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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-05-18 - Orange Coast Pilot1 .. Dranaa in Bakersfield 2 'Speed!) Faetory Snspeets Cleared Oi Drug Charges ,. .... .---~--;;-··- THURSDAY AFTERNOON, MAY ·18, .t972 Touring France Queen E!i%abeth·D of llrltaln and the'Prlnce·of!Wa!es•ride in an ol"'n car after' •isiting the Palais des Papes· on Weilnesday. The queen was led on a lengthy tour of Avignon once the world center of Cath· olicism. · 2 Coast Girls Cleared In Drug Fa~tory Case Patricia Aurand Dragavon of Newport Beach and Sara Emilie h-tasters of Costa ·Mesa both have been cleared of all . charges ln a case involving alleged drug productlon ·along the Orange Coast, the District Attorney's Office disclosed I<>- • day. . ., ' Spokesmen al lhe Laguna Niguel Courthouse offices or the DA said that Miu DragavOn, 23. of 304 canal St .. and M1ss Masters. 2l, or 312 E. 18th SI., Costa Wheat Doctor Dies DAVIS (AP! -Dr. Joseph A. Rupert, I&. a wheat scientist and associate d.lrec- • ot agrtcultural science ror lhe 111 •1•rer fowxlat ion, died Tuesday or .. wde conlr)1'.Jlions to plant iad patboiOBJ', and train<d ldelltlsl.I In tile developlna 'Ill, .... Mesa. are in no way related to a drug raid made along lhe Sooth Coast May 3. The two women were arrested at 167 Chiquita Street in Laguna Beach in a followup investigation retaUng to the seizure of an alleged "spe<d" factory In a San Clemente resld<nce. · The main principal In the ca.., graduate biochemist G<orge William Co1, 29, of San Clemente, is free on $50,000 cash boil· and Is scheduled lor a preliminary hearini Monday In Sooth Orange County Municipal Court. The lll1'ertl at Otiqulil Stuot, police said, were made under a search wmant and during inspection of the premi5<3 a small quan)lly of marijuana allegedly was discovered. OlfJCttS aald they lbtn ~ all ns In the bouae at the tim•. ooe of lhe thret wu subooquooUy In a DA'• complalnl -ll'nddle Joan Jl ... arth, ll, tho alleged l'fAlldent o( Ille -· She WU boobcl C dllrfa ti ,.._., mii1)lana. Bakersfield Wife Freed ByKidnaper BAKERSFIELD (AP) -FBI and r;heriff's deputies searched today for a kidnaper who held a Bakersfield woman hostage nearly eight hours and then abandoned her in an orange crate after collecting $50,IXM> ransom. 4Marjorie Minear. 50, the wife of a Ba nk of America branch manager in nearly Oildale, managed to free herself from the box left in an orange grove Wednesday night 20 miles north of here, a Kern County sherilf's deputy ;aid. She suffered only a slight cut on her forehead. • Mrs. Minear described her kidnaper as white, about giJ: feet taU, weU-groomed with dark hair. She said he forced his awy into her home Wednesday afternoon, blindfolded her and <trove her around in a car for several hours before leaving her in the crate. Bob Wedel, a Joan officer at the Oildale branch of Bank of America, t.;iJd autbcrities be-re<:li!ived a telephone call aboUt 2 p.m. from a man Who said he was holding the wife of branch manager Glenn Minear. The caller demanded $50.000 ransom for Mn. Mineer's return, Wedel said. Because Minear was away at a meeting, authoMties said Wedel followed the kidnaper's lnstructtons and delivered the money to a field about fi ve miles north of Bakersfield. Wedel rec:elved a second call from the kidnaper at 7 p.m. saying he had picked up the money and Mrs. Minear could be found in a box near the money drop JK!int. - But less than an hour later, authorities said Mrs. Minear called from a nearby farmhou,. after freeing her .. ll. A sheriff'• helicopter circled tile spot the raMOm wu to be J)3id. but deputie.'!'. said Ibey did not see tile mon•y picked up and believe it was done on foot rathec. than by car. The helicopter remained at 31000 f~t to avoid detection. . Two mtn are helli« 10Ught hec.I""' Mrs. Minear said she heard dilfe.rent voictJ while being driven blincllolded, depuU.. said. Actor Succumbs HOLLYWOOD 0 (API -Sl•ve° lnhal. 37, motion-picture actor, writer and director, died Swida)' while •lW>cllni • rum latlv~ 11 canne., Franco. ,- • estnl1nster • I ~n ConteDt-pt for Holding Sex Fil1n rea • ...... 1ner Wally" Angela? British Musician · Switches Sexes LONDON (AP) -Wally Stott, one ol Britain's top band leaders and compose rs 0£ popular music, put on his suit and tie for the last time today. The 43-year-old television and recording maestro has had a sex change operation and now will be known as Angela Morley. Wednesday night he went to a concert in a blonde woman's wig and flowing evening gown. But he put on men's clothes today to drive north with his wife to break the news to his parents. He and his wife of 30 years plan to con· tinue together at their country home near London. They have a grown son and daughter. "Since my earliest memories, I have had this problem," said Stott. "A specialist advised me to have a complete sex change operation. Now I hope to be able to live a happy and dignified life. Naturally, I wish to carry on my career -but as a woman." Stott's 28-year-old son, Brian, said, "We feel happy about Dad's operation -I still call him Dad at home, but I'll have to get used to using her and she when I talk to other people." Stot t underwent the operation secretly two weeks ago. To do so, he canceled an appearance before members of the royal family, and the rumors flew. He was supposed h> attend a special reunion show of j<The Goons," a one lime team of wacky, fast-talking comedians which included Peter Sellers. Stott com-' posed their music. Prince Philip, Queen Elizabeth's hll.5- band, Prince&!! Ann and Princess Mar- garet were at the show. The organizer• said Stott had a previous engagement, but he explained today, "I dld not want Police Chief Keeping Films Held in Contempt ·~ ' ', By TOM BARLEY Of tM O.tl' rlltt Sl1H Westminster PGlice Chief Walter SCotl was found in contempt of court Wed4 nesday for his failure lo return IE!X• oriented ftlms and photographs to Frederick and Kay Loar of Huntington , 1 Beach. But Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert L. Corfman iuspended the sentence and any further action by the Uiars' lawyers to enable Scott to file an appeal against the ruJing. Judge CorJman made ii clear that he will welcome an appellate ruling on a legal issue that appears to be without precedent. .,,. . . . . . P.~ •..•. ,, •• , •. He also made it clear ht was 1ati1fied that Chief Scott deliberately disobeyed a court order in whic h Judge Corfman directed Westminster police to return 20,500 movies and 30,000 photographs · eized A1ay 25, 1971, from the Loar1' ''Pete Voss Showcase" warehouse at 15144 Golden West Circle, Westminster. Loar, 34, and his wife, 31, both of 40SJ Humboldt St., had been cleared by a Jury in Judge eorrman'1 courtroom the day before the order was Issued oo charge1 of conspiracy to distribute o b 1 c e n e material. The panel view 21 movies and a selection of photographs ln . the three- week trial that produced their acquittal decision. But Scott Immediately reful!td to return materials valued by the ~rs al Elizabeth 2 To Explode, Caller Says LONDON (AP) -Defense Mlnblry said today bombs are reported to have been planted aboard the Queen Elizabeth 2 at sea and that four bomb disposal n 4 perts were being flown to mid-Atlantic to deal with them. UnoUlclal reports In London aald the captain of the big liner had been advised bombs were planted in New York, the ship's Jut port or call, and' would ezplode U a huge ran110m was not paid. There are l ,400 passengers aboard the 65,000-ton vessel, pride of lhe Brillah merchant navy. Defense Ministry sources said the bomb experts will be parachuted as close to the vessel u possible. First reportt aaid the ransom demand originated in Copenhagen, Derimark. Cunard, owners of the ship, tmmed.lat• Jy contac ted Defense Mlnlatry officials. A Royal Air Force transport took off from Lynsham in WUtshlre heading out. to the Atlantic. The Defense lifirtistry said the plane carried four bomb di:iposal experts who would be alongside the ahip for parachuting early thbi afternoon. •Tile B!ltUl>-.111Jn8!Corp.-Jd a . (See UNEll, ~Ip IJ ' Weatller Those cloud> should c1 .. r by mid-morning Friday leaving the weekend to sunny skies and warm. temperature1. Highs at the beaches 62 rising to 72 tnland. Lows 48-U. INSIDE TODAY LAWMEN TO NAME MISS FUZZ '72 ~.;~C!~&.M!!!"1n~J~~ , oriented literature. He a'g1ln condemned the materlala as "bard co r e pornol!'lphy" and ord<red them held In the vaultl of the police department. Her vital 1tatl.ttlci art 43.27 .. 41 -feet, not inchfs. Sharon Harvey ii the bronitd beautu lhot odorm billboardl CO<lll \a coa1t in the 11tntan oil od. Sht adm1ts-"'l1Ui1 11 um 1toftltng t0 see Mrself in the largerrize and leli1 wlwt billboord 1ign /am• he• brought her. Stt •'°'11 Page 10. LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Twenty rive city policewomen compile in 1 bathing beauty coot.st today, sponsored by th• Fir<: and Police Protective League. To tile ahllpelltst woman oflicea g.., the crown of "MiM Fuzz of ttn." Judge Corfman used lhe comment.I made by Scott IA> Orange County newsmen tn a summation thlt f°'lfld the police ~hlef "clearly guilty of a willful violation or my court order. _ "It's 1trarl1ie to me," he uid, "that Chief Scott cao clurly l'tlDmlber everything the Dio!rtct Altoiney'1 Office (Seo SEX FILMS, l'lp lj -.... _...,, ,.,. ti .... -....... . Or-c.-., t• ._ ..... \tKll MMtlltl .... ·-.. ,.......... ,,... ·-. w-tt """'NI --. r DAILY PIL01 s Tl>•..O•y MIJ' 18, l!n Did Wallace Suspect Also Stall{ ~lcGov er n? ,._ '"" S.nlcu 'BALTIMORE. Md. -ft d tr a I lnvtltigation said, "we are checking out the pos!ibUlty that Bremer may h&ive been lt8Jk1ng t.1eGove:rn. too.'' , being c:r1ticaUy wounded and parti.IUy paralyzed by gunshots, Wallace has stantd receiving phyaical t h.e'r 1 p y treatment.1, it was d1sc,loud today. &1tborlllt1 11ld today they are ln- Vt:lt.lgatlng the paeslblllly that Arthur H. Bremtr, the man acc:used of gunning down Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace, may a1Jb have been stalking a M!COlld presidential candidate. A 1poke1m.an It M?Govern campaign headquartm in Washington !aid her in- itial reaction -·as that ''imyOOdy coold • have had campaign literature. We bla nkett:d the sLale with lllera1ure. and it mi&ht have bet>n 1urprl..s1ng ii he didn '' · A statement issued by Holy Cross H08pilal ln Silver Spring , where Wallace •·as rushed after the assassination al· tempt Monday afternoon in a Laurel shop- ping center JUSl outside Washington, ga ve no details of the 1herapy -presumably designed to see if he can regajn move- Bued on ltcrnt found Jn a ~.arch or Bremer'1 eulomobile, feclc:r;1I iiourctS &aid today that it 8ppeared Bremer may also have been following &n. George McGovern JO.S .D.). ha~ any." · By ''the 5tale" she referred to A1aryland. "'allace was .1hot Monday at Laurel, Md. Alaot his car was found In Maryfand. ment 1n his legs. 1 A key doctor in his 't'ase l~ed Wednesday the odds are better than 5().60 he will not walk again. An lnvtntory of Items round 1n Bremer'• 19f7 blue two-door 'hardtop in. duded McGovern campaign Jilerature; u well 11 Wallace campaign literat&re. Bremer, 21 , of Mi1waukee, ~being held In BaJUmore County JaiJ at Towson , Md., under $200.tm bond. The hospital aa id Wallace rt~ what it described as "mild to moderate" "On that baslJ," a llOUl'ce close to the A1eanwhlle, less than three daya after Shades of Yesteryear The 1972 Wheatridge High School senior class in Colorado placed 15 Volkswagen autos end to end in the school's main hallway \Vednesday, as their year end class prank. Other students managed to make their way to class, however, a litUe Jate. The prank probably brought sentimental tears to Wheat- ton alumni of past years. Get out the goldfish-the se1nester isn't out yet. Studen ts Lost On IIike, Spend Nigl1t in Wild s SAN DIEGO (AP) -Thirteen children ~nd l"·o adults who wandered into a can· yon during a hike on Palomar f\.1ountain spent a chilly night before border patrol trackers roUnd them early today. The yo ungsters. all sixth graders from two San Diego-area schools, were described as hungry but In good condition after the 16-hour ordeal. A few were reported suffering scratches. In the search party were more than flO men, including 40 sheriff's deputies. An airplane and a helicopter were used. J>auma. Canyon, into which two border patrolmen followed the ir tracks, i.s localed on the south slopes of Palomar Mountain about 60 miles northeast of San Diego. "It's easy lo get Into that place but very hard to get out." a sheriff 's officer iiuid. l'og !1ampered the nil-night search. The group left th eir one.week school (.'amp at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday on what "1'11s <'xpected to be a six-hour hike. It \li'HS 8 a.m. be!ore they were found . Durini.; the night, temperatures dipped lo about 30 degrees. DAILY PILOT Thi Orlf!Ot CHll DAILY PILOT, W11h whl(ll It comttl~ the H•W1·Pr9'1, II llVOIJIMG •r !he Ot#ng1 CWl•I 1'1,1bll1lllng CoJml)llny. JtPI· r•lt t'dmon' fire 11Vbti1hl!d, Mondt'f ffltOl/911 Frk:11y, tor C~t1 M'11, H-ptrf ••t<h, H1mllnot11<1 lle1chll"ol.lf!l8fn V#llev. L81111nl llenth, lrwlMrl ~&ddleb•<k 111d Sin c tement1f Sin J11tn C1pi1lr1n1. A Jlnol1 rfl(llllftl/ rditlon It pu11111ht<1 Snt11rt11y1 ind S"'1111r1. Thi' pdncll)lll publ/1~11111 p!1nl It 11 lJO W•1I B•f Sttffl, C01t1 M111, c111rarnl1, "'''•· Robe r! N. w,,d Prttldt nl 1nd P~bllthtr Je<k R. C udey Vlca 11',_ldll't'lt I nd Otntr1t Mt11t~r Tiiom11 Keevil l!dllor TI!o1t111 A. 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U.S. Suit Charges GE With Antitrust Acts WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Justice DcparUnenl accused General Elettric Ci. today of engaging in anti-competitive practices since at least 1965. dienst sedi a civil anti-trust suit was filed in U.S. District Court in Auburn.N.Y. It charged GE, largest maker of elec- trical equipment and related products in the nation, with rest raint of trade by using reciprocal purchasing afrrange- ments with its customers and suppliers. Acting Atty. Gen. Richard G. Klein- Movie Industr y Rips Proposal s On Pornography SACRAMENTO (AP) -A legislative package aimed at cu rbing pornography ha s come under attack from the movie industry, which says it would ban show· lngs of Oscar-winning film s. The five-bill package by state Sen. John llarmcr would mean that films such aJ ''Patton'' and "The French Connection" could not be show n because under the bills lhey would be considered obscene, said Barbara Scott, representing the Mo- tion Picture Association of America. "You wouldn 't expect Patton not to use fou r·letler word s." she told the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday. "The Last Picture Show," ''Love Story" and "Diary of a A1ad Housewife'' also "·ould be forbidden, she added. Harmer said his bills would only forbid such pictures for children. Adults could still view them in a closed theater, he said. Committee members postponed a vote unlil next week. f't'om Page 1 LINER ... caller to Cunard'8 New York office said a bomb would explode tonight unless the ransom wa s paid. It was not clear whether this meant British or New York time. The rend,zvous was Bet for a position 40 degrees north 34 west -in mid·Atlan· tic. A second plane. 1 Royal Air Force Nimrod Jet reco nnaissance 1ircreft, new off from Cornwall. The Nimrod Js a maritime recon- nelssanct version of the fonner CGmet airliner. It would form a comfl'unlcations link betwe<n the ship and B'cltaln lhe Defense Miniatry said. · . ' C.pt. Robert H. Williams or Britain'• Rcyal Arm>' Ordinance Corps was named ~s leader of the bomb dlspGsal te.am. He ta 29 and !Jngle. Williams has never before jumped by parachute, the Defeme Ministry said. Ril No. 2 wu SSt. cmron1 R. Oilvtr o1 lhe Queen's &yll l!Jiblancien, ilZ and ~ Welker B. Comegys, chief of the Justice Department's Anli·trust Division said GE's reciprocal purchasing ar· rangements have had the effect of foreclosing its competitors from selling substantial quantities of goods to GE customers and preventing .supplier! from selling goods and services to GE. Walter A. Schlotterbech, vice preaident and corporate counsel for GE, issued a statement .saying the company would fight the charges. "General Electric believes that the ..• , suit is entirely unwarranted," Schlot· tcrbcch sa id. "Despite repeated requests, the antitrust division has refused to specify the alleged improper act or tr<1 nsaclions, or even identify the com- ponent of the company that has been allegedly engaged in improper prarlires. "Under these circumstances General Electric will vigorously defend the case." The complaint asked the court to enjoin GE from: -Entering into or cont inuing any reciprocal purchasing arrangements. Girl Sliot Dead; Man Says: 'Sick, Wanted to Kill' HOUSTON (UPI) -William David Hardeman, 20, charged with shooting to death h1s 20-year~ld girlfriend, lelt a ncte beside her body, saying he was sick and "wanted to kill .someone." Police found the no~ Wednesday beside th< body of Sharon Elaine Dunn, also 20, who shared an apartment w It h Hardeman. She was shot in the heed and abdomen. Hardeman was sitting at the bottom or the stairs in a pair ol dirty jeans when pollct1 came. An unidtntUied ·1n1n called for an ambulance, and the ambulance driver summoned polJce. Orrlctrs said they round this not•. signtd "David" besidt Miss Dunn'• body: "Dear family . i·Ptease forgive me for what I have done . I have been sick for a very Jona: time ever since 1 can remember. r wanltd to klll someont. Sharon did nothing lo me. Sbe wu just there. I knew I was sick, bot !hen I knew I wun't. Please try to rorret me. I am no (OOd and 1V011ld have amounttd to nothinc. "I loved you aU, "Davld...n temper1ture rise during the night. and an lncreaae 1n pulse rate. Hi! ttmperature hit 102 at ooe time -considert'd fa trly high for an adult -but the hospital sai d both l.ocreasel were usual in the post· operative period. Wallace underwent a long operat ion for hi.,; mult iple wounds Monday night. He has been paraJyied from the waist doun from one bullet that damaged the spinal column and there has Qetn no sensauon of feeling since .then -a negati\'e sign. ,Atao found In Bremer's car was a copy of lhe book, "RFK Must· Die," by Robert Kaiser, about Sirhan Sirhan , the man convicted or assassinating Sen. Roben F. Kennedy in 1968. and another _book, "'Sirhan, 11 by Aziz Shihab. Both boots were from the ~hlwaukee public library. Among Olber Items in tbe car were a Rand ~lc:'ially road atlas. 13 gas com- pany road maps . traWI guides ot the Ohio and Pennsvlvania turnpikes and lists or motels Ori the Ohio turnpike, binoculars. clothing. and envelopes with the V.'aldorf Astoria, 1'e..,.-York, let· I er head. Later. Frank ?-.fankie~·iq, ~tcGovern 's nauonal pohllcal coordinator, said he felt Bremer's possession of ~I c Go v e r n IHerature \.\'as ··pl'9bably just random." ''\[e had so much literature in "'isconsin (Bremer's borne state), I'd be surprised it' ·he didn't have some." ~lankievoicz said. "l haven't beard Red Radio Reports Waves of Planes Bombing Hanoi SAIGON (UPI) -Hanoi Radio reported thet "waves of American planes" today struck Hanoi, the port of Thanh lloa and the rail and road center of Bae Giang barely 50 miles from the border of China. The broadcest which claimed fi\'e Americ an planes were shot down follow· ed reports by military spokesmen in Saigon that U.S. Air Force jets knocked out lix bridges around North Vietnam's southernmost port city or Dong Hoi in earlier attacks and turned the .area into. an inferno of exploding supplies and am- munition. Meanwhile American naval strength off Vielnaln increased steadily and a U.s. Navy spokesman said planes from the carrier USS Saratoga , l\'hich arrived recently, carried ()Ut their first strikes to- day. The planes hit Communist positions near beleaguered An Loe, 60 miles north cf Saigon, and in the Mekong Delta. The carrier USS Ticonderoga sailed Wednesday from San Diego for Yankee Station off the Vietnamese coast but the carrler USS Constellation was pulled off the line today to give the 4,000 (o 5,000 crewmen their first break In . 41 days. This left four attack carriers in opera· hon. The Coral Sea v:ent on rest leave last \\'eek. 'Bakers' Strike Ericls-Day-oU.l Bread Monda y s Some Orange Coasf hriusewives doing the grocery shopping on Monday will be ~uying f ay-old bread from now on after settlement Wednesday of a 24-hour strike by 1,000 Southern California bakers. Bakers and Confectionary Workers Union Local 37 in U:>s Angeles ended the walkout after Interstate Bakeries agreed to give the employes both Saturday and Sunday off. Pre\'lousiy, bakers were given Sunda,Y and Tuesday off so that bread and pastries could be delivered fresh lo superma rk ets. Interstate Bakeries makes products sold under Dolly 1'1adison, Weber, Four·S and Blue Seal labels. an)1hing other than that. "Obviously tbe man y,•bo .shot WaUact is a disturbc<l fellow an.d when you 're dealing ~·itb a di!tutbed personality, anything is possible." Mank iewicz added, 1·sut the. evidence, I must 1ay, seems rather thin.·• Also among items f0W1 d in the car was a letter 10 Breiner froni Rep . llenry Reuss 1D-\Vis.). 6,. spokesman in the congressman 's of- fi ce Sa id Brenter filled out ooe of some 14.000 questionnaires sent by Re~ss to ~pie in his di.strict. The Jetter 1n the car, dated 1.lay ~ apparently was the congressman's form letter aclmowledg~ me.nt that he had received the reply. f't'om Page 1 SEX FILMS . • • said to him but can not now recall what he said et the lime to the members of the press." A stormy. day-long hearing had threatened to become stormi er when Los An geles Times reporter llobert Gettemy refused to ans1o1·er the questions of Los A n~eles attorney F. Filmore Jaffe v.·i th:iut the presence of his lawyer. Both sides agreed dur ing the lunch rece~ lo accept the statements at· tribuled to Chief Scott by .Gettemy and not use the ve teran journalist as a \\'itness. Gettemy pointed out before he went on the stand that he had been assured by Jaffe that he would not be called as a "'itness. Jaffe denied the action which brought the comment from Judge Corfman that Getterny statement was '·inaccurate and unfounded." But Jaffe had ea rlier advi sed a DAU. Y PILOT reported that he had "no inten. !ion" of railing any newspaper reporter lo the Y:itness stand for the Loar hear~g. · District Attorney Cecil Hicks, cleared of contempt charges in the same hear· ing, commented after Judge Corfman's ruling th at his office \Viii 'appeal the.con- tem'pl decision on Chief Scott in con· junction with the earlier appeal on the tria l verdict. The Fourth District CoUrt of Appeals has scheduled the hearing for June&. "Judge Corfman was wrong," Hicks said. "Beyond that I ha,ve no comment at this time." Scott said he will continue to bold the movie1 and plotogra phs he still regards as pornographic pending the result of the appeal. ''We'll look at the issue again then,'' he said. "t:ntil then they stay with me locked av.·ay in our vaults." ' H.J.GAR~FJT fURNfJURE PROFESSIONAL Open Mon, 2211 HARBOR BLVD. INTERIOR DESIGNERS Thurs. & fti, Eves, COSTA MESf, CALIF. l!I!!!!!!!! ~ G.E.l':c. iiiiii tQD .......... c..,. A46·0275 ' • . ' • DAILY' .. ILOT Sl1!1 Pll1l1 ENGL ISH AS A SECOND LANGUAGE AT IRVINE ELEMENTARY SC HOOL, EAST IRVINE Giibert Mir•nda, M1n u.I Lopez and Mlrina Ramirel Work With Aide Carmen Peoples Mexican Pupils Get Help Erig lish Taug ht as Sec ond La1igziage at lrvirie Sc lio ol By CANDACE PEARSON Of Hit 0111., Pllef Stiff "Ninos, vamos a saludar la bandera. "Vamo.s a leer. "Si quiere comer almuerzo, tiene que pagar ahora." -If lhe school teacher began speaking these phrases in class, would most children~ raised in English-speaking homes understand? Probably not and they would suffer as a result, not knowing she said : "Children 1"e're going to salute the flag," "Let's read," and "U you want to eat lunch, you have to pay now." learning that the children expcrienc~ J\.1any of the children's parents work on the Irvine Ranch or other farms and follow the crops seasonally. But h-trs. Rimpau hopes that by learn- ing to perform in an English classroom, the child won't be afraid to go to school any\vhere . While in class, groups of children work with 1puppets play alphabet bingo. writ e vowel sounds on the blackboard an.cl use the Hoffman mach'ine. which show s a story while a record tells the story first in Spanish, then in English. They aiso use the Launguage Master "'hich is a machine that "reads" a word for the child and then asks him to say it. \Vhen the child says the word, he then hears back his O'A'll tape recorded voice. Mrs .. Rimpau and her aides have ex- tended the program to the parental level. Because it is funded by the federal government, a parent 's advisory council is r.equired. But now parents also feel more at ease coming to the school, Parent-Teacher Association meet_ings or callb1$' bec ause bilingual sec retaries or aides ca n translate. But Mrs. Rimpau has found more and n1ore since the Second Language pro- gram began that children who at first spoke almost no English are now proudly doing the interpretation for their parents. But those same phrases in the English translations are just as foreign to many children, whose families speak moatly .Spanish, if not more so. Those children number five percent of the school population at Irvine Elemen· tary School in East Irvine, where reading teacher Jessie Rimpau heads an "English as a Second Language" program. Highway Patrol Seeking Thirty.five children are now enrolled in the hal£·hour·a-day reading program and return daily for another hatf-hour in bi· lingual math. Raises-With Petitions Before the program began lhree years ago, nlany of the children were falling behind in school. Many were too shy to tuse what little English they knew; some didn't know any. "'nle objective Ls to bring the child 's ' language up '° he can function well in the ' classroom," Mrs. Rimpau said. 1 "We attempt to maintain their Spanish : language and reading. I use their skills : there to show differences In the two : tangUages," she added , admitting that ;, she often relies on bilingual aides to do : translating. t Migration affects the continuity or ' Schools Protes t i Annex to Irvine Tru stees of .the Laguna Beach Unified ·Schoo l District agreed this week to send ia lett er lo the Local Agency Fonnation /~mmission in protest of the city of \.Irvine's proposed annexation of 9,623 :.cres of Jand -Including a sizeable por· \.tion of Laguna Canyon. ' uwe don't want to become a major ad· (vocate opposing the annexation, but I do lthinJt we should go on record against it," '.Superintendent William Ullom t o I d :trustees, who voted unanimously to send ·,a Jetter to the LAFC. · f Ullom told the board that the San Joa- ,quin Elementary School District, the city . or Laguna Beach and the Irvine Company jWill also be fighting the Irvine plan to in· 'COrporate the land adjacent to Sycamore ~ills extending on either side of Laguna Canyon Road to the san Diego_ Freeway. The next time you are stopped by a California Highway Patrolman this elec· tion year, ask him about his wage peti- tion. It couldn't hurt. Along with property lax payers. con· servationists and death penalty ad· vocates, the CHP is collecting petition signatures in an attempt to change the law without waiting for legislative action. According to Santa Ana Officer Harry Gillespie, the CHP can count on legislative action for a pay raise -the lawmakers voted one in 1971 -but have had a difrlcult time convialcing Gov. Reagan to grant the raise. He vetoed the 1971 pay hike. The entire patrol agency is supported by·the l\fotor Vehicle license registration fund, he notes, and the fund is nolv bulged with an $87 million reserve. The CHP hopes to gather 540,000 petition signatures to place on the November ballot a measure that would authorize a pay raise for the agency. which he says would cost about $17 million . Gillespie, a college graduate who rides a motorcycle for a living, explains that th e CHP salary range for officers is riow $834 to $965. He admits that this is a liv- ing wage, but says that It is not com· petitive with other police agencies and that the CHP is having difficulty at- tracting highly qualified men . In addition, CHP offers no unifonn allowance, no educational incent ive allowance and no longevity benefits. Many police departments offer these fringe benefit!. ''Anyone who is going to be a police of- ficer and get his head blown oU is going to do it for as much money as he can ," Gillespie says candidly. On the average, says Gillespie, CHP of· flcers make about $200 less a month than :Summer Dancing Session s I - :Offered in Laguna Beach A summer of dance is on the schedule 'of the Laguna Beach Department of Recreation, Ballet from beginning through in- termedJate for chHdren and adult! will be orfered as will creative and jazz dance at the Laguna Beach High School. The Instructor i. JUI Sweet, UC Irvin• dance instructor . She la: proficient In ballet modem and Ja.zz dance. Reciu lred advance registration for classes is June 3 from 9 a.m. at depart- ment headquarters, 175 N. Co a• t Highway, for: -Be&fnnllll Balld, Children. For children from slJ:: to 121h yean of age, tbia cla11 wUI start June 20. Two clules wtll be held to cope with the 111ually larl' enrollment.. One class meets from 12:SO p,m, and the otber from l:iO p.m. on Tuetdays and Tlmrtda)'I. A fee of 16 Is , clwled for 10 leJ90!\I. -blmnodlal< Ballet, Children, Thl! clall will start June Ill and will be &fven 00 Tuesday• and Thursdays at 1:30 p.m. • .......i .-loo II 1ebod11led for lal<r In the summer. A fee of 16 IJ charged for JO lessons. -Be&fnnlng Ballet, Adults and Young Adul!J. Thl! class will follow the tech- nlqu .. of clualcal ballet. It begins June 21 and 19111 be held on Wodnetday at I p,m. Fee is '8 for 10 !wons. --0-eadve Dance, small children. For chlldren five to eight yean of age, this clua wlll be offered in double ...,ions, one at 10:30 a,m, and the other at II :30 a.m. on Monday• and Wednesdays atartina Juno 19. A fee of IS is charged for 10 leuoruJ. Allolber cla" tJ scheduled . for Aug. 14. --Ian V.-, YOUllfl AduJIJ, BeglMing June 19, tbia claa will be btld on Mood•)'I at I p.m, with a f .. of 13 for 10 1 ... ons. Work will be done In various dance fornu lncltldlng Alro-Olban, Dbcotheque, and Rock , -Womtn'I Dance aad EI e r c I s e Clu!es wtll he held on Mooda)'I begin· nlng June 19, F .. 1. 18 for 101 ....... The p!Jss b dealiJ>ed to tone up the body !or health and appurance. ttleir counterparts working for city and county police agencies. If the voters were to approve a pay raise, Gillespie says the Stale Personnel Board would establ ish the average monthly pay of 10 large police departments and then raise CHP officers' pay to ~onform lo that averag('. "\Ve just want to be average," Gillespie says. "That is all we arc ask· ing ." · Gill espie add s that if the pay hike measure is approved by the voters, it would give ofricers about $200 additional pay eac h month. He said the pay hike, because it does not come fr om the state general fund but from a special fund, would not cost the taxpayers any additional money. He says G<>v. Reagan vetoed a 14 percent pay hike for the CHP in 1971 because he dld not feel the officers should get a raise when other slate employes were being denied increases in pay. Street Vendors Would Escape Popcor n Taxes SACRAME NTO (AP) -A store or street vendor could sell hot nuts or pop- corn without tacking on a state sa les tax under a measure passed by the Assembly Ways and Means Committee . The bill's sponsor, Assemblyman John Cuimby, a Rialto Democrat, said Wednesday the law ... prcsently exempts cold nuts from a sales tax, and this is an unfair situation. "Popcorn got in to the bill bcca11Se the . popcorn people wanted to piggyback on the hot nuts," Quimby told the com· mittee, whic h broke into laughter. Under the bill , the sale s tax would still appl y to hot nuts and popcorn sold. at places that charge admission - such as theaters, carnivals and ballparks. The Finance Department opposes the bill on the grounds it would cost the state about $150,000 in los t revenue each year. The committee's 19-0 vote sent the bill lo the Assembly floor . Senior Citizen Talk Set in Laguna Beach Social security. welfare and other forms or pulic assistance for the senior citizen will be the subject of a Pflncl discUMlon at 8 p.m. Monday in Democratic Campaign lleadquarters, liiSQ S. Coast lllghwa), Laguna lle•Ch, Partici pating tn the panel. titled "Public Asalstan<e" -Who Benell!J ?" will be Wallace Ford, district manager, Social Security Adminlatratlon: Mrt. Gwen Mathew, Laguna Be.ach resident ; Dollald Tanney, program assistant, Orange County Welfare Department; and R<>bert Van Marie. South Colst Regional Service Center. Orange County Department of Mental llealtll. The Jll'Oll'&m II open to tile publlc, s DAILY PILO. !j ay sa e • • r1 ' women's cool, easy-care sleepwear.,--<.: Now 20%off. Long and waltz-length sleepgowns. s leep shirt and bikini sets. All in crisp Kadel" polyester/ cotton blends. Choose from lots of charming pastel shades. Gowns, ,, sizes S, M, L, XL, XXL. Sleep shirts, sizes P, S, M, L, 20% off our entire llne of infants' furniture. Now 20%off. Double drop side cribs and dressers. Made of selected hardwoods in rich finishes; many in wipe-clean enamels. Mediterranean, Early American just two of the many styles to choose from. Finest quality crib mattresses on sale, too. Save 15% on all boys' underwear. Buy a bundle, save a bundle. Boys' T~sh lrts, V·necks, briefs and boxer shorts. They're polyester/cotton or 100°/o cotton. So lt, abso rbent and machine washable. ' JC Penney • ' The values are here every day. ' ' ' • / Shop ·sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the following 1tore1: Newport Beaoh, F .. i.lon ld.nd -Huntington Buch, Huntington C1nftll! .J • · .Joit . Q Coasting •• The DA Finds A Loophole UPCOAST, DOWNCO~T: It develops that our good Orange County District At• itomey Cecil Hicks eluded conviction ".tilmselr JU!t yesterday on charge• of con- tempt of court. All of this occurred because or a hassle over aUegedly too $er.y films. The whole case began over a year ago When Westminster Police Chief Walter Scott and his forces raided a warehouse Jn their fair municipality wherein reposed nearly half a million dollars worth of films, photos and other goodies. The chief confiscated all this material under allegl'tlons that It was o b s c e n e, pornographic, bad, dirty and all that. It next developed that a Huntington Beach couple, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Loar, were arrested as alleged owners of the film. They were charged with con- 1piracy to distribute obscene materials. THUS DID DA Hicks enter the case in order to prosecute the alleged dirty stuff. Everything followed the script nicely un- til the jury came in. The jury found the L<lar1 Innocent or all charges. Since the Loara were cleared, the judge or ·· ered DA»JlJcks and Chief scott to .give th:? films back to them. They rerused w.' ·· e at the 11ame time preparing to a~ pc the whole case. 'J :1e refusal to return the stuff under e< ·t order caused the judge to hail both C r Scott and DA Hicks before his b· h on charges of contempt of court. V< ·~rday, Superior Judge Robert Cc.1man found Chief Scott guilty of coo- l ' t. DA Hieb got off the 6ook because It • :!Veloped that he was in\properly 1e_. L-d with the contempt papers. , .. ·• .L, YOU 'VE heard in the past of pr ·:utors who complain that some bad g1 beat the rap because his lawyer fc j a loophole or techn1cality in the Jaw. •:ou suspect that no such complaint wil1 _ co. 2 from the DA's Offlce this time ar ·ind . ?-.~ :anwhile, Chier Scott is left alone to face the music. You can fully anticipate that he will appeal the verdict. Maybe he'll get DA Hicks to take his case. Indeed, the life of law enforcement peo- ple Is fraught with dUflculties in the pursuit of keeping Orange County pure and clean. * FREEWAY FOLLIES DEM'. Another hearlng is under way today in the ' unlikely spot of Redding in an effort to determine ·what to do with some of our Orange Coast freeways. You see, the state ha.s lhi.a Newport Freeway running down through Costa Mesa and it was sup.- posed to end with an interchange at Pacific Coast Freeway in Newport Beach. But there isn't any Pacific Coast Freeway in Newport Beach. So now the California Highway O>m- mission is searching for a new plsce to end the Newport Freeway -maybe at Coast Highway. Newpcrt has dispatched its new City M:inager Robert L. Wynn to Redding to explain Newport's freeway position to the hichway people. Several Newport city managers have tried this before. All you can say is good luck, Bob. Try tossing your hat through the door first before you go in. * mrNGS YOU r..nss 1r you don't read the classified ads. like the changing life style for this poor fellow who placed the following plea : ~ "Got married, must sell -)XIOI table, $150; drum set , $50." And that's the way It goes. INSURANCE PROBER RICHARD ANDREWS DISPLAYS ANTIQUES Informer Turned Over Objects Stolen From LA. Aluminum M1gnate Art Objects Recovered In Cloak, Dagger Caper MTAMI (UPI) -Nearly $1 million worth of antique Russian silver and bronze art objects have been recovered in Miami, 18 month.s after they were stolen from the home of al) elderly millionaire In Los Angeles. · An insurance investigator recovered the objects by paying a $30,000 fee to an unknown 1'finder." Richard E. Andrews, the insurance in- vestigator, showed off the recovered ob- jects Wednesday, after a clandestine rendezvous with the mysterious finder, who used the code name "Sliver Fish." A sculpted fish of silver with scales of inlaid mother of pearl was the most striking of the objects stolen in November, 1970, from Leo Harvey, 86, the president of Harvey Aluminum. UPI Ttlfffttte Fraud Suspect Miami authorities have identi- fied a man charged \vith bilk· ing 600 portJy housewives in a \Veight reduction program as the brother of Arthur Herman Bremer, who is accused of shooting Alabama Gov. George \Vallace . Officers said William Allen Bremer, 32, is free on bail in Arkansas, pending ex- tradition hearings to Florida. Other objects recovered were an ornate silver jewelry chest about three feet long, a silver soup tureen of about the same size, a two-gallon silver gravy boat and two bnfrize statuet'tes. To Andrews' surprise, the batch also Included an item that was not part of the loot from the burglary at Harvey's home. It is a .gilded silver samovar -a huge Russian tea-pot. "We don 't know where the samovar came from ," Andrews said, "but we're assuming it's stolen. The FBI shouldn't have too much trouble tracing it." Andrews said he was first contacted about the missing objects last December. All of his dealings with the man who returned the loot were conducted by phone. "The pieces were delivered to my ear Tuesday evening in the parking lot of a North Miami shopping center," Andrews said. "He called me, told me to park the car and take a five-minute walk. When 1 returned, the stuff was in carboard boxes In the !root seat and tnmk." lrvings, Friend Sue for $91,000 Taken hy IRS NEW YORK (AP) -Author Clifford Irving, his wife Edith and his researcher, Richard Suskind -principals in the Howard Hughes autobiography hoax - have filed suit in U.S. District Court demanding more than $91 ,IXK> which they said was taken as ''jeopardy assessments" by the Int ernal Revenue Service. The IRS applied tax liens against the lrvings and Suskind last February, more than a month before they pleaded guilty to constructing a hoax in which McGraw. Hill Inc. paid out $750,000 for a bogus autobiography of Hughes, the billionaire industrialist. Each could receive 13 years in prison aod $ll,OOO fines. The three asked the court to dissolve the assessments on grounds that the government had failed to take "certain technical slep.! required by Jaw" 1n col- lecting the money against 1971 income taxes. Balmy Weather Hits U.S. Thunderslwwers Spot Parts of Northwest, Plains clntt1 .,... .. TIM' wettMr lltl'Y;c• uol~ for t 1'11111 « '2 111 LM AMlln "'*"' followl111 •11 -llltl'lt low af .51. v.s. s ... _,.. Ir 114a AISOll.t.TaD NaU "•"' llrla •rid btll'fty ..,,..."",.. ,........, '1lmt of tht Miion frlldr/', 'llOiti'I tlleM b;nipt14'1\s: -TN ,..ll;a111 Md Not11Mott1 _. cool, wltl'I fM'IPlf"llvra "' "" IOa. -Thi ~I, .........,,. Pi.1111o ""' Ol.tt'l!.1 .,,. -. Eut•11 st•tts ...... '"'*""" ... ~ ........ or "'-•••••· °" ~._,,..aft Ind;.,~­IMll:td ftldw'*ld, v .. T....,.twa ..._. 4"ift rtMM ff'-21 " 111.....,..,., o.. .. 11 a .r -·-S····· Moo-. TWu Mo1!tr """'"' "*'· Ut11t "'"Miff wi. ••• "'°t;' •nd _....,.. ~ --. •nt Wflltrlr 1 to 11 kl'IOlt 111 •"--• .... , ..... f:rld.y. '*"' .... , 1L Cohl• , ................ ....,.. 11 ..... 1111 .............. ,...fJWW w .. 1'. w.w ..... """ '1, <:-.tal W'ectller • Tinll•SM 't .... • .l!l)~ J.I. ..... ... l';tt ""'" J.• ,.,,,. """' ........ .-.... --... _ -- ,.to.\., J::• .. ""' 4J •:SJ ...... u J:tt ...... .., i.:a., .... u •:a ..... "" ,:II ...... lhftl.1' .... Depart. S.ttWUfl. Itinerary Bared. For Nixon · Trip By HELEN THOMAS WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon's mission to Moscow next w'eei: will .. be bighli&hted by free-swinging, lengthy talks with Kremlin Jeade~ a bit of ... s:ightseelng asxt two vodka-toasting state banquet.. .. Nixon ·will be the first American chief executive to vWt the Soviet Union since Franklin D. Roosevelt went to Yalta in 1945 to meet with Joseph Sta1in and Brit~h Prime 1.-1.inister W i n s t on O:Jurcb..111. Nixon, hoping to open a new er_a of negotiations rather than confrontations, will meet with the Soviet leaders at a time'wheo U.S.-Russian relations are at a critical point in Vietnam, but easing in Europe. The White House WedneSday unveiled a sketchy itinerary of Nixon's tw<rweek trip to Austria, the Soviet Union , Iran and Poland. Presidential Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said the round trip, starting Saturday morning, _will . cover 16,585 air miles with a total flying hme of 34 hours and 25 minutes. After a ceremonial departure from Andrews Air Force Base at 6:15 a.m. PDT, the President and Mrs. Nit.on will take off aboard the "Spirit of '76" for Salzburg, Austria, where they will spend the weekend at Schloss Klessheim, a Salzburg palace. They will be fonnally welcomed and entertained in the famous Austrian city by Chancellor Bruno Kreisky and other Austrian officials. Monday morning, the Nixons will fly to Moscow for a ceremonial welcome by the Soviet ruling trio -Communist Party Chairman Leonid I. Brezhnev, Premier Alexei N. Kosygin and President Nikolai V. Podgorny. They will drive to the Kremlin Palace where the Soviet leaders and their wives will join them for tea. The first evening of their arrival the Nii:ons will be honored at a state banquet hosted by the Presidium of the Soviet Union. In the ensuing four days Nixon, with his closest advisers including Secretary of State William P. Rogers and security af- fairs expert Henry A: Kissinger, will set- tle down to tough bargaining with the Russian leaders behind the Kremlin walls. Vietnam , arms limitation. trade and the Middle East were expected to be the key points of discussion. ·0n Saturday, May ZT, the Nii:ons will make a quick side trip to Leningrad to visit one of the czarist palace& and other historic showplaces before returning to Moscow. Sunday was described as a "personal day" for the President but it was hl,ghly likely be would resmne his discussion with Russian leaders before departing the following day for Kiev. Wj<k< Stop our ships, would you NiXDn. Take That and Thatf Cast Barred At Funeral For Blocker From Wire Services DEKALB, Tex. -Four days after he died in California of complications follow- ing gall bladder s.urgery, Dan Blocker was buried in his native DeKalb. The services Wednesday were almost secret, in sharp contrast to the fanfare of the Hollywood that made him famous. As the family requested, no studio of· ficiab or members of the cast in the popular television show Bonanza attended the funeral in Blocker's Northeast Texas home town, 11 miles from the Oklahoma border. Blocker played the part of Hoss Cartwright in the show. The ceremony, conducted two hours ahead of schedule, was attended only by about 20 members of the immediate fami- ly. At the announced burial time. some of the 2,000 townspeople trickled to the Woodmen Cemetery on the edge of town. but Blocker bad already been laid to rest beneath the red East Te:a:as dirt. The service lasted four minutes. Those attending included Blocker's widow, bis four children, his mother, his close· friends and other relatives and the Rev. Arthur Fray of the First Baptist Cburc:b .. Vegas Showdown 8 Play for Poker Title, $80,000 LAS VEGAS (AP) -Adrian "Te.xas Dolly" Doyle had two aces in the hole. He confidently .shoved his last remaining chips, worth $7,500, into the pol Another Texan was even more con- fident. With only one card left to be dealt, John M..., of Odessa bad three dueces. He matched the bet and $25,@ stood in lhe pot. Although the odds were 28 to 1 against it, the dealer turned over the final card. It was an ace. Doyle, who declined to disclose his hometown, raked io the $25,000. The hand was on1y one of hundreds being dealt to eight profe11ional gamblers in the so-called World Series of Poker here. Sometime in the next few days. one of the eight will break the other seven and collect $80,000. Each paid $10,000 to join the annual game at Binion 's Horseshoe Casino. They sat at a kidney-shaped poker table. In front or each stood piles: of black chips, each valued at $100. The game is called "Hold-em'' a van. tion of seven card stud. Each player is dealt two cards, face down. Five upe cards are dealt in the center or the ta61e, face up. The winner is the gambler who produces the best five-card poker hand. As each player I-hi> $10,000 stake, he drops out. Eventually, only two players wiJJ remain, with $80,000 on the table. They'll play. until ooly one bas all the money. "This Is a different kind of poker," me observor noted. "But these men know how to play il They don1 cet tnd and they can play IOI' three days without get.- ting absent-minded or groga. They've been playing tlJ their lives." The players besides Doyle ond - are 04Amarillo Slim'' Pruton: "Jolly" Rog..-Fnnsmith of Kansas CllJ; Jock DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dellwry of the OlllJ' PMot h ,..,.,, .... ...,.,.rtdty: " ""' • Mt i.w ,.. ,...... br t :a '-""" un ..., ,_.. °"'" 1111111 .. .......,., .. ..... c.111 "" -..... 1:• ""'" s.--..111111~ .. ,.. ........ ,.. CllllPr ., ' ...... a.iw.,, w • M1'. ltNllp, Ult W • C.,. ""' ltil .......,_ • ,... c.a. .,. ...... .., .. It .... T•- Strauss of Houston; "Pug" Pearson of Las Vegas: Addington C?andall of San Antonio and Jim Cassella of Lal Vegas. They leave the table only for minutes al a lime to stretch their legs or to go to the restroom. There are no dinner breaks. Bar girls deliver coffee, orange juice and mil.kahakes. "Only rarely will one drink any liquor. They wouldn't take a chance of making any mistakes because of ~." a casino official said. . It'• Evil Kalevell Two Kil1£d,. 20 Injured In Ireland BELFAST. Northern Ir~land (UPI) - A soldier and a civilian were killed af)d 2Q persons were wounded Wednesday in .• wave of shooting and bombing attacks m Northern Ireland. • · The soldier died when a sniper sprayed a group of British army engineers wl~ machine gun fire as they stackeo sandbags outside a police station tn Crossmaglen, 44 miles southwest of Belfast near the Irish Republic border~ Another soldier was wounded in the at-c tack launched from a speeding auto. 'Ille civilian, Bernard Moane, 46, I Roman Catholic father or six, was shot in the head and his body dumped in front of a war memorial in the seaside resort. of Carrickfergus, 12 miles nortbea,,t of Belfast. * * * WORCESTER. Mass. (AP) -Two masked men shot a guard and walked out of the Worcester Art Museum with four paintings worth more than $1 million. Museum Director Richard S. TeitJ; Identified the works taken \Vednesday as ''The Brooding Woman'' and "Head o( Woman" by Paul Gauguin, a 19th century ' French artist; "Mother and Child'' by: Pablo Picassa and R'embrandt's "St. Bartholomew," painted in 1632. Teitz said all were owned by the museum and the Rembrandt was the most valuable of the four. * * -ti CAIRO (AP) -Egypt has ordered the U.S. mission in Calro and the Egyptian staff in Washington cut in half as a new expression o{ anger at American support for Israel. Each mission presently has 20 members. The semi-official newspaper Al Abram said President Anwar Sadat ordered ·the cuts to protest the U.S. policy ot. : :consolidating the continued Jsfae1i 1g4 gressfon through the occupation of Arab territories." , American diplomats in Cairo confirmed the cuts had been ordered. The State Department said it was not informed of the reasons for the Egyptian action, but "we will, of course, comply." * * * BANGKOK (UPI) -Vice President Spiro T. Agnew said today his Southeast Asian tour convinced him South Viet- namese forces "will be able to withstand the present military pressures.'' ''The prospects look good," Agnew said as he boarded his special presidential jet for the flight to the United States. His departure ended a two-day visit to Thailand during which he made a thtte- hour flying trip in Saigon to confer with South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu and U.S. officials. * * * LONDON (AP) -The free market price of gold hit a new peak of $58.00 ta $58. 75 an ounce on the key Zurich market today. but elsewhere in Europe the gold rush faltered. The Zurich price was a big jump from Wednesday's closing price of $57.00 to $58.20. Jn other European markets, the situ• tion remained fluid after two days ot spectacular rises. in Frankfurt, the free ~rket price opened onJy slightly higher at $58.00 to $58.50 an ounce. compared·to $57.80 to $$8.20 on Wednesday. No Recommendation NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -South Cen· tral Bell reports a smalJ girl called an operator and asked for "the number of the courthouse." The operator asked which one. "Which ones best?" the girl replied. ..,_ Mllt a..... c..nty "'"' ........ ..... Htwft1aa1 t•A41Wl l'9dl "" w.ftl'l•••= ~ ...... -... ·-·· --a... c ......... c11111w 9-d1. ._,,._c,111""'er........._ ....a.-i.t.-.• ........... Darede.U motorcycle Jumper Evel Knie•el (on ladder) dJecb out lhf; fiG.foot bi&h Etunal Flame In lrOnl of tlle Lu Vegas HD1on. .Knievel IIopes to hurdle lhe flame on hi& cycle JOlneUme w. '·-doll the uprmloa) fall. ...... • • - ·. • • LA Bandit Sliot Self LOS ANGELl!'.S (API - The iUnman invol vtd ia an attempted robbery of 1 Bank ot America branch here died or a self-inflicted gunshot wound not a policeman's bullet is flrat reported, officers 1ay. lnvest11ating QI.ficers said Wedntsday Lou i 1 Jtsus Eiicin111. 4fl, ot Lo3 Angeles, died or a stlf-in- filcted bullet ~'ound ln the he1d. At first , police had lhought that a bullet fired by a motorcycle officer who surprised the robber :!urine the attempt Tues- day cl1imed Encina's life. Dismissal In Davis Case Eyed SAN JOSE !UPI)· -The dtfenst needed a ruling today on motions t~ dismiss charges against black militant Angela Da\'iS before be1inning its defense of the 1vowtd Com- munist who is accused of murder, kidnaping and con· • . 1h•"d11, Mq< 11, lt72 No-fault Authors Reagan Tax Pinn Hit by Democrat.s By DOUG WILLIS SACRA~tENTO tAP) Meet With.Reagan Gov. Ronald Reflgan has un\•eiled his long-ay,•alted tax re!orm plAn, but Democrats who control the legislature s;1y the proposed St.2 billion tax SACRAMENTO (APl -Republican, alao said they shif~ is 1 "phony'•. propo~i:d 1'htrt's I fairly rood cl'lanpe: dl~nJ. think they were facing that ~eally gives big business thit a compromise no-fault tlly nil.jar 1tumbllna: block in 1 tax break. auto inaurance bill will be the lt'IY of pasaagt of a no-The IJen1ocra ls. \rd by en1cttd by the legislature t}U., faUlt bill. ~ Assembly Speaker Bob Mor- year, accordina: to thrtt: no-All the Jealslators 1nd rtltl. said they were "disap· fault bill Authors who met Re•l'•n agreed, accord.ins to Qt1ake Bo11d pointed'' "''ilh the Republican ~O\'trnor's tax proposal and privately with Gov. Re111n. Fenton, that 1l rites did 10 up that they ·wouJd go ahead with Assembly Democratic ma· undtr a no-fault 1)'1tem -as B•d Ok d plans to force a showdown jority leader Jack Fenton, one IOme critics have threatened I a ye Ass,mbly vole on their rival or the three mteUng with the -the Je&J.alature would have $1.4 billion tax bill . Republican chief execullvt to act quickly to change the SACRAPt!ENTO IAP) Both proposals would raise l1w. ~1easures to facilitate the the sales tax from five to six Wednead1y, uid if I com-'"Ille te1i111tor1 . , . the raising of bonds lo r'placc-cents and hik' the bank and promise bill were formulated, covernor ... everybody'd be corporations tax by 1.4 per- il would probably be pa•aedlt out of he.re if we di~n't," Fen-earthquake-<langerous schools cent. Both \vould pump mQst and ·'"'...i by Reill ton uld in an unpromptu has survived the California of !he new money inio proir 116"_, n. new1 conferenct. Senate. but just barely. rrtr ta:it relief. but ·tht ~e Montebel1l,o Democrat Fenton, an e 1 g ht · ye a r They gol the minimum re-similarity ends there. 1a1d Reagan pointed out veteran of the leglalature, is Reagan crili<'ized Moretti's S•me things he thou&ht we th tho of the on I y quired. t \Vo· third s vote 1 1 r . . l 1 v e au r ax pan or 1ncreas1ng s a e should be looking at. They Aaiembly no.fault bill this Wednesday before moving to income taxes a g 81 n. He were merely su11e1tlons,,. • • year. Bel!lidts being authors of the Assembly, If the y draw ''laimed the pl11n he unveiled We aren't that far apart. no-fault bills, Sen. Song is another two-thirds approva l \Vedncsd11.v not only would If a JlO.fault propoul were chalnnan of Senate Judiciary there, the voters wiU have 1 hold the line on incom' taxes. enacted, lawsuits below a ce~ Commltttt and Sen. Bradley but might even allow a cut in -·'d h Inn f s chance to decide for ttln monetary level ~Vil.I tie is c a In o en at ~ income lax rates ne:itt year. said he expects "'ill pass Congres!I this year and be s1~ned by,Pres.ldent Nixon . t\lorrttl (0-Van Nu y s l, charltcterized J{ea~an 's plan as a ''dishonest" ploy 10 htlp business. 1101 hon1tO\vners . The counterchargrs; were shnllar lo Miii's the past thret years. in \\1hich 1najor property tax rt'lirf plans have died each tin1e ()II partisan vote_, de.spilt broad lllgrrrn1rnt on major,polnts. Reagan said his plan will "provide substantial. la.stin~ and guaranl('ed prn1>erty lax relief in the 'e11rs 11.head \l"hllc . at lhr salnr timr . in · suring equal tdu cat1onat op· portunity for f'\'Cry child at- tt'nd int:; Calitnrnia's pub Ii(' schools." He also sAi<l his plAn would rloublr thf' state's share of local school eosts in poorrr districts. But it 1\•ould cut off all locnl Sl'hOOI aid to California 's 11• e ti Ith l ts l dislricts -the lop rive l)('f· ctn! or ao who ha vt $90,000 or more of local asstssed value per child. •·11 simply d~s not do what ht !lays ii dots ." ~1ortltl said. Reog1n ,1,. COlll!l<ttd to $lllO million for bu1lne1 t . A&rk:ultur• and other ,....,,.. 1111 property woul4 opllt tile remaining $1)0 mlJlloD tn U-r rellef. ~ said. "By and h•rGe his package ---. _LE_G_AL_N-'<Yl'_f_CE __ _ does \'Cl'Y 11tt1 e for 1 __________ _ hon1 ..... 1vne.r• •nd does a -e•I lllCTITtfill IUIUl9Q \.V e• HAM• ITAtaMIUIT dtal ror busine~ in Calllornla. Tht i.11twl11• ..,_ 0 ..... "9111tt• That's oot reforrn. That's • ,,. l•YL01t Tl•CHJNO TA,11. ,...,., C'Onllnuation of whal'1 wrong M,,,..11,, w"'"'111e1••. c11...,.1, ,, .• I lt•ll"fl It-I T•r• ... ¥11,.•• v.•lth the system. ·ut s.s d. ..~ .. cft\111 v1t1a. ~11w..i. ""'" Pt·torelli SAid tht big dlf· Thl1 ~,,,..,, •1 w 1.._ """"""' .., • . lol1 Owftt •Mlll. fcren <'e bf:ol"'('tn h1~ plan end ••1111 •· Tevi.. ReAgAn's Is that 1 he Thi, 11•••-"' ni..i ""''h 'IN C111Mv • . • Cl•r• et Or111M c ... O\f'/' .,. Mtr I, 1'11. $!,Ol"Prnnr s bill would ([ll'f' thfo 11r ••v•rtr J. M• ...... ~ c-tt l~x rrll('f to all properfy lax· ci.,11.. " 1,_, pa.yer!I, with buslnt'!!i grlling ~1111t1ttot<11 °"',... c .. 11 D•llv .. u ... 70 percenl ()f !he tax breRk. M•r 11. 11. u. ,,.. J11M 1. 1m 1-..n "Pll("lrlt' Teltphonr 11r1s a $10 1nillion tax br,Rk in !hr i:overnor'! plan. ~11ne gl\'f'J them none. Southern Pacific gets a $.1.4 miWion break. :-itint gives them none." Ptlorelli ~aid . Kenneth llRll. Rf' a g tin's dr11u1.v finnncr director. 11aid ho1nrowners would gtt $482 rnitlinn of tax r'lief in the TAKE 'ffiE NEWS QUIZ We Dare You ••• Every Saturday COSTA MESA ART LEAGUE PRlllNTS ART SHOW prohibited and in!urance com-Insurance and Fl nan c i a I the mselves in November. The J:!OVt'rnor balanc,.5 his panla would pay the Ir lnslltuUons Committee. The measures are opposed proposal \l'ilh $100 million a , cu1tomer1' dama1e·1 On Wednesday, Bradley's by the State Department ()f year in anticipated sta 4':' ~ ,. NOW THRU SATURDAY regardles1 of who was at fautt 1_J"°~~mm~ll]tee;pa~s...r:~h~i•:no-~f~a:u1~1JG~e~ne~r~a~1 ~se~r~vi=c~··~~·n~d~t~h:eJb;u~d~~e~t~s~ur~p~luJ"~';P~lu~s~S2~40~-~~~~~~~~~~~0;0;afb~~~;O;A;S;f~~~l;D;~~~: __ in an lctident. measure 1nd 1ent it on to the California Real E s t a t e million a year from a federal Sens. A!Cred Song. 1 Senate floor. Assoc iation. revenue sharing propoi;al he tt1ontere.y Park Democrat, and Clark Bradley. a San J(li&t 1piracy. 11 Superior Court Judp S~na te 0 Ks Richard C. Arnason deniea the requesl.S for a mistrial, the defenze. ·w111 o~n its case. Speculation was high that tt1i11s Davis would be amon1 tht early witnesses. The motion for dismissal came Tuesday, one day after the prosecution rested ila case ()n the atrength of 95 witnesses and more than 200 exhibits presented in 2& trial day1. Arn1son canceled trial Jlro- ceeclings Wec1nead1y to ponder the: di!milaal motions. At- torney Leon Branton Jr .. said the prosecution ()n\y proved 1'11ss Divis WIS I "wtrm, articulate human being." who loved ''Soledad Br CJ the r '' George Jackson. AEC Halt Expensive To Utility SAN LUIS OBISPO IAP I - tr the Atomic Energy Com- mission order• a seven-month 1uspe111ion or construction of power lines from the Diablo Canyon nucl ear reactor, it will cost Pacific Gas It Electric $1.4 million, one of the uWlty's engineers aays. In addition, Rosa Woodward told a special AEC hearing board here Wednegd1y. it would cost $23.t million to tear down the transmission lints already erected and return the land involved to il.s original stale. 'Biggest' i Budget Plan SACRAMENTO fAP i -A $7.8 billion statt budt;tt -$201 million more than G o v . Reagan asked for-has posed the senate on 1 blp1rtlsan 31-2 vote with Republleans saying they'll hold their f1tt until a rmal vote. The rollcall Wedneod.oy on the biggest-ever ltate 1pen-- din1 plan sent the budiet bock to tht Asstmbly, which is tx- pected lo rtjtct lt and set into motion the Senate-MHmbly con re re n c e o:rmmittte mtchanism by which a final state budget is traditionally hammered out. The Ammbly appn>vod Its own f1 .t btlUon verllon· of I.ht bud1et aii: weeks ago. A key dlfftrtnce ls the Senate version includes a $21.1 million rider lo aboli!h tuition at the University of Callfomia. It also includes a $100 million hike in the atate'a •t.7 billion-a-year 1Upport budaet for local ~ls. T h e Republican governor pro~ a $45 million increase, while the Assembly · put 1 Slll million hike in its venlon. That's the biggest of about 50 dlffert.ncts between Senate and Aue.mbly veniona of tM budget th1t must be worked out by the conference com- mittee. Both houses muat t ventually agree on identical budgets. PETUNJA5' . ~ ,,,...,~S'f ~.f.95 • AlL 3 ' COLORS 61f' ..:"'-(QUARTS) "Tm-~ES~ CJJJ/55'? • ! Woodward and a n o t h e. r * PG&E employe, John W. The Senate-palled 1pendin& plan is SI billion more than estimated 1tate apendtna thls fiscal year, which ends June 30, The author of the budget bill, Sen. Randolph Collier (0. Yreka \, laid in a ptrfunctory presentation of the spending document. is "a soundly balanced budget." Page, led off testimon y Wednesday before a special AEC hearing board convened to determine if comtruction of the $600 mDlion Dlablo Canyon nuclear power pl1nt and the transmission lines 1hol.J.ld be gusptnded for tht nnt ttven month! while a broadened en- vironmental impact study is conducted by the AEC. The 1tudy ia t-rpected to be fin· 1· !!heel in December. Republican floor 1 e a d e r Fred Marler of Roddlna 11ld he ii wtthholdina commlllt on the budCet now bee au a e de bate prior to the c:onftrfnct committee is "to a irta.t n - tent, fruitlm. '' He aakl that did not ilgn1l support for the bud1et liter. • · Fal~ons Stolen Bird Thieves Fly the Coop MORRO BAY IUPll -A could be found In 1 paper llclc p1ir of ne<1glin1 pereartn<'. It tht foot of the rock. falcons val~ at $$,000 each They wm found unhann.t ~ .11 .. 1 k 1 ,..,.. and returned to thtlr-. on !ll't' 1 1c1 mar e Bird lovm thl'n bep 24- bdleved in the handt of 1 bird-hour watch on the ro:k,a but bootleuer toclly. i..t week the ftocfC!lnp ,..,.. The peregrine falcon J>OPUl•· tal<en qaln. lion In Cllllomta lotall U. In-This Ume, Court V 1 n cludlni the two mwrna blrda, Wlttand. a Uni•enlty of said Howard Martin, state Clllfomla studtnt and Ke\.tn FL•h ond Game W1nlen. M. Condon, 24. of Pleuint 11111 Tht tntlrt town of 1iforro were arrutfd on cbulea of Bay, Jncludlnl 110.foot ~orro climblnc the nick 1nol - ft«k wbue the l1l<0ns Met iplracy 10 llHI tht f1IC0111. i. \>Ulll. i. on offklaf bin! They w.,. to he amflned unctuory. Hundnd1 of 1vld today. bird wa1thu1 live In the Pollet lfeliavo a thin! """ .... Ide city., lol I WIY wtth the binll. tt Wll Uw HCODd time Martln .. w p I r 'l rs •• within a month the nldlllnp laloonl 11'1 -y b1M•ndld ba~ been taken, and outr111d by hlll1W!I and euy lo lttln cltlu111 hive 1 .. IUlpecll. for f1lconry -a -' lllahtl Earlltr thl! month the birds popularity wllh Calilonllano. d 111 p peored. pmumably Known a1'o 11 " d u c k tal<en by tomeont lni.ndirW to hlwa," the ptrtploo kleono lr1!n them for fll<Otvy. lot w 1bout Ille olu of """" tilt prwur• cl publlc pro\ell -luJI lfOWll. '1111 purloln-c.oulOd the 1bcluctor t o ., ponarlnol .,. ._ 11111 f~ pollce tllal tbt -,,..... NON VI SAILE -''THAT'S IT'' SNAIL & SLUG KILLER Non Polaonous To Hum1n1 or Peta SarM Color •1 Sol I s13s C... Maw 1111 su .. "' u.,lm PA·TIOSHOP FEAMllll: HOP.JOHAi. TROPITOlE. MEADOICRAfl AND mmlUllG FOi TOUI HG IEEIJS Visit our unu1uol and rare house plant deportment .. .Talk to our expert about growing your own Terror· iuma ••. S.e.our·Ornamentol Wrought Iron Pla nter Oioplay., ,Hove a Free cup of. co ffee ... En joy you r- 1111 while1hopping at Green Ha.en Gardens. . . PAX SUMMER SALE NEW -CONTROLS MOST WEEDS - FEEDS OICHONDRA kiNt 11'11111 ....,, .,.. .... intlud ... ~~·"" ~-"l'tlllrft. "'1rudG 11111 dcrMlln •It """'"' ........ , "'' •••tit '"' t1icltol'Ml11 ... ~llttdd""'t lrt" Gllll "~" lfiM!t .: ......... CONTAllSNOlfSl(TOlf $300 OFF SUPER PAX DICHONDRA WEED 'N FEED •PAX CRABGl\ASS AJl1l OlAl.IS COllntll. • PAX BERllUOl 1110 CRABGRASS 111.l· [R •PAX fUllGICIOl lNSlCT~IO[ f[l!TllZ· lR •PAX llWI! 1110 OICHONORI CRIBG RISS COllTROL • PAITOTll FO!tt.IWNI •PIX ICTTONJIElO 'N rEEO • $~ NOW - MYOPORUM Fostnt growlno shnib ill Sauthn Cofffor. ni o. Green all ytar ... 9rows well ~y octon. 1111.tUOYtl" LIQUID FERTILIZER SALE PENTREX ORTHO BIMD\11 SUPER TURF 2 for 1 2 for 1 . . '-"-. . . • • • • • • • 2 for 1 .-.. --: .. Gat f"' llllrJ loleelc1 ... fer ., ... • , .. 1 13 •• "WORLD OF PRIZES" CONTEST WIN: • A SWIMMIJll POOl IT llUI MA¥11 • A YACATIOM JOI TWO IN IUllOPI • A MINK STOLi • ACOIOI TY • lltHnl!I AU llPIMSI YACATIOU TOW •Al c ...... ••4 •It•., .... ' • • t • • • • • • • • I I . ' • • • • • • • • , • • ' • • • • , • • • ' i . . Coast Controls Controversy over the best way to 0 save" Califor· nia's coastline is shaping up as the beginning of a long, knock-down. drag-out fight over whether local govern· , ments are going to be strengthened and improved - or phased into relative impotence . Sharply differing actions in recent days by organ• iza tions on the Orange Coast undtrscore this funda· 1n ental conflict. The Orange County Coast Association, \Vith a mem· bershlp of both private ci tizens and public officials from Seal Beach to San Clemente and adjacent inland areas, adopted a reso lution strongly supporting the coastline control legislation authored by Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R-Newp.rt Beac)l ). Carpenter's bill, approved earlier this week by the Senate committee. provides for creation of a state coast· al resources board \vhich would determine state criteria for use and development of all coastal resources. Imp!~ tnentation and enforcement of the state standards would fall on the appropriate county and city agencies. This follows-the principle now functioning in most of our litate·local relationships -schools, courts, Jaw enforce- ment, welfare. taxing, roads and many more. A day later. the Orange Coast League of Women Voters, whose members come chiefly from Newport Beach. Costa Mesa, Laguna Beach, Irvine and Laguna l-lill s. endorsed the Sieroty·Grunsky bills. These bills c;all for establishment of a state commission and six regional commissions with absolute authority to pass on virtually all development within 1,000 yards (.57 mile) of the coast -and in some cases to several miles in· land. penter ~ill for its reliance on local government to apply state coastal control standards and charged that "local governments tend to favor land use that yields high tu revenue in the shortest time." · T!ie lack of confidence In local governmen~ ·~ the propo1al to cre•te a new , ponderous, very expen· sive and, we believe, ·unnecessary layer of bureaucracy between the coastal citizen and responsible, responsive .government is, In the opinion of the DAJLY PILOT, d;,;is- appointing and unwarranted. The fact Is that, of all layers of government, direct· ly responsive Jocal government really does pretty mu wbat Jl! citizens want ifone. It is a cop-out for any of us -· citizens or newspapers or voters' ]~agues or what· ~ ever -to now put down local government for what is essentially our own collective hindsight awareness of a whole variety of problems, including the environmental. The same arguments for regional commission government can be advanced for virtually every govern· mental activity now remaining in city or county control, from law enforcement to streets to· garbage disposal. And we believe they soon will be, if the proposed form of regional coastal control is adopte~. The Carpenter bill approach has the desirable po- tential for strengthening and improving local govern· rnent, and the flexibility to evolve into an effecti,ve vehicle for developing and administering sensible coast· line controls \Vithout miles of red tape and mountains of money. The Sieroty·Grunsky approach, whether in legis· Jation or in ballot initiative, as the League of Women yoters now urges, would weaken local government and Impose a ponderous, costly new bureaucracy on coastal residents. ......,._. - .\l" ~ ,. ..: '::· . .; "d ~~: The coast association sharply opposed the Sieroty· ~runsky approach, calling it a "maJor step toward d~ stroying local government" and charging that the measure ''provides that a majority or decisions.affecting land use in the coastal zone would be made by indi· viduals not responsible to the local electorate.'' The League of Women Voters criticized the Car· An assault on local government is unwise and un· necessary to achieve desirable and necessary coasUine ..preservation. 'EY£N IF W!:'RE OVERRAiEt> AS WEAPONS, l'Ll Bl: i !HERE'~ A FUTURE IN MAKI N6 IN5TANT RICE PADDlf 5. ' -' ' ; ~ ! Attierica Seen >as A bashed ,-f'u tn6ling -Politicos Like ·l\Vhy ·· ·Russia , Didn't Cancel • Butter ·o.f The Goober :·WASHINGTON -Prior lo the Nixon $:ockade. of North Vietnam, the Soviet f>Vernment distMbuted in this country an f;!'r-:e by an Izvestia political com· ic1~lator which illuminates why Rullsia a\ved no initial disposition to ca ncel the oscow summit meeting. \ t:•on the larger wor!d scene. l~e ~si~n aders think America has failed 10 its ggressive policy.'' The resulting aressure of dom esti c ~d \\'orld opinion las forced the { lnlt.ed States gov. rnment to find an \ ~ rt;: 0-om the "position of 1 ltrength'' po\ 1 c y !J~ pproach different ~ fh1ch has failed, and r tmust adopt ii busi· ssHke attitude \vard the Soviet llnion. $In this hig: picture. the American "1 ilure in Asia is taken for granted. and .. csumably would be unaffected by such ltansient military events as the North J1ielnam cse offensive and the blockade. the Americans have been forced to Jithdraw from Asia. This is the big failure. and in the end the forces of com- ifluni sm will prevail there. ' ~JN Tl11S GENERAL context. American fb llure is projected on a larger screen - bidia. the f\liddle East and wherever flse. A nuc\ear·strong Russia can now af· lord to he n1agnanimous and come to lerms with an allashed and fumbling ).1nerir::i on surh matters as enhance Soviet interests. and in the name of world •earc and peaceful coexistence. It may be true. as Dr. Henry A. KiSll· inger states, that Russia did not conspire with North Vietnam to inflict humiliation on the United States prior to the Moscow· meeting. Regardless of intent, that will be the inevitable effect if lhe .meeting comes off on schedule. The Soviet leaders could have ask~ for nothing better to aupport the patronizing tone.. or their policy in dealing with the wayward children of America. • TO GET NIXON JN Moscow while hill cause iJ faring so badly in Vietnam is to illll!trate to the world how big-minded modern Russia has become in its peace-- loving policy, and how 11ma1J and mean the bombers and blockade.s or Ainerica appear in comparison . • "The world is changing," asserts the Izvestia commentator. "Our peace-loving pc»lcy stems from the very nature of the Socialist system. Differences over social and economic organization or society do not entail a military clash all the logical end. The confrontation of argument! in a controversy ill not' a confrontation of military force ." THE J\.fYTH OF SOVIET aggression has crumbled. and anti-corrimunism is at an impasse, says the Jz.vesti& com· mentator. "A purely bwinesslike, prac· tical estimate shows the senseless and disastrous nature o(. the vast expenditure ot U.S. forces and resources on a con· lrOl)lation with the Social~t world. More and more influential American leaders realize this." With all that. Russia is glad enoug h to reach an agreement on nUclear arm.s establishing "equality" between the U.S. and the Soviet Union, glad enough to ex· ( ROYCE BRIER ) Pane! trade an~ cultural relations, and \ If you think the political atmosphere in confident that its concept of European r 1 d · , · · iecurity will prevail. ou an 15~ t getting a t~c~ fey, y.ou The peace-loving leaders of the Soviet should examine a commurucat1on rece1v- Union will gather Nixon to their bosom ed at this desk from the Peanut Butter becawe it ·Js th~ practica! thing to do, no People, or PBP. matter what 1s bappenmg at Hue or Could be d bl ·f b ha Hllphong you ou 1 peanut utter s · the polltico-hJstoricaJ impetus of the Lin· IT IS A "PRINCIPLED" line laid down coin-Douglas Debates, but don't get bas- al the 24th Cvngreis and elaborated. by ty, just get the hell General Secretary Leonid Brezhnev to out of the ninei th develop mutually advantageous ties with century1 the capitalist countries, including the So it seems is United States. and Russia il following it proud to pres , as unswer.vingly au the while it cooperates candidates say. a in humiliating the United States. Miss Pa u I et t e Regardless of what either Nixon or Bro\vn, once the BreZhnev thinks is happening in Vietnam, humble daughter of neither of them is farseeing enough to a peanut glower, koow bow it will all come out. Brezhnev now the Georgia may believe he has Nixon at a disad-Peanut Princess, an exalted state which ·vantage. Nixon may believe he will has to C1lmpare favorably with that of oveicome that disadvantage. Miss Atlanta, if not Miss America. Anyway, Mis! Brown wired 50 leading nns SOUNDS strange and con-Political figures, asking them how tliey tradictory in view of the confrontation in like their peanut butter, and are they Vietnam, but that confrontation iJ not .smoothies or crunchies? Do you think the new and the Rusllians seem to think they politicos tossed these telegram! in the are finally wlaning. As for Nixon, he bas wastebasket? Then get with it on the nothing to Jose by making advantageous facts of life in America , 1972 A.O. agreements with Russia, while at the same time trying to strangle Russian 1upport of the invasion or South Vietnam. :Tax Reform: Who Gained? IT IS muE American mothers forever complain of the peanut butter con- sumption of their offspring, particularly the males , who are miniature chauvinist pigs, but don't be deluded elders don't count in the peanut butter world. Virtually all the politicos dropped whatever they were doing about war. the economy or taxes, and revealed their peanut butter habits to the detigbt of Miss Brown . ' Dy t;UWJN S. COHEN .. Assistant Secretary of the : U.S. Treasury for Tax Policy ' ' A charge has recently been made that ~r changes in the tax laws and regula· ons since the beginning of 1969 have . \;Ored corporations to the disadvantage 9£ indlviduals. 1'hi s is not so. TI:easury esllmates show that the tax reform and fe !ief provisions of the 1969 Act, the ADR Fcgulation~ (accelerated depreciation ), and the 1971 Act in combination have had Ple following effect : 'for the four ca lendar years 1969-1972 °'ey \\'ill havr : increased corporate in· Come lRxes by an aggregate of .M.9 billion: decreased individual income tax- e!'i by an ag"gre,i::ate or $18.9 billion: and decreased excise taxes on automobiles fnd telephones. mostly affecting in· ll lviduals, by $3 .S billion . . i FOR Tiit: CURRENT ca lendar year ,1972 they \\'i ll have decreased corporate • ORAHOI COAST' DAILY PILOT Ro61rt N. We~ Publi.!11tr T/lorr1a.s J\ttt:il. Editor' Albtrt \V. Bates EdUor1a( Page Editor • • • GUEST REPORT income taxes by $0.4 billion; decreased "individual income taxes by $12.0 billion; decreased excise taxes .by $2.6 billion. for the 12-year span from 1969 through 1980, assuming economic growth, they will have: decreased corporate income taxes by an aggregate or $8.l billion, an average or $0.7 billion a year; decreased Individual income taxes by an aggregate of $140.7 billion, an average of about $1t .7 billion a yea r; decreased excise tues by $19.7 billion. an average ol about tt.6 billion a year. Thus it cannot properly be said thlt the benefits or the J96t-71 changes have favored corporatloM as ag'ainst in· dividuals. Subt;tanlially all the reduction! have gone to individuals. l THINK rr interesting to obllerve that the general reductions ln the Jndlvldual income tai levels made periodalJy"'in the l11t decade (1164, 116t, Ir/I) hive had the overall eflect of keepinf tl1e el· feetive federal individual 1ncome tar level at about 10.i perooit ol tolal ad. justed personal Income, roughly the level which It has averaged for the put II year!. Taking Into account all the chtoCt1 l<r'. th"~ <pest) throe years, wi llDd. ••• that the income tu burclea 1111 ·i.n -in ·111 of the lneome elwa bolow the ltvel of f!OO,IOO. Tbt -tat porocnlap reduction of tu liability II • "'..,rt In the...,. to ii,O<JO lnoom• elaaa1 and tua have ~ reduced In l'ad!lall1 dfcru• ing pen:enlqt1 In tad! hl1her lncomo ela,. to tl1e ll0.000 to IJOO,IOO lneoma levtl, whm the l<duetlon IJ only 1.7 pa- Ctnl. But tbt, lllf.n ehanl" llavt m. creased the tax liability of the income class above $100,000 by 7.4 percent. Thus in these three years from 1969 to date the greatest percentage reductions have been made in the low income groups, substantial reductions have been made in the middle income groups and yet significant increases hape been made in the income levels above $100,000. BIJT I DO NOT THINK we should let that 1mall group of individuals obscure the fact that, according to o u r preliminary data, there were in 1970 a total or some 15,300 per50tls in the coun· try with adjusted ll'OSJ income! above $200,000, and that some 15,200 or them paid an average federal individual in· come tar or •iTT,000 each -a total of some $2.7 billion. This is an effectlve rate of '4. I percent of tbelr adjusttd gross in· come and !19.5 percent of their ta11ble in- come. l"rom this il is perfectly clear that In general the rich are paying federal in- come t1xes in large amounts. And they are paying more than they were in 1968 while other lu]>lyera .,. PIYllll las. Dear Gloomy 'Gua ' I -l)JIJf, .... -~.....,..,...._,­........, .... ~······ .... .._,,.,,....,.. . .... ...,,.., Lyndon Johnson . didn't write, but damned if Ladybird didn't send Miss Brol\'ll her recipe for that old tootll- v;recker, peanut bMttle. George Wallace is catholic, smooth or crunchy is all the same to him, while Ronald Reagan ' played it close to the vest -be doted on peanut butter, but wouldn't have hi! privacy invaded as between smooth or crunchy. As you 1vould expect, outspoken Barry Goldwater took sides. He likes it smooth, and once on a dare shaved with it -"a darn good shaving cream." Try it, you 'll l·i·i·k-e it! TllERE IS Gerald Ford, House Minori- ty Leader, who sent hll daughter's detail· ed recipe for peanut butter cookies. Reads lite Julia Child -oven~ tem- perature 375, bake 10.12 minutes. Senator Fulbrlght'a wile liba peanut butler sanchviches, with honey (W1Uace ' ii a jam rnan), and VJce Presldtnt Aanew's 1ecretary says his tastes are "eclectic," he'll chomp on any old PB 1&ndwlch. But Hubert Humphrey ii the proud'* punch star of Mlt& Brown'• brochure, com.~rtd peanut butter to mom's apple pie. Sht quotes: "My favorite andwicb is peanut huller, lrlloney, clleddar olreeot, letl1JCe and mayonnaise on toasted bread wUh catsup on the akte. Another favorite is. touted peanut butter, chteH and hlcan aandwlcbts, or U 1'18 In a ·1ru&y, peanµt bol!er and jelly. Allo lib ~ bcrtltr 'and ehteoe on cneftrt:. Gm me ~or smooth, I'm· not fuaay. l jual Ion ptanut butter!~ · Serialor Hwnlllvu'• aides ·•~ awed by lrb l,ne1haua\ible -..,.., , belltr liloy ahiluld be a....i b7 hll 'dlpwtlon. On -U.O..,lrl, Mis -.·may not Ire lul1bt., her PIPP1 In pe111Ula IDl1 be ri<h. Oharla Schut. ala, llarvlill .... lbt 11.Peanuta'" calt.oon •• TV Ad Ban -Helps Tobacco Profits A friend or mine. who knows all about money and &tocks and things like that, bought himself a heap of shares in some tobacco companies when the ban on· cigaret advertising on TV went into ef· rect last year. I was puzzled when he told me this. bec!use the tobacco companies were \Vailing and gnash- ing their yellow· stained teeth about this ''infringement" on their freedom to tout their brands on the air. · ·'.croc;?<iile tears," my friend grinned evilly. Most companies don't even know what 's good for them, or. if the y do. keep it to themselves. Yvu'll see. the tobacco companies will do better this year than last.., "How do you figure that out?" J asked in my immense fiscal igoorance. "WELL," HE EXPLAINED. ';lhev have been spending tens of millions Or dollars in TV advertising for cigarets, and to what purpose? They are not recruiting piany new smokers -mostl y' they 're just shifting smokers around from one brand to another. "This is terribly expensive for all of them ,'' he went on, "and yet none of them can stop fighling for his share of the market. So millions are poured into this mean ingless combat that ought to go for product development or new equip- ment or what have you. As soon as the TV ban goes into erfect, the tobacco com· panies will be in clover." HE TURNED OUT, as usual, lo be .SYD\EY J. lIARRIS I quite ri ght. The l.a!(' of (·i~arcts has gone 11p. not do1rn. since the TV edict, and the profit 1s grc<iter. su ice nluch of the advertising ex~·nthture has not , been allocated tn u!h{'r media . but sensibly ploughed back into the company. After a!J. e\'eryone knows that one cigaret is pretly 111uch like another, ex 4 cept for minor \anations in ta ste: all the brands 11 ~e !hr same! basic tobacco, just addi ng 1.hfferent flavoring qualities. And, after the averaJ?c smoke r has puffed a half-a-dozen . his taste buds ·are so deadened that he could scarcely tell a cigaret tube jrnm a broomstick straw. • INDf:E o, IF" ALL ciga ret advertising were halted I doubt if it "'ould make n1uch difference in total sales, and would probabl y increase the. net profit of thr. tobacco companies. Of course, no new brands could be jntrodocied. but v.'110 would S<i~' that there ;i re n-01 enou(!h brands on 1hc n1arket already. \vhosc onlv distinguishing cha racteristic is t he pack age? A~ver1 ising can• be enormou sly ef· fcct1ve for some products, and n1ostly an expensi\'e charade ror others. \Vith cigarets e.~prti.1!1.v, these lens or millions poured into capluring and recapturing "shares of n1arkel" could more pn1· ductively be allocated to technical research for develo ping a cigaret that'! l>nth taste rul Rnd safer at the same time. As an in veterate puffer. !bat's where I'd like to see my money going . ' A Gr eat Boo k Update d Back Jn 1918 a Cornell pro fessor or English, William Strunk Jr., published a Uttle book for his students. "The Elements of Style." One of these students, E. B. White, who betame a renowned English stylist himself during his many years on The New Yorker, revised the work and in 1959 Macmi llan published its first edition. It sold over 100,000 copies during jts first year : the total sale has now passed the 2 million mark, with 179,000 paperback copies sold dtn'ing It'll alone. E. B. WhJte. has dusted off this won. derful little book. on the craft of v.Titing and use of English words; has revised and updated it to include contemporary expressions -such as "relevant" and "relate to." -and contributed a new chapter on writing, Macmillan will publish it this month es "The Elements of Style, Second EdiUon" (13.50; paper, Sl.25). WHAT ABOur ••relevant" and "lr- rtlevant?" Use these words to upres.s a pttc:l$e rtlatlon.shlp. not a v a g u e diScontent, White auggesta. "My hi.story course doesn't seem relevant." Relevant to what? White answers : "A student who llnd3 IOC!ety out or Joint, or himselr ou\ ol,.i9iot. takes refuge In the wotd 'lrrtlevaiil,' using ii 11 1 general tenn of diupprobaUon. He damns history and w!pes out the put with a single atroke. There ii a kind of arrogance In Jabelln.uvtl')'lhlng that has &a.ken place in the 1'0rld ~ 'irrelevant.' What the student mMDs, oI course, Is that he finds the •14ry or lht past curlously unrelal«l lo tl1e IP"Clacle or the pruenL Thal ii hll-pri•Dtge, as""" N ltlt har.I luck. 'But !he rtlaUonsbip ( TIIE BOOKMA'.N J should. be slated, no\ left to the Im· ag1nat1on.·1 . O'ry!ER EXA)lPLES of new material In this edition of the little manual: Finalize: "A pompous ambigUous verb." ' J\.f eaningf ul: ''A bankrupt adjectivt". Clloos.e another. or rephrase. 'His was a mearungful contribution.' 'His conlrlbu· f1on counted heavily: " O~iented : "A clumsy, pretentiou s de~ic~. m~ich in vogue. Find a better wa y 0! 1ndicat1n.g ~rientation or alignment or direction. His was a manufacturing· oriented ~pany.' 'His was a company con«~ned with manufacturing.' 11 Ullhze. "Prcler use.'' A~ £. B. WHITE . on the Old pro- fessor s ~ork : "To me, it sUll seems to malntal~ its original poise, standing, in a dra~ty lime, trect. resolute. and assured. 1 still find the Strunklan wisdom1 1 com~ fort. the S~runkian humor a del1'ht, and the Strunkian attitude toward rlghl·a'nd· · wrong • blessing undlsgulRd." 1 WIUJam, Uogan t---.811 George -·-..., CONFlt>ENTIAL TO , T•H l!l REPUBLICAN NATIONAL CON· VENTION: I still lhlnlr you should ~::Ult !n Disney World and Charge . ~- , • -. I Shepherds Dot U ~S·· West Where There 's Sheep, Th ere's Ba.sque Tending Theni HANFORD (AP) -Somewhere west of htre is the mobile shick occupied by Shepherd Manuel Arraqui. On the P4rched KeUleman plain, there Is a fl~k' or sheep, dusty like the · 11gebruah, ftfanuel 's dog Ped'ro, and that iJ all . Sometimes Miauel lturreria, Manuel 's boss drops by, but otherwise not much happen!' with ManueL He Is Basque, as so many shepherdJ in the American west have been tor more than a century. There are fewer of them these days. but wherever marginal land can be found to graze sheep. !hat means shepherds, and mostly they're Basques. "It 's ndt the best kind of life," said lturreria of Manuel's lonely existence at • a time when men on earth watch their fellnws wal~ on the moon. Manuel s~ru1s and laughs when yo u ask him about ii. He offers you a swig from his wine bodB. He speaks no English, having come not lone ago (rom Narvarnis province in Spain where he was a dockworker. Through Hurreria as an lnterpre ter, Manuel say1 he has to follow his sheep as they grau, if only to keep them out ar neigbboring ranches and out of the mud of t~e levee. And at nlsht !hie' CQyotes must be kept away. Then sometimes the aheep have lo be moved to new land, and, of course, there's shearing time. But sheep tend to graze only a C<1Uple of hours at a time in the morning and evening, so there is much Idle time. "I can go talk tQ. other sheepherders," offers Manuel. Some are only a fey,• miles away. "f\.1ost of the Ume they talk about their girls." puts in Jturreria. "A h, si," grins Manuel , rolling his eyes. "I have lols of girls in Spain." lturreria explains that men like Ma nuel are brought in on virtually unbreakable three-year contracts and paid $280 per month plus provisions. . Manuel , who has been here a year, says he doe!ln 't know whether he'll go back to Spain .two year!! from now . or do what Jturreria says many 1hepherd1 do at the end of their first contract-"go off lo the city to make more money!' "I'll have to think about ii/' .says Manuel. • ''It's not too bid," he said of his job. "I have to like it. I knew before I came here what the job is." He hoisted his boda, toolr a sip, and called his dog . The du11ty sheep werfi moving over a rise into the wind. Boating Death Damage A lvarded BOISE. ldaho (API -A Santa Mon ita couple has been awarded $7.~ damages for the death of their IS-year-old son 1n R boat ing accident on Haystack Rapi ds on the ,Middle Fork o( the Salmon River in 1~1. . The verdict for the a1vard by a federal jury came afler a four.dll y trial. Ra lph J. Smith and his \vife, Mary. brousht the act ion against Dewey I~. anrl Diane Calvin. Jerome, contending they allowed a raft to be manned by <1n in· experienced piloL The raft struck a boulder and capsized. Stephen Sm ith drowned. -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Poetess Inspired In Bath SANTA BARBARA (APl - An ~l Monte woman who says she often writes poems In the bathtub won C1Jifornia'5 top poetry a.ward here for a son· net whi~h placed third in les11er cohipetitinn. Nelle Fertig wa~ presented with the "Golden Pegasus Trophy", California 's higMest poetry honor. at the 33rd Cali fomla Pottry F e s t I v a I here. . The California Federation or Chaparral Poets: sponsored the event. ~ms. FERTTG 'S winning poem, ''Who Reall y Knows About A111gic?'' became eligi- ble tn compete for the top priie when ii got third place in the "Best Petrarchan Sonnet" rategory. ··r thought if any of my poem!! had a chance lo win the Pegasus." said Mrs. Fertig, ''it would be the one T'd en- tered that had won first prize in the individual categories . 1 dnn'I think 'Who Reallv Know!; About Magic?' is the besl poem l've ever written or the best I submitted in this year's competition. but. of course. I'm delightr:d to win." The elementarv s c h o o I teacher uid she writes many of her poems in the bathtub or the car. She added that often the on· ly wa y she can find the time to write poetry is by "neR:lect· lng my housework or giving up sleep." She has had !bout 100 poems publish~ in the six years she has bten writ ing poetry, and of them . almost 80 ha ve won awards. she said. ••t WRITE POETRY," Mrs. Fertig said. "because I think il 's one of the best wa ys to get rid of frustration or worry. Ptople who can't release these feelings . either by writing. or plaving b11sebRll or something, oft.!n end up exploding or ex- pressing these frustrations violently . r 2uess there's 8 part of myself in every poem I write." She added that while she mostlv writes poetry for herseU . i;omelimes she writes her poem!! to Gull contest clas!!iiric<1! ions. ''My winning poem is abc'>ul 8 teen-age dau,R:hter . and I o~· Iv have sons." Mrs. Fertig Said. "I wrole abc'>ut ll daul[hter because f ne~ed an extra svllable, but the poem still reflects some of my own feelin~s about children." The poem . which took only two hnur!I to write. basically says that "life is different from childrens' drr.ams, but sometimes it's better.'' she said. School Ha s New Leader Doug Halverson. ll junior &t Cost. Mesi '& Southern eatlfomi• Cnllege , has been elected A~•oclated Student Body Pr"Iden\. H1Jverson I! ma joring In Bible and hlatory And IA one nr 18 students from the college who will be sent on a summer m!Mlonary program In Af1hanl1t1n . The new student president 11 l.be '°"of Mr. and Mn. J1me1 HalvtrlDll " Dlllu, w11coo. ala. 2640 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA ... -'• •.• .,._,~~if''V'W::"'" :S . -" • q HOURS: EVERYDAY 9-6 • ' . SILVER SPADE Vrgetable llnd flo"'er 1:11.rden1 do better \\'hen you add thi1 SOIL IM' II: 0 VE II:. Loosens 1oil and adds organic matter. 3 bags ass for FRAGRANT STAR JASMINE Deliihtful fragranei! i. n d stii'·ll~e flower ml!.k'e · th is a prde11 favorite. R91. 1.ts. Plant aenral only 9 8'. Hardy 1 Gal. Sin You've Been Waiting For This! CAL-TURF DICHONDRA SOD Roll out the finest lawn in the neigh- borhood or use to patch worn places in old lawns. By the Roll 7112 sq. ~. Just Like Rolling Out The Green Carpet! Our flor is ts always give you quick and courteous service. ''\Ve send flowers anywhere the FTD way." ·did you know • • • 0 we'll help you ••• We have everything you need to plant your own Terrariums -containers of every size and shape - Plants of every description twia:s, stones • {i ...... get started making your own interesting bottle gardens :::_ Or -choose one already planted from our large selection. We Jnvile You :J'!'." SHOP IY PHONE-USE YOUR CREDIT CARD SPECIAL PRICES GOOD THRU WEDNESDAY , MAY 24 PHONE 546-5525 t J.• Tllu11dq, Mq 18, 1972 DAILY PILOT 7 •' ® PAINT SALE YOUR CHOICE •• LAT.EX ; HOUSE 'PAINT OR LATEX FLAT WALL FIN .ISM 97 lATf X HOUS E PA lllT r~(1\l l f11 mt1, mildew a11d bhstwr•niJ Spreads Oil smoo1hly. Or1t1 l a11. Soap and l'.'~!tr rlean up l ow sheP.n. LATF'< l'.All FINI SH d11ei ill JO m1nutts. Ful!•/ wa1hablt . high hiding. Vel ~r!y l\11. for pl1qer, w1llbo1rd, toncre te, e\t. ..... } 11 f _\ n.4[ \I.II.I. /1\/.IJ/ . 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SHop early-<illanlltlts limited, t!dlj•ct to prior sale • • 97 GALLO N Cu5tom M1~1d Color; Slightly Highe r REG. $8. 98 MAR VELUSTRE ··our finest acrylic latex semi·gloss enamel! 11 s hard , satirt she1n resists soiling, fum es, 'steam and mo isture. Extra Krubbab le. ldeil for ·kitchen; balh·wa11s, cabinets, all woodwork. It's latex.· so ear{ to use. 48 Colors to mat ch Sat·N·Hue. FDR 197Z EXTERIOR REDWOOD STAIN . Tou91l, oil 1!11se 111in for txttrlor wood siding, ftnc1s, shinglei, ou1door furnitur1. S11\1 out mai11ure. Rich . redwood color, I ' I tH~nim sr1r• · ; 111•--:-l ..... -,; JS ' 179 WOOD PANEL MAGIC Spray on, wipe off! Clean·. nourishes, preserves wood:. with natural oils. Pint can. ~ 98C Home CAULK1N6 GUN • Drop-in caulker, slotted end cap for fut loadin1. Non.slip ralchet drive ........... (04) ~-~ ~ ~Soz. NAVAL JELLY 149 Dissolves rust! Brush Naval Jelly on iron or steel, wash rust away. Pint size •• , , .2.49 199 REG . $2 .99 179 Tile 'n Grout MAGIC foams on, removes between- the·tile dirt. With handy Brush 'n Sponge. Pint spray can. 59c CAULKING COMPOUND Highut qualily oil base. Arch~ tectural arade, 11 flu id ounces. Cartridge. ... , ......... (06) ~8 0!. 149 ALUMINUM JELLY Cleans & brightens aluminum. Helps p1event further oxida· tion, corrosio n. Pint , ••• 2.49 Your !;ocal Hardwart Merchant With .National Chain luying Power ! ,. •• .. • I ' I .. Dolll. Y PILOT 'Disputed Project Nea;rs Of( SACRAMENTO (AP! -A controversial 757 -unit sub- d t v 1ton ln·so u thern Sacramento County has moved elater to reality despite oJ>. J ec t Ion a from environ· mentalilll that it w o u I d me1n .. aubatantlal damage" to wlldUft Jn the area. 'lbt county Planning Com- m!J1ioa voted S-2 this week to IPIJl'OYI the tentative map for the project. The proposal gou to the county aupervlsors for dilpo1ltioll. Spokesnlen for the slate Dtpartment of Fish and Game and for the federal Bureau _.of Sport FilheriH and Wildlife told the commiuion the proj- ect wpuld harm the en- v lronment. But GleM Underwood, al· tomey for McKe:on Coruitruc- r ECOLOGY lion eo, .. that developers, com- plalnod tl>at the government wU lnh:rferlr11 in thf private Ult of, Pf Iv ate land. WAJi.G~ aP) Ard.Jc apeci&llat B e r n t Bilchen:~ys 1 general warm- i..,:Vend OVtt the North Pole ls melting Uie polar ice cap ud, may ~ce an lee-free ~·Ocel!I by the year 2000. fl't. -1radual change in cllriJate", Balchen says, even- tu.aJly may make possible ~ shipment of oil from Alaskan and Canadian fields, aod Pave the way for water transport of the Far North's m1ner1l .wealth -of uranium, nk:lcel, Iron, lead and zinc. 1Balchen, ,72, is recognized as a ·specialist on tM Arctic. ios AtGELls (At ) -The clf;Y, abould appro":e Occidental Petrolelim Corp, 'a application to 4Dll for oil pear the ocean ·in Plclfic P&.IJ.sades, says Artl>ur 0. Spaulding, city petroleum adritlnlstrator. Spauldlnf urged the city planning dtpartment_ to ap- prove the company's request for three oil dri lling districts and one of two proposed drill· ing sites. The city could receive as much as $4 million royalties durh>g the life of the oil fields, he said. Opponents of drill ing argued that oil exploration in the coastal area eould cause landslides and olher hazards. * * ... WALLA WALLA. Wa s h . (UPI) -Fisheries biologists are puzzled by a surprisingly lu&e run or Chinook salmon helded upstrea1n in th e Col~mbia -ind Snake Rl\•ers to\\(ard the Ir spa"11ing 1rounds. The biologist:. feared this run hat;I been all but wiped out l'fO ye1r1 ago by excessive quantities of .supersaturated nitrogen Jn the ri vers when the young fish moved downstream to the Pacific. At that time, bk>Jogists estimated that 90 percent of the downstream migrants had been killed. But Ray Oligher, fisheries biologist for !he A r m y I Engineers. said this year's run I of spring Chinook r.-ill be well above average. * * * SAN llERNA!jDINO (AP I -The people of California are the p}aintiffs in a $720,000 damage suit gainst 36 personst accused or poaching big horn / sheep . . The suit, flied in Su perior Court by Atty. Gen. Ev~lle Younger, ask! $5,000 in special damages and $15.000 i n punitive damages for each 1heep illegally taken. It alleges 36 sheep \\•ere JIOIChed btt1o1.>een Augu st 1966 and December 1970. The. .suit. contends that the rare ahetp are the properly of the _people or Callfornia. * * * SOUTH LAKE TAHOE IAPJ -11le Tahoe Regiona l Plan- ning Agency u·ill consider a ftq.~ planning pro,1tram for the Lake Tahoe Basin at its Mst i• meeting here . ""' key to the study u·ould be-iD.veqtigations of potential buln population. breaking the arira d'o "' n into Its 54 w~ and · detailing lhe Upocity for eaCh. · The plonning program would abo· look htto 1u-rr1ce 4111 r.a·l a •I·•, tramportation, ~-ftllllotlona, open opoec. nter, sewers, public llldlllleo· Ind llloreJlnes. ; ;~G..ft (~1; - !». ~ ~ paned ud • 10 Ille Sonote le&illallon ...... f'/5 mllUon oollecllil hli'lmport clulles eadl year -""""'for plonlil!l.lniel ID .. 1111111111 linllo. !llf moill)' _,Id come ......... 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S1p1r1t1 bind 1witch with h1ndspr11c( tunin9, Ebony color c1binet. THE FINEST IN THE INDUSTRY EXTRA SPECIALS FLOOR MODILS-DEMOS-.ONE OF A KIND ,18" Color Table, Model .......... $299 23" Table Model """"'""""' $475 25" T ~ Mocfel $499 25" ~editerr~ean .............. $539. II" • c te w... $539 DIA.ONAL on mporary D•ol ......... 