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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-05-19 - Orange Coast PilotI • • • I e1 or, Ir ··Bed Light~ Auto Bandit VOL. U. NO. 1-. t ••CTIONS. • PA.911 FRIDAY AffiRNOON, MAY 19, '1972 Strilaes Again in Irvine • ' ·----. ' ' ' • • • • ~ --~ ~ -J ------"" ----=-~ omh Triggers • Ill Pentagon Flood Didn't Know It Novelist Heller f ' • Visits Old Base· By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of tltt DtllJ P'iltl 'lt1n Onetime bombardier and novelist Joseph Heller came bact to the old Santa Ana Army Air Base Thursday, 30 years and three wars later. He didn't recognize the place. Eucalyptus tr~ still line whe.t was the old airfield's main parade ground, where the seeds o( destruction -he flew IO milsions over France and Italy -and th seeds of Heller'• creativity were planted. 'lbe former B-25 crewman began observing the military system and men at war for mati:rlal to writ' "Catch-22," a biting, satirical book, while .stationed here. '.He spoke in the Orange Coast College Forilm, on the old parade ground site. Somebody in the audience mentioned after his 'provocative, two-hour talk sponsored by the OCC student body that Heller frequently referred to the base in bis novel. 11They'xe closed it down, haven't they?" he said. "This is it!" wa.s the reply. Red Light Thief R elieves Irvine Woman of Purse Orange County's "red light bandit" atruck again Thursday night th1s time us· Ing his police car prank to relieve an Irvine woman of her purse and the $110 ln it. ·'Mr!. Ida Ruth Reynertson, 51, of 1"51 Jeffrey Road, told sheriff'• oUicera 1he wa.s on ber way home when she spotted a car with a flashing red light on top in her rear view mirror. Mrs. ReynertBOn , who felt she had committed no offense. said she dutifully pulled over near the intersection of Jef. frey and Barranca Road and waited for the t.icket or the lecture or bot.h. Instead she got a lesson that has sher· riff's officers hunting today for the bandit with a new wrinkle in robbery routines. He grabbed her purse as she reached for It in the rear of the car to produce her driver's license. ran from her auto and drove off at high speed. lnves\lgalo<s believe the bandit Is th~ same perlK>n who pulled exactly the same ttnd of tbtft exacUy one month ago in the Ttlstln area. Movie projectionist Rober! Hllll90n told 4eputlu· at that time that he pulled over to the aide of the road after spotting the flashing red light In his rear view mirror. Hanson said he was relieved of bls bllllold containing $4111 by • -blndil who then ordered blm 1o drive off without looking back. Sberm'a otncera are ,..king the aid ti poUce In aeveral court)' "COmmunltte1 1n ,a bid to looilo the poeudO potroiman. : Heller criticized Preli.dent Nixon's power in guiding Xmerica'a role in Southe..t Asia ware!.,. during a blend o! social and polltJcal comment illustrated by "Catch-22" readinga, plua offhand humor. He began his novel -a moral and rather existential study of a bomber squJdron 1n wartime -1n 1953, during the so-called era of brinkmanship diplomacy. "When there is war in the air, people begin to evolve a mor'1:ity d. their own," Heller told about 400 in the audience. "This is true not just from the left , , , but from the right as well." "Nobody in America is very utisfied with the government we've been get- ting," Heller added, likening himself to his "Catch-22" protagonist Yosserian, also a bombardier. "I'm afraid .. .'' Yos.sarian told his commanding officer. "Lots of men are afraid • • • it 'a nothing to he ashamed of," the major said . "I'm not ashamed. l'm just a!raid,'' Yossarian told him. Heller told the audience he isn't ashamed to aay he's afraid either. "I'm afraid of the war in Asia " Heller said, adding that the power' of any American Pmldent -not ju.<t Richard Nil<on -should be more limited by Congr<>!. He said no nation on earth, free or dic- tatorial, gives one single man more authority to make war, Heller compared his feara of the cur· rent situation to thole capsulized in .. Catch-22," in which a man't life and fate were threatened as much by hia leader's whim5 .. by the enemy. He·said he certainly lln't .alone. "This country's kleo)ogi~ unity began to fall apart in the m14;10s," Heller aald. "And no one has put Jt back together.'' The author and playwright 1uggested no leader bas ruiiy tried. Questioned , about ~ he wrote the OOok: that made him fflmous , Heller ex· (l!ee RETIJRliS, Pqe II Desi Arnaz Jr. To Marry Liza TOKYO (AP) -1 'Actor .. lnger Desi Amu Jr. 11ya.,,..-and alnger , Llia Minnelll are enpced llnd plan to marry aoon. ... Amu, II, ls the IO!I ol actot o..t Arnaz and corned! .... Lucille Bali. Miss Minnelll ls tbf. daqhltr o! producer Vincent Mllmelll and the late ai!llfer Judy Garland. Mlll Illlnneill, 21, aim In the !Um venlon of the musk:ll Ncabaret." Y°""' Amas la In Japon to lllr In th& UUe role of a Wm 1boul tho travtll ol. Marco Polo. •1Marco.11 '. " ' .. .. .. ') ,. . Bomb Rips_ Pentagon Ul"IT.._.... ARROW POINTS TO AREA WHERE BOMB EXPLODED IN FOURTH FLOOR WOMEN'S REST ROOM Pent1gon's Mell Entr1nc• is 1t Left, River Entr1nce 11 in Upper Laft 'Devil Cult' Member Guilty in Murder Case By TOM' BARLEY Of Ille Dsllr '""'' lttff Christopher "Gypsy" Gibboney pleaded guilty to reduced murder charges Thurs· day in Orange County Superior Court ac-- tlon that closes the file on· what lawmen regard as the most grisly kllllng in coun- ty history. Judge William Murray accepted the plea of guilty to second degree murder from an Oregon youth 'ft"ho was just one week past his seventeenth birthday on Jillie I, 1970, when he played his part In the mutilation murder of Mission Viejo teachU Florence Nancy Btown. _Gibboney was committed to the California Youth Authority (CYA) for an lndeflnlte period. He will be 25 be for 1 that aentence ls reviewed in any way, prosecutor Jay Moseley said. Gibboney had been certified for trial os an adult offender. The Calllornla Supreme Court ii scheduled 1o hear .an appeal against that Superior COUit "decl11on. The guilty plea 'nlursday represehted a triumph for the District Attorney's Office In tho senst that the witness they vitally needed to Insure a conviction againsl ~ Gibbone y In the scheduled murder trial absoonded more than one month ago. The DAILY PILOT learned long be.fore Thursday's ac~ion that Herman Hendrick Taylor, 19, a member or the gang that butchered Mrs . Brown, 31, El Toro, violated the probi'tion imposed in return for his cooperation il1 the conviction or gang leader Steven Craig Hurd, 20, and Arthur Craig "Moose" Hulse. Defense attorney Forest OeAnnond was never aware of Taylor's absence. lf he had been, it is extremely unlikely that he woukl have allowed bis young client to plead guilty. Taylor fled more than a.month ago and Is the subject today of a statewide search. Chief Deputy District Attorney James Enright said parole violation cherges, set aside when Taylor testified for the prosccullon In the Hurd and Hulse trlals, will almost certainly be revived when tho young transient is a~hended. "You might say we're playing a vital card game with our trump card miss· lng,11 Enright said two weeks ago. "lf this information ever gets bito prlnt we (Se< 'DEVILCULT', Pa,. l) • Security Guard Kills 2 P ersons; Motive Unknown WARREN, Mich. (UPI) - A young security guard at a drlve--in restaurant shot to death a neighbor who was washing windows and a teen-age girl who ran to the neighbor's ald1 police have 'reported. Police arrested Charles ~1attila. 22. He was to be arraigned today in the 31th District Court here on an open murder charge. He offered no resistance, police said . Detective Cpl. Joseph Draln said police later found 25 rifles, 10 handguns and a Hhouseful or bayonets" in the home where Matilla lived with his parents in this suburb of Detroll Police said there was no apparent motive for the shootings. The victims were identified as Sam Benincasa, SI, and Angela D'AngeJo, 16. Police said Benincasa was' killed with one shot flred !rom the doorway of Mat- tila's home. Tbe bullet from the hl~hpowered 30.116 rUle hit lhe back ol Benlncua's head as he sat on a ladder washing wlndowa near the front porch GI his borne. llls son, Dennis, who was standing next (Se< SNIPER, Pace ll Group Says Explo~ion • • \ Protest Act WASHINGTON (AP) - A bomb-... ploded In a restroom al lhe PentagOll early today, blew out two tnterlor walls and sent tons of water from broken pipes gustiing through oUices and a shopplng concourse. Shortly before the bomb exploded, the radical Weatherman o r g a n I z at I o n telephoned the Washington Post saying a bomb had been planted in the Pentagon. The Poat notified police who called the Pentagon minutes before the blast. The Weatherman outfit, which, also called ·New York newspapers and broad- cast stations, said the act was in response to stepped·up 1J.S. operations in Vietnam and in observance of the birth date of Ho Chi Minh. Few workers were ln the area at the thne and officials aaid this prevented in- juries. Police aided by a dog apecially trained to sniff out explosives continued an ex· haustive search of the sprawling military headquarters complex even as the Pen-- tag~n's 28,000 employes showed up for work six hours later, No more bombs 'were found. The fourth-floor women's washroom was demolished - fixtures were shat· tered, the ceiling caved in and a 2'h-foot hole blasted through the floor. The force ol the explosion blew out huge sections of l\\'O restroom walls, spewing plaster and brick into the corrlclors. Most or the damage from the blast wa1 confined to the bat.llroom area , but shat.. tered plwnbtng sprayed thousands of (See PENTAGON, Pqe %1 Oruge Weatller Look for a wet weekend along the Orange Coast, with 70 percent chance of showers tonight and Sat- urday, The weatherman says highs will be in the upper 50's at the beach and eo inland. INSll~t: TOD-'l' UC Irvine Fine Art.! Dtan Clayton Garrison directs Colt Porter's musical "Ki is Mt, .. Kate." Stall writ tr Georgt Uidol wtches th.e professor put the students through thtir paces f.1 lht adaptaion of Slwkt· speare ! ''Taming of the ShretD ... Ser toaau's Weekmd1r. t..M. ...,. '1 MlthlM ..... It 1M!l111 ' M•tl•MI Ml'n 4 CtUfwnl• ' Or•11t• c-1111 11 Cl•,JlllH ,._. lltllffrtillh """ c-k• u IYIYI• Pwlff n (l'Mlwt... lt •-'• 1 .. tl 'Dl&ttrl flltllfft 11 ''"" ~ ... 12-lt ltllttrlel ,... I .,,,,,.,.... 1'· •llMlllH 11·11 _.... ..... • ., lllt ltctnl ,, w .. ttwf' • HwffnM If WlllM WN II ...... l•llHn 11 ....... ~ ..... , .. ,, INlltlU 6 w.n. ,.... t Mrttll t1·tf ......... 1Wt • • ;e DAILY J-ILOT c Thund.1.1, Mar 181 1972 W~ttnlnster Case Contempt Rap Hits Top Lawman By TO~I BARLEY He also made it clear he was satisfied °' ,... 01111 , • .., s1•" truit Chief Scott deliberately disobeyed a Westminster Police Cbir.f \Valter Scott court order in which Judge Corfman • wa1 found in contempt or court Wed· dlrected \Vestminster police to return nesday for his 1aUure to return 1ex~ 20,SOO movies and 30,000 photographs oriented fllms and photograpM to seized ?i1ay 25, 1971, from the Loars' Fuderict and Kay Loar of Huntington "Pete Voss Showcase" warehouse at Beach. 15144 Golden West Circle, Westminster. But Orange County Superior Court Loar , :W. and his wire, 31, both of 4062 Judge Robert L. Corfman suspended the liumboldt St., had been cleared by a jury sentence and any further action by the in Jud ge Corfman's courtroom the day Loars' lawyers to enable Scott to file an before the order wu issued on charges ot appeal against the ruling. conspi!ac y to distribute ob scene- Judge Coriman made it clear that he material. . . • O~ILY PILOT 111" "1Mt. J CdMRoute ·Doubtful U~til 1976 Financing problems and englnetrfni difficulties probably will delay con· struction of the Corona de! Mar (Route '13) Freeway at least unt il 1976. accordln% t9 the :state liighwu Co~ission. Robert w. BoWles. executive com· mission secretary, told Costa ltfesa City Councilman Robert M. \Vilson by letter this week it appears doubtful the major projects of the short route could go to bid until 1974-75. will welcome an appellate ruling on a The . panel view 22 m~v1es and a legal mue that appearJ to be without"°' selection of photographs in the three- precedent. week trial lhat produced their acqulttal decision. * * * Movie Firms 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 business in sexually oriented literature. He again condemned the materials as "hard co r e pornography" and ordered them held in the vaults of the police department. Bow Wows and Ows A further delay of one to thrte years I! normally encountered between freeway bid advertisements and the time con-- struction ere"" are actually ready to begin their work. The Corona del Mar Freeway, meant to Score · Porno Curb Package SACRAMENTO (AP) -A Jegisllltivo package aimed at curbing pornography has come wider attack from the movie industry, which says it would ban show- ings of Oscar-winning fWns. The five-blll package by it.ate Sen. John Hanner would mean that films such as "P1tton" and 11Tht, French Connection" ~Id not be shown because under the bills they would be considered obscene, said Barbara ~~ representing the Mo- l l<fn PJcture Association of America. "You 9;'.ouldn't expect Patton not to use !our-letter words," she 1old the Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday. "TI>e Last Picture Show." "Love Story" and "Diary of a Mad Housewife" also would be forbidden, she added. Hanner said bis bills would only forbid such pictures for children. Adults could still view them in a closed theater, be said. Commlttee members postponed a vole unW nut week. From Pagel GOALS ... better place to live. The ~ity manager pointed out that Colt.a ·'Mesa bu a eeftkir citbenl club of. more than 200 members but that transportation difficulties prevent many from attendlng. "The club meeu at the Orange County Fairgrounds but~ la no way Chey can get from the Bethel Towers to the fairgrounds," be said. Poverty, according to Soraabal, ls another taboo subject wlllcb has been lo· frequently admJlted by Costa Menns. Yet the 1966 federal census not only disclosed that there were impovrished families in Costa Mesa but also pin- pointed the areu in which they live. 'Ibe committee, he hoped, would draw its membership from a broad base of citizen& including ex.Isling committees, former committees, ho m e o w n e r s , businessmen and youth. "We want both !ides on the committee, both positive and negative," he said. 2 Die in Baja Crash TIJUANA, Mexico (AP) -Two northern California men on a fishing vacation in Baja California were killed Sunday in the crash of their single-engine plane 200 miles south of here , Mexican authorities report. Mexican officials said Wednesday the bodies of James Barker, 26, of San Francisco. and Michael Ray Walker, 25, of Oakland. were found Tues- day on a deserted beach. OIANGI COAST CIC DAILY PILOT ~ Of"lftDt Col1t DAit. Y Pll.OT, wlfft wtilcr. 11 comblrltd ftM N_.Prftl, It Plltl"9'1N 1ty In• Ortngt CO.It Pllblfslllng eomp.ny, s.p.. nl'I' edllloM ,,.. publl1hed, Mond1y thr"DVll!t P:•lcby, for COst1 M .. , Newport Setd'I. liunllntlon lleeth/Founl1ln V1Uey, ltgUllll llUeh, lr"¥IM'r'S1dll!.tiack end Sin CWINll!t/ Sin J111n C1pri1r1l'IO. A •Inv'• mion.1 • l'O ltloo! 11 11110111~111 Sttun:11ya 1nd SundlYJ, The prlrocl111I °"bllih'"9 pl1nt Ii 11 U1 Wnl Bi r S!rfff. COlll M.,., c1111ornr1, tM:it. Robtrf N. W1td Pf"ftklml 111111 P11llllt.11Cf" J1ck R. Curl1y Viet Pr•ldll'll •lld o.r..t M•n•ow • Tho'".tl k1tYil l:dlllll' Tliom1l /4., M1tp~i111 Mlnltlnl l.dltar Ch11l11 H. L..01 Rich1fll r. Nill AMh!Nlt Mlrll01n9 ~Iron c.n .... Offlq . JJO Wnt l1y Strttf M1lli111 Acl4r•11: P.O. lox 1560, !2626 ---"..,.,, a..ct1 ! mt Htwptf'f 1•1MNI ........ a.chi !D l"-1 Awi- H«tfttJl'lfflf\ afftfl: 111tJ ·~ Mlllft'et'd a-CWnttlfoe: JU "ert!t Et C.mlft!J A••I Ttl ...... 17141 '41-4UI ~-·· ... ~-. ...... ,a ~f. 1'11, OtMf9 CM1! llvllltlllnt C~. H• -9'trlft, lllllltl'llllen1, Mftw .. I ""'1,.. w M.,...,l1111W111t Jte"'I" fftt)' Ill ,..,,........ Wl"-f .,.cill I*"' mlt&lo9 ., _,... ....,...., S... ti.. ,_, ... .,.,_ .. C•t• Mete, Clll'*"'la. ~flttlflll h' ftn"IW U.IJ llWlfflly, " Nit U.lf fMfttM?1 mllifm ~·-RM~. • Judge Coriman used the comments made by Scott to Orange County newsmen in a summation that round the police chief "clearly guilly of a willful violation of my court order. "!l's strange to me," he said, "that Chief Scott can clearly remember everything the District Attorney's Office said to hbn but can not now recall what be said at the time to the members of the press." From Pagel LINER ... Defense were brought Into the case after the first 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 \ras- not made clear. Patton said, "we have been in constant cootact with the ship," and its captrun, William Law. He said the anonymous caller said he would call back today with a deadline for payment but had not done so by af· ternoon. He said the caUer offered to tell where the bombs were hidden aboard the ship il the ransom were paid. Patton said it was possible the QE? would put into the Azore!, the cJ~est port of e1U, rather than rl.sk harm to the passengers. Jt is due in Cherbourg Fri- day. Pentagon IOUJttS said bomb surch 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 reached the liner early thl1 alternoon. Cunard Llne officers in London ad- mitted they might be the victim of a giant hoax but said under t h e circumstances and b€cause of the possi- ble risk to the $'71 m.illlon ship and passengers they had no choice except to pay the ransom as directed. Among the passengers were Leopold Stokowski, the world·renowned con- duct.or, and George KeUy of Philadelphia, uncle of Princess Grace o£ Monaco, the fonner Grace Kelly of movie fame. Victor Matthews, managing director or Cunard, told interviewers In L<lndon the caUer asked !or $350,000 "which is an in- si~ificant sum, really, considering what's involved." Matthews said the money would be turned over to the Federal Bureau or Investigation in New York -"We will do whatever they want us to do , "'e have no alternative but to pay." The New York caller said six bombs were distributed among ,the liner "s 13 decks. He al so said two accomplices were on board to acti vate the explosives. One is "an ex~onvict," he said, "the other is a terminal cancer case." "It may well be a compl ete con trick." l\fatthews sa id . "But that is just a risk we caMot allord to take." A long line of ki~, moms, pops and pooches queued up at the Orange County Fairgroun"ds parking Jot Wednesday night for a low-cost rabies vaccinatien clinic offered by the Costa Mesa Rotary Club in cooperation with !be Orange County Veterin'lfY 7'1edicine Association and the County. Health De- partmenl Drs. George Camaras and Joyce Leedy gave the needle to no fewer than 1,100 dogs. connect with the San Diego Freeway In Costa Mesa and 1.1acArthur Boulevard ln Newport Beach, was originally to ha~• been constructed in 1972-73. Kidrtaper Frees Wife of Banker; Given $50,000 BAKERSFIELD (AP l -FBI and sheriffs deputies searched today for a k:idnaper who held a Bakersfield woman hostage nearly eight hours and then abandoned her in an crange 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 f~m the box left in an orange grove Wednesday , night 20 miles north of here, a Kern County sheriff's deputy SJid. She suffered only a slight cut on her forehead. Mrs. Minear described her kidnaper all ·wh ite, about six feet tall, well·g'roomed with dark ha ir. She said he forced hi.! 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 Joan officer at the Oildale branch or Bank of America, L.•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. 1\.finea.r's 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 of Bakersfield. Wedel received a second call from the kidnaper at 7 p.m. say log he, had picked up the money and Mrs. Minear could be round in a box near the money drop point. But less than an hour later, authorities said h.irs. J\.finear called from a nearby farmhouse after freeing herself. A sheriff's helicopter circled the spot the ransom was to be paid, but deputies sald they did oot see the money picked up and be1ieve it was done on root rather than by car. The helicopter remained at 3,000 feet to avoid detection. Two men are being sought because ~1rs. Minear said she heard differtnt voices while being driven blindfolded, deputies said. School Attacks Eyed SAN DIEGO (AP) -Supt. Thomas Goodman says he's looking into reports that gangs bar hallway s and prevent use of restrooms at Horace h.tann Junior High School. "\Vhite girls are in· timidated," parents complained Tuesday night to the beard of education. Attacks on students were described. Highway crews are preparing for the freeway at the intersection of Palisades House Ripped by Blast, Road -Bristol stree~ and the Newport Freeway -Newport Boulevard in Costa Mesa. The project consists of draioage and on-off ramps for the intersecUon of the Corona del ·~far Freeway wilh the Newport Freeway. Flames; 2 Boys lffiled The trouble spot Bowles indicated, lie.! in the Corona del Mar Frteway'1 terminus at MacArthur B o u I e v a r d • LAKESIDE (AP) - A private 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 rescu ed a third in serious condition. The woman operator of the home, along-With her son and two 9ther youths. escaped. One was hospitalized for smoke inhalation. Cruiser Abandoned BOSTON (UPI) -No identification has been made of the people who reportedly a bandoned their burning 41}.foot cabin cruiser off the islanti of Martha's Vineyard Tuesday, the U.S. O>ast Guard said today. Qitters and helicopters have searched the Atlantic since the report was received from a ham radio operator in Des Moines, Iowa, who said he heard a ''May Day" distress call. A spokesman at El Cajon Valley Quicksand c:ondiUor3 lo the San Diego Hospital, whert a boy was Usted in Creek area will require lreew•Y bUllders merious condition, said the youngster was to remove that unstable foundation and suffering from burns and smoke ll>-haul in freob dirt for the lreeway am- halaUon. , bankmeots. "We didn't have a chance to uve Bowles said it would require about two them," said Ed Harrison, lire chief of _ yeara for the dirt to setlle lollowq the Lakesiae, a f0oth1lls comm u n i t Y completion of the eml>ankment. northeast of San Diego. "Consequently, the proposed 1974--75 Although sprinkler trucks sprayed fiscal year funding of this second stage water on the burnlng wood-frame house, shown in the plaMing prograrq ls overly located a mile south of Lakeside, firemen optlmlstic, and from a physical stand· were forced to rig up pumpers to get a point a more realistic date which thiJ steady stream of water. project can go to contract would be in A defective heater wu blamed ten-1976 unless the settlement period can be tatively for the blast. shortened," he told Wilson. • David Stark, chief deputy San Diego The remaining two project! consiat of County coroner, said the children in-. the actual freeway links between eluded orphans and mentally retarded MacArthur Boulevard and the Newport boys. Freeway intersection and from there to The home, which was destroyed, was the San Diego Freeway interaectlon. being operated for the California State Both or these projects were llso Department of Public Welfare's C.Om-scheduled for 197~75 but Bowles maln- munily Services Office. None of Che boys taJns that the floanclal outlook Is not assigned to it wu related, Stark said. good. Wallac.eSuspectMay Have Been Following McGovern From \\'ire Services BAL TIM ORE. A-1d. -Feder a I authorities said today they are in- vestigating the possibilit y that Arthur H. Bremer, the man accused of gunning down Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace, may also have been stalking a second presidential candidate . Based on items found in a searth of Bremer's automobile, federal sources said today that It appeared Bremer may also have been following Sen. George McGovern (Jl.S.D.). An Inventory of It.ems found in Bremer's 1967 blue two-door hlrdtop ln· cludt!d McGovern campaign literature, as well as Wallace campaign literature. "On that basis,·· a source close to the investigation said, "we are checking out the possibility that Bremer may have been 11alklng McGovern, too." A spokt!man at McGovern campaign headquarters In Washlnston said her tn- ilial reaction was thot "anybody could have had campaign literature. We blanketed the state with literature, end It might have been aurprlain& JI he didn't have any." By "the ltale" 1be referred to MarylPnd. Wallace was shot Monday at Laurel, l\.1d. Also, his car was found in Maryland. Bremer, 21, cf Milwaukee, is being held In Baltimore-County Jail at Towson, Md., under $200,00l bond. Meanwhile, less than three days after being critically wounded and partially paralyied by gumhots, WaUace has started receiving ph)"Jical t b e r a p y treatments, it was disclosed today. A stalement Issued by Holy Crou Hospital In Silver Spring, where Wallace was rushed after the assassination it· tempt Monday afternoon in a Laurel shop- ping center ju.st outside Washington, gave no detail! of the therapy -presumably designed to see if he can regain move. menl In his legs. A key doctor in his case conceded Wednesd•y1he odds are better than !OolO he will not walk again. The hospital said Wallace rtglstcred what it described as "mild to moderate" tmperature rise during the night, and en lncrtase tn pul$e rate. Hls terriperature hit IOI at one time -considered fairly high for ao adult -but the boepltal Nld both lncn!ues were usiW lo tbe post· optratlve pttiod. H.J.GARI\EIT fURNf{URE PnOFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Open Mon .. Thun. It Fri. &11. ' 2215 HARBOR BLVD. cos1A MESA, CALIF. 0 .1 .• C.C. ......... Qerwl 641>-0275 • I uat • I or, • e1 • Ir ··Bed Lightfj Auto Bandit VOL. & NO. 1-. 4 SICTIONS. • PUii FRIDAY AFJE1!NOON, MAY 19, 1972 Strilaes Again in Irvine I' -·~·,.-...... __ . -... - ·-• e • • • omh FlOod Triggers • Ill Pentagon: Didn't Know It Novelist Heller I Visits Old Base By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of th1 D1Ur ,.llltl . Jt1tt Onetime bombardier end no_velist Joseph lleller came back to the old Santa Ana Anny Air Base Thursday, 30 years and lhree wars later. He didn't recognize the place. Eucalyptus trees still line what was the old airfield's maln parade ground, where the seedJ ·o( destruction -he flew IO ntiisions over France and Italy -and tlie: seeds of Heller'• creativity were planted. . 'lbe fonner B-25 crewman began observing the military system and men al war for mat~rial to writ• "Catch-22," a biting, satirical book, while stationed here. ·He spoke in the Orange Coast C:Ollege Porum, on th~ old parade ground site. Somebody in the audience mentioned after his provocative, two.hour talk sponsored by the OCC student body that Heller frequ ently referred to the base in bis novel. "They'xe closed It down, haven't tbey?" be said. "This~ it!" was the reply. Red Li ght Thief R elieves Irvine Woman of Purse Orange County's "red light bandit'' struck again Thursday night this time us- ing his police car prank to relieve an Jrvine woman of her purse and the $110 !Jj IL Mrs. Ida Ruth Reynertson, 51, of 14851 Jeffrey Road, told slte<lff'a officers she wl! on ber way home when she !potted a car with a flashing red light on top iD her rear view mirror. Mrs. ReynertS011, who felt she bad committed no offense, said she dutifully pulled over near the inter3eCtlon of Jef- frey and Barranca Road and waiteOfor the Octet or the lecture or both. Instead she got a lesson that has Iller· r!ff!1 offloero hunting today for the blndil with 1 MW wrinkle ln robbery routines. He grabbed her purse as she reached for it in the rear of the car to produce her dQver's license, ran from her auto and drove off at high speed. nvestljalors believe the bi nil it· ii the same peraon who pulled exactly the same tll1d of theft exacUy one month ago In the 1Vstln area. - Mov ie projectionist Robert HIJ)IOn told 4cputlea· at that time that he pull Iii ove( to Ille side of the r<Ntd altar spotting the O..lhing red light In bis rear view mirror. • Hanson said he was relieved ol bis billfold containing $4111 by a ,_ bolldll ll'ho then <>nlered blm 1o drl•e Clf wlllloul looking back. , $erlfr1 officers 1re ... king lite aid ol police In aeveral count7 communltlea in a bid to 1 .... ta tbe J*UOO poUolman. • ' Heller ·criticized Prt&ident Nixon's power In guiding AlnS'lca'a role In Southeast Asia wiref.,. during a blend of social and political comment illU!trated by "Catcb-22" readings, plua offhand humor. He began his novel - a mc.nl and rather existential study of a bomber squadron In wartime -In 1953, during the SO<"alled era of brinkrnan.ship diplcmacy. "When there is war 1n the air, people begin to evolve a mor'1ity d. their own.'' Heller told about 400 in the audience. "This is true not just from the left , • , but from the right as well." "Nobody in AIDfl'Jca is very aat.iafied with the government we've bff.n 1et- Ung," Heller added, likening himself to his "Catch-22" protagonist Yossarian, al9o a bombardier. "I'm afraid ... " Yossarian told his commanding officer. "Lots of men are afraid . . • it'a nothing to be ashamed of," the major said. "I'm, not 1shamed. I'm Just afraid,,. Yossarian told him. Heller told the audience he isn't ashamed to say he's afraid either. "I'm afraid of the war in Asia," Heller said, adding that the power of any American President -not just Richard Nixon -should be more limited by Congress. He said no nation on earth, free or dlc- ta«rial, gives one single man more authority to make war. Heller compared hiJ feara of the cur- rent situation to those capsulized in "Cltch-22," in wh1cb a man's life and fate were threatened as much by hi.I leader's whim! as by the enemy. ffe ,said he certainly IJn't alone. '"Ibis country's kleo1oglca1 unity began to fall apart In the mld-iOI," Heller said. "And no one has put it back together." The outhor and playwright suggested no leader bas really tried. Questioned , about wlJy he wrote the book that made him fi.moua, Heller ex- (S.. RETUllNS, Pqe I) DesiA~Jr. To Marry Liza , ' TOK-YO (AP) ~..io,er Dest Antu Jr. •11}'1.he Ind llnger Liza Minnelll ore -""' and ~ to marry llOODo ( · Amu, 11, 11tbe1C11 of actot·Desl Arnu Ind comedlmM Lucille Ba1L Mis1 Mlnrielll II ~ daU1hltr of producer Vlncenl lillllnelll and tbe late alnrtt Judy Gorland. Miii illnntlU, IS, lllfl In the fUm nnlon of the muaical ffClblret.'' YOClllJ Antu 11 In J1pan to lllr ' In the UUe n>lt ·of a tllm 1boul the travels of. Marco Polo. ffMarco." Bomb Rips Pentagon -U~I T,._.... ARROW POINTS TO AREA WHERE BOMB EXPLODED IN FOURTH FLOOR WOMEN'S REST ROOM Pent1gon's Miii Entr1nc• is at Left, River Entrance Is Jn Upper Left 'Devil Cult' Member Guilty in Murder Case • By TO~ BARLEY CM llM Deltr l'li.t I t•" Christopher "Gypsy" Gibboney pleaded guilty to reduced murder charges Thurs- day in Orange County Superk>r Court ac· tion that closu the file on what lawmen regard as the most grisly killing lo coun- ty history. Judge Willi<lm Muruy .accepted the plea of guilty to s!CODd degree murder from an Oregon youth 'ft'bo was just one week past bis seventoeritli birthday pft June 21 1970, when he played his part in the mutilation murder of Mission Viejo teacber.Elorenctlil!OO' Bio-"'"· · ,Gibboney was committed to the. Clllfomla Youth Authority (C YA) for an indefinite period. He will be 2S befor I th1t tentence Is reviewed In any way , prosecutor Jay Moseley said. Gibboney had betn certified for trial as an adult offender. The Calllornia SUpreme Court is &eheduled to bear an 1ppeal agslml that Superior Court decision. The guilty plea Thursday represented 1 triumph for the IJi)trict Attorn<y's OfOce In the senso that the wltne11 they vtially needed to Insure a convtctlon against Gibboney in the scheduled murder .trial absconded more than one month ago. The DAILY PILOT teamed long before Thursday's action that Herman Hendrick Taylor, 19, a member of the gang that butchere:d Mrs . Brown, 31, El Toro, violated the probation impcsed in return ror his cooperation in the conviction or gang leader Steven-Qo--aig Hurd, 20, ahd Arthur Craig "Moose" Hulse. Defense aUomey Forest DeAnnond was never aware of Taylor's absence. If he had been, It is extremely unlikely that he would have allow.td hi.s·young client tQ plead guilty..-, Taylor fled more than a monlh ago and Is the subject today of a stalewlde S<arch. Chief Deputy District Altorney James Enright aald parole violation charges, set aside when Taylor te stified for the prosecution In the Jturd and Hulse trlall, will almost certainly be revived when the YOWli transient Is apflrehended. "You might say we're playing 1 vital eard game with our trump card miss~ Ing/' Enright said two weeks ago. "U this lnformatk>n ever ~ell toto prlnl we jS.. 'DEVILCULT', Pa .. I) Security Guar d Kills 2 P erso ns; Motive Unknown WARREN, Mich. (UPI) -A young security guard at a drive-in restaurant shot to death a neighbor who was washing windows and a teen-age girl who ran to the neighbor's aid, police have reported. Police arrested Charles Mattlla, 22. He was lo be arraigned today In the ' 31th District Court here on an open murder charge. lie offered no resistance, police said , Detective Cpl •• Jostph Drain said police later found 25 rlfles, 10 handgun! and a "houseful of bayonets" In the home where Matllla lived with his parents in this suburb of DcttolL Police said there was no apparent motive tor tht shootings. · The victims were identified as Sam Benincasa, 51, anit Angela: O'Angelo, 16. Police 1ald Benincasa was killed with one 1bot fired lrom the doorway of Mat.. tila'• home. The bullet from the hl~hpowered 30.1111 rlf1e hit the back of Benincasa'• head 11 he sat on • ladder washing wlndow1 'near the front porch of hla home. His 10n, Dtnnls, who wu standing nn:t (See SNIPER, P11t %) ·Group Says Explo~ion ' ' • ' Protest Act WASHINGTON (AP) - A bomb n- ploded In a restroom at the Pentagon early today, blew out two tnt~or walls and sent tons of water from broken pipe• gushing through ollices and a shopping concourse. Shortly before the bomb exploded, the radical Weatherman o r g a n l z at lo n telephoned the Washington Post saying a bomb had been planted in the Pentagon. The Post notified police who called the Pentagon minutes before the blast. The Weatherman outfit, which also (!ailed New York newspapers and bfOad. cast stations, said the act was in response to stepped-up lJ.S. operaUoos in Vietnam and in observance of the birth date of Ho Chi Minh. Few workers were in the area at the time and ofliclal1 aaid this prevented in- juries. Police aided by a dog specially trained to sniff out explosives continued an ex· haustlve search of the sprawling military )ieadquarter1 complex even as the Pen- tagon's 28,000 employes showed up for work six hours later. No more bombs ' were found . ~ The fourth-floor women 's washroom was demolished -fixtures were shat· tered, the celling caved in and a 21,1,-foot hole blasted through the floor. The force of the explosion blew out huge sections of two restroom walls, spewing plaster ancl brick into the corridors. Most of the damage from the blast wa1 confined to the bathroom area, Lut sha~ tered plumbing iprayed tho usands of (Set PENTAGON, Pqe %) Coan Weather Look for a wet weekend alon1 the Orange Coast, with 70 percent chance of shower• tonight and Sat.. urday. Tht weatherman.says highs will'be In the upper SO's at the beach and llO inland. INSIDE TODK\' UC Irvine Fine Arli 1>ean Clltyton Garrison direct! Cole Porter's musiC(ll ''Ki 1 s Mt, Kate." Staff w r It er CtOTQe Ujdal watch11 the pro/111or put the 1tu.drnf..r through thtir pacn oJ th< adaptaion of Shak<· spcore's "Taming oJ tht Shrew. N See toda1111 Wetknultr. L.M....... tt IMH119 t c111Ufll'1l1 ' Cl•111tlt'll •M c-k• n CmtftN Jl Dtlltll Mttlctt 11 •fl .... ~/ ,... • PIMrlH 11·11 ,.., .. tfHI'• 11 "-""'-1l .t.1111 L811ftn IS .... _ . .... 11·'9 Mvhl .. ''"" I t N•lllftll ,._ 4 or • .,. c_,, 11 A"t•1re11tt U.:rt lffll• ,.,.., 11 s.-1• ... JI ll'ldl M#ti ... 11•11' Ttl""'" tr ........ .... WH!Mr I Wllltt ..... 11 .......... "'"' lt-11 ...,.. ,..... . ·---,,.. • I ~ ~ i>ML f P'ILOT S • Frfd11. May 19. 191? Nixon Visits Wallace President Says Governor 'Dete rmined' Man SILVER SPRING, Md. (UPI) -Prt1J. dent Nlmn paid a 40-mlnui. vi.lit to Gtor1e C. W1H1ct in hil hospital room today and d11c:rtbod Ille partially ...,.1,_i Alabama fOVlll>OI' ., "ace Mah' -dttetmtned to Overcome his 'c!Llabllliy. about the po1sibillty he .mi ght rtgaln any and he will be able to lead a useful life." feelln& from the waist down. Doctors \Vbo attended Wallace as well He has been paralyzed ln his lega and as -0ther1 who followed the courae of hl1 lower e1tremJUu 11nce an 11sa11lnatlon recovery from Monday'a shooting at a attempt Monday. shopping center in nearby Laurel, Md., But Nixon sakf Wallace was "very alert indicated the odd! are against Wallace's and in g(l()d spirits." He told reporters, walking again -and di1ninlshlng dally as . NI.Ion made the un&MOuncld visit to llOIY~sa Hospllal on h11 way to 'the Wblte HoUJt from Camp 0.vtd, Md .. and <m the eve of NJ1on'1 dtpll'turi for •um· mll lalkl In Mo1o0w, H• 111d wa111ce -hll •ya !Whine 1'1tb vigot -.. wlahed me well." Tllo t1i.1t hospital bWl<tln oo Wall1<e's cand!U.. contained nolhlnl _...,, "He has some serious problems ahead. he does not have any feeling. The bullets affected his-body but-not-his The bu!fet-that-cnused-the--paratyri~ 1pirlt. He ha1 the will to live. lie will ·entered \Vallace's spinal canal and is still make it . , . MentaUy he ill very alert. there. HI• heart ii strong." Doctors, on Mrs. Wallace's decl.ak>n. 'I1tt President spoke with emotion with decided not to try to remove it during a reporters of h11 lmJX"e11ions of Wallace's flv~hour operation the night of the vl.gor. shooting. "H1J eyu fl11bed. He's ln fin~ splrttt A second operation will be performed, po ssi bly within the nex t week, to remove ·Kontum Defenders Halt the bullet. Doctors said at that time, they would know more about the long-range outlook for Wallace 's recovery. Ni.Jon visited Wallace from about 9 .North .Vietnam Attack a.m, to 9:40 a.m. and told rep()ttera, "[ don't know what the physical damage is going to be, but the most important thing is that nothing has happened to his head and his heart." SAIOO!I (UPI) -Flv1 wa-o1 North ·vi.toam... backtd by tanks 1ttachd Kontum today but were beaten back In an eJ&bt-hour battle that lnvolvtd hand-t .. hand ficbllnl on the city'& d•f..,,. wtmetor and point-blank 11H o I howUaiw qalo&I tho 0111Llllf)ll., today of a 300-man North Vietnamese force caught in the open Thursday by Allied air and artillery. Ttle latest hospital report on Wallace 's condition said he "had a good night" but that there was no change in the condition of the paralyzed lower extremities. Meanwhile Maryland officials said to- day a search of a car registered to Arthur H. Bremer'-accused of wounding Wallace, turned up a seoond pistol. . A~ :Ill wa ... o1 Jllll bmnbut Whlcll dropped 1,lllO to 2,000 IGnl o! lanlio belped -up Ille ..uutt that ·mll!tary -In S&tion Aid Could . otarl: tho ot,n ol the "dtcl&lvt llqo" o! •111e botlle for 1ht Central Jllihlandl 2111 -Dorth ol ·aation- South Vietnamese troops also hit Fire Bue Checkmate, a mile south of Butoene. and reported killing 24 auer· rU1u and fmding 33 bodiea nearby. It wa9 not clear U they reoccupied the base, 12 mllet 10Uthwest of Hue. On the My Chanh River front line 20 miles north of Hue, a U.S. Cobra hellcopter hit a South Vielnamese posi· t1on by miltake, wounding two men. The Prince Ge<:Jrges county stAte's at- torney at Seat Pleasant, Md., refused to say where inside the car the automatic pistol was found. But one report said it was located under an inside panel of the veh.lcle when it was virtually dismantled. '!n tho air ~. U.S. NHy fl(lllen nported •bootinc doWD two mot< MIG1 near Hanoi 'Mrunday. But Hanoi Radio 11ld two U.S. i•lll were ahot down today over HI: Tlnb prov- ince lllO mil" 1bov• the DMZ In another day of. -heavy American boinblng raids and that tilt pUota wtre captured. South of An Loe, the besieged prov- lnclal capitaJ fiO miles north of Saigon, government troops reported progress in two locations, The gun, described as a 9 mlll1rneter Browning automaic, pl11! ammunition was listed on a state seareh Inventory of the car's contents filed in Seat Pleasant. The gun was found Wednesday by state authorities after an FBI search a day earlier failed to locate it. Tbe U.S. command reported lbt lou o! 16 U.S. alrcnlt Jul ,WHk, ID plan .. and 11X htllcopten, brlnfliil Amlrlcan 1 ..... In tho ll-diy<1ld Conuliuni.11 olf..,lve to 41 pl&ne1 and 31 heUcopt•rw. U.S. 1lr ltsHJ were put at a ddd, 23 wounded and II mlnll!l-all tlnceMn ch llO. A relief force nown Jn by helicpters Thursday rnoyed nearly a mile closer to An Loe but was still nearly two miles 1way. A relief force farther south on 1Ilghway IS allo JDOVed forward a mile against heavy opPosition. MeanwhUe, salgon newspapers said President Nguyen Van Thieu ordered Bremer, 21, of Milwaukee, was being held in solitary confinement in an 8-by-10- foot cell at the Baltimore County Jail in suburban Towson. A heavy guard was pasted at his cell and at the doors of I-he white-brick jail. court martlals for Brig. Gen. Vu Van Fro111 Page 1 Gia! and "8 of his subordinates whose 3rd Thtrt wu new •klnnllhlnc around tbe old lmporW city ol Hut and South Viet- -tl'OCJllO neeptnc an ll'tl 12 miles eut ol tbe ci ty lald Ibey found " bodlts ~~~~on ,;•a decimated in the fight for · RETURNS • • • p,...p ... J 'DEVIL CULT' •.• can u1 l<>Odby• to a ·~· by Gll> boney a..J to a lot of tupoyers ~Y In tbe form ol a lq trial." Gl~bonty admitted with hll plea Thura-diy lhll ho Wll 1111 Of lhe druf·UJll!I Cini of four youtha and one woman who dragtd Mr1. Browo ltom her car two y-qo .. ""' tDtutd Ille Sand Canyon turn-oH of the San Dle10 Freeway. Silt wa1 hulUtd al ltnll•polnl Into an Irvine orange crove where ahe wa1 lllabbtd to duth and portlonl of her h~ devoured in an orliutlc tribute to Satan. What wa1 left of the teacher wu then dumped Into the blcll: of her car, driven by 1•111 membtr1 to the Ortega lllchway near SU Juan Clplslrano and burltd In a &hallow fl'IVe. 111'1. Brown'& ldllll!I lollowld by just M houn the 11111'1 hatcbtt allym, of J•rry Wlfllt ClrUn, 20, a Santa Ana HrVlce lllatlon atlendanl Hulle, 19, Garden Grove, was the hakhtt man In that mllMer. Ht 11 tod1y aervlng a lift tenn in state prison on a conviction that Include! hJ1 rolt aa an ac- celllOJ'Y In the Brown kllltng. Hurd w11 found In Superior OlUrt to ht fnlane and wu commltttd to Atuc1d1ro Stale HOlpltal untU ht rtg1ma hll 1anl\y. Melanlt May Dani.ts, 31, the -·· lfrl rn•mbu and unofficial trwurer, was convicted on accessory charge• and aenteoced to a minim.IDD of 10 years in 1talo pr!IOll. The abaent Taylor, who served 15 monlbt In couoty jaU whll1 i.sUlylng 111alnrt Hurd and Hu lse, was 1entenced to five yean probation. OllANH COAST n DAILY PILOT Elizabeth Liner Continues Trip Apparently Safe LONDON (AP) -Th• Quffn Elizabtth I and her 2,350 puaengers and crew members headed acros1 the Atlantic toward Europe on schtdule today, ap- ~Uy lale d"plt• a bomb thr•at demanding $350,000 ran.some. But a precauUonary search of the ship con- llnutd. "We're okay, we're fine,'' a young woman in the crew r e p o rt e d • "Everyone'• drinking and dancing as usual, and I don't think the.re's any danger." The ahip's owners reported she w.111 "on Ume and fl.at out." Victor Matthews, chairman of Cunard, told a news confertnce today that he felt it Ale &o assume the 85,000-ton Jiner car- riocl DO bombs. Brltllh Army bomb dlsposal etptrts paracbuttd In the Allanllc Thursday did not find the 11% bombs an anonymous telephone caller in New York said had been planttd aboard. Matthews dl!clostd that CUnard paid over $350,000 ransom money to the FBI -who, he said, em· bArgoed all further WormaUOn on what h1pptnocl to the money. CUnard 1poke1im1n William North aald In New York, however, that no ransom hid been paid to the extortionist or ex- tortlonlslt. The ramom was demanded .Wednesday by an anonymous caller "'ho told Cunard's New York office the liner car- ried 111 bombs -and two accomplices ready to detonate them. plained he simply wanted to become a famoull novelist. He was writing advertising copy for Look Magazine in 1953 when tbe book was started. "And Catch-22 was the best novel I could th1nk to write," he said. "Now that you're a famous novelist, would you run for President? asked so- meone in the crowd. "No. Presidents have a bad reputa~ Uon," he replled, adding that he wouldn't want to disgrace his children. Questioned further, Heller said his book Is not anti-war as such, but served mere- ly to show the humor and tragedy that war weaves through men's lives, like stitches In a wound. "I liked it very much" he sa.id of Direc· tor Mike Nichols' film based on the book, which has loot $10.7 mllllon to date. "I had nothing to do with it," he added of the script. Heller said the movie "Catch-22" was hard.hitting and far more testimonial to the reality of war than the frothy boy- meeta-girl post-World War II comedies that evolved immediately afterward. He hlghllghttd the OCC presentation by reading a scene from his newly-adapted "Catch-%2" stage play with sll speech and drama students. They included Rich Golson, Terry Sidell, Sam Claud er, Lynn Hum phrey and Albert Arvilla, all of <Mta Mesa, plua David Bayhi, of Huntington Beach. One woman faculty member asked Heller to autograph a copy of his book at the concluskin, noting she \\-wked in the Main PX at the old Santa Ana Army Air Base. "I'm sure I saw you on the parade ground," she said, then illustrated how Americans of that era have advanced, although the ll.S. iS still involved in a foreign war. "Oh, I'd rather not." she said when a newsman asked if she would give her name. "J'm teac:hing now," she explalne(!. Sunday Special: Citizen Volunteer Fire Fighters MEN WHO SERVE -Volunt .. r firemen are on call 24 hours a day and. though they may find they have to ' tem~r their drinking and alter some other habits, It 's a great way to serve the 9:>mmunity ... "Sunday Special." L!Nl>Y FLIES AGAIN -Photographs and other memorabilia recall a day when mrn -not computers -nrv.· airplanes. Words and 9icturts Ttmind readus of Olarte& Undbugh's landing In Paris - 15 yun ago to tilt day. FIRST LADIES -Womtn's pages feature word-and-photo pictures of the wtva ol four Orange Coast clty ma,yors , .. four flrat ladlts as diverse u tht:lr clUt1. OONGRESSfONAL UPSET? -Feature Wuilraled with m1p ol nowly fonntd 42Dd Olagmslonal Dlllrlcl (tmltory In Cirlll(t and San Dlqo counlla) lndlcalel lnc:rtue In c...ocr111 and tho po= ol 111 Upoet In the flet that WIS IU lo bt I 11-ln. WILLIAM SAllOY AN -One ot Clllfotnll'1 beat known author1 uplains It' I IO lollfh btma a loner In I -Id ol lntr1 • , • hmll1 Weekly. ON CYQ.ES -Thou1h the trend Is a long way Crom matchi'ng the use of bicycles in Europe or the Far East. Orange Coast commuters are beginning to ride bikes to work more these days, especially if it 's a short ride or the office has shower facilities. POWER & PEOPLE -Eddie A)btrt, who will emcee a two-hour debate on Proposition 9 (nuclear power plants vs . the ecological balance), Is featured In a TV WEEK story that previews the show. TRAVEL FEATURES -Two pagu or travel stories and photographs present Munich, xtne of the Olympics : the ma·· jesUc va!lness of British Columbll ; a caravan in Cork, Ireland; a kosher hotel In Israel ; and an lnvttatlon to 80 In ,.arch of the Sinta Alla River In the San Bernardino National Forest. NIXON TO MOSCOW -Color IJ. lllllrttlon ol the P,..ldent'1 Itinerary for Ill• trip to Moscow, whlcb bqln1 this 'Wethnd, 11 coupltd with a rep6tt on CUI" r.nt Ruut111 arratrs. 'THE JA'D. SHOW' -BUly Ecllslln .. u emcee ol now jlSa allow, mate. the COW!' and covv 1""7 ol Ulla _., TV WEEK. PENTAGON CORRIDOR A RUBBLE AFTER EARLY MORNING EXPLOSION IN REST ROOM Weathermen Cl1im Credit-Celebrating Ho Chi Minh's Birthday With 1 Bang From Pagel PENTAGON. • • gallons of water into the passageways. The water seeped into offices below, caused some damage to the Air Force Ccmputer Center and lay ankledeep on the shopping concourse three flights down, Despite the problems, Brig. Gen. Daniel James said, "It's business as usual. today.'' He said the 'Pentagon was operating normally aside ~from' the cleanup operation. James is the deputy assistant secretary of defense for public affairs. In a statement, the Pentagon said a du· ty officer o{ the Federal Protective Service at the Pentagon received a phone call from the Washington police at 12 :53 a.m. reporting a phone tip ·from a Washington newspaper. The ne"'Spaper reported receiving a call stating a bomb had been planted on the eighth floor of the Pentagon and that it was to go off during the nigbl There is no eight h floor ol the Pentagon. which rises only live stories. At 12:59 a.m., the Air Force security office reported "a loud explosion" 9Jl the Pentagon's fourth fioor. The $15 million worth of computers and other data processing equipment were l!lhut down for about 7 hours and no data was lost, the Pentagon said. During the morning, after the ex· plosion, the Pentagon received an ad- ditional number of bomb threatl!l, which authorities regarded as normal in IUCh an event. The restroom ls located on the Pen- tagon 's E-ring, the outermost of five rings, in the five-sided building. The explosion came six hours before stringent new security provisions were to have gone into effect, requiring in- spection of all packages and briefcases brought into the Pentagon, the world's largest office building. These restrictions were ordered Tuesday and were to have become effective at 7 a.m. this weekend. James said the water caused some damage to the electrical leads of the Air Force's computers which were im· mediately shut down. Agnew Says Connally As Veep 'Unrealistic' From Wlre Services WASHJNGTON -Vjce President Spiro T. Agnew said today he did not know whether he would be Presideilt Niion's running mate in November but added that it was "totally unrealiJtic" to ' sup- pase Treasury Secre tary John B. Connal- ly would be acceptable. "I don't understand how anybody could seriously believe that a man who is registered as a Democrat in the middle of May can turn RepubHcan and be nomjnated vice president," Agnew said. Agnew talked with reporters after making a 40-minute report to President Nixon on his Far Eastern visit. Responding to questions about his run- ning again for vice president, Agnew said he had not been asked by the President and wouJd not decide until inYited. He said Nixon was righUul!y delaying a decision to determine what rwming mate Coffee Rings Now Off Shelf JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP)' - Maxwell House Coffee Co. says it has taken its new throaway coffe package, Max-Pack, off the market because of conmmer complaints about coffee pot.s boiling over. Edward G. Bllance1 manager ct the Maxwtll ·Bou.!e plaot In JacksonvlU•, <Oq!lnntd Thursday that productloa of the product •lopped at hll plant and In San Francisco. Max-Pack la a """-ahaped fdler which already hi1 tM coffee inside. The used placti .the pack In the percolator baski, then throws ·it away alter the coffee is pel'ked. '. I _, would be most helpful to him. and added: "Mr. Connally is just not It." Connally submitted his resignation as Tlfasury secret~ry ·this week. He was one of the President's closest advillers. Agnew said speculation about Con- nally-'s chances of being picked by Nixon as a ri..tnning mate had been blown out or proportion by news media. "It just isn't in the cards. Any political pro will tell you that," he said. Agnew said he had answered questions about his own political future many times in the past and -although he praised Connally as a capable government of- ficial -he appeared somewhat nettled by the questioning. From Page l SNIPER ... to hi! father, at first thought two palling youngsters had thrown firecrackers and yelled at them to stop, police said. Dennis then saw hiJ father's body in the bushes beneath the ladder whieb fell across his body, .. My lather's been shot," he said. Several neighbors, including. Miu D' Angelo, ran to help. Detective Ed~·ard Leahey of the War- ren police in th.is Detroit suburb said the sniper then apparently ran to the side ot the !nae and began firllig from behind a porch. He said Miss D' Angelo was struck and fell. Wblie •ht wu lying on the ground, Marllynn Kant row, 22, who aald sbe was •tanWng "lnche5 away," said Miu D'Atigelo was hit at least once more by a bullet. police said . "ljht (Ang.ta) lltttd her head and critd to her brother John for help. He ran over to her and lilted her head up. Then the ambulance came," she said. CHAPELLE by HERITAGE' Com•, f•li• •n excursion into loveliness • , • our wonderfully v1ri1cf Ch1p1ll• Collection of Louis XV-styled table tr•tsurts by H1rit191. The y highlight • room·-1t1d th~n som1f 11 sur• to s•e the low, lon9, bea utiful sof1 t1 bl1 .• • not illustr1t1d. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON DREXEL -HERITAGE -KARASTAN NIWPORT llACH 1727Womllff Dr, 642·2050 -lltMT'TILt • INTERIORS LAGUNA llACH TOl~NCI 34.1 Nor1il c-t tnry. ~I 23649 HlwthofM l!Yd. mu1n.1mo,......,._, -,.·-·-"-C...., .... 11., Pr1f hn• ....._ lafp• As h tt Ma liltl .-• F Tl plad acrt del wee! cial ,,,, ques com! heac M p] L2 A" La~ 15 wj after 280. Poi trans parer featu landn Ger and : cha it! chairi Mrs. food. The Signe< Mai alreat bus in• 1ofrs. ~ona~ may l La AN< frogs, rorcen year's frog . Eac munit: event local t made Bo1 PAV of bol) ferent. Mattei threat chum• hours • Fi Fin! I Beach 1 are l>tlr joint ti Departn Water [ Clpt. uidhe i bydran~ f ... tbe flr• lnl ......... Smltb • For Developn"!"t . Irvine Company To Ask Rezoning· By L. PETER KRIEG . Of ltte Diii~ P'l•I t11H County, an Irvine official confinned. • FrldQ', M<lJ' 19, 1972 s DAILY Pit .. 3 ltacompatible University Park Changes Scored· However, Jerome F. Q>lU.ns, media Tht ...m.lne._~any will fill<:-:1!lf_-~"~r~v~ice~syd~irect~~oc~d~llo_J~~"".~~-~:.,._~t planned community zoning for its 3,SOO.. exact Y en an use map will be Spur or the moment conditions attached by the Irvine Planning Commission to the Jrvine Company·s revised University Park community plan won'l work, a senior county plannv said Thursday night. To enact the law, the City CoWlcll con · slders the planning co mmission recoro- mendati011, but is oo t bound to adopt the ordtnanee with the suggested conditions. acre eoastal property between Corona presented to county plannen:. del Mart and Laguna Beach within two "We do not know at this time precisely weeks, a Newport Beach planning offi. when the coastal plan will be filed,'' cial said Thursday. • Collins said explaining that it will be filed The company wlll file the zoning re-with the county because the area is un.tn- quest, expected to include 8 mixture of <:orporated and is under the county's commercial development alld pulllic Jurisdiction. beach front along lhe water with Orange Collins said the plan will not include Me.,xican Fiesta Planned for '72 Lag11na Seniors A "Mexican Fiesta" awaits graduating Lagun a Beach High School students June 15 with an all-night party at the school after commencement ceremonies for the 280 seniors. Portions ar the school will be transformed by an army of volunteer parents to the Mexican theme which features Hussong's Cantina, an Ensenada landmark. ' General chairmen of ttie event are Mr. and Mrs. Charles McCalla . Decorating chairman is Art Fisette. Albert Le Gaye chairs the entertainment committee and Mrs. David Rodriruez is in charge of the food CQmmitlee. --- The rock group 1'Honk" bas been signed to provide live entertainment. f\.lany donations to the party have already been made by service clubs, the business community. and citizens, said Mrs. McCalla. Persons who wish to qonate money. decorating items or time 1!1ay contact .her at 494-3318. , specifics regarding w~at types of rom- mercial uses the company wants, but it is known that Irvine hopes to construct a .series of high rise hotels along the 3.$- mile stretch. Company officials have also declared they want to relocate Pacific Coast Highway to the tops of nearby coastal hills and have also already vowed that the public will have free access to virtually all of the beachfront jtsell. James Hewicker, assistant community development director for Newport Btach, said that, in talks with the company, he had been Wonned or the company's pending-zoning application. Irvine orflcials have been talking orf and on with offlclalJ of both Newport &:ach and Laguna Beach for tbe past year about their plans for the property. Collins 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 tbe staff of various public agencies upon refinements .~ the plan," Collins saia. "This preplaMing effort is continuing." "That is all we can say at this time,'' he said. The unincOrporated coastal sector is now ·governed by the county-approved southern Jrv.ine. ]lanch General Plan which designates the area for a variety of land uses ranging from commercial to resid~ntiaJ to open .space: Vie Lawmen Get Jump ort Troublemakers ANGELS CAMP (UPI) -About 3,000 frogs, 70,000 persons and 200 law en· forcement officers are prepared for this year's version of the century-old Jwnpi ng Frog Jubilee in Calaveras County. Each year this tiny gold l\l!h com· munity swells wit h visiloni and the 1971 event was so marred by violence tha t local citizens petitioned to end the coolest made famous by a Mark Twain short Bomb Hoax Romantic PAVIA, lolly (UPI) -Italy has plenty of bomb hoaxes, but this one was dif· ferent. Police charged 16-year-old Claudio Mattei 'Thursday with telephoning a bomb threat to a girl s school so a 14-year old chum of his couJd meet his girl friend two hours early, iitory. Frogs of all shapes and sizes, owned by political leaders and peasants, compete for cash prizes in the international event. A $1,200 prize awaits any jumper that betters the world record jump of 19 feet 3 ;l inche.s set in 1966. A $300 prize goes to the winner of SWK1ay'11 grand final jump. The county sheriff's department has augmented its 20-man force with 50 of· ficers from other areas and the Angels Camp .Police Department of three · of· ficers has hired 5S off-duty policemen from San Jose. The County Fair, which sponsors the event, hired SO private security guards and the California Highway Patrol plans to be on hand. Last year one person died, more than 100 were injured and 62 were arrested in di!Ol'<iers. FIRE HYDRANTS FLUSHED OUT ALONG SOUTH COAST May Re1ult in O.cre1Md Fir• Insurance Pr9mlum1 Fire Hydrants .in Laguna ' . Cleaned f 01· Inspection F'!re hydrants from the south Laguna stopping at each fire hydrant, nmnioi Buch city limits to Dana Strand Rood w1ter through them lo force out cor. are belr>t1 flushed oot and lubrlcatedJn.&......_""lon making prmur< checkl and joint effort by the Sooth Laguna Fire • . . Department and tbe SOuth Cout County lubricatmg valves and cops wiU take Water Dlslrlct. aboot 11.J: months. Capt. Ray Smith ol the fll'< department Following the initial servicing, the laid he 11 hopeful that maintenance ol the hydrants will be Inspected twlc. a )'tar, hydrants will belp lower the lire nting Smith added. 10< the area, which In tum may reduce Many ol the plup, Smith noted, have fire iDlurance p!'emluml roe properly not been checked In yean and could have o_,.,, hampereo\ Ctn ftghling ,actMtles In the Smllb sakf I.he project, which involvts event of a serious blaze. " Cornelia Speaks Gov. George Wallace's wife, Cornelia, talks lo reporters outside Walter Reed Army Hospital under the watchful eye of a federal agent. Mrs. Wallace had been visiting Secret Service agent Nick Zarbos, wounded with the governor in Monday's assassination el· tempt. As Escapees are Free, So is Sheriff's Hair REDWOOD CITY (UPI > Establishment·type Sheriff Earl Whit~ more's gray hair is down to his shirt e<>I· lar, but much as he 'd like to, he won't go to a barber until the law has put the aJlTI • on three more escapees. Whitmore took a "no haircut" vow 58 days ago when nine dangerous inmates broke out of his San ~fateo County Jail. BROTHELS, SI; GAMBLING, NO LAS VEGAS (UPI) -The state Garn· lng Control Board has denied a request from Sky Meadows Ranch, a fly-in house of prostitution, to install slot machines. Board member Shannon Bybee said gambling, which ill legal in Nevada, sihould not be allowed in bordellos, which also are legal in Nevada, because it would be 11unsuitable." They all mu st be recaptured before he will have his locks trimmed aga.i!1. So, if police agencies can turn up John S. Szymkiewicz, 27, a robber; Warren Alarchilette. 20, auto th ief and suspect in the slaying of a homosexual: and William fo.1. Stabler. 39, suspected of robbery and the attempted murder of a policeman, Whitmore can visit his barber. Police making a routine check in a Lo~ Angeles County bar recaptured arrT!ed robbers Ernes t D. Lakey. 36 and Vincent A. Smith . 31. this week: to bring the number of escapees accounted for to six. Of the other four, James E. Dudley died in a shootout with San Francisco police, Charles Ball was arrested shortly after the March 2'l jaU break while trying to rob a San Francisco bank and one man was rootinely picked up by Riverside police. Mexican authorities notified \Vhitmore they found the body of the other escapee. Joseph B~ Mora, ¥, in a Sinaloa rooming house from an overdose of drugs. David A1oare. senior planner assigned to aid the new city's commission, told Ci- ty r.1anagt1r \Villian1 \Voollett Jr. the changes in the plan urged by the planning: commission for City Council artion on Tuesday, don 't fit with the rest of the 933- acre planned community zoning, \Voollett asked r.loore lo :schedule 11 meeting A1onday \\'ith city staff to reassess the flalved conditions. That meeting is hoped to resuJt irr formation of a revised recommendation for City Coun- cil consideration. ' Arnong the plan chan@es sought by thP planni ng commission is the relocation o( a golf course Clubhou se an~ hotel com· plex away from a proposed elementarY school at Culver Drive and Michelson Avenue in University Park. Commissioners objected to the location of the commercial zone next to thr elementary school and across CUiver from the existing University Park Shop- ping Center. The recommendation, hastily drawn rollowing the second four-hour hearing on the plan , shifted the club~ouse con1plex. away from the fir st tee of Rancho San Joaquin golf course to an area within a proposed multi-family -apartments - development aloog University Drive. The present course layout has the 15th green and the 16th bole tee adjacent to University Drive. - Other conditions held future densities of single family development to six uni~ per acre when eight.units had been asked and the Iryine Com pany had agreed to limit themselves to seven units per acre. The bulk of the hastily drawn con· ditions were proposed by Commissioner Frank Hurd of University Park. He Said he hoped the new areas to be developed in University Park would match ex· isting homes. Planning C.Ommission Chairman Wa yne Clark several times during the late-hour consideration of conditions last week urged commissioners to delay action on them un til staff had time to formally state the exact language. Thursday night, Moore said that is the county planning commission's practice. ft assures the commission that staff will review the proposed conditions in the light of other standards in the planned community package. When it is adopted, the weighty volumes of description in the planned community document become the city'• law governing development within the planned r.one. Pagecuit Seeking Slieets, Models For Production Laguna Beach's Pagtant or thP fl·lasters has issued itl! aMua l call for contributions of clean, white sheet' for the makeup department. The sheels do not have to be in perfect condition, but preferably should not be too badly torn -they are used to screen nude model~ in the sculpture prese~ tatioos en route from makeup lo the stage. Sheets may be delivered to makeup director Dorothy Brookbank backstage at Irvine Bowl. Also urgently needed for the 1972 Pageant are more male models -30 or so -for pre sentations of Gettys burg and Norman Roc kwell 's ''Saying Grace." Men and boyi1 of all shapes and sizes ara needed to fill out the cast and may report to casting director Sue Anderson back,, stage at the Bowl between 9 a.m. and S ' p.m. or call casting, 494-S663 for appoint- ments at other hours. ..J 'Miss Fuzz '72' -.38 and 36'.s · LOS ANGELES (AP) -Gaylean Dttnn swapped her .38 for hot pants briefly to win the title "Miss Fuzz of 1972," a contest open only to Los Angeles Police ~partment officers. Gayleaa Dunn swapped her .31 for !tot pants briefly to wln die title ' .. M111 Fuu or 19'1Z," a conte1t open only &o Lot Angelu Police Department ofOcen. Fifteen women competed Thursday beside a hotel pool as the master of ceremonies intoned, "She is presently assigned to the Harbor Jail ..• She is presently assigned lo Venice detectivea.'1 ~1rs. Dunn, 30, is a flv•year veteran of the force and woiks tn tht van Nuy• community relatlonJ divi1ion. Her hus- band is Sgt. Allan Dunn, 111lgned to the department's pubUc'affair1 dlvillon. "I'm nabber1uttd,11 the. s1.21 .. 31 policewoman aaid after lhft wu dtclared the winner. ideal GRADUATION GIFT •• t 1600, 2000, 2600 V-6 Best Selection of the Year ...• on the "Import Car of the Year" Home ot Th• New Car .•• "Goltleta To~h" Drive one honie or asl.~ about our •.• -EUROPEAN ORDER PLAN Hey! You Folks Going lo Europe this year, We can arrange for your new CAPRI to he · waiting there for you. and :.lave $ $ $, too! ' ~~·· r .... 'lv of r;.., cm- o hns on & son • Home ot The Nnr Car .