<•llt•• Pu1111,,,.., o .... ,. c1111 o11w ,.11e1.1 _______ ~ consumer prices, continues to ti.sani, chairman of the United hcing held in only. two states. t "'' '""''t 11•a~rty 10 bt 111td ro '"' 01••c1or nt '11n"'"' ""'' 1• 11• 1t~1•· 1'12 11ri.n tT•T•M1HT o' .1.e&NDONM~,-,c,-0-,·t .Rsei!nd. Soriel" of Italian-Americans. New York and Connecticut,· to "'' o~l111tl(ltl1 11Curtd llltrfll~ ltubll•~ld Orin" Cot s! Dt lly '°l!nl, Ull 0' l'!CflflOUS IUSINE11 NAMI J te t 'I br pt i~ M•v 1, nn · Mi v 17• "'1 "''·1' LEGAL NCTICE lh• 1o11nw1,.1 ttr•nn ~·• ~b•ll<klneo ,,.. "We have ·dec\ded to notify s I s pll IC acce ance. 1 ~11111 woa11n1in u11 of "'• 11u111e11, bu1!1\fu n•m• O!. INFt.ATION. OR lhe threat Shell and give them a final n~ lf Shell decides to use the P~ltllld 0•1"11 (D.t,t Diiiy "Ill!, LEGAL NOTJCE NDTICS TO CllllDITD .. t lt'lh•UtPr Mtrlt11 81 1Sll Newlll!r1 J 't J t' II [ I I Y Mto1 1. 1'· 11· Jt. 11n 11"·" su•1•10111 cou111T oF THI 1001•v1r11. cost• M•11. c1111°""1" ,..,,,1 ° 1 • au om;i ic~ Y rans 11 es porlunity to correct Ute ln· game nationally, "we can take ~ , .. ., IT.&TI o, C.&Ll,OlllNJA 'oft ,,,. tltt lllaus 111111,,._1 n1mt •ll••~l!I •a into a serious potitical factor, ...,uilv. in their •Great steps to revise it and introduce LEGAL NOTfC!: llDTIC• D' 01,AULT .I.ND lllCTION TNI CDUfltTY O' OlllANll 1llov• wl• n1111"" Jun1 JO, 1•11 111 tlll JI be' J Ii yeB -, TO 111.L uH01• 0110 011 T•u•t '"· 1.-mu CaunTY a1 0•1n••· ing an e ec on r -Americans' game." he added. Italian-Americans," he said, ... ,.._, TS.,.."'" ~1t1tt at t>OJolALO E. W11ll!ll:MAN 0tttn111111H s.1,1 cer1 . • caur°"n11 and an election yeer in which, r-------~--------------------i i l(I 0, 01,.1.ULT •NCI ILICTION Tl'>f llllltlwlM' COfl.; ttf "No1ic1'" lttl Ott111td. corPOr••lott. UOO •11t,l"IM8 ""'""'·Loi II ho A · re SILL UNDllll DllO O' TlllUIT orlt lflt l •' W!llcPI Wll lllfd '°' •Ktrd"" NOTl(f II >lEltEllY GIVEN te '"' .&ftl@l11. c111111rr1!1 'OOJ7 po s ~ w, mer1cans A T.s. "'•· 97." AJIP'lt 2.s. u111n 1111 olflc• nr "'' •1tord•, crtdllOl'1 o1 lht 111ov1 t11m111 d1<td1n1 TJ111 11\nlMU ••1 can11uc1M by 1 eor· prepared to vote on pocket I IOllll<ltlr!ll COl'i (II ·t.iOTICI '', "'-II O••nlt Ctunh, C1llf<M'nlt. I• Miit It 11111 111 llO•MWll lltYlnt clal"'l •••l~•I lllt _.,11,.. book • 1111 111 Wiiie~ wa1 lhfd ltN' •t<trll °" yeu IMlll'\UCll 1• 111 111lf'llna11"' el 1111 ti· 11ld dtct01n1 ••• r..wi.1tt 111 1111 thin!, 0111n111u11r ~•It• c....... issues. 1. u11 '" "'' eltlc• e1 ..,. ,_.... 111 1e u tct t•uat 1•oe,11y ,,,_, voo m•¥ w11ll "'• llK•••~'' wMl(fl,,., 111 '"" oNk:• ''"' c. °'''""•u1••. In fact. at least one majnr ~.~ .. C9'1111Y, (ll!'<lfnlt Ii ""' Ill "'''' In llllffttl Ill 11\f lr11llM'I 11 ... (II 1111 Cllrtt: el' t"-l bow 1nt11ttd COUr1 OI' P•t1IOtnt . y "1111'1\ICI\ IS l ft ·~•MllO.tllon .,""' "' -Nlllntl TITLE IN SUll'AHCI AMD " "'""". 111 ..... wlllt I'll """''"' T!tl1 •l•t-tnl w11 1111'(1 '*''"' ttor Caun. poll w:itched by the White I tllll trull ••OOfrlY ll'ltlw• ........... ., T•UST COM,ANY, II tru1IH l:LMEll ~to Ill• Ufldtr1lt nt(I ,, 1111 llllkt ty Clt•k of °''"" Cauntv DI! Mt¥ 10. House indicale9 that millions "' 1n l"ter11t I" 1f1t 1,vtlH'• tlltt W Hl!INtllll. Tr111I•• $111 Otllc:tf. II fltr AltorllflY. 'tut Mt~ .... •lt f •1I 111'. ' I IHlftll. l11LE IN!lJR•Hcr J.NCI NOTICE IS ltflflY GIVEN; THAT Ulll Slrffl. COiii M•11. C•llfefni1 "'"'· IAllD, HOLLS Y, IALIN 'WllllAll:D, of Americans are prepllted to ST COMP'l.NV 11 1rut1H I LMft 'tlll! INSU .. ANCI! AND l lllJtT COM· ....,le!\ 11 lht 111•<• ol bUllr111s of 11\t Atty1. I f th nd th ty r•HtE• 1ru1i., 111. nlflc;r f'AN V. • --•tlllfl lt """' wb1tttu1t11 11f'Mll,.1111..i 111 111 ""'"''' 11el"f11"1"' tt •n "'"' Sl'l:IA ""''· 111111 ,... Vo e or e man a e par Italians Giving Heck to Shell No Pi~kle East Meets West carelesa in appeallna tp voters they not only will cost tM!t candidate! votes, they also may get him In troubla with the FCC. Roman said 11\Mt irrillUng practices sf.em from ignorance and poorly lralned callers and supervisors in t e I e p ho n·t soliclling companiei1. Jie said the indu!ltry must police itself because official r('i::1\la1ion l'Ou ld be severe enough to kill telephcn e 50Jlciting as an effective marketing medium. AS IT IS, t('lephone wliciting is a highly desirahle medium. Its cosls tend lo gG do"'" at a time when the cost! of flfher selling methods are r ising. The duplicitte call really n1akes enemies, Roman sa id. A woman who is interrupted by such a call while changing the baby's diaper or baking a !'j(IUffle is going to be quite an- noyed. "And remember,'' he l'aldi "one person you offend carriea more weight than 10 su~ ce.ssful phone oalls. The ir- ritated housewife sjts in the beauty parlor and sets YOU! ad in a magaz ine. Instantly, she start11 tearing you and your product apart to the lady sining next to her." Another practice that result! in complaints lo the FCC i! telephone soJicjtalio.: on Sun· da ys. "In many parts of the coun· try. it just can't be done," Roman said. BUT THE MOST pervasive sin is garrulowiness, wastiJll the prospect's and th t solicitor's Lime. "Pecple resent being kept on the phone after they NY 'no' politely," he added. The ""'ay to prevent gtl[- rulousness hy soliciklrs is to exercise light control over the sales pitches and make sure they·are-tollowtd lo the~tetter. "Oon·t Jet sales people im- provise much. It weakens the safes pitch, in addition to COfl.o suming time. 1'.fo reover, lt can lead to untruthfulneS&." Roman s;iid sales appeal! should be strictly truthful at all times. "It's absurd lo make claiml ln a telephone solicitation that you wouldn't put in mMll ad\·ertising or a foUow up let- ter." West Bay Finance Tells Loss \Vest Bay F In a n c i a I Corporation, Orange County apa.rtment h u i 1 de r and operator, has reported a Jou of $320,686 or $.09 per shal'.e for the six months ending December :ll. 1971. This com· pares "'ith a profit of '321,000 or $.09 per share for the eor· responding period e n d i n I Decem ber 31, 1970. The company currently manages over 2,000 apartment units in Southern and Nonht:ry1 California and has an 14· d itional 900 units under con· struction. Thomas M. Yedor bU resigned as president aod board chairman of West Bay Financial Corporation suc-- c:eeded by Edward R, Borcherdl, a former director. Humble: Name Set As 'Exxon' Tiet 1s' H!ll:tlv Gl\ll!N : THAT t1u1t1• uftd~• • Ottd of T1u11 d•ltc1 Ju11t ,,.. '""' 111 ,,1d 11ec:t11~"'· wllflln fllllf LM ""'"1"' c11lftr1111 Ntu who sewi1 up the rip In their T I! IN5U••t.rCE •flll r•usf COM· u, , .. ,. 1•11<vltd llv MANUEL s. mD11t111 ''"' !flt first ll\lt111c1tlfln o1 lf'llt JIJ•OC pocketbook. HOUSTON fUPll ~, , Y,, e<1•-•tl11r1 1o dulY sullttltu1..i SALC•DO Jiii . AHO NADINE IALG-'OO . ...,uc~. , ~1111tm MOUNT CLEMENS, Mich. (AP) -Three Arab pickle '"" T .._ u...., • 0•1t11 a! Tru11 o11tt1 ,,.,u ~u111>1fld •1'111 •Ill. 11 tru1•0•1, 10 1Kur• D11111 M•Y J, nn. "vb11•11td O••nn Ce.tst 1><111y 'liot. The poll suggests. In fact. d k h k h Humble Oll and Refining eo; , '· 1.... ••«u•.o tw r•w•N ,, c,ri.tn ,.,u.~u""'' 1" 1tYll!' 1t1 LINOA 1L1i.1.11TH M . ..-1111sK M•• 11. n . 11. ''"' Ju11t '· 1•n i10.n th•I tradi'li'on, p 0 1111. c •I an pepper pac er!I a\'e gone os er. ···Ill change 1•1, name and the' SHUNO J•. ,,,., C••OL -.· orvELO,MtN1 co .• • 1>1r11>1rlfll~ '' l!~ICU!t'I• e1"" wrn a1 '"' . lt 1111 star.led when the Sa.fie. Brothers Farm Pickle .. SMVNO. 1>u1~11C1 •flfl ,.,,,, •• 11ttt•11d •••· ...cortttd Ju•v u , i.u. •1 1n· 11111,,. ,..,.,!Id ll1<tC1tn1 LEGAL NOTICE 1'11e•ia.nce and other ()Id alll· Co. near M-·nt Clemens d-lded to tum out a line ol name of lls gasoline to "Ex• i !Of .. 111 M(1Jr• c•••t •tt o1tll11tt""s 111 ttrum1111 .... IS.SS, •II INtDI< 6'l.!, tiff •7, ••Ul A, MANNA uu .:.. "'Oft"""" WOOC1111,t.N , w16(1w •• o1 0ttrc111 ._.., 1" ""' or1ic. 111 Ill• •1• 1111 '"" sr,..1, '•CTITlOus i us1,,.115 Ances may be submerged by koshe.r pickles and peppers named "Kind Da\•id." . xon" effecli\'e·Jan:. I ~ · Id•"· '«Of'Ofll •••h 11 ni•. ,; 1..,. ,.1<••11 ... "' 0•"*' c-1v. C•11"""1'· c111• Mtw, ci11ttr111• t»i7 NAMt ITATl!MINT the O\'e r\\'helmlng necessity of G Ch 1 d Lou The brand name En 9 .. ,:'l,:'°'111!c~.1 ... 1"~' •::ci:': ·~; '''t!~~ ~:::·~~.·~ '' -m•• !~~·1..!"'i':'~1rh Tl'>f lol111w1ne ",._ r, OoJ"' bls11 ... n doin" something about those: The three brothers -ecrge, ares an IS chosen to r~place three ~"a;:. o1 or.,.., Ctll!"''· c11111111111, '"'''°°' •1ttN1t11 Hi 1oa11. 111. ''"' u . •u1>1li11tt1 °''"" C!'•st 01 11~ ,.1101. •1. "' needed a rabbi to m11ke it kosher . • 1 H bl od ,,. _ ,..., fer mt IH'l"'t'lt•I •lllTI ll ,,.. :w fl/I MIK•ll•ntou• M••1. 111 fN M•v s, 11, t•. ,1, ltn 1112.71 c•i.A OE Mf'.NANA. 10101 s. w. rising priceJJ, Rabbi Jack Goldn1an of nel!rby Oak Park s~id he in U!I~ o um e pr ucts - fACIO,OO ,.w C1t111111!fl<I\ "''' "'• nffl<• '' ""' RIOC'.MO•• 0' 11111 c"""1'• 111r'11• 51ft11 4"'· C•. ''101· And that could mean thRl Esso. EOCCI end Humble, ~Id•• 1"'-""1 unc1 .. ,1>(11 °""' o1 •all Mllt1llOt1• IM.1u111.,. -"'"' '°' , llV'IAL NOTT"-1vtr111 WGfld1on, ~1°' 5. w. 1r,c~ would be hl~PY· to oblige, and lhi!I week the three Arab Tiiit •nd"" o&1lt•t11111t 1f<tll•t11 ""''"' "'' ''""'1'11 """' llf st.tio.oo ~ 1,..t:. s1.. 51111• ""'· "'°'· · the '1tr0dilion'' or the free brother!' Md the rabbi celebrated the birthd•Y of the new Exxon. a word comPany o(· .... ...-11y ..... llv "'' uNl•r11 ..... , 1t111 1111 """"licltt lfllfflll vMtr •udl Tl\!1 -.~1 ... 11 II btl"I Cor>dUCl-.1 by 11'1 k I hi h Ind flchlis said WR! u nu • u •I fPttt • Wtfffl fll, 11>11 ~'"" .... fN Otld flP Tr\!tl ..... ""'CIAlltlllMI tte\JfH NOTICf TO CllDITOll l....,l~ldull, mar ct pace. w e us try pickle. eAJ....., ,.,. '*"'Cl\ .....,, °""' ., T""' ""'"" ••• tr1str111., 11111 .., tt11 """ 1u,1111t0e r.ou•T o' ™' ''"'11 Wt.c.1111r1 insists was suspended only ch bo l p · p d' I " because of its double x. waj 11 ~"' ,.., ~ '" ltltt 111_, ""''..,..: 11111 • lll'udl llf. ·~ •w" sT•TI °" CAL1,0111N1• ,. 1~1, '"'-' 111t11 ,.,,,, ""' '""'"'" "We've heard so mu A u 1ng-ong 1p omacy. • ked . 11 ••• ""' ,., ...,, _,. e1 · 111, ,,.. obllt1t1o11t w w1Mc11 14Kll °'" 11 '"' cou•TY °" Ol&N•• Cl••• llf °"'"" c-"' Of'\ o.c. u , 011. becallse of an emtr~ency that Rabbi Goldman sa.id. ""'e thought we'd try a UtUe pickle pie part1a Y 1.11:\:ause it n. 1111Mt1t111111• ,; _.1"'t'..,.t .,.. ifl. ,,.." 11 •t<vr1"" "'' '""',.. "' ,.,., '"' A·tttn '' 1.r111ur '· 11:r1'" o..wt¥ C•urlfY would ""S!I. m/11ht be 1 loog • could be used In Humblt ._,, Miia! Mll'l'lt M ~'"' 1 1, 1 ••Ymtrt1 fl1t"".,..... midi DI~ 1:1111• t1 MIN.t. s. l'OOLE ~ ci.rtt:. r-" d iplomacy. ' l • 1 .,,.; 1fi tUea1 Ulfll wi.o1m111;, 7 0; T~• '"""''""""'"' .-111t1 .. 1 w ,,.. NOT ICI it Mf,.EtY 01wN "'111, . 'un••l _~l~im~e~r~e~a~ss!e~r~t~in~g!...'_11.le~~lf::_. ___ .!.,:=========================~_::•~n~e~r!p~n~s~es~~n~l~•~m~a~tlo~n~~~l~ly~._j .,..~I ..... ltlfl'NJI/ "'-tum"' Ill M '"'" wft!dl llliC.fml '1.11 ~ '· (!tdllflfl "' ,.,,. IPloO'll ,.,.,..,tel llKlll•"' ~, .. Vied Or1ne. CM!I D••'v ll!IOld ,_,, ... , 11,,.nc:lld .., bltll!ltiirv '" 1n1, ·~ 111 "'*'""•n1 1"11111mt111t • ""'' •II w-1 111,1n.1 ctt1m1 .,.11111 ""IM-'-'-'-'·-'c'c· :Mo.c'c"':-Jc'"c'o=''c':m:O--'cUJ.:::..n:I.-------------------------::::----------------------------------+ "9'IW!t et '1ft !lltU!'t~ n., fll 1:1rliotlt1I •1111 l11ltf"l1l1 Tiit tllll'I fl tlld tec:ldl!lt ~ •"1!1"11 fo tU1 tfltll'I W... fll:NllDflt't ..,;.!Kld_..11• ~~c.t.,,~~·=ttll !:Y:f~ wl•lfl 11'11........, VM.lltrJ, In IN .. llc:t LEGAL NOTICE • / -£ ~OCM te lJ03FU ~,., lfl llYYM!tl If .. 11 ...... ttll fuf tf1 I ... iOI' tMVm ... tM•• ,.... tltrli ti lflf t bllYt f'fl'll!llf (M'f, "l•--77.0,,,-,.,.,---------1 ,J s reo ffl rMI .. l:ttt "'"'· 11111 n ... ..,, fflttf>(lf 1t11 llfldlr,lli!IMI te ._, Ill-. wlltl ""' lltCHJll'Y ll!CTITIOUI I USINlll ~ =:ki1~-"":"0.:."':f -;::::: 11::-;z. ~ ... ~=...o:i .. : ~II~ 1T.' 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"n 111'1.n I • • • • • • SC OAJLV FllOT lfJ • • Friday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List • • Prices of Stocks Generall y Higher NEW YORK (AP)-Prices were generally high er in today s stock market but the trading volume '~as only a little above Thursdays slow session Advances held about a 2 to 1 advantage over de clin1ng issues on the Ne" \ ork Stock Ex change Blue chip issues which helped spur the gains softened a little in the late trading hours ies.f.~ I;: !if.~ :1~ l:.:~1:' • tan••f 'Cl "'\!!' .. t•u .,. 1 90 Sttfr "' I lO U1rcllll a u:~· 1~ 1.,.,wn 1 lolttlV Vft 'E'<c• ~ ' ' M " 111111 1 to ~r;;· ,1l! 1uc11W •'; tuW •I 1., IU11JOGf "' 1,1Cr1' tG un Cllm 40 SunO ICo I• SunO l•l 1 Sunbtm IO Suiisr nd lO S1111st or 31't Suni111~ Ml Su•OI 1.0 i:::~e:i ~ Wlllk .0. !"""' .t ·'IO::lll:l .. lllllllllllOllllll!llllllllOIO!!ll"" .. lllOIO"'llllllllllllllOI win Co .!ti ' ybron C 60 s.1.. "'' Onhl Hlllll .... ci. .. Cllf, V(lr~•I 1.•G Svs DI 0on kl• ..,,-------------. 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(, I 'o :'' ,•')-• • 1• lit l l I ' ,, , ,~,-ni. ~ 1µ..l.!: 'Af·~'-----1 7 0 I '4 j l ] t t • : • ''''''n ~~·,~~~· J~. )l't l'O t-ii • .. .. ' " • • • • I ' I o I I I ' 11 -I t '. 1)1. ,, • ' ' ll• • • • • • , • " " • • I, U\-1 U :il 111,-, ,., 16 /o )-1 A ..-~ 1 ' '' 1 " ,1111 u -.. " j1 )Olo ~ -'-U OV. 1~1t 1~ _, "' ,, 10\'a 111 ~ 10•~ ~­'l ,,., •• tro ll ~ Finance \I"' 1!' 1J" I -., ' I• 171,-, It,._ ;, Briefs ) ,, l~ ,:i ,,, ,j l , '° ''-"' ,,, .• 7 '• ~t I • e Sa111rn lAJ•• • , I ., -ot• 41'1 1 1(1\o '10'• Y. • 'f )1 11 'i ) 1~ 1l 1 11 ' . •"'-. .n,,,,., 1l ,, ,,\1 ,. '' n 't"' n • l . . . . ·-' • , 2 ' ~ It ~· ? t 1~ ••• ' ... • 1•f!o U 0 ~1 n,, 1r ~;~ 11 -• •1 fi n 11•~ 1 f'J lfl.t!6 ~. ,,,,,1.1 , 11J'o l ll JO ,,.... 1".; 1• •~ j ~ J",4 t.;_,. l}t-11 •••''• J''ll ~ '"' IO •i. ,I ' u '"~ 11'-1 .... ,, ,,. ~ .. I• It •I\ • ,... 1'-? ..... •, \1"' • •• 1r~ " ~ " I''" , 1 ., II 1 u~ 1'1 II.. ~ n"! .;:;: .{",; .~ ... , '°"' "° " -1 .JI~ U14 11 ~ -.:, 1'rn Ill: !!:"' : 1 11" m:1 • • ' ~. 1J. ,, n "• "11 ,f¢ .~~-': ,, >t.llo I I" 11i'o \"' ' l's "'" q I Jt.i )4~ • t I U S' Jl.. 1-It Amerfee" s .ie s Voh1nee OAKLAND Sa I u r n Alrw;iy1 had a nel Joss of' $160 279 or 1 cents 8 share for the r1r!it thr ee month!_, o[,, 1972 bt>c:Huse of a decrease in m1l 1tary ch~rter sclh lty and • lower yleld on co1nmerc11r pas11enger cha rter opcr111tlon11 ch.111rm11 n Jlowa rd J Korttr 1111c.l f lrsl qu~rt~r salts wer• Hstt'd a~ $7 195 292 co mp•red, with $6 ~I 447 1n tht first ltTr quartl!r Whf'n e11 rnlng1 •ere. $149 854 or 1 cents a lhare : • e Harbor Bid ' i,OS AN<.E Lf,S Loot Be1u~.h antl l.03 An11el"1 harboe off1r 1als want 1350 <Kt> mo,.. than the $500 000 rtctJm mtndod In 1h• U S hlldget lot contlnutd wntk on 1 hydraulic mf)df'J !iludy or the porll L11wrence t. Whiten~, chief eng111ecr for the LQ1 AngtJts port and Bob Hofr1 master aald 1 harbor redevelopment study undtt .. ~•Y sin« IM-4 alrt tdy It lot.tr' '"•rs bthtnd 1nd would drop bthind onothtr yrar U NIO Oltl 11• not added to 1pprofl'UlliooL ZZ DAILV PILOT Birehers: Reagan Bullish From •·ve Sen1ctt • Gov. Ronald R<lljllll ~~ there is no evidence of John Birch Society memben calllf-. ing a !plit within I h e · Republican party in Ca.lifomia. The Governor told a news conference in Sacramento: "ll"s been so long since you've heard the word. I thought they'd gone the way or the buffalo." * * * Johft E. Deeosle. ~·ho plavs e black detective on the "~TcCloud" television strit". has been awarded $750 in damages and an t'(fual amount in attorney fe~s lrom a San Francisco motel where the night clerk alleJt:edly discriminated against him. U. S. District Court Judge Albert C. Wollenberg ruled I PEOPLE that the clerk, John Keant~. denied DeCostr a chance to see a roo m for him11etr. wife. and s1na ll son at the Doyle Motel allhough later Ke;ine showed the room lo a while custom er. * * * f'ormer U2 spy plane pilot Francis Gary Powers was named to an executive post w i t h a Canadian-based gubsidiary of Garrett Corp. or l.As Angeles. Powers became a worldwide figure when his spy plane "'as shot down in the StJviel Union in 1960. This led subsequently to a cance llation or a sc hedul- ed summit rnceting between Presidenl ~isenhower a n d -Ptemier"NikiD-Kh-rushchev. Powers was appoi nted senior project sales administrator for Garrett Manufaclu ring Co. of Rexdale, Ont.. which makes communications equipment and rescue beacons r o r aircraft. * * * Dun Rask. the former secretary ol state. has been elected one of the new at-lar~e trustees or Davidson IN .C.J College. Rusk, a 1931 graduate of the Presbyteria n • related school. leaches at the University of Georgia. * * * The Dade County f Fla .) School Board c ha irm an. WUU1m Lehman, proposed a plan which he said would keep young visitors too busy to demonstrate during the na- tional political conventions in A1iami Beach this summer. "f think if you gave out 10,000 Frisbees to them e\•ery day. that should keep them busy and they'll nc\•er think abou t de m1' n strating," Leh1nan told the (:realC'r Miami coalition during a discussion of ways to prevent trouble during the Democratic f''lnvention in July and 1he ?. -::······:··1 t:····c lave in * * * Actor Richard Burton ended lhree months of film work in Budapest in the title role of Edwa rd Dm y tr yk 's "Bluebeard," the lengendary '''ife-killer in modern 5"ttin11t:. and flew lo Rome to join his wire Elizabeth Taylor. "This \\1as a f ami l y record -to have been ti\\"r!V from carh other for a ruil week. as the earlier lon~est was a bare llvo da \'s." Said the •7·year-<ild Burton. Liz. 40. \\'ho did not play in the film \\'hich is due to be released in August, left for Rome a week ago. "It was triple agony here without Llz," mused Burton. * * * Carole Feraei. "'ho said her singing job offers stopped arter she displayed an anli\\'ar poster in the \\'hilt' Hous<' in ·January. has an en,izagen1ent to pe:rfor111. Connie Str:\•e11s hired flliss • Feraci to rejoin her act for aeasotH>peninJ! performttnccs Ptfay 27·28 at !\'1nAi<' fllount:tln. .an amusement p..1rk ut Valen· cia, a spokesnu111 for flliss Stevens said. The spokesman. Jo" r a n k Liberman, said. "C:lnnie has no political ax to &rillQ. carol• has worked very well In her act ror several ye a rs, partlcularly in Las V•11as." * * * Qaet:• ntuMCll JJ e:.x· p.--d a desire to Se. Mn. ai.1 .. de GnU. during the BrltWt ooverelgn's visit to France nut week, but P.trs. Do Gaulle declined. ,,,,.._ Aki Mrs. De ' Gaulle -prolound ·thaw to the -· bat st.led ahe would preltr not to make an u.,.,UC. lo lief ·ntl< to re- main In loll! ~t since , ....... ., blr ltlaband. ,.. I . ~ ~ • ,.. ... .... .I" ANIMALogi< ., .... Malpra~ti.ee .\T~eti1n ,,·,Dies - • • ~!JAMI (UPI ) -When Elleh .H'plt, died . she wi!11 t millionairess -only she didn't kOO\\' it. fi.1rs. Holl. 46, died \Vetlnf!S· dar or A vi rus and (Jf r11rn· plicalioni> from a pnrulysls. suffered in 1959. which the courts ha\'e ruled was the result ol medical malpractice. "·elfare 'and handouts from relatives. Her husband lert her aod her mother too k care ol her three children. Bui b>· 1967 she \Vas bC'gin· ning to impro\'C and l1·as able t.o talk . paying o(f ·111 $500.000 share. -:ramily until aftel-Atrs. HoU 's lmt Dts. Ltroy-Ti.ICOtt ar>Ci .death. Don L. Andrus appealed , tying Mrs. lloll's v.'ill leaves her up the money. The final possible appeal estate lo her three sons and railed last y,·eek when the names her mother as execli· ,Florida Supreme Court ruled there \vas no cause to re\'iew the case and the money was available for Mrs. Holl. trix. the hospital, but was still fail · ing. \Vednesd.ay morning the in-- valid told her mother she WaJ dying. "'Ellen said, I'm going to die today," lt1rs. ~~rgan, 7~ •. related . ~·I told her ou are ,not -not w1lil your. f . But she said ·I want to die. l \Vant to die.' Mrs. I-loll was p.iralyzed by an improper dosage of drugs and for the next seven years lay like a vegetable, living off A Dade County jury a\1·ard- ed her $1.5 mill ion. believed to be the largest medical malpractice award in the United States. Victoria Hospital began Her attorney, W i 11 i am Colson, said he heard about the ruling Sunday, but had not gotten arowid to notifying the Her mother, Mrs. Robert 1.1organ, said her daughter was undergoing therapy and W¥, improving. a~hough still bedridden, until she had to be hospitalized March 20. She returned home after 16 days in "At quarter 'tit 5, she just closed her eyes and she was gone. So peaceful." .,.GUES S Y,.'f. BEN!IC.J,IOVE. 70 1 /.1£ L.€F'f."' Advtr1lt•d tp•cial1 good 1hru th• Hdppy Doy ol Mc1t1. which l•n "t May 11. 11111 that"s lh• day !ht ad is ,;ood thru . TILE LA PAZ bEE1' ~MO il\ICI< JOHNS MANVILLE SHAG CARPET ·~ TILE ~· 57~Q.FT. Deep luxurious shag. can't beat. and the tiles are ao eaay to lay. Adhesive backed and in colors. PLASTIC DECORATOR PANELS ··~'x4' toucan make up divlder1, or use It in some way to mah a little prl•crcy. Comes in blue or pink. 10 maybe yoP can do something for the klds room. BELLFLOWER STORE CLOSED TEMPORARILY DUE TO FIRE PLANS FOR REBUILDING NOW BEING DRAWN "We Shall Ret11lll" ZIP WAX CIR WASH GUN Funny name, but tho•• guys oh Madison Avenue do the 1trcmge1t things. Your own wash n' wax gun, to do it at one time. 297 TAKE .YOU Pl CK5) I FOL~ES. / CARNIVAL NEXT WEEK! 12x12 CORK TILE 48c , PACK OF 4 Tho thick dark chunky cork that adds ao much ln a ttrlking interior (Hey. lookit me, ma. I'm writing fancy). Degance for the seventies, to suit your moat discriminating tastes. (Whooee, that wore me out.) 19~o. Many patterns, 1tlc:k1 at o touch. (Hey. 1 understand that Tom Brown reads th••• ads and never buy1 anything at Nationcl. (Got with tho progrco>. Tom. We'll be watching you!) 30" PULLMAN TWO-DRAWER You"ve heard me say this before (stop me if you've heard this), but this is a beautiful pullman, the top is perfKt. molded marble. The cabinetry ain't bad either. Faucet ln~luded. 4J77 McCULLOCH Miii MIC 6 CHAIN SIW Lightest deal made , (almost}. power plenty. and ea1y to handle. U you have lo do a lot oJ big 1awing, . you should see it. Mu1t bt · the price l• great or why would we run 1ucb a: crazy thing? 11495 • 6' RUSTIC CEDAR FENCING BIG SHOW IEXT WEEK cmTIFFDY SWlG 18~ I 77~1N.FT. ' AVOCADO, TANGERINE. j COCOA. WHITE. Ir GOLD /i' JNC. POSTS • RAILS Cheapie price. but why? Cedar is good stulfJ. wish more peQple._would buy. cedar because it keeps the moths away and who wants a moth-eaten' fence? ASPHALT' DRIVEWAY SEALER ··~AL. Not a bad copy (not bad. considering Tiffany never made a lamp like this}. The cane effect gi.-es it cla11. Choic!e of colors in the shade. • STEEL PATIO POSTS 3~ Gunlr: it on. l do (ev.ery year). It does Decorative metal columns. as we aay hold the surface tog•ther· and retard down at the ad agtmcy. Choice of .om• ero1ion. And it look• just like new for nice pattern•. All wrought iron type a.while. (What am I going to do? Lit to finish. _ t-~Y_•_•_._s_ay~it_1_c•_•_•_c_1_ue_•_im_•~·'-H_c_h_l·~~~i-:=-=-~~~~~~~~~~~~~-1 ~f•l TERI TOWELS sw ~ii~ SIAIL i. • ' • . ' This has the nylon mesh reinforcing. to make them stronger. you can get a lot of mileage out of the stuff. If someone finds them cheaper in the market call me. my number is 987-98468nS-87·1. Don't cO:ll collect. MIX :~ PELLETS ·2·~~-LB. BOX I know you think they cue fuDDy little things. Make a choice, 1naU1 or your plants, cause they really eat the green stuJf up. ~ ..... ·. ·~ i ''-' ~ . 'l ---------·~ .. ~ 'TR.EC. ~"""" CITJlUS TREES DECORITOB BEADS WITH F8UIT 2 97 5 GAL. SIZE Can you dig this? Some even have the fruit on them. (tfnle11 the stock boys ate it all). Lemons, limes. and otherr. Good to grow your own. all it tukes is care. 144 SMALL PATTERN 25' LARGE PATTERN 20' NEXT WEEK "National Home Products Carnival" * 90 Ala11lactll'er's Bootbs * Prizes. Thousands ol Give-all'ays * Bands. Games, Free Cotton Candy. Popcorn. Slusbies. Pepsi's. j TON OF FUN & EXCITAMUNT Under the Big Top at oar · HUNTINGTON BEACH STORE Ala_r 20 and 21 ' I . '. ~-. J I I de b .P · iu th • to yo :r m " to ch of • -, . ~ -• Lagl1 ·11a Beaeh Today's Flnal N.Y. Stoeks ' VOL 65, NO. 133, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1972 TEN CENTS 2 Laguna Aides Backing High Rise Initiative By BARBARA KREIBJCH OI' a. O.Hy "kl Si.ff· The Laguna Beach City Co\IJlCil ha3 .atrthorized attorney William WilC'Jxen to file an amicus curiae (friend of the court) brief in a case involving an in- itiative petition in the city of Whittler. now pending in the 2nd District Court of Appeal! in Los Angele!. Wilcoxeil and City Attorney Tully Seymour advised the council that any opinion handed down in the 2nd District ' • • t.. . ' . court cou1d have an influence In the Laguna Beach high rise initiative lawsuit now pending in the 4th District appellate court in San Bernardino. Wilcoxen and Seymour, as co-counsels, ate defending the city in a suit filed by realtor Vern Taschner, seeking to overturn the city's building height limit ordinance on grounds the Utitlative was used illegally in awning matter. 'Ibe Whittier case involves an initiative petition whlch proposes to !'Submit to the THREE LONELY PROTESTERS .CHALLENGE U.5:' NAVY At Long Belch, UCI'• K•y•k. Ag•in1t Mine SWMrr U.S. Cites Readiness To Reopen Peace Talks . ' PARIS (AP) -The U.S. delegation to the Vietnamese peace talks said today it is rea'dy·to resume, on certain conditiohs, the meet~ngs it broke off last week, but a senior North Vietnamese negotiator. Le Due Tho, replied: "Whal we want is a resumption of the negotiations without conditions." The reply by Tho, a member of the Hanoi Politburo, followed by barely an hour a statement from the American delegation that it "reafinn.s its readiness to return to the talks on the basis stated during the May ~ meeting." At that time, U.S. Ambassador William Porter. in announcing the indefinite Suspension of American participation in the talks said: "We will resume the plenaries" - reg.liar. meetings as opposed to secret talks -"whenever you indicate that you are seriously inteersted in the negotiation of matters of substance; or when we believe discussions would be useful." Porter also noted at that time that the first order of business in any new discussions must be the halting of the North Vietnamese offensive -he termed it an "invask>n" ~in South Vietnam. A U.S. delegation•source, expanding on today's statement, said it referred to the geoeral conditions Porter expreued May 4, rather than to the specillca of the in- 'aslon. Le Due 1bo's response came al a news conference be bad called before the American statement was relea!ed. electorate an ordinance amending the cl· ty wning laws to provide that "oil well drilling shall not be permitted in any of the residential zones , .. in the city." The \Vhittier city clerk refqsed to accept the initiative petition. on advice or the ci-- ty attorney who said the initiative~ prtr ctdure could not be used in awning m&t· ter. the same argument now being used in the Lagitna Beach litigation. However. on April 28, the {.(is Angeles appellate court issued an alternate writ. • Local ordering the clerk to accept the petition and place the initiative on the ballot at the next regular municipal election. or show cause \\'hy this should not be done. Since the matter is closely rel ater! to the Laguna. case. Seymour and \\'ilcoxen propose filing friend or the court briefs presenting argument s on tht question which have been assembled during the Laguna litigation. . The \\'bittier petitions \\·ere circulated by a group calling its elf PROD lPrevcnt _, Residential Oil Drilling ) which circulated petitions for six months and obta intd in excess of 3.500 signatures. \\'hich \\'Ould be sufricient in number to va lidnte the petitions. Los Angeles attorney John ll amil tOn. representing the petitioners' Said. toda)'. .. I p.m very happy Laguna is co ming into this case as a friend of the court beca use the other sidf' may have some strong sup- port." The Sierra Club. he said, may also file as a frir.nd of the court. An initial atte1npt to force the \~'hittitr <'ily clt>rk to accept lhe initiati\'e petitions \1·11s rt>jrcltld at the Suj><'rior Courl level, 1-hun ilton i'!aid. and th~ 11t1v nction at the npJK'lllHe court le\·el is !wing taken in beho1£ of t.,.,·o individual citizens of \Vhit· tier~ Prior to the 1\ug. 3 init iative election. in "'hich the building heij!ht limit \\"as ap- pro\'ed by a 3 to I \'Otr. Tasc hner and bis (See lNITlATJ\'E, Pwge %) Protest Continues uieter Fashion Today Antimining Acts Differ 011 Campus By CANDACE PEARSON Of ttlt Dally 'rli.t Slaff Antiwar demonstratioits In Orange County continued today at a.quieter ,pace . compared to sharply contrasting protests Tbunday, which Incl!!'!!!! atreet Jires ar· rists and pe'aeeful prt,~. ·'' · #-'!~ ~ .. ' A group of .UC Irvine students Jilel' al 12:30 p.m. '°!Jal' Ip the school ~s to organize people for afternoon picketing at county and city offices. They ptaniied to march on government offices, read prepared statements against the war and rem.ID until city officials agreed to send telegrams to Pre!ident Nixon in protest of the stepup in U.S. in- volvement in Southeast.Asia, Saddleback, Golden West and Orange Coast Community Colleges all reporled no activity p18rined for todaf, Those cam. puses were also quiet Thursday. At Cal State Fullerton, the scene of some violence Thursday, students held a noon rally against tpe war and ten• tatively planned a sit·in on the Riverside Freeway this · afternoon. Thursday, Cal State Fullerton students and street people attempted to·bum doWn a !~story offlce building near the campus and light bonfires oo busy St.ate College Boulevard. Fullerton Police said the demonstrator:s used street repair barricades and tree limbs to begin the fires, which were con. trolled in about 30 minutes. Those street disturbances, police said, were apparently the work of the same ·group which set fire to the Honeywell Inc. Institute of Information Sciences early Thursday morning. Honeywell manufactures one type of missile used in Vietnam. Fire damage was estimated at $50,000. No arrests were yet reported, althoUgh demonstrations at' the Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station and at the Queen Mary Thursday totaled nine arrests. Most of the demonstrators in those ac· tions were from Cal State Long Beach. UCI protesters c o n f I n e d actions (See ANTIWAR, Pap Z) . MARCHJNG .DOWN: T~AFFIC LANES OF UNJVER~ITY DR!VE JM UCI PR~ESTOT ......... Thurtcf1y'1 Antiwar Activity Was For Most Pa_rt ·Pe•ceful on Irvine C1mpu1 N. Viet Port Blockade Reported 'Successful' WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Pentagon ·said today the blockage of North Viet- _nam '.s ports had been, 100 percent ef· fective during its first 2-4 hours. Several ships be.J~ved originally bound for Haiphopg have changed course, of· ficials said. A Defense Department spokesman, Jerry W. Friedbeim, also said two or three additional freighters that were in Haiphong harbor when mines were sown by U.S. planes got out before the weapons became lethal at 4 a.m. PDT Thursday, That raised to ·seven the number or ships that were said to have left in the three daylight periods after the mining. Twenty.eight-or perhaps 29 -ships re- mained in the harbor. Frledheim said his r'!:port on two or three additional ships leaving Haiphong represented an updating of intelligence rather than departure of any ships after the mines: became lethal. . One more Soviet !re.lghter and another flY.ing the flag of Somalia got out and another Soviet ship may; have, he said. "We think several i'nore .ships that were en route to Haiphong have diverted," Friedheim said. He refused to reveal the location or na- tionalities of those vessels. Friedbeim also said two Chinese ships were caught behind minefield! at the port of Vioh and two Soviet ships were stuck at Cam Pha. north of Haiphong. The .possibility of a military con· frontatlon of super powers over the U.S. mining of the North Vietnamese harbors appeared eased amid suggesti9ns that the United States had private understandings with both the Soviet Union and .China that they wouJ(I not attempt to run tt\e minefields. Former Mayor ·Set for Surgery Fonner Laguna Beach l'\1ayor \Villiam D. ~1artin was admitted lo Mission Com- munity Hospital in Mission Viejo Thurs-- day, to undergo surgery for removal of • cataract from his right eye. l'\fart in said he expects to return to his home at the entl of next week. The longtime Laguna Beach mayor, a direc tor and former presid ent of the Festiva l of Art s board , is also an alternate member or the LocAI ·Agency Formation Commission (LAFC) and i1 serving on that county body pending replacement of member Charles Pearson, who died Sunday. Minuteman 'fest Run Project WOK Set for Annual Ensenada Trip Coastline Bill Supported In tum, U.S. official& said It was unlikely American ships would attack Sovi t!t or Chinese mlnesweeepers if they attempted to clear the harbors: Instead, U.S. planes wolild replace the .,, mines as quickly as the Communists could pick them up. However, the officials said they saw no evidence ·so far of any effort by mlnesweepers to clear explosives block· VANDENBERG A!R FORCE BASE (AP) -A, U:S. Air Force Minut'!man 2 intercontinental ballistic n1isslle was test launched today by a combat crew from the 35tst Strategic Missile WI n g. Whiteman AJr Force Base, l'\1o., a spokesman said. The rhi ssile was reported on course down the Western Test Range over the Pacific Ocean after launching at 2:50 a.m. Dr. and Mrs. Leon Axelrod of Laguna Beach will lead a small group of Orange County optometrists and their wives on a return to Ensenada, B.C., this weekend to deliver S3 pairs of glasses to youngsters examined in a P.farch clinic. The ?.fother's Day journey is a follow· op to the seventh annual Projed. LOOK clinic, sponsored by o p t o rn e t r i s t members of Orange. County Lions Clubs who make the trip to Enseoada annually to conduct a free sight clinic· for needy children. . This year 14 county optometrists and tbtlr wives participated in the first phase of lhe project, enming IZI children o1 IOO youngslers pr .. ocreened by Ensenlda 4octors. Glasses were prescribed for '3 of the thlldren and 20 were refened for medical lmenl. Only chlldren wtth 50 percent ion or less are elJalble 101' the clloic. Thi> wed!encl lhe .l.Jelrods. who lound- lhe proJ<ct, and !our other couple s, II deliver lhe prescription glasats lch have been made in Orange ·County h the cooperation of Lions Clubs counl)o ~ic Sodety. County Association Endorses Carpenter Measure ' By TERRY COvn.LE Of ffHI D•lly Pli.t SI-'! Oranite County Coast Association Directors Thursday · threw their support behind the coa!tllne preservation bill authored by Slate Senator Dennis C.rpenler (R·Newpor\ Beach ). They pickpd hia, rather , than other coas'tline inusures, beCause it relies on local ralher than regional controls. "carpenter'• bill II the only one lhat proposes conatructlve coo.trol In the hand! of locol government," Ja- MllcNab, preskl~nt or lhe Coast Asoocla· tion, told lnembm al a Junchton In the Hwitlngton Harbour S..C:b Club In Hun- llngton Beach. Mtmbera of the a.uoclation 11e alto urging ciliea ~ the Oranae Coaat to support Carpenltr a bill. The Cout A-"tllon has about Sit ' volunteer members and city officials. lt was formed In 1914 to "preserve,~ uplift ar.d protect" the coastline. carpenter's ccastal bill will be heard Mooday in the Senate Natural Resources Commilte<. It sets up a JS·man state coastal review board with final authority of over coastline development. 1'1ost of the grotindworlc for coastline p r o j e c t s , however, is left in the hands ol cities and comrt(es along the coul Mike Neal, an assistant to Clrpenter empbulud lhat the bill 1<tl up no regional government. Another coastline measure, QOnsored by Assemblyman Alan Sieroty ([).Bever· ly Hills ), establllhes a serie1 ol regional agencies with total power. over coasUine deveJopment, even withlW eltlet. Under Carpenter's measure, each coutal city and county will be liven lime to develop lndividua.l aentral ploos lor Ute !uture or lhe oouL · I Those plans will be submitted to the IS.. member state agency which will incor· porate them Into a 11et of guidelines and criteria for a CalifQmia general plan of coaslllne development. Each city and county, however. will have jurisdiction over its own boundaries. A project which is denied, can be ap- pealed to the state agency. The state agency will also review all locally approved projects In cast of con- trovmy, and it can reverse the local ·~ prov al. carpenter defines lhe couUI zone as stretching three miles to sea and a ma1· lmum of three miles inland or a mlntmum of t,000 yards inlaDd. His bill Is SB 860. i Neal said there Is also a companlOn bill; SB Mil, which aulhorbes a public bond Issue or $200,000,000 .. the state can buy private beach land1. "The ltNllor fetls U the public wants that private !ind. tt will have to pay for It," NW e1plalntd, 1 ing entrances.to seven ports. · U.S. sources In Washington,. Sai~on and Phnom Penh said Privately that there was at least a •tacit agrttrnent between the United States •and the Communist powers that the U.S. blockade Could con- tinue indefinitely with neither Ruula nor China trying to run it while denouncing it strongly In pubic. Pentagon ofnclals 1ald there was little (See MINES, Pop Z) Foggy Mist Blamed For Power Dimming · Early morning fog was blamed for a power dip that made downtown Laguna street Ughts dim and flicker al about$.: 15 1.m. At Geiser. Edison CompMy di1trict manager 1ald that mo j s.t u re acro- mulatk>nt on the power llnu m'U' have cauaed an arc which temporarily reduet'd power to the area. He said that there was no lDtmupllon In service. . ~ Oruge Weatller Afore sunny weather prcdlcttd along the Orange Coast, following Uie usual low clouds and fog. lllghs al the beach in lhe hi gh 60'1, ris ing to 80 inland. l.ows 48·58. INSIDE TODi\ Y Tht Logima Btach Civic Ba~ /et stages itt la.st in a 1t rit1 of four children'.' program.a. Ste tlit .!Lory 1n todoy'1 Weekender. L.M. l•Y' 1 11•11"' II C1llllrt1l1 ' Cl1ullk' 11.-1 (tfl'lk t JI (l'IU..,,. JI Dl-"t lliltlkM ,, 11111"111 ,... • ,lalftCI 1 .. 11 ,_ 1111 ••M"ll ,, KfortW-·U "'"' ......... IJ M•!IMt • -' Ml•ltt ... MUllll•I ,Ul'lft 2t Hlllllltl HIM t-f o''"'' cwm 11 .HIW .. 111 11J41 ,, .. 1. hfM • S-'-, .. ,. lMCll MMt!HI •J1 Ttl"l"-• ''"'"'' ... WHIM' I w-·• Htwt 1•1t •••IMlllf U.at l ' 2 DAIL' •llOI ,,, State WaI· Protesting Q·uiets Down By Tbt AllOC'I Dled f'rtll 1'ht current round of California antiwar protr-sls h11s ~u~ldt'<i a ne but militant! 1'1ill closhed wlth author:t!•s and blocked r:iilwoy and hlghw•y lrafric. lly Phil lnterfandl More than 230 per10111, lncludlng UCLA All·Amcrlcan baJkclball center Biil W11lton , wfrt arretted during Vietn11m war protests aero!! the stale Thursd11y. (.See rch1ted 1Hory on Pa,iic 161 . 1 . . ' II I' ·1 · ) .'1 :1 I I nut the cro11i·ds taklnJ( part in the dcmonslralionl'I were smaller than. earlier In the week . Only a few demonstraUons attracted more thnn J,000 ptrson1. I I, I• ' i · . ·· I l''.: p;l 1 •I v1 ' " -r; o .. ' ~ 'J 111 Demonstrator1 were urged to avoid violence by a number of 1tuderlt body pre1klent1 at campuses of the Unlveralt.)I or Clllfomla and by Berkeley Mayor Warren Widener, who aaid viulent't was ~~'-' . "You're My L19un1 .1nd I'm Your Elderly, React1on.1ry ~Id Fuddy Duddy!" "Nixon'• trap." • The largtSt number of arrests, 135, came when demonatrators attempted to block traffic on a freeway near Sllnt:i Cruz. ., A group of demonstrators Jnet, brlclly with Stanford Unlverslly I' res 1 d en l Jticbard C. t.y1n:111, who rerolled their re· ctuest to tiuspend $12 mlllion wort~ or defen!le contracll held by the un iversity. About 350 University or Pacific :;tudents n1archcd to a downtown Stockton courthouse for a rally. Spare Tires U11sightly- Pose Ecology Problems Artcrwnrds , they picked up !heir litter -an action !hut prompted Police Chier Jo::. Jesse Delancy to re1nark. "I'm very proud of these k Ids." At the other end of tbt !J)eCtrum, a rnlly In favor of l'reJJlderit Nixon's Viel· nam policy drew 50 persons in Sacramen· 10, t f\;fnyor San1 Yorty or Los . Angeles bfan1ed "hardcore Con1munisls" for" lilirrlng up dcnionstrations. "The most charitable thing one can say about the young American dupes ()( the Communist1 Is •rorglve them, they know not what they do,' " the mayor .said. Jn San Francisco, 250 persons rallied on Markel Street. Officials reported about eoo pel'IOns took part in an uneventful candlellght protest march from UC RJveralfJe to the county courthouse. They were escorted by police. Walton was one of 52 persons arrested at UCLA when they refused to obey police orders to tear down barricades erected in front of the administration building . Nearly 40 perlOm were arruted for blocking traffic during a demonstration In front or a Bank of America branch in Northrldge, 1 iiuburb of Lo! Angeles. Protestorii al Davl:ii bk>cked Southern Pacific railroad traffic for six hours when they straddled the tracks for the second Ume this week. Five persons were arrested. Artist Cookbook Authors Feted 111 Laguna Beacl1 "Nrwd Cookbook" :luthors and artists \\"Ill bf! honored :it 11 rettptlon from 6 p.m. 10 8 p.m. &lturd:l~· :'II the L.1guna 1\rach Art Gallery. 