1r· T ~ ~ -111••0••• able Model .............. $379 WHY BUY AT ABC? , • No Finance Charges If Paid in 90 Days or No Down and 36 Months to Pay C O.A.C.J • l Year Free Parts' v ·. • 1 Year Free Service • 3 Year Picture Tube Warranty • Free Delivery and Set Up • · Bank.A'mericard/Master Charge OAILV PILOT fJ Plea Made By India For Tiger ROME (AP) -India ha> appealed for international help to save the man-eating tiger from tiger-killing man. An Indian governn1ent. of- ficial 10/d the fores try co1n- mission or the U.N .. Food aod Agriculture Organiza tion that his country is down to its last 2,000 tigers. As part of the program of trying to preserve the breed. India started a paw-print census \Yhich experts say tells n1ort" about I igers t h a n fin gerpri nts do about people. T. N. SrivasU va, India's 1n· spcctor general of forests, told the commission that every ti ger's paw prints a r e distincti ve. 1',rom them, he ANIMALS said, experts ca n tell thP. . tiger's age, sex, health and even a ·bit about its character. * * * BOSTON (APJ -There's a · population explosion under \\'ay a1nong the octopi at the New ·England Aquarium. Fifty ocJopus eggs hatched recently and aquarium curator Louis E. Garibaldi says ap- proximately 1,000 more are \\'ailing to hatch. Garibaldi said the aquarium received two ren1ale octopi from Southern California in December and bp th ap- paren:tfy were c a r r y I n g fertilized eggs. The babies are a half inch in diameter, eat brine slU'imp and show ability to change col- or and io di!!Charge protective ink clouds. They will grow to about. tn•o feet in diameter. * * * ITllACA, N.Y. (AP) -A sludy into th e breeding habit s and early life patte111s of eagles has resulted in w~t is believed the first hatching th111ugh artificial insemination of the golden eagle species. James \V. Grier, a Cornell University graduate student \\'ho headed the project, said that attempts to pair captive adult golden eagles through natural mating \Vere unsuc- cessfu l, resulting in the decision to use the artificial insemination technique. This involved the injection of male semen Into a· female bird. with a syringe. The female egg, thus ·fertilized, Was re mov¢ and placed tn an incubator at the unlveratty. The result: two golden eagle chicks who are gathering strength berore being released to the ~'ilds . * * * CHICAOO (U PI) -The Lio. coin Park 7.oo \V33 the scene of unique t\1other·s D a y celebration as "Babe", a Bengal tiger, gave bh1h to quadruplets. Dr. Lester Fisher. zoo dirtc- tor. said that all the of(spring \rere believed to be 1na les but that zookeepers have no t been able to get close enough to be sure. Two weeks ago, four male N o r t h American mountain lions \vere born. and jn Janu- ary four male European bears were born at the zoo. * * * NEWARK. England (UPI) -A parrot is teaching mute patients to talk, a Balderton hospital spokesman reports. The nursing staff at the hospital near here put the par- rot, named Peter, in a ward with 40 men su£fering from a mental disability w hi c h prevents them speaking prop- erly. Every day, for 18 monlhs. Peter kept up a nonstop now or words. Then, one of the pa- tients started to say aimple words correctly. * * * SA~ DIEGO, (AP) -He nunked out at Stanford. He was too big and too nlean. they said, ne>t to mention dumb. So the universlty ·turned him over to the Navy as un~ trainable. No1v. the Navy say9:, it Isn't so. After three years of personal attention. ''Runner is the only trained animal ol his species," an announcemenL said proudly at the Naval Undersea Research a n d Development Center. Runner is a steller's sea lion, seven reet long and weighs 753 pounds . Runner Is being taught to locate b t cUvers in the deepest ocean., and carry equipment back and forth. Does Y .. , Chll4 NH4 . SUMMER SCHOOL Eoroll NOW lo ltle best 11c1nca11aw1ts PaOM Ofll& OP TMI OL.Dl:l1' & l ltlOMTUT aATID ICMOOU TTl!l'-'11fil!I ta 1& ,,... CALL MOW 714-1 052 ,.,i;.. .. , Prime Scloool 1H1W ............. . ' • • Jf DAJ~Y PILOT L. M. Boyd DC Once Banned 'lJJ!:,lfSllal' Peop'le lnt.erest Agency--Average .Ones ToQ Contemporaryf urnlture Ice Cream Cone ' ' TM youn1est model la I-"We lind the photographs M°'t 1cnt p1tltnt1 art not teen11er1, not quiti. A 1tudy of tht!: medical recordl 1how1 the 1ver11e •ae or 11mr i1 %fl. AM ASKED how many com.Jc 1trip1 11td funny p.aneli lhow up In n.ew11)1ptr1 ~rldwidt now. About ~Ml. lha t'1 all. -• BY HOW many times does the 11/e nf 11uitar1 out· -tit .. . ~ ~I .. I~ - ' number the aalt or piano•' S\1 to one. A WOMAN'S wei$lhl is in her hip~. A m1n's J1 in hi.~ chest. Shr.'s built for •ltlina 1Ull. He lsn 'I. Tha!'a wh.Y 1he'1 fa r more llkelv than hi' In enjoy I 1ymphony concert nr a Rroa.dway play or an oper1. So cl1im1 a univer- 1lty achalar whn h11 made 1 .11tudy of the matttr. Such 1rti.11tlc 1pprech1· lion. he 11y1, owes not 1(1 much to the brain 11 to the center of gravity. Oh. QUERrES -Q. "lt'a uld men '1 ,;hirtl! have the bot· ton1 on tht right tradltlonally ~cause most men are rlthth1nded. So why do women 's blouses have the buttons on the le rt? . A. Debalablt.. but the olde11t aueu i111 th.al just about all women cradle their Infants on the left arm . Q. 0 YOU 1ald Cae1111r Cardin!. nn ce of Tijuana. In- vented C1e11r'1 11l1d. Where Is he now?" , A. In l.01 Angeles, last J heard. Manufacturing a dru1ln& for 11ld nlad. tncldentally. an Informant report.JI ll wa1 not Catnr but hl9 older brother Ale:11nd1r who 1etually created that fsmous 11l1d. WM knnw11? ,, ' •" . ~ THE ASTONISHINr; 11t1tistlcs ahow the United St.tte~ every year Imports 11ever1J thouaand pounds of dandelions. Th1l'1 right, lmpnrt11. Rem1rk1ble! CONE -Th11l the Ice cream cone was invented by 1 Syrl1n c<>nceQionaire named W. M. Hamwl It the St. Louis Exposlllon in 1904 Is com'mon knowledge. Less wide- ly known i1 lht fld the Ice cre1m cop1 was outlawed for morf lhan 40 ye1r11 in Washington. D.C. Llw barred solid milk products liltler than hair a plnl. It was re- pealed a. few ye1rs back. U'I T•lt•.,.le BILLBOARD GIRL HAS HER FANS Sharon H1rvey Sells Sunttn Lotien 43-27 ·41 (Feet) rr HAS been re!Ja~ly reported lhat tht standardited p1cka1e of Kellogg'' Com Flak11 kMwn as "large" con- tains an 1ver111e of t , 137 such f11ke~. Model Sharon Makes It Big 'ONLY TWO wnrrf~ In English~ ce'lnt1ln the fiv~ vowfls in proper 1equence, f1celioua ind ab1telnk>u1. S& thou1ht I. Wron1 11aln! Also count arterlous. GEmNG warmer out. Heir 1 cricktl? Time to count Jta chlrpa In 15 1econd11. Add 39. That will be lhe temper· 11ure Jn de1ree1 F. A.ddrttJ moil to L. M. Boud . f'. 0 . Box 187S. Ntw. port Btach, Cati/. 92d~O. Men in Service Army Pr\Yale Vincent n. Torres. ion of Mr1. Nicole Smith, 72., Owen. HunUngton Be1eh. recently was 1111\gned to the 41st Artillery In Gtrm1ny. Pvt. Torres, 1 ml~slle crewman in 81rtery A. 4th Battalion o( the 4111t Artillery near Schw1tbl1ch G m u n d , entered the A rm y In November 1971 and mmpltled basic tralnln,c at Ft. Ord . HI.I wife. Sandri Ltt. 1ive11 at 78.11 12th St .. We1tmlnster. l!.S. Air Forrt Sl 1 f l Ser1e11nl Rnhfft L. Parker , son ~ nf Mrs . ri.tlldr#a P. Arulltr. 31AU: El Cam ino Rtal. San Juan Caplstrarn>. h11 arrived for duly 11 C1stle. AFB. Collf. Ser~eant PArktr. 1 con· struction speci11 1i~t. i~ assign- ed tn a unil of the f\traltl(ir Air Comm11nd . Amt r; r 11'11 nucle11r detf'rrf'nl forrf' nf \onJl r1n1e bombers • n d In· tercontinf'nt1I b • 11 i s t I i: mlssile11. Ht prl!viously 1erv11tl at U·Tapan Alrfif'ld , Thailand . Army W1rr1nt Offirer F.d· die E. Bonet son of ~r. and Mrs. Edw11rd E. Bond. 401 Third SI .. Hunt inJ(ton Bt1ch , C1lif .. recenlly wa' 11s.~igned to lht 191 Cavtlry Division at Ft. Hood. Tei. \\10 Bond i' 1 pilot In Tronp A, 4th Squadron of the dlvlslon's 0th C1v11lry. He completed b111ic traln'in« at Ft. Polk La .. 11nd w11 !1st 1t1· Uoned In Vietnam. Ht hold1 tht Bronze Star Medal and the Air Medtl. WO Bond. who11e wife. Kathi, li ves on Route 4. Bellon. Tex ., 11 a graduatt of Huntln1ton Beach High School. Cadet Seolt P. McF1rltod, 1t1n or Mr. and ri.1r1. R. J . McFArland of 1868 Parns Ci r· rle, Co~ta Mes". h111 e11rned academic honors far rhe UC· ond irading ptriod or the !le<'· ond ~emtster 111 \\',.ntworlh Mllitar:-o Ar1demy. He e11rned superior 1r1des to qualif~· fnr lhe dean's Specl1I Distinction List Marine Pvt. Stf'\•en "" Barber. son nf Mr11. Jovel' L. 811rbf'r nf 14~~ Gnld~nwfl~I St., \\1titm in~lt.r. 2r11duated fr om b111ir training 1t tht! M1rint Corps Recru it Depo! in San Oitgo. Mar ine C1ptain Kennelh R. Ptack, husb.11nd of tht formtr Miu JoAnn Buscher of 281142 E!c::.11lon1 Orivt, ~1isslon Vitjn. has returned lo homeb1sl' at the Marine Corps Air Station. El Toro. wilh Marine All We1ther Alt•rk Squadron 242. ' NEW . YORK " IUPll Nature give beautiful Sharon Harvey • perftet 37-24-3ft 1in- che1J figurf'. But •en Miss H;irvey became the girl In rhe bikini on billboards 11round the coun- try . 1he immedilllely became 43-27·41 (feel l. "lt'a .!lilArlling to sRy the lf'llSI . .!lieeing yourself that size." s1id Miss Harvev, who's from Bellingham. WaSh. One collegl' fra ternity wrote her employer asking for her on R bitlbo11rd for 1111 frat houst. ln.,tead. her employer had po11ter-siu reproduc::tions m1de 11nd i111 selling them at 50 cent~ 1 whAck to colh~ge and servicemen. Miss Harvey, 24. 111 the 11irl In the Hawaii.11n print bikini 11dvertisini11 Tany1 s u n t .11 n prep1rationl!. You'Jl see her also on 1ubw11y and bus ad c1rd11. She's also 11ppeared in ads in such n11tional mag.11zines as Vogue. Cosmopnlit1n. Harper111 Bauar 11nd Seventeen and made gu,st Appearanres nn televlsinn . sometimes comin11: on In that famous bikini but coverin11 up a11 the show p~ irfl:!l9t',. Sht '.• on a five-city prtl- mn!inn tour. lakinR ,11 smaller w;irdrobt lhRn ~ht did 111 ~! year whf'n sht hit 14 cities in six week11 and "wore myself nut." The \\'llrdrobt this time inrludes anothtr bikini, one in Blick Diamond mink desil{neq b.v .Jeremv Wren of New York. Sht's also pAcking ,11 p!u11-in miniAture piano, a threfl: or· l,111·e instrument !ihe c;1n c<irrv in ~omethinR" resembl in11 ~ flu!e c1111e. Shf' wanl• to keep up her musir on t h t rnlld-"SociAl tire is nil," sht 1111ld. ''It'll be just me and my pi11no." Mi~., Harl'e.v. "'ho "'AS he.1cl majorette when in hii?h ..,:chool. is lllso a spnrt11 11rti vist. skis on both sno"' and wlllf>r . i nd h1111 been ttaching skiinJZ in Lti11 An,11;eles. NEWPORT C.ENTER ' ur.an9e County Raceway 500 PREVIEW .. 'olllOIT1lw, FrlMy. on th• moll • • • ko ,unny C1rt It ,11hlen 11111141 .... 1t1rtln9 11 12 noon -•rowf ,,.. 4rawlnt i.r K1w111kl 1Ml9rtycl1, froe Mint TM m.chandlM, 1"4 Ire. rtct tltlcett. Tit1r1h •••"•"'• ,, 11iile .. Mon. Dtwwl11t fer F,.f K.-aiil Motorcycle 7 P.M • ' • Her colleges art Western Washington State University. Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill., which she at. !ended while working briefly as an airline stewardes.~. &nd the Universily of Hawaii. She bec.1me the Tanya R"irl four years ago in the ea siest of ways. She was stud.ving speech therapy at the University of Hawaii and tak- ing advantage of the island'! beaches. One day an e1teutive of Tanya. whic::h started I n Honoluly, saw her sunning in a bikini. He .11sked if ahe'd like to go to Los Angeles to compete again11t some 300 o the r beauties, to become the com- pany's "tradl'mark." She did and was hired. Now she call11 Los Angeles and Honolulu home. Although a .~ a model she's pretty well tied to one com- pany , she~~ managed In make it into movies and television &s an 11ctress. She was a dancer and model in her first movie. "Sweet Charity." and she was A stew ardess 11g.11in in "AirPort." ~fiss Havey keeps a suntan. but not a deep ane . ''f hide when I'm lr1 veling. I won'I use a sunlamp." Htr first advice to anyone aimi ng for 1 tan is : T1kt It easv. Don't overdo. "Tht big problem Is the weekend burn," she said. "Too much sun. loo fasl. · Appl,v tanning lotion In all pA rts of the body exposed In lhP sun includinJZ eRrs. ankles 11 nci feet. Reapply frequenlly, ;ind 11tw;1ys after swimm ing. Perspiration also will ~·•sh off !he ~unscreen. Appl,1· tanning lotion after ~howering and before retiri ng. It act11 a11 11 skin moisturiur and ron d1 tinntr. helps prevent pt-eling. and I o n Ji · r a n g e prtvents lhl' wrinkles and leathery lnok th11t !I; k In del'elops unless prolteled. .. • Pl'ITSBURGH !UPI\ "Can you find us a 300 pound w<1man?" · K"-. Pittsburgh advertising agency told Model• Unlimited that such a woman was need- ed to publicize a I o ca I brewery. Pete Tambelllni and ·Bonnie Dunn. whn had jus! opened Mode ls Unlimited. were puuJ. ed -but not for long. "We looked around town found Marcia ," Tambell ini said. ''She had the proper dlmen~1ons. We dressed her in a bathing 1uit wearing the n1me of the brewery and the campaign was a success. She was pakt $3.500 for 12 day1 work." AS TRE NAi\1£ suggests. month-old Muine Abramovich tht potential models bring In taed in hospitalization ad· UMUitablf in most cases," 1 vertisements. Her ''mother" Ta mbellini said. • k• in the ads is Nancy Greunak. "We wait until we get a IV• 1 University of Pltt.aburgh 11roup of 20 ind then use the 1 I 1n9 1~retary, and "Dadd,·" ls $1.200 once a month to hire a Dave Hummer, employed in a studio. a photographer. a Git!itfiffltt!1:!pt!!ID machine ihop. stylist for the proper clothing c 0 ,. r e. M ,. o ,. "" ,. v T1mbellini 1ays he has corne and .11 rosmoroloJt"ist," he said. 17111 lf:ACH nvo. Out a losef several times. "In that way we present the HUNT1N•10N •E .. CN I. I Ju~! N of Tt lBer! & .f.rro.I '''"' "A client asked us W pro-ptoper photopraph to c l~n s M 1. '"tt• co"""u"•'v HoJolt•I - v1'de an \S-yeor-old boy with a need ing models. We consider 2 m11n s 01 San O•f<l" "'""'· I ~*'1 or l•I /flt crewcut netded for an ad used the $60 paid by the modes as ) w l!EKOAYS 1~. Mon & Fri. 11·• In the 1950's." he said . "Where: -~th~e~ir~in~v~es~t~m~e".nl~.'~'~_:__ _ _:~:;;;;;;:;~~~~~~~ can we find 1 teen-age bn}·! with 1hort ha ir toda y?" * * * * * * * * * * * * * .* * * * * * Another client wanted a 21· y SAVINGS year-old girl wilh p Ure• M ERC UR natural blande hair. and loan assoc iation "No-wi1!. '' lhe client said. • ... ~ .. ,. --~•P.'!!"I'• Tambe!Hni wu un1ble to find ,. one. '"uvv u.-c:1 ~1odels Unlimited specializes TAMBELUNI 1 u b m i ts in unu.~ual requests. photographs af his models to EVERY SATURDAY -~ 10 A. M.-4 P. M. ,,-~, It also seek.Ill out models of the advertlller who make~ a the "average person." aelection. Models UnJimited "We want the truck driver bills the client $25 minifnum 6 111111 'pi,1il•fiJ ~~-~·!I with a scar on his nose, a per hour for the !Tl()(jel. ;.,.,, 1, OpenMon.·Thurs.9a.m.-4p.m.;Fti.9a.m.· p.m. mother in a kitchen who Joob Tambellini retains 20 percent BUENA PARK Mercury Savinas Bldg., Valley View at Lincoln like a mother," Tambellini of the check and the balance is s.11id . "Teltvision UJ responsible paid to the model. HUNTINGTON BEACH Mercury Savinas Bldg., Edinger at Beach for dtveloplng the 'average When pro!pectlve models TUSTIN Mercury Slvinas Bld1., Irvine ll!vd.1t Newport Av1. person' look In C(lmmercials. ·• re l i s t tr with Models * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Mrs. !do Dreno, 77, a widow'l iU~n\Jim~it~ed~t~he~y~m~"'~~lpa~~Yl'°~iiii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:== who had been a secretary for .f« photographs. ' many years. re1istered with the company. An office 11upply NATL ASSOC. of WOMIN IN CONIJRUCTION equipment firm U!led her pir-OIANGI CHA"•• t l PllS NTS ~~: 1 ~h:· ~~~:e::~;· ~~: WORLD OF CONSTRUCTION best used in hu I 0 n g MODIL IUILDING> DllPLAYID ,., OIANGI COUNTY secret1rial career. 7. ltll C.lADI STUDINTS "BANKS AND savings and loan institutions use the family ima~e:" Tambellini said. He dl1played 1 ever a I ad~ vertisements c1rryini: pirtures 1 of Carl and Mary Chess and their three dhildrtn . Chess, a rnanag~r for an in- dustrial equipment f i r m , registered his family. His three children. rangin1 in age frnm three to nint, are natural models. "There was an amusing in· cident c::oncernin'!' the Chess family." Tambellini 1 a i d . "The husband was in Har- risburg. Pa .. on a business trip and we wanted to substitute another RlOdel for the father in an ad. Chtss wouldn't he.iir af it and flew home for the pictures. He said people in his hometown would have been putzled by the 'strange' hus- band and f11her In the ads." Doug Sortino is 20 and atands 5·4. His "very ordinary 11.ppearance." Tambellini said, has won him several ad . vertlsing conlrttt.s. I "ONCE WE posed him In the cab of .11 truck and h3d to prop him with lelephont books ao M could reach the 1teerin1 wheel." ''Club Bus' Rutt Funded ' &oath (oast ?laza NOW AT REINERT'$ GOL,US OR ANYIODY ENTER THE GRAND SLAM PUTIING CONTEST WIN FREE PRIZES -ADULTS ONLY Alt you do 11 r•gist•r for l bells -end putt on our portable putting gr••"· If you tink I of 3 you wi" e prizt. If you sink 2 of 3 you win • golf bell. If you si"k ell l you wi" t n $8.00 golf shirt, • STANDOUT! A tailored collar kni1shlrt that get1 the a ttention on the course or swinging anywhere. Norrow conlroat edgin g takes to color coordinating. Great comfort, neat looks. Permanent press Dacron* poly ester and cotton, with Scol cbgord9 soil release.As you lik e it •• , KNIT. munsingpiear SAN FRANCISCO IAP I - The transportation committee of rhe Goldtn Gar.e Bridge DUtric::t has voted to continue subsiditing three e:rperimental "club buses " transporting Marin County commuters to San Francisco. COLORS : Roytl blue, nevy blut, sky blu e, mi5t green, send go lJ, ind wh ite. f<!::.=--Y,i,t s1zE$~:~~ XL. PUTIING CONTEST RUNS 'ROM MAY ltrh TO Zlrh MAJOI CllDIT C.t.IDS IN COSTA MESA IT'S O,.IN 'TIL 1:00 ,. .... & p;llDATI The buses, which hAve operated for about one year. were priv1tely chartered by Marin · County residents who go round trip each day to jobs in the UC Medical Center area. Members pay a monthly 1'-------1 r ... DAILT t:JM CLOllD IUN. Raber! Shields. d i at r i c I engineer. said the club buses Mlped reduce the number of private autos using the bridge. And recommend ed con- sider1t i<1n to exp1nding I.ht progr1m. D!PART M!NT &TORE 1116 NIWPOIT ILYD. CINTl.t.LL1' LOUTID AT NfWN>IT AND HAllOI ILYDS. ' • " ' • German 'Brains' :. Return By HOWARD A. TYNER COLOGNE. Germany IUPI ) -As a member of the launch team at Cape Kennedy. scien- tist Helmut Lacheta played a key role in putting Apollo 11 astronaut Neil Armstrong on the moon in July, 1969. '·Six weeks later, I got the al'," l..acheta said in an in· tervlew here. "The cutback in f th!:! ll.S. space program put tirr](Kf of\ps out of work." , ' LACHETA, TllEN 46. spent 16 months looking around the United S t a t e s for a job -u•ithout success. ·· Then, he..-packcd his -bags I nd joined a growing number of fellow G er ni a n · b or n aca demics, scientists and in- tellectuals returning to work in West Germany. ·rhis "reverse brain drain ." as it has come to be known here,. is largely the result of poor employment prospects in the American aerospace in- dustry. It traditiona lly em- ployed large numbers of Germans. A drastic reduction during the past two years of study and research grants once p\en. tiful at U.S. universities, also -fi gures in the move . 1'11E LURE of highly paid positions encouraged as many as 5000 German intellectuals l'iuch as ~eta to emigrate to the Unitei1 States in the years between 1945 and 1965. But ''those days 8re over now," says Dr. Arnold Ebel of the German Academic Ex- change Service. a government- suhsidized agency that deals with the returnees. Ebel's office in B o n n receives dozens o( queries each week from German-born un iversity professors in the Un ited States and it registered 8 20 percent increase in the number of those who have come back since 1969. ··1 wrote 100 letters to American companies in my field. Only on my IOl st did I get a reply." Lacheta said. That "one reply" contained an offer to work in· Munich on a jointly-developed German. American space probe to the · sun. "I accepted immediately," he added. ANOTHER CAUGftT in the economic squeeze wa s Dr. Ulf Bosse II. He went to the United States from Gennany in 1962, won his Ph.D degree at the University of California and in 1969 took a job teaching mechanical engineering at Syracuse University. "I was given a promise of $50.000 for my research," he said. "But not a single penny of it came through. The money just was not there." Bossell. 35, quit Syracuse, tried un successfully to find a Job in industry ("I was over- qualified in aeronautics" J and finally came back to work at the West German space agen- cy in Goettingen. where, he said; ''I have an excellent Jaboratory, a good salary and a 120.000 m ..,. k (137,200) government grant to do my wor,." Gulls Foil Track Plot DEL MAR , (AP) -'Mle operators of Lhe Del Mar Race Traclc. hoping to make for one-le! istrac· lion for their horse acing enthusiasts and be s, stocked the track s with mosquito-eating fish. But an overlooked Dock o( sea gu Us broke f the wire early and clea out lbe shallow pooch. • Thursda.v, ~1.iy 18, 1'>72 DAIL v PILOT I I WHITE 18-PIECE : ~® IRONSTONE-DINNERWARE Ois hwasller :;ale dinner service tor four. SlartP.r set: dinner plate~. soup or s11lad bowls, cups and sauler~. Attractive ~1 glase pattern. , ~R~ P1c i uRE . ' ,, TUBE WARRANTY .; l j ····1.,•1··1 ............ t! ~ •.• ',.,.,. .......... ,. I>""' !! . .. Jd"'•"~"'1 ", ..,, .. ,.. ' ..... ~ .... ..,.,.,-. ·' . ,,.., • 'I 'll II ,,.,., J' .'•Id.Ill.. -• J . I -I . ---._ ~I ...... , .. -.~--··=--!, ~-··-·~ : SANYO 12" ··~~-:~· TV 3ss 1 GALLON REDWOOD STAIN & SEALER ENTIRE STOCK OF $3. 99 WIGS $5 I lightwe.ight portablo lV with rarryrng hand le. All channel UHF /VHF 1ecept1on. 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Ul¥OUI""" rt.s llTWlaN SAN DIEGO FREEWAY ond BAKER ST. • ''They ate up . all our fish in one day," said one flfficial. "They didn't .. get 1 chance to eat one mos- 1 ~uJlo." =·=='!~----------·----------· ~---------------------------------'---- JI DAILY 'ILOf fh""'1, M'1 11, 1972 QUEENIE "The t;~l of being a 'Gad"'8tioul-town' has skyrockllled, and you people put the matcb to the fuae!" Free Speech Row DiviJes Campus By JAMES K. STALEY Sacramento that the disrup- SACRAMENTO (AP) _ A tion was "a symptom af a serk>u1 national illONa. ' diapute over the limits of free "The disruption was an ex- . speech has polarized a oollege preasion of dlat.nPt in one of campus htre In the Wlke of the most ¥•1uable tools in- black militants' refusal to vented ~y humanity allow a Nobel Prize winner to freedom of speech," Shockley apuk on his controyer1lal ·.1 tlclaf OieOil... ' ,.,,. The 1tludent and ~ademlc The incident split campus J!berals into two angry fac-communitie11 are ~p It over tlons : those who fa vo red let- whether Stanford Unlverl!ity ting Shockley speak, and t~ose phyalcist Willia.n1 Shockley Who conSldered the invitation should have been Invited to an inexcu11able-affront to the lecture at the 17,000·itudent black community. Sacramento ltale College, and John Po{wall, a Sacramento Sheu Id tree •Pf!ffh f!o¥tend to Nortel Prl:re mlt1- ne .. '• rontrovera- lal theorlew lhnl b I a c It • t11a11 I><> raclall11 IMferlor? attorney who looked into the c.ue for the American Civil Liberties Union, says !he in· cident put the campus liberals into a quandary. •·they had to cJioose between the First Amendment and being called racists." PoswalJ said. "T~ey can be very liberal in talking about why Stokely C·a rm I ch a e I should be allowed to speak, tt¥hether free speech shou ld but when it comes to why ex.tend to his theories that Shockley should be allow~ to '" blacks may be racially in-speak, they completely failed . ferior lo whiles. "The merits or a person's A band of militants took views have never been a test over the podium w he n of someone's right to speak,'' Shockley appeared last Nov. he idded. "We Jet a Jot of liars 22 and refused to let him talk speak.'' on his theories, which have .. 1 think there's a move in been rejected by m a n Y the academic world to"·ard 1eneticists. the suppression of ideas. Shockley, who admittedly which is very, very bad," has no traininJ:t In genetic~. commented Mrs . Barnes, a 36- bases his theories on year-old ~1issourl native who 1lati1tic1I studies using IQ describes herself as ··pretty test sc or es from identical liberal." I wins. But others on the campus The controversy extends said Shockley's right to speak lllO to Carol Barnes, the did not involve any·question of uaociate p r o f e Ii so r of academic fret'dom -that he sociology who invited Shockley had 00 right to speak. at least to lecture her class. . not on genetics and rac-e. After the incident. members Among them "'ere the vice of the collei•'s adn1lnistralion, president ror academic af· f1culty and Con11nission on fairs. the dtan of tht School of R1ci1l Discriminat ion con· Arts anrl Sciencts. the Pan demned lhe invilation lo African Student ·union and the Shockley as racist. 1'hey urged Commis11ion on R a c i a I college President Be r n a rd Dilicrimlnation . Hylnk to rebuke I ho s e A number of scientists and associated with the event and educators have argued against t.o a111l1n l\1r.~. Barne3 lo Shocklev's ,·it"'s, includinjl another course. Stanford professors Pa u I They al10 urged lhal no F.rlich . a population biologist. discipline bt mettd out to Lee Cronbach. an educator those who dlsrupttd the lee· and L. L. Cavalli-Sforza . a IW'e by ·Shockley, who shared geneticist. a Nobe.I Prlr.e ln 1956 for On Jan. 31. the AmeriCiln development or !he Lr11nsis lor. Ph ysical Society meeting in Hyink rt.fused to reassign Sail F'ranclseo tent111ively Mrs. B1rne1 and further \'Oltd lo disavow support for angered the militants by 1en-Shockley·~ theories .11.nd called ding Shockley an apology. them r1cist. The con t rovers y al "No freedon1 of spet>ch for Sacramento Stale 11 not !hr: racists, Nobel Prize winners first involving Shookley. fie or otherwlae,'' said the Pan has bten the tariet of African Student Union in a demonatratlons at sch 0 0 1 s statement issued after nine or -across the counlry durinll the 10 PASU tnemberl 1elnd the past few years. including Sacramento Stile p od i um Dartmouth, Wright Col!elflt In from Shockley before an Chlca10 and Stanford itselr, overflow audience of about .. whert se-veral or his classe!'I ._soo'-=. ======= . ~ have been di!Jrupltd and h11 r · has br:tn burned in 1rtl1y. THE BEST Al tlte Untv1r1f~ o t • C11l!om..a Dtvla c a m p u 1 Shockley told 1 ·11udtnl 1u· dlenct I week atttr ht "'IS ·.. prev111ted from 1p11kin1 at Readtnhip p o I J s pro\'e ''Ptanutl" is one ot l he world'• mogt 'POcf:1\~ comic 1lrl11'. ntad It . In tho DAil.Y PILOT. ' ~ ' • • DEWIE All-CONDITIOllED COACllS AIRPORT BOUND? Pfl'IOT SERVICE To Lio Mg.I• 1nr1 Allport from Ortnge Cot.ldJ AlrpOlt ., .............. S4 oo ·-/JL--A.M-. .... ,.... . ....... ,, .... ~:~ ~r-n:;;. (({P ~.!!~~'~ .. ., ... ~ s a,, ,.,~,,__~c.,,. DllECT • ftl.IAILE • ECGROlllCAL San Diego Rape Cases Doubling Torrey Pines Campaign Succe ~ful SUMMER SCHOOL fOll STUDINT~ WHO .t.•I WOllltlNGi &ILOW OllAOI ll\llL • SAN DIE<;o (AP 1 -Rape is occurring otarl~· twice as orten as last vtar i11 San J)iego's fasl·aroWing northern &eelions. Plllice Sgt Ken Reson sayL But. Reson said "the rapes 11\al arc called in represent one·!enlh or those that hap. pen" we think. Forly-four rapes w <' re reported through March. LA JOLLA <AP / -A publlo fund-ra ising calJlpaign lo buy 165 acres Qf rare Torrey pines trees ln i)?O Wal a ~CCtii, said SPontOrl. It prodyced $900,000 lo qualjfy for looil.Olitl in matchlnJ. state money . On a Windy blurr overlooking the snarled Ice age trees, a rew citizens met this week lo ask a question. "It's been two years since "''' turned the money (Iver lo the state and we want to know y.•hat happep~ to ll /' sald Mrs. !!Oward J\llen, ehi\lrmap of the Torrey Pines cqmmitlee of the Sierra Club chaptei.J n San Dieg~. Whlle 98 acres were added to t~~ e1isting state preserve, Mrs. Allen said 67 acres are • fllNOlllOAITIN l~rw '1ft e J¥1>f ltltl le J~I¥ Miii • Tr1n1110r1llll<I I• I ll ., ... . ~ South Coast ?tua · , 3333 BRISTOL ST., COIT A MESA ·979.3373 FORMERLY WINSTEAO'S, NOW UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT HOURS: MON.-FRI. 10-9 SAT, 10-6-CLOSED SUNDAYS HI-Fl • STEREO • TV • TAPE RECORDERS • PHOTO FINISHING l/500otn seoond 'plus "B" convenirnt shutter ielease with lock • flash "F" •nd ''X" synch • : OUR REG . 1.98 WITH 8 MAGNETIC PAGES 146 • • • • • • __ ..... .. ~{~]/.!t: • • YUASA 9 YOlT! RADIO BATTERY l 12c E . . • • • • • COLOR PRINT flM SIZE 126 12£XPS. OUR REG.97~ Hanimex Praktica Super TL w/tl.8 Oreston Sin&ie Lens Reflex behind-the-lens CdS meter. Feat ures 1ilms speed 6 to 1600 ASA automatic fil m loadin g microscreen focusio& bright view.finder Instant return mirror OUR RES. 139.95 91 widi cue --•• U.2.2J.!t • • ,._ . .,;.... ; .. U~J/.7.t: •••••••• ••••••••••••••• ••••••••••• •••••••••••• lc;\ip'n ~Vt ~ . . . • . . . • • • • • • • Cl82 INSTAMATIC COMPARTMfll CAI DUI IEC. 3.IS 96l • '. : • • • -• -. .. fi.J'.2~12 .i ••••••••• jc;ttp'I\ : #581 • ! • • color film PROCESSING ,;~-.c ,, ; aaNUa. . :fi., ( PHOTO ioo)linf ~.~'' ~di ~' 61.llttRitt .,_ ,...,,, . .. • • • • • _.,.....: 5/22/72 : •••••••••••• . , .........•............•... • • • • • • • • • • . . • • • • • • • • _..,_ : 5/22/72 : •••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• KODACHIOllE FILM 35mm 20 UPS. Lllrr J 1.95 29 OUI 1£6.1 --. :.~t~Y.7.t: ' . • ---________ _.__ ________ _:__ _________ ~• _____ _,.___ .Crusader DAILY PILOT J.J lor School Prayer Endures QrttHM k ... MMltet W¥kt CUYAHOGA FALLS, Ohio -Mrs. Ben RuhUn ls a determined woman. WHEN IT CAME to a vote last Midwest, into Texas and ultimately, P.trs. billboard. Since then they contributed ad-John F. Selbtrling, a Jlberal Democrat Una: emphasized he doe:i: not oppose the December, a majority of House member5 Ruhlln hopes in Califotnia . Twenty-three dltJonal money. serving his first term, and Pt1osher. seek-concept of prayer in school as long as it For 21> years, she lobbltd In COngrtas for a constitutional amendment that wouJd pennlt voluntary, non. denominaUonaJ prayer In public schools -an amendment that had been bottled up in the House Judiciary Committee, beaded by Rep. Emanuel Celler •(D- K~~ . . . . ••• t I" led I · b h Mrs. Ruhli'n r-i·ved conlribulions at ing his seventtt. is voluntary 11n4 is not 1 part of the -~"" o ""' -vo or 1t, ut t is was congressmen in that state opposed the ....... regular school routine. shcirt of the required twirthirds majority amendment. her home in this suburb of Akron . One Both faced primary opposition May 2 Lambert maintained there 1~ a need for needed to send it to the Senate. from It is not 8 partisa n campaign. The op-non-Ohioan, she said. walked into h~r or-from men wbo disagreed with thtrn on religious training of children and thul where -if similar agreement had been_ ponents range from Democratic con-fice .one day and gave her $1 ,000. lhe prayer issue but contended they were schools are 8 proper place for ii . reac hed -it would have been sent to the servatlves Such as John L. Mchfillan She sometimes contracts lo purchase runni"¥ on their 0~·n and not as Mrs. Seiberling has said he takes a dhn vie\v states for r;1tiUcation. from South Carolina, Lo liberals such as billboards Out of state herself or has the Ruh lin s handpicked candidates_. or tampering with the Constltution, Mrs. Ruhlin pledged to work for the Republican Charl~s A. Mosher of Ohio billboards bought by interested persons in But Seiberling and Mosher easily Somethin,q he contends Mrs. Ruhlln's pro- defeat of congressmen who voted against and the Rev. Rober~F. Drina n, first.term the di strict of a congressman who voted defeated tbeir primary opponents. ,posal would do. He introduced hi~ own the amendment. Now she is actively Democratic cong re ss m a n from "no." llowever, ~1rs. Ruhli n hldlcated that amenhnent that would pcrn1lt school 1be 1po~r of her amendment, Rep. Chalmer1 P. Wylie, (R-Ohlo), finally suc- ceeded in gettitq: the sisnatures of the 218 House members needed to force the bill out of committee for consideration by the entire House. doing that. • Massachusetts. It is doubtful whether-the billboards similar atten1pts lo unseat the t~·o - and prayer as long as it is volunlAry. non. Forty.six billboards -each bearing the will have much effect in districts long other congressn1en who oppose the denominat ional. and -most important - same message: "Congressman voted "WE'LL HAVE over 200 billboards by represented by the same persons, such as prayer amendment -.will be made in not part of the 5ehool's routine . against the voluntary school-prayer the lime we're through," Mrs. Ruhlin those of Geller and McMillan. 1974. Seiberling 1s favored to win the gt neral amendment'' are spread across the coun-predicted. eiec tion lhis November In what is try. They are seen {rom New Engla nd to She and a friend contributed $4 ,000 "a IN THE AKRON area she Is con· IN A DEBATE \\'ilh his primary op-generally a Dt•n1ocrat ic di strict -the -~ -- the Carolinas, througho_u_t _Uie"-h_:e_•_:rt_o_:f_lh_e:____:lo.:.n:::g_li_m_e_•_::gc._o_"_to_f_in_a_n_ce_l_h_e_fir_s_t_..:'c.'n..:t..:r•::.•..:i1_,1g:_h_c_r_of_le_:n_:s_iv_;_e_•:::g•_ins_t_R_e_:p_. _.cpoo_c_n_1._w_tll_ia_n_1_J_. _La_m_be_rt_J_r_.:_' _Se_i_be_r_-_ _:pr_a_;y_e_r_i_ss_u_'_'_'°_' w_,_1h_s_1a_n_d_"_:":..· ----"t I Famll" Circu• by Bil Keane © -.v-your whole arm, Jeffy, You can't 'spect MC1111my ta -yau apenlng and cJ·osing your fingers. 11 Oceanography Team 'Reaches New Depths BOSI'ON (AP) -An in- te rn a ti on al team of oceanographic scientists has reported experimental drilling in the floor of the Arabian Se.a penetrated d e e p e r than anywhere in the world -4,262 Scientists Dig Up Sea Sediment WOODS HOLE, Mass. (AP) -Scientists digging into the Caribbean seabed as much as three miles beneath lhe ocean surface have found sediment they believe may have come from New England or Nova Scotia three million years ago. The \l'oods Hole Oceanographic I n s t i t u t e :i'eJX>rted on studies dono,rjby its research vessel, "Knorr'' as part of a study .aponsor by the National Scien~e Foun. dation to learn what happens to waste deposi ted ln the oceans. Dr. Charles Hollister, chie( scientists on the mission, speculated that rivers in New England or Nova Scotia car- ried the sediment to the seas during glacial times . · He said ocean currents · subsequently moved the sed i- ment south. Fas,, Thorough, Guoronfecd Real Estate Sa/f's and or Broker license TRAINING d Phone for Free Foldr!r I ANTHONY SCHOOLS HAllOI CINTll . U. H11'111r C111ftf' to111 Mn1, can..,.,.,11 rt.. 17141 97t•2JIJ 1n1 I. lrwtihwnt St. A111Mlm, Cal, f2IM "· (7141 7764100 feet under the ocean floor. The record depth was at a sile in the northwest settion of the sea under 11 ,610 feet or water. The report also disclosed finding an area in the Red Sea of hot brine pools with un- derl ying sediments containing .gold, al.Iver, copper, lead and zinc. THE EXPEDITION discovered a submarine ridge at least 300 miles length off the coast of southeast Arabia. and indications the origin ol the Red Sea wawwre com- plex than believ~eviously. The findings w e r e an· nounoed et the Museum of Science by officials of the Woods Hole Oceaoograph.ic Institute, \1i'bich participated along with Co lumb ia, University of Miami, Uni\·ersi· ty of Washington and Scripps Institution of Oceanography, La Jolla. The work was done on the drilling research v e s s e J I Glomar Challenger, with an temational team of scien- tists aboard. It was the 2.'Jrd leg or a series or underwater drilling experiments that have con· tlrrued several years. The 24th leg has begun, th.is one in the Indian Ocean. The G I o m a r Challenger, owned by Global Marine, Inc., Los Angeles. is a 400-foot vessel displacing 10,000 tons with a million-pound hook load capacity drill derrick 194 feet above the surface of the water. mE REPORT SAID th e sediments containing traces of valuable minerals -deep under the sea -were traced down to e depth of 10 meters, but the drills c.ould go no deeper because of a layer of basalt, a hard, dense vol-canic stone. I See by Today's Want Ads e SPARKLING ln the sun, thls lT C.tamaran shows her colon. She'1 a Rain- bow #6 and Is in excel· Jent condition, with RJce 1&.111 and a trailer. e Tin 1..AST WORD In furn- iture. A Pair of Pecan wood commpde t>blo, Fmx:h Prvvtndal king ai.u Br. tet, a Magna~ st~reo Ir record p111,)'ff and a p&i.r of wing chain. e CHOOSE this l96T Mtre· my °"""" J<R.7. It bu W , automatic, Ml power, P'us! 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Eoiy To Rtochl 2666 HARBOR BLVD. -IN COSTA MESA PHONE 546-7010 HOURS: WEEKDAYS 9 TO 9 SATURDAY AND SUNDAY 9 10 6 PM Entiy Lock Set • S1c:urifv for your hom1 • A"'1ric111 m1d1, poli1h1d br111 H1rdw1r• 11td 2 ••v• in· II c:lud1d 3ae Glidden Latex Ceiling White • Go11 •" 1mooth ind cf,ipl11' • E11y to u11, 111y lo cl1111 ., • Ec:1"o'"y pric:1d 199 ·- Yi " x 100" Teflon Tape • Nothit19, but t1ol1'i it19 1lic:k1 lo ih oul•r 1urf•c:•! • Gr•1I for m11lti"9 w1'.111 1pplyin9 1po•v •h:. • Tou9h mvf1r l•P• Accoustical Paint Roller T1'.ick fo1rtr • W1ffl , w11v1 e Rolls 011 p1 it1f 1moolhlv without dri p1 IEG. 1.lt 79' Extra Protection Swing Lock Flip , i1'1 ep1t1 Flip, it'1 c:lo11d Hold, 11 c111 1 '"'" if your r1gul 1r lock i1 iimmiad E11v to 1111!111 Sc:r1w1 i11- c lud1d 49' Jumbo-Size Spray . Paint • C1'.001 • from •"•"'•It •nd /1cqu1r1 -' • All th• mo1t popul1r 1h1d11 • E11y '• Utl -1111 .,...,, 1rtd f111t 39 COIU 1111& ~· l4 DAILY PILOT ,fhl.ltSdiJ, M,l.J la, 1972 For The -Grim Statistics Reveal County Ueaths Record Births Westminster Pair Guilty Of 'Abuse' SANTA ANA A Westminater couple accused on arrest of thf murder of their eight-month-old daughter have pleaded 1 u 11 t y to lesaer charges In Orange County Superior Court. hi r the during the past year. live in hangings, two stabbings, and SANTA ANA -More than \Vho had been drinking were in 4.2 ratal accidents, including childrtn and msel . l•·o leaps from freeway ed bathtubs. 40 Oranae County murder vie· legally drunk : Pifly·three ·per· one accident involving two report reveal · Although 800 deaths \\'ere overpasses. Ums were 1hot, stabbed, cent of the dtlnkers tested had cycles which collided. Arguments were the top. listed as accidental. or 1J1e One death resulted from drowned, 1tr1ngltd, clubbed or more than the legally accepted Teenagers and s rn a l 1 P r cauSe of rnurders. Seventeen result of violence , mo s l ~wallowing paper and plastic beaten to death J•st year. . IS of one percent alcoh ol in children were victi1ns of the V:·ere committed during the' persons \\•hose death \l'as in· knobs, \Vhile 26 died from This wu the report of the their bloodstream, the report carnage \Vith 93 deaths or 34 heat of verbal battle. ac-\'estigated by the coroner 's asphyxiation including carbon said. percent of all traffic demi ses. di vision died natural deaths. ·monoxide gas from auto et· Orange Ciounty C 0 r 0 n er '9 we s tminster, Huntington The 60-69 age bracket was cording to the record. Marital Deaths involving diseases or hausts. Division of the Sheriff's h problems resulted 1·n s1"x I I I 1 TJ.3 Some 18 m<n belween 40 and De Beach and Laguna Beach each the safest in 1971 \Yi! only · the circu a ory sys em, , , partmtnt. had 12 traffic deaths within nine persons killed, but the homicides. topped the list. follo1vcd by 49 committed suicide last ShtrUf-O:>roner Jim Musick their communities . Anaheim, over 70 group recorded 23 Accid~n!al poisonings costs those of the resp i r a Io r y . year-the group most prone to · 11ai3d 1dbou! .. :o percent of the . cri.ss-crossed by freeways, Jed deaths. -. 57 Orange Countians their system, 213. surh action, Sheriff coroner 8,7 2 taw~ recorded were the list with 39, and Santa Ana Children were involved. in lives; 74 died inffall s: three There were 225 suicides with fl1usick said. related to poisonings, .ac· and Fullerton were sceond and five slaylngs last year. Three were killed in a i r p I an e 1nore ·than 100 cases involving The same age bracket wa!I cident1, or acts of violence. third with 32 and 17 fatal s were killed because they \\·ere cr ashes. and one died in a drug overdosage and 75 from the n1ost prolific in suicides by HomicJdea accounted for 43 respecttv.ely. "unwanted." two in cases railroad accident. gunshot wounds. women \Yith 20 k i 11 in g deaths, but automobUes were Motorcycles were involved \\'here the parent shot both the There were 37 drownings Other suicides included 15 themselves. the m01t lethal weapons in ;;;~;;;;;~;;;;;;~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;~;;:;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;~;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;£;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;,~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:; Oran1e County Jn It'll, as 259h clled.ln Ire/fie. Alcohol wu pretent in the bloodltrtam of 41 ptrcent of the drivers. of death cars. the sheriff-coroner reported. More than half the drtvers Dissolutions OfMnrria~e Yeldon Buster Burgess, 215, and his wire, Linda Lou, 20, were ordered by J u d g e William Murray to undergo a oo-day diagnostic te1t at the state's Chino facility after Burgess pleaded guilty to manslaughter and his wile to amended charges or abusing a child. Fullerton's Anti-litter Law Upheld FULLERTON -Fullerton's controver1lal "anli·litter law" baa aurvlved a n <1 t h e r challenge in Orange County Superior Court. Death Notlre• BROOKS lltnv l,ooks. 103 Orch!d. Coron• ct•I Mt[, Dile ot dt•lh, M1v JS, 19n. Svrvlvfll bv to11•~nd. Ch11lt l M. llroo-s: d•u•hter, Ht&IMr; 1on, J~wn; !wo tl1!1r1, Ptm l<rtb•, s,nr• An1; Ptnny l(rt bl, T111lln1 fftther. Mr. W&l!tr Kreb1, Tu1r:n. !>forvlct 1 ........ l'otld IOOtr. Thutldt~. 1 P M, P•clflc View (hlptl. lnl•rmfn!, P•cltlc Vl.w Mtmor111 Par~. F1mllr tllQt•llt tholt wl:Mnv 10 "'~~~ mtmorltl cO!'lltlbu!lo!I~, Pltllt (Otlltill'IJt• lo !hi Cltv Cl Hopt. Pttit•C V!ew Morlu•nr. Olrtdorl. MAitk•L Lurt M.,1 Ma•ktl. A.gt S5. of 911t Flo11ndtr Di .. Hun!lnoton l!tnch. 0~1, GI fl•1!h. M•v Ii. 1977 $vrvlv••1 hv l'>u1~nnll, C.to•vt W. Ml•ktl: <l•u9Mer, ll . J~nn Nobl•I· !!unllflf!on B••ch; lour brothto. Orvlll•, Lt1llp, J°"" W. Jr. •M Cllll11rd Ollvpr; !wo ,,,,.,,, M'I. WUll1m M1rk'I •nd Mrt. Ow1n Ad~ln1; 1r11ndtlllldrtn. J• ·n11. llv>PY And Miko Nnblu FvnotAI 1trvlce1. F rldAy, l PM, S m 11 II I M orlu11rv lnlPrrn~nl, I// o • ! m In 1 I• r Mtmorlet Pt•k. sm1rn, Mor!u1rv, Olrtc• '""· M1SHLEll: G.o<O• [, M,,111u. Att ll. ol 1S60 Plt(tn!it Ave . Sp 0-1. Ntwl>Crt l!P~tll, Survived CY wlfp, NrlUf. P•IY•" f•mllY ,,,.. .. 1ce1 w••P llt ld 1t 11.i• 8fOldWI¥ Mor!VlfV WILLS 0 1yl!ll'd N !G N I WPlll Ill llrotl!Wty. Cotta M•~·-Otl t or llt11lll, MAY u , un. Sur¥1v.U br wl!f , El!lr ; bro!lltr , Gltnn, of Or11on. two J•lltrt, Slbvl Norr!'IKn, N""potl llo11c11: Sn\\•A Slll•rt, Cos!• Meu. SP•vlcf' will bt lltlll S1!urd1v, to AM, 11•11 ll•Ol dWllY (118Pfl. w1r .. 0< P . G . Ntvm11n {lf!lc•e!lnt . llt ll 8ro.dw1y Mo•tv11v. Ol•PclOtl. ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY U'1 E. 17th St., Costa J\.1esa Sjf.4881 ~AJ.TZ ef RGERON FUNERAL HOM E CotoM deJ J\lar fii::-HSO Costa J\.fesa 64S.!U4 • 'BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY Jlf Broad~·ay, Costa Ftir:sa LI 1-3133 • M<CORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1715 4fw>• Canyon Rd. •M.fllS PACJ)I'~ VIEW MEMORIAL PARK 01111elety • Monury Both were accused last Nov. 3 of the killing of Tawna Mae Urquhart, Mrs. Burgess' in- fant daughter by a previous marriage. Police aid the baby was choked. slapped and drop- ped to the gound In an incident allegedly wltneued by other patrons of an Orange drive-Jn theater. Burgess faces a possible st.le prl!on term of up to 15 years on ~the ma1111aughter plea . Mr1. Burgess face• a state prison term of one to 10 years or a Iener county j!il term on the abuae conviction. Lawyer Gets Court Post S"ANTA ANA -Tustin at· torney Gilbert N. Mueller has been named to succeed Judge Alan McKone as an Orange County Juvenile Court referee. Juvenile Court Presiding JUdge Samuel Dri!izen a~ polnled Mueller, 51, to fill the vacancy created when Gov. Ronald Rtagan to the McKone was appointed by Gov. Ronald Reagan to the West Orange County Judicial District bench. Mueller, a Republican, was formerly In private practice in Santa Ana. Empl1ysema Club Meets SANTA ANA The Judge Lester Van Tatenhove refused to grant the injuncUon demanded by attorneys fer National Delivery Systems, fnc, against what the firm said were unlawful arrests and harraaament of Jt.s delivery employees. The firm atated in its com- plaint that its agents were being prevented from at- taching plastic bags containing advertising literatute to door kriobs in the FUilerton area. It condemned lhe ordinance as unconstitutional. Lawyera for the city defend· ed the ordinance on the grounds that Jt prevent.a the dumping of unwanted materlala on private property. The ordinance was upheld by an appellate oourt last year in a review of the action filed by the now defunct "Tempo" (&mday ·Mail) organization. • UC Irvine Scientists Get Funds IRVINE -Six scientists af· flllated with the California College of Medic1ne at Uc' Irvine have been awarded research grants amounting to nearly $20,000 from t h e Orange County H.eart Associa- tion . Recipient s are Robert H. Barllett, ~1.D .. Santa Ana ; Frank F. Ciofa!o. Ph . D , Corona dcl Mar: A I an Gazzaniga, 11.D., Santa Ana; Robert M. Nakamura, M.D., of Anaheim : Jtubert Pirkel, M.D.,, Corona del Mar: and John A. lidall, M.O., Newport Beach. Christmas Seal Atsociation of Orange County will sponsor a meeting of the Emphysema Club at 7:30, May 22, in the auditorium of Santa Ana Com· munity Hospital. The public and especially those with breath ing problems are jn. vited to attend without charge. Richard Blake, chief of the pulomonary function lab in the J~o.spital's Cardio-Pulmonary Department, will 11 p e a k on "Leaming to Breathe." All or the $15 million ex· pended during the fiscal yea r by the American H e a r t Association and its chapters has been donated to annual Heart Fund drive~. Open Season on Bike Owners Begins Soon SAT\TTA ANA -The number ()r bir.vclfs stolen in Orange County in 1971 was double the. previous year and almost reached the million dollar point in value, ·a speclaJ report by the Orange County Criminal Justice Co u n c i I rerealed today. "Tht' valut of 20,000 stolen b1cyrles in the county last year \\'BS abOut $982,~9. almost double 19'70's theft loss cf $504,373," the report reads. The c ouncil added ominously. "about 20 percent of all bicycle thefts are unreported." The justice council also charj!'.ed that, while t h e numbtr <if blkt thefts in· c:rease:d by mare than 5,p last year, rt00vtrles rost only 830. . O..pite tbo bi( jump In bicycle lbeftl In ltl'l lht ... .,. po&albJe reasons for the big jump in bike thefts: · -A growing demand end popularity of bicycles creating a ready and lucrative market for thieve!. -'M>e increased value of bicycles, erpecially ten-speed racers whlch makes thtir theft and rt~ale at prices from $M1 to $15 a profitable crime. -Difficulty e1ptri,nced by law enforcement. a g e n c I e s when trying Jo trace stolen blcycl••. btc1111e llW1)' of them are unlleeJWd. To comblt the incre1ae In thefl• In the counly, the coun- cil suggesttd adoption of a countywkle program u n t l 1 leglslallon IJ pess•d with he avier penalties. --~Drive Newport BuU, CO!lloml1 -PEEK 'AMILY COLONIAL f11NERAL HOME 'llllllellaAw. · cU llld "'no illlonnelloo alsts that there ii an «ganbod bike ateallng ring In Ibo county." But the report added: "It L• obvklus lhat ~ than a few crlmlno!J mfu a IOOci living •lealiag bibs." Recommendallons for the program inclUded u n i f o r m reporting procedurt• by ID po 11 c e aaooc1 .. ; ,.quiring ,.lailtn to IJctnse bicyel• at the tlmt "' oalf; .. giltrltlon dey1 11 achoolr 1od I JIOl!lble door to door rtglsttaUon drive conducted by Explor<r Scou!J. It wu 1bo llllii.,led lhst scbooll try to ,.locala blkt racb ..... , !tom partlnc ...... •nd •ireetl. ............. -- 8Ml'l'll8' JoaroAJIY lllM.11111. ""T-..... The report ~: -·1t hu been .. 1c1 Ulat -ean mike I 1peci1J ..W IGf l ape<lllc tine! ol biey<la trom known thl.,u at -i local educational lnalltUllola and ._ .dlllwrJ wllblll a few Never a middleman! Thatmeans 1 yousave and save BIG! Of the Big 4 mattress makers only Ortho sells FACTORY DIRECT TO YOU through their own stores. And since Ortho cuts out the middlemen between their factory and you, this means you getthe savings. Fabulous sav in gs!. These are just a few examples: SAVES51195 Reg:.$179.95 Step up to king-sized luxury and enjoy genuine Ort ho stretch-out comfort. Tempered·sleel Innerspring. Scroll quilted cover. Ven!iJated Reinforced border. These are the kinds of quality features you get -at lhis low, low Ortho price. Pr ice includes Mattress & . 2 Box Springs PLUS Ortho-Pak & Double Bonus. ~r\flSAVE s LSU\J ss1.es Here's a supe rbly. constructed Queen size beauty loaded with the kind of quality features )'OU get only at Ort ho Reg. $159.95 -and ata super.Jow Ort ho price, Crown Flex ce!'ter support. Smooth Scroll-Ouil1ed cover. Pnce Includes Mattress & Bex Spring PLUS Orlho-Pak & Double Bonus. You Can Only Buy Or1ho Mattresses at Or1hQ Stores THE NATION'S LARGEST SANTA ANA and FOUNTAIN VALLEY HUI Harbor 11¥d Ccor111r of Edl.ftftt'I N1it lo 2"y', '9!01101 tJf.<f510 ANAHEIM 1111 WHI Lincoln Avenue J1ut 011t of Fwd Mort Pho1111 11•-21to Here it Isl The quality construction 1~ full support thet Or1ho made famous. And Ortho gives you the complete set at th ls remarkable dOl lar.aavl'JQ prSct. . Packed with many Ortho quality features . Soft cotton felt.Sisal lnsulAlor, And CM low price includes Mattresl & Box.Spring PLUS Double Bonin. CHAIN OF MATTRESS SPECIALISTS • ORANGE I no No. Tudln Ave. On• l lock South of C.lllru (11ori to Mlcho11'1 Mot~otl 'hOl'IOI f)J.SIOl LA~EWOOD 443l Candltwood A- Candltwoocl Shops l'tilu.: •S4-4 1l-4 l•t,.tt ff.om L..lf•""'4 C.1tt.T cr.i-1.• . 1bt Justice council llst.d 'lbt '?Oport d>neluded wltll the inl'"'1ltioo the! the ..... mer months ol lunr. July and AQfllll .,. Ille wont period for biq<Je tllolll wilb about• ptlUlll ol lbe annuel thoCll ~ darliw t••i• iponth&. • Ul'lN lJAILY Ill !"Si\! IU li ·SUN 12 b·IMMEOIAll OELIVERY •CRfO IT TERMS liVAllABlf •BANf'AMFRICARO•MASHR C'l '.P1:< • • J I c [ I d ,, ( h 0 n h h 0 n ti n ll pi B• I! D u lo cl I tk co m St ob Sa Jui )'O olr m~ u Ot tG .. tr Ill ... 41 . u,1r • ....,.. BOMBER -Actre" Raquel Welc h ·11lies • moment out at Po* land where IUmllU( o! movie "Kansai Cl t/ B o'rn be r" r11ume . Among guH!J on set was Oregon Gov. Tom McCall. He Takes Time Out On Podiutn Dr. Armud Hammer was presiding o v e r Occidental Petroleum Corp. 's a n n u a I stockholders meeting in Lo! Angeles when there was a call: "Is there a doctor in the house?" A woman sUpped on a short stairway and needed medical attr'ltion. Hammer, Occide ntal's board chairman, halted the meeting while he tended to the y,·oman. She was later treated at a hospitaJ and released: The 72-year-old !·lammer received a medical degree from C o I um bi a University more than four decades ago, but abandoned the profession and never entered medical practice. * * * Comedlln Jerry Lflwi1 WM named to receive the 1972 Christopher Columbus award l.__P_E_o_PL_E_I for work to combat muscular dystrophy. The award will be presented tn Columbus, Ohio during the Colwnbus Day USA Pageant In Oc tober. * * * Beuy Goodman, the "King of Swing" who got his early musicaJ training at a Chic::igo high school, test iried at public hearings on the Chicago Board of Education 's plan to cut music, art and physical educa- tion programs. The board says it's try ing to save money. Of the cut in music, Good- man said, "They can't do that, It's impossible." * * * Sandy Rockf:nsmltb, who piloted the Ken t ucky governor's pl8ne from 1959 I" 1967, is running for the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate. Hocl:ensmith sa id that he is keeping his own campaign close to the ground. He just completed a 500-mile bicvcle tour of Kentucky, claiming a bike ls the best way to meet people. * * * .. Robert Sawyer appearing 1n a London court on a obstruc- tion charge, told the judge he could not be fined 165. "Why not," asked t h e magistrate in M1rlborough Strett court. "Because the maxbnwn for obstruction is ~" replied Sawyer, 22. · "Ob, so it is," sakl the judge. "You're quit. right. I'll !<ti you what -In all the clttt.nnstances and in view of my blunder, let's say fl&." ---W'S-BE FRINllY U )'OU have n@W nclghboT'I or know of anyo~ moving to our &rel, plnae tell us so that we·~ extend 1 · b'ft ndly weltome and help them to btcome acqus lnfed la tMtr new aurrou.ndlnp. SI. Cust Ylsitar .....n _, • ... V'ISitar 64Ml74 .. nor.,, llq 18, 1972 •candy" Must Pay Lawyer WHAT'S NEW AT HARBOR VIEW Houston soclalite Canda ce Mossier Garrilon and htr nephew, Mtlvln Lane Powen:, must pay lawyer P e r c y Foreman $390, 700 for his defense of the two before and during a 1966 murder trial. Powers and Mrs. Garrison we re tried in Miami. Fla., in 1966 in the death of Mrs. Gar· rison's husband, millionaire Jacques Mossler. They were. !0,und innocent. Slate District Court Judge John L. Compton ruled in Houston that the two still owed Foreman $140,000 of a $%50,000 {ee for defending Powers. lie also ruled that Mrs. Gar- rison. who married Houston electrical contractor Barnett Garf'iSOn in 1971, owed Foreman $150,000 for work for her between the time or he r first husband 's death In 1964 and the 1966 trial at which she was represented by other lawyers. * * * Actor Cary Grut Baroness Gratbi Von J''ursteoberg will share a $70,000 settlement in their suit for damages arising out of a New York auto accident In March 1968. The two were injured on the Long Island Expressway when the hired limousine in whlch they we re riding to Kennedy Airport was struck by a tnJck. The settlement. re ac h e d before acting State Supreme Court Justice Leon a r d Sandler, \\'as against the Red Bird Truck Rental Co. and Cardinale Truck.Ing Co. * * * Sportsman R o b e r t L. PbJpps, '°n of millionaire soclallte Ogden Phipps, and his wife Carol are divorcing. Grounds for the divorce ac-- tlon fli ed by Phipps In Manhtltta n Supren1e Court were not disclosed. ~rs. Phipps, 11 former model, is seeking $1,150 week- ly temporary alimony plus $30,000 for legal fees and a coopera~ve apartment worth 189.000. Phipps, a bis game hunter, and Carolyn, both 37. "'ert married In October 1969. * * * ll1rry BI 1g1 of Jleter- borough, Eng I and, says he thinks be stumbled across a new cure for baldness -horse manure, Biggs, a 69-year-ol d pensioner, went bald 15 years ago. A 'friend ga~ hlm a manure ·mix to. rerti1'1Ze his garden and in the proct>ss some rubbed oft on Biggs' head about six n10nlhs ago . Now his hair I! back. growing I "l was amazed," Biggs .Jaid. 111 have never put anything else on my htad so r came to tbe conclusion it must be the 1 manurt. '* *' * Entertainer Danny Thomas. founder of St. Jude's Oilldren Res(arch Hosp i t a I In Memphis, announced en $8:7 million Tennessee fund-raising drive to finance expansion of the fa!'ill!y. Come join us at lfarbor View. Enjoy the summery v.·eather and brou•se lhe shops. You u·ill be delighted. , , .J\1aglc ~1lr-· ror has tebblng, A grent - semi-permanent eyelash application. l\1akes you look gla morous. C:ill 6-14- . 8040 .••• A not ht!r ., gh11no1·ous ldeit . Construct .. ' · your ov•n custon1 bn!hing - WlllEBOUSES-DIBECT TO YOU! ,t sui t fron1 a widt srlrrtion " . uf fabrics a t The J.'rln$l:e Br.nefit . Surf & sun ti1ne Is 1.1511tl 4 (f'7'ii1l 4) f.3511t14 (ft7B/J4) l.%511tl 4 (G1"1iiJ 4) 8.5511tl 4 (n1"/ii14) 8.!511t15 (G7B/l 5) 8.5511tl 5 (R78/l S) 1695 1995 Radial Belted Tubeless 1J'hiteteaU. 2 STRONG BELTS 16Sxl3 fib: (5.98/6.00tlJ) 215xl4 (i15: (U18/14) F 0 R IJN IR0¥AL 5.60;rl5 • 6.50;rl3 nu: (878/13) LOW PRICED! ••• 4 PLYTlJBELESS WHITEWALLS The Uniroyal 800 Is o fine quality tire for everybody'1 pocketbooll, le prepared for your vocation & be PROTECTED! Buy o 1et today. H9W can you ;o wrong ot thi5 pric e? 7.75xl5 fitsi f78/IS. 195xl4 fill.: (F'l'B/14) 205x14 fit.: (G78/l .. •29•• '3415 •37•s 215xl5 filf: (878/J!i) LR78xl5 fl111: (%25/15) •39•5 '39" •44•• Balancing '1'' Per lf'heel + W eiPU _:, '1595 F 0 R Allp1111t senic1wit~ 2Tir1 Parc~1se. Fill Si11 O.S. C:ars l1cl1fes c~ect 1U correct caster, u•btr, t11 l1, wb1r1 11c1ssary. Air c11fili11e• cars 1J51ffiti111I. .Now Only LOW PRICED! TIRES for PICKUPS. VANS CAMPERS & TRUCKS SIZ.E PllCE f.LT. JID PllCI f.LT, 6.00116 ••• •• '15" .. ,. 8.00.16.S •• '34" 0.20 6.70115 ••••• '19" ...... 875165 '36" '22'' . • . • . ,... 7.00115.. •• • .... 5 ... .. 7 00116 '24" 10.00.16. •• ... • ... . .. .. . .... 1.50116 •••• ,_. '.;;2.;;r_·_ .. ;;;•;;;•...r._1_2_.00. __ 16_._5_._ .. _4_,_ .. _ ... _•-i Custom Wheels 4: s99 WOWI FAMOUS AND BEAUTIFUL Super Sport Wh11 I• il'I •h•• 1-4'" ond 1!1" to flt ond beautify fords, Chevie1 ond Plymoulh1, IJ" DEEP DISH WH££lS ...... , 4 FOR$~ SUPER CffRO.tf£ WHEEl.S LOW PRICESl Af,L 4 WHEELS DISC REGVLAR BRAKE JOB DRUM TYPE 1. 1enw N£W' tlSC PADS ON FUIR 1. INSTALL NCI IOMDED 21.-llffl.£ Wlt((LS LININC ON Al141'11EllS 11111•111 N-1111 IOTOIS t IEl\llLI ALL• nm cn•ras · " r11111111 J, P.W: rlONTWHEU. IWlflS 1 lllSllCT IU llMT •sc ~ -UUIM&ll!UlflCllUO•S 4. lf'PACI FIOtl1 WHUL IE.AllNCS "5.ADO IW:E FllllD l IUD UNES 5. AID JIAU fllll l IWI UNO I. IN5PfCJ, mu 1£JUIN AND HOLi I. fMSP£CT lllASTO CTUNl!"l.--;.J._, Dawte SPllNCS l NOS[S J. INSffCT All llttlSSAIT "We J, UC CllJtD ALL IUU SIOlS llllDWAI£ l SPllJl91$ 1. IN5"CI FlfllfTCIW£ SW l CICCK Nill IOUS -•e.b, L flll AUISTIOOS FM Ufl Of l tNSP£CT CIW£ SEALS qt htp.. UNUfC 1l1t111U1111wm ... ......_. 11.111111STA1SA1m s39· ·aJ..* 829!.!._ ~ ·. .....,.,. ... ......... °"""'S....... .-..i:_...... ........ ,.. ..... . * FOR ALL FllI.L SIZE u:s. CARS, Except .. !f .. dj. brak .. Sl.75.pir wb..I tdd'tl M•rlc C. 81•••• eU'I aet tie fe11 c•aa • SAFE BllAKE 1081 *C• .. ,.,.,_." ..... MM.&n -:,,_rm.1Mel-ll 1t1m• ..... -..t1 Celt .. ......, -C)tllMMrs...... • .. = -::.:=, ':.:':."':: .............. .....,.cytl,.,, ............................ ..... ..a.. ........ -..... , ................. _... ..... '* .. ..... EJ~! La Habra • Garden Grove ' 2000 14040 Whittl ... 11. Broolchurst ES (cw. ef WhlttW (elf. of Wntmlntttr & 8-hJ & lr .. kh.,rat) 674-3666 (71A) 530-3200 • ' · V al"e StetnS . Costa Mesa 3005 H1rbor 81. (cor. of lektr & Herbor) 17141557-8000 • 95e Buena Park 2962 Lincoln Bl. (cer . .t Lln<oln & K-) 17141826-5550 ... .... w .+1:r.1t'94.&. fpfoch LOW PRICED! ... 4-PLY TUBELESS 9 81 -· ,,,,. ...... 1 • ...... ,. .... Th• NEW 7 llb tvbol°" 2+2 tlret which ,. ... 2 ply card plui 2 ply llLT for )"tUr 1mttr p,.tectlon. Known for ltl parformaftct &, handllng, thl1 hai got to bo tho LOWEST PllCI anywht'V-r th-""' La..do llLTID· 71 oorln WHITIWALLSI · '2595 82895 H78/14 C78/15 '2585 H78/IS '2885 F78/14 &di.+ S2.51 ta Sl.t2 hod. b. Toa depend· ·'"" ""'°"-rhe 1111. Bla.,lc.....U. .2.95 ,,., •• 1 J78/14 82995 '2985 J78/IS Faslrak W-i-d-e 78 Tubeless Glass-Belt low Prices! , •• Uniroyal original equipment on mill ions of new can ••• doubl• glau-b.lttd for your •afetyll Hurryll '1888 F78/14 '2695 A78/13 F78/15 C78/13 '2185 G78/14 '2985 G78/IS '2295 R78/14 •:J:J95 C78/14 lli8/l 5 '2:J85 • '36'5 E78/14 L78/1 5 Fullerton 1321 So. Euclid f 1 Ilk. N. of R ••nlcle Fwy.) (714) 17G-0100 . here!! ... Accrnt your , ' ' . vacation garb \\'ilh 11 ~· I macrame tote bag from l Saodc11tle Glfls. Lovely!. things (or your home & . special altla here too. Pick ; up YOW' Bingo Cards ... Fre1h Al a springtime breeze are the J\1aytime ·· flowers at, F1ower1 By "orrl •••. Let !hem rellecL .. In your cbaadelltr . ,lmperlal Bll"dnre has replacement bulbs r o r ·· ch1ndellm In a style you ,JJ might enjoy fitt ing into ij your decor . . . .Don't ~ forget on Sa t. the So. j Calli. hi N.-i Bank, .' Hltbor View branch, 6«· .f 161111 open lrom 9 am lo • , I pm., with Vlsta·Matic ; Drive Thru facilit ies ... t1 Be sure & browse In The ~ GuUd Drur. They have a ;;.. newly" 1nivtd shipment or '?' !!~a antiques le trlUHUm ~eces to flt · •very bud ge t .•• Caldwell's Candles have just the thing tor weddin1a & showers. Unusual, d1lltloll1 pastel p a r t y wlfm It chocollt. hootoee minis. , •. Oh-Roi N...,.,i ltotfo... II bavlnf a welcome Rome Sylvia l!aJo on Frt., Bit., 'Mon., only. 10 porcont discount on an ca1h ralft. That's sreat value, : .. All whit. crocllt eard1 will be Invalid ,,..,. June Itt. So be sur1 •Ill your renewal forms 1t llart1>r View SbeU: Please bear with them thru' thl1 chan1oover. It II ap- precllted le you 111 tho nme depondable, hooell service . • • M1en1b-lntol RHll)' Co. neecls -In the E11tblu/11 Irvine Ter- race & Harbor Vlew areas. They have waiting '°buyers. Ca ll them for ex- pert service .... Vacation time ii here. Jlave all your clothes made ready at Cameo Cleaner•. Cb 11 d re n~ U11llml1ed . features beautiful, pro- fessional hairstyling • & fashions lhat ere unique for sizes, lols to teens.· Look Into this un ique & ..... special shop. . .The coun-• · try store at lloward1 Nutrition features colorful teakettles. haystack calico tea cmies, chickenPot hold ers, & quilted pot holders to brighten your ·· day .... That dinner ror two will he awaz:-dtd ·· tomorrow, Fri. fl.fay, 19th, ill Richards ~farlcf!t. The Archet, Villa Novi, the new RU&ty Pelican & many more restaurants are involved so you know the re is some $lood foOd . J ust like the good food . they stock at Richards .•. After June Jst we will be changing lormab In thil column. Look for the sallor on the scroll. He's looking for you tbru' that teleacope olbll .•. AJ!lof LOIS JOY • I • car. 5 .HOW . . .. ON THE MALL • SEE The most popular boat in the world •• The Hobie 14' and 16' Catamaran SEE The Most popular trailerable Sailboat . •• The incredible Clipper MK21' and MK26' SEE The Popular Chu~sco Land Sailer •• The Se~ond Best Feeling in the World PRESENTED ON THE MALL BY • • • • • HOBIE NEWPORT 2805 W. COAST HIGHWAY AND THE WESTCUFF PLAZA MERCHANTS - * SaY-· DMJ :it Marfllt llaaket '* Jean . .,., ~ Dlcll V9rnon '*La Gal•la ik fflclioryfoi ~ .. 1-ns '* Cobbltft a.nth lit-ptc:•day11 Men's r· • * Yeta's Intimate Apparel * Cho1lws H. Barr Jeweln * ~ Hair Stylists * I Bennett, Ltd. * Westcilff Plaza Barbers ·* llm1 .. ;y Dmnpty Chflclrt11's * Dao.rs DHricJc Tu Sliop -Jc. Wlltclff SILel S1rvice' . * Paper Unlimited * Rion Hardware * Westdlff $Mes * lailk of America * Dr. Loa Roy Elder * The Storek••P9" - ' * Montgoaiery . ci....n I ' •one-stop' shopp_ing e.t 'its finest! • OPEN THURSDAY AND MONDAY EVENINGS FRIDAY 12 to 9 SATURDAY 10 to 5 I RIDE THE WIND AT 60 MPH ••• - • ' • I, • I '· ' ' ,. ' ' < ,, ., ,s • • •• " .. Goo ·o ers • By LAURIE KASPER ot tltt, DlllPr f'llol Sl11l A lot of people goof orr but most try to hide II. There are, however, about 700 men around who would probably react with a wide grin when called a Coofoffer. Although they became tagged as sucti while goofing off in Newport Beach.. few could be called beach bums ar noted for a lack of ambition. President Richard Nixon and his Newport brother, Donald, are Goofoffers. So are actors John \Vayne and Andy Devine and the voice of the roller derby, Dick Lane. And then there are lhe city's officials, more politicians and actors, and quite a few bankers, educators, judges .. builders, l doctors, dentists, stock brokers, at· .. torneys, merchants, engineers, c a r dealers , •. Even some retirees have officiaHy achieved the name. EXAMINATIONS Of course, it's not hard to become a Goofoffer although both a physical fnd mental examination arc required. · According to Ned Hill, vice president, if a candidate's breath -mists on a cold metal creamer, it means he's alive. And so. he has pas~ed -the physical. The mental exam, however, is a bit more tricky. Hill formed a circle with his thumb and forefinger and said to do the same. Then he said to put it on the....chin ..• and he inoved hi s hand to his cheeif. instead. Reflex: action apparently makes the average man follow llim and, without thinking, place his hand to the cheek, also. If the poteDtia l member does, he's in. Otherwise, he might' be a bit too smart for the group, Hill joked. "You just have to be a good fella and a fri end of someone." added Or. Irving Laby, president and one of the original Goofoffers. Twelve years ago. he . Dick Richard and a fe\Y others would meet in Rltbard's Cof· fee Shop and discuss various things over coffee every morning. A FLUKE "It was just a fluke ." the dentist said. But one morning. their brainstorming evolved the idea to form a club. Naming the club y,•as easy. •Someone st!ggested. '·Y.'e coUld call it the Goofoffers . That's '''hat we·re doing, goofing oH.'' Since then, the sn1all clique has grown. Although the club meets every day from 9 to 10 a.m. except Sunday ("\Ye'd be here Sunday but they're closed"). there are no attendance requirements or fines for missed meetings. But enough members come to have caused the small coffee sho p to be enlarged a few years ago. And. there's little vacant space along the walls where the mugs. complete with the member's name and picture of a Goototter , his feet resting on the top of a desk while he dreams of a sack of money, are shelved. wmTE HOUSE If the President ever returns to the morning meetings, he'll have to bring his mug or drink out of a normal cup. Only a picture of his mug is there. He wanted to take his mug to the White House, Dr. Laby said. He claims Goofoffers can be found in . . every major city of the country. The club, which is incorporated, has had several requests to organize chapters in other cities but, so far at least, they have refused. This club has no ci\'ic or charitable obligations. Most members, Dr. Laby ex· plained, are active in other area club5 which do promote service to the com· munity. Yet. said Dick Lane, "This is the most important organization in the city." Every problem of the community and country is discussed at their meetings. "They discuss business and politics and solve nothing," added 'fommy Qu inn, a retired actor. On this particular day -which seemed a normal day-there were also a lot of jokes, stories and teasing among the men. FRIENDSHIPS FORMED r..tany of the n1embers have formed close friendships. "Where can you ge t more intimate than when you're having a cup or coffee?" Dr. Laby asked. He's the only president the club has had all these years. For llim it is "a nice way to start the day." ~fembers have even been known lo end the day together. Sometimes the men and their wives. who are kno\\.'n as the Goofoffercttes. will go on a short trip or to a ball game, the races, a dinner or a dance together. "We call these\ our extracurricular ac· tivities," the president explained. Brewi -ng eas ' ' ' Goofoffen have no real 9oals but it's fun, fri~ndly start for the day. Dr .. La by · (below I , , 9ets his mug. ~men BEA ANDERSON, Ed itor • Love Is Color Blind DEAR ANN LANDERS : You ha\•e printed many letters on adoption in your column. I have read letters from ~dop­ tive parents, adopted children, unwed mothers who ga•e up their babies -and even unwed fathers. lktt you have never printed a letter from a white coup le who has adopted a child from a minority race. My husband and I plan to adopt a black-white child and we.are running into tinhellevable opposition. Both his parenl5 and mine are against it. Many or our friends say we are crazy -that we are looking for trouble. Frankly. we have given up trying to explain. They refuse to listen. Please tell me, Ann, are we roolish to ant to give our Jove to an innocent child who starts out In life with. two strikes against him? 'These liUle ants of mixed parentage are not wanted by most peo- ple. They are, in a very real sense, han- dicapped. We want the challenge. We feel we are equal to it. Will you give U! a word of encouragement, please? - FRmf IOWA DEAR IOll'A: v .. IOUnd like a eouple of btautUal, Rllltn, gutty people, with a great deal of love to give. The chHd who fiDds 1 bome wUll yoa ii fortunate. You two rite 1 !1 pa ii.late for yOrir courage hi my-. , DEAR ANN LANDERS: Since evidence ls mounting that DCD-1nY.1k.er1 are being physk:ally harmed ,by the human chlmntys around thein . a natlonWi<le organization called ASH (Action on Smok· lng'Md Health), wblcb describes tu<U .. the ltgal arm of the ~ com- -• t4•.t4'1Uu " .. n1tmity, has been establlshed. This organlzaUon has succeeded Jn getting the commercial airllne3 to isolate, via special seating, those who wl5h to smoke. They estimate that hundreds of thousands of American& have died prematurely because of cigarettes . A friend told me to write to ASH to leam more about their program and what peo- ple can do to help. Their address is m> H Street, Washington, D.C. 2'XKl6. I followed throu gh and the literature I received was very lntonnative. Do you know anything about ASH? A persoo can't be too careful these diys. -C.T. IN L.A. DEAR C, T.: A.Sii 11 11 ti:etl1ent or~anlzaUoo. Wbta I wa1 lnvlttd lo 1crve on the foondln" commit\« of ,\SU I i. ve11lg1ted It thonK1gbly Ind ICCtpltd with ple11ure. It iell 1 Triple-A rattn1 from here ~ ind 1 hope e\ltryone who waot1 to know more 1boot It wUI write. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am very curious to kn<lw how you would have handled the folloWinl situation. I am 1 school l<acher and need the thinking of an unbiased oulltdu. Several weeks ago I took a toy musical instrwntnt 1w1y frwn • 13-Ye•r-o\d boy who wu _playtna it du ring class. I retum- ed it lo him at Ille ...i or Ille day and , .. ' .... asked him not to bring il to schooJ again. A few days·l4',er the instrument was .. back and he was playing It. I took lt away again and told him th ia time he had lost It for good. · Today the boy 's mother came to school and demanded that I return the toy because it belonged to another child. She informed me that if I refused I would be billed for 79 cents. I told her 79 cent. wu not a very big price lo pay for 1 1....., 10 responsibility and that her aon should be made to buy his friend 1o new toy, The mother Was furious and the problem ls still unresolved. What do you lt."I htre'! - ALTURAS - DEAR ALTURAS : I ,.. a boy wbo should buy bis fr1t1d a oew Wy, 4ICtt of ltll allow1nce. I 1l10 lee 1 mother whe wUI probably be defendla~ her IOll 11atoa1 teacbirrt for •• lone u be l1 .. aclllotl. After 11111, 1be'U probably be fU1q ... · side 1galn1t lbe pelitt. la •lcohollam ruining )'OUr Ule? KJIOw the danger algn•il and what lo do. Reid the booklet. "Alcoholilm -llof>t ud Help," by AM I.anders. Enciolc 15 canla In coin with your• requut ll1d • ...... 111mped, Ril-addtaaed mvolopa .. llit DAILY PILOT. · · . ... ._ ... -• I .. •1• ... 1.·. - '·litARV fll~' - Congresswoman's Diary Reveals Her trademark 1~ a floppy hit: 1ht has her hair dont whentvtr sht can. SM L• con- cerned about \lo·hal .~hr \lfara She trte!I to diet. She f1•els she doe:sn"t 11pend enough !lnlt \\'1th her husband 11nd-.fan11ty. But lhe!t arr Bell(\. Abzo 1t"s small cares. \\"hat sfie reall y \l'orr1e!f about is the ton· tlnuaUon of the V1einamei;e \\'3r. \\'ha! she really ~'Ork'.'! at i!'i . organ17.1ng and represenlin~ "a new polllical coah1 ion of th,. \\'Omen, the minori ties and Olgainve$i Freedom Front'' now there arc l\vo si1Jcs to every bra Imagine the freedom ill a bra that adjust• to every Jnove you make. JL'1 alt done with Ol1ia'1t 11ew }'reedom }'ront. de~iKn -a Jlex ib/e "lit.tie breather'' .,,.indow that aeparatell earh .9ide for perfeet. fit and com• jort. }'or every figure type, j:udt, ~hite '" 1,r.,1c n1lon 1'i•rit0 •••mini or h1dt·1.w11 1~1m .. ,1 ..... Bott or l11h1l ;1 •h•p•d cup" .)!·.fli .ABC. Tu.Jly paddtd JZ·.'.IG BC. 5.50 • Frantic !he ~oung people. alon~ y,1t h !ht poor. lhe f!rlPrl y tnP work e rs · &nrf 1hP unemplo~ed . v.·h11:h ls 1(01ng to turn this ('OUn try up~1dr rlo"'J' anrl tn!'iide out " In ''flf'll:i ' ~!.').. Ab:ru~ !,r.-·~ to ""agb1ng1<1n '. \1> bl' i>uhl1•n ed June I by Sa1urda,v Ht:11t·\v l'rrss. Congressworr1an Al1111~ nuik{'s: it f"ftar that 11 tdl1· p<>rMnal cvncems la kl.' '\"t·1ir1d place to the l:trger "'" 1111 11nlf pol 11Lca l IS.\Ues, the~ :tfl \Pf) real c<ires to her. '"The rr.ajor dra\\ha1k !11 m~ bring 1n Congrtss ha-.; h1·cn 11~ efferl on my per'-on:iJ anrf fam 1I} life ," 11he ~a 1s 'It hasn·1. frir onP thing, been easy on my ~i~~ Medical Speakers Planned L"CI Tn11n :ind c; 11 \\' n n1C'nlbers v.111 hl'<Jr speakers 1Jn 1 .... 0 medical 111p1cs :\1onday, J\1:1'y 22 , at 9·30 a rn . in the patio 11f lhC' J\ll'd1cal Surge I bu1Jd1ni.: on the UCJ campus. Life /'('~p!t :irt alwajs ap. prr1at h1ng t ht m ag the d1tu~htrr~ of Bella Abzug, \1hrn 1111·~·. like e\f'r.)OOd y r·I..,(• f1nl.\ 1.1.int to ht known a'i 1nd1\1uu:ils 1n th l·1rov.n right." l11 ·~fr 1h1ng htr h u o; hand, ,!,111111 Atu.uJ.!, a ·"'"'·~hrukc·r ;H1r! "r111·r :1<; '""·'<lrcmely ~up1w1r!11 r Htll:1 tf·i:ri·l" the · d1n1rn1,h1111.[ ;11)u1ur1t •l ti1l'ic 1.11· h.11 • t·1 .~f)l·nd trogcthtr ·· E11·n th11u~l1 !ihe :-.p•·nd$ n1'1·! 1.11·1·k{·11d., in '.'-;ew Y<irk, tu r 11rnr t'i ah"a~s taken up by h• r r·1111~.111uen1.~ :tnd b~ the 1 ;u inus gruups and causes H1<11 'he 1~ organizing nr sup. por11n~ ~>. tn lx.•f1Jre she y,·as a con- J.!rl·,• v,f)rn:.in. her energy and p;i,su,n 11 c·re cnmmitte.d to p111grr·\511e <"<iuscs. Born in lhc Br ru1>., ~h1· il 1 t t· n de d J lunter CollC'gC and the Col um-_ b1a Lay,· St huol , 1.1·here she v.;is an ednor of 1hc "Colum:. bla J.ay,· l{{·l'i e.,...· " After hC'ing admitted to the Bar, Bel la 1.1•as act ive in Jabor law and in the early civil rif.(hls nlfJ\e menl, helping to dr<1h lcg1.~l;11ion that would brcume" !he f"1vil Hight s movemr-n!, helping to draft lcg1slat1on that y,:ould become the Civil ltights Act flf 1954 and the Voting Rights Act of 1!!65. In the C'arly 1960s she became act1 1e in the newl y emerging peace mo1·cmC'nf. helping to foun t! \l,'ornen Strike for Peace ;ind sl·r vi n~ as its ~ational J.ei:i!.la1i l'e Beprr-sC'nlat11•c. ' (UPI T•lel>llet1) ~OLLECTOR -Gol d(!n ~;ate Brid_ge is an office for l\1rs. Elvia Tompkins, f1rsl \voman toll collector 111 the bridge's 35-year history. The mother of t\vo began her unique \VOrk 1n April. She su bslituted a tan beret for the usual uni· form cap. Her Job's Nice Change Peering Around "' I S ;..: I ;..: G htr "'ings recently as a ste\\·ardess "'1th ' \\'orld AJr\lo·ays of Qakland \l'a!I Bonnie Ruth K1ssich. d_augh"lcr of ~!rs. Robert Hippe o( :-;'e"·port Bea ch She holds a BA in soc1olog~ f r o m t;n11ers1!.I" of the Pat1 f1c. SORTH\,"EST~RS l·nh ersll~' [)('ntat School in Chicago a.,...·arded a degrte in dental hygiene to ~liss ).i ichele Beth Solomon. daughte.r of the Lou is S o lomons. of \\'estm1nster. She studied prtvious!y at San Diego Slate College and \\'estminster High Sch o o I . l\l iss Solomons affiliated with Alpha Chi Omega. HONOREO by the Orange County Chiropractic Society were the John Haneys or West minster. Dr. Haney w11.s Installed as president and his \\'ife v.•as named \\'oman-of· the-year by the auxiliary. ACADl-.:~!IC and s er v i c e leadership have earned Chris Dahl, son of J\·lr. and l\lrs. Norman Dahl of Newport Be a ch , invilational mem bership in Yeomen. a sophomore men's honorary at the University of Redlands. ~IRS. DENNJS Holstein. DEBORAH · BOYLE Rites Set In August An Aug. 26 wedding is being planned b.v !)eborah Ann Boyle and Peter Brian Hill Jr. Our Ladv Queen or the Angels Ch1i~ch . Newport Beach will be the selling. Parents of !hr bctrolhed cou- ple are !\Ir. and Mrs . Louis M. Boyle Jr. and Mr . and Mrs. Peter Brian Hill. all of Newport Beach. l\fiss Boyle. a t 9 7 0 Children 's Home Society 4'.lebutante. is a graduate of Corona del l\·lar High School and noy,· attend~ ColoradD Slate UnivC'rsity where she pledged Dtlla Delta Delta. Her fiance is a gradu11te or Ne.,.,•port Harbor High School and attended Orange Coast College. outgoing president or the Seal 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Beach J unior Womans' Club "TOUTll LIS CHOlll"' Spc:1kin~ <in ('onl 1nu ing J\1edical J·:duca1ion in fJrange C.:ounly y,·fll be !Jr. f;torge L1ml:lcck. ass<1<:1a!l' profC'ssor of pediatrics ;1! UCJ College of J\1edicinc anti C..:hicf 0 f Pedi1:1trlc :F:ndherinotngy and J\1ctabolism :11 the Orange t:ounty J\oledical Center. She uri,:anii.cd and Jed 1nass lohhiC'" to Wa~hington for the nucll'<ir 1c!il b.an, dis<irmament :ind an irn1nccliate end to the Wilr 111 Vu·tnam. The nian 1\·ho hirl'd thf' li rst female toll collect-0r on the Golden Gate Brldi!;e S<1ys he origlnally \l'<l ntcrJ to C'mploy a rn:in. \\'as honored by club members '"The Everything" discounr,. s1orc cashier, nice. "'e're geltins something during 1. champagne lunche.on RUMMAGE SALi eompetM 1vilh about 100 male In the ·home or Mrs. Allen '"·· M•r 1'· 1''" M•r • M nev.· for a change,' "she said. Ansdell St J•m•• Epl1cop1I and 20 female applicants for · ' Churcll ! he job. J]M Vii Lid•, H ... ,.., nr. RobC'rl Bal'llt·!t , :ISSIS· !ant professor of surgrry at UCI t:ollcgc of Mtdicine and assistant director of surgical services at OCMC. will discuss the University Hospital as a Community Resource. !if'r 1\lork in the peace rn111·t•nl1·nt Jrd her into pol itics and she was elected to Cnngress in November 1970. "Belfa !" is the diary of her first year in Congress. But ,. hridg-c loll c:iprain r~d11'<-lrd A.shoff s:1vs he "s r101v jl<ippy he perm.itted El vi a Ton1pkins. a 2 8 -y ea r -o J d mother of 1"·0, to topple another bastion of m a I e supremacy. "I'm proud to be the flrst''-----------------~------~~~~~~~~~~~~ 11·on1<1n and the first hlexica n.1- I I ~ • Veta's ©.f.~!.tf.M~!N(i llTll&ATE APPAREL ____ .,.,_ 'W11111111 Appar1I lty • Norman Wi•tt e Bleyle ........... t•• Aho Cotf W11r 642-1197 2711 Eo1t C1a1t Hwy. Coro11a d1I Mer 67l·4740 NEW FROM SINGER ONLY 14995 Model 41 J A STRETCH STITCH MACHINE AT OUR LOWEST PRICE EVER! It has 3 built.in stretch sfiches plu~ a built-in blind ~+itch, E11.clus ive Singer• front drop-in bobbin, too! Sews buttons and buttonholes. Get this new Stylist• zig·t<'lg m<'lchine from $in9er now. And Sioger h<'ll " credit pl•n to fit your budg11t. , STRETCH STITCHES HOLD 1 HERE! / Stretch Fabric Sale ·' Ban.Lon Knlls of 100 '!~ 100·~ Polyester Double l(nfl Nyesta Nylon. Wide color Print1. Many colorful pet- c ho1ce. Mach ine wash-terns Mac hin e washable/ abl e. 58160" wide. Rea. dryable 58 /60 .. wid e. $3.99 P" yd. SALE $2.77 yd . Reg.S4.99peryd.SALE SJ .77 Fashion Swtoter Knltl of yd . 100• Fo I p J 100% Yarn Dyed Polyatltr Ch . 0 ttre 0 ytster. Doub le Knils in 2·Color 01 <.• of m•ny colors.. Comblnallon1. Cho ice or Mtc:h1nt w11h able dry· niany color combin at io•s •bl so 52" ., R " . '· w•oe. t9. Machine washable/dryable M.99 P" yd. SA l E 58160" W•d• Reg $4 99 · $l.81 yd. per yd. SALE sJ."88 'yd. • SINGER • l"lltw fllW"' fl'll iitw Sllltf'!' llRll k•lrlt """°" 911ty tU.Je, • An1erican to get one of these Jobs," said the tall brunette. "This opens the door to bet- ter opportunity and equality." "She·s real qui ck" in r-.1rs. Tompkins. said many motorists remarked favorably v.•hen they saw her in a bridge toll booth. collecting far es, Ashoff said . Mrs. Tom pkins, a former "One of them said, 'Oh , 4 Manners Ta bled During By ERMA DOMBECK My mother always said, "You show me a child who has manners and I'll show you a mother with cue cards and a whip in her hand." I am big on manners. Aho,•ays have been. Somehow, you feel that a man who laughs with cnttage cheese in his mouth will never head a large corporation. It seems I ha ve spent a Jiretime or Ill 0 U l h j n g mechanicall_v. ''Say thank you. Sit up straight. Don'! gulp you r milk. Use your napkin. Close your n1ou!h when you chew. Don't Jean back in your chair. Don't talk with a be verage in your mouth~" Just "'hen l finally got n1y h~sband squared ;iway, the kids came along . The other da y I looked in disgust ;is one of the boys stuffed his n1ou1h ';ind 111thout a 11·ord bn!1rd trorn lhc tabl e. ··Hold ii." J shou!C'd. ··come back herC' and ~1t do1\•n. Never have I sren such gluttony. I ant the only \\'Otnan in the blork y,•hose children ha l'C slrrteh lllilrks {lfl !heir fil ccs. ·• "\\'hat's Iha! n1c:ui"!" asked rny son, his speech 1nuted by food. "It 1nC'ans you ha1·e no nianners whalsoC'\·rr. \\'hen you want to !C'avr the dinner table. you ask pertnissiun. \'ou empty .vour 1nouth. dab at your face \\'1th your napkin and "·hen there is an opening in the con1·cr~ation. \'OU ;1sk. 'May I be excu.~ed pi('a~e~· " "~l:iy I ... " he started. ''lf so n1rone is talking :i.·ou rrmain quiet unlil they ha ve finishrd. \'ou n1ust al\11ays be careful nercr lo interrupt." "l\·lav ... " ··rtiC trouble \l'ith kids In- da~·." I continued. '"is thtil thev are ini;ens1til'e to !he fee iings of others. You cannOI Dinner AT WIT'S END imagine how impressed ad ults are with good manners. "I've seen you and Dad leave the table and not ask to be excused," said another son. "Precisely," I said, "That is because we are the excusers and you are the excu!lees. Why, when we \\-'ere children had I been sentenced to the electric chair. you r grand- mothC'r v"ould have yelltd. 'Sit up straight, Erma. you WRnt your spine to grow that way'1' "The point T am trying to $.:Ct across tn all of vou is that ii takes just a little "time to be polite ... !hat manners are 1101 only appreciated . they are re\\larded. ·' "May I be excused please?" persis!ed our son . "No~ How dare you ask a question like that? You're on for dishes!'' Gown Hos Future Don't wait for a special oc- casion to invest in a new even- ing dress -if those hanging in your closet fire "tired" or out of fashion. It is better to buy an e\·ening dress when you don't h;ive the pressure of a deadline ru!ihing you through !he selec!ior.. Take your time. Shop 11round. The occasion to v.•ear your new evening dress v.'ill present it&elf even if one doesn't seem in sight at purchase t!me. DTERY . AIR STEP -BERNARDO -Mii:. KIMEL SCHOLL SANDALS -PASS PORTS MAGDES IAN -MISS AMERICA VINER CASUALS -LIA Edwtrdt -G•1h•1lc:h -Rob/11 1-ioocl PF Flytrt -U.S. K.,, -Sul'l'lf'l'lt1ttft1 C1p11io Oo11c:• Shott 0111~• .Weir by D•11tfti11- Comctlve 1kt1 for c•n ... \. ' \· ' "· '.;,. ~ .... , .. ··i·: ... :~ ; ·"-' .. _,.' r-· ,.,. .1'' •' . / I •. ,, .•. :. • ' ,' • • <. •• ·' .: ...... ..,, ...... :'::. ' \ I .· '', ,., ... , . ,... •' (.,.· . .' .-- . : _, .._,,"'.""'"' Ii'· . . \l / I I • c•z:••.t.-trllt" • IW!lf)twtf' MUll'TtHOTOH ll•C:M-a411trttr •I INCll , • jl a· CMal 1"~'4 .... ~ Hll!ttlftttM lttO C.ltt, n 1•1t41 Or•111t-.11 ""ft-,,,, "TM City" C9lllft, MNtU 225 &. 17tll ST.-COSTA MESA 541·2771 tlltt "'81* -......, ..... -...,. c-w .• , ,.,, .. ·~llllf ••OYl ........ 1 ~· Orlflft C•fY Plttt, ..._.II e \AHKAMl•IU.•O e e MAJTI• tM.t.A•I e ! " Horoscope Taurus: ·check Lease FRIDA Y MAY 19 By SYDNE Y OMARR Pisces persons inhale ex- perience: They can get the feel of t hi n gs. Natives of this zodiacal sign are magi- cians and poets . "They are dreamers who dream dreams that can be seen and heard and rett. Pisces is illusion and behind the scenes. These persons are musicians in the sense that thev ha ve rhythn1 with in . but Pisces is not alv .. ays aware or discordnnt notes. Pisc eans abhor pain but are capable or deliheratelv hurting th('1nselves. Greatest tonic for Pisces is quiet meditation. This is one of the n1ost intriguing of signs. ARJES {March 21-April 19): E1notions dominate. Give of yourself, but be sure you get !omething in return. Be romantic v.•ithou t be i n g foolish. Emphasis now is on how you dea l v.•ith children and special members of op.. posite sex. TAURUS (April 20-~lay 20): The home environment. sense oJ security -these are highlighted. NO\V is time to finish. conclude. nail down agreements. Check lease. Be sure that what appears stable actually Is not springing a leak. GEMINI (l\1ay 21 -June 20 ): N.e"' ground ~ules are in effect for special rclalionsh~s. You lvill regain nluch self-esteem. Re a gracious winner. Strive for independence. CANCER (June 21 -July 22): Hunch concerning possessions, valuables is on target . LEO (July 23·Aug. 22): Pressures are relieved. You becon1e more of your own person. Additional laughter. social contacts are in picture. \'IRGO (Aug. 23·Scpl. 22): Be wary lh dealing with one "'ho is careless. Protect your o "' n interest. Check dues. bills. policy payments. Be sure figures balance. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 1' Friendships, relationships are intensified. \Vith this comes added resPonsibility . No one is going to hand you something on proverbial si lver platter. SCORPIO !Oct 23·Nov. 21): Gift for one who has aided in past is now in ord er. Sho\\•ing appreciation re s u I t s in ultimate gain. SAGIITARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 ): Dig deep for answers. man y or which can be founfi within . Pil'iees person plays prominent role. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): \Vork procedures are emphasiz<'d. Organize efforts. Get rid of \Yasleful methods. Another Capricorn is in pic- ture. You ga in now · by maintaining steady pa c e. Eschew th e s en s a t i on a I Conservative cou rse n o \\' proves most constructive. One who serves you makes special request. AQUARnJS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Conclusion of talk is in· dicated -the business of a signed agreernenl now is on a genda. l\1 arriag,e, partnership. special and unique relationships are featured. Be su re you are correctly quoted . . PISCES (Feb. 19-March 201: Study Gemini messagr. You can establ ish gr('aler raoporl \vilh CO-\\'orkrrs. associates. Tho~e \.\1hn admire you will be vindicated . Responsibility grows. Accept in gracious manner. No tinle lo shirk duties. WHY BUY ANTIQUES? Th ey a dd a soft, mellow touch of the pas t to the present. A bi t of hand- craftsmariship in a maSs- production world. Many antiques are not expensive, and most go up in value, not down. Browse our small shop this weekend for antique furn i· ture, prints, and decorative item s. THOMAS f . ALLEN ANTIQUES Weekends or by ApPointment 7892 Westminsler A"fnue wuuiunslAlr,C.. (714)892·7597 .... ~ le • ~ . ~ • • ' .. -·· !' B. c. , .. t! ., go•e"7e1·yw he1•e sandals Sandals ... banded. woven, bold ly st rapped ... the styles tha t zip you through summer da1 s and evenin gs. For casual oi1'ing or special adventures. Super right ond br;gh t fo r now. A. Dorine from N a+u ralizer, 22.00 B .. Three·band by Bel·A;r@, 18 .00 • C. Woven vomp by Bel.Air® 18.00 D. Rito by. Li fes tr ide, white potent leother, 17 .00 E. Bon de d by Vivo ltal;a, 12.00 Fashion Shoes \ 1. \ \, ' \i ·v. '\ : . \ \ \ \ . •. . \ I , Thlan,wllim.g uron.deriul 1illmm® :i J . '·· ' t ;t D. E. ANA"°'EIM NEWPORT HONTINGTON IEACH OR,AN&E, MALL OF O~N&f cu•11or 444 N. E11tlhl (71 41 SJS-1121 47 f•,hlon h ltltd (71 i l ••4·1 212 1711 Ed l1191r Av1111i1• 1714) 192·1)11 lJOO No. lu•Htt Stfttt 171 4) ttl ·llll 500 Loi C.rtil" M•M 11111 1 ...... 1 IHO'. II A.M, lo 9,19 P.M. MONDAY THROU&H FRIDAY. SATURDA~ II A.M. lo I P.M. lu.IOAY 11 llOO!f lo I P.M. . . • • •' ~ DAILY PILOT Tnu"4Q, Mq If, 1972 ttub Agendas Feature . lnstallatiorJ-~ SPICIAJ. IDUCATION SUMMER SCHOOL l"4l~ldu•U1M· •<"*lln• +•r "" SLOW lEAllNllt . .t.ltTISTIC, ftfU· ltOLOOICALL '( HANO!(Al'l'fD ,,,_ OTW•ltS w1tt1 ~l•I ltl fnlnt ~ lt!Tll, FIN1$T SUMMll SCHOOL Cl1.it1 t" !ht 1119(1•1 ~hll• J""' '"h i. Jlllf 21111 TlANSPOITATION PROVIDED Installation of -new offi cers b the featured event for aeveral clubs during 1he next l!w days. Demonstrations, Junchtons, speakers. a rum· mage gale and a discussion of • breastfeeding also are sched · •led. Chamber Women Fred Lang of L:tn~ and Wood LandM:ape Architfcts., South Laguna , y,•ill speak dur· ing_ a luncheon meeting of the Newport llarbor Chamber of Commerce. Women's Division which begins at 11 a.m. Wednesday, May 24, in the lrvine Coast Country Club. Beautification Awards "''ill also he presenled tn six businesses and owners nf residences for the ir part in preserving !he beauty of Newport Beac:;h . HB Juniors New officers of the Hun· tington &-ach Junio r Woman's Club will ~ installed at 7 p.m. Tuesday May 23, in the Mesa Verde Country Club . New officers are the Mmes. Jame.!! Shepard. president : Cody Taylor . Roberr Sutake and Frederick Spea ker. vice presidents: Michael Pharris- and Randall L a n f o rd, secretaries: Da vid Crandall. treasurer: William Lokken. auditor. and Karl Foss, parliamentarian. Art League JoAnn e Mix w il l demonstrate how to paint a portrait with a palette knife for the Costa Mesa Art League at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 23, In Adams School. The com· pleled portrait will be donated to the League's 6cholarshi p ,fund." . ' HB Women The Woman 'l'i Club of Hun- tington Beach will meet for its annual Springtime luncheon and card party at. noon Tues· day, May 23, in the Woman'!! Clubhouse. Proceeds will be put in the general philan- throph y fund. Edison High School student Jan Fleming's painting, The House W i I h . Appearance s, Center Tour Teen Challenge Women will attend a program presented by former druiz: addicts at the Los Angeles Girls and Boys Rehabilitation Center Tues· day. May 23. Buses will leave the Teen Challenge Center, Orange, at 9:30 p.m. Wednesday Law Topic Scheduled New officers for I he Wednesday Morning Club of Costa f\.1esa will be installed during a brunch at 11 :30 a.rn . \Vednesday. May 24. in the Balboa Bay Club. Bruce W. Sumner. Presiding Judge of Superior Court. County of Orange. will spe8k Wednesda y, May 24. at 8 p.m. in the Mardan School of EducaHonal Therapy, Costa Mesa . His informal talk and a discussion period lo follow will deal with forces at work that are making profound changes in the social fabric. Judge Sumner's expertise in law and its relation to family life "·ill be applied . Lega l conceptl'i re garding marriage. the role of women. position of children and their r l ght s and parental responsibility will be covrrerl . Reservations should be made at the school. Seating is li mited . The new leaders are the JUDGE SUMNER Large & Halt Sb:es Dresses • Sportsmeor • Lingerie SIZES 36-46 E11y, breety pent tops mike the most of your wardrobe. Pick yours off the rick 11 H11f·ti" Shop. Print jer1l1s, striped lcnltt, hand-screened poly.ster1, zlnttY cottons FROM '.$7.00. SUNl1y Shopper? ", ..... , ...... 11 MI p.-. COSTA HUNTINGTON MESA CENTER •14 UM NaWNU 14YJ>. OU111DI llAU. C""rfii .f llfll-ltr.t) CHtwt t. ltrUr ...._, ~II • Jllutan!~e I Ana. Proceeds .... ·ill help the ctnttr .. Interfaith KENWOOD PRIVAT~ SCHOOL SlS Se. W11h111t ,Aitoff!IM 'JJ.JllO siuth co••! p1111 ' lrlttol tn lht San Dl•t• l'wv. Co1la Mttl J46-"°" 20" Stained Glass Tiffany Lamp It's e8$'f to make your own authentic Tif· fany look lamp with a mad&-tJI) value of $132.95. Kit includes real stained glass cut to size, lead, Ught socket, chain and oord. ~ .................. ~~W•$49.95 $3995 r. Now Only K1T Price Never L:OW9r. ENDS MAY24 94 Huntington Center in Huntington Beach Here's Leewards, come to town to bring you 1he biggest selection of needlework, crafts and fabrics In the Who~ areal You11 flnd everything you want to fill your home with beauty end your hours with the satlsf~ion of making them! What's your pleasure? Afghan kits to knit or crochet? Lamps end centerpieces to make? Linens and crew- el to embroider? Handbags to finish? Artificial flowers? Leewards has them ell-as well as thousands of skeins of yarn and thread in every possible style and color. But even more important than Leewards selections are Leewards savings -always best anywhere. Seeing 's bellevlng-so slart with lh•S. typical values. Sorry, no phone or mail orders, please.. Setdemon1lt1tlons daily 1110, 11, 2 Ind .i. Marigold Crewel Pillow · Bring spring Inside with this 17""' square plllow· tul ol marigolds. Kit has everything you'll need {except stutflng), even the need le. $7.95 Mode-up Velue Wn$4.25 $239 Sale Price Come in for Grand Opening Leewards Boutique Ornament Kit Regularly Offered at $399 Come In on or before Mey 28 and plclt up your beautiful boutique ornament kit absolutely free. Kit Includes ever:yth l'ng IO create a matching pair ~ boutique ornaments, artfully beaded and braided In aoft lavender. stand-up ornament Is Iced with tiny boy Ind gl~ angels, hanging ornament with tiny rosettes, flne meoh netting and• k>ng, graceful tassel. Fill out coupon and preacnlatatoro. 30 Elevation Art Kits Perfect one nfght project to enhance your decor. Slmply cut out Identical piecft from prints, glue together to create 3 dirnension1I acene. lMtructlone; and ahadow box. walnut trame Included. B-WIS$4.49 Now Diiiy '3.99 Cloct Sllop W• $5.n -Only '4.99 • • Boutique Ornaments Snowflake ornament makes up with the look of "frozen crystal.'" Kit Includes everything you need. Made<ip value $7.00 Was99¢ Sale Price 6 9c 1<1r Boutique Cube $1!.00 Made-0p value, Was $1 .49 Now99C Doveof- ·$12.00 Mad&-<Jp value. Was $1.69 Now $1.19 I .. • -! :.9----------LMW-14 l-Qt~1 Ctnter ~-a-.. OP • I P.-t ot °""" foryccr he 11ift. I ONLY ONE KIT PIR FAMILY I I Nome I I M "" -....,_..,, 94 Huntington C«lter Huntington lie.ch STORE HOURS Monday lhrv. F ridey 1 O:OO·e :00 Saturday 8:00-6:00 Sunday 12.'()().5 :00 I I gtY I • I QOOOTMllU MAY2t, 1172 , J ' DAILY '!LOT 21 Poliee• Blaek Tur1noil Festers • ID • . . By GUY HALVl!:RSON In tbt> past weeks Metcalfe molded a thwart off moontir11 tension -about one-rt•lat1ons again dr1rrior1Hed . s1nglt> {'t hn1r block in Dal l'y's once in1· Recently, many black leaders - Cltftttu kie.u. MMitw WYlc• broadly based CGalition or 1upport from lhlrd of those attending angrily marched F'1"1. there ""'8S a shooting incident in pregn11ble coalilion -btlng repeatedly includin1 Metc11fe and Jackson -hl,·1 CHICAGO -Against a mounting most of the city's black organizations. rrom tbe room. a publi c school .... ·hen a_n off-duty ofrictr dlscri minatf'd a111ins1 . oppostd t.bl re-election campalrn of Cool ba~kdrop of angry criUclsm aimed by Blacks were particularly disturbed O\'er killed a young Viet1u11n \ tteran. then , County's State's Attorney Edward V. Chicago 1 giant black community at the AT THE SAME time. the recent schism the presence . of vide<>tape television issuance of a report charging Chicago "YOU !'it.\ Y WELL. ask whal has hap. !ianrahan, disllked and fe1rtd by blactt city's 12,000.man Police department, here between two of the: t>lack com-cameras. which Conlisk denied seeing. police \vith l(ill\ng civilians . partlcu!arly pcned to futlph ~letcalft," he ~aid. for his part in 1 poflct raid on 1 Bl1clil .milnY observers here are voicing_ ap. munity's most powerful organizations -The cameramen finally admitted filming blacks. at~ higher ra1(' than in any other "\\'hat took him so tong~ I rtply. it is Panthtr party headquartf'rs in 1969. 1'1" prehension about the approaching sum-Operation Breadbasket, the econom ic the program for the polict , though they U,S 1..·ity: and . rN'ently. Sf\'t'ral arrests never too late to bt• bhu·k.'' young black~ were killed ln that alterCI' mer. · arm of lhe Southern Christian Leadership at first alleged lhat the y were "free of Souths1dl' denttsts under questionable \\'ithout question . the blnck vote is thl' lion. The _police-b]Jick com munity acrimony Conference, and PUSH, headed by the lancers." '<•1rL'u1nstances -one or thtm. the (':.ITil• kt',\' to lht• t·ontinuallon or tht' local Beyond lhr qneslion of publ lt· ordtr It -which was vehe1nent here lhroughOut Rev. Jesse L, Jackson. has been closed . paig11 tnanager of tvletealft-. poht1 cal 1•stnblishnH•n1 the i1nmcdln1e montM ahe11d -11·hic~ the late l960's and erupted In a number or Thus, the city's black. community .stands DESPITE A BURST or police deparl -MetcaUe \1·ho \vas an Olympic :11lrint Vt'1 1hn1 vote ...-11'h1rh cn rr1ed lll1no1s polict' concede is always an unkno\\•n IQ riot.s and altercations -not Cnly poses more united .than in the past several ment reform undei' former Su pt. Orlando star in 1he \930's and bcca1ne a top Daley for pres11tent1al cundiclat{' John F', Ktn· Chicago'!! sometlmes l!:J.tremt>ly humid serious threats to public order, it is felt, years. \V. Wilson in the early J961rs -including stalwart In Chicago politics, called for an nedy in 1960 and which has subsequently sunm1er month! -politic•I analysis htr• but also may endanger 1he city's At a jammed, heated "community rela-stepped up recruitments of blacks -the end to police lflsk forces, better recruil -proven tht• backbont• of Daley's five are "'Millnr to !ff If olher promlntnl Democratic party political establishment. lions" meeting with blacks on the city's department hJ.s never been · able to win ment and pron1otion of blacks. and rnayoral ele<::tions -has betn in-Chlca~o black .po!itlci,n\. wHI side wtt'lr In • an a Imo.st unprectdented move, west-side Fillmore District, Police Supt. aHe:gia1ce from the black communl· rivilian review in cases involving alleged l're;tsingly indtpcnden1. ~fetcalft'. So far, Olh.tr ~P bl1ck of~ Mayor Richard "J. Daley has been James B. Conlisk Jr. was Openly booed ty. · • brutality. In the 1971 city rl('('tions . for examplt. ficeholders , including City Tre1surt1 challenged openly on police department and asked to resign. . Jn tin!'emotional riot situation in 19611, At a packed mffling of Oi}eration Daley's n1arg1n in bhtck south and ll'tst Joseph Bertrand and State Stn. Cfc\I conduct by one of his own lop party of· At one point during the meeting -one Daley even ordered police-to '"shoot to PUSH. ~1etcalfr. his voice soundtn.': s1dr distric1s dropped, apparent 1 >' Parttt. prf'!lident pro !em of !he flllno11 fici1ls -black Southside U.S. Rep. Ralph or a number of community meetings kill or ma im" looters. angry and strained, said that he is t1rtd because Jackson optnly endorsed Daley's Sf'n&lf' ha\'e lt>nded to 11h.v a\YIY from the _H_._111_e_1_ca_1_r._._h_it_he_r_10~•-•_1a_n_c_h~D-•_l•~Y-•_ll~Y-·~"==U~ed;_..::b~y~D~~~·~y-•~n:::..dCco_n_li_•k~lo-•_t_t•_m~p-t_1_o~~Du~r-in_g~pa-•_l_m~••_•_h•_._po~l1_c•_<_o_m_n_1_u_ni_1i_· __ •_r~bl_a_ck_•~~"-·h_o~m-•_k_e_u~p~th_e~l•_r_g_es_•~_R_•_p_ub_l_ic_a_n_o_p_po_n_e_n_1.