•• "Golde• '.1'011ell" ' • • , 4 DAILY 'ILOT Accord Seen for U.S., Soviet Big Truck 'Fireball'; Rain, Rain Go Away ... WEA111ER WATCHING DEPT. -Thi• morning's weather report suggested that it might be -a IOUch damp out today on thJs the but of all possible coasts. When you get thia kind of a prediction in the nUddle of 1.fay, you have a t.en-- dency to blame it on something other than straight precipitation from the heavens. Ycu might tell yoor visiting Aunt Maude from the Eaat that it's really juat .spray from heavy aurf. Or perhaps you tell her it is actually early morning fog that just got too high and thus leaked. There are, in fact, all kinds of e1cuses by which you can 1void calling it rain. 1111: WEATHERMAN, of course, is much mare cran about the whole thing. He blurted right out t.day in suggesting thlt thwe ,plated a 40 percent chance of rain showers and a 50 percent chance that wet ltuff would get dumped all over ua tonight. AU of this, he insisted, wou1d settlt. down to just plain cloudinus for Saturd1y. Thi~ weather news came as no surprise to me whatsoever. You see, I've been havin( thiJ trouble with the window~ winder on the driver's side of my car. At first it just seemed to be a little sticky. Later, it only wanted to wind the window about half way up·and had to be helped the rest of the way with pulling, tugging and certain well-cho5en words. ALL DURING this ordeal, J kept a weather-tye skyward and noted with Jame apprehension the gathering of cloud•. Or at least it seemed like clouds. Yesterd1y I wound the window up tight and vowed I'd just leave it there. The clouds went away for awhile. Then, abruptly and without the slightest· warn- ing, the window fell down inside the door all by it1elf. Honest. CarefuJly, I began winding on the winder to turn it back into place. It came up. Es:cept now It was sideways. Honest. The front end of the window came up fine but the bac.k end was still down iru:ide the door. Tht window lided, JOrt of like the 11lnldng of the Titank:. LAST NIGHT after work I decided that 1 must do something to get that window stralahtened out. Carefully, I began lg jockey the window winder back and forth, up and down. It made funny noises. It didn't seem to be doing (\nythlng else. Suddenly there was a loud clack followed by a thump as the window disappeared totally within the bowel a or the car door. Nothing wculd coax it back up again. It was buried there permanently. Disgusted, I got out, slammed the car door and grimaced at the tinkle and clat· ter of all the parts rattling around thttein. Then l noticed M>mething else. It was raining. MY DEAR AUTO is now parked out on the lol The open window ~s covered with a greasy old shower curtain, held down against the elements by a brick on the roof. lt has drawn some curious glances from my associates. I may get something more than curloUs glances from them if I don't get it fiJ:td pretty quickly now. Tomorrow is the company picnic, you see. MEASLES FELL BEAUTY QUEEN SPOKANE, Wash. (UPI) -Charlene Dupper, Miss Spokane for 197%, probably will not be able to parliclpate in this wetktnd's annual Lilac Ftstival parade and celebration. Mlaa Dupper, a teacher at Post Falla, Jdaho, came down with the measles. "An occupational huard," she said. Missile Nixon Holds Secret Meet With Russian WASHINGTON -(AP) As ad· ministration sources report 1 U.S . .SOviet strategic-arms-control accord virtually ready for announcement, Pres.ident Nixon is moving into a final round of con· ferences prior to departure Saturday for hlJ Mo5CCiw summit talks. An unusual secret session with the Soviet ambassador to the United States preceded Nixon's planned meeting today with congressional leaders and with Vice President Spiro T. Agnew, just back from 1 Far 'East tour that included a Vietnam visit. Accompanied by presidential adviser Henry Kissinger, Soviet Ambauador Antolly F. Dobrynln flew by helicopter in the wee houn Th.ul'!day to the seclud. ' ed Camp David, Md., retreat where Nii· on had been since Tuesday preparing for his talks beginning Monday with Soviet leaders. Dobrynln and Nixon conferred for about an hour on Thursday, White Hou.!e Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said in disclosing the trip after Dobrynin and Kissinger flew back to Washington. Ziegler wouldn't divulge what was discussed, but the mountaintop con· fertnce was believed to have included the movement toward an agreement to check the missile race. Administration sources said they an· ticipate a strategic-arms-control accord will be ready for announcement. during Nixon's eight.day Soviet visit. Meanwhile, it was disclosed that the two superpowers are ready to sign an ·agreement on a joint manned space flight during the President'! visit to Mose11w next week. In addition , there are reports the Russians ·have solved the problem which killed three eo1monauts last year and are ready to launch their second Salyut space station, possibly while Ni1on is in the Soviet Union. U.S. space sources say s e v e r a I preliminary meetings with Soviet experts on the joint space venture have been very successful and that barring political changes, both sides are ready to an· nounce a go-ahead. Young Boys Shot In New Ireland Ten·or Outbreak BELFAST (AP) -British troops early today foiled an attempt to enlar111e an Irish Republican Anny slronghold in Londonderry, a Protestant teenager was shot and killed in Belfast, and inmates led by IRA men rioted in a Dublin prison for six hours during the night. Guerrillas in Londonderry com· mandeered a crane Thursday ind planted IO.foot steel beams jn Williams Street, the main entrance to the Bogsjde's district where the IRA rules unchecked. Then they cemented the beams into the roadway, 1trung a steel hawser acroBS the street and swung steel sheets into place as barriers. But army bulldozers smashed down the barrJcadea early today, and British head· quarters reported only "minimal op. position" from the guerrillas and the 35 ,000 Catholics Jiving in the district. In Belfast, a 15-year-0ld Protestant boy was killed Thursday by guerrilla snipers who opened fire from a Catholic stronghold.Hi! was the 33tst reported in thrtt years of communal violence in Northern lreland. Two olher 15-year-0ld boys believed to be Catholics were y:ounded by gunmen firing from a speeding car on Sprlngfield Road , in 1 Catholic !!fection. Police d~ clined to specuJate, however, "'hether it \Vas Protestant revenge. , • Curbs, Space Flight NOT FOR THE FAINT OF HEART-POKER PLAYERS IN VEGAS ACTION From left, 'Am1rillo Slim'; dnler, 'Texas' Doyle', 'Pug' Pearson 'Slim' Wins \\lh9le Thing Texa1i Cleans Out Foes for Poker Title , $60,000 LAS VEGAS (AP) -Thomas Austin "Amarillo Slim" Preston, lVhose $10,000 gambling stake had dwindled to $1,700 won the "world series of poker" and $60,000 today. Preston. Of Amarillo, Tex., was the survivor in a 22-hour contest that started with eight high-stakes poker players. The win was his first in four tries. Preston cleaned out his remaining op- panent, Walter Clyde "Pug" Pearson or Nashville, Tenn., with a full house after eight hours of play. Pug had been playing a tight "grind ·' game, whittling Sllm's pile down with $600 and $1 ,000 bands.• "I never have nothing In my hand ex· cept when there's real money on the table," drawled Slim. "I just can 't get that Texas boy to bet Into me when J got him ,'' Pug com~ plained with a sigh . During most of the game the black $100 chips moved back and forth across the table in a void of studied silence. Eight players, each staked to $10,000. began th e series with an agreement to play until one player remained with $80,000 and everyone else was broke. When play broke up for three hours rest early Thursday one of the three re- maining players Adrian "Texas Dolly'' Doyle. dropped out, saying he felt dizzy and nauseous. The other two could have split his $20,CMX> holdings under the rules but shrugged it off. "He's a good old boy," said Slim. "I don't take no stake I dJdn't win ." One of those who benefitted was J immy "The Greek" Snyder, the odds·maker. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Delivery of the Daily Pilot • rs guarantrtd Nlond1y.Fr~y: If '!'OU do f'IClt l'I•.,. rovr- p11p..r by 1':30 p.m., c:11t •nd your COIJY wilt ti. bf'oulll'll 10 you. C.111 1r. tak•n unli4 1:30 p.m. S..lvl'MY ll'ld Sul"day: If you do not rtc'tlw 'l'GUr copy by t •.m. S.rurdtv. or I 1.m. ·Sunday, c:all and • copy wm be bf'Olllll'll lo you. C•ll' 1r1 te~!n u,.1u ro 1.m Ttfephones MOsl Or1ng1 County Arte& •.• , •. , •U·4l21 Nortl'lwat tlunrlng!on 811cl'I •nd Wf'ltmtns!er ...... , ... , ••••.• l ... Tllt SM Cllmeri"· Capistrlrio l!ltlch. Sin Ju•" C•plltrano. °""' Point. S11utfl Uouna, Lagun1 NIOUO!I •..• 4t2·4f7t ''I got a piece of Slim and a piece or Pug too," he said. •·Whichever one loses -Jimmy the Greek wins." The players' stakes were put up by backers who collect a percentage if their n1an wins. The game they played was ··Holtl·em .'' variation of sevencard stud. Tv.·o cards are dealt face down to each player. five are deall face-up in the center and the best five-cart! hand wins. 'Publi~ Deceptio1a' Wit'nesses Accuse Media Of Staging News Events \VASHINGTON (A P! -Pickled sea animals, kids drinking "pop wine," sales of dynamite, and a governor's special .speech for a late.arriving film crew figure in a House probe into the degree of staged 1V ne\YS. These are examples of what sworn witnesses described Thursday as public deceptions in telecast news. All but one of the nine persons ap. pearing under oath before the House Commerce Committee Thursday talked about the Columbia Broadcasting System and the CBS.Owned Los Angeles station, KNXT The other witness, Loren Colwell, security agent for the Los Angeles city school districts, complained about the way an American Broadcasting ~. crew from KABC, Los Angeles, covered a stu· dent protest in 1970. Past and present CBS or KNXT cameramen and soundmen \Vere among the chief Vlitnesses. The name of CBS correspondent Terry Drinkwater came up · Nixon Official Says NY 'fimes 'Enemy Conduit' in connection \Yilh a 1970 dynamite- buying story and a 1971 program about the popularity of so-called "pop wine·• among the young in Ca liforn ia . A CBS spokesman said news-staging practices are against netv.·ork policy, and added Drinky.•ater has been_suspended by CBS news for six months without pay for the dynamite and wine stories. Stanley Haberlach, of Portland, Ore., a dynamite distributor, aaid a purchase se- quence filmed at hla store and carried on the CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite "was strictly staged throughout the wllole thing." CBS soundman Floyd Jack Reynolds agreed. J(ill,s Two Pl1i'SBURGll (UPl l -A trac\o lr:i llrr truck loaded with 40 tons of stee lost its brakes and cut a quarter mil paih or burning wreckage alon Pittsburgh's main thoroughfare, killin ,,,.0 persons and flinging cars lnto the air ••like pieces or paper." Another ID 1vere injured and at least lJ cars "·ere damaged. fi1otorisls scattered along the road to get out of the v:ay oi: 11'\ SH .ORT ••• the fiery truck traveling at an estimated. 80 1niles pe r hour Thursday. The truck appar~ntly lost its brake.~ ne<\r thr Wilkinsburg ex it on tile Penn Luicoln Par.!i.'t\"ay, state police said. The truck burst into flames \vhen it struck the first car and picked up speed as it raced down 1hc hill attempting to weave in and our of the cro\vded traffic. Spy Sl11h1 by Son . LE\\1lSBUR(;, Pa. (U Pl l -A rorme r Army sergeant serving a l>year term for conspiring to give secrets to the Russ ians has been stabbed to death by his son \\'ho visited him at tht federal penitentiary. Robert Lee Jo hnson, 56, was brought into the prison's open visiting quarters to see his son for the ri rst time in years, prison officials said. As he e:itered the room. his son. a Vietna m War veteran, lunged at his father wit h a knife. stabbing him in the chest. Johnson died an hour later in the emergency room al Geisinger Medical Center. Robert L. Jr .. 22. Greenwood. Ind., ~·as disarmed in1med iately by prison guards. Jelliner Cr11sl1es FOHT LAUDERDALE. Fla. IUPI\ - An Eastern Airlines jctllner Jahding in a rainstorn1 has crasher! and burned but all ID persons aboard escaped the shattered fuse\agr ahead of the names. One s\e\\'ardess suffered a broken \'ertt>br a nnrl t\\'O other crewmen entered a hospi tal for obser\•ation. None of the passengers \\'as hurt. The plane·s ta il SC{lion broke oH the main fuselage on impact with the ground. The six passengers and four crewmen escaped through front emergency exists. t V.N. Cut l'oled \VASHI NGTON (AP ) -The House has approved a $13.2·million cut in Che United States' payment to the United Nations. The cut. if upheld by the Senate and approved bv President Nixon. means the l!nitcd s1•s will pay only 25 percent of lhe total operat ing costs of the U.N. dur• ing the year beginning July l. The U.S. 8· mount for the current fisc al year is 31.S percent of the \\·or!d body's budget. In approving the measure by voice ''Olt Thursday. the llouse ignored a Jasl· minute plt"a by Secretary of State \\'illiam P. Hogers to restore the funds . Flng Co11ri~lio11 ST. PAUL. tt.linn. IAP I -The 1'1in- nesota Supreme Court today upheld the conviction of a youth charged with defac· ing the American flag by pain.tin& a whi te peace symbol over the stars. In a 4-3 decision. the court rejected • content ion that the defendanl v•as employing a symbolic freedom of speech protected by the First Amendment. The courl ruling means that Thomas L. Cliflon, 21, of Minneapolis faces either • ~JOO fine er 30 days in jail. It's Good Day Across U.S. WASHINGTON I UPI ) - A spokesman for the Nixon Administration has accused 'fhe New York Times of "being a conduit of enemy propaganda to the American people'' in two recent reports on the Viet· nam \Var. Kenneth \V. Clawson, deputy director of \Vhite House communications. said that he based his charge on The Times' publication of a report Thursday by cor· respondent Anthony Lewis in Hai phong and another Sunday by Benjamin Welles. Few Heavy Showers, Thu11derstor1ns Reported "'AllONAI WIAlltll )tt'lll(t f0fl[A11 .. 1AIA 111 , ... / (Cocutot summary a n d tidol data appear lod<IV on Pogt 9./ a member of the newspaper's bureau in Washin gton. ctawson said a copy of his statement was made available to the Times. 1l1e paper had no im mediate response. Ln his story, Lewis reported that North Vietnamese said mirles U.S. atrcrafl dropped into Haiphong harbor were being rendered barmlrss and \hot "lpdependent sources" supported claims that an East Gennan freighter had entered the port since the mines were !IC. tivated May 11. The newspaper printed a statement to that ctrect . by a Pentagon spokesman, Jerry W. Friedheim. But Clawson said "the Times sl4oped to bad journallsm wban II publlshed a loog irte>ponslbl• propaganda. line indk:1llag there i> ship movement In and 0\11 or Haiphong harbor." 1 "TI\e trulh, 11 he said, "was worth 11 sing le paragrapb ••• in a story of many column \ncbes." Uke Bunapt11 Dumpty UfllT ....... Top slor~ ol an abandoned Chicago building has collapsed, shower- ing debns on ieven oars or a weddln.( party waiting at atopligbL On.e younf "!Oman was !\filed and 10 Oihers hurt. OUJclals sale! the building collapaed from ~ge. -' • • • " • 001> Opposition 1 Democ1·atic Tax -i Relief .Bill Ol('d SACRA1\1ENTO !APf -A St 4 billion Otimocratic l•x rtlief bill aimed at eit~ing the tax crunch on C<tlifnrnia home o"·ners hRs won -tr :':r Taxpayers Get Hands On Surplus? S.\CAA:\fF.NTO 1Ar1 A.1111mbly approval de1pJt1 enmpl1\nt1 from R.1publlc1t11 \\'ho said the plan wat actually a "l;ix hill." As~embly Spe~ker 8 o b ~loretti. .. a Vin N u ~· s Dt'mocr1t, picked . up '1 4 Repuhllcan 1upporur1 for hi~ measure. which w11 sent lo the ~nate ror cnnsiderttlion Thur&d ay nn A 56-1 vote - wi!h 1111 the "no" votes J1rp1 1htlcen.~. "I iln1 as!nunderl that thi." hlll i11 louted 1111 a tax relief mtR11ure." s 11 Id Republican A"semhlyn1an Joh n Stull of Lrur11diA, !he minoril~· caucus chRlrm11n of the lower house. ' . . . . . . . . . . . Fa.mU!J Clrem bJI BU Keane " ... And tl>o nl'lt 0111 who soya 'that 's not how Mommy doe1 It' la In Nol troulolo 1" Attorneys Eye Short Defense M N JOSE !lJPll -Angela O.vi1' llfMflf'y~ htt ve won a d1t1y unt11 Mondtt.v, saying thl"y C'OUld prepare an "a~ br1vh1ted defeMt" th1t will l llow tht murdtr·kldn1p-ron· 1piracy ca1t ti) 10 to the Jury by the find of Miy, .Jud2e Rich11rd E. Arnason granted the delay Thurlday ~ Miu 01vi1' atll)rneya could prep11re the 1hotler defense to t.nd the tri11I qu lckl y. •' Pay Raises Propose d SACRA~1El'\TO I r\Pl Gov. lltag11n 15 rrnpoi:;1ni: a tSA.2 mlllinn 1111!1rv 1nr1e<1~1' pAckri fil,f' rn !ilale enirli'll'"~. 1n rluding rho.~f' in rollrgrs And uni1·ersi1ir!'. . . HHH, McGovern Face Showdown By Tbt Assoclalf'd Prf'!S Se.n11. Huhfrt IL Humphrey and Grorgf' ~lcGn\·ern have agreed to a series of fac8-1'l- face !£1le1'ised deh.:ues hefore. lhr1r rla.~h in the rrucial June fl flllf()rOIA flfll1lAt)', Thr t11·n n" 111 n r r a I 1 <' prri:;1dcnt1a1 t"'flntrndrrR "Pre on lhP \\'rst (.'o.:i i:;t Jolin\ - ~linnMn1 11 ·_. Humphrf'y l11kl"I~ R "rtllt'' i1•1· in {'allfornla v.h llc ~lllh nakota '.;; ~lrf;o1·ern t·an1pa1s-n:;; i n Orl'~nn for 1'otr:o; 1n th,11 :o;!.:i!e 's pr1n1ar~· nr:..\, 'f11r d,~1 Derr.ocratic N a t I o n a l Um- \'11ntton. f There are n1aiot dilierence;:,- hetwecn them 011 1mr•or1:int i:i;~uP~. Humphrry ~,11rl , .arid "the people ar·r t11r1 'l~rl to kr•n'f "'here \\"C sta nrl ." \!r(~n1·ern . 11·a1 1n Lo.'1 Ani:rlrs "'hrn he J•,.,arrl nl llu1nph:-r1 .• propn.;.1J r1 11 d r1N'lttred, "J rl"-Arlll~ arrrnr · ~l;iny n1nnrhs tt c-n lt the beq 1n n1ni;i f'lf thu1 pr,.•1rirnt1al ((lt11t).i1Jgn. J ruhhch rh~tlrn:;· C \'II'.\ IG \ ·;z ------Cahfnrn1a i.~ hr;irlN! for the b1,1u;P~l bud~e! .~11rph1 1 In ,.late histnrv -a whnprln11: •4~R 7 mill1nn -;inrl t11xp11yrrs may l,!1.'! a <'U! '10 stnle int.Yin1e taxes bec;:i11~e nf it, says State Financll. Direetor Verne Orr. ''ll'a 1 caae where we'll be---------------------- filling the lop or the pocket. Chief defellSe a ~ t n r n e y Ho1A•11rd Moore even hln tNt In newsml!n that thl!re ma y he nn 1-Mtlmony pt'f!N.nltd. only fln11I argument!!. The pro!!f'1".\llkln ended il11 . cue .-11ainat Misa Davis Mnnch1y. He 11irt Thur&q;:iy !he r ;11sr lihou!d help hr lnii 11::il.1r1 r<.: more In linr wlrh rhnlit" p.i1rl by other f!lTiployer~ f f1 r e(fuiv 1le nt wnrk. In lA1~ \tll!rlr:., 1t>11l il 1 ,., rl('h.11 r nci:;Pll<lluins hr c. :in frotn !hr llurnphrP.1 i111'1 ;\lrf;n1·f'rn hrilrlriuar!rr.;;, ;1 hl11('k .1nr! ;1 h;ilf ;ipart on \\"1l~h11·r Hn11lr1 arrl , l'rl 11!1 the il!l1('r prP::1rlrnt1-ll t .inrhrl;itrs In ii farr ln·L1re rlrh:itP.'' '-t rr;ry, Pm ~.1 1d a~ hl"i h.l'lirderl a plan11 for l'nr1l;111cl, (lr11, "I tl1 1n~ tl1;1 l 1 ~ lhr hf>sl 11 :i.v lo d1~ru ss lhe 1 • .;~1 1rs and nH,.,rr:o;L~ to thr peoplr ' Orr tnlrl tht Senate Finance Comm1tter 1'hursd;:iv rhe Rn· t1ript1frd su rplu!I iii a rnnl· binatinn of hlggPr e.~rimates of revent1f'S from present taxi'" -par1lcul;irly the incornc ;inrl sales taxes -:ind .!In $110 million cu l in Cl'tin1alcd Med i· Cal 11nd \Velf:irr .~ptndl n~. Thi' f'~lim:ited surplus Is S.102.8 milhnn more than Orr sa1rl ht ('Xf)f'C'ted I a st 0N"l"mber in (Ill\' Rnn;ild Re21g;in 's $i.:' bllllon 11tare burli:er. • ThP prnje1·1ed s:urplus i.~ U1c lotal Qf a 'J61.I million surplu11 1n the tl!ritl y~:ir Pndin~ nl!'xl 11u·111th anti an lln!1cipi1!t'd $2~tfl nilllinn surplus in the 1072-73 liscAI .l'C'Ar , 01T salt1 !he rxpeeled 1urph1•e,. Are fin lflp of any ex· ce1111 mnTK'v the s!11te mav col· Jeri. fmrn · nvfrw1thholdin~ of stare 1ncomP 1;ix1>s anrl ill"!' al~ on top of a prornseri $56.5 million extra p;i1· raise next year for slatf' f'mployes. G1·unt, hut "'e'Jl h11ve a h1~ hole in I.he hotlnm or the pocket. so we wnn't g11 in anythina by this mc11sure." Morelli ilnswcred the rri liri~n1 of Stull and other RepublicttnA by sayin,2 lh11t p11nrlerintt: ln public 1entiment loo much ls what h11s been \1·rong with politics in pest ,vear1. The Morl'ltl mea11ure would hike personal Income taxes by S600 millioti a year. lower the 11nnual property t11.1 payment nr !he 11vera11 homeowner by $274. 11nd increi11e 1tate sup- port of schools by 45 percent. Gov. Ronald Reagan Wednes- d11 y un\'t!led 1 tall reforr:n me1111ure of hi~ nwn which \\outrl increase property t11x rt>l)f'f by $1192 million R }'e;ir hut leave !!late income taxes <H their present level. • One nf the mAjor dlUerences hr111·ecn the Moretti and Rcajilan approaches is thal ~1 orrtti 's properly tax cuts \1·nuld go only In homeo"·ners. "·ho Demncrttts 11rgtH" 11re hurting the most fina ncially. W a1uiu Wri'Stl1)festle? PETALU'.\1A (APJ -It's grunt And grima ce tlm t In Pet11tum1 11Rain. Mrn 11ni1 "·omen "'1!1 eo1npete Salurrlay lnr titles in th, 11th 11 nnu;i! \l/orld \\'ristwrestllng Cham pio n1hlp11. Cnnlr,11tanl.~ pl;ire their right el~w~ in rubbf!r cup11 nn the tables and Jock e11ch othcr '1 left hAnds flat on th11 table . Al a rrfrrrr's ~1i;:11al. they try In pin their opponents r1sht arn1 to lhr tilhlr. "II takf'" f'JUJle 11 guy tn ri~k dcfl'RI under a ~potlighl." Fr;inkie Cirtrr. ii hnx1n~ referf'e who has helped out in pasf \l.TlS!"T"stling !nurnan1ents. "Hf' m::i y br king s!rnn~ mlln in his 011'n neighbor· h11Pt1. ::inrl thrn 11·hi1m' Hr's reduced In nothing in front nf thn~I' "hn ('nn~idf'ret1 him inrlr~lrucliblc." If pllsl .1 rars ::ire :in.I.' inrlico:il1nn, !hf' cnnlest.ant~ will ,.ome frnm :i 111<lr 1aril'f\' nf h::ick.e:rnund:o; and locafinns. In 1971, fnr cxamplr.' challcnlilcrs in the top ""eii;;ht cateaory -01·er 200 pound~ -cam~ from 11 f111r away 11 the R11hAm.111 .11nrl HR"'aii. F.ntriP.11 included a 500-pound wood sm.11n from North 01kot.11 and prnfe~sion;il football player Ed White of thP Minne110tJ1 \'ikings. State Lottery Co111es U11 '0' in Assembly • SACRAMENTO I AP \ -The California As.~mbly Ms sa id no to lhe st.a le lottery measure for the secnnd time th is session -bul Mme of lhf' \rOlel'i were bouncing around like the pea in a roulette wheel. The final vote ca me to 38-3~ Thursd;iy, Jfi short of tht: re· quirtd two-third!!. But at one pninl, !he rollcall vole tilllied 47 "aye"· vo!eo; again~t only 25 •·no~". A( th is point , nine A!l~emblymen momenl'i before the rollcell closed - jum pPd up ttnd switched from "aye'' to "no." I.as! April 25, the me11sure los(on a vote or 41-24. Introduced by Assemhlyman !,eon Ralph I [).Los Angeles 1, the measure needs a two- Third Bo y Succumbs After Fire LAKESIDE rAP l -A third you ng!\ler is dead of injuries surfered in I fire I h I t destroyed a foster home for boys a~ mo~t were dres1lng for !Choo!. T"'O boys were trilpped in the house by th e bla1R 11nd died. A third was found un- cnnsciou.~ by a fireman and "'ttS rushed in crit icttl con· rl 11ion In Universit y Hospitttl in S::ln OieJi!O. }le died there lttfe Thursday night , the coroner's nHice said. thirds majnr11y in both hou11M. I( .11pproved, it would pul the issue of a legaliz.ed st1te lnt- tery oo the b.!lllot next N.,vem- ber. • • That's right. every dinette set, game set, ''We: don 'l knnw what '!! going to happen Mondsy." Moore told newtmen outaldt the courtr®m. "We m11 y 1U!l 1tart 11rguinR Mondil.V ... We expect 1 o m e 1bbre11iated defense action." Whtn asked if the formrr UCLA philosopher lmtructor would be called lll tht wltntir!! 11t11nd, Moore replitd: "\'011 wilt find that out when IA'e present our defense." The 113.onn-rnrnihr ( Ca!ifornitt Stale F: Ill r I 0 I r ~ Assncialion 11111~·~ thr IROJIOO 1t11te workers 11re now 21 10 2fi percent hehinrt thr1r rol- leagues whn work f'l.~r"·hrrf'. If thr legls li.rur'° ilrrro1 r l" lhe r11 i5es woulrt makto up al lt•51 hAlf the difftrC'nrr. Re;i~11n .11Ai d. llu111phr('.1 su~grstrrl lhr;,. rirha!rs . hut !hat llnd nthrr ,11 r;in,e-r1nrn1.;; 1rrre nprn In nri::o11n1 1on~. llun1phrr1 rh;.i!lr n:rd \!r·t;n1rr11 Thursrl;i\ ;i~ rhr ;\l 1nnf'<>ntan forrnall \' 1.1u r.r hPrl his t'alifornia srrP'1rh rlr11 r. "fhr "innrr nf the Ca !1fnrn1a prin1nr,v lakt>s ;ill of rh ... :i>IR1P 's 2ilrl ele~alf'S In fhP \lrfin1rr11 ,1rlrlrd. "[!"~ hPrn 1 l'I\ hard i.1 i:rt an 1· rr ~on~& frnn1 any o!hC'r c1nrl 1rla!P 011 ! h ::i 1 ch.1l!rn.cr, sn 1'111 dtl1~htr..rl 1n lrnrn lha 1 Srn llr1111phrr1 1~ now 11 1!11ng to rnl!;i~e in ~111·h .:i dfh;i1r " ..... .,.rr-"".'T:.i...., ' p he e'S CJ {/r1e EJND a : P @Ce for e/erYTh inG ~ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ; and on Sat. and Sun., May 20 & 21, '.l everything in our 125 ,00 0 inv entory ·1 will be sold at up to 50 o/o off man-:: uf acturers suggested retail price ... but, only at a certain hour for each item! Three other young boy:!i escaped, 1111 did Elizabeth Slnvi k, who ope r11led the nne- 1tnry, five-bedroom home for orph1n• or mentally de ficient bny11 (or the C1li!orni1 St1te Department of Public Welfare. Naugahyde sofa and love seat ' ·: I china buffet, .; • •BABIES •CHILDREN •ADULTS •No Age limit t L1l'l'llt1d to one Perlroit p1r 1ubi1<t. Ma.r.imum two pcrtroit1 ptr family CFI Sptc lol off1r. • Otoup ro11 ovailoblt •Soli~fociion Guoronte1d 8x10 COLOR PORTRAIT SEARS LOW PRICE! PLUS !iO• FILM CHAltG[ Studio Hours Dally: 12 NOON to 8 P.M., Sm. 10 A.M. tc 6 P.M., Sun. 12 NOON ta -4 P.M. Sears IUfNA ,A~IC LOS C.fl.!TO$ i0-IA"'1C.t ' INGl.lWOOO ''$AOfNA. C.0$TA.M($A $•Nl i fl S'R!N(,$ ~ANIA MONICA COV!N4 formal 0 dining set, • 0 bedroom group • . ind mattress sets •• The Whole Thing ! ! ! HERE'S HOW to BEAT die CLOCK •Shop early to find the items you wont. •Note the TIME OF SALE on those particular items. •Save up ta 50 '/. off Mon ufocturer's suggested retail price by mo king your purchose AT THE TIME THAT THE ITEM GOES ON SALE . •Tho place is Custom Dinette. Sole Hours Noon to~ p.m. Saturday & Sunday Only . REMEMBER, SOME ITEMS ARE ONE-Pf·A·KIND SO SHOP EARLY 11015 EUCLID ST., FOUNTAIN VALLEY San Diego Freeway and Euclid St. turnoff 962-3325 or 546· 1681 OPIN 7 DAYS A WllK M°". ttt,,, Prl. 10100 AM to 1:30 PM• Sunday Noon·J 't:±2· -,• --' ' r, :1 I ' ' ·. " I ' ' 8 DAILY PILOT Friday, May 19, 1972 nBEESCIPE LIDDER '11 88 IDEAL-SECURITY 3bag1for FROM.BANDiill 8 88 Wt.1' or DRY SHOP VICOOM SGAL 29aa CENTRAL QUALITY BIBCB PULLIUI , GLIDDEN UTIQUE KITS . 1'7 TRASH COMPACTOR 18888 INSINKEllA TOR AUTO COOLAHT RECOVERY SYSTEM 99c TaPSOIS WITEB SEIL ·' . ·., 4 G'1. , iiAaco GAF LORAN FOAMCRAFT VllYL nOORING ·377 SQ. YD. MURRAY-MARSH I • • -.1111rwu : ... , ..• , . • . .•• , • PYBO V WELDING KIT 3411 PYRONETIC lO'x7' SHED ~ ~ . :.< 7777 _, SHEPHERD BLITZ-FOGGER \_;;/ - "'.· ).\[ 1911 Ill ~ . Jl~": · '-0-VllJAGE BLACKSMITH I -·-~~ . ···~· ;J -:-__ ... · 4"x4"x48" TOBIPOSTS 1'7 MICHAEL.REGAN SBIG JM i;IBPET SQUARES 44~. DIAMOND "W" SOCKET SE'.1' SK 1/4 • 3/8 DRIVE 1888 INDY SPECIAL BUDROW . . -llW 1ua.1y &• fSMQ1- li\~ 91'1' ' -. 1%. m. Oii. «&++:111.' DOORBELL CBIME 3·77 !lo. 35 TRINEMFG. -. luisE-IWIY · PlllT · ... YIBllSI ,,...,Ell,_8..,f£Bl!'ll ·~ STMUIE • CISTlllG BESll gal. 297 HASTINGS TURRET SPRIRKLEB 1'7 POOL CBLORllE 39~AL GEORGIA-PAC!FIC CHEMICAL --BOSS BOOT . , FEED£B ·777 . CAL. UQ. FERT. 2~ CAL 1JQ. n:aT -- !; • .; • • .. j ... ~Is · .... · .. -J , Speciu~s · :· • ,. :ii ' .. G'' : ·Pric~s so lpw we ,' ' raleil · : . men~ioll .. tllem : .au ~·. l ' • . ·h : ·, (We'd be nuts if.we didn't.). J. ·:$ ow .; ;,~-two· 011~·sPEe11Ls ·"· · :: 'iDliope . . . ' SAT. l,and 'P.M. · SUN.'l and 3 P.M. • --:. S ,,,,... "" 'P .• . ... <-· ...,.... eps1 s . - - ' · I l 'BUDGET PULLMAN 3777 • Vinyl by Empire FLO-TEC PUMP ' 397 no.TEc FONDUE DISH 33c KANECU'nERY • . MISOllTE CORK n ~.'" .U BRICK PUELS 4'xl' •bl. 9•• MODER!f MATERIAL PDDtlft I •i 1.1111' • ,'14" .......... CDOME 'I cws TDLES 9'7 • TREln>ENT. • CASITA PATIO and FUN ROOM SCREE!jED IN 15777 GENERAL ALUMINUM PRODS. 169 , ' '''·· -DORCY . BALL BINDER TWllE 5 lb. 77c PACIFIC FIBRE and ROPE SllOIE • 1 .. -·yu tDI "'J -"ma•m . ••• . S7!tt BOTRE STlllED CUSS PllELS SPECTRALITE 2'x4' 497 !AM CASTER ..... , 1-1s•1•m . • ,,,., MJi.WTIC PROPllE TORCH 2'' TURNER ~ I . . • .. . POOL CARETAKER 11788 WORLD IND. PORCH SWllG SOLID OAI 1777 MILTON V.NE DELTA FAUCET WASHERLESS 7•• LAllSEN nlE ILllK ifitilii • -!~ Olt VUD'COD • JIFFY.m 4'x7' STODGE m 11 88 TAYLOR and ASSOC. GIS IUIZUITI LDC SET 1997 IEIJ. FOUllDlll • ~ . ~ 1 • . ' .... .. Frlc1c'ly M.1y 1q 1<>7_2 --___ DA ILY PI LOT 7 -·-·--······--·-1·--·•IWll • ,: - • MUTONE BATH FAN 677 1288 NORTH AMERICAN SECURITY SCREEI DOOR DOUBLE EAGLE 2477 COLUMBIA NAVAL JELLY 8 oz. 67c WOODHILL. CHEM. GOLD TIFFINY 2995 JOHN STAMP ' DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Co;rning: Design Review 1·11e La gu na Be;u·h 1 ·11 .\• 1·ounl'lf 1.11 bending over blr.k"1arrl s lo give the public 1n opportunity lo mull over ii~ new rlesign rf'V lt>" nrrlinAnre bcfnre final' adop- tion of 1h e la\.v. Nn\v .'ii.'heduicd fnr :«e<'nnd rf.'aqing-and ;irloptinn .run~ 7. the orrtinan,·r, 11,11 1 1mpo.~e ;ie.o;lhetlr controls nn all nc1v and rrrnodclcd st rurture.<: in the .1\r1 folnnv, e>Cr:cpt li1ngle d"'·ell1ng.~ and dup1f'XC!i. · It i.~ a S'Acerin~. uni~ue alternpt lo UpJ1rad1 Liu~ apre1rftnl·e or lhe con1muntt y by ellm\n1tinF rinnr pl1n · n1n1. shoddy c·on~ll'urti.,n and lasteleu d1s11n. and en· cour111\n1 reArert r.or rnvlrnnmcn111 value~. IJke any altempt in "le~isla tt a1slhetir11," thP or· dinanre i~ hound to rrndure a certain amount or .!ilatlr. Rut ii has hocn .i:lvtn loni: and c:areJul iitudy t!uri ng rl;inning ('on11nission hrar1n~s . wilh littlr or no adver.!ie commu{lity rf'arlion i;o rar. The counril liela;.ied final adoption in hnpe nf ~,n. erat1nS! ;i lillle rnorfl: ruhllr lnll"'rt!ll. /\!'. Mayftr Rl rh ~rd Golr1txirg nnler1 , ho"'l"'ver. 1o1·hen lh~ cily'11 Jitrirl airn nrdlnanre \\'tint intn eff~ct artr.r torrent~ o( riublicll y and even a three·yl"'ar moralnrlum. I.here ,.1.111 "'ere tht1~e \Vhn 1eemfld surprisf!d by the new reRulatinn11. Public Safety at Iioisue The rancor emerging from the hatlle over San Juan Capistrano'!!: prnpo~ed polire department illi an al!l'ming facet of an extremely grave issue for a grov;inlil'. rity. In reront days, during the final stages of petition sign ing for a referendum on the proposal, angry char· ges have resounded through the city. Tht wavelll over th,e proposed polire service is hut the surface of A deep pool of circumstances that ioes back years a20 lo occurrenC'es which had nolhin a: to do \\rith public safety. The community at thi• poi nt I• bitterly divided. ilntl 11 ~r<'fn~ rerl.ain fha.t the referendum petition drive has i,cen a success. \'nl11nt eers hav~ submitted 811 sianatures callin& for ;i vo le on the m<llter. Only 211 r trtlfled names are required In fort e a referendum. If. indeed, the matt er is .!':Cl for ;i votP in coming mnnth,. all c1lizen .~ should settle dp"'" and bee-in tn d cli~rate soberly on their vote. not react to emotional appeals. Public safety is a deadJy 1erlous matter. Park 'Plant-in' Saturday After a shaky Jlart. du11tn1 temporary breakdown in communications, Laguna's Ma in Beaelf Park ''plant· in" '"'ill S!Cl 11nde r u1ay Saturday, with the offlrlal bless- ing of the rity fathers. 1'he idtft of makin~ ;i community pro.1ert out nf r1 1'f!!~!'ing up the "'Ide npen !ipaces left after nlrl hearh bullding!I "'ere razed i~ nne of the bri~hlf'r in~pi ratinns nf ex -council t andidate Reth Ued.~ ;ind her ft.nnw Vnl· unteer Po.~t workers. Unfortunately, lhe enthusiastic younJl'. prop!e ~e nt nut a flyer announcing the event bernre the rark~ de- parlment. which is responsible f4'lr \mplemf!ntinA' the park plan, had a chance to offer sua51e111t.inn!I. 1"he prospect of droves of residen t~ rle!lrenrllng on the park area and happi ly p!antin~ a hl$l'gledy-pig· gledy array of plants that probably would expire in short order caused momentary panic. Rut all is well now. The parks f o 1 k have listed plants that will su rvive on the beach. the volunteer folk will see th a t all are delivered in portable containers lhat ran be moved \vhen park co nstruction begins. and a spirit 0£ harmonlo1,1s cooperation reigni;. Tl's a great idea. gi ving every 1.aiunan a chance lo contribute to the beauty of the park. s Prodeu!Cion Speed·up Ordered Bad Jtabit: U·.S. Lags • Ill High Missiles WA.SHJNl;TnN -A speed-up has hc>r.n ardered on Lhe production of an Air·lo-air missile capablf' of zr.roin,!Z in and destrClY· i.ng Russi a'!'! hi1?hPs1·1rvel comh<lt plants -parlirularly !he super~nir f\11G-2:'1 wilh a reiling of R0.000 frel and a spcrd or around 2.000 m1l!'s an hour. Top opcraling height nf rxisling lJ.S. air·l~ai r missiles ii; 60.000 feel . cr1\ing of the F·4 Ph;i ntom Jtl -neare•t enmbat plane this country no"' h;is to lhe Mfd. z.1. S1gnH1c:intl,Y , Is- rael also is vigorow- h' en12:a.ll'.Nf Jn devel-~pinR An l\ltra-hig tl lpvel Air-lo-11lr mis· .;;i!e -\\'ith ttle Ml(;. l.1 a.~ the principAI 1mn1!'d1a1P ta rgrt. 1~­ raf'I'!' hrs! fi!:!h!rr-txunber ls lhP F-4. ~arl.\1 lh1!' ,11er1r. Prrsidrnt Nixon Aulhor- 1r.erf thr s;:ilp nf 4R mnrt nf these ph1nrs In lsrarl. 1,1hirh i.~ nnll' rf\"eivinp_ lhPrn at the rntr nf four ;:i nlonlh. \\'hile thr US. an<l lsrat'l ArP urg!'nll y pres.~1ng !hP prorluct1on or n new air-10- air miss 1ir . the\' arr procrerl1 n,:: 1n- dei)fnrlrnl1,\ -al1houRh there is a rom- mon mot1vn11ng cause. TH EBI': HA.V t~ bun 11:r11 v,1y dis111rbing experiences "·Ith the MlG-23 in the sllperrharged ~fiddle East. On four diff Prent OC'Cl11 ioN1, fl.1IG-2Js based in Egypt and piloled by Russians (ROBERT S. AU.EN) drhbtralelv \'intatPd Jsr;ie li Air sparr. The Soviels spffi n\'Pf thP roasrline ntar Hit ifA i11H1 over Israeli fortified positions deep Jn the ~ln1I Pen ln1ul1. In every instance, l1r1eli Ph11ntnms sought to Interce pt them -but "'·ere unable to do so because their 111lr-to-air missiles couldn 'I reach !hem. f'lying at l.hrer. limes !he Sj)f'ed or sound. the Ml<:·l1• were tnn ra~t fn r the somewhat slow11r Phantnn1s. A.IM'I, the latter's mi.,~iles 11re unahle to runctlnn In the thin atmosphr.rtt abovti M,000 r .. ,.l. The Soviet planes few at 70,000 to Rll,000 feet. l''or n1i-!lsilrs to "lock in'' on then1 at !hose heights. spr-ci11l .i::uidancr. and o!her equipm!'nt arl': nece~sary. Four MJ(;-2.1s are known In bf' hased 1n Ej!ypL So fAr. all l'!rr pilCltr<l bv Rus sians. There is no indication !hat E,1:yptians are beinJ? tr;iined in lh,.ir usr. fl10ST Of' Ec;rPT's pilol s arr limllrrl to fl yina l\.i lr.-1;is And -17s. "'i lh a smAll number p1lolin11 MJf;.21s. Thf! ~11yptian Air forct 1~ notorious fnr its unu.•u~llv high rite nf lns.~es In c:r1.•hl'IS dul'I 10 faulty ny \ng And Arcidenl.3. To speed up de\'l!lop m8nl of a n,.w ultrA·hlCh level air·to-air mis5ile. both the lt.S. and Israel ari:: usi ng existing "'"ellpons as the basic mis::;ile. II is usinj!: SA,\1-2 an1i-airrraft missiles <'llpturPd from the E,eyptians in the Sinai in the l91i7 connict. Some 311 nf these Soviet-madr mi.c:sile~ wrrr o\·crrun by l ~raeli armnred .<:p!'arhrads . The mi.~siles and their mobile l11unchers WPre seizf'd inlacl; itbandoned by the Egypllln!'I ln lhf!lr panicked rout. The SAM-2 11nd SAM·S are the Russians' principal ground·te>-1ir anll· aircraft weapons . Hundreds of these AA missi le• art! pn!t.itionerl on the Egyptian side ol thl" Suez C'.Anal. and around C11iro, Ale111n· driA. !hr Aiiwan Dam and ot her m11 jnr polenti11J targets. THt.: U.S. AIR·T<).AIR mi:i~lle that i11 un<lergnin,!t rush mndificl'lfion for u.~r above 70.000 feet is l'lround 14 feet in lr11gth. weighs upw;irds or 1.000 pounds iinrl ha.~ a wArheAd nf some 200 pound.!! of hi.i::h explosives. Initial nper.:it inn;il tesls nf !hP new missil e are staled fnr late this ,\•rar nr rar!y nexL ln Western militar~· lerminology the ~11(;-2.1 is known as the Fnxbal. Addenrlum : The 1.1 . .S. is silsn en,ea,2ed in riP vP.lnpin11 a new rf'ronnaissance s•te[lit, with ,ll'reatly improved piclori11t And nthl!r report.Ing rapabililie!!. PUf"?06P of th, new devlrP is to pm,,ide better and r1!1ter ple- ture~ fTom space than art-now poaalble from camera-carrying satellites. Let's Rewrite All History SKAfiE\\'E !'NIVF.:RSITY -St11den1s ended their "·eek-old sit -in 11nd 11nt1rd DeAn Homer T. F'trtibonP to<ia,v af!pr hr pron"~~rl tn d1sronrinue lhP l'n1vrrs1!y's conltO\'Cr.~i;:il \l/h11e S1urli,s Prngr;:im . The ~turlPnl.~. mpn1hers of a mill1anl ,Qroup kno11·n a~ "1'hr \V8sp~ ... marched info Dr:in relli· honf''" off1rt .!IC\'Pn ). d::tys 11i::n and pre- sent Nf th~r non·ne· ~oli~blr rlrm1nd that the "sl<ln1N1, biRnlf"d and h11?hl.v offtn- 5j\·p·• prn1;r11m be term1n111ffl. \\lhrn f1c-an rrtti- hQnp nbjr,·rr<l on the ~round~ lhP trtirfitinnal \\'hltr S!11r1if'!I Pro1?r;in1 \1;is si~ nlrt as 1h1> 11n11·1>rsltv 1t!lrlf. hf' 11 as r11'rl tn hi~ l'ha1r The s!t;- df'nl \P~d P r. ~·ounR \\'11frPd \\'11sp, 1~en orocrr<lrrl '" rr.i rl 11loud. for 18 hours qr fl Streich. flll thr un1vers1!y-apprO\'ed !rxt~ on "'h1!P U11lTory. lllS '(JI Cf: ;\0"' mrrrlr :i l"rnak. roun~ \\'ai;p ht1rl rrArhrd !ht hr11:1nn1n~i; ORANG£ COAIT DAILY PILOI RClf111r1 N. \\'ttrl, r 11hl1ilitr Tf!O"'r'l..l J..'rrl'rl. F:rhtor Altlfrl lr. Bal.ls £d1tQr/ol r ogt f:dlto r Th .. rrl 11 ... n11.1 ~-#' ar the O.Jly Pllnt ~"'"k• '"' lrilnrm end stlmu· l11r rt1td•r• ~.V pr...-,.nuns 1h!1 n~Splll"f"r'• "$>1nlr-n1 and CDm• m rn!AI) nn toptt~ or 1n1rrH.t 11.nd •u:nlncanct. .,Y prO\•ld n1t a ((!tum l"'r lhr •XJ>''l'Allnn .t nor rndn1' GS-nk>nfl, •Jtd b)' PNMT1lint ·the dJ,.rrw \'"""itolntJ of lnlnnned ott- M!n'Pfl and apok~ on looks ., U..dq. Frld11, May 18, 1971 I ( • ART HOPPE J or lhP us. invnh·pmpnt in VJPlnam ~·hen Of'an Petlihone finally yirlrled. ''I r11n IAkt no more!" he: ~rlfd . '·You Aft right. Thc.~e hb:tory ttx1111 . .11rt sl•nted. higntrd and hia-hly nfft!nRlve, by 110)' f;iir 11 n11lysi~. to lhe \\1hite race." A triumphant youna W•~JI I n Id rrporter~ AHtr'4·Ard thal ht had bt>gun hi~ rrAdlnR!ll with lhe hl1tory nf AIPx- anrlPr tM Gre111. "And why wa~ h{' grrat~'' drm•nderl \\'::i~r "Recaust hfll killerl and hurner1 and lon1rrl his \\'8.v thrnugh F:gyp!. A.~i:i Minor anti 1nr1ia. ·rm sorry I ~01 nt) np1,1· "'orlrl~ to ronquer.' hr sa.v~ Wh111 kind of !Alk i!'I !h;:it, Anrl from 1h,.re. fhPst White hi~tnriE's art' all do"·nhill . '·LOOI\ AT THE JlOMANS. '\leni, \'tdi. \'iri,' thar ·~ !hr1r mono. Anrl 1,1•ho knock!' thrm off:' At11 la 1hf' Hun. Thrn wt (!Pl 11 cnupte ol rrnt11ril'~ of "'hilP guy' ji!oin51: Aroun<l hurnu1~ 1o1•h1tr guys al the stake. Charlernagnr ~pends 30 years ~laughfrr· il'll Sa1on•. l.ombard1 ind Sararf'lll. IO ht 's tA h!!rn. ··ThE'n \\'t Rtl lnlo r.:nclish hialory. WM do 1,1·e rrqrl 11boul ? Wllll•m tM Con· quPror. Thrre 's 11. name fnr you. Richard the tion·Hrarttd. who g(let tiff 10 11k11wt.r lnfidPls. H~ry \1111, who cult hit wives off shori. Thtn the Enallsh kill a lot of Sp:ini11rr1s find hil off lo 11ploi1 lndlt ind half the world . "Who's big in fl'ranct? Napolron. who goi m11ybe 11 millltin Pfflple drad. Who's big In GPrm1u'1)'? F'rt<le.rlr.k the Cre;it. Him, too. Who's big In Rusala~ Jv1n 1he Terrible. Th1tt't tttrible. ''LOOK AT TllES!' Arrlitnc11n hl!llnrlr ... •. Alt tlltJ talk about u how tht Wl1ll•1 klckl!d a"'"1td the tncliOl!ll, tht Mexicans. lhr P'lllpiNio od Oll!laved lhe blockl. ....... l'llla. llltQ; ... Slnptm, CIOmlptlOO -W\tMedaUl .j, ''Hn1,1· <'on1e the whi!PS are al"'llYS !he h~d ~uy~" Hi!lPr. Stalin. f\.1us.~olini -all \1·h11es. \\'ho 11ss11ss1na1rd (our of our. PrPsidents'.' "'hitrs. Who ('froppt.d !he first :itomic bonih'.' Whit rs. "Talk About ~l:interl repnrlln~. They rlon'I "' r i I e up a white un less hr'~ rott('n. \Vhy rlnn '1 1hey 1,1•rilP :ibout • rlt'<.'f'nl. pe11'.'e.-loving \\'hil t who minds hi~ own business -one who 's 1 crediL lo his ract~ "It's no wnnrler us \\'hlle!'., 11ft11r reading lhl"'.!le hL•tnry text~. feel inftrlor.'' nEAN rEITIBONt:. still mau111lna hi~ ~·rls!Ji, lmmtdi1uety Annou nced the \\'hlrP-.Sludles Prngram 1,1'('1ult1 bf! repl~c· erl by R!ack, Yello"' anrl Rrown Studlel PrngrAms . "\Vr will gn froo1 thr Zulu Kings an<l thrir rnnquesrs to the l\.tlau-~1au ." hf' s:iid h~ppily. "From Genghi!ii Khan and his horde11 to tht JApanrsP l'inE'ak an11rk on PrArl H11rbor. frnm A1.tec human ~acrifice!' to the slr1ughtrr ai 1he Al11mo. "Aftrr nll. '' he .!131d "'llh A scholarly smile . ·>,,~'e all have a lot 10 learn from • tht lr!iisnn!ll of histor\'." A roahlion of aniry black . yellow 11.nd brn11·n s1udpnl!I promptly marched \nlo Dtsn PetUbone's offlc:e and Uld hlrn up. Dear Gloomy Gus • S11mt old" st.nry: Got • problem? Set up A new government AReDC)' whether jfa nttdtd or not. Th11'1 w~11t the t.e~e of Women Voteri of lht OrMgo Coast wnutd do In opposlni Scnatar carpenter·~ t'Olt,,l· al protecllon bill. -P.J.L. fti'I ... "'" "'""" , ... "' ~ .., Metnwllt' .... ., .. ~-...... s...11 -........... i ... Otltr .. lltt. ' ·We Denigrate Our Neighbors SYD~Y J. HARRI S Up "K'here I spend my ~ummers. pvpryont had heart! lht "Poll~h jokes" long before they became famouA , er in· f;imnu~. Only up there. they were known 1ta "8el1i1n jokes.'' by virtue of 1 l1r1t ~lmmlgranl ir.lgi;in com munity whlch provided the hutl or this rusti~ humor , Thus ha!'! it ever been. TherP is n<1 recnrr1nf11ny cullure 11ny"•here th111 dtd no1 release it11 hosrll - lt lps 11od exhibit lla in\'inciblt sen!'P of superiority by derid- in51: or do11·n-gradin,e ~nmP cnnvenirnt oul- ernup. In !he earlir~r rec· nrds Qf _;incitnl r, reecc. 1 hr Bneti•ns 5 P r \' e d 11 . .;; lhP ·role~·· nr ··selJ{ians" f n r lhP rrsr of r, re e ct:· 1he name ''Soetian" becamP alm~t a svn. nnym fnr "1tupirl. ·• r A n d the tir1l ''b1rh1ri1ns." of courAt. included 111 tlw'" "habblers·· who spoke 11nythlng but GrP&k. ~ llR. MARIO PEI. in "The St-Or\' of l.11nguage ... points out that the eaiHeiit Sl11vs c11!1ed their German neighbors ··~!'!mt!~" 1 meaning "mute " or 1·t1umb'' 1: cnntr1rlwise. t.he w o rd ''lllave~" rome1 from S!1vs c•ptur1:d in b11ttle. The 11nclt!nl, Chlne.~e de!lgn111.ed 11s ··~nuthern harb::trians '' and "miserable nncs" the Mian and Moso tribes of South Chrna. Bad habit~. ;ind reprehensible brhavinr, Are invariably Ascribed to the people next dror : the most famous example being syphili~. which is called "Frenrh disease" in Engl;ind. and "English disease " in FrAnce. IT WAS THl<:IR nciahbors . the Engliah. who made "tn Welsh" nn an obliaatinn ;in ln1u1t In !ht WP.lsh peoplt : li kewi~r.. ''Dutch lreat" and "Dutch courAge," SU£· IP.•ling that Hollanders art both stingy 111nrl alcohnlic. And to "Jew down ·· 1 price IUJl'~esls that Christians are. above such mftrcantile haggling . ~merlcans art by no mr..11ns immune tn lh• world .! envy 1nt1 co nte mpt. Whit we r11ll 111 i m fl ] y 11 "confidence game'' known In both the Frrnrh tind fhe lralians as "the American swindle." IN JTAl.Y . ACCORlllN(i tn f)r, rei. \\'hat we call "gale-r,rashing" or "free· lo11din.iz.'' are known .11!1 port4'jlht~lsmn, nr 11ctinR likr Portuguese. The Ancient Roni11n s r;illed duplicily "CarthaJil'.inian lrusl"'nrlh1nes5"; ;ind in c;erman. tht wnr<l "fiu~s lan" il !lyoonymou.!I wttb "bi!.rbarou~ ... and "English education" me11.ns flogging. . Y.very country has ii regkln (Wlually lht Southern part, which ia pooreatl that th• rest of the country looks down upon. or Joke!' 11boul. or u111 1s 1 symbol fftr 1:1upldily, l11lntss, dl1honesty or auile. It Jl!1ms AS ii we are lneapAble of ma \"' llJnlng a good opinkm of nurlf-IVll •lthoul d1:nigr1ling our nt!ahbors. 1 hum1n h1bll that. 2.000 years or Chrl• Uaolly 1tem1 to hav1 hid absotullly no •llect """"· ' Quotes 'tl'llU. Slocam, MDlbrot, l"ll" U·lock•1 -"Women Ill lhr -Id ttbould alw1yl remtmber lllll ..,. llld aallortl uyin1: ·A bis m.an ma1 be a bis llW1, but a llttle ..... ta all .,,. Protesters Lack Sense of History To the Editor : The Secretary-General of the United Nr1tions. Kurt Waldheim. has publicly conceded that Nnrl h Vietnam invaded South Vielnam. 01her 11rticlrs report th11t thi~ in\•asion has !ht i;uppnrt of J,000 So- ulet tecbn!cl&n!J, wllh thl" 1re11!e1t se!ee. live placement of military har<lware since World War II. So. like lhe "biir: lie -put dnwn civil w11r'' i n v 11 1 io n nf Czecho!J!nvAkia. Huni;:11ry. etc .. we have rurther immutable evidence of the ~ur­ r.e"11ful paychn-politicaJ warhire of lhellt a11re11or nations. MTR.ANG~. THE short 111emnrits nf theAe il)ogical prolesteri; -or lht.ir illp- parent 1i:irk of knowledge nf the siitanlr violiilion of the U.N .. Geneva Conf('rcnre by Hanoi. of their signed 11.greemen! tn tht maintenanrr nf lhP DMZ bel\\'PPn Nnrth ;ind South Vietnam. Even a~ latP as 1963. H;inoi promi!iiPd PrPsidf'nt Johnson lh111. if "'t wnul('f stop the bomb- ing of North Virtna m. lhPy woulrl stop all oHtn.~ivr :ictinn al the DMZ and permlt a1>rial remnnai111sitnce b.v un111rmed aircr11ft tn as~ure the U.S. aga insl thPir tiaklna offenslv t Action agAln~L South Vi1tnam . P:ven with ~All this evidence nf their ruthle1•. degener11fe . repulstve. flendi.~h 1nd d\111bnt1C 11rtlnn,1 -wh y then, •re there nn pr~te11tAllnns 11~.:iin~! thest ntlfAnl illCI~ l'lf WlrfllrP -a!Onjl'. With lhetr cnmpleleJ.v nutrA1tenu~ d\8rt1•ard ol the conventions of lnlern•tlnn1 I RPri Cro111 on the treatment of our Prisoners of W1tr'.' IS IT BECAUSt<~ so many or n11r .•o- crtlled Democratic le11ders. such a .~ Muskie . McGnvern . Kennedv. Humphre,1', F'ulbri~hl. Tunney And H;irtke !presumPd in\ellectua Ii; l. by not speaking out againsl these 11tt11cks. create ;in attitude by our i;uperficial mal<'nntcnL.;; th;it OUR COUN- TRY IS ALWAYS WRONG and we shoul<l accept the humility or defeat by even a minor Communistic nalinn. In •Uet1lng lhtse r~grelt•hle de vnlop- menL.1, I believe thia i1 why 10 m11ny 1tudt.nls prefer to march 111 ~ d d1mnn1tr1tt on ~half or the enemy 1n· atead nl prnvidin~ evidE'nce of their loyalty In their nwn country and the very freed<lm• Ulat 11re denied the cititens nf th111 morally b.llnkrupt enemy countriM whn would not be all owed to protest for ont minute withoul be:ln• Jailed fir worse. Ont thing ror 1111re, they h11vt never read the book "Tale nf 11 Whistling Shrimp'' by Vlad imir e . c:rinioff. I AL..'iiO t'IND it slrange that NO'.t-ONE nf the 127 membe rs nf. the Unile<t Nations -who 11ccepttd ovrr $1:18 billion in t;.S. AID funrl~ ~lnct 1946-has ritised • 110\ce in this illeRR I inviision of South Vietnam by the Nor!h Vietnamese Communisls. One mnre reason why tht U.S. shoold get nut or the friendless ;ind useless Unit ed N•t.lon1! AL N. SEARES Clllropraetol' Replies To the Editor: y.., printed• leftar (Mallho•1,1!Pril 211) ,_ Jou F. Crum, M.D. In uua ltllor p\l)'I oo word• •nd alanttd ••mantlci M UHd to misdirect the re1dtr. It Is t1l*lld that a ""''"'" holdlllll th• ltl.lh office of prt<ldent of tht C.llfornla Medical Association would not re.wl lo W{ltlng 11tetements out of contert so RiS to con.rust. tht pubuc:. Ptrhaps the most clAL"lc error Is th3t of ,...,mrn~ thar di medlcil proro.,lon ts lht sole representative of lhe h!!aling atti. 11liJ ls not lbe Clst. 'lbe Chlroprac• lie prof•uloo II llDf 1 pan or medlcln• and nalllter II oatowallty. psydtq~ or oplocnelQI. ,,,. tntdlcal pral ...... ..,.. [ ~IAILBOX ) /.,,tttr.t /rnm rrnrltr.t art 111,/r.nm.1. Nnrmn/IJI wril,r8 .thnu lrl. cnnv,.iJ 1h,.1r mr••nO'' fit .lnn 111nrd.~ or /p1111. Thf rloh t to rnnrl't'·'" lr.ttf'r~ In fl! Rpnr! nr ,/imlt1nft 11n,1 1.~ rP.~r n•Pd. All /11r.· ''r.t m'18l hir/l.lrl' ,;Q!!rr,urr~ n11rl mnit- ing addr,l.t, hut nnrnr., 1J1fJ!J bf' 1r~tlt· h'/rl on r'«Q"'·'t if st1ff1r1,;nt refl.!'V'l1 i.~ nprnr,nL Pricfr!J u1i/l not be pub· li.•h.trl.. not lfictatr !o tho:,e other branches of t)lp healing arts. nrt. CRl /fll SA.Ill th11t "rhiropractors arl! nnt licensed to Rll'P mt<l1ral care" an<l •·art prnh ih1ted h\' l11 w from pres!'ribing dru~s ". Th; f:ic11 are chiropr11ctors do nnt J.!i\·p mrrlir.:il c::irP : chiropractors arP l1crnsrd hv 4~ .~ra1rs nhe SOlh is legislating no\\'l. Ref ore hf>1ni lic@n1ed in CAiifornia rhiropr11c1nrl1 must JWISll a three.day exam julll as physician• do. Re1u11rrllna rlruis. chiropractic ad· voc11tM minimA ! rlrug u.~~a-r. and then nnly when ab5ol11trly nrcessarv . Dr. Crum im plied rhiroprar1or5 wi11.hed to prescrlbf. They do nnt. D~. Crum QU<.lt.~ the HE:"' cor1m•l1P • 11~ t1t1counting chiropr11r1 ir. T hi ; 11v•h.1.11lln1[ p11nel w11~ ~t>t 11p hy the m~<i1cal syndic11!r v;irh nnP purpn5p 111 mind : defeat chirnpr;:irf1r 1n Conan:~~. Does th.e public rcal i7.e 1hat rhe mrrl 1c~! to?b.1·. 1~ the hiJ.li:r.•1 ~ r P n rl r r i,11 "a~h1nglon. D.C.'.' firrl'ntl1· at thP :wit h convention of the AFL-110 in f\-f iami chirorraclic care "·~~ harkrrl and th~ AFL-CJO ct1llf'<l (nr ConRre~~ tn include it in &II ftdtrAl health prn1lr.:im5. IT WA S fURTHl'.:R st 111rrl hy Dr. ~m tha.l "time w:isr ed nn use less ch1r~pract1c treatmen t ma.v drlay 1 pa· tle:nt a •'-elnr • rtu11 hfle<l ph\'~iri1tn" O~ce AtAin WP. lite thr efrrrt~ of Aelf·a~ _po1n~~ bul u"lnformPrf "•uthnrilAri•nA'' ma~1.na .i.11.emen.ts from hi,e:h politlc•I pos1t1nn1. Moitl ch1roprart lc plltirnts htH'f! already bf'.r.n treated hy iwo or more "medlc1I 1pecl1lis1s" wi!hout re!lul!!I, (More lhan 8f'l percent of my prArtlre cnme.!I frnm "qualifierl phyi;ici.:in~."l Howev~r . now In a~dilion In the pr lm;:iry ~ompla1nt the pa11ent ha.!i onr or iwo 1•trogenl<-: 1 d~tor cau~rrl 1 prohlcrns. , Drug abuse 111 a re11I problem and lh!! intake . of druas must be slo 1,1·erl ~·hether presc~tberl. or pushed . rr parenr~ under thr . direction or thp mrrlirAI lioctnr Are tAk1ng drug!'! for f'Vrry Jirtle ·bump" 1 lhe roarl nf lifP, so \\'111 lh~ir ch1ldre n Th~y h~ve followtd the e:tample weJ1·1 Society 1s touah and enppina ~1 is east@r ti mOlllt!ty and daddy do It "' •Ill th; k!da. DONALD R. scan. D.C. 811 Geor1e --. Dou Georp: Wltal do lbe ll<nOUJ advice col- umnllta ,., when lltey m"l • late tt1 f1ee? 1 ou Otar Art: ART Nol\1!1111. They alway1 !urn lheir bar.ks on me. CONPIDEl<T!At. TO GEN g HACKMAN; --H@roln. of 1 COUJ'R Wbat did f"" THIN!( 100 ...,; looklJlg for . Barbor Ceremonies Cannons Herald • Club s' Openings By ALAN LOCIUBEY DAILY ~ILOT aMtiltt ldlt.r The cannonading you hear in Newport H1rbor Saturday will not signal an invasion by a forei gn force. -Nor will tt mean that boat! are blowing up in the harbor. The b I a a t s, aounding periodically from 10 a.m. until l :~. p.m., will herald the nag ra1s1~s marking the season opening ~remonles at the vartous yacht clubs. In mo!t cases, miniature deck camona will be used for the series of blasts. by VYC is schedu led at 10 a.m. Next club to observe the traditional rites wilh be Bahla Corinthian Yacht Club on · Bayside Drive at 11 a.m. South Shore Sailing Club will break out the banners on the signal halyard at I h e i r waterfront quarters, 2527 W. Coast Highway at noon. Lido Isle Yacht Club will conduct ceremon.i~ from the lawn adjacent to the Lido Isle Comm un ity Associa· tion-wh ich al.so serves as the home LIY<:-at noon. Balboa Yacht-Club will con- duct its ceremonies at 1:30 Who's Racing Whona? DAil V PILOT JI Races At Openings Balboa, Voyagers Clubs Slaw Eve1its Two Harbor A-rea yacht club3 will hold rompelit ive events Sunda y marking the end of weekend season open- ing ceremonieg. Balboa Yacht Club will start a neet of yachls on the llunt- lngton 2G-fathom race Su nday at noon. The event is part of the club's 66 Series. Voyagers Yac.ht Club will hold its Huntington Flats race Sunday . The race is for boats rated under the ~1idget Ocean Racing Fleet (under 30 feet I and is part of the Massey Midget Series. Santa Barbara Jsland rac r. and the MORFs will compete in the Mallbu. Trans bay race. California Yacht Club will also be host to sailors com- peting for berths in the Mallory Cup, North America n men's sail ing championship. King ~!arbor Yacht Club a! Redondo Beach has is.sued bids to dinghy sailors to crim- pete in its Spring Centerboard Invitational Saturday and Sun· day. Malibu Yacht Club will play host to the mullihulls of thr Pacific 1t1ultihull Assoc1:it ion end the One-Design Multihulls inthe fifth race of its Spring Series. San Otego will be hosr to tho Cnronado-25o; 11nd lhe Coronado-!Ss Saturdav ilncl Sundny . Up north Snnta BarbarA \'achl Cluh kicks off ils Suni· mer Series on Sunday ancl Ventura Yacht Club ha$ scheduled its G n v e r no r ' .~ Trophy race Saturday and Sunday. Thf' Hobie Cal F'lcel \41111 ronvenc at the Arizona Yacht Club Sunday for compet1t1on on Lake l'lcas;int. Co11stal ll'callrcr CloudV WIT" ,i.of\t rll•n<• nt "''' •e•9d llQM 11V1wer\ •D<l~v Llom ~~·· ltlllt W•n<I• n•Qnl •nd "'°"'lno llnv• • bf!comlno -st~•I~ 10 10 1C -not' ~ ~nornoo""' h11Mv •nd S~lu•d•Y ~! o•• tod~v mo•!lv '" 60 ' All yacht chJbs in the harbor with the exception of Newport Harbor Yecht Club will be conduct~ Opening D a y ceremorues Saturday. (NHYC held Its colorful ceremony last Sunday). p.m. Shown caught in wha t appears to be an air attack 1n the first America's Cup Shark Island Yacht Club~ the offshore powerboat series off Miami Beach is the ''bad boy" of the sport, Other major events or the weekend will include Hunt- Jngton Harbour Yacht Club's Regatta of Champions for the Lid<r l4 Fleet Saturday and Sunday, featuring fo1111er na- tional champion Harr \Vood of Alarnitos Bay and cu rrent champion Dave U l l 1n a n . Newporl Beach. The rega tta wilp be sailed oc insi de rourses at Huntingt on Ha r· bour. San Diego Yacht Clu b will :;tart a fleet of handicap rac- ing yachts Sunday on the F:ncino l.~ht race for the . Jessop Trophy. A smilar rare for MORF will be sailed Saturday. Ca.1!al !tm1ie••tu••• •~nQ<> hnm I, to OJ. tnl1n~ ttn111••-'0(1, r•not !rom 51 10 '4. Wt••• ttml>'!•ftu-. 11 • only all-powerboat club in the tough Billy Martin as he heads for hi s major win in a 33-Coot A-1agnu m Hus- area, is occupying temporary lier IV. quarters on Bayside Drive and -------------------------------will confine its season opening rites to a co lorful "dressed ship" parade throughout the harbor in the afternoon. Nemesis Captures San Diego Crown Offshore (Mark 11 1 Rule. i\lission Bay Yachl Clubs at Top events in the Marina de! She Snaps Rut ~~nm<I hlon Stcond ... F l"t hi QI\ FIF1I ... S•~ond ll•OI> St'Ond low l'l•t! hl111> Fl•l! low ~KO<'!! "'~" SP<onrl low l'•tOAV I n1 nm " 10 d pm " i ATUROAV , n1 • m. " 10 ~· ..... " I II pm, . ' 11 Ol f "' " SU NDAY I )9 • m " 11 )t f m 00 • 1• nm. .. I ] ~1 ~ m " Bla11~ from the roof of the Blue Dolphin building on Via Lido will be the first to break the morning stlllneas a s Voyagers Yacht Club snap! out I.ht nags from their ...upstairs quarters. F1ag raising Most clubs wiH h a v e members' yachts alongside the docks in "full dress." Following the traditional in- spection. open house will be held aboard the boats. . Tom T o b i n ' s Ericson·39 Nemesis rollowed her han· dicap victory in the Newport to Enscnada race by winning the class cha mpionship at San Diego last weekenQ. ing but was awarded the championship on the best cor· rected times for the three Nemesis' victory was also aided by the disqualificat io n of Dick Pennington's Cheetah in one of the races. Rey area will be a rrsiunrtion of California Yacht Club'.<1 Overton Serie.~ for lntrrn;i- tional Offshore raccrS I IOR l and the to.1a tt Walsh Series for MORP. TEHRAN !AP1 -Aft~r eight consec utive dC'liverirs of t\v1ns in 15 years. a 41 ·VC'ar-old 1nother gave birth to ·!ri plcls. the newspaper E t t e I a a t reported fro m Isfahan. '"" rlM!l I <A ' m ~tl\1\ll)m. Visit 'Shot' CAIRO (AP ) -Salvador P. Lopez, president of t h e University of the Philippines and former acting foreign minister of his country, was turned away from the Cairo airport because hil smallpox ·Vaccination certificate was not yet valid. He cancelled his visit and flew to Pp.ris. Most Southern California yacht clubs remain open the year around. The Opening Day bit is a throw-back to eastern tradition wh.ich holds opening day a n d commissioning cerem~es in the spring to celebrate yachts being launch- ed for the summer ~a son." The cllampionship series . w.as sailed in 8-10 knot breezes off San Diego with two windward-leeward courses on Saturday and one Gold Cup course on Sunday. In Southern Californ ia tile rites are more properly called "season openings." Nemesis was tied with Ed Woodland's Gauntlet, Santa Monica YC. on the final scor- COMING SOON. TO SANTAANA 1:·:·x·:·:·:·:·:·:·:<·:·:·~·c;iii;;;;:;,,,,F~~~rit;'"''''''''''''""''''~·1 .~.: .. r,~ DO-IT-YOURSELF BUILDING SUPPLY CENTER .. '.·' •• ~,. 'lYHTIHIHG FOi THE IUILDll AND HOMI OWNIR" ;. :::·::::::::;:;;;:::::::::::::::::::::::;;;<;:::::;-.i:"-::::::::;;;;;:;::::.;;;:;:;;;:;:;:;;;:::::::::;;;;;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::..:.:.:·:·:·:·:·:·::::: Ovr beautiful new 100,000 squa re foot outlet in Sonto Ana, will be one of the largest and most modern building supply ceF'!ters in the notioF'! o,nd wi ll offer the world's lo rgest selection of building materials under one roof -over 100,000 b uilder and do-it-your· self items! "Angels Sells fOf less" because of ifs tremendous pur· , cha sing power. control of its own d is tribution facil ities, its own import d ivision, a nd its own wholesale marketing div ision sup· plying many other reta il organizations. Yes, you con buy for less a t ANGELS, bec:oust you ore vituolly buying at wholesale, But, if you ore a dealer, W. must insist that yo u bring your resole permit. WOILD'S LAIGIST llTAIL OUTLIT FOi •LUMBER •HARDWARE •PLUMBING •PAINT •ELECTRICAL• NURSERY •SMALL APPLIANCES •HOUSEWARES •COMPLETE BUILDING SUPPLIES OVER 100,000 DO-IT · YOURSELF ITEMS llNSel ·S '-":':"--. DO·IT·~RSELF ctNTEA A Dayl!1t Ce. ' 3309 SOUTH BRISTOL,--SANTA ANA NEAR BRISTOL AND McARTH UR·· -- Check Rotul1r Weoktnd Special~ 11: GARDEN GROVE I HUNTINGTON BEACH 12662 CHAPMAN 7800 EDINGER 100 Yda. E111 el H1 ....... llY<I. One Block West of Be~ch Blvd. ' The series was sailed f h e I nternalional The IOR neet will sail the OUR PRECISION WHEEL BALANCE CAN ADD MILES • TO YOUR TIRE WEAR! Come In Today! General Tire Pre-Memorial Day a • ~•mou~ ou..i It'!~ °"-"'Qfl • tonq ..,,1e11~ °"'"~"l l"?~d ru~r • E~ry 1h!•'<ing lAAGL! rice ae! Charge it ,~'iiltiiJo.--­~~ at General Tire "'~ l rt·" ..... ~ tU.JI YOUTH DISCOUNT CAllO: Orin<r ... l•·tf. AM....., -YOlllll DI-CM . Complete BRAKE SELINE NOT JUST A BRAKE RELINE But we do oll thi s. I, ln1lttl NfW 11t1vy •11ty llntnt 111 111 4 wf\11!1! l. R e~ikl lfll <Vlbtdt'1 tt't I ll ~ whtt lll J. ll l<tM brttH -1n11111 llN \'Y duly brtkt fklld, 4, '"'~' brtkt rt111ro1 1pri1111. s. T1ir" tlld lr11e tit 4 IH'tlt:t dr•flll, 6. llt1M1tlt: 1..,.1 wflMl Htrlnt1. 7, Adl1111 ..-14'11 Ind d!lck .,.,..,. te!ICY llflkt9t. $ Motl U.I . I, ROid ltll ~ lllltrnobllt. Co~t C1r1 DIK 8t•~l!I ll"'lltly H"'lltr. LUV-TOYOT A-DATSUN-COURIER PICK UPS TRUCK TIRES 19 ~~- $2.15 600x14 6 ply Black or Whitewall Change-over• Crooked whecils rob your car of ma xi mum performance, ride, steer· Ing and tire wear. We correct ca1- ter, camber, to•in, toe-out to your cir manufacturer's tpecific1tlons, and safety check and adjust your steering . Don Swetlluntl CUA.ST GENERAL TIRE Moori rlttl U 11 pm. ,,.,,11 ..... SUPER WIDE! BEL TED-RAISED WH ITE LETTE.RS "60 SERIES" F&0-14 or 15 $35.95 ,.E.T.-l .l l·l • G&0 -14 or 15 $39.95 U.S. INDY MAG WHEELS FO RD-CHEVROLET PLYMOUTH-DATSUN- TO YOTA I hole rno9s ayallabl• for 1/1 ta11 Cornpet't e1td l"lck·llJH. tllth"y hl9her. TAKE YOUR PICK USED. TIRES lots of non-s kid tread COMPLETE CAR CARE Sine• 1959 ., Hours: 7:30 to 6:00 Doily PHONE: 540-5710 646 -5033 • 10 DAILY PI LO T . For The Record 1T. JOSl!l"H H0$1"1TAL M•v 11 Mt 11'<1 Mrt. Oa"'" M !lur>to, 1:15? M1rlon (lrct1, Wt•lm.nsl1•, 9lrl, , M•Y ll Mr. 1rod M•s. "~• S. Connelly, tllll M1cKl'n1l1, L•eu..a H.1111, bOV. MIJ 14 M• t rw:I Mr>. llilPl'I JOHP"o 5103·0 "Q" SI , MCAS. El 1010. bOY Mar1·iafie Lieetases lAS \/£GA~. Ntv • -M1rrl191 •Ir•.-· 1· ., .• ~ ~••! 1nt;•;Ut F EIG HTNrR .... PR!l -Apr. I!. Ttrr'f i' ~~~ Ct.l•Ut If., ball! of W••tmln<'tr • Mccov,s"RRIOTT -J.1" H. rr~n-. l:I. and Niner J.n .. , i4, bc•h DI NtWl'O•I f •.·•M P1C!(Ell.!tlG·PACJ.tlA. -Ar>r. B, MOn· '" Aar, i•. cl f"""'" c;.,~~. lr.d Su\&n Lynn, 71, cl Wf.\tmi,.•t~r. • ~-- Friday, MlY 19, 1972 Going llp ·' Captured ita Texas ·valley M~ Held To Face Sex Rap SANTA ANA·-A Fountain VaUey man accused of twice jumping bail to avoi d trial on five-year-ol d sex perversion charges has been recaptured and ordered to face trial Sept. '11 in Orange Coun ty Superior Court. Judge \Villiam f\.1urray set the tria l date and an Aug . 4 pretria l session thls \\'eek for Leotis Lee Heater, 40. !-!eater, captured in Laredo, Tex., last week, is held in county jail wilh bail set at $500,000. Hea'ter was picked up by more than $32,000 In bail since his initial arresl on June 25, 1967. He fled to Canada before he could be put on trial the following Nov . 1 and remained Canadian authorities a n d again released on bail, the $31,250 being provided on this occasion by his aunt , !\Irs. Kathryn Hayes of Fountain Valley. Judge hlurray ordere<i the bail forfeited v.•hen lleater again ned . • WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF LAW Of ORANGE COUNTY d. -ho •r• •ilhtr: no'# •<<eptlnt lft•n •n wom•11 ... • ••" 11 with 1 Y•"'' el •«•~1,blt r1ll11• c11tllh (•OJ: •• • •••• JJ .,.tl ll..V• •llti~otl In ·~'"''"! I"" • ltllt<tuol 1blllty !tit •'lui~•I•~• el abt•• l,. bo tltlt tnJnM by lt•ll ' ~ ,. ol p.,r.rlmt The J.0. or I.L I. d1og•e• ctn be 01rned n yet c!tu•" 3 cl1ue1 per w••~; 3·.t hour• ptr <iu l I 5 "' , ·1 ,,.,lablt /or A Sp.d o( Pr0911m of rh"e < 11101 on • ~ • ' 11111-v••' 11ud•"'" Apply Now for September 7th Day or Evening Classes 800 Sou th Broo~hurst Anaiheim 9'1804 17141 635-3453 G1'du••e• •'• .r;9,ble to r••• rho (•\,!Drni• St••• B" f .,min1•~n. PIOYLSlONAl.lY ACCllDITIO IY THE (AltfOI N!A COMMJnll Of IAI fXAM INEIS JULY I, 1•72. •-----_:'~";':OV~·~o~·~o~·-v~·~"~"-"-'------· ll El,Jln-~uNO/:IFRG /,pr, l!, J/lh" C .• 25, aoa Ltlllt Jt•n, 11, born ot H•·nlln~IDn ~~~<h M~lj.LAuc;11L1t1 . .r:Rv.1>.r1 -Al>•. is. Orange County's new eight-s tory, $4 million State Building is fast taking shopc P~ndv l~(. 21. ~nd Slltrrv A .. iJ, bn•h o• H11n11,.~1on 11,41,11. in what is rapidly becon1ing a va stly eXpanded Santa Ana Civic Center. The Heater has already forfeited more 1han $32.00J in bail since his initial arrest on June 25, 1967. He fled Canada before he could be put on trial the folio\'>· ing Nov, I and retnained at large unti l early 1971. Heater v.·as accused in 1967 when he lived at 701 Roc kford Road. Corona del f\1rir. of picki ng up a l 3. ye a r • o Id British schoolboy \~'ho was vacationing in Sea l Beach and driving the youngsler to the Laguna llills area where he allegedly committed a series of sexual offenses. WE'RE MOVING ll.1>.l(ewett·SANOE11.s -Apt. 1~· building will be completed late this year and \vii! take its place in a con1plex Th!!'Odort W, ~. ~nd O;!~l Gladv" 5'. 1>r1n 01 H .. n:•,,gron llrorh comprising the county courthouse, the county Ja\Y library. the Santa Ana ci ty UCI Profs Get Grants For Travels Kidnaping: char~es were di sn)issed but Heater wns ordered to face trial on multi· pie sex perve rsio n counts. l AUR IA·WILSON -Apr.. 1!. An,tJo Jo•ep11 Jr. 3!, .,,., ~d•bd•• Jein•. hal l and the $10 million federal bu ilding -a total outlay of n1ore than S50 Heater has since been ad· ditio nally charged by Fountain Valley police with carrying out last April 18 an d 20-a number of sexual offenses against a l9- year-0Jd youth . TO A NEW LOCATION JI. bo!ll ol Co1r1 Mt>I. ·11· THOMPSON-SMITH -Ao• 16, Ml-t __ 1_n_1_1o_n_. ________________________________ _ Our last day at this address will be May 29th. Before then, we must sell out to the bare wall s. We will re-open in ea rly July at 14700 Golden West St., ltRDY Alen, n. o! Co•I• Mf.••· •lld Juanita L., 77, ol New1>0r1 811r.11. l(,0LAR·PARl(£R -Aor. 1•. AllM:t! J •• Jr,, ;i, e11c1 eu,,., s .. ;i, beth ct C05!1 Ml!U. WA.TER8URY·REIOHEAO -AP•. 11. S!tPllen A. II. 1', DI Newl)Ot! B•ach, • ,,., SlldrDn LO'J•~' ?J, DI Co•I~ M'c~. W.1.Ll(ER·BRA(l(EfT -A1>r. 11, Cher\~~. ~9. DI l o' A"!r~I,-, •"" F•1rK11, ,1, ol H11.,11n~on e,1cri. 0EAN·REG£$TER -Apr. II, H1!0h E., (7, .,,., M•rlorlr M., ..0, DO!ll of (o·t~ Ml<e. RElllY·GRAYlllll -Apr. II, Jamel Oernard. J6, o) Oc11tn•I01, •nd M~rv, 11. of W111ml.,1ttt. GRA.OOWSKl·llUOOWl(I( -A.pr. 19, RDl>f.rt Ad1m, ](, and Co!lrtn 11.•r, ,J, bolh ct Hyn11.,~ron llr~cll. DYE -0Al(l£Y -Aof. lt, S1e•t £ .. 11, ~~~ l~~ I~~. 11. h~lh o! CC•!e Mes•. OQ.~~AM·KENNEOY -APf. 21, TtrrT l .. i!, of An·~·•~. ~nd Ginger Ann, 11. DI Huntln11lor1 B&nc.,, l(ErHHOOY,tl>.Gt..E A~r. n. Terry Lee. It. of Anal>elm. 1nd Salldr• 0 '\·1n, 2l. o! Hunlln~ton !\teen. POWELL·CHISM -Apr. :11. Rcckv 8./ 11, or Cena M~·'"· ~nd oo.,n1 LDu.t. .. n, u. of lono Seech. NO'•TON -SWANSON -· "'"· il, Larin EdW<lrd, 20, end Oebblr L. 11. DOlh o! Hun11"c O" l!!ol!P• M£11 CIEll.·IH•RNES -Acir, ll, Jot>n Rohh, 19, ot We'1m•nilrr. ~na Lt•k• Loul~. ?3. ol Geratn Grovr. CHuPllU(l(.SMllH -Apr n. Alftn W•u>t, i!. of Pomon~. •nd Ca!"~ o,..,,.a, 111, ol We11m;n~trr, LOWE-BENNETT -Apr. ll, 01~1<1 N., :IJ. ""a JoAnn, 17. bolh ot Hun!l.,g1on lleac11. llERKSH!PF-YO N E$Cft -it.pr, 11. Jdmt1 Wiiiiam, at, •"" Oo•olh~ N., 0. Oo'n of Ne IPnl' At th. MONTCOMElllV "'•Irle-,AC,.to<:>m~r~. Age II, o! l.jj) E W1~-1ield. Anaheim. Otle ot dearn, Mi" ''· 1911. Survlv"J b1 mother, Mt1 Betn GrHlllhs. Anah~lm; l~lher, lllcnird T. r1ont11ornerv. (Q,I~ M~ a: hrolhtr1. DI!,. nl• Monl!X>m~rv. Phoen\J; Mld>atl Monr<iemtry, /N,.rw.,woll•; p • I e r n " r 'l,\g;::!~i;;,~;·~~· ~Ju.,~:" e~~~ii ,w1~1:r':r,,~i o"'lldmnmer, Mn. Carri~ Smllh, Sonia .-. .. ~. S>rv;rt' ~·oil bt held Sa.111rd1v. n AM, P•cl!lc View (h"pel. with ev. J~mH K lr~ ofll<>otl~g. lnurnmenr. P1cltic \Ii~ Memorial Par~. Padllc Vltw MO•lulfY, 0!ftrl0"· Vll!:llETIU ll occo V~llr!rl. Aoe i;. ol 16~ llroat1w11v. L~<1u111 lle11cl!. O~Tt o! death, M•r u. ~~;~j1;,;;..,cir~~j~.~ ri.bt,.;'u'~:· A:;.;';~8 ~ ei'1~~: tlon of \l!t Rc·.~ty, Sund. y, 1 Pll. McCormlc~ L11gunft Ot~cl! Ch~pel: Re· ciultm Mas·. M< nd v. 9 /\M, 5•. c ... ~trlMe or Slt••n11 Calllollc Church. L&quna fltach. 101rrm~n1. A··••n~I"" C ~"' f. m If f v. M cCl'!•m!c t L 11un• Ot &c h M&•luarv, Oit!'CIO•~ AHB UCKLE & SON 'VES1'CLIFF /l lO RT UAHY i2' E. li lh St .. Custa l\lesa 6-tli-·I~ • UALTZ BERGERON FUNEltAL 110!\I E Corona del i\1ar 67:1-9150 Costa i\lesa IHG-%424 • DELL BROAO \VAV !'l·JOllTUA HY 110 Broadway, Cns ta 1\1.c sa LI 8-3433 • l\1cCOJt1\.flCK LAG UNA BEACll 1o10RTUARY li95 La guna Canyon Rd. 494-S.115 • P1\CIFiC \'IE\\ l\1E:'!IOl\1AL PARK Cemetery l\Jortuary Cbaprl :500 J>acific \1Jeu1 Drive Ne"''P<lrt IJe::ch. Californi a 6~4-%700 • PEEK f'A/111LY COLONIAi. FUNERAL llOl\lE ~801 Bolsa Ave. \\'estinin ster 893-35%5 • Sl\11Tl1S' f\tORT UARY fii?7 l\la ln Si. Jl untington Belich 536-6539 '"'"' , ... 11 ...... 1At7 t.t • 1troftoul..., d• ft -•ur ci.• 'n.d IKti. .. Or, It .,.. w• IOINffi:lltf, fHd ••r .. - '"'" -..... fl'Mtl At1d llun ttad Boner'• Ark In tilt DAILY PILOT Sttndav comit.a. Judge Orders S tud y Of Would-be l( iller P erversion Case to Get T11·0 UC Irvine professors ha1·e been avrarded Ful brigh t rellowships to study abroad with the expenses paid by the U.S. Sta te Depart ment. Bird Sl10\vs Canceled Westminster. .FANCY ~ KOi SAf'.iTA A.N.o\ -An Orange County Superior court judge has o r d e red a 00-.qa.v diagnostic study for a man con\l'iete<i of hirin~ a Would-be killer to dispose of his "•ife, a liunti n.gton Beach resident, lo illO\V him to coll ect her $10,000 fife insurance policy. , Judge Charles Bauer sent \.eorge Gregory Boa, ~9. to ·the state's Chino facility for the stud y. 111hic h may afft'CI the judge's views on !he slatutory prison term of up to five yea rs faced by the civilian em ploye of the Santa Monica Fire Department. County OKs Court Bill S/\M°A ANA -A bill wh'1ch would establish a state ap- pellat e court here has been en- do rsed by the Orange Courit.v Board of Supervisors. State Sena tor Den n i s Carpenter (R·Newport Beach) a.