307 Cliff Drive, l.111lwta Ilt"ach. .. . The unusual book is' the result or a life dra\ltlng clnss and nltrnding rrcipe swaps by 14 v.un1en .1rll'llS. Orlglnnl Rrt v;ork \\1ill be on dis1llay al the reception as v.·ill the cookbook. "Thl• 14 :1rtists intvitnbly 1tol around lo dlscus:;in.ll i.:uurinet food and r~changlng rrflµe s \\"hill" skelchlni;.t thr rnd rt'SU lt ,,.a~ '!he publicalion of lhrir unu sun l \·olunie." ~nid Uiro Ent on. U\guna Griller,\' spokt!i;1nnn. llcre is a S<impling of the articles com- lng up in Sunday's t.'tlllion of the DAILY PILOT ' ROLLING ALONG -Old Urcs never die, they just keep bouncing around. 'l'hal's all right for youngsters who -crawl 1/u·ougb , them ond swing on . them at playgrounds but 1nosl old !Ires l_h:it rcfui;e to go ;1wuy present 11n ccotog1r11 I problem. That problc1n is 1:xamined by Staff Writer ~arl Wiison. WASTE FUL SOCIETY -If you want to sec it visit a county dump and you'll find di.,c;arded appliances, seemingly in only a minor state of dlsrtpalr, and n1a1!y useful items ()f furniture. The story 1s this wttk's Sunday Spe<:lal. EMERGENCY ROOM -How does a woman fare as chief of a hospital emergency room? Dr. Claire Weidemier, chief emergency room physician at Costa Mesa '-1emorial Hospital, has handled the job since last January and finds It's quite a challenge. SPORTS STARS -There's an in-depth ' report in the IPorta pages on U.S. palrs skating champlons Jo Jo Starbuck Ken Shelley who turned professions.I this week. liNSPOU.ED TOWNS -The cover story of Fam.Uy \Vetkly describes a couple's search for safe places to Jive, towns unspoiled by crime where doors can ren11in unlocked. They recommend 12 places for couples to spend their retlr. ing years in peace. Cycle Dratving Not To1iiglit "I feel some people out there rn:iy bf. trying to Kawasaki to me." That's not 11.·hat she actually said, but u·s the ~isl of the rnessagc from the fo'n!:hion'lsland shoppin~ ct"nl('r Girl Friday who has been taking 3ll the calls about the Kawasaki motorcycle givetn\'DY. TI1e rari ng cycle \\"ill be given away l-'riday, ~fay 19. A story published in the Fashion Island sec- tion or \\"ednesday 's DA IL\' PILOT inadvertently left the itnprcss ion lhe give11 y,·11y v.·as scheduled for tonight. PSYCHOLOGICAL TESTS -Many firms use these tests in deciding on ke_y promotions or appointments. And 1f 1here's a 1hird person in the room when you are interviewed, that figure, whom you have not seen before, ls prcba~ly a psy chologist analyzing your react~ons. Ifs the lead story in the "YOU" section. 1'0\\"ER PLA!\'T -Southern Colifornia Edison Company is trying to locate an 3ftcrnate pov.·er pla'lllat 1''ry Mountain in San Bernardino County but Southern California Focus on the editorial pages reports that desert forces are mobilizing against the proposal. From Pagel ANTIWAR ..• to a march down hfacArthur Boulevaid following a noon rally on campus and an early morning symbolic mining ()f Long Beach hartxlr. Remaining on campus in their o"·n unique version or a demonstration were about tK> student& al Southtrn California College in Costa ?.1esa Thtwsday night who offered prayers for peace. About 15 of the same Southern Cal studenta showed up this morning In the school chapel and read a telegram to President Nixon which said : . "We the students or Southern California College have set aside .specific times to remember you and our nation in prayer. We will be praying that God will give you wisdom as you guide our natioa." It was .signed by Student Body Presi- dent Doug Halvorsen , who said there were no polilical implications in the tele-- gram. C.Ollege Vice President and Chaplain .John Linclvall said he really wasn't sure •·how the students y,•erc praying. I'm sure it was both ways." Halvorsen said the prayers were directed nHtinly tov.'ard 8sklng for a "l01sting peace in Vietnam." Carrying signs also calling for peace, but protesting in a difrerent manner, were about 200 marchers at the Seal Beach weapcns facility Thursday af~ ternoon. 1'hey n1arched for about three hours during '''hich three arrest& were made on minor charges of jaywalking or disobey· in(!: a polire order. About 20 to 30 police officers kept traf- fic mo\·ing through the busy intersection of Seal Beach Boulevard and the highway \\'here marchers congregated. Authors :irt•: J('nll Abrr. Co r :l Abrah1.1nson. lrt'nr Ashley. ~t er i I y n Gilbert, Virgi nia Grnrn1nnt lc;1. PRuline fo'nlk. Jnnct llilford. ll('[en Hooper. Elaine Kennedy .. Jean Horn. l..tt Alallicone, J/ell'll 1\tc{'htin, Belly ~l()S('s. Sy\\•ia f'nuh1s, Corlt111r St hrn inkr. :ind Sta Jtlll')'. Do11 't Be Self-satisfied, OIAN•I COAST La DAILY PILOT Th•°'""'"' COit! ll,t!LY f'ILOt, ••tit """ld l h (911'1/lonf'G !'119 H-·~"f. It Jlll/111"""9 W ''" Or"nOl" CN1I ~1111111'19 Olmflt"Y, $tp9• r.t~ f'(llllO!>t "n• puto!l~llf'd, M'""'' "'""'~ l"rl4l1y, la." Cnt!• ,.,ti•, ,...._, •Hc:fl. Munll1191!1!1 flt•cl'IJ'°""i'1" V•llfY. LttVM lle1(1\ ltv11>t'S1ddlOlblt l an!1 SJ" ClemMl'-f •" J1u 11 C•11lt!•l "9. A 11 ... 1• ...,lmll fdlt!ool b publl\l'lfd ~•!111'fl\"5 •NI s ...... ,.,,_ Tiie p!'illcll!.ll Plltll.ll'llnt .,._nl 11 •I JJO """'' ••t SlrHt, Coit.•• Mts•, c1n1iomi., ,.._ Ro~trt N, w,,J flrnldtftl •l'llf ,,Wtlh611« J•cl-l . C11rl1y \'k t PIWkll«lf Of'lf Gmtf11 MMll!g..- Tlri•fll•t J(,,,j1 1£eilw Thot11 •1 A. M 11rphi~1 M111&9Jrw l•i?ot o,,.i,, H. loe1 IUch1nl P. N1lt AMl'i'-!f M~lr!I 1111'1"" ~ .... OMc. lJJ foNtt A••~~• M•ilirtt Add,..11: 1.0. le,'''· ,l,S? -..-tat• lrlltN: .ut _., l¥f Sll'W N~ff<fl: WI N....-; h.rlt¥>te MUfilt t.t aNdl: 11'1J ••cJI .......... ,,. $.If!(: ,._ .1iU ,..,,,_II CMiiroe 11: .. 1 ftl ...... t7t•t 64J-4JJI a-,,,... AiliMht11 14L1611 i.ei,.. ..... Al hpa1...,.., f1t a,•ss1 4ff.N&• ~ 1tn. ar... C'Nt.t .......... c~. Mo _, ,_,._ 1nv.rn1-. "!WMI t'Mttw • -. •r11 ... ,."" ..,. _., .. ,........... ....._. .. ill ... ........................ ......, dlM .,..,..,, M W .. C.11 IHM, ~ ~-.., a n-.. ll-' ,....,..., .., -n u.~ ftlllftlft1¥1 lftflhn' ......... .,, .. .....,,. UCI Told by ChaI1cellor UC ln·ine must ''focus on doing well thal which has already been undertaken" In the roming rears. bul n1ust al~ learr roorn for t~pe.ri1n('nlalion and ntvflr become se.lf·satisfit'd, Chancellor Onn Aldrich told a specia l 1neellng of the UC I faculty senate Thursday. Zo tJest. a celebration of Uw 10.year an- nh·ers:iry of thl' lrv\nc cnn1pu$ and Aldrich 's Involvement with ii. begins le>- day and ru ns lhrouJ:h ft.lay 20. (The word "'zol" comes from the sound made by the anteater, the: UCI mascot. in the comic strip "B .C.") AJdrich spoke lo nbout SS facully m<':mbers Thursday on "lr\'ine. Prc$ent and Fulutt." '4'htre he !old th(':ffi thnt latesl UC prajttUons s:1~· l.n•lne will ptak in lhO at 12,(Q) to 14.000 studt:nls. Some chsn.g<': . In academic planni ng must bt madt1 to ttccommodatt' the extra students. Aldrich admitlcd, addinf,!. "I \''UI not bt rtady to add p"*ram.!I unlt'ss I Sl'C th<! doll;,rs lhere to support thr1n Y.itbout dtlr4'cling from that v.·c agreed v. c ()ught to 'ha''C". '' I.~tcr. during questioning, ht sa id that findl11~ support money ror lht r..,.uy •!ready al UCI Is "the mool critical Issue bC"fore us.'1 But Aldrich dots antlclpAle stud!~ ~I possible cbAngts In the lollo.rlhg : -Mo"' emphasis on tmlytrslty n · tension claw.s for student! rttummg to sc:bool. -Addiliooal dWtl In heallh scltnct. -An Institute ol Tr11111parlatlcln and 'll'alfic En,ilneerinl!. atmtll)o '"' the Ila.A campus with a mo•·• to lfle UCI ·-....... study. -The feasibility or an actual education Qepnrtn1en t to train teachers. Aldrich said he fttls UCI hu been a ~nrccss bccnuse it has bttn o~n to new idt•ni; :ind n·as not confined lo fulfilling a prC"dt•tcrniint'd 1nodel. ··1 don"I. have in mind any longer !'lotncthing I am shooting townrd.1' he s:iid. adding. "maybe this is the time I should gel out. But my interest is focused on v.·hat Irvine can generate fur itself. ''I am no longer concerned about how '~'t: look to our sister campuses,,. he ad· dt'd. proudly , Pointing out that Irvine began as a general university \\'Ith on· ly a few specialiiatlons. But he said he had plaMed one lhing: lo build UCJ on a land grRnt colltge philosophy. -A'hcre lhMt fortunatt enough to teach "hare a rrsponsibility to share the ir scholarship \\'Ith student& ~n and off the CRmpus. It's not enough to confine lht-ir application 10 the campus.·· UCI ltachen:, he said. "rttru\ted then or no"'" must be researchfrs or scholars and public ~er\lanta u we.II as teachers. ht explained. He said the "bud8et squetzc'' is on now 11nd will be for some lime. but that this "crunch·• shouJd not wt pressure on the undeclared students to name a major or become "l•beled as lllls or lhot." UCI should olltr the same OJ> portunllles lo tr-lludents who know whit lhey want lo be as those who have no spec:lllc ca,.., In mind. .. What J '4'&S aecuttd of whtn we first started this insUluUon,1' he said, "lhat t lnl<llded • trade school hen -Is oot true," he concluded. 1\ Texas River Flood Kills At Lea st 8 NEW BRAUNFELS, Tu. (UPO -The Guadalupe River, buJging from a week of rain, rushed out to its banks today, pour· ing water housetop high and sweeping away cars and homes and the people in them . At least eight persons drowned. ~lore than 4,500 persons wer e evacuated from riverfront homes along 25 miles of the muddy river. Entire familie s were ml!sing. Six persons drowned at New Braunfels and two more at Seguin, 15 milu downstream. More rain was forecast to add to the foot that fell over the past wttk. I 'hed .. "So many peop e were was away, said New Braunlels Pollet Chief Royce Couch. "We fear the total will go much higher." Flood y,•aters. turned a gooey black by oil from broken drums, rose 18 feet high. Gov. Preston Smith called ()Ut the Tex· as National c:uard to help evacuation and· clean-u p work in the south centra l area or New Braunfels, a town of 18,000. Said New Braur1Iels dispatcher Thomas Claxton : "Several houses floated away. We are !lwamped with calls ..:.. people saying, 'llelp me, please. My house is floating c.1way.' " All bridges in New Braunfels wue covered by the water. The only safe way into the town was by helicopter or heavy four-wheel drive trucks. FronaPage1 INITIATIVE . • • attorney, who also represents !he Hotel Laguna Corporation, s o u g h t unsuc4 cessfulty to block the election in a suit maintaining the initiative procedure was iUeg al. Thev won a faVOrable verdict in Superior Court. but were overruled in both the appellate and Supreme Courts. Following the election, a new suit to overturn the height limit ordinance wlls rejected in Superior Court by a judge who accepted the validity of the popular vote ... T8schner now is appealing this decision. Tl\e \Vhittier and Laguna cases differ In that the Whittler initiative is proposed 85 a direct zoning amendment whil e pro- ponents of the Laguna initiative main- tained they sought only an amendment to the building and safety code. The Lagi.wa ()rdinance zubsequently was adopted as an amendment to the zoning law through prescribed public .. hearings. School Seminar At Hotel Laguna ' A question and answer program ()fl the Laguna Beach achoo! system will be featured at the Chamber of Commerce's 7:45 a.m. breakfast Wednesday in the Hotel Laguna. Two school board members and an ad- ministrator will respond to questions from the public in the panel discussion moderated by Bill Gwinn. Board president William rhomas and trustee Dr. Norman Browne, whose views (Jn school operalions frequently conflict, and Assistant Superintement Robert Reeves, a former princpal of the high school, will make Up the panel. Reservations .may be made by calling the Oiamber, 494-1018. E'11ture Moonwalker? Carole Penney, a student at Laguna's EJ ).Iorro Sch~ol, giggles as Ben Casados, NASA space specialist, lowers a helmet like that Amer- ican astronauts 'vear over her head. Casados gave students an edu· cational talk .about NASA and recent moon landings. Planners Eye Summer Art Show at Highway Location Developer r.tark. Gumbiner's Proposal for an outdoor summer art show on prop. erty at 1550 S. Coast Highway will be among agenda items considered by the From Pagel MINES ... prospect of aily confrontation in area of the mine fields for several days al least. They 1 predicted action in the Indochina war would shift from the harbor area's lo the Communist ground offensive in South Vietnam, which has been in a lull ror a week. ' The mining of the harbors and ()ther actions to stop deli very of war material to Hanoi by land, air or sea are no t ex- pected lo have any Impact on fighting in South Vietnam for tbe next three weeks because of existing Communist stockpileS ()f fuel. ammunition and f90<i, the of· ficials said. L~ies Day Opens Up JACl\SON. fi.1ich . (AP) -The Bul4 terfield Theaitr chain in Jackson has an- nounced that it will allow men to attend \Vednesday matinees -traditionally "Ladies Day" -at the reduced price of 75 cents. Theater ?l.1anager Earl Hoflman said men would be admitted for the reduced price to avoid charges of sex discrimination. Laguna Beach Planning Commlsslon at its regular 7:30 p.m. meeting Moiiday. Because he will be unable to beg in con- struction on a 12.S milli on Village Bazaar sho pping complex until after summer, Gun1biner wants permission to use the property for an arts and crafts exhlbition to accommodate artists unable to find space in Laguna's other surruner festivals. The proposed exhibit would provide booth space for 100 artists, with 23 park4 ing spaces on the site. The artists would construct their own booths to city codes, says Gumbiner, and there would be ade4 quate sanitation racillties and pro- fessionally.installed electric wiring to each booth. Also on the fi.londay agenda is a request from Paul \Vestbrook to parking for Festival o( Arts exhibitors on his prop- erty at 111 Milligan Drive, known as the Eucalyptus Grove. Other items scheluled for discussion or action are: -The request of \Voodland prive ma residents to restore ft.1 tsingle residen·, tial ) ioniJ'lg to the neighborhood, now zon-, ed MI-A (light industrial). -Possible city purchase of lax sale ;>roperty in Arch Beach Heights for neighborhood park use. -Renaming ol a portion of Baja Street in Arch Beach Heights. -Review of the city of Irvine's pro- posed annexation of land abutting the Laguna city limits. -A site plan review and two sul> division requests. UPHOLSTERED CHAIR SALE .. RNAL WEEK Don't miss this rue opportunity to pun:hase from our fine selection of uphoktered chairs at wle prices. We feature nothing but the finest quality in our selection of upholstered chairL Happiness is owning • po ir of custom upholstered chairs from Ted von Hemort, Inc. at a ~le price. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE -KARAST~N NIWPOllT llACH 1727 W-.lflf Dr. 642-2050 --Y'lllt INTEltlOltS LAGUNA IE~CH TORRANt:I 345 North CNtl Hwy:49.ws51 23649 Hawlhonfo '""· ' ,lllJJ J1 .. IJ7t0,.......,"llt ....., ...... Meittflf°"'9111f1C..., 140-12'1 ,.,, I al ......_ I Ip 1 AtsAd la Alt--Mll , I ' ' • __ , • Sadalihaek -=-Today's Final N.Y. Stocks or. 65, NO. 133, ~ SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1972 TEN CENTS Planners Bacl{ University Park Zone. R~vi ·se By GEORGE LEID,,£> Of ltW IAllJ P'l!et s1111 Irvine planiting commissioners ear)y today recommended City Cou.ncil adop- t ion or a slightly revised planned CQm· munity zoning ordinance governing future development of University Park by the Irvine Company. The action passed ~ a 5 to 1 vote with Commissioner Harry Shuptrine opposed. Mrs. Ellen Freund \11as absent. Planning commissioners ·added four conditions to the land use plan. one of .Y .. tuc'h shifts an area set aside for a clubhouse and hoiel complex £ron1 the first tee of Rancho San Joaquin . Golf Course into a high density apartment area nearer the ninth green. The. unique aRProach to starting golfers off on their rourxis of the futurt 36-hole course \\'as suggested by 'Plilnnlng Com- missiori ·Chairman Wayne Clark. frvine Company Executive Vice Presi- dent Raymond L. Walson advised the commission golfers generally prefer to begin at the first hole. Chairman Clark replied, "I am less concerned about tbe golfers than I am about the relatIDnship of the hotel to an elementary school site and an existing commercial area" -University Park shopping center located across OJlver Drive .. ·• '. Earlier in the six-hour·discuS!ion of the proposed zoning,'$an Joaquin Elementary District facilities planner David King told DAI LY P'ILOT Sftff Pllet9 • MARCHING DOWN TRAFFIC LANES OF UNIVERSITY DRIVE IN UCI PROTEST Thursd1y'1 Antiw1r Activity W11 For Most Part Pe1ceful on Irvine C1mpu1 Antiwar Protests· Go· On •..• ··~ .... -.. ~"iJ County Demo1tstrations Drop From Thursday By CANDACE PEARSON • 01 lttt Dltll ~Lr.I Stiff Antiwar demo;strations in Orange ' Coun ty cont~nued today at a quieter pace compared to sharply contrasting_protesl!: Thursday, which included street fires; ar- rests and peaCf:ful prayers. A group of UC Irvine students met at 12:30 p.m. today in the school commons to organize people for afternoon picketing at county and city offices. They plaMed to march on government offices, read prepared statements against the war and remain until city official!: agreed to send telegrams to President Nixon in protest of the stepup in U.S. in- volvement in Soulheast Asia. Saddleback, Golden West and Orange Coast Community Colleges all reported no activity planned for today. Those cam- puses were also quiet Thursday. At Cal State Fullerton, the scene of some violence Thursday, students held a noon rally against the war and ten· tatively planned a sil·in on the Riverside Ftee\\'ay this afternoon . Thursday, Cal State Fullerton students and st~ett people attempted to burn down a IO.story office building near the campus and light bonfires oo busy State CoUege Boulevard. Fullerton police said the demonstrators used street repair barricades and tree limbs to begin lbe fires. which wert con- trolled in aboot 3> minute!. • '11lose street disturballces, police said, were apparently the 11ork ' of the same group which set fire to ~ Hon~ywell Jnc. Institute of Information Science& early Thursday morning. Honeywell nlanufactures one type of missile used in Vietnam. Fire damage was estimated at $50,IKll. .. .. ' .. J •• .· • ' ' .. ~ ' . ' •• J '( -...-e l DAILY ,ILOT lllff ,ii.It No arrests were yet r!:!porfed, although demonstrations at the Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station and at the Queen Mary Thursday totaled nine arrest."l. THREE LONELY PROTESTERS CHALLENGE U.S. NAVY At Long S..ch, UCl'1 Kay1k Ag1lnlt Mino SwNper A-1ost of the demonstralors in those ac- tions were from cal State Long Beach. / UCI protesters c o n f i n e d actions "'ho offered prayers for peace. to a ~arth down MacArthur Boulevard About 15 of the same Souf.tlern cal following a .noon rally !>'1 ~pus a.Ad an students sbowed up thiJ morning in the early morrung s)'m~r nurung of Long school chapel and read a telegram So Beach harbor. . . President N'm>n which said. . Rmlainlng on c:amP113 "' 1he1r 0•'D· "We the studenll of &iuthem Calilornla umqu. vemon of a d<monstratlon were ha ·id ....ir1 1 about IO students at Southern california College ve tel as e s,,... ..... _ c. l mts to eon · ,.,..,... M '"'-·-.a-nl bl remember you and our nation 1n prayer. ti• "' ~ esa "'~~Y g We will be 'praying that God will give )'Oii wisdom as )-OU guide our naUon.'' Body F~und in SUrf KMNAPALf, MAUI , Hawaii (AP) - 1'Irt. 'lbeodora A. Raab, 11. oC Puldt.na, ~ -found d•ad In the water of~ Kaanapali Bea<h on M1ul Island Wednes· '-Y afternoon. An •ulot>IY "" scbedul<d to dttmnioe" the °"""' oC clWJI. Mn. lllab ..., IJU)led '""" the water by a E!quanl who .... lWllmoned by lri<ndr who saw btr !loolioc fl<e don In Ibo ...-. It was signed by student Body Presi- dent Doug Halvonen. who said the.re .. .,. no political lmpllcations in the 1.i.-gram. · -; ~lege v.,. .Prtsidmt and ~arn John Lindvall said he rully wam1 JNte "how the lltodent.s wn praying. I'm me it Wa! both ways ... Halv~ said the pra)'trl •·m dittcted mainly towud astlnc for 1 "lasilnc .,.... 1o VJtlJllm." Corry!rc ..,,. 1bo callq for _,.;, bot protatinl in I di!Ju<nt ...,,..,., were aboul 200 marchers at the Seal Beach weapons facility Thursday af- temion. They marched for about t.hrff hours during wblcb three arrests Wert made on mioor oharges ol jaywalkillg ..-disobey· Ing a police order. Aboot 2ll to 30 police ofrlceri !<>pl Ital· lie moviJ)g through the busy inlenectlon of Seal Beath Boulevard and the highway where marchers congregated. Thunday night, a march of about JOO demonstnt<>ri aboanl the 'Queen Mory "'"'1st attraction In Long S.ach mulled In injuries to one policemau and one demonstrator •nd the mat of six olbers. 'Ille )lOIJceman, ... of •bout 3$ Long Buch polJoe aboard, Wtt r<porlfd lo hoe tU!lmd IJ'C)ln Injuries In one br1wl and the prol...., sullertd fadal Qlll. Amit char'6 rai>etd from f1 ilure lo dilpene IO boil<ry oa a polke. oUicer. commissioners the school silt a t Michelson Avenue and Culver Drive mjght never be needed by ·the district. The site. only part o( y,·hlcb is buildoble due to the former county dump "'hicb lits beneath thf: adjaCf:nt golf course, was ac- ceptable to the district. be said. "But current projections indicate we may never have to build a third elemep.tary school to serve University Park." , He suggested the time has come for ••school districts to go into the real estate business'' and noted the district nllght ·well profit by commercial develop.nent or the prfme corner property afttr it ii; determined it won't be needed for a school. 'Clark, \\'ho Is public lnfor1nalion officer for UC Irvine, suggested the hotel Nlm- plex might better !lerve the comm~1nity were it to be localed closer to the UCI campus. . . Wat.son said discussions with university officials, Including ChanceOor Daniel G. Atdrlc h Jr .. had rcsullf<l in planning for a hotf'I in l r\'iJ1t TG-\l'Jl Center a more dl'si rnblt ltw:111ion for the UCI confrrencc net-els. Ntverthrlr..is, con1mls11lonrrs In their motion lo re<.'01n1ntnd np,1roval by the cl· ty rouncil. r('<J.ulred the lr\•lne Com1>nn}' lo consider a ne1v location fo r the hotel- nlotel connnerclal area <ln 111.nd within area l -n mulll·ranilly zone along tSrr ORDINANCt:, l"oa:e 11 School Bill Ol('d Measure Meets Fast Building Need The California Senate Thursday ap- proved on a 24 to 0 vote a bill to help fa.st-growing school districts meet school. buildlng needs. The measu re by State Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R-Newport Beach) allows school distric ts, with a two-thirds vote approval by resident s. lo raise the bond debt ceiling from five to seven percent. The bill specifically desig ned to aid the San Joaquin Elementary School District, free s bond' moneys already approved by \'Oters so they may be used to build ne'v schools. The San Joaquin d!Strlct has e1- perienced sucb rapid growth that the five percent limit has not freed enough building money to keep up with lncrtms in lhe numbers of students. The three.year measure would nllow the district some . lime to catch up with the school housing lag. Despite the fact that 3,500 Sa n Joaquin students were on double sessions at the beginning of this school yea r, the distri ct was unable to begin construction of new schools. Voters last year approved a $15 million bond issue for school construe- Certain Terms tion. but the district had only 1pei.t $2 million before it rea ched the slate.m11n- daled celUng on bond debt. Since the state school building rund has run dry, no money has betn available to take up the slack in the dlslrlct's building program. • If voters next Junt 1q>pro\'e the $.150 n1illion slate bond issue, srhuo l con- struction rund,, needed 11fter the district hAs rc11chcd Its new sevt!n percent bond ceiling, \\•ould then I><"' cun1lng (.:Tfltlll to the San .Joaq uin District . Carpenter'11 bill now i.:ocs to the Assembly for considerat ion. Pentagon Says Viet Blockade Wor~Sq. f.Br . U.S. Cites Readiness WASHJNGTON (UPI) -The Pentagon said today the blockage of North Viet· nam's port.a had been 100 percent tf· fectlve during Jl.! flrJt U b0ur1. 'P·o·Reopen Peace Talks Several ships bel6eved originally bound for . Haiphong have changed course, of. ficiah1 said. A Defense Department spokesman, Jerry W. Friedheim, alS(I said two or three additlonaJ freighters that were in Haiphong harbor when mines were sown by U.S. planes got out before the weapons became lethal at 4 a.m. PDT Thursday. That raised to . seven the number of ships that were said to have left In the three daylight" periods after the_;rithing. Twenty~ight-or perhaps 29 -ships re- ·mainf:d In the harbor. Frledheim said his report on two or three additional ships leaving Haiphong represented an updating of intelligence rather than departure of any ships atier the mines became lethal. One more Soviet freighter and another Oying the flag of Somalia got out and another SoYiet ship may have, he said. "We think several more ships that were en route to Ha iphong have diverted," Friedheim said. He refused to reveal the location or na. tionaUties of those vessels. Friedheim also said two Chinese ships were caught behind minefields at the: port of Vinh and two Soviet ships were stuck at Cam Pha, north of Haiphong. The possibility of a military con- frontation of super powers over the U.S. mining of the North Vietnamese harbors appeared eased amid suggestions that the .United States had private understandings with both the Soviet Union and China that thex would not attempt to run the minefields. Jn turn, U.S. offici als said it was unlikely American sbipR would attack Soviet or Chi nese minesweeepers if they attempted to clear the harbors. ~ Instead, U.S. planes would replace the mi nes as quickly as the Commu nists could pick them up. llowever , the officials said they saw no evidence so far or any effort by minesweepers to clear e1ploslves block- ing entrances to seven ports. PARIS (AP) -The U.S. delegat ion Jo the Vietnam•" peace t.Jkl .. Id today It ls ready to resume, on cert.tin condltJons, the·meetlngs It broke oil last week, but a senior North Vlelnamese negotiator, Le Due. Tho, replied: "What we want ls a resumption o[ the negotlallo1t1 witho ut condllloni." The reply by Tho, a member of the llanoi PoUtburo, fo~lowed by barely an Park Study Due In North Irvine By ~mmittee The Irvlne parks and open ii:pace ad- visory committee has been directed by the City Council to begin studying possiblllties for a large scale public park to serve north Irvine residents. ~fayor William Fischbach today said 11 propo11al for a 440.acre public park Jn the overflight area north of the Santa Ana Helicop{er ba.se and near the Colony Homes tfact sparked the north Irvine park study. Atto rney Paul Tonkovlch early Wednes- day morning at the end of a lengthy cou ncil meeting, proposed city con· sideration of the overfllgbt 1rea for a public facilily. A.1ayor Fischbach said concerns ex- pressed by councilmen, plannina: com· mi.s11ioners and several north Irvine residents, led to the aalgnment lo the citizen advisory commlltee. Presently no large scale regi011al or commun ity public park lJ planned to serve north Irvine villages, he noted. The advisory group speclflcally has been charged wilh the task of studying po1sible sources of funding for a large park, alternative locations and the op- timum size required . The aoolhem portion or the new city contains a 445-acre county regional park. • 45-acre portion of which his gooe to bid a.nd may be completed by late rummer or 11173. Letter Reared ~ Exotic Pet Gets Backirig in Mesa • Ralph Lutge'1 tame sun bear "Angela." ordered run out of town by Costa 1'1e1a Ctti Cow!cil May 1. has found 1 new frieM. He la Michael J. Hitd>en> of Placentia, •ho wnitt a 1<1thlng letter lo the council condemning ill actioa •. Hil<hens said that the ruling "shows bow government la dtn)'in& people their buk rlghtJ." He added be was ce-rtain Uwt .. one IND bear iln1l eolng to cau.tt a 11Ut dul of troubl< in QIN Mu1.'0 . .. I Jusl to ma.kt sure the council knows where he 11>nds, Hll<heN clotecl with. • "God blw the animal lovers and damn the City CouncJI." L11lge, 1 who bu !<>pl the !~pound vtgtllrlan hear on hla property at 2000 Harbor Blvd. for the past 1even )'8fl, bu been 1lveo 90 clay1 tl> dlspooe of bis pet. Cowltilmen ordered Ila r e m o • a ~ Wiid and uotle lllimals ... llOI allowed llllCkr city codea. • , ' hour • .!tatement from the American delf'gatlon that ll "reafJrm1 Us readlne111 to return to the talkl on the ba1i1 stated during the May• meeting." At that Ume, U.S. Ambassador Wii iiam Porter, in announcing the lndeflnlle 11uspen1Jon of American participation In the talk.1 said: ''\Ve wlll resume the plenarles " - regular mtttlng.s 11.s opposed to secret talks -"whenever you Jndlcate lhat you are seriously lnteersted In the negotiation of matters of substance: or when we believe discussk>ns would be use rul." Porter alao noted at that time that the first order of business In any new diacua siom must be the halting of the North Vietnam offenaive -he tenned it an "invas " -in South Vietnam. A U.S. d gallon aource, expanding en today's sta ent, said It rererred to the general Ions Pofter expre111ed May 4, rather lh to the specifics o.f the In- vasion. Le Due Tho's esponse came al a new3 conference he had called before the American sta ment Yl'llS released. The Amer! ans comhined their crrer to resume the talks with a remark "that lhfl Communist side while demanding :t reSllmpUon of the t<ilk., is carefully avoiding any lndicaf.ion or nex iblllty o~ wllllngne:!S to discuss both sides' posi- tions.'' Miss America Better COLUMBUS. Ohio (U P() -l,aurle Lea Schaeffer, Miss ,America 1972, was reported in 1atl.!faclory conditlon today at Grant flo1pital. Sile ls being treated far acute ga.rtroenterltls 11be su rrered after attending a pa gcanl Jn South Carolina this month. Ora•I• 'lfeadaer I.tore IUMf wealhtr pred' td along the Ora!lge Coast, foll wing the 111\181 low <ioudt I fog. Highs at the beach in high !0'1, riling and 1 41-53. INSIDE TODAl' TM LoQu-11a Beach Civic Bat. Jt:' 1toQe• f1.r Ill.It in o itrf11 of four cltfldre1t '1 prO{JrtoitA" Stt tilt 1tarv 111 todau'• \V1tkt11.cUr. L,M. ..... ' ...... .... -II ........ , , ... , .. -' ••tleMI ,..._ ... ... -o .. Ol'IHt tW'll1 M -" Rlwt..,,11111 rf.ll -• tt'IN ~ • _ ... _ " .....,.. , .... ...... .. ,_ • IMCll Merk'1t ....,, ,..._, .... ,,...,.... . ,_ ...... " TIM•'-'l ... ... ,_ " WM-• -... -" .._. ....... t).tf -• .... -.... JS 'tl4o1· 11., U.1973 Association BJ TERll Y OOVIU.E ot .. -.1iy , ......... Ornnce County Cout i\11aocl1tlon Dlrtctors Thur~ay lhrew their 1upport behind the co~lllnt pru:ervation bill ".' authored by State Senator Dennis C•rptnter (ft..Ntwport Beach). 11Miy picked hlt, rather then oiher coastline meiu1uru, becaUH It relle1 on local rt1ther than regional CQntrols. "Carpenter 's bUI is the nnl y one thnt propose• constructive control In the War Protest hlndl ol local 1avemment.. J1- MaeN1b, pr111dent of the Cout 4-Ja. lion, told member1 al a luncheon In the HW1Un&ton Harbour llu<b Club In Hun- Ungtoo Bu<b. 1.fember1 of the as1oc latlon are also urging cltie1 along the Orange Coast to support Carpenter'• bill . The Coast AsllOCiaUon baa about 338 volunteer members and city olflc lal1. It was rormed in 1914 to "preserve, uplift and protect" the coutllne. Star Basketball Player Arre~ted By The AllOClaled Prell 'Mle current round of California antiwar protelils hat 1ub11lded a blt but militants .sllll cla&hed with euthorlt1e1 and blocked railway and highway traffic. More than 230 per1on1, Including UCLA All·Amerlc11n bt11kelball center Rill Wallon. wcrt ilrrcsted 'during Vietnnm w11r protests acrosl! the stnte Thursday. (See rel ated story on Page JG) But the crowd1 takln~ part in the demonslration.• were limaller than earlier In the week. Only JI few demonstraUons attracted more than 1,000 persons. DemQn1trator1 were urged to avoid violence by a numbtlr or 1tudent body president• at c1mpu1e1 or the Unlver1ily of C1Utoml1 and by Berkeley l Mayor Warren Wldener, who 1ald violence was "Nixon's trip." The largest number or arrest1, 135, came when dcmonslrPtora attempted to block traffic on a freeway near Santa Cruz. A group of demonstrators met brleny with Stanford Un iversity Pre 1 l dent JUchnrd C. Lyman, who refused their re- quest to 1u1pend $12 Jflllllon worth of derense contract. held by the unlver111ty. Aboul 350 University of Pacific i;tud1!nl11 marched to a downtown Stockton Cilurthousc for a rally. 1 Afterwards, they picked up their Jilter -an action that prompted PoUce Chic( E. Jesse Delaney to remark, "J'm very proud of these kids." At the other end of the spectrum, a rally Jn favor of Pre1ident Nix on's Viel· nam policy drew 50 peraons in Sacramen· to. Mayor Sam Yorty of Los Angeles blamed "hardcore Communilils" for stirring up demor1slrationli. "The mosl charitable thing one can say about the young American dupes of the Communlsla ls 'forgive them, they know nol what they do,' " the mayor said. In San Francisco, 250 persons rall ied on Market Street. Officials reported about 800 ptrsons took part In an uneventful candlelight protest march from UC Riverside to the county courthouse. They were escorted by palice. Walton was one of 52 ptrsons arrested at UCLA when they refused to obey police orders to tear down barrlcadu erected in front of the admlnlstraUon building. Nearly 40 persons were arrested for blocking traffic during a demon11tration In front of a Bank of America branch In Northrldge, a suburb of Los Ange les. Prote1tor11 at Davl1 blocked Southern Pacific railroad traffic ror six hours when they straddled the tracks for the second time thi1 week. Five per10ns were arrested. Bulging River Explodes, Killing Eight in Texas NEW BRAUNFELS, Tei. (UPI) -The Guadalupo Rtvar, bulllnc lrom • wffk of rain, rushed out to tt1 banks today, Pj)Ur· Jnc water houselop high and 1wetplng away car1 at1d homes and the people In them . At Jca11t eight persons drowned. More than 4.~ persona w e r e evacu1ted from rlverrront homes along 25 miles of the muddy river. Entlre fanlllle1 wire missing. Six persons drowned 111 Niew Braunfels and two n1ore al Seguin, JS mlles do~·nstre11m. fl.1ore rein Wil.!J forCC'as\ lo add to the foot that fell over 1he pllsl wttk. ''So many people were washed away," 111\d New Braunrels Pollce Chief Royce Couch. "We fea r the total will i O much hlji!her." FloodwRltrs, turned a gooey black by oil from broken rlrums , rose 18 feet high. Gov. Preston Sn1llh called out the Tex. ~is National Gu ru'd to help evacuation and cltan-up work in the south central area of New Braunfel s, a town of 18,000. Said New Braunfels dls)>lltcher Thomas Claxton : "SC!veraJ houses Ooated t1~·ay. \Ve arc i;wamped with calls -people 3aylng. 'llelp me, plcnsc. "'11 'house is rloalln~ oiway.' " 1\11 llrldi:::c.~ In New Bra unfels were t'O\'rrl·d hy ·1hc• \I' Oler. Thr only :-are 1rey OlAN•I COAST 15 DAILY PILOT tnto the town was by helicopter or heavy lour-wheel drive truck1. Couch said hundreds or. peraona were evacuated from re1ldentlat areas of New Braunfels and taken to rour Red Cro3s centers. Hundred more at Seguin were evacuated to city hall, the courthouse and l!lhelter1. Police Dispatcher Tom Clore at 8.'ln Marcos, site of the state's last bad flood, (t.1ay 15, 1970, sold more than too persons were taken before dawn rrom areas flooded by Purgatory Cree k and housed in thrre center1:- Cibola Creek In northea1t San Antonio nooded. forcing Bexar County v.·orkers to evacuate more than 200 persons. "We just got them out before the waler got here," suid Officer Jan1es Bowles. Guadalupe County Sheriff Phil Medlin at Seguin said most of the nooctlng there was In riverfroftl subdivisions In the county and not in the city's residential areas. "At this time we are In the procesa of picking up all the people who falled to evacuate earllcr," he 1nld. "The river is above flood 1taRe here but It is receding above New Braunfels. We're getting a lot or w11ter. Helicopters are pick.Jog up pro. pie stranded <.In rooftops and in trtts. "We 're feeling some e!feets in the low\y!ng areas in the city but most of the trouble Is along the river. the divisions built along the \Valer . r.toat of them art: out on L:-tke Dunlap and L a k e McQu,.ny." Carpenter CUponter'a coulal hill wm be beard Monday In the lmall Natural ~ Commfllfl. 111111 ~p a Ji-miB t\l\la eoallal review board with final autbor1ty of ov" coa11tllne development. t;tost of the 1::roundwork for co:,stline p r o J e c t s , however. ls left in the hands o! cltle1 and <..'OUntles along the coast. Mike Neal, an assistant to Carpenter emphasized that the bW sets up no regional covernment. . ' -~ .............. . . ' i AllOllMr Clllllllne -· ·~· by~ Alall llieroly ( - ly Hiiia), --a ffries of regional •eencliM wiUI &olll power over coastltne dlvtlopment. even within cities. Under Cirpenter'a measure, each coaatal city and county will be given time to develop indlvlduaJ aeneraJ pl1111 for the future of the eo11t. Thoae plans wiU be submitted to the IS.. member state agency which will incor· porate them into a aet of guldellnn and UNIVERSITY PARK PLAN ·-=-··--·-------1~~- UNI PARK PLAN -Irvine Company map details land uses for ex· jstlng and new areas of UnJversity Park in Irvine. Areas que~tioned by commissioners are park sites a, b, and c, and planning areas 2, 3, 4. 13, 17, 18, 19 and 20. They are the new increments to be added to the greenbelt community. From Pagel ORDINANCE ENDORSED. • • University Drive west ol Culver. Area 3, which was to have hoUJed the up to three-story "bpngalow" hotel, ls recommended to be zoned (or apartment use, 1imllar lo Iha!. recommended by the commi&aion for area four along CuJver Drive across from exlst!ng Univerl!lity Park homes, Other conditions pliced on the planned community revision place area IS In a slx·month planning freeze. The Irvine Company volunteered to hold up planning of the area bounded hr Goldenglow Street, University Drive, Be ach Tree Lane and the University Park Elemen. atry School. Watson made the offer when com· missioners suggested revisions In the amount of park requirements and the location of three new propo3ed public parks totaling 14 acres might be needed. Commissioner Frank Hurd of Unlver1i· ty Park criticized the county formula which granted park credit to the lrvlne Company for 13 of the IO acru of privately owned park and greenbelt areas already developed In the area . be privately owned once University Park is complete. When comtnli!isioners learned they could revise lhe park dedication re- quirement at the subdivision level follow· ing the r.ontng approval by Uie City Coun- cil, they changed their c o n d 1 t Io n regarding the parks. They recommended approval of the zoning, pending a "possl· ble, future modification of the park re-- qulrementl to be made by the plannini'. commission within the nezt 90 daya." One other condition dealt with densities allowed for future increments of medium density houaing. Hurd urged, and com· missioners approved, a condition re- quiring a limit of & units per acre for area1 17 and 18. Development standan:ls for the new areas are to match those tmployed sinee 1965 when Villages 11 II and Ill were bta:un. Jn t t University Park zoning Jaw, dens es of from a to 10 units per acrt were llowed, Irvine Company plan- ner Jamea Taylor e1plalned. "But, the resulUna: density is only 5.4 per acre in VIilage n. II The company had 10ught an allowed maximum density ot a units: on each acre within areas 17 and 18. Coastline Bill crtlarJa (Cir I Callfarnfa 1-.J PJao of cout1IM dcvelopnwrt. Each city and county, however , wlll have jurl$dlction over its own boundarJes. A project which Is denied, can be ap- pealed to the state agency. The state agency will also review all locally approved projects in case of con· troversy, and It can reverse the local ap- pro val. Carpenter defines the coastal zone as ~ tint mills to • Ind • mu· tmum of lhree miles inland or • minimum of J,000 yardf lnhuxt His bill is ~8 NO. I . Neal sa id lbere i( also a companion bill, SB 861 , which eutborizel a public bond issue or '200,00J~ooo so the state caa buy private beach lands. "The &enator !eels ir the public want~ 1hat private land, it will have to ,_Y for it," Ne;iJ eiplalntd. Tenth A1aniversary Aldrich Speaks At UCI Senate UC Irvine must urocus on doing well that which has already been undertaken" in the coming years, but must also leave room for experimentation and never become self-satisfied, Chancellor Dail Aldrich t.old a special meeting of the UCl faculty 1enate Thursday. Zotfest, a celebration of the 11>-year an- niversary of the Irvine campus and Aldrich's Involvement with It, begins to- day and runs through May 21'.