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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-05-16 - Orange Coast Pilot7 1' I ,\ .• I t • ~ ' • s .- onna -Ul Ill a IQe • • \ ' ' ' I -r DAILY PILOT Stones Gather •Moss * * * 1oc * * * ' Fans · Vie for Tickets .tOI.. 61. NO, 1D, I SICTIONS, 42 P'i\GIC5 TUESDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 16, ;1972 • \ ' . • ' • I • • • • • • • • • • New Shoreli11e Access La~ Loo ins UPI T•1tPhfft RETURNING TO RANCH Cabinet Member Connally Joh11 Co1111ally May Aid Nixon For Re-election \VASHINGTON (UPI) -'fre:isury Secrelary John B. Connally. _a long.ti.me power in 1'exas Democr11t1c pol_1t1cs. resigned his Cabinet post .today \v1th _a strong hint he ,,·ill campaign for Prest· dent Nixon's re-election in November. Standing side by side in 1hc \Vhitc House Press Room, Nixon and Connall.Y exchanged praise for each others performance in the 17 months ~he Texan has been ip the Republican ad· ministration. . Asked if he t\'OUid actively ,,·otk on Nix· on's behalf in the coming campaign: Cor;, nally replied, "That is entirely possible. Nixon announce<! that he \I' a s nominating George P. Shultz. head of the Office of i\lan:igcn1cnt and Budgrl. t_o succeed Connally. \\"ho v.•ill stay on un1 1l Shultz is confirmed. As Shultz's successor os head of _OMB, Nixon picked Shultz's top ass1st:inl, Caspar \V. \Veinberger, a fo~er California legislator and one· l i me califomia~ncpubllc::in cttalrman. Connally said he has •·no plans v•hal soever" for his immediate future. Last \l'ttk. Connally. l~c on I Y Democrat in Nixon's cab1net. !old nc\i·smcn he 1r:is "not in the proces.~ of changing parties" but added the possibility certainly exists that I could do 10." .. 1 have nothing but the profoundest ad~ · mlratlon for lhe President." Corlnally said today . ''He has my complete support ... t don't ~now that I've ever work\d with anyone more dedlcated and more dl!Ciplined than' is the present President ol thc United St"1cs." There \\•as ~ulat\ot} 1).~1 yrar that (Stit CONNALL y I P¥gt ZJ :Wallace Promises To Fight On SILVER SPRINGS, Md. (AP) - George C. Wallace. shot doY.'ri at an elec- tio~ve campaign rally, today fought to regain use of his paralyzed legs but vowed to continue seeking the presi- dency in a wheelchair if necessary. · Docto rs said \Vallace is under sedatiorf because of pain from his multiple wounds, incl uding a bullet that remains lodged against his lower spine, but in no immediate danger of death. They v.•ouldn't predict whether he'll walk again. Today, President Nixon of re rt d 'Vallace full facilities of ''ralter Reed l\1edica l Center. "[ can assure you Gov. Wallace is receiving the best medical care." Nixon said at the \l/hite •rouse. Charged with the shooting is Arthur Herman Bremer. 21, a white man who reportedly followed the \Vallace cam- paign for so1ne time. He was held in $200.000 bail today by a U.S. magistrate. His family and aquaintances in his home to"'" of ?\fil"'aukee said they could supply no motivt> for the shooting. (See related ::;tory. Page 4) \\'allace \\•as hit several times l\·londay by point·blank pisto l shots fired in the midst of a crowd al a .shopping center in Laurel. l\1d. Three others also were won lied, 11one critically. Voters in !\-1aryland and P..1ichigan balloted today in primaries that \Vallace is favored to v.·in. thus making a hiizh point in his campaign for the Democratic presidential nominatfbn. Doctors said al 5 a.m. PDT that \Vallace hnd come through the"fiight in good spirits despite his pain. "lfc says it hurts, and he's feeling fine." said Dr. Joseph Schanno. Schanno listed \Vallace's condition as critical. At 9 a.m. a hospital spokesn1an said his condition \\'as unchanged. \Vallace is in the intensive care.\vard of IIolv Cross llospi lnl. A spokesman s;iicl \veli-\\•ishers have sent 50 to 60 ar- rangements of fl(}\\•ers. and that ~frs. tSee. \\'ALLACE, Page 2> Sliotsjor Dogs Set W ed1iesday Bring your pooch to lhc Orange County Fairgrounds parking lot \Vednesclay night for a quick $.2 anli·rables shot~ The low-cost vaccines will be of- fered from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. _as i. pubHc zervice by the Orange Coun· ty Veterinary Medicine Associal ion in coope~tlon v>'lth tile Costa Mesa Rotary Chlli' and the Orange County llealth Dep8r1mcnt. ( .... , _.,ans Vie for ·Ti~kets •· DAILY "ILOT Sl1tf ,.htto ROLLING STONES FANS SWEAT OUT TICKET SALES AT SEARS, SOUTH COAST PLAZA Before the fv\u1ic Began,• Lot of Wailing from Would·bt Concert-goers • Gathered Casli Flo ·ws 111 for Sto1ies Co1tt;ert ·· .. By' .ARTllUR R. VINSEi .. Of"Tht Oliff f>l!OI sr111 A Rolling Stone gather!: no moss b_ut the rock n1usic group by the same name \\'il l bounce out of the Southern California "'ith abundant green sturr of another kind : money. Thousands of voung fans -some \\•ailing since Fr\d"ay and all since before opening hour ~londay -ganged mutual ti<"krl agencies. cleaning out Rll amon~ 40,000 tickets available for the Stones' June concert four. '• Top price i\1onday l\·as $6.50. \Vith a limit of four per person lo di scourage scalping. tti'c resale to latecomers ·at e~­ orhitant prices. Thr supply sokl out \\'llhin hours. Blocks of tickets for the June !I through 13 sho,\·s go on sale later this \\eek at .J)!hrr licensed agencies at up to $20 or l\"hatevrr the traffic will bear. . Orange county police agencies had to dispatch squad cars to four shopping cenlers -including Soulh Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa and Fashion Island in Newport Beach -due to a variety o( dlf- fk:ulliC'. A few patrons objected to lhe foµr- tlckct limit. "'hlle a constipated computer rnnsed some Tlckelron oullel.~ t.<I rccctre nnly a few or the concert li ckets :illocated- for wailing fans. No real problems \Vere reported by police~').5ome or whom· acted as mediators between store managers and freakishly garbed customers, or in disputes over lost places in line. One shirtless boy at South Coast Plaza had to go to the rear at the ~1ay Com· pany queue. after helping another who rain\cd in BO-degree heat get to a drinking fountain. ·~vou mean I lost my place in line for being a good guy?" he prolested. . "I'm not going to talk to you -yo11 aren't wearing a shirt," said a store of- ficial. A middle-aged matron begged to buy a whole block or tickets instead of the max- in1um four . ··rve. got to havr more," she declared. "l'm going to scalp them for n1oney to put my son through scho:il next y~11r .'' ~1ay Company officials barricaded thr door and allowed !he' bearded , long-haired and cleancut customers to dribble in two by two like Noah·s Ark, because t'he Tlcketron_wlndow is three Ooors up in the Fine Housewares section. .. Stars enco'untered less dUficulty \\'ith lts ground floor llckrt agency. Customer Service :\fanall"er Les Altman and O~rlUoTl,' .Syperinlondcnt llRrqh.t Hirsch handtd ollt cu~tomrr nun1bers to (See STONt:S, Pogc %) • ~~~~~~~~~~~ Nixo11 Ignores W ar11i11g, Mill s "· .. ~, Witl1 Tourists · \VASI·ll NGTON (UPI ) -President Nixon ignored objections of the Secret Service and waded into a mass of touris"ls outside the \Vhile House today, shaking h:inds and talking animatedly. It took Nixon more th;in 10 tninutes to cross the ~treet bet11·cen the Trt'nsurv Department and the \Vhile llousl' :;~ morl! than 500 tourists cro11•ded about him. Nixon crossed to the Trca~11ry build1n~ to accompany .John B. Connally Jr. baek to his office feil!owing Nixon's personal announcement that ·the Cabinet"s only [)(>mocrat wa s rcsigninr . There ensued a rru~h of !)(){lie'> ;i<;: dcli,tl"hled tourist ~ pi.1shing-1 he ir 1~;1y bcl""l'f'll the Prc5id(.'nl and his proh·rtirr cordon of Secret Service ajl'.rnt s. Ignored 1vas the Secret Str\'lce 11·:irnin;.: th<il it was almost impossible to protect a pubnc figure in a crowd . The frown on the race of Robert Tuylor, head or the \Vhite ltousc Se<'ret Service detail. deepened notice:ibt y-1s he v.'atched !he scene, one dny after the: assa~sinnUon ;itlrmpl nn r;Mrge l '. '\'Rpt1cc ... iit~uburban Wu.rel . i\)d . , A bl;ick tcrnn.s;,ro girl :it one point lSte NIXO~, t>agt ZI 'Ecological' Bill Shocks Carpenter The slate eoMstitutionaJ amendment that 1rould require all private waterfront land O"'ners to grant public access to the beaches has passed the Californi a Asse1nbly jtncl is TIO\Y before the senate. ''ll \1•ould require all private property owtiers, liKf the Balboa Bay Club, Camw Shores or apyone, to provide public ac- cess through their prop l' r l y. '• Assembly1nan l{ober! Badhan1 { Ii . Newport Beach), said today. Badhan1 said t/1e 1neasure sailed throu gh the Asscn1hly. 1-Ie said il .. sneaked through" on~ 59 to 4 votr. ''A [ew of us found out about it at the last minute but ire onlv had lime to vol!! against it." Badham dfclarcd . If it ge_ts by the Senate. the n1ea$ure ~·ould go . on the November b:.illot, Badham said. The constitutional amendment billed a! nn "environmental policy declar;1!i0n" 1~ sponsored by five a:-sl'rnblymen 1n1:!udinj!· Alan Sieroty ([)..Beverly Ii i lb 1 11"h0se str~g coast<t l preserval!on bill is faring a tough lest in lhe legic;l<lture. Aocord ing to Badhan1. thr <·011- stitutional amendn1ent, AC1\ 48. ha.~ · r-eceived virtually no notoriel\' to date and he doesn·t ur1derstand or ki10\Y 11•hv . Amon,i:: other declarations about ih t. need tor ecological cont:crh the <'on- tro1·ersi:i l ;.1r!icle stat.es : "A11.r person or corporation cl:iin1irig flr pus.~essing frontage or tidelands or lhtt harbor. bay. inlet. estuary or fl1he r navigable wnterway may not exclude right-of-way to that ~·ater when il is rt-- quired for a public purpose. or destroy flr obstruct free navigation of the watl'r "The Legislature shall enact statutes ISee ACCESS, Page Z) Orange -coast Cooler tcmper:itures tire e-.:- pc-clt'<I »long the Oran gt> Coi1st on \Vt'<lncsdny, ll"ith sunshine in 1he :1f!rrooo11. Highs at thf' bc11ch<'s. 62 rising to 72 in!;1n~. UJ1vs in the 50's. - ''~"'": ·rouA l ' 1\l'll1ur ft rr111rr, of/egctl n.~· sn1ln11/ 11( (;or \\'nl/o(r, 1~ di'· .~t·1 1f!(lt/ HS '"ro • .-f,•{1 t.1 ·· tn:d "11 /0111·r.'' l/1.~ ftll/1f r ~a11~ /u· 11111.~t he sir~. Srt stv1·11'.\. phutos IJ•' /'U!JC ol. l .M. •01d I (•llk<~ll ) (11"11,H lo.U C•mlc• n C,..,,.,.,11 II Ota!h "''I(•• II 1'111~•11! "''' I 1'~•••11·~"'•111 lt '•1111\(t 10 11 ,,, l'lt 11.KCtr.. 11 MM~ ,,4 ... -'l ••••·· 14 Me"''' It Mw!wtl il'11n•h lf N•1lo11•I ~'"'' 4 Or~n11 (Ow~lf 11 Ucl•I\.. 1t·ll it~(~ M•rtlth lt-11 1"t1tv1tltft lt ~ ... ,, ,,. .,..,,.1'1.. • WMlt Wit~ 16 O\'tl'llllfl'• ""'' \)..\.1 World N..,., d Tip' lleceived \ W alla.ce Suspect Quizzed Earlier KALAMAZOO, Mich. <UPI\ -The suspc<:t In the :i;hootlng of Ali.._bama Gov. Georta:e C. Wallace \vas queslTbned u ._ ... ,'suspicious person" by police prior to a Wallace rally hc1·e last Sat,rday, police aald today. • But he was not held , palice said~ ,' Deputy Police Chief Oniille Ra11:an aa ld tt has been confirmed that the man police talked to Saturday afternoon was A_rthur Herman Bremer. 21. of Mllwauk\!e, who has been Charged In the i;:hooltng of Wallace Monday In Laurel, Md. Ra gan said a JXJlice officer questi<lned Bremer after police recei ved a tip about a "suspicious person" sitting in a parked car near the Kalamazoo Armory where the Wallace rally -his last in the goveAlor's campaign for !he Michigan primary -was held. FremPagel Ragan said the · olficer questioned Bremer for about five minutes. ran a check on his 19$3 two-doof Rambler to M"e ir it .was sto1ta.Mid also chi::cked to see 1f Bremer \\'as y.·anted by palice nnywhere. '"The officer asked him whal he was doing," Ragan said. "(t wa9 raining and , the man said ~e was waiting for the rally to starl." Ragan said there was no reason to hold Bremer and that Jhe check made t n him was the same police would make on a routine traffic stop. "l would have llked it to ha ve turned ou~ differently." Ragan said . "I ~·ould liked the man to have don e something~ have reason to hold him." Mr!. Vicki }fambright of KalamaroO said she sat next to a man resembling Bremer at the rally. She said :ihe recognized him from a ph9tograph printed in the Ka lamazoo Gaz.ette. • • DAIL y P tLOT 1riu Pho!• • U.S. Planes Sl1atter Big Oil Pipeline SAIGON IUPI\ -The U.S. comm.and reported today that F~ Phantoms de,s. troyed sevf'ral building· al Nort ll Viet- nam's Air Defense Command on the ()Ut· skirts of !·lanai and shatlered a pipeline that delivered most of North . Vietnam'• oil for its offensive in the South. ~lanoi Radio s11id toda y that the U.S. N~vy re6ume? ruining North Vietnam's harbors. Capt. J. D. \\lard. commander of the carrier USS Constellation. reported new • anarks against the North t.1onday and said. "'Ve arr fighting to \Vin now." UPI correspondent Patrick J . Killen, aboard fhe Constellation. said the Navy did not officially confirm that mining of the harbors resumed. but quoted enlisted n1en aboard the big flattop as sayi ng they, loaded mines aboard American planes on F\1onday. ' f WALLACE ... "He didn't say"anything t.,. me," !he said. "I thought he was a Wallace fan. He just kept silting there grinning and he ; was ta!klng about Governor Wallace and all !he things he thoug ht he was good Newport Center Crash The U.S. command, in a report ()n the !-=e\·rn days of intense bombing of North \'ielnan1. said the American planes st ruck !he vital Air Defense headquarters <il Bach l\la i Air Field just soulh ()f Hanoi . site of the sophislicated electronic devices that control such air defenses as Wallace requested that people find some for." other way to express their concern. She said the man she recognized as Doctors said Wallace. 52, \\"as hit by Bremer "just Jeaned over ou r way and four or five bulletS. Only two lodged in wa! listening and grinning with that silly grin." his body . . One was removed frC1m around his According to police, Bremer stayed right shoulder. Another punctured his ab-()Vernlght in Kalamazoo Saturday. domen and lodged on his spine, cau!lng Ragan said the officer was sent to damage to the spinal cord. That bullet check Bremer out because he bad been was left ln, thougtJ Schanno said It might sitting In the car "for a while and we got be taken out later, Bullets: al!o pierced a call from somebody." I' . WaHace'1 right foreann. grazed ttie back~ The officer talked to Bremer aOOut 4 .": p.m., more than an hour before Wallace's or his left shoulde r blade and grazed hi.! upper ri ght shbulde r. "I H1ink the governor is going to m11ke n recovery," Schanno said. "Now v.·hat disability he has as· a result of his wounds. is difficult · to evaluate at this time. We're al! very optimistic at this point." Wallace's wife, Cornelia, said early to- day, after her hu sband had come through fi ve hours of surgery, that she ls op- timistic. "As you know. his na ture. he didn't t'arn the title of the •fighting little judge' for nothing. and I expect him to continue in the same vein." Srokesmen said Wallace Intended to continue his campaign. even if he doesn 't regain use of hi:i legs. Schanno noted th11t Pre.~ident Frankli n D. Roosevelt had been a wheelchair cripple during his years jn the WhHe House. Nixon, in a White House appearance to a nnounce the resignation or TrelSIU'Y Secretary John B. Connally, offered \\'a!lnce the presidential suite at Walter Reed. Ile s:iid if \Vallace y.•ishes to return to Alaba rua to recuperate an Air Force hospital plane will be put at his disposal. Earlier, Ni;ii:on dispatched a White House ph ysician , Or. William Lukesh. to aid Wallact''s doctors. Nl t on said he is keepin,ll'. in "close touch" with "rallace's condition. lfe also said Nicholas Zarvos, the wou nded Secret Service man , i s ••substantially Improved.'' Znrvos underwent 7Y4 hours or surgery for a bullet wound in lhe neck and was desc ribed as "doing yery satisfactorily" this morning. Bren1er was taken before U . S . Mai;istr:ite Clarence Goetz in Baltimore Jalt• Ato11<1ay night and ordered held 11ndcr $200.000 bond on charges of shooting \\'a!lare and a Secret Service S~f'lll, Zar \'OS. NewsnH.'n recalled seeing Bremer at earlier \VnJl:ice rallies in F\taryland, and one NBC·TV photograph from one of those rallies !<ho\\'S hin1 \\'Caring a button rc.1ding "Stand Up for America," a "':itlace s!(lg<ln. Frank !Janie\, a \\1a\lare campaign '"·1wker . said he recalled seeing Bre mer or someone looking like him at a rally in A1 1l v;aukce, \Vis. Jlolicc in Kalan1azoo. t-.l ich. saic1 they questioned an Arlhur II. 8ren1er prior to 8 \\1allace rally there S:iturday night, but <li!ln't <lct:iin him. They said they ques· lionrd hinl bf'f',1ll~P r ''"'~f'lne Complained that he looked suspicious. O~AHGi COAST " DAILY PILOT 1"11• Or1ng• (0111 DAILY PILOT, w)lll ~ICll b c:ombon'd lllt Ht""'·Prtu, 11 Plltlll111fll 11'1' fllt Orangt CO.JI P11~11111 lng Com~nr. St~· ••1t CGll10t11 ... PulllllllrG. MONhy lh•o~ll FHC11y, for (Ollt Mnl, N.,..PO•I lt1cP!, ·rally began. Neither Bremer's person nor his car was searched, Ragan said. "It would have been nice if we could have," he said. Ragan said Bemer sat "right out front" at the Kalamazoo rally."He was clapping his hands," he said . "He was just like anybody else there." No special watch had been put on Bremer at the rally because he had been cleared in the police check , Ragan said. About 2,500 enthusiastic fans turned out for Wallace's speech. Ragan said there was only "one minor skirmish" at the ralJy -when someone raised a Nazi flag and someone pulled it down. * * * Wallace Favored To Win Biggest T-wo Victories By the Assoclated Pre11 Gov. George C. Wallact, !hot and crltically wounded ()n the eve of what looms... as his biggest 1972 political triumph, Is ttvcred to sweep Democrat ic pre:iidenUal primaries today in Michigan and Maryland, po....lbly boostell by a subslantlal .sympathy vote. Michigan will divide 132 delegates to the Democratic National Coilvention pro- portionately according to the presidential preference voting. In Maryland, 53 votes will be decided on the bas.ls ()f statewide and con-- gresslonal district remits. Even before a gunman shot Wallace as he campaigned Monday in t h e Washlngton suburb of Laure], Md., he had been favored to win in OOlh slates, and after the shooting an aide said the governor ~·ould continue his drive for the presidency. Principal rivals are Se.M. Ge orge McGovern and Hubert H. Humphrey, considered the leading candidate! for the Democratic presidential nomination. The incictent may crea te "a large sen- timent to vote for Wallace." presiden t Tom Turner of the Metropolitan Detroi t AFL-CIO. A Humphrey back er , predicted. Other politicians speculated privately thal the shooting wou ld sti ffen anv ~avering \Val!ace supporters a n d perhaps S\\'ing wme voters undecided bet~·een ·the Alabama governor and anoll1e r candidate. r.lcGovern and Humphrey stopped nc- li\'e presidential eampaigning. halted tclevisk1n and radio commercials and re!urned to Washi ngton. ' The driver of this van, Douglas Aunger, 29 of 34095 Beach Road. Ca pistrano Beach, is in "critical but stable" condition today at Hoag I1ospital in New- port Beach. Aunger's van reportedly struck the side of a heavy trash truck driven by Dav id Esra!· ante, 21, in Ne\vpor~ Center, Ne\\·port Beach ~ton· day. Escalante escaped 'vith only a bruise. Police are investigating'the accident. Court Orders 1Return \___ By DA of Gay Movie A federal judg? ln Los Angeles has ordered the Orange County dislricl al- tornCy and sheriff to feturn to his court next Monday wilh the controversial gay film "Seven in a Barn" seized.last March on the UC Irvine campus. U.S. District Court Judge Jesse Curtis said Monday the film must be returned before hearings on the suit by the Gay Students Union (GSU) chapter al UCI will continue. The GSU brought euit against the coun- ty officials after sheriff's deputies seized the film al a gathering of 350 pers.ons in science lecture hall . Prior to the seizure, the GSU had agreed to comply 1vith a ucr ad~ ministration ban on the film's;'l;howing as part of a program on obscenity. Following a screening be.fore a panel o[ students, faculty and administrators, Vice Chancellor John C. Hoy banned the showing. Judge Curtis said the sherif£ and dts. trict attorney may face contempt of court rulings if they don't return the film by next Monday. The GSU contends in its suit that the film seizure constitutes unwarranted abridgenlent of the constitutional rights From Pagel ACCESS. • that giVe these provisions the most ...... liberal construction w that access to the ma·ny waters shall always be obtainable by the people." The little-known measure was totally unknown to State Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R·Newpart Beach) whose own coastline management bill passed the Senate Natural Resources Committee Monday. "He relttt'· it for the first time this morning. Then he paled," said an aide Richard Rohrbach. "He'll not support it at all ," Rohrbach asid adding · that Carpenter foresaw it ha ving as tough a time as the coastline bill co-authored by Sieroty and Senafor Donald Grunsky (R·\Vatsonville). Grunsky's bill was in effect killed by the natural resoun:es-pane l Monday. "This amendment is based on the same kind of philosophy.'' Rohrbach said. "It lakes away private property rights." of freedom of expression ana assembly . Al the time that suit \Vas filed, CSU President Terry Oleson, a 27·year-0!d graduate student at UC!. indicated a sui t against the university might be possible. However, GSU members later decided to "work within the system" to change the regents policy which prevents UC ad· ministrators f~Om al\O\.l'ing "obscene Or lewd" presentations on campuses. Dr. Hoy had cited that UC policy as the reason for his denial of the film's sho~-. ing. The GSU has not contended that the film was not obscene but notes that without screening of the flhn the discussion of the obscenity issue \1·ould have been less valu able. GSU attorney David Brown of Los Angeles contended in the suit the fiJm's shewing would have been entirely "legal" in the context or the program. ... Man's Misfire Kills Girl, 2 POMPANO BEACH, Fla . (UPI) - A man accidentally shot and ki!Jed bis 2-year-old granddaughter while firing at an injured dog menacing tbe ,:irl and h e r playmate, pol~ .Said. Washington Wil son told police he tried to shoo the /6g away several times, but it kept returning. Finally, Wilson ran into the house ~nd grabbed a .32-caliber pistol. Police said \Vilson fired once at the dog. The bullel struck Rhonda Holston. killing her instantly. Wilson was being held on an open charge of homicide. but police said the charge would probably be r educed to in volun ta ry manslaughter, Russian·bui/t SAr-.1 missiles. Fro111 'Page 1 CONNALLY. • • Pentagon military observers said they assumed Soviet military advisers might have been stationed at the Bach Mai Air Field because of the recent Jncrease in the use ()f MIGs and missiles, but official sources would not comment ()n the C!lnnally might be selected by Nixon lo pcssibility. replace Vice President Spiro T. Agn~w on Of immediate importance to the Com· the 1972 ticket. The President indicated munisl offensive in the northern areas of strongly a fc1v months ago that he sa1v no South Vietnam was lhe command's nee d for dropping Agnew. reports that ~he air ra ids, averaging 257 a Connally. was asked today if he ~·ould day for a .... ·eek, destroyed all pumping accepl 1hc vice presidentia l nominauon sintions along (he c93stal pipeline on the ticket if asked. .-delivering oil through the Drt·IZ. lie replied he 1~·ould not engage in such The command said the line. hid a speculation but added he did not think capacity of 1,320 tons of oil daily - sui:h an offer \.•:ould come. 435,000 ga llons -for the tanks, armored "l have no political aspirations and no personnel carriers and supply trucks particu la r ambitions." Connally said. being used by the Communists in the buildup for an expected assault ()n the Ci· Nixon 1vas equally unstinting in his ty of Huf'. praise of Connally, describing him as the Ther"e \vas no indication hovr' long tl architect of the Administration 's nc1v \\'ould tak e the Nort h V)etnamese to economic prograins of price and \\•age repair tile pipeline if daily bombing raids controls lo curh 1nrlation, and draslic nlovcs to sirengthen thC dollar abroad. perm il them 10 do ~o. "Pentagon sources reported Mo.nday Nixon describrd Connally as "a lower that American planes also mined rivers of strength for the President " and and canals in Nonh Vietnam JilJ cut the particularly th(' recent de c is ions flow of supplies. Other raids concentrated regarding the Vietnan1 \va r. on railways. hig hways and key bridges. "\Vhen !he going is the toughest. There ~'as nd'ind ication the North Viet· Secre!zry Connally 15 at his best," the namese succeeded in S\\'eeping mine1 Pres1d~nl dccWrrd . from any of the harbors -the Pentagon Shulit. ~·as a rnembcr of Nixon's has report ed no mine sweeping activity. original cab:nct ?.S L<lbor Secretary and But some could be swept out to sea by became the nrst dir.:'ctor of the tidal currents. reorganized Offic·e of :O.lanagemcnt and The mines are set to deactivate Budget. ;1 po\1·erful posl \\hich \1·on hin1 themselves automatically at some Un· the unoffici;1 ! ti!le of "general manager nounced date, reducing the threat to ln· of !he l.;n\tcd Stales." ternatio nal navigation. Connally himself forcshado\red his resignation in the past several months by talking about his desire to return to pri\'atc life. Just after his 58th birthday on feb. 27, he told reporters: "~ 've spenl most of my adult life in puS\ic service ... 3nd now I'm tired. I want to do some othe r things." Nixon said Shul1z. forn1er dean the Graduate School of Business Adminislralion at the University of Chicago. \\'as the .;only candidate" con- sidered to succeed Connally. "He is an econon1ist but one that has shoY.·n great skill in management," Nixon said of Shultz. The prospective retu rn of Connally into Texas politics on Nixon 's behalf ~·ould provide a lift to the Presiden t's chances of capturing the state's electoral votes in No\'ember. no matt~r ,\·ho t he Democratic nominee might be. Froin Page I NIXON ... pushed to Nixon's side and called to a companion, ''Take my picture with the President ." Nixon paused . stood ne;ii:t to"the girl and ca lled to her friend: "Shoot." The wounding of \VaJlace was a blow to \he Secret Service. charged with pro-- feeling him as well as the President and other presidential candidates. ( Se e related story, Page 4). Eugene Rossides, y.·ho has primary authority over the agency, warned after the shooting that it was "very, very dangerous" for candidates to mingle witb crowds. "It's going to have a prelt.v tough lime. Our man will do all he can to see that it dors have a tough time ," he VO\\'ed, All For Tl1e Frunily- Bait on Due ls Lifted TREl\'TON N.J. 1UPf ' -The Sl~te Senatr voted Monday to repeal the state la\\' banning duels. Wlial chang es your liouse more lh~n -~ny otlier thing? What improves accoustics dramatically?. , H~~nnqton tr1tll'Foun•~ln v111,r, ~·o~• !lr1c11, l r•j~t Sl.,d lcb•c ~ •114 Sin Clt1"tn!t/ ~In .Jwon (1p11!r•""· .\ 11/'IQlt rf91onf/ Miiion h oulll••~ld l>&lu•dlVI Ind Swfll!,IV•· Tiie prlnclp~I publ/1111"(1 plt n! 11 1! JJO wot !IAy Str1t1, Co1t1 Mf'11, C1!ifor11i1, tlt!t. f'roin Page l What warms up a house 1. Rob1rt N. W 11d Prn ,oent 1no Pu111i1111r J1ck .II, Cwrl1¥ \'ic:t rr11>11~1 t fld G.rMrll M1n1ge Thom11 K1 1ril EGltor Tho"'•• A, M11r11hin1 Ml,,.Qlf'l9 !Clltor Ch1 ,!11 H. Looi Rich1ri' '· Nill Alol•"t nt Mtn~l"9 ElllOrl 0 111< .. Co.tt Mtu; lJO Wt\! !lay 11rH 1 N,_,, l'l1•c11 iw H•"""' 1oi.11w1 •• Lat\11\f tu~ll; m , .. ~, ·- tfwri•i"'11!o<1 8Htll; 11t1J a .. l "i ll!ult vlrtl $In Cltmt'l'ltol JIU NWlll fl C..m!NI lllt41 T .. .,.._ t71 41 64J-4JJI Cl .. "*! A ............ '41·1671 ,,.,.. C.11Jll ...,.... Sew• ........... o 4tJ-44JI ''"'"' Nt1111 Or-C"""' '--ftlet , ... ,u. ~'· tnt. °"9fltt C'Nlt ~ ... c..,..ro,. "--uwi., ntvalt'et!MI. todltwi.1 ""'lllf II' H_.,~ MAii! '"'" M ~ """-" ._..I .... IN!., • .,...., ......... L ~ dbl .... , ... !Miii .. c-. ..... Cetl-lll. .....,.~"°" ...-urrw tut MWlll!l'l'I .., IN!f UlJ '-flWI Mllltwr" llnltfttt• lt.61 _,,,.,,., STONES TICKETS ... be called, just like a supermarket rneat counter. "Thry y.·ere just grtllt," bubbled one mother \\'ho ~·ailed J l.J hours to pick up Rolling Stones ticket! for her children . "~Tr. Altman even took some kids' telephone num bers and said ht'd call them as lieket.5 became 111ailable Jate.r. ·· ~he said. 1 One httle old ltdy wandued into the crowd of several hundred In bewilder· ment to formally complain 1boul an um· brt.lla. confronting CUstomer $tr\•ice.'s beleaguered Altman. "She wu a dur ltUe old Monday momiJl& •bopper," !aid lhe middleqed mother also waitlna: in Une. "What bappeoed IJdy, clld ii rain and your wnbttlla bad a bole In ltl" quipped one youthful bystander. __....... "Why no, '1 &be declared.. "ll nlMd and it rusted !" "The kids ... ,,. I.any .,..~ .. wd ... obsuvtr, nollbt unlfonnoiJ omcm rettled wt.ll too dtsplte store maniger·1 call that brought five squad cars to the Costa l\fesa plaza. Sea.rs officials allowed tKem to rest - some asleep since turning up before daY.'D · -on lawn chairs and patio lounges . one youth tired. hot and frus trated, ho .... ·eyer. ga"e a ne1\·s pape.r photogr11pher an indiscreet hand gesture demanding to know if he was. a p o 1 i.c..e..m a n photographing radicals. "No, l'm ll'il.h the DAILY PILOT," was the repl y. "That picture won't ~ in the nev.·spaper will it?," the teenage?' gasped In horror. "My dad will kill me!" The. circus-like: attqospben diminished thortly aftt.r noon as the ticket set.kt.rs drllted olf, leaving lhe area lllttted wllh ICda cups. '"Thank htaven I'm old enough to understand." remarked ()Ot May Com- pany lady afl<r lhe lnvuloo of Rolling Stant• fans. 1 "Bui I wouldo•t ao ... u..n U !hey wtre ·•l'PW!DI ""'-lhe strffl tr..." she added. , • • • What imparts unique beauty and comfort ? , •• Carpeting from Alden 's, that'• what! (If your house "stifles" yow, stoP. in ano see us FAST.) -·ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA ,646-4138 ... ,_ .. A Stat N'" criti ,._1ay did T said but "I loca me beli feet T its gt al pla gO\' sele and H llSSi City sho coas cont loca mis Sup COLI T pro hav " the regi bill Don Ass Ang w com ma •·ou s G u l c1ti s. 8 ni tw ol .. t ol • • • .. ---· -----.. lut\dU, M•Y lb, J.tf1l s OAIL Y RJLOr J ~. County Transit !} Ado,pts Fielding Action J?lan· The Orange COunly· Transit Oi.str\ct the present operalor to the 1une of $93 ,000 moved into high../iear f\1onday wlth the , for lhe 1972·73 year, and with the addition adoption or arl-6rhbn plan offered by of five ne\v buses. d1 str1c1 General Manager Gordon "Pett'' "-Taking over the Santa Ana city bus Fielding. s.vsien1 nov.• operated for the cl!y by the In rapid fire order the district direclori; American Transit Corporation of St. approved : Louis at a cos! of $14.8,000 a year lo the -A stepped ·up operation or the south di strict. The city has nine npw buses on Coast Transit Corporation routes to Costa · order v>'htch will be financed partially by .Mesa. Batb()a and1 Laguna Beach from federal funds. s_an_._••_An_a_w_it_h_t~h_•_d_i_st_ri_c_t _,_ub_s_id_l_"_:"g:__ __ r:.:..he purchase of 25 new bu~es during So1iie Real High Steppers the f1rst year of operalJon of ~ overall county bus system, nine with ftdef'aJ two- t.hirds funding, 16 with districtJunds and the lease of 20 more buses. -Purchase of 63 busei; with fedtr11il two-thirds funding lhe second ·year t 1973· 741. Del1vE'ry of the new equ1pn1enl is ex- pected by July. 1973. -Purchase o( 99 buses in subsequen~ ye;irs with federal two-thitds funding . The purchase of 25 new buses for the Pam Staffieri, 18, Saddleback; Laur~ Fillmore, 18, Saddleback; Sheryl Iverson. 20. head songleader, Saddleback: Ellen Brink. 17t Corona; Judy Ha us- auer, 19, Saddleback; and Marilyn Miller, 18; Sad- dleback. • • SaddJe·batk CoJJ.ege songleadcrs put their best foot foru1ard at recent competition to choose next school year's representatives at athletic and other events. Both current students and girls who will be s lu· den ts next year competed. From left to righf are ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Carpenter's Bill Attacked • Mayor of Capistrano Cites Local Control Fears A coaslline pro1ec11on bill sponsored by Statf Senator Dennis Carpenter. R- Newport Beflch. has drawn sharp criticism from San Juan Capistrcino Mayor James Thorpe, a Democratic can- didate for the Asse1nbly. boards. Nea l told the council !hat this approach \l'~uld dilute local governmen1s' reason for existence about 80 percent lie also told the. group that Carpenter has amendment, Thorpe 's 1uggestions about increasing local representation will be considered, according to Neal. The stressed that the bill is not yet finalized and' will probably be amended many times befor~ it iA pasaed. ooming flsca\ ytar and lease of 20 olhrrs 1s a modificalion ot I.ht Special Bus Needs Study c~sullants'.propi»a.I of 8.~ buses. fielding told dlrtctors he rtCQnl· mtnded thr rtduclLo""n to •·avoid cash flow difficulties in future years." He !"aid leased buses should br used to upgrade service in the South Central Al:ea of the count y, one of .stVt'n areasJ designated by the con~ull.ants in a prellminary report two 't<reks ago. Hf' also said some leased busps could be used to initiate inter-community service in all three western (coastal ) service .areas . FieldinR also got approval of an e1· perimental d1al·a·bus operation 1n the .North Ctntral Area (Fullerton and vicini- ty!. The Consultants -Alan Voorhtt.~ ·and Associates of Virgini;i and VTN of Orange County explained h1ay 1 that dial · a·bus operations had been successfu1 on the eai;t coast and were "somewhere in between schtduled bus operations and taxi service." The general manager said the first new buses (nine) could be e1pected to be delivered by February ·of next yrar and they would be used in Santa Ana and that the remainder of the 25 would be utilized to establish intra-and inter-community routes with preference ,i;:iven to the West Centra l and North Beaches (Seal Beach, Huntington Beach. etc. l service areas. Fielding said new inter.community route11 would be operated dirocUy hy tht district using its own equipment and staff. In contr:ast, for the first year the South Coast Transit Corp. routes to Orange Coast point1 will be operated by the cor· poration under contract with the district, as will the Santa Ana ci ty routes. New routes within communities. undrr the plan outlined. will be operated by contractors for the d1slrict. Under th i~ setup the dis1rict will lease or purchase busts and lease them to an operator who · will run the · unes under district 1upervision. Fielding .1 sked that the consllltants be requested to recommend priorities for implementing intra and inter-commu nity routes during the first year of operation beginning in July .and for dial·a·bus 1ervice areas. The board adopted a five-year cash program . required to qualify for federal two-thirds funding for buses, lands and operation and maintenance headquarters buildings. The capital outlay program i Ii estimated to CCISt $1.05 million the first year accelerating to $2.18 million the 'Lobby' Files Suit WASHI NGTO N {UP!l ,.-Common Cause, which calls itself the "People'1 Lobby," has filed 1uil. 1n U.S. District Court. in an effort to stop TRW. Inc., 1 Cleveland defense contractor, from makin& political cont ributions through .an affiliated ''Good Government Fund." friurth year, ror bust~ Othf'r OU!~t;ind1ng ~ptndlng \\•ill 1ncludP $1 5.'i m1t\1nn the 11econd ye111r foe oprrallnn :inrt mt1.1nttn· ancf' farilltles . plus $105.000 to SR4R,0011 fro !ht firs! to flflh yrars for bu~ rrplact· n1l'n t. Total capital outlay ~prndu1.11 for thi• first }'ear 1s t:sllmalecl •i SI :17 n11lhon, Jumpul& to $5.18 milhon the se<'ond and dropping to $1.5 million In the fifth . Of t.htse expenditures, tot11ihni;: Sift 4 • m11llon O\'tr ei~ht )rars. the d1str1cfs ~hart is t$11n'latM '41 si; 6 m1lhnn and the fedrral ~o\•rrnn1rn1 ·~ at SI\ R million . Oistr1C't fund~ 111rr rr1·r1ved from a 1 -unis per $100 nf 11~:1l'~r<t valuitllnn prnro· f"r!y tax rount)'"l'Hie th1~ year ~ 11 ran b8 r;i1~f'd tni.ccnts. bv l~w \ from new M.818 Ji:Alr~ laxr.!fi: nn ~R.~0ol1nt (r ~t11nAlf'r1 al $i 10 $11 n11lhnn thf' ftrst yrar br1o:1nn1ng Ju· \~· I• and rrotn oth<'r ~t:ilr graols which \~I ll !it: applied {or. Tol(/ Sc li111it z t,o Criticizt• Nixo11? ' BR,~A t Ul'l 1 -A t•nn:-rr\':ll11 r lirpulll11"1n 1'"n~rr~~rn,'l 11 \,'ltd \l .. r11L1v lhal Vice f'rc~1drnl Sp1r11 T Ai,:nr"' f'nrnura,1:.r1I ht111 tu ... , 1r1 r-11f' l'rr..,1rlr11l N11on in ordrr lo munlrrhalanrf' l1hrrt1l ilrl\'1~1111' 11 1th t·nn,rr\illl\r pn''"""· Rep . .John (;. S<'hn1111 .. nf ('al1fnr111:i . ~:11 rl 1\i,:111•11 p1,,h :1hly 111111111'1 1tr11y !hp 1nc1drn1. Schrn111 ~.'lid hr is "tllnu: In !ilk•• ;i l1r drt1·1·t111 lrsl if challen~ed Schn11t1. tolci A llrpuhlu·an \\'utnrn ·!'. Cluh 1tH'f'l1n,1.: (h:il l1r rcgretleri ht had ln lrll ~u!'h a :o.101'\' 11ilh nrw,nlf'11 fltr~f'nl He called on A,1:.nrll' l;i .~t ~·r.:ir , .\l1nr!I\ ~Itri ,\1x1111 1111- nouncrd pl;ins In jnurnr,r to C'h111.:1. Srhrn111 ~:ud. 1,1 ;1,\.. 1f Agne1v would run for. •flrf's1drn! 1f N1x(•U dun1prd h11n tnnn the 'rp...elrrt1 on t1ckf't "Thr 1'1rc prrs1ctcnl told n1r 10 rflrc·t. 'lht· IA1rd i,:1\1·tl1 .:ind the Lord takrth ;i11'rt1·.· 1u1rl 5;i1rt hr> wflulrt nn! run if th:1r happened ,'" Sthrn1!1 l"A1d. 'tttM''' "He then Jiilld th11t hf' w11s <11sro11r:ii.:eri bc!·;.i u ~P pn'.~1dcnl1;1I Hiii L.\f'ri. of !he lef t cont1nu;illy hnlrl sv.'ay anrl h11 i;:rt.\ pu.~hf'<l i11·11ullrl Agnew "lnld me tn kttp up \hf' prrssurr nn !hi' \\'hr!" llflU'-t . ynu fl' dri1ni::; lhe right thins: -pressurt frnm the right rqu11hLri: pressure from the lt'ft ,'1 Schmitz said. Pines Park Dedication Set by Recreation Unit . . . •· Th e: Cap istrano Bay Park~ anrl n.ecrca-hnarrl n1rmhrr~ Mil~' C'nll1n \. C:('nrc r lion District will hold ;i puh!ic ried1rat1nn R11llt>\\', l);i11n v LrLo.1n.l(rr :inrl Sylv1,1 S;iturd;iy mnrn111i:: for thr emballlt.d Prrr1 Pines Park in !he Palisades. flcfrr :-.hrnt'tll.\ ;il ~n arP pl11nnrrl. And included in lhr 11 a.m. crremon1c~ Con1mt1nHv .:1~'>111·1;1 t1on o.. i;::ir1lr11 fluh.'> at 'the site aloni;: Camino Capistr11no. !ht: ;inrl t)lhrr '1n!Prl"~led ~1 n11p.~ :inrl 111· district hoard wlll unveil the . f1r.~l im· divtclunl.~ nrf' 1vrlrnn1c 1n ;i1tr1ul :ind offr r provenient to the scenic arreai;:e in s1111:~tslinn.~ for 1mrrovrn1flnt o! 1 h" p;ir II. scores of year5 -11 sig n. which hf'ars !he scrtril of yr•ar~ 11[ n"~lrt:I. Tom Fuenle:r::, aide lo Fifth 01.,trirt Thr nwnrr.~h1p nf lhr r .1rlo: \\'"' rat1f1Prl Supervisor Ronald CaspPrS. will JOin in rcceolly 1fl a <lrr1.~lon hv !hr <:.11lll}rn1 11: the dedir.a \1nn reremflnic.\. Suprrn1P C:n11rt whtrh rrh1 \rd In hr>~tr an SpokPsmrn · for the d1~tr1tt wh1rh :lf)(K'.:11 ol ;in r':irhcr rasr. dr1'n11n~ ~oml!l recently wall certified as the conlrnlling o/ lhP park puhln' ltirlll. agenry of lhr park -s;iid that ·plan~ will ThP d!slrit·L ;ind II.\ lr :::1I fl1f1rr r - be: on display Al the public cerrmflnirs l~~un:i Rr;u·h l;iwycr \\'11l1 t1rn \\'1Jr·ox11n showlzig the proposed improvement of -s11rrrrrlrd 1n w1no1ng ahoul 'half lh., rotted S!orm dratn.li in the .area. flrip;1n11) :lfTrap;r or thr park for public Construction on !he storm rlr;iin p11rposri1 starting at the edge of the park will begin The pRrk s d1str1C'I. wh1rh recr1ves ln· this summer. rome from-pr1~perty taxei. 11nd new~ Questionll on proposed park im· development park fees, wJll supt!:rvli.e th11t provementll will ~ an1wered on an In-recon!ilruct1on lJ! the p;cen1r park l1r~t formal basis dur1 n1 the morning by rlevelopcd in lht prl'!.depres~inn dily' by District Board Chairman Jack Snipes and the or iginal dcvelnpers of the Palisade&. Thorpe. during an interview Monday, said the bill does not insure local control. but in effect could remove i! entirely. "If Senator Carpenter is interested in local control. I don't understand why the measure is built as it is,'' he said. "I believe his bill could make sure no el· fectivt local cont rols \\'ould h;ippen ." · sponsored a companion bill lo provide $200 mlllion bond issue to compeni;ate local go ... ·ernments for the loss of tax base· and to compensate local property owners for land that is "frozen." The council did nol take a stand on Carpenter's bill or either or the others despite Neal's urging to take a positive stand on \l.'hichever one appeals to them most . Big Car Luxury at a Low, Low Price! Thorpe has criticized the bill because of its pro\·ision 1ha1 all I~ members of !he state commission in charge of coastal planning \\·ould be selected by the governor. nine from a hst of nominees selected by each of the coastal counties and the o!her silt b}' the governor. He lold Carpenter''s administrative assislant Charles Neal during a recent City Council meeting that the commission should contain representatives from coastal cities. ThOrpe said the bill \4'0uld centralize control in the governor's office. The only local government members of the com· mission \4'0Uld bf' at !he Boards or Supervisor level in six of the coastal counties. • Thorpe adder! that thr rea son ror this probably v•as that 1n !he pas! the cities have not done a good job in protecting the coastline. He said he liked the regional approach outlined in a similar bill being proposed by state Senator Donald L. Grunsky, R·\\'atsonvil!e. and Assemblyman Alan Siero!y, D -Los Angeles. Watson 's bill v.·as killed in a Senate committee ~1onday by a 4-4 vote. The regional approach provides for representatives of ciries to be on six com- missions wh ic h \40Uld take over virtually All coastal planning. There \\·ould also be a state board made up of 12 representat1vei; which \4'0\Jld receive input from the regional Citize1is Senior Gi ve I nvitlltion The t.aguna1tes Senior Citizens Cluh is txtend1ng an 1nv1talion lo all seni1Jr citizens to Jotn its activities this summer. The club. sponsored by the Laguna Beach Recre;il1on Department , holds meeling from 11 am. to ~ Pm. _ThursdaysMJhL_RecreaIB>n Bu1\d101. 175 N. Coasl H1~hwa~· "Act1v1t1es include card and table games. coffee and lnts of \1\·elv C1ln· versat1on ." said George Fowler. Recrea· tion Departfnent director. 8 Twins, 1 Trirlets TEHRAN 1UPI 1 -A 40.ytar-old Ira- nian \\"Omltn has has borne eight pair• of twins gavt b1nh 10 triplets this week. · doctors said torl11:y. t.tr1 fl.1olouk Harouni ~f tht vilbtge of Jam~loo near Isfahan and her triplet~ were r,eporttd wtll Sht told'newsmen she "'·armarrttd ~t tbt age of LI. Thorpe said all three hills have their share of .advantages and disadvantages and he personally "·ould have preferred the Sieroty bill if some "loose ends" had been tied. Although he did not offer a formal Interpretation Clinics Slated , For Coast Area . A tv•a.day Southern California Oral Interpretation Festival 1v111 he held at Sadrl!eback college and 1n L:iguna Beach Olf Friday and ~~av . The event will feature Critics n~. tPachers from thf' \Vest Coasl :ind · west The literary works of !\1ark Twain will be examined in depth '¥1'ilh workshops being conducted hy Or f r a n c ell ri.icCurdy. t;nh1ersity of ~1 issouri, Colum- bia Or. ri.i cCurdy h11s preparerl a m1Jntage of Tv•ain's work tn be performed by visiting profesi;ors at fhe Laguna Beach \Voman's Clubh1Juse. 286 St. Anne 's Drive. at 2 p.m Saddleback aod vis1t1ng .~tud£'nt~ \\'Ill perform a variety of evenls including poetry and an11lys is 'and perfflrmance. theme recitals. small group performanc' nf prose and large ~roup performance of interpreters' theater. The publ ic is welcome. Selected pcrformanceo:; v.·11l b e presented in a special progr.:im Salurrlay at 2:30 p.m. al the \Vomen·s Clubhouse. The festival is sponsored hy the Sad· dJeback College Fine Arts Divisi1Jn and coordina!ed by Joann Bennett , speerh instructor and Dr . Doyle G. r..tcK1nney. division chairman. { TV's €harley-Weaver Rests A fle r Seizure HOLLYWOOD (AP ) -C!1tf Arrp1r>ttP, who created the comir charar1 .. r Ch'lrlf'y \Veaver. is ;it home after being ho.cipitalized since April 24 becau.,e of a hPart .:ittack. A spokesman ~id the 66.y(ar'9ld actor woulrf be"'iDle to rciiume work on the "Hollywood Squar,.s" televi11on 1h01A' in three or four wttks. Arq uett'e suffertd the attack while dri\'· in~ home from Phoenil . Ariz He ,...!IS relea!ed from a West CovMI· hnspt)•l Montily. • MERCURY Monterey 2-Dr. -Hardtop, handsom': medium brown with white vinyl roof. \V W Tires. Fender s~1rts, Radio, dual rear speakers, complete tinted glass, remote control mrrror, deluxe wheel covers. body side moldings and AIR CONDI- TIONING ... $4133 MERCUR·Y Comet 2-Dr. Sedan. yello\v gold. me· tallic. W.\V, tires, Radio. Df!COr group, bumper guards, complete tinted glass ... $2499 Rome Of Tb• New Car .• , "GoU-'.l'ouell" • ohnson&son t l:\J( ( 11 ~. f. !1. I' fl I 2626 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • 640-6630 Hl')me Of Tht New C11r .•• ''Golden Touch'' • ' • 4 DAIL V PILOT r -Q Just • Coas ting ~ ···@ ll'J..•' ' .,.,_ "\'\ wU h T om ...-phine IAgnew Pulled John's Strings TL1tM11f, M&J 16, 1972 Arthur : Bremer 'A Sick-Loner' Note book· Sc ribb ling of A lleged Assailant Sifted MILWAUKEE, Wil. (UPI) -The little a gun man~al on a c1oSet 1helf. tax rerund of ~.17 dfopt the state or Stephen Wasche said Bremer hadn'~ notebook wllh the IC'Tibbllngs. 11ome <lf .. A bit or his life was scattered about the Wilconsln ; dirty clothes ; airline and been seen around the apartmt1nt (~r them childlike, may tell more about room: repart cards or average grades motel brochures; and a variety of about a month, or .!i~ce ahortly a ter. t e . Arthur Bremer than anyth.lng or aoyone. from South Division High School where reading material ranging from ·~eon-Wisconsin presidential primary ~pr1l 4. The writings are about life and 1 death, he ar!fiduated; a receipt for an income fuclus Say" to use1: Comia\" Wallace. finished second in that pr1ma.ry. politics and Jove, a lot of thlngt. Tiiey tell the story of a lonely and confu~ young pian who today is being held in Laurel, Md ., ror tke shoaling of Alabama Gov. Ge<irge Wallace Monday. • Barr icade s Bro ke_n Up . . ' By Br itis h BECFA5T {UPI) -British troojll braved hea\'Y stoning today and smashed barricades erected a1'und . ~ Roman Catholic area of Belfast follo\¥~ng another night of catholic-Prote.!ltant v1ol_ence. Catholics in the Ardoyne area ignored British Administrator William Wbitelaw's warning that he would not allow people lo take the Jaw into their own tiands. They hijacked. ft'u kks and barricaded two en- tr1ncts ·to the Ardoyne area orr the Crumlin Road. RICKY TICKY POLJTDC : Finally t~ day it can be told why John G. Schmitz, the congresmJan from Twlin, has been · .. acting likt a member or the opposition • . party all ~se months in continually put· tipg the knock on President Nixon. His fltller, Willia m, 5', a truck driver for the same company for 30 year1, rouldn't believe it. but said if hi.s son "is involved in this crime . , , f\e mU1t have been awfully sick." The notebook. with Arthur'• name on it, was found among the clutter in his thre~ room bachelor apartment on the city's '°West Side . lncluded were these passages: Troops moved in and smashed the bar· r icades 4,_esplte heavy stoning from I jeering crowd. There were no casualties. The Ardoyne area races the Protestant Woodvale region across the Crumli11 RDad. . . SChmiti , It develops , made the grand revelation . himself in the · unlikely metropolis of Brea t.1onday whilsl speak· lng to a Republican women's club. Schmitz, according to news reports and wire services dispatches. explained that Spiro Agnew "encouraged hlm" to run around shooting off his mouth on what a bad job the President is doing. 'nii&, the congressman from Tustin ex· plalntd, he did just to offset all the bad advice that those liberal advisers were 1tvrn1 to Mr. Nixon. WHY, YOU CAN almost hear it now as SchmJtz and Agnew huddled gomewhere in Washlngt!m, going over all the bad ad- vice that the President has been given in recent times. "Happiness is hearing George Wallace sing the National Anthem or haviagJtlm arrested for a hit and run traffic ac- cident .'' "I am part. or the world ... l am one three billionth of the world's history to- day .. ," "If l live tomorrow ... It will be· a long time." "I'm playing the game of life to win." "My country tlz: of thee, sweet land of bigotry." "M1 blood ~ black." Some of the jottings appartntly were from radio disc jockeys -judging by marginal notes -and some were Bremer's. He had lived in the apartment since November. Neighbors said he was a ':,_ ''loner" who said very. little. ;,His mother came to see him a couple of ... i:f.-tf A-tft .. AMBOY, Wash. (AP) -w1n-i!ng1ne plane has disintegrated ln mld·air and crashed near Amboy, killlhg all six persons aboard. All were members of the .same family. Dr. Arch Hamilton, Clark County. cor- BRIEFS I oLn-e-r.-i'°'d-en"'t"ifi'"ed-,-1'°he-v"'"1c7tJC:-ms-o-.f'"t:-:hec:-M:-:-on.J- day crash as Denny H. Mansell Sr., 79, and his wife, fl.furiel, 76, Klr.land, Waah., the pilot, Denny H. fl.fansell Jr., 53. hi! wife, Merel, 51, and their sona, Gary 11ansell, 22, and William, about 12, all or Quincy Calif. They m~t have revie wld. the fact that Mr. Nixon has tried to halt the wage- , price spiral; that he made repeated bids for honorable peace on Southeast Asia; that he tried to ope11 the doors for com· municaUon with Peking and Moscow; and times," saJd Mn. Tony Wasche, wife or "' ...... .,....,;,,,.., the apartment building manager. "She said she waa worried because he never called her .. She said she knocked <ln his BREMER IS SHOWN IN CROWD AT WHEATON, MD. CAMPAIGN STOP Picture W11 Taken of Gathering a t Wallace .Talk Earlltr Jn tttl Day Clark County sherUf's deputip said nG explosion \\'SS heard and the reason for the mishap was not. kDOWI\· * * * that he has set a goal of a z.ero draft. · All of these thing s have to be terribly disturbing to tbe likes or Schmitz and Asri<W• THEREFORE, SINCE this is an elec· lion year, they must have atruck on a wonderful way to help htr. Nixon. Get SCbmitz going around the country blathering on abbut what a bad job the President is doing. This will cert&inly set Mr. Nixon on the proper course for the .future and assure him re-election. Well, It makes a lot of sense. The only problem is that Congressman Schmitz, according to the ne'i''S accounts, told the "Brea_ GOP ladles that if con- fronted with tbe facts about thi! Agnew- Schmltz ,advisory meeting, the vice presi- dent would probably deny it. Schmitz, however . told the Brea folks not to worry about that. He 'd be willing to take a lie detector test to prove that it was all reality. The 'I\J.stin super-rightman explained that thts meeting oceuned last year shortly after President Nixon announc:ed his plans to visit China. It was shortly thereafter that Schmitz made his famous speech during which he said he wasn't worried about Mr. Nixon going to China, "but only about him com· ihg back." LATER, SCH~flTZ explained that crack was really auppo.!ed to be a little joke that his detractors were trying to use against him. Now, however. we apparently learn that it was all part of a Schmitz-Agnew campaign to help Mr. Nixon . Of course. all or th~ is puzzling when you attempt to explain why nearly three :years ago Congressman Schmitz voted against 20 of 23 administration-supported bills in his first six weeks in office. Why, it 's obvious he v.·as helping ~ .. tr. Nixon even before he got r..1r. Agnew's advice. CLEARLY, IN this election year. Prtsident Nixon doesn't ha~·c to worry about Democratic opponents at all. Only -his friend s, like C.Ongressman Scha:iitz. Hue Forecast Alleged BOSTON llJPI) -Columnist Jack Anderson said i\londay that President Nixon has a report from Saigon v.•blch ' says" Hue probably v.•ill fall to the North Vietnamese . According to Anderson the fall of Hue could mean the' fall of the regime or South · Vietnamese Presldent Nguyen Van Thi eu. door several times and thought she heard noiaes inside, but no one answered the door.'' Mrs. Waiche's brother-in-lawJ .• ~tephen, 11, said lit fountt .. i"Warra~rcampalgn butta\ Jn Bremer'• trash. There was a confederate flag on the floor of the clut· tered apartment, two boxes of bullets. and · > ' Campaign Comes To Standstill In California SACRAMENTO (AP) -Pr"ldential campaigning came almoat to a standstill in California today as leaders of both ma- jor parties recoiled from the shock of the shooting of Alabama Gov. George Wallace. Serui. George McGovern and Hubert Humphny, Wallact'• chief rivals for the Democratic nomlnatton for president, both canceled all campaign appearances shortly after receiving word of the shooting. .Both were to fly to California thi.! week. There was no word if either would ·resume campaigning in time for their scheduled .California a p p e a r a n c e s . McGovern also halted television and radio advertising for at least a day. Wallace's California campaign leaders, who were expected to announce Ibis week that the Alabama governor \\'Ou\d run as a write-in candidate on the state's June 6 Democratic primary, aald they now are "in no frame of mind to engage In poUUcal strategy or prophecy." Only one Democratic candidate, Rep. Shirley Chisholm of New York, continued campaign plant .with 1everal California campaJgn appearance• aWl scheduled for today. Led by 'GOv. Reagan, who called the shooting "a tragedy for America and our \\•ay of life." California Republicans joined Democrats in expressing sympathy and shock. "Isn't this an outgrowth of the hatred _that has been injected into what has been a peaceful competition?" Reagan said ~ter hearing the news. "As GOO is in his heaven. do \Ve have to hate ourselve.!I to the point where peo· pie with less balance are stimulated to deeds of this k1nd?" Rea1an said. State Sen. Mervyn · Dy m ally , California's only black state senator and a long-time Wallace critic, called the st\ootiogibe result of the same ''sickness in American polltlcs" which caused the slayings of John and Robert Kennedy and Dr . Marlin Luther King. <:BS "l'lol• VII UPI CORNELIA WALLACE KN~ELS OVER HER FALLEN HUSBAND · Offlclals Hid !o Pry Her Away, Sobbing and Grief-stricken A_·Wife's Horror Mrs. Wallace at Side of Hus ban d LAUREL. Md. (UPI) -There was blood on her yellow dress and tears streaked her cheeks, She knelt on the dirty gray asphalt of the parking lot , her long black hair cascading protectively on the shoulders of her fallen husband. ~londay afternoon Cornelia Wallace was. where she has been since Jan. 4, 1971 -by the side Of her husband, the governor and the presidential contender, with him on the campaign trail as often as possible. Bystanders and police finally pulled the sobbing Mrs. Wallace away from her hus- band and she climbed in the emergency van as George C. Wallace was nl.!lhed by road and hellcopter 1o !he operating table. Cornelia Ellis Snively Wallace. 32, divorced her citrus heir husband a few months before she married the widower \Va llace. She had known \Vallace since childhood when she lived with her uncle. former Alabama Gov, James "Big Jim'• Folsom. The mother of two boys -six children all together counting \Vallace 's four -is an accomplished guitarist and a friendly, folksy woman v.·ho sometimes dresses in mod clothing and boots. The first swnmer after her marriage she drove the pace car in the Winston 500 auto race at Talladega, Ala .. and has joined her husband on the hustings •lmost constantly in this political year, Nice Weather Favors U.S. At Holy Crosa hospital in the minutes and houn after the shooting. she waited in a nurse 's station while surgeons v.rorked on her husband. Friends and even one other presidential candidate, Sen. Hubert H. Hwnphrey, dropped by to comfort her. Sc attered Storms Break Up Generall y Fair Skies Temperature~ A\IMlftV, cloudy ,Jlll•nll, cle•r ll!r!TllntNm. <ltlf &ouon, clolldv 8ut11UI, tlOudV Ch1rlft!on, clO\HI <h•rlO'ltt, cit•• c11rc110, cloudv Clnc:fnMll, clOUdY Clevtlll'ld, CloudV Otnvtr. < IOudv Ott Molflll. clt1r Ottto!t. clt•r HOIWll\11\1, Cltl• HOU1!9n, <lttr ll'idllnl"lll , Clol.tdY Kini-al C'7Y. Cltlf llttlt lt.cJI, CINI' L...,l,,,..lfl, ckludY MUl!'nl, rtln Mllw1i*.H, ClfUdW' OlttM!tl• C!P\t, c1t1r Omtl'lf. clt•r "•Im Wl1111 ~tHittptile, cloulf'I' ""°""'·· cltff PlfblM'f~. dolldV "°'11f.. On.. '"''" lflilltld ClfY, clOUdY llllCJ!lllllwid. ~ St, lWit. t.lffr $ell I.Alt• Cll't', t;llueY t.n• ''fllCJtal, Cit« ..S..ttlf, r•l11 w'~ton. '"" Mltl'I Low ~. ,, . " ... ~ M ,. .. I.I SJ 1 C<I .. .. 7) M n ,. " " .. " • ·" ~ " " a ,. .. .. .. ~ .. " " M • .. n ... " " .. M .. " M .. .. .. n " ~ .. " st .14 " ~ 51 .OI ~ :J " .u .14 " " " " 1.22 .. :·:: " . .., .. • .. " .. ... .» fl.Uf•rt1la ..: .,.....:. .. ':"' ea t;i _wz.:= • ~ tlll _,. .l:l•I 11 ("1(1(. ~ • ..... rn"1 1fm1 .UN 1!:!:!4J~N(Yo# m>;'J ...... ~WtOWfd I I(\ .. The next time reporters saw het she Was composed, surrounded by Wallace's four children. " [ just wanted to tell you myself." she said, "the gover nor is in very good ron- dition. He bas sulfered.a set-M>us injury to his abdomen, bu1 It ls cleaned up and he's out of surgery. "The children and 1 are going in to speak to him. Before he went into surgery, he was C<lnscious all the time and quite aware of everything that was happening to him," 11he added . DAILY .PILOT DELI VERY. SERVICE Dsll'ttf'Y of the Dally Pilot Secret Service Views Sl1ootin g As Major Blow BONN ~ UPf) -Opposition leaders have dropped their objections to nonag- gression pacts with Poland and Rus1i1, en.ding 18 'fOonths of wrangling that had brought parliament to a stand.still. The pacts which brought Chancellor Willy Brandt the Nobel Peace Prize last year appeared assured of approval by a tsrge majority of Parllment's 4N !\!em- bers \\'hen they flnally are put to tbe vote \Vednesday night. WASHINGTON (U PI ) -The at-Rainer Barze\. the opposit ion Christian tempted assassination of Alabama Gov. Democratic leader \\'ho fought the George C. Wallace is a blo\\' to the Secret treaties from the moment Brandt Service, charged with pro1ecting him and negotiated them \n 1970, dropped hi.! ob- the other presidential candidates. jeclions ~londay after he and the govern-- Agents covering the \Vhite House detail ment \\·orked out joint r's o I u t ion 1 viewed the incident wit h diSmay. "Ifs a restating long-tern\ aims and res erva- blow to w all ,'' said one. tions. Shortly after the shooting President {::r 1:r ~ Nixon ordered Secret_Service protection \VASHlNGTON (AP ) -The former top for Sen. Edward M. KeMedy (O.Mass.l, Air Force general in Vietnam ha.! bee whose two brothers. John F. Kennedy relieved of his post ''because of · and Robert F. Kennedy, were kitled by an regularities in the conduct of his co a.!lsa.!lsin's bullets. Nixon also extended mand respOnsibilities." protection to Rep. Shl.r}ey Chisholm fD· Gen. John D. Ryan. Air Force chief o N.Y.), an announced candidate for the staff, reportedly was personally -em presidency and to Rep. Wilbur D. Mills barrassed when Gen. John D. Lavelle tol (D-Ark.). him U.S. pilots were obeying Joint Chief ~ Kennedy, wh9 has consistently Qenied of Staff iMtructions on altitude and olhe he is a ca#date, accepted the guard flying ronditlons designed to save plane temporarilY. and pilots, and he learned tater pilot were nying lower to hit their targets. Neither Kennedy nor ?¥Jrs. Chisholm The Air Force announced Lavell were eligible for aucb protection under retired April 7 "for personal and healt previous Treasury Department guidelines reasons.'' ~londay. Ryan said Lavell based on standing in the palls for an· retired for health reasons, but had nouni;ed and unaMounced candidate.!. relieved ol command before tbat beca Round·tbe<lock protection already had of unspecified irregularities. been provided four candidates -Sens. -f:r "f:r "f:r Edmund S., Muskie. Hubert H. Hum-NEWTON. r.fass. (AP) Fiv phrey, George ~1ctovem and Henry it be f f ·1 ed J Jackson -in addition to Wallace. mem rs 0 a am1 Y perish tar Y day and two others escaped when fir Despite the close scrutiny of scheduling swept their brick house on Ambers arrangements for a traveling candidate a Road. police reported. survey of questionable persons In 'an The victims were identified by police ~rea , and a thorough search of tti:: speak-Francis Tesoro Sr., 42, his sons Vincent 1ng hall, federal agents ~now their safety 17. and Francis Jr .. 6, and two dauibters measures have human !units. _ Maria 14, and France.!, Ht. Greates t _Impact of All Seen ·on l{ennedy Future By STEVE GERSTEL WASHINGTON fUPll -'The at· tempted assassination of George C. Wallace may have jts greatest long-term impact on the future of Edward M. Ken- pedy. \The Immediate effed was expected to swell Wallace'I retW111 with aympathy votes in today's l\.1lchigan and Maryl~ prirnarie.s. • But afttr thi shooting, a1 well u before, Wallace remain1 a ".!paller" who has shaken up the Democratic party, aroused a well-.!pring of protest, cerved <lut a heady CO'l!tituency, but hu no chance at all of wt.nning the nomination. TO Kennedl'.r the. shots fired at Wallace ln a !uburoon Washington shopping center may well bave sealed any lingering doubt about accepting a pri!Sidentia1 draft ll:t 1972 and perhaps in the years abetd. Kennedy, who los two brothers to the buUeta of assaesins, bu stffdfastly in.. slsted !hot he II not a candidate. But ~­ i.tllng hu persisted that U o deadlocked convention turned to him, be could not refuse hil party. . The ...... 1nalion ettempt la certain lo rtil>(on:e Kennecty•a doclsion nol lo make hJm1ell available -a declllon bded In part on the poosibllltf. that hil deeth at the hanc!J of a kll er would rob bis cblldttn and lhooe of bl! brothers, Robert F. and John F., of the familY patriarch. '!'be ahoo!Ing came u Wallace was wJn. d~ up his primary cam)llfl!f I« the nomination . Allor three vldorles Florido, r;orth Carolina. Tennessee and possibtr lwo more today (Michigan, r.,1aryland ), \V~Jlace planned no more major efforts In prun_ary states, although he contemplated a wrtte-in effort in California June 6. Despite the fact that Wallace may come to the convention wllh 3(1()..400 delegate votes pledged to him on the firat fl?llot, he can go no higher. That I.! hl5 high-water mark. After the !hooting, as well as before, lM race is between Hubert H. Humphrty and George S. McGovern and the crossroad.! may be California. }f neither of the Midwest senators ca,, win the nomination and the national con-- venti_on begins to look for a comprornJ.se candidate to break .the deadlock it will look high and low but never for Wallace. Nor will Humphrey or McGovern de.al with Wallace. althopgh the~!1Allnly wlll at.tempt to sway Wallace delegates. Ho will have an impact on the platfonn wlth he espau3aJ of tax re(onn but It is likely that th~ Dtmocrsl9: can sw1Uow, without fli~hlng, his total oppMttlon to school busing. · There ma y be tn Impact on the Humphrey tnd McGovern campaigns. ni.e t~ ltad}ng challengers ror the nomt~ation are enx\ous to start cam~ ~lgning .(ull-tlme. In Cslifort\ia with ils winner·take-all primary and 271 del(;gate voi.s. Both suspended their campaign• Immediately after they 1 .. med W!llRe had'beoirlhot. Humphrey ind McGovern have IOmt brealhln1 room. Both are virtually bypa8Sin( wnpaignln~ In the Ore1on locprlmak ry Moy 23, which Ja co111kl«ed ed up for McGovern caBullft the1 Y are arut10111 t4 move. To each, om a II the IDOILJmporlanl.~!Ni~ .. ihe road lo the natlollli convention Ju- ty UJ. -• • ' ' • • ' Davis P1·osec utio11 E11ds Case F.ortiuies U11li1ni ted • • I SAN JOSE ( UPll -Angela Davis wrole in her "love diary" that she was ''totally ,¥itoxicated'' with G e or g e Jack.sen, tht prosEltJlt lon has told tht jury in concluding its m u r d er · kidnap--con!piracy case against her. / The prosecution contends lhe diary sho ws that ~!Jss Davis' passion !or Jackson was so great that she armed Are you. hQuse rich. but cash poor? · At Avco Flnanci~I Services, you ca11 ~onvert 1he bullt·up equity In siour house into cash Jn your hands...Cash lo do1wh atever you want to do, and pay back.conveniently over a period of years. · At Avco, it's ou·r business to lend money to homeowners .. What you do with thA money is your business. HOMlO'lll'NfR lOANI TO $21,600. 0\11111 tl,OOt ON lllAL l STATI 6 ,!JllONAL l'ftOl'llln . 500 N. A1111h1lm ll•d., A11alrelm • , , , • , , , , , , . 535-2116 210 S. lh1clld St .• A11ah1lm , , , , . , • , , , , , , , , • 776·5250 1179 Harbor 11,d., Cotta M•10 ••• , , • , , . , , , 611 W. 17Ht. St .. So11t1 .t.111 , ,, , • ,, •••..•.•. 642·]484 547.4431 2017 $. M1h1 St., 501110 Ano . , , . , , , , , , ..... , 549.]161 -~------. ......-.. - B.a .: .. ~ ~ . ' ; A. .. .. 'l "~c . " D •' . E. . . STRAIGHT FROM THE HEART , and plotted an aU4mpl to frte ·him from prison that ended y.·lth the August. 1 9 7 0 , shootings at the Alari n County couilhouse in which four pel'sons died. The diary, written nearly a year arter lhe shootings , revealed that h1i.ss Davis con· siderecl herself ma1Tied to Jackson . ''I'm Io t a I I y intoxicated, overflowing ,.,.ilh you and wa'n· ling you more than e.ver before ... that ro much love could exist anywhere. iA any two· people. even betv,reen us, I SACRAMEN'T'O ·1AP I - A measure placin g a $2.S \ n1 illion limit <lPI the size of iortunes Californians could amass has been killed bv lhe As~embly Revenue and Taxation CommiUee. For the second time in ·as many years,. lhe con1° mitlee Monday defeated the · bill . whic h would a!so place a $1 million llmit on the amount a pe rson o\hf't' tha11 a spouse could in· herit. never realized." read an tolry ~---....,.------' in the diary dated Julyl, 1971. "It makes me fetl all llut.. tery and kind of weak. not thoug h in the sense of suc- cumbing to weakness. for 1t makes me feel so much stronger. stronger with your st rength wi thout end my lifelong husband." Pro..secutor Albert \V. llarris Jr. read to the jury 21 ~ pages fron1 the original IS.page document. Judge Richard · E. Arnason ruled the remainder was irrelevant and prejudicial to the defendant. On July 10, {97 1, Miss Davi.!i y,•rote: "1'111 crazy with love and desire and guess y ou ' r f' nlre.ady Will ing to accept e ll !he consequences ... only if you stop lovi ng mt would i be ho1>clessly crushed." l<.'f iss Da vis and Jackson met only orlce. in a prison cell with auorneys present. Jackson was one of three "Soledad Brothers'' accused of slaying a prison guard and later acquitted. Jackson was .slain in what ofricials say was an escape attempt from San Quent in Prison in August. Route Open· ·But Trllffic Still Hellvy LOS BANOS (API -Traffic Is l1eav ier than expected on the ne"' stretch o( Interstate 5. bu t lhf' older alternates Governor Proposi11g l.QSw·ance ' SACRAMENTO (AP) Go v. Rqnald Reaga n is prc>- posing a $7 mil lion voluntary life insurance plan through y.•hich he hopes 135,000 rull· lim e state employes will gni n back what they have lost for Uie lack of past pay ra ises. Re~gan made t he an- nouncement Monday al a com· bined lunchton or State Men'!! and Women '!! club!!. "Last year. regretfully, J had to ask you and other .!itate employts lo rorego a sa lary increase because o( t h e ttO(lOmic situation," he said. 1'\Ve will remed y that Ibis year. "\Vhtn we C<luldn 't increase your wages the. last time around. I indicated that we hoped to make up in other ways for 'the money we we re unable to put in yo u r paychecks," Reagan .!i a id . .. Today. J am pleased to an· nounce that we are proposing !he most comprehensive group life insurance program ever offered to state employes." According to the. plan, the slate and its employes would each put in aboot $3.5 million annually. Con tributi<lns end coverage would be based on income. ' . , " ·Senate Ol(s Move Allmving LA Split SACRAMENTO (AP I -The Califor nia Stnate has a~ proved a bill under which Los Angeles County - with i1s 7 million inhabitants -could split into several counties. The n1easure 1·eceived a 24-8 vote. MOnday and movtd to the Assen1bly. It \VOU!d ease ff" quirements for an initiath·e petition to place the bid for ,. new coun ty ~ Lhe ballot . The author, Sen. H. L. Hichardson (R·Arcadia ). i;aid Los Angeles County h a s become so large it is un-, manageable. and unresponsil'e. bet\\'een 7~,000 and just over He said pre!lent law makes 11 1 1111 t1iOn population. lie s~ud virtua ll y impossible for a new this has been indicated by 1.'0unty to be lo(med . stud ies. The bill would allow persons I(· l\'OUld be 110 sohllion for in an area with at least 750,000 population to call an elec tion 1,os Angel es Count y lo n1crel.v by obtaining the signatures or boost the n u n1 b r r or 10 percenl of the 'registered supe rvisors abo ve the prl'sent voters. Approval would be re· five, he said. A bill to do U11s quired by a 50 percent vote of was vetoed last year Uy (iov the entire count y, H.onald H.ea~an . Present law requires that 65 Ric hardson ai.ftccd lo ;in1rnd percent or the registered thr bill so ii 1~·011ld not voters in an arra sign an in· preclude the possibility or tl ali ve petition, and lhe movf" creating a ne1v C{)Unly uu l of has to be approved by the portions of several 1·oun11es 111 county Board of Supervisors. the Lake Tahoe basin. Richardson l!aid the bill wa!I Sen. Mervyn l)ytnally 111· prompted by the requests of Los Angeles ) supp ort r d about 4() city councilmen from li ichardson 's bill. fie· said San Ga br iel Valley cities. county governments need to Since the bill 's inlroduction be smaller and closer to the • ' '' ' . . .... - OAJ LV PILOT J - ' t TBI 11\EIT WHISKEY DF THI WEST. TIE ORBIT WHISKEY DF TDDIY. Feb. IS. Richardson said he people because the y deal with -· •,.,.,,,1rr·~ ···~•!"', .-..· ,, ,,,.,, ,,1 .. ,,, •IU"-tM'l•r.1.u~1;1111u1·r·•·· has received inquiries from1~·_c·d::a~y~-to-~da~y~p.'.'.ro~b~le~m'."''.:.·'.:_' __ .!._'.=====================:: virtually every area of Los Angeles County on t he possi bility of creating new counties. The bill would also ~st the minimum population re- quirement for a new county from 20,000 to 750,000. But it would permit the consolidation of a county with fewer than 500,000 population to aoother cou nty. Richardson said the ideal ~ize for a county, from the standpoint of tc:onomy and vote r responsiveness. j s and San ' • •.• of the abundant earth. Genuine stones in colors to make your heart beat fast. All in 14 karat yellow gold. A. Amethyst. topaz. garnet, peridot, aquamarine, tourmaline, diamonds. $295. B· Seven opal s, $79.50 . C. Opal an·d diamond, $125. D. Rose coral, cultured pearls and diamonds, S225. l hrou~h the San Joaquin 'Va lley also remain~ busy. the D1v1s1on of liig hways says. A traffic survey on the 184· ROTC Offices -Occupied r . • • f E. Smoky topaz quartz. $42.50. Do Something Beautiful- ,..,,,..., Au•1111h ln~lled. Am1rlt 1n EJ,rtll ••11kAmerk•'9 Ind M1111r Cll•••• IM. SLAV-ICK'S Jc\vrlPr:i; Sinr.r 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH-644-1 380 Opon Mon. ond Fri. 10 a .m. to 9:30 p .m . Wltll IM1lien1 9'; T1rruict, Or11191, Lt Ctrrllo1, LI Mtllrl , "'"' 51~ Dl ... & Lii Vftlt, • •• ' ,,. mile section ihal opened LOS ANGELES (AP l - l\tarch I \.IP the valley's west ,About 200 antiwa:~ student.I\ side shows a daily traftic stormed into the ROTC offi~o; count of 11,800 vehicle!!. That at the University of California is 36 perce nt highe r than the cam_pus here and occupied 8.700 that had been predi~ect. ·them briffly. The action came highway 9fficia ls· re ported after a peaceful rally by 2;000 f\1ond ay. demonstrators. Open ing the new 1-oute The. group pulled pictures, ~t"•een the Bakersfield area plaquf:!s and messages from and L<ls Banos has not reduc· hallways Monday but caused ed traffic vol ume on Highway no major damage. Police were 99. lhc sur vey sho1vs. A count not called. at Livin~ston recorded 17,700 Actress Jant Fond a. the J daily vehicles, up 1,300 from main speaker at tM rally, ac· _one .vcar ago. cuscd the United Sta le!! of • I c o m mit I i nl · 'cultural genocide" in Vietnam and "turning the beautiful Viet· namese culture to a plastic IOCiety. "Saigon and Las Vegas are. the same thing," she. said. After her speech most of the. crowd drifted awaY. But a picket line was thrown up around the ROTC buildif]LJDd the students marched in. After a brief confrontation with Col . Frank Burgher, head of the campus ROTC program, the demonstrator!! left. 4 times 1 d1y from Long Beech: Or sm ;Jo away to Sacramenlo or San Diego. Coll your travel agent or PSA and ask 8boul our easy.1 0-bea r, low fare. PSA glv•• you• Hrt. ---- • • ID ID • • n [ijii GEnERALTELEPHDnE • • • a DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Personal Tragedy Whatever one's political persuasion, the attempted assassination of George WaUace ought to be vi ewed as a personal tragedy. The rising tide of mindl ess hatred~ invet tive arld abuse being he¥ed upon all of our public figures and publlc instltuti o s can only take this nation -and each of us -down e road ·to nati,onaJ destruction . The Ugliness of publif fi~u res being 1;ubjeeted to indignities and threa ts for trying 10 comm unicate their views has become too familiar an occurrence: How ~mail a s1ep is it now fr om the hate-filled shouting down of a speaker to the shooting dow n of a speaker? If the ti me has come when public fi~ures or r>oliti· cal cand idateii: can no longer express their vieu's, no matter how unpopular, without fe31 for their safety - when armed _ secu rity guards, bulletproof glass an4 a police frisk are to be a neceSfiary part .. of our political life. the step into a police state wilJ become a very i;mall, easy · one for Mankind, U.S.A. Motorcycle. Proliferation In Southern Californ ia, we face a mounting recrea· tional vehicle problcrn. It 's th e motorcycle. The cycle industry has in the last several years assumed tremendous proportions. ~~rom the youngster . tooting down the street on his mini·bike to the super· powered chopper ridden by a begrimed "outlaw" club -they're here with us. How many are there? Somewhere over 600,000 licensed-for-highway.use motorcycles and betv ... een 1· and • 1 ~l·miUion. off·highway trail bikes, mini-bikes .and sim· Har vehicles in California, most of therri in the south. The vast majority of these bike riders resent wd depl ore the gang wars and conduct o! the tiny minority in outlaw cycle clubs which, they are sure, have held up public recognition of cyclitjg as a major new recreation. \ ) So cycles are here. More are com ing. What does il mean? Some examples: -=More public areas for racing .and trail riding: Anaheim has approved one. H\J..ntington Beach is 5tudy· ing··-anqthcr. · -More-private trail· riding parks also. Orange Co unty has .. one in Trabuco Canyon, an other near Ir· vine Lake. -More interest in motorcycle racing tracks. Cos ta lt1esa's fairgrounds track is usually filled to its 8,000· seat capacity each Friday· ni ght and 4 ,000 were report· ed turned away on a recent Friday. . -More legislation. California has already adopted a Jaw requirin·g CHP·approVed helmets. Another proposed law would require that motorcycle heaatights go on automatically when the engine starts-to reduce acci- dents from ·non·visibility. -An entire new attitude toward off.highway vehi· cles (mini·bikes, trail bikes and dune bug~ies). Begin· ning July 1, they'll be licensed for the first time. A two·year, $15 !ee will be used in part to establish fa~i· lilies for their use. So whether you're one who sees a two-wheeler as a means of escape and thrill -or one who's irritated and terrified by their presence -they're apparently here to stay. - , . "OKAY, I GET THE MESSAGE ..• YOU'RE THE NEW COMMANDING OFFICER" 0 A Harder -Word-Quiz~ On Sports Burea11 Is Not a .Natiotial Police Fot•ce • Dear Gl()omy Gus Putting FBI .' Role • Ill Pe.r~:eectiv·e- doe~ not seem o'b:l of proportion. the sa1ne lime. the general support of the vasl majority. (SYDNEY J. HARRIS) ln hls Sunday full-page open letter seeking favar with Republicans af- . ter blasting Nixon for three years, Congressman Schmitz shows he not only doesn't understand the Viet- nam Problem, he can't even ~II It. "Aggressive" came out "agres- sive. '' WASHINGTON -The role of the FBI in the general scheme of th.ings in the na- tion has always been exaggerated. It it not a_ national police force. Jts jur1sdie- tion is circumScribed. By far the greater resparuibility for law and order resides in state, local and other rec1eral agencies. The latter include ( RIOORD WILsON.J and the liberal community, "'hich must now be astounded by the statement of Interim Director L. Patrick Gray that he has yet discovered no secret files or dossiers, a la the European.secret Police. on political figures and prominent Americans. Interim Directer Gray has undertaken, as one of his £irst responsibilities. dispel!· ing su'ch distrust of the FBI as was based on hatred of Hoover. He tries to appear In the role of a r.easonab!e and access ible official who will effect changes in style if not jn substance. con trasting \Vith Hoover's adaman cy and re1,T1oteness·. IF GRAY IS l.OOi\l:'\G for ;in rxample nf how to r:-.tnn.:t a lead ing g11rernmen t agency from the fielrt f•f con1 r11\1ersy. he might exam ine the t~c!1 cs of !he United States Director of lnlelligcnce, Richard ~fy word-quiz about sports a rew months ago Was llO well received thal I've devised another on the sarne subject, only a little harder. Three out af 10 woul d be a satisfactory score. I. Why is the standin,'l. or re sult. of a contest called a "score"? 2. Why were the games of golf and bowling banned by royal edict? 3. What is the origin ar the name "teMis" for that game? 4. Why is a horserace with obstacles called i: "steeplechase"? 5. WHY ARE GA"fES and sports ""'n· ducted in an "art'na"? 6. How did a ref- eree get lo be known , as an "umpire"? 7. Where and how did "badminton" llC· quire its name? -0.G. T~I• f•11ur1 r•llt<lt l"Wlf1rt• \tftWI, llOI llKtn•,·ur ""9n •I lht ntwt•••tr. Stnd r~' ••I -·• i. Olotmr Gui. 0111-, Plhtt. f'rance. would-ca 11 out "Tenez!'' ("Hold!") as they began each serve, warning the opponent to get ready. 4. A PACK OF horseback riders in 18th Century England would pick out some distant churcb. steeple as a goal and race to gf!t there, jLmlping over whatever natural hurdles were in their way. 5. "Arena" is fram the Latin word, •·sand," and signified the floor of the den of li ons, where sand was spread to soak up the blood af the victims in gladiatorial contests. 6. f'rom the Old English "nunpire." n1eaning a non·pee t, ar the odd man out \\'ho decided a dispute. tin the same phonetic 1\·ay. an "orange" was originally a •·norange. ") the United States Se- . cret Service, as well as numerous federal enforcen1ent agen, cies aperating in con· junction with-the Just ice Department 's criminal division. Of the $2.3 billion budgeted ror 1972--73 federal anti -crime programs, $300 miliion or Jess than one. sixth is directly for %the FBJ. These facu are recited in a11 effort to put into perspective a kind~ of hysteria which will soon evidence itself on how the post.Hoover FBI shall be run, who shall head it. and wh~t its philosophy shall be. -THE HYSTERIA RISES from one ma~ jor source, those who imagine that the FBI is or will soon bttome a secret palice used for "political repres!lian. This bugaboo is regularly paraded in Congress If Gray finds no such \ncri~inating files in the "future, he will have destrdyed the cherished convictions of thousands of liberals and radicals that they are under constant surveillance: Their megalomania and status will have undergont a. shat· tering 'd~Oation with the disclosure that the FBJ did not even th.ink it ·worthwhite· to tap their telephones. · IN FACT, THE FBI is very exclusive, ha ving in operati()n about 50 telephone taps in national security cases at any particular time on the sco·res of millians ' of phones in the country. In viev1 of the politically-inspired violence and threats of violence in the era of dissent and the many bombings and depredatians. a figure of 50 wiretaps (actually 36 in 1970) THIS MAY BE useful in the beginning, but in the rnd Gray \'fill have to un· dertake.-because he is required by law to d.o so, the type af inquiries 1Vhlch rnade Hoover so unpopular in radical in- tellectual circles. These inquiries extend lo college cainpuses,. \\"here dissei-it crosses the perilous boundary into overt action against the government, and tO' the ·ghettos where the creed of armed · violence Challenges established authority. If lhterim Direc tor Gray receives reports of plots to blow up the capitol, or destroy its heating system, or to kid nap prominen t federal officials. he \rill have to look into them. rega rd less of ho1\' Iii juries ha v.e reacted to such charges in the past. · And i( such inquiries result in rene\.\'ed charges that the FBI is an agency of pelitical. repression. Gray will have to live with ii, as did Hoover -having ai J) -l {clillS. Cl l\ Dire<'tor Helms. before hr ascend- ed to a higher role. 1nanaged to e:..tricate the CIA from a pos1l1on of pramineice which did not hecon1r i1 LIA 1s 1nanag1ng to kl·t•p 0111 of the ncv.·s. rxcepL in tho se cases "'here it might be expei!Jent to lrt it be kno\.\11 that it \.\'as not enurel y 111 agreement with the Defense Departn1cnt. OTHER\\'!St::. · vcr.\' 1Jttle is heardi anyn1orc of CIA ·s shridicr sl<te, ;ilthough it stretches credu lily to believe that th is . agency has abandoned t1n acti1·e role in shaping the 11•orld"s affairs. A n1ild manner and !011'cred prnf1!e ha ! aided l!ehns. <1nd w1nething like th is 1nny he valuah!e in the case of the FBI , no1r !~at i! is no longer necessary to sup- porl the Hoover personahty cult. If Gray succerds. he 1na~· becom e the pernunt director of tbP FBI. although lh:it ""fiuld depend to a grecit extent on Nixon's re-rlccllon . 8. Jn cards, \Vhy isn 't the "club" suit ahaped like a club? 9. 'Why is the \'ic- tor in a contest cal- led the •1champi on"? 10. Why ls the bat in teMis or squash known as a "racquet"? ANSWERS i . THE DUKE of Beaufort introduced the garne from India in 1873, at his coun- lry place in Gloucestershire, ·known as ''Badminton.'' 8. The "club" Is really a clover, but we confused the French and Spanish designati<ins for the suits when we trans\8ted !hem to Eriglish. How to Recognize Arthritis Quacks I. A "Score" is a notch made on a stick for counling , as !he \\'estern badmen ustd to ''notc,lf' their guns to ke<>p score .of their kl!Tings. Hoyle 's book on f.(aines first used ··score " in the n1odern sense. 2. F:arly kings of Englan d ond Scotland ba'n ned ,l!Olf 1111d bowling for n1any ye!rs. because they v.·erc crov.'tllng out archery as popular sports, and archery practice \'fas cons idered essentia l for w a r training. 3. The earliest tennis players, in 9. "Champion"' is cognate with "cam- p11lgn" and "campu~." meaning a field ar plain v.·here contests are engaged in: the "ch:impion"' \\'as the one 11'ho com· manded the fiel d afler battle. 10. '"Racket" or "racquet" 1s from the Arab ic. meaning "pahn of the hand"; not until the 12th Century \\"8S the game played with 11 bat. and even now in f'rance it is some times called "jeu de paun1c" (real tennis ). Tbe Arthritis Foundation Arthritis is everybody 's di s e a s e . Chances are that sooner ar later you or someone in your family will suffer from some degree of arthritis. And chances are that you may fall for some kind of quack cure or pbony product . Don 't laugh. It happens to lots of st.nsj.. ble people who find they're not ao sensi- ble after all "''hen faced with the pain of arthritis. Just in case you dii.,t quite believe it. here are some statistics : Politics , As Show Biz -Frauds and rackets robbed arthritis \'ictims of over four hundred million dollars last year aJone. -For every dollar spent by responsible organizations this year in legltimilte Tht audar1011s part of 1 ' Th r. Kingn1aker, ·· tlenry ~nker's big novel1of the rntertainrnent · cnn1nu1nications in· dustry. is the charartrr Jeff Jtfferson. He's 1111 agini; C0\\"00,v mol"ie star \\"ho ls 1noldc<i ln!o !hr ho1fl'SI prnperty in e11.rly ltlt\'~Sion And finall,v to thr top political !>eat in Cahforn1:i. 'rhf'rt 1~n·1 ;iny i:;ur~s1ng s:ame about thr Jrfferson ch;iract«•r. the lall, iron· grayinj: author ~.1 1d . during a sl(lpo\"er here . ,.011 r:in r:lH hin1 Ho.nald ReaJ:an if you choosr. Hr 1s n11I thr <'rntral fii;ure in lhr book. The "kin1n11aker"' i$ a one-l\n1c 1_1\'o hit talent a~!!nt 11 ho n1aneurcrs hin1~t>lf int<l control of a po11·erful llolty\\'{'1(1(! a~enc,·. ThP R e a g a n characttr. if you C'hoosr lo ('a\1 it that. is n<il the 1·il!ai11 af the pie«. but the vic- fJm. THE Gl1ES..<iJXG $.!flme in Holly•·ood, Dtoke.r stressN. I! o,·er who lht agent is. lie is based on no one persan: the characttrs and the story art based on whit Denker Ms-o~t.f\'td of big sh<>w business. big politics and the law O\"er 30 ytars. If 1s a C'Otrunf'.'nt on his limt. the 1uthor ltds. 1 11m' when nobody knows whtre •how busln,ss tnd~ and politics begins. 