~kcc\ for the endorsement or hi~ Senate Bill 421. The present Fourth District A1)elJate Court sits in San Bernardino and San Diego. Judges and altorneys have repeatedly poinl<'<l out th,1t more than one-third of the cases heard originate in Orange County. T1vo of the three judges on the court are from this area, Robert Gardner and Ste phen Tamu ra, Boa v.·il\ be rctutncd ALI''.. 9 to the courtroom 11•here a j1.11·y convictet! hin1 Apr il J.l c11 charges of solicitation tc;i com· mit murder. Hoa was arrested Jan. 8 al his Santa !11onica apartment afte r Hun lin gton Beach police persuaded a jel'.·clry salesman to pose as the hired killer. Poli ce said Boa \(lid their con- tact that he \v.'.lnled to dispose of his J~year·old 1vifc. Jean . Police said Boa also sup- plied their agent wi!h a fu ll dossier on his wife's business and social activities and several photographs or the Jluntington Beach v.•01nan. They said Boa and his 'vife 11·rre estfanged and preparing for final divorce action at the lime of his arrest. Ne,v Trial Dr. Joseph Lambert of SANTA ANA -A second Laguna Beach and D r . _Orange County Superior Courl Timothy Teyler of Santa. Ana trial has been ordere d for a 11·ere selected by the Board of Long Beach rnan accused of · Foreig n Scholarships f o r forcing acts of sex u a 1 partici pation in the progran1 perversion on three young . under the Fulbrig ht-Hays Act fcmale.i. h.itchhikers picked up Dr. La mbert, a philoso phy Three aviaries have be~n in Lag'llnit Beach area at gun-professor. ·will do research in cOnstructed for the Golden point. the foundations of free logic at West Ga1ne Birds exhibit. and Jud~e \Villiam C Speirs the Univcrsi!v of Sa lzbcr~. plans had been made for a T1vo exhibits of birds have been canceled for the Orange County Fair because or the Newc3stte disease quarantine in Southern California. ordered George R a n d o I Ph Austria, duri 1li; the first half chicken exhibit. \V alier. 29, to face his second of 1973. But no\v. no feathered· O'lni· jury trial July 26. A jury Dr. Teyle r, a lecturer in mals can be sold with in an deadlocked last ,.,.eek 7.5 in favor of conviction afler 11.,.0 psychobiology, v.'iil s tu d Y eight-county area. The federal vrccks of trial. n e u ro physiology at the quarantine was i1nposed in Walter is free 011 bail. Ju<lJ,?:e University of Oslo, NorY.'ay. h·l:1rch, and "depopulation S~irs ordere<i hitn to return The Fulbright-Hays Act, in teams" from the U.S. Depart· June 2 for a pretrial hearing . add itio n tu sending An1erican ment of Agriculture have been The jury could oot agree on scholars abroad, provides for killing pet store birds and foreign professors to come to poultry flocks since that Lime related drug charge<:. the U.S. and study a l in an attempt to stem Ute It is alleged lh3 t the tall. American universities. spread of the disease. r s0%'0fF Ai:cessories K"o''1"'F'o'o''"o . , IM,ORTED I 1/2 f'RICE STOC K UP NO~ "ARIAKE" Pond Fll terlnt P111np1 Spec:iol 89" FROM Pacilic Goldfish Farm OPEN UAILY 10·5 ..... 89" 71 OS Clos9d Tu•sd•Y 714 ~· 14842 EDWARDS ST., WESTMINSTER Volunteers Plan Marrl1 stockily-built defendan t pic ked ...:.:::::::.:.:=::.=:.:.:::.::::=:_ __ _::!::c=..::..=:.:::=::::---" U]l hitchikin1; teenagers in the !1 _______________________________________________ _ La ~una Beach area on three se parate occasions in 1971. drove them to remote are;is and forced the1n at gunpoint to participate in acts of sex ual Vo 1 o n t. e c r s of the perversion. ltcinophilia F'oundntion of Police arrested \Vfllter on Southern Californln \viii b<' al!c~ations filed by girls \1ho n1arch ing-door-to-door d1•1"i 11~ sn 1d he picked them up on !\·lay 111 Oranf e Co 11 n \ y ~l~rch \0, Jt1!y 15 and Aui:i;. S. · solicitinr, funds lo support the The !!i ris. twO 17 and one 16, foundation. testified against him. KOCM stereo103FM the sounds of the harbor ~-'=d.!~'!--; 24 hours a day There are about 150 people~.:.:_~~~~=-~-~..====;! v.·11h the blood dis ea s c !'~===========================================~ registered in Oran:·[' Coun1y. !(I DS LOVE It ensts each abn1'! ~20.!Yffi a11-nl'a!I~· for the clotti11g factor UNCLE LEN n1issing fro111 their blood . The founda tion assisls rnem· SA TU RDA YS IN bers \\'ith payn1cn\s for l THE DAILY PILOT medication ood '"PPlies fund> for re~e:irch . --. - \. This is a black and white ad for color tennis balls • imagine a scoop of raspberry sherbet, or the way lipstick looked in 1957. and you've got some idea of our exclu· sive color for d11y· light play. Fuchsia. I fullr f u•r•ntffcl a. re-co11ditlo n1d WURL ITZER Deluxe Spinet • $1695 USED ORGANS cholc:e of t hl'ff was S2165.00 •. NOW HAMMOND SPINET ORGAN WU RLITZER Console Organ ~~?~:850 .DO ••.• NOW $2595 M•ho9011y WeiSll,S.oo •••••••••• NOW HAMMOND SPINET OR GAN HAMMOND DELUXE SPINET ORGAN Wllh outoinatlc rhylhll'I Wn S1729.00 •• NOW $1495 CONN SPI NIT HAMMOND CONSOLE & DELUXE SPEAKER Wol111t, IOld ••• hf SJ700.0t •••••ly .... $1595 OUAllAHTllO •ALL !"IA.NOS loll "rOlrr Miiii ''" , ..... LESLl"E SPEAKERS L11Jlt 1pe1k1n . Com• !ft 1114 ,,.,. '"' "' Jlllrll, 1"111 •II "'••n, tf ... ,~ftl. ''"'" f, om tnly •• $199 •••. NOW $1495 WURLITZER SP INET THEATRE Wolnot, wa1 Sl 79S.OO NOW ..• $1495 KIM IAL CONSOLI $599 $1249 $1195 South Coast Plaza --Costa Mesa 3400 Bristol St. -· Ph: 540-2830 If you remember what Kryptonite looked like, glowing greeney-yellow, you know why our fluorescent yellow is ideal for twilight pl:n ·. Because you're out there playing all hours of the c.t~y and night, o!1 all kinds of surfaces, Spalding makes a greater vanety of top quality tennis balls than any other manufacturer. Besides the colorful baUs above we make them with color seams for instant iden tification. And. we're fh e ones who put those great plastic stay-put lids on the cans. Q uality? We make them ou rselves, right here in the U.S. so we can control the quolity. In fact, of the two leading balls play«! here, ours js the only one that can make that statement! SIX FREE SPALDING TENNIS BALIS WHEN YOU BUY" AN ALUMINUM SPALDING SMASHER Spalding. Bal ls of another color. · · · SWING 10 SPALDING • · Sf>ALDJNG .. RACKET! •. c:www.u .\ • I I I So l f lto's Tr'1di ng? Carol Vogen, a Long Beach State Coll egc secretary, l'la s been chosen rriiss World Trade for 1972. The statuesque brunette \vill serve as the official hos tess for the 46th annuaJ observance of World ·rrade \\leek beglnning Saturday. Gla ss Particles Pro111pt Recall of Cabba ge Jar8 \VASHINGTON (AP! -The l"ood and Driig,Adminlstration has announced the rC'Call of about 67.000 jars of S&\V Sweet-Sour Red Cabbage oon- t a m i n a red v.•lth glass particles. An estimated 5000 16-ounle jars remain on store shehes across the nation, th<-' FDA I CONSU1l1ER I said, although the recall bega11 in January. S&W Fine Foods of San Francisco began cnlling bat:k the jars and st o pp i n g shipments arter a consumer complained he suffered a cut mouth and tongue. The cabbage was manufae· lured by Aunt Nellies Int• .. Clyman, Wis. * * * RIVERSIDE 1AP1 -A Superior Court judgi: has i s s u e d a preliminary in~ junction ord erlng Rath Pack· ing Co. of \'laterloo. Iowa . to stop selling packages of bacon !hat \veigh less than the marked u·eight. Judg e Ehrood Hich also denied the packing company's request that Riverside County officials be ·prohibited from ordering that suCh; Rath" prod- ucts not be sold. The packing con1pany has been under a ten1porary restraining order s i n <.: t' February, prohibiting it frGm selling "shortwei~ht .. bacrlil 111 the county. * * * \'I ASHINGTON ( liPJ ~ Pressured by angry ron - sumers and a \vorried in- dustry. the Food and Drug Administration has pro1nised a stepped-up progran1 a;::ainst filth in the nation 's 60,000 food plants. In contrast with pa st assurances that purity G( the IJ.i"). food supply \\'<IS (·on· finuaHy improving. FDA Com· missioner Charles c .. Edv.·ards . ackno\rledged '~thert has been a· generaJ decline in the food ind ustry's san.itatio11 prac- tices." countin~ Officr. Congress' 1-:dv•ards' stal'en1ent loJlov.'- cd ;:1 report by !he General At- fiscal investigative arm. v.·h ich concluded that 4-0 percent of food processing plants ~re unsanitary * * * SACRA~·IEN'TO I /\P i "J'hree bills puuing strict con- trols on public uti lity ad- \'t'rlising have been shelved by an Assembly cornmil1ee. bnt a measµre requiring utilities tq tell customers ho\V to conserve po1\1er v.·as unani1nously 2p- proved by the comn1itlet!. ~ 1\ssemblyman 'Ken Meade (D-Oakland1 agreed Thursday lo have lhe Assemblv CGtn- merC'e and Public 'utilities Coinmittee take under sub- mission his utility advertising pills after it voted 6-0 to send Uie pawer conservation biU to . the Ways .and Means Corn~ mittee. The other measures would outlaw ;-iny aqvertising thAl encourages an incrrasr in consumplion of gas or f'i~c· lricity, * * * SACf{AMENTO 1 AP I John T. Kehoe. GGv. Ronald Reagan·s legislative secretary, has been na1ned head of the !'itate Depa rt m e n t of Consumer Affairs. Reagan appointed Kehoe to replace Donald G. Livingston. v.•ho recently became director of programs and policy in the l{eagan adn1inistration. Kehoe's jQb pays $27,500 per year. El Catnino R e al B e ll Debts See ni To Be Style I 1i .4 rn eri ca 1BY JO HN CUNNIFF AP 811iln.t$t' AlltlVll NE\V YOJlK As memories of the G re a t -Depression, of tl)~l9.39s fade, Aniericans seem to be shed- ding almost all fears and in- hibi tions about personal debt. Once. it may be recalled. the goal of millions of families "'as to pay off the billS: Only- then. they felt. could they relax: only then did they feel they "'ere paying their own \\'3y. But in today's society it is entirely possible for a family to seek debt. to never be out of deht and to look for\l.rard to an entire life lived on credit. On graduating from college, in fact. t h Gu s a n d s upon thousands of young peGple are expected to pay off the loans their parents took out to fi. nance their education. ls this \Vroo1?? Financially, -morally? You'll receive dif- fering. vie\\'S, but a 1.videly held att itude is that the burden may look bigger tha n it reall y is. The chances are that the youngster will haye job stabili- ty and constantly risin~ in- corne, it is argued. ln addition he will have many years in wbich to finance or even refinance the debt. The changed attitude tQward borro"'ing is shown even tnore dramatically in housing. The very last source of funds for a depression family was to remortgage the house. Today it is a conunonplace practice. A study by the Conference Board, a private research organization supported mainly by business, shows th at new mortgage debt since 1959 has constantly exceeded the value or homes purchased. This means. of course, that families are using their equity for other purposes , such as educational and medical ex· penses. investment in other asse!s, vacations, travel. debt cGnsolidation . A bil ol California history Is now preserved in lronl ol Uni led California Bank's 'Mission Viejo branch . An F.J Camino Real bell was presented to the bank by tho Native Daughters or. the Golde n .West. It Is a replica or the bells which once marked the King's Highway lroin Mexico to San Francisco. Shown from left are William Wells, bank manager; Mrs. Clare Farrell, hlstorial society; Mrs. Vera Popov, grand president ol Native Daughters and Donald Smith, re- gional vici;;president ol United California. Friday, May iq, lq72 D•ll Y PILOT l J Nixon Pair 'Tough' Sliultz., We inberge r Head Eco1io1ny Po sts llughes Alfwe1t bas ap- pointed J1ck M. Stoopt, a :ti· year veteran· m the •irline transportation and travel sales fields, as Southern CaJtfornia district marketing planager. in the Santti Ana position. Montgomery ·o et; o 1n cs i\ regional sn le~ n1anager In Callfornia. By STERWNG F. GREEN • WASHINGTON (AP)-ln his \Vhlte Rouse job as director of the Office of MMagemfnt 8nd Budget, George P. Shultz sometimes has been called the general manager cf the United States. Whether his designation by Presidenl Nixon as the new secretar)' of the Treasury suc- ceeding John B. C.OMally is really a promotion, in tenns of power and influence, might be questioned. At Treasu ry, he'll be one block re1T1<Jved from the seat cf power, instead of just upsta irs. But his responsibilities will be global, instead of merely national. AND SHULTZ \\!ill bring to the coming monetary and trade ne,otiations of the non- Commun1st world, aimed at creating a new monetary structure and the dismantling of trade barriers, a style that differs widely from C.Onnally's flamboyant and sometimes heavy-handed style. Shultz is patient a n d persevering, a scholar and economist, , a quiet man. o( keen wit and twinkling eye. One associate contends Shu1tz "sitzfleisch" -a German term which, when translated very roughly, means he js hard-bot- tomed. He can sit through endless hours of wearying debate and wind up strong and clear -minded -and in com- mand of the situation. - For Casper 1'1. \Veinberger. who has been deputy director at OMB, the shakeup that makes him director is a major step upward, and ooe ·tliat will be acclaimed by t~ who favor old fashioned GOP-style fiscal repowlbility. Stoops wJll be responsible for coordinating and im- plementing the a i r I i n e s ' marketing effott throughout Southern Ca!Uornia. Weinberger, a 54-year-old Californian, is known as a tight man with the taxpayer's dollar. As top man at OMB he 1'111 have a lot more budget· squeezing mu..cle. .. Chances are bright th at Davld S. Swan, former dire<·- Weinberger 's nan1e lvill be tor for marketing for Great much in the news in the next Western Cities in Denver. has fe\v months. He has incurred been appointed director of the wrath of many C-Ongress n1 a r k eting members in the past two for th e Irvine years by impoonding and Company. w i t h ho lding appropriated S"•an has funds to 'keep the lid on spend· al,so served ing, and he is again due to in marketing start squirreling money away. c a p 11 cities with Shak-lVWTE HOUSE econon1ist3 ey's I n c,, now fear a resurgillCe of in-Grea! \Vest- flalion in the next half-year, sw•N ern Sugor caused partly by he a v y a n d Procter a n ct r.am- federal spending delayed t'rom ble of Cincinnati. J1e recei\'ed this spring. The anti-inflation his master's degree i n strategy was smilingly ex-mai:ketlng frGin st a n f o rd plained Saturday by chairman · Universitv . He and his \\•ife Herbert Stein of the reside in ·l\'ewport Beach. President's C.cuncil of Economic Advisers as follows: Conlintnhil Airlines h a ~ n1Hned John 0, Phillips a' <I i r e c I o r -internal audit. Phillips \V1IS formerly head of fuiance for Blue Plate Foods. a subs idiary of Hun1-Wesso11 r~oods. A 1961 Phi Bela Kappa gr;:iduare of the Univ ersity or ~·1issouri. Phillips is married and lives in Villa Park. The Sanla Ana office nr l>ean Wlttrr and Co., ha~ na1ned Andrew J. Soter a." n1anager. Soter \Vas th 11!1 forn1er vice-president a n d n111nager of the Long Beach office of Dean \Vltter _ The Long Beach resident received his bache lor's degrer in finance fron1 thr IJnivcrsil \' of Connet'ticut. Sant a An.::i resident Lillian .J. Hoover has been appointed ad1ninistrator of N e w po r l Money's Worth "We intend to unleash Cap \Veinberger to perforni hLo; favorite role or cutting back budget outlays," Bruce K. Aroold. El Toro, has been a\\'&rded a joint pa·· tent by the U.S. Patent Office for deve lopment of a plastic retentiGn systen1 used \vit h products of ITT Cannoo Elec- tric in Santa Ana. Villa resi· dent center in Newport Beach. f\1rs. Hoov· rr has been with llealth· co ConvaJe11· ceot Hospl(.al C o rporatlon What is Job Outlook For New Graduates? \Veinberger, a lawyer, has served as Ca l ifornia Republican state chairman and an assemblyman and "'as generally viewed as a member er the.GOP moderate wing. tie was serving as state finan ce director for Gov. Ronald Reagan when he accepted Nix· .on's call to Washington in October 1969 to b e c o m e chairman or the Federal Trade Commission. Arnold. a n engineering manager for military and aerospace products at the San- ta Ana division of lnlern<i- lional Telephone and Telegraph Corporation, n·orked with t w o product design woov111. for a year. She is a 1nember of the By~VLVIA PORTER This month and next, about one million of our young men and women will graduate from their college.$ and universities. The vast majo'rity will want to mGve directly into jobs - although significant numbers '"'ill join the Peace Corps or Vista, will go on to graduate school, will simply take a sab- batica l from the world of education for a \vhile. What are thejr job prospects? Still below the job pro- j e ctions made in the late 1960s for POllTl!W -t h j S year, but moderately b e t t e r than they were in catas- lrGphic 1971. Hiring p I ans are up 11 percent, according lo the annual tally of recruiting com panies by Dr. Frank S. Endicott, director of placement, Northwestern Uni- versity. For engioeers with B.S, degrees, though, hiring plans are up only s· percent and they are aCtoally down 3 pertent for graduates with master's degrees. This is an even grim- mer picture against t h e background of 1971 -when, on average, compan i es recruiting on college cam- puses cut their hiring in hair. "' Fairly sharp job increa11es were reported for male college graduates in the fields or ac- counting. sales· marketing, chemistry. But declines were reported for liberal a rt s graduates. majors in math and statistics, economics and finance. Other surveys of the job pic- ture come up with similar findings. The average number of job offers being m11de by each re<:'ruiting company is less than one-third the aver11~e that was made in 1967. reports the College Placement Council in Bethlehem, Pa . Job openings f o r cGlle~e graduates with bachelor's degrees will be down 2 percent from last year, forecasts the Michigan St a t e University Placement Bureau. At the Despite _ t h e jllidespread belief that the economic u~ turn itself wlll solve the prob- lem - a comment made by many of the emp l oyer s surveyed by Dr. Endicott - this is not likely unless the ex- pansion becomes dangerously boo my. Much sounder would be a head-on attack en unemployment in each of the areas where it i s con- centrated. For this category of unemployed, most he I p f u I would be an cverhaul of the U.S. Employment Service; an urgently needed matching of jobseekers to job vacancies; a direct increase in the number of higher level and sti.&ulating public service jobs that so desperately need doing. Meanwhile, to end on a positive note, here are some tips on how to approach a pro- spective employer. Do write a brief letter to the personnel office of the com· pany, telling why you art in- terested in working for the company. Enclose a resume and a picture. Request an in- terview. Do yo ur homework fir st on the company, so you are familiar with its products and policies, its general history and outlook. You dGn't have to boast about your knowledge ; it'll show throug h in your let- ter and.during your interview. Do deal directly with the personnel department. Do not antagonize the people who will be deciding en your employ· ment by attempting to bypass them and tc enlist the help of an executive of the company. Similarly, do not ask your pro- fessor or dean or college placement officer to intervene unless the company requests recommendations from these sources. Do emphasize the special qualifications you have that separate you from other a~ plicants -fluency in the languages of countries in which the company may' have afflliatea ; a back.ground of travel, social work, civic ac- tivities : artistic ta I en ts : outstanding abilities in sports, etc. The whole somnolent FiC shivered is axman \Vein· berger set to \Vork clearing out deadwood, reorganizing the commb!!sion and setting it on its present course as a ma- jor governmental advocate er consumer protection. THE SIX-FOOT, dark-hair ed San Francisco native, who claims he is a fru strated ne\vspaper man. seemed destined to become Nixon's budget bo.ss in 1970. But the old Bureau of the Budget became the new OMB in June of that year, and Nixon called 'Shultz-then secretary 0 f Labor-to its helm. Wein· berger was named depty, with responsibility for budget-mak- ing but not governmental management. Chr;ysler, VW Faci1ig More Tests LOS ANGELES (UPI) Vclks~·agen and Chrys l er Corp. have been asked to St!~ ply more cal'3 for testing because three-quarters of the Volkswagen and 60 percent of the Chrysler vehicles chttked failed to meet exhau~t emission standards. If further testing does not improve Volk!wagen's show- ing, "We will have no other way out than to just hold up the-sales," A. J . Haagen-Smit, chairman of the state Air Re!OUrces B o a r d , said Wednesday. No such threat was made against Chrysler. G. C. Haas, chief o! the board's vehicle emissions con- trol program, said the re.Suits of tests on Genera) Motors and Ford vehicles wire "pretty good. , .but in Ult case of Chrysler and V'N, we found quite a high number or failures . These are disturbin1: to us." specialists on the-palent. · He has been with ITT Can· non since 1934. ·,. Investors IJJversifle d Service~ (JDS) has appointed James R. Pint divisiona l sales manager for the Santa Ana of- fice. Pint has been a tllslrict manager in the Minneapoli.<1 office fGr tv.•o years. He suc- ceeds Charles B. Montgomery San Diego chapter of Eastern Star and the won1en's aux· iliary of the Pharmaceutical Association of Siln -Oiego. .. B. Lee Kar ns has been ap- pointed president of Neura Psychlatrl{' and fl e a l th Services J nc.. of Newport lleach. Kerns v.•as previously t'X .. ecutive vice president of the Advan ced Health Systems. Inc. Prior to that he wa~ president (if a large heallh. care consulting firm. Initial Public Issues Popular i11 Recoveries By S. M. MARSHALL Chrl1ll1R Scltn<t Mf<111or 51rvic1 One predictable by-product of a stock-market recovery is speculation in initial public Gf· rerings, or new issues. Jn fact, the n e w • i s s u e market tends to exist only during overall bull markets. Obviously, when investors are unloading blue chips like Eastman Kodak, they are not inclined to buy the initial pul>- lic orferings of unknown and untried companies. Btn' IF the overall derr:anrl for common stock is great, the new-issue market u s u a 11 v heats up in response to buying by speculators in quest of fa st capital gains. T<>day, the new- issue market is sizzlinll! again. Stocks with names like Chef Pierre and Datascope are pro- ducing virtually inslant capilal gains of 50 percent or more. Investors bent on playing the game are besieging their brokers to get any amount they ~an. Individual allotments i n some cases amount to no more than 10 or 20 sh-area, as brokerage firms try to please everybody. Other speculators are snapping the s~ocks up in the altermarket, driving their prices up even farther. THE TROUBLt; \l'ilh the \'/hole phenomenon. of cou rse, is that not all new issues are likely to be good investments Gr produce fast gains. \'ery astute trading often !s re· quired to take advantage or sharp price nuctuations. Moreover. the hotter !he new-issue market gets. the lower the quality of the of· ferings tends to be. Comp~nies that could not sell their equity at a multiple of five times earnings a year before are suddenly marketed at 10 times earnings. In Washington . the Securities <ind Exchange Com· missiGn has been holding public hearings into the new~ issue situations and it appears likel y . that new disclosure rule s may yet be dravm up go,•erning these offerings. William J . Casey. the SEC'~ chairman. said recently in a New York speech: "In tne light of what appears 110\v 10 be a nc1\· hot-issue boorn . parallel in size to the 19G:-6:J and 1967-69 eras, 11·c may he forced into lakillg :ictioo lor the protection of i11veslorR even-sooner than ire thought." Casey said it appeared tha t the difficulties "reh1te m'lre to imperfections in the distribu· tion and afterinarket rradinl{ process than in inadequate or inaccurat e disclosure in pros· pectuscs." start or 1972, the unemploy--liliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiii.••••••• ment rate for young men, age 20-24 -which includes recent college graduates -was near- ly 10 percent, and more than J6 percent ror non-whites. What dOes it mean? Despite the quickening pace of the economic upswing, it means that hundreds of thousands of college graduates will be searching for jobs which do not exist and which will not be ·created in the near future. It means that many who do get jobs during this buslneu advance will get them only by "bumping'' others with lesser qualific ations -' "'hich wil l hnrdly • add to the general sa tisfacti on or young Americans with our economic society. It means a shameful waste of our educated manpower at a time when young people with !his level or education art deeply needed in all areas of our effort to Improve the quality of life. And It certainty means the U.S. government will be losin11 out in the collection of huge amounts or add!Uonat taxes that these young men and women would be paying if lhoy had job$ paying lhtm ap. propriate salarie3. the Balboa ~Club has let Its guard down . That's riQllt. The Bala Bay Club/ ln~lan Wella llU eXOUMd the Qlle guard for a little while longer. But only a little while. We wanled to give you a chance to keep tabs on our prograsa. To let you share , our arrival in P1lm Springs. During our apening celebration on 1he weekend of May 20th, . enJoY our tennis courts and watch 'World Class" proleasional tennis being exhibited. Dance and dine atourclubh0ul8. View our Olympic slie PoOl lnd Jacuui. Golf al Iha championship India• WellaGolfClub. To become a part olthls callltl L ~ affluencethattheBBCisknown Dr tor,takea lookatourstudios, _ , ~ towphouses, custom suites, and - -~ the rioh landscaping that • • t"' surrounds them. We offci you "4lltf Sl'ION" • ~ · private, corporate, or joint \' ~ ~ ~ }. owner9hips irl addition to ~ ... .., e m8mb9rship in the Balboa B.W ~ ~ ~ ~ i Club, guest priVileges in 44 ~ ~ » ~ • ' ln1ernatlonal clubs, golllng o• 1 " ...... !i 1 world famous courses. complete ~ ,.,,,. _, ~ 0~ property management, rental and f. ~ ~ hotel services, gate hou10, and ~ I ;~ security guards. $24,500 to S40,000. ! ~ ~ Come see us on May 20th. That ~ if gate guard will be coming 1....------..:l t>ackaoon. · BALBOA BAY CLUB b-INDIAN WELLS Sales and Information Cenler Highway 111 It> Bay Club Drlve/714-34&2561 Ext. 49 I I • I :z DAILY PILOT s 92% ,,, 1964 lnflatio11 Oimb? LooJ{ at Brazil's U) JOll:\ C:l '.'li~lff A~ •w• l'tU A~• ¥1 \:F .. \V '\ 01 ~ -tJ1 t ho1 gup th I\ Ill lkt~ I n t l J. l I') n Hl IO!Crilblc fn r Arnl'r r.ir s And t:anad ans 1s that tire\ 1 on s de.i JI a r rril 1$.5u1 h fJ 11on 1s sin thev Itel nd n1 llCClple .or t'Of Sl'l('Otc h~l: I h \t 111 5: n 1 h~ SC Jut on It I:> SUI It ll'd 1n1gllt be to le:irn tu II\ l w1tl 1nna11on r:ilher thau t ~ lOU tJnue 10 bntTle t hi ad n!u brc;ik lhe bonds of Ar gl • An1cr1c:1 n morality ind lr} a l 1tle I ot1n philosophy Le t us fur ex 11npk I kf a lip fron1 Brazil Nuv. th1.1c s a counlry that knu\\S 1nflat or HS 92 perct"nl rale as rt.-c1 nlly as 1964 making puny by r1 m pa11so11 our prc~cnl 4 or f)t'r c:ent IN rHI:! 11~\I .in1l1ss the (jUCSh on s posed LSfl I I beller to h\.C "1th 1nf\::it on than to ha\e high uncmplov men\ and con1pulsc ry con troJs? l{eally sn t 1\ n ere Iv a choice or U1e le~c;cr f'VLI ? These arc sornc ideas th al ~ profcsso1 o f internal onal business present ed lo a seminar on 1nnauon al the Un1vcr s1ty of Toronto School of Business The professor :Stefan II ftobock of Columh1:l Un1vers IV is serious on ::i ll poinl'! and t11ed to persuade the Nixon adm1n1strat1on lo l 1 st c 11 Instead 11 has been ( x tremcly consistent 111 1g norn1g him In p1 esent1ng h1!{ l'lrgumt>nt \l.h1ch be 1m1nc1.hatcly con c.:cdes LS no! <.1 new u11c Robuck asks thLLt v.c list the reasons ror thinking 1nrt 1t1on IS harmful Anrl lo ad us he provides this che1 klist JT DISCOUltAf.t. S pr1 vat -:av1ngs adds to :i b.il<incc or paymen ts def cit leads 10 economic 1nefftc ency a n d social 1nJus1Jcc d1storls and unbalances lhc 1nvcst1ncn l structure 1he popul ir c:\ I picture oC Inflation is one wbe1 c 1>euplc 11\ 1ng on fixed 1nroml'S sut h as pensions 1nsu1 anc:e s iv 1ngs or bonds are stead ly being robbed or th eir purchas Ing power But he 1sks do 11 i mf 11 results have lo n<.'cur? \Vhy not instead lry to neu1ral1 zc the potentiall y har1nful er feels 1 But how' Says Robock a \ariclv of neutrahz1ng tcchn 4u1 s exu;t :;uch as index ! r kcd loa ns \\hlch provitl( lo r read justmcnl 1n the amount of the loan on the basis or cha11gcs lfl prices -·-PhotoM•I c Custom Tailor and Shirtm aker •l\~<t llffl l.u~• ._.J, Jer.~ :cc--oo ~ 1 OOpn f.I nd~~ tit oo~lt '> Jd.)' • by Arr< lm~n 11 n11 his a l1ustn1l.'nts 111orti;:11g~s onl~ \II pnvn1en1s 1n !he en11re \C Ir \C 1r~ Container Marketed 'Pla11t Ar1ahc11n Engineer Wanted Ag• 110 c.rlttrlo Port •r full t lllC' Fobr (oted ltffl blnt ond (011.eron Write Ad :3•2 Dellr Piiot lol 1560 Cotta Maci Calf 92626 ORDER \T YQURS ,~ TODAY! J 1000 Beautiful Strek-on LABELS Personalized • Stylrsh • Efficrent Order For Yourself or ii Friend May he U\ed on "nvelop115 •~ refurn addres1 labels Also very nandy ., 1d11nt f"-a t1on label, for mark n9 personal items such ., book< records photos tdt labels st ck on 9lass and may be ~nod for mark ng home canned foc.d items All label1. 1111re printed with stylis h Vogue type on f ne quali fy wh t• 9ummed peper. • OVER THE COUNTER COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK UST NASO l"tlngs for Thursdoy, Moy 18 1972 • • ~n •• •• •• ~~ "' •• •• •• ~1~ "" •• Nn "' NE ... "" •• NY ""' ~~ •• N' .~ •• •• "" "' "' •• "" ..., •• NM "" ~: "" Nh ... ·~ ... "" "" •• ,,. •• N• ••• ""' ••• ·~ ••• ••• ·-••• ONo ""' "" 0 .. Ot ccl 0« "'" 0•" °"'' °"" o..e OOE OOE ""' o•P-. Okla """' 0 '"' o::i• O• k o~• 0•. OU o ...... "'" o~• o • ., -·~· 01'\'rc •:i• .. l PtcP" P•CP" Pies Pe Tl P•C 1 .... ..... Pl mJ .. , PMO I"•~ " P1rtf ";: ••• '""'' P11b ·-.... P~D ·~" MUTUAL FUNDS •.c. Peon"I ~~b Pl p '" P1t1n1 Per11" .... Penni Pen11 ~= ··~ '" P•t II Pet I Pelll'I> ··~ ~~\.~ Petr .. ( Piiar Pll~IP Ph l' "' PO I Ph~ p .. "' Pl\ lf. Prtll PFll P Pll~V p • "'" ' .. PlonG Pll .... P IFt p "•'~ "' ~ IYb :r.:~ Porr1c P 01IG ~~ltl ~~!/, Prtl!'I( ··-Prock i.r< ~l!~ i. ' ~19 ~ NE\ ..... '""' "" '" . I UM ••• 2Cw • Oul """ Hi, I Tt• ~ ~c, 11 sf. 12 Glo 13 Htl , ..... 15 Ma .... "~ ll ~:J ~~ ''Ch' t4 ~•I tS Co. ~ .. ;~ ~ / tJ ' I I 1972 s. Thursday's Oosing Prices-Complete New Yol'k Stock Exchange List Profit Reports Shore Up Stocks • ------- DAJlY ,ILOT .... .. (WLIMll'U.DIMO.. IU -ml •+ " I totllt *" IOf ~ '*' .11 J)\l+l\.\ tilt N ?\'a N + '- 241 MW. tn~ ,, + \t tlO •1 ,, " + 14 .... ., . ~ a llJ\:o ni~ 111 +1•- • lllili .11111 IMO+ 1, Q :N 7Jftlo ,, +4 11 llffo IJl't 11v.+ \to 1u n-. n\4 "·" ... 11' lOVt th f h--111 •11 a"' '*"" ,,,._ '·• ••"-""· "" ~l !ot 41 ''""" •• '2 .... .. .. -14' lM Ji-. JI al~ fe 2 ''"" ., ., ..... u .u ~ ~+ .... '21 ~ LM'o MYH-HO 6' JI" 11\lo 11\<l-\t llDO 112 111\1 HJ +11-i 1100 l(Q 10'2 10'2 ••• 14 1114 ll 11 ,. , ..... 21\~ 171'1-\it H ','\'ii t11'4 H l't-1\'I ,, .. llt 11'1 ", 23'-1.)111 ll,,._ .. , 11.-. 1 ,,,. 1 IVio "! ~~ !!'1 H'i+ '• """' 1• S'V.+ 1. 1:10 1~• 101.r. 10\..,_"' It 141 UJ U114+2"-11 ll 17't1 111\t \1 -xn- "f Ul\lo 11'\Q l o!O'~+l•• 1, ll"l r.· 1l" .:t: ''' ' ,.~ ., ... ,~ 1 32 31 ti' +I S> :MYo lJ\\ J.!'11.+ "'II '' :UV. u :u -'• u ,, .. ~ •tv.+ ;, l tl )) 31V. J;m.,.-\o Phone- 6424321 For Weekender Advertising ( ·- • i J 4 DAILY PILOT Official Just Out Of Step From Wire Services The Pan-M·alaysian Islan1ic party kicked out a member of parliament bec ause he would not give up performing a Malaysian dance called the jog et. ''No dancing" is the rule for the Moslem party. Hashim Gera was expelled for violating It in February. He got back in by taking the l PEOPLE ' pledge, but he v•as caught swaying to the rhythm again this week. "No," he told the party. "I Jove the joget and canno t give ft up." * * * Mrs. Thomas K. Mattingly . wife of the Apollo 1 6 astronaut, has given birth to a 4-pound, 2-ounce boy a t Galveston County (Tex . ) Memorial J1ospital. A hospital spokesman con- firmetf the Saturday event this week and sai d the Mattinglys asked that no public an- nouncement be made . Mrs. Mattingly and the child, Thomas Kenneth ~'lat­ tingly Ill, were doing well, the spokesman said. * * * Explorer Jacques Costcau. Boston Bruins hockey star Phil Esposito and the Rev. Mother Waddles, who gained national recognition for work with the poor in Detroit, will be included in The American Academy of Achievement's 1972 Salute to Excellence. Academy founder Briane Blaine Reynolds said the awards will be presented dur- ing a banquet in Salt Lake City July 8. There will be among 50 men and women ci ted for ac- complishment. "The whole idea of the academy is to instill a greater awareness than ever before that American as unlimited opportunities for a person to do great things-and b e respected for doing them," Reynolds said. * * * Mrs-Sharon Hughes. widow of former Detroit Lion s fl anker Chuck Hughes, has been awarded $43 ,250 as set- tlement in her claim for worknian's con1pensation after the death of her husband Oct. 24. Hughes died of a heart at- tack in Tiger Stadium during a game between the Lions and the Chicago Bears. He had just run a pass pattern when he collapsed on the field. * * * A Superior Court judge and jury in Atlanta sentenced a 2().. year~ld man to death twice. "I suppose they're going to kill him twice," said court-ap- pointed attorney Bill Spruell after the conviction a n d sentence of Tilnothy Wayne Bramer of Atlanta, also known as Loys Edward Camp. Kramer was found guilty of murder, armed robbery and aggravated assault in the holdup of a a franchised fast food restaurant March 23. * * * Agriculture Secretary Earl L. Butz shows no sign of being muzzled in speaking out on fann issues. "The American farmers will have the deep and abiding respect and appreciation of every American-or I'll kno"' the reason why," Butz said in Washington· at a meeting of the American Feed Manufac- ttll'ers Association. * * * President Tito ol Yugoslavia will visit the Soviet Union in the first haU of June, Mosco~· radio annouoced. Tito last visited Moocow In April 1964. T h e brief announcement pva no Information on sub-- ... to ... di!cussed. -.. ' • Friday, Milf 191 1972 r • • • 13" TABLE GRILL 1 Oxl O" HIBACHI 18 INCH TABLE B-B-Q ~..,,~":'~r: 99c Here's the ideal grill for Table model with J. inhmate parties. Adiust- 1ee position chrome grill, 2ee beach and p1cn1cs. able grill: wooden han-folding legs and heavy Heavy gauge brass dies and base. r1re bo~ gauge steel brazier. finish. emptic~ easily. Cast iron. OUR REG. PRICE 1.17 OUR REG. PRICE 3.99 OUR REG. PRICE 3.27 .. BIG BOY 18" BBQ BIG BOY 24 IN. B-B-Q 14x14 INCH HIBACHI Adjustable grill, wind-Dtf.D lire bowl, revolv-_Cast aluminum brazier; shie ld. 3 chrome plated 5 e e ingad1uslableg1111,5" see ad1ustable grrll, wood 7ee ske wers. Fold-UD·legs, · . wheels. Remove trom handles and base. Ideal handles. · , nase Jor portability. l or pat io or picn ic cookouts •. OUR REG. PRICE 6.97 OUR REG. PRICE 8.97 OUR REG. PRICE 10.97 BUDDY L SMOKER BARREL SMOKER BUDDY-L WAGON B-B-Q flip-top hood with f~ll/ enclosed .. full hood with safety glass win- 1999 ~mo~er h1Jod. ad· 1 ee glass window.Ad-2 4 ee dow. Motorized 1ustable and re-justable fire box, spit, 2 grills. movable lire boK. 2 grill s, spit, . OUR LOW PRI CE OUR REG. 29.97 • &::! • .WHITE FRONT PICNIC BOX B-B-Q 10x17 INCH HIBACHI Use as grill or smoker_ Twin grills adjust 1n - 4ee. Portable, easy to carry. 3e 9 deDendently. COof ham - Carrying handle & lug-. . · burgers, ~eep callee gage latch. hot -all at once. OUR REG . PRICE 5.91 OUR REG. PRICE 1.91 BIG BOY 24-IN BBQ BIG BOY DELUXE BBQ :i:'::i:: 14 99 24'' barbecue has ' hood with warm~ 1999 1zed rotisserie, 1ng oven. Ad1ust- hood, wheels. able gri~I. OUR REG .17.9!· OUR REG. 21.97 BIG BOY SMOKER DRUXE "SWINGER" Removable a!IO· ad-Big 24'' square '"''"' "'"" 2 ee griU with 2 lire 4ee Two line spit forks. height adjust-tasy·roJI wheels. ment s & pull do wn sm oker OUR LOW PRICE hood. OUR LOW PRICE , BUDDY-L FULL SMOKER . OR BIG BOY 24'' GRILL !~-~~e~;t~rt~!~~P<~Lfo~:ii ing. closed for smoking. Adjuslable draft control; full length aluminum han· die; towel bar; shell. OUR RE5ULIR PRICE lUT EA. BBQ WITH ROTISSERIE 24" diameter, revolving grill. Semi~ circular hood houses motorized spit wilh 1 line forks. Big enough to cook lt all at once. OUR RE5ULIR PRICE 12.97 ... ST.ORE HOURS: DAILY ANO SATURDAr .10 AM TO ' PM • SUNOAf 10 AM TO 1-'M.. THflf'f'A WHITE flONT UNOAY1.MAY21 CHAllf lT-Wf OIDIT C .. - ••• m • "¥111-t-~ •••• ,_,nt.llfftlm 3088 llllStOL sr. San 'Diego F..-1y 1t llrlotol • • 1 9 ~men BEA ANDE,SON, Editor 'rid•'· Ml' l'• 1t1l '"' IS Spouses Dogging Issue ~ ~ ~· ' . ~ r •. r: fl 1• " ~ 1, .. DEAR ANN LANDERS: TWo yean ago my wife died, leaving me with four dogs. · They range in age from 16 to five yea rs. 'fhese dogs have been like children to me. I ~ Recenf.ly r married. My present wife has a dog and she ls as devoted to Dolly as I am to my dogs. The problem is that Dolly and my dogs are at each other's throats every chance they get. We have to keep my dogs In the basement and they are not very happy down there. We cannot tum all the dogs loose in the fenced yard at the saJTie time because the barking disturbs the neighbors. My dogs have had a lifetime of com· panionship with me so I must spend a lot of time in the basement with them or they get very unhappy and cry. Neither my wife nor I can give up our dogs -it would be like giving up children. Do you know of a tr'anqull i.zer we might give our pets to help them get a!o'Tig together? Our marriage is suffering and I am not pul ling your leg. Please give me some help Ann. -SERIOUS DILEMMA DEAR DlL: J\.fy Chicago canine experts ten me tranquilizers will not solve your - ~ ' ~ ~ " - \ , .. ... / probl em. \'ou'll have to wait lill the dogs die. I hope your marriage outl asts them. B seems ~ me that both you and your bride have a strange sense of ,norltau. DEAR ANN LANDERS: If you say I am overly sensilive J will never bring this subject up again, But I do feel I have a legitimate complaint. It's my husband's sister. She has a beautiful home about 21) miles from here. The house has a large living room, a nice side dining room, a roomy kitchen. two bedrooms and two bathrooms. To thi.s day we have-never been entertained in the living roo m We've only seen it while passing through. She alway!i_asks us to sit in the kitchen. The k.itchen d1airs are comfortable and it's a pleasant room, but 1 feel this is an insult -almost as if we aren't good enough to sit on her upholstered furniture. J\Iy husband says it's an old-country custom that his s.isler picked up from her mother. His sister was born in this coun- try and I say she ought to know better. Shoul d I tell her we'd like to sit in the liv- ing room nex t time? -MRS. LONG ISLAND. DEAR l\.1RS.: Sure . If you want to. l\.1aybe she thinks you are more com- fortable In the kitchen just because she Js. If sitting In the living room means so much l'1 you, tell her so. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Will you settle . an argument please? My husband and I received an invitation to a silver wedding anniversary party. It is being given by the children of the cou ple. The invitation Js engraved. At the foot of the invitation it saus, "No girts. please." This in my opinion, is in terrible taste and I 'say no ethical prilter would pnr duce such a cloddish invitation. After all, people who are in the business know wh at's right and if they are half-way de.- cert they will protect their customers against such ignorant mistakes. What do you say, Ann? -VER~10NT READERS DEAR V,: I agree It ls not in good taste to mention girts on an lnvttatlon of any kind , tut the printer1'1 job It hr" print. If asked for "counsel," a printer might Indulge in 1 lillle gul :lance. Bat most· peo- ple go to tbe printer with lbtlr mladl pretty well made up. CONFIDENTIAL TO HOW N 0 W BROWN CO\V: You haven't had 20 years experience. You've had one year or ex· perlence 20 times . Talk to your lm· mediate superior and find out why you've made so little progress. Even a clock that isn't working is right twice a day. A11 Landers dl1cu11tt teenage 4riak- hil -flt mytll1, Ill rulltles. IAln Ille fa<.11 by mtdln1, "Booze 1Dd Yo• -F• Tetn11en Only," by AM Lllderl. SeH Si ttDtl 11 coin 1Dd a long, 1tamped, Mlf• oddn111«1 uvdope to tloe DAILY PIL01' wUil y-nqauL ~ ~ Jl. .. '" ~ .. • ' " • ~.);! ' 1 '• ' • 6 H d .1 ·I M r ~ i -.'); ............ , A VERY GOOD YEAR -Toasting 10 years of success in sponsor- ing the May Wine Festival arc (left to right) ~1rs. Robert Dabney. Dr. Jerrel T. Ri chards and ~lrs. J ohn Lee. Return En ga gement For Wine Festival P'roudJy announcing the vintage of their annu!!;I spring benefit arc mcn1bers of the , Orange County Chapter, National Foun- dation-March of Dimes. For the loth year the group will present the traditional May Wine Festival . and this year it is planned £rom 6 lo 8 p.m. Tuesday, May 23, in the Newporler Inn. Among the distinguished wineries participating will be C on c a n n o n . Inglenook, Sebastian( and B e r r i g e r Brothers, and.cheese ror sampling will be supplied b)t Hickory Farms. Adding a pleasant background to the eveni11g's fest..ivitles will be strolling Mex- ican troubadours. Mrs. Don Southworth, a Newport llarbor artist, again will de!lgn the programs. Serving u chairman Is Vick Knight . a member of the tntematlOl'lal Wine and Food Society. Orange Coast area hosta Include Corona del Mar, Or. and Mrs. Hal Godshall and the Messrs. and Mme•. Lawrence K. Harvey, Nigel Balley and B.obert Dabnc>y: Costa Mesa. Judge 11.ncl ~lrs. Donald Dungan and the l\1cssrs . and Mrnes. J)o1ninic J. Racili , Fred J. Owens. Gerald E. Odegaard, James Moultrup, J{ny June. George Gemer. Roo Gagliano and Arthur R. ~lcKcnzic. O!hers are Et Toro, h1r. and l\-1rs, \\'1 1lia1n Shue ; Fountain Valley, the l\lcssrs. and l\1mes. Gerald Wessler, Ed Az-nolU and Edwin Booth: l·luntington B~ach. Dr. and l\1rs. Dale Miller ; La guna fl ills, r..1r. and Mrs. Michael Collins; l\lission Viejo, Mr. and Mrs. Tim Morgon. Also hosling are from Newport Beach, Dr. and l\1rs. Nom1an E. \Vatson. Dr. and ~1rs. Jcrrrl T. Richards. the l\ff'ssrs. and Mrnes. Jfrank Marshnll, l·Tnrold O. Boyvcy. Southworth, Louis Marke.I, Robert Goo<hvin, John Franco, Richard Braley and Jeck Starner Md Mrs. Onelt:r Correll. COncludlng the list are Stal Be1tch, Mr .. and A1rs. Lee Chase and Westminsltr, ~trs. Grace O'Brien and Mr. and Mrs. Donald G. Neugebauer. • Moms By ALLISON DEER R 0 1 tht D1llr Pilol S!llf Every Tuesday morning 4'.l beach arP~ \\'Orncn take a break frorn hOUSC\\·ork. kids and shopping and escape into music. For two hours they are no longer v.1ives and mothers but members of th~ Harbor \Vomen's Chorale of Costa f\lesa. J1 reschoolers are tucked away in !he nursery while molhers rehearse. Rehearsals arc from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. In the Presbyterian Chuch of the Coven.ant , Costa tifesa, \\•hich loans the group faci lities lo practice and :.1 nominal Jee nursery, 'fhe chorale performs music ranging from classical lo folk rock, with an emphasis on contemporary m u s I c. f\1arlenc Jenner accompanies rehearsals 'and performances on the piano and several members play ~anjo and guitar. DANCING, TOO In recent years the group has added cho reography. ''You should see all 47 of us jumping around to 'Wendy'.'' commented Mary Bow, a chorale member. ''\Ve do everything from Schubert tG 'Jesus Christ. Superstar,' a lot of Burt l3acharach, everything but barbershop singing." Described as an "alternative lo Sv.·eet Adelines'' for those who want to sing. the chornle dr11ws members from Costa Mesa, Ne\vport Beach, fluntington Beach, ' Mission Viejo and even San Diego. "One of our members moved," Mrs. Ho\v explained, "and she couldn't bear to leave the group. Now she commutes for rehearsals '"<Ind perfonnances .. , l\1embers range from the "baby,'' a 21· ycar-Qld mother of one, to a few al· tractive gr:indmothers. Median age Is abo ut 30. There are 128 children among the n1oms and about 13 grandchildren. YOUNG IMAGE But the group has a young image of which they're appropriately proud. "Our audiences often think we 're col· lcge kids." she added, "and we love eve ry minute of i .. " Costumes and rc~rtoire may be the cause. Standard garb is a modified miniskirt with a vest and blouse in apple- plc· and-motherhood red, white and blue. "Happiness ls,'' the s i x ·me m be r i:iub·group or the chorale. did a USO tour of the Pacific -Japan, Oklnawa, Guam -costumed In red, white and blue hot pants. 'TliegrOup began about 15 years ago un der spon50rshlp or PTA and Orange Co8st College. Th~ chorale now It stlf· austairring. h1embers pay $10 a year dues I Spring . Salute Oriental-style llr. and 1'.Irs. Robert S. Barnes' Ne\vport Beacl1 h on1c \\ill be tr:i.nsforn1cd into an Oriental setting for a fund-raisi ng cocktail party and dinner \Vhich \viii benc· fit the Arthritis Foundation. Sponsoring the Sunday, l\lay 21, gala. entitled San J."rancisro f'ling, is the Orangl' County \Vo1nen's 1\ux· iliary. To underline the Oriental motiJ a Cantonese menu is being planned and guests are invited to '"car cos- tu1nes to car"ry out the thc1ne. The auxiliary, \vhich has 35 1nembers. presents tu·o benefits annually. Funds go to the national foundation \vhich helps victiins of arthritis and funds research in the field. In Orange County alone there arc more than 125,000 arthritics. ('hairtnan or !hr auxiliary is ?>.Ir". F.. l\tortin1cr Gher1n:in. and heading-thr party co1111nittce i1; ~1rs. J oseph Shuff. On her romn1it tce arc !h r :i·11ncs. Norm::in Cirkle. Conrad Ch::irlette, E. \"I. Dray, l•'red Carter, Samuel J·lur\\'itz and J Qhn Patlcrso n. · \Vaitin g to extend a \r:-tr111· \Vel coinr to party-goers nrc ~1rs. Carter (left) ind hlr~. Dray. .. ' l I Hum l ' n Strum MAKING MUSIC -Marlene Jenner, at the piano, accompanies re- hearsal of the llarbor Women's Chorale of Costa h-1csa . llunning over a new number arc director Pat Danne and chorale member Pat Kollenda. Forty-nine beach area \VOmen pcrforn1 "'ith the i,:roup. and 35 cents a meeting for expenses. They perform everywhere - ' for church groups, P'TA groups, clubs, and this year at El Toro Marine Base an1I Mesa Verde Philharmonlc. Mrs. Pat i>anne, who was a member before becoming director three years ago, hol<t• a bachelors degree in music education. sang with the Roger \Vagner Master Chorale, bu bttn a travelling music teacher Jn Huntington Beach achoots and did college conctrt tours. Members don't need formal music training. however, "~1any of the members can't e\·cn re~d music, thry lcnrn the numl'" . by roto and clo qui le weJI." ,\1Hlillnnlng Is 1nfurmal. No one Is turned nv.:ay. &in1c are asked to sing a solo. Others just join In. lnll'r;•5t In their mu!llC hu.~ rwelled the rank to the largest in the group's history. . Pat Kollcnda, a three-year member, \.'Oiced the reason many women Join. IS.. MOMS SING, Pace 111 f ! ·1 •Jfl DAILY PILOT F'tid1:y, M1, 19, 1972 ' Museum Extravaganza a Model Benefit -.Leaders Glance at Tomorrow ' By L.\VR/f, KA.SPER 01 !ht D•lly 1"1!~! l!t!I . '.'Women in v o· J 11 n t e e r groups, properly orientated. Could chan ge the d1rPc11on of our nar1on .'' acrorrl1ng lo Dr. Dorothy forrl. career educR - tion consultan t for the Los Angeles county .!i r h no I !I irupe.rintendent. .. As the keynote speriker for the annual Spring cnnference -Of. the Orange Co u n I y Deaner), Archdiocesan Coun - -~I of Calhol1c Women. shP. · ~uggestcd \.\'ays ho1v "'omen might orient them seh·es as leaders. decode. 60 percent of the na- tion's wnmcn would be "'ork- 1ng. Although the .:i.verage ~ ' ~ \\'Oman now earn15 $3 an hour "'hl!e a ni:111 receive s $J for I.hf' same Jnb, she predicted thJ!' gap \1·lJI narrow and ''women \.\'lll obviously ha\'e i::re;itPr rconnm1c !ever age." \V ORKING \\'0~1l'.'\ \\'hen she told of a man tell- ing her !hat a 11·om.:in·s place JS in lhe hnrne, a nun1ber of lhe 11>"omen applauded ln ai::rf'en1ent. ''If 1nu ha1·e childrrn. f rnuldn·1 agree mnrf' ... !'hf' !'.:i1rl. ....,._ Dr. Ford told the women that the feminist moveme~ heads the list of timely lllld r~levant leaders. Change items for women has become the name of the game. she lokt the women. To keep up with the changes, &he said women must continue to grow and de\·elop or they will be "lei! b~• !hP IA'aystde." LEADERSHIP SKILLS Howard Daum , Mrs. Ben Deane , Mrs. Daum and Deane (from left) admire historic tabla setting at Musee d'art Bal . ESTANCIA Jane Miller By JO OLSON ot fM tl•lty '"'"' '''" While female gue1b at the t.1usee. d'art Bal scrutiniied the furniJhinp and decor in the five-Dtan~ Condominium Home models at Big Canyon, !heir hwbands and escorts dlscus,,ed bu1ines1 11nd politic11. Several hundred art patrons and art. lovers aecepted In- vitations kl the bl1ck·tie benefil for thf'! N t w po r l Harbor Art Museum, and they were given in return 1 spring evening lo u vor. Mr. and Mn. Ben C. Dtane of Laguna Beach. creators of the condominiums, wen!. the official hosts and moved through their four modi!! home 1 enjoyillg the art displays, table settings and mwic along with the other guests. Many of the art pieces from the museum and pri vate cot- leclions seemed to fit rig ht in with the decor of the mode ls, such as one contemporary tapestry in limes and purples ·thal was placed in a £ormal lime and purple living room . In the De1uville House. to complement the To k ' i d o prillu from the colle<:tion cf Mr. and Mrs. J . L. Hurschler, CdM HIGH Valerie Cardeiro lovely Japanese gtrls sefved Pinkerton force mu st hav1 hors. d'oeuvres and a Koto been hired for lhe evening, conrert was played hy Mrs. bK11use the assemblage of art Kyoko Sc h r u be n from and antiques was wrll su,... Monlclair. rounded and even the guardt The kolo, shf' explainf'd. is \\'e.re enjoying the ftst1 v1 11es. an anelent J a pa n , sf' 1n-Thf' only damper on the st.rumen! whirh is about 11' ~estlve evening was the long, a foot w1dt. has 13 salln wearh.-r. whlrh was on Iha strings and 15 playt'd wilh nippy side ;ind kept ,llUests in. ivory pic ks . side more . th11n nutside prom· In the Versaiilles Hou i; '-, enading in the beautiful gar· where twn Rodin sculptures den settinJil. from the Of'anes' cn\lect1on After slrolhng. 1·1ew1ng the were displayPd. 1 't r i n g arr and basking in the beauty ensemble from UCI provided or lhe homes , izuesl.! 11d· appropriate music. journed to the Big Canyon Of interes1 in the Monaco Country Club to begin another Hou!lf was a Sunday brunch round of fpsli\·1llP!'. this time buffet tllble sellinR U!'ing centering on ;i se ve n-course Royal Copenhagen in the rare gou tmrt dinner. F'lora Danica pattern, B11r..:: The menu featured Green carat crysta.I ;ind a silver Turtle. Olorn.~n. Pnached Filet serving piece from the old of Solt. Cardinal. Fleur·on; Rancho Sllnta M~rguerila, Bibb LeUuce. Herir!s of Palm; which was !;ii.er to be the do-Rorist Nf'w York Sirloin Strip, main of thP. pioneer o·Ni!!il\ Saucp Beameisf': Tom 11 t I) family. Stuffed Wi!h Spi111ach, .lnd Also clispla.ved was ;i setting Baked Alask;i . featur ing gold VP.rmeil service The tvenin~ \.\'85 hcncfici al plales and a centerpiece of ror pveryont : the ArJ i\1u!ltum gold and silver which w1111 added to its coffer. s(lmt handmade in Mexico City, friendships were rent w P rl , loaned by Mrs. John Wayne. women ~nl some decora11ng and Spode'11 bo ne china in the ideai;, somr bu11iness ~·a~ Sutherland pattern. loaned by discussed and r v tr y on e Mrs. Jean H ;i 11ibur1 on learned a lilllf' mnre .Bbrlul art . Swedlow. A 11 charitable donations Every gua rd in the should be sn pleasant. ... ~#­ NH HIGH Ba rb1r1 Hiutand CM HIGH Sut Mo1tr • '"\'our lomorrn111-; hal"e !heir ·teglnn1ni::s tixlay.'' she sa1 rl ,during her talk on A Touch of :'Tomorrow. · The first tomorrow she tl}Uched on was "'omen's ~lbtration, a movement which ~w of the v.•omen apparenlly aupport. WORKSHOP SPEAKER Or. Doroth y Ford Bill !'hf' arfrlPd. "TQdav hon1ern;ik1ni:: nrPrt no !nnge'r be a full!imc Jnb ·• A maJorJty of the "'omen chu ckled iind tnurmured v,ri!h their neighbors ovf'r I.his con1n1ent. Women involved 1n the work 1.1·nrld and community or religious organiz;:ilions. she sa id. ha1·e lo de1·pfop leadership skills to keep pace. The art of lisl.ening is one of the most important of these skills. Since the Lord prov ided one mouth and two ears. she said. people !'hould listen tvtice as much as I hey should lalk. Zonta Girls Excel • Service ·Most of !he ·women raised their hands "'hen she asked tio~ many were "etecutive j19memakers." Few, however, 1nd1cated rhev t\•ould return to the labor ma.rket. Yet. Dr. Ford pointed out that by the middle of the Some womrn. she explalncd, need to v.•ork In support themsel1·es. The Joh she gets sho uld depenrl on the in- dividual. "Brains have no sex attached to them." :.Coastal Clubs Elect ·:New Executive Award pre sentations and in- s'.tallatlons head activities for organizations along t h e OTahge Coast. .' Busineu Wom en '.Three college students 1\·ere named rec i pient s of ~tflolarships during a dinner meeting of the Newport Beach Chapter. American Business Wf)men ·s Associa lion. Recipients were K a re n Amburgy and JMn Nelson. both Orange Coast College 5ludents and Jan Efenbaugh who attends Riverside College. The scholarships are given In lhe names of Frances Stuckey. founding member 0£ the national organization: in m.Wiory or Dia ne Guerlon, a charter member and past president of the chapter. and 0 .W. Richard. ·.'vi n n in g Boss~f·the-year J1?nors was 1\-fichae! Hill. pr in- from Page 15 c1pal of \Vi!son Elementary School. Mt. Carmel Gu il d i\trs. Joseph Slowikowski 1~ill be installed president of the Larly of Mt.. C.iirmel Guild rluring luncheon ceremonies in ti1e Balhoa Bay Club June 7. Servin~ 1.1•\lh her will be the f\1mes . Louis F'anelli . vice presidf'nl ; Alex MacG illivray and \V il\iam J n h n so n . recording secretaries. a n d Bruce Bender and William Urell. corr e s pond i ng sf'!cretaries. Nursery School Huntington Be a c h Com- munity Nursery is having open house daily from 9 tn 11.30 a.m. !hrough t<.iay 26. HB TOPS Huntington Beach Chapler .· .. Moms Sing Slate of TOPS (Take Off Pou.11ds Sens1bl yl recei11ed lhP Da1'1d Fox Memorial plaque 1 n recognition of rhe bP~I 1ve1ght loss per member in l!lil. Chap ter members r;irning honors include Doris &juirr, bes! loser: Eileen Coleman. chapter queen, and Jerie Pomaro. fnr maintaining her "'eight status for four years. Bay Guild Captslrano Bay Symphony Gtuld ins tal lrd ne\v leaders during 11 luncheC1n in Lorrnzo's restaurant. ln c.!alled 1\·rre the J\.lmes . \\"11!1am Lo,·e. prrs1denl: Jark &hmid!, John Puchese anrl Robt>r! Churchfield. 1· 1 r e presidents: A1rh;ird Buechler. secretary. and Robert Gertz, treasurer. Hom e Ee ~llss Patricia J\.langels of Hunting ton Beilch 11·ho attends Orange ((last Colle.gr received a scho!<1r~hip from the Orange D1~trict, Ho me Ernnom1cs As.~ociaL1on. "A good executive spends 75 lo 80 percent of her lime listening.·• she said, because "no one has a corner on all the ideas.·• Since many errors have e1·0Jved because a person has not heard "'"hat has been said, she suggested ii is just as im· portant for a friend and a mother lo listen well. BesidPs listening to words c re a 1. ively, imaginatively, sensitivtly and en· thusiaslically. they shoul d also understand nonvPrbal com- munication things the person is afraid lo say and fp.elings they are afraid to ex· press. A good leader. she con-- flnued, is able to motivate people and meet lhe needs of the organizalion. s~ gives "commend~!ions in publir and condemnations in private." Dr. ford also pointed out rhat the leader never talks about anyone because it always gel.3 back to them . TODA v·s THOUGHTS Other trails of a good leader. she said. are the abili.ties to plan, to organize. to make decisions and to delegate the tasks. But. she said, "Remember when dele1Zaling, you are s I i I I responsi ble." She also clled lhP. leader's need to become goal orienl· E'd and repealed a quote she had OPfned her talk with. parl of which was. "We are tOOay where our thoughts of .vesterday have brought us." July Rite Zonta Girls for May ha ve been 1e.lected by the 1.onta Club 0£ Newport Harbor. At the end of the year. the Zonta girls from each school select the one they feel most qualified to be Zonta: Girl-of· the-year and the recipient of a $50 savings bond. ESTANCIA Jane Miller. daughter of Mrs. Norma Miller f'lf Costa Mesa. 1s student body i;ecr etary, drill team leader. a member of the class council and Culler 's Crew. As 1 junior . she was a mem· Wedding Bells bu of AfS and class coUJ1cil and WI! co-leader of the drill team. and as a sophomore \\18s a member or the band and drill te&m . Mi&s Miller also has served as a F'a in'iew Vo!U11teer. worked for the H1trbor Ana Girls Club and was a nurse's aide at Hoag Memorial Hospital. Presbyterian. Sht plans to attend Or1nge Coast College then transfer lo an R.N. program. CORONA DEL MAR Planning l-0 attend University of California, the San Spring Vows Said Diego and major in biology is Va lerie Cardf'!iro. daugh ter of Mr . and Mrs. C. Philip Cardeiro of Sanla Ana . She serves as comm issione.r of campu5 affain. is a California Scholarship F'edera· lion Sealbearer and w a 11 Juninr Cl as.."I secretar\<. Mi5.'I C1trdeiro has· been 1 member or GAA for four years. l:lld h11s belonged to the American f idd Service and lhe Sciencr, Spee<:h, Chess and Sailing clubs. She is active in her church. rides horses and was a member of the N a t i on a l Forensic League. NEWPORT HARBOR Planning a career i n journalism or p u b I i c ad- ministration is Miss Barbara Hiestand , daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Hiestand o f Newport Beach. She Is a Californi a Scholarshi p F' f, de r a l i on Stalbtarer. CaHfornia State Scholarship finalist and was winner nf the E. I f..1oorfl Memorial A1.1·ard during her sophomorf" year. Miss Hiestand, also a member of the Social Science and Ski clubs and GAA, srrvM as Junior cla.~s co u n c 1 1 chairman. She is prr~iden1 nf !he seninr grnup of Nation;i l Charity Leagur, a member of the Sierra Club and 7,ero Population Gro"1h and 1o1·orke<l 1111 a DOS migranl 1.1·orke r tutor. COSTA MESA Miss Sue Moser. daughter of fl.1r. and ~1r.,. Ralph M. Moser of Cosra Mes11 , p!ans fo attend Orani!e Cn11~1 CollcgP then California St 111p llnivPrsitv .!It Long Be11ch or Fullrrtnn "wi!h speech therapy a~ hrr major. She is r.AA president and Girl's League trea.~urer . and as a junior w11s a member of Ptp Club. Miss Moser e<1rnP.d sever.111 GAA honors during her fnur-year membership and concluded her Girl Scou t membership as a pa t r o I le.!lder. Calvary Chapel. Santa Ana wu the setting for the nuptial rites linking Sandi Lee Lenl and Phillip Anthony Mahlow, who repeated their vows before the Rev. Charles Smith. Parents of the newlyweds 1-:;;m;m:::;;n;;;;;r=::=::;::;::;::;::;::;::;r_;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;r;;- MRS. MAHLOW are Mr. and Mrs. Donald J . Lent nf Newport Beiich and Mr. and ~frs. Charles H. Mahlnw of La Puente. Mrs. Jim Smith rind Gilbert Mahlow were h n n n r 111- lendants. and Miss Becky Koury and Carlo11 Figueroa cnmpleted the bridal party. The new Mr·!t. Mahlflw is " graduatf' or Map:nolia Hifl:h School, Anaheim and her hus- band is an alumnus of Bishop Amat High School and Mt . San Anloni(l College. They will reside In Costa Mesa . Part-Skim Milk F!nMEn CHEESE :..~1i just love to sing. ll's a c6Mct for self·expression ~me like art. All of us lo,·e tn slilg. It's really an outtr1 , upC!cially rbr mothers 1o1•ith a special party in !heir honor al vear's end . Like any group. social f'Vf'nts are sprinkled among performances A n rl rehearM ls. , . i~~~ small children. ~'#AH of u1 are ham!i 11 l biirt. We. lov" lo get up and perform. It's 1 kind of group tber1py. You get outside y6tftself for a couple of h(lurs Vld Into somethifll else." she 1dded. "lt'• a r 1 n t 1 1 t I c rel•· tioMhlp. J 've never bee.n in· .. 1ved with 1 group or women IO <on&.W.l. Evujon• II the best. or friends ." K .. IJini hormoey w I t h hUlbondl 11 aocompll>hed with But gelling oul and singing 1;; thr big thing. they ex· plained. ThP rllorale will be fe;,turPd tomorrow and Sunda y. at the StatP ~iother Singers· Con - \'Ultlnn in Gle.ndale. Thev will perform "Jesus Christ. Super Siar.'' "'Ith gpecial choreo- graphy. In June 1: VFW convention In An•heim will feature the chorale.. r.te1nwh1le, It's rehe1rse, rehear... rebtane. And they Jove evtry minute. MELODY SHEL TON Planned ~' t ~1 SALE! ; Rnbert. C:Olwtll ol. C:Osta ) ~ n.,. M•v 10 · • 1'fesa will cl&im Me I o d y .,1 • S••i"t' & l•rt•i111 G.,fl ,.! Rock Hounds' Shelton as hi• bride during Ju-• I)' 8 ceremonies. . • Ce1t1.-lri1t9 Yeur G Cutfe I Ft;'"'' em rs New, or the forthcoming • evonl h., been announced by 25°/o.50°/o Th ;,;, th• pltco her parenta, Mr. and Mrs. l 9 01111 Fri .. S1t.-Sun. H.W. Shelton or R«llAnds . Hi1 ' C)J..., Mty 19-20-21 pareni. •re Mn. Alice Pope 0 BIDTJQUE 0 Soni• An• Roe~ & and H.B. Colwell, both of Gem Club wHI C:OSta Meu. " e.JA-Mt•tw OI•,,. displey • demonstrate MiSI Shelton ia a graduate 1 J , ....... OMI,... 1 their s~ill1 in our of Redlands High School and ' sta "'" LIDO \ enclosed m1ll- her flance ls t IJ'•duata of ·'li.: 111wl'O•T tu.cw 1 ~ Hu"tln gton Center, H.I . Costa Mua Htgh ScbcJlll. Me 'lJ "Ml1• ' 1t le1ch a Sin Oieqo ~~ .. :ttended Oru(t Coast ~ ... ti!~,._ ______ Fr_•_•_.,_•Y_,. •, • h't )wt .. _. origintlly rNCte '" lur«»t b\' '-"'*" fol° rt'll"Y yttn. TM tl....:ir ii •l(Cll/i.nt. ~t for .,....,,. • eoolci"'. 11 ... 11.1t ~. $1.59 lb. LET YOUR TASTE BUOS DO THE TALK- ING •• .sAMPLE BEFORE YOU BUY. IT'S AWAY OF LIFE AT fllftM'1 f'!'!!S· Soatb Coast ?tua COSTA .El!A ,_ ....... M" -.... Oii tit t t SM Olftt .. ,....,. 0,. Ot"Y1 hllfty lfMf" d!W,dl 'tll I ,,111, -l"tllM .....,,, au;r:mr;n WlllllG cmm smm • - 041LV PILOT ~ f Your Horosco~ LEGAL NOTI C& LEGAL NOTICE U:GAL NOTICE LF.GAL NOTICF. LEGAL NOTICE LEGAi NOTICE Aries: Travel Plans Changed SATURDAY MA Y 20 a, SVONE \ OMA.RR 1 I lo\ t bei ng a Leo If I h~d 11 chan( e to t:hange my zodiacal sign If would be to Aries or Libra berause thty remind mf' of Len and ha ve some of 1hr s<-1rne quaht les -Ra rb11ra L Fappiano Kens 1ngton Conn ARlES IMa r(h 21 April 19 1 Some travel plans 11 re thangl'd ~1t>s~aRes reserva lions <:oul d go astray Some perso ns now are careless 1n handling your affa irs It would be 111se lo doubl e 1.:h!'Ck Son1e statemcn1s promises sunply are not a<.:curate 1 AURUS (April 20.May 20 ! Spend "1sely Means don t lhrow good money after bad E1nphas1s now 1s on extremes Emotional response~ are 1n tense Affairs of heart dominate Member of opposlle sf'x 1s !1kelv lo pla y key role M~in!ain semblance of otr Jt>CliVllV GEMINI (Ma y 21 June 20 1 Extra respons1b1h1y 1<:: rl u e 1ncl11d1ng overtime a~signment You '\nay ~ charged w1!h teac hing others ..;pec1f1c JOb rouflne In persona l area s parks fly at home base Strive to be. a peacemake r Re neutral CANCER fJune 21 J uly 221 Relal1ves get d1reet1ons con rused Best no" 10 be \ersa!1le to have alternatives .:it h and Confusion (.'ould be o'rder-of d ay C heck schedule Someone may be making ap- pointments for y ou Mal<e 1n {luir1es I EO (July 2.1-Aug Take special c are w 1 t h \ aluables possessions Protect a ssets Being metic ulous now can save money at larer date Know 11 Rnd act a cc o rdingly Aquarian ts 1n p1r-tur e Older fr1enri airs c omplaint VIBGO (Aug 2.1 S ept 22 1 Agreemenl c an be reached "tlh regard to lease property special purc hase Key 1s to 1tatP n eeds 1n frank manner Member of opposite sex plays paramo unt role Gem1n1 t'.". muc h m picture Take 1n1 t Jallve LEGAL NOTI CE I EGAL NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS IUSl,,,lf:SS NAMi $TATt:MENT .,.,, ltilll'>WI,,, penon 1 <1nJ,,, .. L~GAL N01 lCE NOTICI TO CRIOITOllS SUl'llil'l!Ol COUlT 01' THI' STATI 01' (ALtFOIUOIA FOii: THI COUNTY Ofl Olt ANGi No A 11UI E• •I• or MINI\ s f>()()l" O• ., •<I "-OllCE IS HERESY GIVf N 10 rt C ~ 10<• QI Ht '"""' • !htt fllPf toO•t ov W(I• ••w flll r ••l<I <l•,•U• ! • t rr11u f <'f) h) ! I< II • ! wr ll t ••••vv<><,I •> nll•u "'" ol I t (f ~ <ll 11 • •t><>V• f T!o.i <ll\• IQ lo p•u t "'' wn I • •<•HfV uuuct u • 1u u • u """ vn•O • I ll Ou•• Or VI ~ !1 1l NtWl>Ofl 6t1CI (•I !gr • '1"0 "'' " s I!• g M;t ul bu•I •u " 11>• u ><l•r> g td n t ll ••I t •I ""'1• lo It . ···~ • 0 ·~Ill ... , ..... I w II IQu fl l>ll • 1!tr II .. 1 >I PVbllC•l<>n 01 t 1 " .. rrol • I• t ''"' UI ~· r>I> ll or"! lo U t l<I OU P ''' f b• ti<. • v u ~<'r ,.,,1 llt•<l ul lu>l I•>••• ll'<IA UoVt •Ulo dU l I (AL Nlltll ~ ilu • """° l~U l u "" 1 w r • 1'1Ctll10US IU~INlSS Or<.I• •!1> u1 D•l1.,11 o u Oo • u •~• NAME iTATEME NT St e ' u ru, <l•vu1lt•d w ! 1 ••lo dulv '" Tr • lul ""' Iii P• '"'' • Uu u~ bu• '" l>u •<I i ""'• ""·' O•Ml ol I u I • I ~ t i (1<><u o l\ t •Uo .; u obv•!l)I> W($lERN tot [l fROME01C.-. •t<tJf'\) II~ ollv • <I •• Of-< I• ,J • d <lot• I• ellv <le<I.>" •' '" > t • u •O ""' tbv ho •<l n•• • uvt • u 1> ••bl• •~d MP> '~< <<I " <l <kl•> • ol)y •I<'<! ID '"'"' 1' U•I pro .. • r 10 I)' •old Jg >di >IV • ulll w• • ,.<tJ t<I 11 •r•t>v D•lt(I M~r I • 1 OIH'JIA WOODMAN Pul)I ti •d Ora "" Coao! Md ~ I? f ?6 l~/l I I GAi No11c r· T • ". 0 vt ,,. \l\JHQ J• • o A I• Mo • I•' 1 • .,. 0 "" ~ ••• 8 ••((1 ~·! "' • ·~ ot) ll>t>v< ·~ tla ~CPtltJ••~UV ;o I '() • avol JACKSON llLLEN MOS• ER ln1 """ • 1 !IOd w I !It (_Qv V Cl•rl. nl D •n11• Cou ly o M&v 11 •n 8v lhv• y J Mad<l-0• Q.ou11 y ~ >U l• '" Pul!I <I P<1 0 o 11• Cn• I 09 Moy 19 1~ •><I Ju ' 1 t •II 11 GAL Nt)1 H.F. ,ICllltOUi I U\lfllESl NA.M' STAT EMENT f ,,.., " llll I) ·~~·~ "• 1 .. 1 ~" .. y ·~ • V f uUI w \ >•(~ fU r tO• ll~l~<llld I •I v r' "'"" • "'ur , •d 0 ~lfl• l.v,11 tl•IV M•Y ) I 1~ t 19/l 11 G>\I N(l 1 ICJo I' lu! "] ll LEG AL NOTICE ,ICTITI OU$ IVSIN•ss NAM( STAff:MINT 'fne fol o .. 