>. (The word .. r.ot" comeJ from the 10und made by the anteater, the UCI mascot, in the comie s!Tip "B.C.") Aldrich spoke to about SS faculty members Thurlday on "Irvine, Present and Future," where he told them that Jal.eat UC projections say Irvine will peak in l9lkl at 12,000 to 14,000 students. Some change in academic planning must be made to accommodate the extra students, Aldrlch admitted, adding, "I will not be ready to add pr.ograms unless I see the dollars there to support them without detracting from that we agreed we ought to have.'' ~ Later, during questioning, he said that finding support money for the faculty already at UCI ls "the most critical l:!;sue before us." But AJdrlch does anticipate studies of possible changes in the following : -More emphasis on university e:r· tension classes for students returning to school. -Additional classes in health science. -An Institute of Transportation and Traffic Engineering, curently on the UCLA campus with a move to the UC{ campus now under study. -The feasibility of an actual ·education department to train teachers. Aldrich said he feels UCI has bee:n a success because it has been open to new ideas and was not confined to fullill ing a predetermined model. Cycle Drawing Not Tonight "I feel some people out there may be trying to Kawasaki to me." That's not what she actually said, but it 's the gist of the message from the Fashion Island shopping center Girl Friday who has been taking all the calls about the Kawasaki motorcycle giveaway. The racing cycle will be given away Friday, May 19. A story published in the Fashion Island sec. tion of Wednesday's DAILY PILOT Inadvertently left the Impression lhe giveaway was acheduled for tonight • "J don't have In mind any 1onger somethlng l am shooting toward," he said, adding, ''maybe this is the time 1 should aet out. But my interest 11 focused on what Irvine can generate for itself. "l am no longer concerned about how we look to our sister campuses," he ad· ded, proudly, pointing out that Irvlnr: began as a general university with on· ly a few specializations. But he said he had planned one thing: to build UCf on a land grant coUege philosophy, where those fortijnate enough to teach "have a responsibility to share their scholarstµf with students: on and of£ the campus. It 1 not enough to confine their application to the eampus ." UCI teachers, be said, "recruited then or now" must be researcher• or tcbolars and public servants as well 11 teacber1, he explained. He said the "budget squeeze" Is on now and will be for some time, but that this "crunch" should not put pressure on the undeclared students to name a major or become "labeled as this or that."· UCI should offer the 1ame cp- portunities to those students who know what they want to be u those who have no .speciflc career In mind . ''What I was accused of when we first started this institution," he said, "that I intended a trade school here -is not true," he concluded. Sacramento Trip By Plane Nearly Misses Takeoff A flying field trip !or mentally gifted minors (MGM) in the San Joaquin Elementary School District a I m o s t mis11ed its takeoff this week. The trip - a flight to Sacramento to see government in action -w11 ·~ proved by the board of trustees with the ' understanding that the MGM 1tudents . from Mission Viejo and El Toro would ' finance the trip themselves. A group of students In the sixth grade at Linda Vista Elementary in Mission Viejo recently went on a similar trip which they financed. Asking for clarification Tuesday, Res Nerison, assistant superintendent for ad .. mini stratlve services, said a mi.Jun. derstanding had occurred and funda for the plane fare had not been raised by the Los Alisos and La Paz Intermecllate MGM students. The tickets have been estimated 1t ap. proximately $1,100. Jn what he termed "my soapbox speech," Hurd showed a chart he 'd drawn showing how greenbelts resull from building homes closer together, elimlnatlng sldeyards and sharing of the saved space. He compared four 70 by 100 -7 ,000 square feet -lots built in a traditional slngle·famlly tract with the !!Ix. smaller lot attached townhomes found in Uni versity Park. UPHOLSTERED CHAIR SALE He contended the developer should not get park credit for the greenbelts, which under other forms of development would be residents' backyards. Irvine Company officials respanded by nollng the park credit they Md received was for only 13 acres of the 120 that will "NAL WEEK T1le Or•1111• c .. .i DAILY f'ILOT, •11'11 ... kll 11 fO<l'lbln ... !tit H1w. ltrn1, h 11Ublltlltd b'f tht or'"'' C•111 f'110111/llfttl c~.,. l•iN· '''' llflllon1 1•1 P1.1b1!1llfCI, MONll'f tll~Olt r•~•1. tel• COii• Mt 1•, NIWllOtt INCll, t111nllf001t111 lll'"~ll"llUl\1111\ Vlllt'f, l .. ...,. l••tll, ll•ln' )ulll!t~~ ft 1111 Clt-nt,/ ~~n J11~•1 (~p""'""· A 11~01' rMlcMI ..i•1•on ,. r11bl•~nf(! ~t111tu .,, •nll !>111'1d1 y., rnt pil,,Cll).ll P1.1tl11ll•"" pl1nl l1 11 ~XI W'•I '"' Streit, C11 tt Me•~· C1lnorn11, •n}lt.. Spare Tires U11sightly- Pose Ecology Problems Rot11t N. w.,c1 l•rulcltllf 11111 1'11bl••~tr J11k •. C11rl1v VttC Pr11111.,,1 tllll Ot,.,..rt l Ml n"V'f'• Th•'"'' IC11wil E•t1w Th oM11 A. M ur,~i111 M11111Jf11 (•llOf C••1/1J H. l111 •ic~.~ P. N•ll '°"'"'"' M"""lfll lll!tert 0-C::O.t• Mtw· JJO W.I l•r '""' .,....,.,.. lut~ ., ,.....,.., ............ L~ 111, .:1 ""'"11 A"9flllt """.""' ... 1111• 11111 ... [~ ...,.,..., .. .. fl °"'*"'ti JW "R"'lll al C.in .... l.,I ,.,"···· 1;14) "4J,.4JJt C1"""94 AIT1 ' 1t f '41°1671 hi C!t&Jlfa At .. ,.,.. ........ , ....... ; CWWllM. mt. Ort"\ c...-l!J. "' ""'" • ..,., _,..,. It • _, .............. ~l11i. .. ~· - ~ C-. ""'''""NI C.ll..,. ....,... I -ltWI " .,.., U.tt I *tllMI .. W.d """"'"'"'· IH Here ls 1 .sampling of the articles com· i"G up In Sunday's edi tion o! the DAILY PILOT : ROLU~G ALONG -Old llres ntver die. lht'y just keep bountlng .:tround. That's all rl&ht for youngsters "'00 er1wl through them end awll'll on them at playgrounds but m011t old tires thllt refuse lo go aw11y prtsent an ecological problem. That problem is examined by Staff WrUtr Earl Wilson • WA.~TEFUL SOCIETY -lf you \v&nt to Stt II, visit 1 county dwnp and )'OU ·11 find cflJcarded 1ppllanc<1, se<mtngly In onlY a minor state of dlsrepilr, and many "'<fui Items of furniture . The 1lory ts this w,.k's Sundl)' Special EMlllG!NOY llOOJll -llo• doeo a ""'"'n Iara u • dlitf of a hoapltal --room! Dr. Clalra Weldemler, chief emergency """" P11Y1lcl1n al Ooota llua Momarlal lloapli.J. hao handled U.. Job llnce Jul JaoUlly Ind flnda ll'o quite a challtngt. SPORTS STARS -Thtn's an ln-d•plh • report In the sports pagu on U.S. P.lrs skiting champions Jo Jo St•rbuck Ktn Shelley who turned pro!easlonail this \\'etk. UNSPOILED 'l:OW1'S -The co ver story of Family \Veekly describes a couple's search tor ufe places to live , tO\\'U unspoiled by crlmt wbtre doors t an remain ut1locked. They recommend 11 plaoei for cooplu to 1ptod their rellr- in1 YNJ'S in peace. PSYCHOLOGICAL TESTS -Many firms use these teits in decidlnc on key prom0Uon1 or 1ppo.lqtment1. And if &here'a a third ponon In the room when }'OU are lriterviewtd, tUt flsure, whom you have not setn before, is probably 1 psycholo1t11 analYllnc your raactk>N. h'o tho lead otory ln tho "YOU" aectlon. POWEii PLAl\T-·Soulbarn Clllfonlla fldlson Company la lrylnc 14 locale an alternalt po~ plan& 11 FrJ Nounllln In San lltrn.vdlno CounlJ liut 8outllom Callfamlauf'.~ 00 tha adJ~ rtporl tliildtMrt -.... •s•lnal Uie proJ)0511. " • Don't min this rare opportunity to purchlse fr om our fine soleclion of upho~tered cha;,.. at selt prices. Wt feature nothing but the finest ... qu1lity in our soloction of uphollltm ci..trs. H1pp!ne11 is owning • pair of custom uphol1i...d choirs from Teel von Hernert, Inc. at 1 wit price. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE -KARASTAN 1td11111 · INTEll I 0 RS lflWPORT llACH LAGUNA llACH TORRANCI 1727 Waetdlff Dr., '42·2050 345 North CNll Hwy. "'44551 23649 Ha wthome lf..i. -i.it,u '111. 1 · 111111,..tm o,.. .....,.., 1 -, .. ,._ .... of --.... uu PNSJn' I ..... l1•J1ut ............ 1 ....... 11 I I . I t .. .. Trahuco · Road Problem Some Irvine councilmen. plannin g comi:nissioners and Racq uet CJu b residents have wondered aloud ii 1 frontage road such 1s is proposed for Trabuco Road is really needed along the San ta Ana Frteway between Culver Drive and Jeffrey Road. Residents of the 21 homes sold with scenic views are partl~ularly concerned. I! the Irvine Company's plan for the northward shill of the four.Jane divided highway i~·realized, the tree view from these Racquet Club homes will be replaced by landscaped asphalt and a commercial strip. lrvlrie Company planners correcUy argue that the relocation proposed. by the county highway planners and the state divisio n of Highways would create two virtually unusable triangles of land . The City .Council has appointed a citizens"comm'ft~ tee to work with county and state· highway planners and the Irvine Company to1draw up an alternative plan for . the freeway interchange, Trabuco Road relocation pro Jed · · An equitable solution should be found . Deadline Should Be Met • Si~teen short da ys from now, t_be building permit freeze intended to slow construction in Irvine since the city was incorporated will expire. City councilmen voted March 28 to extend the 90· day mo ratorium for another 60 days. They hoped that would be enough time for the city to at least regulate walls and service stations and come up with a master plan of parks as well as one for drainage. • I trolling. Ille design of tract walls any parl of 'which is built within 25 feel of a public street. The drainage plan has been reviewed and accepted by th e planning commission as required when the city council ad opted it. Service station design standards may well be en· acted prior to the end of the freeze, leaving a master plan for parks the only yet to be 1ccomplished iask before the freeze is lifted, The May 28 deatlllne should be TQet. The city must move ahead with approvals of construction permits. Credih~Jy _Gap Grows Trustees of the San Joaquin Elementary School m .. lrict have enlarged their credibjjity gap. Three weeks ago concerned Irvine residents asked the board to postpone hiring an associate superinten- dent until after the unification.election June 2. Their fear was that if unifica tion passes, one of th o new unified districts would be stuck with a high-pri ced administrator. Regardless of his qualifications, they would prefer to hire their O\vn when the time comes. They were assured th at a one-year co ntracf would be offered. Two "-'eeks later the trustees ann ounced that they had hired a _man for th~ job and had offered a two-year contract. This means one of the di stricts is legally obli· gated to accept him if unification passes. The reisoning was that "a man of such stature should not be offered a contract for less than two years." • ' The master pllfls were critical, co un cilmen and planning commissioners reasoned, because they cannot be applied retroa ctively to approved tentative subdivig. ion maps. To date, the city has enacted an ordinance con· Situations change and promises must sometimes be broken. But this has the air of more than just a • broken promise. ''CHf fR UP, fADDY. ODDS ARE IT WAS A BRITISH BULLET~ Why Latin Should Be Reinstated (SYDNEY J. HARRIS) If the Human Engineering Laboratory 1n Boston is to be believed, the un-- derstanding of English words in the U.S. has persistently declined for lhe laSt SO years, dropping at the rate of one point a year on the laboratory's "general scale" or vocabulary. , What is Important about this , if true. is that the laboratory a·e ea: a one-to-one correlation betwee111 vocabulary and vi. olence: if the level of verbal expression is low, the only other form of expression is physica l. A continuing study of some SO years by this group indicates t h a t vio lence and crime predominate among those who score Jow in "recognition vocabulary," especially of1 abstract words. Without the appropriate handles, it reports, "tuch abstract ideas as justice, honesty, per- sonal propert y, Jaw, courtesy and thoughtfulness for others seem impossi- ble to comprehend." Fascinatingly enough, the "level of education" does not play as important a part in augmenting vocabulary as we might imagine, After the age of 12, roughly -judging by a study based on 29,000 persons -"neither high schools nor college contribute to E n g l i s h vocabulary." Anyone listening to a group of "college-educateCI" busine ssmen or clubwomen nattering away at lunch would sadly have to ag ree with this. WHAT PARTICULARLY interested me in tWs study -apart Crom the menacing • Dear Gloomy Gus Wouldn't it be grtat if the street sweeper followed t.he trash collec- tor! -F. C. Tlllt fUtv1'9 ,..fleefl Naden' 'lkwl, llOI MC11..,-Jly fMM ef 1111.-,....,.,....,., s.-11 ,_ "' '"" .. Cl ...... , ow. De'l'I'' 'lltt. relationship· between growing illiteracy and rising violence -was the fla t state- ment by the laboratory that "with the fabulous sums spent on education," the understanding of English words has declined in large part because of the removal of Latin from most school pro- grams. • The number of years of Latin studied in school correlates with a large and exact English vocabulary, it was found: "The structure of English ls Anglo-Saxon; but tbe words which give color to writing, and definition to thought, are Latin. The Latin language, though dead, furnishes a backg round (or English, a foundation on which to build." I HAVE LONG ma intained this, although l had no real factual basis for my belief. The laboratory recommends unequivocally. that "to retard the downward trend of the U.S., reinstate Latin in the high school curriculum." (It turns out that even money earnings, with minor exceptions, have a high correlation with a background in Latin.) · Everyone has r:emarked the difference In verbal levels between the average Briton and the average America n; the former Is far more fluent and expressive, more respectful toward precision and rorm in language; and this flexible use of language may account in large part ror the civility, the courtesy, the Jack of violence in British life. What the tongue can't articulate, the fist (or gun) is forced to express. Study of Human Soci~ty Anthropology, lhe study of the origin and development of man, is usually thought of as a scientific approach to· prim itive peo ples. In fact, of course, anthropologists have come to reject the idea that any group can properly be thought of as "primitive." Furthermore, anthropologisls can be found studying the peoples of America, France, England, and other highly advanced societies. This background conveys t.he depth and scope of Prof. Ja n C. Jarvie's book, The Story ol Social Anthropology: The Quest to Understand Human Society {McGraw. Hill, $5.95). • IN THIS NEW volume In the History of Science Series, the author sboWI bow anibropology grows out of oomparioonl and contrasts beh,.•• ooe ooclelJ and another; that contact of cultures and societies stlmalates rdlection "' wliy social Ille ls.onlered the w1y It Is, and not some other way. The boolc concentrates on tbrM main areas of society: re.ligibn and magic, lamlly and ~p, and social conlrol. ( THE BOOKMAN ) The former are seen a1 man's attempts to understand and muter his aur· roundings and hla Ute -precursors to science and technology. Family and kinship are the most widespread means of organizing the groups necessary for · social life. Social control is nece111ry because man lives in a hostile en· vironment and nftlst organize. to survive. SOCIETY, TH£N, is seen in this book as the most IOpbilticaUd piece of man'• lechnology. But aMht aame Ume, IOCl.a l mechanisms wort o~ because men ac:-- etpt them as btnef!Cial and co-operate. Palling this mutual undentandlnc, oocl.al arrangements break down. Dr. Jvvle-ls 1uocl11e professor or philo.,pliy al Y«t Unlve.,ity, Toronto Carou.e Hortlenlll ••George-------- Dear George: I bfve operated a Dlllni staUon fur years ind am goln1 broke because a new station across lbe street bu hf....i femlie """'loe a~ lmdanls. '!bey wear sbortl and baJWs. Whit can I do ta fllbl t1lll k1nd ol competition! OLD TIMER Dear Old Timer: Advertise for some t o p I e 11 me<hania or ebe ln!llll • PIO car wash. (Wben ail otbtr advice COi· umnlsts have l111od rou. let Georp do It! He can fall you better than IDJl>odJ In the .. Urtpetet.) Family Car Killed Public Tratasportatiota _Opposed .to Mass . Transit To the Editor: Re: Letter, HSupport Mas! Transit," by Fem Pirkle (Mailbox, May 4}.' Forty years ago every city of any size had public transportation that was ef- ficient and inexpensive. When I first came lo Long Beach as a bride, one could st.ill ride the bus for a nickel! But as cars became more plentiful and priced-so that more people· could afford a car, and then as people began moving to tht: suburbs, the transit systems could no Jonger operate as economically as before because they had 105! the .bulk of tbetr · riders. Once people experienced the ~at con· venience of steppi.ng.,loto their 'cars at their door and riding directly to their destination, the buses Jost their populari- ty. WHO WANJ'S TO wa lk several blocks to a bus stop, with another walk at the end of the ride, and probably transfers from one bus to another on the way?-And at the height of bus travel during peak hours having to stand swaying in the aisle because all the seats were taken? We have become too spoiled by the ad- vantage of going in our own cars, com- fortably and conveniently, to want to go bai::k to public transportation on a scale to make rap id transit feasible. Now the only ones who would support a transit system are the aged, and those who can· not afford to own a car, and they are not always financially able to pay the high fares to ride the buses. 1T HAS BEEN suggested that another ta x be added to the price of gasoline to subsidize the public transportation and rapid transit systems. This puts an unfair burden on those who are alre,dy bearing the cost of their own vehicles, plus the cost of operating, upkeep, and insurance. Public transportation died a natural death \\1ith the advent of the "family car." Please don't try to revive it at taxpayers' expense. IF it can be done, Jet free en- terprise do it! PAULINE E. MOEN Agt'ees With Nixon MAILB.OX lt"•n '""' .....,.,, ~ -k-. Honft1t1Y "rlhn .ii.viii _,,., JMll' -H••• Ill • ""'""' •• i.11. Tiltl rl•~I i. Ull4tM4 ""•n 1'I lit .. ac, •r ellmllllt. llMI b ,._... ... All .. ftolrt m•tl in- cl• 11t111111r1 11111 1n1lll11t1 ..in n , Wt "'"'-' '"'' .... wlfllllllll ... ,_. If ... ttlcllftt ...... _ ., .,,,,...,, , .. ,,., w11t· 11tt M .,..ti~. represents the people of America, will prevail for the good o[ all free people throughout the world. GRANT HARDING PHILLIPS Think Abotd It To the Editor : The sky now ls black, many rivers are dead; mi!Uons of cars, planes, boat!, lac· tories are contribu ti ng to our pollution . A smog alerl rings, school children must go into the school room . This is no t the future -it is right now. Man Is destroying the world. Man and animals are going to die unless we stop pollution now! The factories can slow down the rate or pollution and we can stop It. It will cost moriey and time. We must stop it now before time runs out. When it comes to decide what to do about pollution, think 1bout it DOUG PARRY Age 14 Guollne Pt'lclng To the Editor: I was very interested in recent com· menls on our retail gase>line prices in the Orange Coast area. ' • Perhaps I shoWd explain first that we have no control at all over the retail gasoline prices that are charged at Chevron Dealer stations. The dealers are independent businessmen and set their own prices according to their own be.st judgments. That accounts for JOme of the prlee differences you have noticed between 1tatiom. The only statiOR! where we can set To the Editor : the retail price of gasoline are our own 1 just listened to President Nixon's company · ope ra ted standard Stations. speech regarding the war in Vietnam and And even there, prices often differ from our mining the port of Haiphong. As an one station to the next, according to the American, t was in accord with every market conditions 1n the area served by word he said. each station. Have no fear that Russia or Red China To run a sound business, we must stay will retaliate against the judgment of our abreast of market conditions and ~eep President. In the first place, both Russia adjusting to them constanUy. Our prices, and Red China gained their power and therefore, cannot always be the same maintain their power without honor. They from one at•tion to the next -or even rule through fear and oppression like a from one 'day to the next. ga11gster mob rules a territory through _1 R.A. V ANOEHEY threets of violence again$! honest, Cod· Manager f ring I Customer Assistance ea poop e. . Western Operations, Inc . BECAUSE OF 'MUS 1billow foundation Markttlne Departme"t of slttngth to rule, when it come. to a Standard Oil C:O. of Calif., ~-----~to ~~ follow and that is to turn tall and run. No, never in the history of the world has the real villain against the Bood of mankind ever won out. The judpent of our Pr.aiden~ who ·Quotes Ethel Watt n, 1lqer, adretl, on Calli. tvance1J1tlc tour -"I've been called I 1tar, you know, but 'star's' just a nlctr word for servtnt, baby. It's those people out there in the audience what paya your salary." Willi.am R. Gl111ell1, Dlre<tar Slate W-Re-Departmut -"Two of C.llfornia't ••ter probl<llll ""'· too mucb w•ttr In the wrq pllCt at the wrong time: and oo the other hand, not <nougb wattr In the right pl.au at the right time." • • Defe.efls CJllropt'11etor1 ·To the Edllor: Re: Jean Crum, M.D. vs. Chiropractic -Dr. Crum llWlll to take great dellght In continuing the bl1 lie about chlroJ><ao- ton. It Is Interesting (and Infuriating) st lime9 to see: what many mllguidtd people do to make a point about which they have 1Lron1 feellngs. They take cut.aln Ideas and me lhem to Illustrate their point, meanwhile carefully ignoring th e other side of lhe CX>ln whic.h may det ract from the bellevabillty of their argument. Emotion tak" over, logic ADd true facls Oy out tht .window. DR. CRUM KNOWS that lht chiroprao- ton lll'f ... u trained In all the buic sciences and mlllt diqMK Ind tr.It the aldt acconllnc to stata I.aw. Hil ll'JW""11 Is the wnt old rebub of the medlc1l tA.M,A . .C•IU.) •monopoly. ft I 1 shameful that chiropractors are not on the staff of every state and county hospital and all public institutions. ~1any crippled children are denied lhis very fine and scienlific treatment. Through high-powered politics and th~ great medi cal lobby. the e\~rly pe<>ple are denied the right to chiropractic medicare. Why is this allowed lo continue in ll great free An1crica'.' Is thi!i a part of our civU rights? GEORGE H. STRtCKER Dr. Jean F. Crum i.t president o/' the California Mtdicat A s.sooiation. .:...,.Editor Cr11 , Screech , Moan To the Editor : Why are so many radio stations foolishly playing rock-and-roll today? The reason is actually quite slmple. Rock-and- roll as bad as it is, has somehow mysteriously produced an enormous listening audience. But who Is listening Lo this rubbish'.' It is the manipulated youth ol our nati on who (eel they have to be total duplicates of their beloved peers. The youngsters or this country appear to be mere compu ters walUng Ig norantly for their peers to program them. - FURmERMORE, the term "rock music" is completely • Jnappropriate. Probably the perfect na me ror it la ''rock sewage." By the use of these two fall- tastic words, a person ls not only able to vividly give another a picture or "rock· and-roll," but can instantaneously esplain exactly what it smells like as well . You are probably wondering why J omitted the word music and substituted the moot appropriate word In lta: place. ( did this because rock·and-roJJ ls not music. Rock·and·roll is a cry,-. screech, a moan, 1 groan, a dirge, and a gasp. "Rock-and-roll" is no more music than l'm C~rlitophtr COiumbus. TT HAS OFTEN baffled me ho;, many or today's youth can sit listening to such CRAZY trash for so long. Jt Is truly frightening to contemplate. Most likely, programmed youngsters will disagree wllh mu ch or all of this. But, unrortunately, their disagreem ent demonstral4!s how e f f e c t i v e I y pro- grammed their computers are. l.lin't It pitiful! TERRY J. NIENHUIS Would Omit Vote Count To the Editor: As the student body secretary · or Newport Harbor High for next year, l would like to express my feelings rei:arding the front page article. on Friday, May 5, entitled "Gets To Top." Putting the number of votes that Dan Cohen "beat" Gary Litten by was, in my opinion, in bad taste, as the article would Do Your Bit (PRESS COMMENTS) Ballale, S.O. '11meo-J1mld1 • • A triumphant read was 1ehed11.led In a vWaae. And, to ' Insure adequate liquid rtfreahmenll, each villager agreed to pour one bottle or hlr belt winO Into a great cask. 'If I fill my bottle with water/ rea.sontd one, 'The dilution will be to tllght, who will notice?' When the feast eomrqeoced Ind the wk 1'U tlpptd, ~bu ,weter poured CIUL Everybody in Iba village bad fleured alike -My bit •• Oii lie ml11ed ! Th< 'moral of lh1I ttoty Is -do your bit be<ause .. ecy lit· Ue bt"heipl." • · Subsidy have been complete U you had left the number out. nte feelln~s of the loser must be taken Into ronside ration. MEREDITH MASSEY SI.op Sign 1~eeded To the F.ditor: ~ly fa1nily and I arc very N'lncrrned about the death (Urvc on 1rvinc jlOin~ south ju:<1t before 23rd Street. We llve 011 the street that parallels Irvine and art~ constantly worrying about the cars tha~ come spe"edlng around this curve. WhY. not put in a stop sign just at the eorneF of Santa Isabella aiid lrvln• heading south?. It also would be advlsable to paint "Stop Ahead" on the street before the sign. A sign like this <:0uld be put in overnight. JUST TifrNK, a simple stop 1ign could bring cars to 1 stop, then reductd speed on this curve , thus averting many ac- cidents. • We believe the DAILY Prim will be doing 11 great service to our community tr tt wlll help lo communicate thi11 message publicly and to the cuy lraf!Jc dep•rt· ment. PATltlCE IVAHLSTEDT ' Klb S hun Water To thC Editor: The recent hullabaloo concerning nuoride In city water (San Clemente 1 and the coming vote In the west Orange Coun· ty cities \1 ridiculous ! Has anyone.. lately seen a child take a drink of water? Not t. Jn the years when we had kids at home I pr11ycd thal they would, just once, pass up the frig and try a glass of water. Believe me, It never happened. It always had to he mllk, Xoolade, Coke, pop or just "anything" but plain water. "Gee not water, It tastes runny.'' . ''If It's so good for you, you drink It, Pop." '1We notice you put Scotch or Bour bon In It to drink It." THE ONl.Y TIME the kids 1et 1 serious look at drinking water I! at school, looking through the microscope AL "lhe runny bugs in the stuff." I don't blame them for not drinking lhe 1tuff. (In six month$ In the European countries I never drank tap water, u~ed Solari arid Li Casera, as the beat bottled waters, or San Miguel beer or Scotch). What's to blame? If the dentists wan t fluoride to eJiter the mouthll Of babc1 then why not put It In candy, cereal, cake! and pies? Maybe hot dogs? Hamburger? Fluoride doesn't help afltr age 15, I've been told by the dentist~. and besides I'm not sure it would help my dentures . And what ptrcentage of the f)('Ople are under lS? Or do we count the dogs , cab, horses, ttc ~? ' Bl~L HEARD Oll.ANOI COA.IT DAILY PILOT Robert N. \Vted, Putlluher Thomo.i K11vfl1 r.dilor Albert W. Bat.t.i Edi1ariot Page Editor The editorial 1111.tt' of 1~ 0-11.y Pilot ..::t"ks lo 1.t11·orm 11.nd 11tlrnu· l&lt l?lldtta by pre1enlinic ltti1 M'Y>'IJllper'a opiniom and cotn· mcn1a.ry on tns)lrs ot lnt.r:rat and •lt:nlftcanct, ~y pnwldlnc a rMUm rut lht txprH&inn of ollt rnd~,..· oplnlont. and by pl'nf!ntln1 lht d1vtne \•ltwpolnt• ot lnrormed ob- 5f'T"Vt'rJ and 1pokcamtn on topQ ~' the dly. Friday, Mty 12, 1972 ; • I Ecology Unit,s Plot Strategy Shident IQ Lower This Year SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - ConJervation groups today planned legal strategy to halt the Alaskan pipeline and at· tacked the lnterJor Depart· ment for granting oil com· panlts a rlghl-<>f-way permit for the multl·mllllon dollar project. Sierra Club E:iecuti v e Director Michael McCloskey said the Thursday's decision by Interior Secretary Rogers C. M. Morton would lead to the "worst possible 'corn· binatlon of long r a n e e u,1 T.._... results." Free to .Dissf!llt fo"-rlend!I of the Earth, an ac-• live environmental group, aaid Capitol t our guides in Sacramento can wear "every legal strategy that all the arni bands and might work" would be used to buttons they want as stop the conatruction. David far as the Joint Rules Brower, the group'• pre11ldent, C o m m i t t e e is con- called it a "destructive, un-cerned. Members in an necessary project" that would emergency meeting re· anly lead to the , , L 0 1 jected a move to stop Brett J\!arshall1 ~hown, Angelesization of America ." from wearing nis anti- B.rower said his organlza-war symbol. lion, the Wilderness Society, ---------- and the Environment a I Defense Fund will w o r k together to halt the pipeline. A1cClo:ikey said the Interior Department decl.aion will lead to "the admitted danger11'' of marine pollution 111nd ac- celerate the depletion o! U.S. oil reaerves. Jn Bellevue. Wash., officials of Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. said construction or the system could not start until next year because or pending litigation. A spokesman for th e firm, whiClf -Wtts-set ~up -by seven major oil companies to build the pipeline, said the company was "deeply committed to constructlng and operating the ufest and most secure oil transportation sy11tem in the world." He said ''eve r y precaution will be taken to saJeguard a g a i n s t en- vironmental riski;." The Sierra Club direct or gave a different opinion, saying that Morton has "chosen a ahort term ex- pedient which wlll confront us with the worst possible com· blnation of long r I D g e reault.s." * * * Cl~ Wants Coast Vote SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The Sierra Club says It will stage an Intensive petition drive over the ne1t month to put a coastol protection in- itiative on the November elec· tlon ballot. John Zierold . the Sacrllmento lobbyist. id Thursday the club would w k with the Coastal Alliance, a coa lition of some JOO groups, to collect 325.000 signatures by the deadline of June 9. "The people will have to ena ct for themselves what the Jeg isl11ture has refused to give them," Zierold told a news conference. He said the initiative would require the state to prepare a master plan for the preserva· tion of the coastal en- vironment. It wouJd also create machinery to institute controls on development in areas 1,000 yards inland from the beach and three miles out / to se he 11ald. J e lobbyist said the pro. posed initiative would ~be almost identical to bills In· troduced by Assemblyman Alan Sieroty (0.Los Angeles), and Sen. Donald Grunsky (R- Watsonville). See If you've won this week. May 12 through May 18, 1972. 21 12 6 24 20 14 3 9 18 10 • Pickup a Bin goCa~froma pa~iclpallng Shell d_ialer today or send 1 stll-addtffsed envelope to Oa~.Mment BFC #1, P. 0. Box 79, Chlctgo, FREE 7 5 ·11 16 4 15 13 17 2 19 22 8 23 25 llllnola 60648. Every Shell Bingo Card Is I potent/1/ winner. So uva your card>-11 one doesn't win this week, It could win next W9ek. (AP) - • DAILY Pllo/ ji Mill,s in Middle Severelg Edited Of Women's Bill Jurors to See ·Diary , I by Jacbon11 attorniy, John Thome, and ordered jurors to return Monday -for what may be the wrapup of th• state's case. When you think of real estate investment, think of DeepWelf Ran ch and Palm Springs, You ca n own a superb new condominium or individual residence iri that fabled land of Sunshine. Enjoy it as a permanent home o r a desert retreat. It's 1he easiest way in the world 10 save money. And the most pleasant! Palm Springs: where sunshine bathes the air year-around. Deep Well Ranch priv.acy is maintained with a walled security entry. Enjoy swimm ing and tennis or relax in steaming therapy pools. All yours with· out work, since building exterior and ground maintenance is provided. But hurry! 0.-er $5'/1 million worth of DeepWell Ranch homes have already bttn sold. Only 111 families will be able to enjoy DeepWell Ranch investment. Be one of 1hem! 2 & 3 Bedrooms:, 2 Baths. From '$51,950 ftt simple. DeepWell Ran.ch A ......... r , .. rJf Thi Yl'llU .. -C.....,... .... A.I.ODO F-*- Y{rite fOf complete inform.;ation Ehr P.alm Ca.nyon Driv~ at D~pWeM bd l'.alm Springs, California 922&2: The Smasher. Everything you want from wood and cant get from steel. Wood has always meant feel <llld controL Then, steel added punch and power to the game. But players using steel soon missed their old control. So, Spalding came up with the best of both worlds: the aluminum Spalding Smasher. The sheer power of the new, tempered with the reassuring feel of the old. An aluminum frame for power and controL Strung conventionally 60 it doesn't cheat you of accuracy the way suspended- string arrangements can. Spalding Smasher. A powerful racket you can· be friends with. 'SJ>AtoiNG • • • 7 D p ,. l ' Co co res 12· to at offi the agr Nix vol s Coa DO pus A and' al and Bou F use Jim lrol u lo fol tar Bea a CoU ~ I . Huntington Beaeh Fo'1n1ai~ Valley voi:. 65, NO. 133, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES Association By TERRY COVD.J.E Of 1114' O•IJ~ l"llft St.ti! Orange' Cbunty Coast As.soci<ltion Directors Thursday thre\Y their support bthind the coastline preservation bill authored bY State Senator Dennis Carpenter <!!·Newport Beach). They piCUd: his, rather than uiher coastline measures, because it relies on local rather than regional controls. "Carpenter's bill is the ·only one that proposes con~tructive control in the hands of local government," James MacNab, president of the Coast -Associa· tion, told members at a luncheQD in the Huntington Harbour Beach Club in Hun- lioiton Beach. • Members ol the association are also urging cities along the Orange Coast to support. Carpenter's bill. The eoa,t Association bu about 338 volunteer members and city atficials. Jt was formed in 1914 to "preserve, uplift ar.d protect" the coasUine. ... ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Carpenter Carpenter's coastal bill \Viii be heard ~1onday in the Senate Natural· Resources Commit! ... lt sets up a l~man stai~ roastal review board with final authority or over · coastline development. Most of the groundwork for coastline p r o j e c t s , however, is left ln the bands of cities and counties along the coast Mike Neal, an assistant to Carpenter emphasized that the bill sets up no regionil goVerrunent ' ,. ' .. Another coastline meas ure, spansored by·Assemblyman Alan Sieroty ()).Bever· ly Hills ), establishes a series of reglonal agencies with total power over coastline development, even within cities. Under Carpenter's measure, each coastal city and county •'ill be gi ven time to develop individual general plans for the future of tbe coast. Those plans will be submitted to the 15- member state agenc;:y \\'hich will incor· porate them into a set of guidelines and ' ' • FRIDAY, MAY 12, 19·72 Today's Flaal N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS Coastline Bill criteria for a California general plan of coastl ine development. _Ea ch city and county. however. ll'ill ha\'e jurisdiction O\'er its own boundar ies. A project which is denied, can be ap- pealed to' the state agency, The state agency v.·UI also review all loc~lly appro ved projects in case of con- troversy, and it can reverse the local ap- proval. Carpenter defines the coastal zone as . stretching three mlles to sea and a ma x· imu1n o( three miles inland or a minimum Clf 1.000 yards inland. His bill is SB 860. Keal said there is also a companion bill, SB 861, which authorizes a publk: bond issue of $200,000,CKM> so the state can buy pri,•ate beach lands. · "The senator feeli if the public wants that priv11te land, It will have to pay for ii,'' Neal explained. • , . ' ' • .. G , -· --~-f . ' • ,.; '· 1 ~ • • • 1 ' • • Mines 'Effective' ' .. ~. ., ' { "'· . . :~r·'·f\~ Haiph<Jng-bound Ships Alter Course .. /'f '· 't,;')'. <. WJ ,_ """ " '.'A~T)wAft MARc11~Rs 200 ~~o,.G'ciiAN1 'o~·~~6E· s1AL iEACH NAv.it wriP°o,, oE'~":Jt , There w .. Conlidtr•lil• V'hoOpirit • ild Hollering But Only Th'" Arruts ~ Antiwar Protests Go · On County Demonstrations Drop From Tliursday . . Bv CANDACE PEARSON • 01 flit Deity !'lltl Sttff Anliwar demonstrations in Orange County continued today at a quieter pace compared to sharply contrasting protests Thursday, which Included street fires.._ ar· rests and peaceful prayers. A group of UC Irvine students met at 12:.30 ·p.m. today in the scbo01 commons to organize people for .afternoon picketing at county and city of(.ices. , They planned to march on government ()ffices, read prepared statements against the war and remain until city officials agreed to send telegrams to President Nixon in protest of the stepup in U.S. in- volvement in Sou!heast Asia. Saddleback, Golden \Vest and Orange Coast Community Colleges all reported no activity planned for today. Those cam- puses were also quiet Thursday. At Cal State Fullerton, the scene ()f 10me violence Thursday, st\l(lenll held a noon rally against .the war and . ten• tatively planned 1 sit·in on the Riverside Freeway this afternoon. · Thursday, Cal Stale Fullerton lludents and street people attempted to bum<lown a 10-story office ballding near the'campus and light bonfires en busy State College Boulevard. Fullerton police uid the demonstrators used street repair barricades and .tree limbs to begin the firts, which were con~ trolled \n aixlut 30 minutes. Those street disturbances, police said, were apparently the work of" the same group which set fire to the Honeywell Inc. Institute of lniormaUon Scienc'-! early Thursday D)orning. . . Honeywell manufactures one type or mlsstle u..cl )n Vlelnll\\. FiNI damage wu f3til!laled at. $50,IJO\l. No arrests were ·Yil ~rttd; althou&h. de11¥""tratloi!J at the Seal Beach Naval WaapoJll Station ai\<I at the Queen Mary Tbunday totaled' nble •anals. Most of the demonstrators In those ac- llao\S wm from Cal Stale Long Beach. UC( proi .. ters c o n I I n e d aclionl to a march down MacArthur Boulevonl foUowlng a noon rally on campus and an early morning symbolic mining of Lons Beach harbor. Remalnlng oo campus in their own unique version o( a demoostraUon were about Ill . ....,, .. at Southern Calllomto College Jn Coeta Mtsa TburJday nlCht wbo ol!..-.d praym for peace. About 15 of the aame Southern Cal ltudents lhoncl up this znornlng In tho ocbool chapel aatt read a Weir•m to . , , ' • \ , DAILY ,U.OT tllff P""9 · · THREE 'toNEL v. P"°1~st.e1ts · cilAL~ENGE u.s, NAvv · · • . · At Lont ~ch,·UCl'a Koyok,,A .. lol! ·Mine Swffper • • t -• Prtsident Nlxon which said. uwe the stbdellh-of Southern California College havt It! ulde apeclllc llm" to remtmbtr you Md~ our nation io prayer. We wlabe PJ'*Yln& that God will give you w.lsdom at you gllide oor naUon. '' It "'!II llgntd by Student Body Presi- dent' Doug Hil•orien, who said there weo;e no poli\icil lmPOcitions In the tcle-vam.· O.U~e Vice Praldent and Chaplain Jehn blndvaU said bl rtaliy won't S\ltt ''bow tile llodents w.re praytns. rm 1Ut• It 'WU both 'll1JL • Hal-sail the prayers were • dlrected mainly · toward asking for a "lastlng peace in Vietnam.'' Carrying algns ai.o caltlng lor peace, but protesting in a dlfferent manner. were about 200 marchers at the Seal Beach weapons fa cUlty Thursday af· ternoon. They marched for about -three hours d\l.rfo&"wMch three arresta were made ()n minor ~gu ol jaywall!.lng or disobey· • q a pollco ord.,., I' · About 20 to 30 police ofllcen kept trar. nc moving through the busy interaectlon of Seal Beach Bo<ilevard and the hl&hway where man:hera C<>ngrtgate4. . , .,. \ WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Pentagon said today the blockage of North Viet- nam's ports had been 100 percent ef· fective during its first 24 hours. Severa] ships believed originally bound for · Haiphong have changed course, of· ficials said. • A Defense Departm ent spokesman. Jerry W. Friedheim, -also said two or three additional freight ers that were in Haiphong harbor when mines were sown by U.S. plane!! got out before the weapons became lethal at 4 a.m. PDT Thursday. That raised to seven the number or ships that were said to have left in the three daylight periods after the mining. Twenty-E:ight-or perhaps 29 -ships re· mained in the harbor. Friedheim · said his report on ·two or three additional ships leaving Haiphong represented. an updating of inteHigence rather than depariu're of any ships after the ~inH became lethal. · · olio11!0i'4.1lovtot'!relghte 111!1~ Dying' the Dag of Somalia got out and another Sovtel ship may have, he said. ''We think several IllONl ships that \vere en route to Haiphong have Guadalupe River Overflows, Kills Eight in Texas NEW BRAUNFELS, Tex .