1'icllagtd poliliC'$, park•ged candidate~. the M'.lling of c1ndidatt.s as 'IV per$0rlaJitits, it's all tbeattr. and Amtr ican pohlicz is in a shamblts """"'" of 11111 fart. Denker tried lo Wkt this point within u.. rough. toogh, sUtltrin&, cynical ,.tlin& Ill this story •• research for the cause and cure of ( ] arthritis. more than $25 1l'ill be spent on THE BOOKMAN useless quack "cures" and remedies. . STILL NOT CONVINCED? Here . s .. ___________ ,,_ ' another fact, perhaps the most important · one of all: "'rtten in the Irving Wallace tradition. Researchers are making exciting prog· Author of fi1'e novels, a: SUC<.'essful ress in working towards a cure, and p!ay"Tig hl ("A Far Country," ''A Ca se of finding the solution is now just a mailer Libel'" etc .l, Denker is a onetime New of time. But in the meantime, don 't ''ork la\\·yer ~·ha began a writ ing career believe anyooe who says he has a "cure '' \'."hen the old CBS Playhouse started for arthritis. no matter how many buying his radio sc ripts. Denker is still degree s and letters he has after his name Involved in thr. theater. He has written 11 • , • no matter how well-meaning the ad- ne11• play based loosely M tlM unhappy \'ice of a relative or friend may M:. <:Breer of the Soviet no\•elist Alexander So!ihenitsyn, This has been tried out sue. cessfully: it "'ill ope.n at Kennedy Ctnter in \\'ashington before aoing into New 'lork. OE~ltER RAD heard nothing yet out or Sacramfito on his story ar en-t.ert1inment ustry praC'liets making polltic•l 1 . There should be no quamJ. Re n. the aid Warner Bros. ador. did ~ ~_aovernor. ~·et so far as J¥nktt knOws there was no powerful taJ,nt agency king·making there, in tht fashion his M\'tl de~cribts. It Is strictly fiction. Fact ls often stranger. • Denker's neit project is a big no1·r! about \\'ashinglon la 11ryers. He w~l' rtJtard>ing it thtrt during ~ m: ln>uhtes, ind could baNiiy btlltve the -SJ>lpm. Taft •bout runn y cotn- cldenc<s., .. IMcl\ay; $6.15). WlUlam Hoga• ..---B11 Geol'fe ---. Dear George: What is me.ant by a B-Gi rl~ FRED 11. O..r Ft«!: rt would dtptnd on the lndivictuar II-Girl, Fred. What ,.... she clolng? ln any caoe, ketp your hand on your nllet and don't give )'Olll' right name. CONFIDENTIAL TO HAROLD ST ASSEN : Now•s the time to make )WT mo,·e in the prtsidtnlial tlK'-- Uon! (See! J told you if you played ii cool tho naUon WClllcl reach th• point ""'"' .-ty knew what wu haP,penlrw!l [ ~UEST REPORT) Everybody's sister's cousin seems to have a pet remedy for arthritis. If such nostrums would do any good, medical science ~'ould know it. Don 't think, h-Owever, that because there is no.cure there is also no effective treatment for arth ritis. ·0n the cootrary. legitimate treatment by a quali fied doc· tor Can bring relief and prevent disabil- ity. One way to recognize a respansible physician is that he'll never claim he can cure arthritis, only that he can control it. BECAUSE OF THE NATURE ol !he disease; arthritis lends itself perfectly to the quack 's standard line of mumbo-jum· bo. For one thing. arthritis has a way o[ coming and going unpredictably. The symptoms of pain·and swelling can sim· ply disappe.11.r. sometimes far periods cf "·eeks or months. 'n!ese disappearances are called remissions. Unfortwialely they art usually temporary and symptoms eventually return in full force. The arthritis victim who has a lem· porary re.missian by coin cidence. just when he is trying something new er special -for instance. one of those "miraculous" ropptr braCf:lets. or 1 a special diet. or "immunized" milk - thinks the new product brought 1bout hi> relief. Score another point for the quack. ALSO. MANY ARTllRITIS victims suf· rer severe and constant pain. No one wanta to put up with pain, and if it'! btd. enough, moot people .will try llll)1hing to get rid of iL The trouble is. some quack remedies art positively d a n g e r o u s . Others are merely hamile.ss but ex· pensh·e. "·hich is hard on the pocketbook and not \'try helpful to the arthritb. Most frn partant of all. quack cures and remtd.ie& waste not menly money. but ''aluable lime durir\g which arthritis may c1o lrnvt.rsible damage to the joint!. DON'!' HELP TllB QUAClt perftcl bis art ... don 't get hooked on spec ial diets and devices ... and don't be a sucker for glamorous sounding products \l"hich prom- ise an end to suffering . Often the chief ingredi ent is aspirin. Aspirin can he the arthritic's best rriend. but only if taken in the proper \\'ay, under a doctor·s supervision. f\fost of the fancy aspirin substitutes are merel y aspirin in a more expensive packa ge. \Vhy pay lo.tinsel? Remember that th e final victory orer arthritis \\'il l come from men of sCience, not dou bletalk experts. TO HELP YOU RECOGNIZE lhe species Common Quack. ire offer some simple clues lo ho1.,, he aperates. , . clues to help you be "'ary and think 11,·lce before you buy. I. He ma y offer a •·special"' or ''secret'' formula or device for "curing·• arthritis. 2. He advertises. He uses "case histor ies .. and (cstlmonia ls rrom satis fied •·patlent s." .1. Hl' m:iy prom1s(· 1or 1mply1 a quick or easy cure. 4, Hr 1na~ elaun t\i kno w the cause or arthrit is and tal k about "'cleansing"' your bod.v of "po isons·· anrl ·pepping up"' your hcat1h. lie ina .v say surgery, .x·rays 21nd dru.Q's prescri bed by a physic ian are un- nccessar.r. "5 .. He m:.iy a c cu s r the n1ed1ca! estab!1shmen1 ·• of dell1X'ra1elv tb\1·art ing prng rcss. nr fJ f )X'rsecut1ng hirii · · · but he doesn"l let his nicthod be tested 1n tried and proved \\"ays. SEE \'OUR boCTon if \'OU ha\'e -;-~ersistent pa in and ~!llfness upon ari sing. -Pain or lenderne~s in one or more. joints. · -.:Sirelling ii1'0"nl.). or •'11ore Joints. -~ecurren~e nf_ the>~c symptoms , pa_rl1cularly 1nvoh 1ng more than one w~opholes J<l~~otic:!e pain and stiffnes s in the tndu;strlal News Re,·ltw loiver_ba~k. knees a~d othr.r JOi nts . Tax -Ttnghng sensation$ in the fingerl~5 As government plunges into cfebl_e_v_e_r -hands and feet. 1 deeper each year, ingertiaus new taxing -Unexplained '-''eight loss, rever, "'eakness or fatigue. schemes proliferate. As the federal defici t soars lo record levels. the country \!.'ill be hearing more about the "value- added tat" which is a form of national sales tax. It will also hear aga in rrom the "liberals" w~ still make a show ar tax· l'ng the rich to pay the government's bills. 'There will be a new ~ave ar oratory aboul closing "loopholes" in the income tu la"'· TBA T OLD WlllPPING boy "percen- tage deplellon'" -a provision in !he tax Jaw Ilia! has helped prese.n•e the 1n- ctntive to explore far ail and other minerals -will be· attacked again. ~lost of the tax loopholes "·e hear about might better be ca.llt'tt breathing. holes that ha~·e managl!d 10 ktep producti\'c enterprise alite under \\·hat \\·ould ot~rA·ise be a smotherlng blanket o! t.a.x- . ation. A lot of polltlclans can't disting_uisb the diffe.rtllCf bt1•'een • fegJflmaTe br•alhing bol• and a foopbolt. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT ' ---~ Jus • I •• ~~ ' . '' Getting to Know YOu • . • ' . ' I I . . _..,.... ..... .• • Just how good is Winston? It's America's lat"gest-selling cig.arette. That's how good it is! Yes, Winston Tastes Good Like a Cigarette Should . . ,,,, •. , .... ,_ .. ,. .. _ ........... .,......" .... .. klNG;19 mg."1a!', 1.3 mg. nic01ine .. SUPER KING, 20 mg."1a(.1.J mg. nico11ne.av. per c1gari11e. FTC Repon AUG.'71. , ' • • • ..,... '·- • .. . . ,.. , r ·· • ' ' -,,...,_ ' '"" ' : I"' I ~ .. ~.il'~n \ . ' • , • • • I OAIL V PILOT L. JJI. Boyd Blue-eyed People Feel Less Pain? Sti ll unrefuted goes that claim by some med)Cl1I ftl• lows th t1.I blue-eyed ptrsons are sorrfe\l:hat less ltftlftlYt to pain than 9r'c brown-eyed persons. Remembtr ii, nunt l;idy. If you '"·11nt a husband "'ho won.'t be ea.11!1 Jutri. pick a lad 1vith blue eyes. UNDER TllE law of Norfolk, Va., in public there unle ss she's wearing a corset. £nlorcement must be lax. A sai lor tells me he 'does not believe .i ll lhe dancing girls in Norfolk "'ear t:orSPIS. WllY 00 so many ladie11 who take up chemistry as a profession choose lo die by their 01\TI hand ? ·Among lhem, one of every JO deaths ill a 1u.i- c1de. That's t"o and a half times as high as the,suicide rate among men \l'ho go into chemistry. Baffling. QUERIES -Q. "Are teenagers all owed to join nudl1t <:amps?" A. Only if their folks are along in most such oolcftlu. Or so re searchers report. They report further thotf 1DJ.IDI• slers don 't have to strip, if they don 't want to. 1nt14tnl- ally, there's ·said to be one category of colony mtmtier \lo'ho unlike any other is almost invariably requlAd to \l'J!ar clothing. Can yo u name same? Q. "WllO'S the highest paid executive in thlj ooun~ try7" A. ~·lust be Harold Geneen. board cha irman Of ITlT The rinancial boys say he made more than $812,000 laat year. GET IT RIGHT, sir , a stud is not ont bretdinl horae, but a "·hole slableful of stallions. TWO AND A half gallons of co ffee from a pound of 'ground beans, that's the norm in the sna1zier re1~w-anll. TRUE, there's never more than t"·o eggs in • hum- mingbird's nest. No room. I guess. CORN -If you're ·a city mouse, you may not rtallse this. But the farmer up Iowa way is said no lonitr te bf inte rested in scientific techniques to make his eart of ~ bigger. Too big already. What he's looking for now ta • huskier stalk that \Von'I buckle under lhe extra ••llht. · A Sioux City client reports that. ._,__..IF YOU1WAKE~ this b'et with eVFrYnian you mett, •· odds are you'll win far n1bre lh{l:n you'll lose:·"J'll w111r your hollle contains at least one piece of wooden fW'nlttJµ made in North Carolina." , A RIPE watermelon is kno1vn to contain leu thin f pen::ent sugar, a lemon approximately ID per cent IUfar. So which is sweeter? Add·ress 1nail to L. r.r. Boyd, P. O. Bo2 J•11, Newport Beach, Calif. 92660. Britain's Charle8 Falls-Princely 1''rom Wire Servict1 Prince Charles became tht fir~il British prince to n1ake a parachute jump last July, but the experience turned un· nerving when he round himself upside do"'n "'ilh his feel tangled in the parachute rig- ging. he \Vas quoted as saying in a book published Monday. ''The next trunc I knew my fet'l were above my head, caught in tht rigging lines. \\·hich was very odd. The first I PEOPLE .• 1 hi ng 1 thought Wll!. 'They didn't tell me anythJn& about this.' " Charles .said. The book ''C•pllilns and Kings." by Kevllle/lrch and Alan Bramton, 11! Charlt1' feet weren 't twilled loo !>Idly and he quickly worked thtm free. The book uld the rtlt of the descent was norm1!. * * * The Rolllna: Stoae1 plan to hit the road nut year with a roc k 'n' roll clrcus. ~rouJne the ('()Unlr~· in a special train. "Thr \\'hole thing will be 11 ~or1 of rock'n' roll carni\'AI 111th games. C'ircus act., and t hine~ like tha t." Mick J11ger (Jf thf' Rolling Stone& ~•Id in an 1nter \·ie1\' v.·ith the London . :)11n. lie said the Stonr!. schedul- f'd lo open a month-long An1rr1c::in lour later l hi~ n1un1h 11·ill he ad I in e !he planned rarniv11 I sho1v "''ith thP British rock aroup The \\'ho. * * * '.\1nhammsd A.II !RYI ht 11 (1.n't let hla new son become a boxer. "The lut thing I'll let him bt Is 1n 1thlttt.'' lht fonner heavyv.·elfht bortn1 champion said in Phll1dtlphl1 after l\luhamm1d Ali Jr. "'II born Sunday, 11 7 pounds 4 ounct!. It ''as the fourth child bom 10 A.II and hl1 Z2·yt11r-old wire Belinda. and their first boy. * * * Blatk Panther p a r 1 )" C'ha irman Bobby St.alt !J run- ning for mayor of Oaklaod on 11 platform calling for com· munity control o( police and ciillngs on rents. •iwhat the people w1nt In the community wt11 bt the ma· jot iSJue," sa.id Seale. 3S. * * * T.'omm'1 1lbtr1Uonl!t Gl"r• ., .... GrH1' loot an appul In Auckland. New Z I I h "d again.st her convictloll fer ua. ing obscene languaa•. Supreme Court Jud11 Dun- can l\1cMullin s1id the four· letter ~·ord used by Ml11 Greer at a public rntttifta J" Auckland in March 1'11 COrt- lrary to accepted pubUe .i1N1- ards and upheld tM l!Oll· l'iction and fiM of tu. Jle said that whill IDJM ,... plr might find tht werd It· ceplable others \VOUld ~Ider it "grubby." * * * . . QUEENIE Will Tells .. Massacre 'Of Honor' "Watch out !tr 11111 ono-b1'11ot lhollrt o! 1rab ... " . Airlines Eying Hawaii Boosts • •' ,. • ' • • " .. . ' , . . ' \ r,.ld.,, u., u . 1972 • invited lo allend ~ premiere ·-review rg,nd Opening urnilure warehouJe-jhowroomj edne3da'J, a'! 17, 6 p.m. lo I 0 p.m. , :J4u~~da'J, ' a'l 18, 10 a.m. lo IOp.m. ) /eegiJfer /or over $1!J,000 in Joor prizeJ including a 1972 Pf'Jmoulk Station Wagon no PurckaJe n eceJJa r';f ' • WAREHOUSE SHOWROOMS 3200 Harbor Blvd., Costa Me sa Division of Federoted Stores Inc. ' . . Pleas e present this invitation for admission •.. , , DAILY ,II.ff @· '. , ' • ·J •, ' ·. l \ . ------ ;· . • • J () DAILY PILOT • WASHINGTON ACCOUNTS PROTECTED TD s10,00D.DD s . I ...., Accounts protected up to maximum cf $10000 00 by THRIFT GUlRANrt CORPORATION of C•ilforrna only as provided in the Calrfornia f1nanc1al COde. ON $1'11,000 90-DAY FULL PAID THRIFT CERTIFICATES A copy of Chapter 8 (Guaranty of Thrift Accounts) of Orv1s 1on] of the -cal1forn1a F1na ncral Code ma y be obtOl ned upon teRUOS! THRIFT GUARANTY CORPORATION Of CALI· f ORNIA 1$ NOT AN INSTRUMENTAL· fTY Of rnE STATE OF CALIFORNIA. ! WASHINGTON Thri ft & Loan Member of t he $600 MILLION rlrmF.c r1m11y COSTA MESA 270 Ll•t 17th St. 92E27 645-3l53 Offfels 1/'lrOl.Jlhout ~lltoml» Phone 642-4 321 For Weekender ---- Achertising OVER THE COUNTER • • NASO L1 st1 ngs for Monday, M•y 15~ 1972 Finance Briefs Tho Maida Rotary Eng1n1 F nr 1nfnrn111.t1f'l n n I !hi' !;{r>Ck or Toyo Togyo Co 1 63 1 68 M1y 1 S C<ill Rriy R11.r1holomr11 Gr,.11.t P11.r1f1r S<'c11n1 r~ l 72il Ti\ iTii"Ri \ n -f\ii 1 1 n 714 -8.12 f!Oflll McCOMBS SECURITIES CO., INC. STOCKS-MUTUAL FUNDS-TAX SHELTERS lHI lstotct Sy111f\cotlo111\ '4500 Campus Dr -S11lr. 100 111cel tli c Nowport IHCll 92460 171<41 557 1<400 810.000 panther* PA_NTERA ••• \I, d f'l f' 1R5f'I 111 11 rl ff\1 Lin <ill \!r11u1' 11 .. l1R n I 1hr l 1 d]!An l GhtA Stud ~ t"f T1111n 1 rJn 4\ \ i:;: l'nt:lnl' Fn Ir \I hrr\ 1n 11nrl t Hi ch in r ni;:1ne placrrnrnt fl\e c nch1 C>nl1rd rnil h 1 "!I k ri f';prrt Fnrd rlrc1,£:11r rl !hr rlPf"'ll''lll "ll~T'f' 1 j l ~Pl I'd l'.:l'Af ~x ft II' QXEROXING 0 ANSWE RING SE~VICE 0 DE SK SPACE Ol A LINES 0 TElEGRA>,IS, TWX, OO!:UMEN t TRANSMISSION • -- liu11hrr • COMPLETE-NEW. YORK STOCK UST • Symbol!r • • ... ,. Monday's Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stock, Exchange List P1·ices Barely, Up 0 11 Stoc k Mark et ' sli h~,~~' :"''~HK IAP~Stoc.k .market prices closed Jac~J 11!1 ,1,.1 i,hi rl today in \ihal amounted to a fairly ,, 1>l''·~ ()/) '/'tic 1 Jiiw Jr,ncs average of 30 industrials closed up 0.37 al V4i iq. lhc i\naly~ts 1>a1d the n1arkct \ra s just drlfun(J absence any !'.ilgn1ficent ne\\·s development~ lil ... 1'11111 L1w CllM Cl'lt . ~ '" HOO " :u .. " ., ' " " " • " 21•0 1.i, .. " . '~ . '" ". '" I"• ~! ... .,, • ,, •i ,, , . " '"' , .. ~: . "l~·· " : '• " " . 1.,. ~-· '· . • ~· ::"'} • :·:n ·~ " • ·:1 ;, . " u·, "' • " ' ~! , '" . -:-... "' .. ... ... . ' <>l ' , .. '" ,, _, ' . ., ,, ·-... •; ,.- !ol' .. ,_ ;;., - •• t-- ! ·- "•'"kl' ~ ' -• t;·• l .. :: ~ ~;ct· ·1.-c..:: 1" -1rd"1 CJ>r, ~ -!~C '-•1t.·· <::>'I -•• ··:•. 1 • • t 'l!Cl ,.,., l· "tU ~,, :l!... ¥· .j.-.. •.!'· .. : .. \., 7t ' ll:: ,,, ... " .,, . '" v '1•::..:. ~ .... I ""'· . 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' m ~' " "' " • " ' .. " • ... • ~ .. ~. ' . ' ' ... ' " "'· •• ,., ••• ., ••• •• ~ " n ,., ·~ '" .. . ... Finance Briefs .. '" -,, . - ;>o-,, _ )~ ... ... "• .. -" • . ~ • _ .. .... -. ...... --. ,._ ... ,,., • -4 :-.. -. • • ,, ~ '• ;">. • • ! ·-.. .... -. ,, . .•. -r. ' -. .. r i-i.- "1 • .. . . . -. • '!"'t ... 9't· ' . . . •• ,, '>-... ,:.. 21·.-.. !•-'• • • .. ' ' • • -- Denll• Notlre• · ·Slide Slioiv Slat~ Sweeps UCI DeLapp Will Be Election; SAMBO'S DOES IT AGAIN COMP°LETE CHICKEN DINNERS l.YO ... P()(lt• w1111, LYOI' .A111e 11, ol 70111 R1Vtr1ld• 0,,v,, S•nlt A~a Mtleflh. 011• ol dt•'"t. Ma~ IJ' 1917._, Su•vlvll<I ov morl>er, ••1r1 Btu e Lou Lvon; blher, M• W. P1rktr Lvon Ill; bro!lwr, 5ro!tJ •illtf' JNn. 111 ot S•n'• AM l 111r11w:tpar1nr1, Mr. and Mrf, W. P1rktr L voo , P1lm S11rln•u. SuvlcH, 11111••'. T~>d•v. l l'M, P1cltlc Vl1w Chti»I. lntt•men!, Poclllc View #tmorlt1 Ptrk. P.clllc Vlr.o Mortuarv, Oj•ecror1. MC lillll!I! hol>Pl M Mctlret. Age 40 ol Xlll """'°' P1!m D••vt. l".0\111 M•31 0111 ol 11111111, Ml<v U. 1tl1 Survlvl'<l bv hu1~•nd. J,)o'lt!. \(Ill, J11m1• TPnv ~cElrt~. W.tlnul Crl't'k' molP>et, M•rr C1mntMI!, [O'IM M.111: rwo ur~rl(!Cnlld·•n. P11v••• "'"""'' wrvk11 w .. e l\l'Jd ti 8111 l!roaow1v Mortu1rv lnur nmtnl. Ftl•hlVM Memorla! Ptrk BtU 8 •0..<lwlY Mo<twrv, Doretlllf•. • WELLS ?..:~: ~:/~•· J:k ,,.~;~o't::., $\i. c,~Y,~ $ttviCt1 pendlllll II lltll llfCM<IWI' /Wfuarv. WOOOAllO ~rv M. Wood1r<1. Agt ti, Of 210 W•ln11! F~.'''hf,011·~~';!~1~·, ':,';;,:,~,a··!~, ~r, Bre1<1wav Mor1111rv. VOUNG )M""' V•n(enl Vouriq Rr1l!lrn1 nl Jo\~1111 Trtt. Oa!r ot d~dlh. M1y n, 19'1. Surv•v· e<1 hv <l•u~n1er. All(e 5(11<1lm~n. Founi.I., Vtll~v; •our 1l1ten ""d rwo Ptro•hrr\. ~~· ... ~r1i:t.~.i,;::~~.·~·.~~.,~~1:.:c..l~e...~.T:; P1r1<. DlrKltcl Dy Paclllc View Marl111ry. ARBUCKLE & SON • WESTCL!FF MORTUARY t%'7 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa ... 646-4888 • BALTZ BEHGERON FUNERAL llO>IE Corona del J\1ar fi73-9450 Costa J\lesa 6-16--%4%4 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadwa y. Costa Mesa u 8-3433 J --. McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH iJORTUARV 1795 Laguna Canyon Rd. . 494-9415 • PACIFIC VIE\\- J\1Ert10RlAI~ PARK Cemetery rt1ortuary , Chapel 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport Beach, Caliiorn!a 644-2700 • PEEK f'AM!LV COLOMAL FUNERAL HOME 7801 Bolsa Ave. Westminster 893-35%5 • SJ\IlTHS' J\tORTUARY 627 J\faio St. llunllngton Beacb • 536~9 On Indian s In Atnerica SM(rA ANA - ''America. 1he Beau._tiful. As \'iewed Through the Eyes of an In· dian" is the title of lecture and slide presentation at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at Smedley Junio r High School. 2120 W. EdinRe r. Riley Su11rise, a Hopi Indian traditionalist, will ma.ke the presentttlio n of Hopi home- _lands or Oraibi. the oldest continually inhabited to"·n site in America. Sunrise now resides "'Lth his fa;,,1ly 1n Garden Gro\'e . Pie· tures of the Crow, Siou:t. Cheyenne, and N a v a j o reservations will also be shown. This is the second public a'p- pearnnce by Sunrise. who spoke to capacity audiences three weeks ago. There is no admi sson, charge, although a colll'ction will be made tu defr ay c~penses. Health Revival ORANGE -The f irst "Health and Ecology" revival ls cominJ!: to Chapman Co\leJ!:e ~1ay 27-28. It is open to the puhlic \\•ithout charge . Doctor Wins 2nd Dela y ) Preside11t A slate of st*nt5 bead,ed DeLapp received 298 votl?S to by Irvine resident T 0 m defeat four other presidential cand idates. DeLapp has ~pt to victory Students elected to the coun- in the student body elections cil and the schools they at UC Irvine. represent incl ude: DeLapp, a Junio1 history . Biological ,science! -Sc<itt ~. at the school, will Freeman of Tarzana, Bob au e the duties of student Wilkin of Arcadia and, sharing y president July 1. Also one seat. Greg ~1.arrujo of elected with Del...app were his Lake\.\.·ood, Bill McKibben of running mates Chris Kralick Long Beach end Bill Schobert of Sherman Oaks as executive of San Bernardino. vice president; Tim Stf:phens Engineering K e v I n of Belmont as administrative Desmond of Long Beath and vice president ; end Pat Creg l\1edeiros of San 11arioo Steven Eugene Hamilton of Uls Angeles. A representath·e· of the col- lege of medicine is still to be named to the council. a ANtHpHY SCHO_OL\t HARIOlt CENTllt >'lOO H••DO' c ... rer C91I" Mt•I, C1lllorni. Pk. 17141 979·2J5J Auliqi no of Van Nuys as stu-ho ·•--·1 t SANTA 'NA _ Dr. John 'II' ;).ll4.le one counc1 sea, ,.. dent service vice president. 1111 s. l1'90~h""'' s1. Shriver Gwynne. just one HumaniUes He 1 e n •~•h•im, c11. ntl4 in onth away from his Lo& AU four ot the: new student Zeilberger of Tarzana, Dian rt.. 1714) 776-5100 Angeles Superior C o u r t leaders will be seniors with Emerson of Palos Verdes andl I~=~ murder trial, has won a the beginning of 1 It e 1972·73 Tim Kelly of Downey. l1 further delay on his scheduled academic year. Delapp is tnterschool curricula sentenci ng in Orange County presently vice president under David Allen Miller of Downey Superior Court on abortion co-presidents Pat i1oore and and Ray Swartz of Likewood. charges. Steve Chamida. Social Sciences -Louis Judge \!Jilliam 1i1urray reset The elections marked a Smith of Los Angeles and the agreed . imposiiion of a change in the constitutional Garv Einstein or Montebello. $5,000 fine i and voluntary structure of stude nt govern· Physica l Sciences -John suspenSion or the Sn nta Ana ment \\•Ith the creation or · Bavsdnrfer of Bu rbank and physician's li cense for July 14. three vice presidentia l post's Jeff DeCurti.ns of f.1onterey Gwyn ne, 27, goes on trial and the abolition of a 28-Park. June 7 in the Los Angeles member student senate in Fine Arts John S. court's~Santa Monica division favor of a 24-member coon· Beckham .#· for the alleged murder of Deb-cil. 'The four executlvts will sit At-large membe rs 2 FOR THE PRICE OF 1 $3.70 VALUE FOR $1.85 The Fun Pl ace for Family Food! y,, w t 11111n ill Two of our unb~iti bl• chlc~•11 dtnn•" t rt yaun for ihe p1ic1 ef 3001 . S. BRISTOL SANTA ANA IANQUfT FACILITIES , 545.4479 Olttr Gffll MOn.-Tlllln. l tlWHll I & II ,.m. Nol Vllkl tar ~ •flit• t9 ... I Vcll ld 011ty ot Safl'lbo's, So11to An• -1-plra M•'( ll COUPON HAMS " • So Good It Will ~;aJ Haunt You 'Til It's G~ne" bie Dwyer, the l9-year-0ld on the council as voting Barbara Bodkin of San Juan Whittier girl who was once his members. · Capistrano, Larry Stahlberg of IETAIL STORES co-defendant in m U It i PI e With about a 25 percent San Bernardino, Ja mes 1700 r. Coan Highwo.,, Coran• .!el Mor -67J-900I Orange County abortiotl' ac· voter turnout at the campus Jackson of Altadena, Jim 1222 s. 1rookh11rst, A11ahei111 635-2461 lions. ,~~d~ur~i~ng~t~wo~d~a~ys~o~J~ba~Uot~m~g~,~O~rl~o~w~s~~·~o~J~Sou~th~La:!gu~na~a~nd~1~"""""""""""""""~~.;; .......................................... .;,;;;~~.;,;;;~:.~ ...................................................... ~ Harbor Man Admits Model Agency Guilt SANTA ANA -A· Newport Bea!=-h D_lan has plef!ded guJlty in Orange County Superior Court to conspiracy charges stemming from hi.$ role in the operation of the now defunct lntroduire Artist Guild (lAGJ model agency of Orange. Judge Willia m Murr.ay ac-' cepted the guilty plea of Philip Nadeau, 29, of 4250 Park Lane, and ordered him to return for sentencing June 8. Nadeau faces a possible term of one to 10 years in state prison. Judge Murray dismissed identical allegations against J\1ilton Moore , 38, Fountain Valley, on a motion filed by the prosecut ion . Michael Gerce y. 29, manager of IAG's Manhattan Beach ' office, had earlier pleaded guilty to conspiracy charges. J udge Murr a y ordered him to serve three years probatiori. The trio was accused on ar- rest and in a subsequent Orange County Grand Jury in- dictment of defrauding pro-- spective models by taking high agency fees with the promise that IAG could find them lucrative jobs. It was alleged against Uie tr io that they told their clients. many of them from the Harbor area. that JAG was casting for parts in televi.sion and motion pictures. that the agency was supplying all the actors and actresses for Universal Studios and that JAG had a 14-year contract with tbe city of Anaheim in which it .supplied hostesses and booth airll for the Anaheim Convention Center. • Pinto Wagon: We put a lot into it. You can put a lot in it. ' . What you can put in: over 60 cubic feet. Pu! the rear seat down and 1here~s 60:6 cubic feel of carrying space. For comparison, VW 5quoreback and Vega Kammba ck bo th give you Some Details. 1. The 1;k gale swings up and out of the woy. 2:The rearpassenger windows !l;p open. 3. The spare tire doesn'I lake up any lood room ~ouse it hos its own well under the floor. And be- neath it all, the rear suspen- sion i5Speciollydesigned for_load carrying. \2\ a bi! over 50 cubic feet. The basic $2265 • model. . It's the ideal choice for people • "" who want on economy car that if ~ carries more-or o ogon !hot com less. The white s.idewo\I t es {shown here) ore $28.00 exlra. The wheel covers, $23.23. Front Disc Brakes. Slandard. And there's precise rock-ond·pinion steering, which is normally found only in some of the more expensive sports cars. 2000cc Overhead Cam Engine. It's rugged, economical, peppy-and standa rd equipment. A 4-speed flo or mounted oll- synchro mesh transmission is a lso · standard. Better idea for safety.,. buckle upl In an emergency, the lastest way to gel help Is to have the right telephone number and make a direct call. That's why we left a place on the inside cover of your phone ·book for you to write In numbers for your Police and Fire Departments and your doctor. 01 course,if you don't know the number to c:all, dial "0" and the Operator wlll help you. @)Pacific Telephone. • S1idtf Price. Excludes dealer prepo,o· lion c.horges. if OIT'f, destination chorgM 1s1 OS.001, title, tons ond ColilorniQ •ml»iOn system ($1187). . • The Squire Option. That d~Hnctive wood-sided wag on look, plus~eel covers, special !rim, and more. No ~ther ec~nomy • wogo offers anylhing like it. Price with the Squore Op11on, $2479. The I age rack is $45.53 extra. The white ~idewoll 1;res $28.00. FORD PINTO FORO OIVISION .. We're here to helP, See Your Ford Dealer. • • ·-- • I • ' ;• I · t . . ~ I { ( ' .. Here, i • " ' ,. l . > l ~-; • . • ' ... They Do • • Love These Gowns A bride can dress to suit her personality this sum· 1ner and fall. thanks lo designers Oscar de la Renta a:1d ~lartin. If sh e 'vanJs a traditional church wedding, a sl11~00ard ceremony .. <>r garden nuptials, sh e will be beaut1fully gowned. Above, layers of organ za in a gored. princess·line skirt from Martin bring reminders of a romantic put, complete with its full, feminine hats. At right, Oscar de la Renta offers a dress that brings oUt the little girl in every woman. Swiss cotton, ed ged with ruffles, will please the most romantic bride. BelO\V, Oscar de la Renta offers a very unu sual bridal gown for the woman who wants something very different for her wedding. Its sailor collar \vill be at home on a ship or add interest lo a, traditional cere· mony~ • I • Come t e Bri • '," \-. .. .. , . , . ' " ~men BEA ANDERSON, Editor T111M1r. Mir If. 1f72 ''" 11 Francoise Is a Model Wife -- By MARIAN CHRISTY NEW YORK -Whenever fashion eoes through a kooky period, a decade of calm follows. It's the much-needed still after the storm. "The 60s were a marvelous decade for gimmicks and revolutions," says in- fluentia l American fashion designer Oscar de la Renta. ''But now it's tim~ for warn en to dress sedately." • Oscar, who feels that elegance is not a decadent word, has concocted an early fall, 1972, collect ion based on shirtsleeve dresses, cardigan jacket costumes and evening gowns that are either dramatic · caftans or dolman-sleeved gowns with swirling skirts. "The lost sense of quality is 6ei1rg revitalized," snys Oscar, whose fashion decis ions certainly are affected by his wife, the fonner Francoise de la !Anglade, an ex-Vogue edi tor. When character dressing was in fashion, Fra~ coise tried it -mostly to please Oscar. lt ditin't work. Oscar decided that his wife, the pro- totype of millions of women who felt defeated by fashion's silly whims, should be dressed simply but elegantly. That is, of course. his premise for fall . Francoise has always liked to own at least one winler coat that can top a number ot dresses or cottumes. Packing is less of a worry. WIDE SKIRTS · ';That's why I believe IO firmly In the tent coat,'' says Oscar. "Skinny co1ts limit what a woman can wear UJto demeath. With a tent coat my customer can wear chiC da ytime dresses that have skirts with width." Oeslgnen are certainly out to please women. OScar, like his famous col· leagues, isn't offering only one. look. He'• making 'plenty of skiMy coats that wrap on. But they have a 1972 signature -the: sleeves are dolman and the hemlines are , narrow. The.re are no dictates in fashion 1n7 more -only choices. Oscar's evening k>ok takes two dlrec- • lions: He shows many fabulous versions of the silk print chiffon caftan that flows seductively around the body. Some have huge palllette designs on the bodice -a standout being the butterfly which is the Oriental symbol of good luck. There's also the covered-up gown witll high neck, dolman sleeves shooting out of the empire waist and a bias-cut skirt that fiWays deliciousl y. "When Francoise wears this type of gown and all the other ladies are semi-bare -she's the one who "'stands out," says Osclr, who believes his customers should do likewise. PHOTO REQUEST · The couple met when Francoise was a Paris editor for Vogue and OSCar \fas a struggling backroom assistant to French . -designer Castillo. Francoise telephoned one day and asked to photograph a blue chiffon gown with a coordinated coat made from o.strich feathers. When Oscar arrived at the studio, Francoise was sitting on a stool, observ· tng the goings-on from on high. Oscar'I premier impression of Francoise wa1 that she was a "big shot'' and he was "unimportant." The intimidation was short lived. There "'ere lots of parties in Paris that week and best-dressed ho stesses sat Oscar and Francoise side-.by.side. Eventually OScar invited Francoise to watch Nureyev dance. After the show Oscar decided to go to a bistro rather than to a Duke and Duchess of \V indsor party. The two danced the night away. Today Francoise is a full.time wife. She and Osca r have just re stored a fOur·story 1860 townhou se on 62nd Street in li.fanhat- tan. They also own a country estate set on 65 acres in Kent . conn. \Veekends Oscar dabbles in painting and Francoise cooks. /'"~ ''tstarte<fout to be an artist," Oscar 1ay1. "But my father refused to continue subsidizing me after six year!! of nothing." Oscar . who draws well, eve~ tually 1o1d some fa shion sketches to Madr id fashion houses. And that, of course. was•lhc other begiMlng of everything. ' I • ~ ~~ Ir; ~I/ \ f 1 . ' !Y )' ~ ' '~ """\ • Oscar. de la ~enta offers a dolman·sleeved gown w:th 11 hip -•titch pl eated •kirt for fall-winter. ' )4 t • / Playmaf es ·. Victims of Excess Overbites 1 1 , DEAR ANN LANDERS : ~iy 19-ycar~ld DEAR READER: A h~man b~e can be ton ls &t11n1: wllh a girt 20. They spend very dugtroua. Tbe moutb I• full of al moal every evening together -often at bacteria ud complie11N>n1 can re1 ul t if ur house. She comes here after work cbe vletbn dOflla't bavt enougb re1l1tance fi nd has dinner and tben she and Stev~ &o flP,t off Infection. I hope thue lwo alch 1'V or wrestle. The ·wrestling is all gladtal0r1 bave bad tetanus 1ho11. Un good fun ..,:. or at least I THOU GHT it DEAR ANf'il LANDERS: I didn't care F~as fun until I noticed that sometimes for youf answer to "Hoppin' Mad in ey really hu rt each other. . Modesto" -the woma n whose husband I Several wecks·ago lhe gi rl bit Steve 10 was a great dancer and got mobbed at hard it broke the skin. He had her patties by wives whose husbands had leethmark~ on hi s neck for several days. htrnias, prostate trouble or wouh:l rather Last night Steve bit her in the flftShy part sil and drin k. You seemed to thil1k the ~of her upperar1n . She scre11med so loud wife should keeR her mouth1shut ahd-sit ~the~ must have heard her in Buffalo. It it out. bled quite a lot . · It so happens tijat my husband is a l once heard that~a human bile can t;>e wonderful dancer, so I've been· around t dange rous. Yes or no~ -A CANADIAN that track plenty. When I was young and 1READ.E;R. !~Ii.sh J .used to ha\'e my hair fixed and I I -. ,, . "V .. ,.,A " •• ' Mother's Day Surprise • '4•.t~ ~ .. betur tbu mlDe and l helftily eodorse JL Thaili for improYiDI oa my answer • 1 DEAR ANN LANDERS: I can tell you lead a pretty soft Jife from the kookie answer you gave the man whose wife goes next door to Vlslf nl!!ighborS a couple of times a week. Your concern seemed to be for the little woman and her loneliness -not a word about the hard-working husband who collapses after sui)per, too pooped to do anything but watch !fV. born, ill-tempertd, unreasonable peopte there are ln th.ls world. Wake up or get a new job. -0 CITY DEAR O: I do.a't work with th e public? Would you believe a thousand letters • day. The wife who Wrote to me bad a very 11nemJc mania1e and 1 stand by my advice to transfuse it. get detked out in my best bib and tucker .. ' anyplace where there might be dancing, He solved the problem with a simple phrase, "Sorry, I pro mised this dance to n1y wif~." • Can dru{s be a rriend in lime of stress? ~ -only to end up sitting by, my lone5Q1Pe while Twinkle-Toes was pulled and hauled every which way. (Women even cut in on us ~ J I got to thinking maybe il was up to me to tell these brassy bi mbos to leave my husband alone. Then I decided no -tt , was up to HIM. Finally I. informed him that unless he C{)uid figure out some way to say "no" l would not &CC{)mpany him I hope you will print my Jetter s"ince i t makes better sense than your mealy- mouthed, submissi ve approach whic h reflects your well-known philosophy of a long leash for husbands. -NE\V ENGLAND NELL . Your dumb suggestion th at ma ybe the wife ought to invite people in was the liv- ing end. If a guy is too ti red to talk to his wife, why should he be bothered with company? If you keep your head together can they be ot help? Ann Landers' new bOC?klet, "Str~ight Dope on Drugs" separates th e fact from the fiction. Get it today. For each booidet ordered send a dollar bill, plus a Jong, self-addressed, stamped envelope, with IQ cents postage to Ann Landers, Box 3346, Chicago, Ill., 606M. PEAR NELLIE : Your solution' ls much It's plain yo u don 't work much with the public. You have no idea bow many stub- " Questioning Periods Punctuate Life By ERMA BOMBECK Some people say you are deteriorating mentally when you begin to talk to yourself. Others say you reach the br eaki n g po int when you answer yourseU. This is nonsense. It's im possible today to find anyone who has not at some 1 lime or another sought their O\Yll con· fidence. It 's that kind of ti world. In fact, one wa y con versations have become so commonpla ce, there are at least 10 standard 11itua tions in "'hlch talking to oneself is perfectly acceptable. I. The woman standing in the middle of the kitchen ask ing herself, "If I ~·ere car keys, where would I hide?'' 2. The tel evision viewer who runs over and punches the guy sitting on the edge of Hie bed in the stomach and chides, "You ate it all right, Ralph, so · sit there and suffer!" 3. The man on the golf course who has just missed a two-inch putt and is the only one who wouldn't be shocked by his X·rated dialogue. AT WIT'S END 4. The man putting together a bicycle o n Christmas eve when t he man ufacturer has failed to in- clude three win g nuts, the rightssize chain. predrilled holes the size of the bolts in· eluded, and the eight-pa&e in-- struction booklet. S. The young mother who overhears 'her mother-in-Jaw tell ing her grancdhild that if Mama doesn't have time to read stories and bake cookies to call her up and she will come right ovet_and-. ick her up and leavt(~ama to crub her stupid old johns. 6. The man in the opping center parking lot w o follows a woman for 20 min tes to her car thinking she i oing to leave and give him he park- ing place, only to discov she is dropping off packages. 7. The woman v.·ho is mar· r ied to a man with a 23- televised. football · games-a . week habit. (It 's even pe rmis· sible for her to dance u·ith herself.) 8. The m othe r who rehearses her "I'm leaving" speech just after h e r preschooler thre\v up in the knife and fork drawer. 9. The public listening to campaign promises. 10. The woman in the fit- ting room zipptd into a dress she cannot get out of and the entire sales staff has left for a salesmeeting in the Bahamas. Conventions Fill Calendars The other day I not only talked to myself and answered me, I asked, "What did you say again?" 0 r a n g e Coast C I u b to getting more for youi foda members will be kept busy at dollar is be ing offered by a number of conventions and workshops for the nex,t few· · Oran&e Coast . College. The days. A course on getting more class meets on Mondays at for your. food dollar, polka 9:30 a.m. in the Costa Mesa dance, flower show a nd Girl s Club. The course is of. Mother's Day lunches also are scheduled. ESA Sorority fered .as a part of the college's Consumer in the Community program. Polka Dance ~1embers of the Polish N~­ tional Alliance will do the pol ka during a Mayflower's Dance at 9 p.m. Saturda y, May 20, in St. Gregory the Gteat Church hall, 'Whittier. Women's Lib Orange County Women's Center has been moved to 429 Sycamore St., Santa Ana. I answered me back. •·1r ... you're not going to pay at- tention, then forget it!" I'm in trouble. Workshops on Women Working1 .. ----------Together will be presented there from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday, Ma y 20. M is for the many things sheJave to her own children, the mentally retarded and in civic work. that earoe :National Mother of 1972 honors for Mrs. Esth er Hunt Moore of Hickory, N.C~ Ttie1 64-y ear-old winner was selected by the Ameri can Mothers Committee. Daughters Beatrice and Ma r i e congratulate Mom with a kiss. Couples ~. FRANCIS- '\,, ORR J Looking fo r •" di•mond •ng •CJ•· m•nf ring +h•t it •1 fr•1fi •nd ••fr•ordin 1rv •i th• f••ljn9 •of b•in9 in lov17 511 th• many •1c.ilin9 new d11i9n1 at j1w•!1 by jo1eph. Pric.11 from SI 00.00 . • · Mrs. Al Lamkins, newl y in- .stalled president of I h e Orangewood Regional Council, Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority, will attend the annual slate convention which begins on Friday, May 19, in Sa n Fran· cisco. Her council will host the convention next year. The Couples Club "'iii meet at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, May 20, in Coda's restaurant, Buena Park. Dean and ~1ary Jean Bro wn, recording artists from Long Beach, v.•ill entertain, WOMEN'S Wl.ltll Sba ' hi 21 251J E. Co11t Hwy. FINE STATIONERY srECIAL OFFER MONOGRAMMED Your Horoscope AWARE Ass isteens Co1'9n• dtl Mi r '1l-ltt0 New officers from 29 Assis-Dollar lor Doll ., th• NOTES ' r Cancer Gains Freedom AWARE, Association for Women's Active Return to Education, will meet for the ir seventh anniv ersary celebra- tion Sunday, May 21 , abDJ,rd the Queen Mary. Nine women will he awarded Minerva Honors for t h e i r ac- complishments. teens Auxiliaries of the Na-fiR•1twom•n'1 wa •r ova il•ble. SAVE 15°/0 Soutll C1111 1"1111 l rltlol on Ille S•n Dl-,o "'""· tioool Assistance League will 2121f.ttAST11, ••• , t 1'-11 11 Your c;h••9• •c;count w•lcom•. tfllllltl O•I <DI Coil• M111 540·f064; meet at league headquarters \'~==~~~~::;:::-!_!~~~~~· ;'!~"~'~1~"~"~"~'~1;;;;;;;;;;d in Hollywood Saturday. ~1ay 11er1c1n11 ti.111n<1 •tu••· I· WEDNESDAY MAY 17 I· Ill' SYDNEY OMARR ,. Plenty of financial .chani es • are occurring for many born under Virgo. Natives of this zodiacal sign want to be of service, are perceptive:-°often critical and can be mag netic and regal. If one a11ks Virgo for a favor, c oo peration usu811y can be expec ted. ARIES (March 21-April 19): Accent on romance. B e creative. You can make loved one happy through purchase of sentimental gift. Remember birthday s, olher anniversaries. TAURUS (Aprjl 20.May 20): Now necessary to m a k e decision concerning 11 o m e • property, matter affecting security. Sti ck to basic is~ues. Don't meander, wander or engage in "'ishfu l thinking. GEMINI (fi.1ay 21-June 211): Emphasis on relatives, short journeys. development o f ideas. You receive accolade from one in authority. Be versatile. Display h u mo r . CANCER (June 21-July 22 !: Finish what you start. Spread influence; broaden horizons. f..loney situation improves. You have a greater freedom. Delve deer. for--answers lo ap· parent di emma. Situation is not likely to be w~t it ap- pears on surface. Aquarlan is involved. Intuition, intrigue and mystery are featured . LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 ): no w do01 inale. Relationship is put lo lest. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Spe<:ia l duties, chores are featured. RememQer pa s t lessons -apply kn owledge. OCC Class A six-week course devoted Review desi res. You may be r--------------------~ asking for something you can do without. Be flexible. Use . al ternatives. Socialize. Make contacts. Your own style now intrigues. SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21): Promises should be taken with proverbial grain of sa lt . Those at top talk about making room for you. Take c.ash and let compl i ment s go. Be meticulous about details. What appears' a certainty needs more-investigating. SAGIITAR!US (Nov. 22· Dec. 2ll: Good lunar ~spect now coincides with travel. vacalion activity, creati ve ef· forts. \Vrite, publlsh and advertise. G€t oot of rut, emo- tiona l and ot h e rw ise. CAP~ICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 191 : Family discussio.n con· cerning invesrmenls, savings is a necessity. AQ UARlUS (Jan. 2G-Feb. l 8 l : Questions concerning sJ)<'cial agreements, marriage ·For Press Chairmen Workshop Set Th e DAILY PILOT will conduct aseries of workshops f or press chairmen of Orange Coast women's organiza tions. Presidents are also welcome. 1\vo work shops will be conducted each afternoon during the week of May 22·26. EaCn will be limited to 40 persons and reservations will be taken on a first-come, first-served basis. The sessions, scheduled at I and 3 p.m., will include a tour of the newspaper plant and a qu es tion and answer period, conduct ed ~ Bea Anderson, WOJ¥n's editor. To make reservations, call the DAILY PILOT at 642-4321 and ask for the women's department. '-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--' 20, for the second Assisteens Officers Workshop. New officers of the Assis· teens of Huntington Beach will be installed during a dinner meeting Monday, May 22. They are the Misses Kelly Otis, chairman; Cheryl Gera, vice chairman; Diane Murray, se<::retary; Beth Broderick, treasurer:' Candy Sela nders, publi c relations: Missy Miller, projects, and Kim Broderick, ways .and means. Mom's Lunch Beta Alpha Pi members will pertake of a Mother's Day lunch at 11 a.m. Saturday. May 20, 1il Sam's S e a foo d restaurant, lluntington Beach. DIAMOND REMOUNTING Y.ur 1•m wm !Mii: ,,,..,, .. _ H•r , •• W• ll•v• •• 1111Um11..a c.ite(tlotl llf •!VIit. ... ..... 1"'1 •11 "'"1flflnl• Wlfll tllll Id, HONDA JEWELERS .. • ., ·~· • •••I• 25 Y••r1 Exp•ri1n~• ADAMS et IROOIHUIST HUNTINaTON IUCH 961-2212 LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 1: Lu nar cycle high: take in-lr'--;.;;------- itiative. Study C a n c e r message. Be independent in thought, action. Pe r s on a I magnetism attracts opposite sex. :f...lake spec i a I ap- pearances. Add bright colors to wardrobe. VrRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221 : ~OON. LTJ'""1 -....:..r.t:~ ..... NE\V., • Stars, St.r:lpt'll "t. SailboB1 ~ Appllquf!d Shirts & Shorts By !1ore nce Ei5('man ~~· .,,. ... .-.......... ,.11, ......... , .a,1"1twt>'• U•,.. 1., IM •••llil-•4 llunUn1lon Harbour Clll) IU·lii6 Town & Country Oran Re (111) 551.9515 TWO NEW BEGINNERS COURSES IN HOUSE PLANT CARE by LEW WATERMAN EVENINGS-7:30.8:30 MONDAY-MAY 22·29 JUNE 5-12-19 S LECTURES -$15.0o .CALL -645-3256 AFTER 5 P.M. ATTENTION HOME SEW:ERS NEVER BUY ANO HER PATTERN!!! Copy or Design Your Own Clothes! Attend One of Our 90-Minute Classes Given by " Specially Trained Consultant NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY Learn The Following e Drofr Y 0 11r 0Wfl P.m.11111 e Copy Any Styl• or G.,..trt • Adj111t A11y Comiwerclel PtrfNnll • A r1rlect Fir l'Nf'Y T11M No Alttu1tl1111·lfff • • Compl•t• • G•ntt9Wt h1 2 Hown e Need Atte11d OM CIGIS Ollly TO THOS E ATTENDING A Valuable Gi ft FIRST TIME EVER IN COSTA MESA THURSDAY MAY 18, 19n lODI WAY INN, I 1400 ratltodet ••illif " l'l'lllf 1<1tl el Htwwt .. ,,,.,. l'•ll1acltt JIMll A•ll • 90-MINUTE CLASS Be9innin9 at 10 A.M., 1 P.M. and 7:30 P.M. Admission Fee $3.00 SOc LeH with this •d. One ed per l•dy Jim.II Part-Skim Milk · F!nMEn CHEESE Th is is th• semi-soft. ~rt P im milk c::tie''' Reg. $1 .79 lb. as it was originelly rMdt In Europe by fa rm- ers for .,1ny Ytl rs. The flavor is f)ltell t nt,.. $) 59 smooth ind creamy, Firmer Oitese is ~reat lb. for, snacking •nd cooking. OFPll GOOD MAY 16 THIU MAY JI LET YOUR TASTE BUDS DO THE TALKING ... SAMPLE BEFORE YOU BUY. IT'S A WAY OF LIFE AT . <» a~t ,,, .11r!!~ · · &Guth Coast ?Iua COST A MESA '"-c,.,,... Mon -1""°1 "' '°' D~ frwy. a,.. IH!lty: S•ltdcrf ofMr Chrcll 'tll I fl.M. -PHONI 140·1ttl AME!UCA'S Lt!DING cm:s STOllES • • • • , • DICK TRACY VfS.JU5T FIRST A.10 f'ORME. l 'M OKAV. Mun AND JEFF A .JOI FOR YOU. CORONER, A.T DIET SMITH'S. ' I KNOW 11!':)• HIM! < •ONE OF~. MV Ji\NITORS. I ' By Tom K. Ryan .t'!t N:M.YS 1lro;llT THf w Wi'S mswi: \\'ORK WK'( WELL. 10Grnlf'R ~" By Al Smith 'THERES No l<EASDN 'TO BE! Yoll HAD A, SQ WONDERRJLMOT'4ERS . DAY'--COME DEPRESSED ; . oN Now- NoWSITHEREAND LOSE YOURSELF IN THE WARM GLOW 01= 'THIS CHEER'F L-WOOD FIRE! ·ATTA GIRL! LOSE YOURSELF, GET LOST.' FIGMENTS . " i1 ... NANCY WAIT THE.RE --- l'LL 'GET TWO ICE-CREAM CONES O NE CHOCOLATE CONE AND ONE VANIL LA I DAILY .CROSSWORD-:-.~:.>-POWER I ACROSS 1 Foot rrs\ S F•ith 10 Sltndtr 14 l1adlt11)1•I dJnCt of l!tr~tl ts Swift11t~s lb Ont lt11ni11g 1 new act,.1· •ty: V•r. 11 "It's not I • lit11111d1ty' .•. --'": 3 wore~ l~ Far .. ,.,~,. 20 ···of peJrl '21 Q:mlsh CO•·I 2Z Nt19i11!,.0t cl Ktntl.l(~y 23 Toronto lilap'~ 25 Elprt~SIClll of ccnte'I Pl 2b Slri~t w1th cpen h1r.d }0 Sp•r.ish \otl r Abbr. JI Indulged Ill •quahc !tPOl1 34 Nott<! ntw!tPdP" 3& Misti~~ ~8 Highrs! 1.0\' 3~ "The Br1r Vient ··· ··· ... " ) .,Otd~ 42 M~n·s m~k;1~· • 43 lUbr •C~ltd 4C A Stn!tf 45 flprtS~IUj •· irrr:h 47 Twt lllh JllOlllh: Abbi'. ·~ HOl'lty mi te< ~O -·Mar;, ~l 'Nalli;1119 53 Ot9rtt SS Af1 umit"t VO\t' Si. Sala•f 1·1crra~•s bl lila91\t t1c irttal i.2 Ac! of hold, 19 back I>~ S11rr !h11•;· 51 Ang b5 Bobby •••• 'lottd gol!tr bb 1Jo111ntr or wal~1n9 i 7 Or1 td t lo1•t •. 1llall~. t i' bB C0110mm9 1 su9M &" A lot: t11for"lll 00\lo "I l T Jptred P•t(t to \r·1rl '11Chlllf 2Dcgm"T~, ~11,,d o1 Oz" ! F Of!T't tly • Roule s ..... ' 511 ' ! Hot ti" Ii H11rr1l1 7 w ~r: 4 wc·Q> ii Cr!est11I bodir~ Yu tmlaJ'S Puzzle Solvrd: q ···.1·tr1r 10 St1tlon~y patl or ' dynamo 11 "Livmq' ··· -... ": 3 word~ 12 tlrighbo: of T uikey ll Time of di v: Poet. II Under.,.Ofld QOddes~ '" '"" lfylhology 24 S!~germ~ 2~ )c:Qfchtd 2~ Outer Ro:~ln g•rl!lt1l 27 Body gl~·1d 28 Couect •~e 2'1 Bv the 31 Sou\hffn· AnDr. 32 ,.lost sk1!itd ~1embrr 33 5c•ndin1vi1ns 35 14 PQU11ds, m B1it1in )1 Catt lt r01J11d11p 40 Slip 41 Flotp 4& ll'ICidtnls 41 Clo'St·flttmq undrrgarmrnt ~l Bow and ··-· 52 Mike l1;;e bt """~ ~3 Possessing great wr1!U1 54 Rrg ion 55 Chums ;,1 Misc'11f'llous (l•ildrtn 51 Kind of lur ~~ NWI ending ~O Ye1t and Vt°9f\ibl t ~1sh ~3 :.111111 to 111! '"' i u 11 PLE AS E TAKE THE MONEY OUT OF MY POCKET- PEANUTS -·· JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH 8 0Y, AM 1 B~Ol<E. NOT A PENNY Q!.TWf.EN NOW ANO NEXT .. .AU.Y'S .AiL.LOWANCE". FL.AT·BUSTED POVE~TY·ST~lC~EN . PERKINS '~ .. By Dale Hale by Ernie Bushmiller --IT'S TH ~ ONE W ITH MY PET SNAKE IN IT • .. Hl,JQE ... UW'5 '/OUR FRIEND WITH THE flANKET ? ;J: WISM I COULD &ET tNTO Mi LlMOU~IJ<Jf; AND H AYE M'/ QlAUFFEUlt DR IVE ME iO ~ MY 8~Nl<E It . ... -;l-. • .. GASOLINE ~WY SALLY BANANAS GORDO MOON MULLINS ' I I i uetd,1, M.ar 16, 1972 "!OU \\OIJ~1"f . N!ilD Mii IN 11115 ~ .:•.JACJ..L/T01/.C!PtZ! .. , .. ·-"-OFF TO WOl>J( AS USU.AL., WINSTON?- ·ves,. Pl'OF. BURI'!>;. 8UT NOT AS U5U,Al - DAIL.V PILOT ly Dick Maores 1 Don't touch the peint! lt's wet~ By Gus Arriola . By Ferd Johnsan ANIMAL CRACKERS By Roger Bollen BUT-1 00N'.T H~YE ~ LIMOUSINE, O~ • CHAUFF'E UI< 01< A BANKE.::. By Mell J:'M S'.J llPRi~ED. ,Ii. MA N 1N YOU Jr PCS 1T~N ... By John Mill!s THE GIRLS •·NOTWf\iG gOts fa11ter than tile IG days be.fort you h1Ye t.!J>ay for M!methlni;." DENNIS THE MENACE • JI · DAILY PILOT Berry~ Ryan .. "Are Latest Ailin~ Halos 8y CRAIG SHEFF. Of h DlllJ' f"ltr•t lt1H This b d.tinllely not tho year of tho Ancef. · Hit by • rash of injuries to their front· . . 11.ne pitcber1 in the la1t few weeks and plagued> by 1 lack of coruistency, the California Angels ju11t haven't been able to put tt together. · It's sot td improve, but the way the 1 " •·"'· 1 " fl.l'l"I. J:JS •·'"· J" ...... J·H "·"'· 1!:1o'l ...... Halos are 11llin1 in combat one l'Wly wonders. Monday night at Anaheim Stadiurh the Halo bata were not only silenced by r Oakland pitcher John "Blue Moon" Odom. but two. more An5el1 player• were hlt by injuries. Odom pitched a nifty two-hitter in heating the H1lo1 for the 12th time in 18 UP.I. ?1l111htt9 THE PADRES' ENZO HERNANDEZ CATCHES LA'S BILL BUCKNER IN PICKOFF PLAY. decl1ion1, 2-l. _ .....,.. Outfielder Ken Berry and pitcher Nolan ftyan are the l1tt1t hospital cases. Berry aurfered a moderate concuS;Slon and a deep eash over his right eye after crashing into A's second bueman Larry Brown while ·atltmpting to break up a dollble play in the ail:th inning. Berry plowed i~to Brown about three quarter1 of the way down the line. but was knocked unconscious ln the process . He wu. tbtn carried ofr the field on a stretcher and taken to St. J.oseph 's Hospital In Or&JJge for x-rays. It's undetermined how Jong he'll be out, bul one thins ia certalh he'll be missed. Berry waa leading the American League in tutting comln1 Into the game with a .S73 average. '[be hard-throwing Ryan suffered a tightening of a previously pulled thi1h muacle Jn the fourth inning and was ushered out of the game by Rice after throwilig a home run pitch to Angel Mangual. Halo pitcher Andy Messersmith is. ex· 'Jlfeled to be out at Ieut another 10 da~s with tendonitis in the middle finger et hi• pltchin1 hand . And pitchers Clyde Wright and Paul Doyle are atill nursing aore arms, 1lthough Wright rontlnues to stay in the rotation . "I really don't know how long Berry and Ryan will be out." says Rice. "We won 't know until tomorrow sometime. "Jn Ryan's case. it's a day-to-day basis. We might have to leave him out a couple ~I weeks." Btcause of the injury, Ryan was unable· to throw the sl ow curve ball effectively. Tha t's the pitch that Mangual hit for his home run, said Rice. Meanwhile, the Angels se nt catcher Joe Au:ue to Salt Lake City but he i1 refusing to report. . . Game No. 2 of the four·1ame !ier1es 1s toni&ht witli the Halos' Rick Clark (2-3 ) facing Oakland's Diego Segui (0-0 ). OAKLAHD CALl,OllHtA (l"'Pflfl H 1111111 If JI Jl tk•Oll rt 111>110 lll 1-1eg111 lb Ollnttn t MtntlHI d L 1.e-tb e11111e111 tb Odo• • ... , .. JM .... , .. ,., J I 0 0 JllVHI d J 0 e 0 •llJ\lffryct 2000 •OIO K111t11rf 1000 JOllLAllfllt 11111 O I 11 I l"I,,..... ti • 1 0 0 l 111 1 O JI Ollv1t lti • I I 1 4 1· 1 1 .M(t.\ullt"lll • I I 0 '''le'~"''''' 1000 •00 K111"y1 r c 1000 l00 0Abi'Nr211 JllO HJly1nt 011 1 'llv1rl11, rl I 0 O t ,,. ''' "T11t11 l1 J J 2 T1t1t 1' 1 2 I 01kl.,'HI 1110 11.0 000-J (111111·~11 100 0111 oeo-1 [-OISll,.., LOl -Otkl1MI ,, C1Utor~l1 •· 21- Jl llltl. JI Ollvl •. MJ1-M111111J1I 10. Sl-Cl "'Dlntrl1. !.-N. Jly111. " • • • ' ' ' ' ' . IJI II l ,, J j Iii ' (Ounc111. ' ' T-2:11. Indy Driver Still Critical ' ' . ' ' ' ' ........ ,, •. " ._. ' ' • INDIANAPOLIS -Jim Malloy. "·ho was injured during practice Sunday at the Indianapolis 500-mile Speedway. con· l1nued to be listed in critical condition al Mtthodi1t Hospi!al early today. A hospital spoke~man said thf' :18-year· old ri.talloy, of Denver. entered the' hospital in critical condition ind there was no chan«e in his condilion report since arrival. "" SAN DIEGO -Preston Gomez 11ys the man who fired him as manager of the San Ditgo Padres 1s the smartest man in ba .. boll. "He did whal he believtd necessary." Gomez said of E. J. •·euztie" Bavasi. ·~ $20,000 Sari Diego Re.ject • Paying Off fo .r Los Angeles SAN DIEGO fAPJ -Chris Cannizzaro never ~anted to leave San Diego when t~ Padres traded him t~ the Cubl last uJson. Now the 34-year-old catcher is proving one of the best $20.000 Invest· ments the Los Angeles Dodgers have made in ages. "It's great to be with a first-place team, but I live here and J ha ve a soft Dodger~ Slate Ml ., 16 Oocl!Hfl 11 !1n 011111 Mi r 17 00dte•1 11 !en Ole90 Ml., 1' Ooclteri VI. HouUon , ~'( It Doelger, VS HDu1•0~ M1v 10 Dlldtt" v1. Moutten 12,\ p m. J )j "in. ' JJ p .... ,. JJ " "'· I 'll Pm. spol in my hearl for this San Diego team.'' Cannizzaro sa id Mond:iy night after he broke a tie \~ith a ninth -inning pinch single to give the Dodgers a 2-l vie· tory and break the Padres' heart s. The Dodgers picked up Cannizza ro for the $20;000 v.·aiver price last "'inter. Thrust into the lineup after an early- season injury to Duke Sims. Cannizzaro has averaged .324 for 'the Dodgers and has driven in five runs in the 11 games he has played. His clutch hit Monday night kept Los Angeles one game ahead~or Houston in the National League West and gave the Dodgers their 11th San Diego Stadium victory in a row -a streak dating hick to 1970. Bu t this latest Los Angeles triumph was a near thing. Acting San Diego manager Bob Skinner left rookie left-hander ~jike Cald"•ell on the mound v.•tleii Cannizzaro came ur to pinch hit in the ninth \\•ith the bases load· ed and one out. · "W ith Caldwell 's sinker. I'm pretty confident Chris is bound to ground into a double ," Skinner said, "and he altnost did." Cann izzaro hit a grounder deep into the hole at short and Enzo Hernandez was able only to knock d?wn the single that cashed in \\'i llie Da \'is' leadoff bloop do u· ble to short left. "We hit the ball harder than they did but too many of ours were line drives righl at somebody," sa id Skinner, who filled in ll'hen mailager Don Zimmer had lo take an early-evening fiight to Florida LOS ANGELES •brhrlll SA"I DIEGO . 111 r ft rb! l 0 I 0 1 0 0 0 J 1 ' 0 ' 0 1 (I J 0 0 0 .1 0 0 0 J 0 2 ' J 0 0 0 j 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 ll:~Sllli " B~ckner 111 W Davll (I F ll:Obln1on rl Crawford II MO!t 11 Grbkwl!1 Jb S imi G Ctnnlzzro c Vtllnllnt 7b Brewer ll Gt•vt y Oh M lkkel1n ll oc .... 1119 o Ltf11!~r1 lb Tota l L'll Anqtlts San Ol~o JO l O OTntlmt,211 1 O I 0 JtJted! 111 I l I O !-lttntndl ,~ 3100L,e lt 1 O 0 0 Colbtr! lb o o o o .J•ierct J 0 0 0 Mnrtll~ rf 1.0 1 O Kend•llc 1 o I 1 Camob111 lb JO llArlln n O O O 0 016rown o~ l O O 0 Ctldwell n O O O 0 Corkln1 p 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 19 2 6 2 Tot1I 3116 1 0 10000001-1 000000010-1 Positive Thinl{ing l(ey To Success-Aspromonte . CLEVELAND (AP) -Ken Aspromonle "'as convinced that posilive thinking could change the Cleveland Indians from chronic losers to penna nt contenders. llnd a 14-3 record sO far this season is bearing him out . "l knew I ha d a ball cluh lhRI wris going to compete for the top," said Aspromonle, whose Indians are in first place in Lbe American League 's East Diviaion. "I bad 1 team \Yhich had just lost 102 games," the first -yea r field boss ~aid. "They were the same players physically, but something else mentally." He said his "bigget job" was to gel his players into a winning frame of mind1 not ing, ''!l's easy to lose. It's a tough job 10 be a 'vinner. I kne\v I had to instill th is in !hem and get them to think ~Hively." Aspromonte tre;:ited spring traini ng ex- hibition games like championship con· lest.!i ·and said. "I Clln't see giving up ball games in sprinlil trriining because it knocks do"'n·morBlc. ''I do not 1•:ant any one on my ball club lo lake losing easy. I want them to lhink about it." · Aspromonte , 41. whose 011·n mtijor leag ue career was undistinguished . said he "thought we had a good nucleus" in spring training . Trades and rookies have ... re1haped the ball club. Newcomers include outfielder AleX" Johnson, pitCher Gaylord Perry and first baseman-outfielder Tom McCra11•. all veterans obtained in trades , and rookie pitchers Dlck Tidrow and Milt Wilcox. outfielder Buddy Bell and second baseman Jack Brohtimer. The latter is from Huntington Berich. Perry. fi-2 11'it h a 1.98 earned run a1·eragc. \l/ilcox 4·3 1vith a L25 c.r.a. and Tidrow 3·2 11·i1h a 3.24 e.r.a. are now the mainstays of the pitching staff. Already forgotten by fans is Sam McDon·e\l, for )'ears the ace of the mound corps •. \\'ho 11•as traded for Perry. McCra1v took ove r al first base v.·hen Chris Chambliss. AL rookie of the year in 1971 , suffered an injury in the second game of the season. McCraw leads the team "~"ilh a .348 battin_g average. F.ddie Leon . a .260 hitter. was benched in favor of Brohamer, "'ho 01111s a .322 average. Roy Foster. an outfielder v.1ho belted 18 homers last season . is playin g behind Bell. who·s hitti ng .268 with nine runs baited in. "Some of the boys came on much quicke r than I thought," a d m i t s Aspromont e 11~th~ee over Tid1vell. 'Belt, Brohrimer <tnd 'lcox. "I'm just as thrilled as they ~r . '' Aspromonte admits the ball club lacks pov.•cr hitters and has made up for i! l\'ll h ;in offense or hit-and-run , sacrifices , bunts and steals . "'We\1e got about five or six guys who can really run." he said. "This is a great asset to a ball club. You can do a lot with speed." The Indians wit h only 11 home runs In 22 games. have sv.·1 ped f7 bases. lo testify fo r the government. Zimmer hopes to be back Tuesday night before rook ie Bill Greif ,(3·3) pitches t.Qe second game of th(' series against Dodge·r right· hander Bill Singer \2·31. Dodge r mRnagPr \Valter Alston called t.1onday 's effort the best of the season for lett-hacid starter Al Downing. \vho was lifted in the seventh with the bases loaded , tv.·o out Rnd Los Angeles ahead. I· u. Reliever Jirri Brev.·er faMed Garry Jestadt to end that rally but gave up the tying run in the eighth. Dejected Jim Ryu n portrays disappoi.nl· n1ent moments after running next to last in Sunday's feature mile run at the Martin Luther King Games. Ryun ran 4:14.1 - a far cry from his world record of 3:51.1. ' Once Won 31 Games McLain Fizzles, . ' Sent to .Minors Pltche5 which lacked 1team and a medical problem were cited by Oakland A 'g manager Dick Wiiiiams when .he broke the news that former .11-game win· · ner Denny Mclta in was optioned to the minor leagues. · "He just w1 .!in't throw ing the b11!1 as hard as we know he can." sa ld Williama of the right·hl!lder who hu 1 $7S.00o con· tract. McLa in. apparently informed of the move Monday morning by A's . O\~er Charles Finley did not make the trip with the · team here for a serles with the California Angels. Williams said the pitcher visited a doc· tor on Sunday who blamed a m~ication. McLain was taking for making the pitcher feel weak . The prescription was c h an g e d , William s said. but he didn't ment ton what- ailment McLain was under treatment for. Over the weekend, WilUams had demoted McLain to the A's bullpen aftu the pitcher was hit.hard in hrl .last start. ''I don't think he has the velocity he had in the past," the manager said then. "I go on what I see oul there .... fr~m the way he 's throwing, and the 1Lltist1cs show it, I don't think he could help anybody right now ." . , McLain had a J·2 record wtlh the A s but was unsucc'essful in four of five outings. . . His .earned run average for 22 Innl:l'll.! of work this season was 6.05 and he failed to go more than three innings in his last two starts. • Before learning ol his move to the minors. McLain said : ·"If the gam·e ends tonight. I've ~ad thrills people never dreamed of .ha.vmg . They'll have to rip the un!form b!f ,?1e. You know, I just turned 28 1n March. \Villiams sa fd he fell M~Lajn would report to the minor league team. "He'd · be foolish not to with that contract," he sa id. In 1968, McLain won 31 games for Detroit capturing the Cy Young and Most Valuable Player honors. He shared the Cy Y9ung 4ward with ~i~e Cuell ar of Baltimore in 1969 after wmning 24 games. But his career was never quite tha same. In 1970 he wa s suspended for h1lf a season for alleged involvement in bookmaking. He was suspended aga in at the end of the 1970 season for throwing buckets of water over the heads of two Detroit baseball writers. And he declared bankruptcy. . ri.1cLain was traded to the Washmgton Senators during the 19'70 se1son and came to the A's this )'ear. His record at Washington was 10-22. Williams said the pitcher took Mon- day·s news well, but seemed unhappy . ''He was a good fellow and didn't cause u.s any problems," the manager add.ed. McLain could not be • reached un· medlitely for comment. DENNY McLAIN Schaus Takes Coaching Job With Purdue WEST LAfAY1TIE. Ind . tAP) George . King, Purdue b1skelball coarh and llfh letic director. annou11ced hill re- tirement as coach 10day and n~med Fred Schaus. general manager of the Los An- ge les Lakers, to 11uccced him. King will continue as athletic dir.ector. He has been Bollermaker basketball coach seven ye1rs and athletic director 15 months . Schaus . 46. was a movi ng force behind th! Lakerli this year a1 they won their first National Basketball Association tjlampionsh ip. In his fifth year as gen· efll manager, Schaus coached Loti An· geles for seven seasons. 1961-&7, compiJ. ing a 315-245 won-lost record. Under Schaus the Lakers captured Western Division titles in 1962, 196.3, 1965 a "<! 1966 . Schaus was head basketball coach for six seasons at th~ University of Virginia. Tht Mountaineers won the championship all six seasons. King was Schaus' assist ant at West Virginia in the 1959-60 seasons and IUC· ceeded him as head coach. Both ha ve employed the fast break. free lance of· fense a11d are advocates <i pressing ione deftnse.!i. Regarding Fi-eedom Revolutionaries Should Talk to Czech Champ Are you tired of America? Are you one of the revolutionaries who · feels 196 ye1ra of democracy la 1nou1h .and that a change In the syltem IJ the answer? Are you frustrated because. people with bettar tducations and more talent than ' WHITE WASH .. ----- •LaNN WMITI you are holding better joba ind earning D'lort money thin you?· Would you likt to see this country turn to Communism? wnuld not allow him to leave 1e he mi&ht carry out that desire . Why not defect? He has a large family, wlUch he feels very clost to. He chooses not to flee, leaving them behind to suffer the consequences. Secondly, he would then prefer to give up amateur skating. Bul even that thought is being voided by Ctech of· ficials , who would like to see him carry on one more year 11ince the 1973 world championship.!! will be in Czechoslovakia and they want lo make a good showin& in the event they are hosting . So, he'll be a good boy . do what he's told and I.hen hopefully after ht'S coin· pleted his obligations in '73 he CID join 1 German theatrical group . Is that the kind of life you would will on America? Elsewhere : Bob Hope 111 the new public relatlMI amd promotion's dlrector fnr tbe Atl a11ta Braves. Thl1 man 11 t5 and nn more than 1 name!lake nf tbe "·orld renowned co-- median. ' Then perhaps you should talk to Ondrej Nepela , a Czechoslovsk ian who might well dissuade you. This young man i1 an Olympi c and world champion in tUs chose n sport -ice 1ksting. A IS.year.old boy was 1enlcnced to liflJ. Yet , he is 1 captive. of aorts, in hla own na tion. Through. a fr iend he made on the American ice contingent, be ~ves an idea of how grand jt \1 to live Wider the care of Communi&m. He tells of how much he wanted lo come tn I.he United States to try pnr feuion1I 1kalin1. But hJs 1overnment Imprisonment recently in Baltimore after he was found guilty of the bludgeonin( death of retired major league baseball umpire LUther Sahm . Sahm. 79. was fatally bellten 111 he slept in hi1 auto in a parking lot. Aller three years at the helm of I~ National League expansion team . Gomei is moving to Los An1eles wiltlQut 1 job. He his turned down 1 half-dozen scouting ·job offers. he 11ys, in order lo be frte -.:hen lhf righ! wor k COJ1le!I along . "I'm not biller toward Buzzit ," Cubitn· bom Gomt:z ~aid in an Interview. "lft 1!1 still my friend. Someday I hope he will ask me to work for him 1g1 in ... 10 me, he 11 the 1m1ne1t man In basd>all. ·• Three Blinks Away From 200 at Indy Former CorGU del M•r H i I h swimmer-water polo 1tar Grt1 Fink 11 balfdl1111 the electrtc 1coreboard which will bt: pat up •t tbt ne• SO.meter pool belng co11ttructed and near cnmplet1n11 at Newport Harbor Hl&h. Fink rr•du11H from USC re«ntly with a desrH 11 electrical en1lnee.rln,c. · Newport boa1ter. .lta ve r1l1ed nearly ti,• for eqWpmelit and • 1ivln11 and Joa• outnt de1ated S:JOLtoward lite 1ctr1board. ,,,, WlllmER -Aller al bolu. Southern ' Ca lllomla lod Ill• PaclJlc-1 Conference 1011 ebamplonahlps Monday 11 the CaJJltrnla Country Oub with • ~ t11m IWJ. Stanton! w11 In -d place wltll 197 lollowod by °"-· llt: W11blncton, IOI: Wuldnctoo &Ille, !03: UCLA , !Oe: ~ Siiia, llJ; and Calllomla , Ill. INDIANAPOLIS tAP \ -The railbird• brought out lheir sliderules at ln- dlanapolla Monday and took 1 second look at Bobb)' Unser1s breathtaking 196.678 qualifl'lni! lap. Among other th ings. they ligured : -Had the Albuquerqu& driver gone 219.13 fttt further in his elapsed time of 45.76 seconds, he'd h1111e reduced his time to 4S 1econds flat and his lip speed would hive be.en 200 milt s per hour. -PutUna ii another w1y, 29.1.! feel per ltcond la 200 m.p.h. 1t~he "'l \\-mlle In· dian1polls Motor Speedway oval . Unser covered 289 feet each second he was under the clock. -Or, as one of the seasoned observers put It, ''Sey the words '1,0QO..to.I' real quick and you've already used the tlmt! ho needed to do 200. Or simply blink yo ur eyelashes three times." Unstr. dr1vlng one of Dan Gumey's Olsonile Eagles, ripped off four lapg at an astounding 19$.~ m.p.h. to take. a 1trangle-hold on th< ;>ole posltl<m Jor the May 27 Indianapolis 500-mile race. It wa s. as sttll another sideliner put It. ''The greatest Co{1'1bination of driver. machine and sheer courage in the history of 1uto racing." But whlJe the Speedway crowd was still 1igog over 11 record-shattering perform· •nee Sunday that lifted the onw.n<l·fOur· l11p marks triore than 17 n1 .p.h. over IJ\Y thJng ever recorded at the ancient brick· yard. 1vork went on for the other drivers ·-particularly Mark Donohue and Peter Revson. These two hot&hots are the onl,Y top I contenders ..;.iho 1till have a ahot at Un!tr., pole po1itlon In flnol tilfte trio!• thi• week•nd. l;;ven thon. tho beat Liiey may hope for 11 14 111akh tho other two front row 1poll belnf held for tho time being by Gary Bttlenhluien and Marlo AndretU. Bettenhlusen qu~Jified his McLaren at 113.187 m.p.h. Sonday for the AtCOnd·but time of the d1y . Andre.ttl1 put one of Pamolll Jonu' rad!Cll oew cars In tht lineup •t 117.117. All thy ae.ed 11 another Sl,oot for • pU of permunt aJ1mleum 1n1l1 ul - • .... p1elod pool -to bo mdy i.r tl•IJ1es1. ' Jim StymO\Jr. ea-Huntington Btech Uigh and Golden West Colle.11 athlt:te, won the FrtfJno Relaya open 440 hurdle1 ' In 50.l Saturday night. Twenty-four hours later Dic k Brua· a<rman 'Uded Jo a 41.1 11 lilt MarUt Luth!r Kini Gamea In Phlladllphla. I • ' Rustle1· Golfer s Tlrird CAM!EL VALLEY Golden \\lest C.Ollege'.s golf team put together its best o\•erall performance of the season and finished third in th& state JC meet "at the ~ Rancho Canada goU course here ?>.fonda y. ' Golden "1est totaled 919 ~ • strokes. just one behind El Camino and se ven in back of !late champion Long Beach City College. Sle\'e Robertson and Jim George had Ute best rounds for coach Rai Shackleford's Rustlers. Roberlson, a freshman fro1111 Estancia High . had a t1vo- round total of 146 (74-72) to finish in 11 four-way lie for sec- ond. Robertson then \~on 11 playoff for the No. 2 spot. . . . . . " George also was involved in a playoff for sixlh place and he also won ii after shooting rounds of 75-72-147. CIF ... layoff Ent1·ants . . ..... DAILY I'll.OT 11111 l"lttto OAILV Ptt.O~ j f Wilt's Big Dippers . At OCC Thursday Volleyball O~sl1 Set With Balboa \\'ill Chamberlain will le'aft one of the greatest vo lleyball . teams of all time aga inst the Balboa Blue team Thur5day night at Orange Coast College. The tilt gets under wa y at 7o30. Tickets for the event are now on sale at the Orange Coast bookstore from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Admission i.s $2.7S for adults and $1.2S for childre n under 12. Reserved seats are priced at $3.50. Chamberlain, the Lo .s Angeles Lakers ~tar cent er i5 fresh from a s t a n do u t performance in the Nat ional BasketQall As .soc i at io n playoffs , helping to lead lhe Lakers lo the title over the New York. Knicks. ' Other Golden \Vest golfer s Laguna Beach ~ligh's varsity tennis team tied for and their scores included : the Orange League title and entered the CIF A Harold Eldridge 175-75-150). playoffs today against Royal Oak .• A.rtists pictured Larry Margison (78-75-153 ), are (front tO\\', left) Steve Spalding. Tim Taylor, Howie Pearsol, Clayton Berryhill, Scott Mccarter. (back row) coach Ron Ross, Steve Duncan, Dan Ja- cobson, Giff Tabor, Mark Jay, Norman Bedell. Another top niember of the Big Dippers is f o r m e r Corona del Mar High. Orange COaSt and UCLA baskelba ll star John Vallely v.•ho no\v plays for the Houston Rockets or the NBA . Steve Ryan 179-75-154 1 and ---'------'----'--"-----'-------------------------John Minkley 18.1-86-169 ). lo.1edalist honors in !he •' tourney went to El Camino's ll1ark Pfeil who h11d a 145. just one stroke better t h a n Roberts-On. Tourney Scheduled • Six .Co.ast Area Standout,s Other members i n c 1 u de Gene Selznick, Larry Rundle, 'foshi Toyoda . Kirt Kilgore, Butch May and ~on Lang. Selznick is a six-time A11- American and A 11 . W or I d performer while Rundle is. rated as the top volleyball player in the United Stat~s . By fini shi ng in the top six. Robe rtson and George were selected to the all·s tate team. Ro be·r Is on also took medalist honors on Sunday with a 70 as he led ·a South al!- star tt:am to a victory over a Nor{h contingent. . • A 24-tca m \\·ater po 1 o tournament. fea turing · th ree divisions, "'ill be held Satur- da y and Sunday at Orange Coast College and Costa J\1esa High. Earn All-Irvine Honors Toyoda is an outstanding defensive player 11r1d Kilgore v.•as the capta in of the UCLA team that won the 1971 NCAA title. May was on th e '68 U.S. Olympic tea m and Lang is a lO·time All -American a n d Olympian. i • lt was a climax to a spark]. ing three weeks for Robert son who also took medalist honors in the Southern California Conference meet and \vas third ln ttie sectional tourney last w~ek. "The kids really pl;iyed greal." said Shackleford. "They listed us last on the score sheet because v.•e had lhe v.·orst score in the sec- tionals. And I think that kind of made the kid s mad." Shackleford also lauded the efforts of Tom DeGue\le. the seventh member of t h e Rustler squad. The first annual event ·is sponsored by the Costa f\1 esa High Aquatics booster club. The tow·ney \•:ill run rrom 9 a.m to 9 p.m. Saturday and 9- 7 Sunt"iay. The cham pionship game in the 16-and-under div isio n is scheduled for 5 Sun· day with the 18-and-under title till to folk1.,·1 at 6 and the open d1vlsion championship game set for 7. There is no admissi on cha ~ge. Half of the official All-Irvine League ba seball selections as picked by the DAILY PILOT belong to Orange Coast area athletes and a hair dozen earned first team berths. Edison High's Chargers picked up a pair of first team selections in so phomore catcher !lllke Selwood and the \"ersalile Greg Parker. Selv.·ood stroked the ball at .500 clip during the league season and swu ng with power. Parker operated at first base ini tially, then filled a vi lal gap later in the pitching depart· men!. an imposing 0.00 e.r.a. in four complete slarts. He shilt out three straight opponents, then lost to Postel on a two-hitter, 2-1, with both enemy runs of the unearned variety. Rounding out the first team selections from the Orange Coast area are Costa Mesa 's Jerry Golden and Fountain \'alley's Ray Eckles. Golden possessed t h e slickest glo ve in the league at second base and y,·as Mesa's most dependable batter. Eckles. a junior. Was given an outfield post, '1lthough he's 11lso a t"q,u g h compeliJ'or. pitc hing. Second team berths y,•ent to Edison's pitcher Mike Alba, Corona del Mar's ju n i or catcher Bob Palmer and out- fieldi!r Scott Parker. Estan· cia 's infield gem Jim Schultz and Costa Mesa's slugging first baseman Mark Christ- man . Player of the year la urels go to Los Alamitos High's junior Mike King, who pitched and batted the Griffins to the champiori!>hip. His coach, Da ve Hernandez, is the coach of the year. The Big Dippers' opponent -the Balboa Blue team - finished second in the recent national AAU championships at Orange Coast. ~1embers of the Balboa squad include Bill lmwal\e, ~1att Gage. John Meek, Dick Montgome ry , Spence Noteboom, Tom Read and Glenn Stone. lmwal\e, Gage and 1.1eek are all triple-A players while Montgomery is the coach at use. JOH N VALlELY PLAYS FOR BIG DIPPERS. JC Gal Swimmers Seeli SoCal Honors " • with Miss Shine and Miss Cassube vying for first and ' Cheryl Botzong taking third. Miss Shine also maintains the third best time in the SO "He's helped us all yea r long. hu! only six could play in the sla te tourney . Margison and DeGUelle played 72 holes of golf last week to see who would be our sixth man and Margison won b'y a stroke ." Here are the entries for the open division : Open Pitchers Jim Postel of Estancht and Matt Keough of Corona del lo.tar were named to !he firs! team 11 fter spar· k!ing seasons. All·lrvine League First Team Noteboom was a member of the U.S. team which toured Bulgaria in 1970 and Read was volleyball's rookie-of-the-year in ·71. Stone is a three-time All-American . Orange Coast Co 11 e g e 's women 's sw im team hopes to upset undefeated Fullerlon ~t the Southern Cali fornia Com- munity College's swimming championships at Golden.West College Thursday. "There's an outside chance we can take the championshi p if every girl really swims her absolute best." .says Sue Brown, who has coached the team through an all·win-but- one season. •• back and the fourt h tJesl in. the Individual , medl ey. M 1 s s Cassube also swims the 50 1;: back. Of the seven players. on ly Geor-ge and · Eldridge ·are·- sophomores. The rest v.·ill return next season. Balboa Bay No. 1 (Ne1-1:port Ha rborl, Buchser No. I (Santa Clara), NJr-.!A A !Corona del Mari . Diablos 1Cal State Los Angeles). Balboa Bay No. 2, ·Orange--toast· -Pir-ates, ··Clip-· pers A (Costa ~fesa ) and Ph illips 66 (Long Beach !. ·Postel fin ished the league campaign with a 7-4 mark and \l"aS the Eagles' clean up ji it· ter . h'"eOugli ." a!t.OOUgh he didn't assu me the mound duties until late in the season, chalked up Name. school Postel. Estancia Keough, Corona del-Mar Selv.·ood, Edi10n Carpenter. llls Alamitos . G&lden, Costa Me-.s8- Glaspie. SA Valley Kentner. Magnolia King, Los Alamitos Comin, Magnolia Eckles, fountain ValJey Parker, Edison "1>os. Clas§ Mark P Sr. 7-4 P • Jr. 3·1 c ·s.. .500 IB Jr, .342 %8 . Sr •.• %75. 3B Sr. .356 SS Sr. .366 OF Jr. .419 OF Sr. .4-07 OF Jr. .310 UtiJ Sr. +.J Deep Sea Fish Report The team has Josf onfy to Fullerton . Miss Stungis is expected to .I( win the 50 free event, with a Southern California best of ' 27.0. Another OCC student. " Cathy Dolan r@ks third in the ,, SO fly with a best of 31.4. t ·• Dominguez, Edison Mix Sect1nd Team Coach Bever,fy Barck says Golden West's hopes lie in Monica Re nno. who is entered in the 200 ·free. the 50 free , the 50 butterfly and the 50 breast. Her best time is in the breaststroke event. where her 36.8 ls second among ·female .swimmers at~ding Southern California conimunity col- leges. Orange Coast also hopes o •· take first in the 200 free relay, with ils unequalled time or 1:47.0. The 100 medley relay will be closer. Fullerton's best ' time is a 2:05.8 while OCC's : best is a 2:·06.8. .1 DAVE ROSS PONTIAC'S EXCLUSIVE NEW CAR 5YEAR/50,00D MILE-[ WaRRanty : ' , .. ' ' I· At No Extra Charge P1t!\ & t.~bo• o~ c"l•ri POV.ti T•~·~ ' . I •: Ed ison High's Chargers v.•ill Invade Domingu~z High Fri· da y afternoon in . the first round of the CIF' AAAA baseball playoffs -regardless of the outcome b etwee n !\1onrov ia and Muir in today's Pari fic League makeup .':ame. The Chargers of coach Bill lllorris won R coin nip, thus E~tancia and Magnolia "'ill meet at Fou ntain Val ley \Vednesda y (3 : 15) should it beco me necessary to eliminate one Irvine League team from the playoffs to make room for Pasadena . The latter \vould become eligible for the playoffs pro- viding ll1onrovia loses to Muir in the Pacific League en- counter today. Alba. Edison Stewart, Magnolia Palmer. Corona del J\far Christman. Costa Mesa Martin. SA Valley G. Templeton, SA Valley Schultz. Estancia K. Templeton, SA Valley Lilly. Los Alamitos Parker, Corona del Mar Bauer. Magnolia MD Picnic Mater Dei High's track. baseball and golf teams will celebrate their annual spring sports awards y,·ith an all-<iay picnic at the Brothers of St. Patrick's Home in Stanton Saturday. Activity gets under way at 11 a.m . MAY20ITT INDIAN Wfl I S IN\111'~ You are invited to share the Balboa Bay Club 's arrival in Palm Springs during our opening celebration on the weekend of Ma y 20th. Enjoy our tennis courtS and watch 'World Class" professional tennis being exhibited. Dance and dine at our clubhouse. Vi ew our olympic size pool and }acuui. Golf at the championship Indian We lls Golf Club. To become a part of th is casual affluepce that th e 'esc is known for, take a look at our studios, tov·:nhouses. custom su ites and the rich landscaping that surrounds them. We offer you private, corporate, or Joi nt ownerships in addition to membership in the Balboa Bay Club, ouest privileges in 44 international clubs, golfing on world fa mous courses, complete property management, rental and hotel services. gate house, and security guards. S24,500 to $40,000. Come to our invitational on May 20th. BALBOA BAY CLUB INDIAN WELLS ~ Sales and Information center (" \'JIU""' Highway 11110 Bay Club Driven14-345-2561 Ext. 49 p p c IB 2B SS Inf OF OF OF Util Sr. Sr. Jr. Sr. Sr. So. sr. Sr. Jr. Sr. Sr. 3.3 4.3 .318 .316 I .373 .426 .230 .310 .364 .298 .324 Orange Coast's strongh6Jds are Pat Shine, Sandy Cassube and Nancy Stungis. The school is expected to win the top three spots in the diving event The Orange Coast girls will '. be competing against .Sl\'im-" mer1 from Bakersfield, El . ! Camino, fullerton, Lon g 1 • Beach City College, Mt. San Antonio and Pasaden a _. Preliminaries start 8.t 10 a.m. 1 Diving begins at 2 p.m.,~ followed by the swimmin& ~ events at 3. ' ' • Baseball Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division w L New York 18 7 Philadelphia 15 10 Montreal Pittsburgh Chicago St. llluis Dodgers Housl.on Cincinnati Sa n Diego Allanta 13 12 12 12 11 13 10 17 , West Dl\'ision 17 10 15 10 12 Ii 12 15 San Francisco 10 lfi 9 19 M11H11.,'1 ••1ur11 ""11~elel!l1 4. c 111c1oa o New YarW j , MO<>lrll>'I ] "1tt11!v<-9h '· SI I.au;• 1 Mou11an I , An1M1 1 le1 .t.1191111 l. s~" O·~~n 1 Onl• 1~mt1 1t~ftlu1...i T..S.1'1 G•mf• Pct. .720 .600 .520 .500 .458 .310 .630 .600 .480 .444 .:JBS .321 GB 3 5 5\1 6'h 9 t I 5 6\\ 8\1 "1a~1,,11 (Morlan 1.11 •I "l•w "T~r• {Se1v•r !-1 1, ,,;0111 C"te••o !Maatr~ 1 1! •I Pll<l..:!•lo"•• (("•"'• Plan J.0), l'lfM $1 louls (W11t J )\ 11 P,!l!l)t.lr•" (Wtlk•~ 0-1), 11!pl\I •U1'l!t ISclluel .. 1.0 al Jt rv" J.1) •I Mw 11an tllruu J-U, "1th1 l11 A11ttlt1 t$h'lll•r l ·ll 11 $1,, O•'"llD !G,.11 ).JI l'ltlll Clnc:lft"•tl (Nolt n l I t nd e a11"'"'"' &.II ot Sa" F"r•"t"'a !Ct •rl!htrs 1 l 1...i Slel'• &.U, ). twl-nltlll AMERICAN LEAGUE Cleveland Detroit Baltimore Boston New York Milwaukee Minnesota Oakland Chicago Texas Kansas City Angels East Division w L 14 8 13 9 12 11 8 12 8 14 6 14 West Diviiikln 16 6 14 7 14 9 10 14 10 15 9 15 ~,, .. 1,·1 •11•1!1 8•11omart J, Ot!rel! 1 1(1"11' (lly i, TtY•O 4 c~1c11a 1, Ml"l't•a11 l 0 1kl1nd l. C•llltr,,i. I Ontv 1tfllt1 1dll'dultd THI Y'I 01""\ Pel. .636 .59t .522 .400 .364 .300 .727 .617 .6119 .417 .400 .375 GB 2\1 5 ' 7 Ot>ltl"ld (5.f9ul 0.01 t t C1U/.ett'll t !Clt rt 1·31, .. 1 ... , • T•~tl !Go.a!•w1k 1 l-11 tr ICl nl,fl Cl•v flltooli:tr 1'41, nfgl!I I """I""'"°'' rw11111hel' :i.01 II Chl<1•11 !II•~""'" l-4!. "''"' !1!1lmott !Cut i! ... 1 JI ot Oflra•I (Tl"""f ""l l' 1-11 ,,1,M Mtw 'York 1•"-•tll J•l] 11 Cl•Y•l•ml ICPINrl 0..01. nl9/\I !P1lll11 ((yjp 1-JI 1t M!l"'lulift j lrtll J )1, nltl!I D,,EAN LEWIS 1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 646-9303 Strvic1 and Parts for All Import~ C1rt~ Modern Body \hop for All . C•rs Orange County's Largest and Most Modern Toyota and Volvo tiealer OVIERSIAI OILIVIRY l~ICIALISTI ,. DEAN LEWIS . . 1972 TOYOTA CARINA ~ WITH FACTORY . AIR CONDITIONING ,. ' $1200 PE,a . MONTH St4.70 Tot1I Down -S72.00 Tot1I Monthl., Paym•nt. #31520 fer Forty E~ht Mo1. Dtferrff - $3550.00/ 11h -S27t4JO AP'R. 12.76 on 1pproved cr.dlt. 1972 VOLVO 142 SEDAN WITH FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING $9900 PER .. MONTH 5117.46 Tot•I Down -D.ferr..t $6057.46. C11h 'rice S4246.27 Incl. T & L/APR IS.36 on app. credit 1972 TOYOTA MK II STATION WAGON WITH FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING $9800 PER MONTH $"147.IS Tot1l Down/Stl.66 Totel Monthly P'ymt. for F•;i IEl9ht Month.. Deferred ~ .,,. 2.61 flT7to00~-r::z.~· ct'Mlt~ a •• ' • i • • • • . • .· • Ir • • .. • • • • f§ DAILY PILOT Tltttd•J', MQ 16, 1972 CURE FOi\ SLICING: PULL JUTT·END Of CLUll TOWARD RIGHT FOOT One of the reasons that JO many aoltcn hit wt.tk 1licta from · left to right ii btcause they 1lidc the clubhcad across the ball from outside to inside the target line. This t11ually is caused by uneoil· ing the 1houlden prtmaturely in tbc downswing. The downswing should begin with a sliding of the hips and lrgs ·to 1he 11tf1, along wi1h a free downward swinging of the arms. 0 I One v.·ay to accomplish all of this is to concenlrate on S pull ing the butt tnd of the clubshaft-and the butt or 1· yol.lr left hand-dov.'nward toward your riaht foot 1s you 11hit't. into your downswing. This move will get up the ~ Jtft·hand contrcl you need to keep the clubhead inside i the target line until it swings 1quarcly into the back of • ., the ball. LOW SCOfl:ESI HIGH POWER! Get1lenty of &olflnt htlp In Arrlold Pa11111r'1 booklet, ''f11 Shots en r1lrw1y Wooch" written Ill• clu1iv1ly tor r19der1 of ll'l!s tol~mn. Aupy It youn' fOt 20t ind • 1t1mptd, wtf·tddr111td envtlOpt 11nt IO Arnold P11rn1r, c/o thl1 n1w1p1per. Time Schedule Set For Rustle1~ Tilts FRESNO -Golden West College's fir st round game in the state JC large school s baseball playoffs has been rescheduled for 1: 30 Friday, here. The Rustlers were slated to tangle with F'resno C i t y College in an 11 a.m. game Friday, but that was changed w he n tournament officinls decided to use just one ball park. instead of two. John Duless Park, the home of the Fresno club or the class A California League. willi be the facility used. 1n another first round tilt, Full Slate Of Activitv • At El Toro Over 170 bikt"" jammed the pits at El Toro Soeedwa y last Friday night Ir. the largest turnout to date fai the "'cek- ly USMRC mott"IC"ross series. the -state'~ ~ee{l11_d r~nk~· JC tearp -College of San Mateo ,-clashes with Co ntra Costa at IO in tltelnorning. The winders of the two games return at 8 that same evening with the two losers mixing it up at 5. Saturday's games are set for II and 3. Another game, if necessary, will be played Sun- da y at I. It's a round robin doubl e eliminati on affai r. Gol den \Vest coach F'red J1oov('r plans to start right· handed pitcher Mark Barr against I h e predominantly right-handed swinging F'resno t'l ub. Then another sophomore - lefty Dave Klungreseter - will pitch the night tilt with right-hander Ken M u r i 11 o ~lated to go in the fi rst Satur- day gan1e. Fresno was the winner of the Valley Conference Vt'hile San Mateo captured Golden Gale circuit anrl Contra Costa nabbed the Camino Norte flag. In the lower bracket par· ings. Cerritos tangles with San Bernardino in a first round tilt and Long Beach City College me<>ts Ventura. All thet lower bracket games are set for Long Beach CC. Area Tennis Results lrviM l.<llfUt lncllvi.y.i Ttflll1• TMrMllM"t ., l!dlJOft l"lr~\"11!:...i Mllltr fCllMI ~I Z1rtmbt ISAVl 6-0, ,-0, • ""'1111 !Ell dt1 M1ndtr1 <FVI '°"·I· l, .... _ ~~"w'iM;11rtJ.f'8:~rrt1 1~~tit~ .. , .. ~en e ie1 I won bv 11111\iTf.' C1" llo ILAJ lie! Murtd CFV) •·1 , 6-J Holl!tltld CMJ def s1ev1n10l'I CEd) •·1, 6·7 -Wtblltf !CdM) dtl Mulry1n (CMI 6· o, />-0. Ptrk!n1 IEd) dtl Gu!lck {CdMl ...... •• Ol1011 \SAY! cltl Guild tFVl .. l( •• Stmut I (LAJ dlf Arret\llOnCIO El) I· ..... 1. Re ml.,tl (Ml cit! H1rrl1l(M)1·1, 4-> Ovtr (C/Ml dtl HtMI (SAVI •·3. 4-1. Pono ! Ill cltf Lt•ICk CFV) u ..... t 'M~v,'1 !E;l dtl S!lfPtl (LA) .. 1, .. I. EnC11l1Y (CM) lltl C: Porltr tMl 6-,, I< SKOflf tlOUM Miiier !CllM/ d•! "tettle (E1 J 4-1, 6-0. c111n !Ml llf e1ock !Ed) '"f 4-• 1 C1rro!lo (LAI atl IC1 ndt1 r I) 6-l, ... Hallllltld iMl dtt Wtb1!1r ICc:IM) •·•, ~ .... 6-1. Ptrkln1 !Edi Oii Olt«i(SAV ) 6-1. 4-3. S•mu1t1 (LAI dtl ~1mlr.1 <Ml 6-l, ... Dvt• !CdMI d..t Pa1io CEdl 6-2, 6-1. End1ltr (CM) cit! Mrt1r1 IE'l 6-4, '-1. UUIM"ltrfl ... JI MIUtr \CllM d't C1'" \Ml 6-0, '°\. HolUflt cl C l dtl 1rr !lo ~A) ._.,, H Pe rkl111 (Ed) dt'I Stmutlt ! ·A) 6·0, 6·2. End1ltJ (CM) Cllf or1r 1cc1.4:1 6-1. 