1no "'""~ ' <la "o 11 " ..... ._, WE.SIFl[lD U'1811N (OMPAN'I" \Ip()'/ s~v p.,~ Ce r ro ~(I• ..a.54 I v • Ca!Uor • ~111• Wt\!I f <I O•vt OP t I Coo "~"" l"t. «C• r Co p I I/SC? ~~. Pa ~ (•el• P O 1!10~ <ISi iru "' Co• Ill n • "U"' l • Dv•I"'" 1 co,.uuc ••~ 1w • L ,..llfff f'9 1 tr~I'> D W•.r! 01<1 O•v• (lf>m• C~ 11'1:., G•,,.1al f'a ! •r H0 1 ICE TO CIU!D•TOIU ev J•m•• E ll<J<111• SIJPEJllOll COUlll OF THE Prt>l<l~nt SlATE OF Cll~lfOl!tHA FOii fh 1 \l••~m~nt w•i I &(! w "tno Cou• THI COUNTY 0' OllANGf h ( u~ of 0 11 <If Covnfy II" M•Y ~0. Hv A n ll!O IY/7 Or ~• • NOT l(l •S !-!!'l(f ll V (:!V ~H •o "• Put> •hed 01• ,. (OAll tl•1Y '"''' 1'!1~ '" IO IOW 9 Pt tOO I •• f ~!d • u J(!}t: .. HINf A!\\a l (ll I llF OC 10 ., ( "' I~ • .;! ! • Ol.ltJYt ' • ' .. ... • M•v 11 tf ,. Mid Jun• 1 1•n 111,0 11 l!v• nt\I " A S I( al10 A.MElll(AN ~V N KON 1 "'01 J021 f• (O••I H 11 w•• Co•~ a O•I Mor (di I Yl&1) Lto A Govl!I ;~ Ma ~ue t AV• {11ro 1 Otl Ma C•I 10 n • ! •I ~II ~" ~ I• \ " .. IO I r •Ct .. JY """' r I• <>I Cle•• or (I• al>Ovr • II• I r o I EGAL NOTICE l'ICflTIOUS IUStNifSS NAME STATliMf.Hf K•n~~u F N Cl olw IOI Pt••! t WI • ••••V Avt Lo w ll•och {oflfll' • "'""I vw~r •' lo rt • u "1gn•<1 • 1-0 f'" ~ .... .,. \~\IV . ti•o~n (~I 0 ~ '1• I Thi~ 1!11• if" ' <0 <111C••a ~. • f'• t al Pt t ~ II 11 Tt f lollow "" Pe"°"'' ••• ""'"' bus ~" as OLO TOWN ANTIQUES 7H<t JlttW ll(ltf ~'v" C<>1h M••• ru'~ Ll'.OTA GOUL D l r • •I•~,• 1 "'~' 'IM.I w th u • Coun IV Cir . OI 0•• Ill Cou !> l'>n M•• 11 IYn l 41 oc f 111SJ l'ublhhl<I Ot1nv1 C°"ll O~!IY P 11'> M•• 19 16 """ Jun1 ; ' 1~n 1J11 n I ~ (,Al. NO'flCE 0~1¥ P io 111• n I EGAI NCJTft F. wt h • p •<• 01 t>o• "" OJ rn• uJ~•~•(I ll •II fl+" >•II• u ! II • •II• t or '" " (lit.:•O• I "' It l~u .. • ..... tn. I " PllOI ,. on O! It not (• Ot t<l M•• 1J 1'11 MARJORIE £ Wlf (HMAfll N f•t~llll ~ Ill II)~ WI I OI !! • ·-"""'.,.; ct••-"' WILLIAM M WILCOJClfll nt ~·r-""••n111 L••un• ft••<h C111lotn • '1•s1 11141 04 U•I Dt~ 1 11• •<II 11'1" Sto!l•c•••I Avt,, l"eut 11 n V•I "" 9)10• ea tu•• H<>P* ll•ln<ll ll?tl l t-••1t Ave Fo1>nll n llall•1 t11GI Th ' ou1 "'" 1 Dllno conduCltd b• II f'trlnt >h p •••D•r• Hooo ltoltldl Thi\ <l~lf "•n! I le<I w !h In• Cflul'l!Y C • ~ ot O • "' Count. on M•• 10 1'11 lly 8tVt tly J Mlld<ln• OtpV!y' (....,l'l!Y '" Alie n•• lur E •••~Ir+• "uOI' ,a O•• '" (Od I O• M•V 19 l~ a d Ju • 1 t 1~11 I' ,,,,, r l<lt r 1>1 "•d o .... ca.11 o.. 1, Pllo! 1111 1J M•v 17 It 71 a <1 J n• 1 1911 1tl411 " . 1..~GAL Nf)l lCE ,-l(flflOUS IUSIHESS HAM( STATEMENT !gl 0 ... 1 w CPPO•O 00 • LEGAL NOTICE ---,-Ul'l!R10R (OIJl'tT 01' TH• $TATE Of CALll'OllNIA l'Olt THI COUNTY 0' OllANGI No A IUl• llu• • \ •• MC AIR 1•1 Cv fl W4Y PIA tnl!e NOT ICI Of IHTfNT!OM TO llll ( ~+ • ~el ~· •l•o;I A fend o S• v • I IA (11 I (p ,,1 1111 r .... , 51 •el Git O•I• c .11 0 nl• ll l!AL AND P'ERSONAL l'ROl' .. ltTY AS A UNIT 011 SEl'AJl'ATELY AT PRIVATE SAlE ! Th• M•ll~ ot '"' F IM• at E11£L Y" I! ' b"' n•i. c~ a POfM o o-<1 b• • (O M .JOI-I HS TON ~~• EVE LYN MJIRCf-L l .-. JOHJllS10N ·~~ EV ELYN V£1GE\. JOHN STON Oe(•a,.rt 0 AN!EL R C.l\ROWElL Pr~• II~ t ln . Ol•lt n . I ..... •II•" wltn lh• (OV(I IV C ltr~ o! Ora g• Cov" ~ O" M•v II "' ,.., oc EDWAllDi t'OWAllDS A ASHTO" ATTORN EY! AT ~AW 4l'O Nor/ft l r11<1 ll•C GIH>ll•lt C•l I tllOI Norl(t 11 ! ~ tllY 9 "' 111•! \ubl11<t '" c11<I ••lion~• ll f •b Qv f '"'''''" Supe !o (...,, I on Jun• ll 191) •t JG ll!I JIM ~ 11 r c~ner ,.111 In !1>1 ! m• 1llnw •d I>• I•"' th• u•l<l•••ltflltd 1• lldn '•Tralo• ol 1ht E1t11• ol Evtlvn M J1,1I 1t1,1 ll•rt8•..:I will "" •' 11'1¥t1e ••II IQ tr f hill! 111 IOd Olll .,., blddlt 1'>11 ti • 1t t n 1 '"" concll tlo" h••••tr•r mtn 1'11111 100.,.<1 •II r 11nl lltte tnd lnl••••I tJI Pair Parties MESA P'ET ~HOP llvd NtwpOrl l!l••ch M~•~ln L Lo ,,,,. $1nte """' CaHI •41 Old N•,.,,ort C•I I 111(1 Co 81rch T11!1 bu1l.,.11 l tit n1 conducre<.f II• 1n tndlv dull •• \& ~ T•1111tf By Rngor G Ov l>m•n f' e• de 1 ' 14/*l NOT ICE TO CklOITOllS Stlf'ElllOlt COUllT Of THI! P1,1bl 1hld Or1n111 (011t D•IY Pio EV ELYN M JOHN STON dtc11111d 1! M•• I' ,. • '" '""' 1 ' "" I 111 n lh• I ". o! l\f f dt•'" '"" •fl rlolll 1111• LF.GAI ----Md 11'11~1 .. I 11111 It f 111111 hl o It«!\• .. NIJTICfo In add 11011 10 thll or dtctdenr 11 it., Im• STATI OF (Allil'DMNIA l'OJI' ltt•f ol h•f Uf•lh In !l\t rt~l pr-rty loc;1!_., 11 lh• lau h ol Ori 19• S!llt d C-•l!lor I• <1••<'11!<'<1 •• 1011 ...... 1 M l L• •~llt l'llWll lHE COUNTY OF DJI ANGE NOTICll!' 01" Ol[il'AUL T ANO ELl!CTION Publlllf'd 011n9, CG•sl Oally P io P ubl,hed Ntw1><>r1 HorbOr NtWI Pftll Nf A 1114t TO SELL LINDEii Q(CO 01" TlllV~I SI'S JO'Ol For Business Thtt 1tat....,ent !!I"" w rt> !he !'.ouniv Cttrll Ill Or1ng• Countv on Aorll B ltl? II• 81¥t1~ J Mtddo~ Deouly Cov~tr Clerk Pvbl "'1~ Or1no• Co••I 0& !v A•r11 n i nd M•v ! n lt 1t 71 Flll M p lo! ietl'6 11 M1~!1 It 76 •n<I Ju•>el 1,12 1Jj \/1(0ffib (lt><I wm D~!Y f'llo! Newaot E•t~t of ... LF HtD l(H tS5 &l•O ~no"'n f S Nt ff/I ----[Be1ch C•!Jlorn a M•t 17 19 16 Hll o,.-.lFRE D KR ES5 J R O•<•••t <l l t t IOIOw rw <W• "' Nolet ll r LEGAL NOTICE llU 17 NOTICE IS Hl::HEH'I" Gl~E N 10 l•o•~l•lolw!l<I w••ll•~! """'" -------lu..i 1oro o• n t •WY• '•n •a ~t(•<l• t Au 1 n ~ll I 11 Y .:.1 • u! 1 • R• ~· l'ICTITtOVS 9V51NE5J NAMI Sl.1.Tf_Ml"l LEGAL NQT[CE !hot •II D•n" \I•• w f • •~•n•1 !ft t/1 Or•~· lQ\I I• (o r11 \''I lu •Od "ft•dtnl •rt f\I •<I lo f tlf ~W •I Uc &I 41 o•• olv t1I I 1 ! 1--------lw (11 11 ~ •<•• ~ "u"'' r • 1 • ti 11 ~ ti• tu ••II lru,1 v ""~rty ,, uv. It<'\< ~· I Lo1 1t n l!lloc~ l'f of HrNllOrl l!lt•(h I H • C Iv ol N•wi>0r1 8•e<:ll. •• 1t1own on 8 rn10 !l'>t•ftlf tl,Or(llCI 1,, l oo-1 Pau~ 1• MIH1U1111"'11 MIJO• <tCO"h or Jf" 0••"9• Coun!v Tll• P•"f>+ • ly • co 1 noonly r1l•rril'd to •• 11t 19111 ~lfe• N~wll<)r! l!le1ct1 (11llMl'llt 916(>0 I l<I I t(tr1t or d•ritl!led It ""•uor 1 f>d <•I No O~J JI 8) GAV PAULEY NEW YQRK 1UPI 1 -T;:ike or1~1nal1tv mix tn h;:ird work and a n;:itural knack for pro- m<ll1nn add a care r u ll y res earche d file of where to hnri !he offbe<1t and vou get Rn unu(ual bus1nes~ enterprise run b y t"o womrn 1n 1he1r 20s M1 s S!ephen I Linda 1 Weiss 11nd Mrs Ravmond (Cary l 1 I itzenberg er h a 1 e arran~ed ever v th1n,R: fron1 S w a h 1 1 1 le(sons to a bu ~1ness meellng 1n a Bne1ng 747 lo out1nj!:~ on a \acht In helicopte r tours fo r their clients Thev c all t h e n1 s e 1 1 es Tnd1v1du a1 T ouch In c an ex trull1 e gr rt bu ~ 1ng and sales p romot1o n servic e C t1enl'1 in c lude an ofr1c e e q u1 pn1enl (,' o m pa n y a magaz1ni> :;i s po r t s w ea r manufacturer an auto re ntal rnmp::inv plus 1ndi1 1du;:ils who dnn I h:;i v e !ln1e to shop but want to g11e highly 1nd1v1dual gifts tn friends a n d or a s s ociate s There s a bi~ trend to n11t1ng ( g r1en h y companies a'.". 11Rles 1ncent1 ves the pair said Currentlv fo r Xerox they re plan n ing a one dav boat tnp up the Hudson R11er w1lh box lunch and a he np at some h1st n nc s pot rnr sight St"CIO,R: This hke many o t h e r gathering~ will include wnes 1 Hou1 .. nu<1 OOO(I t urnl !ur • <lo nv NOT ICE TO CRED1TOJIS o! ti• c ''~at u t •Oov~ • 1 1 •ll tl>ll 11 I •Ve • I le ••I 11 t u •• o ol•I SUPERIOR COU RT 0,-THE lo p "'" t !/t i "'1'111 ltr ~~"orv l'!O<ffU ~· 1111 l IN~\JHANll l\NU tollowinv ~''°'" .. Wt hke to get t ht wive~ In , ___ LEGAL N<rrJCE Du1 "'" •• STAT( 01' CALlfOllNIA il'OR ~ollct~rl to II• uni!~, 9 ta •I Ill' Oii ~•• JHUST COMPANY '' I"',., ~I Ml H Hun n~lon ll•arh THE COUNTY Of 011A1"G( ul I rr• tur rv• lYllE & l( ... MINS lllOU W t lNll H I"'•• s~•• 01 t \l)l\ed when we c an the) l'ICTITIOVS BUllNES-,--- DONUT STOPPE fv nhh '" • (I .,.r•0•1lll .tr...;t1 loc••"ld ., ltY1•11 S!f••l N•wPnfl D••cll (•ll!t,>t !•on O• • ot <I•• II ot <lecil'dtltl lt • .. IO \ \YU Oli lo CU •nf t••Uo satd NAMf_ STATEMINT l ho, follow n• P.r1on i. <lo.,. bu1ln111 .. l!lll Y M.•tlt Hunll ev );Ill? Newootl No A/?41' C•Mvly j~~ E.o•I Svl• 1000 l ai NOT JCE IS t+t HllJY f.,V I N 1 IA1 ... v• Tv11 n CA 91690 Est ale or 11Rl11UH D HILL Otceas..a A ~·., Col to nlo llOGil wll t h ' u ~ l llLE INSU '1.-.Nlt:c ANO loll!~ I lOM The wife hke'.". to ~ along ge1t1ng to know other1 1n her husband s company And a wife 1~ ]e!i:S likely late r lo com p latn 1f her h usband ha! to put in .s-0me evenings at the or rice ' H•tn Mat t 1-luri<ll•V 1AI07 NtWDOd NOTICE ~ 1-IERl:'llV C.IVE!\ ID 11• I " Pt.NY • ~o· u .. 1o 'ti IV \ub t ",, 1tA.Jlt(H0 MES.-. PRE SCHOOL HO Av• T111! n (A 916'0 < Kl on ot II f al>ovo n~n ed !le<r(lt I "~<• o! l>IJ; "" or !! ',:Jl<i•" Qnf<\ ~I 1 u•l•P v !dr ~ ll~<'ll o! l ,1 <J"IP ! Ju tuv•~tl! c"'O<l l t,>• t el l • C l l Ol"I , ~·· Yd IO • '~· •• 'ulll• ol WftV '"" ••>e ne~ll of record 1nv •flctJmb••tw:'!'I ~r ••(Ot<I lo b• ••ll1lft!(I OUI ol lh• ""'(!&It prl<t Tt11 P•Otx"fty I to bl 1'0lll f ••I 1Stt\ Slrt et (OHi Me11 Col T~I• bu•nt•• I• l>tln• condu(lt" !:IV. tn~ ~·1 gp ,0' ., y cl• 'dQ .. ,, u, Ill.oil • t P•'1"' ng IO • ••l&TP 0 l•d ,. 9•1 ·~·~u!t<I by MANUt l ~ llorn • '1t?7 P1rtntr<h P I~ d <l•t~<I~ I &ro tt<>I) rod !o 1 It I • t \le oOtM w II In !Wr month• &llor rl o ~ALGAOO JR AND N.-.OINE ~.-.LL.AUU J•c~ & JI 1 School 01 \/ 11 p8,t Inc 1!1 1 v Mttl• t-Ju.-.nlrv w t 11 <' ~'~"• v vwtr r ' Uo on c~ l!'•I P~bl t~I on Cl '"'' no I<• '!n;;;o!~)n .~~I) Slole Strtt1 Fremont '" • ~:,:~;-;,•t1;1 ~a""!'i~~ 11 t Coun, ~ tr~~:':'~ or1 ~~ •b:•~ .. 1 ~f<l1 ~~.~.~: Da!r!l8~~·L!~ 1;~f ~5 !u•b• d •<I WI• I I !rv>lu • !<I''"'~ u • •l j, b", ,.~ctl)I •• 10 11111 c• ~ n obll11 rlu > I••" ~I I NV/> 11 ll• or o!ltro "'' 11 v ted 10, 11!1• iw-oio-OfVELOPMl::Nl CO 1 ~•rt ,. I 11 1> b• .t c ~·v t'O(urll•U ivy I 1~6) "' ••Iv •fl<l u•I ~· fl WI ' "II .... ~ .. m Ito Tl! , bvoln1"' b be "' c"""vcred bv 1 Clork or O••noe County on M•• 10 1911 v(MJ( 1r1 o 1 • \I Ille'! t1no<1 11 lt\t Ol t• E ••Cu!,,_ or • w 1 Corpar•llon Bv 6ovt•IY J Modero-Oepury Coun ¥ er ~ Alto n•v l'~vl A H• n~ ,19 t~" or no obo~• n&mtd lltcedefll lv11l l ft lpo t (l•r~ l'HIU ~~hchSlr~o! 11~"~:(~·~~ ;:,' t~,~·o~?6~• i.:!'~,!1u~:~1.~: f•lf l•o•lvror S 1 lOGO •!ru t I No 1-..1~ (>0\)11, MJ) ~·~e 6/ ••t i vtd 1! t! • ~II Cf ct H JllC1( HALL ol 0 1tld•I R~\uru, t • o 1 ,, .,1 1, ollvr '" 101 ••<I •<Im n tlt~lo •I •i• R~(Utll" of Or• w• ( " 1v LMI rQ• d I .,1 )••• lrtnlh Slretl (Olfl Mu• (leu• b ~ I •"<I ~ ~ " (M !Of I~ Y1•U Of m•v b .. tiled wllll Ill• Th 1 •!•l•mtnl f! •d ,.. lh lht Counlv Pub •ht d 0 1nt1e Co~<I O• Y P lot u <It s tint<! n 8 n M tr< oo ~ n ng to ~ e for the game COmpS:llY Cl•rt ot OreflQt (ounlv en M~• l lt l? M4Y 17 ? 1& •nd Jvnr 1 1111 11~1 I) lh• 01!1 t of •9 d Cltctdt~I w rn n iou ~tt An•tl•• Ctlll tOOOI -• b b -----lno t •&II~ •I" publc•lw ot ms ••I OIJJ S'J611l !hey ve stago:u gra a g l!ly ll•vtrlr J Mt<ldO• tleou!v Counfv LEGAi NOTICI no!<• Al!Orn••• for l •Kv1r. Lui JI ol Tttt! Nu 'llt5 11 Pt• l '" clu~ o! •• d Suve or Courl.,, "•fl ¥t •"l<f 11 ~. ! •co•li~<l 1111\lk t)I "•Vf~ J1 '" H JAl !'; ttALL P••ton .. l!y •I •nv rim~ 3i • '() u <>I M ""llM...uu• M""' 11 • •llfr 11 .. 1 put>ll(1I 11 al !hit 110!1'• •n<.t all r ul ' ~ i.i..._., '"' "' '•Ill lou v ~lorr m a~ no 18" ••le F~r •u•tller In 1e o;I OIJ! g11 u 1 llu<ll ,, u ._ 1 vtt tor for no1lo11 • td blU !o•m• 1001• •! fht ol tr ~ "' "" '" ul 11 '~ oo ti•• 01 ••I" 1!!or.,.v lcr tho IMI ••ss ••os W>lh q u a I l f V • n g C it•~ • 0~1fll M•r 1 nn i>ub •"•d Or.onqt Co••' 0111v f' 1o1 ""' " F111H ----AHN M lllLL M•• 19 10 1n~ J11nt 1 9 911 1111 11 <alesme" reaching 1n for a Puoi •h•<I Or•n11• c ... ,1 O•llv i> 101 ,,,.,.,0 .. , , .. ,,,,,. • , , , " Mtv J 11 I' ?j ltll 116,71 ' ' " " ,.c r• •a !I ~ st•I• "anety of treat~ those --------I 11 , 101~:V,M~ STP~;~0~,EN:,, croln1t l'AUL :1 111 ;J11~11:•' n•mo<1 <1ece<ttnr Swahili 1 e s s On! helicopter I F GAL NOTICE Du• nes1 •1 1n Eau 111n s1ret1 h Ith I b day • I--------1 EARTH ENfERP RISES 96S 0•1 M•r Ct•I• Mell Callfornot f7tt1 lours a ea c u ,.ICTITIOUS IUSJ NISS Avt L10 .. n~ 8•~<1 (•I ! 91•! Toi 0 141 111 lfOI maid (Or 3 d ay for the m1SSUS NAMI tTATl:MENT R <na <I Dfa~ WOC<I• 965 De! Mtt A!totn•y lor Adm nl1tr1lrl• 11' GAL NOTICE SUP'flllDR COURT 0 1' THl STATI 0,-CALIFOJINIA ,011 Tl41 COUNTY OF OllANGI fl •! tt e !)., •I d al lnl .. ff•1 u "'" 1uU Ir 1lra1or O••ll ,,1 1 v•! " " u • .,111 .,,1 ' l"~u•fll 1 ! • or<><>orlv will bf .old on '"' lcttow tlHtlJV • • o> ~••1tly htld lly II • vn v lt r • <.le • v •<I r! .. 1 " b ••tl .,1 ft u ll~! II (1,1 l r u•rc.i I ot me Jim<>< nl blfl !1 11 ~Obi >10! o• • tur w1 ttl """ Dtot<I " •t~ou 111 v 1! • 0111 hv • re tltlt<I ch•cll. ]fv I 'l•<VI Iv ~\ 00.<ul •<.I ! 11 •1 d Ht b&l~•Vt la bf P"ld O" crn l I _,, Tne 10110 .... 1,,,, P••SO(I• ••• <Icing l\Vf Laqun~ 8e•Ch C•l f 916! Pub ~tPU Or6 gp Coal O•IV a gourme m e.a prep aro::u bu1!.,.l 1 •• M ch•el J•mt• Mctar1• 911 L• M~y s 11 19 16 9/1 nghl tn the home l1mous1ne NfWPORT OCEAJllOGR,t..l'HI( IN M ••d• l•lt una B••lll (~I' t?611 STITUTE •OI lr vlnt l\Vf Ntwco•I Gt rV ~t•n< s Sho •• 11! Oafft!! St serv ice a Playboy C lub key ''•ch ca11 t7&Mi c 0,11 M••• c .111 97~11 Ll:!:GA I N01 ICE Ht A 11141 F' Cl NOTICI 0 1' tt(lllllNG 01' Pl'TITtON I 1l n 1'01t l'ROllATE 01' WILL ANO C.ODICIL AJllO LETTERS T£SlAM(N TARY P"Y • I .... 11,11 ll<'• m•~· vi llf •• 11011 OI !~I• bV th• Supr•la ,...,,, r ~ ' II "I vi "' L"•I "ll I l•••• t , """ ,,i nq •fld malfll•n•n(t f.,rp~I "'I (II lt<o<"ll1t o.,. D•te t>tr I t•o>t n\•• & Id 11 o /<Jn t o fn•ut1ncp f C- IYll ~ U • >Ull•• u• I •1~!1 " I• I (•pt bit IO II t 11 <nft t •!l•li be ,.,.,_ p I< 1•1 • <.l •<II Ji • ;u u! 01.,..1 •• ol I • cl~I• c r~nrrmal "" flf Wh.it s the reaction of a wife 111.YMOJ110 J DERN 1110 wn it Th, bus •u , "" ., coni!u<t.., bv • 5•11• Corona 011 M•t (• ''615 P1rl1 tnh o 1f her hus band pulls the F••n' Valv•n 1tU POOPV Co on• d•I Rk nard O Wo1xh k ' Th d dn I M•r C1 n671 f h s 1!ale on! I on w m 1 t CCuMv Playboy ey ey , f f\. 1ru .. .,..~. It bi!"' <Of'ldtJ(!fO bv • Clfrk ol Ora .. o• Cov ,. 0 AP• I 15 1911 know the y said f'•r'"'"h o ev l!t•••I,. M•o"o~ OtQu1r Coun v c1"~ 'lt••mon<I J Dtrn l'HU) lnd1v1dual Touch grew from 11, st111m• 1 11 t 11 w rn tn• cuu111, PuD •"Pd Oran11t Cc•11 D• IY I' 1~1 'I" la••! (hat b()fh (OLJnd (lfr~o!Or•nOl (<><>1!yon ADtlU 1t 11 Aotl!11 ad MaY !11 19 !Y)1 10161? ._ l!I• l!tvt r!y J Mollclo• Dt o>vlv {ovnr• thenlse h es alwavs being con c itrk I E(,AL NC' I ICI' ff l'lllJi suited al lhe1r offices o r g1 l Publlst11d Or1o0t Co••t oa 1y Piiot ---;OTICE TO CREDITORS IU,EIU01t COUlll OF YH E STAT( OF CALI FORflllA 1"011t TH' COUNTY OF ORANCE suggestions what would be a Apnl " •fld May J n " nn 1c11 n good place for a s a I e s m eeting and the hke Two y ears ago w1th \ery little cap1l11I but wtth their husbands rull backing they inc orporated and s aid 11 s f11ken t hem about t hat long t • get reallv on treck well r esearc hed ' LEGAL NOTICE --NI A,,, .. STATlf:M•1"T 01' ilSANOONMliNT 0' P!ll• • ol OONA.L O E WITtfRM.-.N Ull 01' l'ICTITIOUS IUSIJlllSS HAMI Ot(t•l•d Tl'!t" !o!lo"' no p&,.on ha• ibolldolltd tit JllOT ICl IS 11E'1 Ec 8V CIV[fol I~ II • u\e of lht !l(t!llout bu• n•os imo 01 crod 1on ~• II• •l><>v• ! """" dtf •U•M ••.,.,.,,voe• MJrnp • }~' t•O wPn•I 1 fl •II P• 10 • h•v ~ (11 • •u•+ >I n. floul•v••<I Co•1• M••• C• lforn 8 •1•11 •~!er CIK•O• I •re '''" ••d 10 11• 11 •" 1't!t t c!l ou• Du'"'' n•n • Utrrtd io wlh ltf tc••~• 1 ~ouCI• I n llt Olli•• •bovt W•I f!l..:I on Jvnt )0 ltll n rhf ot ti• cl•rk of lhf •tltJv• t 'll•U <C<>•T or Coun!V ol Otlfl9e IO .... I "e "'I II. .,., " • NOTICE TO CREOllORS SVllEMUlll COURT OF THE ST.-.TE OF CAl.IFOllNIA FOR THE COUNTY 0 1'-ORllNGI N• " n 121 [ !~. D•c•o••ct GI WtSLCV M NQl IC( IS Hf li El!V GIVEN Ull••>•t 1• <.l U•~•U• w th lour "" I ' •!!• 11 11vbl <al Qn ol !h' II)! c~ O• •d Ma• s 'n Wll L S MELVIN F:1 LIOTT E~I ~•• al JUNE COM~lOC-K I)• ••\OU NOTIC[ 15 11£Rf 8 1" GIVf.H • • l j/t IU l •r .. 1u10 . ~<IV~ l •d ~ y l• ~ bY • Suo• 0 LOUii E ~11m ,,., ~" bf t!I•• v I •~¥ •nl "I llfll ue wl~' 01 !tit r • ' •ct ~alt• n •m Jm• f.u1,1 r A N 1lt~n "~' t l•(l • • • ~'1 (11>•" •pr r •cu ur~ ,, "CO•!l~ 0 01 ~ """" <• • • r Vt,.,.,. I lo• P u011!• o1 Wll •l<f Co<l{ll •n l ll ot by ,.,~,11 I ctl!QI ltf \I dt rJ t lftl 1.,,, • un• •I! 1r ••~ o .. !~•• 11 •nv 11• t • ul L"!• • r .. 1. •1 1••Y "f'•I ~•"I l • ~1<~ y 1111!• •v<• U•t!l.:; ,10 1 b • ~•O t>v ,.,., & d hvv• wll r•• • • • l • o when ' '1 1• n• 1 ult ,, ••••tJltJ •Id <!tllvo••d 111 >d (\ 111 011 •r (ll•l> lurtl>t r ~• ! cul" t • d tn•t Int 1 • • l<f <I• !v •~,. lt <I ! .,.., \IJt t1 o. !I nl l I • uM• , " 00 .,.,_,,, h• o!lt !" pl·~· OI ·~ 9 ,, • ·~Of hol C••n "'' ,, ... 1 • u •I oucu • !~ ·~<I• • 0 •• •C1 • y • \) 111 b '" '"" '" ••!ty .... or Ju • • 19/1 •! ~ :lO • m '" Ti>• ob ~•Iv \ 1rcv •d U • •t>v • <l • "" 0 dt (o 1 , n(I 1>1 • ••+• Cuurl "" .,1 O•P"'' n•11I l ol IJl(I (QtJtl <!tCla •d •n<I Cla.• ht tb• d~ I• • •I M I) I~// aT 100 C v l Center Orl~t Wt1! In lhl Cl •u > ••C<Jtfll It t tt>v •<l • •ly <111• M O~~C'K ::LL Arlorn1y i i Ltw i .. ol ~-I• An~ Coll!o !• .... o P•Y~ble ""' ,., llte!f(I •nd aot1 It '. I 1~• E•t•I• ., D•l•<J M•• !I "11 '. •bv • •O '" <~v~· lh• r u<l D•OO•"Y lo :eEL ... • ... :J.. eJOflfll~TON IN E ~I JOH N bO Old IQ 111l11y 111' olll 9• on• ·~<ti ~ Tff'HLN c JOHN\TOr. Covnl• Ct•rk 1 r •lly I•!$ GllSON OUNN ANO CllVTCHllt D• •<1A~r1 10 1911 H•rllor Low lu d n9 A !t~ntYI 1r L•"' Si'.RVllt k Ll\l TV CQMPll NV '" lal! 111!1 Slrort I • W It •m A AftO•ntn • (II !u lo t o•n (0\1• Mt'• C•lllor" • t l•U UI Ntw .. fl Ctnl•r Dr Sw !1 Ito tlv I'-" ~ E G •V ltl lfUJ 641 IHI N•,.••rl •••ch C•lllorn,. tlU• llv Lyn Ar•dlty AllorntY ltr Admln •••trtr Tel t l14J •u :11111 l'~b \l P!I Or•nu• Lv•>I Oo •v P C1 Publ ll «I 0 • Wt Cn•.r Cl• • Atlor••Y• '"' l'•!Ultntt ,t..prl! 11 an<I M•v ) 11 19 ltn 111¥ I? M•• 11 lt 'I 1•17 Pulll u .. 11 Or~nv• Co•tl O• ly Pilot M•v 9 10 1' NI? IJll n l.f. t:A1, NO I IC: Jo~ I bGAI NOTJCF. 1'11!1! 1111 7t vlll/..LEf Ell 1o•r M<DoNeL 1 1 c.Ar. Nt1ncti.: No11c11: INVITING 11oi 1._y E>~t lu • ol m• W I NOTICE IS HfF!El!IY G!YtN 11 '' Bo•1U o! 5vpr v •o t ol Or•n11e CeuriN , ol • •bOvt n• >ltd dec•d• I NOllCI Oil' fRUSlEI I IAlE Cat 10 ~ ., I 1 • •• ,0~1...i U><l• ut1 1 00 O<IOC• P M (lfl Me""OV 111• 111!1 dtf ,AUL A HANNA TS Ne HI! o! Ju p lt/'I 1 I r 011 <• or I•• Cl•r~ cl '"' Bo.o•<I OI $uo...-v "'°'' 'th llnor, ~ ...... ~ye.~~~~ Ol!tnll•u,., Sti•• Cc•• 1 (1111,.. • vov,1 tfl 10 U t undt 1 un~d •I lht 011 (t corooruon '300 Alh1mb • .-.v • ..,1 LO! O! ••• A!111•o<•Y P•"I ll•n • • • ~~' Allgele• C1111ornl1 t00l7 1111 Slrttl Coll• Mt•• L•l lO• • •1111 '"h bu• "el t "''' <ondvc1...S bJ • tor ... 11(0 • lhe pl•<t or Du• ~'' ol ! e 1>or•t on !lfldfnlt<>ed n ~II "11 "" a•rl•I nt to Olltnnov••r S•I•~ Cor.e 11\t ••tilt or ••Id aoct O•n! "'l!hln 1ov "'"" ( Dll•flll•V•" n onlhl •11•1 It 1 f ,.1 P11bl tit on or lhl• A!lt•ntY •1 1..... 0• J • lS 1•11 ~I II w ~ I ~ .. M luv IV Ad n •1••11<>< 1111 ~t u )II Nu 5~ ~ .,,, ~ San!• """ ($ll!o•nlo •I Htrbor Uw 811 1<1 nt ~1 II>• 0 01, <• t nl • <t 111 )•~" !v "' '<~ , e 1 d u ll• w 1 1 • 11111 iv .,.,, ..u " (I re•(! to 1ht !OllQwlna 41t l ••I I/In S•••fl 11 1, 1 •u • ,, t ...... ~ • 111 flt I LAGUNA Nlt;UEL REGIONAL l'All1C (f>!t Mel~ c .. I B QJ l"'~f $" a A f I 0 CllY "I I' t1HI I'll• l"ll 4H Ill D~P~t~~ ~~...%~ .. ~~ 1 o avoi d d1sappo1ntment prospective br1rles are reminded to have their wedding stories wi th black and white tlossy phot<>- grap hs lo the DA ILY PILOT Wom•n's D~ partment one wee k before the wedding Pictures i:ece1ved after that tlme will not be used r·or engagemen t announce ments 1t is imperative that the story, also accompanied by a black and white glossy picture, be •ub- mitted six weeks or more before the wedd1n g date If dea~line ts not me,t, only a' story will be used 1 o help !di reqmremeni. on bolh we<J. d1n$ and engal(ement stones. lorms are ava!lable In all of the DAILY PILOT olfices Further questions wdl · be an!Wered by Women's Section stair members 11 642-4321. "•t-1i<tt nl no k• Tlllt •l•ttm•nt Wfl f!l«1 w th 11!• ((!Un 01teC1 M•y l It/? r11 !/1~1 Ill "'I 0 ... ~ ~IAIO ~t {. 1.,. .. ~I lUH 11 y All of • ~ "'0'~ 1o ~· ~~ I~ .., ~ V•d~ 1.• ... n plJfl• •nil •l!«H!f&tl!) .... Al!"""V' lo Ct (•1(utero wn d ~ • uw o. • n lh• "II 1 ol "' l11 •• L 1rl 111 l~t Cou"!Y A!I Mlrihr "' Oii h Cltrk of D•1n1t CWlll• o~ Ma• !0 f llll\Bf l H AA Fiii~!( l'ulll • ed 0 .... co~•I o~ y f' 0 il!LE I N~U l<AHtE LDM .. ANY • tur 11!111u .. \\Nu •Y•~OU. )J1A A. l~ 11> • M•• n 19 • n Ju • S 11 1911 J'/•17 PO • on ~' Irv•~•" <le II• lk•d ~1 M .,. "' •••• " th• JJV•<I I••-""" ""~ n """ llV II•"'"''" o• 1t n E••cvlf • o! !ht W II a! tl'lf IAlllO MOLLlY GALIN & WILLA•o •bevf n• "'" "«ea•~! Attr1 •AUL -14ANNA 411 Weot tl•lh Ufffl iun• Utt 01t £••' 11111 S! ••I ~·· tn1•lt • C1llf9rnl1 tttll Cn<I• M••• Ct lltt•n I tl4U JU 0C T•I (11'1 '4J 1'01 1'ubll$htcl O••ntit Coo1t O•llr M•• l) lt U •"'1 Jun~ 1 1t71 ,,.,,. Attor11•1 II• l:•tcutrl• Plll'>l Publ •hed 0••"'" Ce••I 11•l /1 MI Y $ 12 lt 76 lt/1 0• l'f P OI 1111 /1 Ltl.AL Nl)l lC:b: NOTICE JO tMEOllOll~ SUl'ElllOR (QUiil 01' l H( STA TE Of CALll'-OltNIA I OR THE COUHfY Ofl OMAN(:£ l u•T •••C lrll b• ROtllRl l ~· P~•Outo .~6,7 •«•I f 01 ,.1 n , on 1 e n t~~ e!l t • ol 11•1 ASllWQll l • ! l\NN ~ A~ 1WQll l 11 • , 0 ! bo• J ~r )""' • " • h •b• t •><.I"' ' tco <1~11 '"'' •w •• "•• v , ,,.1 ....r 0 )"'I 00 , 11011111 or 11>1 L•oc• C<'fle wt1 ttll w 11 <Iv( '. I No ") b"u' U •6 " r I " ~ 0 I u n • QI l••I llM '"er 11•nt••I PC rtl•"" 91 0111., .1 r;i .( .. <il• ' ... u (• ... t .. ,. "' w .... ·~· ·~ I " II I !JO r > ....iri.m'l(l OflCI mt<h•n t J I M!llCYlfl ,,, k•c II•' ul U ~• l "' Y ( • !~ • !Jy • •<•< 11 0 ul I • <> ~..,,.,; "'I •cl • ~~" 111 l>r ~ull ll r ""' • 1 I>• U • •"' • • "' "' • I ''"I nA ••I• or w•o-. '""" br P• °'W'nY W'lltk "9 ... " 71111 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.------------.. r ,1 •• ol ~lAN f<I II I! O•<t 1 .... 1 ""r "' • c~ 111 v~ "' 1>•1 "~•I tnlt 1 ,, "vt •",lhl '""', • f 1> • (f ~><J• O•y •Ill o ~••u•ft•"li SU<'!d~v• lotbV •ch"1 11 1 11!•~•1 or(l•t~v! •.u w1 t vuon '"' 11 1~wn1101..i ~O "' n•n•(lfll llou• O•• d•y lfl• !OF~LUNO I<~ lw! "'~' ~l ~•<I l•~u•v, •• ,n I~~ l•ll,.!v 111 •t1>"10'11'".., n•tlflo nv......Ottoll\OU'•""'•'' 111 1011 ~ tqt ., "'" 11v1 ~w~1 ., • .,, • • N011ll IS f LRLl,!V G VfN lo ! r ct•U u ' ~ < ~~v• •<l Cl 011• I l~•l •IO••O• a•nll <!•••~q~ •Ille ••l<I"''"' •• •~ •dlu1e 11 wl~1t•n•t•••1~ou<n~, nl •Oll tt o!lht crr~u11h•~UOvftlltU<oo U 10 ii ••• ll ITI• N t It I "'''''~ ' wD•~• n Ir \d~\qnf'c ~ nr 011lr or n, &llllf'l1'V M••'11•" """ 1111;~""' A. l~tn•YI • l~"' ?I~ L"C n IJ ~O :.ut• toivnl)r ?I» S~nt• MOflC~ Ci •o•n• .., ~h • Ill• ;.t,.ct o! ""' nt,. ot ~ u t• 1 o eu n •" "•I'• ' "" 1~ ~ q o I t •\I•!• OI ••d dt<•l• ! "'~n !Ot n1111, ••• t•t 11 .. 1 ~""'(• c" ol t~J "u t • ~ I Clift<! M~• H un R"lPH HOF~LUHD E •ttulll• cl tfl• Wiii '">"-..lu.lc.1'1.J:.l..U"'" nl m~ •l'Wl•t "'""'..., ~toi.•d•"' "-·-S MAll \HALL AN O H!C1CSOH Nee4 • l•rter ..... fM ye»f 911wl11t t..-11y1 Ye11 ll fJ114 111oe Br A t~r11•¥• •I L•w UU LIO(ftlfl l lv• htlll JOI wh•~ •IM Y•• re l•••IRt "'' 111 the c.h1yltiff .. ttl•• sin•• Me11lc1 C•lltt r1111 A tJd for rt nl fun rtod PILOT SundnJI tnm,r.~ Rn11ttr ~ A. rk tn tht DA J l... Y T.i1 (IU) JU 11DJ AllM"1¥1 /!llf l ••Ull"" I PullllJllr~ 0••<10• C~•I Ot lw ~ .... " l'ol .... J "" • • 1911 •""I 0>8U• 'IJ "' If~ 0 ! I JI II''"'"' c l! ". 1~ I ~... t WI t I h ~ u " '" l~<IO!V t ! ,r~ (•tll!,., ttv • ·~ .. I ;,II d ~u~I l ~ (I \ '" \ ~ \l)t.o UI• u• ~ II II u IOI • bl> "j " o~ l>~Y ~I~ IO lh• O•d•r c! !flt Cci. ... 1v 01 O••rio• ... I " 1 ... ~ ,. I• ~· hi I I. 0t.0•1i-l11 I . . 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(ncl• !'/WI ont "' • y QO"<I n hf • "l<lnl or IOll. ot th• C<1~•,1eo, 80<l' • l'•v• •I M •I • !~t .. Cu• M~• .. U\I~ 11n ••Ina !h• ••1111111 P"r 0 .......... or fllt c .... 1 ~(fl ••i(I -· '~ IN "''' .... ""o•d• ol •• d 011 ·~• lwn • 1> o"fd b• n. tov y ,.....,..,,. •"' ln•v • 1C1 "'""" nl•t •rt.• ~t O •Ml• ("""'" H p C>\lfl'(>•f o• 1•r11\1 obi•~·'~'" '"• l'lo• (f0~! i ~·••c, ••• "'' '"" r 11h1 lo ,..1..,1 •nr e •II hlott •I'll!""'' '"'' fl! bY •• II D•od .... 1 r "' ., ... ,11v ~tt•OT !M 111..... " \0 "" fnd tO w• y~ 11n1 n1 ......... 1hy In .(I. t'!f IA<l<lt •n !Of ••<IP'"""'• 'D Ofl 1ttl Of• ~oft! 'I: 0'" nr L'I -•llV• CC•O"• <I• M•I BY (l80Fll Cl~ Tl<E IOAllQ o~ ~Vf'(llVl\0115 {'I~ 0 11-..,c.r COVNTV \.ALL lll• u.-.n•r•l•n"'1 l•v•••• n wt•I•'" •n~ l'QIH.t .t t 101111~ •o• lflt"' ~''"''\ o• 1•ht 4t!<lre<l.l o~•ro M#>Y u 1'11 ~lfd M•v It !ti? l~lALl iE(Ull!TI" Till F WF SI Jl'IHN •N SURAJll(ll ((')MP~N V c: .. vrt~ (!,.\ •M ., .... 4 ... CIJ'r - 11¥ T~· "" \••~ ct ,,,_ l'flolltt1 01 ltlflt•" w, ~' Fn,,.r n• r• O!! t•• Cl ~"II" Cl:IUfTl'r C• +10.,1• 11'1 l!tU ~~ !ll!'t '-f'••"l7•r "utll '"""' O•on~• Cn•tl f\t N Tl w 0 ..,,UTV ,.,.., ,. '~ '"" J n•' rtn ,1111-n 1:':~:'_":'cc"'cc':'"':'_"'=:'_':•:•:':'_'_'_":':..:":'c'cc''--'':"":..:_':_''-"'---------'"'--"- 1 • • JI Dl!LY 'JLOT FrldlY. M'1 H. 1972 Bobby Unser Plays It Conservative at 195 mph By DEKE HOULGATE Of flM O.llY ~ ... Jl-'f JNDIANAPOLIS -Even at Its.IMO mpb Bobby Unser ls su.s~tfd of pr•c- licin& 1 rnlld form of 1andbll"gging last weekend when he virtually assurM. the pcte position for Dan Gurney'& Olsonlte Eagle JurbcHiffy. Costa Mesan Gurney did not dt..ny the report that the 1ndlanapolis 500 favnr1t1: might have run faster if Gum~y had not dec ided to treat the quallfic:atlon 11tempt ''conservatlve.ly." The 1968 winnl!:r added 17 mile! 1 hour to the track rttOrd . That's about as eon.. servative u chairman Mac. "We were \'try concerned about quah· f)'Lni," Gurney iald. ''It means a artal deal to our sponsors, ind to all 33 of us at All-American racers ( 1n S1nt1 Ana'· •'tt'd bt silly to 11y we weren:t irt- lerested in qualifying well. but that was not nearly as important. of course, as winning fht race. A gre&I deal cf our. testinJ and thinking is directed toward the race. . ··r think we could pos.!!lbly hav,. run a littlf' bit harder with the engine. The <'hll.~!is was handling well. and wt could prob1bly hive set the boost pressure a li!Ue hl1her. "! lhink we were 1 tiny bit con- &ervatlve. althouah often you can screw • more boost into the turbo charger and it won't make any dUference. Jn fact , it might slow us down.'' The lrillck closed tArJ y Thursd11y af- • tf!rnoon because Un&e.r. while continuing tlis pre-race lesting program. blew an engine and oiled the track. He has run ju.!!I a tick under 190 at 139.994 mph to be once agajn the faste.!!t driver Qf the da.v lt wu thf' first lime since he h11d qua lified Sunday that Unser had run the car, Despite feverish preparation for next Saturday'& race and the delight over ap- parently capturing the polt position while 1tltlng an all-time speed record, Astros Do It the Hard Way; • LA Toppled in llth, 4-3 By GLENN WHTTE Of 11!1 Dtllr PHO! Stilt LOS ANGELES -It's been quite a turnaround this season for the Houston Astros and for Dodgers pitcher Don Sut· ton. And so it ticured, that something would hive lo aive Th ursday night at Dodger Stadium when Sutton took tbe mound against the Astro.s. And so it was as Sutton pitcb~ three- hit ball through nine innings, left the field with no verdict, and then stood by while his males played on until they lost, 4-3 ln ll innings. The conque1t left Howton 1n salt pos- &e.uion of firs t place in the N1tional League West _ u'ith the Dodgers a game off the pace. Tonight it'll be Brea resi· dent Claude Osteen opposing Houston 's Don ''No-hit" Wilson in game tu·o of the four.game set. It's been a tremendous reversal for Houston. A year ago the Astros wue in 4t h place. 9¥2 games out of first place. There was t1lk that manager Harry Walker would soon be am9ng the unem ployed . Team morale was waver ing. It looked like anothe r Alamo in the offin1. But Walker kept his job and the Aatros got a lot of help when they traded for in- fielders Tommy Helms and Lee May. C.Onsequently they ire w!Ming -and doing so the hard way. Of the 18 tilts they've "-'On this season, 12 h.ave beeo. come-from-behind affairs. Quite a con- trast from a year 1go when they couldn't win the one-run verdicts. losing by that marain. As for Sutton. he was 0-4 at !his juncture last season and Ii 5-0 today. Bu t he could easily be 7-0. He has an ear.nri run average of 0.88 and hid it not been for Doug Rader's 3-run homer with two out in the ninth inning Thursday. his e.r.a would have been 0.44. Sutton .su rrendered only threr hits Thursday, bringing to mind the one-hitter ht twirled over 10 innings May fi in ~!on­ tre1l when he also wa~ involved in na decislon and a game which the Dodgers HOUSTON LOS ANOILI ! ···~··j IAttt~• 11 J c o o ll.un,11 n CldtflO ti I 0 0 0 8ut11"I' 1b Wvn",.. ! 1 I o W Dtvl' ct LM1y1e j II 0 0 F ll.o•I"'"'' F"'wlclt Cl• O 1 O O Cr1Wftlrcl ll G!a&llf'O Cl 0 0 0 0 G1rvt y )b WlllM If • 1 I 0 8•f-Cl Edw1rd1 t o 0 ! 0 Mall 1!11 llldt• Jb J 1 1 l !Im• t Ml lm! Jb • 0 0 1 V1lellll'lt l1I Font~ Cl I 0 0 0 Su""" p .!il9w1•I ol'I I 0 0 II G•bltw01 lb Cv•ve•fl II o o G J ll.1rll 1 1 0 0 •~ r ~ iitl J I I 0 J J J 0 ~ 0 1 ' J 0 ) 1 J ~ I 0 J 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I C 0 0 ,J D 0 0 • 0 • 0 . ' . ••• .IAIGu ll G 0 0 O Te!tl 11 •• j Tot1I 15 J IJ ' Meullell Mt llOI eeJ tl-1 lll "'""111 11! Mt .. , ......., 1!-!1,,., •• Grlbl"'-IW"I O~-~eu1•&1> '· L08- Mou,!o'I t . Loi -'"~t111 11 18-" 1too1.,1!W'I. lluut ll 38-l!:dWl •lll Mll.-Rtdtr '" ~•-w. o.tv11 '· ltt di' S--M1!m1. For1cl'I Culv1r J. 11t1y !W, ,I.{) 61ellldlng ·-.......... IL. J.11 S.ve-Gll ddl"g " ' 1 1/J ' Jll ' • ' (4\ T-l 20 M II 1• " ' ' . ' ' ' . . ' . . ' ' ' ' ' . .1-lJ,,,,, •• so ' ' ' ' ' ' . ' ' . ' I also went on to Jose. \'et ht was fortunate not to lose Thursday because Jt took two walk.sand a poorly played ball hit by f'rank &bin1on in the last of th~ ninth for the Dodgers to Dodgers Slate M•v It 0Gd11r1 Vl. M111111~ .. Mtv 10 Olxlttro VI. Htlo1•011 M1v 11 Oeillt&rl VI, f.IOUJ!!llO MIV 1J Ooaa1 .. ~I. S111 l"rfllfi•c& '"" 0 .... ':JJ • "'· '"" '"'· 1 .• u ~ .... tie it and put the tiff in to extra innings. Thf' left-fielder lt.t Robinson's ball gel past him tor a double to tif' the score. And then LA blew it1 big chance in the; last of the lot h when the Dodgers picked Hughes to VSC up a single and double. but couldn 'l pro- duct' a run . Houston picked up the cue and won it in the llth on Helms' perfect squeeze bunt with the ba ses loaded . Tht uniform numbers or lhrPe of !he all-time Dodger gre111s -Jeck f e Robinson 124 l, Roy Campanella t.1!1 1 11nd Sandy Koufax (321 -will be retired et the Dodgers' Oldtimers Game of June 4. II marks the first lime thP Dodger" have T'etired uniform numbers. Robinson. Campanella and Koul111 are the only living members of the Hall of t.tme who 11pe.nt their full careers ail Dodaers. Trojans Hire Cage Coach; Bloom Plays Bridesmaid When thinkina of "''ell-known sports bridesmaids, the Lakers used to come to mind first. But they have moved out of that category since winning the Nation&! B111ketball A~!!ociation cham- pionshlp earlif'r this month . A st rong candidate to take over the vacated No. I position is Newport Be1ch resident Bill Bldom , the former Corona el.INN WIOTI -------WHITE WASH ------- del Mar High basketball coach whom fat' seems !Cl be d!nying his destiny as a col · \e@:e level coach. Thursdav Afternoon Bloom finished sK- ond in a kev tvent for the lhird lime in recen t yeais a~ University of Southern CaliforniA head ca ge coach Bob Boyd chose his nt"'' assistanl. Bovd called Bloom to 1,11 him he h11d comt. out runntrup in tht ra ct for !he post 11 USC with Rex Hughes thl" "'inner by a judge's decision. And on' might question the merit of that verdicl. Hughes. you m;iy rt>Cflll. left his mark in Snu1h.111nd prep ranks \vhen he coached 111 Redondo Beach High back in the six· ties. In 196~ he led an undefeated team to the CIF playoff semifin11 ls -a learn laden with height. and ta len!. Yet his Seah11wks hardly were up to thf' task. 9esp11e playing the v.· ors t semifinalist team I've ever seen -North Torrance. Redondo somehO\\" lost and then t..'ort h Torranct", a slow. inept looking group, u•h\ch was subsequently annihih11erl by Long Beach Poly in tht" finals . 90-48. That may givt" you some iden of how parhetic the ff'am v.•as !hat beeL Hughes ' forces in v.·h::it r ve a!w::iys considered one of lhe biggest upsets in err playoff history. So now Hughes comes to USC. via an assist.anl 's job at the University o[ Nebraska. And Bloom pl11y!'-bridesmaid. as he rlirl once in junior colle@e and once in high school championship racPs. At Corona del Mar his Sea Kings "-'Pre ru nne rsup to Huntington Beach (a CIF' playoffs finalist 1 and this year at El Camino his Warriors were second to San- ta Monica (eventual st.ate champion 1. Jn those title derbies he lost lo be tter sides. In lhe coaching job race that may not hold true. * * :* San F'ranc1sco movr s rnto Dodger Stadium Monday for a three-game series Would you believe the .Dodgers "''iii be after fh,ir 9th straight triumph over tht Giants in Mond;iy nighl"s tiff? The "-'ay thP. two club!'! are playing it i!'-n·1 too much of a str11in en 1hP im- aJ?:in;ition !o si>e Los An~e!es running the string tn 11 in a rov.· next u'ePk . Of the :J5 .7:m fans who turnerl ou! for Thursday nii.;ht's Houston-Dodgers game in Lo!'! Ang~lPs. some 18.000 were Sears employes and lheir families . Quite a sho"''ing~ Sports Clipped Short Bruins~ SC Fight It Out STANFORD -''Th.is year it may bE Oregon's turn,'' says UCLA coach Jim Bush. whose track team has won three atraight Pacific-8 titles. The Oregon Ouck.s have been runner!- up all t.hree ye11rs -by a 126-117 score last year. A pessimistic coach Bill Bowerman of Oregon said "I set us about third " when discussing his team's ch111ce11 in the championship meet which opened here 1Dd1y. And most dope sheets agree w1th Bowerman. UCLA and Sou t h,. r n California. each u·ith athletes owning world best times. are expected to fight it out for the title in the t~·o-da~· mtel 1t Stanford Stadium. Today's schedule includes finals in the pole vault, long jump. javelin. shot put .ind the 11teeplec.hase. Alhletts will qua.Illy in ei&ht other events for S8turd11y finll11 . UCLA's learn, also the defending NCAA champions. is led by John Smith. lht t1Qr)d r«:erd holder In the 44-0 who •P- pears completely recovered from 1n at· tack of bepatitil. Smith won the Pac-144(1 tjtlt two years 110. but •as M:1te.n by teammate Wayne Collett last year. ""' BALTIMORE -"f like you, blJI I hopt I ketp oo btallna you," Lucien Laurin, lr•iner of Kantuay Dtrby wJn. ner Riva Rld&e, told Hom.er P&rdue.. lfal!ler of Duby nmnerup No Le Hace 'l'llunday u u.. two mtn entered tll<lr I colts for Saturday's 97th running of the Pre1kn!!s. If Ri\'a Ridge Is to keep alivl!' hi s bid to win the Triple Crown of thf' Derby, Preakness and Belmont Slakt'~. hi' also will h11ve tn be:1t seven other 3-year-olds Saturday including his Meadow St11ble mate. Upper Case. 11nd P1tul Mellon's Kl!y To The Mini. '"The y're gonna give me po~! po!i:il\on number one -nt !ht' wirl' ... crncked ParduP just momenl~ btfnrt ,Jni:eph R. Straus' No Lt Hacf' was given post No. I for th' s111rt. HI' will 11.!ave from the rail under jockey Phil Rubbicco. ,,. ri.tEri.1PHtS. Tenn. -Billy ~1axwell. one of the shortest hitters on thP tour. Slipped around the long. tough Colonial C.Ountry C1ub rourse in " lhre!-under-p1r «i and t.ook a shart of the firJl·round le1ut Thursday In lhf' Sl7S,OOO Danny Thom11s Memphi$ Open (",olf Classlc. Maii:well. 11 42-ye•r-old vett.r11n whn h1sn'f won in the last decade while courses were 1etting longu and touring pros stronger. ~tu1red the top Jlpot with Gibby GObe" llnd Hubert Gr .. n. Th' namboy1nt Let Trevino woo started the incredible hot streak th1t won his athlett of the ye1r honors in this tourn1me.nt in 1971. w11s at 70. one stroke back, along with Ch1rles Coody. ,,. The li72 NCAA Western Regional baseball tourntment at San Fernando Valley State CoUeae will befin on T:iur• day with five teams <trtaln to partlclpalt In the competition according to cha irman Dick Arbenz of Chapman CollP.ge. Four team~ hive already been named to the tnurnament including UC Jr\1 ine . ChapmRn, host SAn Fernando ''alley St.i1ff' and Pullet Sound. The fifth entry will be the F'ar \llestern Conference ch;impion which will be determined lhi~ weekend between UC Davi!. Sacramento State and HRyward Sfate. All five teams will play on Thursday. Action will continue on Friday And Saturd11y with pos~ibility that the final gamt or game~ 11s necessary 11o'ill be played on Sunda y. Pairings and 8 time schedule wUl bt' made early in the week according t·, Arbenz. ,,. INDIANAPOLIS -Freddie L..ewis sank two !rte throws with nine seconds left Thursday night to give the Indiana Pacers a 100-99 '1ictttry over the New York Nets. It ga"e the Pace.rs a 3·2 lead In their be!t of·se.ven American Basket- ball Associatlon Championship playorf. ,,. Tht Sille or the ramed BMton Celtics ba!ketb81l 1eam to Beverly Hills bu11ineas e1ecutlve Harold A. Upton wu approved Thursday in New York by U.S. blnkrup1cy re.fe.ree Asa S. Herzog. The Celtic• organl1aUon. wblch hu been Jn financial trouble, It expected to cle1r $1.1 million after c,reditora are .. 111ne<1. ,\ \, 1nembers of Gurney's crew appeared &on1ber Thur~da~. Tht1r friend 11nti former l"ammate, Jlrn ,\lallo}. h11d died 1n )1ethodJst l!fJ<;p1t;1! here thnt ~aine r11nrn1n~. A vrar agci ).1 alloy l'iCf\f'rl 11~ ll team- mate t<1 t'nscr in 'thr <1h!it>nte of s1del1n•1t Swed,... S;11·a~c. ~hilln)' \1·;i~ 11clJ liked and rcspcr1cd. Anothe r of hi~ erir ownf'r~. H<1rold Shcll:>.1'. ta.bhcd hin1 as a su per str1r of the fulurr (;urnl'y rcflPr-tf.d Ori ill!' lu'~ of ).lallny, first \"1t•t1m of ..i r;H·111g dl.'<J\h here since "'t ike Spence \\'as killed 1n 1!)1;8. ··11 v.•as a pl:i in !ra~edy ," Cumry !'nid. ''\Vhal do you sa)? Thrrr"s not much to say. Jt 's too late to say anything. "\Ve thought a i:;re11t dtal nf Jim. and o! rour~e no one wants to lose an y dn\•tr, part lcu larly nne you N)unt 11~ 11 friend . \Vp thouR;hl of Jim as a frirnd. and we rrally hked him a great dc::ii.·• \\'hen ~1allov smashed tnto. lhr. turn lhrrr \1·al! at " 170 mph Sunday he 11o·a~ dr1\'inJ: ::. new Eagle similar tfl the onf' a ;:irief~stricken Bobby Unser dro1•e 1n his h1stonr qualif~·1ng cfrort. l~nSPr was reported badly sh11kf'o by ).lallnv·s death. 11r1d he C'Ould have bet>n exrusCd for not trying as hard as he did tn set !he reenrd . Gurney assessed his driver's ability this 11o·ay: "The most important thing is he has 1 lot of e1pt>r1encP, he "ants to win very much and ·he's very, very fa st. "Naturall y. hR\'lnJ.l 1lrlvtn rill tbe se rrars he has a J:reat rlc11I (lf b;ick~round 'and.know!edize himself, but I 1h1nk more than ever before in his career and ours, we'\·p been or~riniwd so tha1 v.•f>"vp been able to go oul ;ind run anO finrl rins""·ers. It secn1~ to hn\1r, l)('Cn payi ng off." Unrlcr a ne11oo·ly invokcrl rtde . five driver s will havr a rr:i ek al Unsrr's No. t qunlirying position nn R11lurrlav, but few 1Jbserl"ers expect Pelt' Re\·~on, Mark Donohue . .Jerry Kl'lrl. Mel Kenyon Qr Sieve Krisilofr to unsc11t Bobhy. ~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~ r I .-~I OAILY..,.ILOT l'l>o!o llY Lit l'1Y114 Wll T CHAMB'ERLAIN SPIKES PAST Bill JM WALE 12 41, AS JOHN VAllEl Y 1111 WATCHES. Alle11 I11jured Ailing Halos Send Fisher Agairist Chicago's Wood C'llJ CAGO -\\'1lh R victor\" in a homestand finale and still "anrither casually behind !hem. the California Angels en1bark on a slx·gami:! road trip v.·hich beg1n11 toni~ht (6 o'clnck PDTJ -.-·hl"'n !hr H ::ilo.~ invarle the den of the Chic11go \\'hile Sox . The C1!ifo rniRns thro1\" knu1·klel:l-'ll ler Eddie F'ishPr 11·0~ at the rale Hose tonight agr11n~t ann!hf'r kn uckle artist - \Vi\bur \\'nod ifi-2), The latter won Z2 games last sca-.on. California is fre.~h fron1 a 4·J, l2-1nn1ng A11t1els Slate M!~ 1' """• . ~I (" •O" Ml!Y I~ AN:I• I (~ ,~,., Mt¥ 71 "-"'l•lJ ~t Ch;t,.'X! M~v n .l"on • •! :>~~l•rd I ;~ n "'· I \j n ""· \LI~ m "'· 1 >5 ""'· victnry O\"er Oak land's A's Thursrt:i v night ::11 Ar'1!heim Stad iun1 htll the in- crerliblc injury hu~nboo v.•hich has plagued the llalos since the beginning of the campaigri, struck ;igain. In lhe 161h Inni ng, rclir.:ver Llo~1 d Allen pulled a hamstring musrle in his ri.1;hl leii; 11•hite running out a single and 11·ill ht> sidelined rnr scvr.r;it rlays. AHcn h,11~ i'tllov.·cd only four earned runs in hts 21 I 3 innin~s o[ 11·ork i11 1972 and hi~ se tba ck n1erely con1pounderl a dcp)etcd t\n!;cls 1noundcorps "'" h i ch '" .. OAICLA~O CALll"O!llNIA , .... °""'' u llUlll u II J!t~ 'II<! 8•-311 O\Mr •~ c Me"G\141 ti l:O\l•lfl Ill °"""'" ICN:1wlfo e Ot 8•o...,. ~ ShlW b l&f\~• b l .,,,_ 7tl MUfll•t b Hl'Qlfl to • I • l't flll ~ ' , 1 -·~,.,~-lb A 1 2 II ll•v,,.(I rt 4 0 I I F'l"'O~ II ~II I 0 1<01,..,••! J 0 II 1 Sll".~t•• 1!1 $ o 1 o Co•ne~"' •1 • 0 ' 0 MtM11llt'I )I' o 0 o 0 Ob•lf" 1b 0 D 0 0 l MIW!.-, l 0 0 0 0 l.l~•'Ofl OOOOLllll•"ll 0 'O 0 0 M•1t•ll't Ill' J 0 1 0 fl~rN'•I!> J 0 0 0 W•ICl~I O ' 0 0 ~ ''""'"''" ( Klllf'IVIT 111'1 lo••• •l .1 tJ .t To!11l TWO D\11 °Wt!tf'I Wff'l"lllO l"lln t((tr«I, 11b r fl rlll s 1 J 0 I 1 I 1 ! 0 2 I ! 0 0 0 $ 0 I 0 ! o o D J 0 I 0 J 1 , 0 1 0 0 0 ! 0 0 0 1 O r O n o o o 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 ' 0 I I I 0 0 II u ' 10 1 Ott!ltlf 1tt 111 101 oe1-J (flllt"'lt It t I I I I 0 I I 11 -I • .,. .. 11111•10 M\lflt ... I •JIOJ IC"tl.,.le1 1 10~01 5M>N CL. O.I) I 1 J 2 1 I 0 0 1.otkfr liJ 1 0 0 I 0 Wr'l"tl I 10 ' J f 1 LA)!'" J l I 0 0 J l1•t11r ('#, 141 2 I I O I I T~.19 .4-.1.bJS. alreariy nu1nbers ~tarlers Andy Messers1nith. Clyde Wright and Nolan R.\"an among !he wounded. Ryan \1•a~ s!a1ed to start in Chicago tonight until manager net Rice rlec\ded to 1hrov.• Fisher at lhe White Sox instead. lhu-. giving the Texan southpaw more rr:-1. On the t>thcr hand , \Vr1ght hurlerl the f1rs1 stven innings Thursday nighl, giving up Ill hits and three runs and then arl- mittlnA that his shoulder waS stilt hurting. Onl y 5,03.'i fans filed through the turnstiles Thursday nighl 10 see the Anizels cloi:e out their homt sta y with six "ins and 11even losses on the St»nd and fail to escape the American U!ague West cellar. Al so on Thursr!ay, the Ha los rcc;illed Z$-ycar--0ld Jig~thanded pitcher Don Rose from S.:1lt Lake and optiQ. lefty Paul Doyle to the same club on a 24-hour recall basis. · • • LA Signs Price To Fat Contract LOS A:"JC.F:LES (AP I -The l/'ls ATigeles L.ak!"'rs announcrQ Thursday the sign ing of l.ouisville guard Jim Price, who last monlh hRd broken off contr11ct t11lks and 1ndicatC'<I he w11~ goin.R tn play · 1n Ille Arner1can J\askrthalt A11SOCi111ion. The !\-fool-3 Price. ~ second team Associated Press All-American. stgned • three-ye1r contract for an undi.,closed sal11 ry \vith the Nfltlonal Bflsketball A s~iation team. The L.akers refused l.o give Pric(', who "-'I~ negotiflting With the Kenlucky COlnnels or the ASA. a: $300,000 contract whlch he S()UJ:ht In April. Price was th& 2ot.h plRye.r dr11fted by NBA teams last month . The Ll~er3 stlected him In lhe 8econd round with ' choice acquired from Clev1J1.nd In a trade.. Los Angele•' flr1tround choice. Travis Grant of Kentucky Stlte. his not been 11gned. Cl1a111berlai11 , Mates . Give Quite a Show By Roc;ER C.:1\f\l..'\ll\" Of 1~1 D•lly l'llctl S!Hf tr an yone douhtc<l the f:\rlier an- nouncement that \\'ilt"s Big Dippers -.-·e:rt goin~ for their 571h conquest 1n their last 58 tric~. those douhls v.'cre put to rest etlrly Thursrlay evening at Orange Coas t ColleRe. Will ChamOCrl.:iin and hi~ ban1I flf sr:ind - oul l'Olleyball player~ were an a\\·e.~omti l<:1t in disposing of n tnu,qh R:i Hina Bav Club. 15-7, 8-1~. 15-i, 15·12. before 1.9cio appreciative fans . The 7-1 Chambcrl;iin w11s 1hf' rlelil!ht o' the crowd. bul. he h::id plrnly of hrlp frnm the likes of Larry Rundlt>. Erl Btcker, Butch Mays. Kirt Kilgour. Keith Selzn ick and John Vallely. In all. Chamberlain w11s rcspons1h!e rnr 11 scoring spikes or blot'k~. while llie versatile Rundle chipped 1n v.·ith nine scoring .~pikes and assorterl manru1·f!rs. . The turnin~ point in the rl"cn1ni::·s ac· llnn came early 1n the third srt alter lht Balboa Bay Club had C\'ened the sets at cne apiece with a nlf!y \fl-R rnnrpresL Tom nead, .John ii.leek , (~lcnn Ston& and Spcncrr Notrboom h11rl i;ottcn that victorious set off nn the righl font 11o'ilh a 4--0 advantage and the th ird .~ct started out as a replay. • · Three strai,eht out of bliurul~ plavs by the Big Dippers and Dirk 7'.1nnlgn merl"'s ace shoved the underdogs into a 4--0 le'.ad and they appe11red to hal"e momrnl um. Bui Rundle took rharge al that point, !ilopplng lhe Balboa Ba y Club fi rs t .i1t the net. lhen with h111 i;ofl t~ch, t~n a blocked spike allempt and fin111\y with a scoring spikf' of his own 11s he personally reverstd an 0-4 deficit to 11 5-4 lead. Ch11mberlain 's crev.· breezed afltt Rundle's exploits. It was Rn evening of brill iant play by both teams with occasional ri.tl les spart. ing the crowd intn spontaneou! applause An indici.tlon of the ~l11~s votleybail presenttd wa~ .11 total o( three ncit servet In an hour .11nd a half"s play. Wm~rlaln was in 11ctlon throughout the evtnlng's play without substitution . former Orange Co11st Collt.1e and UCLA ba•ketball 1i.r Vallely. now with the Hou1ton Rotk•t.. plo yed only apu- ingly In the. second game . DAIL y ~!LOT I' • • (again) • Through May 31st all you need to win in I~ Play Bingo For Cash Game is a 7 II. And can still win thirteen other ways. Shell wants more winners! This week only (obviously, this is a speci al offe r), your Shell dealer has a special deal. Very special. In additio n to th e thirteen regu la r ways of winning: five rows across, five rows down, two diagonals an d four corners, now we have a new special way of winning. If, when you scratch off five numbers on a Bingo Card, you uncover both a 7 and 11 ... you'll win a dollar. Only two numbers (7 and 11) make you a winner. • Pretty good! And if you win more than one way with one card, we will pay both ways. Here's somethin. else you'll like. If you 've be en saving Sh ell Bingo Card s-this olfer applies to any and al t cards you now posse ss ... and all th<: cards you get this week. However, the special 7 and 11 oil·cr must be redeemed no later than May 31, 1972. (Which mean:; ca ~h 1n vou r 7 and 11 winners qu ick.) By the way your choriucc LI w1nn1ng on any one ca rd (on 7 and 11) am at leasl 1 in 27. With t11osc csl1m1'od od ds, it's su re worth a try. Co me on 1n and Pia IC ri ; J For Cash. You don 'l Lclvc to buy a nyt ~11ng. Just stop by a part 1c1pa11ng She ll stat ion. Licensed dr ivers only. Vo id where prohibited by law. ( I 21 14 18 20 24 3 8 9 4 23 16 13 5 22 10 12 2 FREE 25 11 15 6 7 17 19 See ii you·vewon lhl1 week. M•y19 through May 26, 1972. Winning ~•rd• on this bo1rd redeemable through Mey 31, 1172 Piel{ up a B•ngo Car(! lrom a par1lc1pa!!ng Shell dc1J.ler today or send .t !ell-addressed envc toot to Deranment BFC It, PO Bo..c 279 .Chicago, 111ino1~ 6064 8. ' • ! l I l l ' ' ' ~ ., I 20 DAILY PILOT f'ridA~, ~ay 19, 1972 • I .. • -• Spike Four Area p ·1ayers • Semis \ To.night Selected All-county , An.gel us League Chat11pions r.italer Del 11igh's track and field contingent cap· tured the 1972 Angelus League tiUe. In the front row are rfrom left) -Tony Thing,• Tom Adelman. Ed Rios, Mark Schmit, Jim Ridge an d Steve Breen. In lhe back row are assislanl coach Al Godfrey. David Haupert. Jim Poettgen. Greg Woepse. Kevin Simes, Greg Viviano, Mike Ardanaz and head coach .Tim Frost. ' Four Orange oasl arf'a play· ers tiave bee n honored with spot~ on tbe official All-Orange \\'rst min~1 Pr's Bob '.\'od!and earn~ srcon ·l '.et1m SP:!errinn'i. NOR\\' ALK. -Forty-five in· dividu al., and seven relay Coooiy prep baseh;i!l team as ,co to ;\tarina 's (;r'f>.': Fll.~!t'f. J>l'lecled by the Or.angf' Countv ('or'ona rfl'I '.I.tar's \1;111 l\('()ugh combinations from the Oranti:e Sportswriters Associatlrin " llnd Erhson's Mike ScJwood . Coast area are layi nJi!: their ~1arina Hi gh's Brm:k l'f'Hl· PC'nih<.'rton \v;:is a unani111nus best efforts on !he line in the berton and Gordon Bl;ikrlv nr thn1cr rClr first b;.isf" hnnr ri; Ctr Southern Section track \Vestminstrr were llfl/l\{'rl to nft{'r gutdin.t: his \'iki ng n1atrs and field semifinals at Cer-first I.earn bcrlhs wh,le E.,t;in. 10 a second place finish ut ritos College today and cia High's J im Pos1rl llrJll the Su nset Lea.c;ue. ton ight. .A • ,, _\, Con1petition began earlier -Cr ;,{ .1-1 th is afternoon in the class Cee All-Orange County high jump and polf' vaul t at first Team nearby (;ahr Hi~h School an~ Pl:tyt.r, school Pos was slat~d to ~esun1e a~ ~·.4.) Peterson Sonnra p at <;err1tos with the 1n1t1al Ph illi s, 'ta Qui nta p running event. Aase p Savanna P Of the most interest for rirell Westia ke. Lollra C rrins are the 20 athletes and Pemberton, !'11arina 1 B four bat.on quartets from these p It ' S ·1 Inf t flt . . . th e 1er, erv1 e ~=;s~tys ~ate~~~v~in.ing in e Carter. Sunny Hills Inf At th t ·r th 1 r I · Blakeley, We~tmlnister Inf e op o a 1s 1s T' K 1 JI OF Newport Harbor shofputter inoco,. a e a or~ Terry Albritton. who 's on the Bro"'n1ng . Bolsa Grande roa<l toward defending the St.andtey. Loara. Stfi sectional title wh ich he cap-King, Los Al amitos Second Team lured last spring. ,! r. Sr. Sr. Sr. !'r. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr . Jr. . ' . .. i\lark 12-1 8-1 12-1 .41!3 . 500 A.17 .34R •. 1~1 .41 .1 . 39 1 .403 .419 Albritton's personal best of Ver~oy, lA1 Quinla p Sr. -fi6-91~ is shorter , Ulan that of Davis, Loar a . p Sr. his chief competitor -Crespi·s Poste:I. Estane1a p Sr. 7·3 1 l-3 13·7 .347 .3;)7 Ai3 ,414 ..157 .340 ..169 .<n .450 Cantrell . Head s JC Contingent AZUSA -Three Or;:inge Coast Colle~e field evf'nl specialists and a Golden We~.1 miler ;:iftempt In qu;:il if.v fnr' the state JC track and field meet Sa!urday night ~t the Southern California final s at Citrus College. • fielri events Qegin at 6 \.\.'!'.h th e,,.firs1 running event. ~t.1 to go at 7:30. OCC javelin rhrower.~ R;inrl.v Cantrell and Alvin WhHP !e::id a four-man area contingt>n!. Pirates' teammate D a re J Althousr. a poli; va ulter, .ind miler Vic MRrtincz frn '11 Golden West round out the area foursome . The Golden Wes1 mlle rela y roursome or Brian Strnu,("h. Walt Ankerman. Ron Dickson and Phil Maas will ;:i!so com · pete. replacing Fullerton JC v.•hich was disqualified after finishing th ird in its heat. Cantrell stands the best shot al making t.he state meet. He had a seaso n bcs1 nr 212 4 111 lasl weekend·s V.'cst Coast Relays al Fresno. In the &1Cal prelims a wee k ago he thrl:'W the spear !99-4. t.he third best mark in the meel. Brea Long Jump Sensation Not Eligible For State Meet Brea's junior long jump phenQ__m Qan Carpenter must be scratching his head about noi,1·. C;:irpenl.er is the sprln,i::-leggeo. flame- haired flash who came within a half inch ot equalling the Orange Coun'ty prep record In hi s specially by leapin,ii 24-0 112 two weeks ago in the Orange League I.rack and field prrliminf!ries at Placentia's Valencia High. However. no maller how fflr he can stretch out his best mark, Carpenter will PHIL ROSS Section finals will be 1972 season for him. the last st.op of lhe In an earlier CDlumn. DAILY PILOT col· league Roger Carlson illustrated y,•hat a strange prep basebflll season tf"s been. Carrying that thinking a slep furth er."' Fourtlain Valley's ·Bacons j inishcd a dt!ad las t In the Irvine League baseball rare aflef ha ving hcen ont of the preseaso n picks to conlend for the title. Howevrr. "''hile coac h John Cole's Baron~ "·ere mired in the Irvine·~ depth~. they also stun2 Loarfl, 4-1. in a pre-league tilt. Si~n ifirrinre then• i~ the fart thal nne of Ct>le's units had n e \' e: r be:a ten Floyd Chandler·~ Loa ra S a x o n ~-furthermore. Loara we:nt on to ca pture: outright possession of the Su nset League pennant. Strange , indeed. not be· eligible for the June 2·3 stale meet, One nf the league titlisl'i which the Bar. at Oroville. Why? ons couldn 't conquer on the diamond was Garden Grove circuit champ f..a Quinta, The Wildcat 11th grader ii; rompeting as wblch stomped Fountain Valley. 11-1. a BltP through the CJF meets because that's the classification i.n which he accomplished La Quinta's senior lefthander Brian Ver. his gargantuan feAI in the loop prelims. nov. also a standout in foo1ball. is one of thr. bi,i;gcsl conversation poinls among bas~ball Therefore. the state mef't is nut of the aficionados in these parts. f']Uestinn. since he 's not R varsity competitor An excellent control pitcher whn can Randy Cross at 67-6 ~2 _ but Yoder, S<1van.na C Sr. the Ne wport putter's 64_4~.1 Van Horn , fullert.on lB Jr. heave was the best in the last Borges. Buenri Park Inf Sr. week 's preliminaries. Danfo.rth . Savanna Inf f-ir . Huntington Beach.~ ·rony Glaspie, SA. Valley Inf Sr. Ciarelli 159·1 l and Ediso n's Jonf's, Tusl1n OF Sr. Sleve Timmerman 155.71.11 Nndland , Westniinster Of' Sr. are also vying for the eight Ricks. Valen cia O~ Jr. finals berths. Dingess. Garden Grove Util .sr. Gene Taylor of Marina Player nr the year -Gary Carter. Sunny Hills . ( JB.91 has an excellent op-Coach of t~e year -Dave Hcrnande1 .. Los Alamitos portunity of making the finals Hnnnra hle ftlrnUon • . . in his specialty as he's seeded Pilchcrs -F'nster (1\1 arina). San?oval (Srrv1te). Hutchin· first in a he~t alongside the son I Fullerton ), Liedtke 1 Full~rtonl. Keough .(~nrona del Marl. likes of Tustio's D a rr ~_ll -~tchers -Tuvell (~~th11J }. Selw®d. (Edison) •. Walker (19.0I , Inglewood 's . first base men -\\·h1eldon (Katellal. MannoleJo (Valen- Brian Kimble l 19.3) and Long c1a ). Beach Poly's James Roya l lnli rlders-Stuhr ITusli nl. Schank .1Fullcrlon l. (19.41. Outfielders -\Valbru~ iServ1te ). D1alynas (Sa\·annal. Peck Tnp qualifier Dan Jones nf (Villa Park l, Sepulveda (Santa Anal, ~oore (l'royl. Hart Pan] Verde (Blythe l flashes his tSonora ). IR .5 in another' heat while Newport's ~1att Hogsett 119.0l and Fountain \lalley·s Ri ch Lenga I 1!1.5) are confronted by Palmdale's Stan Whi,1?harn ! !R.91 11nd North Ri verside'.<: Base ball's Top 10 Bob Taylor (19.2) in yet another heat. In the 120 highs. Hun- tington's Sieve Pickrord races off against Jones f 1 4 . J 1 , Bnnita·s Da ve Shamblin ~ 14.51 ::ind Magnolia's Dave Cooper 114.41 while Edison 's Dave Po\\•ell (J4.51 is lined up in a race with El R11ncho's r.1;irk Malone ( I 4. 2 I. Palmdale '.~ Mark Davii; 11 4.:l l and La AMERICA,_ \..E AGVF. l'l•ytc Club G AS II lo! l'(I. e'•u1, M in P o;oi1v. CM M'(t•w, Cl• p;n,•11•. l(C Pln•on, C•I Mun•on, NV Freeh~n. D•! Apotirin, @•n 0 . All•n. Chi (o•h, Del I! '>~ ~ ?~ 1S1 XI 1l 11 ?) 111 1< IA )I ·~· ;1 ~­l• ~) ;1 7~ 1? ·~ 1\ •• I 1 II .J•1 I I l• JI/ m IP 1H 10 )Ii 11 7& ' " II ;)(! 1) l~ "' "' "1 ,Jll "' C•lll, 0Plfn•1, A; D•rwin, ""'""~'"'"· 6. 0, Allen. (h•(IQn, S: Ou"'""· 0~11. l•"d· I; R. J•c•1on. O~•l•nd, ~ Quinta's Steve Ward (1 4.:n. o~rwin, Minne•oi~. 11 ; o. Allen, Three survlvin l'!; area milers Cn•c~~o. '°' F'PPh~n . o"'"'t. 10, " M V. . Ed J~n\('<>, Cltvel•nd. l~. c~~ll. 0~'"'•1, are i.'ision IC'Jo's .~, c~'~"'· Mlnn~snt•. u. l(dl•llr•w. NATIONAi.. lEAGUE l'••v•r Club G All II H ""· Jn"·· S!l '' Tn) 11 •O .JI" ~•nou111cn Pon 1~ Ml 17 •o 111 "'nn~•v. Ch• ?J II 11 ~ .Jll lnl•n, C•n ?~ 1~1 n l• .. 1111 C•O•nn ><ro 7• 10? l1 )lo ,JI] Ln~. ~o n H .1 ?~ .Jll L M•v. H!n il 'Ill 17 JI .) .. fl 01.-er , Pgh ?/J !I? 10 JI! 119 H~1>n.r, P911 ?~ •s 1) 11 JJI Hlc~m•n. (hi ?1 16 11 ?5 .)79 Hom• R11n1 (o~r!, ~•n OiPQO, 9, Wvnn, ~tnU<· Inn. 1. l(,nc;m•n, ~·" f,•n~l•e o. 1: Ll'tin•'oi, P~il•<ltl"n;~. •. ~l•rg•ll, Pi11<Pu<Qh, 6 : H .... ,pn. A!laM~. •; T P~'fl, (;nclnn•!r, 6; \... Mly, HPU)· !an, 6. ll:un1 lla!!1d In 1(•"0"''"· S•n ~·~nt"'"· ?!i; Tnl•n, Radermacher f 4 : 14 .2 I .1 _="='"="="~·"=·-'="-=.'"="="~"=· =''='-''-"'=·-'="--''-'"c"'c·_'_' ______ _ Newport's John Ho 1 c n m b ('nr•nn•!•, ?.J; Wyn~. H~u·'""· 1]; T, P•r•r. (•nci"n•t.. ;1, (olb~rl. ~•n 14: 18.41 and Marina junior 'J'he 6-2. 205-pnuJtd Viking wC. cnunred fnr 2fi rbi with hls bat, ~parklcd rlefrnsively and was u~rrl 11ceas1nnall}' at pitcher. ;:.lakrlv display;d a lnugh 1<:l111·p th roughout the .~eason ;-.rid stroked the ball a! a .. 1A"l clip. He and his Westminster 1n;11es capturPd !he Sa nta Antt Elks Easier 1'ourney and fin · JShed wirh a 21-7 record. Ill s ni<J!e. Nodla nd. wa.~ ::t·cond Learn choice in the out- field with his .369 average. . ~:staneia Hlgh's iron man. Post1•!, earnPd second team lflurels as a pitcher. The Eagles· hurle r ac- counted ror 20 of his team's 24 carnpri1gn d1>t:1Sioris and was a solid factor in every gamf' . His back-to-back route goini efforts on the mound eanrf'd Estancia the Newpnrl·Mf'sa District title prior to league hostilities . Player (lf lhf' .\lf'flr L~ Sunny Hills' c:arv Carter. Los Ala· mitos Higli 's Dave Hernandez 1s coach of the year. Area Stars Dominate Loop Team Fl\'P rirea plriyers hR v@ been accorded first team berths nn !hf'· coaches' A 11 ·I rv t n e h;isrhall team da.r. announced lo· Cornnfl del ~1ar's Scott Parker (outfielder ! rind Mart KMugh 1uri!ity1, alnng with fir.~t baseman Mar.k Chri stman of Co.~ta ~1es.:i, c;itcher r.likf' SclwooO nf Edisnn ;ind pitcher Jim Postel nf Estancia earned the first team laurels. All-lrvin1 ll••Ut ~lrst Toam flo1. Pl•vor School V•, IP-M•r• cnr111man, (Oii• MIW S¥. L•-G•rv l(onln•<, Moonollt \• L!-J"" Gl1•01e, ~1nt1 A.n• Vollev \r: LJ-(,o,~ Ttml)loton. S•nf1 -'"I V&l· l•v So. 01 -fl ic• Com•n. Mocnoll• g Ot-§(011 Pl•MH, Co•o1>a 11•1 M•r F 01 1,01\~ Mer lin, M•cnol•• ,: (-M•lt• §f!wood, ElllMtn P-Jim Po11tl, E•lln<I• r: ~11~1~'11~1~~;0~. 'C.1:~~!1\0d•I Mir 1";.: Utol -H•n• Bo•ur. Maonoll~ Sr. Seccnd T••m 11> M••lt C&,o•n•er. L"' Al1muot Jt, Ll-Jtrry Col~n. Ce111 Mt•• i~. ll-M1'1t Slol, EdlMtfl l' Ll-Wevne Me"in. S1n10 Ano Vill•v ,; 01 M1k• llllv, lo• Al~milo1 Jr. Ot-llav Ec1tlo1, ~ounta!n V1tll¥ Jc. 01-Mlltt lti.,..1. E<llMln Sr. C-Bob P&lmor, (oc1111 ''I 1"11r Jr, I' 8~b S"w~•r, Mooneli• !'• P M"• Je"'''· S1nt1 An• V 1llf V r, IJM-Gr" P1r1t1r. !'dloon " U••I l!vov O"!lv•I.,.. Mnon.oll• Jr. Pl1vor M 1~• VOi • -M ;k• l(in~ (\..QI Al•mltos~•~------- White h;ul I.he ninth br:~I toss in the prel ims ! 1R5-Sll, hut he's been over the 200 m:irk on a number of occasions !h is ~ra!inn. \\lhite has a best of 204-li. The f;ivorites in the ia1·rlin are C.rnss mont.'s Rick Rhoads anrl F'ullcrt.on's (;ii An1olin . Rhoads h;id the best pre li ins mark !22.J-.ii. ;i season hL'St. while Antolin has fl t.op rfforl nf 2211-0 th is ~C'asnn. Anrfllin "".is eighth in the prelims wi!h a throw of 18fi·i in the sectional competition. al5') overpower most batter,<; on his level Ca rpenter did have a chance tn go v;:rr-with relative ease. Vernoy has a i!nod chance · sit:--. though. right up lo the day prior to the of being one of the first 10.prospeets plucked Orange prelims. in the 1973 major league drafts. according lo sev~rR! reliable sources. Rut he harl chan,1?ed hi.~ jumping tech-While on the i;ubject of pitchers. ~1at· nique. so Carpenter anrl bis coach !Wayne nnlia's Bob SteYi'art isn't a bad one. althnugh Bridge I decided nol. to take fl chance in !he his fnrte has been basketball. varsity with an_v experimentation. thus !hf! A 64. 225-pound mu seleman. Stewart and entry into the Ree categor.v. A-:t b11ekcourl mate Pat Barrett. the Senti· The reaso n you ng Dan m<1y be sc ratch-ner.~ lnp two ~corers last caire campai,lt'n, ing his head is simple, then. 11re both ticketed for Cypre.~s College in the fall. Ken Marfvn (4:22 .7\ with Estancia's Eric Olson 11 :54.41 and University's Bob Bradford ll:Sfi.6l seeded in the same heal with Santa Ana·~ Bob Harrell { 1 : 5 1 . 4 I , and Lakewnods Jeff Tamminga i I :53 .91. Other area varsity com- petitors with very g nod chances nf making the finals are Corona del Mar high jumper Genr,l!e Kent 16-7 '1. Newport qu:irtermiler Grif Amies !49.01 and Costa ~1esa two miler Doug MacLean (9 :0R .li J. Seagram's 7Crown. In the pole v.iult A lthou.~e quali fied for S:uurday night 's finals 11·ilh a lop effort of 14-6. The hesr of the v11ulte rs r.rt> ~1L San Antonin's Pa 11 l Grossmnnt's Ross Ellis ( 1:i·O) and Ma>: Gabaldon 1.1-0 1 t1nd Cerritos' Fred Strom 11:.-01. His experiment.at.ion with the nei,1• .~tylt> · But vou can bel that Costa ~1esa re.~ident wnrkerl much better than Carpenter ever Ezra viin Horn -Cypres~ hoop coach hist realized it v.•ould so soon ,11fler changing and, "'inter and newly-sij?"ned f'ullertnn Jun ior even though he has the best long jump mRrk Collej?e menlor -is not on the path of the r.Jarrinez faces an uphill bat- lle"in the mile . He qual ified 1n !he prelims wit.h a clocking r,f 4· J!l.2. rhe wor sl mark of the 12 qualifiers. The best of the miler.~ lnff the prelims tin1esl is Cit rus' Richard \Valkrr (4:14.61 1vhile East LA 0s Mike Steiner went 4 · 15 SI. Walker <'locked 4: 1:1.7 in 1he Mission Conference 1nect three weeks ;:igo. Bakersficl<f s Ed <;r;:r nil10, Santa An:i 's Terrv Lan1h Rnrl 1..A Valley's .JOhn IA1mis cnul rl 1.vin it all. espcc1a l!y Granillo. He's done 4: 10 ~ this se<1.<-on and 1n !he prelims !nPNi rn a timP nr 4·17 .7. saving hin•~eir undoubtedly for the thr ee.- mile. .Miller Top LooJl Netter in Southern Califomia, the May 21i Southern Ma1?noli11 pair. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Baseball Standings l\1ATIONAL LEAGUE Houston Los Angeles Cincinnati San Diego Atlanta Western Division W L 17 10 18 11 Iii 13 !3 lfi San Francisco JO JR 9 21 Nt>W Ynrk Philadelphia Pit tsburgh Chica~o .Montreal St. Louis Eastern Division W L 21 7 15 12 14 12 14 J.1 1.1 15 IO 20 T1turld1¥'t ltt111•h Hl'\t!!On ~! lot Ant1l11. !nu>"'"'~lt l<•w Vn•lt '· Mont•,11 I (;nclnn1•I ~, S•n F•1ne!1(~ J c111cngo 6. St loul.• ~ Qnlv Ill"''' '(l\fdUl"!I Tod1v'• l<h..cl11i. Pel. .6.10 .621 .552 .448 .357 .281 P('f. .1sn .551i .5311 .519 .4fi4 .JJJ GB GB A1\1ERICAN LEAGUE "'e.~lern Division Minnesota Oakland Chicago Texas Kansas Ci!y Ca lifornia W L 17 7 15 9 15 10 11 15 1 ! I~ 11 16 Cleveland Detroit Ba lti more Bos!on New York ~1i!waukee Eastern Dlvisinn 15 9 15 JO J.1 12 9 14 9 " i 15 Tl!11rM11v•1 llt•11lh C•lller<111 ,, o~•l•"tl i (1) lrinl•~•l O~l•('ol! 7. 8~5Mfl 1 o .. r~ c~ ... •• """'"''-.! Prl. .70ll .62.i ·"" .42.1 .407 .407 .fi25 ·"" .520 .391 .375 .318 Hou""" IWihOn, 1'1t vot; L<ll lllflflO '0\•e•n, Te1UV't SC/ltd11lf GB , ~~l I 71-z ' ,,, .. 1). O!ldQ•• SMO•vm. l(FI, ICWl(W, ' ~ m c .. llf(tr .. 11 /l'i!h ... 1.~1 II C~i(19n IW<!Pd. 6·11 A!l•n!• I Nl•kt~ . .1-3) IT $.on F'•ncl~(O ((um~•-~ 0••1.,,.d i0d<1m. 7._,l Al 1(1n~•• Ci•V ISoilttll'lf, lend. 0.3 ) nlant ?·JI, nigh• Cit1tlnnetl IMcGk!thllfl, fl.)) •1 S•• O•Ho l l(i•hv, Cl~v•ll"tl /Pt"Y 6•1~ •I 0 .. rni! ((•!.,, I).)), Coroo;i del ~·l 11r Hlgh ·s Dick c~i:~~0"1j~'•nkmt. 3.31 11 s1. L...,,, i5e1 .. 11;,, M·~:!018 11t•••.' ··~! •I t11•• fGova1•w~11;1, I ~1iller h<1s been accorded 1.11. nl9h1 1.11. n1~h1 Pl;iv, er-nf-the·\.'rilr honors for """,",','.""..',.~'Qn~m•n. l ·Jl 11 P1n ,11vr;11 fMl)(lu. BAlilrno•• IMcN•tlv. • n 11 Mllw•uh•~ fP••· ., ,,. "'"'· ) )). <!I0/11 te nnis in the lr\'1nf> ~ague. N•w Vnrlr re•"'"· 1·1) t i l>hll.od•ll)fli•. S•lm•, acs•an IP•ttln. o.•) •I N•w Vo·~ rs•o•11e"'v'". h)l. nleht J Jl nltlll I Here·s the fir.".t and second !•·-------------------·-------------"' singles 11nd doubles teams. llnthu f'lflt lt•m 5Cll" Enost~v /Cl)'.18 "'t1•\. l'tt~• J Perlti"s IEdlsonl. Jell Ovc• •C.,.-on1 dt!l M11rl. Jol'>n Guhclt ICO•on• tlfl Mii•~. DEAN LEWIS S1e111 .. 1 T•1m I 1966 HARBOR BLVD ., COSTA MESA Bull lloc••d IEdl1on 1. Tenv S•w•v• '\'l1<>eJ11). ll•v Hen~• /SA V11lt vl. 8 elt• Wfl)tlfr ICMen• "'' M8•J. 1111 "¥8de f[1l•<><l•I, Ml~t 0•11 ICo•n"• tl~I M~r]. ,.1~\':lm Strvice and Parf1 for All Imported C1r1 01cw MJ,ur;, 1f3r~1 d->1 Mori. Modern Body Shop for All Cars 646-9303 Tnp Bee qualifiers are fSee SPIK E, Paj1'.e ?I I DEAN LEWIS 1972 TOYOTA CARINA WITH FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING $7200 PER MONTH 594.70 Total Down -$72.00 Tot•I Monthly Payment. #31520 for Forty Eight Mot. Deft rred - S3S5~1.00/Cash -$2794.70 APR 12.76 on •pprovecf credit. 1972 VOLVO 142 SEDAN WITH FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING PER MONTH $117 .46 Tot•I Down -Doforrtd $6057.46. C•th Prlct $4246.27 Intl. T & L/APR 15.U on opp. crfflt 1972 TOYOTA MK II STATION WAGON WITH FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING s9300 rlR MONTH CUI Vlilfvl. 011 rv:::,. l fifenctt ), Orange Coun ty's Largest and Most Modern Toyota and \'olvo Dealer Mo"thly_ jtyrnt. fOf' ~.rty ll~t It's America's whiskey. I n America, 7 Crown outsells the leading Canadian and Scotch combined. And for a very good reason: thctasle. It's uniquely and consistently smooth . Tastc 7 Cro\vn ~'ourscl C lt's the only way you'll be able to under- stand its popul arity. Taste the best of America. $1J Seagram~ and Be Sure. s5lt 4/5 91. ' 1;:'n!~i {s~(• vi.11a:1~9J~·,., ~~~1~ $147.IS Tot•I Dewn/Stl.6' Tot1I "'"' A111~v ;,1#.~'0"I ffl M!rL kott Mo"tha. Dtfvrtd $4IU.U A • !~11.v!"f.':r14 °':n0v~~1:1_-1-o:::: OVIRSIAS DILIVIR'f lfl'ICIALllTI 12.61 (RT7t000 -f41t7 on •PP. '. ICY. i"n111C•• •• ~n ,w11 r-.,;;._ 11 _______________________________ .;';;',;;";;';;'·-------.;•;,T7~to0;.;,,.11--------------------------------.....: eu MMl, Cl'ltlt ,....-,.r I to"Olli /.' . 4 ·. -I ,i • . . WHAT'S IN- OUTDOORS? By JIM NIEMIEC · .lncrea.&ed salt water fish ing activity is being reported by aU . the landings along the south coastline. Yillowtall, calico ba.S.11, barracuda, bonito and white sea bass are making up the rla,ily fish counts. .:Dl!ve.)1 '1 Locker announced the addition of a new 66 foot ~fM»·tfJ,her to their ~fleet of fine open party boalll . The Sea Fwr,y •kippered by John Linson m1de Its m1iden voyaa:e earlier thJ,s. ..e~k to San Clemente l1land. A -good-bas~ (caliro) bite was full on 1t the east end of the hlland, where callco1 to 5\i pounds hit on Uve squid. A fev ... barracuda were al90 brought to gaff but the yeUowtail st&y~d well out of c1sUng r11n.a:e. The Set Pury will be the fastest da y boat rvnnin1 out of Newport Harbor and It also available for priv11te ch.11.rter. Lo11dl1111 Operoliot1 111 /tfo1'e .... Davey's Locker w·ill move Its landing facJHties to the Balboa Pavilion btginnl ng June J. The entire 1portflshlng nttt will mflve In with the Pavilion operatlnn which will aave an~ler1 mqre than ~o minutes boal riding ti mt to and frfJm the fish· Ing ·iround11. · Bl11 Yell11mloil Bile ffl C'11r11nod11K }he biggest catch of yel\nv.•tai l or the ye t young season TI·as· brought into the docks of San Diego earlier this week. The d~k count lol<iled l'llmost 1.400 fish v.•hich made ii Almost a fnur fish per rnd average. This reporter "'AS lucky rnough tn be aboard tht' charter hnAL Ser1rcher ruMing nu! nf F'isherman's Landing and WA1' an eye\.