~~~~~~~-td_i_sp_u_1_'~~~~~~~~~~- • SOFr·SELL SA1'1 hy Marvin Myers 4 • ' I .. rti CAL L you A &Jl.f. FAtfD IJAR J BV T YriJVf GOT A MO!ISTAC7!E .' N Lake Talioe to Get Passe11ger Vessel ZEPHYR COVE. Nev . (API - A Mississippi River cotton barge transformed into a graceful 114-foot stemwheeler has passed her "sea trials " and goes into service June 15 as the only passenger ship on Lake Tahot . The M.S. Dixie. a 9!J·ton ship owned by Ken Amlindson, f!Us a void existing since 1940 when the 168-foot steamer "Tahoe" was scuttled near this south ·shore cove . Since then. only smaller vessels -mostly privately owned but including a few tour boats -have plied the crystal-clear mountain lake. As a result, the thousands or tourist!: nocking to the lake each year have had little chance to get awav from the pine-covered shoreline. Once clear of the shore. boaters -a n d · ' Di x I e ' ' pas11engers - can get a sweeping vista or rocky crags and mou ntains surrounding the lake along with an un- broken view of the shore and a real sense of the lake's 11ize and beauty. Amundson says he acquired State Says 5 Firms Mislead LOS ANGELES (AP) - A group of Los Angeles srea firm!! have been accused of false and misleading ad- vertising to attract aspiring entertaine-s in fl ve Superior Coort tiults filed by Atty. Gen. Evelle Younger's ofrice. Some of the suits al110 charge the firms w i t h operating as artists. managers and employment a gen c i es· without the proper licenses. The suit.! t11lege that tht 15 firmA involved claim they will obtain job!! for the i r customers in I h e en- tertainment field. The suits seek an injunction barring further a 11 e & e d mifrepresentatlon. refunds to clients and a 12.500 fine for each mislesding statement. Nsmed a1 defendant11 in the 11ction were Ame.ric1n Model Service Inc.: Yoolh Manage. ment Corp .. Warren Manage· ment AJsociales, Inc.; Talent Search; World Wide T1lent Search. Inc.: A&J Art lat. A&eocy; Star Talent Aslodalt: STA or Beverly Hilla; Royal Cn!tl Produc- ti on 1 ; Ma1lna ·T1r1 • Ent erprisu: Phototenesl11 Columbl1 Cutin&i Columbia Enle!Jl<ilel: Columbia Public Rl!AUODI; and 111.J.H. Produc- tlons. the ship in 1953 and used it un- til last year for sttlrage and 1s a private houseboat. ... Bui so any people liked It and wanted to go for rides on it that r d~cided to go com- mercial." he said. Amundson began work on the ship last year after mak- ing his son and four friend! his business partntrs to r a i 11 e $250.000 needed i.t' rebuilding the former single-deck craft. Now it has three Jull deck11 -two or them enclosed - painted gleaming white and trimmed in red. The ship is topped off by a wheelhouse and massive wooden wheel salvaged from an o Id freighter. The Dixie, powered by three diese l engines. is licensed to carry 399 persons. Jt makes about 10 knots and will cruise from Zeph yr Cover pier to Emer ald Bay across the lake on three daily excursions throughout the summer. The 12-mile roundtri p takes three hours with no 11tops. Amundson says he will run the boat on weekends during the winter and whenever anyone wants lo charter her. The ship was built in the 1920s and was used to haul cotton on the Mississippi ar>d river's of East Tex111. Jn 1948 she was cut into four sections and transported by rail to Lake Tahoe for use as 1 gambling boat. But the venture came to a standstill when blocked by federal authorities and five: years later Amundson got the ship for storage fees ov.·ed to him by the previous owner. News Ads Beat TV NEW YORK !UPI) - The nation's newspapers sold $6.2 billion wort h o( advertising in 1971 com· pared with 13.S billion l()ld by televilion, 1ccordi.ne to 11gur., releued by the American Newspaper Pu~ 11ishlng A.uoclatlon. Direct maU 1dvertl!lng was in third place with $2:1 billion and maa:aiines accounted for $1.4 billion of advertlain1. RAdk> wu rmh with l t.38 bllion. The ANPA Slid lhere were 1,749 dolly and llO Sunday n•WIP"P<rt in the na;tlon. It 11ld dally newspaper clrculaUon lnc:rt1ted by 123.73( to Q.2.11.2!1 and Sund•f clrcul•tloo ;,,. creased by 448,041 to ffr 164. Ml. • Comnnmily Events Artl1t or Tiie Mo"th JllSll RAY POWIRS RED IARRONS ' OF O~A~GE COUNT~ Sot111r4oy Nltht, Moy 20 MIS.A YERDE COUNTtlY CLUI Dlnntr •Ml ~ltfft 1,.okor -Mel fltllrno11 Cll~nnel J ~•w• Newport H1 rbor ·Co st• Me'• l ionl 27th Annu a l FISH FRY JUNE 2-3-4 IEAUTY-IAIY-IANO CONTISTS rlNTO STATIQN WAGON DRAWING l~-'FOR-ALLTICKETSCALL--1 .. CLIFF WESDORF -546-2300 ~ Nation's Largest Federal offers Nation's Jt!ghest interest oniDsored savings 6%, $S,OOO minimum certificate accoarm-two . .to five year terms. 5% pwboct lllXOIDlts available a'.so. % FREE . Money Orders With Sl,000 min.imm; balanct. FREE FREE FREE Porldag Wldle ia -- Trust Deed Note Collection Wllll Sl,000 ...._b1T1nce. FREE smngs Banks ' ' 1· ,, FREE " Monthly Money Plan Community Rooms for cbarltaWe and educ1tiooaJ l""IPJ. \Vbere 1nhWt. ..a.. CAUFDRNIA FEDERAL SAVINGS Co sta Mesa Office: 2700 H1rbor Boule 1ard ~&-2300 C> FREE Tranlers Checks With Sl ,000 miajmwm llolllll:O. FRE E Payroll Saringl FREE Sne-by-Mail Postage Deduction Plan FREE FREE NllWfScnice Wllll SJ,000 n1il' ....... FREE Check Holders f«llft - O~Lint FREE Jntttbnnch Dtposib and Withdn,..ls at u 1 of os omces. Electronic lnslJtnt Senice Anaheim Office: Orange Office: 600 N.. Euclld Avenue 77&-2'222 ~050 Mltropolltan DrM in City Cel\lar ~ r • ' .. • .. .. •• • • • •• • , . . .. .. . • . , •• ' ' • • • •· • ' ' • • " ~ ~ ' ' ; ~ • • • ,. , • , .... ; " ·"' ,, • -~ "' •• . • • • • • .. ' OVER THE COUNTER The Purjsts Choice .Halllday's Button Down Sht11\ n hf'rr .-~1rr 1:otton n111· 1'1l',illlr strinin' on 11 f1nr polY· lahr1c \1 hich is ro1npletc-ly dorablr Ha.IHd11.y's 11tro fraturc.s lh<' n1orr ba::ih· coloul'in~:> or \1.1\ltr, h lllf' &. 0111.IZI" 0'1 1)rrl.~. TRilorrd \11th nrt'C'i~if)n fronl !hr sof\Jy rolled col· )R.r lo lhr hl\rrrl 1·uf(. DRESS SHll:TS FROM $10. MEN"S TllADITIO~AL CLOTHING 17tfi, I llYlNI AYI -WlSTCllllf Pl.Ali NIWP'ORl IUCH -PH. '4W1t2 NA50 l i1t ingt for Wedneodey.,May 17, 1972 ' • COMPLETE.NEW "\'.P.~· STOCK LIST I ' ' • ' ) . ' ' • • ~ ~ ~ ~ • p p • ~I ~ ~ ~ :i • :, ,, • • •• •• "' P< ~ • •• ~ p p ~ • • ~ ~ ~ p •• ~ ~ • ~ • • • • ' I • Stock Investors Go to Sidelines . NEW YORK CAP) -The stock market marked 1 time ·Wed.nes,day as many investors stayed on the aldtllnes. 1 ''The market's just gone to sleep today." said Bradbury K. Thurlow, analyst for· Hoppin Watson ;..· Inc. "There's no emotionaJ response. to ~ything." The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials dosed down 2.93 at 989.27. - • /,..,,,. ~ "•;1. \, !ff, .l;. f; ,rt.14 . 11nw~ . 19'1llf • '••r•ll .to ~':':;-tit ... fE:'' ,4 1:'-..i~ I~ i~~vn1 lffilM::-: , H "''" ... .. w l'" tu09W D S :Jb~01 :g ubl"rc;• w "''i" . un 11111 .~ unO Ko '• ur!OU,f, 2', u~~~ :::: un:;~;r JV, UM/lint Ml lull OU 1.a vi>er°'1 • .... ~ \. 1uPr \111 ·'t .............. "" .................. .., .......... "'""""., .. "'r:ri~:.~ . \it~, 1~ IJellt .... h'Slron Oori tNt.I Hltfl Lew C'-0.. ... ., . 1'72 • DAii. Y PllOT Complete -Closing Prices~American Stock Exchange List ,.... ..., CM1,) Hl1J1 Uw Cini CPlf, ,,... 111.t ~I Hltll LA• Cl9M Ch1, • ' '''" .... tM1.I Hltll Uw CllM Clli .. Finance Briefs I . • • • .. • %f OAI LY '!LOT •• . TODAY 'S TV HIGHLIGHTS KtET llll 8:30 -"The 40s Hollywood: You Must ~member This ... Ingrid Bergman, Robert M.atchum. Ho\vard Hawks, .Joh n ~Ju!ton and Raoul Walsh Introduce and explain excerpts from their most famou s 1novies. NBC D 9:00 -"Ironside 1' (;h1cF Ironside al· I te~pls t~ unearth evidence to prove an accused police officer (David Carradine) innocent or a mur- der charge. Raymond Burr. ABC 0 10:00 -"Owen Marshall." Ma rshall and Bran~on defend a bioJogy lnstructnr's wife charged with setting fire in the university labora· tci'y. CBS .a 11 :30 -"The Learning ·rree." Gordon P3)'ks' film adaptation of his autobiographical novel about a young black boy growing up in Kan· :. ~ sas. · 11 , KTLA 0 11 :30 .-''The Major and lhe Minor." I" ~ /l!illand and Gmger Rogers star in this J 942 • COJ!ledy. • ,,. • ..,.. 1!'I' •• TV DAIL¥ -LO.C Thursday Evening C1lllorni1 Stat• W1lttrwt11ht Chu~ p10n1hip title ln lt·rd bout. lfj) Thirty Mlnutu Witll ••• ED l lld. Joum1I MAY 11 €IJ El Sllow d1 LKO V11du: ail Esttclon Ctntr1I 1:0011aammm""" 1:30 iJ CIJ Mr T111111 Son• (RI Child· (]) l1i Nm . leu ynunr manitds. Chip ind Polly 8 The t lr V1lltr btcnmt tilt pro1y p111nts o1 wv· 6 (I) Wiid Wiid Wut er•I tlll!dren when St1v1. B11b111. m Trt1 fll~bton11 Charley Ind Kll it t1kt off nn tonr Qt I Drtftll tr Jt1nnlt 'lrt1~ends. @hi UM $9Ctll111t ~RJ ID Mrrv Crilfln Show flt Mod&tpodfl loci&• tI)@ '11ylloust NIW Yor• "fht 9 Mlflteny 1'rD 40'1: Hollywood, Vou Must Rtmem· ([ii lo1 T111tbNlS01 btr This" ln1rid B1r1m1n. Robtrl 152) TI!fM Stoo11s Mitchum, How11d tow~s. John Hus· •::tO D Mnr.-(9&) ·'T1tt~frt111• ~iii I Ion 111d R1oul Wtl)h lnltodlll:t ind (drt) '65 -Burt Ltl!CH!tt, Prul upl1in 11c1rpts horn t/\111 moM Scolltld, J11nn1 Mo111u, Su11nne lamous films In 1 1tmini1ctnl 1ooll Flon. Wlltn an 1r1011'nt G1m'11n of· at the frtll mcwies of lllt 40's. fk;er 1tt1mpb to lead 1 train and 1;00 B (I) CBS Thundar Movie: (C) ship to G1rm1ny rrtnell 1rt looted C1hti "Duffy" (com) '63 -James from mu1tum1 111d llomts, a resls-Co11urn, J1 mts M11on. Jamts fox, tanca l11dtr tels out lo 1too him. Scs1nn1h Vork. A sophisticated 1d· (J) CU Ntn Walltr Cronk II• ~en:ure comedy about 1 million dol· (ml Holl)'wood Square1 I!' p·r1cy. • m AllCIJ lrttttth Sllow 0 1'J m lronsidt "License lo (D Nin,,, Ind th1 Praltuor Kih" tR) Cllitl lronsid1 1!!1mpts (Ill Cult.tr, Cull1r lo ur.t~rth evidence to prove 1n K• GI 1'Plll Slcldy Praenb "The Ar1 cus td police olf1tef innocent ol 1 of Klbukl" Wtll·•nown Ktbukl IC· murdtr ch1111. David Car11dlne tot fl:uratmtn ind othtr 111rs or 1u1st1. tilt Grind K1bukl TNlupe perform 0 (})(Jl m lon(rlrttf '1ht Old uurpl1 trom two popular pl1)'t and T 11m Spirit" (R) Lonptrtel. lnvesli· dernonstratt tr•ditiorltl m1ka·up i nd 11Hnr a urlt• of 11mo1td cir 1ob· 11stu111. berits, h11 r11i.on to su5pec! 1 m Tr&elllft friend's lnvolvemenl O Crttn Acrwt ED Nocha T1p1tiu G:) Ttlt·ltt'tlttl Minlctl J Cotntll· (ljt The Vircinl111 ttrfos ail Non i• m Vlctolil ll!Ml Show 9:30 e Setond look (5Z) H'""°p [lllot Mintz C:J News W1kh John Fullmer 7:00 IJ (]) D m Ntn I all• C•ll 8 ... I UM Clock (S2) R1d111 from Hollywood Part Cl)Trvttl If Cont111ut11c11 10:00 0 ®J (!;) Dttn Mtrtln Show (R) ()) Dreptl Ruth Bun l, Mlkt Connors. Or. Joyce CJ WW't MJ Unt? Brothers ind Bobbi M1rt1n 1u1st. aiTOM htttl ShoW Stmm' Divis IJNews G1or1• Puln1m Jr., Wtkh Gutrd1 Bind &utst. 0 ClJ (j) (!) Owtn M1rsh1I "Thi GJ I LM Lucy f orest ind tht Trees" (R) aJ I Dr11t11 el Jtanlltt C:J Morie: (Zh1) ''Tiit Or11nizu" CllJ S,.tklnf frttlJ (drr) '64 -Marcello M1str1oannl, fD H•thlfo11 Ka!hletn H!tchcock Renato Salv11ori. di Un1 Pl111rt1 111 11 Clml• m HtffJ Ptt1 "41ller, Ken Jone' 9 Mavle: .,Ship If fool1" Conti. m Nt'lt"S Hoa/\ W1!!i~ms i nd (t) "TM Lona ~ips" Part / (fi) World Prtu m 0 "°'· Sa11t1n. ED film OdyutJ (R) "Our D1i1, 7:JD IJ m Rollin' 111 tht "'°"' K1r1n Bread"' Blltk 1Ut5ls. aiJ luch1 Ub11 Wre1tlinf Cl lault ''The flyin1 Squlrrtl" (R) (52) ll L11end1 dt l1lomtl twit mtke1 friends with 1 fam ily Hl:30 0 Gear11 f'utn1m's Ttlk lick rif l!yln1 squirrels. tnd rexues 1 Q) 1111 Cosby Show f1m1l1 squlrrtl frGm d11th wlltn sh• @II L• S..l1n1u aets htr hetd cauaht In 1 tin Un ~ rl!111: (CJ "Broken l•A<t" t nd rolls to Illa edit of 1 stttp (S2) Condend • Cutpabl• tli!I. 10:45 (Ill Critic 11 l1111 9 Mtwlt: (C) (2hr) "ltnJOll" 11:00 0 (l1 €?i) N•"~ (mys) '71-Robtrt fonter, D1rr1n O ®) m News McGavln, Jost Ferrer. IJ Ont S1tp Beyond Cl) To Ttll lht Tru!h (])Marsh~! Dillnn ())I Ore1m ef letnnlt 0 ClJ aJ Hew1 0 Mllllon S Mo'tlt: (C} (2hi) m Truth Of ton51qu1nct1 .. C!ffn M1nlion1" (rem) '5!4-Aud· m Movlt; "four Dtsptrtlt Men" 111 Hepburn, Anthony Ptrklns, lie (tdv) '~Aldn R1y, HeRther Se1rs. J. Cobb. O)LWV .,Re$lllv•n1 !ht f1ninc11t m Hopn11 HtrMI Crisis In Our Schools' (D (ti Dnptl (52) He1d1hop (R) fl) History ol Arf "[ast/Wnf' ll:tsmGran Cine del Jutv11: 'Que Ql).J.tlt-IMsta Muslu l r Comtn· H1cemos Con Los H11os" Urlt1 11:30 0 [tJ CBS Ute Movl1: (C) ''TIMI CD This W11• In thi NIA lt1mJn1 lrH" (aotoblo) '69-Kylt (52) Mo'lit.: (Zhr) "011 tortht Umps Johnson, Altt Clar~t. Dina [lc1r, Es· ol Cflln1• (dra) 'JS-Pit O'Brtan. telte [fans. Pllo!o·Journthst Gordon Josephine Hutchinson, trl• Ttlbot. Puk"s f1~m 1d1pl1hon ol his aulo· Dontld Cristi. b!Of11p/\1c1I novel about 1 youn1 1:00 EJ Mt ind lh• Chimp (R) Al black boy 1row1n1t up In K1ns1s. lh<wlh M l~e t11ch1s Butlons lo 0 @' m .lollnny Carson lony rlni 1 bell whtniver ht 5111 a R1nd11J and n11ur_1!1s t )1'1'1 fowler 1111naer enter tht house. he hlSll'I rutst. Ju_ne A'.lyson is al!wO gheduled. prG1r1mmltd tht chimp tn cope 0 Mov11: 1h1 M1for i nd th• w1!h 1 buri far ho!dini 1 hindtul 01 Minor" (com) ·4z -Ray M1ll1nd, undJ. 0 rn@ fE D!tk Cavitt Mort Q ®J fD Flip Wllso~ (R) Sandy Sihl, Bill Cosby tnd lest1e UaK1ms Du~1n, Jim H1bors ind Slappy 1muesi. T 11 th T ~• Wh1lt 1uesl. O ~ t r O I]) (j) CD A/lat Sm!lh Jld IZ:OO 0 Maw1t: (CJ "l1w ot !ht Liw· 1oftt1 "lht Men Thtt Coriuo~t~ len" (was) 'M --:---D1l1 Robertsnn. H1dl1ytlur1" (F!) Htyes and Curr, '!' M~.w11: "Doohns ol Okl1hom1" 1r1 In 1111 11r1np poslllon el no! ( 15) 49-Randolph Scott. cl\ly http!r\f llltlr ttplon, but want· I :00 m 0 0 [{)@, Ntw1 Jnt to, l:JD O Moria: "Tht lllllnl" (1us) '56 Cl) Tf I hplltl "Wht n tht (1rth -Slertint H1vden, Vinet Edw1rd1. Mom" Gtn1 Gl11so" b liott m AJl-NJ1ht Show: (CJ "ApKllt Ttr• Q) ArrlJ Griffith Show rltMJ," ~Pltfalr 1nd ''Tiit Wiid llul di lu:l111 fr.11 tbt OlyJ\pl( Gil l'oltdtt" kllta I nd Arturo Lollltll ¥If 1o .. 1 2:00 0 HlflrwlJ P1t111i ' Friday .... . ' , Y otill!I Lovers ('ost;1 ~Jc:..:i 's f)c11isc l\Tc<:anlcs and \Vestn1 inster's J{ici}ard IJ ;u·n1at1uk arc linked ron1anticaJlv in the Long Bea ch Comn1unity Playhouse comed y "The Savage Oilc mma ." giving it!'~orld prerriiere Friday. 'Doctor Faustus ' Opens At Cal State Fullerton .No More 'Singles' Emmy Changes Winning Rules By JERRY BUCK lfOLLYWOOD (AP1 -The Nationa l Ac ad e m y of Television Arts and Sciences announed a change in the Em · mys \Ve<fn esday that will substantial_!y change the ~·in· ning pattern established al the awards presentation last Sun- day. categor.v \vo:1s t'llminated due !(I the decline \n that kind or programing and in the tuturt'. talk sho"'S \\'111 co m pet e against other \'Jriety shO\\'S. Su rf Sou 1id In ft-lovie On Const Lee Schuln1an, chairman of the awards committee. said the acaden1y was establishing a new category for limited !'it'ries and !hal a single The sound of riding a wa ve episode or a series would no as only a surfer knows It is longer be eligible for non1inn-just one teChnique included in lion in the out standing single dramatic prograni category. the film "fi\'e Summer Schulman said that the Slocies" to portray the true performers in a series would feeling of surfing. now be eligible fl)r a nom inii -The film . !he la.~t surfing lion only in the series acting release of photographC'rs categories. Greg i\1;1t:(;11liv ra.v and .Jirn Last Sunday. the academy Freeman. is sho\vini:: thrnu~h ;nrarded Emmys for outstand-Tuesd11y at thC' B ;1 1 b n a ing ac Ii n g in a single Theater. 709 E. Balbo;i Bl vd. performance to Ke ith \1ichell daily at 8 p.n1 . and 1 p.m. /\. 6 for an episode of "The Six p.m. showini:: is included on \Vives of ~lenry VIII"~ and to Frida y and Saturday C\'c n1n:;~. Glenda Jackson for a single To capture th e true feeling episode in the s eries of s urfin g. the \'A'O ''Elizabeth R.·· photographers harne ss ed Schulman said the action surfers with tiny 1nicrophones was taken in recognition of the and transmitters to r«ord the . '• .•. ... ······. ········· ........ . • CO&~f tlWV. AT !llACAllTtllJ~ 8LVO . • NEWPORT BEACH • 644 ·0 760 a •.c·~ c:irr·~iy tCi'lt.:'1 Lf·• I' )Pl' :i ~~l>rAJlRti~ ~Q't1lal •·IN UARBOR SHOPPING CENTER·• ···•·······•···········•··· :.: EOW~AOS :.: ! HARBOR cl':':.1 : • HA~8011 8!.VD. AT WllSO"I ST. • •,e COSTA MfSA 646 GS1l • • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 MILES SO. Of SAi~ DIEGO FWY, CONTINUOUS SHOWINGS J)AILY 12:30. 3:30 7:00 -10:00 P.M. tlCIOiltOl.Oll IG;o0 •••• ~ .. PLUS -ACADEMY AWARD WINNER B(iT SHORT SU8JECY "SENTINELS Of SlllNCI " POllHVl\Y INOS lllll.M•Y lJ An all ·stutlcnl cast will as:-.oc1a tr professor nf theater. growing trend of mini-series sounds of surfin~. Also in-\vilt continue lhrou~h Sunday and not be(ause of the British corporated in the him is high Now at Both Edwards Cinemas prrsenl Christopher r-.1arto1ve's 16th-century n1oral itv hor ror stor.v. 0 or t o r Faustus." orrnini;: tonight 115 the fin al n1;iJor prnductirin of the 1971- 72 !hra1 c'r ~easnn at Ca l State' .Fullerlon. and conclude May 23-28. wins with the two limited speed photog raphy, givin~ the W k 0 I 1 1~0• Or<inge Co as I a re 11 series. effect of motion 25 tinies 1 1 ee n Y.· ivn. • f "Th d N THI! W IESTMIN Tl!A C NTI" JX'r ormers in the cast include e aca emy is not em-slower than regular speed. •·IN HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER·· ••••••••••••••••••• l April Thronson and Stan harrassed by the British Scenes in the film \l'ere .•:•••••••••••••••••••••••:• •••• · • -• 00 '• .•• l!DWARDS ••! .' •, The ~hOi\'. n1arkiru: lhe dirC"rtnria l <lebul ar C;il S1a1 e o.f Dr. Jlf}bcrt I. Renee. DlllY O•IWl·llf SllOWlllG! "GODFATHER " (R) ~°"""',,..,, C-·-*"·•-4tl·4S.U TWO TOP flAIUIUI UAN (QllllllY AS "tll7" "DIAMO NDS AR£ fOREYlR',',, 111<11 ()oob11I~ 11,vnol•h ) '"WHAT'S WITH HELEH" !P'G ) h • "'''' ..... " •• _ ....... i..1 t•l 2'11 SlL·l111 TWIN TAlrS Of l(RllORI IOTM IH l lOOOY Coto• ""llACM llllY T/llANtULA" (R) "WCElo:END MURDER!" t ll') ...... -.i.. .,i;.,_(;,,_ ,, ...... ,1•·111? (HA~lES 8WOH!iON -"'Cit llAl .. ~f/~ICH•PD IASfKAlt "CHATO'S LAN D" (PG) ·--..... 1or~...:>1t ~l1·21ll Jl4••r ,,111..-. , .... 1 Jl4HT '•l!ltt/MllT'J lololwto "IUCI & Tiil Pl(ACH(R" (Pl) • lo'1 l-••lorj\" IM~l• "tMl PaO,ISS IO NAlS" l,G) - Tudor of Costa J\\es;:i , Connie wins,'' he said. ''\\le took the filmed in Europe, South : HARBOR co~'l.':.2 : : ' • : Sponheim (lf Founlain vaney, action in recognition of the Ameri ca. Puerto Rico and • ~A~IO~ BlVD. AT .,\t!IOl'I Sf. • ... •• <'Ind Ken F'alscllo, a forn1er nelvtrend." Hawaii. The film. says !•; osrAMESA 646 0513 :·! ························· Orange Coa$t Collei;:e student The academ;y. also move<:! to MacGillivrav. i~ 11ot to ro1n;:in -•••• ••• ••••••••••• ••••••••• Wi!&TMINSTl!1t AT o oLoiN wi r . f h ' . 2 M.11!~ so. q_F S_!.~ DIE~_o FWY_. BETWE.E N :::°o',;o'lt"~:J..". 892·449S . no1v li ving in Fu I J er ton. give urt er recognition of licize the surfer, but pfesCnt Falsetto is one of three actors daytime Pro gr a n1 i n g by him as one who enjoys surfing 'A'ho portray various facets of establishing new category more than anytl1ing. else. the Faustus chiiracter. a1vard areas and to recognize The film criticizes the cur· Curtain time is 8: 30 p.m. in the achievement . of cable rent trend of disappearing pub. the 200-seal Recital Hall, and television. Schularr1n said that lie coastline . as 1\'ell ;:is the reservations can be made at cable programs will now be surfing championship structurr the the11ter box office, 870-elii;iible for Emmy awards. and 'commercialized a ~pects of 3371, ""'hich is open from noon The separate talk sho'A'S the art. lo 4 p.m. on 1veekdays and /lr~~~~=='==~~~~~~~~;~~=-====1 afler 6 :30 p .m. on J performance days. I rrtTIDIOI it HELD OVER ! Tiit IHI l"llm 111 Sw'11"1 fw1rl BALBOA THEATRE 673.4048 400-•11" , .... s.v.i• NfWP'Ott llACM •••I lko '"'"'- ,. '"~"lov1 ll'• hto --Qf . l ·fJMI ENDS NE XT TUES. Also J ames Coburn J ennifer O'Neill "THE CAREY TREATMENT" "THE FRENCH CONNECTION" '" STARTS WEO'NESOAY EXCLUSIVE "SKYJACKED" "BREATHTAKING!" ,~"BRlu;;. l . -t"'""''- ... , "HOSPITAL" """ HEWPOllT 8E.ACH • Oll'.3-8Jsb' MAJOR STUDIO PREVIEW -.._FROM M.G.M. STARRING CHARLETON HESTON FRIDAY NIGHT, MAY 19 8:30 P.M. Plus JAMES COBURN in "CAREY TREATMENT" SHOWN AT 7 & 10:15 --· -.• :1 1 S TAO/UM " I :s .. -1'.l;"-;rnc::I;.:::: .... __ - --·~•lr• STADIUM•?~,',' .. ~ .. ::- ---~.u:i STADIUM •3 ·.•. ·~~ ----··lr• STAOIUM ·I .. .. .-.=.c...:..-::--19 y,.,_.11 •.itr•v• Glet!d1 J1tk1on •M•IY, OUEEN OF SCOTSH "'WUTHEll:IHO HEIGHTS" E'lclvslwt Ort"OI Cnnty ll:ntiNtd Slit! En.itglmtftl Nomlnlltd lor I Actlltmy Aw•"'ll "FIDOLEll: OH THE ROOF" Acllltmy Awtnl Wlnn1r J1n1 FtMlit "KLUTE" Ott llW "SUMMER OF '•?" 1111 "CHATQ'S LANO" I "DOC" Sl•rring FIWt Ovn1war "MARK OF TME DEVIL" "LET'S SC.I.RE JESStC.l TO OEATH" "SWEDISH FLY GlllLS" '"' "SWEET BODY 011 OEIOllAH" WP ORT 12:>0 · J:JO · 7:00 · 10 P.M. • "DEALING ' ... ... "THI IOY FRllND". IOI 1---AMD "K!LL T'S HUOES" .,. __ AND ;-"WHERE'S PO'l'A". .L . • • • --- • • • • • 00 o•THEATRl!•o, J: •••• 5 4 6-3102 ••••• .. A .. 1901t AT AOAMS. COSTA M~S"­ Clll l</JltOll IUP.·1 •ill wt.Of l.111 OllGO rw1. U>;e ;,; ..-couagod. But the penalty tor birth is death. THE TIME IS TOMORROW AND THERE'S NO TIME LEFT. WINllER OF S ACAOEMY AWARDS BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR! BEST ACTOR · GENE HACKMAN THE FRENCH CONNECTION IN THf GRfAT TRADITION Of AMlRICAN THRILLfRS. 2o. c.<.,.,,, ISi• CCX.~ BV OE l LJXf'' • . ' • 2nd TOP A ITRACTION BARBARA HERSHEY IN PUP NY ONACHAIN • • • •••••• ••••• ••••••••••••••••• • o BEACl-1 19LVO. AT f.Ll!S • ft etT, CO•!IT 11wv "SAN Oll'GO rwv 847 •0608 • HUNTINGTON BEACH (PG) c~:.~. ~ a ...... ,. !\.QI<" WHAT CHATO'S LANO 00£SN1 KILL. CHA TO Will BEST ACTOR NOMINEE omRG1c. N MISSION VIEJO . SCOTT ••······•·······••····· · PllllP . . -· ~ j ON"'~CtWN • • ~-110oHicQ.QilJI' •• • • •••••••••••••••••••••••• ··-·- • 1'11u"d17, M'1 II, I 972 DAJLY 'ILtl JS T Shirt. and Guns GWC Designer Wins· Honor Condensed 'Hamlet' Presented at OCC Robert' C. ll ubt'r. Golden \\'est College theater arts in· structor. has received a na· ti onal first place award in scenery design in competition sponsored by the United States Institute for The a I er Technology . I By TOM TITUS 01 IM Otllr Plltl Stiff ' You are gi\'en a m p I e forewarn ing that O r a n g e Coast College's productton of "Han1let" is anyth ing but a traditional st a g i n g of • Sh a k e·s pea re · s most noteworthy tragedy , yet you are never really prepared for the version adapted by OCC.:'s John Ferzacca. Ferzacca calls it ' 'a 'Hamlet' for our time." It is ·really a "Ham iel" for just "HAMLET" Sh•~••o••••'l tr111edv, •dlp1td 1nd d"ttltd bv Jor>n FffflK<ll, "t ~t•ltn bv Ptlf ~c~•i>ello, li1h!lno by Oennll 1 Clyne, 111~1 m1n111tt Pt1 Pr•"on, ' or•1en1,d lonl11nl throoon $11urd1v 11 8;JO bv The Oren11t C.0111 Collfge dr1mt dep11rtmenl ifl 1hf OCC t udllorlvm. Cos111 Mflt THE CAST Hamlt t , . . . . , Wlllltm Vtrdtrtllr Clt lldlul ,,,, .•.••.•.... Thom ~omtn Gtrlrudt ....... .r ....... Tt ny ~lde'I Ol>l>tli e ................ Mtrv Gtrr!icn Polen;,., .......... ' Otn Evtn• Lttrlfa , ............ ,. JeU Ntwm1n Horatl11 ..•. ,, ,, • Oe,,nl1 "'~in Re1tncr1nl1 ........ .. DIYld 1!11vt.I Gulldtn1tt rn •.......•.. e rvct Ctmobfll G••~l'ditttr ..• ,, ......... Otn Ev1n1 Osric Sttvt Wlnott ROBUST HAMLET William Verderber The prestige award was an. reshaping of scenes has betn nounced at the institute's re- done with much care and cent 1972 conference in San thought , marking the second T · Francisco. It is believed to be ume this season a rour-hollr ryouts S~t the firs t time the a"·ard has drama ha s been successfull y gone to a person on the '''est paced to half that length (Hap For 'Carats' coast. Graham's production cf "Long Day 's Journey Into Night" at tluber won in the .graduate the Laguna Moulton Playhouse st udenl category over 200 en· being the other ). The OCC Aud itions for the upcoming tries fro m colleges and director dots become 1 bit new production of the Uing uni versities throughout the na· carried away , however, when Beach Community Playhouse. lion. he has Hamlet fire a pistol in-the comedy "Forty Carats," His winning design \\'3S for to the air. will be ·conducted ~1onday !he Humboldt State College Nevertheless, the Ferzacca production of Fernando Ar· adaptation _ if not nece.ssari-evening . rabars "The Arch itect and the Director John Williams will Empccor of •·syc•'"" and '\"""S ty the staging -stands ... t\.3 .. .. worthy of s er i 0 u 3 con-be casting for five men and par! aJ his . master's deg fee sideration by college and com-six women in va rious age v.·ork. munity theater groups con-ranges. No second or th ird pl ace templating a production of h d. 1 be h 1 awards \\'ere made this year, T e rea 1ngs wi I e d at "Hamlet." 1t clears away but two gradua te studenls NATIONAL AWARD-WINNING SET DESIGN. FOR GOLDEN WEST INSTRUCTOR Robert C. Huber Honored for 'Architect and Emperor' Stagecraft much of the verbosity while 7:30 p.m. in the pla yho use. from S I a n ford University retaining the raw , red meat of 502l E. Anaheim SL, Long received honorable n1ention. research on the playwright. proc·esl:ies used in 1he project. the tragedy. Beach, where the play will Huber"s ~et, built for onl.v the play, construction of a sel This made up a large part of Performances · co n tinue open June 30 for six weekends. $298, used eight cubic yards of model. and building the SE'L his \\Titten thesls. manipulating the fates , rather tonight throu•h Saturda.v at Further informa tion is sand and driftwood , and · 1 Judges ,·n th• scenecy com· • Huber ~ept a deta iled Journa than vice vlrsa. 8:30 in the OCC auditorium. available at the OOx office, literally poured offstage into Roman's Claudius is less Admission ia free . (213) 438-0536. the audience. Throughout his of his though ts and ideas, and petition were Henry May. of about anyone's ti me. for the impressive at ·the outset.1-".":'.'.".:~'.'.'...~'.'.:::_ ___ ~-~::'..'....:'.:::'.:::'.:.... ______ .:'.'.~'..:'.'.:'.:'.:::.'...."'.'..::~::.:..::.::_ ____ _::_ _______ ..::. _______ . _______________ _ costuming rnnges from period though he increases in power the Unive rsity of California 11t Berkel ey: Robert Blackman, A m er I c a n Conservatory Theater, and Robert .Darling, San Francisco Opera. traditi onal to today's casual. during his second act scenes. v.•it.h Claudius in blue jeans Dan Evans. who doubles as and T shirl and Polonius in a Polonius and the gravedigger. business suit. contributes two highly ef- What the director is saying fective characterizations. by this startling departure is Mary Garrison performs that what the actors wear v.•ilh eerie brilliance in her matters far Jess than what mad .scene ~s Ophelia . Je_avin)! they say _ and. while the a spinal. sh~ver as she 1s led script has been whittled from away giggling . to the w?rld. four hours to two. the essen--A\sn exr.el~ent 1s Terry fildell tial elements are alt there. a"!! Hamlet ~ mothe~. Gertru~:· You are never r~ally aware of who turns in one o. the sho s missing anything , nor are you most a u t h e n t 1 c charac· cognizant of a jarring thud in teri7.ations . scenic transition. The vengeful Laert.es is well Ferzacca's "Hamlet'' is p!ayed by Jeff Newman. who also fills in as the ghost of staged in epic sytle -the Hamlet's father and the rehearsal approach used with player kin1t in a thoroughl y increasing ·success in th(:,· pro-fe ssional theater. The "rourth busy evening, scoring suc- wall" dissolves 88 the cessfully on all counts. Dennis Akin fails to measure up as playgoer becomes. virtually. a Horatio, 1.icking the ability to psrt of an informal run convey his fid elity. David through which occasionally Bayhi and Bruce Ca mpbell as spill.!! into the aisle. . the no\v-famous Rosencrantz Along with other tradit ional and Guildenstern /decked out discards. Ferzacc a chucks the for the OCC production in limitations of physical ap-aloha shirts1 lend fine comic pearance in his casting. 11is relief to the traged~·. Hamlet (William Verderber ) Ferzacca's cutting 1 nd is a chunkv. robust actor with a range Somewhere between Peter Ustinov and Orson \Velles -no undernourished beanpole: 1-e stands a head taller than his adversary, Claudius (Thom Roman ). Verderber, whose acting abilitv is several cuts above that 01 the average drama stu- dent. wrest I es vehe mently with Shakespeare's most dif- ficUlt role and emerges the \vinner on points but not by a knockout. In striving for in· tensilv. Verderber too often sacrifices clarity. though his Alse solitoquys are rendered with consummate skill. His Hamlet emerges as a man "'CABARET' IS GLITTERINGLY BRILLIANT. IT DESERVES TO BE A CLASSIC." -Wm!tld 811viM, lA.Het1kl-EAmin<tF Carroll Baker ,, "SWEET BODY OF DEBORAH" "SWEDISH Fl Y GIRLS" SHOWTIME 7:00 P.M. Starrlltf Choflft. IFOllSOR Jock Palarice ALSO PLAYING Ill s1tt1111 com PWA l·Co.s11 Mm . S46-l111 AICCITTTKUTI( 1-0rlree -mom wtnd•v': ,,oa, 1:u, io:'2s p,m, s11. a. Sun .: 1:.», J:~l, •:oo, l ;ll. IC:Xt p.m. WOCM1J .aJJem "bananas" ABC CITT !MU.TIE · Cfnllll)' Ctfy • 3!1.l-t29J C•11tl .. 11••• S•IMll•r Sito" Z:OO P.M. NOW SHOWIN6 _; WID. THlU . SUN. Mll!IM TIIEATI£ AT ITS AIUST: 11 l1t1111 JWllut sllfJ •I •n I• 11!1il 111 11ai11t tlo ttroutr U<k111od ti ,.. '"" 111s111 ii IM ,,..., 11 nrw ,.uut.i ,.... -----·-' ,...., ... ~tllHlils -............ "* m...,,... ti II ••tlt/Jlf ... ------PUEBLO tynlllll' L -· . /1 i~,rrl1 ( ... ,, ,; Rr'{J t r11-·r_i· Co ~to Mr•.o • o4(>.1 J63 or Mutual A11C''1C1C'~ * * * ' ., i ·-,. ... ~ . , ; • ·KEZY's GRAB BAG THAT IS •.• IT HAPPENS ALL DAY LONG . ' * * * * * \ • .. . __ , ... ' \ \ ' D&llY PILOT DICK TUCY TUMILEWEEDS • P0Ua OFFICER UZZ. 15 YOUR MO~ER MOME? HOW~ \'00 ASKI~ , FQ!. HIM1 W!:EPS? .......... . a.- Mun AND JEFF >O MY MOTHER By Tom K. Ryan By Al Smith WE ARE ALL OIFFERENT PER.SONG TO OIFFER.ENT l'EOPl.E! l'M A soN. TO MY WIFE I 'M A HUSBAND AND "TO MY SON I'M Now···DoYoU KNOW WHAT l AM>OYOU? SHOULD I >ELL HIM? FIGMENTS NANCY MUSEUM HOURS 9 -5 A FATHER' HE'v'. SON···DO ME A FAVOR ··· BRING >HAT VASE INTO THE NEXT ROOM I DAIL y . CR=OSSWORD •• ~by : •. PO~ER I ACROSS 1 F(J{ltt!.all or let hoc-ty It OlftrlriQ 11111 , lfSl sl~tlC' 10 1 .. con.11tlltd " 14 SWffli•flM t 15 WoD(fv pl~11t lh Gr.1r1,r1: Hc1. 11 Ptacth1I l1~1p11111y 18 -· u .. Git31 20 Mlddlt; l'rtf1 , 21 Movt "11!1h 1 lrv'1 11 •••• ht ~!l 1~ 23 Gail ol !~111· tPottd ~111~•~1 15 ~fl \ d~w'1 ;., "'"t •11\1 21 (.p,,,~ .. t ll"uthctii., )0 Lo .. ·tr l t~Q•I'' JI Adi11•ttd jl ContJol lht co1.i1t or !!l Child'~ 0•11t 3tt Ou\tr 1\111.tl '' F,.11~11t)t ~) B 13t~ rv•~: Sla1111 47 Ac1oi W~r d ••• 48 A~•11n1t' ~ po,t111~ 4<J Kl!l1t ol ht.in ~O P~r! ot h•,11t 'i4 Ann~rtn!lv ~I Quit! ~! River of R 10\~l.1 ~1 L~nd o! !ht Sl1.1'1i•Ot I f.0 r11t '" t11<1 10 itl Pl~v i"!I t~r.I t1 fb~lnq git .II 'ropt' f>l J.1.i c~ll' Sl.111Q 001\N l Olol 1,, .1.1.i.-' .' Oumc r , Irr ,. ,, 3 11.r!l•atl ,l•tl'1r• nt tit~'~' 1 1~,.t\ ~ ,1,r. l'tflll .,,, ,, t~ ~ A1111q1l ll Enrli•IQ u•rrl r,.111 1.t!l!I .t·11! ht\'"11' }1 c~~·r to .. l'l l •'o}l<'h I 111,1~1' ·'"I,,\ If : ~ l • "' :~ "111, 1.1 , 1•! •••• " .'~ ~r·1 rl \•' • :1 ~~.,1r1rr nf 't..111,n._ 35 Thf' rhlgOt"· 1 WClfd• ~G Pt•i"'1) Pit· ~tn\ 111 11111, 41 Mrmbtr or lllf 11\Jlll.1!1 l.lft 'l 2~-ho!• Pfll""j: ~ "iW!I< 'l C .. 111r:1"~ 4) Ot 11lt lM ~I r1rroy 4b ',lo1•t blC~ l 11d loilh By Dale Hale by Ernie Bushmiller ;~,;.:,:.,DSl ~ PEANUTS 6U AWA~ .. '/\'.XJ OON'T C.I HEl\E AN\'~~ ' ....-~-·-·-" JUDGE PARKER I WA5 Jll5T CHECKIN6 I WELL .,. I'M SORRY .• I DON'T NOT IN A WANT TO BE PERSONAL PROFESSIONAL .• 8UT HAVE YO\J EVER W'4.V, MR. BEEN INTERESTED IN BORGSON! THE THE ATER, M ISS LAWRENCE? ._-<' \ I I I 0 10 DO SOME WORK IN OUR LITTLE THEATER GROUP ... MOSTLY BACKSTAGE .•. GASOUNE AWY ·.• SALLY BANANAS GORDO Ar y.IHAT? • 5-18 MOON MUUINS • (rET YOUR HAT, WILLI!<-· WE'VE <5oT BUS/NESS •o ATTEND To ... Al>JC> "TO 1HINK 1 JLIE'iED TH' <;UY,. ANIMAL CRACKERS YOU MEAN TH'4.T YOU DID NOT PERFORM? ~ «C() RElll.IZe T~AT ~100 c.AIJ IMKE. A PER50I.\ 51CK ? Bv Charles M. Schulz 'lllll GET !HAT WA~ WHEN l/Oll LIVE IN. A !>JR.I\ TOO LONG .. v~~ By Harold Le DoUll WHOEVER RAN I DON1 W~T THAT THEATER G.ROUP TO EMBARRASS HAD TO BE A YOU, M \55 RAAK AMATEUR! LAWRENCE •.• BUT WOULD YOU REMOVE YOUR GLASSES ••. JUST FOR A MOMENT? By Dick Moores By Charles Barsotti Arriola By Roger Bollen Ofl, l<\E ... :IF I GET GICK WH~l'l.L :r llO THEN'!' •. :i:. OOll'T dS1R4 \lOSPrrAl. l~RAl-lCE. ..• A~D BESIDES "' THE GIRLS ....... 17 l'ttio!t1.,,1· Sl8•1a t• 11,v~ •1\,,,,.1:.1· :S 6.dnr r ,11d -· 2~ u~-:.1· t •7 Rlvtt of lret~fld ,q Co.,stt<I on 1ct ~I ••• Aml'(ht' r,1f'thAl1 "11fll ~: (,., ·t.11nt1 ' "I hope we stay oo the bus today -my rttt just can't lalle another cathedral." l& ll~1·•no go.:'d I f. ·ll(',l ~I ~11lg•·r11t l'.1 .• ~~ ,1\lr1• a ! ... 1\i, IY 1t1 ll tt r· 1a "' 'Qr• •l r Miii iv.:rv••1~.t f'f1t .•r mh•t11I011~ly hi \',,, lf ~,!·~r 42 Hold t.:rgt1~ri 11 H11 , l1u.,tr '·' 111r·,.,,.f'1 I• ' " • I,) 6"'"'J'°' l,., tr! !1,1: ;: , .... ,,, 'l • ('~"' H " l <.l.:t.,r.1 11 to r1 _;• ).'•-l'M l'I •'··-IJ,1•1 v '; 1~·~.1 ,~or I >•r I ~) 11«•,1.,1!11t ~ti N.111t11.:41 !\It!" 5i l'Qfl. "' l!IOl·•t • • 10 II 11 13 " • 'll it • MISS PEACH 6C r "' t;:u.-2TER:, l='R'.AN C!NE ., NC~ AND j. Ai\\ SURPRISED, 80,Ji'O\VING 1~0NEY ~OM ~ (;IWL ON !'ER VE"Y 6 1RTM D•V! PERKINS SU11E ! DIP! IN FACT, l 'M CMIPPING IN TO SUV YOU A G-JJ:'f.' ,. By MeU By Jah11 Miles DENNIS THE MENACE ••• 1--- .. . ! I I • • . • Race Set For Funds The Saddleback Y M c A building fund wjll ~et a £inlln· clal ~I Sunda'' ~1av 2.8. with a motnrcycle r~ce benefit at the El Toro Rilcew.._\, · ?re-enlry ftt is SS ~nd mini· bike fee is SJ.SO if made before Saturday ti.1ay 20. At tbe gale, fee will bf Si per bike and $5 for mini·bikes. Spectators 11.re $2.50. Events are: ~lini·bike. 50cc limit. one class; 1'o1inl-enduro. one class: IO()('c. junior and expert classes: \25cc. no\·ice. junior and expert classes: 250cc, junior and exp e.r t classes ; a nd open . junior and ex peel. WHAT IS THE KEY TO A BETTER LIFE? Project Running Smooth as Silk ... ' Cotti Elt>cled I Jn~rr Z1ka~ of 1:?07 \\'ts! Ray Art<. Nt\11)()rt Bf'DC'h hMs bC'en tlt('ll'd ~t'<'rttary (If lh1• P""s.ldrnl's Ctrr lt , a support group as,,lsling the 1eademle I progra1ns of lhe Univ,rsity of Southern CaU!orn11. s • DAILY mor 80UTIQUE ~CLEANERS QUALITY & DIP'INDAllL.ITY AT A ,All P'llCI Wnnaer·Dafe CPtater Corner of W1 rntr I Sprlngd1le, Hunt ington Beach 842-2050 . By CANDACE PEARSO~ Of tM O•llY P'lttt S!t ll Laurtl \\'illiams will ne rer start 'her O"'" silk company because she couldn't stand to boll her pets. and lay f"U;S ror th!" nr:.:1 btHt"h of rloth It 15 big bu~1nt~s 111 Jl\p.tn hut for --~I ;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;i.Jiiii:-:-;-:;;:·~=~=~:~~i:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii J..a urf'J, it is onlv an tngrQfls1n3 hobby. f Shr be.i.an "raising" worrns . af~er htr four!h ~rade teaC'her 111 Rtd 11111 Public Sc~I brought some to <'lass t1nrt 11:ave e.irh student \1•ho \rant~ th('n1 35 tggs. Htr uMOphisl ica ted \'trsion of a silk faclory -abo ut a dozen silk ~·orms f'nC'losed In pll1 stlc strawberry cartons - is busv at "'Ork 1n Sandra Pv lr's hon1e eronorilics cla~s al ljnJ\ ers11y lllgh School in lr\·ine. The silk worms feed on mulberry lra\'eS. f()r about a month artf'r hatrhin~. !hen spin cocoons around themselvE"s and be~in the transforn1ation from worm to moth. County GctlS 3 Roadside Rests • Three roactsu.ir resl areas fin Ortega highu·ay arr being lt~sect by Orang" County fron1 Richard J, O'Nt ill, o-.·ner of Rancho ~1 iss1on \'1tjo. ThE" ter1ns of the 11grrt>1nenl provide that the rounl y has ust of !hf' hree art>as NEWI MASTERCHARGE ACCEPTED fOlt STORAGE 'HARGIS '011 TH! "Artistry in ·Moving" BEST MOVE . . · =· t·_AGUNA ·BEACH.· 01' YOUR LIFE ·CALL 494-1025 ....... ·~ ~ ... •"" '• . ,' :.·~'7°!.lit .~·, STORAGE . •a c.itt'~Lo.1'.'CJ .Dist a ".c~ tMovinc:i 1 . .,. ---.. . \i ... . ~ .\~-:~.·.~·ti :"· ~ : · .. · Yo11 don't have to bt a victim of circumstances or feel that solutlon1 to problems art out_ of reach. OAILY ,ILOT 1t1U 1'1Ml1 Normally. the moth then pushes out of the top of the silk ball and m11:tes with another moth . The female thtn lays from 200 to 500 e~g s and both moths d1r u•1thin thrre days after coming out of thrir c°" coons. But the fabric industry interrupts !hr process and boils the cocoon to kill !he sfill-worm after he has spun his last thread . tola\1ng 111 ;u·res for no l'Cl.'11 for as long lr;;;;; ___________________ .. ~-----------"1 as the f'as\t•rn St'l'tion of i\hss11111 VitJO IS in agricultural preser\'(' statu.~. I HOLDING HER HOBBY 'Laurel Wllll1ms Thry nre hl<'llted fro1n lu·n tn lhrrr and one-half miles from !hr junruon of Or· tega Hlgh\vay and the San Diego Frce-SUNSET LIVING A chat1t• Jn your thlnklnt "" ltad you out of ,,ob· lems you may be fach19, lut such a chon9e must be based on somethln9 .. substantial -an under· standln9 of God and His divine laws of harmonious 111 •• COME and HEAR how thh1kh19 dttermlnH ,1xperle11ce. Y°"' JOSEPH H. ltlARD talks on "MIND aod MAN" In a free public IKture on Chrl1tlan ·Sclenc. -ar+o:iO A.M. Saturday, May 20 at the South Coast Theatre In Logurta IHch. Smell children are cartel for ot the church, 615 High Drlvo. PRE-KINDERGAUEN REGISTRATION CLINIC :\lothrrs bring child, birth crrt ihcatr, mf'Rslr~. 8 n d rolio D.P.T. rrcords fn r chll· dr('n cnt,.r1ng tlus fall. Ai::c 5 or o\·rr before Dcct·mbcr 2, 1972. AL/SO-Monday & TueMfey M1y 22 aftd 23 IL MORRO-Wadne1dey & Thurlday, May 24 & 25 TOP nF WORLD-Tue&dey & Wtdnesday, Mey lO & JI All School1-I AM to l PM f or further information. call: Shirley lurcomb....,.f44546 Copy It! at our new quick.action copy center. lmporl•nt Cor1t1pondtntt tn••nlo1y Sllt1h Attountin9 Rtcord1 Ordt• & 8id Fotr"t ln•oittt I St•lt mt ni1 C 1t1lo9 Sllt th & 8u11t tint Pro i•ct/Prod utt Sptcific 1tiont Prom otional L1tf1rt I Flyt rt Try Th i1 Convenient New Service Soon! COMMUNITY BUSINESS SERVICES 17175 leach llvlll. -Huntington Be•ch In O.lly Pilot Office 147·5111 Smile, you're " with Safeco. ' ·,l < ·• •; . '' DANIEL D. GORMAN, C.L.U. Auto • Boat • Home Mobile Home • Life DAN GORMAN INSURANCE 496-2114 34551 CASITAS PLACE DANA POINT MARINA, BLDG. 2 Only a certain TIUmber of"worms are al lowed lo comple te the metamorphosis v.•ay . at Capistrano Beach 72 Youths "Contacted' By Police Lriguna Bc11ch police logged 21 "informal'' and 51 "form al" contacts with juvenile of- fenders in April, Police Chief Joseph Kelly ha.!1 reported,. but the referral rate to Juvenile Hall for local youngsters was zero for the month . The 21 "informal" cnn!t1cls. KeUy explained, consisted ol field in terv iews in which a 'youngster was stopped for a minor violation and rele11sed with a warning without hfing taken to the police station. These contacts are slmply recorded on a field interview card. without further action. One of the "formal'' con. tacts, Kell y said, was resolved with a parenl interview. \\'lthout booking . and of the re· maining 50 y o u n tl s I er s formally bookt"d. 4.1 "'ere from oul of tnwn ;i nd Qnly sc:vcn \\'Crc local. Of this group 3n. including the local you ngsters. were released to their parents and 20 were referred lo Juvenile Hall, Kelly reported. Lagunan Gets Post Miss Mary Mullen . Laguna Beach has bee n elected first vice president of the National Retired Teachers Association at the groups Silver Anniversary Biennial Convention in Miami Beach. ri.1iss Mullen said thal during her two-year term as vice president she will promote the association's programs of pre- relirement counseling a n d continued community in- volvement for older persons. Mrs . Richard M. Nixon at- te nded the meeting a n d recci \·ed an awarrl of ap- preciation for her support ofl re tired Ameri('ans. The association is a non-pro- fit. non-parlisa n grou p which ) cond ucts a I e g is I a I i v e r~presentalilln proi;:ram and services to help older persons meet insurance. trave l and htal!h needs . Study Awarded In Fellowship I Richard L t·rank. of t:C ) Irvine's Depa r Im e n·l of Classics, has been av.·arded aj fe llowship by the American Council of Learned Sncietie&. 1 frank. of 625 Glomsted Lane. Laguna Beach, received his fellov.·shi p for post-doctoral \\'Ork on the ' · r.t o d er n Historiography of the Roman Empire." I Collectors Eve ., 1st Day Stanips Laguna Beach &lamp co\. &>r vicc. will sen d a card an· "A"Home Away F rom Home" I• the object of our attit ude tow1rd the pat ie~l t . We a im to make the atmo1phert happy and plea•anl for tho conva le•cont pe:rton. We want tho relative• and friendi lo fetl very relaXed and h11ve a toclal ettitude when vltiti11g their loved one1. Visl tort Alwayt Welcome Beverl y Mi nor Convale•c ent H0Apit1I Sa" Dl•t• frw~. t• CoMlnt l1trolla, h•'" rl tht •" lector1 now can automatically nounc ing the name of the 35410 Camino Capiitr•no, Capistrano l!!ieach receive first d11y cancellations giver. Rose said. 496-5786 of each new stamp, affixed to The new program be~ins !n ~~;;;:~~=~~;;;:;:;:;:;:;::::-~~~;::-=-:~~:--::::::-=:;-:;;;;;;:=~==~~ a scu,1veoir page suita ble for June 'with the Yellowstone Na· -- framing or an album , Don l innal Park sramp !~sued • R ose Laguna Be a ch fi1n rch I. This i~ done so the -postmaster-fiaid·lodlty:-----fif.'ri-ef;.. of-N111ionai.. r a r k The 8 by 10112 souvenir page stamps u'ill he con1 plcte on ill sin1ilar to the stamp an-souvenir pa.i::cs. nouncemcnts that appea r on ~ney g,rdE"rs or checks for post office bulletin boards. It $\O lfna.v 1)e sent to Phlhitelic consists of a phol.ograph of the Aul omalic o i s 1 r i h u t i 0 n stamp. the stamp itself with Service. Philatehr Sales Unil. first day cancelli:ition and in-111 h" D c 2~" formation about the stamp. "as inglon. · · """"· To subscribe. the colleclnr deposits $10 with his initia l order. E~ch time a souvenir pa2e is ~cnt out. a com puter deduc ts the cos! fr nin his de posit. (Jost of the sou vcnir pai.;c is 50 cents plull the cost of the sUtmp. Subscribers will be notified when the depollit ac- count gets low so th;it no issues are missed. ~1a11ings will be made monthly with souve nir pages of t h e precedi ng month . Gift 1ub11criptions may be entered. and the P ost a I 1'o llonor Holl .J,iscph Catlin. Jr .. of Z:::062 LaVara Slrcel , El Toro, hns hcrn named In the Santa An:i Collc~e honor roll,. F B I I semester. Students namfd to !hf' honor roll mu~t have completed al Jc<1 ... l 12 unit!'i dur111g thE' seincsrcr with no gradrs lower than a C. OvP.rall grade average must be B or higher. ll/cfr !Yyou ... a F'arme rs car in - surance policy wit h additional r eceive ex tra money v1hile s ion da ma ges in excess of your de· ductible . Farmers pays you $10 a day .c:i. for up lo 10 days for meals, car re ntal, motels, ph".lne calls and other 'extra' expenses -even if you dcri't spend the rr.one1. Just ask any fa s!, fa ir, fr;erdl/ Farmr;rs rran. NEW IN HUNTINGTON BEACH Olck Hayes -Howard 8atti1-Tom Butler 17171lfftti11"4 .. S11lto "K", H.I . 142·1185 !Ata:OSI STa:EET l'a:OM M>Ul"'fa:IOI CALU( 111 N•T'L IANI() or 6411 141"91' lt .. H.I . -ltJ.6111 11705 ldl119tr, F.V. -IJt.tJOO 17t1t M .. 11•U•, F.V. -t'Z·Z411 ., ''5·1401 901 J Ade'"'· H.I. -t,z,44'' · , , VISIT US AT '?f't ~Old MacDonald's Farm _./ WHERE YOU CAN S&E , PET & TALK TO THE ANIMALS Old MecDon1ld '1 Fa rm h11 hor1e1, pi91, chicken•, goal\, duck,, turtle,, mule1, dove1 , roo1le11 , 1heep cow1, boar1, lon9horn cattle, tu rkey1, rt1bbit1 , end lot1 of fun . Score Kee~ng No fun ... • BUT BOWLING IS! BOWL WITH THE AUTOMATIC SCORER WHERE YOU "AUTOMATICALLY SCORE" .. WE STILL HAVE SOME SUMMER LEAGUE OPENINGS DAY -NIGHT -LADIES MEN -MIXED -JUNIORS Open Play Lanes , ~~~~~~ t~~1.s:. j SATURDAY 11 :00 e.m. to 6 p.m. 9:00 p.m. to 4 1.m. SUNDAY 8:00 1.m. to 6 p.m. 9 p.m. to Midnight BRUNSWICK ROSSMOOR BOWL 12311 SEAL BEACH IL.VD . llC>ISMOOI IHO,,IN• CINYllt Jvtt 11ortti of ttie S.. Dl4tt• ffenr.,. -. ---·.:.-----~---------------SEAL BEACH 213-430-1038 or 714-527°1196 stereol03FM the sounds of the harbor ' ~d~~7 you~~neVei: heard itsogood • ! ' Ul"ITI ........ H'ur i\11g11l•I• /\ wounded South Viet- namt:se sol dier shows agony during recent retreat frorn Co1nmu· nist troops dow n lfigh- way One. ' -'---------I 'Lights On' Campaign Effective Cllrbll111 lcl1nc1 Mfllllor S1rvlc1 WASlllNG1'0N -There is mounting evidence t h 11 t motorists who turn on their headlights while driving in the ~dayllghtdr-tve more safely, The manager or the National Safety Council's motor. lr1Jnsportnlio11 drp11r1.1ncnt . John F'lahcrty, suys, ~"Mnny transportation con1p11nics have h ad favorublc experiences with 'light11 on' campaigns.'' REASONS GIV EN for the effectiveness of lhc ,1;1ylight use of he11dli~hts include: -l.ij(hl!1 intTcast• I h'c visibility of a vehicle 1111<l thus command the atlcnlion of other n1olorists. -Lights on in dayli~ht re· mind n drivrr of thl' nec..>d to opcralc safely. '!'hey increase his. snfcty nwnrcnes!I. -The driver traveling wllh his lighlN on joins e selrct J!rOUp o( highway molori!ltS. 1'his associ ation n1akcs hi1n tnorr conscious of h i s participalion in n hghwny- ··snfcly t•flnrt. (If everyone £urned on his ll ghts, this reason could not be valid.) Flahcrly says the council takr:oi 110 ofriclal position In isupporl of the "lights on" Idea. "Tiit• jury Is sll ll out" as fur ns suffil'lent t'Vidence is con - -ccrned. he snys. I lnwcver, such evidence is slowly being co1npilcd. "Lighls on" can1pai~ns. in one forn1 or nnother. hnvc bet•n common in rcct•nl years. A ltESEARCll llEPOllT. "Automobile H.u11nlnJ.( Li~hts." published in 1964 by Merrill .I. Allt•n nod Jarucs fl. Clark or Jnd i:n1a Uni\'.Crsily. cit<':oi n "lights on'' !t•st in 1!'162 by 11u• Greyhound Cor1)or;1tion. II l'l'SUl!cd in the nun1ll<'r <1r a('· cldcnts dccreusing hy 7 In 2·1 P<'rccnl. t :r1•yhn11nd ('nr1>0r:11 ion\ .sarc·1~· dirt·t·lor, \\';1Ht'r \Vt•is.s. 1111•nlion.s lh;1t ":i 111nr1• rt•rc111 siud.1• 11f 11cr1dr111.~ .sho11·ccl 1ui ;1pprl'ri;11Jl1· 1hff1'l'l't1<'r" for bu ses op1•r:1ti11g 11·i1h li~hts 911. "\\'c ::1rc l.'11nlinuin~ our flights 1111 l prngrnn1 bccaus1• 11 dc)('S 111;1 kc 1 h1• bu.scs 1nor1• v1.~iblr." he :irlr:li>tl . 111 four s1·p~1ralt' n10nths nf trs11n1! during I 9 7 0 • 7 I , fn11solidnll•d F1·eigh111•:1~·s' 1'!1· lire flcr1 of 2JJ(XJ truck~ opcrall'<I "''ilh lights ~n 2~ hours :i clav . The f11•rt rx- l><>rtt•nct>cl a· 24 In 4!1 pcrrrnt rN"luclinn in ;1rriclcnt fn •- qucncy ch1ri11g r1·1·r~ 111011111 lh:it d11ytin1c lights 11•1•rc 11s1'd. $255 La-'\' Grant Wo11 C'rt'rald T. llunlit'I', 33. or 'l\1!!1in , has bet'n named lhl' Orst Bay Al'l'n R t' v i t' 11· ~holarsh.ip ~·Inner nl \\'cslcrn St~tc Unh·ers1t~· t'ollegt' or Law. The $225 scholnrship In· cluMs the CQUrse fee 3'nd all materials. · lluntlcy, or 1171 $i()O('ht~ni:(' Drive. rettlved his B..1ch<'lcll o( Science degrtt in electrlC'AI cnglneerlng from lhf Univcrsi· II' of Soulllern California. Given Honors Dl'l'ld -· '" 'I).,,. dall DrilOt. Hunllilgb>n O.ad. hu bool llllnod lo U.. Santa Anl eo1i... bonot roll ror u.. ,.. ........ • """ 2 I, ... II. ml when you think of WHITE . FmDING WEB CHAIR Wide, colorful wavtn vinyl wllbs in 6x4x4 pat- l ~rn. Orange-yellow nr tilu!' lime ~JP.en. /1 lJ?Ufi OUR REG. PRICE 4.11 3ee · WEB CHAISE LOUNGE long on com!ort. ~nd a pnc~ tha1 ~an'1 br. tiro,11. b• I ~1 webbm~. ;1d1uslahlr ~luminum hamr. II I 1111 OUR REC. PRICE J.!J 5ee WEB AND PVC CHAIR W1d~ vmyl web~ alld PVC rv1d arr 1n1rr wov1·n !(If h11r.h1 rnl(lr & Lomlrnt. I (lld1nr, t1amc. N /9J·1 J OUR REI. PRICE 11.91 see ' ... • ! ' " MAN SIZE WEB CHAIR Multi n1Jor Vi'1d~ & nar- row w•·h~ in fi·Gx4 o~t­ l1~n. I/lid~· t~m.r. poll h- r.d aluminum tr~mP.. f ~]Z OUR REG. PRICE 6.91 4ee ADJUSTABLE LOUNGE ent ;rnioi1• : ;1l111n11111111 lr.1!11'' x. I I 11) 1'<•·~1'11 ~JI!\ I y,' Uf'" 1n fl ,/ OUR RlG. PRICE 8 91 ,· :v ~· • -1 ... , •• 0 -.y ' Rm woo o CLUB c ~'an ~.11P r11ml nl m 1!~ h•''N rrdwtllld lf~"l''. W1· 11~"r .p~lrd lmi'.h, ....., conh1u1 ~1m~ .. S6A OUR REG. PRICE 12.97 " ~ -I ~> ' • I. ' • ' • • ., ' •' . ") ' 99 , PaDBI PWTIC CIAll Strong, comfortable and wrather resistant: briMht ~1·•.1pn on seat and bac k. Aluminum frame. #601 OUR REG. PRICE 7.97 5ee "BON BON'' LOUNGE 111 .. 1111mitablc chaise that 1111; the heart's desire tor r i!~t I rrla~ation with i!s :,;; p11,1!1on \lf'f'I tram c. OUR REG. PRICE 12.91 gee PADDm CllAISE LOU•E ~::~,;~~,~~~~s'~~s'~~~: 15ee support. Tubular fl'eme w/ 4 wJy ad1ust. A604 OUR REG. PRICE 19.91 RllMmllATCIAll Rustic redwood seat and back are contoured for comfort. Strong tubular aluminum frame. #341 OUI REG. PRICE UI - see 5 POSITION LOUNGE Edra big & sl.,dy chai>e 1 0 1 e wn~ 7~17 colorful web panern. Aluminum tiame, Dla~t1c arm CaDS. N 211 LOW DISCOUNT PRICE WEB AND PVC CllAISE 4 different color vinyl webs interwoven w/white PVC bands. 5 posi tion back, white vinyl arms. #291 41 OUR REG. PRICE 11.11 1eee • FOAM PADDm CUIR The lap or luxury with l v~" sulid foam till vinyl Drinl cushion~ & 11 band !'llfing suspension. Al 7 OUR REG. PRICE 1.91 pe INNERSPRING LOUNGE Vinyl covere<I 5" '""''. 2 I e e spring pads over JO rahs band SUSPfnS1on. 4 v.a1 frame, 8" wheels. Al 20l /9 33 OUR LOW PRICE LOUNGE IN LUXURY ON THIS 3 PC. PATIO SH! SAVE NOWI OUR REG. PRICE 14.97 • sn INCLUDES 2 FOLDING CHAIRS & CHAISE LOUNGE Put your backyard, patio or porct in order for summertime lounging. Rugged long lasting set includes a big chai se lounge with 5 position tubular aluminum frame and bright woven vinyl webbing. Two companion chairs fold flat for easy travel and storage. SupertJ support and comfort in thi s low pFice package. STOlf HOUIS: DA/Lr AllD SATURDAY 10 AM TO 9 PM• SUllOAY 10 AM TO 7 PM• Tffflf'S AWHITE flOltf llW TOUI PllCESGOOO 1NlllSUll,MAY21. Sll7 3088 BRISTOL ST. osta esa SAN DIEGO FREEWAY AT BRISTOL -·-· • CllAIGf IT-Wf CIEDIT WO .. -·--· ·--~19 . _...., ft!J"· . . ---~· •tR• WWWM Cllll 911 • < . • • . ; I I j ' I •: • • •• '· q• Ill n le ll di \\ "' " ' m ck • • au dil .., dil I ok sci l'UI "' al. m. I the wa bei tJn I Hd ne• fro, I fi~ thI N p 1 sta Mu ""' "" Inn Jo l!ell tigi rec dri· s - L coa nes of leaJ by SI coa ..., to c s. ma1 coa Ion m>1 leac pos• c Jlig fig< nes lea• Ne1 ~ tom wor wal ma1 B Met lent ·Bel pl8) p tr.. ·ny ab.! 1pe T w~ Sun tho : .. ., n wt> 11111 ..c mil Spo ) ha( m.1 " ID I E 1M .,..,...,, llQ 1'. 19n OJ.I L V PILOT --=~=~--- Injury Shelves America's Premier LOS ANGELES (AP) -Marty LI· quo<i'I io>palJeoce for an Injury to ~ and his dedJc:aUon to hls Villanova team· malls bavt combined to knock Amer· lea's top miler oul ol the Olympics for 1972. Tbe 22-yur-<ild st;ir olo-the middle distance rices the past three years said Wednesday a painlul bone spur on his left heel "will only get worse U J continue to run. ·l'U have a cast put qn soon and maybe it'll heal by itself. But 'I'm deflnlltly throtlgh for the year." Uquorl <>me .. Caillamla Tuesday to Pl'~,-bopelully -for a June t Coliseum meet which alrtady bas five of America's top distance runnm lined up. "Anotbu reason I came out here,'' U. quorl said. "was to see Dr. Robert Kerl1J1." Kerlan, who bu treated numerous famous athletes, confirmed a Pl'Viqus diagnoslJ -1 stretched liga- ment in the foot around which a large calcium deposit had fonned. Liquori said the Injury occurred durln& Succumbs Today In d y Driver Dies From Injuries INDIANAPOWS, Ind. (AP) -Veltran auto race driver Jim Malloy of Denver, dled today of multiple lnjurles suffered last Sunday in a fiery crash at the In- dianapolis Motor Speedway. Malloy, who would have been YI years old next Tuesday, never recovered co~ sclousness after his Eagle in a practice run crashed into the concrete retaining "K·all as he came out of the northwest turn at a speed that may have approached 175 m'.p.h. He was trapped in the crushed body of the car for almost a half-hour. He finally was pried out with a new hydraulic tool being used at the Speedway for the first time. He was rushed to the Methodist Hospital of Thdiana by hellcopltr but he· never recovered enough to be moved from an intensive care l!lection. Malloy, a native of Columbus, Neb. finished fourth in the 1971 Indy 500 after three start! in which be railed to wind up NEBRASKA ST AR PLEADS GUILTY LINCOLN, Neb. -Nebraska football star Johnny RodJi!;ers pleaded guilty in Municipal Court Wedne5day to charges of running a red light and driving on a 1t1spended license. He earlier bad pleaded innocent. Judge Neal H. Dusenben-y deferred sentencing pending a pre-sentence inves- tigation. The 20-year-<1ld Rodgers could receive up to 30 days in jail and hive hll driver's license suspended for one year. Sports In Brief among the top ten. His best previous finish WU 11th In 1001. He was the fastest rookie qualifier at the . Speedway in 19!8 but a spilt 1ear case took him out of the race. Malloy's death is the 591h fatality at the Speedway, lnc1uding pre-500 races of 1909 and 1910. The last victim at the Speedway was Mike Spence of the British Lotus team. He crashed into the wall at the opposite end of the 2'72-mile asphalt track, also in a practice run, May 7, 1988. There have been no fatalities In the race itself since rookie David MacDonald and veteran Eddie Sachs died in 1984 in a fiery pileup at the head of th~ main straightaway. -The· Speedway toll has Included 3S drivers, 14 mechanics. nine ' spectators and one speedway guard. Dr. Hanna said Malloy suffered a com- pound fracture of th~ right arm, frac~ tures of the hip and' legs, and second degree burns on the hands and feet. Malloy had been timed at 188 m.p.h. earlier In his Offenhauser-powered car. On his fatal run , the low-slung car dipped low as it came out of the turn, then skidded into the outside wall. He competed in all three of the United States Auto Club's Triple Crown 500-mile races last year, finishing sixth at Ontario, Calif., but stopping wilh engine trouble at Pocono, Pa. Bob de Vour of Los Angeles, who operated the Hurst Power Rescue Tool used to pry apart lbe shattered car, said Malloy "was pinned the worst I've ever seen. The front part of the car was rolled back on hlJ legs and the whole mass pinned his body Inside." Sharman Ni~es Post; Brohamer RBI Wins It LOS ANGELES -Los Angeles Lakers Coach Bill Sharman was quoted Wed- nesday as saying be doesn't want the job o( the National Basketball Association team's general manager, a post vacated by Fred Schaus this week. Sharman said he woold be too busy coaching the NBA champions to take on amther assignmenL "I wouldn't be able to do justice to both jobs," he said .. Schau.s re.signed as the Lakers' general manager to take the head basketball coaching job at Purdue. Sharman and fonner Houston Rockets g e n er a 1 m:J.nager Pete Newell were rumored the le ading candidates for the lAS Angeles post. "6· CLEVELAND -Ex-Huntington Beach High star Jack Brohamer once-a~ain fi oured importantly in a victory Wed- n:sday for the American League East· leading Cleveland Indians, who edged the New York Yankees, 2-1. With the score knotted at 1-1 in the bot- tom of the ninth inning, Brobamer worked Yank reliever Fred Beene for a walk with the bases loaded, forcing home mate Tom McCraw with the winning run. Brohamer's free pass f o 11 owed McCraw's ,eadoff triple and a pair of in- tentional walka to Ray Fosse and Buddy 'Bell to load the sacks and set up a force play at any base. ,,, PJTl'SBURGH -Dock Ellis, CO!> troversial Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher, ·nys he baa abandoned a long-~ abstinence and will now take part in 1pecial autograph sessions. 1be 2'7-year-<1ld righthander s a I d Wednesday he would sign autograpbJ Swliay at Three Rivers Stadium before the Pittsburgh-Montreal dcubleheader. · · "! will he there, and I will •i&D autographs," he said, offering no reason for the move. Ellis refused to take part in special autograph sessions last season, but voiced no objection to spontaneous auto-• graph signing. Pirates general manager Joe L. Brown said the decision was Ellis' alone. "I did not even discuss it specifically with Dock,'' he said. ,,, OAKLAND -Denny McLain, 171,000-a· year Oak.land Athletic:s pitcher, iays It hurts to be fanned out to the club's Birmingham team but he'll stay in baseball. "There's no doubt I can pitch in the big leagues," said the 28-year-<1ld right- hander who becomes one of the highest paid players in minor league bi.story. '"l'be only tblng that hurta is that after only five starts, I'm gone. We've only played 20 games and rm , ..... he said. ,,, DALLAS -Tbe Russian champion soc- cer team, Moscow Dynamo; will play in five North American cities, with Dallas the first slop. it was announced here Wednesdl!y. The Moscow club rated one of the top 10 in the world, will play the Dallas • Tornado June 1 in Tena Stadium, home ol the National Football League's Dallas Cowboys. • CllICAGO -Big Ten and NCAA Of· ficlals have revealed they are in- vestigating the University of Illinois for alleg¢ athletic pr.octioe vtolatlom. "A pre1imina'J' Inquiry hu hten fUed with lllinola" reprdlna an alloted viola· lion o1 NCAA ~ulalloiu, the NCAA 1ald Wedoesclay in K.amu Qty. a Big F'ive """' country met! Wt October. "I was in the greatest shape ol my lire at the ti~.11 be said. "'l Ww the injury nteded rest '1!!1.1 also had an obligation to my ieBnuiiatei. We hid ~·on the NCAA cross country championship three of ·the last four years and I knew how httrd some of thosre guys bad worktd. It was just IOmothlng I felt I had to do -run in the NCAA championships. . "I tbooght the injury might go away so I lhou&ht I'd tty to. run through It. •1Wbm It started to grt wortt, I wu told not to run for three moolhs. r ut I ca.me back too .soon and 11 got ~rse." Liquori, who defeated Jim R)'lln last l'U.r at Pl:illadtlphia 3:>t.I to 3:54.a. said he had set only one goal for hlnudl this year-''the Olyn1pics. I ~~uld b'ave tritd to go aller the wgrkl, rf<.'Ord ln the mile_ but the Olympics W8'1 au I was lhl\lking oj>out. '')l's cUscouraging but I'll never ltt monry get in the way of remaining an amateur. f'lo amount ol money could get ¥ ou Can't B e Serious me to Jlvt llP Ill)' llNttur •tandin& now. 1 am lntettsted In ..,_,sting but I won't aettpt an.y job now -no nUttler what the olftr Is -U I'm not per11)1tled to run qaln. "I'll ~ bact." Uqoorl's best 1,50<Nntter run of S:3S.O ls one ot tht bf st marks on rec.-ord and he said he fe.lt be ('OU.Id "easUy have lalten three stconds oil that thls season." Tbe l\'orld mart is S:Sl.1 by Ryun. .. , guess my "'xt c.'OmpeUtlon will be: In · January or February Indoors. 1rs just too bad that this season Is wiped out." That seems II> be the blues Jim Rosario (right) ts singing to umpire Frank Pulli after Cincinnati's Joe Morgan tag~ed him out on a pickotr play Wednesday. Cincmnali wpped San Francisco, 2-1. Homage Paid t~ :t;lehoin Never Co ached a Finer H uman B eing-Oliver It was Al's night. Some 200 friends, family and associates gathered at the Sheraton IM Jn Hun- tington Beach Wednesday night to pay tribute to Al Reboin as he neara the close ol 36 years as a coach and teacher. Eleven or the many people who crossed Reboln's career, first as a.student at San- ta Ana High and later as he worked at Hunlinet~n Beach ffirrh, reminisced ab?ut Al to the group. Included were Te:t Oli\•er, Car> Sheue, Bill Boswe11, Jack Jenkins, Elmer Combs, Bill Wise, Cora Henderson, Ed Goddard , Lee Mosteller, Woody Smith and Jim Stangeland. Oliver, Reboin's coach at Santa Ana High, lauded Al by saying, "I've had over l,000 athletes in my 35 years of coaching and none was a finer human being than AL" Sheue relived a day in 1929 when he presented a .skinny Al Reboin the trophy for being high point producer at the Southern Counties track meet: "Little did I realize that mutt would follow in my 1teps throur,h life." And Stangeland capped It of! by saying, "he'll always be my coach." · Others told of the little experiences which they have shared with the kindly, bespectacled man, who by his own words holds three things dear in life -family, friends , students. A few of Reboin's many associates or· lered their lribult to Al In Interviews !hit week: AL ffiWIN, UC Irvine a11lllut direc- t.or of athleticl and past coachillg rival - "Al Reboin is probably one of the most dedicated, most sincere and Joyal coaches I've ever had the good fortune of coachini teams against and had the plea.sure or knowing through the year1. He's a very, very sincere individual. "AJ. a coaching adversary I knew him quite well. In those days bis teams were always well drilled, tremendous fun- damentally and possessed great desire." WENDELL PICKENS, Oru1e Cont Collece athletic director -"I wu coaching at Newport Harbor High when Al "'' at Huntington Beach. I got to know him quilt well and later we hoth belonged to the officials wociallon. "We had some navll duty together, too. J consider Al and his family very close personal friend1. "He's such an unusually friendly person. I've never heard a bad word about Al Reboln." HARRY °CAP'' SHEUE, .former teacher, coach an·i1 athletic director at Huntln'!ton Beach High -"I can prob- abl.v tell you more about Al than anyone alive. "Al'& very well liked as a teacher. The kid:; liked to be in his class, because he is strict. He keeps good order in his classes. "He'i kindly, but firm. There's no hors· Ing around, they learn in his classes. I know because I've substituted for him. "Not a peep In an hour, but still they liked him. Kids like a little authority, it gives them a little security. Al'• just well liked throughout the community. "He broke my record with service at Huntington Beach High, by the way, with 36 years. My old mark was 33 years. "He was the greatest. I've nevP.r known a more even tempered guy. Everything '• always ok, We're old goUing and fishing pals, too ••• " ...... " SHIUI KEN MOATS, lormtr IOOlball coach and athletic director at Hantlngloa Btacb -"Al's a person who wu always there and 100 percent interested. He'• probably one of the best pert0n1 I know with the abWty to organize. His knowledge and background to organize tournaments and playoffs and the administration of athletic prograntJ was outstanding.'' JULES GAGE, Newport llathor lll&b athletic dlreetor -"I got to know Al through athletic competition with Hun- tington Stach. "I relped h11 bo!1'Sly In problmt1 in- volvlng athletics. Whether lls ellgibllily or whatever, Al Reboln wos always a very honest person In his dealings with coaches and kids. And I admire hl1 abili- ty to organize." CLARE VANHOOREBEKE - An.ahelm Hl1th footbaU coach and former athlete l't Huatiar,ton Beach -"It's too bad they don't make more like him . He's not <lnly a line coach, but he'1 one helluva fine person •. , a guy who's never too busy to help you. "Cap Sheue and Al flnt got me started In coaching. They talked kl me about comJng ln and helping them at Hunt- ington Beach. "We agreed that I'd do that and got the machinery working. But about that time Al required surgery and dr opped out of coaching. They threw my name In the hat to become head coach at Huntington, but then it fell through. Al personally took my papers to Anaheim.to help me aec::ure a Job there. "He'• a wonderful person, sincere, always wllllni; to help and always did more than his share. More Important than his coach.Ina:. however, was his simple interest In the kids," ELMY.fl COMBS, basketball coach 1t Jluntlngtoa Beach -"lie wa11 extrerriely popular with the 1tudents. When I was first acquainted with him it wa1 just after World War II. "'"'"He wa1 never my coach but he was always Involved In athletics. The gals U!· ed to think he was Mr. Smoothie. My wife (Carolyn) 1ay1 all lhe girls had a crush on him •.• " JIM STANGl!LAND -Cal Stile !Loa1 Btach) lootbaJI coacla and former athlete at Hunlln.Jt.oa Beaclt -"He was ,ny first coach and l'd say the person most retpon.slble for me wantlni to aet into coachlnl( • "He was always a areat Inspiration to me as a person. When I wa1 playing for Al the lmpre11ion he gave me and our teammates was "there'1 a auy you'd like to he like.' ·~ "! can remember thinking I'd lilu! to coach too, simply hecaUlt of what he stood for aa a man. He waa • 1rtat technician or the real lundiun.ntala. When you look back'and realize ho was the ·only coa<;h on the field, there were no a11lstants, you .rt1llu it took quite 1 Unser E.iJrns Pole; Mosley Hits 192 • INDIANAPOLIS (Al') -MIU MOiloy, ..mose car failed him durlog a qua1Uylng IUD rour dlys ago, cam• bacl< Wed-.Y and rec:orded a shakedown lap at 191.0IO miles per hour al the lndlanapo!IJ Motor Speedway. Mosley, I'/, was one o! Ov•,driven Who bad regilteml apeedl In -ol t• m.p.h. In pradice. but Ol))1 two ol them _. -the t2 Who mad& Ille Un..., 'lo laltlal time trial• Sllllday. Bobb)' Uoaer, who had hem docked at ltl1U. -ailly dlodiod Ille pile poaitlon with a lour-lap speed ol !IS.MO m.p.h. Another memhtr ol the lllk!ub, Gory _.,.., gained tnnporary spot Ill the lnlnt fV'll with l~.1177. Otben from the aelect lfOllP art P- -and Mark DanollUe, botll of whom will have a lhot at Unser'• pole poaltlon Ill qaalllying _,_ ftey ft AZDODI five driven atfD cm- lldered first..i&y qu.allllm. 'l'lle filth manber, Jim Malloy, crashed acalnlt the third tin wall fn a pre-qua!l-,..!Jinl pndiot .... _, and died today at Methodist llorpltal. Moslty, badly lnj>r..S in a wrec;t dur- ing last year's Indy SOO.mlle nee, took lbree laps under the grten before bei111 aldellned with Jcnltloo problem1. B'tl beat lap waa only 185.IOI, but the qualllylng aU.mpt COil him 1 shot at Unser. 'l'bo best ho can now hope f« 1113th poaltlm. A. J. Foy!, Who also suffered eng1oe Wlure during the earlier time lrlall, came back Wednoday and PClllod a lap at IJUUill b!J No. 2 ~ l'onl. Bill Vukovich, who htt the wall on the second lap of hlJ qualifying lry Sunday, turned one lap at 116.217. other bigh 1peeda Included si.ve Kr11iloll'1 182.IU In a Gl'ant Kin~ Olly and rookie John Ma!Jltr's Ill J71 In a Vanguard Olly. With George Snldtt al.lo reaching t!0.971 Ill Foyt'1 backup Coyolt, R>eer t.lcOw;tey movlog up lo 180.732 In • Klmna-Ofly and Did< Simon poctin~ 110.JJJ In the Travel Lodge Special, the !lat ol W'S and drivtn In the lllHJIUI dub .... 11 rr !of the-. ptt10n to do It." I TEX OLIVER, Conner Santi Alla Hlg~ loolball coac• -"He played for mo In 1'28 129 and '30 and be was 1 1tar 11 a IOphomore. "He'1 one ol tho oulltandJnr y~ mm who ever played for me, you Couktn t find a flntt human being. J never bard blm cry about what .......,. did to him . A re.a.Dy fine 1portaman. "You cooldn't ••k for a more COOpt .. allve or nl«:r pttlOn lo eo1cb. "Ht'• the kind ol 111Y who wears well , .. doesn't throw airve bolla at people, I paWne and honeit petlOG. '' Miler ' Holtzman Giving A's Arm, P1111cl1 By C'l\AIG Sllt:FF ot "'-g .. ,., ,o .. '"" Ken 11olt:unan hlid a fl!w prohle1n! last ba.sebnlt ~ensun "'hilt pltrhlu.: f11r tho Chlrago Cubs. Nol\' his oppon~nts arc havlng trou blt! \\'llh hlni. llf" not Oulv had K bad yt11r. bu! al!KI knorkt<t ht'Uds on ~ fr:w oe~:as1011s with th~ <..'hJ1·nf.:O ·rnanai,:t'rnent . ··1hnd1t lut of 1roubte with the Chlrngo l·n om p '"· '~"·"'• 11 . • "'· 7 1 Cl rn, orgnnl1ntion last ytoar, but n103t of 1ny problr.1n!I wrre oft the field . So wht>n the .sra"lon was over 1 talked II O\'l'r with 1ny wUt! :ind [ nskt'd to be tradf!d," 11ty1 }(oJIZ.11\lUI. llt· nut his \v\sh -siolna to the Oakland A's for outflt'ldrr rtlck Monday . The ~111ooth·\vorkln& lert·httndtr 11 "°'" h1tppy "'tlh his 1vork -and tho results show. \\'t'dntsd1ty night at Anahelrn Stndlum, tht'I 27-yenr-old ~1l'lsourl natlvo won hl1 rlfth gan1e In scvrn decUl\on s this se111011, blanking the slumping Callfomla Angeli on right hits. 4-0 .. Although llolt:unun would not elaborAte on his 1>roblen1' with the Chica.go n\anagemen t. he doosn't think it affected bl1 pllchiog that.much In '11. '·i just hntl 11 bad year." say11 Jfollunnn who finished lh u ae11son with A 1-11 record, desplll• throwing his socond 1na- Jor lengut'I no-hiller. "TI1ls Is a con1pl(ltely frtth start for . me," says lloltz111un. "1 just w11nt to forget 11bout Inst year." Apparently he ha1. Playing for u t•lub that hA1 one of the besl pitching stnffs In ba11ubnll , liollimnn Is the leader In vlctorle11 and has a nifty 2.48 e.r.11. W~ne~dny nlghl'a win was llolt:r.man'a 11econd shutout of the season and he wa1 never In uny real danger, detplte allow- ing eight llolo hlla -three of them to SRndy Alomar. "l started a lltUe alnw, but r got In tho groove about the third Inning and J felt stronger at the end than J did at the atart of the gome." The 1tat11Uc1 point that out. Hollrmaft gave up five hits In the first three ll\oo nlngs, then allowed three h1rmlea1 1lnglr.1 over the last 111: frnmc1 . And ll was lloltzman'11 bat that pro- vided the A's with a lltlle broathin1 room In the second Inning. After l<.'Orlng one run In the frame on Larry Drown'& one·ba11e blow, Holtzman hlt a shot up the middle with two out1 to score two more and glve the A'• 1 J.O lead. OAKLAND (ALl,OINIA .. ,,."" .. ,,.,'" C•"""'rl1 u llvdf " JI Jrc••on '' t•lldo JD D\lnc•I! c Manou11 ct f,,.l1ln ID C. lroom 10 Hol"INln p 40llAIMn••1• 41 10 4 I I I lllv•11 ti J 0 I I • 0 0 0 MlMult.,1)1 4 0 I 0 4000I Ollv•fllJ 401 1 J111Kou •fl 4010 40l•C1rC11N1•tt 4tfo llt1S11nlonrl 1100 ' I I I l Otbct19 O ) O O I •0121M•YP 210t Obri.n p11 I t o o 0u .... p • I •• Tot1I JJ 4 I 4 TOl•I )7 0 I I O.•l1nd OtD 010 tlO -4 ~llornl• o IO 101 O I I -o l!-1. 011 .... ,, AlolNlr, L. lro..,n. 0'-4•• 1•1111 2. lOll-O.kl11\d I, C11ltoo1'4i •• 111l-l!,!dl (II, S lllv•ri. lll'Hll"llSO +to111m1n IW, l·'I ' I O O O ll l .M1y (L, 0·)) I I 4 4 I I Q""" I OOOtt PB-Olll'ICln. T-2:01, A-1,111. Dodgers, Astros Due l for Lead Don Sutton, ofr to his flne•t start tver (~). will take the mound for the la Angeles Oodaer1 tonight al Dodger Stadium u the O'Malley'1 ent.trt1ln the red-hot Houaton A11ros In a b4ttle for tho N1tlonal Leogue We11t leuder1hip. 11le Dodgera fell nine 1~r(.-ent1o111e pol11111 off Jfooston 's pace Wednesday night aa Tommy John dropped a 2-1 decision to Dodger• Slate fllt#t II Dodlert Yt. HOllllOfl INl't lt O.Otttt YI. Ho\lf!M MW 8 00dt•,. W, H°"'11on 7:11 •·"'· 7:N '·""· •:~• '·'"· the San Diego J>odres and a former Dodcer minor league hurlu. Fred Norman . In tonight's optnlni gRme with lloluton to aet an abbreviated home atand undlr way Including the fint loor with the Alitroa, Sulton wiU face Ken J'onch (l·l) with tht game atartln& 11 a o'clock. The Giant• then come in for three hfKlMlng Monday night. Norman. 1 left-hander, lowered hla e.r.a. to I.to and aingled to let up the fint San DLeeo nm which IOOted on a third lrmlnr error. ·Nohnan had roofed whtn ho lrted to p from aecond to third on Jerry Morale6' , _.,.l &r<••••lcr to short. However, 8111 Grahcrkewlti let the throw &et by him for. the error that loot the (JIJ!le. IM M•tW:J ,.,. , .... .. , . ,. • • • • 0 f"""91 • 4 • • • ""°''"'" 4 • • • &lllM " ••••i..• 4 1 I • J ... Nlfll ••11c.et1Ut 4 • • .Hltr u t • 1 • "•!Cw!c , • 1 • C....-it • I • t f . ~ ...... .. I ........... . .. , .... J t I t I I • . i i: f t t I ' • I ' • • • a t I t I I f t • , • J • I I I I • ••• •••• .,_I 2$1 ~1 ......... -· •••••• 11•-• l .. :JO DAILY rlLOT Edison, Dons Tangle COMP'J'ON -Gon:zalt.1 Pork Is the 111tt of th' Ur.at ever (;JF AAAA baseball plnyoff g;une ror cntic h Bill Morri11 and hl1 Ed l 11on Chirger!I Friday aflernoon (3) 11nd awaiting thr. J r v i n e l..eal(ue runnor1up Is C.:011ta l.e11gue runncrup is Coal!t And the Don!C 11port all of the credentials uau111Jy Identified with league champioflll. Coach ll arold LaVallc h" a couple or top pitchers In the fold . riight.handed starter Carl Sapp ha11 chalked up 11 9-2 mark for the season while left handed mate Darnell King has epun an 8-1 rec-Ord. And to go along wllh two good 11arter1 i1 a solid Infield bu Ill around Dcnzll Palmer, a 1ingle1 hitter who has punish- ed the ball al a .480 clip. DAILY PILOT Pllet9., L• Pb'N Ma gn olia Ho lds Off Late Estancia Rally By ROGER CARLSON Ot 1111 t11U1 JOii .. lt1tt . Estancia High'll long, uphill battle to secure a CIF AAAA baseball playoff spot went up in flames Wednesday af. temoon as Magnolia held on to post a 3-2 decision at Fountain Valley ijlgh. - The special playoff victory propels Magnolia into the playoffs Friday aaainst host North Torrance. while Estan· cia must view the eliminations from the sidelines. Coach Ken Millard's Eaglet didn't go down without a fight, however. Estancia, which had won six of 115 Jast seven Irvine League games to go from a cellar con- tender to a playoff contender, almost pulled it out in the 1ixth Jnning. Trailing, 3-0, Millard's nine scored twice and had runoer11 on second and third with tw.o out. But Magnolia s e c o n ~ baseman Mark Kelly ·made a nice defensive play on a soft punch to short right field by Dave Ronquillo lo snuff out the rally. Joe Barnett scored the first Estancia marker when he reached s.afely on a fielder's choice. The two safeties in the sixth were ttJe only base hits Estan- cia could muster. Twice the Eagle11 were tum· ed away on double play balls early and with the exception of the sixth lnning tber& wa little in the ~·ay of an Estanda threat. John M<irtin was the major offensive item for the wiJ. mlrig_-L Sentinels, ~ strOking a double and single, good for two rbL Vil{ es Face Stiff ,First Rou nd Test LAKEWOOD -1'.farina High's Vikings have gained the CIF AAAA baseball elimina- tions for the second time. and coach Ray Allen and his Yikes may have a tiger by (he tail in their first round test Friday. Moore League champion Lakewood awaits Marina in the 3:15 d8'h and i£ the .......,-.-----~ ~ Tak• tl>S Stl'I OllOO frHWly l'IOl'lll to 111'1111-lllvd. Norlll on lltll- flowtr IUvd., tlohl on H•tVtY St. Scl'lod klc11td on lttl. rormer's past record .is an in- dication, it would appear to be a tough first round challenge for Marina. The only non-league setback was to Sunset League cham· pion Loara. 6-3. "We used a lot of reserves and a lot of people out of pos.I· tion against l.oara and ended up with a lot of errors," says Herbold of his team's Joa to the Saxons. . ~· Friday's starter Davis ind · backup ace Bob McRae abut down the South A 11-at•a.r baseball learn last year if a nine-inning scrimmage with two hits. And another in the mound corps who may figurt in Friday's opener is 6-2, 21(). pound Doug Slettvett. Making his mark even more lmPoo'lng 11 hi 11 coach's ESTAN CIA'$ remark: "We don't credit DAVE RONQU ILLO !LEFT), JEFF GRANT IRIGHTI PUT OUT MAGNOLIA'S HANK BAUER. He moved up to second when mate Jim Schultz was hit by a Bob Stewart offering and got to third on a wild pitch. Coach John He rbo I d's Lancets have won the Moore League title the past four straight years, was, the CIF finalist two years ago and possesses a bevy of tough hit- ters in the current lineup .. The Lancer"}'-h:d the league in liltting with a .2.86 team average .. anyone with a cheap base hit" Thal w;ts his reply when. queried aoout the balance or his team's batting average - one that lhows only two others 1"ith. Iver ages better than .300 Wilt Heads -Voll eyball UCI , Pirates Seek Horwrs He scored when injury-rid· died catcher Tom Johnson beat out the Eagle!' first hit of the afternoon. "You have to undersland one thing about Lakewood, and the Moore· League in geoer~I." says H er b o Id, "everyone plays well. Marina is expected t o counter with sophomore Gttg Foster (11-ft on the mound, Brock Pemberton at first~ and a host of threats in the hitUng and fielding departments. Second baseman J a c k Ramirez has a .313 average and Kenny Landreaux ls a .353 hitter. Lineup In Western Sprints Yeet Then pitcher Jim Postel came up and slammed a dou- ble to the left-center alley. Schultz scored easily but the se<:Qnd runner held up at third. '''You have to if you 're going to make the team. It's not a case ol three outstanding players and the rest going aJong for the ride." Pemberton is the Samltt League wplayer or the year and bas batted at a .500 clip for the season. $# Sapp and Palmer earned co- pl11yer of the Jeague honor11 while Ramirez and Landreaux also made flr11t team. Their overall record Is 17-4-1 and Coast League rivals (which Includes Lynwood , Downey and Santa Fe) were punished at a 14-1 clip. Third baseman Rick Prterl! (.250), outfielder Joe ~·aulkner {.26'1) and King were nnmed to All-Coast League second team. Edison has 1 few gem11 of Its own, however, 11nd leading the list are All-frvlne League 11t1rt Mike Selwood and Greg Farker. Selwood't bat and glove at catcher have been highly in. ttrumental in Edlaon'a rise to the upper echelon. The sophomore Y.'hii batted .432 for the year and .500 In league play and· he hits with power. Parker cnn1e to the rescue In the pitching dcpnrtment when one starter wa11 IOI'!! for dlsclpllnary reasons and another because of surgery. Hill pltching (and hilling) along with the slants of second team all-league pitcher l\like Alba, helped Edison to within one gume o! !he chn1n· plon11hlp. Others who have figured heavily In Edlson'a suCctss have been infielders IUC'h T11chlne, r.1ark Sigl nnd Ed Weinht'rRcr, nlong with out- fielders Gus Albn, i1ike fllncs und l\lark Nielsen. Los Angeles Lakers star Wilt Chamberlain and a host or other world class volleyball players will accept l he ch:illeni;te of the Balboa Bay Club Blue team tonir ht at Orange Coasl Co/le,ll'e wllh ac- tion starting ot 7:30. Chamberl:1in, "'ho led the 1.sker:t lo the world cham· plonship in basketball and was named the top player In the championship series with New York , is expected to play despite suffering a sprained ri ght wrist in the finals with New York. 111s team Is called Wilt's Big Dippers and he Isn't the only threat to the Balboa Boy Club's contingent. Former Corona del Mar \High, Orange Coast College r.:nd ·UCL-A All-Amrrican John Vallely, now a member of the ·Houston Jiock<'lS, will be In ac~ion nlong with six others. They are Larry Rundle , con- sidered the top volleybAll pla yer In the 11ation: Tos hi Toyoda and Kiri Kllgore, members of the AAU cham- pion Sand 11nd Sea club; Butch r.1ay of the 1968 Olympic team: nnd Ron Leng, a ten· time All-American nnd former Olympian, Bucking that .setup will be the Halboa crew of Bill lmwnlc. Matt Gage. John Me('k, DI ck Montgomery. Spt'nf'e Noteboom, Tom Rend and (ilenn Stone. UC Irvine will clash head-on with heavily favored Universl· ly of \Ya shington In three races Friday 1norning while Orange Coast College will face both schools in a varsity fours with coxswain race in the 13th· annua l Western Intercollegiate rowing championships at Long Beach Marine Stadium. The two area schools are an1ong 27 club and uniy_!rsity teams from San Diego to British Columbia participating in the event that has been dominated by the University of Washington through the years. Freshman elght.5 races get the program started at 8 o'clock Friday with the first heat including UC Berkeley, Stanford, UC Santa Barbara, Orange Coast and UCLA. Jn the second heat at 8: 15 are l,oyola, Cal State (Long Beach !. Washington , UC Jrvine, and Santa Clara. Orange Coast Is in the se- cond heat of the junior varsity competition at 9:15 in a heat that also includes Loyola, British Columbia University, OCC, Stanford, CSLB and Oregon State. UCI's varsity eights crew is Net Playoffs Set Friday Three Orange Coast area ten- nis tea ms will be in action Fri· day In CIF playoff com· petition. It starts at 3: 15. Laguna Beach High's Artists trek to Mlraleste to battle the No. 2 seeded Marauders iri the quarterfinals of class AA com- petition. Coach Ron Ross has opined that If his Orange League co- rhamps can get by Miraleste his team will make the finals . Newport Harbor and Corona de! ti.1ar begin AAAA action wllh the latter getting a road lest at Redlands. Newport is seeded No. 2 in lhe ellmin11tions nnd draws a ho m e assignm,nt against Downey. Should Newport get past Downey it'll most likely face Sunny llll l s in the quarterfinals, a foe Newport- shelled earlier, 20-8. Corona's problems are two- fold, since the winner of the Redlands • Corona de! Mar match will be raced with No. t seeded Beverly Hills. Net Results •• l11n11f LHIW ln41¥1M•I fl'IMll 11 Ntw•Ort HI,...,. ll"9ioll Patktr (M•r) dff H•r.itY {SAi 6-3, ._ Ooo.i~IH IE•1lm1n-O'RtU!v (NH) FDl!fr (5Al 7·J, ... 3. DEAN LEWIS Baseball S tandings 1972 TOYOTA CARINA NATIONAL 1.EAGUE l:':n11l llh•lslon \V L Pct. GB Ne\v York 20 7 .i41 l'hllndelphin 15 12 .~Ii 5 Pittsburgh 14 12 .fi38 51~ Chicago 13 1:1 .500 ri1:1 ~1onlrt'al 1:1 14 .481 7 St Louis 10 19 .345 11 \Vest Division llouslon 17 10 ,&31) l>od~trJI 18 11 .f>21 Cincinnati 15 I ~ .5:ffi 2 ~ Son l)lt•J.!O 13 16 .4"8 5 Atlnnla 10 18 .:157 71 ~ San F'rnncisro 9 22 .290 10 WtclllfMllY'I Jlt1wl11 (1""1""~'' 1. s,~ "'""' l•to 1 f'rtt ll'~'ll" '' St 1.llV<\ 0 (M(l 1'1! ), r-1tl10ldth>ltl1 1 N~'"' Yoo ' 11, M""'''•I ) tio"''"" • 11t1011t• ~ S.1'! 0ll'llf! :, LOI A"'t!U ft r.-.,·, .,..,., No0t11t11! tT01t•1 ).0~ 11 N1w Yorlt. IM<"""''"' 1.n Clnclflf\OU t 'lm~tewt.1 .C) II $1" "•1ncl1«1 (hit• Oil-II J..(ll (lllr•t<' '"'"""' ).)) 1! St, l o11!t ($111tc•lfll J.•1. 1111111 Houtlell 1ro....cll 1.:1 1! Ltt Allt91tt !$vl!6'1 S-4). l'lltM (lftry ""'" t(11Hulf'!I "" .. '''' .. ...,.. Ntw 'f(!o11; Ol 'lllllldt!Mlo, rt)flll M(lltl,.._t 11 Pl!ltbVtOll. lllt~f O!ICNO 11 St. L0..11. l'lltlll Cflltl-11 11 Sin Olf'OO. 11ltlll Hou911M't 11 lff All ...... Iii.Ill Allll'I .. 11 S.11 fll't"C'hno, 111tllf AMERICAN LEAGUE East Divisio n W L Cleveland 15 9 Dotroil 1110 llnltlmorc 13 12 lloston 9 13 NC\\' York 9 15 r.fil\1'8U kee 7 15 \\'tst Division Minnesota 17 7 Oakland 15 8 Chicago 15 IO Tt'xas 11 15 Kans:Js City II 16 AnAt:ls 10 16 WldMllftY'I RtWlll Ml-ICll I , (hl(~90 I Cltytltnd ,, Ntw Yort; 1 MllWl\lt."' (, 8ot!ol'I I ~lffllt .. ••Ill-1 o .. k,,.lld 4. c111""'1a • l•\•I 4, 1(81\lll Cltv t . 11 IMlnl1 , ... ,,.. ....,.. Pel .62$ .583 .520 .409 .375 .318 .7111 .1152 . 600 • 423 ,407 .385 GB I 2'.!i 5 6 7 1\1 2\i: 7 71,J 8 81'.'S'°Dn j l(r1uu1 1.01 11 0.ll'Gll !COi-S·l l, "ipllt -. o~"•~d (Hv111,.. 7•)1 •I (llt ..... !Wrldht N l, nltl\I O!llv ••""'' ~vlfolf "~··· o ...... 8MIClll I! Nf'# Yorfl. nlfl\I fl•lllmor• 11 M11'wlullH. 111oM 0.~1.1>...i 11 1(111H• Cltv. 1111111 Ml-JIO't 11 tu11. ~tfll (lf~•1• .... 11 Oth'e!I, """'' C1t111of111a 11 (~l(lfO, ll'tfll DEAN LEWIS 1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 646-9303 Sorvlto and Part1 for All Imported Cars Modom Body Sh_op for All Ca" Oranp County's Largest and Most Modern Toyolt llld Volvo Dealer OVlllllAS DIUVHY INCIALISTS ·'· ' WI TH FACTORY AI R CONDITIONING 7200 PER MONTH SM.71 Total Down -S72.00 Total Monthly Payment. •>1520 for Fony Eloht Mos. Defernol - $3SSO.OO/Cu h -$2194JO A•R 12J6 on approvM credit • 1972 VOLVO 142 SEDAN WITH FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING s9900 ,,. MONTH S117.4' Total Down -DlferrM $6057.46. C••h Price $4246-27 Incl. T & L/APR 1U6 on app. cNlt 1972 TOYOTA MK 0 STATION WAGON WI TH FACTORY AIR CONDI TIONING sn300 ,.. ·7 MONTM ' 1141.11 Totol -n-,._ ,, ........ , """". -~ llollt MNtt.t.:. Dlllfw!•.. ll411m.JIGJll APll u ... 1•~---­c,...,.. •17111 '' In the third of three heats with Oregon State, San Diego State, Washington and UCI. The other two heats have fivt teams participating. This race is scheduled for 11:45, UCJ and OCC will meet in the varsity fours l'lilh cox- swain heat race at 9:45. The lineup includes Oregon State. OCC, Washington, Oregon and UCI. Heat assig n ments haven't been drawn for the freshman fours or varsity pairs races that UCI is also entering. · "Our kids are going as rast as they have gone all year," coach Bob Ernst said this morning. "That doesn't mean we will beat Washington but I think they will give a good ac· count or themselves. n Friday's competition Starts at 8 on the 2,000-meter Olym· pie course (approx. ll/4 miles). Jn the afternoon, non-winners will return in repecbage or se· cond place heats witb winners also advancing to Saturday's· finals along with the morning Millard may ?lave hit it on the heRd earlier when he opin- ed, "If we get four hits we'll win." * * Com!", cl 81uar, c K•nt111r, u Marlin, 11 Stewert, P Ontl11e•c1, rt Pa!n1••· lb l<el!y, 1b Kunkle, Jb To1a11 Mltnolla UI •1t1"cl1 UI all r "rM l 1 I o l , , 0 l 0 0 0 l 0 2 l s 0 1 0 3 I 1 0 l 0 0 0 , 0 0 1 , 0 0 0 22 l ' l 1brh rb1 , 1 0 0 ) 0 0 0 3 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 3 0 1 1 , 0 0 0 ) 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 l 0 0 ScilUltJ, "> H111t, cf Jolinwn, R•~• pr Posit!, 11 Ronqi;lllo, lb Gr1nl, u Powtll, lb MCCltaty, rf Chants, ph Lovtdofl, ph llttll-'1, U Tot1ts n : 2 2 kor• b1 '""''"'' 0 H I 011 010 0-'3 ' 2 000 002 0...-: 2 • Area Sports Calendar Victors T~11r1d1y IMllY 111 • VDlleyb•ll -WlU s Bio 0 !11Per• ~ The Washington varsity boat 81111oa 811 Club 1t or1nee Cotsl Col· averages 6-foot-4 and 195 11119 !7:30l·,,r111., IM•• 1,1 pounds ""r man including ~iX Track -CIF Hmlllnal1 I f (trrllltt ,... (5/.-"' I returnees rrom Jast year's 8• Pl~::.~~~ s!.1,F1~~!0!'~..:t1:U~111S.'" tJonal championship varsity. P1:::,~rl""lor ~l.:"~~1"1,~I:. Cal State (Long Beach) 111vr11" IJMv 101 8awhfll -J1m!or coll• MC!lonal averages 6-foot·3 and 190 t 1n111. Two of the best prospects at Lakewood are juniors. Starting pitcher Jim David (g.. 2) and second baseman Steve Brisbin (.386) have spearhead· ed the Lancers to a 17-5 overall record. P rep Golf E111ricl1 !17) 111 CorOf\1 ~I mu K"lll\I (E! 74 d9f. COit \Cl IJ, "°' Lts !E) 11 del. llu11 IC tz, +.L B~•t bill' E1l•11Clt .0. CclUn~ !El n def. Harnf1' /'I 11, U . Co~ (Cl n def. McGawtn E 7t, ,1.1, Seit 1>111, E1!1nc11 '"4. LlrtdleY (El 14 del. Cowlnolol'I (C) 1$, '"4M1l1!trlln (E) 1' cttl. JDhnaon IC! If, '"°lies! ball: E1t1"c!' 6--0. meet the $10,000 panther* • • • .,.... PANTERA by deTomuo .-• imported. for Uncoln-Mercury . ..Ita.J.Wi coachwork created by the brilliant Ghia Studios of Turin: Ford designed the 351 CID 4V V-8 engine. Four wheel !-1"'1 depenent suspension and mid-ship engine placement Fivt apeed 1ear box, fully synchronized .. , •Pantera ... Italian for Panther .,. Or111111 Cor111ts "f11•i'l1 •/ f ;,,., C11n• ohnson & son ; 1 1~=-1 ·: pounds per m8n and is ex~ T•nnl1 -s11i. 111111or cDll"• pected to contest the Huskies :J1~l,1~1,~1~us~111111rn11 run1or for the championshi·p. wa11r llOID -NfMA "' °'"A~,.~·~·~'!l~~~~~~~~~~i;jii~~~ iiiiiiiiiiii~=~~-iiiiiii~L~os Ano1IH CDflseum fl\OOn). i IANK-lil!RICUI i : \ rl " •• " 538 CENTER STREET-COSTA MESA 646-1919 . ' ' -------------------------------....i·· , I • s.50-9.oo, 14.!Si I Duck Feet Fins Blems • I I I t I I 6.95 Duck Feet Fins Regulars • • • • • • 8.95 Basketballs • Voit • • • • . 5.95 to 16.95 leather Basketbaff s 15:95 & 28.95 Volleyballs Rubber • • • • • 3.95 ta 9.95 Volleybals Leather • • • 10.95-1 2.95-1 7.95 Saccer BaUs • Voit • • • • . 3.95 & 8.95 Soccer-Baltleather • • • 1595 & 17.95 • Mens Tennis Shoes • • Ladies Tennis Shoes • • . . 1.95 & 14.rs 1 • . -----------------! Wilson Tenilis Balls • • • • Doz. 7.95 1 Dunlop Fort Frames • • • • • • 15.95 1 1 Davis Imperial Frames • • • • • 17.95 W'-SDll Kimi' ~ograim Frames • • 16.9~ , Wilson T-2000 Steel Strung Nylon • • 34.95 I ......................... ·; Our 1972 Basebal Wits Glms & SlrllS Art i Sta Bicycles-Parts-Tm • ' . ': - ,, " ... ] " . I Ju tin '" ho1 he• na: 1 .. ;;ct ' ing '"bat -Jon in I;' ~ !: she aspc Oil :: the :l Loi :l " •ma ftim fima .~Ky llC br2 ' • ., ,, GYMNAST KYLE GAYNER HUGS PET OTTER Co sta Mesa 8th Grader Set .. ·' ·11y LAURIE BECKLUND Of lht O•llY l'llol $l.11f For Kyle Gayner being in Junior High School means Jess liine to spend with your pet ot- ter. Ophelia. and eight or nine hours a day preparing to become a \\'Orld class gym- nast. This week the TeWinkle .. :;ctool eighth-grader is work- . ing even harder on the parallel 'ilat-s. the balance beam. the · long horse and on her routine in free exercise. ·;-!fhat 's because next week !: she will be competing for a t spot on the U.S. women's JI Olympic gymnastic team at :% the qualifying finals at the :l Long Beach Arena. ii. "I don 't really think l'll •. make it to the Olympics this t time-I was shocked I even ,.made it to the finals," says ~Kyle, showing a mouthful of braces through a wide smile. The 14-year-old Costa Mesan placed 17th at the semifinals in Indiana a few months ago, penliitting her to enter· the finals as one of the top U.S. "'o men gymnasts. Six will go to the Munich Olympics in August. "I guess I would like to have been a wild animal trainer if I hadn't gone into gymnastics," says Kyle. sit· ting at the kitchen table of her family's ~·l esa Verde home during a half hour lunch bet11·een school and gym- nastics in Long Beach. 11er roam is a massive col- lage of magazine tigers. lions and wildcats. But a balance beam now shares l h e backyard with the otter her father gave her last year. ''The balance beam is my best event," Kyle says. "Last year at a meet in Fullerton "'ilh the Japanese. the judges gave 1ne a 9.6 on the be_un1-that was my best meet ." Kyle's coach. Bud Mar- quette of the SCATS, places Kyle second only to Cathy Rigby -the United States' best hope for an Olympic medal -among U.S. women balance beam perfonners. "Kyle 's coming around very, very well. She is very sincere and ded ica ted and has im- pro ved, I'd say. 500 percent in the last year," Marquette says. "I don't really look for her to make the Olympic team this year. but I hope she 'll place in the top IO or 12 •... She has a style all her own:_more or less like the Europeans-very classical. Her compulsories are ex· (See TRIALS, Page 3% 4 DAY OFFER HEAD "STANDARD" PIESTIUHG W/NYlON IEG. $45.00 $33.88 • TliNNIS BALLS Sl.99 CHEMDID "ROD LAYER" PIESTIUNG W/NYLON IEG. $40.00 CHOICE OF MAJOR BRANOS : WILSON, PENNSYLVANIA, SPAL· .. ~:;:::;--.... DING , Wl:ll TE OR -' YELLOW TINNIS PIESSU 88c SEAMLESS "KEN ROSEWAU" JUP'llt TI)UOM ALUM ... 11.t.MI CUSTOM STltUMO W(Jl'l'l01' ......... $29.88 WILSON "JACK KRAMER" FAMOUS WOODIN FIA.Ml UNmUNG- $16.88 "HIAD" L.UTHEI TIMMIS SHOU $17.95 RESTRING TOP DOMESTIC GUT .... 111.H $8.88 "VANTAGE " NYLON llG. 111.00 $6.88 VICTOR IMPERIAL GUT SPORTS PLAZA :"•1 r~•~TOL AT ~AN DIEGO FREEWAY . PH. 54S.11S1 ~oat .. r.01st ,.. __ 1 OPEN: 10.' Mon.-Fr1. Cll B \1 J UU. iAT. 10-6 SUN. IJ..S ' Thuncly, M11 18. l9n DAllY •llOT SI Rustlers' Barr Faces Fresno Nine· Deep Sea Fish Report FRESN'O -Golden \Vest Collri:e b.sseball C"OllCh Fred 1100\'er \\'ill st.ud right-handed pitcher ~lark Barr lo lht! n1ound aRninsl Frrsno CC Fri- dav in the rln:t round of lht' st8te JC ployort~. hf'rt'. Costa Ult. tr tile Ru.stltrs Le rt -h a n de r D a'' e Nseman Blalnt Calder earnt'd lose thdr tlrst game, they ~·Ill K I u n B r rs e t t' r h:ts been All-c.'Onftrt!n('t' first I ea n1 DANA WMAltl" -" •1'111'": di ~U. ' ...,IW!, l )•tlowltlt, 2Crol tntel< ..... pl:iy again at S. nonunttled by ll01.1\'l.'r 10 pitch honor:J "'l11lt' third Ms:1·1nan Snn Matro •nd Contra Costa lhe second lllt 'A'llh rlght· Tony C'rt'srl and outlh•ldrrs optn the tourney wit h a 10 handl'.r Ken ~lurlllo to go in (;ury Sln1pson and I' h 1 I LOQ •1,ACH I..._., f'ltrl -1' -19"\: 1 Wtrtcud1, !I 11.1>1 . .5 111!1111.11, 1n 1"9Ck um. ••rH -» 1119l•n: 1 tr.tr,.<~•· I• 1>61._ • "-liOt/t, .JO INltk.,,,, ts "'<"· ., '""'"'· tf'ilf'· N111t'UH!Rtl -u 1n11ltn: Ul c1llco bft1, 1 Wrr1cud1, U h11!bul, •2 blue a.in . gan1e. the first gnn'K" SRturday . ~lrCartney wtre stcond lt•111n If Goldtn \Vest conUnues to The Jlustlrrs' balling nllack. pit.•k.11. .... Ch. • The first round lilt is sel fur l :3t> at John Eult>s.s Park , homt' of !hr FrE'SllO prcr fcssional l'ean1 of the Class A C;11iforni:i l.A't\RUf' 'A·ln, it will play two n1ore revolves itround oulf ie\dCr P:11 l'nldtr, Crtsrl. S!1npsC111 •11•1 HIW"<lllT CArl'I LINfiflt) -41 111t1tr1: ti 1>611, I' rO(k <od, I m1ck•r11. games Saturday. Curran, tl]t.' Southeru Cul titc<:11rtnry art f1·r11h1n1•11. Sa.1urday's tiffs are stt (or clrt.•tlil playrNir-1he·yea r. L'ur-The "'lnnrr or the northern OXNAllD -1S ..,~i.n: ~:10 <1llco iwu. U! 11nd ~u. lJO blu. percf\, 11 11n11 cod. • ,.,u~~•. s•AL. •rACH -12 l!niltf$: ' wu. a rock <ad, 1 cow coo. 1 1111• .~. JI blr••cvd1, n c1tic'o b111, 11 ••nll D111. 1 111Ubut, ' m1ckirtl. l1r" -.. 1n1ler1; .lS Wrr1cud1. IQ b<H<il!O, Z} k1lp !Wu, 5 F11llbu1, 40 Pt•<h. 60 ritr- r l111. 11 11.n1. nnd 3. Another gamt·, rnn hall 10 home runs. 12 rt-s1onuls \\'Ill fncr t he if necessary, \\'ill be played doubles,. st·1·rn triples anti 37 ~oulhrrn rt•glo.1111! 1·l<'tor nrit Sunday. rbl this seitson. "'t'tiktnd in 11 bt'st-of·lhrre Rcgar~lcss of lhe -0ulcon1r. Golden \Vest \\'ill pla~· a SN'- ond jilnme Friday in the dou· ble elimination tou rnament. Bnri·. who prepptd 111 Currnn. Borr. Klun1i:reselt!r. st-rit'S for the :Ht1le rhan1- Lyn\\·ood l·ligh, has a 10.5 eatchtr Dud Dulling and fir st plonship. season record nnd was &-2 in, _______ .:_. ___ ..,....c. ________ _ SAM .. IDlllO lnM SI. Yll<llh"I -,. 111t1ltr1: • wtlllt s.Hblll. 1)0 <•ll<o l11$1. 12S "rch, SO m1cktr1I. l$1R f'edN 5-'fhlllnt l -71 1...,1.,,: 5&1 r..-•1, J Yt l_,111, l blrtlCUCll, 110 10(11; If ~loover's club 11·ins. ii u·Hl return at 8 J.~ridny nijilhl lo tangle \\'ith the \\'inner of the College of San ~1ateo-Contra Southern Callfornlll Con-, ference plRy. lle'll face a~-------------------=-., p redomlnately right -handed Fresno lineup. ""· Grand Opening NEW LOCATION SKIP MAY'S · Costa Mesa Golf Range Friday and Saturday, May 19 and 20, 1972 100 FAIR DRIVE --COSTA MESA I Across From Costa Mesa Police StatlH-54S·f99J FR EE Drlnlcs for Grand Openln41 Bucket of lcz:Us For Everyone Use of Clubs $1 .25 Golf lall Gi .. n Away Every •11 Hour I Golf Equipment Sale I OPEN 9 AM to 10 PM 7 DAYS-MASTER CHARGE a< IANKAMHICARD R•f•lor }14<(' /lfJUJ 1}21,9 DISCDUITI IUYTllE 3 PK. CASE. LIMITED TIME ONLY! BELTED TIRE FOR STRENGTH: Tough polyester cord construction FOR ADDED STABIUTY: Twin rayon c0<d bells FOR SECURE HANDUNG1 Wide 78 profile FOR SURE TRACTION AND LASTING WEAR: Deep, wide tread Blackwall ~ize A7S.13 plus federal excise tax of $1.78 per tire and trade·iri. BRAKE RELINE 40,000 MILE GUARANTEE e IJ:IN'f 'Wort......ttt, 9 ••1itJ •• ,e.e.-nt ..... Speckil low Pricn GUAU.NTEI lilll ~ Tiii "'"llfY llnk• lilllftft. Ln111u.,. "' ..-(tr ••• 1111r1111Nd !If' 4t,. ml,.. .... .., •Mt i. -911\nMrclll ,., ...... ,, ut N"k t. Shtvld 1111 U11lflll 1•11 ... "'' tlll t111r'"11 lhl1 ,....,., .,,.., wlll " ,.., ... , .. t11 1 ,,._...., .. Nth ...,._. ....... mllelfl, LlmllMI "' .... ...,. .,. ... ,. ptr'llf'mllltl ..... , .... ltlf'f'kl. LINING & LABOR .... YelM SJI. ti BELTED HT Blackwan R•11ul1r Tradt·fn f11deral Sale Excise 51111 Prices Prlc:e '" A7S.13 $23.10 $17.U $1 .78 E78·14 28.55 2J.OO 2.34 F7S.14 30.20 26.00 2.52 G7S.14 33.10 29.00 2.6'9 G78-J5 33.90 30.00 2.78 H7 B-15 37.15 33.00 :~.0 1 . . U.S. CRAGER-MAGS s:~~E 4 ~ $99 -1517 -"" JONES TIR·E-SERVICE · 2049 HARIOll ILVD. lat layl ~~\ COSTA MESA . ·. :· AClotl PIOM TMIODOH IOltHS POii • ~ • Phones 646 4421 540 4343 - ) ' • B DAIL v PILOT Wonaen's Golf LEGAL NOTICE f.l!lGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE . LEGAL NOTl~E ,µG.U. NOTlCB LEG.U. NOTICB l lOAl. lllOf K I ll'M'""'11 f.J -W "*"' 1..,. IUl'l.llOll COUIT O' TM• lill'Wl'O•T>MIU. .n ..-. Jomwr-,... NOTICC 01' T•UITll., t.t.1.1 • su••••Oll (OUI T 0, Ttlf 140TICI 0,. TllUSTl•'S SAll STATI 0' CALll'OllNIA PO• UHll'lfO K NOOL DlfTllC'T 8"1lf!I '" , NL ••1 STAT• OP CALl,O ..... •o• ... ltMll THI COUftT't' o• O•AH• NOlq h1¥ltiltt '"' ...... m • ...., '-" °" J .. 119 IJ. ttn. ., 111• A.M... T'HI C:OUlllTY 01' OIAlll41• 1 ·., 1100 •'dock l'.M. I f N•tlU .. c.t!MN•ltr'I lllOT!C~ 15 1(1 11:11'1' GtVElll "'•' tt.. 5lllff ll:OQ: ,. .... , "'" FULLfJtTOH M 0. T GAG e ANO .... A-11'1' °" Jul'lt •• tn.tfltt•n<t to the Ol•llff Prl¥M• SIM Of Bo.rd el EdUUollon of lllt N-Wl-Mf11 UIMt at(.11: IUl#lf ltlOOktr) 7,l'f ESCltOW~OMPANV .. l'n1tl• undlr MOTICI 0" llllTIMTtolll TO SILL "'°' Nortll l'ron:.o..,M J0t (IY1C (tnltt IMI '""'"' un111t0 SC"°°* 0111r1tt of O••nH County, Shlltt lhct CUtlnl ltlm lu) 1Af '"" PUrllllt Jll to ~ ol' r111" O.ttll alAL ANO PIJtlONAL PJtOPllTY Cou11tyw'o;'", "" Ow ot Siii!• A"'' ,.,, A.,... Acl1eson, Burda Ct !!IOl'f!lt . Wiii •tc:•IYI Mtltd blft Ill lo Jturllt)'mMI ..... , '·'' Q(.IOOtif 11, 1m f,llk\lltd .,.. HAJl l Y v. .... A ""IT o• SIPAUTILT AT Orflle ft . II '~""' Mllttw"' , .. l'.M .. Tflu,..,.,, , ...... '· ltn. ,, ""'~::..· w.it1re .)I OAVJ•t. Jlt, Ind CAADACE L. OAVIES, PllVATI SAL.. .. E ELYN '~~,:~. TITLI GUAIAMTY COM· lllt GtlUft"l•ttnfl• Oii!