6- ' Warmer weather coaxed some riders out and the entry total is expected to top 200 once school ls out in June. Several riders s c o r e d sweeps in their respective divisions. Dragsters Join Forces For Hang T_en Title Run • J They were : Brad Dutoit of El Toro in fh e Schoolboy. Johanna Ste nerson of Sfln Clemente in the Powder PufL ~fark Rodman of Sa nta Ana in di vision one of the 125 junior clas.s, Tin Carmack of Orange in division two of the same <:lass. and Billy Bobp in divis ion th ree. Ron Ban dy or Santa Ana in division three of the 2..50 junio rs. Gary Cochell In the 500 expert and Davey Carlson of Anaheim in the 100 expeft class. What could prove to be the most formidable funny car partnership in drag racing will debut May 28 at Orange C-Oun· ly International Ra ceway. preliminary rounds last year before it exploded in the final. Bruce Baron of \Ve.slminster won the 125 expert class and Don Harchar of tf unting ton Beach nabbed the 125 in- termed iate tille. Baron also won the 250 expert event and Bob Perlof or Santa Ana came hon1e first in the 2 5 O Intermedia te class. Action gels under "·av on th is night "'ith the fi rst ,jf the School boy events at '1. \\'ell over 30 races are scheduled. The three quarter midgets relurn to Et Toro on Saturday nigh t. Ai·ea Girls Honored Four are.;i girls "' e r t honortd Saturday night 11! lhe first aMual awards dinner for memberii of the Santa Ana Volleyb3IJ Club of Orange Count y. ,_1argaret Alv11rei and Ann 1.fc:Laren of Huntington Beach wtre presented s p e c I e I awards. Bnlboa'a Pe 11 y Jacobsen received an . award ror oulltandlnR'. contributions and Laguna Beach's Marie Dvorak was honored ror outstanding achievement dtr· q the >Dll•yball ... .,n. 'l'be Santo Ana Volleyball Oob II open to iJrls of high ld!oolaae. Danny Ongais of Carlsbad and John f..tazmanian of . Whit· tie r have joined forces and \~ill field a ·72 Barracuda in the Jiang Ten F'unny Car 500. Rav Zeller iLong Beach! of 11.lidnight Skulker notoriety \\1ill manage the wrenches on the ne w car. Both Mazmanian and Ongai:;: have been absent from drag racing for some time. Mazma- ni:1n \\.1ithdrew followin ll!; a bad explosion and fire at OCIR in January. Pressing busi ness demands pre v e n I e d con· slruction of a new car until ju!it recently. They'll have even stiffer o~ position this year. Pat Foster, the nation's quickest Junny car drtver at 6.40, has entered Barry Setzer'& 227 mph Chevy Vega • Other ent ries include \\"Orld champion Gene Snov•. defending champion Dav~ Beebe and all·pro champion Gary Burgin. Laguna Sets Cage Clinic Jttly 17-28 Ongais has not been aclive in funny car racing si nce he The only Junior P r o "·on !he national chnmpionship Association basketball clinic in in 1969 dri\'ing ror ~1ickey Oranirc County "'fll b t Thnn1pson. 11 vaila ble to youngsters a11e 9-Coincidentally it wa~ Ongais \1•ho cle!ente<l ri.1azm anian·s 15 at Laguna Beach High car in the final race of the '69 School July 17-28 under th e nationals. Richard Siroonian. spansorship of Arti sts coach John's nephew. who has since Jerry f't1ir. 1narried and retired , was driv· ing for Mazmanian. Fair has former UCLA All- Ongais has a long standing American Henry Bibby, Los reputation for being one of the Angeles Lakers star Happy "ery besl drivers in the soort. flairston and USC coach Bob Likewise ~1azm3nian h a s IJoyd lined up as guest al"·ays fielded the most com-speaken for the progr11m with pelilive rat'ing e q u I pm e n t money could buy. Thtir com· emphasiJ on pusing, shooting bintd c r e d e n t l a I 1 are and rebounding. awesome. Entry fee of $32 per bo1 ~ The f'unny Car 500 provldts eludes au official si.e junior"" a ~~feet stage for lhls pro ba:sketball, a clinic t-shirt, ausp1c1ous debut. A '500 bonu~s 11n oUicial jacket patch and Is paid to the qulckm ela~e . time in each round or racln ,bronze medallion. !l's lhe kind of ground pouD-SlllJl•PI will be taken !tom d!n« comprtitlon that Mauna-10 a.m. to noon Saturday at n111n tind Ongais thrive <ln, Lagima Be1<:h Higb'a gym. wllh tho molors sel on kill Fw1"·· In! llo be every run. I.IQ Onftl n CID Mazmanlan's car won lite obtained by calllni hlr al bonuses for all t h re e 830-09'71. • Berra Bosses .' -n ... IUSllllltS PltllTIOtfl 1u111,iau '" .. NAM• 1tAT1t:M1NT JU,MI tTA MllllT The tollftlll'lt ~.on1 11t c:llolftt 'rM hlMwlllt ,...,_ lrl f0/111 Mit!Mh illllll ... Mets LEGAL NOTICB LEGAL NOTICE .. 11: t bu J & A t.NTllt 1s1s, 11111 M1r111t STOCK"°'-.Dlltl PUNOING C 2.00 l<"fl Orlwt Lot IJlll'llltt. C1U1«11l1 I h W ' I w hdflc:C....M•V·""""" t0'21 • Fl. rm' y, ut arm y 1~~:._c~!.'°" TKktr, 1)01 OU $1.. .t.~~~v:.dr::'A~·=· i~11lo::01''"' MVflfllllhln IUCl'I. (lllf. 4nn LH O'Oo\lfd, t!J1' Mlfrllt 1-1111 TM1 bullfMU It Ml ... (eftl(ludNI Ill Orlwt. Lo. A!1mllot, C1. tc»':IO !nclfwlitu1L Tiii• ..,11.WH 11 clrwl11clNI bV 111 u11l11- J1m11 P, Tuc-tt COtllOfllt<I ••-!1llttl oftltf '""' • \ Tiii• 11•1-nt lllld wltll th• CoulllW pa f!Mn/llP, Clerk OI O••M• '"""'' on: MIY n. 1f'2. "'"": Allft LH o·Oo¥i4 , I •· •·• I · l Iv 11wr1v J. MffR•, Dwurr CWlll~ Tr.11 1111,.,,..111 w11 111*<! w11r. th• (111,jllo NEW YORK (API . The nose ls busted and the fingers gnarled alter torturous seasoM a~ a baseball pin · cushion, but Vogl Berra unhesitatingly admits ·he'd do Jt all again. "I have no regrets about being a catcher and if I wa1 just starting my career, that'• what I'd do," saya the Hall of Farner who manages tht New. l York Metii. For the pain he received behind the plate as a New York Yankee !lar, l he universall y-liked little man gave the fans something special in , return the pleasure of seeing him play. ··we had some pretty good anyone. The easy.going Berra v.•as certainly one of baseball's toughest Clutch hitters during his 18-year career as a Yankee bulwark. His bat and glove were largely responsible for 14. pennant-winners in that span from 1946 to 1963. He was named manager <lf the Yankees in 1980 and won a • • YOGI BERRA the Yankees: "It's fM 1ame old •lory of lrylng lo keep ~ men happy at once. Everybody wants to play at the same time." A s o m elimes-pugnac1ous crowd doesn't bother hin1 , either. • ~ w""t wanl, no ma • ci.n. ,, c1t•k 01 01111111 c...,n1v e11 M•v lL d Plmt 1'11 ter how much the crow 111u1iu.n.1 0t111e• coeu 0t>1Y 1111101. · itt.oc doesn't like my decisions .. MIY , .. n. JO .... Jun•'· ,,,, IH,.n •OlllT P. IUNNltT, Ally. ' •U Ctll,_11 Awt- a.aid Berra. LEGAL NOTICE s.111 e11t. <•· ~-'1n1s Berra doeiiO't play bastball Pubfl1tlld Or1n1e co.it D111v "1101• l'"leTITIOUI IUllNlll Mff1 lf. n ........ Jlll!t .. ltn '"''" anymore. He swings • golf NAMI ITATIMINT •Club in the off.season tnstead TM to11ow1M1 ~"Oii 11 111o1,,. 1111.1,..11 of a bat. And besides, he say1, ... lMIE l.IEISU•fTTIES. ""-D Awt11ld•:1---~LE=G~AL=~N~OTl==C~E::--- his players won't let him hit. l•vlll .. t.••-HJllt, C1Ufonllt ~.n •1eTITIOUS IUllNlll "Th d o J Alli M. Ylll Loonbfock. Ut•O NMI• ITATIMINT ey on t want JO ' et .me Av1111t11 ~vn11, L1...,111 Hin.. c111t, Tti. touowl11t ,..rMtl• 1rt ..i111 ln the ~tllng ~.q:e,". &a)'I Be~ ~~ bulllllU ,, (oftducte.1 •v ~ Ill-""''1C'!'I(':: 0 flt 0 v IL t. I LA,,,. 0 ra, grinning. They r1 all too 41wl411•• 1-ssoc1ATl!S, 1nu c1mbfl~•• L•-anxious to hit themselves." All• M. •111 L.a...,ectt Hun11.,.1o11 .,,di, C•H•. Tilll lltlHnlJll Wit llltd Wlltl 11'11 Cllln• lllotwrl IE. Hot, "1U (l"'brkltt ltft~• Berra, who turned 47 last " cimt llf °'"'"" cout11'f' e11 Mlv IL Hu,.1111tr°" t1tK11. c1111. Friday' rurui the Mets firmly 1rr1. m«" 1~1C'!1ri: Trivedi, 1'111 1-1111wlllf. 11 but with warmth and un· Pin" 1, J1m•• Gr1n1n. 2n c111t 11.oc1 . "110IJ1tlld Or•!IVI Coe•I 011tr ll'llol, \lla11, 5111 Cl1m1nt1, Ctllf. derstand1ng. He prefers to talk Mlv ,,, n. :111, ,.,. J11111 '· 1tn ut.s.n Tr.I• 111111,.."' 11 1111111 (OlldlctNI '" • to players to iron out problems L11r111td P••1M•>11l11. d I la l . l·· LEGAL N ltobtrt I . P+ot ' an ! I COO! n an1ma ~ O'n:CE Thi• 11tt11r11nl llltc:I with 111• (DUnt"f fl"ure at the clubhouse CllM"k o1 Or•• Ceuntv Ol'I: ,.,,11 n. 1tn. 't!i ' l"ICTITIOUI IUSINlll I r e1vttlY J . MICfclo~. ~I"!' (DUnlr t TBhe pl~yerslha~! respolndled Tiit 1o11!t,:•,.!~!:~~~!. bu1 l11eu c11rM. •11441 o erra s re ax~ man pu a· .. i 11v~Uthtc1 or1n11 C691t Dell"!' "11!1f, tions witti I stron-e1ri7· THI! JI-VIES COMll.t.NY, 2US s. M•v '· It. n. )0, ttn 1217.12 ~ .-H1lll1w•v SI .. S111t1 1<111, C•lll', mos season per1ormance. J1r1111 A. Grttn, JW 10.11t 1.1111, LEGAL NOTICE "Th' · babl lh •· l Cotlt M11t. C1lll. m2' 1-------------IS lS pro Y e ut::ll Tlllt butlr>elt 11 Ml"' <Oll>ducltd lllV 1n IUPllllOtl COUllT Oii TMI team the Mets have ever 1ndlYklu~iMtS A GlllfH ITAT• OP CALlllOll.NIA PO" had," said Berra. Tlll• ..i1t11r11"1· tllld ·w11t1 tht Cou~'' THI co':.:T!-~ofllANll ~ lh Clerk of Otlll91 CQl,jlll"f' e11 : Ml~ 12, lfll. NOTICI 01" Nlitl1Ne 01" PITITION Jue manager was en I r ltYtfl"I' J. Mlcl~. Ot~ly Cou11tv PO• PlllOIATI 01" WILL ANO POii reminded that the Yankee! of CltrM. PU1'1 LITT••• TllTAMINTA•Y his era weren't bad, 1!\lher. PubllU.ld Or1n11 COllll 0111"1' Piiot, D!~::i.Gf CONCl t t.t. IVAHGILIStA. "No .. said Berra "Not bad MIV 1'. t,l, JO, •M JvM '· 1•12 111•12 ""0TICE IS Hl!llll•Y GI VIN ,~., II ~. • ._ M1r1111rH1 (111<.cl!lo ~•• llltd lltftl~ 1 at a . HtlllOfl tor Prob1f1 ol WUI Ind !or ltl• • LEGAL NOTICE 1trl Tt1l1mtnltrv 1• l'lllllolltr •tl9r1nt1 -------------110 wl!lcll 11 midi tor turlll1r N•ll<u11ri. PICtlTIOUI IUSUtlSS Ind tti1t 1111 1lm11"'1 1l1C1 cil ... 1r!111 1ht Preakness Field of 9 NAMI IT.t.TlMINT um1 II.It Min 111 for Mtr JO, nn, 11 ,,,. lollllwlnt "'ton !1 dolllf llv1i,..u f130 1.1r1., 111 Ille courtrOOl"l'I t1 Dt"rt• '" 1'1'11111 Ho. l ol ••kl tt11rl , ti 1all Civic ll'ETIT PO INT JU NCTIO,,,., JlO AYt. Ctnltr Ori .... W11f, Ill lltt Cll'f' tf S11'111 0t LI Ellr1U1, S~n Cltmtnll, (I. 91'72 "111, ClllfONlll. Mlt9'"'' lref\f Stur"'I" lllln Allp11 Otltd MtJ II, 1tn. 51 .. llo. Xiii, S.n J11•n (1pt1tr1110, Ct. W. I . II JOHN, ti•1S Ct111nl't Cltrk Thl1 bl/1111111 11 Mint """'uc!9c:I br '" DONALD A. McCAllTIN lncllvldu1I. Attw..., II LI• M1r11rl'I ltlM SIUtNU 1• APll'll An. SYlll Jll Headed by Riva Ridge pennant before being fired in fa vo r of Johnny Keane. Then BALTIMORE (AP 1 -The he sv.•itched to the Mets in the field for Saturday 's 97th run· Tr.1, 1111tm..-it 111ec1 wur. in. CounTV CMt• M111, c1ntw1111 Image ~'ho was 11th in the c11rk 01 o,,,.,, C011111v M : M•v 12, un. Ttt: 0141 •ru1 ' Iv Brv1rlJ J. Mlddl»I, OollVt"f Counl"f' A........, lw1 Ptlltl-Derby, all 20-1. Cltrk. ll'llblllhld Orin" (11111 01llY •11o1. •11m MIY ll, 17. 2J, 1'1J l1't•n The reh1rn to form of Key 111~b1!ih111 or1n~• ca.11 0tuv "1101 1~-----=------'--"' To-The Mint "pi'obably will M•v 1•. 1J, JO, 1nd JuM '· 1tn 121'1·71 LEGAL NO'nCE.-dual role of coach and player. ning of the $150,000-~~ed • -;-.Somelimes H's hard iO rer·-Preak~ss Stakes '"as fU"med go at the beginning -you at nine . Monday. ~s Freetex: . . .. waii named a defrn1te starter. pose the major threat for Riva LEGAL NOTICE Ridge's bid to become the first · Triple Crown winner s'1nce NOT1e• 01" INTINTIOH TO INOAGI IN TM• II-LI o• 1-LCOHOLIC .,.,... NOTICI TO CtllOl'TOll O• IULI( TUMS•la - miss playing, said Berra, Trainer Bill Ray m () n d , Citation in 1948. 1av111•01J lflCI. l11J-lllP U.C.C.J NO!\(t It h1r1bY 1IW11 to ff\I' Cr'"ll'-5 APrlr 11, It?? of I(, A. MEAD, tr1111lt•lf", ....,.,., who was used in only a hesitant after Fretex 's sixth handful of games before turn· place finish in the KentUcky ing S<llely to coaching during Derby. decided to enter him ''Yes, Key To The Mint has To Whom 11 M1v CG11Cern: 11u.i-1ddr1u I• ISAll l•Mllhlll Orlve me worried " said L cien sub1.c1 10 IHu•no:• 01 II•• 11<11111 •P. Yorbl Ll11111, CIPllntv o1 °''""· 11,... tl4' , U 11llecl for, Mtlct 11 r.eretiv tlUtfl 11111 !tit C1lll«nl1, 11111 1 Miik lr1n1ltt 11 11Mut It the 1965 season. after the colt worked five--Laurin, Riva Ridge's trainer, 1111M"11n111 p roPO..,, 10 ttll 11c011cllc bl '""'' te '"· oo•OOM 1•v1•10GE. .lier lh P k ~ "H btvtr•-11 Tiit 11rlf"lll11t, d11crlbld .,, Tr111tNr ... wtto11 bu1111111 add r111 11 m e rea ness .-1l:p. e foli-1: So. Anef'tllm l lv4., An11111m. cou11tv If Berra took over the eighths of a mile in 1:00. 4/5 manager's job this year when last Saturday. had me worried a]J winter and s.i1 w. 1tt11 it., C••I• Miu o'"'"· s1111 o1 c1111or1111. Gil Hodges died of a heart at· "He turned in such a good tack before the season started. workout, I decided to give him I.II ,. Purwtnt 10 well ln!..,llOll, IN Ull· Tflt ·P•-rh 11 M lrtll•ftrttltl 111 s 1 more so now. d1r111n111 11 t0P1,1,,. ,. ""' °'"''''""' lfK•ttd ••now. 1tlfl '""'· '"'' wu. Key T ~ 'llnl b d of AICaholl( ltvertll (Ol'llrol !or l1tu1PY.t (111,jnty ol Or1f\tt, 51111 ol C1llfor111t. 0 1 ue I~ ypSMe of Ill t lcolloll< blYtf"I" !IUMI "' ""'" Stld pr-rty ,, OM<rlbld 111 """''' "ll"s tough taking over the a chance," Raymond reported job like that ," said Berra. by telephone from New York. the Derby a(ler Winning the prtmlHI .ti lollow1: 11: AM 11K• M ., ... , fl-1ifrt .. --~ llerb Tr' I . OH SALIE llfl •M tlNI ttlll ol INt Mir t1v1rt1 fMltl,.., y 18 because trainer Dll'll E. Lvdll'Olft --n ,, "THE llEIE'" •nd locllolid .. "lt's oot like going to spring Both Freettx and Easter training and being manager. Exchange ar~ sc:heduled to be Elliott Burch thought the coll GJ111n s. Lv<1m111 '"'° w. 1m *"'''· c"" M111, CounTV tf ..._.f-..1 • PvOlllhld Ol"lftVI C0141t D1llV •nor. Ol"tn,., Sttlw ol C1lllor11l1. ·~~ more seasoning. The M1y IL ''" 1tt1-n Tl'll 11u1-''""''' win bt <°"'""''"'ltd It's tough just stepping in." ~hipped .to P1ml1co from New Berra has found managing York either. Wednesday or Derby Trial was hi.! firsl Ol'I or '"" ""' "" ar e1 Ju111. im. 11 -LEGAi NOT!,...,. 10:00 A.M. " GtlOVl!lt l!SCllOW COlll· outing in seven weeks, after n.&.1 "'~ "011AT10M. 111 s. 1mno11. A ... 1111"" the Mets not unlike managing Thursday -while _No Le Hace. the Derby runnerup, is due in injuring a hip in an allowance 1 ltnl coun!Y ''Or•""· s1111 " c1utor1111. So llf 11 --n '' 1111 TrllllftrH 111 race. HOTIC• TO ClllC!"Oll.I buth•t•• l!lll'le1 '"' ldd•IHll "* br 01" IULK TtlANSl"ltl T • L ur" "d he Id 'l IStc• 4lt1-lll1 u cc I r•nir.ror 1111" • ll'lrlt "'" 1111 ... ,,, Displeased Mount Asks For Trade INDIANAPOLIS ( API Second-year guard R i c k Mount, a fottner AIJ-America from Purdue, says he wants to be traded away from the Jn. diana Pacers this summer. ac· cording to a story in the In· dianapolis News 11.fonday edi· tions . Molhlt told the News, "!"II just tell my lawyer this sum- mer what I want to do. Right now. I want to do everything I can to help with the pla yo rfs.'' Mount. who has a no-t'Ul, five-year contract with the Pacers, expressed dissatisfac· tion earlier this year over limited playing time . But a meeting with coach Bob Leonard seemed to have quieted the situation as the &- foot-4 guard. began to play more. The News questioned Mount about his status after a story appeared this week in News- day saying the Lebanon, Ind .. nati ve wanted a chanRe. The story quoted Mount as saying. "I think I signed too early. I should have waited for the NBA Nationa l Basketball Association draft. If I hadn't signed right awa y, T'd pro!> !!bly have gone with the NBA ." The article also quoted Mount: ''After my contract is up, if someone would aporoach me 1·d go. I signed with the wron,e; team. Ind iana was an established team when I signed and I've h11d dirficulty breaking into the lineup. "Earlier this year." the story continued, "I asked to be traded before the trading deadline and thev couldn't make a deal. I'd like to go to Kentucky. I sllll like th( Midwest and 1 think J could help that team." In 78 regular .season ~ames. h1ount avera~ed 14.2 points a game and 27.2 mJnutts or playing llm•. In his 15 playoff gam" pnor lo Monday nl~h~ he averaged 1.4 polnls and IU minutes. Laguna Awards Laguna O.ach High will honor ils track and lldd tea ... :pttb 1 •porla awards banquet lonllhl In the school cal~lerla. F"tivltl" 1el undor way at I:~. . today. The other six entries for the 1 3/16-mile race. which \l'ill gross $189,800 if all nine start, already are on the grounds. The MeaOOw Stable entry of Riva Ridge, the Derby winner, and Upper Case has been in- stalled the &-5 choice by Earl Hart, Pimlico's pro gr a m oddsmaker. Key To The Mint. from Paul 1'.1ellon's Rokeby Stable, was quoted · at 2-1 after his im· pressive victory in Saturday"s Preakness prep. with No I..e Hat'e at 6-1 and Freetex at 12· I. Bee Bee Bee. Winner of the Survivor Stakes at -Pimlico earlier this season, was qooted at 15-1, with Eager Exchange, Festive Mood and Hassi's _a in sa! _cou n ex-Ho11c1 11 ... ~.by ,i.,.11 ~ ~ cr'1c111~t •r•: S•F"·o plain the d1sappo1ntlng effort ol PETElll J . OtlllllJY,,,. Ind ,LOllENCE T;1n1°~~= llw•ldf• of Ul'\rV'r Case wbo finlshtd lM. O.&RUY,,,., lr•n11•r0••· w ~.'. OtOVlt •Sl'llOW COllPOtlA'TtO• rr~ . • bulll!Qt 1ddr"1 It 2358 Herbor l lvd .. Na. fifth and last in the Preakness 101. co111 M111, clll,j""' o1 Or•!UI•· s111e l'.:.:t1:11(~~lftnll Prep · or C1Hlcrnl1, 1n1t t bulk 1r111•l1r I• 11iou1 1 •' _,,.,' · to be m1de to GLENN LUOMA"' tnd IC""" 1• -"He never runs on the front DANA LUDMAN. tr1111teree•. wr.o•• ll'ut11lih.c1 Or1n11t Co.111 0111r '"ltet, d " 1 .~ · ·d he bv1l,.11t 1ddr111 11 .,,t !ll!nihim St Mt~ U, 1fl2 1•n en , 1J<1Urln S3l , but t n Hu11llntlen ltadl. County o1 Or111ei added: "I may need him to go s1111 01 c1111or1111, LEGAL NOTICE lhe f nd . TM P•otllrfY lo bt tr1n1/1rrtd h 1-------------0n ronl e tn the ICK1ttd ti s.o W11t 19111 s,, .. ,, Co111 l'ICflTIOUI :IUllNllS Preakness for a half or five--Me••· c111,jt1IY or or1nt1, s111e 01 NAM• ITAT•M•NT eighlhs -·n 1 wi·ll nol c1u""""11. Tiii 1o11ow1111 Pl,_ It dtl111 a,u,1,,.11 . . lift: S1Jd 11r-rtv 1• 1MHl"lbtd In "ner1 I 11; particularly care where he 11; 1-11 Jtock In rr11111. 11~1~r••· •'llllPfl.,.nt JACK MISHlll '" Anocl1t1t. 4M 1. !'·'·"· f I f" , . , •fld tood wot or tt\11 bffr b1r bu11nen )llh SI C011t Ml•• c111r tU21 uu.::.u~S or 1gure the big known •• Sl!A 8111.lllE •l'ld 1oc11111 11 Jtct ··Ml~ . ..,.· 1, l0t11 11., Cttt• horse (Riva Ridge ) "'ill take '" w111 ltll't srr"'' cc111 Me••· Coun!w Me1$, c1111. '1'27 " Gf Orann, s1111 ol (1lllor1111. Thb Mlneu Jt bll119 c..-UC:ttlll by • OVer. TM bl.1111 lrtl'ltltr will be <Olllllrrllrllttd ll'IOflh•ldUll. F~stive l\lood was ll.A only Ol'I Ot '"'' ""' 26tl't dlY of Mty, 1912, ,, J.t.CJC MISHLIEll: u..:: 10:0. A.M. t! Pll:OFESSION.t.L ESCllOW Preakness horse in a serious s111:v 1c1Es, 1nn '""'"' l lvd ,11111 1 Tlll1 ·•""""'"' 111"" wlm llll C9111!fY Tuttl11 (OUl'll'o' ol 0 "' St 1 cii Cllr\ al Ori"" Ceu111Y If!: NII"!' IL tfn, workout Monday. going a mile c1n~1111, ''""· 1 • Iv ''""''' J. MlfllM. O.Ul"I' CIUl'lt'I' in I: 48 at Pimlico. • 1 t So 11r •• k_,, to 1t1t T••"'*''"'· 111 cim. ''"'* rt. I I l'k·' hi I bl.11111111 l'lllrlM 11'1d lddr11111 ulld by ll'ullllMtll OI' 0 1.., p pa ICU ar y 1 ~ s ast Tr1n11tror• ,., tl\e """ '"" 1111 1111, M ,, ... _ 1"" Cold 'm" • '"'· quaJ·r " '1d t . B·11 •r•: H-. '" , .... •· •"" J1111t " i m.n . I u:: I sa ra1ner I ''''*' bY: GllM lvdmll'I Dixon of the 26 2/S.sec<>nd Tr111l1••" clocking 01111 Lvc1ffl111 · Trtl'ltflrff IUP•ll.1011. COUllT Ofl TMI LEGAL NOTICE PlllOPHSIOflAL llCllOW 1111.VICll ITATI OP CALU'Oll.lftA Hll P. 0. IOX "' THI COUNTY 01" OllANel TUSTIN, CALll'"Ott""IA Nt. A-,_ NY Overcomes Pacers IMr.w Ht. n..,,,.., NOTIC• 01" MIAll.IN• o" PI TITtoN Pllbllllled Or1n1t Cc11t lltl1r "llol, POtl PlllOIATI o• '#11.L ANO •tit MIY I .. lt n • 11'1·7' LITTltll TIEITAMINTAlf lllllt ol' FRITZ ICHNAUOT, D9-CH,..... LEGAL NOTICE NOtlCI IS HElll!•'I' l;IVIM 11'111 J1n1 tum ll1h1111 1111 fllld 111r1!11 • M!Hlln fror NOTIC• OP INT•NTION TO Protltl1 ol Wiii 1"'1 !or Lttlt•t Cltll<TI SleU ltlfY INTltl•ST T11t1rr11nl1rv 1o ~P1ll00111r• rll1r-t ffl lltCt. •1tl-l1'1 u.e.e.) wl'tlcll 11 mid• lor l~rtlllr ••"lcullrt, 11\d NOtl Cf 11 fltrt&y ilvtn to ll'lt 11111 1111 llmt Ind plt(t al h1trl111 "" UNIONDALE . N.Y. (AP) -88 when Baum scored on a re-Crtcllter• t1 I". GOROOH 11ve11:10Gt!, 1~ "'' 11tt11 "' ror M•r >o. 1tn, ,,, Oetitor .......,,. bu'llMtt .tddrtu I• 2U ii t.)O •·'"·• In 11'11 <1111•!1~ ti 0.Nrl· For 110-105 Victory Ollie Taylor, Rick Barry, John bound and added a free throw A11111t1;,, •rwi .• At1111tlm, countv ef "'tt1t No. , of ••Id (C\1'1, 11 1• c1w1c Baum and John R 0 c h e f lhr · 1 1 ·th or'""· s111• of c111torn11, 111,, , wt11rl· C111t1r oriw w111, in t11t citv 11 1111t1 or a ee-po1n p ay, w1 "" '"'''"' 1, •bout 10 °' cr••IH by Dtb-""'· c1111or,.11. sparked a fourth quarter New 2:56 gone in the fourth period . tor 11111 '''"'"to K. A. ME.t.o, Stcurld °""' M•v "· ,,n, V k ba k h " AJ · P1rty, wlloll 111.lllllftl 1Cld•m hi Ufl W. IE . SI JOHN, or come c as t e 1,ets ter the Pacers tied the irea1111IN 0,,.,.. YorM 1.1,... c-... o1 CllUl!tv Cltrk lh I di P nd I l ' • '' IUITON. O.lUl.OfN, overcame e n ana acers score seco s a er on a or11111, ''''' ., c1t11G0"1111. TNOMSON ,,.. fllll.IOll 110-105 Monday night, squar· jumper by Freddie Lewis, 1n1::ntorwTi'i: (!:1:1: 1,,~i!::r'~~1 JIM e. N•ll- ing their American Basketball Taylor bit a driving lay-up "•'"'" 11111 "u~t11, ''""I""' 1n11 7'14 IMflil Pil11t1r """ JM , ... • 1Vrllf1lll11CJ1 et Otblor ~1111 ~ Wlllllltr. e1t1fll"N1 Ass ociation championship giving the Nels a 92--90 lead -Mic•llll ,, 12t1 w. '"" 11rttt, coe11 l::!, ctui ~111_ Serl.es at lwo v1'clort" ap1·-th t they f' lsh-1 Miii CWlll'f' or 0r1-. s1m o1 "" 1 1 ' r ~...... a never re 1nqu 1:\,1. C1111~ •• 11\d """'-k-II "'THI 1"1;11111111111 °''""' C•••I C•1tv Pl!•!, The fifth game in the best· Barry scored nine polnls In 1tl!EI"". M•r 1•. 11, n, 1tn 1mn Of se"en ser1'es will •· pl~·· th r· f J. I nie 11orn1kl ucvrll'f' 1r1ru.1r:t1o11 w11t LEGAL -• u.::: .. Jn. e ma qua. ""r surge, Tay or 111 c011111mm11ec1 e11 or 1111r 111e ttl'I 01v NOTICE ~:~:.Y 6 ~:~~ 1~tNe~~.on:'k had ei~ht and Roche and :si~~w 1~7J~;10~~~0~~;,r' ,~~~:~ 1,.111 "'' Baum SIX each. Center Billy Anellelm, C1l!lor11I• ... II ln1t•llmt11ll". 'UPllllOtl COUllT 0, THI Satu_rday afternoon . If a p ltz 1· • hed s th N t' So l•r ., know" to "'' Stc:urtd 111rt"I'. ltATI o, CALtl"OlllNIA •o• h au tnlS a e e ll •II bu1l11111 111me1 '"' tddrtutt 111.cl 11'1 THI: COUNTY OP OtlANOIE sevent game is necessary. it high scorer with 30 pciints and ""' o.01or 1or tilt lhr N y11r1 1i11 P•••· N•. A-ll1• will be held May 23 at Indiana I led . bo d 'th 18 ll'e: Su"'· NOTIC• 01" Ml:AtltNO ON PITITION Playing before a record a so m re un s WI ' . O.t.TEO: MIY '· 19n. •o• All'•OIHtM•NT 0' SVllTITUTI Barry followed in scoring with SECUREO PARTY TllUITll AB/\ playoff crowd (lf 15,890 -26 points. OfllOVI:· :i~~: COll:POllATION c!~::~. of THOMAS ,_ MEltltlNO,. surpassing the previous mark Le . •• lh b 1 _..a 111 s. 11Mno11 No11ce 1s HE1tEev GIVEN 11111 f 15 241 l I t F 'd l lh \l.'IS pacl;:U e a anceu Atotll1l1r1, C1llf1M"l\ll SECURITY PA(l,,I( """TIO,,,.AL •ANK o . se as r1 ay a e Indiana attack with 22 points l1<r1JW No. m1.11 • corPOr111on. •1 l•tc:utor, 1111 n1e.i Nassau Coliseum -the Nets hil R B -h d 19 PvD11,r.e<1 Or'"" ca111 O.lly Piia!, r.ere111 1 "1111r.n tor Ord•r A1>P0111tlnt tralltd 8"""78 going into the w e oger rown 8 . M•Y 1l, lt12 1m.n GERALD WILSON II • u b''. I u' I Tnt1mtnl1rr Tr11t1tt lbtfor• dlllflby. final 12 minutes. LEGAL NC1I1CE LEGAL NOTICE 11an1. 1,. 011c:t o1 Ill• 11n11n11e<1 •rwtt• Th th ·• h d ~ '-------------ISECUlllTY ll'ACIFIC ,,,.AT10,,,.AL IANIC' en, ey surgeu a ea ow-·1-------------1· ,..., • <orPOr11IOfl, or10111111v t11mtc1 In tt1111,; Tars Honor Swim Stars P1et1T1ous IUSINISI SUP••10• COUtT 01" THI Wiii 11111 t11l1m111t or THOMAS ... HIEll-NAM• IT.t.T"l#lllNT STATI Of' eALll"OltNIA ll'Otl lllNG, de<ttllcl, r1ftrt11« to wl'llefl I• 11~~ lo!lowl"' perlOll ii dtlnt 111./tlMtJ THI COUNTY Oii Oll.AWOI midi fW lurtlltr Plfl!C1tl1r1, IM ll'lat !tit H" A~ II"'' tflll lltcl OI lll•tlllt 11'11 llfftl 1111 M'I' THRf:I SONS JANITOIUAL. ltJJ OtlDllll TO SNOW CAUtl ow' AP. illftfl It'! let Jllfll •• Im, 11t1)01.m .. lfll W1ll.ct, Cost1 Mtll, Ct!I, #it CO\ll1rOll'l'I ol OtNrtrntllt H JoM T ltlf Jr IHI W1lltc» CCllll PLICAUON OP CMAM .. Of' NAMI. Mid cwrt " * , .... _ 0. J "' • "' ' Ill ~ IT'lllftr If 1111 .. IUllOl'I of ' ,.... Cll'l11f DrlYI Mtu. C11JI. lllO,,,.ALO KE,,,.NITH Wl!Clll""T lot Wttl. 111 !tit Cit\' of 1111!1 A111, C1llftnll1 Tiil• bl.t•llllU 11 btl°" (Ol'lduc.lffl Illy 1n (Ill ~ H Olltd Mt~ f, 1911. ' 1ndlvldvll. ,... ., "'111· WILLIAM IE. lt JOHH , JOlln T Lui Jr Wl'ltc"UI ROHALO I( E N H f: TH C-IY Cltt- ThJt t11ttmfnt fllld' -.ltl't 1111 COltllt\' Wll(lllHT 1111 "ltill hl1 llllOOll -.tit! tl'tt 11.ALPM I. SMITH 11111 Cllf"ti: ., Ol'lllH °""" on: IMY n. 1tn. clflt of 11'11• Ceurt .., ptrmbltlOll ffl DAYID M. •AlllU.ND Kevin Ashe galncd most tv 81v1ttr J. MldcfM. DIW!Y cwnTV """" 1111 -ff"ll'l'I •e».ALO KEN-Oii e1'"""' °'"" Valu.bl. hono-on t b Ctw-. N•TH Wll(ll.IENT .. DAVID ltOHALD M...,..n ..... Cttll. ""' ,,, t! 'U'Jtl ICl!NT/ -""'lftrl, Tt11 0111 ........ N•wporl Harbor High swim .. llbfll/IM OrWIOI CN•t 0111y ~1o1. IT is H111.r1Y OllDllt.IO ""' 1n Alttntfl ..,1 ••tnter ,,.. ~ltllMr M'1 1,, n. • ..,. J-'· 1,72 1,.._n ..,..,. 111tttn11C1 111 "" Nner •'-tt.1kl "uli'!llMCI °''"" ca1it Dinv Pllol team Monday night •t the t-r ti °'"""":."' i " J-"· 1m M•r it. 11 .. n. 1tn ,,,,_,; school '~ annual sports awards LEGAL N011CB ::.,:::.:;,e1::,.·~::. -:111.::";..;,""11::'1-----------.;.;.:..:.: belltQUel. -wmr w111 •••ketle!I ..-di"' fll ftMnt LEGAL NOTICE S I ard ,ICTITIOUI 1u1u•••• tflOUN P!Of"' -''"''°· -1---:;;;;;;;;:=::;-7.::::::::::---peci1 •w winners ln MAM• STA.TIM9MT IT II ,U .. TMllt ot!;Ollt,l'O ftlll • llllC'TIT IOUS IUtlMIM swimming ond gymnastics: n.. fltlkrwJM ,..,..., ,, Ooint ),u1IMll toll\' ol Jiii• onttr .. """' ctllM bl .... ITATIMINT 11: pll941lt!M 11'1 tllt Cotti IMH a.Ill' Plllf. 6 'TM •ttfllwlnt 11e1"1t1n \1 HIM Mh'ltu G GOLDC,ff ,11,.AHCIAL CO., 17177 lllWIN"r ol llllff"•I (!rc11!11'9n, IMJ&l!U" ti: • vi,;:~~kl ~ 1rw Hun111ttte11 19Mlf, caur. • 111 Oritl'W (Miff, ~ • .,. tw ltlt•, at W. 1t111 s1 .. c .. 11 M-. c.tt'lalto: fll11r1 W1lktt1 MVI" II.Oii SMl"I.., A. C11W11, ta. ,,,.,...,..., '°"" •Dttllr.IM WllllL 'lflltY O. •n.rldft, 2U Afllfwlflft W11k1r1 Mott lm111•0Yf'll: J 0 .. ft 11\ld .• NIWllOl'I. tllll. DATID1 \MIY l. l'7t. 11¥d., Al\IM11'11, Ctll'llrllfl, Tlllt M l-It Wiii mMudffl "' In H~rtnoll C).. ScowU'4i Tllh llutlMU 11 Mflll CONl\lci.f 1!r 111 ·~1.. lndh•ldutl. Jud" of Ille lllhltl,otl. Vttlll'f' -Cwt•ffl1 MvJ. AtMI /ollltl SHlllLIY A. CAllOIM Sill'C•lllf Court ,INLAY G. llVlltlOOI l ..... OW'td: Clwlrltl Gl11ltr1 MY! 1Ct¥11'1 Tllll .tiftfl'lltlt nlld W1111 tl'tt Ctu"IV NllNLY I IODfflll • TJ>lt· tl111,.,111t 11"!1 Wllll !fie, C AIM. ·-(llf'tl o1 Ortlltl C.,,.,IV t1t: Ml\' IL lf7', lit (I'll< Ctn'l«r 011"' W.. Cl1r11 ffF ()ff"" ,_.., 1111 Ml'f' II.";; c.t1l11: l(tffll Wtlh ,,_... ll'!WM'twd: l"I' ttwrl'f' J, ~. Otlllltt C111"'1 lelllt ,.,,., Clfl .... ma ·~ llVWIJ J, ~. Ottllly °"'"~ Johll a.rrttl. .. .... k Ttl• fn 4J to..,n Cllrll.... c... . -..... . • l'lnm .,,.,...... ,.. ....,...., C=i ~--)OtWIWll, M••• fl>Vollthtd ~ c ... , oiltv Plltl. Pulllt ...... °"'"""CM.ti °""" Pltot. "*1t11H Ori"" c..n 0.Jtf ·~'r" m. • Ir ~ Mtv 1., n. ",.,. J-" 1•n 1m.n ""' f. M. P. -. '!11 IJM.n.Mtv ,., 21-. .,,.. J-" 1m 1~ I I .. • • . -··-~ .., .. '· ---. ..... TODAY'S TV HIGHLIGHTS CBS ID 7:30-Primar1 Coverage. CBS News >4'Jffe~s coverage of the Michiga n and h1aryland pri· mar1es on "Decision '72." • .. ~ KHJ 0 7:30-"Run Silent. Hun Deep." Clark J Gable and Burt Lancaster star in this dran1a of I subn1arine warfare. ,. ~ . . ABC 0 8:00 -"The Deadly Dream." A ter· 'i r1f1ed man fa ces death as his frightening drea1n ... becomes real. Janet Leigh , Lloyd Bridges, Carl "' Betz. "NBC 0 9:00-Secrets Of the African Boabab. ~· O~son \~elles narrates this documentary of the , 'v1de variety of animal life in Kenya \vhich thrives ...: f because of the bao bab tree. r 11 :00 ID-"The Fighter." ru chard Conte and '-Lee J. Cobb star in this 1952 adventure drama. ~ ..... .... ~· ··.--.... Tuesday Evening MAY 16 6:00 fJ li1 Nt•1 Jtrry Dunphy (j) lill Huddy Report 0 KNIC Hen TGm Snydu e The 11,·v.u., fJ H1w1 Btnli, Schuhec:k CJ (jJ Wl14 Wiid Wtst ®)HBC NtWI m Tht FU11btont1 m.1 Drt1111f Jt1nnlt (jj Zoom! ED Hod11podp Lod11 ·qrm-Nm--- (j'f; MIJbtrrr llJD • ai) To Bt Announced Q) Nen Jiln Htwthornt (52) Thret Stooae• l :lO IJ MO¥it: (C) (SO) "'0111 Min fHnl" Canel. (dre) '65 -.llmeJ Coburn, Gl/1 Golan, Ltt J. Cobb, Edward Mui· h111. An •~P•rt fro1m1n t nd super secret 111nt is 1ni1n1d to destr'a1 lht vlll1ins who 111 1tt1mplin1 lo conlrGI !ht world's wet,l her. (Jij CIS NeWI Wauer Cronkite @1 Nation1I GtO(l"t pl\ic "AllSkl# m AndJ lirilftlh SMw C!) N1nn1 tlld tht P1of1uo1 @ lo\iii hit 1his l riah! Ltnd- A PtBOntl View" by l rooU Atkinson. is rt¥itwtd by Robert Cromie. ED Hiltlty tf Art (R) ''Art •nd Mu~ic" e:'! TrtlSlilrt (lf,. liffln Actti (S QwlM C:.ntt Est• Clncionl m Ylcttrll braa Show (52) H111bhop Elllol Mintz 7:00 O CBS News Waller Cronki!t CIJ ABC News Smith, lletwntr 0 ID N9C NtWI John Ch1ncello1 0 a.at tilt Cloc.t @ lnrtt '' Co1Htqut11Ct1 (]) Dr11n1t ,,~ .. ,, .. • T • ' Cumminp, K.lrtn Mor1ow, Timcrthy BoMoms end m11itlan feli~ Green· lillld. iE Lt Cou Jwz11d1 @j Cle11 C1111pbtlt m Esl1ti111 Central 1:30 0 (])@ Q) Mowit of the Wte~: ~C) (90) "TIM Deldly Drtem" (sus) '71-Lloyd Brid1ts, J1net Leith. Leif [ncllson, Carl Betz. A ltrrilied mtn ftces de1lh 1s his tri1hlenin1 dreem becomes real. m M1rv Griffin Sllow Gursts: W1yn1 Newton, Norm Crosby, Dominiqu t, Ser1io Franchi, Jeanninr Bernie1, tenny Kent. EID (iJ) Tilt Adiioute•- ~ hltric.11 Ecol!HIJ l:OD II (j) ff•~•il Fi'lt·O (R) A hndu memoiy in McGuretl's p1st is sod· denly shaken when· his IOJmM litncet, pltyed by Di1n1 Muld1ur, finds her husband sl1in. O Tonight join Kraft for * a fascinating look at the African Baobab. 0 (@)ID I 1,IC1.1.\ I Stcttlt ti Hit African 81ob1b The widt vuiety of 1nimti life which lhrives btc1us1 ol lhe weirdly shiped b10b1b tret is studied, Orson Wellts narrates. Briti!.h nat uralis! photographu Alan Root and llis wilt Jc1n lilmed th• specill on lotalion )n Ke nya. m la trieda l ien trilda 9 The Yirzinian a!)MM!t •:JO 0 Seeond ...... O Nin W•kb. John Fullmer , I!) M11n Huth W1llitm1 (jj) lllCl Jo11m1I ED TN Forsytt S.11 (Ill '"Bir1h of 1 forsyte" a> Lt Cati (52) R1cin1 From HoltJWODd Ptrt The Ra ilbird Sllkes, riced 11rher in 1111 dty 11 7 lurlonrs. fe1turin1 3· yt1r·old rillies l1om I $25,000 PU/lt. 0 Whit's My Llntl 10:00 fJ {]) C.111"1011 (R) m I Lm lllCJ O ®J m J1m11 C1mtr II Nich· I!) I Drt1111 ti Jt1nnlt tb "Bertht'" (R) O]J Ed!Kllinl 1 Nttitl '1ht Ch1n1· Q m !kn int Amtric1n Commitment'' A r1port fJ @@ tl) Mercvi Welby, M.D. from lht LBJ Ubr1ry •dwllon sym· "--Of Miiic Sh1dow·Sh1pes" fR) pOliu m. CJ 111..;.: (C) (?hr) "Sapphirt" &11 HlthlJ'Clll Kethl1rn HitchcoQ (dra) ·59 -Nirtl Patrick. (£) U111 Pl111rit tn el C.llllM m Dr1ptl 3 Kid Talk (iJJ Sptcitl t i lh• Wttk '"Bernstein 7:J0 0000[Q)mo1cl1 l•n 'n In London" Col/e1agt of tht Mlthi11n 1nd Mii)'· a!) reriinl Mtiicani I d · · (52) LI ltflnd1 dt ltfomtl en p11m1nts. O Movit: (CJ (2h1) "ltnyon" lD:lD 0 ;10111 Pllln1m'1 T1I~ lad: (m)1) '71-Robtrt Forster, D1rr1n m 8it1 Cosby Show McG1'1n, Jose fllrtr. A priYett dt· tt) Behind tht Linu "I. F, Stone"s iectivt linds himself In 1 st1iou1 Washington'" aitu1ticn w.h•n. I f'.1Urd trtd ti~ ls eJl Lt $tlanic1 discovered 1n his ofli«. OJ Movit: "Nirhlmer• Alltr'' lrron1 0 I]) (jJ al The Mod Sq111d "I Powtr Joan Blondell. Am My Brother's Kteper" (R) line (52) C~nci1ntia Culptbl• end Julie race •tainst timt tnd 1 killtr to find Ptlt, who Is 1u!ftr· 11:00 IJ 0 (I) ®J (E €D NtWI in1 1 brain injury. 0 tint Sttp llJVfld O MilliOft $ Mnit: (Zhl) "llu~ (!) Manhat Dillon Siltnl, llun Ottp" (dra) '59-Cltr~ 0 I]) al News Gable, flurt L1nc1ste1. Jttk Wuden. m Truth tr Consaqutnces m H11111'1 HtrMI C!) Movie: "Tht Fi11rt11'' (adv) '5~ 61 D111net -Richud Conte, Ltt. J. Cobb. ()j) Tiit flf'l)'lt Salt "Birth GI I (5?) Hudsllop (R) forJyte" ,. 11 ·JD fJ (I) CBS Litt Movie: (Cf "The EI!lC urrtnl .~nnts Portr111 cl Or-• Rtvndtrt" (wes) •6S--Gltnn rord. 1n11 County Henry Fonda. ~Count!' Plitt O @l m Jojlnny Ctrson Ed11r CiE) Conw1tro CorUlll . __ , f (521 Mrrit: 12111) "TM Hird W.,... Buch1n1n. Of;b~11 lley • ..,.ds. un1n· (d 1 ,43-ld l p"no Dennis Mfll" do t1mas. Tnn1 Lopez 1uut. rl 1. u 1 • 1J Mnit: "TIM Ctst A11inrt M11. r•n. Join L11h1, J1ck Ctrson. Amts" {mys) '36 _ lltllrlt B11nt. 1:00 o m rn ai ,.. tmtt 1 ... fJ EATON CORPORATION Paar 1ut$ls. .• Presents CBS'S Charle1 m T• Tell ltrt Tntll Collingwood narratinE 12.00 CJ Mnit: "Union St1tion" (mys) WHERE WE STAND! . •50 -w11111m Holden, Berry f1lz· II Cl) CBS Nm Sptdtl "Whue ierild, Nancy Olsen. W• Stand'' R1port on out5t1ndin1 news tYtnh sine• Jtn., '72. m Mo'lit: "'lJ11i•" (!om) '-4l Merit Oberon, Jostph CcMtn. Q €t'.! POftdtrlU '1he Survi¥Cf1" (R) A )IOiln& womtn h 11Jecttd bJ l:DO rn fl 0 (J) llj N1W1 eJltz1ns end tllf hu1btnd when sht ind 1111 h1ll·bried baby ere r1scutd 1:15 0 Withwty Pltrtl from lnditns. {j) I Dr••• tf Jt•nnlt @)I lflCIAt I Alric.I P1rt Ill al lou1 specitls on Africa. Gr1101Y Pee-nar· llllS. m Amir C1ittith Show CD Dt'lid rmt Show Gut1h: 8Gb Wednesday DAYTIME M;QVIES t:OI m WO.ly tht Y•lllllr (dn) '5l- C1tro1Y Peck. 81rttr1 Payton. t:JO 0 '1t1n;·ll1" (setlr1) '37-flum· ph(tJ 1o111t, lesllt ttow•rd.· IO:IO 9 "!1o Nlitil "" • ~" [fd" (dl'I) '41-[ctw•rd Q. •bin· ton. C•U Ruwn. "TIM ...... 0. ..._,. (com)· '3&-M•11•r1t SulU· 1:30 II Movie: (ti "llOlll II Dt nv11" (WIS} ·s~John f>lyM. 2:00 m All;"i1ht Sllew: "'l1111pict," "I"· tttpe." "W .... tf Pllu l,. Wind" l:DO 1J Mtvll: ''Ctllltf F1if" (dr1) '50 -Roi)' C1lhoun, J1r11 Ni1h. wtn, H111ry Fondt. l:OD CJ (C) "lllt nll ill ~ S1111" fdrt) '47-Jimu M1son, lOln FOfltllnt. CD "Yelin St;J" (w11) '4&-G1e1- 0'Y Ptcl Anni BtXftl. l:JO 0 (C} ...,. ... tllt l ln HtrtiOll• (edY) '42-0orothr llmour. J:OO ()) "'l'9 ltrv...r" Conti (drt) '114 -Dirt loltnll, S.rth Miits. (C) '1h lhlftr ""'*-" P1rt I (com) '&S-.lmy lrtris._st1n1 Sttvtna. fl "Chlil1 Stu" (dll) '36-Glt r• G1blt, J11n Hailow. ' . ' .... . . 'Klaight's Ganabit' Laguna i_Ba.llet To·ps By TOM ~ARLEY Of 11tt ~111 PllM l!•ff L1!a Zall took to the foils. a tale of tragedy that has 1nuch or "S\\·an Lake's'' Odette·Odile treachery in its message and a solid Tschaikowsky score to give us the fa scinating and colorful "The Knight's Garn· bit" that so completely dominated her Laguna Beach Civic Ba ·11 e t Company's weekend progran1. Little "·onder that th e onlookers at the Regional Ballet Festival in Seattle were Qii ... • ioA,1 H1fv A1.Mi.ci.i.0r°H"J';.il'vU • NEWPORT BEACH • 644·0760 S.HOWS 12 :30 . 3:30 so enthusiastic about J\11ss Zali's latest creation: I thoujJht it was one of the best things done by the Ari Colony group in recept years and a rleverely devi sed work that should be a mainstay for .a long time to come. It brings Hal • ' J\·I r . lndefatigable" o 'Neal to the fore as the Queen's Knight in a role that enabled him to fully e111ploy his dramatic talents. \Ve also got a gli1npse or t14·0 of t~e adaptable male lead in yet another setting - that or a ski llful and obviously carefully trained fencer. lie had lots of company in fencing sequences for v.:hich the group had to thank fencing master Alexander Dilts. the equally capable Black Knight of this admirable Zali creation. vacancy in Row Z. It Wl.3 good to see our sprightly young Lagunans once more demonstrate their ton· siderable _pro11'esS in Carl Orff's "Gannina Burana .'' the scenic cant3ta in '''hich, they linked last year so §Uperbly vl'ith !lie "trvine t-.1 a s I er Chora le. They capture very cleverly the earthy message so brilliantly evolved by Orff fr on1 the (lid Benedictburen manuscripts of the roving n1(1nks and mead swillers or medieval days. The Orff score has been splendidly edited to give-us a cross section of the classic best suited to the ballet sequences. "Golden Moments of Ballet., and "Don Quill'.ote Pas <le Deux" completed \vha t "'a:<> the Laguna group's final membership program of the season. They can1e through with flying colors in v.•hat \V as most certain1y a long and demanding session. Tuesday, M11y 16, 1972 DAILY PILOT 0._ll Y ,-I LOl Sl•I! Piie!• Tlint's No Lndy • • • ?\·\artin J<..,uchs restrains .l nhn l.ough111 11n froin ~r:1 hlJ1n g ~Jerrell Ann l·laddan in a tense scene fron1 the 1 nystcry-ro1nrd~· ··t ·a1rl1 ~le IJ You ('an," open1n' its five·\Vee kend run Friday at the J-I1111ti11 g!o11 Rc>aeh Playho use. --~----·--------• O'Neal n1ost capably resists the sword play of the three Silver Pawns -beautifully danced by Kristi Moorhead, Molly Lynch and Sandra Winieski -to defend the love he holds for his Queen, deli ghtfull y danced by Kathy ?.1ason. But the Black Kn ight. very much on the lines of Von Rothbart in Swan Lake. used his prize pawn to sell ing effect to destroy the Prince \Vith a rapier thrust t h a t spells checkmate in this cleverly staged game or chess. 'Critic's Cl1oice' Still 11'1·igl1t,· Witty ~··ta• flVD Al •nsc~ SI CDSrA ,.ISA 606 O'I) l .. ai' lOUT" ,.., """ ••• ~Jlk.;~ ~O'•t~ ~•­·~r;~ Ptxr •• •• ~ '. !'lU-OC:OUll'I Alie. Ac•4•,.Y Aw•nll Wi••tr - "SIHllNALS Of SlllNC E" E DWARDS HARBOR c·~~':.2 H~•IO• ll•D Al WILSO~ U co~u "''i 4 6•!> 0111 One Is A Lonety Number Melvy~ Oouglo• Alsa. W(ll"rtn Bto11y -l il Tay(or "TMf OHL Y GA Ml IN TOWM" • • B( .. l;H 9 LY0. "l !ELLIS ?·9909 • HVHTIN GTON 9(ACH . ............ ,... .... _ ......... . GEORGE C. SCOTT "lllE HOSPITAL" BEST ACTOR NOMINEE DIANA RIGG (PG) Color James Coburn "THE CAREY TREATMENT " llr.DWA"DS I THEAT fl E ~""'""''"'"··re••"·•""'"'.,,,.~, C< __ .... ·-·~--.. ---· fXCUISIV( ~ IMSASIMfNT ,· • .. ,~· '""' .. f.9:. 2nd lop hi l "MADE FOR EACH OTHER" DEAUnG: OftT!M-10-oom:>n ·cesz ... ._., .............. "''"' "'""" ............ ,.. ·~'° ... . GENE HACKMAN :<'Oto! CENTim·FOX PA£SEN1S THE FRENCH LR.Jo CONNECTION ~~.~r P!u1 . Ui1(thflth Tn°Ctlf i" 'IJ Y & IE!:'' Michoet !!Ill!' !PGI "HOSPITAL" "II" 1--AND "NIAIY OUEEN OF SCOTS" By TO~I TITUS or lllt D•!IY Piiot 51•11 Dilts, suitably decked out \\'ilh a fearsome c h ee k scar. was a 1nosl effective and chilling Black Knight. His deftly fl ickering blade had this occupant of .Row D wondering more than once if there nlight not be .$1 more attraclive "Critic"s Choice" has long been one or thiS critic 's choice comedies. despite the fact that the entire play is built on a fallacious roundalion -that a drama critic (any drama critic \\•het her in Ne\v York or Orange County I .would_write a re view of his wife's play. Ira Levin took a very in· .triguing "what if ?" situation (possibly based on the even· tuality of Walter Kerr cri- tiquing wife J ean's "Mary. Mary") and spun a bright. literate yarn that was one of Broad~1:ay's best comedies in the early sixties. fallacy or no fallacy. It ha s lost little of its original sparkle in the version mounted by the Ana·Modjeska Players of Anahei m. ENDS TONIGHT J ANE FONDA "KLUTE" ALSO JENNIFIER O'NIEILL • "SUMMER OF '42" Even "'ith a cast displaying vary ing degrees of talent. and direction which at times loses its forward momentum , "Critic's Choice" remains a witty and quite enjoyable evening. The onl y way you can I ~ ~f.t;·~ ·-hoctiofcltboUI Bruce Brown's "ON ANY SUNDAY" ALSO -~"""""" ._ ___ ..,...,m• ALSO R "SWEDISH FLY GIRLS" LITnf FAUSS AnD 116 HALSY l.t.RGAIN MATINEIE EVERY WED. 1 P.M. ADULTS I .OD ---• -:I."!£> STADIUM ' I '.\'. ·~~ -._' -:.7.r • S!AOIUM ,2 . ." ·~~ ----·'' S!AOIUM •3 ·. .. ~:".'l:ll::ll~ ---7.•• S!ADIUM 'I ·. .. ~~-.. ,_~ Lii Tey101 "X, Y l ZEE., CRI 1---AND '-11Glass House'' IR) • V•nffU fllH1r1ve Gl•nd• J•ckson "MAfllY, OUIEEN OF SCOTS" "'WUTHERING HEIGHTS" El<IUllvt Or1ngt Ctunly lll"rYtd Still Ent1t1me111 Ntmi11•fl'll l•r I Ac1d1my Awird11 "F'IODLEfll ON THE fllOOF" A<Hemy Aw1nr Winner J•ne F•nll1 "KLUTI:" Otl Ill• "SUMMER DF '42" (I ) "0.111111, Or Tiie l1rk1tty·l9· a111tn 41-lrl<k L11t ••1 111111" "M "T 1k1 T~• Monty •nd Run" Wlnntr el I Ac•dtmy Aw•rd• "f~1 PrtM~ ConlllCllDR" Cflll ... "Vat1lll'll111 "''"'"' ,., "SWEDl1H PLY GIRL!" '"' "SWEET IODY 01" CIEIOJIAH" "PUPPET ON A CHAIN" "' ~--AND "MAN C .. LLl!D TllNITYW Qpen Daily 6 30 p rn · Sdl 511 11 & H ol1d.iy~ l \() Vin -------"CRITIC'S CHO ICC " A (Qme<lv by I•• Levin. noreoed l>Y Ooniln ""'"Y. 1e1 d•1l<1n t>y (h1••~• Rrdmon. 1ounD •no h9h1in9 t>v ~lf•t Bern 1nd Jon ~"'· 11•tsfn1f<! by Ill• An1Moditsk1 l1ver1 F"d1v tno SAlurd1y •! I} in 1h• Loar• Pl1vnoust, Br "'"Y 11 L o 1 r 1 , Anahf!m. Rrs•,... Ions 5ll·521l TH CAST Par~er B•ll1n11.,.. fU<jent W•notll Angela 81U1ntine Centv!tvf Von Coon Dion K1111~oi. • J~m•~ fl•a'• Chtrloftf Orr .. RY!h Sm•!hton Iv¥ LonOon Lni!. r~r~h Jofon 8~11•~1inf Arnl~ B~r~OWITI E:sJlf ._liCift Prk~ ' really n1ess this pl;:i~· tq1 i~ b.1· casting an ine rfi cient actor i11 the central role or th e cri tic. Parker Ballantine. There is no such worry in the Ana -Modjeska production Eugene \Vendell. whose locnl experience to dale consisted of a smattering or minor sup- porting roles. moves into lhf' spotlight with lhe fervor <111d assurance of an aclor \\'ilh dozens of leads behind hin1. \\lendell takes full command of the production and sets his 01vn pace -deli bcrale. but steady and solid. creating a m o s t believable character de voi d of theatrica l trappings. ~do •mM:lll' 9IOI -. --........ w. .... -oe.~ WHAT A SHOW! NOW! ht RUN! '"' PARTIMI Df THE ltED IEA lllt Sl119l1 Mtll S,KtlCllllf l c111t E•1r FllMtf. CoRtiR11e111 l11RRl119 S11Rdoy S•ew-2:00 P.M. KOCM stereo103FM the sounds of the harbOr .....J~~rJ.-7 2'4· hours· a day • .. :i hurnan bring Ills 1111 d er:-. t a t e d ac1111g i:.kt ll 111a111fesrs it:-1'1! 111 :in t'\· ccptional <lrunk se('tlf' i11 lilt• tlosing acL ;i ~£'nl of <1 pcrformanrl'. ll is pl a~·11r1u11g 11·1fl·. a ~ Pnactcd by (;eneviPl"I' Vn11 Gogh. con1es off a bi! less crcd1bll' \\'hil£' sh~' r-..:h1b11~ 111!h consun11na\r ~J..1!l 'h!''\ F:.irah c\h1b11 s ;idn11r.:iblr JIOISl' and l11111ng a.'> she 11C'aves her silken 111t'b. Ar1ue Berko1111tz. 11•ho play~ !he critie"s prr.cious kid an d 1hr sourt'1' or n1n11 y of tiis !1\crary bon rn o L s , t.:on1· pc1lsates for an inherent sLi1f· ncss a fool bY' a rine-se nseot 1he requ1s1lt· flash 1111d SJliirklt: l11nini; :u1ct delivery. Ahc1a onst~gt'. sl;l' never 1nanagt's ro l'riee tun1 pl e1es the cast. in a 1naid 's roll' '\\-ri rtcn prin1arily be. altogrthl'r con\'1ncing in a.<: a parody 011 rna id's roles. her delivei:.r <tnd h C' r Direction bv llonald Henl"V perfor1nancc t<lkcs un a l11u is uneven, ~oncentrating oi1 artificial flavor. character <• n d overlook in~ James Beale as the "ne\v necessary clen1cnts of stage , n1ovemcnl. l'aus1ng s o m e \\3\'c"' <lirectur rnaktn" ;111 c-scenes 1c1 be 01·erly stallc. Oedipus play for his father·1n1 . t·h:irles Hcdrnon "s set ts rx- age's \111re h:i.~ !he beginnings t·cllrnl. a spilt ll'\'CI ap<1rtn1cnt or a rifle character in hlS l'Ulll· tha t \ooks J::l'llLlllll'I}' liv1•d In. 1nunily thc;itC'f debut. Onl~· 0 n I v t 1v o m or r. n1inor dcfiClt'llCil'S in t11111ng perfornil!ll<'t'S 0 r ''Cri11c·s and pulll'hing of his Uarbcd Choice" rcn1<1111 lnr 1he Ant1- dialogut• prC\"t•nt hi1n l"ro111 Modje ska Players. this Frida~ :iehieving his potenti:il. <ind Saturday at the Loara Twos p ! e n d i d supporting Playhou se; Broadway a I pt'rror111ances are turned in b~· Loara. in Anahein1. Jluth Smithon as the "'ideal'" ,liliiii. llilili.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii mother-in-la \V and Lois Farahl THE c;1EATIST as the critlc"s fi rst \vife who's SURFING FILM !YIR MADI out to bccorne hi s third as - 1ve ll . ~1iss S1n1thton is srnooth BALBOA HEA ff and polished in all areas and she handles her juicy retorts '"CABARET' IS GLITTERINGLY BRILLIANT. IT DESERVES TO BE A CLASSIC." 673-4048 'IOD0WAn STEREO SOUND I ENDS TUESDAY I A., Evr.~1~r. \Vrru THE R@YAL ~~ .. ~BALLET ( L 1.V r •••• ,.. "11c0,,. ... l oY•" •-••••~> '""·' D•re:-lfd ~, .1.·.1~1 Asou·:' i~J •nher!) H~~t1oci.l l1n ABHE Prl.ldlA:l>e~ A S.-IPlll 111 Rrltut SPECIAL ONE DAY ENGAGEMENT TUESDAY ·MAY 16th Sptciol Gf'OJP llotts Avo.lobl1 · l'lta't tOl'llotl [nd.~ !Nofft<J !Qt lvrlhlr t1"onNllOll. $HOWTIMIS::..l. • 1 • t P.M • DAil V .I'll 0 i SOf'T·SELL SA,U hy lllarvln Myers l I,, Pair Have 'Hospital' For Animal World over the creek. so that visitor.! n1ay s1toll through the proper- ly 11nd tnJOY what he created. For The ltecord FAME-L~SS Births FACES MEI.BOURNE. Fla . (APJ - Birds with bro.ken J e gs. homeles! monkeys and orphaned la "·ns have found <.-omfort 1tnd ~arety in n tropical refuge, "''hich a couple ha:. bulll for the tialt, the slck. and the lame of the 'l:lnimal world . • luxury <luring 1 ll \ r con· val~ence and dttided there's no point ln scratching for an exi:steoce in the "'ild when handouts are available rr om the Carl1011s. ~lrs. Carlton said, "\\'e started this \11ith a pair or \\'ood ducks and a palr of bro3clb11l!' It just kind of ke pt grO\\'ing." , ~~~~~-.~.-~~~~-, f t. - . i' •• .!':. ~-:~ .. \ / • Me11 in Service U.S. Air ' force Sergeant participated in ex e r c is e John E.~G1ddy helped provide Gallant Hand 72 which was C<lmmunicatibns support vita l held in !he F't. Hood, (Te.1.J to the success of the Apollo 16 area. • mission. ' A scoul in Combat Support Sergeant Gaddy, aon of Mr Company, 1st Battalion of the ind Mrs. John E. Gaddy of 1st Cavalry Division's 13th 14362 Bushard. Westminster. Armor at Ft Hood. he entered is an air traffic controller with the Army la st November and the 2179th Communications completed basic training_ at Squadron at Patrick AFB. Fla. FL O,.rd. The unit helped furnish com· munication links between the Cape Kennedy launch site and worldwide aerial, sea and ground stations. Navy Airman Re e r u i l_ Dou.Id C. Troup, son of Mr . fltr. and Mrs. Carllon Tratr turned their 31h·atre back yard into miniature zoo where young deer bro"•se peacefully by a little winding creek while ANIMALS dozens of ducks swun placidly and ostrich-like rheas and emus stalk through the. un· dergrowlh. ''"'E STARTED <:aring for injured animals abOul two years ago. but "''' really gut into ii big in th e last :;ix 1nonths." says Gladys Teate. Tin ker . .a 1nonth-old "'hile tailed deer, munched quietly on a fern. ''She'll never be. allowed tQ go into the woofls."'. Teate says. "Poachers killed her mother recently, and without her molher she'd never learn lo survh·r in the \v i\d " The rheas, South American birds, and l°"e . eTTJUS, their Auslralian cousins. came from animal dealers .,.,ho didn't \\'ant them because they were ill or crippled. •·oNt.: RHEA. l\lal1\da, has a crippled foot. These "'ere birds dealers couldn't sell and didn 't wanL to mess Y:ith.'r Teate has bu1J1 w\nd\ng "'a!ks and seven rootbridge~ • i 'l '· ~ ' . i ' ' • '.-. UPI Ttlttho!f MMt MlfnWLll Hftlll•I ,.,,,u ,., 1•n Mf •nd Mt1. c;eoroe w. tit~tnlOI'. JiJ Ett,,_f, (Ol!t Mtltl, bOY. "' Mr and Mrl.. JOftl M. Arflltl, s(otr Pl•''' co11t M•••· t lfl ,.., • ., 1, nn Mr 1nd •·MTt. J!)onf it.. 11.l:t, J\l Shi llr<"11r Opw~, Cct.111 M111[,1irl.Porl Mf •rid lw1n K. Wl'tlOPlt. 7t E.oward Cl1tlt. NtWP<lrl '1', c~. '\'Oit Ml 1n4 Mr1. Adi"!' G. P 1k1 , £111 St. Andr~wl, i 1nt1 ,linl \ Del~ 1 Mf. Ind Mrl. JOhl\ E. Mtl'tl1r, Mi II WillO<" Ao!. I., Colli Me>I , tlO~. 1'l l Mr ind Mrl. l(.1n1\fll't W. &•tft, h Port Albl nl P11ct, Nt,,.P<lfl B11c • M~'ind Mii. O•vid R. Wtll1, ~ill SI~ 11ic1l Ci•'"· Hun!ln,t<>n lle1ai. oor. MIY L •72 Mr •flCI Mfl 01nlll v1nl1n. :IOll Poll c'neht• puice, NtwPOr! le1ch, 11r1., Mr. Ind Mfl. Thom•I 1·1J.llttworl ' :i-091 El Con11nto-.-a.,.. olnl .. bOY,14 Mr. ind Mii. Rffl Ch1mbtr1, JJ SQ<iln Birt/I. s1nt1 An18 •'c"· '"' Mf 1nd Mrt. J1m•1 • •r:· P1ttfl00 w1y, Apt. J· , Col I Me_., M~Yino M•.•· KtllY &11k1r, 120'! south Dorttn. S•n!1 An1. bov. Mr. 1nc1 Mr1. SMl'htn l ruttvem1n, 9191 C.11>1 COd Drlvt , Hun1\1'1t10n Bt•dl boY Mr 1nd MfJ, L1wrenc1 Jolln1on' '"' Port EGwt rd Clrtlt . NtWPilrl 11th, IW•n boYI MIY J. l•7J Mr 1nd Mfl. Mlthltl SinGOWl l,. IOOI Geort ll , Apl 10. HunUntlOf\ 11uc/I. M~11no Mfl G\u1n Chl1m. tOI Linotn .;venue. Lone l••(h. ""l , Mr 1nd Mro c;1ry G Ulnt1r ._ tY 1'-l0<1nder Orlv1, HutnlntJ!Gn •t•c/I, M~!rl tnd 11.llPh A. Htnc~ll, :J06' W1\l1ct 1'~tnu1. 1'ol. a, Coll• Mt••· M.!'°~nd ,.." G1ry R. Wtldman, 1 ... "2 S!rch S\<11\, Foun11ln V1llt1. •frl MIY 4, lt7l Mr. and Mrl. M1rll Howltlt, 11l1 Po" Wl'ttf\tr, NtwPOll 8t1CI), olrl •• Mr. i nd Mrl. Robert 11ow1r EJ111m1rt Aw1nut, Ca1r1 M111 I•, Mf Ind Mrs Oeln 81!11, flSJ I 1111 lf--~---;•T.nd~Mr11. Dav!d Tco..uRJl(.IJJ.7 sa sf. Huntington .Beach. graduated from r ecru i t training at the Naval Training Center in San bi.ego. Coast (;uard Se a ma n Recru1l James P. Geber . son 11f Mr . and Mrs. Allen J, Geber of 805 Coastline Drive. Seal Beach. graduated from basic training at the Coast Guard Training and Supply Center at Alam.:c:ed::a::·-- Coast Guard· · Se a m a n Recruit Timoth y J. Lewi!, soA of M.rs. Fern Lewis of 1931Z llickor.y La n e , Huntington Beach, graduated from baSic training at the Coal Guard Training and Supply Center al Alameda., ~Mrs:-Carlton said . ··we take the1n and try to do \\'hat "'e can. Dr . Samuel Ridoubl. a veterinarian who lives near here. has been a tremendous help with problems that have been too much for us to handle." POLITICAL VIEW?-A giralle has very long neck and le gs. tan coat with bro\1111 blotches, short horns -and long tongue. Photographer said animal stuck out tongue as he t!JRk picture at a ?lilidwest zoo. Or1w , H11tlt111110n 111cn,_~,..1n t l•,•,.• , Mr. 1nd Mrs. f"!tllon """"''"'! ' P1rkvl1w Clrc •t 0111 Mt11, I rl Mr. •nd Mr1. 1mothr Coker, 2m Elden. A1>1. a, (0511 Mis•, bov. M•r 1, nn Mr. 1/ld Mr1. Ntlton Pll1!1r. 1•1~ cornw1n Lt nr, NtwllOrl 8•~ch. t l;l,1 Mr i nd Mr1. W1Ynt Mee rr. 1- Marine Pvt. Robert R. Gooch Jr .. son of Mr. and Mrs. Bill J. Qualls or 15171 Essex Cic\e, We!ltminsler, graduated from basic training al the Marine Corp!! Reeruit Depot in San Diego. Navyman Larry W. Dodd . son or Mr. and Mrs. Charle!! A. Dodd Jr. of 9352 Fireside Drive. Huntington Be a·c h , eraduated from r e c r u i t training at the Naval Tr1ining Center at San Diego. Jerry E. P111arelll, husband of the former Miss Marie C. Black or 21322 Ashburton. Huntington Beach, was pro- moted to Signalman Chief Pet- ty Officer aboard the combat support ship. USS Camden. bomeporled at Long Beach. Navy Seaman RJ>ger W. French , son of ~1rs. Juliann -M. Anderson of 9321 Jennrich. Wtstminster, is a member of the C<lmmissioning crew of the new Navy ammunition ship, the USS Shast11, in Charleston, s.c. Soon hl will I e a v e Charleston and take part in the Shasta'.! operation a I readiness cru ise. vis i ting Guantanamo Bay, C u b a ; Kingston, J amaica; various ports in South America rand the Panama Canal Zone ; and Concord. Calif., where his ship will be homeported. -. Navy HoSpitalman Recruit Hans H. Stbeibt, so n of Mr. and ?<.~rs. Hans Scheibe of 13742 C!are1nont. Westminster, i::raduated from rec r u i I training at the Naval Training Center at San Diego. Airman Randy A. Vivier, son of !\1r. and A-1rs. Dann B. Vivier. 17061 Sandra Lee l..11.ne . Huntington Beach, has com- pleted his U.S. Air Force basic trainiiig at the Air Training Command 's Lackland AFB. Tex . He is remaining at Lackland for training in the 3ecurity police field. Airman Robert L. Gish Jr., son of Mr . and l\1rs. Robert L. Gish Sr., .5592 Edinger t\\'C. l·funtin~non Beach. has com- pleted his U.S. Ai r Force basic training at the Air Training Command's Lackland AFB. Tex . He has been assigned to Chanute AFB. Ill., for training in aircraft maintenance. Coast Guard S e a m a n Recruit Gary L. Broadhead, son of ~Ir. and ~1rs. Paul F. Broadhead of 16759 Mulberry Circle. Fountain V a I I e y , graduated from basic training at the Coast Guard Training and Supply Center a t Alameda. Navy Petty Officer Third Class Claude A. Ernst Jr .. son of Mr. and Mrs . Claude A. Ernst St. of 2140 Wallace Ave., Costa ~!esa . hes arrived at his new homeport. Long Beach. aboard the. Navy's ne"·est destroyer escort . thr USS Cook. Navy Hospitalman Recru it !\llchael c. Lanier , son or l\1r. and Mrs. R. C. Lanier (If 221 Frankfort S 1 . , Huntingt on Beach. graduated from recru it training at the Naval Tra ining On April 16, Army Medica l •Center <t San Diego. Specialist Corps (A!\1SCl of- ficers throughout lhe world pau sed in their aclivities to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the lounding ol their corps. 't\.1arine F ir s l Lieutenant James ~f. Thorndike. husband of Mrs. Susan Son\Yind Thorndike of 209 \V. Escalones. San Clemente, h<1s completed an Embarkation for Ai'rfphibious Operations Cours(' at the-Pacific Fleet's Amphibious Training Conl- nuind in :ian Diego. One of these officers "'IS Captain Ruth E. Kershner, "·hose parents. l\1r. and ~1rs. Baird 1': Bauder, live at 2107 Lee~·srd Lane, New po r l Bea rh. She is one of thr ap- pr0Ji1nate\~' 600 active-dut y Ar-.1 SC officers who ::i r e Cade.I Candidate Jiamei; n. dittelic administrators. di('l i· Hogur. son of ~tr . and ~1rs. fians. ph ysical therapists and . Harry Hogue of 9 9 O 2 occupational therapists in the -we s l ha v e n CI r c I~ . U.S. A rm y med ic a I \Vest minster. has graduated dpe.artment. from lhe U.S. Air force Sergeant Hugh \V. ... l\IC'Cullorh. !t<Jn nt ~tr find J\trs . Clarrn('e l\trCulloch. 450 Cfllllhna Ol'J\{', N l' \1 p u rt Beach. ha" been rt:!cn~n1zcd for helping the U ~ l\1r Force's. Q1 ... ty EC ·\21 Constellalion ,1 ing11 eam the .1i 1r force Oul slandlng Uni t Award. Academy Preparfltory School. During the I 0 -m o n t h rourse:--<"onducted at the air ~c1tdeniy n ea r ColoradQ Springi1 -he receivf'd con· crntrflled tra1n1 ng to prepare htm for the the academy en· Ira.net rxan1inations and \(l succeed as an acndemy cadet. Sergeant McCulloch is 11. • radio rep;iirmiln wilh the Aerospace Defense O>mmand'a (AOC , 5 52 n d Airborne Early Warning Rnd Control Wing at McClellan AFB. ' Aimran Steven f\1. \'ede. son of P.lr. and Mrs. Warner \Vedt. 222 W, Pa lizad<'. San Clen1enLe-has graduated with honors at Sheppard AFB. 1'ex .. from the U.S. Air Force technical .training course for aircraft mechanics. .. McFaddtn No. 6SL _T1;1tln, 1lrl •-• M'· t rid Mri.> Al1>1rt Grlhtm, ,... Mrs. Teate said many of thf:' 21nimals. like the young fema!t' spider monkey. came from people who had to leave the J\1elbourne area because of job cutbacks 21t the nearby Ken· nedy Space Center. Hunting .. Arena Criticized, 'etosed Oo••• Orl••· NrwPOrt Bt•rh. bop Mr arid Mr1. Wllllt m Sml!h. Jll Estntr, Cost• M•''· 1\rl ' Mr tn~ Mrt. J1mt1 OOtllnt. 1111 f . ACltml, Orlf>Vf, girl. M•Y '· nn Mr 1nd Mrs. Ron1ld C1rd, \lCMI l 1mPS0<1. No. )f, c;,.,;,.11 Gr11vt, ooy. Mr. 1rid IArs. 11.rlnur G. Li;nd•"'· lqf? El C.orll(o, Minion ll ielo1. 1lrl •-• Mr. 1nd Mr1. Robttt 8. KtlJott, "' Oro SI .. 1.11un1 &t1~n. boV. Mr 111d M" ,H1rt111 0 . E1stml /\, lf1S Por! &rlslcl Clrclr, Newport lttcl'I, M:'°vt nd Mr1. Jot'On t'I. H1mm11 ..... , .Rhine IUvtr Awt., Foun11ln V1!1<tp, 1lrl Teate. a 48-year~ld state Department of Transportation . employe. also is an auxiliary c;ame arxl Fresh Water Fish Commission officer a n d spends some of his free time hunting poachers. llF. AND HI S \Yifc spend about $100 a month out of their 01\'n pockets tn care for the anin1als they have adopted. COLUMBUS. Ga. iUPll - A fenced~in farm at P ine Mountain. where hunters could stalk exotic animals from around the "''<1t ld. has been closed -after crilicism by a11 imal lovers. Millionaire John B. Amos said he closed the Roya l Hu n!- ington Preserve because of complaints the hunts v>'ere ··i nhumane and dangerous ." The Indian Nilgai antelope. wild Russian boar. Canadian elk, wild ram and turkey and Not all the animals on the refug e arr ill. So m e. especially the wild ducks. grew accustomed lo a life of • bison, Amos snid. "·ould be. sold or donated to public in· stitutions. e6f?IWDPQPS BARK. 15 J.DTS WO/l5l 'fJIAW #15 BITE ! .. ' Some or the1n. hr said. \\'ould 1" kep1 on the land to enhance its unspoiled selling and "to provide subiects for camera safaris in line \1·Lth some future use of the pren1ises * * * TOKYO (APl -Tosh iko. a sjXltless b.aby giraffe bel ieved to be one of three in captivity, has made its public debut at t.he Ueno 7,oo in Tokyo. * * * INDI ANAPOLIS IAP I -The Indiana -Oe{iartn1ent of N21turaf Resources had th is to report about its recent annual tur key shoot 1in southern Ind iana : -~8.5 hunters participated. -12 hunters bagged the limit of one bird. ' Wl1at"s in Name? Director Tells SAN DlE(;O jAP\ -Hav(' _1 ou run into a gang of elk. a r!r.1y of .squirrels or a set or b;1dgrri:: lately? If so. you probabl y thought of thl•n1 as just a bunch of critlrrs. Not so. s.!lys Dr. \\'il1111111 A Burnl', executive director of lhr San Diego Museum of Natur11l History. He has spent much of his c11reer compiling a lexicon of terms describing. fron1 a lilt'rar\' standooint. ~roups of birds 3nd beasts. For exan1ple. it's a crash of rh1nocerosts. A sowider or w ild S"'1ne. 1t~ YOU OOS'T want a 1nurmurettion of statlings or an unkindness of ravens in the yard. Burns sugge.sts setting a_ clowder of cats after them. llow about an earth or fox· es? An exa!lal1on of larks? A plt )•lng of turtle. da,•cs? An ostent.aUon of peaCQcks? An army of herrings~ • brood of hens ... A pod or gam of \\'hales ... ,II,, sloth or bears ... A rafter of turkeys . , . 1\ g:1ggle of gresr if they'rr Qn \\•ater . , . A flock of geese in fligh1s. "~1ANY PEOPLE coine Into the museum asking, '\\'hat do \'Ol.I ca!\ a lot of herons or inallards or such~' and I rem('mbered a faded li st l n1ade out 25 years ago and though t people might bt' 1n- lerei::le<I." said Burns. once 11ssistam director of I he American ~luseum of Natural •Hstory in New York City. 11is list is published in the ('Urrent issue or En virorft11ent South~·est, a m a g a 1. in e published by th e SSln Olego museum. Many of the group terms date back centuries to hunting royalty in Engl and, ~rtHJCe and Germnn y. After headlng se\'ernl U.S. museunis over A 33-year career, Durns sa)'S he even came.. UP.....'!..ilb a name for hl.s own kind: - -The successful 12 hunters spent a combined total of 960 hours in the field during a fi\'e-day period. -17 birds were seen and 28 heard. * * * PHOENIX, Ar iz. (AP l The Los Angeles Zoo has given up its rare. Z2-mo nth-old male Arabian oryx in exchange for an equal ly rare female from the Phoeni x Zoo. Both American-born animals are from the only two herds in the world outside Arabia. of- ficials said. Dr. David R. Fransen. Los Angeles Zoo veterinarian , brought Flame. the young female. to : Phoenix. and returned \vith Jack. Officials said the reason for the trade is an imbalance of sexes. The first five born in Los Angeles were males and the first six born at the Phoenix Zoo were females . * * * CARLISLE. England (UPI) -Gigi. described· by the Gulness Book or Records as the wor\d"s largest cat. is dead. The 42-jXlund terror of dogs and 1nice for 12 years was pul to sleep recently by her 01\•ner. Anne Clark. 6.1. "She went off her food la st 11·c.ek and the vet told me it was the begin ning of the end.'' said Miss Clark . whcl had Git!i since the cal was six weeks old. * * * TRAVERSE CITY. Mich. IAP) -On Three Mile Road . just east of busy Michigan 310. (l\'O sig ns hav1 been posted. reading: "Slo"'· Duck Cross· int!'' The signs are the work of lke Maur. a husky. 38-year-old "'ho said he "just could n'l stand to see all thQse ducks grtllng killed.'' Several score wild ducks can h• found daily on Mitche.ll Creek nepr ~1al14'S service sl ation . ~nd h.:ive 1aken to crossing Three Mile Road as a shortcut to reach the wate.r again. * * * COCOA. Fla. tAPI -A banana·lor1ng alligator named Allev has become ll bit too chuinn1v \1 ith the pupils at S;iturn Ele1nentary &hoot. So school officials. figuring there might be a slip IY;ixt the banana and the toothy gator's hp. h.ave decided to fence in Alley and keep him away from the. yoongsttrs. Alley lives In a canal a short distance from the sc:hool along with another gator. Gordon MIY f, 1tl1 M• 1nd Mr. J1mes l. Ar>VtllP, 16111 siMr l1n1, No. A·2· Hunt\r>Vton &t ltdl olrl Mr 1';;;( Mrt Cyril G. &tck, N I Gt r· rf11 "l1rcl1 •. Huntlr>Vl1>" B11th. bo'll., "~'· tnd Mri. Niii S. Sttlr, 5tn Mir It $Ire-ti. LCM"llt tlcl'I\ 1\rl Mr t nd Mri. D1rw n a. F1vd9'\CltU , l~ll Wood'#l1rd Li ne, Huntln9kln Bt1Ch, 1lfl Mrt I nd Mr1. RoWrl 9 . 5llwer, 2<121 cOmmodore 11.0 , Ntw~t Btl(h, M~yind M., Cf\1rl•s l . GUh11y1, 6Ul Oor11nt Clr(ft, Huntlnt lon llttc.h. "'· Soulh C111t c;,;;;unltv Hlllll11 Atrn 16, n n M• and Mis. Mlthttl Pnllllo Oon1h11r oi JOI E1Pl1n.d1, Si n Clt menlt . 1!rl. Alrll 21 Mi t...:I Mtl. Ftrmln Golrl l(l of 160! c'.i1t 1.11 80111 Att I, 1n C!tm1nr1, bor. A,..11 tt. 1•n Mr. Ind Mn. Mlrcht lt &trrt ll Howt Jr. of 3-Wo!S C1mlfl0 C1t l1lr1no. C1pl11r1no B••ch, girl. AtfU JI, 1tl1 Mr. arid Mn. Ctrl Sptf>CU l1lrd of 7361 2 VII 51~ Gii. Mlu lon Vlt]e, 1lrlj Mr 1MI Mrs. Lvnn Mlch•tl O'S!ttn o '5Xl7 1111 Pledr• Role. L1tun1 Nl9uf!, boY M•. ~!'Cl Mr1. Htn\ Gtorl Eltt ri of 31'1! Avf 0!1Yt r1. Si n Ju1n C~olllrtno, bor. Ml'/ I, ltl1 Mr 1nd Mri. 01wld Al•••ndlf lnte or 1•711 (l ilt tcml . CI PIJlr.ino Btt(h, .... ~.1'~"" ,..r1 Tim <.tt FrrrJt' 01 ~" .t.wt. Rell AP! A, $1n Cltmtnlf, 1\rl. Mt 1nd Mrs. Ro1•llo Torr11 0 111 ol lid Dt! Gedo Ao1d, Sin Cltmtnlt, .... M1v '· nn Mr. •"" Mr1. 01n11v O.wtvnt Tllllfll of lit P11111df, St n c1em1ntt, bcr. Mr. 1r>11 Mrt. w l\11m Jaf\n Le.: of 2"11 VII CtbClll1, l"un1 Nlt utl, N~. Dissolutions Of Marriage IEnt.rM MIY I Gi it . Euotnf 0. 1nd Trtwl C~1r\ttl'I S!dl!o. Mtrllyn J. i nd Joseph Sl11rd1. Rostm•tl• Ind l.lwr.riu Ll'I Otnton. II.Ioli A. 1nd Rabtrt E. BtnlOf\, M1rwln t nd 11tllf1 E. (;ul1tl1um, Lvnnt. Annt t nd D1vlo Rlch1rd 81rn1tt, Lvnn GordOfl t nd l(tll'IV Anne \ alb, HOWl td l . Incl Edlll't II . 110mc1on. Oorol~Y E. t nd W1vnr E. Multl\tr. 8 trlh• 1"4 F rid o. Ol"u•. v1rn1 M. and Fenlon J. Bttbt. Oonl'll M•rlt I nd ltobtrt Llovd 81own. Ell11btlh Ann and Araen G. Prr~. PMr\ P. I ncl Htnr¥ C1blt. Jolin Ttrnl •nd Shlrvn An,. Albtrt1ot1. Terr¥ 01n •nd Gill Lvnn Sc1r~1UI. JMtClh 0. I nd MlfY It, Luoo. Pltrl<lt M. 111d fdw1 r1 '· ,:1wro. onlld G. Ind P11111 ut LtYdtn. M•ffl•rtl •. 1nll Jtabtrt Sem~on. H•lt!'I M•rlt •nd \l•rnon O.lt Ehrf'l')blro. 111rn1rd O. ind M•rv Ann llr1n!. &ovd e . ind Ev• L. (Ool!fl. Joll" R. Ind Oltf 0 . W11tr•r. C.11ol Sur f nd Herold f:dw1rd 1"1nMr. Olin• I nd GltM c. llcn"'ll .Cjn1rt/\Ct M. 111(1 •rt Alln Pynt, Cyr I V. 1fttl Al!drM L. Pie<!~. Alkl L"'ralf'll" t nd Mlt~!),'°"' Mtl(inney, TMlma J . Ind ,,,,_ E. Jofln1otn. Ch.OWYn Siii I nd M1rlc Cntrl11 Wi!•on, Albtrl1 Nfvl~ 111d Jo~n Lustig, Niner C. •nd JOl'lfl L1on1rd C'"•!n. lturtn Cf>rl1!ln1 and J1f!ltt Altrtll ~t·~on, A'"''' M. tnd 0101 E. Ro~rt,, M1'ra1rl! M. 1nd li:IYrflOnd I.. N!Ckft, Gery :;1.:,n~:n1r1 John,on. eetrr Rull'I 111(1 ltty L117')'d 1'.11!1n. Jot"tn H1nrw ind Judv Loul1~ Frtn~t. P1ul Ht n•V JR. i nd Wllml C~; Btv1•!y J., 111 11'd TMCiltol't Rt'Ynold1 Gold1•orthw. V11t1t~n W. Ind B1•b111 Hiuiior1ter, H1rry JI. i nd E!l1n It. O'G1r1. Ll<'><ll L. Ind Mlcf>trl L, $1t)Orf, Svl~I• Norml Ind J8(0b O.wnt. C.nrol J 1nd John M. Ch~f\IVtrl, 0ttl0flf\ l!H l f'ld WllUll'l'I Fl~·~; Kl!hl•en 8. t'lil Ch1rlt1 S. Co!l!i>I. P1trldl A. Ind J11wtn0ncl Rr.bl•I Cer..,., Su,i1n ind Wllll1m S. tr~ur. Knr~ Lte •~d C11¥ln L• Vttn Mtndo1n. ClrOI I'. t'lil Bir"' A[ H•ll IC.•n\tudl !§.onl\tn9rtr HO l1r Ind JOlln Greoorw L1n1. Ann F1nn¥ 1nd 8ff\llY H. HIJ•. Kllfl'I AM Ind lt~!1 Tl'ltwn• r.r..,n•OCld. vlvl•n C. I OO!'i•ld W, Coffin, J1nlct G. Ind I""" M, H1n1on. Jtabtrt 11'111 Ott~ MIMNI ,, ,.ierct. Lwndl l o!I I nd lobtl\I rr Md:l!M!c•. J1"' E. •M 01t~t l (;ardnll', Join E. i nd '''"'" • Htnwn. l'l11W" 1nd Lwtt D. O ~t. Ml"ltr" f , tnd llOOlrl . Gremi-r. Sl !IY •rid Jol'lll H~. • Jtos,. hltlollfl Jttnnt tnd l(lc Arl~ur ltl!Ci'llt; J~dlll\ A, 11111 L" · _, T-~ ~tuln, L"'r1IM L\IDllll ''"' ,.. ::1r1. Lind• Ann lh<I lrf'l"!ld "J·•·• •• }tv. iillM\I Jtlfl ff\ ......, flr'llfltltk I 9 1/!Wf"f, 011fll J~1n tnd OOYll I! W~Ollfll ; •'"! lji"titM f~'t!ij:ru :t.'\!'ni Dor.M w. . " , "· I ('" . /. .. 1 "' ,.., . ~-- ,_ -· H~lfN I, 5HAffUl • . Think You Don't ~;zby :o~~r:~nize • single name or face in this group and yet, ii you're one of tho DAILY PILOT'S very well informed ed itorial page readers, it is this talented tHm, of writers which helps you keep informed. They write tho Editori- al Research Reports. Though t~eir own names don 't appoer on tho articl11 which are publis~ed under the Editorial Research Reporls heading, these ere the reel pros -diggers who go after ell the backround facts which put today's top issues into perspective -without thought of seeking the fame that goes with the name when you're a national columnist. They're Your INFORMERS • Yes, they could bt your "inlormen." It's f11lurts like Editorial Research Reports which make the DAILY PILOT much more then just' the most important hometown newspaper available to residents along tho Ora nge Coed. Tho DAILY PILOT is the total pach91, It. makes whatever happens in the world "local news" and delivers it daily right to your homo. Let th is teem of dedi- cated "informers" help you keep informed. Road Editorial Research Reports on the editorial page -and an tho other informative special f11tures in other p1rts of the . DAILY PILOT • Army Private Oaudt R. c:re.e1 Jr. wbosa parent. live at Tm. JuUen,.. Low Or., Hun· Unct<>n Beach. re c e n I I y Airmw Wede. who has trained to repair currrnt Air Force jet. fi&htm. Is returning to hls C..lifornia Air Nationa l Guard unit at Ontario. A smuck of jt!:llyfish . , . A business of nres . , , A pest ol wasps ~ . • A flock ot lice ••. A petp of chickens. Or a trip of 1oet& .. • A '"How •bout a frustration of mustUJR director!!'!" · Crouch. an flssi!lAt\1..8Chool. superintendcnL said children go to the canal and call. "litre. Alley. llerc. Alley." 1'.ihe.y .t1Ap....the-wa1tr-to get him, then feed him their bananat and Juncb sandwiches." ~~'i:i-;,;:.:-'· "'~ r..:r&... w. l~--------~-----...1 \ • • • • . ... . OAIL V ~IL.OT ~ Everyon e Hes Somethi ng That Som eone Else Wa nts DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It , Fin d It, Tredo It With e Want Ad ·The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results ' -j . [ -·-I~ I ..... , .. _ I~ I ---l~I -·- General ... General 4. U~l()Uf tl()Mf A PICTURE OF CONVENIENCE~ Close to th~ golf course, nearby the freeways-and a quick run to the beach. ·That's the advant- ages of this 2 bdrm. 2 bath lov.• mainteilance ho1ne lhat is in in1 1naculate condition and cu t~ as a b~1 g! Near ne\v with sunny atrium pal10. Ask111g S4 L500 . PHONE UNIQUE HOMES CORONA DEL MAR 675-6000. REAL TOR, MULTIPLE 'LISTING SERVICE. ~ ~ l·G-•~~..._r_•_I_·~~~~~ 1 -G_•_•_•_••-l~~~~~- $2,000 Under LITTLE GEM General * * * * * * TAYLOR CO. IRVINE TERRACE . SOME VIEW RefreshinJ!l v btiS!ht! A rare find in. this ex- clusive area. 'Slidin.1? doors of lhf~ sharp 3 BR home open to patio & PoOL $57,500. -''Our 27th Veer'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 211 1 San Joaquin Hills Road NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 Gene ral General BAYSHORES VIEW & POOL \Vaterfront custom home, 4 bedroom & den or 5 bedrooms. 5lh baths. Top ouality car- peting, dra'peries, wallpaper &. fixtur es. View from most rooms. 87' lot, spacious yard with beautiful gardens. $240,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR Gov'·t Appraisal 11 ~ BR. we.11 built st~rter Islanders Bu ilding Bayside Or., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161 Beautiful 2 story, 4 b<.'drooni. honic nr. Ne1vport He1g.hts 341 2 bath hon1r. Thr niarble on R-2 lot ~·/spac~ to build.,~!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' Alley access. $19,;iCXJ. 1 ~ and till' 11•ork is rantastir. ROSE COTTAGE ,G_•_•_•_r_a_i______ General Lovely brick pa!10 BBQ and 1• planter5 surrounding This 2 BR. home nr. Ne1\1>0rt * PALERMO * home, !or the finest in out· Height.~. Nev•ly painted. door hv1ng. Call no 1v Lgr. kit. \l'/brktst. rm. For Spacious Livin9 In Mesa Verde 847·6010. $22,900. Harbor View Homes \-0' THE REAL \"-ESTATERS POOL . . Try this 5 bedroom home on HIGHLAND DR . Outstanchng Val!ry. View for size. You will aJso. e_njQy , . . '• *DUPLEX* \\'alk to bench. Nearly 11e1v s tudio apts. 2 BR., I ~~ ba. · -ldM!Hmmnn-pmne Jiarbor A ,Jamil home whlcb can loi.ma l .dining. &-th&-.break.,_ 1-J tghlands' area. 4 Spac. BR , doubl.e. in large group en· · fasl area off the kilchcn. ramily rm.,-21 2 ba's .. kitch-tertai~ing, 4 4:e. 8~r:1'1'" The property is further~­ "' bhns .. <'arp., drapes & a ~II with the Italian R1v1era cented with cusl~n1 drapes, sp.1rkling 1-1 & f' pool. $44,000 mflu.enc~. Owner has spared a stone fireplace & thick ,,a.ch. 1v1patio. Priced at· $•12,500. Call: 613·3663 67j-8886 Eves. associated BROKERS-REAL. TORS 2025 W Balbaa 67l·l66) \\bite Elephant Dime-A-Linc Classfied ad. General HOME SO PERFECT Captivating view of the harbor. 3 BR., fam. & dining rms. Very quiet street. Too good to last at ~59,500. Jim Mu ll er THE WARMTH OF BRICK nothing 1n cost to complete 11hag C"""'ling · Tb ,. th. 1. h •~ . h ~ ... ~ . r en ire is i!1e o!"e"' now 11. as pri<'I" is $42,495 fHA·VA out~wn him. Call to VJC'll.'. !('ml!!. Inquire further by $62.950. , calling 546-231:1. Waterfront Pier REALTORS 644-7662 $25,500 $28,950 4 Bedrm-Family.Rm. No Down G.I. terms. try 51'o down all others: -4 Bedrms, family room. 2 pullman baths, built in efficiency kitchen. 50 f covered patio. $3000 air con- ditioning uni! with plec- 1ronlc air llltrr. Electric p;aragl"' door o p e n e r . Pa r k -I i k e landscaping! 5-10-1720. TARBELL 295j Harbor, Costa. Mesa FOUR BEDROOM • SANDPOINTE • All \vr3pped up in this niee TWO STORY 4 bedroom, 3 bath . HUGE RUMPUS ROOM that will take a pool table, builtin kitchen. large yard rvill accommodate your 30 foot boat, and a spacious feeling prevails thru· oul. VA, NO Down .............. $39,900. CORONA del MAR SOUTH of the HIGHWAY DELUXE DUPLEX -Spacious identical units -3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, builtin kitchen. FIRE- . PLACE. 1800 sq. ft. l.arge master suite (16'x 17'). All this and close to the beach too. ... ','..... . . . . . . . . . . . . $76,500. FAMILY ROOM FOUR BEDROOM Short distance to beach and golf course. FAMILY ROOM , used brick fireplace, 2 baths. builti n kitchen. close to shopping, _ schools, Jr College & freeway. Try )'01:1r VA -·or-conventional~ ..... -.... --.. $31,500. • IRVINE. TERRACE ·VIEW· Let us show you this enchanting home. Atrium entry, spacious Jiving room with firpelace and VIEW . 3 Large bedrooms 2 baths, LOVELY DINING ROOM + room to sotre your trailer or boat ........ $62,500. -TWO TRIPLEXES - CORONA DEL MAR Built in range and oven. dishwasher and disposal , car pets .._and drapes. 2 Units ha\'e 2 bedrooms, 1 bath: 1 Unit bas 2 bedrooms, 111z bath w/fireplace. Each unit has 2 car· ports, maintenance free yard and pool privi· leges ..................... Each $79,500. ~ AHDASSOCIATIS REALTORS 644-7270 PENTHOUSE ELEGANCE \Yilh ground-lc\'cl ('onveruc111·c. Break· fast in pri ... acy. Ne\v Orleans rourt~·ard ~t~ !c -or dine on the l~e. OCE.1\N VIE\V 11a,,·a1- ia11 terrace. This UllHlll<' :!·l:M!r1n .~ din111 ;.: rn1. hon1e should be idenl for t11c d1~cr1 111in~1!· ing coupl e or '1'1 11 l~L> profess1on1.1l perso11 •1 lu1 desi res privacy. You n\r11 1hc strcct·IO·:•arccl, fee simple lot. S74 .U50 . IRVINE TERRACE General General TRUST THIS AD VIEW Do you like l!v111g l'IOsc ro thl.' heach~ This ho111e is fnr BUY IT OR LEASE IT! Tht~ 1Ln1• •I tlf'(troom lo1vn- hn11,1• 1~ 11\(' tw·~t rwi1v h'l'lrd .11 •\t1lv S2l!r!I lln11·1·vrr, !hr 1111 1u•r'1' 111·11' IM1111r 1.~ now n 1d1 ~" ,1 , ,111 ho Ll·:ASl·:n \ll1'!1 lll"J10~ ']'l J JllTY nr ~011 ,•;111 !1•1•st• nnl.v ul S2~. l••T 111un1h I !'~ 1·0111111!'!1' 111111 loUll1 11h, • !:ol'f>"I~. d1'<•1"'' nnd h11: •kl11lllt• ~~r· Rl:.1' ~ \~T 1'os..;;~:s . ..;10N~ ~W::f::E I REALTORS --546-4141- {0pen Evening1} Executive Speciol . 1 .. 1• r h 1 ~ suprrh :I hi'droo1n h•)1111· n1·~llrrl 11n1ong Ir«'!> ;11ld ... liruhs. Sp;1rk!in1: t'[UAJ 1- t; lu1• fine r n1rr10.u11ni;:. l.u•h •h·rr1 pi!,.. <'arrr1111g 11 1\h 1·u:-lu1n n1 II tr h lni;:: d1·1111•''· Al l (11•<·!r 11· klt<'hrn 11 ,111 a ll 11u· rr1mn11n.I("'. fan- 1a .. 111· t1n"pl:'l("I'. \\lhA1 11 ..h•J\\ l)llu'(' for s.111.:llO• :-:..·J11 r i"i prrpt1rrrt lnr 1:1 ;111'! ~'HA lf'nn~. now'.c l hl' ! lllt'. I "all Walker & .Lee Hrul1ors .~ ... l j..~'.l l o( Costa l't1esa Coif' Courfil! f!'OQL lhi~ fine 3 IX>c!To6Tn~2 ba1h homr. bl1in kllch fnr!.~ hllin refrig·frr(zrr. Alley l"n!r;1/lr(• ror boat or 1ra1h•r iv /parking 5lah & douhlf• ~ate: cnlr.y. Vf'terans. usr your rligibility on Ibis homr. llurry? ti~ lhu·l•1r Blvd a l Atiatris Open l::ve1 · you. 4 bcdrqoni, 2 ball1s, :o:pnt·inu!I hon1e-l~1J a..vlcw...o! - a p.11'k th;d w1!1 gl\''-' you $28,000 No Down $28,500. th111 sp1ri1 o! out or doori. living. Jr ... pri<.:e • 1"' only ~41,;icJO. Cllll today, IM2·25J:J. \-0' THE REAL ·~ESTATERS \. ''i'!"ll'ill •I~' • BY OWNER Nowporl I OPEN HOU SE Sat. & Sun., 11·3 2422 S. Rene Or., S.A. IS. nl \Varner,\\'. of l3r1stnlt 3 BR. 2 Balh, f1rrplac-r, M'll· cl1n1ng rm., s1>rv1l'C' arf'a 111· s11lr, 2 rar garagr. Bu11f.Jns, vrlvf'1 drnp<·s 111 1nHSll'r 1 .... c.1- room. 1v /w carpcti;. sprink- l('rs in Iron!. Jusl rrpa1n1rd ins1d(', Close lo all ~l'hOOI.~ and minutes rrom So. Coos! Pll~za & niajor shopping. S2!i.750. ~uh1n1l Ill! !C'rn1.~. 1:.r. 1f'l'll"ls. Pr1n1f' Co .... 1a 1\lcs11 lo1:at1on. Shactrct by 1flll i.lutdi' !r~e.~. 1·011nlry 11t- n10:-11h('l'f': 111 lhf• c·1ty! .~ ,;1111t·1u1111 bctir0l1n1,, :l hlllhi>, 1• if,. 'iill'l'I' hu1ll 1n k11t·het1 I !osp1ral1ly hv1n1: room 1v1th 1nv1t111g Ju·tpltu e. Lov1•ly pal1u. Aeceio;ll lor raniprr N1•w shag carpf't1ng. Near C'Vl'rylh\ng. ~\72{), I I Fairview \ TRIPLEX Vf'ry n1cr 3 BR . 2 BA 01vnrr'g 11n1t + 2·2 Bil I 13A. Good location. $51,500. Roy McCardle Realtor 1810 Newport Blvd., C.!tf. 548-7729 01vnf'r \I'll! p11y ALL t•l•\~1n~ t·osls. For morr 1nform<1\1on, eaU ~38 .. 126! hr[nre ;: pni. TARBELL. SPECI~ NO\v you can buy hf'r that drram house bccau!le thi!I la 11 4 huge bf'droom1, 2-,.Z Jux- unou'-' bB U111, lots of extra rvorn. J>rcr;tig~ modr.I w1lh ankle dcc1> cnrpct!I lhruout, drape/ii lo match. Huge srparatr family room . I ·rradc in !hat old model on , I thi11 $49,500 11pcclsl. ~!!er GOVT. 1vlll considl"r all oUcNI. Call A.fakes this home so attr. The interior is just as appealing. 3 BR., o'sized family rm. & a good view ~ Eileen Hudson FABULOUS BUY quiet atmosphere in huge rear yard. Alum in um covered patio-acreened loo overlooks fig, lemon and orange trees. B u i I t i n wi f e-saver kitchen, dish"•asher. Ov•ner leaving. King sized bedrooms. Hur- t")''. Brk .. 962-8865. $9 50. DN. 2CI028ROENAASTDCEOLAMAST RH IGCHA~~ Y RE POSSESS ION ' • l1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Fantastic 3 bedroom, 2 bath l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! REPOSSESSION rWalker & Lee MESA VERDE I · " . Realtor~ 54r,.-0465 INVESTORS -CORONA OEL MAR 2 Lots. each 30xl 18 -2 units per Iol. Sold as package. Ou,ner \viii carry 1st T.D. Ex· cellent location. l\Iarcia Bents. ONLY ONE AVAILABLE Popular Carmel model. H.V.H. 3 BR .. 2 ba., fam. & din. rm. Close to comm. park & pool. To see, call Howard \Veils. COUNTRY CLUB LIVING Lar,R"e 4 BR .. fam . rm. townhouse in Univ. Park. Pri\'acy. comfort, convenience: xlnt schools. Big· in· value $35,900. "Chuck '' Le\vi.s. MOTHER'S VIEW Tr ulv the spot! A hit?. ,gracious home w/a bay vie,v; in a fine neighborhood, ,v/a huge. priv. upstairs s uite. Going at $69,000. Willis Comstock. BAYFRONT BEST BUYS Cust. 5 yr. old 5 BR, 4 Ba., apt. over gar - pier/float. Super nice. $139,500. 2 Yr,old 4-5 BR. view • bay/OC'ean. Dock for 50' boat. Quiel lor. $92.500. George Grupe MORE FOR YOUR MONEY By far be5t value in today's market'. Just reduced $1.000. Deli ghtful Corona de! Mar loc. Now onl y $53,950. Paul Quick PRIVATE COMMUNITIES Emerald Bav 3 BR. den, vie\v . . . . S86 ,500 r.1onarCh Ba·y 3 BR, FR. poo l. vie\v Sl00,000 Emerald Bay 4 BR. FR. View .... $124,500 Bob \'orke BEST FEE LOT· BAYCREST One of largest & finest lotc; in Baycrest ~ DOVER SHORES ON GALAXY. Suitable fo r an estat .. type home. $45,000. Charlene Whyte WAS $82,SOO ·NOW 579,500 Broadmoor, Co rona del ~1ar. Much wanted 2· sty., I2e. 4 BR.. ram. rm .. din. rm. 3 Car gar. Spacious yard v.·/putling green. Bud 1\uslin _ CORONA DEL MAR OUPLEX T .. ive in one, rent the other. 2 4·BR. 3 ba. units. \\'alk to beach, schools. shops. Blt·in range & oven . carp .. drps .• !rpl. 2 Car gar. & paUo. $79,~. Al Fink • 133.0700 _._.._ Coldwell, Banker ~ SSO NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.I. " home -freshly painted, General General 11e"·ly carpeted, all builtiru;, ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;: ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I NO DOWN NO COSTS Sparklmg 4 IJedroom, 2 balhs. 2790 Jlarbor Blvct 11.t Adam• dl"ep shag carpt>tlng and Of)f'n Eve.~. TARBELL WATERFRONT $95,500 3 bedroom~ (could bl": fourl in Main House with one bed· room t.'Oltage in lronl. On thf' channel Cottage rents lor $300 month. Ne1v de<:k actomodates boat 'up to 39'. Greal patios \1·ith each house for waterside living. Call 646-7171 . i..Qj THE REAL \NESTATERS '..' ""' •, ,.,. Ill " p,• 3 BEDROOM CHEAPIE Gn'at \lalue. big lot, 2 barh.~. quiet area. ~11A or \1A terms. S2t:lj(}. Re-d Carper P.ealto~. 546-8640. General family room. double: garage a nd excellent residential locat ion. A must to see • 129,9:.0. Call ~5-8424 (Open e\·es.) \cuth ~ (-cast -... - Like Lar9e Rooms? Three large betlrooms plus family room. Carpe led throughout. 1'e1v Door in the kitchen &: dining area. plus O('W paint inside. On quiet eul.de·sa(,' on 2 minu!.es v.·alkmg distance lo schools. Only S2i ,500 -AlL tenns. Call 8.:12-253.i General CLOSE OUT $40,250 .. The Racquet Club in Irvi ne has one home available because of a last minule cancel- lation. This tiled roof be auty features a two story 1.iving room \Vith a floor to ceiling firepl?ce and massive exposed beams. Three bedrooms and three bathrooms. Large family roo~ and a cozy dining room. \Ve are including block '~all fencing and additional carpeting as an incentive for YOU to buy !his lovely home. Located just one block to park and tennis courts. Liberal terms and imme<iiate occupancy. Located on Culver Road. north of the Santa Ana Freeway. Open dilly from 11 am to 6 pm (except Fridey) 832-5792 · or. 979-2113 VETS! don't miss this! Cliffhaven Thi" 01vners 11·ant out! -4 bedroom, .2 hath home on a i;:md res1den!Jal s t re e r . Pric•e onlv $27,750 and 01vner n1ey pay llil your costs. Cail 847-fiOlO for in fantastic location. F irepla('r, ·-=~~~ -"-=-="" family room, 1111 bltins 11nd WEED IT AN O REAP hC'avy shake roof. \Valk ro NO DOWN VETERANS school & llhopping, Every- one qual1fir.~ -Be~t value on the mark('! -S31,950. Call · 543·8424 t0f)('n f'Ves.) 4 Bednn 2 balh. UNIQUE fJO;-otE. Large balcony over- looking huge back yard with an xtra "Gel·away" work· shop. Approx 1900 !IQ. ft. of N~:port Beach living ror your family. Near Newport Jf i. Beautiful 5 bedroom >2 story ho1ne in a• prime Cosla Jl.1esa loca1ion 11-·ith family room a nd 2~ baths. Many fealures including electric formalion, Today! \cuth ~(.cast Bring your garrleninJC lool~. pain! brush('!! and old clothri; It> this Euts1de: Costa M"u I !nm(', 3 Large llfllroom ~. l·'f. Baths, Dining floom . Quiel S!rret. f'llA·VA Trrm ~ S2'9,!J50. Call 64&-0j,)S, Evr.n· ing11 8.16-6960. huilti,ns, &hag carpet, Del· Piso stone entry and fine landscaping with sprinklers. Excellent 11.'nns 11-·il h no $39,500 do1~·n to vets. All !his forl-.---1------General $39,900. 1."_._._._ .. ________________ _ Nowport •I :2. Fairview I 646-8811 : (anytime) OCEAN-VIEW FROM I ALL ANGLES / Tired of loo kin g a l neighbor'!! 11-·alls? Cast your eye:& on the 1parkling blur Pacific from any v.oindo~· of this custom Temple Hill!I mansion. \Vatch the sun se-1 behind Catalina Island. Buy I 11. telescope. \Vords can't describe thf' belluty. Th i~ 31 bedroom bf:oaury ha.~ it all. Formal dining roo111. lu sh ' carpels and ma t r hi n g I drape~. \\'r v.111 trade Jo... co:Ts ~WALLACE REALTORS -~54 .. , ... 4141- (0pen Evenings) SUDDENLY AVAILABLE This inimaculate 4 bf:odroom & family room home: has really been pampered 3 lux- uriou11 bath:-:. Fully t>quipped bll1n k1t rhrn, .l'ormal rhn1 n~ room. f"ully <'arpelerl anp Pool. 512'J 11.~sumablr ln;in. Cho1C'r Baycre~I lol.'a1 1on. (.'all 67?..--8~1j(). Hurry. I anything you havf' fu r this SOO,OOJ castle. You 11-·111 agfe•. Call lo• •ppo;otm'"I. MESA VERDE \Walker & ·Lee \,~~:".':,'.~:·~d.':~~:.: zrno ~::~;~1 ~·:~!~ams 1 thrunut. For !lfttr tJy "\\ n+'I'. l f'l9.950. JO'~ d01\n. :H.-122l Open Evl"'!I 1 Nothinq Down! r LEASE-OPTION j Desperate I . DUPLEX 1 \\'rJllo" t;IUI;:(' J(v\n1: f'l'll)m ": ilh t:nhe$l'd of unlll non·, hut ..-r;u-khnit flrPp1arr' ('A'\ur· herl" it i~. \'our opporlunlty mrt kJ!chrn. BuiJ1.1n~ f;1Rn! to purchaP a !tpaclou11 4 larruly J"')l')m . 4 BerlMOm~. 1 BR. 21~ bath home "'Ill\ a Baths. Pr1vall" Orior "'ntl) nt'arly klent1c11I rrnrat unil r-.l!l.!ller suitP-, Only ?fll mn tor an .abaolule minimum pay. of s2~· :-.-o '1.)(J\\'~ !n1tl11l ln~·~stmtnt. Pr!('!' PA Y~tEST' 7': Mn •; redu~ lo $74,ill. Call "''" 0v.'flrr ,.xttem,.Jy &n· 6'i'3-3il50. xlou~! CAL.I. TOO/\ Y' IO / THE REAL '")l ESTATERS 3 BR (or 4) top ahapt", pool, cul-<le-uc, sn•t nbrhood. Sy nwnr/qt. '42-8989. , 64>0000. MACNAB IRVINE --------"'-----.....<- FINER HOMES NEW OOVER SHORES HOMES F inal opport unily to own a new Ivan \.Veils r.alaxy Drive custom horne. Choose from FIVE spectacular ne\v custom homes w/ sweeping VIE\V of Ray & mountains. Fro1n SI 10.200 to $154.500, r·urni shed mod· cl OPI::N IO a.m. • 5 p.m. DAILY. 2018 . (jaJaxy Drive. LI E IN THE SUN heside lo vely \valled pool & entertain Jn the c·ontinental atmosphere of this glam4 orous 3 BR. -2·level home. S89,500. WE INVITE OFFE RS Beautifully custon1 built -like new 4600 ... q. ft. -5 BR -5 bath . i\o luxury forgot- len. i\larble halls -crystal fixtures - sauna & jacuzzi pool -manicured Ja,vns. Large ,\une 642·8235. OOV E R SHORES BAYF RONT LOTS For 100' yachts ,..... 305 Morn1n~ Star at 897.500. \\11128 ' on water· 207 North Star at SBY.500. \\ 111 5· on water. Drive bv. ~l axine W1!l!ams/Barbara Aune 642-8235 ..,. Irvine M.c:n•b·lrvlM Really Comp•ny ~ 101 Oov•t Drive 142-12fs IMC MecAr11Nr u.&·120() • • COLWELL PROPERTIES, INC. REALTORS COLLEGE PARK- aorue .. In the pool, ,\·ha! a me1s! Tenant moved out &- /he owner I who llve11 In Palm Spring1J sa)'I '"ge:t r id of Iha! th ing!" V11cant &: 1n nl"ed of TLC. Could t>e a Beauly. r1x It & aave .. $28,500 tii ~. Call OO>A' 546-231.1 \D 'THE REAL \'"'-ESTATERS 4 BEDROOMS -10% DOWN- Cnllc11:,. Park hr-ou!y, l.i1r1;f" hl"drm.~ . 2 harh~. h11;.:r hv ing roo111 11 l1rrpla•·". 0vf'r1ookini: lll':11111ful ,Yflnl. Bu1lt1n11, 1·Ht1 '-=:u·. ra110. CALL ANYTIM E ~3tl8 or Eve. 67S.1827 Lachenmyer Realtor $23,000!- :-0'() d•)\111 ''' 11 J 'c, ~ IRt.lrmn1~. farn1 , I \ l r kit• hr11, br11eh• & 1 h1·1·rhd hlHlcly 11ork fc11h1rr •. l'.Jr•h 1\.1.oVd Pl•Mlln:,:, \\,ti' '" 11.11!1 r .1rJJl'I n~. dr1111P,, A1k1r11hlr playhr».1v. !. u ~ 11 lr111. n1111ntrn;in1 'I' TARBELL - ----- 1 Be st Buy In Town mml'dl.11!f' PM"*~'IOn, l I hf'droom.... bu·v:e lnl, bl11 IT"'f'oe VA. appra t~ 11 I S22.'f.Al Now ''aca nt. Don'! miu 11 1 Rrd Ca r pa l P."A]IQ" ~ %% OAJLY PILOT Gener ii Govemment Repo 4 IR, MelCI Verde Ju.I ~leUfit 6: auper 1hai'p! c bis ~ma. 2. bath!, hu,a:e lh•lng room, deep 11.hai:: t'llrptt5 1hruout. Completely repainted. Pr ired under muket. Vacitnt. CRn hf' shown a.nytimf'. ui;t gi\'e us a· call." S46-5880 (Open eves.) --• ,~ HERITAGE • • REALTORS Spacious Living · and Fine Neiqhborhood Thia 5 bfo(:lroo1n ti.ome also reature!li a ramlly room, phJ!!i <lining room, & il'L accented by 2 brick lireplaces and l0\l,'f'r1ng pine fref'S in the hark yard. The en11re price is $55.950. Discover mQre llboUI this hQme by call1nK 546-2.llJ. Gener ii FIRST HOME? SlB,000 A 1.DT FOR Ll'ITLE! P<"r- fl'(!t st&rh!r hl>mr \\'L!h bl£ living roon1, Dinln~ roon1. Cabin kit~hen. Qu irt i.trrt>I. Boal door l hru hiuok 01 i::ar· age. \\'A lk to ~hOl)J)lng. Clo~r to bt-arh('!I. Vrry 111nal/ do\\ n to quali lif'd buyrr~ Call l10\\' -~0303. .. . . I OllL\ 1. J Ol.SO.\ N£A t T O P S Coron1 ckl Mar BROADMOOR BEAUTY This lovC°ly·C btdroom home IA our newest listing. Jt Is In 'l. lo\•tly JocaUon In Harbor View "'~lh (.'OmmunUy pool and ~rf"l'nbf'lt11, Tbe patio area and hanJ1:in1t plan!A 11nd largf' "'rought iron sates are all rlone In a inost gracious lash.ion. Call 675-7225. COLWELL PROPERTIES, INC. REALTORS T OCEA N VIEW * ---------•I Sharp duplex; So. of }fwy. 2 -BALBOA- PENINSULA Spailous BR. eaCh .. Onew1/2 baths. f'.A. heat, Opt'n bt'am 1'f'll"s., 11ep. Jaunilry rm. Balcon1NI Brauly -t•lu1rm-Copper plurnbing, Vt>ry clean in.ii: & roomy, Uu11t heforc & 1 blk. 10 1he bcat·h, All "eronon1y" 11·11.s lhP rulf', Rt'-thi11 for $75,000. • huLl t anrt uJXfatf'd into a I MORGAN REAL TY \'l'ry /o,·pJy :> b<·drooin, "J 673-6642 61546459 bath farn1ly honie on 2 10111. VACANT & READY Every modern conven1l'nce. Sl25 000. • Sharp 2 Bdrm home 'PETE "e RRETI • Ne'v paint in & out A * Ne11• pltli'lh !!hag Cl'pl REAL TY ... • New draperic11 642_5200 * 'koom for another u_nil 1========= :::::::::::::::::::::::::: l ~~~~~i,{r~'EAL TY* OWNER'S MESA BARGAIN 546---0SH ............ A"ynm, ' Huntington Be1ch l1gun• 8ocb --------1 Wanted! Co1t1 Me11 NIGUEL CHARM Mobile Hom11 For Sale 125 2 BR., J ~t BA1lf Condoritlnium. Sl9,500. 2400 Elden. 54:>-6384 East Bluff Large Family! $33,900 J Bdrnu., 2 bath.I: 2 cu llx» Mayf~·er Doublt Ex· gMage, Yi'Llh t\uge 70xl07 tt. pa.ndo-2BR. alt vcrru, adult level Jot. This lmm11.cul11.te park. Fountain Va 11 I" 'i . hoJne priced to seU quickly I ~,.._~~l368~/~6<~3-~JJ~!6~, ~~~ ------.