• (UPI) -The Guadalupe River, bulging from a week ()f rain; rushe<f out to its banks today, pour- ing ·water housetop high and sweeping away car! and homes and the peol>le in them. At least eight perso ns drowned. i1or~ than 4,500 persons were evacuated from riverfront homes along .25 ·miles of the muddy river. Entire families were missing. Six persons drowned at New Braunfels and two more at ,Seguin, 15 miles downstream. More rain was forecast to add to the foot that fell over the past wl?i!k. ~, • "So many people were washed llway," said New Braunfels Pol.ice Chief Royce Couch. "We fear the total will go much higher." Floodwaters, turned a gooey black by oil from broken drums, rose 18 feet high. Gov. Preston Smith called out the Tex- as National Guard to help evacuation and clean-up work in the south central area of New Braunfels, a town of 18,000. Said New Braunfels dispatcher Thomas Claxton : ... ".Several houses floated away. We are swamped with calls -people saying, 'Help me, please. My house is floating away.' " All bridges in New Braunfels were covered by the water. The only safe way into the town was by helicopter or heavy four.wheel drive trucks. Couch said hundredJ of persons were evacuated fro m residential areas ol.New Braunfels and taken to four Red Cross centers. Hundred more at Seguin were evacuated. to city hall, the courthouse and (See FLOOD, Page Z) David Croghan . Last Rites Held Funeral services for David Croghan, 8, wllo ditd Tuesday after .it days In a coma caused by encephaUtls, were held this afternoon. He lapsed into the cama April 18 at his 8S51 La Caslta Ave. home after being sick with strep throat, He was Immediately hospitalized but never regained can. sciousness. Services were held at the First Cbrl,. tlan Church, ll~OWJt.aln Valle.y at I p.Jl'I., with interment at the Good Shepbtrd Cemerery, ffuntln1ton Btach. Ht is 1urvlvtd by hl$ parent$, Dale and Nancy Croghan, a brother Donald; and a siJter, Sharon. ' • • di\'erted ," Friedheim said. He relused to reveal the location or na- tionalities of those v.essels. Friedheim also said two Chinese ships v.·ere caught behind minefi elds at the port ()f Vinh and t\\'o Soviet shi ps were stuck at Cam Pha, north of Haiphong. "" The possibility of a-military con. frontation of super powers over the U.S. mining of the North Vietnamese harbor• appeared eased imld suuestions that the United States had private understandings with both the Soviet Union and China that (See MINES, Pa1e Z) Ocean View Official Hall Appointed to Hi1h State Education Post By J!)IJN ZAu.El\ ot "'f Delly Pll9t Sittt' Dr. Clarence Hall, superintendent of the Ocean Vlew School District since 1967, was appointed Thurlday a 1 ~late slate. superintendent of public instruction: · Appointment ol the Huntlngtob Beach school adminiitrator to one of the hJibest pogta fn Califonda public educaUon was approved unanfmoualy Jn Sacramento by the State Board cf EducaUon at the re-- 1 quest' of Dr.' WJbon Riles, stale super· Jntendent of public instruction. The ~year-old Hall will assume his: duties ~uly I as: associate superintendent and chief administrator division of iJ1.. struction, he said. ' "I'm looking forward to joining the state team," Dr. Hall reported from Sacramento. "I don't expect to be l'WWir\g the~state school system from here, bul in ex .. pandlng the range ol alternatJves available to local school administrators." "Dr. Hau will be doing one of the most Important and crucial jobs in the depart. · ment ()f education," said schools chief -. Riles. "I'm very pleased to have such an ~r ~ outstanding man for the post." - .. • ·¥ ·• !!all's salary will be about $29.000 Dr. Ril es said. His current salary is $31,cioo. 2 Pilots' Heirs Win $425,000 Death Settlement Heirs ,or a Huntington Beach pilot and the co-pilot of a Los Angeles Airway1 helicopter that crashed four years ago, killing all 2.1 persons aboard have won a $425,000 wrongful death dull settlement. Survivors of Capt. Jack E. Dupies, 45, o( 6442 Govin Circle. and his cockpit partner ha s sought $2.25 mllllon in the suit filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court. " The jury \vas in its second day ot deliberationi; Thursday when agreement was reached with the derendnnl~. now· defunct Los Angeles Ai rways and tho Sik()rsky Aircraft Corporation. The plaintiffs claimed a defective rotor blade part from Slkorslly's ConnectlcUt plant caus~ the May 22, 1968 crash, worst commercial heli copter disaster in U.S. history • Following hearings, the N a t lo n a 1 Transportation Safety Board agreed. A shock-absorbing device gave o~t, causing the blade to chop into the fuse- lage over Paramount, stnd the LAA chopper plwnmeting tnd pver end into a dairy correl where It burned. Simlle r suits involvln( the. deatht of all 20 p.1ssengers are stilt pending. Only threl'I mo nths later, another rotor blade failure threw a second helicopter out of control over C.Ompton and it crashed Into a playground, killlng 21 persons. Vlcllma Included the pilot, Capt. Ktn Waggoner, 33, of 3t31 Pierce Avt., Costa Mesa , and the grandaon of the hellC<>pler llne'1 foundtr. Los Angelt1 Alrway1 llnally wtnl bankrupt, but anotbtr commuter aircraft company b now in the process or revlv· ln1 lu Southland ahutUe 1y1tam. . . ~ ·' Dr. Riles said he flr!it became well ac. quainted \Vith flall on a visit to the dlslrict last Spring. "I sa w some of the: most exciting programs J've come acrou anywhere in the state at Vista View School," Dr. Riles said. "Any superin· tendent who could produce that kind of action had to be a good man." Recommendation of Hall to his ne\' position came from a panel of top educat()rs in California according to Dr. Riles. "His district is one of the most progressive and innovative in the state," Dr: Riles said, "and its reputation ii fairly widespread." Dr. Hall's elevation will be a (feat lou: to the Ocean View School District of· flcials thtre said. Dr. Hall took ov~ the district when it was verging on bankruptcy, was near double sessions and had failed to pass three consecutive tax overrides. "Dr. ·Hall built this district Into ooe 1£ (See HALL, Pa1• I) 'We•tlier Afore sunny weather predicttd aloni the Orange Coast, followtna the usual low clouds and fog. HighJ at the beach in lht hlgb 60'11 rising to IO inland. Lowa ta-se. INSIDE TODi\l' Tl1e Laguna Btach Civic Balo let staoes Its ltut In a 1erit's of four cltildrtn'a prooranu. Std tht storu jn today's \Vtektndrr. L.M. ltY• 1 •••llllt 11 C.lltiofl'llt • Cl111lf1.. a.a c-k1 ,. C,.u ... tf 11 ~Ill Nlliett 11 •t11i.NI ''" I Plllll«t l .. il ,., ftlt "t("' 11 MfrtN"-14 ... ~ ..... w.n 1J M•llllfir t -· -... Miit ... P•llf• • HttlMttl ...... ._. °'' ... ,....., '' ••• ..,....... Q-H Sr l.t. 'tnw • ·-" , .... $ttcl ,,,.,.. .. •11 T.inltltfl • ~"" ... W•tt!Mr I .,,_.. ...... 1).11 ................ I • i DAILY PILOT __ _.H'------'-F-'rt4ey=, _llor~IZ.--'--1'1_2 Board Action Airport Housing F·:reeze Oppose~ There will be no moratarium on hous- ing construction in lbe area surrounding l.()S Alan1lto11 Naval Air Stetion as rar as the Orange County Bo3rd of Supervisors is concerned. Board membtrs backed a county plan- ning commission ~mn1cndution th11t 1he 17 acrts or unincorporated territory near the air base were not in immediate dan1;er of being grabbed up by land deve.loper$. They were !~form~ that the owner ls a conlirmtd agr1cultur1st. Ralph Clark, fourth district supervisor Dr. Aldrich Urge~ UCI: Be Flexible UC Irvine must "focus on doing well that which has already been undertaken'' in the comlng years, but must aJJO leave room for ex.pcrlmentition aDd never become self-satisfied, Chancellor Dan Aldrich told a $Pecla l meeting or the UCI faculty senate Thursday. Zotfest a celebration of the ID-year an- nJversarY of the Irvine campus and Aldrich'• tnvnlvement with it, btglns l~ day and runs through May 20. (The word "'~ot" e-0mes from the sound made by the anttater, the UCI mascot, in the comic •lrlp "B.C.") Aldrich •poke to about 55 faculty members Thursday on "Irvine. Present and Future," where he told tht.m that latest UC projecUons say Jrvlne will peak in 1980 at 12,000 to 14,000 students. . Some change in academic planning must be mnde to accommodate the extra ~tudents. Aldrich admitted, adding, "I will not be ready to add programs unles.s I see the dollars there to support \hem ~·itbout delracting from that we agreed we ouaht to have." Later, during questioning, he said that finding support money for the faculty already at UCI is "the most critical Issue before us ." "' But Aldrich 'does anticipate studies or possible change1 ln}he followlng : -More emphasis on university ex· tensl_pn classes for students returning to ~ctlool. -Addlllonal claS11es In health science. -An lnJlltute of Tran1portaHon and Trtfflc Engineering, curently on the UCLA campus with a move to the UCl campus now under study. -Thi feaslblllty of an actual education deplrtmeilt to train teachers. Aldrich said he feels UCI h11 been a success because It bas beep optn to new ideas and was not confined to fulfilling a predelermloed model. "I don't have· in mlrid any longer something I am shooting toward," he said; addin1, "maybe this is t~e time I should get out. But my interest JI focused on what Irvine can generate for Itself. "I am no longer concerned about how we took to our sister campuses," he ad· ded proudly, pointing out that Irvine heg~n as a general university with on- ly a Jew specializations. . But he said he had plaMed one th1og: to build UCJ on a land grant college philosophy, where those fortunate enough to teach ''have a responsibility to share their scholarship with students on and off the campus. It's not enough to confine their application to the campus.'' Spaghettithon Slated A five-hour "All You Cnn Eat" .:;pughetti marnthon Is scheduled by Boy Sco ut Troop 287 of liuntington Beach in order to raise n1oncy for a father and son deep sea fishing trip. Spaghetti, salad. and garlic brend will be served from 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. l\1t1y 21 at the Loyal Order of the Moose Hall, 7409 Lorge Circle, Huntington Beach, ac- cord.big to a scout spokesman. ORANGI COAST HI DAILY PILOT from AnaheJm, urged that tlte citi es sur- rounding the air base be reques ted lo Im- po se building moratorlu1ns bul he got lit· tJe support from other board members. Supervisors agreed that It was up to tht! cities or Garden Grove. Anaheim, Westminster, Stanton, Seal Beach, ey. preas and Loa Alami~ to determine if they wished lo impos! a building lr ee-tc in the area. Capt. Grant Boice, air station com· mander, two months ago requesttd the cities, county govunmen~ and the public to support his plea for a mor.atortum because, "Developers are buildlng home! in the vic~ty ol the station witb the hope of getting the fedel'al government, the .Navy, or,Qmgress to close the station." He got support from the Orange County Airport Land Vse Commission which tossed the b:in to the supervisors. All the surrounding city councils art now considering Boice'~ request but not one has come up with a defin ite decision as yet. Los Alamitos councilmen have fought for year& to have the fac ility lihUl down as they wish to add to the city's assessed valuation tl'iough construction or hon1es and apartments on the valuable land. They also contend that jet aircraft from the base disturb their residcn(s and pollute the atmosphere. Injured Woman Treated, Saved At Crash Scene First aid on the scene helped save the Jl fe of a gravely injured young lfun~ tington Deaclt housewife Thursday night. when a sports car c.'Olllded wlth a jeep ln the northwe!t part of the city. External heart massage and mouth-to-- mouth resuscitation were used on l\1rs. Nancy Berg, 24, of 4352 Pickwick Circle, police said. She Is listed in critical condition at lluntlngton lntercommunily llospilal. where both her hu.sband Robert, 28, and the other motorist are also patients. Berg ii listed in satisfactory condition . while Roy E. White. 50, of 15732 Bluebird Lane, ilunlington Beach, is in fair con- dition. Investigators said the Bergs were southbound on Bolsa Chica Street en route to the market, when White's jeep apparently turned left in front of them al Dovewood Drive. · White was wandering around bleeding pro!UBtJy when police arrited, while Mrs. Berg had lo be removed from the mangled wreckage of the couple's sports car. From Pagel .FLOOD •.• shelters. Police Dispatcher Tom Glore at San Marcos, site of the slate's last bad flood . May 16, 1970, said more than 400 persons were taken before dawn from areas flooded by Purgatory Creek and housed in three centers. Cibola Creek in northeast San Antonio flooded, forcing Bexar County workers to evacuate more than 200 persons. "We just i:ot them out before the water got here," said Officer James Bowles. Guadalupe County Sherifr Phil Medlin at Seguin said most of the flooding there was in riverfront i;ubdivisions in the county nnd not ln the city's residenlinl areas. "At thi s time v.·e are in th e process of picking up all the people who fa iled to evacuate earlier.'' he said. "The river js above flood st<1ge h<!re but it is receding ;ibove New Braunfels. We 're getting <i Jot of "·ater . ilelicopters are picking up JM!O- ple stranded on rooftops and in lrees. "We 're feeling so me effects in the Joyt'iying areas in the city but most of the trouble is along the ri ver, the divisions bullt along tlit water. ~fost of them are out on Lake Dunlap and L a k e McQueeny." Letter Reared Exotic Pet Gets Backing in Mesa Ralph Lut.ae11 time IWI bear 0 Anatll, .. Ol<lered run oul ol loWll by Colla Mua CllY CVW>cJI• M11 ~ lw found a new lt1'rid. He la Mlchatl J. Hltc11'111 of Placentla, "'ho wrote a scathing letter to the council condemning its action. llllchcns said that the ruling ''shows how governmtnt is denying people tht,lr basic rights.'' He added he wa s certain that "one .sun bear is n't going to cause lil great deal of trouble In Costa Mesa." Jllll to -lllh lbe COllljCll -· ""'" be .-, HI~ cfOaed with. "God blMI Ille lllllmal !oven and d111111 tbt City Ccio•ncQ ... Lut«•. wbo lw kept the IJS.pouod vegetarlan bur on hls property at 2008 Harbor Blvd . for the past sevtn years, he s been given IO day1 to dlspoce or bis pet. Councilmen ordered its rem ova because wild and exotic animals are not allowed under clly coder. Questions Asked 4 Hours On All-year School Plans Parents with questions about all-year classes grilled school officials for four hours Thursday night on planJJ of the Ocean View School District to switch to a "continuous learning " program this sum- mer. 1'he meeting was called a~ the request of parents opposed to the start of all-year calendars at Crest View and Westmont schools this July. About 120 were on hand when the meeting began at 7:30 p.m. but at midnight, when the meeting formall y broke up, only about 12 were still on hand. 'JWo school trustees, were gone by l 1 p.m. Robert Knox and Robert Zinngrabe left by·ll p.m. School ofricials were about a third through a list of 99 written queg.. tioru when the pair left. The meeting in the Westmont School library revealed the following new developments: -A feasibility study on all-year school~ has been prepared and wlll be presented to District trustees at their regular meeting Monday night. If approved it will then be forwarded to the slate depart· ment of educ'atlon , where final approval or rejection is expected in a few day!. -88 percent or the expected students at Crest View and 85 percent at \Vestmont have agreed to attend the school when it opens July 10 on an all-year calendar. The remaining students have either not responded to the school's questionna ire or choose to be bused to a neighboring school. -A state department of education offi. cial gave the first positive indication that the state may approve Ocean View's plan. Previously the state ha d been scrupulously norH:ommittal. •'The state will be apt lo consider that -if the district has made an honest attempt to ascertain ~he feelings of the community -the request for an all-year school calendar should be approved," said Jim Mcllwratb, a member or the state Fron• Page J HALL ... the finest in the state,11 said Trustee Robert Knox. "He is a man dedicated to excellence who knows how to bring out !he beSf in everyone. "OUrt,.loss will be the slate's gain," Knox sa1d. "\Ye're losing a man \Yho has done more for the children of this district than any other single person," said Ocean View Board President George Knox. "He is virtually irreplaceable." Or. Riles reported that Dr. Hall left Ocean View with "some reluctance ." "I stressed to him the challenge of pro. viding leadership on the state level Jor things he believed in," said Dr. Rile!. "And 1 told him we just need him. He was easily the most qualified of the ap. plicants we considerel." Before coming to Ocean View, Dr. Hall was superintendent of the Pacific Grove Unified School district near A1onterey. He also has 12 years' teaching experience and a doctorate from Stanford Universi- ty . 1ll·year schools committee. Parents had Prole$1ed lhal a school-run election was unfair .since only those who had attended infonnation meetings were allowed to vote In it. "A cert.a in number or people will never vote no matter what you do," Mcllwrath said. ' "It's not fa ir to penallie the ,whole community on their account." * * * Search for New Superin~endent To Start Monday Formal acc~pl.ance' of the resignation o( a man regarded as "irreplaceable" will top the II.st of agenda items at Mon- day night's meeting of trustets of the Ocean View School District. Dr. Clarence Hell wa.s appointed Thurs- day a.s Associate State Superintendent of Public Irutructlon, a post which he said he will take up on July 1. "Screening and/or appointment of a new suptrintendeot" Is also one of the items on the ageoda for .Monday night's meeting, an official announcement em· powering tru stees to •PPoint a new superinf.endent then if they so choose. There was Jame speculation that in- clusion or this item on the agenda in- dlcates trustees knew in advance of Hall's departure and may have someone in mind. Three specializing assistant superin- tendents in the district might qualify, in- cluding Woodis "Woody" cHaddick. 53, edueational services; James Carvell, 47, personnel and special. aervlces; and Dr. John Rajcic. 41, business services. Carvell and Rajcic were both recruited by Dr. Hall. The trustees meeting :will be at 7:30 p.m. in district olfice1, at the corner of Beach Boulevard and Warner Avenue. Lions Club Set For Park Feast Lake Park in Hunti11gton Beach will be filled with sausages, hot cakes, orange juice and coffee Saturday morning - and. hopefully, people. From I a.Rl. to noon, members of the Huntington Beach Lions Club trill be serving breakfast, all you can eat, for $1 • plale. Proceeds from the charity breakfast will go Jnto the Llom Club fund to buy ·and fit eye glasses for needy local school children wlth visual problems. The breakfast serving line will be located at Lake Street and 11th Street. Unit Seeks 3 'Changes :In Courts Dy JACK BRODACK Of Ill• O•ll't l'Hot lrtft Three changes In the stole judicial processes "'ere endorsed Thursday b)' the Orange County Criminal Justice CoUncil -including smaller juries for felony trlala and allowin& filth-sixths verdicts rather than unanimous results by slJ or JZ.man juries. The council also approved an Assembly bill authorizing the appolnt1nent or traffic trial commissioners to conduct a pilot project to speed up disposition er traffic offenses. + t.1ost council members endorsed all three proposals but Deputy Public Defender Rod ruccardl objected to reduc· ing the number of jurors and allowillg less tha'n unanimous decisions. ruccardi is chief of the felony defense division of the Orange County Public Defender's Office. Keith Concannon, executive director of the council, urged adoption or the pro- ))08als \Vhlch he said "'ere designed to speed up the processes of justice. The justk:e council was created two years ago as an advisory group to the Orange County Board of Supervisors. to monitor trends in crime prevention and to serve as a clearing house for anti- crime programs. Members include coun- ty supervisors. city c o u n c i Im en , criminolotists, judges and police chiefs. The principal proposals adopted were presented to the council meeting by Robert J. Huntley, city manager of West. minster and chairman of a special com- mittee of the council. "This committee has re viewed the recommendatk>ns of the Select Com- mittee on Trial Court Delay appointed by the California Supreme Court and the recommendations of the Special Com- mittee of the Slate Bar of California and recommends adoption of those proposals which appear to be the least con- troversial and the most beneficial in' the continuing effort to improve the judicial system," Huntley said. The reduction Jn jury sizes Jn selected crlmlnal cases to provide six-person juries, HunUey explained, applies only to those felony prosecutions where an al· Jeged offense is neither punishable with death nor with a maximum sentenri! of life imprisonment. The recommendation that ma jority verdicts in selected criminal cases be iinowed applies only to certain felony prosecutions, the committee chairman said and to prosecutions of misde- meanors. 'the term "certain" was not elaborated upon by Hunlley. The council voted to forward their recommendations to the California State Supervisors Association. t he ' League of California Cities, city councils and county boards of supervisors in each of California's 58 counties. The criminal justice council recom- mendations will also be forwarded to Orange County Jegi§lative deJegation in Sacramento for evaluation. Burglars Steal $220 In Office Equipment Burglars smashed the window of a Mission Viejo office Thursday night and left the premises with business equip. ment valued at $220, Orange County sheriff's officers said. Deputies said the intruders, apparently tn a hurry, took an adding machine from the offi ces of Dunn, DeBerry, Sharp and Company, 26181 Chrlsanla DriVe, and overlooked much more valuable equi~ ment. The theft Is under Investi gation today. • Cycle Dra,wi1i'g • Not Toniglit 1·1 reel some people out tbu• may be trylna to Kawuakl to me." Tbat'1 not whit she actUIUy oid, but it's the gist of the message from the Fashion Island shopping center Girl FrJd.ay who has been laking all tile c11ll~. about the Kawasaki motorcycle g:iveay,•ay. The racing cycl~ will be given away Friday , ~1ay 19. A 8tory publlshed in the'Fashion lsland>sec- tion of Wednesday's DAILY PILOT inadvertently left th~ impres.sion the 8iveaway was scheduled for lonlght. Councilmen Eye Leasing Guides For City Park Huntington Beach Co uncilmen Will con· sider adoption of a set of guidelines Mon- day night for lea~ing concession in the 207-acre central city park. A boat rental. two refreshment stands and a bicycle rental shop are planned in the park. A major family-type restaurant may also be built on the bluffs overlookinc liu.ntington Lake. City Administrator !>avid Rowlands is asking COWlcilme n to set up guideline!t and ask for bidders on the concess.ion leases now. while park construction if just beginning. Rowlands believes private capitol should be encouraged to develop the public concessions needed, rather than the city building them . Under Rowlands' plan, however, the ci· ty will maintain some control over the prices charged and the style in which they are built. The boat and bicycle rentals proposed for Huntington Lake should not be built in a "carnival like" atmosphere Rowlands maintains. Huntington Beach will retelve a rental fee fr9m the concessions, based on . potential profit. Rowlands is recom· mending a 2.>year lease for the con· cessions. From Pagel . MINES ••• they would not attempt to run the minefields. In tum, U.S. officials said It was unlikely American ships would attack Soviet or Chinese minesweeepers if they attempted to clear the harbors. Jnstead, U.S. planes would replace the mines as quickly as the Communists could pick them up. J~owever, the officials Sftid they saw no evidence so far of any effort by minesweepers to clear explosives block- ing entrances to seven ports. U.S. sources in Washington, Saigon and Phnom Penh said privately that the.re was at least Ja tacit agreement between the United States and the Communist powers that the U.S. blockade could con.. tinue indefinitely with neither Russia nor China trying to run it while denouncing it strongly in pubic. Pentagon officials said there was little prospect of any confrontation in area of the mine fields for several days at least. They predicted action in the Indochina war would shift from the harbor are11 to the Communist ground offensive In South Vietnam, which has been in a lull for a week. The mining of the harbors and other actions to stop delivery of war material to Hanoi by land, air or sea are not ex· , peeled to have any impact on fighting in South Vietnam for the next three weeks because of existing Communist stockpUes: of fuel, ammunition and food , the of- ficials said. "Though I'll be removed from the local schools directly. I'll continue to be an Ocean Vle\V fan and supporter," Dr. Hall said. "These have been four golden years with the district and I'll always treasure !he professional alliance with an ex- ceptiona l stall and many frienships which have rooted here." UPHOLSTERED CHAIR SALE Dr. Hall and his wife Jacqueline reside in Anaheim. They have a son, Jeffrey, 221 and a daughter ~fyleah, 14. ' , ANAL WEEK 1t.. Or111119 (Diii DAH."r PILOT •1111 11411d'I ~ COITlbll\C'd I~ N1W1•Prtu, 11 pubUIMd 11, !Pit 0111111r (011t Piltlllthlnt CG'""ny. $,. ,-,.,, tdl!lo"• 11e wblttlled, Mondlt' thro1111h llrid~1. !Or Co1t1 Mht. Nlwpttl lflCll. ,l11t1!1119!on n11(h/Fc11"111" V1 1t1y, 1..t9un1 1!.1•c11, lr~ll!t/,1110ltll1c~ •!Id Stn Cltmt11tt/ ~1n Junn C1pi1111~1. A ,111911 r1tglon.I .. au1on h 1111bllllled s1tura,,~, '"" $undtV'· Tl!r prl,,CIPll pi,11111lll11q Pit"! '' 1t lJO WM I B•Y Slrttt, Co.It Mn1, C1Uto1nl1, f)Ut, Spare Tires Unsightly- Pose Ecology Problems Rob11t N. W11d P1ttld1nr 11'111 P'llOllW'lft J1ck R. C11rl1y v .cc "''~.-it 11"111 Otncr1t M1n101r n,,,,,. 1e .. ,;1 lfltw lhom 11 A. M 11r~hi111 Mlflltlllll IEdllOt Chari" H. L.01 Rtch arC '· Nill A&slil•nt MNlllq r•i*' Torry Co11lllo w"' °"""' c..wi11 1m.r " ............ OMc. 17175 lo1ch loul•••nl M1ill11t A4cl111u P.O. 111 790, !2•41 .,__ LttVN l .. t11· 111 l"ertst A'#tl\W c .. 11 Mtw: ut wn1 11, '''"" ltlt.._..,l INCfl; J>JJ N_,.n lou1.-.1ff M ii (lt1Mnl1: lllS North l!I (llTllM lt1tl t11.,11 ... 17141 '4Jo4Jt1 Cl...m.4 A'"1thJ.t 64J·l611 ,~ HONJli Or-.e (-Ir CtlTllMllllHff llff·IJlt CWrrltllt, 1'12, Or•• C..11 ttvotlllllnt c-..,.,, ..... *"" llltiu, 111\lltrlllwl .. lfttorl!tl tl'llttlr .,. ""'111..,,.ft "'"'"' Mt'f' .. 'lll'*fllc"' •lllllul ..... , ,..,, fl'!IUitri 9f (Wyr\1111 -· 5Mf'lll t!Kt Mii ... •lit 11 Ciiio ~""° Qfli.r111L 141i11v1oi1t11 ., qn• A..U "'*'"'"' Wt """ u.u: ~lrJ mUlfWJ -lflt!llM 11.U "*'"'"'· litre is a sampling of the articles com- ing up In Sunda y's ediliOn of the DAIL 'l PILOT: ROLLING ALO~G -Old ~ li:es nt\'tr die, they just keep bouncing around. That's all right for youngsters \\'ho cra\\'I through Uiem and ,,v.·lng on them at pl1ygrounds but most old tires that refuse to go away present an ecological problem. Thal probl•m Is examlntd by Staff Writer Earl WU110n. Yl A!ilTEFUL socu;rv -lJ )'OU want to see II. \•bit a county dwnp and you'll find di.carded appllancts. seemingly In only a minor stale of disrepair. and many useful lit.ms ot furniture. The story is this Wffl<'s Sundoy Spteial. EMERGENCY l\OOM -How does • wom11n far.e · as chief of a hoaplt.al <mergeocy room! Pr. Claln> W•ldeml•r. chief emtr1tncy room phyalclan •I Colla Mesa Memorial ll01pltal, has handhd too Job slnct last Januuy and finds 11'1 quite a challti>gt. SPORTS SfARS -Thrre's an ll><leplh rtport In the spons pages on U.S. pairs skating champions Jo Jo Starbuck and Krn Shelley who turned professiooo.1 this \\'t'~k. . .. UNSPOILED TOWNS -The cover story of Family Weekly ducrlbe1 a couple's search for safe placts to live, to\\'ns unspoiled by crime where doors can rtmaln unJocked. They recommend 12 places for couples to spend ll>•lr r<tlr· Ing ytars ln peace. PSYCHOLOGICAL TESTS -Many firms use these test.I In deciding on key prornollons or Appointments. And If there's a thlrd per90n tn the room when lW art lntervle\\·ed, that figure, whom you ha\'t not sten ~ore, la probably 11 psychologist lll'.lal.Yzln& ~our reactions. ll's the lead story ln the' YOU" section ... POWER PU.NT -Southtm Callfornl• EdlllOn Company Is ll)'lng to klcale •• allern1te Rl>~~r plan\ at Jl?J' Mountain in Sd B<rnaralm County liut Soulhrrn Caliiomia Focus on tbt'edlloriol pages ftporl! thal dum foi<os an mobUWng aga!Mt lhe proposal Don't misa this ruo opportunity to purchose from our fine selection of upho~ftrod choirs at solo pricos. Wo fHturo nothing but the finest quality in our aolocti~ of upholrlorod chlirs. Heppineu is owning I ~1ir of custom upholster.a choirs liom Tod von Heme rt, Inc. 1t • solo prico. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE -KARASTAN ·1a1-" INTERIORS NEWPORT llACH LAGUNA IEACH TORRANCE 1727 WMltllff Dr .. 642·20!0 345 Norlh CNaf Hwy. 494-4551 23649 Htwlhomo llY<!. . 12111 m.1111--w• ~.l'lltAY'ltLt -Tol-M•of--140.UH ........... ........, ... ,. I '...... .... Al~SIO " -, ' ' •. the lsr the Du res con T Ha hou de le rea bas· A Por SUS lh• are of beli p first disc Nori it an A to<la gen '1, ra vasi Le con! Am "'T lhe poiso j5su,j ''ecti An date Distrl feder fraCa test · 15.000 to " war The agent lbe H the a assert Anon Abo I ri,Ved lbe f Hee proles where gain media The gov er 1970. r.-1ot cident Digeo when 1 Cl op m• but juri F Reds Shun Conditions On Talks PARIS (AP) -The U.S. delegation to the Vietnamese peace talks said today it Is ready to resume, on certain conditions, the meetings it broke off last week, but a senior North Vietnamese negotiator, Le Due Tho, replied : "What we want is a resumpticin or the negotiations without cond,itions." The. reply by Tho, a member of the/ Hanoi Politburo, follo'"'·ed by barely an hour a statement from the American deltgation that it "reafirms its readiness to return to the talks on the basiJ stated during the 111ay 4 meeting." At that time, U.S. Ambassador William Porter, in announcing . the indefinite suspension of American participation in the talks said: "We will resume the · plenari~s " - regular meetings as opposed to secret talks -"whenever you indicate that you are seriowly inteersted in the negotiation of matters of substance; or when we believe discussions would be useful." Porter also noted' at that time that the fi:st o:der of business in any new discussions must be the halting of the North Vietnamese offensive -he tenned il an "invasion" -in South Vietnam. A U.S. delegation source, expanding on today's statement, said it referred to the general conditions Porter expressed ~'lay 4, rather than to the specifics of the in- vasion. Le Due Tbo's response came at a news conference· he had called before the American statement was released. The Americans combined their offer to resume the talks with a remark "that the Communist side while demanding a resumption of the talks is carefully avoiding any indication of flexibility or willingness td discuss both sides' posi- tions." The U.S. stater.)ent concluded : ''The American delegation regrets that th~ ~unist side seems to prefer pot~rung lhe atmosphere in Paris by 1sswng statements more noted for in· vcctive than constructive language ." Candidate Held After Skirmisl1 In San Diego An American Independent Party candi- date for the new ttnd Congressional District faces charges of assault on federal officers today. in an alleged fracas stemming from a taxpayer's pro- test In San Diego. Armin Moths or San Diego was freed on $5,000 bond after his arrest with six com- panions at a warehouse where agents for the Internal Revenue Servict and the FBl were padlocking a building. The 42nd District encompasses parts of the Orange Coast. Moths was quoted as saying he and his <.'Ompanions were forced into t h e warehouse by the IRS agents. then ar· rested. But spokesmen for the lRS said the candidate, a relative, and several others allegedly assaulted agenh:i and·attempted to "rescue" property seized at the warehouse o~·ned by John Robert Heck. The incident took place Tuesday, agents said, as they seized the contents of the Heck Transfer and Storage Company. Thret agents were named as victims in the alleged assault by the group who assertedly represent Ta x p a y er s Anonymolis. . , . About 30 protesters fl-om the group ar- r.ved at the storage company to protest the federal action as "unconstitutional." Heck allegedly led a group of seven protesters to the d&or of his business, where he assertedli broke the window to gain entry. The arrests took place im- medi~ly afterward. The IRS claims that Heck owes the government $8,~1 in back taxes from 1970. Moths was formally charged In the in- cident before a U.S. Commissioner in San Digeo Wednesday, then released later when he posted bond. Boy, 2, Falls 15 Feet-OK A Z.year .. ld toddler from San Clemente !ell 15 feet from an 1partmtnl balcony onto hard pave.. ment shortly before noon Thursday but suffered no appartnt serious in- juries. Firemen said they were sum.- mooed to the scene of the fall by a U<tuor stote owner whose business ls nearby. They foond Marc A 11 a n Brotherton crying on the pavement below his mot.htr's apartment at 11119 S; El Corn!no Real. · Mire, son of Mn. Carol e·rothtrton, was taken for treat· mtnt and obstrvatioo at Miasion Community Hospital. .. \/Pl Ttffp/Mlo H DAILY PILOT . State II Star Basketball Player Arrested By The AISOCl~led J>rtllS 1'lit current round or C..'\llforn1<1 ant111'11 r protests has subsided a bit but n'ilit:\nts still clashed 1vith authoril ies and blockt'd ralh1•ay and highway traffic ~!Ort• th;ln 230 persons. lncluding UCLA All·An1er lcnn basketball ccnlt•r Hill \\'alton. Wl't'e arrested during \'1t't n;11n 11·ar protests across tht' state Thur~d;i~. !Sec related stor y on Pnt!e 16l Uut !ht• crowds taking part in th1• den1onstrnlions \Verl' s1na ller than earlier in the 1rel'k. Only a fe11• .deinonstration:. nttracled n1ore than 1.000 persons. Pari lll' railroad traffic for siX" hour-'! \1·hen !ht\' straddltd thf! 1raclu for the srrond 1iri1r this v.·eek. f ive persons were <U'l't'Sled. :\ i':i.udll'l1;:hl rally continued into !h~ l'i1dy 1norning hours today. Tr:i.ffi~ 11as stop ped briefly 11nd a h:i11oru1 of drnionstrator!I ;lrrested 11t Santa BnrbAr:i Thursday "·hen youth.o: 1r1ed to blot·k U.S. 101 and interchanges nf'ar the LJC c:un pus. l'hr lnr)lesf <h·n1onstrt1t ion ot the da y - 1•sl)alf'd at nlxlu! 5.000 persons -"·as • ~aceful t•andleli1:ht procession along the S:inla B:irb11r21 seashore 10 a park lv.'O rniles up the beach v.·here 21 rall y u·a~ hrlrl. Ai:tor nutx-rt Vaughn 1\·ns one of th ree spcilkers at tht. rall)•. 300 PROTESTERS CARRY ANTIWAR DEMONSTRATIONS INTO THIRD DAY AT BERKELEY Trash Cans Emptied Into StrHt1 Outside University of California's California Hall D<>n1onstrntors 1\'crc urged to a1•old \'\olence by a number or studt•nt body presidents al can1puses of .the University nf Califo rnia and by Berkeley ~layor \\1arren \Vid ener. 11·ho said violence "·as ''Nixon's trap." In S.1 n Luis Obispo. 1 . .100 marC'hrd !X"ICCfully by candlelii:,ht Thur:;d:iy night. Business1111111 11,rre askrd lu <·lose down toda y in !he <'ause or pcal'e. Cities · League Backs Gas Tax E~ology Plans Use of funds raised by the new sales tax on gasoline for environmental im- provement projects in cities a n d throughout the counly ,vas endorsed Thursday night by the Orange County League of C~ties. League members, meeting in Orange, urged all 26 city councils to consider adoption of support resolutions as soon as possible, The league-adopted resolution calls for ipecial budget handling of the new revenue and appointment of reprtsen-- tatives of each city to meet with their counterparts and with county officials to plan • overall coordination o f en- vironmental programs. The resolution was offered by Robert Nevil, La Habra co4ncilman and new alternate member of the Local Agency Form.alion Commission (LAFC). He said it was based on a suggestion made three month& ago by SUpervoor Ralph Cla.;k or Ana,heim. Nevil estimated that seven perctnt of lhe total sales tax revenue which cities receive from the state will come from the new gasoline t.a:x \vhich becoes effecti ve July 1. He added that money earmarked for environmental projects by the various cities will be spen t wit~ those cities on projects selected by the particular offi· cials but added that they should be co- ordinated with neighboring commun- ities. Nevil also said that the county go•ern- ment has agreed to commit its estimated $130,000 in new sales tax income to the environmental program. He sakt to date that 20 of the 26 citieS in the county have agreed to the program. Nevil's report also said that additional funds for ecology projects may be available through federal and state grants. especially if the programs are joint efforts between cities. Thursday night league members also elected a new vice president to succeed former Newport Beach mayor Ed Hirth. Named was Councilman Bob Harvey o{ Cypress who won by a narrow margin over Councilman George Scott of Foun- tain Valley. League President Robert Finnell. mayor of Villa Park, also appointed several Orange Coast city ofUcials to tbc organization's standing committee. Named to the SAMCO in- tergovernmental council study committee . W8s councilman Al Hollinden of Fountain Valley and Mayor Donald "Mcinnis of Newport Beach. Costa Mesa Mayor Jack Hammett and Placentia 1'-1ayor Bob Langer were !'Ppointed to the SAlfCO urban adjacent area group. Finnell appointed. Mayor Jbn Thorpe of San Juan Capistrano and Mayor Jack Dutton of Anaheim to the joint city-coun- ty park commission and Colincilman Tom O'Keefe of &tn Clemente to the ad hoc group considering "'8Ste disposal prob- lem s. Councilman Henry Quigley of Irvine was named to the arterial highways ad· visory committee as was city manager Lee Risner of Placentia. Gordon "Pete" Fielding. ge nera 1 manager of the Orange County Transit District, etplained district programs now being developed and talked or future plans of the organiUltlon. Fielding Jlreased that cooperation of the cities ls vital to the proposed establishment or transit bus service in the county and called for a feedback ol lnlormaUon to the tra .. lt di.trlct. . Halfway House Pair Arrested LONG BEACll (AP) -Two re•ldtnts of a federally funded Halfway HOUie here were arrested and booked ror in- vtsUgatlon of poueuion of heroin lor saJe, police said. Atmted Wedne~ were Eduardo E. Carci1, 35, and Albert Artiniag1, 2t. PoUct saJd both were paroled from TermiMJ Island 1 few montba ago. , Foreign Diplomats Tell 1'hc largest lllllllbf-'f or ;ll'l'l'SIS. t3j. «ante 11•/tcn dr111onslrt1 l\H's ;1t!c111ptod t11 11h><-·k tr11Hic nn a 11·w 111a,1• n1•nr $:1111:1 C~ruz. ,\ group Of tlC'lllOtl!'ilrators 1111'1 bri ef!,\' 1\•ith Stanford Universily P r •· s i d 1• n l llicha rd C. Lyn1an, who rt'fu st•d lht•1r rc- 11uest to suspend $12 1nillion 11·orth of defense contracti; held bv thr uni\'er:-1t\'. Al Rerkelev. the scrne of violent Rn· liwar protestS this \\'eek. '10Q persons sur· round ed the office of UC Chant-ellor AllH'rt Bo"•krr "'ith :tbout 100 persons in· l'ading lhe..btulding. The.v were evicted by polirr. Of Evacuation in Hanoi Aboul 3.10 Unil'ers.ily of Pncirii' students n1arched to n do\1·n1011•11 Stockton courthouse for a rally . Sorne JOO 1>ersons rall ied al the for111er Pt~ple's Park in Berkelry l:1ter :ind spent lhf' night. J)olice reported no trouble 11 t th1! park. SAIGON (UPI) -North Vietnam ha s ordered all residents of Hanoi out of the city except for esse ntial government, military and industrial "'orkers. a diplomatic source said today. The source, v.·ho travels regularly lron1 Saigon to Hanoi, said the evacuation of the North Vietnamese capital obviously v.·as "'ell planned and orderly. The evacauation began with the fir st U.S. air strikes on the city April 16 and "the streets are now Oeserted except for old men and critical government employes," the IOUrce said. Diplomats from Poland, Canada and India travel between the two Vietnams as members or the International Control Commission, which is charged \Vilh ma in- taining peace in Indochina. The diplomat said he saw a children's hospital in Hanoi that had been hit by American bombers early this month, despite the fact a large red cross was painted on the roof, He said he saw "up to 10" dead children in the rubble. The evacuation of Hanoi was carried out by government vehicles , which moved the population to the countryside, he said. "The peo):ile know Where to 'go.' There are slgm te!Ung those from each part of the city which area they will go to," he said. ---- \\'hole cit y \\'ards are being rcc.stablisli- ed in the countryside, the diplomat said. Schools. no1v closed for the sun1mer vacation. "'ill be reopened at new areas outside Hanoi in the fall. he said . The evacuation is the setond from lhc North Vietnatn('sc capitnl. U.S. a1r strikes rron1 1965 t.o 1008 forced the civ ilian population out of n1ost of the cities. The diplo1nat said mos t city residenl i; returned to their homes in 1969, but plans \Vere drawn up for ha.!ily evacuations in case of renewed U.S. air strikes. The U.S. command has announced t .... ·o bombing raids on Hanoi in retaliation for lhe C.Ommunist offe nsive launched March 30. Radio Hanoi has· mentioned several others, including a series of raids Thurs· day. Meanwhile, Hanoi Rad io reported ne\v American air raids on the city today and said three more U.S>--planes v.'ere shot . do1vn. / ~ Diplomats shu t.lling between ~lanoi and Saigon reported that Hanoi had been evacuated of all but essential govern· me nt. military and ind ustrial workers. Hanoi said the three planes shot down bring the number shot down in recen! da ys to 22 with a number of American pilots captured. The U.S. command hnd no immediate comment . Afterw ards, they picked up their litter -an ,11ction that prompted Police Chie f F.. Jesse Delaney to remark. "l'n1 very proud or these kids ... At the other rnd ol thr "Pt't'lru111 , a rallv in favor of President Nixon's Vif'I · nani polil'y drc1v !'