« Of ••Id S<hoOI Oltltlct, loc:•lfll If .)I h .. .otnd •1111 Wilt ..... rtcJ)l'ftd Octllber Ill "" M41tt• of I"" l!ll•M v I 1tlon •• Ille .,, tllJ Pl1ct nll1 A_, COltl INW. Lift 11\Wfll'Kt ,10 16. ltl'O, In llDot t4t NH 453, of Officlll IA. JOHNSTON, IM EVELYN MARCEL· l'ANV, I Callfof'n 1 ~ Otecl 'ot Tf\lfil JAHI T •Olla'fA NIMMUi .. C1lllotnl1, 11 ""'ldl llmt ..,.,. bldl Wiii k V1<1tloll ,. • ..0 Jltcenh In tilt offkt of tf1t 11:-dtt ot LA JOHHSTOM, 1-.. EVE:LYN VEIGEL 1r-I Tniitt:;,"'~EHH AND OtANNE c ........ alM 1>11bl1clv OHf\ld ind ••1d lot: Admlnblra.W. .0, °''"" CWlllV, C1M1ot11l1, wUt .all 11 JQtfHS,0'4, .Dl(t1..cl. "' ... b'I' JAM ' I nd Off Cf IS HEI EIY GIVIN th.I! W.lll:EHOU$E AND MA fNTEHAHCI A1H'rtt1fklll'll1 l'llnlll Cit lllltllk llKll"' to h""91t bldcW IOI' Cllh Hofk:e Ii htrtb\I t lVlll'I fllll w bltcl lo J, HEHN, Hulbtnd ~ W fl 1 p '.C:. of Nt;ITI ING It Cltll.,wl tlr ot .. OPEll:ATIONS FACILI TIES AT CEN• ...... TlAD•• 1111n {H Y4bll If llmt OI ..... 111 llWflll _,,"""'"'''loll by '"'. ~O 'll't 1 111 tl tl•d l'lbt\ll rY f, 1M• In :i*::!:.. ''tevntv l'HlllP M. ;:E~eT '«tol EJl:TA HI M< TRAL $E RV ICf) Sll'I l'lumbtt .. St11.mlttt.r CIM'I. °'"" Unl!ICf Jtatal __ .... tront ., .... to S:\19t.dor ~'·"" J1,111t 16, ltn . •I 10:• Ofllclll Jltcordl n -ln: lilt llfllll Ill MU If rl\111 Captm~e Tourney Jt wa~ a partne rs ' better ball a ffair al lfuntlngton Seacliff 's large membtr·guest tournry T uesday. All bld1 •le to -111 ec:cotdlt'IC.t •llh F«-111 ... •rou Jt1,1rntYmlll ,.,.""'Horii! lflttll'(I or F11U1rt .... ~ ..... A.M. .. thsrttfl« wltllln "'4~flm1 •llOW-C1!llotl'lll, t l111n, to ::cu~Lf~DALf MINO, COlll:r;:.i:~.: bftl blddfr~<.11111~ and D flights Co11<1HI0111, l~Slru(IJOftl,, t11(1 S1ttllk.allonl "'""""" .. JfNmlltU'f Ftl'etMll. 11111 11:'.Kr-c.om1111y f05 ti EllClfd Id .,., ....... flM ulldtr1ltMd ll debttd!M$1 111 '"°' NO LOAN ,.1., 10 tM 1 tit INll• "''"" ' wl!itll 1r1 ,..,,.., on 1119 In tM ofl'fc1 OI ll'llf I' 1°"' lbw1 ti•-JOlilflltYmtll r•ll SfrHI, J!ullfrton, C111.Wn11 111 rittot, fftlt Admlt1btr11or of 111t 111111 ol fwlYn M. F ~fJc~:iioHSAV11INU~~14d ~l•ltll (;cirllO"I' ~rm,:o a:;:ibr:~ ~ortlll~llklll 1ty Ill~ Low net winners In the first .l•U.11..c1, c .. mld'lltl·)(-. Attfl-Uec:h. lunoblr w.• Mid l"'•r•• C011"'9Ytll to •fld -""kl vr Jol!ll•ton. cltc:•1MG. ·w111 ''" '' prlY•tt A , 'ot tht br•Kh or ctf'l•l" ' • c rt MA"I :it ltn '' -• 21110 LIH Ftllt l'I•<•· Lot. A"'itlt&. LtM l u,_ I.JO II ul'Cllr .. 1c1 °"° In tilt ,_ty Wit .. tM hfthnl Ind bffl"" blckl9f Oii TIM, b' ,....... not! of k!Hrlof GU • on M • ..,., .. ,,.~1 a nd four.th flig hts were Betty cantor>\11. 141!1!1t1 I. Wolflr• 1Jtutltd hi the Cll'Y of lr'tlnt, In .. ,. ""' ";""' •fld <Ol'ldltlorli ...,.."'' """" :J•:llorla wcu'd'!, J::u':JY-, 19~ In "°ft1 of"' 1 11°'t1°;i1~.d i;., i:'w ,1 fllt 011 G allagher (68) and Vivian Ea<ll blOdef mull IUbmll .• b!f:! OIPOlll .. '°" I~ " tf'lll ll'Y~I COUl'll'f ... Sl•I• c11Krlbld 11: ''°"" •II rr.lol, tltll '"° 111ttr11t of c ;;;; ';-o' "°' of 11td Ollldl l -:: Ill~ w~n":AN .. SCHMIOT'. 11tor~r~ In 1111 lorm ol I ct rtllllo:I Of u thlsr't '°"' Pllll Lof 21 of Tree:! No, JOtl , In nw City ti IVl'L VIII M. JOHNSTON, dlClallCf, 11 hOll ' -cl Ftbr\I r Cl leof ! :IU Siii Ml-I 'J\1 artha Acheson T routman (75 ) M Ra ncho San cll«k or • bl<! 11onc1 ""''! ~ 1en P*rcen1 1•% 01 ,,.., N't'roll ltvlne, 11 t11own on 1 mt• llloi'tof 1t1ot 1rm1 of hlr .i.1rt1 '"" 111 rltflt, title Jt.cordt. Or•-''l:o::r'r' "'1 cw:,.,.' tor uld ~'ft'''~~' 1 Ntwport •••Ch ' and her J a I c ' M I k I (1~) o1 '"' lll'Ounl of lh• bid, "''de Vl(lllon .. Htlldt'fl rtc0tdtd 111 boot ML •••• , • to ~l ...... r11tw111 "''' '"' '"''' hM 1(41/lrM )1, lt12 111 8ooll; ' HC ' ' 01IW:-u I ' 1 .... 1 1ttt. ,· 0 QU n. OS a e5a 00 OW NVt ble 111 ll'lt O'Otr of lht H--1·Me.. II' OI t'l't P N YfOll Mltoellll-1 Mtpt. tl(.Otdl If u lcl Ill Mlclltloll It th.II of clfcldllll II Jht tlm• w!l1 $111 tt PUblk IUCl!orl 10 tll<I l!lfMlt C1lllornl1, 9':16'0, I ll Ill !ht ' .,, • t n g uest, na \'Y golfer 1-felene nets in the s econd and third unu1t0 S<JIOOI Obttk t. 1" 111<1 avant 01 AOPr1tt1Tlc• a. Jtur""'""" lt•l~nt 1~ 0r111" Countv. of "" dHlh 111 1tlt ,,,1 propmy 1«'1fd bldcltr '°' ulh paYffl• In 1ew1u1 mo;v 1n11'"' 1" IM '''''' of 111e 1 Mid ~"· · , . l•llur• IO an1er Into 1\ldl C011t•1ct rt11 llltll'lkll r Fitter "or.min tWNe• TM 1trt1t •dd•ll• ot tht rret Pf"llPlfly 111 "'-Cwnlv of Ot"'" Siii• ol of 1111 Uni!., Sl•llt of A!Mrl<• 11 1 11rvl!t1 In •I'd lo lhe ••• Pl'oPI h B urda, tum~ in the winning fhghts though. with Sybil proceed• of 1~ c'*ll wm i.. •ort11t.d, °' ll'ICh.MI .. s1 • .-"'" hr. vac11k!l'IJ t11.f.l c11tcrlbld •i..vt' 11 P11rport.a 10 w; C•Hfotnli , ftKl'lbtd 11 fCll~i: 11m. o1 1111, wit/IOI.II cow111nt or w•r· 11111,,.., 1n tht c11v o1 co111 M111, Cou"1~ 65 F oster 175J and C<trole r{oss In C•it Of • bond, "" iun ....,. ltlft.ol SPt'll'ltltr ,l!l1r Journw'""" 14,SI COllMI $tr•t, ltYlnt, C1Ufot11l1 1. l.Dt ,. Ill l loct tt of tffwllOrt t1nty IXllfllPd or lmPlltcl ••• lo 11111. of °''""' SI••• If c1111orn11. deterlbot6 · . . w!H t>e lorltlltd IO ••Id kf'.oOI Olllrlct llf Wltlfl ll'IClllOI• •t.«I Ptr hr, s1rd 1111 •Ill IM nllcll. 11111 wllhoul l•tch, In 1tlt CllY of Nt111POrl t each,•• --ron ti l'll<Umbr111(.11, lhl lntorut 11 ~llDw1r Th (72) p1ck111g up the a wa rds, O•ano• <1111n1v. VOKt,._,) 11.u eovi11tnt or w•l'f'•nw, •~Pl'tu or lmPll.,, .,_11 on 1 "'• lhlrlOI, '"°"°" In eanWIY,. M •nd now 111141 b.,-Uld Tru1tw i.ot Four 1~1. Tr1t1 200t, 11 •• "''• · e Huntington Seacliff-A claPQ11t " Jts.• ,., ..t will bl ,., H1111~ 1. W•ll••• ,..1,dl,_ 11111, "'"uloll. ., _ aoot ,, p1 .. u Ml1C1ll•nt011• M41Pi, uroder 111d OHll of Tr..,,1, In •::::,.10 "" n<ordeo In e111t 61, "''' ~1 M ,.dowla rk C 0 m b 1· n at ion Jr-'tle Co-it <iulrld to uu1r1nree the •t111rn, ln tooc1 P1n1IQl'I cum0r1nu1, 1o pay tti. unoeld ptfl'ICIPll rlK'Onb of u ld Ol'll'IOI c-1y, T"" Pl'llP-!'0''°""1n, cMserlbtd Pr-rlf, to-,,.1 · 1,,. MIK•ll•lllOUt M•Pt. JttcOl'clt ol Or1111t VS " conolrlcn OI 1111n1 •lld 1pec:lflc1tlor" AllPl'tnllu ,.r11n1,,. t11M of lht no!• ~rtct bY 11hl °""' to. 1rty 11 commot1l1' raf>frrtll 111 11 llf· Lot 717 •lld • l/3341h undl d.01 CO\lntv. {Urned OUt 1J f th t wlthlfl FIVE !S) OIYt 11f1t tn1 blcl OPt.,_ PLASTl•I• 7/lnt •It: SU,t4',6<1, wttti lnt1r1" from :mti •1rnt, H-.otl 1...:11, 1!1lll'Ol'nl1 ltrtJI In C-Ill 11'14 to LOI ~ Thi 1trm1 11'14 concllllon1 ol the 11t1 w e or e WO sec-Vir ginia Fruehling af Santa !no dill. ltOt'lmtn s ,3"/J '"°"" J-vma11 $1111111'1kt I, ttn. II In ••Id nol1 -ttuo. 11111 It 11/rlhet lclenlllltd I I TtKI Slao,. II "' ft'IN rtcorclfcl OI •••: c •• ~ Ind l1wlul money 01 lfll Unl!Pd ond place teim h ted C No 1:11c1 wu1 bt .wcteltd from 1 con-. Pt111tru ,..., Yldtcll • .,,.,1,,c.,, It 111y, ul'Cllr !hi t1rm1 A•lff-'• l'trC't1 No. ,7..0C.'1, e a 111, P•tlt c. 41 ....0 42 th• s111., ol .lmt rlc1, or Pf/I c•th •nd "'' $ w () pos Ana ountry Club and Dee tr1e111r who 1111 no1 bffn uce1111Cf In •c-H1tlth & W•H•r• ,JI of .. i. o ... 1 Ifft, cniroe1 ,,.. IJ1plf!lll 2. M.ol.IMMlll eood•. I u rn 1t u r 1, Ml1Cell111NU1 M•Pt· In ~ Otlk t ." credl!, the 11•m1 01 1uc:h'l crtillt to Ill ,,. scores a f 66. Cuba Curl played Dee Whlte of Irvine Coast corclance w1111 1111 pro~11111n1 If 1h1 con-"'"''°" ,Js o1 "" Tru1tte 1nc1 of thl fniati cr111e<1 furllilNnv• 111d ,....... • .ittc11 1oc:11tc1 c~3;rE;:;=:R.,., ;1T'~d c=~xclu•I~• ceo11D10 to th• ~·~·~~ ... ~~~· i::"'~~ 1r~1or's Llc1nw I.cl or ~ wl'lom 1 V1c1llon .ll b,. ••Id Offd. 11 llt-2911\ s1re.1, NtwPOrt aeidl. Ten 00) perc tn II With Meadowla rk's Betty Bri-. Country Club won the la w Pro1><>s11 F11rm h•s nol l>Hn Juued Tr1c11 ,..,omotlorl ,I» Th• 1>sntrkl1rv undll' 1eld o .... bY Cirlfotn!i on c1111 of d••lh Dl.dlcldtm, e1,.m1nts •I'd non·•xcluslY1 rlo~h o1 eccomP•~Y tM o•l•r •n<I 11141 b1t1nu 10 I h • 0 •• awards at t •· second s1>1e!llt•llY lo• 1111 PU•PllM of wbml"ln• AM>rt11tluthl1 .Oil r11to11 of , br11ct1 or cl•l1u11 In tilt Thi 1111 11 wbltct to current ttKis, ••v 0Y1r., u!'ldlr •I'd UPOl'I Lot I for bl 01ld belor1 the tt•n11er ol 11111 to 11ld ey W lie Evie Jl ice teamed up ,.r ~ . •it: • bid tor fllh pro1ec1. •U.ITIJI Tl"HOIJI L1Mr1r1 lfl/'1 obll•1tlon1 wcurld 111ereoy, neretofor• COWll!ini.. c.ond!lf.,.1, , 1 •1r 1c11 0 n,, ntc••••rv or d11lr1t111 I"''"' tnd re•I oro0t:rtY. Tex11 11111 pr.,.,lum• on In· With Pat Orio of M eadowlark annual Glass Slipper tou rna-Ho bidder m•y wllhodr1w hi• bid tor 1 ,1111er Tll'ld•r f7.1n otc'lllld 111(1 O.llY1r1o:t to lf'll 1,111d1r1l1f\ld r1Mrv111ons. rlohh, r111111 of wiv, ind 111rns. 1111Vbloro c1bl•1. POI••· wlies 1ur1nce 1ccepl1ble 1111h1 purc~111r W\111 m en' S.turday after post.Ing perlllll of lcrtv·llYe (45) dl Yt 1fltr lt>e He11111 & W1!11r1 ..cl • wrlnen Otd1r1tlon al Dfcllul t 1l'lcl DI· 11-nlt ol r.cord. 1nv eneumbrlrKtl i ncl conoullt '°" 111ctrlcl1Y, '•,lfllllon~• i.. prorettcl 1s ot Ill• d1!1 ol lr1n1i.t of to tie for ~""ond. date set le• 111e ape"!ne 1her1o1. Pen11ott "'° m•lld tor Slit, 111d •rltt111 t1Cllt1 ol 01 •-d to bl w t1illld 1111 of "" •lld ott11r P11r111111 •nd accou ''""" 1 uue. • ""''-iden tical 78s. The Dl•trlct ~'' Ot!ermlf'\ed ll!t g1ne•tl V1<1lloro .6CI Drelcl'I •nd ol tl..cl!oro 111 c•<.1tt the wcllltl prlct. Thi Pl'OC>ltl'f 11 to bl IOlct lt>tl'llll, •-•· dr11111, w1!1r, ••• •nd Ari bid• 1nd 01!1r1 mull bl In -111n1 Three t~somes s h a r e d third place llano rs w ith s cores of ""67. They were Liz Bran· d e nburg and her guest, Lael M ur ray a f Aftadow lark : Helen Cowde n and guest Vi Hos kins of Costa Mesa : a nd M a r y Vander Somm en and gues t H azel T rickle of Los Coyotes. lfle•a l' erde Another better b a ll o f p artner s event w as h e ld by the M esa Verd e Country Club w o m e n golfers. J n the two-day eclectic affair Celia Neth a nd Mary Lou Ma nley won t he t op award w ith a 58. Other winner s w ere: Dora Donaldson a nd Bo bbie Wa Sco (58'h ). G eorgia F a r m er a nd Cecelle B rown 159). J oyce Crawell a nd Carolyn Cr amer (60) a nd Pe~ Maull a nd M a ry Ratekan (62). - Costa Me•a The Costa Mesa Women's Ca lf C lub and the R ancho San Joaquin Women's Golf Clu b got together for a borne a nd home tourney at Costa Mesa and g a ve aut prizes for la w net and low gross scores. Sally Owsley of Ranch<> San Joa q uin posted the low gross score of the day - a 85. Joyce C a plis (95 ). Carolyn Wa lbr idge (97) and Phyllis Bar nes and L ita Simdorn (100) won the la w gross awa rds in the B , C TRIALS ... -(Contl.nued From P.age 31) ' cellent , too." As the y oungest g irl at the finals, Ky le lacks only the strength af some of the older girls in e vents like the uneven bars and vaulting, Marque tte prev1lllng rele OI ,,., clltm w"•• fn tlll lllOOl'El IJIJ/11 und1r1l tl'llCI to 1111 t11d pr-rtv to 11n 1n "•• 11·• batlt. ••ctpr •• to 11111. 1te1m 11l111a, •nd 1ccoulrement1 '"'"111, ind rKelvld t i 111• oftlc1 al W!ttm1n I. The tourney, sponsored b y k>tolilr 111 which 1~11 ""°'t h lo bl F11rern1n N .6' IJl!ltf'f 1ald ot>ll111UonJ, 11'1111 t111r111t1r, Ol'I a1c11 or 011.,.11,1 lllvlttd fOf lfllt,,,.. •nd for well roof ow1th1n11• •nd 1o~tr Schm1dr, 11torney1 tor u ld conMtvllor, th C . d II C ·1d f prrlcrmeo tor •Kii cr1tt or IY1>1 o1 Sub-For1m11'! 6.S. J1nu1rv 31, 1tn, 11141 und•••klnM c1uNd lrlf •rid m11tl bl 1n wrllf •ncl will bs enc:roadimenlt or • Ilk• Of' dl1s m " 11 3" S111 Ml111tl 0•1~1. S~!I• lOO, e In ere a UI 0 wor~mt" ,...eotd lo •~tcull th1 eanlrtct, J-ntvrn1n 6.2' IJlld nolk t ol brt1ch ancl al 11..c:tl"' 10 bs r1<tlvlcl ti !hi offlet OI H"'JACK HALL kind, tnd t1Jamanlt lln ldl1c1nt Lots of NtwflOfl flttch, C1lllornl1, '1UO, If 1nv Newport B each. w as held at wti1t11 wlll De ••••dlcl ~ ttlt 1WC<•••tuf $NllT MITAL 111m 1111n r11;ord.O 111 boolt t9M. oue Mt, ot Nici •tt"'""' for Mkl ldmi,,11i,,1or 11 ,1; 111d Tr1ct S1'° for roof ovtr111M1 1nd 11m1 '"'' 1t11 fl rtt PUt1llc111on or thl• · h" blOO••· to bt 11 IOlklw9: Foren11n Ollld•I lecord1, f••t $e • Ollllt 11\C:roadlmen11, o1 • llt1 or notice and Defort lfl• meklnt ol 111d 1111, Irvine Coast t IS year and six 8AStc TllADES (Lot Allll•ll• end 11'!1. 1bovt Jour,,....m1n r1tt Dlf1: MtY i, 1112. 1 Ctrlfor nl Yen,:':z;11h $lrealbt ~:":;' 1~·~ dl11lmll1r kind. S•ld c(Wls1r~11or rtMrv•• lhl rlo111 I• r•· raised an estimated $1 800 for Or1no• Cou nlYI G1ntr1t Foram1n FULLERTON MORTGAOI! AND Clift If ~lcl suii:~:·~Ollrl or c1':'uwertd AllO t-11: 113 Morrtllown LIM, IK I tnr 1nd 111 bid1 t rod ofltrt. . , .' CAR•IEHTIERS 11,.. tbaYt Joumtvm111 rite ESCROW COMPA NY to H JACK HALL Pl!'tontllv 11 '"Y llmt Co1l1 Mt1t, C1HID01ll Otltd: MIY 16. 1t12. the Children s Hospita l of H"I!" a. Wtllart -•1< -hllllr snnt Mt!ll Wtrker ... ,, 19.lt I S llld Trullff, 11tff 11,..1 l>Ubllc•tl .... of lhll nollct •l'ICI for lh• ""'""' of 01yTn1 llbU01llon1 PHILIP M. HEMM INIJ O r ange County Pen1111n • 7Jt; "r hou r Ht1tth I. Wtll .. e .ff ·'' llv WIU!lm 8. Shepp1rd, bllore ""'~1111 ltld Mlt F11t 1 tll'll 1,... 1eCt.1•., bV u!d Oted of Tru11 lncl11dln1 c on,erv1'6r Ill' ' V-'<:l llon S•vlng, -HolldlY •SOC 111r l!Our P1nlklll ,I! .rs Trull Oflle•r hwmillon '"°bid form · 1 111 ' 111 fHI, cl'lltHI incl exJ>M111111f 111<1 T•u11t1. Ille et!t!e ot Marj Hayes and Phyllis Foremtn: RK•lvt1 not 1111 th1" 40c "' l11ter11111or\1! f>lfl1 lo11 .u .1s "ublli.llld Orin" '°'*' OlllY Piiot, 11,, o1 ••kl •Hor.,.;·~:,' •1..,t11• u: ldy1ncet. 1r '""'under'"' lt1ms 0111kl JA NET ROBEITA HEMMING, . f hllur more lh1n lllt hllllrlv rile cf the V1t1llon IO<il. If i ron PtYmll M•~ U, U Ind Junt I, 1t72 1~72 mlnlJl•llor Dffd al Trull, lnf>fra•I ll'lereon end CoroiervftlH Sm ith 0 Mesa Verde sh a r ed hlllhH I Cl•PSnler d as1lllc1t1on ovtr TILi UY•• NO. 11 1111n Th• ProHrtv •lll bs JOld on fhl foUll'oV· 116,2'7.02, !11 unp1ht prlnc:lptl ti !hi -WITTMAN • ICHMIDT second low gross honors w ith WTi lc11 II• 1111 r11P111111b!ll1V. ••cludt"e F11•1m1n In ch1r11 of LEGAL NOTICE 1119 t1m1•· Mcurld bY ••Id Dttd Ill' Trull •+lfl In-1, wml•"' v. smrr:ldt . . . "Pnet1m1tlc N1lltr « Powff Sl1pll•". l-10 men Cii.11, T~n Pllltnl of fhl imounl bid 10 111"111 thttton from September 15, 1f11 , 11 AttorM1'• ltr '°"'"""" 81e. Marie Whita ker of B1p. Sll/1J 11.~ "'' d1Y mora NOTIC• TO ClllOITOllS accom0tnv the ofllr bY 1 c•riltlld cntck In N ici"°'' •lld bY l1w Pf"ovklec:t. 3U s1n Mltv•I 0tlw, tYll• JOt, Ca"yon a nd J ane E vans o( C1rHnt er Sl.1J ... t11111 JwrMYm1n SUPIAIOA COUllT 01' THI ind lht b1!onc:e lo bl ptld lln con'. 01t .. : M/lt U.S ltn E """"" l11d!, (1lllornl1, '26H, 61!ln1ler 1.16 Fore•,,.n 1'o chlrtt '" !1r,...tl11n OI .,1, bV tht S~rlor Cwrt LAVt\YfR Till Pllbllt.MG Ofa1>11 Co.111 Dally llllllt. Mesa V erde turned in 61s for MUlwdol!f l.ll 11 or m~· STATI 011 CALlllOJINIA 11011. Tt•tt, rants, OP•t•tlno .... melnlooo.....: GUARANTY COMPANY, May 17, 11, 14, lt11 1:iot.n th I I d Sow Flier 1.!I $$.00 1Nr d1y mort THt: COUNTY 011 OIAHG• I'd kl ·~ Tru1lt1 e OW ne a wa r · Tal:lle Powtr Sew ¢9er1111t 1.%3 thin lourntYm•" H1. 4•nt11 u111nie1, I l>rlfl'! "'1 on lnllltll\CI I« lly RtCHAll:O f . MARS HALL, pi:-;;:~. ~~~1:r.r I.JI ~~:,J;•r•rw1u1rt "·°' w~~1~EA~ ... ~~:~. " L E T c H E R ~::~D~. i:, 'i': ':":,~"":;"r co:,~~~:n~o:'!i ~:~:1rS~Lv1A e. HASSEN. Meadowlark Cl!Ml!Hl' MASONS 145 (fmPlllVlll 111.,.., .O<ll NOTI CE IS HERE8Y GIVEN t11 the •1l1 bV !fie Suptr!OI' Cw rl. E•1mlnallon A.sH, s.e,rtlltY LEGAL NOTICE T he Club n • 30 CrlCll!ort or tht 1bo~I Mm .. dtctll""I of 11111, rltlt lntutl~ PO!le'f' Pflfl'llum1, JM44 M d I k Count AUoc:tllon • 4X Pel" hllur " Sil/ PenilOn •60 INI 1J1 Nr"'1t 111vl119 cl1ims 111ln1t 1111 rtcord1llOf! of convtY1nce, lr1n•ftr 1lt m11 I 147«1 ea OW ar ry H11lln &. Wfllare • 'IOt per hour V1c1tlon · :uold df«dlnt lfl '""lrtll tll lllol f!llm, ltXtl, ll'lcl -11111 of tKfOW IMI, ti env, l'Ubll•llild' Ortrtte CD11t DtilY PHot, SUl'l!lllOa COUIT 01' TM• Women's G olf Club VPaf!11,-, • '",~-Pl' hllu. r TUI PromollOn ... 14 w!lh the l'\l(tlll•Y VOl.ICMn, In Ille ofllu i.h&tl bt N ici bv ••lier Ind buyer •ltl ,., MIY 11, 25, 1nd Jur11 l, 1912 1301·11 STATE OF CALll'O•NIA l'OR ica on . "" ,,., °"'' ,t,p,,lf!tlCtthlo • of the cltrll. of 1111 ibov1 1111111111 court, or ell otMr Cllll1. THI! COUNTY 0" OllANO• sponsored a least p U t t S Forimin: Wl>M !hr" or mo,. Cltfl'lenl 10 preunl rhtm, will! Iha ntctuttl' TM unorr1l1nte1 ttMrv1• thr rloht 111 Ha, A·J'Wif l f 'I t I Ml $Ol'IS •rt omplove<I "' 1 lob, 0"" V<llfdllr1, to t111 1Jndtt1l1ned ti w Hum· rt!ect any •nd 111 bids prior 1o antrv ol LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF Hl!AalNG 011 111,ITION o urney or l s m os recen th•ll bl .mcloYH 11 • For1m1n 11\d bolclt 5,, .. , Sult• 207 Rll'IO Nevid• '" 0,61, C11ntl•ml"9 lhJi ••I• FOR l'ROIATt!. 011 WILL AHO ,Olt event. 111111 •ecelYt no! lt11 111111 60c Ht hour AllPtll'lllCet tb1tl IM tmplll'I' .. In COi'!< 19054 whldl' 1a the pl.(. of ~-1-of Dll..:f: Mey 1$, lt72 ' 1------c.cc,.c~C>O------Ll!TTl!ll:S TISTAMENTAll:Y • motl 111111 lht hourly tlfl OI lhl hlthlll for'rnlly with SICllOll 1117.5 of the ll'll uMtrslGned lll•ttl mitt••• Ol:rtllnlflg /t/ Steollt" C J°"""'°" E1l1lt o1 LEVON PROOOIAN, D_.., .. Dottie Mulligan WOn the C.ment Ml "'1 Ct1u1tlc1tloll O\ltr wlllch C1rllor1'11 Llbor Code. Ill fhl eslili of llkl deC .. lf!I, •11111n four Aclmlnfilrllllt 'of !hi ES!ll• Of HOTICI" TO Cll!OITOIS .a. Class A COm~t1'l1'on w1'lh a ••. he 11•1 ·-•IDllllY. Thi lorl9Qlno tcfltdull " w~ 11 m1111tht 1t11r "" 111'11 publklll .... OI "111 EVELYN M. JOHNS TOM ~¥:~:·:: t.r:..~::.:rA ~~~ NOTICE IS HEREllY GIVl!M lhll r • .W 111112 blNCll llPOl'I I Jwrn1vm1n -klncr 6tf of no!let, /I/ STEPHEN C. JOHNSTON Edw1ro Proocl11n hll 111111 tirr1I~ • .. u. R05e_J rickson_ and _ F -..y CC!:!.._ll'lo•' ~~ JGUl'nrm'llll .J!,:!!-llllltl. Ill ~·-~"'11'-.,''"ot "1< !'Ollcll ... •.,..and 0.IM AprU 15, 1•12. -HAltlOlt LAW· IUILOIH• THI COUHTY 01" ORANGE lien fer prob•tf of wit! 1na IOI f11u1~ 91 · ...,,.., ..... .-. . .. ~erl m1 wo ... ant "'' • M'-N! •-, W ''' ""' 1-''"" E NI, A-naJ ,__., L1H1r1 ru11mtnlatv fl! 1ht ,.,_, Pedersen tl'od m' the B group c--· .... -. ,,,.1., .... ' ..... ..... ~ • •m 11111 ol BE U LAH llAYE "'"~" ....,...,, htll. E•tcutor If Ille Wiii of c1111 Mill, Cilll9tnl• tuz7 •el•••nc• to ...,,1c11 11 m•d• !Or tlirll'ltr w i t h 3 I s a n d Anita .. Trow11!1>11 M1Clllnt o"'"°' f.41 " 111111 bl m•lld•lor\I UllOll '"'' (Oft-rh• lboVt n1mecl dtcedttll Tel: 1110 '42·1+11 SCHLUETER, Ot<:••s... Ptrtlcvl•n . 1nd "'"' IM llm1 •1'111 1lld Grlncl!ng Mldllnt Operelor -tr1clot 111 w1>0m !ht conttlc1 It IWl•dlCf, STIVEH T, WALTMl!'R, flSQ. Alt•r~y lor Admlnliltilor NOTICE IS Hf;REBY GJ VEN lo I/If ol htt•ln' !tit Mme 1111 bffn M!I tw Met Montgomery took the c lass C (ell lvpet) '·" 1nd UPOn eny wbc:cf!ltaelor unaer 111m, le f16 Hwm"'°111 .. Sult• J17 P l:lllth., 0 C etlo:lllOl'1 OI Iha 1bov1 n~mtd decedenl JO, 1tn, it t :lC 1,m., Jn ll!t cou•!raom ol d 'th 28 IRON WOltKEltS PIY "" 1111 tt1111 ...... Id 10.clfltid r1te1 l'.O, lo,11 1067 II 1 ''"" Ollll O•llt Plllll, llllf •II pe•M)nt l'rtvl"' (lllmj IPllnl! !tit OIPt rlmtnl No. J cf 11lcl court, ., 10I) a wa r WI a • Hettlfl & Weill'! • 31c; .UC 1111/11 to t!l •or•m"' 1mpl11v .. br th'm In I ... 11-, HIV ... nSIM MIT I. It, 1$, 1912 1J11·11 lllcl cllctdtfll 1ra rtc1Ulttd lo 1111 lllt m, Civic Cfnler Qr lvi W"I, In !hi CllY or Pens!OI\ • 37\'K; •7thc • l/lll/11 01cvtl11>\ ot tilt QOnlr•d • Alf>ft1lfY fir ,l!iteulw ---------------'Jw1111 11141 nece111tl' VO\IClllfl, In !lit of/Ice S.nta .-,"'' Callfornli . vacotlon · 50c Tl!1 &Gird of l!d\K1llon't1 Ille Nr...,,ort-Publllllld Or1n11t Coa1t 01llt Piiot, · or lh• cl•rli: ol the 1bov1 1nlllltd CO\lrt, or Olltd MiY 9, 1tn 1'11rrmt n: RtctlYet not 1111 thin 1k Pit Mii• Unifi., Scholl! Ol1l•lct r111rv11 tht AP<U 17, ind M•'f 4, 11, 11, lfi'2 10'/4·12 LEGAL NOTICE lo pre11nt lhtm, wltl'I tlw ne<t1Mrv WILLIAM E. St. JOHN, l!OUr more ll'l•n th• hw •IY r111 111 the rltllt to ril-ct '"" or 111 111d1, ,,.. llOI 1111Ucheri. lo lhl ulldt'llOl\ld 11 lfl• o"ltt cwnTv Cler• Twelve handicapper Bobbie hllll'lett c11111tlc111on ov• whldl hi ht1 MC1111rlly .cc1PT lht 1ow111 bid,,,,. to LEGAL NOTICE HOTICI tlllVITINCJ 11os cf hl1 11ter~v. 8LOCK, BR ICKNER & JOHN" HOltl'MAH Co• u' t'n top Spot t'n the fi-t 1UperYltl011, wtlvt ,,,., l"lorm1llty 11t !rrnultrltv 111 Nelle.. 11 Mrel:ly t lvan rtial 1111 loard ol LOPIM, INCORPORATED, 1226 Norlh IM E•1t'ColotHo alwcl,, tollt )fJ a •<> 111•111 lllf blcl tlCl1Ytd, Tru1l111 o1 the Co.11 Communltv Colltot 8•~wiy, St,,11 Ant, Ct lllornl1 t2101. P•lldtfll, CIUlttllll t!IN wome n's c lub championsh ip a f 1te1n1orc1.,, 1rOl'I Wofker $'·" 011 .. M1Y 1s. 1tn. 11 ~C,:~T~~: ... ,.a.u:rH•-ls 0111r1ct o1 O••not COUl'll'f, c 1u1cm11, w111 ::;~11~":i..~n P!T~'m!:,.~·~~!1 f.,'':' Tri· uu1 m ,.,. th B. C Co t CJ b Stru"urfl ltori Wor•er I .IQ NEWl'ORl'-MESA TM lo!lowlng paraon II llOlnl buil ... n rtctlvt llllrd bids up 111 11:00 1m, Fri· lht 111111 Of said dtcldlf!! wl ... ~ ..... e Alllflll"f lot. l'tllllon• e Jg anyOn Ufl ry U Or11tmen11r Iron Worker •.OJ UNIFIEO $CHOOL ll: · 01y, Ju,.. 2, 1972, 11 rt1t •11reh11l11g [)ept. mol!ll'll lttlr lhe "'" PllbU(trlo:;• ~ '::jr PuDrll.hl!O Or1no1 Coa.t DlllY l'Ho! afte r one round of play She fel'ICI Er..clor 1.•t DISTJllCT MESA VIEW. 441 lllrtll Slrttl, Sul!• (If ltlcl Khool cll1lrlct locllfll II 13711 root let, .. '"I MIY 11, u, 11, 19n 12l7·n ' LABORERS Orlllllf Cw nly, C1lllotnl1 I02, NtwPOrt lleld'I. CiUfot1'll 92660 Adtml Avenue, Cotlt Me1a, Ctillot"la. ar "-lod M•• '· ••n 1--------------Shot an 89, He11!h &. Wellt,. • SJt; • $/!In ; 65c • a, ••••• , HlrY'"" Ffltttr · w111-~ tlm• •'" b'" 001 bo O<O o -""" •• O. W•dl Hurt!, 1277 Valley VI-..,, 1 "' "'' W e>u c Y HENRY HERMAN SCHL UETER One Stroke behind are Kay p:~;(0'1. 11.10 _ 511/n: SLll . Sll/Jl r:i~'ih::t~o:••nf Or lwe, Glend1!1, C1lllot11l1 tl102 °"'':1R~"t.~lld toi: 1k1 HENRY H SCHL UETER ' M eyer and Dea ne He lperin. vacation • lOc • 111 111; lk • '''113 Publl'h"" or1n1e Co111 01llY Pllal, TMs bu•1"'11 1• bt!ng ccnoucttd bv • 01s~R ICT /'EvLEec~:~~N~~fi10:5oR E•1eutor t i I~ wnr Low net leader 1·0 the cha m -For_rm•n: Ha• 1111 the n 50c ptr l'lour MIY u, 2.5, 1912 1119·12 Limn.a 0P~rnir1~Jp, AH bid• 1,1 to bl In iccord•ll(• .,..j111 of 1111 •bove nemtc1 de<M•nt more !~In lhe l!ourly WIOI tlll ol 1111 • IOI urJI C 1111 l"llruc:llof!S Ind Condition• ood •LOCK, IRICKHll & LOP/N, INC, NOTICI! TO CJIEOITOJIS • h ' r1· ht . K M Tl!ll lllltmtnl llttd wllh tt>e ounty 122• Horlh Bro111w1v ,,.,,,,, ''"'' '' ,,. P1o ns 1p 1g " ay eyer h!111e11 c1111111c111or1 o.,., whldl 111 h•• SP1C!llc1t111"1 ...t.Jch 1re now '" '"' ,.. , CE (ltrk OI Orin,_ C011nfy on: Mt~ 1, 1'12. '"' S111ta A11o1, Cl. n7t1 STATf OJI: CALIFOJINIA l"OJt w ith a 75. Pos ting the lowest lei dlrsl'l!p, '''m .. ,,,, LEGAL NOTI BY 81v1•lt J, Mlddoll, Offutv Cwntv m•Y be u cu•!'d In •~e °''1c• If Ille Tl!: 1114) aHJl1 7HIE couNTV 01' OltAHOI N Cltfk. Purch11lno Ao1nt ol Mid Kllool district. Atlwftrrl fir I! IW'9r ••· ,.-... n e t in the other four flights A•l>l'l•U R1t1r. l utem1n PICTlTIOUS 1us1••s• , usu e1e11 bkto•r mu11 wbmlt with Ill• bid 1 • ·- M . & lr111111r IS.906 N.W NAMa STATIMl!NT . c11/ll1r'1 cl'lldl ctt!lfllcl chick "' bid P11l:IUlhed Ortflll Co11t DlllV l'llO!, Ell1te ti HENRY JAMES JOHNSON are Carolyn Mason. axine A11>1'1a!I Sl!Ovtllr ,,,., ,,GO Thi followlnl jllffOll t1 doln• ""1tlMH •ublllllld or ..... COial Oallv Piiot, dtt'I bond ,,,.;. PIYlble lo ll'HI' °"~' ci Mtf II, 11. 1$, •1111 Junt I, IP12 1231.n •li.o tnown II HE NRY J. JOHNSON ..... p Q p k Jld 8UPll'fmoblll Men S.105 ,,15' 11; MIT 4' 1l, II, 1$, 1'72 lU6-1111 CW•I Community (1111191 Olttrkl HEMRY JOHNSO N. Dec111l!O. ~yaS, an~ ar er a Cemenr Oi;mprr (1111 I yO. l.lUllA MEll:lO I. ASSOCIATES, :!OS IOltd of TrurtHI In 11'1 1motmf not r1s1 NOTtCE IS MERE8Y GIVfN to fhe MJckey Renwick. or l•fV9r ml•tr l wonll SI .. Nl'WOOrt 8nc:h, C1Ulol'nl1 LEGAL NOTICE fll1n 11¥1 ....,e1nt CJ'liol of 11141 111,1m blcl 11 LEGAL NOTICE c•tdltcr1 ol the ebcve "•mtd dtc .. ent The tourney ends Tuesday _ &. h•llOll~1 bulk etm111tJ S.11ll 6.Us t2'60. • 11u1rentH 111a1 tfM blclder •Ill 11111r Into lhal 111 Pf•wr11 h1vl"9 cl•lm1 1111n1t ''- Concrete COO't Culler $.tGS 6.255 llUtl Mtrlo, XI! Llltl(ln11 St.,,f·--------------flht PtOP<»td Contrl(I If 111<1 11m1 11 Mid de<Ntnl ore r"ul1ect lo fllol lfl1m, Concr~ll Saw Mt" S.toS 6.'lSS HtwWl l11th. C1ntornl1 92660. lllCTITIOUS IUSIHl!SS 1warcll!O to him, If! 1111 1y1nt of flll11r1 to ,ICTITIOUI IUSIHISI •Ith tl'lt ntet»ltl' 11wc11er1, In !hi .ttkt Orlller 6.UJ 6.$tS Tl!ll l:l\/tl111-t1 i. •t1111 c:ondllCf .. bY an MAMIE ITA,l!NIEHT ""'r Info llUCl'I C1)f!lr1C1, lhl procffds al NAM.I! STATIEMIHT ol It'll. tltr~ ti the tbove tflllllect cwrt, II' L1borer, Ge"'''' 11r l11(1lwlclu1I. Tll<I follPWll>O Olftlll'I It cllllnt bullnes• 1111 'l'lfc:t Wiii bl fOl'ftl!ecl, or In 111<1 (Ill Tht fOltowlllft parlOfl JI_ delllf bullMU Ill .,nant !hlfl'!, w)I~ "'' lllCll .. l'Y f\. · • V' · W , C11n1truc:llon S.#5 S.t4S Llutl M. Mttle ti! of I bond, Ille lutl 1um thertof w!ll bt It: 'fOUChers, 111 the und1r1lv/llO 11 11o<t olllcet; The f1ss1on JeJO omens pfpelaYf• •. oas • 4" Th1t ••• ,.,,,,nl flied wllh lhl C1111ntv VALLEY Pit INT ING, 1, 117·. forltllld IQ Mld K hllc>I Olt!rkf. ') FANT As y '0 AT s 1 ) of HARWOOD, SODEN .. AD)(IHSON, JJt Golf C lub sponsored a Mutt Pipe Laver'• B1c~uo M111 S.l'lS 1:2" Cltrk ol Or1n11t Countv "' M1Y ,, 1'72, ltcokl'MJr1I SI,, Founl1l11 VI I t I f , No blddtr m1v wllhdrtw hll bid for 1 EYGABltOAD'S )) E y GA 8 11: O AD M-Pert Cenltr Orlv1. Sul!• 4:1-1, N-t Tr1nch!nt MacMM. bY fl•~tlY J , MlddOl!. °'"""' C01itntv C•llfClrnl• f210f. P*•IOCI cl forty.flvt !4S) claYI '"'' IM MANUFACTURING co .. 1916 Placenll• 8••dl, ca1llornl1, Wiiie" 11 "" "'"' "' and J eff tournament this Hind Propellelf 5.105 6.1" Clerk. l'tlom•• "· OtFr1e1. 162n Rtlfwood cl•I• Jtl for Ille-"'"' lllltlof. Av1,, Cot!• Mew, c1111orn11 m11 bu11,...11 ol lfl• urioer1lontd 111 •II "''".,• week . Sue O s borne won the Undtr11r1111na Liborar, lncludll'IO 11-1ms St., Fou11111n V•ll•Y. Ce1l10r11l1 '2108. T11<1 awrd ot l'rurteu re1ervtt trw Jlll\.,ny GtotM EYt1Droe<1, 7JJ1 $11. per111.,1no 10 th• """ ot 11 ld <1ec1C1t111, CalH<ll'I eenowtr J 621 6 015 Publli.hld Or11111 cetitl O.llV l'llol, Tht1 bu1t1111• 11 6'11'19 COl'IOUCll'd bV 111 •rfwtltM ol ,.!Klint '"' •nd 111 bld1 er Ttwntr St., S1nt1 A111, c111iwn11 '2707 wl!tl!" !ou r "IO<'ll'l1 1t1er 1111 tint l'lltlollU· Big Canyon LEGAL NOTICE lflis•ion Viejo e vent a fter poBting 8 lOW net ' •· .• d Mtf 4. ll, It, 1S, ltn 1162•n . lllcllvkh.111. Ill •1lv1 tn'I' frreoul1r!tln or In-Thll butlMll II Mint COlldUtled by In liofl af lhlJ nollct. says. Window Cleal'llf 5.495 T, F. OtFr1;1 lorm1Ut!11 tn ..,.,-blcl or In !hi blcldln1. ll'ICllYldu1I. Oiled May 9, ltn. "D"tJhe Jinals ar<>a four af 30'-h a n the cou_rse's_par OPf_JIATJNG_E_NOINEllS . Tlllrst1lf"'•~I f!lld-Wllh mo COul\l'i -HORMAN-~. WATSON-JOlmllY G.-~YOlbtOld RUTH I(. JOHHSOH ~ ....... ~ ·-h-d f' Tiit 1o1towlng nttoll1t..:f lnCflttts art E Cl , •• 0 c 1 ''" s-•y , d " T , -1 E , , " -, .. d.y SUrvl·val of the f1'ttest-1't's t rees. :11n. 1ves. la he 1!1ot~tf<': LEGAL NOTIC •r '" ''""' ounly .... M•v ' bY s~ • Cir "' tllS ... "'. •l•l•m.nt flltd wlrtl !ht County •fC\f r ~ "' .. ,e 5!•1• of d v · M · 81Vtl'IY J, Mloddo1c. OrPl!ty County Cltrt. °"'"' Ju111 7, 1t12 • 11:00 1.m. Cl1t• tf Otlf!M Cwnl\I on ,.,.,.1 9, 19/l, •!:love name-d d«tdt~! a question of t em a i n in g N-a tne aze came in Se-•k -111111• •sc • 111in. IX • ,..11nt Pu1:111lhtc1 °"'"" c .. 111 0.11, PU111, by e .... 1r1Y J, MlddO;c, Oe1>11ty C011nty NA1twooo, sool!'H & AOKINSoN COnd with 8 J21L f/ll'J PICTITIOUS aUllllllSS "ublllhfcl OrallOI: Cocll D1Uy P/1111, MIY 11, 25, ltn lln-12 Clerk, S,. H_,.,,.i Ctnler Drlw1 steady. ·we'll i·ust have to w a 1't n . He1nh • w1111r1 • ~x "r hour NAMI! 1TATIMl!NT • 11 11 1 .. , •--rt , .. " , ,, .. _ 1 d h · ., h Pe11tl1111 -80<:. per hllur The followlnt fl'''°" 11 dolf!f bu1ln111 IV 4. • •:ZS, ltn 1..,.. 2. "''""' ,.... .. c ' • ,.,,.n I an See OW It C0ffie5 aut, e Vtc1llon -HoltdtY Fl>llCI . lOc,.... hwr 11: •utilllhfd Or1nor Co.it 01lly Piiot, '4+1JU • co .. MY 4300 LEG" NOTlCE LEGAL NOTICE M1Y n, II. 2.S. '"° June 1, 1t7l 121~n Allor111Y1 tor 1..w1r1:i: aays Forem1n: !Ge 111' hour 11ver !flt t•Tt THE &ALDWIN M.-A • ~ Pul:lll"'ecl Oringe Cllold Dilly l"fltl, And' h d KI r ,, tl!e hlallett paid Ent!nHr uno•r hi• C•m-Orlv1, HtwPOrt •••ch , MaY l l,1t,1J.1110 June l.1t12 llll-11 OW Ol!:S y e el!: , 1upervl1!on. C1lllotnl1 '26'0 , l"ICTITIOUS IUSIHISS "I'm nervous about the 111 11' aALOWtN BUILDEll:S {• C1rlf. PICTITIOUI IUSINflSI HAMI STATIMEHl LEGAL NOTICE GtOUP I U .D3 Cot•.l, .000 C1mPv1 OrlWI, Ntwpotl HAMI! STA,IMEHT Thi follcwl119 ,.rtons 1r1 dolt111 finals. That's the b igges t meet Grouo 3 •.s1 &11Ch. c1111or11I• '16'0 '"' 1o1tc•lnt Plfl"" 11 clolno Mlntt• bu1ln111 ••: 1--:;;,;;;-;;;;;;;;;;~~~--/--::~L;EG~~AL~~N~OTI~~CE:! __ _ I'll h A d , GrOllP 4 6,,, Tfth bu1lne11 11 cortduct .. by I cer-11: BAY ll'ICI 8EACH APAll:TMENTS, T420 HOTlCI INVITING llOS ever a ve gone to. n I m GrOUP s '·'' p0r1t11111. UNIVERSITY SERVICES COMPANY, w. Oceenlrent, M1w1>0rt 8tldl. C•lll. SUIERIOI! COURT 01' THI not 8 . ed j f Group 6 6 91 J1m1t P. l11dwln 16.:151 McF1dcl1n Slrllf, Tu1!1n, Ct llf. Robert P, Gormly, 11d C111dlillldl: Nolkt 11 h1r1by 1lv1n lh1t lll1 Gllvttn--ST.I.TE 01' CALIJl:OINIA l"Ollt s exper1enc as mos o '"'"''''' · ••• ,,,,-• , 1 ••• , ••• , '""" ,, , L " -, , , '"' coo•-0 ....,. " ... , 'f,""'' ....., Mt tn ftl , 1ne, "' e1ch, C1lll. 1111 oard of Ille Hew1>0rl·Me11 Un!fled • • ,. ORAHGI the o ther gir ls ," K y le says. He1u11 & Welf1rt · t k per hour Th111111-.,1 1111•• tiled with Ille Cwn-Tustin, c111. Vlvfe11 M, Gormly, l14S Cilldltf!lct Schoel 0 1.irk t cf or1ne1 Ccun!y, Ni. A·72Hl . "Eve bod g ls 'ed P1n1l1111 • 45e J>lt hllu r tf Cllfk of Orantt Cwnly °" MIY I , 1tn. Thll bual111 .. Is btll!I CllfldUCltcl by tn La~, "''""""" 8tath, C1 llf. herflf!a"or rf11rrecl to 11 I/If "Owne•'', NOT1CI O• MlARIMO 01" P•TITION ry Y e WOrrt • Vatrilon • Horldl 'I' Fu11(1 -S1c: per llOllr Pl,ffl htdlvlclu1I. T/111 bu1 l""1 It bl/flt <Olldlld .. bv t •Ill rtct lvt up le, t1v1 "° l1ltr lh1n l:OO FOii: l'ROBATE 01' WILL ANO POJI especially (JO the beam a nd Foreman: lSc per l!Ollr mor1 th111 l"' PublllhlCf" Or111111 Coe•! Oaflf Piiot, A. P. Tlylor P1..,,,,r1h{p P,M , ThurloCl•t, Ju,,. I, 1912, ttlllO bl01 LllnElllS TISTAMl!HTAJIY free e x because they're s lower WE ARE BOTH 11J1h11t T11m1ttr c1au111c1t~ ovtt M•v n , 11, 25, 11111 JuM 1, 1t17 l:t11·n Thlt 1t•ltm1n1 111.0 with the Countv VIVIAN M, GORMLY for" lfl• ewircl OI cllnlrict 10 lurnri.11 111 fstate 111 EOGAll TAYLOR SEl!LIY, LOOKING' RIGHT? wllleh "' It For1m1r1, Clift of Ortnn C01111ty on: Aptll 1S, 1f7t. Thf1 tlllemtllt flied wit~ fllt CWf!h' l1bor end ma1frl1l1 n~eu1ry lo lns!tll 1k1. EOGAR T, SEELEY, Dtctt ... , and you have tim e to get 111/7' ,,. BIVt•IY J . M.clda,11 OIPUl'I' (Wiiiy Cltrfl; OI Ortlllll Cw n1v 11n: M•Y tf \ltllftv 1eNk11 lot Scl11K1 C1sework Ad· NOT ICE IS HEREBY GIVEN l'h9t No EXPERIENCE Ori Ye• t i Dump Tnx k If l•11 th in; LEGAL NOTICE Cler11;. Im. BV 81v1rly J , M1ddox, Oepuly Coun· dl!lons 11 Cororoa clel M1r H/111 $t~llOI, Stcurlty Peclfic N1t1on11 l•flk 1111 Iii.cl nerVOUS. • Ydt. wtllr lewel S.05 "17157 fV Cllrk. Ot1nM Counly, Ctllf11tnl1. ll•t lf! 1 o.tltloro lor Ptobat1 of Wiii 1ne "But I just t r y to tell m yself NECESSARY 4 yOs.1:1~1 le!I """I ydi. J,OI l'vbllshecl Or•"" Co.ti DlllY Piiot, ,.1,UI Suell bld1 11\all .,. f«elv..:f If! th• for ln111nce Ill Lflters Tt1!1rm-nl1ry lo to he Calm. to g e l Out there •Rf TOU LOOKING FOR ·. I 1<d1. bu! 1~1 than 12 yOi. S.l3 lllCTITIOUS •UllNl5S April 21, •1111 MIY '· 11, 11, lt72 1N5-n Publfll'lld Orint1 Cllolll Otl"1' Piiot, 8uslntn tfr!c1, 1157 Pl1ttnll• Av'1!ut , Ptll!l-r reltri nci 10 •~lch 11 m ... tor " U Ydl. 1:1111 1111 tnan 16 YOt. 5.21 NAME ITATIMINT MIT If, 25, llld Juf!I J, I, lfn U00-'2 COilft Mete, Ort ntt County, Ct lllornlt , lur!her perlkul1ri. 1/w:l 11111 lh• llmt ll\d a nd j ust have a nice time. But -Flr1t year Income dtould 1• yOs. but les1 llltn ts Yd•. 5·43 The follovrlln• Ht11111 II doln• bu1!11n1 LEGAL NOTICE .,_ 111111 bl 011111111 1na P<.lbllclv read pl1et ct ht1rl119 lhl um1 h•i l:IHfl Mt for 2S 'fdl. but Ills 1h1n Cl Vdl. J.IP 11: 1!0\/Cf If lht above 1ltltd lime. Mtt JO, 1t1l, ., f:lC a,m,, In 1111 t hen, w hen I'm on the ba lance M 111 e1cns of SIS,000, -«I "(dt. 11t more w111r ltv1t CENTURY " flEAL ESTATE, 111n PleTITtous IUSINl!SS LEGAL NOTICE E•dl bid "'"" c11ntorm 11\d bt courtroom oi OePirtme~I Ne. 1 If 11111 bea m , l Jook OVe r to the wlfh 25 '/o lftCreGM 111 tfte f1l119I• unit •11ch 81Wf,. Hunl!111f0f! 81K11, CA NAME S'ATEMINT reJPon1lvt 111 lfll1 lnvlt1lloro, !hi plans, court, aot 100 Civic Cenler Oriv• Wnl Jn d d I 11r CllfflblnaHoro o1 v.,,lcl1tl f .OIS 92641 1'ht followl"I perto11 11 c1o1111 bu•lnQt 1pec:lllc1tllln1 •nd an olhtr dotument1 the Cltv of S1n11 .lna, Ct l!lornli . ' judges and w atc h t hem make ffCOft Y••r Oft 011111110 orlvtr ti Truc:t L•tal P1vlold C•P•elty: c11rl1el Rea!tv, 111n •••ch ervc1 .. 11, NOTICE 01' AVAIU.llLITY comprl1lne lfl• pertinent c on 1r1 c , Dated Mty 11• 1,17 1111 k ( k ff · t ttter.Gfter LflS llltn "6 ton1 .5.0S Hunllntlon le1cl'1, CA ""1 F"Alt·WEST LEASING COMl'ANY, 01" ANNUAL ltll'OltT dotum1nt1, COPl•t ol Iha C11nlr1ct W E S! JOH.Ill 1 e mar S lo a e O po1n S p ti 1 1 ' 1on1 10 10 1on1 s.OJ Thi• bu1!11111 11 IMrno cortduclld by 1n J:US NtwPOtt B!vd., Newp0rt B•tch. Thi Annu1r Jllwr"t of l'M Gr&e1 P•P• Document• 1r1 now 1111 r11t encl oe>en 10 cOunt~ Clerk ' and that scar es me.'' -,... fJtl P" 1 oft 10 ten• 10 IS 1on1 J.ll 11111111rc11111. """ Ptcer1 J r, 3211 Gllblrl Orlw Pit Smith Fw no1111111 11 1Yall1Dlt '°" in--Publk ln1P«tlon 111 111e 11ld Olllc11 of 1111 Win MAH AND SCHMIOT d I -Profnllo111ol trolnl119 IS ten' 10 20 111n1 J.11 Vietor H. Je1hln1k! Hllrrtln•ton &eltll ,... , ' ilPKllon at 111 PF"ll\C:k11I olllct, 11' S•P· Owner, 11'1111 m1y bl obTafrltd by rtc1u.11 1o Attorr1n-1 11 Lew Ju ges natural Y e X P e C t -Appoln•-•h p,.-411utllfied 20 1on1 "' more !.d Th11 1t11em1nl tiled wfttl tM Countv Thli M int•• b barn, conducted .,., 111 plllr• Ave., 811"" 1sr1nd, dur/111 bu1lnu1 1111 'District Purche1Jnt 0111tnme111 11 :au''" Mllllll 0,..,... w ell·known gymnasts to do a -G .. at ,..fetrol birslnns, Driver or Dumo•t•r or Ctart of Or1no• Cou"tv on : APrU 26, itn. 111c11vh1u11. flol.or• b.,-•nY c11111n 'Nl!o ttqulr11 It 1u1 Pl1e1lllfl Avenut, Ccat1 Ml••· N"""" 111c11, Cllll, .,... Oumo1ter True• S.d 8y 81vtrlY J. M1cldoX, 0...UIY C01i111tv P•ul PKtt• Jr. w11t1r11 180 cl•1t 1ner lfll1 dllt 01 PtJbllCI-C1lllor11l1, Til: 11141 64'.attt better jo b and seem lo be a retalnl119 0•11 cll•11'-~ Driver of 1toao Oil SPre•lll• Tr11tt .5.,l c11r11.. Thi• 11atemtnt tiled wilfl ,... c w nt)' tJon. A JO percent l'1vmt111 ecna 11111 • 100'!' A1t1rMl'1 ltr: l'ttlllo!llT lit tle eas ier on them if the.v -Sofr prof•uloital OrlYer 01 Tra.,111-MI• Tr\ICk '1'"1 Ct.rt; 01 Or'"" COi.Hiil' Ol'I' M1y t 1t12 J . Hunllr Sm!lfl P1rlorm11\C:t eonct w!ll bl rt'lulrld of llMI Pvbll1htd Ori"" Coctt 0 1111 llltof, prlf;tfttoitloll lll'lder J ,,,.,1 I :It Pub!lllltll Or1no1 Coall Danv P11ot, IV 8111trly J M•dctolc ~ CouniY Prttlcltrrt Corttr1clor .. le<t!'d. Miy 17, 11, 24, itn IJ04.r.t m ake mis takes , K yle and Driver 01 Tri osll-M I• Tr\ICk ' Mii' II, It, 2S, •nd Junt 1, 1f72 1111·72 Cltrll ' ' Pt.tbtlllhld Otlflfl COltl D1Uy Pilot, WAOE llATIS: M arquette a gree. -Guorontffd r•tlre1M11t J Yt•d5 or n'lll•t s.o . "' 11•n M•v 11, irn 1312-72 CAlllP•HTllllS peMioft o t T k ltu th LEGAL NO'J1CE l'ubl!ll'ltd Ot1no. Coll! 01Hy ,.riot, ''But a lop girl can blow o ne -Frl'9• Miiefitt. u,~."',','.;, ;,';i., Lewi •n s 79 M•r 11, 11, n. •lld Jllnt 1, ltn l2ll·n C•r"'"'" ................. , ............ , .......... , .... ., ................. ,,,, ~ 111111111 · h · 1 •• · LEGAL NOTICE l'ortn'1111 .oe ""' hou, ""'' ''"" h111>et1 c1111fllt1tion event an d .! g irl w 0 IS css -CorMf p0ilflo11 Oum~···· Truck '"" Vd"-LEGAL NOTICE tUPINlllCf, t•cePI -umellc 111ll1r, well-known can d o \\•ell in ~II " vour •nt_, 11 YES to • or ,,,.,. Wal•t t.wl '"" l!Vlr 5•43 PICTITIOUS IUSINl!SS PICTITIOIJS IUJINEJS Uifll'IT .. LINOLEUM LAYE• d I h. h . ,, -, '"''· -, m•• .... , ., -, f'ork Liii Driver J.113 NAMI STATIM•NT NAM• ITAT•MfNT C1rNI, Lll!Oltum & SOtt Tiit L•Ytt , e •ents an pace 1g er 1n a "' •· ..... "' w , , •, 1-·• o ,_, Th• fo!lowino P*r•on 11 11o1111 ""''"'*''---~-----------1 IWtlYt I 1m lotliln1 for. 8 tr qt en ' fPI ,.,... t • ., it: I' Tllo folro....lnt PfflOl'I It cllllnt butlnets CINllEHT MASONS b ig 11ee t like t h is," K yle sciys. Ulldir ?SOit 9llt S.ll VALLEY VIEW IHV!STORS, 4.J.11 '';J.Jl~O~: ... ~~~H::s 11: Cemer1t M4lto11, f101tl1111 •lld ll"owellnt m1ctllnt aperttor ............. , 6,41 .... "I d 't t j he t Otl"ft. Cou"ty S1l1t O!ll{lor •Ill W•llr o• l'in•-Ty,. Truck Ortver l lrctl Slt11!, Suitt 102. N-llOtf ... Ch, -. ''""' I •·• " I 0 . J, ATl(tNSON 1nol COMP'AMY, Cement MllOll JwrMYmtn . ... , .............. ., ........ , ... ., ,.16 On Wan 0 a SOffiC-lnlttvltw II Ort nd Holtl, Suitt !1.IOf, 2SOO 9111. lo «IOO 91la S.23 CtHlornli '2660 .,;"' 0 11' Pltlllfl I ....,..n1 ""111111 26116 Ctllt H'"'*'• C1Plllrino ltlCl'I, FOl'1m1n .OC Per holtr tbovt Journeym1n ttlt, ane becaus e they blow one 1 Freidman Way, ...,,.11.im t•efOJI W•l~r II• T~f!~·T'(PI Truck Driver Wl'l'lll Ocltltlrk. ltrll Chicory W1v. CAlltlltlACE Tit.AD! LEATHER '° '•· '262•. ILaCTllCU.lllS t th h " th 1' Id from Ol1nev11,,.). 4000 11111. or ov•r S.» lrvl111, C11JIOl'11Fa f2U4 W oi ' Oon•ld J1m1 Attl-. 26'M C•llf GtMr1I F0t1m111 ....... , .................................................. lo.fl even oug e .-year-o , ,,, . 17th s1., c '' Me11, m11, , c , , _ •·-•· ' ' Wttdlr · Thl1bu1l1111111 klllf OOllductlo:I lw e ShlWllMCCltl)' 643W "lhlt Clllti lfll'!Oll, IOlfftf!O t1dl, C1. ,..2 •. ''"'"" ......................................... , ......................... t ,tl says. "I'm you ng enoug h that Soturdoy 11 :OO '"" &' l :JO" pm Slll·TJIAOl!'S !Ol'•f!OI County Llmlltd ,.artn1r1111.,. M••• ' · " T11t1 bu1lnt11 11 btlnt coroduclld vr '" JOU•ntYm.n ................. , .... .. .... . .. .... .. .......... .... . .... . ....... s.to J have plenty of I 'm If f · Su11doy 11 :00 om & 2:30 pm IRICKLAVIJt WIYM Odltlrtl. Thtt butll'lffl 11 bahll COl'lllvcllcl try 111 llldlw!Wal. l•ON WO•K1•t 1 C. win , F0<em•n • Em1>loY ,., """-ml llU lh•" Thl• 1t1lltl'llf!I 111td wlrtl rt11 County llldl'lldlllt Don1ld J. Allrln11111 R•1nf11rcl111 Iron W11tk~ ........... , , ...................... , ..... , ... 1.U l want it to be because f d id ' AN EOUAL OP•ORTUHlTY .jO,per /11 1bov1 J11Urf!tfm1n Cltrll Of Or1ntt Coull!)' on: Mey J, ttn , Sh~wn Me(irty Thlt 1tet1men1 llltd wt lfl Ille Countv FOrm1n 7Sc..,. hour rnort llltn hltlMll cllt1lllt111oro better than the others.,, fMPLOYIEJt l'or~m~n -t m1>loy 7•12 min, no! 1111 than ev e1wr1y J. MaddOJf, Deputy c1111n1v Th i• •l•ltmtnf 11_... •!th th• CWlll'I' Cltrt If OrtnH '°"'"'' on: M•Y 1,, 1912. 1u111rvl1ed. iiiii~ii~~i~~·~~~~~~~ijij~~ii~iil '75 per hr. l boYI JOUtNYman Clark. Cllrt of Ottllfll COllnlY on : A..,-t lt71 8y llVftlY J, MtddOll OIPUl'f CWl'llY UIOltllS Farem.., · EmplaY o~r 11 mt11, not lfl1 11·11J16 •r ,,.,.,,, J . Mlddox Dtovry 'Cieri!. Llborll'•• •-•I at COl'lllr!ICl!ort ,.. . .................. _ J.'9J, OAYE ROSS PONTIAC'S EXCLUSIVE NEW CAii 5 YEAR/50,DOO MILE WaRRanty • At No Extra Charge f'.tch 6 l.tllor 0" '"'"' "~"' '''' lht n $1 .00 Plf ht. 1bo\11 JOUl!lffm~n llllbll11Md Or1nM t*t D1llv Pllof, Cltl'k , 1"4t O....r1ton Incl ltndto 01 onNmtllc tlld tlec!rletl ~If, 11/1/11 MIT 4, II, 11, JS, lt72 11SJ.11 ' , 11JU ,utllllfittf Oflllff Cotll OlllY PllOt, vlbrtllon !Ndlln11 Ind tlmll•r mtchllllk.11 !Ooll er1c1t11ver & Stont M1to11 7.70 ,.ubllthtcl oru111 Coast Dilly Piiot, Mlv ll. ts. 11111J111111, I. 1rn 1»1·n not NC11r111rv ct111lfled l!fft ln . ... • ....................... I.IOI ~~~~& Wtllt,. ·'0 LEGAL NOTICE AP!'ll v 1nd M1v '• 11 . 11, 1tn I017·12 LEGAL NOTICE "or:;!':,.::!,,'"' hour more fllln h!OhMl cltulflca!lon. v1ea1111r1 ·'° LEGAL NOTICE ,AIHTEas Trldt Promo!lon ,70 ,ICTlT'IOUS IUflN••s l'leTtTIOUS 1u11111•ss FOrttrllll (4 mtfl qt ltu) -Jk •bovt ~'""'" ,., •• Aoptt nllctlhll> ,05 MA.Ml tTATIMINT NAMI ITATIMIEHT ftHUllf bnlll'I Nirllu ....... ., .... , ... ,,..,, .• .,,.,, ................ ,, .. .. lltlCKTINOlal (1.tbortrs) ni. f'ollowlf!I ,.,.,, It ctolne t1111!nou l'ICTITIOUI IUllHISI 'The follt'WIM tllt"ton ti dollll bulll'll• "''E TltADIS ·-~ H11tth &. W1!lfrt .. ..,.111n V1e1tlon CAll'ET, LINOLIUM &. SOl'T TILi U.Yllt 111'1/" ••: NAMI STATIM&NT II' •111mblrt lflcl stumllltln ....... , .................................. , ... I •• S.IS It •. IYSUMJ MOTOR HOME Thi '°"""'"" •t-It dolllt .,.,, •• ,.... • COSTA MESA Rl!POlllTl!ll, 212 v tc-G-•· For-tmell _,;~ •boWI 9f"On Journevmll'I ,., •• .6 JI ENTALS. "* H. lt'OIC!Way, S111t• .. : tori Sulit ,,, (bf! Mt•• F-fl'llfl -101li •bovt 1rou Jiu'""'"''" tllt. ,IJ Ar11, C.1111, JONI °' CAl.l,OJINIA 1110 1'"' ''" 0 •• Ou , ..,, C1 Vi.w Otl TIAMSTllllS ::M ltlchlrcl Armwr llber, 116 Cllff Svl tt U l ... H""'Pllrl 11.d, nuo A :1,,. nctn, 1'111 .,., 'ltttl'I-" JOc: It flt""" T••mtlft• unOer lut lldkflon ol r lyt, Ll ....... I a.l<l'I. Ctlll, JOM Ir.,_ Armstf'Olll, 111' lflll lt,. T~I~ IMltil'llll II Mlllt tel'lllucltd bY .n Tti1nUlttl Ulllorl, t•Ckldl!'ll 1ny lllUIPmenl ltu. thin ' lonl ' hll buliMS• It Mini Ctll'lllUC:ltd bY an L21'-/itwPorl lteeti f21MO lrtdl'lldu I 1'111 mllflftnlnA ""'"'"*'I), 111m tnm llldlvldu::ch1N A. • ..,. I Thi• IM/11""" .. Mine cottdlJdlld bf '" &AN DUNCAN OtlV~ of Vlhld• or Coml>ln•llOll ol Vlhk ln of1 I ndl'll'ldull. Thi• tl.itm1nt fi llet wfl!I Ill• Colllltf 2 ult• -V4111tln It» thlll ' '°"' ......................... I .It v•m Ctrotl. Lll'IC .... son Tll• L•v•r H .. tlh & Wtlltr• ,._Ion S1.6'1 Sl,4f -Thi• ••""*" tlltlll wlllt "" County JOtl'I 1, ... Armtir-Ci.rt or Oflntl COVntv on· Nttl'( 16 1'71. Ot1Vlf't or Tflflllt-mbt ll'lldil Ul'ldtt , Ylr41 ........................ ''°' ---,\;--Cftt11 Of Or1• County on:•.urn U. ltn . Tllll 1l11trMrrt fllecl wlll'I lht COUii!)' IY 9l\llrlf J MIOlloll: 0.ll!ltv CMllltv Pll I to lhl Llbor Coc11 of lhl Jt1t1 MrlOl'INCI ht I~ or IM rff\llar dlY't VICllfon ,M APPttnl1Cnht11 T r1lnl~t - ILIC1'111CIAlf A •Y lfYl,lr J, MMtlox 0.UI)' County Clttt ti 'OttllOI Courdy 111: Alwll 2:1, ltn. Cltt'll • of C '1=j1 toultllrn (al1forl'l!I lulldllll -' ll'ld •I lhl r1t1 t1r ovtrll,,... ol fht . u M c..-. '' '""''' ._ MMisoa. DIHtY c .. 111)' ' p 1n. ...., (:Ollllf'Udlon Toidl• c wfldlt, 1u1k1111 u11t l11W1:1lred. -: f'llbfllll'llcl Olll!ff Co.tit 0.11y p ~=-Clttlt:. •lnlol ll'Vbfllhtd Or..11111'1 Coell ~Of l'llot, lf'ld thil C-lf'llCflOl'I Trldtl ~II of In":...-,. ~::..tit :!',.":1~~:.:' ::""'~ •nm Aftl'll 21, •1111M1v .. 11, 1 .. 1f11 lot1.J1 • "llMFlif'lld °''"" c .... D1lty l'ltot, Mlf IL 2J, lll'ld Jlllll I, .. 1tn 1*"12 Or•ntt CMl!llY. "'-Mld :""' ~· ;r.c;; .... .. "" Nf"!lcular ";:;:!· Gtl'llf•t """"'" 111.4' AMI( v. 1nd M•Y"" u, 1&. 1tn 1...,, LEGAL NOTlCE t•llltd "" ..,..,.,~v:,,::; •l"fPI of c111tt11e1t1on or t't'Ofl 11 .......,.. 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C..,.. 1 (fllrt, .. • flf'tllll(fl lhfU "' lfl'\11,_.. llt c:Ol'lfllfmlt\< Dtnirlff H1,.,., , • ., .,.j IMlt .._ ...., Noll-.. ~ CllUt Otill)' "8)1t, """"""" Otlfltll C.-AlllY '.::' l"lltill...... °'""' CoMf Dtftr ;.::.; =·tl(tloll. lffl.$ fl !I'll Cl!Ffenlft La._ , .... I.::-~ "':it ' • • ...... ""'•,,.._. ,. ~ • '",., .. 1m 11~ .vr11 v. ""'_,,,_, ... 11, -.1m 1 "*' 4 11. 11. 11, ttn 1111.n 0wt1._ .... 11 "' .,..., tw ..-INr "• "' tm ~ 1t:r; . ' . . • I. , ~ .. ' . .. .... ... ,. .. ~., • . ' .. ' . '· .-' , .. , f; • r ' ' • • • • • I • ' . • . ' •· Men h1 Service '·. ... ?: .. ' . ···' "'' •• ., .. ,-;,, • 'o ' . , . .,. .. , .. '· . , .. . .... , '· ... . ·~· ' • ... .. ... , .. • Cllthli.>11 kl111e1 Mtllltw l"l'Ptlt ' ., SMALL SHOVEL SCOOPS COAL FROM A SEAM AT CUMBERLAND, OHIO MINE ,, . ' "•' ••• >Ecology Catastrophe? Lawrriakers Praise, Condemn Strip Mining By PETER C. STUART Christian Science !t1onitor Service :~ CUMBERLAND, Ohio -The Ohio :.. Power Company w<'lromes visitors with brochures. information booths, and guirled tours. •• Alon,e: lnlerstatP 70 in Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and ea st e r n Ohio, mo!orists need only gaze through their , 1.·,\\·indshields. ~ • :.i ·~ Strip mines are suddenly becoming .~-l' public attractions. .. For lhroughoul the United Stales - •• • · ... particularly in the 28 states where it oc-.:..;.:1-!~.iurs -strip ~ning is gouging the n~ · .. :·-:tion's conscience. So deeply. in fact . that .. · .. Congress i!I expected this year lo clamp ~'..the first nationwide controls on strip- ·.mining. Not far from lhe a-roaning shovels and gTO\\•ling trucks of this coal strip.mining re~1on, a House of RPpresentatives com- mittl'e is quietly preparing restrictive legislation. •' (T'S A LEGISLATIVE subjecl that Opens differences of opinion as gaping as the mine pits themselves: This year, for the first time. more coal is expected to come from strip mines lhan underground mines. Measured geographically fby the U.S. Geological Surveyl, in 1965 coa l Alrip- n1ining had disturbed acrl!agP the size of the state of Delaware. By 1971 an area as large as Rhode Island had been added. Remaining c081 reserves t h re a t e n acreage exceeding the size o f Pennsylvania and West Virgini.a. BUT STRIP-MINING boldS' a personal financial meaning for millions of Amer- icans who ma_y never set eyes on a mine - pil -electrical customers. Three-fou rths or strip-mined coal fuels electric-power plants. generating nearly one-third of the nalion's eleclricity. Because strip-mining is so economical - twice as productive and one-fourth to one- third ·cheaper to operate than un- derground mining -federal restriction~ could hike light bills. across the country -centers on these Issues: -Energy needs. "Major portions of the U.S. coal reserves are recoverable only by surface-mining lechniques. Satisfac- tion of eleclric-power demands without access to these coal deposits would add a new 8nd significant dimension to the energy crisis ." wa~a strip-mining stud y issued by th' Interior Com- mittee. Yet America's underground co a I resources 11pparently could fill the gap - theoretically. at leas!. "Many closed-down underground mine& could be reopened. and we could stop shipping cOal to Japan and Germany." Rep. Hechler said. Even Carl E. Barge, president of the National Coal Associalion, concedes ''There are ample u n d ' r gr o u n d reserves." But he terms it "not realiStic" to expect deep·mined coal to replace surface·mined coal. Army Na!lornil Guard Major JobD R. P'rttm1n, of Newport Beach, recently compltled Uie dnal phase of tht command 11nd gener11I staff offleer' 'course at the U.S. Army Cotn· mand 11nd G'neral St a f f College , Ft . Leavenworth, Kan . Maj. ~·reeman and his wife , tlenriett11 , live at 1958 Vlst1 Caudal, Newport Beach . Army Private First Class Eric 1\.1. Carlson, son of Mr. And Mrs. Duant M. Carl!on, 8201 Deerfield Drive. Hunt· ington Beach. recently com- pleted "''ith honors. an -equip- ment storage specialist course 1t the U .S . Army Quartermaster School, F t , Lee, Va. His wife, Jeanne, live11 at 427 Lz Larl!pur Ave., Corona del titar . U.S. Air Force Sergeant Simon 8. RnA&rlo Jr .• son of Mr: and Mrs. Simon B. Rosario of 11092 Ranger Drive, Los Alamitos, has Ar- rived fur duty at Osan AB, Republic of Korea. Sergeant Rosario, an ad- ministrative specialist. is assigned to a unit of the Pacific Air Forces. head- quariers for air operations in Southeast Asia . the F11.r Eai;t and the Pacific area. He previously served at Beale AFB. Marine Sgt. Rlcbard L. Smith, husband of the former 11-1iss Kathryn A. Collins of 17929 Waterbury. Huntingt.on Beach , reenlisted in the Marine Corps for four years during ceremonies held at the Marine Corps Air Station, San- ta Ana. Navy Airman Recruit Darrel IJ. Wingra\lt, son of Mrs. Verna M. Wingrove of 16.100 Te ri St.; W e ! t mi n.s t e r , graduated from rec r u I t training at the Naval Training Center At San Diego. ----- Airman Alan B. Copeman. Aon of Mrs. Ruthanne E. 2 §Q4$W:P¥4 Copeman of 15972 Ound1lk l Lanr , Huntington Stach, has graduated at t...owrv AFB, I Colo .. from tne U.S. Air _Force \1'eapon5 mechanic course cnn-1 ducted by the Air Tr1lnlng Command. The airm11n . who was trained to load and I n s p e c I the '"eapons used in Air Foret fighter aircraft Is be l n g assigned to Ty~dall A.re. Fla., for duty with l unit. or the Aerospare Defense Command which prctectll the U . S . a~ainst hostile aircraft and missiles. Navy Ensign rt11cllael R. Hagy. husband of the former h1iu Judith A. Frost or 404 Onda . Newport Beach. ha~ c 0 m p \eted En\'irqamental Indoctrination School a I Pensacola. -- Coalll Guard S e 11 m a n Recruit Kort A. Orbaclri son of Mrs. Betty Tnpalian nf 2726 Visla Del Orn. N e w po r l Beach. graduated fr om basir tra inina 11 t the Coa~t r.u11rd Training and Supply C.ter at Alameda . N11.vy Fireman ApprenticP Rlehtrd L. Conaway. son of Mr. and Mr!. J immie C. Conaway of 17824 Sa n Clemente, Fountain V11Hey. graduated from r e c r. u. i I training at the Nav11\ Training Center at San Diego . Army Priv8te .John F. Horan. son of Mr. and ~1r1.1 John F. Hor~n . 21!131 Archer 1 Circlt. Huntington Be a r h.I recently was allsigned to !ht 82nd Airborne Division at Ft. Bragg, North Carolina. .Pvt. Horan is a clerk typist fn the division ls 582nd-Supply 1 Company. Navv Airman Apprentice Gi ii e_ Wellrll, son of Mrs. I Irma Wehrli of IM Monrovia. Cost11 MesR, has returned to Newport , R. I.. aboard the I aircraft carrier USS Intrepid, rollowing a Aix-week cruise lo Portugal and Spain. &ULW!iCJ - " ·An ecological catastrophe" -Sierra Clul>. "Vital ... in ser"ing mankind in lermi; of economics. employmenl, and energy Rep. Wayne L. !lays fD-Ohio), a lawmaker from a striJ>-mining area wbo sponsors one control bill. estimates that state regulations pending in Ohio would boost lhe average household 's electric bill by JS cents a month. Hen ce. Congress·s interest . The choices ra nge from the gentle proposals of the Nixon Administration -giving states two years lo suggest 11trip-mining regulalions -lo the aggressive plan of Rep. Ken Hechler !0-W. Va .) lo federally phase out all coal strip-mining in six months. -Jobs. Strict regulation or strip-mining could throw out or work, or at least t,m. porarily dislocate, some of the industry's 22.000 employes who earn an annual payroll or $243 million. These figure!! represent about one-fourth of those for the underground mining industry. But Hechler argues that surrace-mining jobs are deadend anyway : For the Record .•.. needs" -\\'est Virginia Surface Mining • Association. • . But both sidell agree on one aiipect of ".'.ltrip--mining: it ·s growing. Just how fast : .: .is auggested by strip-miniog's burgeoning · : "!bare of American coal production : ·;. 1941-10.7 percent; 19/il-22.7 percent : ',: ~'.;1961-32.3 perctnt: 1971-47.5 percent · • • "(est .J. ...... LIKE MOST LAWS, this one prDhably will strike a compromise . The debate on Capitol Hill -and , .. .. ' .. .. •Tough' Bill Ohio OKs Strip-mi1iing Laws COLUMBUS, Chin (AP )-Gov. John J . Gilligan has signed into law Ohio'& tough new strip mine bill. hailing it as "a major victory for the people." Gilligan acknoy..·ledged the cost of electric power might go up and that some small, marginally profitable strip mines might go out of business. "Bu l I'm sure that if we have to pay higher to prevent the dutruction ·•· of the terrain, we will pay," he said. Gilligan said the strip coal mine industry could "thrive without this kind of devastation," gesturing toward color photographs of high y..•alls and ditches left by strip mining in southeastern Ohio. The lay..· sets strict standards for mine operators to restore mined land to useful status. 'Modular' Pref ahricated ... .. Home Gaining Popularity Chri~tirrn Scienee Mo nitnr Service GILROY -Statlslics show there is a growing trend I0\11ard building homes in fa ctories and shipping th em I n ''modul ar" units for asSembly on prepared foundations. The Nltional Association of Building Manufacturers has estimated that hy 1975 about 50 per- cent of all United Slates housing w:n be factory built. While there are no statistics on whether 1" modular housing is more popular In the West than in the East. literally dozens of ; '. homebuilding firm!! are going "mod." And in California. several are finding real succe.~s in the field. One is Dukor Mod ular Systems , Inc .• wil h home offices in Redwood Cily. It claims the largest modular housing fAc· tory in the nation -eight assembly lines producing 26 modules a day in an 86,000 square-foot building on a 2&-Acre site her•. ·' •• .. : DVKOR OFFERS one feature in modul11r home construction -rooms ol •• Any width. BecaUSf: lhe factory-built home must be moved to the tile over • ·highways. there Is a 12-foot width limit.I· •• , .tion in Olllfornh1 •nd most other st•les. Dukor h11s overcome this limitation by 1: u1lng a Ateel box frame . '" .M<>!t modules are des igned so th11t the • • , wills IU'Jlporl the roof and wlth a 12-foot •.. • w.ldlh timlt11tion modular hornet tend to -•~ • have 1 bo_xy or "trailer" look. .• . . .. ' By uUllzln& a steel box frame however, Dukor say, he can offer rooms el any width simply by omlttlnt1 .. ans _.Ult! they have no AUpport function. "Ill• firm be&an opentlGnJ In 1170 and it.s firsl project. the Pierce Street Apartments. a ~+.unit complex of one and two-story town houses with gabled roofs and wood cedar exterior. was one of 15 winners in the 12th annual competition sµonsored by lhe American lilstitute of Steel Construclion . Tn announcing the winners, the jury of awards cited the Pierce St re e 1 Apartmenls as "a fine example of pleas- ing and socially rewarding results that can be achieved with prefabricaled com- ponents for Jow-incDme housing." The jury added , ''The innovalive combination of exposed steel fram ing with wood fill-in \1:alls is most attractive." DUKOR ALSO claims that it!' homes are 30 percent Jess expensive than COO· ventional housing of the same size. A two-bedroom. one-bath home can be con- 1trucetd in lwo days on anY level 1ite. 1be modular unils arrive al the sile complete with stove. garbage disposal, heating plant, electrical and phone outlel.9, and wall -to-wall ca rpeting. Prices rRnie from $10.3~ for a two- bedroom, one-bath to Sl6,0SO for a four· btdroom, two-bath, exclusive or lot Other advantages, liAted by the firm, are that the Dukor home is e1rthquake proof, hurricane reslslant, termite rree, and thllt unitA can be placed aide by 11de or stacked 11s high A1 three atorui . One projtct being develop«! Is al Hftlf Moon Bay. A complete modular com· munlty of tH onMtory, •inale-lamHy units, M rental 1partmtnll, and 154 two-- story town hOUle condomlnlUtnl ran&tn1 from lwo lo fM bedtoomt wUI be COO· structed. "The jobs in strip-mining are. tem- porary jobs, for when the coal is stripped out, not only are the jobs gone but the land is gone too. and this makes the en- tire area unattractive ror the t.ourist. Likewise, people do nol flock to live in stripped-out areas where the water is polluted and the land ruined." The West Virginia congressman and others say strip miners could be reemployed in underground mines (near- ly one-half -or-"all surface workers, eAlimates the Conservation Foundation) and reclamation projects. -Reclamation. Strip-mining isn 't pret- ty. The Department ·of the Interior calculates that the process has polluted (by acid and sill ) 12.800 miles of streanis and 145.000 acres of lakes and ponds: destroys S3S million a year in outdoor recreation resources: disturbs tw~thirds of surrounding fish and wildlife habitat : p rod u c es "significant socio-economic losses such as retarded employment. in- vestment opporlunities. depressing social environments. abnormal physical and mental hazards, and aesthetically unat- tractive landscapes." Many strip miners seek to repair !he damage by "reclaiming'' the land. Ohio Power Company -which here operates the world 's largest dragline, :\2- story "Big Muskie" (for Muskingum , the name of a local county, river, and col- lege) -also operates one of the nation's la rger reclamation programs. "' Since 1943 (long before state reclama- tion laws ) v.•holly owned subsidiary Cen- tral Ohio Coal Company has planted 32 million tree seedlings in reclaiming 18.000 of its 22.000 strip-mined acres. Survival rates range from 50 percent among oaks to 95 percent among locusts. Bulldozer operators WIJrk round the clock at three locations , filling . and grading mined-out areas. Some will be reptan!ed as grassJaod. ''We're replacing a depletable resource \V\th a renewable resource." expl,11.ined Charles A. Kefnei. Ohio Power's futil and na!ural resources supervisor. The company envisions fulure profits from timber and cattle grazing. ONE EARLY DfVIDEND: More than 60,000 registered guests last year in the reclaimed area's 18 campsites, picnic areas, and visitor centers. Not all strip miners lire so con· scientious . When last Inventoried by the Interior Department in 1967, only about one·lhird of the. nation's Atrip-mine disturbed land had been reclaimed ( 1.2 million of 3.2 million acres). Marriage Licenses M•Y 11, 1•n Mt rtl••• llct 111'1 w1r1 !1suHI la 1111 lollcr<rtlno •s of MtY It; .ArEt.1-CONKEY -llol>trl J., lO. ]~11 H1rb0r 81wd., Coa11 Mtu, and C1rotl1 V .. JO, L.A. IAYL Y·8YllNE -Rev D .. IU, to ~mtrlld l•Y7 )•OUll• lkll.., ~ ca...::t':~~A1AP~ ~11f:".:.:r S.. 12. Derro11 Mlc,,J,111. •nd Mrc,,11111 J., u. lJ!IJa Mf f'iMr Dr. HUllllllltafl Bt ll. MOIUlllSON"4011.l.EiPtE -Mlcilatl H., JI, •l16 Fllckt r .Aw., Foulll•l11 Vil., 011d Horlh M .. olO, P1110,1ma Cit,, .. MAIN-ltOTH -Rlclword. I!. A11ohtlm. .,,., P1r1v 11 .. 41, 70m k1lw111 1.11,. 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Li'ld1 G1dbol1, l?, Of ll:JOl MINl,•kt • lrYlllt. sru1tM·llMMEAM.4H -llr•dltY, Llwr,nct . 2t, et 116'1 l rook,,uril SI., Apl. 111. H~lltl ... IOll BtfCP\ 1/ld l!lon-11ls lv1111, 17. ol JlWl Brookh1.1ril S!rtll, Apt, Hl, H\nlll"Clfaoi lo1dl. ITEWAltT·OAVIS -Mltli.tl lttY. 20, ol 101 W11I V1ltncl1, Siii Clt,,,tMt llld M••Y J1"'r It, ol 101 Weit V1ltll(ll, SIFI C ll'l'lel'll. WAI. TOH·V.AN SWl!.AIUNGEN - JO!.IPh ll¥1. 11 of lll-0 ltalld1 Stvlll1, L1ru111 Hlll1 t/ld Jttll. 43, al 1120·1!1 VII Putrl1, L811111'11 Hlll1. SMITH·Wll.SOH -OMllO l.lovd. 11. al JJO S1llt1 A,... Aw1., "lfWPOrl B11cll Ind Oorrc• 111,,._,u, !O, ol *' Port Co1rdln. Newporl B•actl. GARB(lt·~AtrERSON -S I t,,, t 11 Mlc~1tl. l l. of "'' Mounllln -~~' 1. ..... ,,. ll••ch •nd SVt AIVI~ ,,, af ~ M•tml•lll ltold, t...Oll!'ll llllC,,. CAMPBELL, .J Jl .. ROBEltTS -Brict C•urc""· JS. of 211' Eldtn, Ao!. I. ("1'1• Mell tnd Gtr1ldlnt .. M", U, of lilt POll'IOllt. Cati• Mtt•. $Mlf"-l·A"IPfllSON .,... 01Mli Mtrlt, 1•, 01 r1n1 A'l)OI' Clrclt. Hllllli!!9t011 A11c,, o"'1 Vlckrt LOUii• Mi di .Al'lld1r1411, ti. al Ill? Rov11i1! Orlwt, Hu11H119I011 ltK,,, WOlllKMAN·BUl.AltO -lll oblrt Tot>v, If, of UOI W1lnut Avt,. API. Slj u1t111111d S!to~11llt An11, u , al 1111 Broo~llurtl, .Apl, 7', Fou11ll!n V1Ht11. MORTIMER·l$Tllll -Edw&ro Gt1nr, ]), of nt G1wlol1 Ptlwt , Apl. J, L1- 9u111 ll••t" 1nd l.talll Oaro1ne1. 13. of nt G•wlo!1 Pdv•. Alli. J, LI· 0111'1 l11c,,, POt.l.41C-50WARO -Jdllft C., ?I. 1'«! Or1"r,· ("1'11 Ml\I, l lld NIM¥. 7', f:U~tJNE-OARIUTV -0.111 JI .. ?'l. SHI Bch . I nd lu11n M .. ?I. 11~11 Rld111'11dt l.lld .. HUl'ltl,,.tDo. l••t h, •f.RGUSOH·VEtlU;( -J(llln c .. n. ~ f'flcl91•, 1nd J lr\fllf A . 71, 11\J VlllO 11lrt!lt NfWPOd l••Ch. MITH•~INl(OVfC -ltlc,,1rd A .. ]I, 131 t 1111 ~OUI MH1, •~• ~M\1~H'-~El~ -I(;:;"""" v . 1s. 11()1 WI'"'' A¥l " Hunl!lltlO.. llNC,,, .... ltl r•n L • l , L.A. $TANl.IY·B•llltl0S -Tt1{¥ (., lO, U.S Ar,,,¥. 91111 J-!t t . It. '70! II ''"'° Ci•t\t. FOU11t1hl v 1111-.. Some critics attack reclamation 1s a failure and public-rel8tions gimmick. "Rcclamatiqn." ctulrge! A. T. Wright of the Wilderness-Society, "ls at best 1 myth and at worst a hoax if, we de.lude oursel\'tS lnto belle'ving lh11l we c11 n reestablish anything hut 1 s h 11 k y monoculture on strip-mined 11re&s." Dissolutions Of Marriage Both friends and foe& or strJp-mlnirig Aeem prepared for federal regulationK from this congress. Even the industry (represented by the National Coal As.wciation and Amtrlc11n Mining Congress, 111y1 it f11vors federal standards or guidelines. The total-b111n leg i1t11ion er Hechler hu attracted no fewer than 88 congre~1ion1I coepon10r1. Will strip mlnea -the new public 1l- tr1ctlot11 -become historic 1M .. 1 IN,I JILOCUTORT OIClllllS '"''' .. Mly 1 'Out~tlt!ll ltuf"'I .4, 11'1d lt11~" F. H•rtw111. Jlmmv .,.d Allllll c . H1 ,lw.tl. 1'nlllt c. llld Jl"'mv ''"I""'' Tt11rt11 M. 11'1d IH!v J. A•11 ,,,., J111lc1 M ;1'111 .It\• lttubt<! l!Wrv, Ly,,.llt 11!11!• ~1111/~1. lt!llDr~ , In~ ll1111&r I, llOYlll. Plffr w. •Ml Oollllf f . ''"'•"· N~nc:w J. l lld Ou1n• IC, Abball Judllll !' •1'111 G•frY I . ICll!lr ~rll'ltJll Thtlll'll ~ ...... ,,. N ~k Ul'ld1 Dwlllllt L•• 1"d Wtrr., dWln!I C• 1. Omtr J. Ir o111d Jean S, Ml 1•,, M1rM 11\d \•Wiil L ar111U1111. JOll'fl (I• r .tll(f Jt <IW•ll ... L•11rtf N Ll'Wt•. Mlrtf l" llld 111 itlllrd Del" M~Ji.r1, I. nd1 J•t n ll'ld .ltdlM•I ._, Mll•l ll. '"lfl.tllt l l11• ll'ld f'*'"I• t.1-wrt"Cl £~""''11,!C f.J,.,':J '~ s 1rvJ~r."'oW.lt •Ml . .......,. Kn -DAIL V 'ILOT 3;! Who Listens To Landers? • • ' 1 • SINCE SHE'S ONE • OF THE I TEN MOST INFLUENTIAL WOMEN IN AMERICA. •• • •• Just About Eve,ryone Does That's Who You Can 'Lis ten' to A nn Lenders Daily In The DAILY PILOT . ' ' ' . DAii. Y l'ILOI Thi#~. Mq lQ, 1972 Everxon• Ha• Somethin9 1h at Someon e Else W o nts DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS . You Can Sell It, Fi nd It , Tr aci e It With a Want Ad The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results l~ I _ .... l~I -., .. u. I~ I I~ l._-_ .. _· .. _,l[~J l~I • I~ I I _ ..... _ ...... _,. .... General Generel General I--:-*---:*-*..,...-....,..*-'--*-· *-L TA-Y-l-OR C-0~ EVERYONE LOVES A VIEW ~fagnificent view of bay & blue Pa-cl.fie! 3 ~room, ~ bath conte1nporary \Vit h luxur· 1ous carpeting & drapes. See today! S11-5,000 ''Our 27th Yt•r'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO .• Realtors ' 2111 S•n Joi1quin Hills Road N.EWPORT CENTER, N.B. 6«-4910 Gtner1I Gener11I DOUBLE YOUR INCOME \\'ilh ttti1 ll'uly fine inoome propc11y. Has 4·2 bedroo1n homes on largr lot -0 1\"d for 8 units. 2 xtory -t'ach homr ha1 ils own yard & private patio -single gar· ages for eat•h home -cp!s + drape& -stovPs. lmmac· ulatc condition -never a vacaney. Only $62,T:Xl -or 2 c::an be purchased. Call 6/?,-8550. \-i>l THE REAL \"\l ESTATERS ' ' ' •' • • I ' ' "II LOW OR NO DOWN • \rrn loc;a!ed ~ar South Con"~ Plaza .1 'lrg lwrlroi>rn~. 1111nk· f'll Sultan tub~. 1naJ1lcr balh, Jargf' 1volk in pantry, ~eri· are.Ir sc1v icf' quarters and Jetep.down living roon1. T1 .. ·o covered patios, one com· pletcly ent losed. Garden kitchen wlllt Jonds ()( cup. boards. Give us a call 546.~ (QfK_'n ('VCll.) ""r~· HERITAGE REALTORS OCEAN VIEW FROM' ALL ANGLES TirPd 11f tooki u i.: at nPii.:hbor's \Val!s~ C<tst ~our f'yes on !he sparklin_; 0 blur Pacific front any "'inclo1.,· of this custon1 Ten1plP ltill~ m11ns100. \rfl1rn· the ~un ll<'I behind Catalina Island. Buv a telescope. \Vords can-:t dcscr i~ lh~ beauty. This : bedroom beauty has it all. }'annal dining roo111. lu11h carJ)f'IS and 01 a t chi n g 'tlrape~. \\'(' 11·ilJ lradf' any!hing you havP ror rh~ $60,000 castll'. You ~·ill agree. Call fo1· appointment. Walker & Lee Reallorf ~.-}"-9191 2790 Harbor Blvd at Adams Open E1·1'll Stop Circling Ads! This is the one you'\'C been looki ng for. A 4 bt>{lroo)11 home completely painted lhruouL Nicf'ly !anllscaped on a hw"gt> corner lot. Quiel neighborhOod, but close to schools a nd shopping. Only S29.900 -ALL te1ms. Call 842·25.t-1. \-i>' THE REAL \'"\..ESTATE ... ·r·· . . ' ' ~;/ii t j .-- . -IT'S SO NICE- IN IRVINE TERRACE Let us sho\V you this enchanting l \\'O year ol d hon1e. Atriutn en try. spacious livin o room \Vith fire(>lace and VIE\V. 3 Large bed<: rooms 2 balhs, LO VELY DI NING ROOM -'- room to store your trailer or boat. ~<i2.500.' "SO RA~E" -IT'S FEE- Turtle Roc k J BEDR 00~1S·. fan1ily roon1. 2 baths, atri um, buil tins 'rith self cleaning ove n, shag carpeting an d custon1 drape s. Large covered patio \Vil h super landscaping. WOULD YOU BELIEVE $47,900. YOUNG AT H_EART??? -THIS IS FOR YOU- Good starter for the young family. NE\·V CARPET. 3 bedrooms. 1% bath. close to freew ay, schOo l & .shopp ing. Small invest· n1en t <lo"'n ca n "beat th e rent r ace.·· and IT'o ONLY .827.900. -HARBOR VIEW- MONTEGO-FEE-MODEL Vt\CANT. Immediate possession on credit approved buyer. 4 Bedrooms: 2 baths. formal dinin g room , wi th family room adjacent to the buil tin ISLAND KITCHEN. Lots of cc· ment \\'Ork in front and patio. Onl y t\VO years ol d. .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. ........ SM,950. -CORONA DEL MAR- TWO TRIPLEXES General Gener el IRVINE TERRACE- PRICE REDUCTION 'OPE N 1·5. FRl:/SAT./SUN . 1531 BONNIE COONE Bea utifully n1aintain ecl 3 BR. & din int?. rm. home. \Vid e. \Veil landscaped vard. Ne\v price $46.900. 'rh is is a VALUE \vorthv of con- sideration. HARBOR VIEW HILLS G ene ra l G!'neral BLUFFS BEAUTY B"AY VIEW PRIME L-OCATION On beau tiful \iis ta Ca udal in the choice. early Bluffs. so perfectl y located on a "·ide pie· ture sque greenbelt at the back , \Vith ptlno- ra111ic day/nig bt vi e\v of the bay & Dove r Shores fron1 the front. Th is is th e sca rce. very open "II" plan condo \v/2 lge. BR ., 2 baths & se p. for1nal din. rm. Beautifully up graded & 1m1nac Lo\v. lo\\' leasehold. Nothing to com· pa re '"ith thi s beauty at $45.950. An exc lu sive neu• lis ting. For app't. lo see, call 644-01 34.' Helen B. Dowd, Realtor G!i!nt:r al Ge neraf General 4 U~IVUI' ti()M( A CO LOR PHOTOGRAPH from th e front of this 4 bdrm. Corona del J\la r beach house 'vould sho\v a blue ocean. sunny skies, gar· den greens and ju st a touch of \Vhite sails and bright flo\vers. 40 ft. Jot \vith spacious Jiv ing room . bric k patio and formal din ing roo1n . Som e t'in is hing touches are needed but e."<cellent chll nce for a fu n invest1nent. Offered at $75,000. O\\•ner an xious. Pl·ION t.: UN IQUE HOMCS CORONA DEL MAR 675-6000. REAL Ulll,. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE. ~enaral .. * PALERMO * Harbor View Homes -oiilstahding Vflley V\•1v A fa1ndy home which l'&lt <loublr in !Krgl" group ""' 1rrtai11ini:. 4 Lge. Bdrml'I. ,\JI 11·nh lhf' llahlln RiviPrl'I 111lluenl'<'. 01vner has :<pi!n"il 11oth1ng in t.'O~I to •"fln1plt>1r . 11\J~ fulf' hon1I.' & no1v it hl'I<; ou1i,:1'U1rn hin1. Ca:l l to \P1e". $G2.~. Waterfront Pier t11:-1ton1 dup\r,, Ne v.• p n r 1 l ~lnn<I .... Thi:-1 i~ 11 be11ut. 11·t•ll·k<'pl prOJ>C l'IY -Loi,; ol prul1• 111 1111·11t•rsl11p. 011'11<"1' 11 ill 1·a1Ty Isl T.0. lonn 11'irt1 no loan l'Osts. Qf[~rcd a l $&2,000. CORBIN- ·::-;------o-----~-i REA~~~Tl!!1w G•noral LITTL~ GEM oflnJa !Jj/e PRESTIGE WATERFRO.NT HOMES SHOWN BY APPO INTMENT _ 101 Lind• Jilt Drive I .. ovel y 5 BR., 4 ba . home \Vith do,vnstairi; w~terfront mstr. suite & Jge. game r1n. or stl1dy. l\'le xican tile floor s, bea1n cei lings. qu ality construction, sl1p ": $155.000 For Complete lnform•tion On All Homes & Lot1, Ple111e Call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 30 Bayside Or., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161 Gentrll Nothing Down! '2 Bft. \\'t'll built slart8 hon1e 11r. Ne11·por1 llr1xh1, 011 R-2 101 11'/spact' lo build. 1\Jlt'y :l.C'reS:-1. $19,5()(). ' ROSE COTIAGE :! BR. home nr. Ne11·port Height~. Nr11•ly pamtcd. Lgf'. kit. 11/brkfst. rm. S2?,900. POOl HIGHLAND OR. i dl";il ho111C in prinlP llarbnr ll1i;:l1!a r1ds arra. 4 Spaf'. BR., f;uni!y rn1 .. ';!•, ba'11 .. k1trb· rn bltns .. i·arp., drl!.Pf'll l • ~pArkling H l t' pool. $44,000 CALL 0 646 -1 ~1' A;d~ r.EALT'V Nt •r Nt wporl Po•t orr ltt $33,900 No Oown Terms , lJrff.I •.'1l~VM Gener ii Ge,neral I~uill in range and oven. dishwasher and disposal. carpet s and drapes. 2 Units have 2 bedrooms. I bath : 1 Unit has 2 bedrooms 11h bath s ,,·/firepl ace. Each unit has 2 car~ ports, 1naintenance free yard and pool priyi- Ieges. .. .. .. .. . .. .. . .. .. Each $19.500. I T~~.~~~R~l~~~h~~Af~r~1g Desperate Executives Only \\"o,,~ Huge 1iv11111: 100111 11i11t Huntington Harbor 1Tackling fireplace! G<>u r· Comr homr to 11 true prt'~tigr n1ct k1tclten. Bu ii!· ins. Giant addrrs~. Truly a brighl lamily room. 4 Bedroo1ns. 3 sparkling Jamily 110n1r . 4 Baths. Pri\•alf' door ent.ry berlrooms, 2 baths, plu.~ 11 1'1a!ilf'r !!Uilr . Only 360 n10: master suite !hai t"()nlpletely pay. Of $2·14? NO 00\VN t'OV{'fS the SPC'Olld noor \vith PAYJ\1E.NT? 7•,; ann 'ii Or('an vie111 and channel vic1v rat£'. Oivnf'r r xtremcly an· fro1T1 balconv, Ladit'S -vnu xious? CALL TODAY! Get in the Swim!! at a modest price 11r ois-un1r ;ipr lo11n 111 fi"~ V.\ and your nionthly in~tall· 111f'nl" ar,. le~~ rhan 1· .. nl. Spa!·1ou.~ .1 1.M•1lroom, 2 bath. horne. Elr11:ant lirpla!·t'. fin· 1·.~t "'Top Qt The LlnJ!"' buiJt. in ki!ehrn, dishwa11her. ~p­ ilrate la undry roo1n. PPrfr('I for a largv family. Huge ra1nily roorn. 510.1720. J HOME SO PERFECT Captivating vie\V of the harbor. ·3 RR .. fain. & dining rms. Very c1uiet str#et. Too good to last at $59,500 . J im Muller THE WARMTH OF BRICK Makes thi.s home so attr: The 'interior is just as appealing. 3 BR .. o's1zed family rm. & a good view ! Eileen Hudson INVE.STORS -CORONA OEL MAR 2 lots. each SOxl18 -2 un its per lot. Sold as pi!;ckage. Owner \Vill carry 1st T.D. Ex- cellenl .location. ?darcia Bents. · ONLY ONE AVAILABL'E , Popular Carmel model. H.V.H. 3 BR .. 2 ba .. fam. & din . rm . Close to comm . park & pool. To see, call Ho\vard \Velis. COUNTRY CLUB LIVING LarJ;?e 4 BR., fain . rm. to,vnhou se in Univ. Park. Privacy, comfort1 convenience; xlni schools. Big -in -value $35.900. "Chucku Lewis. ' MOTHER 'S VIEW Truly the spot! A bi ~. gracious home \V/a bay view; in a line neighborhood. 'v/a hu ge. priv. upstairs suite. Goin g at $69 ,000. Willis Comstock. BAYFRONT BEST BUYS c.~st. 5 yr. old 5 BR, 4 Ra ., apt. over gar - pier/float. Super nic e. S92.500. 2 Yr. old 4.5 BR: view -bay/ocean. Dock for 50' boat. Quiet Ioc. $ 139,500. George Grupe MORE FOR YOUR MONEY By: 'far best value in today's market~ Just .red uced $1,000. Deligh tful Corona del Mar Joe. Now only $53,950. Paul Quick PRIVATE COMMUNITIES Emerald Bay J BR. den. vie\\' . . . . $86,500 Monarch Ba v 3 BH, FH. poo l. vi ew $100.000 Emerald Bay 4 BR, FH. View .... 5124,500 Bob Yorke BEST FEE LOT. BA YC RE ST One of largest & finest Jot<: in Ba vcrest .. DOVER SHORES ON GALAX\'. Sui1"btc for •ll .,~te-lype home. $45.000. Charlene Whyte • WAS $12,SOO ·NO W $79,500 Broadmaor, Corona del ril ar. ~·fuch wanted 2· sty. lge. 4 BR .• lam. rm., din. rm. 3 ~ ear. Spacious yard w/putting green. Bild AusUn CORONA D'EL MAR DU PLE X Live In one, rent the other. 2 4·BR. 3 ba . units. Walk to beach. schools. shops. Bit-in range le o~en . carp .. rlrps., frp l. 2 Car gar. le patio. $79,!IOO. Al Firik .• . . _...... Coldv-.ll,Banker ~ 551 NIWPOllT CINTlll 1111.. N.L • A<t4tbt-SHdd ~ AAO A~!AllS lhl' n10n1en1 )'OU a1·r 'in lhr Entry11·<iy. Gal(' 111!0 thr Sunken Livini:: Roo111 1vith 11 fil'Cpla1·1-. Thr bright, (]I f l\it<·hen 1\·i1h l)Oublt' Ovt'ns & Dish\\·ashcr i~ a Lady S1oppcr. i\dd 3 Bedrooms, 2 Bath~ and a Orn nnd you are' i;ct for ~un1n1er. $3:>.JOO. Ca ll 616·05:j,'i, Evt'nings ;)•1:>·~7. J' .I~ 64:).0303. 1nust .~f'e thr lovely kitchen Onet' you srr thi~ lo\'l'ly :l ~droom. 2 bath, pool hon1r, you'll be N'ady lo mo\'P riRhl in. Sf'parate paneled lamily family and bt'autifol fal'n1 kitchen. Cali 1101\' befOt'e ifi; too late. All k1r only S:~i900. TARBELL ~~~~;2~0 R.fJJIP' 2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY •----• dcf'Qr. Priced at only S00.500. Jo'ol' n1ore in£onnation plea!!' 1·rill J\:JT·60lff. I ORIS! J. Ol\O\ Ii'£ A t. -Cf:':, $2B,950 COATS & I WALLACE REALTORS !' -546-4141- <,0pen Evenings ) 29jj Harbor, Costa i\lrM QUIET SPOT IN MESA YERDE Ir you don°t l\'Rnt .Y()Ur 1·hildren pla.ying tag 11•ith lrarr1r, lhi~ i1 th1: locatKi.n ror you. Largt ff'nC'ed yard 1\·ith patio and play area. Great :: BR. homr 11·ilh fao- tasllc hreplact'. \'()U'll lind it in excellent condilion and only S:l!l,950. Call no1v for an appointmrnt 546-2.313. 'J!!!!!!!ll!!!!!ll!!~C·O~RO~N~·A!!!ll!!O~E~L!!!ll!!MA!!!ll!!R•,•C~A~L-IF•.!!!ll!!!!!ll!!~' ~enera; General It Rarely Happens DREAM HOME $27,000. Bu! '°"" have ·.tust listc..tl !hr rwrftct l."()mbinat.iQn -a . '<p11cious <'harmiiig hoirie :: h<'rlroo111J1, 2 bath:-;, fan1ily \v1!h fl vie1v lh;'ll i..: rruly roo111, firrplacc, double gar· Utl<':.:re)JC'd anv .. i·herf:. ·4 ai::r. shake shingle roof·and bedroon1s, :1 ~tits, lanlily i:rrat 'residential loca tion. 1"001n, 1.ir.i::c pro!f'<:itionallv l\fodel homP J11?f'(]s some l;indscii perl y:it·rl 11ith .~pacf. rarr, bur , ··oh, 1~·hat a ba1'- for pool. $79,!JOO. c 11 J J ll:llin."· Submit all ternis. 673-SX.O for a vie1ring ap-Ca ll 545·~12•1 (Open Eves.) puin\1111·111. I \outh,. (~ oast EMERALD BAY Charntin.c J Br + r ain. rm. ln1111arulate ! Ocean s ide of lh1·y. \lie1v. Ideal loaction. I Sl45,(XX)..Jlurry TF.D HqBF.RT &. ASSOC. :;!il Via L11\n 67:.-8500 TOWNHOUSE 1vith all fhr extra!':. 2 lrg i bedmis, 2 baths, l\/1v 1·ar· peting, all buiJtins, palio &: more. Only $19,500. 10~ dO'lvn. Call Ray Gaull, 5-tQ.1151. llERJTAGE REAL ESTATE. Ge neral Gentr1I CLOSE OUT . $40,250 The Rac quet Cl ub ·in Irvine has one home available because of a last minute cancel\ , lalion. Tbis tiled roof beauty features a t\VO JJ:ory Jiving roo1n . \Vith a Doo r to ceiling l11repla-ce and massi"e exposed beam s~ T~ee bedrooms and three bathrooms. L,.irgeoJaJnil~ room. and a cozy dining room. WF are including block wall fencing and additional carpeting as an incentive for YOU to buy· this lovely hqme. Lotaled iust ,one block to park and lennis courts. Liberal lemis and immediate occupancy. Located on Culver R~d . n~rth of U1e Santa Ana Freeway. · -. • Open dally f1om 11 1m to 6 pm (uc.pl ·Friday) 832-5792 or 979-2113 ' • SPANISH $37,500! Newport Charm 4 lx><lrooms. 2 baths, Sf'ClUdPd rear liv1nJl room enhall<'Cd by, massive firepla~. De· Juxr built·in kitchen, dish· "·ai;her. Lovely Sprinklers. Red beauty! 5-10·1710. pa Ii o. tile roo f TARBELL 2955 Harbor. C()sla ~'11.'Sa I INVESTORS PARAblSE Ovf'T ont' acrE" parcel ,,·ith ~· units. Possible R·4 ;,:oning. Ideal for additional units. Good Costa J\Icsa locaticln . Call for derail.". 546.5880 ~ 0pl'n t'l'l'S.) ~~HERITAGE REALTORS l.ieneral MACNAB IRVINE -------""---~--- Fl NE R HOMES PRIVACY & BEAUTY Lovely 3 BR in Mesa del Mar. Beautifully landscaped -children's play area -:-2 patios -boat access -room for pool. Reduced for immediate sale. $34,900 . EXQUISITELY DECORATED 4 BR .. 4'h baths, FR. Unu sual , exciting design. Pier & slip fJr 50' cruiser. $169.500. , Dave Cook. 642-8235. · LUXURY AT LOW COST Designed for modern Jiving! Decorated in exceUent taste! 5 BR .. FR, bar.room. pool & view. A functional and charming home. Every room is 'vell oriented to the nth de.. ·gtee. Amy Gaston. 642-8235. LIDO PENINSULA ,3 BRs · 2 baths. Poot. boat slips. $84,500. Frank Peralta. 642-8235. 4 Bedrm-F•mily Rm. No Down G.I. lcrrns. try j c;, do\\'Tl all others. 4 Bedrms, family room, 2 pull man batM, built In erfic::iency kitchen. 50 ft. ro,·erc<J pa rio. S3000 air con- cliti<>n1ng unit 11·i!)1 elcc· Ironic· air flltrr. F.leetric i;arag~ floor o p c n c r • Pa r k -I i k e Jandscapin;;;: :>10-1720. TARBELL 2'J:i.) Ha rbor. Costa :\lesa Corona del Mar • Duplex Corona del l\1nr -South of thl" high"''ay, T1vu bcdroom11 and den 11·ith ruslicbeamed ceilings and )i:Undeck. Tu'O bedroom 1\'ilb fireplaCf' and brick pati<ls. Triple car gar· ages. Priced r ixht at $62.500. C. F. Colesworthy & Co. Realtors Ea.stbluU Ollice Bayside Offi<'e J;!0.0020 675-49.'.0 WATERFRONT $95,500 3 bedroom.~ (c()uld be four) in ~1ain House \\'ilh one bed- room cottage In front. On the channel Cottage rentl'I f()r $300 mooth. New deck acccimodale.!1 boe.t up I() 39". Great patios with each house for \Valerside living. Call 646-7171 . • 1-Qj THEREAL 0of. ESTATER,S SPECIAL-- r-..01v you 1.:an buy her lhat d1·t'am house bcl·ause this is ii. 4 huge bedroon1s. 21 ~ Iu.x· urious bath~. Jots of extra room. Prestige model "·ith ankle deep carpets thruout, drapes lo maleh. lfuge separat<' ra n1ily ro1Jn1. Tradr in that olcl n1odel on this $49,500 special. Sellrr \\'ill consirlrr all ()ffers. Call Walker & Lee $25,500 Realtors 5,lJ.-O·lG.) 1 FABULOUS BUY 27:10 Harhor Blvd at Adains I quir1 11!1nusphPre in hu~ Open Eves. rcnr ya rd. A I u m i n um covercrl patio-~creened too overlooks 11;:::, lf'mon and orange tree~. 8 u i I t ; " Only 21 ~ blorks lo the hf'af'h. Near ne1v 3 bedroom. 2 bath home -011·ner moverl in, then transferred. E1·el")'One qualifies to assume J()1v in· teresl Joan. S257. per n1on1h include~ la.">e~ \vitb mini· mum dojvn. Bei;t buy in Capi$trano Beach -$3.1,950. Call 545-842-4 ((}pen Eves.) -VACA NT- COMMERCIAL South aide of Warner near Bolsa Chica corner, 112' x 192'. \'hit priced at $49,500. TWO LOTS ''R-4'' on Canyon & 8annIDG Good for family units. Own- er anxious. \l'i f e-sa vPr kitchen rli.~h11·a.~her. Ollner leaving: l<ing sizrrl bedrooms, Hur· fY! Brk., 962-8865. TARBELL *DUPLEX* Walk to bcaclt. Nearly new i>tudlo apu;. 2 BR .• 1 1~ ba. ~•ch, '11.·/pa1io. Pricf!d a t $•12,500. Call: 67J.366.1 G75-&886 Eves. associated BROKERS-REAL TORS %02S W Balboa 47l·l66) COLLEGE PARK . KIDS GONE! PETE BARRETT Bottles In the pool, what a men ! Tenant moved out &:· the owner l\\·ho live11 in Palm Spring~) U.)'I "get rid ()f that thing!·· Vacant it in need of TLC. c.cuid be a Beauty, Jlx it Ii: a.ve, •• $28.500 as is, "Call now 5'6-.m.1 awntr moving to Condo. REALTY Finl Ume olfered -beaut!· -- O THE REA!. '"\.. r:sT1\TF:RS lul • """"""'· 2 1"0!y w!lh '41-5200 Mrmai d1n1nr. I•ml1Y ..... r ~ ................ ~..,...,.,. -~~~~iiiio::::=::1 "'"'' d.n, > bAth• 1n prime Brand New. MESA BARGAIN location. 3 pAtiOa, tarae yard Californl C'-·' Ir: outdoor B.D.Q. Beat for a 189MC AT $29,500. fUIJ sJrice foilarp BETTER THAN A CONDOMINIUM Ne~port Harbor's most spectacular VIEW 100' above tlle bay. An ImmncuJate Brown- ell creation. 2 BR, pool. zoned for 3 units. See this before you buy a ~ondomlnlum !, the money at S42.500. by. a lake on quicl'" cul.de!u.c 4 bedroom •nil family room. Call 5G-St2• (Open £ves. 1 1treei. This 4 bedroom Owner will hf':Jp with ft. home b on the bonier of nanclllJ. Submit only 5~ Huntington Beach's· new down. Enjoy buUtir18. 1hab park and lake. See the hlltt, roof, J1rtplaoe. Xlnt loc&Uoft. "' . [Irvine I M-•b·l-,._",c...,.., I IOI lloftr Drm MZ•UH IM'_,,...., e,14·- lake and bOI'M!S out of )'OUr Call 540-1151 (Opti. tvee.) ,._window. ~•tTY on lh~ one it won't lult Phone SQ.2535. . •. · HERITAGE P.• Al TORS Don't IJWt .. up tlflt I "'IJ1t" It m dassff1ed ~ Silo.--.. I ~ • • • • • f -"'"" I~ I -'·~· 1~--~ I ~ [ _"' ... -....... I~ I -.. , .. w. Gener el Gene r1.I STEP S TO BEAC H 3 lllt 2·ilty, Reccotly de1.'0i,:, VIEW General $28,000 No Down lrviN RY Ownll'.r -3 Sr. 1-"un R.tn, Turtlt Rork - IJS.2M ne_ar lll'\v cJt·p. Open Ueeu1 I of Co.~~ J\lcsa Gott Co . l'Cl)$' Ill~(' pnlio $l3 90(} Ult'.t' C. L term:o:. Printt Cmila Jl.ltsa. location. SM.dtd by tall sh.al.le tret"s. rounlry al· 1nosphere in lht cl!y! 3 sipacww; bedroon1s, 2 baU1s, ,fif<' &aver huiltin kitchen lfospltality living ro:om \\1th invitin(: fireplace. Lovrly patio. Acet'ss for can1pcr. Ne\\' shag curpetlnl:. Near everyU1ing. 54()-1720. CAYWOOD REAL rY 'h'Olll lltis !in" _3 ~~Ill 2 • bu!h hon1c, blhn kilcb 1nclls * OCEAN VIEW * 8t'».u1. l hdrn1 ., 2 bAth ho111t w/loti'llal 1.liniai I: t&mlly rm•. Livlnc nn. htll ta,.. 1tonf! frplt'; nil~ patio •~•8; i9Qd nt".IJhborhood, f"tn:ie to sChoolt. Askln1 Stl,!lj(). * 548-1 290 * bll in rerrlg-rrC'ezcr. Alley LITILE RANCti /3 acre, zoned R-2 cutf' Ut· Hf' house, c.'Ountl'y st>lllng, old fashioned fro11 t 1>0rc;h, all !or $21,950. Tnke • look: Red Carpel R e altor s. :>46-8640. REST 1111\' S! L ·A 5 5 I F t>ntrnnce fol' boat or tratll"r 11'//,larki11g slab & doubll' gate entry. v.-te.rans, use · your r lig!blllly on this honll'. Hurry! $28,500. COLUJ&LL PROPERTIES, INC. REALTORS Newport .IGJ;j:J4!1 •t • OPEN HOUSE Sat. & Sun ., 11 -3 2422 S. Rene Or., S.A. I.Iii. of \\'arne1·, 1,\'. of Bris!oH :; IJ!t, 2 Bath, fi r,~p!att'. ~cp. dinin.!.: rn1., servif'<' arra i11- *NEAR !!EACH* ID MONTHS NEW 1 I [11.£.:t' l>t'rlroo111s • .l J).:1!hs. srp;u·1111• fanuJ~· J'OOTII + I dining rooni, · largr livin~ roon1 111111 f1rC'plaee. built-\ In:-. UP.L:J'f.ld~ crpts & drps, l c;JJ' gar, CALL ANYTIME 646-3928 or 673-7575 Lachenmyer Realtor $34,950 Sharp Mes• Verdel No Down GI 4 lx-droom~. :l baths, ramil~ · TllOm 11·ilh inspiring fil•t•-j plarf', 1l!'lu\.e built·in gour- n1rr k1!(·hrn. rli~h1rasJ11·r. Top quali1y sh a.g: «ai pcliri:,:. Pi«lur" p.-·rfl."t·t lan<l~(·flp111i;. :H0-1720, TARBELL 29;35 Harbor, Co~la MeSK HlR L \'I L Ol.SO \ "' REAlrQNJ ·TWO STORY 2 FirPplat·e.~. 1Juiltin~. Forrn- ~I rlining. ~·ami l)· roon1. i'\i!· 1·h<'n ealing lll'C'a. :1 bPd- 1001ns. Lar~e kl!. All trrn1 ~ including \'A no rknvn. ~·uu price S39.9j(). N1>ar UCI. Call 540-11~1\ iQ [){'ll {'\"C'S., ""~ HERITAGE •. REALTORS -- t\OP.TH Co:oita ~lr5a. l BP., 2 R.\. l.argr lh·ing ro11n1. Fenc'f'rl ~anl. Tioon1 lor bo;it or trailf'r. ~e1~· t•p1. no-11<i'i \'inyl till'. J•rplt·. NP.11· '11sh11·a.(hf'r. T 111 m ,. d i 11. 1,. TRIPLEX "'""'''"'" '"·""· w. Vt-ry nice .'\ BR. 2 BA 0\Vllf'!''!I fh ... n. 963-2187. l TARBELL .. 499-2800 • DUPLEX 'J\\·o 1-bdnn. apt11. \\'ilh cuelll studio. \Valk lo tit-a1'h I.: shopp10£. Zero vllt'IN') ! Priced fo srll at i«.000. .A'Ola1 ~ REAL ESTATE I ?!);,a Harbor. Co:;ta .\l('i;a unit + 2·2 BT{ l BA. L:ood -NEAT-&-VACANT- 1 I-~ -----location. 1 Spotlr.ss. s pacious 3 BR . .,n ROOM TO GRO.W I $51 500 qui et sti·et't. Hd11·d. Ors, · I 1111h this Grrate.sl Starter 1 ' • plush carp. 10'!0 0<i1~·n'. TARBELL ATTENTION DAD E D 6 4 2 Hon1f' nn a llu:.:r Lot. No1v ' 1 GEM Onr Brdroom, One BaUi. 1'~ 'Roy Mccardle Realtor __ ,. -PANICSVILLE This one ~as., .. Has already nioved a.ncl ,vifr ••• nr1v carpel1ng rh1·ou&hout is really grttin~ 11.nxiou:i1 .••• ntiv d~apt':'I BY~;:-p;:;n;-com~ Sup!'i pool! 2 Sty.-4 Br. frp\t. ~m . rm.. crpt~. dJ.-p$. M11ny extl'tl! 97S-Zl20. C11r Garag" "'th Alle-y Ac· 1810 Ne1t·port Bll'd., C.l\I. 1610 \\'.Coast 1-hvy .. N.B. f f'S)i for futurr Plannin~. SCl-7729 REALTORS _ ti42·4f .!3 Large 4 _ bedroom, :.J slruj' •• _ nf'1v rl ~sh1\·ashf'r 7.oncd for Anothrr Unit as WC'l!. \\'hat Possibititie.~! ! Just SlS.KJO. (:au 646-0J5.j, -NEWPORT -HEIGHTS COLUJ£LL PROPERTIES, INC. REALTORS BY THE BEAUTIFUL SEA Loc111Nl just minuies from I 1hr bl'aC'h in much desirrcl I Frarn:·iscan _Fountains By The Sra. This spa<'ious 2200 1 ~ rt. Is made for living. profess\onal landscaping and lwaulHully decoraled all fo r S47,9:l0. J1urry 11nd call 546-Zll:t $23,000! No do\\1n to G.I.'s. 3 bedroon1s. rann s t y I " kitchen, bright & cheerful, handy work: fcatw·es. Rich 11.!ood paneling, v.·all to "'all carpeting, drapes. Adorable Jlomes are selling fast! On scf! t hi~ one~ Ch11.rm1ni;:-J Br., 2 Bath, family dining. Bfoi;t ror a1lul1~. Easy yar<l upkC'ep. \\'ork shop for man or v.·onu1n. Gr1>11.I \'alu!' for the llrit:hts at 131.jOO. Thrre bf'rlrornn. two ba!hs. 37' s JS' he.1trd, fil1ertd JlOOI. All IPrn1s. '.\~t.JOO. 8·17-6010. The Real Estatc rs. 1-o·THEREAL '(\<. ESTATERS -" " . " ... " * 111. •• Vordo$"ll,5llO Great housr ror [atnily or adult Jivin,ll'.. 3 BR. & family rm .. w/!K"rH"ntd-in patio It boat y1I. Jmmed. po!l.!<~~­ BALBOA BAY PROP. * 642-7491 * -------- home "'ith formal rlining • • · llf'\V. pain/ , area. 11nd large family J'OOm •. , : ~pr1nkler:i; J.. l R Onl $29 ·9j() 11 •~ no1 a ne\V one bul al· 1 N•wport l•ach Comf'r + boat ya rd YR ' · RD POOL mo.~t. Jusl in111gi11r all th is . Sh1'rp :l bedroom. PA K, YA , $' in 11 4 bdl'm., 2~~ ba. IO\\'Tl-HARBOR V1f"\Y llo1nPs.-5 PARK VIEW '.! balh(,. rlf'n. I an<l 1 i,'Tf'a! 3 brdiin, 1 • hou~f" v.:i lhin ~·alking di~-bdrm'!, h~ '?m roonl &. di'n. Ow /B k hath homt': 1·an 1\11 bl" y'Ou111 tarn·~ of i;ekools !llho in Unu~ual Dt.CORATOR IN· ~70.f: er rn1· only $21,900. llurry on i1nrl ,.huiThes .pr.il'e:_p .~ ·r ERIOR plu11 all 'BUILDER __ _ _ I I.his Ofl('! UIJ 500 1 , 11 f' t:XTRAS: Charming us"d .\1ESA Vtrck Tri-level. 4 br-Call 54G-8~ii"1 land. i\l~n~mu~ do:~: pa~-brick . patio l lirr ring .l b.11 -2-frpl c -Co1np!ete SHERWeeo REAL TY 1 nd .1. P S 11 , 1v/c1ua1nt :.:arden brraklalit 'kl t Cut •·v 111 ·11 1 "your9-·•· 5 k 112 = B ~ spnn · r.r ~)'~em . s om 1&964 81'00!,hurst, r . . . 1 2 bl ·'·-f ti II noo . ..JW. Y ...,,vner . • d !:: . I JU!'i ()(_ ..... !'001 lf! 10 . ho ,,.. L'"'6 i·rpt rapt"s. '"·im poo . -SPA-Ci0US_+_POOL · · \Vh t bout ·r D d• J..or appt. I> ne .... ~ . "'"" """· "". '00 . ~Oill5". • • I ••. -BAYF-RO-NT, PIER-Architecturally designed tn ;,..iG-3986. I I "d i eel h·11 • ---givP you I Ill ~·1 e-oJ)f"n i ' .i\JESA Del !\Jar. 4 lge. BR. 2 rcelin_g, an t'XCC. enl!'rtain-; .. _.: r I BA. family I'm .. ISCO sq. 11 .. 1nrnl hon1e -+ a lrg ram rm palio 1\·/ro1•er, sprinklen & pool for ramily fun . J Bfl fron1 !: back. ~v rrp!. up. 1 d11: 2'4 811, Call no\v ' " 000 0 r::A" """~ · Univ. P1tl'I; Cf'nlPr. Irvine .iu, 11·neJ.', ,,.,.,..""""' pr1n. _ .~1vi m 1111t·r. _on~.v._ ------KASABIAN R.E. CAii Anyti1ne. 811-0820 i\.fF.~A Vf'rde -3 Br -:! Ba 4: l'a111. Near park. 1chls. ~hopp ing. N ewl y redecorated k shag ctplde. 12 x 24 aluminum rm ofl hc.k -Playhouse in back yRrd. By O\~'ner. ~34:il Wayne FOng 847·fl604 1 AsANooNt-::o-. -01nTv-1:: FREEWAY ORIENTED CHEAP -011•n1>r 11•an!s1 out! Brina: painl & broon1. low, Low Price <'lean up and rent out for Come SCI> thi! 4 BR.. 21Ai xtra month ly income. As· hath, 2200 sq. ft. I0\\1lhou!!', 1umable loan SISJ . pl!r for only S.12,500. 01'.'tler i1 BY 0 \\'flll'_f • Lovely l BR. month. a.nxiou.,, ?.take offu, fpl .• cor lot. rm for OOal, I RolMrts & Co 962-5511 ~:;_ = Portol• 0r. -Low;Low Down t'harming 5 BR bf!a1·h honte on sandy 1hore. ]:.:).1·iting harbor actiori choice loca le. 2::01 Baysitl" Dr. Sl68,000 By Appointment Te-rl liu~H fl75..-A."'lll0 ---------· BA \.'Sl~ORES. Bay \'iew. lmpeccablt cond. l BR. 3 ba. den, fpl. S93,500 Own. ""-9111' JlARBO}t' Vll..'W HOMF;:S 4 Br .. Jo"R. DR. Palermo on corner. Lush extras. Owner. 64H2'9. DAILY '1LOT -.. Now,..rt lleoch '-"'"rclal ;;.;.....:...--,,......-,.,-Property 151 IACK IAY _..F1-,,-t"'r""1m_o_ot1=.-, ... ~~1 3-BDRM. Cout Hwy, Coron& <kl Mat CONDOMINIUMS :; Commercial 1; duplt~ Bu1ldt1~ t Io• e o u 1 . In Si!t:'i,000 O\\'C •ro@T ~;,~-. beau"ful Newport flivita•a, 3 UltlSlf!r slit"llRs, (Jijj() ~. E. 17th sr., Cett• M••• fl.l 2\; t>I .• t1001' to ceiling 1'op locatitln. low dom1 ' llrepla(.~. \1:-'v 11ha: ('lltP<'I .11.:v.• s pe:irlable return thruoul, cuatonl clr11.pcll k R"alonomie:i. flk1'. ft"f5.6'lOll rli!lhi\•Uhft'. llur'l'yt Ju>1t 4 _,.....----- .left. YOU O\VN ·t II f: Ouplexe1/Unit1 I.ANO! $26.2.iO Y.P. 4 bdrn1. s•I• l ft 1n('l(l"I." fJ'Ol:n S2S.600 lO~i !-'------0--.,.,.,-: dn. 6111 ~(, w . Taki'. lrvinio to 2-' pl1:xN, C .. \t. SlOl,OM Sa nta l~bll'.I A\·t . roll01\' ltrm.!. Gt'tlU $14.~ yr. 011' i lgiu lo n1oU"I Ot 1.:all R-~-:-·~ l:M'. Tobt11 . Jtlcy ~Air~ Ofli<."t ~()-.ilfi. A·lll""l.111. • ~-TER·R-IF1"' HY -°'"""·:-C•po -RWi. l ,_., s.;o,000 ~r tradt fo r Jiw. eaD TOWNHOUSES! """"'" --..____ -- \V,. hll\'" "'o lino·lilflt Park lncom• f'r._.rtv '" l.ido humMt lot Ilk. A :! · i.• ,,4., U I btlh'OOnl ruU. Ill • \'f'l'Y LOO•lftCJ ft ti li/lllC"iou~ ~ be4ftlCID with a BJo:.\UTIFlll. bonu8 rocun . Yo11 JthOUld SN' ~1~;sA oto;L ~IAR fhl" rooJ 1inrl 11 f'll kf'PI ~Ill'· l')1·u1,. of 01\'nf_J'lihir> 1'C}lld1tltin rt.-" 1'1'4'as, J!'ron1 $1.ti,!X)O, _ t.:Xtr• l•r&1. Apls. 1-&J'&• l "all +i7:t--i225. 1·c11·1ir•r lot -An1n.1•J in- COLWELL PROPERTIES, INC. REALTORS , JUST LISTED * I r.1'Y'11l l•'a1n!iy P11rk 1IONTlll.Y SPACr. Jtt :NT,._L •'fllll" 17.0:1.0. \\'.111 ""r:h1.n1• U/1 th II lltlil~. $65,:,00, - Sli,'il,11\, D<h\'n. 1'1/f: REAT. I :.~ r:•ri-;ns INVt-;~!\olJr.N1' I)!\'. :..tU-1600, {:O)THE REA!, '0£.ES'.fATl:HS ''IZ THI-l<I :.,i I . ' '" " •·'I ',' : ' FROl\1 S69.~llT! -·---- A gC"t&l family t'.On1n1unlty L.t1 f•r S•fl 11' 11·i1h r.omfo11 ~ luxury ~nr r..-:: lh!, ~ood rt1ntaJ &rfla, f"VC't'YQM. ILIC·1~ed 1n 1111n. F./8idf', Cll. Sl!,500. 112 .. a11L ·or· ·Anabtim op ne1v C1:cll Pl ., c .11.1. r'43-8All"- Rivrl'!1de Fwy. Take Grern -------.-- R ivrr off.ramp adjaeeat .\0 Mountain, DtMrt, Gree-n River Golf Coe-. R•sert 174 4901 Grr.rn Rfveiibr. 2 Loi . ,1 dNI •",'"" Corona **' 7141'1117-m• • •. u c u . ..., ._, ---------Mooru·1d1~ c1b1n S1 i,7~ 12xiJ J\1a1•flo\\'l"r Double Ex· 1 .. ke1id,. ctbin 135,11(1) pando-2BR. all exlra~. 1rlull Ca ll 166-4041. .,r wri~; park. Jo"oun!:i io v II I I • ,Y . Spt"tK.~1· l!e1tl E!lllf .... r. o . 96X-1~/S4.2-J186. Ro.'1: ~. !Jir Bear Lake. EXCf<;P'rIONALLY Nirt 1 BR (_"aJi f. ------------1>;4(]_ $l ,G.10-Ttrn1~. Rl:.'TIHt:;\TEN1" clilhln H ar '"all 64:>-4:-..30 Lake Ornvlllt . l . .\. -Jlh ~i4X32.-2-8P.~2 BA, lnrlry J1trl!'1n1 $lt500. Bax 106 nn, vie1V lot, S7J. mo. Adi!.,. OrovilJt- W"~tm., Sll,900. 839-1486. Rt•I E--,-tet-o7W.antN 114 · --CONTEMP0.--1---------\\' ANTED •partm~ llou.<JN, LAGUNA HILLS Orang• co. to ,,, so unJt-• Pl'C!sti&e aduJt communily not mor" ttia.n 12 yrs. nld. a<ljat:ent to U isure \Vorld. Quick acliml! !Jlrdy 2!:1; B!'aut surroundings, all lux· 3711-S~ill f"xt. 3.16.' day ei· ury appointmftlfs .. Thera- peutic pool, 11a11nu. r;yrn. ~ billi~rd tables. P.J UC lI MllRF:!· Sc.-e Int "Awartl • winnin g" fu rnished rnodel homes ON SALE 11-llS WEEK. m3900 or 8?.0-1900 .__ .... _ .... _._·:_··_·-~I~ 11il.e . -·----. , I OR :\lor" L<>ti'l Wa~M By Re11ponsibl'. Builde.r-Prtric-~ Only. 833-Jl48. -----· . 8uslnM1 ~unity llj] -• pla)lhouse. Lu 5 h IO\Y maintf'nanee landseaping. Belbo• Ptninsul• * ELEGANT BA Yi'""RONT * Rrfurbi!thed 1971. Panor11mic view. New pier. 8 BR. 5 Ba. Courtyard entry. Sl9:">.000 10"; Oo1\·n. By owner . College Prk finest. ~ Br .. 3 Ba. 1925 FL, King sz. mstr J\!inilnum clo1v11 move11 you in1o thi!! tar~e family 1·m TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOl -------·-·I WA NT E ~Inveirtor with Acrt•te. fer ••It 150 capital for )'OUT!&' t:oup~ tn 1------------buy antique&. \Ve know how IO ACRES, New ~tl!xit.-o. nr, 1: v.·M-rt ro buy • .\11ke l- na.tionaJ Comt. $61 .25 PER Bel~)'. S• jiteve ililltu. 4n ~CRE.~ l\lo. 9G.1-004!:°~ t.:. 19111 A1't!., C.~t. 5 6 7 8 SAYE ~ASH! 962-5566. lf!i;l:Jj!_I • Spanish Adobe • . $22,950. Solid built 3 bedropm, double car ga rage, close to tow n & r ity park. Priced right. Ph: 612-1771. :r.tanhsl RPalty fiT.,....600 Beyshores 3 BR., 2 Ba., din rm. cu11t. crpl/shutters k drp~. Elec kit lo\V i.se. hQJ fl. 67:)...()8"1Q, Capistrano Be•ch 0?-;E Yenr old 3 Bil. 2 BA, high ceilings. ocr11n l'iew. Take over loan. 968-71t'i. ~~--------'Coll-Pork * OPEN SUN. 1-5 * bl'. 5-16-8.176 ----------EASTSIDE by o"''l'W'1'. 3 Br- 2BA·Fam Rn1. Crptl!-drapes -191 Bury St. 64&-ll74. East Bluft BLUFFS "E" . Largest. greenbf!lt, l family ; IOI\' leasehold, feet cond. $5.IJ,950. ~-~~ plu!r Per- [.;..,, ': : )' .&.uf' . · c' rea lt y .,,, 2414 Andover Pl. .._ i ~E~S!'!!T~A~T!'!!E""'!S~IZ:.'lE~L":::O~T~l spc>ll"• 'BR. 2 baths. La•· living nn.. family nn .. 12,cm S.F. klf At end or cul· 11erttnl'tl lanai. On beaul, dt·s&C ~lrttU $19,SCIO. Al.a lnd1'CP(I t'O!'T'M!T' lot. Walk to 70' x 135· Comer only 121,500 alt Rehoal11, $30,950, 2-414 Villfa df'I Oro N~wpor1 ~ach 644-1133 ANYTL'lE *GRANDEURT Submit on term!'! 648-7171. N•wport Be•ch Rt•lty One or the TM!Jl eltgant con- do'11. In The Bluffs. Luxur- kMJ11 appolntm1:nt!r. s:lw en- chued trplc., Unttd "·in· dows. t"lee. 113ra,g~ door OJ>('ntr. On m1jot ireenbC'll lol'ith gt1rgrous •W'lk?tS. MORGAN REAL TY MESA-VERDE l n,..(froom 2 hath. tree lined Cul-de-Sac 11p top oondiUon thruout. >~pr ge;lt-by O\\•ner. $29,000. 10% down. 54&-1224. ' • w b f t e Deph&nts" t1t>t:r- runnlnc ,.., -? Turn them .... •'CASIJ" -..i1 tll<no 0... DaOy P l lot Cwln.d. l12-:i67$. 2627 Nt>Wport Blv. 675-1&12 Coron• del M•r VACANT a READY • Sharp 2 Bdnn homr • Ntw p11.lnl In i . out * New plu11b shag crp1 • Ne.t draperte1 • * Room rot 1.nofh(':r unit '73-"42 '7$-645' Fount1in vantY 16,!itXJ. f\JO """" GREEN Brook Home. r.v •• *FULLER REAL TY* Bdrm., 2 Ba., tamlly and M6-0814 ............ Anytime dlninr room. Slnlk tfory. By owner. 968-(t)I(.- FOR ACTION. • • • er " 3 ba. e .. ..., poo1. CALL 642-5678 J Frpk In Multt BIL M2.000. !li3-:138a alt ' pm. »ome-.. 1 B<lnns, 2 baths. Jo~uu "SINCE 1!M6'' ~tiC'c ~ly s:;s,500. Call now. l tl \Vc~ern Bank Bld1. 11 1t'On t 111~1 . UniveNity Pan, JrviM REA~71~~1:1~5fAIR Doy• 552-7000 Nlghtl WANT AD -$ Instant Cash $ for your ~ulty. \Ve pay cost!. 24 hr. 1erV. 847·850'1 · U.S. AFFILIATED Brokers Realty REPOSSESSIONS For in fOrmation •'*location of thc!lf! F11A Ii: VA homes . c.'Onl11:rl - KASABIAN Real Esta te 147-H04 -:sso-:-oow N 2 &Inn, '1 1~ bath Con6o, lttthly painted. C:trpeOI, dnpe1. wathl!'r, d r y" r , l't'frlg. Slll,450. C111! 963--4441, CREST REALTY 0·1voJi cE DESPER.A TE 0 \\7N ER -'4 Bedrm. 4 B&th~. lam rm vv/ fpl, Imm) din, likt "'w. A8' aumr VA 1'Wl. Qul<."k Po$S .. nr bch. U.S. AFFILIATED Broken Rra\ty A.sro?.lE nrA LOAN I TOPlA I I I' I I'. • CAPIH I I 1: I l • 6 UNSCIAM!l£ lfllUl'TO I GCT ANSW[t l~~ ACRES An,e".lope Va.lley, i:EAOlNG._f>antyhoK-~Corp~. orily $250. down. 0v.'l'll!t now taldn& 1pplic1tioM Jot• must sell. s.16-.1.086. qualified di.tr\butort ft>r Orana:e Co. Com p '"" y train in& with r. ti t ... t 1 c rttum:.!_TI.4) 919-8612. I . * LJQUOR Llcentt, Orarfe Co. oU 11aJe. ''C..._ •• 537·-t ilO 01• 499---. NEED CASH 1 $1,000, Or up to $3.000, 11G,OOO ·alld ft'Mft. Stt Avco Thrift lor a RMI EAtale Loan. Upon •~aJ. Wll' l.M .monty however fOY like. AJ!O l !ok a bout..-m- ucured p('rt0nal )Mnr. AVOO TIIRll"T. 6ll> port Ctr. Or • Suite Newport !kacll, Ph. MONEY avail tor lit 6 loam alJO pufChU& Maniin ~1d:'lure Real Ewtalt. 10\!J S:. Hill IC.1 Oceanside, daya 1'22-S32i, fill'_l,. 491-00t. \VT'" Buy 2nd Tnut 1Jee6I 'nit 1™1n C... ~aJtan 14t CUI 610 "' .......... a.-Jlr, &litool<l Nftpcst-11 CLASSIFIED ADS FOil ACTION. • 1 4 BR <ODdo, <'J)lr. drpot, rttrl(. SmaH down. Paymu leiis than ~ftl. Bier: Eve, S0.511 or96&-"41fl. SCltAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION IOO CALL 642-1671 , • > I • ' '' ' • :.:'.'.:'.' 10' ·~ r.~[-'""""~· .. ··~ l'.• i '~!._~·~·~·-·~1 .... ~~""~l~"~'~"~l=~I r~.~; '--·-··_·_1""_"1_· 1_ .. _._~_·_ [9 ][ L--·-·_"'_''_' _ _,]~: [ -. -I••••••••• 411 lndu1trii1I Rent•I '50 -. H DAllY '1lOT fhursdq, M11 IS, 19n I~ 360 1.:.A.;.:P;.;t·.;U.;....nfu_rn_. ___ 3'5;...;..;.;A.::.pt.;.._U;:.n.:.IU.;..:.m;.;. __ _:..us.:.:. Apt. Unfum. US Apf. Unlurn. US GuHt Hom• COSTA MESA I *PRIVATE ROOM* Gen•r• G-r•I Coat• Me•• N•wport B•ach Good 1440 I< 28PoO Sq ti. -----------1::;:.:.;::;:.;_...:..-----fnr ambul•tory person, .JQ5 Apts. Furn. ,,.--------Cost• Mes• Gener•I 1st TD Loans 6'14 % INTEREST 2nd TD Loans e COZY Cotta'-" -1 Br, cpt /drps, Npt Hchtt, sun. ALA Ront•I• • '4S.39DO e CLEAN & Qu1e1 -I Br. sml pet ok. AU utit inc. Sl.'Th. ALA R•ntols • '4S.3900 . X Bold New Concept I HIOOliN VILLAGE APTS. Hom•Llke Living F•milles W1lc omel FURNITURE RENTAL Uiowest ratH Orana:e C.O. "WE BUY' TD'S" Sattler Mtg. Co. a..EA.'1 Bachelor h o u •" • * P..fonth to MonU\ 642-2171 .546-MlJ trp l <"., pr 1v , )'•rd , •1007'Purc.hut0p~on Strvtna: Harbor area n yrs. 11tovt./retrig. S 1 0 :i I mo, * Wide Se:lection- j ~~. Siyl•-O>IM---·----·----- 1 2 BR "''r•r . S140. fncd yrt1 * ic Hour Delivery -1..--][11!1 ) ••Ip•"•· W\i' pd . 2110 1 ;Ii PlactntJ• Ave iB). Call blwn J"!L~ -------· 1 A S, ~1&4120. I ~ -~~ HouNs Furnished 300 3 BR Eutlide. MY. carpc11, I paint. f!'nced yard. No P"'I~ 511 w 19th CM 5UJ-MS1 G1ner1I I ED RI Or..E R F.: A LT Y 2'156 N. t>.f•.in SA S.C7.ro14 FREE Rl!NTAL BOOK 'ros B•lbo• lsl•nd l 'w IC"JOktd at the hoolc aJ'ld there. are ffl!.veraJ rood homes tor r@nl lnr 11p- proximately S200 per month. Stop by and bro\\'M! thru it. You mifht tind Wh!l l YoU'rt' i:iok:lng !or. Walker & Lee Realtors 2190 Harbor Blvd at Adam• Cotta Mela, Ca.llf. Coron• del Mir S2lO - 2 Br, iat. apt, 1 blk ocean, Deck, Yrly ..• $250 -2 Br, 2 ba hat. Lovely patio, iU. 1 blk bc:h • , • $fiOO -2 Br h1!'. 1"1 bl.k ocean. Sips 6. Avail J uly .. , NU-VIEW RENTALS 673-fOJCI or 494.3243 L11un1 811ch UM -l Br dplx w-trplt'. NiCf'l.Y turn, rar. yll. view •• , SXIO -Channutf oouaae in earden. Pvt pat, yd, aml pttOK ... Sl.35 -La!' 2 Br 'Pl w-Bal - cony, x!nl vlew. Walk bch •. ' NU-VIEW RENTALS 673-4030 or 494-3248 2 & 3 BR $150 J>@rm.· e1t11blild·1al11rled adult1, no pet/child, ref. 494-8170. • BACHELOR APT. • 2 BR, dbl i&rll.i:e . cl!Udren Yl"9rly. t175, 11)('1. uhl. OK. 1185 mo. leau. <All Wtntnn ReAI Estat1 1i1.>-lt1l Agent MZ..1 n1. 81lbo1 Ptnlnsul• Palludes 2 BR, S130. Fncd. e S25 WK le UP-On (k'an e brinr kids~ Cool Breeze1. U>vf'ly Barh. t Br .• Rnoms Rent-A-Houte 979-1430 , f.faid l!tvicr-Pnol-Ut1J Prl . Fount1tn V•Oev I • Call 67>-R740 • 4 BDRM .. 