-.--•[to Ma.re au lhe anwrutics of· BLUFFS "E" tef'f'd In 1h1~ !i bedroom, 2 at $.15.500 l : ~~ ,/ -Re1tt1t1tt, [.al ./TOe-tZ./t L----°'M_•~ --' t.argci;t grcrnbel1, 3 pJw; t>Arh h0rr1e. Jlappy fa1nll_y fa mily; lo\\' lca.~f'hold . Per· living. F111nily room w11 fret t.>Qnd, S59,950. fireplace for all to enJOy ,'! .. and ;u]n1 1rr· n1o~I l~nvenient REAL J;STATE :' "1-.., orr lhe '.lr!it\f' huiltln klt · 1190 Clen11cyre St. Acreage for 11111 15 C::S( ;_',· .'1,>fJ!ft/ chr.n, dlshwa~her. Lovely 494-9473 549-0Jl61 ______ ~---Uf. -patio. /\ttract1ve landscnp-1--..-..=<=-==-..-.--LASSf.:N COUNTY RANCH Ing, colortuJ tree~-FAMIL..3o/.....DREAM 40-80-HiO·atre r:-irw-hes , In _ ~, rcaJly: shrubs 842-6®1 2-Sty.1tucco w/1!1akc roof. 5 Lassen Col'.ln!y-fi~hiiig-hun- ....,_,. Bdrmi>.. 2~4 bath~: Jiving ting-n1ountains-lakeli -pa rt 2414 Vista de! Oro mr. '''ilrplc .. formal dining of a 10,000 acrt' Cuttle Nf'"'port Searh nn., lg" kitchf'n. \Y/brkrt, Ranch -from $300 PER 644·1133 ANYTll\fE _.. --area. Good nf'ighborhood . ACRE-XLNT TER:\15, long Fountain Valley EVERYTH~NG NEW Asking S+J.~.()'). 4 BR + 2 BA , • 499·2800 • tern1 financing. Call Qy,•ner 2 Years old, 4 BR. 21 ~ Ba, $2 7,990. B'Q: ~ 80 ACRES, Ne1v :\lexico, nr. 3 car, garden kit.. fain & Features NE\V paint In and ~ ~ ............ ~ nAlional forrst. $61.2.l PER cl in rms, .shag, IR lndfiCpd oul and ou t NE\V shag ,,...,,....._ "-1.~~.:.t ACRE. Sl9 ~lo. 96S-{XH7. yard, boal s11ace $42,930. carpet, Cozy f1rep~ce, bl tin ~80~;::.,. By {hvner 839-8466 F n!n Vlly R/O, and it's located on a • ..,__.....,..CMw 2111 ACRES Ant('lope Valle~', I I •-,.___. •~ ...., JI' 4 1 only $2~i0. <.kl\vn, Q\\'n<'r 5 Br & 3 ba. lle&ted pool. ove Y ""e· 1""'" s .. e... s ;ENTLE~IAN'S estate, l ·:-1 Frplc 111 :-.ta!ll'r B R. in mint condition!. Submit acres, big lrees. can he mu51 sell. 5-16-3086. $42.000. 968-2365 alt 5 pnt. 'your ternu;. Call 847-1221.. divided 7 Jots, each \vilh Commercial pin. ~ magni!icent v\c,v. $J20,00J, Property Larry Reynolds. 8811 N. -::=7-=--.,,.,.,..-.,.- BY O\\"NER. 4 BH. l~f BA. Coat H\\'y .. 494-1468 Rl!r. First Time Offered fam. nn .. shag cpts .. 1800 Coast lhv.Y. Corona del r.Iar 158 sq. ft. $31,500. 963--2146 or 17141 Brach Blvd., ll.B. Laguna Niguel.' 3 Commercial & duplex !213J 37~721. e FIXER UPPER e $95,000 O\\'C TD@1 ~J';"'o GREEN Brook Hoine, F.V. 'I $32 1950 3 BR, 2 BA, trp!c., lilrge Bdrn1., 2 Ba., family and NO DOWN TERMS yard. Assumable l oan. dining room. Single !!01'y. All the luxury features here 642-2155. After 5 pm. By owner. 96&--02-14. PLUS~ 4 big bedrooms, 2 lido Isle E. 17th St., Cost• Mes• Top location, Jo,v c]oy,·n 11.5~~ Spendable return Realonomics, Bkr. 675·6700 PRIDE AND JOY AT S29.~I()(). full prier ror large HARBOR VIE\V 1111..Lli - fmmacul11te and customized 4 bedroon1 a11r! family room. Lusk (Carmr!) 4 Br, 2 Ba, 4 bedroon1, 3 bath hon1f' Qn 0\\Tier will hP]p 1vi_th fi· !am I'm, f11>lc, pool 11.z !QL shady tree-line s\TPet. l\fa:r1--nancing. Submit only. 5';'£, _P_rinc Qoly. $66.800. 644.:_<J~~ 1,G_._,d_•_n_G_r_o_v_• ___ _ ter 11uitt' "Fil for a kini;f' doy,·11. Enjoy builtins, shake LUSK HARBOR VIEW gleaming pulln1an haths, --------- form al dining roon1 for NEAT Dupl1xei/Unit1 those banquets prepared in and clean 3 BR. 2 ba. & lam-sale 162 lking.si.te bell. loo!). Nothing JWf. firepla1·e. Xlnt location. RI OGE hut the best hll1i !wen used Call 540cll51 !Open evcs.J This twautiful 5 lwdroom in remodeling this spafklin.ll: hon1e is availahle no1v - gem. Landscaped to a "T" no y,·alling for Spyglass! The and evf'n room for boat or view is by far the most out. trailer. $36.450 and Fl-IA-VA i;tanding in Corona del Mar. terms. Bed l'his is a brand .new hci.me, ~. F. Colesworthy 4 room, you-\Vtll be the first bride & Co. Realtors -~ 3 bath ~:~~~;.the thrf'shhold. Eiutbluff OffiC'f' 640-0020 Beautiful 2 story, bf>ttcr 1han Bayshorl' Officl' 675-4930 new, 2 _yt>ars old, bonus liiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii• I roon1, bu1l!-in kitchf'n wi !h INVESTORS -PARA DISC- Ov~ one acre·parcf'I wilh 5- ufli ta. · Posaible R·4 zoning. Ideal for .!QJ:lllional units. Good catfa Mesa location. Call for details. 546-5880 (Open f'Vea . I --' ~ HERITAGE RBQ, cul-de-sac, rn·t~tigr .nea. $43,500. Red eaf.pct -n,.·a1tor""r. 546=86'ttr ---* CLIFFHAVEN * Owner·MUST sell! 3 BR. Lovely pool nrea + addt'I, yard & tree house. Bring lhe familyt $36.950. BALBOA 'BAY PROP. * 642-7491 * STEPS TO BEACH , -REALTORS 3 BR. 2-sly, Recently decor. j:==::::=:::=:::=:::==-:::::=: j near ne1v rarp. Open bea1n Cf'ils; large patio. S33,900. CAYWOOD REALTY • Spanish Adobe • COLWELL PROPERTIES, INC . REALTOR S tosta M1si11 DOLL HOUSE Eastside Costa i\tesa for $19,950 fuU priee. GI's no do\1'n - m inimum down }'HA. Darling home situated on hu~e R-2 lot. Queen size bedrooms, g r e a I coun- try-sryle kifl'h<."n, also lo1s of trees. \f hat a place! Let's sho1v it to you. l.Llls or room to grow here. Call $24,950 i\LL TERMS -3 BR., 2 BA., "like new crpts & drps., dsh- 1vshr, "'atersoftener, over· si7.«I lot w/block fence. 84i·8507. U.S. AFFILIATED Brokers Realty Huntingt~n Beach $30,500! American Colonial All the chan11 of yesteryear with all the convenif'nce of l'feenfUIY;' bel:1l'OOn1s, 'Z pullman baths lavish use o! used brick. Family room with inviting fireplace most convenient oil the all elec· tric builtin k it e h e n , dishw11sher. Patio. Reflects tender lo\'ing care inside & out. Pool sized grounds. Oh-yes -ahnost forgot there's brand ne1v thick shag carpeting! 842-2561. TARBELL the all electric ;,A11ard" ily room home. 4r'Ke straila --------- '"i nning kit ch c n , patio, BRA~D ne1v deluxe b'iplt'x. clish\1•nsher, gorgeous sh.ig $!1 ,000 2293 Fordham Dr.. C.\l. carpeting, custom drapes B!tlr/0\\'llCl', 5-13-61•18 eves. t hruout. Lovely covered bou10Rl> lowson jR. pati~. Expertly landScaped, 3416 Via r=l""'1: 675-4562 Income Property prec1Sf'ly m a n i c u re d . ===-,-,--:-;,..--c;--;;c-962-5566. DOUBLE lol, 4 Br, J Ba, 166 TARBELL Low, Low Down magnificent mstr s u i l e ,,·/frplc, den & pvt deck. 2 beautifull y lndscp'd patios, bl tn kit, scp din rm. sunny breakiasl rm \\'/garden patio vie11·, 14 trees, 3 car gar. $129.'500-673--019-l onr. ~Tinim®i do1vn.-moves. you . into th is large family rn1 3 BR + fanl. & din r1ns. 45' home. 3 Bdrmi:, 2 baths. '.Fu!! Lot, street to street $69,500 price only $21!,500. Call no\v, 75 Ft. lot, Jge. home. Street it \\"on't la~t! to street ............ $90.000 REAL ESTATE FAIR LIDEl REALTY (714) 536-2551 33i7 \'ia Lido, N.B. -673-7300 REPOSSESSIONS 1------ For information and location Mesa Verde of these },HA & VA homes, FOR I b C '.\l 2 contact -sac Y O\\'ner, .. ~ KASABIAN Sim)·, 4 .be<lcm., fam ' , formal din rm. lrg back Real Estat• 847-9604 yard. eovd patio, xlnt cond. ATIRACTIVE Tri-ple:ic \V- side Costa f'.tf'sa . ldt>al for owner occupier. Princ. On- ly. °'-''ner. ~lll06. . NE\V DLX Dana Polnt duple:< $~9.9.50. 33952 Silver Lantern. \Vebb, Bkr. 642-4905 28 Unit-Nr_ Shop'g. 2 & J BR. 2 Ba. 8231 · Ellis Ave, H'B. $420 l\t. 847-.1957. 4 UNITS for sale by owfter. Xlnt financial rl'turn. Call after 5: 30. 531--0350. Industrial Property 168 32 UNITS Over 2 acres of easy Jiving, i;:arden apar!mf'n1s near Santa Ana Ctluntry Club. Schedule sho1,·s 15',, return $22,950. * 548-1290 * Solid built 3 bedroom. double Walker & Lee Rca!tor!I 545--0465 Open Eves 25 Vacant Homes $13,:iOO. OPEN HOUSE Sat & Sun. 2m Albatross Dr. ,..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii• I 3 & 4 Bedrooms in good area. Ph: 540-35511, Principals on· PRICE some \vith p<>ols. FHA & GI ly. on 15<,P rio"·n. i\lay ex- C'hange. Listed pr i r.,. : $~45.000, call our Investment Division, 546-1600. car gani.gt', clo11.f' 10 10,vn & iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio REDUCTION financing. $400 to $1.ooo. l -8-'y-0-,-.,-,.,,-p~,~;m-,-C~o-,-.,.-, \o ·THEREAL '"" ESTATERS t'ity park. Priced right. Ph: TWO STORY &1z-.1m. · COZY BUNGALOW Eutside Co.111a Ml'sa, Tree Lined Street. Brick Fire- plact!', Shini::le Roof. 2 Bed- room11.,'Large Jot "'ith Alley Access for Boat or Trailer. $23,500. Call 646-0555, Even- ings 8J6-S960. COLWELL PROPERTIES, INC. REALTORS Brand New California Classic by a Jake on quiet cul-de-sac strttl. This 4 l?c'droom homf' Is on !he bdrder of lluntington Beach's) n e 1v park and Jake, See Uie hills, lake and hor~s out or your front windo1•"· llurry on th is onf' it 11·on'f last. Phone g4;,:.25,15, 1-oTHEREAL '"" ESTATERS " ,,.,r., u•. q' rov 2·Fireplaces. Builtins. Fom1· al dining. Family room. Kil· chen eatin~. 5 bcd- l'OOfll!'i." Larg . All term~ including V do1vn . Full price $39,950. Near UC!. Call 540-1151 fOpC'n C'Ve!I.) ~.,,p,.. HERITAGE REALTORS EMERALD BAY Charming 3 Br + F'am. rm. Immaculate! Ocean side of Hwy. ViC'\V. ldt>al loacllon. $145,000-Hurry TED HUBERT & ASSOC. 3471 Via Lldo 675-8500 LITILE RANCH /3 acre. zoned R-2 cure lit· tie house, country selling. old fashioned front porch, all for $21,950. Take a look. Red Carpet Re:altor s. 546-8641). Balboa Peninsula F.LEGANT BAYFRONT RC'furb ishcd .1971. Panoramic Vil'\\', Nl'\V piC'r. 8 BR. ~Ba. Courtyal'd entry. $195,000. ~1arshall Realty 675-460.J Bayshores 3 BR .. 2 Ba .. din rm. cust. crpt/sh u!ters & clrps. Elec ESTATE SIZE LOT kH t.ow '-'•· 1>o1d. 67:>-o&IO. 12,000 S.F'. 101 at end of cul-Capistrano Beach de-~ac slrC'l'I! Sl 9,500. Also 1---------- 70. x 135' ConK'r only S21.500 ONE Yrar old 3 BR. 2 BA. Submit on tenns 646-7171. high C'E'ilings, OCf'an ,-ie"" Take over loan. 968-i3J.j. Don't give up the ship! "Lisi'' it in classified, Ship 1o Shore Re.'jults! 6-12-56i8 NO DOWN TO VETS 3 BR .. 2 ba. Quiel corner. B<m1 .~pace. Near free1vay & shopping, $29 ,500. --GEMm-- 1s10 \V. Coast Hwy., N.B. RE:ALTORS 642·4623 -PARK VIEW CorTicr + boat yard Sh;u-p 3 bedroom, 2 baths. den. Owner/Broker 646-7010 i\l~:SA Del Mar. 4 lge. BR, 2 BA, fan1ily rm., 1800 sq. rt., patio \\'/cover, sprinklers front & back, new crpt. $36,000 O"•ner, 546·9633 prin. only. ~lESA Verde -J Br -2 Ba & Fam. Near park, schls, shopping . New l y Tf!tleau:ated & shag Cti>ldf'. 12 x 24 aluminum rm or! bck -Playhouse In back yard. By Qy,·ner. 546-3451 1otal down and rent 'ti! es-S"=' poo. l! 2 s"''.--4Br. Seller has been transfe!Ted. 1 .. ,.. '' .... 't •i '-''. • •, Reduced S2000. \Viii sell FHA crow c OSf'S. frplc. tam. rm. cpls, drps. fir VA. Beaut 4 BR. 2 BA Roberts & Co. 962-5511 979-2120. --lots for Sale 170 home in !he heart or Foun-$50. DOWN Newport Beach I BUILDING? Cul-<le-sac R-1 taiil Valley across !lie street 2 Bdrn1, ]1~ bath Condo. BACK BAY lo!. O\VNER \VANTS AC· from Mile Square Country freshly painted. Carllf'I.~, 'J'ION! \Viii consider f'x· Club. F'orrnl din, lam rm & drapes. \Vasher, dryer. 34BDRM. ch~ngc for income units. !pl, sep laundry, concrett> 1~frig. $18.450. Call 96S-4t41. CONDOMINIUMS S18,:;oo. TR I -H ARBOR block \VRll & covered patio. CREST REALTY Buildt-rs clos eout . 1n REALTORS, &16-32.)5. r.tany more xtras -See for I --~-~~~~---1 beaut.ifu Ne"lXlrl Riviera, 3 R-3 lot, ~ rental area, yoursel{.. $35,500. DIVORCE niaster size BRs. (1650 sq. E/side, C~f. $13,500. 182 I' DESPERATE 0\\'NER -4 ft .) 2;~ ba., floor to ceiling Cecil Pl., C.l\f. 54S-698l Bednn, 4 Baths, fa.Jt\arrn ""/ fireplace. \\·-1v shag carpet =--,-,--=--,-- f6M47J (:::JS4M_ lGl fpl. fonnl din. like ne1v. As-thruout, custom drapes & Mountain, D1s1rt, sume VA l'Jan. Quick poss., dishwa'!her. flurry ! Just 4 Resort 174 nr b<'h. left. YOU O\VN THE Has :i!~,1c;;-:~~~~d "'ife U.S. AFFILIATED LA.i'\D. $26.2j() F.P./bdrm. Bl'Okl'l'S Realfy models from $28,fiOO 10';0 is l"t'ally getting anxious. ,.., PRESTIGE S BR, 2 BA, dn. 6\: .c int. Take Irvine to Large 4 bedroom, 2 story honie \\•ith fornial din ing pool, lg lot, crptd, xtras. Santa lsabel Ave. Follow immac. S-12,9'.JO. Q\\•ll(>r. 6-102 lhe signs to model or call area and large family room. Camille Or. 846-3031 Open Sales Office f>i0-5147. Only $29,950. d .1 PARK, YARD, POOL ai y. HARBOR View Homes-5 and a great 3 lx>drm, 1~~ O\Vl\ER, $26.900. 4 br, l~• bdrms, lrg fam room & den. bath home can all be yours ba, 14x24 fam rm. cv'd Unusual DECORATOR JN- for only $27,900. Hurry on patio, nr schools & heh. TERIOR plus all BUILDER this one! Days 968-2800 alt 6 & EXTRAS. Charming used 2 lAts, .secluded $2,450 ~toonridge cabin $15, IJ(I Lakeside cabin S.15.000 Call 866-4641 or \\Tile; Spencer Real E~fale, P. O. Box 2828, Big Bear Lake, Calif. 2 BR home in Org. on H ighway . 1~• acres \\·/ercek. Next to gen store. $9500 cash. No tern1s. 2324 E lden Apt. 4. 01. Call 540--8555 11·knds 963-1017: brick patio &. fire ring COLLEGE Park . By O\vner. SHERWeeD REAL TY Irvine \\"/quaint garden breakfast 4 BR·2 BA· plus family. 18964 Brookhurst, F.V. nook. S72,500. By 011·ner. RETIREMENT cabin near Lake Oroville. 3A. \V[th stream $14,500. Box 166 Oroville Crpls, drapes, 20 fruit trees. For appt. phone 644-62-16. Open hou.~r 396 Princeton POSH PALACE A RARE FIND Dr., 5-1;;....1168. CLOSE TO BEACH 2-Story, 4 Bdrn1., 3 ha .. 3 car 'BAYFRONT, PIER 4 BDriJ\t. REPO. 4 + FAM RM + 3 BA ~ar. Beautiful Broadmoor, E. Side-frplc. huge lo!, 3 car $35,000. Turtle Rock. Decorator Charming S BR beach home gar. ~take oiler, under Sparkling home in :iclnt area. drapes. Xlnt loc., \\'alking on sandy shore. Exciting S30:'1t. \\'ills Re a 1 t Y, I-luge master bdrm sui1e, dist. to elem. &: high school. harbor action • choice 546-7739. fireplace, like rie1v \V/w A MUST SEE AT S4ll,750 locale. crpts & drps, all pash-but-INCLUDING THE LAI-ID. 2301 Bayside Dr. $168,000 BY 01\•ne r -Lovely 3 BR, fpl., cor Joi. rn1 for boat, campC'r 28.Jj Portola Dr. 5-16-1031. B\' O\vncr. lg 5 BR, xlnt 11rea. many "tras. 10x30 .scrnd porrh~ 971 Lansing La, 546-5713. ton app's, 2 big patios, xlnt By Appointment ldscpg. GI or FH tern1s. Ted Huhert 610>-8500 Call 847-1221. PANORAMIC VIEW 1ln h''11i·llil. Beaut. maintained home 2 Bedrooms & large family - --'l le ulior "SINCE 1946" rm. Pool. S64.500. 1TI41 Beach Blvd .. H.B. 1st \Vestern Bank Bldg. GeorgRe W1i 1 11iamson HATE A University Park ea or Real Estate Wanted 184 \VANTED apartment house!!, Orange Co. 10 lo 50 units, not more than 12 yrs. old. Quick a,clion! Hardy 213: 378--S5ll ext. 336, day or nite. 1 OR i\·fore Uits \\lanled By Responsible Builder-Prine. Only. 833-3148. FI x ER-UPPER? I ~D;•;Y~• =SS;2~-7~000==N~i=gh~IE• / ES~48-~6~5~70~s.::::~64;;--:S-~I 5~64 ~ BA YSHORES. Bay \'iew. Jothing to do here! Sharp Tiburon "Monterey" Condo. COUNTRY-LIKE Impeccable rond. 3 BR. 6 3 BR, 2~) BA. $4001 xlras. SETTING ~~g_~· fpl. $9J,;;oo Own. S©\\JtllA-.?£ £tf S" The Punle with the Buiff./n Chuckle .... UNSCRAM8ll lCTlERS 10 I V GET ANSWER SCltAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 700 Owner lransferred and set a give-away .. price: $33.~>00. Call now! Bargains don'! 11·ait. larwin realty 968-440-5 Anytime. $29,500 ''FUN HOUSE'' 4 spacious bedrooms, 2 balhs. bright, c heer I u I ktl~hen, handy "'or k featurts. extra eating area. Added on rovef'M & 11crttn- ed patio ovcrlooks ~ gorgeou! swim pool &r: pa.Mc-like yard. Phont! j1cks in all t>Mrooms. Submit no dO\\•n G.J. tenn8-'1ow donw all otheN! 962--1373. TARBELL S Instant Cash $ for wur equtty. w~ 1>11 onta. 24 hr. aeno. 847-3507 U.S. AFFILIATED -Rally • 4 bdrni., 2 ba. homt> "'ith ••Anno V l·tO,lE ranorainic vic1v or vallry n.JV\.D R IE\V 1 S bcl01i·. Quality construction. 4 Br .. FR. DR. Palermo on meticulously nlaintained. corner. Lush extras. Owner. I-las everything yau need for 1,,_644-<;=72~'9~·~~~=~~ gracious living In prestigious fl\f'.\TAC. 2 BR .. 2 BA Condo Turtle Rock Hills. $57,00J. at charming Cape Series. ffi red h·111 ri:s:~:· .~:;: ";.' • HARBOR V1eiv Home 5 Br. REALTY SommersE-t. Xtras, ltt land. Univ, Park Centf'r, Irvine 644-4917. 185.l Port lttargal~ Call Anytiml', 833·0820 NewpGrt Heights BY 01\ne.r - l Br ram Rm BY OWNER Turtle Rock_ ' ' 3 BR, Spe,nish charmer. Rf.- 833-2798 m o d e I e d • redecorattd. L,-,---,:.---.,-----1 Beaut. Joe. $36,0CU. &ts-6193 agun• Be1.ch days, 673-1658 eves. See any. -"B"'E"A"C~H..,...,HO=u""s"E,.._-l tim" $29,500 3 ~R. Vactinl. R·2 room to QuA.int home m:a: close In. budd. $29.900. Agent . Btam ct'll'11., Or. 'to ttil. 675--0144 646--7414 trple., picture window, ttl., \\'8Sht.r. l Br w/bath. Vacancle• eost mooeyl Rent MISSION REALTY 494--0731 your bou!t, apt., •Ion! .,..__ ,_.. klg., ete. thru a Daily PiloC I WTI UnUSt!(I lif'ml lnto.,UK:A 01s:slfJ1d_ Ad. euh, caU 642.-S611 • TIME FOR ~UICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 ' Buy a Border to Border Bargai Every cl•ssilied w•nt •d in tho DAILY PILOT appears in every edition every day. Th•t mean s your ad will be seen in papers delivered to homes and sold from newsracks from border to border •II •long the Orange Coast ••• all tho way from Seal Beach to San Clemente You Get It All • • • Huntington Beaeh Fountain Valley Costa Mesa Newport Beaeh Laguna Beaeh Irvine Saddlebaek San Clemente Capistrano (Plus the daily newsrack edition J For One Price With A Classified Ad Phone 642-5678 YOU CAN CHARGE IT, too ••• i.' ' " " . •• •• '. ':: : . ,•: -•• .~ ~ R ·~ ·!~ s :·~ -• ;t! I ·~ ·~ [ :~ :~. ,,.._ ~ .-. , .. ,. ... ,~ G ~ F I ' t " ' f { s ' ' ' l " v : • 2 ' ' ' C• .r s2 ' d : S? ··~ g "' 14< ~ '•" \\ ·~ jl ,•: .. " ' ·~ 67: ;g c ·.~ -:·. 2 ·:· ~ .. " ·.: p !•Ji " ' . -' \V1 :· l ' :~ H •Ro " -H• ~­. ~ - Wo B & V' N t ~ !~ 'i \i:i i B !' fi ' s. • . " ' -: Sl~ • N • .. "' : 91 ' -• SU 1 1 bt i: ,t Ji ·,cc -IR do B L 11 I H ... ------ .I ... 'f11f'}d:•1. fl'•; 16. 1972 DA!lY PILOT f:J l ~I J[t)! '----"R .. "'--" ,_,·J~ ~I _ ... _w. ~J~~~ Bu1lness Opportunity Houses Unfurn.. 305 HouMs Unfu rn. 200 ~~~-30$ Apt. Unfum, General 365 Apt, Unlllm, General 365 Apt. Unf\lrn. 3'S Apt. Unf\lrn. 36.S Summer . Rant al1 420 lndu1trl•I Rental Cor.ona dtl Mar L1gun1 Buch \V A N T E 0-lnvtslor · \\1tti caplla l for ~una: L'Ouple (O SZ75-2 Br !rtllc Mme, bltns, ONE Year Leue onl)', 3 BR, buy 11 n1ique1. \Ve know ho""' tl('i~ cpt. ri rp11, beam cell, 'l BA house, Iireplaee. HIDDEN VILLAGE APT$. & ~·here to buy. "likt k dbl s:ar, yrd, ni~ patio, 2;., Oct .An vie"'._, No p e 11 . Hom•Like Living Betsy. ';e Ste\·e ililli!!r. 481 hlks b<.'h .•• , • 494-~7]. ....,Families Welcomel E. 19th Av!! .. <;.:-.f.' ~ S~~ blk octa.n 2 Br dpbc Mesi11 Verde 2 BEDROOM-2 BATH LEADING Pan1yhose Corp. 11'/frplc, bltn.S. &ar, tncd From $159 now Taking applic11.tion~ tor yrrl. · • · Jmmaculate 3 Br, 2 Ba, crpts, Carpets • Drapes • Air Condition ed • Enclos· qualified distributors lor $351)........sunny & bnaht 3 Br. 2 drpa:, lrplc, &:lll"dener Incl, ed patios • Heated Pool • Forced Air Heat • Oranre Co. Comp a n y Ba. 'frp~'" bltns, cpt/dtl>s. AvaU. 5/21. Mli·82!8. Carport & Storage. trainini wilh f" n ta st I c ~·rd, patio. ·g~r. · · · Newport S.ich . 2500 S.uth S1lf1, S1nt1 An• 546-1525 Cost• Meu t,lewROrt Buch . BAY VIEW 2 h<droom . COSTA MESA -;-;:;:::-;::~:-:;:-;:';;'.:7'11::::;:.:;.!:::.:.:..;::::;:;;,___ &lttps 4 ('(lmpletely furnish· 1440 A 2880 Sq f!. A PRECIOUS FEW PARK NEWPORT ed. AvaU June Jo S.pl. S7'0 CABINET MAKERS- can e.njoy fairway Villa •llv· pr month. Adu.Its only rtBERGl..ASS ina -one of those 1ml ll APARTMENTS Aaent. 675-49.'3fl. Nr. Nw pL Fn-.•y & s,o. ~ elegant comp!e.X!!S, kno\Yn Oft the bay 2'2()( \V. OCEAN FROST. Lri:. 2931 Cr11ce: Ln. for unmatchrd man~eml'.'nt Luxury •J'lrtrnent llvlng 011• l br. Jul~ $150 wk. Aug. St~ f&t. ot 8 11.ker, £.Of l'aU)'ltW 1nd imprccable detail. J ust erlooklng tha v.•ater. Enjoy "'k. 64<1-5307. ~ .. ~ti l Rrpre1entativ.e !ftere now there ue t~o 3 bedroom $7~.000 health spa, 7 1wlm0 TAKING reMrvarions. 2 BR. 9 &m·l2 noon. apartments av~ilable-\1·lth mlna-1'001•. ,. llabt.."d ten-011,. block to -bt'ac:h. •tit & (TI4 ) 919.4434 or 379-tnl all those des~rabl~ e.xtra.s ni. court•, pl us miles of BalboA . 64~7!!2 A\f5, NEW -pool, pat~o. ftreplace; bicycle tralls. puttlnr. shuf-BACHELOR Bayfront Apt. :'900-:!ti,OOO 5q. ft • ...,1"'"· m11 .,,_.,,,, .·I NU.VIEW RENTALS Ls;;;;;;;::;::E;;;;;;;;;;:;LJij;:J (ente 2 blks W. o! Bristol, o!! Warner on l+Li0uiloR";:;;::;;;;;1;;;;;;;;;,.J.!'::!;7'-"~0!!'Jo=~or"==~<l4-~3~2!!48._ 'e1 or Families 4 BR, 2 1-----+inda-Wa"""", souttrto-W.-Centnl ~ + LIQU R L~nse .• 6ral1 fl R 0 ""· '"· S"llt level. J ' Co. f'lf ~A lf'. ""CJe11 n:' A B R Vie'\11/Carmel. 3 J •' laundry, walk-in .closets, 1~1 Deboard, c uel. Ju or · --j--J\duttr.12M"1\1n~ --J...ph.-XO emp;-epnnk.- .. -Mth~e--coutrio on:-bllr m . monthly; also 1 67~9 wtc .. rpet oflicteli come a11d *«. and 2-bedroom plans 11.nd ~ .. 1.,.h11t11 r-.1orttm>"i1.. CM 2-~to~ towD ho"ses. E!ee-R11'\taf1 to Share • 430 I Tri-Co Realty 645-0621 5.1i-1.SlO or 4~3992_ hr, 2 ba, fam nn. din rm. R•nt-A-Hous ... 979-8430 -Vl.LLA MARSEILLES F.x1ra sharp. $4j() nio. HouMs Furn. or SPACIOUS 1 & 2 BEDROOM APT. Money To Loan 2CO &i4-l7:i9 e\'e"' or "·kends. Unfurn. 310 Furnished & Unfurnished NEED CA 'H' SI -000--0-Cost1 Mesa Adult Llvlnn · 1 • •• • • r up Balbo.1 P1nlnsul1 • 10 $3,000, SlD,000 and n1orr. • OOZY Collage _ 1 Br. Dish\vasher color coordinated appliances .. See Avro Thrift for a RPal ,.111 drns, Npt Hi:thts, suo. BAYFRONT. Choice 5 BR: '4 P lush shag carpet .. mirfOred wardrobe doors- Estate Loan. Urion approval, ALA Rentals e 64s.3900 BA, pier &. flo11.1, Summer indirect lighting' in kitchen • breakfast bar • UM! the mQney ho11iev er you or yearly. Fum . or un!urn. huge private fenced patio • plush landscap· hke. Also 1.11k aboul our un -• CLEAN"&. Quiel -1 Br. 011i•ner. 613-20.39. ing _ brick Bar·be-Ques -large heated pools serurcd JX'r50nal loans. sml pet ok. All uf il in<' Sl :l5. Duplexes Unturn. 350 & lanai. Air conditionin~. AVCO THRIF1'. 620 Ne11 · ALA Rentals e 64S.3900 3101 So. Bristol St., Senta A na 557·8200 ~rt ~tr8 Drh, P~ui~~"\-~ e PRIVACY ! l Br, stove/re-_c_o_r_on_a_d_e_l_M_a_r___ COLDWELL, BANKER '& CO. ewp::i rac ' . . frig, rn<'d yrrl, pet ok. $110. BRAND NEW-Avail. in ~!!!!~!!!!!!!!!ll!iMA!!!!!N!!iA!!G~IN!!!!G!!!!iAi!Gf!Ei!iJ!N!IT!!"!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!~ ; R11I Estate Loans I ALA Rentals e ·64S-3900 June. Huge dlx "owrier's ~ ;· $1,000 TO $15,000 NOW! -u"it 3 BR 3 BA F~<pla'"" Apts. Furn. 360 Apt. Uftfurn. 365 vr<l ! k"d I t $130 bit-ins, 1800 .!;q ff. + 3 C M Coron• del M•r " HOMEO\VNERS: Comp11rr i e RARE lnd('crl? 2 Br, [nl'd ., . ' . ...~ • ...;.---------1 . OUR COSTS! \\'r are NOT · · rnr gar, i s J>C' s · decks "''/view ol bay, Otta esa Mortgage ' Brnkf'rs! Our ALA Rentals • 645-3900 ocean, & hills. \\o'alk to heh I ,, LOAN GUARANTF.E a~· FOR !"ent {&. sale) 3 Br. trg & shoppinl:'. 1 yr lst!. $425. Ufe8liB.JIU 2.0 : sur@s you or IO\\'l'r rales! l'ncl yarrf, 840 Governor. Refs. required. 673·0960. Sparkling new adult aprs I 2 BDRMS., l baths; frplc. • Our varirty of rrpayn1f"nt Sl!l.i Call 213: 286-96.i6 rvPs. 1 BR furn. $185. :: plans permits u.~ to please Cost• M•1• Fantastic ocean vie11i•! $42;) Month. No pets \Villiam \Vinton R!!altor , Pa,li.~arlcit 2 BR, SIW. Fncd, ---------2 BR furn. $21 5. ' ...you personall y. ""''"" ,,· ... ~·. Cool B·-··"·'· 2 Bt-droom Dunlex. SlXI mo. 229 M11rine Av~. N'T "' .... "~ '<"''·~ '' 2 BR unfurn. $l9Cl. Balboa l•la"d 61·.· "31 S NO~~~~~~[ · Rent-A-Hous• 979-8430 Adults only. l\1r. Derman. Pvt patios, }ush forest aet· " .... ..,,, • G f .• '64fi.-7~192 • ting, carports, gas pd, F ireside Thrift Co. TI llT Burlget? urn ll4 E ~ C "80137 SHARP & clean 4 Bedmom, 211 bath 11·alk to bl>11ch. Fa.mil'y preferred. ~10nt h to month. $390 pr month Call ~fr. Bailey, 673-8550. 2328 Harlxir Bl. C. f\les Rac·h. a ll ul il incl SM. Newport Be•ch · ~ulh Sf., .M . ...., • 64.>1000 • ALA Rentals e 645-3900 HOLIDAY PL4ZA 3 Bn., 2 BA. F'rplc., top DELUXE s · 1 BR 819 N. r.t.11in, ::-anta Ana 2 b y 1 pac10us · 547~4 • HAR D to Find 2 Br, fncd shapt! lks ocean. r y. furn apt. $135. Heatrd pool. : 1st TD Loans ~'rel , encl g11r. kids pe!s $140. SJOO. Adlls no prts. 573-SOSR. Ample parking. Adull11 - ALA Rentals e 645-3900 12 Blk Ocean, rJe\\' crpt & no pets. 1965 Pomona Ave., drps, beam Cf'il. 3 br. 2 ba. c .?\-1. 2 BR tov.'nhouse. new cpts, pai nt ; pool , 11i·alk ro btarh. s:m. adlt~. no pels 673-4447. $2'75 yrly. S30-73:io "vrs. * $25 PER WEEK * & Up -Pool & maid se-rv -Cost• M11a • 3 RR-2BA-<'T'pt~. drapes, I r~ :· 6%% INTEREST yro. s10\"r avail. \\' Sidr. " 2 d TD L ! Nl"iir 11rh()(ll!I. S225 5.i7-71l78. :} n oa ns 4 Brl,m.. 2 Ba .. h. '"'' ( 1..o\l.'l!St till!!!! Orange Co. ramLly roon1. Avail now. ----""I ~"" kitchens available. Ap•rtrntnhlflf"R!nl i ~ ~10TEL TAHITI . ;;;;;-• .;~·~""~I {Corner llarbor/Vic.roria) Furn. Bachetor & l Br11 Apts. Furn. 360 especially nice, 2110 !~ "WE BUY TD'S.. s2:io. M&-21145. ~ 1 BR. Single Bachek>r A-pt. ·~ Sattler Mtg. Co. Arlult, no .pPt. S7~/mo. 820 1': 642-2171 546.-0611 Crnt<'r St. 1142-;vl41l. HARBOR GREENS Furnished & ~ Serving llarbnr ar!!a 21 yr~. General Newport Blvd., CM. , Unfurnished :!: r.tONEY avail !or Ji;t &. 2nd ;. loans also purcha~e TDs. LOVELY 1 BR Home', family iiiiii rm., !lt"'\Vin~ rm .. pool rm. A Marvin ~lcClure Rral •: Es1ate, 1015 S. Hill S!., .:: Ocean51de, days 722·5322, ::. eves. 492·0424. •:• "'e Buy Znd Trust ~s ~ The IT\l.·in Co. ·~ Rrallors 614~1 11 ·~ 610 :'\'e'\1.-port Crnrt>r Dr. $275/mo. 831-9;}17. Dana Point DELUXE custom home, 3 BR 3 BA. oc!!an yie1\', nrw drp~. v.·/w cptg. 1'o pets. 3422 Zarz1to Dr. $300 mo. Phone cnllect 213--4i7-1009. Huntin!:ton Beach '•'-Suit!! 44j I\r1\•porl &ach ::i •\\'E have a large selection ;~:I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!~ ot 3 and t bedroom homes 1~1.1 ]~ that can be mo,·ed into ·~ HotJlel forRtnt ~ almost immediately on our :~ · Rent-Optlon plan. Bold New Concept FURNITURE RENTAL * 1'fonth to Month * 1ooir. P urchase Option * Wide Seleclion. Styl!!-Color:. * 24 Hour Delivery ;~ SHERWOOD REALTY , ;~ Hou,., Furnished 300 ~~~5~411-~1~55~5~~~ 517 w. 19th, CM 548·3481 ·"-~ ., 2'156 N. Main SA 547-0314 :~ General SPAC. 4 BR., 2 Ba., 4 sty. °!!!!!!!!!!!!iii!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Bltns, carp, drap!!s, fncd . '!!! FREE RENTAL BOOK J've looked at the OOok and there ai·e 6t'vrral good homes for rent for ap- vrl. Children OK. S27j. 54.>-7439. • ' ' proximately S200 per month. 4 Br, 2 Ba, Fenced -r-.1onth· month. $315. 2081 Hunter U\ne. 962-jl42 Stop by and browse thru it. You might !ind 11i·hat You·re 1 looking !or. :, Walker & Lee LARGE 4 BR .. b!tns, patio. atrium, \\·aJk to beach. Ava il. 6 '15, $2'15. 962·5671, Oc-ean Brttze!'i -2 Br, $155. :'i BR, $1115. Fncd, &. Vacanl. Rent-A-Hous• 979-8430 3 BR aJNOO, ll~ BA, pooh1, patio, dhl izar, lrpl, nr OCPan. 962-0986 aft 5 pm. ' RPaltors • ! ' 27!() Harbor Blvd at Adams Costa :'<!!!511, Calif. : • Corona de1 Mar • ;~ S210-2 br, g~r apt. fully !urn. 1.,.. deck & 1 blk beach ... , : .. $250-2 Br. 2 Ba._ I blk ocean, ~ jar. lo\'rly patio .•.. 2 BR. Duplex. Fncd. yard, garage, boat gale. Quiet. Sl55. 2416 England St. HB '-1: $4oo.cha.rming l Br hse ·~ w/frplc, bbq, yrd. \Vil! ad- 'rl just renf ftlr yrly, :;: NU-VIEW RENTALS 4 BR condo-cpt-dr p - ,,.,.shr/dry, frig, R/O, uril pd. $250. 548-1405/537-5384 ::: 673-4030 or 494-3241! i ~ Laguna Beach Irvine ... -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;. 3 BDR..'1, crpl!ii, drpg, bltns, sprinklers, l!!nced, $260. sv11il 6/l., L.~e/opt . 993-2392 ;~; 2 & 3 BR Sl;JO pcnn.· 1 • ':; establisd·s11.l11nrrl 11rlult!'i, no 3 RP.., 2 Ba ., lam, rm. $350. '•: pet/chilr!, ref. 494-81 70. 3 BR., 2 baths ......... $350. :, Newport Beach 3 BR., 2 ha ., atri .. -$325/33.5 ·: 3 BR .. 2ha., lam, rm ... S3.15 • \Valk to Beach -1 BR, $130. ! 1 BR mobile SI30. $90 up "lln li"I 11'1111. :· H.B. • R•nt-A-House 979-8430 .. ,. HOuses' Unfurn. ---,-1 ll'11ll11r 305 ~J--~----~~-' • General "SINCE 1946" • . LANDLORDS! n•e Specialize In J\'e\.\1JOrl , Beach • Coron11. del i'ol11r • Ii;.t \Vestem' Bank Bldg, t.:niveniity Pa.rk, Irvine Deys 552-7000 N ights : . &: Lagun11. Our Rf'nlal Srr-2 BR., 2 haths ......... S.100 vier i1 FREE to You ~ Try 3 BR., 21-? ha!hs: •• S.115 1335 Nu·Viey,•! 3 BR., 2 l:iaths .... $325/36.l t'. NU-VIEW RENTALS 3 BR .. 2 ba .. lam .. d<0 ., 1400 ~ 673-4030 or 494-124!! (i' d h.11 t' VACANT AND CLEAN • :'i ·D . re 1 ~ BR bom• wHh l•oc•d '"'· • 1: fireplace. bulltins, ntt11 r Rl::ALTY i . South Cna!I PIAza. $250 per ' h A 1 rn '141 Un iv. Park Center, Irvine .. l'tlont . gen , ;nu-o • '""""""""""""""""""~ : $190 Month. 2 Bedroom. I ! Ne.,.•ly decorat!!d lnslr'le and I L1gun1 Beach • :· out. Ko ftt, 842-669l or $140-1 Br· In 4 ple:ic 2 blks ! 962-5566. ocean, bltna, con 1 I d-1!' r ; SUPER Sharp 4 Bdnn • all pet. , • , i bltin kitch .. quiet cul·d~-sac. S\6.1-l A: d!!n, r-;0, eM. 1270. Herit1111e Realtors hil\!'ifocta.n v1ey,·, Ide a J i Jack ~1151. · 1 I qu1e CP . , , , ', Corona del Mar $2J>Uri1 prt~l Br i n ~ . 1 channinrg oldf'r bide:. bltru:, IRVIN E Tf'TTAtt gr11('11)U5 Y ('pt/rtrp!I, VlP\\'. , , , • deeor11tM. F11 m1ly hOme._ ~ $225-2 hr \\•/lrpl, bltn!ll .,.•111\ BR, 24 ba, '1 trplc. pario-I to beach, r•u &. Ira Lfl: ynl, S600mo. Owner. p11!lo ..•• 615--ll32, ~untquf! 3 Br. 211 ba <I BR, 2 BA, fam nn, din nn. cmtom home. frplc. btam1, }farbor Virw Montieao. Ex"· pa n ' I & , 2 d a c k • • tra nlce $450. 8.13-3894. hlldl"l!n/pets. • • • • , SiJ;&IM or familiea -walk 10 ~Beaut oct&il VI w, 1rg: 3 bch1 ' BR . Hu ll!'WT)'thln.-. Br '2 ba, gar, dedc1 , Rlftl·A·HOUH 979.1430 patio .••. • ' W h I t • Elephants" OVt'l'- ranmna: ,our house! Turn thtm tnto "CASJI " • all 1llun dm.l OaU)' P t 1 1 t Ous~ied. 64J..M71. NU-VIEW RENTALS 67l-.ttl.10 or 494-3243 Don't five up tlle ahlp! "'U.t" it in clasJified, Ship to Sboro llHulll' w.!m B•lbo• Island .- * BAQIELOR APT. + YE'arly, $175, Incl. util. \Vinton Real E!tll!e 675-3331 Balboa Pentnsuta e $25 \VK & UP-On Ocean e Lovely Bach • 1 Br. • Rooms l\1aid se-rvice-Pool-Util Pd. e Call 675-8740 e Costa Mesa WEE KL Y-MO~THL Y E xecutive Suites 2080 Newport Blvd, Costa Mesi 642-2611 STUDIOS & 1 BR'S e FREE Llnrns e FftEE Utilities • Full Kitchen • Hraled Pool • Laundry facilities • TV &: maid serv av&il • Phone Service El Puerto Mesa I BR's-$130 UP F urnished Apts All Utilities Paid Pool k R!!creation 1959 M,ple Ave., C.J\.f. AllO. gai:11grs tor rent WEEKLY-MONTHLY SUNNY ACRES 2376 N ev."J)Ort Blvd 54g.9775 l..oo· Rates STUDIOS k 1 BR'S, ROOMS • Free Linens & Util . • Phone Srrv-H!d Pool • lV & '.\1a 1d Serv Avail • Chilrlren & pet M't"l1on A'ITRAC. ("()mpl. !urn. 2 Br .. 1 1 ~ ha. htd. pool, nr. srhl.~. sOOr. Ir: lN'Yi, no pets. 64;)..-4220. - * $Uj * Studio Apts., l Br. S!2j. Older adull5. No pets 2115 Elden. Mgr. Apr. 6. Sll5/dlx mobile home, y,•/w cpl. 11.rllts. no p I! t s. PONDEROSA ~1oh. Est. 1991 Np! Blvd . 646-8373. DLX 2 Br furn apt, pool. close to !hops. Adults. no pets. Frnm $150. l 9 41 Pomona. CM. 1 BR-~gle: adult. Stal per mo. 2l1!il r-:rwpnrt Blvd. Ca.II for 1.rip1~z..o5go, l BR. Cottq:e, tum, utll paid $89.50 mo. 1'.faftlr,. v.wkllll adult only. 64S..OS78. tl'1 a bt"H.n .• HD your llel'nl with uat, UM! D"1l)' Pilot Ousill<d. M:l.a617. + NO DEPOSITS * Lrg ne .... •!y decor 1 & 2 Br. 2 Ba, r:coL k rec area. 645-5530. '1'10 W. 18th St. $115. Attraclive Studio, Ney,• crpt. Trees k flowers. Downtown. 130 ' ' A ' ' Broad~y. Huntington S..a~h L•QUINTA HERMOSA Spanish Country Eltate Liv- ing &.. Spacious Apts. Ter· raced pool: sunken gas BBQ. Unbelievable Living - Only I BR . FURN. $175 . ALL UTILITIES PA,TD <4 blks S. of Sa.n Diego Frwy on Beach, 1 blk W. on Holt to 16211 Parkside Lane. l (714) 847-5441 $14.5 • $165 Bachelor k l BR, patios, frplc's, priv. I a rages . Divided bath & Jots of closets. Rec ha.IT, pool & pool tables, gauna bath!. See for yourst'!f! 17301 J\ttlson Ln. 11 blk W, of Beach, 1 blk N. or Slater). 842-7848 UPPER front 2 Br. Qo.·erlooking lake park &. beaut. enclosed patio & pool. Adults, no pt'ls, Sl69. 1035 12tb St. 536-2S92. Laguna Be1ch BACH . at Crescent B<ty. Color TV. ulil pd. ~MO. UP. $40 \VJ<. 494-2508. .N•wport Bea.ch BAYFRONT RENTAL F rom $120 to $215 mo Bachelors • 1 Bdrm1 2 Bdrm• e 3 Bdrm1 1 V2 or 2 Full Bal~• h-ta.ster size bedrooms w/ high bellm ceilings, large livinst room w /ga& or \\lood burning fireplace. Convenirnt laundry arPll off kitchen. Enclosed pa· t ios. 2 sv.·imming pools, sauna. recreation facili- t ies. Security iuard. Mod1l1 Open 'til 9 pm. 2700 P eterson W•y, CM nr Harbor Blvd & Adami 546-5025 --·------ P•rk-Llke Surrounding QUIET • DELUXE 1, 2 &: 3 BR APTS Prv. patios * Htd Pools Nr shor'r * Adults Only Martinique Apts. im Santa Ana Ave., C.M. :· r.A-ptl13 64&-5M2 New Villi Cordova Super Deluxe Adult Living . , • 2 BR Ap ts. r-10. to Mo . $170 Gag & Wtr paid 2323 Eld!!n Ave., C.~f. 646-0032 * * $170 * * 3 Br. l~' Ba, newly painred Bllins, crpt/drps, encl patio. 1'"r schls & shop"g. Chilrlrf'n ok, no pi"l.11. 880 Cent!!r St., CM. 642-8340 cir 548·26'12. 301 Ed1::ewater. corner "THE VICTORIAN" 2 Br Coronado. 3 BR. 2 barhs, 1 di J:"ll rage. Priv, l:ieach. Avail. \\' g11.r. ll Ill. cp!/drp~. hlln!, fncd yrd iv/patio. , J uly 1sr. )1r. Robinson \\'tr pt!. Call btwn l -5, DAVIS REALTY 642-700'.l 6~120. 2 BR upprr-2 h0use5 to 667 VICTORIA "B" $155 beach. Dn.pes, shag crpts, ~~-.:.._.:..__:. __ ..c,_ $250 yearly leas!!. 642-3443. 2 BR dl!'lx apl, ~sq. ft. 1" ba, priv patio. Full gar. e "'INTER RENTALS e frplc. must be s!'f!n. $200 West Nev.'J)Ort Regerve no~·! mo. 323 E. 18th sr. CM. Call ABBEY REALTY 642-3850 Alt 4 pm, 548-1575. Sant• Ana DE ANZA PLAZA 1 k 2 BR -Fum Ir: Unlurn PooJg. carport11; It other rx· tras. Nr. S.A. & ~pl F~s. From SU5 up. Ariu/fs only, no pct11. 1402 Fruit St., S.A, * 5'13·6620 * Apt. Unf urn. 365 NE\V 2 BR upstairs, crpts, drps, fncd yard. gar., children, no pets. 2515 Elden Av,.. 54~1657. OVERSIZED '2 Br .. 2 Ba,. v~/w crpl., bltn11, palfo, tncl g:1r. S17j, Alt 6 pm. 673-.11129. PATIO or DEN-2 Br, 2 Ba. s1.;o . .ArluH1. Call 546-7111. Btllboa Island 2 Bedroom to\\.·nhouu, NE\V. SJ:Wl. J\.Jo. Batnlt Rea.lty I NE\V k beautiful 4 Br. 2 642-5200/Evl!: 642-4603. baths. Steps to South Bay. LARGE 2 BR w/cplJ &.- $.'ij(l :\lo., y!!arly. rlrps, child ok. 151 Tulip Ln, L.ARGE &. Luxirious 2 Br .. 2 !...< '" C.M . .,,8-,106. Bl!. $375 Mn .. rly. ...::.c.:....:.:::..:::c:.::_ ___ _ WINTON REAL ESTATE DELUXE 2 BR. 2 BA, frplc., 229 M11rine Ave. dshy,·shr., ('IC. $180. mo. Blllboa Island 675--3331 536-2652 1 2 BR , encl yArd &: .R'"r. Corona def Mar Cr ri t /rt l'J)s/rrplr. Ju111 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii PA lntl'rl. Slfll ~fi!l. l BR. 112 BA, nt\l.•ly decoratrd. S165 • mo. 7:)3 Shalimar, CM. 64>-0973. * * BEAUTIFUL l &: 2 BR. Contemporary G11rden Apt~. P~tiog, frplc.. pool, SI» 1170. Call ~163. *" ~ Deluxe 2 BR. .. 2 BA. gar. Iml pel ok. Nr. So. Coast Pl82.8.. 545-2321. 2 BR. cltan·no pt1&·tf'l!n.a~r Ol,.\R...\fING 2 Br., c~s. ok. Sl45 773 W. Wilt0n. drpr. nnr• It r e I r i s . 1 ..:5:.:48:...:";:.;.417· ______ _ ----·- Localed on oc:ea.n1ide or 3 BR, 2 BA. f.a.mlzy apt1. No li""Y· htd swim pool A car , .. P!t•. SlBl. It S113. c.aJJ port. Lea ... 64)..MOO. 630-43": &l!-WS • FAIRWAY VILLA ITJC k1tch~ns, prlva:e pallos ., .:"E\V DELliXE ;\l-1 u nit.. 3 or Mlconieli carpetina; dra· SHARE 3 Br. horn . H B. I . APARTMENTS · S b, ' k Fvrrylh!nfil: 1n(']Udf'rl :t j ph. f'l"l\\Pr lit 1 )-fnnn:iv11 pe.nes_-h "1 terranieao" t~~-; ,.~"/o\·pr 536-0481 aft 5 p. m :W.1-1 14~ 836-9798 evr:•· -20122 Santa Ana Ave. 546-6215 mg ~·1t e evalors. p lOrllU • · ----·cc,;..c,.,;::. __ I "-'"-=~=:.c.~.;...:..:.;.;.:1 rnalrl service. Just north of & .<111 dit y ~·knlf~. S761fo 9600 Sq. Ft. AP~:~~~~TS Fashion Island at Jambor· LADY 11i·UI i;ha.rr 2 BR arit. 4001 Blrrh, N.B. 54l·S032 Air Cond. Frplc'1 -3 Swim· ee and San Joaquill "Hills Dana Pt., S!ln. mo. «1uple Rentals Wanted 460 m in .. Pools • Health Spa • Road. OK, hf'frort" 3 rim, 496-1460. ~.. NEWPORT BEACH 2 GffiL°' tn 5harf" Ii;:.,, 4 Br. Tennis Crts • Game &: Telephone CTI4l 644-1900 81.lllard Room hoUM' ''11h ~11n1f'. Ch1•n · !or rental tntorm11.tion l ~EDROOr-.t 1----------1..:""':::::::m:::·.:."::':'.'"~O':'..'.o::.. c:":::""::.I::"':::.· -FROi\t $165 MEDITERRANEAN VILLAGE 2400 Harbor Blvd., C.M. (TI 4) 557-8020 RENTAL OFFICE OPEN 10 AM TO 6 P?lt New Villa Pedro Families Welcome. 2 Br.: 2 lull Ba, sha§: crpt/ drps, patlo, beam ceil, gar· a a es. From $185. 2.132 Elden Ave., C.~1. 548.8224 Apts., Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Office Rental 440 Costa Mesa Summer Rentals PAL M MESA APTS. MINUTES TO NPT. BCI-1. FURN. OR UNFURN. Unbelievably large apts., huge pool, J acuzzi ~lect blt- in.s, shag crpts, drp~. 1auna eic. Adults, no J>f'ls. SINGLES • • . . • From $135 1 BEDRJ\f ..•.•• r~rom $140 2 BEDID.1. , •.• Frnm $160 MEDICAL OF,FICE :'11"~11 Verde Al'f'a XlQ ~q . Ft.: Garrlf'n se!l1nr Amplr PMking l Examining rooms Lab ar,.a. Pr1v11!!! off ice f,, rf'ce p!ion arf'11 3&: Pt1>r square foot LOOh_ING F'OR R ri;pon.~1 blt1> f'xerufiv,. fam1· ly, kids 16-14-!l \"'Ith pe ts, nef'd nice 4 BR 11i•l!h pOoi & hor'e f11c1h11r~ for 1 ~. lra ~P. Araund0 SSOO.mo. Call lnnt!l)n al 12Jl t 98!}..1100. HOUSE lt'ase \l.'Anf~ in Ct'IM h11th 11res, 3-4 bdrm. unlurn. 1 yr from 611a172. Approx. $3:;c) Lindqu1&1, ( 2 1 3 J 691-12·1'1 F URN. or Unfurri. ho1111.e N.B. area • 3 moi1. to 1 yr. ~1 u~1 move. hy ill. 713 - :!~2!191. NEED 5000 ~q ft. for m,.rchand!&e pr1c1ni J uly 1hn1 Ocr. Close to lrvtne. llJ0..3733. i\1tlve in allowance, th1 ~ ad. You 're right, 1hey're under· REALTORS 2 BR, den, frpl, pr1 pti.tio, priced! 1561 ~1e!i8 Dr. SINCE 1944 TO r""nt or l1f', 3 Br 2 ha, un· drps, crpts, redec. Aft 5, (5 biles from ""Newport Blvd.) 673•4400 I furn hnmf' in N B. cir C.'.'YJ. 548-S301 or coll: 213: 54&-9R60 I ;ir,.:1 . 643-4()99. ~Z-5227. e SPACIOUS e ARCHITECT, Engineer, etc. I SPAC. 2 & 3 Br 1pt. $140 up. \\lell-Deslgnert Aprs. orc·s. 444 Old l'\e'.l.'JlOrt [ Pool, cpt/drp, bltns, kids l & 2 BR. wif!!rr11 ces. Blvd. See to apprecia lt". Ex· Announctmtnl• ok. Frnm $140 • $275/mo. l!!r. entrance, $UO. 548-5300 I~ 1396 1'Iaple No. 1 642-3813 Shag cpt1, drps, u.una11, OPEN . 2206 College N_o. l 6'12;-7035 pool, jacuni, eDcL gar. 1 0;;,...:=;;c"E,-,p-oo-::N;:•:::wpo=,::-t-;B;:a~y:I Announc•rnent1 SPACIOUS "A Sunny 1 BR. Q-;;et Adult living "Ill> Linda Isle. Sp e 11. c c O UN SELING CENT!:R: 500 Crpi~. drps, bltns, no pets. MERRIMAC WOODS Bttyfront loc. Grl Park. Sll'O/mo. Jnq: 2872 LaSalle: -425 ,-1!errlm1.c \\'.ay, C!l1 Crpts _<!rps -11 ir/ed. Th~ Apt '2. CM. 557-1584 or l & 2 BR Furn or Unfurn. Islander Bldg. J~l Bayside 54()..6338. · Ch ildl'f'n"• section. Pool. Dr. 673-1620, 54S-1019. Sm! l BR apt,.,.; crptg, drps, $140 Up. ELM GARDENS BAY VIEW OFFICES stove, retrig, gar, $140. APTS. 177 E. 22nd St., C.~1. De!UXf', air-conditioned Adul!s, no pl!IS. 642-5511.l 642-.3645. Redecoratrd. Lido Area LRG 2 Br duplex w/gar, HuntingtOf' Beach Realonomics, Birr. 675-6700 $135 wtr pd. 2176 Ph1.centi1. DESK gpace avl!llla.ble $50 Av•. No. A. Call btwo !&;, NEW SA!ilDPIPER mo. Will prov;do fumltutt 636-4120. ~ Early bird 11pecials-l BR at S5 mo. Answering service SPACIOUS 2 br., 2 ba. apt. from $125. 2 BR from $!j5 available. 222 Forest .Ave, home, trpl.. gar. beii.ut. Fu~/Unfurn, cool c:olor In-Lllguna Beach. 494-9466 lndscpiz. Adu1~. S 1 8 5 . tenoN. pool. Jacu.zi1, more. DESK space available S50 546-4016. ~1 Holland Dri\ie~ _Hun· mo. Will provide furniture 1 BR w/~~2 BA. ting:ton Beach. 1!47-9.19a. at S5 mo. AnsweN!g service 2 BR. Adults, no pet.!: N•wport Be1ch available. 17875 Beach Blvd BAY MEADOWS APTS Huntincton Be11.ch. 642--4321. 3'1 w. Bay st .. CM 6!6·0073 OAKWOOD GARDEN 21c GROSS Ind1vidu11.1, couple11 and ;;roup co u ns!!l1 ng. P r o fe'Ss lnna l coun5e\or1. Fe!!~ based on 11llding t.e11!e. Use of Ge11ra..1t, bio · enf'raetic, s e ns i t i vity a11'arenei.s and supp::>rtive '"Chniqur1. f:al! ~94-9755. SU~1MJ>R CM1P l3o)'I k Girls 'l'-13. Outstanding pro- iram-Top not.ch 1 t a f t . Reasonable rates -FREE Brochure. CAMP CA YUCOS, C11 yuco1, CalU. 93430. J[j]_ XTRA ill: 2 Br, 2 Ba , pool , Apartm~nts1 Approv 4.000 sq ft oUiee k .1 . (Resort Living or ba" area. "•d nr. AIC. At 530 ut 1 pa1<1. adults over li. 1 ) J "" Per1on•l1 $14J. Allio w/l BA, $140. Adults O~~ CH Nwpt & SM Diego Fwy in· ---------?i-1~2407 or 645-4636. NE\VPORT . A tersect. ample p T k In i. PROBLEM Pre1nancy. Con· 16th at Irvtne 54~-n71 tident, sympathetic pre1an- Huntington Beach 645-0550 tlr 642-~170 o~itE~. S:i9 & S63. \\'iii cy cou11elin1. Abortion &: ;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;:;;;I WESTCL I FF decorate. Nesr 17th St., bank Adoption reL APCAftE, ON BEACH! CAPRI & sboppiog . 543-8118. ~. 1700 \VestcliH Dr. SPACE for leale. ll40 &q . tt .. ALCOHOLICS Anonymou1. Adult Living-No pets furnished. Newport Finan-PhOne 542-7217 or wlte p. FURN. &: ~· Df'luxe 1 & 2 Br. Pool. cial Center. 644-1860 Mon-O. Box 1223, Costa Meu. 2 BR.. From _,j Carport. Furniture avail. ADULTS ONLY 642-6274 Fri. * nJLLY LICENSED *" Furniture Avfti.1able · LUXURY 2 Br-den apt e Offlc•Costa Mes• Renownl!'l:I Hindu SpintualiJI. C a r p et.drapes-d15hwasher , 600 sq. ft. e 646-2130 Spiritual Readlnj:s 11ver1 heated 1-saunu-tennis w/many extrai -O\erl60k-1;:;,;:~::....-..:.._,..:c::c:.::.: dally. 10 A.\f.10 PM. Advice rec :rn«ea.ll views ini Irvine Country club & OFfICE suites, do\\Tilown given on all matters. 1 can " I .. ..w.... PaclfJc ocean. Fu 11 y Laguna. Lease. m'.I sq. fl, '--Ip. ~•. • pauos-.a.mp e p .......... ,. Cp d Re 41u ~"-'"'" J--Security Guards. crptcklrpd-\1.·!!t bar~lec 2 ts.. rp!. as. ~.,.,~. JU N. El Camino ReaJ HUNTINGTON CM .... -~uch more. s;oo eu1lne11 Rental '4l Sao ClemeolO mo. 644-21.i.J. 492-9136 or 492--9034 PACIFIC * 2 BR apt: Adults. crpt, RETAIL ipacie still avail. ln DISCOVER DISCOVE1tY 7ll OCEAN AVE .. H.B. patlo. g1.r11ae. Sl6.'"i mo. bustJinr shopping center. Find YOURSELF in Someone (TI4) ~1487 Call 642.--0445 ~2600 sq. ft. 31401 Camlrm Call no\v • 1''o ohllgation Ofc open 10 am.ii 1'tn Dally Capigtrano, SJC, -d96-96lS (71t ) 83S-Q85 (213) 337-3393 WILLIAM WALTERS CO. ~ RETAIL shop avall. at The NATIONALLY !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"'I I Rtntels j ,a Factory, $175. mo. See No. 9 RECOGNIZED SEA AIR APTS -$115 . for ;,., or 61:1-9606. --------,.-. I · T rav•I · _,, Lrg. 2 BR. Crpls, drps. b tns. STORE for Jca.M! • on --------- 1 blk N. of Adams of1 Beach 400 N!!wriort Blvd .. Costa )fes1 . Blvd. 729 No. ·5 Utica. Rooms c111r1 _ SJj(J . 548-3493 536-2796 or53&-7o70 1 Br. full ha. Jg. cloaet pvt. 1300' S hop -$160 . 350' 1-BR. Townhouse. Carp., ent. patio. 3 blks to Of c/slorl'! S95. 2340 Nwpt drapes, \vshr/rl ryer. PatJQ. bch/bay. ~88 9am-IO Blvrl, CM 646-2544, 548·833.1. SET SAIL TAHITI Grand III ,\.Ja~t!!d Schooner, Crew &: Guest~ Nrt1>rl!!d, 1213) 371-123' ----- * * * * * Carport $150. 962-6846 Af t. 5 ~p;.:m::.. ----~---I pm. DELUXE y,•/ba. Pvt. entr. LRG . 2 Br., 1 st)'. 4-plex, Redtt. Nu gold crpt. Walk to * crpt. drp!, R-0. laud rm.. bch. Yrly. 1244 W. Balboa gar. fncd, child ok, $135. Blvd., N.B. 1,.------------------.... 1 527-3144. R.OOi\15 $15 wk up w/klt. S30 * HUNTTNGTON HARBOUR wk up Apt! 2376 Ne,,,1>0rt 1 ·BR. 2 yn. old . $147.50. All Blvd, 01 54'g..9755, Trader's Paradise bltn11. 64.2·3347, 642-5020 eve!. BEAUT . I bo . rm. in uxury me. 2 Br apt, riew lA'/w crpt, Pri va te bath, phone, eo1or drps, bltns, aarage. 962-8;)78 TV. :-.'8 Area . 64.'>-3143. rve!ll !nr Rppl. ROOM for r!!nl, Balboa Ir v ine Pt'l1in1ula. Csll 67J....«19 evPnin~,;. DELUXE, priv .,ntr"nr.111 & b11th. on ~mokPr1. Costa 'MP~ll . 67j...()3\0, !"148-7197. Guest Hom• ...41S PARK WEST APARTMENTS • 1 Bdrm. From $160 2 Bdrm., 2 Be, From $195 3883 Parkvlew Lane I~. fJu1t ()ff San 01tf0 J'wy at Culver M l 1------.-...,,,,---IHA VE 2-2 br pool hmr. tn *PRIVATE ROOM* Crll\l & 11iB. Wa.n t Harbor for ambulatory per10n. Good ar!!ll rf'nt1.l1 or Nlmm. C•n food , nice cheutul surround· •drJ. olh!!r prop. Colwell in&:5· Proper11e1 675-722j, '* Call 548-4Th.3 + NEED sood rr.fn g!!rator, L_a.;g:.,u_n_•_Be_e_c11 _____ 1PRJVATE &. 5rmi-nv. room1 1.,.111 lli\\'AP NE\V Hitachi * NEW 2 BR-b\k to Mach, & ollpl!I. fl'Jr h1,. oon· auro llil,.reo w/1peakrrs . tlifM!CU•cular Yiew, S225 up. valri;c1ng, \\',.I I are nr rosl $!21'1. '!M-3.l8.1, 494-2339. J'.l"n11onPr!'i. 2376 Xev.1>0rt • Ca ll 5.i7~ Rl\·rl, .;,tg..97j.J, R • BIG BEA . • PRIVATE R00'.\1 fOR Br1ULDER BA\" . :-.·r \1tr, DE LUXE 2 &. 3 Br. 2 BA. ELOY.RLY LADY. I:\ 1'11 F.: 2Bn fUITI r 1r \'111 . S3tlM. "ncl ~Br, Sl.i.i up. Rental 110:0.Jt-: OF 1\N n N ·for ~cn1 n~ 1nr ~pt-C,'1;1. ~tr. Mesa Verde nrr , 309!i Aiaet A v e •, :l-)6--0977. \\ rll~. B11.r r,.fl nJ1y 642·5200 _54_6-_I0_34_. __ ~----i PVT "-~m1 Pvt rooms tnr BAVF'RONT Mml", 3 Br &. Newport Beach 1.~bula1ory kl". e,1t1zen1. R11J 3 Bii , Bo1tl 1'1ock, for Avoca - me"l11. 2·t hr 1uprrv111on. (to.CJIT\J~ prt!p or ~mall BRAND NEW Laund ry lnclur'l,.rl. 54W225. home, P111m s Pnn11. ALL UTILITIES PAID Summer Rentals 420 Brltt1nch11m, 11gt. 675-Dl i3 Fumt.hed Av1Uahle $.'JO-OU tat Mo·1 R~ni. 0 " ~fAY • JUnft & July. 2 ER WILL tr11de S12.000 ~-In yeM1y l!!e~. when you br tn& hou.w, l B.A. Cornn11 del n!lw 1.10.000 Dle1rl Traw]!!r In tl'lii 11d. :i1ar., rurn. or unfurn. Y11ch! !or 'nour.e in Newport 20102 Birch St (nr o.c. 6il-'l'769. or l1 nd . 2? airport, ~-of Pal1a.t.d'.s Rd !. · · \Y h It e E:lepnantJ" over· Call 6~ · Priv. pallf.I. billiard rm.. ru.nnlna your house? T\Jm jacuw . ~-r. UC lNlne. them into "CASH" -1ell * * * ~rr. 919-Mtl them thru Oa.Uy P 11 o t lines times dollars BEAUT. ~200 aq. It, home: pool • J11cuzz1; on 1 acre. Palm Desert Want Income. ro·11, land, or 1ubm1t. ~1ad1e Davis l\ltr. 6'2-7000 tlAVE tree &t cletr recre&· 11on lot• + 1maJJ TD: want hnml", W. San Fernando V"Jt"Y · 1 \111rlt::" D11 vi5 Rltr. 642·70!r.l ~ UNITS Long Beach + llond• 3:>0. Tradr fl'lr land. car,, 1 ""' ASYTHING. Must br"ak up p.<1rtnf'r11h1p, Ca)] Oa\·e R46·704t OL..'\ l BR. JBA. r i1m nn. r.11 . hn1 + lnr bl!'.lg: ~.A. w/ !rlAI!! 11 ... ·y J~ Run. Sprc .. 134.i\1 !'11 for Ind. lor hm 11nc prp. 5.16-1904t673·2lll. E::x '29 TRADE S9500 Equity In S20,000, 71' Ofi.Aixl" ~1olor Homt for Rt!•l Utat•. * Call · 1'36.J652 * --------------- • • Found (frM ,d>I pm. ---·--~---STl:'\{.;RAY b1kf. 1 11" J ... imh S.-hoo!, 11.8. (.'utJ lfl 1drn· l1ty. fl62-4:wl .C to" ri n1 Nllrm1-r1JP.";!/J2~\'ir. a.11 l'f'n. Vrry 11m111J, 11ha"s;.'Y b1'0"n &r hlk. 675·1(Jil. ~1 11y !'11h Orl'anh-onr. C<i~T. ~·l'm111,. SIBmrkt' 1·at. Call 8.13·11997. F'OUND on 'frftr111u11r. ::ian Clrmt·nr,.. YnunJ[, J[Olrl •·olor· "''· mi.:rcrd brrPrl 11ej,:, 492-:1.~7'.l Lost 555 • • • l[Il]I L-_ ...... _ ..... _J[Il]!I ~··-· JfHJ f-!_~··~"· l[j] Holp W1n;od, M 1. F 710 1 Help W1nlid. M & F 710 ~ l[fi]I .__ _ ..... _.-·_llfiJ I '-'"""' . ---ALTERATION°<;;.-r ~t-;()-fl 1 IJf'f'i!PrJ fl:ll I 111nl' 'llln·S.'11 ;>.lust be r~1i. Hl ··lotn1n¥ & n1f'ns \1c11 1·. Gi~-.1\j~:z AJYr. ~llJ\.~l\c.:t.H.-:--..:1tir-~r- 1jl)rfun1ry for f'.'>Jtl'I, ('f1UJ1lr 111ilin;.: to 11nrk. :'lo 1·luld1 I'll , I •(' prt ~ 6)2.-3()1,'1, ---------• A'fl'ENOA;\T e Cook Htlp W1ntod, M & F 710 j PUST.\!, Ci.n·i<-r". ~lh rr B k f:,\R.Lr J~LM>r;" \\'ant part l..AD)·. maturrd. o\·('r :~;. \uUI 011n atTd. Costa ;\!~q,, . 00 • L rim(' l)pist fron1 6:JO a:lo to night \l'Ol'k, 11:>.11!<'-.s. 1\pph ilur:I Reh. Fn1n \'I~· I' S·:>.O an1. Ca!l .»&.8111. ti1L·n1n~~. Thl' Plue~. :n'lO Hvu~f'1111f'~ prrf'd. :i»-0-JO' k ·~LJ::C"TRO:'\!C A.~:if'ml,. \\'. Baltx>:i . ;\l"\lpl'Jr! Bt·al·h pj~O fl'.~~10'.'\At:-phW eepers I lr1". Prerf'r f'.'\JJ#ll', S2 & up LOAN soJlt'1 t<H'. IJ:tru f oint, San 11r. ~lle )>mall 1<>-lrv11'1C PROCESSOR L"ltn1c111r, '[1ptstrai10 area. l'OllJIJ!f'\. j.\Q.Jb(jj fur 3.f)lll, l-:\p('I'. t llA \".\ \\.,1·k Ul ~our 01111 hon1e. ! ------Ll<Jll(j \\01'1\1ni( CH11dl!10!1.• H"~l rte.ii !n <\rt'.1. PJIOnt Immed iate Openings I ESCROW OFFICER 546-1 093 11;J-141iJ t>rtw('('n 9.00 a .ni. These are e xciting po-JI LOCAL 1~os1 t1on~ i..va1lablt tu ~f·\1•1·:.! .. ..,..,.., ____ ..,_._ ! ;ind HOCin. . 1 1 of uur offief!§ for r:sc1'01\ LUHRS BOAT CO. Real Estate Career s1tions .fo r indi~idual1 1 (2) F /C S-ool<:kttpefl OfftC'f'1-.;· -n·ta-mtn:--~ -~--ttrr·,,,,,----,'11~·1•r1 ~Ofn'l"'\1'.ll>lit'llCl'<f. ~ln thr who en1oy pubhc con·l·A/Pay S p , ;.r"«. l')r,!X'I'. 1n 1'{.o1tvf'1tl\1Jn:d l'uinpt1ily thats :.;rc1...,1ng. H tact. We would prefer! u e r visor lu,· th •• \h11;1 II(' t«"·~bl,. of J . . . A/rue.. Clerk ..,.. ENGINE .. .1 uu ~10 n111 !1a1c a 1i.:~u&e1 previous e x perience 1n 1121 1 1 hn1nll1n~ 01111 de~k. Sah111 , !Jp•·~ 011 uu1 b k . & nven ory I INSTALLERS • an , . 1av1ngs ! Control Clerk • o 1n111f'/1~tu:a1" i1 c\prr 549 loan or finance com-11.l:n" s T I Call ~Ir f:.t rhi<:tJu. S.16-Ij(j). .l:.:\j)('nrn4·rd Onl;. . . pany. We offer fln•1 1 ... '"fin .i~·~ignnltlll~. nr CALIFORNIA ratr· .... ~., Fr·r. FEDERAL SAVINGS Real Estatl' starting salaries, plea-. s 1. s Tl:::'llPOP.Ar.\· J ·--------..... Appl~ Btr11r1 f\ & 10 1\.\I I Licensing Course sant worMing environ-st:H\'JCE ----~Ion. 1h1u Fn. tJnl.\ ment & i'cb security. 1120 SCI. L:ranrl I ESCROW OFFICER f ull .~alt" tra1n1ni:' rrogram For Positions At Our Springdale & Editiger Branch Call For Appl. 1714 ) 846-3321 <. " I 1-< '' "'• lol -uo o·o,f . :\lanagr1nPnl OJl· .~onta And :14; .. ·,;·:i; ,,,;nu arfl 1ca . ..,n · · su,~ , f.-l~f \\', ]\th ~r. -----~ _ P:O, Bo' Kii, Uana I ouit. Cost;i :'llf'~~" JIOl'IUnill• '· ~\><k for ~lrl. CAR WASH HELP <.:al. !i°26:l9. J,...,...,._,...,.._..,,..~ .Joneo; lv1· tu!ormahon 11.t So''\f'raJ PQ~ii1on.~. ~ loca11011~. -.--1 J.\'i\-P·Tl~II·: 812.j;iSl. ,\lc1 ro <.'ar \\'a~h :!.!~ J::.'\l::~Ul:lvt; sf' t· r,. r a r ~ I T b II R It llartx>r Uh·d. Co..,tll ~tr.~a & f'Xll cl. Sk1llt'd 1n i.hortha11d. & Esprr. :'\ur:o:t·~ A1J1·"· QF e ea OFS 1~100 &·u·ti Bl\d llunt 1 1~p111e;. llR:'ll ,. 't'l' 1, ___ c_ii1:._~,19-;¥!6 I __ , ~ Bl·h. ' ' · •·alcula1n1'. l\'<'•·J 1·:1r. trf'il"' ~J:\JI) 11 0:11•h in r•\t'hath!I' fr•r 1:1·;1! t :..,1.'l.I!' S;dri; ·------t1\r. 1n1lep<>11clt'nt, 1:1~1 bllt l afJ<1r111,1't~1. :!:;~1; '.'\••\1r<u·t LARWIN REALTY CASUAL LABORERS 1 hOl'Oll~h. \'l1ri~rl l1r<;. SP11rl1 •:111!., (.'\}. .il.~·~J~"~" r~~'~i!I<' 1S'i1 •II J..:11°\lllJ l '('I. J't'~litllf' ro Bo\ 8:?1<, L;iguna 1'·---•··--------~!:.riJ:.! Hn.1nkhu1~l A\ • 11.B. Urgently Needed Bra1·h. !1:!6.i~. i7141!lGS·4•1u.·,;121:1J 59z.3211 SECURITY • i\1l1sl have' IJ'<tn~·JXlltar1ur1 ------MANAGEMENT OPl'Olt'J'IJT\ITY for h10 ru.11 Interim r.Jlr .'iulrsnu•11. Bt•!1f'I' 'lhan "' lf'lrpl1onr. FACTORY TRAINEES llllH'. t•'\pC'l'lt'lll'('d n,•al 'E!I· • Cust•Jd i&n PACIFIC Personnel Se rvice s NEEDED 11\!"l'agl' ··01111111ss1on. 1-on1· •Laundry Mrlr . 7i$ \\','.?0th.( .. \/. I TRAINEE pan;.-pn1d 111a)Ot' iucdicaL l\rply in jlC'r~on • 61:.!'·i:,!: j ll).2j92 IMMEDIATELY! 'f'rrn1('ndous oppfy. for n1an· .. PA II PLA~Tf.RTNG I N'() l'X114'r1('1lt,. Tif'f'eSS~ll')'. ;i~Cll\t•n . ,. 1a1·c SOll1'C· TC •IOOO llilarl11 \\'ay BANK • 1 11· 1 ll :\i'-l·port Vtlla, Nr:\1'J)Qrl B<.·h. ,. 1· -· ·--D11r 10 n,• >""'" ., .. ,,.,h 'I I 1·r1 1 EARLY Sun d11 y AM. Rt""'llr<I~ 2-SIX'p. & Coll1f' ltt"· dose~. J•rn111.ll'·"Brrnirc" moltlrrl, whllt>, hlk, bm, 3 )Tll old. l\.lall', "Amigo" bm. 10 yr" ohl. ~S·6621. A lypr~. rre~ l'~limate:i1. !'tlr~. llooi·rr * Gl:Z..:~l\6l ..:L ·.J\Nl:\'G W\OY netlll'd. I J 1n in l' di a Ir r o s 111011 .. "'' u ... . " 111ng c 1 f'tt·n. Call 54()...Ql2:i I )Ion. !· Vri. P\'f', tu C'lran a~·a1laUIP on 3 Sluft.~. Costa f':-.pansion of our <"orµ. A D1·011 111 and I.ilk it cvf'r. Plumbing ,--ATfENDANT--Equal (iµpor. i-:1nr lo}rr of.ficl'. c~111 ~2-4-li1. i\1l'~a. 1n ·11}1' & Ne11·port ntnnbei-or prP.~t 1gl' flOSl·I ~....._ .<\L'S GARDTh1NG FOR i\l.ilr or f'C'n1alr -------at'l'l1s. Ko F!"f'. !Ions al'f' noiv 1'1·;iilaUlP. ; REAL ESTATE Gardening \VILL !hr J>"rM'ln \l'ho ~tnlc­ my ,~·11Jl,.t 111111 Thur11 noon 111 \\lootworth'!ii on llrhr Blvd. C.J\f. Rrlurn \\'llllf'I llliflll I: imPQrtant 1J("ri;on11h1. !Jro1• tn ~i\11111 box Jn c.~I. or N.9, 10.C'.1. I.OST: !'n1/ ~I G<1"11111n S/1Pp, h11\r clirjlf'rl on hrk l,.s::, Vu· llrbr Olvtl 11t '.\ltri·1111nr" No.MA 2:'i01 lfrhr Blvd, !J.1~9331 htwn 8pn1 &:. 10 pn1 . !'th;or. Wllll11m~. LOST': Crl!y ·Al!Py c!'it, l'ilrlp. rw<d 11·/flra rollnr. An.'i to "Dick". V1('. B~horr P1.1rk, NB. &1:;..oo51 hclorr :lpm. BL.AO\ ~landa1'l1 Pf)()(llP, loRI Sar 13. Vic. Jrvirir t.i tar gar~t"ninz & am a I I ~AVE 1 F 1 REC. ROOM I _ 9 TO 1 Pi\! ONLY SALESMEN land!llcapinz aerv!ce!I', ell.JI ~ on-)()ffif' repa ir~. rre and Lite Duties Hours • Bi\H\l,\lll . Nii;:hr sh1f1, CLERK TYPIST S.J.S. 'l'E;\lPORAH\' ACT NOW! --~G-5198 e~. Se rv'l n{;1 Pi,t., rlun11>!ns;;, ra1nT, '~ 9 to 2. $1 .75 ho~r. £(){)fl ra~ fnr 1·1:.:ht :;11·L 1 $EP.V!Ct: -=--crd r 01· " 1''\prrient•Nl Nr\1•po1·1, Cd~I. Costa ~lesa, ,., I A. I! 11 t ions · haul1n., 546-5025 1·>;p'1J f\l 'l'j.A. AJlfll) uq v .. I' l'iui·h;,sin,i.; UPJll. ~ 1121.l ~0. l;RA'.\'ll I '.\o ~=\llt'I' ~,,,. ·salrspf'(lplf'. lncr11ti1·e rom- [)()vf'r Shoreii:, \\'e11!clllf. R.19--0:11~·------, nC't'.-.On bt1\n :! :; 11:n. ,\ .1: 11+1 1 .'ia111a A1111 ~.,li-~1i~1i/ 1u1~s1011 sl11l1ng sc•al,. pl;;.n, I I AUTOi\IATlf' l Al."S L!Hl<l11r.11pinli(. ;rr ,.,. l1LU~!Hli\(; r:EPAIP. .. . . , , \Jer·l"l.in THE llP.E~:'.\'1 1 Yf'ar offi1·f' r\:f)("t'. ~!111 :ll!1 --fASJllO:'li.\VOP.J\--\\'f' 11ould n1111r1· Jr:iu1 f10111 fll'rso11;ih1cd 11·a1ning by a . I ,. ~h I . II tP.ANS:-.11s:-:.Jo:'\ I ,, .. ,,_.,' l'I"" 1•1· . r · 1 I I I •L•'" II . rcn1ova1. 'lord rrmodel1ne. ••O•.r' .. on, s1r1a SPECIALIST .1 · r. { .•. .JV ,Hrll Id \1 .p.111, t'h'•'hl•' l,I J•f·1111tcr ;>.a1 ioi1,i1 t'Onif)a ll) [,: Jr adr r :-•·fl\lt·h [vt· 1hp ngh! prvplr f)rolrss1una." . .....,11•1 11·a10 Tra~h haullni: lot clr:anur. 6J:.!'·.~12.l': " . . Ail' .. t.::\J. 111 11 . fl<'ll! ha• "'i.ll'I & full nP11· l11·1'11srr'. Sinai! olf1ce, · . ' ·------·-101Un1nn fn1ni.nlls.~1011 , rn -- -1• ~ ~ • · ,, RPpo1r $f\l'Lnklrni;, 6,1:i-ll66. COLE PLUMBING 1 .. <' r 11 1 . 1 1 BA!t\l.\llJ,..;, \\'A:'\T~:o nll f'(fr .\prr. 11 n1r nf}f'n ini.:~ ui .1our ;o'f:t Call M r. Paulson I pleasant \1ork1ng •'Otxl111ons. LANDSCAPING. f'\ew La11·ns 24 hl". Sf'l'Vi1·r. 61:1.JHH r~~·li~~: r~·n1:t'i~a~~::~i r~~l :~ • APPLY. Tiil-: \IAVEHl.4'1~ [tlrfUs!ri;il r:rl11t111n~ lut bC\'t"l'ttl wnn1e n to ·nf'lp SJJ.9472 IJrr!<t')nrtl inll'!'V iC\\' -Ask & ~Pl'inklers. Re s i d.' J. Remodel &-Ref)o1ii:.... · -~~1 1 · 17".{S i\e11 1,.ori lll\tl., <.:~!. (714) 494-9401 in eonchK·ting 1a~h1on l"ho11·s.f•-----. ........ -..-101· :\lana~f'I', ('.nmm. S1a1c LI c d . 1ran:1 rrbui!dr1·s & iu.~1 11 11. Bl-:AUT'i. Op1· \l'ant1·,1. Nr11 I . No rxfW'1·1cnl,. rl'Q!hl"etl. Foi~ ~11\TIJRE ,o.vrnon nf'tt!M-M'r-!J.S . .AFFI LIA1.E 0 ••1 '446 •1 · · I i · 1 TE LON IC 111!C't'\'ir1v 11"p 1 c·1lJ b'''"''' ,•. '·.'''"''''."'' .~··I"•.·. Brokl·rs Realty •hl-. • f'l'1'1. I ll'1'1C' po~1l1ons l'f'(JUIJ'I' )::l'<l{S ll'f ('fllllr. :-1.1 ill'}' ')l'I ,, • ' ' .. ~ ,, ' n. .... -0 -SS-e e e e e e f 11 'd 1 I ·1"S""\· I) 1 INDUSTRIES INC ;:i.:l5·662" c.'111i1sira.••.n_Bcl>. 1.1rs flcx·1847 .• ~:i07, Eves 968-1178 PR fE. JONAL tree y,ork. I' THE-u Y cxrx·r .~! 1· H;.s sp1·~· con1111. ·' ,,.. ,,,,,. H\ 11 • I ' • -· A ~R &: SONS -I La B h · · 1 1l t -1'~' '' • ·• '"' pnining, 1r11nmln.lf, 11pray· Decorotlng, "''''"· corpr"· iali~ts. \\'{' <irr :<ef'kinK n1rn BEAU·fiCl !\N-i\l'~Pdlin· guna eac I ~'!Bi':RCLA:)S i\Iold"r.'i, ~k1l · -2._~:~~i_:_:__:__:....:...... Real Estate Sales ... • f • -.. I "" k I 1':<1ual ' O•po1·. c,,,,,,.y•• I '· k"I·" •11 .. I.,, ' ,.,. . ' 111~. ~pr nklf'ri< . .uin<l~C"AP· fry. pJUnlbini:'. ivirin!::. t'!C. 1r11u 1111111 . ro n1l'I <' 111onl'y int•d. lnr hu~~ shoi1. ~LtiJ hi " ,. ,, f't "' uns u "-'· 11 .. s lt s . .-1 . ..:HA'.\IC. 1111n. "yl'i<. r :-,. Rf';i! E~latr Ofi· ne~ds irw. cleanur . Coorgl:' 646·58!1.l 4 · 2 . k hH\'f' pr1rlc 111 lh<'tr 11ork· or ~i0·, r·nrn in. Pd \'<ll'a!ioii. .· . \\'c 11·ill tJ·a in. lti:ll Placen· Pf'!'. Arro !!'Ith & .'\r11])()rl, salesnico. \\'r 1·0,·cr a ll QUALITY°IH\\'n 1 ,. r vi c ,.. In t.:~~;1~1;~i~~1,";:'~nc~~~.yr. 1 manship, :\ln't 1'l<1r1inji! ~al· C'ttll :-~IS-9!11!1. C' 0 :'Ir P L T F. I~ 0 P R : 11<1. Costa l\le~a. C.:\T. i:;.1~1:,::2. rhasf's or rPHI "~l ate. f'r ''). "'"~~·"'I ''"''"''' 110,.k Tan"fdisl' n1·i~n1c1I. 2 )t~~.. ----------~== o. ·r f II II ~ .. An~ lo -H11hlr. r•••--•blr. f1·•• 8.'°·3"•.·, '. · '' ...... ~ .. ,, 1 ' • • -,,. '' FOOD & Cockta il \\'111lrl"Ss .. \1EDIC \I. 1·r:O.'.\T Ol'FICJ: 0t·au11 u unr. aruuur . 7 ,.. r -.."" '"' ..,.. rng 0 ,, & ( BE1\LlTICIA,\'.'i 11 c·hcn!f•Jr, r\pcr afr11 ~hlfL \\'J'lll': -•' f\11 r kl<''', b\~183 ·1 <'!'tr im at r . H I lot• 11 I• e e • • • l ' s · uni orni~ pi·o· ,,,.,,,~ ,.xprr. 11f'('Cssa1;.. GIRL for [)()('tor" oHii·r. ~ Tobi_o_lt!"atr~ ____ 84&-_3311_> 11 3 · 1'idrd. Call 6'1."i·i .. >iO ru1· ·~u1 I l'f't!f !i00ih. ' niurf' C.:la~sitir<l ;ul !I\). ·Ill. 1·/o - lith Sr. NR. M!l-Si)J. 962-9iO;: ---------·---· J '''' '''' '" .11 " • ,, ll 1 I' 1 Appl~ In Prri;on Onl.\ ti 1\:\l ;.r>< r ...:p._'ricner. :;o.;:.·, )rar~ ==~--,~----R1';.\tODEl./1'\r. . .:idr!ition<. fi<lf'ntial 1nrrr\·1..-11 . ~11· ' ·· •11 ·" "''' · 3 1Y iot. l'.U. I~'' 1.'iGO. RECEIVING SCUBA re1t11l11!or. pr"s1ur" /.· *-L-AN'i:iS-CAPING* ri1111011. p1"Cn1p1 ~f'n·1<·P. t•rrr i\li<·harl~. %::-::i:;::. t'o,1,1 \lr."11 , Ca. !rlG:.'6. All"Y \\'pst i\'B of agf'. Bookkr1·p111;:: . 1~1J· CLERK dt'pth ll•111ll"· . Cd;\l lllith. N,.1v la11·n.ic. Sprinklr1. dl"<'k~. r.'illrnu tf .(, 1·rft'rf'nfr!', l()("a] I .! , BE1\U.T\'-{1ii·11tor -11~t11t"'ll./ -C6NSTRUCTION--'.!IOti \\ · Ot"rllrifi\ln1 tri:::. ~t·la•dul in~. ,,.., 111• 0pt"n hou.il nue. Rt!ll'ard. 1·lf'llllll[). St111e lir•rt 5.16·12:!1. bu iJfl('I', I-JU p.111 .. XS-OO!ii . A Urth·r Tl'n1poru1·y I A1111I,\ ltl pt•1·.•on. c1 .. ..,~111url LOAN OFFICER r l 'LJ :--oi·-p/rui\r-Sl'rll('f'I !'llt':•rll'I', ~ .. ·,. $.JOO lllO. 1>h· &1:,..3310 -------. --~· ~1 1~ . l' r1 101" 1·1 ,. f',labl1,.hrd F11 1!1·1· 01l1,.h ~1;::,..10·..o '\r11110rl arr;i. · C Q')t p L F. T F, L.i11·n k , -~-·""11'~-· ·-usirton °1 ~It'•·: " · -..•inl!llO(\:lnf opµor. f,w appr'!ltsrr 111 ---------- SIBERIAN llu~k)-\!ll' J ll"'.1· Gardening Sf'rvic,., H11 ulini; I " CAHPENTP.Y~l'~Kl.'. • u RGENTLY l)ni·':.:... ~o~l:0r"!l.___ l' I'.; 1 <ltn11:iJ <°Ons11·uc1ion ··~:'..1~111~'· %:!-{J.llfi -e e NEEDED • f',olr Cour"'r.. Rr11·11rrl! · '. ll'ol> 6'"">11 ,. 1 "11 .. B h ,1,,,,.o,, f" l~·l lyp'·•" 1 ~··1 I F T1111f' '\:1111 Salary + ('u111111. & Beneli!s Call for Arpt. :H{).5Qj(), Ex!. :lO JOSEPH MAGNIN boJ'('I' nd ,. Nin JOllljU ln I 4:. clran.up:.llm ~Jo18--0-IO:i. Painl i11~. ~·orn1it·a. Call Be:iur:v Salun d1•111 Ill Cf)$1a \ll'.~;1, H<'· GEN'L OFC.. $5001 T w o Office Girls !'>1A-1808. LA\\'N Srn·i<'e. Exper ienrrrl 1--· "'''·• . NEEDED , a.• uo .. a, r i~l'l\'fKJl'I f'a•· , . 111111. o •. 1 ,,, t''\fll'J' "'Cal! u'.:~·~ii:-.. I ___ _ k rtlinhl" 1·-e e~thnalcs Roofi'ng I S:1lon. L11·rn~('d as~i.stanl 111 a11p1·~11.-111g rr.~1d<'t1l1nl &.· l "'1~1 "" .,,. •''"" "• l>I•• ''' ,,,.,\,. 1 E(iual opi>ly '"l'~)'Cr ~/13 Cot:k-R-flOO, h l ark ~3_10;-2 ..... "' · · llf'CdC'cl. 6~-1-21~1!. s1nall 111r•on1f' u111ts \l'f~omr l \\'ESTCLl r~· ., _:A~·~~~_ !~~'"''"''"'~"."''"'!!!!"'""i !'llfl1~. vie llarhor/\\lj'J.~n. f.XPE R J npallf'M' G11r<f4'nr.r I• T Guv Hooflni:: tlc11l Bl-:AU~Oprr~.-=-~ t'O n )<I I' \I I' I I 0 11 lt·n<l ing >l\!Jrr,~nnr~,,''o<'ll«~. 1% E. 16!h SI. t.:.:\l. Recept1"on1"st Q.t. An,_ lo ('h11r 1c.: · · ' • . · · t 1 iri1h ~nil' folloii in,::. 'fh(' Jll't'h:~rnble.'fh1~pnsi t lo11u1· ~V'l::\cs11'11 r .,1 -----1 :W!t-2Sl-I, rr\tflnL Comrlr!~ ~rl M't'\'lef'. 1'r11! I J1h r r t, J do n1y 011·n \\Ark. I e REPRO l·ludrs loan ~licilntion & 6£.2770 !l:f:EDED-l'.-.:p. cosmctolrig1 . .;t ·-~--1 & Ttr11a. Frf'e t r.I 612-4.~S!l I 645-2ill0. ~l1!1-9jfl0, t Ilt'~uity P.11·lour. O.l:l-i2!!. l.Juilrlrr r ontart. ~111."l ha.\I'' ·---------Jollo11ing pre!. 558-~ or (3) LOST; ~lny 12th. ~rt or krys ".-.-, ----.. ~~--TYPISTS ------. • ClRL fHI01\"\ -;\of'\· -491·Gl::!'I. - f)n i':)lh rS!., N.B. ('nil ' "-~' . 1!:111·11 111111 . Gnrdrr:cr I Sewing/ Altera11on1 BEAL'T\' OJK'r.'.llOr II I I 11 arpl'iH~"d l\it~ a financin! pf' r l (' 11 l' (' l\('('('!<~;1ry. :\1'· ---=~,~·~=== tilf1-~i1!1ti. I l ?111p)rtr . gn~ll,.n1n~. scrva·t> j foll u11 'n~ .. f~nid , \111·n11u11. in:<! 1111rin11. C;i!l .\Jr i·urarr 1 ~ r i 11 J:'. ~0n;r 1"..l:.:\\'CO~!EP.. \\'ELCO:'l-ll~:c . -:OlkA;;iB17;. Frniulr t -:~0~1;;~~~·8, ~~~NiNG A!t;;;ti ons -642-5'45 lntr.rviriv flour... Rr~~~u 1:1r~:i~l;;11~~-~~~~ridt'I'~. Dair~J~t:~~~NIA I .~11:~1·~~1:<,'.1,.r1;~1'.:~T;~~. ~~~,To (~.~'11tP~~~'L:.l~t~~;~ nrii Fn1n! 11fo· girl~ nrf'rlrrl fm. i\li:"<,.rl Colllr'. i\IP~fl Vrnlr I , l\'f'{ll , llC<'lll'R1l', 20 yPai·~ "XP. FEDERAL SAVINGS 111r•(l1;11rl.1, To11 ,1oung local RF:\\'AnD~ :\ilNg:z.I '.11nl ~[:untcn.inci-, Pl.11ntln~ 1 9 am.JI an1 & 1 pn1 ·4 11111 Rnll<'T·:<. 1'•nHh u11. Chopf)("J' · 1h1'u Fri. ,\~k tor ~ll's 1'l'"idt'n! fan1 iliP." hnng .ni: c·o. :'llu~i llf' «<"l'UralP lypisL _. _ ----1 (!f'Hnuµs !167-20.1,1 Stereo Repair \l'ol'k \1'hPn & 11hl'l'I' oprralor .. \Iii! '"'11. t.'.oh1n.~t (·001,;-:-p/1_i.nir-lo_r_C:our;;-ie:, ('h('rnolr. !'161~1.1;1. 12:1f1s i.· ci\·ic info. lrtl(}<! ra.1· Top r;i tr .... Lon:: l<'rni. No --------·----\·ou 11·:i.nt~ I a.~,r111blr1·~. llllf'tl<IJ' t..,,t c.11 ,,1.111~ .~l\"i<·r. P.O. lki'< llO"l·f·..;·-1.-1,: ;--: .. ·~-~-1 P/iin1r. :'llu~r· h111(' llarp.1 1..,,. ]~I S~RINKLER R1 EP~l.R STEREO *''11l lflm<'nt l'f'!lllll'. ·1 . F ~ Q r 1 r .~ .. ·"' • a1.i r , · ••PP 1 1 · u 1 Stnlcn •nd RtP1ir1 '" '·' 11ni)'. t:n1n ,\lanner Y:trh• '· -~ ----· --· · · 1_. :..i;-:wi:1. Sl:..1~\'JCt: [ . - Nr\\' Systrn1~ * .WJ .. z,.1.1 I ""'''''''' '"· "1·1,·11··. ,,,,. ,,, nter1m . •'1ll'Jll'nlrr, .\fJ. ,· llH I •t'( I 1.·1~'0.\ ~<in!a Ana, Ca . in p('r,1111 I II,, If r \ ·~ Sllll f', t'ar, l~'Jllllg ;i I II\ ~-t ,i;: T.E~1POf".AP.Y General Service• mnkf'i; ,l. lll<ld('ls -dlSC'OUl11 '. Personnel Service l."1P'.I:! l;otdl'n \\'t'~t C.:11 clr. l CREDIT MANAGER 1 Hc~lauranl. :!!:!'-' ·'· . -----·-----. I • k I ,,-1·0 II k 1 I Bri~tol 'A :'\lif{,..;l::sA1dP-llp1n-'i14 11i. 11~'0.')o.<lrand • . . rH <'~: •' !r11.<' IRpr <1"1.'k. 778 W. 20th, C .M . ~rr.,1 min,lrr. ~!l-1-471'; , a 1 na ~-1J01\·n 1rn1 nt'C'fs -· ~· · Of)D b I h I I ·I _, ... ----f.:-.p . prri. :\lt'!a VPrciC' ("on· N1nl.i An:1 ;,17_jj36 . JO ·, ra1n 1rig. au in~. I <' <'11!1 &: ar!Ju.•I $11.?'1, lh1s 642•7523 546-2592 roung rnan \\'ti 1 6vvv. t'l'rulf llouse1ri\·c·s! US<' lr1~ure hrs. __ _ _ ·-__ _ <'lr11,moR~. f'f'nlf'lll t.· prih·h \1·r.f'k Sl.00 orr 10 Daily P1lor l BOYS •''\jX'I'. Unlun1l('d opporltlll· lo supp1Prn<'n1 i!H'On1r. Sin. ~~:~,~~::~rt ....... ',1~!')ll!Jl. Ii Ii 1 nr::.T1\l.'HA'\'T 81by10tlng BABYSIITINfj 1n my hom~. 11 or · eas. ralf',:. Frr(' ,,I. r f' n <I<' r i; (RC'rl11rr1nf'nl ; 1\;;:e 10·) I io '•if'h\·er paJ)f'rs ity. ::\tart S700. in\·c,;tm!"nl bnn~~ gC'nf'1'0u s .......... t::'IJPLOY.\IE'\~f AGf:X('\' :t 1hru IJ. 1111y/nllr/11 knrl~. Jln\\'nrd. 64~i42J or Da1·1d n<'r dlf's &: carll·idgts 1,1 olfl. ARCHITECTURAL · Jn the D.i na Point. Nin Cle-Call Jf'an 81"01111. >ilJ.liffi.'} I •'Ommi~sinn..~ &· cnlitir~ ~ou 'lana~rr ........ Salary open t'n!"rl y11rd, l'f'A~ .. '!Int l'f'f~. 61:.'-!l'i~iZ. U.S.A. ~!l'<'f'I) E l'J u; p . 111c1111• area~. Coasta.1 Agrnt·y to rrrl' training. ti-4:>-0.i\.''12. OVERSEAS .\!al!r<"d European i.1)1t.S800 DAILY PILOT ;'IJOREJOBSTHAN'PEOPLE I roo. C.R11 al! l :~ ptn 642-3711. BX ~l oo~,.~ LL clrcl. \\'a1'\11011SP, 179 f:. 17th S1 .. ~i!K> !!arbor Bl. 11! A.dan1·-'-1 fJQl;SEKEE.PER. r 1 1 ----~--Jllllnih. fcncr, ; 11 :s 1 J n ~. Cosln i\14'!-tll, &1;:,..21~:?. DRAFTSMAN !~~· l·l~'O or P\' ,\II skills L prores.~ions \\'a 1 Ir "-~·""'· C1Jntl11ental e IN i\IY llll,\1f:. l1El'~:i\'IJ• ------DAYTIME ho1.11r~-P/~n1c & F/tin1C'. • Jligher \\·agf's e Lo11't'r 1 ::i<'rvi<'" ............ Sl.6'.i hr. ABl.f.. llaroor.Hnkl'I' :\JTA. <':orprn!ry. 111<', BA/:\lC Television R1p1ir BOX BOYS DISHWASHER Cail 11·1--0l .1. expt>nst's e Ta.'< benefits i \Va 11 r,. ~ ~ f' ~, food 4:. • !'d!i·~t~:1 • I 1·:.nl. :i'12-$!H1. nL I 'f rull Ti1111', llj:1'." 16·21 r.llbl . ----• f"rre Tran."porlaT!on t'01"kla1ls ........... $1.6.l hr. 1~--~ -·rrrrAi:-:"ERVlCES cO:-* ,, AN :·s TV * • ,\ t1l'\\ (·0111pl\11y .1u~1 rnrn1r1 I lir a1·31! bf'hi·n !lan1 & ipn1 INJECTION CALL 541--4345 Carpet Service Srrvirin!! ,\:I .,.,,,,,.. ,,. , . . 1 1. , ,1 1 1, p,."'"'' '·' "'. O•·"•' f.~u .... ho\~ ............ $1.G:l hr. l'lu111bi,: l11~1all'.~~111·1)('n!ry .. .~ .n1t·1·1c;i .~ 1·11 r111~ "P!Y" f'l'.•"On '' " ' MOLDING Scr.,iceGuaran1--·' i'ook ·, .. 1 ' S'OOhr STEA\1 f '111·1M'I l'lr:irl(')'~. l·:lri· ni11n1r • 6~&-1SO!l A1tlliori7f•d :\l.igna\'Ol't I lll'\'('IOJlf'I' 0 f t'l'~idrntial JU A:\J.l:! P\l Appl,\ 111 Prrson OPERATORS Until l'lllplO~'fllC'lll a~~~ptrd I P.in;;.~ u~~111 ::::::::'\21. shir; J'>l'llfr~~1t1n:ol i1t I 11 i1 r .• I 1 '1\HP~:.~TR\:, p.:1 in r In i;:" TKl>l'I01111 fu1· hnn,..~1~· ,.j()..4.~l.~! ti'>111n1uni1lr~ I' 1lt)11· ~taff11\;.: I 1:1d111rd's Lido ,\l;1rkr1 hr(ll'C'Cn t·:;o & :, P:'ll (Or Trainees) O\"ERSE1\~ SEP.VICES 110,:1,-,.,1 ·~ ...... S:!·S2.i:i hr. P'·I ·..,~ , , 1 1 e it.' opr.r11t 11111 i:1 Or:in"" .:.\;~: \'1a L_u!o. ~r. I 161" 1· 1·11 "I "\ o. , 3 111~. · ,·'. a1~_,;111~ <'t1111p 1• • •'•'lllt'lll, l'f'lll<>tlel. r1r. Sni. 1 ,.. F11r Pl.1slies ?llanu(aclurf'r. ' .. • 1 :--·"'·' · ""11 c · P ai1 t1111r •·Ashirr , $\.;.}hr. ~~ ·'· .11.•2.-0C.... . . _ -I '"'."_1.1;. Buh 1;.1r ... G-1.i1;. __ . CF:r:.,\~llC t. Vtnvl Til r . I coun~., · 11 has <if'i 1'1"1)('d 11n 1 f~no1.;1-:EEPE1:. r1111 rhl'lq:r COCO'S On)~ .t· S11·1n~ shif1 . :'llust PBX Operator for ans11cr·u1i;: VFE " C1\IO I· I \ .. \'\ L\1, • 1 Hauling -1\i lrhrn~. nu rh~ ,t.' En!i;.~. I r .'\l'l!in.1: llC'IV c't'lnC'f'!ll 111 rnt" 1111'1Hi1.:h gt'tl('i'al Ir d f.!. r' 1 IX' neat & c!r.peniJablt·. t'f'· ser.·i!'f'. f"ull 1in1<' ,1,.ad~ f~OY .\ 1~..;r:r..V!CE AGE:~CY 1· A. !'.\i;1. Cu~toiH \Ynrk nr ni'ilSOriablC' ior}-biult niodular hou~in~. \ft1s1 br r'\1xi·w r11·f'll in a!ll uiall' prC'f<i. 1\tusl b<' aU!c 11·ork, :i.'16-S.llSl i-·or i :r~taur.int P<'rronnel • hl1-2\li1l • y,\RD ,t-Garai,:C"~<.'lean11p.I Hn!f'~. t 'I 'I~ ~2ff' ph;t~r~. ,\ppl~ [)l'riin S '''II lo 11 ork Sal. or Sun. · JOO\ P.('cih1\I A1·Pnt1f' °"'==~-~ ,rn ;,.,-, "" \\t lia\'C' i11111ic<l111.te 11!Jl'f1. 1<• :i l'\l. Pf'rk F111nll,\ I ., \ Pl j t · I cl JV C I \I JOllN'SC:tl'\lf! N-l;phol.•lr11 1'1~:" r~1; i ... rlt1~s. CaJI uig.s lor qu.ihf1f'cl Rl"'h1l!"t" ~11 11e1 .!I l!C11nr. iSl Bo!sft 1555 W . Adams. Appy S::::0-1 1:30 A.I ant l .sp.in;1 c ' osa . Psa Cl I .ni1111,. ,.,_~,1 " C M · l'o•>a '' ,,., .• ,, Ca!1f. PLANT ~u1ll' '110 551-2800 f'11 n11 r~. f:,!rR , .• ~-"' ... '"'' • I ][Il] lural 1lr:1 fl .<n1<'n 11 1111 at ,\i·r. \\'rs1 1111 11~tr r. ;\{I osta esa ~ ·~ ') I ' ., ' • . I () . ,, ,, I 11 Ii I ,. I a I s~ \\'e~I lSth ~!. ... _,, <I•)' ••• , • ""'''· X"fol 1· .. 1t11nruc1 rrr :-W.Y1!1·h l 1. • ovr~. 1nu nJ::, Employmtot I lf'a~! I-• ~<'a r~ t'Ut'r•'tlt I'\· phon\I' ;,pp!io•at ion~. .qua PfJOI'. t.:111pny<'r " ~' " " i:.unr1I l .~)11 1:rt1<1>i!11n1~1 i lrnnup. ~'JI ' o 11,. it r p!"ri"n1·r 11C1rk111i:-11 t h ----. . * Ornnge Coast Plas11cs • SUPERINTENDENT I fnn£c bnf1s. ~f'~·C'rly ~·lanor IN~r'f'.1,1'1• .t 11!1 1111"1 ... rutlr111. 1.1 1; 1111 .. k. llf's.1 t l'lc1·nt ion~. llo..11 pl:liis. r11 • BOOKKEEPER DENTAL ASSISTANT -----! Cnr,\·. lio~p .. Capo Beach, hn1.:ht1'11r1' ,t '.O 1111n11rr . ~.:-:4, 1~·11>. ---_ _ 1 Job ''lanteo, i=emale 702 1 . FULL CHARGE Doc·1or Sf'f'king FULL,. r\· INVEST IN i%-.:1iSG. l~lr11 1·1i f"r 11 h1 r. 1 .11 1~·1 . \' Al:ll. ::.ira::" r ; c a 11 11 fl ~ . I \\ i• offri· an a r t r a 1. I i \ r 611.')' 111\lptrl,\' 111,1na~rnH'fll Pf'J'l<'llN'd chair sidr ass1."I YO UR FUTURE \ nt'\1' company just lonnf'<I _ _.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiol N11·r 11 I · -,.".I'll I I I \\' 1'0. Xlnt salar•· & l)("tK'(1!.".1 I II b • er·c · f 1· d I ROBINSON'S ·· .1•1r ffl•~llr~ ;1. ~.1\·1n;;: l:•'tnoir 11,..1,", tlirt. l\,I, , i:.. lf'J'> Al 1111111'~ r ~tarlulg .•nll11) 111 .1dd1thll1 ~ anf \\'10 t'aTI 1101·k \\'f' \\' Y ''m I as c1111nli( l'\'f' n1r f'\tr.1 t1 11•' \\1il rll':1n :i>l-:i J1l o a d rr, btukhoc.I h,i\1' .\11lr< e '\ursr' e l•l ~ til.l<'rnl paek,l):<' (If Subn1i1 n'."lunr !· .'ialary •'f'-proplc. Great fJOtus. Beau1j. 1 Full or r11timr. Ol>f'1' or re~idential ron1 e NEWPORT • l1 1111i: 1111 . i!J11111i.: i on .~ ~li~~~;i; Jluu~f'krrrw-1.,. e c 0111. h<'lll•fll .•. Ph·~I.~•· (';io! Fol' (!Uot1'rnrn1 ~ lo P. 0. &\ ft1 I offit'I'. :;alary o(X'n. BE YOUR OWN BOSS! n1un1tici: I!< flO\I' ,;tarfinir Jls BEACH hii.1! S1.1 \n1 1111 \:.:~1. . ----. . . ran1on~ e llomc111nkers • 1 Appcinfnlt'l\1. 1.:.10. Xrt\port BrH<'h, 9266.1. Photlf' S.".:'n~::.::::. Men or Women operation in Orangl' Count)'. ' n'11rh SlO, Ch:111· s:1. ti ,1r< I l1.1nt~'n111i.: .. ' ai~I & ~.:irai::c t:ii,i<lhn. ~.\j..ffi>l.1 . It has dM·elopNI an exc1t111g "'P· 1lt 11h11t ,,•u111•. 1,,,. l l1'.'\l1 l r. ~rre l·.sL Flttl Jor'ne• DEXTAL .l\s..~isl.int. part Leas .. A Yellow rlf'\t' roncf'pl 1n 1Ac:lory .. bul11 '1· , f' > ,,. "I<! i\1A11.1H~: (,:J,1 Rr~1 dcn 1 1;nH'. ch.iirsit!I' P>;p'ri. n1rth1•t 1 'I" •1o11\; 111.1't'.I: "';' · :" e<.:._ 'o-... ,, Taxi Cab n1odular l)()u~1n;:. r. 1 r ~1 .(\101 H & \1ou1r1 l1kr h;1h):e11r1111t for The !16S-3:1r1 "r ti~&-261;; .. n '" ... eal;ng A;r "'"'-n ' I e s I" k . ' "rl' . OMNI HOUSING ----c.•ponter ~ Conditio · DENT!\L l'h<11r sidf' 11.".~\. ("all fnr Apo1 ·\ krr sla!r "Jll'ntni;: to ht' n1ng bi.)...l.~G4. I I I I . l.'::7.:--:--------, ·--___ __ _ _ _ _ 11·an <'1 , surgh·a c•q:>er. r Pn· 1 5461311 iUNl i1; !hat or plant supi>r· l'Xl' 1'11rrrn1t'•' 1,, ii·• ('ou· '' 11' <'1'11~1ru\'ri(ln or r...:1~1 1ng I H A n Y ~ I r T 1 i\' (; . SYSTEMS INC raJ 01· lllt'(h<·ttl. cifl~1 ra l>le ~ ntendant tcport1n£ to th!' •'t-r!r--!'.it1,, .... !· 1 .i 111 1 11 C'. Iii.!;:~ lh·~. r11• t"On1n1rl\'l:tl llousf'\'l1'a111ni::. ll1111g11r1a11 1 I • hu! cssrnti:il. Appl,1 in rliN'('!Or of produc!lon. Qua!· Ila:-. opening r11r . EXECUTIVE SECRETARY To Store Mgr .:~1;..1 .~»·.• i.11111 " ~ l'\I I: 1:. !lui:l-'.1n~ l\1. 612.0..'i\j \\':intrd \~1;..,.:.:i,~~l. Dr '.'\o i()6 '.\ B or 1·all eMI 5 ,.,,,-, reee"f es·-,. 1Must have secretarial 111i.,111,r ,( I· \lt'ii"r 11.1,11 1\11· 1·,,11,1iti.•n1n,:. 1111:. ('tx1k1ni.:. (;:lrdr111n:;: .Joh DA I LY Jl('1'$r1n. ~00 Xr11·po1·t <~tntt-r A:k:r i1rrinan tied l'illldidalt'~ \11!1 have ar " " · :-.. --~----17822 Gillette 61 \--06.-:1·. . . . . . " " "' E • • h I E:\I' i;,,111,,1,.1n,"'. 1 ,,11111":•. 1•1·. • t'11·11'-'1'1 Bh·rl. i\',J:t. !lt)P.~LEA'\'IXl; b) 111.ur. 1 1 ,,,, C IRVJNE ocn CQ",'"" l f'nC'r iJ\ 1Ge 1nobile hontf' I· skills. xc1t1ng c • -• 1 ..... 1\ i 1;111t-n,""f 01npl(':-.1 ---------• 1 LI\.) J'll l'llL r 1 bu.I ~ · · I · .. E '"'l'l!llr~. nut inl. 1'\o 11,h f('('I HouseclNn inQ •.. JU hr .. ha\I' l n1 u~. 11n1I S A DE:\'T1\L P.rC'rpl: bu~Hl{"S~ or ac o~ .. t t ,..,usLni; in· eng1ng pos1t1on. x- " . -1.. r rrfrrr111"'f'< %.>:-."l;.:12 anta na ~s-r -q 'd ~-1·' .,. COD\IV'fS"''AGENCY dusl:r\· They must ~ .. cepl>'one l •-nef1'ls & ~~ \>\~-.. l -r " r FR. IE~ c ~: n In I H--1-W I d M & F 710 ' _ p IL OT ~1~11·al ... ;~~I' ..... ~~sirabl0r I • ~.,,1 .,,.','-l'f'farit'5 to l600 thor00&hty versed in all t·u":.' l iberail d isc:.nt. Cement, Concrete llo1n1,.,1t,. 11'{1t'k ·:-.:R .~· e P an e • (714 ) 979-7400 ..... " .,.,. rynt manufa.cturi.,..., t«h-·1 bu1 M r~nUAI. Apply in I Enginttruig Sc-<''y to $550 .. ., (.1 \fl ,1. 11 11,1 !'1'1!"'·' nn·:i~. s.,-:..i-#~(l l\f!('r I ,,.,1:;on •. 400 i'\r111>0r1 Center / "·-·,-ira·.• ~n Island 10 •=--nique-s as "·eu . ., .ha\'t an /\.ppl1.· in ""'l"90n 10-5 p.m. · · 1 '' 1'" 1oih h'' ., I'\! ;\ .Bt-11rr Trinf')rnr;.· t:qua\ Orpnr. t:mplO)'l"r ,.. ""'' "''"' ~ t'Xlen.<;,t\'f' I• 1"0 -t lh ~ ~111:11!. I• ""'':1 .. 1·lr Fr r" 1-.,,11 Klll Dr .. :'\.B or call &l.$--0681. ~·tTlarie~. litr sh 10 $52~ · . . mu .... i Y "'1 •2 FasJ-.cn IAJ.. 1'.B, ~ ~11:i1. Ii. :.-! I! 111· k . 'Ir ·' ~·lr:\11111~. C11.rrr1• u RGENTLY D-E !\TA L a~ i; 1,i I an 1. I Pa)>TO!I Clerk/XCR S:JOO the bu1ldltlg trades involvcd. f Equal opportunny empkl)~r \.L'-.~1 I "1111!~11 c:_l~rs rtr. f\r!id ASSEMBLERS ORANGE l'hAl~l<i(' .. :\I1n1n111:11 I yr i ,\('('()Uni ins: Clt>rk In S500 \'r oflrr 11n att1'3('1n·e I SAU:". romal·. '' 1;.,,.,_ 1·1 t'll ll: \\,i .. -,--' ·11 '"' .-7,1:.'. 7>4~..i111 f'\p. \\'1H1ni; 10 Irani ,.,. ProrJ, Conlm! Cl,.rk 10 S-l1.i ·7-,. •· ~ ,,.. r-l'"' f\\Y NEEDED oc1rd rlu . II ~ • ( ral arr 5500 sran1ng ~alary in add1ticn 1 f:x1urf' ~ho\\TOl">r'fl, S.nta 011 • • ",, • • .t • 1.• 11 1 n.. ~ '"°·''"' ,lAn1:ori11l ~1ind 11141 :-udl ri r ' 1 r r 1 , f':'\ t!<'s. U'I · 10 ;. ;r.n<' 11'" lo a hhf>ra ! pac'k1n:r or bl".n· A rut art'&. s·ro. mo • ! ,.,1,.. t"''"'"'I 1~1 .. 1t'\.) 1~1'-I•/" ,,,·:,.1\\•llr('('t .. t lr 1, .... -l ·d . El r ">roni . S4i-2j(j!I. T~lJl."tor;\IT:--IOpr 1c :r-ai 1 p> nd , , ,. ", , en~. .ea~ !H' )our 1·i-· ~i.otiljJ. ,.:1.11 \l,1' 1'1trl. 1,, 1,1 ., , ~''"•i/C11:1:.::1''.:__6lili·l·~·-nu1nul.t1 tu1-.~· 11 111 I r;\!~;. DE~ f." L ,\ ~ ~ 1~t11 n r., ~ir.1/Tf'l·h \\'i'll('r r:ioo :orunlf' ihand11T1llc-n 1~ finr 1 1..::.:...="'-------- •lfl l , ,, .1,\ l't Jkio,, , ,. , 11 Dedicated Cleaning Call r or APJ'l' COAST'S rhttn·<idt-. •·h11ndrd r\p rl<'r. Cle!'k T:.i>ist~ 10 ::: or L'all unm<"ilia.lely • • OU ICK CASH 1 0 11 ·, r ~ , r 1 J r . r. • • \I•: 1)(1 E\'ER\'Tlll~(; * e TECHNICAL lndu~1r111l Rclat10n~ Alf' 2;l.J.2, Xon smokrr. l\.B. Clf'rk Typistnrn<' ,. '"'Q ""'-(\)" r. I ~~ 6"" ...,. 642--1050. RC"N'pl ifrt'n Ofr In s..;oo Ed Fullor ·"-:"~.:!_,~-.'." --"'· '"' "1. __ ,,_. 1 ILLUSTRATORS (71 41 494.'401 OEN T L "°"Y Mktng 10 SOOO THROUGH A rATIOS, 11alk.' clrl\I", Ir. 11111 1 CLtA.'\l;'\l; Sp('rinhst: \\'ln-f • A Rrce-ptlont!ll, Girl F'rid111y 10 ~ OMNI HOUSING nr\I' la11n~ . ..,.11 bJT;\k,, tkl\1':!, r11rprt. fll'."<Of1-, !IO\CJ I d nlllllmUm Ol'll' )1' . esp, f'rtt I: rtt Po!itio.rui """°"· ''""""' "'' "" •• , .. , ol-<llll. TELONIC ea ing _ '!"""nee. bkkt><-M>Won I ISS E. mn '" ln•in.1 CM SYSTEMS, INC. DAILY PILOT jQiiX·~ r;t!(t, •fu«.k wo,· \l'R.nl• ho~lt'anl..... 9 l!'JlPr\'H'I\' I.faun: INDUmlES \•ltjo. &»-JN. 642-1470 . .,.. 11n1·ll am A I pm·.C pm t>-..,.., L Of ~1 ~--I ""Ork. An·~-"' \·ai;~ \t"<lrit on "'ffkly b8si6.. $1.~, \\'oiit "·ht'n & 11·htfe Lquna Be.ch Dc.t~1A I ~.VIII ... -..Jry "'"""'""'"""'"""""~""""I 17112 Giiiette WANT AD LaodKapt~ .~I. ~1 10 l''r hour. E:(p .. °"'" t~ .. ( you ,,·ant: I Asst w ;ii::n)' e:cper. m-ISLA.'l> ~tgr .. min. :; yn.. (lnilie fndus. Complex) Child C•re Mi-.l63:. I I rl Equal ()pp)r. EmplC\"Pr M rk t I meet openi.nc.. 5'S-ii10. I P'q)t'r. Se"" Sta.t'lon .•'· Sanll"'Atlil 642-5678 LOndsc•pl"9 nte m I · [ a e p ace O£SI( a ... -l '.30 '"°"'30 c.ndanh 4» k mt< •hln rooNcf:Sf ......... "''" Pel"SOl\nel Service I BAB\'Sl1TER. 1111> "''"""" 1 pm M-~ ' Sa< !N. """" ·~·-l9th ' K«'Jl0<1 (71 4) '79-7400 M. °""' 11>11)'>. 6".\J.;·311 e TOP SOIL e I 77I w. 20th, C.M. mild l mo'· , i,.. ,,,., profd \ ..)l.C.A. W-9990. ~<'32. ~ I PM Se-~rtlf P\'\lll'llm G-101 rill dirt. ro.!OUU1t11 • 642-7521 546-2.StJ Thur. It Fri ':":l:N P:\1 . Rflj ~II id~ Items ... I Ca:J, .. A.\l mulls a.rt JUtT • ~ ~ INl'tll'n.. Glt-JiOS. cntdtf!I, 5fO.Ollti. I plf"Af>('. "" ~jg..(lt~ &t.S-.~ NM\" tall •V011Y . 6-t2-"'1 \ ' • .. • ' • . H • • l ~~~~~!i ~~ ~ ~~~~~~~,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'rr~~~~~~T~"'=""J'~· ~M~a1~1~b,~1~97~Z~~ll!l~~~~~O~A~ll~V~Pl~LO~f~ I ~·-· J[fi] ~! .............. ~J[fi]~t• I ~.... l!Ill .__I _l,,.i.,_ .... _,J[Ill I , --I~ !~--~I[§] ~I ;;;-~!;;;'[§]I ,. ..... _ l~I ~~ I~ Holp Wantod, M & F 710 ,Holp Wantod, M & F 710 Holp Wanlod, M & F 710 Help Wontod, M'f F 710 AntiquH 100 MlscallaMOlli 111 Pianos/Organs 126 Dog s SALJ::Sl..Af)y for Jt>v.·tlry s 1 • TELE.PHONE ii'ff. Top 1--------- c,54 Boats, Slipo/Dockl flO Sales (News 1'.fedla) SlZK Sr, Acent CCPAJ $ltK Prosram AnaJ.y1t 12K f'enonnel Director S12K Ltaal Tnle (S.A.) $4.50 Transcriber Cm~. elCJ).) USO X-Ray Technician SGOO Secretaries (S.A.) · $525 Bkkpng milch trne to $390 Typial/Receptionbit $450 Sec'y/OUice Mgr OPf'n -.µ>o<::,"-~·a-·•-k'ln ' g Open Exec. Sec'y (SJ\) to S65Q Persnl Sec'y lsh 80) s1so File Cl .. rk, (ei.:~~ S.150 Prod. Control Clrk S4'..13 Girl Fri IOran&e) S600 Legal Sec'y.!! to S650 Sec'y-Corutr/Anahe1m $650 F /C Bkkpr . to $800 A/Rec. Clerk $500 SPc'y/Bkkpr to $700 Purchasing Sec'y S5'15 Gal J''rl/Good sh $600 Financial Cons!. Tme $600 Prod, SupPrvisor to $12K NEWPORT ~Personnel Agency 833 Dover Dr., N.8 . 1.~3870 -(AitSM~N Need men who are ready to learn the car busines.s and are willing lo train. Must have g~ peJ'SOnality, be interested ln a future, dress well, salesmind~. Benefits: Demo., _group ins.. high commissions. Unlimited in- comt". ~ AppJ¥ in Pt"rson. OLDSMOBILE, 2850 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. SA.LES, $600 SALARY Hot Legs Panly I-lose nff!ds attractive girls to secure locations in Orange County, iiusl have plea 1an 1 personality. Ca.II L ou , 7141979-7860. stol'f", full t1mt, ttfs re-ecre ar1es rom.misslons and bonus. Ap. SQ. Oll k tablt:-& mu_nd Oflk GIBSON GUITAR t;. '1tl', 6 qu1red. 548-3402. •ply ln penon betWHD 9,00 tablt w/6 chall'S. 2 b1cycll't itrina ) like Tlf\\', ca.St' ln- SEA.\1STRESS . .Experil"need and 12:00 noon at 838.1 Bolas and a~lKlrt, ,1;!11.u w r 11 r · t'ludM ••. $90.00, CR A I G only tG &Mist dres.smakt>r. Avenutt, Midway City. 968-2StG. TAPE RECOROt:f\ illt'tJ 11·/dre1s making and a!tera-Needed lmmedl•tely TRAINEE-Young nian as Applianc·tl 102 type') se Id o m Uif'd. tlorus. 1\tu.st nav ov..-11 TOP PAY • Tran1fom1tr lncludl'd , t op tical lethnician repair ----------1 •41).00, .u N 1 Q u E J'J'O. • r an spo r la tlon & be nt!l n. Required-2 0 /:Z O ~lAYTAG 1"t'p11.im1an hfts ~ ' available imm. for part Must ha\'t' top & k l 1 l s. vision, ""'hhout g 1 a s 5 e !I , \\'flshf'r2' sa5. 10 SIOO. Can JE('"TOR. shoots !n1agrs up ti m t! e 111 plo ym en 1 .. Background In s ale s. r easonable intelligr ol.'l', deliver "l yr. i:Uarn. lol6 fl'f'l1urnply hyobJ<'!'t. Rrfcren~ req. Corona dt"l marketing , or purch11!!!ng mechanical skill .~ ap litud~ 83$-1778, ldral for the studrnr t)r hoh-, .. ~.'."··~6~7~'-·'•73~5 •. iiiiiiiiiiiia I ~~~;~:1 Lol'!a;er::ps~~~~~ -patiencl'. J\1achlnr sllOp 3 Yi"ll. old "l"t1niore 1rnshrr ~>6~~1~BL1-; ·.~~ .. (~~a~k C~1;;; \ $. URETARIES N(I F'ee. HURRY! t'xp <lesirablf' but not man. runs perlec, very good con-v•h1!e 11" S<'l"t'enl uicludi·~ S S R da!ot'y. \\·'ri~ P. O. Box d'J ~· 1 1 . I. . TEMPO AR\' 1 ion. • • iva e P a r Y 1r:in$for.n1l'r to 11·ork vlr ) SERVICE: l907i, C.~I. S2S2'6. ,~ 968-0833. c1i.::1r l1ghtrr. E x r r 11 r 111 \VE' havt' irnrftt'd1ate openings for Pxperienc~ sf'cretaril"!i lo Y.'()rk in our corporate headquarlf'rs in t.t1ssion Vif'jo & also in ou r Irvine lnduslrill.J Complex facility. Qualified candidate! should ha\·e at least 2 years recent r e lated exp e r i ence preff'rably in the con. s!ruclion industry & must )XlSS<'Ss app r op r i a l e secl'('tarial s]:tills including rbili ry 10 lake dictation. T,hese nr€' pf'nnallt'nl )XlSi· titlns & provide an op- )Xlrtun ity to associ ate with America's leading com· 1nunlty developer. \\1€' offer a lil>eraJ program o r benefits, as 1re!l as above aVerage compensation. Please Apply- Immediately To Our Personnel Dept. MISSION VIEJO COMPANY 1420 So. Grand TURRET 1-:1,F.CTrllC '1"1~hf'r & DT)·1-r. ~hap<' .$:i.J.OO. Ph {l 11,. 5.ln!a Ana 547-5736 'LATHE OPERATOR \\'hi1iL". e."<rrllrnt rondttinn. t>-12-6&4-0 or sC'r ft l 75."J \\'('~! Secrf.ta ry Union Bonk llas a unique opportu11i1y for an Executive Secretary She must have an altraerive appearance. Excellen1 typ- ing skills. Experlenre de. sirable. P)ease cont11.cl Ter- esa \Val as. 610 N"'"'porl Center Or., Ne"'porl Beach. An equal opporlunity l-m- p!oy<'r. .. SECRETAR'i', p11 rt lime. Approx 1,'i time, hrs flexihle, s kills n€'edcrl: shrthnd, typ- ing, (IBM Exl'cl, caculalor. Nf'e'tf car. Send resume 10 Box 82ti Laguna Beach, 92652. SECRETARY • BookkPeper. Shor thand & typing-double k "f. i n g -Co n struction Xnow edge pref. Costa Mesa $flKl mo. 642--0500. SERVICE Sta1ion attendllrl t p /lime, eves &"'wknds. Ex- per ' only. Nt!at in ap- pearanct'. Apply mornings only, 2590 NeY.1>0 rt BJvd., c.~. Class A-Day Shift 1\pply 1741 P larentta Costa l\trsa TYP!Sf/Clt>rk . Gfon'I Ofc. Constructio n olc e :ii: per . hf'l piul. Submit resun1e ,{, salary histar:y to Classified ad no. 3j9, r fo Daily Pilo t, P.O. Bo:o.: 1560, Costa ~lesa , Cali f. 92621i. TYPTsT·---~$~so~o WAlTRESS \\.'anted. New cocktall bar needs food & cocktail waitress. Must be over 21 & experienced. Neat appea ring. Apply 2 pm to 4 pm daily. Steer & Ste in, 1110 Baker St., 0 1. \VAITRESS for col!ee shop. Also, l'Xpt'r. Cashier !or din· ing rm. Apply in person to Coflee Shop Hostl'S.'>, Jlotl'I Laguna, 425 So. Cst Hilo')'., Lag Sch. l'l'l\'Ull.> parly 9ig..~j()() or l~lh ~r .. ,\pt. 6,0, (\J~ta 91~7'Z4j ask for Casry. !\lrsa. -R9 nt Washer1/D-iyers s <1 u·-;-;~"·o"<".s"1c".N"-G-,c,A~R~R~A~1=m- $2. \\'k. }'ull 1naint. .. CO:\IP0:-11'.:NT SYSfE~l * 639-1202 * 7 p1t'l't'S i n c l u di n g : RE t'RIGEfU\TOR. 5 yn;, lrar k car!rid~ playrr. 3 olcl, 'Z drs. autet dt'fros1. i1·ay hn.s._~ reflt'x sprakrl"!i, Garrard pro l 1L"ss io n11 l. 893-!\060. bl lurnta e ron1p!etf' 11·1U1 REF RIGERATOR & Stnvf', look like nr Y.'. SJO t'R. 7130 \\'l"Sfmi ns!l'r Al'r ., \\'t!~lm. CALOR IC g11s range, sclf- l'lean ovrn. Almos1 n€'11•. • 673--0614 base, dust l"OVC'r a nd din- n1ond slylus, evrry!h1ng fully i::u11.raorrcd, 1'Qn111l1't f' i;1'strn1 so ld for $.191.Sf; pay-off small •halant'i' ol S\!14.77 or smA\I monlhly OVF.R 200 \.\'<lSht•rs, r efrigC'rator} tronl 545--0780. _. payn1rnts Rvniluhlr . USA ur:yr rs, Furniture $39.95. S!rrro }:qu ip \VarchottSI', 17!'1 E. 171h St., Co~ta !\lesn, &15"-24.J2. 810 A p . nva te party nius! sell :t ----------t:lectric typc-11.·riter~. ro~1 SOFA R' & lovr ~eat, nrvf'r ovC'r $~ each, 11o'i.ll takl' used. both Sl:xl ; srwing $2:.0 f'al·h. 2 Calculators cosl niachinr, $2:1. Pri. Ply. ovC'r $600 f'ach. 11'ill take 96S-7!l lfl." s:n:, ('ach. 968-1197. TRAD l T 1 0 N A L furn ESTATE Sale ! Venerian, ~produerion.!I hAndt·raftrd in pinf": front shop to you. 11•alnut, cArved armoirr: 6-t6-958.1. OhC'rry armoire; adrl1ng mach1nr , S:xl; o f I i c 4' VELVET juf1 rrl ~fa, never lypewritcr. $75. Ph. 9 am-6 us<'<l, $\:W. l\l.1trh1 n1: lnvr. pn1. 615-6774. WAITRESS , food & 1 S" \' J I I k Sf'<I . ~_. e VI'! ll-lae A Steal! 4 bra~_. ne11· he''' cocktails, exp only. Part 1 s~ ~R.-6281 '"' SALESLADY 26137 LaPaz Rd . Mature, -experience unnec-Mission y;,-1•0. SE\VI NO J\1achine Operator: exper pref'd. Xln't 11·orklnt tin1e. Fri-Sun. 642-827·1. c iair,_:_::_: __ ._. ___ duly pirk up l ir~~ - ~I AILJ NG CLF.nt~ Uooclycar -h1~h nilll'r. 8.~,.. \\'AJTRESS wanJed -?\lust t'ull t1n1r, 9 to 5 \.\'erkclay5. 16.5 ti ply, Also 4 Chevy essary. The Show Off, 22 Fashion filand, N.B. (714 ) '837-6050 -1-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliii~ ·~·················· :~ r.i:-.. -'-==--'""""""'-==--: --~~@~1 ~ ... f' A CONVf:NIENTSHOPf>INC AND r -c:1" SEWING GUIDE fOll THE :•. , CAL ON THE CO. .-.... .. _____ !!II For an ad in Woman's World Call Mary Beth 642-5678, ext 330 Into Summer Knit Neck Down! • cond5. Call aJI 1:30 fur appt. 646-4633. SINGLE needle & overlock· oprs. Exper. only, Top pay. 646-0308. SHORT order cook neede·d, graveyard ahllt F ri & Sat. 6 to 10 wkday1. Caplstraoo Bch, 496-2454 or 496-8891. SUPER TYPIST Newport Beoch Exceplional posirio n for t'X· ceptional girl. Unusual op- portunity. be 21 -Call Galll'y Ca re -Ne~d in1n1ert1ntely . s!t~·I \l'h<'l'ls. 892-121.l 673-4_110 for i_ntg_rvi~-'·"· _ ,. JI ,,,..., "'"'2 + -~~ ----~* ":a ,,.., . ...,. .. ~ --cATtPET & TflC' Wfl.re-liiu.o;e WA NTED-needle potnt can. BALD\\'IN F'r. 11rov. P1nno. ~ale SpC'cia!s lor rental vas designer-call • 953-2006 Xln! ronrl . $750. SofA & uni ts, boa!s, &. campl'r.~. or 213-862-5988. chair S7:i. Misc. furn11urc. 3737 Birch No. G. NY.'Pl Beh WANTED man or woman ex· &l6-003J, afl 6 pm S48-1310. perlenced try cook. Lunch & ==-o07--,--,-~--,--CLUB cha1r-brov.in. Excel FOR Sale: 1 glass & chrome dinner, age 35 to 45. Fut. Cond. $10. Card tableio1-1 .,..•in din rm tbl 3'x8', ·w/8 neat, liOme background &: spreads • Bl<'nder • Pans -chrome chairs, 1 mink stole reference work exp; ln 557-tiS.iO. 644-5992 afl 6 pm. Orange County, 310 West .th •-ta A \VOOD palio !able & hen. LOVELY ne1v f orm a I 5, , ,,,..n na. che11. S2j; maple dinette' sci, Rags to Riches. 285 E . WHY NOT? S:.0. 968-3089. J\1ain, Tuslin. Tues-Sat, HIDE-A-Bed · queen SIZ:'i. 10-j; 30, S44-9.lll. Bed divan $55. llerculon. All --,~,-.,-;-n-lo_b<_Jh _;_n-. -. -. -. - li ke ne11·. 642-8111. The Diet \Vorkshop \Vay -R-OLL-TOP--~o~E~S~K~-I For Information 531-5105 * 646-9583 * _ CARPET FOR SALE- * Clearance Sale * \\'e are -ovrr 1IOC'kM \1·t1h 11~"·ntd b11r1':a111s 111lrl plf&nt'IJI, t.1 11~1 lllft.kt• t\l\1lll for ne11· 111t>ri·h11nd1~e ~'0111111ii: on. Buy Now & Save I e ORGANS e ~Jl~'f\r !Oil(' Orl'Oa Chor<! Sfi!'I. s1 ~:i. I 1.Jo11111ond ;\f.J • ~7'.'l'>. l..1111 r•'>' TLO 1:\0t1 s.,..;~ri . llnld11 ll\!'1 11\Hll $:>9!J. llnn1n1011<i •'(lni-o1h·~ :f.i J><»h1I~ !n1n1 SIG!IJ. e PIANOS e R11l1lw 1n n1uk1· ~111n1•1 $ 1'l:~. ~torv .~ fl11rli j•nn~. S~•"ll. i\!t"l~·itll' Cini k l"'";1·:1n(I s:1'.l:1. \\'t'brr Consolr $~~1 . '"' l\lany nion-In rhNlSI" 1!~1111 Sank tl'M11ll 1ra1lr 1n~ \l'('h'<;lll\(' COAST MUSIC SERVICE 1839 N<'"'pc:irt Jlh·d .. C'.!\I , ttl \1 1u·!'l11r * • ii•l2 ::!s:,1 • • 0Jlf'n Sunc111~' I:.? Iii ;, p11 1 B-Jl'iAf\1~lON 1;:-1•rrtcl't 11 • string bass. $1 .!l~S. CONN 'l'h<·ut<'r. Sl.:lol::i THOl\IA S full <'l'lns. $1 ,.'>(J'.1 \\IUll L player rtrn10, $1 .1·1·1 Nu pi<lnos. No sho1·t 1·11ts. S5!l9 (i0tn.D t.IUSIC fO. 'Z<MJ No. r.1111 11, SA. 5°'7-0081 1t * ~llH'l' \!}JI * HIGHEST CASH PAID * For your piano: Sp1n!'tJ1.Cnn- 50lC's·ll pr 1r.h I s·I. rn n< I.~. COAST MUSIC G42-2H!'J6 Sporting Goods STEREO 830 Co1npk>tr sy111r111.~. 2fl !o 40'; 11f/ rrg. rrt111l. Sprak{'I' ~.YS· l l•m.~. 35 111 50': 11rr n«. rl'l11il. 1,11().1 Wr.