>Cl p1•rsons in :-iai:r;1n1t•11· tu. ~layor S:un Yorty of Los Angcl1•s blamed "hardcore <.:0111mu111st11'' for slirring up drrnonslrations. "The 1nost charitable t.hing 01le t:ilu say ;ibout the young Amer ican dupes of the Coinmunists is 'forgive them . they know not what they do,' " the mayor said. In San Francisco, 250 persons rallied on J\1arket Street. Officials reported about tiOO peri;ons look part in an uneventful ca ndleligh t protest march fron1 UC lliverside to th<! county courthouse. They were escorted by police. \.\'alton was one of ~2 persons arrested at UCLA when they refused to obey police orders to tear do1vn barricades erected in front of the administration building. Nearly 40 persons were arrested ror blocking traf{Jc during a demonstration in front of a Bank of America branch i11 Northridge , a suburb of Los Angeles .. Protestors at Davis blocked Southern '!'he city council deelar~ today a da y~ of mourning. A sit-in al ithe Air J>'orct ROTC buildin~ at the University o( Soutliern Cal\forniit ended unc~·enlfully Thursdn y when a 1·ro1,·d lhnl lt\1'indled to 20 left for no lll>- parcnt reaso n. "Thc.v just gol up and walked ou1. '' :;aid Col. l'hilips Copeland4 HO'fC co1n- 11111nclrr. /\bout 1,000 persons m11rched peacefully 1l1rou~h downtow n San Diego while th e t:ily council debated a rcso!Ution demnn· ding gn i1nmedlate end to the U.S. role in Viet nam. The council rejected the measure S·3. /\ negative vote was cast by 1'1auree n O'Connor . 25, who said she was bowlng to the \Vishes or her constltuent.s despltt her opposllion to the war. Ladies Day Opens Up JACKSON. Mich. (API -The Bul· tcrfield 'Cheate r chain in Jackson ho1 an. nounced that it will allow men to attend Wednesday matinees -traditionally "Ladles Day" -at the reduced price ot 75 cents. Theater Manager Earl Hoffman snid men would be admitted tor the reduced price to avoid char1es or sex discrimination. Vacation T~me ... Wagon T~me Colony Park .. • • •.. IF CONTINENTAL BUILT A STATION WAGON, COLONY PARK WOULD BE IT! Colony l'a rk offers the ne w look or luxury in st ation wagons for 1972. Long the leader in the station wagon field ••• see lor yourself the most magnificent collection of better \vagon ideas under one roof •.. Test drive one today, •• Montego. • • Villager "Ca r Of The Year" ABSOLUTELY BE.~UTIFUL IN A STATION WAGON ••• 1'HE HOTIEST STY LI NG ON Tilt: ROAD TODAY' e GREAT SELECTIO N .e ALL WJTH AIR CONDITIONING • "'Orange Countu's Familtt of F'iM Car.s• • ohnson & son r\1f f{( l 'H,Y 2626 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • 540·5'311 , • • - OAILY PILOT f,ldt'J, M1y ll. lt72 • Mine Core Yields Last 40 Vict~s War .Protests Enter Third Day·; Slackening of Violence Noted KELLOGG. fda ho IUP I) -Alter nine day1 of 1earchlna: under1round In the M • tlon's lar1est 1llvtr mine. rescue mws h1 vt found the bodies of the laist 40 men n1i11sina: 1n the Sunt1hinc mine. All were dead. Jn all, 91 men died in the worst c1t11tropbe In ldaho '1 history. Of thoac flrlglnally frapped by 1n underground fJre, only two surviyed. Rescue team11 found the bodle11 of the last 40 ml11~!n! mlntt1 deep in the mine Thur1day, tnd n1 an around-the-clock ef. tort that bt-gan May 2 when a fire erupted In the "old worklna•" of • maze or tunnels. A mine official 111ld most of the men died Instantly of smoke or noxious carbon monoxide 1a1. many 1tlll 1lttln1 over their lunche11, others In pa1s agew1y1 . A total of 108 miners man11aed to teraml'lle to 11afety . Wlv11, rel1Uve1 ind ·rrlends main· t1h1lng a vigil outside the mln1'1 en- trance wept when the news of the dea~ was announced by Sunshine General Manager Marv in C. Ch111e. They were quickly driven from the complex , leavln& only empty chair• and wlndawept debri11. • 0 11\ey lied to U'I," screamed one hysterical woman being led through the company parking Jot. ''They said they were pumping air to them and they weren 't.'' Newsmen and photographer11 were kept at a dh1t1nce by Natio nal Guard1men. A company official said that "every cofi'celvablc means" was token to keep the trapped men alive and reach them . Re11cue teams worked night and day in the danaerous honeycombed mountain or tunnel• in hopes of findJng survivors in the nation '• Jerge1t 11lvtr mine. Hopes were buoyed Tue11day when two miners were found alive after 1pendlna a week at a rnJJe-deep level "air pocket" living off the 11ndwlche1 of dead com· rades. Tom Wilkinson, it. •nd Roy Flory, 21, aald after their rescue that molt of the men were-not trained In the u111 of their re1U1Cltators and would throw them away ii they cot hot, which meant that they were worklna:. The hope faded quickly IS teams round dead miners at nveral different levels during the past several days. The final 1even bodies were discovered Thursda y nljJht. three at the 4,200-foot level, two at the 5,200.foot level and two at the ~.ooo-• l'oot level. A U.S. Bureau or i11nes official, S. M. Jarrett so.Id that there 1tl\I was ll pos11\blllty of more fire In the mine. lie q !d an Investigation would be1ln im- mediately. "We hive to find the cause for recom- mend1tlon1 to prevent future such tlret," he 111ald. Jnspectlon11 will alto take place at the nther 21 met•l mlne8 In Northern ldaho'11 Cour D' Alept area. beglnnlna with the nearby Bunker Hill Mine, Jerrett .. Id. Smelti1ig Plant • Orderecl to Pay Medical Costs EL PASO, Tr.x. CAP) -The An1cric1tn S111elting find ltr!ining Co. hns betn ordered to stop di scharging dan1erous lrvel1 of hr.avy meta\11 Into the lit· 1nosphcre and \\'ill be required to bear 111 1nrdlc1tl cx1~nM"s ar l~nl children bein1 trrnted for high levels of metal In their ~lood. Judge l.'. H. Schulte Qn 1'hursday al~o lnslrul·ted the fir m to pay $100,000 i11 pcn1\tie1 and court costs and to lrnple- 111cnt some SiS0,000 '''Orth of pollution l'Ontrol iinprove.snenlS. The judge 's ruling y.·ound up three months of court prOCffdlngs on a 1ult brouaht agninst the finn by 1he city of El l)aeo And the Texas attorney general. Thi !lr1n also \\'as rtquired to finance the merlieal t'xaminations o! aUected children for 30 months. Tutin1ony durlng court proce~ rc\•M.lcd Iha! nurntrous chUdrtn 1es1td by authoritiN> have betn l..'OOIAminated in tiOflltl degt'CC' by lead from the smelter. UlllTt"""'* 'SAW CANNON BL,t.RING' · Lt. ~1ndy Cunnlngh1m NARROW ESCAPE LATIR Lt. lj.9.) Wllllom Drlocoll U.S. Fliers Down . 5 MIGs-Firsr ... Aces in Vietnam U.N. Orders Doors Closed To Tourists By THE ASIOCIATED PRESS 11.N. ol/lcloll ordered the world body'• New Yorlt beadquartera cloaed to touriata today becauae of the "rillng tide of demorwtrationl" agalntt President Nl:I:· on'• on Vlelnlm policy. 'i'hou¥ndl ar•ln took to lhe 1treeta an4 campu&a' Tlluroday In the tllird day of w1::-J!.iead protuu aaalnst th • Pr t'a cleclalon to mine North Viet. namese harbor1. At the University al New Mexico in Albuquuque, Dr. Fern! Heady, Ila president, called off an earlier Ila~ of emergency proclamatk>n and campus: curfew Thursday night and proinised to stay with the dWidents if necessary. Reports from acrOI! the country :;hmved significant antiwar activity In at least 23 states and the District or C<llum- bai. \'iolence appeared to ebb some\vhat , however, and though. there were more than 500 arrests most demonstrations were peaceful. Despite the demonstrations, a poll con· duded for the American Broadcasting Co. and aired on a tpecial Vietnam pro- gram Tllundoy nlllht Indicated a major- ity of Americans support the President's decision. The 1urvey baled on 191 telephone in- lef\'.lew1 by Lieberman Reaearch, Inc.1 found Ill percent agi:eed with the mining. 28 percent dis1greed and 13 percent had no opinion. The United NaUona was closed follow· Inc• demoastrotlon by 300 people and two inck!ents in which a IJ'OUP of proWters chained themstlves lnaide the Security Council and another attempted to climb a fence outaide. Radical lawyer Wllllam Kunstler told the demonstration, 0 Now ts the time to SAIGON (UPI ) -tt was a big turkey get to the streets. We are In the grip of a shoot in the sky orthestrated by the Red dlctator. We should disrupt every public Baron. At lea11t, that's the way Am erlca'11 ·function." rirst two Vietnam air ace! described The protesters called on U.N. their exploits. Secretary-Gene ral Kurt Waldheim to Navy Lt. Randy Cunnfngham, 30, of ~~~ war jssue before the Security San Dlego (Mira Mesa), the pilot, and his radar cfficer Lt. (j .g.) William Driscoll. The state of emergency at the 24, of Framingham, Mass., met the preu Uni versity ot New Mexico campus in today to ducrJbe how they rhot down Albuquerque foJJowed an Incident in three North Vietnamese MIGi two doya which police fired lhotpna and wounded before in HoJlywOod-ityle air battln over at leas t 10 penon1, none Hrloualy. the skle1 of Hanoi. ' The Incident occurred when a croup of The three Soviet-built M1Gl7s the pair protesters rushed police and threw ahot down Wednesday railed their total atones. Police fired shotguns at a hlgh ''klll,." this year to five, the magic angle and the crowd retreated up a knoll. numl;cr required to become an officia l "All we w~t ,is a pea ceful demonstra- air "ace." lion. but el'ery tbne we try to get off the Cunnlnfham , whose call .!llgn is "Duke,'' campu1 we get gaued.'' said one student !!aid the flrat word he reeelved about the a:ner the abooting cUmaxed in a day-Jone r.tJGs \Vednesday came over their serle1 of demonstrations. Phantom's radio. In Cambridge, ~lass., riot-equipped The \\'&vy. brO\Vn·haired pi lot, who police fired 60 to IO tear gas grenades to speaks \vith hi:s hands and face as much disperse hundreds of demonstrators who 111 his mouth, 11ald, "there was a 'tttIG so barricaded lhf! city's main artery in front close that t could almoat see the auy 's ct the Massachuse tts Institute of ('yes." Technology. ''lie had his cannon blaring out of bolh Seven persons ~~re an:ested and at "'in& roots" Cunninghan1 said. "I broke , .. lea~t four were Ul.Jured m the melee: into him and he overshot. \Ve reversed \vh1ch followed a peaceful rally by 1,000 and that "'All tht nr~t kill." de1nonstrators ,In Bolton and a march H1 bnished orr \\'tdnesdny's other l\1'0 back to Cambr1dae. d.ownlngs ot J\11<:11·~ as "just a typical Between 800 end 800 demonatr1ton hassle you get wilh MIG s." marched three mile11 from the Unlvtrlity CUnnlngham said only one or the pilots of Iowa campu~ Th~ay nlaht for a he shol do"'n mnnagtd to grt out of the planned symbolic blockade of Intentate plnne ilnd parachute lo !he ground. "He 80. Moat were •topped short of the didn't wavr. but he had a good chute," he hl&hway. :iald. ~ The Phantom Pair. \1'ho eventually got a\\'8Y from lhe. remnlning 1'-fJGs and headed south toward the set, finally ran into more than thtv could handle -a Sovlel·bullt surrac~io-alr missile (SAJ\1 ). "It shoo k lht nirplane but the airpla ne fie"' .fine for about 30 seconds " Cl.In· ni11.ghnn1 said. "And then I started losing all my h)'drnullc1 systems. And we coaated over the water and then I lost jUlt about everything." Cunningham nnd Driscoll ejected from lheir Phl'lntom fi\'e n\iles offshort. "You feel mighty sn1all in a chute noallnR riown and ft's probably th• most petrified 11ve ever bctn In my llfe." the pilot said. DIULY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Oefr.-ery of the Di lly P'llot Is guarantr!d S1turday end Sund1y: II you do ..ot ''"'"° lour copy by t 1.m. S1!urd1y, ., I 1.11\. und1y, call and 1 copy Wiii .. ~ fl you. C•lf• ara t1k1n .untll IO .,"" Tel1phorte1 "°'• I Oranpt COWll'I' Ami ., •• .,. , ..._. orth-1 H11t1tlnftll'I ltlCfl .. I ncl W .. tl'ltlNfW '""''''''''''"' ... ,. n '"'"'""' Ce1tfiftr9M IM<fl s.n Jvtn C.1tlftn1Mrt Dtfll ~. ltutll L..,,.., LtfWlll filltWI ........... • Ill Texas Floods 4 Drown Ne1v Brau1ifels Deluged b)· 10 lnclies.-of Rain f'emperatNre • -.. ,ll(OfA.l "'l -Uttl•l lY1(110t)(,t.~/l•1AMl.1 1 •1)•'1'1 trcuMO-'---. ..... limil- ~~,,t:;_ 't\ ~ ' • ·~ J ' ' . "~ CONTEMPT STRICKEN -Chicago Seven defend- ants, and their attorneys, are shown in 1969 photos. (Left to righl, top), Jerry Rubin, Abbie Hoffman, Thomas Hayden, Rennie Davia and attorney Wil· liam KunsUer. (Left to right, bottom), Bobby Seale. Lee Weiner, John Froines, David Dellinger and at· torney Leonard Weinglass. Seale was severed from the trial and tried separately. ' Freighter Towed To Port-With Cargo of Dead Chicago 7 Conviction Of Contempt Overru"led MONTEVIDEO (UPI) -A British freighter with all 74 persons aboard feared dead arrived in Montevideo under tow today following a collision with a Liberian oil tanker in the River Plate. Eight of the tanker's crewmen Were missing and presumed dead. , The 10,292-ton freighter R o y s l o n Grange, described by authorities as a charred hulk of melted steel, was an- chortd two miles out in Port Montevideo. Uruguayan coast guard officialJ said the 220 degree heat in the hold prevented a search of the passenger and bUnk areas. where most or the 63 crewmen and 11 passengers were sleeping when the col- lision occurred at 7 a.m. Thursday 2 a.m. (PDT). 'Ibe Royston Grange was en route home with a load of frozen Argentine beef in its refrige rated hold when , ac- cording to one of the rescued crewmen from the 9,000-ton tanker Tien Cheung, it suddenly veered sharply toward the center of the river and its prow struck the tanker amidships, ,Tlw! crewman, Lo Kam Wal or Hong Kong, said the frelibter'1 -Iman apparently feared be WU In d111Cer ol arow>dlng. The C{Jih touched oU a raging fire on the Tien· a.run,, which waa hauling 20 tons of crude oil. The fire engulfed both sh1pa in fl&JMt. Cout lllard officials said the coUl1k>n may have burst . carbon monoxide tanks servicing the British shJp'a refrtgerntlon units and that most aboard the freighter .probably died of gas poisoning. The Argentine coast guard cutter Delfin, which responded to the Tien Cheung's S.O.S., rescued all but eight of the tanker's 41 cre.,.;·men -Hong Kong and Nationalist Chinese who jumped from the burning ship. The eight were given up for lost. Cmdr. Luis Farraco Silva, chief of search and rescue operations for th• UnJilllYAn COi.st Guard, sald, "We presume, and we have adequate iround• for oo dolni, lbal all those aboard the ~ Granp porllhed." . By ROBERT BENJAMIN CHICAGO (UPI) -"I want to com- ment on this, your honor, be<:au11e I think wbat you have just Wd is about the most outrageoUJ statement I have ever heard from a bench, and I am &oing to say my piece right Dow, and you can hold me in contempt right now il you wish to." U.S. District Court Judge Julius J. Hof- fman eventually did hold attorney William M. Kunstler Jn contempt for speeche1 like that one. He also meted out contempt aentencts to Kun1Uer's fellow attorney Lf!Orllrd l . Weingla.u, the "Chicqo Seven" defendants · t h e y rtpresenied, and Black Panther leader Bobby G. Seale, wholo case had been severed from the trial. On Thursday, the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of AppealJ overturned the contempt sentences and ruled that those found guilty of contempt by Hoffman should have jury trials -with the e1ception of one defendant who received a term of less than the genenlly accepted six months for contempt · The Appeals Court ruled, 3-0, that any contempt tria15 should be held before a different judge. U.S. Attorney James R. 'Mlompson said the 1overnment would take thole ruled as deserving of jury trials to court again. The judge's contempt sentences - ranaing from two months and 18 days for defendant Lee Weiner to four years and 13 day11 for Kunstler -had been as con· troversial, in and of themselves, as the rest of the trial. The "Chicago Seven" trial began Sept. 24, 19&9, with eight defendants. It ended Feb. 111 1970. Seale wu severed from the trial. He had been lhackled Ind gagged for three day1 on Nov. 5. Hoffman save him a four-year contempt sentence. Seale called the Judce "racist • • • Foaclll ••• Ill.I" !or not permltUn1 him to be npruln!ed by San Fraocllco at- tomey Charles Garry, who was ill at the !iUlrt of the trial. But Seale's absence did not make the rest of the proceedings tranquil. There was a brawl between the defendants and U.S. marshal11: a birthday cake was brought into the court for Seale; the defendants tried to drap the defense table with the 'Viet Cong flag; Yippie~ Abbie Hoffman and Jerry Rubin showed up in judge's robes; and there was a rag. ing controveray about whether the defen· dants should use the men's room in the hall or the one in the courtroom lockup. And attorneys Kunstler and Welnglast' engaged the judge (v;ho today is 76 and on senior status) vigorously about hi~ decision, claiming that the "almO!phere" in Chicago Jed to the disturbances at the 1961 De mocratic National Convention, for which their defendants were beinl charaed y.•ith conspiring to 1Dcite riota. Teaclier Won't ~ -So Dad Does ILKESTON, England (UPI) -A fatll<r became angered because a school head· mistress refused to punish hJs son with a cane. So he caned the headmistress. The story was revealed Thursday whew Brian Draper. 37. father of seven children, was jailed for six months ro~ assault. He pleaded ini:iocent. 1 Prosecutor David Seddon said Draper'• son had been barred from school dinne~ for misbehaving. The father then went to the school and suggested a canlna wou14 be a bftler punishment. ·, Miss Beryl Bl11s. the ileadmiltrW: told the court that · she told Draper she did not cone children. "He then told me, 0 1'11 cane you• 1n4 pushed me over a table and hit m1 ,.veraf limes on the back with the c:ana, • lhe lald. ' ' · The collision occurred 30 mile• southWffl ol Monle>ldeo off Punta lndlo, 40 D1uUcal mllea from Buenos Alrts. 'nle Liberian tanker was being towed to Buenoa Aires today. Sehools Raided • • Bo1nbs Rip Army Bp.se iii Europe Officer Killed FRANKFURT. Germany (UPI) -U.S. miUtarj • officials tightened security precautlono on bases throughout Europe today followl111 a chain of esploolons which ripped through the headquartm ol the Army's V Corps Thunday nlJbt, klll· Ing one olflcer and iniwinll 13. An Army 1pokesman said commanders wtre Instructed to take measum 0 nectssary to insure the securltf al tbtlr Installations." Including checks ot license plates and ldentincatlqo cardl ol all pusom entering bases. The dead o(flct.r was Identified as Lt. Col. Paul Bloomquist, 39. of Salt Lake Cl· ty, Utoh. a member or the Army Medical Service Corps. The offlctr ".., kllled when bombs w-ent off almost simultaneouaty near the l.G. Farben Building and the od- j.1cent Terract Officer's Qub Io dO'i\'T'ltown ~"rankf\lr1. Poliet. aid tbt bombo may hovt bttn pl1ntl'd by U.S. Arm1 c1oout ... • • 59 Students Ri(le to Jail on Buses C:HATTANOOGA. Tenn. (UPI ) -1t was an u.nutUal route for the two yellow school buses to be tr1velin1. The road led to the city jail. The 59 students aboard the buses voere part or 120 persons rounded up by police Tllunday In the larl'•t dnii rold in Ten· ,,..... history. "Ronny1 Ronny. Oh, Sweet Jesus. Why?" unplored GllO mother, lean 1tre1m1ni down her cheW. A pretty blonde i n hotpanll ran to a· heavyoet --with lilorl hair. .. Mama, I didn't do It/' lhe cried. 111 know you dJdn't, honey," the woman replied. Undercover agenll. willed b y studmt lnlw men, aJlllodJJ' made 110 pun:huos of marij uana , It of LSD, 4l of heroin and 31 of other assorted drugs fN>m the studtoll and II 1dulll collared In the roundup. ' .. we·re not dtallng wlUJ a kid ex- perlmenttnc wit)I • llldt of marijuana, n Diltrict Att.me!> Generol Ed Divis said. ·-One i.-lptor u ld he wu off<red 1,000 -of LSD from a :lf11&le pusher for $3.llllO. Another sakl one pusher of- fered ID ..U him ID pounds of m•nijuana for ..... Ustnr the school buxs. police . h<can th< roundup of IUl)l<clod dru1 puoh<rs at 10:30 1.m. Visiting eight junior' and l\Yo senior high schools, poUce turned over 10 the principals lists of suspects named in secret warrant s issued after tht 311 month underco\•er investigation. "The principal just sent messengers to the var ious classrooms and asked the studenta Involved to report to tbt prin-- cipal 's office," Police Commiuioner Gene Roberti said. "When the students got to the offlce they were lalcen Into custody." A •prinklilll of atudenta c r I e d throusboul the amst proceos but most llJICbed and clowned -unW u.; pueeta relched the police lllttoo. ~with the m.., armta. Davis said "only the surface of the u..ble hu been scratched. We have one hell of a problem hert." DtvfJ, who said there Wert 272 stpa.r1tc offcnSes listed in tht In- dictments. indicated be felt authorities had been too lonient In sucb cues In the past~ "We've taten 1 son attitude on this Ion& enough and it's lime we bt1an to tr .. t lh<m llltt pushm -lhat '1 "hot they art," he said. Jnvcnlle Court Jud(e Dixie Smltll hu g~ aside two wetlu. be1lmin1May24, te try lhe Juvenile._ • ' l 1 In d h y y of th c v ·~ · ol of is f i5 of th t er ~ SC • es . . th a 80 th bl ed pa m ro 29 no v of cl .. In a ba of of u ff Sc an an • DAILY -PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Tight Control Needed Al Coen bas developed an image as a tough mayor o! Huntington Beach. He wields a stern gavel at clty council sess.lons. Coen demands an estimalt from each •P.eaker on how much time he needs to speak. He doesn t lludge • minute past that estimate. He also puts hearings ln order !rom the shortest to ·th• last, so a bulk of the business is accomplished first. While Coen might be a bit l!lOre diplomatic in his approach to handling the public at times, tight con- trol is needed and welcome. 1n the past many bear- ings have run up to two hours, with citizens filling the air with repetitious and irrelevant comment. While each citizen certainly bas the right to ex· press his feeling to his city council, many have a ten· dency to drag a meeting to an unbear_able length and create a situation in which tired councilmen ma"-e poor decisions. Coen's vvel may sound a little sharp to some sen· sitive ears, but i! it helps produce sharper decisions It's worth that. Thematic Summer School Public education may be compared to a monopoly. If you're between five and 14, chances are 99 of 100 that your neighborhood public school bas your business. Except in summer. When the sun is out, skies are blue and the surf is calling, children and their parents have a choice whether they come to school or not. -. Fountain Valley, Huntington Btacb and Ottan View scllool districts. The Founlaln Valley School Distrkt, !or example, has designed each school's program around a particular theme. Thus children may spend their summer session doing science, reading, math, and social science as they relate to ''Our sraceship Earth," or "America the Beau· · tiful," or any o several other themes. Huntington Beach and Ocean View schools are dressing up their <ilferlngs wlth similar approa<hes. The efforts are commendable. Maybe regular school o!- ferings can borrow some excitement from summer school. Early Career Guidance Deciding on a career can be a tough task for a . youngster in high school. Faced with more th~n 40,000 work choices, it is not easy , to know which ,direction holds the most promise for a rewarding vocation. Two high schools in the Huntington Beach ~nion High School District-Fountain Valley and Wes!m1nst~r -have established cai:eer guidance centers in their schools to help students find an occupational direction. At both 'schools, the guidance center has a wide variety oC job resource materials including pamphl~ts. tapes, movies, microfilm reader macbines and film strips for students to study as part of an assignment or on their own initiative. The programs also include a series of s~eakers on various careers ranging from auto mechanic to cos- metologist. There also are field trips to diffei:ent job sites in the immediate. area. ... ' .. ~ 1,'"" '~, '~·~ Consequently, the schools put on a whole new face in summer so they can stay in business. Shiny new pro-- grams are presented in the hope of competing in a tight market, and nowhere is this more true than in the The program appears to be a valuable step in helP" ing students to plan realistic and fulfilling careers. H ''CHEER UP, PADDY. ODDS ARE IT WAS A BRITISH BULLET~ Why Latin Should Be Reinstated (sYDNEY J. HARRIS) If the Human Engineering Laboratory in Boston is to be believed, the un- derstanding of English words in the U.S. has persistently declined for the last SO years, dropping at the rate of one P2IDl i year on the laboratory's "general scale" of vocabulary. What is important about this, if true, is that the laboratory 1 e es a one-to-one correlation betweeft vocabulary and vi- ... · ·olence: if the level of verbal e1pression I is low, the only other form of expression is physical. A continuing study of some 50 years by this group indicates t h a t violence and crime predominate among those who : score low in "recognition vocabulary,'" • especially of abstract words. Without the appropriate handles, il reports, "such abstract ideas as justice, honesty, per· sooal property, Jaw, courtesy and . thoughtfulness for others seem im~i­ ble to comprehend." Fascinatingly enough, the "level of education" does not play as important a part in a,ugn;ienUng vocabulary as we might imagine. After the age of 12, roughly -judging by a study based on 29,000 persons -"neither high schools nor college contribute to E n g 1 i s h vocabulary." Anyone listening to a group or "college-educated" businessmen or clubwomen nattering away at lunch would sadly have to agree with this. WHAT PARTICULARLY interested me in this study -apart from the menacing .~ Dear Gloomy Gus Wouldn't it be great if the street sweeper followed the trash collec· tor! -F. C. Tiit. ... ,.,.. nflKtl .....,... wttwi. .. , _ _." .... tf ltle ....... kllC .,_ "' ,....... " • ..,., .... D* "'"'· relationship between growing illiteracy Jand rising violence -was the flat stat~ ment by the laboratory that "with tht fabulous sums spent on education," the underst.aodiDg of English words has declined in large part because of the removal of Latin from most school pro- grams. The number of years of LaUn studied in school correlates with a large and exact English vocabulary, it was found : "The structure of EngliJh is Anglo-Saxon ; but the words which give color to writing, and definition to thought, are Latin. The Latin language, though dead, furnishes a background for English, a foundation on which to build." I HA VE LONG maintained this, although I had no real factual basis for my belief. Tbe laboratory recommends unequivocally that "to retard the downward trend of the U.S., reinstate Latin in the high school curriculum." (It turns out that even money earnings, with minor exceptions, have a high correlation with a background in Latin.) Everyone bas remarked the difference in verbal levels between the average Briton and the average American; the former is far more fluent and expressive,' more respectful toward precision and form in language; and this flexible use bf language may account in large part for the civility, the courtesy, the lack of violence in British life. What the tongue can't articulate, the fist (or gun) is (orctd to erprea:s. Study of Human Society • • l Anthropology, the study o! the origin and development of man, is usually thoug?lt of as a scientific approach to primitive peoples. ln fact, of course, anthropologists have come to reject the idea that any group can properly be thought of as "primitive." Furthermore, 1nthropologisl!: can be found studying the peoples of America, France, England, aOO other hi ghl y advanced societies. This backj:round conveys the depth· and scope of Prof. Ian C. Jarvle's book, The Story of Social Anthropology: The Que.st to Understand Human Society (McGraw· Hill, $5.95J. IN THIS NEW volume tn the History of Science Serles, the author shows bow anthropok>gy grows out of comparisons and contrasts between one t0elety and another; that contact ol cultures and socleUe.s a:llmulateJ reflectjon on wby aocial life ill ordered the way it ls, and not some other way. The book concentrates on throe maltl anas of society: ttl.lgton and inaclc. ramlJy and ldnsblp, and oodlJ controL (THE BOOKMAN) The former are teen as man's attempts to undmtand and mailer hil 1ur- il>undinp and '"' me -precunors to sci_ence and technology. Family and kinship are the most Widespread mean1 of organizing the groups nectSlary for social life. Social control ts necessary bec::aUJe man lives In a hoe:Ule en- vironmtnt and must orsa.nize to survive. ;· SOCIETY, THEN, is seen In this book as the moat aopblsticatect piece or man'• technology. But at the same time, 110c:lal mecban.isms work· only becal1.9e mtn ac-· cepl them u beodldal anil CO<Jperlle. Failint thil mutual wxlentandlnc, IOclat mancements brMk c1own. Dr. Jarvie ii o-iafe pror ...... or philooophy at Ycrk Unlvenlcy, Toronto. Canlbe-· • •• G~rwe --------. Dear George: I have operated a filling otaUnn for years and am aotnc broke because a new station acroa the lllrttt tw hll!d !emale aervtce at- tendants. They WW ohcrta and halten. What can I do to Hehl thil kind ol <'.<llD!"Utioll! • OLD TIMER De>.r Old Timtt: Mvertlse ror ...... t o p 111 s mechanics ot eJa lnstaJI a -ar wash. .. (Wben an ot11er ad...., eo1- mnn1•s have failed you. I<! C-11 do tt! He can fail you b<tttt than lft1boct7 in the l!l1lln rid< et.) Family Car Killed Public Transportation Opposed to Mass To the Editor: Re : Letter, "Support Mass Transit," by Fem Pirkle (Mailbox, May 4). Forty years ago every city of any size had public transportation that was ef- ficient and inexpensive. When 11 first came to Long Beach as a bride, one could atill ride the bus for a nickel! :iut as cars became more plentiful and priced so that more people could afford a ~, and then as people began moving to the suburbs, the transit systems could no longer operate as economically as before because they had loot the bulk o! their riders. Once people experienced the great con- venience of stepping into their cars at their door and riding directly to their destination, the buses lost their popular!· ty. I WHO WANTS TO walk several blocks to a bus stop, with another walk at the end of the ride, and probably transfers from one bus to another on the way? And at the height of bus travel during peak hours having to stand swaying in the aisle be~use all the seats were taken? We have become to6 spoiled by the ad- vantage of going in our own cars, com- fortably and conveniently, to want ta go back to public transportation on a acale to make rapid transit feasible. Now the only ones who would support a transit system are the aged, and those who can- not afford to own a car, and they .are not always financially able to pay the high fares to ride the buses. IT HAS BEEN suggested that another tax be added to the price of gasoline to subsidize the public transportation and rapid transit systems. This puts an unfair burden on those who are already bearing the cost of their own vehicles, plus the cost of operating, upkeep, and insurance. Public transportation died a natural dea th with the advent of the "family car." Please don't lry to revive it at taxpayers' expense. IF it can be done, let free en· terprise do it! PAULINE E. MOEN Agrees With Nixon To the Editor : I just listened to President Nixon's speech regarding the war in Vietnam and our mlftlng the port of Haiphong. As an American, I wu in accord with every word he said. Have no fear that Russia or Red China will retaliate against lhe judgment of our President. Jn the first place, both Russia and . Red China gained their power and ma intain their power without honor. They rule through fear and oppression like a gangster mob roles a territory through threats of violence against honest, God· fearing people. ' BECAUSE jlF'THll ahatlow foundation or strength·to 7.'•· when tt comea to a real crisiJ they have only ~ courae to follow and that ls to turo tall and run . No, n'ver In qie history of the world has the real villain against-the good or mankind ever won out. 'liie judgment of our Prealdtnl, who represenWI the people of America , wlll pnvall !or the 1ood ol au free peoj>le thniugholll the world. GRANT llA!IDING PHIWPS :J'llhlk Abo•t Jt To the Editor: The sky now is black, many rlvtrs are dead, millions of cars, planes, boat&, faC" torles are c.onlrtbuUng to our pollulitrt. A miog al«!rt rlngs1 school chUdrtn must go Into lhe tchool room .• Thb b not the fUture -It ii right Dow. Mto ii del1roylng the world. Man and animals are golnf to die unleu we slap pollutlofl -! The lacjorlu can slow down the rate ol pollutlon and we can stop I~ It will cost money and time. We · • m"!l, lllJP It now belOA Um• runs ouL MAILBOX Lt-lttn fNlft ,....,.. •N w.k--. HtrMll .... wr111r1 .....,Ill cell'ffY tlMlr --• lo! JM ~1 er ..... TIM rltfll, fl nMtflM i.tt1r1 fl Ill "'Kl ar •ll11tl1111fl Ilk! h NMl"I ... All Mttws """' ,,,. dllfe 1'91llhl,. 1tM -111"9 ....,..,,, ~I M .... I IMr 1o1 wt~ ff l"MlllMt H wtfkltllt ,__ It ·~•rMll. '"'"' wllt lltl M Mtlllltllttl. • When 1t Ct>mes to decide what to do about pallution, think about It. DOUG PARRY Age t4 Gaaollne l'rlch1g To the Editor : I was very interested in recent com- ments on our retail gasoline prices in the Orange Coast area. ~ Perhaps I shouid explain first that we have no controt at all over the retail gasoline prices that are charged at Chevron Dealer stations, The dealer,. are independent businessmen and set their own prices according to their own best judgments. That accounts for some of the price dlffereM:es you have noticed between stations. 'Mle only stations where we can set the retail price of gasoline are our own company. operated Standard Stallons. And even there. prices oft.en differ from one station to the next, according to the market conditions in the area served by each station. To ru" a sound business, we must stay abreast of market conditions and keep adjusting to them constantly. Our prices. thererore, cannQt always be the same from one station to the next -« even from one day to the next. . .' 1 R.A. VANDEHEY Manager Customer Assistance Western Operations, Inc. Marketing Department Standard Oil Co. or Coli!., Conconl Defend• Chlropract_or• To the Editor : Re : Jean Crum, M.D. vs. Chiropractk: -Dr. Crum seems to take great delight In continuing the big lie aboot chiroprac- tora. ll ls lnterestinf' (and infuriating) at times to see what many misguided people do to make a point about which they have strong feelings. They take certain ideas and use them to Illustrate tfleir point, meanwhile carefully ignoring t b e~· otht:r side of the coin which may detract from the believability of their argument. EmoUon takes over, logic and true facls fly out the window. DR. CRUM KNOWS that the chiroprac. tora are well trained In all the basic sciences and must diagnose and treat the sick according to state law. His argument ls the same old rehash of the medical (A.M.A . .C.M.A.J monopoly. fl I s ehameful that . chiropractors art not on the staff of tvtry It.Ile and county hoopital and all public illllllutlons. Many crlpplod children ar• denied this very rrne· and 1eitntlfic lrt1tment. ThrouCh hllb-powered politics and the great medical lobby, the elderly people ar• dtnl<d the right to chiropractic mtdlcare . Why la this allowed .io continue in a great frtfi Amtrlca ? IJ Lhll a part of our clviJ, rlghls! GEORGE H. STRICKER Dr. Jtan F. Crum it prt •Uient of lhe California Mtdical Atsocintion. -Editor Crf, Screecll, Moa" To tht Editor: Why are oo many radio t.tallora Transit foolishly playing ro<:k-11nd-roll loday? The reason is actually quite si mple. ltock·ond· roll as bad as it is, has somrhow mysteriously produced an enormous listening audien c('. Bul who is li stening lo this rubbi sh? It is thr 1nctnipu\atc<I youth of our nalion who feel they have to be total duplicates of their helovPd peers. The youngsters or this country appear to be mere computers waiting lp;oorantl y for their peers to program them. FURTHERMORE. the lt?cm "rock music" is compl elely inappropri11te. Probably the perfect name for it Is "rock sewage ." By the use o( these two fan· tastic words, a person is not only 11hle lo vividly give another e plcturt1 of "rock · and-roll," but can instantafleously explain exactly what It smell s like as well. You are probably wondering why T omitted the word muslc and tubslltuted the most appropriate word in ilfl place. I did this because rock-and-roll 1!1 not music. Rock-and·roll is a cry, a screech, a moan, a groan, a dirge, and a gasp . "Rock-and-roll" is no more music than I'm Christopher Columbus. IT HAS OFTEN baffled me how many of today·s youth can sit listening to such CRAZY trash for so Jong. IL la truly frightening to contemplate. · Most likely, programmed youngster• will disagree with much or 11! of this. But, unfortunately, their disagreement demonstrates how e r f e c t l v e I y pro- grammed their computers are. 11n't Jt pitiful ? T~RRY J. NIENHUIS Kid• Sh1111 Water . To the Editorl The recent hullabaloo concerning nooride tn city water (Sin Clemente) and the coming vote In the west Orange Coun· ty cities Is r!dloolous1 !las anyone lately seen a child take • drink of water? Not I. In the years when we had kids at home I pr.:iyed that they would, just once, pass up lhe frig and try a glass or water. Belleve me, It never happened. It always had to be milk , Koolade, Coke, pop or just "anything" but plain water. "Gee not wat.!r, It tastes funny .'' "U it'1 so good for you, you drink it, Pop." ''We notice you put Scotch or Bourbon in it to drink It." TIIE ONLY TIME the kids get • serious look at drinking water is at school, looklng through the microscope at "the runny bugs in the stuff." I don 't blame them for not drinking the stuff. (In slx monl.hs In the European countries J never drank tap water, used Solari and La Casera , as the best bottled waters, or sa"n Miguel beer or Scotch/. What's to blamf!? If the dentists want nuoride to triter the mouth.' Of babts then why not put It in candy , cereal, cakes and pies? Maybt hot dogs? Hamburger? Fluoride doe1n't htl p aflt r age 15, I've been told by the denti sts, and bc3ldes I'm not sure it would help my dentures. And what percentage of the! people are under 15? Or do we count the dogs, call, horses, de?? BILL HEARD ' Mor•torlum O,,,.O•ed To the F.ditor : The League of Women Vol.tra of Hunt- lngton Beach oppo5e1 President Nixon'• propoged moratorium on school hu1lng. By oppostna thl!: moratorium, the local membership rentnrms our National League position In support ,of equal op- portunity for quality education for all children. Jn 1954, the Supreme Court, 1taun1 that .. ,..ratt achools cannot bt cquol, ru led that llOJT!l•tlon by race In public school• denied tqU>I opportunity. Wt rtsrrinn the lf71 .,.,,., declllon ln Subsidy maintaining that bu ~ing Iii It loo! th11t must be held ovallabl c to remedy stirlous inequ ity In educati on. PltESll:>F.NT NIXC)N proptlll:f"ll a morato ri um on all new rourt-ordcrrd busing. '!'hough supposC(tl y ~upporting desegr~~allon, thls lt~lslntlon woulft 111'.!n)' support to tho,.e cun1n1un11 lrs which hR ve made an errort to lntr~r11te nncl ren1ov• effective incentive ror thost Achoo! systems not willing to lntcgratt. Resid ential integrRtlon would , n f cour se, eliminate this kind of busing. But a whole generation or more cannot wait. A six-year-old ehlld, &tarting first 1r1de in a ponr, 11cgrc~atcd neighborhood, ha• only that one year to be In flr1t gr11de. Busing offer s one Immediate acceu to better education. Most importantl y, It Is quality educ• lion for all that 11 the real n1tlon11l l111ue. : RUTH FINLli:V League of Women Voter1 or lfunilngton Reach For More Open Spll«!ft To the Editor: A recent article In WestwayJ mag11zlne states that "Southern Callfom h1 h11.!I one· fourth the recreational lane! called for In national surveys. Thal open space In Southern CaUfornl• Iii: among the ·hordellt to obtain in the nation." I believe that In this area or OranR t County, we still have a ch11nce to 1ave 110me of our open spaces. Our Orang• Co unt y Board or Supervisorn, by adopting the rlrst "open apace plan" for th• county, h11 realized that "a change 1n the concept of how much open space 11 needed" ls an Jmmedlalt! necessity. AND WHY NOT start with the bluU1 area that Ilea along the bound.11ry of Hun. tlngton Beach and Fountain Valley ? RIRht now, a parcel or the bluffs la net oo the lluntlngton Beach 11if1e of Newland and Ellis streets I~ be ing conaldertd for a houJJing development. I understand that parts of the bluffs would be rtmovtd for U!lt as fill below . And 111 large grove or eucalyptu11 tree" would he cut down. Also, In th.ht 11re11 is known to be 1 veluable archaeological 11lte which would Mi covered over. APPARENTLY, THE I.and owner's problem Is havinR a piece of hiChlY·taxed lend not In use. So Mlurally, he wants to sell. But surely, a natural are• auch 11 this could be purchased by city, county or state and used for same rccreaUona l purpose (perha ps as an extendtd equestrian and hiking trails area) or simply preserved 111 open 1Jp11ce. Just driving up the tiill on Ellis 111nd through the farm8 Is a ple;i sure. l..el's keep our little bit of country. Interested persons should let the lluntingll.