2~ BA, all ~er Cost• Mes• kitchen, d1hwshr. 1 blk I _W __ E __ E_K_L'"'Y"'·"'M-:-O=N°'T'°H"L-:Y-:-- schl1. Wtr pa id. $26.5. mt1. Executive Sult•• 962-m4• 2080 Newport Blvd. Huntington 8e1ch Cost• Mes• *WE h.ave a larle selection of 3 and f bedmom home1 that can be mm·ed lnlo almost immediately on our Rent ·Optlon pl11n . SHERWOOD RE ALT Y, 54il-SSS5 1 BR. newly d!'c. Condo . Stv/retria .. wch/dr y .. c:lbhse:/pool. Sl.56/mo yr'1 lse. 19847 P iccad1ll)' HB, nr. Brookhursl & A d • m 1 • 536-1126 alt S prn, 4 Br. 2 Ba , F!nced • Month· month. 1313. 2081 Hunte.r Lane. 962-5142 LARGE 4 BR .. bltns, palin. atrium, 11'alk lo beach. Avail. 6115. ll8c 962-5671. '42-2611 STUDIOS & I BR'S e F'RE'E Linens e FREE Utilities • full Kitchen • Healed Ponl e....,Wundry racillt.11!1 "'9 &; mairl serv avail • Phone Service WEEKLY -MO'"'N""'TH=L Y" SUNNY ACRES 2376 Newport Blvd ~-975.5 Low Ratti STIJOTOS & l BR'S. ROOMS • Fret' Linem & UliJ. • Phone Serv-Hrrl Pool • 1V & Maid Serv A1111tl e Ch1lrlrf'n £. pel 1rctinn El Puerto Mesa 1 BR's-$130 UP Furnished Apt• All Utilities Paid Pool .&. Recr!allon 2 llED~OOM-2 BATH From $159 Carpet> · Drapes • Alr Co nd ition ed • Enclos· ed patios · Heated Pool • Forced A1r Heat • Carport & Storage. 2SOO South S•lt1, S•nt• An• 546-1525 tenter 2 ))lks W. of Bri.!ltol. otr Warner on Linda \Vay, so uth to \V. Central) VILLA MARSEILLES SPACIOUS 1 & 2 BEDROOM APT. Furnish.cl & Unfurnished Adult Living Dishwasher color coordinated appliances • Plush shag.carpet· mirrored wardrobe door!-- indirect Jigbting in kitchen • breakfast bar • huge priv ate fen ced patio • plush landsc ap.. inl? • brick Bar-be-Que!'i • large heated pools & lanai. Air conditionina. 3101 So. Bri1tol St., S•nt• An• 557·1200 COLDWELL , BANKER & CO. MANAGING AGENT -- Apts. Furn. 360 1 Apt. Unfurn. Huntington 8e•ch Costa Mes• La OU I NTA HERMOSA I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiii I Spanish Country Estate Liv- lng & Spacious Apt11. T!r- raced pool; sunken ga1 BBQ. Unbelievabl! Living - Only 1 BR . FURN. $17S ALL UTILITIES PAID 14 blks S. of S~n Diego F'rwy on Beach, 1 l'llk \\1• en Holt to 16211 Puksid!" U.ne.) f71 4) 847·5441 HARBOR GREENS Furnished & Unfurnl1hed From $120 to $21l mo B•chelors • 1 Bdrms 2 Bdrms e 3 Bdrmt J V2 or 2 Full B1th1 to.faster 1>iu bedrooms \\'/ $145 . $165 hii;h beam ceilint:s. large Jiving room \I' KU or Ba.chelor & 1 BR. patios, "'ood burning fir ,.plare. trplc't , priv. garag e s · ConveniPnt laundry area Divided b&th &. lnt11 ol nff kitch~n. Enc.los~ pa- cl0Sf't11. Rec hAll , pnn\ k 11011. 2 swlmmin1 pools, pool tables, s11una b11 th1. saµn11 , ret'r,.ation faclli- SP.e tor YoUrsri!' 17301 t ies. Security guard. Kttlson Ln. (1 blk W. of I Mod I 0 'tll 9 B!ach, l blk N. nl Slater). e 1 pan pm. R42-7M8 2700 P•terson W•v, CM 1 BR, Cnnd<>-Pool , 2 CA.r gar .. nr beh.. yr/summer. 8151 Pa .... 1uckf't . j21.11 445--60S.'l. N1wport Beach nr Harbor Blvd & Ad•m1 546-5025 " food, •1·ce cheerful &Urround· CABINf.T i\IAKF.RS-OELUXE BRAND NEW .. l"IBERGl,ASS APARTMENTS ALL. UT ILITIE~ PAID ingi;~ C'n tl 54~.475.~ * ~r. ""'P' F'~y & S.D. frwy Air Cond . f'rplc'1 · 3 Swim · rumls~rt Avll llab!e -~="'-----:-2!l.ll c..;race Ln. .mtna Pool8 • Health Spa • t'lO-O!I 151 ~10 .• ftpnt. lln * PRIVA'!'E R~~I , ~~~ i ."1. nf Rak,.r, F.:. ol fa1rvl,.w Tennis Cr11 • Game II h brina ELOE~RL\ LAO). J,'\ n, ·. , 1 :-,111 Rrprl'~tn!at!ve there Billiard Room.QOM f;81~;5 J:~~t, w f'n )'f)U H0:\1f~ Of A.'l' RN · 9 nin-12 noon. lF~~~R SJ&.5 20102 Bir~·h ST (nr t) C. 54&--0977., ~714) 9i!l-44~4 nr '79·471 1 'l: .11 irpart, S. of P.11l 1u.de1 RrlJ. Summer Rent1ls ~20 NF.\V DE LUXE 1'<1-1 Units ..... , MEDITERRAN EAN Priv. pann, bllli11rrl rm., BAY VlE\V 2 hedroom, ph. )>O\\f'r, 1111 f\tonrovia VILLAGE jacuzzi , Nr. UC Irvine, !ttp.'I 4 <..'<lmpletely lurn\111h· ~.,·.114.l 11:16--9™ evl'I. f\1£T. ~:179·~11119 f'l1. Av1ul June tn &>pt . li~iO R;nt..-11 W•nted '60 2400 Harbor Blvtl., C.M. (n4i ss1.so20 RENTAL Of F'ICE OPEN .10 Af.1 TO 6 P'.\f WESTCLIFF pr mnnth. Adults only . CAPRI i1.1?Pnl. 6iS.-4!l:tO. LOOKING FOR 1700 \\'p11 cl1 t1 Dr. RP~pnn.<1 1bll' l'\PrUUvf' Jami· Adull Llvlna-No pt\JI 7204 \\I. OCF.Al\'F'RONT. l.ric. h k1;I • lS.14-9 with p1>t1. New V illi Pedro Deluxe I & 2 Br. Pool. 1 br. Jul~ Sl,",O \lk. Aug:. 1175 ~~f'rl nire 4 BR with pool -" Families Welcome \\'k 644-:>307 I l Carport. Furni!ure 11vaL!. · · · hor!W! factlll1f'11 or yr. 2 Br .. 2 (!J.11 Ba, ahq c.rpl / ~2.6114 TAKING rf'.'lf'tv11.t in na, 1 RR . ]rn~<'. Araunrl S500 mn. Call drps, patio, beam cell., l llI·I----------n))f' block In Mach. 4l st & London 11 t ~?1:\1 980-ll!!Wl. Ap;~;n. or Unfurn. 370 Ballx.•s. &l~7j0! A~1 ·ll. l!OusE IPa.w "'AnlM in Cr!M aae1. Frnm Stl!S. Cost• Mes• 2332 Elden Ave., C.1\1. 541!-R224 !\IOVI" In ii.Uowance. th is ad.1---------1-Summer Renta s Pork-Llko Surrounding PALM MESA APTS. QUIET • DELUXE 1, 2 &: l BR APTS MJ NlITES TO NPT. BCH. Prv. palios * Hid Pools FURN. OR UNFURN. Unbelievably 111.rge apts., Nr llhor'g * Adults Only huge pool, Jar.:izzi eler.I bit- Martinique Apts. Jnii, ah11g crprs. drps, sa.una 1m Santa Ana Ave .. C.f\I. elc. Adults, no pets. r. Apt 113 646-5542 SINGLES .... , From $135 2 BR. clean-M J)l"IA-tttnazer l BEDRi\f. ..... From Sl>lO 11 2 BEDRM .••• , From $160 ok. $J4j, l "'· \\'il!!On. \'ou're r ight, they're under-~s--4407 . priced! 1561 Me:sa Or. Dana Point (5 blks from Ne1vport Blvd.) --------546-9860 XTRA 18.rie, luxuriou5 2 BR. --~===c=-co--- 2 BA, bltn11, cpts/drps, S210. e SPACIOUS e mo. 496-5988. "'ell·Ot'signerl Apts. l l 2 BR. 11·/Terr11cf'S, Huntington Beach From $140 • $175/mo. ON BEACH! Sh11.g C'pts, drps. s.aunas, pool, jacuzii. encl. gar. Q .• et Adult living MERRIMAC WOODS ~ .-lerrimae Way, CM 3 BR horn!', Capo Ri:h hi1:h 11rP11, 3·4 hrirm unfurn. Pali5adl"ll , turn. hl>11.ul ffK'd I 1 r fron1 6 15 72. Appr.,x . )rt S.ll'i + ulil , 496-6.l4·!· _ S.1~. Lindqu1s!1 ( 213 I Rent•ls to Share 430 i..:'::'1:..-="'c:''c.' --~~-­ TO rent or !Sf'. :1 Br 2 t111. un- YOU!IJG lady age ~ .... twauty rurn honll" in N.8 . or C.l\!. oj>l'.'r. tra10f'f', Yl!Snf'~ 10 ~ sharl' room \\'ilh kit\h pri v'~ ll rf'a. 64 · or 1rork for r()Onl &. hoarrl. Costa ,'vff"Sll. 54.>-273.l a~k for r JI ., 1 Carol. .-.nnourn:ements Sl-IARE 3 Br. homio. H.B. I ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.:;;; £\'entth1n~ indudPrl. :\ 511 yrs/;;v,.r. ~s1 aft 5 pm Announcements 500 I. all day "·knds. LADY \\'ill !!hare 2 BR apl ~U MJ\1ER CAMP ~y11 & D Pt S90 m'o couple Girl~ 7-ll Oul5tanding pro-O~ahtofo~e 3 Pm, 496.:1460. gram-Top nolc.h 1 t • f I . . }{PllSOnllble rate• -FREE 2 BR. 2 be. C<l'.\1, pool , !PD-Br oi·hur !', CA1'1P ni.~. carport. ulil. bdrm ph CAYUCOS, Cayucoa, CaJll. p111rl . S\00. 644-7514. !l:w.~.o. Garages for Rent 435 1--------- \VANTED: G&ragf' 10 ~n1 l"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~[j]~ f?r s!~ragf', dhl or 1ingle I ;~sof\lls , ... El'f'S, :.40--0466. . . • FURN. & UNFURN. 2 BR. From $265 ADULTS ONLY WANTED: GaragP 10 rPnl. 1 & 2 BR Furn or Unfurn. N.B.-C.:-01 , ar.Pa. Call Davt'. Personals 530 Furniture Ava!lable Ch1lrlren'1 sttliQn. Pool. I;_::.;..;;;:..;...:.. _____ _ 5-6 pm. 557-3647. C a r p ets-dral>@s-tlish\l·asher $140 Up. El.i'f GARDENS PROBLEl\1 Pregnancy, Con- heated pool-saunas-tennis APTS. tn E. 22nd SI., C.M.1 ~0ff--ic;;;•;.R;;;e.,n;;t;;;•.,l ;;;;;;;;;;:;;41;;0; I /idflnt, .<1ym1>11lhetic t>tt1an- r ec room-ocean v iews 642-3645. c-v f'Ouseli ni. Abortion I patio5-ample parkin1 Huntingtol" Biach MEDICAL OFFICE Ar1opt ion ref. APCARE. Security Guards. Mesa. Verde Area ll4.2-44:lli. 'HUNTINGTON NEW SANDPIPER ooo Sq . r1.: c'"'"" ,.u;,, PACIFIC Early bird l!l>@Cial&-1 BR Ample Parking Jrom $1 25, 2 BR from s1 ;,a 3 Examinin11: mornll i\LCOllOLIC~ ,.\J'lonymotL"I. Phnne [142-i'.?17 or ¥.Tile P. 0 . Rox 122:1, COll!ll. Mf'llll. 7ll OCEAN AVE., H.B. }'urn/Unfurn, cool color ID-Lab area. Pril'ale office (TI4) 536-1487 !Priors. poo!, Jacuzzi, more. & reception a rPa * ~1.:LLY LICENSf:D * Newport Bt1ch SJ2S -Vt-ry Jre 3 Br Penin Pt. Redec & nice ... Ocean Breez~s -2 Br. SlM. 3 BR. $185. Fncd. & Val"ant. Rent-A-Hous• 97f..14.10 3 BR CONDO. 11n BA., pools , patio, dbl g111r. trpl. nr ocean. 962~86 aft 5 pm. 1959 Map!!' Ave., C.f.f. Also g11r1t1tf'11 fnr rl!nl BA YFRONT REJ\'T AL 301 Edgf'water, Cflrner Coro- nado. Furn. 3 BR. 2 bath.<1, IUeSti.BJllf 20 '"'<'· P nv . .,""' Avon. Ofc open 10 am-6 pm Dally 80BI Holla nd Drive, HUD-l8c Per square loot RPno\l·nm Hindu ~piri ruaJ iat. A PRECIOUS FEW WILLIAM \VALTERS CO. tingmn Beach. 847_9j9.'i. ~p1 r1lual Re1rl1ng11 g11·•n rla1ly. JO A:\t-ID P~. Advict SEA AIR APTS -$115 HUf'l'TTNGTON G11rden11 •ii·en on all mattrr1. I can $325 -1 & Iott • form dm rm, trplc, 2 decks, boat slip ... .f BR c.onrlo-c.pt-dr p - wshr/dl'j'. trli. R/0, UIJ.I pd. Sli'.I. 5-IA-1405/537-538-4 l BDR.'f, crpts. drp1, bltns, sprinklers, fl"nc~. S260. aVAil 6/1. [..t;p/opt. 993-2392 Spark1111g new 11dult apr~ 1 July lsL ~1r. RohinYln ~ can !'njoy FairwAy Villa liv-I c ing .... onP nf lhnM! small Lrg. 2 BR. Crpts, drp1. bl!ns. Aptl!. Hell 111 Bosa h1c11. he lp you. 1 blk N. ol Adams olf Beach M6-JJ2J. Comparf' • Sf'r 312 :-;, F.I Cami"<! Rf'lll ,.1rg11nt romplf'Xf'~. kno"'n Blvd. 729 NQ. 6 Utica. 1vhat you re: missing, Fr. s,,11 Cll!mf'nle fQr unmalrhf'rl managemf'nl t BR fum, Sl~. DAVIS REALTY M2-1000 $36S -Np! Short's, 3 Br, 2 ba, bltins, nu lhq. f'rplc , .. $400 -3 Br, 2 ba , trplc. hu1e patio, 00.t sli p .. , NU-VIEW RENTALS 613-4030 or 494.32411 2 BR turn. $115. 2 BR uppf>r·2 houses tu 2 BR unlurn. 1100. beach. DraJ)f'.~. shag c.rpts, 11.nd imPf'crithl! rlPlail. Ju.~t _.,.,.:'::3&-:,;2'7c:"~·'~''6-;.:1~0·:;;·'=~1~Sc;-l>J.-;;;l,-'40--;;-;· o.>o.::::::-;;;;;;---.::; RF.AL TORS 492-!lt::ti or 492·!X>.i~ now lherf' are l\l'(I :\ bedroom * HUNTINGTON !£ARBOUR e LRG. 2 BR Bun1tt1.IO\\' Apt. SINCE 1944 IJJ_l'CO_vJ.:R DTSCOVERY Sl75-3 BR HM, mlddle-aze couplf" prtfd. Pvt, patios, lush fore!t: set-$250 )~Rrly le11.~r. 642-:\44.'I_:_ tina:. carports, au pd_ e WINTER RENTALS e 114 E . 20th St., C.M. 543-0137 Wtst Newport Rr.se:rve no1v! 11parfmPnf1 al'ailabl! -~·Hh 1 BR. 2 yr.;. old. $147.:'JO, All Gardens, 6 pools. Sauna•. 673-4400 F ind YOL:HSF.LF in Som~ne All lhnM! de11irab!t> !Xlras bltn:", 642-l147. 642·5020 evr~. I In! JtH"UZZi!I. T!'nnis. Froni ,,.,,....., ... -.............. Call no11• • No oblig111inn Call S.fJ..3457. HOLIDAY PLAZA ABBEY REALTY 6<2·3850 -pool, pa tlo, tireptar,., 2 Br apt, rlf'\• "''"' n-pt. $1'10. AA&-02a9. . ' BAY VIEW OFFICES (714 ) &.tr~lt'i t2l:tl 387·3393 launrlry, walk-in clos'els, 1'1' drps, bltns, garage. 962-8518 APT. Pool:"fde • ~par~!I Deluxl", air-conditioned NATJON A.U.V Walk to 81!.ac.h -1 BR, $1.M. l BR moblle S.130. S90 up H.B. Irvine DELUXE SP11.clou11 1 BR. Sant• An• furn apt. $1~. Hratl'd "POOi · ;......:..:,... ____ .,..,._ baths -"'" roult' go on, but e.vel! !or appt. Bung-alo\I', Pvt. patio. Sl:iO. Red~raled. l~ido Ar,.a Jtl-:COGNIZED come &nd see. mn 10 right arlu lts i46-1323. R••lo·omi••, Bk,_ 615 "100 WE HAVE OTHERS Ample parking. At1ul111 -DE ANIA PLAZA LRG 2 Irr studio apt F ncd ~r1·1 ~~-----,-..---,---" ' ~ Sm. child ok. No pf>b. $150 Newport Beach DESK ~ce available $50 VAC'ATIO~ hnunri? R1>.<1pn. rrtirPd i'Ouplr wi!! riota.in ynur hnmf', l"lf'I.~. 67J.-!l484. R•nt-A-House 979-'430 3 BR., 2 be,., atri ... SJ:l.S/335 3 BR,, 2ba,. lam . rm .•• S3.lS nQ petr;. 1!16.'l Pnmona Av!' .. 1 1 & 2 BR - Furn &. Unlurn C.h"I. Pool~. carports & othPr e.'(· * $25 PER WEEK * trl\1. Nr. S.A. &. Npt frn·ys. FAIRWAY VIL APARTME mo. 1142-4549. mo. Will provide furniture Hou~• Unfurn. 305 LANDLORDS! We Spttlallze tn Newpcrf Beach e Corona de! f..far • I: Lquna. Our RP:ntal Ser- vfee ls FREE to You~ Try Nu-ViP:W! 'I :,1li''l 11·lld . ---''I l 1•11liill' "SINCE 1946" 1st \\'rstern BMk Bid.(. Univenity Park, Irvin• D•Y• 55f-7000 Nights ~Up-Pool&: maid se:rv _ from $115 up. A?ults only, kitchens available. no pets. 1402 Frwt SI ., S.A.. MOTEL T AHTTI * 543·6620 * (Corn"r Hubor/Vicloria) Apt. Unfurn. 365 LARGE 1 BR. Clean. Sunny. General Carport. Nr sh n p I . S140/mo. + dep. 998 EI CamiM, Apt. 1. C . }of • ~51. PANORAMIC OCEAN VIEW APTS 20122 Santa Ana A New Villa Cordovi Super Deluxe Adult Living , . , 2 SR Apt~. ri.10. lo Mo. $170 Gas It Wtr pairl 2323 Eld!"n Ave., C.M. 646-00.\2 lne PARK WEST APARTMENTS Bdrm. From $160 1 Bdrm., 2 Ba. From $195 3883 Parlcview Lane Irvi.M. (Just oH San Dlfitl Fwy at Culver Rd) FROM $135 A LIFESTYLE FOR THE 701S NU-VIEW RENTALS ~30 or 494-3248 VACANT AND CLEAN . 3 BR homP: ..,.,,th f!n~ yard, f:ittplace. builtins, n f" a r South CoaBt Plaza. $250 pl!'r month. ~ent, 546-4141. I $190 Month. 2 Bedr(IOm . Newly dec<irated Inside and out. No ft'!'. S42..fi691 or 962-5566. ·-·-·-~ Furn. B•chelor & 1 Br's Choice DMll Point Location. Brand Nr11.' Luxury Apls. Cpr~. Drps, Bit-in kitc.hl!na. * * $170 * * Are you UrPd ot paying out 1ood money tor the same old skimpy 11.pa.rt- menL<i with even skimpier t11cilities and no extr&s to spe11.k of? ThPn enjoy the lifestyle of the 70'l! at ----------10 AK \V 0 0 D GARDEN 2 BR., 2 baths ......... SJOO espacl1lly nice. 2110 3 Br, 14' Ba, newly painted APART.J\1ENTS. 3 BR., 2"' baths •. $315/335 Newport Blvd., CM. 3 BR .. 2 bath~ •••. $32.51365 J BR ' 1 d SAN\ LARGE 1 BR 11pt., nicely .. ha .. am.. en .• ...,., 1 lurn., pool SW mn. l~ F. A. Private P1ttios. 2-3 BEDROOM 2 BA &-2 BEDROOf\l 1 BA OPEN FOR ti]\' ; red hill ,-'---'~;_~":,;.~'· A="'·=-=-NO-,-----J , • * NO DEPOSITS * INSPECTION SUNDA \', MAY 21. 12-5 Pt>.f 24421 Alt11 Vi5t1 Or. REALTY Lr& newly decor 1 & 2 Br. 2 DANA POINT FOR lNfORMATION Univ. Pm Center, Irvine Ba. pnnl. k rec. area . 64~5.530. 710 \\'. lRth 5f. SUPER Sharp 4 Bdrm • all I '!'~""''""""'~""'""'~ bltin kitc.h .. lfll let tul·de-sac. SR.AND MW 3 BR house, on A'M'RAC. compl. furn. 2 Er .. $270. Herll3&e Re11.Jtor1 gT~n bf'lt & adjacent tn ! 1% ba. htd. pool, nr. sc.hls. Jack 540-1151. pool. S315. 645-2996. shop. & trwys, no pets. Lagun• Be1ch 645-4220. Corona dal Mar .::..::....:;=-7s~s~--- ONE Year Lease only. 3 BR . * 11 • 2 BA house, fittplace. Studio Apt1 .. 1 Br. Sl25. BRANO NEW--$49S • Br. 3 Ba. Fam rm. 2 trplc.s . C.J'1)!L~. draPf'J. Nrxl to ~an vif'w. No pet 1 • Older adults. No J>l"l.5 4M-59TI. 2135 Eldf'n, f.1gr. Apt. 6. pool & cl ublu;e. Harbor Mes• Vtrdt View J1ome!>. 673-7Ut 4 BR, 2 BA. fam rm, din rm, Hu!xlr V1e.w Mani~. Ex- tra nice 5450. 833-3894. !MMAC. 3 Bt, l ba, crpt, drps, dsl'iw1hr, fa.m rm, trplc. Avail 5/ZJ . 54&-8218. Singles or f11m11ie11 -walk to 14 BR ~feu V•rde hm. Avail heh 4 BR H11.,. pvrrvlhin2 .Tuly 1. S~5 mo. Call Ren.t-A·H~use 979-8430 540-3924 afl S pm. HARBOR V!""'•/Cirm"I. :\ Mission Vftjo br. 2 bll. f&m rm. din rm. Extra iiharp. 1450 mo. 644-1759 t!ver;. or \~·kenrls. IRVINE Terrace iTllClously d!!cor111ed. Family homf'. 4 BR.. 2~i b11. 2 frplc. pstio- Lrg )Td. $600mo. O"'TI('r. 67>3032. Cost• M•s• e PRIVACY? 1 Br,1tOVf' rf'· trts:. tncl'I )1'Tl. pel ok. s11n. ALA R•nl•I• e 64S.39W • RARE Tndetd! 2 Br; !ncl'I yrd, l'ncl au. k1rl1~1per1 StJn ALA R•nt•I• e 64S.39W e TIGHT Bud;el~ Furn Bach, all ulll Incl SSO. ALA R•ntels e 64S-39W FANTASTIC VIEW &aut nr' 3 BR 2 BA. fonnl rlhi . Jitm rm 1\•/fpJ , lf'aSf' $.Jl).'itnin. Immt'tl po s 1 . A~f'nt 540--1m or 83()..(,0JO, Newport Beach S1ngll's or Fi.mlllf's 4 BR., 2 sty, I'll. ~rill! lrvel. Rent-A -HouH 979-8430 Houses Furn. or Unfurn. B•lbo1 Penfnsul• 310 BA ''FRONT, Choict' 5 BR. 4 BA , plf'r Ir Dol t. Summl't" nt )'l'Arly. f·urn. or unfurn. Owner. 673-3l39. Duplexes Unf\lrn. 350 e HARD to Find 2 Br. tnr d Coron• del M•r Sl.15/dbc mobile home, "'fw cpl, arlllll. nri p e r s . PONOEROSA Mob. Est. 1991 Npf 81\.'d. 646-837:'\. DLX 2 Br turn apt, pool. c!Me to shop11. A.dull~. no pets. From $1!JO. l 9 4 1 Pomona, CM. VERY nice 1 Br. dplx. Quirt. Sep. hy garages. l Adlt O\'tr 30. no pet~. ~1021 . NICE 2 Br Trailer. Sl40. Adult!!, no pet1 . 645-4530 132 \V, \VJl5on, C. !\'I. 1 BR Ct1ll11ge, furn, utU p11 ld SS~.!JO n1(1. M11hJrf l\'Orklng adult only. 645--087'. 1 BR. Sinai" Sllchfol<'lr Ap!. Adult. no Pf'I . S75/mo. R20 C.nter St. 642-!>84~. l BR Trailer, SH)(! • util. No ptts. Quit'!. coey hllc.helor ped. 646-IM)ll. • Fount•ln Vall•y BA.otEUlR. I BR., •hA.&' crpl, prlv f'nlr, pool, ttC rm. util pd. Sl~. :'167-8618. Huntington Beach 673·814ll 675-6450 Coron• dal Mar .-,.a~.~ ON n:N ACllES 1 I 2 BR. Fun1, 1: Unfum. nttplaeet I pr1Y, patlol. Pools Ttnnla Contnt'J Sid.rt. '100 S.• Lano. Cc!M IU-l611 (Mac.Arthur nr CM.It Hwy) 2 BDR..\1S .. l baths: trplc. Fantastic ocean view! 14~5 f.1onlh. No pets \\"illiam \\J'inlon ReaJto r m 71-farine Avf'. Ba.lbo11 Island li7f>.-3.l31 SHARP & clP11n 4 Bedroom, 2"'9 h11rh \\'alk to beach. Family prPferrerl. J\fnn1h tn month. $390 rir mon!h Call Mr. Bllilf')', 67.'\-R.'>~. CUTE 2 BR apl., 1 ha., gar11,Je .\ Jaundr~·-pri. rn- lraJ'l('!'-SZl5 mo. Y ,, 11 r l y li!ll~. 6~18R Av11.I! Junf' I. 2 BR townhflu~f'. rw>11• cp111, pa int; pool, "'alk rn tw>11ch. UXl. adlls, m ptls 67J-.4.447. Costa Mes• * LRG Deluxe 2 BR .. 2 BA. gar. 1ml pet ok. Nr. So. Coait Plua. 54~232l. 3 BR, 2 BA. family .11pl$. N6 pe tg, Sl"-i. & $1 75. CA.JI 630-43M : ~11 :\.~ VACANT sp.a cklus bllch apt. Blfins, crpt/drp~. encl patio. f'l'r schl!! ,\ Ahop'g. Children ok. nn per~. AAO Cenff'r SI., Cf..f. 642-R~40 or 5411-~2. NE\\'LY DF:CORATED ~ 2 Br \\•/rzar. Sl.'!.'l. Wt r pr]. 2116 PIACflntia No. A. l.l71 Orang!' Nn. A. Call B!"twn 1 ,., 5. 636-4121'1. 2 BR rlelx 11p1, l200 Ml · rt. l li bt1 , priv patin. F ull gar. frptc., must hr-sttn. $200 mn . .32.~ E. 18th SL CM. Call Alt 4 pm, 548-J.;75. • :\ Br. 2 Bit, UPP!"r. lrg. crpls, drp.<1. qui!"t. Adu\111, no ~ts. S3l0. 2281 Fordham, Da)"C ~1689, Re 1 Id . 646-4939. SPAC. 2 & 3 Br apt St40 up. Pool, cpt/dl'p, bltru, kids ok. ZDi Collf'llf' No. S 642-703.5 l!l96 Maple Nn. t 642-.'\813 FRPLC. o venl!flf aunken !iv rm, 2 BR, 2 Ba. w/w crpr11, hltn~. pAtio, encl iRr, $175. 613-,';62!1. I BR w/Den-2 Bl!.. 2 BR. Adult~. no pets BAY MEADO\VS APTS 387 \V, Bay SI ., CM 646-0073 2 BR, den, trpl, prl pllf!n. rlrp!1<r-ffPl11 , rerleC'. Aft 5, !i48-8:to1 or coll: 213: 592-5227. SPACIOUS .l Sunny I BR. Crp111, drps, bltn11. no Pf'ls. $1~/mo. Inq: 2872 LASall~. Apr . 2, CM. "7-1534 or -· ** BEAUTIFUL 1 A 2 BR. Contemponry G11rden Apf11. Patios, trplc.. pool. $155- Sl 70. Call M6-51fil. Sm! l BR apt w I crpts, drps, 11tove, rerrtr. gat, SJ40. Adul1s, M pet11. 642-5.\S.1. PA.TIO or DEN-2 Br, 2 a.. St!O. Arlults. Call '4&-7331. )'rd. encl zar, ki ds 1pe1s Sl40. I B_R_A_N_D_N_E_"-,-. -A-vo_i_l._ln ALA Rtnt1l1 • '4~3900 June. liu;;~ dlx O\\'n"'' 3 BR-2BA-crpta, drt j)tl. lrt unit. 3 SR , 3 BA. Fi.replace. yrd. st.eve avalJ. w Sldt. bll-ins, 1800 1q tt. .., 3 Ntu schOols. $225. !!17-78:71. d~ckJI "'/vi~w ot bay, UPPER tront 2 B r . Ovt"rlooklfll J11kf park & beaut f'nclo11f!d ptlki A pml. ,.Adult•, no pf'I&, $169. 1035 Urh ~t. S.~'592. nr colleJn·~ t;. ~Mps, util pd 2 Bedronm townhouse, NEW. StJO. C11ll 979---013'1. SXX>. Mo. Blmtt Realty 642-5200fEvt: 6<2·'60.1. There's Sl million in rec.· LARGE 2 BR near ·Mach. reation includina: I a r g I! Adlt!!, no pe'I~. $175 mn. !iwimminR pool, "'hirlpool Redf'r., cpl:", rlrp~. !,44-2339. bathlli, s11.nd volleyball and tennis cour ls, a pro shop * NE\V 2 BR~blk lo beach, &: pro \\'ho offers free group 11pe:clac.ular v1e\\·, $225 up. lf'ssons. A beaut iful rlub- 494-3383, ol!M-~339. . housP. has 2 heallh club11, Mes• Verd• .<1aunas, indoor 1olf driving ran11:r. billiard.~. color TV DEi UXE 2 & 3 B 2/B• lhe&tf'r. Ac tivities mtan '· ~ r . · free Sunday brunches, bar-Pncl g11r. $15.i up. Rental be-QUf"S s p 0 rt s tourna- Ofc. 3095 Mace Av e •, me nt11: 'etc. ~6-1004. Custom d P.c.onttcd Sin· gle!I , 1 &: 2 BR's. Furni.,hio d N1wport Beach or Unfurnished. Low movf"· --'-------In CO!lls .11nd no lease rf'· PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS on th• bay Luxury apartment living ov- quired. Models open dll.ily 10.7. OAKWOOD GARDEN APARTMENTS erlooking the water. Enjoy (Rf'~ort Living for $/;i(),000 health spa, 7 swim· Adultl! Onlyl. minr pools, 7 ll&htl?d ten-NEWPORT BEACH nls c.ourta, plus mile• of 16th & Irvine bicycle trails, putting •. shuI-64S-0550 or 642.8170 fleboard. croquet. J unior l '•i:~~~~~~~ from $164.50 monthly: aJM I and 2-bedroom plans and tric kitchens, private patios Rantals A 2-story town hri"<iel'i. E\ec. )~ or balconies, carpeting, dra· 1~m;;mmmm~-m; peries. SubtetTAJ11!:an park· 11 lng with elevators. Optlonlll Rooms 400 ma.Id 1ervice. Just north of _...,,,.,,,,,_,..._,.,..,,,..... __ F'ashion lsland at Jambor-LARGE, btautltully furnl1h- tt and San Joaquin Hill:r ed Rll't'ping room Jor 11rlult Road. 111.riy. Qti'i~I 11ree, private eD- NE\VPORT BF.ACH lrAnrr &: bath, sun porch. Telephone (TI4) 644-1900 5-1/µ;9S ,t for rental lntonnation ''1c-=B-r,-·l""~lf"°'b-,-. ""1,-.-,""loo-•l-pv-f. LUXURY 2 Br-den apt tont. patio. 3 blkR In w/many extras --0verlook· bc:h/bay. M'Hi688 9am-10 Ing Trvin!' Country (':!uh & pm. Pacific OCf!an. Fu I I Y R~00~.-M~S-$71S~w-k_u_p_w_/7k~il-. 1-30 crptd-rlrpd-w~t bar-eltt 2 wk up Apls, 2376 Newport car fllf' .l much more. SOOO Bl ·~ CM uo97« mo. 644-2155, wu, 1 ..._.. .N. B.RAND NEWI DELUXE, priv entrance & ADULTS .ONLY-PET OK bath. M smokers. Coata Mesa. 67>0310, 548-7197. DELUXE 2 BR SlB5 2 Baths, diAhwuher, fir?· pl&<;•. private patio, ~· 20342 Santa Ana Av. M'l-21~ 1.f UNT INGTO N Beach, kltehl'n prlva.';. pool, female only. S1~. Ytwk. 842--3472. • GROUND rtoor, adult 2 br SLEEPING Rn1-Prer \Vork. w/frplc'. \Valk m church. 1r. Ina: girl or rm. 1tudent. VJ) ~1112i!nl ttnlt!r, ghopptnr. rnn. Pri ent. 962-31SJ . octtln. & hill1. \\'alk to heh LOVELY 3 llR Kom•. family "' •boppli\r. I )'\' ""· U2S. rm., WNinl' rm.. pool rm. Refs. rt"qUlrtd. 613-0960, Sln/mo. 8.!1·91111. Newport 8Hch I BR, crpcs. dtpo, rar•i<· No QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT l Br. cpl. drpf;, lmf ynl, 1..:.=c==...:.....:......:.:..;._ cb1ldren o.k., mo ptta, $1!!0 l..ARGE 2 8R. w/tpts It mo. 2515 Elden. ~>1657. drp1, child ok. 158 TUUp Lii. 1 BR •Pl SU~ S30 Clellnfna _c;:·..:M:.:·.:" .. S-:..%\=OS.c.... ___ _ SlBS. 54-$69.$. F1NE room avall. only klr BRANO NEW Delux' iipt• • tmploytd min over 30. Crpt1/drp., bltn~. Y!'1.rly Costa ~feM . ~· pt!J. 2 .,,,.U d!lldrH. Itel. 3 BR.. 2 BA. l'rplc.. lop :IJ7T 'WaU.C.. -ohap<l 2 biles oce111. Yrly. dep le: wa ttr rl'lkl. Ca.JI alter 2 BR, t1ncl 111.rd Ai pr. 5; 60-1983. Cr pt Id fl'R/trplc. J\gt SPACIOUS 2 Br. nr sbopo. p<lnlld. Jlllll. ~. fl<)'I. o.c.c., • 11.c.1. 1181. loll a. old •11111 ..., 1e11~. From $2,5/mct . G t H ~91.1 . . uet om• 41S ,2 Br, nr oetan: tml •ndc:k, SUO. MON"Mi UP at S5 mo. An~werlng service Travel av11.ilable, 222 Fott1! Ave, ---------·I Laguna Beach. 494-S466 SET SAIL TAHITI DESK space available S50 mo. Will provide furnlturP: Gr11.nd Ill :-01A11lr rl Srhoone.r, at SS mo. Answe~ RNice Cre"· & Guf'~ts N~dttl, available. 17875 BP:ach Blvd. (21 3) 371-1239 Hnntin~on Beach. 642--021 lie GROSS Approv 4,CJOO sq fl otric!' & I lf?')l hay area. 2nd nr. AIC, Al . Lest Ind fOl.ll'ld L:::1_.i Nwpt &: San Diego F 1vy tn-';;;-;;;;;;;~;;:~1 tenect. ample prkl n g . I M:i-nn. APT. suitablf' for offirt'. PMne st'tvice, pool 2376 Newport Blvd. C . :-Of • ~R-9~i. OFFICES. S5~ k S69. \\'ill df'cor11IP . r.;ear 17 th SI., bank & shopping. 548-SIJR. SPACE for le11se, 1140 sq. f1.. f11rnisherl. Newport Finitn· ria.I C.nter. 644--1860 f.1on- Frl. • Offic•Co1t1 Mesa Found (frH ads) sso FOUND: vie. Roll'l11 Oiira & He il, Hunt. BE>l!.ch: )'OUfl&'. dog. rP~mbles Germ . Shf>p.: broy,•n &. white 11·/~n1f' hlack ~ts, Call & irlPnt i f).F;~ . ~ Dog~ fnfle ! mix Germ ShPp. 11lsn gold rl'd mi;ii and onP 11·hire &. 1tolrl. Vic. lla.~lior &. Garden Gmve · Rlvrl., {;lll'flen Grov e , 522-6361. liOO sq. ft. • 646-213{) rOUNO-l.1id1,.l'I rl l a m n n d OF"FTCE suites, do1111lown Laguna. Lea~e. DX> srr. rt. Cpll'i .• drps. RP11..<1. 494-:\0:ZS. 1vrf.<1t.,.,·afrh al Vi!111ge Shop- p1n2 Cn •r., in~eriplion on bllrk r11ll to Id t n t It y !168-W.17. DESK sp&Cf'. $45 month. =--------UtililiP.~ pa,irt. 17th SI. Costa IT~IALF: lonrz haired MPsa ~·2750 '&45-4157. beautilul ~rry cat. Vic. ~!Nia Del '.\'l11r Dr. CM. Business Rental 44'i Eh1·rM?r plr11st' c.1111, ~liill. ------NEW store 11pacl! now l!'11s-F'E~1ALE C h I h u a h u a , ing, 2 lotatioo~ in thf" hPart \'icinily f.f a c no I i a I nl Orani;:e County. ln> !o Hamilton, Huntington Be.ach 15.000 !lq fl. C 0 ST A I ~"'4=~'~'-'------­ MESA-nrar South Co11~1 1"0UND younrz J;i!verr ~Y Pll\Za. Baker at Century. ~tript'd c-111 wtarlng «rUar. Immediatf' o cc u p 11 n c y . Vic ;\1esa Verde school. FOUNTAIN VALLE Y 546-i~. betwPen Gemro & \\'oolro. ""=c=----,,--:-c-...,~-- Brookhursf 11.t • Heil Oc-FOUND: Goldrn Polntf'r g..J · mo'll old M I VI C'upanc.y Sep!. l. Call Bnb · . · a 40• C • W. .. r:.•c 2131 841 8.... f..farguente & L.oirk,spur, isn. '""" ' ...... er, CrlM. 67H7:JO Costa M!"sa. · · CHOfCF: R.Pnllll:o1-Shops t.._ of-1''UUN'D C.f'rm11.n Shf'phf'rd fice~ .17th & Newport Blvd bl11ck &. t11 n la~e puppy. loc111ion, Re11NJn&ble rent· Vicinily Victoria & Harbnr, Call 642-0066 before 9Ar.1. or Cosra f.ft'!la, 64.5-27511. 646-9197 Im lfigh school rlnrz. Ch.ilia RE."TATL shop avail. al Th!' ~lt-;,ll ,High Sehool . Must F11.ctory, 1175. mo. See No. 9 1rlPnt ify. 9fill.-103lf'vio,, for info or 673-Sti06. rRlENOL\~, Blk Gmnan ~RE for Je.11.R -on Shepherd, fem 11.bt 5 TnO. Newport Blvd., Calta Meq,. vie. Liiauna Ni&tJel, 495-4869. Crpt'g -$350. 548--3.493 AIREDALE. ins lo "l>uteh,'" 1300' Shop -$160, 350· tnale, W!'ll Newport . Ofe/1tore S95. 2340 Nwpt ;;!i<S-""'c-'"':;;;:1·::;:-,..,.-;---,- Blvd, CM 646-2544, 548·8.tll. YNC. Blick m11J• cat • Lona STORE A office for t'f!nt : ha ir· l'nd. ~Shortt Apt, Bolaa OiW:a at Heil, HB. CdM. 644-4290. 816-1311 GERMAN Shoplim!. 4 l"llow I A pll'NI Wt'aril'I( ~ chain 6 Jndu1trJ1 Rtnt•I 4Sv fl ea coll1ir. ~27rit. NEW FOUND; lrbh S.tttr 511~ 2900-26,000 oq, ff. elill to id<J>Clly "'-lsi. aft 4 3 ph, 200 amp. tprlnk. pm. w/carpel oftlcts ffi'"ll"G"RA°"Y""'b°'U..c-. -vle,......Lo-,.b N!!wtiAII/Monrovts, CM School, lf.8,. C&U t. tde. Tri-co RHlly '4U621 ~. -4 to 1,_,._ SlOJ. Adlla "' pe\L - Fut-on Jaol • plloN --A-Lint _,. ooll•----WANT AD Cellt!HUI. -- Ille l2lO yr, IM. No ptt/c!IUd. Sludlo Ap!J. Pi1one serwice. SU'l !!Ch SI; 411; SIC CC. l"l"· -7. 574 to HOO Sq. Ft. CAT l 2 ldtffm • .,... Cdll • 4001 Bird!, N.B. 541-llm °""'* IJltad. m..L • -. • '. ' Thunoq, Mq 1$. Im , DAILY ~ILDT a7 ....,..... l[il] ~I ~ ...... ~ ..... ~. ~l[Il)~J ;1 ~-~.-~ .. _~;;l[il]~J;~l~I :_ .. ;; .... ~ •. ;; .• ~ .• ~~l[il];;;i~JI :· 1;;' i.t;;;•;;;;-;;;l;;:[S]-, _-... ---1~-![--... 1~1---1~ I .,, ... ,_. l[Il) I Found tfFM ..til 550 Contrac!or Haullnv Tllo Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help W1ntod, M & F 710 I-------CONSTRUCTION l'OUND on TralaJ&ar, San ROOM Addlliona, Estimaleo. LOCAL -h 1u11 n •, CERAMIC l Vlnyl Tll•. ASSEMBLERS LOAN OFFICER Clemente. Youna. Sold coJor. plans & layout, sif\ile or 2 cle11.nup. E!itp co 11 ea e IGtchen. Baths le EntryS. ed, mixrd brted doe· m.3379 1tory. L. T. Q)nstruction. atudent. Lrc truck. 'Res. Custom Work at Rasonable x,in,',0 1Pd"°'en;,8f1or 8!,~r:'-1ru'"c'i~~ 3411511 r.... ...... Ra GI ouo........, Good manual dexterity "' ....... "'" Lost 5$5 -· ...,......l.Q'«,I. tes. en _.,-.i. dept in ~... Mesa. R· 1'!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~ n fie de d. EI e ctr C'i n t c l..Vll... ... LOST: Sml M Cerman Shep, Additions * Remodelin&; YARD, garage c I ea nu p 1 •1~ manufacturer will train. quires a min. ot 2 yn eXJ>U. Mir clipped $)11 lx:k lt-g. Vic Gerwick & Son, Lie. ~move trees, dirl, fvy, , II i J) Call For AJ>pt In "ppraising residenUal & 673-6)41 * 549-7170 tklploader, backhoe. ~11•il Industrial Relalions imall income units w/some Hrbt Blvd at f.terTimac. 847 2666 c o n s t r u c t i o n lending Nol' •~1 n~ Bi··.. J ACK. Taul a ne-Repalr -· -'liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiii • " 1>.N • ur vu. 11 94. preferable. This position in-MS-9331 btwn Bpm & 10 pm. remod., addft. 20 yrs. exp. Heating & Air Job W•ntff, ,.·omale 702 {714) 4 9401 clodes 'Joan solicltatlon k Mn. Williams. Llc'd. My Way Co. 547...oo36. CondJ!ionlng builder contact. Musi bave LOST: Ctty Alley Cat, strip-DrJ veway1 New.<.-onstrucUOn or existing NEED Melp at home! We TELONIC appraised. with a financial ped w/Dea collar. Ala 10 HAWLEY'S Seal Coating; bldgs. Ris. <1r commercial have Aides • Nurses • INDUSTRIES inst l tut ion. Call Mr. "Dick". Vic. Bay 1 ho re W '"· oil '·Lani Air C.Ond!Uoning. Htg, Housekeepers • Com· L B h Dawson, 546-1500. 1'1U'k, NB. 64° -1 be!o-ea1J,.,r, gas, res.. ' -n .. v.ns • Homemakera aguna iac CALIFORNIA 3 .roN'J • ., Stays black. 545-5195. R. R. Huuins Co. 642..()515 .....,.,.., . • GS pm. 486 Newport Blvd., N.B. Upjohn, S47"'681. FEDERAL SAVIN Electrical AB'~ 1 d Equal Oppor. Employer MISSING 5n • M a I!-Housec1Mni"9 DEPEND """' t Y to do I '!!~~~~~..,~~"!' ~CCX>K. ex per. F / ti m e . Samoyed mlx. Blk-brwn-ELECTRICAL WORK. All ---------1 hou.M! work own Trans. ASSISTANT B 00 K· Salary Open. 41>ply 23«2 El white markings. 3 mo. Vic: kinds. Bi& or small Lic'd Ir: ~fESA Clearung. Carpets, 642-2314. KEEPER: f igure your way Toro Rd .. El Toro. PacUic Sands. SJ&-4391. Ins. Free est. 546-6211. windows, floors etc. Resid/ Help Wanted M & F 710 into this exciting company CO up LE : --,-,-.-,-~ ELDERLY, male, Germ11n :Sardining com'!. 557-ti742• 54S-O.ll. ' v.tiere there f! a friendly tenance-assistant n1anager SMpherd, • mlxl'd. Found BAY & Beach Janitorial. A Better Temporary boss & lots o[ VIP clients. needed for large project in Harbor Blvd. at Victoria, AL'S GARDENING Crpts/wtndows/fioon etc. Position Tu $650. Costa ~1t>Sa. Painting & C.M. 64~3. for gardening & small Resld/Comm'I. 646-1401. URGENTLY Call Nancy May.~ repair background 5/U Cock-a-poo, black landscaping services, call Dedicated Cleaning C.OastaJ Agency necessary. Sa I a ry + ale 54Cb519B evu. -Servin & * l"E oo·EVER~""G * 2790 Hart>or Bl flt Adams , .... .,,..,...cnL Mon-Fri, 9 to 4 m , vie Harbor/Wilson, ·• i Jn.u, ......... . CM. Ana to ch a r 11 e, Newport, CdM, Costa MeA., Refs. Frtt est. 646-2839 NEEDED BABYSITrER, reliable lady, 113/3»-3880. ~ ~, rd Dover Shores, Westclifl loves children, 4 yr girl, my Oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim ,,..._.60 .. , rewa . • CLEANING Specialist: Win-· AL'S Landscaping. Tree home Laguna Bch. $25 DAYTIME 10 Yr. old black German Shephlrd. Reward. 642--0328 or 623-8172 Bl.AO\: miniature poodle· Lost 1'1c: Placentia-Victoria· .. ff!'m. 646-1029. LOST Irish Setter, Rea eoOar. Name: Reward. ~882. female, Ginger. GIRL'S bicycle on Bolsa Chica Beach, Huntlflilon Beach. 592--1647. 1--~1~ dows, carpet, floors, stoves • 'd " p I SH WASHER removal. Yard remodeling, & ovens. 774--0321. Week, trans provt c... or Trash hauling, lot cleanup. • TECHNICAL may live-in free. 5~5166 Repair sprinklers. 613-1166. LADY wants housecleaning days. LANDSCAPING. New Lawns wock on weekly hMi•, 13·50 ILLUSTRATORS 1 ..................... .... 1 per hour. Exp., own trans., & Sprinklers, Res id ' . 847-3637. Comm. State Llc'd. 531-4446. JAPANESE LADY Interview Hours would like to house clean. PROFESSIONAL tree work, e G42-8985 e ..- pruning, trimming, spray· ing, sprinklers. Landscap- ing, cleanup. Ceorge 646-5893 9 am-11 am & 1 pm..4 pm Work when & where * LANDSCAPING * New lawm, Sprinklrs, decks, cleanup. State lic'd. 536-1225. Landscaping )'<lU want! • TOP SOIL • Interim Fill dirl, rotolilllo• " Personnel Service ,;en,_d_in~g._540-009 __ 7_. ___ 1 778 W. 20th, C.M. Masonry 642-7523 54(>.2592 BRICK, BLOCK & Bank of America Balboa Branch 615 E. Balboa Blvd. NCR Proof Machine Operator Prefer 18 or Over Apply in Person behveen 2:30 & 5 PM Coco's lSSl W. Adams Costa Mesa Equal Qppor. Employer 1 ~==m DEBURRER Help Wantocl, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M & F 710 ~Ip Wantocl, M & F 710 EXPERIENCED Cbainlde PORTRAIT STUDIO Dental Assbtant. send KEYPUNCHERS SaJea Ptnon, p/tlme. Plea•· Resum& to CJusifled No. Nttded lmmedlately. All •nt penonaJlly, 1&les ex~r. 421, Dally Pilot, a>x 1560, .t!Uts, mud have exper. helpful. 892·l.tl1, rxt. 2&3. Costa Meaa, Ca 92626. xln'l camlnas. 10.l PM la 2-4 P~I. EXP'O mature "''Om" n . c.11 Sue P~STAL Carriers. DeJIVf'.f .,.,"Anted to .,.,'Ork in health KELLY GIRL y0ur own area. CO.!ta Meaa, food store, .fO hour week. 13•1441 llunt Bch, Fntn V)y . 548-9537. 2061 Buslne.u Center Dr HousewlVi!a pret'd. m.-0402. Irvine }~[BERGLASS ~tolders, skill· ----------!PROFESSIONAL p hon e ed & unskilled. AU 3 shifts. LADY, matured, over 35. aolleltor .. Dana Point, San \\'e will train. 1631 Plac..-en-night .... 'Ork, waitress. Apply Oeme:nte, Capistrano atea. ti1:1, Coil.a ?.Iesa. evenings. The Place, ~ \Vr.irk tn your own home. FOOD &. Cocktail Wsilress. \V, Balboa, Newport Beach. Best deal tn area. Phone 83.>1465 between 9:00 a.m. exper. necessary. LADY for picture fram<" and noon. Apply Jn Person Only 11 A~t shop, full or part time, art ---~--~-- A.lley \Ve:st background. 494-9523. Real.E state C1rMr 2106 \V. Oceanfront, NB LIVE·IN Housekpr / Baby· New or experienced, join Ow: . C.ompany that's growing. If FREE-LANCE WRITER for Sliter, $30 .,.,.k. Pool. much you do not haft • license, travel pub Ii<" a I ion. more. Call Sue. before 5, check 00 our Write, Joyer. Box 701 . 8.13·1441. aft 5, 552-8067. $49 Corona del l\lar. Ca. 9'2625. LOAN FRY COOK-Exp·d. Fu 11 PROCESSOR time. Short <1rdE'r. Apply in Exper. FHA/VA Real Estate person. Seafare Re 1 r.. GoOd \\'orkinoi:; Condilion11 Licensing Course Mc!'~adden Sq. N.B. (!It' 546--1093 F'Ull Wes !raining program pier) before 3 pm daily. --.,-,="""==:---I -no cost. Management op-LVN P-TIME portunltlcs. All for Mrs. FULL or p/hme. Service & Exper. Nurses Aides. Jones for information al eslabllshed Fuller Brush "'iiiiiiiiiCmal;;l ;;S4;;9-306iiiiiil iiiiii•I S4l-55.n. customers. 962--0416. _ GENERAL OFFICE LUHRS BOAT co. Tarbell Realton 1>9rm. position, 5 hrs a No\v Hiring ~--..-.... f . Real Estate Sales day or mature, cap•· LARWIN REAL TV ble woman , typing ENGINE Resale Div. of Larwin Co. 1klll1 req'd, 642-l200 INSTALLERS 21562 Brookhu"'l Av .. H.B. for appt. (n4l 968-4405 / {213) 592-32'11 Experien<.>ed Only GEN'L OF"C: c I er i ca I OPPORTUNITY' tor two full cashiering, Fine I ad i es Apply Bef\vn 8 & 10 Al\{ time, experiencrd Real E!l- clothing store. Perm. No JI.Ion. lhru Fri, Only tale Salesmen. Better than phone calls. See l\.1gr, Back average commission, com· Street, 25 Fashion Island, 849 \\I, lSth St. pany paid major medical. N.B. Costa l\1('$a Tn!mendous oppty. far man- CENERAL OFFICE: Plush I '!!""'!!!!!!!!!!!!..,..,,.,.,_...,,,,.I agement. We have 90me- oUice in Irvine needs a girl MAID WANTED thing diUerenl. with your talents & bubbly Don Quixot<" l\.1otel, 2100 Drop in and talk It owr. , Babysitting PROFESSIONAL Japa~ Gardeni.D& Sen.iice Free Est. * 646--0619 ~ Japanese Gardener STONE WORK. ~29 Painting & Paperhanging ACCOUNTING CLERK An Equal Opportunity Employer Exper, In hand & power tool deburring of precision me· chanical components. personality. Chance to ad· Nev.'port Bl., CM. 645-2.152. ~E,..._ vance1 To S465. MALE. age 18 or owr REAL EST AT . Complele Yard Service Free estimales, 646-76:U can NanCy May, 54~ "'a.nted for theatre duties. -SALESMEN-Coastal Agency No Wasttng.. JIM'S Gardening, romplete * WALLPAPER * lawn&: yard care, cleanups. When you calJ "Mac" Accounts Receivable exper. including handling collec· -tions· &-credit investigations. Type 50 w.p.m. 10 key adder. 2-3 Years exper. * BARMAID -Night shift, good pay for right girl., exp·a prerd. Apply in person btwn 2-3 pm. Ask for Mgr.-Dan. THE GREEN LANTERN, 1930 Placentia Ave .. CM. 9 Hr Day 45 Hour Week Profit Sharing 2790 Harbor Bl at Adams Apply 121 5th St., H.B. aft 7 NM('! l or 2 experienced pm. salespeople. Incentive com· 1~ ANDYMAN-pt/time _M_5"'1062 __ ai_t ~'p~m~·~~-· 543-l#f M6-1n1 LAWN SERVICE TPAINTINC-PAPERING mainienance & custodial MALE attendant for \Vhe(l mission sliding scale plan, C'hair patient. 5 day wk. personfllizcd training by a work for Pvt sct-o:ll (l·ffi) 540-7956. profei;slont11. ALSO will train . ' WILL Babysit in my home, F/time or P/t lme. -· C•rpat Service STEAM Carpet Cleanen, profeuional al I o w e s t priceL 3 ave mu c.omplett! $39.95. """"72. * CARPET LA YING * C. A. PAGE * 642-2010 * JOHN'S Carpet i Upholstery Clt!aner1 . Extra Ori-Shampoo f re e Scotch- guard (Soll Retardants). Deareutrs I: all color brighteners Al: 10 minute bleach for white carpets. Saw your money by aavlng me extra trip&. WW clean Cut-Edge-Trim ~Dependable Call eves alt. 6. 545-3766 COMPLETE Lawn Ir: Gardening service. Hauling & clean-up. Jim, se-0405. EXPER Japanese Gardener Complete yd sen.iice. Neat ' Reha. Free est. 642-4389 ff E W-Japanese rardening scrvi~. Ca.II • 645-2619 • EXP. Hawaiian Gardener Complete gardenlnc; service Ka.malanl, 6'6-4676. WILL clean backyard & haul away -alto pltnt ground cover. Free est. 495-5348. JOHNSONS' GARDENING Yard Maintenance, Planting Cleanupa 961-2035 . , • living nn., dining rm. & SPRINKLER REPAIR New Systeins * ~2535 General Services • ·' h&ll $15. Any rm. $7.50, couch S10. Chair $5. 15 yrs. exp. l.a what counts, nOt method. r do 11,•ork myself. Good ref. 531..0101. ODD jobs, painting, hauling. cleaning, cement & patch 1M>rk. Reas. rates. Free est. HOWllrd, 644-7423 or David 642-9852. ..... C•rpenter EXP. Carpenter to do Con· crete-Patio1, F r & m i n g . Intuior Al: Exterior trim 646-1352 btwn 6-3 Pl.I. . ' '~=~-~~-~~-EXP. Rl!!'rnodeling, cablnet1, BY Moose~ U. elect, plumb, fence. lnstlns , carpentry, tile. BA/MC ~ard. 552-8949. : .•. ,., " ' " " npain, ma.int. No job too am. Reas. 646-4724. MINOR home npairs. Plum· bing -carpentry -paintini - roofing. CaU 540-.\560. TOTAL SERVICES CO. Plumbg tnstall°rCarpentry Elec Repair e 646-1809 CEMENT WORK, no job too small, reasonable. Free Estim. H. Stuflick, 548-8615. Cement, Concrete ----------FUN SPECIAL. Firepit + 2 JOHN'S Patios & Block modern benches, S 1 8 9. Patios xtra. 644--0687. work. An assoc. of Van's Land1eaping C.M. 646-8149. CARPENTRY, pa inti n g, FLOOR Work k patios, cement, remodel, etc. Sm. drlveWILYI le sidewalks. jobs ok. Bob 646-6446. Lic'd 5: bonded. 645-0826. Hauling PATIOS. walks, drive, install ·Y-ARD-.....;&_G_arag--,-Cl-ean-u-p. new lawns, uw, break, Free est. 7 days. Call reTJtOVe. 548-8668 tor est. tim .,0 ~ any e,~. Child Caro Gardening, Yard &: Garage Clean Up. Free Est. Reas. Rates, · 646-3488 Interior Lie, Inc. Call Harris Exterior Guaranteed 64""4568 YOU Supply The Paint. Rms Painted $15. Ceilings xlra. 30 yrs exper. Also, exterior. S4!).71J4G, 3:1'1o disc. paper & hanging, mobile store, vinyl, flock. 547-5846 The Hangman 846--2182. Call For Appt. I ndustrial Relations (7141 494-9401 TELONIC INDUSTRIES Laguna Beach Equal Oppor. Employer PAINTING. Int & Ext., Accountant-Jr to S800 Reas. Ra I es, Work Sec'y·Bank S600 guaran·d. Local Ress, Lie. Sec"y-hegal $600 Phll-494-8691. Sec'y-Marketing $600 PAINTING • Honest, clean. Gen'! Office SSOO guaranteed work. Llcensed Recept!Typist S425 le insured. 675-5740. Sec'y/Bookkeeper to $700 EXTER Complete 2 coats 1 Sec'y.Constr/Anaheim $650 story $240, 2 story $300. NEWPORT Neat work. Roy, 847-1358. Personnel Agency PROF. painting, also roofs, 833 Dover Or., N.B., accous. ceil, tnter/exter. 642-3870 Lie/Ins. FTee est. 645-5191. ACX'XlUNTANT: Crow with PAPER HUNG $30. nationallf known company. Any rm. + paper. 646-2449 Use~ur accounting PAINTING & PAPERING, background & ability to 19 yn in Harbor area. Lie & supmvise. Fee Paid. Start bonded. Rers furn. 642--2356. $10,00J. Also Fee Positions. PROF. painting. inter/exter. Call Jean Brown, 540-6055 Quality \\'Ork. Reas. Lic'd Coastal Agency Ins. 551-7455, 548-7759 aft 5. 2790 Harl>or Bl at Adams ADMINISTRATOR -Home BEAUTY Opr Wanted. New grads welcome. Salary or comm. 540-8888, David. BEAUTICIAN Needed Im· med. for busy shop. Sl.65 hr or 50% comm. Pd vacation. Call 548-9!119. BEAUTICIANS Space for Rent! $30 Weekly 642-0844 BEAUTICIANS w/clientele, rent booth, make more money, terms open, 963-3433. BEAtrrY Operator wanted. Apply In person. Cl assique Coiffure, 1013 El Camino Drive, Costa Mesa. BEAUTY' Operator wanted with some following. The Beauty Parlour, 642,-1241~ BOYS Age 10-14 to deltver papers in the Dana Point, San Oe- mente areas. DAILY PILOT 492-4420 BOX BOYS Full Time, ages 16-21. Must be avaU betwn 9am &: 7pm. Apply In Person 10 AM·l2 PM Painting, Sign • Owners Association, Orange Richard's Lido Market ATTRACTIVE sign painting County. Responsible for 3433 Via Lido, NB &: lru<"k lettering. 23 yrs in organizing & co-ordinating Co.sta Mesa. 548-4456. re c re a tional activities, BOOKKEEPER, full charge =~-""",--,.--..,--,--1 s u pervising maintenance through general I e d g e r . Plaster, Patch, Repair contracts & administering Must be experienced in all --..... .....,-,,.,.,,,,,oc:,,,,• I daily business. Must have phases. Apply betwn 8 AM * PATCH PLASTERING previous e"""rience or to 5 PM. Peek Fii.mily All types. Free estimates. ~...-F al H 7801 Bol educational background for uner ome. sa CaJI 54()..6825 same. Please forwar d Ave., Westminster. No Plumbing resume including salary re-phone applications. SAVE <1n home repairs. Free quirements tci: Classified BOOKKEEPER & general est., plumbing, paint, Jn-Ad No. 412, Daily Pilot. office-Strong a cc o u n ts st a 11ati0 n 5 , hauling. P .O. Box 1560 C.Osta Mesa, r ec e iv a b 1 e-payroll & 839--0372. Ca. 92626. telephone exp. Construction =-~-------! ADVERTISING background desired. Estalr Plumbing Great opportunity for highly lished company-Good fringe PLUMBING REPAIR motivated, highly skilled beneflts·R. W. McClellan I: No job too small secretary to work into broad-Sons Inc-548-5511. * 642-3128 * er responsibilities at fut. BOOKKEEPER THE 962-3343. new Jicenst"es. Small offl<"e, J. C. CARTER CO. l~OSTESS & \Vailress. Apply MANAGEMENT pleasant wnrkini:t condition!'i. in person, H e n r y · s Personal interview -Ask Restaurant, 2122 S. E. TRAINEES for Ma.nager. 6TI W, 17th St., Costa Mesa 548-3421 Brislol, S.A. NEEDED U.S. AFFILIATED Equal Opportunity Employer Housewives! Use leisure hrs. IMMEDIATELY'. Brokers Realty to supplement income. Sm. 847-8507. Eves 968-1118 investment brings generous . Real Estate Salis OEMONSTRA1URS -cpls commissions & entities you Due to . the rapid growth Ir: Real Estate Ofc needs ok, P/T. gd earn., no exp to free training. 645--0852. expani;1on of our . corp. A salesmen. \Ve cowr all nee. \\'ill train. 968-0063 4-7 H OU S EKEEPER-live-in. ".umber of prestige posl-pha.~s of real e~tate. Nr pm. Mon-Fri v.'knds off. S!art lions are now available. Bet1uliful Hunt. llarbour. DENT AL chair side asst. 8/28 for 2-3 v.·ks. o .... •n Tobin RI" ally Mfr.3371 wanted, surgical exper, den-tran.'i, salary <1pen. Irvine ACT NOW! ta! or medjcal. desirable 8324408. but essential. Apply in HOUSEKEEPER wanted 8 person. 400 Newport Center hrs. twice monthly. East Or. No. 306, N.B. <>r call Bluff area. Own trans., 644--0681. references. 545-9475 days, DENTAL Recept: business Mon lhru Fri only. exper required, Dental or HOUSEKEEPER for pvt medical exper desirable home. P/llme & F/tlme. but not essential. A:pply in Call 774--0321. person. 400 Newport Center Dr., N.B. or call 644-0681. HOUSEKEEPER, Jive-in, 2 elderly ladies, Bal. area. DENTAL Ofc. Oral Surgery CaJl 673-3284. Asst w/x-ray exper. 1m· =====--~­ med. opening. 548-7710. HOUSEWORK, experienced, .part time, 5 day Wffk, own DEPENDABLE young man car. 644-7344. wanted full time to run er- rands for rapidly expanding H 0 USEKEEPER, live-in. Need care of toddler. Young girl company. s car. 646-7473. prefd. 675-8854. DESK Clerk -3:30 pm-ti:JO pm 1'1·F & Sat 9-5. l\1ale pref'd Y.M.C.A. 642-9990. DO YOU Have Leisure Time? Increase your income Now! Full or p/time. For Interview only call 540-0928. DRAPERY. CARPET Sa\e11. Exper. decorator type per· !iOn for active store. Xlnt draw + comm. 492-2254. INVEST IN YOUR FUTURE Full or p/tlme. BE YOUR OWN BOSSI Min or Women Lease A Yellow Taxi Cab Call tor Appl 546-1311 DRESSMAKERS Asst. Ex· Ask for Herman per necess. w/dress making' •iiiiiiiii..,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii No Exper. N('C. We would rather train from scratch for the right people. Call Mr. Pftulson 833-9472 RECEIVING CLERK F/Tlme Xln'I Salll?Y &: Benell.ts Call tor Appl. 541)..5050, Ext. 30 JOSEPH MAGNIN Equal opp'ty emplo)ier MANICURIST Pt/Time Joe. Pbone-548-4179. xlnt RECEPTIONlST: If you V.'Ould like little furry fella&, you will ~ this great-op- portunity. Answer phones & meet people. Your big 11mile gets this fun job. Some!' typ. 1rn:c helpful. Start $348. MA N U FACTURING. for mechanical engineer to develop A.ilbo&I production lines. Degree req'd. Top pay k xln't future. l\1ecC~gor Yacht Corp. 1631 Placentia, CM. MA TRON $1.75 HR Exp. for Rec. Rm. In L rg Apt Complex Hrs 9 am-2 pm 54(>.5025 Call Linda Ray, 540-£.055 · Coastal Agency 2700 Harbor Bl at Adams RESTAURANT EMPLOYMENT AGENCY ~1altre'd Europe11n trained • •••••.•••••.•••••••• $800. mo. Fa'lt Food Mgr •••.••• over 21 .................... $400. mo. MECHANIC, min. 5 yn. ex· Fry Cook ............. $2. hr. per. Arco, 19th & Newport, Pantry Man .••.•. S27. shift C.M. 645-1532. Pantry Woman •.. $11 to $23. MEDICAL FRONT OFFICE shift GIRL for Doctors office. 2 P/~ Hostess • •• .$2-$2.'15 hr. yrs experience. 30-35 'years Wailreflses ...•. All hrs avail. ot age. Bookkeeping • typ-.. · •••• · · •· • .$1.65 to Sl.75 hr. Ing, scheduling. No In-Busboys ••........•. SI.GS hr. surance. 9-5. S500 mo. ph-Dishwasher ............ Open & alterations. Must have I ' own transp. & be avail. im· med. for p/time employment. Ref's req'd. CdM. 61'5--1735. 535-105-0 Newport area. FEE ==-~7'--=--,,..,.cc-IROY AL SERVICE AGENCY J™NE PERSONNEL '425 Mo + 10%. Crvyd shift, For Restaurant Personnel pd vac. other OC'ne:flls. 3001 Redhill Avenue SERYJCES•AGENCY Jacks Phillips 66, Balboa Bl Esplanade JV, Costa Mem Legal Secretaries to S600 & Cit Hwy, NB. Suite 210 557·2800 Engineering Sec'y to S550 e e NEEDED Reiitaurant , ., YOUNCSET School, q:es 2-ti, Open 7 Days. GAM-7:30 PM. '. Separate program 6-10 yrs. . • • Prof. teac:hen. $3) Mfr.3106., Dally Pilot Want buplm1alore. --,C"O"L"E~Pi;L-i-U"M=B'°IN°"G.-· I pac.d Newport Beaob ad· FULL CHARGE Ads bave 24 hr. service. 645-ll6l vertis.ing agency. Braim, Busy property management initiative, & sb ·required, co. Xlnt salary & benefjts. EARLY Riser? Want part lime typist from 6: 30 am to 8: 3(1 am. Call 546-8450. Seo'y/Fa!hion Island lo $550 Two Offico Glrl1 SANDWICH MAKER Secretarie11. lite sh to S52S • SHORT ORDERS Payroll Clerk/NCR $500 Must be 25 and able to drive Woman wantt'd to work al R1mod1I & Rep•ir Call 133-1670 Submit resume & salary re-liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilloiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Eun $700/$800 Mo. " * -* * * .--.--.--.--.--.-lcAL=T=ERA~~T=IO~N~S.~~p-,-,-,-0-n quirements to P. 0. Box * FATHER & SONS _ needed part-time J.1on-Sat. 1810, Newport Beach, 92663. Decorating. design, carpen· Must be exp. in clothlni: &: CARPENTER &. hoosev.'Orlc * 4 Day week. No exp. Must be over 6' & willing to work, Over 23. 549-4186. Trader's Paradise lines times dollars H.A VE 2-2 br pool bins ln CdM I: NB. Want Harbor att• rentalA or comm. Can add other prop. Colwell _ .. 675-7225. - - BA YFRONT home, l Br A 3 Ba. Boat dock. for Avoca- ' ®'Citrus prop. <1r small ' •" home, Palm Springs. : '• Brittingham. agt. 675-0123 . ' ~ WJU. trade $12,000 eq. In • • MW $30,000 Diesel Trawler .. " Yacht for hOUle in Newport or' land •. Call 645-4;827. HAVE 2> acres, vaJ. $100,(IXI klc ln pratlre are• Rfver. &idt. Exch for hme or tne prop Newp't Sch. Dkk Cl~ • WU11am Alll!in 0,. - * * * TRADE $9500 Equity In $20,000, 27'. Dtl.wce lifutor Home for Real Estate. ,---------Ml Jot w/4 hats A Cafe· N Lng Bch for lot vacant or w/O>m buld 'a or r Blair, 72U Marcelle St, Para· mount, Ca, 634·7163 oo1 LOT wtth btaulltul unob- structed View ot oct:an A mtna tn Lag Bch. Ovtt lOO' on Temple-Rills Dr. tor boat or 1!! 8 ·1896. . * * * try, plumbing, wiring, etc. mens wear. 673-8782 needed in trade for dance ESCROW OFFIC&R 4 generations exp. _25th yr. APARTMENT manage r . lessons. Singles Chalet Club. Positions available in several in b111 .• Ltc'd &: bonded. Exp, full charge manager 646-5337. of our offices for Escrow 838-3545 for large project in Costa CAR WASH HELP Officers w/a min. of 2-5 • • • • • • Mesa. Salary ·+ apartm"'1t. Several posiil'ons. 4 locati<1ns. yrs. exper. in oonvenUonal REMODELING, additions, Mon -Fri, 9 to 4, Metro Car Wash, ~ loans. Must be capable of patios, prompt service. Free1 _213_135>-__ 3880_. ___ ~-Harbor Blvd, Costa Mesa & hMdling own desk. Sa1ary estimates. references, local APT. MANAGERS. Xlnt op-18400 Beac" BJvd, Hunt. commensurate w/exper. bulldE."r, 1-10 p.m .. 968-9067, portunlty for viper. couple Bch. Call Mr. Etchison, 546-JSX). ===-~~~cl CALIFORNIA 96S-006-4. willing to ~'Ork. No children COLLEGE or high school SAVINGS Roofing orpets642-3645. girl wanted beginning FEDERAL e T. Guy Roofing. Deal Direct. t do my own work. ~2780. 548-9500. Sewinsi/Alterations ·-Alt1ration1 -642-5845 Neat, accurate. 20 years up. Stereo Rt pa Ir STEREO equlpmtnt repairs, complete facilities for all makes 4 model• -discount A Better Temporary Position URGENTLY NEEDED • REPRO TYPISTS nte1: 8 t111ck tape da:k, clean k adjust• $8.00, thl1 JntervieW Hours week $1.00 ott to Dally Pilot 9 •m·ll am Al: 1 pm-4 pm reader s . (Replacement Work w~ A whrre nttdlt'1 lc carbidacs "' off). you wanu u.s.A. s..... E • u 1 P. Interim ~.~ ~1>-~i1lh s1.. Penonnel 5ervlc• ----~---• n1 W.10th, C.M. Tol1vi1lon Ropolr 642-7523 54'-2592 * BLAINE'S TV * Selvld• All -Authorlzed Mapawi: mici--June (or earlier) lo babysit 2 children, 6 & 4. tor ESCROW PEOPLE 5 Growing S l L n<'l'ds ad dl-the summer. HM!. from 7: 1 E p 1 ~­ AM to 3:30--t pr.f. Mon-Fri. lion scrow enonne . ~ Some eves, too, n desired. cl"0\11 Ofc I Sale &. Loan) Es· ~1usl have 0.,.,'11 transporta· crow secty It cleric Full or lion & desire to give !he Jrt·time ba!i!I. Call ~tiss children )OOr und ivided at-Mill<"r <2131 67tH)I50, tention at the_peach or park EXEC. SECRETARY or ·wherever you le they Secretary to the chief of. decide to spend tht' d11y. fleer of Multl·State Mortgage Write, telling u11 a little Banker. Must haVe good about yoortelf & the pay skills & ability lo leam our you desire plu~ your age, buRiness. Irvine Indus. Dis· address & phone No., to: tri<"I. ' Mr. ~fammond, 01111lfled Ad No. OJ, Daily R3.1·8.140. Pilot Bo:rc 1560, Cbsta Mesa, EXECUTIVE sec re tar Y Callf. 92620. exp'd. Skilled tn shorlhand, COMPUTER 0 PR : typing, (IBM ., x ec), Tape/disc oriented. 2 yra. caleoln.tor. Need car. Crea· exper aftn 1hlft. Wrfle; Uve, Independent, fas! but Ou11Jled ad no. 411. c/o thorough, varied hrs. Stnd Daily Pilot, P.O. Box Im resume to Box 826. t..aauna Co&ta Ml!sa, Ca. 9262.6. Beach. 92652. I l!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!l!!!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!!ll!l!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!! I ~ 1or haMlty ~ DAILY 'PILOT CLASSIRED ADS '· W h It e £1epnsnts'' over-EXPECTANT ~fol.her neflla runn1nc your bouse:T Tum live in houstkl'(ll)er-Rm &:. them lnto "CASJI" .. sell boud-me&.l>-Pri Rm 11Vl them thnl Daily P ilot ~1790. Accounting Clerk to $500 -APPLY - lunch counter preparing Centtal OUice S500 186 E. 16th St., C.l\I. sandwlcht'll, salads, & ihort Med/Tech Writer S&X> NE\VCOMER WELCOMING; orders. 40 Hr wk. No Sat Clerk Typist• to S425 1400 Hospitality Host~s nile or Sun work. No split Oerk Typlst/Trne To Call LOCAU.Y on new 1hlfls. Clean modem lunch Sec'y Mklng to ~ resident families bringing counter. Apply Lindberg Girl . Frlday . lo ~ gifts Ir: civic info. Good pay· Nutrition, In rear Of th& Toy P/Time Typnrt ~2.30 hr P/lime. Must have happy \'Vorld Store on lower level Frtt & Fee Poidtions smile, car typing ability. So. Cst Plaza Shopping 488 E. 11th (at Irvine) CJ\.t 547-3095. ' _ Center, In Costa Mesa. 642-1470 NURSES Aide-llpm-1am. RNa day &: eve shift . LVN11 ~'"'!!0!'!'M~""'"'1""'!'5"""" I Exp. pttf. Mesa Verde Con-day & eve shift. Xlnt tringe ISLAN gr., m n. yrs. I H . al ,. 6 l exper. Sl!rv. Station at· va escent osp1t • o;i bnfts. Be\'erly Manor, Capo tendanls day & nlte shift. Center St-cM. Bch, 49fr.5786. Arco 19th & Newport. NURSES Aides full & RNs day &. eve lhlft. Xlnt 64i>-l532. Pt/time. All shifts. Call fringe bnfts. 'Beverly Manor JR. SECRETARY: Gel In on the ground floor <1f rtew of· fk:t!: in Newport Beach. Start $400. fee Paid. Also Fee 'J>olitiOns. Call Jean Brown, M0-6055 CoastaJ Agency 1790 Harbor Bl at Adams Jon11 Tire Service Rc!quirca Immediately. £xper T ira Servicemen Retail Saltsmtn Sal & Comm. Co. Pald Bene· fits. Apply In f)Cl'80n, "'.)49 llarbor Blvd .. Cost11 Mesa. JUNE OPENING Ttlklnti 11pplic:atic>M f o r wallrt1!l1e1, waiters, bart.,nder &r; cocktail waltre!ISC1. Quiel Carmon Restaurant 34344 St. of the Grttn Lenttrn, QI.,. Polnt. Don't 1lve up the ship! "U..l" 11 In ~od. Ship "' Shon Rnollll - 642-2410. C.Onv. lfosp., Capo Beach, OVERLOCK or Single Ntt-1,.<9&-0iii7m86.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiol die ()prs to 11ew Jr.1• Spon ..... ar. fNttd 3 E"""'' ROBINSON'S Call for appl 557..Jl<O. e NEWPORT e OVERSEAS BEACH MORE JOBS THAN PEOPLE All skills A professlonJ • Higher wages • tower expensea • Tu .benefit.I e Free Transportation CALL 541-4345 Strvlce Guarantffd ·until employment accepted OVERSEAS SERVICES Hu openln&' tar EXECUTIVE SECRETARY To Store Mtr 1617 E. 17th St S.A.. Suite 3 Mutt h•ve HCret•rl•I PAINTING or Ken f' r a 1 1klll1. Exc1tfnt chal.. rnalnteMnce In t"Xchnngt lenglng ~ition. Ex- lor apr. 2l76 NeWl>Ol't Blvd . copilonil bonofl11 & 5411-9735. liberal di-I, PAS'fE.Up AMI. knowledll(I of production. (71(1 !ll-213) Apply In -io.s p.a, betw, SI am A 12 pm. e 2 F...,..on· llL, N.B. PBX Opttaior tar llllW01lrc !:qua! opportunltJ """"- ,.,....,., F\111 u ... 11Md)o\"'•-------i -~rtt. ~. Whllo Eleptwul OIJno.A.1.111 • & [ DAJlY PILOT J[l1) I !/&].__I --1~[. M ......... )~ ~[ -~· ~)~~.I~(~ ... " ... ~-~ .. ~][E):~[;;.""~""-~' ]~[E: Thurtd.-,., M•.r 18. ltJ72 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!c........... 1[11) .__I _..__-~l!IlJ i Help Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wonted. M & F 710 SECRETARIES Help W1nted, M & F 71 0 Antique• 100 Garage Solo 112 Miscellaneous I Dog 8S4 Ill Pianos/Organ& 826 Pet&, General 150 ' ROBINSON'S e NEWPORT e BEACH PART TIME LUNCHEON . HOSTESS • In Our Marin• Room Apply In 11t•l'llfln 10·5 ri.m. •l Fllt1hion lid,. N.H, Equal opportunity f'mplnyrr RC>llNSON'S e NEWPORT e BEACH SEAMSTRESS FITTER Full Time Apply in J>C'r110n 10·5 p.m. •2 l"a11hlon r11., N.B. Equal opportunlly cmployr.r Sollmokor, I/time 501 291.h Slre!!l, N.8. SALES. $600 SALARY •101 l.ea1 Panty Ho~ nttdM attrtlctlvc 1Clrl1 to #eCUN' localion11 ln Oran.i(e.tounty. Must havl! plea11ant pefllOnalJly. Call Lou , 114/979-711GO. -------- TYPISTS AN'rl~. '""'~I 0.k U.blo, G NEIG!tBORllOOO c.,.,, * AUCTION * t·hair.11 It l1U/fi'I. i.ra: China ' S.e.Je 1t)33 Goldencyf." {~lean FRI DAY ?·30 p M Cl SI PA!lROT-OOuhle Yellow -------J-b-1 * earance a e * Head. Ht>alt h~". tan1r. ta lk!>, ~OVl('F. CJ3.,.~(·i; -a.I rte1' .t · '\l'w sun·!, :,1<irl, ~luy J.,,, E•rn Your P•y The K•llY Gld W1y flrw 1'hnc, !'~rt ·r~rn1• <>r' AU 111r-T1 rt11· 1·.ili . ...,/tilrn arulrm ph<ino, VcnkJ c .,'1. dhl btth1, baby MAY· l, ' ' M>l1d waJ•l\JI 1/ rt' 1 llf r, turn I c lol ht' 1 1 to)'J, . ' 1>./c!ige SIOO. 5.:J7-36:hl. :., .. •o P.nl ,(·'\'eel, :-.l ay 17, ~ '"" arP over lilocked with 857 ~ I pre-O\vned bargains and Cat s pnl. :O,J;1n 1nrrr~t Krnnc s, J U1t See (j,·,.t l\ll1~! I~· l~liSl.;fl, W1·ll J(r<1C10I• t·d l.1;>v p1'i''.11ur,.. J(ibl! S111rt ~1ll l)\1·d1lL!('l}'. X l /'I I l.t!)· r~1rl11n1ly for litH!lll'WIVI'~ f•" ,,nt,..rin.: !h•· ioh 1uarkl't ur 111 l1<'fw1•1·n jtil1~. J•n·1}("h rn11fhJt• r;lock & ~urtbo•rd maternity clothes D1varui. love ieat•, b«lroom 01111r·J11n1: r:lntlcl11bra11, hanrl :ii HJ, (:lothifti ~x S.16, IJ<'l!I, chmits, di~ina .sei.. ~nd 1• a. 1 11 ! 1• d d 1 t> h,. 11 & Pcr•ian nig, ti' colfrl" lhl, bl..Lff11I!'; Spanish bang1ni: (.'u/1~/!!0Ul'trs, (.; U t g•I a II' t.'OO('h~e:. dt'•k. ('a 'm 11 I n g IR11Jfm, bunk!!, dresat'rs, ft!· rr1•arnrh It SU1:11r·S0 Olhc:r t!<'itl' "'Orking K t n Ill 0 c e Jrij:erator1, llOVeS, \\•agbr_rs rw"K. 7 J)(', Sllvrr t.'Olfl'f' rlryE>~. Jim camara & pro-& ~1lJCll ~10RE! . •1 k "" ~·9 ·Plano~. ,. u.st m~ e room STAMESE &-nlpolnt kitt('ns "'orv"" tor ne"'-' mtrcharubse coming SlO. t-'11. Cull uftl·r 2 pni. LAB~ P. c tr ~ 1 v r r , in. 646_27~1. Ah'C. rrgi.;. 11uali!y pllpp1e.~. Buy Now & Savel . Call jj7.fi219 alt l pn1. Havt' e ORGANS • l SfAME$E P Lll'C'hrrd ktt-shol!. 1 S1•r1'. l'llll'\O 11100111, leg Ill'• mo1rP rhr11t, Sri.Ml df'11lc. ftll1l1Y o1hrr ric·s. Pl.•! ply, 'l'h•·n Pick 'ThP I lour8, Day~. t .rnrth Of f:mp~1yrn1·nt ·n1&t t'Jt11 Yiuir N••t·d~ You'll \liork f or tJs t Ju (lll~~~~~n~~~:~·o~:f/u r·~. l ~1~~~1~.~~n;.11~l~l~.Lll1 SCH-AM-LETS \Vt"'ll l'lnn A \V1J1·k 1, Irvine 833-$1454001 ., ANSWER·S &:hedull• ·ro SI.Ill Yuu <>n" 1'hut 111 'f111lor"d TYPIST ·ro Your At11Jlty \Viii tn.lln 011 i\tTS'r, Xllo't I Hn11-:111• -P<11in -Panic - Your Tin1i· l1•·r11·f!1~ 1,.,·a/ an•11, Call &_.,·ond -SOOT lf"G Your 'l'rfu111po1·11111vn Zt·i~ ••. !.l:Ji.J()(Jl'l, Cn l t'air Eni· l·;<·oJog-y : Heavy ln!lu111ry Cull Or Vlio,11 -11oll•1!1·r' .,!11nd around .soo·r. plriy1111 ,n! /i~(·ru·y, W..1 No. ' './.. 1717'! (}·,. IJ_ 1 .!'.'.'.'·w'"'E· ~,A,,,R_E,,. eAo"'rn'"'.'!'.'.:_ "" -"".-""·~··,_ .•. __ _ J \1:{{i { SQ. 11ak 111hl1· t.: round oak h1h!I· w/6 chuil'8. 2 bieycles. I i ~I Bu8iric1111 C.:l·ui.·i· J ,,, LOOKING! RIGHT? :ond 1°~111Jrt. ~ln s11 we 1J. r. I I Irvine 833-144 11 968-2.i lG. , N Old rloek~ SECRETARY NO EXPERIE CE , A"':~~;r·" NECESSARY I -A~R~>l-'cOl~HE. Oak table. PlATFORM Comm'I Baok J·;xp. JJq•'tl CENTINELA BANK NEWPORT BEACH R•gion1I Office Call Mr. J.~. M11111lnn«a (714) -7121 I:;qual Oppor. Empl<iyC'r Scl'rchu')' Union Bank llAA a unl11ue opportunity ror '" ARE YOU LOOKING FOR: -F irst y•ar Income should b• In •xces& of $1 S,000, with 25~. in- cr•••• in th• sc.Ond year And • n n u • I ther•aft•r -Pr•1tl9• po1itlon -Prof•ssion•I training -Appointments pr• qualified -Great r•f•rral busi- ne1s, r•l•lnlng own ell en tel• c·hulrs, buffet, drc&l:l"l', tir-.~k. mi~c. Jl3()...&19!! .Appl lance1 802 fllt\YT!iG rcpairn1:in has l\';i;;hrrs $~5 .. 111 $JOO, Can d1•tivcr wll yr. guarn. 1139-1778. l Yr.i:. old Kenmore washer runs perfect, very &ood con- dition. Private par I y 968-083.1. i•'Pl0' Xlnt <•n•I. & ""'· WINDY'S AUCTION Silver tone • $69. tens. fen1ales. 6 weeks old -~-----'---1 Orcoa Chot·d SlS9. SIS cadl. 979-2120. Do~ H11ndlh1:,-: Lt'ssons. E\'f'ry TU<'S. fl: 15 pm. $1 per lfammond t.1·3 $795. Dosi tsC ri"" "''r l<'<~on. :.1artincre111 1 101 FamUy Ga.ta"e Salr-& COME BROWSE AROUND 1 A ,.... ,.., (AOC! O'OIU: s ve .~ ,, ....,11.Tf'Y ·1UJ "°"J· _,~--,'""--:---:-~·I j\pnncls. ~>16--0989. I 9n.m~ May 20th & 11~1. · Carnival. r·urnilttrf', !oys, 20751,~ Nl'wport Blvrl. Baldwins from $595. COCKJ:"'h g,..,,n1r t, pure bred, - I b ., I lb. •-· k "-h -·• T ' Bldg M t•I• "" ,_ -S-REG-OR German Sheph("'°'.1 Ja y 1 en1s, co lflJil', uvd !1, nc: luu ony I . a · · 11ammond r.oruio\PS 6 \\'ks old. 1 niale left. Bull. hQull('hoid good$, Jarl(C & Costa ~C'lla • 64&-8686 2.'i pe<lal.~. from-$1695. S50 968-8~'2 !{ennrl has hf'autiful pups! 11mall appliaoces, hi -,f i OPEN DAILY 9 lo 4 e PIANOS e · · ·" · by Ch. Nordic. 'fcn111;. •tiu!pment, elc, F.vcryl!':1ng S 0 U NOESrGN-GARRAR!). Bald>A•in 1nake Spinet $495. IRISH Seiter pup&. Anterican 527-4931. I ' ' 'd l 11 Field Reg. i\lal('/fen1ale. ~~:::::;~~=--:---::::-: ' . ,. -o 5 r · COMPONENT SYSTEM: Story & Clark con!!. $595. -OBEDIENCE Class to star! Joro.I-garnn-.pri:tts. Sa 1 • 7 piece!! incl u din i : t.o1clville Clark Grand $595. Shots. Reasonabll' 673-00&>. '\'ed i\lny 24. in N.B. Irvine May ~ 9 ain 1_0 Uu~lc. iral·k cartcirli;i:e player. :1 \Vcber Console .S795. FOR Sale or return of litll'r· ar('a, Open to all dogs 5 Un i I aria n Univer11afi11t wily bnss reftl'.'x l!Pf'n.kl"rs. full g1'Q\1'n fl'nl. St. Bernard. nio',11 & old er !»6-4928 Churrh, 12'.f.) Vi<:torin, C.~t. Garrard pr 0 f e i:; s i 0 11 a I l\lany more to choose f.1·on1 Good y,•/children. 612-1469. YORKSHIRE Terrier pup. GAP ACE Sal•.'. m•oy l>"'bl•I 1urntable -mpltt" 1vi!l1 Bank icrm& trade·ins DO"IE p •KC , .... , ' b CH ~" "" .. ., .. u ups, " <:\.! • • Jiles, ,1 malrs. sired Y · ilems, includ import. S1vi11i; l»H~t. dust covrr and di:i· 1ve-h.-om('. hlacks. Xlnt (hamp line, for Baby Bandit. 497-1@1 aft lamp, hra.11s & chrome d in monrl s1ylu11, everything COAST MUS IC ~ho111 or pct. SLl. up :ii7-:J717 ti:lO. tblr \\'/chr1, mink i:;tolc, fully guaranteed, completr SERVICE --- SCI-INAUZ ER/Pood!e SCHN, 'AUZER ""''· "''rfecl Cl'rnmic BBQ grill, t-.1ust system llOld !or $397.8~ 1839 Ne1vport Blvd., C.:'-1. · ,.~ "-r·cmale 7 mo. lo>' ,, 1,11,er's Day. llsebrkn, .~II. Sat I: Sun 5/ro & S/21. p:iy-oH s1na ll bAlance Qf at }!arbor I :\92-1 ~52 afl 6:30 ~1 .... 1s. <TT"oon1 & s!ud scrv. 9-6 Hrbr View I-Im~ 1930 $lS.l.77 or si;nal monthly ** 642·2851 ** "'"' b ' 1'011 Laurent, N.B. toff payn1entg available. USA Open Sunday 12 to 5 pm -. 4· 'finy Cockapoos. avnil. Terms. 846--0839. l\far·A rthur Blvd. Stereo Equip Watthouse, *PIANOS.ORGANS* $10 each. JRJSM &>uer pups, AKC, top 179 E 11th St Costa Mesa 642-4818 or !134-38~ eve11. ~bo,·· 1,· .... ,.. top breeding LIKE New -Roll away bed, · " • Going Out For Business ., ' "'-"' rotisserie_ lamp~. clothing, &1>2441. Best quality. priceg _ serv. FEi\fALE Cocka~. 8 \l'ks quality 1r 11.·ks. 962-41 4i VAc .. hsehold l!emg • etc. SCH\VINN :> spd la<licii bike Kaivai·Sll'illlvay·Baldwin. etc old, 7/~ P~lr. Slivl'l' grl'Y· SILKY T('rricr pups, 'I Ching Wool hooktd ~en. & haby c:arril'I'. Xlh1 rond. Player Pianos & Rolls _!~·~·_-_2.i._1·'·-~---1nalr.s, shots, AKC. Call neetlle ntt rugs, Sat. & Sun. $65. Yel!Q\\' Ediwn Crib & Rt>ntals .• , We Buy • Sell ACJ..: Sili\y Tl'rril'r pups -af1Pr 4 pin. 8:.:S-1149. 9-5. 2381 Notre Dame Rd., eht'.'SI $-10. Eldon battery l'ar Daily 10.6 Evt>11/Sun 12·5 l'l1ale & fen1. SOOw quality. * !RISH Seller Jlups AKC, C.l'l·J. .. $10. Stfullcr $1 5. 'Vee nELD'S PIANOS 644-2560. Sl2S.SIJO. Champ Sire. superb Jitter, Cl-llNJo.:SE imporl11, antiq's, Wheeler $2. \Vee \Vagon SJ. Cos!a Mesa (TI4) 645-3250 * I \\·ould Jlkc a fa\vn col· sho11'/JM?I. 9ra-6291. fllltl., art objer.t111, knick· 2859 &-'tang, C.M. 545-5709. K J ,\1 BALL p LA y ER ored Chihuahua puppy. Do Al\C l\1alc Bassrt hound·S knatkl!. All now in slornge. ESTATE Sa I e ! Venetian, ORGANS you hAve one? 675-2173. v.·ks _ all shots. Beaut. $7j . Allt atlC•dy'! 27'Zl E. Coast Cwbealnut. carv~d armdodi~; Lesli<' Speaken. FR!llastic! * * AFGHAN Pups, chnnt· 962-3151. wy., 1 • rry armo1re: a ;ng PENNY O'VSLEY 892-33 14 pion sired. & i\1 i n . ANTIQUES / misc furn I machine, .S50; 0 f I i c <" 11352 Beach B!Vt.I., Stanton Schnauzer pups. 6'1:H209. SILVER poodle puppy 11al•. tKI. bikP I clothf'S I plant~ I typewriter, .S75. Pb, 9 am-ti Open ·Evenini::s 1le.o.;k I etc, S34 S. Bayfront, pm, GT".>--0774. BABY GRAND Pt AN 0, Ual. Is. CARPET & Tile 'Varrhousc Ebony Jinish, xlnt <.'Ond, FRI/SAT/SUN ONLY! Jri-S<i!<' Specinls tor rental $650. TIME FOR &i2--1818 o' 53t-3883 ""· , QUICK CASH Al<C ""''·· Sil'•" Toy Poo-j dle. 8 11ceks oW . .$j(), 1 ... Mature, expcrh:rltc unntt· Executive Secretary $hi" m~ have an altracllve -: f!H&ry. The ~ ·oo, 22 appear11ilcc. Exl'rllrnt lyp. -SALESLADY -Soft profe11ional pr•· qnfetion -Gu1rant!!td retire· ELF.CTRIC wa11her & Dryf'l'. Whitr. cxct'llent t~ondilion. Privall' party 979-2500 or 979-7245 ask for C'llley. HJo::FRIGERATOil, ~ yrs. old, 2 drs. auro defrost, 893-9060. Fi, i;m applia~i;. Avon units .. boat~. &. campC'rs. * 499-161) * bottll'.'!! <lishe!. r.1isc. 22021 3737 Birch No. C. Nwpt Bch ESfATE Sal H d '. 1 ·54&'.-lilO e, ammon THROUGH A • 830-5881 • DAILY PILOT Guman Shepherd• I F'allhkln l1land, N.B, ing J'klllll. E:..:pcrlt•nl.'e de· $500 Mo + 10~:, glY!s.I!. Exp. _.nbl1'. Pll'it~r ronlnrt , .. ,..r. In ltrt 11tllt"I. 44 hr \\'k._Pd t>s11 \Vttla11. 610 Nf'wport Vl!.C. ~lck pny, 0 j ,., T c:enlel' Ur.,,.Ni'IV(Xll'1 Bl'U('h. l.M'n«'flta. '541)..1103. An f'f]lltll npporluni!y 1•n1· SALESLADY ror .)rwclry ploycr. 1tore, Juli Ume, rel• rt-Sec'y Bookkeeper quired. 548-3102. Conalructlon B11ckRrou11d SALE~f'&nliu;tle full or p/t Call Lorralnr eamlnar. No exp, nee. over WES'fCl.IFl" 21. ~ ~7 p111. Prr!lonnt>I AR:tn1·y SALES-1'~('1n11lr, ln Ughlhllt 2043 Wr!!lt•!i ff Dr .. NB llxture 1d10\lll'0001, Sant11. 645-2770 Ann Rl'\.~1. $,j(XJ. n10 +• -,-,C-R-~-·n-Y --,--,1-,..,r.. ,., , ,. , pn r 1111'. ~7-6351. l\JJlll\),'I; ~~ tlrn(', hr.~ nrx ihh'. ---SALESMEN !>kllJ11 IJ('ed<'d; iihr!hnd, l.vir N~ n1cn who n.ro ttndy to lcllJ'n Ille car buslllCSJS a.ncJ are willing to lrn!n, l.1u11 have good' pensonallty, be tntereated Jn a future, dre1L"I v.•cll, aalesmlnded. Benefits: Demo., ll'OUP tn1.. hi~l1 commissions. Unlimited In· u>nle. Apply in PtrllOn. OLDSMOBILE. 2850 llarbor Blvrl .. CMtn. r.1c,n. SATURDAY lnterview·s PACIFIC MUTUAL Moving To N•wpo rt S•pt•mb•r 1972 ln.I{, (Jlli\1 Exi•rl . cnr11l111or. J\'r1~l C'flr, Sl'nd n'SlrllH' lo llf1.x 826 LliRllna f!Pnch, 9:.'1.i:'12. SECRETARY /Girl ~'riduy: crl'ative. x!n1 l y p is 1, pKycologlcnl orlk:r, l\pply j21.1) 597-24<r, --~-SF.RV TCE Slntion nrtr-ndan1 p/thnr., f'\'c.•s & 1\•kn<ls. F.x· pr1· only. N"al In Ill!· pearanct". Apply 111ornings only, 2590 Ne\\'port Blvd .. c.·.r-.1. SINGLE nt<cdlc Ir. ovorlock optll. F.xpcr. only. To1> pay. G4tHJ3tl8. SUPERVTSOns, 11 n i Ibo a I prod. Supcr\'ir.ory s k I 11 t•ssc11. H1111t bldR exp. 1101 t~ftl. \l/c \Vii i tr 11 I n . t.lacGrt'!:Or \'acht Corp, 1ii31 Plo!•1•t1!in, Ci\1. -Swltchb-;ard _O_p_' - Kelly Gid m•nt p•nslori -Fringe b•n•fits -Car•er position If your nn~11'f't' he YES to R Ill' llltl!'I' 1,f llJt• lllll!VI', yOl,1 nuiy bl' Olli' of the !\\'l'IVI' I :un louldnJ: rn1'. Clrang-r Cn11 nty Salt'!\'. Di- rector \vlll Jnl~rvil'.'w tit c;rnnrt TfolC'I, Su ite #809, 7 F'rcedmnn Wny, Anaheim (ftCl'<J!llS fr('lm Disnryland'J SATURDAY: 11 :00 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. SUNDAY: 11 :00 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. An Eq1111I ()pp()rtunity En1plny1•r VJ J. YrN A i\1-Vk:T:E c=R~A~N-: ~St-a-rt a n111nagl'n1cnt t·nrel'r in a loc·al brnnch or a nationally kno\\'ll l'o, ()n thr job 1raininii;. ~:nru 1vhilr-you lr:1rn. Appro\•rd Cf job tn1 inini;:-. To $7;!00, Coll l!f'll.'n Jh1y1 ·.~ 5'l0-60.'"i.'i l '11ns1nl Agl'ncy 27!Xl llnrbor Bl. af Adan1111 ----WAl 'l'HI-:S S , food & cor.k1nil.~. f'XJI only. Part lin1l'. Fri-Sun. 6-12-8274. WANTED full tin1t' livc-oul houskt'1']lf'r Jor Junt'. N.B. l\l'('R. Must like children. r~l(}..1249. WHY NOT? Have o job you en joy 1n o new building ! REFRIGERATOR & Stn\'e, look like ne1v. $;,t.l ra. 7130 'Vc-s1n1inster Avr .. 'Ve.~tm. (IVJo;ft 200 1vashor.~. 1lry1•r.i;;, reCri~erl\ton fron1 $39.!l:J. ;14;,..01RO. --------H.EF'R!GERt\TOH, sid~ hy sidr, ZI cu rt, auto 1lf_•frost, xlnt col'l(f. $1ft5. 6-1·1-4777. Furniture 110 'I' H. AN SF ERRED. !\1ust snerirlCfl our Re au Ii r u ! i\l+>rlit. furn. Hidnhl'd Nl'ver 11.~ed, formal d inilJR' rooni. king slzt' ma!ll'r brdl"QQnl sui! Arnt'rican of i\1Hl'11111- l'illl' party )lt>t, velvet sofa and lovr seat, rJt rcr-nr11I f'nrl tables, sfl'teo, lnmps, 1•tc. O\rnrr (71.fl 522-J:l.16 PAIR l'('cnn 11'01lll eomnuxre labl~ $200. Fr. Prov. kingsiz<' Bit. furn, $2'",,0. i\tngnavnx sterro .~ rtl'Ord plnyf'r $200. 2 Pr. drn]')C's $50. Jlr. \1•ini; chain: $25 ca. 1 Mink siolr $100. 6·14-0322. Call ev!'s & \\'Cckcnds. INVALIDS \Vnlkcr & Con1- 1nodc, 1 chl'st & nilestnd11, rofree thl, 1\·asher & clcc. dry<'r. Fro~tfrrC' r ~frig \11/icemak~r. 833-l:ill.f afl 5:30. l'l10VING -H1ni:; or Furn. to sell. 3 f)C' scclion;d, marble roffE'f' tblt'.'-Childrens furn. Dint'llr tbll'. l\lANY l\10RE lTE:'\I S! 968-6-100 nft 6. 11kdays. OCCASIONAL ch11.ir. 11qunre <'nd lable & dni·k gre!'ll velvet ottoman. All derorator quality & in pcrff'<'t conrl. 67:;...·..r.i. t. --- Ml\llbu Ln. llntKBch::..; ------•'-...:. eTec. Organ, Model E·ll2, Garaae Sale-Sat & Sun. FOR Sale: 1 glass "-chroml'.' . like ne11.·. $1800. 673-4700. WANT AD --~-842~--3™---1· 10.3. Washer/dryer/Misc. din rm !bl 3'x8', \Y/8 206 A I B Ibo I I chrome.chairs, 1 mink stole po('na, a a s. =·~--'"'~---~--fi·l·l-j!l!J2 aft 6 pm. OUR junk -·your treasurl•! Jo'ri 9·5. Sul 8·11, 2218 Aralia. f.:ast BluH, N.B. 644,.1836. A pr. \\lharrdalc Sp(•nkcrs, By pvt. ply. Boxf'.~ nC'ver opf'ncrl. Sohl $126(1. Take GIANT Gar. Sale. Somtthinf:. S12j cash. 5:14-1l4R for everyone. Thurs.Fri.Sal. --~-~~-~~~ 626 Center.C.M. 518-6&12. * * New 1-landmade Quilt. l.imogel! Plntl'.'1. 5x7 Import Jewelry 815 rtug. ----------·r Wecldi n9 '' Off! * 642-8989 * \\ll'ddini;:-ring set for snle! LOVELY 11('\\' form a 1 s, Ty,·o bnnll.~ & snlilairl'.' in Rags to Riches, 28J E. liffany setting, Dian1on1l is r.1ain, Tustin. Tues-Sn!, 1; caral. J.lnve bit\ of 5flle 10-~:30, !')-14-9311. from Dahnken'11 in Co.~ta Mr11u. SAVE about $100. Call 546-5710 aft 6 pn1 & wttke-nds. I!"s in to be thin .... The Diet \Vorkl!bop Way For information 531-5105 CARPET FOR SALE M,\N'S bf'autiful diamond by Carpet Layer. Call ring. yl'llo1v gold w/3 e ;»(}-2086 e dia~110nds.. Appraised a l JOY IN A JUG! 362.1. Lad1t!! gold pendant Art· 1. boltl _, 6,. I . . is 1c e ga.uens -,~ or pin) w/7 diamonds. ap-ll ~20 G4Z-9I19 p1·niS('d at $225. ,1,rw accept aa on.~ o;i ea. · · • r<:'rt.i;;onable offer. I-I . B, NE\V blank Am~x ~ min 84G-jl03 Casst'.'l!e tapes, sold $24 doz Machinery 816 accept S9 doz. SJ.l-1148. ,.--,~---,--,.--·1CAKES, Custom Made for all OXYGEN -Acety!l'.'nt" -occal!!ons. Any 11ize. Reas. 1\•clcling :tllcl cutting ('luHit. 5.'16-7725 or 968-'nli S79.9j. A~ ARC \\-'elder. 225 ¥ATTRESS-Atlantic·SUpt'r a111~. $9:i 827-3040. firm • doublr • nearly ne1v - Miscellaneous 818 :i:io. 5-18-6756. ~~~~~-~~~ GfBSON GUITAR (·}4 size. 6 i\IAPLE dinctte with leaf & 5 string) Jikt' ne\\' case in-chairs $3J, 1513 Orange eluded. , .$00.00, 'CRAIG Ave .. C.l\1. 642-5666. TAPE RECORDBR !Reel ELECTRIC FANS lypl'l s c I d o m used. 1212 So. Ross St., Santa Ana Transformer in e I u de d , 542.3120 $40.00. UN IQ ~ E PRO-AIR Conditioner-ml Jize. Gold•n Retrievers WE Buy graM p;..,..·, 642-5678 AJ<C * 631-6485 PEN~ Y O\VSLEY ~2-33141 1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 1".\2 p,_..,h Bl'd, , St'"Joo •••••••••••••••••••• , x .P\!l)'CI" Pl:\!10 Kingsbury I Qn! ?racuce piano, $,lij. I ~, '\ """''"'· •q~ . BALD\\'TN Sp1Jl('t piano, ! @~..nlil ./JJJJ_ ... /}_j b!·ass insi<lC'. _\valnut ttnish. -:. <-~ wr~.,IV~ Xlnt cond. $4j(l, 496-~ ~-... \ A CON'IE.NlfNTSHO""'NC ANO Everatt Studio Pi•no '<1 srw1Nc cu1or FOR TH£ $300. 536.S775 ~ ~ CAl ON THE GO, Sll0!.11! Stor~, Restaur•nt, ' . 5., 832 For an ad in Woman's World Coll Muy Belh 642,5678, ext JJO STORE FIXTURES, display cases, clc. 1m Harbor Blvd, phone (714 ) 32;'r.1381. TV, Radio, HiFi, Super Easy! Potholder Jiffys Stereo 136 SPEAKER syi:;tems, shipping- 1lamage to boxes & packing only. 6" 1·1vay lo 15" J.\1·ny air suspension systems. 50~(, off rey. retail. 5 Year gUarantee. 892-1191. STElfe••o--- Complete syste1ns, ro to 40~~ off reg. retail. Speaker sys- tems, 35 to SO~t,. off. reg. retail. 7804 \\'estmins!rr Ave., \Vestn1instl'.'r. 892·7952. l'.'.D 7028 /· ' JECTOR, s?ools image~ up Xlnt cond. $50. to JG feet simply by ob1cct. 673-SIBO [ If I Ideal for the student or hob-=--,,------+I free to You byist •.. $6.00. G.E. Misc•ll•n•ou1 ~------~ \ . .•' lmn1rdl11tr plnt·f'u1r11t fnr "·ork 111 l.o11 A11~cle11 unlll tlrnc of 010\'1', Need11 you for shnrt 1rrn1 li'1nporary a,.;1dgnn1rn!~. i\lus1 h;o\'C' t'X flt'r. ' Xln'I "·nrklni;: !'Ollds. T11p <'urn· 11\J.:s, \V<'rk!y .rayc hr<·k. l\h· )'>(l!U!rly llP fc •1•. i\l'l'l,Y NO\V FOH : i'1 0 VI N C ! ,\Just srll PORTABLE TV, <black and Want•d 820 3 Lints, 2 Times, $2.00 ,, Exp<'nrnl'c In l.1ft'. A,·,·id1'nl nr llrnl1h Jn"urnn1·r pr,.rrr- rrd hut not r~iit•ntlal. Cur· r~nt of)('ning~ Arr: eGEN'L CLERICAL eSEC'Y,STENO eMATH CLERK Interviewing 9:30 AM ·11:30 l'i\'t On Siie Ot Ne1v Uhl'° PACIFIC MUTUAL NE\VPORT FINANCIAL CTR ((".omtr Sanltt Ctuz & Nr\vporl Ccntcr Drl • }'rt¥. dally hu~ h·11nsport11.· lion ror \11ork in L,A·. un1U 111ov1· to Nt'\\'()(111 s.t•p\. '72, Kelly GM 2061 Bus.i11('s.~ <.:tr Dr il'Villi' s:l,'\.1441 • S•c'y·Steno O!X"llin:,:-~ t11"u il. IH.l\\. ·ry/)(' ~..O. lite sletl(), 'l) pc lil'. S1e11() 90 1't::LEPllONE Sales. Top e General Clerical t'llznn1lssion.~ and honus. Ap.. t.'lli!h or English bnck· I ply In 'PC™" beh\'t'en 9.00 .1t1uund nccess. o r(-. :ind 1:?:00 110Qn nt ~:\81 Bolsn 1'.\p1·r. pref'd. Jr,.~ _A~~11dWA.y CH_y,__ Sr. Otx•nini.;s Avnit. TELLE!{ Tlti\INEB: Sn1i\(' .n1ur 11·ny inlo ll ~l"<'lll r11tun' 1n rnonry! Thls hunk 111•r1ls ,\11ur aptlludr & l'll'rMnntH y fn1' tlll'ir 1r11 lnini.: l'\l'11t"l'fln1. t :r1•111 11·ork111g 1-0111titionii ,(· lo!:( or 11uhli1· contact. r11ll hC'n1·rit~. s:::-J(J. Cull J,1ndn Hny, !i~O·lilJ~li ('(la~111l AJ:f'nry ::~~ llnrbor Rl 11! Ad11n1~ Apply Y(lunf: & !,.'Ith' Tirr.~. 1~$ Nt'11.'J)C11i lllvd .• <'.1\1. F:xpcr, p1·<"f'd , 11111 lll'n,.rit;.; \1•/1)(1id \'~11'n!h1n~ -----TRAINEE-Y0ur1~ r11:1n n~ op!lcttl IN•li'11u·i:1n rrp:ur 1111111. Rf'i.11111·1·11-~01 :!0 • Accounting Cl•rk Vnt'fr·d & Jntt'l'l'5ting Opcni11i.:s f 'or Good ~la!h 11pti!11d1•. Son1e Expr1·. .~· lire t;pini; nt•1·c~s. JNT~:HV I I-:\VINC !\!on & ·rut".~ !Jnn1-lp111 \Vrd !hru Fri 911111-l:lp1n ON SITE OF OUR NE\V BUIWING . PACIFIC MUTUAL ~·t\~lllON lSLANll r{'ortll"r Sn n!n Cruz ,t· N1'1l'l)(ll'I (.'('Iller Drivt'' turni~hini;:-11, t'f'frii:., n1isc;. Call ti7:l-l&IG Thur~ or t'ri o.ft 6; Sec Sat 2009 Vista Caudal, NB. ITALIAN Prov. living I'm. suite, s· deeor . .sofR, rock· ta il lhl & lamp tbl. Xlnt · cond'. $200. 963-3922. · SOFA 8' & love seat, never used, both $150: M'\\·ing 1n11chi11e, $25. Pri. Pty. ~7910. S Piece Spani~h t.1 e c:I • f.:irig!'iiZC' bed set. Nearly l1L'11·. Pert. Cond. $375. ~l'l5·S!l34. TRADITIONAL furn reproductions handcralled in pin<", from shop to you. t;,16-9583. VELVET tufted sofa, never used, $135. l'lfntching love i;eal' SS5. Velvet hi-back chair, $85. SJS.-62SL RALD\VlN Fr. Prov. Piano. Xlnt 1-ond. $750, Ironritf' Jron rr soo. ~llsc, rumiturr. &IG-OOl 'l, ttfl 6 prn -~-~100U JIAflo !Able k be•~ v ision, \\•l thoul i.: l :'1 .~ ~ ~ !(. r r" K onnblf' 1nlt•llii,:1•11('1'. • t'R~~f; 1la!ly b 11 ic elie11, $2~: n1aple dinetlt" set, s •• m.tre•t, f/tlm• fo(ll 29th ~'tl"t'fl , N.K SiOCltl;;"J'ARY • Bookkcrr;\. Shor'thand A typh1u·1louhh• k "r p in a: -Co 11 ~tn11·1i11n KnowlrdJ:(' pref. Co1ln ~1t·.~o mi Jl1fl, t~l'J-0090. I rnrcl111nlcal 11klll & 11pl!h1d1· 1ml!e111'f'. J\1tch111r shop "Xll desirAble bu! not n11in• lr1ttl~portation ror ''"lrk in I S:.O. 96S-:n~9. Lo~ J\rtgl.'lr11 untll n10\'(' 10 ROL~L'", T~O=P~D~E~S~K~- N1·11·11Url. &pt. '72. 1 * 646-95.Cll * • SEC RE,::;T:;_:A~ll~Y~.- 1"\IU Un1r poaltkm. Savlftat .l loan expcr. h1•lpf\1l but not m ·1•MAry. M·ust bt ~ .. rp. Call Mf. l\t11i1'h1nilll"r ~l:MOl'lt d111or,v. \.\'rilt> P. O. Box 1!X!J, r.~t. !!262li. 11tJo:E 'Vo1·k. ~tu11 CUn1h, Own rr11n~p. S2 hr. Stnr1 tomorru1v. li~G-5393: TUR_R_E_T __ _ LATHE OPERATOR C1aM A-Oo.y Shift Appb' 1741 Pl&cl!nth1. Omit,, Mfu. -\\'IV~~S l>IS1':NCJfAN1ED DREA'EL dining room tab\«"' Oil UNlli\PP\' \\'ml MAR-\\'/G chairs And extra lcavts JUACE. llunt. Bch f'Ulhor ~Gd. cond. SOO OR 3-JOSt. nt'f'(j111 stl\ttstil·P.l docutncn-DRESSER ~ttm:>r, 2 matd1. t:lllun tor lltl\\' hook. Ablllty niteslnnd!I In contemporary In ct1ndldb' vtrbaliie your \\lalnut. likC' nu. 67".>-4355. npinion~ & nttitu00$ im· C.OlJ) vf'lvt'I t'Oueh & prrAli\~. , .. our C'Onfldence lOl'('J§t'nl, 10 mo's old. Ori&. ll1>Slll'l'!tl 1t11 JOU \\'Otald T'f!-1600. SJOO/bst orr. 54(1...19'J4. ,1·hi1" 11" scre('n) includesl:;::U-=::;;:::;-;:;:::::;.z I •••••••••••I irnnsfor1n('r lo y,·ork off ·*Wanted-Dead* cigu r lighl<'r. Exe t' 11 e nt Aluminum cans that have Kha pc ... $55.00. Pho n c sl'rvt>d you \veil & provided 642-6840 or stt at 755 West hours or pleuure. RUN!~! 18th St., Apt. 6D, Costa Do no walk to 1060 Glenn- M<'sa. eyre St., ~na Beach. No STEREOS glass whatsoever, accepted. 1972 C'.erTard equipi>«;d "'ith Mu1ical lnstrum•nt1 822 full size pro! e 1s1 on a l ----------c h anger, AM/FM/MPX PAIR Lud\\.·ig Timbare 11hell receiver, 1 e tt I e d ttir drun1s '\\·Ith stand $63, Olds suspension speakers, tnpe recording trumpet, cost .S·:OO deck & headphone plug in sell S200. 842-2064. jacks. \Vas le.ft ~laimed. VOX Royal Gu a r d 1 m a n Brand new in box & Amp., total sound effects at gunranteed. Originally pric-a rep.sonable price. ~l. ed at $279.95. Take over for KIMBAIL spinet piaro with $90 cash or !mall payments. bench, mahog color, $'250. T.nya\vny Department. 642-1492 7141893--0501. -------,,,-~-* * Deluxe, dble Tom Drum EXTENSION and STEP Set Zlldjian cymbnls $175 LADDERS: all sites WOOD or best offer, 6'4-45'94 1 ONLY Price t't"duct'tl: for ~-------­QUICK SALE 12!2 So. R<... Offlco Fumltvre/ St., Santa Ana. 542.31~. Equip. 124 POODLE-pup. F('1n Salmon - Needs loving borne \\.·/daily attcn. &15-0355 6 4 5-4 7 4 4 Arnie. S Ll'ITLE kittem need good homes, males & femaJes. 646-1098 alt 3 pm. FREE t'emale Collil' to friendly home. 847-2391 HEINZ 57, 4 kittens 6 11·ks old, heaJUi,y & walking. 5:)7--683.1. TO good home·beaut. husky/ collie mix. Loves child. 642.{)545f546. 7308/645-4714 j fntA6a 13~ Add dash 'n' smash to separates \\'ith this new set . POT J10LDER JIFFYS! Crochet and join 4 squares for c<>nt rr front, 4 for back, 18 for bag. Combine vivid 1\10RE PLAY than cutting colors of kn itting ivorstcd. or sewing! Just ONE main p aHl'rn 7028: bag, w st. pattern part each for sun Siz('s S.l$ illC'h. skim and panties -no side ~VENTV-FIVF. CENTS TABBY Persian from Ir.an to sean1s! Whip up sev<'ral for each pattern -add 2j sets in penny wise, easycarc cents for each ""''''" fo, right home. l )T old f('male. ti bl d ~ ·• co on en s. Air Mail and Special Hand!· ~~=7~308_, _______ 1 Print~ Pattern 9194: NEW ing: othcrwisr third-class FREE cute tmier poodle Child's Si1.t'!s 2. •l, 6, S. Siz(' 6 delivery \\.'ill take ttu'ce rnix-hse trained-loves child. skim, panties l~' yds. 4:>. weeks or motl'. Send to 642-0M.5/546-7308/645-471-4. inc. All« Brooks lht'.' D1\JLY KrITENS, 1 blk & \\.'hl part SE\1ENTY·F1VE CENTS PILOT. 105, Nrcdlt'.'craJt P -1 · for each pattern -add 25 Depl Bo l63 STOVE-O'Keefe & Merritt. 2-FRIDEN el-, calculators ersmn, orange! hgcr; I ., x ' Old Cht'lsea ""' mttl('!, S' v1ks. 673-7878. cents for each paltern or Station. New York. N.Y. Vt'ry good. $45. Color RCA $60, ca. 1-Frlden 10 key Air Plail an1l Special J-landl-lOIU.L Print Ntffif'. Add--~ TV. rcnlOl.f' control $63 elec. Add rnachin8 SJOO. '69 APRlCOT Poodle · I yr. To ing; otherwise third-class Zip,. P•lle.m Nunib(lr. ,,,_, Jnkr'~ 199 E. l61h, C.M. Ad<lo-x book kt' r pi n & good homt". 778-4SOO e...:-338 delivery will lake tbree NEEDLECRAFT 'll'. 642-5006. machine & table. Cost $1300, bet. 8 -5/646--9()j9 tves. "'eek.<i or more. Send fo C •• U "~ ""74...., roc1~t. knit. rte. Fret. A Stt"al~ 4 brand nc""' heavy se ...-.. ".,... '"" FREE % Persian kittens, 3 Marian Martin, the DAILY dll't"ctions. 50c duty pick up tl"l"f.~ -PJinos/Org•n• 826 \\'hi\c, I black. Call even· Pl.LOT, 442, Pattern Dept.. NEW! lABtanl ~lacra~. Goodyear -high miler. 8.75-ings, ~Z. 232 West l8tl1 St., New Basic, fancy knot,, Plt- J6,5 6 ply. Al'° ' Cl>e'·y * HIGHEST CASH 7 MO, old ""all fem, dog. Y°''· NY J()OU, ".:iot terns, ft. Sl<.lltl \Vhttll. 892-4713. Very aflecUonate • love~ · NAl\lE, ~DRESS w 11 h E&IJ' Ari of H a 1rp1 n ESTATE SaJe-1224 £sM.'X PAID child. It ptc>ple. 54.Cl-8810. ZIP, SIZE and STYL!: Crochet~ over 26 duigns to LaDe. Westcll!f. !M. M•v 19. ' * NUMBER. make fl -v FREE Kltte• Black SEE AfORE Spring ' • 20, ZI. Antlquew, l''urnlture, temaJts • S wkw old. Fashions and choose 'one lnala•t Crochet B<lot. Rclrl.gerator, Sony 3-lrftck. COAST MUSIC a47-4990 ""Item 1...... from tJCw learn by pictuttsl Patterns. Clothe•. Bookll. For your piano: Splnet1·Con-...... ''"" SJ. "~<'SltELVES ,., 2 solei·Upi'lgh.ls·qrnnds. DARUNG small hlk .t: \\'ht Spring-summer Catalog. All G-lntplele lalltaftt Gtfl Book ~ ,..., GU 2856 ftmale. puppy, 5 mo, has·aJJ !lzt1! Only 50c. • more thtn 100 .. 1.... IL ~fAU. DE...C\f..'S suitable for • shot&. 00)..5104 JNsrA~'T SEWING BOOK -..._ .... - txtra stcnte space In your B.J HAMMOND. Pcrfecl w/ 7 MO'S btRUI. mkrkttl sew tod~. wear tomorrow. Sl~nplflftl Alpall Jloot - -· 1212 So. Ro• St, string bhL $1,968. r.-~~ 11 , •llty •·· QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT TYPJSl'/Clerlt, Gtn'I Ore. QJ,n1trutlk.ln ore t' x pt' r. btlptuJ-. Submit re&UIM! #: nlnln anonyn1ous. Ubtt·al I '"'"'=-----------~~~ ltr PAid to lllOllC atl1tettd. ORTIIO quttrHl.tf' \Kl! & Cell !i'\ti·f.006 IW?f'1tt 7 pm. box ttprlng1, fl.nn. Whit~ hd,brd Hke new SQ. 846-9548. \VO?i:tAN 10 llvt fn Ort1Uiu1 Nm1f', mu~t drl\'t" 543--2624. ~' 9· MODERN '°""h 1100, li1od. l"t'Cliner, pede1tal J.rp, $8). $17 .. 2391. Slnr3 AM. M).3lJ) CONN Theater. $1,345 '-Kol-••i•n ""'"'V'"''v• femll.lc, rNsrru'IT FA s JI Jo N J ...,. SOOb-SOc. BRAND new Stm Deluxe THOMAS full cons. Sl,395 all abota. 642-8989 BOOK -HWldttds of ~ of lJ Pl1ae .,,._., \VURL nl•-demo Sl 14' PtlR.mRED Siamese female f··"'· fa WANT ~AB ' Alary hl,,tory to Ch1ulfle<I ad na. l.'>t. t.!o 0.11y Plkl.t. P.O, Bo...: 1. .. Co&tt Mesa, CAJlr, - Sell rM old 1tutt. new aluft CALL-642-5678 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS FO@_ ACTION. • • CALL 64i·5671 ' . btll muaatt "''fth varl· "....,... · ' -:;-:;:.:~;;•_;;:<Uc=,, _,IL=-=--=-:-/ Qa.llC Boe* t-IS i-t:tnna. apffd. Colt $10> .. 1ell $70. Nu plaooa. No ahmi c:ut., A ~ ~ltns. :;-Make Room For D&d-50c. 6"-1''32. ~ wsrc co. KM'TENS-:otie Black a one d )''' .• t I•• n out tbe MlllNm Qiallt 9eoli: t .. It'• ll•'AYI the rlaht 11mt 8' 2>43 NO, 1llJJn, :>A. gar&&<, "'°'" tntlh Is CASH IOe, olways 1lte rialtt p1.,. If Sl7418l ** SlnotlSU U,.r6n-4813.534-3831 , wllh a DAJLY PD.O'I' Qallfsfor'l' .. q .. ....-.. 10\I not RESULTS! Call eves.. CT.usfttd alt. 15 bC!auUfUI pall.ems. 5Qc. ~ A 'Pilot that •d Sdl Idle Hems aowt Ca:t White Elepout Di.mcM.·Llbll lodtu'I ,;..:~~:..:.-~! ___ ._a...n __ ..i_oc1_ . ._: _)..,._, ••••••••••••••••••• ! [ -~=-I~ [ -~ I~ I ,_..... lliJ I I§! [ Autos tor SM• • 1_o_.,_-_,._r•;..f ____ ~'°°:; Boeh, Sllpsf Dockl 910 Motor Homo• 940 Auto• W1ntod tjl Auto1, Imported 970 14' Fiber&:lau, tzi...bu.U, MW concl .. 1~•t for flah & aid. $499.54W37Jaft4. COMPLETE YACHT MAINT. HuU cleanlnr. 50c per ft. Monthly ra~t. 675-8772 Boots/ Merino Equip. a.tARLJ.N Tack1e -1 Rod w/Penn 50 lnternaUonal \Y ANTED Moortnc on Balboa bland tor snuill boat. m.1200. * Slip Avall-Nr Lido • m.6<50 • SAIL BOAT SLIPS Newport Beach 548-2253 OICE slips In new ~farina tor 30-70 n. boats. 613-6606. • NEW 23' 2UX\lry motor homft. Air. Load@d! Best rates ·posllble. Prl ply 96S-1.!97. e ARISTOCRATS e NEWPOR1's e Atrr().MATES Abo, s@veral uacd $39!5 & up l'IORSllAM TRAILER SALES reel. 1 rod w/1'"1n Nor ~ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim 2709 W. 17th Street Santa Ana (714) ~l-2595 Vilcount reel. LI 8-1255. Boats, Powtr to6 * 32' CHRIS CRAFT* 1982. By Owner, S1@eps 6. _)(tra.sJncl.: a~to.pllot, radio, monornatic h@ad I: more. Real 1.1over w/twln 283 Oi@vs. MUii See! Best btfer! Back Bay, 64&-9001, 2'2' CU11tom Fiberglass Sport fiaher. Brand new Completely equip~ -Must Sacrifl~ -$98f.(). Orig Cost 112.000. 646-&l<t 13' \Vhaler. 33 hp. Johruon. Molded seats -Shoc k trailer. $1250. 835-3150 or 673--0467. WINNEBAGO -17' self con· tained. Only used 12,lXXl ml. $2150. 96z-.l.198 H.B. Carnoer1, S•lt/Rent ~ Auto Service, Parts 949 1 Ton "400" '72 GMC PICKUP, long bed. 1-feavy duty springs and shocks, automatic trans., "400" V-8, Powu Steering, Cadillac Parts Tranamluion Radio 1959 Air Conditioning Unit 1212 So. Ross St. Santa Ana 542-312> 5-950xl65 10 ply tires, aux ~~~~~~~~~ battery, 11eavy Duty Bat· r tery, tilt wheel, Radio, Aatw..... If g,J gauges, Super Custont w/ _ -4~3' Angelus full sell con-J ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;~ tained cat> over camper, ,.Jeeps 6, Shower, Full Flush Gtneral 950 \VE buy all mallu of clran BMW u...i -1> can. paid ,.,. or noL Please drive 111 tor _...,..l_M_M_E_D-IA_T_E __ ~ appralsal. OELIVERY NEWPORT IMPORTS . l1DO W. Coast Hwy., Newport Beach 642-9405 WE PAY TOP CASH . tor lllOd ears • trucka, lult call UI kw he nttmates. GROTH CHEVROLET Ask tar Sales M.,,.... 18211 &acb Blvd. Huntinaton Bu.Cb 147.6087 Kl ,_ \VE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP USED CARS II your car is extra clean, see us first. & SEE US ADOUT . Overseas Qellverv CREVIER MOTORS ~ \\I, 11'11 St .. S:tnta Ana 135-3171 Viliit our new home! & ROY CARVER, Inc. 23-4 E, 17th St. Costa Mesa 546-4444 '69 BMV 2000 Sod. Lo mi's. &4&6697, aft 5 CITROEN Autos, lrnpor'tod 970 Auto•, lmportod _.......;_.._ ___ _ 970 Auto•, lmjiortod · JAGUAR PORSCHE XJ6 JAGUAR ·n. ~Int C<trd. '68 911 TARGA 16,0CO nl~es. Y.'h1te ""'/blk 5 spttd, alr rond . ., mug leathf1• !nt. All utru. \\'beds. Must seU. Bu.ylru; T~"'·er. au· cond, AM/Flit. .. ~ """u.-14 $7800/675-2625. ,,..,use. cuu-...... · MAZDA ROTARY'S lmmedlete Delivery RENAULT Renault Demo Sale Semi Annuol Demonstrator Cloorance Sale This Weekend Unbeotable Prices ALL 1972 MODELS IN STOCK FOR IMMEOIATE OELIVERY INSTANT CREDIT APPROVAL BANK FINANCING COAST . . . . . . TRIUMPH *TRIUMPHS* '71 CLOSEOUT SP)TFIRES AS LO\V AS $23!)!) GT-4 SAVE $500 FRITZ WARREN'S Sport Car Center ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 710 E. 1st, S.A. 5-47~7&1 VOLKSWAGEN '69 VW Bug only 34.000 mik•s. 7.LA517. SI 195.00, Jim Slemons Imports 2201 S. i\tain. S.'U1la An11 557.5242 0 1)1•11 Sun. 'fi.~ BUG. X!nt ('(11111., nt'I\' 1 1rC'~. f'ng. just "1111pl1•1t•l\' i:n1w thru. l\iu~t ~11. S~l9:1. 1Ws1 offer ur t rail 1• , R-17-ful9. ·n V\V.~h~u-,.-,o~,-,,,-o,-,,-,,-.;1r Sl'Bt & bed t'flbin('IS. :=ilirlHlt.: sun roof-purl n·rni.:. l1n· lll:H'Uifllf'·pri/ply. $ ~ R fl 0 . Call ~16-Qil l \VkdAys !}-I 28' D IE S E L Sportflsher, cu.sbn ·n LUHRS, F/G, loaded. Slip avail. Pvt Pty ~ Toilet , Holding Tank. Hot &. •N-OT-JC-E-.-.-.,-you--ha-V>-og Cold Water, Electric Butane, credit problems for lack of Refer, Ready for these long c red i 1 , re possessions, weekend trips to the moun-divorces? I can get you tains, etc. GET AWAY financed on a used car. BAUER BUICK 2925 1-larbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 979.2500 \VANTED : '68 Mustang or Cougar with. air. lt'J:ust be clean & reas. 537-2096. Citroen Sports Maseratl Orange County headquarlers for local & European dC'l.ivery. Jim Slemons Imports 2201 So. Main, Santa Ana MERCEDES BENZ SO USED MERCEDES ON OISPLAY NOW IMPORTS '67 l\lert•cdes 25{)S 4 dr. 1000-1200 \V. Pac!r!c Cs!. l-h\'Y· VVB:657 ............. $2,945 Newport Beach t714l 6<12·0400 '6."1 V\V hus r rhlt t'n~. S!ill K\1nr1·. dble be d-SI 2 :.o .1 Uavid 833-&12S days l.i7:l~):\jj~ 23' Cabin Cruiler, 4 cyl. Gray, ln water & ninnlng. $850/otftr. 6 4 5-0158, ~1968 eves&: wlmds. 15' Birch Craft duraply w/18 HP Johnson. TraUer. $7'50. Ph. 968--0154 aft 5. MUST Rll all/prt 10' d~ & 14' trlr. Both xlnt cond. Make ofr. 557-6594. lB' Caillornia: in fl: out Mere cruiser, SS, w/cover, trlr. $1600 cash. 962-1608. · 34' Cabin Cl'ulser, alps 6, Fully equipped. Llke new. . 96Unlall6pm, 16' Glupar, 65 hp Mercury o/b, 4 yrs old, fully equip. !M2-5115. 12' Aluminum Boat w/3 hp Johnson motor. both xlnt oond. $300. 9711-1866. NOW. (#510975) (No. 1078) Some aay they can, but \\'e Buy this at do. Call 9 to 9, 7 days a $6995 wttk. Dealer. m.33;9. + tax &: lie. REBUILT Ford Au to BILL BARRY Trans. $35. Almost Dew Taco 22 mint.bike -$65. '&3 Flat-GMC-Pontlac (1st St. at S.A. F\Yy.) 2lOO E. 1st St., Santa Ana 558-1000 CAMPER COMBO '72 Villa Grande Travette Cabover camper, .sleeps 4, stove, refer, stainless steel, overhead cabinets, weighs 920 lbl, moffiited on New '72 GMC pickup, automatic, J10wer steering, power brakes, radio, deluxe cab, heavy duty springs, Shas:ks. (#576356), all this for only $4295 Ford Country Sta. Wgn. $300. •57 VW Sedan • Very gd. cond. $350. Call aft 1: 30 pm. 962-3978. Truckl 962 '65 Dodge 3/4 ·Ton V-8, automatic trans., radio and beater. (546263), $1199 Mike McCarthy Recreational Veh icle Ctnter COR. BEACJ-f &. f..1cFADDEN Autos, Imported 970 ALFA ROMEO. · -----.-.-.....-.--* '71 ALFA * *CLEARANCE SALE * The 1972'• Are Herel Largest Savings Ever On All Models! This ls the \Veekend To Buy Your New Alfa at: 557-5242 Open Sun. DATSUN '71 Datsun 2 dr. Sedan Excellent cond. Gets weal mileage $1250. Phone 644-8.5111 1967 DATSUN pick up w/ce.mper shell. Ex c e 1 Cond . 557-84431557-42'37 '72 new Datsun pick-up Lease or buy. $69.95/mo. Pocai Leasing 548-1155. 'fi7 Datsun 1600 4 door automatic r/h good cond. $600/or offer. 546-4478 ask COAST . -for Linda. IMPORTS '67 Datsu n 1600: 4 dr Sdn, good cond. $4%. firm. 54&-1610 '69 Datsun 510, 4 spd, new paint & tires, 39,000 miles . $700. 833-93.19. '65 l\1ercedes m sed FXGSU Re nau lt Sales & Service ,7·0··~,,··:::~····300····5 .. E··L Sl.575 !or over a decade in Orange " t'n .. -.:ues ' · · Counly Luxury scd. Lease New Mercedes Scrv. Dept Open til 8 p.m. hfonday $118 .Mo. Jin1 Slen1ons Rennult HOUSE . OF . IMPORTS 2201 So. r.-·lain, Santa Ana 6862 Manchestch, Buena Pk 1 blk. oorth of \Varner 523-7250 on Santa Ana Frwy. Service Department 546-4114 Or an~e County s L,1rgcst S('ll'ct1on Nl'w & U~Pd Mertedes Benz Jim Slemons Imps. w ,1rncr & flt .. 1111 St Santu Ana 546·411 4 Sales Department 557-~~2 R-15 First Showing USA .Test Drive Jim Slemons Renault 2201 S. Main 557-5242 RENAULTS 1968 210 SL '68-'69.,7().,71 \Vhite--red int. Low ml~es. 2 From S605.00 10 SJGga.oo. tops-Real beauly-pr1/pty. J' SI 1 1 $5500. Day 547-5832/Eve •m em~ns mpor s 8-46-2439 2201 S. Main, Snn!a Ann ' 557-5242 Open Sun. SAAB C'\'t'S. 19611 V\V Bu,!!. Sun 1· o Q f A~/F'~t rRd10, nu t1r•':o\, Xt nt runnin1,; rnnd , S950. 646-1991 after 6 Jl":::'-__ WANTED V\V Bus 01· Bug, runnini;: or not, prerernbly not. 54ll·5.180. 1%.~ V\\' bu~. Rad io. lo 1111IPs. ;'\Jai.t \\'hPf'ls, C.1..EAN, 1 011·rw1· pr1/pty. $1195. !162-R.'61. '6!1 \l\V Conv. Au 1 u, H:ut hC'af llndin\s, ~~5K niilr!'. Likr n<'11· -$1 350. 6~fiHt. 197,!) V\V Bus. OrJ&._~. i\IU!\f Scoll this We-ekend. $2195. 642-1178 l~X V\V Squarehuck, clean, radio, ne\V w/1v tires. $1475. 6-l·l-137•1. * '6j V\V BUS -crpt'ing, pflru•lel'I, l SOO e n~ i n e . Bo1h, Rontf Chart'r 901 HAVE BOAT-WILL TRAVEL + tax & lie. BILL BARRY 894-1336 531-2450 1000-1200 \Y, Pacific Cst. Hwy. Ne\vport Beach tTI4) 642--0406 '70 Datsun P.U. with Jarge Schell Camper. Good cond. $1550. 646-~ aft 6: 30. '69 RED 280 SL air cond, 46,000 mi. Best concl. $700J. TI4: 889-0093 MG SAAB SONNETT Ill S750/bE"st offer. 557·2127. 'Tl BLAZER, .350 V-8, auto trans, 4 whl dr, air cond, r/h, red w/wht removable top. Sp&tt never bttn down. Lo mi's. C>wn@r must sell, will take loss. Pvt pty. 615-4355. Alfa Romeo e When You're No. 3 '70 VV..' Sedan. Excellt'nl con- Sport fishina O'uistng Pontiac-GMC-Camper1 ---------Y Try Harder e dition. A1any Exlrns Slfill:ror '65 MG, immac d OU Ai.'t/fl.i rad., C'.;:n,vi~ We Alkl CToas!__ good offer. ~1750. whls., 2nd O\\'ner. $'rri0. Would L e o PUGSt 1965 Bus l!W! e 11 r: inc , 6-J4-!W7i ''We Sold The Mostl'' 1'op Shap<>! $1 175 646-0000 644-8211 Flat Boats, Sall 90t (lit St. at S.A. Fv.'Y.l FERRARI 20Xl E. ht St., Santa Ana '69 Ferrari, 3G5 GT, 2 + 2, silver, A.'1 11-~l\f, air, full p\\T., new l\tichelin, 714 : 675-MlO, early morning. MGB /Is of March 3, 1972 \'le \Vere Call 67;}.5\JG MUst sell -will accept any I ----'558-C..:...1~000~~~~ reas. oUer. 26' Endeavor, '65 Ford 250 ~~ T. 'J'nlck loaded w/extru. Barlow w/8~J' Cabover \Vestway's wlnche1, knot meter, head, camper unit. 4 speed. R/.H No. 3 in the Nation (In Fact e '67 V\V J.'ASrBACI..:: * '67 Ford F-100 Long b@d, V-8, 3-speed trans- mission, radio, h e a t e r • (V44449). FIAT --,-6-7_M_G_B_G_T_., !he World!) In Sales for the $1 .050. Clean. Good c'<lntl. SAAB SONNET Sports Car. 5-18-5610 after 6 p.m. NO\V ON DlSPLA Y racing blks, 2 m~ns, 3 jibs. X1nt cond. 54,000 mi. $1995. Sales Service I---------4 speed, Radio, Heater, Air conditioning, chrome wire wheels, only 27,000 miles. Extra nice. vzy144. We Want to be and will be ,66 VW Station Wagon. No. 1byJune1st. T@sf: drive Good condition. Clran! Genoa. Spinnaker &: g@ar. 548-0316. Boat immac. Great family •65 FORD ~ T Camper $1399 Mike McCarthy Parts Body Shop Brand New COAST IMPORTS '72 Fiat 128 a Sonnett today and att wby $925. * 962-382'2 more people buy from Cout --~-,.,~~=-,,­ than any other dealer in So. ** •n VW, 7,000 mlle11 day a.llor, racin&. 6'15-0'J6l. Speclal, lo mi's. 10' Cabover (2131 986-6189. Camper, re'frig, heat@r &: lOOJ..UX> W, Coast Hwy. 4 Dr Sedan. M 0 T 0 R f'lewpart Beach &12-0406 TREND'S Economy Car of $1799 Calif, $1750. Mesa Verde area * * * .... d. 5411-3884. 24' Gl1H Sloop Dlnette-Galley-Llfellnet: Cycles, Blkes, Scooters Truck Canter 15550 Beach Blvd,. Weslmllllter COAST Call 979-621B. '71 V\V Super-bug, A.i\f/FM, Q ~ "'""' mull\.ptex. radio. L.' ~so IMPORTS ·~··~~,~~;~.,,x mooi Alfa Romeo '72-... year <•12Aos66618). $19118 2000 + 1~' & lie. 91S SaU1-Trallerable Excellent Buy TI+-496-1298 1970 HOnda.cB 750, 2400 ml. Fairing, luggage r a c k, custom exhaust. $1175, 1970 Honda.a> 175 2083 ml .. perf for a woman. $275. 548-8798. '72 Stmikt 250 J onfy 475 mi. lik@ n@'W $700. firm. ·n Hon- da CT-70 only &'j) mi. like new $250. firm. 6'rrN287. 894·1330 894.3341 Ford '65 FlOO PU/VI 4 sp. Long bed. Overloads. 190621... $1095. NOW IN STOCK "l A ' miles average condition ...~ ,./fl 1000.1200 IV, Paclfk Cot. Hwy. ~l:;.700;;_. :;64:;2-4;259;:'::;·=~=- BILL BARRY ll' YAWL "Nice'' $2,500. 17' Trojan speed boat 12' Penguin w/trlr ssoo. tr Cat &: trlr. Make oUer Z' Vik- ing "Sharp" $1,500. -\\-eekdaya. J im Siemon• Imports 2201 So. Main, Sant~ Ana 55 7 ·5242 Open SUn. For Immediate Delivery Instant Credit BANK FINANCING . Pontiac-GMC-Fiat (1st sr. at S.A Frwy.) 21m E. ht st., SaJ;ita Ana 558-1000 "\'Y • Newport Beach.(7141 642-<>406 '70 SQUARE BACK AUSSlE 18'-World Champk>n TRA VELO OGE. 3 masts • all gear. u.ilJ, tr!. um. New 18' aniving llOOn. Roger Welsh 646-6666. 13' Cal-Cat fully eulpped; Good shape . $400. Phont-557-7514 aft 5 pm wkdays. 'i'2 Suzuki Savage -400 mi. 3 mo.s. Cost $11XXJ, sell $100. 543-74n. HONDA C'L-157 K3, One Owner. 3800 mi. Lik@ ntY<' oond. $375. 838-2.120. •n ~ Penton 125 MX. Immac. Extras. DependablE". • 673-2918 '69 Chev. C-30 I Ton FLAT BED. UF, Auto tra.M., radio and heater. (38317C). $2688 COAST IMPORTS Mike McCarthy JOOO.l200 w. Pacific est. Hwy. GMC TRUCKS Newport Beach <n<> 642-0406 COR. BEACH & AUDI McFADDEN Flat '71 128 2 Dr. The car Mr. Ferrari drives. Only 13, 700 miles. (511DTC) 11195. Jim Slemons Imports 2201 S, Main, San!a Ana 557-5242 Open Sun. Brand New · 1972 Fiat 124 Special, Automatic, Factory Equipped, (#12-481057235). 445 E, eo..t Hwy. SAAB SALE NEWPORT BEACH All New SAAB'• Aro 673-&.KXI Ext. 53-S4 Always Special Priced (Open Sunday) At Coast lnst•nt Credit MGB '63, new paint, stats. Bank Financing radials. extras. Xlnt cond. Immediate Delivery $650. ~5722. Factory Trained PEUGEOT Export• In Servi ce, Parts, S•les PEUGEOT * OvorseH Dollvory * tu low as 12.299. (No. 5545) COAST FR.IT": WARR EN'S 15' CATAMARAN - tiberalau -full cover, cushions, ext:ru, trailer -'69 962-3007. 894.1330 531·2450 '70 Audi 90 Yamaha 125 CC $300. '63 Dodge panel truck, 4 d dio h 1 gpee , ra , ea er. co. 548-3107 Many recent repairs, owned car. {690CQQ), Super $2285• + tax & llC". Sport Car Center •ORANGE COUNTY"S IMPORTS BILL QARRY -· Ra . 51 N··.. alt 6 pm. asking $400. or best offer. saving, 4 door se""" ~ Clllg oop, ~s o. ===~=-'~,...--..,-64~ * 673-9183 ......_ LARGES? no E. ht St., S.A. 541-0764 1000-1200 w. Pacltlc Cit. Hwy. home at someone'• private YAMAHA 175 Enduro · lo -----~~--$2299 dock, tn trade tor use. Call ml. Xlnt cone!., lots of xtras. '71 El Camino, SS. air, auto, Pontiac-GMC-Campers PORSCHE Newport Beach !Tiii 642-04-06 9-5 pm. 6'45-3940. Call aft 3. S45-0541. radials, all xtra1. Like new. Fiat OYOTA •= CB .th Must sell 546-3265. (1st St. at S.A. Frwy.) PORSCHE, late 'fi6, ~12. 5 T 11' TARTAN, lnbd, 5 a&ih, ·70 Honda, ........ WI 2000 E '" St Sant A ~ AM/FM Sl•t· gray race eqpt., knot meter, helmet &: rack, $500 or Mt '70 Dodge l/4. Ton · 558-l<Xx> a na i:~ac. $2,ooO. 6 7 s"'-s 3191---,-72-T_O_Y_O•T.-A--- tach. depth ldr.~ lgr 1 _o_u_er_._5.5_7_-8836 __ . ----V-8, 4-speed, R-H., 26,000 .68 Fiat 850 e-ider: .........A eves; 213/638-nJl days. $2029 boat, $9500. 49'J..,,-. 'Ei6 YAMAHA 305, reblt. mUes. Ba1ance of fac1,_, .,,... """"' ..,,; cond $700. Please call-aft 6 '70 Porsche 911T 4 rpeed trans. Dlx AM ndlo. 14' Fibtrglau ' •Dart'•, helmet. Good condition. U75 warranty. (n043J). •--tint-.. dacron A • n.cu • ww e. trm. a.»-· ~-2 Days 839-9560, aft 5 glass. White wall tltta. U n~ • -~•t 1· •~5170 $ 588 ~" pm. 97S-0048. Sfet'e(), Mags, Prtvate Party, lfeater, deUVlJ•i!n, 1:\1 l200 64>--0158, 646-1968 ""'' '68 Bullaro-El Bardilo 99>, M'k M C rib JAGUAR 833-3155, <>!