~!1111nslf'r Av ... , \Vrstn1lnsh·r. ~t!l2·7!1~2. S URF BO A ftDS, pad· rllcboards, ~l igh t frl'igh! rlamnge, $55. liH6 Placcntiu, C.M. M&-3486. Store, Bar Re•taurant, 832 STORE: r~I XTU nF:s, di~pla,v ca~l'~. err. 1!127 l!Hrhor Blvd, phone (7141 325-1381. TV, Radio, Hi Fl, Stereo 136 l.·OHKSJllnto: Terrlf'rs. 9 WANTED lofoorin« on Balboa \\'~~ ~t11lt' & fl'ma.!111. i\KC Island tot .~l bot.!. nog. 67!>-G'l91; !\32--1827. 6~U)O:. itt1SJT.""'Crrr pups, AKr, tor1'ro=R;:-.,ll<oc-n~I-, ~boa-ct,-:doc--,k_u_p..,.to ,;ho111 llnf',, 1.111 hrf't'<hnit ~·. naum JJ.laod. $$:)/mo. •1 11~1li ly 11. \\'ks. \\i'Z-11 r.. 64.)-t789, • .-PL'it-1'.: 1,1~1 J\O~~:H~ \\ .. \ITTED lllp fClr 81 ' Cult'. l1··~il t h). $2:\ 1'11. rrulHr. N•v.rport llarbor. s;~ 11~.() •tll.~$:2::;~~je ('\'{'. R1~l ,•11,y1 ur "'*' Bl.AC!' t>ONllr p11pp1~. ·10 * Slip Avall·Nr lido 11 ks 11!tl. s2;1 1•a . til~-l~!S or • tiT.l·6450 * ~3 1-.1sS.l nft__fi_ ~-SAIL ·aoAT SL.~l~P~S-1 Jl{ISll St°'ltt'r p11p-", A111eri1·.'.ln Nl'11port HN.l·h ~~·:lZ.1 Fu•l•I .!:"~ ,. ~!.do• fl.'lll .tll', 6a S Nd & Ski 911 ~h4•ts h •. 141(1~.,. ats, P \ r1r~ r' t : Cl n '1<1' ~-=--;111 1-;;:;:;" 1:1 -~16S-. -,,-,.-, -,-,-,,-,.-,-,-. -,-, ,-,-, .,-n·. 1 • i"\~'11· 1<1~11 L \l .. 11 \l 1~ 1.". 1un1-d Chevy 301 C.I, ::et! i :\0 11111 $.• \\'r1l. :\li11 17, li llP, 1'r111lt'r ln1·I. $2800. l'l'I. \1.1 rt1Ut"r•;>t J't'lllh'I~. c~l:Z-R'i.~:Z 11.ff 6, V1111, fjT3-653}. "-1~1i;·1 ~lliiiii~I L.\Jllt.\llOH n ,. r 1·" 1\'1· r • 1 )~ Al~C. n·.:1~. ~111.111•~· r 111•r111•!<. Trantpcirtallon · rl'I ('a!I j.'17-ti~\9 aft 3 pni , l1111,•1'=iiiiiiiiijiiijiiiiijil.l!iii -· ~ I ~ --Camper1,. Sale/ Rent 920 I ~·~ 1 lundhn~ [..l'~i;un~ !•.\'1't'y Tu1·~. ~ E1 pin. $1 J"'r 191i!i Furrt a'-Thn·Ch11.11i.~ •l·~.: Jlf'r h'~!l!l \\arllll\'IV!'I! 1111>111\I {lf!ell 1'1'\11d • r\f'll l\1'1u1r1~_ ~u;~~1~·1. n1or11r. 1i1't'11. 211 l<\V 110 S!it-:\;(J)~ l;1·1·n11111 Slu·ph1 'r'1f Vu!! 'if\1~1 . fl lr 1'nnd. 1hr11oul l\•'!ill<'i h~~ lll':111td11 I pup~ &.1-' >;11 1 Y.'1llt'T' l\'/~IJ()\.\'1•r & h~· 4 •ti i\'.tol'\llL'. 'J'l'rtHS. hl'lH!. $21\7~. ~\1.,~,(l'.l, ---()1\1-'.J)I J-:;\('J·: ('l11~'-"" i-L1rl \\,•,I :\·In~· ::1 In N fl. lr1 1111• Ill'!'!\, ()pt•IJ to 111! dni.:s a 11\ol's .~ 111,!•'I' ~df.>-.1'1:'.~ S<11IN 1\Ul'.~:n. Pill'~. l)\'l'rt•t•! l•'I' !\lolli.•r's 1 1:1~'· lls"b1 la1. ~1~11 ~. ~:1,>11n1 ,r., r<hut !:~'1'\', nvni l. 1'er111~. ·sir .. o.~:1~1. -----... --· • llllSll S<'llrr J'11ps Al\(', l hn11l1' S1rr, ~11Pt'l'h hnr r. o;l1owf1X'I. :lf .. ~·6Zll. ll t lS.11 Srlter pup~. An11·1·1,·an l·'irl1l ltrJ;. f\l11lf"/f1•n1a l1'. Shn!.~ Ht>;p~1n11hl" 61:1··-00li:•. FOil Sil!·· Ill' l'f'lu rll or l1tlt·1·· lull ~ru11·n f1•n1. St. Hen11u·d. Good 1vi«hilrt re11. 6-12--4 lli'.l . SOIN AU7.F.nll\'10<llt! ·r.;, l·'t lltl.l "'r C11n1111·1· Sf1<'t'111 l, lo n11'i.., 10' Cnhovot C111nprl', rt1r 1){, ht'Bter Ii ht>arl. !~1~38A·I. --,.,----~ l!'lj0 l"11rr11cu1l1t 8' ,. a 11 f'lfl'11111pt>r. Slf'l\·r , l'l'fr\J( •. ,,l1'f•f1" 4, $-1'.'IO. fi.1~2128 aft '.\ '.!,(] \\'/!'l'<•rylhin~ lleart.v Fon· c,1n1·f'r~l11n, $3500. 642-26$1 e\'i'•. Cycle11 8Jkes, Scooters '6.'l JIONl)A ~ 925 COM Pl.~71'1': ll EOUILD 'l't'.IJ') 1•nrt, huttoni end carb.1, ne111, eluleh. Runs excr!lon!. $300. 646-9071i, 11io1k !or To1n. Frn1ule 7 1110, A:J:?--!;i.'12 llfl li .. m ----___ ~10VI NG-n1u.~t .~11,crl llCI' 1971 • 4 ·r1ny C0t·k11poo~. l!ol'l(l/1 3:.0 CB,. f arlnfit $10 rach. wlndshli:ld, hr l m ll t & &12-4fl l8 or !i.:11-:18.% evl"~. 1tlove1, $625. f'lr hf'st otter. Horses 8.s6 1 -!l62-<l564~=~--0~~-~-1 _.__.... • • HON DA. 305 Scrnmblcr, JlF:C.IS. J\1ustang, Annual nrw Urea, hr11.kl'1, hHttf'ry, h,.:1 11>1oinr lrnnhv 11 tllll•'I'. xlnf cond. $.'\.')(!, 64s.-043fl. •·1nest trail horse In <>r11.ni::e -110 Y--,--S 1-1 11-,, -1 - l• t "Afi 112~ u y-. lllgl'lt)' YJlt' ~l~~r• 1' • h1k!'. E.x c1·llrn"-' t'Ondlilon Live1tock 858 Sl..I. 642-0022. ' M\/,l,J Sa!'r1firr hr,'\nt1ful MINI Bike 3.5 r ng. Run11 & p1n!n niare . <;rrnt r1r!1ng IMk.!1 pcrfe1·t $60. Finn! ho"r. All equip. !nC"l. $2:.0. M&-1096 nr 720 lh1mlllon, or hrs! oUr r. 646-8811.2. <:011111. Mc•ri, 5 lo 1 pm -----· --ONLY. ===-~-=---=- S. 'I. S. TEMPORARY SERVICE Hove • job you enjoy in a new building! · 1-3 DRAWER \Vhilc bahy by Car'p('I Layer. Call drc!'~er $40. Sofii ™>i:I $2j·j ---,,~·~54-0-~2086~=·=--ISPEAKER .~ys1rm.l'l, 11hl ppin1: Couch $30. 54f>-4652. JOY JN A J UG! damagl' to boxC's & packinl\ Boa11 and ~ JR 'TI lloncla 3SO CB, $600 or I~ LEAVING Stale: Mu111 S..c. Marin• Equipment 1(. !nit orr. 962--6564. - 11· .· (::~'(!: · '.:, . ,.;· i:\.': .... . " f-:., .\\ ,• , ' I I , ·\., .. / I . , I .,, ' . I • '\ • • I •.• '. l . ' ' !::D. .... 1 ·.::·\ r •. ~: · •.. \. ~'-~.-"'~'fl-.'' .. I ' •' ,• • I ; "' • I ' > I ' 'j .·; ::i'1" ~ ;, '·,.· - I + ', •'. , : I ', .' : -~ ~ . ';,. ~ •I ' •, • • •! ' ' . .. . ' ' . ' ~ ' . . ,, ' ~ . ' ' ·' . ··• ' . -. ~ : 9318 SJZ!S 10Y,.20Y, • "" 1Tf ..,.; .... 1Tf ,..j' ... Long and lean to there, then a burst of plea11t 1wings you into 11ummer! Th.is is our idea ol a great shape for you to se1\• in soil knits, ble nds . Printed PatlC'm 9318: NEW Half Sizes 10'..io. 121,, 14 ~. 16%. 18~, X)I,), Site 14\i (bu.st 37) takes 2 3/8 yards 45-lnch, SEVEN'rY-nvE CENTS for each pattern --add 25 c:e.nt5 for each pattern for Ail' Mall and Special 1-landl- lng ; ofberwise thi rd-class delivery will take thrl'e wei!ks or more. Send to Marian Martin, the DAILY Pnm. 442, Patt em Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York. N.Y. 10011. Prin! MA.'1£, ADDR&S8 w i I h ZIP, SIZE and STYLE NUMBl:R. ·SEE MORE Sp r l nJ: Fuhions and choo1e. one pattern free lrom new Sprinc·Summer C&t.loe. All lifttt! Only Slk. INST ANT SEWING BOOK ltw today, wear tomorrow. 11. ' INSTANT FA S HION BOOK -Hu~ of ta.sbion fact... SI. "~ Room For Dad- d 7 ' ' •• cll!l'an Ol1t Uie tuace . .)'OW' trash 11 CASlf wllh a DAILY P1LC7T a...&<! ad. '··. ·:' ;;J' ' .... ·. •, 7299 ·" •· " • .. 1420 So. Grand Santa Ana 547-5736 Supervl1lon fMNUFACTURING SUPERVISION A new company ju11I formed by America's leading devel· oper of residential com- riiunities is now staffing its operation in Orange County. I It has developed an ex citing new concept in factory-built modular housing, We have an'immedlate need for 2 qua lified supervisors for our prorh1clion opera- tion. Both opcning11 require individuals 1Yith at least 3 .<\PPLY NO\V f'OR: • Sec'y.Steno Openings avail. now; Type 50, Jile at.no, Type 6(', Siena 90 e General Clerical ~1ath or English back- ground nl"cess. Ofc. exper. prefd. J r. & Sr. Openings Avail. • Accounting Clerk Varied & lnt€'resting Openings For Good Math •aptitude. Some Exper. & lite t;ping necess .. JNTERVfE\VING ·'i>t. ':\. years recent experience \. t; ~~ M ~·' 4 •supervising a mobile home J\lon & Tues 9am-2pm \\'ed thru Fri 9am-12pm ON \\, ;\Y,!. · ., ~\l¥f: or factory-built home pro-\~{:~~../1 • ...! fl:~: rluction oprration. Exper-s\TE OF OUR NEW BUILDING ~ ~·sh~u·; 'S ience must he in either the ·.:·~·l~}' --::~ji' , ~ ~-. area of pain t & fini1h wo rk ·,:_:; .. ~~.·l!J "i · '.•!~ or in the installa!ion or .. r: '1}·''--':.i'i~ lixtureio1 & other mechanical PACIFIC MUTUAL FASHION ISLAND (Corner Santa Cruz & New(Xlrl Ct'nter Drivt'), lt's soft, light, comfortable y.•ith gu its or SC'parates. Dramatic diamond yoke ove r-blouse -knit in one piece lrom r)('Ck dO\\ll, of lingering Y)rn. \\'ear \A'tlh dressy skirt or pants lor parliC's. PatllTn 'im: sizes 12-18 inrluded. SEVENTY·Fl\<'E CT.SYS !Qr each pattern -add 'Z5 cents for each pattern for Air Mail and Special Hafldl. Ing; olherv.·ise third-class dC'livery \A•lll take three weeks or more. Senrl to Alicf' Brooks the DAILY PILOT, 105, Needlecra.lt Dept., Box 163. Old Chelsea Station, New York. N.Y. 10011. Print Nan1t, Addre1111, Zip, Patt11rn Nurnber. NEE 0 L EC RA FT '72'. Crochet, knll, ~!C. Free directions. 50c NEW! Instant ~lacranw:. Basic, fancy knots. pat- ll'rns. $1. Eu:r Art 11f ffalrpl11 Crochet -ovrr 26 designs to make. $1 . ln9'anl Crtlochf't Boot - learn by pictures! Pattern1. Sl. Comple.te b 11tant (ilh Boot -mott than 100 gill!. -$1. Oomple.te Af&han Boot - fl. JI Jiffy Ruf Boob -S0c. Boole cf U Prbe Af&:....._ 50c. QuJU 8oo11 1 -16 pattema. 50<. M attJUJn Qlldt Book I - 50c. QalU.1 f« Today'• Lh1n1 - lS bl!atttifttJ pefltrM. ~- & interior Items, We offer an attractive start· ting salary in addition to a liberal package ot benelits. Plea5e send your resume fhand"'Titten is tine.) or call immediately, Ed Fuller OMNI HOUSING SYSTEMS, INC. 17822 Giiiette (Irvine lndug. Complex)' Santa An• ' (714 ) 979.7400 Equal Op)Xlr. Employer * FREE dally bus transportation for Y.'ork in 'Los Angt'les un til move to Ne"1>0rt. Sept. '72. .. \VIVES DIVENCHA~TED OR liNHi\PPY WJTf{ tl-1AR· RIAGE .. Hunt. Bch author needs statistical documen- tation !or new book. Ability 10 candidly verbalize your opinions & attitudes im· pcrativ~. Your confidence assured as you y.•ould tt· main anonymous. Liberal fee paid to those selected. Call 53G-fifi66 5-7 pm wkdys &: 9-noott wknds. \\'O~EN l R up. Need 10 to !Pach. Learn & enjoy on your lo' o .... ·n time. Hi S's. Ali;o possi- ble business of your own 645-0'!90. SUPERVISO RS, s a 11 bo a I \\'0:0.1AN to li ve In Christian prod. Supervitory ! k 111 homr>. must dri\·e. 54S-2ti24 , essen. Boat bldg exp. not 1 M&-6.)65. re1f d. We \\'ill Ir a I n. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil MacGregor Yacht Corl>. 1£31 Placentia. C.t r,--_---.. -~JI~ I TELLER Experienced P•rt Time -UNITED- Callfornl1 Bank tt2 Ou•n Ave. L•guna Btr•ch Antiques IOO SCRAM-LETS · ANSWERS Fitucet -Favor -Glade - Dilute -ORfITED Cornball Ct>ntustus: ''Sht wu pure u: thr driven aoow, but Jh .. ORIM'ED," E:qUaJ Oppor, Employer "Make Room 'tor Dad. l!\!•l!!""~""'""~""""'I cl y' ' •• cl ean OU! the Babyline Wardrobe $35. * 540·357:> Artistic bo1tle gardens -611~ Rallon,11 $20 ca. 64Z..S119. 1'~0R Sale • 7' turquoise loose NE\V blank Ainpcx 90 min cushion _ li ke nt"w. $fl!. Cassell• tapes, sold S2•l do:.i: &16-38H8. accept S9 doz. 534-1 148. Gerane Sela 812 CAKE~. Custom M~de for all • occasions. Any size, Reas. GARAGE Sale: many hsehld 536-1725 or ~m.5. only. 6" 1-way to 15" 3-way l'llr su11pe'tlslon s y 11 t e m 11 .. 50'ln orr reg . N"lail. 5 Year guarantt>c. 892-1 lfll. 12" Woofer , 5" Mid., 3~i" Tweeter. Boxll"s never opened. Pair ne'W WharfrlH If' apcaken . Sold S260. Take $115. CM h. 534-11 ~ . ~iiijiiijiiijiiijiiijiiij.;;;m; '63 1-londl\ Scramhle.r 250 Dirt General 900 blkf!. Nnw eni,?lnl", clutch. Ma ny e xtra11. 557-41Sll . ll ' SEE thrnu~h GLASS.HO!'-Motor Homes MO P Eit. u~rd Oll('f' • $100 1-----------1 642-l~R , Boats/ Marine Equip. 904 • items, lnctud import Swiss GOOD ehest of dra"'·ers S20. LATE model RCA conM>le lamp, bras! & chrome din Reclln('r w/vibrator $30. color 1V Sl45. 20 0 J\'1ARLIN Tackle • J ltod w/Penn 50 lntern11.t )l)n1tl reel. I rod '1.•/Fln Nor U) VilCOUnt ~el. LI R-12:,i.';. !bit-w/chrs, mink stolr, 54S4485 138 E . 18th G.i\t. B d •-1a M roa way, UJll e1;&. ' I ' I ceramic BBQ grill, l\.1us .MATCHING set suitcases I ~~~~~~~~~~ Sell. Sat & Sun 5120 & 5/21. szs or bl'st otter. l\.1UsT 9-6 l·lrbr View tlms 1930 SEIL. Call Pam. 499-3006. ! ][' Boats, Power ~06 ~1 Harbor, Garden Grcmt Port Lauren!, N.B ioff l '°~.-=-------FrH to You l\.1acArlhur Blvd. · Mrscellaneoua ~------~ 14 ' SEA WilcM nt!w inOO,.I~ l Blk. So. of G.G. f'rwy, 636-2333 - GARAGE Sale, W~ & Thurs Wanted 820 10 to 4. ~loving lhi11 ----------- 11.·c-eke11d! Game !able & *Wanted-Dead* ehair.s, dinette set, old Alum inum CMS thal havr teacher's desk, sk L~. toy~. lricycle, pictures. misc. f>l2 Angeli!ri Dr. Irvin T t'JT, Cd.VJ. 67.1-::0717. scrvl'd you well k provided hour! of p1easurr. RUN~!! Do no walk. io 1060 Glenn· ryrr S!., LaJi:una Beach. No CJ-/INESL im porlii;, ant ic(~. glass whA1~vcr, accepted. futll., art objecl:r;, knick· Musical ln1trumenf1 822 kn&ck~. All now in ~loragr. At alll'y, 2721 E. Coast FENDER Ba.ssman amp. 135 llwy., Cdl\i. r.m.~. 2-15" Altccs $100. Oak commodr, brass bed, olrl 1.-encler Coronado-12 gu itar, radio, odds & ends. 40·1 w11rranty, S150. 499-190·'-" Clu bhouse, N.B. VOX Royal Gu a r cl s man 7M7i',-c-a"ll'a_n_e_o_u_s __ -,8~1'°'8 Am p., total soun<I effecl~ at a rcasonahle price. 963-6291. SfEREOS 1972 Gerrard equi pped .,.,,.11h Office Furniture/ full size p r o f easionaJ Equip. 124 ch anger, AM /Ft.1/t.1PX UNTIL !hf' rnrl or th€' mon th recei ver, 1 ~a I e d a ir v•e ,~:ill ehcm1cally clean, oil suspe nsion speakers, tape & adju.s t any \ypcwriter or deck & headphone plug in caleula tor !or $1~.95. Elec- jacks. Was left unclaimed. tries $24.:iO. Call 8'12.-.1945. Brand new In box & • guaranteed. Orlgi nally pr!c· Pianos/Organ• 826 ed at S279.95. Take. over for ORGAN • PIANO 3 Lines, 2 Timas, $2.00 BRI·TTANY Spaniel 4 yrs, rnc kapoo 4 mnR. g irl.~ i:rf hm w/ynrd. l/bo1h. 9&1.nJO . 961<-2900. PUP.l:.:BREO Brlndlr· GrP<i1 Oane, no P1lJ'M''r~. lf'A lb11, !JI/., n10. Rig yrd. !Ave,, kirls. $.1-1791. --~~~-~c-­Kt'l"TENS • Un1r1 ur Slnmf'~r l\1Anx Cl'OSll. FN·r• r 11I ·fri•:;d l\'/e;i ch kit!cn. Cnll 549-2 11 3 aft 5 pm. --~-~--TO C.oo1I llomr nnty • I oldl'r frm. 11ilver IAtihy Inn'! h:tlr cat .• ii ll io,hols • 1 youngl'r mal r ~1Am"lif' -r..i5.~11 T iiier, Sport f ill tiern1;in, 1--~T~E~S~T~'D-R IVE- Dlvcr, from S750. Moror11 ,(. trnill'r avail. MG-0060/ THE MIDAS MINI 5'G-°'"· MOTOR HOME lfi' ~·irc.tilrr!~h<ln!, motor l. Olalrlhult'd by 1r11i!er $l•Klll. 40 Jr p l<l'n <.:r1dt l'roducla Ev inru<lc-&16-5.'i74. CREVIER MOTORS 18 I 208 W. 111t SI., Snnta Aoa 'Call ornia : in & oul f\1rrC' IJS.ll7l erui11er, ss:, W/('f)Vtr, lrlf. $1600 ('1'1.'lh. 962-160fl. PACJ-::-ARROW,. Cl fJNOOK -1". ,.1 , .• -, M Al! lop branda •• Discount " , a.~p11 r, i :i p I r rrory price , , lMMED fATE DE· r1/h, ~ yr~ <ild , l11lly r••1u1f1. I IVf'l\Y. !!12-"115 ' ' .. e •• ;,, Ran11char1·r 908 BfACH CITY DODGE II AV J:: Sport frlh~~ BOA T-\V 1!~L 1·nAVF.f. fishing t:rui011ng l6S55 lk.11.r h &ulcvard llun!lna-ton ~aeh 171'11 M0-2660 &14-fl'.ll 1 -~,---;--;;;---- -------------}""REE, 1n1 ni ft>malc black Boets, Sall q09 poodl<', 1'1 m~. Io v ,, 11 _M_U_ST--ll---,-, ---- *Marvin Pearce* se -w1 1U'l'rPl any -'-"-''-'"-"-· _""-_~:t1:.. · rrit,11, offer. :lG. ~:ndc11vnr, BLACK malr Grl'n l Dane, 1 yr old. rl'('c to ~ood hom,. :,0\(,..S 1111. ' 6 Yr. olrt l,;1tir11rlryr R.ctr1r1·r r • Tra inrd ror hun· !In?;· 64 2-4:12•1 t'Vf'. load!'d \v/rxtra11. Uru·!ll"I' w1nt"ht'll, kncil ml'ter, 1Jr 1ul, riu·lng tl!kll, 2 m11.ln11, 3 Jlll.~. Gt>noa . Spinnaker &: gl'll1' Roat im mac. Gr!'al family rli1y 111t llf')r, rr11"1ng. 67!J.(]'J6 J, 121.1 ! ~'lli·67Ji!t. Motor Homes Sales • Rentals 558-3222 $90 cash or small peymenU. WAREHOUSE La Ya. w a Y Department. New·Ul!M Famous Brands I 1 1~1 71.,_, ~, P•I• and Supp!le1 ..,,,~ . .....,.,., ·· STEINWAY. KJJ\f B A L L , * AUCTION * CHICKERING. etc. !Over ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~ * * * 24' Glass Sloop Din,.!!r·C11 llr y.l.lf•'l1nc11 S111!11·Tra 1Je r;1hlc E11:cell11nt Buy 71•·'196·12'.J~ 141 1 S. VIiiage W11y, S.A. • NF.\V 23' luxury tnntor hon1~. Air. Loe.deli! Beil r11!e1 1.0111dhle. Prt pty 968--1397. UEl..UXE '70 Motorl>ome. l..011rled, Qn}y Bini mllea:. Trade Equity $I S 0 O. ~1&-:1!152. F ine Furniture & Appliances 1000 pianos avail.) • Cats 852 IlAMMONO , KI MBALL & CONN, etc., or;:ans. Auctionii; f'rld11y, 7:30 p.m. Before you buy-Gi ve? us a lry~ Windy's Auction Born ~esr Dealrr In •h ... \Vest 2JJ75112 Newport, Cr.1 64G-S686 PENNY O\\'SLF:Y CO. 714/892.?.'.ll4 Behtnr'I Tony's Bldg Mat'! 11352 Stach Bi., S. of Ktttl'lla BEAUTlt'1JL new Japanc!M" Dally 10·9, Sat 10~. !iun 12-6 buf!et 52" x ~" x 16" hand --------- carved black laqu,.r ·can't *PIANOS.ORGANS* uv, paid S375 _ f~t u.lc Golni; f~ut For Business sin. CAii fit2--6463 allt't' 4 Br.st quaJ1ly . pr\Ct'<( .. .wrv. pm \A'N'kdays or anytim<' Ka~·a!·~l,.1nw:'ly·Brihlwln, ~tc '\.\'N"kf'ntl'I Pl;iyer P1anllS & flOllll ' Rrnt11.!<1 ·. , \\'c Buy . SPll Ol'\F; 'ml!l ll dt'sk & cha ir $15. Daily 10:6 F,vr <1/Sun 12-5 Onr .,Id dl!sk Ac 1wlvrl rtiair Fl ~ 1 D'S PL\~OS $i 3Si" Table li mp 11. 1-:ii r· C~!ll t.i;'la 1714 1'r.C.:?ri> ly Amrr. lamp lahlt $JO. ---- 38" h!~h ~!a!ue $10. 2 lte TOP PRICES PA fD F'Ofl pirturr.s $1U c1ch. 531-\29t StC'lnw11 y1 le !111mmt;1nds BRANO new Sein ~luxe PE:-l~Y O\\lSl..£Y CO. helt mau~r wllh var\· Sn..l114 gpeed, Coat $100 • aell $10. BABY C RA~D pr AN 0' &*4-1732. .Ebt>ny f1ni11h. xlnt cond, ~:J~ =u': llV:o' u":n~ S6ffi. • ·ln-1635 • ha ir, toUte table le end ES'TATF. Sa.le, Jlammrind tahle all.,Jor $95. 531-7294. ~lll'C. 0r):fl.n, )frxl~I f.-112. l!kc """'-tl800. 673-41'66. ~lAl.E .c;1a111eSf' kll !cn rt'.lr YI' YAWl, ''Nirc" s~.;,111;1f· Trailers, Travel ,.;11lr, Call ll fll'r 4 rim . I 1:rojfl.n •peed ~ booL' ~2' • ARISTOCRATS 6i.'.-ln21. I rni:;uln w/trlr 1500. 17 ( :11 • NEWPORTS :\ SlA:\~ESE f'urrbr<'d ~1 1. ~' l~l.r: Ma~l' O~f'r 20· V1k· , e AlJTO.~Tr..S h'nll. ~rmal""· r, ""rk~ 1,!d In,.:' Sh~rr $! .. j((l 54r,_.1Y.l() At.'W'I, IM!Veral uted $395 A up ~I ~. 1>arti. 979-2170. ___ """kdityll. _____ f.'OP.Sl lAMmAn.ER~ GIFT Idea: PC'r11111n k1 11rn~. 1.'!' Ca l-(.:it lu!lv •·111ririr1I; 27m \V, 17th Strttt rl'I(. purebrtd, \.\'h11r> or c: ll <J ti " h 1 P ,. S 4 0 (). Santa An.a 1114) S.11-S Ml'lkr, m11lr~. 4'r~ l'htl~:T.17-1514 a ll 5 pm 14' Trailer, alHp!ll 4. Ice box. t1~J-.t:Kilif-'.N~. Alv1 ri~ wkr:layt1. h1rxa >Atj!"r lank, 1tove It hrrrf S111.me'!ir, ;>; mfl flld S1!J 17' TA R'r1\:-.:, 1nt:.<J, S "311~. n\'ll'ft, 1lnk &: Iota fll 1toni.1tf' 6-J2-4~1~. 53-t-3-'tl!'~. I racf' "Qfl' . km! mr l•·r. •Oii.Cf' Vf'ry clran $.'195. ---lach. tl"1J'h A<lr., llUrrhd l;;r t"rarru! hllch l wllh tanJue Dogs 154 W.a1, $'1YIJ 4!n--7ill. h1rio1 $l1. 637-4156. -----JO ,\1 Dnlh l)itl fl'maJ" lruh r <JP. S;i!,..Jf••hlf' ('111 11 & "-'IS~f-.'RA(;() -17' lf'lf con- Setter. Sh<it•. 1X'd ;J:rt'wl , lru 1Jt•r. $850. <;nod 0Jf!ll. h1lnrd. Only """d 12,00'.> ml. ~-&16-<tl(f.}. C111l ah ll 11rn-S-18-4!Wl $2J!ll, 96l-4198 11.B. ACK Silky Tt"rriC'r pl/fill • Lir>O l~. Perlrrt, Jtaf'f' Auto Service, P•ri• '49 Ma!,. & frm S!•1w qu.\l11y. :-O'lOOllled. Dolly, S950. 644-Z"(l). $12~Sl !'JJ, c11J1 1)75-J<.18.t '55 V\V Truck $.100 ar hHt. * f Vi'OOlrt llke a 1-lwn Cfll-20' Sloop fbrx \11, cah, twr1d, ~ ·~=I f'~u ::ad~ Dt\: ored C.:h!hUllhUt1 PUil!\\. LJo -111. lxtl kr.,I, G HP m!r $5001\\r~M ·6'1 W ' )IOO h!v" OM":_lm>-:11~1 -I S2400 ~~'i90. !1oherk minus •n&o $1& * • AFGJ~AN r up\., 'h>lm-19T2, 1.0' + t:nM'Mda , tuU) 61~3Co82. ••••••••••••••••••• Parad..lle colwnn 11 tor )'OU! "'i th a DAILY PJLC7T PU or Mobile Home u~w. -Everett Studio Pi•no Like 10 trade" OUr 'l"rader'• 1 kUl\ie. •)'OW' truh fl CA.~f 7-14-5 ~ylon JO ply n11na. 5 llom, 5~ lot 5 bucks. Classbed ad. _ : _"_ . ..,, __ 11_1_m_u._t_. _~_U!n __ ,_s_'"'-------~--' pion l lrf"'!. k \I 1 n , ri~l(efl. btaut lnt, ,. trill l ;Pu=1-c-,--o111~, .. ,,....7. •• ~too-.:1.~. ~.,,--,....,­ Sdm4uier Pl.IP' i;i ,...t~fl "ni, 12900 . •II 6 pm. ~3216 V v111 • a.eU thoM btbttt ffll' TIM': "Yellow PYi2~' -cf if;;1~i~~~-Y.atrh Uir "bal'.'.lu". Call O&utbtd du.ti~ • . ~1;;11 QrJ---.; 1101..iSE column 6-0-!J6TJI. , _______ , -- • " Tursday, May lb, 1972 _...... I~ I _...... 1§1 1 -. ... Salo l§l !.__-;;;; .... ;;;; .. ~1§1~1 1 ,_,..... l§J I ---II r;, 11 .,,,.,,.~. 910 -970 A-011<1 _...;,..._·~---Autos. Import.cl 950 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported PEUGEOT 990 Autos, Used· 990 Autos, Imported MUSTANG NOTICf;. arr you havin& ~redh problems for lack or -1• r <' d i 1 , r e pout"sslons, d\\'Oret'll'! I .()an aet )'OU llnanc·cd ,.on a ult'd cor. Som<' '"iBY the)' can, but v.e rlo. Call 9 10 9, 7 d3yS a "'ttk. J)("aler. 833-~. REBUILT , .ford A uto · Trani;;. $35 .• Almost ne\V 1"aco 22 mini·bike • $65. '6J F'ord Country Sia. \\'gn. $300. "j7 VW Sedan • \rery gd. cond. $350. Cail aft 1: 30 pm. 962-3978; Dune ·Byggies 956 CITROEN Citroen Sports Mastratl Orange County beadquarter1 for local & European delivery. J im Siemon• Imports 2201 So. Main, Santa Ana 557-5242 Open Sun. DATSUN * PEUGEOT * As low as $2.299. <No . 5545) TR.IT': \\I ARRf."N'S Sport Car ,Center e ORANGE COIJNTY 'S LAJlGESI" 7l01E. 1.st Sf., s·.A. 5-17-01&1 • 1 PORSCHE '11 l)HHn1n 2 dr. &clan Exet"llent roncl. PORSCHE, late 'r.6, S--12, 5 Gets great mlleagt" $12JO. tipd, AJ\1/F:\1. Slate gray. Phone 64.\--8581 lmma~< $2,900. 6 7 5-5 31 9 eves: 2U/&:;s--7731 days. -· 1967 DATSUN pick u Jl VOLKSWAGEN CADILLAC FORD 'Qi VW VAN, new p.Alnt, lj(ll) cc;..1 engine. 1ituat sell. • 1970 l\.1averick, 4 speed Rm. Leaving country. $893 Or .S~lal -;1,395 or leaM, best cash offer, call bt'twn 6 $39,95. & s. 536--2.143 ask for Fred. Pocai Leqlng · 5-18-115.l 1968 V\V Bug. Sunroof YOUR ONLY " '65 Ford Station \Vagon, A)f/l-~M radio, nu ti~s. ~ FACTORY Cntry Sedan, .S-175, 5-lS-2314 X'ltll running cond. ;!f.JO. AUTHORIZED dy, 833-3496 eves aft 6. &IM99t uli<r 6 pm. . CADILLAC •;1 FORD WAGON WANT E O DEALER As is! Transmission VW Bus or Bug, running or Largest sel~tlon of C8dil· good. $65. 646-56.24 not, p1·eferably not. 548-5380. lacs in Orange County. MAVERICK ·so BUG, good cond. New ~'!·Leasing. Look for our1 _________ _ bN.ke1, just tuned. $500. 1 paee ads e>CO' ·Wed. '70 Maverick, R/H, low mi. 49-l-M76, room 308. & Friday tor our specials. Xlnt cond $1600 Nabers Cadillac '536-n;; 'Gl ~!UsrANG 289, au\o, PIS. Very Cd. Cond $T"JCI. 552-7896 OLDSMOBILE '66 OLDS F-85 Holiday Cpe, auto trans .. R&H, alro extra ·sharp! $775. Pvt 1»1.rly. J;>ays 673-8655, Ml-5585. . '67 Delta 88 auto, PIS, PIB. R&H, A/C, nu tires. Very gel cond. S 1095. 546-7326. v.•/camper shcll. Ex c e J '70 Porsche 9TTT ~I Dunebuggy, Co r v ai r Cond. • · Stereo, Mags, Private Party, p\1•r'd, reblt eng & trans. 557·84-13 /557-4237 DRys 839·9560, aft 5 - '6.S Y.\V, ttbuill engiM, 2600 HARBOR_ BL., flolloy bll. H"nl ~Ml. , COSTA MESA MERCURY '68 Glds 4 Dr .. aulo. R.~11, tinted glass, air. Gold $1350. Ph: 546-2562. J~lu FG bo<ly. COfil ovf'r" =~--=-----.~-8.TI-3155. $1800 Jst $950 takes, 833-8996 '72 new Datsun pick-up I ---.ffi"-P-o-rsc_h_o91_1 __ $87j. 646--0438. 540-9100 Open Sunday --------- '65 Volks :sedan. Perfect. "BILL \\!J-IlTUDGES'' '69 Mereury ~targuis Colony PONTIAC alt 5_ Lease or buy. $69.9:i/mo. Pocai Leaslnl':' 54S-,l 155. SUN ROOF S2ROO. "67 un 1600 4 door or !Jt'S~ oiler, 968-?192 S"5 1= 3200 SI N port S M Prk: Sta \Vgn, Lime Grn &a~h."673-0717 3°ft 6.e"' unset otors f.fetall !c, Loaded, Top Cond, '69 Executive \Vagon. 962 -.-.,-Do<-1,-,-.. -"'-l,.-lru-,-:k.-c:i:'...<omRtic r/h good cond. PDRSC11E 914 • '71. Xlnl. , J\1any recent repairs. $600/or offer. 5-1&-4-178 ask 14 ,000 mi. Blaupunkt radio, . • •. O~E COUNTY Still under Warranly Pvt · k ,· 28 000 • 0 • VIV BUS crpl mg • pwr., air, rac , pos. , .,.. . -. • ATION Pty, "'IC'''\ 642-7984. 0 ·"'161' -1~ 1~ , , g, "' <..:..::..:..,~:=:::;,,::;:::.:~--n1iles. Jmmac. o'fU""" •• pa . ..,""· JVV • • 166 XKE Roadster $2795 1-$750/bcst offer. 557-2127. LocaJ one owner car wtth MUSTANG '69 FIREBIRD, auto trans, 111.i;.klng $400. or best ol!ET. for Linda. npp group. $4250. 673--0101 . 54.µ)926 * 673-9183 '6'i Dal sun 1600 Hrdtp, mag!!, RENA UL 1 '70 V\V Sedan. Excellent con-25,000 actual miles. 4 speed, I·.---------air cond, '.)(Jnt cone!. Call aft dition. Many Extras ;1600 or chrome wire',wls., and near 65 !"f_ustang V-3. Auto. R~. 6 p.m., 673-8784 or 557--4029 '71 El Camino. SS, air, auto, nu radials. Xlnt cond. Olr. radial!!, all xtra~. Like nc.'W. (Zlll 592-2752. Renault Sales & Service Musi sell. 546--326'.i. ·"69~Dc-,-.,-,-,~,~JOc-,-,,....""1...,..-n-,-w· lror over a decade in Orat1ge g?0£1 oUer. 548-1750. new radials. #RVK193. Original O\vner. 54,000 mi. '71 Pontiac Ca I a. Ii n a '70 SQUARE BACK , Phone 6-45-6677 );;;6'6-=2348""'·.,,...,,.,-,.,..-~ Brougham. 15,000 milt's. All A~u-to~L-.-.-,71n_g ___ "'9"64~ I paint !-tire~. 39,000 miles. County $700. 833-93.",9. Serv. Dept. Open ti! 8 p.m. 1970 Harbor Blvd. :'dUSTANG '66 xlnt cond. extraS-:full p11.T. PfOO. Pt·i. slick, r/h $1785; 839-8305 Costa Mesa _.P/S, R/tf, $800. Pri P ty. p!y. 536-3856/6'15-0051. 1965 Bus 1600 en g 1 n e' MUST SACRIFICE! 1972 El '644-lS69. I ~~-=:,T;·~B~l;R~DC::::C:....- Try our lease experts for Savings • Satisfaction • Ser· vice. \VE L&\SE ALL POPULAR 1972 l\IAKES AT CO~IPETI· TIVE R~TES. Cali f.1aJcotm Reld for further detail~. THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 Harbor Blvd. Co!!:ta !\1e.sa 642-0010 Autos Wanted 968 WE buy all make• of clean used sports can, paid for or not.. Please drive in for free a)1praisa.I. · ' NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. Coast Hwy., Newport Beach ' 642-9405 WE PAY TOP CASH tor used can A trucks, ,f\1lt call u1 fClt free est1matt1. GROTH CHEVROLET AU t« Sales Manacer lmI Beach Blvd. Hwitinetcm Bcaeb 847.6087 IQ "'331 \VE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOil TOP USED CARS It your car is extra clcun, sec u11; first. BAUER BUICK 2925 llarbor Blvd. Costa l\1csa 979-2500 ThIPORTS WANTED Orange Counties TOP I BUYER Bil..L :r.tAXEY TOYOTA 18881 -Beach Blvd. R. Beach. P~. 847-8555 \VILL Buy your car paid for or not. Call Ralph Gordon G73-0900 -445 E. Coast ll"'Y· Nc11·port Bench. \\IANTED: '68 f.lustang or Couj\ar ·with air. ~lust be clean & reas. 537-2096. Autos, Imported 970 ALFA ROMEO , ____ ... __ Alfa Romeo J'\O\V ON DISPLAY Sales Service I Parts Body Shop COAST IMPORTS I lOIJ0.1200 \V. Coast 1-hvy. I ~~~=·:ME;;~ I 'R~ Auslin AmericA Rulo, 1 nulw!>:. Xlnt rood'. Sl9j. Call 968--37·13. AUSTIN HEALEY AUSTIN HEALEY Sharp! $800. '11: 6.J6-5S48 * BMW IMMEDIATE DELIVERY & 3000 SEE rs ABOUT Overseas Del iverv CREVIER MOTORS 20E \\', Js1 & •. ::'\nt& AN 135-3171 \"isil our ne~· home! & ROY CARVEi, inc. %34 £. 17th SI. Costa l\ll'sa . 546-4444 ' · \V h t t t Dephanls" oper. runnittc )'CUI' bou• f Tum thtrn ll'lto "'C.ASll" -ldl them thru Dally P 11 o I O.Ultled. 6U-56i3. • '70 T-Bird Monday '70 Datsun P.U. with large Jim Slen1ons Renault Schrll Camper. Good cOncl. 2201 So. l\Iain, Santa Ana Top Shape! $1175 Call 675-5ll6 Dorado, tull equip. 2000 mi. J\tuSTANG '66 :dnt cond. $8CXXI. TI4:545--fl510. PIS, Rnt. $800. Pri Pty. $1::..50. 646-2836 aft 1i: 30. I blk. north of \Varner FIAT Service Dcpartmer1t 546-4U4 e '67 V\V FASTBACK * $1.0j(}. Clean. Good cond. S.18-5610 after 6 p.m. new tires. Beautiful Cond. '69 Red l\.1ustang -Mach I, $UX>. 645--0826. p/s, p/b , tape dk. Full ·ts Cad Cp. deVille. Lo mi's, 6U-l869. Full pwr -ne1v tires -lo miles -Every pos. Extr-.J. incl. tape dee. Pref, Cond. 1 ov.1ner, 644-0307. Sale!! Department 557-5242 '68 Fi11t Kil Spider: good cond S700. Please call aft 6 pin. 979-0018. R-15 '66 V\V StatiQn \Vagon. Good condition. Clean! $925. * $2-3822 CAMARO Pr1oe 11525. m-1092 ait 6. _________ 1 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used HONDA NEW Honda 600 Sedan. Great mileage. Perfect for 2nd CRr. l\1ust sell. A!!lking $1300. 673-8364 aft 6 pm. JAVALIN '69 Javelin \18, power steerl.nS?. factory air, pow('r steering, real clean j770FC $1495 .PUil Leiai& W VO.LYO . 1966 Harbor, C.lot 640-9303. MAZDA ROTARY'S First Showing USA Test Drive Jim Slemons Renault 2201 S. Main 557-5242 TOYOTA '72 TOYOTA $2029 4 speed trans. Dix Arif radio. Jicatcr. delroiters, tinted glass. While \\'all tires. Pop-out rear \vindows. Vinyl tri1 n. Carpets. Front disc brakes. Reclining bucket scats. KE :?Q.300785. J)m le.wi& -TOYOTA 1966 Harbor, C.~1. 646-9303 '70 TOYOTA STATION WAGON Ne\v ear trade in. 4 i;peed, l'adio, & heater. 74SBZU. $1495 Santa Ana Toyota Service dept. open 7: ?11 am 'til 9 pm Monday thru Fri· <la). PHONE 540-2512 417 \V. \Varner, Santa Ana ~lllT\lllS VOLVO 1972 VOLVO Lease Today •t Best Rates $88. 74 Per Mo. O.A.C. MI/flf, Auto. trans., disc brak.e.~. 36 mo. For Leasing or buying :OU!l ltwi4 -VOLVO . 1966 Harbor, C.?i.1. ~9303 Autos, UMCI 990 AMERICAN American Motors J<o"Gremlins ....-Hornets ...,.,Matadors J<o"J•velins J,Jllll Ambassadors !luge stock of •n·s &: '72'1 Big-Big Savings Harbor American Home of Convenient Payments 1969 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa ~61 BUICK '70 CAMARO 350 V8. -4 speed, radio, heater, vinyl roof, bucket seals (961· AVB). $2295. Tommy Ayres Chevrolet, 946 S. Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach . -49-4-77441546-9967. Camara '69 SS Lo mileage. Top coDdition. 4 new tires. Priced to Sell. Pri/pty 673-6806 '68 Camaro 396 SS. Rblt., 4 spd. Ne1v niags a n d Goodyears. Gauges, a i r shocks, CusL inL $169!J. ~. '67 camaro V-8. a.uto, many xtru, Looks a: runs aood! 54tl-ro48. CHEVROLET OLD but still GOOD! '61 C\1e\'Y "'1agon \vlth 283 engine -runs good. Good \''ide oval tires. Needs head gasket. ;100. 67~134:i eves & "'kends. 1966 NOVA Stat. \\·gn. Auto. P S-1 u g gage rack-tinted gi&M. crig, OWDH' -~. ~14. '70 !\lonte Carlo, orig onr, 28,000 mi/atr/sltreo/i:nvr cond. $2950. \\"kdy 547--689'J, , 1' ""5' met•n '66 Riviera. t-ui1 po"·er. Nu eves 673-3745. I Toyota & Jaguar Dealer Authorized Sales & Srrvice • 900 S. Coast llij;h\ray lircs. Sharp! 2957 Croftdon St .. C.l\.I. 546-3949. ·~.~~al~, ~d95~. hrd~•nauto, r.otn, air, 4"' • 645-4vw ask ·53 Buick Skylark convt, for Ed Joffe. Laguna Beach 540-3100 50.000 mi. x.lnt c o n d , I ··"s:;~-"'Chevo---,~u.~d,..el'"W<-,~300~,~dr $500/make ofr. 8.37-8497 ata wgn. u is $3501bat otter TRIUMPH CADILLAC 645--. *TRIUMPHS* '71 CLOSEOUT SPITFIRES AS LO\V AS $2399 GT-6 SAVE $500 FRITZ \V ARR EN'S '7(1 Sedan de Ville Cad. E.x· eculive model • Loaded! Xlnt cond. Mwt sell, ne"' car coming! Days &12-1202 Nights, 846-1492. Sport Car Center '69 RED 280 "sL=.=,,".,,=,d",""1o RANGE c OUN Ty. s 46,<XXl mi. Best cond. LARGEST 'il SED de Ville, lthr seats, Ai\f/F).I stereo, vinyl lop. new tires. loaded '''/all xtras. lo book, S55iOO firm. Dys 5.12-3338 Eves 54.>--4305 SiOOO. 714: 889--0003 710 E. ~I, S.A. ~7--076-l 1968 2so SL VOLKSWAGEN ~!UST SEU. -Fleetv.'Ood \Vh ite-red int. Low miles. 21 ---------- 1 •~1v 1912 VIV s"~" "-olle. Brm. loaded, st ere o, top!!·Rea lx>nuly-pl'i lpty. '~"' ·-· ""' t 1 .~ blk /·"-I \Vhite, A)1/Fl\L 1250 miles. e e"' ..... ne, ''' ... ..,,y tp, $5500. Day 547-5832/E\'C X1 lthr, int., $6950/bst o[r. ~46-2439. • nt cond. ?<.loving, inust 833-8780 MG '6.i :'llG. unn1ac con d . , A:\f/F'i\I rt1d .. chnn \\"lt"e 11·hls.. 2nd O\\'IK'r. $i;(l, &l+.84iJ. MGB '69 MGB, xlnt cond. $.1650. S35-S307 bef 4:30 i\IGB '63, ne1\' pa.int, seats, radial~. f'Xtras. Xlnt cond. S{).j(}. S-16-:>7:2. sell. $2200. 673--0.J.13. ==~~=~--~- • 71 V\V BUS CADILLAC '69 Cpc De Ville Lo miles. xlnt con d . 18,000 miles, cl('an! '' IF 1 8 1 $2600 * 546-3379 · 1 ;.. !<tereo rack, full ==~=-:-::;_:::::.:'::.· -~ Pl\T. $399:i. 675-&169 'ii POP TOP Camper, red. "71 Cad Coupe DeVille, blue Al\.l/ff.1, tent, xlnt cond. w/\\•ht vin. top. Fully .i2-800t, \ . I Pvt t '" ~0 -equip . . p y. ....,~ '68 VW BUG. Xlnt cond. Ne11.· dars. 58&-2517 evelwknds. tires &. paint. Best oUer. ,68 CADILLAC Sedan n.. -494-5m. ~ Ville, all po\ver, IE.'nlher, stereo, Tie\v tires, immac. 126.'JO. 64~247:> 196j Cadil!Ac deVille, excel. cone!., all pov.·er, air. $1.100. CHEV '66 Caprice. 4 Dr std. AIC, P\\-r window. Vinyl top. Sgl. owner. 548-6111. ·~ VAN Chevy !Kl, big 6, mags, Cfl>td &: paneled, $1500 or best offer. 646-1840. CONTINENTAL 1971 CONT. -4 dr sedan, air, full power, Michelins, 8500 ml, AM/FM stem>. Under warranty. \\'ell under Blue Book. 64Z-4100. '71 Continental :r.tark Ill Loaded. one owner, private party. 714: 4gg...1s54 . CORVAIR '63 CORVAlR Spide r \\'/turbo chlll'gtr & 4 spd, CO!ll1lit reblt eng incld nu eluteh. $400 or bst oiler. 645-1805 or see at 1946 \Vallace No. l, C.M. 19&1 Corvalr. Good Condition. $300. 84&-4187 CORYmE It's aJ\1·ny~ the r1g:ht tin1e ,t, ttl11·ays !hf' right place ii )'Oil \1-ant RESULTS? C:tll 642-5678 &: place that ad today! 'iO Squareback. auto, r;irl10. nu hrks.. BEST OF'FER TAKES! 962-9639. Daily Pilot \Vant bargaim galore. 0',.''~m~. _&~l&-~~~'~·~--~-i '69 Corvette, blue $3-195. 23» '71 EL OOR.4.DO. \\"ht. Ian-mi. Mag \\"heels, l'"ide ovals, dau top. lthr, all f:li:tras! JU rear end. F\llly equip! $6.950. 12,000 mi. 64~2fi66. '427 eng. 642--0330 aft 6. .. ,. EDSEL A Oassic '58 Edsel Citation, full power. air. Xlnt mech cond. 67H766. FORD e 171 Ford Torino • -4 door sedan. Rad/air/ pwr steer/disc bnJces. De ed. "·kdays only, 8-5. 546-7Z77 "10 Ford Station \Va.goo Fa.ir- la.ne 500, Z1 ,000 miles, 3 year warranty avail. $2000-Priced to sell! 962-1687. "69 Ford-LTD Brougb- 4 dr hardtop-air, atereo, new tirH, excel cond. llSJ). SIMO!)! '63 FORD Gal XL 4 Dr. hrdtp, 1teerUw. tnket, air, xlnt cond. $f75. 968-'°9 aft 6, '70 Blue MaYtrkk, fact alt, new Um:, tlnJ:td &IHI. well c&l"ed fur. llSJl, 549-1362. •&l FORD FaiJ1ano • dr. V4. UH. stick. Good v."Ork car. pio, MS-35lll, '67 Toni. LTD. f'llll sio--<tr, air, ltG'fO, hnmac f'ODd ! i1m 0ne ...... ..,.111SJ. .. WE'RE MOVING UNBEATABLE PRICES UNBEATABLE SAVINGS EVERY CAR MUST GO '69 ~?.~~ Mo;.,. A;, c.,d • $725 Po l•r• 440 CID lot. ;s 1 '66 CHEVY El Camino. Auto. Trans, Mechanics Speci•I. (T81075) '67 '65 '64 '62 '67 '63 '66 '70 CADILLAC S•d•n D•Vill•. Full pow•r, •i• conditioning. IXWT l791 DODGE 6 ~.Ton PU IS57119J N1w Tir11. DODGE 6 Pickup I N94 7791 Utility l o• ECONOLINE Pickup Utility lox IOAR l671 DODGE 4 Dr., V-1 , Air Concf. IDLR94l51 opoGE SEO. V-1 , R1d io. Hir•l•r, Auto, T r•n1. I IZF24tl l $1895 $785 $745 $695 $650 $425 ~10:.:~~~. ~~~.v. $1095 Now p•;•t, l op. t,1..,051 ~Lo~~cO~~~ •. ~~.RPV,., s900 P.I., R, H. IPK4LOD20099l) '59 CHEVY Utility Picliup. Work Hori•. (644491 1 $495 '67 '67 '70 '64 '66 .. '62 '64 '72 '56 $475 ~~~nl~~V~~-Full $2095 , .............. ,;., l•ncf•u. IOllAEKI OPEL 4 Speed. lllODTXI ~Li~?.~A~~Cood. Rod;o, s325 He•ter, Auto Tr•n1 .• V.I, N•w P•int ln1id• •nd Out. .) f Pic4 I l00200990l CADILLAC CPE. $695 Full Power, Air. IDPFll71 CADILLAC $1095 s.d .. o.vm •. f,11 ''""· Air. ISZH4lll IMPALA 4 Or., ,\ufo. Tt•ni., Air Cond. ILVF559l MERCURY ... ir, P.S. IDLRMJ51 DUNE BUGGY f41r9~l51 MERCURY COUPE ,\uto. Tr•n1., Nie• C11. C P2U4561 $455 $395 $1095 s299 '65 DODGE $695 MONACO Club Cp1., Full pow1r, ,;, corw:f, IRP1'220 1 RENAULT '67 '63 4 Dr., Air Co11d., Auto. Tr1nt., Mech•11ic Sp•ci•l. IVDSOSI FORD Sh•tp, f\111 Pew•r, Air Col\d. IFM&!51tl rrtc. he4 1'" W-4:, MIY 11, 1t7J 2100 HARBOR ILVD. COSTA MESA . f I • 1 I ' 7 1 l I ' I ' 7 .. .,----'I -"~--r ~---. --• ' San Clemenie -· ' Capisirano ./ EOITIPN . VOL. 65, NO. 137, 3 SECTIONS, <42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, .CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1972-. Connally Resigns , I Secretary :of as WASHINGTON (UPI) -Treasury Secretary John B. Connally, a longtime po"!er. in Texas Democratic politics, resigned his Cabinet pest today with a strong hint he will campaign for Presi- dent Ni.Ion'! re-election in November. Standing side tby side in the \Vhite House Press Room, Nixon and Connally exchanged praise for each other's performan~ in the 17 months the Texan has been in the Republican ad- ministration. Asked if he \vould actively \York on Nix- on's behalf in the Coming~ampaign. Con- nally replied , "That is entirely possible." Nixon ~nnounced that he w a s nominating George P. Shultz, head of the Office of ~1~nagement and Budget, lo iucceed Connally, who will stay on until Shultz i& confirmed. As Shultz's successor as ·head of 0~18, Nixon picked Shultz's top assistant, Caspar W. Weinberger, a former California legislator and one -time California Republican chairman. Connally said he has "no plans whatsOever" for his immediate f1.1ture. Last week, Coiinally, the on I y, Democrat in Nixon's cabinet. told newsmen he was "not in the process of changing parties" but added "the possibijily certainJy exists that I could do so." "I hnve nothing but the profoundest ad- ace Noveniber Ballot? miration for the President," Connally said today. "He has my complete support • _ . I don't know that I've ever worked with anyone more dedicated and more disciplined than is the present President of the United States.'' 1 There was speculation last year that Connally might be selected by Nixon to replace Vice President Spiro T. Agnew on the 1972 ticket. The President Indicated strongly a few months ago that he saw rlo need for dropping Agnev;•. · Connally was asked today if he would accept the vice presidential nomination on the ticket if asked. He replied he \Vould not engage in such speculation but added he did not think • I , such an offer would come. ''I have oo political aspirations and no particular ambitions," Connally said. Nixon was equally unstinting in his praise of Connally, describing him as the architect of the Ad~nistration's ne'v economic programs of price and wage controls to curb innation, and drastic moves to strengthen the dollar abroad. Nixon describtd Connally as "a tower of strength for the President" .and particularly the recent d e c i 1 I o n s regarding the Vietnam war. "When the goin~ 'is the tpughcst, Secretary Connally 1s at his best." the President declared. Shultz v.·as a member or Nixon's original cabinet as l....llbor Secrelflry and became the first director or the reorganized Office Of Management and Budget, a pov;•erful post \\·hich won him the unofricial title of "general manager of !he United States." Connally himself forcstiado"'ed hi~ resignation in thi.-past~cveral 1nonlhs ·by talking about his desire lo return to • private IUe. Just after his 58th birthday on Feb. 27 , he told reporters : "I've spent most or JTI}' adult tifr in public service , .. and no1v 1'1n lirrd. 1 v.·ant to do some other things.'' Nixon said Shultz" for1ner dean the • • • • • , .. •• Today's Ffnal N.Y. Steeks -TEN CENTS f.raduelc Srhoo! of 8 us I n t I s Administrntion .at tht' Unlverslly of Chicngo, 11°11!1 the "only cnndidntr" con- :1idered 10 succeed Connally. "He is an econon1ist but one that h:i~ sho1~·n grt'nt skill in manngement ," Nlxon :.:nid of Shultz. Tht pros1X'Ctive return of Connally into Texas polit ics on Nixon 's behalf would provide ;i lift to Jhe President 's ch11.nce.• of capturinc the stole's clcctornl votes 11, No\'rn\bt'r. no n1Rtlrr \\'ho I h·e Oen1ocratir nominee might be. In the 1968 cler tion, Nixon nnrrO\\'IY lost Texns to 0<-n10C'rilt I lubcrt H. Jlu,n1phrry. Governor Supporters · Push Coastline Issue ·'Favored' By L. PETER Kl\IEG Of tM 0.llY .. Oft 1"!11 A crucial state senate coq:imitlee vote Moo!l•Y that virtually killed tough coastline control legislation has ap- parently triggered all-out efforts by CaWomia environmenlalists to get the coastal protecUon issue on lhe November balloL "The legis1ature has failed and I hope the people Y."OO't1" Jaid Janet Adams, an * * * Solons Okay New Public Access Bill The state constitutional amendment that would requ ire all private waterfront land owners to grant public access to th~ beaches has passed the California Assembly and is now before the senate. ••it wCJ1Jld require all private property owners, like the Balboa Bay Club, Cameo Shores or anyone, to provide public ac- .cess through their p r o p e r t y , ' ' Assemblyman Robert Badham ( R • Newport Beach), said today. Badham said the measure sailed through the Assembly . He :said it "aneaked through" on a 59 to 4 vote. "A few of us found out about it at the last minute but we on1y had time to vote against it." Badham declared. If it gets by the Senate, the measure would go on the November ballot, Badham said. The coll.!titutional amendment biUed as an "environmental policy declaration" ls sponsored by live assemblymen including Alan Sieroty (0-Beverly Hills) whose strong coastal preservation bill is racing a tough test in the legislature. According to Badham. the con. stitutional amendment, ACA 48, has received virtually no notDriety to date and he OOesn't understand or know why. Among other declarations about the need for ecological concern the con- troversial article slates : "Any person or corp:>ration claiming or possessing frontage or tidelands -of the harbor, bay, inlet, estuary or other navigable waterway may not exclude right--0f-way to Uiat \\'ater when it is re- quired for a publlc purpose, or destroy or obstruct free navigatioMl'f the water. "The Legislature shall enact statutes that give these provision& the most Ubtral construction so that access to the many waters .shall always bt obtainable by the people." The little-known mfesure was totally unknown to State Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R-Newport Beach) whose own coastline management bill passed the Senate Natural Resources Committee Monday. "He read it for the ·nnt time this morning. Then he paled,'' old an akk RlcNrd Rohrbach. "He'll not support It ti all," Rohrbach asld adding that C.rpenltr lortsaw tt having a.s tough a time as the coastline bill co<outhored by Sleroty and--S.nator Donald Grunskv (R-Wa1ac>nvllle J. - Gninsl\y'• bill wu In effed killed hr tht natural resources panel Monday .• officlil of the California Coastal Alliance. Her words ca.me after the stroog measure· co-authored by Senator DQnald Grunsky (R-·Watsonville..) and Assemblyman Alan •ieroty (D-Beverly Hills) was rejected on4a 4 to 4 vote of the senate's natunl resources corrunittee. Grunsky chose not to seek a second vote Jn the measure when the full nine- member panel was present later in the day. A coastal bill sponsored by State Senator Dennis Carpenter (R-Newport Beach) that is .aimed at preserving local government control as well as the en- vironment was passed by the panel, however, on a 5-3-1 vote. Carpenter's bill now goes to the senate finance committee. Mrs. Adams has strong criticism for this measure. ''It's worse than wotthless. It's destructive. It's a builders bill." she said. SieroLy himself agreed wiUi the ap- praisal and lashed out at the building trades for opposing his bill. "'lf they were asked to build something on tog of Half Dome in Yosemite, they'd say •fine'," Sieroty said. Under the Sieroty-Grunsiy measure. \\'hich is technically still alive, there would be one slate board and six regional boards with veto power over any develop- ment within 1,000 yards of the beach front . Carpenter's measure establishes one 15-member state agency that would be given three years to formulate a coastal land use plan developed from Weal governments' concepts of how their areas shoUld be handled. During those three years, any develop- ment that would cut down the size of public beaches or available public access properties would be forbidden . After three years. the board's \•eto power would be expanded to review all developments approved by iocal agencies and approve or reject them within 30 days of their passage. The Sleroty-Grunsky bill would have had a much more stringent permit system _during the period .in which the state board would prepare a statewide plan for development criteria. Democratic Senator George Zenovich of Fresno, considered the swing vote on both bills, said he cast a negative ballot on the Sieroty-Grunsky measure because it attacked local governments' power. Zenovich agreed the building trades' opposition influenced h.is vote. "I can't discount their prevalence on me," he said, "but that wasn't the speciUc reason I voted against it. It was the local government issue." On the Assembly side Sieroty's com- panion 'Jill is still alive and awaiting ac- tion by the ru11 assembly after clearing its own rounds of committee hearings. Sieroty this morning said he plans to brlng Jt up but consldt.ring the senate 's action on the Grunsky bill he figures his measure will get the same treatment If It ever got that far. Sieroty said u the carpenter bill i• passed by the .. nait he woold tctlvely -campelgn to deft.at the meaaure ln the lowcrhoust. Legislator! voting ~" on th< Gl'llmky bUI were Senators John Nejedly (R· WelnUI Creek); Peter Behr (R.1iburon); Arlen Gregorio (D.san Mateo) and Robert La&omanlno (11.()j&I ). . The no .. ta wen Carpenter. Ralph Dills (R-Lclo Anpleo): Jamn Wedw<irtb (0.11.,rtborne); and 1.eno'vich. • DAILY .. ILOT lft,, "IM!t Newport Center Crash The driver of this van, Douglas Aunger, 29 or 34095 Beach Road, Capistrano Beach, is· in "critic~ but stable" condition today at Hoag Hospital in New· port Beach. Aunger's van reportedly struck the side of a heavy trash truck driven by David Escal· ante, 21, in Newport Center, Newport Beach Mon- day. Escalante escaped with only • btuise. Police are investigating the accidertt. Capistrano's Trustees Hear Budget. Probkms By PAl\fELA HALLAN 01 '" o.uw "Uot 11111 Severe budget problems that could turn into a disaster if North American Rockwell sells its Laguna Niguel plant to the U.S. Government were described to trustees of the Capistrano linified School District fi.tonda y. The Sl0,489,218 "tentative, preliminary budget". which Is up about St milUon over last year's adopted budget, calls for a l!k:ent tax increase in the permissive areas for non-educational programs man- dated by 1he state. "Our educational program remains in- tact this year but we will have 1tvere cutbacks in all other areas," said Superintendent Truman Benedict, who reminded the board that he did not think the 56-cenl tax override will be enough for the next three years. Assistant Super intendent Sam Chica!! added that the budget include!! $200,000 from the North American Rockwell plant. IS.. BUDGET, Page ZJ Board Ol{s Park Plans; Bid Opening Set June 12 · PJ;:ins and specification! for the pro- posed 167-acre Laguna Niguel ~gional Park wert approved today by the Orange County Board of Supervisors and June 11 was set as the date for opening bids on I.be tl.2 million project. Board members also •pproved negolil· tions or an agreetne.ot for purchase of ef· fluent water from the Moulton Niguel Water District. Flood control district cltief engineer George Osborne wos asl«d to · participate .lo the negotlatioo1 !or purchase or the '(tdoimed ...... watu. lie had comp It ltd ii report on Ibo ,...,.1 subJec:t last year.· ' The regional park. on land donaltd by the Laguna Nigutl Corporation, 11 localed on the west 1ide of La Paz Road, north ot Crown Valley Parkway. Original plans completed In 1.970 can for picn ic and play areas, boating and fishing In the 68-a~re Jake, restrooms, roads and parking areas. ConstrucUon of the new J>3rk was delayed last June by the board al the suggest.ion of fifth District Supervisor Ronald W. C3spers of Newport Beach, 11becau1e of the slowed development of the arta and the problems witb the v .. cant Nortb Americ•n Rockwell plant l'learby." A low bid al thal lime was eight per· ttnt oftr1tstim1tt1 and oonsttuct'°'1 was tabled u Caspers requested. Original plans for the rtgional park had bttn ap- proved on Dec. 22, 1970. New Bare-bones Budget Released To.,.Councilmen San Clemente City Manager Ken Carr today released the city's preliminary budget for the coming year -a tradi· tionally bare-boneJ version showing $31787.487 in income and expenses. It will.be up to the city' council in study sessions during the coming weeks to determine how much more the document should contain. Thus far , Carr said today, few capital Improvement projects and virtunlly no salary increases for any city employcs are included. The City Manager a*led that because of little new city income and greater city expenses in employe benef its any new projects ~'Ould either ha ve to be funded through tax increases or the further tap- ping of the city's Unancial reser vrs. Carr said that urging by department floods as well as the general public for several capital improvement project11 could not be accommodated in the balanced budget. J{owever, !here are a few project11 for the coming fi.5cal yenr wh ich could he financed In the document .as It appears in the preliminary stage!: ' -Replicen1ent of worn pier piling• al a cost of about $l5.000. -Reconstruction of a triangle of 1trttl! inland of North Beach under 1 malchl;&·fund grant project with the CoUnty lof Orange -West Pico , Boca de la Playa and Estacion at the clly cost of $48,398. -Repfactment and addition lo the clty'1 rolling $tock at• cost of '5.',728. -New wattt main IRStallatkiM aDd repla~ment of older mains for s-M.412. --O>nstructlon •long lht cit"' aeled IS.. COUNCIL, Pace tJ In 2 States SILVER SPRINGS, Md. (A P) - George·C. Wallace, shot down at nn eltr• tion·eve campaiRn rally, today fought to regain use of his para lyzed 1£'gs but vowed to conth1ue seeking the pre~i· dency in a wheelchair if necessary. Doctors said Wallace Is under sedation because of pain from his multlpl• wounds, including a bullet that remain!t lodged egain11t bis lower 11pine, but in no immediate danger ol death. 'T'hey wouldn't predict whether he 'll walk again. Today, President Nixon of re red \Yallace full facilities of Walter Reed Medical Center. "I can assure you Gov. Wallace i1 receiving the best medical care," Nixon said at the White llouse. Charged with the shooting is Arthur J-lerman Bremer, 21, a white man \Vhc> reportedly followed the \Vall ace cam- paign for some time. l·le was held i11 $200.000 bail today by a U.S. magistrate. llis family and aQuainlances in hi!t home town of Mil waukee sa id they could supply no motive for the shooting. (See related story, Page 4) \Yallace wa.'!: hit several time s ~londay by point-blank pistol shots fired in the mid!lt of a crowd at a shopping center in Laurel, Md. Three others also were wonded, tone critically. Voters in Maryland and ~1ichigan balloted today in primaries that Wallace i11 favored to win. thus making a high point in his campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination. Doctors said at 5 a.m. PDT thr1t Wallace had come through the night in good spi rits despite his pain . "lie says It hurts, and he:'s feeling fine." said Dr: Joseph Schanno. Schanno listed Wallace's condition R!'I critical. At 9 a.m. a hospital spokesman safd his condition was unchanged. Wallace Is in the intensive care ward or Holy Cross Hospital. A spokesman said well·wishers have sent SO to 60 ar· rangements of flowers, and that f\1rs. \Vallace requested that i)eople find some other way to express their C-Oncern. Doctors aal~ Wallace, 52, was h1l by four or five bullets. Only two lodged 1n his body. One was removed from around h11 (See WALLACE, Page%) Oru1e Coan Weatller Cooler temperature" arc ex- pecied along the Orange Coast on \Vednesda)'. with wn~hlne in the 11fternoon. llighs at the beach~. 62 rising to 72 Inland. Lows In the W's. INSIDE TOPJ\ l' Arth1.1r BrtNr. alliQed a.•· sall1111t of Gov. \VaLlttce, u clt· !Criberl a.t "cal\f11led," and .. a loner." lliA father sa11_. he m 1.1.ft be sick. See 1!orlet. photos on Pao• 4. L.M. ''"'' I ,.,.,... . tlttllf!M »M (-In II t,..,,..,.. 11 O..lllt H .. l•Ut It '"""'-4 '•" ' 11\ttrl•fM*lt " PlMMt ... U ,.., ............. It ..... _ ,. A• L"""" 11 Mrf~ \I Mill\Oll """' " ........ , "'"" . Ot-CW9IY '' ....,,, 1&-11 . ttedl ,._r\4'JI If-II Ttlt•ll..., 1t .,.....,.,, " WMl!Mr • Mtltl WWI M ...,,.._.., ...... \).14 Wlflill "'"" • ' Polic e1nan .Clemente P.,,,,.. .Questwned Condominium ... Suspect Request S ated \ KALAMAZOO. Mich. !UPI) -The ' stBpect in th~ shooting of Alabama <io''· George C. Wallace was questioned as a "sU!plciou.s per!t<>n" by police prior to a Wallace rally here last Saturday, pollct said today. But he was not held, Police said. Deputy Police Chief Orville Ragan said 11 has been confirmed that the man po\lce talked to Saturdaf afternoon was ArUwr llerman Bremer, 21, of Milwaukee, who has been charged in the shooitng of \\'alJQce Monday ln Laurrl. Md. Ragan said a police officer questioned Dremer after poll~ received a tip about a "suspicious person" sitUng in a parked car near the. Kalamazoo Armory where the Wallace rally -his last ln the governor's campaign for the Michigan primary -was held. Ragan said the officer questioned Bremer for about five minute!, ran a check on hb 1968 two-door Rarnbler to see 11 It was stolen and also checked to see ~ If Brvner was wanted by police anywhere . , ''The officer asked him what he was doing," Ragan said'."l ·'It-was raining and the man said he was waiting for the rally to start." Ragan said there was no reason to hold Bremer and that the check made on him was the same police would make Dn a rDutlne traffic stop. After months of delays including in- tricate annexation procedures San Clemente city councllmen Wednesday finally will consider an appllrat1on by a San Leandro businessman for permission td build a major condominium project surrounding Grant 's Plaza shopping center. \V ith' nel\' zoning restriclions now on the books and planning commission con· sidcration complete. councilmen will con· sider the rezoning or the 21 acres belong- ing to E. W.•Rathbun . The businessman, wha successfully an· nexed his parcel into 1he city recently, also will submit a general plan of his proj· ect s ontaining scores of units complete Y<'ith recreational facilities and covered parking areas. The n.ew zoning "·ould be R-3-G (garden apartment). Councilmen expect to grant conditional zoning on the parcel. which would mean that if Rathbun and his developers fail to produce an approved project, the new . zoning \vould be canceJ\ed. Other items confront iflg councilmen at the 7:30 p.m. meeting ihctude : -An annual request from the South Coast Area Boy's Club for permission to use Old Plaza Park June 15. 16 and 17 for an annual fund-raising carnival with rides and booths, Similar requests in the past have been denied because of complaints by nearby residents, \Vho assert that noise from the annual activity constitutes a nuisance. -A rcq at from Mr. and Mn. Robert C. Hart r city approval:"'ol the transfer of 1he lease for the pier-end tackle con· c~ion to new propr ietors. Mr. and Mrs. llart, who have operated the ~usinl!'M for many yeara. plan to &ell their interst to a retiring lA'I Angeles Police officer and ~ wife. --Continued discussion on the city's chances 10 purchase surplus free...,·ay land near the entrance to Our Lady of F'atima Catholic Church -property in which the church also has shown an interest. Whichever buyer is selected, provisions will hold that the land now Dwned by the state would remain open space. -A repott # {rom City Manager Ken Carr on information obtained last week during a trip to Sacramento to check the city's ch.anr.es to obtain major funding from a federal grant for a mUlion-dollar sewage interceptor line. Carr attempted to jog loose the city's Jong-standing ap- Jllication for the gbvernment grant which could finance up to 80 percent of the proj· ect costs. The proposed sewer Une would run nearly the length of the city -A report by a special city committee on progress of finding feasible plans to upgrade the municipal pier entrance. Councilman Paul Presley. the chairman of the ' study group, has hinted that the committee will need at least two more weeks to come . up with a list of alternatives complete with projected costs for each plan. "I wDUld have liked it tel have turned out differently," Ragan said. "I wDuld liked lhe man to have done something tel have reason to hold him." 'Moss!' Gathered Mrs. Vicki Hambright of Kalamazoo said s.he 58t next to a man resembling Bremer at the rally. She sa1d she ncognized him from a photelgraph printed in the Kalamazoo Gazette. · From Page 1 BUDGET ... ''If that's taken off the tax rons we cDuld be bankrupt -well , perhaps that isn 't the right word to use.'' The .eovernment is considering purchase of the building. Government ownership would remove the builWng from tax rolls. Although rumors have been flying for n1onths, no official announcement has been made. Increases in the pennissive areas stem from a cent here and there in retirement funds, the regiDnal occupational program, community service, adult education, the mentally retarded and educationally han- dicapped, and seventh and eighth grade excessive costs. The largest increase since unification wilJ occur in the state school building repayment which jumped from 32 cents to 56 cents. Bond interest and redemption rate wen t down. The superintendent told the board that most increases in the edUcational pro- gram and staffing areas wtll be caused by the opening of _ Dana Hills High SchoQI next year. The utilities fund also wiU In- crease. "We also face trouble In the teacher category.'' sai d Benedlcl. "We face our greatest potential growth next year and J don 't believe enough money is budgeted." He added that no provisions have been made for salary increases, except for normal step increases. and the unrestricted reserve' has only been estimated at $100,000. "We've had to raise taxes th1s year and last yea r." said Trustee Gord o n Peterson. "We need some long-term thinking on how we are going to finance education in the next few years. We will either have to curtail programs or raise n1ore funds in the traditional way. "What J want to know is shall " .. e curtail programs no\v in anticipalion of !he following year or wait and take Dul beating then ? Benedict ansv.·ered that the district cannot live with only $100.000 reserve. He said further cuts will have lo be made .and urged everyone to pra}' for a windfall. Ob.NGI COAST SC DAILY PILOT Tiit Or•np Coast OA1 LV PILOT. wllh ,.hlth 11 comtilmd t~t New,.Preu, Is Plllllitlltl(I tv lht Or•ngt CO•ll Publilhil'>Q como.nr. St~• rttt ~!llOl'I ••t P110li1h.o', Mor.dt'f l~t0110h Frld1y, for COIT• Mt••, /'Ct-rl 8t1ch, H11n!lno!on lhtchlF01111!1on ll•llty. L1gv~• 8e•cft, lrvlnt/Sacklltb~tk 1!>CI Sin Cltmtl'!f/ Son Jv1n C1pi~tr1no. A 1•nQ!1 tf010111l ldllfon It P11bl11h~ Stlu•01y1 •1111 Svri&11v1. Tiie prlnc!111I Publi.,,ino Pl•nl 11 •t ));) Wt\! 111'1' S1ree1, Co1t1 Mtll, C•H!0tnL1, t!ltt. llob•ri N. 'W11~ Prt1ocltn! tnd P11t>hsh tr J •ck R. Cu1!1y Viet PrHkltnl •nd Gtnt r•I M•ntgtr Tho111•1 K11vil Ea11or Tliom1s A, Murphin1 Mtn•t1"9 Ea <tor Ch1rlt1 H. loot Rid1 11d P. Nall AUlll•~! M•ntOIP\f Ed•~tl S• CltMllN Office 105 North f l C•m ino Rt•I, 92•72: °""' OHi ... C111•• Mtw: UO"Wtll ••r S!rttt "l""'P'Ot'I attch: UlJ H""'110rt loul•~••o Hunl"'9ton •tWll: 1111, ltt<ll 11.,,..1..,•rd LI•""" •••di: m l"orn1 ""'""' Tel.,.._ ,f7141 64J-4J21 Ct..ffiH A'-thl .. 642:·1671 S.. C'--N All De,•rflll"'trtt: 'h:..,.... 492-4421 c....,..1g111, 1•n. °''l'IOI t0t•• l"utilldl"" C.mPllfty, Ht "''" 1Mrlh IU.,.lrt!i0rl1. 4'cll191'1.S -tttr tr 4"ht•ll1t!Nnt1 llffttn "''" lie rllPf'Olf!,ocM WI""°"' IPIClll flilf" Ml.aion • ~I G ....... ~ city 10tlttt Dtlilf et c.tt Mtu, C:tllflonllt. li*CTJtitllfl -Clnlw U.tl "'°""'"'' 1W mell U.U "*ll'ltrl ..nftwy ...,IMlllN UM "*"""'· Cash Flows In for Swnes Concert By ARTHUR R' VINSEL 01 !111 OallW ,llGI Sltl! A Rolling Stone gathert nD moss but the rock music group by the same name will bounce out of the Southern California with abundant green iituff of another kirn:l: money. Thousands of young fans -· some waiting ~ince Friday and all since before opening hour Monday -ganged mutual ticket agencies, cleaning out all among 40,000 tickets available for the Stones' June concert tour. . Top price Monday was $6.50, with a limit of four per person to discourage scalping, the resale to latecomers at ex- orbitant prices. The supply sold out within hours. Blocks of tickets for the June 9 through 13 shows go on S!lle later this week at other licensed agencies at up to '20 or wha1ever the traffic will bear. Orange County police agencies bad to dispatch squad cars to four shopping centers -including South Coast Plaza in C..osta Mesa and Fashion Island in Newport Beach -due to a variety of dif· ficulties . A few patrons objected to the four~ ticket limit, while a constipated computer caused aome Ticketron outlets to recelve only a few of the concert tickets allocated for waiUng fans. No real problems were reported by police some of whom acted as med iators betwe~n store managers and frea kishly garbed customers, or in disputes over lost places in ltne. From Pagel COUNCIL .•• system of streets al a cost of $73,000. As for projected tax rates in the budget, Carr proposes the i:iiainten~ce of the $1.45 exiS:ting rate with a minor drop of slightly more than two cents in the municipal lighting district levy. City councilmen and news entities received their copies of the proposed budget late Monday, and the city la\vmakers Wednesday will set a series of budget study sessions to be held sometime this month . A~ a rule. the council sits in informal discus.sion and pores over the budget page-by-page in a quest for cuts in some categories and increa9e.S in others. Public hearings on the budget, rare- ly attended by la rge groups of citizens. will be held in early June. Councilmen \viii be saddled with several demand s on the city's finances no t yet included in the budget _. the largest being requests for increased "'ages by city employes. Demands for overtime wages -which the city does not pay al present, plus v.'age in creases to bring the city's pa y scales closer lo a county average already have been made by employe·groups. In the capital improvl!'ments category. upgrading of the city pier entrance, cos· ting a minimum of $30.000 for minor esthetic improvement3, will be: suggested soon hy a .special council committee. Other improvements in parks and streets also have betn strongly en· couraged by some groups. Thi!' budget shows ~me healthy Jn· creases in uses.std valuation due to lhe current boom Jn comtruction, but the city income from that .source will be offset heavily by greater tipenses caused by in· flation, Carr said. Sevl!'ral ntiw employe categories also are included, an assistant planner at a salary In excess of $10,000 to assist the overburdened bulJding and J lannlng department, plus a new hlgh-lev aide In !M-public worl<> departm .. t. One large revenue source will be the ule of city U..U at a J'Olecl<d sum of aboul 111111,000 -the old city yardJ. But U !bit Im! Is 10ld, the funds al· rudy hive been commlu.d to pay for a ""' complex at the c:lfy unltatloo plant. One shirtless boy at South Coast Plaza had to go to the rear at the May Com- pany queue, after helping another' who fainted In so.degree beat get to a dr!Aking fountain. "You mean I lost my place ln line for being a good guy?" he protested. "I'm not going to talk to you -you aren't wearing a shirt," said a store of- ficial. A middle-aged matron begged tel buy a whole block of tickets instead of the mai:- imum four. "I've got to have more," 5he declared. "I'm going to· scalp them for moner, to put my son through school next year. ' May Company officials barricaded the door and allowed the bearded, long-haired. and cleancut customers to dribble In two by two like Noah's Ark, because the Ticketron window is: three floors up in the FJne Housewares section. Sears encountered Jess difficulty with its ground floor ticket agency Customer service Manager Les Altman and Operations Superintendent Harold Hirsch handed out customer nwnbera: to be called, just like a supermarket meat counter. Fl'.om Page 1 WALLACE ..• right !boulder. Another punctured hls al; domcn and lodged on his spine, causing damage to the spinal cord. That bulltt was left in. though Schanno said tt might be taken out later, Bullets also pierced Wallace's right forearm, grazed the back of his left shoulder blade and grazed his upper right shoulder. "I think the governor is going to make a recovery," Schanno said. "Now what disability he has as a result of his wounds is difficult to evaluate at this time. \Ve're all very optimistic .at this poin t." \\1a!Jace's v.•ife. Cornelia . sa id early to- da y, after her husband had come through five hours of surgery, that she Js op- timistic. , "As you know, his nature. he didn 't earn the title of the 'fighting little judge' for nothing. 11nd I expect him to continue In the same vein." Spokesmen said Wallace intended to continue his campaign. even if he doesn't regain use of his legs. Schanno noted that President Franklin D. Roosevelt had been a wheelchair cripple during his years in the White House. Nixon, in a White House appearance to announce the resignation of Treasury Secretary John B. Connally. offered Wallace the presidential suite at Walter Reed. , · He said if Wallace wishes to return to Al:\bama to recuperate an Air FOrce hospital plane will be put at his disposal. Earlier, Nixon dispatched a White flouse physician. Dr. Wiiiiam Lukash , to aid \Yallace's doctors. Nixon said he Is keeping In '1cJose tou ch" wlth \Yallace 's condltlon. He also said Nicholas Zarvos, the wounded Secret Service man, 1 a ''substantially improved." Zarvos underwent 7y, hours of surgery for a bullet wound in the neck and was described as "doing very 11Usfactorily" this morning. Bremer was taken before U .S. Magl•trale Clarence Goetz In Baltimore late Monday night and ordered held under $200,000 bond on charges of ahooUng W1ll1ce and a Secret Service agent, Zarvos. Newsmen recalled seeing Bremer al earlier Wallace rallies Jn Maryland, and one NBCTV phQfograph fN>m one .of those rallies ahow1 him wearlnc • button reading "Staod Up for Amu:lca,0 1 W.U..ce alogan. Frank Daniel, a Wallace eampalgn worker, aald he recalled ...in, Bremer ~r IOID!Olle looldng UU him ot a rally Ill Milwaukee, Wis. - OAILY l"ILOT lttft r~• HE Will RETURN Vititing Prine• of Hur1111 Medical Unit Air Cooling Hit by Jury . By JACK BROBACK Of tt.1 C.Hy l'lltt 11111 Members of the 1972 Orange County Grand Jufy toured the Orange County Medical Center in April and today Center Administra tor Robert White probably wishes be had not been so hoSpitab!e and talkative. 'The jury released a letter dated May 4 Monday criticizing the Center for "lack of proper air conditioning which leads to the unneeessary deaths ()f 12 patients eaCh summer." f}anel members al.so objected ~o the fact that they. were allowed to tour the Center's"-intensive care units~ without -being masked or gowned. Wh ite said today that he told jury members, while making' a pitch for Center improvements, that during "the 30 bot days we experience in an average year 12 people probably die." Bul, the ad· minlstrator said, b·e added, "There is no certainty that heat is the principal factor in their deaths." The administrator said today that most patients who di! during hot summer days are 0 weak or elderl.Y and would possibly survive a few rpofflhs longer if not ex- posed to Uiltlecessary heat." The jury's letter also charged : -That the Center admipistration should clean up its ·hospital and personnel through better housekeeping standards and more unifonn grooming regul,A.tions. -That portable air conditioning units be Installed Immediately (While said he is requesting 90 window air C'Onditioners at an apprmlmale coot of 1135,000 In his tlm-73 budget). -That Cerlta' administration abould. Immediately cmcern !lull with stalf moral• by improf!ng communications between the front office and the general ataff. The jury letter, however, praised most persoMel they had interviewed and said they appeared to be, ''e1tremel y dedicated, well educated and we11 trained • , • and doing a fine job under adverse conditions.'' Regarding the ir tour Df the intensive care unit and the fact that they were not required to wear masks or gowns the jurors said, "to bring a group of people into an intensive care unit to disrupt the staff and to gawk at the patients is Jess than wise." White particularly objected to the charge that people were. dying by the "dozens at the medical center because of Jack of air conditioning." .. 'Shangri·la' Prince of H unza Pays Coast Visit By CANDACE PEARSON 01 1111 0.llY ,lltt Sl•tf Posters with beautiful girls ln grass 5kirts or couples sipping wine at a .... .sidewalk cafe beckon travelers l,D "get away from it all" at various tourist spots. But to really get away from it ''all" - all the heart attacks, cancer, aslhma, tuberculosis, crime, jails, pollution, smog and mysterious additives jn the fo6d - go to Hunza. Hunl..8 is a small 3,900 square mile kingiDm within the country-of Kashmir, located bet~een China and Afghanistan in the Himalaya s. It has been f1puted to be a ahangrila, or a utopia because some of Us people live tel be 120 to 140 years old . . f\.1any 1lill work Jn the fitld.s When In the ir early lOOs, Dr. Jay lloUman, nutrl· tlon expert, said Monday. fl orfman lectures on ~JU/l1a at the Seventh-day Advenfist Church In Costa h.1esa and Monday greeted 22-yeaMlld Hunza Prince Ameen at the church, whom he hadn't seen for ll years. P1ince .o\meen is visting Hoffman lo California .during a break in his studlt1 for a n1asters in business adm inistration at the University of West· Virginia. the second oldesl son of King Mir. Ameen v.'ill not 1-ome klng unless his older brother Gahzanfar cannot take over. He doesn 't know what he will do tn Hunza (populallon 30,000) when he return,, Dfter s~mmer school, but he knows he must go back. Rosary Slated } "'Pecple leave -sometimes to go lo school cir service," he said quietly, "but whenever possible, they always gg.back." For_ ;Executive ·' ., . Walter Boggs -----toonng Very unprincely in a blue suit and tie, Ameen spoke wistfully of home, where he slept ou~ under the stars often or rode yaks in the mountains. Rosary will be recited th is evening in Capistrano Beach for reti red corporation executive Walter \V, Boggs Sr .. v.·htl died last weekend in his home. lie was 76. The rites will be conducted at 8 p.m. at St. Edwards Catholic Church In Capistrano Beach, with Requiem Mass sung Wednesday at 11 a.m, in the same chapel. "But here," he added, "everything seems more artificial. The buildings are so .structuted, there is no naturalness. "ft all look as if you can't breath free- ly. The windows are even closed, with a1r conditioning." Everything in the United St.ates Is "fa~ter" too, than in Hunza; where SIS percent of the people farm, he said. It ls a sell-sufficient economy, where each person grows his own food and makes his own goods and clothing from the few sheep, yaks, goals and camels raised there. Mr. Boggs, who lived at 26000 Avenlda Aeropuerto, Space 5, was a retired ex· ecutive vice president of Luber-Finer Int'<lllXlrated in U!s Angeles. • He leaves his widow, Mrs, Virginia Ann Bogg,; of the home; two som. Thomas V. O'CDnnell of Whlttierand Walter Boggs Jr. of Fullerton; twD daughters. Nadine Dawson or Cincinnati, Ohio, and "'Coleen Ann Farrell of Downey; two cbrothers, George E. Boggs of Oregon and Don C. Boggs of Florida; a sistcr, .. Hazel Rogers of Long Beach: 16 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. During the \Printer, people eat meat because the climate naturally 1r ..... II, but warmer summer weather prevents thal and napves eat frtsh or naturally dried fruits and vegetables. · Burial will follow Wednesday's rites in J\scension Cemetery, El Toro. Lesneski Mortuary of San Clemente w~ll be in charge of arrangements. Friends may contribute in Mr. Boggs' memory to SI. Edwa rds Catholic Church, Capistrano Beach. Veterans Group Plans for Show On 4th of July San Clemente 's Veteran Fireworks Committee this week began plans for its annual Independence Day show from the San Clemente pier and has named Walter Leibig as general chainnan. Liebig, the city's Man of the Year, will organize the 12th annual presentation of the free P!aiOtechnics exhibit. Stan Northrup has been chosen as secretary to the committee, Paul Roberts as treasurer and Frank Nauretz and JDhD Fierst, program chairmen. , Dan Conred, spokesman for the com- mittee. said that the nonprofit annual project's size this year will be directly related to the public donations received. Traditionally, the group seeks dona- tions from the community to offset the high cost of the fir eworks pieces. Conrad stressed that the fireworks performance brings thousands of visitors to the city each Independence Day weekend. Doncirs can mail contributions of any amount to the Veteran's Fireworks Com· mittee, Box 299. San Clemente. r Capo Will Study Plans for New Shopping Center Plans for the new Von's shopping center on the corner of Del Obispo and Camino Capistrano will be presented to the San Juan Capistrano Planning O::lm· mission at tonight's 7 o'clock meeting in city hall. If approYals are obtained, constraction fs expected to begin in July. The buildings in the center are planned in Spanish .style with wood bearru and a red tile roof. Plans are being examined by the architectutal board of review. Also on the agenda is architectural ap. proval of a shopping complex on the cor--· ner of Camino Capistrano and Verdugo Street being constructed by Bernard Syfan Corporation. Other items for consideration include; ~qnstruction of a recreation center in the Westport development and revision of South Coast Development Company's planned development• off Trabuco ei;eek Road. ·. Officers Installed .. - By Legion Auxiliary Valma Hemsley of San Clemente. ba1 been installed as president for the comlnr year of the American: Legion Auxiliary 423. Elected with her were J t s 1 i • Hagstrom, first vice president; Erma Teachout, treasurer; Elinor Emmons, secretary; Adela Hin.shaw, chaplain and Marian DuBord, historian. ... All For The Family-{ • Wliot chon98' your house more then eny otlier thing? What im proves occoustics dramotically?. What warms up • house?. Who t imparts unique beeuty •na comfort? , • ,_ C.rpeting from Aldon 's, that's what! , Pf yout house "•tilles" r.ou, stoP. In anCI seo in f.AST,J ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES .16.63 Placentia Ave. COSTA MISA 646-4138 • ' ;- • . • " 1 I I 1 I i I < t I I f I - I I 1 1 .( 0 DAJL Y PILOT SC Tllfsdi.Y Miy lfi 1972 OVER THE COUNTER WASHINGTON ACCOUNTS PROTECTED TO s10,000.00 Accounts protecled up to maxlmu111 of $10 000 00 by THRIFT GUARANTY CORPORATION of California only .. provided m the California Financial Code. ON $10,000 90·DAY FULL PAID THRIFT CERTIFICATES lnt9fat PfYable monUttr A copy of Chapter 8 (Guaranty of Thrift Accounls) of OIV>S on 7 ol the Cahfornta f1nanc1al Code may be obtained upon request THRIFT GUARANTY CORPORATION OF CALI· FORNIA IS NOT AN INSTRUMENTAL· ITY OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA. i WASHINGTON Thr1~& Loan Member of the $600 MILLION a'VnfoJC Family COSTA MESA 270 [11t l71h St 92527 645 3153 011/~s ThtOl.lthout Cll loml• Phone 6424321 For Weekender Advertising • 111eet the $10,000 Finance Tho Maida Rotary Engine For 1nformat1on on the stock of Toyo T ogyo Co t63 t68MayJ5 call Roy Bartholomew Great Pacific Sec:unt1es 17291 Irvine Bl vd Tustin 714 -832 8000 panther* ... PANTERA b\I deTomaso tmportrd for Lincoln r.tercury lta.l ian cMch"o1 k crrated hv lhe br1lhant Gh1a Studios of Turin F0rd desl~nrd lh!! 351 CID 4V V 8 f'ng1ne Four ''heel 1n dcprntinl !l:t)"~'l'l~lf.(T"rill R'rf(f mid !>hip engine placement f L\e !>peed iear box fully S) nrhronlzed ·r~ntc111. Jr11h11.n (01 Pan1hf'r MANUFACTURING QXEROXING ['.] ANSWE.RING SERVICE 0 DESK SPACE E.E.OS ~ 0 SECRETARIAL SERVICE 0 l A LINES D BOOKKEEPIN G 0 MIMEOGRAPHING 0 TELEGRAMS, TWX. DO~UMENT TRANSMISSION 0 MAILING LISTS • COMMUNIUTIONS SERVICE BUREAU "'CONLrn ~-Ar fOW CO ......... flVINE·AIRJIOltT INDUSTRIAL COMPLIX (714) 547.7777 12u1 6t0·93t3 • • COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK UST,, •• .l • 'l " , 'I '"' ., " ' ~ " ·~ "' .. ": ·~ lo • • • •• ~ • • -• I .. - / ·, • TOfsdaJ, 111116, 1'72 OAllY PU.~' ~ • . . ""'" . ~ - qu a;,,J·'four . amify ar~ cordially , invited lo allend a premiere' ·--review rand_ Opening o' \f!;,_e o the worf d ~ f arge:il ' . umifu'R.e warehou3e-3howroom3 I \., ' .\edne:ida'f, ... \. a'I 17, 6 f ~m. lo I 0 p.m. :Jhur:iJa'f, a'J . 18, I 0 ·a.m. lo ·to p.m. · Codla edct L Jegioler /or over $15, 000 in Joor prizeo including a 1972 Pf'lmoulk Station Wagon . r/o Purckaoe !l/eceooar'I ' • 3200 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa ' Division of Federoted Stores Inc. Please present this invitation f Ot' admission • \ • •• ~·· ' I ' I ' I I ' J ' • Tu es day 's Closing Prices Complete Ne,v York Stock Exchan ge Lis t • 1 ........................... 1:1 •• , S.I" Mtt ....... Kif ..... Htl l--------------·1 °"" 1 """Lew,..,. ar.1 Doao Jones <•'-) Ni,11 L .. ci... °'" ,,.., , H1t11 L•• ci. •• en, Jtlark ~t T r e n d Stocks Zigzag, 'Blue Clrip s' Drop NEW YORK (AP) -Blue-chip stocks edged lower today after 11gzagg1ng most of the session Trading was dull The Dow Jones average of 30 1ndustr1als closed down 2 93 at 939 27 SllP•l111 20 111 .-\~ •N • -'Plo A T .,..., , " •I ~ 11\i 1 ui,...s 11'6 l ~ i.i u -• ••s• M11••1t T•••o y,.,,r,,,., OMi !" '"" n I ''" ,,,, ,,.. tlf!t'age• ''''"'-" ., .. 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" 1nmn llOI s I I llt.M ll'llM • • •-ICllHnb ~ I '"' 1 • 1 P1c L!pl •.,. Jl!O W lr llO'lo IO~-... ',!!o-,,.,• fl! >o' ",~ •,,. ,.!::,_ ''' -··-··-·. ,-·-.... ,.,, .... .. -.. J.6 11'1 1.,/,l(IJo.,\41 11,rn r 7310•111 r..-.... ~.., -,..., ,. l!Un •I I SI l 11+-IJ -, 10 10 10 ... .,,1e111Ar'o, Ca 1 1 i-. t'\-•,P1(foiW 1 6'1 II lS.t. IS 15 ~,.• j.i ~ I.\ '4-"' '! :11 21""' ~ .... IClflt •Id o 1 11~ llt\o 11-141 P1c Pltntrn 11' lS ~ l6 .4.1 ~"' r~ I i: ~ tfl: ~. 1 lr! ~ 9 .. : :. ~::!}'; \:: ,. ~~ r,~~ ~.~ ._-. ::~~L"1.·'~ '"n, ll,_ 11~ :,..._ +'~ ft<fCl.*,~:~ .... n'~.. .i • ff" f _-., ' ~ !" a"' l(!t Ml• Cl 11 1' l 1' o 1.. n Ptt~Alr wt. ,.. ,.. <>-.-"' tppS!'>cco li 1"' + ~ ,5 ~ , " ~ "° ~lflnlri lS l,"t Yl'>t Tllo' -•1 P1 ~"ti Ud l l "' 11 • 1 ~-"" ,·~11';, Gr 77; Iii E ~ 211' 11~ t ~ ~ 11k1ol!C )0 II"" IT i ' -P1 111.11 .IOd 21 1 ~ 1S\lt 11'•"'" ' tiulll Wiiii -t N '6 1~ If.to 11'4-.... ICl'e'ltHH ' ''' Ill .. It -~ PtmiC1 '"'-1tl 11 70 10-,._ '"" Jr1ot J4 19'1 1 1 "'"\lo LAS VEGAS Nev -Plans to a.ell the StardUlt Hotel oa the Lu Vegas Sjrlp to lho Hyatt Corp have betn c:al16 celled the ~ion Corp , .owner or tht hotel his an-- •• <O'-I I .. , 1' K'""'"' Ii 1 ... l"o Jllo ._ ·~I (O'D 11 Jlflrlt '°"' 21 + "' ~ .. ,_, ... '" ) • f~VJ f:"' fr"" Ii. Koll""I A 10 JO'• '° JC -:: ::ttc ,~ : 11'' fJ !~a=~ "Ti,11 .t: if ~ ~ ~';: ~ '': 1!~ \!~ 11~ ~ Am•rl•an ::,:~ ~,~ ,; Jr° r,,. ...:: ·~ e,.tt 0: >; ~ ':'' 1".:: The two corpor1ttonS uld 16 1'1Jo t It -'" ._ ~ P• F•\l'o lo •• ,•,, ..... • r•-~ ~~'•r.' °",, ,,> 1>, •'•, ,-,· ,__the IUt month thty Stardust. ~ ~'.~ t2..~ ',' .. ~' •· JO ,,fo•t A•lt'1•a '•'• -,, .fo0 !ii-..--.. ·-· nounced • -~ _.,., ...... .. • ., ~ 0 lt,! tJ 1'"' ~; ~ !"• "'ot•I n 1• • 11 r .,• ~ were negotl&tin.g 1he aale or ~ ' tit• .. Ntw "'YO-oor V'll -t~· 0 •t Y•1 :1~d ,,... ,. ,,,. .... \IP"tltOPt 'I ,.... SVJ lr.\-"' R-rlon •'--ow111 , •. ~.-·u ·1,, i. • ,-;J.10 ,1ao1 '•IO"d"".,..., &.n>uu~ 1oc'P•""E!""61J 11tt. I ~ 11~•-. .._,,_ i..u .. nc "1.- 111 ~~ »,. ,,~,, li•cti-' lu.W•• <k "1• £' "' ' 11 11 1' monl 11otel ~· 1s 1'1 ~ »' i. ,,i.. c-· ''•~o•,. ' ••\ •• •• ~ _, A-•r'-".,_,. ,, ,~ 1! lJlki.."" [:,,~ d 1~1 ~.~ ,! ~ : •1n1 ~., 1..., tt J ~ .r ~ ,]~-tl ..-~ n:a ou.t. .. a We juat "1ed It wu not t 11" 1" 11111. .. .,. a;\' ~' nAOtJ ,, ' ,. :::.:Jr"'~ 1 t•, 1 ~ ''"" l'olum.e tht ri11:h1 time and d rNrn-c IP\ 1S'""1 llt"t ,,,1..,. ollAOD •' • ,.., n Coro Y ' •~1 ~ • ,. ,.. .. ,., " ,..,. •rocPJtt ...._ ~ • 1 • p..,...,,.. t: ,., I~ ,, 1 .. ·~ .t.M.lllC-Alf ~CH.ANOI $ALll stance Rttrlm teerel.t"' 1 ~ 1'-<1 1 ) -1 ~~rt 1 ..m ,1 1 ,.-1 Pn KIP! 2' !"' Siii .., l9 UllitM 1 l•'-ttllllfl •' '; ~ '*~ ~¥1>:: ~ ~"' 11._1 ~·ll f' ~ ~ z:!.~~ , 'i ' • 1•: I:• ~ ~,.,!~,..,:;~'" 11 lf4 L B Ntl.son •11ic1 70 ~ JI ... Vi .... tfofolt ;t,M • -,~' P'ff'I ,,..,tG ~ 1 .: I"' , ... ._(/Ii 111'11 ...... -. Rttrlon $Old the J ~"" 1~ ~~: tkai"" ,._, t • "::,_~ 1l',c. lf ';:': /.,. ~1~ : hr'MI ...... ,..,. "" .ooo llotet hen tut f11L Allddi. -• -I ... - 12 DAILY PILOT Death l\'otfres ~ •Liil ho!KI M Mcflr ..... ACH! 60, ol lD\J lloY•I Ptlm Orl"I· Ct»I• Ml'' Ot!t ol Ot~tn, MIY 14. •1:. Sii'" ... ~<! by 1!11,b•nd, J11m1\· IOI'· JI""'' T~ny wcElre•. Wtlnu( Cr.,.k; morner, M••Y Ct moflo"!!, Coil• Mt••: IWo 1••ndChd.,..•11. Prlv••~ .._,, 1...v•c" w~•• ""fl! 11 l!leil '~y:~~~ ~~~:r"P1r~. 118~: e;;:.,:!; Mor1.,..ry, Olre<lor1. t W~LLS (,. H, Welll. l:U !lroedWl'f JI 1 (0111 M.w. 011e 01 dHtll, ,,..., 11, ltn. StNl(tl ~lno 11 Btll Bro.ctwt'( Mot!ut•Y. WOODAllD MtrY M. Woodard. Alll! U. of ,70 Wtln11t Pltcll CO!ott Mtu. 0111 vi detlll. M11 lS, t/1. Servlc11 otf'Mllnv I! Bell 8roedw1y Mor!uorv. YOU HO J11rn11 Vinc!'ll Young. llf'1Td1nl ol JMllua Trtt. Otte o! 011111. Mtv 13, lt12. S11rv!Y· ~O bv dtuonltr, Al•ct Scllll!m&n, Fo•mt1l11 Vtll~v ; lo11r 1l1!t'I tnd two bro1n~r1. 51rvlct1. WWnt\dlY.• 10 A~1 Ptcl!lc View <.na..el ln1ermet1t, Pa(lllt view M•mo,,~I f>trlo;. Dl•ecled by P1clllc View Mo•!u~·~· ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF l\IOHTUARY f.Z'7 E. 17th St .. Costa l\1esa UG-4888 •· BALTZ BERGERON .Slide Show On lndiaris In America SANTA ANA -.. Amtrlca, the Beaut'iful. As Viewed Through the Eyes of an In- dian" is the title of lecture and slide presentation at 7:30 p.m. fJ'hursday at Smtdley Junior High School, 2120 W. Edinger. Riley Sunrise, a Hopi Indian traditionalist, will make · the pres'entation of lfopi home· Jandl! ()f Oraibi. the ()ldest continually inhabited to"·n· site in America . Sunrise "°"' iesides V.'ith his family in Garden Grove. Pic· tures of ·the Crow, Sioux, Cheyenne, arfd N a v a j o reservations will also be shown. This Is the second public ap- pearance by Sunrise, who spoke to capacity audiences three weeks ago. There is no admisso n charge, although a collection will be. made to defray expenses. Health Rev ival ORANG.E -The f i r s t "1-lealth and Ecology" revi val is C()ming to Chapman College May 27-28. )t is open to the public without charge. • • • . --Election; Slate :Sweeps UCI DeLapp Will 13e President Docto r -Wins 21id Delciy A slate of students headed Dtl.app received 298 voles to by Irvine resident Tom defeat four other presidential candidates. DeLapp has swept to victory in the student t>odY elections -cjtu~:ts ~~ct~c~~~ c~~~Y at UC Irvine. represent include : DeLapp. a junior history Biological sciences -Scott major at the school, wjll Freeman of .Turiana, Bob assume the duties of student Wilkin or Arcadia and, sharing body president· Ju1y !. Also one seat. Greg Marrujo of elected \vilh DeLapp ·were his Lake"·ood, BiU McKibben of running mates Chris Kralick Long Beach and Bill Schobert or Sherman Oaks as executive of San Bernardino. vice president : Tim Stephens Engineering Kevin of Belmont as administrative Desmond of Long Beach and vice president ; and Pa I Greg ~ledeiros of San Marino Aulicino of Van Nuys as stu· "ho share one council al SAt-.1TA ANA -Dr. John .. se · dent ~ee-Yice president. Shri\'er Gwynne, • ju~t one •lumanities He 1 en Steven Eugene Hamilton of Lls Angeles. A ttpresentative of the col· lege or medicine Is still to be named to the council. :a ANTHONY.SCHQOLS HARIOI CENTER noe H•rtier C•11ttr Coll• Mu..o, C1Hlonll1 Ph. 17141 t79·2J5J 1n1 s. lnall.fl~"l·SI, • A111Mlm, C.I. ,._.. "'· 11141 n6-saoo month away from his Los All four of the new student Zeilbergtt of Tanana. Dian Angeles Superior Cou rt leaders will be seniors "'ilh Emerson of Palos Verdes and I~~~~~~~~~~ murde r trial, has won a the beginning or I he 1972-73 Tim Kelly of DoWney. Ii further delay on his .scheduled academic year. Delapp is Inlerschool cuiricula sentencing In Orange County presently vice president under David Allen 1.1iller of Downey Superior Court on abortion co-presidents Pat 1-foore and and Ray Swartz of Lakewood. charges. Steve Chamida. Social Sciences -Louis J udge William Murray reset The ~lections marked a Smith or Los Angeles and the agreed imposition of a · change in the constitutional Gary Einstein of Montebello. $5.1)()() fine and voluntary structure of student govern· Physical Sciences -John .suspension of the Santa Ana ment with the creation of Baysdorfer of Burbank and physician's license for July 14. three vice presidential posts Jeff DeCurtins of Monterey Cv•ynne, 27, goes on trial and the abolition of a 28· Park. Jun e 7 in the Los Angeles member student senate in F'ine Arts -John s. I C()Urt's Santa Monica divi sion favor of a 24-membcr coun-Beckham. for the alleged murder of Deb-cil. The four executives ~·ill sit At-large me nl be rs bie Dwyer. the 19-year-o\d on the council as voting Barbara Bodkin of San Juan --...... ____ ·-· -. COUPON $AMBO'S DOES IT AGAIN COMPLETE CHICKEN OINNERS 2 FOR THE PRICE OF 1 $3.70 VALUE FOR $1 .85' The Fun Place for F1mily Foodl 3001 S. BRISTOL SANTA ANA Offer OMtll MM.·Tilwr" "lllwHll J lo II ,,111. N.i ~•IMI fW ffdtr le ... v.iw oily •t S.MIM'1, Sat• AM -11,1,.. M•y Jt COUPON HAMS " • • So Good It Will Haunt You 'Til It's Gone" our flom1 i.re the 1lnn1 com.fed low• PQrke~ -Ollr 1low ll"V turlng me!llod, rul Wlston1ln hldcorv or.cl opplewood Jrnokl1111 •tw:I :lll·haur o.,.n baidng hontY 'n 1plte gtfle •rt vnlQl/9 In Ill l!lt world. So delidous 1nd 1ppoill1ing we just wouldfl'I kroow hew to Improve l!l ls product we've btln 1Mklfl9 !or l4 ytl•t. Splr1l 1lictd 1<111, !rem 1op 10 bol~m sc t1111 uth G11teleble un11erm 1lle1 c•11 be removed effort!~"°"· Compkl•IV ba~td and rl'edy To !erve. Or- 01r. yc11r Hon•v 8oloked Him tod1y, an ldw11lu•1 Ill hem·IOYnM~I you'll nev1r torgtt. Whittier girl who was once his members. -Capistrano, Larry Stahlberg or ! d r d t · It · I llTAIL STOllS C()-e en an in mu 1 P e \Vith about a 25 percent San Bernardino, JI me s1 l 700 E. Coast H'9hw•y, C•roHHI MM -67J·•OH Orange County abortion ac-\"Oler turnout at the campus Jackson or Altadena, Jim I 1222 s. lrooktuirsr, A••I• 6JJ.2461 tions. .-~d~u~ri~n!g~t~w~o~d~azy~s~o~f~b~a~ll~M~in~g:·....'.:O~r~lo~w:sk~i~o~f~Sou~l~h~La':!gu~na:_:a~nd~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar 673·'450 Costa Mesa "" 546-1414 BELL nloADWAY MORTUA'RY 110 Broadway. Costa l\lesa LI 1-3433 Harbor Man Admits Model Agency Guilt ' McCORMIC" LAGUNA BEACH l~ORTUARY 1795 Ltrguna Canyon Rd. 494-9415 . ,. PACIFIC VIE\\ l\1EMORIAL PARK Cemetery l\Iortuary ChaP<I 3500 Paclrlc View Drive Newport Beach. Callfomla 644-%700 -• PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HO~<E ~MU Bolsa A\·e. Westminster 193-35%5 SMITHS'i:onTUARY 6%7 l\faln SI. Huntington &acb 536-65.19 SANT A ANA - A Newport Beach man has pleaded guilty tn Orange County Superior Court to conspiracy charges ste n1ming frq__m his role in the operation of the now defunct Jntroduire Artist Guild (IAG) . mode l agency of Orange. Judge William Murray ac- cepted the guilty plea of Philip Nadeau. 