\'itness to the fantastic bite of goldentail.'1. Luckily every bnaf in the nee! had a good quantity of squid on board and \\"hen the yellnv.•s began to bite arou nd 9:45 a.m . it war; almost ln.~tant bonanz<i. Boats looked like umbrellas .:i.~ ever.v angler on every bo.:it hon~ed info a yellowt.ail. This action lasted for 41-l hour.'! "'ith mn~t. bo<its nnl y making two moves In ktep the fish under the bn:it. The mirtdle ground,'i and thf' south kelp produred the be::;4 fi~hing . . Jf b:iit anrt waler conditions holrt up these ne\\' school.~ ·of yeU~\\·tail shou ld produce j!reat fishing for some time to come. .A sample of fi111h cnunls \\'Pre : the Searcher. 127 ye llows fnr 14 anglers; Pacific Quten, 173 ye!lt;iws for 35 anglers ; and Ch~rger, 175 ·yfl!O\\'S for 22 anglers. Cfttfbh Head f,11ke Catrhe& ·"'arming water candllifJn!t 11t lhe inlRnd la kes bas produced an 'upswing In catfish action. Channel ('als are'reportt d as being ,·e~ actlvt In shall nw. brushy water hittln.( on cut m11ckerel, stink bait and ni.(ht crawlers. ·Va il Lakt's whlskerfish came nn like s:t1n.(buslers this p;is t week es good strln.rers were wei.(hed In at th e boat dnf'k. Orani;if' Cnunly ;in2len5 Mr. And Mr5. Jim Russell had 14 ca l.ii \\'hirh .~ce led In at 103 pounds the heavies t beinJt a 10-ponnder. .The aclion at Vall was sprr.ad all civer the lake and anRler~ t1rt enconrAged lo use nn le111.~ than 15-pound les t line.o;: in trying tn hold the ha rd fighli n,1t cal~. Crappie And blutgil 1,1•ere ;i lso artj,.p :i i Vail, but ha.~s rishlna: was rated only fair fnr st1rh1l'e fi."n~rmen u.o;:ing Smithw ick Buc k n' Rawls aod Lucky l.1"s. ·jr\"int La ke also rtp<trtcd fa ir to 2nod ('a tfishinj!; in lhe !ihalJowtr portions of the lake with 11n npswin.E in hass arlion al.o;:n hein.e f'njnytd by anglers. Tront are 11tlll being planted 111 J,,ht rate nf .1.SM po11nd11 a wetk and mol!t of thf' ralnbinv 11<·1 ;nn 111 bei n,; fnund. in der,p water hy fisher men using light !e~rl.rr~. llmAll honkll and floatlnjt'. bail. ·Except for 11ome early mornina: •nd late evenina: 1urface. bu,.tJ ni brnnzebac kll in the San Diego lakell, fi shing ha s to be crnSlrlered 2enerl!lly 1lflw. Thf' h11ss arp hnldlni tiJCht In the heavy cn\•r,r and Rnl!lrrs h:n·s In "·nrk to brln1t thrm nut of their hiding plare11. Rush Hngs. 'lll"hlch art llemlweedlel!!I, and 1urface plug11 are atcnn nl· inlf: for the best ('alche1 'lll'hile rubber worms fished very slow erl: rt'lll•ardlng ball!I 11 n,1lers with thr largt:r bncketmouth!. Wind Rompers Trouler• : \Vind has bPen the enemy or most troul fishermen at the high elevation lakf's. bur. on calm da ys anglers 11re getting into some good fishin~. The hi~h sicrr::i lakes are al! well stocked . with rainbo\\'S and: rrn\\'rls are llJ?hl. Cro1,1·Jey Lake is slill s:etring I.ht mnst att~tinn anrl P::IS.v limit.;: or bows tn one pound are being t.aken by '!!nglerr; using TNT floating cheese bail and salmon eggs. Rip Re;ir Lake i~ coming alive , helped :ilon~ by h~.11·y bonu.i;: lrollt pl;ints. Shnre ani:lers ::i~ well iis trollers ;:ire findin.i; rhe fredin.c: trout off lht points and near the dam. Some nice strin,;:::- ers:nf blueJ;il are being l<iken at Big BPar but catcher; of bass and catfi sh are scarce due to cold wa ter. Trnp .Shool Sel This Weekend 'The La~una Hiiis Gun Clu b will present an Invitational ATA regf~ltred trap shflnl tllls wee kenl'I with many prize§ bting &'lll'~rded to top gun.'! in different rh•~~es. Dee p Sea Fish Report b.\N'-W14lltll' -46 1n11e•1: •1 bl'h. , h1libul. I m1tk@•f1, SANTA MONICA -1.! •nlll••t: il.I toe~ t!>d. ?1 ,And b•.S!· ) ~lllbul. illAll"ADIS! cove -~l •n•I•••: '-11 •ot1' (od, ?a c8ll(o b•U. !lo,N 01£00 IM11n•clp1I l"l•rl -~\1 1'191••5: n ve!IOwl•ll. 1' b•rr•cud•. 111 wl\11---~b•n. HS c•flco b1!1, 19 bMJ!n •EOONOO -11 1n•ler1 : l ~11' !•Abe•" J ~•!.bu!. 'l!I! c•llttl b1,1, l.U f'I(~ cM "••G~ -n 1n111'''· 15 m1c~~rel, 1111 r«~ (od. LONG 9EAC14 (81!-11t l"lerl -11 8r'lti•ri: l bArt8Clldl. 1' JAnrl ba•~. ! ~•ilbii1, l.fl) •llCk c/ld, l 1 w/11!1 lhh. 91r11 -l• l!nQllrl: )0 b,.tt•C11d~. lS 10•d b,..,, ~ M~!ib,,t , IS m~c~1r111. 15 Mrch. l~ h1rrln9. !l"lerPOl"t L1"4lnf) -70 1nltt•r-· • h•llbu!, 56 Calleo bau. Htl rock r~tl. OXNAllD I! l!rttl•ri: 1711 c•llco : WE ARE BOTH LOOK ING! RIGHT? : NO EXPERIENCE . NECESSARY :ARI YOU LOOKINCI fOR 1 ~Int yecrr l11coll'le 1ho•l4I be 111 erc"' ef Sl l ,tff, · wltll 21~ llK,.... I• tile '. '"at1d ,.., •IHI .. 11••1 . ttltNctftlft' bits<. IJ6 , .. ,,,. bl!s~. 11\0 blu-. "'''"· ~ hl!!i~ .. , l l!AL 9 1!-'(:H -5' 11nQ1ert: 3@3 rock coe 61trlf' • 10 .. oql•r.: 10 bl!rr1ttu~1t. I bonllo. )0 kel1> bl!n. S h1tllbu!, )I ol!rrh. 90 M•rrlnq. SAN l"E.DlilO -7t 1tn1ltt\! Hl b••" ' v-11ow!1til. J b•"•Cu!l1, ' h•Hbut, 16(1 rock end. tUl!d It. L1ricU"-l -16 1no1ert: UO c11tlc11 bl!JJ, i htllbu!, J btmlto. ll'KI ""''"' 50 m•t.l<•ttl. MOlllRO IAY (Ylr•'t L1llllll1•l -t 1ntler1: 1 lln!I cod. U rock cod, (fi n Sim"") -1t 1n1l1rt: t lino tod •• , rock tl!d. ~• rock cod. l"OftT HUl"NIMI -46 1nvltt5c )27 c•llco bl!!~, J htllbvl, ~1• re<:k cod. ltllWl"OftT (0 ...,1v'1 Lt<kH) -lS •no11ro : SI c1!1«1 b111, 11 rock coo. 11 rr1•ker1I, 1 11Jir1c111u. • OCIANStD.I -Sf l f'IOll•t: t b•r· r1elld1. 16l ben, 3 h1llbu!, t• rod cOd, 1• m1ck•rt l. ' OCC Gals For Coast Area Capture Swim Title Gal,s ' Badminton, Softball Results I 'fhe Oran$(e Coast Colleae ~·omen's swim team captured the Southern CaliIOrnia junior college crown Thursday at a cha mpionship hosted by Golden West. Orange Coast swimmer Pal Shine took two firsts and ·helped pecc the Pir.t:te11 In a winning l :49.1 in the 200 free re1ay. Fotrth·aeeded i.n tht 50 back. she 1wam W 1 first ·place 31.2. She also captul"ed tht diving honors, outsccring second-place wlnlle!'" Sandy Cassube, also of OCC. Monica Renno of (;u!den West won the 50 breast with a 3.~.9. but the Rustlerettts ~till placed second to last in the me.et. "All the OCC girl.'! just swam ou t of their minds - without exception everybodv swam their be.,! today," 01.C ('(lach Sue Brown commented after the meet. ''They ju~t wanted to-win and they did.'' Top swimmer or the day was Long Beach City College student Laure Frit1.. who broke the na tional women·~ collegiate record in tbe JOO free with a lifetime best (If 54.9, a tenth of a second off the old record. Mis.'! Fritz. en Olympic hopeful, also ·broke meet re.cords in the 200 free and 50 free. Diving -1. S~in• (OC(). 111.JO. 7. C•Hvlw !OCC I 1J4.60. l. llr•cktnrillO" l FJCl l\l,.SO. i. Bo11ono (OCC\ 111 . .SO. S. Vin Mour<k (FJCl 11 IS.'· Full...-.al11 (M!. SA() 70.40. 700 Mell. •et•v -J. tono 8e1ch CC 17:0!!.ll 1. Or1no• (o••t !7:00.ll l. Ful! .. rlon (?;Of.JI •· ll1ktr$f l 1 ld ll:<.tll.I) S. El C•mlno 47:09.i l 6. Mt. SAC !?:11.0). 700 Frte 1. Fri!1 !Lii (() 1:00.1. 1. MtC~n (FJC' l :OJ.J 3. Lt!)O<! !Ml, SA"CJ 1:1? 9 •. C1rion (f )() J:1\ J J, erown. {PCC> J:11 .t 6. Srerkwt1tht r CPCCJ .J.li.I. .SO Fr .. -I. Frill fl9 CC1 JS.I. J. Stuntl• IOCCl JO.I , 3. llenno (GW) 11.3. •. s~tcktr l ll•ktrtll•l!ll 11.4. J Ht~flOn (e:I C~mJ 11.1. '· Ch1!1tV (FJCl 2t.1. • r 100 loll. Me!llf V -1. fl llhllO \El C8m] l ;ot,7. 1. SMnt (OCC) l:Ol.7. l . M•lln~r• ILI CCI 1;()1 1. •. J1Ck1on (FJC! 1;0l.I. S, L•rson !MT SA() 1:10.0. "· OIKrn (81~tr"ltlO I l :lJ.O. ill 11¥ -L OIMln (91kt r•flt ldl ~.I. 7. Ool•n (OCC l \l.G l. Htndft•cn {El C•r"l'll ll.O. 4. l'-lublwll (El Cami JI.I. J. H8c~•~n (FJC l l\.7. 6. ll•nno fGWJ J1 1, 50 ll•ck -1. Sh!nt (OCCJ Jl:t i. Oav11o1 .. H1rrt !I •nd f'1nlol11 !Hl det. (lrl,.tf!l'I •nd 5thoettler !CJ li·S, IS·l. ll•t., ind l•uchwill IH) dt!. Smit~ end Leedom CCI lS·ll. IS·I . Cl1rk •nd G•.,•iel IHl dfl. Pctfer1 •ml Sll!ll'lao (CI li·!. I S·~. Jloblrlson 1nd Wh)Ulr !d (HI dtt . lubbs """ W~llP /Cl JS'6, U·1. Hlulh •n<I 0'(enf10r CH) d•I. Gt rm•n 1nd Htnllrlck•on (Cl U·6, 11·10. John•tcnt •lld Shlllllt (HJ <!Pl. Hi ll •nd McClunt {C) JS.t , li-0. Comb1 •nd Phelln IH) lo•I to llret1nr •nd Groe--Cl 13•U, .,.1$. -Ce!• •r>d H\lduin (HI fll!I, ll•rtle11 1 r>d N111! IC) U·12. 1S·IO. Ch1fl1¥ 1nd L•nor• IH) dot Schnoor l l'ICI Wltls IC) l!•U, lW. ••nion •"11 Grin (HI de!. H111 1nd Llt>ml n !Cl IS·H , lS·l. CtrHI <let M•r !11) Ill Soft Cl•mMI• Sln1J11 Hcu1• !C l llt !. 0.Mtrcc ISi tl·!, ll· l .Ncll (Cl 10,t '" letYor (SI J.11, 11.J, 1.2. Schmidt !Cl def. Htrbtr!c~ 15) 11.1, 11·1 l i1 r• !Cl 1111. llnds•Y f5 l 11 .~1 11.1 • . Wttl !CJ ll•f. Pow1ll (SI 1·1. 11 ·4, 11·• cfon• !C/ "'· l 'own C~l 11 1, 11·1, M!lllfln Cl dt . l119ltdtw IS) 11·1, ·S 11, 11.,, D1u~l11 M811nnt• !L9CC! lJ.1. l . 01t k1r Ch•i'1•nsen •nd Akin 1(1 dt!. ,'.,,,,,,,,,, lJ,O. 1 (IAllr>Y (FJC) C1rdell11 1nd Otvtnt>erf ($1 !S·I, 15..0 . ~ Hlten •nd Crookt (Cf d •f. 12 1. !. Don (P:J() l•.I. I. Sml1h (Ml. Gr1,1nktmt vo• 1nd Sh1rk1 IS! l.I·!. U·!. JllCl l• t. Simuel• i nd McN•llev (() dtf. 100 Ir•• -1. '•lU J8L((j S•.'· 7. 51ndtr1Qn Ind G•n...,.., rs1 lS·l, 11·2. McC'1t n (FJ(I 56.0 J. Sl<Jnt i1 (OCC! Arml!ron• •f'l<I l. W11! (CJ cul. 1:00.t .•. L~••Dn (Mt. SA() 1:01.J. ! .• ·.·.·.·~-·.·.00-· .... ·.··"•'•'•'--··--,."--·.· --..-1 H•n!l• .. Dn (El CAm) 1:01.9. I. C1•1on1· (FJCJ l·Ol l so ti••••• 1. ~~nno \GWI JS.t . ?. S•l•s Engineer W•nt•d J~<k•on (P:JC I :Ii.I. l H.,.,t>ell (El (Ami :Ii.I . • Oaw•on lOCC J ll.l. S. l i lk M•terllll'I Ho1111illttt Sy1t•"'5 C1nubl (OCC I ll.7. !. Ol1nn (81•~"""101 11.1. . I -4 Appllc9'l•• of A11._m•tic 1'00 tro• r•l•v -1. Or#nOt Col •l 1 C•11,,.i1. Wrlt9 •Ill #]fl. D•lly (1 ;4.Sl. ). Full•r!Of! (1:Sll91 l. El rllot. ••.r 1560, c .... M9J•, (•mini> (1 :!2.11 •.Ml. SAC tl.5'.(I.\ .I I Gnldon wo,t !1:51,J) 6. l~kfr1flfld Call~ 91626 11 :s1.1.1 1:~iiiiiiii:::::;:::::;:::::;~:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;;::;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I T11m ktrl~t Or1n1• Co11t. 6t"'. Fu•lrrion. \.I. Lent Bt~t~ cc . .u. E'I C1mlr>1. l• 8tktr1lltld. J•""· M1. SAC, 19. GOlllfn · West. 16. P1s1don1 cc . l. SPIKE • • • I Continued from Pag~ io I Mission Viejo'• Mark Hower in the 1320 and Mater Dei high jumper Ociu.ir Marlin while Marina shotputler .Josh Rico heads the area's Ce e qualifier!!'.. V1nity 1:16 -Ric• Ot•>T'•I ((o•la Me .. 1 ••O -Gril Ami!! (N•WP<lrl HlrbQd . 880 -Eric 01•011 [ES11nd1) and !lob 8 rl!l!Ord fUo!verillY). Milt -ICt n MIMyn (M•rln1), Ed ll1!11trr11c~er IM\Hlcn V!elo) I nd Jo~n Hol!omb (NtWP!lr! Hatborl. Two mflp -Oou11 M8<L•en. Jo~n Ol•w•no and Tom Ot1w1ng (Cost1 M~;3 iHH -o~v• PtWfll IEdi.\Cfll 1n(! STev• Pi(Of!>rd (Huntln9ton Belt~) T&o LH • Rich L!nlle {foun!lln Yll1e¥), Gfnt T~ylor (M&r!nl) 1n!I Min "°''"' (Newoor! H1rll0r). uo r1l1v -Coron1 df l M•• (Jct Tolll Jo~n Milt1, Mitt C~•. C1rlo Totll ll FGUn!•ln V•ll•Y (JOf Wl'!ldlf, Rlth tn91, Tom (e•so. llob Schenk I. Full Maintenance For Only $521 T11kf' your rhoirf> from an.v n[ l'IUr beautiful Li ncoln or MPt· rury 1972 mndrltt and fnr only 11n fl.dditionit l $5.21 J)f"r mo. yo11 can enjoy all thf' 11dv11 n- t 11gf'~ our PXCIUSi\it' full nrw r11r mein1<"nanr<" 1""~" program providf'~. Cl!ll 1oday for our ,;urprising!y lo"· 1·ost, tax wi~,. MONTHLY p!!-M;onally tailor~d plan , . , just for ynu .•. • 540.5130 Mlle rel..,v -· Co•one d~1 M~• (Cl•IO Tn~li . Do.,. ICn~pll Mer~ Wrnn., Mi tt Co•l. F'ounr~in Vall .. ~ l9ob Scheni., JOit W"'lkll•. Jlrn W~l<h, Otnni1 Myerl). "'twPOr! HarllOr (Garv Ll!len. ICI"' Hum•nn. Grit ilmie•. Ml!!! Ho91tlt). HJ _ GMrlle Kent (C!>rone del M1rl.jl~""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" .............. """"""""""""""""""~' LJ -Ken Grout !MArlrll ) -nd PI T Hon•vw•ll lNfWPOrl H~rbor \. SP -51evt Tlmmttm~n 1Edl1en). T.-nv Clereni (l'-luntlnoton 9•ecnl •nd Ter•v AlbdT!on f"'ewoo•I Harber). '" 100 -_.,,, Liddlt !E1!•nti1I '~ -S!PV• ... !l•m• IE•t1nci•! Intl llltk Medjold /Mtrln•l. 66C -c1h sr1,~1 (L•Jun• fl ~•chl end Jlrn Pot!totn IM•l•r 0•!1. llXI -Mtrk How~r !Min ion Vlt lol. 110 lH -Ad1m1. S8C rtl8v -E•t•ncla l01vt P1 rl•I, l lddlt. D•v• Jllllt1•lon, Ad11m,1 HJ -M1•t Ch1rrtn •nd Jo• Oen••• ICO•on1 !lei Mir), N•I! Amsll•n L80U~• B~•thl. Oouo Ml rlln IM•ltr 0.1). Prtm11 WM!t !Sin Cltme~1t l. Dtl~ Perk.r !W1S!mln1!•r l. LJ -John llothwlll !Coront ~,1 Mtr) and l lm Mt~n (MIH<on YlflOl. '" 100 Chrl, M1ttln (M1t•r Ofil. 19C -Oon Giron [fdl,<l!)I. 661> -Louh L•urlll•n !EJ!1ni;l1l lillO -Ltt 8 1hon (Ntw-1 Harbor!, ~ rtll V -Minion Vitio (CIYdf l irch1rd, Mlrk Kltchfntr. Douv Wu11!, OtYt C1l!lwelll. HJ -lttn CO<!ntr CEt11n(ll) 11'1d Oouo C••• IL11un• ll••<~l. · PV -Jim H1m1nn IEdll!ll'll, l•"~ C1sto.,,u1v jHunlln9ton fl••<~) 11'1d Oev• C:lldwtl {Mlstlcn Ylttol. 5P -Jo1h Rico (Mt rln1J. c: as -.. <. -· E • • - Tomorrow's Saturday! ·- - -» • • ·-.;...,,....,. , .. ft .... ..:...p,.,..,,.,..1 ,,.. ...... -AppolntMHh ~ltftfte4 .;..4,.ctt rtt.ftlll ~nfH& : rt tofnlnt ••• •tSttH .. -S•ft profeuleltel 5 YfAR/50,000 MILE Wauuanty u. • ct - Drop by and see us for wh1t'1 happeninr In Men's Clothes T~d1y! : ,, ... ,,,.,, .. -Gucrr111111tHi m~ ··,..1tdo11 • _,,,,.,. IMMflts -e., .. , 1tOtltl•1t It ftu~ •~1w4r 11 Vlf ft I tr """" M 1t11 •bllv•. 'l'llli mf~ M -., ltll ~"' I 1111 leolil"t t. o~ ,_..., s11tt ~,., 1'fn ... , .. !'YI .. II Or•M Net•!, S•ltt ,.,, f lrMd111111 Yl•r, AINll!e'm 1.-cr.u '"'V Oftl!IV .. 1141). Smt4iry 11 :00 .,.. & 2:30 p~ S111!.dey 11 :00 eM & Jil O ,_ AN IOUAL O,~ftTUNITY IMl"LOYllt • At No Extra Chllrg ~ "-''' & L~Dor or ~"T ''Pow•• 1 I I ,.,... ... • l_;. ' , ' ,, DAILY PILOT ~l UNIROYAL ZETA 40M ST££l Radial Tire Guaranteed 40,000 Miles A Whole new driving experienc e. 7.5"/. MORE HAZARD PROTECTION ' 201, MORE CAR CONTROL• 12 '/, BETTER TRAfTION" •1hon conve11t ionol 78 1er1 e-s bios pTy ltie1. -40,000 Mill GUARANl(( JI~·· do•'! ••t I~• "',!""~• t10•0J "" '"• ,;d•~•ll !M-•ho••nnd] •r 1;,. t0fl, fo< ""' ''"'"" "''""' '""" .. illju! "b"" .,, <•I''''""• ~·•• ••oil0<0J 1.ro <lo•I., .,111 '"" ~··" ""~'' OfO'••t '"" P•"~"'° ol • ""' : •• " '"" .r '°'"" "•• ., ,.,,.,,, ~""""'., •• •• .~'"'" C".-d;1 ,,.,1 oouo\ oo:co ~·• ,,.,;J """I' ,.1,-.1 Lo ""'""'"'" ol "•'•d ..,,loot• ~ou <J,d no! o~•olo, ( ·•·• < ,.,11 1,, u1,pl,od ovu•n11 IO• l f'o Cuo•o01•••d '"'" '"'" '""''""'! .,,,,._..,,,,, bu .. 000'"""'"''"U o<lual ,.,,,.,), D••'•• ... , OOJ ..... :r ······!Of '"" ••• ~. por1•'"'' I• t•plo<j•• '""·· torn o~d rololod vo~ltlo •••d;,, • ., "'"" Lo ~•opo•l1 "'"l"'•i••d ""d Ii••• --==·~;~;~ b•••I~' in for I••• 3,000 .,11. 101~1ioo• ond •"•·~ •P• kr ... 10010 ~0110•• •I . . • •• , ........ .,.,.1,, UNIROYAL ZETA 30M INTER ST££' Tire Guaranteed 30,000 Miles 72 '/, MORE HAZARD PROTECTION ' 3.S-;'. MORE DURABLE AT HIGH SPEEDS' 20 y, MORE MILEAGE' "lhan convt nlioool bios belred tires, E 78·14 $)645 "11~ ""' (/'. Si l l l•d, f ,, Tu f78-14 ... $37.45 G78-14 ., $39.45 H78 -14 ••. $42.45 G71-15 .. $39,45 H71· 15, .. $42.45 J78-15 ... $45.45 ., •• , RADIALS FOR IMPORTED CARSI !UNIROYAL ZETA GUARANTEE NOT APPLICABLE! .Jo Jn fesrs by lwo of fur-TUIELISS mu IElnD BLACKWALL ope's leading mola r ma· 11 •• ••• 1 •••• 11 •• ,,i,. '••h• 1"•• 13.SSR 12 6 .00.12 $28.45 51.45 gazines, the Uniroyal 145SR13 5.50-13 $26.45 $ 1.38 Steel Radial firs! 155SRl3 5.60-13 $30.45 s 1.53 won 165SRl3 ' 6.00-1 3 $3 1.45 s 1.76 place rafings aga inst 175SRl3 6.50.13 $32.00 $1.99 165SRJ4 6.A5-l 4 $32.45 $1.79 othe r manufacturers of 175SR14 6.95.J.4 $33.DO $2 .00 155SR15 $34.00 5.60 .15 $1 .70 fa bric and stee l rad ials. 165SR1 5 6,00-15 $37.45 $1 .95 FRONT-END ALIGNMINT :rrai~" ~·~ °"' '"""" -~•let "'""' ~" u•bo•. ,,...in •ft4 1 .. -1 N ,..,.. "°"",."' •tl1i••! o•dlicttl•~o. •1l•t 011 ••• 1 ... .._ .. 1, •••• , ,::::.. $555 . ~ ' ~ ' $1.50 l•r. V1l11t BUY 3 SHOCK ABSORBERS At O ur l Yt rydov l ow ,.-... I UY J ftr $7.fJ ••cl! { - ~:::~; zoc only 1.4.MOUJ ••• i11oc•1 1•11 IN$f o\llATIONS COUtON GOO/I Utllll M'1 :11, 1971 - * SPIN BALA;;c;-;.-1 WHEEL BALANCE -~":t~) ~u~~:T)' !Includes Weighh) Reg, $3.00 FOR $200 ONLY ea, ANAHEIM 8961 Brookhur!i t , . . • , .... 635-1870 WESTMINSTER 7135 We~trninsJer Blvrf .... 893-352 1 GARDIN GROVI 8601 Weslmlnst er Blvd ... 893-3!95 HAWAIIAN GARDENS 11973 Cwon St. , .861-0227 HUNTINGTON BEACH 19•1 I Bcoth Blvd ... 536-7571 SANTA ANA 115 N. Harbor .. ,. ••••... 83"3700 SANTA ANA 1? 11 W. W~rn~r Ave ...• , .. SA0-8646 TUSTIN 131 £. hi St"" .!44-9431 COSTA MESA· NEWPORT BIACH 372 £. 171h St. . .••. 642-413 1 CORONA B36 W. 61h Slroet : .......... 7SS-6D10 SAN CLEMENll 927 N. n Camino R"I .... 492-5143 OPIN DAILY 8 ·7 • SATUll DAY 8 ·5 first Introduced IlllZ c~!C tlcw· & "7'IOER PA~. ' 2% DAILV PILOT frlday, Ma,-19, 1972 . . QUEENIE By Phil lnterla ndl • . .,... • ~~'.s -17 . • . I 1 ''Tell the pilot of that plane to take it to the unem· , ployment of!ice!" L. M. Boyd What Makes Gal Unf orgetable? \\'hat the New York City police are fighting now, I'm told, is a rerenl wrinkle among mfiggers. Namely, said stronga rm boys hide in apartment house basements, push the elevator buttons, and wait. Eventually, some absent. minded victim, who fails to notice whether he's-going up or down, dispatches himself. CORRECT, young lady, two new studies this year still show that professional woman least apt to get a di vorce Is the school teacher. YES. sm. am now told the oldest trade name known is "Kikkoman Sho- yu Co.. Ltd.," makers of soy sauce since 1630. NO, MADAM, ordinarily the only nudist colony member called upon to remain at least partly clothed is the untrained toddler. QUERIES -Q. "Wh at one thing more than any other is most apt to , make a woman unforgettable ?" A. Alimony must be No. I. Good cooking is said by the fond sons of mothers to rank No. 2. Q. "HOW many times do you have to shuftl~ the deck to make sure the cards are really mixed?" A. Three shuffles is supposed to do it, if you use what the Nevada boys call the professional riffle. ANOTHER thing tha t's so good about May is it's the month when you're likely to lose the least hair. The science men have proved that hairs fall out of your head system- atically year round. November is when the most go. TltAT word ''betw ee n .'' Most think it's wrong to use it for more than l\'-'O. Like : "An argument between To1n, Dick and Harry ... " Isn't wrong though. Quite proper. Ask your old English teacher. PRE'ITY circumspect, the male Indian elephant. It's not until he 's 21 years old that he ever really gets serious about a lady elephan t. Any earlier romance is merely adolescent flirtation. A10NEY -Sti ll one more customer wants to know how to make $1 million. Nothing to it. Write a Christmas melody. So far, Johnny Marks has pulled In more than $2 miilion for his "Rudolph the Red Nose Reindeer" while Irving Berlin has collected more than $3 million for "White Christmas." WlfAT, YOU'VE never eaten skunk cabbage? Pity. Boil the leaves with a pinch of baking soda and serve with green pepper sauce and butter, advises gourmet Chet Switell. Excellent with pork roast. Address mail to L. l't1. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875, New- port Beach, Calif. 92660. Cou11 ty Doctors Earn Chiropractic Ho11ors The California Chiropractic Association honored th re e Orange County doctors with the society's highest honors at Cease F ire a recent installation banquet. Dr. John Such was named Doctor of the Year and Dr. David Bundy, outgoing presiden t , won the Distinguished Service Award for outstanding service to his community. Both men are TOKYO (AP ) -Th e from Santa Ana. Japanese state of Yamanashi Qr. Robert Reed of plans lo stop renting land to Fuherton was the first recl- the U.S. l\1arines for use as an pient of the Robert B. Bot- lerman Award f or con-srtillery range arter the tribu"tions to public health present contract expires July education and Information. 27, Gov . Kunio Tanabe an-l;;;;;;;========o;;I nounred. When he can1paigned In 1967 and 1971, one of his slogans was "regain our land froiri the U.S. military." LET'S BE FRIENDLY l( you have new neighbors 6r know of anyone moving to our area, please tell us so that "'C may extend a fri endly welcome and help them lo become acquainted In their new surroundings. So. Coast rasitor 4'W57' 4ff.f3'1 Hnr V'rsitor MM114 , VNITED ' S TATES NA TIONAi.. BANK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH HOW OPlH SATURDAYS 9 to 1 P.M. MON.•THUI L 10.S P'.M, •llDATS 1M P'.M. t71 4J 140.1111. LM.r.4 lar s.. CHlt ,._, c ...... _ ANt.VlaPl'M. ....... . H. M. STOLTE ) WHITE • RllDY 10'x30" SPLASHER POOL Enamel finished corrugated steel wall, rounded edge top and heavy gauge vinyl liner. OUR REG. PRICE 14.!l 1777 VEG·O,MATIC FOOD SLICER Slices, dices, chips and wedges. Makes 2 77 hundreds of flench fries a minu te! OUR REG. PRICE 3.99 25 PLASTIC AIRLINE CUPS IO oz. clear plastic airline tumblers. 2 77c Buy now for the big holiday weekend. SPECIAL PURCHASE FOR • > - OPEN IAJURIAY 11L 9 PM-PRICES GOOD SATURDAY MAY 20111 ONLY BOLD PRICE SIASHINHN MOST WANTED ITEMS THAT EVERYONE NEEDS • • .. DON1 MISS OUT ON - UNBEATABLE VALUES FROM WHITE FRO~T! .. ASSORTm AUTO OIL FILTERS Effective protection u11der all driving conditions; I 9c spin-on type. KF 1. 7, 40; Kl41 in main sto1e. OUR REG. PRICE FOR 1.4! EA. I. DIAL 4 OZ. ANTI PERSPIRANT 'Round the clock protection with ttie time rP,IP.a'ie anti per spi1ant. Scented or unscented. OUR RES. PRICE !le CHARCOAL LIGHTER . -~~ r ~~¥~ ~I CHARCOAL LIGHTER FLUID 39~ Ouart charcoal lighter fluid. Gets your bar-b-cue 25C off to a Quick start. Stock up now! OUR REG. PRICE Jl c ar. ~1!,~be!!2~.~!!!!,~UN30ER, While;S..M-l-Xl. Not at L.B. or Torrance. OUR REG. PRIC! J FOR 1.68 FOR DISCO THROW & CATCH GAME Super fun. Play catch from JO 1~200 fPPt r,·:-1' tor p1cn1c<> and b~Jcn. \ OUR REG . PRICE l fOR 1.14 100 plashc forks and spoons, or l 00 0.1~ Pf 'l" paper plates for hot and cold food. \'OUR CHOICE 3 f0R 81 · . NO-IRON BEDSPREADS s YOU• CHOICE Twi11 or full OUR REG. PRIC! 6.99 Eleg_ant heavywei11.hl cot- ton i:'htnille spreaos to toss in the machine and never iron. Lu~~iouslr lulled in a velvety text- ~re. rich shag border: choice of color s. HOH HOUIS: DAllF AllD SAT. 10AM10 f ,M •SUH. 10101 • THlll'SAWHl1ffl0#1 HIM YDUI wfS30J COSJAMESA 3088 BRISTOL ST. I .111..SIJMlt• ·--·•IRIUlll&l'9 \ ., • " • I .. I • Friday, May 19, 1972 Dean Garrison Directs: 'Kiss Me, Kate' In from the blinding light of a set· ting Calilornia sun the players enter the cavernous darkness of Village Theater stage. The vast acting arena lies bare but for spripklings of chairs repr~enl;ing entrances and exists. On Tuesday, May 23, and for 9 even. ings to follow the UC Irvine stage will be alight, scenery will replace barren chairs, an orchestra will replace the tinkling rehearsal piano and 49 UCI students will bring Cole Porter's "Kiss Me Kate" to life. But, on a recent afternoon, bar.." renness was the byword as student.9 worked with Fine Arts School Dean Clayton Garrison. At least once each year for the past seven. the learned leader of the fine arts faculty has diretted a stud~nt production. The founding faculty member who, with architects and uni versity plan- ners, breathed life into the new campus arts complex, now directs stu· dent singers and dancers to their places on stage. Casually dressed in baggy slacks, slip.on shoes and open-neck shirt, and drama professor deposits a 11otebook ·on the dowl!.stage apron . Garrison eschews the comfort of thi;.i cushioned audience seats and directs from the stage. "I'm not the kind of director who yells rrom out there," he says quietl y, pointing to the empty seats. "Until dress rehearsal, I'm up here where I can work with the actors at close range," he said. On this particular afternoon, the first rehearsal call i n v o I v es sophomore Bill Miller and graduate student Donna Fuller, a Costa Mesa High School alwnna , now working toward a master's in drama. The pair run Uirough. their duet, ''Wunderbar." Garrison watches quietly. Reverently. At times he kneels. Sometimes he rolls up on the balls of his feet, arches his eyebrows, points a finger, waves an arm. Gestures all to communicate a feeling he'd like to see more of. None fl uster the pair. When the last tones of the 19-year old's rich baritone voice have faded, Garrison steps forward into the brighteness of the rehearsal lights and confers with the two. Moments where more is desired, and some when less is required are discussed. He positions the duo at key musical moments. Quietly suggests a sweeping gesture or a subtle one, either or both might try. Then, the nearly invisible pianist begins the song again. Garrison again steps back into the shadows to watch. This time a bright smile breaks across the craggy race matching in brilliance the bright silver streaks of the dean 's generous, but grayed mane. Fred and Lilli, leads in the Cole Porter 4-0s musical based o n Shakespeare's ''Taming of the Shrew" sway and sing, charming the director as they must the audience on opening night. Then the school·clothed couple will don Renaissance costumes painstak- ingly tailored for the UCJ production by univeNity seamstresses. Daily Pil ot Story and Photos By G eorge Lei dal Despite severe budget cuts by the legislature and governor, the "Kiss Me Kate" cast will enjoy costumes and sets of a Broadway quality. Garrision explained that support funds for drama productions have dropped from $96,00> two years ago tG a mere $5.1,000. That means to con- tinue to produce the same number or productions to train a tripled enroll· ment of drama students, UCI must make money on each production. .. Kate" must play 10 performances to full houses instead of five in order to bank enough for the next student learning experience, Garrision said, The budget crisis add an aura or professional theatrical reality to the rehearsal scene. Garrison's quiet touch in directing belies the self·imposed press ures to excel that students apply to their work. "These students really want to do well ," Garrison notes proudly. "I don't need to yell at them to get them to work ." Indeed, while Garrison ha s been working with Fuller and Miller, scores of chorus members and dancers have (See KISS PttE, KATE, Page %5) UC Irvine Fine Arts Dean Clayton Gar.ri- .son, above left, scru. tinizes rehearsal .ac· tion of leads i n "Kiss Me Kate." The production fe1· t u r e s sophomore Bill Miller, 19, of Palos Verdes, and graduate stu- dent Donna Fuller of Costa Me si. Dean Garrison comments on the pair 's duet ''Wunderbar'', above, stopping to adjust • graceful closing sweep of the arms . The students duplicate the pose in costumes that will set the Cole Porter hit in t h e Shake-- Jpearean mode. Sunday: Fine Day for • SOUTH COAST REeERTORY MIME GROUP SHOW THEIR FACES ClockwlM, from loft, H"IO P"1, Steve P1tterron, Ron Boussom, Reg Rook ind C1me""' Yount • - an Arts Festival Forecast: bright sun, warm day, coot breezes. Sunday, May 21, ls going to be quite a day if the Newport Beach City Arts Committee has its way. The committee has planned a day of arts, crafts and entertainment -all part of the 4th ann ual City Arts Festival. The fes tival will be staged from 1 to 5 p.m. in the Civic Center Gallery, 3300 Newport Blvd. Professional and amateur artists will be competing for a $300 purchase award in the festival's arts and crafts show. Entertainment, to be provided throughout the afternoon. will open with the Midshipmen, a versatile group of one girl and 17 men from Newport Harbor High School students, under the direction of Richard England. Both the Soulh Coast Repertory' Mime Group and the Chil- dren's Theater Guild of Newport Harbor will present two theatri· cal performances. The guild touring. group will olfer the children 11A Walk· With Christopher Robin." The junior and senior· groups of the Newport Harbor Ballet Company will offer the series of peasant dances, complete with costumes on the city lawn. There will also be craft demonstrations throughout the after· noon . According to Mrs. Edward Whitehouse, the fe stival ts spon- sored to encourage, stimulate and aid in the practi ce and exhibi· tion of arts. "It increases and broadens the opportunities of the citizens to enjoy and participate in cultural activities,'' she added. Members of the committee in clude Ron Yeo, Herbert Brow- nell, Donald Ferguson, Gerhard Felgemaker and Mrs. Robert Malinolf . Others are Ladislaw Reday, Mrs. Francis Smith, Mrs. Gus Chambre, Mrs. Hans Ewoldsen, Mrs. Kenneth Perry, Mrs. Wm. Stab- ler, Mrs. Newt.Jn Wayne. Ms. Sue Wilson, Mrs. Wrn. Wright, Mrs. Andy Carey and Mrs. Dobson Frances. WEEKEND Ell INSm E FEATUR ES FRIDAY, MAY 19, 197% Black actors are growing in num- bers, The popularity of Black ac- tors in television series is indica- ti ve. Actor Ra ymond St. Jacques . has for m e d a product ion company. See page 24. Guide to Fun Page 24 Intermission Page 24 Previe w Page 24 Out 'N About Page 25 Hollywood Bowl Page 2S '°"'id Cassidy Page 26 TV Log Page 27 Movie Guide Page 11· Ope ra Page 7T In the Galleries Page 28 Live Theater Page 2' Radio Spots Page i? •• • ' ". • n d Son" goes on triumphantly into next fall 's television schedules and R e d d Foxx, far left, •nd De- mond Wilson, left, go on as its stars. Gail Fi1her, above, i1 Mannix' M Cr• tary in the television ser ies of the same name. Btlow, Mod Squad's Cl1r• tnce Willi1m1 Ill. Actors Find 'Black Is Beautiful' Where to Go , Wl1at to Do Ry PHIL THOMAS -- NEW YORK (AP I -Bla ck artor Ra y- mond St. Jacqul's says h'e thinks "black pe'nple have sr en enough" of white peO. pie on the 1no l'ie screen <111d now tht'y would like to see some of their own heroes ." To meet the nred the 6-foot-J actor has rorrncd a con1pany lo· produce "fil ms now -plays later'' lhat has begun work on it s first movie, ''The Rook of Nu mbers." St. Jacques, who is the fil m's producer- tlircclor, says, "[l's a story of the 1930s. u ·.~ about the black expt!rience then. And it 's about !he 11 11111bC'rs racket." I le .~<tys the <1i n1 C>f his· fil rn i!I not on ly !u dev('lop and n1<1kc movies but '·to mak e !heni sigpifie;i 11t so they will relate lo the hlaek struggle in America. We also v.•:uit thctn tu ins1r11ct, lo en!ertain, and to lli<lkc a few dollars. "There ha.~ been a rash of black films Jate!y but rnany of them are rip-offs that laek taste and make no contribution. We n1usl ha ve films that ha ve art ist ic merit. tast e <llld significance." St. Jacques, whose Jar est film appear· anee is in "Come Bac k Charleston Blue~,'' h1ts appeared in a wide variety of mov ies. stage plays. rind 1clev is;ion producti on~ si nce "f saw a play when I was young and decided I wan ted to acl." l 'he 40-year-Old actor says he got hi s fir st break in 1955 when he applied for a par~ in an off-Broadwa_y play about the Korean Wa r "and they told me there was nothing in it for black.~. "I said. 'What are you tRlkihg about?' It's about Korea i1;n 't it? What a bout the black sold iers figh ting over there"?" So they hir ed me. At $.15 a week. I was the only black in the play.'' Afte r th.:r L he says, "f got fairly well e1;tablished , I ~orked preU.v steady, I eked out a tiving, 11 nd here I am ." St. Jacques fee!s that things "hitve bee n easing for black actors. You see more bla cks in front of the camera now but not behi nd iL When we make ou r picture we plan to ha ve an apprentic e in each key department behind the camera. They will study behind -the-cam era tech- niques. plus they will actu<1 lly do."' While he thinks things are easing some- whal for b1acks, SL Jacques ;:rdds tha t ''i t's stHI pretty hard for a black to get into acting, although not as har~ as whe111 I came up. ''If a young black asked me , J'd say •rorgrt it, get a de-"ree, gf'l a good job, and try aoting a., a hoDby.' "But. ir you are ma sochistic and te- nacious, then I'd urge you In get a good strong education in acting !echniques. To dancP, sing, read. write . The11 you will have the resources !o dra w on that are necessary to recreate life.'' Coa st Artists • ·Perennial Director K_oha Keeping .Bu sy L;ist Sa turday wa s closing night for Alex Koba -and not any , too llOOfl. Tonight's an· other opening night. Tha l's the WRY it's been this stawn for the Westminster director who barely got his production of "The Little Foxes'' oo stage at the Long Beach Community Playhou~e before he started preparing "Catc h Me rf Y()U Can" for the H u n t i ng to n Beach Playhnuse. The latter will be un veiled tnni-'hl.. a week Afler "Foxe.~" wound up its six- weekend run. F'or Koba, it'!I the rourth directing assignment in the past year -a year that began with a compelling production of "The Bii: Knife" last sprin g for tht We1tminster Com- munity The11ler and included a revival of Noel Coward's "Hay Fever" la.<11 fall , alS() at l1lng Beach. Al l were well received, an in dicatio n tha t the tall. personabl e Koba is emerging· as one of the area's top com- munity theater directors. The four show!! he hall slaliled In local theaters, however, constitute only the tip of the Koba iceberg, Underneath are some 2.\ year5 of acting and directing in bot h profe ssional and amateur theater. Hi!! career ~l11 rted on the Wes! Cnasl, at the Pa~adena Playhouse . wh ere he worked with such up and coming luminaries as Fred MacMur- Dramatists Traveling With Show A woup nf California State Ccll ege. F'ullel-ton theater ma- jnrs, backed fina ncially by a product inn loan from the col- lege th e111er department. t1re currently touring area schools and l'tervice club~ with ;i !IO minu te musical revue based on a hi9tory of the American musical theater. Known as the Music Box Pl;:ryers. the group is an 1Jutgrowth of a t.erm paper thRt Sue Semegran n f An::ihcim wrole ror a course in theater his l()ry. TOM TITUS Intermission ray and Linda Darnell . It w11s there be met hls wife •. Jean. who rrcently preceded her husband in the Huntington Beach directnr'!ii chair with •·cat on a Hot Ti n Roof'' -a production which ran. for a lime. simuJtane(luslv w i t h Alex 's "Little Foxes'." The Koba~ moved lo Con- necticut where both were in· volved in sumnlJ!r slnck, Alex directi ng and acti ng, J e:::tn Fil l- ing the bill 11s residenl leading lady. Their retu rn trip wesl, in- cluded a stop in Chicago where they worked in theater and TV commercial~. On the Orange Co;:rsf. I hP Koba.!I acted together i n "Wiiltz of the Toreadors '' :::ti Huntington beach lilnd Alex directed Jean in ''The Bi-' Knife " at Westminstrr. Prior to directing ·cat .~ Jean took th e leading rOle ()f Vinnie in "Life With Father'' al Long Beach. It '~ been an even tful vear for both Koba .!I ~who man.iged to celebratl!' their silver anni- versary bttween shows 1, and their presence in Orange County presage some eventfuJ productions in fut ure commun· 1ty th eater seasnn,c;. WH .. ;N 1'HE CU RTAIN goes up Tuesday on the LRguna Mnullnn Playhouse·~ mu sical comedy ''De11r ErnesL'" n v"111 be ont.v the thlJ"d produ ction of thP show -all !hrPe 1n Lagun;i ~e11ch . "Thi.~ .<1hnV• h:i .<i nevfr been done nut .<1id e of L::i,i:11n<1 ." says Hap Graham, mRna~ing rfire c- tor nf the pl:i.rhnu ~P. "I pro· duced it in 1!15R, :ind a~R i n in 1%4 . M.:rn.v prorlP rn nfuse it \\11th R mus1c::i\ r ailed ·Ernest in L<lve ." hu! !ha t "'"" An en· t.irel.v differrnt play pr·esented off BroadwR y.'' The mu.<1i ral \·ersion of O s cri r Wild t>'s ''The lmpo rrarlce of Being ERrnest'' i.~ bein~ prrsrntr-d this time 1·nrler 1he d1rrrtinn of f r:i.nces Rafferty Baker. It will play a "'hopping se\'en v.•eeks. rather than the usua l three. closing on July 8. T'rotter Previews Last OC Con ce rt John Sco!I Trotter will "'~'"'--..~ .-.---- prev iew the final concert of '.;. ":""·' h ••• t " seaMin to be presented by ''''i· tht O r a n -'e C o u nt y Ph i I h It rm o n le Societ y. Wednesday, Ma y :11 , when Walte r Susskinri 1o1•ill conduct the Cleveland Orchestra. The preview will be offered at Edw.ards Newport Ci nema Theater. Fashion Island, at 10:30 a.m., Thur sda y, May 25. Tro tter has been a member of the board of directors of the Oran~e County Ph ilharmon ic Sqciely for many yea r~ 11 nd hRs served freq uently 11s a preview lec turer. The () r i g i n a 1 production, which earned M·iss Semegran a $125 Creative Achieve ment award from the c o.l iege theater department. started a ~ a simple arrangement wi th [our singers and simple stag- ing for nearly 30 musical selections . Two Initial presenta tions of the shnw on campu~ la st semester wer e jamm ed with students and faculty, and the enthusiRslic recep,tion pro- vided the im petus for this year s productio n. The program he will discuss for the preview, which i.<i open to the public and frfe or charge. will consist of Mozart, ·Symphon y No. 35 in D ! Haff- ner 1: Symphonic Metomor- phosi~ on Them e s of Weber: 11:nd Ovork.it , Sym- phony No. 7 in D Minor. LECTURER John Scott Trotter The prod uctio n traces the historica l de velopment o f musical comedy from it~ roots in earl y minstrel s h o w~ through ' the sophisticated pro- ductio ns of the 1930's and 40's, Students Sell Artworli More thi:in 30 booths w\11 fill the quad of Californi a State Ccllege 11t F'ullertnn when student.!! stage iL~ annual art show May 24-211. The bian nual art show will Include ceram ic~. painti ngs. prin ts, lithographs, candles. leather goods. j e v.• e I r y , ma.cr<lme, wea1·ings .11: n d pr int.~. The booth.~ will bP ope n from 9 <1 .m. tn sunset all three days of !hi': .c;a.le. .UCI Festivcil Celebrates 10· Y ears Take Honors ~THECROPS mAiiiN.":':"FiAVoRlsFANTASTIC ! Orange Corist <1rt1sts took fop h<lnoc(<o the All Ca1'forn ia ' THE PRICE IS RIGHT! ;\IA)' 20 ZOt FEST CAR'l;f\IAL -L'C I pre~rn!.~ Z1Jtfrs l Can1i\'a! at l'l .i ·m ... \l.~1· 2'l, in c;u11p•1s park ~l u.~ir, hno!h~. fMrl anrl g--1mrs cckl:trnt" JO:h <lnn11T~sar.v pf C':1n1p11<; 1\dn1io;s1nn j.; frre \1 1\ \' l!l -~~ Hl·::\.\r:-;:-o;,\\CI·: F \JHI': ll!lli :111nu;1 I plc·:1~11r<' l';-iir ;-ind Sprl11i::11n1r ,\!··;·J,el ;11 1hr t )l1I l':1ra1n·11111r ll;1nrh in Augura. !IJ a rn lri r. I' 111 . \l;\1· '.!H-'.!1. :ind ~i-:!!l. A 1·rr·1·<·a!1nn of P\d En~lirh ro11111 r.1 . .idr-f:1ir~. Sp1'l't;1 lnrs ;11·,, 1'rH·ri11r;11;rd tn \If'?,!' rn'>lu1nr~ \rl1111s~HH1 •. ~:! :111 ndult s. $1 ( l11ldrrn. \1:\Y 1; -:!II C}l 'C lllt \\I \ -( 1r:mi.:1· ! '11:1~1 ('1•ll1'~1· ·r11r•:i11·c· An s l'nulu('· t1rin rrr~rnl '> Sh;1~.r~pP;!n's "lf:•11\I! I·. :irl:1p!rd ;ind <t1r-rc1rrl b.v ,/. H Frr1a1·1·:1 .. 11 11 :111 p 111.. 1\lu1 J ~J-:!t1. 111 l)f'(' ;i11ditnr· iun1 . 2i01 F;llf \It'\\ n11;1d. l'n:<;la ,\Jt~:!. :\rlrni!<sion j~ f l'('('. .\l\\"IS f fJLI\ ('t),\('l·:1rr~~(:u.v (';1r:n1:11 . f11Jk.<1111~cr ;111d n1~trun1r11- t:ilisl. 11ill prc·,cnl ;i l1 '1 !111·r ;11;d pcrlnrn1::rnrr, ".\ Folk · s1ngrr (nr All Sc;1<;11n~··. ~pu11<;nrrd h1 ! "ti E'<!rn~inn. at i p ni .. ~!;iv JR. in Snr1:il Sr·i1•11cp lla ll llr~1rn 100. UL'/ campus. Arl111 1ssion . $1 !"JO, \I \\' 1!-1 11HA~1A -']'11111 \111·1 p11r\1i1\!-. !)1<· l1fl' 01f ,\J:1rk 'l\\';1i11 in a '•Jiving hiogr;iph.1 ··. ~l~Pll ;i1n•d 111 ~·tdcllr•IJ;H'k \'11llrgf' ('om- n111ni!v Sr1·\ ff'f'~. at fl p 111. \l 1\ 1·1. In ~:111 {'lr·rnrn!<' lfic:h Srhrv1f (';1fC'toriun1. i!~! '\\1·111d.1 l'H'"· ~:111 f'l<'lll<'ll\r. Ad- mi.~si•1n i.~ frcr . fnr rr.•Pr\ rd ~t·;1l i11i:: call ff.1i ·!llflfl. \IA\' 1 ~·:!1 . 2:1-zK IJHA ,f.\ -l'hr1s l1Jphrr .\l:irli1\1e\ ··11nl'lur Jo'au,~lus''. ,.;l;igPd bv l 'a)1fnrtPa S!alc f '1 ill1·i.:1' fl( 1:11 ll··~111n 'l'hr:it<'r J)r pai·t- n1Pnl at ~ .111 p 1n . \li-1.\' l!l·:!t and 23-28. in Hrr1tt1I 11111 r. on campus. T1ckrt~, $1.SU st ud<'n1 ~. $2 ~l'nrr:il. • AJAY 19 PftESlll fo;.\l'l.'\L CA\r1J f)AT E-Prf'side11\1;1I 1·:indid:itr Shir- l1:.1y C:h~ithohn, .,:pt11w1rf_Hl b)1 AS UC/ Speekt'r:'f ('ntnn11l1rr, \\'ill f Pf!lk :i ! R :~O p.lll. J\IR~' HI. Ill f'rll\\'ford Jlall. lif l r;irnpU5. 'r1rkt>!.<i. $1 -<-J !i!I. ~ludrnt.~. ~2 50-$3. J2:<:'neral. at ASUC:I Ticket OfficP and 01'1f'krtro11 Outlets. l\'fA)" 20 CHORA i. CCJ~Cfo:ll'f -UC LA J\1 adr1~~l ~.n~rr:-, dit't'l'l<'d hv Don· \Vriss. in ronerrt at R p.111, i\fa,v 20. HI ~1is11ion Vicj'o High Srhool gyn1 nasi u1n, 2502fi Chri~anta Dr .. i\11~~ion Virjo. Program Is !ipnnsorNI by S11<fdlt'hack Collf''1;e Cnn1n1uni1y Stn!ict5. Ad mission J~ frr c. fnr rt""t'r\'rd sc\lting r~IJ 837-97()(). ~1 1\ •· 0 1 SYMPHONY CONCE RT -G"'ii~n '\lest Colt1>ize Sy1nphony Scbollr&bJp Concut features J ohn \Valz, cellist. a.nd Dom- • inic k Alnnr.o, pianist. at .1 p.m .. Ma y 21. in campus lheater, t.li44 Golden \\lest SI., Hunl.inp:tnn Beach. Admiss ion. $1. !\IA V 2!1-26 ll •\;\'(E Pn111 ;1111,\I --(;nldcn \Vest tnllcgP Da nce IH>pt. prrs!'nls "lleflPf'tinns" ;it 8 p.m .. Ma y 25-21i. in r r1mpus lhe<itcr. 15144 (;olden \Vest St .. Hunti ngton BeAch. Admis- sion. $1. J\IAV 2l llHA .\IA -Senrp111 Hising Thl'R!er pr~~ents "The !'en plr. 1s. r7::ruclin1:in"' spfl11.<1ored h,\' (iold rn \Vest College at Rpm 111 c::in1p1Js artnr ".<1 pl:iyhox. 15744 (:olrlcn Wes t SL, Hunl ing- !011 Hr::ich. 'l'1f'ke1 1;. $2 Rt lhe door. l\IA Y 2D CA \1,\H.ATA ~I US ICALJo..: -Six n1usicit1ns offrr extensive i11~1 nu11r11ta! nnd \'oca! rcpcloirc of medieval, Renaiis11nce :inr! !)ani<jur 111usie. lns1ru1nenlal co llertion includes record - Art Exhibition at the 57th Na· 'J t.ional Orange Show in San ~t" Bernardino th is week. . r.eorge .James or C-Osl<t ; Mesa won one of three $.100 first pri1.e 11wards. Roger Kuntz of Laguna Beach woo 11 " second place award of $HK). Sculptress Diana S. Dirkin of PR~adenR, formally of Laguna Reach. al so won a first piece • aw11rd of $:!00. Paintings and sculpt ures will be on exh ibit in the Orange Sh ow Art Gallery through ]11ay 29. ~'!"~. 1111ls. krurnrnhnrns, kor!holts. reber. viola . harpsicord Andy 's Fun and i)(lr!;itlvc organ. ·rickets av11 ilable at the door 11t $1.50. Ask any kid. "Ask Andy" Is Thr r 1·rn! is part of the UC! Ex tcnison series. "Our Re-fun. See it Saturdays in the ii;111sance \;(J:acy in Culture Rnd ArL<;,·· 7 to JO p.rn. Sunday. DAILY PILOT. \la,\ 20, room lBl, hu ma nitie~ h~aill~, ~U~~;~~-~c-ia~m~_Pi"~~·.-........... ~-----... ---·•:ll Btil'l Stal's I IOL l, Y\\1()( If) 1U PI ) Rurt Re~'nolr1s will st.Rr in "Sh.:r nlus" 11t C o I um b l a , pl;:r~·i ng a h:i rri·hitt ing privnte r.re. SOUTH SEAS TROPICAL FISH Oran,. Cav11ty's fl11t.t seltt.tla11 ef Treplcel Fltll ctlld Goldfllll e AQUA RIUMS e MAINTINANCI SIRVICI e LIVE FOODS e LIVE PLANTS 11t W. WILSON, COSTA M(S.f. lt tl l'al••itw ltd.) S•·1t'1 "" All~n11, HUNTI NO'TON 11.f.(H 1 N1~t IO ,..,w Luck •'ll .... .,u ,... GIVE AWAY BOOK SALE! ThOu1ands of New Books D!tASTIC f'LL Y REDUCED! 100'1 .ol books w•r• 2.95-5.95 S9c EACH 1 FRE E WITH , EACH 5 BOUGHT BARGAINS GALORE! HUNTER'S BOOKS Or-. C .. 11ty·1 Nkftt llt IMbteM FASHION SQUARE · SANTA ANA \/ \ l oc •I 1tr•wb1rri•1 .•.• locel sweet corn .•• C•lif. bing c he rries .•. C•lif. p11•che1 ' . 'c.tif. epricots •.. c .lif. sw•et 1eedlf!tl 4r•pes. 5 VARIETIU OF MELONS W atermf!lons , • , Honey Dews .•• C11nt•loupe •.• Cr•nshaws • , , Persi•ns - We h11 ve thf!m •Ill Plus B•l9ium Endiv•, W11te rcre\1, leek1, Sh.Hott, We ha ve them •11 •nd low pric•d to ol 'lower Shep Ceupon Grewn Ju1t fer U1 r lower Shop Coupon ... ---_ _,_ ----..--·--.. 'I 1,000 to Choo•• 'rom l -·At Their le1t Newl•& I 1.000'1 to Choo•• P:rom I 1 !1~!~!~ 1°srR!wiirtRi!s 1 cARNATloNs 1 I .~!~ I 4 ~':., !.:.!»0 I 2 doz. 99c I I Limit 2 1 Limit 4 ~ Li mit 2 D••· I With Thli Ceu,.n With Thl1 Ceupen With Thi• Coupon -..----.---------1 H•t• They Art 0 11r ramo111 Le1t ef th• Y•er I ITAUAN Orange or COACHELLA I RED . ONIONS . I Grapefruit Juice I GRAPEFRUIT I l Ll!~~M. I L,~?! ::;h I 6 ~~lt?5' I I; \ With Thi• C•upeft L With Thl1 C•u,en J With Tl\11 Ce11pen .I ------------COUPONS IXPlH MAY 14, 1 '72 . Th 11e r•steurent1 ~•m•n ,. +h..-flnest for ·their cu1tomer1, +hi t's why th1y f111t ure Newport Pred11cel P.trffr. tllaml The ntw Mf C~. Co1+1 M11•; D1t.11ey'1 s .. SM!oty, Ntwporl; hrlnldr., ......... t.y'', Ntwporl; lhtll9ht l r•ll•r, N1w- port; Hale's 0c ... frMf, Newport, incl ov1r 100 others. Hew 1bout your c1llin9 u17 "Orang• Cou11ty'1 Fa1ttst Grourino 1'rodttc1 and FJ.ower Organization" ~ Nwg~~~~CE ~:~_f~_.1:_::_, •as Y '"'' of l'toduc• "Wh"' quot11v II 1111 ICMto lloto" _Order of tht HoU11" I OllttO 'ltUIT JHI'''*, 1161 U Yf.f.el • . ' • ' • ' 'l I IT'S A SHAKEDOWN Bartenders to Match Concoctions Can · anyone really lop "Cracklin' Rosie''. the "Banana Breeze", or "TIO Pope?'' \\'hal will it taKc to equal the sensa- tional "Lena~·· These are the intriguing questions that \\'lll be given careful -and judicial - consideration during next t.1onday'.5 24th Annual Cocktail 'Competition in the I.rand Ballro6m of lhr Bevrrly Hilton Hotel. BPverJ.v Hill s. ConduC'lrd by the U. S. Barte nders' Guild. the conies! will see more than 90 of Southern Californ ia's top professional h;irtcnders put thei r creativity , skill and proficiency to severe test. The competition requires each partici· pant to <.:rcatc i:in original cocktail or mixed drink. prepare thr drink before an audience of his peers and spectators, and h.1ve his drink tasted by panels of judges. For the grand champi on barte nder. the rewards arc pride of accompllshment. impressive troRhies. and a cash award of $1.500 ln addition . !he winnin~ bart ender also r.:irns lhe privilc~e of represeoling the U.S. in the biennial Inte rnational Cocktail Compet it ion held in various countries of !he \vorld by !he Intcrn11Uonal Bartenders Association. a 24-nalion international or(ianization. Last year's wo r l d championship, awarded afte r a lengthy and sober judg- 1n r. session in Tokyo. went to a bartender from thr ~1oulin Rouge restaurant in f lorenc('. l!ri l.v. whosP winning drink coh· Out 'N About NORMAN STANLEY t ai n~d. as the ma jor an ingredienL an American product. Names "Lena." after hls wife, Alberto Chirici's championship cocktail consists of I I/, ounces of Old Grand Dad bourbon. one half ounce of Vermouth t.1artini 'Rossi. and one quarter ounce ('ach cf Vermouth Dr.y Gancia. Bitter Campari, and Liquore Galliane. with all in,l:r~ienls stirred logether wl'th cracked ice. and strained into a stemmed coc ktail glass garnished with 11 cherry. Among the U.S. entries in last year's intem&tional compelition. ''Cracklin' Rosie," created by Vi rgel Jones of the Pen and Quill in Manhattan Be11ch, pl11ce<l 21 st in the judging, while tied for ~0th place were the "Banana Breeze" by J0t: Ruiseco of the Red Onion in Torrance. and the "Tio Popo'' by J. Galsini of the Disneyland Hotel. More than 1,000 guests are expected to be on hand for the May 22 event. startin~ at 3 p.m., and continuing until about R:30, when the judging should be completed. .• Immediately following the competition, the annual awards banquet of the U. S. Bardenders' Guild will be held in lhfl Beverly Hilton 's International Ballroom. MITLA Whenever the craving for Mexican food develops it comes on pretty hard and f asl. It seems so as you simultaneously race oul to gratify the whim and try tn pick a favorable restaurant. If there i! anything Orange County l11r ks it is not good Mexican restaurants. To the contrary, their number is so larJil e selecting 2.ne place pose.5 lhe only dif- ficult y. Confronted with the cha llenii e last r..1onda.v ni ght. we quickly decided on Costa Mesa's Mitla Mex ican reslauranl -a spot ,,·here many past visits have turned up consistently line food and service. Thre 's been no changf' in these con- ditions -everything lived up to previou s experience. Evident as ever. loo, was Milla 's neighborhood casualness that strikes a note cf friendly welcome. And the simple but attractive decor nudgin_g the diner in- Gypies Captu1•ed 'rhrse gypsies \l 'rre 1·ap!urr<I on cn!or fil rn h,V Robrr1 Bonar of ll un \111.i,:to n Beach , 111 1hr rrren t [)<1gu rrreot.vpc l)ay <·onte-:1 111 Knolt's H<•rry Farm. Bnn11r's photo \\'as il\l'ardrrl second pl;i!'r 111 th t phot o 1ournal1.c;111 cate,cnr.' ~lo re th 11n :lOO photo~· raphrrs. a1n.:itcur ;in d prnfrssinna!, took ad\•an· tage of the backgrounds at Knott's. 'l(ISS ME, KATE' • • • to a state of total comfort and relaxation. The restaurant 's sizable menu doesn't lend itself to making up one's mind in a hurry. But it does enable the customer to HollY'vood Bowl Celeb1·at es 50 Years consider many promising possibilities. Hollywood Bowl's 5 o t h There are more than three dozen items Birthday season \\'ill open rFrom Page Z.11 ~ more lustre has been added. The nee!· on the a la carte menu alone and 20 dif· Tuesday, July 11 rthe d1tle nf f1lf'<I qui f'!ly into! he darkened corners footed director makes corrections ferent combination plates. the first ever "Symphon ies of lhe stage. while the number progresses. PriCes for the latter range from a low Under" the Stars" concert in Patiently thry srand a~ide fnr a run of Sl.60 lo a high-of S2.2.5. and all are 1922 1, when the Los An,eles The gathering on stage picks up !he d ·th •-d · A •-g lhrough nf "Any Tom. Dick or Harry serve Wl ucans an ri ce. i.n::vera e Philharmonic pl:iyi; !he fir st of \Viti Do ." The nunl her fe atures Sands tempo to a mu sical torrent of ex-of coffee or tea is included 1.00. 30 subscription concerts in the J-lall as Bianca, Ray She ffield as citemcnl as the spectacular "Another Some Jikf'ly pro~cts <imong the com· world-famed 0 u 1d 00 r am· (ircmlo. Jim Carr as !lort ensio and Opening. Another Show" Is subJ.""ted binalion plates are enchilada, tapatia, " 1 60 1 t 1 60 phitheater. Can1crnn ~'111son as l.ucen1io. lo the profe ssor and dean's eagle eye. two eggs, I. ; lama e. -aco, I. : h·1 d h"I II I t 70 h ·zo F'e.:itured conductor s include G<irrisnn 1·ie\vio: thr youthful sexy The nnst11ge mif~iment. musical enc 1 a a. c 1 e re eno. . ; c ori . musical spoof. rnakcs ad justments 1n projection and dramatic excitement is con huevos . $1.70; tostada. taco. Sl.70; Ifie Philharmonic 's musi c positioning anrl cal ls for the "We Open •ut a laste of the polisheli show that • two fluatas. Sl.&:l; camarones !Shrimp ) direclor. Zubin r..1ehta. as well jn Venice ... " production number. will open to Lhe public Tuesday. fritos l'l]a canasta, $2 .25. -as Hans Schmidt-lsserstedt. Suddenl y the quiet stage comes alive Ti ckets for ''Kiss Me Kate" are Representative a la carte selections in-Lawrence Fosler. John Green . and fills with the student players. available at $4.50 from th e Fine Arts elude chile verde burrito, 80 cent~; Henry ~1ancini and the newly lhe Reljli an Na t1nn;i l Rad in Orchestra and .:i ssOC'i ate ron- ductnr nr the \Vashin_gt{ln l\':i- lion:il Symphon,\', J.:imes fie Prcisl. Three ('Onductors \\'ho made highly acclain1cd Bo\\•] debuts last vcar -Lukas Foss. Jame; Lev ine. and Edn de Waarl -relurn lhis s11n1n1cr. .:ind both Ch<irlcs Du!o1t I hus· band of pianisl M a r t h a Argcrichi and Aldo Ccreato will make their Bowl debut s. The 1971 Bo\\•l season \Viii run 10 weeks. fron1 July 11 In S eplemher 16 . wit h Two qu ick runthroughs and a bit box office. 833-6617. IContinued nn. Pa ge %6) appointed chief conducl or of ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~=~=:::==::=::=::==v=1 s=1T=o=w=1A~r=AN~~~~~p ~ET~E~R~W~IC~K~E~R~S~H~A~M~~~~~~ "'-'---Y · '-.), ® For_, Leod Sl11qer Wltll ~....-A~-~ .-~·.;-'. -'.\'-THE ROAD HOME ... r. T """' Monday thru Thursday Nights MUSTANG r-::=;;:::-----:::--:-::--:::--~111. ~; m I y fl K 0 F~~·~ ·~~~;~v T~;~·· Nightly Dinner Ai7#)l r "'~;~~·:;,:.~::~,~::~·;~:.,.., And ~.f..:i~/·~9~~:·;0n Specials $3.95 (/'///(,( tJ OR a.-..:GE 33 To\\·n,. cou ntry · 541 ·33o3 • "CLUB 21 " Mon .• f rl. 4 to 1 l-'-!...1.'-"'----"'.c;ro?:::R::R-:-.,-.,,:CC:OF.c:,c--1 D•'I ~ o\-~;-F~-;Jll0<-1 S11 •• 542-8677 GARGANTUAN DRINKS DANCING NIGHTLY TAtEqlt/,eWHAtE NOW OPEN MONDAYS LAGUNA OPliN llll!UEN OAY~ 1460 S. COAST BLVD. 400 MAIN,BALBOAPEN JNSULA Ret)ular Lunch Served 11 ta 5 FLEUR DE LIS LAGUNA BEACH PLENTY OF PARKING • 673-4633 ENTERTAINMENT Tue1d"y +hru S .. tu•dey, l :JO lo I :lO BRANDIE BRANDON DUO Thursday Foshio11 Show 11:15 Open Seven D~ys LUNCH e DINNER e SUNDAY IRUMCH \ 1 o.m. 4 p.11'1. 9:JO o.m. • 4 p.m. 32802 COAST HWY . lll CrOWll V11it)' '°'"'WIYI LAGUNA NIGUEL "MUTIER" IS COOKING FOR LUNCH 1'1m1H1• tor ~•u••ll••!ttt wlrll Pol•lo Dumpt1~91 THE BERLIN ER RESTAURANT 18511 I EACH I LYD. HUNTINGTON ll!ACH TOWN AND COUNTRY CEHTEll A COMPLETE CONTINENT AL DELI SECTION O"liN l'OR LtJNCM Mo11. t11111 Sii, -ll<IO le f ;M OINNEll: 'llOM I l".M. l •c1pl MO'lld1y O.t.NCINCI TO V.f.ltlOtJS Glll:MAN IANOS •rl,illy 11111 S1111N1y OltlN SUNOAYI IAHQUIT l"AClllTlll FROM OUR WINE CELLAR Wint Ct1c:lrl1ll1 Rlf1li119 (,..,,, N1cllll~ll ,.,,,.,,.,,,, o.i. OUR MENU wi-r ScllnH·r.f ll:llilllfll IHf Sll'tf111tff "Ort C:l!ellt H1llblll litfllr '•r Lunc!K' Wt S1rv1 l(lfle Sltl S.,,.Wkll"' lu•lrlfl-'t L~Mll PARTY NIGHT STARTS AT 4:00 P.M, Special Priced Drinks ChampcHJn• Soc COMPLETE DINNER $2.50 Dancln4J With CLAY CHRISTOPHER & THE CHANGES -r "-8 to 1 p.m. WAYNE GABRIEL 111 the Lo1ftV-T11". tflr1 Serr. 9 t. 2 LES CZIMBER TRIO S1111day After1100M froll'I l it.M. 011 SUNDAY CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH 11 to 3 LUNCH e DINNER COCKTAI LS e DANCING lJ OONKS3333 w. COAST HWT. tt'°" rl NEWPORT KACH VV\.-642-4298 HOST TO DIPLOMAT, BEACHCOMBER , ~RINCE AND PIRATE, FOR OVER 38 YEARS SUNSET DINNERS "BE AN EARLY BIRD" 5 to 4:30 p.m. !bcept Holldeysl fO< A Mere $2.95 ll"lc:ludinq Choice of Four Entrees I Chicken 8e1c.h c:omber e Pork Canton•s• • B11f T ometo • M1 hi Me hi Beachcombe r With Wonton Sou p, Chine1.1 Vegetables and Fried Rice SUN., MAY 21, Open For Brunch 11 to 3 Closed to the Public For Dinner DANCING TO CARLOS ORTEGA AND HIS BEACH BUMS THURS,.FRl .·SAT.·SUN. 8 p.m. Until? 3901 E. Coast Hwy. Corona del Mar Reserv•tion1 67.5.()900 ( SAMBO'S DOES IT AGAIN COMPLETE CHICKEN DINNERS 2 FOR THE PRICE OF 1 $3.70 VALUE FOR $1.85 The Fun Place for Family Food! Yt•, w1 ..,,,n ii! Two of eur unbetl1bl1 chiclcen dintttt1 ert youfl for tht prict of Sam]os-:·:: .. -, w; •• -•••• -...... ni1h, French fr ied pol1to•1, ro ll, toned q•ten 1al ftd with yo OJr coh oice of dre11in9 . 3001 S. BRISTOL SANTA ANA IANQUIT FACILITIES 54S·447f Oller Good Met1.-Tll~r1. ••""'t•n s & 11 p,rn. Nol v1lld tor ord1r hi tfl. Yclfld 011ly .. S.mbff 1. So11to AIMI -Erplrn Moy JI COUPON r Ph i I h ,:i rnion ir suhscripl 1n11 rnncerts each Tuesda,\. Thurs- ciay :incl S:11urrlay e,·rn1n i: 0\'Cr ii cin1rn pian ii;.!~ 11·1tt jn1n rht Los /\ n i:elrs Philh11rn1on 1c ciuring t h r season th is sun1mer. Pianists And re \I/aft.~ . .Joh n Rro1,•ninii, F.:ir t \\lild, l!nr .1t"1n Cu!ierre7. .:ind /\lf rf'd RrC'ndrl All \\'ill re!urn this. sr;i~nn. Such lonjt C.<i\ahlishcd <1r11 sts as .lakob Gimpel . now a rrs1- dcnr of Los Angeles. and C7.erh pt:inlsl Rudolf Firkusn1, ni.:i ki nJ? his firsl Rn1vl ttp- prar:inre since l!)fi~1. \viii be fea tured . Two h11sb11nd·11·1fro tri:ims 1v1ll he introciuf'rti Ar.c:e n· !1n1.:in pianist \!ar!h<1 Ari:rrich ·at ;:i concC'rt to he cond ucted b.v her husband C h a r I e I Du tni!. and Misha and C I pa Oirh1cr. p);i \·1nR a J\1 07.art 2· p1ar111 cnncrr!n. Lukas Fo~s anti .James l.c1·inc, "·hn rnadr rhctr ron· ciurting drbu rs flf the Rnwl J;ist yc.:ir . 1~·1 11 return this season in dual ca pacities a~ 1•onduc!or-piiinisls, both In t\1nz.:i rt ('onrrrlo.'. THE BLACK KNIGHT Open RESTAURANT INT IMATE DINING COCK TAILS • DANCING SEAFOOD BAR ENTERTAINMENT Doily 10 A.M. to 2 A.M. Lunc:h 11 :30 to .3 NOW APPEARING JERRY LAMBUTH 330 EAST I 7TH STREET COSTA MESA 548.7791 A guide to the best in entertainment • ( ISADORE'S 333 Bayside Drive • Newport Beach *AMAZING GRACE • REUBEN 'S-NEWPORT 251 Eas• Coast Highway · Newport Beach *MICHAEL & CATHY • THE MOONRAKER 18542 MacArthur Boulevard. Santa Ana *LARRY & TERRY • REUBEN E LEE 151 East Coast Highway *ARMSTRONG BROS. • REUBEN'S -TUSTIN 1513 Tustin Aven ue· Santa Ana * BOBBIE LANE PLUS • REUBEN'S -COSTA MESA 1555 Adam s Ave .• Costa Mesa *JOHNNY SHER IDAN DUO • REUBEN 'S -FULLERTON 501 North State College ' Fu lle rt on *TWIN PIPERS • REUBEN'S-LAGUNA HILLS 24001 Ave de la Car.Iota · Laguna Hills *MICKEY & DIANE • REUBEN 'S AIRPORT 4647 MacArt hu r Boulevard · New port Beach * DOUG KENNEDY • REUBEN'S-SANTA ANA 2313 North Broadway. Santa Ana *RON BUTLER • '· • OAJLY ~ILOT • l'ltu! lt•llaH Cui.hoe ('o.,ktalb 232! E. COAST HIGHWAY 673-8267 Retervetlons Open Da ily -5 p.m. to 2 a.m. CLOSED MONDAY R~al Cantonese f Pod e1t t-lere or take hoine. ST AG CHINESE CASINO. 111 2l1t pl., Newport Be•ch OR iolo 3·9560 He lt'ort Advf•e Young ·David Cassidy, Reluctant -Pied Piper fty MARV'CAMl'B!LI, HOLLYWOOD t AP! -Somebody onc-e 11id nr David C11sidy th1t he Joolts likt a pt_r~nn wh<Jsf' -high · scho<!I guidanet counselor prtdlcted a fµturf' as a teen· ag, 1dnl. · It'll 11 Rood llnr itnd everybody in lhe 1 room lau1hll at it including Ca11lidy. Utt 1n!ervle wer, two pre1u1 agents, a girl "Nriter from Rolllng ~lone '<tho Ii follow- ing him around for severa[ days and a couple of people wno work fnr Cassldy. Cassidy rtlaled It when 11sked whether he aet out to ·bect'lmf' 11 leeny-hopprr idol. ''No. Doe11 anybOdy'.' (;;in you imagine 1M>mebndy 11ying . 'Somcd.:.y I'm ~oing to be a teen Idol '.'' I nevt!'r ever rlid."' But Cassidy ill an idol. to preteens and OUT 'N' ABOUT ... even lillle girl1 more than. la teen agers. At his '-ladison Square Garden Concen, sold out three da vs after tickets wtnt on sale, many merfibtrs of the aud1rnce were astonishingly young -6. 7. 9. 11. Parents brought the you ng fry ~cause they consider Cassidy's im1.1e wholesome I; .. ,the TV show, •·The Partridge f'ami· STARTf;D AS ·ACTOR Cassidy. who started as an a<'lo r, non- singinl'!. doing mostly TV is front a show business family . His parents Jo~velyn \Vard and Jack Cassid y., who were ch~esl' (0ri!lp lbnf and btans 1, 90 cent-: a la carte nfferings _ all spiced with 1 d ivo[~ed whhen he was 5, and his step- chill' relh1nn 11nd ,,-, 11.05 ·, be•f lo•l•d• 1 h-o n .. ~ molin:r, S irley Jon~. are in show '" gen1 e touc ne aul11 , "" ce:nt1: one b · And bean burrttn. Sl.20: chlle verde. bur-enchilada. 5S cents: one tostada. lia cents. us 1nes.~. Miss Jones plays the mother on lritn ,nd flaula , SJ.:15: rwo iamalta with '"The Parlridtle Famih"' and mernber of Beyond Mitla's fine food that alwa ys II• f 11 k c·· ·d · · d t'hlle\. bcanli.$1 .40. · am Y roe group. ass1 y s voice an A~so, one t:hile relenn. 'll·lth salad and stimulates agreeable conversation. there hers are' hf'a rd on the ri ve .. Partridge was anolher interesting sidelight lo our .,.,m1·1 " LP lh h · t tortillas. 95 <.~nts : chile Colorado bowl. r Y :i : e 01 er vo ices are no with lortillas. SI; two enchiladas. SI: h•o dinner dialogue la!!I Monday evening. those of the young actors seen in lhe TV enchil adas r11ncheras. $1.1$: beef burrito Only several nighls earlier wr had bt-en serirs. The first Partridge f'amily and toslada. Sl.25. lo lhe movie.s and seen this vear's release. "I Think I Love You," featuring Thf' priceli quoted for enchiladas are Acade·my Award .,...inning shor! stibject, Cassidy·s voice. wa s a hit and his first thosf' madt wilh cheese and onions . They "SenUnels of Silenct'." Through Truly one unlfer his own name, "Cherish,'' last ~·~o~,..~;'-;;:"':•:';,.::D:•;;l~:;;;11:·:11;;:::':"·:•~,.~..,;;,;;·:':'"::'~·~·~;;;;;:·IJ cai. be ordered with beef. however, for 20 outstanding photography and narri1linn. October. also .,..•as a hil. _ . _ _ cf'nls exlra. this film examines the ancient Toltec and On a recent best·selling cha rts, Mitla ill.so offl"'rs sorn e promising ste1tk Mayan civili1.11tlons of Mex le<1. Cassidy's '"Could It Be forever?" was t1i~hf's ;.ind house spe<.+.!Jtics. Am ong the well ·presf'rvt'd ruin.o; of No. 18. down from the prcviou~ week's THICK STEAKS THIN PRICES SHORTHORN: A 16 oz. T-Bone 3.50 LONGHORN: A 32 oz. Porterhouse 4.95 PRIME·RIB: Finest Beef Roasted 4.45 LUNCH AND DINN!'JI SERVED DAILY 'J'hc arr<iy i111·ludc.~ carne as:ida. top ci lizes sl'H.l\vn ln close detail were Monte high of 15 and the Partridge Family's .~irlnin ~teak. served with f'nchilada. Alban and its s!ate!litt city of Mil la. It i~ ''Am I Los ing You?" was No. 44 and IM•ans, j.luac·arnole. tortil las. coffee or tra, from this incredible vestige of Nor th climbing. On the LP <"hart. his fir st LP in J.1.25 : llnd chicken·il l.a ilnd shrinip, America's oldest rul!ure. of cour~e. that hill own name, '"ChP.r ish." wa s Nn. 15. r-er\cd 'l,l'il h rwo sc ranibted-eggli . toppPd the Cos ta Mesa restaurant takes its down from 12. where it had stayed for 1v ith ll mild Mexican sauce and melted nan1e. three weeks, and "The Partridge family cheese, $1.:>0. Open S<'Ven d<1ys a week for Juncb and Shopping Bag" was 29 and climbing . 11inncr was launched at uur table with dinner. with food service from 11 a.m. tn BLAND INTERVI EWS B ff A . a nirty appelize r, 11uacan1ole and frito.o; II p.m., J\1Hla al so sports a chet'ry llttle As a gene'ralizalion . lht n1 or c U Y p-pe,arS with t hf'f'Se. 95 cen ts. and two bowls of cocktail lounge where you can go on \lr'holesome the reputation of thr sing in~ · d · k. M · h d h h. 1 h ~urry Sa1nlr·~l ariC' '' 111 bring 1an1.1y atbond iga tone meat ball ! soup, 40 r1n 1ng argar1las -or w atever -star an I e younger l!i ans. l e more ' bl d her one·\\ nrnan shn11· lo the ct·nls raeh. unlil clo.~ing limt'. an are the th ings he say~ in an in· Nexl up "·a.s 11 (·ornbination pl:ite 1hat And on rriday and Sa1urday n ight.~. tervie.,..·. Dnrothy (~h andler l-'ar1llon of proved f'IPfCi1111y t;isty tcamarone!! 1la from 11 p.m. to 2 a .m .. there ·~ conti nuouit Ca ssidy doe11n 'l say anylhing startling the i\l us1c t ·{'ntC'r. Sunrl ay, Tarnpit."O 1shrimp Tampi('O slyle 1. $2.25. south-of-the-border dance rhythm!! pro-.,...hen interviewed. but he works up steam J 11 n c 4. 'l"hr !'nJ:aJ,!rmcn t The shrimp had been marinated in the \'ided by MarC(ls and the Lalin Mark., a co uple of times. f nr instance. he s11 ys, marks the s1ngrr :o;ong\rritrr's rt>slaurant "s SPt'cial Me11:ir11n sau('c. and Trio. '·Pe0ple say 10 me. ·Give our kids first major Los .1\nJ!eles ap- wcrc atcon'rpartitd--by beans, rice and Food lo go is stlll anolhr.r frature at something to fol_low . something to believe praranrc. 1'iek.l'l.s 11!ll srale lortillas. the Milla ~1exiran reslauri1nt. 547 W. 19th in .' Everybod_v want.~ to m11ke mt' the from $6·~4. St111\1t1111c I~ 8 ,;.;: ... ,~ 1'he second ord('r ronsi~lrd or a trio of St.. Costa Mesa . Pied Piper and I'm nn1. p.rn. She 1s r1rl1ng the charts (I 6'61 .. -----.;,.,;,o;iiiiOiiiiOiiiiO_iiiiO _____ ;;;,; _____ ..., Ir;;;;;;;;;,,;,,,,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.,;;;;;,.,;;;;,~ J v,:j lh t \\ o tu ls -hr r 011 n re-- COIT A M!IA. 3010:=b:,~-:::::::i~ Pho~· (71~) 54"311" /Jr Cl1inese Cuisi~e I INTIMATE ENTERTAINMENT ~~~~.i n!nd ofEl ~ .. i~'!"·rc~;;~~ngy~~ TORftANCI • 011 Amo F•ihlon s qu•i• IEnlrlric• #S) • 1213) 542_7331 //Jr" A 0,1,., 0•1L v 11 AM·'' ,.M • cLor1ro MoHo v ''With You Gently On Our Mind'' /! /lr~~:~~~~~:~~~~;~~::~~l ---1 BAMBOO Lu~~v.g~:f~•s ' BOB &. ROSIE DUO /I MEADOWLARK I TEIR.l.CE COUNTRY CLUB 1f. 1t COl\fPl.F.TF: DINNERS .fRO~l $2.95 f'lri,.111111 Corkt111il l,011r111;oa Fcaturin.s:: Tropi ca l Orinks LARK ROOM ' DINNER SPECIALS Cheic• of Seup er S1l•d B•lti P'elt le,or Jl:it • f'il•f e b t rli ' l r11d l•~•••<J• e D•11•rl WID.-Top Sirloin Sf11k THUR.-Prim• Rib PRl.-Sftefoo~ N•wbur9 SUN.-Lobster T •ii INTlll:TAINMINT -W•ditudr, '"'• s.rMt., $2.95 $3.10 $2.U $4.35 The Only Ones ·•·• ,.;,,.., ...... , IUDDY l HILEN-W•d., Thur. l Sun. l•11q11•t F1cilP 1i., "P le ~so P•eplt 16712 G-UHAM AVINUI! I At Wor-rl HUNTINGTON llACH 17141 146·1116 12111 lfJ-lfS4 Kids Like to Ask Andy --------- -·•" 0 'EH MONO.\Y, MAY 7' MEM0-'1"-L 0.\Y Im -11 "~---tj- 1 oJ:k. l'HONE •••• 645°5550 ~....:_I-153 .EAS 'r l 7TH , ... COSTA MESA \\~M~ ANCHOR INN HOUSI OF SEAFOOD NOW OPEN FOR LUNCH 11 :10 to 2:10 Tues. thn1 Frf. Ni9htly Oinn•r-Cockt•ils '4 to I I p.rn. Sunday 2 to 9:30 pm-Clos•d Mond•ys 1814 N, Coast Hwy. IEI Camino Real! SAN CLEMENTE 492-6571 PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES COC KTAILS HAVE CHANGED A LOT SINCE THE OLD DAYS Get the Pizza with Pizzaz ~n·fds VOLCANO HOUSE Hli/M.1 Q..U,y N011 .. Man.-Foodl Wffk De,I: lt:JO A.M. t• 12:)0 frl. •ff s.t.1l :JO A.M. t• 1:JO SUNDAY IRUNCH 10 A.M. t• 2 P'.M. IANQUn FACILITll!S J17 r.t.Cll'IC COAST HWY. HUNTING-TON 11.t.CH OPEN 7 OA YS 536-2555 CONTINENTAL CUIS INE e SEA FOODS CHARCOAL BROILED STEAKS How Ap,.orllMJ NORM PANTO DUO Ope11 Dally M•11. tllr• Fri. -11 ..t..M. t• 2 A.M. Ope• At 4 P'.M. •II Sar. •!Id S1111. TEMPLE GARDENS 1670 Newport llvd., Costa Mn.a 642,!293 QJIWi:s:BResta11ra11t ./ RESTAURANT DAN.CING FRANCAIS RICKSHA COCKTAIL ~~~~~'~E ' ,,1, &-Sat. I t• I Ftaturing f..xotie Tropical Drinks l unc heon & Dinner D•ity BUl'F!T LUNCH 1l:l0·1:l0 Mond1y thru Frld1y P~ARIS INN Exc lu1 ive But Come Ai You Dinner J\'i_ghlly 6 to 1 l ENTERTAINMENT IN THE LOUNGE Are 1500 ADAMS (1t H•rbor) ~ COSTA MISA J Uur Kilrhrn t..:noi·r 540·1937 540·1921 ~· Th<' 011r1.:1 in11 nf 4 . ("flEF _\IAf110 LE rHA\"r ;:~~===="'7'=§~~~~~~~-1 ~.IJ."c·".":.~ COCKTAILS e CLOSED MONDAY I 501 W. JOrh ST. I NEWPORT BEACH 675-0300 EN'I'ERTA/~'MENT 1r~~~~~~~:;-:-~-;_'..~~;;::~:-~::~=l~~~~~~~~~ Opt1i 1 Days ~~ LUIS MORENO At Th• Pi•no s., Tues. thru S•t. n 0 .... .1, LU~~~JA~~~~ER \....:~~~ COCKTAILS SEA FOOO-STEAKS~PRI ME RIB INTERNATIONAL ENT REES FROM Sl.15 JILL SAYS: "YOU ONLY HAVE TO TRY IT TO LIKE IT." Prfm• Jtlb e Lunch $2.25-Dinner $l. 95 Th• F11tulou1 HARRY & JERRY In Thi Louft91 Lunc h-Mon. thru Fri. I l a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Oinner--Mon. thru Fri. 5 fo I 0 p.m. e Sund•y 3.q p.m. Cofnpli,,..•11!1ry l•k•d ... l11k1 for •II l irthd•v• a. Ar>ftiv•••••it• FOR THE FINEST IN MEXICAN FOOD• STEAK & LOBSTER MEXl<."'N c7f(t1..tf;..11ca1i[; "f1n,.,1 \lr\1r;iro flYld tn (1ri1n ;::" Co." Cll fr b•11i lt•-~<'11d le &o Oo•" 7 O•v• WELCOMES YOU TO OUR NEW HENRY'S AEROPUERTO Tll(l-TIME TWO· WELL· DRINKS . FOR· THE ·PRICE 0 0F ·ONE Monday thru Friday, 4 to 6 p,m. HOT HAWAIIAN HORS D'OEUVRiS Far. a Relaxing Interlude , • • THE SOOTHING SOUNDS OF · HAVEN WITH HER SONGS AND GUITAlt Monday thru Friday -4 to 8 p,m. • 1400 PALISADES ROAD (Briston COST A MESA 557-7057 \ ' Celebrating 20 YEARS doing business in Orange County Monday-Thursday-May 22-25 ALL YOU CAN EAT $2.25 BUFFET w;tti locos. tostodos, tomoles. ench iladas. ch1le vtfde. cl11l1 '°loro- do, rict , btons, tortillas with bvtter and solod. , • ENTERTAINMENT-DANCING with SHANNA & the IACHELO•s WED·SAT. CARlOS-Su!Mlay· Tu.sday . 2122 PALISADES RD. !lrhtotl SANTA ANA -NIAii THI O•ANGI COUl(TY AlllPO~ 54S.S57l I NEW MAN.t.GEMENT e NEW MENU IUSINESSMEN'S LUNCHEON From $1.50 s .... ,d f •efn r I :)0 A.M. for 0 1r Spe(.lel ferty llrd l'rl9114h '•111plet• G-et1r111et Dll1....-5 t• 7 P'.M.-$2.fl HA,,Y HOUll: COCKTAIL Pll:ICIS ll:JO •"''' '"' !1111 V•lu t i11 N••porl 1 •• ,hl Cli1f E•11e~l,;-ll:~e ... ,..•nd-, - Ntw Yo•• P•pper Sl•ek -Au rei"•· Flt""b• Jl:o11 t le"t t1t .. 11d Ouco•li119. Ft ..... i.. I Fer f..,ol ci. .. +•tubri•nd l ouqu•+i1r• lfe• Twel DANCING 1:10 P.M. IO 1:30 A.M. GREAT LAS VIGAS IANDS f!IAiT WRI DAYIS FASHION SHOW Ftid•y1 12 :10 lo l:JO f'.M. NOW AmARING HERB & JOE TRIO •'.!