>-OU!"'" "1ndow•. Vlnyl & wlmd.s. xlnt oond, nu nMltor. $625. I e c a y 445 E. Coast Hwy. '66 Porsche 911 trim. Carpets. Front dliw: COLUMBIA :lfi: 548-1610 NEWPORT BEACH '69 XKE Coupe. ~r, 4 !!pd. SUN ROOF $2.800. brakes. Reclining buck~ Marl&: n Deluxe.Moto ___ r_H_o_m_o-.---9~40 GMC TRUCKS 673-0900 Ext. 53-54 \\ires. mint co . $3,850. or best offer , 968-6192 aeats. KE Zl-300785. 968-7397 COR. BEACJ-1 & (Open Sunday) 496-l408. McFADDEN '67 XKE Road ster-Lo mi PORD~E 91-4 -•n. Xlnt. fl""" l•n.:a 28' Sloop, Atomic 4 tnbrd. Xlnt 1hape. ~pt 4. Nrw sails. Bkr. $5,500. 675-8900. CAL 2-24. Must aell thb week. Make' oUer. • Bkr. 645-02'll 22' Albatross Sloop. Xlnt concl., complt refitted w/complt aalls. 644--0425. HOBIE Cat. 14'-2 sets aalla. Dolly, Paf«t condition SD> 64U122. UJDERS 16 :16' Sloop. Xlnl Racing Record, Xlnt Sall.&, -Cal-Cat 12' catamaran. 111/u.U -little used. 1295. ~1831-:Mn. IT CaWnaran, Rainbow No. • Xlnt cond. rue. Mill w/tra.Uer. Sl!9S. 6?'S-'115. ,,-Sloop tbrgll, cab, head, 3 11t, txd kftl, 6 HP mtr. $2400. ~190. 13631 llarl>ar, Gardon Grove 1 Bil<. So. o1 G.G. Frwy. 636-2333 TEST DRIVE THE MIDAS MINI MOTOR HOME 0-buled by Km Craft Products CREVIER MOTORS 208 w. lit St .. Santa -835-3171 PACE-ARROW •• OUNOOK All ... -•• Dt..,..,,,t prko , • !MMEDIA TE O& LIVERY •• BEACH CITY DODGE um, z· + ......,..., "'llY 16liO 8eaclo Boul<vard l'IQ<d, heaut Int, w/trtr/ IJuntlngtoo Beach ena. $2900., alt I pm, 53256 !TI4) 541).:166() Exc.K~.7:o.W/T~llO _*_Ma_mn_' _Pe_ea_rai __ *_ WESl'MINSTER AUSTIN AMERICA 4 1p, air. Mako o!fer. 646-5864 14 .000 mi. Blaupunkt radio, Wf" {AlllO 1/93.1336 531.2450 -------•PP group. $4250. m.otO<. TOYOTA TRUCK_ Hillman (Commel') '6S Austin America, auto, It'a a breeze .• sell ·your '60 POROCHE, nu paint, Van ~ 1962 1212 So. Ros!I St.· radials. Xlnt cond. $195. ttem1 with ease, u.se Daily reblt eng. Must Sell! suso 1966 Harbor, C.?i.f. 64&-9303 Santa Ana 54.2-lm ~c~a~Ud96S-~~3743~·==;:;;;;;;;;;;;.!;~PU~ot~Cl~as~s~if~ie<1~.~64~'-56~~11~.:;;;!.z;;;;;;~*~~61~~~145~-~*~=;;;'~=~·7~0~T~O~Y~O~T~AC~ '61 FORD Van Econollne. STATION WAGON Good interior. Call 546-48'15 New car trade In, 4 ~ed1 ask tor Ltt. s TAR G.AZEX~~ rndlo, 6 healrr. 74811Zt1. Auto Ln•lng Try our lease expe:rta far Savlnp -Sat!daction • s.r- ~U:Asr: AIL POPULAR JS72 MAKES AT OOMPETJ. TIVE RATES. Call Malcolm Rold for turtt... .i.un.. THEODORE ROIUNS FORD :llOO -Blvd. Cocla Mesa 6<2-0010 Autos W1ntod "8 LMPORTS WAN'Il:O Ora,_-. Counties TOP I BUYER BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 111111 S.adl Blvd. ~~'.!..!..,;~-Bya.AYl!.l'OI.l.U! $1495 fifJ ,::.~ i:. 'tCIU"~TyAdM-,,Cuicle ~ sm~~':t_t 'Sant• Ana Toyof• ~Ni n .Amitdu1;folh•Slan. od11@MC Service dept. open 7:]) am ,._ P.ll·l To dtvelop mrssag~ for fr1doy, .it.li.U2P .._ · 'Ul 9 pm b-fonday thru Fri· ~ ftOd words corresponding torurtas :¢ cf )'CU Zcx:lioc:birth Si!Jl, da). 1Yd.111 21 a-,1 °'-"d SCOIPIO PHONE 540-2512 2Whot 31:s.,;n11 6lp,,;,,... ocr·21~ tl7 \Y, \\"arner, Santa Ana 3R.4at!M 3J'°Pulnt 6JC..-NOf',Jf~ AW, :M~ 6'Allo. SO.. 3ST~ 6$F,..,.,. 1459-&S "n. 36 N'4 "~ 6-77.u.89 7~ 370f 67To I Manf09it ;a If a Dofflcr.&t 9 ,....._,, ~ ~ "'Of lOA ..OHelp 700rt1'1'1 I """I .. , Muth ,, ......,. 12()W "2Char'O'ft '2WO!dt 1J HaWll ...i ~ 13 ""-'ielfd ~!!:!!!.,,,"4 1•1f ,.,~ 740ppo.ltcn 15Who ..i~P.nanol 7S A.o!lt 160an'I ~y°"' 76 Witl't 17 Con '7To 71C.. tlYor./te ..i1 vour 71rlfi4 ltlt -49Ll:ioil. 1'YOUI 20VOll'I ~T~1 805urlam LIO 21 ~ ,S t !).JI~ II 0wr JlltY-V l 22....... ~lYtN 12NtM-' t 23 ,....... ~ Culltl'Od' ll ~ .-=a-'uo. :n 24 .WrnW si Gv... "lvtd .lS47 2' " $5 An IS n,. liF-l 'l•t,ais ~'m.ms T0yota • Ja.gUar DeaJer Authorized Sain &: Sl!rvice 900 S. Cout JUahw11.y Laguna Beach 5'i0-3100 Toyota '70 Corona 4 Or. Stick. ftad & ht" at. Only 28, 700 milea !8791:\NNI $995.00. Jim Siemon• lmport1 2201 S. Main, Santa Ana DAIL y PILOT Motor Homes I ff. S.acb. !"\. 847.- S).jl.7,. I~~ rii"""' r,~ Vlli:IQ 21 =-M ~·, 18 H!ITIH<k ~AUG. 2J f 2'W"""-h1' ~Nrw 19 ~ 557.5242 Open Sun, iiim TtJyOIA ~fark II 1\4ti0n w~n. Auto tr.in~. tlr <Ord .. ll.!M. 546,31.,'9. Salft • Rentah Wru. 11uy )'Olll' .., paid 1or er not. Call fl&Jpb Gardon 558-3222 m411011 -4«i E. QIU! BW)'. ! JO ldote 60 The '° Sc-• ""· n • ,,,, f @Goo! @ Adnnt {)Ncutnl ·n COROLLA 1600 -DthlM'. P..adial , AM/f'll, $1&2S. stick, r /h $1785: 839-8305 '70 Camper, nu eng., radio &: extras! l\1ust see! ?>1AKE OFFER! 642-3945. VOLVO 1972 VOLVO LuM Today •I Best Rates $18.74 Per Mo. 0 .A.C. AM/FM, Auto. trans., dlAc brakes, 36 mo. For Leasing or buylnt . ~Wt ltA.Ui& -YOLVO 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 Auto•, Usod 990 AMERICAN American Motors ,,....,Gremlins J.o"Homet1 .....,Matadors VJavellns "'Amb11sador1 Ruge atoek ot '71'1 & '72'1 Big-Big Savings Harbor American Home of Convenient Payrnerit. 1969 Harbor Blvd. Co1t1 M111 646-0261 BUICK '67 Rlvic>ra beaut gold w/all power & xtru, $1575, Pvt Pty. 552-'ruO CADILLAC CADU.LAC '69 Cpe De VUJ11 Lo miles, xl nt con d , A~f/F:l1 lrtc'Ml 11 tnck, full pwr, $3005. Gr>6469' '00 Cpe DeVille·V('ty Cll!'.l11, mu.,t lt'f' to apprect.atP. $460. or offer ~1006 aft 6 ·or wknds I n Cad Coupe DeVillr. ht~ ,,, /""·ht \'in. lop. FuH • equ_Jpt. Pvt pty. ~,11)...MJ61 days, 586-2517 tvt>/1•.k1~ .• 'S,, CADil.LAC Std ~n Dt Vllh!', elJ po\\'f'r, t(':ltht>r, altreo, ™'\lo' tlrts. l1n1noc. $2650. 64;,...2475 ~ C11dUl3c deVUlr , t"XN"1. cond., all P')\lo'er, air. $1, 100 . firm. ~9061. I 'Tl a.. DORADO, tA1\I, la.~~ dJ\U top, ilhr, &LI !: lnL'I~ $6,!J;;(I. 12,000 n I. b-:..;,.2:4:_ '65 Cad Cp. deVlllt. UJ mi'i I new tim. Beautllul Cood. CLASSIFIED ADS FOR ACTION ••• 642-5671 Ull S.. Vlllace w.,, &A. N°"}dt Beocb. ----~-~~~~~-~~~~~...,.~~-~-~-Call_M_T_-2125_.~~-~· um-. I I " • DAILY PILOT Thu'1da7, M.,. 18, 1972 ' Auto., UMd 990 Autos, UMCI 99\a Autos, UMCI 990 Autos, UMG 990 AutM, u ... 990 Autot, UMd 999 Autoo, UMd 990 Aulol, UHcl -..:....-----CADILLAC CHEYELLE CHEV ROLET COUGAR FORD LINCOLN OLDSMOBILE ..... . . . YOUR ONLY FACTORY AUTHORIZED CADILLAC '68 Chevelle 4. Dr. hanltop. ~d io, heater, air cond., power brak:ea. Blue with landau top. $1250. 548-n23. CHEVROLET OLD bill alW COOO! . '61 1-~--CO-U_G_A_R ____ 2_bb_I '""':C".'":....,=="'""""~ CAi.i. 963-7175 a.fter 6 in the '70 Toronado, xln'I cond. FuU Chevy wagon with 283 ;ova ""'"• ' 166 MUSTANG ne-nlng for a.ii appointment P"T equip. Lo ml'1o Vin. .,glne _ runa .........i, Oood auto trans,, Io mllei, rloyt VB, automatic tn.namlaskln. to 1ee one of the cledest top, AC stert0, am/fm A 111-top. Xlnt cond. Jl450. CaU ., _ _._,_ Im wide oval !Ires. Needs head 837-1170, ·alter 5 pm, power ltffrlne, perfect 2nd 1966 IJncoln Con~\&Y tape dk, SJ750. Phone J gasket. $100. 675--1345 eves & 830-262'1. car for the little lady. YRS-around. $850. Gray, Days 510-9892, Eves wlO'od" -~--~~-005, , UAVERICK 642-3203. '61 Cougar -P (S, P /B, $ ......_ l=-==-=""""=c---=---1966 NOVA Stat. wgn. Auto. t · 1 V 995 ~--..,....,-.-,,......-, '66 OLDS F-85 Holiday ,Cpe, '71 VEGA "GT au o., all', owner. ecy -p S. Jug 1 ag e rack·tlnted good cond. 644-1667 evea. '70 Maverick, R/H, low ml. auto trana., R&H, air, extra SPORT CPE. 2 Door. 4 •J>K'd. gtaaa. Orig. owner • $800. Xln l concl. $1500. sharp! $T1S. Pvt party. PONTIAC -·---..,.,---'67 Pontiac Le Mans 2 Door l!ardlop. VS, ,,uto- m.atlc trarus., power rteer- lng, only 46,00J original miles. 1.IUJt see to a!'Jpre- ciate. Like new VHR997. $1095 . DEALER. Radio, Heater, mag whee la, 8.U-8514. DODGE 536-772S Days 613-8655, eve 1 . Larc .. t aelec~on ot C&dll· only 10,000 mllet, 946DLL. ~cAf~R~t-=cE~W~A"'GO"N~J966=----------MERCURY ~644-5,;ii;~·-·. ____ _ lacs In Oranae County. $2399 9 pa•••m•er .62 Dod S'·t '68 Oldo • Or a"to R"'' Salet·Leaalng. Look for our .. ., , it "" wa,gon, "' " • «n, ~I~~ tull r-&e adl every woo. Q0. 846-3)5~ Very clean. Gd tltt1-1967 Mercury Cougar XR-7 tinl.ed glass, a.lr. C.Old $1350. A Fliday for our 1~lal1. • CONTINENTAL 1285/oHer. 519-2107. Bl"" Bk $1175-$1630. SEU-Ph' 540-2562. Nabers Cadfllac · I\" ING pooo. Air, Auto, Full PLYMOUTH 2600 HARBOR BL., .. ~ ~ •n Conlloeot&I Mark 111 EDSEL ""' plus. -· • COSTA MESA t sO Lo<ded ooe 0"""' private 445 E. Cout H.,.. -MUSTANG '69 FURY. Xlot cond., out<>., ~9100 Open Sunday tJ, party. 714: 499-l55"4'. A Classic '58 Edsel Citation, NEWPORT BEACH V-8, eng., PIS, P/8, tac '69 Coo~ deVille, bl'OWfl. O 'P full power, air. Xln t mech 673-0!m Ext. 53-54 -.66-M-.,..-..,,.--, -6-cy-I-, -,-...,-.11 _al_rl_~=387~2~·=~~- e,~- 445 E. Coast Hwy, NEWPORT BEACH 613-0!m Ed. 5J.5' 0r!gll2,9'5na. !!~'.·. Excel rond. .. ..JJI CORVAIR rond. 67Hl6'r. 1972 FORD Galaxle 500 Sta. R/H, "°"" tltto & bruH. PONTIAC ~ ,,,. Wgn , grey/gold metallic, Clean inside &: ouL $T;i0 1 _______ _ (Open Sunday) CA MARO 445 E. Coaat u.,., '63 CORVAIR Sp Id" FORD AIC, power, crul...o.mall<, Firm. Ph. 646-47'.11. '70 FIREBIRD E>prl~ like NEWPORT BEACH "'/turbo charger Ir: 4 spd, 400 RV eng. phone Terry J '66 Mustang • Orig owner 6 new, $30'.Xl. '68 GTO Big engine, vinyl top, factory air, factory mq wheels (with locks) 37,000 miles, Max-X. tires. Beautiful cond. $1500 or best oUer. 826-IZG, '10 CAMARO 67J.0900 Ext. 53.54 complt rehlt eng J.nc d nu '55 Ford Wag., % Cam, T-10. betwn 8 am&: 5 pm 540-1473. cyl. auto. tran.rad/heat. 552-8699 (Open Sunday) clutch. $400 or bst olfer. 4 spd., reblt. eng., big e '71 Ford Torino • "A,L'NI -i •725 Must sell! MUST •-u ~ean, &d ru--•-- 350 V8, 4 speed, radio, heater, vinyl roof, bucket seata (961· AVB), $2295. Tommy Ayres Chevrolet, 946 S, Coa11t Hwy,, Laguna B •a c h . 494. 7744/546.9967, 645-1805 or stt at 1946 he d Ir _., __ ,_ $!95 Vt YIN ,..... • ""' ""' •u"''A '70 Monte Carlo, orig onr, " II N 1 c M a 5' a l>t7Jl.'1U1, • 4 door sedan. Rad/air/ 644--0279 Grand Prix, P/B, P/S, air, \-.n nee o. • . . 64~3323 1 /di ~·-28,000 ml/alr/ate!'fl>/pwr · pwr • eer l5C u.-..... ea. 1966 ldustang. Orig. Owner. make oUer, 548-3968. (.'Oncl. $2950. wkdy 547~, CORYmE 1970 ~taverick, 4 speed R/H. Ex ed. wkdaya only, 8-5. Auto. A.1 r conditioning. '67 Catalina 4 dr., h.t., Excel '69 FffiEBIRD, a uto trans, air rond, xlnt cond. Call aft 6 p.m., 673-8784 or 557-4029 eves 673-3745, Special -$l,!95 or lease, 546-7'277 R/H. Must Sell! 646-1185. cond. Lo miles. PS/PB. '67 Chev Impala -Auto '69 Corvette, blue $3495. Zim S39.95. '63 FORD Gal XL 4 Dr. ,65 MUSTANG 289, auto, $775 or best offer. 549-2641. trans/PS/Excel (bnd. ml. Mag wheel.11, wlde ovals, Pocai Leasing 548-1155 hrdlp, steering, brakes, air, Gd ~-nd 1750 •70 Bl M · k 1 1 •• 5 P/S. Very • VJ • '69 Executive Wagon. Full T BIRD * '70 Camaro, alr, auto, $850. 847-6736 aft 6 pm 311 rear end. Fully equlpt ue avenc , act air, x nt cond . .,..7 · 968-3089 aft 552-7896 pwr., air, rack, post, 281000 ___ _,,,,..·=,,-,---- pwr, muat sell. Sacrifice! , , W h 1 t e Fflephants" over-427 e11g. 642-0330 alt 6. new tires, tinted glass, well 6. miles. Jrnmac. 846-lS?2, - $2350. 675-4238 n1nning your houser Turn '68 Corvette -JZT, 4 sp, cared for, $1800. 549-1362, ··=1o'"'F~o-rd'"S"'t""at""lon-,,W'"ago-n"°F"'alr-. DAILY PILOT '70 T-Bird •·-· Don't give u ••-hi ' Full pwr -""' !Itta -lo '67 CAMARO SS. V.S, auto, them lnto "CASH" • eell Customized mags· w Ide '67 Ford LTD, full power, """' 500, 27,000 miles, 3 year P ..,.. • p. Jo rnt, vinyl top, xtru, best them thru Dally Pl I o t ovals, hoUey, aft 3 • air, 1tereo, immac cancl! · W81Tanty avail. $200Q-Prlced CLASSIFIED ADS .. Llst" it In clusl!led, Ship miles -Every pos. Extra. ottr. Sacrlf. 546-0062. Classified, 642-5678. !>48--0985. $l.axl, One ownr 4 , to ·sell! 1687, --,,---,.,.-----,=I to Shore Results! 84J..567I 7 I 94-7081 962 incl. tape dee. Perl Cond. ~ ~ 9.,,, l owner. 6.f4-030 , Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Auto1, New 980 Autos, n•W 980 Autos, New • 980 Autos, New -Auto~, UMNI 990 Autos, UHd TAKE THE KEYS THE 8055 SA Y5 ••• ''GENTL·EMEN, SELL YOUR DEMO·S'' • > • 1972 BUICK ELECTRA 225 LIMITED Fully oqu ippod lncludiog nc-IAUER PRICI fory i1 ir conditioning, AM / FM stereo, powe r windows, $5 l99 6.w1y po wer aeaf, color co- ordl'imio d, vioyl lop, tinted glass. Sor. No. 4Vl7T24424- 878 . Sticker Price $6956.) I 1972 BUICK CENTURIAN 2 DOOR HARDTOP l oaded, includin9 factory air IAUU PRICE condit ionin91 6-way power , uals, tinted gl•n, pow" $49 3 8 windows, AM/FM, custom whe•la, vinyl top.. Ser, No. 4P47T2C I 08062 Sticke r Price $6271.15 1972 ESTATE WAGON FOR FAMILY FUN • THESE 1972 BUIC KS ARE LIKE NEW • BEAUTIFUL BAUER BARGAINS TOO NICE TO BE CALLED USED CARS '66 BUICK SKYLARK J DOOR HARDTOP lie.::: 511DJA I LU! IOO K Sfl 5 IAU ll'S PllCI $795 '70 BUICK ELECTRA 225 C111tom 4 ci r, H,T, lo1d•d, full pow• or, tilt wh••I, •l•c. J oor lock1, ftc. •ir, ILUI 1001 SJ94S IAUll'S Pl lCI $3695 '70 BUICK SKYLARK Custom 4 Joor t-i.T. -C111t, 11otch Mc.k,. vh1yt h1forlor , AT, R.H. P/S, r;1, f1cfWf •Ir. 11.UI 1001 S2'1t IADlln ,.tCI $2695 '67 JAGUAR 2 + 2 Chrome Wir• Wh••I• Lie. # UC6619 ILU I 1001 $J6JO IAUll'S PltCI $ 319 5 '68 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 2 doo r h1rdtop. AT, R-H, P/St9., f•ct. 1ir, l111d1u top. l ie, # UAC229 ILUI 1001 $1150 IAUll'SPltCI $1695 '72 BUICK SKYlARK AT, R·H. P/St,., P/l rk1. F1ctery oir, 7 ,000 mil11. lie, tt 204EMZ THIS Wtll 'S SPICIAL IAUll'S PllCI $3695 '70 TOYOTA COUPE R·H. '4-1p.1cl, lo mil••· Uc. •6tlA6C 11.UI 1001 $1405 IAUll'S PllCI $1295 '70 CAD SEDAN DE VILLE Pr. wi11d, 6 w1y Pwr. Sei t. Door I wi11d, loc•1, AM/FM, tilt whl., l•ncl•v. ILUI IOOI SIZJI IAUll'S PllCI $4.795 '70 BUICK RMERA AM /FM StoNo, Pr. wlMI. 6-w•v '""'' 1111, C111t. 11•tchll•ck •••h. LIM•• f•clory •it, I LUl-I S4ttt IAUln ,.ICI $3595 We "eed your qu•lity used cer t o· dey to fill our big new lot ••• we re peyin 9 top doll1r t nd out· 1fendin9 tr1d•-in ellow1nce1 ••• try UI. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK e STORE HOURS e l 'IO A.M. Ill t P.M. M--FoWoy l :lt A.M. tUt 6 P.M.,s.tw1...,. IOA.M.IW 6PM.- • SERVICE HOURS e I A.M. 1111 t P.11. M- l A.M. tll l :JO P.M. T..., tn Mffy _ ........... ..... WE'RE MOVING UNBEATABLE PRICES UNBEATABLE SAVINGS EVERY CA-R MUST GO '69 ~~?.e~ M ..... .,, c .. d .. $725 ,oltt• 440 CID lot, Z:SI '66 CHEVY El Cimino. Auto. Tr1ns, Mechanics Special. {T81075l '67 CADILLAC S~'" D1Yil l1. full pow•r, •it conditionint • IXWT17t) '64 CADILLAC Cp•. D1Vill1. full Power, Air Co11d. ~ IOPFJ l71 '64 ~~f,~E 6 fN9'477tl Utility lox '62 ~~~~OLINE Utility 101 IOAR l67) '67 ~~~~. Al• Coo~, IDLR94J5l '63 DODGE SEO. V.I, R1dio, H••••r, Auto. Tr111s, 11Zf2461 $1895 s599 $745 5695 - $650 $425 -'66 CADILLAC CONV. $1095 Full pow•r, •ir c111d., N1w ,,Int, Top. ldlrt4ll) '70 PLYMOUTH FURY 4 Dr., C.O. c.,, Air, P.S., P.I,, R, H. IPK4LOD20099JJ '59 CHEVY Utility Pie.up. Work Hori•. 16'444911 '67 OPEL 4 Sp••d. 11 IOOTXJ '67 CADILLAC Sed•n D•Vill•. Full pow1r, l•1th•r, 1ir, l1nc:l1u. 1011.4.EICI '70 PLYMOUTH $825 C.O. C•r, Air Corwl., l•dio, H11t•r, Auto l r•nt., v.1, N•w P1lnt l111icl1 1Prtl 011t. f Pic:AILOD2009901 '64 CADILLAC CPE. full Pow•r, Air. IDPFJ 17 1 '66 CADI LLAC Secl•11 D•Ville. fvll Pow•r, Air. ISZH4Jll '62 IMPALA 4 Or., Auto. Tr111J., Air C•ntl, (LVFiltJ '64 MERCURY Air, P.S. IDLR94J5J '695 $1095 $455 $395 II -VANS-VANS-' '62 ECONOLINE $1145. I VAN. Sil•1r-Purpl1, Pl11 Strip•1., (6611JJ) '62 EC9NOLINE $1295 , VAN, h 1.tlful 9r .. li.fi11hli, • p11tel.4 '°'' ll4S5ltl '63 I CONOLINE 'vAN. Sli•rlJ, Ytll1w fi11hh. a.,.. fKllllJI '64 ECONOLINE WJMow v.11. lluo I l l•o I Wit!,., IP7196'I ·$1145 $995 '65 ECONOLINE '1495 VAN. Cwf•IM, n19, .......... 11627141 ""---·~· ...... ,, .. ~~ 210I HAR60R BLVP. COSTA MI SA 2925 HARBOR BLVD-, COSTA MESA ~ · 979~2500 .. ·~--------~--------~~-~1 ~~~~~~-~-I ' 7 • ' . \ . . • • Today's Fi.al istrano EDITI O N N.Y. Stoeu voe. 65, NO. 139, 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, ·MAY 18, 19n TEN CENTS Councilman, Chamber Continue Fiery Debate Sometimes angry, spirited debate between San Clemente Councilman Tom O'Keefe and top officers ol the chamber of commerce over a proposal to nearly double the city'a contribulion to tourist pro".'IOtion failed to yield a solution Wednesday. It was O'Kee!e who launched an im- mediate and sometimes scalhlng attack on the request by the chamber for $18,600 to cover the agency's expenses for ad- vertising and promotion. The councilman, wbo often has taken Issue with the concept.of using tax funds to underwrite the chamber function, I'm Three I began by all•ging the funds granted the chamber in the past had been "misused and malallocated." "My commentJ on previous years wert common koowledge and I remem~r vividly tbe threats by many chamber members that they would 'get me' at the eleciions, but I'm still here and t still disagree with the idea," the councilman said sternly. The councilman's opening comment.9 drew an immed.1ate response from Cham- ber resident Roy Garbarine, who insisted that the promotion of tourism was "iD- DAILY ,It.OT lt11f '"''• Melissa Bryant revea\I her age to dental assistant Chris Harris at Monarch Bay Plua in: 'l.aguna Niguel. Melissa is one of the young- sters in lhe,S-Oalh Shores Christian Preschool "'ho Thursday visited the dental offices of Dr. Herbert Burridge to ·see what its all about. • Clemente Woman Brings Water w Boil at Mee t Complaints to San Clemente city coun.. cilmen about the quality of municipal tap water are nothing new in council chambers. But Lena Barrett of 7 W. Avenida· Junipero had a better idea Wednesday. Not only did she bring her complaints about water quality to the cotmeil. She brotlllhl the water along, too. Exhibit A and Exhibit B -neatly stored in labeled jan kept in a paper shopping sack, proved the San Clemente woman's point better than any verbal description. Approaching the podium during the public's tum lo speak, she opened her aact and pulled out the two jars. One had an inch-thick. reddlsh l5Clllll at the bottom . The other was more of a milky chartreuse. - ''Thi! is what bas come Crom my taps this weekt" she told councilmen. Councilmen found they could say very little about the e>hibits, so they asked Cl· ty Engineer Phil Peter to \answer tM woman's query, Peter, who admitted that bis own home's water aeenu . the 11 me sometimes, could oller tttUe solace. "I agree that U'1 bad 10metime1, and something bas to be done," he lald. Tbe engineer added that councttmen recently hired COllSUltants to examine the city Water supply for quantity and quality and then recommend ways of lmpro•ing it. The red ICUJD, he said, W I I precipitated Iron compound which ap. pears often In taps booked to water mains that dead-end. City crews nush the 11nea when the scum pours fourth. He bad no explanation for the cbartrellle variety. Mn. Barrett then took her place again In the fron t row. "I just hope Jt gets bttter very soon," she said. Wally, Angela? Britis h Musician Switches Sexes LONDON (AP) -Wall1 Stott, ooe o1 Britain's top band leaden and eompoaero ol popular m~slc, put .., bis llllit and tie for tbe last time today. Tbe 43-year .. td telcvtslon and reconltnc ma.mo bas had a ... change operation opc1 .. ,.. will be known u Angela Morley. · Wednesday night be -to a COllCAllt th a blonde wolNln 'I wig and Cowing evening gown. But he put on men's clolhes toda,y to drive north with bis wife to break the..,.. to hil parents. Ke and bis wife of » yean plan to "°"' tlnue U>Cethor at their <OU11U, homt ,,..,. Loncbl. 'Ibey bavt • pvwn ... and clqlX<r. "ShU ..,. eoru..t .,._. I lllft had this problem," lald Stott ~~~· tpecialiJt advbed me lo have a -lete aa· change operation. Now I hope to lie able to Jive a happy and dignlfltd Die. Naturally, I wllb to carry G'l-'llqr-ue.,-but u a woman.•: SWll'I 21-~ IOii, Brian, &aid, "We feel happy about Dad'• operatloo -I 1W1 . call hiln Dad at heme, but I'll hne to get uaed to 0SU. ber and she when I talk to Cldm' people.,. Sloft lllldmr!llt the operation IOOl'tlly two -b..,.. To do IO, he ca...W an -'belcn membert ol tbt "'7al ftlmQJ, al tla.-a llew. • dispensible to the economic prosperity o! the city." Garbarine added that the funds used by the chamber for city promotion should be regarded as ''seed money". ·" "Those funds attract persons here to use local facilities, which in tum yields more ta.1 revenue to the city," Garbarinc stressed. But O'Keefe, who disputes the philosophy that tax money shout.: be used for the promotional effort, questioned the merits Qf incre~sing the amount of city bed taJ: revenues which would be granted the chamber. The bed tax (transient oc. cupancy tax ) in San Clemente is five per- cent. The debate, which continued for Df\arly an hour, ended in uncertainty. Councilmen agrffd to invite c.hambtr spokesmen to make another request for the increased allocation during the .series of budget study sessions later this month or early in June. Chamber officlals have insisted that in- creasing the city allocation from less than $10,000 aMually to the $18,600 sum, would be more adequate compensali<in for the entity's functions in promotion. The chamber officials Wednesday cited ~ the larse contrlbutM>n made to t he Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce by the City, 136,200, and added th'1 the Clly of San Clemente should do the same. But O'Ketfe, who complied data during the wet.k., rtplled with flgurts of bis own. San Clemente alr!ady pay1 a great<'r percentage of bed tnx to lts cbn.mbtr than Laguna Beach. The disparity In dollar values, he ad· ded, relates directly to a much larger bed tax Income In Laguna Beach. "We're already paying a greater perctntage than the city upcoast," he said, · But chamber o(flci1lt rtm•lned •d•- manl. l~arbarlne stressed th11t the chamber'• on ly rta'°n for functioning is "for the betterm ent of the entire 4..'0nllnunlty, not a S'-lect group.'' "We would ~ toeing the benefit or the tourist dollar If we ensage In minlmal promotion," he added. If nudlence applause Is any Indicator of advocacy of a stand in a debate, O'Keere \Vednesday 11pptared to be the lo,cr. Comments by Garberlne •nd Ch1mbtt 1.1anager Robtn. Ev111... defe.ndlng the chamber's stand drew applause teveral times. Bombs Reported Aboard British ·vessel at Sea. Wages, Benefits Clemente Public Safety Employes Seek Increase s By JOHN VALTERZ.\ Of .. .., "" lltff San Ctemente's public safety employes Wednesday llroul!btl<rth a vasUy Jar1er request for wage and benefit increases -major requests to bring their schedule Kidnaper Frees Wife of Banker; Given $50,000 BAKERSFIELD (AP ) -FBI and sheriff's deputies searched today for a kidnaper who held a Bakersfield woman hostage nearly eight hours and then abandoned her in an orange crate 11fter coUecting $50,000 .ransom . Marjorie Minear, 50, the wire of a Bank of America branch manager in nearly Oildale, managed to free herself from the box left in an orange grove Wednesday night 20 miles north of here, a Kern County sheriff's deputy said. She suffered only a slight cut on her forehead . Mrs. Minear described her kidnaper as white, about six feet tall, well.groomed with dark hair. She said be forced his awy into her home Wednesday afternoon, blindfolded her and drove her around in a car for several hours before leaving her in the crate. Bob Wedel, a loan officer at the OUdale branch of Bank of Americ:i , k'ld authorities be rece ived a telephone cflll about 2 p.m. from a man who said he wu holding the wife of branch manager GleM Minear. · The caller demanded $50,000 ransom for Mn. Minear's return, Wedel said. Because Minear was away at a meeting, authorities said Wedel followed the kldnaper'1 instructions and deUvertd the money to a fie.Id about five miles north of Bakersfield . , Wedel received a second call from the kidnaper at 7 p.m. saying he had picked up the money and Mrs. Mlnear could be found in a Im near the money drop point. • _._up, \o an a!J.county, nonn. Pplk;e LI. Raymond H a r t m a n , f,esman for the public aafety force, stnted the new package which C?alla ., ralaes of up to 40 percent in some categories. ~Besldet the large wage lncrease1 in the police, fire and lifeguard cattgortea, vastly improved benefits are being 21oug~t u well. Overtime at time-and-one-half beads the llst of added benefits. Lt. Hutman's four-page 1chedule of Improvements was taken under sub- misson quleUy by the council with no comment. Negotiations between the tmployes and a committee appointed by City Manager Kenneth Carr are continuing, but little, if, any, progress has resulted thus far. The request.9, by department, include: -For police personnel, raises of 2D per .. cent for the chief's category; 31 percent for assistant chief; 19 percent for lieutenants; 18 percent for sergeants; 14 percent for patrolmen; 15 percent for de. tectlves; 15 percent for parking officers· 46 percent for dispatchers: 21 percent fo~ the police chief's secretary; 23 percent for pollce typists and 19 percent for desk of!lcen. AU those raises, Hartman said, would mean that San Clemente could rise from the bottom of an all~unty survey to "above-average" 1tatUJ but still not at the top of the county list. Benefits, plua the overtime com- pensatl~, also include city payment of all mechcal insurance premiums for employe1 and dependents, longevity pay, reimbursement for half of all accrued sick leave and educational and equipment allowances. -For· the fire department, the In· creases call for 18 percent in wages for ~re engineers and 15 percent for firemen; a 63.Z.hour work week and a minimum of three men on duty at all times. Overtime Insurance and longevity schedules would be similar to police re-quests. -Lifeguard Department increases call foe 34.4 percent ralaes for the chief lifeguard; 28.1 perent for captains; 3$.1 percent for lieutenant.I; an increase in (See SALAlllES, Page I) Four A rr ive A fte r Cruise YOKOHAMA (AP) A n American family of four anived at Yokohama from Hawaii in a 42-foot ketch today, completing "t 2,050- mlle Trans-Pacific crui3e In 40 days, Japanese mar It Im e author!Uea rtported. Tbe Maritime Safety As ency-11td the 11-ICll bttll Sea F•var ll'lf sl<lppered . by lion ' R. COX, ' I :arpenter who lived In Kattua, Kona;tlawalt. Also aboard the ketch which the IS-year-old Cox said he had bought five year tao In San Dle101 -were ht• wife Linda, 29, and two daughtero, It-year-old C""'1 and S. year-old Jody. Agency offfclall satd they were reportedly accompanied by their pet, a Slamen cat. - Semi Jackknifed On Freewa y Here Snarls Traffic A double-hopper, 1eml truck rig car- rying to1U1 of aggregate material pro.. duced by the Cre1ltlte Products firm in San Clemente jackknifed on the San Diego Freeway Wedneaday night and traffic was 1narled. for hours afterward1. The truck'a rear hopper fiJppec! onto lit !ide as the rig approached the Presidio overpass In San Clemente, heading south. The hopper, containing 38,000 pounds of the material, came to rest on its side on the shoulder of the freeway. But authorltle1 found that few available tow rigs could right the large container. Four houri later. a huge wrecker from Los Angeles arrived and removed the meas. In the meantlmt, authorities bad to block off three of four frttrray lanu leading aouth. No one ~vas Injured In the mishap, and the name or the driver Wat not im- mediately available from h I & h-w a 1 patrolmen. The milhap occurred at 7 p.m., they said. . Ac tor Succumbs HOLLYWOOD (AP) -stove Jnhat. 'fl, motion-picture act.or, writer and dlrtct.or, died Su"'l!Y white attending a fttm fe1Uval at Ca.Mel, France. Services Slated For Eddye Elston Women Cleared of Counts Rosary will be ttdted tn Capislr1no Beach tonight fllr Mts1 Emily Hall "Ed- In South Coast Drug Case dye" Ellton, le, of Capistrano Beach, a Patrfala Aurand Dragavon of Newport regisler<d nurae who died Tuesday eve,.. Beach end Sera Emilie Mulen of Costa Ing tn Orange. Mesa both have been cleared of alt Mia Hall, who lived at 26l3t A Via charges In a cue Involving alleged dru1 Sacramelllo,_ ltevea. a hatf·brothet. producttan along the Ora nae Coast. tht Donald Hall, of S.Cl'llllento: a at.,.. District Attorney's Otri<e disclosed to- brothe:r, Kmneth Cro11, of CaplltraM ~day. Bucb. and a ctmlln, Gregory Goodwin of Spokesmen at the Laf(llna Niguel S.n Antonio, Tex. Courthouse ofltcea of the DA aald that Rosary will be recited at t p.m. Jn St. Miss Dragavon, 23, of 304 Canal St., and Edwardl Calhollc Q111tth, Caplatrano MISI Mastel'I, 24, of 312 E. 18th St., Costa Beach, followed bJ !!equtem Ma" tbere Mesa, are in no way rttated to a drug Friday at 10 a.m. B<lna! will follow tn n ld made alon• the Sooth Coast May 3. Atctnston Cemetery, El Toro. Le!Dtsii Tbe two women were arrtsted al 187 Moriuuy II in dlarge of arrangsnents. aitqult. Street In La1Una Beach In a l"riGICll who wish m., mab memorial followup lnvaligltlon relating to the -irlbulloDa to SI. idw_. Catholic M!Jw• of an a1Jef!d "lpeeil" fador7 in a a.m. . .. ""'"""' l 1 •• :c • • ,_ Tho m1in pr!ncJ111i Jn Iha C8M, ~raduate ~tochemlll George WW!am cox, 29, ·of S•n Clunmte, ts fr .. on 150.000 cash ball and II ocbedulad for 1 preliminary beariog Monday in South Oronge County Munlcipot Court. The ormll at Chiquita Street, pottce said, were made under a Mln:h warrant and during Inspection of the premtset a ama!I quantity ol marijuana alle&ed!Y wa~ dlscovtrtd. Officer1 aaid tlley than armt..s all ptl'IOl1I In the -at the time. Only 0111 o/ the thr .. WU .. ~f named In a DA'• complaint -f'HddJO Joan Howlrlll, 14: the allaced rwalllent of Iha-·· -,,..... ....... rnn<•.C...,.... Elizabeth 2 To Explode, . Caller Says LONDON (AP) -Def_, llltdatry aald todl,Y bomba are reP!'l'led. to bave baon.ptantacl aboanl Iha Quoon-~tb 2 at 111 and that four bomb dl1poaal ''" ports were being nown to mld·AUanl!c to deal with the m. Unofftctat reporta in London 111d Iha captain of the blf ttner had been advised bombl were planted In New York, tho ship'• last port of call, and would explodl 1f a b,uge ranaom was not paid. There are 1,400 passengers aboard the 85,000-ton vea:sel, pride of the Brltilh merchant navy. DefenM Minl!try tources said the bomb experts wlll be parachuted 11 cloH to the vessel 11 possible. Flrat reporil aald the ransom demanll originated In Copenhagen, Denmark. Cunard, ownen of the ship, tmmedlat .. ly contacted Defense Mtnlatry offictal1. A Royal Air Force tranaport took off from Lynsbam Jn Wllllhtre headinl oul to the Atlantic. The Defense Mtnl•try said the piano carried four bomb dl1po1al e1pert1 who would be along.alde the ship for parachuting early thil afternoon. The Brltlsh Broadcasting Corp. takl ar caller to Cunard'• New York ofUce uld a bomb would explode tonight unlua the ransom wa1 paid. Jt w11 not clear whether thJa: meant British or New :VorS> time. The rendeivous was 1et for 1 potlUon 46 de1reea north It weal -in mtd-AU.... tic. A second plane, a Royal Air Force Nimrod .tet reconnala11nce aircraft n.,, off from Cornwall. ' Tbe Nimrod II I maritime ,.....,. nalssance wnlon of the former Comet atrttner. II would form a communtcattona link bet ween Iha 1htp and Britain, the Defente Mlnlltry aaid. o.. .. ,. w ...... Thote clouds should elur by mld·momtnt Friday . leavtnc tlle wrektnd to sunny 1kJea and warm temperature1. Hljjht at the beachtl 12 r!Jin& to n inland. LDWI -· 11\'S IOt: T ODA l' lier oilat 11a1utk:1 ar< 0 ·21· 41 -/tet, not fnche1. Sharon llarot11 U th~ bronzed btoutu thot odontt bfllboardl COGlt IO c°"'t In Iii< lllnlan of! ad. Sile admf11 lhol ft "'°' 1tor1Ung IO te• MT1tlf ln the lat'ller riu 01ld t<lt• whot blllboonl tlg11· /.,... h•• brought h<r. Stt •lortl I'• 10. 1..M. • ..,.. ,. ~"'"' . ·---.. -.. .,,. .... ...._ 'N ......... , ... ' ...... , 5 • ,..,. ,..... .... ... " .. .._ " " r r .~ • ,Z OJJI. Y _1'1LOT SC Countywide Open Space Plan Okayed Orange County's·26 citiei1 are subject to a new ttate law requiring open space plans as a part of their general planning program, the County Counsel's office reported today. 'lbe county adopted an open apace pr°'" gram on May 2 which called for de velopi rnent of a plan of ''c ount y wld e 1lgnlfic1nce . . . in both the unin- corporated and incorporated areas." "However. the coun ty program adop- tion does not relieve the cities from adop- ting their own plans by June JO as man· dated by law," said County Counsel Adrian Kuyper. The state Jaw requiring open space ~lements in planning ~'as originally ap- proved by the legislature in 1970 a nd amended in 1971. It requires that such plans be "prepared, adopted and wb- mltted to the secretary of the State Resourcea Agency by June 30, of this year." U the plans are not submitted to the 1tate agency by the deadline, cities may not luue building permits, or approve 1ubdlvislon maps after June 30, lt;uyper uid. The Board or Supervisors' adopted plan ur1ea cities to cooperate to make the plan fully effecti ve. But th is phraseology in the county plan does not relieve the clUes from their mandated duty to adopt In. divldual plan.1, the county counsel added . Thundq, MIJ 18, 197Z Air Angels County Plaoolng Director F o re s t Dickason and his general planning staf( developed the co1.1nty's open space plan in a "crash progra1P" to meet th~ June 30 deadline, Dick.ason told supervisors May 2. However, Dickason recommended a modified plan which would meet tile atlte law's requirements and did not· Include incorporated areas. But the 1upervilor1 adopted a stronger alternative. Dorothy Waltz ol El Toro, right, will start ninth in the Powder Puff Derby from San Mateo to Toms River , N.J., on July .7. She is shown with Margaret Mead of Manhattan Beach, her partner in the 22nd All Women's International Air Race "Angel Derby," flying from Ottawa1 Canada, to Ft. Lauderdale, F1a., which ended today. 11ie adopted program commits the county "to the preservation or permanent open space of local and countywide significance.'' Clemen,t,e Golf Tourney Slared Tliis Weekend A 11t11e contingent of champlOMbip goUers will square of£ this weekend at the San ClemenU! Municipal Golf Course In the !Ith Annual city IOll champion&hlp ollerln( both clwnp!Oniblp IJld handicap DlRhts. Featullng 311 holes of medal play, the tournament will start at 10 a.m. Saturday and Sunday with the public welcome to join in the gallery. Among the top golfers in attendance wlll be Gary Sanders, from Los Coyote• Country Club; Bob Howe of Rancho Country Club In Los Angeles ; Dick Ferry of Red Hill Country Club; Jbn Wilson, San Juan Hills club champion ; Burl Qulmby, club champion of the host course ; Dan Barrile, former local club champion; Kemp Richardson of El !;iguel; Dr. Bob Ctawford of Red Hill ; Craig Olson of Meadowlark COuntry Club: Bob Darnell of Rancho California and Mitch Voges of Slnglni llill.!. Teen Challenge Groups to Play A pair of talented musical groups - who disclaim fam e, money and the drug cultu re after seeking all three -will perform free Friday night In an Orange County Teen Challenge concer~. Russ WinstN~, .special programs coordinator of the youthful religious organization sa ys 1,500 seats at Santa Ana Valley High School, 1801 S. Greeo- \'ille Ave .. will be evallable. The 7:30 p.m. event featu res "The Way,'' a quartet whose members all e:1- pttlmented with drug!. "Selah" a .six-member group including two girls will also offer Its own hea"y hard-rock sound. OaAN61 COAtT IC: DAILY PILOT 'rlle Or•°'" CMll DAILY ,ILOT, wllft wflldl 11 nmlt~ Ille N""·l"rfU. It ,.,.il"*I n ""'9 O••ne• Cii.11 l'Ybllt.lllne Ce!l'llMll'f' ....... r•ll .01110111 •rt ""'llMd, McwldtV lll rwt!I l"rld•V, lot Cnl• Mt••• ,...,,_., ltK~. H""t!llllon lttot!l/F01111ltl11 \l•llty, l1g""' lffc!I, lr~IM/llddltNcit ..... ·$1n Cle....,,lt/ S..n J.,.n C••lllt•M. A 1lntlr rl'Olor11I t'd11lon 11 publll!I .. $1il\l•°'lty1 •ntl Sll"Cl•'f'•· Tiit priftc!HI M 11i.lllnl •lint II f l .)JC Wfll l1v "rn l, Cttl• Mtu., Cflltwl'lt, t Jt)t. •ot,trt N. w,,4 ''"Ml.tll •ntl 1'"1*H11'1orf" J.cli: II. C11rlty VKt 'rttldmt tnd Ctn.rel """llf9tl'" Th'"''' Ktt¥il Edltw ille"'•• A. M11rplll110 M•llltlrlt 1Eti1...- C~1rl•1 H. l••• lkiclrlt t4 '· Ni ll A11lt1Mt Mt ...... lfl"'" s.. Cl•••lllf• OM.. JOI N•rlti ll Ct111i111 1,,1, t2A 72 --C..lt M-1 .J» Wftl ltp Strttt = ... di: ,,,, """""" 9"11 .... ,. Hwl .... lffdl: ,,.,. ~ 1Cllltt¥t'1 u.-1HcP11 m ,..,...., .-."""""' '"-1n•1 '42-4ut C._1#114 "'"'' ..... 641°1671 S.. C......_ Al D••••=••: , ... , ........... . C.V.-1'1'11. lfll,_ Or-. Ct tsl t "'*llil'llrif '""""'· "' llllwt '""""' !l~lttlltftt, ..,_,Ill Nt!W ., M-1'-ft lltttlfl .., .. ,.....,,.... Wl!Mvt ... i.1 "" ... .. .,._, -· ...... '*" ...... HN 4lf c:.fll MtM. ~ llllllKl'totllfl• "' urrtw GM ~""'" INI U.11 "*'IMrl fJilftew7 ..,._.,.......,, Police Chief Keeping Films Held in Contempt By TOM BARLEY 01 llM Dfllf Pllet Slelf Westminster Police Chief Walter Scott was found in contempt of court Wed· nesday for his failure to return sex· oriented films and photographs tG Frederick and Kay Loar of Hwitington . Beach. But Orange County Superior Court Judge Robul L. COrfman suspended the sentence and any further action by the Loars' lawyers to enable Scott to file an appeal against the ruling. Judge Corfman made It cleat that he will welcome an appellate ruling on a legal i33ue that appears to be wlthout precedent. He also made It clear he was satisfi ed that Chief Scott deliberatel y disobeyed a court order In which Judge Corfm an directed Westminster police to return 20.500 moVies and 30,000 photographs seized May 25, 1971, from the Loars' "Pete Voss Showcase" warehouse at 15144 Golden West Cir cle, Westminster. Loar, 34, and hls wife, 31. both of 4062 Hwnboldt St., had been cleared by a jury in Judge Corfman's courtroom the day before the order was issued on cha rges of conspiracy to distribute o b sc ene mate rial. The panel vie\V 22 movies and a selection or ph otographs in the three- week trial that produced thei r acquittal decision. But Scott immedia tely refused to return materials valued by the Loars at $500,000 and whi ch they wanted to restore to their $15,()0().a-day business in sexually oriented literature. He again condemned the materials as "hard co re Selection Plan To he Explained At Marco Scl1ool The new "student selection " registra- tion method will be explained by the San Clemente lligh school Guidance Depart· ment beginning the y.•eek of J\.fay 22. The new method will be used at both San Clemente and Dana Hills High School. Current juniors will meet Tuesc:b1y, May 2..1. Sophomores \viii meet \Vednes- day, 1'.1ay 24 and prese nt eighth 1;raders al J\.fart'O Forsf('r Junior High \\'ill meet Friday. J\.l a~· 26. Parenls of all student s \\"ho \\'ill be at one of the tu·o high schools \\'iii hear abou t the program Thursday at 7:JJ p.m. in the San Clemente High SchooU itlle the ater. Overhead projectors Y.iill be used to sho'v exa ctly "''hat is planned. A queslion-and- ans\\·er period vo'ill follou·. From Pagel SALARIES .•. monthly salary from f1V1 lo m'I for rescue bolt operators and 22.S percent for permanent lifeguards. Seasonal persoMe) raises call for a IS percent raise for lieutenant and IS.I percent for lifeguards. No exart computltion or the clly's cost for tilt ontlre pack•ge submllted Wednts- day has yet been announced. but some ci- lN aides have uld thot the 1ncre ... s coold mean perhaps a SO.percen1, oueNll lnmue in city fUndl In the ct1""l'· · The propooed lludgot for the c:om1n( ytar .. u, kr .-lllO,Olt to be lpeal fbr plbllc saltly-- pornography" and ordered them held in the vaults of the police department. Judge O:lrfman used the comments made by Scott to Orange County newsmen in a swrunation that found the pollce chief "clearly guilty of a willful violation of my court order. "It 's strange to me," he said, 0 that Chief Scott can clearJy remember ~ everything the District Attorney'• Office said to him but can not now recall what he said at the time to the members of the pre5'." t A stormy, day-long hearing had threatened to become stormier when Los Angeles Times reporter Robert Gettemy refused to answer the questions of Los Angeles atto.rney F. Filmore Jaffe without the presence of his lawyer. Both sides agreed during the lun ch reces s to accept the statements at- tributed to Chief Scott by Gettemy and not use the veteran journalist as 1 witness. Gettemy pointed out beiore he went on the stand that he had been assured by J affe that he wou1d not be caUed as 1 wlt ne.s.s. Jaffe denied the action whi ch brought the comment from Judge Corfman that Gettemy statement was "Inaccurate and unfounded ." But Jaffe had earlie r adv ised a DAILY PILOT reported that he had "no inten· tion" of calling any newspaper reporter lo the witness stand for the Loar hearing. Dist ric t Attorney Cecil Hicks, cleared of contempt charges in the same hear· ing, commented after Judge Corfman's ruling that his o!fice will appeal the con· tempt decision on Chief Scott in con- junction with the earlier appeal on the trial verdict. The Fourth District Court of Appeals ha s sehedu1ed the hearing for June 6. Bakers' Strike E1ids-Day-old Bread Mondays Some Orange Coast housewives doing the grocery shopping on Monday will be buying day-old bread from now on after settlement Wednesday of a 2f..hour 1trlke by 1,000 Southern Callfomla bakers. Bakers and Confectlonary Workers Union Local 37 In Los Angeles ended the walkout after Interstate Bakeries agreed to give the employes both Saturday and Sunday ofr. Previousiy. bakers were gl\•en Sunday and Tuesday of£ so that bread and pastries could be delive.red fresh to supermarkets. Interstate Bakeries makes products sold under Doll y ~iadison, Weber, Four-S and Blue Seal labels. Collegiate Art Competition Set An atl ... ll'llate art eoinpelJUoo wlll be held from noon to e p.m. SUnday at the Laguna lilgucl Town Ctnler In Lqunl Niguel. The outdoor show wlll f e a t u r e scholarship awards totau,,. $1,lOO. Tho show Is open to all registered stud<nts al- lendl"' Junior and ,.,,Jor collq<s or unlvers1Ues, or acc:redJted art schools ln • ClllComla . Entries Include painUng, fll'OphlCI, 1ailpture, ceram.icl and c:rafta.. 1be C'GID-i:=. T~ Ab'":.,~ rnJuloacbarp.· I Evans Leads In Campaign Vote Costs OUsted ·San Clemente Councilman and . Mayor Walter Evans Jr. leads the list in c8D1paign spenders among the lose rs in las~ month's municipal elections. While Evans, hlmself, spent only $1 1 or hls own funds, a total or $891 in polltical contributions was apent In the campaign far ree.lectJoo which failed by only a few·. dozen votes. In campp.ign-expense statements filed before Tuesday (as prescribed by a loosely-worded Jaw) the former mayor's list of contributions contained 26 separate donations, none over $100. · Reeves Rubber Company and Kay and Peter Berger, former operators or the ci- ty golf course clubhouse, each con· tr!buted $100. The remainder of the contributions were in the less-than-$50 category. As the state law reads, all losing can- didates who spent more than $200 in their campaign ha ve to file within 35 days pf the el~tlon. Those candidates claiming less than $200 in expenses were O:lurtney Allison, Fred Divel, James W. Moss, Ralph Tomlinson, R. L. "Mike" Bunker, City Clerk Max Berg. Byron Rush, James Straus and Robert DeCoster. Other losing candidates hou·ever, spent more than the $200 minimwn. Long·time councilman Stan Northrup, who JOit a bid for a fourth t.enn , dec lared · $379 as his personal contribution to the campaign and a sole contribution of $25. No rthrup, who did not itemize his ex· penses, u.sed his funds primarily in advertisements ln newspapers and mailed advertising circulars. Local builder Alan Wulfeck also com· milted his own funds to his campaign declaring $346.02 as his total n:pen.se with no outside contributions. Another candidate, Mrs. Ed w i n a McDermott, declared only a few dollars, her personal expense. • The largest single expense, however, was $270 paid by frequent city-govern- ment criUe Eric Boucher. who bought large advertisements in support of the local housewife and in support o( run ning mate James Straus. Former City engineer Eugene Ayer, who waged a hard-hitting campaign as well, spent $375 in his losing bid for a council post. Ayer itemizes standard expenses for advertising, art supplies and photos, and 1dds one wry indJcator of a tight budget. The battling candidate spent $22 in lunch tabs at the local Jack·in-the-Bo:1 to , feed hl.s campaign worken. Red Radio Reports Waves of Planes h. H ; . Born 1ng ano1 SAIGON (UPI l -1-lanoi R~dio reported !hat "waves of American planes·· today stru ck 1-lanoi. the por t or 'J'hanh Hoa and the rail and road center of Bae Gia ng barely 50 miles from the border of China. The broadcast which claimed five America n planes were shot down follow· ed reports by military spokesmen in Saigon that U.S. Air Force jets .knock~d out six bridges around North Vietna m s southernmost port city of Dong Hoi in earlie r attacks and turned the area into an inferno of explodi ng supplies and am- inunition. l\1 ca nwhile American naval strength o[f Vietnam increased steadily and a U.S. Navy spokesman said planes from the carri er USS Saratoga, which arrived recently, carried out their first strikes t£>. day. Budget Proposal In San Clemente Asks No Boosts Wit h little comment San Clemente city councilmen Wednesday accepted City ~1anager Ken Carr's preliminary budget for the coming fisca le year calling for no increase in taxes. The panel then agreed it would begin studying the financial docu-· ment in special sessions later this month. The $3,787,487 financi;d prognosis con- tains few cctpital-improvement projects and no wage increases for any city employes. The first In a possible series ol four study sessions on the budget will be held at 7:30 p.m. May 24 in the mayor's e<>n- ference room . General business sectioM will be handled in that session, and at the end councilmen will agree on wh at sub- jec ts to take up later in the month and early in June. Two members of the city panel are out of lhe city for vacations , Councilmen Cliff Myers and Wade Lower, and their absence means that budget study will be taken up later than usual this year. Public hearings on the docwnent will take at the council's June 7 meeting. Final approvaJ, of the document, however, will not be necessary unW the last dsy of the Jlscal year, June 20. • The planes hit Communist positions 'near beleaguered An Loe, 60 miles north of Saigon, and in the Mekong Delta. . The carrier USS Ticonderoga sailed Wednesday from San Diego for Yankee Station oll tbe Vietnamese coast but the carrier USS Constellation was pulled of! the line today to give the 4,<XXI to S,000 crewmen their first break in 41 days. This left four attack carrier s in opera· lion. The Coral Sea went on rest leave last week. Hanoi Radio sa id the An1erican planes struck "densely populated areas" of the three cities and th~t one American jet \\"as do\vned over llano!, one over Tha nh Hoa 75 mile s south or Hanoi, and three over Bae Giang; 2.S miles northeast or Hanoi and· about 50 miles from the Chinese border. The main railroad supply line from China to Hanoi runs through Bae Giang, also known as Ha B4c, as does a major highway. Another lesser line -a narrow gauge leading from H a n o I northwestward toward China -was cut several Umcs I. l ear1er. ~. 42nd District Hopefuls Slate Debate Thursday· The four Republicans batlllng In t!i• June 6 runoff elections in the 42nd Congressional District will square off in debate next Thursday at the San Clemente Community Clubhouse. Labeled a major local event by the sponsoring San Clemente A re a Republican Women, Federated. the 7:30 p.m. event will be held in the Founder's Room of the clubhouse with the general public welcome to attend. The ne w district, whi ch stretches from San Diego County, then into Orange County following the coastline, en· compasses much territory once held by Rep. John G. Schmitz of Tustin. The four Republicans entered in the runoffs are State Sen. Claire Burgener or Santa Fe Springs, Norman J. Ream of San Clemente, Gay Lewis of San Diego and Fred Gage ol Oceanside. H.J.GARREIT .fURN1111RE PROF£SSIONAL INTEJ\JOR DESIGNERS Open Mon .. , Tliu11. It Fri. E.-.1. 2215 -HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, CAI.IF. O.E.C.C. ""'""a.,. ' 646·0275 t ( \ . . . . ... . . . } DAILY PILOT J/ Poli~e-Bla~k Tur1noil Festers • ID \ By GUY HALVERSON In 'the ~asl weeks Metcalfe molded a thwart off mounling tension -about one· t1irtt11•• kltM• """'".,. Jervlc• broadly based coalition of SUPPort from third of those attending angrily marched CJnCAGO -Against a mounting most of tbe city's blaCk organiutions. · from the room. backdrop of angry criticism aimed by Blacks were particularly disturbed over Chicago's giant black community at the AT TllE SAi\1E time, the recent schism the pruence of videotape television city's 12,()()1).man police department, here between two of the black com·' · cameras, which Conlisk denied seeing. many observers here are voicing ap-munity's most powerful organizations -The cameramen finally adm itted filming prehension about the approaching sum-· Operation Breadbasket. the economic the program for the police, though they mer. arm of the Southern Christian Leadership at first all eged that they ·were ··free The police-black community acrin1onv Conference, and PUSH. headed by the lancers.'' -which was vehement here througholi t Rev. Jesse L. Jackson, has been closed. ·· the-late 1960's and erupted in a number of Thus, the city's black comn1unity stands DESPITE A BURST of police depart· riots anQ altercations -not only poses more united than in the past several ment refom1 under former Supt. Orlando serious threats to public order. it is felt. years. \V. Wilson in the early 1960's-.including but also may endanger the city's At a jammed, heated "community rela-stepped up recruitments of blacks -the Demooralic party political establishment. tionJ" meeting with blacks on the city's department has never been able to ~·in In an almost unprecedented move, west-side F'illmore District,. Police Supt. allegia11ce from the black com"lunl· Mayor Richard J. Daley has been James B. Q>nlisk Jr. was openly booed ty. challenged openly on police department and asked to resign. Jn one emotional riot situation in 1968. conduct by one of his own top party of-Al one point during the meeting -one Daley even ordered police to "shoot to ficia ls-black Southside U.S. Rep. Ralph of a number of community meetings kill or maim" looters. . H. Metcalfe. hitherto a stanch Daley ally. called by Daley and Conlisk to attempt to During pasl months. police·con1munity ~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ SO.t'l'·SELL SA~I by Marvin ~lyers , -- relalions ag:'lin dc1eriorated. First. there WEIS a shoo1tng incident in a public school "''hen an olr--Outy officer killed ·a young \'ietna1n \'eteran, then . issuance of a repor1 charging Chicago police wilh killing civilians.· particular!~· blacks, at a higher rate than in any other U.S, city : and, rrcent ly, several arrests of Southside dentists under questionable circunlsla nces -one of them, the cam- paign n1anager of ~·tetcalfe. ~1etcalft> \l'ho \vas an Olympic sprint star in the !930's and became a top Daley stahvart in Chicago politics, called for an end to pollct' task forces, better recr uit· n1ent and pron1otion of blacks. ;ind civilian re\'l,•w in cases involving alleged bruta lity. At a parked n1e('ting of Opcr;it1on PUS H. ~lrtca!fr. his voice sound1ni::- angry and strained. said that he is tired of blacks -\rho make up the largest single ethni<: block in Daley's once ln1· pregnable coalition -being repeittedty dlscrinunated against. "VOU ~1AV WEL.l. ask \Vhat has hap- pened to Ral ph ~letcalfr," he said. "\\!hat took him so long? I reply, it is· pever too late to be black.'' \\'it hout qurstlon. the bhu;k vote is the key to tl1e continuation or the local po\iticul establishn1t>nl . \'et that vole -'"hich carried Illinois ror presidential cafldidate John F. Ken· nrdy in 1960 and which has subsequently proven the backbone of O.:iley's five n1ayoral ele<'tions -ha~ been in- ('reasl ngly independent . In the 1971 city elections . for l'xamplr. Datey·s n1argin in bla ck south and \vest side districts dropped, a p pa rent I y because Jackson oprnly endorsed l)Rley 's Republican opponent . ' Community Events Artist of Newport Harbor -Costa Mesa Lions The Month 27th Annua l Rocenlly, many blar k leaders ... incl1..1dln1 Metcalfe and Jackson -havt opposed tbe re-elec1lon campaign of eoo• County's State 's Attorney Edward vj Hanrahan. disliktd and feared by bla~ for his part in a police raid on a Bite Panther party headqu11rters ~n 1969. · young blacks were killed in that 1Jtrrcitl tlon. JJcyond thf' question of pubh c orcifr Ii the immediate monlhs ahl'.'ad -"·hlc- pol ice concede is always an unknown i~ Chicago's sometimes . extremely hurh.14 su1umer m9nlhs -political anal)'Sts here arr 1rRiti ng 10 set ir other promine1~ Chicago black pol!!lclsnii wtll side wit• Met catfr. So far. other top black of· ficeholders. including City Treasur('I .Joseph Bertrand and State Sen. Ce<·ll Partt'e. prt>sident pro lem or the Illinoi ~ SrnRtr havt tended to shy a .... ·ay fron1 tho dispu te '=Jl= JESSIE RA. Y POWERS FISH FRY - ~.rb CALL you A SAR.f·FACED LIAR., Bvr YW"lf c:iOT A MOVSTAC1iF.'" Lake Tahoe to Gei Passe11ger Vessel ZEPHYR COVE . Nev . IAPl -A Mississippi River cotton barge transformed into a graceful 114-foot sternwheeler has passed her ··sea trials'' and goes into service June 15 as the only passenger ship on Lake Tahoe. The A-1 .S. Dixie. a 99·ton ship owned by Ken Amundso n, fills a void existing since 1940 when tbe 168·foot steamer "Tahoe" was scuttled near this south shore cove. Since then. only smaller vessels -mos!ly privately owned but including a few tour boats -have plied the crystal-clear mountain Jake. As a result, the thousands of tourists flocking to the lake each year have had little chance to ge t awav from the pine-covered shoreline. Once clear of the shore. boaters - a n d ' ' Dix i e ' ' passengers -can get a sweeping vista of rocky crags and mountains su rrounding the Jake .along with an Un· broken view of the shore and a real sense or the lake's size and beauty. Amundson says he acquired State Says 5 Firms Mislead LOS ANGELE S (AP) - A group of Los Angeles area firms have been accused or f11lse and misleading ad· vertisin g to attract aspiring entert.ain~s in five Superior Court suits filed by Atty. Gen. Evelle Younger's office. Some of H'le suits also charge the firms w i t h operating as arllsts. managers and employment a gen c i es without the proper licenses. The suits 11llege that the 15 firms invol ved claim they will obtain . jobs for their customers in t h e en- tertainment field . The suits seek: an injunction barring further a 11 e e t. d misrepre3entation. refunds to clients and a $2,500 fine for each mi.'lleading statement. N1med as defendants In the action were American MOOel Service tnc.: Youth Manage- ment Corp .. Warren Man11ge- ment Associates, Inc .; T11lent Starch; World Wide Talent Starch, Inc.; A&J Artist! Agency : Star Talent Anoclal<: STA of Beverly Hills: Royal crest Produc-t• on 1 : Maxina -Tara E n t erpri.sel: Photogentsis Columbia C...tlng: Columbia Enttrpr!Jes: Columbia Public Rdatioos; and M.J.H. Produc- tio<\S. the ship in 1953 and used it un- ttl last year for storage and as a private houseboat: "But so any people liked it and wanted to go for rides on it that I decided to go com- mercial," he said. Amundson began work on the ship last year after rnak: ing his son and four friends his business partners to r a i • e $250,000 needed !n rebuilding the form er single-deck craft. Now it has th ree fu ll decks -two of them enclosed - painted gleaming white and trimmed in reel. The ship is topped off by a wheelhouse and massive wooden wheel salva ged from an o Id freigh ter. The Dixie, powered by three diesel engines. is licensed to carry 399 persons. It makes about 10 knots and will cruise f:·om Zephyr Cover pier to Emerald Bay across the lake on three daily eJtcursions throughout the summer. The 22-mile roundtrip takes three hours with no stops. Amundson says he will run the boat on weekends during the winter and whenever anyone wants to charter her. The ship was built irt the 1920s and was used to haul cotton on the Mississippi and rivers of East Texas. In 1948 she Was cul into four sections and transported by rail to Lake Tahoe for use as a gambling boat . But the venture came to a standstill when blocked by federa l authoritleS and five years later Amundson got the -ship for stor8ge fees oWed t'o him by the previous owner. News Ads Beat TV NEW YORK (UPI) - The nation's newspapers sold $6.2 billion worth of advertising in 1971 com· pared with $3 .S billion sold by television, according to figures released by the American Newtpaper Pub- lishing AMcJc;&tion . Dii'ect mail advertising was in third place with $2.9 billion •nd magaiines ac:counled r..-$1.4 billion of Jdvertising. Radio was filth with 11.3! billon. The Al!IPA said there were 1,749 dally and 590 Sunday newspapers in the nation. Ii ,.Id daily newspaper circulation ioo-eased by 1!3.731 to 62,231.258 and Sunday clrculalion In- creased by 448;041 lo 41,-W: 841 " M•v lS IMru Jun1 I• . JUNE 2.3;4 RED IARRONS OF ORANGE COUNTY IEAUTY-IAIY-IAND Scu11rday Nitht, Miry 20 CONTESTS MESA VERDE COUNTRY CLUI PINTO STATION WAGON DRAWING- Oinn•r 1rid , . FOR ALL TICKETS CAL~ Guest Speak•r -Hal f lihrnon CLIFF WESDORF -546-2300 cn~nntl J New1 Nation's hi_ghest interest oniilsured savings 6%, $S,000 minimum certificate accouuts-two.to five year terms. s ~o passbook acoounts available a'.so. FREE FREE Trust Deed Note Colledion Wltft Sl,000 nriniftwn hloce. F'REE Parkinc Smngs While la Banks -olllql. FREE Loan Counseling an• Httnmre oa liome, """· propaty illpm-................... FREE : Money Orders With SJ,000 minimum ltalance. FREE Photocopy Service With $1,000 -;,,;,,,,, ... ...,... . FREE Q Monthly Money Plan Community Rooms for charitable and. ed ucational groaps. Wberca~. c> FREE Travel en Checks Wllh SI,000 mjaim11m bo!llK,.; FREE Payroll Savings Deduction Plan FREE Toter branch Deposil• and WithdnWllls at IDJ O( OW ~ ..... CALIFORNIA FEDERAL SAVINGS Costa Mesa Office: Anaheim Office: ••• i .. ·-·""" 2700 Harbor BoulOJ,a·d 546-2300 GOO N Euclid Avonuo . 776-2222 FREE Notary Smiee With Sl,000 • miaimaa hlDce. FREE On-Line Electronic Instant Sc nice FREE Exchange Cbecb FREE Check Holcim fGr atft - Orange Office: 4050 Mat ropoll!al"I Drive in City Center 639-3033 CIOWI ' ··' • . -· .. .... ~· ·. • • ~ + '• • •! ·:··.· • '• .· . . -• • . ·• ~ ' ' -·. ' • . J + • .•• .. ' ' ' .. . , -, I ' .. I . -' ' -' -' ' • ' . • , ' , · l • • . ' ' • . ; •• ' • . ' ':) :~ '• l· ti .> ·~ l • I '.J • J • ~ F r I n • 0 u ti d A el P' • p n R y " n •• • u 6 t fl I [ I • ·• l r I. ~ I ( • I I I ' I I • l I ( I ( I ( I I I I Ot:ER THE COUNTER KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN Saturdays in The DAILY PILOT HALLID -AY'S '11 \· I ' I. I I +I J The Purists Choice Halllday's Buttan Down :O::h1I\\ l1 hl"lV' r~t .•r 1'\llton pn'.~~. 1111r 1·IAule j:lrl1)h\t on 11: tint rnJy- tllllL'io· "·hlch l.s ron1plC'1<'l.Y dtlnt.blr lht\111\:1) ~ ~lq' f•\lhu·r-~ lhl' 1no1'1" ba~11· ct'llnurin.-s 11! \\ hLh', b l11r ,t 11'AITf' n'l:(til'd.t. 'f~tl1•,.,'<1 1•11 11 p1-.·1·1:>111n r1,1n1 !ht $<'!11:,· l:tr 1,1 thr h,'trt~·I ··11(!. DftlSS SHIRTS 'ltOM $11. \IE.\"S TR.\OITIOX '1, f lUTlllXG 1 Ml I ll'nNI An -WlSTCl..IN PU..U Nl'Wf'O l l HACH -,M. Ml.elll llAIUFACTUBllC 9wa-- " , • \, COMPLETE-NEW YORK·· STOCK UST .. ,,,."411. M11 U . 1971 SC Thursd~y's ·Closjng Pri~mplete Ne:w York Stodi Exchange List • -• • ., • .. . CAil Y ,llOT ,p • =---= 1M A Mt ...... ,. •MM•• ... u "' .. ....1" lltt "'-'" ,.. 11111 ,., ..... ""' .. +"-1• •I ti ti + '6, ......... 0 11"4 111" ltf +•"' ..... -~· .... -u ,. ... " +'• ,, ut• Slit .,. .• ~ '"' Jt.. "... .,.. • ' .,. 111, ftt fl-.... •1' 014 41 1" Al"-~ • • n. "' .. . "' .itt " ...... .. .. .... . . _ .... • , .. Jli• • -~ ~ I,, ... U At" Jl ~ ~ ... ,. ... "' '11 .... ~ .. , ... . .. "'' "\lo """"""" JlllO 111 111~ 111 +4til 1100 1111 1U 1• ,., 14 1114 \I 11 ,. ,. ... """ 11¥t-,, !! iY! ~ -~:: :J .~~ ,!,. .t, -..i II iJ i'fit i I• __,.,,_ For Weekender Ad•ertilbag -· ·I ITS - l 1 In Inc th• anti np ~ .,. of ork r.: ot l ll.• di od .. 11 ft Lii ~I !I Ill ell ••• II· "• id 4. '" " lo •• II' 1U ' ~-• ld " IO ol to •• ly '· '" '" IS r • . y ,, '" lh .. .. H l'f • . I I I • ' • I ff DAILY ,!LOT TODAY'S TV IDGHLIGHTS : ' kCIT ID 01:30 -'"The 40s Hollywood: You Must Remember This." Ingrid Bergljlan, Robert Mitchum. Howard Hawks, John Huston and Raoul Walsh introduce and explain excerpts from their most famous movies. I NBC 0 -!;PO -"Ironside." Chief lronS1de at-I tempts to unfiarth evidence to prove an accused police officer (David Carradine) innocent or a mur- der charge. Raymond Burr. ' ABC fJ 10:00 -"Owen Marshall." Marshall and Brandon defend a biology inslrurtor's wife charged with setting fire in the uni versity labora· tory. CBS ID 11 :30 -"The Learning Tree-" Gordon Parks' film adaptation of his autobiographical povel aboul a _young black boy gro,ving up in Kan- ~~ - · · Kl'LA 0 11:30 -j'The ~1ajor and the Minor." Ray Milland and Ginger Rogers stai in this 1942 comedy, • Y 01cH!J Lovers ('osla 1-Icsa's Deni se ~1cCanlcs and \-Vestminster's Richard ll armatiuk are linked romantically in the Long Beach Co1nmunity PJayhouse comedy "The Savage Dilemma," giving its \vorld premiere Friday. • Thursday Evening C.Ufornia State Wellerweiaht Ch1i. pionship titft In 12-rd bout. (ij) Thirty Mlnutu Wittl ••• El'} llact Jotsn11I 'Doctor Faustus' Opens MAY JI fD D Show dt Loco Vtldu Q) Estadotl Ctnt11I UOIDOfJlll!l:!l!l-l;JOlfJ (JJ "' Tb"'""' !RI ChBd· At Cal State Fullerton (l) iJ0 1kn less youn1 m1Hieds, Chip and Poll' 1J Tbt l lt Vtllly btcemt lht proiy p1rtnls ol sev· O @ Wild Wlld Wal eral cbi!dr1t1 when Steve, 81rb1r1, An all-sludcnl cast will m T1111 f!k:tsfonts Charter tnd kllit Ukt off on lon1 prcsenl Christopher ~1arlowe's Q) I Dr11111 II .INnllll WHkends.. 16th-century morality horror OJ)l1•s,otiipt(R) mMt,.CrifflnStln story. Dortor Faustus.'' --""" ~ ~ 111 -bollSI ...... '°" '1ht &:.I" u:1 1UJ • .. , opening tonigh1 ~s lhe final ft II"'*" lfD 40's: Hollywood, You MllSI Rtmtm· major product ion of the 1971 - G'l) lM T1111bmol btr This" tnatid 81rrrn1n, Robert 72 theater season at Cal State fSZ> Tllrllll Sloopt Mitchum, How1rd HawU, John Hus- • "30Dtit..iw. (tO) "Bl TQ" Part..I lon_tnd Rto11I Wtlsh int1oduct ind Fullerton. (dra) '65 -Bwt L1nus111, Piut o:pl1Jn excerpts from th1ir "most The show, niarking the Scorle1d, Je•M• MMllLI, SUzlnn• famous films In 1 1eminiscenl look directorial debut a!. Cal Slate Flon. Whln(Jln 1r10r1nt G1rm11t «· •I lht ir11t mcwies of th1 4D"s. of Dr. Robert T. Renee, , fleer 11t1mpb to I01d 1 train ind t;OO 6 (I) CBS Thursday Movie: (C) · "'' IO Gtnno.., '""" '" lootod 12h•; "11""1" (wm) "68 -JomH I ~~ ~****S from muttu1111 ind homes. 1 ruls-~~~rn, limes M~son •. J~mes fo~: llflCI le1d1r •b ollt to atop him. wi:11nmh York. A sopl!1sll~1.tad Id· ~.;}~~··~'P"l'.~[~ ..... i ~l/~.,rTl~:-_,"'..,,I Cl) CU fltWl · W1ll1r Cron-Iii v~n:ure eomedy about 1 mrlhcn dol· _ , .:_ "-~ .. _) -M'!!·~'!!·!~~~" 111 Ht1y919' l(ultl •~• p:r1cy. . , .. m •~ ...... .... 0 ~ a;) lto115id1 'license In ••••«••• •1 ._, ., " . . l• Mlre4• 11•4. Q) ... ., ... the Prefellll 1(111 (1.) Chtel lronSld e 11templs s11.t••• associate professor of theater, wlll continue through Sunday and conclude May 13-28. Orange toas t are ll performers in the cast include April Thronson and Stan Tudor of Costa Mesa. Connie Sponheim of Fountain Valley, and Ken Falsetto. a former Orange CoaSt College student no\v livi ng in Fu 11 e r Ion . Falsetto is one of fhree actors who portray various fa cets of the Faustus character. No More 'Singles' Emmy Changes Winning Rules By JERRY BUCK HOLLYWOOD (AP I -The •National Ac adem y of Televisio n Arts and Sciences announed a change i~ the En1· mys Wed nesday that wit! substantially change the win- ning pattern established at the awards presentation last Sun· day. category v.•as elin1inated due to the decline in that kind of programing and in the Juture. talk shows \\'ill com pet r againsl other variety shOl\-'S. Surf Sou1 id lit Movie On Coast The sound of riding a wave as only a surfer knows It is just one technique included in the film "Fi\·e Summer Lee Schulman. chairman or the awards comm ittee. said the academy v.•as establishing a new category for limited series and that a si ngle episode of a series 1\-'ould no longer be eligi ble for nomina- tion in the outstanding single dramalic prog ram category. Schulman said that the Stories" to portray the true performers in a series would feeling or su rfing. now be eligible for a nomina-The film . the last surfing lion only in the series acting release of photographers categories. Greg ~·tacGllJivr<1v and Jin1 Last Sunday. the academy Freeman, is shO\\'ing through a\\'arded Emmys for outstand-Tuesday at the Ba I ho a ing a c I in g in a single Theater. 709 E. Balboa Bl vd, performance to Keith ~ticheU daily at 8 p.m. and l p.m. A 6 for an episode of ''The Six p.m. showing is included on Wives of Henry VIII'' and to Friday and Saturday evenings Glenda Jackson for a single To capture !he true feelin g episode in the s e r i es of s u r f i n g , the lY.'O "Elizabeth R.'' photographers ha r n e s s e d Schulman said the act io n su rfers y,•ilh tiny microphones was taken in recognition of the and transmitters to record the grotying trend of mini-series sounds of surfing. Also in- ancf not because of the British corporated in the film is high w;l v.•ilh the two limited speed photography, giving the ser1 . effect of motion 2S times " e academy is not em-slower than regular speed . OOrrassed b.v the British Scenes in the film were wins.',' he said. ''We took the.a . filmed in Europe, Sou l h action in recognition of the America, Puerto Rico and new lrertd." · Hawa ii. The film. s ays The academy also 111<>ved to MacGillivray. is not to roman- give _ further recognition of ti~ize the surfer. but present daytime pro gr a m i n g by him as one who enjoys surfing establishing new c a t ego r y more than anything else. award areas an<i to recognize The film critici7.es the cur· the achievement of cable rent trend of disappearing pu b- television. Sc hulamn said that lie coastline. as y,·ell as the cable programs will now be surfing championship structure eligible for Emmy awards. and commercialized aspects of The separate talk .sho\vS the art. t1ll Cllitlr, hltat lo unur1h 11id1rl(e to prov. 111 K· ID .... S1c:Jt1J "-Ml '1hf Art custd Pl)l ice offiter Innocent ot 1 el KafMIW" Wtll-known Kabuki IC· murder dlarrt. D1v1d C1111dine Curtain time is 8:3'1 p.m. in the 200-seat Recital Ha ll. and reservations can be made at the theater box office, 87()... 3371, which is open from noon to 4 p.m. on weekdays and 1r=====~~~~~~~~~~~=====11 after 6 :30 p.m. on ~ perlormance days. fihJD!Ol_u tmr Kuroem111 and otlltr 1t11J o1 1111sts. till Gnnd Kabuki TIDUpt perform 0 (l)@ Q) LM(llmt ''Th• Old a::arpts "°"'two popular pllys ind Te1m Spirit" (A) lonrstreel, lnvesti- dll!IOftltnl• tradillo111I 1111Q.up and 11Un1 • striu of 1rmo11d t1r rob· pslum.. berin, hn rt1s6n In lllSptCI I m ,,....,. friend's lnvol¥ement. QI.,._ Aerts fI) Nodtls T1111tla I!) T•a.mtl Musk.al J c.... @TH Ylrrtnll1 tariel CE) Noni• CiDYldldl .11-Shew !:»O SKond Uiok (52) He I ' p [lllol: Mlnti: 0 Nrws Wetdl John Fullmer 7:00 IJ (JJ D Ill -€D" 1"' 9 INt .. Clod: (5Z) Rscin1 From Hall,.ood Park (ll Trdl • C-.•ncn 10:00 0 OJ m Dl1n M1rtin Show (R) {]) Dr..,..t Ruth Buul, Mike ConnofS. D1. Joyce ID WWa My UM? Brottiers and Bobbi M1rtln 1uest. a.II r ...... .._ Slmmy Dn1s 9 Ntws Georre Putn1m Jr., Welch GUlrds Band f utsl. 0 CIJ ({) Q) Own M11lh1l ''The G)I LM lier for.it and the Trees" (R) 111 I Drum II JNnllle 0 Movlt: (Zh1) "Tiie Or11nlz1r"' t1J) S,..kfq: Frttfy (dr1) '64 -Martello M1strio1nnl, fD Kdllyiop Kalht1111 Hi1cllcocl Ren1to Salvatori. • NEWf>O't'f BEACH • CMt.3-&15lr MAJOR STUDIO PREVIEW FROM M,G.M. STARRING CHARLnON HESTON FRIDAY NIGHT, MAY 19 8:30 P.M. Plus JAMES COBURN In "CAR,EY TREATMENT" SHOWN AT 7 & 10:15 •·IN HARBOR SHOPPING C£NT£R.~· ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• :.: 1 EDWARDS :.: : 1-fARBOR c~·;At : • i7A1ieo• ltVO. Al ••L50N SI. • • 0 • COSfA MESA ~•6·051l • • • • • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 MILES SO. OF SAN DIEGO FWY. : •• .. • -: ••••THEATRE••• ••• 546·3102 ••••• HA .... 0" AT ADAMS. COSTA Ml!S" 4111 IWI-91.VO.·l •IU $0, Of SAii PllliO l'Wl. '"""""""' [Q]«& "'"" ..... PLUS . ACADEMY AWARD WINNER BEST SHORT SUBJECT "SENTIN(l$ Of SlllNCI" POSITtVlll INOS TUIS.Miy 2) Love is encouraged. But the penalty fof birth is death. THE TIME IS TOMORROW ANDT1££S NO TIME LEFT. IE u .. P1epril Ill ,, c..i. m News Pete Millff, Ktn Jcnes QI Mowit: "Slllp tf F11b" Cone!. (I) News Hu(h Wltli1ms WINNER Of S ACADEMY AWARDS 1Jld (C) "'TM lollt Silps" Ptr1 I t1Jl Wolld Prm m [I ""· S.1it•1io ED Fil111 OdyutJ (R) "Our Daily 7~ 8 m Rollin' IR Ute ll't'lr p;1ren 8re1d" Bltclt-(utSts. ail Luch1 LibN Wresl1in1 Q laal1 "Th• rtyin1 Squirrel" (R) (52) L.a lty111d1 de 81lom1t I.Jule m1~11 friends •ilh 1 fim ity 10:30 0 5ao111 l'utn1m'1 Tit• lldi cl f!yin1 1qulrr1ls, i nd 111eues 1 ID IJll Co~ Sllow ftm1 le squirrtl lrom de1th 11'1\en sh1 m LI S.tan1t1 11ts her head u urf!I In 1 lln an 9 Film: (C) "Brol!en lanuN ind rolls ta lh• tdr• ol 1 stt•p (52) Cofltle11cl1 CulP1bl1 cliff. 10:45 llJl Crttle II Llf11 8 Mo¥f1: (C) (Zt11) "l•llJll" 11:00 0 ([) @E Ntws {mys) '7l~obtr1 forsltr, Darrtn 0 9J m News McGavln, Josi ftner. 0 One step ~10nd (I) To T1ll 1he trutll @ M11Jllal Dillon (I) I DtH• 11 Jt1nnle 0 (I) fa Ntws ID MWllOlt • hit: (C) (2tlr) m lrutb or Constqutnus °'8rMll Mlnsilni" (rom) '59---Aud· (i) MOYlr. "four Otipetate Min'" ~ Htpllumi Atlthoriy Pti1dlll, ltt (•dY) '60-Aldo Ray. H11ther S1111. J. Cobb. Oll LIW "'Resolvin1 !ht fln1nci1I CD.,.. .• "'""' C1isis in Our Schools' CD (}) Dnipet • (52) HllCb~p (R) •• fm Htsto11 et Art ''[1st/Wat" 11.JS e:I f9tan Cl"' dtl lutws: Que CDT• IMlta Mlllkll ' c:o.tll· Hacemos Con Los Hijos" t.rl• 11:30 6 (I) CIS Lite Morie: (C) '1'hl (if) Tiiis wnt: 111 Hit NIA lt1rnln1 Tm" (1utoblo) '6'-4(yle (st) lilfril; (Zflf) '1111 llf !flt LIMPI Johnson. Altl Cltftt, Dini Elur, U· er Chl111• (drt) 'JS--l'tt O'Brltn ttlle [~ans. Phota-Jouinalist Ga rden Josiphlnt Hutc:hinson l.71• Titbol Pours l1lm 1d1pt1lion ol his au!o- Oonald Crisp. ' biO(taphic1I nowl about 1 10un1 1:00 -Mt ••d tllil Clll (lh Al· black boY llll'Wini: up in lltnsts. u . lllP "I CJ @) €t) Johnnr C1rson Ton1 t~u(h M•t• letchei Buttons ta Rtlldlll and n1t ur1lisl Jtm fnwler r1n1 1 bell •lltlllVll" h• sen 1 ., . stn-r tnl•r the ho h h .1 1uest. JutM ,.,1y3on 1s also sehtduled. .... ~·· 1 1111 O Mcwlt: '1he M1jor ind the pracrarnmld the chimp lo COj)t MillOr" (com) '42 _ Ray Mlllind with 1 b11rt11r llold!nc ! h1ndlul o! 0 CJ)@ OJ Did tnttt Mori "a"~-:--rn Wll IR .,. s~hl. em Cosbr •nd L1sli1 u11ams 1!!11 u:i P • > ... ndy rues! Dul'ltln, Jim H1bo11 tnd S!tP!lJ m T~ Ttll th• Truttl Whitt runt. 12:00 D Movie: (C) "LI• of t/'11 Lnr-D CD (I) m Allu S.lb •lld lea" (•llS) '64 -011• Rob1r1son. JONI "The Men Th1t Corrupttd m Movie: "Doolin ef O•l1hom1" Hldllyburf" (R) Heyt1 i nd Curl)' (wl5) ·•9--Randolp~ ScoU '" ltt tlll 1tr1np position of not ' on[)' hllpln( thtlr Ct,lors. but •ant. 1:00 rn u 0 (j) di News In( le. l:JO IJ Mavil: "'lllt Xillin(" (Sin) '56 ([) 1Y I llplfb •Wht" th• c.rtti l -st1rlin1 H1}'den, Vince Ed•1rdt. m Alll)i lrtfftUI... rftwr," "P1t111r 1nd ''Tht Wild llue Mown" Gene GJ11son il l!oll I m All·N!a't Slltw: (C) .. Apadit Ttt• ti) 1111 .. fl99 ttll Olympic Gill Y1ndtr"' !On( 1114 Artliro l.onttll •ii Por Z:OO 0 Hl~IJ Patrol Friday DICffiME MOVIES (1"1) 'SJ -QUJ Madison, Fri nt LMJoy. m '""'"' Stcntt" 1d11) '49 - Pttrltla Neil. Ruth Rom1n, Cte•nor P11~u. l:tD ID_. W'") '41-T°" Mor· !;JO 0 .,,,,, ...... It ...... id") tin, MW Ton1t. '52-Mtrilyn Monroe, Rich11d Wid· l:lO D "S..,._,.. (MJ) '39-.John m1rl. W•JM. C..111 Tmot. 3:00 (])"The stl1pper" (dr•) ·u -Jo. 1 .. (J) ..... It ltpech ..... (ftl) 1nnt Woodw1N1, ftlcll1N1 Brym!r. 'SS -SltphH McW1ftJ, Hup 9 IC) "Any All l otb" Cond. O'lrtu, ltJt•) '5' -.i.rr C111nd!tr, Richartl 111:11 •'loll "" -CCOlll) ·n 11oo1o. "'"' ""' ''"' ----lu lllo, UI 8 (C} .... """' Wlf ol 111111 -llf r (-) '39 -loll _. ("") '5S-(li1noo H,. Moot. too.MO-• I• •fl .... , --4:11 (J) -• 11111 llllolo • --· ~· ~·· °"" r.,. • .,-...... ,~, •• , ,,,l &orl>•n S"• •~nri P,u~ 0 N•ol "WH.lr·s UP, DOC" (GI ~ "HOW TO COMMIT MA••IAGl(Pi) "'OOC"el loOG I '::"::"::':""=~' --·· TWIN T.lllS Of Tfll•Oll IOTN IN llOOOT COLOI ... LACI llllf TAl.lltTUl.l" 00 "WEEKEND MUll:OEll:S" (II) .... ~-,... ..c.. ..... c.-,, ... .., ~:M~n CH.Ael.(S iiONSON JACI: ,A\AN(.l /Q!(HA,0 BA5EHART "CHATO'S LAND" (PG) -·----·--111-lMt IHI"' '•llltf"• l• .. 11 '"""' '•ltlHfll•trf lolofM .. •1uc1' THI PllA(Hl•H IPIJ .. '"11-••Nr/\•••"'· "lMI '10f(SSIOJIAll" (Pf) AU.T llTJI 1. •t®DIYI COlUMIUS"' 00 t. "WlftHS PGl"•A" 111 "'AlKM llSTAUtllt- NIWf'Otf lfACH •• •t 1~1 •"'"'-I• l•~vlov• lid• l•I• ·• 01. J•llM ENDS NEXT TUES, J ames Coburn Jennifer O'Ne il l ··~ "THE CAREY THEA TMENT" "THE FRENCH CONNECTION" STARTS WEDNESDAY EXCLUSIVE "SKYJACKED" ,,.., "HOSPITAL " ·~-,__ ..... "MA•Y OUll.N 0, KOf1"" --' -~::ilrl SrADIUM •t .'!" ·~ ---'.•C.• Sr AO/UM" l .'i/ .. ~ .... ·~ --. --·~· SFADIUM •J ·. ,_'J...~ ---.1 . SIAD/UM ·I .. ' -.:..i..:·~-- .... "" ... 11.0.••¥• GIMd1 J•dlMll '"'MAllT. QUEEN OF SCOTS" '"WUTHERING HEIGHTS" E•cklliv• Or•nte Ceunry RtMrved St1t En9...-m1nt Me"'ln1tM tor I AcMlc.my Aw1n111 "FIDOLER ON THE llOOF" Ac••my Aw1nl Wlnn1r JIM F .. ndl "KLUTE" 1111 llM "SUMMER OF '4l'' CR! "CMATD'S LA.NO" A "DOC" "MARk 01'" THE DEVIL" "LET'S SCARE JESSICA TO DEATH" "SWEDISH Jl'L'I" GtllLS" ••• "SWllT IOOY O" OEIORAH" ~:::;~ ~T NEWPORT '" 1---· .... , ':WHD(S POPl'A" ' . "THE IOY FRIEND" ~--MD ,., "l!EY.rs HEROES" I • BEST PICTURE OF THE YEAR! BEST ACTOR · GENE HACKMAN ~: • • • • . . . •• • ••••••••• •••••••••••••••• •• 91'ACH ilLvo. AT l!LLIS •• ••T. COAST ... WV.• ..... 0111:00 f'W¥. •47·9908 •H UNTINGTON Bl!AC M I THE FRENCH CONNECTION WHAfCHATO'S LAND OOESN"J Kill. CHATD Will • • I I I I! ' •I I 7 I 7 I • I ,I I Lag1111·a Beaeh EDITI O.N Teday's Final N.V. Stoeks ' , VOL. 65, NO. 139, 3 SECTIONS, ~.''pAGES ORANGE COUNTY .. CALIFORNIA: THURSDAY, MAY 18, 197~ TEN CENTS , Bombs Reported Aboard British Liner a t Se a LOmlON (AP) -Defense Mlnl5try satd today bombs are reported to have been planted aboard tbe Que<n Elizabeth 2 at sea and that rour bomb disposal ex· perts were being flown to mld·Atlantic to deal with them. Unofficial reports in London said the captain of the big liner had been adviud bombs were planted in New York, the ship's last port of call, and wou1d eiplode U a huge ransom was not paid. There are 1,400 passengers aboard the 85,000-ton vessel, pride of the British merchant navy. Defense Ministry sources said the bomb e~ will be. parachuted as close to' the vtsiel as _possible. · First -re1¥>rts· sa.ki ·the ransom demand originated In Copenhagen, Denmark. · Ctmard, owners of the ship, immediate- ly contacted Defense Ministry officials. A Royal Air Force transport took off from Lynsham In Wiltshire beading <>11t to the Atlantic. The Defense Ministry said the plane carried foor bomb disposal experts who would be alongside the ship for parachutinJ early thiJ afternoon. The BritW! Broadcasting Corp. said a caller to CUnard'a New York office said our Vi sitations Disruptive -Trustee A propo•ed school board policy oon- cerning visitors to Laguna Beach schools 'parked some bitter debate this week l>etween trwtees Patricia Gillette and ~o~.Browne. ·1 A recommendation by Superlntendert 'William Ullom that visits~ ~,~ lo two ~-a.~ 'it·'tldl'..,iid wu 'T<fected 'by Mn. Gillette who said vlslla· tiona should be rillowed on!y twice pet month and that visiting IJ'WPI be beld to 15 persona. -"Visits are just too dlRuptlve," MtL Gillette a substitute teacher, Cold other members or the board. "A teacher will stop in the middle ol the class ond uk the visitors 'What are you dolog here?'•• "I have been in the clusrooms and seen no evidence c( d1srupUon. I can't give much credence to your opinion," Browne responded. "Well, U you were 1 teacher, you'd know what I mean, u Mrs. · Gillette lflllpped back. , I'm 'Three a bomb """1d uJ1lode lolllibl unle.u the ramom was paid. It was not clear whether this meant llritiJll or· New York Ume. Tbe rendezvous was set !or a position Ill degrees north 34 west -In mld-Atlao- tic. A secood plane, a Royal Air Fon:e Nimrod jet """'1llalsaan aln:raft, flew "Gif from CornwaJL "' 1be Nimrod is a maritime recon- nalssance version ol the former Comet airliner. It would lorm a c:omrmmlcatlons link between the ;"J and Britain, the Defeme Ministry . • Ill DAILY PILOT lflff ""'9 Browne said that if visits were disrup- tive a drop In test acores mlgbt be tx· pected. "But I ate no drop in test scorea, and that's all I have to go by." Mn. Gillette said test ·ICOfe.s were "irrelevant to the point." Trustee Jane Boyd suggested the board IOlicit information from tour guides •• the various schools to ue how they feel about the best Umes for the t0<n IDd the a1zt of visiting groups. Melissa Bryant reveals her age lo dental assi!tanl Chris Harris at Monarch Bay Plan in Laguna Niguel. Melissa i! one of the young- sters in· South Shores CbrisUan Preschool who Wednesday visited the dental offices of Dr. Herbert Burridge lo see what it's all aboul Ullom said that Mrs. Gillette's IUI· gestioi\to limit the toun to a twice roonthly schedule "might be a llrnlUng factor considerJng the number of re- quests we have had." Irvine Offers Band Visitors to the scltools, Ullom added, whelher they be local peroona or educators from outside the district tend to develop pride In tha acboola on the port of staff and students. Laguna Council Defer s Protests on Annexation "Being in the education business, 1 think we owe it to others to see how It operates in our acboob,' 'BroWJJe com- mented. He said he agreed with Mra. Boyd that )le would like to see more Input from the ataff on the matter before trustees tate final action en the policy at their June 7 regular meeting. "Well, we11 progress aloog. If you want Input, we 'll gel Input," commented board president Will~ 'lbomas. A councilman from the new city ol Irvine appeared before the l.quna Beach City Council Wedneld1y night to ofler a band ol friendship and succeeded In pe<snading Laguni councilmen to defer a . 1uggested protat of. portlons of Irvine's P'OPJ.sed t,800-acre annuatkm. Irvine Councilman Henry Quigley, who ldenU!led himself as fonner Laguna resi· den~ aprused oympalhy with Laguna's Lagu:na Council Action Principal •ctlons taken by the Laguna Beach City Council Wednesday night were : 'ti. -Accepted the migruitlon ol "'!\ff!Cllrnan Edward C. Lorr, effective July 31. • -Agreed, a!ltr bearing from Irvine City Councilman Henry Quigley, that the stoffB of the two dtlea should mtet to work out an acceptoble boundary line where the propooed Irvine annu1tlon woold ftlltr the Lagun1 sphere of. JnDuenct. · -Referred lo the Planning Commlsllon a prliposaJ to Install a lrafflc: llgnal at Glenneyre llDd Tball.t Sltteta llDd 1nthorized advertising for bids .. IC<: the project-provided the commission approves. -Adopted an ordinance esbblllhln& the pooWon ol dty cltrk u 1 lull llml poslUoo at • aalary ol me • month and lhlt d dty treasurer as a. !)Ill time position with a lalary of f6!0 a month. -Adopted an onUnuce to ma.a the bolOJ.mottl bed tu-nte !ram 5 percent to t poreenL -Adopted ruolutlou -bll&hln1 ao ptrklnC or &toppln& ,.... on South Cout llllhwlY bit-N,.. PllCe ml Victoria Pllc:e and 111 G.....,._ Street at ·B!ueblnl am,... Dmo. environmental concerns saying, ••we (Irvine} do not want to do aoything to af· feet your drainage basin. We are jn- terested in the Laguna Greenbelt and would like to help it along. We want to get alodg with (lUJ' friendly neighbors. · '!'be Laguna cooncil agreed that ltafl membera of both cities should get together and try to work out an amicable agreement on the boundaries betwe<n the two communlOe1.11 The co\fDCll bad received lrom the planning <.'011UDission a recommendation that the city protesl portiona of the Irvine· lf1flU that overlap Laguna's stated "spbere ol Influence" at the May 24 an- neutlon hearing before the Local Agency Formatlon-Commiuion (LAFC}. Portions of the anneution In the· Laguna Canyoa area. the commission bcld, laU wllhln the Laguna plarmlng area, tall within the watenbed that should be oontrolled by the dty because ol llood bawd, fall within the Laguna Gre<nbell and lorm part ol the entrance to Laguna Belch. · Qulgle~ uld 11hal the boundary ol the annex shown on a map u.aed by the com- mission was 11\CUTOC\ and that the actual proposed boirnctary ooveml a mucb 1 ... extensive area .. It w11 agreed that r<preoenlaUvt1 of the two ciliea lhould try to <anler and reach •greement before the LAFC hear- ing. "ll neceuary we wm try to oontlnuo the hearing.'' aaid Quigley, "We don't want lo go lhold with II unless we cu get together belortbanrl." Capt. Robert H. Williams of Britain's Royal Army Ordinance Corps was named at leader cf the bomb disposal team. He ii 29 and single. Wllllams baa never before jumped by parachute, the Defense Ministry said. His No . 2 was Sgt. Clifford R. Oliver cf the Que.n's Royal Highlanders, 32 and married. With the bomb experts went two ex· pert frogmen from an army amphibian unit -Lt. Richard Clifford. 26. and mar· ried, and Cpl. T. H. Jon es, 31, and sing_le. Their job would be to advise and help the bomb disposal men durJ.na the hazardous drop into the ocean. In Ne\v York, the U.S. Coast Guard said the ship was 500 miles northwest o( the Azores. The plane carrylng the disposal team is a four-engined ltercules search and rescue aircraft built by the U.S. Loc:ktieed Co, Its~standard equipment in· eludes four slx·man rafts, recovery winches and a crew of 10. The Queen Elizabeth 2. launched in 1009 is the last great British liner on the North Atlanti c run. successor to the Queen Elizabeth and Queen ~1ary. The first Queen Elizabeth burned at Hong Kong In January while being refitted as a floating unl\•ersity. Last October securlty, both aboard th~ liner and at its New York , and Southampton terminal!, was stepped up after she \\'ns used in an apptlrent al• tempt to smuggle arms Into Ireland. The ship set a turnaround record of eight hours. three minutes In New York on J\tonday. If the bombs were pYt aboard then lt had to be done In that lime. She had been delayed becaU$e o{ storms. _orr's • Math Cl.ass Scores Low At School Top o( the World Element¥ry School students are performing "significantly below average" on tests to place them in math classes at Ttrurston Intermediate School, a report issued to Laguna Beach . Unified SCbool Dlstr!ct truitees this week ·It.ates. •. ·~~I~~~~ wbtre students seared "significantly above average" and the "above average•• acoru by most students at Aliso Eltmen· laiy School. The report wu prepared by Ted Donlguian, 91~ Emerald Bay, a ayitems (!lee SCHOOl.8, Page Z) Goldberg Next Ciiy Official To Quit Office? Lagunana today speculated that Mayor Riclurnl Goldberg might be tho next city official to leave his of· fice. In a statement folJowing his an- nouncement of the resignation of councilman Edward C. L or r , Goldberg said, "Within the next few month.s, r fuJly intend to reassess my polltical future and the effect Jt may eventually have on my private life." Referring to "the political and economic assassination" of !Nrr, Goldberg said, "I, for one, am very much ashamed of thi s political maneuver which has had such a drastic effect on the life of Ed Lorr nnd his family. 1f this were not merely political maneuvering, I would ulc why I was passed over in the recall attempt, as 1 shared many (I( the same positions that were ta ken by Ed Lorr . "Politics in Laguna Beach ha ve apparently become a v e r y capricious and dangerous game. "For thls reason, and because of the plight of Ed Lorr, which I co°" sider to be tragic, within the next few months, I fully intend to reassess my political future ••. " . ' DAIL 'r PllOT l"tf PMtti DECIDES TO RUN Lorry C1mpboll Mrs . McCullo11gh, Noted Festival Supporter, Dies f\.1r~ Clara McCullough, a noted figure with the Laguna Beach Festival of Artl since its inception, died early Wednesday at the age of 84. "Her life was very devoted to the festival. She was very much involved. in things here for years and years," Sally Reeve, festival spokeswoman said. . Mrs. McCullough suffered a stroke Fri· day and died at South Coast Community Hospital. No services are planned. She is survived by her husband, Charles J. McCullough of 1780 Catalina, Laguna Beach; and three daughters, Mrs. Sheila Holmes of Laguna Beach, Mrs. Carolyn Swartley of South Laguna, and Mrs. Gloria Goff of Costa Mesa. Jn addition to her work with the Festival of Arts, Mrs. McCullough was an honorary member or the Laguna Beach COmmunity Players Association, and In. volved with the lecal Red Cross chapter. Her association with the Festival dated _from 1933 and continued lo 1981. Durin'g that period, she served as a mem~r of the staff working as librarian, sceretary and at a variety o! other jobs. Wom en Cleared of Corints \ fu South Co as t Dr ug Case Patricia Aurand Oragavon of Newport Beach and Sara Emilie Masten ol Costa Mesa both have been cleared of all char(es In 1 cue lnvolYlng alleged dru g production along tbe Orange Coast. the District .Attorney'• Office disclosed to- day. Spokesmen at the Laguna Niguel Couribouae offlces al the DA said that Miu Dragavon, 23, of ilOI Canal St .. and Mias Masters, 24, ol IU E. 18th St .. Coata Mesa .. are in no • ., related to a drug nid made alone the South 'Coast May 3. The two womtn were-arresttd at 167 Oilqulta Street In Lquna !leach in a lnllowup lnvestlg1Uon relating lo lhe leizure of an alleged "11'ffd" foclory In • lian Otmente resldmco. The main principal In tbe cue, graduate blocbernlsl George William Cox, 29, of San Cltmtnte, is free on SS0,000 cash ball and ls scheduled for a preliminary hearing Monday In South Orange County Manlclpal Coirtt. The mests at Oilqulta Street, police said, were lll8de under a.search warrant and during lnapectlon ol the . premlae1 a •mall quontlly • o( marijuana allegedly was dil<ovtred. Olflcen lllld llaey then ll'Ttlted 111 persons In tlio' house at the llrne. Only one ol·the lhnt w11..Jbotquently Mmed In. 'a DA'1 complaint -Freddi& Joan &worth, 24, the alleged realrknl ol the houae. Sile -booked on char«eo of posswloo cit mar\lllanl ·. Re signation • Accepted By Council "' ... BULLETIN By today's noon deadline, three candl· dates -Wayne J . Baglln, Beth Leeds and Laurence Campbell -all flied 11ominaUon papers for the July 25 La- guna Beach City Council election, City Clerk Dorothy Musf-elt reported. Thls means that conlrary to earlier reports. there '\Viii be an election with four candidates seeking the City Council seat bein& vacated. by Couocllman Ed. Lorr. Planning Comm\sslOR Chairman Carl Johnson is the fourth candidate. By BARBARA KREIBICll Of tM e.11, Plltl Staff The Laguna Beach City Council Wednesday night accepted the resigna. tion of Councilman Edward C. Lorr, ef~ fectlve July· 31. Two potential pcandidates for Lorr's council set, realtor Paul Westbrook and PlaMing Commissioner Leurence A. Campbell, who had taken out nomination papers, said this morning thf'y have changed their minds and do not intend to file for the office. Barring a last·ml nute filing by today'• noon deadline, these developments clear the way for cancellation of the recall election against Councilman L o r r , scheduled for July 25, and automatic ap- pointment of Planrting C o m m i s 1 I o n Chairman Carl E. Johnson Jr. to succeed him on the council. In submitting his resignation, Lcrr stated that, if there should be only one candidate, he would advance the date of his resig11atlon to permit the council to appalnt that candidate and save the ex .. peruse of an election, To date, ooly Johnson has filed his nomination papers: Thirty minutes before the noon deadline, nomination papers also were taken out by Marie M. Eslinger, 315 Harold Drive. She and her husband, Dr. Paul Essllnger, are major property ownem in the South Laguna area. At mid-morning, City Cle-rk Dorothy Musfelt said two more sets of oomination papers had been taken out, one for Beth Leeds, an unsuccessful candidate in the April election, the other for \Vayne Baglln, personnel admin1strator cf 2764 Highland Way. -l Baglin spoke brltfiy at the Wednesday council meeting, sa)'ing that, whlle be (See LORR, Page Z} We•tber Thoae clouds should clear by mid-morning Friday leavina the weekend to sunny akles and wann temperatures. Highs at the beaches 62 risini' to 72 inland. Lows 41-58. INSIDE T ODi\ V lier vii.at stati.ftics art •3·21· 41 -Jttt, not inch.ti. Sharon llorve11 is the bronzed btaM tV tltat adorru bfllboanb COOi! to CflO..!t in the simton oil ad. She admit1 that lt was 1tartUng .to see herself in the larger lizc nd t<lla 101tat billboard aign faffl< /\n.s brought her. Ste 1tort1 PQflC 10. I· ' ,,_ 0"-11..Y t-l~"'• .. 1a .. 1· • ~ 1.,u,......,, ""'1 ... i;., J. •• .;, Bakersfield Ad Funds Bit Wife Freed Expe~se Totals ByIGdnaper Trigger Outcry BAKERSFIELD (APl -FBI and aJ:ier'W's deputies 1earched today /or a kidnaper who held a Bakersfield \\'Omin hostage nearly eight hours and then abandoned her in an orange crate after collecting $50,000 ransom. Marjorie Minear, 50. the wife of a Bank of America branch manager in nearly Olli:lale, managed to free herself rroffi the box left in an orange grove Wednesday night 20 miles north of here, a Kern County sheriff's deputy said. She suffered only a alight cut on her forehead. Mr3. Minear described her kidnaper as white, about six feet tall, well~groomed with dark hair. She said he forced his awy Into her home Wednesday afternoon, bllndloJded her and drove her around ln a car for several hours before leaving her in the crate. Bob Wedel, a 1.oan ofl!C<r al the Oildale branch of Bank of Amerlc:l, k1Jd authorities he received a telephone call about 2 p.m. from a man who said he was holding the wile of branch manager Glenn Minear. The caller demanded $50,000 ransom for Mr!.' Minear's return, Wedel said. Because Minear was away at a meeting, authorities said Wedel followed the kldnaper's instructions and delivered the money to a field about five miles north of Bakersfield. Wedel received a second call from the l<ldnaper at 7 p.m. saying he had picked up the money and Mrs. Minear could be found in a box near the money drop point. __ But less than an hour later, authorities said Mrs. Minear called from a nearby farmhouse after. freeing herself. A sheriff's hellcopter circled the spot the ransom was to be paid. but deputie~ said they dJd not see the money picked up an·d believe it was done on foot rather than by car. The helicopter remained at 3,000 feet to avoid detection. Two men are being !Ought because Mrs. Minear said she heard different voices while being driven blindfolded deputies said. ' From Page I SCHOOLS •.• analyst, who evaluated scores of in~ coming seventh graders to Thurston on a placement test admhtl.stered ht Sep- tember, 1971. In releasing the report, Dr. Robert Reeves, director of curriculum said the concern 11for Top of the World's scores should be held in abeyance until we see how this year's sixth graders score as a result of our beefing up the math pro- gram." The resull5 show that El Morro students entering Thurston scored 14.6 percent higher than the average student tested; Aliso studenl5 scored six percent blgher, and Top of the World student's scored 20. t percent below the average mark. First year Thunton students from other school districts scored 1.6 percent below average. Comparing the scores agairuit the IQ ranges, Doniguian found that scores for El Morro students were higher in all ranges; scores for Ali so students were high for high and medium IQ ranges, but below average for low IQ ranges, and that scores for Top of the World students were below average in all IQ ranges. Ooniguian recommended that the school district review the Top of the World mathematics program and possibly adopt the El Morro program. He also 21uggested Aliso adopt the remedial math program used. at El Morro. "The scores for the other learning areas such as spelling, reading and science should also be evaluated as were the math scores,'' Ooniguian stated. "The programs from each school found t be above average in effectiveness should be reviewed and possibly adopted by the schools that show below average ef- fectiveness." OUNGI COAST .. DAILY PILOT TM ar.nee CO.It °"''Ly l'ILOT, wllh Wllkh 11 comblllld tt1e H.wa-Pre.1, 11 pUblllhal by flle 0Bl!ff Co.it P11btltl't!"1 COmplir1y. ~ r•t• ed/llorls •r• P11btl1hld, Mond1y thr0V91l Frld1y, for (c.!1 MetJ, Nt.,.,_rt &Mcfl, Nllllllntlon ltKl'l/Four1ltlr1 V1lltV, Uflln• &tJdl, lrvlMl.~dOtlllb.lck Ind SJn Cle'""11t/ S11t J111r1 ctfplitr1110, A sl119lt reolan•I tdl1iofl I• publblllll S.tlrrd1ys •rd Sund•Y•· TM prkKl,_I PllbHillll'll pllnt Ii 11 330 Wttt l1y Slnrtl, Cotti M .. , C.lllorn!1, t21i2'. loltert N. w,,4 ,,.~ •l'ld l"vbllilllll Jack It. Curlay VICI .... Jdtnl and ~I N.IMOlf T>iom11 K1evil Edllot Tiiam11 A. M11rpltl11a Mtflltlnl l&d!ll)I' C1iarlM H. Leos lti1h1r4' '· Nill Allbtlftf Mtn11Wt ldltort ---22Z FoN1t A'l'a~u• Ma1fi1t M4r1111 P.O. lox 666, 9l65Z --CM MaM1 .nCI Wiit.., I,.. ·=<ft:»»,,..........,'°""""' """' a.di! 11'11 letdt loulw•l'lf llilll lei • ,..,. 1!1 c.-lnl .... .,..,,,. •• , rn4> '4Mm Cl•WW A.,-.,...1 '41·1671 .................. , •u Tal4t r .fM.t4U ~ ,_ ow.. CNd .............. .. ~ .............. m. ......... ......... --., ............ ,... _, .. • ... Cllf .. lllJll¥t ...... ...... .................... .................... c.'lt--. ~ .....,.., ..... atriw .... ........,, " .... U.14 "*'*"' flllllJflrr !l•I pi I llM ...,.,,., • DAILY PILOT lt•rt l'llolt PLIGHTING THEIR TROTH IN LAGUNA BEACH WITH THE BLESSING OF CHEVROLET This MacGilllvray-Freeman Movie 11 n't About Surfing; It's About Skiing ~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Supervisol'ial Campaign Funds Not Repol'ted Only two ;i·of Orange County's 12 supervisorlBI candidates and six other aspirants for various offices complied with the new state law requiring" that all contributions of $500 or more to their campaign be filed by 5 p.m. Wednesday, the C.ounty Clerk's Office reported today. Supervisorial candidates who filed we_re First District incumbent Robert Battin and orie of his four opponents William Wenke , a Santa Ana attorney. Battin reported receiving $25,269 to date and Wenke, $20,800. Battin, the First District supervisorial incumbent from Santa Ana, said 19 con- tributors offered sums of more than $500 to his campaign. They included: -Dr. Louil CeDa, $2,500. -Dr. Celia's Santa Ana Clinic, $2,500. -Fred Harbor, $2,500. -Richard J. O'Neill, Rancho Mission Viejo, $1,300. -United Auto Workers Local 148, '2,3114. -Rutan and Tucker, lawyers, $1 ,200.'-' -Sunset Builders, $2,500. -B. Harvey, $1 ,350. -Laguna Niguel, $750. -Harry Rinker, $700. -Dr. David Ascher, $900. First District candidate \Venke·s top contributor was a political group known as United for California. It gave him $7,000. Another $,4000 came to him from the orange County Committee for State and Local Candidates, reputedly an arm of the powerful Orange C o u n t y Republican group known as the Lincoln Club. Incumbent William Phillips pf the Third Supervisorial District did ndt Hie a contribution statement and none of his four opponents did either. Candidates for other than supervisorial offices filing included Assemblyman Ken- neth Cory of the 69th District. A group called the Cory Dinner Committee said they had received $7 ,700. The only other candidate or organiza- tion reporting contributions over $500 were Robert Badham, i n c u m b e n t assemblyman in the 7lst District. $600, and the Lincoln Club of Orange County, $37,000. But the club treasurer told the clerk's office that'1lnly $3,000 of the sum had been dispersed as yet and that to the Orange County Republican Central Com- mltte. Each candidate for a state or local of- fice is required by the California Govern· ment Code to file a statement listing in- dividuals or groups who have donated to his political campaign. Failure to comply with the law due to Jgnorance is a misdemeanor offense, punishable by up to six months in jail and a $500 fine. However, if a candidate kno\VS of the law and fails to file it is a felony offense. according to the office of Secretary of State Edmund G. Brown Jr. Candidates who !ail to file statements showing contributions or no con tributions in the First Supervisorial Distri ct are Paul Balch, Wallace Davis and John "Bill" Hill. Those who did not file from the Third District are Robert Bark, Ra I p h Died.rich, Steven Zirschky and Salvador Zavala. Lag11na Lo~ation • Wedding Scene Short Shot in City Laguna Beach, a bevy of residents, and fhe Presbyterian Community Church starred in a MacGillivray-Freeman movie shot on location \Vednesday, The church front entrance was used as a background for e. wedding departure scene in the 20 minu'te "short" to be Fro1n Page I LORR ..