29. of 4250 Park Lane, and orrlered him to return for sentencing June 8. Nadeau face& a possible term of one lo 10 years in state prison. Judge 1'-1urray dismissed Identical allegations against ?\.1ilton 1.1oore, 38, Fountain Valley, on a motion filed by the prosecution. 1'-tichaeL G er c e y. 29, marump-or JAG 's Manhattan Beach offiC'e, had earlier pleaded guilty to conspiracy charRt1. Judge Murr a.y ordered him to serve three years probation. The trio was accused on ar- rest and in a subsequent Orange County Grand Jury in-" dictment or defrauding pro- spec tive models by taking high agency fees with the promise that IA"G could find them lucrative jobs. It was alleged against the trio that they told their clients, many or them from the Harbor area. that lAG was casting for parts in tele vision and motk>n pictures, that the agency was .supplying all the actors and ac tresses for Universal Studios and that JAG had a If.year contract with the cily or Anaheim in which it supplied hostesses and booth gi rls for the Anaheim Convention Cent.er. Your neighbors are away_ and you see smoke coming from their house. You reach for the phone. Now what? In an emergency, the fastest way to get help I• to have the right telephone number and make a direct call.· That' a why we lell a place on the Inside cover of your phone book for you to write In numbers for your Police and Fire Departments and your doctor. Of course, II you don't know Ille number to call, dial "0" and the Operator will help you. , @ · Pacific 1elephone We're hln to help. Pinto Wagon: _ We put a-Jot into.it. You can pUI a lot in it. Some Details. What you can put in: over 60 cublcffft. Pu11he rear seat dawn and there's 60:6 cubic feet of carrying space. far comparison, YW Square back and , Vega Kammback bath give you \ :;;,.\ a bit over 50 cubic feet. • Th• basic $2265 • model. ll's lhe ideal choice far people who wont on economy car that carries more-or a wagon that costs less. The white sidewall tires (shown here) are $28 .00 exlra. The wheel cavers, $23.23. Front Disc Brakes. S1andard. And there 's precise rock'1nd-pinion steering, which is normally found only in some of the more expensive sports cars. L The lift gale swings up and cul of the way, • --"'-----·-..... ••YYY ••• '~"' """'"V -:""f'.'N"Y'~ ..,.,., ..... y """yy·.y""':' ..... -· ~ 2: The rear passenger windows flip open. .3. The spare tire doesn't take up ony~ood room because ii has ilS awn well underthe floor. And be- nealh n oil, the rear suspen- sion is specially designed for load ca rrying. • Stid::tt Pr'a. Eia:ludts dealer prepatO• llon charges, ii ony, des lino hon c.harge1 (SlO.S.001. Title, toxe1 end Colilornia · eml»lon syslem ($1 1871. ~ 2000cc Ov•rhHd Cam lnglne. ll's rugged, economical, peppy-and slandard equipment. A 4-speed floor mounted oll- 1 synchromesh tronsmission is also i ' standard. .......... The Squil'9 Option. Thal dislinctive wood-sided wagon look, plus wheel covers,speciol lrim, ond more. No olher economy wagon offers anything like it. P}ice wilh the Squire Oplion, $2479.' ThO'luggage rack is $45.53 extra. The while >idewoll tires $28.00. See Your-Ford Dealer. Better idea for safety ••• l,wckle upl FORD PINTO FOAi> OMSION .. ' I ·-• •• •• · . • Lag1111a Beaeh Today's Flnal N.Y. Stocks VOL 65, NO. 137, 3 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES · ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESQA~, MAY 16, 1972 • TEN CENTS , Connally Res.igns as .Secretary of Treasurv WASHJNGTO N (UP!) -Treasury Sei:retnry John 8. Connally, a longli!'lle pawer in Texas Democratic politiCs resigned his Cabinet post today with ~ 3~r.ong hint he \1·ill campaign for Presi· dent Nixon's re-election in November. Standing side by side in the \Vhile House Press Room, Nixon and Connally . ex~hanged praise for each other's performance in the 17 months the Texan has been in· the Republicao /·ad· ministration . " Asked if he would actively 11·ork on Nix- on's behalf in the coming campa ign, Con- nally replied, "That is entirely possible.'' ~Nixon announced that he '"'a s ~ominating George P. Shultz, head of the Office of h1anagcment and Budget, to succeed Connally, v.•ho will stay on until Shultz is confinned. As Shultz's successor as head of Oti.tB, Ni:iton picked Shullz 's top assistant , Caspar W. Weinberger, a former California legislator and o n e • t i m c California Republican chairman. . Connally said he has "no plans whatsoever" for his immediate future. Mst week, Connally, the on I y ·Democrat in Nixon's cabinet, told newsmen he was "not in the process_ o( changing parties" but added "the possibility certainly exists that I could do so." "J have nothing but the profoundest ad· Nove11iber Ballot? Supporters P ·ush Coastline Issue By L. PETER KRIEG 01 tllf, ~11, ruor s1111 A crucial state senate committee vote Monday that v~tually killed tough coastline control leglilaUon ha! ap-~ parently triggered all~t efforts by Califomla environmentalists to get the coastal protection issue on 1he November ballot. "The legislature has failed .and I hope the people won't," said Janet Adams, an * * * Solf!ns Okay New Public Access Bill The state .const.ituUonal amendment that would require all priva te waterfront land owners to grant public access to the beaches has pawd the California Assembly and Is now before the senate. "It would req utre all private property owners, like the Billboa Bay Club, Cameo Shores or anyone, to provide public ac· cess through their propert y,'' Assemblyman Robert Badham ( R • Newport Beach), said today. Badham said lhe measure sailed through the Assembly. He said it "'sneaked through'' on .a 59 to 4 vote. "A few of us found out aboot it at the last minute but we only had time to \'Ole against it." Badham declared. If it gets by the Senate, the measure would go on the November ballot, Badham said. ' The e-0nstitutional amendment billed as an "environmental policy declaration" is spoJ1S(lred bf five assemblymen including Alan Sieroty , CD-Beverly Hills) whose strong coastal preservation bill is facing a tough test in the legislature. According to Badham, the con- «tltutional amendment. ACA 48, has received virtually no notoriety to date and he doesn't understand or know V.'hy. Among other declarations about the need for ecological concern the con· t.roversial article states: "Any person or corporation clai ming or possessing front age or tidelands of the barbor, bay. inlet, estuary or other . ·navigable "·aterway may not exclude right-of·way to that water when it is re- quited for a public purpose. or destroy or obstruct free navigation of the water . "The Legislature shall enact statutes that give these provisi<ln~ the most liberal construction so that access to the many waters shall always be obtainable by 111' p<ople." 1'te lltl~i:nown measure was totally unknown to Stat(': Sen, DeMis carpenter (R-NeWport Beach) whose own coastline management bill • po!S«I tht Senate Natural Resources Committee Afonday. ''He read It for the fint time Uli1 morning. Then he paled," aakl an aide Richard Rohrbach. ''11•11 not support It at all," Rohrbach ' ukl adding ·that Carpeoter foruaw It hti'f\Dg u tough a time as the coast.Line bill C0-1\Jllhored by Sieroty and Senator Donald Ghmsky (R·Wal!Onvllle). Gninsky's bill was In effect killed b)' 111' natural""'°"'"" panel Monday. I ) ~fficial or the Cali!onUa Coastal Alliance. Her \\'Ords came after the: strong measure co-authored by Senator Donald Grunsky (R·Watsonville) and Assemblyman Alan Sicroty (0-Beverly Hilb) was rejected on a 4 to 4 vot.e of the senate's natural resources OJmmitt.ee. Grunsky chose not to seek a second vote in the measure when the full nine-- member panel was present later in the day. A coastal bill sponsored by State Senator Dennis Carpenter (R-Newpart Beach) that is aimed at preserving ·local government control as well as the en- vironment was passed by the panel, ho\vever, on a 5-3-1 vote. Carpenter's bill now goes to the senate finance committee. Mrs. Adams has strong criticism for this measure. "It's wurse than worthl(ss. lt"s destructive. It's a builders bill," she said. Sieroty himseU agreed with the ap- praisal and lashed out at the building trades for oppos;ng his bill. "If they were asked to build something on top of llalf Dome in Yosemite, they'd say 'fine'," Sieroty said. Under the Sie roty.Grunsky measure. which is technically still alive. there ,,·ould be one state board and six regional boards with veto J>O'.'er over any develop- ment within 1,000 yards ()f the beach front. Carpenter's measure estabt1shes one lf>.member state agency that would be given three years to formulate a coastal land use plan developed from loc al governments' concepts of how tbcir areas should be handled . , During those three years, any develop- ment that would cut dov.·n the size of public beaches <lr available public access properties would be forbidden. Planners Oppose Annexation Plan Of Irvine City The Laguna Beach Planning Com· mission endorsed a strongly "'orded staff report opposing portions of the t ,623-acre Irvine annexation during their meeting 1'.fonday night. r: That report will be sent to the city council meeting \Vednesday. The re~rt included four basic reasons for opposing the aMexaUon and commissioners added a rew of their own. -Portions of the anne:ratlon fall within an area claimed as Laguna Beach sphere of influence. -It is withln the Laguna Canyon watershed area and should be controlled by the city due to the critical nature or the flood plain. -It II within a proposed Laguna G""'1be!L -ll fonn5-one side of the canyon cn- lr>nct to Ille clly. Commissioners no~ that a b\111d~ rooratailum hat been asked !or ill that area.~ particularly were concemed Mth building In the nood plain aru oboervlna that "anything (Qi<r) that eomes down that f1ood plain comes through~" miration for the President," Connally said today. "He ~s my complete support . , . l don't know that I've eve r worked with anyone more dedicated and more disciplined than is the present President oI the United Stales." There \Vas speculation last year that Connally might be selected by Nixon tic> replace Vice President Spiro T. Agnew on the 197Z ticket. The President indicated strongly a fe\v months ago that he saw no need for dropping Agnew. Connally was asked today if he \Vould accept the vice presidential nomination 011 the ticket.if asked. l-Je replied he would not engage in such speculation but added he did not think • I such an offer \\'OU.Id come. "I have no political aspiration! And no pnrticular ambl1lons," Connally said. ·Nil:on was tQuaUy unstinting in his praise of CoMally, describing him as the architect of the Administration 's new rconomic programs of price ando wage controL!I to curb inflation, and drastic moves to strengthen the dollar abroad . Nixon described Connally as "a tower of strength for the Preside nt" and particularly th'e recent d e c i a i o n s regarding the Vietnam war. "When the going is the toughest, Secretary Connally is at his best." the Pres.ident declared. Display ·ur ·Confiscated Shultz \\'as a member or Nixon's original cabinet as Labor Secretary and became the first direc1or of thr reorganized Office of J\1anagen1e11t and 'Budget. a po11·erful post 1vhich won hi1n the unoffi cial litle of "general ninnagrr of the United Slates." Connally himself foreshadov,1e<I his _resignaLion in· the past severnl months py talking about his desire to return lo privat~ life. Just after hls 58th blrthd11y on Feb. 27. he told reporters: "I've spent 1nost <lf my adult lifr in public ser\'ice ... and nO\V 1'1n tired. I want IG do so1ne other things." Nixon said Shultz, fernier dean the • a -I • DAILY PILOT ff•ff r11ot. Explorer Scouts Kirk Oberholtzer, l~t. and Jerry Chilvers, look. over Laguna Police Department dis-- play o! confiscated weapons and riot gear. 'Ibe dis- play ls'Part· of !he pollce week activities. It will be available to the public today until 8 p.m. and Thurs- day and Saturday (rom 3 to 8 p.m. In city ball. Laguna Planners Study Su1nmer Art Festival • By JACK CHAPPELL 01 Irle D•llr r 11o1 11111 Can too many art festivals be too much of a good thing? And jll&t how maoy is too many? Those thorny questions confronted Laguna Beach planning commissioners 1'-Ionday when they were asked to approve "in concept" a proposal for a fourth art festival this summer at. 1550 S. Coast Highway. on a plot of land destined to become a $2.5 million "Village Bazaar." Commissioners declined t h e op. portunity to approve the rest i v a J piecemeal preferring to continue the matter to their June 7 meeting and look at the planned fe.Uval as a whole. ·· As prop(>sed the art festival would have about 100 artists: and craftsmen display· ihg their goods in the vacant are.a behind the old Carpenter Mart. A petition with 34 sigtll'rs in opposition to the proposed festival was presented to the planning comm.is1ion.1 It charged that the iummer festival would iocrease the already critical park- ing shortage, would create more traf[lc (See GUMBINER, Page Z) Board 01\.s Park Plans; Bid Opening Set June 12 Plans and specifications for the pro-. posed 167-acre Laguna Niguel Regional Park were approvtd today by tbe'Orange C<iunty Board of Supervisors and June 11 "'as set a~ the date for opening bkll on the $1 .2 million project. Board members also approved negotia- tions or an agreement for purchaae of ef· 011<nt water from 111' Moult.n Niguel Wal<r Dlstrid. Flood control dlalrlcl chief engineer George Osborne ,.., uked to portldpaU! In tbe n•gotlatlODI for purd>Ue of the reclllmecJ .....,-Wiier. He had oompleted a ,.port on Ille g""'al subjecl lost year. The nglonal part, .... 1aod ....... .., b)' !be Laguna Ni81Jtl ~tion, It~ on the west llde of La l>az Rold; i&llr Crm vaney Parkway. Original plans compleled In 1970 call for picnic and ·play ar<u. boating and fi>hlng In tile !I-acre lake, rnlrooml, roach and parting artas. Construction of the new park was delayed last June by t'1e board tt 111' suggestion or Fifth District Supervisor Ronald W. Cl-• of Ntll]>Ort l!iach, ··'because of the slow~ development of 111' .,..a and the problems with the •• cant North Amnlcan Roctwell plant nearby." A low bid at that time wu •l&to! per- cto! over rstlm.t!H and -wu lobled .. Qospers fequetted. Original ~ !Dr the-regkllat park bad been ap- jimtd on Dec-21, mo. .( July Election Papers Taken For Westbrook Nomination papers were pi cked u p Monday for the city councU caadidacy o( Laguna Beach realtor P.aul K. \Yestbrook in the July 25 special election for the recall of C<luncilman Edward C. Lorr, the city clerk's office &Mounced. Also on Monday, nomination papers signed by JO registfied voters were filed for candidate Carl E. JohMOn Jr., chairman of the city planning com. mission . Deadline !or filing, City Clerk Dorothy Musfelt said, is noon Thursday. Because of the short preparatory period for the election, she added, candidatet wlJhlng to include a printed statement of qualiflca- tlOlll with the sample ballot malling. must file the statement along with nomination papers. A •too printlnc fee is charged for the statement, but there Is no charge for filing . Westbrook, 51, of 1284 Starlit Drive, Ill a former concert ainger who came to Laguna Buch from Nni York 13 yearl ago and maintains a real estate business at 1t43 II. Coast lllghwyy, The realtor uld Mondy be understood papers had been tllen out and v.·ere being circulattd for him, but aald h1a . ~andldaey ii "not official'' yet. Papers rued 10< widldal• Johnlon .. .,.. circulated by Jam" W. Dill•y and signed by Mrs . Alice J1ne David, $7' Center SI.: GW)tl"" II. Kirkpatrick, 14IS Sl<yllne Drive: Ralph D. McCGnJJ<U Jr .• SIS Miramar St.: Harry A. MDCII Jr .. 280 High Drive ; Clenn E. Vedder, ,m Qlfl Dr!"; Luisa Hyun. 4ll Jumlne SI.: 1'-lllC81 S. Engelhard~ 1723 'l1lnlm Drive: Barbara Rablnowttah, 1311 Poplor SL ; Wllllam M. Wllc:oun. 41t LecioD SI.; Ike £LECl'JON, P .. I) i I .t Gracluatt• School of 8 u 1 l n es 5 Ad1n inist rallo11 nt the Unjversi ty nC Chil·ni;o. 11·as the "only cundidnte'' ,:o,i. sidl·rcd to succe~d Co1111t1tly. "lie is n11 t.'Conomist but one that ha~ sh0\\'11 grcut skill in mn11<1J;c.ment." Nixon s.1hl of Shultz. The pros1){'ctivt· return of Connally into T~xas polili('.S on Nixon's behalf would provide a lift lo the President's chance~ of ca pturing -the state 's electora l votes in Noven\ber. no nintter \1•ho t h e Oen1oc•ratic nominee might ht.. In lhc 1968 election, Nixon narrowly lost Texns to Denlocrat l·lubert If. llumphrey . Governor :Favored' SILVER SPRI NG, Md. .(AP) - George C. Wallace, shot down at nn elec- tion·eve campaign rally, today fought tn regain use of his paralyzed legs bul . ' was reported determined to continue hi~ presidential campaign -even from a ·Wheelchair. Doctors sald Wallace I! under sedation bec1UR of paln from his multiple w6unds, fnc1udlng a bullet that remaln11 lodged against his lower 1plne, but In no Immediate danger ol death. They wouldn't predict whether he'll walk agaln. Today, President Nlitl n o f f e r e d Wallace full facilltles of Walter Reed Medical Center. "f' can aasure you Gov. Wallace i11 receiving the be1t medicat Care,·• Nixon said at the White flouse. Charged with the shooting ls Arthur Herman Bremer, 21, a white man woo reportedly followed the Wallace ~.nm· paign for some time. He was held in '200,000 b8il today by a U.S. magistrate. His family and aqualntances in hit home town of Milwaukee said they could supply no motive for the sboottna:. (Seo related story, Page '1) Walla ce was bit several times Monday by point-blank pistol shot. fired in the midst of a crowd at a shopping center In Laurel, Md. Three others also were~ wonded, 11one crillcally. Voter11 Jn Maryland and Michigan balloted today in primarle1 that Wallace is ravored to win , thus making a hili(h point In hls campaign for the Democratic pre11idential nomination. Doctors 1ald al 5 a .m. PDT that Wallace had ·come throuli(h the nlght in good spirit.. despite his pain. "He says it hurts , and he'11 reeling fine ," said Dr. J<lseph Schanno. Schanno listed Wallace'a condition as critical. At 9 a.m. a hospital spokesman said his condition was unchnnged. Wallace is In the intensive care ward of Holy Cross Hospital. A apokesman said well-wishers have sent 50 to 60 ar- rangementl of flowers, and that Mr11. Wallace requested that people find some otper way to express thejr concern . Doctors aaid Wallace, S2, was bit by (See WALLACE, P11e JJ , Orange Coat Weatlter Cooler temperatures are ex· pe<:ted along the Orange Coast on \Vednetda y. w Ith IWlahlne in the afternoon . HtghS at the beaches, 82 rising to n inland. Lows In the SO's. INSIDE TOD-' V Ar1hur Rremn, alleged a,. sailcint of Gov. \V4ltoce, as de· scribtd ui ''etm/wed.n oM "a loner." lib ~fathlr sous ltt mtLrt be rick. See rt.orlts. photos 011. Page f . l .M. 1..-• • C .. I..,..., I a. . ..i...-,..,. c-. .. '",..._. ,, ~ .... 1c.. 11 ............ ' ,....,....._, It ........ 1•11 .,..,. .. ."""" tt ..... F H ... u.llft 14 • I ......,..,.. '' Mlrfl11141 ,,,,.., It ... ,,.... ........ . w .... '-"' ,, '-" l~M ,_. ... ,. ........ ,............ ,, T"-'"" If w..... • Wit!.. .... '' __., ...... , ..... .... --. • ~ DAILY f'IL01 Bid Seeks· C rove Use For Autos Laguna Beach planning commissioners Monday night held over until June 7 a re- quesl'to use a canyon eucalyptus grove for parking at summer art festivals for fe Rr the autos might h11rm the trees. Paul Westbrook, Laguna realtor who owns the gum trtt grove, pitched the ettmmlsslon that exhibitors would pay 125 to park all sta90n under the trees. lie ..,...owe·d the rnoney v•ould go to main· lain the old master eucalyptus grove. 9 _The commission, ho"-·ever, "'asn't con· v1nced. Some fears had been expressed last ac-:ison that trees in the historic grove n1ii.::ht be chopped down tt> make room for 'parking...._ WestbrOOk assured commissioners that M trees would be cut to provide parking iipaces. tte said that the money raised by the parking of artists' cars there would be ~pent to maintain the trees. Westbrook said that about 20 to 30 can1· could be parked on the property. Each pnrk.lng space not used on the street ell dn.y by exhibitors can be used many tin1e11 by customers, he said. "I don't know or anyone else who Is or- rerlng his own personal property to help ~ol.»_e. the parking problem around the fcsl fva ls," Westbrook !!&Id. lie said that he wlll receive no funds from the project and that the city could determine administration of the "Save tht' Trees fund.'' "Those trees need ran. I wouldn't harm them for anything. but. I can't af- ford to preserve them on my oWn " he said. ' The planners asked Westbrook to return June 7 wtth an!'iwers to their que,s.. 1ions tbout access ovtr a small bridge. du st, night lighting, possible actidental dan1age to trees and tra(fic circulation. Pedest1ian Hit By Car, Incurs Hip Fracture". A Laguna Beach woman pedestrian Buffered a hip fracture Monday when &lrock by a c•r In a crosswalk at Laguna Avenue and South Coast Highway. Vivian Alford Dickinson, 65, of 592 Allvlew Terract, was scheduled to under- go l!iUrgery today at South Coast Com· munlty Hospital, where she was taken by ambulance following the 10:3{1 a.m. ac· cidt~t. Her condition Is antlsfactory, a ho..c:p1tal spokesman said. f'olice said driver Charles Lert1y King, 31 . of 3120 Bern Drive, had eased his car into the crosswalk, attempting to turn right onto the highway on a red traffic light, \\'hen Mrs. Dickinson Jtepped off the curb. on a green llght, and was knocked to the ground by the King vehi· c le. Details or the accident will be reported to the district attorney's office for possl· ~t further action, police said. Sgt. David Avers noted that slgns ban· ning right turns onlo tht highway on red trA!rlc lights were ordered removed some month,, ago by the State Division or lli ghways, supposedly to speed the traffic flow. Laguna Will Conduct B1·iefing on Schools A question and ans~'er session on 'the J,11guna Beach school system \VIII be presented 7:45 a.m. \\'e dnesday at LagunA Beach Chamber of Commerce breakfasrat the Hotel Laguna. William Thomas, school board presi- dent: Dr. Norman Brownt, board 1nembcr, and Or. Robe.rt Reeves , assis- tant superintendent, will be answering the qeustions from the audience. Reserva- tions are required for tht breakfast and m:iy be made by celling the Chamber of· lice.: at 494·1018. ~t is $2.50. ' . OU.HGI COAST " DAILY PILOT Thf °'9.._. Cotlt DAll.Y !"JI.OT, •lltl ~kll h camblllld "'-Ntwn·P'rns, I• Sl\lllll atwd OJ ~t11e °'"'°""' CM•t l"vlllltlllolt OmNnr. s~ ,.., • .Ol!lont ,,. pvbl~ Monctay tl'of"Willl l'"rld•r. fOr Colll Mn1, Nt..,orf ,Nth, Hvnllf"IDlwl ltldltilovnt11n V•llfY, t.1oun1 9ttdl,. lrvlM/Sadd!llWdt l!ld S11t CltlMl'ltl/ kn J1111t C1pl1lr11"10. 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O(l'\w '1» __,,., .,, -ii u.u. ,,.,....,, ""°"" ...,._._AM ..... ..,. • literature Too 23 New Classes Ey·ed for Laguna Three new courses In British literature and 20 other first-time course5 in s:everal departments head off the proposed course of study for the 1972.73· yr:ar at Laguna Beach High School . For the !lr5t time, the high school star! has recommended three classes - Famous British Novels, British Satire and Plays of George Bernard Shaw -be offered to students. ' A total of 23 new offerings are. proposed in the course or study wh ich 'A'ill be co~· sidered for adoption Tu t:sday night by trustees of the school district. The addition of the course!. noted prin· cipal Donald Haught, was made possible by the switch from the semtster system . of two IS.week periods, to a tri-mester Students-Raise F11nds for Tree As Memorial calendar, 11llow.i,ng three 12--w~k periods. William Thackeray's "Vanity fair ... Ch a r I es Dickens' "Oliver Twist.'' Somerset Maugham's •·or HumAn Bon- dage" and D. H, Lawrence's "Sons and Lovers " will be four classics studied in the British novel! course. Each student In the class will be re-- quired to read !ix noveb during the 12· week run of the course. The offering in British satire will ex· ~Ine "epigrams, character sketches, ~allads, monologues, essays, short stor- ies, novels and plays. Critical papers and examinations will be required as well as creati ve attempts at satire by the stu· dent," the course description states. Oral interpretation and dramatization of selected short plays to · increase the student's understanding of George Bernard Shaw will make up the content of the course that bears his name. Other new courses in the English department are The Two R's, to acquaint students with a variety of authors and provide experience in writing literary essays; English Usage and Mechanics; Preparing for College Entrance Exams, and Dramatic Literature and Modern· Thu rston lntermediate School students Media. ha'<e pres~nt~d the_ l.aguna Beach Unifiecf""' Changes next year are also due in the School District w~th a gift of $100 in high school science department, with memory or Jca.nnette llurst, ~ seven~h Organic Chemistry. ~luman ~logy and grad.e student ~11led by a passing car 1n Physics and PhilC>sophy offered. front of the Irvine Company horse stables The Natural History program has been six weeks &JO. . r~vamped completely with separate sec· The money, said Thurston Instructor t1ons ln the areas of marine environment Art Fisher, will be used for the purchase coastal e11vironment, mountain and of a large weeping willow for location on desert environmenls perceptions of school district grounds . nature and man, and 'man -technology Thurston art coordinator Gail Kuhlman and .his environment. headed the drive to raise the funds , said Reform and Protest 111ovements in Fisher, and received donations from America and Comparative Religions are teachers, students and friends of the 14· t1ie new offe rings in the social science year old daughter or Mr. and Mrs. Fred . departrilent-:- Straffo{d, 2955 Mountain View Drive. For students.. who wish a basic Trustees of the sc hool dist rict will be background in mathematics, Practical asked to accept the gift at today's 7:30 Mathematics and Funda mentals of p.m, meeting in the Education Center, Mathematic.s will be offered. Advanced 550 Blumont St. students wtll be offered Trigonometry Also included on the agenda for the and .th~ Slide Rule, plus Probability and meetin~ are the following items : Stat1shcs. , . , -Action on a request from high school Folk Art bas been included 1n the Art tennis coach Ronald Ros.s to place six Oeparbnent course or study next year. tennis courts on the high school north The cl_•sses. wi_ll deal with practices campus, using money raised in the com· use.fut m daily hfe_ such as the tie dye, mWlity to fund construction costs. batik, . rug m~k1ng, wood carving, -Approval of the high school 1972-73 ce:a~cs, bookbinding and silk screen course of study, which includes 23 new printing. . . COW'SCEi made WSible by the switch from General Business w1l1l be back next a semester etlendar to a trimester calen· year, aft~r a two years ab~ce due to dar. lack of interest. "The OfJice : Reality -Adoption of 8 resolution opposing the :rainin~ th~ugh S~mulation'' will be held \Vatson amendment, which calls for 8 in co.nJuncl!on with the Regional Oc· maJ:imum property t•J: rate of $2 per cupat1onal ~ogram .. $100 aB.'lessed valuation to pay for tax Co-educational Ethnic and Folk dance, governmental services t.o teach the fundament11ls of worldw ide · folk. dancing, will be given for the first From Page i WALLACE ... four or five bullets .. Only two lodged in his body. One wu removed from around his right shou1der . Another punctured his ab- domen and lodged on his spine, causing damage to the spinal cord. That bullet "'as tert in, though Schanno said it might be taken out later, Bullets also pierctd \Vallace's right forearm , grazed the back of his left shoulder blade and grazed his upper right shoulder. "I think the governor is going to make a recovery," Schanno said. "Now v.·hat disability he has as a result of his wounds is difficult to evaJuate at this time. We're all very optimistic nt this point." \Vallnce's wife, Cornella, said early to- day. after her husband bad come through five hours of surgery, that she is op-- timistir. "As you know. his naturt. he didn't earn the title of the 'fighting little judge' for nothing, and I expect him to continue in the same vein.'' Spokesmen said Wallace intended to continue his campaign, even if he doesn't regain use o( his legs. Schanno noted that President Franklin D. Roosevelt had been a wheelchair cripple during his years in the White House. Nixon, in a 'Vhite House appearance lo. l'Jnnounce the rtsignation or Treasury Secretary John 8 . Connally. offered \\'allace lhe prtsidential suite at 'f\'alter Retd. He said If \Valtace wishes to return to Alabama to recuperate an Air Force hospital plane will be put at bis disposal. . Earlier, Nixon dispatched a White House physician, Dr. Wllllam Lukash, to aid \Vallace's doctors. Nixon said he Is keeping In '4close touch" \\'it'h \\'allace's condition. He also said Nicholas Zarvos., the wounded Secret Service man , ls "substantially improved." 7.ar\'OS undtr"'ent 7l• hours of surgery for a bullet ""Ound in the neck and was descrlbtd as "doing Yery satisfactorily" this morning. Brr.mer ~·as liken before U.S. ~!aglstratt Clartnct Goelz In Baltimore latt htonday night Md ordertd held under m .ooo bpnd on charges of shootlng \\'allace incl a Sttrtl Service agent. Za.rvo!. - N"ewsmen recalled set.ing Bremer 1t earlie; "'•!lace ralUes 1n r.itaryland, and one NBC:TV photogrtph from ooe of those r1lhes shows hlm ..-·taring 1 button .reiding "Stand l'"p for Amerie1." a Wallace slogan . Frank Daniel, 1 Walllct compalall -ker. Slid be rttlll«I ... 1og Brtmu Of ........ looking lllte him •l t rally In Mil-. Wis. Polke lz> ltlllm.,... Mlch. 11ld th<y quostioood an Arthur H. Bmntt prior to a Wallaoo rlll1 U.. Slbinlty nlgb~ but didn't cl<laJo him. n., sald Ibey '\'*: tioole! him ....._ -complained that be loolr:td IU!piclous, time by the physical education depart· ment. · "Folk dance U fast becoming one of the most involving recre ational activities in the country," the course description notes. From Pagel GUMBINER. • • pressure. and would cause economic distttss to k>cal merchants by drawing business Crom them. J\1arc Friedberg, marketing vice presi· dent for Gumbiner Development C-Om- pan}', told the commissioners at the beginning of his presentation that a study he had conducted in the north end of town indicated that Art-A-Fair there improved business for surround ing businesses. "Having that kind of attraction im- proves business. It is something more than just a row of stores that people can visit anytime. This is nqt something that will drain away business. you can't have too much art at this lime of the year." Friedberg told the commissioner~. He said that the area now is unat- tractive and that the festival develop- ment \\·ould mean some tsthelic im- provement until development of the Gumbiner Bazaar. · .. I'm continually having to 'have cars tov;ed away. old junkers that are left on that property, it's a ljuestion of what's better for business. a festival or that " Mark Gumbiner, the developer. told co~­ missiC>ners. ~1arta ~titrovich, managtr of the Art )Center Gallery . spoke in opposition to the art festival. ''The shops pay taxes, and rent and they're here all year long. The summer months are their big business times," she said. "How y,·ould the O\Vners of the little bookstores feel if there were a book festival every summer and peOple came in their stores asking 'where's the book festival~· " She said that a limit should be put on the number of art festivals in to"·n. Although !be property would be permit· led lo be used as a festival site for Only ont summer "'bile construction of the Village Baz.aar shopping C(rmpteJ: is pen· ding. there was concern that a fourth ft!lival 8S90Ci.a.ttoo would be tstabltsh!d this year. and would be ca.st out without a : home nut i-..r. • I "You'no giving birth to 1 baby h ..... and like all habits it is going to grow. I Wbeno will it 80?" the arto,..aaUery manoaer asked. While expressing oo formal oplnloos on the matter, commisslooera Wk.ed about both aides of lhe proposal • "We besltata to gi\'e final approv1t to the "'°"'Pl becall50 U might be mo<e .,,. COlalginc -~ -log than ... Jlllm!." cart Jobnsoo. comml1sloo 1 chalnna.n, aaid in coolilllina the matter. He cllrected that the denlopor provlcle ....... to questilnl lit parklna. trafllc dn:ul1Uoo, bow ...., tJbllliton. -Ing fenct, and othe< delalls. • • • O~ILY P'ILOr Sl11f P'IMltl HE WILL RETURN Visiting Prince of Hunu Medical Vnit Air Cooling Hit by Jury By JACK BROBACK Of Iha D1llr P'lt.t Sl•fl Me.mbers of the 1972 Orange County Grand Jury toured the Orange County 1'-1edical Center in April and today Center Administrator Robtrt White probably wishes he had not been so hospitable and talkative. " The jury released a letter dated hfay 4 t¥1onday criticizing the Center (or "lack of proper air conditioning which leads to the UMecessary deaths of 12 patients each Eiummer .1' -· Panel m,embers also objected to the fact that they. were allowed to tour the Cente r's lnteri.Sive ·cM-e units .without being masked or gowned . White said today that he !old jury members, while making a pitch for Center improvements, that during "the 30 hot days we experience in an average year 12 people probably die." But, the ad- ministrator said, be added, 11There is no certainty that heat is the principal fact8r in their deaths." The administrator said today that most patients who die during hot summer days are '_'weak or elderly and would possibly survive a few months longer if not e1· posed to unnecessary heat." The jury's letter also charged: -That.the C~ter administration should clean up its hospital and personnel through better housekeeping standards and more unlfonn grooming regulations. -: That portable air conditioning units be installed immediately (White said he is requ esting 90 window air condi tioners at an approximate cost or $135,000 in his 1972-73 budget). -That Center administration should Immediately concern itseJf with staff morale by improving communications between the front office and the general staff. The jury letter, however. praised most personnel they had interviewed and said they appeared to be, ' ' e x t r e m e 1 y dedicated. well educated and well trained . . . and doing a fine job Wlder adverse ('{)ndiUons .'' Regarding their tour of the intensive care unit and the fact that they were not required to wtar masks or gowns the jurors said, "to bring a group or people int& an intensive care unit IC> d_isrup t the staff and to gawk at the patients is Jess than ·wise." \\"bite particularly objected to the charge that people were dying by the '·dozens at the medical center because of lack of air conditioning ." 'Shangri·la' Prince of Hunza Pays Coast Visit ' older brother Gahzanfar cannot take over. 01 1111 0t11r P'll•t s11tt He doesn't know what he wlll do In Posters with beautiful girls in grass Hunza (population 30,000) when ~ By CANDACE PEARSON skirts or couples sipping wine at a returns ofter sumrner school, but be sidewalk care beckon travelers to "get Imo b away from it all " at various tourist spots. ws e must go back . But to really get away from it "all"_ "People leave sometimes to go to all the heart attacks. cancer, asthma, school or service," he said quietly, "but tuberculosi s, Crime, jails, pollution, smog ·whenever posslble, they always go back.•• and mysterious additives jn the' food -Looking very UIJW"incely in a btUe suit go to llunza. • and tie, Ameen spoke wistfully of home, Hunza is a smalr 3,900 l!iQUare mile where he slr:pt out under the stars often kingdom within the country of Kashmir, or rode yaks in the mountains. located between China and Arghanistan in "But here," he added, "everything the Himalaya s. seems more artificial. The buildings are It has been reputed to be a sh angrila . so structured, there is no naturalness . or a utopia because· some of its people "It all look as if you can't breath free.- Jive to be 120 to 140 years old. ly. The windows are ev.en c!C>sed, with air Many still work in the fitlds when in conditioning." t~eir early lOOs, Dr. Jay Hoffman, :iulri· Everything In t the United States I! t1on expert, said Monday. "faster" too, than in Hunza , wher~ 1:5 Hoffman lectures on Hunt.a at the percent of the peeple farm, he said. Seventh-day Adventist Church in Costa It is a se lf-sufficient economy, where Mesa and Monday greeted 22-year-.old each person grows his own food and Hunza Prince Ameen at the church, makes his own goods and clothing front whom he hadn't seen for 11 years. ___ the few sheep, yaks, goats and camel• Prince i\meen is visting Hoffman in raised there. California during a break in his studie5 During the winter, people eat meat for a masters in busineSs administration because the climate naturally freezes it, at the University of \Vest Virginia. but warmer summtr weather prevents " The second oldest son of King ?-.lir, that and natives eat fresh or naturally Ameen "·ill not become king unless his dried fruits and vegetables. - Capist'Yno's Trustees H~ar Budget Problems By-1;\AMELA HALLAN • or "'' Diii, "1101 SI•!! Severe budget problems lhat could turn Jnto a disaster if North American Rockwell sells its Laguna Niguel plant to the U.S. Government were described to trustees of the Capistrano Unified -School District Monday. The $10,489,218 "tentative, preliminary budget ''. which is up about $1 million over last year's adopted budget, calls for a l!l-cent tax increase in the permissive areas for non-educational programs man. dated by the state. "OLir educational program remains in- tact this year but we will have severe cutba~ks in all other areas," said Superintendent Truman Benedict, who reminded the board that he did not think the SQ.cent tax override will be enough for the next three years. Assistant Superintendent Sam Chicas added that the budget includes $200 ,000 from the North American Rockwell plant. "If that"s taken off lhe tax rolls we could be bankrupt -well , perhaps that isn't the right word to use.'' The government is consider ing purchase of the building. Government ownership would remove the building from tax rolls. Although rwnors have been flying for months, no official announcement has been made. Increases in the permissive areas stem from a cent here and there in retirement funds. the regior:al occupa tionaJ, program community service, adult education, th~ n:ientally retarded and educationally han- dicapped, and seventh and eighth grade excessive costs . The largest increase since unification 'A'ill occur in the state school building repayment "'hich jumped from 32 cents to 56 cents. Bond interest and redemption rate went down. The superintendent told 'the board that most increases in the educational pr~ gram and staffing areas will be caused by the opening of Dana Hills High School next year. The ulilities fund also will in· crease. "'\Ve also face trouble in the teacher category." said Benedict. •'\Ve face our greatest potential growth next year and I · don't believe enough money Hr budgeted.•• He added that no provisions have been made for salary Jncreases, exce.pt for , normal step increases, and the unrestricted reserve has only been estimated at $100,000. "We've had to raise taxes this year and last year,'' said Trustee Cordon P~ter_son. "We need some long-term thinking on how v.·e are going to finance education in the next few years. We will either have to curtail programs or raise more funds in the traditional way. '"What l want to know is shall we curtail programs now in anticipation of th~following year or wait and take out beating then? Benedic t answered that the district cannot live with only $100.000 reserve. He said further cuts will have lo be made and urged everyone to pray for a windfall. From Page 1 ELECTION ... and Joyce S. Dusenberry. 278 Ruby St. In the July 25 election, voters will be asked to cast ballots for or against the r~cal\ of Lorr and also to vote for a can· d1date to replace him on the council should he be recalled. ' Loans 'lo Be Probed LOS ANGELES (A Pl -The Small Business Adm inistration says it will ~ake a months-long investigation of its dlSasler loan program. "We can't tell whether the policies we have were follo w· ed and if they were followed what went wrong," the 1.-0s Angeles Times quoted an S~A official as saying Monday. The Tu:~es published stories this year ac· cus1ng the SBA of mishandliilg loans I() persons whose homes were damagt.d in the 1971 Los Angeles earthquake. · All For Jlle F~ly- Wliol olionges your house more than eny other thin g? I Whet improves accoustics dramatically 7, Whot worms up • house? Whot imports unique beauty an<! oomfort? , .. C.rpeling from Aldon 's, thot's whotl 01 your h01111 "•lifles" you, stop in onC:I soe us FAST.) , ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placelltla A••· COSTA MESA 646-4131 • ' ' ( I t ' I , -----..·-.. ._ Saddlehaek EDITION * VOL. 6~) NO. 137, 3 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES • ORANG!! COUNTY, CALIFORNI~ TUESDAY, MA'( '16, '19n • Connally . Resigns as Secretary ,.of WASHINGTON (UPI) :._ Treasury Secretary John a Connally, a 1ong11mC power in Texas Democratic politics, resigned bis Cabinet post today with a strong hint he ·will campaign for Presi- dent Nixon's re-election in November. Stt11nding 11ide by siile 10 the White House Press Roon1, Nixon and Coitnally~ exchanged praise for each other's performance in the 17 months the Texan has been in the llepublican ad- :.:::r.istralion. · Asked if he would actively ,work on Nix- on's behalf in the coming campaign, Con- nally replied, "That is entirely possible." Nixon announced that he \Va s nom.Jnating George P. Shultz, head of the • Office of ~1anagcment and Budget, to succeed Connally, who \\'ill stay on until Shultz is confirmed. mlration for the P.resident," Conn•lly !aid today. "He has my complete support ... I don't know that I've ever worked with anyone more ,dedicated and more As Shultz's successor as head of OMB, disciplined than is the present President Nixon pickecf"' Shultz's top assistant, of the United States." Caspar \V. Weinberger, a former -catifornia leg islator and 0 n e _ t i m e There was speculation last )'ei!r that California Republican chairman. Connally might be selected by Nixon to Connally said h~ has "no plans replaCi! Vice President Spiro T. Agnew on whatsoever" for his immediate future. the 1972 ticket. The Pre:sident indicated Last week, Connally , the 0 n1 y strongly a few months ago that he sa w no Democrat in Nixon's cabinet, told need for dropping Agnew. ... newsmen he was "not in the process or-Connally was asked today If he y,•ould changing parties" but added "the accept the vice presidential nomination possibility certainly exists that I could do on the ticket if asked. so." "I h8.ve nothing but the profoundest ad- H<; replied he would not engage in such speculayon but added he did not thlnk • • such an offer would come. "I have no polltlcal a1plratlons and no particular ambitions," Coooally aald. Nixon was equtlly unotlntlnr In his praise of Connally, des<riblni him .. lhe architect o£ the Adminlstrailon'a new ~ economic proa:rams of price and wage controls .to curb lnfiatlon, and drastic moves to strengthen the dollar •bl"oad. Nixon described Connally as "a tower of strtngth for the President" and particularly the recent d e c I s t o n s regarding the Vietnam war. "\Vhen the going is the tou1hest. Secretary Connally is at his best," the President declared. ace I Growth Platas Forde -Ends Santa Ana Vows Position To Fight Irvine -As Pkinner The May 2~ nearing on Irvine's pro- posed 9,600-acre annexation by the Local Agency Formation Commission {LAFC) may be a v.·arm one as the city of Santa Ana joins Laguna Beach and Saddleback Valley interests in opposing the-new city's growth plans. The Santa Ana City Council on a 4 to 3 vote Monday vowed to fight the 53;ooo acre sphere of influence map filed by the city o! Jrvine. Some Santa Ana councilmen, not.ably Jerry Patterson, supported contentions of Santa Ana official! who asked council ap- pro\•al of a protest on three grounds. They are: -Santa Ana's sphere of influence map on file with the LAFC ovei"Jap! the Irvine sphere area. (Irvine officials contend the incorporation blocks Santa Ana from any possible annexation of these properties near El Toro Marine Corps Air St.ation l. -Santa Ana has a "contract" signed by presumably responsible officials of the lrvine Company declaring thei r intent to annex a considerable portion of what now constitutes the presumed city of I.rvine to the city of Santa Ana . (The old "promis- ed land" argument referring to a 1963 let- ter that to date no court has agreed could have been binding on any Santa Ana council other than the one that ham- mered out the 1963 agreement with the lrvine Company on the then proposed 938- ocre Jrvine Industrial Complex). -Santa Ana 's continuing "extensive litigation'' over enforcement of the "promised land" leUtr seek.ing $15 million in damages from the lrvtne Com- pany and its contention that the city of Irvine "doesn't exist." (Thal battle. con- tending the incorporat ion election v.•as ii· legaly called moves to the oHice of Stale Attorney General Evelle Younger next Monday for a hearing on whether or not Santa Ana may continue to press its con- tention ). * f: ~ Lagunans Rap Annexa tion Plan Of Irvine City The Laguna Beach PlaMi ng ·Com- mission endorsed a strongly worded staff report oPposing portions of the 9,623-acre Jrvine annexation during their meeting ?lfonday night. That report \rill be sent to the city council meeting Wednesday. The report included four bas ic reasons for opposlng the annexation and commissioners added a few of the ir OW(J. -Portio ns of the annexation fall within an area claimed as Laguna Beach sphere of lnOuenct . -It is wilhin the Laguna Canyon watershed 1rea and should be controUed by lhe city due to lhe critical nature ol the flood plain. -It is within a propoltd Laguna Greenbelt. ,.,,., ,• -It fonns one-side of the canyon tn- ltaoce to the city. • Commla1i0oen notl!d that 1 bulldin& mor1torlum ba1 been askid for In lbal a.mi. 'Ibey particularly were concerned with building in the flood pllin .,... observing that "1nythina (Wlf«) that ....., down that flooc! plain COID<I UrooP Logunl.• l Laguna Beach officials noted Monday they were concerned about the' Irvine sphere of influence because it includes part of the Lagu~ Canyon watershed. The area Irvine <bnts to annex would mo\'e the new city 's boundaries to the Sycamore Hills portion of Laguna Beach and might affect plans for the Laguna .Greenbelt, officials said Monday. On May Ht, the Saddleback Area Coordinating Council attempted to file a sphere of influence map covering 50,000 acres lying southeast of Irvine. Of that total acreage, 3,000 acres overlap the Irvine annexation and spbei:e of in- nuence. That map would reserve for some future Saddleback Valley city lands the lrivne Company plans to develop as an industrial park -1,000 acres -and Lion Country Safari. The LAFC merely received the map and may or may not act on what the SACC feel s is its area of concern. Only cities may file fonnal sphere maps, the LAFC was reminded by Irvine Councilman Henry Quigley. OAILY •ILOT Sl1fl •11tt1 IT'S A LONG WAY HOME Teacher Biii Ander10n P11is Foot Down ' Teacher Seeki1ig Olynipic Spot By CANDACE PEARSON Of ltlt D1llr •t1ot Sl1H Meeting jackrabbits and watching sunsets turn colors over the hills of ~iission Viejo are just a few of the things Bill Anderson loves about running more than 100 miles a week. "To me ifs an exciting kind of thing, actually getti ng out, seeing things," says Anderson, a math teacher at Rancho San Joaquin Intermediate School in East Irvine. He is training for the Olymp ic marathon. "Running is half my life." adds the man v.·ho usually runs home lo ~1ission Viejo from school each da y. The short v.·ay. it's 11 miles; the longer route is 17 miles. Anderson, 29. wa s captain of the track team at Occidental College. lie was graduated in 1965. lie is now aiming al a r-.tay 27 quali· fying meet where he must run the more than 26 mile event in at least two and a half hours. If he makes that time, he will go on to the Olympic trials July 9 in Eugene, Oregon. where runners with the top three times are taken for the summer Olym- pics in ~1unich. Germany. The best time in the nation right now, Anderson say s, is t"''O hours and 15 minutes. Anderson has done two hours and 27 minutes, but that was before he injured a tendon in his left leg. He is working now to build it back up by running 12 to I& miles a day during the week and 20 to 25 miles a day on weekends. But the Palos Verdes marathon May 7'l may be ''a little too soon'' fears Anderson, who's hoping, just in case, that someone will also sponsor a "last chaiice" run in June. Jn 196&. he qualified for the Olympic !See RUNN.ER, Pago 1) Controversial Orange County PlaMing Commissioner Amold Forde to d a y r"ignl!d his posl on lhe county body el- fective immediately, Ron Yeo of C.orona del Mar, a PfO~ lneol member of tbe Clll>en1 Dlrec:tlol\ Flndin& i:ommltlte and of Project %1, was -appolilr.d by Fiith I> II f'r f rl I Superv~ Jlooald W. Caspers lo-replace Forde. Caa:pen' nomination was approved unanimously. - Forde, a Jong-time a1soclate or Caspers and a re,. estate broker, said in a letter to Casper• that he: wu forced to rulgn becaUJe of preuure of personal business. Caspers put through a resolution of com- mendation !or Forde's 17 monlhs service on the commls1ion. During hi! service on the county plan- ning body, Forde was in the ctnter a( many controvrr1lal is1ue1 including the Sadd.leback versus Misalon Viejo hospital light, the Mcllonnell-Douglas properly rewne near Orange County Airport 1Dd other vital ;ssues. During Forde'• first year on the board he was allgned with Foortb District c.om- mi.ssioner Fred Jeffenon, now clielrman of the commission and First District Commissioner Woodrow Butterfield In many 3 to 2 declskins. Go-kart Motors, Scuba Gear Lost Burglars were active 1n the Mission Viejo area Mond1y night with theft. of scuba diving equipment and " go-kart motors belnc rtparted to Orange County sherllf'1 deputiai by local resklent3. Deputies 1akl 1CUba tanks. ngulators and related diving equipment v1lued al $516 were taken lrom lhe home of John Mormann, l&lel De Seo Ave .• by In- truder• who for ced open the garage door. Threet go-kart motora valutd by the owner at $200 were rtolen from the home of Lannie A. Brodtt1, 242&1 Chrisanta Drive. Again the g1rage door wu broken open by the thieve!, deputies aaid. Return of Film Ordered County Must Produce 'Seve 1i in ci. Barn' on Monday A federal judge In Los Angeles ha~ order(!d the. Orange County district, at· tomey and sheriff to retum to hi:s court nut '.Mond1y with the controversial g;i.y film "Seven in 11 Barn'' st-ittd last March on th! UC lnrtnt campus. U.S. f)istrlct Court Judge Jesst Cur\1s said.ltlcmday the film must be returned before bearings on lhe suit by the Ga'y Studnrts Union (GSU) thapter at UCI will ctlltinue. Tilt GSU brought .Wt against the ""'n- ty olf..W. after •heriff's deputi,. ,.il<d tbe mm at a gatbering of 3lO pen6ll! In ICien<e ledtn hall. Prior ~ lhe ~· the GSU bad ap<ed to compl, with a cCI ad- ministration ban on the fil m'1 showing as part of a program on obsa:nily. follov.·ing a screening before a panel o! students. faculty and admlnlstntort, Vice Chancellor John C. Hoy banned tbe showing. Judge Curtis said the sherilf and dJo. trlct attorney may race contempt of court rulinI? H they don 't rctum lhe fUm by next Monday . The GSU contends In 111 suit tbal lhe mm ..izur. coostrtutes umnirrllllfd a brtdgement of lhe CONtilutlonal r1aJits . o1 frttdom ol expr....., and •Aemblr. Al lhe time that lull wu filed, GSU President Torry OI_,, 1 27·,ear.old graduat• SIUdenl at IJCI, indicated 1 11111 t againll tbe university might be pouiblo. However, GSU member• later decided to "work wtlb.ln the syatem" to change the rq-policy whioh pWenll UC ad- mlnllitatoro ficrn a!Io#ln& "oboc<ne or . lewd" pruentatlons on campusn. l>r. Hoy bad cited that UC policy u tbe ...UO.. lor h1a dq>lal of the film'• show· Ing. The GSU bu not contended that tbe film ... not -but -thlt "ltbout l<l'ff!lin( of the Olm . tbe .._ ol lhe oblcenit, luue -Id hive beea ltu l'1luable. GSU atfome)' O.vld Brown ol I.GI Ancela oontended In tbe llllt tbe film '• Jbow1nc '""1id have been entlrely "lepl" In tbe -of the pnll!IDI. 1 Shultz. was a member or Nlxon·s orlglnal cabinet as l.abor Sreret'ary nnd became lhe flrst director of the reorganized Offict of M11nagement And Budget, a pov.·erful p()lt which \\'On hln1 the unofficial title of "general mnnager of the UnitM States." Connally himself roreshadO\¥ed hi~ . reslgnatlon in the past several n1ontM by t'alkliig' about his desire to return · to private life. Just after his 58th blrthdoy on Feb. 27, he told reporters : "I've spent most of n1y adult life in public service ... and now I'm tlrtd . I want to do 1ome other thlngs." Ntxon aaid Shultz, formtr dtan the IULLU LODGED HUE . . -....... V,I D•AWINa WALLACE PARALYZED - Doctors say the Alabama gov· ernor is making a remarkable recovery but th at paralysis could be permanent. The bull et that passed through hil abdo- men will not be removed un· ti l the governor is in better shape. Defeat Spurs Ballot Effort For Coastli1ie By L. PETER KRIEG Of 11!t D1llr Pllft Ir.ff A crucial state .senate committee vote Monday that virtually kllled tough coastline control Jegl!lation ho1 ap.. parently triggered all-out efforll by California envlronmentallsta to get the coastal protection Issue on the November ballot. "The legislature ha1 fallcd and J hope the people won't," 1aid Janet Adams, an official of the CalJfornia Coa1tal Alliance. Her words came after the 1trong measure co-authored by Senator Donald Gn.tnsky (RaWataonvt lle ) •net Assemblyman Alan Sleroty (().Beverly Hlll1) waa rejected on a 4 to 4 vote af the senate's natural reaource1 commltttt. Grunsky chose not to seek a ~cond vote In the measure when the lull nlne- membtr panel waa: pre.sent later in the da y. A coam! blll 1ponoored by El>!< Senator Dtnnla Carpenter (R.-NeYo•port Btach) that b aimed 1t preserving local govtrmntnt control u well as the en- vlronmenl was paued by the panel, however, on a $-3-1 vote. Carpenter'• bill now gou: to tbe 1enate finance commlttet. Mrs. Ada~ ha1 1trong criticism lor UllJ: measure. "It'• wor1e than worthle1!. It's destructive. It'•• bulldtrs bill ." 1he aaid . Sieroly blmseU al'eed with the ap- praisal and luhed out at lhe building 1r1c1.. for Of>l>Ollni his bill. "If they wtre ukod w build aom.thing oo top o( llaU Do1!1e in Yoeemlt<, they'd ay 'flnt'," Sleroty u.ld. Under the Sieroty-Grunaky mt'NUrt. wblch la t«!wllcally lllll alive, lhert would be on. •tAI< boord and 1Ix l'flloool boords with veto power over any develop- ment wllhln !,Im yards of Ille beldl front. Calllftlf«'• lllUIUl't tllablbhn ... I~mber Ital< llal<J that woald be given tine YW'I to lomnllato 1-.! land ase plan develol>ed from loCl1 IS.. Gl\IJNKY, r., I) • "' Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks ~EN CENTS Graduntt· School of 8 u 11 l n 1 t • Adml'r1l8 tr11l lon it! thr Unlverslly or Chit:ogo. \\'l\S the "only candidate" COB- sidered to SU<'l'l't~ Connnlly. "lie i~ un econon1l1t but onf' th111 his :-ho1\'ll grent skill In man11sem<'nl ," Nixon said of Shultz. The 1>ros1>t>tl1ve return of Conna lly Into Tcx11s politics on Nixon 's behalf would provi<le u lift to the l'resld('nt's chan('t:I of cap turinR the state's clectornl votes· 111 Noveinbtr, 110 mutter who I he f)f'rnotr11llc no1nlnee might be. ln the 19fi3 election. Nixon narrowly lo~t Tr'C:1s to Democr111 .llubert II . Jlumph1't'Y· • lllll Governor • 'Favored' . In 2 States Sil.V im SPRINr.. Md . IAP) George C. Walla ce, Hhol down at :in elet· tion-eve co mpalgn rally, today fought to reRain use of hl1 paralyzed lei(s but was reported determined to continue hi!t presidenllal campaign ~-even from • wheelchair. Doctors s:ild Wallace Is under ~atlon because of pain rrom his multlp1r. wounds , lncludlng a bulltl that remain11 lod&ed again.st hl.11 \owcr !pine, but in oo Immediate danger or death. J{is c.omJltlon wa! stable. • They wouldn't predict whether he 'll walk again. Today, Prt1ldenl Nixon o It e re l't \Yallace full lacllltie!f of Walter need Medical Cent.tr. "I can auure }'ou (.iov . \Vallace l.11 receiving the belt rnedical care," Nixon said at the White Jlou.ire. Charged wlth the shooting I~ Arthur Jlerman Bremer, 21, a white man who reportedly followed the \Vallace c11m- pn ign for some time. lie wis held in $200,000 bail today by a U.S. mn1ti slratl'. llis family and ;iqua int.anCf?s in h1ii· home town of Mllwnukee s11id they could supply no motive tor the 11hootlng. i See related .story. Page 4) Wallace was hit 11cveral tlmts Monchty by 'J)Oint..blank pl11tol shots fired in th• midst of a crowd at 1 shopping ctnter In Laurel. Md. Three others also were w'onded, 11one crillcally. Voters In Maryland and Mlchlgan balloted today In primaries that Wallace ill favored to win, thus mak ing a hl~h point in hl11 campaign for the Democratic presidential nominatlon. Ooctor1 .said at 5 n.m. PDT that Wallace hid come through the night 1n good 1plrit11 despite his priln. "He 1ay1 It hurtJI, ancJ he's fetllng fint." 1aid Dr. Joseph Schanno. Schanno listed Wallace's condition ;i.t critical. At 9 a.m. a ho11pital spokesman aald his condition wa1 unchan"cd. T/111' afternoon. he wa11 removed from the criticnt Jilit. Wallace i1 In the Intensive care ward or Holy Crou Hospital. A tpnkesman 11Jd well·wisher1 have aent 50 to 60 ar· rangemertU of flower1 , and that P.lr11. Wallace r~ueated that people llnd aome other way to e1pru1 their cone.em. Doctors said Wallact, S2, "°a.1 hit by IS.. WALLACE, P•J• IJ- We•tller Cooler temperatures arc · rx· pectt!d along the Orange Coast rm Wednesday, with sun.shine in lhe aft.emoon. IU gh.8: al the bellchel, 52 ri sing to 72 Inland. L.owi in tht 50'1. INS mF. TODAY ArthMr Brtmer. olfeged a• JOiJant of Gov. Woll.act , 11 dr.· 1cribtd GI "c011/u1td," and "a lonn.'' lli1 fathfr 1au1 M mu1t bt 1iclc. Stt 1torie1, phoW1 0t1 Pa(Jt 4. l.M. • ..,., • _ ... " -• ,.,,.,,.J ~· .. -... ·--• ._ " ... _._ " -" ...... 1•1• .... ..,_ .. s-.a ..,..,._,.. .. .. a ............ • ,_ ,. -" -" ·-.... ·-• ,..,. ... ..,... n ......... " ... " .............. fl.-14 .. ._.. ,. ..... -• ( l 1,! DAll'l'..PfLOr IS DAILY PILOT ll•ff P'Mlt HE Will RETURN Visi ting Pri nce of Hunz1 'They-:, Always Go Back ,' Says Hun za Prince By CANDACE PEARSON Of 1M 01111 Pl'-1 l ltff Posters with beautiful girls In grass skirts or couples si11Jing Wine at a sidewalk c~Je beckon travelers to "get .away from it all " at various touris t spots. But to really get away from it "all" - ;If! the heart attacks, cancer, asthma, tuberculosis, crime, jails, pollution, smog iind mysterious additives in the food - go to Hunza. ll unza is ~ small 3,900 square mile kingdom within the country or Kashm ir, located between China and Afghanistan in the Himalayas. Conditions At Medical Center Hit By JACK, )!ROBACK ~ Of tllt 01111 P'll•I 5111! Members or the 1972. Ort.inge County Grand Jury toured the Orange County Medical Center ln April and today Oenter Administrator Robert Wh ite probably wishe s he had not been so ho spitable and talk;;tive. The jury released a letter dated May 4 ?i.1onday ciiticizing the Center for "tack of proper air conditioning wh ich leads to the unnecessary deaths of 12 patients each 5ummer.'' Panel members also objected to the fact that they were allowed to tour the Center's Intensive care units withou t being masked or gowned. \Vhite said today that he ~ld jury members, while making a pitch for Center improvemr:nts. that during "the 30 hot days we experience in an average yea r 12 people probably die." But, the ad - ministrator said, he added, "There .js no certainly tha t heat is the principal factor in their deaths." The administrator said today tha t most patients who die during hot summer days are •·weak or elderly and would possibly survive a few months longer if not ex- posed to unnecessary heat." The jury's letter al so cha rged: -That the Center administration should clean up ils hospital and personnel through better housekeeping standards and more uniform grooming regulations. -That portable air conditioning units be installed immediately (White said he is requesting 90 windO'\f air conditioners at an approximate cost of $135,000 in his 1972·73 budget ). . -That Center adm.itlistration. should immediately concern itself with staff morale by improving commu nications .between the front office and the general staff. Newpot•t Center Crash 'The driver of this van, Douglas Aunger, 29 of 34095 Beach Rclad, Capistrano Beach, is in "critical but stable" condition today at 1-loag J1ospital in Nev.1- port Be:ich. Aunger's van rep·ortedly struck the side of a heavy trish truck driven by David Escal- ante, 21, jn Newp8rt Center, Newport Beach Mon- day. Escalante escaped with only a bruise. Police are inve stigating the accident. Frot11 Page l GRUNSKY ••. Board 01\s Parl{ Plans; governments' concepts of how their areas should be handled. During those three years, any develop- ment that would <:ut down the size of public beaches or available public access properties would be ror~idden . ' Bid Opening Set Ji111e 12 '· ihe area and the problems \\•ith the va- cant North American Rock,vell plant nearby .'' Philosoplir, .Prof Gels UCI Kudos A UC l rvine philosophy professor from Newport Beach received the top award of 18 made Monday n4ght at the UC I Alumnl Association lauds and laurels banquet io the Airporter Inn. · Dr. Abraham I. Melden was the red~ lent of the Extraordinarius award given each year to someone from the campus • community ''who best personifies the !ipirit and purpose of UCI." UC President Charles Hitch addressed the gathering (If 450. discussing "the Nert 10 Years at UC! -An Educated Guess." Hitch's remarks praised Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. for his 10-year leadershi p of the UC! campus. "As his boss, his friend , and his ad· mirer, let me assure you he-deserve! every tribute we ca n pay him," Hitch said of the chancellor, whom he describ- ed as a "great chancellor and a great human being." Hitch briefly outlined the expectation! for the future of such programs as social ecology and the college or medicine and touched on JJCl's role in the extended university program to provide parttime, degree study courses for adults. Dr. Melden's top award was made for his contributions to Irvine "as a scholar, honest-to-goodness· teacher, and · con- cerned citizen of the academic com· munity." Chancellor Aldrich. who was feted at the annual lauds and laurels banquet, ex· ercised his option to present a Citation for ~1erit to Richard S. Stevens, president of the Balboa Bay Club. Stevens was fou nder and president for three years of the Big I Boosters, is a member of the UCI Foundation Board and is heading the ChanceUor's Club Drive, Dr. Aldrich noted . Dr. Alexei Maradudi n. chairm an of the UCI faculty senate, presented an original sculpture by Tony DeLap lo Chancellor.. Aldrich in recognition of his 10 ye8r s II head of the Irvine campus. It hos been reputed to be a shangrila, or a utopia because some of iU! people • Jive to be 120 to 140 years old. The jury letter, however, praised most personnel they had inte rv iewed and said they appeared to be, ''e xtreme l,y dedica ted. well educated and well tfained ... and doing a fine job under adverse conditions.'' After three years, the OOard's veto power would be expanded to review all developments approved b.v local agenc ies and approve or reject them \\'ithin 30 days of their pa ssage. The Sieroty-Grunsky bill would have had a l'nuCh more ·stringent permit system during the period in which the state board Would prepare a stateu·ide plan for development criteria. Plans and specifications for the pro- posed 167-acre Laguna Niguel Regional 'Park were approved. today by the Orange County Board. of Supervisors and June 12 · was set as the date for opening bids on the $1.2 million project. · . A 101v bid at that time was eight per- crnt over estimates and construction was tabled as Caspers requested. Original plans for the regional park had been ap- proved on Dec. 22. 1'970. The following is a list of the other awa rd s and ~heir recipient s: UNIVERSITY SERVICE : Dr. Patrick L. Healey of Irvine, an assistant pro- feSsor of developmental and cell biology; student Patric k J. Moore of Laguna Beach, co-president of the Associated Students of UCt. and biological sciences staff member, Carol D. Heckman, "a counselor ... and friend of students.'' l\1any still work in the fields when in their early lOOs. Dr. Jay Hollman, nutri· lion expert, said Monday. Hoffman lectures on llun'l.a"' at the Seventh-day Adventist Church in. Costa ?i.1esa and Monday greeted 22-year~ld Hunza Prince Ameen at th~ church, whom he hadn't seen for 11 years. Prince Ameen is vistJng Hoffman in CallfomJa dur ing a break In his studies for a masters. In business administration at the University of We!t Virginia. The second oldest son of King Mir, Ameen will not become king unless his older brother Gahzanfar cannot take over. He doesn't know what he will do in Hunza (population 311,000) when he' returns ofter summer school, but he kn ows he must go back. "People leave sometimes to go to school or service,'' said quietly, "but v.·henever possible, they always go back." Campus Drive To Be Topic At 2 Meetings • Two open meetings on the proposed ex-· tension or Campus ,Prive highlight ac- tivity this week set by Irvine citizens ad- visory committees. Representatives of ('ach Committee will also meet tonight with the City Council and the Planning Commission. The environmental quality committee plans tv.·o of three open discussion nleetings on the highway project that "'ould link UC Irvine with the Irvine Industrial Compler by crossing the San Joaquin Creek channel. T21e meetings are set at 7:30 p.m. in room 142 of the physical sciences building at UCI on \Vednesday and Thursday and again next Wednesday. Other committees scheduling meetings this week ere: OIANGI COAST " DAILY PILOT Tiit Of•nt• COltl DAILY PILOT. wllh 'llt!lctl k aimblllftl ll'lr Nrws·P•ns. 11 riut111.,,_, by lflt 0r•"9• COit! Pub!ltlllna Company, s.o.. r•lt ftlllont 1r1 11\/11111'*!, M-•Y lhtCOJVll Frid•)'. for Coit• Mfll. Ntwptul ''•ell, Huntlnglwl ~aclltFoun11\11 'l•llry. Lari~n• affd'I. 1.,.f,.,IS•ddltbac~ 1r.d Sin Cltmenltf S.11 J1H111 C1pi1Jr11\0. A 1l1"19lf ntjlan1t Mllllon ff llllblkllled su11rd1r-•rd s"'"",.,. f1'le prlllc!Pfl PlllH11lli<IQ p/1111 II 11 JXl W..1 l•t Slrttl. C•I• Maw. C1111«1111, •242'. Rob1rt N. 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Regarding their tour of ~he Intensive care unit and the fact that they were not required to wear masks or gowns the jurors said, "to bring a group of people into an intepsive care unit to disrupt the staff and to gawk at the patients is less than wise." White particularly objected to the charge that people were dying by the "dozens at the medical center because of lack of air conditioning." From Page 1 WALLACE ... • four or five bullets. Only two lodged in his body. One was removed from around· his right.shoulder. Another punctured his ab- domen and lodged on his sp ine, causing damage to the spinal cord. That bullet was left in, though Schanno said it might Democratic Senator George Zenovirh of Fresno, considered the swing vote on both bills, said he cast a negati\'e ballot on the Sieroty-Grunsky measure because it attacked local governments' JXl\ver. Zenovich agreed the building trades' opposition influenced his vole. "I can't discount their prevalence on me," he said, .. but that wasn't Lhe specific reason I voted against it. It \Vas the loc:;al government issue." * * * Assembly Okays New Waterfront Access Proposal be taken out later, Bullets also pierc~ The state COP1stitutional amendment Wallace's right forearm, grazed the bac'k of his left shoulder blade and grazed his that would require all private waterfront upper right shoulder. land owners to grant public access to the "I think the governor ls going to make beaches has passed the California a. r~~ery," Schanno said. ''Now what Assembly and is now berore the senate. d1sa b1llty he has as a result of his wound! .. . . is difficult to evaluate at this time. It w~ld requ1Te all private property We're all very optimistic at this --Owners, hke the Balboa Bay Club. Cameo point.·• Shores or anyone, to provide pubhc ac· Wallace's wife. Cornelia. said early to-cess through their proper l y , ' ' ~ay, after her husband had come ~rough Assemblyman Robert Badham ( R. five hours of surgery, that she 1s op-N t 8 h) ·d tod timistic. ewpor eac • sa1 ay. "As you know . his nature. he didn't Badham said the measure sailed earn the title of the •fighting little judge' through the Assem bly. He said it for nothing, and I expect him to continue "sneaked through" on a 59 to 4 vote. in the same veln." "A f f f nd t bo t ·t t rh Spokesmen said Wallace intended to :w 0 us ou ou a ~ 1 a e continue his campaign. e\•en if he doesn't last minute but "''e only had lime to vote regain use of his legs. Schanno oottd that against it," Badham declared. President Franklin D. Roosevelt had been tf it gets by the Senate. the measu re a wheelchair cripple during his years in v.'ould go on the No\·ember ballot the White House. e dh 'd ' N,. . wh·t H a am sa1 . 'LXOn. in a 1 e ouse appearance to announce the resignation of Treasury The constitutional amendment billed as Secretary John B. Connallv. offered an 'renvironmental policy declaration" is Wallace the presidential suite· at \Valter sponsored Cy five assemblymen including Reed. Alan Sieroty (0-Beverly Hillsl whose He said If Wallace wishes to return to strong coastal preservation bill is facing Alabama to recuperate an Air Force a tough test in the legislature. hos pital plane will be-put at his disposal. According to Badhan1. the con- Earlier, NU:on dispatched a White stitutional amendment. ACA 48, has House physician. Dr. William Lukash. to received virtually no notoriety to date aid Wallace's doctors. and he doesn 't understand or know "''hy. I Among other declarations about the need ·for ecological concern the con- Frotn Pafle J troversial article states: "Any person or corporation claiming or 'RUNNER possessing frontage or tidelands of the • • • harbor, bay, inlet, estuary or other trials in Alamosa , Colorado, v.·hich was chosen because its altitude corresponded to that of Pltexico City, Olympic site that year. Out of 400 men in the r ace, Anderson fin ished 48. ''my slowest time. The height definitely affected me," he says nov.·. remembering he hadn't felt too "·ell the v.·eek. before. ~ow he is "just about looking at an}1hing to help that leg ,'' and lakes a mulll·vit.amin tabltt with Iron,. an iron tablet and 1.000 milligrams of vitamin C a· day .. "I also eat a lot.'' he admlta , smiling. He has to. During each run home from ~chool he loru: about fou r to nve pounds. His weight is generally stabUl!td at 155 pounds. "Sul I like lo think of lll)'lelf N a fam ily man," he says, JS he prepam to suit up aftu flllishlog bis last math clus . of the day. lie and his wlfe of sevtn ye.an.. Virl!nia. bavt ooe boy, BWy L<e, I, and are txpt<tJnc another child, She IUpporU him Jn his sport, but ho ltill r..i. "fllilty" about U. oecaaary IOlltary quall1;f. , navigable v.·aterway may not exclude right~f-way to that "''ater when it is re· quired for a public purpose. or destroy or obstruct free navigation of the v.·ater. "The Legislature shall enact sta tutes that give these provisioni:: the most liberal construction so that acCess to the many v.·aters shall always be obtainable by the people." The little-known measure "':is totally unknown to State Sen. Dennis Carpenter lR·Ne"''P,Ort Btach) wbose own coastline management bill passed the Senate f'.'atural Resources Committee 1'1ondav. "He read it for the first time "this i:noming. Thtn ht paled," s1kl an aide Richard Rohrbach. "He'll not support It at all." Rohrbach asld adding that C&rponter foresaw lt having as tough a time as the coastline bill co-aulllor.d by Sleroty and Senator Donald Gnmafy (R·Wawnv!lle), Grunslly's bill was in efled killed by the natural mouroes panel Monday. "This amendment is based on the same kind of phllosopby," Rohrbach Aid, "ft te~" away private property rlgbtl." "It's aoln& to 111 .. a ~ tou&h 11me. Our mao will do all ht tan to aee that ll clou h&ve a lodch time." bt •'O'&'ed. , -v' Board members also approved negotia- tions of an agreement for purchase of ef- fluent water from the Moulton Niguel Water District. Flood control district chief engineer George Osborne was asked to participate in the negotiations for purchase of the reclaimed sewer water. He had completed a report on the general subject last year. The regional park, on land donated by the Laguna Niguel Corporation, is located on the west side of La Paz Road, north of Crown Valley Parkway. Original plans completed in 1970 caJI for picnic and play areas, bOating and fishing in the 68-acre lake, restrooms, roads and parking areas. Constr uction of the new park was delayed last June by t_he board at the suggestion of Fifth District Supervisor Ronald W. Caspers of Newport Beach. "because of the slowed development of Speecl1 Therapy TV Panel Topic The speech therapy program in the San Joaquin School District is the subject of the lr\•ine Community Cablevision educa- tional show, "Learning 72," tonight at 7 o'clock. Irvine cablevision is channel 3. Featured with hostess.loan Boulang~r v;ill be speech speciaHSt C y n t h i a Densmore and Norma ;.Pat" \\'eeks. The show will present methods of evalualion and instruction used in cor- recting speech problems. 1 t is one of the regu1ar series sho.,.1n every second Tuesday night. The next \Viii be presented May 30 and will concern reading programs at El Toro Marine School. • Trustee s Study Sale of Lag u1ia N iguel Facility By PAi\1ELA HALLAN 01 lhl 01111 !'1111 llllf Severe budget problems that could turn into a dl~ster if North American Rockwell. Sills its-Laguna Niguel plant to ,the U.S. Government \vere described to trustees of the Capislrano Unified School District J\Ionday. The $10.489.218 •·tentative. preliminary budget". v.·hich is up about $1 million over last year's adopted budget, calls for a 19-cent tax increase in the Permissive areas for non-educational programs man- dated by the stat<'. "Our educational program remains in· tact this year but v.·e will have severe cutbacks in all other areas." said Superintendent Truman Benedict. who reminded the board that he did not think the SO.cent tax override will be enough for the next lhree years. Assistant Superintendent Sam Chicas added that the budget includes $200,000 from the North American Rockwell plant. "If that"s ta ken off the tax rolls we could be bankrupt -well , perhaps that isn't the right word to use .. , The government is considering purchase or the buildin g. Government ownership would remove the building from tax rolls. Altr.ough rumors have been flying fo r months, no official announcement has been made. All Fo1· The Family- ' Whal cfi•nges your fiou se more th•n •ny oilier thing? What improves accous tics dramatic.ally 7. Wh•I w•rms up a house 1 Wh•t imparts unique be•uly •nil comfo rt ? , , • Carpeting from Alden's, that'. what! COMMUNITY SERVICE : Dr. Ricbard N. Baisden of Santa Ana, dean of the UC! Extension; Gene S. Uematsu of Tustin, a university physical planner, and the en-- tire student body of UCI for their various contributions to community service pro- grams. . . STU DENT A WA R D S : OutsJandlng 11thlete is Phil Rhyne, a .$~r from · Newport Beach who was tti1s season'• leading scorer on the Anteaters' basket· · ball team. '• Outstand ing seniors of the year are , Steven P. Chadima of Downey. a social sciences major who is co-president of the . student body, and Gary Barrett ol Corona del Mar. founder of INTERAC110N. butstanding graduate student I a. ~amuel J. Shacks of Irvine. a doctoral candidate in immunology biochemistry. v.·ho is. one of four finalists for the Edward Steinhaus teaching award. FACULTY RESEARCH: Dr. Murray Kr ieger, professor of English and com- parative literatu re and who twice was a Guggenheim Fellow. was awarded tht Distinguished Faculty Research honor. TEACHING: ·Michael Butler of Irvine, a social science lecturer was given the Distinguished Faculty Teaching Award. PR OFESS!ONAL ACHIEVEMENT: The staff award was made to William. Wadman Ill, radiation safety officer for the UCI reactor. The alumni award went to Betty Grimes Tessman for her pro- fessiona l theater accomplishments. Alumna of the Year is Lynn M. Osen, 1 lecturer and course coordinator for UC I Extension and author in the field of women 's rights. {II your hO<Jse "slifleS'' you, stop ln anCI see us FAST.] I ' • ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 l'lac•ntia Ave • COST A M15A 64MIJ8 I t ), l 'i ,, 7 I ' .. I' I I 'i , I I ,I ~ 7 •. • ·----,_J.. ---' Huntington .Bea~·h -~· Fountain Valley VOL. 65, NO. 137, l SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTlt', CALIFORNIA • ---·------·-- TUESDAY, MAY 16,1 1972 I Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS State Ecologists Want Coast Plan on ·Ballot By L. PETER KRIEG 01 tllt Dtllr l'l .. 1 Sii~ A crucial state senate· committee ~oie Monday that virtually killed tough coastline control legislation has ap. parently triggered · all-out efforts by California environmentalists to get the coastal protection issue on the November ballot. "The leg islature has failed "and i hope the people \Von'!.'' said Janet Adams, an official of the California Coastal Alliance. . Her words came after the stror; measure ro=authored ~ Sen ator Donald GrUMky ( R-Watsonville l a11cl Assemblyman Alan Sieroty CD-Beverly Hills) was rejected on a 4 to. 4 vole of th e ·senate 's natural resources co1nmittee. Gruruiky chose not to seek a sfcond vote in the measure when the (uJI nine .. member panel was,... present later in the day. A coasta l bill sponsored by ~fate Senator Denn.is Carpenter (R-Nt•\vpcrL Be11ch) .tlull r.i aimed, at preservlng local government control as well as the en- vironment was passed by tbe panel, however. on a 5-3-1 vote. Carpenter's bill now goes to the !lenate · finance committee. Mrs. Adams has strong criticism tor this measure . "It's \\'Orse· than worthless. It's deStruc tive. It's a builders bill," she said . ...Sieroty himsell agreed with the ap- praisal and lashed out at' the building • trades !or opposin:g 'tiiiDfll. "If they were asked to bu ild somtthing on top or Half Dome in Yosemite, they'd · sa y 'fine'," Sieroty sa id . Under the Sieroty-Grunsky measure which is technically still alive. there would be one J>tate board and six regional boards with veto power over any develop- ment within 1,000 yards of the beach fro11t. ' carpenter's measure establishe!' one lS.-member 1fate"agenc,Y'.that would be given Ulrtt yenrs lo formulate a coas1a l land use pion dc~eloped fro1n loca l governments' t'flnccpts of how their areas should be handl ed. During those three years. any develop- ment that would cut down the slze of public bepche.s or available public acces1i: properties "'ould be forbi dden . Aft er thrre years, the board's vetn power would be expanded to review all develo pments_ approved by local agrncies and approve or reit<."t th&m-wtttmr30 <Wallace S-till Running Wounded Governor Vows 'Wheelchair Campaign' SILVER SPRING. Md. (AP) - George C. Wallace, shot down at an elec· Uon-eve campaign rally, today fought to regain we or h1s paralyzed legs but was_ reported determined to continue his presidential campaign -even from a wheelchair. Doctors said Wallace is under sedation -· because or paiil from his multiple l\'Ounds, including a bullet that remains lodged against hi! lower spine, but in no immediate danger of death. His condition was sta'b1e. They wouldn't predict \\'l1ether he'll vt'alk again. Today, President Nix.on offered On Coast Highway Burke Promises End Of State's Billboards State Assemblyman Robert Burke !R- lluntington Beach) promised Huntington Beach Councilmen Monday night that the elate-controlled billboards along Pacific Healtli l11stitutes· Abandon Searc1i For Cold Vaccine WASHINGTON (UPt ) -The National Jnstitutes of Health has abandoned its search for a combination vaccine to ward off the common cold. and is con- centrating Instead on other preventatives, It was disclosed today. The idea of a number of vaccines .,cocktail" style to fight many viruses had been the dream of respiratory disease scientists since the mid-1950s, although they have never been certain how the vaccine would be administered. But resetirchers kept discovering more cold-causing viru ses. And NIH officials conceded during con- gressional hearings ~1arch 16 that the causes are loo common to fight with a vaccine. "With this ne"' kno\\•ledge, the early concept or a simple 'cocktail ' vac cine against a fe\\' viruses had to be discarded and scientists are no\v seeking new solu· tions." said testimony released by the House appropriations subcommittee that examined the administration's 1973 Nll1 budget proposal. "Frankly, I cannot be too opt imistic about a vaccine for prevention." testified br. Dorland J. Davis. director or the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. COO.I Hilhway will disappear In 60 days. Burke aurprised officials by appearing at 1i1onday'1 council meeting to support a city resolution asking the state to remove its billboards. "I understand some people don't think this wiJI really happen," the legislator said. "But your resolution is the vital step needed for the state Public Works Department to cancel its leases.•· Burke said that any of the billboard leases can be cancelled with a maximum ro-day notification. There are 61 billboards on state right· of·tvay on Pacific Coast High\vay from Beach Boulevard to the Santa Ana River, and also on Beach Boulevard itself, from Atlanta Avenue to the highway. "$ixty days from tomorrow," Burke promised, "those biUboards will be down." City Attorney Don Bonra ha! also filed suit against five major billboard com- panies involving 60-80 bi 11 boards throughout the city. He warned councilmen at a previous meeting the suits would take some t1me, because the billboard companies are "fighting for their survival." A city ordinance: adopted in 1965, <'ailed for the elimination of all billboard s by January 1970. Billboards were not eliminated in 1970. however. and the city dela yed filing law suits while a citizens committee tried to work out a compromise . Sul last year, councilmen rejected any compromise and ordered legal action against recalcitrant bill_board companies .The city ordinance does not ~feet tract directional signs, or off.site business signs . lt is aimed at the sun tan lotion. "everybody needs milk," live-in-Calcutta. type or advertising, that in the opin ion or councilmen totally blocks the motorists' view of the environment. Council at a Glance l\1eeling for a bri ef l\llO hours, lhe Huntington Beach City Council took the rollo~·ing actions ll.1onday night : BILLBOARDS : f ormall y asked the stale to remove about 60 bill btards along Pacifi c Coast Highway, Assemblyman Robert Burke fR·Huntington Beach) appeared at the meeting to say the billboards v.·ould be gone Y.'ilhin 60 days. CEr-iTRAl. PARK: Approved an outline for seeking concessionaire~ in the city's 207-acre central park. The guidelines give the city tight control over the operation of park concessions such as snack bars, boat rentals and bicycle rental s. PARKISG: Ex ten ded parking meters along Pacific Coast IJigh\\'ay rill the ·way to Golden \\'est Street. BUDGET: Set 7 p.m .. June · 12, !or the first 'public hearing on the city's 113.7 mUllon bu<lge t proposed for 1972-73. Councllmtn will get their first look at the bud get next Monday night in an lnfonnal Jtudy session. -TRAIL FUNDS : Learned ~ city may have an additional $200 .000 this year to &pend on Jretnbtlt!. trallJ, parka and other Items, thanQ to a new sal es ta on gosohne pasoed by the slat. LqlJia!ure. WATElt BOARD: Ordtr<d an Io-dtplh stoely on !be. ,,.....lty for .,..,_ tinuanct of the West Orange County Water Olstrict whlc6 serves lour cities. PLANNERS: S.t S p.m. Monday, for tnterviewinc prnopectl•e pl!IMing commiutonen. · \Vallace rull facilities of \Valter Reed ,_fedical Center. "I can assure you Gov. Wallace is receiving the best me.dicat care," Nixon said at the White House. ' Charged with the shooting .is Arthur Herman Bremer , 21 , a white man who reportedly (Qllowed the Wpllace cam- OAILT' PILOT Stiff~ TAKES OCEAN VIEW POST New School Chief Carvell James Carvell N a1ned District Su peri11tel.de1it J<imes R. C11rvell, assistant superin- tendent of personnel for the past three years, was named Monday nigh t as the new superintendent or the Ocean View Sc hool Di strict begi nning July I. The a p p o intment was made "unanimously and vi gorously" Jess than 20 minutes after district trustees ac- cepted the resign ation or the present su perintendent , Clarence Hall , who has accepted a position as asjOCiate stale superintendent of public insrtucti on. The 47-year-0!d Carvell hatl 14 years of expe rience as superin tendent of a 2,000· :i;tudent Northern Calirornia s c ho o I dist rclt before Coming to Ocean View in 1969. Carvell 's salary will be $.11 ,500, the same as Dr. Ha11 ea rned. "Board members have bto.en discussi ng lhe choice of a new superintendent among tpemselves for several weeks," said board Pres ident George Logan. "We felt it would be best to come unanimously and vigoro usly to a decision as soon as possible. "We are blessed in this district to have two men as fully and highly qualified to be superintendent as r-.Jr . Hall and Mr. Ca rvell ," he «includ<.