_~",.,., 1617 WESTCLIFF DR. Callas Creates An Era By \I'll.BUI! G. ~A~'DltF.V NE\V YORK !l'PI 1 -Thr ~· J:reatest of sopranos and tenors crf'a!e !hei r own l'ras in ooera, and the '50 's anrl eRrly '60 's \\'err thr dr11nu:i11r· 11nrf romJ)('lling limfs or l\111 rla C;illas, <HI st agt• a n d somel1 n1cs ofL r.11ss Callas ~" still 11'ry l'l~\JCh a pnrt of lhe S<.:cnc, although she no longer ap- J)('ars 1n the n~r:l houses or th' "'Orl ct. Twice n 11·eck At the J u11liR rd School in ~!<1.nhattan. shp holrts tlnslf for 25 sch~! young opert1UC' horcfuls. nnd the 1.000 srats of 1he opcr11 lhrarcr !here 11rf' iuT1nni:: lhe 1nos1 sought·ilftcr In 101111, Last yrar a! Juil11ard i\1JS:-> Callas rC'Cal!rrl th;i r she had re<"ordrc1 crr1ain ari::is in thr early '60 's ll'hit·h hart not bern rr!rased. Shr a~kcd ro hPflr lhrm again. and the result is a nr1"' Angr.l rcle!l.~f' •'C;il!ils h) Request " 1Angel S-368321. S1e1>pi11g IJt>1t'tt M i ch e I e McDonald, -i\.li ss USA 1971. v,iill (.'nn cludc her reign and cro\1·n the new Miss l lS.I\ in the final mo- 111cnts of lhe pageant to be aired. via satel- lite, from Puerto Rico Saturday night. from 10 p.rn. to midnight. The \1 ;irm s111okr uf her \'Oicc i~ a rrtnindrr that no snprano sin~lllR no1v ran sin(:" \l'i!h, qui!e the s;irnc clr;im;itic inlensit y .. Joan Sul hr rl;ind rind Beverly Sills h:n:p ra kcn up the bel canto rrp!•r!ory v.hi('h ]\·liss Call;is rCl'ivcrl in !hr '50's and h;t\"C' f'l'<'illCd j1('rhaps f'qually glorious eras but r. theirs are their o"'n. CHAMPAGNE 81tUNCH BUFFET JUN . MA Y :1. 1~;~ te 1 P.M. ,~., ~·'·• 'Km101~1q• _., ; 5••4tf lrelK~ ·+ 10 1 .. 10J'"' " ">t, 11 ... u111·••11di I + ·~) ~ UlftMr•CecUllll• i\\i~sion ~:j~"i;n sToff 3lilR[ ltlSTAU~ANT J111 WE ST CO~ST HIGHW"'f NEWrORT BEACH 10 SO!T GRENADINE OF IEEF TINDEllLOIN Fo r11i•1r1 Se!lieod on bult1r w rl~ S~e llc!1, Mu1h•oo"'• i nd red wint A.MONli 20 SELECT DINNER lNTRlES ""'""''"""'""'-'""' ,,,_ RIVIERA Rt5TAURANT Continental Cui1ine C0Cktai11 Sen'ing Lunchton and Di11rrtr lilonda11 through Saturdau. Closed Sundays We lre located next to the May Co. in South Coast Plata. llJJ S. lrhtol Cott• Mnm 140.]140 VINA HAllM ER DUO lnlttleinin9 1-KIDS LO''E UNCLE LEN !"l:tlrftll ,_, CHAMPAGNE SUNDAY BRUNCH o.~~"' Coclrte!ls En!i!rl1ir1,.,.,911 11 A.M. -l P.M . DINNER IS SERVED FROM 5 P.M. Phone 833-2770 u4irporter G/nn CTiote/" 18700 MAC ARTHUR Bl VD. -IJj (OPQOtl•• 1"! .l!f'"l!0'1l NEWPO•f ;. ~Tlk 8oG!laHGViC# -lion • • ~tllJ 8or.ti.i.,,j o'i 1C.~ r•o •~•l•o., 10::".;"'', ';:".': c.:. T f --\', ~ •o \1"'' ..... -,.,.·-.--c·-~•-1 S111 D11c• fr11••111 _ l••0~~1rd rS~ t•f51·1611 _ lltOW llltU 11 0111• (~II'"" Uo'ot Ith" POS ITIVH Y LAST WEEK SHOWING NOWI I it.,,,,,..... 1,...d \l<l!Wlf• .,, S•o•t Sub1•~•1 "St• l11tlt ti SI 1 t" • ~------·-· -~ _,_--..... -'"'--.. ----- Your Guide to Movie• Liza Minelli Stars in 'Ca baret' r r1du. MIJ 1" 1"1z OAJL Y l'ILOT TV IDGHLIGHTS NBC D 10:30 -"Ecoloty: The Road Back ." Tom Brokaw hosts I hall bout look at at~mpts I! Ed I! or ' 1 !1lote: Th is movi e r;1urle is p,rrpartd by thi f ilnu committtl!! of flnrbor Cnu11cll PTA . Air.(. Jl nrry /.ftl/nr 1., rresidt'llt a11d llf rs. Bruer. Nordland /,, con1rn ittee cho1rn1411. 11 is i11t1r11derl as a rl!!ft rtnce in detenni11i11g suitable f i I m I fnr certain OQ• proups ot1d wilt oppr.ar tl'trkly. Yn ur 11il"1os nre solicited.. /.'fail t/1enl to Mo· vie Guidt'. rare of the DAILY PILOT. Btrkeley mlslrt!IS and has her !hipped Eut wilh 1 delivery of hidden marijuana . Dishonest cop capture!I part of the marijuan8 and 8 C'Ops and robbers game is on. Co medy. who cope1 with in unsu<"-Mary Que• of Se• t' to clean up lbe air. ct.Wu! marriage and tht <PGP): VAM&U. Rectirave la KCIT e 8:30 -1'Film Odyssey-Yejlmbo.'' emergtneies ol 1 n Ufl-C1tholic Mary Stuart and Toshire Mifune stars in a cynical film about derstaffed. overcrowdtd, big Glenda Jackson p n rt r 1 y • good and evil. cit~ hnspital. · Protestant Quttn Elitabt.th of r.,_,,.,.,..,,,,..,,.._,,,,..,.,._""'""''""""'""'""" .. l!!ll!ll Klute (Rl: JRne ~'onda England tn this hlitorlcal"' * ADULTS C&bart:t fPGl: Musical stt In decadent days of pre-Naii Germany. starring L i i a i\1inelh as En~lish cabarel singer in love wilh bisexual English teacher, M i c h a e I York. Carl')' TreH tmenl ( rr. ): James Coburn ~111rs In medira1 drama concerning ahortion .;1nd murdtr. Chato's Land 1R1: Charles Bronson. J11ck Pal11nr.e . Jamt.s Whilmore ~tar 1n story nf Apache tndinn pur~uHl hy pos.~ee for the murder or the 11·hite sheriff's ~·ire. Dealing fR): Har vard col- lege student long.'i for hi.! Doc-t RI: Legendary Doc Holliday, a C<lMUmptive den- tisl turntd gambler, f11lls in lovt with • frontier ·prostitute. \Vy1Ht Earp is porlrHyed II A politiral opportuni!il who !ltll.R- ed the famous gunfight for political purposes. Stars Stacy Keach ,.nd Faye Ilunaw1y, The French Cnnnectlnn jR': Suspen~e my.!ilery starring Gent' Hackman ind Fernando Rey. Brooklyn police delee· tives move in on the American rnnnert i on to French American heroin ring in a chase story of violenct. F'rilz tht Cat !X): Aoimaled cartoon of sexual t'!scap.ades of cat involved in camrus revolu· tit1n and pot. The Godfather IR): l"ilm version of Marin Puzo novel telling of life and dtath within a gangster faml!y. Politic!! and intrigue. brutality 11nd murder of the M.:ifia. Stars Marlt1n Brando and Al Pacino. Hnspllal t PG I: George Scott portrays hard-drinking doctor, Lagu11ans Kick Off Gallery Fundraising portrays aspiring 1ctren turn· drama of Ena:lish PoUtlcal and ed pro.!!lilutt. Unable to ptrlKlntl Intrigue. estsbllah real relation.Vlips she FAMILY tegards her business as a form of 1u:tlng. Don Suthtrland Tlte Bey Frl@nd 1Gl: Twlg-i~ policeman on hunt for 1 gy stars as I.he undentudy missing friend in thl,, murder who makes good ln thb film mystery . version of the stage musJc•l Mark e1r tbt Devil IR l: depicting theater &Ong a n d Story of devil work.shop and dance 11/e of the 1920'1. Co- the macabre. stars Otristopher Gable. Summer (If '4% 1 R \ · Tht Endle11 Summer (G): Nost11lglc return to early w11.r Tr1vel film of surfing •round years depictlna three t.ttnage the wo'rld 1s two California boys 1w1kening to roin1DCe ~urfera search for the perfect 11nd sex. They while away wave. their summer at an Eastern Fiddler On lite RM( er.': short resort planning con-Story of Ille in small. poor questl'I. Sensitive Hermie falls Jewish village <lf Turist in \()ve with beautiful Army Russia. Tevye, the milkman wire. Jennifer O'N eill and with five daughters talks over Gary Gri mes star. Yente the matchmaker seeks " Swedl1di Fly Glrlll (RI: Lnve hi.!! problem.!! with Gcxl. wh.ilt an<t ses-life of Swedish Yente fhf' matchm1tker 5etks 5few11rdes1e1 on international suitable mates. Stars Topal, flight.!i. , and Norma Crane. Where's Pnpp1 ? ( R ) : Fantastic Pla1dc Machine• George Segal plays a man torn (G l: Surhn~ film . between love for his molht'!r Pacific VlbraHons ( G l : and a desire to kill her. From Surfing film by John Sevet!On. ht'!r television centtred world, What's Up Doc? ( G ' : she manages his life, \ovt and Ba rbra Streisand and Ry11n career. O'Neil star in slapstick com- Z.P.G.: Olivet Reed and edy. Geraldine Chaplin in drama Walberlng Htl&llll f G I : pleadi~ase for zero papu\a-Emily Bronte"s classir talf' of lion growth. lhe meloncholy-tragic love 1f· fair of Heathcliff 1 n d MATURE TEENS Catherine. Wild moora of The Laguna Beach Art Association ha~ announced that it has kicked off a $200,000 fund drive with over SIR,000 in pledges already rl"feived. AND ADULTS Glenn also stated thsl t.his is Five Summer Stllrlt-1 ( l: Northern England • century the first major fund raising er-F I v e 'u r f i n II f 11 m 8 .ago are the setting. Stars fort the Associatlon h 8 s backgrounded with amplified Timothy Dalton . undertaken since the. IHO's. In rock mu~it!. * conjunction with the fund r1iii-Kelly 's ~oes (PG \: World The letter immtdiatel11 ing campaign 11 membership War II comedy-adventurr: with after the titlt indicatt.1 tht drive will-be he.kt and prizes Clint East.wood and --nonald-rating Qivin the pictur« bu will be: aw.11rded to volunteers Sutherland whn attempt to the Motion Picture CotU. who bring 'in the mo11t new steal gold buHion behind The Code A·nd Rating J>TO- members as well .111t tl)e enemy lines. Don Rickles co-. gram m.av bt found on on1 large.lit. amouot of money. star~. o/ tht. motion picture paQt..f. BoRrd President, J Ack (llenn. stated thal ' • t he $200,000 jitoal iii based on what it will cost to bring the present structure, built in 1929, up to reriuired mu nicipal codt> ~tand­ ards. provide 11 Memorial Gall~ry lo ho u s e t he pt>rmane nt collection lert by the founders of the Associ a- tion, and make the ne ce!!Sllry repairs 11nd provide additional ~pace to exhibit many im· portant works of art which have h11d to rem11in in storage bPcausE" of Jack of adequate facil itie~. ·• In the ensuing week s,-p;;::;;;;;;:~;:::=;::::~:::;:;::;;;;;:;;:;:=::;;:;:;;;;;;T.:;;;;;;.;:::::;- membt.rs or the AssOciation I NOW SHOWING_ WED. THIU SUN. and campaign ·volunteers will be contacting local bu•i""'"' llOIEIJI TllLITIE IT. ITS flNESf, H let1111 -•I sltfy and the community-at-large tn tf lttl it crisis Rt 111l1st t~1 W11ffr Uc-1n11• If • participate in the fund drive. c• tll .. ti tM Ctltln tf .... ,.fiticll .... . Persons interested in taking Al E•·arnnl 1+111111 ..... i.,...... t . th . nd • ....,-flt, *lie tlil frl• ....... ,.. par tn e campaign a .,.. * ._,.. tf" .,.111,11, .. -.. membership drive are urged tiltll c.ary --. lo contact the Laguna Beach Art Association at 494-65.11 for further information. 4 Artists 1'ake A wards Orange Coast artists cap- tured four of thf' Ja top awards in the 1..:1 Mirad;i fiest;i rte Arie.~ Open Art Show which continur.~ 1hrou!{h tod;i:--11l the La Mirarl;i M::ill. Laguna Bea ch, In Impressionistic category : and Lou Murphine, Laguna Beach, and Michael Apkins, Hunt- ington Beach, were cer11mic8 winners. Rn,ger Kunl7., L;igun;i Be;ich. wnn 1n !hP '· Re a I i s 11 c '' category of open painting and sculpture; Armen Casparian. The v.•ino)ng entrie8, along with 750 others. will remain on display for the duration of the shov.·. ~eUJ a..:(<dqs ,, -1-ba ,, 10 C'CO D•n~•1T1•ri&1rd e 11'11ltr e~•rg• 7 f•1'1io" hl1nd, 111wport c1nftr •44-507~ ~ N EW POAT Bt ACH -ut 11,.. e nlron<l' to It.<' fobulo u\ l ido l ~I• OR I 83 ',Q ........................... -......... -. WH AT A COMBINATION! NOW! ht RUN! LAST BIG WEEK James Coburn is ''A JAMES BOND, M.D.'' • -OfTltOIT flll£I ~1'5 •1 Wll.l.Ol,AIO!tD lllUIDll MTSTllf.• .NfW'l'Oll ()AltY HfWS • INClUDING ••• The Acodemy Winner 2o. Clnlw!·ft• -m FRENCH CONNECTION IN rHl BffEAr rffADmON Of AMlff/CAN 7Hff/LLE!f8. STARTS NIXT WEDNESDAY EXClUSIVE SHOWING CH.AlL'TON HOTOH nm1 MIMllUI "SKY JACKED" ,• PUEBLO...:. .. . · .J;1u1h Coast RPp1-rrn ry Co\IO M(''Q • 646 · 1363 or Mutuol A t1r n(1e~ •EWOa1' tEltCM • Oil MAJOR STUDIO PREVIEW FROM M.G.M. STAUIN~ CHAILITON HISTON FRIDAY NIGHT, MAY 19 8a30 P.M. "ut JAMIS COIURN lo "CAREY TREATMENT" SHOWN AT 7 l 10:15 Smog COYefs the eartn. TM oxygen ts depleted. love rs encouraged. But !he penally f0< birth is death. THE TIME IS TOMORROW AND THERE'S NO TIME LEFT. SHOWI NG MOW ' Friday Evening MAY 19 Saturday Morning MAY 20 f:OO Ill 0 0-llJ &l II) -'''°ill 1'I I Clo.,,.. ([19 l:lO 9 SUartte Stllllllf 8 TM 111 Ytlltf fJ l ltd ~ 0 (I) MN WIW Wut m llt'1 ta, m TM nl11btal'fH 7:00 II Httd• u, m I D1r111 or .lut111l1 D ill e lk. Delttlt (lJl TMity ltllRutes w~ . . . a (J) .It"' L•.t• s• fJ) Hod1"94ff1 ltdft ({) SunrlM Stt111stlf a M.,tltrry RfD m •uis •Ml Hb luddlff EE!) Tt It Al1111aMM (!) SlllJflR (St) Tll1 Tlll'N Steel" 7:30 IJ Dusty't T .... ~Oust l:lD G Ml'l'lt: (!a) ''The Tttln" Contt. Cl @?;') DtpirlJ .,.., {61'1) '6~1urt l 111t1ster, P1ul Seo· 8 C.111pu1 "-"It lield, Je1""' Mot11u. S11 Thuf1d1y, D (J) Cl) httl Run111r ':30PM llst1n1. (I) TY I Clturtct .. (J) CIS N... Q Miiiie: "Amourtd Attlcl'" <•r1) al N1111t ti tit• CtMt '4l-D1na Andrm . W1lt1r Hustoa. m Andy Crtffltll Show ®)Until l11J1 m Nt1111J' 11111 tht PTofmor m lrolt11r Im ,. l1J) Tlllt Witt (I) Movlt: •Junp rlit'lbn" (11fv) m Tm1ur1 '6l-~1th11C Todd. 8 CirMll ACFH 1:00 8 (I) lup llRllJ' EE!) Dutlt 111 P•hnts 0 m WMllJ W•d,.Ult I!) Vldr&rit .lt11• Sile• 8 ptep.,. trwl fr!Hds (52) HUlllllllJ Elliot Mlntz O CD (I) f11_., l'tt•fttOll 1:!1 D '-'itlctl r11t m A.M . ......,= "Th t1t: 1r.r 7:00 . CD CJ m Nen !mys) ·s~JollPI !romlleld, Mtrllll a hit tk Cloct I Vlcku1. "TM Cln MtaW' (hot), (j) Tnrtll tr CMMrfilMlllcn '66--Myron Httly,' Phyllli Colt .. \J) Dnprt lolO IJ Ill....., .... G Wllat'1 MJ UntP CJ !ti f! Pll'ft h11t1ttr ca 1 l"' luc.y a, .... Autry (I I Dru11 el M1111ll 0 (j) (ll ltcUM FIM II)_,, 1:00•-· .. ·-m HI.,, .r Art "R•'l'I•• S.•lon" Dam Thi JeboM fll U111 P'ltprtt 111 II C..11111111 8 Mo.It: """""'" (com) 17 -0 fll111: "TM leftl Shl,s"' Conti. W.C. Fltlds, Rochellt Hulbon, 7:SO IJ Clm11! ''Tiit Stirs of !ht Ctnhr O (J) ~ lnltdllrll Rl111" ()) C.rtoon C.mlvtl a Mol""8' 11111111"• m MO¥lt: "Tiit Hu••t Mlfllflr" a Mowlt: (C) (211r) '11111111" {mys) '40-l•f• lu1GSI. (!Tlys) '71-Robtrt Forsttr, Darrtn m Mt'l41: (CJ "htvHlfl ,,.. McG1"1n. JMt ftrrtr. M111" Oel·h) '5>-Htltftt Cir!«, Cll Tt T•ll tllll Trwtlt II> a111 Ill Sa tau ([l I Dn111 .r 11tM1t t:lO 1J Nllr lttr l 1Mh CJ Miiiian S Mtvl1: (2llr) upar\ Cl l]I m h rrltr lllHr Qe, Hllr' {d,I) '5'-Gtt&IW'\' Peek. (J)Tllu•R•: Wlndtw ti Ult SMth ll1rry Gu1rdino. G (]) Ud•11t mKB111's H1l'ttt l lO:OO G(()r.~ tM" h•• II•• m rnDn1Mt a 0imr·~·, 11a111.., llll ••nt""' ""' O (])(J)C."'"1 s"" m nt C.Une tf Oar Tl~ ''Tht 11a:30 IJ (I) Aldlle't TY FOfllltl Ord1tl M Grt1ce 1t1d Cyprus g Mtwlt: (t:) "Ctttlt hlfilrl"' @m Unt1111lll Wtrill (wt1) '51 -bl Mc:CIM. tJ) Pwt..-Wtplllf' a.... CJ Morie: "IMfllr 1111t'° (d11) 'II (U) MM!: (~) "P'll~lc. (ltllll'J" -.lllhn Ofitk," P111I Dtual11. (dftl 'll-Jamts C.pey. II 1.,.. lllPtl JIWllt 1:00. (J) O'H1r1, U.S. TrtUUlf (Rl 9 ...... : "Drtl11toat" Ct al m Sltllortl '"' .. ,. {R) o mCJl m"' '""''""'I•> uoeoe CJl ...... GI Alldf Crtttttk Sllew Cl HIP ••II WIW m..,. '"" '"" CI1 1 .. 1 blob "'bb fJl) lJI Walltlnfloli Wttt 111 Rl'tltw : ~ Jt;~~lll I~~ A~~11 ""'n11 m tlldlt urw. wrtat11111 l:JOD ltl mNIC fridtJ Moril: IC) f!Ntwr P'*f• jlhr) (IQ '1.14', St.ct lnll .. ,,., .. 11:30 IJ ()) .... 11111 h ,... {tdY) '71-Tim M1tll1JCn, Selindt D IZI CH!lltllt Montaomtry, C11ud1 Akins, Jtek A! G CJ) LlllClllel link bsrtson, HIVll!t lrtnd, Bur1w all s,erta Adloll ~nit Mtttdlth, ftllelt ftrr. m USC/UCU Track M11t o rn Cll m"' '"01d,. '""~ m ""'" ltl "(MU,.,.. l•d~ GI""' trtfl'IR a.. '57-AntllOny stHI, Sttt1ley lllktr. m9m. ~ ''Y&jtmlle~ 8:0utdttr.., 1:001J \J) CIS '""' Mm" ~l (Oil al loopt "' ... ,,., -· l""' ·11-•., Al Tlllnnes. v""* Mi111ieur, Glo111 ternoon Gr1h11T11. l)'ll lorlft£ Ht"lf Silvt, ll·OO 1J (J:l Tllll Monk .. Ray Mlll111d. • CJ 111 m Mtltr Latpt llllNI fJ (])(I) 0> R•11 Z2Z (R) Al!antl !rm1 1t San frt rdxl fJ) TY llluslctl Gltnb 9 T1tt VlrtlniM 8 John W11111 Thulrt: "Rl&ini ti t:lO I =J~ look Dtdlny" (w1s) 'JS-.IGl!n W1yn1. · O ,..., :ri ,,ei n.. Odd '"·u Ii (RJ !])-MiM1: '1h1 Vlolt11t ltr1n1t.- 1.V ~ w '""' ""' P fmys) '58 -Z1ctuiy Scott. D m "''" 0 mm All!,,, e•• l•n•at•lll !l)t..Cm d l!l) JI d , H ~ p it G1•drs Knl1ht ind th• Pl11s '" • 111 ro111 o .. ,_ 1 Stevie Wondtr 1uast. l0:008 OJ NM fJ MIWll · (C) "Mot1l1111,. (wt.II 'SO 0 CIJ Ill al"" """'' "'1• . " I -•---....,. 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D Mtrit: "Clllflfflll" <•~) 'It ()) llllMNft (C) "1'h Pll in• ttlt -Jock Mthonty, Ftltll Dmnlflll6. hlMllll••• 9 Sd-PI TtrtNn: "Clutlt1 ltl ttit m Hutl•lllll!I•" T1 Ttl 11111 Trwltl.. , m Mwlt: "hlllloll 11 ,,._. ll:OO m llltwM: "'Tltrt MM (dr•) ~1-l•lfY) '43 -kl111 Crtllford. Richtrd KlltJ. lrodtr1tt Cr1wkWd. A) 'ltbtl·Stcar [mt!l Bor1nl11t. m Movlt: "TM MIMY J••a'e .. 1oeomaoa"'"' i!t L•• • ,,... CJ Maotlt: .., .. ll1!1t tf Jtn1lll1w Q) Splftl tNl1tn11 Dr1t1'" (hnr) 'st-{du11d Fr•n.t J:JO 8 IMldtr/Otrbldlr Y1ltfl• frtntll. CJ 011 C.1911111 l:JS Ill-: ltl ""'11''" """' CI1 """' "'" "7 '"' .....,. ldr1) '54-Muprtt l.od'wood, FOi· (lf!J') '57-H\IJfl Md>trMtt. ttsl T11tktt. D s,.ru Actlt!! , .. ru. Stl rd 8 ..... : "If I th11 llflt" {dttl Sbldt1 S.b.ktl Is 'refffN. '33-RolUlld Colm1t1, Ellt11 Dr1w." Q) Slews St"7 1:11 ID ~lllpt -"Slltttfl'• lhtt. 11! Clllot, ..... UUIO Wo .. -· -°"'"""·"""' m-u.....· iS2l v .. " _ .. I f f .. . " .. ~ I t • • ..l .. • 111 tne Galleries·/ Art Museum Exhibits Don Potts' 'F irst Car' JACK GLENN GALLERY-2831 E. Coast Hwy . Corona del f\lar. Hours: II a.m. lo 6 p.m. daily . California F'esllval e1- h1b1t by Judy Chicago, through May 26. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA FIRST NATIONAL BANK -Bay- side DrivP at Jamboree Boulevard. Newport Beach. \Vater- color exhibit by Marilyn Millar, through May. NEWPORT llARBOR ART fl.1USEUM -221 I W. Balboa Blvd .. Newporl Beach. Hours; noon to 4 p.m. Tues.-Sun,. closed Mon. On exhibit in the main gallery, "Don Potts: My first Car." Scu lpture in the form of a car, includlng chassis and three bodies, through May 28. In the enlrance gallery, n~ illusionist acrylic painting by Don Lagerberg. through i\Iay 28 SADDLEBACK 1NN GALLERY -Jn the Saddleback Inn. Isl St. at Santa Ana Freeway. On exhibit. desert landscapes by John Hilton and daughter Kathi Hilton through June 8. t>xhibll . 01!:; by Linda Hudson and ~1arie Taggert , through ~Inv. · llOW!\'EY SAVISGS AND LOAN -360 E. 17th St. Costa J\lesa On exhib11. oils by &rentce Houser, Sally Badham and Dr. Fred Olds. through ~tav. F'JRST NAT IONAL BA1\'"' Of O.C. -1650 Adams St., Costa ~1esa . On rxhibit. olls by Lassie Hudson. through J\lay, CLENDA Lt: FEDERAL SAVINGS -2300 Harbor Blvd ., Costa Mesa. On exhibit y,·atercolors by Beulah Treadway, through May. ~IESA VERDE LlBRARY -296~ J\1esa Verde Or .. Costa J\lesa. On e;.ch1bit. oils by Helen Patier and Irma Parker, through ~1ay. Rescue Race CIVIC CENTER GALLEY -Newport. Beach Cit y Hall. On exhibit during regular business hours. watercolors by Jerry Nicholson and oils by Ben Gary, through f\1 ay 19. SECURITY PACfFIC BA.NK -1~6 E. 17th St.. Costa ~1esa. On exhibit, oils by Jane Hate and Helen Gowry!at. through ~la y. I I-top aboard lhc Zany Rescu e Ra cer with KJing and Kla ng, Puffnstuff and Little Jimmy and ride aJong during th e 32nd edition of lhe Ice Capades at the Lon g Beach Arena through Sund a y, ~1ay 21 . Show times include 8 p.m. Friday: 1, 5. 8 r.m. Saturday and I and 5 p.m. Sunday. Ticket s are S2.50. 3.50, 4 and 5. ;;;;::;;;::::::::;i11 . HELD OVER ... ,, THE BEST FILM ON SURFING EVER INCREDIBLE PHOTOGRAPHY ... UNBELIEVABLE WATER SHOTS BALBOA THEATRE 673-4048 I 400-WATT DYNAMIC STEREO soµND !PGJ "HOSPITAL" "DEALI NG" ..... "' CHAUJS GALLERIES -1390 S. Coast Hwy .. Laguna Beacfi. Hours; 11 a.m. lo :i p.m. daily. On exhibit. paintings by Dale Peche, throu gh June 4. LAGUNA BEACH ART GALLERY -J07 Cliff Or .. Laguna Beach. Hours: 11:30 a.m. W 4:30 p.m. daily. An exhibition of scale model scu lptures. through June 4. GOLDEN WEST GALLERY -15744 Golden West SI., Hun- tington Beach . Hours : I to 5 p_.m. Mon.·F'ri .. 7 to 9 p.m. Wed. "Sculptural Canvasses," works by students of Darrel Elbert, through May 27. AVCO SAVINGS AND LOAN -3310 Bristol St.. Costa Mesa. On exhibit, oils by Francis Ross. Lhrough May. CROCKER CITIZENS BANK -2.100 Harbor Blvd .. Newport Beach. On exhibit. oils by Gerlrude ~1attocks, through f\1ay. COSTA MESA LIBRARY -566 Center St .. Costa ~1esa. On • LIVE THEATER "MY SISTER EILEEN" Comedy opens tonight for a three-weekend run , presented Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 P·"l· by the <:;osta Mesa Civic Pla}rhouse at the west gate of the Orani::e Co u nt y Fair- grounds .• Reservation s (days) 834-5303. "CATCH ME IF YOU CAN" Comedy-mystery opens 11 ri ve-weeke nd run tonight at the Hunt ingto n Beach Playhouse, 2110 Main St .. Hun- tington Beach. Fridays and Saturday!l al 8:30 p. m. Reservations SJ6-.8861. "HAMLET" Closing performances of an 11daptat io n o r the Shakespearean tragedy will ht given at 8:30 p.m. tonight and Saturday at Orange Coast College. 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Admission free. ''PUEBLO" South Co a s t Repertory's West Coast Premiere of this factual drama continues wilh p e r formances Wednesdays ''KLUTE '' (R) through Sunda~ et 8 p.m. in the Third Step Theater. 18'l7 Newport Blvd .. Cosla Mesa. Reservations fi46-1363. "'KISS ME. KATE" UC Irvine's production or !he Cole Porter musi cal opens Tuesday for two weeks in the UC! Village The a le r . Performances T u e s d a y s through Saturdays at 8:30 p.m. Reseri'ations 833-1>616. "DEAR ERNEST" The Laguna Mou lt on adaptation of "The Importa nce of Being Earnest" on Tuesday at 8:30 p.m. Tuesdays through Saturdays until July 8, 606 La - guna Canyon Road , Laguna Beach. Reserva tions 49'f.-0743. Tickets Discounted Special previews of Hi1rnld Pinier's new play ' ' 0 l d Times", featuring F' a .v e Dunaway. will be held May 21. 23 and 24 at the Center Theater Group 's Mark T;:iper Forum at Los Angel~ Music Center. TRA/\"SA1\1 ERJ CA TITLE CO. -170 E. 17th St., Costa ~lesa. On e;.ch1b1t. oils by Peggy Russell, through r.-lay. CIVIC CENTER GALLER)' -Newport Beach City Hall. On exh ibit during regular business hours. painlinI?:s by Ben· Jamin Gary and Jerry Nicholson, through May HI. flO\\'EltS .fl..1USEUfl1 -2002 N. Ma in SL. Srinta Ana. Hours: Tucs.-SRt .. 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.: Sunday. 1-5 p.m .• Wcdncs· da}r and Thursday evenings, 7 to 9 p.m., closed Mnni;lay. On . exhihit. Chinese Art from Sung . J\1ing and Ch'i ni: Dynasties. DAILY AT NEWPORT 12,Jo -J,JO 5NOWTIMf5AT IUfNA Plllt OPENS AT 6:00 SHOWSAT7:00& 10:15, '""''Marl~~ ~rn n~~ r ·~ !I ia~i~~ Jami~ ~aan i1~~ar~ ~a~l~lla~~ i~~~rl ~~ia ll ~l~rlin~ ~ai~w J~~n Marlii ii~~ar~ ~~~Ii man~ !~al~n t--AND t---AND "WHERE'S POPPA" ~--AND "SwmlMI' of '42" Ill Tickets for the event are SJ.50 with all seals reserved Student tickets are $2.50. Cur- tain time is 8 p.m. Oµen 0.;uly 6 30 p m • St1t Sun & Holiday ~ I 30 P tn Free. Relief for headache and its tensjon. And help to sleep. ._ "' .----.... 1 I I I I I I I I I I I I Headaches se€m worse al nigh!. Because you're all alone w.1th your pain. and you can'I sleep. Tonight !here's relief for nighttime headaches wilh Excedrin P.M~. the nighttime pain reliever. It combines a mdd sleeping aid with 3 pain relievers. So 1t relieves your headache and its tension. And it genlly helps you to fall asleep. For your free trial sample, simply fil l on your name and address and mall to Excedrin P.M. Offer, P.O. Box 409, NewYork, N.Y. 10046. C1ty __________ stat~---Z1,,_ __ _ li'Tllt Of°'"' to1fl"'''!or11:•0\lfl Otttrvo!d...+ieit ta•ed. 1t1ul1ttd or prolo.1ttittld. Orlttt •plrt1Au1ust 5. l97l. 0 ll1l Bnstol·Myt"' CO. P',M.1 I I I I I I I I I I I I I ~--------~~---------~ The play, y,•hich a Is o features Verna Bloom and \V. B. Brydon will open May 25 and play through July 9. PHONE 644-0760 5 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS MARY;- QUEEN OF SCOTS, Production '"'""'Redgrave · Glrnd• Jackson INCLUDING VANESSA ltlOGRAVI BEST ACTIES5 ELIZABETH, QUEEN OF Et\G LA ND """'1 McGoohan · T;,,;.,,,,> Dal ton · ~;,.,1 Davenport '" Marg, Q11een of Scots T1rvor "~-How ard · o.,1o1 Masscy · 1 .. Holm i....;, r.,.,......4 ••41'.., ...... ;h JllH\ • l'•l ·Or1t._. ""'""'I"~ J0ff" H.U • •l.....,...i..,I H 1•1 t.~ JAl.tnTT • '"'~ ... 11.u ... 11\U 1s .. 1t .\Jll k\ll MHI \\I ·fl I l(\llOIO~·.r1~\\'T~1~· 1GP1··'"' ~:•..,w..•r.1 .. _ .. _ ....... ..... " • • •• • •• 'S? . --u•row ... -• ,,.DKU._ CALL THEATRE FOR SECOND FEATURE CINIDOME 20 •1 W.<MAPMAll·OIAJIGI NS.tlHSANtA AXA llWf Al OW MAN l S!Alt(OWOI MO-ml!MbSUTSI U.A. S. COAST ClflllMA SOUTH COAST VfllAGl OPP. S, (()AST PlAZA ON W, SUNA.owtR Nil llllSTOl. SANTA A/llA S40•0St4 UNUMITtD flt([ f'ARKll«i I 7th SMASH WEIK ••IN HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER ·• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• !o! EDWAAD$ :.: : HARBOR c~Al : • HAlflOlf I LYO. Al W!LSOll $T. o •0 o COSTA MIS~ 6t6·051l • • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 MILES SO. Of SAr~ DIEGO fWY. •••• • ••• : "••EDWARDS •'0 1: • • ~ ~ I E • • !I ••••THEATRE••• ;.! •••• 848-3102 ••••• H.t, .. BOA AT AOA,,.S.COST .. ""l!:S ... (l"·IUo~!IOR 11.Ytl.·l IOllL.l SO.Of SAN Pltl00 1•f. CONTINUOUS SHOW INGS DAILY 12:30 . 3:3 0 7:0 0 -10:00 P.M. [G.~··'"·A •• PLUS · ACADEMY AWA RD WINNER BfST SHORT SUBJf(T "SfHTINllS or Sl\f N(f" POSITIVflY INDS TUI S.M~y 13 Smog covers the earth. The ox.~ is depleted. Love is encouraged. But the penalty fQ( birth is death. THE TIME IS TOMORROW AND THERE'S NO TIME LEFT. r.: ·~ ,,..,.., r. "'• Ar,.. ....... ...,, Pv•f'I' .. WINNER OF l ACADEMY AWARDS BEST PICTURE OF THE-YEAR! BEST ACTOR · GENE HACKMAN . • • • • • •••••• ••••• •••••••••••••••••• + .., B EACH BLVD. A,T l!:L!.tS ~ • e1.r. co .. sr HWV. A a•H o•eoo ,,wv. 847-9808 "1-!UNTINGTON 8E .. C H THE FRENCH CONNECTION IN TH[ GRfA7 TRA DITION OF AMERICAN THRll.(£RS. 2o•Wk.yl1r CCX.OR BY IX l'J~~· 2nd TOP ATTRACTION BARSARh HERSHEY IN PUPPET ONA CHAIN IPGl c .... .. " ... .. ., .. ~ "' - f l*m ·j~ WHAT CHATO'S LANO DOESN'T Kill. CHA TO WILL ' BEST ACTOR NOMINEE GlORG!C. MISSION VIEJO seen •·•••••••••••••••••••••• llll~ZW' .. ......... i 1 ON~_..N : : PG C :."';';',., "t~lll".Q.OI'" • • ........................... r . . ' '• • Al " ' . • ,rlday, M•Y 1~. tq?2 DAILY 'ILOT D Loose Comics Keep Drivers Loose ~o 'CA8'4a !or -·-..,~>. "''' "'* ***". ?-. WINNER OF By GUY STOMEL Of ttie D•llr flf.t '''" • Ht tumbles out of bed at 5 a.m., and drlve1 acro.1s town ln the preda~n 1b.adow1 of Loll Angel... flt ambles up th< white granite steps of Utt KFl building and down a hall wtucl\ leads to a clu ttered studio cubicle. Once ins ide. Al Lohman sits In the des k cha ir next tn his RADIO SPOTS partner . Roger Barkley. They ere a learn. A radio comedy team. they have. been in the funny business for nine years. The show began "in 191i.1. out of sheer desperation. 8Rrkley v.•as program director at }(LA C, a Los Angeles radio station "'here Lo h m a n performed as a disc jockey. \Vhen the sta1ion v.•as sold. the lwo dicovered they did not fit inkl the ney,· owner·l'I plans. which included ll twe>-man mornin~ show. Bui before picking their baf?s. they hasti- ly combined their talent! on an audition tape. KL.AC bought ii. ''The Lohman and Barkley Show" was on the air. Today. production is nearly effortless for the pair. Like a Student Wins $250 Prize Oran~e Coast Colle&e stu- dent Gabriel Adkin! h a s recei\·td a s2;;o prizP in the Bank nf Amer1ra 1972 Com· muTI 1ty College A"'"ard:i;. good babit, lhe. allow pro- fftSIN in a l1nOOth pattern. Early morning commuttra: att!i treated to dally dolel ol what aound!I like or&anlz.ed eonfu•ion. But • vlait to the KFI 1tudk), to tee tht team in person. reveals th1t the con- fusion h1 re.111. and the broad- casler1 know no more than the li1teners. At precisely f a.m. Barkley takes a cue from the a:irl on !he othtt side of a 1lau panel. He leans forward to an array flf switches, flii)s one and simultaneously pulls I h e microphone tow.ard his lean fac::t. "Good mo r n l n 1 everybody ." l..ohman's head bobs sH11htly as he be1ins his Tonto routint in s baritone voice. ''Me and Lone Ranger get no laughs." ''So what," says Barkley. "So me try to ch1n1e fonn11t." ·'Oh yeah7" "Yes. me tell joke! about mother·in-law in M i 1 rn i Beech, and Lone drop hls panls". ·'Knock it off. Tonto." There are no scrlpt11 to read or schedules to follow. Barkley believes the offhand style is "You •lMI rud Ulis ant lrom !boat San Bornarc!IM 1Uda7" "I don't care ... Tbty wort toaether u a team. While on lhe air, they art hiJhly senalUve to each other. ntelr thou&ht.s art almort aynehroniied. "Wt get along very weD ," 58.YI Barldey. who u1ua1ly pl1y1 the 11tr1lght man in their MOVIE RAnNm1 - FDR fWIEN1B AND WUNOPEDPLE ,,. ...... ft/ .. ,..., ....... ,...........,.,,,..........,._ ..... .......,,., ...... ,,, ........ -···--···-- ® • en uaon 11 M111nu "'" 1.-rt..,,,.,, ·--•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• comody al<ill. ..We needle uch olhlr sometimes. but we nevtr &tt too 1er1ous," be add.I. "Actually, I OWi I amt deal to Al." "P'lftnn dollarl, 11 Lohm1n intujects. ---Ctlf/DUMf ?D ... ' 'f 1· T' .J , --CtlffDDMf l l ... , ~ :r.:. r~~•~ - - -1. SIAD/UM I .. _., .... •-=::----- ----!· SfADIUM l .. .. __. ~·11 ... -.----,, SfADIUM 3 .. -· •s: ., -~ Vtt1•111 .... ,...,.. ......... J.ai- MMAllY, OUllN 01' SCOTS~ "''WUTHllllMO MllOHn" axct..,,,1 Or111f41 C-ty .... "'" '"' ,,. ... ,,...., M•"'IMl9111 Nr I ACUlll'l'I' AWllW$1 "l'IDDLlll OM THI 11001'" AcHef!ly Aw•rll W ........ JtM P'I .... "ICLUTt:" /It) 11» "IUMMI• O" '4t"' {II) "CHATO'I LA.ND" & "DOC .. "MAll K 0, THE DIVIL" "LI T'I ICA•I JISS1CA TO DIATH" -New York Dilly Ntw9 •1e.t.1MITllA ICINTIUATINO llUllCALI" -#IMMt't Dio- ('hu(.ltleMI fi"""J "'l.lli linNMILU-TH! Nb -lltOW lllZJ" _,_...,.._ ""LIZA MINNl1.U IN "CAIAllllT'-A IT.ut JI IO"Nr' 4t--..t .. _.... "UL\ MINN!l.LI DIVIS A MOYll ,_,.,0,.MANCI 10 IUUTIAJL THAT I CAN THINK Of NOTHINQ TO 00 IUT OM THAHklr" N""' YM TllJI• . .. ___ .. SOUTH COAST PLAZA I Costa Mtsa • 54&2711 WfflUllY•• •:te, I'll, lt:U l>.M. Sii. & S1111. 11.JO. J;4!. ,, .. , l:U, 11:11 ......... *THREE* 1 AWARDS ACADEMY "'Fiddler on the ()pat! '""' *'t 1100 Hoori -Iii t.oe ".M. l!t1tn•d Slits Glw !Mtilobl• 11 Mutull, l.W- iy. A~ils Sid Wollidi's ,,,.._ sic City. onthesaeen Fe~ SPKLll Aff1111t.,..lnf9 F~r C.rt111H of 15 or Ho-C1ll "2·J"f a ..... rtv S11r1y. MATINID WM •• Set.· 1•11· e5sential to the success of the ~a • -is.,.._ N } E Li L d !how. ··w. just don·1 worry -----. ear y veryone stens to an ers about being funny all the !::~~~~~;;:~~~-~~~~~~~:=:!'.__.:~~~:::::~~~::::::::~~~~::::~~~~~~~~~~:'._~~~~.:._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ---;, SIAD/UM 4 . .. _._ ... .-;--...... "SWIDllM 'LY GlllLlg . .. ,.SWllT IODY 01' OllOllAM'' time ." MYll Barkley. lw The format for !he Mow resembles ;i patchwork quilt. News, traffic reports, hit tunes. telephone interviews, . listeners' letters and comedy skits are all loosely arranged. U:ihman grabs a ta p e cartridge off the wall . and snaps 11 recorded commercial into the broadcast system. Barkley flips off the studio sound switcll. lMM back in his chair and "inhales deepl y nn a cigarette. He casually shuffles through a stack of letters. then turnR to Lohman. * * * - • The OCC SOphomnrP. of 433 Bnl~ro W;i v. Newport Beach l ~~~~~~;:;~;:~~jJ rece i\'f'rl rOurih plarr in !he l l technical·\'nratinnat rat rj!Or~·. 'Sta" .... CIHlrles lnlJtMit .lock P'•lnc• ALSO PLAYING wood)ralld "bananas" · C•11th111•11S S1111d•y Show 2:00 P'.M. "BREATHTAKING!" ~. "BRILL;;.: l . -Tho•wY- TP.l!A fS EVERY WAVE Lll:E A !DUL BROTHERM -~Y80Y EJhe ti arnas c Pl.3SliC Machine I Fly Eirls who know what to do for or to a man. .. ,NfYl.llfSM ... 1 "GODFATHER" (I) LAST .. G WEI I k bro 5r••i1o~d1R""'" o ·ir.i..i ''WMAT'SUP',DOC"f•I .f. "'IOW TO <OMMIT MA.lllA•t•fH') "'11«~., ... ,1,,.,, ... CH ... l!li& 81! . 50 JM:I( •Al.,l,.C!/l!ICHARtl l.t.li!HAtT "CMATO'S LAND" f P'G) PlUS/lH ....... ,. c~u~ "CAP'TAIN AP'AClll" PG I I ·KEZY's GRAB BAG THAT 1$ ••• IT HAPPENS ALL DAY LONG ' * * * * •' I IRAND NEW 2 f R. COUPE #' YL2f·l21•J711J7 IROUcrHAM 2 DOOR HARDTOP lllJiND '72 'NEW-YORKER N~ . ••• OFF MANUFACTURE STICKER PRICE ••• IQUIPPID WITHt AIR CONDITIONING, POWER STEERING, POWER DISC lltAKIS, POWll WINDOWS, POWER SEATS, POWER DOOR LOCKS, AM-FM STEREO RADIO, TINTED GLASS, VINYL ROOF, WHITE WALL TlllS. ne. #CHD-nC..111727 . . $' ATLAS SUVIC! DEPARTMENT WELCOMES AND HONOIS ALL CHRYSLER CORPORATION Y!H~ cLES RE(j!UIR INcr SERVICE Al!D WARRANTY WORK. arcrARDLHS OF WHERE CAR WAS PURCHAstD. WE HONOR MASTER cHARcrE. IANKAMIRICARD , CA~I ILANCHE, AMERICAN IXPRISS AND DINERS CLUI •• • BRAND NEW '72 SATELLITE 2 DR. COUPE GIANT USED CLEAN-UP '69 DODGE crT340 DART 2 DOOR H.T. Automatic, Rad io, Heater, Power Steer- ing, Vin yl Top. IZRGl7~J 51495 I 68 CHRYSLER V8, a utomatic, power 1teering, r1dio, healer, air cond, fVVU~55l 5995 • '70 DODGE • POL.ARA 4 DR. H.T. VS, •utom•fic, r•dio, heater, power steerin9 & br•kes, i1 ir cond., vinyl top. l6l5AKVI 51995 I 69 PLYMOUTH Sl'OU SA TEUITI 2 dr. VI, eutomatic, radio, heater, power steering, wsw, air conditionin g, ,;nyl roof. I YDM82 JI. 51195' .. • I I 1 I 68 PLYMOUTH 4 DOOR SEDAN VI, •utom1tic, factory air conditioning, power steering, r•dio1 heater, white well tires. IWFH812). 5795 I 67 CHRYSLER 4 DOOR SEDAN VI, autivnatic, power steering & brakes, white side walls, air conditioning. IVZS818 1 5 795 '68 DODGE err 2 DOOR HARDTOP Automatic, rad io, heater, power steer• in9 , vinyl top. I 3'1 0C KK I 51095 '69 CHEVY CAPRICE 4 DOOR HARDTOP VS, •utomatic, radio, heater, power steerin g, power brakes, factory •ir. .ITHVl75 1 51695 ALL ·PRICIS PLUS TAX AND LICENSE AiJ, PllCIS VALID UNTft. SOLD • '71 PLYMOUTH DUSTER Autom1tic, r1dio, heater, white will faes. 1921 CPFI 51695 '68 ·0PEL WAcrON 4 speed, radio, he•fer. IVWU178J. 5795 .. _ .... ,.,., .......... .......... - • • • I I 1972 EL DORADO 18' MINI HOME • Fully self contained •Sleeps 4 •Toilet •Shower • Range & Oven •Etc. 1 TON CHASSIS CAMPER SPECIAL • V-8 engine • Auto. trans • Power brakes • Power steerin,g • 12 Ply roted tires • E30GHN69774 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY $ FULL . PRICE ~ -----'-~-. . • I COMPLETE CAMPER PACKAGE ::~ND '72 FORD F250 3/4 Ton Pickup BRAND NEW ·IMMEDIATE DELIVERY OPT. RATIO .REAR AXLE, 800x16.5 8 PLY H.D. TIRES, HEATER, DEFROSTER, WEST COAST MIRRORS f -2 58RN83584 WITHA '72 ELDORADO CAMPER. 8' DELUXE CAB OVER (#1 18787) FULL PRICE Flid<I. May 19, 1972 DAILY PILOT 31 t BRAND NEW 1972 NEWPORTER VAN CONVE RSIO V-8, AUTO.~RY. AIR COND .. bOOO GVN 8 pr. I Ires, pow- er brks. ef(. }"~ (01nper includes lull conversion. sleeps 4, icebox, sink, ~love, roilet, room w/porto polli, co1 . peling, paneling, spacious cobinels, etc. f24GHM8S878 $ • FULL PRICE BRAND NEW 1972 FORD f 100 PICKUP BRAND NEW COURIER ~~~K·~~ PERRIS VALLEY SHELL CAMPER BRAND NEW '72 RANCHE RO 240 cu inch engine, 3-speed, healer & defroster ORDER YOURS TODAY ,,- $ BRAND NEW 1972 FORD BRONCO . ve. 4 WHEEL DRIVE 2 Skid Plates, $ Swing Away Spare Tire Carrier, Exira Cooling ·Radiator, Aux. fuel Tank. U15GLP12461. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY. '6SMUSTANG 2+2 Y·S, ra<fio. hfot1r, Rallye l'citk no. KYZ74S '67TOYOTA COIONA All10. tnm. rod"io. htater. Lictnst No. 134BQS '67 GALAXIE 500 . 2 Oo•r thr4t., V-8, auto. trons~ power sltering, racfio, hlotm', tic111m1 No. IS4COU. '69TOYOTA (&OWlllDAI Auto. troflS... ra(IO. hto!tr. LiteMt No. ZXV777 '70 MAVERICK :: 6 cyt i:..ito. tram~ delu.111 t•ttrior ll'im. Lictnst No.ZSG669 '71 CAPRI DILUll 2 DOOi COUPI bllo. htotw .... qi, firlf\ ...... licwt .... 11sac I I with a PICKUP ftOO 1/2 TON locfio. htottr, long bed. licrnse No. 39909( '71 ECONO VAN 1200 s.;.r v ... v.a. Olllo. lram.... oir conditioning. rodio, heater, ~ •HO!+ 11lros. No. E24GHIC64870 · Fully Insulated, D1 luxt lnt1rlor. 5299 $5995 DOWN PER MO. $2S42.40 11 lolol cash prite inthldiflv la• & !>. ttnM. D1ferrtd pcrymtnl prit1 $3176.60 lncli<dl"9 la• & littns1 I. al! carry;,.., chartt1 lot 48 monltit tn 11p11rovd of UW.1 ANN.JAi. ,UCENTAG£ RAU 12.78. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY '64FORD Wgn CLVI WAGO• Otlu•I Club Wagon. 6 tyl. OUIO. lrotis .. J·ltal modtl · I;. lomily sp«iol. tit.r1s1 No. KJW692 '7Q RANCH Wgn. JOID V~. auto. ll'ans. factory oil" conditioning, power S1•9gi. lic1Mt Ho. ZEV7511 ..._._ 250 CID. AUTO. TRANS . $ FULLY FACTORY EQUIPPED (2A47L242053) IMMEDIATE DELIVERY :J II 1111111111111111111111111111111 111 111111111111111111111111111111.l.!:i = IEASEll A NEW 1972 = = FOROITDat"71PllCES ~A·ran 5 = '117.65 PER MONTit ...,.,. '"'!" = -' -= '72 PINTO WAGON WEEKEND RENTAi SPECIAi = = $74.74 PER MONTH RENT A 1972 FORD PINTO = -24 MONTH Of'lN fNO lEA\f ----ASK FOR -- $788 ' '71 PINTO ;t 20001 ' I '69 MERC. """""" v.a. OUIO. lrOll'" kxlort 011' Cotldil>Ono~. pa- '"" .... powlf br"olt1' AM/JM Sttf~ radio, hf.alt!', IOlldou lop, Vll'IWI lflltfior. loc.tnM Ho. YWH-648 '70 FORD::,sao KlltMAt V I, 1111to fr on', i..1 ••« 11M1.r. t-tw, •h11t•alt\, t/1'1111, w/10•••1. l11nd11" top 901M8l .'71 GALAXIE 500 H1rllt1, Y·ll, ou10. Irons. po~• 1ttt11"'l, nldio, healer, wtM.. kW'oll 11111, Londou lop, no 80~ (Ar '71 MUSTANG:: MD Tr v.e. oulo ,,..,,, •••o<, '"' 1ot1e11hlltl.nq. llO•" 1tffrll'l!I, rodoo. hfol~. ,.h••t•oll 1 .. 11 I ~"'"' Ho 070Cl.1' '70CHATEAU WGM fOID IJJO 12 pon.enger. Y·8, auto ''°"'~ 011" tond•hQn""J lor9eturnol,~O ll!tn~No 708llY • • ' - " iJJ OAllY PILOT -' frld.111, M17 19, 1972_ DICK TRAC\' TUMIUWEIDS Mun AND JEFF FIGMENTS ' I Tllll!K ' '\la) BS! IE~ 5ltP BlWN' IW> ... HE'S .l!5T AeoUI' READ'( 70 EXPlC»E ! WMAT I., \IOUR ATTllUO! OH MARI.JUANA 'SC.MOO\. PAAV&R .... 0 TMI OR.a..~T1' 1N' By Chester Gould I TMlNK 1 ~ WMAT VOUR &AO NEWS IS. I've. 8E!frol EXPECTING /T, Jy Tom K. Ryan By Al Smith OH, HU BBY. D-'RLING, THERE'S A MAN HERE WH~ TO ME! By Dale Hale GASOLINE ALLEY Thi~ will make llOU a nice · office, laif'6! I Jt even na~a windOW.1 SALLY BANANAS GORDO MOON MULLINS LATE, I.ATE 1"f'<-EVIS/ON IS ,A LOT LOOS!'R 1"HAl-J IT USEC> To BE : • Ain't hardkj room fer m' table an' ~lnle chtlir! ~lllA AAD "Ill!' · MM/X':> OF "'P&<Jl1Jli ~~M~t ~~fli: 60RNo>JA 'llrJ<flA5S M41i ///JM5Ul 0/41~/NSf 5-" ly Dick Moores By . Charin lonottf T~ ~"""1 fl'll>li&t & tPui . .oormG ~ l1'T\J2 ~- By Gus Arriola ..:f:ER."' ..:::_/QH/'4 so.U ' 1..:-=.:::::~:.:::::..-------------.::•·.::"J il\LE NANCY HI, SLUGGO PLEASE REFER TO ME AS THE MASKED RID~R I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• bz •· "-row .. I ACROSS I Elgtlt: Gtnn111 'Socr1t 11nit1111 10 Fl•tl pt!Ct .. 14 Word ol tndfwrntnl 15 C11111111 l' Sta;t dlrtcllon 17 N1polto11'1 Jltct of 1rl!t 1$ V1ltr11t l' Ac11111 . 111w11 - 20 Kind of pltcll 22 Qu1Uly th1t ldcb piquancy 2• Anlt111I tlmb 23 Lan91111gt t mpfll)'td 27 Fr1t1 lrom r11t11 lnl 2Q Slope 3Z H1blt111I u1rr or 1lcohol ll-Roy: Scotti Ill lrttbool« JC Sl119 IW!rlly Jll Obl1011lon1 40 In 1 capablt m•nnll' 42 Appar1tu1 lot loc11lno aublrlll'~ Ollltcll I IC R01111n t'lllptfOt 4S Culdt a vtlllclt 47 Certain l•P d091: l11lar1111\ ,, U.prq 50 01 lnll!'lor ch•acttr 52 Wtnl 54 Dtclclon trtH SI Atehlltc!Ural VIUlll s' ,.ronoLl'I •O lteOlllH spill IPlft 62 T 11!1 on 1g1!n •S Al'llllllOl'ly: l'rtfl• •1 Docltln• •• 01111 txprtsl· 1n, 1iwprl't 70 H1 ll: l'nlr• 71 Throw wit!! rflort 7Z Splk1n1rd 7) Son of Aphrodllt 74 fl'ul • llordl!' '" 7S Shallow r1crpt1elt DOWN l Cltru1 ctrrn•• z 01011111111 l Sultab!t to llYt In c S••Pt4 5 F11cln1Ung ptoplt 'P'Mt of Nt•· f'3.ndfnl: Allbr. 7 Touch I Fltlhy plan! yltldln; I 1Ufl llbtJ , .. Yrtltrdl)''t ,.unit Sol•td: ' Orrkt wortrrs: lnlom11I 10 ·-ctnl ll Enlorctd'......._ rtmoval-lnm ont'I COl.ltlr)' 12 lllldt I danMlcrt U Milt anlm1l1 21-Guffin: No!1cl loc'ry Z3 W1tl bthlYrd 211 !lusybody 21 British machln~ z• M1rdl - lO 8oy'I nari.1 : Abbr. , Jl HarrnonlJtd JS Nudt '"'"" "'"'" c1rbotlyor111: ,_., l8 Woody plant )9 [KChlfliltd lor monty 41 Cry out loudlr CJ Told about 411 UUll' of loud rum,bllng '"""' '! ldrntleal 5 lllovr with twisting "''""' S3 Farl lncllgn111t!y IV\ll'ltvtd 54 Group hunl!ng 1 ctllnlnal 55 Fwlhtr frot11 tilt mldcllt 56 In ll1t flrJ! plac:t: Lalin 'l Orlvr too f11t 6 Htndranct 6J Whit NIOllll uli:td lo bt c•lltd U Ciwrt!lt 66 Twiet: Music •• Motlier of C1ln SIH/11 by Emie BushmlDer ANIMAL CRACKERS SAY, "THERE'S ATINY MOTH HOLE IN YOUR MASK THAT'S NOT A MOTH HOLE' PEANUTS 10 'o I .. • JUDGE PARKER HOW. JUST TURN YOUR HEAO A LITTLE MOJlE TO THE RIGHT, MISS LAWRENCE! MISS PEACH PERKINS 1 LIST!I<' L IT'S ONE OF ™OSE VA~S WITH NC11'HIN& TO Do. MIND II' l-BORROW A lOUPl.E OF YOU~ TOYS? /Ir--~ ' YOU HAVE A FASC1NATlHG BONE STRVCTU9E TO YOUR FACE! HAVE YOU EVER SEEN ANY OLP GARBO MOVIES? OKllY, 1.RA, SUT DON'T OVERDO If ... • ~flil:r IS 11" '1ttl KIDS WAMT ?'A SOC1ETq \lll1il 00 FWJ.ES., l)o ~ .. ~~cAAOG~ 00. IOe- ·: Iv Charles M. Schulz I .NEYER i,NDERSTAND Al«l'HING. ,._ .. By Harold Le Douic AS SOON AS I SET UP l ••. I D01'!1i MY STUOIO, WILL YOU KNOW WHAT LET ME TAKE SOME , TO SAY ••• STILLS OF YOU? IT WILL COST YOU NOTHING! TfLL THE Tft.UfH, L!STE/1:-DID·VOU l!VEI< IN A M/L~ION VEl\~S THIN!< :i: cou"o CAft.fZY SUCH i\ ~Oi\0 7 ly Mel ly. John ~lies By R09er lolle1 NE'lfR MIMDl '1\le. HEA~t> ltlOCMllll n " • ! ~ f ' 5.19-''Regar'd"'ln.:1;.;lh~.s:.::=.'-m-.-.. -•• -..,-..b~tlng1 of two-Haded blrdt • our last fleld trip, the refreshments chairman reports die will dtflnltely .aot order any JDON box IUJcfft C01.tliillll1 brandied peaches." I j J • .. ,. • • .. • • • : ' J < < ' ' ' J < < • • I J ~ • • ' J < c • • • ' c c .-.• Frldlt, Ml)' 19, 1972 DAILY PILOT 3131 LEGAL NOTlCB LBGAL NonCI! LEGAL NOTIC'S LEGAL NOT1CB LEGAL NOT1CE LEGAL NOTICE NOTICI II HEllllY GIVlN *"*' " fttlllCi.cT ...... ,..,llKTr -.au•t fiN' c.i.o.-eiH ,.,im.ry l'McflM .. h hlMnl l't.c.. HtMiw ·~ l•l "'6111W ,.., Wilk!,_ 11~ INJ1 ..... 'IH'lt .. lt7t ""' ... -111 .. '"" ~ La119 "-,,,_ "'-'*''" 1·• rci.o. •.m.. •""' .....,..., A. J, HMiltr, .., '-'-· L M. WllklflMll. ,.. ,..rfY. ' '*Ir "' • oO "a.ct am, .... lfllf •rtne ~ J. c. L.tcY. •• ,_ , • ..,, •·-"°" tto.w:a_.,.,._....,1.-.-.. ..,. ""' C1w\;. 1. •. ~o.-. o.n. ,,.,., If· G v ., • 11 ._ ... t~l"9 "'eclflttl llfltJI Ille 1M '*'-Cllrk. J It OM, It-. • ~ " .._IMff1r Clttltlltlld •1111 "'*f 1IM NICIMCT' INll-1 C'ltt1l. J M. 0. "''"''• o.ii.. ,....,.,. heAl~n1 • ,.11.CIN<'Tt .._,, offlQl'I ,, ..... 1~1::0 tt!i~ =~:: ~~~·-:i..:•l•M Si..t Sdlod, 1711 f'Olllne ,.~. Ch.lllf!Out• '· l•l!J ""°"''"' vflltlnt "-c:tllm, ancl !hwy ''"" lloW ealf ll!Qo9dw If fl O.rt DMI. l'kwy ollK'flM and rntll' rttwn ltl.,.toof 111 1,._ J~ ~ S. 'c ' •ii • .,. I-tot. H. ktion, Otm. m.nn.t PF0¥1d" bf l•w Tiit to!INI I Clertt,' J K.. I ':.tt c.n JlltlH, J, K. F .. lhW, OMI, I IJJt Of .,Kll'l('lt. POlltnt fll C-. Ill n: C .... k. F I .:~' Olm (lltk, M l . M•rt ""'1Wf, 11111 •lectlOll ottlctr1 f1I S:. ,:,.. P•ICltti:T'»-fO·I ' • Cltrt:. M. e: l111ou, It .. SUPtNIMrl•l Otal•ltl POtllflCI l'IKt l'tlffMll UW.ry kllool !.~.~~~Mc,T,' ...... , ' • --POUMTAIJll ll'Al&.l't' ..... ,, F ' ' "",,.... fi.. MlihouM "' ,,,..,,. Av• p UI Pl ·-lfflf-ttfl Lll'lt St lllllt OT M0..__. ,"«< Oltl'1lan (1111/'(fl,. tot!) lllllH<IOr. T I Httrltofl, llU. IM--.. ,. W M\1 .... ""I No Pt•lr • ....,, .. v1 Judot 0 M Klflt. 0..,, ..-..~. "' '"''"'' ln"'9C'lor, M L CourtlffS .... Cltrl. 'A M Dttttl. D.n'I Jlldfl, M "· C1wt;.,, • ._ Julltt, E. L oovi. o~ ' ' c1tr11' M e' 0 kMor ll • Cl.nt, If o MllC'lltll •••· Cl11k, I( E l ra$0, lttit • Pltl(IMCT n~I · "'· Cl•k, J l.. kUh!r, Otrri. 0 1rt(, II M EpP1 .... l'ollJno l'tKt M ltuldt 21lil ... ICIJllCT1 --~I P•ICtMCT ,, .. 1 .. 1' lffiloll L ,.... ,.... rw::., PolUne Pllc1, CIUb/louM l, l •11J P'olllfl9 Pl1c1 lt SIHll Tl' CIUDllOl,IJ.e, lllSM<tol', ~ l , Mr.,1, "-"'· MOvllOll Pkwy, 1tlt4 lulh1rd St JudM 0 I Nttl~. .... 111.,.c:1or, " H F~ott. It•• l111PK1or, W L Slll()P, ltt-. Ci.rt, M I{, Morris, lttt, J\ICIM, W J GrftOl"I', lttt JI/dee, S, 1<110, lt111 Cltrk N L Porttr, ltt11 Cltrk.. W khum1e111r, llt• C1trk, w. F. TIC~l1, Otm, l'ltlCINCT .b••I Cltl'll, E l . Ptrktf'. llt't Cltfk, I M Tk kl1, 0.1'11 PolU,.. l'ltCI HtnMn llt1h1tnc.. :io.ll PlllCIMCT l946ol-J l'lllfCIMCT ~I ltl 1 Cht uctr llllt ' PotUno Pltet l'lrttldt Rm, Clubhunt, Polllnt Pl1c1. MOIOlt ltl'l'I I 1 Schaol, '"° 1"8P9(10r, s, I M111t1n, We jllrty 24112 Moulton Pkwr. Fine/I Ave.. JuclH, V, A Fttt)lflll, Ill' lnsHCl'Or, M M S<tltltl', Ctm IMPl(tor, M. E Toad" 111,,, Clttt., p 11 S•undtrt, 011m. JI/die, II II AVfn, R• Judpe E A Btlll rd Rt• Cltf'k, E M c_,., lltl, Cittk.. J N, 01r.y, ltlP Cl•rk. E. A B•IJtv, Dem Pll•CINCT n->4J.I (ltrl(, G l. Oltndtr, Otl'l'I Cltrk K M. lllrt'ltll, '"'" Polltno l"l.c., KllMlto11 ""fdtl'ICI, "" PllfCIN(T· X-.W-1 f'ltECIHCT l1•21il 1 Cti!!t1ite Orlvt 'olllnt f'ltn. ClullllOUJI '' Pol!JllO Plil(f, MOlolt 111'1'1 ~ 1 Sttiool, f110 l111pec:tor, M. L K.,..,ho11, No 11rtv Moulton l'tr;wy, Fiii(~ Avt Jlld11, Y c, Yl)lrrt, illfll 111tll'C'lor M S Mr1r1 ltao llll~lor G M llro011.1, Ct111, Cr.rt, M E. lt1neel. Dim. Judte, IC, M, Mvtrt, iltep, JUdff, c F. Dtmor1, o.m Clttll l M ktnf Otrn (lt<'ll;, 0 B Rtld Otm Cltrk 0 , A R>lllf'dot, Rtp f'ltlCIMCT 12~1 Cl1rtr;, D 11 Itel!!, Dem C!tr~ I' l ... Uter11.11, 11.u Polling PllCI, Gltltr Otflct :Schoel, 21l41 Pll.ICINCT "4U1 f'•l!"CINCT ll.Jtf 1 Str1rhmoot Lant Poll!nt PIKt ClublleY!ll t f'ollln1 Pltct Klsal(ll; lltlldtn Ml llltl>IClOT", J C Ktlll\ldY, °""' MoullOll l"kwy, TCHICln Avt. ct. 4 J\ldee, :s. A, Mcl<l'llthl, 11:... IMl>t~tor. "· F Btrnttt. II.ff, lnM1ector J L IC!u!ck Dern Cltrk, l Frtlltt. O.m Judie. It S lltrntll, Dtm JUdOI J 'M !!it dl ak R'P Cttrk, J L, l'1ee. Dem Cltrk, 0 E. Fr!tdl No Pwl'f Cl1rM' H M Mo,in' 1t11p l'A•ClllCT 22447.f Cltrk, M L Hill lttp Cl~r~ M v Olton '11,,o l'olt!ne Pl1u, lll1k1tll'f llttkM1K1, '311 Plll(IMCT, *'46 .. 1 f'llllCINCT 11 221 I M01tlh11'11 Drl111 Po!llllt Pllct, Ctul>llOl,l't l, 1"232 Po111n1 Pl•ct F v MObll• Etl ClubhCHiff, ln111tc1or, M Jl ll1lch, lttP. Araoon ~l:IO Ttlber! I.Vt JUllOt, f c Bl•k••llr. 11:.,;i ln11>1Uor. A ACktrl RIP lnJPf(1or H W Sh! k O CJtrk, G 8 Holl'l'ltl, llei> Jl.'1111•, R L M1(1'lddtn, II~ Judge G' A. Shi k r 0 tm Cltrk C W, W11~1r, Olm, Clerk, M Nord. o.m ' r • llfn. ,lllECIMCT tt S....1 Cl1rk, It G LOftt Dem Cltrk • )( Clt9t, lltP Poll lfll Pl1ct Lltllf!kUhl ltesldtn«. 20111 PllllCINCT: u.n .. 1 Cltrk E X Clffr, ltfJI Aqualk Ltnt PolU"11 PllCt Clul>houlll 3. 2»21 Ave PlfECINCT JI 22t.I Inspector, A,, Htmphlll O.m. Stvlllt PolUng Place, H~rper M111 111'1'1 School, Judot, E I Htnlllll. llltp lntM(!or, l , R McBe!~, lltp. 1-..a.s S1nt1 Ynt1 Clerk, M S Ll!i Otm JllCIH, M, A. 1t,oy1r, Rtt lniMCICH', W A McCvbb!n, 11.tp Cieri:, 8 J, L1*m• II.-. Clttk, A It l<nudlln Oem Judoe, o P f ourtr 1111, l'1t•c11itcr 21-Uf.I Clwk, w s Fo1ter, Dem Citric, 0 l l u11t11, llttp Potlln• Pl1C1, Kint lt"kleric:t, f172 PlllfCIJllCT Sf-Vl 1 Clerk P P Thol'l'l~I. lltP Yell-1klnt Orlvt Pl>fl!lll l'!a.:t, F\rll e11lltt Church, P'll.ECINCT ll Z1t I lntPlclor, S. G Mtrper, lttt. 2'521 MOlltton ,trkwtr Polhng Pl1c1 LI!tt llttt!dtric:e, 17•2 Judt t, 11 S Dltrnotltl, Otrn. tniptetor, M I( Mlrlir CHm. NlgM lngllt Alie Cllf'k, M, A Kine, llto Judft, ll, l , M1r1h, RIC> ln1Ptc!or, H E Diiie, Otrn Cllf"k, S E Dlimond, Dem CIM, A E Jont1 lttP Judoe. L T Kttl .... llto ,,..CIHCT n~I Cltrk, G D. Wood .. llel. Clerk, 0, O!clc, No pertv Po1Ufl9 Pltcf, Hunt TOW n II I U 11 S • l"RICIMCT• ,..:rTJ.I Clerk L H L'"1mtrJ Otm Clubl!O\IM, fflJ Cornw11J Orlvt Polll~• Jlltc• Procvn11, 1ltS1d1nce PRE CINCT JI UO 1 lnUlldor, R M WOOClhtm, Otm mtO Grin~ lld Polt.n~ Pltct, Smo11t 11.•JllltllCe, Ill)] Judot. f' 11.uno, 0"'1 lnlPICfor, M I( Mlnlclt. 1111 P~!m SI Cltrk, M S Blktr, lttt Jullll M. J CoHld D- lni11ecior E A Smotli, D1m Cl•rtc, S Woodh1m, Dem Cltrk.' J, L Houri•~• o.m Judte A E l!lrlcktl, Dim Pltl.CINCT J2.UI I Clerk, J p N0/'9llrd, It..,. Cltrk, J M Smolr: Otm PotU,.. Platt. lllllh•rd $111111'1 Fltttll• Pll.ICINCT• UJn.1 C!e,k, E N111"°r Rirp 11 lt711 ll lhtrd 51 7 •<017 MllHTINOTON al!ACH on, 11 1'<>1111111 Pt1c1, Clubhoute • l'RfCINCT » 16'°1 lntHCIOr, 8 F Wtllty, 11.tP MouOon Pkwv. Poll/"' Pl:ce, Cre1lvlrw SchOol, 110S2 '~'i:rgk~· i : :::::~: ;!:."'' ~~':.~'°'c: ~ 'h~~I~::::!: ~ L '1 L•n Clef'!<, C II-Rtp, Clerlr;, V E Nultr, •1$1 ln111edpr, L ll•rbtr, llftl l"ltt:CINCT tt.JS2•1 Clllr11 1. M Du l'bt<:k. Ofm JI/dee, M. Wll!_Oll, o.m l'otllfl9 PIKt, ll•Mho Mobrt1 ••I'll l'J1E(INCT1 ·..;., Cltrk, M. lit MUrlJl'i1. Otm Clubh01,1M1, ,,,.1 erootl'luttt SI ' 2ll12 Cltfk, E D Cun11lnoh1m, R&P ln1p..:tor, t D Klrd!O!I, llltJO, Polling Pl1ct, Clubhol.l11 • A111 PltlCINCT l1 H• I Judgi M E ltldtllts, 0.n'I Stvll!I Poll!1111 Pltce S1rl1to 11.1sldenc1, 21671 Cltrk.' M • M' CMld• R•.o ' 1n1;>Ktor, \/, M1nn1<!9 Rep Salud1 Clrcl' Cltrk T l V•n Lue, Oll'!I Jlldgt, M Jl l'rttm•11• lltp. l1111>tetor, P A S1rle10 Ckm, PlllCIMCT n UJ.1 Cl1rt, H, L ~Of"rlt, Del'l'I Judot L M Ol11r Rtp Polll"I Pltct, l1mO Multl P11,110S1, CAl"ISTllANO 8l)CH Cler~, L W Trubovlll 01m 5ch00!, 10251 Yotkt-n Avt Pltl!CIHCT •ISi I Cterk H L WOOC11, lttp tn1l)KIO!', T, L Llr19K11tld, 0.1'1'1. Polling Pltct. l"tlltldfl Schoof, 244'2 PRECINCT l2•1t1 I Judo1, e E 111111, ltto \111 S1cru1wnlo Pollln• Pl1c1, C1r111nt1r1 llu1l ntss Office, Cltrk, M Htniilm1n. Rel lntpector. A N Potter, Dern tJC2 Allanl~ Av1 Cttrk E J Yttn, Rio Judoe, A M Stuhr, Ditrn lntPKtcr N 0 Mtmtt Dtm f'ltlCIHCT i2·2J+1 Cltrlt, F M S111oe, O.m JUOl.lt, H M Pt1!ole1l Rep Polll111 Plitt M1tllY llesldel'ICt, 218'2 Clerk A M Tennv.on, Atl Cltrk, l J Sweat! Otm, OCt1n11l-lint f'ltlCIMCT .. lU 1 Clerk J M Aoulffft, Olm !nM>t<IOr, C. F 1td1m1, 11.ep, PoU ln• Pl1Cf, Sttr• kflool, 1'126 VIC· f'llECIHCT Jl 1" 1 J\1611•, W, C L1mblrt, Dim 1orli Blvd Potllf'ICI Pl1c1, ltll1rd Foytl' School, 204J1 Cltrk, M M MllffV, Rff lllt<>tclor. v E H1rlow, Dem. Cralm•r L111t Cltf'k, T L MtHer, llto Jlld11t, l It H!ckmen, Otm. ln1CM!'(:lor, P A 01uo11tn1Nuoh, ll111 PltECIHCT t2•UJ•l Cl .. k, J. T toncond, Otm, Jull;t I M 0.1r1v" 11111 PotUnt Pl•c•. Mci:ourt lt.11ld•nc1, 22112 Cltrk. s 11 caonev, Dem. Clerk S F B'nder Otm Ct,olSlrl no LI"' l"llll(IHCT• •ISi I Clt•k v. M SChtflbff, Dtm 1n1PK1or. c J M<Cwrt. Otm Polling PltCI Unllflf Melhodlt1 Church. P!tECINCT n 2'0-1 JuOVe, J l AIV1ftl 0em 2roo2 Cimino E1!r1tt1 PotU~o PIM:t, llrcwn lttt!denct 1:111 Clerk, M, A Krr1!11tk, Otl'l'I lnt1>1dor, L G lltltfl, llefl Tyler CtrC1t Clerk K Ci lltYOOld1, ll$ JudQe L J llt!C/I, ll•P lnS:>K1or, J H Brown, Dem Pll.l!CINCT ft•l1J.1 Cltfk M M StrOlltr Dem Judge, E J Eddow RtP Polllnt Pltc1, Clodlelltr R111denct, tt02 Clerk, c R RoM'brook. II.~ Clerk A l llrown Dem Sltvtr ~••nd Orlv1 'Pl 111' Clttk, M M GIM10n1, Otl!'I ln1Ptclor, C M $1undtri, It~, •IECINCT· ,.._Ul 1 PRECINCT H 204-1 JUdlt, A T W.i1r.r, llep, f'o!llnt PltCI, lluuttl R1sld1nc1, Pollln'I Pltcf Ttll>ert Conl Sthaol, '101 Cltrk, A M Goodm1n, Reo Cimino El Mollno llr1\1111m Drlv1 Cltrk, A E, McNtr. RtP 1nSl>tcklr, ll 1 J1mlt110n, II.to. lnip~!or E M G11k!n1 lltt LAGUNA NlllS JI/doe, J M Cro1by Otm Judtt, A E ll1!V1t lor Dtm. P•l!CIJllCT1 U·U:Z 1 Cltfk, A Jt Entwtlltr, lit"' Cltrk, T L. Venlut Dem Polflno Pl1ct, Clubhou11 3. 2312'2 Aue Cltrk J E Pttlon, RIK> Clerk, V N M01111, llep StvlU• l"•l!CIN(T ... 1,, 1 Pll!Cl"CT l2 '"I llltPt<lor, R RIPP· Dtm. PofUtlO PIK• McMlch1&1 Jttsldt11'CI. Polllne Plact. Wtrdlow Hurtt School, tUI Judor, M A Ripp, o.m J.111• c1111 Del Sol Plonr:er Orlv1 11.ri Cltrli:, H, H Tyltf', llao. lll!P&etor, ll I( McM!tf111F, 0.1'1'1 ~~~~°,.'.· : ~.n~l;,:ni~tr. C!trk, E M ll•l1n1, Re1 Jud11, C A Lff lttP Cterk C A Gt01h111 lltP 'PllllCINCT• 3' tll-1 Ctttk, It M $lsc1 Otm Cle rte' J I' Grv1hon Rto !lolling Pl Kt, ClllbhO\llt 2, 2~llt MOltllOll Cltrk, E C Hiil 11111 ' Pk DANA POIJllT Pll;l!CINCT J2-*1 wr l'ltlC1JllCT· 41·111-1 Pol!ln1 Pl1ce, 11u111111r CluOllou11. 101n ln1Pll'Ctor. • P NtrbGI, 11.ep. P l!I f'l 'c 0 , 1 5(hao1 2A11? L• Hotbum Drive Judot, M. I. Ptlrlt It."" O nt 1 e, n ' ln•.otdor O G 1l1rn11t Dem Clerk I' H Crtwtord, O.m, Crtslt Dr Jud111, M A AlllhCr,01, Atp Cltl'lc: G G Grlbblt , 0"'1 ln,Pl(IOl, E J Snlptt, lltJO Cler• E M Aowl1nd AtP, 'PltlCINCT )II JU.I Jud11, R E l<l1rn1n, lltt C!erk, M E, Ftlllco Dem, Polllnt f'l•c1, Cll/Olloult 1, 24232 (lltt Clerk, l G Them11, Dim f'll.ECINCT 121071 Aregon Cl11'k, J M Muir, Cttm Potllfl9 Pleet, Munl!nt Cont Cfubllou11, lntpeclor, N S 8ett1, 11:1«1 Plt•CIJllCT 41·1» 1 331tl 19'~1 llroothurtl 51 Judtt. c £ Olt•n. ()Im, l"olllnt Pl1ce, Smlftl ll:"lderice, ln1ptdor, 8 L $plchlr. ltep Cltrk. E G Mt••• Rtt Mtl••• Or. Ju<11e, M J Huuhe1 Dem Citric, M I( Wtrntr, lt1!$1 ln-•r. 0 J Smit~ Otm (IM~. F M MonlMn Dern l'ltlCINCT ... ,.1 Jud••· T s Smith, llt' Clerk, M E Brown, Otm Pomno Pltci, ctubhouw 3, 231122 A111 Clertc, I" M S11111 D•m PRECINCT n 341·1 Sevl1la Clerk, ll M V•n DYkt, lttP Po/11110 Pl•ct, C1b1n1 Club (lubllou11, 1,,--,,, T F OWenJ •ep ... ICINCT• 41·2ff.1 tl'1 Atltnt• A111 '"'"' II: Pomno l'!1ce Reid t1;11ldt1Kt, 2s.tfl ln•lleC!Or f A cnrlSIOP~ttJ<>rl, Rep Judgt, H P. Amllutt, IP. WeslbOrnt Or J ~llle, ll E 8 ud rl1, lltP Cltrk, I E Ams!uti, AtP ln101ctor. J Y R1ld, Otl'l'I Cterlt G J Arthur, Otm Clerk 0 S J_,, Rip. Judtt, D O Bondur1111, 1t11 Clttk, J G Ht mmtrlltUltl, Dem f'll:ICIMCT • 212·1 Clert:, C P Trlbolll, Dem PllECIMCT n , .... , Polll119 Pie«. Clubl!OllUI ,. 22122 AYt Cltrlt, J H, Wrltht, ""' Poll!nv Pleet Orl11 llnldel'ICt, t6t1 SevUl1 R ,",1,0CINCPT0_0<MR'!..!rt, •Mldo-o -·· Velardo Orlw lnJHC:lor, I( E Gubltr, Ill, o Ill ... , .,.,... "" , H~ 1n1~1tCtor, v E Sobt.I, Otm Judtt, G f' Smlll'!, lll'P. Oet1n Hiit Or Judue E s Herlvstell Otm Clerk, 9. Goldftrb 01m ln5Pfcior. M J tltoblttl, lttP C ler~ M G Gllkeuon, Dtm Clerk, G D Our1tn, lteP Jud11, J N Got~, em, ltw. (: .,~ s ~eurer Dem Ptlt!'CIHCT U.nl-1 Cltrk. 8 G Con ns, Dem PllECIJllCT n UMl PotHno PltM, Clut>llOUff 1, ?4232 C1ll1 C!trk J A 1(1rv1r, Otm ' .. • • "' •••• ,..... 11tl! Ar1oon P•ECIMCT• 41 Jn.I o~ino .-11ce, ~0 "" ln•1>1ctor, ~. p Penney, ltep Pollln1 P11c1, Mllllotn 11•,llltm;e, 1S2'1 Adami A11e JI/dot. I' II' Mtlkt lltt.o Y1cl'lt Of ll'llPICIO'I', v E $0beJ, Dem Cltrk, A R Thorbtruon, ltto ln1ptd(ll", J H lltlldOll, Dern Judge R 8111, Dtm Cltrk, -w.L Hirt Al'!ltr. Incl Jud'Of, B I Mllll11n, llto Clerk, G E McCrtl Otm PltlfCI • 114-1 (litk, N A Hlcllln1 Dtm C!erk, S l Nltrttn, Cttm c 1 o f'IECINCT ,, 2'11 l"oltlng I CI , Clutlfl.01111 1. 1"232 ,, , l'.;l1rk c H Mtnn n1, lltJO Poll!no f't1ct Wtll 11.tl!dtnct. f'JI% Ar111M l'lllfCINCTt 41·2'1-I Neu!llUI Ori~' lnJPtclOl. A II Ene1rl, llet> POIUllt Pl1c1. l'lrllll llnldtn(e, 3'00Y 1n1P1clor, c A Will Dem J udot. J , A~ ll111 Alc111r Or. Jvdoe c M Pt11rlOl'I Olm Cl•rk, N w Ha11n1r, Oem ln111ectot, E P ll1m1ey ll:tll, Clerk, L, M Jll!1r1, Otm Cltrk, W M WHI, [)Im J!Hllt. E. E Smit~, O.m Clerk M L C1lltCl, lle.o Pltl!CIJll('T -.ns.1 C1trt.. It M ArevtlOI Otm Pll.ECINCT n 2'9 1 Polllno 'Pltct. ClutlhOUJ.t 1 2•2'2 C•ll• Cl trk, 0 ,., F1rk11 ltlP. Pollln~ Plec• At11bll lll~!llenet, 1571 Ario°'" IL TORO 5co11t01.1n Drive lnillldor, v A !!air<, R:eP PltlCINCT• .,...,_1 lnlPfCIOr II II Antbtl, No Ptrty Jud••· J G Smith, O.m Polllnt PtllCI. Ad1tr llnld•nc•. 22'06 Judot , P L 81l1nd1r, D"'1 Cltrk, M J Britt 11."I!, llumblt Or Clerk, D 0 Hatlm1n Otm Clertc M D Llndet Re• lt11pec1or, 0 l. Tuttle lltp. Cltrk E R S111ncr Dtm PltlCINCT1 •2u-1 Judtt, I(. A Ad1lr, lttf P RECINCT H 270.l PDIUl'lll l"lt!I, Clubhoutt 1. 2•23' Cilll Cl1rtl, 9 l Vince Rep Polllnt Pl1c1, Ptrrv l lbrtr,, SCl'IOO!, Arepol! Clerk, 11: Mlll•r. AtP Iv.Ill H1rdlna Line Ooo-Oor M L Vox, lttl Plttl!CIMCT • 42~ I lniPf<:lor, M Z lmllh, 01111, Jud-i~ v L llirr11rd, Jl!P Poll!n1 Pleet, G1111 Scl'I001, '"'' ltn. Jud«, V J Sl'llllh, 0.m Cltrk, G M ltotHltr, Ctem dltllltw A11• Clerk, M P Miii Otm Cl~,k M p Hnvoon, 111$1 tn1111Ch!r, J Prortiero lltll Clt rk II, f l(ln111bury Otm. PlllCINCT• -.2r11 Judtt, J, P M1t1r1111111'1ro 0tm PRECINCT l1-l01•1 l"olt!no Pleet, ClubllouM t, 2•1'2 C1l1' Cltrk, J E D POtlnell lttl Polllno P"ce SI Fr1ncl1 Sch. Chur(ll, Clerk, II E. Milek, Otl'l'I -·-Mo•OOlll S! Arioon ' tt • l'•ECINQ1 4Mn·1 ''"''"' tn1pec1or, L. IC Ou• o, •P. '''''"' '''''· •·o (mo Sdlool, '"U l111P1clor, B G 0.lltt Otm Judie, M. l( Grltlln Rto ll1Qlr11 SI ...... Judot, c M, M1U11. o,"" Ci.rt, e f Munl, 11;1,o ' ' s M ...... lltt, Cltrk, II L McCleln " ''''' E " l're"fnin, ""' ~W« or. Clerk M C Turner, Dtm •••CtHCT· ..,..1 Jud••• S J llrltt1. Dem PltECINCT tJ·lU I 1 1 232 Cilll Cterlt, C G G1rrt11on RIP l"olllno Pl11e1, v P Club HOl.llt, Polllnt l"IKt, Clubllouit ' • Cltrk W C Gve111r1, Dem Clubtioute, "33 Vlllt PKlflc Drive Araoon PllllCINCT1 4t ttl-1 tnJMclGr. F M Cr1btree, Olm, lnlflfclor, I M Guoto;, Otm Poll!n1 PllCt 0\111twood Settool, 2J3tl J!ldat. M K. Jackaon, II.Ill) Jucltit, It F Wllou1. eP Dunt Mtlr ltd Clerk. F p o.ut1ch 11&.o Cttr1!: I H ftltc:n llftP 1t1,1>tctor, l ll Jetn, lttt Cltrk, C A Plal!n•r, O.m C!trk H S St>~rlfl '11$1 Jud'tt. E A, SIU<kY, Dtm. 'PlllCINCT ft·JllJ 1 1"11.l!(llllCT n.?tt·I Cl1rt, $ IC l'loyd ll•~ f oll/no P!te• 8utlllrd 11:.m 15 School. l'oU!no f'ltct. Ctl/bl'IOiltl t, 231.l'f Allt Cltrk, J C Htl'l'llln, 1te11. 1t69t l ducttlon Ltnt St'o'\111 f'lllCINCT 42•ttl•1 ln$1'tCIOI' o L ouo1n. ll:tP. lntPfflor, 0 D llou1e, Re, Pollln1 P1ec1. Duff R:ttld1nc1, 2"31 J~, J E. M1t11111, Otm Judff, J W Cord!l, 111, Ave Ott.o Clerk 11 L Met!Ottll lltP Cltl'lc:, S 0 Modtt lttt, lftlteC!or, J C Quit, lltll Cltrk, L, J folk1rl1, Otm Clerk E L 9!tl,.., R.,, Judot , J O Dull R .. f'iECIMCT l1Jl:I1 Plll(IM(Ti »-11 .. 1 Cltrk, A M. f'lnltY, Rell Polling "ee• Munt!nt I r IM Polllng Pltct. V11911Clt School, ~I Clerk H l . Wlltcm. Otm Clubl!Ol.lll ,,.,1 Ntw!tnd St P11to 0. VlltM11 PlllCINCT1 lt·lfl•t ln!IPKlor. o o G1ose Otm ln1P1Ctor, M M KIPll 11:... 1"11111"' Pl11ce, Out! lttlidtric:e "631 Judi~. E 11 GrOlt, lhD Jvdtt, A M W11c'Ji, !!et II.Vt Dtsto Clerk. H A 01vtJ011 0tm Cltt'k, H J lllfln.r, ltl'P. IN,tClor, M I llltdciV. Dim Cle", L £ Wll~~n, 11."' Clft'I!, II E. lowltr. ll11P. Jud ... G. J C1rrlllo Otm f'lllCIN(T n :111•1 f'lll!CIJllCT1 iwt•t e r.rt, s J loom!e, Rep f'olUno Pl.c,t, Ell!JOll M!Dh Admlnlt""· Pelllno Plac., V1ltncl1 $(hoot, UW.1 Clwlt, I( s. llu,.,., II."", lion kl'IOOI 21.IOO Mtgrloflt St PtMO De v.r-11 f'ltlCIHCTi 1:1.m.1 1.. 2AJ'1 ln&M<IOl'i G M Whfflf'I', lltl l"1Hefor, $ A Normt11, llP, f'olllntl PIKt, 4tl<l'ltll lltt l'ICt, J~dllt p M Btll, 11~, Judtt, J Htnlfltld. Otm. $p1dr1 LA Ci.rt, L E 0111!t, Att, Cltrk. L, M, Httnlndll!, OlfTI lllJPl<tor, W, L, Gtlthtll, It.to (trio:, M A JeM11n11l, tit"° Clfrk., H I! Shiffer, ... Judt•, A, V, Pin .. t Riii f'R ICIHCT »·111•1 PltlCIMCT1 a41f.t Cltrk.. 0 . A. Allllrt•lc.k, At• Polltng Pit«. EIOfr Llortry $Chool. nt1 l'otun• ,ltot. CllJtltlou~ J. nnt Avt Cltrll, 0 C, Mftkt\I, Dttn f11nnlnt A111 StVllll l"ltl!Cl"C1'1 &"lf'l.I Jn.,.ctor, T J Norton 0"'1, 1111-klr. T. WlllttOI!, llttl Ptlllfl9 Plllct. O'Ntll $thool, 141111 S1n Jllfff> A. L Suuon. 11110 Jucftt, M, M $-•· 11111. Oo.-tl 1.1'1. Cflftl(, ( l KIOPH, 111111 C1ff'k. e. M l"ro.-tn, ""'' IMpf(tor, It.. lit, Dvtott, °""' C-lwk, A I lt1U11m. 11:... Ci.tk. P. T, lltlfltl, lllt. JlldM, M f SClft, 0ttn "111.ICIJllCT t241t-1 r•1CtMCT1 ""'"1 Cllt1!, I. l. ltOWft. It .. f'Olllntl, ,. .... l(t1Mll J!: .. ldtll«. 1om f'o!Ul'll PIK .. ClutillOllW Ji. :pm ,..,. ci-1•1 G. •• WUUttnt. II:• Kllmu Orl11e U\11111 ~ lltlllc;INCT1 12,,,._1 ln11tclor, N, L l(el-. Dif", rMMctor. c. L Wlltllll. ... PoUllll Pl.ell. 11:~~'1111• ll11ld1Me. J''"'· W WUM1m" •HI JUlltf, E 0 W-1\11111, II.. "°'I '""'"° Adeltnlo Cl9r'k. 11 J, flll<kltrf"l'I, D"" Clerk. fl:, M, ltahlff"lo ll" l,,..C!OI', V, !, lllctllirdvlll1 R.11. Clettt, O M f'lt<ll, OW'l'I. C.l"tk, l,, I Culbuff-. It.. JvOft, R. i . g-M•lfft, Dtm. ... l:CIMCT Jt-nll•I PlllCINCT1 )W17·1 Cttrt, l.. H, Mtt~hlnl, lte1, P,,.111111 ftlltei Arw1l111 llft'I. U SCMll. l"otllnt l'ltet,. Cit!...,.. I, 20» (.Ille C"'1(. D.. M. Out!.i. 0...... mn l.tltlMIOl'I Liiie ArlltOll l"llCIJllC1r 04"-1 lnweclvr, I.. '· S•-· 11. .. , llltPK'IOI'• N.. D. llttllP• lltll, 'olllnl .. i.ct. 1111 .. ••tltlt!IU. '4102 Judff, V. J, ilnlfl'lr Dent. J ....... I, A. l*'I, • .._ llf'Mft °'"· Cltf11, M ,... .... I""' 0-. ~ J. L. lltrn, ..... IMIMC!tt, J, A. l•llot, Otm. Cltrll, O t... ,,,,,.._, o-. C""-6 H. L•r-, Dotm. Jt,i41L I, L StoM, llee IPlllCIHCT n.nt·I l"tllCUfC1'1 ...... Cltt1I. D.. M. !ltWll!Nfl. 0-.. f'ollnt Pltce. f°"1'9t 1l1111tmai, ltrl1 1'otllfts ,.., Chlllllelnl t. t4!1J C*"11, 0 L. Tttw~ ,,,,._, 11111. l ltdlwltd Orl11t,. MOll!t.I ,...... l"ltlCINCTt .,.,.._, MIM(llD<t, Oil E..,.,.._ • .,. I~·"·""'' "9ul1ry, Din. '9111M ,i.e., All• lcNDI, mC2 ""'"' G • .._ .....,-. lltff. J ...... L '· l"M!Ut 1._ -"l>r. ~ ci.n., It. 11.•hfl. °"" c11n. A M. H..., ••· '""*'°'• "'· c SKJ<it.11, °""· ~ I , M. Mllt!t• U...,. Cl.,,, L f rO* .. °""'-JudN. C. S ,,. 1 hkfln, li e.. l CIPf't. M. l. \.M,...,.,_ Oft. lf'ltlfCllKf1 4t-111·1 (llf'[, s J, Lt1 11... ,..!Int '1ac11, •IWllt lllllllMCI, IPtf t. PlllCINCTr •»7•1 CMJ.1 l'lllll!WIY l'cllll"' rtla. Oe Wiid llMIHllCI. lllllClof, M l l.vnet!tr4 Aff. Mn! l'MfleN It J.... .. c. Ntla. Dlllli. l/lflPl'Cfot, M. M: Cr--. Ootm. c...-, V, H Clt'l'tt, 11 .. J,,_, M 8roclo. Dem Clwt. M. L l .. lfVI, Otm • ( ....... c '-M111i-, Otr'n NOltl)I u•vNA Cltrll, 0 e,. Zl...U, 11:11. ...ICtMCT1 •Ut•1 IPllRIJllCTe .,.,...., l"«\1119 ... _ Vtt ''""" Wi n . ,..11,.. l"l.C.. 11tlo Rtslot!l(t. U)tl l.•9111111 C1ny011 lt:Md, S,.rt1n St, l'*""tor• I , s. khtlt, It"'" I-tor, 0 C l11to, lt111 J......_ D.. L Soto. Dtm J\111", 0 w f!lw.-., ll:ff Ci.tl. L r Saitll, Ottn Cltn. S. J. ll"""" 011'1'1. Cltr11. M. OPO/'OOi., 11.11 Cltrlt. V, L111111r, Dim, IOUTM LA•UNA PltlCIJllCT• ..._.1 ,ltaCtMCT •1111 Polll1'19 l"ltai, Mtddl"!Nd It~, f'olU11a PllCI, l(olll1 llnlfll'!a, 2'"1•1 E1gltmctll AIOI 4tfl A-., lnSH('!or, O H MIOcll.,1114, tit• lllVIC1'0!', '· I! Cummll'lt, llta. Juoo1, Y • £rtl<lnt, lll'P, J11c19t, C. t!!. ••t,, Cllrk. A, o. s11 .. w11t, °"'"-Clertl, E e. H~ck.on. Dem.• Ci.rt, G A, Owtn1, Otm. Clerk, R l 11v1n, llfll f'ltlCINCTt 4N'11•1 ,lll(IJllCT1 -.11:1·1 Polllnt Pltct. Duer ltMt.oenc.. 22111 PolHM Pltc1, Grlm!IS llnlOenc'I, IM•mert Lii MOl1Mtr St. ,.1...-ror, L.. J, D11er, Dem 111-ctor, t , M •urntr, Ill!>, Jud111. a A HoiilJnp, No PtrlY Julllt L E, Mtrlt~ Otm Clt1k, l S, lrown. Dll"I. C1trk, O l C11t1t1r, lit•. Cltrk, ~ J, Jrondrtw,, •tP. Cll'rl(, V M Gthn11, 0.m Plt•CINCT 4:1·11111 Pll•CINCT1 .. •1111 Pott!nt l'!tc:f. Rhode$ RHldflna 2''31 1"11111111 f'l•C•. TllrM Arth Prim•.,.•• Clubhou11, 50 I L1 Stnd1 Or ln11>1Clor, a G Rl'lodtf;, O:Jl\'I l~or, J (, W1r-, llltP Ju011, B J Tl~lo• Otm J!Hlle, C E f'tttr-., Rtf Cltrk, It W, Goolltl!, lap Ci.rt., C W. Llndotrm111, Dern 2~112 Clerk, J C. Ll!litllt ld, No Ptrh' Clerk, o N, Youn1, 11:..- l'ltlECINCT tt.JM-1 P•ICINCTi 4'I 114-1 Polt1110 Pt~. CordUltr.J School, U9J1 Polllfl9 f'llCI, Rlld lln!dtnct, (orllllltrt Or Lt Htrmolt Av1 lnll>PC'lor, M L HelldrlcklOl'I, No 1'1ny lntM<tor, D. M. Mt11.l!!1ttr. fl••· Jud111, G T, Ar1mbtl 11.tP Jud',., E, M. llttd, Dem, Cltrk, J E, Noltthl, lttl Citric, l M. ltu9"m1n, ltep 1012 Cltrk, It l Hotnl1, Olm ' Clttll, E I Corflr, lt11. l"•I CINC"I G.Jl7•1 l"lt:ICIM(Tt 4'-111-1 PoU1111 Pltct, Hootis llltsldlllC!!, :Ml'O'I Polllne Pltn, NllUll 'l•ttlt. C1rret11 Or Alltlt l"ICWY ln,,•&elor, II, ~ Hobbs, 11..,, lnt0KIO!', M G 11.utfltll, ll11 Judtt, A A, Vin Orkt, lt1p Jud11, E II Morrow, lttP Cltfk, M J, lron, ltt.o CMrll, • G Courttm•nth•, Rep ' OIO Clerk G L Ch•Vtri, Dem Cltrt, M H Thom111on lltf 1 PltECINCT 4J.JOl•1 f'lllCINCT• 44-lli I Polllnu Pltc:t, VIII Atlldtnet, 1'101 Polllr19 l"llC'I, Lag11n1 Hlltt Molllll Rotl!nowood Rd • Ptrk, )OI02 COILIJI Hwy, 1n1P1Ctor. P A S1K, 11111. ln•PtClor, E c. Rhlntl'L111, ••• J ullot, J A Vitt. Dim J!ldlt, E I , ll•M• Ill"' Cttrt, J ll' ll1r1rd De Vole, Dern Cltork, F s. Sleti:>tr, lttp Clerk, C M Hotrilo R•o Ci.rt, A, C. lllcntrdton, Ile" l:MElllALD aAV f'lllCINCT1 ....... 1 PlllECINCTi 4J.1t0·1 PotUne Pltce, Crown V1ll1v SCl'loOI, Polllnt f'lec1, El Morro Sd'Lool, ... , N 2tJ9'J Cn>wn V1U1r l"kwy (01,, HWY •11-clor. s A Ktll\ll'I•, 1t111 ln1P•Ctor, !!i S Oil ao11 ll.1p, Judoe. J. E. l1Vl1n1. ltfll Judo•. S C Perelr1, Dern Ct1rk, B I McGu!nnet~, Dem. Ct1f1(, C J Croul, lllP Cltrk. J 11, Ott1w1r. Rep. Clerk, N D11tr, Dem PlllCINCT• "'41>-1 PRl!"CtNCT 4121•1 "1>111n• Pl1c1, BtPl!IJI Chul'Cll Polllfl9 Pl.ca, Em1r1ld Ill/ Flrtllla. Crowrt Vllltv l"!lwy llOn, Ml Emtrtlll Ot 1n1,.ctor, M L Phltllll, It.IP tlllPfCfol', k. M Roberts, lleP Jud11, E L. D111!on, O.m. JUdlll, 8, II Srl1rt, lltP Clerk, M L 0.l&ntY R•P Cltrk, B S St11r, ltep Cltrk, J N, Wtrotlt~d, lttp. Cllrk, C A l(napp, Re' PltlCIJllCT< ... J\J.1 PltlCINCT1 4)-IV•l Polllnt PIK4, Alkel\1 ltn!dtn(r, l"oltlnt l'lttt, Foolt lll!'Sldtl'ICt, 14 Vtst1 f'll11 Or. Emt rtkl BIY lnlPt<'lor, E G Alkftll, ttep lnJpt1ctor, A II H1!llo!, ltep Jud91, C. I . Alktn1, 11.tP J\Klot. K M. Arm1tron1. lltP Cl1rtc, L M. Stl\dJlrum. 11111, Cltrk, M C. Sp1rkJ, Dern. Cltrk. W F. Gtrdntr, ltto. Cltrk1 I( A FOOlt RtP PltlCINCT 4'-tl"l U.OUNA llM:H Pornng Pltct. Llpptncolt ""ldtntt. l'll•CIMCT: 44-111-1 UM2 Wlndmlll 1.n Potufl9 Pl1c1 Thur1ton l1111r SCtfoo!, lnwector. C l LfpPlncoll, llltP 2100 P1rk A11e Juctoe, C. A, Li~ll'ICott, littP. l,,,,..:tor, 8. J f•"'llt• Jteii. Clerk, A. It Grtnl, R••· Judoe. S Johnson Otlll Clttk. S 1t10tckl, ltfJI Cltrk, I Looldon. "'°' PltlCIJllCT. 4'-t11 I Clerk, O. W, Otltr, Rtp Pptllnt Pt.n, LtlOh ll11ldtnct, •lllCINCT ... l:k I ftllon Cl", PoUlne Place, 8radCh•w ll9'1dll'lce, SJt ln1.otcior, J C L'lfh tltm, Cyprti1 Or Judtt, H H ltlltl'I, Otm IMHCtor, T T. L1wi.t1, Otm Cltrk, P W. E11'1trdtV.. ltt9 Judi•, F. £. L1wl111 Otm Clerk A M Crtnmtn, lttP Cler•, E, L, Pltly, Atfl PJllCINCT1 4"l21 I Cltrk, E M Ctv&ntoh, Amer. Ind, POIUne PllC'I, !!inYder ltttldtorKI, 24001 l'ltlCINCT: ... 111•1 LI H1rrnos1 Av1 l'oUlne Pl•«, Woo!l«d retlde11e1, m ln,peclor, M 8 Sny4tr, II.IP Ltctroll St. Judie. G ll Mllcflttl lit• tn-1or, C M woo11on:t. lteo. Clerk, A l Fr1nct1 11.t• Judtt, W. f . Robb, Dem Cltrk, L L, Anderton, ll.19 Clerk, 8 l H1r!l1v, llep, PlllCIMCT. "4111 ci.rk, a J.-<:oi, o.m, f'olll119 Pit«, Wrlollt 11.•tllttnct. 31173 f'lllCINCT· 4t-125-1 1111 A111 Polt1111 Pl1e1, l1rt011 lt"!dtlK,, 'lll• lntD«tor, J S Akin!, Olm, W1111 SI Judft, 11 J. Amm~1. Otm, ln1p1Ctor, W M l1rJ.011, Dlfll Clerk, E l( SI Cltlr, lltD JudM, V, L. 1.trtOll. Dtm Citric, M M El/'l'IOrt. lltp, Cltrk, D L Hodnl(JC, Otm Plll!CINCT1 U·m 1 Cttrk, E 0 KtlCh•m. R... PolllM Pl•ce. Aliso School, f'ltlCINCT, ... 11t 1 Wt11tV Or Polllnt P11c1, L1oun1 l••Cll Ml1h lf\Sotclor. I llurni, Otm Sd1C1ol, i25 P1rk A111 Judte, H Ill Klepp1r. ltet ln1Pector, V A L1nsdell, ltep Cltf'k, I S H1nn1nt11r1, 11.ep Judo•. L. l•ll1nd, lllt Clt rk, 0 L. AnderJOll, ll:tP Clerk, R A Mlfthtlt, llt!ll f'ltlCINCT 4' tt1 I Cltrk, A c. Merrill, llet Pollln1 Pl1c1 •• 11111 ltMlfln«, 23U2 )4632 l"ltlCINCT: 4' 1»-1 V1rr111nno lllY Pollln1 Pltct. l'lte Slttlon 2, 1P A11fe fn1P1d<>I', f' A 81111, No Ptrty 51 Jlldft, G M f'rlct, RICI lntOtdO!', t . S ChJl!on, 11.tp, (111'11, ll, M. Prlc1, JttP, Jud11, l, F. Knlthl, lt.11 Clerk, P A B1111, Rto, Cltrk, A A, F1"'lll, Rtt OltT•OA Clfl'k, C A. Vin lotnt11, ltltO Pll1iCIH(T• 41.J•l '"•CIHCT U.1:111 Pot!ln• Pltcr. Lt PIE Sdleol, tslSI Polllllt Pitt«, Gordin R111dtnee. m Pradtrt Or Myrt!1 SI 1n1Hetor, C J ll•bcock, Dem ln1ptel0!', E Sturm, Dem, Jvflt, s 1(1r11, 11:., Judg1, E. Sturm Oem Cler•, F l ftllllf, II.to. Cltrk, G M. Munl,, littc Cit••• S M. Ctrr, 0"'1 Cltrlr, L C 61m11aon, 11:..