>n Beach planning commission or ci ty council kno.w of their feeling on thl.s subject. ' CAHOL W. RAWC DAILY PILOT Robe rt N. Wttd, P"blf1her Thol'l'kU Kettrll, EdUe>r Albc'I W, 8at~J Edirorrat Page £rJUor The' tdJ!orltJ JMlP Uf 1hl! ()ti!)' Pill'I\. tt'f"kt to lnlQrm and •Umu· ll11' f"'Atlrn hy JH'tl(ln1ln& thi• new•p1111cr'1 n111nkin• a od tom· Ml!ntarf l)fl to1;ie1 of lntl!th\ and •li.:n1n~1nc:11, by provldln1 a forum lor th'! r:ii:pn-ulon or 11ur tt•dt'r•' •1lfnlon&, and ~ Jlfttl'n11nt UM d vf'rw viewp11ln11 ot lnformtd ob· M"t'Vf'rl Ind tpokftnwn OD iopa or Uw day. Friday, At ay ,l2. 1072 l I Ecology· Units · Plo t Str ategy SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Conservation groups todBy planned legal strategy to halt the AlasJu1n pipeline and at- tacked the lnterlo1 Dtp1rt.. ment for granting oil com- panlet a right-of-way permit for· the multl-m lllion dollor proJe<:t. Sierra Club Executive JJirrclfir Mlchael PtfcClo~key ti<1id the Thursday 's decbion Ly rntrrivr Secretary Rogu1 r . ~t ~lorton would lead to the "wori;t p()aslble com· bi11ation (If Jong r I n I" e u,1 T....,..... rc . .,1 ... " F ree t o DIJ•ent Friends of the Earth, an ac-C ., ... 1 tlvc environmental group, sald ap1w tour guides In Sacramento can wear "every legal strattgy "that all the ann bandJ and might work" would be used to buttons they want as iitop the conatru ctlon. David far as the Joint Rules Brower, the group'a president, Comm 1 t te e ts con- called tt a "destructive, un-cemed. Members in an neceuary project" that would emergency, meeting re- l I d h .. L jected a move to stop on Y ea to 1 e 0 1 brett Manihall, shown, Angeleslzatlon of America ." from wearing bi.! anti· Brower aald his orjilaniza-war symbol. t ion, the Wilderness Society,---'------- and the En v Iron me n t a I Derense Fund will w or k together to halt the pipeline. McCltlSkcy said the Interior Department declsion will lead to "the admitted danger•" of rnarlne poll ution and ac- celerate the depletion of U.S. ail reserves. in Bellevue, Wash., officials of Alyeska Pipeline Serv ice Co. said construction of the system could not 111art until next year because of pending litigation. A spokesman for the firm, which wna set up by seven major oil companies to _build the pipeline, said the company was "deeply committed to constructing--and operating the safest and most secure oil transportation system in the world." He said ''ev ery precaution wlU be taken to u.feguard a g a I n s t en- ·Vironmental risks." The Sierra Club director gave 1 different opinion, -ailylng that Morlan has •'chosen a short term e1- ·pedient which will confront WI with the worst possible com- .tbinatJon of long r 1 n g e TeJU)ta:, •I * * * Ne w Charge To Be Filed In Accident REDWOOD CITY (UPI) - The San Mateo County District Attorney's office has an- nounced that 11ew charges of vehicular maMlaughter would be Jod~ed against a dentist married to a daughter or retired Mafia leader J oseph Bonanno. Deputy District Attorney James Niven said Thursd ay the new charge would be filed against Dr. Gregory W. Geno- vese, Daly City, In South San Francisco Municipal Court and it would be based on "other evidence.'' A similar charge against the dentist was dismissed Wednes- day by Superior Court Judge W. Howard Hartley o.n grounds Genovese had been given a blood tes t withou t his consent. ·Club Wants Coast Vote ' SAN FRANCISCO (1\1') - ·The Sierra Club sa ys lt will stage an lnlrnslve petition ~drive over the next month to put a coastal protection ln- .:Jliatlve on the No vember elec- tion baJJot. John Zierold, the club's Sacramento lobbylst. said Thursday the club would work with the Coaslal Alliance, a coalilion or some 100 groups, to collect 3Z5,IJ09 signatures by the deadline or June 9. "The people will have to t nact for themselves what the legislature has rerused~to give conrerence. J.Je said the initiative would require the state to prepare a master plan for the preserva- tion or the coa s tal en- vironment. Jt would also create machinery to institute controls on development in areas l ,000 yards Inland from the beach and three miles out to sea, he said. Student · IQ Lower This Year • them/' Zierold told a news The lobbyist said tfle pro- posed initiative would be almost identical to bills In- troduced by Assemblyman Alan Sleroty (0.Los Angeles}, and Sen. Donald Grunsky (ft.. Watsonville). ' See If you've won this WHk. May 12 through May 18, 1972. 21 12 6 24 20 14 3 9 18 10 Pick up I Bingo Card from e p1nlolp1llng Shell dealer !Oday or send 111ll·1dd[t1Hd envelope to Oapajlment BFC #1, P. o. Box 279, Chloago, FREE 7 ' 5 11 16 4 . 15 13 17 2 19 22 8 23 25 Illinois 60648. Every Shell Bingo Card is a potentiaf"-winner. So sava your cards-ii one doesn't win this rieek, it could win next wttk. , ''""'· ""1 u , 1972 ' DAil Y PllDT i .Mills in MUMw Seoerelr1 Edited Of Women's Bill Jurors to See Diary When you think of real estate investment, think of OeepWell Ranch and Palm Springs. You can own a superb new condominium or individual residence in that fabled land of Sunshine. Enjoy it as a permanent home or a desert retreat. It's the easiest way in the world to save money, And the most pleasant! Palm Springs: where ~unshine bathes the ai r year-around. Deep Well Ranch privacy is maintained with a walled security entry. Enjoy swimming and tennis or relax in steaming therapy pools. All you rs with- out work, since building exterior and ground maintenance is provided. But hurry! Over S51/2 million worth of DeepWell Ranch homes have already been sold. Only 111 families will be ;ible lo enjoy DeepWell Ranch inveslment. Be one of them! 2 & 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths. From $S1,9SO fee simple. DeepWell Ranch Write for complete inform.lion EiSt Palm Canyon Drive"' DetpWeJI Road Pa.Im Springs, Ca1irorn1a 92262 The Smasher. Everything you want from wood and cant get from steel. . ' Wood has always meant feel and controL· Then, steel added punch and power to the game. But players using steel soon missed their old controL So, Spalding came up with the best of both worlds: the aluminum Spalding Smasher. The sheer power of the new, tempered with the reassuriitg fecl of the old. An aluminum frame for power and amtrol. Strung conventionally so it doesn't cheat you of aa:aracy the way suspended- siring arrangements can. Spalding Smasher. A powerful racket you can be friends with. • , - I · J ' \ • -.... . . .. I • , ' ' OJ-ange _ feast Today's l'lael N.Y. Stoen I * VOL'.. 65, NO. 133, 4 SECTIONS.-48 PASE ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNIA FRIDAY, MAY ·12, 19n TEN CENTS • Carpenter co·astline Bill Bacl{ed By TERRY COVILLE Of tM O.lly l"I"' SJtff Orange County Coast Association Directon Thursday threw their support behll!d the coasU1ne preservation bill authored by State Senator Dennis Carpenter (R·New,ort Beach). They picked 'his, rather than other coastline measures, because it relies on local rather-than regional controb. "Carpent•'• bill ls the only one that propose1 • c:Onstructive confroJ in the hands of local aovemment, 0 John Macnab, president al. the Coast A.ssocia- tlon, told members at 1 runcheon in the Huntington Harbour Beach Club in Hun- tington Beach.. Member• of the association are also urging cttles alorig the Orange Coast to aupport'Carpenter'•· bill. The Coul AsiOclatl'on hss abouf 333 volunt.eer members and city officials. It was formed in ·lilt' to "preserve, uplift and .. protect" tbe ~liot. • · 'C3.rpenter's coastal bill '''ill be heard ~londay in the Senate Natural Res~urces Comm.lttee. It sets up a JS.man state coastal revit\V board wiU1 final authority of over coastline development. ~lost of the groundwork for eoztstline p r o j e c t s , however, is left in the hand.! of cities and counties alQng the coast. · • Mike Neal, an assistant to Carpenter emphasized that the bill sets up no regional government Another coastl ine mea surt . sponsored by As.sembly1nan Alan Siero1y (l)..Beve-r· ly liills), establishes a se-ries of regional agencies witb total po1,1·er o\·er coastline development, even Tl'ithin cities. Under Carpenter's measure. each coastal city and county \\'ill be givC'n tim e to develop individual general plans for lht future .or the coast. Those plan.Swill be submitted to the 15- member state agency \\•hich \\'ill incor· porate them into a set of guidelines and criteria for a Co.llrornln general plan or coastlini derrlop1Tient. Eac.h city, and county. howrver. \\'ill ha\·e jurisdiction ove:r its O\\'n boundaries. A project which is denied, can be ap- pealed to the state agency. The state agency 'will also review all locally approved projects in case of con· troversy, nnd It can reverse the local ap- proval. Carpe.nter defines the coastal zone as :-:trt'IChinj? thrtt milts to Sta and a mai· i1nun1 of lhree miles inland er a ntinitnu1n of l.000 yards inland. llis bill Is SB 860. . Ne:a\ said !here is also a t<f?mpanlon bill. SB 861 , "'hlch authorizes a · public bond issut of $200,000,000 so the slate cpn buy private beach lands. "The Sl'nator feels If the public \\'ant' that private Janet it \\'ill ha ve to pny for it," Neal ·e1Jilained. ~;;;::;::;;;;;:;;;;::;_;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_;r;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;rT1;:;ii;;;;;rt;:;t:;i)i'i:'~~'if,;~~ii'"~;"'"--;-·~M~ Pe~tagon Says Viet Blockade Works-So Far WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Pentagon said today the blockage of ~~rth Vi~· nam's ports had been 100 percent ef· fective during its first 24 bOuts. r · Several ships believed originally bowjd for · Haiphong have changed course, of. ficla!J said. A Defense . Department spokesman, Jerry W. Friedheim, also ·said two f!'t three additional freighters that were in Haiphong harbor when mines were sown by U.S. planes got out before the w.eapons became. lethal at,4 1.m. PDT Thursday .. That raised to seven the number of ships that were said ·to have left in the three daylight periods after the mining. Twenty-eight-or perhaps 29 -!hips re- mained in the harbor. Friedhcim said his report on two or three additional ships Jeaving Haiphong repreSented an updating of intelligence rather ·than departure of any ships after the mines became lethal . One more Soviet freighter and another nylng the flag of Somalia got out and 1notber Soviet shlp may bave, be aaid. "'We think ,.,..a1 more llblpo-tllal were en roule to Halphon&, bave divert.d," Frledhelm said.· He refused to reveal ~ location or. na.. tionalities of those veael!. Friedhelm alsn said two Chinese ships were caught behind minefields at the port of Vlnb and two Soviet ships were stuck at Cam Pha, north of Halphong. The possibility of a military con- frontation o( super powers-over the U.S. mini.fig of the North Vlebwnese harbors appeared eased amid suggestions that lhe United States had private understandings with both·the Soviet Union and China that they would not 1ltmlpl to ruu 1be m!ntlitlds. • In tum , U.S. officials said · It wa; unllltely American ships would attack Soviet or Chinese mineswetePen lf they allempted to clear'the harbors. · IDllead, U.S. plaod would ftP.la<e .~ mlllel aa quickly u tile •COmmlllliN · could pick lbem up. llowe.,.,,, tile offlclals said they saw no evidence oo tar · el any lllort by mlnosw«ptn to clrar explosives block· in8 entrances to seven ports. U.S. sour«S ln Washington. Saigon alld Phnom Penh said privately that there wu at least a tacit agreement between the United States and the Oommunlst powrn that the U.S. blockade could con. tinue indefinllc!ly with neither RUllla nor Chllll trying to run it while denow>clng It strvngly In pubic. Ptolagon o(llclals said there waa little proapec1 of any coolrootalion in uU ol the mine fields !or .. .mt cllyl 11 leul. 'lboy predlcled 1ctloa in tile IndOchina (Sol lllNES, Pap I) . -' " .... ' • Nixon Vote Bid Opens R eag a1i, Rocke feller, Goldwa ter on Hand SAN FRANCISCO '1\P l -Republicans ~: Reagan, Rockefeller and G<ildwater it 1 gather this weekend to kick off Richard Nixon's . preiidential campaign in California -an all-star display of party unity in the President's home state. Gov . .Ronald Reagan of California and G<iv. Nelson Rockefeller of New York State .. Nixon's challengers for the GOP nomination in 1968, came lo San Fran· cisco t<aj!IY for a rare joint luncheon ap- pearance. They and Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona \\'ill address the spring state Republican convention. called for the ma· jor purpose of giving the Nixon campaign a big sendoff and to overshadow rumbles of anti-Nii:on sentiment among GOP con- . servatives in California. A spokesman said Reagan v.·ould con- ·centrate his talk on support of Nixon's decision to mine Vietnamese harbors. The California chief executive told a tlic..:l1..;;~ Capitol hews conference in S"acramento Thursday that Nixon "took the only ·~ae','.•'1'! "l lhi'*he enl\ailc9cl hln)telf Ilbl)l!Nlit liecailio ' 1 thin~ !bl" 'llalk <:I. Anlerlcal'l!· ha Ve' wlinted for a long time to have some deci sive action t:iken that will bring this the war to a Juilt." Reagan is Nixon 's re·elec:tion chelrmari in California, again the potential pivotal state, \\.'Oil by Nixon by 230,000 voteJ over 11emocri1t Hubert Humphrey in 1968 out or seven million cast. · Now, '''ilh 4~ electoral votes. California has more lhnn 16 percent of the electors needed to win the presidency. California palitica\ observers said it's the first lime lhey can remember Rockefeller and Gold\\•ater on the same GOP prog ram in California since !hey fou ght their bitter battle in the 1964 GOP pr.esidentia\ primary. -G<i\dwater \\"Oil the-contest by 68,350 votes out of 2.2 million cast to sew up the 1964 Republican presidential nomination . It was Reagan's national television ad· dress on Goldwater's behalf that fall that turned him into a national polificl'll figure a"nd launched his 1966 campaign for governor. The convention comes just 21,~ weeks ""!<>rt the JDM 6 pre1!14eoliil.~ .lo ~Ch\. Nbdft°1 is belbg ·c1'll'efCM '· 1't ·Republican Congressman John Aahbrook CQunty Geafs Up for Protesters Antiwar Demonstratio11s Include Freeway Sit-in, March By CANDACE PEARSON Of .Ille Delly,t"lltt Stmff An~war dernOiMtra"Uons ln Orange County continued·today -at -_ quieter P.BCe coJ!ipared to sharply amtrasting prot!sts Thursday, whJch inCluded street fires,· ar· . rests ·and peactful prlyerS. A group of ,UC Itvine studen.ts met at t.i:39 p.m. tod!IY ,in .the 1cbool commoqs to organize people for ~temoon picketif\g at county ·an~·,city offices. They plann~d· to march on government ' . . Ertemy Bombards Ari Loe, Seize s Most of Tow1i SAIGON · (UPI) · -·North .Vietnamese troops1 bombarded the provincial capital al M Loe IO miles ncirth. iii S.Icon with a ~ 10.0llll 'roanda ol atlUllJy and rockets l!ld captured 111ost of Ibo town to- day in 1 ~tant-led 111ault, military spokesmen npo~. , · U.S. B52s ·hit Communlst-held areas around Qle destroyed ·ctty with 2,000 tons of bombs in what spokesmen called the most cimcentrated borrtbing of the war. But the Communist positions were well: camoufiagtd in the rubber planlationii and effectiveness of the raids was not known. Jet fighte,..bomber pllots said they knocked out two Ruuian-made PT'/6 tanks and disabled two. others, but the two dllmoged tanb stm fired .into the toJm, Ol)Ce • )>ea~U/ul d!Jtrlct capital --; Pllin-lrlnatd ttletta l!ld riench coioniaJ bungalows •. Military IOUNltl said the North Vlei· •-,.,;.,.~to hsve »Fought in· .to the An Loe uu tbelr newtst we1pons -hand-held, he1t-seeking S t rr II a mi11Ues lob:Oduced during the battle of Quong Tri. U.S. Navy filht..-·bombers plutered !lie area 1'11h bombs ind pllots said ,Ibey tfiought'tlioy spotted SAM mlHllrs. But mWtary ,... In Sllgon uld they more Ukely were the new heat-seeking mlstflts wbl<ii U. lllllltWhat similar to tbO Al11ericao Slcln1nder and which could pta7 havoc with tupplles to the An l.oc larrlaeo whldl t•la 1b suppllrs by .... -- ' offices, ttad. prepared statements agalnsl the war and remain . until city officials agreed~ to send telegrams to Ptisldetit Nixon ln protest of the !tepup in U.S. in- volvement in Southeast Asja. '5addlebact, Golden . West and Orange . Coast Community-<:;olleges all reported no activity pla~d for today. Those cam· puses were also quiet Thursday. At" Cal State · Fullerton, the scene of some violence Thu,rsday, students held a Doon rally agaihst the war and ten· • tatively planned a sit·in on the Riverside Freeway this afternoon . Thursday, Cal State Fullerton students and street people .attempted to burn down a 10..story office building near the campus and light bonfires on busy State College Boulevard. Fullerton police said the demonstrators used street repair barricades and tree limbs to begin the fires, which were con· trolled in about 30 minutes. Those street disturbances, police said, Comple x Threatened By Highway Divi sion Vote Plans for a 37-acre condominium development on the West Newport bluffs may be dtalt a fatal blow if a State Division of HighW'4ys proposal for COil· demnatioo of part of the land is approved Thursday. State Highway Commissioners meet then and will be ~ked to approve the purchase of land .along the bluffs to pro- tect the adopted tennlnus of the Newport Freeway. The threatened condominiums, planned by the Robert Grant Corp. of Anaheim, \VOuld be ~l\ted along Superior Avenue. The plan has drawn praise from plan· ners and re1idents because. of lts low density figures. Warren Toman, as sistant vice presi· dent for the Grant Corp" said today the state actually bas three alternatives to end the freewa y at the cwt. "If they choose two of the alternatives, u·e would be safe, but if they choose the third, the project will be ruined," he aaid. "If thdf condemn that land, we are sure not going to build on it," Toman ad· d~. ~ He said his firm has been working with the city and the state to find some route for the freeway that would be acceptable for all three parties. In the meantime, Newport Beach City councilmen have asked the state to move the freeway end to Huntington Beach. Newport Beach City Manager Robert Wynn is disturbed by the prospect of uprooting the condominiums after plans have gone so far . "I will appear at the commission (Ser CONDEMN, P11e I) Letter Reared .~xotic Pet ~ets Bac king in Mesa Ralph Lutge's tame tun bear "Angela," ordered nm out of town by Oist1 Mesa City C9wlcil May l, has found a new lrltnd. · He,& Michael J . Hlkhens ol Placentia, who wrote a scathing lttter to the council condemning 113 action, ffitchtn1 ~Id thlt the ruling "sho\\'5 how govrrnment It clenyln1 poopl• lheir b8sic rights." Ht added he. was ctrtaln that "ant sun bur isn't going lo ~UJe a art•! dral ol trouble In Colla Mou." . ' • , • Just to make sure the council knows where h' stands, Hitchens closed wlth, "God bless the animal lovera and damn the City council." Lutge, who has kept the 125-pound ve:gellrlan bear on hJs property al 2000 flarbor Blvd. for the 'past stvtn year•, has been Rlv'n 90 days to dispose of his pet. ~ .. Councilmen ordered its re: m o v , ... because wild and uotic anlmal1 are not 1llowed under city axles • ' J were apparently the work of ' the aame group which set fire to the HoneY.Wtll Inc. lnstltute of lnformaUon Sciences early Thursday morning. Honeywell manufactures one type of missile used in Vietnam. Fire damage was estimated ·at $50,000. No arrests were yet reported, allhough demonstrations at the Seal Beach Naval Weapans Statlon and at the Queen Mary (See ANTIWAR, Page Z) Plea to Ce ase Raids Allegedl y Made by POWs From Wlre Stnilce1 TOKYO -A ltatement of protest and denunciation of Increased bombings -at times sober, at times pleading ":""" and it. tributed to eight U.S. pilots imprisoned by Hanoi was released here today. The announcement carri~ by the of· ficial Hanoi news agency VNA carried ~ignatures of the Marine Corps, Air Fnrce and Navy fliers, lncludinR one from Santa Ana. lie is Marine Lt. Col. E~lson W. ~1iller1 listed as a Jl()\V nearly five year1 after being shot do,vn on a combat mission from Chu Lai air base. lfanoi's news agency said the only other two Southland·based niers among the eight are Navy Cmdr, David \V. Hof f. man , and Navy U . (jg) Norris A. Charles, both of San Diego. They were capturtd after bflng shot down on Oight1 from the aircraft cmler U.S.S. Coral Sea. 'l'be VNA 1ald "'their messag• to lhe American people and the congress of the United States read 11 (ollows: · "0.splte a bombing halt announced in 1968, the Presiclent ordertd the mump- tion and authorized the contlnuaUon ,of the bombing of the DRVN North Vlttnam with a variety of excuses to justUy the raids. On Sunday morning, April I!. 1972. the peace o( H1uwl and Haiphong wu shattered by AmerlCM aircraft and bombs. t.fany Innocent people died a tololly needless and senseless death. "We, the detained Americans in Hanoi, «>Uld not help but be otruck by the futili· ty of such acUon. We ha\'e come to know the Vietnamese people, and we kJIOW thsl no bombln1 or threat of 'death ii going to 11m the 1Plr1t, that II•« 1n their bearu. , I of Ohio, v.·ho nccuses Nixon of turning his back on GOP conservatives. Ashbrook rectntly v.·on t h e en- dorsement of the United Republlc1N of California, an officially recognl~ GOP volunteer group clalmlng membership .of 12,000 conservatives. UROC's former president quit with the nccusation that the John Birch Society hnd taken over lhe organization. Reagan tried Thursday to 1Tijnimiie the Influence of UROC, sa ying, "I wouldn't suggest that is representative of any gigantic split. Actually, I question some of the statements thnt have been made about the size of It. I think v"e are talltlng about a very few thousand individuals who have banded together under that particular charter." UROC always has befn an enthusiastic bac~r of Reagan. State GOP Chairman P u t n 1 m Livermore said In an Interview tbat th\1 weekend's convention o( the l.~ -member Repub1\c1n State Centrtl Com- mittee is "the family meetlng." Ri v.er FJoods In Texas; 8 Lose Lives NEW BRAUNFELS, Tu. (UPI) -'!be Guadalupe River, bulging from a week of rain, rushed out to ilJ banks today, pour. Ing water housetop high and sweeplnt away cara ind homes and the people iD them. At least eight persons drowned . More than 4,500 penon.1 w 1 r • evacuated from riverfront homes along 25 mileJ of the muddy rJve r. Entire families were missing. Six persons drowned at New Braunfe11 11nd two more at Seguin, 15 miles downstream. More rain was forecast to add to the "foot tbat fell over the past week, "So many people were washed away," said New Braunfels Police Chief Royce Couch. "We fear the total will ao much ~ higher." Floodwaters, turiied a gooey black b:r oil from broken drums, rose 11 feet hJRh. Gov. Preston Smith called out the Texa as National Gµard to help evacuation and clean-up wort in the IOUth central an.a <II. New Br1unlel1, a town of 11,000. Said New Braunlels dispatcher 'l'1lomu CIM:ton : "Severi! houies fioated 1w1y. We are ~wamped with calls -people uylng, 'Help me, please. My house II lloallng away! " All bridges In New Braunfels were covered by lhe water. The only safe way (See F~OOD, P110 I) • Weadaer More SllMJI wrather predicted along the Orange Coast, following the usual low clouds and fog. Highs at the beach in the blah IO's, rising to IO Inland. Lows -· INSIDE TOD~ 't' Tht Lagimn Stach Civic Bo~ let .tUl:Otl itl la.t" i11 a 11rl11 of foJr childrtn11 program.t. Ste '''· 1to111 in. todaU't lVttktndcr. LM. .... • -•• '""" " MmoMI' .. • (tll .. Hllt ' ,. ............ .. ci. .. 1tlt' .... .. __ " Ct1111<1 " ·"'-.. " -, __ • ., ...... ,..,,.. • Dta"' JMtlctt " ...... ..... ..... ,.. ...... • llkll ,,__,.,,.. •tt ·-· ... T--• .... Ille ·-· " """""'' -.._ ... " ..... • '".LMIMft " ._., ...... , .. 1, ....... • .... _ ... r ' l '1 ' • 2 DAil V PllDT H Uiiit Seeks 3 Change~ In Courts -By JACK BROBACK Of Jilt Otltr l'tltl Sllll Three changes in the state Judicial processes 1\•ere endorsed Thursday by thr Orange County Criminal Justice CoW\c· -including ·smaller juries for feloif trills and allowln;; firth-sixths verdlct1 rather than un11nimous results by six or 12-rnan jurie$. ' The eauncll also approved <in Assembl y Cycl.e Drawing Not Toniglit "1 feel some people oul there m1y be. trying t.o Ktwua1ti to me." Thlt'a not whit 1h! actually 11ld, but It'• the 1111 or the mwage from the Fashlon island shopping center Oirl Friday who has been taking 'all the calls about the Kawasaki motorcycle giveaway. 11le racing cycle will be given away Friday, May 19. A story published in the Fashion Island sec- tion of Wednesday's DAILY PILOT lnadvertently left the impression the giveaway was scheduJed for tonight. From Page l FLOOD ... bill aulkorlz.ing the appolntmcnl or traffic tn11I commissioners lo conduct a pilot project to speed up disposition of traffic offenses. into the town was by helicopter or heavy four.wheel drive trucks. .. M6st council memptra endoratd alt Couch ·said hundreds or persons were three proposals but Deputy Pubde evacuated froni residential areas of Ne\v ·, Defender Rod Riccardi objected to reduc· Braunfels •and taken to four Red Cross 1ng the number of Juror1 and allowing centers. Hundred more at Seguin were ' Je ss than unanimous decisions. evacuated to cily hall, the courthouse and shelters. Ri ccardi ls chief of the felony defense Police Dispatcher Tom Glore at San d!Vlslon of the Orange County Public ?-.1arcos, site of the state's last bad rlood, Defender's Ofrlce. · ..._ May 16, 1970, said more than 400 persons Keith Concannon,. executive director of were taken before dawn from areas the council, urged adoplton of the pro-flooded by Purgatory Creek and housed in three centers. Posals which· he ·said were designed to Cibola Creek in northeast San Antonio ,. speed up .the processes of justice. flooded. forcing Bexar County v.·orkers to Tut justice council was created l\\'O evacuate more than 200 persons. years ago as an adv isory group to the "We just got them out before !he water Orange COunty Board of Supervisors to · 1 got here," said Officer James Bowles. monitor trends in crime prevention and Gua~lupe_ County Sheriff Ph~l Medlin to serve as a clearing house for ant i· al Se~u1n ~aid most of t~ fl?001n~ there . crlple prog rams. r.1embers include coun-was m riverlr~t subd~vl~IOM m t~e ty supervisors, city c 0 u n c i 1 men, county and not 1n Ute city s residential crtmlnolotists, /udgea and police chiefs. ar.~as. . . The prln~ipa proposals adopted were . ~t this time we are in the process of ~ presented to the council meeting by picking up all the people who failed to Robert J, Huntley, city manager of West· evacuate earlier," he said. '.'The rive~ is minster and chairman cf a special com· above flood stage here but 1t is receding mlttee of the council. above New Braunfels. We're getting a lot "This committee has reviewed the of water. Helicopters are picking up pea-- recommendations or the Select Com-pie stranded on rooftops and in trees. mittee on Trial Court Delay appC>inted by "We're feeling some effects in lhc the Californla Supreme Court nnd the lowlying areas in the city but most of the recommendations of the Special Con1-trouble js along lhe ri ver. the di visions mlttee of the St•te Bar o( Callfornin and built along the water. Most of them are recomn1ends adoption of those propC>sals out on Lake Du nlap and La kc which appear to be the least cou. 1IcQueeny." troverslal and the most beneficial in the continu ing effort ta Improve the judiciaJ system," Huntley said. The reduction in jury sizes In seleeted criminal cases to provide six-person '"juries, HunUey explained. applies only to those felbny prosecutions where an al- leged offense Is neither punishable lvilh dealh nor with a max.lmum seritence of life, lmprisonmtnt. ft~ reoornmendatlon that majority verdicts In selected criminal cases be allowed applies only to cerlain felony prosecutions. the committee chairman sal~ ' ~ ' IO , 'Pf.Ot•cutlbns o( m1.tde- meanor1. i . • The term 0 certalri" Was hot elaborated upon by Huntley. The council voted to rorward their recommendations to the California State Supervisors Association, the League or California Cities, city councils and county ~ds o( supervisors in each of California's 51 counties. The crilnina l justice council recom- mepdatlons vt'ill also be forn•arded lo Ora.nge County legislative delegation in Sacramento for evaluation. Used Car Auction Slated May 20 A sale \vhich Ralph Williams would en- vy is being conducted by the Orange County Purchasing Dtpartment Satur· day, ro.1ay 20. In addit ion lo surplus county cars and trucks. seven cilie~. UC Irvine and two special dlstrltls heve pooled their used cars and all Y.'ill be offered beginning at 10 :30 a.m·, Approximately 19l vehicles will be sold, according to Gene De\·ers of the purchas- ing de!)lrtment. Vehicles "'ill be on display Friday, hlay 19 from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. and again at 8 11 .• on sale d11y al 1300 S. Gr11nd Ave., Santa Ana. OIANGI COAST • DAILY PILOT Youth Joy Rides In Style, Flees After Capture A Santa Ana youth captured in Beverly 1111\s \\"hile cruising in a $7 .000 luxury sedan stolen in Corona del A1ar is sought today, after allegedly slipplng out of the station and fleeing in more n:l:Ddest means. Cl}'de Ward, 19. of 1427 E. Ftrsl SL, ts named in an all·points bulletin chnrging grand theft cf an auto, felony escape and burglary. Neu·Port lfeach Police Detective Sam Ainburgey picked up \Vard and a young \\'Oman passenger .arrested v.·ith him .and returned the pair for questioning Tues- day. Investigators revealed toda y that shortly after being booked upon arrival. ~Vard \\'alked out of the cramped, busy Jail area u·hlle other prisoners ·were being processed. Detective Sgt. Ed Cibbarelli snid \Vard Is suspected of making tracks a few blocks to \Vest Neu·port. burglarizing a ~art1ge there and fleeing IO\tn on a rac- ini:: bicycle. . •ns young v.·oman companion was ques- tioned about the original Lincoln Con· tinental theH , clear.ed and released. Insanity Plea Set SAN DIEGO (AP J -Stanley Harla n Speck of San Francisco \\"ill plead in- nocent by rea son of insanity at the limt a Pacifir South" es! Airlines jet 'vns hi· jacked lo San Diego. his lawyer said Thu~day . "If a jury finds that he was in· sane at the time of the hlja<;klng, he ca n go right back lo society," said Asst. U.S. Ally. Robert Risso. • . ' • UCI Chief: Continue Experiment UC Irvine must ••foc~s en doing wen that \\'hich has already ~en und ertaken" in lhe coming years, but mu5t also leave room for experhnentation and nevet become self.satisfied, Chancellor Dan Aldrich told a special meeting al the UCI fa <;ulty senate Thursday. Zotfest, a celebration of the IO.year an· ni\'ersary or the Irvine campus and Aldrich's involvement with it, begins to- day and runs through ro.1ay 20. (The word ..zot" comes from the gound made by the anteater,. the UCI mascot, in the comic ?itrip "B.C.'') Aldrich spoke to about 55 faculty members Thursday on "Irvine, Present and Future.'' where he told them that l'atest UC projections say Irvine will peak in 1980 at lZ.000 to 14 ,000 students. ·Some change in· acaderhic planning must be mide to accommodate the e1tra student~. Aldrich admitted, adding, "I will not be ready to add programs unless I set> I he dollars there to support them \\'\thout detracting from that we agreed \.\'e ought to have ." Later, during questioning. he said that find ing support money for the faculty already at ucr is "the mo.st critical iss ue before us ." But Aldrich doe s anticipate studies of possible changes in the following : -~·fore emphasis on university ex· tension classes for students returning to school. -Additional classes in he~h science. -An JnsUtute of Trans rtation and Traffic Eng ineering, curen ly on the UCLA campus with a move to the UCI campus now under study. -The feasibility of an actual education department ta train teachers. Aldrich said he feels UCl has been a success because it has been open to new ideas and was not confined to fulfilling a predetermined model . "I don't have in mind any longer something t am shooting toward," he said, adding, •·maybe this is the time I should get out. But my interest is focused on what Irvine can generate for itself. "J am no longer concerned about how we look to our sister campuses," be ad· ded. proudly, pointing out that Irvine began as a general university with on· Jy a few specializalions. But he said be had planned one thing: ' to build UCI on a land grant college philosophy, where those fortunate enough to teach "have a responsibility to share their scholarship with students·on and off the campus. Jt's not enough to confine their application to th! campus." UCI teachers, he said, "recruit!d then or now" must be researchers or scholars and public servants as well as teachers, he explained. He said the "budget squ.eeze" is on no\V and will be for some time, but that this ''crunch " should not put pressure on the undeclared students to name a major or become "labeled as this or that." UCl sho uld offer the same op- portunities to those students who know what they want to be as those who have no speciOc career in mind. "\Vhat I was accused of when we first started this institution ," he said, "that I intended a trade school here -is not true," he concluded. Job Week Slated I11 Newport Area Noting summer jobs are needed and local agen cies are available for work placement, Newport Beach Mayor Donald A. ?-.lcJnnis has proclaimed May 15 to 21 as Youth Employme nt Week. ?-.tayor l\.1clnnis s:ingled out the Harbor Area Youth Emplbyment Service for its no-fee job placement around the ytar in issuing the proclamation. The ''ES operation begun three years ago on a tiny budget and a seasonal basis now operates regularly in headquarters provided by the Harbor Area Boys' Club Cenlral Branrh. Directed Florence Hayos can be reached at 642-04i4 wilh job cffers and job requests. The non-profit organiution also has a telephone AM\\'ering service to t.ai:~ messages during cff.cfuty houri. TM Or1119e CWI! OillY I'll.OT, wilfl wlV(fl 11 Comllll'!M m. Nlwt·f'rm, is Milrlltd ll'i' tlle Or•"9• c .... 1 Pl/111111!1111 (omPtn1, S.. r1tt M1llcln1 1rc P\llMllfltd, MOt'ldtf tl!rwQI! Fr1d•v, fw (C1!1 Mt:11. H....,...,. 8t~ Hlll'\11"91on 81KIVF-ta1n Vt!ll'i', ll'IUM 1.-cJI, 1,....;M1S1clcllt1Mck Miii .i..n CIHMntf/ Sin JwM Cict11r1M A 1il'l.Qlc "9•eMI Mltlilot ~ puohV.9' ~l\ll'"N'f'W M'ld Sl>lldt""' tfl,r l>l'•"<l~•I l!llOllthlllO Pl•nl b •! JJO Wn! •• , ~1r..-1, CCIII MN, Celltemi•, 1:0,~. Sp{lre Tires U11sightly- Pose Ecology Problems Rolt1rt N. w,,d 1'rHlatfll 1toi(Plotblt.V!Cf J1ck II. Cutl1y ~•(I l>rQieMI...,,, Gftllr91 l.\1Mi'1 lho'"'' K11Yil El of'llf TI!o'"'' A, M"',ol\;111 "'*""''"' £tl!Ot L. ''''' Kri11 H""""1 '""" City rc;1er "--·-JJJJ N1wport .. uln•~ M1ifi111 A44rotu ,.0. 101 1175, t26~J .._ """• C:-M MtM: )IO W..1 .. ., '""" ~ ht(tl1 m ~I A-.W Hll!lt.,,. ... ••tell: l'97l ·~ ~"' W ("""""II: ~ H"111 fl (;flnN ttMJ , ....... (714) 641~)11 Cit ........ ,. I • '4W71 °'"'"""' ttn. .,,...,. CMll ...,ht! ... =:t· ... -"" •ltrfe. '""'"'' .... --.. ....,,1 ...... 11 ...... _, .. ·-~ ~ "*"' .... ....... ~ ..... S..-ct.. ,._. •Ill ti C1iMo N#a. ~-. 1 7 ... ,.., ... umtr .AU ~I W -a u .11 INIMM¥r M1l!lwy ._ ....... -... _.. • .... "*'""'· -• • Here ts 1 sampling or the articles com· I~ up ln Sunda~··s edl\ion of the DAILY PILOT: ROUJNC ALOSC -Old lirts ne\·er die. thfy just keep bouncing around. Tbat'1 all rlghl for )wngster1 who cr1wl through them and swing on them 1t playground!i · but most old Urts tha t refuse 10 go away prestnt an ecok>ltk:al problem. '!'bat prohl•m IJ examined by Starr Wr!ltt i:.r1 w11.oon .. W .\STEFUL SOCIETY -II you wanl to ~ it, vhit a county dump and you'U find distanled appliances. 1e<mlngly In oal)' a minor atale or dlmpa~. and many .,.M llems or lumll11tt. The story Is lhls .,,.k'a Sw1day Sp«lal. l!MBllGENCY ROOM -How does a WOlllM !art Al cbltl ol a hoopltal ~ l'Clqlfl? Dr. Clain! Wfidemljr, Wt! ~ "'°"' pllyaldan 1t Com · Mw 'Mriirtai llo.<pltal, hu handled the Job,slnct lasl January and !Inds H'a qulle • chill ...... SPoRTS STAllS -Tbftt's an in-dtptb • rtport In lhe sports P"I'-' on U.S. P'ln skating champions Jo Jo Starbuck and Ken Shelley w·bo turntd profession.ii this \\·eek. USSPOILED TOW1'S -The cover story of Family \\o'eekly describes a couple's search far sale placu to live. towns unspoiled by crime wbere doors can remain unlocked. They recommend 11 placos ror coupl., lo spend lbe1r r<tlr- 1ng )'Mr! in peace. PSYCHOLOGICAL TESTS -Many £inns use tbtse ltsls In dfcidlng Oii key promotions or 1ppolnlmenu. And ll there '1 a third peDon ln the room whfn you '•re interviewed, that figun, whom you bavo not -Jl<lor<. Is problbiy a psychorogist ana1rs101 y0'1r reactions!' It's the lead st017 1n tile "YOU': stctlOll. POWER PLANT -Southern C.IUomla Edlioo Compa117 is tryio« lo locale an allunale powtt plant al Fry Mountain In San ll<n>ardlno COunty bul' Southml C.li!ornla, FOCUJ on the oditorlal I'll'" reporu lhlt de.wrt lorte.s are m-OblllJlal against the proposal. ., I o.A.IL.Y PILOT lltff P~ MARCHING DOWN TRAFFIC LANES 0 F UNIVERSITY DRIVE IN UCI PROTEST Thursd1y'a Antlw1r Activity W11 For Most P .. rt P•ceful on Irvine Campus Residents Give Up Hopes For 'Private' Lido Isle Lido ls\e reside~nts have given up any hope of becoming a private island, the head of their homeowners' association aaid today. From Pag.e I CONDEMN •.. meeting in Redding and oppose thi& ac· tlon," he 11aid. "How can they buy the lahd in the absence of a freeway agreement?" "This would not be morally and perhaps not legally right," Wynn added. Gil Hood, supervising right of way agent at the StateJ>ivisio.n_of H!g!iways in Sacramento, said today that the action is legal and must be taken if the route is to be completed at all. ''Under legislative controls, we cannot buy any land unless there is a freeway agreement -unless it is a hardship er protection case,'' Hood said. "We lelt that du• to land cost figures and long-standing freeway plans, a pro- tective condemnat~on is necessary in this area," he added. Hood said his department was made aware of the ,development plans in the area only a short time ago. · "1tfaybe we are slow in telling people our plans. We can 't react instantly," he said. "\V e are about as responsive as we can be considering what touchy things we are dealing witru" Hood said the state is not wi£alr 19 the develcper or to his plans for the area. "We are generally pretty falr about it. We give these things great care and con- sideration and we are certainly not out to butt the developer," he said. Hood added that be thought the con- demnation action, if approved, may not damage plans for the area at all. "If the developer and his money like the area. they won't lea\'e -no matter what happeM," he said. "If the ~dopted route should change again -such as has been suggested by Newport Beach -then all we have done is defer develOpmeilt of. the land. 'l1le land ~.the same , as· it , was before we bought it," Hood said. . · Jame·11 Hewicker, assistarit community devi!lopment director far Newport Beach, said he ·was sure any such acti'on would "wipe oot the · project. 11 • "The state already owns 17 acres of right of way below the Grant site end this would complete their needs," Hewick- er said. ,, ''It just can't be done," conceded Thomas Malcomb, Lido Isle Community Association president. after being con- fronted with declarations from both the Newport Beach Public Works Depart- ip.ent and city attorney'g office. A group of Lido islanders had fostered the private-island concept in hopes of making their streets private and their gate guarded. Traffic and j>olice patrols have been two of their bigger conc~ns, and the idea or bumps in the roadway to slow cars bas generated considerable comment. Such speed bumps are illegal on public streets, however. City Attorney Dennis O'Neil this morn- ing explained why it's impossible to make the streets on the island private. · "The city ~as the authority to abandon , streets, but they have to be for a public purpose," O'Neil said. "In mind mind, it's very difficult for the council to find that abandoning the Lido streets would be for a public purpose,'' he said. On occasion, alleys or small, aban- doned streets are vacated, O'Neil ex· plained. ;,But to do s'o the city has to find that 1he street is no longer necessary to serve tile public interest. '"Ibe could make this finding on street- ends or alleys, but it would be another matter when considering aba;nd,onini a whole street system on Lido Isle -that the public no longer needs to use those gtreets," he said. 6 Fire Stations Set Open House Fire stat ions In Newport Beach will open their doors to the public Saturday to ma rk Fire Service Recognition Day. Alayor Donald Alclnnis procallmed the special event to give residents an op- portunity to learn something about the men and equlpment protecting their lives and property. · The stations will be open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and the men will conduct tours. explain equipment and describe the duties of firemen. Stations are located at .-110 Balboa Blvd., 475 32nd St., 868 Santa Barbara Drive, 323 Marine Ave., 410 Marigold Ave. and 1348 Irvine Ave. From Pagel ANTIWAR ..• Thursday totaled nine arrests. Most of the demonstrators in those ac- tions v.