• disagreed wit h many of Lorr 's positions, he admired his exercise of the right o:f free speecJ. and felt his presence on the council was a benefit to the community. Westbrook issued a statement Wednes. day, outlining his "platform ," but con~ eluded by W'ging a vote against the Lorr recall. Campbell, who was prevented from running in the April City Council race because his service in the Marine Corps will not temtinate until June, took out nomination papers Wednesday afternoon. This morning however, he issued a statement announcing he V(.OUld oot file. ·'After C<lnslderable discussion with Mr. Carl Johnson,'' said Campbell, "I determined that our mutual goals were not so far apart as to request the tax- payers of this town to spend another $5,000 on a special election .•. it is my feeling that l\1r. Johnson will remain his own man. and make no attempt to re- polarize the city council by a 'majority shift.' " After reading Councilman Lorr's letter or resignation at the \Vednesday night council meeting, Mayor R i c h a r d Goldbtrg issued a brief statement of his own, which later dttw sharp criticism from proponents of the recall. Jn the statement , Goldberg compared the "political and economic assassina- tion of Ed\11ard C. Lorr" to the attempted assassination of Gov. George Wallace. saying both had produced shock and anger. Recall leader Jon Brand said he was 0 appalled to hear a recall compared \vith an attempted assassination -the most dastardly of crimes." \Vriter Arnold Hano also took the mayor to task for con1paring •1attempted ass assination by bullet" to "recall by ballot," saying "one is sick. the other is healthy •.. the use of referendum , in- itiative and recall is the highest democratic process." There could be no comparison , said Hano, b e t w e e n •·gunshot versus debate and vote." Referring to Lorr's charge that he and his family had been subjected to hatred and vilification during his term of office, Dr. Eugene Atherton, who said he had worked in behalf of a recall, stepped forward at the meeting to say, "I nevertheless feel the communlty owes l\1r. Lorr an apology for this sort of har- assment." Friends or the Lorr family said this \Veek that the councilman, whose Arch Beach Heights home is for sale, plans to move with his "'i!e and t\\·o small daughters to Oregon, where he is reported to have bought a sporting goods busi ness. Lorr declined to comment on this report. released in mid-July with 3 United Artists picture. Well-wishers of the bride and groom were Laguna residents and on occasion, passersby were pressed into servicll as rice-throwing extras. The travelogue picture involves a young couple who are given J European honeymoon as a wedding gift, but decide to see America and ski. Movie locations included Vermont, Wyoming, and Colorado. The production is the work of Lagunans Greg MacGillivray and Jim Freeman who have previously produced surfing movies. The film is backed by Chevrolet, and features that make in ell scenes, but it is not a commercial for the car maker, MacGillivray Baid. I Sometimes angry, spirited debate between San Clemente Councilman Tom O'Keefe and top officers of the chamber of commerce over a proposal to nearly. double the city's contribution to tourist promotion failed to yield a solution Wednesday. It was O'Keere who launched. an im· mediate and sometimes scathing .attack on the request by the chamber for $18,600 to cover the agency's expenses for ad- vertising and promotion. The councilman, who often has taken issue with the concept of "using tax funds to underwrite the chamber function, began by alleging the funds granted the chamber In the past had been "misused and malallocated." "My comments on previous years were common knowledge and I remember vividly the threats by many chamber members that they would 'get me' at the elections, but I'm stiU here and I still disag.ree with the idea," the councilman 1aid sternly. The councilman's opening comments drew an immediate response from Cham· ber resident Roy Garbarine, who insist~ Three Retil'ing Teachers Lauded By City C.Ouncil Three Laguna Beach teachers were honored for meritorious serviCe to the ci· fy Wednesday by the city council. Councilmen cited Mrs. Lorraine Aines, Mrs. Marjorie Letterman and Mrs, Roselma L. Messman for their devotion to the children in the city and school districtsand to their professions. Mrs. Ames is a first grade teacher at Aliso Elementary School and has been in Laguna Beach since 1964. Mrs. Letterman is a third grade teac1!;,;.at Aliso and has been teaching in Lagt!fia Beach since 1947. Mrs. Messman is a home economics in- structor at Laguna Beach High School and bas been teaching in Laguna since 1952. The action was taken on the retirement of the teachers, who were given a 11tan- ding ovation by the audlence at the city council meeting. that the promotion <1f tourism was "in· dispensible to the econon1lc prosperity of the city." Garbarine added that the funds used by the chamber tor city promotion should be regarded as "seed money". "Those funds attract persons here to use local facilities, which in turn y~ds more tax revenue to the city." Garbar1ne stressed. But O'Keefe, who disputes the philosophy that tax money shoul..: be used for the promotional effort , questioned t_he merits of increasing the amount of city bed tax revenues which would be granted the chamber. The bed tax (transient oc· cupancy tax) in San Clemente is fiYe per- cent. The debate, wh ich C<lntinued for nearly an hour, ended in uncertainty. Councilmen agreed to invite chamber spokesmen to make another request for , the increased allocation during the 1eries or budget study sessions later this month or early in June. Chamber officials have insisted that In- creasing the city allocation from less than $10",000 annually to the $18,600 sum, would be more adequate compensation for the entity's functions in promotion. The chamber officials WeQ.nesday cited Ute large contribution made to t he Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce by the City. $36,200, and added that the City of San Clemente should do the same. But O'Keefe, who compiled data during the week, replied with figures of his ·own . San Clemente already pays a greater percentage of bed tax to its chamber than Laguna Beach. The disparity in dollar values, be ad- ded, relates directly to a much larger bed tax income in Laguna Beach. "We're already paying a greater percentage than the city upcoast," he said. But chamber officials remained ada- mant. Garbarine stressed that the chamber's only reason for functioning is "for the betterment of the entite communi ty, not a select group." "We Vt"OUld be losing the benefit of the tourist dollar if we engage in minimal promotion;" he added. · If audience applause is any indicator of advocacy of a stand in a debate, O'Keef1 Wednesday appeared to be the loser. Comments by Garbarine and Chamber 1.tanager Robert Evans defending the chamber's stand drew applause aeveral times. Collegiate Art Compe1tition Set An all-collegiate art compe:tition will be held from noon to a p.m. Sunday at the Laguna Niguel Town Cenler in Laguna Niguel. 'nle outdoor show will re a t u re acl!olarship awardo totaling 12,500. The ahow is ()pen to all registered students al· tending junior and senior collt ges or unlvtrslties, f' accredited art schools Jn cauromia. ~Irs. Lorr and the two children were seated in the front row at the council meeting, alongside two school teachers who were being honored 9n their retire. ment from t))e district, one of whom held the hand of the older Lorr daughter while the mayor read the Jetter of resignation. The children Jeft the council chamber following the mayor's statement In ·re3ponse to questions from the au· dlence. City Attorney Tully Seymour <!armed legal points connected wllb the rt'Call and Lorr's resignation . The resignation, Lorr and Seymour agreed, wotµd remain effeCtlve, even if the .-.oall election against Lorr ahould fall. "My decision WM oot based on the recaU, but on the long view," Lorr H.J. GARl\fIT fURNflllRE Entrl" Include painting. graphics, Cure, ceramics and crafLs. The com· It~ by Avco Community tlopen, Inc. There Ii oo tnl:ry ad· mltsloncbugt. • stressed. · The July SI data wu selected becaUJe certification of the election multi and sw•arlng·ln of th< winning candidate would take place ,...., ~111 oiler; the •lectlon, Jul,y 2$. • \ PROFESSIONAL INTEl\101\ DES IGNERS Open Mon,,. Thun. A FrL E-!10. 2215 HARBOR IL VD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. G.E.C.C. -- II ' 646-0275 ' -• 7 7 I " . • Saddlehaek Today's Flnal N.1:'. Stocks vo t:. 65, NO. 13 9, 3 SECTIONS, 4o PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNI,( THUR~DAY, MAY 18, 1972 TEN· CENTS Saddlehack Valley Groups Vow Annex Battle By PATRICK BOYLE Of Ille o..r11 l"llet Stiff Officials or several organizations in the Saddleback Valley Wednesday vowed to wage an all-out fight to keep the city of Irvine from annexing 1.600 acres or in~ dustrial zoned land that lies on the fringe of the valley. At a general meeting or the Saddleback Area Coordinating Council, president Bart Spendlove urged the members to at· tend a public hearing Wednesday when the county Local Agency Formation Commission (LAFC) will consider ·the Air Angels proposed annexation. The council has already reacted to the proposal by filing an area-of-0>ncern map with the LAFC, claiming Irvine is at- tempting to annex land which could ser\•e as a vital iDdwitrial base for a future city In the Saddleback Valley. On the map, some 3,000 acres overlap with Irvine's proposal. ' Irvine ha!' proposed for annexation 9,623 acres adjacent to Leisure World and the El Toro Marine Corps Air Sta· Uon. The I.AFC must make the decision of whether to honor the valley'a map over U'IT ....... Dorothy Waltz or EI Toro, right, will start ninth•ln the Powder Puff Derby from San Mateo to Toms River, N.J., on July 7. She is shown with Margaret Mead of Manhattan Beach, her partner in the 22nd All Women's International Air Race "Angel Derby," flying from Ottawa. Canada, to Ft. Lauderdale, F1a., which ended today. Council Gives 2 Groups 4 Months,. fo1-Planning Over the objection,, of two councilmen, the Irvine City Council Wednesday night launched a four-month timetable for planning commission and citizen advisory committee preparation of po 11 c y statements to govern planning of the new city. Councilmen John Burton and E. Ray Quigley Jr, opposed the move to direct the planning commissk>n to launch the basic work on the city general plan. Burto.n suggested it was poinUess to ask advisory committees "to work in a vacuum" creating planning policies "without some concrete frame of reference" against which to judge the standards they might r e c om m e n d become city policy. Ray Quigley, meanwhile, cited the re- cent IS<lcre park dedkatlon standard sugges1ed by the parks and open 1pace advisory committee 110 an eumple of the need for a C<lOCI<te data base to be given committees which are developing poli . .. cies. Thal J5-acre standard compares to the 2.5 acres of parlt. land developers must now give cities for each 1,000 persom their tr odd .to the ell}>'• popula- tion. Mayor W"tlliam Fi ch agreed that .. nne guidance must come from the planning di.rector" who will work with commlti.es Ill developing policies. Tiie mayor auggested the "real world" must bear on the "utopian" dreams of com· mittees who will fay the aroundwork for (See POLICY, Pqe J) Move ~ails to Censure Joaquin School Trnstee An attempt by 14 m!dents to censure bad communication and considmr tho me lnl!tee of the Son Joaquin Elemen• matltt-dooed." tary School Dlltrlct failed Wednesday Mrs~=~ ':"'°Mi.:' VI~~:: night. presented the board wltb a petition The dra11111tlc plea to ctnSUce the Rev. signed by 14 people who wete pr. .. nt at l'nlslon Howell !or an alleged verbal at'-the ~ 3 meeting. lack 111 Mn. Lynn Clrlln or Mls.<ion Vie-James carlln, lnlsband of . the alle¢ Jo at the May. 3 board meeting was Victim, "lid although M was not P™<nt denied alter lengthy deliberations behind May 3 be became <;O'femed when friends cJooed doors. · ·told· him libollHlie·lncldenl and -pin-' "The Son Joaquin Boord of trual;es clpal .. kL the .... board lllOIDbtr hlld regreta that a cillzen or group lteJI one . ~yed the communlcaU'!" he hid al our members doesn't want to liJlen to · tried to build. , the· publlc," S8ld Trusl<e Robert "M1 wife wu ..,.billy •llldcod and Dameron, ceodlni a prepared llatemenl • ..Ued a 'prtlllft group,'" ,aald Carlin. on bellalf o1 tho boanl. "I went to the adrlllnlatratlve ollloe lo "We Ill wllll to listen to our con-hear tbe tape and.,... told tho coaunert stitulents. Tbe board feels tbe Incident wu unlnle111'ible: I pl.,ed It 1111"117 to r.sulled 1n1111 a mbundmtandlni and (Seo ~ ..... J) ' l • a map filed by a city. Some 86,000 residents llve in the valley, while the population of Irvine is aboul 22,000. "I feel that our future growth wUI be imperiled by such expansion (as Irvine Is propdsing)," Spendlove-told the council. "If we can nip it at the bud this time, we won't have to go through a fight with Laguna Beach, San Juan Capistrano and others in the future." The president and members of tbe council stressed that they are not con-- sidering incorporaUon, but feel the bowi· Irvine daries of lhe valley should be preserved for future cityhood. A representative of the Irvine Com· pany, owner or all of· the land propased for annexation, told the council· that in addition to the El Toro industrial area, the company is also planning a com· mercial complex like Newport Center in the freeway triangle adjacent to the Marine Base. Dr. George Kurilko, the company's director of environmental design, said development of the complex was some five years away, but tha1 present market studies indicate such development is feasible . The triangle, comprising about 450 acres, is not included in the proposed Irvine aMexation, but is on the Sad: dleback Valley's map. Most of the land is in lhe agricultural preserve, Dr. Kurilko noted, but some 120 acres could be used now for some sort of commercia l development with office buildings and a shopping center. "We are a basin of separate com· munities which cOuld be picked off a Council piece at a time If we don't stop It now," Spendlove stressed. "The sentiment of this commwiity is not to be piecemealed a\vay." Laguna Hills Leisure World represen-- t&tive Robert Price said the mutual boards governing the retirement com· munity have expressed oppasition to the Irvine annexation. "We don 't want a city now,11 Price 'iaid, "but if this isn't opposed, th1 natural process of gobbling up will hap- pen." LAFC Delay on Annex * -ti * Joaquin · Board Joins Grottps Against Annex By PAMELA llAU.AN Of ._ D.ll)J" Piiot Stiff Another group bas Iormally jumped Jn. to tbe fight against tho proposed an- nexation of 9,800 tu-rich acres by the ct. ty of Irvine.· Trustees of the Siui Jooquin ,El.man. tary School District voted unanimously Wednesday to OPf><*: a portion of the atr nexaUon · bec~u.se of ils effect on the ~future '!chooI children In the Saddleback Valley ma.• ••'Ibe anneution of the 1,660-acre·East Irvine industriil complex can allow con- ditions that could burl the tu baae of the proposed Saddleback Valley Area School District," the statement read. The .statement describes why the pro- posed Mia.ion Vie~El Toro district needs the eut Irvine industrial land to provide a potentially equal tax base and to comply with the community.identity factor the It.ate requires when dlmicts unify. "If the commission allows the an· nexation of the industrial park area to the city of Irvine, the only new major in· dustrially-zoned area in the proposed Mission VJejo-EJ Toro district will be under the control of a city whose interest in schools will cover only the city of Irvine and its children, the atatement continued. "The anneution would allow the City Council under pressure or of its own voli· Uon to force development of other ad- jaooit areas rather than the presently designated area in order to enrich the revenues for their own Irvine district. "Although Irvine city representatives state there are no other logical locations wbere the Industrial park could be moved, it remains possible for the city to develop many surrounding areas which would benefit Its own school district. The only JD<IIlber of the board to qualify hiJ vote was Trustee Dennis Smith who said the entire argument assumes that the existing school finance situation (property taxes) will continue when, in fact, it will not. "I don't see the annexation as a threat," he said. "The prezone resoi ution adopted Tuesday by the city of Irvine gives a pledge of good faith on the part of the cooncll. I am not really ture that San Joaquin bas any business adopting this resolution. 11My main concern ls ccmmunlty iden- tity.'' Bob Dameron argued that to protect tbe residents ti. the Mission Viejo-El Toro atta the ceaolutlon bad to be adopted. AD live board. members rnide In the Saddl•bock Valley. Lawman Retried In Rape Cases . ' LOS ANGELES (AP) -A mistrial was declared In the .... ~ a Santa Ana po\tceman accu.sed « rape after a aeven. ·woman, ov .. man ~ Court Jury reported II was hopelesaly dtadloclled. Judge Jack Goertun aet June 20 !or the Illar! of the aecMcl trW !or Jury Lee llurll, 24. Hunt races charges ol kidnap, rape and aex perversion In ...-ion with alleced attacks against -Ill Redolo- do Beoch 11!'1 CUiver CllJ. • - Meet Tonight On Unification A public hearing on unification will be held tonlgbt at 7 o'clock in the Mission Viejo High School lee· ture hall. Conducted by the Orange County Committee on School District Reorganization, the meeting will COJlei!m itself with the proposed division of the Tustin Union High School District into three unified districts ·in Irvine, Mission Vlego and Tustin. A ·tJeCOOd wblic heaiioc Will•be \ 'heid the-same' night at 8:38 P.m. in the University High School lecture hall in Irvine. Caller Reports - Bomb Planted On Ocean Liner LONDON (AP) -Defense Ministry said today bombs are reported to have been planted aboard tbe Queen Elizabeth 2 at sea and that four bomb disposal ex· perts were being flown to mid-Atlantic to deal with them. Unofficial reports in London said the captain of the big liner had been ad vised bombs were planted in New York. the ship's last' port of call, and would explode if a huge ransom was not paid. There are 1,400 passengers aboard the 65,~ton vessel, pride of the British merchant navy. Oefenl}e Ministry sources said the bomb-experts will be parachuted as close to the vessel as possible. First reports said the ransom demand originated in Copenhagen, Denmark. Cunaid, owners of the ship, immediate- ly contacted Defense Ministry officials. A Royal Air Force transport took off from Lynsbam in Wiltshire heading out to the Atlantic. The Defense M"mistry said the plane carried four bomb disposal experts who would be alongside the ship for parachutin' early this afternoon. The British Broadcasting Corp. said a caller to Cunard's New York office said a bomb would explode tonight unless the ransom was paid. It was not clear whether this meant British or New .York time. The rendezvous was set for a position 46 degrees north 34 west -in mid·Atlan· Uc. Four Arrive After Cruise YOKOHAMA (AP) An American family of four artived at Yokohama from Hawaii in a 42-foot ketch today, completing a %,050- mlle TraM·Paciflc cruise ln 40 days, Japentse maritime 1uthorlUes reported. The Marlllm• Safely Agency said the 18-ton ketch Sea f'ever was skippered by Ron R. C.Ox, a :arpontu who lived In KaUua, Kona, Hawaii. Also a board tho • ketch which the 13-year-old C.01 aald, be had bought Ove year ago in San ,Diego, WtrO his wife Linda-, 19. and two daughteri, 11-yUM>ld Casey and g. year-old Jody. Agency olficlalll 1ald they were reporltdly accompanied by their pe~ a Siamese cat. • 1 'Good N eighhor' Policy Most Important-Pryor By GEORGE LEIDAL Of rM DallY Piiot Sllff Irvine city officials today asked the Local Agency Formation Commission (LAFC) to delay consideration of the city's 9,500-acre annexation and 53,000. acre sphere of influence map. Presumably acting at the direction of the Irvine q.ty CQuncll who met until ,11'45 p;m, '\Y!!dn~ i!l •.J!!.IJlll!Qt~ \!l'' ecutlve l!essloo, Cit}' Manal!'I" Wintuh Woollett Jr. today met with LAFC E:r· ecutlve Secretary Richard Tu.mer. Woollett aaid he also filed. documents lndicatlng support of the major land· owners in the annex: parcel · for the city bid. They are the· Irvine Company and the Irvine Ranch Water District. With their consent, Woollett said, the approval process may be !peeded 'Up by some 60 days, following LAFC coruiideration and approval. Irvine is asking for a delay past the scheduled May 24 I.AFC meeting. Councilman Henry Quigley •. who is the city's representative in the anne:ration proceeding, asked for the secret !eSSion \Vednesda,y night. He said today the city wants time to 0 sit down privately" with officials from Laguna Beach and the San Joaquin Elementary Distrlct to work out areas of disagreement. Councilman Gabrielle Pryor said today 0 we have to be good neighbors. If it takes some time for us to iron out difficulties in the boundaries in order to be good neighbors, then that's what must be done," she added. ~ Henry Quigley said the city already has asked the Laguna Beach City Council to appcint a committee of its members to meet with Irvine councilmen and the city attorney. Laguna Beach city staff and some councilmen have objected to the Irvine anne:ration's possible effects on the Sycamore Hills area of Laguna and the city's greenbelt plan. Quigley also said a letter to the San Joaquin elementary district trustees was mailed today seeking similar private meetings with school board members. San Joaquin Board President Gratian Bidart of El Toro has opposed the an- nexation. He charges It will have an adverse effect on the tax base for the proposed Mission Viejo Unified School District. 1bat district, and similar ones in Irvine and Tustin, would result from the reorganlzatlon plan for the Tustin Union High School District voters will be asked to approve on June 6. To ease that concern, the Irvine council this week pr~zoned a t,600-acre iJl.. dustrlal park to be built in an area shared by both the Mission Viejo and Irvine proposed districts. Others oppOsing the Irvine annexation are the Sadd.leback Area Coordinating C.Ouncil ISACC) and the city or Santa Ana. The SACC has filed an ovtrlapplng area of concern map with the LAFC which claims for !Orne future city to be developed In the area IOlitheasl of Irvin<, about 3,000 acre1 of valuable Industrial and commcrctal property, locludln1 the 1,600 acre lndustri.1 park. Santa Ana Is cootlnuing to press Its clalm the city of lrvlne does nOt exist. Were !hat claim .le> futd C..vor In tbe courts, Santa Ana cqntcnds Its sphere of inlluence map --talnlng much ol the new clly In a swath otre\chlng lo the El Toro Marlrie Corp Air SlaUon -would overlap Irvlne'1 ,ll)here. Oboel'Ven note the In1ne delaf may well tnhance cbomc<s for • favorable vol&by lll<lllben ol tho cllr-mty panel which ruleo 111 ell)' bauDtlarlto. The annexation by Irvine. If approved, would make the fledgling city the largest in Orange County. covering 45 square miles or 27,700 acres. LAFC members are Supervl1o r1 Robert Battin of Santa Ana and William Phillips of Fullerton, UC Irvine architect and Tustin Mayor ~ Mlller and La Habra Councilman Robert Nevil. Since the death of veteran LAFC (See NEIGHBORS, Pace II * * *' Resident Hits Board's Policy On Annexation An angry Jrvin~ resident, charging that trustees of the San Joaquin Elementary School Oistrkt have complete disdain for the cblldren of Irvine, sharply criticized the board'! position statement on the Irvine annexation. "Their approval of a pasition statement on the Irvine annexation contains specious allegations unnoticed by the board members in the ir haste to concern themselves with 'the future school childrep in the Sadd.leback Valley area'," charged Lee Slcoli, a candidate for the Irvine Unified School District. "All of the trustees live in the Sad· dleback Valley. The board claims to represent all the rest of San Joaquin school district. "Indeed they are responsible, under state law, to provide educational op- partunities for all children of the present San Joaquin Elementary School District. the position for which they were elected. "However, one can conclude from th.ii position statement that the only children worthy of note are thMe residing in the future ~1ission Viej~El Toro Unified Di!lrict." The position statement, adopted for presentation to the Local Agency Forma .. tlon Commission at lts hearing on the an· nexation May 24, was unanimously aPo proved by the board. 0r .. 1e 11'eat•er 'Those clouds should clear by mid-morning Friday leaving the weekend to sunny skies and warm temperatures. Highs at the beaches 62 rt.Ing to 72 inland. LoW1 cs.M. ll'~SmE TOD~ Y Her vital 1tatUtic.s are 43·21· 4J -ftet, not ~ncht1. Sharon Harvey 1s the bronztd btautu thot adomt billboards COGlt to coo.st in the sU'fltan oil ad. SM admits thot it was ttdrtling to sec herstU in the larper iizt and tell! what billbOOTd 1ign fame has broupht htr. Set 1to'11 Paue 10.. ) I• t...M . ..,.. 1t Cill_... I Cl•t.i.... ,p..q Ctfl'lln M "-".. " Dtllltl ... "'" 14 lflttrlll ,... ' lt1~t•IMWtlt tt.IJ Piii-• n.n --" AJll L""-" 1t r I I I I DAILY PILOT CdMRoad Delay Seen; Funds Cited Financing problems and engineering dlfHcultles probably will delay con- struction of the Corona del Mar (Route 73) Frttway at least until 1976, aceordlng to the 1tate Highway Commlsslon. Robert W. BoW1es, executive com· minion secretary, told Costa Mesa City 1• Councilman Robert M. Wilson by letter this wttk It ap~ars doubtful the major projects of the short route could go lo bid until 1974-75. A further delay of one lo three years i!I normally encountered between freeway bid advertisements and the time con- struction crews are actually ready to begin their work . The Corona del Mar Freeway, meant to connect. with the San Diego Freeway in Costa Mesa and MacArthur Boulevard in Newport -Beach, was originally to have been constructed In 1972-73. Highway crews are preparing for the freeway at the Intersection of Palisades Road -Bristol Street and the Newport Freeway -Newport Boulevard in Costa Mesa. The project consists of drainage and on-off ramps for the intersection of the Corona del Mar Freeway with the Newport Freeway. The trouble spot Bowles indicated, lies In the Corona del Mar Freeway's terminus at MacArthur Bou I e var d. Qu icksand conditions in the San Diego Creek area will require free\vay builders to remove that unstable foundation and haul in fre:sh dirt for the freeway em- bankments. Bowles said It would require about two years for the dtrt1o settle following the completion of the embankment. "Consequently, the proposed 1974-75 fiscal year funding of this second stuge shown .in the plaMing program.Js. overly optimistic, and from a physical stand· point a more realistic date which this project can go to contract would be in 1976 unle.!.!1 the 1ettlement period can be shortened," he told Wilson. Th..,Q;r, Mq 18, 1972 .. Red Radio Reports Waves· of Planes . Bombing Hal)Qi SAIGON (UPI) -Hanoi Radio reported that "waves ot Arnerica n planes" today struck Hano i, the port of Thanh Hoa and lhe rail and road ce nter of Bae Giang barely so· miles from the border or China. The broadcast wh ich claimed fi ~·c American planes were shot down folio""· ed reports by military spok eJmen in Saigon that U.S. Air Force jets knocked out six bridges around North Vietnam 's southernmost port city or Dong Jlol in earlier attacks and turned the area into an inferno of exploding supplies and am· munition . Meanwhile American na\.'al strength off Vietnam increased steadily and a U.S. Navy spokesman said planes from the carrier USS Saratoga, which arrived recently, carried out their first strikes t<>- da y. ~ The planes hit Communist positions near beleaguered An Loe, 60 miles north of Saigon, and in the Mekong Delta. The carrier USS Ticonderoga sailed \Ved nesday from San Diego for Yankee Station off the Vietnamese cout but the carrier USS Constellation was pulled off the line today to giv6 the 4,000 to 5,000 crewmen 'their first break ln 41 days. This left four attack carriers tn opera· tion. The Coral Sea went on rest leave last v.•eek. ifanoi Radio said the American planes struck "densely populated areas" of the three cities and that one American jet y,·as downed over Hanoi, one over Thanh Hoa 75 miles south of Hanoi, and three over Bae Giang, 25 miles northeast of Hanoi and about 50 miles from the Chinese border. The main railroad supply line from China to Hanoi runs through Bae Giang, also known as Ha Bae, u does a major highway: Another lesser line -a narrow gauge leading from H a n o i northwestward toward China -was cut several times earlier. Wally, Angela? Br{tis h M usicia1i Switches Sexes LONDON (AP) -Wally Stoll, one of Britain's top band leaders and composers of papular music, put on his suit and tic for the last time-today. The 48-year-old television and recording maestro has had a sex change operation and now will be known as Angela Morley. posed their music. Prince Philip, Queen Elizabeth's hus- band, Princess Ann and Ptlnceu Mar· garet were at the show. The organizers said Stott had a previous engagement, but he explained today, "I did not want From Pagel POLICY ..• ' Streatnlining . Lennon Makes Proa of Mercy C~uncil Okays NEW YORK (UPf) -Former lleltlt John Lennon has pleaded with the U.S. government to show "mercy" to bimstlf, his wife and her mJ.uma daughter and allow them to rtmaln in the United States despite his marijuana con· vtetlon. Shortened Meets · "We are not now in federal court but Jf there Is any mercy to plead !oc.tll'd like it both for us and our ch!ICI," Lennon told the hearing by the lmmlgraUon and Naturalization Service. After · taking testimony from the Lennom, apeclal inquiry officer Ira Fieldsteel gave both sides until Ju. ly 1 to submit briefs and said he would de<?ide the case "sometime afler the July I date." ' A set of meeting-shortening proc'edures governing hearings to come before the lrvine Council beginning in June were unanimously approved In concept by COWlcilmen Wednesday night. ~1ayor William Fischbach's nine-page suggestion for ways the council might trim its wee-hours sesgions won support and added suggestions from all cOWl· cilmen. A final draft will be prepared by City Attorney James Erickson and will include those addilional suggestions. Brleny, the new rules will require anyone expecting to make a presentation MOVI•e Industry to the council to provide a written copy of their material two weeks prior to the meeting. Rips Propos' als Hearings on any matter will be limited to 30 minutes, although Councilman John Burton suggested that time limit might commission, C:Owicilman Heory Quigley urged a restrlctlon of matt~rs set for the bi-monthly joint study sessions. Quigley adamantly insis ted .the agenda be limited to discussion of policy matter.! 10 planning coinmissioners would "get a fetl" for council views on plaMlng mat· ters. h 1 . Henceforth M~yor Fisc hbac • P a.nrung commission chairman \Vayne Clark ~ City Manager Williant \Yoollett Jr .. w1.ll draw the joint StSSions .agendas and Jun.it items to matters of policy. . Quigley said the move m1gbt end the council's habit ol continually reversing planning commission actions. f'ro1n Page l CENSURE ... 0 P h well be reduced further, to 10 or 20 ll Ornograp y minutes. aee if I could tell by the tone Of voice. Presentations to the council in public "\Vhat concerns me ls whether we as a SACRAMENTO (AP) _ A legislative session would be limited to questions public can ask questions without being al· from councilmen on the matter being tacked." package aimed at curbing pornograptiy considered. Ken Lewis, assistant to superintendent has come under attack from the movie Under the mayor's proposal, no action Ralph Gates, told the board that tht en~ire industry, which says ·it would ban show· ,vould be taken Wllil a meeting two weeks tape of the meeting wu unintelllgtble Inga of Oscar-winning films. following the presentation, except for because of a maHunction. Wordl 11poken 'Ibe fiv~bill package by state Sen. John minor or routine actions that may be directly into the microphones were ga~I· Hanner would mean that films such as placed on the council's consent calendar ed while th05e spoken from far away were for en masse approval. somewhat more intelligible. · "Patton" and "The French Connection'' Councilmen Ray Quigley Jr. and Henry A text of the !tatements were provided, could not be shown because under the Quigley moved adoption of the suggested however, by secretary Nancy Rowlands bills they would be considered obscene, rules. who takes shorj.hand notes of the entire said Barbara Scott, representing the Mo-. Later, planning commissioners also meeting. asked that the suggested process be in-Her notes quoted Howell, responding to tion Picture Association of America. corporated in a set of procedures for a question on student housing by Mrs. "You wouldn't expect Patton not to use their body since many matters coming to Carlin, as saying, "If there are ·people four-letter words," she told the Senate the council originate at the planning com-present tonight who feel that by speaking Judiciary Cornmitlee Tuesday. -missX>n level. . -.... •bllcly they would create pressure on "The Last Picture -soow," "Love ,.. .. One time-saver included in the mayol"'s me as a board member to make unwise, Story" and "Diary of a Mad Housewife" package is the suggestion that persons unfaj.r:, and unjust decisions concernillg also would be forbidden, she added. seeking C1>uncil approval of a proposal be scboOI boundaries, they would be out o[ Harmer said his bills weuld only forbid required to complete an impact state-place. we would welcome construclive such pictures far children. Adults could ment questiOMaire. comments and sug2estlons but will not The remaining two projects consist ot the actual freeway links between MacArthur Boulevard and the Newport Frttway lnter1ection and from there to the San Diego Freeway intersection. Wednesday night he went to a concert 1n a blonde woman's wig and flowing evening gown. But he put on men 's clothes today to drive north with his wife to break the news to his parents. still view them in a closed theater, he In the case of a tract map coming to submit to pressure.'·· the formal policy ~-lemenls 00 plannlll· g said. t the planning commission for example, Defending the Rev. Howell was Mrs. -Committee members postponed a vo e th· r uld k t f th 1· , Lou Young who sa1"d she has sat t•-ugh that are to be "'""l of the city's gene ral 1s orm wo as mos o e ques ion 111 u Both of the!e projects were also scheduled for 1974-75 but Bowles main- tains that the financial outlook is not good. Clemente Golf Tourney Slated This Weekend A tar1re contingent of championship ~lfers will square off this weekend at the San Clemente Municipal Golf Course In the 13th Annual city golf championship offering both championship and handicap fll~hls. Featuring 38 holes of medal play. the tournament wlll start at 10 a.m. Saturday · and Sunday wllb the public welcome to join in the gallery. Among the top solfen in attendance will be Gary Sanders, from Los Coyotes Country Club; Bob Howe of Rancho Country C1ub In Los Angeles; Dick Ferry of Red Hill Country Club; Jlm Wilson, San Juiin Hills club champion; Burl Quimby, club champion of the host course i Dan Barrile, former local club champion· Kemp RidKlrdson of El Niguel; ~. Bob Crawford of Red Rill; Cralg Olson of Meade~ lark Country Club; Bob Darnell of Rancho California and Mllcb Voges or Singing Rills. Presc<Jltt Area Afire PRESCOTl', Ariz. (AP) -An un- controlled fire that has consumed nearly 20,000 acres of brush and ponderosa pine and threatened hundreds of homes .southeast of here raged Into its fifth day today, The Battle Flat blaze began Sun- day, Prescott National Forest officials aald, when aomeone either abandoned an iJJegal campfire or to~ed a lighted cigarettt. oaANGI COAST ,, DAILY PILOT ,,.. or •• Coe•• DAILY PILOT. wlll! wfrllcfl f1 <'OmblM'lf !he H.ws·P•tsi. It ClllbllllM:f IJY flMI Or•ll{le CwH Publli.lll!!O COmllo'n'(, Sqy. ,..,. ftlllon1 ere pUbll111fd, Mond•v th•OV91t Fr~y, fW Cos!e M•w, Nf'WP!ll flNdl, MunllngtM llf8CllfFoun .. w V•llf'f', L•!>U"I• e .. cll, lrvlnt/S10dltbad: Mid $11\ Ct~ntt/ i.n Jllaft C1phlr•l'IO. A 1Jnglt r"!io...I «llllon h pWUslltd S.tul'N't" lrid ~und•YJ. Ole prlnffNI PllD!bh'"9 pilnl ,, •I no wt.I 8•'1' Sirwet, COii• M... C1UklmW, '167'. llto\1rt N. Weed ptr1i'i1'1'1'1 Ind P'ucllllher J11k R. C11rl1y Ya ~tfh Ind ~II M""'"' T1101n1 1 Kee.ii ·-n.,. •• A. M111r,Jii110 "'""""-lllfltor Cli.ttfH' H. t... ai1li1t4 r. Ni ll Au.lllW••••t:'IM ........ ('afl; -..: D W.. kf 11"M' ......,. aucti: ma .....,.,.. ew""'',. .....,. •ettti: m 11°'"1 ..,_ ,._..,..., •H<fl1 17'1S leedl ~tlf IM c.__..: -Ner1tl IJ Cimino. ltMI Toi ..... 1n4) '4Mll1 nm,,,.. 411,.,,... .. '42·'''' S. Qe ... 11 Al Pif•••.....,I Tai Jl•• 491....ut °""..... 1'W1t °"""" c:Mt ...... ... ~. ... .... ...,,.,.. ...... ,,., .... ............. .,. .......... ~ ...... .. , ... = ................ ... .... ,,-... . ..... ct.. ........... e.tl,..,... 0...,...., ............ .. antw ..., ......,, ....... ti.If ......,., .,..., • 1P1111M ... __,., I He and his wife of 30 years plan to con· tinue together at their country home near London. They have a grown son and daughter. "Since my earliest memories, I have had this problem," said Stott. "A specialist advised me to have a complete sex change operation. Now I hope to be able to live a happy and dignified life. Naturally, I wish to carry on my career -but as a woman." Stott's 28-year-old son, Brian, said, "\Ve feel happy about Dad's operation -I still call him Dad at flome, but I'll liave to get used to using her and she when I talk to other people." Stott underwent the operation secretly two weeks ago. To do so, he canceled an appearance be!ore members of the royal family, and the rumors flew. He was supposed to attend a special reunion show of "The Coons," a onetime team of wacky, fast-talking comedians which included Peter Sellers. Stott com- Aili1ig Person.s Ouglit to Move? LOS ANGELES (AP ) -The slale Department or Public Health should con- sider warning people with respiratory or heart ailments to move out of smoggy Southern California communities. says a alate Air Resources Board official. R. Robert Brattain, chairman of the board's technical advi90ry committee, told the board Wednesday that oxident levels reached almost daily from the end or July to mid-September in certain parts of Los Angeles have an adverse effect on people who suffer from respiratory or heart diseases. From Pagel NEIGHBORS • • • member Charles Pearson, f o r m e r Laguna Beach mayor William D. J\tartin has been serving as the alternate. al· large representative. The four reguJar LAFC members will select a permanent regular member to replace Pearson. who died last May 8. Turner said today the formal granting of the continuance will be considered on May 2-4 since the Irvine matters were set for a public hearing. AJthough the delay is usually granted, LAFC members may ask the hearing to proceed as scheduled, Turner Doled. 1 r'-' until next week. commissioners ordinarily ask and would many meetings and Wltneued, "selfish P an. · be answered in advance. concerns by parents of particular areas, Planning Commissioner Frank Hurd Typical questions might require the character assa.s!inatlons, p r e s I u r e opposed Burton's contention 11Ugge,Ung School Attacks Eyed developer to del.ail the number or Khoo! groups, candidates' platforms, and about· the advisory committees' geatest con-children the requested tract will produce ing, cheering and clapping. lribution would be "not in reacting to SAN DIEGO (AP) -SUpt. Thomas or the added cost to city services such a! "Trustees should be held accountablt, plans of cities like Garden Grove, but in Goodman says he's looking into reports fire protection that the new development but parents should not govern the developing new standards." He cited. the that bar hall and t -;ght requ;-. dilltricl." · gangs ways preven use .... .. .. service station ordinance development 88 of restrooms at Horace Mann Junior Councilmen directed the planning com-She pointed out that Howell h a an example, adding that the policy plan High School. "White girls are in-mission to devise the impact statement spiritual adviser and has many times program "as proposed, will encourage timldated," parents complained Tuesday format. -proved to be more willing to li.sten with people to look at the ideal." night to the board of education. Attacks In an effort t.o clo1e the com-patience and empathy than other board Burton said he did not mean the on students were described. mun.ications gap between the council and members. citizens developing planning policies .----...:... __ .....:....:......:... __________ _:..:.... _____________________ _ should not be innovative, but rather there "should be more direction In the energy set governing the policy plan." Noting he'd had only "five minutes" to read th e proposal, Burton moved for a continuance of the matter. Councilman Henry Quigley Jlrgued against continuing approval of the policy plan program saying "il is high time this council started delegating responsibilities to the planning commission." The motion to delay action was defeattd on a l to 4 vote. ·Henry Quigley and Councilman Gabrielle Pryor moved approval of the planning advisers' recommendation to refer the plan to tht planning commission who will in turn guide committee assignments. Later, the council voted unanimously to direct the planning commission to begin immediately the development of 1 master plan of parks end recreation with criteria and standards for city council adoption by ordinance. That action marks the first direction to prepare a part of the city's general plan, C:OUncilman Ray Quigley noted, adding his "hearty Amen." More than 50 days ago, the council had considered the ne«i for a master plan or parks as being one reason tor enacting an extension of the city's building freeze. That freeze expires May 28. ~fayor Fischbach noted 'Vednesday night it will be 90 days before any new parks plan will arfect new developments in the city. City Attorney James Erickson repeated his interpretation of the Quimby Act which allows cities to set standards for park dedication if they have a master plan or parks. The standards, however I ~·ould only affect tract maps filed 30 days after the standards are in force . Councilmen estimate the hearing proc- ess \\'ill take at Jeast 60 days for ap. proval of the parks portion of the general plan recreation element. Meanwhile, the standards being sug. gested by the citizens committee y,·ill now be subject to scrutiny of plaMing com- missioners who are charged with the parks plan development. • 2 Coast Girls Cleared In Drug Factory .Case Palrlcl.a Aurand Dnlgavon of Newport Beach and Sara Emilie Muten or Costa Mesa both have been cleared of all charges ln a case Involving alleged drug' produclion along !he Orange Coast, the Di!trid Altornty's Office dlsclostd to- day. . Spokesmen at the Loguna Niguel Courlhou,. offict1 of lhe DA said lhll Miu Drag1von, 13, of 304 Canal St., and Mias Masten, 11, ol 311 E. !Ith st., Coala MOSI, .... In no way rtlaltd to a drui raid triaclt aloog the South c...t May S. The lwo -were amistaf al 117 Clliqulta Street In Lq\Jlll Beacb In a loUowup 1n .. 111pt1oa rtlallnl <a the .,.i.un ol an alJoCel "speed" faclorJ ID a s.n a-rms...c.. j The main principal In the c,.., graduate biochemist G<o'i• William Coll, 29, of San Clemente, is fm on $50,000 cash ball and is scbedoltd for a prellmlnary hearing Monday In South Orengo County Municipal Court. The arnstt at Chlqulta Strett, pollc:o 11id. were .made under a search Wln'ant and during lnJpedlon of the pmnloeo a amall quantity of marijuana allopdly was discovered. Olllcen aid they then m-aled all pmon1 In the -II the tltne. Only -ol lhe three ..... ~1 named In a DA'a complalol -"'"1ldJe Joan Howarih, 24, lhe aJllpd 1-ol Ille bouae. She ..,.. booketl GO dlorpl al --ol JDll'ijuana. ., • • H.J.GAl\l\EfT fURNflURE PROFISSIONAL • Open Mon., :U IS HARBOR ILVD. IHTWOl DESIGNERS 'lllurs. I frL.im. COSTA MESA. CAUF. 646-0275 llBE . G.l .C.C. ., ! 17 • 17 • .. Hunting1o;o Beiteh Fo1lntain Valley -----~ . Today's Final' N.Y. Stocks voi.:. 65, NO •. 139, 3 S~TIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MAY 18, 1972 TEN CENTS Golden West, OCC Employes Get Salary Hike Nearly 900 employes at Golden West and Orange Coast College have been granted across·the-baard wage increases of 5.5 percent. The salary hike , which covers ·both teachers and classified employe.!, was approved by unanimous vote or the Orange Coast Community C o I J e g e Districl J>oard of trustees Wednesday nighl For the district's 378 lmtructors the new 1972-73 agreement means an in- crease on the ·lowest step of the salary sohedule from $8,765 to $90247. The hlgbest step of the scale bas been moved from 117,!71 to 111,537. The average Orange Coast Community C.olleee DJstrlct teacher currently earns $14.200 per year. He will find his pay in- crea~ to 114,981, a raise ol.about $781 · Classified employts such as Janitors, secretaries and clerical \li'Orkers do not have the same wage structure as the in- structors and will be given a flat 5.5 per· cent increase over their current earnings. Board members exhibited C<lnsiderab!e concern over the $500,000 cut in un· distributed reserves the new salary pact demands. The current re.serve fund of $900,000 is expected to shrink to about $400,000. , , . Shades of Yesterr1ear The 1972 Wheatridj e High School seiilor class ln Colorado p!llced 15 Volkswagen aulQ8 end to end in the school's main JWlway Wednelday, as their year end class prank. Other students managed to make their way to class, however, a little late. The prank probably brought senpmental tears to Wheat· ton alumni of past years. Get out the goldfish-the semester isn't out yet. Trade Restraint Charged Against , GE by Justice WASHINGTON (UPI) -The > juttice Department accu.std. General Electric Ci. today of engaging in anti-competitive practices since at leest 1965. Acting Atty. Gen. Richard G. KJein. dienst sad..i a civil anti-trust suit was filed in U.S. District CoUrt in Auburn,N.Y. It charged GE, largest maker or elec· trical equipment and related products in the nation, with restraint of trade by using reciprocal p.irchasiag alrrange- ments wi th its customers and suppliers. Walker B. COmegys, chief of the Justice Department's Anti-trust Divislon said GE's reciprocal purchasing ar· rangements have bad the effect of foreclosing It. competitors from selling aubstantial quantities of goods to GE ~tamers and preventiBg suppliers from selling goods and services to GE. Walter A. Sch1otterbech, vice president and corporate counsel for GE, issued a statement saying the company would fight the charges. "GeneraJ Electric believes that the ••• suit is entirely unwarranted," SChlot· terbech said. "Despite repeated requests, the antitrust division has refused to specify the alleged improper act or transactions, or even identify the cont· ponent of the company that bas been allegedly engaged in improper prarlk'es. "Under these circumstances General Electric will vjgorously defend the case.,. W allac~SuspectMay Have Been Following McGovern From Wire Services BALTIMORE, Md. -Fede ra I authorities said today they are in- vestigating the pogsibility that Arthur H. Bremer, the man aCCU!ed or gunning down Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace, may also have been stalking a second presidential candidate. Based on items found In a search of Bremer's automobile, ·federal sources said today that it appeared Bremer may also have been following Sen. George McGovern (0.S.D.). An inventory oI Items found in Bremer'~ l9S7 blue two-door hardtop in~ eluded McGovern campaJan llterature, u ...U u Wallace ca111palgn lltuature. ''On tbat~blsla." a ~ close to the Investigation aakf, ''we are cbtcki.ng out the poaibilll),.that Bremer · may have been llalklng.Mc:Oovern, too." A apokesman at McGovern campaign headquarters In Wasbfnston aald her in· ltlal reaction -that "anyllody could have bad campaign. Uttrature. We blanketed ~.Ute with lltetoture, and it might have been llUr]JrisiniJ U be didn't have an1." By "tho llate" she referred to Ml>tYland. l{allace 'WU abot Monday at Laurel, Md. A!Jo.-biJ car WU found ln"faryland. Bremer, 21 , of Milwaukee, is being held in Baltimore County Jail at Towson, Md., under $200,000 bond. Meanwhile. less than three days aft er being critically wounded and partially paraJyzed by gunshots. Wallace has started receiving physical I h e r a p y treatments, it was disclosed tO<:lay. A statement issued by Holy Cross Hospital in Silver Spring, where Wa11ace was rushed alter the assassination al· tempt Monday afternoon in a Laurel shop- ping center just outside Washington, gave no detail! of t1le therapy -presuniably designed to see il he can regain niove- ment in hi.!i legs. A key doctor In his case conceded Wednesdsy the odds are better than 50-50 be will not walk again. The hospital said Wallace registered what It described as "mild to moderate" temperature rise during the night, and an increase tn pulse rate. His temperature hit lO'l at one time -considered fairly high for an adult -but the hospital said both .lncreases were usual in the post· operative period. Wallace underwen' a long operation for his multiple wounds Monday night. He has been paralyzed from the. waist down from one bullet that damaged the spinal '(See BREMER, Page Z) The loss may be offset by unexpected increases in the taxable wealth (assessed valuation) of the district. Financial ex- perts have predicted an increase of about six percent, but there are ind ications that their predictions may be on the con- servative side, district officials said. The county assessor's offic,, for ex· ample, predicts an assessed valuat ion in- crease of about 10 percent or 11 percent. Li11er Since the 5.5 percent wage increase will cost the district about f168,000. trustees said they would need lo hold the line in other budget areas. Also covered by \Vednesday night's salary agreement were increased fringe benefits for dental dependency coverage, improved health and medical insurance, and other programs which amount to about $200 pef employe. Exclusive of these fringe benefits, to be financed by a health and welfare tax, tht additional personnel costs for the ne1v school year have bee'll estimated at $1.5 mlllion, The figure includes $270,00ti for In- crement increases : $68,000 for pr<>- fessional improvement inc re a s es ; $404.000 for new teachers and classified employes, and the $768,000 for the newly- approved 5.5 percent cos{ of living in- creases. Threatened Bombs Reported Planted on Vessel LONDON (UP!) -The Cunard Line said today It had been informed that bombs were placed aboard the 65,863-ton luxury liner Queen Elizabeth 11 and told that it. would-be. blown up in m.id.Atl~nliC­ witb 2,250 persons aboard unless $350,000 ransom were paid. The Royal Air Force flew [our frogmen~bomb disposal experts to th e liner north of the Azores Islands and said they would be parachuted into the sea near the ship to join crewmen in trying to Westminster Police Chief 1-n Contempt ·'BJ TOM. BARLEY M I oi' .... ..,,. Piiot ttlft We~tmJnster Police Chief Walter Scott was found tn contempt of court Wed- nesday for bis failure to return sex· oriented films and photographs to Frederick and Kay Loar of Huntington Beach. But Orange County Superior OJurt Judge Robert L. Corfman suspended the s~tence and any further action by the Loars' lawyers to enable Scott to file an appeal against the ruling. Judge Corfman made it clear that he will welC<lme an appeUate ruling on a legal issue that appears to be without precedent. He also made it clear he was satisfied that Chief Scott deliberately disobeyed a court order in which Judge Corfman directed Westminster police to return 20,500 movies and 30,000 photographs seized May 25, 1971, from the U>ars' ''Pete Voss Showcase" warehouse at 15144 Golden West Circle, Westminster. Loar. 34, and his wife, 31, both of 4062 Humboldt St .. had been cleared hy a jury in Judge Corfman's courtroom the day before the order was issued on charges cf conspiriicy to distribute o b s c e n e material. The panel view 22 movies and a selection of photographs in the three-- week trial that produced their acquittal decision. But SCott immediately refused to return materials valued by the Loars at $500,000 and which they wanted to restore to their $15,000.IH:lay business in sexually oriented literature. He again condemned the materials as "hard core Pornography" and ordered them held in ftle vaults or the police department. Judge C.Orfman used the commentJ made by Scott to Orange County newsmen in a summation that found the police chief "clearly guilty of a willful violation of my court order. "It 's strange to me,'' he said, 1'that Chief Soott can clearly remember everything the District Attorney's Office said to him but can not now recall what (See SEX Fil.MS, Page Zi find the bombs. The QE2 left New York Monday for Cherbourg and Southampton with 1,350 passengers and 900 crewmen aboard, and a Cunard apoke.srnan in New York Jn. dicated the extortionists might also be aboa rd , seeking the $350,000 ransom in $10 and $20 denominations. (The Associated Press said the passengers included conductor Leopold Stokoi,•:ski, 90.) In Washington, Pentagon sources said T1ies e Cooki es Really Bombed SAN FRANCISCO (U PI I -The package wrapped in brown paper addressed to Police Inspector John Collins had a label that read : "Do not tUt l\..eep in a cool place.'' Poll~ found it moments after a man telephoned headquarters with a warning that three bombs ha:d been hidden ln the bullding and would go off In 15 minutes. Bomb aquad members gingerly took the box into the parking lot where they carefully opened It and found homemade cookJes. Inspectors then remembered that an elderly lady Collins befriended !Mlme time ago had been sending hi m cookies once in a while. No bomb was: found. Suit Dismissed Over ITT Gift For Convention LOS ANGELES (UPll -A federal judge has ruled that the •too,000 con· tri bution International Telephone and Telegraph made to attract t h e Republican National C9rwentlon to San Diego was not illegal. U.S. District Judge Robert J. Kelleher dismissed the suit Wednesday brought against ITI by California Secretary of State Edmund G. Brown Jr., who charged the contribution violated the fed eral Corrupt Practices Act. The act forbids corporations to make political contributions to federal election campaigna and .conventions. rrr conntered that lt did not C<lntribute the money to a political campaign, but gave the money to a San Diego civic group to help attract a big convention, a legitimate business expt!nse to promote bookings for three ITr-owned hotels in San Diego. reports or the bomb threat had been known for "several days" and that searches of the ship found nothing. The frogmen fl own in today were to check the. hull of Ibo shipJor any ex, plosives attached under water. "' Richard Patton, president of Cunard Lines, said in New York the first bomb threat wa~ received Wednepday afternoon by Charles Dlck.9on, CUnard vice pres!~ dent of finance and administration, (See LINER, Page Z) Educational · Budget Shows Big Increase By JOHN ZALLER Of ... Daltr Ptltt , .. ff A somewhat 11beefed up" educatlonal prognµn Is contained t n the 1971-73 preliminary budget of the Huntington Beach City (elementary) Scbool District, school officials 1ald today. Next year's COlll are estimated at tft.1 million, compared to '5.45 million In thi1 year's adopted budget. The largest part or the $650.000 pro- jected increase in costs will go to teacher salary raises, higher fixed costs, and the two new schools the district plans to open. Discussion of the preliminary budget is expected at the regular meeting of district trustees next Tuesday. "The budget looks tight b u t manageable accord ing to the data now avail able to us," said Charle Palmer, deputy superintendent. "But there are too many uncertainties to be absolutely .&Ure." Palmer noted that several tax reform measure& are pending in the ltate Legislature, that an increase in the district's taxable wealth ls assumed but not known, and that teacher requests for a 15 percent raise have not yet been set- tled. An unexpected development In any or these areas could change the whole pie· ture, Palmer said. "But based on available data . we plan 41 continue the same basic program into next year, whJlt beefing, it up in a few places," Palmer said. Among the improvements, Palmer listed : -$18,000 to hire an additional testing specialist to help the district compete for more federal funding. -$20,000 to hire 1 new district level ad· mlnlstrator to coordinate the district'! educational program. This would In effect be splittlng otf some respofisibilitie.s now (See BUDGET, Page %) or .. ge The complaint asked the courl to enjoin GE from : -Enterlni; Into or continuing any reciprocal purchasing arrangements. -Communicating to suppliers that they might get preference If they bought from GE. Council Candid~es Spe_!it $3,989 We•tlaer Those clouds should clear by mld·moming Friday leaving the weekend to sunny skies and warm temperatures. Highs at the beaches 62 rising to 72 lriland. L<wa 48-58. -Compiling staU,UCS o r com- municating .talWJcs to suppUers and customers which compatt GE.purchases from companies to its sales to 1ucb com- pMies. The government also asked that OE be ocdered to abolish any duUt.1 or functions U$il"ed to any ol lb officials which rtlate to reciprocal purcba.sine. Gawal Electric had uli:s in 1970 ol .. me $3.7 billion. rllliing tt'as the fourth largest indumial compony In the UnlUd lltata. Actor Succumbs iiO!;J,YWOOD (AP) --lnhlt, fl, motlon-pldure 11<1«, writ... and dlreclcr, difd SUndoy while attmlilll a ftliti fest!Tol at tannos, Franct. • . The u men wbo wanted to be Hun-tlnstoo Beach city COUDcllmen in April apenl a tola1 of $11,111 aeeiing that goal. BIClest apender &mCll( the group WU Incumbent Co u n ct l m 1 n George McCracken, who ahel.led out lil.989 to finlah fourth In a race for three seal&. The man who beat McCracken and rihiSbed as the top vote getter, Heory Duie, wu the second bigl>est roller in the election with npendlturta lot.tllinl $3,0tll. AU candidates finished ming their cam- Pllen llatementJ Tuesday With tbe City • Clert'a Otllc:e. 1be three ~. Dult~. Jfff1 Matney and Dmllld Sill~. bad llleit thflt atat..-a --Idler Iha April 11 eleotlon. Mone7 tbs not IUVl!tlee....,.. but the lack of It ....,. to lnaure failur.. in a 01J Council nee, acardlng lo fl4lhl dl.!tlc-1 In ca111palgn irtatemenu. Nooe of the three wiMers spent leas than '2,000 in their ract. Matney spent $2,743 (third highest total ) while Shipley spent $2,185 (fifth highest). On the other hand, Mark Porter spent 12,215 (fourth highest) to finish seventh, well out of the money. ·Dive Garofalo, 1 young challenger who made headlines by w1nnlng a coun suit to become a candidate, open! 11,900 (silth h!ibest) to fini sh loth In the 12·man race. Ool7 ooe candidate tlld not file a cam· palp expense llatemllil. George Arnold apent 1.,. than l3llO 11 be Isn 't required lo Ille. He finished tut. 1be other low speodm, Doyt. Miller (1746.115), Richard Belyea Charles Geers ~.28) and Jostph Whaling (~I. finilhcd 6th, Ith and 11th, reopt<tlvely. Rlcl!ard Bel7ea '9'ttl tt,411 to linilh 8th arid Jam"' DeGuelle spent $1,734.13 for 5tb place. A review or the campaign statements shows that most of the candidates ran their race,, with their O\\'R ·money pr money raised from parties and 11mall contributions. There wtre only 1 few major con- tributions with McCracken reeelv1ng $SOO from W. B. Mills : Porter getting $350 from J . S. Spencer and $200 from Shapell lnd\J!t:ries; &)yea receiving '300 from J. N. Swartley (his campaign. manager) and $300 from Premier Co.; DeGuelle was given S2SO each b)' atffonl H011str and Vern llou.ttr: and Garofalo rectlved l3llO from W. Freedman. MiJler and Ceera were the o!lly can· dida# who lcte11ted no contrlbutlOl>S, while Whaling paid la> all but ~ of biJ campaign. Garofalo, perhaps spent tbt most, ,l,000, of his own money. ln the ordtr of their finish, here are the 12 candidates and their expenditures (v.•ith number of votes in parenthtsb): -Henry Duke, $3,088 (6,411 votes). -Jtrry Motoey, 12.743 (5,!30 Volta). -Donald Shlpley, 12,185 (5,547 votes). -Ceorge McCracken, $il,98'1.44 (5,238 votes). . -James DtGatlle, $11784.53 (t,071 votes). -Doyle Mlner, 17!US (3,714 voy,.). -Mamu Porllr, $2.215 (3,561 votes). -Rlcbanl Bel7ea, $1,411 (S,145 votti). -0ar1,. Geers, $403.28 II.lei votea). -David Garolalo•ll,900 (1.50! votea). -Josepb WhaUec, 1533 (1 ,299 vota). --Oeorc• ~. 1100 <102 ,.iw. I NS m E TODAY Her vital ttatiltiet art 43·21· 41 -feet, not fncht1. Shoron llorvey is the bronzed btautv that adorns billboards COCl.lt to C()(l.ft in tilt ivnlan oil ad. Sht odmit.t ·that ft was rtart.Ung to ltt htrstlf in lht larptr 1izt and tdt. whot billboard lign 'tomc h~ brouaht her. Set 1tor;v Page JO. L.M. ...... It Cttlfmlle 1 Cltulfllill ,,.... .-. .. ,,_. .. Deeltl fttfkw ,, '"""'.. "... . htwt~ ~ fllil-tt>D ""9tc-1t .. ._.. u -..... MftMl 11" ... • --. ..__,.." ..... ... ,_. """* D>n T .... W. • --.... -. ....._., '"""1NI --. j • ' ~DAI".'...::-· Rent-s Could Go Do ·wn Price Panel Change May Affec~ Leases )YASHINGTON (AP1 -The Pr irc Comm111lon today announced a change in auldellne1 that could bring rent redul'· tiona for man}' tenants who rttentJy •taned one-)'i!ar ltnse renewal s Jncrt11!!lng their rent more thun 8 pcrcenl. -A longer leue coverln1 the qme pe riod 111 lht old lea"le, 11t whatevtr rtnt ' lncrcusc_ the land lord wa JJ able to jwtlfy u11dl'r the J'rlcc C<irr1mis1ion's rent 1c~ulat!ons. ·rht· two options, one y,car al 8 percent or a longer lease ut more th an 8 percent, rnu!!l ulso bt Klven for tennnts un longer· th11n-t1ne-yc11r lc1Jses expiring In the future . Any tenant who had bct.n on a lease -0f lonl(er than one ye1r, and who was ttllow· ed to refl<'w for only 1 slnJj'.le year. w!ll be given a chance to renegotiate the term11 of that lea~ 11 the lncreue topped 8 ptr· cent In such ca11c1 l1ndlord1 mu11t, !'!tarting for the roonlh or July, f!IVt! the tenant either or two opllonll : -A one-year leaae lncreasln1t rent 8 ptrcent. No refund.I wlll be rtquired for past rent charged over a percent, but from July on It must bt trimmed back to that le11el. '.Join lfs' I Jim Tanck; executlvt director of lhe Jttnt Advi sory Board, whlch advises the Price Commission on rent matters, estimated 5 percent of the nation's rental units have leasts of longer than one year. JJrlce Commission regulation& allow landlords to get big rent Increases in cases where rent. have been held steady by lonf.l·term leases whlle prices in- c:rta~d. Reagan Re spo11ds Coolly To Hecklers at Meeting SACRAMENTO (AP I -Gov. Ronald Reagan has a re11pnn11e for young heckler• who Interrupted his apeeches - "loin u1 -you m.1ght find out we have aome of the anawera you're looldnfe for ." About a dozen yOuthful httklers showed up Wednesday at the formal opening of Benefit Concert Set Saturday At Golden West A choir recently returned from "' alnglng klur or Spain, a barber shop quartet, and a women 's madrigal group wlll ptrform Saturday In a benefit con- cert at Golden West College In Hun- tington Beach. Opening with "Cantato Domino" by ltelnrlch Shultz, the Golden West College Singers wlll also ptrlorm "Rf Joice fn the Lamb," "The Unknown Region," and ••Las Agachadas," college officials said. A barber 1bop quartet, the women'll chorus .ctrOUP, and • mixed chorus will also be featured after intermission. Then the Golden West Qlllege Singers, which ncently sang In several Spanish t·hurche1 during the Easter season, will return lo sing ''New World Comln'.'' "We've Only Just Begun," and ''Walkln' lloppy." · The profertlm will begtn at 8 p.m. In the community theatre. Tickets are '' and may be purcha!ed 1t the door or in ad· vance al the college bookstore. Countian Sues Store, Employe A man ~ho claims a s~lty guard at the J.C. Pennty Company's Huntington Beach store frilsely arrested and Im· prisoned hlm has sued the 1tore and the employe for more than $30 nlilllon. Fidel Cervantes, 33, Orange, nnme1 the 5tore and stcurlty officer Dennis Dahlke as defendants Jn 11n Or11nge County Superior Court action which accuses Tlahlke of filing f11lsei charges agalnst Cervantes on May 18, 1971. Cervantes, who nlso 11rcuses Dahlke of 11ssault and bAttery, cl11im1 he was \li'rongfully •C'Cltsed or grand theft and held In lhe llunllngton Beach jail for one week aw1IUna court action on the allega· lions. I-le point& out In a dem1nd for 1 total of .$.10.250.000 In dnmages that charges ~11:alnst him were dlsmlsstd for lack or r\•ldeoce J11~t NO\'. 8. ORANGI COAST Mi E+1hjij!{1JI 'TM 0...,.. C'Mtl DAILY 'LLOT t1tit. -..fltdl I• ('flmOln.M lflt H•W\·,.l'ft'I, It J!UlllftflH lly llW OHll'ttt CM•I ,.lllllblllnO COl!Wny, Stpit. .. llt lllfllanl 1 r1 P\IOll1llt'll, MCH'ld.l'f' f~t0"9PI f'ltliltY, W C'olt1 M~•, Nt-1 "'Kl\, M11111th1tlwl ·-·ll 'llwr>!1.n V•lle'I'. 1.•t- ~ l•\llMIS#ddl.a..o. t l'ld S•n Clt..,..nref Sin Jlillf'I C•pl1t•tM. A 1!110I• '"'~•I .. 111911 11 f!ullll11\M S.~'\'t 11'11 S"""''''· tlll ""lllC1NI J!Wllllllr4 .itftl 11 11 .lJil ''"~'' "' Slrwt, <••• M..,, Ctll!Mnll, t:,,:.., R1\1rl N. W1M t'r91loHl\I ll'ld ,.~I.,,_. J 1c .. It C1i1~•Y Vin "-~ lfllt O..et ~ lli•111•t K•e'ril ....... n.0,,,11 A.. M11t'"'"• Mar.e .. (4ltor Qerfn H. L.et ••cll1ttl P. N1 !1 ~ MMet ... 14li"- T.tty C.•i11e 'Wltl·Or .... C-.ty ...... ............. Ofllct 17171 •••• ~ ..... ,.tt1 M1lt111 A14,..,, P.O. In 1t0, '2148 --l ................. ....... ..... : • w::::..::r ......... ~DI! ._,..N ... • ..... c ........ Ti.e ;' r 171•1 '4i-un et.WW ..... ,!& ... M2·S17' , ..... .,.... CRMr ----un ~ -..... Dell ....... . ~ .. -dlrtlia. ...... -. ....... .....-....... -. ...... .... ... • •••d! ........... ... .. _.._ ....... . ----·.--en·•-....... w Anter aas .....,, .... U..\t _..,, .....,, ----- the Republican campaign headquarters in S!lcratnento County. They Interrupted Reagan 's speech to about 100 campaign workers. Once they chanted "peace now" and another time they ,held up clenched fis ts. "Ah, the clenched fist.'' Reagan smiled, "the symbol of the closed mind." No attempt wa~ mode to oust the heckler1, some of whom were later seen sharing Republican punch and cookies. Reagan's bodyguards took their presence calmly. Thi! Oovernor, who Is Cllllfomla cam· N1ign chairman for President Nixon, acknowledged there are differences cf opinion on the war. He said, "The fa ct Is. President Nixon Is taking the only action we can to get our priminers of war and our 60.000 young men back safely." lie said that 200 million Americans should be wUUng to do "anything that has to be done" to return them home safely . "Anything less than that is a rop-out." he !Ulid. Then addres!ing himself to the heckler!. lteagan is.sued his invitation lo vote Republican. "The Republican party ls In favor o{ less aovernment," he said. "We want to get government off backs of the people and out ol their pockets, ond let people have control of their own de!tlny." He crltlcl.ztd "the phony demagoguery that we hear from candidates from the other side." lie !Clld Democratic leadership "leada a great many voters down roads and leaves them there where they have no place to go except to our side, and I welcome them. as a former Democrat.'' lie expressed confidence that If youths could be informed, many would vote Republican. Pancake Feast Slated Saturday Son1e 5,000 hungry people are expected Saturdny morning at the Huntington HrnC'h-Fountaln Valley Yl\1CA pnnC'ake bre[lkrast, said Richard Collato. Yl\lCA t':<rcutive direc tor. Also on lhe "nil you can <'Al for n dollar" 1ncnu 'viii be orange jut('(', sausage, nnd t'Of!e<'. Children under live \\·Ill be fed free, Collnto sald, if lht'y are nccon1pnnlt'd by paying gul"sls. The brenkh1st \\1lll be held from 7 a.m. to noon at the Village Shopping Center. RI the t·orncr o! l\tagnolia Street and Talbert A\'rnue. Enterta inment \\'ill bC' provided by a ''l\1CA youth band, "The \\1hltewash Conspiracy." Ne,v s,vint Fees To Go in Effect A nt'W schedule of fets for S\\•lmmlng acli\'llies spoMOrM by the Foun1"1n \tRlley Recttatlon Department has bttn adopted and will go tn,to effect an June :IS. Tht ncv.· fttS are: Chlldren's s"•lm ll·ssoris. $-4 ; adult swim lcSS10ns SS: t'hlldrt>n's junior and senior lifesaving, Si : ndul1 junior Rnd senior life saving $3; bt·g1nninj; d1virq;: $~ nnd tiny tor !rs.sons, $5, t\tht•r nl'V.' fees include: p •im l<'am. $4 : "'nlt•r polo. SIO) synchronited sv.·imming $1(\: 1norn1nir and me, $5: snorkel and nn 1un1or (ro~uAn. no <'h11rgt': ('hildren·, r«'rt:tllun:.I ~\rin1. 2S ('\•nt.!111 adult f't\.'rtat1on3J !N'i1n. 50 Nnts ; waler saftt)· U., and family S\\'iln pass. $IS. Working Safety Rehu·ns $21,177 'lbc .. 1, •wkln& habits of f'Olllltaln \·allt-y t'l l)· empk>ym ha,·e added Ul~l17 to the city's gene-al fund. AC'C"Ord.Uli 10 Sl.lQnne Foucaull., dtr •dnuni.straU\'e: a.~i.slant. the dty was P<'f"'"td lhe lllClllfJ' as !ht dMdmds oa its 1'111 -·· -·-Tho cllOct, the b4f>ost dMdtUd pomn. But T1nct 11ld many llndlonl1 hive been taking advantage ot the llrae rent h1<·rt<1ses without giving their tenants -the protection of the long-term leases they prcvsou.~Jy enjoyed. l.andlords wi!l be required to notlfy.af· reeled h~11<1nts of their rights. The l'rice C01nmission noted that even the 8 percent ceili ng rent isn't automatic. It still must be justified under present reg ul11tions before landlords m1y charge that much. Jlowever. the 8 percent lid won't pre- vent landlord.'! from pasalng along dollar· for.<Jollar increases in property lazes and municipal charges. And, of course, it won't apply to luiury apartments, single-family dwellings or rental units of tour or fewer apartments, all of which aren 't covered by rent con· trols, anyway. Price Commission Chairman C. Jackson Gcayson said rent increases on the whole declined noticeably since rent regulations went into effect Dec. 29. He said in the first three months of tm rents went up at a year ly rate of 2.8 per· cent, <.'{Jlllpared with 4.8 percent in the year before President Nixon froze wages, prices and rents Aug. 15. From Pagel SEX FILMS. •• he said at the time to the members of the press." A stormy, day-long bearing had threatened to become stormier when Los Angeles Times reporter Robert Gettemy refused to answer the questions of Los Angeles attorney F. Filmore Jaffe without the presence_of hia lawyer. Both sides agreed during the lunch recess to accept the statement.. at· trlbuted to Chief Scott by Gettemy and not use the veteran journalilt 11 a witness. · Gettemy pointed out before he went on the 1tand that he had been assllfed by Jaffe that he would not be called as a witne!s. Jaffe denied the action which brought the comment from Judge Corfman that Gettemy statement was •·inaccurate and unfounded." But Jaffe had earlier advised a DAILY PILOT reported that he had "no inten- tion" of r.alling any newspaper reporter lo the witness stand for the Loar hearing. District Attorney Cecil Hicks, cleared of contempt charges in lhe same hear· ing, commented after Judge Corfman's ruling that hls office will appeal the con- tempt decision on Chief Scott in con· junction with the earlier appeal on the trial verdict. The Fourth District Court ol Appeals bas scheduled the bearing !or June 6. From Pagel BUDGET ••. being handled by Betty Funkhouser, assistant superintendent of ln,,tructlon. .-$10,000 to hire more classroom aides, brlnglng total costs in thJs category to $32,000. .-$12 ,000 to prepare an educaUonal planning guide which should "make a significant difference lo the classroom teacher." 'J'.he largest single increased cost to the district will be in the area of teacher salaries, Palmer said. "~loving our teachers into next school year on tht same salary schedule will cost us about $150,000," Palmer 1ald. "And that doem 't Include any of the increases teachers are asking for." Palmer said that to grant teachers everything they are asking for would cost about $450,000. "I can say that there ls no way that so large an increase is going to be granted," f->aJmer said. But he hinted teachers may get a small part of the increase they are requesting. "Our district has a history of followinI trends In other areas." he sai d. "Based on my conversations ~·ith other sclJool of· fic\al.!, I think teachers across the state \\'ill be getting increases, but not as large as they got last year." He said that the statewide average last year wa s lhrtt to four puct-nt. compared to a 2.78 percent hike for Huntington Beach teachers. From Page l LINER... t I saying there \\'tre bombs aboard the ship. 1 llr said Ne'' .,:"ork police. Britain's Scotlnnd '"ard and the British r.tinislr11 of Defensr 'rere broug~I into the case a'rter tl1r first trlephone call and tbat there wrre indications the penons ln\"Olved in the extortion plot mlJl>J be roll aboanl. Prr.sumabJy thty "wkl try to ltave the ship in tht Atlantic and make It to tht Arorts ·or ~e otbtt ship, but this was not made cltar. · Patton said. "l\·e ha\·e bttn in CONtant contact •·ith the ship," and Its captain. \\1llllam Law. He said the anoeymoos caller said he would call bldt toclo,y with a clelclllne lo< payment but bad not done so by al· le,,__ He said the caller offered .. tell where lhe bOmbs ...,.. bidden aboard the .UUp U !ht rll\JOm ...,. paJcL Patton said ii was possible !be QEI would pu1 Imo !ht AzorM, the .- port ol call, rather than risl< lwm to !be -II b dllt lo Olorlaq ™-cia)'. PtnlAgoa -said bomb .arch opentlons_J!M lwn ....... -..... Bifflilili<i ... ., the atM tntal>od -the .._,.ibillty ol Gnlat llrltaln. 'l1't RAF said ID L1o111oe !be four ln>t-aboold rudl ... llDor llllJ tlill !qt ,_ rolwMd to the city, "PI09tnttd .. $11 ,llllD 1om ........ Jut roar·• dMd•od doe to .._ ~ loJurt loll ID 1111 t11u 1• -- Lennon Makes Plea of Mercy NEW YORK (UPI) -Former Bellle John L<nnon has pleaded wlth the U.S. 1ovemmenl to show "mercy'~ to bimaelf. his \li'ife and her mlialng daugh ter and allow them to remain in the United States despite his marijuana con· viclion. "We are not now In federal court but If there is any mercy to plead for. J'd like it both for us and our child," Lennon told the hearing by the Immigration and Naturalization Service. Alter taking testimony from the Lennons; special inquiry offjcer Ira Fieldsteel gave both sides until Ju. ly I to submit briefs and said he would decide the case "sometUne after the July 1 date." From Pagel Bakersfield Wife Freed ByKidnaper BAKERSFIELD (APl -FBI and sheriff's deputies searched today for a kidnaper who held a Bakersfleld woman hostage nearly eight hours and then abandoned her in an orange crate alter collecting $50,000 ransom. l\1arjorie Minear, 50, the wife of a Bank of America branch manager in nearly Oildale, mana'ged to free bersell from the box left in an orange grove Wednesday night 20 miles north of here, a Kern County sheriff 's deputy said. She suffered onJy a slight cut on her forehead. Mrs. Minear described her kidnaper as white, about six feet tall, well-groomed with dark hair. BREMER ... She said he forced hls awy into her home Wednesday afternoon, blindfolded her and drove her around in a car for column and there has been no sensation several hours before leaving her in the of feeling since then -a negative sign. crale. Al110 found in Bremer's car was a copy Bob Wedel, a Joan officer at the Olldale of the book, "RFK Must Die," by Robert branch of Bank of America, k'ld Kaiser, about Sirhan Sirhan) the man authorities he received a telephone call convicted of assassinating Sen. Robert F. about 2 p.m. from a man who aa.ld he Kennedy in 1968, and another book, was holding the wife of branch manager ••strhan,'' by Am Shlhab. Glenn Minear. Both books were from the Milwaukee The caller demanded $50,000 ransom public library. for Mrs. Mlnear's return, Wedel .said. Among other items in the car were a Because Minear was away at I Rand McNally road atlas, 13 gas com· meeting, authorities said Wedel followed pany road maps, travel guides of the the kidnaper's instruclions and delivered Ohio and Pennaylvania turnpikes and the money to a field about five miles lisll of motels on the Ohio turnpike, north of Bakersfield. blnoculan, clothing, and envelopes with Wedel received a second call from the the Waldorf AJtoria, New York, Jet· kidnaper at 7 p.m. ,.y1ng be bid picked terhead. up the money and Mrs. Minear could be Later, Frank Mankiewicz, McGovern's found in a box near the money drop national Political coordinator, aald be felt point. . _ _ . _ BmnITT-posses.slon-of -Mc G 0 v er n -~uHess than·an hoorJater, aulhonties literature was "probably juat tandom." said Mrs. Minear ca.lied !Kim a nearby "We had so much literature in farmhou~ ,after .treeing h:erself. Wisconsin (Bremer's home state), I'd be A sheriffs helicopter ~1rcled the SJ!Clt surprlled if be didn't have 10me,", the ransom .was to be patd, but deputies Mankiewicz said. "I haven't heard said they did not .see the money picked _anything other than that. up and believe it was done on foot "Obvioully the man who shot Wallace rather th~ by car. ls a diaturbed fellow and when you're The helicopter remained at !,000 fee~ dealing with a disturbed personality to avoid detect.ion. u • ' Two men are being sought because ~nythlng is possible, Mankiewicz added. Mrs. Minear said .she heard different But the. e~dence, I must say, seems voices while being driven bllndfolded, rather thin. . deputies said. Abo among Items found in the car was a letter to Bremer from Rep. Henry Reuss (D-WiJ.). A spokesman in the congressman's of· lice said Bremer filled out one of some 14,000 questionnaires sent by Reuss to people in his district. The letter in the car, dated May 3, apparently was the congressman'• form letter acknowledge;- ment lhat be bid received !ht reply. • Peace, Love Party SAN DIEGO (AP) -The party ol Peace and Love , locally at least, is the Demoa'atic. Love Sacks works for a Democratic state assemblyman IJld Eleanor Peece iJ on Ibo llafl at party headquarters. - Four Arrive After Cruise YOKOHAMA (Al') -An Ameriellll family of four antved at Yokohama from Hawaii Ir, a·42-foot ketch today, completing a .t·O?O" mile Traru-Paciflc cruise in 40 days, Japanese maritim e authorities reported. . , The-Maritlme Safety Agency said the 18-ton ketch Sea Fever was skippered by Ron R. Cox. a ~arpenter who Jived in Kai!ua, Kona .. Hawaii. Also aboard the ketch v.'hich the S3-year--0ld Cox said he ~d bought five year ago in San Diego, were his wife Linda, 29, and two daughters. l l·year-old Casey and l- year--0ld Jod y. Agency officials ~Id they were reportedly accomparued by their pet , a Siamese cat. Smog Devices Now Required In Counties can and trucks registered In Orance and Q.lher Southern CaUfomia counties must have unog control devices begin· Ding liept. I, il bulll between 1955 and 1965, the State Air !le!ources Board decreed today. The deadline aet at the panel's meeting in Los Angeles appll<s only to vehicles weighing &,001 pounds or lw. V eblcles cannot be n-reglstend upon lnnsfer ol ownership without the crankcase controls after that date. • State-le&l!lalors ordered the in- stallation earlier but told tbe Air lleJOUl'l:es Board to establlsb the time for the tough smog crackdown. Orange, Los Angeles, VentW'I, Santa 1!m'J>ar• and_ portiOlll of Rlvenlile &Jl!I . San Bernarcllno countlet .,. the allected areas. Sc>ne sectlOlll of Rlvertsde and San Bernardino counties already roqulre tblt vehiclea: built before IMS have aucb con· trols. San Francilco and San Diogo areu'Wlll get !ht same edict by year'a end, but starting dales were staggered due to ·need !or smog controls in various areas. The Southland metropoUtan area ob- viously has the worst need and urgency for control measures, the board noted in today's action. • Air Resources Board memben were also told at loday'o meeting Iha! IJDOO( all motor veblcl.,, Volbwqens lhow the wont uballll emlaloo inelllclmdes. • H.J.GARI\EfT fURNflURE PROFBSIONAL INTEJUOR DES16NW • 2211 HARIOR ILYD. COSTA MESA. CAI.IF. 6#-0275 c . . . . • U.S. 'Waves' Hit Hanoi Planes Also Bom b 5 0 Miles From Chi1ia SAIGON !UPI) -~ool Radio reported that ''waves of American pl anes" today struck Hanoi, the port of • Thanh Hoa and the raU and road center of Bae Giang barely 50 miles from the border of China. The broadcast which claimt!d five American planes were shot down follow- ed reports by military spokesmen Jn Saigon that U.S .. Air Force jets knocked out sir: bridges around North Vietnam's southernmost port city of Dong Hoi in tarller attacks and turned the area inta Toairing France an inferno of exploding supplies and am- munition. Meanwhile American 11aval strength off Vietnam increased steadily and a U.S. Navy spokesman said planes from the carrier USS Saratoga, which arrived recent!\', carried out their first st rikes to-da \•. · The planes hjt Communis t posi tions near beleaguered An Loe, 60 miles north or Saigon, and in the l\1ekong Delta. The carrier USS Ticonderoga sailed \Vednesday from San Diego for Yankee Station of{ the Vietnamese coast but the carrier USS Constellation w11s pulled off the line today to give the <.000 to 5.000 crewmen lheir first break in 41 days. This left four attack' C:1rriers in opera· tion. The Coral Sea vl'ent on rest leave last week. Hanoi Rad io salt! the 1\n1erican plants struck "densely populated areas" of the three cities and that one American jet was doy,•ned over llanoi. one over Thanh Hoa 75 miles south of Hanoi, and three over Bae Giang, 2S miles nort heast of Haooi and about 50 miles from the Chinese border. The main railroad supply line from China to Hanoi runs through Bae Giang, also known as Ha Bae. as docs a major highway. Anotht.f' le sser line - a narrow gauge leading from Han oi northwestward toward China -\Va s cut several tin1cs earlier. In other developments : -UPI correspondent Donald A. Davis reported from Hue that the South Viet- namese caugh t a force or l.000 North Vietnamese In the open \Yest of Hue late today and that heaYy righting foll owed. Results of the battle were not known by nightfall . -communist troops poured another 1,800 rockets, nlOrtars and artillery shells into the district capital of An Loe. BS2s carried out mo re saturation bombing in the area -up to 300 tons -and the planes from the Saratoga joined them. R52s also struck in the Kontwn area with 1,000 tons bombs, but Jlttle ground 1 fighting was reported there. -The U.S. command issued a revised repart today on the cra sh Wednesday of an Air Force Cl30 cargo plane hit by Communist rockets while taking off from Kontum. Spokesmen said the original report of seven Americans killed was •ln· cocrccl and that two crewmen were wounded and three reported missing ln the crash. -The battleship New Jersey, which is anned With 16-inch guns and already has served one tour off Vietnam, may be taken out of mothballs and sent back to the war zone, it was reported. Queen Elizabeth ll of Britain and the Prince of \Vales ride in an open car after visiting the Palais des Papes on Wednesday. The queen was led on a lengthy tour of Avignon once the world center of Cath- olicism. Navy spokesmen refused Wednesday, at least, to rul e out the possibility the New Jersey might be react.iva ted. The 45,()00,.ton ship is at Bremerton, \Vash., and If it ~ent back Into service il would be the only active battleship in the world. 2 Coast Girls Cleared -south Vietnamese forces suffered more than 25,000 casualties including more than 5,000 killed since the Com- munist offensive began March 30, mili - tary spokesmen said today. American loss" In the same period totaled 68 killed, 231 wounded and 16 missing, most of whom were believed dead. In Drug, Factory Case The spokesmen 11aid nearly 30,000 Norlli Vietnamese and Viet Cong were killed In the offensive. Patricia Aurand Dragavon of ~rt Beach and Sara ~Ule Masten Qf Costa Mesa both have been f;leared of all charges in a case involving alleged drug l>l"Oductlon along the Orange Coast. the bistrict Attorney'• Office dlsclosed t<> day. Spokesmen at the Laguiia NJguel Courthouse offices of the DA said that Miss Dragavon, 23, of 304 Clnal St., and Miss Masters, 24, of 312 E. ·18th St., Costa Mesa. are in no w.ay related to a drug l'aid made along the South Coast May 3. The two women were arrested at 167 Chiquita Street in . Laguna Beach in a followup investigation relating to the seizure of an alleged "speed" factory in a San Clemente residence. The main principal in the case, graduate biochem.iat George William CoK, :ill, of 81!1 Clemente, Is fne on lll0,000 cash ball and is scheduled for a preliminary bearing Monday in South Orange County Municipal Court. The arrests at Chiquita Street. police said, were made under a search warrant and during lnspectkla of Ute premises a small quantity of marijuana allegedly was discovered. Olllcers said they then arrested a 11 persons in the house at the time. Only one of the three was !llb!equent~y na.med in a DA 's ·complaint -Freddie Joan Howarth, 24, the alleged res ident of the house. She was booked on chargu of p:>ssession of marijuana. Girl Shot Dead; Man Says: 'Sick, Wanted to Kill' HOUSTON (UPI ) -William David Hardetnani 20, charged with shooting to death his 20-year-old girlfriend, left a note beside her body, saying he was sick and "wanted to kill someone." Wally" Angela? Police found the note Wednesday beside the body or Sharon Elaine Dunn, also 20, who shared an apartment w I t h Hardeman. She was shot in the head and abdomen. Hardeman was sitting at the bottom ot the stairs In a pair or dirty jeans when Police came. An unidentified man called for an ambulance, and the ambulance driver .. summoned police. British Musician Switches Sex es Offlcen said they found this note. signed "David" beside Miss Dunn's body : LONDON (API -Wally Stott, ooe ol Britain's top band leaden. and composers df popular music, put on his suit and lie for the last time today. The 43-year-old television and recording maestro has had a sex change operation and now will be known as Angela Morley. · Wednesday night be went to a concert In a blonde woman's wig and !lowing dYening gown . But be put on men's clothes today to drive north with bis wife tlo break the news to his pamlls. He and his wife of 30 yean plan to con- li.nue together at their country home near London. They have a grown sm and daughter. •·since my earliest memories, I have bad this problem." said Stott. "A specialist advlsed me to have I ~mplete sex change operation. Now I bope to be able to live a happy and dignifled IU•. Naturally, I wish to cony but .. an my career -u a WCIJlaD. Stott's •year-old IOll, Brian, said, uwe feel happy about Dad'1 operatlGn -I lltill call him Dad 1t home, but 1'11 have to gel used to using her and she -I talk to ether people." " Stott underwent tbe opentlon leCttllJ n<o weeks qo. To do so. he canceled an appeorance before memben ol the royal family. and the rum~ new. LAWMEN TO NA.ME He was supposed to attend a special reunion show ol. 0 Tbe Goons," a onetime team ol wacky, lot.talking comedJarui wbkb Included Peter. Sellen. Stott com- posed their music. Prince Philip, Queen Elhabeth'1 hus- band, Prlnceu Anne and Prlnceos Mar- garet. were at the show. 1be ora:aniurs oaid Stott bad a prevloul <llPiemenl, but be explained today, "I did not want offend the royal family In any way." "Dear family, "Pleaae forgive me for what t have done. I have been sick for a very long time ever since I can remember. I wanted to kill someone. Sharon did nothing to me. She was just there. I knew I wu rick, but then J knew I wun 't. Please try to forget me. t am no good and would have amounted to nothing. "I loved you all , "David." Four Seek Vacawd Seat Of Laguna Councilman By IWllJAllA KREIBIQI him on the council. °' .. .,,.... P&lllf ,..., Barring a la.st·mlnute filing by today's By toctay'i nocm dtldline, ~ candi· moo deadline , Ulele developmentl c1t:ar data _ wa""" J. Ba .. 11 .. , Beth Lttds the way for cancellation ol the recall J~ ...,,. elecUoa agalnit Councilman Lo r r , and Lourmce C&mpl>eO -all ffied ocheduled !or July 25, and automatic •J> llD!l1inlllon popen for the July 25 La-polntment of Planning C o m m I 1 1 I o n "'°" lleadi C1t1 Council e!edioo, City Cbolnnao Carl E. Johnaon Jr. to ouccecd Clert Dorothy Musle!t reported. In !IUbmittlng hll rtsl«Nllon, Lorr IUlled that. If th<re ahould be only one This means thl't oontrary to earlier candidate, be would advance the dat.t of tt[IOl'll. there will be an . eledlon with his -resignation to permlt the <wncil to lour candldatea oeetln& tht Oty CGun<il appoint that candldalt and aave the u - ... t being vacated by Councllman F.:d pmse of an election. L«r. PlannlnJ Commlllloo <llalnnan Thirty minuteo before the noon ' M U-'IL. Y PllO'f .I -- • ay sa e .. women's cool, easy-care sleepwear. Now . 20%off. Long and waltz-length sfeepgowns, sleep shirt and bikini sels. A ll in crisp Kodel" po[Yestor/ cotton blends. Choose from lots ol charmi ng pastel s hades. Gowns, sizes s. M, L, XL, XXL. Sleep shirts, sizes P,S, M. L. 20% Off our entire llne of infants' furniture. . - Now 20%ott. Double drop side cribs and d ressers. Mada of selected hardwoods Jn rich finishes; many In wipe--clean enamels. Mediterranean, Early American just two of the many styles to chooae from . Finest quality crib mattresses on sale, too. Save 15% on all boys' underwear. Buy a bundle, save e bund.le. Boys' T .. shirts. V·necks, briefs and bo.l(er sho rt :; They're polyester/cotton or 1000/o cotton. Soft , absorbent and machine washable. ' • ' ,, ' I ••• / Carl Jdmson Is the fourth candidate. deadllne, nomlnatlon papors also were Lj__~M~IS~S&lill~FUU;s:Z::£WZ~'~72;...;;~=i:..~~~oe.~'rimd~n1~f!;;.;~:R""""~~:Li~::-.i:E?a~.:;i:"----:~~lll~ld~~~:~ii<r~~~=~~:-t.~~·~ba~:s;;."~:ir,.,.~t-----------.:1~e-nney 'llE[,ES lllPQ Tor""" fM "fective July 31. . ownen In tht South l.tJUDa aru. . \,I'""' clr'f ~ compete In a bo~ r... potelllial cmtldala ''"' Lorri At mJ6.momlnc, City Clerl Dorothy Th I he day. beau<Y conlort tod•y. sponwed by the COl!Dcll Id, realtor Poul WestllnJolt and Mu<!elt laid two man ..U ol nomination e Va ueS are re fJl/8ry • fn and PoCu """"'°"' League. ~ ,.°""hobad ml~ out'·~~.~ popen bod 1-1 !Wu out, -1or Beth !1o ,.,. ""V'm __, o111ca ,... f;:~ .. id tllll :in, n;yi:;; ~-=·· d'~!.:,...u;'.:,t' ~"li;: Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M . at the following ator11: the <mm ot ".lllD Pim ol-u71." chaned thoir mlndo and do !IOI tntml to Bq1io. per_..i admlolo•nlor ol %764 N---' Beach, FHhion IJ•rd -Huntin nfon S.1ch, Huntinnton Centet file tO, the olf'.ce. ffilhland Wu. """"" • ~ ': • 4 DAILY PILOT w ith T om u~'!-'ine ... The DA Finds A Loophole UPCOAST, OOWNCOAST: It develops that our good Orange County District At• torney Cecil Hicks eluded convlctioll himself just yesterday on charges of cona tempt of court. All of this occurred because of a hassle over allegedly too aexy films. The whole case began over a year ago when Westminster Police Chief Walter Scott and his forces raided a warehouse tn their fair mu·nicipallty wherein reposed nearly half a ffillllon dollars worth of films , photos and other goodies. The chief confiscated all this material under allegaUons that It was o b s c e n e, pornographic, bad, dirty and all that.. It next developed that a Huntlngtort Beach couple, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Loar, were arrested a1 alleged owners ol the film. 'Illey were charged with con- spiracy to distribute obscene material!:. THUS DID DA Hicks enter the case in order to prosecute the alleged dirty •luff. Everything followed the script nJcely un· til the jury came in. The jury found the Lo<ir.f innocent of all charges. Since the Loar1 were cleared, the judge or:'ered DA Hicks and-chief Scott to give the films back ·to them. They refused w:·"e at the same time preparing to ap- p< the whole case. '. 1e refusal to return the stuff under e< t order caused the judge to hail both C f Scott and DA HJcks before his b; h on charges of contempt al court. Vt '.:rday, Superior Judge Rober t Co;·fman found Chief Scott guilty of con. t( ·t. DA Hicks got off the hook because it <...cveloped that he was improperly 1ervcd with the contempt papers. WE~, YOU'VE heard in the past of pr ::utora who complain that some bad 11 beat the rap because ttis lawyer fc .:t a loophole or teclmlcallty in the law. \'ou suspect that no such complaint will co: e from the DA's Office this time ar~'Jnd. Mzanwhile, Chief Scott is left alone to face the music. You can fully anticipate that he will appeal the verdict. Maybe he'll get DA Hicks to take his case. Indeed, the life of law enforcement peo- ple I! fraught with dHflcultleB In tho )lllrsult of keeping Orange County pure and 'clean. * FREEWAY FOLLIES DEPT. Another hearing is under way today in the unlikely spot of Redding in an effort to determine what to do with some of our Orange Coast fretways. You see, the &tate has this Newport Freeway running down through Coata Mesa and it was sup- posed to end.1-with an interchange at Pacific Coast Freeway in Newport Beach. But there Jsn't 1ny Pacific Coast Freeway in Newport Beach. So now the California Highway COin· mission is .searching for a new place to end the Newport Freeway -maybe at Coast Highway. Newport has dispatched Its new City Manager Robert L. Wynn to Redding to explain Newport's freeway position to the highway people. Severa) Newport clty managers have tried this before. AU you can say is good luck, Bob. Try tossing· your hat through the door first before you go in. * THINGS YOU MISS if you don't read the classified ads, like the changing life style for this poor fellow who placed the foltowing pl ea: "Got married, must 11ell -pool table, flSO; drum set, $50." And that's the '!'lay It goes. ) UP'I T•lffllolo INSURANCE PROBER RIC HARD ANDREWS DISPLAYS ANTIQU ES Informer Turned Over Ob ject1 Stolen From LA Aluminum M1gnate Art Objects Recovered In Cloak , Dagger Caper MIAMI (UPI) -Nearly II million worth of antique ~Russian 11ilver and bronze art objects have been recovered in Miami, 18 months after they were stolen from the home of an elderly millionaire In Los Angeles. An insurance jnvestigator recovered the objects by paying a '30,000 fee to an unknown "finder." Richard E. Andrews, the insurance· in· vestigator, showed off the recovered ob- jects Wednesday, after a clandestine rendezv~ with the mysterious finder, who used the code name "Silver Fish." A sculpted fish of silver with scales of Inlaid mother of pearl was the most striking of the objects stolen in November, 1970, from Leo Harvey, 86, the president of Harvey Aluminum. .Fraud Suspect Miami authorities have identi- fied a man charged with bilk- ing 600 portly housewives in a weight reduction program as the brother of Arthur Hennan Bremer. who is accused of. shooting Alabama Gov. George Wallace. Officers said William Allen Bremer, 32, is free on bail in Arkansas, pending ex- tradition hearings to Florida. Other objects recovered were an ornate silver jewelry chest about three feet long, a silver soup tureen of about the same size, a two-gallon silver gravy boat and two bronze statuettes. To Andrews' surprise, the batch also Included an item that was not part of the loot from the burglary at ltarvey's home. It is a gilded silver samovar -11 huge Russian tea·pot. ''We don't know where the samovar came from," Andrews said, "but we're assuming it's stolen. The FBI shouldn't have too much trouble tracing it." Andrews said be was first contacted about the missing objects last December. All of his dealings with the man who returned the loot were conducted by phone. "The pieces were delivered to my car Tuesday evening in the parking lot of a North Miami shopping center," Andrews aaid. "He called me, told me to park the car and take a five.minute wa1k. When I returned, the stuff was in carboard boxes Jn the front seat and trunk." lrvings, Friend Sue for $91,000 Taken by IRS NEW YORK (AP) -Author Clifford Irving, his wife Edith and his researcher, Richard Suskind -principals in the Howard Hughes autobiography hoax - have filed suit in U.S. District Court demanding more than $91 ,000 which they u id was taken as ''jeopardy assessments" by the Internal Revenue Service. The IRS applied tax liens against the Irvings and Suskind last February, more than a month before they pleaded guilty to constructing a hoax in which McGraw- Hill Inc. paid out $750,000 for a bogus autobiography of Hughes, the billionaire industrialist. Each could receive 13 years in prison and fll,000 fines. The three asked the court to dis.solve the assessments on grounds that the government had failed to take "certain technlcal steP-' required by law" §n col· lecting the money against 1971 income tueB. Balmy Wea th er Hits U.S. I Thunders1w ·1ve rs Spot Parts of Northwest, Plains dnff1 eree1. Tiie ~ MrVlc:• u lled fol' I Mt>h .i n 111 1..o1 ~la l'~r followlnt ~ tw<nllht low ol .541. v.s.s--... ar TMa ASSOSIATID P'll•SS "•Ir 1klft a1'd Nlfiw '-"-•tv'" fl'<>'O!'W mot! of fl'lt ,,_,.., tvd1y, Wllfl l1'leU UC1$1110fll: -The Mor1f'IWftt trod MerltlNit 'ftf'9 «IOI. with tMIM,llul'M In the JOs. -TM NOi'",._!, HGr111en1 Plllrtt. tM 011rlr1 '"' -1E11tenl llllet Wft'tl ~ wlfll Ill O«Ulonll ~ 0# ll'lvftderVIO•&t. Oft WtcllfltlMY, nMrtf e11 lfldl of relft --.M IUC.f'WTIOIW:I, 't'I. T~1tvtft bttor.