-P•ICINCT• •7.)'1·1 l"lll•CIJllCT, 4t-IJ2 t l'olllnt PllC1, Schlul ll"ldtMt, f'ollln1 Plett, SI C1th1rlnes Chut(h, Etltntltro Or HM3 l"'1111t ltrrtct lntHCtor. E s lomlltrd, lttfl. ln1pedor, M. K lnr&rlt/'1111, O.m, Judlt, It. L 1"11111, llap, Judot, H L. Tobin, Dtm Clerk, H, W Biker, lllt.o C!erk, No W. R1nkln, lttp Cltf'll, L E Thor11t, Ofm Cltrk. e '· McDowell, Riii PlllCINCT1 17 m1 PltECIJllCT: ... lJl·I Pol!lnt Pltc1, S1ddlttl•Ck Coll"'' 2to00 Potllno Pl1c1, P1rrl1h ll!ttldtl!Clt, 3113 Mtrtuttlt• f'kwv 11.111 l1111n1 lllYd ln1p1CIOI'. M, Jt Gundtr1C1n, Dem. ln1111e!or. C. L Ptrrllh. lltet, Jull11, It, A tuloU, I" JU001, M, S. MIJOll, lttC> Cieri<. M A. Drown, Rtt Clerk. V l Rolllf191r Dim Clttk, v E Morrl1, Dem, Cltfk, I' I , ll1r11t1, ltt.O Pllll!CIJllCT. 41•J:St-I 'PllllCIHCT '4·1M-1 ' Po!11111 PltCf, Pl ... tl ltttldtnU, Pollln• Pll(I full'l'IOI ll11ld1nce, UJJ Sttllrl Ln Stnlt Crur SI. tnwector, L A Mltchfll, 11.ep. ln11HC'lor, H It Fulmer, Dern, Jut19e, II. I(. Almqul1t, lttp, Jud11, £. E Ctl'l'IPbtll, lttf, c11rk, N G, P1raon1, tit• Clerk, P M Kl11i1111, Otm Cl1rk. G R llt!tttl, lltll (llfll;, M E 5'ttrrv, It•• PJtlCINCT. 474JS I Plll!CIMCT= 4t-IU.I l'clllnt Pl1c1 Minion Vlt!o Mllh Potllno Pleet. l"or1tF1111 8utll'lftt OI kl!ool, 2ms cnr11t1nt1 Or. ft«, ,,. Hy" •1 ln~ll'(~r. M II Mcl(nloll!, ltlP ln111tclor. A E C111uboll Olm, Ji,Hfee, s A Wtrdm1n, II.ff Judo•, z. S C111ubon, lt.,;i Cltrk. J J Adtrm, Otm Cltrk, E M Oemmtr, ltt.o. Clwk, W C Eclor111. Otl'l'I. Cltrk, E M Clllf, Jt111. PR•CINCT· 47.,,._1 f'lll•CINCT 44-1 .. 1 Polling Pltct Vl1Jo SC'llocl, 2,712 VII Potll,,. Pie«, Sr. Mltr'• Churth, 42' Grinde ' Ptrk ,_,,,. tnt1>1Clo• E, s 8uer1er. Itta ln1Peclor. J, W Wlrtl'I, llt.o, JWOI e' I , "'"' lltll J\11111, E I, Allhhird, lttP Cltrk' M O Oenm1n, """· Clerk, E Y Wtbs!tr, Dem, CioJrk It C All111!1 Rtp, Citric, M W1k1lltld, R., ' IAN CLIMINTI PilllCINCT1 ... In I PltlCIMCTt 6'-ltt 1 Polling f'I•~· M1rcum Htrl\ l 11tln111 IPoll!l'lt Pl•ct. Sltlnbll ll11ldtnc1. Ottlct. ftl Gltnlll'l'rt II w Pttto Ot Crl'1ob~I lnll>l(IOf, C I( TtlChntr, 11.t' lni11tclor e E K1mnl1t, ""' Judge, V J. lltl••• llllO, Judit, E J Sltlnbl1, 0.11'1 Cltrk, E L HOYtr lltt Cltrk, W F Cludy, ll:to Clerk v W Sd!r1mm, lll•o c11r1< 11, J B1Mdtd, Otm PlllCINCT1 U.1•1 f'll:ICINCT 41-IU-1 PoUltlO Pl1c1, Lul!!'r111 Churc~. 119' Polllfl9 Pttc1, l'lrll Cllr11!11n (llurcll, Mornl"ltldt Dr .. 702 N Jr,ve Ot LI Et1r1ll1 tnJPKlor, 8 I l11tew, lltp, lntPtC;lor, M, e l rown, ... Jvflt, C. I\, Sllln, It"' JudiH, A L S1llm1n, Jltt Cltrk,, J, C Good1!I, Rell Dom Cl•rtc. A E. Chrlltr, II.ff Cltr~. !, F, 1"1111, PltlCIHCT• ... 1'11 Cltrk, K l lllYt"I, lt•t. Porn ... Pll(t, $h111ter Jtetklenu. llff l'•ICINCT 111'4•1 HlltCflll Or Polt!nt Pl1c1. ltCl'I' llnllltnct. lntPfClor, W A McCtrll!V. Otm Ctllt Lot Altmol JVON, E, M H1mltlltlr1, ll., ln3Dtc1or, E L L11e1y, 111111 Clerk, M DflYIOft lltP Jud11 F V H1n1•n lttP Cltrt, J M GtvloC-, lltJI CIMk, P A, Orlnnt!l, II. .. Pltl!CIJllCT ... ,u,1 Cl~rk. D II Wood Otm Pollln9 Pl•«· J Ollllf llMldtlKI, 2" ~:~~;Ncp~~,:-1to!.cord11 Smoot, 1120 Grand-lt w St A~e Ott l"rtttllt,.,. lnt11tclor, L. F. lY1rf1, No l"•rl'Y lniPIClor, w 1 wi!lhttloll. 11:111. Judoe, 0 V11t, lleo Judo•. M, I Stemp, 111111. Cltrll, E, L, Ste.,.,,t, 11:.. Cltrk, G, l Smith, 11:.,;i Cltt-, M II:. lots, llfC>, Clerk, M P, Oomtnlch!11I, ltep, PltlC1NCT *14).1 ,ltlCINCT1 .. 147·1 Polllfl9 l"l1ct. llndtrton lllnhl•nct. llO PolUrtt Pttu, Ltmti.r1 llllkltrM:e, Holly SI VII Monltto llltPIClor, A, E. Andtrt,on, It.Ill. ln.-etor, E L Cl'lttltt. 11111, JUdft, E •• Hoo...r, RIP J udpe, F E E111nor, Otm Clerk, M 6, Jonn, O.m Clerk, v c L01'1n1. 11111 Cltrk, J E lll'ft)ll'• lltt Cler•. !' C llroc~trup, lltl PltlCIHCTi ""lU.I PlllCIMCT1 4"1411 PotHnt Pltct, f'ldetord llnldtnct, 1131 l"oll!ng PllCt, Elli• ltttldtnct, Lll U"I '"'"'°" ltd (I lle Ot SOkl lnlllJCIOI, It Mir!<-. Otm. t pl(:lor W t4 EUii RIO Judit, M S G!blM'I Otm /1~111, ,./., N, Etut, R;p Clerk, O 0 f'ldltord, Dem Cl«-. M F, Dodd. Otm Clerk, M I Benion, Dim Cfffk, ll J, Adkl1on, Otm PRl.CIJllCT1 44'1C I PlllCINCT! ti Ut I Polll111 Pltce, Ta• Of World kllocl, f'olllnto l"llCI, s111ee llt91deMt. JHCll Ttft T• ll'I AVll Oomlntut! lnt1••ctor. L. L. COfl'IWtll, ltlll !ntHC:lo,, H A Sine~. Otl!'I Jlldtt M J 11111, liltll JllOOi, G J H<:i,ii ln, O.m Cler!L, $ J 01/Htr, 0 9"1 C111k, J A Hta~• lttC Cltrk, ft M. Mflltf', O""" (ltrk, M, J o llrttn, Otm. Plll.ICIMCT i 4t-1*1 f'lllCllllCTt 4f lit.I Polling l"ltcl. Ncortlt '""""' Hioh Polhnt f'ltet. ln!trl•l!ll CIUllll9UJ .. kllool, 100 l'trk Ave, 1 Alll , Vldort1 "' !tuDKfol', E H 01Utthtr1 llfllc, lr!lPIClor, F I!. $cot1, II .. Judft, J, 1111•. lttO JudH, A 0 Lffdt,11.tt Cltrk, 0 I Att vtl°'-ltN' Cltf'k, L A MuU1, lttll. Clttrk. D • C,1blr ... 1111 (l.,k, M S Klint, lttP ,llllCIHCT1 U-147·1 l"ltlCINCT1 •111•1 PolUnt ,ll(f, Arntrlc111 UitlOfl. 3M ,ollil'lf f'laq, Clvlc Ctllltr f'uMldt . L"lon SI 100 A111, l"l"hldlo '"'"''or• 0 It St11hr, OIJn• •~..,.ctor, v. II, "''"""· Otm Judot, 0 . 8 M11'11Ll1t1•. .... JIJ4M, W II. Wrltlllmtn. It." Cltfk, L. (llllMt ll Rff, Clerk, J N, lib, lttt, Cltfk1 • L, Kl'llHtf', 11.,, Clll'lt, A L lffmln. ..... PltlC:IMCT .... 14"1 t'lllCINCT! •11>1 '°*'llf'lt l"lt(f, Wt"l ll"lde!lu, lttl JltUIM PIKf, COt""''"'ltY Clubhll.tll, Ttrn'lt Hiii• Dr. lot H, Ctllt kvlll• , Jn111KIO!'. o, f'. w1111. NP ,,r1y '"wec:lor, o u. u-Dtm. Judtt, C. (omn,, 11.ep J"°"', J M. Kllnln 11.llt>. Cltrt:, • •• Colllfll ll•P. Ctn. L c Ftlrtler,111, °""· '""'· M. c. Heu. ••• (llt1i:, A v Wtlftll, ••• PltlCINC'f1 '4·1ft..I ,ltlCINCT: •ln.t l'olll"8 l'IK•. W1lk•r llt•IM11c:1. llJ5 Pol!l119 Pllct, Al'lltl'l(IWI l"lll'I Lt Mlrtd1 SI 01t , la:t W. 11 '•~I lnwfetor, f' P Cd..,.,.U, Jttt. I~. I! I '""'' 11-. Jtl'lfll. I , II. ltlltw, It... Juffl, M. M. KMtr• It• Cllrt, f'. J Cotllrt l! Ottn C1tr'k, V. J JtutfrL, Oll'n Cltrll, M. M ll:lllllJ11 ,o.m, 'Cit"., M M ll;Nletf, It.flt, ,lllCIMCTt ... , .. 1 P•tC1NCT1 •ltf•l l"Ctlll,,. l'llU1 FIA 511'1\of! :t. 'KS ANM ,ol111!1 PltcJ Etldt-111"~' 4IOll ti, c.111 Jwro. lllli-l""PkfOr, V. I . W11mlt1W, 11.tt IMPftlor, t 0 C!tmo. llltt JUlftt. I, Mt"h, Dtl!\. JudM. A. I. trirt.M. btJ. Clet11o V M. Glll'\b1t~ lltt.. Cterk. W L G•'-. ltw C:ltl'L , M. ll'tellll)'...-, ltto. C~''· If, I . 010.ttn, ()tfn, I ' l"ltSCtMCT1 ...... , f'lt.C-INCT1 U-11 .. 1 Plll(INCT1 ll•lf1•1 ,..u,.. ... .n. Mlnfll ... ....._. JllJ 1"011111&, Plttt, ltllC ... r~ 111 ...... llno ''•«· S\ltlU'rtMnl.. Cl~ Vlt (tlldllll'-. ttwllne G•-Or 21U lrblol St. llllP'C'-• J. J WlltlMI .. ·-1,._1.,., M. L lltl'-ltep..:_ ruttctol It. J f'lMI, llff, .l<*I, t.\. ~. I.Nit, 0-J~ •• WtrllWOtlll. .... JIO'dM, p, L ft-IM ••P Clerk, S.. A. fl~ 11:11, Clri, (, 0. ll~ftkft. 0-Clert.. P. 0. 1(111'111, Wt HllY Cllf'll. M A. Ktlclta. Otm. CltrL O. "'· Dunn, 11...,, Ci.ti.. H M. N111tt, °'"' Pl•CIMCT1 ..ul·I 1'111CIMC1 t SW.I l"ltlClNCli 0.1«11 l'olll"I Pltai, Ho.Ill ••tlllflC'f, 1617 S ... 111111 ,.I.ct. Gefnt'I' llttilofl'ICI. U0 Ptlll,,. PIK'• H1rlloor a111l'I Churct< J01D 01111 Vlltti Wfflbt'9ok l"I, 1130 ••It• /<VI ffltlllCtor, J N HUii, II• 1-ter. J. ().or....,, 0tm. l~'OI", A A Melrt... Otm JudM, l.. It, Hull, lt:IP JuoFlfl, 0.. J, (eoltv, 111.,. JudOt M, L. (lllCcNO. ND MrTY Clerk, O. I . f'My, o.m Clttk. HG 9te!W, Dini, (Itri! L t H1vw1rd, llf'll. c1..-. t. H. (I~, .... Cl«'!. w. • Vilt, 11:... Cllfk. M Mu1r'1'1~: Olm. H:ICUtCT1 ... 1 f'lllCllllCT e Cl~I PlllCllKT• ft.ld-1 Polllfl9 "'11ce, :ll'vk111 ll"'°'nc•. 111 ,..tint 1"11Ct Collt9I> ,k, SchOOI, n90 .. Olli/II Pil>(t, Tr111lt 1t111denc•. ttt E W A .... hl'I~ Net .. DI.mt Ill lt!h SI ,17• 1,.MC'!Or, H M 0.M. Dlfn l ...... tor. A M GI"'°""' lit... tnw111:lltl', I J H..,...,, lttl Jlldee, L. llcwct, Dim J\IOtlt , I!! C. Wll1outf1•11, .... Judtt. C It, Slttt!, Dim CIOl'k, 11 C 0.ll'llt, "" Cltrii., J W, f'llh, lltP Cl ... M i , llttflf•, 111111. Cltrt:. M OtkltY. °'"'" Cltf'lt. M •• 1.-111, 0-c1m , G • McC'lelltn, •••• l'lllCIHCT< tttlf-' PlllCIMCT1 Cl .. M-1 P•ltlJllCT SI 114 l ,.ollll'I PllCI', L'11hfr•1' Churcll, !IO P'olll• Pl1u, MGlll lt11lctt11«, 14, Potl!111 1111<1, C1rvHU1 R11lo~ .. M Avt. Sen l"tbM Ctcll Pl f . 1"1'1 SI l!UI lnt0ec11t, l . c HOii!. Jttt. ln111(!flr, c T Hthl. "•• tMPlttor. A M, ,,,., •• u •• No 1111¥ JudM. L ••• .....,, ""'· Jucltt. M I(, a....,..i1. Otm. JudOt R I Ct•tmtn. O.m Cieri<., It C, Mc lntrr1, lltt Clltk, It A Ollblrl, Otm Ci.r• 11 M Mc(ut. Otm Cltrk, I I WIUl1om1, •• Clerk H I TromNffr, lttt Cltrk I( I!. lttt, O.m, l"•ICINCT= ••1 l"lt•CINCT IMIJ•I Pill l CINCT 11-1•11 Polll"' Pl11n, Henson khoOI, In Avl Polllnt l'l1ce, C1tlrto 11.~IOlf'IC•, :IOI Pollln11 Pl•C•, Luc~111ra1 A•tldtn.:.i, •• lt Cr1111 l't lrwtY I I, E :tOfh ~I llV lniHCNn, M, C ('urtl1, 11.1,, ln,,k!or W L. e 11t1rlv It• lnopt<loo o M Luck!lt•lll, JI~ Juctot, M I'. Ptltlt , 11:.,;i Jud .. , M, A, 11111111'1. Otm Juae1 M T Conclr Ctm Cltrk, H It 9001 11:1$1 Cltt~. l , It, C11lno Ctrn Cltrk C E Ktv 1111 (ltrlr;, M M•v1r, lttt. Clt!'k. O. I 5,..;: 11:11 Clerk 11 l Snl"lff• lttp l"ll:ICINCT tf.tll·l PlllCINCT U•tl I P'l•CIN(T l).lU•I PolUno Pit.et, Hin ltttlcltnc:t, 111 A .... l'olUno .. llCI', lJI M at~llJI Ol~rtn Polllno Pllfl, MOn!t V!ilt )ChOOI, I" •••ctlofl• ''° H1mll!(lll SI MOtllt Vl1l1 Av• 24tt! ln1""""', IC L Hiit, .... lll<C1Klor, A G C!lrlrltn10~, tltto, lnl<>tC!OI, D • M1tOont ld ll•ll. Judot, 0 , f ltlfl, Otm, J\Hllee, J, E llV"MV, lttt Judtt J. A Jtckaon 01m Cieri(, t M, 0 Ow\noll, No Pt,IY Clerk, 0 I( R\/09, RN> (ll'k M J M!Ctt!hy, Dtll• Clerk, It J, Ptrt DI/II, Cll'rk D A VI~ 01 Walk•• Dem Cl trk ~ M G<trm1n, 0.111, PlllCIMCT1 4MJ·I l'llf•CINCTt ltAJI 1 Pll•ClNCT1 n •117 I Polll119 P!Kt. Vt! llot•lth W111, l ul POUlllll Pll<•· Mttntr lt111d4P\CI, lSll Po!llnt Pl1c1 Lono ll:t•ll;len(e, '" ,~. O", l•I A11t.. Mlr1m1r F1lrw1y Or M•11tro Cir. )11!'1 l11111Clor, M J Ml.I.II, ..... 1n11>1<lor II I' Httntr D•m ln•flf!<""'• S L L-. ll•t Judo1, M M Sebo, ltll JIMlll 8 M Vlnd•r-1 llt11 JUdlll, E S 111111 ..... Otm, Cltfk, J Tuttl1, lleg, Cltr~ J A ShlpltY Olm Cl•tl , J M, Zllrn Otm Cltrll. t t , W.rl, It... C1•rk P l, WOod Dtm Cit•k J B J1~k l111, llltt PltlCIHCT .. ,.SI l'ltlCINCT Jt Olt 1 l'•IC1NCT D-11& 1 Pollln1 l"ltc• ... .,.,.11 lt1tflll"(~ 11t PoUlnp l'ltce, l!OYI Club Ciubhlt ~'' Polling Pll Ct, H!1led ltt1!a""<e l~I W M1roullt C1n1ff SI St"" (lt•t Cir 1MPKlor, D. A Olcktf Rtp tn1pecror, P II llur1htm ll1p ln•llf(!l)I', w Hli!ld ltfp, Jucl111. G. F, Wtl?•I, II.ff Jud••· II M fttrntll llto Jul!O• H L. Moll, llltp e r.rte, A, Caooer, lt•P Cit<~ M l Cool, Dem Cltr~ M C Pelmtr Rtt. c11rk, L M Ptn1111t, """ Cterk P R H•rT•l'lorn, O.m Cler~ M J, lrlirf•· Otrn. Pllt!CINCT· 4' 1411 Pll:l!CINCT t Sl .. 1l 1 JlltlCINCT p.\ ... I Polling Pl1ce, Co• R:t11dt11C41, ,31 A111, Polling Pl1(1, Lll'ldb«lh School 110 I!, l'olllnt Plt~t. Fltt Sl1 tlM t, tot ••k•• V1tutro ntd SI Avll l1111Ptclor Y H Co• Olm ln111tctl)I' A F. Kvlt llleP, 111111c1or, 1 L C~•rou1111, It.ti. Jud,., I . a. O.lt!row, lltP Jff11, M I! l(nlpp D•m JudPt, A 1. (hrl1tofl Otm. Cltrk, L M HOP~ln1, ltt• Cltr~. f L W;rl~ff illt' Clerk, J A HoObt R•P (ltrk, S Ptd<, Rto Cltrk £ L ~tw Dem, Cltr~ G A, 8tnntll, lltP. Plll•CINCT• 4f.)4f.I f'll.ICIMCT !t tM•I P1taCIHCT1 tt 1•1 Pottln1 l'l11ee, e1y Cliff Vlll1g1 Pollln1 Pl1~ Mltll'l'I llftlldt/ICt, 2lU PolUno Pitel, Seritu• llttldtnc:e JO"ll Clullhou11. itll Motil• Vlrt1 Conlllllf'llt1 Allt ••bb 51 • , ln11ecto•. A s Coif"''"' ll•• ,, •• ,-,,, 0 J '''''''' o.m. 32112 ln199Clor, S .. 111111rt, " T F k o ~· " Jud91, C E MundlV, lllJI. Jlldlt, • '1 "' "" Judtt II ll $1)1.1tk1, Otm, Clerk, M [lyff, Dern. Cttr•, L. A F1ulk1110 Orim, Cltrk, D M l!d10n, lltt Cltrlo., L G l(r•mtr. ltW Cltrk J M •••"1• tm Ct1r~ V I M1ll1cy, lt•o. PltlCIMCT1 9' .. ll I o••<OHCT n ·ltl I SAN JUAN CAPllTaAMO Polll1111 Pl•c• W111t lltt1Gt11'Ct, 21•1 Polllno Pl•Ct. Fonltlntrt lllfllldenc;t. PltlCINCT1 .,_117 I S1nt1 Ant Av1 :io;, llovct LIL. Polllftt Pt1c1. S•n Ju1n khool, '1'42 1111p1cto" C c Mtttlnelv, ll.., ln•e>t(!or G ,., Koitl It•• tt•I El C1ml1'I lt•1I JI/dee, ,_, II. Sor1n1111, lltll. JUOlt, N M. lulll lttP ln•pec:for, I , L, W1llt, ltt•, Cltrk, J, M L11\d Dtm Cltrk 1-1 I' lnirtm, D11n1 Judff, K. $. 'l"llclrmll, ll!tp Cltrk, I E T1ylor, 0tf!'I, Cl trk e J p-11, 1t1p Clerk. M I!!, SltPhtn1011. lttt. P1t•CINCTt lt-1:111 Clttk, J M, H0011, Dem Ptlltng f'ltct, o • ., ll"lcl~nct 1711 PlllCtNCTi It-In I 1310 l'ltlCIJllCTI 4f.1111 Clbolt Allt PolHno P!1t1, Ccttl C..n Col, Polllnl Pl1e1, Ctllloun lt"ldlnct, fl411 in .. tcfor, E o Div. lltP Adimt "111• Oro Pl. J·-H ( 0 c 0 Dom ln1HCI¥• • C Turnt• Ofm, vu • • 1rpen "• • ''''' E 1t1>rhm1n Dem lfttPldOI", C G C1!fl.Oun, lllfll, Cit ric, J C ltolm1n, 0tm '''''• M, A KtMblr, Dom J"'.. • >. M1tll!11, O.m, ''''' C • M-•OO''' ••• Cllf't, D. H. l1utm1n. 11-.:i, n•(•Nn7' p.t;,,1 ' • e11111. f!. l. llro.tCtw•ck. DtM. CIHM 0 l M1rth1U, lttp. Polllnt Pleet, StnklY llttldtlKt, UJ l'lllCINCTt St lf).1 P1t•CIJllCT1 4'-1:111 Stntll SI Folllng Pl1c1, Mtrk•burY ll11fd11>C' Pollln1 Pit;• C~erm1k lltllllfl'ICt. 1ni.oec1or, 9 J Stnkev. Otm. l11l Coletti Or ttl12 3ml Av• Lot Amlto• Judot. B F Sttvtn10n, Dem !n11>1clor P -S Currin lltO. lftWKICH', A I 0. Mlfl. lttt. Cltrk. R M Tl'IOmPIOn Rtp Jullot, M P, Gtn111r, lteo Jlldll, M E ktllO, ltfll Cltfk, 0 ( LI llut, He p1rlY Clerk ) M CtV811ttn Rt1t Ci.rt, Jl E 8u(,llht1m, liltl "ltlCINCTi U ..... 1 CltrM V IE Mll!t r. O.m. (ltrll, 0 L1nem1n, llt11. Polling 1"1•ct , SI Jotchhn MIU (ll\ll'cll Plll(INCT1 h •194-1 Pll.aCIJllCT1 4t-l1••1 lt"' Ortlltt Allt Pol!l1111 Pt1c1. Trtlltr Tow11 Clubh1• Polll119 PllC• Mobtl• H-Pt11••"' lf'ltPtclor, T. T SehtoltV. R:tP 3'1 w Wilton 51 Clut1110u11, '341l Stn ,,lutn Crl'llC ltd Jlldoe, P, Jollnt011, 0"'1 ln•Pl~!or, ~T 0110, It~. ln1"dor. M H1lfltlcl, 11:11> Cltrk, s J 8o6tnh0tl•r 11:... Jud'e• A l., arow11, A•p Judot, N 0 Kt nntdy, It .. , Clerk. £, MCTltut, Rtt C!ttk 0 l Amc1 Dim Clerk, N F. JtCktOll, Otm f'llCIMCT tt+ll•l Clerk H • 1h•twlbury, Dtl'l'I Cltrk, 0 l 0111.ilt, Dern '0111119 Plitt P1ul1rlno khOol. 10.0 Plll!CINCT• l:l•ltt·I PltlCINCT• 4'·-1 W l'tullrlno Alll Polllftll Plttt, ltlllll Tower,, a11t Otl • Polll111 Pltct fortier kllool, 25'01 ln-ctor, 1 M Htll'k, Rn• W W lt'lh SI C•mlno Oii Avlon J\111 .. , y , M Brown, ltet>. ln1111<1cr, M A klll lll•I, R ... lniptdor, A H Comtr lttt. c11r•. J Tomnn D•m J11<111. O M H...,.11, Otm Jud11, 0. Y. Gtlff, Dim Clttk, M, E. Tll'l'IPlt, • .,. Clt tk J G l"tul•Y O.m Cltrk, D M. G1uldtn, 11.tt PlllCIJllCTs 12~ 1 Clerk, N ll141ck, Otm CllA P A Ml"YI ..... l'Olll11u Pl1c1, l(lllvllrOOkt lcllool, t1Sj PlllCINCT1 12•1171 1'11.ICINCT 4' lJt I l<Ul~b•ooll.e ln, Polllno Pl.Ct Pl1v.oert MC Polllng f'ltct V1llty Mobllt Isl ln1~lot, J R N1um1rtr, O.m Clubl!11 , f0.1 W, Uth !I 21'1.12 CIUbllouH, 16000 Alll Atr ..... t11C Jud11. J 0 Enollllh. Otf'l'I. lnu••Clor, E M ltou• It•~ '' tn•PtcfOf, M A H111, lltt. Cltrk, 11, c Holm1n, t1;1c Jud•• 0 V P1nktt111, lleo Judi", (, S, Jl11d, 0tm Clerk, C P. M1rr001, RIP Cltrk f F Lommtll Dtm (ltrli:, A C l_I,, lltt l'll•CINCT1 11 ~I Cttrk V M hbtll, ltlfl Cllf"k, l S l<ltlltn, Olfn, Polllno Pl1<1 l(elly llttldtnce J141 P•ICINCT1 l:l·IH•I PlllCIMCTt ~1 YtllOWllllnt Or Potunt FltC' ltorl<k lttlldll'CI. 11•3 POiiing f'l1e1, Btro ltttldtnc•, 31US INPKlor, H, It Kint, 1t11 AlbtlrOll Or VI I M1c1onn1. Jud••· J, J , 1(1t1y, •• , lnlPtc:lor N K 1"1!!trlln1, Dtm lntPfC:for, s. L. aero, It.to. Clt tk, s E l.ll\dou111, 1111 JudM, It, A. HtY, tit•' Judoe. <;. J, Qulnl1n1, lll'P Clerk, M e, Ctltlrld'I, 1t11 Clerk N P lluch•n1n, ll11. Clerk, W l , 81lbrld11, Otm P1t•CtMCT1 t2..U.I Cltrk, I!" II'. ft"ltrtlntf, l)tm Clerk, J G, Chttlner, Otl'l'I POlllnt 1!'111.:1, ,.OIT>OM School, )O,fl PlllCINCT1 12·1tt I PR•CtNCT. 4'441·1 '°"'°"' A-..; Polllf'll Piie., E1tarw;t1 HI kll(lol, ml l'ollln• P!1(e OUIDOlf Clubhll.lff. '°201 '~-(IOI'. A II, H1rrl1ort. ll:tt f'C1c1nn1 A.VI OutPO!l'I 11:.d Judtt. E M 8111by, ltt• ln111ector, s R Kilt~. II•• tnu11ctor, l J lt°'rk, Otm Cl11k A M Roff Dem Ju<lut, I . J M4rlh1ll, R"' Judo1, J, £, Gower, Rell C1trk M E L1l'lllt(n, Qem Cltrk, A S CP~tn, Oolrn Cl1rt, D A, ._....n, No P1rty PlllCINCTt l1+1J 1 Cltrk, N l Gt••tn1, Ho 111 rfy (llfll;, G. J Wlttf, 11...., Polll119 'Pl•C•, M••· v~•dt Lli>ttrv. PltlCffoFCT1 n ·JOl.I TllA•UCO 2'Kt Mpa1 lllt<lt Or, Ettl Polllnl Pltct, Wlt.on ltllool, IOI W, f'lllCIMCT! ..... l·I ln,peclor, V, I Mllrtr. ltt.o WUaon II O I O Po!llnt Pl1c1, TttbUCO Sc.llOol, Tttbuco Jud11, II J. McKlm, Otl'l'I lll~or. I In, tm 2'6J2 Cvl'I Rd Cltrk. S, M, Wordtn, Dern Jud11, C, A Otl116. Otm '".' -oo,, L Ju-. O.m Cltrk, It 1. H11th, lllt Cltrk, G Cl1rM, m -"'" P1t•CINCT1 "'°""I Cltrk, 0 E, Glll11pl1, ltt Jucl11, M E ltrnblrl, lllt l'lllCIN(T It »I I C.' •• ' ' ••• ''''"• D•m Polllnt P1tce, Hert ltffld.tnct 21°' 1 • ' Miner SI Polllno Pll(t, Htr!kl ltt1ldt nct 11:)1 Cieri:, M M Ortlltrn, 1111. l••-ctor, M I( Molltn, ltt~ 0111)(111 Ave PRECINCT! ...,,,_, .... tor V I! H tk ll PoUl"'I Pl1c1, Kotfl ll"ld1nc1, llJtl Judlt, J C Lyne.II, Nt ••rtr ln1Pr1t • Ir f, ti Al!urat Dr (ltrk, 0 It Htrl Ptm Judtt, G II:. Ollvtr, O.m lnwtclor, I' J Kotl•, He 11rh' Clltk, M L Hltlb1rd. Ctm. Clerk, J E Me111 "'' Jud••· J J D•ntul, o.m. Plt•CIN(T1 IMl1·1 Cltrk, S l Ct<ll, 111111 Cltrk, A, I , Otutl11, lltt Polllnl Pt1c1, Mist V1rd1 Sd\ool, 2"0 l"RICINCTe Jt,,01•l I N Mt11 Vtrd1 Or, Jett, Pplllnt l'l1c1, M1thodl1I C~ur<h '91 Clerk, P, J A;':~'·vf'.': ~~-~HC01 ~{i ~· :1b::;V:-., ll•I 111~::::or~1M o Vin Oor1n, lttp. PlllfCINCT: 11.,..1 "" Jud I L 9 11 O ZSOll Polll111 Pl1Ct. (rtnt ll:MldlftCt, 2'11 Clw.k, I( M !!iWllttr Otm ft , • U rt11 "" C!trk, J M WVtll, Dem Cltrk, M. l(, Lu1k, ll"' lttdlll'ld1 Or PllCINCTI n.sl I Cltrll. M L Cauoht,lv, lttll ln•llfdor, M J Crtnt Otrn, P•'flnt Pl1c1, Fl·"-........ ,, 01"" JlllWPOll:T llA(N Judtt, I'. M S111tll'f, CHm "' .,.,. .., Cltrk H E Moor, JttC> Orlole Or Pll.ICIJllCT1 ""'4 1 CJtrk N T, Flin"'"• llff. l/llOl'Clor, I!! t l'lchl', °'"'· l'olll119 Pltct, Gtlff ltttldtna., l'14 •••CINCT• h ..... I Jud••· v. M. Tic••· ll:4P vr111 ,..,., Poll!ni Pl1c1, L1ud1r1H1ulfh 1111ld•Mf, Cftrk, C. I "'""ror, II••· ln1111clor. M M Oat11. Otm. no E n"" SI Cllrtc, L P. Wtntlty. It.II Jlfd01, c A P•fch, llto 1n1.otclor, L V L1udtrb1V1h, ... •RICINCTi n~1 Cltrk, J, Cott. Dim Jud••• s I( Al'llltr .. n, Dem Pollll'I Plact , •1i.1rlc kllool, 1•11 Cl1rk Ill L, B1r1, Otm. Clt rk, fl Elrr'. lttp l1J11r1< Dr. , l"•ICIMCT1 Q'°'J' Cltrk, D 1. W11!, 11:11 1111-frllr, G L, C1n11011, 11.9' Potlll!I P11c1, Slutk•Y ll"ldenct, ,,,,, 1"11.ECtNCT i fl ... 11 Jud11, G, S ChtPIYllll, Otm, VII M1rln1 l'olllno f'lite. T~ Aptrtl'l'llftfl Cltrk, LA 0.11ltl1 Dtm t111pfciol", J M StucktY, Otm Clutlhfl , JU ! 20lll tt Cltrk. J J &.tlllt, R.. Judte. H, A ltuckl'f, CHm. ln1Pf(lor, V, M Ltndry, No ptrty PlltlCINCT1 H4U.1 Cltr•, A. Gii, lltl Judt•• A fl' Ltndrv, lift• Pollln• P11ee Louldon ll11!c1tnu, 1n c11rt, J e ll•rTon, 11:1, Clerk, I( I Wttlhfrw•M, ltto, Monlt \/hit Ave PltlCIJllCTJ ....,., 1 Cltrk, J Jt, WOodwtrd, lt•t• ln10tctor, V Lotallon lttp, Poltlllf f'l1c1, au!otl lltcllltnce, 11 (OITA MllA Jlldll, F, A, Jmllh, 0-811con 111 Cl1rk, V l P1rto11•, Ret tnt-lor, l , C Co•blll, lt1P f'•ICIMCT• »•I ( O L M O J 0 H • ' , ' ,' '' ''. ''-I Ill lt rk, Orr IOfl, ltto ud11, P, t '' t o 211 Oii nt ICI, rt _, ' l'ltlCINCT1 h .. 11·1 (ltr'll, V. NI, ~tuon, 11:11, Aoch11t1r St Po1Un1 Plt Ct, tltrllor O!rll Cl~bllll Cltrk I I D1vl1on, lttD lnsl>t(for, D P 9row11, Ctt/11 JIU Anlhtlm A111 PRECINCT "•111 Jull~t. C I( Co111ult, leP lnH>ltlor, p Slaol•k 1111 Potllnt PllCt N1wport Mlll!Or )ChOOI. Citric. E M OUllrtl"f, ltt•. Judfl A B Grthtm, Rep, "'° lt11lne Avl Cl1rtt, l C HrVJt 11., Cltrk, M J Nltm,1, 11.tp, !ntpec:tor, M M llOlttd, II.to l'•ICIJllCT• Jt414•1 Cttr• J H, M1rtln, llllP JUdlll, J. I, Stndl, Otm, Pol11"9 Pl1c1, Ot LI V!tnt lttllcllll'lct , PllllCINCTt Jf•.,,.I C!trk, L. C FU11, Otm 417 Lll!lll'OOd Of Polllnt l"l1c1, Cltr Htll, n ,r!r Of', Cltrk P M Fowltr, illtP ll'IU'ldor, l H Dt lt Vllnt, lltf l111otcl0r, a J Muti.r, 11111>. l"llllCINCT1 Q .. 1J.1 Judll M A Sh1w, llW Judtt E f', TlrllUU Dtm ,olllnt ,!Kl, ll<lu Plrk (lubtlou11, 111 Clttk, 0 l , Onn'lllM, lttP Cltrll, J M, Kt1mtr, ltfll Liiio P1rk Dr Cltrk, G J Jol\n1ton, Dem Cltr•, H L You119, llltC> 11\lr>tclor, F. M Crlum111, Otm PllllCIJll('Tr 12-.1 f'll:ICIMCT1 12 ..... I Jyllft, V, Shtnnon, 0.1!'1 2011 POlllnl P11c1. llttd ltrtldtll(f, !I»' Polll119 Pl1c1. Wh/Hltt Scliool, llOO Clerk, II., w MIMlll....... ll•D P1!mtr 51 WMtlltr Ayt Cltrk, M ft1l1, Dim !ll~lor. I A w11111, Otm lntHQor, • l T•lboH lttt. PRICIJllCT1 ,,..741 Jvdtl, M G. 9,-11, Dern Julle1, I, L Andtr1ot1 Otl'l'I, Polllnl Pltct, Community (hu1c!I 41t Cltrk, M, I!", Lt Mltf1r, Dim Clltk, A I kulr1, Otm HtllolrOPt Avt Cltrk, A l . M1rdl111, Dll'n Cfe!"k, M A l(lffblr, ltt,, llltptclor', G M Sltln, Dtl'l'I Pltl!!CIHCT 12 .... •1 l"llllCIJllCT1 D-1 ... 1 Judot, H. 9 ICllVllY 11111 P'olll.,. Pl1c1, ,_,,.,.. ltlllffl'ICI, :XO 1'011!119 l"ltA C0tt1 M"" School, ~ Cltrk. I! M llowt, Dim, M1tno1!1 SI F1lrvl-Id Cltfk, H F, Hern Rip !111p1Ctor, a . J llttclltr, ltll ln1pe(IOt, &.. H, l"Olltr, ... l"ltl!CINCT• IM7S I Judee, L. A WtllhfrwtX, lltf. JudH, J. A, Hllll!le, RIO. Polllnl Pltet, loon11tr ltHIOfHICll. 211 Cieri(, It, G, Sntllhtn, lt111, Clltk, I( A. OIMIOll, ltlP VII DlJon Clerk, S A Mtr1r, lttt Cltfll, A YOUl'll, 111 l~11111Clor, V, J Mt1ny, lt1P, PltlCIMCT! ., ..... , PltlCIMCT1 n.1t11 JlldlMI, E. ' MtcGllllv••r ••••• 21f Potll111 Plt(I, HlrHf" k"901, .US I. PollltlO Pl1c1, Co11t1 ltt•ldtnCI', 3104 Cltr-, !, A, McC1tlr1, Otlll, 11th SI VIII •u"'1 A.... (ltrk, , S PtttlOll, RIP IMltdCr, J M f irth, ""'· ln1Pttt6r J Ct. Co11d, ll:tt PltlCIHCTe lt4'6 I Judtt , L Mlflcllr 11:10, J\/dtt V P Rtntltr, Rip l"otllnt P11c1, N-POrl Eltmtntt,., Cltrk, a J C1mpbtll, It., Cltrk, C M Pl1!ll, Olm School, l•th .. ll t!tlo1 SJVd Clerk, II I , C1l1J Drlm Clerk II IE NtllOll, Rtfl lnipe(IOr, M J Cr1wtord. 1111. f'ltl!CINCT. rwtf'4 f'1taCIMCT1 ft l•t•I J\KIOt A, II Ptlt,.•n, ll•P ,11 Pcillnl l"IKt. 9uc~ • ., lll•ldtf'l(I, "' Ptlll"I l"ltcl. 01111111', ltttlctlflCI, lO'lO Cltrli, G II. Llwttnct, II•• Either SI C011ntrv Ckllt Or ' Clerk, 9 M Morll-t. No f'1rll' ln1P1H:tor, It, E lucht n, Dern. lntftl(f«, Ill l( Olltt!t., 11:•• PRICINCT 1 IMn I Judot, I , J S111!1, It•• Judlt, M M Turin, +to PlrlV l"alll"I Pttct, ,llm!fltl llt,ldlnct. MCI Clerk, \', !'. llc:hltr, Olm, Cllrlt, A, I , WU!llmt, lit.. St1.,,or1 Or Cttrk. It I Fowlfr, lt1$1 Cltf1f, J , V, M1t1.,on, 11:111 ln•PtCtor, 0 C J01111-. •11. Plt•CIMCTt 11411•1 l'ltlCINCT1 '1·111-1 Juda• I w G••110. Rtt 121 Po111nt Pltc.. Ctllftrn11 Sd!Olll, .mi f'olll no l'lttt. ,eur ,.._ MP (lt rk. 11 Ill M<Ntlr. Otm. Gllllornll AYI, ClWIPl'!11,, 2l)t N NIW'llOll 1!!11d. Cltrk, J ~. J011n10n, O•m ll'lfloldor. C I Wilker, Ill... lllMltt'°'• G e '•tlbtum, ll1p, PltlCINCT ~I Jud••• I( I &1nd1r1, Dtm Jud••• M f', l ur1•11. 1"11 l"elllno ''•(I, Mtrln..-. l tti.I, JlllO Cl•tlt, a J , Anc1trto11, 0"'1. Cltrii. M S, l1ldl.,, Dem. M•rl"''' Or C141rk, E L Sor-, Dern Clttk, 11 M Prl<t 0.m ln ... ctor, T R MllldtMtll, Otm PltlCIHCTe h .. lt I l"llllCIM(Tt U·l7S.I Judot M l Br!_,.! Dern lM POIUl\9 l"IKI, Or0tttdl ll1tkl1nc1, 2201 l'olll/19 Pl10,, llC:tlll!" Scl\001, 21:10 111111 (ltrk, J , Y, Mc:llffr, lllt P, IOWI lt Ant A111 Cltrk, J I( J..CICIOll'I, Riii lllWllC'for, M. I . o...tiem. "''' l11u11ctor, N A, Owen. llff, PllllCIJllCT .,._,,, JUCltt, f . I , GrOl'ltcll, lttp Jlldt•, I I l lltlt10ll, 11:.. l"olltn9 f'IKf", NtwPOrt C,.,k.. I . J , f'1rk!11M11, Amtr. lnl Cllrt, A, M. t111nt11, ••• (lvblllllln , $11 C•n•I S! Clet•. V. C. Ttlft lltll, Clerk, J, A. Ka~ll•n. 1t11 l111tectof, It. L.. ltulf, 0"'1. PlllCINCT1 ft .. 1 .. 1 l'ltl CUiCT1 t).11"1 Juott. I 11 Howell, Otl!'I Potllns Pltct, Vldorlt l(flcol, 102.! l't/11"9 P!tct, kulllk lt•lldtnC .. IU SI Clt rk. C, M l'tl'llllf, ltlfl VIC'IOl"l• SI Cttlr 61 Cltr• I' S O••••"°"· lttp, lllt.-CIOI', a, I! f'lllltt. It"" ll'llt>Ktor, I 1(11\>lk, 0trn PRICIJllCT ,, ... , 1 Jllftf, J, E. HOSLkll'lt, o.m. Juel~ ••• J H•lfM, °""' Pollina 1"11<1, Sw1ln tl111111tnu, Jn Clefk.. V. M Htlt. ti.. Cttr•. A Whfttd, Dlfll ,f,N11nt Av• Cltl'lc, , ll, Sl1!1t, 11... ,,, ..... M. Htll(Mtt, 11:.. fnU"l(for, M A sw.in. .... l"RICINCT1 IHW.1 l"•ICIMCT1 ft•ln.1 JudM, t J Httnmt n lttt1 Polll119 P11ui, C.nyori khoOI, IUO Cit'!-f"olllne Pl.ct, HICkt, Jt11idl1'CI. 1102 Cltf't, J I. Wl\ll1ktr, lfll, 'fOll Or G!!lrttt.r Aw Clerk I . T. 1tllli.,., ""' 1111Mdor, It J J1nu1ry Dem ln1Pl(lor, I J ,._,,, Otrl'I. f'llCll'tC"fr JJ.U-1 Jlldff, c w. Hollll\111, 011'1'1. Jlldtt. M 0 111ck1 '"' Poll! ... Pl1ot1, L.ytntr'" ,111/ttll, m 0.. Cltfk, &.. J W'tltv, N• ''"" c11rto.. s. t.. LltNJt, 09!!'!. lltr Or, Cltrll, S W Hopklftt. Otm. Cieri!, A. 0. llt11I, O.m 111-'1>1, I p C1rr, Otn'I PlllCOtCT1 041 .. t 1'1tlCINCT1 J).11 .. 1 J\ldtt, v I( S..rt. Otm, • .., .. l"Oll!nt PIKt, v 1n1 ,...,,_ lll1tlcttl!OI. "°'"'* PllC.. Fir• l ttlloft I, -Cltrk.. l. • Pitre• 111 .. , 17llO ·~ A11. AGYll Pllm Ot Cllf"k, ' I, Alf\fl, llltP lnlplCtor, M, l Sl1Jt1rt, II... ._..,, L A, JtWI, Ill.... l"ltlCINCT1 ..... ! Judte, Ill. M. MammtllO, ••• Jllllft, M, L. l rtoltlltrt, °'"" Polllnt PIKr, 011""' ll~l*"'tl. Hll Clttlt, It. J , Thelnta, It"· Cltf"k, I(, J, Olvtll>l11, 0.... tkNI! l lvl , Cttnl, 6, """""""'llO. 11-. Cltrk. I I Hlfll!f't. 0tm f111otcto•, a J , Otl,,.., 11. ... l"lltlClll!CT1 9M1"1 l'lllCIHCT1 ft.1,..1 Jud ... N a Welt!", Dern Polllnt l'ltct lfYVltw M4'*'• lut l'ollll'lt Pit«. Ad•mt klloel, '"°Cr.I~. J r i e lf(l\111111, Dllfl Off , MOW. lly II. Clt.lllllClvll Rd C!trk T, P, lhP.llttr, II• IMPl(IOI', ll M. ll•tMtt, ~ti. IMMC:lor, I W, \t,n, ltt,, PlllCINC11 U.fltl.I JlldM, 0 , M Olt111r, 0tm. JYdfl, 0, H l.N l tP hllll'll ~!t(f Cl!V Mtll, »tlO Htwtlft C"'l· I. llobll'I•, It" Cltrk, M.. &. Gt~,,.. Ottn (r·-t'-J N f'I • ('lttk, #. l>,Mm1, 1t111 ~ Cltrk. E ,., 1'1rt1 "• / \..oQ mlae on f11 (t1 ~ I II tr 1 • . . a4 DAILY PILOT LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL, NarICB fCo11tlnutd from PrevleQ P&·' c...-1r., • "'· c1•I••· 11: ... ...... J>llC.llfCT1 fw.M-1 lfllDKtOI', G I . l ••-· ll:ff. J>ollll'IO "'•c.t. 0.._'MIMI J"'"', I . C. 11:"*°¥1'1. tit•. C~. 11-1•111 St CJHL. I ¥. L,..I,, II•. tfl.-tot. JO • ...,.,..._ ._ (lorn, M.. t:. flpolfll, °'111. JUO,., lit, C.. Hotli.111, ll" PlllCIHCTr ...-.1 (l«t., A, II. 11',..I,...,.,., .... ,.fltll119 '1-.ct, 11/ttffWffl ll:ttldfnet, Cleft.. H. 4. WOOd, o.ri.,, SIJ "°'"w Aw. l'lllCIJllCT1 U...U..I fnW«i.,. H. I . Lhlt , ll:t... ,_.. .. ,. '1.K-. ~WOOd J\llltM, H. I . '""-"'· ltf. CIWl!OfJ .. , 17-14111 f.I. LEGAL NOTICll .... , .. (!•"'· o .•. Dtl-.... Cltf\, I . a. DllW-, Olrft. ,.1tKCIJKT1 l'Mll>1 PO!flnt J'lt<t. ,.,._,.. A •JI Ciu"'-N, .)IQ "-"'fffw L11. ln110tdll!', T, H, o.vt1, 111.,.. Juett. A I , O.vlt. o.n. At 11. Cttr~. L. A. V .. t, .... (l,rlr,, 0 . L O'l rvl fl. ll:ti• !f!N>«tor, M. M, 0. LI Mt rt. lilt•. Cltrk, P. A. llllllklltllt. • .._ PlllK[INCTo IM'l .. 1 C.•trlr., 0 . G. kl...,lel'ld, .... JvdM, L L.. GIV"-rl. btim. J>11tl(IN(T1 u.411•1 (llJl'll, T, (Ol»'F. llltf. ,..111.,, "l•ct , Mc.Mllltn ll:otlOtl'U. J.llO C!trlr., ,l K'*"'-· Olm. PotU11t l'lt(I. Vt-1111 .. ldtncl, .(IU Stton lld. 1 .. 1pectll!', o. J. wr-. o-. ltOlt nclt "~·-.... ,, .. ,,, """"' f~to•. l . D."M<MIUtn. lit••· l>oolrlnt l'llt«, Wt.,. ""~'· 111• Judff, T. V, Wllltl«. It.,, a. C!trO., s, I . Ewff'&, °""'· Cler-. M, 0. Hf,olll. Jt.,.. J110tt. '· G'. Norm111, llltt. lhlbot I J\'11. (t.•k. 'f-, I . Hubbell. ltt•. tn11>«tor. 0 , J , S..H. Ill••· Cl1rli, J, "· G•'l'llClr. 0.-00. Judt1, A, T, Crt1, II••· l"ttlCINCT: ~·I Cllrk. O" J, Mv1n1, Ill••· P!IUflt "'•t•, 1"lr1 St1tfon J, 110 Clerk. J, F. Wrtn, •~. M1rfl;old A~I. ,.lllECINC't: D» .. ·1 l'lll•CIHCT1 ti.flt-I Pclllnt P lt><t. ltMMI' lllHldtf'Ct, Stlon llld. "" lnllNCIOt, J . M •• ,,, •••• l'ollfn1 ,I.a. MNfl1'10t!d llt.lld!otet . l/\ltl9(1or. V, t . llMMI', ltlJll. Juelte. J "· ltrnlne, fll,p, 110 (~rk. O. L. 1 .. 1i.v, °""· (ttr•, P. I , NOfdrkt, ltff. J11IHIP. "'· G. 1<1111.,, lllto>, 0...l A~t. Ct1r~. N. Grat11m, .... !/\t11Kl0t, J. L. HIM, llltO C.l1r1o. M G. Cr1wloofd, Otm, J.-1, ,._ O. H ............ , Ill••· "lll'CINC't1 »tlt•I Clerk, M. H, Mdlltf, °"91. .. 0111119 Pll Ct, Mtr1l1'1f 11111104~, '4J Clerk, G. M. 9ttCll. .... Ft.llf'tl.., A~•. "llllCllKT: D411·1 l/\lllf(IOr. 5. M a.,c,, °''"· Pollint •i.«. Coull.. lt1tl4t11Ct , J ul!M. J. G. Mtr1ll'lt . tltl, Ettl It.' ,...,. (ltrk. J, "'· IC1llw , lllt•. ln11«1or. 0 . •. P-1"9IOl'I, llleo, (lttk, l E NI(~. lltl . Jud9t, S. I . 8..-on, Ill••. l'llllCINCT1 il..,._I Cltrk, L. L. Coull1r, lllH. Polll,,9 •it t t . $mill! ltnl4trice, 1)06 Cler•, 111:. M. Smllrl, Rt•. E11e1i. Ln, •lllCINC't: U.lO·I l"IHCIO<, M. I OYll<'I, lllt•. •olllM Plitt lll~llM Ttt ll rr Jud9~. M •. Cunnl ... """' It... Clubl\oo,lll. JOO IE. CMll HW'J', Cler~, L, W, FO<ti.I, lll1p. ln•fi11<1"• M, E. J.-H. lltP. C.lf.r•, L A, Sml!h, °""'' Jud!Jf, J. w .. rtirooll. 1111111. f'llf(INCT1 J.J_..1 .1 (ltrk, Ill. 8 rtn1lttltr, o-. Potllnt Pltct. P•-ltttlcllft<t, 211 Cltr1<. C.. I . Otbor,,., Rtl. Evrnlno Ct nvon lld. ,.ltlCIHCT: S~Ml·I ln111t'(!0t. I, C. PttM, •11. l'ollJ"9 PIKt. Smllrl ltttlcllflCI, J,,dOI. E. N. 111ne,, ""' Ct ntt ll• Pl, Clt•k. •. M ... rllcMll, llttP, 1noptK!Of'. ' J. imllll, ltH. Clttl , M IC Ultltr. Rtf, Jud••• II, M. Hooe, ltff. PllCIH(Tt tt .. 16•1 Ptlllflt li'lt<t, CUIYtrdtlt CIUW'lo!,iM, JIS. HtmlHon St . ln1P1Clor, I . M .... ,,....., It ... )01 Jud1f, II. J, 811m111, 1111 .. (It "'' H. C. Wtll, II ... Clt •k, M, It, ht•rll, a-. Plll!ClHCT: Sf .. ll·I Polllnt J'lKt. Tu•!lt lttck khool, illm11f1~• !n•<>t(!Of, f". H. C1r!11l1, llff, ,.trlt JudH , (. 0, 111.0.. lttP. Cltrk. H. C. l"'tt._., Otm. Cltrk. E, M, l rtcktlt, D-. PlllCIHCT< H .. llt-1 l'oUlno l'l1c1, l rotd-Olltc .. Sier•• Stt11. 11 .. ln11>1"0t' I . J. Andttwl, tlt11. JuC111t. J. W1,,., Ho •••l'I' "'"'· c ....... Dto:n. (l1rk, N. M. NlllMn, 11.tp. JUI lt41 Pll'!(IHCT! J).ff)·l Cit'*, M. f , Alldrt wt, 1111(1. l'llCINCT1 Jf.fl .. 1 • SOFl'·SELL SAM lty Man .. Myen U.S. Drops 'Antipot' Subsidies WASHINGTON (UPI) The Juatloe ond Aarlcultura Departmenr. have decid<;d not to continue IA 1972 an u· pe.rimental program In 1\ states in which farmers wer11 given 1ubsldle1 for eradlcallng wild mariju1n1. "In gener1l," an A&riculture Department official 11ki In response to questions, "it didn't lppe.tr the twt·tharint produeed a 1ignJficant in- crease in the wild m1rijuana acreage r 1 r m e r 1 were eradicating on their own." Po11ln11 Pltct, Mttl'IOdltt Cl!ur<.11, J1J Clt rk, II. J. Holcomb. 111•11. 1'0111119 Pl1c1. U11/veralty l"lrt Ill, 1l'002 The program was conducted· last year til 'two counUe11 In Kansas and ilngle counties in Dllml1, Jndiana, Iowa, Ken- tucky, Michigan , Minnesota. Mbsouri, South Dakota and Wisconsin. -'11.ott AW l'A:ICINCT1 l~*·I Ztt SI, ln•J>l(!Qr , a'(, Cro.,on. Otm, P1>1lln11 Pltc:e, Thl1tlrtnw 1ltt ln11>1ctar, l , '" GruDl)t, It..,, Jud1t•, P, P. Hulcllln1, •~11. 11t11ldenc1, 2(111 Hltnt1nd Dr. Jud!Jf, S. I', 5"1111'1, Otm, (~rk, M , l. LI li'l1n,., A:tp, ln1PK't .. , M. W, Tl'll1Jlttbw1llt, Otm. (Itri , J, fl, C111, 01m. C~rltllt" lc!tll{t Metllltr ll'ltl• Cl•rk, C, H, HCW"Oft, lltP. Jud111, E. C. Aolt>tnburttr, Jltp. Cler~. S, T. SIHr$, Otm, Pltl:CIHCT: fM,.,.1 Cltrk, J , M1rder, Otm. P•ICIHCT1 lt .. 1 .. 1 Polllnt Plt ct, Scrupt t l11ldenc1, l•I Cltrk. A. J. Mt.rdtr, Ho PtflY Polllll9 PJtct, Unlvtr:tllV l"lrt $It, lf002 VI• Lido Nll!'d l'lll!'CIHCC U~1 Zit 51. For the Record SAGUARO CACTUS-CAMEL OF PLANT WORLO It 11 Native to Some Sections of West l nsl>t'l';IM, L. L. 5cn11111, lttP, Po!llnt P,llct Tlbtrt llt1ldtll(.•. llOol lnllPfcl", C. A. HtUl11, 0.m, Judoe, G. II. Cott. Atll. Otvon l.!n. Judot, L M, G•udht, Otrft. Cl~rk, A:. L. 1111/,,_1, It..,, lnlPIClor, N, A. Fl>ltori, llt•· Cllrk, V, I , H1rd\ol, All', CltrO.. E L. llrtt. OM! J116tt, J, IC. Tltblr9, 11111>. Clt rk, IC , N. Ctrll11t, Olm, PlllC1NCT 1 IJ..,4·1 Cltrk, J. I , Robt,,_, lttl. PllllfCIHCTt H"11•1 PoUl119 Pit<•· Ht•tlor 0 111, ti li'uOtlc (l.,k, J. J , Cov .... ltH. POUl"11 Pltct lnrlM ~••d tWJ 81diJ .. lf'Ol ll•r.tldt Or. l'llllCIHCT: t.>lM-1 C '' , " ' Participating farmeri col- lected $55,000 in payments, which were baaed on 90 per· cent or· the coat of 21pray:ing and oth!r weed control prac- tices. 'Slowpoke' Cactus Termed 'Oddball' JI Polllnt P!t Cf Ptrk HIWPlll"I (11/bfto1.ftt, lllbllouH . I~ ~lnfll' d. ln1Dt<TM, N, H. C11nnln9"11", ''' _,.,. p '* N 1 Or tntPICIM, Ill. (. Trl llf'!'I, Otm. Judllfl, M. l , IKkfr, llltP. """" I ......._ ' Jlld" A ( J&MI 11 .. Clt rk, M. w . ••llllt, ••• fnJPK!Of. M •. ;· 11"1·~·· It.,,. c1rr11.' M: L'. ... ,..~, •• ,. Cit•-· J. D. CIN"dt rv, tlN. JuOtt, Jl. ' 1 1' fP. Clerk. J. O. Wiidt,, llltt. l"llllCIHCT1 J,...t-1 Cltrk, I', Vtf'ri. Olm. SILVlaADO Polll"I PIK I, Hl,tl ltt1ldtnu, S21 Vlt C!t rk, L CtOW, A:tl. F .... 11. M1rv E. •lld 'Wllll1m J. Gib-. S.nclrt kt'I' tlld Lertfl LM MtNtlt, AtntlMI llld Otvld S, lrvln, Mff'V •lld •tbtrt A. * * * LIOo Nord l'ltlCIMCT' U.W1·1 Pll•CtHCTt ,......1 lnlHCtor. L T. H•wltV. ..... Polll"9 PltCI. l lutt1 •••l!'V. 1(1( VIII• Polling •ltct, ,..,,,....,,,.,.,. Ctflltr, lTMI Dissolutions Of Marriage G11lltd11, Mtrt1v11 J, 1nd 0.,,114 I", w11111,,., &!'Itron elllf G1rv H. AndtrMn, Lindi AM tM Dtlt l!""M Aikin" Nolt L. tnd Oltn L. WASHINGTON (UPI) Thr" organizallw, lncludlnr the American Public Health Association., ha\le asked the .Bureau if Narcotics and Dahgerous Drugs to reduce the penalty for use and Jud~. f , 5. Londlllu1, lllt•. 0.1 Ori Sllvt<lllO Ctn'°" ltd. Clttk, I(. l. H1vt1, 1111, lntPICIM, 8. A, H1wlllnt, 11111. lnillt'<!M, M.. V. Gtmfnlll. Rt .. Clttk. H, :s. Wlll1, Rtl'. ,JIJdlt. A. e. Corbv. It••· . Judft, H. L. J111111, 11111. "llllCI HCTi Jl.ct'f1·1 (11'11 ••. II. T•IPPll, II:••· . Clerk, ~. /l. Smfltl, OM\. Polllne P lt ct, f MI! Club Clubf!tuM, Cl.,k, L. A. MOnlootl!, Ill••· Cltrk. M. IE. <OllclH, lllt•. SIS w. ••lbot Blvd, Pal:CINCT; 1w.,e.1 TUITllll "II ... MIY ~ Clinton, Jtrry i.v..,. 1nd i<rtdt Mt• Auld, S1rldr1 L• Junt •nd 01vhl WUll1m K. G111t1um. Ht•IMrl O. tnd Mtrlt Ill. P1r1on1, l:trl'fflt Ind <'Oty Smith, Ltltl1n Ind Htf'btrf I', CIM'lilltn StltMt MMlltr llrvlu cactus family, is a mystery. ln1N<:1or. 111:. lll!Y'!tv, lhl Potlln; PIKOI, .AcliH 111.tallll'IC.I, '17 Plll•CINCT: TI•JIJ•l Jud11t. c. B. Ft,..,..tl!, Otrn. Aoc:kl0td lld. Potllnt "l•ct, w111 Clulll>ou.,, 14102 Clt •k. H. w. Hl'blr1, •IP • 1n1Ptcto•, ill. H, Ad1fl, 111$ Otvonil!lr• A"9. C1at<1ll1,1t;Clo, ktrt ii J, •l'ICI Vlnctr1I A. l'tbllrllr,·H11I J. INI lhl<"l"I' llt!Hm, Gtnt J. I"" Dorvtl'IVI" M, Htr1tlnt, Arton II!, tM Lloyd C. S..Utrs, Glll!'ll Jttn 1"41 Mkli.MI Jottn arunt r. Oot!111 E. •nd 'Jlamon N, Mlytr1, Jtdl N, 1nd T.,_,tM ,., Gott!, Llll'tnt Grt (I Ind Gtortt TUCSON, Ariz. -Just west of here on Gates Pass Road, lies the Tucson Moontan sec- tion of the Saguaro National Monument. Well -mainlained dirt-roads lead to scenlc areas and hiklng trails where visitors inay walk among the friendly gianl.s of lhe desert Southwest -tbe s t a t e I y saguaros, which grow to. a height or 50 feet and live· for 200 years. Native only to southern Arizona, northwestern Mexico, and a few places in California. saguaros are the wonders of the plant world. Each saguaro Is an efficient-w.ater-storage tank adapted to survival in the srorching heat and scanty rainfall of the desert. Cltrk. H. E. McGreior. tlf'P, JIH!M, E. 1. Ad1l1, 0-. ln1~1or, P, A. •1rmlt y, fl;111. "lllCIHCT1 U""·l , Cltr~, "· $. '""In, -flt~. Judn, S. f . 5.plff', lttit. P &Ulllt Pl1i:t. IHlf'I' •111dtnc1. \JOY c ...... c . A, 9rl11!111. ..... , ...... 0 . J. Wl'ltlltr, Jltp. E 81lllol 1111'11. •1tlCtHC't: U·lff.I lltlhflnct Clerk , I', L. OICktn" Otm. Wllllt m Dtlt111, Dunc1n~. Mid L111rl1 9. HollvWMd.-->MllMtt M, .... Tltem" A. Miiier, Sl'ltr!tnt Otl'll" ttld Jll'ln s1..,111n lni~c1or, s. L. Moore, lttP. Polling 11'1.ce, lluttt,,nor• ' ,.llllfCINCTi 11·146-l Jud;t. M. F. 5evllr. lilt•. 5'0 S11wtrd Jld, 0 · Polllnt •l•ct. w. 111. ~h!Mn S<hool, Clerk, D. K. Hkllclllton, lilfll. ln1Ptelor, l!I. Vin Hoven, 1m. !.:19? llrownlnt Avt. Moor1, ll:lllt.ltlfll AM tnd CKll Jot WIN, Mtrlt 11111_ Wtodtllw W. Frttlm1n, Pet•r tnd ltobtrt WllU1m Cloust, Dfvld Wtll1 I nd R"' T1r111 M.!lurfno, l'rllK'll H. tM Er"lll P. H!t111, JOl\n Allin 1"4! 5111~ J 1nt llrtMI, l'lorlnt Morrl1111 1"41 Otlt 1Crel!m1n, Lindt J, tnd F•1nk I . l1rn1rd, Ctrm1n L. Ind Ctrl Wtrnt Ollvtr, Llll"tM tnd JC>lltPfl H1nry J•. lMry, Ttlomt& Mtrlln Ind Elolt I DRUGS I Cl@rk, M. II. ICl1ln. Oem. J!Hlet, J, S. llu!lt•-•• ltlfl. lnipec!or, !, Ill. Gtrdntr, 11111. f'ltlCINCT: 1a~·l Cltrk, l. I . Wltff, lttp. Judge, f , M. WllJOn, 11111. Polll111:1 ,Pl1ct . Knlgl'lf Jlt1ldtflCI, 2511 Clerk. ll. ~· V•Oll'll~, ,Dtm. Clt,k, O. J, Wi!111n, O.m. Sltrll11t1 Tl'ltlmt ' · • Polling Plttf , Coront Otl Mtr Eltmtl!· Ir • • tr~u · 8ty1hfll't Or Plt•C•NCT . .u-m-1 er k A: M 1· - ln11><1Clor, £. M, Dctntr, lttl. ' !'loot .,0 Ctr11ttlon Avt l'llECINC't, n.J t•I Ju!IQt, C. M. Evtn•, llt•. !irY Sc II '"l O trf/lfl tltP ' Pollll'IV •lt tt, Etst (IUbhouM, 1'111 Clork, J. L. Fowl1r, lllt•. ln1P1Cltr, · · •, '• ' c11111rbur, A"'· Jones, Ol1n1 Mtrlt tnd Otvld l'rlct 110.0, ll:ult! c. •!'Id A<'ltflonr J, Pul1w1, Mtrly Ann Ind LIWl'l!l>Ct L. ICollKll;_,, C1tol O. 1nd J1fl•tv M. 91tke, Ktthlte" A. tnd J1nit1 C. Wll10<), Jtrt!« LM •rod Chtrlt• Ortn Wiii!•, Jlmtt L. I nd W1ndl J . ltrt1, 81rb1r1 L. 11\d Alol1 E. Woodv1rd, Wllll•m A. ind ll1r1Nr1 I , ICtlty, Htncy L, tnd Otnn11 A. ll••udtt, Fr1ncl1 T. 1nd Jtnt ""- Htw1dnl, Sl'llrltt<1 Gtr tnd Jt1" .. possession of marijuana to a misdemeanor. The petition, along with a IIJ.page supporting brief, was filed with the bureau by tht National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, !he Institute for the Study of Health and Society, and the Public Health Association. The plant has a hard, waxy surface that resists evapora· lion and is protected by a thick growth of spines that provide shade and break up hot air currents. Cltrl<, 8 c. E~1tm1n, Otrft. Judtf, M, AZ. :..-:..~ tltlll:~• lni~clor, M, ,.,,,11, .... PlllCIHCT· J~lM·I Cltrk. •. . • . Judtt M E Htwklnl Dtfll Pol!ln11 Pl~ct, Sltwtrl ltttldtllCf, .... or (ltrk, H. A. Scl'lu1tltf, Dtm. Clttk.' \',. J . ·M-. It.,,. • SttJl'lart Or. "ltECJNCTl Q.Jn·l 1 l1" Clerk. C. S. Gr1M. Olm. ln1P1clor, J, T. s1-1rt, Dttn. P~U7' A~•· Kin• 111.l.ldtlKt, ,.llll:CIHCTt 11.JU.1 Judge. (. A. Cluc:11. ltto. , or 1 F J J.ttp1oin 11., 1'0111111:1 •t1e1, Evtrfll lll1t1 .. nc1, l47•1 Clerk, W, (. H1tjl"", lt11. n19K O<, · · • ' Dlvonil'llrt Avt. Cltrk, 0 A. W1t!1t1, lllep, JllllOti II, G. Klr19, :flfl. lntptetor. M. O. l:Y-11, lt1P. P'ltl:Cl ... CT: t.>1t2·1 Cltrk, M. J . ''°'1• to. Judi• O J McCltlllnd ... Pollll'll PIM;t. F1rwtH ltttlcltnce, J174 Cltrk, J . A. Snvd1r. llff. Cltrk ' 1 · J · 111.,.,.1n It;., ' E 11 lbol lllvd ,..ECIHCTt J~:ll1·1 • · · • • . ' ( O j 1111(1 1'11lll119 Pl1c1 Sttpl'ltflt lt11hlen(t , 1901 (ltrk, II, J, ICll!v, """ lnW<'Clor, · OVM<. ' rdl..f Pl P11r1111,.1 to Ste. 14'20.5 llf fl'WI EllCTlon Jud... tt H. ,_, RID. '"' Ct M • Ettl II ••• codt . th..-. WIN bl no polllflt •lt Ctl for Clerk, I(, I.. MMlt. ,.?.t_m. ~:.pe<:IO~ ~· $t~phtn~' lllP ' lhtM prKlncft. OINUll.0 Yel«1 ll!tU veil Clttk, A. H Jnnt1. ""'"'· 91• ·. · ' bv 1b5-t"I voltt ballet. c.r vott M n..t Of.. P'llECIHCT: il·lt).I . Cltrk, (, t 711;.,, lie,°. Otm !let Df 11'11 lletl1tr1r " Voters~ •ltdlon Pollln1 Pltct . Jone1 lttmd111ct, JDI Tiit Clerk. O. • t r •r • · div Gr1"4! Ctn•I •1t1C1,.,CT1 J).m.1 3 · l'llll'CIHCT lnlllf!Ctor. P, W, 1-1. llltt. Polling Plttl, N-port Cin!tr LAGUNA HIUiJ J ud111, J. A. Cr111l1r, filfP. l'lr11t1tlo,,, '61 51nl• 81rb1r1 Or, ll·:l7.I Cltrk, IC. E. Jonfl, Dtm. 1....,.1e1or, J , C. WUJl1tTU, flltP. ll·ll4 Cltrk. M. M. J11•n11I, 1111. Jud ... A, II, .l~tri, lllH. ll·l7' ,.ltKCINCiTt l:l·IOS·I Cltrk, O. E. W1tlbrook, Ill••· ll·J71 Poltlno Pit.et, Wtllon lte1ld1nc1, JJm C1tr•, C. L. Po!ltr, llto. CAl'l1TIAHO ll!'ill(H Set lhMI 0,, l'Al:CUICT: U ·Jll-1 . lntllf!<!or. L. A. W-IMtn, A11. l'DlllnG l'ltCe, SI. M1cl1t1l1 C~urcl!, )1l) t'~! l"OtlfT Judot. L. L. AV\, lllP, PtCl!lt Vll!W Dr. C!trk, M. Ro1bur1. Jl:tD. ln•PKlor, 0 . K. OrlU111t. llto. 41•?9"1 Clerk. L. C. McCltll1n, lltD, Jl,ldo;e, M. P. Crumltv, llltr>. '1·195 PllllfCIHCT, JS.1°"1 Clerk, 0 , W. Quinn, Otm. IL TOltO Pc~~l;~!e:'•~',;.~'" f v1rv lt11ldt1>Ct . 3130 ~;lkitN~T~· .~=-~"· Otm. ::::~ lntoector, M, A. AlklnJOl'I, 111111. Pollln11 Pi.et. Ptrhl'I Hill, M Mtl ~~~:lltALD IAY J u<l11t. O. J , Moore, Dem. Vl11t Dr. SDU'tH LAGUNA Clerk, N. V, Ov•tllro,m. lltt:>. ln1oec1or, M. M. T"""'lt. Darn, '6·1IO (l1rk. L. A. Jol'ln..on, o..n. Jud11t, L. H. Y•rd, llt o. SAN CLIMIHTI P ltl:CINCT: J).J07·1 C!trk, H. L. lirtltt, A:eo. 4 .2u PoHlnt Pl•'•· Smflh f111t!Mnc1. 1127 Cltrk, I. O. lll•mtlo, ·-:·HO SAN JUAN C:A .. 1$TltA'40 Bullonshttl L"· , Joi li'AUL.Alt •t·l:ll ln1oecl0t. M. A. Mtclnntt, fllt1. •llllC1MCT: ..... t•l. llotldtnct, 1111AIUC•, J udgt. 0 .-W. SmUh, llltP. P,lllfll Pl1c11 C1mpb*ll »Gtl Cllrk Ill A Jord1,,, llN. Sr.t P1IMUI St. COSTA Ml'IA Clerk: E. J. Durkin. .... lntPICIO•. M. I. Sloddtrd, Dllfl'I. S?·202 PltlCIHCT: U-•·1 JUOOe. M, t .. Hoo1n. Ho Pt•IY Sl·l06 P11llln9 Pl•c•. Jkln,,.r lttsldtnct. 112 Clerk, F, S. O'Sti-1, Dtm. S2·707 Hltl'lltnd Or, Clerk, F , Crt nt , Dem. HIWPOltT IKACH ln1oeclct. C. W1ll lltP. ,.AEC1NCT; M·2'2·1 5J.J1J Jvd91. J . ill , IC l"911t v, Rt P Po!lll'lll P l•Ct . 01,.ls lluld•n<•· 2GU2 53.311 Cle•k. 0 . L. C1rmlcll11I, Dem. Cv1>re1s 51. l'AULAltlHO Clerk. ill. J. Ud1ll, Dtm. IMp.Klor, E. C. Hiii, O."" J.l-06! PRECI NCT: U·Jlf·I Juont. T. "'· 01vl1, Otm. Sl·213 Polling Pltce, Vl1rH.,., llnldtll(.t. Cltrk, C. l. TUI. R111. lllVlllV11:W 231' Ar1llt JI. Clt rk, W. 0 . t(ln1tt, Ofn'I, J$.HJ '""'"<!or. M, C. Slelllt\1111, Otm, "lll!CINCT: M-tll·l DIAMOND Jud<tt , M. L. WffCI, lttll. Polfln11 Plttt. It' llltw Sch«ll, Jill Jl..OOI Clrrk, R. S. F1rel, Olm. O•<l'ltrd Dr. S7.oot Cltrk. M. II. M1r.Oudln. lt9', ln1pec1or, V. I . S1cri, lrto. NOi.TH llllVINI PlllllCIN(T: SJ·tll•I Jl/d'Ot, F. •. MOMmtn, No ptrlY Sl-Ot1 Potting Pl.tel , Coron• dtl Mir Hlgtl Cler•. M. II. ~r. •~ Sl·ID2 S.Cl!ool. 1101 E11tlllull Ot. Clerk, II. W. ltol'lrtt, ltll'· 51.101 ln11>1!ctot, M W. 1C1v1n, Rt11 , Plllli(INCT: U...,_I .. Pk S1·101 J ~dlJI, G. 5111, .1111'1'. ,.olUn9 Pltct , $uclln Mt. · Sl·IOt Clrrk. J. V. 1Cev1n, A:tP. (lu11!!1e., 190 W. IJ!h SI. 59·110 c leric, p St81. RIP. ln1P1C10f, I. o . Andltll)n, .... lltVINI Plll!'CINCT: U ·lll·I Jvd11t. E. H, Tnom111on. ltep. St·OZI P oll!n9 Pll tt . l1rry •11ld1nct, 2tS1 Cltrk. II, 0 . MoodY, "•Cl• j9~7l Ctltlpt 51 Clork. V. ll:U1"t>l1, Dem. liANTA ANA ln~ctclcr, 0 , M. lltrrv, Re1>. ltlVlfRVllW' 1>9.JJS Judge, N , I(, HlldenbrtNI, lltP. SILVl:ltAOO Cltrk, R. F, IC lourv, Ofom, l'llllCIH(T! SJ•16J·1 d ,,.,, (l~rk, P. L. S1lltr. lltP. PolUnt Pltc:t, M<Ctulfl•" fil11 ! t t\CI, TUSTIN PlllECI N(T: SJ·lH·l :ru1 Ctnvon Or. 11·200 p11H1n11 Pli tt . EM1l!d1 lrtll•r Ptrk l"'Pf<lor. 0 . E. T1yl00". Dem. Ottrd t~h 11111 d1v el M1y, lt12 Clubhou11. !MC Pl1ctnl!t illvt. Jud11e. J . (; . .lrOlld, D•""· OAVIO G, HITCHCO(IC, tn1Peclor. M. L. Olctr1, 011", (l&r\, V, l. Bowden, Otm. lltol•lr•r el Vot1r• Juda~. A. Y tlltwk lr~. °"'" Clerk. M. McCt uOht". R111, Ort nH CO'J,,fv, Ctlllfll'l'llt Clerk. G. W, N11111, No l'trlv a, It. J. M1 r111o1, Cl!'•~. W Ev.om. Otm. HOltTH llllVIHI O.oulv PltECINCf: 11-ni.1 ... ICIHCT: Jl.fft.1 l'uOt!sl'ieot OrtnN ("'' D•llY' .. u.1, P ollr"g Pl•<• Swttl 1t11ldlnc1 40I Pollln• Plac•, e1 Toro Mtrl~• Sd\ocl, M•Y ,,, n, itn l:t:t.1·'1 Plrtlt Rd. 1111 Tr1bu«1 Rd. 1,.tot<tor, ll. J, SwHI, lllSI, lnsP«clor, f . S, Arnold, flttt. Judtt. c. II. Gullcl, Otm. Judg1, o. o . smnn. OMI, C!ttk, J. 0 . Pt .. IOl'I, RISI. Cltrk, 8. I<, Colllnl. lttll. Cltl't!. M, l. C1llvt , Dtm, Clerk, O. 11. W!.Otn, 111:11. PlllCINCT: U ·>2'·1 li'lltCIHC't: •111·1 J'vtll"9 ll!ttl, 811111'1! Rnlcltflc::t, "°1 Polllnt Pltct. Prlld•t rd t111ldenc1, Cemd~n 0< 13101 WlckU.lrt Ln. l"tPftlor, 11 J Oelirt f'>Cn, lttll. tnlP«d.,, J. M. Prl!Gt11rd, Jlttt. J ud11e, M, Y. JOl\,.1on. Ato. Jlldot, F, Su1Uv1n, 111!11. Cft rk. O. l . IC-. ~fp, Clt<1<, ~. I(, P«kh1m. II.ti. Clt•k. C Jennl•on, 111:11'. Clerk, f , F. tOll, A~. LEGAL NOTICE HOTICI TO CJt•DITOM SUPKltlOll COUlllf O• tM• JTATI 0, CAl.lllOIU'OA "" THI! COUNT't"O, 01tAN•K N1. A•7DM £•1111 of l0' G. Hl!'ltllEL., DlcMM'd. NOTIC E 15 HEltEaY GIVIEH te Hit "ltl:CINCT: IJ·l11·1 1111.VlHI Polllnt ,.IKI, Fc.r-1n lt.•ldtn(1, IU4 l'ttKCINCT J,..,_1 crldllari ol ll'lt la.ft flllmtd 'dtcWMt s..n••Mllt T .. r. '"'''' ,.;t«, Mc0Clnll4 11111!6tnc1. "'" 111 11trMr11 111vl/'4 C111n'11 fflfMt tflt • s~ld dect'dent 1r1 r""lfH lo ftll fllfm, ln1PfCtor, J. H. Crim"' '" lllll T~P" WV., will! !I'll ntetSttll' vCl\,l(l'ltU, In tlw .tflol l'I .... MIY I Er1k!M , P1lrlc1 Atntl Ind Frtnl "'''' S1>1.1nl, Cvnltll1 ind l'r1nk Mffl't. Clttioottl'I An<1 t nd H-•rd Dudttv Jr. N«:eo, W1nU J. •nt1 01vld o. Wtrd, Ktltlllln J, Ind 01,.ld A. Lodtht rt, llolltrt 'W. tnd l'l'lvl111 M. Lt"9, Sl'lerrlt A1rll tnd lilobtrt Alltn c111rr1tr, lln l'tul tncf Htlffl M1rior11 Hew. HCl'(I EUMM tnd Viol• Al .. S11n~v. Gtr1ld M. Incl Cl'l1rlon1 L Sl'ltP1n11tv, Wl'!lllM H. t.ncf J-V, 81111, JOVCI lncf ltoOIN W, Ztrd•, C1rdl'11 Su. 1nd lttd\lrd Dontld J Ol\n1. W1lll1m HlrlrY Jr. tnd Jtc· ~tflMM. Hfft, Etntlt J . tnd Li"4!1 J. H-1rd, Alntl L. •nd John 0 . hrtckmt n. ltttr June •"41 Donnlt J. !Curit, Lindt M. tnd llltYlflond H. 9 u1t>v, Judv I.. 11111 G1ort1 Edwln Zerblll, LOrrt !nt •nd J11n·,.tll! 81n- l•'"I" 1 llrown, C~trlot11 L. llMI Grt0"V A. llllty, Vlrl1nl 0. tr.cl H1rry O. Jr, llrtdbllrv. Lt Vont L. 1nc1 ltlUr1rC1 E. 9•8Cl•uri.n, ICtvonl J . lncf Jud/It. A, llond, Thom11 GlltOI' 1nd Lortll1 Loli RtvnOld1, S1ndr1 Jo tr.cl E4w1rd J1m11 M"rls, W••d A. tfld .Horth M, Grounding Snags Rites MOAB. Ulllh (UPI) Utah's fifth national park was dedicated, but Gov. Calvin L. Rampton almost misstd the ceremoniea. Rampton got stuck on a double-decker, o p e n • a i r paddle-wheel steamboat In the middle of the Colorado River. The newly-christened "Can· yon King" ran tiground on a sandbank. Crews from other boats rescued Rampton and his par· ty after 90 minute!, in time to make the ceremoniea for Arches National Park. The boat was pulled fr~ to continue i~ maiden voyage. Bay Star Not Ham SAN DJWO (AP) -Sandra the Porpoise b AWOL from the Navy -much to the de.light of the civilians 1ht'1 been entertaining In San Diego Bay. ' Htnrv llau1"tl. Ellttn tlolltrt1 1"4! St>trm1n Sot>l•rd, Jo,c• Ant1 •M "tut l'fll'IC:I" llllllwltk, 11. ... ull IM Gtr11d C, , .... Mty I Wtlktr, "•trlclt A. tnd L-rfftCt W, ?ont, ''"* A. 11'111 l1rb1r1 J. Un111rl1nd, lrvct 'Jlt11fld tnd JtMI "' OutkW .. lh. M1ry J tntltt tnd Otnllt CH Ct11tllno, Jo Ann 1"4! Dominic Clllr1t1 T tlovt, lllobtrt J. Ind CM1n1 L. Lotb, Dlltint LH IN Cl'l1rlt1 !. Jr_ 1Clrk111trlck, lttty C. tncf Ol<'lltl E. Oulltv, Ct rol Ann tnd Jt1"H Dovtltt llrltton. ltvttlr J, and J1d. w. sw-r. Dfvld o . 1r>11 '"'l11Jrtt HtNllll. Otbor11! Ind lruc1 LtM Cl'l lvtU. Vlrtlnl1 !. tr>ll Dontld O. H1rpln, Gtr1hl WllN1111 tnd EUt11Mlll Sul on M1c6r1tor. Atrn1 G. tnd C•lvln W1ltlr Cocllr1n, $hlrltr Ann 1nd G•rv Ectwtrtl llowen, Ch1rlt1 L. tlld M1rv A. ArbeJle, Edwtrd llllthtrd Ind Cynll'IJ1 Lynn To11r Fl!ocl'I, Wllllltfl Urtlltltrt •fld Jeye1 lrtnt Mow1rd, F0trttl H. tnd Ctlt!•rl,... M, Sturm, lldt Jttn •nd TP1ern11 C. Kobll!ns. Jurtt M. tncf Ctrl T. Boni<'!, WUlltm JOMlll'I 1nd Ctr•I Lt "''" Whlllk.,, Mtrlt'lll 1111• •N T•rrv (lrrotl 011'1111, l'udtko and l<rtnl1 llutll, Fr1nc11 G. tlld 1111 L•ntdon, Jof'ln J. •l'ld AMI Mllrll Stlld, Mlrlt E. tnd Glor" J. Wllllt.mt. Mt• o. tnd Llmtn WHll1m1 ll•lnk, J1m.1 E'. 11111 "'"" Lou WhHl«t:, Vlrtllnft A. Ind lt"laml" L. Gtortt, llllcl'l1rd H, tnd Jlldlll'I E. (l'ltlltv, Ct(o!Y" JOl'CI tnd WlllJt Ocntld Cl'llpPlll, Mlrltnt M. 1ncf llltY 1!111'11111 5tlllbury, SMllt Mtrll 11'1d llotltrt l ruc:t C1rmtle, AllMrl A. Ind lttd'llt J. k lme1, V1lorl1 1nd l'hUllp Ill. Hoblit, Mlcl'l .. t 0.111 tnd VIOlttlt 0 . Cf'>oi.ntfd, Mld'lttl L-t<'ld J1nkl Jttn ll:ot>lck1u•, Gt0rff It-• 1"41 "•ullfte Conlf•nc• l ow1, J111 "•ul tnd (trot D•rll"9 Wtb$1tr. Jo.n t(, 11'111 Dlll'llld o , Tl!om111on, Ptlrlclt •1'111 Mtr1011 L1nc11t1r. M1ro1 •nd Jltv ll1n Skiver, Ouw1!11t W!ltl1m ind C1t~1rlnt M1r1l1 Mev••· Arl1nt C. 1nd John E. H1r1, 91.t'loi l1tor. Jr. tM Mtrv Jev« Hln1on, lltltyt L. tnd lllr,,trd Wlltltm Codtr, J 1nlt A. aM D•rNI \', Cll1om1n, Jtnlt Mtrlt 1nd (ttrtl'IC:t "'" ktMiclf, Dolorn JtM 11'111 Gordon Jttotl M111ulrt. Donllt .v... 11\d Dtflftk Dotlt Noll. JOltl Wlll\tlm tnd ll'llrJty All«i er-n Pl(l!l1r, •rledMlm •nf llrltltt• Smlll'I, Jtmt1 l!:Pl\rltl'OI •r.d COtllll~ •w 9onclv, lonnlt ROM ind ttldl.lrd Normtn E•tnl, .._It'll J. tnd ShtrYI Slit!Jll Younttbloom, llll.llh A. tncl EdWtrtl Dffft, MtutlM t, 111111 llld'llrf M. JtWllt, Doro!Mt EllHlll'lll Ind StlflMll ....... GnK:l!l&lil, llobtri A , Ind Ttkllrt M, $11...,a, l"tnl T. trllll WHM-f', ll1ktr, 1(1ren Jffn 1fld L••ty ,WtYflll • 'TIMwr>,_,, G.,tkl S. llfllll AIMii L. Nllllll Mrt t Crow1Mr. K.rintlll °*1M lrlll Mltkt Wooltft, "•u• Ar111ur tnd Kl<ffl Arlt/1ot Lt Cr•IJr, lt lditrd Loul1 •!'Ml li'tlN Allrl Wtltt. Jo4mbtlh ttllll ""'4 T. (ort•tt, Ir•• Ntdlllt .... ••Yltlaltl P. ltollbln.. """" Mn arif, OIWI ,_ .. In the brief, the three groups said marijuana doe3 not fall into the category of having "a substantial and detriment.al effect on the health and general welfare of the American people.'' * * * WASHINGTON (o\Pl -The president of the N1tional District Attorneys Asaociatlon has told a Senate hearing barbiturate abuse has reached epidemic propoltklns. Young people, especially between 15 and 25, are most adversely booked on barbituates and am- phetamines; said W i 111 1 m Cahn, di!trict attorney of Nassau County in New York. "Couple t h e widespread legitimate use of barbiturates with the rising illidl trlflic ind one caMOt help but recognize that the stakes in this strugg:le are the very foundatkw of our social ord er," Cahn told the sub- committee on juvenile delin· quency1 whkb is studlng drug abu.se. * * * WASIUNGTON (AP) -The Treasury Department h a s singled out I03 drug traf- fickers Jn 37 states for in-. tensive tax investigations in the first 10 months of a pro- 1ram designed to cut the pr1r fits out of the narcotics business, officials h 1 v e .. porl<d . The department said It has collected $11.1 million In cull or property from drug traf· fickers. Altogether, $ 4 1. S million in taxea: and pen1ltle!'I have been 'se.ssed, but not all will be collected. A saguaro is a slowpoke. ln the first 30 years of its life it grows only 36 inches tall. It may be 75 years old before it reache! a height of 20 reet and begins to deVelop its first stubby branches. Usually these anns grow straight upward. But oc- casionally something happens to make them droop and twist; Ulen that particular plan evolves into a strange caricature. The reason for this distortion, which makes some saguaros the oddballs of the Recreation Area Plan Supported WASHINGTON (AP) -San Franciscans and con- serv1tionists have v o I c e d general approval of proposals to establish a Golden Gate Na· tional Recreation Area. 'No opposition was raised as 10 witnesses testified or submitted statement! at a House interior subcommittee hearing here on seven bills calling for a recreation area ranging from 24,000 to 33,000 acres at the Golden Gate. The advocate. included spokesmen for Marin County, People for a Golden Gate National Recreation Area, the San Francisco Planning and Urban Renewal Associati on, the Sierra Club, the National Parks a n d Conservation Association and the National Wildlife Federation. A group mm GaliJeo High School, Jed by Princlpll James William K e a r n e y , recom- mended retention of t h e language in two of the bills to permit the constroc'tion of a high school campus at Fort Mason to accommodate l ,800 students from Galileo's crowd- ed school. Slender vertical ribs suppor1 the saguaro's fluted. trunklike stem. Its root system i1 sha llow and widespread . When a sudden rainstonn drenches the arid land, a fully [ournooRS I grown plant, weighil).g from six to 10 tons, can soak up 11s much as a t.on of water. This is stored in the spongy core of the plant, making its trunk and arms pleasingly plump. However, if a thirsty saguaro drinks too much, It gets so plump it splits open. The saguaro can I i v t through many months of total drought by drawing moisture Irom ils inner reservoir, Some botanists believe It can survive four years with almost no rainfall and still continue to put forth it! creamy-wh ite blossoms and bright-red fruit in season . Because it provides Jiving space for many birds, the sagua ro is often called "the apartment house of lb e desert." Gila woodpeckers and guild~ ed flickers drill holes in the fleshy trunks and build their nests inside. After Lhe young are raised, these abandoned nest holes are taken over by sparrow hawks, purple martins, and tinv elf owls. Saguaro blossoms attract whize·winged doves and long- nose bats. Later, wbilt lbe pods are still on the branches, ma ny birds eat the fruit aod seeds. When lhe fruit falls, Jt furnishes food for peccaries, the little desert pigs, ground !'!Quirrels, mule deer , and even coyotes. J11d;1, M. L. Clttrk, 111.,, l111pec;tor, P, K.. Me~f. Ill.IP< af !ht cl•rii; ol 1111 1bd¥t tfllltllid CllJtt," Cltrk, J , C. Hatrod, llltD. Judtt, J. A. Gltn<'I, Oefn, 10 Pl'tltnl tt...,, wOtl l:l'lf MetPtry C.lerk, O J. Clll',,.H, """ '''''• '· K. Ptt.,11111, ltff. • ••• v1>Uth1r1. ~ t~1 u~1ltntd 1t tM Otflte PllCINCTt J....,_.1 c 11rk. R. A. O'H...-11, Dim. .. .,, •• Pohl"t ,.,_,,, CIN"! llt1ldtnc1, 1031 •lllt:CINCT: Jt-·1 or 1111 Al!Otl'ltV Ptu A. .. 1N111.,., I Sande•~ll• Dr '''''"' Pl-e. Slivtnt Jletldtnc•, 1S24:1 111n Sire•!. Cotlt Mt11. C1ll!Orttl1 '2'27, C A -whlcll 11 lht pltCI flf bllt!"'*t tf ..,. ln!<Pl'CIOt • M, M. crt, to. (h~rbour~ St. u"dtralenld In tll mtllff'I Mrltfnlitt : .. Jvd11. E '" T1b~\. o~m. tl'~(tor. 8 _ J. SltYtnt. ltt•. the t i!itt 11r ••Id dtc:ldl11!, wlll'll" Niuf' Sandri escaped r...m h<!r pen •t the Naval . Undersea Research and Development ~Center about two weekl ago. llldb9rt11111. Qtnl I!. •l'ld DClfl w. G1rhlflt, M•r .. NI Atll 111111, Oler* Htr!'llt ll Oro.._ Al'!llt "'-· •nf'Gtr1ltl A. The program began July I. special teams if tax auditors i¢o •ctlQll aglin>t alleged drug ttlfllcten !lorn Dl\l!OS 3Upplied by llllt. ind loc1J low enforcement 11encJes, around the country. Four penons have been coo- victed on crimJnal t a x charges, 13 crlmln•I tax cases •tt pelidlng, ind 12 ln- vestlgaUons '1have been com- pleted whh proaecution recommeodation1,11 the ~ partmenl llld. Peter R. Arrigonl, · Marin County Board of Supervisor chainnan, endorsed a bill sponsored by Rep. Phillip Burton, (0.Calil.) to establlsh a 33,~acre recreation area. Park regulations prohibi.t removal of saguaro fruit. However, th.is ordlnanct b1Ji been relaxed 90 that the Papago Indians may harve .. the edible pods, as ,they hav' for countless generations. Some o( the frult is eateii raw; some is dried and preJto eel Into cakes for winter use. Cler\, E, II. W!kll, RtP. J V(fff, M. T, a&<Mk, llPt . monll'll llllt n..t llfll j111bllttlltro tf llllt Cl,rk. 0 (. TrtUl l', Dim. (lerk, 0 . II, W!Htn, ltt~, llOllCt. l'lllECINCT: ll·l.!•·1 (lfrk, "· Shi'"""°''· o.m. 011.0 MtY ,, nn Polllnt Pltct, Wll.nn llttldtntt. IOI l'llli(IN(Tr , ... ~I Rl(j.jARO M, WHITEMAN 1rl1 Avt . •olllno l'!tCt, Ctllloofn1t HOIT'*!. JOD1 E•tcvtar el 1111 Wltl ln-cior, I . 11. Wlltori. Dim. w.1 ..... 1 fJ,vt. ol "" •llowt 11111'1'11d dtcMtM Ji,tdtf, L. G. Ll1111lll, Otm ln•PICIO<. M, V. Oul•I, 1111, .. AUL A. HANNA, (lff'k, P. W, Cl'lrl1!1n1tt1, II:". Juffot, V, I., OllOl'I, lltp, 41t fttl 11111 llfwt, ci.rli. o. w. c11rk. 1.11. c11rk, K. l . JKolll. ••· '"" Mt11, Cllfolnrll• nur P"•ICIHCT: i.1.JSJ•l C!t rk, E. I(, McHtbO. J111. P'olllnt P1tc1, Httbot Vitw Sc"ool, l'OO "llll!CIHCTi J .... 1 Ttt: (114) •IM1 .. .. • ' - •11 """"' ,.,. ••1ntw Go nr "~ ,.otUnt Pltet , Celofitr IU M . PllllUll'lf'CI Oril'lll COit! 0.ily l'llel. l~H<ter. J H. McOont ll, "''· Sou•~ Miii. M•¥ J, lJ. \f, K. ltn ll .. 1ll Jvdtf', Iii , (. Jll ftlon. ltf t. 1.,sp«'!Of, M ,., "'°""' Ofm, (l"rk W, A. M.,..,.. ·~ JU09f, 0. W, •.vt, °""-(Wk, M. IC Gt rrk.11 , ltff, (ltfk, Ill, I'. Pt-.c:otk. Ill• .. l'llll:CIHCT• JJ.U)·l • Clilr11, 0 J. oerr, ••• l"'ortlnt ,...l<t . IHirtflty tt11idtfte't, ltj.I .. ltlCtH(T1 """'' l"orl Cl1rlo.t .. offlf!I PIK• .IOV'ff ltttl~. lnWKlor, E. S. ll1rtilt¥, lttp.. M1r<1t Cl•. Jucklt:, J. C. fllvnn, 111.-. \f'llPICtot. Y, J. Jove., OW'<'I. ("'41, J. G, lnrln, It"" J\llltt, N, s. ,.OfM1'91', lllff. (Wrk. 0 S, Miit!. .... (ltr-. E, S, Htult. Otl'OI, PltlCIHC't1 IWS-t•l C~. 0 . E, lt:t-1, lt8. P-'11"1· ,.~, Tr...., L ..... •* W ... tllCINCT1 ,,..,_, C.0.11 HWI'. hlllnt PIKJll, Uni\'. Mtlllllldlill lri....CIOt, I. NII-, ltH llm CUIVlf Or . Juftf, •• J, H«lfrld1-. ..... l<'llPICIO<', G. a, Afltfl ..... C!tf'll, A, C. 111.tmff:..,, .,.. J\lfft, 14. J , 1""1111, It••· Clerk• A. L. ID1r1i.. It.-. Cltr1t, 111, E. Htlfl'l4, lllt•. PllllCIHCT1 IW .... 1 Cler-, IC. L, Altr9Cl. ltH. f'olHl'll "IK.. Alklll ll:ttlOe!'lct.. :.11t l"ltlCIHCTt lM'l .. I lttvff A11$. "1llllllf l'llCI. UlllY, l'lrt, $d!OOI, 111'111«10<'. H, S. AOdl" ...... Stlldbvrt WY J..o.t.. K. #,. A410lt. It--. lntPIC!Of, Mi Y,, IUlt. ·-(1.,l, Q, L. Mc.K-. DtM. Judfll, It, D. ""'Ir, tltl'. cwt~ tt~ M. ,Mcltf!Mo Dtln, tllfl.-o. ,f't, °""" f'lt!ICl..C:Tt lWM•I' tllr\, JC .... KlfMf, II.ft. fJOlllM ,...._ HMftlltM 1...-..C:.. 41 l"ttlCIHCTr IM11'ol Hlllfl'l...O °'· . -Polllftl 1"141(t. 1.l!ll'tlt bl!dtn<-1. ~. D. I. ,. ..... ltlMI. K•t'!Mht Lii. J~, M. L. H.,..Wlltll, It.. IMpe(tor, V. '· l lllttll, ll-. c:....-.. It, l . llll'N. JI•, ,..,., H, G. Slll!lefl, lft>, (ltfk, It, Ho HMl'lllttA. OWft.. Clln. I", L. Dllttfl, It .... LEGAL NOTICE ~ICltKTI INIM l (""11, P'. "'-MM!. JI.._ ,...lllt "i.ca,. Slltlt't &cMti. -CIHt "llCIHCT= tMt .. I Dfr P'tfllflt Pltet. '"'"" lttJldt!d, , 0.. N, Clel't. Jt• Ac.ck t,.. Lft. • I . ~ It ll'lqK!w. Ill. '· i"fl!'-•••. A. M. MM<t. It• ,,_., ... J, FWMr, Deol. ( Sht hasn't str1yed far but that hasn't m1de it e1s~r for of!icial.s 1t the research f1clli· ty to catob her. ln the meantime she's betn playing with liahermen and sailors in the bay. Babysitter Waits Fate SAN JOSE (AP) ""\ Moy M * * * h .. been Ml for oentencbfg of WASHINGTON (AP) -Tilt Parnell Wattlns, tonYlcted of number or Americans aervtng llOCO!ld cl<gm murder and Jill ,._ o......U for n- voluolllry mallllluDiler in !hi 1.,11 druf UJt hu lncr<ued slayI111 ol Iwo Utile girl•. for nearly 1Jx Umea 11n<t Jiff, whom she wu 1 bllbys1lter setUnc off 1 renewed sovam- lost November. -menl pibllcJty c.ompalfll to Mias W1Utlns, It, pleaded worn tt1Ydert of the dlnim Innocent and -I • by they lice .. ason of inslnt!J b u I >.""""""' to JOvtrMlent wlthdro~w ~~J.!J.!'°'pJ-1111tlstlcs, ~ U.S. cltlselll, Su ~ • -.• ·-mosUy of collese 111. 1ro Jn Arne Io !hen dbmlsoed the Jill lbrood Jor druc abu,1e. jury lllld Id the date for Four Ytltl .... the total WU '"""nclni· 117. A Comeback RIO DEk~AP) - Ofd.elyll . -q ii -.• Rio ii tM plosl! I'll& niclJI dalo, I Bro 1111 D .........,...,. .. ported. Tilt Stale Dtporlment Ind the Department of llulth, !ducltloo 1nd WeUare uld, "Tb!i la ID alannln( Jo. creue." 'llllY Gpened • c1rt .. to JnfGnD -!t••llln tllat the -of cinlc• ..... --result In lolll Frlaoo '"""' thal will be .served IDier !lrlmlUve condlu;;... This would include all or Fort Baker, all of Mari.ncello an:d all of the Olema Valley, Arrigoni said. The Papagog also make syrup, jelly, and candy to be aold at lradlng post,. · San Diego County Bans Beach Dogs SACRAMl:NTO (AP) Dogs other the aetini.,Y• dogs are no longtr being allowed on aeven 1 t 1 l e beaches In San Dlot10 Cloonly. the Depar!mtllt ol Paro llld llocrotlon teporta. State· Parts D I re cl o r William PeM MOU Jr. Aid lhe ruling W1I l'fOOlptal by the 11arm1nc 1ncrute 1n !he number of <lop allowed to rvn loolt In 11111e · ports, portlculariy belch parb." II 1!ao oonlom11 ~ rulu r!C<llUy ael for 11! r Ind county beaches In San Diep County, Mott 11kl. • The onle< alle<ll thi beaches of Carllbad, Soutjl car I t'b Id .Leu c Id JI Moonlight, San Elljo, Cardlif and Tomy Plnu s t I I. Rtaerve. , II does not apply to 114 camParOWHts, however, .i Sooth -Clrlsblld, EIJjo and Tof;· tty Pina. ' Even in ~·· however, Molt utd dogl mu• be leashed lllld kept o/I tr11'11 ind out of bulldl1111. \ , • Everyone Has Something That Someone ,Else Wants * DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS OAJLY •JLDI Sli You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad I ' l ·rhe BiggestMark~tplace on the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results ,) • 7 Gener•I General G•n•r•I l---:-*-*c---*-*.......;.__*..:..__*_1.;..;;*.;;;...;_PA-LER-MO_*_ General G.neral J AYLOR (0. Harbor View Homes Out~1a11r11n~ \'al!r~· \'ir11• EXCLUSIVE LINDA ISLE -$155.DOO This .i sla~d , of boating offers the ultimate ln prestige ltvinJ?:. llurry for this NE\V hayfront 1 4 BR home. L.ge fain rm , play rn1 & formal DR. 2nd Floor has large sun deck. "Our 27th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road A J;unlJy hnn1e 111h1rh f'/Hl (!nuhlr 111 ]Ill)!(' grnup I'll· tl.'rta!n1ni::. 4 I.i:r, Brlrms, All 11•1lh 1hf' Jtalran R1v1Pra influrn1'P, 0>.1 orr h11i11 "flllff'rl 110lh111J: in ('fie! lo 1·on1 pJr1e lh1.c hn~ horne & now Jt h111~ nuta:fr'l\.111 h1n1, Call 10 1·1r"'· $62.!l.'iO. Waterfront Pier BLUFFS BEAUTY BAY VIEW PRIME LOCATION On hea11tiful Vista Caudal in the choice. earl}' · Bluffs. so perfectly located on a wide pic- turesque green belt at the back. with lovely day1 nig ht vieu.r of the bay & Dover Shores from the front. 'fhis is the sca rce. very sep. !or1nal di n. r1n . Beautifully upgraded. t,o\'', lo\v leasehold. Nothing to compare with this beauty at $45 .950. An exclusive, new listing. For app't. to see, call 644-013-4. Helen B. Dowd, Realtor General Gener•I _G_._"_•_··-'~---~~I !;c;.;;;:;:"••':·:';;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;G::·"••:':·:1;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;G;•:":•;':·:';;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;I LITTLE GEM ,, BR. ~'f'll bl.Jill JIArt~r 00mf' ur. Nt\\.'J)Ort Hf'l~hls on R-1 lnr w/tipAN' to builrl. Allf',\I a Cl'f'Jo!S. $19.:.lXJ. ROSE COTIAGE 2 RR. hon1fl' nr. /\'f'wpnrl Heigh11 . Nf'>A'ly J'Ml intf'rl. Lgr. ki!, w/hrkl~I. rn1. ;22,900. POOL HIGHLAND OR. WE ALWAYS WORK HARDER FOR YOU IN SELLING YOUR PROPERTY OR FINDING EXACTLY WHAT YOU WANT Do You Want Better Tl!an the Best Service in Buyln9 or Sellin9 Your Property? PLEASE CALL US TODAY NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 C11ston1 duplrx, Ne w p n rt -------------------·I ltlf'11I horn" in prin1r H11rhnr HlJt:hht nrl.( arf'R, 4 SpRr. RR., f11mlly I'm .. 21, n11·~ .. ki!rh· fl'n bl1n~ .• 1·R.rp., drllpt'~ l 11 RJ'Mlrkl inJt: !I It. f' pool. $44,IXX'I CALI. e . ,4,·J4 14 JACK AND THE BEAN STALK l~l<inrl . , , .1'hls is 11 he11ut. \\'Pll·kl'fll Jl!TIJ!('rly • }..t'ltS Of '11iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilllliiiili~~·~~ .. ~~·I prillr !n n11·n1>r~hip. 0\\'llf'T II 1vitl cn1Ty li;11',l), loan \1;ith no ln11n cost~. Offered al 182,"'1. ~~~I CORBIN- LIDO ESTATE J)bl lot. 4 RH. 3 Ba .. mae:nifircnl n1str suite "'/frriL, den & pVt. rlerk. 2 Rea111. lnciscpd . patio.~: hll-in kitchen, sep. din .rn1.; 3 CEjr ~ar. $129.o OO. 4 BEDROOM-BAY VIEW l.2E>. 2-s lorv fan1 . home '''ith view. lluge yard \\1 'patio & trees. \Valk to all !'Chnols. A mu't 'ee at ~69.000. OPEN SUN. 1·5. 28l2 Cliff Dr .. N.B. Rill ('on1slock COZY HIDEAWAY · $45,500 Popular Rayshnres. Chartn all arounrl: knnl!y pine kitchen. bean1 ceil's., used brick, raised fi replace. Triona Rcrgin 5 BEDROOMS . POOL Lovely family home in Baycrest. Lf!e . -<lin- ing rm .. cozy fan1ily room \\' frplC'. A really good buy at $89.500. Eileen l·l11dson SMASHING DESIGN Beac·h Jiving at it.c; luxuriou.c; best in this sparious modern 5 BR. home · rlin ing rm .. family rm. Bel\\'een ocean & bay, $85,000 . Bill Bents ONE OF A KIND· $79 ,500 Popular 2-sty. in BROADMOOR. Besl Co- rona del ~1ar address. Lg:e. 4 RR .. fam . rm .. din . rm . 3 l~ar garage. Spacious yard v.·/put· ting green. Bud 1\ustin MORE FOR YOUR MONEY Rest value in today's 1narkel. .Just rerlurcd'. Deli~htful Corona del J\1ar location. JusL $53,950. Call to see. Bill.Qu ick TWO BAYFRONT BEST BUYS 2 ''r. old 4.5 RR . Viev.• ba v/ncean. Dork for 50' hoat: reducerl. $128.500 . \ust. 5 yr. old 4 BR . 4 ha . apt. o.ver ,gar .. pier/float. Super nice. $92.500. George Grupe · GOING .... GOING .··· Prnba.b!v gone hv nO\\'. !'harp 3 RR. 2 bii. in trarbor Vieu1· Homes. ('nn1m . park. pnol & playgrounrl nearby. $52.900. To see call Howard \Veil s LESS FOR YOUR MONEY! Yes· LESS MAI NTENANCE· LESS WORK: More elegance · mnre everything in thi!; one-of·a·kinrl Jux11r\· to\rnhouse. $55 .000. Call "Chuck" l .e\\·iS EMERALD BAY . PRIVATE BEACH 3 RR .. ronv. den. beamed catherlral ceil's. Lour main!. vard. Panoramic vie\r. fee land; 24 hour secUrily. $84.500. Roh 'i'orke NEW LISTING -LIDO ISLE C:J·lAR!\1ER -i:unny. bright 3 RR . home on 45' Jo1 . Beam ceil's .. lovely kit ch .. huge Oo\.\·er [iJJed patio. Imrnac. $69.950. Charlene \Vhyle 833.0700 --Coldwell, Banker ~ 644-2430 550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.B. MARTIN IREA LTO RS 64"77U2 e BY OWNER OPEN HOUSE ' Sat. & Sun., 11 -3 2422 S. Rene Dr., S.A. (S. oJ \\'arnPr, \\'. nf Rnsto!l 3 RR ., 2 Ha1h, fi1:i•pla,·r. srp. • rl1nini: rn1., srn·i1·c 11r .. a in- l"lrlr, :! o·ar ~11.ra~1'. Ruilt-i11.~. \f'l1·r! 1frllf'l£'1' i11 nu1.slrr hf'rt. rmm. 1v/v.• carpel.!, ~prink. Irr~ 111 fron!, Jt1.!'l rrri11.1ntrrl 1ns1rlr. CJnsr !n all s<·hnol s 1111<1 1111nulC'1' fro111 Sn, Coa.~! Pl11711 & n1aJnr · ~hoppin~. S2".Th0. Suhr11 it all 1f'rn1s. 011·nrr 11111 pay ALL l·lo~1ng l'Qst.~. f or n1orr inforn1ation , <·all R:tS-5261 n.-rnrr :l pni. $28,000 No Down IG.1. 1f'rn1s. Pr1n1,. Cns1.:1 l\lcsa ](l('ii11nn. Sh11.rlrrt hy tall slii:utr trees, cou111ry at· n1nsphl'!'C ln the ('ity~ 3 spaciou~ h<'dl'onms, 2 baths. "ife J<a1·cr builtin kill·hrn Ho~p1tal1 t)' lt\1111g mo111 11·1th inviti11i;:: firl'pb11•e. L.11\·rly }ia1io. Af'('f>.~~ for cfltHfll'l'. I ?\c1v 1d11111: 1·arrctin~. Nrar• C\'l'IJ'lh1ng. 540-1720. TARBELL. 2955 Jlarhor, Co."ta ~fr"R OPEN-SAT /SUN~ 2-4- 3608 MARCUS \\'i11rrfrnr\f -P1rr ~· Sl1 r r h;irnllllJ:; \0 .\'L nlrl ho1nr on R·2 Int; c111·rl<'-"l'I'' nn Ollf"· 11::1~' ."lrrrt. 1<!,.iil to r chilrl!'f'n. Tren1f"1kinu~ parin rntrr111inini::-11rF".1. Furnil111T gOt's loo. al S7ti,00l. Our 0\1·11 f'X«lu.~i\1£' · hurry. Call: 67~1-.1003 671-,!0.116 E1·,..~. associated BROKEA5-REAL TORS 2025 W llolboo 673-3661 What A Bi9 House • 5 Rrrlmoms * 3 Bath.~ * Vn1·n111I Dining j !Ir Alri11n1 • 2 f'::il!o~ j * :t Ciir ( ;iirao;~ 11r Only $4fl,:::.00 * I'rrff'rt }1nm~ for largr l11.n11ly * C111! 