·ere from Cal State Long Beach. UCI protesters c an f i n e d actions to a march down MacArthur Boulevard following a noon rally on campus and an early morning symbolic mining of Long Beach harbor, Remaining on campus in their o-y,·n unique venion of • demonstration were about M> students at Southern California College in Ccsta Mesa Thur!day nigbt who offered prayers for peace. Aboot 15 or the same Southern Cal students showed up this morning in the school chapel and read a telegram to President Nixon which said. "We the students of Southern Calilomla College have set aside specific Umes to remember yo u and our nation in prayer. We will be praying that God wW give you wisdom as you guide our nation." It was signed by Student Body Presi- dent Doug Halvorsen, who said there were no political implications in the tele- gram. College Vice President and Chaplain John LindvaU said he really wasn't sure ''how the student.s were praying. I'm sure it was both ways." Halvorsen said the prayers were directed mainly toward asking for a ''lasting peace in Vietnam.'' Ca;r:ying_ s,ig_ns al.90 calling for peace, but 'protesting in a different manner. -y,•ere about 200 marchers at the Seal Beach y,·eapons fac ility Thursday af- ternoon. . ' " TheY matched for about three hours during which three arrests were made on minor charges of jaywalking or disobey- ing a polire order. About 20 to 30 Police officers kept traf- fic moving through the busy intersection of Seal Beach &ulevard and the highway where marchers congregated, FromPqe J MINES •.. u·ar \•:ould shift from the harbor areaa to the Communist ground offensJve in South Vietnam, which has been in a lull for a \Veek. The mining of the harbors and o~her actions to stop delivery of war material to Hanoi by land, air or sea are not ex· pected to have any impact on fighting in South Vietnam for the next three week.!J because of existing Communlst stockpiles of fuel, ammunition and food, the of· .ficlaJs said. UPHOLSTERED CHAIR SALE • RNAL WEEK Don't miss this ra re opportunity to putCh.st from our r{._seledion of upholstered ch•irs •I sole p<ices. W1 f11ture nothing but the fi.,.st quotrty in our stlediofl of upholst...O ch.irs. Happiness is owning • peir of ... tom upholstered chin from Teel von Hemert, Inc. 1t • solo price. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL HERITAGE -KARASTAN .?,JI/Ill INTERIORS • NEWPOR'Tl'llACH LAGUNA IE.I.CH TORRANCE 1 n:J W-llff Dr., 642-2050 345 North (Md Hwy. 494-4551 , 23649 Hawthorne 11 .... -l'lllMY 'TlL t UUI Jn.Im 0,-....., 'II t _,. __ ,. __ -"" ...,1 rin ·....., t tu,, an 01: AJt-fll11 / -J ' ' ( 1 \ ' . ' I ( I \ • DARY PROT EDI'rOBIAI. PAGE • Death Curve on ~rvine ' Nothing chlils the spine more than the sound of squealing tires. You waJt moments anticipating the re- sulting crash. Often It doesn't come. Too olten;ln the past four years on that hairy S-curve on Irvine Avenue between Heather Lane and Santa Isabel, it has come. Perplexed Newport Beach councilmen have already plunked down nearly '10.000 !or warning devices to try to impress on drivers the !act that the speed limit Is 35 mUes per hour -to absolutely no avail. Now, councilmen have ordered another $10,000 be laid out to widen one lane six feet and to install a median barrier. They've also ordered beefed up radar patrols. They also may have to .install "Bott's Do~," known tn the trade as rumple strips, to ·slow ~rafftc do~n: They're willing to try almost anything. Rebuilding the curve would cost $250,000. Foiling the Burgl~rs Newl>ort Beach police think' they've got a way to . cut down burglaries on Balboa Peninsula very sub- stantially, · ' Citing impressive statistics on the results of similar programs, the police department Wednesday night Un· veiled "Or.er..ation l.D." · They re going to try it first with Peninsula Point, explaining that area was picked becaus~ it is an o!der section with a high crime rate and with an anxious homeowners' association. Basically, the pilot project involves iden~ifyin~ homes by painting house numbers on curbs and 1dent1· fying homeowners' valuables by etching serial numbers on th em. Participating residents get a sticker to pas~e on their windows, giving fair warning to would-be intru· ders that the stull they get will be tough to peddle. Homeowners also get detailed information about Why Latin Should Be Reinstated (SYDNEY J. HARRIS)' ]( the Human Engineering Laboratory In Boston is to be believed, the ufl. derstanding of English words in the U.S. has persistently declined for the last 50 years, dropping al the rate of one point a year on the laboratory's "general scale" of vocabulary. What is important about this, If true, ia that the laboratory s e e s a one-to-one correlation betwee• vocabulary and. vi- olence : if the level of verbal expression is low, the only other fonn of expression is physical. A continuing study of some 50 years by Uli.s group indicates t h a t violence and crime predominate among thOse who score low in "recognition vocabulary," especially of abstract words. Without the appropriate handles, it report.a, "1ucb abstract ideas as justice, honesty, per· MJnal property, law, courtesy and thoughtfulness for others seem impossi· ble to comprehend." Fascinatingly enough , the "level of education" does not play as important a part in augmentinB!, vocabulary as we might imagine. Affer . the age of 12. roughly -judging by a· study based on 29,000 persons -"neither high schools nor college contrlbute to E n g I i s h vocabulary." Anyone listeni ng lo a group of "collegHducated" businessmen or clubwomen nattering away at lunch would sadly have to agree wilh this. WHAT PARTICULARLY interested me in this study -apart from the menacing Dear Gloomy Gus Wouldn't it be great if the street sweeper followed the trash collec· tor! -F. C. n.11 Mture l'tfllc.h ,...,,. ....... Mt _....,..,, "'"' .. fM .......... ~ ,,_ "' ,_.,. ... ......., .... o.llr Pltll. relationshlp between growing Illiteracy and rising violeDce -was the flat state. ment by the laboratory that "with the . fabulous sumJ spent on, education," the understapdtng of English w9rdi ha!I declined In large part because of the removal of Latin from most school pro· grams. The number of years.of Latin studied in school correlates with a large and exact Engli~h vocabulary, It was fotmd : "The structure of English is Anglo-Sa1on ; but the words which give color to. writing. and definition to thought , are Latin. The Latin language, though dead, furnishes a backgroun·d for English, a foundation on which to build." I HA VE LONG maintai ned this, although I had no real factual basis for my belief. The laboratory rectimmends unequivocally that "to retard the downward trend of the U.S., reinstate Latin in the high school curriculum." (It turns out that even money earnlngs, with minor exceptions, have a high CQrrelation with a background in Latin.) Everyone bas remarked the difference in verbal levels between the average Briton and the average American; the former is far more fluent and expres sive, more respectful toward precision and. form in language; and this flexible use o( language may account in large part for the civility, the courtesy, the lack of violence in British life. What the tongue can't articulate, the fist (or gun) i1 forced to express. Study of Hz q;man Societ y Anthropology, the study of the origin and development of man, is usually thought of as a scienUfic approach 'to primitive peoples. In fact, of course, arlthropologists have .come to reject the Idea that any group can properly be thought of as "primitive." Furthermore. anthropologi sts can be found studying the peoples of America, France, England, ana other highly advanced societies. This background conveys lhe depth and scope cf Prof. Ian C. Jarvle's book. The Story of Social Anthropology : The Quest to Understand Human Society (McGraw· Hill, l>.&Sl. IN TWS NEW volume In the History of Science Series, the author shows how anthropology grows out of comparison.! and contrasts be.tween one society 11.Dd another: that contact or cullum and IOCietits stimui1ta r<fleclion on wh1 aocllJ Ille ii ordered the w1y it b, and not aome other way. The book concentrates 111 thrte main areas ot., society : rtUg1on and magic. family and kinship, and IOCi1l oooln>L (THE BOOKMAN) • j The rormer are aeen as man's attempts to understand •"4 matter hil 1ur· rounding.s and his life -precursors to science and technology. Family and kinshi p are the most widespread means of organizing the: groups necessary for &Ocial life. Socia) control iS necessary because man llvu in a hostile en- vironment and must organfu to survive. SOCIETY, THEN, la seen in lhis book as the mo.t aophlstlcated piece of man 's technology. But at &he same time, 10Cial mechaniama work on!J because men ac-- cepl them · u btnellclal and .... per1lo. Failing Ihle mutual undel'lllndin&, 10Cial arrangements bruk down. Dr. Jarvie Is UIOclalo prof"'°' of philosophy at York University, Toronto. Caroll• llarkltrold a,, George--------, Otar George: _, I have oper1i.d a filling station for ye1n and am going broke because a new station acrOQ the m..t bu hl...r rOOllle -·~ tendantil. Thry WW shorts and lllltera. 'llllol COii I do to flcllt lhil lrlnd Ill competition? OU> 'llllEI\ Otar Old Timer: Ad\·ertire for tomt t o p I e 1 1 mechanics or ei4e !n111U • fOiO QI' •8'11. (Wbm 10 other 1dvlce cof. -111 .. failed ,..., lei Georp do K ! lie ... ran you betru than anybody in the entn rldel.) \ what basic preventative measures to take -such as locking doors and windows. . Such a program can work, but only with the coop- eration of the residents, themselves. In Jttonterel)' Park. with 5,000 homes participati.ng since 1968 . there have been only 20 burglaries. 01 the 6,000 not involved. 2,000 were burglarized. Ultimatum Is Unfail' Time has suddenly become the most crucial element in efforts to preserve the 157 acres of st~te surplU$ property behind Estancia High School in Cosla Mesa as~ a regional park. An ultimatum from state General Services Direc. tor Lawrence Robinson declares that Costa .MeSa must have conc rete plans for purchasing the land ,before June 5 or be prepared to watch it auctioned or trade_d off to private interests. That seems somewhat peculiar since the acreage has been surplus since 1963 and no on~ other than the city of Costa Mesa had .. ~tepped forward to stake a claim on it. ·· It's no secret that the state is quite eager to trade of! 36 acres of the land to the Squaw Valley develop- ment firm of William Newsom to cover its mistakes at the ski resort. Hence the sudden urgency on the local property. Thirty days is a totally unrealistic time in which t.o muster the $4 million required for the purchase of the land. It wouldn't even give Costa Mesa or the county enough time to come up with a legal proposal, or call a bond election. The ultimatum is both unrealistic and unfair. A delay, as requested by Costa Mesa and Orange County officials, would be the least bit of consideration the state could show to ward the people of Orange County. N ''CHEER UP, fADDY. ODDS ARE IT WAS A BRITISH BULlE T'.' • Family Car Killed Public Transportation Opposed to Mass Transit To the Editor: Re: Letter, "Support Mass Transit," by Fern Pirkle (~1ailbox, May 4). Forty years ago every city or any size had public transportation that was ef· ficient and inexpensive. When I first came to Long Beach as a bride, one could 1till ride tbe bus for a nickel! But as cars became more plentiful and priced so that more people could afford a car, and then as people began moving to lht suburbs, the transit systems could no longer operate as economically as before because they had lost the buJk of their riders. pnce people experienced the great con· venience of stepping inte their car~ at their door and riding directly to their destination, the buses lost their populari· ty. WHO WANTS TO walk several blocks to a bus stop, with another walk at the end of the ride, and probably transfers from one bus~to another on the way? And at the height of bus travel during peak hours having to stand swaying in the aisle because all the seats were taken?· We have become too spoiled by the ad· vantage of going in our own cars, com· fort.ably and C1lnveniently, to want to go back to public transportation on a scale to make rapid transit feasible. Now the only ones who would support a transit system are the aged, and those who can· not afford to own a car, and they are not always financially able to pay the higtl fares to, ride the buses. • IT HAS BEEN suggested that another lax be added to the price of gasoline to subsidize the publiC'transportation and rapid transit systems. This puts an unfair burden on those who are already bearing the cost of their own vehicles, plus the cost of operating, upkeep, and insurance. Public transportation died a natural death with the advent of the "family car." Please don't try to revive it at taxpayer!!' expense. IF it can be done, Jet free en· terprise do it! PAULINE E. MOEN Agrees With Nixon To the Editor: I just listened to President Nixon's speech regarding the war in Vietnam and our mining the port of Haiphong. As an American, I was in accord with every word he said. Have no fear that Russia or Red China wiU retaliate against the judgment or our President. In the first place, both Russia and Red China gained their power and _, maintain their power without honor. They rule through fear and oppression like a gangster mob rules a territory through lhteata or violence against honest , God· fearing people. BECAUSE OF Tl!IS shallow foundation of strength to rule, when It comes to 1 real crisis they have only one course to follow and that is to tum tail and run. No, ne.ver in the history of the world has the real vlllaln again.st the good of mankind ever won oul Tbe Judjm"1l or our President, who rtpr..,nts. the people of Amtnca, \till pr~a il ror the good of •11 ·fret people throuihout the world. GRANT HARDING PHIWPS 'l'hlnk About It To the Edilor: The 1ky now Is black. many rlvers are dead, mlltions of cars, planes. boats, f1e- tor1~1 are l'Ol\trlbuting to our pollution. A smog alert rings, school children must 10 Into the BChool room. Thia I.I not the future -it ii right now. Man ii destroying the world. Man and anldlala are llOlni to die un1 ... "' stop pollution now ! The ractoriea can llow -. the nlo of pollution iUld •e CID atop IL It will coll montJ Incl tim<. We must atop ~ no• belort l1me n1111 ~L MAILBOX L11!1n ~ f'Hffr1 ,,. -.I<-. ,..,_,,., WT'lllrl ....... tlll'H'I' ttwlr -· Ill * -·· ., 1111. ,.,.. rl•llt " CMMllM i.tl•n .. flt .. IC. tr 11l1T11M .. 11-.t 11 11_.,lllll, All ~I 111.nl l11o clvM t1w111h1N .,,. m1U1111 ..,,...,, llul lllllM'I .... , ... wlltlllfilll ... ,._, If 111fflcltlll ,.._ ... ltoHl'Mt. PlllrY wlH Ml M Hllolllf*i, When tt comes to decide what to do about pollution , think about it. DOUG PARRY Age 14 Gasoline Pricing To the Editor : I was very interested in recent com- ments on our retail gasoline prices Jn the Orange Coast area . ·-Perhaps I should explain first that we have no cootroi at all over the retail gasoline prices that are charged at Chevron Dealer stations. The dealers are independent businessmen and set their own prices according to their own best judgments. That accounts for some oC the price differences you haye noticed between stations. ' The only statiOfls where we can set the retail price of gasoline are OW' own company. operated Standard Stations. And even there, prices often differ from one station to th1~ next, according to the market conditions in the area served by each station. To run a sound business. we must stay abreast of market conditions and keep adjusting to them constantly. Our prices. therefore, cannot always be the same from one station to the next -or even from one day to the next. R.A. VANDEHEY Manager Customer Asslstanc• Western Operation1, Inc. Marketing Department Standard Oil Co. or C•lif .. Concord DefeMd• Chiropractors To the Editor : Re: Jean Crum , M.D. vs. Chiropractic -Dr. Crum geems to lake great dtUght In continuing the big lie about chlroprac· ton. It Is Interesting (and infuriating ) at times to see what many misguided people do to make a point about which they have strong feelings. They take certain Ideas 'and use them to llJuslrate their point, meanwhile carefully ignoring th e other side of the coin which may detrict from the bellevabilfty of their argument. Emotion takes over, logic and true facta: Oy out the window. OR. CRUM KNOWS that the chiroprac- tors are well trained in 111 the basic 1elences and must diagnose and treat lhe sick according to state law. Hi!! argwnent Is the same old rehash or tbe medic•! (A.M.A..C.M.A.) monopoly. II I 1 shameful that chiropractort are not on the staff of every st.ate and county hospital and all public tnstitutlons. Many crippled chlidr<n ore denied this very fine and 1eientific treatment. Through high-powered politics and the greal medical lobby, the elderly people are dt.nled the right to chiroprictic medfcare. Why ls this allowed to continue In a great free America ? ls thia a part of our civil r1&ht.? · GEORGE H. STRrCKER Dr. Jeon F. Crum ii prt1id1n1 of the California /olrdical AuodaliOIL -Edit« c,,,, Screech, Mo•" To the EdHor : Why ore '° many radio 1l1Uon1 fool!Shly playing rock·a nd·rol\ loday? The reason is actually qultc sl mp te . ROC'k·and· roll as bad as It I~. ha!! so mehow mysteri ously ~roduccd an ('normous listening audien ce. But who is listening to this rubbish? It is the nu1nlpu\atcd youth of our nation who feel thry have-to be total dupli cates of thei r beloved peer!>. The youngsters or this country appear to be mere computers waiti iig ignorantly for their peers to program them. FURTHERMOR~. the term "r<>ck music'' is completely inappropriate. Probably the perfect name for it iii ''rock sewage." By the use or these two fan- tastic words, a person is not only ahlc lo vividly give another a picture of "rock· and-roll," but can Instantaneously explain exactly what it smells like as well . You arc probably wondering why T omitted the word music and subsUtuted the most appropri.:ite word In its place. I did this because rock-and-roll Js not music. Rock·and-roll is a cry, a screech, a moan, a groan, a dirge, and a gasp. "Rock·and·roll" hi no more music than I'm Christopher Columbus. IT HAS OFTEN baffled me how many of today'! youth can sit listenlns to auch CRAZY trash for so long. It is truly frightening to contemplate. Most 11)\.ely, programmed youngst~rs will disag11ee with much or all of this, But, unfortunately , their disagreement demonstrates how e r f e c t i v e I y pro. grammed their computers are. Isn't it pitiful? TI::RRY J. NIENHUIS Would Omit \lote Count To the Editor: As the student hody secretary or Newport Harbor High for next year, l would llke to exprcs~ my feelings regarding the fronl page article on Friday, May $, entitled "Gets To Top." Putting the number or votea that Dan Cohen "beat" Gary Li tten by was, Jn my opinion, in bad taste, as the article would have been comp lete if you had left the number out. The fee lings of the loser must be taken Into consideration. MEREDITif MASSE Y Stop Sign Needed To the Editor: ~1y famil y and T are very concerned about the death curve on lrYinc going Muth just before 23rd Street. We live on the street that peral\els Irvine and are ron1tanlly worrying about the cars that come speeding around thi1 curve. Why not put in 11 stop sign jwt at the comer of Santa lsahtl18 and Irvine heading south ? It also would be advis able to paint "Stop Ahead'' on the atreet Quotes ' ~U.el W1tf:r1 , singer. actress, oa Calli. evaagellltlc tour -"I've been called a Jlar, you know, but 'star 's' juJt a nice r word for aervant , baby. It's those people out there ln the aud ience what pays your salary." Sen. Mar«•ret Chase SmlO. (ft...Mafoil, H!wtrln& brr own que1tktn or wlly 1be Seute doe• 1101 act on ableotetltm - "Becauite the Senate Is a club of prlma doMa1 Intensely aclf-<iriented -99 kings and one queen -dedicated to their own per1011al accom.modaUon " . -WUl11111 R. Gl111<UI. Director Slalt W1W Rnoarca Dtpartmellt -"Two of CaUfoml1'1 w1ter problems u e. too much water In the wrong place at the wrong Umt ; and on the other ha nd . Ml enouab .. attr In the right piece 1( lhe rlpl Ume." Subsidy ~fore the sign. A sign llkc thlJ could be put in overnig ht. JUST 1111NK, t1 simple 11\op sign could bri ng car~ to a stop. then rcducr.d ~pct.d on lh l!i cu rve, thus :ivcrllng n111ny AO- cident~. We ht•11eve the DAILY PllJYl' wi ll be doing a great service to our rnmmunlty it It will help lo commun icate thi!i mcssagt public ly and lo the city tr11fic depart.- men!. J PATRfCE WAHt.STEDT Agalnn Helicopte rs To !he Editor : For over two years the residents of Newport Beach have been subjected to the terrible persistent noise of pallet hcllcoptcr11. For two yea rs the Newport Reach J>olice Department has been get· ting telephone romp/1tlnl11 11boul the noise, especially after midn ight, :1r11t, for two year~ they have been telling citizenii of Newport Beach lhat they are fJylng the noi11y machines for lhe people's ''protec> lion.'' Earlier promlse1 hRve been mode that the noise will be eliminated Jn the near future. This has not been done. II means that it lt1 no Jonaer poss ible to believe the promises of the Newporl Beach Pollce Department. Doe1 that meHn we 1hould not trust the police anymore ? I WAS SHOCKED and dismayed when the Newport Beach City COuncll approved the use of these nol1y "toy1" ta• they were called by Thomas F". Jones In Mailbox, May 3), depriving ltti ctln· stituentg of thei r re!lt Rt n'lghl and 1quandering the taxpayer11' money. The cost of the helicopters 11 too much for I city the 1ize of Newport Beach. Th• Newport Besch 1nnu3J bud1Jet, fisca l period 19n.1m 11tate.!I , "Object 41, Helicopter maintenance, provides for gas, oll and maintenance for the two depart· ment helicopters 11 an overage cost of mi per d1y." This amount. to $92,()()() yearly. On top of that figure goes the i,,.. itial Cott, pllotJ' pay , the cost of repair .. Insurance, and repla cement of patU. Unfortunately l could not find the figurCJ for !he above items, but, I am sure th t overall amount spent is 11teggering. AS A RESIDENT or Newport Beach whose ta•es are spent for the purpose o( keeping me awaltt! unlll 3 o'clock on many mornlng11, ) dernand that the helicoptt.r 11urvelllance be discontinued Immediately. If Chief Clavas Is not ahl• to protect the citizenry without the noh1y copters. then he should !ltcp down and there will be plenty of others that could do the job efllclenlly without the he11C1lpters or TY. After all . the salary of 126,000 yearly plus exprnses, al so comt.1 from lhe taxpaye rs. JOSEPH W. SLOWIKOWSKI 0.ANOI coAar DAILY PILOT Robert N. \Vttd, P11blilhtr Thomos Kec i;il, Ed ftor A/b,rt W. Bok1 £ditoriot Page £drlor Th,. f'dUori a.I J>1 C:f' t)f th11 Diiiy PllfJt 111ekt to lnl11rm 111nd ,1tJmu· tale reader• by pnrHnlln!r thl1 ~•Pl~• oplnlntr• and com· ment.ary on 101;ln. ,,, ln!emt and •la:nlflctnno, by llfOVidlnac I rf\'rurn fflf' tM r-lCpN'lll<m or oor rt~dlln' opln"'nl, and hy Jw~lln'C the d~ vStwpolntt ur •nfonn~ nb- M!l"Ytn and •VOkt'Vntn on lQ'Jlk:I ot lht daJ. Friday, M1y 12, 1972 ' Ecowgy Units Pwt St ratf!gy SAN t"llANCISCO !UPI) - C.:unservation i;roups t~y planned legal iitra tegy lo t thr Ah'u1k11n plpellne and . • t11cktd lhe Interior Dtpa~ ment for gr1nt1ns oil com- panies a Tight.of-way ptnnll for the multi-million dollar project. Sierra ·ctub E:recu t Ive Director Mlchael McCloskey 11ald th e Thursday's decision by Interior Secretlry' Rt.leer• c. M. h1orton would lead Jo the "worat possible com· bination 1 or long r a n-Jl e u,1 ,, .. ,..,.. rcsull!.' . F ree to Dllse nt · ,.-rltnds of the Earth, an ac- tive environmental gr(/1 aald Capitol tour guides in Sacramento can wear "every legal 1trlite thlt all the arm bands and might work" would be u11ed to buttons they want as rtop the co111trucllon. David far u the Joint Rules Brower, the lfOUP'• pre1ldent.. C o mmit te e 1s con· called tt 1 "de1tructlve, un.-cerned. Meniben in an nec ... ry.;pto)ect" that -1d emergency meeting re· only ~lead to the '•Lo• jected a move to stop Brett Manblll 1bown, Angeleaballon of Amftica." fr om weartnc hli anU- Brower 11ld his organlza. war symbol. tlon, lhe Wilderness Society. ---''------- and the En v Iron mental Dcrense. Fund will work together to halt the pipeline. ~fcCl0tkey 1ald the Interior Depnrtm.cnt decision will lead to "the admltt«I dangers" or marine )>ollutlon 11nd ac· ceterate the depletion or U.S. oil reserves. ln ·Bellevue, Wash., officials or Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. said construction of the system could not t1tart until next year because of pending lltlgatlon. A 1pokesman for the firm , which wa11 set up by seven major oil companies to build the pipeline, said the company was "deeJ>l>.'. committed to cOniitructlng nna (lperi t1ng the 1afe!l and most ~ure oil tranapQrtatlon system In the world." He 1ald ''every precaution will be taken to 1afegunrd a g a i n 11 t en- vironmental ri:lks." The Sierra Club dlrtctor lave 1 different opinion, llyln1 thal Morton h 11 "chosen a short term ex- pedient which will confront us with the worst poulble com- bination or long r 1 n g e resulf1." * -t; * New Charge To Be Filf d In Accident REDWOOD CITY (UPI) - The San Mateo County Distri ct Attomey's office has an- nounced tha t aew charge11 of vehicular manslaughter would be lodged against a dentist married to a daughter of retired Maria leader Jo~ph Ponanno.,~~~ Deputy Distric t Attorney James Niven said Thursday the new charge would be filed against Dr. Gregory W. Geno- vese, Daly City, in South San Francisco Municipal Court and Jt would be based on "other evldence." A 1imllar charge against:the denUst was dismissed Wednes- day by Superior Court Judg e W. Howard Jlartley on grounds Genovese had been given a blood test without hi11 constnt. Club Wants Coast Vote · SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The Sierra Club 1ay1 It will 1ta1e an intensive petition drive over the next month to put a coastal protection in- itiative on !he November elec-- tion ballot. _ John Zierold. the club's Sacra rnento lobbyist. said Thursday the club would "'ork with \the Coastal Alli nnce . a t..'OallHon of some 100 groups. lo collecl 325.000 slgnRturts by lhr drndline or J une 9. ·'The people will have lo enat•t for themselves what the leglslnture has refused to gl\•e the1n." Zlcrold told a news conle.rence. Ho aajd tho Jnlliatlvo Wl!llld require the state to prepare a master plan for the preserva· Uon of the co11 t1 l en- vironment. It would 1lso create machinery to institute controls on development in areas 1,000 yard! lnJand fro m the beach and three miles out to sea, he said. The lobbyist said the p~ posed initiative \vould be ;iJmost identical to bills -In- trod uced by Assemblyman Alan Sieroty CD-Los Angele~). and Sen. Donald Grunsky CR· Watsonville). Student IQ Lower This Year SH If you'Ve won this week. May 12through May 18, 1972. I • 21 12 6 24 20 14 3 ; 18 10 Pick up a Bingo Cant from a partlclpallng Shell d1tler1o<11y or Hnd 1 Hlf·addl'9Ued envelope to Department BFC #1, P. 0 . llox279, Chlcagc, FREE 7 5 11 16 4 . 15 13 17 2 19 22 . 8 23 25 llll nola 60848. Every Shell Bll!f/O C.rd Is a potenf11I winner. So uve )'llur c11ds-if one doesn'twln this week, It could win next WHk • . ' I _•rldl..c.::'~·-•~-'-u~,_1_'72-'--~~~~~~~~o~~~t~v~Pn.~'!f'-'i~ Mills in MiMfu Sherel11 Edited Of Women 's Bill Juro~s to See .Diary I \Vhen you lhink of real estate investrnent, th ink ofUeepWetl Ranch and Palm Sp rin gs. You can own a superb new condominium or individuaJ residence in th at fabled land of Sunshine. Enjoy it u a pe rmanen t home or a desen retreat. Jt'1 the easiest way in the world to save money. And the most pleasant! Palm Springs: where sunshine bathes the air year-around. OecpWell Ra;nch p rivacy Is maintained with a walled security entry. Enjoy swimming and ten nis or relax in steaming therapy pools. All yo urs with-. out work, since building exteri or and ground maintenance is provided, But hurry! Over $51/1 million worth of OeepWell Ran ch homes have already been sold. ·only 111 fami lies will be able to enjoy Deep\Vell Ranch investment. Be one of them! 2 & 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths. From $51,950 ftt simple. DeepWell Ranch "' "'n. Wiiiia. .._ c.....-. ... ALODO: ~ Wrile fOf complete information bit Palm Ganyon Drive at DeepWeJl loid. Palm Spt'ings, California 92262 The Smasher. Everything you want from wood and cant get from steel. Wood has always meant feel and controL Th.en, steel added punch and power to the game. But players using steel soon missed their old controL So, Spa!dingC1111eup with the best of both worlds: the aluminum Spalding Smasher. '.fhe sheer power of the new, tempered with the reassuring feel of the old. An aluminum frame for power and control. Strung conventionally 60 it doesn't cheat you of accuracy the way suspended- string arrangements can. Spalding Smasher. A powerful racket you can be friends with. - . ' • • l \ I . l • ' * ORANGE ~OUNTY, CALIFORNIA VOi:. 65, NO. Ill, 4 SECTIONS, .q· PAGES By TERRY. COVJU.E Of ~D&ll't , ..... ,,.., Orange County Coa!t ~lation Dtttcton 'lbursday threw their oupport beblnd the coutllne _..,,.11on bill authored by state Seoator 1lemiis (R·Newport Beach). · )llcbd his, ralbtr than other .......... because It rellel .. 1oCal ratbe!' than r<1iooal cootroill. "Clrpeot ..... bDI ill the only Ont lllat propo1e1 conrtrucfure control in the hands of local government," John Macnab, president <I. the. Coast Aslocia. tioo, told meinben at a tbncbeon in the Huntingtoa Harbour Beach Club In HW> tingtoa Beach. - Memben ot' tbe 1aocl1tion · are~ also ~ cllles aJoag tbe Crance COul to llljlpol'l 'Corpenler'• tilll. 'l'bo Coat• -latlon hu•abciut 3S8 ~ member.a and ctty..aicw.. It .... formed In Jilt In "in-vt. upUft and protect" the coulline. .... .. .. ...,._-_, 1;t . . \ •. f '*"'. FRIDAY, MAY 12 , 1971 • Coastline 1 Bill .. Carpenter's coastal"'blll \Viii be heard Monday iQ:tbe senate Natural Resources Commlttee. It sets lip a U.man 1taie coastal review board with final authority of over ooaatllne dovelopmenl Most of the groundwork' for· coestline p r o j e c t 1 , however 1 i5 left in the hands of cUlts and counties along the coast. Afike Neal, an assistant to Carpenter enlphaslzed that the bill sets up no ~glonal govmunenl .,- ' •• Another .~stUne meas ure. sponsored by Assmiblyman Alan Sieroly tO..Bcver· ly Hills), establishes a series of regional agenciea with total power over coastline development, even within cities. Under Carpenter's 'measure, each coastal city and county will be given time to develop individual general plans for the future of the coast. Those plans will be submitted to the I> member state agency \\'hich '"'ill incor· parate them into a set of gu idelines and criteria ror a Cal\rornla general pl11n or coaslllne development. Each city and county, ho\vever, will have jurlsdictJon over Its own boundaries. A project whJch ls denied., can be ap.. pealed to the state agency. The state agency will also review all locally approved projects in case of con- troversy, and It can reverse the local ap. proval. Carpenter defines the coastal ione a~ Today's Final N.Y. Steeb c TEN CENTS slrrtc-hing three miles to sea and 1 max· lmunl or three miles Inland or a 111i11hnun\ of 1.000 yards inlnnd. llis bill is sn 860. ~enl said there i.s also a companion bill, SB 861 , which autborii.e s a public bond Issue of $200.000,000 so the state can buy privat' beach lands. · "The senator fH-ls if the public wand' thfll pri rnte land. it will he.ve to Pl'Y for . it," Nelli eiplnlned . DAILY PILGT INH PllM9t ANTIWAR MARCHERS 200 STRONG CHANT -OUTSIOE SEAL BEACH NAVAL WEAPONS DEPOT ' There Wat Contidera~I• Whooping and· Hollerin9 But Only Thrff Arrests MARCHING DOWN TRAFFIC LANES 0 F UNIVERSITY DRIVE IN UCI PROTEST Thursday's Anti'w1r Activity Was For Most P11t Peaceful on lrvlne C1mpu~ · Pentagp11 Says ~ • ' < • • , • ' ' v. . ' Viet BlockJMfe -County-Ge·ftl's .:(J n ; .. f or Protester·s· River Floods . . , ;. , -r · · In Texas; 8 { Works-So ,Far Antiwar Demonstratio11s Include Freeway Sit-in, March Lose Lives WASIDNGTON (UPI) -The Pentagon 11ld today the block1ge of North Viet-By CANDACE PEARSON .___ Of fM O.lly .-lttt Steff narn's po~ had .been lOO percent ef· Antiwar demOnatraUons in Orange fectlve durm~ its r~st 24, h~~-' County cOntinued today at ·a tluieter pace Several ships believed or1g1n~y boWld compared to sharply contrasting protests for Haiphong have ch4nged course, of· 'MWr~y, which incluCied Street fLre·s, ar- ficlalJ said. rests and peaceful pr-,.ers. A 'D<feD!O Department opokesman, A group o! VC !n'lne students met at Jen')' w. Friedbetm, also uid two or 12:~ p.m. today ht the school CQl\Ull~I Ihm additiooal freljhtera thit were In to _cqanlu.peopleJor af~_plcketmc Haiphong harbor when mines were sown •t county and city om..,. . . by V:S. (ilanes got out before the weapolS They )llamft to march on government became Jetbal at 4 a.m. PDT Thuraday. That raised to seven the nlDllber of ships that ·were said to have left in the three daylight, periods arter the mining. Twenty-eight-or perhaps 29 -ships re· mained In tht harbor. Jo~riedheim said his report on two or three additional ships leaving Haiphong represented an updating or intel.lig~nce rather than departure or any ships after the mines became lethal. One more Soviet freighter and aiioth!i!r flying the flag of Somalia got out and an:i!her Soviet ship may have, he said. 0 We \hink several more ships that were en route to Haiphong have diverted," Friedh~im saj'd. He refused to reveal t&e locaUoo or na.- tionalitles of those vessels. Frledheim aillo llld two ~ d!lpo were caught behind mlnelleldl at the port of Vlnh and two Soviet dllpo were lluck . at Cam Pba, north d Hilpbong. . • The possibWty of a mill1ary oon- frontatlon of super powers ovtl' tf,e U.S. mining of the North Vietnamese harbor• appeared eased amid suggestions that the United States had private understandings with both the Soviet Unlon and China that they ·would noi attempt to run the mtiie{ie\ds. Jn turn. U.S. official s said it '"as unlikely American ships would attack Soviet or Chinese minesweeepers if they attempted to clear the harbors. Instead, U.S. planes would replace the mines as quickly as the communists could pick them 'Up. However, the ollictab 11ld they 11w no evidence .. far o(. Illy effort b)' mlneaw•epen to clear ~-block· int entrance! to seven peril.' 11.s. -in Wlllhlng1on, Saigon and Phnom Pooh llfd privately that there ..... at 1eut I tacit· Qnemenl -tbe United Slates llld the-Communist powtn tllat tbe U.S. blocbde could co.,. tinue lnddnltely with neither Ruslia nor OUna trying to run It while denouncing It 1trongly In pubic. Pentagon officials said there was UtUe prospect of any confrontation in arta of the mine fields for several day1 at least. They predicted 1ctipn in the lndoc:hln1 war would shift from the h~rbor areas to the Communlsl l!J'ound ofleMlve In South Vietnam. which hlf, been In 1 lun 1 ... • -k .. The mlnlnc of the batbon and olba- lcllons to stop dellvtry of "ar malarW to Hanoi b)' land. air or aea are not ..., (Ille lllNIS, hp I) • • ' E11emy Bombards An Loe, Seizes Most of Town SAIGON (UPI) -North Vietnamese troops bombarded the provincial capital of An Loe 60 miles north of Saigon with a record 10.000 rounds of artillery and rockets and captured most of the town to- day In a lanl<·led usault, mllltary IJIO)<eamm reported. v.s. -hit-Communlat.beld ..... -Ibo . .-., .... ..,. with 2,000-tom <>! i...111 la.,,,,.t opokeomen ~ u.. ·moo\ con<enlrated \IOIDblng of Ibo war.- But the Communist J)osltions were well· • camouflagtd in the rubber plantations and effectiveness or the raids was not known. Jet fighter-bomber pilots said they knocked out two Russian-made PT76 tanks and disabled two others, but the ,two damaged tanks still fired into the town, Once a beautiful district capital with wide, palm-fringed streets and French colonial bungalows. Military IOllrCU nid the North Viet· . . . nameR were thought to have brought b>- to Ibo' An Loe at.a their -wftponl -blh4-beld, · lltat-oeeklng S t re 11 a • mlilll!' In~ during the battle of Quaa( Tri. . U.S. Nt"J' filhler-bombm pllltend the am with boml>1 and pilots llld they thought they spotted SAM mlsslles. Officers 'Would Kill' ., WASHINGTON (AP) -Transportation Secretary John A. V'olpe say1 v.s. alr murlty officers will shoot to kill hi- jackers U "it come• to \hi matter or the sa!dy ol the pwengerr or the me ol the hljld:tr." Volpe told the NaUonal Press Clllb Tllurllday that "we don't lnlend to hl>e.lhootouts•whm they can be avoid- 111,"' haftVW. • o(fices, read prepared statements against the war and remain 'until city orficials agreed to send telegrams to President Nixon in protest of the sCepup In U.S. in· volvement In Southeast Asia. Saddleback, Golden West and Orange Coast Comrp.unlty Colleges all reported no activity planned for today. Those cam- puses were also quiet Thursday. At Cal ~Fullerton, the scene of some violenci ·Thund1y, students held a noon riDY aiainst the war and ten· tatively planned a sit-in on the Riverside Freeway this afternoon. Thursday, Cal State Fullerton students and street people attempted to burn down a 10-story office building near the campus and light bonfires on busy State College Boulevard, · Fullerton police said the demonstrators used street repair barricades a:nd tree limbs to begin tfle firl!s, which were con- trolled in about 30 minutes. 'Iboae atrett diSturbances, police said, 'Off ~street' Parking Plan Faces Mesa Councilmen Costa Mesa's proposed off-street park- ing ordinance faces a City Council test at 6:30 p.m. Monday in council chambers at 77 Fair Drive. 11le ordinance, proposed by the plan- ning department, would determine the num!Jtr·d parking spacea In apartments according to a new forlnula whlch1takes into account the nuniber of bedroolns in er.ch uniL Ctn'rent standards, in existence since 19&6, specify a flat 1.5 11paces per unit, no matter how many bedrooms it contains. Should lhe five-man council appro ve the new standards, new one bedroom units would be given . 1.5 spaces, two ~be<.lroom units 1.8 spaces, and three bedroom units two spa ces. Jn addition , the.re would be. one guest space for each 10 dwelling units. The increase in apartment parking was proposed shortly after a planning depart· ment survey diJclosed that many nsidents of large apartment blocks were dissatisfied with current parking stand· ards. Also on Monday night's agenda are two public hearings which directly concern the '20 million Four Seasons VIiiage recreation area proposed on COsta Mesa's north side. One is a · change in the master plan from the current high density to com· mercial recreation and the other a special commctcial recreation zoning di strict. Approval of both items would allow Four Seasons to f>uild a 40-acre c0mplcx north af the San Diego Free\vay and West of Bear Street. It would include num erous sports attractions as well as a 1najor hote l and a motel. Other agenda items include a pro- posed reduction of the speed limit on Sunfl ower Avenile between Bristol Street and Main Street from 65 to 45, and a one. hour daytime parking limit on East 17th Street between Tustin and Irvine Ave- nues. . ·Letter Reared Exotic Pet Gets Backing in Mesa Ralph Lutae's tame sun bear "Angela.." ordered run out of town by Costa Mesa City Council May I, ha. found a new friend . He is Mlchael J. lfllchcns of Placentia, who wrote a 8Cathlng letter to the council condemnin& it& action. , llll<h<ns Jaid that the ruling "shows how ao•ernment Is denying people their blslc r1gbtl." He ldded he wu certain, thlt "one sun bear isn't going to aWlt a put deal .. U.Uble la Colla ....... -< • Ju st to rhak e sure the council knows v.·here be stands, Hitchens closed with. "God blesa the animal lovers and damn the City Council." L<rtgc, who ha• kept the 125-pound. vegel8rian be1'r on his property at 2000 Harbor Blvd. for the pa st seven yea rs, has been given iO days to dispose of h~ ptt. Councilmen ordered It' re mo v a because ~14 and exotic animals are not 'allowed under dt7 codes. • i ' .. were apparently the work or the same group which· set fire to the HoneyWell Inc. Institute of Information Sciences early Thursday morning. Honeywell rn·anufadures one type or missile used in Vietnam. Fire damage was estimated at $50,000. No arrests were yet reported, although demonstrations at the Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station and at the Queen ~ary !See ANTIWAR, Pase Ii Plea to Cease Raids Allegedly Made by POW s From Wire Sf:rvlces TOKYO -A 1tatement or protest and denunciation of Increased bofnblngs -at times sober, at times pleading -and at- trlbuled to eight U.S. pilots lmprilloned by Hano i was released here today. The announcement carried by the of· flclal Hanoi news agency VNA carried signatures of the Marine Corps, Air Foret anct Navy fliers, tncludlng one from Santa Ana . , He ill Marine Lt. Col. Edison W. Miller. listed as a POW nearly five years after being shot down on a combat mission rrom Chu Lal air ba:i;e. llaool's news agency said the only ot her lwo Southln nd-ba~ed niers amon~ !he eight ;ire Nnvy Cmdr . Dav id \\'. Hoff. mnn. and Navy Lt. f IJC) Norris A. f'h:irles, both of San l)iego. They were captured afte r t>eln~ ~hot down on fl ights rrom the aircraft carrier U.S.S. Coral Sea. The VNA :u1id 1'Uieir message lo the American people and the congreu of the United States read as followa: "Despite a bombing bait announced In 1968, the President ordered the mump. tion and authorized the continuation of the bomblnf of the DRVN North Vietnam'. with a variety of excuses to juatU1 the roldl. On Swlday morning, Aprll 11, 1'72, lhe peace of Hanoi and HJ!phonc wu shattered by American aircraft and bombs. Many Innocent people died a totally needle!ls ~nd senseless dt:Alh. Wine Autl1ority Dies SAN FRANCISCO !AP) -E. Otto Sichel. member of 3 p1"9minent wine in- dustry family and hi1nself a noltd ••lk authority And di!!trlbutor. died Thursday at &5. A native of Germa~ny Sichel for the past two decades had bee preAldent of Fromm and Sic nc., tlC\..