-NW11 r1~ ftom 31 '"' ll:ldrftorM&. On.. '° •• 1 ~•.Al'lr. s ..... ltfoott, Tftlu Mottty ._., froMY. Utflt -w..-ttllft Wlr .. , n-aflt 1nd motflil'ICI "*"""' ll«om-- 11111 ~!My I lo 11 ~ Ill '""""'°"' todey t110 ll'rScWoy. Hlfli '81Ny n, COl"-t ......,..,_. "'-,_ rt te 6'. INllW ~ ,..,... hn'I k to '6. •• .., """""'""" ••. Coalfd We.titer '"" ...... y ~ -l":ll •"" 1.t &IOWld ... • ... ""'" ,,. IL'lnt Ntlll '1"1 ... -""' -... ... __ -- Plt90AY l;lf ··"" ..., 'hP '·"" U ·=-.. "'" .u tt:a """ u l:At LM. .... 1tJ1 ,....._ n:ar"""' 1ttt Departs satUr'dart Itinerary B~red . For Nix~n Trip By HELEN THOMAS WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon's mission to M06COw next week will · be highlighted by free.swinging, lengthy talks with Kremlin leaders, a bit of sightseeing and two vodka-toasting state banquets. Nixon wiU be tbe first American chief executive to visit the Soviet Union since Franklin D. Roosevelt went to Yalta in 1945 to meet with Joseph . Stalin and British Prime Minister W i n s ~ Churchill. Ni1on, hoping to open a new era of negotiations rather than confrontations, will meet with the Soviet leaders at a time when U.S.-Russian·relations are at a critical point in Vietnam, but easing in Europe. The White House Wednesday unveiled a sketchy itinerary of Nixon's two-week trip to Austria, the Soviet Union, Iran and Poland. Presidential Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said the round trip, starting Saturday morning1 ~will . cover 16,585 air miles with a total nying time of 34 hours and 25 minutes. After a ceremonial. departure from Andrews Air Force Base at 6: 15 a.m. PDT, the President and Mrs. Nixon will take off aboard the "Spirit of '76" for Salzburg, Austria, where they will spend the 9w:eeken~ at Schloss Klessheim, a Salzburg palace. They will be formally welcomed and entertained in the famous Austrian city by Chancellor Bruno Kreisky and other Austrian officials. Monday morning, the Nixons will fly to Moscow for a ceremonial welcome by the Soviet ruling trio -Communist Party Chairman Leonid I. Brezhnev, Premier Alexei N. Kosygin and President Nikolai V. Podgorny. They will drive to the Kremlin Palace where the Soviet leaders and their wives will join them for tea. The first evening of their arrival the NixOns will be honored at a state banquet hosteCI by the Presidium of the Soviet Union. In the ens'uing four-days Nixon, with his closest advisers Jncluding Secretary of State William P. Rogers and security af~ fairs expert Henry A. Kissinger, will set- tle down to tough bargaining with the Russian leaders behind the Kremlin walls. Vietnam , anns limitation, trade and the Middle East Were expected to be the key points of discussion. On Saturday, May '1:1, the Nix:ons will make a quick side trip to Leningrad to visit one of the czarist palaces and other historic showplaces before returning to "Moscow. Sunday was described as a "personal day" for the President but it was highly likely he would resume his discusskln with Russian leaders before departing the following day for Kiev. I A w;w Stop our ships. would you Nixon. Take That and That/ Cast Barred At Funeral For Blocker From Wire Servlca DEKALB, Tex. -Four days after be died in Ca11fornia of complications follow· Ing gall bladder surgery, Dan Blocker was buried in his native DeKalb. The services Wednesday were almost secret, in sharp contrast to the fanfare of the Hollywood that made him famous. As the family requested, no studio of· ficials or members of the cast in the popular television show-Bonanza attended the funeral in Blocker's Northeast Texas home town, 11 miles from the Oklahoma border. Blocker played the part of Hoss Cartwright in the show. The ceremony, conducted two hours ahead of schedule, was attended onJy by about 2t> members of the immediate fami- ly. At the announced burial time, some of the 2,000 townspeople trickled to the Woodmen Cemetery on the edge of town, but Blocker had already been laid to rest beneath the red East Tei:as dirt. The service luted four minutes. Those attending included. Blocker'' widOw, his four children, his mother, his close friends and other relaUves and the Rev. Arthur Fray of the First Baptist Church. Vegas Showdown 8 Play for Poker Title, $80,000 LAS VEGAS (AP) -Adrian "Texas Dolly" Doyle had two aces in the bole. He confidently shoved his last remaining chips, worth $7,500, into the pot. Another Te1an was even more con-- fident. With only one card left to be dealt, John Moss of Odessa had three dueces. He matched the bet and $2.1,000 stood in the pot. Although the odds were 28 to 1 against U, the dealer turned over the fmal card. It was an ace. Doyle, who declined to disclose his hometown, raked in the 125.000 . The hand was only one of hundreds being dealt to eight professiona l gamblers"in the so-called World Series of Poker here. Sometime in the next few days, one of the eight will break the other seven and collect $80,000. Each paid $10,000 to join the aMual game at Binion's Horseshoe Casino. They sat at a kidney .. baped poker table. In front of each stood pilea of black chips, each valued at flOO. The game is called "Hold-em" a varia· tion of seven card stud. Each player iJ dealt two cards, face down. Five more cards are dealt in the center of the table, face up. The winner Js the gambler who produces the best five-card poker hand. h each player loses his $10,000 stake, he drops out. Eventually, only two players will remain, with '80.000 on the table. They'll play until only one bas all the money. "'Ibis is a different kind of poker," one observor noted. "But these men know bow to play IL They doo'I get tired ond they can play for three days without get. ting aboent-minded °' groggy. They've been playing all their lives." Tile playef3 besides Doyle and Moss are ''Amarillo Slim" Preston; .. Jolly" Roger Funsmlth of Kansas City; Jack Strauss of Houston; 1'Pug" Pearson of Las Vegas; Addington Crandall of San Antonio and Jim Cassella of Las Vegas. They leave the table only for minutes at a time to stretch their legs or to go to the restroom. There are no dinner breaks. Bar girls deliver coffee, orange juice and milkshakes. "Only rarely will one drink any liquor. They wouldn't take a chance of making any mistakes because of booze," a casino official said. It's Evil KnfeVeU Two Killed, 20 Injured In Ir eland BELFAST; Northern ireland CUPI) - A soldier and a civilian were killed a~d 20 persons were wounded Wednesday in .a wave of shooting and bombing attacks in Northern Ireland. The soldier died when a sniper spray.ed a group of British army engineers with machine gun fire as they stack~ sandbags outside 1 police station in Crossmaglen, 44 miles southwest of Belfast near the Irish Republic border. Another soldier was wounded in the al· tack launched from a speeding auto. The civilian, Bernard Moane, 46, .• Roman Catholic father of six, was shot 111 the head and bis body dumped in front of a war memorial in the seaside resort of Carrickfergus, U miles northeast or Beliast. * * * • WORCESTER. Mass. (AP) -Two masked men shot a guard and walked out ot tfle Worcester Art Mu'seum with four paintings worth more than $1 million .. Museum Director Richard S. Te1tz fdentified .the...works taken Wednesday a5 "The Brooding Woman" and "Head of Woman" by Paul Gauguin, a 19th century French artist; "Mother and Child" by Pablo Picasso and Rembrandt's 1'St. Bartholomew," painted in 1632. Teitz said all were owned by the museum and the Rembrandt was the most valuable of the four. * * * CAIRO (AP) -Egypt has ordered the U.S. mission in Cairo and the Egyptian staff in Washington cut in half as a new expression of anger at American support for Israel. Each mission presently bas 20 members. The semi-officia1 newspaper Al Ahram &aid Pre.sident Anwar Sadat ordered the cirts to protest the U.S. policy ol : :consolidating the continued Israeli eg· gression through the occupation of Arab territories." American diplomats in Cairo confirmed the cuts had been ordered. The State Department said it was not informed of the reasons for the Egyptian action, but "we wlll, of course, comply." * ·* * BANGKOK (UPI) -Vice President Spiro T. Agnew said today his Southeast Asian tour convinced him South Viet· namese forces "will be able to withstand the present military pressures." "The prospects look good," Agnew said as he boarded his special presidential jet for the flight to the United States. His departure ended a two-day visit to '1iailand during which he made a three-- hour nying trip in Saigon to confer with South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu and U.S. officials. * * * LONDON (AP) -The free market price of gold hit a new peak of $58.00 to $58. 75 an ounce on the key Zurich market today, but elsewhere in Europe the £Old rush faltered. The Zurich price was a big jump from Wednesday's closing price of $57.00 to $58.20. In other European markets, the situa- tion remained fluid after two days of spectacular rises. In Frankfurt. the free market price opened only slightly higher at $58.00 to $58.50 an ounce, compared to $57.80 to '58.20 on Wednesday. No Recommendation NASHVILLE. TeM. (AP) -South cen- tral BeU .reports a small girl called an operator and asked for "the number· of the courthouse." The operator asked which one. "Which ones best?" the girl replied. DattdevU motorcycle Jumper Eve! Knievel (oo ladder) cllecb out the ~loot high Eternal Flame In front of the Lu Vegu Hilton. Kn.level hopes to hw):lle the 1lame Oii his cycle 10metime tbia (Jiii' don the expression) fill. I I \ \ I \ \ f ) \ I t .. , . . . .. -• • -··-.. • '. Orange· f;oa·st· Today'!' Final N.Y. Stoeks VOL 65, NO. ·139, 3 SECTIONS, 4o PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MAY 18, 1972 N TEN CENTS Irvine Co. to Ask Coastal Comfilunity Zoning By L. PETER KRIEG 01 ttl1 O.llr Plltl SI.if The Irvine Company will file for planned C-Ommunity zoning for its l,50().. acre coastal property between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach within two weeks, a Newport Beach planning official said today, The company will file the zoning re- quest, expected to include 1 mixture oC ' Liner commercial development and public beach front along the water with Orange County, an Irvine oUicial confirmed. However, Jerome F. Collins, media services director, this morning declined to conlirm uacUy when the land use map will be presented to county planners. ••we do not know at this time precisely when the coastal plan will be filed," Collins aald e1plabling that It wW.be-filed with the county because the area is unin- corporated and is under the county's jurisdiction: • i Collins said the plan will not include' specifics regarding what types of com· mercial uses the company wants, but it is known that Irvine hopes to construct a series of high rise hotels along the 3.5-- mile stretch . Company "Ol!icials havt also declared Threatened Bombs Reported Plnnted on Vessel LONDON (UPI) -The CUnard Line 1aid today it had been informed thit bombs were placed aboard the 65,863-ton luzury liner Queen Elizabeth n and told that it would be blown up in m.Jd-Atlantlc with 2,250 persons aboard unless '3501000 ransom were paid. The Royal Air Force flew fout frQgmen-bomb disiiosal erperts to the liner north of the Al.ores Islands and said they would be parachuted Into the sea near the ship to join crewmen in lrylJ!i to Health Office Faces Owners ' 0£ Boatyards fllld the boml>L The ·QE2 left New York Monday for Cherbourg and Southampton with 1,350 passengera and 900 crewmen aboard, and a Cunard ~kesman 1n New York in- dicated the eztortionist. might also be aboard, aeeklng the !350,000 ransom In flO and '20 denominations. (The Associated Pres3 said the passengers included conductor Leopold Slokowski, 90.) In Washington, Pentagon aources said reports of the bomb threat had been known for "several days" and that .searches of the ship found nolhlng. 1be frogmen ' flown in today were to check the hull of the lhip for any u· pla1ives attached under water. · Richard Patton, president -of Cunard Liriel, said in New York" the fll'St bomb threat was received Wednesday afternoon by Charles Dickson, CUnard vice presi· dent of finance and admlnistraUon, (See IJNER,.Page l) .. they want to relocate Pacific Coast Highway to the tops of nearby coastal hills and have also already VO\\'ed that the public will have~ free access to virtually all of the beachfront itselr. James Hewicker, assi.stant 1 community developUlent director for Newport Beach. said that, in talks with the c:ompaoy, he ~ad been informed of the company'& pen- ding zoning application. Irvine officials have been talk ing off and on with officials of both Newport Beach and Laguna Beach for the past year about their plans for the property. C',ollins referred to the discussions with the municipal officials in his statement but did not disclose much of the content. .. During the past year. as we said we would. we've been working closely with the staff of various public agencies upon refinenu:nts to the plan ," CoUlns aajd. "This prcplnnnlng t:ffor1 ls continuing. 11 "That is all we can sny at this time.'' he said. The unincorporated coastal sector is no\v go\'crned by the county·approved southern lrvint. Ranch General Plan which designntes the area for a variety of hind uses ranging from commercial to residential ·to open space. DAILY ,ILOT f'llelll h' L. ........ ,. By WJLU.ul SCHREIBER Of tM D.tltr Pu.t Ii.II Newport Beac~ boatyard openton to. day were assured that an Orange Coun- ty Health Department crackdowll Gii 1111 pollution is not intended to close dow1 or damage waterfront businesses. Planners Halt High Rise Bid For New Study Newport Beach plannlac -tnissionen pogtpoMd · «lion on -. ,ri- posed high rise ordinance Thur.day alghl when they, and m08t of the 150 persons atteadine 1 public bearing on it. agreed that tall revisions to the plan required addltio,..I study. ' . PLANNING OFFICIAL (LEFT! LOSES AU DI ENCE DURING FIRE STATION SESSION .,If You!,.,~ 19.Jlloot In a Fir• Station, You. Have to be Propared for Dl1trodlona "We are not trying to place the blame !or the pollution problem on anyone in particular," said Robert Stone, counlJ director of enviroamental health. •1We are just trying to stop the problem. from continuing." Stone's office recenUy sent letters to 13 boatyards and nine restlurants frontiaC on the bay warning them agalnst furtha' pollution of the water. Stone met today with the Marine Divi- sion of lhe Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce and came face to face with a number of the boatyard owners who re. ceived his warnings. The boatyards were warned because their heavy metaJ.based boat paints are being dischar,l?ed into the bay and ate taken in by the sediment! and marine Ute. he said. "We have shown there are high concen. traUons of toxic heavy metal! in aome par1s of the bay," Sto&e said. 11We took action now because we don't think it is desirable to wait until the problem bas disaster or crisis effects," he said. "We wanted to take the first step to haft a problem that l'Jeems fo be emerging.'' Boatyard owners were critical of the action taken by the county and tome were fearful it could hurt their opera· tions. Stone said the Jetter was aot intended to burl the boatyards but merely to 11<1 the ball rolling toward some solutions. "We don't advocate shutting down the yards because they are only one part of the problem," stone said. "The Jetter was our way of initiating a diatog and we will do anything in our power to seek some cooperative answers." Several boatyard owners expressed a desire to work cooperatively Wilh the county but they made it clear that other pollution sources needed exploration too. ''If we ar"-breaking the law then every· (See BOATYARDS, Pare Z) Lennon Makes Plea of Mercy DAIL "r PILOT haft' ,,... LEADS STATE CHIEFS Newport'• Jame1 Glavas Glavas to Take Post as Peace Offieers' Chief Newport Beach Police Cllle! B. James Glavu wW be Installed u president of tile Ca!Uomia Peau olficerl Association Tuesday during the 8Dllll81 convention of the S,IOO-member organization i n Anaheim. The four.<lay gathering wW b e bigbllghlld by addresses by Acting At- torney General Richard Kleindienst and Governor Ronald Reagan Monday mom- lng. Other DMtjor addresa<s are scheduled by Ju..tice Robert Gardner <h Newport Beoch, P""lding justice o! the Fourth Dbtrict Court of Appeals on Wedne>day and by Loi Angeles Police Chief Edward M. Davis Tuesday. Gllvu, 59, ls a veteran Jaw en- forcement officer who became chier In Newport Beach In 1911 after a 23-year career with the Los Angeles Pollce Deplllment, from which ::e rttired u captain in charge of the juvenile division. During bis career in !.<Is Angeles, Glavas had served as commander of the Hollenbeck Division and a supervisor of the deperlmeDl's planning and research . dlvlsloa. · A1J II now rezds, the lour-woe height limllltion ordinance would put a :U.foot• celling on most all aing]e-family and duplex iones and a 32-!oot limit on most apartment and some commercial zones. A thin! aection allows bulldiog& limited to 32 feet to go up to 50 feet U they meet certain criteria and get a use permit All other high rise areas, 1n major commercial and industrial zones, would be limited to 50 feet unless they meet strict conditions and also get a use permit. As written, the ordinance wouJd not govern approved developments, areas that already have plaMed community ordinances or buildings for which con- struction permits have been asked before the new law goes into effect. This section of the proposed regulations drew the most criticism during what was scheduled to be a public hearing, but what turned into more of a question-and- answer period. The bearing was conducted In the Newport Center Fire Station with distrac· tions ranging from ringing telephones to fire trucks rolling on emergency calls. CommW.ionera asked and answered questions and members of the Com· munlty Development ·Department went through detailed explanation of the ordinance for three hours . before the bearing was continued until June 1 at 7:30 p.m. in City Hail. Commissionera are expected to have a proposed. ordinance designed to place ad· ditional controls on density ready for public bearing the same night. The revised high rise ordinance was greeted by mixed reactions from the Irvine Company, whose spokesman, Lar· (See WGB RISE, Page Z) Manager Attends Meeting on Fate Of Coast Route . Newport Beach City Manager Robert L. Wynn was in Redding today for a meeting of the California liighway Com· ,mJssion that may decide -at least ror the time being -the fate of the Pacific Coast Freeway. CommisSioners were scheduled to hear three new plans for termination of the Newport Freeway (Route 55}. Until now, the state had planned to end it at the controversial proposed coastal freeway. If any of the three is accepted, the ac· tion would signal the state's concession that the Pacific . Coast Freeway is no IOJ1ger among thelr foreseeable freeway plans. Of the three alternates prepared by the Divilion of Highways, one would bring the' Newport Freeway down Superior Avenue to Pacific Coast Highway, an· other would swing it east to Newport Boulevard above Industrial Way and a third' would coMect it with a plant1ed extension ot Balboa Boulevard in the vicinity of 15th Street. Commissioners began their two-day meeting this morning OO:t were not sched· uled to take up the Newport Freeway question until thJs afternoon. The commission has apparently been forced to make a decision on the ulti· mate alignment Of the route· because Newport Beach approved plans for a condominium project directly in the path cX one, of the alternatives. 900 Golden West, OC(; Employes Get Pay Hike He began his police career in 1938, Nearly 900 employes at Colden West Classified employes such as janitors, NEW YORK (UPI) ~ Former waltlag a beat In Ce!ltral L.A. and Orange Coast College have been 11ecretaries and clerical workers do not BeaUe John Lennon baa pleaded Glavu bu •l«Ved as president of the granted across-the-board wage increases have the. aame wage •tructure as the in· with the U.S. eovemmeot to allow Southern Ca!Uorala Juvealle Officers' " "mercy" to blmael! biJ wile and Asoodatlot>, pcesldent vi the Ca!ifoml~ of 5.5 Jler<en~ structora and wiU be given a Oat 5.5 per- her miMing dlughl.r and allow Slall 1 .... 0. Olllcttl' ~latioa and The aalary hike, which covert both cent Increase over their current earnings. them to remain In the United prealdenl of both the. California and teachers and clwified employe!. "" Board members elhlblted considerable Stakl despite biJ marijuana..-Orange County Chiefs of Police Assooia· approved by unanimow vote o! the concern over the $500,000 cut In un- fictloD. tions. Orange Coast Community Co 11 e e distributed reserves the new salary .J)3Ct "We are not now la federal court _,U. ..tlrtd from the 1ata~ll:...!IJ'lll~P~a~1-Dist~·:rl~cl~bo~ard~~of!f_!!!!J~~We<llltlidiit__~d~om~ands~ . The curren\ reserve fund of but If there ls any mercy to nlead "·· ""'~"••.laJ4eor~ , IJ tij)icled to Shr!M" tO about for, I'd lib II both f«-auu our Boru lilLOi Angdez, Glavas atltnded For the dlsttlct'1 m ln.structora tlle fl00,000. child," Lennon told the buring by Wuhtaaton Slall University and obtelned new 1971-'IS igreemeol means an In-The loss may be of!sel by unoxpected the Immigration and Naturalllatloa a BS In publlc .admlnl.Watlon from USC. creaze on the lowest step of the oalary Increases In tlle llxable wealth (assessed servtce. "-·-Glavu l!aa been an ln.!lnldm In vlliou.< ICbedule from fl,715 lo .,.247. The valuation) or the district. Financia l ex· Alter taking i..li!llOl!1'·m>m lho pollco adeoct .....,... al USC and Loi, perll have predicted an incruse o! about LenllOlll, speclal inquiry olllcer lnl · ~ Stale Oollege for 17 :rnn. blihett step of the acalt 1w been JDOYed 111 percent, but there a~ Indications tllat Fleld&teol II~ ~-;i..---arnw....-a U.S. Codi Guard chief from f)l,571 to ft8,537. ~ predictions may be on the con- ly l to submit brieb and llld ho pelly ollker dut1~ World War II and bas The averaga Or111&• Coo.rt Community zervaUve side, district olliclall said. · 1tould decide the case "IO!'nttfme IS'Ttd oo Yll'ious local ltate and °'"" College ~r currentJy tarns The county assessor'• olllct, fer ex: •fttt Ibo July I ctall." ~ crime """1 .... ii, lnclodlnl the '11,2()0 per yw. lie w111 find hla pay In-om pie, prodlcts an a.......i valuaUon In· (Set GIAVAS, Pap Zl creued to fH,111, a rail< of about 1711. (See WAGES,.Page ZI , I •• ' • So1ne Planning! Newport Officials Blow Wednesday The Newport Beach Planning Com· mission couldn't be blamed for wanting to go back to the drawing board with Wednesday night. * * * Newport Facing First Oiallenge On Parking Law The first challenge to Newport Beach's new emergency parking ordinance will be heard tonight by the PlaMing Com- mission. Rick Lawrence, owner or the Alley \\lest Restaurant and one of the prime movers of the Cannery Village idea in Old Newport, is appealing a decision to place his planned antique shop under the ordinance. The planners will also continue discussion of a huge convention center addition to the Newporter Inn. The issue · was held over so further studies could be made. The parking ordinance in question re- quires commercial operations I n manufacturing zones to provide standard parking under existi ng zoning laws. Lawrence's appeal contends that his antique refinishing and retail sales opera~ tioo at 502 29th St. should" not fall under the ordinance because it is .utilizing an existing manufacturing 1.0ne building. The planning staff has told Lawrence that a use permit, and the parking, ls re- qu ired for his operation because it is an "expansion and intensification" of the prior use of the building . Lawrence and the CaMery Village Association have been fighting fdr some time to have parking restrictions in the waterfront area eased to allow retail defelopment of the area. The Newporter Inn Issue revolves aroUnd the lack of cross-property access roads and lhe extra trarflc burdtn such a convention facility might place on ex· lsting streets. The matter was contlnutd from tht: last planning commlsakln meeting to aflnw the applicant more time' to atu~y the problem. • Also facing the planner'--at their 7:30 _ p.m. ·met11ng:-iA--lho ci!YCOUJIC chambers ar': -An 18-Unlt condominium ori the iido Peninsula . -Approval of the flml map of the Robert Grant condomlnhDTl tract In-West Newport. - -A variance e.Uowlng construcrton or tW<> duplezes on under•slud B~boo Pcninlula lob. -RegulatlOO-' rezlrlctlng outdoor llghtin(I on recreational facilities. ,. First of all, the city council. cham!X!r1 where plaMers usually meet had been pre-empted by a homeowner.! group. The planning session had to be moved across town to the Newport Center Fire Station. After setting up folding chairs and tables, the panel convened among the fire engines. There were about 150 spectators. And then the inevitable happened. The architects of Newport's future were about an hour Into their agenda when firemen bounded downstairs, leaped onto one of the trucks and sped off, red. lights flashing, to answer en alarm . Clear-thinking firemen didn 't turn an the airen until their truck bad cleared the building. The meetlng continued. A short time later -the alarm turned out to be a leaky gas main -the fire truck and Its crew ret.urntd. This time planning c o m m I s s I o n Chairman Curt Dosh called a fivc·minute r ecess while firem en backed their ve- hicle into the station. WJieat Doctor Dies DAVIS (AP) -Dr. Joseph A. Rupert. 55, a wheat scientist and associate direc- tor of agricultural science for the Rockefeller Foundation, died TueMay of cancer. He made contributions to plant breeding and pathology, and trained agricultural scienti.5ts Jn the developing countrlet. · Oruge Coan Weather Those clouds should clear by mid·moming Friday leaving the weekend to sunny skies and wann temperatures. lliRhs at the beaches 62 rising to 72 Wand. Lowa "8--58. I NS IDE TODAY Tier vital 1U1tiatica are 43.77. 41 -feet, not fiu:rie1. Sharon Jlarvey is tile bronzed becwtv that adornJ b4llboard! coaat to coo.st ~n the 1untan oil ad. She admits tliat ft wos atartling to sea herself in the larger rite and tdla wlwt billboard rign fam• ha& brought her. See storu Pciae 10. ! DAILY PILD I H Tllwtsdq, Mq 18, 1912 Contributions Candidates· Fail To File Reports . ' - Only two or Orange County's 12 supervlsorlal candidates and six other aspirants for various 9fllces complied with the new state law requiring th at all contributions of $500 or more to their campaign be !Ued by 5 p.m . .\l'ednesday, ~--Uie-COUHtYCJCri:~SOffice reported today. Supervlsorial candidates who filed were First District incwn bent Robert Battin and one ol his four opponents William Wenke, a Santa Ana attorney. Battin reported receiving $2.5,269 to date and Wenke, ,20,800. Battin, the First District supervisorial incumbent from Santa Ana, said 19 C(lO- tributora offered sums of more than $500 to his campaign. They included : -Dr. Louis Ce:lla, $2,500. "-Dr. Cella'• Santa Ana Clini~c, ' 5j)O. -Fred Harbor. $2,500. -RJchard J, O'Neill, Rane sslon Viejo, 11,300, -Untied Allto Workers Loclll 148, '1,194. -Ratu and Tucker, lawyers, fl,200 . ..., -S.set Bullder11 $2,500. ~· llarve)'.L~•t,~. -Lqana Nlgnel, !750. -limy l\lllller, '700. -Dr. David Aacber, 1900. First District candidate Wenke's top contributor was a political group known as United for California. It gave him $7,000. Another $,«JOO came to him from the Orange County Committee for State and Local Candidates, reputedly an arm of the powerful Orange Co u n t y ilopubllcan group known aa the Lincoln Club. Kidnaper Frees -~ ~ - Wife of Banker; Given $50,000 BAKERSFIELD (AP) -FBI and sheriff's deputies searched today for a kldnaper who held a Bakersfield woman hostage nearly eight hours and then abandoned her in an orange crate after collectlng '50,000 ranoom. Marjorie Minear, 50, the wife of a Bank of America branch manager 1n nearly Ollda.le, managed to free herseU from the box left in an orange grove Wednesday night 20 miles north of here, a Kern County sheriff's deputy said. She aufCered only a alight cut on her forehead. Mrs. Minear described her kidnaper as white, aboul slx feet tall, well-groomed wilh dark hair. She aaid he forced his awy into her home \Vednesday afternoon, blindfolded her and drove her around in a car for several hours before leaving her in the crate. Bob Wedel, a loan officer at the Oildale branch of Bank of America, t...•Jd authorities he received a telephone call about 2 p.m. from a man who said he waa holding the wife of branch manager Glenn Mine.ar. The caller demanded $50,000 ransom for Mrs. Minear'a return, Wedel said. Because Minear was away at a meeting, authorities said Wedel followed the kidnaper's instructions and delivered the money to a field about five miles north 0£ Bakersfield. Wedel received a second call from the kidnaper at 7 p.m. saying he had picked up the money and Mrs. Minear could be round in a box near the money drop · point. But Jess than an hour later, authorities said Mrs. Minear called from a nearby farmhouse after free ing herself. Incumbent William Phillips or the Third Supervisoriat District did not rue a contribution 1tatement and none of his lour opponents did either. C&ndJdatet Jor other than 1uperviaorlal offices·fiUng included Assemblyman Ken- neth Cory of the 69th District. A group called the Cory Dinner Committee said they had received $7.700. The only other candidate or organiza~ tion reporting contributions over '500 were Robert Bad.ham, t n c u m b e n t assemblyman in the 7Ist District , $600. and the Lincoln Club of Orange County. $37 ,000. But the club treasurer told the clerk 's office that only $3,000 of the sum had been dispersed as yet and that to the Orange County Republican Central Com-- mitte. Each candidate for a state or local of· lice ls required by the California Govern- ment Code to file a statement listing in· dlvlduals or groups who have donated to. bls pollUcal campaign. Failure to comply with the law due to Ignorance ta a misdemeanor offense. -punishable by up to six months In Jall and a $500 fine. ' However, If a candidate knows of the Jaw and falls to file it is a felony offense, according to the office of Secretary of State Edmund G. Brown Jr. From Pagel BOATYARDS • • one who waters his lawn is too," aajd · Anene '~Blackie" Gadarian. "The water from Jawns eventually flows right into t.tte ~Y with all its fertilizer." Stone said the boalyard-pollii!IOn pfub. lem ls not the only one being .studied by his department. "We aie not singling you out," Stone saJd, "we want to look at the whole pie.- lure. "We have a legal responsibility to stop the paint pollution but we also want to cooperate in any way possib1e," he add· ed. Stone offered a number of possible solutions to the paint pollution problem. "Some kind of .aump « filter system could be set up to prevent the paint resi· due from getting into the water, the yard. couJd be better maintained and wastes swept up or a non-toxic paint coold be substituted," Stone said. The latter tuggestion sparked the big· gest debate. ''The whole Idea ol non-fouling bottom paint on boats is to kill marine growth ." said one boatyard owner. "How are you going to kill them and then tum around and keep them alive?" "We are concerned with pollution, but \\'e can't tell the customer whaHdnd or paint he will or will not use," Gadarian said. "I would be satisfied if he didn't paint his boat at all and it rotted away -I'd make a million bucks," he added. For the most part, the owners agreed that more research should be dOPJe to find a less toxic paint for the bottom . They also agreed that the problem coold prob- ably be worked out cooperatively without legal actions . From Page 1 GLAVIS ... 1960 White House conference Community Protection Committee. Gla vas and his wife, Melba, live in Newport Beach. ite has a son, James, who is a deputy with the Orange C-Ounty Harbor District. He will be installed as president of the CPOA during ceremonies Tuesday night at the Disneyland Hotel, succeeding Placer County Sheriff William Scott. A sherilf's helicopter circled the spot the ransom was to be paid, but deputi es said they did not see the money picked up and believe it was done on foot rather than by car. The helicopter remained at 3,000 feet to avoid detection. Glavas is now first vice president ol the organization. Two men are being sought because Mrs. Minear said she heard different \•oices wh ile being dr iven blindfolded, deputies sa id. These Cookies Really Bombed SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Tbo pacfolge wrapped · in brown papor addreased to Pollce Inapector Jolin o.m .. had a label lhal rud: "De not till. Keep In a cool place." Police found it moments after • ma n telephoned head(luarters with a warning that three bombs had been hidden in the building and· would go off in IS minutes. . Bomb squad members glnJ!:erly took the bo.1 into the parkhfg Jot where they carefully opened it and found homemade cookies, Inspectors then Rmembered that an elderly lady Cotlins befriended some time ago had betn sending him cookies once in a while. No bomb was found. Proposition 9 Economic Result Seen Disastrous If a clean air propoolUon DD tbe JID!e 6 primary ballot puaes, tbe ec<lllOmlc resuJIJ In California would be disastrous, lhe Newport Harbor Chamber ol Com· merce Marine Division waa told today. "If approved, Proposition t would go Into effect !be nm day and Ute econ· omy of lhis state would grind to a halt,'' said Thomas Eliott, a spokesman for Calilomians Against ProposlUon I. Eliot! told the chamber memben! what the proposition would limit. "It would put sev~re r.estrictions on diesel fuel, gasoline, oil drilling, and nu- clear power plants," Eliott said. He said tht latter restriction, wblcb would put a five-year moratorium GD nu- clear plant construction, IJ aelf defeat· Ing. '.'When th15 llale begins having the blaclcouts and bro.,...ts predt<led by 19'/4, there will be no choice bill to beef up the fossil fuel facilities that are our biggest pollution problein," be said. Eliott also said that a restrlctlon which would drastically cut llUlphur In diesei' fuet could bring to a haJt all truck and train traffic in the state. · "The damage to retail sales outfits would be incredible U thal happened," Eliott said. Eliotl streosed thal once the propost. tion is approved, the legislature's bands are tied. "Tht!y cannot weaken Ille bill, ooly strengthen t~" be uld. Eliott acknowledged oerloos poDal!on problems in the country but said that they cannot be effectively or economi· cally solved overnight. "Even the conservation groups real- ize this measure is not the correct an- swer," Eliott said. / He said the Sierra Club,. which bad been expected to jump on the band- wagon, has neither endorsed nor re-- jecled the proposition. "Several other responsible conserva- tion groups have 11Iready opposed Prop- osition 9," he aald. "Unless we defeat it, it could take years of initiative proc. esses to change it again." Eliott said the ·biggest problem his group is having is convincing the aver- age voter to decide against the measure. From Pagel LINER ... saying there were bombs aboard the ahip. He said New York police, Britain'• ScoUand Yard and the British Ministry of Defense were brought into the cue after the first telephone call and that there were indicatioM the pe.rsons involved in the extortion plot might be still aboard. Presumably they would try to leave the ship In lhe AUanUc and maka It to the Azores: or some other ahip, but tbia was not made clear. ' Patton said, "we have been in constant contact with the ship," and its captain, William Law. He said the anonymous caller said be would call back today with a deadline for payment but had not done so by af- ternoon. He said the caller offered to tell where the bombs were hidden aboard the ship if the ramom were paid. OIANGI COAST H DAILY PILOT Thi Of'l;llOf Coast DAILY PILOT, wJltt ~ .. combined tlle N•ws·Prns., lf PllbUIMd b)' t11e Or•rtfl CO.II P11llllilllr1Q COfTl~riy, S.p,,. r11e edltlont •rt publl,tltd, MOl'ld•r throw" Frldl)', for (0$111 M•u, Ntwi:orl llelch, H11n~fri9lon lleMh/Foutlll o'I Va!ler, L1~11.m1 l~h. lr11l1>1/$1ddltMtk etld ~•n Clt'menl(/ S•" , Ju.n Caoi1!r1110 A 1!ngl' rfillOl'I~/ edition Ii p1,U1tl1Md S.lurd•l"> 1.nd Sunc:s•v,. Thr or•rt<IMI pt,ll!ll1hlr1Q llia"I II 11 )JO Wf11 8•1 Strfff, (Ott• Mtw, C•llforn!a, 9202'. Beside s the speakers named earlier, also address ing the 52nd annual CPOA confab 'viii be Justi ce Lynn Compton, of the Second District Court of ApJ)lj,als, Raymond C. Procunier, director of the California Department of Corrections and John Ingersoll, director of the California Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs. A talk will also be given Tuesday by Justice Herbert Ashbey, former wistant California attorney general just ap- pointed to the Circuit Court of Appeals. Patton said it was possible the QE2 would put into 'the Azom, the closest port of call , rather than risk harm to the passengers. It Is due In Cberbnurg Fr\. day. ltoO.rt N, w,.J. Prn ldtttl •!Id PubtWttr J•c:• R. Cutl•v Vi<• Prao01n1 •nd CerMrel MINOtr Thom•• IC•evll Edlter Thom•• A. Murphi11• ~Intl Editor L '•t.t Ktl11 .......... ~ Clfy l"dUW .... ,.,. .... om. JJlJ New,..-f lo11lever.I M.llJ.,AU,...; ,,O. lox l17J, t266J --a.ti MtMl -WHf ..., ser ... L..--1eteh1 m iror.t """'""' "'"'filt* llldll 11'1S INdl &ovllW,.. s.n CllnMftl•; as Nortf\ e1 c.min. 11tw T.i.,._. 17141 '42-!Jll C1•1"'84 ...._,lilllt 6"4Z·f•71 °""'""'· ltJI, °' .... C:O.J ,...,.,... ~ • ..,. ,... 11eri.., 1uw1re1-. .. j...... fMtMr' .. ...,"'.......,,, """"' fMY .. ........ Wl"*'I ..a.f ,.,. ........ ~ ..... . = °"' ......... ., .. c.t• Mnl. ~-s 7 ....... .. c.trt"" "" :,-;-r:_w~.~!'.w.'"""""' ""1n1n r • Fro1n Pagel HIGH RISE. • • ry ~toore. first asked for the continuance so that the land development Jirm could have more time to study the measure. "We just got the revised ordinance '"·hen "'e walked in the door tonight.'' Moore pointed out. "So did we," noted planning com- rnissloner Chalnnan OJ.rt Dosh, in ijgree- ing later th•t more time was needed. Several persons. i n c 1 u d in g c.om. missioner William Agee, expressed con- cern over protracted delay1 in adoption Ill tht ordinance. Commissioner Jacqueline Heather urged caution against moving' loo fut, howtver. "We·are being pres~ured to act at this point In time," she said, admlltlng, "the city bas lcantd toward lht developers in the past, buf, now it appears tbere·are ex· ceases on Ole other side. This pressure i5 preventing us from 1e1Ung to· a mld-dleground " Sho later agreed that. If the ordinance belort planners IJ cnnaldcred only an Jn. terlm measure pending completion ol Jhe uocta1 led genual plan, It CDU!d be ac-et?>t.ab!e. • Pentagon sources said bomb aearch operations had been turned over to the British because of the area involved was the responsibility of Great Britain. The RAF said in London the four frogmen should reach the liner eerly this afternoon. FronaPagel WAGES ... crease of about 10 percent or II percent. Since the 5.5 percent wage increase will cost the .district about fl!B,000, trusie.. said they would need to bold Ute line In olhlr budget areu. . AIJo covered by Wednesday night'• · salary agreement were iocreaaed fringe benefits !or dental dependency coverage, . improved health and medico! Insurance, and other programa wblch amount to about '200 per employe. Exclusive of these lrlngo bentflla, to be financed by a health and wetrare tsx. the addlUonal per$0M<r costs for the new school year have been ..um.tlad at $1.S mlllldh. The 11gure 1nc1ud.. mo,. 1or h> crement lncn!aseJi; 181,tlOO for pro- fessional Jmprovimtnt l n c_r 1a1 es; $!(14,000 for ..... ltacbm and clualfled ·employea, and Ute f'/fl,000 for tile D"'1r· approved U per<ent cost ol living In- ~ r • CdMRoute Doubtful Until 1976 Flnanclng problems and engineering difficulties probably will delay con4 structlon of the Corona del Mar (Route 73 ) F'reeway at least until 1976, according to tbe llala HJihway O>mmisslon. Robert W. BoWJes. e1ecutive com· mission secretary, told Costa Mesa City C.W1Cllman Rober! M. Wll.oon by letter this: week it appears doubtful the major projects of the short route eou!d go to bid unlll 19'14-75. A further del.ty of OM to three years is normally encountered between freeway bid advertisements and the time con-' structlon crews are actually ready to begi!J their work. The Corona deJ Mar Freeway, meant to connect with the San Diego Freeway in Costa Mesa and MacArthur Bou1evard in Newport Beach, was originally to have been cnnstructed In !Jm.73. lltrhway crew• are preparing for the freeway al Jbe Intersection of Palliades Road -Bristol Street and the Newport Freeway -Newport Boulevard in Costa Mesa. The project conSlsts of drainage and on-oil ramps for the intersection of the Corona del Mar Freeway with the Newport Freeway. The trouble spot Bowles indicated, lies in the Corona del Mar Freeway's terminus at MacArthur B o u I e v a rd . Quicksand conditions 1n the San Diego Creel: area will require ltteway builders to remove thal unstable folmdation and haul In fresh dlrl for tbe freeway em· bankments. llolo!es aald ti would reqUlre·aboul two years for the dlrl to aellle following the completion of the embankment. "C.nsequenUy, the proposed 19'14-75 fiscal year funding of this second stage shown in the planning program is Ov'erly optimistic, and from a physical stand· point a more realistic date which this project can go to contrac~ would be in 1976 4Jlfess the settlement period can be shortened," he told Wilson. The remaining two projects comist of the actual freeway links between MacArthur Bou1evard and the Newport Freeway intersection and from there to . the San Diego Freeway intersection. Both of tlte!e projects were also scheduled for 197C-75 but Bowles main- tains: that the financial outlook is: not good. -· . . Four Arrive Aft.er Cruise YOKOHAMA (AP) -An American family of four anived at Yokohama from Jtawaii In a a .foot ketch today , completing a 2.~ mile Trans-Pacific cruise In 40 days. Japanese ma r it i mt authorities reported. Tbe MJritime Safety Agency said the 18-too ketch Sea Fever wa!i skippered bf Ron R. Cor. a ::arpenter who lived in Ktiilua, Kona, Hawaii. Also aboard the ketch which lhe 33-year-oJd Cox said he had bought five year ego in San Diego, were his wife Linda, 29, and two daughters, 11-year-old Casey and 8- year-old Jody. Agency officials sa id they were reportedly accompanied by their pet, a Siamese cat. State Unit Now Enforcing Smog Device Decree Cars and trucks registered In Orange and other Southern catUomia counties must have smog conlrol devices. begin4 ning Sept. l, if built between 1955 and 1965, the State Air Resources Board decreed today. The deadline set at the panel's me.eting in Los Angeles applies only to vehicles: weighing 6,001 pounds or less. Vehicles cannot be re-registered upon transfer of ownership -without lhe crankcase controls after that date. State legtslators ordered the in- llallalion earlier but told Jbe Air -.S Board to eslibllsb the lime for the tough smog crackdown. CJI:ange, Los "'1geles, Ventura, Santa Barbara -and llortlona cif:Rlvmlde and San Bernardino counties are the affected areas. Some sections of Riverisde and San Bernardino counties already require that vehicles built before 1965 have sllcb con. lrols. san Francisco and San Diego are.as will get the same edict by year's end, but starting dates were staggered due to need for smog controls in various areas. The Southland metropolitan area ob- viously bas the worst need and urgency for control measures, the board noted in today11 action . Air llesourcel Board membm were also told at today'• meeting that among all motor vehicles, Volkswagens show the worst W!auat emlaslon inefflclenclOI. McGoyern Also Target ' . Of Bremer? From Wirt services BALTIMORE. Md: -F<dcr;I authorities said today they are in· vestigating the possi bility that Arthur lf. Bremer, the man accused of KUMinf do1vn Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace. may a!sO have been stalkin& a second presidential cand idate. Based on itema found in a search or Bremcr's automobile. federal sources said today that it appeared Bremer may also have been following Sen. (;eorge MeCovem (D-S.D. ). An inventory or items found in · Bremer's 1967 blue two-door hardtop In• eluded McGovern campaign literature, as well as Wallace campaign literature. "On that basis,'' 8 source close to tht Investigation said, "we are ~becking out the possibility that Bremer may have been stalking McGovern, too." A BPOkesman at McGovern campaign headquarters In Waablngton nld her in· itial. reaction waf that "anybody could have had canlpaign literature. We blanketed the state with literature, and it might have beeri surprising if be didn't have any." By "the state" 1ht referrtd to Maryland. Wallace was shot Monday at Laurel, Md. Also , his car was found in Maryland. Bremer, 21, of Milwaukee, is being held 1n Baltimore County Jail at Towson, Md.1 under !200,000 bond. Meanwhile, !eaa than tbrte da)'I after being critically wounded and parllaJb' paralyzed by Jlllllbots, Wallace bu started receivlilg pbylleal I h 1 rap Y. trealmenUI, it waa dlsclooed loday. A 11itemen1 -lsSued by, Holy ci.a Hospital In Silver Spring, where Wallace was rushed alter the assassination at· tempt Monday afternoon In a Laurel sbop. ping center just.outside Washington, gave no details of the therapy -presumably designed to see if he can regain move- ment in bis legs. A key doctor in his case conceded Wednesday the odds are better than 5()..fl() he will not walk again. Tho hosplts! said Wallace registered what it described as ''mild to moderate" temperature rise during the nJabt, and an increase in pulse rate. Hi.I teuiperature hit 102 at one lime -consld<red lalrly high for an adult -but the hosplW said both lncreues wen usual in tbt post. operative period. H.J·. GARRETT f URNrpJRE ~ESSIONAl Open Mon. 2211 HARBOR BLVD. 646-0275 INTWOR DE.slGNW Thu"' le Fri. Ews. COSTA MESA. CAUF. ' .m;Ba G.l.C.C. .......... a.wt • • ' j I \ l I I •J I I '. ;1 J . < . . • • '• ., I ' I h I I . d '.4 I c r' d \ " a d • . I " • 'I I • • 1 ' ' . . . ., .. -.. T~. llqll, Im N DAIL~ PILOT 117' First Graders Learn •Langua ge Arts!t By JAN EDWARDS Of flt• 0•11• Piiot $1111 .. My siudents can read newspapers within one year:· boasted Mary Belviso, lflrst grade teacher at Harper Elemen· :WY School in C:O.ta Mesa. • "Parents are amazed al these kids," ;aid Alfred O'Leary, principal at Harper :khool. Students who began to read in the ' • 9 • • fte1• Fire first grade. are now fourth 1raders, and con!idered the besl readers in the school . A teaching met.hod called the. Open Court System has brought these results. It teaches reading phonetically -wh ere speech sounds are combined a n d transferred to wriUen symbols. Unlike other phonetic rtading methods . Open Court is a complete languag e erts . r r i i Pastor's Flock I Rebuilds Church • • LONG BEACH (AP J -Watching his church burn ty;o days before last Christmas , the Rev. Verdell Calhoun "said be felt I i k e "tomorrow had been canceled ." But no1v, after much hard : \1·ork, both his church and his faith have · been restored. < . .;. \Vhen the Rev. Calhoun learned that in- : turance covered less than ha lf of the : 4.50,000 damage to St. Luke 's Bapt ist ·;"Church. he started a ''do it yourself" ·:rebuilding program. : :·· First step was to give up a parl·tlme . : )ob as a cement finisher so that he could : : devote 15 to 16 hours a day to the ·chu rch's reconstruction. ~ Nex t was to enlist the hel p of his con· : sregation . Ch~rch members assisted vdth • the construction, cooked meals for the : workers, and sponsored banquets to raise money. Companies including J, B. Electric and . Flock Construi;tion donated supplies. the Rev . Calhoun said, and many of their workers volunteered their time. Interior \l.·alls, flooring , and furnishings have been replaced. "The church looks better th11.n ever,'' the cj~rgyman says. ··The lighting is im· pfoved. Everything.is more modern.'' While investigators suspect arson as the cause of the fire , the Rev. Calhoun :worker Reported .Caught Tapping .Water From City . A Covina weed control company is in : hot water today, after a policeman on predawn patrol a[legedty caught an employe tapping a Newport Beach city · water hydrant to fill a 1,000 gallon poison- . pumping truck. The water was to be mixed with weed· killing chemicals for spraying today at two local jobs contracted by Industrial Weed Control. police said. . Questioning of the 21-year~ld truck · driver detained on Balboa Boulevard at : 4lst Slreet led lo his release, pending · possible petty theft charges against the company. "His boss told him to do it. He was really surprised. He didn 't know he was do ing anything wrong." said Officer Vince Battit. He theorized the threat of prosecution v•ould persuade the firm to pay its bill for about 250 gallons of municipal water at a dime or so a gallon. said. "l could never let myself believe lt \\•as intentional. If I ever found out 50Rlf:; one did start the fire , I'd have to pray for him." During the church's reconstruction, services were held in another building on I he property which had been used for Sunday school classe!. Room partitions \\'ere removed , and about 350 persons crowded each week into the educational building which was designed to hold a max imum of 200, the Rev. Calhoun said. ''A lot of the people had to stand, but no one complained," he added . "Now, I feel closer to my congregation than I have in the four years I've been clergyman here. It 's as though we've all grown up together." Bear Elemeniary Kids Beat Chess Teams in Meets ·Fifth and !iixth graders at Bear Street School in Costa Mesa began learning chess in December as a supplement to thei r studies of mat hematics. On Mon4 day, they won their third tournament against high school and middle schoo l students. Their latest .victory was over the chess club a't Newport Harbor High School by a score of 18 to 10. Teams from Davis Middle School, Rea ~tiddle School have been defeated, and the Heinz Kaiser team will be challenged next Monday. Gary Springer, Bear Street teacher and chess coach, bl eroud of his team's first victory over a high school. ··1 think it's great. I thought we could lake them when \\'e went over, and l thought they'd be surprised," he said. Rodney Rodrigues. David Dawe and Randy Williams, the top three Bear School players, have never been defeated, according to Springer. Other team members, in order of team st.anding, are: John Mccarter. Bud King, Jim Vandorpool, Ponathon Berg, Shari McCombs, Tammie Pryor and Jeff Andre\\'S. To join the club. a student must beat 1 current member of the team. According to Springer, almost every student at the fifth and sixth grade level-is able to play chess. ' The team challenges any chess club, regardless or age. Clittabing the Ladder of Success The Cost! Mesa Fire Department got som~ brand new brass last week through a oew round of promotions. Taking their positions on the ladder In order of rank are (top to bottom) B1ttalion Chief Gary Golson. Capt. Larry LaFresnayc, Capt. Al Feurstein , Capt. Jim Richey. Engineer Chr is Reed, and Engineer Ronald McMinimy. . . " pro&r&m that e1poses e h i 1 d re n simultaneously to reading. spelling. wriling composition and g:ivn them the freedom to e1plore them. "This sytitem is the best of au ·types of reading methods," claims O'Lea ry . "The foUrth graders .are much far ther ahead than anyone could expect them to bt us-lna: any olher system." Open ·co urt has helped produce •n above-average reading Je,•el for the school as a whole since It was first used the.r:e in all pr11fi 1ry grades four yea'rs ago. Classes are ne\'er larger than 25 students . and !he teachers at Harpe r have an average of 12 years teaching ex· perience. All kind~rgarten through third grade teacher s have voluntartly attended workshops on Operi Court lo improve the ir skills and incorporate the system. Upon enrolling at the school. all children read for O'Leary or a teacher to determine clus p 1 ace men t . Kin· dergartene rs be-gin by copying the letter sym,Pols wr11ten by th eir teachers. They have recently been copying complicated DAILY Pll.Of $ .. ff Pkl• Hats Off To P olil!e1nen J Costa Mesa Police Chief Roger fl. Neth and Con- stable Brian Norman compare lawmen's accessorjes such as y.ihistles and headgear on each side of the Atlantic. Stationed at London's Gatwick Airport, the bobby is with the British Airports Authority Constabulary. Visiting America a third time on vacation, Constable Norman took a busman 's holi- day to visit local police headquarters. Corona del Mar Cleanup Planned Over Weekend The Corona del Mar Chamber of Com· merce is sponsoring a cleanup campaign this weekend in an effort to replace. Utter with nowers. officials said. Newport Beach city trucks will roam the streets of Corona del Mar picking up debris and junk left by residents for disposal. - Chamber officials said the crews will pick up almost any type of junk except dirt or building materials. The only limit Is that the discard be accessible to lhe trucks: and easy to llandle. The Chamber recommtnds that cut· tings be tied in bundles not over four feet long. papers be tied in bales and all debris be put in containers for easy handling. ' All discards should be put out for col· lection no later than noon Saturday. There will only be one pickup run. Trash will not be collected in the Lusk Homes of Harbor View Hills, the chamber said. 25th Birthday. Of Boys Club Baseball Feted The 25th birthday of the Harbor 'lrea Baseball Program will be celebrated June .17 with a player reunion and steak feed. Tables will be set up at the Harbor Area Boys Club, 594 Center St., Costa Mesa. at 5 p.m. where former players and their coaches can reminisce with each other about their era of the baseball program. Baseball Commissioner Rod McMillian has invited all past particlpantJ in the program to join in the event. On the menu are steaks . beans . tossed sal11.d, garlic bread and dessert. Tickets are $3, obtainable by calling 642·9892. McMillian started the program in 1947 with onl y two teams. Today there are 354 teams and a total of 3,862 players. Assisted by Theodore Robins and Paul Palmer, McMlllian built th' program into one of the major ~}Area summer activities during the past'fs years. Today, the program is co-sponsored by the cities of Costa Mesa and Newport Beach and the Harbor Area Boys Club. Water Employes Hold Breakfast The employe assoc iation of the Costa Mesa County Water District -will hol~ its annual pancake breakfast from 7 a.m. to noon r.tay 21 at tht downtown Costa Mesa Park. On the menu are pancakes . sausagt. orange juic~. coffee and milk . Prizes will al5o be given away. 'Grandma Mac' Expects Much From Sclwol Kids IMPERIAL BEACH (AP l -Grandma Mac is finishing her second year or leaching v.·ithoul pay to the only "grandchildren " she ever k n e w , preschool children from poor and broken homes. At 72, she's having more fun than when she started teaching at the age of 18, she says. "! may be grandma Mac to them, but I'm slrict," Gladys McCrary insistJ. "I don 't mean J discipline them a lot, but J hold them high. I think you have to hold children high and expect a Jot from them, Mesa Employers Vie,v Occupation Training Film HO\Y can Costa ri1esa employers participate in occupational training and career preparation? A new film developed by the Orange Coast C.ommunity Cqllege Dist rict's tele-- communications cen!er \\•ill te ll at noon, May 25, during the Costa Mesa Official Greeters Luncheon. Sponsored by the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce, the luncheon will be held at the Coral Reef Restaurant, 2645 Harbor Blvd . Tickets. pri ced at SJ.25. may be reserv· ed by writing to the Chamber, 53.1 W. 19th SI.. or by phoning 646·0535. Nick Zicner . Chamber of Commerce manager, said the pro gram was prepared to show how employers can become in· volved in the educatio nal system and how to derive someth ing from its benefits. \ • t No Park Here and let them know what you e1pect from th<!m.'' Att ention ""as focused on Mrs. ~tcCrary as ··The Week of the Young Child'' dedicated to preschoolers was observed at the Myrtle S. Finney School here where she is a volunteer. In a rural school near Muskegon, Mich .. she took up teaching in 1918 but finds "kids are the same today as when J started teaching. Kids always respond. They aren't any smarter today than they v.•ere. They do have a lot more to work wit h today. But it tickles me to see bow teachers today complain." The white-haired widow rides a packed school bus from the trailer park w~re she lives and sits in a rocking cha ir as she reads to youngsters 3 to S years old. She sings with them, shows how to work puzzles and do fi ngerpainting. She tells them to chew quietly with their mouths closed, to say "please" and "thank you ." Mrs. McCrary's children call her grandma respectfully and act good around her, says a teacher, Constance At taway, The respect a child gets Is important, Mrs. Mccrary adds. ''That's where we·re failing our kids today. We don't hold them high enough." Coed El ected Joyce Zlkas of 1207 V.1e.st Bay Ave., Nev.•port Beach has been elected &ecre- tary of the President's Circle. a support group assisting the academic programs of the University of Southern Califo"!ia. a1mes of prehistori.C dinosaurs and made invit.at fOns to open house for their parenl.5. Teachers feel they become better ac- quainted with the children as individu1!1 and at the same time expose and in- troduce them to variocs uses and reaaons for reading and writing . Children "often cannol speak in oom· plete sentences.'' claims O'Leary, and these methods encourage them to collect their · thoughts and exptess them.selves. First graders first learn the 43 basic soun& and their meanings and spellings. Then. by orall y pronouncing the printed worrts and understanding them. they I.fl reading. ··It is a mull1-sensory approach where earh child is trapped into learning." uid Sist er Lucille Bernier, coordinator of Mar) mount College's reading center and co--aulhor of Open Court. If a teacher explains the tools of reading in !he presence of a child . she rtasons. !he child wiU learn his way and at his O\l'n speed . r.trs. Belviso dictates words to her first-grade class and uses a workbook so the "Students will learn the many sound' and how they blend to make words. By tracing letter symbols in the workbook. pronou ncing th.em repeatedly. and using llnf.!u1stic cards which are permanently tacked to the classroom wall . students build a vocabulary. One card repre!ents one sound ; it may be one letter or a combinaUon of letters. The sound is ""ritten in letter symbols on the ca rd and re lates lo an illustration agove it. For ex ample. a card shows a child lick· in,11: an ice cream cone. The sound written belO\\' is lhP Jetter ··m." ·Students the ref ore see that figure and relate it to a good-lasting_, cool ice cream cone . When they have learned th is associa- tion, they will be identifying the letter •·m" and its sound . And . when they learn the letter shape and sound of "e," relating to the sound of an .ambulance or fire-engine siren, they will be able to identify the word "me" as a combination of the sound!i. Other words can be formed by learning two more sounds. •·a'.' and "t'.': meat, team and mate. . By progressing in this manner. children build a large vocabulary. Mrs. Belviso. safs "They can pick up almost any word." And t~e bigger the words are, the more !hey want to learn them . Tea chers using this system musl be knowledgeable about the sy.stem, patient and determined, she claims. "Teaching read ing is a scientific achivement." She follow-s the Open Court manual very closely, varying it occasionally when she thinks it can be improved. It also covers history. science and literature. Students can learn Independently during a daily workshop period. In Mrs. Bel\'iso 's classroom are many small boxes 'which contain objecta or informatio n about flowers. an i m 1I1, food, mathematic&. etc . Guided by the teacher. they can use an encyclopedia to. find out more 1bout whatever subject they selected. This rreedom lead& to an enrich.ment of each Child 's knowledge but also to question. use reference material and practk:e reading. School District Accepts Sears Building Gift The Newport-Mesa Unilied School District board has accepted a building valued at $.25,000 as a gift from Se1r11 Roebuck and Co. The appro1imately 17,lM squ1re foot structure will be used as a maintenance and operations bulldipg on dist rict prop- erty al 915 Baker St. in Costa Mesa. Erected in 196.1. the building is in good Q condition. It will be dismantled and removed from its present location at Goldenwest and Edwards Streets in Westminster to Costa ~1esa during the month of June. Site preparation bids are now being accepted and are due June I. The future headquarters for all grounds and building maintenance services. will be reassembled by lhe end of September, acr:ording to Raymond R. Schnierer, di strict business manager. "If we had to construct a new building, it would cost us about 198,000." he said. The district will pay approximately $55,000 to dismantle and erect tbe building. • • ~ 1 ..,, D.\11.Y PILOT lltff I' .... Tickets for the a 11 · y ou ·ca n·e at breakfast will be 1vallable at the park for $1 1dults. and 50 cent• for children. Proceeds from the benefit will be 1p- plled toward youth activities 1n the Harbor Area • Newport Beach city councilmen have thrown out plans for $8.400 worth of Improvements at the West Jetty View Park near the Wedge on the Bal· boa Peninsula. Improvement.• were planned by city's Parks, Beaches and Recreation Department, but coun cil men bowed to wishes of Penins11la Point Association "'hich said neighboring homeowners don't wa nt the park improved . Councilmen ul4 the money will be used for park lmprO\'ellll!lta elsewhere In the city. • \ D.111.Y 1'11.DT. ' ' • • • ' • " • • I • • • • ' • • War A11911isl1 A wounded South Viel· namese soldier shows agony during recent r etreat from Commu- ni st troops down High· way One. 'Lights On' Campaign Effective c1111111an Sdt11ee MMllw Senrlc• WASHmGTON -There is mounting evidence t h a t motorists who turn on their headlights while driving in the _daylight drive more sa!ely . The manager of the National Safety Coun cil's motor - transportation department. John Flaherty, says, "Many ·transportation companies have had favorable experi ences with 'lights on' campaigns." REASONS GIVEN for the effectiveness of the daylight use of headlights include; -Lights increase t h e visibility of a vehicle and Uius command the attention of other motorists. -Lights on in daylight re- mind a driver of the need to operate safely. They in cf ease his safety awareness. -The driver traveling with . his lights on joins a select group of highway motorists. This association makes him more conscious of h i s participation in a hghway· safety effort. (If eve ryone turned on his lights, this reason could not be valid .) Flaherty says the council takes no official posi tion in isupport of the "lights on'' Idea. "The jury is still ou t" as far as sufficient evidence is con- cerned, he says. However, such evidence is slowly being compiled . "Lights on" campaigns, in one fonn or another, have been common in recent years. A RESE ARCH REPORT, i•Automobile Running Lights ," published in 1964 by Merrill J. Allen and James R. Clark of Indiana University, cites a "lights on" test in 1962 by the Greyhound Corporation . It resulted in the number or ac- cidents decreasing by 7 to 24 percent. Greyhound Corporation's safely director. Walter \Veiss, mentions that "a more recent study of accidents showed no appreciable difference" for buses operating with lights on . "\Ve are continuing our (lights on ) prog ram because it doe s make !he buses more visible." he added . In four separate months of testing durin g I 9 7 0 -7 1 , Consolidated Freightways' en. tire fleet of 2.000 trucks operated with li ghts on 24 hours a day. 'fhe fleet ex- perienced a 24 to 49 percent reduction in accident fre- quency during every month that daytime lights were used. $255 Law Grant Wo11 Gerald T. Huntley, 33, or Tustin, has been named the first Bay Area R e v i e w scholarship winner at Western State Unlversity College or •Law. '!be $225 scholarship in· eludes the coune lee and all 1111leriall. HunUey, o/ 1171 Stooehenge Drive, received his Bachelor of Science degree in electrical engineering from the Universl- 111 of SOutbern caurornla . Given Honors Dovld 8. Porter, l2tD Ty1> dall Drive; Bunling!on Beach, bu boon llllllled to tlit sani. AlUI OoUege ._ roll for the ,.. .... • ~. Mir llJ, 1972 . = FUlfl WB CHAI Wide, colorful .wt1ve11 vinyl webs in 6x4x4 pat- tern. Orange-yellow or blue-lime green. #23206 GUI REC. PllCE Ul 311 WEB CIWIE l.llllGE long 011 comfart, and 1 price that can't be beat. 6~15 webbing, adjustable aluminum lrame. # 11 20 OUR REG. PRICE l.ll 511 WEB MD PVC CHAIR Wide vinyl webs and PVC co1d are interwoven for bnght color & comfort. raiding frame. #2934l OUR REG. PRICE 11.!l a•• Multi-color wide & •- row webs in 7i6x4 pat. tern. 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Superb support and comfort in this low price.package. 3088 BRISTOL ST • SAN DIEGO FREEWAY AT BRISTOL 1r.· ~~ ~~· _ ..... •Ill•~ Cll'1ftllS I • • 1 I \ '7 I '7 , Orange Coa·st -Today's Fin•~ -. N.Y. Stoeks . voe. ~s. NO. :i 39, J SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MAY 18, 1972 c 'TEN CENTS Orange Coast College Employes Get Pay Hike Nearly 900 employes at Golden West and Orange Coast College have been granted across-the-board wage increases of 5.5 percent. The zalary hike, which covers both teachers .net classified employes, was approved by unanlmoua vote of the 0Mnge Coast Community Co 11 e g e DWrict board of trustees Wednesday night. Goal,s Unit Proposed For Mesa A ctizens committee may be appolnl<d thi> l!lllll1llU to establish a brood nnp of goals for Costa Mesa, Clty Manager Fred Sorsabal revealed today. 'l11e committee, he hopes, will be ap- pointed by Mayor Jack Hammett before Aug. 1 and will focus on improving the quality of life in the lS.year~ld city. Sorsabal announced the tentative com· mittee plans during a breakfast meeting of Costa Mesa -CHART which featured Mrs. Helen Hollingsworth, former chairman of the City Charter Study Com- mittee, as guest speaker, Mn. Hollingsworth noted that her com- mittee had strongly urged formaUon of a goals commission last October but that the city council did not follow the recom- mendation. "We don't have any goals In Costa Mesa that we're aware of," Mrs. Boll· ingsworth observed. In response to dine! questionini by . CHART memben about tbe auu..U.O. Sorsabal !8ld be hoped tbe recommenda· tion would be follewed with action by mid.summer. "There are aome lldnp we don, like to talk about In Costa Ilea," aald Sorsahll who stressed knf..lncome b o u 11 a ·1 , cultural improvement, poverty aod trll!l!]lOrtation aa the clll''• major .,... of need. Sorsabal said the committee abauld ad- dress Itself to tearing down bmlen which prevent dllfmnt types of people from comiog into town aod opkn methods by which Costa Mesa will be a (See GOALS, P11e !) Electrical Wire Stolen From Van Raiders who apparently knew of ita: delivery cut through the roof of a storage van at a Costa Mesa construction site Wednesday, burglarizing $3,500 worth of electrical wiring. The 100 cartons and two large rolls of copper wire taken from McGrew Elec· tr1cal Contractors' walk·in facWty parked at 3300 Smalley st., weighed more than a ton. Job superintendent Michael L. Tate, of 25041 Rudolph Clrcle, El Toro, told Of. ficers Chuck Duvall a large truck would have been required to haul it away. Footprint. of at least two peraom ...,.. found around aod on top of the p1rked van, which had a two by two foot bole cut In It. metal roof. Wiring for a resldenUal developmcat under construction at that location wu delivered two days before and in- vestigators suspect the burglars 1metr It was due. Orange Weadaer Those clouds tbould clear by mid-morning Friday leaving the weekend to sunny skies and warm temperaturea. Highs •I the beaches 62 rising to 72 inland. Lows 43-51. INSIDE TOD~ Y Her vitol stotllli<s ar1 4!·21· 4 f -f"'· nol inclltr. Shor.,. Harve11 is tht bronzed btautv lhat adonu billboards coast to coast in the •"!llml oil ocl. Silt admit& that ft um startling to 1ec Mrsclf in the loratr aitt and teU. what billboard riqri fame ha& bro1LQht htr. St• itoru Paa• 10. .. For lhe district's 378 Instructors the new 1972·73 agreement means an in- crease on the lowest step of the salary schedule from 18,765 to $9,247. The highest step of the scale has been mo\•ed from 117,571 to $18,537. 1be average Orange Coast Community College District teacher currently earns $14,200 per year. ae will fmd his pay in- creued. to $14,981. a raise of about f181. . . . Classified employes such as janitors, secretaries and clerical workers do not have the same wage structure as the in· structors and will be given a nat 5.5 per· cent increase over their current earnings. Board me~rs exhibited considerable concern over the $500,000 cut in un- distributed reserves the new salary pact demands. The current re.serve fund of 1900,000 Is expected to shrink to aboot DAIL V PILOT S'9ff ...... AU In The Family Mrs. Colleen Pacino and her 15·month·old <laughter Maureen are all set w w sign up for the 27th annual Fish Fry baby contest The !Jons Club event will be held June 4 at Costa Mesa Park. Registra· lion for the baby contest continues through May 31 at Cal's Camera Shop, 1780 Newport Blvd, Four years ago Mrs. Pacino's other daugh· ter, Kelley, was a finalist in the competition. Price Commission Eyes Rent Guides for Tenants WASHINGTON (AP) -The Price Commission today announced a change in guidelines that could bring rent reduc- tions for many tenants who recently signed one-year te&se renewals increasing their rent more than 8 percenl. Any tenant who had been on a lease of longer than one year, and who was allow· ed to renew for only a single year, will be gt-..n a chance to renegotiate the terms of that lease If the incr<ase topped 8 per· C<Dt. In such .cases landlords must, starting Bakers' Strike Ends-Day-old Bread Mon.Mys Some Orange Coast llousewlves doing the grocery shopping on Monday will be buying day-old bread lrom now on afler oetUemont.Wedneaday of a 24-bour strike by 1,000 Southern Clllfornta bakers. Bakers and Conlectlonary Workers Union Local YI In Los Angeles ended the walkout after Interstate Bakeries agreed t<> give the tmployes both Saturday and tlunday off. Pre91ouaiy. bakm w.,.. given &mday 1od Tuo>day off so _that bfead and pastries could be delivered fttlh to supermark•ta. lntmtate Bakeries makes product! aold under Dolly Madison, Weber, Four.S and Blue staJ labels . for the month of July, give the tenant either of two options: -A one-year lease Increasing rent 8 percent. No refunds will be required for past rent charged over 8 percent, but from July on it must be trimmed back to that level. -A longer lease covering the same period as the old lease, at whatever rent increase the landlord was able to jlLSlify under the Price Commission's rent regulations. The two options, one year at 8 percent or a longer lease at more than 8 percent, must also be given for tenants on longer· than-one-year leases expiring in tbe future. Jim Tanck:, executive director or the Rent Advisory Board, which advises the Price Commission on rent matters. estimated 5 percent of the naUon's rental units have leases Of longer-than one year. Price Commission regulations aJlow landl ords to get big rent Increases in cases where rents have been held steady by long-term leases while prices ~ creased. But Tanck said many landlords have been tak.Jng advantage "of the large rent Increases without giving their tenants the protection of the long-term· leasts they provlou.sly enjoyed. Landlords wUl be "'!111"'1 lo notify al· fecled tenant. of their rights. 'l11e Price Comminlon noted that even the 8 percent ceiling rent Isn't automatic. 1t still must be justified under present ngulatlons belore landlords may charge that much. $400,000. 'The }oss may be offset by unetpected Increases in the taxable wealth (assessed valuation) of the di.strict. Financial t:x~ perts have predicted an lncrease of about six percent, but there are indications that their predictions may be on the con- servati ve side, dlsltlct officials said. The county assessor's office, for ex· ample, predicts an ~ valuation in- crease of about 10 percent QI' 11 percent. Liner Since the 5.5 percent wage increase will cost the di.strict about $768,000, trustees said they would need to bold the line in other budget areas. Also covered by Wednesday night's salary agreement were increased fringe benefits for dental dependency covt'rage, improved health and medical insurance, and -other programs which amount to about $20I;) per employe. Exclusive of these lringe benefits, to be rmanced by a health and weUart tu, the additional persormet cost! for the new school year have been estimated at fl.5 million. The figure includes $270,000 for In· crement increase5; $68,000 for pro- fessional improvement i n c re a 1 e 1 : $404,000 for new teachers and · clas.sified employes, and the $768,000 for the newly· approved 5.5 percent ~t of living in· creases. Threatened Bombs Reported Planted on Vessel LONDON (UPI) -The Cunard Line oaid today It had been informed that bombs were placed aboard the 65,1163-ton lu:rury liner Queen Elilabeth Il aod told that it would be blown up in mid-Atlantic with 2,250 persons aboard unless $350,000 ransom were paid. 'I1le Royal Air Force new · four frogmen-bomb dlsposal experts to the liner north of the Azores Islands and said they were parachuted into tha aea near the .ship to join crewmen in trying to Smog Devices Now Required In Counties Cars and trucko r•~:i~K In :~1 ind other Southern' •·'-id must haye mnog oonlrol d~I~ begin- lllng sept. I, l! oollt betw.en 1955 ancf. 1965, the State Air Reaoun:ea lloard decrted today. The deadline set at the puel'• meetll\I In Los Aogeles applies onl,y to Yehle!~ weighing 6,001 pounds or lw. Vehicles cannot be re-registered upon transfer of ownenbip' without the crankcase controls alter that date. State legislators ordered the in~ stallation earlier but told the Air Resources Board to establish \be time for the tough smog crackdown. Orange, Los Angeles, \•entun:, Santa Barbara and portions of Riverside and San Bernardino counties are the affected areas. Some sections of Riverisde and San Bernardino counties already require that vehicles built before 1965 have such con- trols. San Francisco and San Diego areas will get the same edict by year's end, but starting dates were staggered due to need for smog controls in various area!. The Southland metropolitan area ob- viously bas the worst need and urgency for control measures, the board noted ln today's action. • Air Resources Board member! were also told at today's meeting that among all motor vehicles, Volkswagens show the worst exhaust emission inefficiencies. Musical Groups From Mesa High To Give Concert Top musical groups from Costa Mesa High School will display their talents in a spring concert Sunday at 4 o'clock in the Orange Coast College Auditorium. Choral director Edward Brahams will lead the 50-voice concert choir b1 some of the music that earned superior ratings in the recent San Jose State C h o r a 1 Festival. The orcbeslra, concert hand and stage band will perform under the batons of in- strumental music director Earl Trechel and as:iistant conductor David Gutel. Bob Trotechaud wUl be featured u alto sax soloW.wlth the concert baRd and the iitage band, recent Winoet" of honors in the southwestern Jazs Fesllval at San Diego, will be heard half 1 dozen special arraogements, Indudh1g Tom Kubis' Heedle F1at, named beot original jau composition at the 1972 OCC Jm Ensemble Festival. Ticket., available ot the door, are IL for adult.. Children wlll be admitted lrtt. Actor Succumbs HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Steve lnhot, 37, motlon-plttur'e actor, writer and director. died &mday while attending a fllm festival at Cannes, France. find the bombs. The QE2 left New York Mooday for Cberbourg and Southampton with 1,350 passengers and 900 crewmen aboard, and a Cunard spokesman in New ,York in- dicated the extortion~!> might also be aboerd, -setking the $350,000 ransom in $10 and $20 denominations. In Washington, Pentagon sources said reports of the bomb threat had been known 'for ''several days" and that searches of the ship found nothing. The frogmen flown In today were to check the hull of the ship for. any ex~ plosives attached under water. Richard Patton, president of CUnarcl Lines, said in New York the first bomb threat was received Wedne9day afternoon by Charles Dickson, Cunard vice presi- dent of finance and adminlstratlon, saying there were bombs aboard the ship. He said New York police, Britain'• Scotland Yard· and the British Ministry of (See LINER, Pa1e Z) AT AGE 'S, KIMI CHER~Y IS swiMM1NG''vEie'Rl'N ·- Sh•'• Youngest Mombor of Cos!a MIN Cllpfl"rs T11m Swim Get • ID Clipper Aquatic Team Open to All By RUDI NIEDZIELESKI ot 1ttt DlllY Pl .. I Stiff Every afternoon the flailing anns and Jegs of 70 hunlan windmills whip the glassy smooth surface of the Costa Mesa High School pool into while froth. It's workout time for the Clippers, an enthusiastic young swim team of boys and girls from the Oraoge Coast. Not an ellte group by any means, the Costa Mesa Reaeation Department· sopnsored team is open to anyone. U you pay $10, show up, you're on. But performance counts, according to Head O>ach Herb Williamson, "even though winning in competition is not the main thing." "We stress persona! improvement," he says. 'Nie teach them to do the best they can and this includes good starts. going all the way to the wall when making a tum, and improving their turns ." Membership in the Clippers, founded nine years ago by former Costa MtSll High School swimming and water polo coach Dooiild Utter,· is open to anyone who can swim to. the far end of the pool. Somttim<S tt takes Just o Uny little girl like Kimi Cherry of 3138 Cork Lane, Costa Mesa to get the job done. She joined the Clipper• a year ago at the age of four. Her mother took Kimi Into the waler when she was only -~ old and by the time ahe waa two-and-a·hall, she ..... Clllllpltlely pool-al•. "She waoted to beioq( to the Clippers 1nd she was only S when sbe started her WU"kouta with them." sald ~trs. Steven Cherry. 11We're not trying to {Ql"Ot her in- to compeUtlon. She llkes It,. and that's Whal'a lmPQrtant." Under the tutelage of WUllamson one! • . • coaches Debbie Pinkerton, Joyce Dawson and Jay Spontale, Kimi has already cap. tured two firsts atxl several seconds and thirds in freestyle, backstroke and breaststroke races. Williamson believes In putting any of his charges into competition who shows a desire. The Clippers gene.rally contest two meets per month during May-August and about one a month during the off· sealOfl "to keep them in shape." Though the membership rolls are pret· ty much ruled, be says, "we need to have more kids involved" and wHl try to fiad a spol for. any interested youngster up to the age of 18. Beginnen are taught the backstroke, breaststroke, freestyle and buUerfly aM are required to work out for one hour each day. For intermediate end advanced. students the workouU are extended to one-and-a-half-hours. Competition should be a litUe earlier thls ~ar since the ctippen h a v e asked to be dropped down to the "B" divisk>n o( the Orang·e Coa"lt Swim Conference for the first thne in their history. "The competllion was a bit stlif,'' seid Williamson. ·~~ the kkls sbotild have a belier opportumty to do well in the "B" dlvl.slon." 'l11e Clippers, although spomored by Costa Mesa, draw their members from the clUes of Costa Mesa, Newport lleacb and Irvine. In AAU meets they .,. kmwn as the NIMA (Newport,.I~ Mesa Aquatic) Clippers. Anyone Who Is inlerested in JoinJnA their dally iplashlng routines 111"1 call the Recr .. llon Deperlment, -w workout Umea and application dela!)•· • " DAILY ~ILOT c ThUl1dlJ', Mt.Y 18, 1972 Westminster Case Contempt Rap Hits Top Lawman By TOM BARLEY Ot tM Oii!., ,.llof Sl•tf Westminster Police Chief Walter Scoft was found in contempt of co_urt Wed· nesday for 'his failure to return sex· crlented flllllJ and photographs to Frederick and Kay Loar of Huntington Beach. But Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert L. Corfman suspended the sentence and any further action by the Loars' Jaw}'ers to enable Scott to file an appeal against the ruling. • He also made it clear he was satisfied that Chlef Scott deliberately disobeyed a court order in which Judge Corf1nan directed \\'estminster pollce to return %0,500 movies and 30,000 photographs seized ~1ay 25, 1971, from the Loars' ''Pele Voss Showcase" warehouse at 15144 Golden West Circle, We stminster. Loar, 34, and his wife, 31, both or 4061 llumboldt St .. had been cleared by a jury in Judge Corfman's courtroom the day before !he order was issued on cha rges of conspiracy to distribute o b s c e n e material. Judge Corfman made jt clear that he will welcome an appellate ruling on a legal issue that appears to be without precedent. * * * Movie Firm s The panel view 22 movies and a selection of photographs in the three- week trial that produced their acquittal decision. But Scott Immediately refused to return materials valued by the Loars at $500,000 and which they wanted to restore to their $15,000.a-day bu siness in sexually oriented literature. He again condemned the materials as "hard core pornography" and ordered them held in the vaults of the police department. Bmv Wows a,id Ows Score Porno Curb Package SACRAMENTO (AP) -A legislative package aimed at curbing p<>rnography has come Wlder attack from the movie industry, which says it would ban show· jngs of Oscar·wirming films. The five-bill package by state Sen. John Hanner would mean that fllma such as "Patton" and "The French O>rmectlon" could not be shown becaU11e under the bills they would be considered obscene, _uid Barbara Scot~ representing !be Mo-- tion Picture Association of America. "You wouldn't expect Patton not to use four-letter words," she told the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday. "The Last Picture .~iJ9w," "Love Story" and ""Diary of a Mad Housewife" also would be forbidden, she added. Harmer said his bills would only forbid such pictures for children. Adults could sWl view them in a closed· theater, he said. Committee members postponed a vote until Delt week. E'romPegel GOALS .•. better place to live. The city manager pointed out that Co8\.a Meta bas a RnlOr cltlztna club of more than 200 members but that transportallon difficulties prevent many from attending. "The club meets at the Orange ColDllY Fairgrounds but there la no way they can get from the Bethel Towen to the fairgrounds," he aaid. Poverty, according to Sombal, la another taboo subject whloh baa been in- frequently admilted by Colla Mesans. Yet the 1966 federal cell!UJ not only disclosed that there were impovrisbed families in Costa Mesa but also pin· pointed O;le areas in which they live. The committee, he hoped, would draw its membership .from a broad base of cltizena including e.xlsting committees, former committees, ho m e o w n e r s , businessmen and youth. "We want both sides on the committee, both positive and negative," be said. 2 Die in Baj a Cr ash TIJUANA. Me~ico (AP ) -Two northern California men on a fishing vacation in Baja California were killed Sunday in the crash of their slngle-engine plane 200 miles south of here, Mexican authorities report. Mexican officials sai d \Vednesday the bodies of James Barker, 26, of San Francisco, and Michael Ray Walker .. 25, or Oakland , were found Tues. day on a deserted beach. OIANGI COAST tM Judge Corfman used the comments made by Scott to Orange County newsmen in a summation that found the police chief "clearly guilty of a willful violation of my court order. "It's strange to me," he said, "that Chief Scott can clearly remember everything the District Attorney's Office saJd to him but can not now recall what he said at the time to U!.e members of the press." E'romPegel LINER ... Defense were brought into the case after the flrs t telephone call and that there were indications the persons Involved in the extortion plot are still aboard. Presumably they would try to leave the ship in the Atlantic and make it to the Azores or some other ship, but this \.\'as not made clear. Patton 1aid, "we have bten in constant contact with the ship," and its captain, William Law. He said the anonymous caller said he would call back today with a deadline for payment but had not done 80 by af- ternoon. He said the caller offered to tell where the bombs were hidden aboard the shJp if the ransom were paid. Patton said it was possible the QE? would put into the Azore!!, the closest port of call, rather than risk harm to the passengers. It is due in Olerbourg Fri· day. Pentagon aourct.s said bomb search operations had been turned over to the British because of the area involved was the responsibility of Great Britain. The RAF said in London the four frogmen read:Jed the liner early thi1 e.fternoon. Cunard Line officers in London ad· mitted they might be the victim of a giant hou: but said under t h e circumstances Md because of the poss!· ble risk to the $71 million ship and passengers they had no choice ezcept to pay the r81150m as directed. Among the passengers were Leopold Stokowskl, the world-renowned coir ductor, and George Kelly or Philadelphia, uncle of Princess Grace of Monaco, the fonner Grace Kelly of movie fame. Victor Matthews, managing director or Cunard, told interviewers In London the caller asked for $350,000 "which is an in· significant awn, really, considering what's involved ." Matthews said the money would be turned over to the Federal Bureau of Investigation in New York -"We will do whatever they want us to do , we have no alternative but to pay." The New York caller said six bombs were distributed among the liner's 13 decks. He also said two accorriplices were on board to activate the explosives. One is "an ex-convict," he said, "the other is a terminal cancer case." "It may well be a complete con trick." itatthews said. "Bui that is just a ri sk we cannot aflord to take." A long line of kids, moms, pops and pooches queued up at the Orange County Fairgrounds parking lot Wednesday night for a low-cost rabies vaccination clinic offered by the Costa Mesa Rotary Club in cooperation wilh the Orange County Veterinary Medicine Association and the County Health De- partmenl .Drs. George Camaras and Joyce Leedy gave the need.le to no fewer than 1,100 dogs. Kidnaper Frees Wife of Banker ; Given $50,000 BAKERSFIELD (AP) -FBI and sherifrs deputies searched today for a kidnaper who beld a Bakm!ield woman hostage nearly eight bours and lh<n abandoned her in an orange crate after collecting $50,000 ransom. Marjorie Minear, 50, the wife of a Bank of America branch manager in nearly Oildale, managed to free herself from the box left in an orange grOve· Wednesday night 20 miles. north of here, a Kern County' sheriff's deputy said. , She sufCered only a slight cut on her forehead. Mrs. Minear described her kidnaper as white, about six feet tall, well-iroomed with dark hair. She said he forced his awy into her · home Wedoesday alt<rnoon, blindlolaed her and drove her around in a car for several hours before leaving her in the crate. Bob \Vedel, a loan officer at the Oildale branch of Bank of Americ3, k'ld authorities he received a telephone call about 2 p.m. from a man who said he was holding the wife of branth manager Glenn Minear, The caller demanded $50,000 ransom for Mrs. Minear~s return, Wedel said. Because Minear was away at a meeting, authorities said Wedel followed the kidnaper's instructions and delivered lhe money to a field about five miles north of Bakersfield. Wedel received a second call from the kidnaper at 7 p.m. aaying he , had picked up the money and Mrs. Minear could be found in a box near the money drop point. But less than an hour later, authorities said ?.1rs. Minear called from a nearby farmhouse after freeing herself. A sheriff's helicopter circled the spot the ransom was to be paid, but deputies said they did not see the money picked up and believe it was done on foot rather than by car. The helicopter remained at 3,000 feet to avoid detection. Two men are being sought because h1rs. Minear said she heard difCerent voices v.•hile being driven blindfolded, deputies said. School Attacks Eyed SAN DIEGO (AP) -Supt. Thomas Goodman says he's looking into re}Xlrts that gangs bar hallways and prevent use of restrooms at Horace ~1ann Junior High School. "\Vhite girls are in- timidated," parents complained Tuesday night to the board or education. Attacks on students were described. House Ripped by Blast, Flames; 2 Boys IGlled LAKESIDE (AP) -A prtvate home being used as a state care center for children was ripped by an explosion and fire today. Two boys were found dead by firemen who rescued a third in serious condition. The woman o~ator of the home, along with her son and two other youths, escaped. One was hospitalized for smoke inhalation. Cruiser ·Abandoned BOSTON (UPI) -No identification has been made of the people who reportedly abandoned their burning 40-foot cabin cruiser off the islan<i of A1artha's Vineyard Tuesday, the U.S. COast Guard said today. 0.Jtters and helicopters have searched the Atlantic since the report was received from a ham radio operator in Des Moines, Jowa, who said be heard a ''May Day" distress call. A spokesman at El Cajon Valley Hospital, where a boy was listed in merious condition, said the youngster was suffering from burn!: and smoke in- halation. "We didn't have a chance to uve them," said 'Ed'"Hanison, fire Clilef Of Lakeside, a foothillii com m u n i t y northeast of San Diego. Atthough · .sprinkler trocks sprayed water on the burning wood·Crame house, located a mile south of LakesldeJ firemen were forced 'to rig up pumpers to get a steady stream of water. A defective heater was blamed ten· tatively for the blast. David Stark, chief deputy San Diego County coroner, said the children m... eluded orphans and mentally retarded boys. The home, which was destroyed, was being operated for !be Calilornla State Department of Public Welfare's com- munity Services Office. None of the boys assigned to it was related, Stark laid. DAILY PILOT .,,,_ °""'" 0.1t OAIL Y f'ILOT, wttl'I "'9kPI 11 ~blflC'd '1119 Nftn.P""'-ts publllf'IN by tht Ott1'19f Cotd f'llbllshtng CO"llMl'I)', SfM• rite ldll!MI ,,. Pllbll1htd, '~'' thr'D1181t Frl1lly, Tor Colll M .. , Nrwport IMCl'I, t111nt1119tOt1 •~ri/Foun11tn \'•llt')', lqW11 loci\, 11'\111\f'/S.ddltback al'ld Sin Clfmml1/ Sll'I Juen Ctpblr1no. A 1!111111 r1111ontl WallaceSuspectMay Have Been Foil owing McGovern . .a111or1 lt oub1t1hld S.h1rd1)'f, 11111 Suodt)'f,. Tll1 Pf"ll'l(!pal Pllblllhlnil pt1nt II 11 U:1 Wnt l !V Slffft, CDlll Mt~, Ctllfom!1, ti.:H, RoL1rf N. W11d Prftklt'lll Incl Publllllll" J1cli R. Curl1y Viet Prnld..,I 11'111 Glnef'tl Mlnt;er Tltom•• K11•il ldl!Ot Thomtt A. Murpftit11 Mltllllnl IEdltot Ch1rl11 H. Leot R.ich1rd ,, Hill -'-tlllMt Mlntgfnti llllNn _ .. __ lJO W11t l 1y Str11f M•ll1nt A4clr111: ,,0, lo• 1160, 92'2' 0-. OHlc<o From l\'lre Services BALTIMORE, Md. -Fed er a I authorities said today they are in- vestigating the possibility that Arthur H. Bremer, the man accused of gunning do\lin Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace, may also have been stalking a second presidential candidate. . Based on items found in 1 search of Bremer's automobile, federal sources said today that it appeared Bremer may . also have been following Sen. George McGovern (0.S.D.). Wallace was shot Monday at Laurel, l\.fd . Also, his car was found in Maryland. Bremer, 21, of Milwaukee, is being held In Baltimore County Jail at Towson, Md., under $200~ bond. Meanwhile. less than three days after being critically wounded and partially paralyzed by gunshol:!J, Wallace. bas started receiving physical t h e r a p y treatmenta, it was disclosed today. A statement issued by Holy Cross Hospital In Silver Spring, where Wallace was rushed ·alter the assassination •t· tempt Monday afternoon in a Laurel shop-:: ping center just outside Washington, gave CdMRoute Doubtful Until -1976 Financing problems and engineering difficulties probably \vlll delay con· struction of the .corona del Mar {Route 13) Freeway 3t least until, 1976. accordint · to the state lUghway Commission. Robert \V. BoWles, e1ecutive com- mission secretary, I old Costa 1'1esa City Coimcilman Robert M. Wilson by letter this week it appears doubtful the major projects of the short route could go to bid until 1974-75. A further delay or one to three years ts normally encountered between freeway bid advertisements and the time con- struction crews are actually ready to begin their work. The Corona del Mar Freeway, meant lo connect with the San Diego Freeway lo Costa Mesa and fi1acArthur Boulevard In Newpo~t Beach, was originally to hav• been COOISlructed in 1972-73. Highway crews aft preparing for the freeway at the intersection of Palisades Road -Bristol Street and the Newport Freeway -Newport Boulevard in Costa h1esa. The project consists of drainage and OIHlff ramps for the intersecUon of the Corona de! J\tar Frttway with the Newport Freeway. The trouble spot Bowles indicated, lie,, in the Corona del t.!ar Freeway's terminus at MacArthur B o u I t v a rd • Quicksand condilior.s in the San Diego Creek area will require freeway bu.Uder1 to remove that unstable fowxlation and haul In freoh dirt for the freeway am- bankmetrts. ~WI~ aald It woWd require abolli two years for the dlrt to settle following the compleUon of the embankment. "Consequenlly, the proposed 1974-75 fiscal year fllnding of this second !tage- shown in the planning program is overly optlmistic, and from a physical stand, point a more realistic date which. ·thiJ project can go to contract would be in 1976 unless the settlement period can bl shortened," he told Wilson. The remaining two projects consist of the actual freeway links between MacArthur Boulevanl and tbe Newport Freeway intersection and from there to the S&n Diego Frteway intersection. Both of these projectl were also scheduled for 1974-75 but Bowles main- talm that th< financial outlook la not good. ,....,.,, l .. dl: ml N..wt l"ln'llrd ........,,. IMdl: m llw111 A- Hlll'ltll'tl• IHCl'lr 11'7J INCll IOul1<11rd Sell Ci.mtnl1: XS Norttt IEI C.mlftO 1'111 , .. _ 17141 '4"4121 ~ '"''" ..... '4J.1'71 ~t, 1f7l, °"""" Cltll .. 11b!!U.lnt ~. NI MW1 ••rt11, llh111r111oM, •lterlll IN!"' If' ld""111tment1 1'1«11~ """ • ~· wl"-t ...... ,..... m...-fll ~ """"'· An inventpry of Items found in Bremer's 1967 blue two-door hardtop in- cluded McGovern campaign literature, as well as Wallace campaign literature. "On that basiJ!I:;• a source close to the investigation said, "we are checking out the possibility that Bremer may have been stalking ~tcGovern, too.'' A spokesman at McGovern campaign headquarters tn Washington said her Jn- itlal reaction was that "anybody could have had campaign literature. We blanketed the state with llttralure, and tt might have been aurprtslni U he didn't have any." no details of the therapy -presumably designed to see if be can regain move- ment in his legs. A key doctor Jn his case conceded Wednesday the odds are better than~ he will not walk again. H.J.GAR~tff fURN11URE ""*" cla• ,...,,.. ,.,. .r c..11 Mnt, CtlftMlle. ~i.tlM W Clrtltt U.U fl'llnlM\<I IW """ IJ.1J llWl#llyl l't'iUillfY ............ •M ,.....lllY. By "the state" she referred to Maryl:ind. The hospital said Wallace regi stered what it described as ,"mild to moderate" temperature rtae during the olght, and an increase In pulse rate. His teJTtperature hit 102 at one time -r considered fairly high for an adult -but the hoopltal uld both lncrwes were UIUll In the post- operative period • • PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Op1n Mon., Thun. & Fri. Ev11. 2215 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 0.1.c.c. ....... -