>d The new superinh!ndent said that he didn't plan any changes in the direction of tht district . "r-.1y ma ln cond rn will bt lo continue the hii,:h standards set for the Ocean View district by the board o• trustees, by the staf f. and by Dr Hall." Carvell aid. "These people have established goals and I want to lead the distr ict in striving to reach them fully." Ou tgoing superin tendent C\artnct llall praised Carvell as a man who "worked hard~t his assigned task! than anyooe would dare ask. He ha! more integrity than anyone I've ever worked with." Hall and Carvell hJve known each other since the early 1950!. Fi rst Hall worUd u a Jl'lfCholog~t In the ~fcKlnleyville Union School Diatrld. where CarveU was superintendent. La~ lf 11JI wa111 made 11uJ>trlntendent o( • IS.e CARVELL, Pa1r II paign for some time. He was held in $200,000 bail today by a U.S. magistrate. J-Us family and aqua intances in his home town of Milwaukee said they could !t!pply no motive for the shooting. (See rel~ted story, Page 4 I . Wallace was hit several times Mondny by point·blank pistol shots fired iu the midst of a crowd al a shopping center in Laurel , Md. Three others also were wonded, 11one criticall y. VgJer s in .,,_1aryland and Michigan today in primaries that Wallace p to win, thus makklg a hi~h hi! campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination. Doctors said at 5 a.m. PDT that Wallace had come through the night in good spirits despite his pain. · "He says it hurts, anct~he's feeling fine,'' said Dr. Joseph Sc~· . Schanno listed Wallace' condition as critical At 9 a.m. a hos apokuman said his condltJon was unChanged . This afternoon, he was removed from the critic8i list. Wallace ls In the intensive care ward of lloly Cross Hospital. A 1pokesman said well-wishers have . sent 50 lo 60 ar~ rangements of flowers, and that Mrs. Wallace requested that people find some other way to express their concern. Doctors said Wallace, 52, waa hit by four or five bullets. Only two lodied in his body. One was removed from around his right shoulder, Another punctured hiB ab- domen and lodged on his spine, causing damage to the 1pinal cord. That bullet was left in, though Schanno said It might be take n out later, Bullets also pierced Wallace's right forearm . grazed the l>ack of his Jett shoulder blade and grazed his upper right shoulder . "I think the governor is going to make a recovery," Schanno said. "Now "'hat disability he has as a result or hi! wounds is difficult to evaluate at this time. We're alJ very optimistic at this point." Wallace's wife, Cornelia, said early to- da y, after her husband had come through fi ve hours of surgery, that she is op- timistic. "As you know, his nature. he didn't earn the title of the 'fighting little judge' for nothing, and P~xpect him to continue 1n the same vein." Spokesmen said Wallace intended to continue his campaign, even if he doe!in't regain use of his legs. Schanno noted that President Franklin D. Roosevelt had been a wheelchair cripple during his years in the While House. Nixon, in a White fh5use appearance lo announce the resignation of Trea!!ury Secretary John B. Connally, offered ISee WAU.ACE, Page Z) UPI T•l-.he .. RETURNING TO RANCH Cabinet Membt:r Connally Connally 'Quits Treasury Post; Move Surprise WASHINGTON (UPI! -Treasury Secretary John B. Connall y, a longtime JXlWer in Texas Democratic politics, resigned his: Cabinet post today with a strong hint he will campaign for Prcsi· clcnl Nixon's re-election in November. Standing side b}" side in the White •louse Press Room , Nixon and Connally ex changed praise for each other'• performance in the 17 months the Texan has been in the Republican ad- ministration. A.!ikcd if he would actively work on Nix· on 's behalf In the coming campaign, Con· nally replied, "That is entirely possible." Nixon announced that he was nominating George P. Shultz, head of the Office of Management lnd Budget, to succeed Connally, who will stay on until Shultz is confirmed. ' As Shultz's successor as head or OMB, Nixon picked Shultz's top aJSistant, Cas par \\1• Weinberger, a former California legislator and on e. ti m e Cali fornia Republican chairman. · C-Onnally said he has "no plans whatsoe ver" for his immediate future. Last week , Connally, the on I y Dcmocr?l in Nixon's cabinet, told ne~·smen he ""'as "not in the process of changing parties" but added "the possibility certainly e.xists that I could do so." "I have nothing but the profoundest ad· miration for the President," Connally said today. "He has my complete support I don't know that I've ever worked !See CONNALLY, P11e 2) Ha~la Espanol Valley Kids Lear1i Two Languages By JOHN ZALL~R Of "'' o.ir, .. Utt Slllt "Ml nombre es MaQit ." The 4·year-old blonde child. sm11Lni: shyly at the floor in fron t of htr. rolled her R's and lisped her S's perfectl y. "Tengo cua1ro 11noiri." Just a beginning reader. Mari11 <"iln al~o recognize almOf>l llS many words in !ip;tn· ish as she can in Jo:n$(li5h. She is one of7f1 chlldr'n -roughly half Ahglo and hal f Mexican·American -Vtho are enrolled lh tht bl~tural, bi·li ngual Colonia Juarc1. preschool in Fountain Valle y. To Marla. who hails from a well-o rf housing tra<.1, the special educ11tX>n she iS receiving Is a Ju.xiii")•. But to the ~1exlct1n.-American childre n, many of whorti come from home s where only Spanish Is spoken, the preschool ex· perience 'Could tum ~t to be a lifesaver. "Ad1pting to 5Choof is difHcult enough lor Uie regul:i r child," says Sam JWdriguei. directo r or the preschool for tllf Fountain Valley School OlslrlC'I "But think of the situation faced by 1 you ngslcr who knows little or no Englis h. Jl's almo:iit lmpc)S3ible," he says. ftodrlgucz co nt ends that nlanv of these children graduate from sc hOOI wltMut ever rea lly teaming English, and are nt the same time illiterate in their na!Jve Spanish since it irn 't tauRht. "And thnse that do learn En~tish dfl ~o only by forgetting thei r Spanish. hy iit·· noring their own cult ur al rool.~." he say.~. "Th at's what we're trying to get B'l''3Y from here." The pu rpose of tile pre.school. 'Nhic h i~ la rgely J upported by a spcctal lederal granl. is to strengthen children in lhe.1r ·native culture and language, but at tht .same lime, tench a &eeond culture :i nd language-. Thu s children celebrate bot h Cinco dt '-tayo (the ~!exican equlvaltnt of tndependtnce Day 1 and the ~·ourth of Ju· ly. they 11tudy Ir.1th Benito Juarez (the first natb't ;\lt1lran to be elected preJi.. dent er th;i1 country1 aod Geor-ce Washinl{ton . ~nd thty hear JUCh standard (Ste Pft~,<;(;IIOOl., Pqr II di!}'!) or lhelr passagr . Thr S1eroly·Grunsky bill would hav• had 11 1nul·h n1ore stringent pern1ll systtnl during lhe period in "'h.ich Iii. :-;tat~ ll(l<i rd would J)l'Cpnrc a statewide plnn for dC'v1•lopmtnl criteria . l)(>n1o<'ratic Sena tor (ieorge Ztno vlch of Fre~no, considered the swing \'Ole Oil bo1h bill.~. :-1aid he ·<'a~t a negativ" ballot on thr Sirroly·Grun.!lky ml!aSurf' becau:fe (S~t GRUNSKY, Pa1e !) •• . .. )~( Access Bill Passed On To Senate Thr sl.itc C091SlitulionaJ amendment U1al would require all private waterfront land owners kl grant public access to the beache.• has paMed th<-C.llfornla M!iembly nnd Is now before the senate. "ll \VOuld require ult private pro~rly 01vncrs, like the Blll hoa BHy ciUb, Cam eo Sho res or. anyone, to provide publiC' ac· cess lhrough their prop,rl y.•• Assemblyman Robert Undham ( R. NcwfA}rt Beach). snid today. Badhan1 said !he n1ensurt Nliled through the Assc1nhly. '" said Jt "snc11ked through" on a 59 to 4 vote. "A rew of us found out about it at th• last minute but we only had tlrne to vote against ii." B1dham declared. If 11 gets by the Senate, the measure would go 'OD tht November ballot • Badham said. The constitutional amendment billed 11· an "environmental policy declaration" is sponsored by five assemblymen Jncludln1 Alan Sieroty (0.Beverly Hills) whos. strong coas tal preservation bill Ls facin1 . a tough test In the legislature. According to Badham, the con- slitutionaJ amendment, ACA 48, hu received virtually no notoriety to data and he. doesn 't understand or know why. Among other declarallons about the need for ecological concern the con- troversial article states: "Any person or corporation claiming or possessing frontage or tidelands of the harl>or, bay. Inlet, estuary or othtr na vigahle waterway may not exclud• rig ht-of-way to that water when it is re· qui red for a public purpose, or destrof or ob~lruct frtt navigation of the water. "The Legislature sh all enact statute• that give these provlaloni: the moat liberal construction so that acce11 to thl many waters shall always bt obtainable by the pwple." · The .Utlle-known measure wa1 totall y unknown to State Sen. Dennis CJ.rpenter <R·Newport Beach) whose own coastline management bill passed the Senatci Natural Resource! Comn1iftl!e Monday. "lfe read it for the first lime lh iir morning. Then he paled,'' said an aide Richard Rohrbach. "lfe'IJ not support it ::it all." Rohrbach asid add ing that Carpenter foresaw It having as tough a time as the coastlioe bill co-authored by Sieroty aod Senator Donald Grunsky (R·Watso nville ). Grunsky's bill was In effect killtd by the natural resources pen el Monday. "Th is amendment is based on the 11amt kind or philosophy," Rohrbach said. "It takes away private property right&,·• "lt'1 going to ha ve 1 pretty tough time. Our man will do all he ca to Jee that it does have o tough time," owW. Weatlaer Cooler temperatures art e-".· perted along the OranJi:I" Coast on \\ledn e!day, v.·ith sun3hine in lhci afternoon. lfighs al the beaches. fl2 rising IQ 72 inland. Lows in lht 5<.l's. I NSffiF. TODA V Ar lhllr Brtmtr. alltC1tfl ,.,. iailani of Gav. \Wollar l'. 11 di'· icr!btd as "c<1tt/11.1td." and "a loner/' His fath tr .rayi he mll.!t lie sick. Stt: 1tori.t1 , pltoUJ.r 011 f'oge <f • L.M, ..,.. • -·· .. C1Ut.-.IN1 I MiltWI ,llO'lll .. (ll "MlllM .. H Jll.tllMI ""' • c-k• .. °'"""' '-" .. -.. ·-1 .. ,. --" SIKlt ,_.,._... . ... .. """ ~ ... • T•l9of!UM .. ... .,..._, .. .... w. .. 'lMACt .... •.. ,_.... • , ... '" .IUIOll " wa1t1 ""'"" .. --" w-·· .._ ,,.u •• ·-· " -·-• ' Conclitions At Medical Center Hit By JACK BROBACK 01 t1!t O.llY ~llot S!fll Members of the 1972 Orange Count,. Grand Jury toure~ the Orange County 1'.tedicaJ Center t.n April and today Center Administrator Robert White probably wishes he had not been so hospitable and talk&tive. The jury feleased a 1etter dated May 4 tlonday critici7.ing the Center for "lack of proper air condit ioning which leads to the unnecessary deaths of 12 patients each i:;ummer." Panel members also objected to the fact that they were allowed to tour the Center's intensive care units without be ing masked or gowned. ..J \Vbite aald today that he !old jury members, while making a pitch for Center bnprovementt, that during "the 30 llot days we experience in an average year 12 people probably die." Bui, the ad- ministrator said, he added, "There is no certainty that heat ls the principal factor in thetr deaths." e DAILY l"IL£!_ Sltll Pllolo The administrator said today that mOst patients who die during hot summer days sre "weak or elderly and would possibly .survive a few mor1ths longer if not ex· posed to unnecessary heat.': JUDY KIPPDLA (AT PIANO) LEADS BILINGUAL SINGING At Colonie Juarez Preschool, Respect for Two Cultures The jury's letter also charged: -That the Center administration should clean up its hospital and personnel through better housekeeping standards and more uniform grooming regulations. -That portable air C<lndltioning units , be installed Immediately (White said he is requesting 90 window air conditioners 11t an approxjmate cost of $135,000 in his 1972·73 budget). -That Center administration should Immediately concern itself with staff morale by improving communications between the front office and the general •t.fl. The jury letter, however. praised most personnel they had interviewed and said they appeared to be;''' e' lt rem e I y dedicated, well educated and well trained • , . and daing a fine job under adverse cond itions." Regarding ir tour of the intensive care unit and fact that they were not required to wear asks or gowna the jurors said, "to bring a group of people into an intensive care unit to disrupt the 1taff and to gawk at the patients is Jess than 1Vise." White particularly objected to the charge that people were dying by the "dozeris at the medical center because of lack of air conditionina." From Page 1 GRUNSKY ... It attacked local go\lernments' power. Zenovich agreed the building trades' opposition influenced his vote. "I can't discount their prevalence 'ln me," he said, '"but that wasn't the specific reason I voted against It. It 'vas the local government issue.·' · On the Assembly side Sieroty's com· panlon 'lill is still alive and awaiting ac- tion by the full assembly after clearing its own rounds of committee hearings. , Sieroty this morning said he plans lo bring it up but considering the senate's act!on on the G_runsky bill he figures his measure \vill gE"t the same treatment if it ever got that far. . Sieroty said if the Carpenter bill is p:lsscd by the senate he v.·ould actively cnn1pair,n to defeat the measure in the Jo1rcr house. Legislators voting yes on the Grunsky bill were Senators John Nejedly (R- \\'alnut Creek \; Peter Behf (R-TiburonJ; Arlen Gregorio rD-San Mateo) and J{ol>e rt Lagomarsino (R-Ojai). The no votes v.'ere Carpenter, Ralph Dills (R-Los Angeles): James Wedworth (0-Hawthorne ); and Zenovich. Senalor H. L. Richardson (R-Acradia) \\'as not present for the early vote but J>ald he y;ould have voled against the Grunsky bill. \"otin~ for the Carpenter bill v.•ere Ct1 rpenter, Dills, Zenovich, Richardson and Lngo mnisino. 1 OlA~GI COAST "' DAILY PILOT i'llt O•lnQI COil! DAIL'f PILOT wlill w~lcl\ I• comfll11M !ht HtWJ•Preu, ~ pUfll(lllrcl fly 1111 O•l"llt CO•ll Pltflllilllng C011ic.11v. ~ro.t· r111 l(l!liori• f tl PVt>ll•~, M011<11y 111'0"9h FddlY, for Co1t1 MrH, Nrwoo't !IC8(fl, Huf\l!f'IQ'tl)n e .. cfl/Fou11tat11 \ltllty, l~;u111 lleatll. l"VinrtS1delleb1ck •~O S1~ Clt~11!t/ Stn J1tll C,,pl11r1no. A ti~lt •111lon1I ed!lfotf 11 PVl>!lllltd Se1uro1~ •rid Svr>dl\11. t11r prlncro~r pi,oblill'!lnq 1111~1 It 11 JJO wc1t !111 s1rr1!, Coit1 Mt11, t1111orn,1, t161t. Robert N. W11d Pr1110tn1 Ind PuDll,lltr J etk R. Curlev \li(t P1esk1~1 •nd GtM••I Men~ger lhol'!'I•• K1evil Etlklt Tho"'11 I\. Murphi11t Mlnt01"9 Editor Char111 H. Looi "ith1rd P. Nill AU1$11nt M1n111lfl0 EdltorJo l1rrv Co .. illt Wt1t O•t"91 County Editor H111fiJ1ft.• h9Cli Offlc• 17175 le1th louJ, .. ,,a M1ili119 Addttlll P.O .· It• 71/0, 92•41 Ottilr Offlcn l'9UN ltlcJI• tt1 f'Ol"t•I ,4,yt- (ot" Mn1: l:» Wtn llt'r 1lrff' Htwp0t1 •••ell: sill ~ewoofl ISOlfl•V•rd 1111 Ct.""1'11•: XS NOfi!I l!I C1mtno 11: .. 1 1.i.pe. ... i11c1 ••1"4J21 Cloum.4 Alfftrth.lflt •4Z·l611 f',.111 Nft'lfl ..... C·-rr C..111-ltlu 141·1UO """'""'· lrn, Ortw!Of CO.•t P\lellllllrlf (ffl'\1)911f, "• ,.... '"''"· ftlWfrtlleM, MllOfltl INftw flt' ~, .. .,._.. Pttt-tlll '"'' tit ,......,..., •llllevt IMlfdll .,.. "'/Well ot ~ ...... ~ .CS. ........ Nllf ti C.-1• MN. c:.11..,,.... 1i.111eui.r1e11 fll' unW CUJ MCl'lltlflrJ ... -II IJ IS momtlllrl mllltarY ..... ,... 1JA1 ltWllllllJY. • / Beach Resident Dies From Auto Accident Injury Mrs. Nancy Berg, 24, of Huntington Beach died Monday afternoon of injuries she suffered in a two-car collision last Thursday on Balsa Chica Street. The young woman never regained con-. sciouSness at Huntington Jntercorilmunity Hospital where sh~" was t~ken following the accident. She had been given closed- chest heart massage and mouth·t~mouth Tesuscitallon at the scene ot the accident which restored her weakening pUlse rate, police said. , ~fficials from the Huntington Beach Police Department's traffic division said Mrs. Berg was the eighth person to die in a Huntington Beach traffic accident this year. Last year at this time there \Vere only two traffic deaths in !he city. Mrs. Berg and her husband Dennis, of 4352 Pick\vlck Circle, were on their way to the market when a jeep driven by Roy E. White, 50, of 15732 Bluebird Lane. col· tided with their small foreiga sportscar at the intersection or Dove\vood Drive and Balsa Chica Street in northwest Hun· tington Beach_. police said. All three victims were hospitalized. Berg has been released while White was reported in fair 'Condition at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Long Beach. Police said they are still investigating the accident. Funeral arrangen1ents for Mrs . Berg ate pending at the Callanan Mission t<.lortuary in Garden Grove. · Attorney Says Battin Charge Won't Be Filed The Orange C.Ounty District Attorney's office announced this morning that it will not file a criminal complaint against First Distric.t Supervisor Robert W. B.'.lt- tin over his alleged refusal to cease Politicking in the parking lot of a Foun· tain Vall('y department store at the re- quest of its manager. "\\'e have found no~tatute under which l\1r. Battin's alleged activity is lllegal," said il·like Capizzi , an assistant district attorney. Provided there is no interference with business. said Capizzi. political acti vity is allowed in the front or stores, even '~:hen they are pri vately O\\ned . The disputed incident took place 10 days ag:o as Battin \\'as campa igning for re-election. According to a report compiled hy the Fountain Valley police depart men!, Bat· tin -\vho represents Santa An<1 <ind parl s of Fountain Valley. \\"es!mi~1stcr, tind Garden Grove -was cam pp1gni;1g in the parking lot of a Gemco Dtpartment Store, 17099 Brookhurst St.. when th e store manager asked him to leave. Battin and a co!leagu('. John Abbotl or Garden Grove, reportedly declined to !ert\'e until threatened with arrest by police. Child Lectures Planned at OCC A day-long series of presentations on "The Education of the Young Child" has been sl ated Wednesda y at orange COast C.lltge. Lectures by local etperu will cover such topics as early science and music education, bi-lingual education, Head Start programs in Orange County, aod trends in early childhood educaUon. Scheduled from 9 a.m. Uuougb t ~.m., lhe lectum are being held in conjunction w!lh the notional Week of the Young Child. For detailed Information on the program, caU ~ betw .. n I a.m. and 9 pin . From Pagel PRE-SCHOOL. •• nursery rhymes as Goldilocks and the Three Bears and Little Red Riding Hood in Spanish, where they come out Los Tres Osos and Caperucita Roja. "It should be a tw~way street," says Rodriguez. "The Anglo children and the Mexican American children each learn ~ about the other's culture. We're trying to build bridges of mutual respect and understanding." · • The program, now nearing the end of Its seCond year, is planned to continue the bi-lingual, bi-cultural approach through the sixth grade . "We hope that by that time the children who are in preschool now 'will be fluent in two cultures and t w o languages,'' Rodriguez says. ''If the same children remain in the . program, as we hope they will, there should be many cross-cultural friendships, too." The preschool is housed in a special building in Colonia Juarez;, which is located near Slater Avenue and Ward Street. The Colony produces •about 25 children a year in each grade level, and after preschool, they attend Tamma School. Anglos for the program are chosen from the Tamura School attendance area, so that they will be able to remain with their Mexican-A me ri can mates throughout elementary school. "Right now each group kno-w:s the equivalent of 300 to 400 words in the other's language," Rodriguez says, "so they're just getting to the point where they can really begin to communicate with each other . "It's very rewarding for us to see this happen. That's What we're here for," he says. Interviews Set For Candidates In Huntington ·, Applicants for the open seat on the 11untington Beach Planning Commission will be interviewed by city councilmen at 5 p.m .. next Monday. . . Councilmen have decided not to in- terview applicants who have previously been interviewed or those who are well known to the council. 1\\•o defeated candidates in the last council election are among those ap- plicants. Neither David Garofalo or Joseph \Vha!ing will be interviewed. Freshman Councilman Henry Duke Clb- jected to the procedure of not in- terviewing some applicants. "\Ile should interview all these people on the basis of qualifications. not whether we know them,'' he contended . One of them will be picked to fill Duke 's plarining commission seat. vacated when he won a council stat last April. ~Iayor Al Coen and Councilman .ferry Matney were the strongest opponents to interviewing all applicants. Duke said he considered the planning commission 8 highly important body, 1,1nd deserving of better C<:1nsideration. There are about 30 applicants for the commission seat snd seven w!U be in- terviewed . Everyone Will be C<lnsidered for 1he post. even though not interviewed l'ilonday, according to city offlci•ls. Marina ~ligh Slates Spring Concert Fete Th• Marina High School Music Depart· ment will present Ill annual spring con- cert et 7:30 fbnlght 11 lhe Goldtn West College Theoter. Thrte of the 1<:bool 's musical lfOllps, Utt Chamber Ordl..tra, Intermediate Jland and Concert Band, WU! P""'Ot I •lrlety of clualcal piece under the dlrection of John Muoo, Marina Band I and Ord>estta tucller. 'l1le -1s """' 1o the publk m1 I Ihm Is no admission charge. • Parkillg Meters , Ol('d To Be Added Alf!ng Pacific Coast Highwa~ Twenty.five cent parking metef1" wW IOOn be installed llong Pacific Coast · Highway from Ninth Street to Golden West Slreet In Huntington Beach. COuncilmtm approved the exten&lon of the highway parking meter system Mon- day night. The meters are supposed to be tem- porary, standing only until the city determiAes what will be done with the pt'ivate beach owned by the Huntington Pacific Corp:>ration. Moorhouse. The other is to discourage parking on the inland side of Pacific Coast Highway. Cars can currently park there free, and there have been many aceidents because of beachgoers walking across the busy highway, according to city officials. l City officials would like to completely prohibit parking on the inland side on the Balsa Chica marsh area. but the final authority for that rests in state hands. Parking with meters, Is considered n~ssary' soulh of Col.den West Street becluse the area ls built up with som• housing. Moorhouse said toda y he does not know how soon the meters will be installed. No details have been announced for C<ln- struction of lhe beach front bicycl~ traU. eJther. A bicycle trail may also determine whether the meters will contin1.1e to func- tion-or be elfmlnated in the future . 'Symptotns' Analy%ed If the city wins its court suit to keep _the private beach open to public use, the bike trail may travel along the beach front, leaving the parking meters up. -coastal Lawmakers • But if private development plugs up the beach, the trail may have to be shifted to the inland side of Pacific Coast Highway, eliminating tfle ?Qeters. Councilman Henry Duke nearly op- posed the parking meters Monday because he thought they would interfere with the bike trail. Cite :Wallace ·violence' "For safety reasons, shouldn't the bike trail be all inland from Brookhurst Street to Golden West?" he asked. Vince Moorhouse, director of harbors and beatjle:s, explained that it was more desirable to have the bike trnll extend through the state and city beaches up to Golden West.- At the Golden West signal lights, the proposed trail would switch to the inland side of the highway and terminate at Warner Avenue. "The bicyclists want to go down the beaches, it's safer," he said. OU:ke, however, did not like the idea of bicyclists crossing the street, even at signal lights. Moorhouse said he.bopelJ the trail will follow the entire route of the beach, even· tually. Other councilmen pointed out that the council can eliminate the meters anytime they want. The meter! themselves have a tw~fold purpose. One is to raise revenue, about $25,000 to $30,000 annually, according to FromPcgel WALLACE •.• Wallace the pres)dential suite at Walter Reed. He sald ii Wallace wishes tp return to Alabama to recuperate an Air F<lrce hospital plane wUl be put,et his disposal. Earlier, Nixon dispatched a White House physician, Dr. William Lukash, to aid Wallace'• doctors. Nixon said he is-kleping 1n "close touch" with Wallace's condition. He also said. Nicholas Zarvos, the wounded" Secret Service man, i 1 "substantlally improved." Zarvos underwent 7¥• bQun of surgery for a bullet wound 1n the neck and was described u "doing very aaUsfactorily" this morning. Bremer wu taken before U . S • Magistrate Clarence Goelz in Baltimore. late Monday night and ordered held under P'.I0,000 bond ·on . charges of shooting Wallace and a Secret Service agent. Zarvos. Newsmen recall¢ seeing Bremer at earlier Wallace rallies in Maryland, and one NBC TV phQtograph from one of those rallies shows him wearing a button reading "Stand Up for America ," a Wallace slogan. , Frank Daniel, a Wallace campaign worker, said he recalled seeing Bremer or someone looking llke him at a rally in Milwaukee, Wis. Police in Kalamazoo, Mich. said they question~d an Arthur H. Bremer priOr to a \Vallace rally there Saturday night, but didn't detain him. They said they ques- tioned him because someon¥ complained that he looked suspicious. Orange Coast lawmakers today reacted ··to the shooting of Alabama Gov. George \Vallace by saying it was but a symptom of a violent Ameri'ca and of a society "coddling its criminals ." Rep. John Schmitz (R-Tustin), calling the incident "a sicken ing event," blaming the act on the "glorification of violence by critics of our society." ··it is grimly ironic that Gov. Wallace, who made our current toleration of violence and crime a primary issue of his campaign for the presidency of the United States, has now himself fallen vic- tim to it," Schmitz said in a prepared statement. "Let us hope that the teachers of violence will at long last be shamed into silence by this latest example of their handiwork," Schmitz added. State Sen. Dennis Carperiter CR· Newport Beach), who. is now seeking reinstitution of the death penalty in Caliklrnia for capital crimes, said such incidents might not happen if crime• were'lllore severely punished, ~ · ·'This sort or incident," the state senator said, "is related to the banish· ment or the death penalty an_d to the overa!l prevailing attitude of sOciety cod- dling its criminals. There is a general lax ness on the part of the people responsible In allowing criminals to go free.'' State Sen. James Whetmore (R-Garden Grove ). said the shooting was a ''very great shock" and agreed with Carpenter that the root cause of assassination at- tempts v.·as mild punishment of criminals. "I think we can expect these types of things to continue as Jong .as we live in a society that doesn't particularly want to punish its criminals ," Sen. Whetmore said. ,; Assassins know that they can do these things and usually get away with it, at least with their life." The legislator said he thought it was a "mistake" lo say that the cause Of the Wallace shooting Was a "sick America." FromPqel CARVELL •.. neighDoring district and the two worked as colleagues for several years. Then in 1969 Hall became Carvell's boss when the latter applied for an open· ing ln the Ocean View School District and was accepted. Now the pair's various relationships have entered yet a new phase with the succession ~f Carvell to Hall's job. The new superintendent of Ocean View has a wife, Marion, and a daughter - Cynthia, 20, who attends Golden West College. The fam ily lives in Fountain Valley. Carvell is currently serving a s chairman of the Oranie County Person- nel Administrators' Association and is a state eommittee member of the Associa-• lion.of California School Administrators. All For The Family- Whit changes your liouse more than any otlier thing? What improves accoustics dramatically?. What warms up a house 7. What imparts unique beauty an<! comfort? , •• C.'l"ting from Alden's, that's what! . . "The fact that puni!friment I!: so 1u Is the main contributing factor," Whetmor• said, "but J can't think of any punish- ment that would be sufficient for the person who does isuch things. (as assassinations)_" FromPag~l CONNALLY. • • With anyone' mO're dedicated and more disciplined than is the present President of tbe United Ststes." There was speculation last year that Connally might be selected by Nixon to repla:ce Vice President Spiro T. Agnew on the 1972 ticket. The President indicated strongly a few months ago that be saw no need for dropping Agnew. Connally WU Wed today il be. would accept the vice prfsidentla1 nomination · on the ticket if asked.· . &' He replied he would not engage In '!Uch ' • speculation but added he dld not think such an offet would come. "I have no political aspirations and no particular ambitions," Connally said. Nixon was equally unstinting in bis praise of Connally, describing him as the architect of the Administration's new economic programs of price and -wage controls to curb inflation, and drastic moves to strengthen the dollar abroad. Nixon described Connally as "a tower of strength fo~ the President" and particularly the recent de ct s Ion• regarding the Vietnam \Var: "When the going is the toughest, Secretary Connally 1s at his best," the President declared. Shultz was a member of Niion'1 or)ginal cabinet as Labor Secretary and became the first director of the reorganized Office of ~Ianagement anf! Budget, a powerful post which won him the unofficial title of "general manager of the United States." Connally himself fore!hadowed bi1 resignation ~he past sever.a! months by talking about his desire to return to private life. Just after his 58th birtbdaJ on Feb. 27, he told reporters: "I've spent most of my adult life 1n public service ... and now I'm tired. I want to do some other things." Nixon said Shultz, former dean the Graduate School of B u a i n e 1 s Administration at the University of"' Chicago, was the "only candidate" co~ sidered to succeed Connally. "He is an economist but one that ba1 shown great skill in management," Nixon said of Sbullz. The pi-ospective return of C.Onnally into Te1as politics on NU:on's behalf would .< provide a lilt to the President '• chance9 of capturing the state's electoral votes in November, no matter who t b • Democratic nominee might be. In the 1968 election, Nixon narrowly lost Texas to Democrat Hubert a' Humphrey. ' {If r.our howe "J!jfle5" r.ou, sloP. In an<! see ut FAST.) 1 I I I i I I I I I I I ' ' ( I ! t ( c ( ~ b I I< b m ., di Fi Cc M Sa th· fol of •Y Ar IA di! on fee th• coo lhi · lh, tw• 74) pee Y" 1 cor Is Ne< bU! me1 dlff ~ UPtJ Ar~ des P"' al st to'I lhn F per , Nor ty). And Qi,; :! ~ ..... • • ... Tueid&y, M'Y 16, 1972 H DAILY PILOl & • County Planner Quits: Ron Yeo Named to R eplace Arnold Forde Controversial Oranie County Planning Commissioner ·Arnold Forde today re!igned his post on the county body ef· fective immediately. . Ran Y«J of Corona del Mar. a prom- inent member of the Citiu:ns Direction Finding Committee and of Project 21, was appointed by Fifth Dist r i c.t Supervisor ROllald W. c.aspers ·to rtp_lace Foi<fe. . Caspers' nomination was approved unanimously. . F9rde, a long-time associate of Caspers and 1 real estate broker, said ln 1 letter to Gaspers that he was forced to resign because of pres.sure of personal business. Caspers put through a resolution of com- mendat.ion for Forde's 17 months service on the commission. During his service op the county plan- ·ning body, Forde was in the center of ' many controversial Issues including the Saddleback versus Mi!Slon Viejo bolpital fight, the McDonnell-Douglas property rezone near Orange County Airport and other vital Issues. During Forde's'first year on the board he was al igned with Fourth District Com· missioner Fred Jefferson, now chairman of the commission and , First District Agnew Commissioner Woodrow Butterfield la~ many 3 to 2 dec iJions. '$ Butte:rfleld ha' a.I so resigned but 1 when he did so aome weeks ago after being ap- pointed to the Garden Grove Ci ty Council he said he would remain with the com• mission for "several weeks to clear up some matters in the southeastern p1rt of the co1,1nty in which I am interested." Tolcl Sc h1nitz to Criticize Nixon? BREA IUPJ I -A conservative Rtpubl ican congressman said Monday that Vice Pres1Qent Spiro T. Agnew f'n couraged him to criticize President Nixon in order to counterbalance liberal advisors with conservative pres.sure. Rep. Johll G. &hmitz, of California. said Ai;:new probably wouud d~y the incident. Schmitz said he is wHlin~ to take a lie detector test if challenged. .. .OAILY l'ILOT 5tlft l'Mlto ROLLING STONES FANS SWEAT OUT TICKET SALES AT SEARS, SOUTH CbAST PLAZA 81for1 the Music Began, • Lot of Wailing from Would·be·Conc1rt-909r1 Judge Demands Return to Court Of Seized Film Schmitz told a Republican \\'omen 's Club meeling that hP. regretted he had to tell such a sto ry "'ilh newsmen present. He called on Agnew last yea r. shortly after Nixon an· nounced plans to journey to Chiria. Schmilz said, to ask if Agnew would run for President if Nixon dumped him from the re-elect ion ticket . Stones Gather Up Mos~-A federal judge ln Los Angeles has ordered the Orange County di!ltrict at- torney and sheriff to return lo his court next Monday with the controversial gay film "Seven in a Barn" seized last March on the UC Irvine campus. "The vice president told me in effect. 'the Lord giveth and the Lord ta ke!h away,' and said he would not run if tnat happened ," Sch mitz said. 1CMM•tz: "He then said that he was discouraged because presidential adv isers of the left cnntinuatly hold sway. and he gets pushed around ." 40,000 Concert T ick ets Cleaned Out Fast Agnew "told me to keep up Uie pressure on the Wh ile House; you're dolnc the right thing -press ure fronf"the right equalizes p'fessure from the left," Schmitz said. By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 fll• O•llt !'lie! si.n A Rolling Stone gather:: no moss but the rock music group by the same name w!JI bounce out or Southern California with abundant green stuff ol another kind : money . Thousands of you ng fans -some wai~ng since Friday'and all since befoi:e opening hour .h-tonday -ganged mutual ti cket agencies. cl~aning out all among 43,000 tickets available for . the Stones' June concert tour. Top price Mon4ay was S&.50. with a limit of fo ur per person to discourage scalping. the resale to latecomers at ex- orbitant prices. The supply sold out within hours. Blocks of tickets for the June 9 through 13 shows go on sale later this week at other licensed agencies at up to $20 or whatever the traffic will bear. Orange County police agencies had to dispatch squad cars to four shopping centers -Inc lud ing South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa and Fashion Island in Newport Beach -due to a variety of dif· flculties. A few patrons objected to the four- ticket limit, ~·hile a e-0nsLipated computer caused some Tickelron outlets t.o receive onl y a few of the concert tickets allocated for waiting fans. No real problems were· reported by police, some of whom acted as mediator.!! between store managers and freaki.shly garbed customers, or in disputes over lost places in line. - One shirtless boy at South Coast Plaza had to go to the rear at the May Com· pany queue, after helping another who fainted in 80-<legree heat get to a drinking fowita in. "You mean I lost my place in line for being a good guy?" he protei:;ted. "I'm not going to talk to you -you aren·t wearing a shirt," said a store of· ficial. A middle-aged matron begged tO buy a whole bloclM>f tickets instead of the max- imum four. "I've got to have more," she decla red. "rm goinl to scalp them for money to put my son through school next year." May Company officials barricaded the door and allowed the bearded, long-haired andia cleancut customers to dribble in two by two like Noah's Ark, because the Ticketron window is three floors up in the Fine House wares section. Sears encountered less difficulty with its ground floor ticket agency. Customer Service Manager Les Altman and Operations Superintendent Harold Hirsch handed out customer numbers to be called, just like a supermarket meat counter. "They were just great," bubbled one mother who waited 1 1,~ hours to pick up Rolling Stones tickets for her child ren . "Mr. Altman even took some kids1 teleph one numbers and said he'd cell them as tickets became available later," she said. One little old lady wandered into the crowd of several hundred in bewilder· ment to for mally complain about an um- brella, confrohttng Customer Service's: beleaguered Altman. "She was a dear ittle old Monday morning shopper," said the middleaged County Trnmit Agency Act,s To Improve Service The Orange Olunty Transit Di.strict rooved into high gear Monday with the adoption_ of an action plan offered by district General Manager Gordon "Pete" Fielding. In rapid fire order the district directors approved: -A .stepped-up operation of the South Coast Transit Corporation routes to Costa ~fesa, Balboa and Laguna Beach from Santa Ana with the district subsidizing the present operator to the tune of $93 .000 for the 1972·73 year, and with the addition Of five new buses. -Taking over the Santa Ana city bus 1ystem now operated for the city by the American Transit Corporation of St. LOuis at a cost of $148.000 a year to the district. The city has nine new buse!I on order which will be financed partially by federal fund!!. -The purchase of 25 new buses during the first year of operatilft'I of the overall county bus .system, nine with federal two- thirds funding. 16 with district funds and ·the lease of 20 more buse.s. -Purchase of 6.1 buses with federal two-thirds funding the second year ! 1973- 74 J. Delivery of the new equipment is ex- pected by July. 1973. -Purchase of 9!) buses Jn subsequent years with federal two-thirds funding. Th.e purchase of 25 new buses for the coming fiscal year and lease of ~others ts a modification of the Special Bus Needs Study consultants' proposal of IS buses. Fielding told directon: he recom- mended the reduction to "avoid cash flow dlffieu.Ities In future years ." He .said leased buses should be used to upgrade service In the .SOuth Central Area of the county. one of seven areas designated .... by the consultants in a preliminary report two weeks ago. He 1180 said some leased buses could be used to Initiate Inter-community service In all three weste m (coastalJ service areas. Fielding also got app.-oval or an ex- ptrlmentlll dial-a-bus operatkm In the . N9rth Central Area (Fullerton and vlcln l· ty). The consultant! -Alan Voorhees and Aasociates of Virginia and VTN of Winge County explained May t U.ot dlal-.-S operations had been succt ssful on tit tut coast and were "somewhere ln bohoten lcl!eduled bus operations and tuS iervlce." 'liie gentral manager said tho f~st new buata (nine) oould be erpected to be •delivered by February of next ye ar and they would ht used in Santa Ana and that the remainder of the 2.i v.-ould be utilized to establish intra-and inter-community route.s with pre,~rence given to the West Central and ·North Beaches fSea l Beach, Huntington Beach, etc.) service areas. Fielding said new inter':t:ommunity routes would be operated directly by the district using its own equipment and stafr. In cont rast. for the first year the South Coast Transit Corp. routes to Orange Coast points will be operated by the cor- poration under co ntract with the district, as will the Santa Ana city routes. New routes wit hin communities. under the plan outlined. will be operated by contractors for the district. Under this setup the district will lease or purcha se buses and lea se them to an operator who will run the lines under district supervision. Fielding asked that the consultants be requested to recommend priorities for implementing intra and inte r-community routes during the first year of operation beginning in July and for dial-a -bus service areas. The board adopted a five-year ca sh program , requ ired to qualify for federal twtrthirds fund ing for buses, lands and operation and maintenance headquarters buildings. The capital outlay program i s estimated to cost $1.05 million the first year accelerating to $2, 18 million the fourth yea,:, for buses. Other outstanding spending will include $1.SS million the 1econd year for operation and mainten· a.net!: facilities, .plus $105.000 to t848,000 fro the first to fifth years for bus replace- ment. Total capital outlay spending for the first year is estimated at Sl.37 milhon. jumping to $5.11 million the sl':rn nd and dn>pplng to $1.5 million In thP hf!h. Of the&e expenditures. totaling $18 4 m.llllon over eight years, the district's 1hare 11 estim ated al $6.li million and the federal govemment'a 1111t $11.8 million. Dist rict funds ire rectlved from I 2 cents per $1()() of assessed valuation prop- erty tu countywlde this year (It can be raised to 5 cents by law) from new state al.lies tuts on aasoUne Cestlm1ted at S9 to fl! mllllon tho first yeor beginning Ju· ly I) and ·frvm other 1t1te 1rants which will be applied for. mother also waiting in line . "What happened lady, did it r&.in and your umbrella had a hole in It?" quipped one youthlul bystander. "Why no," she declared. "It rained ·ind it rusted!" "The kids were really gfeat." said one observer, noting uniformed officers 'reacted well too despite store manager's call that brought five Bquad cars to the Costa Mesa plaza . . Seara offici;U.! allowed them to rest - .some asleep since turning up be.fore dawn -on lawn chairs and patio lounges . U.S. District Court Judge Jesse Curtis said Monday the film must be returned before hearings: on the &Uil by the Gay Students Union (GSU) chapter at UCt will continue. The GSU brought suit against the coun - ty officials after sheriff's deputies seized the film at a g_atherini of 350 persons in 1eience lecture hall. Prior to the seizure, the GSU had agreed lo comply with· a UCI ad- ministration ban on the film's showing as part of a program on obscenity. Nixon Handshaking Irks Secret s·ervice Agents One . youth ~tired, hot and frustrated, however , gave a newspa__Qer photographer an indiscreet hand gesture demanding to know if he was a polic e ma n photographing radical1. "No, I'm with the DAILY PILOT," was the reply. "That picture wolf be in the newspaper will it?," the teenager gasped in horror. "My dad will kill me!" The circus-like atmosphere diminished shortly ·after noon as the ticket seekers drifted off, leeVlftl the area littered with soda cups. "Thank heav~ 1·m old enough to understand," remarked one May COm· pany lady after the invasion of Rollin& Stones fans. "But '1 wouldn't go see them if they were appearing across the street free," she 1ddecf. · Following a screening before a panel of students , faculty and administrator1. Vice Chancellor John C. Hoy baMed the showing. Judge Curtis said the sheriff and di&- lrict attorney may face contempt of court rulings if they don't return the film by next Monday. The GSU contends in its suit that the film seizure constitutes unwarranted abridgement of the constitutional rights of freedom of expression and assembly. At the time that suit was filed, GSU President Terry Oleson, a i 27-year-old iraduate 1tudent at ucr'. lndk:1ted a suit again.st the unlversily might be passible. However, GSU members later decided to "work within the 1y11tem" to change the regents policy which prevents UC ad- ministrators from allowing "obscene or lewd" presentations on campuses. \VASHINGTON '(U PI ) -,President Nixon ignored objections ,of the Secret Service and waded into a mass of tourists outside the Wh ite House today. shaking hands and talking animatedly. It took Nixon more than 10 minu tes to cross the street between the Treasury Department and_ the Wh ite House as more than 500 tourists crowded about him. Nixon crossed to the Treasury building to accompany John 8. Connally Jr. back to his office following Nixon's personal announ cement that the Cabinet's only Democrat was· resigning. There ensued a crush of bodies as delighted tourists pushing their way between the President and his protective cordon of Secret Service agents. Ignored was the Secret Service warning that it was al most impossible to protect a public figure in a crowd. The frnwn on the fa ce n.f Robfrt Taylnr, head of the While Howe Secr@t Service deta il. deepened noticeably as he watched !he scene, one da y after the assassination attempt on George C. Wallace in suburban Laurel. Md . • A black teeneged girl at one point pushed to Nixon's 1lde and called to a companion ... Take my picture with the Prrsident.'' Nixon paused, stood next to .the girl and called to her friend : "Shoot" Thfl: wounding of Walla ce was a blow to the Secret Service , charged with ~pro­ te cting him as well 11 the President 1nd other presidential candidates. ( Se 1 related story. Page 4). Eugene 'Rosside1, who ·has primary authority over the agency. w1rne<( lftat the shooting that 'It was "very, ~ dangerous" for candidates to mingle wltb crowds. Big Car Luxury at a Low, Low Price! • MERCURY ' 1'224,H51440Z • Monterey 2-Dr. Hardtop. handsome mediu m brown with white vinyl roof, W.W. Tires, Fender s~1rts, Radio, dual rear speakers, complete tinted glass, remote control m1rror, deluxe wheel covers, body side mol dings and AIR CONDI- TIONING •.• MERCURY Comet 2-Dr. Sedan . yellow gold, me- tallic. W.W. tires, Radio, De cor group, bumper guards, complete tinted gl ass: ..• $·2499 Rome Of The New Car -•• "Goldet1 rellda" "Omi9• Couflly'1 Taallp of FiM Can• $4133 2ICJITi42 16t Home Of The New Car . , • "Golllet1 re~h" 2821 HARBOR BLVD,. COSTA MESA • 640a30 • • • 4 DAILY 'ILOT Tutsday, M.11 16, lq1z •• Just ~ Coasting i~J Arthur Bremer 'A Sick Loner? Barricailes Broken VP. .. •' ~ •-'-, '\~Vf'l\I\' with Tom arphine Notebook Scribbling of Alleged Assailant Sifted J By British ~,·.··;:· .... . Agnew Pulled John's Strings ·RICKY TfCKY POLITIX' Finally to- day it can be told why John G. Schmitz, the congressman from Tustin, has ~n acting like a member of the oppos)tlon party all these months in "°11tinually put- ting the knock on President Nixon. Schmitz, Jt develops, made the grand Mil.WAUKEE, Wis. (UPI) -The little notebook with the acrlbb1lngs, &0me of them childlike, may tell more about Arthur Bremer than anything or anyone . The Writlnss are about tire and death. politics and Jove. a lot of things. They tell the atory of a lonely and confused young man who today !s being held in Laurel, Md., for the 1hooting . or Ala5ama Gov. George Wallace Monday.· His father, William. 58, a truck driver for the aame company for 30 years, couldn't belleve lt .. but said If hia son "is involved in this crime ... he must have been awfully tick." The notebook, with Arthur's name on it, was round among the clutter in his three- room bachelor apartment on the city 's West Side. Included were these pas sag es: revelation himself in the unlikely • metropolis of Brea Monday whilst &peak- ing &o a Republican women's club. "Happiness is hearing George Wallace sing the National Anthem or hillllg him arrested for a !it and run ti'IPl'lc ac- cident." "J am part of the world ..• I am one three billionth of the world's history to- day ... " Schmitz:, according to news reports and wire servlces-d!Spatches, expJained that Spiro Agnew "encouraged him" to run around ahoottng off hl.!1 mouth on what a bad job the President is doing. This, the congressman from Tustin ex- plained, he did jwt to Offset all the bad advice tha t those ljbe.ral advisers were giving to Mr. Nixon. WHY, YOU CAN almost hear It now as Schmitz and Agnew huddled aomewbere in Wa&h.ington, going over all the bad ad· vice that the President has been given in recent times. They must have reviewed tile fact that Mr. NiJ:on haf tried to halt the wage-- priee aplral; that he made repeated bids for honorable peace on Southeast Asia ; that he tried to open the doors for com· municatlon with Peking and Moscow; and that he has set a goal of a zerO draft. All of these things have to be terribly disturbing to the likes of Schmitz and Agnew. THEREFORE, SINCE this is an elec· tk>n year, they must have struck on a wonderful way to help Mr. NiJ:on. Get Sclunltz going arbund the country blathering on about what a bad job the President is doing. This will certainly set Mr. Nixon on the proper course for the future and assure him re-election. · Well, it makes a lot of sense. The only problem is that Congressman Schmitz, according to the news accounts, told the Brea GOP ladies that if con- fronted with the facts about this Agnew· Schmitz advisory meeting, the vice presi- dent would probably deny it. Schmitz, however, told the Brea folks not to worry about that. He'd be willing to tai::e a lie detector test to prove that it was all reality. The Tustin super·righlman explained that this meeting occurred last year shortly af(er President Nixon announced his plans to visit China. It was shortly thereafter that Schmitz made his fa mous speech duri ng which he said be wasn't worried about Mr. Nixon going to China. "but only about him com- ing ba ck." LATER, SCHMITZ explained that cra~k was really supposed to be a little joke that trls detractors \\'ere trying to use against him. Now, however. \\'e apparently learn that it was all part of a Schmitz-Agnew campaign to help ~fr. Nixon . Of course, all of this is puzzling when you aUempt ·to explain why nearly three years ago Congressman Schm itz voted against 20 of 23 administration.supported bills in his first six: weeks in office. Why, It's obvious he \\'as helping Mr. Nixon eve n before he got Mr. Agnew's advice . CLEARLY. IN this election year, President Nixon doesn't have to worry about Democratic opponent:s at all. Only his friends, like Congressman Schmitz. Hue 1''orecast Alleged BOSTON IUPI) -Columnist Jack Anderson said l\londay that President Ni xon has a report from Saigon \vhich says Hue probably vdll fall to the North Vietnamese. According lo Anderson, the fall ol Hue could mean, the fall of the re(ilne of South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu. "If I live tomorrow ... It will be a long time.'" "I'm playing the game of Ille to win." "My country tiz of thee , sweet land of bigotry." "My bl<>od is black." Some of the jotting1 apparently were from radio disc jockeys -judging by marginal notes -and some were Bremer's. He had lived in the apartment since November. Neighbors sa id. he was a "loner" who s&d Vt.fY litlle. "His mother came to see him a couple or times," said Mrs. Tony Wasche, wife of the apartment building manager. "She said 1he was worried because he never called her. She said she knocked on hi! door several times and thought she heard noises ins ide, but no one answered the door." Mrs. Wasche's brotber-in·law, Stephen, 17, said he found a ....,Wallace campaign button in Bremer's trash. There was a cOnfederate fiag on the fioor of the clut· tered apartment, two bo1e1 of bullets and Campaign Comes To Standstill In California SACRAMENTO (AP) -Presidential camJ>aigning came almost to a standstill in California t.oda.y u leaders of both ma- jor parties recoiled from the shock of the shooting of Alabama Gov. George Wallace. Sens. Gtor1e McGovern and Hubert Humphrey, Wallace's chief rivals for the Democratic nomination for president, both canceled all campaign appearances shortly after receiving word of the shooti.ng. B6th were to fly to California this week. There was no word if either would resume campaigning in time for their scheduled California appear a n c e s. McGovern also halted television and radio advertising for at least a day. Wallace'• Cllifornia campaign leaders. who were expected to announce this week that the Alabama gove.rnor would run as a write.in candidate on the state's June 6 Democratic primary, said they now are "in no frame of mind to engage in poUUclll slratqy or proph<cy." Only one Democratic candidate, Rep. Shirley Chiaholm of New York, continued cunpatcn pllnl with oeverlll ClllUomia campaip appearancea otill llCheduled for bldoy. Led by Gov. Reagan, who called the shooting "a tragedy for America and our way of life," CalUonUa Republicans joined Democrats in expressing sympathy and shock. "Isn't this an outgrowth of the hatred that hu been Injected Into what has been a peaceful competition?" Reagan said after hearing the news. "As God is in his heaven, do we have to hate ourselves to the point where peo- ple with less balance are stimulated to deeds of this kind?" lleag'l' said. State Sen. Mervyn Dy m a 11 y . Californ ia's only black state se nator and a Jong·time Wallace critic, called the shooting the result of the wne "sickness in American politics" which caused the slayjngs of John and Robert Kennedy and Dr. Maritn Luther King. a gun manual on a closet shelf. A bll of bis life was scattered about the room: report cards of average grades from SOuth.. Division High School where be grad"uated ; a receipt fofl. .an lncome . lax refund of $5.17 from the state of Wis<onsln; dirty '1•thfl; airline and motel brochure•; aod a I variety of reading material ranging from ''Con- fucius Saf' to "Sex Comics." Stephen Waache said J!remer hlldn't been 1een uvund tho apartment fill' about • month, or llnce ohorUy alter Ibo Wlsoonalo &'t:tldentlol primary A\lrll f , Wall>ce fin le<ODd In that primary. • BREMER IS SHOWN IN CROWD AT WHEATON, MD. CAMPAIGN STOP Picture W11 Taken of Gathering at W1ll1ce Talk E1rlier in the Day CIS hth VII U~I CORNELIA WALLACE KNEELS OVER HER FALLEN · HUSBAND Officlala Had to Pry Hor Away, Sobbing and Grlef-strlckan A Wife's Horror Mrs. Wallace at Side of Husband Secret Service ' Views Shooting As Major Blow WASIDNGTON (UPI) -The al· tempted assasSination of Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace is a blow to the Secret Service, charged with Protecting him and the other presidential candidates. Agents covering the White Houae detail viewed the incident with dismay. "lt'1 a blow to us all," said one. Shortly aller tlie shooting Preoident NiJ:on ordered Secret Service protection for Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (().Mus.), whose two brothers, Jobn F. Kennedy and Robert F. Kennedy, wore killed by an auassin'a bullets. Nixon also extended protection to Rep. Shirley Chisholm (0- N.Y.), an announced candidate for tht presidency and to Rep. Wilbur D. Mills (().Ark.). Kennedy, who has consistently denied he is a candidate , accepted the parct t'!Dporarily. Neither Kennedy nor . Mrs, Chisholm were eligible for such protection under previous Treasury Department guidelines based on standing in the polls for an- nounced and unannounced candidltes. Round·tbe-clock protection already had heed provided four candidates -Sens. Edmund S. Muskie, Hubert H. ffltm· pbrey, George McGovern and Henry M. Jackson -in addition to Wallace. Despite the clou scrutiny of scheduling arrangements for a traveling candidate, a aurvey of questionable peTIOOI in an area. and a thorough llW'Ch of the spelllc· Ing ball, fed,..lll agenta know their llfely measures have human limits. • ' BELFAST (UPI) ~ British troop! braved heavy atoning today and smlllhed :barricades erected aroWld • Roma11 Catholic erta of Bel!ast follow~g-anolher •night of Clthollc-Prote!tant v10l~ce. Clthollcs in the Ardoyne area lgnored British Administrator WUllam Whitelaw·., warning that lle would not allow people 10 tu-e the law into their own hands. They bljacli:ed truckS and barricaded two ttn· tra.ncu to tht Ardoyne area ()ff the Crumlln Road. -Troops moved in and 11Mshed the bar· ricade• despite heavy stoning fr~ a jeering crowd. There were no casualties . The Ardoyne area races the Protesta~t Woodvale region across the Crumhn Road . * * ·* . AMBOY Wash. (AP) -A twtrH:ng111e plane has' disintegrated in mid-air a~d crashed near Amboy, killing all sit persons aboard. All were members of the sa me family. Dr. Arch Hamilton. Clark County cor· . BRIEFS oner, idenUfied the victims of the l\ton- day crash as Denny H. Mansell Sr .. 79, and his wife, 11uriel, 76, Kirland, Wash .• the pilot, Denny H. Mansell Jr., 53. hi.t wife, Merel, 51, and their sons. Gary Mansell, 22. and William, about U, all of Quincy Calif. Clark County sheriff'• deputies 11id no explosion wu heard aqd the reason for the mishap was not known. . * * * . BONN (UPI) ;:: opposition leaders tiave dropped their objeclions to nonag- greuion pacts with Poland and Russia, ending 11 months of wrangling that bad brought parliament to a standstill. The pacts which brought Chancellor Willy Brandt the Nobel Peace Prize last year appeared assured of approval by a large majority of Parllment's 496 mem .. hers \\'hen they fin.all y are put to the vote Wednesday night. Rainer Ban:el, the op~ition Oiristian Democratic leader who fought the treaties from the moment Brandt negotiated them in 1970, dropped bis ob- jections Monday after he and the govern-- ..Jnent wOrked out joint r e s o I u t i on 1 restating long·tenn aims and reserva- tions. * * * WASIDNGTON (AP ) -The former top Air Foret general in Vietnam has been relieved Of hiJ post "because of ir- regularities in the conduct of bis com- mand responsibilities." Gen. John D. Ryan , Air Force chief of staff, reportedly was personally e.ro• barrassea wheD Gen. John D. Lavelle told bim U.S. pilota were obeying Joint Chiefs of Slall instructions on altitude and othef' flying conditions designed. to save planes ud pilols, and he learned later pilot• were Dying lower to hit their targets. The Air FOrce announced Lavelle retired April 7 "for personal and health reasons." Monday, Ryan said Lavelle retired for health reuons, but bad heal nlieved of command before that becau.se of unspeeified irregularities . * * * NEWTON , Mau. (AP) -Five members of a family perished early to- day and two others escaped when fire nept their brick house on Amherst Road, police reported. The victims 1t'ere identified by police a1 FrlDcll Tesoro Sr., 42, his IODS Vincent. 17, and Franci1 Jr., I, and two daughters, Maria 14, and Frances, 10. LAUREL, Md. (UPI) -There was blood on her , yellow dress and tears stre:aked her cheeks. She knelt on the _ dirty gray upbalt of the parking lot. h~r long black hair cascadif:lg protectively on the shoulders of her fallen husband. road and helicopter to the operating table. Cornelia Ellis Snively Wallace, 32, divorced her citrus heir husband a few months before she married the widower \Vallace. She had lqiown \Va llace since childhood when she lived with her uncle, former Alabama Gov. Js.Ples "Big Jim" Folsom. Greatest hµpact ·of All A-tonday afternoon C.Ornelia Wallace '!\'as where she has been since Jan. 4, 1971 -by the side of her husband, the governor and the presidential contender, with him on the campaign t,rail as often as possible. Bystanders and police finally pulled the sobbing Mrs. Wallace away from her hw· band and she climbed in the emergency van as George C. Wallace was rushed by The mother of two boys -six children all together counting \Vallace's four -ill an a~mplished guitarist and a friendly, folksy wmnan wbo sometimes dresses in mod clothing and bools. The first summer after her maniage she drove the pace car in -the Winston 500 auto race at Talladega, Ala., and has joined her husband on the hustings almost constantly in this politi~al year. • ·seen on Kennedy Future J!y srEVE GERSTEL WASHINGTON (UPI) -The al· templed usa•U.llon ol Georce C. Wallace may hove Ila greatest Jona-term impocl on lhe fulure of Edwin! M. Ka> nedy. The immediate effecl was Olp<ded to North Carolina, Teruiessee and pouibly two more today (Mldtlgan, Maryland), Wllllace planned no more major efforts In J1!i1narY llatu, although he contemplated a·write--in effort in California June 8. Doopile Ibo fad that Wallace 1ru1y came to the cooventlon with 300-400 deJfiale votea pledged to him on lhe first Nice Weather Favors U.S. At Holy Cross hospital in the minules and hours after the shooting. she waited in a nurse's station while surgeons u1orked on her husband. Friends and even one other p~ential . candidate, Sen. Hubert 11: Hunlj>hrey, dropped by to comfort her. I l btllot, he can go no higher. 'Iba! b bis _ • high-water mark. NEW.S--,tN71LYSIS Alter Ibo ahooting, as well .. hefore, · the race ii between Hubert H. Humphrey and George S. McGovern and lhe swell Wlllace'• returns with l)'lllpatby 1 crossroads may be California. Scattered Storms Break Up Generally Fair Skies Ten1perat11res AINlftP, tloud~ Atlt nte, clttr Blrmrt9111"' ¢lr1r llOITOfl. <loud .. Bllftt le, CIOIHIY Cl'lt•ltllM, (IO\ld CN>rltllt, ,,.,, Clllc•to. cllludv ClntlftNll, c~ '""""'ftd, <lou81 Dlfl•· cloudv 0., .¥.o!J19S, clffr Ottrolf, Clttr ....... l!,llu, clH r H_..,_, tiff.I' llld\ttll"ll .. <lovfV k~ c•"'· t1t1r llttlt ll!tct. C'IMr Llo.lllWlll•, c:louer MIMll, r1lfl MJi...,.,.., .. , <itUd'I' Cl!~ ,,,,.., , ... , On\tflt. clMr l"tlnl s.r1,... \ ____ _ 1"!11 ..... 111,t- ~ ...... c:lt1r r ""'""911, dMY ,.,,....,, on .• .-•in 11!..W Clt'Y, doudY ·~,.., St. LWIL dew S.rt Ulrt ''''" ,....,., ...,. ~""'"'°" ""' ... lfle, "'"' w_,.., ••• " " n .. .. M n ~ n .. • " .. .. ~ ~ .. " n .. • " ~ ... " .. .. .. .. " .. .. .. .. " C•Hland• Ltw ~•. .w .n "' .11 .. " '" M .1J n ., .• " .OJ Sl• ·'° " .n .. ,, w .10 n .. " ... • • g • " d ,I• " .. .. •• 1 n .. .. . .. " .. " .... .. • .. p ... ., .v A .,_Ill " CW , .. rr... lf'lf 9CMfl ... -. ,.......,. """"""' - The next time reporters saw her she was composed, surrounded by Wallace 's four children. "I just wanted to tell you myself," she said. "the governor is in very.good con- dilion. He bas suffered • Hrlolll Injury to his abdomen, but it is cleaned ~ and he's out of surgery . "The <hildren and I are going In to speak to him. Before he went into surgery, he was conscious all tbe lime and quite aware of everythizlg tbat was happening to him," she added. , DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE ' Oellwry of tht O.aUy Piiot Is 1uarantttd I ot In •-• , Mf.S.•· and"'·-·'-· ' ff neither of the Mldwesl senators can v es wuay • """'tian ••uu1JUC1 win the nomination and the national primaries. 1 1 vention begins to Jook for e compro:l.: Bui after the l!hooU~. u well u <andldale to llreak the deadl<><t. It will befoN, Wallace mnainl a uapoUer" wbe .' Jook high and low but never for WaUact . baa shaken up the Democr1Uc party • Nor wlll IIumpbrey or McGovern deal arowed a well"l'l'lnl of protest, cuv~1 wtlh Wallace, .atthouah Ibey ctrlainly will oul a bully ClODllltuency. bul baa DI\ al1"'npl to nay Wallace delegatu. Ito chance II .all of wlni1bJi Ibo ncimlol.t::J will !,Jive on impacl on Ibo pfaUorm with To ltenned)', Ibo sboU fired al 'IV "-·~ of tax rtlonn but tt II likely hi • aiburbon Wuhlngton ~ that llie Domocrllls can swallow, without center may well bavo "•led --ant fllnchlna, bis total opposlllon lo tchool lingering doubt •bout acct'p~ • buslnc·. tnlldenlial drllll In 1m and perhapo ·Ii There 1111)' be an Impact on lhe !be ,_,. abeod. _ ! llmnplny and McGov1111 campalcns. ltonoedy, who losl two 1ni1erl to The two leadlnf cbaDencen tor lbt bullets ol ......... baa lleldWUy nomination are lllWouJ lo llart <•m· Nted thlt be Is not • candlilate. Jlut Plllninl full.time In California with tu i.ett,. bu peniated that U o dudlocbd iolniiu·lakHD primary and 171 del•Rale convenllon !urned to him, be <001d aot v...,, J!oth IU.ipended' their wnpol1n1 reluse bis party. lmmedlately after they learned Wallace 'Ille UllSlinatlon atlempl II certain to had beoo lhot. • ...Worco Kenned)''• decision not to m&M i!Jlmpllny and McGovern bave ..,.. hlmaelf avall>ble -a dectaloa bulcf In bteathl"I n>om. J!oth ,,.. •lrtullllr !>*rt on the poooalbOlly th&I bis cleath al bypuslna campaiplng In tho Ortgon tha ha.ada of • tiller would rob hit primary X., 13, whlcll II COlll!defed dllldrm and U-of bis brothers. Rol>orl locked up for McGovern . F .,...S Jalln F., of tho w.:~cb. Bui Ibey art ......... lo movt. To tach, Tbe ~came u 'IV wu ,,.,. Calllomla II !be .inosl lmt>Orlanl !11'1111117 dln( up hla prlmarT campolp for Ibo on lhe ....S td Uibtlonil oonvontloa Ju. DCCDlnatlon. Aft!r tlna -1'1ortdo. l)' JO. • • I 1 I ~· . I I I + ' _r· ~ Orange .Coast • • Today'11 Final N.Y. Stoek8 . . -VOL 65, NO. 137, 3 SECTIONS, '42 PAG~S ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA' -· TUESDAY, MAY 'I Ii, '1972 • N TEN CENTS State ·Ecologists Want · Coast Plan on · Ballot By L. PETER KRIEG 01 m1 Da!lr f'1 .. 1 ll•ft A crucial state senate committee vote ~fond~y that virtually killed tough coastline control legislation has ap.. pa~tiY. trig~ered-all-out efforts by Cahforn1a environmentalists to get the coastal protection issue on the November ballot. "The legislature has failed and I hope the people won 't," said J anet Adams an orfi cial of the California Coastal Allifilice. ·Legs Paralyied • Her words came after the strong measure ~authored by Senator Donald Grunsky (R-Watsonville) and Assemblyman Alan Sieroty (D-Beverlr Hills) was rejected on a 4 to f vote of tfle senate's natural resources committee. Grunsky chose not to seek a second vote in the measure wben the full nine- member panel was present later in tbe day. A coastal bill sponsored by Stale Senator Dennis Carpenter (R-Newport Wallace Vowing To Stay • Ill Race SILVER SPRING, Md. CAP) - George C. Wallace, shot down at an elec· tioo~ve campal.gn rally, today fought to regain use of lils paralyzed Jegs but \vas reported determined. to continue ht! presidential campaign -even from a v.·heelchair .. Doctors said Wallace is under '5edation _ because of pain rrom his niultiple "1 woullds, including a bullet that remains lodged against his lower spine, but in no immediate danger of death. His condition was stable. BULLET LODGED HERE '" ,- UPI 01.AWIN• WALLACE PARALYZED - Doctors ,say the Alabama gov· ernor is making a remarkable recovery but that paralysis could be permanent. The bullet that passed through his abd<>- men "-•ill not be removed un· til the governor is in better shajle. 5 Coast Y outli.s Held by Police ' In Theft Ccises A Santa Ana police checkup following the alleged peddling of marine equipment and other items in a bar }.1onday night has led to the arrest of five Harbor Area suspects allegedly involved in a boat burglary ring. Various items of loot recovered in the case were traced to a series of five boat burglaries reported at the Arches fl.tarina , 3333 W.-Coast High\.\•ay, Newport Beach, several hours before, police said. Santa Ana police arrested three suspects. leading Ne\.\'port Beach in- vestigators to pick up the additional tv.-o suspects and recove r·other items listed in burglary reports. Booked on sus picion or burglary are Roy D. Lindsay. 21. of 2565 Orange Ave., Costa ~fesa ; Jack H. Hahn Jr .. 22, of 2421 16th St., Newport Beach and Steven J, Cantrell, 2.1, of 224 N. Ne~'port Blvd., Newport Beach. Ch!rges of posses.sion of stolen prop- erty race the other suspects, John E. Richardson, 21. of the Newport Boulevard apartment shared fil\\ith Cantrell . and Joyce A. Princie, 21 , o~ 2421 16th St., Ne"A·port Beach. They wouldn 't predict whether he'll walk again. Today, President Nixon of (er' d Wallace fu ll facilities of Walter Reed Medical Center. "[ can assure you Gov. Wallace i!I' receiving the best medicat care," Nixon said at the White.House. Charged with the ihooting is Arthur Jkr~ Bremer, 21, a white man who reporte4py followed the Wallace cam- paign for some time. He was held in $200,000 bail today by a U.S. magistrate. llla. family and aquaintances in his home town of Milwaukee said they could supply no motive for the shooting. (See related story, Page 4) Wallace was hit several times Monday by point-blank pistol shots l~ed in the midst of a crowd at a shopping center in Laurel. Md. Three others also were woadl!d, JtOOe critically. Voters in Maryl and and Michigan balloted today in primaries that Wallace is fa vored to win, thus making a high point in his campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination. Doctors said at S a.m. PDT that Wallace had come through the night in good spirits despite his pain. "He says it hurts. and he's feeling Uoe," said Dr. Joseph Schanno. Schanno listed Wallace's condition as critical. At 9 a.m. a hospital spokesman said his condition was unchanged. Th is afternoon. he was removed from the critical list. · Wallace is in the intensive care ward of Holy Cross Hospital. A spokesman said well·wishers have sent SO to 60 ar- rangement'.S of flowers, and that Mrs . Wallace requested that people find some other way to express their concern. Doctors said Wallace. 52, was hit by four or five bullets. Only t~·o lodged in his body. One was removed from around his right shoulder. Another punctured his ab- domen and lodged on his spirle, causing damage to the spinal cord. That bullet was left in, though Schanno said it might be taken out later, Bullets also pierced Wallace's right forearm, grazed t,he back of his left shoulder blade and grazed his upper right shoulder. "I think the governor is goifll to make a recovery," Schanno said. "Now what disability he has as a result of his wounds is dilficult to evaluate at this time. We're all very optimistic at this • point.'' Wallace's wife, Cornelia. said early to- day, after her husband had come through (See WALLACE, Page 2) Bond Co11aniittee Beuch) that is aimed at preserving local government control as well as the en- vironment was passed by the par.el, however, on a 5-3-1 vote. Carpenter's bill now goes to the ,enate finance committee. Mrs. Adams has .strong criticism for this measure. ''ft's worse than -wortble3s. ll's destru"t:tive. It's a builders·bil!." she said. SieroLy himself agreed with the ap. praisal and lashed out at lhe building UPI T1ltWl1 RETURNING TO Rl!-NCH C1binet Member Conn1lly Connally Quits Treasm·y Post; Move Surprise • ' WASHINGTON (UPI) -Treasury Secretary John B. Connally, a longtime power in Texas Dem ocratic politics, resigned his Cabinet post today with a strong hint he will campaign for Presi· dent Nixon's re-election in November. Standing side by side in the White House Press Room, Nixon and Connally exchanged praise for each other's performance fn the 17 months the Texan has been in the Republican ad· ministration. Asked if he would actively work on Nix. on's behalf in the coming campaign, Con- nally replied, "That is entirely possible.'' Ni.Ion announced that he w a s nominating George P. Shultz, head of tbe Office of Management and Budget, to succeed Connally. who will stay on until Shultz is confirrued. As Shullz's successor as head of OMB, Nixon picked Shullz's top assistant, Caspar W. Weinberger 1 a former California legis lator and one· t i m e California Republican chairman. Connally said he has "no plans whatsoever" for his immediate future. Last week , Connally, the only Democral in Nixon's cabinet. told ne\\·smen he \\'as "not in the process of changing parties" but added "the possibility certainly exists that I could do so.'' "I have nothing but the profoundest ad· mlration for the President," Connally said today. "He has my complete support ... I don 't know that I've ever worked with anyone more dedicated and more disciplined than is the present President -of ·the United States." There was speculation last year that CoMally might be selected by Nixon to replace Vice President Spiro T. Agnew on the 1972 ticket. The President indicated strongly a few months ago that he saw no (S.. CONNALLY, Page Z) .. trades for opposing his bill. ''If they were asktd. to build something on t!>P of Half Domt in Yosemite, they'd say 'fine'," Sieroty said. Under the Sieroty.Grunsky measure which is technically .atUI alive, there would be one .slate board and· six' regional boards with veto power ovir any develop. ment within 1,000 yards of the beach front. Carpenter's measure establishes one JS.member state agency that would be given three-years to formulate a coastal land use plan developed from lccal governments' concepts of how their areas should be handled. During those three years, any develo~ ment that would cut down the site of public beaches or available public access properties would be forbidden. After three years, the board's veto powCr would be expanded to review all developments approved by local agenciPs and approve or reject them within 30 days or their passage. The Sieroty.Gruasky bill would havt hnd a n111ch more ~tringenl permit i;ystem during the period in which\ thrl lilate bonrd would prepare a siatewide plan for development criteria. "' 1.>emocratic Senator George Zenovlth or Fresno, con!lidered the swing v:otr <1n both bills. stiid he cast a negative ballot on the Sieroty:Grunsky measure because (Stt GRUNSKY, J>a1e %) Proposal Planners Eye high Revised Newpart Beach planners said this momihg they have revised a proposed height·limit ordinance-to aUow no build- ing in the city to be laller than SO feet unless it is given-a use permil, -" · The ch;11ge would affect areas such as Newport Center, the Emkay property. Mariners Mile and the Collins Radio Company, among others. A special planning commissioil public hearigg_on the plan. which also places a ~foot height iimit in all single-family and duplex zones. will take place Wed- nesday at 7:30 in the Newport Center fire station at the corner of Jamboree Road and Santa Barbara Drive. Cart Neuhausen, the city's advance planning director who prepared the new lour-zone ordiha11:ce, said the proposed change would make developers get bot;t planning commission and city council approval for any building more than 50 feet tall, anywhere, re.1ardless of current zooing. The ordinance also establishes a 35-root he!glit limit in most commercial centers that cw1d be penetrated only after 'planning commission ,and council scrutiny. Provisions for open space and .setbacks are to be considered simultaneously. The plallnf!rs Thursday are .scheduled to meet in regular session and will take up a council directive to tie revised den- sitv limits to the high rise proposal. Th.is order came too late to include any ordinance for fonnal consideration in Wednesday's special meeting, but Neu. hausen conceded the subject Of de11sity will undoubtedly be discussed . Councilmen said they want density limits cut virtually in half and sald so just a!ter planners rejected a proposed addition to a West Newport apartmenl complex that proposed same 738 units be built at a density of about 35 units per acre. Planning commissioners had told the de veloper of the complex. kno"'tl as Ver· sailles on the Bluffs. to bring back scated- down drawings lf they wanted to get fu. Ban on Duels Lifted TRENTON N.J. (UPI ) -The Stale Senate voted Monday to repeal the state law banning duels. · Sliots for Dogs Set Wed1iesday Bring your pooch to the Orange CounLy Fairgrounds parking lot Wednesday night for a quick $2 anti-rabies shot. The low-cost vaccines will be of- fered from 7 p.m. lo 8 p.m. as a public service by !he Orange Coun- ty Veterin ary Medi cine Association in cooperation with the Costa Mesa Rotary Club and the Orange County Health Department. Rise Ordinance ture cc>nsiderat ion . Wednesda y night's hearing is expeeted lo draw a large number or homeowners, many of them members of Newport Res· idents Ur1ited (NRU) which has threat· ened to force an initiative it hJgh rise and density controls are not established through normal channels. Allen Beek. NRU president, sa id lhls First Witladraw1i rnoming he is basically pleastd with the high rise proposal. observiag, ''We Ire finally getting started on ou~r general plan." " Beek aaid NRU wanls extremely touefl density controls; hoWeveT', and will push ror nonnal dwelling-unit limitations . of J:I units per acre, for a11y kind of u.w·. in· eluding apartments. 1 • Planners to Receive Collins Developing Plan A plan ta build a series of high rise of- fice buildings, a 450-unit blth rise hotel, three nstaurantll, three gas stations and some shops will be presented to Newport Beach planning commissioners Thursday by Collins Hadio Company. The proPQSal Is similar to one an· nounced and then withdrawn for the 177· acre tract by Orange County Airport several months ago by officials or the electronics finn. Phan.toms Strike Oil Pipeline, Red Buildin.gs SAIGON (UPIJ -The U.S. command reported today_ that r~4 Phantoms des· troyed several building at North Viet~·· nam's Air Defense Command on the out- skirts of Hanoi and shattered a pipeline that delive red most or North Vietnam 's oil ror its offensive in the South. Hanoi Radio said today that the U.S. Navy resumed mining North Vietnam 's harbors. Capt. J . 0 . Ward, commander of the carrier USS Constellation. reported new attacks against lhe North Moaday and said. "We are fighting to \\'In now:• UP I correspondent Patrick J. Killen, aboard the Constellation, said the Navy did not officially confi rm that mining or the harbors resumed, but quoted enlisted men aboard the big flattop as saying they lnaded mines aboard American planes on Monday. The U.S. command, In a report on the ~even days or intense bombing of North Vietnam, said the American planes struck the vital Air Defense headquarters at Bach f\.1ai Air Field just south OC j-tanoi, site or the sophisticated electronic devices that C<lntrol auch air defensea as Russian-built SAM missiles. Pentagon military observers said they assumed Soviet military advisers might have been stationed at the Bach Mai Air Field because ·or the recent incrca:r1e in the use of MlCis 3nd mlssiles:, but official sources woWd not comment on the possibility. They pulled It back when com- misslone11 gave it Jess than a lukewarm ,. reception. . Revktcd plans, which include two mlUion square reel of office space but no more industrial usage, wiD be detailed to planners in a 1tudy 1euion Thursday at 2 p.m. in City Hall. The Collins plan actUally provides for 600;000 more square feet Of orflce buildings to be built across MacArthur Aoule\tard in the Emkay Development Compan'ys commercial park. Development or the Colllns tract, between h1acArthur Boulevard\ .Jam.· boree Road and Campus Drive, will ac-• tually be on 147 acres. since the ezisl in~ Collins plant occupies 30 acres of t. ~ parcel which is held on an 85-year lease from the Irvine Company. The Collin3 parcel had been pr~zonM for industrial use prio r to annexation to the city in December <if 1970. According to plans filed with I.he city, Collins is willing to build the major strut'· lures as high, or as low, as the city wants. The company wants the same aquar• rootage , however, and says there would be less open spnce if the buildings are lower and spread out nwre. The Collins properly is currently in an unclassified zone, which requires use permits. or a rezone, to allow con- struction of any kind. flow planning commissioners will react to the new proposal UI uncertain, although one planning official said tt1onday he doesn't think there has been enough of a change to make them think any dif- ferently lhan they thought before. ''There aren't enough changes lo change their minds," said James Nu- zum, a senior plaMer Jn the Community Development Department. "There were no changes that make any significent differenct, it's still the same thing when you get down to per· cetnages ·of types or usts,'' he n.ld. Collins officials declined to make an)' comment this morning. or .. fe Weatller Detective Sgt. Arb Campbell said 45 recovered items include boat equipment. quantities of llquor, guru. television and stereo sets. camping and fishing gear and credit cards. What Method for Message? West Newport Unit Sets Meet Cooler temperature1 are ex· peeled along the Orange Coast on Wednesday, v.·ith 1U11shine. in !ho afternoon. ltlghs at the beaches, 62 rising lo 72 Inland. l.cn\·s in tbt 50's. "There's no lndJcatlon." he said \l:hen asked if a total value estimate had been established for loot confiscated at t\\'O of the suspects' residences. He noted valuables reported stolen from three of Gve yachts cind cabin cruisers Monday, however, amount to about $1 ,500. • Sylmar businessman Fred G. Walker said $980 wor1h of boating gear, a tele.vislon set and Uquor was stolen from his 4;.foot vesael Lot Angeles architect John M. Relley llsted 17M worth or equipment laktn from hlJ 31-foot cabin cruiser. Paul G. Fbhnlch, 49 Bayside Village, Newport &ach, &aid he lost $560 In 1oo1 !rolll his 41-root crul,.r. A citizens' e<1mmlttee working for pas- sage of th!: Newport Beach park bond propositions on the June & barlot is hav. Ing a lei:_rlble lime trying to tell people why lhey should vote for them. Working with a !imlled budget, the committee printed two brochures C:xtol· ling lb< lnertta or the thr.. 1jl<ndlng propooal<, but can't seem to ftnd • w1y to dlltlibute them. · "Tho city attorney ha• ruled lhal they're not Impartial so they cin't be sent out ln th& water bills,•· u.ld Mn. Margot SltWlng, an orficial or the Citizens' Advisor)' Part Booe! T•am, "We ihougbt wt'd found a way," she sa id. ''The Boy Scouts Jnd Girl Scouts said they'd take them around. but the.y. came back.and told us it would be against their by1aws,'1 Mrs. SklHing said. The IU million bond Issue iJ divided Into thret propo11IUons , F, G and H. The fil'll proposes $3.!i6 million be spenl ror !And acqw.ltlon. Proposition G call! roe 12.42 tnillioo for development or parkl and bicycle tralla and Proposition R I$ for $3 mHllon for future iand acqulsitioo. Using th~ theme. •'Green Survlval,11 the citizens IHm, he•dtd by M,., Ginger Page, 'h"' also riled the "yes" ballot arguments on the bonds aeot to voters with their sample balloll. ' ., ' There were no "no" arguments rued. The only formal opposition to the bonds that ha! surfaced to date come in the: ronn or a committee headtd by Carl Artbot'er. who owns a parcet or land the city Want! to acquire for a view park tn Ntwporl Height" Mrs. Page Uves acr<>9.s the street. lier view would be lost ir Arthortr btllltlo. Artholer, of 1806 Dover Drive, clalmr the city has an abundance of parks and open space now. Arthofer has launched tn advertising eampalgrr agalnsl the bonds. Supporters or the bond prol>O'ilibn .. y the died on lh< lupayer will be mini- mal, If thlJI are po>sed. The We11t Ntwport Beach Improvement Association·.1 annual meeting will take place Wf!dnesday at 7:30 p.m. in Clly Hall. r Election of a new board or directors w!ll foUow prescntatlom on a variety of issues concerning the area. lncludin1 the P1clflc Coast and NeWport Freewllys. a proposed condominium projccf, a library and the II.I million beach erosion J>Nllect planned lhls year. Nomintt1 ror lhe ntw bofird lncludt Michael Johl\~n. outgoing prtsident, and Donald Beckley, Margot Sklllltlt Emla Sllcock, and Richard Clucu. I NSIDE TODAY Arthur Brtmtr. olltQtd as· $Cf/ant of Gov. \V11llact, ii dt· "cribtd a1 "ccrnflUed," and "a lontr." lib father .ta~s ht must be sick. See stories, photos on Page 4. L.M. Mf • _ .. " .. _ • M"'WM f'"'" " !:.i..Mn.I .... ftll .... , ..... • ,_ ... II °''"" ""'""' " c;,.,....., .. ...... .... lklltl Melle .. " ............ ..... ....... , ... I ·-" lftfwtai-1 " Tlll•twt. " . ....... 1•n "'''"'' • p.,. .......... " -~lff ... " ...... _ " ~ --,,.,. .. ..._, " "".,"' .. "-• . I .! UAIL T t'ILVI Access Bill Passed On To Senate The •tale constitutional amendment that would requ ire all private waterfront land owners to grant public access to the beaches has passed the California Assembly tnd 1a no w before the senate. - "It would req uire all private property •. owners: like the; Balboa Bay Club, Cameo Shorea or, 1nyone, to provide publlc ac-- cess through their p r o p e r t y • ' ' Assemblyman Robert Badham ( R ~ Newporl Beach ), s.ild today. Badham sa id th"e measure sailed through the Assembly. He said il .. "tnealt"ed through" on a 59 to 4 vote. "A few of us found out about it at the last minute but we only had tlme to vote q1in1t It," Badham declared . If It gets by the Senate, the meu:ure would go . <ln the November ballot, Badham tald. The constitutional amendment billed as an "environmental policy declaration" is spon.sored by five usemblymen including Alan Sieroty ([).Beverly Hills ) whose ~ strong coastal preservaf lon bill is facing a tough test in the leglslature. According to Badham, the con- 1titutlonal amendment, ACA 48, hu received virtually no notoriety to da.te and he doesn't understand or know f;.Jly. OAILY ,!LOT i11ff 'h•to Banner llp Among other declaraUon• about\~e need for ecological concern the con· troversial article states: "Any person or corporation claiming -0r possessing frontage or tidelands of the harl>or, bay, inlet, estuary or other navigable waterway may oot exclude right-of-way to that water when it i11 re- qu ired for a public purpose, or destroy or Ob!!lruct free navigation of the water . City crews erect banner near city hall. Canvas strip which went up this n1 orning prom otes city's Art Festival scheduled for 1 p.rn. to 5 p.m. Sunday on la\vn at city hall. City council approved ba!ln~.r. a method of advertising rarely seen ~n Newport Beach, over objections of Councilman Milan Dostal. He said th is !iort .of thing doesn't belong in Newport Beach. "The Legi.sl1ture shall enact 11tatute1 that give these provJslonr the most liberal construction ao that access to the many w1ter1 lhaU alwayi be obtainable by the people." =---~ / League Joi11s Alliance The llW.known '!'