-lusive worldwide dlstrlbUtor1 for CNlatiAn Brothers w(nes, . 'f , NEW BRAUNFELS, Tex. (UPI) -Tho Guadalupe River, bulging rrom a week of rain, rushed out to its banks today, poul°" ing \Yater houaetop high and sweeping aw.iy cars and homes and the people Lil them. At least eight persons drowned. More than 4,500 per110ns we r fl evacuated from riverfront homes along 25 miles of the muddy river. Entire famlllea were rnlssln g, Six persona drowned at New Braunfel1 11nd two more al Seguin, 15 mlle1 downstream. More rain was forecast to add to the foot that fell over lhe past week. "So many people were wa!lhed away," said New Braunfels Police Chief Royce Couch. "We (ear the total wlll go much higher." Floodwaters, turned a gooey black by oil !rom broken drums, rose 18 feet high. Gov, Preston Smith called out the Tex· a!I National Guard to .help evacuation and t lean-up work in the south central area of New Braunfels, a town or 18,000. Said New Braunlell dispatcher Thomas Claxton : "Several houJt1 floated away. We are swamped with call1 -people BBylng, 1Help me, please. My house ts: floatlnl: away.' " All bridles In New Br1m1fels were covered by the water. The only safe way into the town wu by helloopter or heaV)'. four-wheel drive trucks .. Couch aaJd hundred.I of perlOna wern f!VA<!uated from re1k:lentlal areas of New Rraunfels and taken to four Red Cros!'I cf!ntcrs. Hundred more at Seguin were f8f!e FLOOD, Page ZI 1"ea~r More sunny weather f>'edicled 1long the Orange Cout, followlni the ..,,.1 low clouda and fog. Highs at the beach In the high eo· •• rising to 80 Inland. Low1 -· INS I DE T4)b.\ l' The I.agtma Beach Civic Bal· let 1taut1 its last fn a 1erl11 of jout cl1fldrtn'1 program.t. St e the 1toru in toda11's Wetktnder. l ,M, a114I 1 ew1111t II (1llltrnl1 I cr • .,H~ »•11 C_k, t1 Crto ..... JI 0...111 ........ 11 ll4llltri1I ..... ' ::-~ Tt-.'t!~ -" ....... ...,., 11 .,,.... . > Me>'ritt •• Mvtffl ,.... ,. H.ilt~I NI... ... Or"""I CW..., II ·"'""lflft .,. l fl•l1 ...,.,.,. " '"'"' 1 .. 11 •ttt• Mat\ th 1M1. Tt!WWM • .......... -Wttfllllt t --·· """ ,,.,, ......... u.• ( ' ' I l l c Unit .Seeks 3 Changes In Courts 87 JACK BROBACK Of .. DtlrJ 'Het SllH Thrtt chang~ in the state j!J<Ucial proceues "·ere endorsed Thursday by the Oraf\ie Cou nty Criininal Justice Council -Including sm1ller Jurles for felony trials and allowln; fifth-tlxths verdicts rather than unanimous resulta by six or I 2-man juries. The council also approved an Auembly bill authorizing the appointment of. traffic trial comm l11ioner1 to conduct 1 pilot project to speed up di1poaltlon of traffic o!fen1e1. Moat council mtmber1 endoned an Ihm propo•ils but Deputy Publlc Defender Rod Riccardi •hlected to reduc- fnl the numbtr of juron Ind allowing Jeu than unanimous decl11on1. Riccardi 11 chief of the felony defense division of tht Orange County Public Defender's Office . Keith Conc111non, execu tive director of the council. urged adoption of the p~ PoUlt Which he said were designed to speed up the processes of justice. The Justice council w1s created two years ago as an advisory group to the Orange County Board of Supervltor1 to monitor trendJ 1n crime prevenUon and .to 1erve u a clearing house for anti· tCtlme prOifamt. Member• include coun- ty 1upervltor1, city c o u n c J I me n • crlnllnolotJlll. Jude .. Ind police chief•. Tha principal propoals ldopled were Pf*nted to the C01111CU meelfnl by Robert J. Huntley, clly l!lllllger of ·Wlfl. <nlnaler llJd chalnnan of I 1peci1J COl11• mltlat of tlJe CDUllcU. "This committee hu reviewed the .mommend1tlons or the Select Coll>' mltlH oo Trill Court Delay appolnled by the California Supreme Court and the recommendations of the Special Com- 1111tte8 of-the State Bar of Cllifornia and recommends adoption of tho,e proposals -which appear to be the leaat con-- <troveraJal and the most beneficial in the cootlnulng eHorl to Improve the judicl1l 1y1tem," Huntley aald. The red1.&Ctlon Jn jury alies In Rlected crlmlnal cues to provide 1lx-peraon juries, Huntley explained, applies only to those felony prosecutions where an al· leged offense Is neither punlsbnble with death nor with a ma1lmum sentence of life Imprisonment. The recommend1tlon that llll)ority vertiltta ill •ltcted aiminal CUii be allowed applies only to certain felony prosecullons, the committee chairman said and to proseeutJona of mlade· meN'QrS. "l'lil'ierhi "cePl•ln" wls not el1bor1ted -upon by Huntley. The councU voted to forward thejr recommendations· to the C&llfomla State Super,vlaor1 AasOC'laUon, the League of California Cities, city councU1 and county bolrd1 of 1upervL9or1 in each of t;allfornia's 58 ~ntles. The criminal justice council recom· mendatlons will also be forwarded to Orange County legis lative dele1aUon in Sacramento for evaluRtlon. ' • Rabies Clinic ' At Fairgrounds Lov.·-cost anti-rabies vacclnatlon:i: will be offered to Harbor Area dogs May 17 during a cllnlc at the Ora11&e County Fairgrounds parking lot in Costa Mesa. The clinic, sponsored as a public service by the OrRnge County VettrlnRry Medical Association. the Costa Mesa Rotary Club Rnd the Orange County Health Department, will provide the ahots for S2 per anlm1ll . The vaccinations will be offered rrom 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Dols must be at le11t rour months old to receive the vaccine, whleh will im- munize them against rabies for a two- yeer period. OIAN•I COAST CM DAILY PILOT ~ 01'9ftte C-11 DAILY l"ILOT, lll'lltl ~ I• ~ ,,,. H..,.l"l'ftl. h .II .... "" ll'ltl ~..,.. c .. tt l'Vlllltllh'll CtmMfl1. ,.,._ ntt .. lllorlt l rt Pllbll1Md, Ml!ld1y "'Nlllf' ,rjhy, fW COllll M ... , N...,...f ... ti\. Huntr111ton lfftll/,_11111 V1Uty, L•tun• ft•<;ll, l,.,ln-.'S111dlllb<tck 11'141 S111 Cllmlnt1/ S1rt J11111 C•1l1tr1119, A tlntll Mi<IMI ldll l"" 1 .. llllbll•lll<d $..>t11rd1Yt 111C1 S1M•1r1. Tiit< prlnc:tpel fl\lblli.11;,. pl911! It 11 1)1 Wtsl l1r $•Alf, (0.11 M,M, C1 tlNrml9, P~. Reb1rt N. W114 l"rttlffftl 111C1 PllCll1,,,.. J1•k It. C111rl1y vic. ...,....,., w o.n..1 Mllntttr n."''' ic: ••• 11 l!fl ... T1io1t111 A . M11rphl11• Mtlllllllre l•flr Ct.e~t11 H. L101 •1,h1N P. "'II Altltftnl Mll'lll ... M IMn c ....... o... JJO Wo1t l1y, Stn1t MafUttt M"',..'" P.O. t.11 lftO, tJtlt .,...._ ~ hl(fl; U» HfW!llrl ..., .. ,_, Lllfli'll l ttellr m ,,....,.,.,"""'" """'"""" ... (fl: 1lt1J lllOI ......... ,. ... , ............ ; JU """' ll Ctlftlfte ·~ N••111 f114J Hl-4JJI C11:11'1111 ......... , '41·1611 ~ ''"' °'... C-tt ,..,.., .... ~,; Ne ..... llef'ltt, UMtr.t ... , .... Ill ......., • ~,.._,. '*'"' ""'· .. •••*••• .............. 1 ,.... ....... ..,...,. ...... . .... -= ....... __ ~--"'Ale... I --1111 W llfriw OM ='1."'d.::.~ •. -· - • OAILY PILOT Staff PM• THREE LONELY PROTESTERS CHALLENGE U.S. NAVY At Lon1 Be1ch, UCl'1 K1y1k Ag1in1t Mint SwHper From Pflfle J ANTIWAR • • • Thunday totaled nine arrests. Most of the demonstrators in tho:i:e ac- tions were from Cal State Long Beach. UCI protesters c o n f i n e d actions to a march down MacArthur Boulevard following a noon rally on campus and an early morning symboUc mining of Long Be1ch harbor. Remaining on campus Jn their own unlque versJon of a demonstration were about 80 students at Southern California College In Costa Mesa Thursday night who offered prayers for peace. About 15 of the same Southern Cal students showed up this morning in the school chapel and read a telegram to President Nixon which said . "We the students of Southern California Oollegt have 1et ulde 11peclflc times to remember you and our nation in prayer. We will be praying that God will give you Mesa Girl Sips Lighte.t· Fluid A little Costa 1'-1esa girl Is recovering today fmm a big swig of charcoal lighter fluid after being raced to the hospltnl by police car Thursday in her mother's arms. Sharltne Sheffield, 21 months, and her 'mother were ficked up at their home, 3040 Fillmore Ave., at 2:30 p.m., after Mrs. SU.san Sheffield reported the emergency. Officer Chuck Du vall said the little girt "'a.<1 coughing and choking as a result of swnllowing an undetermined amount of the petroleum-based product. "She's dolng faJr ly well today,'' one nursing supervisor at Costa l\1esa Memorial Hospital said. 0 Stereo Unit Stolen Returning from a church meeting Thursday night, a Costa Mesa woman found a burglar had stolti) her $ISO stereo radio-phonograph· eet. Linda R. Morrison , of 288 Costa Mesa St.. called police. but 1nv .. ugators could find no sign of for<ed entry to th< aparl· ment. > wisdom as you guide our nation." It was signed by Student Body Presi· dent Doug Halvorsen , who •aid .there were no polltical implications in the tele· gram. Coll ege Vice President and Chaplain John Lindvall sald he really wasn 't sure ''how the students were praying. I'm sure it was both ways." Halvorsen said,_ the prayers were directed mainly toward uking for a ''lasting peace in Vietnam." Carrying signs also calling for peace, but protesting in a different manner, were about 200 marchers at the Seal Beach weapons facili ty Thursday af- ternoo n. They marched for about three hours during-which three arreatl were made on minor charges of jaywalking or disobey. int' a police order. About 20 to 30 police officers kept traf. fi.c moving through the blJ.!IY lnl.era~Uon o! Seal Beach Boulevard ind th< hl1ihw1y where marchers congrega~ Fro1n Page l FLOOD ••• evacuated to city hall, the courthouse and shelters. Police Dispatcher Tom Glore at San Marcos, site of the state 's last bad flood, May 16, 1970, said mere than 400 peraons were taken before dawn from area flooded by Purgatory Creek and housed in three centers. Cibola Creek In northeast Siii 'Antonio flooded, forcing Bexar County worktn to evacuate more than 200 persons. "We just got them out before the water got here," said Officer James Bowles. Guadalupe County Sheriff Phll Medlin at Seguin said most of the flooding there was in riverfront subdivisions ' in the county and not in the city's residential areas. "At this time we are 1n the process of picking up all the people who failed to evacuate earlier," he said. "Tht river is above flood stage here but it ls receding above New Braunfels. We're getUng 1 lot of water. Helicopter1 are picking up peo. pie stranded on rooftops and in trees. "We're feeling some eftects in the lowlying areas in the city but moat of the trouble Is along the river, the dlvlJiol'll built along the water. Most of them are out on Lake Dunlap 'Ind L 1 'k e ~icQueeny." ·\ Spare Tires Unsightly- Pose Ecology Problems Jlere Is a sampling of the articles com- ing up In Sunday's edition of tht DAILY PILOT : ROUJNG ALOf\'G -Old tirts never die, they lust ketp bouncing around. That'• ill r gh.1 for youngsters who crawl through them 11nd !wlng on them 1t plaiirounds but most old tires that refuse lo go away present an ecologica l f,l'Obltm. That problem is examined by Sllfl Writer Earl Wllaon. WA~TEFUL SOCIETY -If you w1nt to see It. l'lslt a cou nty dump Rnd you'll find dlscnrdcd appl!Ances. seemingly in only a minor state of disrepair, and many useful ltt!ms of furniture. The story Is this week"s Sunday Special. EMERGENCY ROOM -llow doe1 1 wom1n f11< II cltie! of I horplt.11 tmUgency room! Dr. Cl11re Weldanltr. dlial em•1ency room Ph.vslclan 1t Cost• M111 M-rlli llD<pllal. bu blndltd Ille Job linct lut J IDlllr)' Ind findl 11 'I qulle I chall .... t. SPORTS STAM -'l'hm's an ln<ltpth t ' report In the 'I""'' f:B" on U.S. pairs skating champions o Jo Starbuck and Ken Silelley who !urned professional thlJ \\'etk. UNSPOILED TOWNS -The cover story of Family Weekly descrlbu a couple's search for .safe places to live, towns unspoiled by crime whm doorl ,cnn remain unlocked . They rte0mmtnd 12 places for couples to spend thelr rttlr· ing years ln peace.· PSVDIOLOGICAL TESTS -M1ny firms use these tests in deciding on key promoUons or appoinlments. And If then!"s a lhlrd person In the room when you aro lnlervlewld, th1t llgure, whom you have not aeen before, Is probably 1 psychologist ana lyzlnc your 1<1cJIDN. It's the lead story In the ·•vou•• section. POWER PLANT -Southenl C111!omla Edloon Company ii trylDf to locate u alternate po-.-er plant at f"rf Mounlllfn In . Sin B«nlrdlno ·County bat Southom Cltuomla FDCUI Oil tho edllol~ reports lhll -larw n w----•11IMt the proposal. UCI Chief: <;onttnue ... Experimen~. UC Irvine must "fOCUI on doln,J wen that which has already been undtrtaRn" in the coming years, but must also leave room for e1perimentaUon and never become sell-satisfied, Chancellor Dan Aldrich told 1 s~ meeting of the UCI facuJty senate Thursday. 1.otfest, a celebration of the IO-year an-- niversary of the lrvint campus and Aldrich's involvement With it, be1ina to- day and runs lhrough Moy 20. (Tbe-w~rd uzot" comes from the IOUnd made by the antealer, the UCI ..-, in Ibo comic strip "B.C."l / Aldrich •poke to •bout 5$ J1cult)' members Thursday on "Irvine, Present and Future," where be told them that lalest UC projec\lonl aay Irvine will pull: in llllO 1t 12,000 to 11,000 sludeota. Some Charlie Jn ICldemlc pJIJ1DinC mu st be made to accommodlte the eltra students, Aldrich admitted, adding, "I will not be ready to 11dd programs unless I see the dollars there to support them without detradlng from that we agreed we ought to have." Later, during questioning, he said that finding support money for the faculty already at UCI is "the most critical issue before us." But Aldrich dots anticipate stud.its or possible changes in the following: -More empbuis on univer1Jty-ti• tension classes for students returnin& to lcbool. ' -Addltlon1l clu1es In health science. -An ImUtute of TrlDlportltlon and Trllfflc Engineering, cunnlly Clft the UCLA wnpus with • move to the UCI campus now under study. · -'Ibe fe1slbWty of an actual education · department to trlin Jelehen. Aldrich Afd he feela UCI hu been a success becaUJe it his been open to new ideas and was not confined to fulfilling 1 predetermined model. "I don't have In mind any longer something I am shooting toward,•• he :said, adding, ''maybe this ls the time I should get out. But my interest is focused on what Irvine can generate for ttseH. "I am no Jonger concerned about how we look to our slater campuses," he ad- ded, proudly, pointing out that Irvin• began as a general univenity with on· ly a few 1peciallzat19ns . But he said he had plaMed one thing : to build UCJ on a land grant college philosophy, where those fortunate enough to teach "have a respoll!ibility to share· their 1Cholarship with student& on ind off the campus. It'1 not enough to conflftl their appllcaUon to the campus." · UCJ te1cbeni, ht uld, 0 recruited then or now" must be researchers or scholars and publlc servanta as weU ~ t~a~ers, he ' t1p1'Jned. · • . He 1ald the "budiet l<JllOW" ls on now and will be for some time, but that this "crunch" shouJd not put pressure on the undeclared students to name a major or become "labeled as this or that." UCI should offer the same op- portunities to thole 1ludenll who know what they want to be as those who have no apeclflc career in mind. "What I was accused of when we first started this institution,'' he uld, "that I intended a trade achool here -is not true," be conclud~. Scouts Sl~te .Sale Boy Scout Troop 1111 wW hold a rum· mqe,llle from I 1.m. tlJ 7 p.m. Slturdly Ind Slmdly to help-troop 1Upplle1 llJd llUJM1er camp .. The ule wUI be in the Youth Services Building, 2905 Red WU Ave .. Costa Mesa. For more information, call Lee Walden 1t 646-1177. DAILY PILOT hllff ,._ FIRE'S HOT, IUT MESA'S ~IM DIBBLE STAYS COOL Pn>xlmlty Sult to be ~1tr1tod S.turdoy · . Fire Trucks Rolled Out For Open House in Mesa Firemen from all four Costa Mesa Fire • parking lot where firemen; under the. statiom will show oil their bMghtly direction or Chief Ron Coleman, will set paHshed engines and the latest In up demonstrations of various pieces cf firefighting techniques Saturday at the equipment. Orange County Fairgrounds. The schedule calll· for an 11 a.m. A proclamation by Mayor Jack Ham· demonstration of emergency mcue Wltlt bas detlar<d Sltunlly Fire Service metal-oultmg techniques with a so-<alled Recognition Day, carrying an invitation burning bar, Porta-Power and toreh. to all C.OSta Mesans to visit their nearest · be and At 11 :40 1.m. tJr firemen will show station tween 2 p.m. 5 p.m. . •' croWds hh• they'txtin.n\j~ ~ar·ritt! with But the big show is reserved for the "'et'" a spectacular demonstration on an actual burning vehicle. Cycle Drawing Not Tonight "I feel some people out there may be trying to Kawuaki to me ." That's not what she actually said, but it's the gist of the meuage from the FashJon Island shopping · center Girl Friday who has been laking all the calb about the Kawasaki motorcycJeiglveaway: The racing cycle will be given away Friday, May 19. A story pubUshed in the FuhkJn Island sec- tion of Wedneaday's DAILY PILOT inadvertently left the impression the giveaway was scheduled for lonight. Following a short intermission. dur ing which free soft drinks and coffee are served, firemen will get back to work at 12 :30 p.m. with a demonrtraUon of. life- line rescue techniques and a 30-allled "'Sky Genie," a nylon harness wed In rescues. At 12:45 p.in. firemen will enter a smok&.filled house to demonstrate thtlr breathing apparatus, followed at 1:15 p.m. with a ladder pipe demomtration, showing the dJfferent types d. nonle streams fire flghtera use. The final, Ind most IPfCllCUlar event, promises to be the 1:15 p.m. bulldlni In demOO:i:tratlon. Firemen will alx>w how 00... ""' laid Md bow they 1tllck tho flames in a fully-burning bulldJ:ni. Throughout the performance, there wUI be free fire truck rides for the tk11 and display booths containing other pieces ol equipment UPHOLSTERED CHAIR SALE FINAL WEEK Don't min this rore opporlul\ity to purchase ~rom our fine s6lection of upholstered chairs at wlo prico1. Wo foaturo oothi119 but tho finost quolity in our HloctiOll of upholmrod choirs. H1ppineu is owniri9 • pa ir of custom upholstered choirs from Tod von Homer!, Inc. at • wlo 'price. • DEALERS FOR": HENR"EDON ,:._ DREXEL -"HERITAGE -KARASTAN 7NJ11111 NIWPORT llACH , 1727 W-1111 Dr• '42•2050 -PllMY'Yllt INTIER"I 0 RS LAGUNA llACH TORRANCE J4S North Cont Hwy. 494-6SJI 23649 H1wtho rno llYd. ~• · 11111 JJ1.1m o,...,.,,.,. • _,., .... _ .. __ -116) Pi1t I I ...... I 'p n A:tA .. h Al ....... 111 I ' I I 1 • '· I [ I • -. • ' DAILY PILOT ED~BIAL PAGE • 1Ultimaium Is Unfair Time bas suddenly become tbe most crucial element in efforts to preserve the 157 aCi'e5 ol slate surplus property behind Estancia Higli School in Costa Mesa as a regional park. . An ultimatum frOF.J state General Services Direc- tor Lowrence Robinson declares that Costa Mesa must have concrete plans for purchasing the J1nd· before June 5 or be prepared to watch it auctioned or traded off to private interests. That seemS somewhat peculiar since the acreage has been surplus since 1963 and no one other than the city of Costa Mesa had stepped forward to stake a claim on it. '"It's no secret that the state is quite eager to trade off 36 acres of the land to the Squaw Valley develop- ment firm of William Newsom to cover its mistakes at the ski resort. Hence the sudde·n urgency on the local prpperty. Thirty days is a totally unreali!Uc time in which to muster the $4 million requited for the purchase of the land. It wouldn't even give Costa Mesa or the county enough time Ip come up with a legal proposal, or call a bo.i;td election. • . The ultimatum Is both unrealistic and unfair. A delay, as requested by Costa Mesa and Orange County oflicials, would be the least bit of consideration the state could show toward the people .of Orange County. Divisive Freeway Issue Both mayors of the Harbor Area, Mayor Donald C. Mcinnis of Newport Beach and Mayor Jack Hammett of Costa Mesa , came into office with expressions of high hope that past differences between the two communi· ties would be smoothed over or resolv.ed. Their words, unfortunately, did little to ease the tension on that never-ending problem between the two cities -the freeway issue. Newport Beacli adamantly insists that tbe Pacific Coast Freeway be deleted entirely through its dly and Is supporting legislaUon to tbat eUed. Veteran c .. ta Mesa Councilman A. L. Pinkley in tbe past week called tbat a "head in Ibo sand" attllude a~d reltenited his • belief that it should be built. But Costa ~fesa's primary concern currel)ily is the Newport. Freeway. Original plans called for 11 to loU,ow a Superior Avenue routing and term1nate at Pacific Coast Highway -or Freeway -irt Ne~port Beach. Mayor Mcinnis said this week be wants the terminus swung up the coast so it will end in Huntington Beach. The fact is that one of the possibilities for ter.mi· naling tbe Newport Freeway offered by state engineers envisions a split terminus, sending some traffic into Newport BouJevard at Industrial Way and some into a relocated Superior Avenue -or BalOOa Boulevard ex· tension. So the cities may find that they are not quite as far apart as tbe rhetoric on botb sides might suggesL Death Curve on Irvine Nothing chills the spine more than the sound of squealing tires. You wait moments anticipating the re- sulting crash. Often it doesn't come. Too often, in the past four years on that hairy S-curve on Irvine Avenue ' between Heather Lane and Santa Isabel, it has come. .. Perplexed Newpott Beach councilmen have alreidy plunked down nearly $10,000 for warning devices to try to impress on drivers the fact that the speed limit is 35 miles per hour -to absolutely no avail. Now, councilmen have ordered another $10,000 be laid out to widen one lane six feet and to install a median barrier. They've also ordered beefed up radar patrols. They also may have to install "Bolt's Dots," known in the trade as rumple strips, to slow traffic down. They're willing to try almost anytbing. Rebuilding tbe curve would cost $250,000. c ; • ~e •• ~ ...... . ,_, .. ~ '.j ''CHEER UP, PADDY. ODDS ARE !TWAS A BRITISH BULLET: Why Latin Should Be Family Car Killed Public Transportation Reinstated (SYDNEY J. HARRIS) 1f the Human Engineering Laboratory tn Boston Is to be believed, the un- derstanding or English words in the U.S. ha1 persistently: declined for iµie last 50 years, dropping at the rate of one point a year on the laboratory's "general scale" of vocabulary. . What is important about this, if true, Is that the laboratory s e e s a one-to-one correlation between vocabulary and vi- olence: U the level of verbal expression is low, the only other form of e1pression is physical. A continuing study of some 50 yean by this group Indicates t h a t violence and crime predominate among those who score low in "recognition vocabulary," especl41ly of abstract words . Without the appropriate handles, it reJ>Orts, "such abstract ideas as justice, honesty, per· &0nal property, law, C<>urtesy and thoughtfulness for others seem impossi• hie to comprehend." Fascinatingly enough, the "level of education" does not play as important a part in augmenting vocabulary as we might imagine. After the age of 12, , roughly -judging by a study based on 29,000 persons -"neither high schools nor college e<>nlribute to E n g I i s h vocabulary." Anyone listening to a group of "college-educated" businessmen or clubwomen nattering away at lunch would sadly have to agree with this. WHAT PARTICULARLY interested me in this study -apart from the menacing Dear Gloomv • Gus Wouldn't It be great if the street sweeper followed the trash collec- tor! -F. C. TM1 INtuN r.n.dl ,....,.,.. Vt.WI. lll't _...,.." ,..... " ... Ill-.... .... ,_ "" ,...... .. ......, .... Dtltr ~ ..... relationship between growing illiteracy and ri!ing violence -was the fiat stattr ment by the laboratory that "with the fabulous sums ~nt on education," the, understanding .Of English words has declined in large part because of the removal of Latin from most school pro- grams. The number or years of Latin studied in school eorrelates with a large and exact English vocabulary, it was found: "The structure of English is Anglo-Saxon; but the words which give color to writing, and definition to thought, are Latin. The Lalin language, though dead, furnishes a background for English , a foundation on which to build ." J HA VE LONG maintained this, although I had no real factual basis for my belief." The laboratory recommends unequivocally· that "to retard the downward trend of the U.S., reinstate Latin in the high school curriculum." (lt turns out that even money earnings, with minor e1ceptions, have a high correlation with a background in Lalin.) Everyone has remarked the difference in verbal levels between the average Briton and the average American; the former Is far more fluent and ex pressive, more respecUul toward precision and form in language; and this flexible use of language may account in large part for the civility, the courtesy, the lack of violence in British life. What the tongue can't articulate, the fist {or gun) ii forced to express. · Study of Human Society Anthropology, the sludy of lhe origin and development of , man, is usually thought of as a scientllic approach to primitive peoples. In fact , of course, anthropologists have come to reject the idea that any group can properly be thought of as "primitive." Furthermore, anthropologists can be found studying the peoples of America, France, England, and other highly advanced societies. This background conveys the depth and scope of Prof. Ian C. Jarvie's book, The Story of Social Anthropology : The Quest to Understand Human Society (McGraw- Hill, $5.95). IN THIS NEW volume In the History of Science Serles, the author shows bow anthropology gro1U out ol compartaons and cootrasta between one aoclety and onotber; tho! c:onlld ol cullum IDd IOciettu attmul11ts renectton .. why IOcial Ule ii ordered the way U lo, and not t0me other way. The book ooncentr1te.s on three main 1re1s of eociety: rellalon and magic.. family and klmblp, and IOciaJ oontrol Dear George: I have operated a filling lllltlon for years and am going broke because 1 new staUOQ acrou the atreet bu hired female oervlce at.. tendanil. They weor aborta and belier.. Whal can I do lo flPI thlt kind ol cmipelltloal OLO TlllER ·[THE BOOKMAN) The former are seen as man's attempts to understand i nd master his sur- roundings and bis life -precursors to science and technology. Family and kinship are the most widespread means of organizing the groups nec~ary for social life. Social control is necessary because man lives in a hostile en- vironment and must org1nlze to survive. -' SOCIETY, THEN, Is ,..n In this book u the most !IOpbistlcated piece of man's l«hnology. But 1t the aame time, ooetal mecb1JUsms Wort only becau.t men. a<:-o cept !bent .. benel!cial and CHJIOralt. Failing this mutuol undentandlng, IOcial llTangmienta break down. Dr. Jarvie lo usocialt professor of philooop!J1 al York Unl•er1ity, Toronto. ClroU.. Barklenld Ot!lr Old Timer: . Adverti1e for some to p I e 1 1 medwllct er elae Install a ge>go car wash. (When all other ldvlce col· nmllllll hive !ailed )'OU, lei Geor1I do kl He can 110 you belier thin aJl1l>odJ In the -ncket.) • Opposed to Mass To the· Editor: ' Re: Letter, "SupPort Mass Transit," by Fem Pirkle (Mailbox, May 4). Forty years ago every city of any site had public transJ>Ortatioo that was ef- ficient and inexpensive. When I first came to Long Beach as a bride, one could still ride the bus for a nickel ! But as cars became more plentiful and priced so that more people could afford a (:ar, and then as people began moving to '.tht: suburbs, the transit systems cqu]d no 'longer operate as ecmomically as before because they bad lolt the bulk ol their riders. '· Once people experienced the great con- venience of stepping into their can at their door and riding directly to theiP destination, the buses lost their populari- ty. WHO WANTS TO walk several blocks lo a bus sfup. with another walk at the end of the ride, and probably transfers from one bus to another on the way? And at the height of bus travel during peak hours having to stand swaying in the aisle because all the seats were talcen? We have become too spoiled by the ad~ vantage of going in our own cars, com- fortably and conveniently, to want to go back to public transportation on a scale to make rapid transit feasible. Now the only ones who would support a transit system are the aged, and those who can- not afford to own a car, and they are not always financially able to pay the high fares to ride the buses. IT HAS BEEN suggested that another tax be added to the price of gasoline to su bsidize the public transportation and rapid transit systems. This puts an unfair burden on those who are already bearing the cost of their own vehicles, plus the cost of operating, upkeep, and insurance. Public transportation died a natural death \\'}th the advent of the "family car." Please don't try to revive it at taxpayers' expense. IF it can be done, let free eJl.o terprise do it! PAULINE E. MOEN Agrees With Nixon To the Editor : I just listened to President Nixon 's «peech regarding the war in Vietnam and our mining the port of Haiphong. As an American, I was in accord with every word he said. Have no ·fear that Russia or Red China will retaliate against the judgment of our President. In the first place, both Russia and R.td China gained their power and maintain their power without honor. They role through fear and oppression like a pngster mob rules a territory' through threats of violence against honest, God· r .. rtng people. BECAUSE OF THIS shallow foundation of strength to rule, when It comes to 1 real crisis they have only one course to follow and that is to tum \ajl and nm. No, never in the history of the world has the real villain against the good of mankind ever won out. 'lllt judgment of our Praldenl, who Quotes Et.Itel W1&en • ..tbtger, actrt1s1 .. CalU. e"ugellstlc \oaf -"l'"e been calltd a star, fOU know, but 'star's' just a nicer word for servant, baby. It's those people out there In the audience whit pays you~ salary." Wllllam R. Gl11dll, Direct« 61a1< W--. lleportm.,. -"Two of Califomi1'1 wattr pr'obltms are, too mnch waler In the ..,... place 11 the wrong time; ind on the otbtr band , not tnoqll waltr In the rllbt pace 11 lhe rig)lt time." MAILBOX t..tftn '""' ,........ .,.. ftk-. ,,_.ltt' .,.._.. .....w _,,.¥ !Mir -Ill .. _.,;. ..-...._ n. r1otflt " C9fllNlllll i.thlrs ti. flt SHC• ., efllrllMte 11.... Is ,,_..,.., A• """'"" 1n111! I• , .... .,,...""8 ... -~.. ......... .., ........ _, M wfftltMM • ,_, M wffki..r ,..._ I• ........,. ,..,,., will ""' .. ""41911M. represents I.he people of America,· will " prevail for the good of all free people throughout the world ... GRANT HARDING PHILLIPS Think About It To the Editor: The sky now is black, many rivers are dead, millions of cars, planes, boats, fac- tories are contributing to our pollution. A smog alert rings, school children must go into lhe school room. This is not the ·fUture -it is right now. Man is destroying the world. Man and animals are going to die unless we stop pollution now! The factories can slow down the rate of pollution and we can stop it. It will cost money and time. We must stop it now before time rum out. When it comes to decide what to do about pollution, think about it. DOUG PARRY Age It Gasoline Pricing To the Editor: I was very interested in recent com- ments on our retail gasoline prices in the Orange Coast area. Perhaps I should explain first that we have no controt at all over the retail gasoline prices that are charged at Chevron Dealer 1tatiOM. The dealers are independent businessmen and set their own prices according to their own best judgments. That accounts for some of the price differinces yow have noticed between stations. The only stat.ia. where we can set the relail price of gasoline are our own company -operated standard Stations. And even there, prices often differ from one station lo the ne1t, acC<ll'ding to the market conditions in the area served by each station . To nJR a sound business, we must stay abreast of market condit ions and keep adjusting to them constantly. Our prices. therefore, cannot always ht-the same from one station to the next -or even from one day to the next. · R.A. VANDEHEY Manager Customer Assistance Western Operations, Inc. Marketing Department Standard Oil Co. of Calif .. Concord Deff!tlu Chiropractors To the Editor: Re : Jean Crum, M.O. v1. Chiropractic -Dr. Crum IOeffil to take great delight In cootinulng the bi( lie about chlroprac· tors •. II lo Interesting (an<I 'lnfuriaOng) al tlrnes to ste what many misguided people do to make a point about which they have strong feelings. They take certain ideas and use them to Illustrate their point, meanwhile carefully Ignoring th e other side of the coin which may detract from the believability of their argument. Emotioo takes over, loatc and true facts ny out the wind•!'· Oil. CRUM KNOWS !hat the chlroprac- lon are well trained in all the btslc aclmcu and mual diagnose and trtal the a1ck acoordinc to llllte law. Ilia 11gwneot It the ume old, rehuh of the medical (A.lol.A..C.111.A.) mooopoly. It' l 1 Transit shameful that chiropractors are not on the staff of every st.ate and C'Qunty hospital and all public institutions. Many crippled children are denied this very fine and scientific treatment. Through high-powered politics and the great medica l lobby . the elderly people are denied the right to chiropra ctic medicare . Why is this allowed to continue in a great free America? ls this a part of our civil rights? ' GEORGE H. STRICKER Dr. Jean F, Crum is president of the California Medical .Association. -Editor Cr11, Screech, !Honn To the Editor: Why are so 'many rad io stations foolishly playing rock-a nd·roll today? The reason is actually quite simple. Rock-and- roll as bad as it is, has somehow mysteriously produced an enormous listening audience. But who Is listening to this rubbi sh? It is the man ipulat;ed youth or our nation who feel they have to be total duplicates of their beloved peers. The youngsters of this country appear to be mere computers waiting ignoranUy for their peerg to program them. FURTHERMORE, the tetm "rock music'' is completely inappropriate. Probably the perfect name for it fs "rock sewage." By the use of these two fan- tastic words , a person Is not only able to vividly give another a pictu~ o! "rock· and-roll," but can instantaneously e1plain exactly what it smells like as well. You are probably wondering why I omitted the word music and substituted the most appropriate word in its place. I did thls because rock-and·r<>ll is not music. Rock·and-roll is a cry, a screech, a moan, a groan, a dirge, and a gasp. "Rock-and-roll " Is no more music than t:m Christopher Columbus. IT HAS OFTEN baffled me bow many of today's youth can sit listening to such CRAZY trash for 110 long. It is truly frightening to contemplate. Most llkely, programmed youngster• •ill disagree with much or all of this, But, unfortunately, their disagreement demon11trates how e f f e c t I v e l y pro. grammed their computers are. Isn't it pitiful? TERRY J. NIENHUIS Would Omit Vote Connt To the Editor : As the student body secretary of Newport llarbor High for next year, I would like to express my feelings rega rding the front page article on Friday, May 5, entitled "Gets To Top." Putting the number of votes that Dan Cohen "beat" Gary Litten by was, in my opinion, In bad taste, as the article would Do Your Bit (PRESS COMMENTS) Buffalo, S.D., '11mea-Herald: t • A triumphant feaat was scheduled in a village. And, to Insure adequate liquid refreshments, each vll loger agretd 10 pour one bottle of hls belt wine Into a great cask .. tJf r fill my boltle with water,• reasohed one, 'The dilution will be so slight, who will notice'?' When the feast coinmenced and the cask was tapped, nothing but water poured out. Everybod1 ta the village bad nrured alike -Illy bll wUt Ml bo mll9'dl Tbe moral of this story Is -do your bll because <vtry 111- tle bll helps." ~ ' Subsidy have been complete If you had left the number (IUI. The fec\ln~s nf lhe.t lo11er must he lRken into consideration. MER EDITH MASSEY Slop Sign Need e d To the Editor: ~1y family and. t are very conccrntd about the death curve on Irvine going south just before 23rd Street. We live on the street that parallels Irvine and are constantly worrying about the cars that come speeding around this curve. Why not put in a stop sign just at the co rner of Santa Isabella and Irvine heading south? It also would be advisable to paint "Stop Ahead" on the street before lhe sign. A sign like this could bo put In overnight. JUST THINK, a sim ple stop sign could bring cars to a stop, then reduced 1peed on this curve, thus averting many ao- cidents. We believe the DAILY PILOT will be doing a great eervlce to our community If it will help to communica te this message publicly and to the city traffic depart- ment. PATRICE WAHLSTED'I' Kia Shun Water To the Editor: The recent hullabaloo concerning fluoride in city water (San Clemente) and the coming vote in the west Orange Coun- ty cities is ridiculous! Has anyone lately seen a child take • drink of water? Not I. In the years when we had kids at home I prayed that they would, just once, pass up the fr ig and try a glass of water. Believe me, it never happened . It always had to be milk, Koolade. Coke, pop or just "anything" but plain water. "Gee not water. it tastes funny.'' "If it's so good for you , you drink it, Pop.'' "We notice you put Scotch or Bourbon in It to drink It." THE ONLY TIME the kids get a 8erious look at drinking water Is a$ school, looking through the rTiicroscope at ''the funny bugs ln the stuff." I don 't blame them for not drinking the aturr. (In 1lx months In the European couatries I never drank tap water, use<t Solari and La Casera , as the best bottled wa ters, or San Miguel beer or scotch). What's to blame? If the dentists wan t fluorlde to e111tcr the mouths Of babes then why not put It in candy, cereal, cakes and pies? Maybt hot dogs? Hamburger? Fluoride doesn't help after age 15, I've been told by the dentists , and besides I'm not suc.e It would help my dentures. And what percentage of the people are under JS? Or do we count the dogs , cats, horses., tic?? ,, BILL HEARD OIANOI COAST DAILY PILOT . Robert N. Wt1d, Publilhtr Thoma Ktcuil, Editor Alb,rt W. Batt• l'df1orial Poat Editor Tht tdltor1a l J>tt;e nt lM Dally Pilot aC!f'ks to lnl1>rm •nd stimu- late rt•dtr1 by Jl~nunc thl• MWSptaf)l!t'• (ll"tinll'lnl and ('Om· mtnl1ry on topla 1)1 lntrr~t and 1ianlfi~1n~. by provldlnK a ,fft'rum for th\ ~.xpre.ulon or our rN<l«s' opinlon1, and by prn rnllrut IM dlvene v~poln11 ,,r lnfonned Gb- Ht"Ven and 1pokrtmtn on topics ot tho 411. Friday, May 12, 1972 • I .. " . ' Ecology Uniu Plot Strategy · Student IQ 1..-0wer This Year * * *· CJuh Wants Coast Vote SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The Sierra Club says ft will atage an intensive petition drive over the next month to put a coastal protection in- Jtlatlve on the November elec- tion ballot. John Zierold, the club's Sacramento lobbyist. said Thursday the club would work with the Coastal Alliance, a coalition or some 100 groups, to collect 325.000 signatures by the deadline of June 9. "The people will have to enact for themselves what the legisla ture has refused to give them." Zlerold told a news See. If you've won this week. May 12 through May 18, 1972. 21 12 6 24 • 20 14 ' 3 9 . 18 10 • . Pick up 1 Bingo Card from a participating Shelf dealer today or .. nd aeett·addrneed envtlopa to Department BFC # 1, P. o. Box 279, Chlc1go, FREE .1 5 11 ' 16 4 . 15 13 17 2 19 22 8 23 25 • lllinols 60648. Every Shell Blngo·C.rd is a · porenl/1/ winner. So save your card&-lf one doesn't win rhis week, It could win next wuk. ,, I DA.IL Y Pllgf' § Milh in MiMw Severftv. E~d v Of Women's Bill J urQrs to See .Diary by Jackson's attorney, John '!borne, and ordered jurors to return Monday -for what may be the wrapup of tho 8late'a case. GOOe · automatic garage door opener systems When you think of tW estate investment, think ·o.f OeepWell Ranch and Palm Springs. You can · own a superb new condominium or ind ividual residence io that fabled land of Sunshine. Enjoy it as a pennanent home or a desert retreat. It's . the easiest way io the world lo save money. And the most pleasant! 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An aluminum frame for power and control. Strung conventionally 60 it doesn't cheat you of accuracy theway~ed­ string arrangements can. Spalding Smasher,· A powerful racket you can be friends with. Sf>AtoiNG • , • • I j 'I ' • , p s 0 I F fi c f " , lo n u G lo in I I la