•out• wH tola)ly unknown to State sen. Denrila Carpenter (.n-Newport Beach) whose own coa8tllne n1anagement bill passed the Senate Natural Resources C<immittee Mondav. Seeli:ing Coast . Initiative "He read it for the first time ·th is morning. Then he paled,'' said an aide Richard Rohrbach . "He'll not support It at all," Rohrba ch t1~id adding that Carpenter foreaaw it h.:ivlng aa tough a time as the coaatline blll co-authored by Sieroty and Senator Donald Grunsky (R·Watsonville ). Grunaky'a bill was In effect kllled by lhe n1tural resources panel Monday. "Thls amendment 11 bued on the aame kind of philosophy," Rohrbach sald. "It takes away prlvate property rights." "It's a:oing t.o hive 1 pretty tougi{ tlme. Our man will do all he can to aee that It doe1 have a tough Ume," he vowed. * * * FromPngel GRUNSKY ... Jt attacked local governments' power. 1.enovlch agreed the bulldJng trRdes' opposition influenced his vote. "I can't discount their prevalence <ln me," he said, "but thal wasn 't lhe 1peclflc reuon J voted against it. It was the local government issue.'' On the Auembly side Sieroty's com- panion "1111 is still alive and awaiting Ac· lion by the full assembly after clearing its own rounds of committee hearings. SJeroty this morning said he plans lo bring It up but considering the senate's acllon ()n the Grunsky .bill he figures h!s measure wlll get the aame treatment if it ever got that fir. Sieroty said If the Carpenter b!ll is passed by the senate he would actirely campaign to defeat the measure In the ·iowtr house. Leglslators voting yes on the Grunsky bill were Senators John NeJedly (R- \Valnut Creek ): Pett'r Behr <R-Tlburon): Arlen Gregorio (D-San Mateo) and Robert Lagom•rolno (R-OJ.al). The no votes wue Carpenter, Ralph Dills (R-L<Js Angeles ): Jamtis Wedw&rth (D-H1wthorne): and Zen()vlch. Senator H. L. Richardson (R·Acradla) v.·as not p~sent for the e.arly vote but ~a id he would have voted against the Crunsky bill . OIANGI CO.A.Sf • DAILY PILOT 1'lM o,..,,,. Cout DAILY 'ILOT, w!tl\ '!Wtllcfl h ~llN tM N""·'l'til, k pUbHlolltd ti'( "'-0Nl'lf'9 C:O.tf '1111tltllfrlt Comp.ny. $~ rite M ltlorlt .,. DUllllU!td, M011111y ti\~ FrlNy, ,_ Co&f• M-. frlewporl lttcl'\, Hvn!lneloft lt«tl/F-ttln V•H•v. L•oun• a..di. lrvlntlhlkl'-bllclt Ind San Cl•m.!~tt/ $111 Juan C1pl1tr1110 A t !119!t rtti°""t tdlll#I II pUl)lt"'" le!Un:ll" '"' SllnCltv" tll<I prtnc1pe1 w11111ot1t»0 ~'"' b '' .JJO"w .. 1 l•r Sttwt, Cott• Mtt•, C1ll10rni1. t:i.1•. Ro~erl N. w,,J Pr"'k:l..,I •l'ld P .. olltlltl" J1c~ R. C~r ley Vic• 'rnlO..,I •nd 0•114••1 Men11tr Tl!o,,.11 K11vil ltllor Thol'rltt A, Mvrphit1e Mtn1gln1 Eoll'or L ,,,,, Kri19 NfWPCWf ltKll City ldlfw The Orangf" Coast League of Women Voters toda y joined !he California Coa11tline Alliance in callinr: for l'I Novem" ber initiative on coastli ne management. Jn 1 prepared statement, Mrs. Kit Dralinger, ft.WV -president, announced the league's ';renewed support ~ for the Coastal Zone Co nse rvatibn Act Initiative ." The LWV will be circulating petitions through this month to get tbe measure on the ballot , she said . She said. "This action "'as taken in vlt\V of the rejection by the Senate Natural Resourcea Committee of the Grunaky bill (see separate 1itory)_.. a Accident Victim Serious; Police · Arrest Driver One motorist \VBs seriously njured and a second jailed on suspicion of felony drunken driving ?>.londay in a spectacular ·head on coJUslon on West Coast Highway in Newport Beach. RiThald w. Jackson, 38. of 226 E. Washington St., Orange, was arrested and booked after questioning by officers aent to the 3 p.m. accident, which snarled traffic on the highway near Orange Street. ' Motorl•I Mary T. Harry. 23, of 676 W. 18'.h St., O>sta Mesa, was admitted to Hoag Memorial Hospital with multi ple In· juries. Spokesmen said she suffered a con• tussion, neck sprain and lacerations re- quiring numerous stitches, but is listed in good condition today. Invest igators said Jackson was west- bound on West coast Hlgh\\·ay and Miss llarry was eastbound. .Jackson's p I c k up truck allegedly crossed the centerline out-of control Jnto oncoming lanes and Miss Harry swerved her 1965 sedan trying to avoid the crash. Traffic officers said the truck rammed the car at an angle on its left front and side. totaling the sedan and causing ma· jor damage to the truck. Suspect in Car, , Bike Tlieft Back In }ail-Maybe A auspeeled Nt\\·port Beach car and bicycle th ief \\'ho wa s in and ou t and in 11nd out of jails last we('k ls In sgain to. today, this time in Fulle rton . Clyde A. Yi'1rd. 19. of 1427 E. First St .. SllntR An11. was arrested on suspicion o( hnrglary ~londay night and held for Ne\v· part Rt>Ach poliet. measure endorsed by the . League of Women Voters. "The Initiative." r..trs. Dralin~er con- tinued. "co·nta ins the same provisions as the Grunsky-Sieroty bllls : a statewide California Coa11tal Zone Conserva tion Commission with 8ix regional com· missions empowered to develop a plan for the California coastline over a four. year period. "During this time a permit would be required for development on Jand 1,000 yards inland from mean high tide," she said. "The league does not believe that the bill sponsored by state Senator Dennis Carpenter (which won comittee approval Monday) is adequate to deal with the problem since it places heavy reliance on local government. ''Local government lacks the · broad pov.·cr needed to preserve our coastline," r..trs. Dralinger said. "Development allowed by one local government may adversely af£ect the coastline in an adjoining local jurisdiction or a whole area," she asid. "Ecologic al inter-relationships do not recognize poHtlcal boundaries." she said. Mrs. Dralinger said that "due to their dependence on property tues for revenue, local 1ovemment1 tend to favor land uae that yields high tu ·revenue in the shortest lime. "The leagu'e believe1 that our coastline ls 1 unique natural resource which can no longer be subjected to uncoordinated , piecemeal development," she said. Attorney Says Battin Charge Won't Be Filed The Orange County District Attorney's office announced this mom ing that it will not file a cr iminal co~plaint against First District Supervisor Robert W. Bat- tin over his alleged refusal to cease politicking in the parking Jot of a Foun- taln Valley department store at the re- quest or its manager. "We have found no .stalute under v.•hiC'-h Mr. Battin's alleged a~tivity is illegal," said Mlke Caplul. an assistant district attorney. ~rovided there ls no Interference with busineas, said Caplu.l, political acli vlty is allowed in the front of stores, even V.'hen they are priv1tely owned. The disputed Incident took place 10 days ago as Battin was campaigning for re-election. Acrording to a ttport oompiled by the Fountain Vailey pollct department. Bal- lin -who represents Santa Ana And parts o( Fountain Valley. \Vestminster. and Garden Gro\'e -was campa igning ~n the parking lot <lf a Gemco Department Store, 17099 Brookhurst St.. \\·hen 1he store manager asked him to leave. Battin and a colleague. John Abbott of Carden Grove, reportedly declined to leave until threatened with arrtst by po\ic-e. H...,.... ... c. Office llll Newport lovl1•1rcl M•i11itt A4Jr1u: P.O. 101 1175, fl66l --a.ti M-..: UO Wftt a.y"""' "-""" koe<JI: nt 1"01•tlf A--..e Hvflfll'•ffM ••tc11: IFITI hlcfl .. V!f¥9pof S.a ,,.,...,.,,: as ~ El tamlflt Atel He \\'<15 charged in a \\'arrant issued last \\·eek "'ilh grand the ft of an 1uto, felony Jail escape and burglary, Aft er slipping out or Ne,\·pon Beach police htadquarters. , Detective Sam Amburge y picked up \Vard in Bt\'erly Hills a wtek ago srter his arrtat there wbilt cruising the ex· -auslve community in a $7.000 luxury car. The 1972 sedan was repl)rled stolen hours earlier by its owner in Corora del Afar. . Gun Collection Taken By County Burglars ,.,.,.... (7141 '4Jo4JJ1 c ...... ·~ '424•7• . ~ ttl'\, or-., CMtl ~Mt ~ny. frlt fltwi tlWlll. ll~ll'tl .... H J!tritl fMltw to' WWrT.....-11 Mr91ft _, • ,..,....,.. w1llleu1 .,.,.. ,.,. '""* ., .,....,., .... r JfClllMI c .............. " c.te ....... Celrt.ftle. Mrr•_.., .., t'"'"" QM IMlllMJI .. INI N.1J "*"""IJ'i n1nlf.,.., ..,.,...... .... ,_,.,...,, Ward reportedly slipped out ol tile crowded. busy booking section o! !ht Jail 20 minutH after arrl\111. hotfooted it a !ew bloclra to Wul Newpon and alleaedly stole a reclng bl<ycle to Dee tile city. Oeltcllve Amburiey was sch<duled to pict up his man In FuUenoo and return him lo lace !ht prior cJwa-. In Ille ntw Harbor Judicial Dtmict Court ladllty In lrvlne. A fWJ collection V1lued Ill A wu carried o!I Monday nigh! by blJrilan who ripped the ..,.... from the klkben wln- dojY of a Santa Ana Heights apartment to 1aln enlry to the premltea. . Orange County aherill'a d<podes .. id the •upons. both rill .. and band IUftS, were liken from the 1parunent of pro- les.ionll Y•<ht skipper OUn Bnict Hutcblnp. 11(1311 S. W. Cypna A ... Depujles Nld Hutchlop """"°tit Is -ting In F't. L.audtrdale, Fil. ' Tip R~ved Philosoph.y Prof Gets Wallace Suspect UCI Kudos • Quizzed Earlier A UC Irvine philosophy professor from Newport Beach received the top· award of 18 made Monday night at the UCI Alumni KALAMAZOO, Mich. (UP)) -Thee \ Association lauds and laurels banquet in suspect in the: shoottng ()f Alabama the Airporter Jnn. Gov. George C. \Vallace was questioned Dr. Abr<\ham I. Melden was the recip. as a "suspicious person'' by police prior lent 9f 1.be\Extraor~rlus award 1iv~n t~ a Wallace rally here Ja1t Saturday, etch ye1r to someone from the campus police said today. community "who be.st personifies the aplrlt and pu~e of UCJ." But he was not held, police sald. UC President Charles Hitch addressed Deputy Police Chief Orville Ragan said the gathering of .(5(), discussing "the Nett it has betn confirmed that the man police lD Year1 at UCJ -An Educated Guess." talked to Saturday afternoon w1s Arthur Hitch's remarks prai8ed Chancellor Herman Bremer, 21, of Milwaukee, who Daniel G. Aldr ich Jr. for his IO-year has been charged in the ahooltng of leadership of the UCI campus . "A.s his boss, his friend, and his ad-Wallace Monday in Laurel, Md. ... niirer, let me assure you he deserves Ragan said a police <lfficer questioned every tribute we can pay him," Hitch Bremer after police received a tip about iaid of the chancellor. whom he descrlf>. a "suspicious person" sitting in a parked car near the Kalamazoo Armory where ed as a "great chancellor and s great the Wallace rally _ his last in the human being." I h M. hi Hitch brleflY. oUtlined the expectifions governor's campaign or t e 1c gan I th I ( h 11111 primacy -was held. or e uture o sue programs as soc Ragan Said the officer questioned ecology and the college of medicine and Breme( for about five minutes, ran a touched on UCl 's role in the exte~ded h k on his 1968 two-doo Rambler to university program to provide parttune, c ec. . r degree study courses for adults. see 1.f 1t was stolen and also checked to Dr. Melden's top award wu made for " .see 1f Bremer was wanted by police his cOntrlbutlona to Irvine ''as a scholar, ani.';:eer:ificer asked hlm what he was honest-to-~oodne1s teacher, and c:-doing," Ragan said. "It was raining and cerned .~1tizen ()f the academic co -the man said he was waiting for the rally munity. to start." Chancellor Aldrich , who was feted at Ragan said there was no reaso n to hold the annua.1 lauds and laurels banquet, ~x-Breme r <ind th<it the check made on him erclsed . his opllon to nresent a ~lt~llon was the same police would make · on a for Merit to Richard S Stevens, president routine traffic stop. ()f the Balboa Bay ~ .i.1b. "I would have liked it to hav·e turned Stevens was fo~r and president. !or out differently," Ragan said. "I would three years o( the Blg I Booaters, is a liked the man to have done something to mem~r of the UCI Foundation, Board have reason to hold him." and JS bead!~ the Chancellor a Club Mrs. Vicki liambright of Kalamazoo Drive, Dr. Aldrich no~ed. . said ahe 1at ne.it to a man resembling Dr. Alexei Maradudm, cbalnnan of the Bremer at the rally. She said 1he UCI faculty senate, presented an original rtcognlzed him fr()m a photograph sculpture by Tony DeLap to Chancellor · Aldrich In recognition of hia 10 year1 as head or the Irvine campus. The following is a Ilst of the other awards and their recipients : UNIVERS!l"i ·SERVICE : Dr. Patrick L. Healey of Irvine, an a11slstant pro.- lessor of developmbital and cell biology; student Patrick J. Moon ol Laguna Beach, co-president of the-Associated Students of UCJ, and biological sciences staff member, Carol D. Heckman, "a counselor ... and friend of student.s ." COMMUNITY SERVICE: Dr. Richard N. Baisden of Santa AniJ, dean of the UCI Extension; Genes. Uematsu of Tustin, a university physical planner, and the en· llre student body of UCI for their various contributions to community service pro- grams. STUDENT A w A R D s .: outstanding l'lthlete ·is Phil Rhyne , a senior from Newport Beach who was this season's leading 1corer on' the Anteater•' baaket· ba\l team . Outstanding seniors of the year are Steven P. Chadima of Downey, a social sciences major who is co-president of the student body; and Gary Barrett of Corona del Mar. Jounder of lNTERAC'llON. Outstanding graduate student I s Samuel J. Shacks of Irvine. a doctoral candidate in immunology biochemistry who is one or four finalists foi' the Edward Steinhaus teaching award. FACULTY RESEARCH : Dr. 'Murray Krieg'er, professor of English and com- parative literature IJld woo t~e was a Guggenhelm Fellow, was awarded the Disting uished F1culty Research honor. TEACHING: Mlcbael Buller of Irvine, .11 social science lecturer was given the Distinguis hed Faculty Teaching Award. PROFESSIONAL ACHIEVEMENT' The stall award was made to William Wadman Ill, radiation safety officer f~ the UCI reactor. The alumni award went lo Betty Grimes Tessman for her pro- fessional theater accomplishments. Alumna of the Year is Lynn M. Osen, a lecturer and course coordinator for UCI Extension and author in the field of wom en's rlghts. From Pagel CONNALLY. •• need for dropping Agne\V. , Connelly was asked today if he would accept the vice presidential nomination on the ticket if asked. He replied he would Jl_Ot engage ln 1uch speculation but added he did not think such an offer would come. "l have no political aspirations and no particular ambitions," Connally said. Nixon was equally unstinting in bis prai.se of Connally. describing him u the architect of the Adminiatration's new economlc programs of price and wage controls to curb inflation, and drastic moves to strengthen the dollar abroad . Nixon described Connally as "a tower of strength for the President" and particularly the recent de-c i s Ions regarding the Vietnam war. "When the going is the toughest, Secretary C<innally Is at his best," the President declared. ,. Shultz was a member of Nixon's original cabinet a11 Labor Secretary and became the fir8t director or lhe reorganized Office or Management and Budget, a pawerful post which won hlm the unofficial title of "general manager of the United States." Connally himself foreshadowed his resignation In the past several months by talking about his desire to return to private life. Just after his ~th birthday on Feb. 27, he lo!d repcrters : "J've spent most of my adult Ille in public service ... and now I'm tired . I want to do some other things ." Nixon sa id Shultz, former dean the Graduate School of Busi n es s Administra tion at the Univer!lity of Chicago, was the "only candidate" con. sidered to succeed Connally. "He Is an economist but one that has shown great skill in management," Ni.Jon said of Shultz. · All For The Family- Wliol cliin9t1 your lio'tst more than any oilier thing? Whot improvos accoustfoc ilrameticeUy?, Whet worms up • house? What imparts unique beeuly and comfort? , •• wrpeting from Alden's, that's .what! Pl Y°"' h°"sa "llilles" you, sloP. In onCI see us FAST.) printed ln the Kalamazoo Gazette. "He didn't say a11yt1\h'lg lo me." she said . "l thought he was 'a \Vallace fan . He just kept sitting there grinning and he was talking abou. GovEJ nor Wallace and all the things he thought tie was good for ." She said the man she recogniz¢ as Bremer ''just leaned over our w<f.y and w~s listening and grinning with that silly; grin." According to police, Bremer stay.eel overnight' in Kalamazoo Saturday . ~an said the officer was sent to check -B.remer out because he had been sitUng in the car "for a while and we got a call from somebody." The offi cer talked to Bremer about f p.m., more than an hour before Wallace's rally began. Neither Bremer's person nor his car' v.·as searched, Ragan said. "It would have been nice if we could have," he said . ., Ragan said Bemer s·at "right out front" at the Kalamazoo rally.''He was clapplng • his hands.'' he said. ''He was just Hka anybody else there.•• No special watclt had been put on Bremer at the rally because he had been cleared in the police check , Ragan said. About 2.500 enthusiastic fans turned out for Wallace's speech. Ragan said there was only "one minor skirmi sh" at the rally -when someone raised a Nazi flag and someone pulled it down. * * * Fro11a Page 1 WALLACE ... five hours of surgery, that she is OP:' timistlc. "As you know. his nature, he didn't earn the title of the 'fighting little judge' for nothing, and I expect hlm to continue in the same vein." Spokesm en s_a ld Wallace intended to . continue his· campaign . even i( he doesn't regain use of hi; legs. Schanoo noted that President Franli:Jin D. Roosevelt had been a wheelchair cripple during his year! in the White House. - Nixon, in a \\lh ite House appearance tel annou nce the resignation of Treasury· Secretary John 8. Connally, offered Wall ace the presidential 11uite at \Vatter " Reed. He said if Wallace wishes to return to Alaba ma to recuperate an Air Foret • hospital plane will be put at his disposal. · Earlier, Nixon dispatched a White House physician, "Dr. Willia m Lukash, tB aid WaUact'.s doctors . ~ -Ni1on said he Is keeping in "close: touch " with \Va\lace's condition. · · He also •said Nicholas Zarvos, the .. wounded Secret Service man, i ,.-. "substantially improved." ··: Zarvos underwent 711, hours or surgery ~ for a bullet wound in the neck and waif ' described as "doing very satisfacto.rily" this morning. ~ Bremer was taken before U . S, Magil!ltrate Clarence lioetz in Baltimore late Monday night and ordered hel d under $200,000 bond on charges ol shooting Wallace end a Secret Serviai agent, Zarvos. Newsn1en recalled seeing Bremer at earlier Wallace rallies in Maryland, and one NBC-TV photograph from one of those rallies shows him wearing a button · reading ''Stand Up for America," a \Vallace s!()gan. Fr ank Danie!. a Wal!ace campaign \\'orker, said he recalled seeing Bremer ·~ or someone looking like him at a rally id : Milw\ukee, Wis. ..' Police in Kalamazoo, Mich. said they -.. questioned an Arthur H. Bremer prior to a Wallace rally !here Saturday night, buf · didn't detaJn him. They sald they ques.. tioned him bec"ause someone complairied that he looked su5picious. ' ALDEN'S • CARPETS e DR~PES 1663 Placentia A., •• COST.« MUA 64M138 . ' 7 • I • 7 ' I I I • Orange Coa·st Today's Final N.Y. S&oeks VOL. 65, NO. 137, 3 SECTIONS, 42 PA~ES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1972 c ./ TEN CENTS Super visors Seek Fairview Par l{ Moratorium Orange County supervisors today called for a one-year moratorium oo d!sposal or the 257-acre ·state surplus property behind Estancia High School they hope to c.on- vert into a regional park in cooperation with Costa ftiesa . A resolution to that effect was ap- proved by the supervisors with a unanimous vote, along ~·ith a promise to lake "all steps necessary" to get the park and the.. announcement of a future joint-powers agreement with CoS!_a ftlesa for its acquisition, finance ancf ma in- tenance. · During the meeting, Super visor Chairman Ronald Caspers lashed out at the ... short-fuse" ultimatum given to Oosta Mesa by the state Department af General Services. General Servi ces Director Lawrence Robinson earlier this month demanded that Costa Mesa have concrete plans to Recreation Plan Gets Council OK .. The $20 mill ion "pay as you play" recreation complex proposed for Costa Mesa .cleared its final city council hurdle Monday night. By unanimous 5.-0 vole the e-0uncil placed an entirely new commercial rec- reation {CR) di strict around the project which, if completed, would give Costa iiesa an attraction equal to Knott's Ber- Mes a 9 rders In ter tjiew ing Of Candidate Faced by possible legal action, the Costa Mesa City Council Mondoy night decided to interview one nlOf'e planning comntission candidate who tenned the city's new five-year residency re- qy.irement for com mis s ione.rs "unreasonable.'' Mayor Jack Hammett said no ap- pointment would be announced until the five members of the council had in. terViewed Mrs. Myra Kirschenbaum dur- ing a special closed-door session schedul- ed for 5 p.m. next Monday. Only one seat on the planning com- mission is currently vacant. II belongs to Commissioner John Leonhardt who, ac- cording to some city hall sources, Y•a! slated for re-appointment. Mrs. Kirschenbaum. 366 Lourdes Lane, had earlier been decla-red ineligible under the new "job description" for plaMing ~commi.saiooers drawn up by councilmen ty,·o weeks ago. The requirements specify that planning commission candidates ffi\lSt have lived .,in the city for the past (ive years. Mrs. Kirschenbaum, a real estate agent who ran for council la st April . has lived in Costa ?>.1esa for-abou t a year and a half . "l called -all over Orange County and out of the 10 cit ies I contacted only two of them had a residency requirement," ~1rs. Kirschenbaum said todav. '"Fountain Valley has a one year recjuirement and lluntington Beach has a !y,·o-year re- quirem ent.'' Her husband. Santa Ana altorney Larry Ki rschenbaum, sought an injunction from Superior Court Judge Lester Van .. Tatenhove against the req uirement. The judge. however, would not sign the docu· ment until out~f-court efforts had been made to resolve the diHicu ll)'. "There is no way in the 'A'Orld T will be appointed now," said ?>.lrs. Kirschen- baum. "But the requ irement y,·ould ha ve crossed out in numerable qualiried people. All 1 am asking for is to remove th e re-- quirement ." , No decision has been made by the council on whether the resklency re- quirement wilt now be abandoned. ry Farm and Disneyland . The new zone, meant to supersede a current commercial zone, was _authorized despite some misgivings councilmen ex- pressed. earlier ?>.-1onday during a study session . Councilmen were openly worried about the ability of developer Ed Regan to at- tract financing for the complex which is ,to include a hotel, motel, water skiing, archery. bowllng theaters and a host or other ,attractions. The basis ror Hammett's concern, shared by the otber councilmen, was that Regan might rail to deliver the project if financing is not available to him. Since the property ls master planned for high densitjdevelopment, coorw;;ilmen are worried ~t having an unsound commercial di;trlct in north Costa Mesa. After receiving asSurances from City Attorney Roy June that the zoning could be changed ~ development stops, the council moved ahead. Although Regan aaid earlier that he \\'ould not oppose the stringent re- quirements imposed under the new CR zooe. he did so at Monday night's meeting. The Newport Beach developer asked for a four-fool rtduction in the 20-foot setback required for hi.5 buildin s bound- ed by Bear street, the Sa Diego Freeway and South Coast Road. Regan said his request was itated by a realignment and wid o( South Coast Road which sq zed his parking area down by 1.5 a s. The reduction tn land yield, according to Regan. would give him 1,750 parking spaces when 2,000 are actually needed. Regan said be was actually in favor of the 20-foot setbacks from an esthetic standpoint. "We d6n't have to be sold on it. We believe in it," he said. A motion by Councilman Willard Jordan to grant the setback reduction to Regan titiled by a 3·2 vote. It was followed by a new motion lo adopt the zone, along with the setback re- quiljfments. The motion p a s s e d unanimously. Cou nci l1n e11. OK Ow1i Pay R aise Costa ~fesa city e-0uncilmen Monday night gave themselves a $50 raise, in· creasing their total monthly salary to $300. City Attorney Roy E. June said the in- creau became lawful when Costa Mesa exceeded a population of 75,000. The latest population figure is 76,900. Councilmen approved t.he increase "'ith a unanimous 5--0 vote. "I think that increases your hourly pay from 28 cents per hour to 32 cent! per hour," joked City ~1 an ager Fred Sorsabal. Capsul e Council Actio11 llerc, in capsule form. are the major actions taketi by the Costa f\.lesa City Council };tonday night : APPOl~ih1E1'i -Delayed appointment or a new planning commissioner until ~1rs. A1yra Kirschenbaum is intervley,·ed. lifrs. Kirschenbaum threatened legal action over the council's new five-year residency requirtment for plan. ning commi.ssiooers. .~ FOUR SEAS01''S -Grarrted a cornmtrclal recreation dislric~ zone for the construction o1 a $20 mJllion "pay as you play11 recre•UOn ~tnplex on the city's north s.Jde. The cha.nge wu approved dtspi.Lt IOme mi!g vingi about the project. _ TRAIL~ -RefUS<d 1 zoning exception which -...:id ban allowed ~ trailer rmtal outlet ntar apartments on Cinnamon Avenue and Da te PIJ'c~ PAV RAISES -Approved a 1$0 per moo!h lncrea,. in councfl ulories. COuncllmen will now rfCdve S300 per month. • • purchase lhe $4 million property bY June 5 or watch its disposilion through sale, trade or other means. The moratorium proposed by Caspers · asks the General Services Department to give the two governrntnts 12 months time to pl8h acquisition of the park. . A similar request by ails Mesa Mayor Jack Hammell to delay the ultimatum for ·30 days until the July meeting of the Public Works Board haS Ul'I Tt !""°''' RETURNING TO RAN CH Cabinet flitmbtr Connally (onnally Quits T reasDI·y Post; Move Surprise WASHINGTON I UPll -Treasury Secretary John B. Connally, a longtime power in Texas Democratic politics, resigned his Cabinet post' today wit~ a strong hint he will campaign for. Presi- dent Nixon's re-election in November. Standing side by side in the White House Press Room, Nixon and ·Connally exchanged praise for each other's performance in the 17 months the Texan has been in the Republican ad- ministration. Asked if he "'ould actively work on Nbl:- on's behalf in the coming campaign, Con- nally replied, "That is entirely possible." Nixon announced that he w a s nominating George P. Shultz, head of the Ofnce of Management and Budget, to succeed Connally, who wi ll stay on until Shultz is confirmed. As Sbultz's successor as head of 01.IB, Nixon " picked Shultz's lop assistant, Caspar W. Weinberger , a fonner California legislator and one -t i me California ~publican chairman. COnnally said he has "no plans y,·hatsoever" for his immediate future. Last week, Connally, the on I y Democrat in Nixon's cabinet. told newsmen he was "not in the process of changing parties'' but added "the possibility certainly exists that I could do so." "l have nothing but the profoundest ad- miralipn for the President," Connally said today. "He ha; my complete support ... I <lon't know that I've ever worked with anyone more dedicated and more disciplined than is the present President of the United States." There was speculation last yea r lhtlt Connally might be s..electcd by Nixon lo replace Vice President Spiro T. Agnew on the 1972 ticket. The President indicated strongly a few months ago that he saw no need for dropping Agne~. Conn.ally 'A'as asked today U hf. "·ould accept the vice presidential nomination on the ticket if asked. 11e replied he "''OUid not engage in such speculation but added he did not think soch an offer y,·ould come. "I have no pclilical aspi rations and no panicular ambitions," Connally said. Gun Collection Taken ,. By County Burglars -A gun collection valued at f7(l5 'A1as corrled off Mooday nl&ht by burglars who ripped the acreen from the kitchen wi!l- dow of i Santa Ana Heights apartment to a:ain entl")' to the premises. Orange County sheriff's dcpuli., said the weapons, both rtnes and hand guns, were liken from the apertmtnt of pro- 1 ... 1ona1 yacht skipper Oli n Bruce Hulchlnp. 20371 S. W. Cypress Ave Deputies said Hutching! currently b "orkln~ In Ft. Lauderdale, f1.,. ' not been ans"·ered by Robinson. Both Hammett and O>sta Atesa C\ly ?\.tanager Fred SOrsabal wert i n Sacramento Monday to testify In support or a park lease bill by Assemblyman Robert H. Burke (R·Huntington Beach). The bill, which spells out details by v.·tuch both govemment.s. could leas e the land for a period of 50 years, passed the As&embly Government Administration · Committee by unanimous vote. Burke-said this 1norning thilt AB 1068 would be p:isscd on to the Asse1nbl.v ·Ways and t>.Icans Conunittee next 'A'et>k nnd that h<' forl'Sl't"S "no big problem" ror its pas11ag('. The ll w1t1n.:ton ReRc h legislator Hdded that lhe bill could rench the Assembl.v lloor before the June 5 deadline. Local of· Heinis hope that passage by the A!sembly 1night pcrsu<ide the Cl'nernl Servicrs Departn1ent to 11·ithdrn1v lts resistance to a lensr :1grcement. ,. Burke s:11d his bill passf!d lhe (;overn· r 1n('nt /\d1nlnlslr11tlon Comn1ittee virtually unnltt•retl 11xccpt for the $10 per acre, per )'tar le11sr pr i(•e propost•d by him. "Thl' t•onunlttee felt !hat y.·ould btst hr lrfl OJ>f'n to bargtalning," Burke sni<l. Should !he Assemblyman 's blll , pull~ both hou!f~. it lVOUld prtvent di1J>05al nf the prol')('rly unlll Cosin Mesa llnd !ht> County hue\ 11·orked out sll detail.!! of lhf"lr park plans . Wallace Fights On Still in Race, He Vows SILVER SPRING, Md. (APl George C. Wallace, shot down al an elec- tion-eve Campaign rally, today fought to regain u~ of his paralyzed legs but was reported determined to continue hl.s presidentia l campaign -even fr on1 11 wheelchair. Doctors said Wallace is under sedation because of pain from his multiple wounds, including a bullet that remains lodged against his lower spine. but in no immediate danger o! death . His condition was stable. They wouldn't predict whether he'll walk again. Today, President Nixon offered Wall ace full facilitie s of Walter Reed Medical Center. "I can assure you Gov. Wallace ii'I receiving the best medical care," Nixon said at the White House. Charged with the shooting is Arthu(_ llerman Bremer, 21, a while man who reportedly followed the Wallace cam- paign for eome time. He wu held in $200,0llO ball today by a U.S. maglltrat.. His . family and aquaintances in his home town of Milwaukee said they could 1u1l1lly no motive for tbe lbootJni. (Sec refiled story, Page 4) Wallace was hit several times Mollday by point-blank pistol 1hots fired in the midst of a crowd· at a shopping center in Laurtl. Md. ntree others also were wooded, aone critically. Voters in ?i-faryland and Michigant balloted today in prlmatie.s that Wallace is favored to win, thus malting a high pcint In his campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination. Doctors said at 5 a.m. PDT that Wallace had come through the night in good spirits despite his pain. "He says it hurls, and he's feelin( fine," :said Dr. Jo!leph Schanno. Schanno listed Wallace's condition as critical. At 9 a.m. a hospital .15pokesman said his condition was unchanged. This afternoon, he was removed from the criticai list . Wallace is in the intensive care ward of Sho ts for Do gs Set Wednesday Bring your pooc h to the Orange County Fairgrounds parking lot · Wednesday night for a quick $2 anti-rabies ahot. The low-cost vaccines will be of. fered from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. as a public service by the Orange Coun- ty Veterinary Medicine Association in cooperation with the Costa Mesa Rotary Club and the Orange County Health Department. Jloly Cross llospita l. A spokesman said well-wishers ha ve sent 50 to 60 . ar• rangements or flowers , Md that Mrs. Wallace requested that people find some oth~r way to exgrcss thelr concern _ Doctors said Walla~e. 52, wo~ hit by four or five buJ1cts. Only two lodged 111' hi! body. One was re1noved f1"11m around hi~ right shoulder. Another punctured his a~ domen and lodged on his spine . causing Qamage lo \he .spi nal cord. That hullct was left in , though Schanno sn id it might be. taken nut later. Dullets alsn pieret'd. Wallace's righ t forearm. gra1.cd lhe back of his left shoulder blade and grazed his upper right shoulder. "I think the governor ls going lo m<ikf" a recovery," &::hanno said. "Now wh at di.sabllity he has as a\result of his woundi1 is difficult to evaluate at this time. We're all very optimistic at thi.!1 point." Wallace's wife, Cornelia, 11ak1 early to- day, alt.r her husband had come lbrough fS.. WALLACE, I'll• %1 Pliantoms Strik e Oil Pipeline., Red Buildings SAJCON (UPJ) -The U.S. ~ommand reported toclay that· Ft Phantoms def!· troyed several building at North Viet· nam 's Air Dcl'ense CommMd on the out- skirts or Hanoi and shattered a pipellnt that delivered most of North Vietnam 's oil for its ofCensive in the South. Hanoi Radio said today that ttw! U.S. l'{avy resumed mining North Vietnam'• harbors. Capt: J. 0 . Ward, commander or the carrier USS Constellation, reported new attacks agaifUlt the North Monday and said, "We are fighling to win now." UPr correspondent Patrick J . Killen, 21board the Constellation, said the Navy did not officially confirm that mining of the harbors resu med , but quoted enlisted men aboard the big flattop as saying the y loaded mines abourd American plane1 on Monday. The U.S. command, In a re1K>rt on the seven days or inlense bombing of North Vietnam, sa il the American planes struck lhc vii~! Air Defense headquarter~ at Bach Mai Air Field just south of J1anoi, slte or the 11ophlstlceted electronic devices that control such air defenses as Russian-built SAM mis1iles. Pentagon mllltary observf.!Nl said Ibey assumed Soviet military advi sers might have been &tatloned at the Ra ch Ma i A!r Field because or the recent Increase in !he use of MJ(;s and mis:l:ile11, but official sou rces would not comment on the possibility. • Fish Fry Near 100,000 Expected at Mesa Event The Co.'ta t.1csa-Ne\vporf. HIU'bor Lions Club hopes to attract more than 100,000 persons June 2 to t for the annual Costa A1esa Fish Fry eod Para·de, A bigger and betltr 'xtrav<1gan1a h;:i1 betn promised thl.s year for the 27th run- ning of the Fish F'ry which begins at 5:30 p.m. June 2 with the tradJUonal fi sh din- ner. About 4,000 pounds of fr esn fi..sh from as far away as Alaska will be brought to C..ta Mua flir the 12,000 lo 14,000 !ish dinners the I.Ions expect to atrvt. Donation tickets, priced at '1.75, will be oold lhrwghout the city by ~ions Club membera during tht nett ltw weeks . All proceed• will go to H.arbor Area youth acUvttlts and to iUVkts for Uie blind. ncket holders are eotltltd t o participatt 1n drawings for more than !JO prlus. lncl001na the grand priz.e.. a 1m Ford Pinto sl3tion wagon . BegiMing at 10 :30 a.m . SaWrday. a 1.S hour parade is schedultd to ~·ea\·t lt1 wa y through the downtlJ'Wn area and pn l>t Ccr.rtn Mesa Park . tht: traditional sl te of lhe J<'ish Fry. , Parade Chairman Cliff Wesdorr sa id more than J,500 persons will compete f11r prlt.eS anrl trophies In tM parade, to bl Olrned and aJred thil )'ear by Kn.A Channel 5. Sin~ there appear• to be a sca rchy or convertibles for lhe holt1 ol prettY girls end dignitaries, Wtsdl)'r1 h:ts asked anyone with a atrviceablt coovertibit to contact him at s.46-2300. Tht popular hUss Mermaid cont.tst will be run off on Sunday afternoon with 30 contestants competJna for more than f l.OllO Ip prlus. Thal ume afternoon more than 200 proud inothcra and their children a.rt tx· pected to line up for tM bab)' cootes1, another ,lradltH>n.al Fl1h Fry evtnt. Other act.lvitie1 includt 11.tgt 1~w1, a mwlway and carnJv1t, txhibitl and a band t'Ontesl IULLIT LODGED HERi , .. Ul'I D••WINe WALLACE . PARALYZED - Doctors say the Alabama gov· "' ernor Is making a remarkable recovery but that paraly•ls co uld be permanent. The bullet that passed through his abdo· men will not be removed un- til the governor is in better .'lhape. Police Sur rou1id Ban k as Bandits H oUl II ostages BULLETIN LOS ANGELES (AP) -Police 1bot and kil led a bank robber today but lhen hesitated to enler lbe Bank of Amer· lea branch for Zl,1 hour11 -not reallllni 11 ptnon1 Inside were •ale but locked 11 •."aull. LOS ANGELES <UPI \ -One or rnorf! gu nm en cornered In .11pp11rent bank' hnldup attt mpt held bank employe11 and customers'hoat<ige today i1111ide a Dun k of America branch, police reported. A cuslomer who fled lrom the buildina: told pollce he sow only one gunman. l.lut offlcer11 were uncertain the bandit w.111 a loo(' More than 00 uniformed police and plalnclothe s detectives surrounded the one-story red brlek bank bu lldinu ~ fe'* blocks north of the busy Wilshire Boulevard commel'('lal complei. They crouched behind cars, rlfles and riot gun.s at the ready. Police weighed use of !ear "as lo flu11 h the gunman from the building but feared fS<c ROBBERY, Pas• II 0r .. ,. C.a•t Weat•er D>oler temi)eratures arr l'I· L pe<:lt'd along !ht Orange <..:oast on Wednesday. "Ith sunshlne in the ;:ifternoon, lfighl .ttl the btlJChPs, 1)2 risi ng lo 72 Inland. Lows in !he lO'• JNSIDF. TOPi\ l' A-r111ur Rrtmt r, alltQtd Of· 1a1luril of Gov. \\'alla.cr. u dt· scr1bt:<l a1 "curi juied." a1td "n loner." ]lit jathfr 1a111 hf 1nu.s t bt rlc:k. Ste .storit:1, plto los ON l1aut: .if. L ,M, • .,. t1Uft•~•• Clanlllllf ,_., ,_, Dltlfl ..... '"' IJ ••-1a1 .. _ ' •11tlff.i-1 " ''-""' ••11 ,_ ... l tUtlf II -" ...... "......... " • • DAILY ,_ILOT C DAILY f'ILOT S!t ll P'Mte HE Wil l R 0 ETURN Visiting Prince ~f Hunu 'They Always • Go Back,' Says Hunza Prince By CANDACE PEARSON Of "'-0 111, f'lll l 1111t Posters with beautiful gi rls in grass akirts or couples sipping wine at a sidewalk cafe beckon travelers to "get A\~ray from it all'' at various tourist spot.I. But to really get away from It "all" - all the heart attacks, cancer, asthma, tuberculosis. crime, jails , pollution, smog a.nd mysteriou.s additives irr the food - ' go to Hunza. Hunza Is a small 3,900 square mile kingdom wlthin·the country of Klilhmir, located betv•ee n China and Afghanistan in the 1-Iimalayas. It has bccri reputed to be a sh.!lngrila, or a utopia because Some of Its people Jive to Le 120 to 140 years old. Many still work in the fields when in their early lOOs, Dr. Jay Hoffman, nutri· tion expert, said Monday. Hoffman lectures· on Hunr.a at the Seventh-day Adventist Church in Costa Mesa and Monday greeted 22-year-old Hunza Prince Ameen at the church, whom he hadn 't see n for 11 years. Prince Ameen Is vlsting Hoffm.!ln In California duri ng a break in h~ studies for a masters in busi ness administration at the University of West Virginia. The second oldes t son of Klng Mir. Ameen will not becomf; king unless his older ,.brother Gah:z:anfar cannot take over. ~ He doesn't kno w what he will do in Hunza (population 30,000) when he returns ofter summer school, but he • knows he must 'go back. "People leave sometimes to go to school or service," s•id quietly, "but Y.'henever possible , they always.. go back." f'rotn Page I ROBBERY ... fo1· the safet.v of the hostages. Bank officials said the branch has 15 en1 ployes but it wtts nol kno"'n how many \\'Cre on dut y ·and hO\V many customers "'·ere inside. A policem nn \\·ho got a glimpse of th e bank interior through a window rEported tha t the employes and customers were Jying on the floor. Attem pts to phone the bank to induce the b.'.l ndit to surrender wrnt unans wered, as did bullhorn n p~als in both English a1al Spanish, • l'olice conve rged on lhe scene when a motorcycle of ficer was hailed by a Jhtsserby, who reported the bank rob bery under way at lst Street Rod \l/estern Arcnur. The policeman ran to the door of the building but turned a"·ay when a shot \\·;:is fired at hi m from inside. The bullet JTit.<:.'t'd . OIANGl COAST CM DAILY PILOT Tiit Ort "'IJ• CCNll OAtl Y f'llOT. wlltl wtilcll 11 comblnld !ht Nt ws-Pr.,,, It P\ltlllllltt W !ht Ort l>(lt CD91I Publitlll"9 ComfNny. StSM· rtte edll lan' '"' tiu01!1htd, MIW~•hy 11\t-ou~h F'rtdt y. Tor C°'Tt Mnt , NtWPOf"f llt'9Cll, Himtlr>0lon llnCll/l"ounltln V t lley, L19u111 81-cn, lrvln~StOdl.tl<lc~ 1'1(1 S!n Clolmrnlt l Sin Jut n C~Plllrtno. A 1lnglt r1t91or\t l ftlitklr'I 11 P\lbl11ll'° Sth1'llt'f'.\ '"" Su'ldt yl , Tne prlnc•l>5I P\lb!ltlllng 1>ltM It t• >JC Wl'll llt y S!rt fl, (Otlt MCH , Ct li'°""lt , f 1'62t, Robtrf N, Wied Pr.,ldtnl I ncl f'11b!lthrt" ' Jeclr R. C11rley Vitt Preld..,, t 'MI Gt;wr11 Mtntgtr Tho,,.11 K,,.,;r EClllOt" Tho,.,11 A. M11rphi111 M'"fJillft9 l!ditot Ch1rlt1 H. Loo i llich1"11 ,, Nell Al.1l1taftl Mtflftll!O EClllOn c .. ,. M ... Of'lkt JJ O Weit l 1y Street M.1i/i119 Atld r111: ,,0 , lo• 1160, fJU6 o ............ Hrwoort 8t ttl'I : SW HtwlJO<f l "ltvrl'f L ....... t+k""ll; m Forut .1.-H""u"'''" lttcll; ,,.,s IMdo ............ J.l'I Cltm9"1t; JCS Nortll 11 C."""' 11 .. 1 • Ttt .. , .. (71 41 642·4lJ1 C.ltNlfi.4 A'"'1W .. ,.,.,,,. (OPYrltf\t, ltn,. QNl\et COhl f'vblltrl"1f '°"'""'"· ... -'""""· llfwtqt .... . ... 1orl1I 11\111 ... OI' Hwl"'li..n.N ...... In ""' " ~ •ll'*'f lf'Cltl ,,,,,. mlttloo\ ol eofl'rl'Wll """""'· ~ Cltl' ,.. .... Nllll sf (oett ,..., Ct trfflrfrllt , '4ltltul.ilOlt W umtr 1Ut l'fltl'lllllf:t 'r ~II at.If '""""6-1 fftllitwy ... ,,,,.., .. st.IJ ftW!flllr. . Supporters Push Coastline Issue By L. PETER KRIEG Ot ritt Otlll' Piiot l llff A crucia l state senate committee vote Monday that virtually killed tough coaslline control leglslallon has ap. p.arently triggered all-out efforts by California environmentalists to get the coastal protection Issue on the November ba llot. "The legislature has failed and I hope the people won't," said Janet Adams, an official of the California Coastal Alliance. Her words came aft er the strong measure co-authored by Se nator Donald Grunsky ( R · W a t s o n v i l I e ) and Assemblyman Alan Sleroty (D-Be verly HiUs) wa~ rejected on a 4 to 4 vote of the senate's naturctl resources comm ittee. , Grunsky chose not to seek a second vote jn the measure when the full nine- member panel was prestnt later in the day. A coastal bill sponsored by State Senator Dennis Carpenter \ (R-Newport Beach) that ls aimed at preserving local government control as well as the en· vironment was passed by the par.el, however, on a 5-3-1 vote. Carpenter's bill now go"ts lo the ~enate fina nce committee. Mrs. Adams has :iitrong cri ticism for this measure. "lt'S worse than worthless. It's destructive . It's a bui lders bill," she said. Sieroty himself agreed with the ap- praisa l and lashed out at the building trades for opposing his bill. "If they were asked to build something on top of Half Dome in Yosemite, they'd say 'fine '," Sieroty said. Under the Sieroty.Orunsky measure which is technically atill ali ve, there would ~ one 11tate board and six regional • boards wi th veto~power over any develop- ment within 1,000 yards of the beach front. , Carpenter's measure establishes one 15-member 1tate agency th.at would be given three years ·to formulate a coastal land use plan developed from local governments' concepts of how thelr areas should be handled. _ Di1ring. those three years, any develo~ . me nt that would cut down thP'size of public beaches or ava ilable public access properties would be forbidden. After three years, the board's veto power would be expan_ded to review all developments approved by local agencies and approve or reject them within 30 days of the ir passage. The SJeroty-Grunsky bill would have had a much more stringen t permit system during the period in which the sta te board wou ld .prepare a statewide plan for dev(!loPment ·criteria. Democratic Senator George Zenovich of Fresno, considered the swing vote on both bills, said he cast a negative ballot on the Si eroty-Grunsky measure becau se it atta cked local governments' power. Zenovich agreed the building trades' opposition influenced hls vote. .. "I can't discount their prevalence QR me." he sa id, "but that wasn't the specific reason I voted againsl it It \Yas the local government issue." On the Assem?ly side Sieroty's com- panion '>ill is still alive and await ing ac· lion by the full assembly after clearing its own rounds of committee hearings. Sieroty this morning said he' plans to bring it up but ·considering the senate's action on the Grun.sky bill he figures his measure wilfget the same treatmel)t If it ever got that far. 'Symptoms' Analy%ed • • Coastal Lawmakers · Cite Wallace Violence Orange Coast lawmakers today reacted to the shooting of Alabama Gov. George Wallace by saying It was but a symptom or a viol ent America and of a society "coddling Its criminals." Rep . John Schmitz (R~Tustin), calling , From Page I WALLACE. • • tive hours of surgery, that Bhe is op.. timistic. "As you_ know, h1s nature, he didn 't earn the t!Ue of the 1flghtlng little judge' for nothing, and 1 expect him to cont inue in the same vein. n Spokesmen uld Wallace Intended to continue his campaign. even If he doesn't regain u.se Of hfs legs. Schanno not ed tha t President Franklin D. Roose velt had been a wheelchair cripple during his years in the White House. Nixon, in a White House appearance to announce the resignation of Treasury Secretary John B. Connally. offered \\'allace the presidential suite at Walter Reed. He said if Wallace wisfles to return to Alabama to recuperate an Air Force hospital plane will be put at his disposal. Earlier, Nixon dispatched a White House physician, Dr. William Lukash, to aid Wallace's doctors. Ni xon said he is keeping in "close touc h" with Walla ce 's condlt!On. He also said Nicholas Zarvos, lhe wounded Secret Service man, is ··substantially improved.'' the incident "a sickening event." blaming the act on the "glorification of violence by critics of our society." "It is grimly ironic that Gov. Wallace. who made our current toleration ol violence and crime a primary issue of his campaign for the presidency of' the United States, has now himself fa llen vie· tim to it," Schmitz said in a prepared statement. "Let us hope tha( the teachers of violence will at long last be shamed into silence by this latest exa mple of their handiwork," Schmitz added . State Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R· Newport Beach ), who Is now !eeking reinstitution of the dea th penalty in California for capital crimes, said such incidents might not happen if crimes were more severely punished. ''Tilis sort of incident," the state senator said, "is related to the banish· ment of the death penalty and to the overall prevailing attitude of society cod· dling Its criminal s. There is a general laxness on the part of the people responsible in allowing criminals to go free." State Sen. James \Vhetmore (R-Garden Grove), said the shoot ing was a "very great shock" and agreed with Carpenter that the root cause of assassination at· tempts wa s mild punishment o f criminals. ''l think we can ex pect these types of things to continue as lon g as we live in a socie ty that doesn't particularly want to punis h its criminals," Se n. Whetm ore said. "Assassins kno w that they can do these things and usually get away with it, at le~st with their life." Gaylord Wells, 82, Dies; Oldest Realtor in Mesa G~ylord Norman "G. N." Wells wa s a lifelong Republican who gru bbed for gold on Idaho, l\fontana and \\'yom ing homesteads, be fore finding th e pol at the end -0f his rainbow in Costa l\fe.'Sa. Death ca me abou t 6 a,m. today %'. G. N. \\'ells. in his home at 143 Broad\va y, in the heart of a tO\\"n he helped build. He was 82, oldest continuous Realtor in IO\\"O. His doctor was presenl and attributed death to a coronary coodltion und er treatment for fi\·e years, according to polict'. Funeral services for l\lr, Wells wr.rt pending at Bell Broadway MorS.ry - just down the block in the downtown district where old G. N. wu 1 fixture since J!Ml -with tnt"e:rment in P1cUic View i\1emorial Park. To hear him described by olJl<rs, G. N. WeUs soun d slmilar to cowboy 1ctor John Wayne, a square-built. work·loting cattlerrKtn and pollUcal conservaUve who came West lffking his fortune. "He was a bla man, sit feet Ull and a lltUe. more with his IO.gallon Sfebon hat he always won," aays Wells' niece, Mrs. J .. nctte Reynolds. He alwaya ,..... his cowboy hat i. the old Gingham Rcslaurant wben It "" the only one Jn town." . says hla former partne,-, Ruller Roy McCardle Sr,, who lalcr took over Ille firm. Gingham Restaurant is now J;apa Joe's, "He was a crusty old guy but a real pioneer," says Council man Alvin L. Pinkley, \\'hose pharmacy is a few doors d-0wn from Mr. Wells' original office, The 200-pound-plu s North Dakota na tive established it smack at the inte rsection of Harbor and Newport boulevards. a fiU1ng spot to do business in a city to be called the Hub of the Harbor Area . "Costa J\.1esa : The Greatest Town on Earth," said the ads,.. he ran ln newspapers. McCardJe said hls old partner slowed down about thrte years ago to look after bis wife Elsie, who had a Jeg amputated. He married her at age 11, just 43 years ago this July. 0 He always had at least two jobs, mining and homesteadfnl," MeC&rdle rtmarked·. "He wu active in the Lions Club and he was extmnely intere!ted in politics." Relatives Slid today Mr. Wells' last ore production job was with the Homestake Gold Mino In Gillette. Wyo., orter which Ule couplt ame to the Orange C.O.st. SUrvlvors In addltkln to hls wife Include a brother GJ•nn Wells, of Sutherlin, Or<,. plus sialerl Mr1. Slbyl Normon ud Mrs. Sabra Sllfert. both of Colltl "'"'"· They ogrt<d wl1ll slnwd old G. N. "H• plclced up • lot cl hls buslnm thero/' says McCan!le. noting the old Wells. who preceded them lo wllot wu bortly man lhon a ~· In fannlond Iba! ho lldvortilod 11 the Greaten Town cm Eorth. ' . OA1LY PILOT llt fl f'lltlo .Conditions t · At Medical I Center Hit ~ By JACK BROBACK , 01 !ttt O.llJ 1'1!1! Slllt ! Mem bers of the 1972 Orange County Cra nd Jury toured the Orange County Medica l Center in April and today Center Admini.5trator Robert White probabl)' wi~hes he had not been so hospitable and talk£.tive. The jury released a Je tter dated May 4 Monday criticizing the Center for "lack of proper air conditibning whic h leads to the unnecessary deaths of 12 patients each sum.mer." Panel members also objected to tt\e fact that they were allowed to tour the Center's intensive c.!l"re units \vlthoul being ma sked or gowned. \Vhite said today that he told jury members, while making a pitch for Center improvements, that during "the 30 ho~ days we experie nce in an· aver1gt MESA DAD HELPS OUT KIDS IN KINDERGARTEN Hans Weyer Shows How; Teacher Il a Steventon Witches year 12 people probably die." But, the.ad• mi nistrator said , he 'added, "There is no certainty that heat is the principal factor in th eir deaths." Vol11nteer Teachers Parents Help Out l{ids At Understaffed School Ham week. By JAN EDWARDS, Of tltt Diiiy Piiot S!&fl Weyer goes tQ school opce a Mary Weyer goes 19 school three times a week. They are not truants or students who C!ll'e sick a great deal of the time . They are parents. Each week. the Weyers assist teachers at Victoria 'School in Costa Mesa with spec ial kindergarten projects .. and school supervisorial duties. Weyer, who works for a local ship- builder, brings unfinished, precut wood which the kindergarteners nail together. saw , through. ·derorate and proudly display to visitors. Every Friday, his son Sean and other members of Ila Ste venson's kind ergarten class take the tool cabinets and sawhorses outside and start to 'vork. And Mary We yer teaches the children how to sew and croch et cloth purses, wallets and kites at a table nea rbv. Originally from Holland, the "Weyers voluntarily began helping at Victoria last fall . They will proba~ntinye to teach at the kinde~garten eve ~use next September their next will enr<ill. In addition, Mrs. Weyer will teach a literature sessio n for the upper grades beginning next September. Last fall some prim ary grade levels at Victoria School were temporarily un- derstaffed. This situation emphasized the need for more ind ivid ualized instrutltion and led lo greater involvement of parents who \4-'ere interested in giving th eir time,. according to school officials. The Weyers and about 30 mothers (Hans Weyer Is the only father) ha ve contributed to their children's school ac· tivities through the year. For the kindergarteners, Mr. Weyer is a wonderful miracle . ··Jt is strange to ha ve .?.1r. Weyer around," says J\:trs. Stev eMOn. "He is a phenomeno n to the children . There is almost disbelief that a dad wlll visit the classroom and stay." 1 The adminislrator said today that most patients who die during hot summer days are "weak or elderly and would possibly · survi ve a few months longer if not ix· posed to unnecessary heat." The jury's let(er also charged: -That the Center administration should clean up its ho spit al and personnel th rough better housekeeping standards and more unifonn grooming regulations. -That portable air cond itioning units be installed immediately (White said he is requesting 90 window air conditioners at an approximate cost of $135,000 in his 1972-73 budget)., -That Center administration shoukf lnuneiliately concern it.seU witft at.!lfl morale by -improving commun.icaUoo1 between the front office and the general staff. The jury letter, however, prais ed most personnel they had interviewed and said they apPE;ared to be, ''ext r-e me I y dedicated, well educated and well trained ... and doing a fin e ~b under adverse conditions." Regarding their tour of the intensive ca re un it and the fact that they were not requi red to wea r masks or gowns the jurors said, "to bring a group of people into an intensi ve care unit to disrupt the staff and to gawk at the patients ls lest than wise." White particularly objected to the charge that people were dying by the "dozens at the medical center because of lack of air. conditioning." Skyjacking Trial Set Gov. W a-llace Favored SAN DIEGO (AP ) -Stanley Harlan ~ Speck, 31, faces trial in federal court July 11 on charges of hijacking a Pacific , _ Southwe st Airlin es jetliner from Oakland To Post Biggest Wins By the Associated Presa Gov. George G. Wallace. shot and critically wounded on the eve of what loom! as his biggest 1972 political triumph, is fa vored to sweep Democratic presidential primaries today in Michigan and Maryland, possibly boosted by a su bstantial sympathy vote. Michigan will di vide 132 delegates to the Democratic National Convention pro- portionately accord ing to the pre sident ial p~ference voting. In Maryland, 5J votes will be decided on the basis of statewide and co n· gressional district. results. Even before a gunman shot Walla ce as he campaig ned Mondav in the Washington suburb of Lallrel, Md., he had been fa vored to win in both states, and after the shooting an alde said the • governor \\·ould continue his drive for the presidency. Principal rivals' are Sens. George McGo vern and ~fubert H. Humphrey, co nsidered the lead ing ca nd idates for the Democratic presidential nomination. The incident may create "a large sen- timent to vote for \Vallace ," president Tom Turne r of the Metroixilitan Detroit AFL·CI01 A Humphrey b a c k er , predi cted. Other poJ itici ans speculated priv ately that the shooting "'ould stiffen any waveri ng Wallace supporters a nd perhaps swing some voters undecided between the Alabama goVernor and another candidate. McGoverl1" and Humphrey stopped ac- tive pr esidential campa ig ning, h'alh!d television and rad io commercials and returned to \Vashington. AQ For The Family- What chang es your house more than any other thing? What improves accoustics dr am atically? What warms up a ho u••? What impa rts unique beauty and comfort ? ••• Carpeti ng fro m Alden's, that's what! to San Diego. Spec k, of San Francisco, pleaded innocent Monday. A hijacker commandeered the plane April 9, demanded $50.000 and parachutes, and was seized in San Diego. COUNTY SHOW ON TV TONIGHT "Portrait: Orange County," a. documentary prod uced by the Telecommunications Center o f Coast Community Coll ege District, will be shown again on Channel 281 KCET, tonight at 7:30 o'clock. First aired last· week, the 61).. minute film an alyzes the county and the people that populate it. "Portrait" originally was a pilot for the first county television tita- tion and will be repeated at noon Tue!day, May 23. (If yO<Jr house "stifles" yo u, stop in and see us FAST.J • ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 PlacHtla Av•. COSTA MISA ·- , .. .. '• ,,. .. 646 4131 • • ;• • I- I i I . ,/ 1;' I ., I I . . / ' . II· I .. ---~ .... .. -... ~ . _ ... _.,_ • .. __ .. •• a ace ara . : . Three Exet!nted ~o;r Kidnaping~ I . Rap~ in Maitila DAI LY . Pl LOT ' " * *. * 1oc * * j{ . . WEONESOA Y AFTE!\NOON, MAY. 'J 7, :1972 F"iresi of . Fry Karen H"onermann, Miss Fountain ValleJ; Connie Wiggins, Miss Huntington Beach, and Marianne Bergeron, Miss Costa M~sa (from left), are among the entrants in the Miss Mermai d Contest to be hel d June 4 as part of the Lions Club Fish Fry and Carmval. All .girls between 17 and 23 are invited to enter the contest. For applications, contact Dr. Bi;:rnard Simon, 540-1171. KUlJ¥1p, Rape Convicts Die in Maniln's Chair MANILA (UP!l -Three men who kid· naped and raped a movie aclress in one of the Philippines' most celebrated crimes were executed in the electric chair today. " , Each died wllb ·an unfinished praytr for forgiven11s.a nd mercy. One by one, the three met their• death within 55 minutes, of eacb·other stnpped to the se•t or.the fralJ.looktng and an-cle.nt electric ·chair wblcb. kOled U2 others convicts "Jlitce 1932. lcfore than 100· persons, including 32 ne)V5men and two young childrep of prisons' directer Vicente Raval, wit- nes$ed the e1ecuUoo of Jaime Jose, 26; Basilio Pineda Jr., 30, and Edsardo .\_qWno, 31, inside the death chamber •t the national penitei;itiary 15 miles soulh ol~anlla. :')'he three along with 1 !ourlb com- panlob, Rogelio Canial who died in prbon in 19"10, were coavic\;i of the forcible ab- duction ancl rape of .actress Maggie De Li Riva June 26, 1967 in a cheap.hotel (IO'taide Manila. To the end, Miss 0. La Riva, 29, allowed no mercy or forgivenesa for her r1piltl wllo, acconllnftO'ber, victimized II olber wmien before her. Relatives of the condemned men gathered in an adjainlng cell and did not witness the execution. Alternately, the y JObbed, sCreamed and fainted as the men , Were led ·out one·by one. · President Ferdinand E. Marcos refused last.minute appeaJs from the relatives, including one from Jose's molber who in a fulll attempt to 1aTe her• JOn said he ilmld'bt given clemency because he was Dl"1tally retarded, The Rev, Hennenegildo Angeles, the prison cha.pl~ said all three. spoke to him bel0re their enoutlon· and. told him their last wish wu to• lmpart a message to Filipino youths "to avoid bad com- . pan ions and to obey tl>tlr parent.o." "Each one admitted his guilt to the crime they were charged with," Father Angeles said. Prilons .Director , llavtl, asked by newsmen how be fell about c•pltal p.misbmeot. Aid, "I'm neither for nor against I~ I Just carried out•my Joh to- day." There are ~·eonvkt11 confined at the national prnft('nU.ry11 death row, and so have had death ~cOo!tnned by .. _.oaurt. ' ' • • Governor's Paralysis Under Study . • SILVER SPRING Md. (AP) -George C. Wallace, elated by presidential primary triumphs in Michigan and Maryland, showed c o n t i n u e d im- provement from gunshot wound! today. But there was disagree,rnent in medical circles regarQjng hls·cbance .o( e.scaping permanent paralysis. (See Page 4 for stories about · the Maryland and Michigan primaries.) A medical bulletin on the condition or the Alabama governor, partially paraJyz. ed. since being hit by bullets Monday dur- ing an election rally, said: "The governor spent a comfortable night. He is very alert and aware of his surroundings. He is reading the paper avidly. He is continuing to improve. All of his bodily functions are normal and stable. ''Paralysis or the legs remains un- changed. "At this time, despite reports to the contrary, the exact nature of injury to the spinal cord cannot be determined un· ti! surgery is performed." The bulletin, issued by Dr. Joseph F. Schanno, appeared to chaUenge published reports that W(lllace faced pennanent paralysis from the hips down because of damage to the spinal column. The Washington Post .. today reported that the bullet severed Wallace's spinal chord. Jt quoted unnamed medical sources as saying chanres of the ggvernor ever walking again are "zero." Earlier, Silly Joe Camp, Wallace 's press secretary, told a reporter that the Post story was "unfounded." Camp said the governor asked him this morning to get the lateil vote totals from the two primaries. "He was in good spirits," Camp said. "He was already aware he~d won the prjmaries." . There had" been indications that Wallace1s gunsh6t wound affecting the spine might not be as serious as had been feared -. The governor's wile, Cornelia , wu reported to have been told by a neurosurgeon tha t the Post story 1lf permanent paraJysis of the legs was "in· valid." An aide of Wallace, Elvin Stanton , said the comment was made by Dr. Baltazar E. Perez, a staff member or Holy Cross lmpital where the governor is being treated. Stanton said Mn. Wallace asked Perez for his opinion artu being in· formed o! the Post report. · Dr. Perez refused to accept telephone calls but.a secretary In his office sild tht. had been in&tructed to tell liiQulrl6g, newsmen tblt · the Post rtport was (5ee WAU.!.CE, P•p II • ' ·:: • I ! ... ......................... ~ .............. ~ Vietna1n Air At!es. • '.: .. .J ·--.. ~~y to San.· D~t:go ··Heroes~--Wel~o1ne Q\IA... • e1NH L A 0 0 ' ' •p .... • · U"'I Tll~llf• TRANSPORT ARMAdA -United Stales helicopters today airlifted two battalions of South Vietnamese into Ra kkasa n, an • abandoned base 15 miles . west of .Hue, under cover of air, naval --and artillery strikes. Vietnam Air Aces Home, Given Heroes' Welcome SAN DTEGO ·CAP) -Regarded ·as too valuable to risk capture, America's two air aces of the Vietnam war flew home to also 1n the cheering crowd. ·Although the Navy salll ef£orts to ad .. vise Delores Schnfjder of·the·home't'Om· · a heroes' welcome by 200 persons, in· ing were unsuccessful, she said "I heard it on the car radio tonight. · cludin~ relatives and a girl /riends. Cunningham's nine-month-old daughter, Navy Lt. Randall H. Cunningham, 31, Kristi, was home asleep. grinned as he spotted his wife, Susan, ·A commercial jet returned Cun- t:olding their 2·Year-old soo; Todd,. in the nlngham aod Dri!colJ, 25, a resident of crowd Tuesday night. Framingham. Mass., crewmates who The fiancee of ~-t. William Driscoll was shot down five Sovlet·bulit MIG fighter . • : : ,:-..... "'?AJ ~ . , "". • ,IWlno. includ,ipg three. May 10. · t>rikoJJ, raa'ar ltitercept officer in ari F4 phantom jet, said the Communist pilol! "cfefinitely ~made mistakes.'' Spokane Overrun ' By Jesus Freaks c ''We were leaving a strike target area when our aircraft was hit," he. said. "We knew we had to make It to the Gulf (or Tonkin) if at all possible because we had no intention o( becoming POWs il we SPOKANE . \Vash . .(UPI ) -Spokane is could hell' Jt.'' having a "Jesus Freaks'' Problem.· The two pilots were ordered home from ~The City Council has betn asked to do the attack carrier Constellation. something about the influx of young A Navy •Pokesman u td they might be religious advocates ha, wkmg' th, Ir subjected to eaj)eclally harsh treatment by N0<1h Vietnam ii captured. newspapers and preaching OD· nearly Vice Adm. Triomaa J. Walker, com· every downtown street .comer. mander of the Pacific Fleet N1vaJ Air .Business merchants caJt It Force, welcomed the two pilota oUicially ••parass~ent." . and said thdr ne:xt assign ment la .. 'up to Th< council's "legal o!fice•ls .Wd/l>J ·"the <hlerol&v,lteperltt!l)na;j!i;""····,"'•:. tl>t kind o! action , II any, the governing A Navy Leque !unClioo lruCharlulon, body can take ill the·matter, S.C., Is llral C11»the acbedule, .. . . j •• ----.... ~ ..... -4 . ·~"-·. . . .. Base · Closed AtKontum :f: In Bar.rage ! SAIGON (UPI)' -Communist §' zeroed in today.on an amm unltkln.lad U.S. CIJO transport plane at the Kont · airbase, kllllng seven Americans a · woi.Jnding two others abOard . r The bombardment closed the base anit ·wounded nlne:Americans. J • Both ,sides .drew~tight.er.:.lines .for.~ rortht:omio&..!..CoromWJ.W:_o ff e "~4 l v ·against Hue, for which Pentagon sou said the North Vietnamese massed f divisions. , r. The Communists cut the road betweeii Da Nang and Hue and the South Vi~~ nafnese drew tighter· what they called ir· steel delense.ring 'around ~rue. ' UPI correspondcgt Kim Wille~ reported from the Bien Hoa airbase miles north of Saigon that President N' on ordered another I , 100-man U.S. Marine air · group with. at least 25 a~ possibl y more A4 Skyhawk jets there ·$ help beat ba ck the 48-day-old Communi(t offensive. U.S. planes struck North Vietnam to- day in another series of heavy Mids against transPortation and other fa ci lities. Hanoi reparted another four American planes shot down: a UPI dispatch from the carrier USS CooateUat1on aaid Cmdr, Thpmu ·Wilkenson, 42, of Hanford , wu hJt but bailed out of hi.a A7 Corsair in the Tonkin Gull and was.rescued. AltboUgh the situation In \he Kontum (See VIETNAM, Pare %) .. Ora11ge l\'eather More sun!htne on the agenda ror Thursday w~th high temperatures along the beaches at 62 rising to 1'"12 ·'inlariil, • U.w,..lllnf1-5i. 11\SI OF.,. l'ODI\ \' It's a big week for openingJ In five theater will~ Orange C.'oast ColleQe. the Costa Mesa Civic Playhowe and the Ht.m· t1ngton Becu:h Pla11house nil ,,,;sing !11eir curtains. See !ht· 1ilf'f Notes, Page 24. l .M. leftl lJ IHll!lt 1( C•l>ter~I• S C•r•~• CtrMr II ci.nrtlM J1"" · CttnlCI ff (f91\-· " 0.•"' Htllttt 11 Edll1rlll 1'1tt I 111:•r"l"mt11I U.11 ,lfllllCI f1•11 Hfnlote" M .... ~ ... ,.,., JI '-·-. ' ,... .. krYk• ' ,,.... . ·-, . . Mrt111 ff.U ,,..,.._,, 11'111..... • M1t)lflfl ......_, I Or111" ,_,, • u l'TA. » ,,1w11 ,..,...... " ,...... ,,.,. Or. 1111Mr9'111 1J I Slo(k M111ltl' ll4t T1lt•!tl911 M ThMltrt ..... U W1ttMr I '#11111 .... ,, w_.,'°"-...,t1• . .,.. ,..... .. • DAILY f'I LOI c DAILY l'ILOT 11111 l"flett HE Will RETURN Visiting Prince of Hunza 'They Always Go Back,' Says Hunza Prince By CANDACE PEARSON o• 1t1t 0 1111 "''°' 11111 Posters with beautiful girls In gra!S akirts or couples sipping wine at a sidewalk cafe beckon travelers to "get away from it all" at various tourist spot.I. But to really get away from it "all " - all the be.irt aitacks, cancer, asUuna, tuberculosis, crime, jails, pollu tion, smog ,..id. mysterjo111 , addilive& in the food - 8<> lo Hunza . Hunza ls a small 3.900 square mile kingdom within the country of Kathmir, Jocated betwe"en China and Afghanistan in the Jlimalayas. It has bern rcpu lcd to be a shangrila. or a utopia because some of its people Jive to tie 120 to 140 years old. Many still work in the fields· when in their early IOOs, Dr. Jay Hollman, nutri- tion expert, said Monday . Hoffman lectures on Hunza at the ,Seventh-day Adventist Church in Costa Mesa and Monday greeted 22-year-old Hunza Prince Ameen at the church, whom he hadn't seen for 11 ye-ars. Prince Ameen Is visting lloffman in California during a break in his studies for a masters ln business administration st the University of West Virginia. The seC<1nd oldest son of King Mir, Ame"en will not become king unless his older •brother Gahzanfa r cannot take over. He doesn't know what he will do in Hunza (population 30,CMXI) when he returns ofter summer school, but he knows he must go back. "People leave sometimes to go to achoo! or service." said quietly, "but whenever possible, they alwa ys go back.'' Frotn Page 1 ROBBERY ... for the sarety nf the hostages. Bonk officials said the branch has 15 ~n1ployes but it was nol known how many \\'ere on duly and ho'v ma ny customers y,:cre inside . A pollcrman \\'ho got a glimpse of the bank interior throug h a window reported that the employes and customers were lying on the floor. Allemp ts to .Phone the bank to induce the b.'.lnd it to surrrnclr r went unanswered, ns did bullhorn appeals in both English a~lfl Spanish . • J'olice converged on the scene when a motorcycle officer u•as hailed by a passerby. \vho reported the bank robbery under way at 1st S!rett and \\'estern A,·cnu<'. The policema n ra n to ~he door of the buil ding but turned a"'ay when a shot \l':ts fi red t1I him from inside. Thr bullet i n •-~.:ed. 01.ANGI COAST Clll DAILY PILOT Tll1 0 ••"111 (OIU DAILY l'ILOT, wlltl ~kh b <omblncd 1111 News.Pr11•, fl pub!l"1'1f'd h' 1111 Or1nge Cot•I PuOll1lll"t CO~flY. ~· •tllt rdlllot11 lt"I CIUblltll«I, Mand1y ft!rtlllfll Ftid1 y, for (Ot11 M'"11, NtWflDrl lll!lrll. Hun1l110lon lt1clltf'ount1!11 V11l1y, L•tu"' 8e~c~. 1,,.•nir·S•ckl l-ct •~d s~" Cllmt111t/ Sin Ju111 C111 .. 1r1no. A 1ln9lt r-vlaMI lllH!ori 1, 1111bll1llld S~lurd•~ '""' 5uncl1y,, 71111 prl11c • ...,1 11UC!l111tno pl1nt It 11 .uo Wet! 8sy $rre11, Cost1 Mu ... C11>t~i1, t1o:t. Rob1rf N. w,,J '•n~<nl i ncl Publl.,,., J1cli: JI, Curl1v Vk1 Prf!,kltl'll I ncl Gf,""'' MI MP•r Tko"' 11 IC11•il Edl11t Tho"'11 A. Murphi11• Mt~lng f ltltor Ch•rl11 H, l oo• ltich1tl "· Ni ll Au!111n1 M11191lftt I!,,._.. C•1t• M .... Office JJO We•t l1y SfT11t M1i/i119 Add r111: ,.0 . 101 1160, t 2616 ' O"n Of'flc• H'-1 l11cll1 »lJ Nt"'111f't 1 .. 1rY1"11 Lq-1 .. c11 : m lf•<•111·•- M1111t""t'"" l11U1; 11"17S l•tll Iii°"'"""' $al\ Cl•""111t: »S MOl'fll 11 (1rn1M Jt"I T.t.,ei ... (71 41 ,.J.4JJI Cl•••lfiM A••Mtal .. 64J·l671 (OIJYl'IOJ'll, itn. ~· Coad 'IMWl!ftt c.e""'1M11r. H6 tllft •lor*, htr.tllnt. .:111or111 ,...,!tr or ......,,~ '*""" IT'ii• Ill ~flf wllflout .,.ui1 ,... l'lltt\ol'l tlf ~'-· Supporters Push Coastline Issue·. Dy L. PETER KRIEG ot flMI t>tlll' ,.Ill llllf ., A crucial state senate com mittee vote Monday that virtually killed tough coastline control legislation has a~ parently triggered all-out efforts t:f' Callfornhi environmental ists to get the coastal protection Issue on the November ballot. ''The legislaJu re has failed aild I hope the people _}Von 't," said Janet Adams, an offici al o( tJie California Coastal Allia nce. Her words came after the strong measure co-auth9red by Senator Donald Grunsky (R-Wat so nv i ll el and . Assemblyman Alan Sleroty (D-Bever ly Hills) was rejected on"a 4 to 4 vote or the senate's naturlil resources committee. Grunsky chose not to &eek a second vote in the measure when the full nine- member panel was present later in the day. A coastal bill sponsored by State Senator Dennis Carpenter (R·Newport Beach) that Is aimed at preserving loca l government control as well as lhc en- vironment was passed by the pa nel, however. on a 5-3-1 vote. Carpenter's bill now goes to the ."Jenate fina nce commi ttee. Mrs. Adams has strong criticism for this measure. ''lt'S worse than worthless. It's destru ctive. It 's a builders bill," she said. Sieroty himself agreed with the ap- praisal and las~ed out at the buildil)g trades for opposing his bill. "If they were asked to build something on top of Half Dome in Yosemite, they'd say •fine'," Sieroty said. Under the Sieroty-Grunsky measure which is technically still alive, there would be one t.:tate board and six regional ' boards with veto power over any develop- ment w1thln 1,000 yard!: of the beach front. Carpenter)s measure establishes one 15-member 1tate agency that would be given three years to formulate a coastal land use plan · developed from local govern ments' concepts of how their areas should be handled. During those three years, any develo~ ment that would cut down the size of pub lic beaches or available public access properties would be forbidden . After three years, the board ·s veto power would be expanded to review all devtlopment.5 approved by local agencies an¢ approve or reject them within 30 days of their passage. The Sieroty-Grunsky bill would have flad a much more stringent perm it system during the period -in which the state boa rd would prepare a statewide plan for developm;nt criteria. Democratic Senator George Zenovich of Fresno, considered the swing vote on both bills. said he cast a nega tive ballot on the Sierot.y-Grunsky. measure because it attacked local governments' power. Zenovich agreed the building trades' opposition influenced his vote. "I c3n't discount their prevalence 'ln me," he said, "but that wasn't the specific reason I voted ag ainst it. It \l'as the local government issue." On the A.ssem}lly side Sieroty's com- panion 'lill is still alive and awaiting ac- tion by the full assembl y 8.fter clearing its own rounds of committee hearings. Sieroty this morning said he plans to bring it up but considering the senate's action onJhe Grun.sky bill he figures his measure lill get the sa.me treatment if it ever got that far. 'Sy1nptoms' Analy%ed Coastal Lawmakers Cite Wallace Violence Orange Coast lawmaken today reacted to the shooting of Alabama Gov. George Wallace by saying it was but a symptom of a violent America and of a soclety "coddling its criminals ." Rep. John Schmitz (R-Tustin), calling . From Page 1 WALLACE ... five hours of surgery, that she ls op- timistic. ''As you know, hls nature. he didn't earn .the title of the 'fighting little judge' for nothing, and I expect him to continue in the same vein." Spokesmen aaid Wallace Intended to continue his campaign, even If he doesn't regain use of his legs. Schanno noted that President Franklin D. Roosevelt had been a wheelchair cripple during his years in the White House. Nixon, in a While House appearance to announce the resignation of Treasury Secretary John B. Connally, offered Wallace the presldenUal suite at Walter Reed. He said if Wallace wishes to return to Alabama to recuperate an Air Force hospital plane will be put at his disposal. Earlier, Nixon di9patched a White House physician, Dr. William Luka sh, to aid Wallace's doctors. Nixon said he is keeping in "close touch" with Wallace 's condition. He also said Nicholas Zarvos, the ~·ounded Secret Service man, i s ''substantially improved.'' the incident 11a sickening event ," blaming the act on the "glorification of violence by critic.s or our society.'' "It is grimly ironic that Gov. Wallact. who made our current toleration of violence and crime .a primary issue of his campaign for the presidency of the United States, has now himself fallen vie-' tim to ·lt," Schmitz sald in a prepared , . statement. "Le t us hope that the teachers of violence will at long last be shamed into silence by this latest example of their handiwoi'k," Schmitz added. State Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R· Newport Beach), who i! now seeking reinstitution of the death penalty in California for capital crimes, said &uch Incidents might not happen if crimes were more severely punished. "This sort of incident," the state senator said, ''is related to the banish- ment of the death penalty and to the overall prevailing attitude of society cod- dling Its criminals. There is a general laxness on the part of the people responsible in allowing criminals to go free ." State Sen. James Whetmore (R-Garden Grove),· said the shooting was a "very great shock" and agreed with Carpenter that the root cause of assassination at- tempts was mild punishment o f criminals. "I think u•e can expect these types of thing s to continue as long as we live in a society that doesn 't particularly want to punish its criminals." Sen. Whetmore said. "Assassi ns know that they can do these things and usuall y get away with it, at lea st with their life .'' Gaylord Wells, 82, Dies; , Oldest Realtor in Mesa Gaylord Norman "G. N." \\'ells was a Gingham Restaurant is now Papa Joe"s. lifelong Repu blican who grubbed for gold "He was a crusty old guy but a real on Idaho. f\tontana apd \V yoming pioneer," says Councilman Alvi n L. homesteads. before find ing the pot al the Pinkley. u•hose pbarmacy is a few doors end of his ra inbow in Costa Mesa . down from Mr. Wells' original office. Death came about 6 a.m. today for G. The 200-pound-plus North Dakota native N. \\'e lls. in his home at 143 Broad1vay, in established it smack at the intersection of the hea rt of a to1\•n he helped build . }!arbor and Newport boulevards, a fitting ffe was 82. oldest continuous Realtor in spm. to do business in a city to be called !O\l'n. !he Hub of the Harbor Area . His doctor was present and attributed "Costa ft.fesa : The Greatest Town on death to a coronary condition under Earth," said the a.ds he ran in treatment for five years, according to newspapers . police. McCardle said his old partner slowed Funeral services for ft.fr. Wells were down about thrte years a.go to look after pending at B<U Broadway Mortuary -his wile Elsie. who bad a leg ampulated . just down the bk>ck in the d(lwntown He married htr at age 1ti, ju.rt 13 years district whue old G. N. wu a fl1turt ago this July. since 1943 -with interment In Pacific "He ilways bad at least two jobs, View ft.temorial Park. mlnlng and · homesteadlng," McCardle To hear him dt.Seribed by othen, G. N. remarked. "He was acUve in the Llons Wells sound slmllar to cowboy actor CJub and be was extremely Interested In John Wayne, a aqu.1""ullt, work·foving -lltics."" cattlemen and pollticAI· conservative who Relatives said today Mr. Wells' last ore came \Vest seeking his fortune . production job was 'with the Homestake "He was a big man, six feet Ull 1nd a Gold Mine in Gillette. Wyo., after which litUe more with hli 11>-gallon Slelson hat ollie coupl~ cam• lo tho Orange C..at, he always WOT!," aays We:Ila' niece, Mrs. Survivors in addition to his wife include Jeanette Reynold.s. a brother GltM We!IJ, or Suthorlln. Ort., Ho alway1 ,..... his cowboy htt h> the plus al.ten Mn. Sibyl Normtn and Mn. old Gingham Relllurant when tt wu the Sabra S!Uert,'both of c..ta M .... ~ <lltt .. ,.,. Nill .t e.fo ,M...., C11r.oni14!, ~lllfi.n 11¥ ct"1t.t Ila l'l'IClll!fllYJ ty l'PWlll U If ,,,.,.,., ""1llll'f' ••llfttltwm a.u "*''""'· only one In town," aayt his former They .,....i wttb slnwd old G. N. partner. Rtallor Roy McCm!le St., who W<lll, w!lo preceded them Jo whit wu. later tOok over Iha flnn. barei1 .,.... lhan a ~...it in "H• picked up • lot cl hl1 lluslnea farmland that ht advertliod u the !hut," says McCardlr, not1n1 the old Gnale$! Town en Eri. ·' DAILY ,lLOT lllff ,lloll • Con·ditions At Medical Center Hit By JACK BROBACK ' Of lllt tMlll' l'Ufl lllH Members or the 1972 Orang! County Grand Jury toured the Orange County Medical Cente r in April and today Center Adminiltrator Robert White probabl}" wishes he had not been so hospitable and talkr.tive. The jury relea sed a letter dated JI.lay 4 Monday critieizing the Center for "lack of proper air conditioning \•:hich leads lo the unnec essary deaths of 12 pati ents each 5uinmer." · Panel members also objected to tne fact that they were allowed to tour tbe Center's intensive care units without being masked or gowned. MESA DAD HELPS OUT KIDS IN KINDERGARTEN H1n1 Weyer Showa How;'Te1cher Iii Stevenson Watc;:he1 \\'hite said today that he !old jur1 members, while making a pitch for Center improvements, that during "the 30 hot days we experience in an average year 12 people probably die." But, the ad· ministrator said, he added. "There is Jl() certainty that heat is the principal factor in their deaths." l' olunteer Teirehers The administrator said today that mos t patients who die during hot summer days: are "weak or elderly and would posllibly sur vive a few months longer il not ex· posed to unnecessary heat." Parent's Help Out l\.ids The jury's letter also charged: -That the Center administration should clean up its hospital and personnel through belier housekeeping standards and mo~e uniform grooming regulations. At Understaffed School -That portable air cond itioning unit s: be installed immediately (White said he is requesting 90 window air conditioner• at an approximate cost of $135 ,000 in his Hans week. _ By JAN EDWARDS Df tllo O.lly l'Llol Sl1ll Weyer goes to school once a Mary Weyer 1~ to school three times a week. They are not truants or students who fiJ'e sick a great deal (lf the time. They are parents. Each week, the Weyers assist teachers at Victoria School in Costa Mesa v.•ilh specia l kindergarten projects and school supervisorial duties. Weyer, who works for a loc31 ship- builder, brings unfinished, precut wood which the kindergarteners nail together, saw through, decorate and proud ly display to visitors. Every Friday, his son Sean and ot her members of Ila Stevenson's kindergarten class take the tool cabinets and sawhorses outside and start to \vork. And Mary \Veyer teaches the children how to sew and crochet cloth purses, wallet.! and kites at a table nearby. Originally from Holland, t-he Weyers vol untarily began helping at Victoria last 1972-73 budget ). -That Center administration should fall. They will probably continue to teach Immediately concern il!elf with &tail at the kindergarten level because next morale by Jmproving cammunicationJ September their 11e1t child will enroll. between the front office and the general tn addition, Mrs. Weyer 'Wlll teach a stair. lltcratur~ session for the upper grades i::t_The jury letter, however, praised moSl beginn ing next September. peiionnel they had interviewed and Mid Last fall some primary grade levels at they appeared to be, ''extreme I y Victoria Sc hool were temporarily un-dedicated, well educated and well trained dersta ffed . This.sit~~tion .emp~asized !he . , . and doing a fine job under adverse need for more ind1v1dua!t zed instruction conditions." and led to ~reater in~olv~~ent of .par.ents Regarding their tour of the intensive who w~re interested 1n. i:JVlllg thell' time,, care unit and the fact that they were not according to school 0U1cials, required to wear masks or gowns the The \\'eyers. and about 30 mothers jurors said, "to bring a group of people (Ha~ Weyer 1s ~he ~nly ~ather ) have into an intensive care unit to disrupt the ~t:1buted to the ir children s IChool ac-staff and to gawk at the patients is less t1v1lles through the year. than wise." For the ki ndergarteners, Mr. Weyer is White particularly obj ected to the a y,·ond.erful miracle. charge that people were dying by the "ll is strange to have Mr. Weyer ''dozens .at the medical cen ter because of around," says Mrs. Steven90n. "He is a lack of air conditioning." phenomenon to thi! children. There is almost disbe lief that a dad will visit the classroom and stay." ' Skyjacking Trial Set Gov. Wallace Favored SAN DIEGO !AP 1 -Stanley Harlan· Speck, 31. faces trial in federal court July 11 on charges of hijacking a Pacific Southwest Airlines jetliner from Oakland to San Diego. Speck, of San Francisco, pleaded innocent Monday. A hijacker · commandeered the plane AprU 9, demanded $50.000 and parachutes, and was seited in San Diego. To Post Biggest Wins By the A110clated Press Gov. George C. Wallace, shot and critically wounded on the eve of what looms as his biggest 1972 political triumph, is favored to sweep Democratic presidential primaries today in Michigan and Maryland, possibly boosted by a substantial srmpathy vote. ft.fichlgan will divide 132 delegates to the Democratic National Convention pro- portionately according to the presidential preference voting. In Maryland , 53 votes will be decided on the basis of statewide and con- gressional district results. E\,.en bef(lre a gunman shot Wallace as he campaigned Mondav in the Washington suburb of LaU.rel, Md .. he had been favored to win in both" States, and after the shooting an aide said the governor u·ould co ntinue his drive for the presidency. Principal rivals are Sens. George ft.1cGovern and Hubert H. Humphrey. considered the leading candidates for the Democratic presiden tial nomination. The incident may create "a large sen- time nt to vote for Wallace," president Tom Turner of the Metropolitan Dttroit AFJ..,.CJO, A Humphrey backer , predicted . Othe-r politiciaos specul ated privat.ely that the shooting would stiffen any wavering Wallace supporters and perhaps swing so me voters undecided between the Alabama governor and another cand idate. McGovern and Humphrey stopped ac- tive president ial campa igning. halted television and ra dio commercials and returned to Ylashington. All For The Family- What changes your house more than any otlier thing? What improves accou1tics dramatically? What war111s up a house 7 What im parts unique beauty and comfort? ••• Carpeting from Ald en's, that's what! (If your house "stifles" you, stop in and see us FAST.J COUNTY SHOW ON TV TONIGHT "Portrait: Orange County," a documenlary produced by the Telecommunications Center o f Coast Commwtlty College District, will be shown again on Channel 28, KCET, tonight at 7:30 o'clock. First aired last week, the 6(). minute film analyzes the county and the people that populate it. "Portrait" originally was a pilot for the first county television 11ta. tion and will be repeated at noon Tuesday, May 23. • '. ' .. ALDEN'S .. CARPETS e DRAPES ,. ' " 1663 PlaCllltla Avt. ... ~ COSTA MIS.A .. '46-4138 .. ,. • , I ' ' ) I