1147·6!Jl0 Tl'lfliiy: MACNAB IRVINE _______ .... ______ _ Fl NE R HOMES DOVER SHORES BAYFRONT $122.SOO Rest buy on the Bayfront! :I bedrooms & family room! Pier & slip! 3 private sandy beeches. OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1·5 p.m. 324 Morning Star Lane. PICNIC IN THE PARK in your own back yard. Beautiful spacious gnrrlens -separate chllrlren's play area -Jov.e ly 3 BR Mesa del Mar T-Plan. !34.900. TURTLEROCK PRESIDENT HOME Best VJEW in Irvine -Ne\.\' li sting -4 BR. FR -super condition. Great land- scaping . For ONLY $73,950 with land. La szlo Sharkany 644-6200. LIDO ISLE Fabulous fan1ily hon1e -5 large bed- rooms. 4 bat hs -double lot with pool. OPEN SUNDAY J,5 pm. 633 Via Lido Nord. NEW DOVER SHORES HOMES Final opportunity to own a new lvan \.-Veli s (;alaxy Dri ve custom home. Choose frotn 5 !<ipectacu lar new custom homes w/sweeir ing vi e\\' o( bay & mountains. From SII0.200 lo $154.500. F'urnished n1odel OPF.N D . .\ILY 10 a.rn. -5 p.1n. 2018 Galaxy Drive. INVEST (.'nll lo vie \V thi~ 2 BR collage w/fireplac:e on R-2 lol (53x 135). Across from c;osta Mesa Park -close to boys clu b, girls club & shopping. $18,950. Barbara Aune 642,8235. SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO RANCH ESTATE "'·ith superb VIEW of ocean, 1nountains & valley. Custom quality home on 9 acres of cit rus & avocados. Beautiful courtyard. 2 guest hou ses, riding ring, fen ced pa sture. Privacy & secl usion yet easy access to free\\·ay. Ask for Ton1 Queen 644-6200. EXQUISITELY DECORATED 4 BR , 41h baths, FR. Unusual, exci tin g de- sign. Pier & sli p for 50' cruiser. $169,500 . Dave Cook 642,8235. LIDO PENINSULA Sun ny 1'errace. 3 BR's. 2 balhs. Pool. $114,- 500. Frank Peralta 642·8235. TWO BAYFRONT LOTS Illness forces drastic price reduction. Uti- lize existing 8 BR house or demolish for 2 ne\v ba yfront homes. Gloden F'ay 642·8235 for appt. Price NOW" $215,000. .,.~~--~~~ Irvine .............. R .. 11,c..n,.,, IOI Oovtr Drive 142·1231 1144 M•cArlhur 1-44·1200 Newport h•th,C.llfornl• 12113 t;_d'4.. :EAL TY Nt•r Nt•porl P'•11 Offltt HALECREST 3 B1':DROOM . 2 bath, HARU· WOOD floor hon1P, wilh Arlrlf'd /ami!y rn1 ..-·/huillin B-B-Q. NPwly p11inlrrt 11nrl rlf'PJl ~"l f'RrpPlin.11. \IA BUYER!\ OK . $27,500 Newport •I Fairvi•w 646·8811 (anytime) Could work nu t ,in his o"'"" private gyni anrl swi1n in 1 rantasli<' pool al, th\~~ hedroorn 4 bath for1nal din ing room home in Costa Mesa . lf ,you have a big fa1nily this i~ a ML IS'I' SF.F. home $10~,9~0. UTILE RED RIDING HOOD Cout rl trip thr11 thii: qu iet setling of beautiful hig tree~ and not see the big bad \\'olf. 3 large bedroon1s, 21.1 balhs with tht living room & family roon1 looking out onto a bea11tiful big pool. Seclud"· ed with fully grown shrubbery &. tree~ with connecting patio. Owner anxious. $48 ,500. Please c:i.11 todil y. Open house Sat &. Sun J to 5. ALICE IN WONDERLAND Lives in this near ne'v Mi~sion \'iejo view home. 3 bedroom~. 2 baths. fullv ai r rondi tinnect. neat all electric kitchen, thick &haa: carpeti ng ·throughout. Rarlminlon court, patio and mu<'h more. $35,9~0. Open hou.c;e Su n. I lo 5. Please call today. Open house Sa t I to 5. SINBAD THE SAILOR : -Pano.ramie View I , '$29. 900 ! Woulrl rent lhis terrific duplex: on Balboa Island. 4. Bedroom. 2 bath upper unit, all furni shed 3 bedroom, 2 balh lower unit. All ca rpe ted & dra perl, ftreplare in holh u nil ~. '10&,000. Open Hou~e Frid ay & -Salnrday I If! 5. Plealie Call Toda y. 01wr in a life timt opporlun· I lty In inl'f'~r in surh A I(!+ GEORGE WASHINGTON \Vould be proud or t h l~ Colonial 2 story houi>e In Co~ta Me~a. 3 bedroom~ & den . all electric kitc·hen. carpets & drJpes. $37.~. Please Call Today. Open house Sunday l to 5. rer1on, &1 rhi~ prir~ in Hun· ling1on Rf'111·h, You ..-·ill lo\lf' lhf" L'Ountry like &lmo.•phf'r~ of !hill he11u1iru1 3 Be<lrnom hon1P. lllizh on hill wilh 11 pnminen! vi f'w or rontinuirf'!!I: p11:r;sina: acrne. J.:ai<y lf'.rm11. Cal! IW>\I', 557-174:1. NOT A SACRIFICE CAPTAIN AHAB c.:ould see the terrific vaiue of thili e!'tale sale 100 yarct~ to lht beach in Ba lboa . 2 bedrooms & l bedroom. lovely patio in SlOO.· 000 ooo home area for only $42.900. Outsl andini;i: rinancing av ailable.P lease (;all 'foda y. Open !·louse Sat. &. Sunday 1 to S. HANSEL AND GRETEL Would have thi~ ginger bread home with a large brick fireplace and 3 bedrooms. l :Y• bath!li . t • .arge rlin ine room, cover:ed patio, beautiful land ~caping. J u~t redu1·ed lo $28 ,900 for 1 quick .11ale. Please Call Torla y. Op.en !louse Sundily I to ·:;. I I rl(ll A hR.r211in . it'll 11. .•lral! 4 hP<h~W'lm.!', utid"r $l'l.000. l.R.rJtf' lam;!y ronn1, J1h11kr POPEYE THE SAILOR Could park hi~ boat next to thi!li great co rner lot hou"e. Sperl.al boat ~atei1, 4 bedroom~. 1 % bath s, extra bonuA room, great Costa Mesa area. $27 .500. Pleilse Call 1'oday. Open House Sat. & Sunday 1 to 5. rnor. Nf'xt-lo-impo!Ulihlf' to rluplica1e i n Huntinitton I Bnich. ANTHONY AND CLEOPATRA • COi.ATS it the Jov e story that goe~ wit h thi!i house. 3 bectroomiii:, 1 o/4 bathlf, front & rear pa tio, fenced yard, full y carpeted & dr1pect. $31,9~0. WALL.AC! Open Sunday I to 5. Please Call Today . · REALTORS [~.-...-..,...., ..... ,,-:-~....--:---~::'.""~~~~~~-r.'.::~""'\I Open Evenings 1 We have available a number of fine hornet for graciout living. • 962-4454 • . These c.an be shown only by •ppaintment and only to qu.allflecf buyers. Prices r•nge from $41 ,500 to $175,000. LONE STAR PINE '1...,.::::;;,;:;...:,.:.;,;;;:_.;~~;,;,......;,...;.....,....,;.....;...._.._..._....,..., ..... _..(, On Sandy Lo&m Snil! Clr11r. J [,.\lf'I s6xJ21 Sile (OT your Orr11n1 Jl.imP. Allf'y A<"~·~s~.1 TPrrtfic EASTSIDE VAl.Uf. $1 1.001. OWNER \VIL L J."JNANC ~: .•. .lllJRRY! Call 646--0'.i!ij, f~ v en i nJ[ ~ &IB-4:179. COLWELL PROPERTIES. INC REALTORS SPANISH $28,500 ShpPr !i:pAnish 1t11rrll'll hn111' I 1tih1111rd 11n R llpaciou11 ror· I tlf"r Joi. :'I bedroom, 2 hftth homP ..-ilh & pri\111le patio arf'a Pnh11ncffl by lullh 111.ndtl<·apinJi!. C11ll no..-• 842-25.1.'>. G•neral --j Generl l N•w T rl plue• [ ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ~:11lll ('n~l11 Mr~" $ft.'1,000. TWO LOTS J..11.nrl1lf'R p1n(L "11 r p,. t 11, llrllpPll, I'll'. inrlullrrl. Agf'nl 673· 72'.~ POOL-PRIVATE Y.&RO ''R·4" ON CANYON /. RA NN ING GoOorl r.,r h11n11Jy unit~ OWNf.R ANXIOUS PETE BARRETT • 3 hr 2 bl!, fllnl J'OI W !Unk· I en h11r, w,.~1rlirr 11rr11 I S:'l!l.900._1'1111 .;7~.7:;9;i.:__ __ ThP .. Y,,llow f'flitf'it'' cf ---------1 l'IA~•1l\f"ll ..• M2-.'ifi711 Gen•ral General 1,01 THE REAL \~ESTATERS '-., 'l"'• ~·.r ' ,_. • REALTY · i•ll,1200 --- VACANT LOT 60 x 300 R-2 IA!tl nf rhf' 812 OOl'll. A,kllllt' $24.r..OO f~ (~IA Me~"· SH- 11:! Cllll M6-7171. "O THE REA!, '"-ESTATERS SUISIDIAlY OF COLDWELL IANKll IRYIN.E UNIVERSITY P.&RK ! S<e"! this vn11111e ."i BEOP.()01\f, :l BAT!·! hrin1p trid11)' Sr<·lurl · ~ atrium rnlr,\. f'rirrnel Jiviniz 11nd dining room, \\'h1rr- mantll'd brick firPplfl<'"· fl!)f'n &Rtd'rn kitchrn 11:ilh brl'ak fa .~r l)ar. Hu~" srparetr m11..~rrr suite. Doubll'! sttachPd garagf'. -S4 I,000. Call nn1,1· 645·0J0.1. WHISTLE SHARP-$25,500 AIR C0Nf)ITI0N IJNJT ~TAYS!~,.,, this \1·h1<tle rl,,An hrymr today! Hui;f' livins: rnry'SOLD llnP .. Petlri kltr hrn 1\"ilh natural 11·N'ld so:ra ln rrth• 1 -17.f' bPdr..-..,mA. Beau11- tul pArk JIK11 ~Ard >A Ith t ~l in. Graf"" Arbor. Brmr . trailPr 1tnrae ... t ool Jhrd. Unhfllif'\'ably prlrPd At low, \1')1,1.' S2S,500! Ju!t listed -~·l)n't lut -C'a/J today 645-0303. THE ILUFF>.-US, 900 ~fu1 1 '"t thl! lo\•P!y rnd unit O\'t"rlooking huct gr~nN>lt Bl;; lni ng l'!')Om. Fo rmal dlnt l)r r a11u•I as you pr11fer. J berl· rooms.. 2 bltht. \V&Jk to l{l'lldt and hl 1chool&. Only $35,900. Hurry -call 6-i~-030..1. FIUT HOMlf $11,000 A LOT fOR urn..E' P11rf,.,.1 t la.rttt home 11 1th big l•v1nst room. D\nln;: room. Clbin kitchen. Qu il"l str,.flt. Boet door thru be.ck of rt•J'Uf. \\'alk to thopplna. Ooee to bf!&ehes. \'ery amall d own ta quallfit'd OO>·•rl CAU now--64~..()303. CORONA DEL MAR !"hi~ i~ 11 · rrr~112i••lJ~ ll'\l lOf' Trrl'fll'f', l.Q\lf'IV f'11ln~ Vrrrlr 31,.nnr f11·r11l11rr h1i.:hh1:;h1.( lAr~E' livini:; rnnm ~·ilh >A·nnnwnod \\All~: llU£f' dl"n 1,1 \lh ()OP <'lltl!'P 1\'Rll nr ti lOOf'! J giftMI brd· rnnn1~. (n1.y kltrhf'n. lrr,..211l11r p111i.i >,1.•i!h 1ropi~11I waltrfal/, Lo·maintrn11 nrr yiird -flnnd li~hr~. CR.II &4~-0303. NEWPORT HEIGHT>.-YIEW! <JCEA.'i \'!~:\\'~ Old N<'>A 'pnrt rh11rm enrl ivy 1·J11~1rrl'(i lull hlli\1' tti1o; ln\'r l~' 3 hffirflnnl hnn1r, 1-lllR'f' ~lrp dn>A•n living rnrim 1,111h m~~~IVl' hrirk ri rr11IAl'I'. Oinina mom. Knn11y pinr kltf'hPn. Hft l"rlwM(I flnor1: c;111nt CO\'f'l'('d p11.tio. Only $39.750. Call 645·0300. OYERIMPlOYED-1.&llO.&IN! \\'OnJ>S C1\N"T nE~CIUBF: 1111S CllARMER: U ptlrlldl'd thrnui;:hnu1! t".,nnal Ji\I SOLD Oinins: r'll<'ln1 1,1 lru,,,nm huflt •in 1i2h1rd hutrh, l rt"•om. BrPlllkfa,t nook . t1Jtr11 mnrll'm ..,r~li:ttf'd th ..i .. ~k huitl in! Gh~nt hNlrf')t)m~ -1'unk hrrl!l h11llt in rark llkr ittnund~. Almost noth ing takf'~ It ! Ra ri:;&in prirf'it Al only $.12,W'I: $16,00D PRICE REDUCTION! Exrruth•fl n1111n~io11 1 l)lfM'·k In .. ,.-rlu•h·" ~l'IU k. ('nunlry f"!IJh. Trl-111\'Pl Ill'! rul-rl"·Sl'l(' Int ~Irr 11r lfl h111tP fnnnAI Uvln2 rnom. f'rinnAI d inr. C.1An1 f11 m1 ly rl'll"lfTl. All f\AN'llrf!. "Qlll>f'n· &lt.e bf'odrnrim~. 2 C0\'"1'4'ft f"Atl~ rLUS billrnny PLt r~ ~ e.ar I pragf'! PRIM£ MESA VERDE L()CATI()N -CALL NOW -64$-030.1. I.ALIDA PENINSUL.&! !}('F.A .\; VIF:\V~ l ·ithnrl hlork tr1 BAY nr OCEAN' Tudnr ~rylP livlnc !'OOtll "'i1h IR \111 slll11P (l r,.pl11rr . Fnrm11l Oi11f'. llEAL SPAi'\ISH Tll~E: kitrhPn rn11nf11rll "flnor ~ R11rlar nvl'n. Bit.in rrfrlc And S:-"' RRQ! f; 8rdrnnnu1. ~ hflths, Lllundry room. 2 Alnr11.iz11 rnrrm•. \.i11nt r"l'rr11lt11n MOm with wrt bar1 Offprf'd 11t ~13.~.000. Call for Appl. -&4~·03().1. , SPANISH ~ll\~~h·'" rlnuhlr ..,nor f'r11nri:i;r11n 111r Ptlll',v. ("ur1·"<1 Sp;tni"h (lr110!11rP in 1tian1 llvint mom. V11ullf't1 f'PIHn~~-l.Avl•h drrnr aM ph1~h rarprt•. Sunk,.n famll)" mnm >A"ilh Wf'f hllr. Cal'• d,,n kllrh"n wllh f'\llrtlry nn enllrP WAH, 4 (luffn 11,,,. hf'd· rf'l(lm.•. n11t~rd ,...d-.•ood J')AliC df'f'k In tmmer.uhllf'Jy IAnd • ~r11,..,.d y11rd. J.("11,r ~&raizr. $43.~. Call 645·0.103. "0"$$ DOWN-DISPHA R \\"n"'' lhtt'" livln~ mnm ..-·llh rf'1111·kll ntt firf'pl11,..,.1 Gourmrt khr:hf'n. Rullt-ln.-. r.11u11 f11mlly MOm. 4 Btdrnom!. 3 BA.th~ rrn'A'' i1'1'1r tntr~ ri1.,1,,r .-:ult,,, On!)' 3fiO ml'I. pay, nf $244 ' Nn f)('l\V~' PAV~1ENT: 77.-itnn % rat,., Ownf'r ,..ll'tr,.mety e.nxlou'! CAt.L TnDAY! &4~0.10._1. STAlTH HOM~ll,HO I s,... thic ..-·11rll'I hl-alrr: M"'iA r nll"R" v.1th rlPl"rt, dr£'rt J.il. p,..rfrr t <tAr!Pr homf' l)r Fl'lr rf'!lrr<I roupl11! M•1st _,,,. tn ap. prr!"C'l1tl1>'. Clme tc "vt.ryth in1 . .Sm!ll down. Call 5-45.().JOJ. MESA YUDl-$59,950 ~:srr-Hll\I .. cu,1;tnm -Cnuntry r.luh. An rnlrrlJllllfl'r~ hnrnf' - h11r nn11,,.! Srp11rA11" rnrm11I liv!ni:. rMm 11nd rtinini; rMm. lnlrrcnm. Chrf~ kl!rh,.n. rlfon And AHll1rlf'.d f11mlly rmrn ~·tlh •unkf'n 1a1·Prri, bar~ 4·klnit si7.oe hMlronm•. Lllundry rMm. Call 64:'J-0.10.1. NlWPORT HAUOl HllOHLANDS! 1·nr.y rntry In h112r ll\llni.: roorn. fil1111t family l'Mm with bi& brick rnrnl'!r flrf'f'lllH'"· F'11tm11I 1tlnin1::. Comfy klt<'hl"n. ~ QUl!1>n .-11.P brodrnnrn• "'ilh All •h•Jl!Pr!f.d w lntfnwll'. Laundry tr~\,.,. poN'h. Tl'l(ll •hM'I. 2 !'W'lil'!tl, Rnrim fnr brlat·lr'llil"r. Hurry -lhls Is A ral'f' nn"! Oill nn" M..,.n'V).'\, NlWPOlT IAY.....:CUSTOM !{1Ain"'1 sdA!l<! rntry, ~11'1' rtown lo h•111:r 1'11~1.,1n w1tllrft lfv· ini; mom "'-'llh 1l11mrt'•nt1I' flN"1JIA rf', l..Ar2r f11rrtllY ronm whtl AU. ~I.ATP: F'IMR' 8"11m rf'lllnst• Mzy kllrhfon wt1h bu!ll· In l)r"ftkfs•t tl'Jbl" Ar\f1 hlrtr. Qu'""" 'i1td twodl'N'!m~. lnll"rcnm. I rArk llkP Ml"k y11rd. WAik 11'1 NP\\ pnrl ~y. O fftr!'l'I ., M4.· 9()'l, C:AJI 64~·{\'lOJ COASTAL COTI,&IOl RA rstA ln h11ntrn; l"k" • 1Mk~ All up;:rarlf"f1 frnm hrirk ,,111.nt rr11 lft •llD"r 21' x !Fl' f•nsOLDV11;ll In wall ru~lf'lm fl,..~ p\11,{'f'. Ct'ilrH'mPI k!trhftn rn ,t: flnor! ffln'nllll dln- lna. 3 111.JTf' bfodmnm~. I Jna tn hNlfh. Appra~I I t• in. Owntr \J •nxinu~. Pr~rfl'd WAY UNO~R. IJ0.000! 645-0303 • 2299 HARBOR IOULEVARD , COSTA ME$A , CALIF . 92627 • 6 .45-0303 ' 't ' I I • • ' :16 OAJL Y PILOT r,1n11. M1y 1~ 1~7! . I ..,..,.,u. l~I _,,,u.· I~ I _,,,u. l~.I _,,,Wo J1n era1 G•neral CAMEO SHORES-OCEAN VIEW Rrand ne\r l 1~1i11g 1n fa sh1o na~Je ('ameo Shores, \\1th panoranlil' 0·1·ean & 1ctly ,·u~,,·s. SJ'13Clt')U~ family home '"'llh a bdrm!!., lar~e r et·re11t1on roon1 . heated s\.\•i1nm1n$! pool in n!ee:ly htnri~c·Anerl ~·1tr<i. Oul F;landin,R loca· lion~ {)PF.N 110(.;Sf:. 'l'l\IS \\"Ef:KF.NU. 1-5. Sf;F. 4507 FAJnFIEl.D Ult $89,5UO CUSTOM BA YCREST HOME t'ompare the features 111 thi s loverv home! Paneled fa1n lly roon1 \11th f1rcplare & bar. l..arjlf . form~I din1n .i: roon1. \Voort rloor:i;. 1.-ar.i:e bedrooms I:\ of thrn1 ). ~1 ~ture land· ~rflJ"Pl)'.!. 011·el y 1n:11nt;iincd. Q111el st reet. OPE~ r1ot ·s~; Sl '~llr\\1 1-!l .• sr.E t71R 1'1Aft· J,J:\ \\'1' \'. It's hi:i rd to ftnd . so t:hcck you r m:1r first. The best buy in Baycrest at 804.oOO. UDO ISLE SUPER BUY Jnst c~rpetcd . :l Bedrooms & 3 baths: on \'i:\ \\'azi er.:. Sini;?lf' !'tnry home "·11h rorml\1 r1 1n1 ng rnom. private. lo~· m.ai nt_e~a nce pa· tio. hookshe!ves & paneling 1.n living roorn. \\'ou\d ~·nu believe S63,500. FOR RENT Genera l office~. <'a rpeled & _draped. in gar4 den setting. \\"it h am ple parking. 2.550 Sfl . ft. at 3!k per foo t. Selling HARBOR COMPANY REALTORS Reif E1t1te in Newport H1rbor ,. Since 1944 673-4400 KHp thi' ht11tdy dlreclO'l' with yo11 this ......... d .. Y" to lrio-.flu11tht9. All tlla-loc:9tloM ll1tod below 0,. .t.KrlMd lo trHt.,-dotoll ~y .d'IOl11silHJ •IM• wW. itt todoy'1 DAILY f'ILOf W:ANT ADS. f'otroin 1howl114 .,.. ltoulfl for 10 10 or to ront oro urf-4 to llt't 111ch lttfor1119'!011 111 this coh111111 eoch ftl4oy,.s.t- t1rd•y ' Sundoy. HOUSES FOR SALE (2 Bedrooms ) **3608 Marcus, Ne~·port Beach 673-3M3; 673-8086 Eves. !Sal & Sun 2-4) 417 Dahlia, Corona del Mar 644-24:!() '53,950 (Sun 1-5) ( :t Bedrooms) ·**4401 VV. t'oasl l l\\·y., l\1'pt. Rcac.h 675-0820 !Sat & Sun IO·Duskl 18~7 Pt. Kiniberlv Pl. (H. Vie w Ti ms) N.B. 1\44-2430 $52.00o fS un 1·5) IOR4 Salvador (Mesa riel ~fa r) CM . 1\44-6200 !Sal 1·5) *263 Oceanview, \N"pt Jleight.~) N.B. 642-8235 !Sal & Sun 1-5) (3 Bedrooms & Family Rm or Den) 630 Ca1neo 1f ighlands Dr., Cdt\1 !65.000 1Sal & Sun 2-6) 2338 ('ol _g<itc llrive. f"osta Mes;i 1714 ) 728·6-017 1S al & Sun 12·6\ 20!\0 Ga laxy f>r. 1 l)o\'er Shor e.o;) J\1.R. 646-1550 $110 .200 IDai l.v J0-5) *1623 Tradewi nd s, (Baycrcsl ) N.R. 642-82"5 I Sa l & Sun 1-5) 324 Morning Sta r (Uover Shores) N.B. 642-8235 !Sal & Su n 1·5) (4 Bed rooms & Family Rm or Oen) 360R Su rfvie\V J_,n <Harbor Vu l·litlsl CdM 644-0289 $66.800 (Sa l & Sun 1 ·5) 1741 Pt. Sheffield PL (llbr Vu Jlon1es) NR 644·6249 $fi7,9~ ISF11 & Su n 1·5:30) *2025 S\\·a n \1r .. l ·o~l a !\lcsa >4ll-3986 551.500 f Fri. Sat. Sun 10·6) *lM:J Bayport \\"ay. Ne\1·port Reach fl42-54i 3 $&1 .9!)0 IS;::it & Sun 11 ·5) 2.19:\ R;i _v J•"arn1 r'l:ice , R;ick R::iy 046-4750 549.950 I Fri-Sal. Sun J..I \ 2R l2 f'li ff Dr. l!'rpt 1;ciizh1 s) N.R. fi44-2410 S69.()(}(l 1s,,n 1-5\ 20 1R f;aJaxy l)r. ! Oover Short'!<) N.R. fi4fi.1550 $154.500 rneily 10-51 **1645 Ravside llr .. {'ornna rl cl l\·1ar 675--1935 <Yachtsman's ('ove) (J.lail y) t:Jfi!l l.al::ixy Dr. (Dover Shores) N .R. fi4'.!·R2:J5 (~at & Su n l-.1) *2Rl :l Ha rbor View !)rive, ('rlM 644-1425 !77.500 1Sal & Su n 12-5 ) (S Bedroom•) 90112 fl hodesia. Hunti ngton Reach 962-9810 1.19.000 (Sunri ay 9-5) (S B~droom • & Family Rm or Den) **!)4 Linrla J~le J)r., {Linrl a Isle) N.R, fl44·24.~fl /~at & Sun J.S) 1521 .\11t1qu~ t H::iyrrest) N.R, fi42·1J2:J5 t Sat & Sun 1-5) *4507 Fairfield l1r. t('an1eo Shores) ('dl\1 6i1-4400 1 S• t & Su n I ·5) (6 B•d room1 & F.tm ily Rm or Den } 1924 Galaxy Dr t Do\·er Shores) N.13. 646-1550 $122.l!OQ I Deily 10-5 1 CONDOMINIUMS FOR SALE (2 & 3 Bedroom ) **440 1 W. Cq.asl ll wy., Newport Beach 6i5-6820 1SM & Su n JO-Dus k) TRll!LEXES FOR SALE (I • 3 Br. & 2 • 2 Br. I 229.1 Fordham Dr., Cos ta ~l esa M.1-6148 1 Daily 10-4) WATERFRONT LOTS FOR SALE . ttl645 Bayside Dr .. Corona del Mar 675-1935 Yachtsman's Cove (Da ily) ' G1Mr•I Gener el Barrell preJen /J CLIFFHAVEN-VIEW! FIRST TIME OFFERED -Cu•lom ~ ~ed· rootn 2 bath·nn the bluffs overloo king e_nt_ire harOOr. Large open livi ng room and d1n1 ng area. By origiv.al owners .......... , .$67,500. OCEAN, BAY, MOUNTAINS EXCE PTIONAL VIEW -fronl this ,;pacious Oo\"cr Shores hon1e . 4 Bedroo1ns. fa1nity roorn :ind dining roorn·pantry, "·et bar, etc. J)esigned for easy a nd gracious entertaining. Q\\'ne rs tra11s ferred Eas.t. Well .priced a t . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. $91 ,500. 1130 Santi•go, Dover Shor••. N.B. Open Son 1-S HARBOR HIGHLANDS OWNER WANTS THIS SOLD NOW -4 Bed· roo rn family roon1, 21;\z baths, desirable loca- tio n·l'vla riners Sc hool , . . . . . . . . $4 7.500. 1418 Estelle Lan•, N.B. Open Sal & Sun 1-S ORIGINAL OWNER OFFERS THIS CUSTOM BUil T HOME - A n1ost desirable fl oor plan desi gned for fam· ily livi ng \vil h a formal dini ng room . family rOon1 a nd 4 bedroo ms in excl usive Baycresl. 20 IS Commodore, N.8 . Open Sit & Sun J .S TIME TO ENJOY SUMMER WESTCLIFF -Lots o( roo1n for a growing fa n1 il y in the 4 large bedrooms with 3 baths. La ri;?e self cl eaning pool and full s izerl. pad~l e tenn is court. }~asy care yard-on qu iet Ltn· coin l .. a ne ...................... $81.500 . 1412 Lincoln Li1ne, N.B. Open Sat & Sun 1-S COZY, CAREFREE HOME NEWPORT .H.EIGHTS AREA -n elax with this low n1a intenance y a rd snd ~our choice of l\110 brick fireplaces lo si t beside . :l Bed- room's and 2 baths .............. $39,500. CUSTOM, NEW HOME NEWPORT BEACH UPPER BAY -Pic- tu resque ca pe Cod wi th br ick exte:ior. ~igh bcan1 ce;!ings. parque t fl oors. Qua lity built :1 bedroon1 3 bath, family room and formal d in· ing room ...................... $84 ,000. BALBOA PENINSULA BALCONY TO BEAUTY-Charming & roomy. Rebuilt & updated into a very lovely 5 bed- room. 4 bath . famil y home on 2 lots. Every modern conven ie nc·e ........ -.. $1 2;).000. 1S8S E. Oce.tn Blvd., Balboa O~n Sun 1-S Office Open Saturdays &. Sunday• PETE BAR REIT REAL TY 160S Wostcliff Dr., N.B. 642-5200 ------------ Gtn•r •I -IT'S SO NICE- IN IRVINE TERRACE Let us show you this enchanting t\\'O year old hnnle .. <\1r iu1 n entry, s pacious living room "'ith fireplace a nd VJ ~W. 3 Large bed- rooms 2 balh s, LOVELY DINING ROOM + room to store your trailer or boat. $62,500. "SO RARE" -IT'S FEE- Tu rlle Rock o BEDROOM S. family room. 2 ba ths, atriu m, builtins wi th sell cleaning 0 \1en. shag carpeting and custom drapes. Large covered patio with super land1;cap1ng. WOt;LD YOU BELIEVE ............ $47,l!OQ. YOUNG AT HEART??? -THIS IS FOR YOU- r;onrl !'tarter for the young fam ily. 1\'E \V C'A RPE:T, 3 bedroom s. 134 bath, clnse to freev•ay. school & shopping. Small invest- ment down can "beat the rent race." a nd IT'S 01\LV ......................... $27,900. -HARBOR VIEW- MONTEGO-FEE-MODEL \' . .\('.AN'f . Jmmediate possess io n on credit a pproved buyer . 4 Bedrooms. 2 baths, formal dining roo m . \\•ith farnily room adjacent to fhe buil tin ISLAND KITCHEN. Lots of ce· menl ""'ork in f.r.ont and patio. Only t\\10 years old. . . . ............................ $54 ,950 . -CORONA DEL MAR- TWO .TRIPLEXES Bu ilt in range a nd oven. dishwasher and d is posal. carpets a nd d rapes. 2 Units have 2 bedrooms, I bath: 1 U ni t has 2 bed roo ms. 1112 ba ths "·,fireplace. Each unit has 2 c ar- ports, maintenance 1re e yard and pool privi - leges ......................... Each $79,500. A"4~-Sffdd tfo'UH4# ... _ REALTORS 644-7270 2111 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA Dl!l MAR, CAllF. General l ~~~~~~~~~-J ~~~~~~~~~liGiiiio .. iijjjri••liiiiiijjjiiiijjjijiijjjiiiij.Giiiijen·•-r·•·liiiijjjijiijjjiiiijjjijiijjj MESA $34,950 I' DEL MAR Sh•rp Mes a Ve•dol No Down GI BAYFRONT CONDOMINIUMS PREVIEW SHOWING THIS WEEKEND LikP 11. r,.r,. 2rm, thi11. i·u~rnrrt· i7.rrl 4 Mimom, 2 ~lory 1~ onP nl II. kinrl . Adrlition.11\ ~ ... ·r<li.~h rlrrpl11r 1\ cu.~rnn1 11·l't h;ir. rlev111erl i::an1 P ronrn. n1J1 rloor B.R.Q. & t'fl\'· rrf'fl p11r10, l.J1 r2r irrri::uli:i.r 1 lot 11 irh boat &--tri:i.11Pr .11rn1« 11.2e. \\'11lk lo pi:i.rk, s<'honl.!1 k l'liflf1Jlin~. A m ust lo Jlet - $41.11!"111. C;i/I ;;1; .. 1142.f fOPf"11 l:v,.~.) • hfflronm 11, 2 l>!l lhll, Jamily rnnm \\•ilh in!fJ>irinit tirt· pl11rt', rlPIUXt' built·ln JtnUl'· m t'I kltC'hen, cfi1hwa.~hrr. Tnp QualUy sh&li: 1·11.rptolinii;. Pi1·111rr J)f'r recl JandJ1c11 pinJ!. 540.1 ilO. TARBELL 29:{1 l li:i.rbnl". Cosl11. l\fr.~11 28 New hom es on the bayfront. Com pl ete with boat sl ips. Xlnt Terms. YO U OWN THE LAN D Pa cific Coast Hwy. at Balboa Bl vd . NEWPORT BEACH TOWNHOUSES, l TD. «OJ W. COAST HWY. 67S-6820 \outh , (-oa st J 1!1, ~~~:~.! j ~1a1e~·~h~'G·_·_,,._r_•_1 _____ _ Pf'1'1f'f'1 cci111hir111tin11 -11 E . S • I -!>1Jllf'in11i:; 1•h111·n11nJ! hnn1f' xecut1ve pec1a Income Producer OPEN HOUSE 1 TO 5 SUNDAY 3607 SAUSALITO 'l'h1s Jlarbnr \'1cw l1 ills 4 RR . & farnilv rm . home has 1nany special features incl. i MA4 RI NE \'IE\V rro rn J ... agu oa to Palos Verrtes. S30 Sq. :vd. carpet. ··i;:pac·e aj!e'' electrnnlc burglar & fire alarm. self·cleaning oven, 1'rashma~aer . K1trhen-. .\irt dishwasher. a uto. bea n1 ceil's.-professio na lly color coordina ted sprin klers & outside floodlights. Vaulted -all of this for S92.950. OPEN HOUSE 1 TO S FRI/SAT /SUN. 1l31 BONNIE DOONE llandv l() lrvine ('.ountry Clu b. also the beach. Adult occupied, \\'ell maintained 3 BR .. 2 ba th, dini ng rm .. Crplc. Attractive la ndscapi ng. Price just reduced to $46,900. Con\'rn1 r nt p11rkin2 -,.,.~y 10 lll' a '"DRC\P·IN"' II.I BAy &. BeRch. Re11!ty 675-3000 A UNIVUf li()Mf NEW llSTING ·IRVINE TERRACE 4 bed· room on impres.s i\'e t\ngelita Drive. Su per size lot. r amh!ing no0r plan Y.'ith detached gara_l?e, brighl and a iry kilchen and a great patio for enlerta ining. f erfect conditio n 1hru- out. Presented at $72.500 . Nev< lis ting. CALL UN IQ UE HOM ES CORONA DEL MA R 6i5-6000. REAl TOR, MUl TIPlE LISTING SERVICE. .. ... _,.,.TREASURE MAP . ::. CHUCK CAROTHERS :REAL ESTATE ·TREASURES CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX WAlK·TO-THE-BEACH. $63,SOO. VACANT DOVER SHORES & BlUFFS lUSK HOMES Newport Be1ch & Cast1 Mt1i1 Multiple Listings OCEAN VIEW FROM ALL ANGlES T1rf'r! r>I Jnnk1n1: •t nri£hb0r'11. \\'1111" .. c~utt your f'Yf'I on l~ 11p11rkl\rw: hlue r11.c1f1c frfll'n rtny \lo'lfldnW of lh111 1•lH!ln1n 1'Pnlplf' Hillt ffilU\.'!Of\, \\"111rh the 11\Ln WI ™'h 111rl CA1111in11 1~11111d . Ruy II lf'IE'~('l)Pf', \rrirrl~ C'An'I ·ne1.rrihP 1~ ~11uty. Thl11 3 bf'droon1 bl'aury h1111 Jt All. J.'orn111I rl1u1nJZ ronn1. lu1h riirJ)l'l5 111\rl n1 11 I c h I n g rlri!J>f'l'. \\'e 11 ti! trade 11.nythi ng ~nu h11 1,. /11 r this SFll.000 1·i:i.J<!lf', Ynu v.1.ll 11i::rM". Ca!J for 11pp<11nlml'nl. Walker & Lee RP11l1nr~ ~:>-MS\ 2700 H1trhnr Rh·rl 111 Adams Opt'n ~:vP!I If Boating Is Part Of Your Life Arni ynu '"'"rt '!'AX AJ). VANTAGF. TOO. Sl>f' thtl t"'U~tnn1.hu ilt rluplPIC nn thf' QUIP! Nnrlh Rll.y1'rnnr. Each l\\1'1 ...,.drnnm un11 hll11 a l1rrpf;H·r 1111rl fnr"''f'r bAy 1•1p11 Ln•~ nf 11·,.rm wi:i.lnut p1u1Pl lni;:, i;Pp11r11ll' p,.!IO!I, piPr 11nrl .o:lip. Tnp m nrlition lhrnui::llnu!. Thi.11 primP pro- pf'rly 1.~ nffrrPrl 111 Sl69,\i00. C. F. Colesworthy & Co. Realtors F.'..ll~l'hluU Otli~ 64()....003) 8.11.\'~lrlP Off1f'I' 1'75-4930 ·----C. $33,900 No Down Term& nr ii..•.11unll' 11pr \n1tn ,ti t 61(o \'A 11 nr! your mnnrhly 1nJ1tllll· n1,.nt.11 :\fl' IP~.~ !hl'ln rpnt. !\p;t{'iou~ 3 hPrlrmn1, 2 h11t.h , twm ... EIPf'AnC firpl11l' .. , ltn- f'sl "Tnp or Th• I.in .. ·· huill· tn k"1'rheu. tlish11·11.~hrr. g..p- 11 n1t .. l1111nrlry rnr1n1 . P Prf Pcl fnr 11 l11r,e• f11rnil.v. Huge f11 n1lly room. M0-172ft. TARBELL BUILDING LOT r:1·rr 11·11.nt yN!r Q \\IN et:~m\1 110:-.1F>'.' HPrP's a nf'i:i.I R·l fnr 1(1 pu! rh11! h1g l'loml' nn, 1r ·~ rlr>SP lo ron- 1rn\rl'l('P.'I. yr1 h11~ real COL~NTR Y AT:\IOSPHERE. priC"l'ff 111 SlJ.nl. JCia,,. co:Ts -~WALlAC2 REAlTORS -S46-4141-I (Open £v1ning1 ) ....................... !!!!!!!Pl I It Rorely Happens 1 But \\'4" ha1·40 just hJ1tM mt I prrlrf'I <"On1hin11r 1nn • A .11p11f'tou~. rMrn1ini;: .horn~ v;\lh 11 virw th.11! L~ truly 11fllll•u•rllPd 11.n~whrre -f't1ur t-Prlrnom.c, :i b111h.~. F'Amily Room. l .A"2f' pmf~ion3.lly l11nriw-11 pf'1'! yi:i.rrl 11•ith .llJ>8Ce fnr pool. S79.1<00 C 11 11 67'.\-R:'l.'iO fnr 11 vi4!\\'in1 a~ poi11tr11Pnl. 1 ...::==:-~ SPANISH $37,SOO! Newport Charm DOVER SHORES. $107,000 11·i!h 11 viPw tha! i:oi truly fnr !hill llup!'rh .1 hPrtr<>nm u1~x<'t llM 11.ny14·hf'rr. 4 ho1nP nrll1if'rl Rmr>fl11: ltPf'll ht'rlroom11, 3 balh~. f11mily 11 rirl 11hrubll. Sparklini;: <1 u11.li· rnon1, large prolP11ionally fy for fine Pnft'r1111nini;:. l11 nd!lcaped yarrl wilh lpact Lilllh rlrr-p pile carpeting fnr pool_ $79.!lOO. (_" 11. [I "·ilh <'USlo n1 n1 11 r 1· hi n g fij:l-!f,~11] !or 11 viewing ep-r!r11p<>s. 1111 "1('r1rir ki1f'lwn St-f' !hi ll ru~tir hfo,.ut.v • thA1 ...,·ill mF<kr 11 lil"IP 1nvFl\fltmrnt • l .1\1'("~ 'hrrlmom Mmf' -3 . 1831 WESTCLIFF DR., N.8 •. -CAllME646-5152ANDSEE ·~ 4 hf'drnnm~. 2 h:i th~. 8ttlud~ r .. 11r living ronm Pnh11nr.ed hy mil\,~~ivP f1rrpl11rf'. Oe· luxP huilt·Ln k"i!chf'n. dilh· 11·11~hPr. l.ol'Ply p II. t j 0 . .Spr1nklrr,i;. RPrl 1111! roof n.-11uty'. 54(). 1720. Ovr r ~.200 liq. ft. ot L'Oinrori. l u.~ury, i:i.nrl pre111ii::e in 11 n111r:n1f11 ·r111 Nf'\\"prlrl BPach h11.thll · uM'<f brrl fir,.pl11.1¥, ~~~~·~c ~··;;-;;;;;;~·-~;;;;;;;;;~;;:;:;:;~~~;;; bllin O\'{'n & rnnp:~ -Plus 11 J r ulP 1 hrrlmom uni! nvrr lhp 2'Afll2'E'. A.~k ini:: Sf\.'l.000. EZ tenn~ . Call 673·lt550. P'llfll111nl!. \\"llh 1111 thf'o lrimmini;:11. Ian· Sf'ttioi;: v.·1rh 11. n un- fnr,ePll11hlf' \"/EW. J."our ~f11.~·1ou.~ hf>dro1Jn1s. 4 halh.•, I lllr~c f11n11l,v roon1 111\rl ~'OR.\IAL JJ INJNG ROOM. Sho\\ n hy appninrn1r nl only. t11s1il" f1replacf'. \Vhal A show pl11r•p fnr S.19,:x>n! SPHPr ill prP~rl'rl fnr Ct 1t nrl t"llA 1t>rm~. nov.··1 the limt . C11ll Walker & Lee BAYFRONT w lk & L MESA VERDE Char1ning 3 Br. 2 Ba, ConOO. a er ee 3 Rrdroom 2 bath, tref' hnM Rl':iHor~ 64&-771 ! Pool, plrr & ~lip -$79,500. nrallor~ ~~9491 Cul-<!~(' lip tnp ronrlitirin 201.1 \\'r.~1cli ff 11riv~ Tfo.:D J tURf~RT A ASSOC. 2790 Harhnr Blvrl -!I.I Adams lhn rout. 1''nr ~,.J,. hy nwMPr. ___ nPf'n '111 9 PM 341t ViFo I~irlo 675-~500 1 ~---°"'--"-E_,_,_• ___ 1 $29,!¥.ill. Jfl'1,. rlown. 546-1 2'2'. G;;e~n~o;;r;;•;;;I ;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;G;;•;;n;;o;;;r;;o;;I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;IJIGane r a I General If you've one mort move to make, make it now to MESA VERDE 3 BIG 4-BEDROOM HOMES READY FOR MOVE IN NOW! N••" • b<9, f.,,.,a., ltome ;" o,, pr11liqioul C oil• M••• "•i9hbatli <>ad ? F!v• ol out bi,9•,+ 1-•IOtY, • b•dtftll'l'I, 1 b~tli hnm,1 ••• ft OW compl•I• •nd r••"v tn mo~o into . , . FACING A NEW COSTA MESA CITY PARK! CLOSE OUT $40,250 PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTME NT 11 Lindi Isl• Drho•• Completely furn. o Bdrm ., 4 \-2 balh home. Lge. Y.1aterfront living rm. with floor to ceil. m arble frplc. Form;i l dining rm .• fam ily rm., maid's rm., Pier & slip ........... 195,000. For Complete Information On All Homes & Lots, Please Calf: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 B•y1id• Dr., Su ite !, N.B. 67S.6161 General $23,0001 BIG FAMILIES TARBELL ~1 l/11rhnr, Cm=t11 Mf'Aa KIDS GONE! 011·nPr 111ovini:: 10 Cnnrln. Fir~! t1m"' nffrrrrl -bl'a11ti- fl!I 4 brrlrnnm, 2 ~1nry 11.·1th fnrm,.j rlinin jl. f11m1ly. ~P P· 11.r111r rlPn .. 1 h11thll in prim~ ·, lf'lf'11!l11n. J p::il in~. large y11rd .. ; "-nutrl(lor 8.B.Q. Rf'1t for 1! lh11 n1nn,.y 11.1 S42.500: . "• C3JI 54~8424 (O pu Eve1.) \outh (-oast - 5 BEDROOMS $34,500 Nn rln.,.•n In G.I:~. 3 [.ari;:r f11mily homr in Mr~;i 1 YrnJ !iehou l(! ~ thi~ hr11utiful bi>rlrni:'lmll, l11rm " t y IP kil<'hr'n, hr\~hl t... <'hf'f'rfu!. henrly work fplllllr<'ll. Rirh worwf J)fl llel ing. w111J In 1vAll r11 rprtin~. dr11pe 11. Arlor11hle J)l11yhnust1. L u J h lnw n111inlenMC:e land~c11pi ng. ~. TARBELL ~ *SMOG* *FREE* VPrrlr . 5 hii:: hllrlrnnm,o;. 71 tw'>rl1non1, 2 hAfh home. ~;iu!iful !11.r2P count r y 2.000 11.q. ft . o h::Mrl livina 11.fylP kilrhl'n ll.'i1 h firl'pl11r11 . lnr rht-fAm1ly, Shait {'llfJM'!~ 0\'Pr 2,ll()'I ~. ft. nf thn.1 out with inll!rmm &: • elf".l:Fo!WI' ju.sf A putt 11w11 y fir.. A!11 rm !l.)'11 r m8. tt'a fm m Mr~;i Vrrrll'! Cnunrry lrfPAI fnr A IAri::11 f11.m\ly 3nrl Cluh. A MUST SEE! '™°rl'0 !1 11. 111.rsr:f' Yllirl fnr thfo S:'i2.~. CALL NO\V'. kirls. C"ll Ml-60\fl N(IV.1 Walker & Lee lteitltoni fi46::.7TIJ m1 We,o;lclllf Orl\le 0 J)fn 'til 9 Pr-1 \0 THE REAL ·"\.. ESTATCRS ' ·'• ' ,., FEEl THE TRADEWINDS .All ••• riql.I "''0" II.• '''''' fr oni • "•w p•r~, 'II k11r. •v": Yflu t •fl I•~• .,.,.,, pie~ ol "'""' of th e 11101+ •l•9•11t lu•ury hn'l'I•• •••ll•ble •liywh•t• 111 O ''"'I• Cow"ty! l •1il 1 by l uceol• f-io,.,•t, II.•¥ '••'u•• et••• 2SOO 1q u••• f~e! of 9r•t iou1 IP •in9 •• , • J C•• 9•••9•, bu:tt.;11 wft b••, '"'"'•I d,";"9 1oem, pool.,;,, Ioli •nd ""'"'I' o+h•t Th e Racquet Clu b in Irvine has one home available because o{ a la st m inute cancel~ J;:itinn. This tilect root beauty features a two story livi ng roon1 with a noor to ceiling fireplace and massive exposed beams. Three bedroo m~ and three bathrooms. I ... arge fanlily r oom and a cozy dining room . \Ve a re includina block wall fencing and additional carpeting a s an incentive for YOU lo buy this lov ely home. Localed just one block to park and tennis courts. Liberal terms and immediate occupancy. 'Only 71.., hlorkl'; 1(1 lhe lvar h. Reach for The .Moan Tr1v1t .... i nri11 !hi')' may not be, • Mfr or .. 11:n hr,.,..its fllf'y 111rt. " M "x l10'-ot F~f' I.And wi th a ~·­ Vil•:w nn v.+.ir.h ro ('()nJtn1et ~ the ~me )'OU Mvf' 1J~ J rlf'Lllred. • • .$1'.500. Can 64&-05b5. Ev,nina1t &46-4.'!79. d~lur• f••lu1 •1 , O+h•r hom•t i11 M•t• V•rd• !or l•l•r delivery •r• p•l.:elf f•o111 S4 J,150 to 159,500. Hurr v for \i,,, 1el•cf1011! •.. AND RIGHT NEXT DOOR TO THE COSTA MESA COUNTRY ClUlll MESAVER!)E Jur11i1lrt1d P11ocleh. Phone: 1714) 557-B252 Localed on Culver Road, norlJJ of IJJe Sanla Ana Freeway. Open daily from 11 •m lo 6 pm (oxcopt l'rl~•YI 132-5792 ar 979-2113 Me"' H•rbor l !vd. i11 Co1t1 M.,,. l1••+h of S111 Di•11• Fwy,) t • wo1t e11 AJ•1111 Ave. fbou~ • l!t1lf 111Uo te eur i .._ _____ _ • N,.11r new l bf'-<lronm. 2 h11.th homt -ownl"r n1nvM in. thf"n tnln111fl'rrf"l'f, F.v,.ryone quAlifi"11 to "~'uml! low in· tl"N'11I loatn. $257, ptr monlh inrludn tue11 with mini· m um OOwn. Br11t huy in C11pi,.tntno ~11ch -S.13,951'1. Call 545-8424 (0Pf!n Evts.) 1 Rt'fl~IM In ttM' -himm,.r~nJ br&u(y Af }'nltr nwn ht11ll"t! II. nrl fl JI f' rf'l1 pnnl , f v. YI ll"TJ:A"IU!I firtpl11tes. ln!~ nr v.'Mfl J)Allf"linrt Anrl hN!k 111h,.lv~s. Th~ prt~li•lou- 11.f'f'-ot H11rtinr VI 11 w Hnm,... T'riol"d r\ttll •I S.fi8,y.(I, .Jim al/ !W6-2Jt]. '&THE REAL ' 'ESTA ERS -~Uf"J. :n l ' (I,,. COLWELL PROPfRTIFS. INC Rf Al TORS 1--· Hl"IUJ.f' l lun!i"l1 W11ett tht OPEN HOUSE rohunn. • ~ . .::..::-. ":M'~ ~ " ' COMMODORE ROAD BAYCREST 0vPr 2000 -~'I· ft . Llf luxu1·y Bl 3 .) hf'drnorn. :.!1..., lm11t, faniily ;uirt din- in;;:-11rrA. Rnnus nf A ~l'!'lrkllnl.! prw1I and lov. 11111intrr11u11·1> 75' " 110' y111"f1. All lh,. 11<;11al R11v,.rr;;;I fl'lllturrs. f'ull rric,. $h1,9;)() a11il 11n 11!l11urN1hlr l<>11n of epprnxir1111trly $50,000 . .Ju~t hs!Pd hurry. Call us rit !YI0-11.51. BIG 5 Ho"· abt>ul " 2ori:eou.<; 2 stofy rorner horn,. with ~ hii:: b<>rlr•Wlm~. J h:ilh~ ;irand pi11.nn ~i~.C'd l.ivins: rnom. drPan1 kitrhPn 11•i111 c"n1n1ir til,. And dbl l"l,•·en Al! this er1rl ir~ 1n l""rf,,rt rnn• aition ll'il h /lP\•' rf'lint in.<;jdp and Olli. E.xc,.11,.nt JV!rsa fl<>! ,\J;ir loc!ltion 1111 h no dov.•n VA nr J.('\\' rlnv.·n fl!A terms. rriC'f'd only $.19,900 -call 00"'-' 546-5886. FLOWERING ORCHID TREE ~fl\\' In full t>l'l"rn ""'~ nff !hi~ hf'llU· tifu11y l;u1rl<i<'a1INI rhrrr hPrtroom .\IMiA \ll'!'rir hf11nr . .Spa1 ·1nu~ f11m1l y rnnm \•1th hrPp/iu·"". full bu1ll·1ni;. and h1111<1y i<rn·•'"" pr•rrh. 12 :o. .111 \O\'• ,. .. ,,rt p.:111r.. sh:u:: 1·11.rpr u anrl l"lS of p'tr11~. ~-ull pnrp S.10!r.Jfl. Exr,.11,.nt l""rmi;. nf rl)IJrr;e'.' Jusl hslt>d -hurry. Call 540-1151. SUPER DUMP· $20,50'0 Th is M~ i::ot ,,., tv-th,. b--~t tJ f all fj,.pr-upprl""i. ~r1n~ ) qur hn<lts &: "hn\·,.J. :\ hdnn.~. 2 Nllhs. hr.I"'~ 1n lh~ \\ 1111!'. br"kt'n "1n<ltJ"'"· rtr. Th,, be:s l part 11 tlJP l(lr,11\il)n anrl drn1, 11 pay- ment -only $1000. t.:ncl,, Sitm 'l\•·ni it and "·111 ~II it to As."'\Y l!\'VESTOR. ror stool hearts only. ca11 546-~. YOUR CHOICE t:hoo~E" nnf' or aJI lhr,.,. or th"~" flt"' lo"·nhouser. rlf'ar clubhouse and 1)1)()1~. Tu·D-3 bPdrnom. t"c St')f)' or gor- iPOUS 2 b<>droom, .l!iino:I,. storr. All inrlud"' buil1-ini;. carpets. doublt' &arag". Mch pncf'd at a Jo04· 120,950. Call 540-1151. TillLEVEL ~t"''J>f'rl Jkarh t.ownhou~o:. Try care- frl'" h\•1ng 1n tw>aullful s1irT011ndlng;,, Cl~,. to twoa,.h ann nnl) stP~ lo pr1 - '·at,. pcinl J ll"drni:lm~ 3 ba1/l<I and fonn11I d ining rl"lnfll. Pricf'd brio"· lllllTkt't and only $31 ,500. Call 546· 5880. GOVERNMENT REPOSSESSION Just rtlPilS"d -t'"!ltsidf' (o~la ~-ff!.sa hl'lme 1\ 11 h ;'\ hru·111' rlu .. ""'"· brirk fireplRl"'. i;h112 rrplJ1;, huil l-1 n kilrhen, 2 ba1h~. A hull." Int "'ilh dPlllCh""' 3 c11r l:'llfi'li:" rnrnpll'll' \\'Ith ['llumh1ng. Prired at S2:"l.ono 1tnd 11 i;king nnly ~lflOO do•1·n. C11ll us 1mn1E"diatt>Jy - " on·t last a "'f'ek. 546-.l880. 4 BEDROOM BARGAIN .Al S29.500 full rr1r• for lari~,. 4 bed -• room and famllv Tf'V1m. "'"'TIPf "'ill help "1th financ\ng. Submit only 5-:;, do"·n. Enjoy btlil l-ins, ahake roof. fireplac,., e.xcrllent location. Ca.II 540-1151. BA YCREST 4 BEDROOM EIPiBTit charm1n;: horn ... f'nur bt'cl· rooms, f1unily rnom. fnrmsl dining room. Perfrrt fQr t>llll!!rt sinina "ith a rear )•Rrd pl11nnPd for 1tJmmer so· c111.H.z1ng. Priced Rl onl)· '63,500. For appo1ntm,.nt, -.all 540-1 l:l?. HOW ABOUT UNITS :; 2 h<>droom house!> :l -garas;"~ • .'i . ~ .. par.1111' r11rd!; • Gno<I rrn r11t 11r"'a • A.~kin~ :i;.fi7,5(1(1 ! Nrf'rl n1nre dtta JJ.s ~ CAil u~ lll 540-1151. ' SCARCE 4 BEDROOM COLUGE PARK- • , , b\JI "" JU~I 5:,llt 11111'. llnd 11'" I bulf'. Thi' ,.,11•p1f1Pl\' pnrul1r milt!,.! ha!l 2 p11ru•~. ·I hrrlrronn''· 10rp11.r1tr,. IAlln_dry fll(lfll, hrlrk f(r,.rl11r,.;' 'l 111' ar11rll'rt h111h~ 11nd t-111. rlh\ a-11r11i;: ... Tf'Q'ifir '""" 11nr<I fill'""' elti.cP to 1111 l l"h{t(\lll 11nd n1111or •h"i•pin;:. Pr•r" ri,h1 111 s.;1.ono \\'ith rHA 11nd \'A terms a v&!lablt. Call :W6-l880. LOW OR NO DOWN \\'~11 loc1tl'd near Sou th CM~I Pla11 ~ lr2: hP<lrntlrll,, s11nk,.n Sulttln fut'>~, m111~1,.r t'>.111h. l111r~,. \l'lllk In ~nlry, ~Pl"l'\rlll" ~,.rv1r,. qu11rt,.r~ 11n<1 ~tl'p• d"'\'n l11ini;: rnnnl. T\l'I" l"f'>\•PrPrl pA • nn ... nnr rn111r1 .. 1rly f'nrln~rrl G11rrlf'n kitrhrn 11·i1h ll\fldfi ot cupbna1•d,, G1vt" u' a ral! ~4f>-5880. IT'S GOOD TO BE HOME t'SJ)M'IRll .1• Wt"tf'tl hnm,. ill II~ lnvl!ly IS thi!i ~1,.1111 \!Pni" hnmP. ~ hu;::" hiort room.•. dhl hrir~ fir,,ph1r,.. mnrl,.rn ht1ln kirrhr>11, rn,.ri;i1rd f11"11ly rnl'lm, lr.1·.,ty i;:l11s~ ~hrlin~ dnor<. Ir. ri11tui. J11st t'"pll!ntf'rl 1n~id• .!Ind n11r V•r.v r,..11s1Jnahly rnred. Call u~ for fu1 lhl'r detaila. 546-5880. M·l ZONE Hard tn find, but ".' h•1't' II -3 bt'droom hnm• on 7!1' x 120' Jq!, Great location for · amall bu!ines~. Askin& '24.450. 540·11!11. R· 1 LOT EASTSIDE Costa ~1,.sa. EXtr11 nlcl!! l>ulldlng lot tn PXC"llf'nl nfc!ighhorhond. Enouir:h said: A~kin1< $9,950. . ... Al~n chf'rk out th1~ h(lt bu.v'"-d,.s,.rl Int real rhP11p $900 buck.11...:..\40-1151. INVESTORS PARADISE (.J, .,,. nnl' 11r1·f' 11'1frrl 1•·t1h 7'-11n1U. poc.~1hl " R· I l"11inc Jctf'11l rnr 11.d~!. tinn11I un1 1 ~. 1-;nM rn~tA '.\lr.11 loc:a· 11cin. Call for dt>l&1la. M6-;,s80 . • •. VA TERMS t'pi11kl11n.; I hr1tr,,•>1 ll. f><111 1l1 r11f\HI, ]0' , I~ si•rrr11rrl 11!•11111n1un Jan1u, f1rrpl11rr rull h1 11l l 111~ \tlO'l11rl1nt d1&h 11 ;i~hrr . """ !'"11•'<. '1n1 I flnnr In lu t &.· f11n11h rm -f.)ff,.1,.rl ">th fMA or nn rln".'n VA !"'rm;; 0J cflLH'~f'. CALL 54f'l-11~t . FORMAL DINING ROOM Tli~y:r,, harrl !n flnd. h11t !1••·1''.J l t• at !i."\6.9.'iO-·rn11r l~r:" twrlrnrim~. fi\mlty 11n<I ~"riar11t,. r1111 1nc -1111 nn '1n~l,. stnr1 . Fr,.~hlv p111n!rd 11.nd Tt'll dy fnr 11 fa~r ~111,.. r nn 11111 l'njny ~r,,inli: th!~. C11JI U!i Ill .l4fl-l 151. _,.. .... l~ I I~ I~-_ .. _ .... ~!~[~ __ ,_ ..... ___,]~ ~I -_ .. _ ..... ~__,J~1 1 -""u. I~ 1 F•o•u•n•,.•;•n•v•.•ll•e•y••• ! Huntington Bt•ch GeMral General General · College Park 1 Corona del Mar Costa Mesa Cost• M••• $28,950 BARGAIN DAY • f * OPEN SUN. l·l *I DUPLEXES __ D_O_L_L_H_O_U_S_E __ MESA Vee<• -l Re · 2 R• • • Spanish Adobe • 2424 Andover Pl. Thrrt 10'<'n·r 1n11ny & WI'.' h11\'t' 1 F:11slsir!P Coi;1a MP.~a fnr f Fnm. NP11r p11rk, llf'hll', BY O\\'NJ.:R . 4 Rn. 11' FtA 4 Bedrm-Family Rm . $3,000 PRICE $22, 950. srionrs..~ :1 Rn. 2 h::ilhs. J.i;:~. lhr111 11 11. ThP hf>s1 nnr . . . $1 9}1.'l() rull prier. 1_;r~ nn ~tin Jl pill f.\. N "" I y fAm. rm .. ~hAll: rrt~ · \AAl'I No Down G.J. REDUCTION li\·ini: nn.. f11rnily rm., 2 An. 2 haths rar·h unit. <IO\\'!l -rni111mum r!nwr1 I rrvlPrnr11.lrrl llr ~h111t 1·rp!rlP. sri. (L $.11 ·~· 9li:l-Zl4fi in I TWO STORY RANCH HOUSE _. Snl11I h111lt :I l'w><trnon1, 1louhlr ' L'\I 1. 1-, · t I 12 24 I · ff 111~• ~79-4i721. It>~~ tri· ~--rlo " II ~·r,.rnrrl lAnai. ()n h<-11u1. F.lr1·. hlt ·ill.'. r1trl i1111t hP11t, r /\. J11r 1n,i: .. nmf' ~11t111.IP1 x II un11num rm o '"" · · " "' 11 R,.1Hll1ful h111 .dory, 4 r11r £Al'ltll:". rll'l!il" '" 101,n &· r.·.R;;-,,o,N-R-,..:.,-1r:-,n--. ,-. V.-4 $29.9~. 4 R!"tiTm .1 hi11h_. El~· nthPr~. 4 Rrrlrni.c, f;i mil.i tlf°11r<Tini, 2 hl!.th. liinHl.i i·ily p;:irk. I'rLCf"rl r i_zhL I'h: 1m ... ·r1rt 1·urnrr Int . \\11lk rn frpli·~ .. lnlV n111in1,.n11n1·P -on h11~" R-2 Ir.I. Quern ~17.P hrk -Pl11yhnt.111P In h111·k n.Jr;m., 2 ·R··,_ , .. ,,rn .. •ly ,, .. I j!l'lnl •ntry, lnmillll <lln nn_ , ronn1 2 pullm11n hlllh.11 hu1J1 ;:ill J«'h•1r1l.~. S?Jl.9j(). rln.~r Ir. ~lnrr!i. si;i;,;.oo, hrrlmon1i::, 11: r PA 1 lVllln-.v11rrl . Ry <M•nrr. ~lfl--.\4:i1 .,.,, " · · • 11rP11 hnrnr in 11. l'N'l':llt:I"· 612-llil. 1 k h 1 1 ------- - -"'i~'"' ,_,,,_ '·''""'" ·,, .. , . ., hv rm f,,11r11nng n11s5t\'I!! 111 t"ff1r:l"n<:')' kilrh,,n. 50 fl. ,, .. , .. 1,c.,.1 .•• ". 0 ... , ..... ,,,,, Newport Beach Realty Open Sunday lry-~1.v " 111· Pll, 11 ~ nl.~ R'i' Ow11,.r -lflvrl.v .1 RR. "" ··~· "'~ " ' f rr.Vl"l'f'ri p11l1n. $:ml air (Vln-niJ1. rrirf'I'! ;i! s:i.4•1;.,i:i. FHI\, 2i'2i ~r\\/lf'lfl Rh" 6i'.'i Hi42 ' 615 Narcissus Ava. 0 Jrrr~. "! 11 r Af"f'_ fpl ., !'l'lr Int. rm fr.r hr111!, _ ·'...:.'.. __: ·_:~' '1 ""fl!~ x, <Irr~. r111n rm, lri , ... '"' """' " ' ., Centu f \\"h I ' "" "Wf>••, ~. o "2'<. . lrrril, 1111 11pi;:r11dNi II 'II.' "r·1,·0,,,· .. , ""'.' ... ,,1, ,1,, ~ ----I U . 't R It Lrr'~ ~h<1w it rn .vou. 1J">1~ of ,., .. ,,.,,, ..... a ... ··, p .. ,., .. ,, D•. ·, B• • ' h• llc,r·" ~t tmnir air flllf'r. EIPrlrLl' (lll(> v.qn'! 11'1.~L 1 RR. 3 RA, f11.ni rm .. •hii11: ~001 E. c.~t. lhvy. 6il·fi.ll0 !'nnni in >:'I'll\\ hf"rf'. Cllll .. '4&--111.11. frnlr In \111~1rr RR . 11 t'>llin rll!lC:", <lbl 0,.,.n. ri " ., 1-(;J 1rr1n ~. ('1111 R.12-2 .. "~ !ht~ ~21 " RY O\\'.~~:R • n 1ver11 y ea y "•p' ..,,.~ "" • · • " · •. ,, ,, ... 11 1lr'rl1nhP~. >:"(11Jrn1,,1 '5 lr1lch C:llr.:11?1' <lmr <}pr n (' r . ··rp•~. dq1.~. rlrr bltn,, 2. L-u-1k-Harb0r-vi;-w Hills Wa Iker & Lee ' 10'1~ ~-.-_~R-,-.-.. -,-.-r .. s12.~·__:'lfill_-M_l 111ri fi rm. rii;.hv.i:;hr, Int~ "' counter P 11 r k -I i k' l11.n<liicap1ng'. , ··-11 •1A ~ I Coll••" rrlr hrll'.~f. 4 Br., ' Gorden Grove i:;""f'f' I. ,.11r1n• ""· Over-!>ttl-li20. Pll 10~. ~."~' sq. · ~'"''""-· ('u.~!nrn pool, lush lnr1.~1·PJ!. I • '~ f.,.,...., ___ ..,...,_...,_,..,, Oprn 11,..u~r "·rrkrnrls. 2:l·i::i 1111111r11 I r'll·k .,.,,111,.,r fRll Sr flf'11ilnrs ~:Hl-lfi5 R11. _HI~ ~·1.,_Kina: .111 .. fTJ!llr !li~Prl dhl >:'ftJ, rntlln, block -----EMERALD BAY I Cnl~alr nr.~·''__:"'-·7-2:lM. '"'ll'P pnnrl .. 1 nr. 21, h11, r11.n1 o~~":·~ _ _!1r._ MO-it."121;_____ $24,950 \VAii, l,otnrl!l,.p<l. :l'la Yr.11 Ot'W TARBELL $25,500 Char111i11~ l Br + ~·11 n1. rn1. Corona del Mar rn1, fnrn111J din rn1. 2 frpl!·. t·nri AAI"' nr l('A!W hy t)Wnt'r. M~;SA Vrr<il' • 4 Rr, 2 R11. J\LL T~JtMS-:i RR ., 2 RA, -Tnp Jrn·. Jr11n1111·11J;11r'. Ot·r;:in s 1<1P of c11.~1nn1 1trs1£11. rlP1-nr11rnr I rnot, \'l'l•·11n•. ~ Rft. 2 Rf\. fArn, S.12,:,00, ft'f'P!l/rn~'· hkf' nrw rrplir. I. tlrps, dsh-,, 29~j H11rhnr. Cr.~111 \11'.~l'I DREAM HOME $27,000. FABULOUS BUY II")'. \'ir"" lrlr::il ~.:tlOl\. I ( SPY GLASS dr11pr~ I. "'llllJJ;lpt'r f.41 .:i17.1 lg,. [llll}Torim "/frpl" I. 1.1·P1 xtr11~. lli:ll l'nmro!I,. SI, "'•hr, w11tpn;nf1Pnrr, 11v,.r- quirl 11ln1•1sphrl'P. 111 hui.:r Slt:1.006--llurry FP•in t'\l'fV ll)(lll\ \n rhi!! flprn S11.1 f,, Sun, I-\ 1100 h11.r. llxt'1 hr11INf Jl'Yll :,.19 .. ()4;i~. !117"rl 1'1! " hlnck f,.ncl'. f62-4471 ( -J 54M10J 1·rAr .1·11rd .. A I um i 11 urn Tr:v \IUHE\lT • ,.~-._.,..,..., J · o., •~n~t f>. ,,.,."'''"' h•lh "p•• "•·n• ''1·•-. 1. ••11• 1lla ge Real Estr1 te I G: .._. ... ,"--h,.11u11ful ,,,. .. Lu.~k t110 . ...-· •··-·· 1• " ·" • '· •" , .. ~ .• RY OWNF:rt. :l Bl1, 2 RA , ., ·'" cnvrrrd pnl i0-·~"1 ""11"1 l()o l47t \'111 L1tlo l>i=~ ---·-hit I t r f'<I US AFFILIATED ri1·rl'looks fif::', lrn1r.n and l story ynu h11\'C 11n un.~ur· I VACANT & READY II~ i::r ~p11ra,. rnr F11n1, f'!n1., Frpl., $~.:ion. , • J hPr1rno111 .•. 2 hath.~. fan1ily room. f1rrpli11·P. flquhlP i;:11r- AO:P. ~hak" shin~IP roor 11nrl grPll.1 rP~lrlPn1i11I lrw·111inn. ~nr1 .. 1 hotnf' OPP<i~ !ll'lrnr Ofllllf::'e lrf'f"<. Bu LI I 111 pa~'i('ll \'11'11· nf :i ll 1hc h11y 1,.. Sluii·p 2 Bdrni hnmc ri11t1n y11rrt. Ov.nrr 011 !hr Low rl'lwn. rih : 549-026fi 11ft Rrnkrrll R"11Uy 11 i l r _ .~ 11 "I' r k i ll'hl'n, STEPS TO BEACH 11r<"a . an•! ~urruunrhnl{ hills. * Nr11· pAinl ink 11ut prt>nii.•r~ Slit & Sun. 11 11"1 111 11 .Jn. Hur1tinnton-8eich-- Wanted! Lar9e Family! 3 Bn 2 II I rt e. r I • S --' rr. Ii nn1 t:t?JI ColJ:111P Dr., - -.------.---• <1 i~h"·11~ht>r, "-\·nrr Je,vin<. ''· ·!it)'. crt>nC )' rlC'cnr, prn ,.,., uri ay nn .. · 11'"'11Y * l\'r1•• plush ~h11R: c('Jlt ,. NI"' 'R 2 R blr I v• hrhin1t \111rhnr Slin1111in11: •.r." r, 11• IM, fl 11~ $33,900 r11rr, but. "Oii, "·h11.t 11 har· 1n1in." S11hn11I 1111 lt>rn1~. (1111 M.'>-8424 IOpt>n t~\'"'5.f \outh ~ (. oast --- '' -ill' Sl'l.r'rl hr1f•~·-·· lhrr-llMT ll('W ('llfp, 0Jl"n ti<>an1 11·.·J. C;1JI ti7".>-7t.2 .. 1. • Nr1v rlr11prri"!! I I r ,.. ,,.. r< ,A.. _. .. " f'Pn!rr. 1714 1 7~3i. 11~1 nr·y '· •.rp .. .,, ur11pr<1, r}! Rrk .. 9fi2-i.:Sfi.·1. ;·ril.~: l.111l:'f' p;llin. S:t1,!JOO. * Rot"111 fnr Rn()lh,.r uni1 _ _ . _ _ 11,. .<or-hi~. $2fi.li00 HlllN'rP~1 _ CAYWOOD REALTY $4:i.!'IKI. full prir·r OPEN BY OWNER 0 .,..11,,r :..t~IR42. COLWELL TARBELL TRIPLEX- * 541-1290 * *FULLER REAL TY* Th"' hnu~" 1.1 "'"rrylhini::. :J PROPERTIES. INC. :11fi-ft!tl I ............ Anytimr 1£" hr. 2 II h11. 1Rr <lin rn1 UTILE RANCH REALTORS SPECTACULAR VIEW "' ~n11k h11r. 11·n11i;1.n lrivrnit J111rhflr.fli·rioi·l.ii;:h!s. 4 RR, _kit. lw11111 rl'pl ._ 1111 nf'11· !'Pl~ /.1 a<·r1', 7.nrwrl R-2 {'Ill" ht-SHORECLIFFS 2 811 + poii·rlrr rnnni liv-&. rlrp~. litr 111111i·hf'<1 1th! tfp hnu~. rounlry vllin:::. You'll Pl1jt)y the qu 11•! l•}l'H· ' ,11r. Snnriklrr~ frnnt k rr11r. r · ' 2 inli!' nll, fan1 rn1 , rl1n rn1. ,. \f'ry nice" RR, BA n11•nrr's ol<I f11.~h111rlf'<1 front 1.,...rrh. 11nn. !hr r11ny11n & 01·ra11 NE •~Jrn,,r lot . Killyh1Y)()k & F:l\STSlnF: hy n11'nt'r .. l Rr- 2R11·~·11n1' Rn1. rrpt.•-rlr11f)"'11 -191 Rury SI, M!i--1174. ~ Rn -Cn l n .. ~11f' Ry 011•nrr. s:n.ocrn 'i"11nt v.•/lrr"'~ li7 .. >--fi611 2 , BR I B ProL t11nrls1·RJJ"<I. Pr111•Plu1. . , . R I I Sf>ol•l111h>rl rinoJ. rrP~liee SALE-LEASE unit+ · A. Goodll'lll for $21 .950. T;:ik,. l'I !<'Vlk. ,.1..,1~ fl'•lr111h 1s ru~ri•·, vrry Rrlf11 ~1 !1.12ll Rrl l11~1 1 . ()<,1•n· East Bluft ocat1on. r.""I rarprt e 11. ! u r 1. pn1·11tf' /lf•l11f'. 2 RrrlJY>t)rn~. t>r "·ill ("fll1~irlPr .•rllini;: nr 1 _________ _ 0 L e Optl•o $ 5 ~·" ,,~10 n<'iRhhnrhf'IOlt. 17i,l00. hy BLUFFS "E " r eaS R 51, 00. ·"-~_. 2 ha1hs. panrlrrl 1lrn. 11srrl r.prinn !n huy. l)""'n 1.;i fim. 1111 nrr. 6i4.14:.!.i. , .. Shio·p :\ ht'drll0n1, 2 h11t h Back Bay hn1·k f1rr11l11 1·r, l..;iri;:r & ____ -POOL-BEAUTY -l.11rs::,..•I llrPrnh,.11 , l phi~ C -~ 1-., .. "llr <Hrll"f' lr.l'rf_v l1VLll" ronn1. flrrpt11 1·r HJ\P.ROll vrJ-:\\1 1111.1 ~<:: r11.m1I,\'; lnw 1 .. 11 ~ .. hnh1. Per· 011'"1• ,..u ,- ' " Roy McCardle Realtor " Jmn111 :l Rl1 2 RA rrsulrr JU~! ~tf'p~ fMnl 1 h,.. lSIO NE!l\'plrl Rl\·rl., C.M. N011Tll RAY ll0Mf-: pl11• ~l1rl 1ns:: rtoon• 10 11 pl11nl Ry n\\nrr. '.l Rr. 21'11 R11 . Ll1.11k 1 '' '" • C 1I rk A frcl Mnrl. J:i9.9;;1, I h'-· " I _, 4 BR·t·r.. 2'i RA.. !)hi, 1·11-1 ~••· R-rn fo ''°'"' '1nn1r. 2 frpt~. F11m. rm, rnlrAn•·f'.. 0 '"£'" .· -' ru "'"'~t' """ pon 11,,. • r.o1•7729 . 1 '' ,.-"· ·~· '"· I fllA CAI I C •· \'nu m11kr lhr <lrl'1llinn. ~o-lrplc·"'t'I lmr ·Spa n. l1lr rn· 1 $1111.000 d111inll Till. Ocr~.111\·irv.·. · !<lllllf' . '' olVtf'R'I' ;' ~-/~ l,'.•• , $22'.i ....,r nionth nr 1ry & rhn. ll1n. l.i,: 1'f'111rn1 U ' "t R It Sw.J ... 1'10 Jilo!-171.11 111"1"1 .. i57·42fil f:rl fiirlrllP G · ) ~ . ...-,~ n1vers1 y ea y _ ~ ___ _ Jlr111ty f>4fi.AA11 ' ' . r buy 11t $21 .500. with ltl~; NEWPORT HEIGHTS J)lltio are11 . Hr;i11! huul~· ••p-:UIOI ~:. C!il. lh1y. 6il·~1IO HARROR VIE\\I 1111.1-'> - _ -· -_I ~j,S{ . :/ ~ If do"'Tl· for 111'11'1' 1nfnnna 1 lo11 . • l!li!. Aul<> .~11n11kl1•r 1 ·111 t\r--* -R 2 -* I Lui;k 1C.<1rnirl 1 4 Rr 2 All, , ME SA DE l MAR ,' '"''--•lf'a~ c11ll ~6-1.U:l llnmr:i: llrl': !irlhnsi: falll ~ Do /;$1('. $19,950. z:~~ H<l) f'';i rn1 -. rllnl r1n lrpl·· ,.,,.,,..1 'S1 loll.. Ail~Un111hlf' jl,I, 'r.. ('nn1pl .. 1rty .~c 11lly · ' · · · Y.~ lhi~ onr! C..1'111.rnunll 3 '\1•·,. 2 lwlnH h<>nl,. ~'lt'lh •11 ' · r-· Pl. i\.1P~ l)r. In \'111w•r lt.<1 ~ ' ' rrini· •inly S1;6 ROO &11-0lK.i ff'll01':<1lrrl, Tn[I f'flnrl. M11ny ~· ---Mesa del Mar 8:;9 St. \l11 1r. (.hlnrr Aru.:1nuJI TO SF;l.t! ,, 8Nirn1.11., 2 bath.II. tra:. llv. rrn. + tfln in~ rm .. Rt'pnrBll' family n11 . "' flrrp., ~ b!lin.11, bf'Jiul. yarrl. Sh11kr roof, <tbl. li:Br. CALL ANYTIME ~ma or J411-16ll Lachenmyer Realtor Rr .. 2 B;trh, f11m1ly rl1n1n2. J)r. OJlf'tl linu'lf' rn .. ~I . ('on,, lh1 y SJlll('l'lU~ h\,·1ng I c t M_. . . .. .~ITll!I. LTll' 4 RR . 2 h11, f11n1 , :!II~ \'1~111 rlP! flro Rr~t fnr a<lulri>. Eally y11 rl1 Son. 1 !'i. Hnidrr RKR. nn . 11 l:ru.·k frpl.,·" h, in OS a esa rni. S.'lll.500. rrfni•ipRlll Qnly. Nrwrinr1 R"""h upk,.r11. \\fork shop for 1111u1 't4&-47i0 lw .. .kshrh,,ii, l<,1 111 s1~r hil-"4l-71111• l'i4 !1:1.1 ANYTIMJ-: nr 1\•nnian, Grral \'AIUt> for ' ~ · nn~. I.ii:r. k1r rh. " f'M11ni;: 1 PARK VJEW · · .i. --- lhl' lleis;:hl.11 al $.1i,j()O, VJ[\\! qf h•ll~ and ur1. 2 :.i rPll , S.·rl'l"'flPrf li:ina.1. f)hJ. EA~ -Rv (}"''""'"· l Rr. 1 Fou,;taln Valley Slot)·. hrar11M l'i'llill(I' -4 Rr ,.-•• fllll~ ~n111,. fnr hr.11.1 t• L . ... R11 . rrwrurr•. hlYl"ti nr•, 'ft ,. 11rnrr + 1•1111 ~111" -~·\lint{ Rn1 . lrplr, I~ ln! -or lrai1Pr. flflrr.!"1 fnr S44.500 I Sh.11rp .l hrdrY)()m, 11h11.t rpl . nu tir~. 1r1: ln l. low h1x. s:~.!llJI. :.~~. J MORGAN REAL TY 2 h111h.11, tt rn . s:i~ .. 'iOO. frpl,., ,, 111r.irhrd 1:11r 8 Ibo P . I 67'6642 657 6459 0 /B k S2".1;ll. A.11!1umf' 10~11 nr a a •ntnsu • -~-VIEW-HOME _· __ \ w~~~IOl'o0 e r rrf111:1 nr ... .;1;......:.111~. *ELEGANT BAY•·1tO:o.1 * --OPEN-HOUSE CPLLEGE PARK Refurbiod~l 1971_ ranor.<1m11· fi."JI C1&n1m ll it;:'t-h1nt1~ Tlr . :i *C'c:fRN.ER-SHARP --. ~L:Nl)AY Rofflf'Jt In !ht' 1-1, w•--1 , \'ti'\\'. Nf'"' pif'r . .-BR. :i R:i. llr . J11m nn , hrr:1Jcf11~1 ~tnv,.·in rontt. p,rlr .. i,."· ~~, '"" • l.11.rar 2 RR r111plf'.\, .,..,.,.., 11<1,. ffi<'l'ISI 'ff'lll!llt ntti\'f'il out Ir COlu1y11 rd rntry. S19.\f1IO tlf'IOlt. p19 nrl.-.i rlrn -~· 1w"r ,"\ RR. '4J · hA.. f11m ily ITII., S.14,400. 2'lfl6 s 1111,. A'''· lhr o"tK'r !whn i1vt>1 In M1tl"ll'h11I Rf'11.lly 5i.-... wro M r. 7 1111 . N11·rly lnrl.~1·ptf. hlln!I, .,h,,r1 y ~1111 with <-HI 1 ,... rnn. r.nly . .J"'l•·ll17 . r.11!111 Spr1112.11~ µys "a:f't rid B•yshores tVlrn .. r It'll , l11vrly t'W't'All F\RQ, S?.4,500. -------~~- of 11\At lhln.i::" Vi1ct1nt le in 'l""i:: fr,.1m VVPfll.1 1111~. A BALBOA BAY PROP. \1F:SA Vt"rriP 'fri-lrvrl, 4 hr- MEADOW HOME $.12,R00-4 RR , :JRA. new Jh11g rrpl~ & r1rp~. H 11 • 11.ll!<U!Hllhlf! lf'>lln 11r \\Ill r1>hn11rv'"· Sl111rp h n 11 ~ r . 1<.....-wl 11.jt'll , Nf'11r ~'.V. Hi S...hml:Onty $HHO. rin. ,, 1llage Real bta te 531·5180 ( ::::.J 531·5!00 nc"'d of TLC. Cnulrl be a l BR.. 2 1:-. .. din rn1 r--• 1 ;hi 1' 111ry ~mr "' ln!Jt nf * 642•7491 * l h~ • 2 lrf'I(' -tnn1plP!• --Beauty. F'ix It It gvc. , . ..r1v1 1shulll'ni le II~. f:I,,... '!l:i~~ -pf)v11t .. hf'i:irh!"ll , ~pnnklf'r .•Y,:ll'm, <"u-.;tnn1 --y()WNHOUSE $28,000 u ii. CAii now kit J.n"'' !Afo. hold. 61:M>Rill. Allk1nc $6.").000 . Ry Ou nrr OPEN HOUSE rrpt & rlr11fW•· Swim pnnl. 1''0R MlP hy qwT'tl'.tr .1 Rrlr. 2 wllh ill• !hi' l"Xlra•. 2 Ira 54~2313 Capi1treno Be•ch I orF.:N ~AT"' SUN 2-6 Nt)l')n 1(1 5 Pr-.1 .• Rrinn ,, j \11u1v f"Xtr11..11. s j] ... 1flO · 1 R111h . Sl\11 11: c·11r1ll"t 111"'1 ... _ .. __,. 2 hlllhl.. 'W/W ca.r-I 0 D • I h Pnol -M11ny J.:xtr11.11' ('nn1 :i.tG-.19111;. hr1111Tlr11I l11n<l.°'l"Ap111,1:. Al! ::',i::.::, ... all hulltini, patio .t ONF: "1°1"11.r nld l RR . 2 RA, '..'~A 1 "'11 "-~ ' ,' '1rn · 1 plrt,.ly rl'<lrmf', in "°" r>11t '' S.l'l 000 fnr 1111,. hy nv.rw'r ~ hu 1l1tn.11 IFlr'hl<lln r 1 I 111 I h ,... ,.,. ..... u11u) .. -.".nr urrx. I-·•-f •• ,_ 1 ~no: • '' _.__ Th 1• .. ,,, oi• morP. Only $19.500. 10% htcz'i f'f'llino. Ot'f'11n Yll'l!I. fmnl unil-l hr 2 ~ rrp1 ., .. '"'wn pm · .... ·""'" ~,., RR·2Rll hnn1r . l''.,;r'f'I C'nrv1, mll..-r,.·r. 1• l • ' " dmvn. c·1111 R11.y f;11ult, T•kt. O\'f'r loan. JQ-'lm. • ~ dtrt rm: "~ w I ; !-.1'18'Y"Moo IN.11""· llttl""'ff'cl. I Qu.,.1 ",. Ill h h n r h,,., rt -lwlu~,. t-11~ """°" •Pfl~l~ .. r1.~ S40-11!'11, JIJ.:RITACE REAL ....__ ._11,.11 •no In .... m:ff'('Ol'lll"f1. F\rlll'l<I IW'\\ l W ER S.Cl-2750 Nie~,. r11rk lf)f'lltiM. Zill S:i2,l'llVI. Th111 • "1ir J>r1""·" EST E f[AW' ,omttl\lng""' """' In'""' Ill u Iii' ... hr t .. b"'I k l!Jj MJ.4 ". • 1/1)¥111 R<i (',\1 ~:131 1 <ln\1n pt11• ln1plltlll'b. r-.n AT , !I'll" C111ulli""1 fld<i dtl It "' .. !>I • "" Datl\ pt 1 o I , r un11 ~ . Thfl )'f!liow Pq~1 or \ . . ;;,;1 .~111 "'r 8.'M-34~ Alh'r \\'hltt>. ~Ant Dlme-A·Lln• wt>ll _ ca.11 NO\V i~~. CluJtrlf"'f Ad. M~ I ~II the mrt shift rl~u1fiffl ••• 541-5671 Otm---A Ln'll' M~7• ,;,yi nr 1111 ~".) ~· ,, !.I.Jn. '-~---~----·---------·----------'-~-----~~ , $32,950 NO DOWN TE RMS J\11 1hP lu~ury fPl!lllr'"ll hPN' I r1.1 1S! 4 t->1a-br<l!VlClm.•. 2 2lr11mlni:: pullm11n Mth~. rnrn1al r!lrunr rnnn1 ror thn~e h11.n11uPl.A prPp11rrrt in 1hf' 1111 P'IPClnr "Aw11.rtf ' "inn1nl{ kllrh,.n , di~hwF1.11h,.r, l{n~mu~ !lhll.ll C'ArJJPlin1<. 1·u~tr.m rlr.11Jlf'11. 1hruo111. l.nv,.ly 1-ovPrrrl ri111in. t:xpi>rtly l11nf1~·11 prrt , pff'f'IY'ly m 11 n 1 c u rt' d . , 962-5."lfifi. tn iih11r" all lh" 11m,.ntl!t'' of· fPrPri In lh1~ ~ t'lf'rlrmm, 2 h11lh hnm ... l/'lpJ)y r11.mlly ltv1n1;. r11n1d,v rnnm w11 fll'f'[ll;ir .. ror 11!1 tn !"lll(I)' 11nrl 11r!m1r., n1nl'.1 r·onv,.nJt'nl nft lh!" rlPIUX" hu 1tt1n IC1t- rhPn, <11.11h"·11~h,,r. l.nv!ly p11 tin, J\ 11 r11rli11P I 11 ririM:'ll.P- i ni:;, 1..-.lqrf11I tr,.,.,. .Y .11hJ11h~ 11~2-fffll TARBELL EVERYTHING NEW 4 BR + 2 BA TARBELL I $27,990 . fP11tur,., NF:"' r11 1nt !n 11nd nut 11n<1 ""I' NF:"-' ah11.1: r 11 rpt'I. f'f'l1)' f1r,.pl11rf'. hllln n:1n. 11n<I 1r~ tl)l"111rrl on a tnvP!y rrr,.-llrff'd !lfN'Pt. II'& In m111! 1•nnrl111nn• S11h11111 ynur rrrn1~. C11tl 1147-l?ll. PAN/CSVILLE H11.11h1111rl h1111 alrl'11.<l y °"'""<1 11nr1 w1f,. •• r,.11Uy i"'t11n1: 11n:idn11~. l'.11.l'tf' 4 hP<lrnnn1. 2 1tnry h<1r11,. "'Ith Jr.rm11! rhnlni:?: "r"/\ 11nrl fllill"' lttm - 1ly rtw11n , 0111.v 129,!l"ill PARK, YARD, POOL 11111! 11 ~1T11! .'~ iv-firm. I ~. I h11lh hnn1 .. ··1111 1111 hf' \l\l/f'~ for nnly S27.900. Mn~ nn 171<11 Rr11.rh Blv<i., 1r,9 , lhi1 Orw'? ~ANMN_C_n-. -DIRTY (1111 ~~,;,;, SHERWeeD REAL TY r.v. -SPACIOUS + POOL- Arrhitl'{1ur11lly rlf'Alll:tl!"'I In 11111.. }"111 11'\ll! .... !<If'",..,,., ,,.,.ll nr, 11n r:o.rr . f'nl,,rl11 111 t11~:Ar -O\\•n"r "'"n~ nur • Rr1n~ r111n1 k l\f"'ll'lrn. "'""" uri 11M N"nl nu! tor )l!r11 mnnthty ln1'f'lmf' A~­ ~11n111hlr [(!Fin S1'11 !V'r ,,,,.,..,,h Robt:rts & Co, 961-5511 mrnt h<1n1f' +-111 Ira-f11r11 r1n OWNER !. fJMI lnr l11m1ly fun. ~ ftR "'· I ''"' 2\ "" C•ll "'"' TRANSFERRED -~wln1 IJll,,r. I f\Hlrnnrn , 2 b11th• hu1Jt.1n, . kASABIAN R.E . I Nf'&r bf'11rli. All ll'TTnJ. \\111y1'!' Fru1i 17·9501 S:\lY(l. rtril Cllfl>"I RP•I· t·RY.F; bo-!(lt1f nf HS., f'j°j;, tnr•, !lli'2-m1 \'•I. rr .... ll!f1 O\•Pr ]lllVl f\Y -111'~~--ptnl'"· hnmrii lrir ii;t)" C.1111 tnr J ro.ttn) xtr.11\. 3\:t. GI kl.an, ntr11\I~. LM.df'r<th1p fl ! .. I "'•I~ 10 hPach l &II IC'.ftoo.111, l.42-441ofi, J'l'!l.t'M TI I· !162~10. 1 \ ,. . -• • OAJLV PILOT I Hunf lngton Be•ch j Lido Isle Newport Buch OWNER TRANSFERRED.< BAY VIEW Opon Sat. J::JC).5 :30 Income ProPllrtv 166 HovtM Furnl1Mcl 300 HouH• Unfurn. ----"'--'--Hufttln~on Bt•c:h WANTF.O: lncfWT'lt property lagUM ... ch Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. UnlUm. Huntington Be•cll $30,500! Br, 2 811., blt-1111. !"1~11r I.Ari" noublt lot, \'111 Lidn 444 Seville Ava . Americ•n Colonial t-tach. All terms. S33.~ ='"rd & Gcnn11, Room lnr 1Salboa Pen1n. p!ltnt . 2 BR&: or 1()1, \\'rit": 132 North 'J' 't • · A NEW WAY TO OWN 1 SAn l\PrMrrl1m. 2 Jr .3 BR . SIM> P"rm . A HOME RENT ITI HIDDEN VILLAGE APTS. Al.I lht charm o1 yesl@ryear RN:! Carpet R fl a 11 l' p:iol in bUie p.tt>O. 2 BR. lam. rm. II !p;t.rkl,.~: Wlth all tht convenience o! 962-7711. J.. ron•. rll'f'I. dLn , rm, 3 GEM- , f'~t11hhsd-sal11t'll'li .11rlull~. nn , ' lndu1tr1al Property 161 i/chilrl ,.1_ 494-11170, \ou. t'An 1,,11.~, optV\I\ thl'l ---::,,.-".".':-:"'.=-::,---lo"""~=:::·_::'.::...::::.::.::.:::._ ('UIJP51 fW() hf'rlnvtnl. f"'lO] Hom•·Llke Living Famllles Welcome! ...... ._ -nt ' ~ ......... ~ 2 r<tr lit&rl.l"-S99.!'IOO. n C ....,"" -.~ UfY ... ~uunu, I . 11>1 Y• .. l'.lft.9l H,.,,. N.Et 32 UNITS N•wport Beach lt\Wnhou~ ynu l'vl'r MV., lnr Ju11I 11hriu1 lh, aaml' 00.!s .11~ r,ntinsi: it. Call 6n.~. 2 BEDROOM-2 BATH From $159 -"' "· 1 ·" r rv1ne n 2 r 11 ...,....man uo.lhs av1 .. u l1!f: o b0t1>0Rb [oU)SOfJ Ja.. R.EALmR~ 642 <\fi23 ,.,.r acrl's 11 ""SY iv rig, IJtG J br, 2 1)-. home. frplc, Ca.rpets • Draoes -Air Conditioned • Enclos- ed patios . Heated Pool · f orced Air Heat • Carport & Stora,ge. u1~ brick. Fa.mily room !';;:;;:;;:;;::;::;;:;::;::;::;;:;;, oe.olC.Olt --JUST LISTED 1ardlln ap11rtmrnt,11 "'""'' crptlrlrpa, dbl gar. fN'rl yd, with inv1tinl .fin!place MOil 1 FIRST RESALE Wli Vu1 Lid., 67>4562 * * Sanla Ana Country CJub. Sttps to bch. S.150 per ,..k or trca1tv<nboenlt ott lhek I alih~tt:· ! In a p·Jal'l 1 Broadmoor 'T'urtll!: I :fl3R .._ ram. 6r (!in rms. 45· BEACH INCOME &hrdlllP shn1~;s 15% return St200 . ~r mo. 494.11111, COLWELL lC u1 Un t c en , . Rocle. 4 BR.. 2,, bll.lh~. Lot atrE'el 10 !tr""' WJ.500 on l57o ri{)wn, May tx-M7~M. • dishwasher Patio Rdlect1 bo ' Xl•r 1-•••o• !47 .. ,..... changl', L1strd Pr I c t : 1---------PRO PERTIES. INC REALTORS 2500 South Salt•, Santa An1 546-1525 (enter 2 blk~ \V. oJ Bri!itol. off \Varner on Linda \Vay 1 !iouth to W. Central) l -•· 1 · ·In d •-family rm .. rlua lara:t nus f:'i ft ,,,,, lgP. home. StrHt • · " •n "' ··•r• \\'alk lo &ach -1 BR, SlJO. enuo::r ovmg care SJ e .. 24.o ~ 1 ,.._ Georn• Wllliamion 1445.000, citll our Jnvestmen.r room 'XI .,.,. 1 ....... r i"' io sir'""' ............ $90,!XXI • Divls\on. ~J600. l BR mobile SUO. 190 upl·,"e""","e."""r""".""",., lh out. Pool sized ifOOnds. Cnrpor;i_tr owner MYS SELL , LIDO REALTY Realtor H.B. ., r, · '",.""'' · ,,Qn . 0 h -.y es -a Lmost forrot NOW. $.12.51Xl INCLUDll"G 1177 \"111 Lu1n. X.8. S48·6S70 64S-1564 Rent·A·H 979-1430 month. S.11S. W&l Hunter thft'e s brand nf'W thJt:k THE_LANO~ I 673-7300 HARBOR VIE\\' )!ONTEGO ouse l...af1"'. 962-a1 41 the.& carpetlng' 64.Z--2561. ·----1 Houset UnfC..rn. 305 LARC.E 4. BR .• bl'"'· •'''"· VILLA MARSEILLES SPACIOUS I & l BEDROOM APT. 1 LOVEL y -C/D-0 HOME !! ~lns ne\l, ~RR, 2 BA. lam .J!""'!'!!!lllll!'!!!l!!!!!!!!l'!!!~J~::'.::'.:o ____ _ P-1 1-" .....i ~1, G n J atrium, \11tlk tn N-11.ch. ld~al fl'>r !aro" or sn1al1 larn· I'm. '" ,~,er!-"'• rnv rn °· • M·I CORNER + • •r• ·~ full pg ri d ,. ' ---------A\'ail. 6 ·1~. s~· 962·5671, 1 11,v. 4 BR. tam nn. J BA, Y u e·r:i,. n11·n"r s \\'ii~ nlr!Pr hou.Sf'. Prime LANDLORDS! Furni1hed & Unfurnl1hed Adult living TARBELL 'TJ11~··1 J1·1!1!. hig sunny pat1(1, PJ.:O'M .... l 7,;-;JO. &14-5.!\l~. \rx;1tinn. C.osl11 Mes11 D<-elln BrPeZPs -2 Ar, $155. POSH PALACE ~5.~ J)tMAC. 2 BR" 2 BA Cnnrln Cnrbin-MIU'tin ~aJtors \\'e SPf'cialize in Ne11:porl 3 BR, SlR.'i. f'n,.rl, h \':1.,.11nt. KEN BRITTINGHAM .111 ,.h.armlllR Car"" St'ri,.~. 644--7fi62 nr 642-i;:9.!!9 Beaf'h e Coronit df'l Mu e R•nt·A-Houte 979-8430 ---''l'lPnl!or Dish\\•asher color coord inated appliances .. Plush shag carpet~ mirrored wardrobe door,s. indirect lightin~ in kitchen • breakfast bar .. huge private fenced patio • plush landsca~ ing • brick Bar·be-Ques • large heated pools & lanai. Air conditio ninj?. CLOSE TO BEACH Days 552-7000 N ights REALTOR 675.0123 Crpt-'. drpA-, rl'rlr. pool. & t.aguna. our Rr-n1111 &or -3 BR CON. DO. 1<, e.1. pool:. 4 + FAM RM + 3 BA I "SINCE 1940·• 29 = 11 Lots for Salo 170 " $ 'G 1 ··•.Jv. By O\l·nrr. 4: vit'e 11 FREE to 'i.'oo! Try pann, rihl 211 r, trrl. nr 35,000. I 151 We.stern Bank Bldg E1~C:,::IN ...... ;,. 8 2'· ,4~a·1'.,,'i'.:'. 979-147!r. J rt·.l .ll'>t, izood ??nt.111 attll, N11°\llP\I' flf'l'A n. 962--0986 .11!1 ~pm. ~rkhng home ln xlnt a.rea. Vnlvenary Park. Irvu~ "" "" ~J ~ d NU VI EW RENTALS Huge masrer bdrm suite.1 $9.l!Fll 126 VL<t Lorca HARBOR View Hmt1 j E/~l I!. C!\1'. ~lJ.;(11')_ I.B2 -OF.LUXE 2 Br. 11., R11 . 3101 So. Bristol St., Santi Ana 557·8200 COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. fireplace, hke ne1v w/w l 6-15-4fi9;). f\1on1rgr11 4 Br, 2 Ba. fn Cl>f'!I PL. C.i\{, ~983. 673-40.10 "r 4~-3248 \'11rrl. gar. Walk to heh. crpli k drp•. •ll push·bUt-1 ' Bedroom E state l;i.nri s.11.roo. Oritn Sat k Sun ! Mount•ln, Des ert, y.,IJLL Rent IG N'~pom:ib\f" 5.1&-1029 I MANAGING AGENT Q Mesa Verd• • ,,., Ao,,, I ton app's. 2 bii p11tios. xlnt 1vell aJmost •... JI was rns· .,...,..........,, · [ R•sort 174 <'t'llp!P, 3 BR hcimf', qulf'I 1 BR' Condo, ponl. C"lhh~. ldscpr. GI or FH rerm.s . lomized tnr IL la.rae !1mily FOR sa]P by 011·ner. c.~I. 2 Newport Heights 2 ln!s. 5f'C'ludPd S2 4:,0 ~r'"· ~"~t~. imnit>rl_-Ck-I 1·p1/rirp5, All 11ppli11.nrr$:, I Apt1. Furn. Ca.ll 847-1221. lo tnJOy. Mom 11·il! .=ipprrf'· Story, 4 l:IPdrrn .. fam rm. .' ·. ('UJI. ., . :'I mn. 1 n f' $l!itl /mn. ~-4.Ll-4~. S.17.!').'Jl·I. ~forRlnt Costa Mes.• latP It tn Pvery way. SafPty formal din rm, Jrg back BY OWNER !\1oonridge cahtn SJ.i.7.'iO v.·atPr/11:ard~nil1E". :i.1R-!l~I. ___ ..,;..._.-.---,...,,- !' tor the children ridlni: b1kPi; y!lrcf. ccvd pa.ti,.., xlnt cond. J BR. Spanish charm,.r, R!!-LakesiriP ,.ahin SX1.DOO Irvine '--------' ATIRAC. fflmpl. !urn. 2 Br .. I n..i f th $'3.~. . O"EN' HOUSE •·t mode led , rl'll!!cnrated. C111ll 866.-4641 or write· VACANT AND CLEAN • :t J 11 h~. hid. J)l'll'I!, nr. 1chls . . . . • p A.Yil'OU•..,i; or e .. ,,.,., r .CM SpenCf'r Real Estllll!!, P . ci. BR hnml' 11·ith fPnred yitrt1, ~ ti! l1t1Je on!!s.,,. 1wimmlng k Sun. 2712 Alba!J'Oss Dr. Beaut. IOI:'. S36.rxr>. M5-fil9J Bo:< 2828• Bil Bur Lake, fjr,.pl,11C'f', huiltin~. n ~1 r WE HAVE ~THE RS ~ Ouplexff Unfurn. 350 ;;"~220~ frv.'Y"· nn pe · ln41 Beach IDvd., H.B. $29,500 ''FUN HOUSE'" • spacious bedrooms. 2 baths. bright. c h e er I u I kitchen. handy w or k ! features. extra eattna: al'f!a. .Added on cove~ &: screen-1 ~ patio l'.lverlooka a aora-eous i;,vim pool & park-like yard. Phone jacks in all bedroonu. Submlt no down G.l. t~5-low doaw all olbers~ 962-1373. TARBELL Low, Low Down Minimum down' moves ytiu b:Lto this la.rge fa.mUy nn home. 3 Bdrms, 2 haths. rUu price only S28.500. Call now, It wt'Jn't Jul! REAL ESTATE FAIR (714) SU.2551 FARM SIZE LOT 3 BR home, SHARP, "1th new shag cpts. new tile entry. a boat aate k: an 11cr' of extru on the BIGGEST lot in town! S27.500. All pools, tennJ> ~d compt"li· Ph: 540-~. Principa.ls on-riays, 673-16,Sg ev""· See Any-Calir Muth Co.11,;t Pla:r..11. $2;.r) per~ RR., 2 ha.., atr1 •.. $3251:t'\5 I uve sports 11.vailablr. !or the ! ly. iimr. · mnnth. A;Pnl 546-t141. :t RR. .. 2M .• f.11m. rm. , . S.1.15 N•wport S.1ch * S11~ *· o\dt!r ones l'.lverlooking 'B\' owner. Prim• Cornl'r J BR. Vacant, R-2 room to BIG Bf!.2.r Lake frnnl M~ & S190 Mnnth .. 2 Bttlmnm. 3 BR., 2 BA. F...,lc.. tnp I Sturlio Apt~ .• 1 Br. SUS.. large park v.·tth v1t!w of Su 1, 2 Stv-4 B build. $29.900, Agenr. 1 iU"'sl hnuU! on pr1. point. . , . '" , Oldl'r 11riul1.c. No Pf"I• .. mounlaini;, SS.5.000. f pt! r !poo ·,· d r. 675--0144 64ti-7414 fawni;k1n Arr><1. 2 !nts ln<'I. NP~ly riernre.ted Inside and ~h11~. 2 btk.s !'J('f"ll,",· .. ~l~·I 21:1.l EldPn, )tgr. Apr. 8. .. "· re •1 r.1an.v exrra" 979-2120. Sa n Juan Capistrano 1 . f ,, 962-;\":il'h. I Sl:t~/dtx mnhile hnml', wJw i d h II rp c. a~. nn. crp ~. rps. $:ili.fl00. Pholll' ITI-4 l MG-637\ nul.. r\() Ftt. 842--6691 or S."IOO. Adlls nn Pf'!s. . • ..........,. · . nr in t'1 i>.ppt. 1 11.rBt nn pet I M ission V iejo O"'NR irans, 4 BR, 2~~ BA. RETIREMENT cabin ne11r SU~R Shitrp .4 Brinn . 1111 ...--· ----""'1--.. ~Norn0~A l\f{)b. Eat: ELDORADO 2 BR. 1. BA, f'lm ITl1, din rm: fnrri yri, Like OrovHIP. 3A. with hlt1n k1tch:. quiet cul-rl~sac. "SINCE 1946" I Ap11t1t1tnts lorRent ! ~ 1991 Npt Blvd. f.-16-R.171, Jux. ,.P''· ('U!t. drns. Pvt . I ml D1U111 H~rhor. 4~.1-:l 7tt ltTl!:llm S14,:,00. Box 166 $270. Hi>r1t~ge Rtaltor~ 1~1 \\'p~ttrn Rank Rlrii;::. • --·~· I Univ. Pule Center. ln11ne "" Om ·n J11rk M0--11,1 L"niversity P11.rk, Irvin!!! DLX 2 Br rurn 11pt, poo . ca.u Anytime. 8.13-0820 uell-lnrlscpd. }('lu' mnfn~. vi ~ · · cln~e t1' 11hnp~. Ad'lllt~. nn '"""""'"""""""'""""""" 1 covrrl pauo & garden walk, Reil Eitate Wanted 184 Corona del M11r Dayi 552·7000 Nights Apt1. Furn. 360 Jlf'I.~. .Frnm $1j(). 19 4 1 REALTY SPRINGTIME '1 :~r~1~~~-J~:s~~!bf; I Mab~Homes Jf 1 •) QUALITTED buver dPsin>.~ BRAND NEW-$495 2..BR 2 .. _.... Gen•r•I ! cp~"~""'~"-";_c_'~'~· ~,,.--=-c l S · · C•·.·-· Vu hm .. CdM. ~., (Br. 3"Ba.. Fam rm. 2 '-1cs. 1 ·•· .~WJ.J~ --······· s:,:m VERY nicP 1 Rr. rlplx. """et. IN PAR' 6~,...~ loan. Chl·nt'r. JtJ7-11R5. .. • ._.... ~~" ,,.., RR 2, hi!. h SJl~ :t'l.., ...,..... Cl ills nr C11moo Sh(lrf'~. CArpt'I$:. rlriipP~. NP'>! ,,., · " 2 1 ii; • • • :_ • ~p. hy £Ar11gt"~-1 Adlt over Owner rrioving to Paris. Thi!I e.xqwsite h()ml!' has thP best ot everything includ\ng &pringtiml!' flowers. cushiony shq carpeting 11nd 11 private upstairs den. \\laJk 10 achools, pools and parks. $$,900 incJUdes land and evtrything but the O\vner' 1 pel'50nal property, Bre.1th- tak1ng dE"lails at 646-7171. 11'.)' THE RE.l\L \"'\_ ESTATERS ' . . 4 BR, 3 SA TurtJerock. Buy thru Bk:r, S48,750: thru ownr $47,400. Tabor Drivt. See' sign! N•wport Be ach Mobile Homes I Prinr On!v. \\lritP Classlfit>rt pnol " c-lut>h,,P . Harbrlr J RR., 2 hllth~ ···· S~2a .\fi.l 1 A .10, IY' prl~. 54~1021. For .Sale 125 Ari Nn. 03.8.1. Daily P,1,,1. V1"""' HomP<. fi7.'\-71.'l.1. '1 8,~ .. 2 ha., tam .. """" S400 Bold 'New Concept NIGF; 2 Br Trailer. $140. B~~~R!~ y ·,:~ATE!~~ ~1,''.' m:;! ~·0 ·~ J;t;I. Co•IA M•1&, ·:.~:t.~~~,::.~:;~ ~: . . red h .,,,I FURNl.TURE RENTAL t.~·~;:,;.::;:,','.'.l:;.";-4;,Q 132 CONDOMINIUMS .,,..130xu• citbana .. Rearty lo WANTED ~p<trtm~nt hou!IP~. trll ni,.,. 1450· R.\"t.,V!S4. · '·· . I BR ·C(ltfll.gP, lurn. utU 1111.ld Builde_r8 closeout . tn llve \n. Choice Neii'flOrl Oran~e (o,_ 10 tt) fll un1!s . Singll'sorfarnilies -w11itkfn . REALTY ·1 * f.1' }. $.li!l50 ml'I, M111urP v.·orldng bf.11uh!ul Ne1.,,...,r! R1,•1r.ra. 3 IOf'llflon. St400. or bf'st offl'r n(lt morf' lh.tn 12 yn:, nld. hl'h 4 BR H.11x f'\•Prv!hini. Un11·. P11rk CPnlPr, tr\'in, * IOOn~h ..!.~-hfonih0 . 11riull t'ln!y. 64;....(l.ll7.f!. .,,_ Q k • H 2ll · · · · ,o rwC RSI! ption master !\Z~ BR!. '1650 sq. 2912 V.1, Cst, H .... -y., H.B. Ult' .11ctinn. ardy ' · · Rent-A·HOUS• 979 ... 30 *Wide St.lechon I BR. Sinl'.(11' R:i.C'hf'll'lr Apt. ft.) 21,.j ba .. floor fo ceUrng Sp;1~ No.~-~7R-11511 f'xt. 336, d,11y nr HARBOR v · •/C I J BRAND rww .1 BR hon~. nn ~..:.I ,..I"!· Artult. nn ..,,I. $):.Jmo. 01 I I h t nitP. 1"'1 arml' · · grt::'Pn hf'!! k 11dj11t"tnt lo ~•J """-. OT;, ,,. 1rE;'l'J ace • .,,.,_.,,., s a.g Clll'Jlf' l2lc5S Mai'fkm r tkluble Px . hr, 2 ha, fam rm, '11n ,rm. rvvi/ •11 • ,, •• 2996 * U Hour Dehvrry CPn111r SI. M2-jM.I!, thruout. CUSl".'lm drapes & ' ' : • ·e . j OR. ~1ot'f' Lots WUlted B'. • E,,., '· h••p. S4'il mo. i nn•. #o-:>. ""~ ·' · n:1nrtl'> 2 Br &II r-xtn.s • • 1 RR Tr:i.ilPr, $100 + ulil. No dishwasher. Hurrv? Just 4 r· · ·· · Responsible Builder-Prine. 6#-17~ evf'~. or \\"kl'nd!t. Lanun• S.ac.h left. YOU owN THE adull piu-k. 108 Osprey Ln., • r,u • ~ J>l'l!t. Qu1l't, ('()%)' bachelor LAND. 526.250 F.P. 4 bdrm. F.V. 968-1368 or 642-1186. Only. W-Jl4B. JRVTNE Ttmoe gniciously OlTT'SfANDrNG Cfl.'lll _Jin~ ~"I' ... ~ p11ri. 646--1 ~. mQdels from S2!!.600 103' EXCEPTIONALLY Nice I BR SMALL rtsidential lot. dttonurf'f. F11.mily· hom ... ~ \'iP~'. Qu1Pt h<'lmP tnr ro11~ --l BR. ljt!. Sl ?.IJ. Ideal for dn. 61 2o/'r int. TAke Ir111ne to SX40. 11.~Terms. Reu::>nAble, CM *re 11 · BR. 2~ ba. 2 frplc. P11tk>-pie. R,f's (Inly. S.l7.'i mn. h11,.hPlnrl', w/pool Adults. ·~La Jsa~l ~ei Foll:; Call 64:1-45.10 Privll.lt! Pty. 548-3l8S. ~~rl. $600mo. Owrlf!r. IPJIM', 494-4741i.'4!m--1111. ;µa6 wN_1~~in~A ~~~~ 199J Chur('h. 5'4R-96.\1. s1j:nll_ o m e or C '71, 24x52, 2 BR, 2 BA, lndry ' ' . J,Tffi. IR. Hilllnp homP. VA&l I REORM. furn. Utilitie"X pd. terms availa blf'. larwin realty. tnc. 9684405 Laguna Beac.h ---s=so=-.-=Dcc:o=w=N~ Salt!! Ott1f'e ;,.t0-5147. t'Tll, view Jot. $75. mo. AdJt.oJ. If • I * SHORECL I FFS * Of"PAn vil'w. ~ BR. !11m rm., B•lboa Jsl•nd Sl~/mn. Af'fttlr!t on 1 y * Harbor V iew Homes Wt~tm .. Sll.~-lt\~1~$16. f'11endal l Br. 2 BA, yr !sP, $3.')0. Prine i11rrirn, rPf~. 494--7m. ~'?2-"F." CrntPr ~!. ~3-J0'7'i Pa.Jennn. pr,,m. rnr. !t'lt. LATE '69 LANCER only, By ()1>·nr 675-?>Jl. L•guna Hill1 + RACHELOR APT. + Fountain Vall•y 2 Bdnn, 11,2 hath Condo. freshly painted. Carpets. drapes, wa1her. dr yer. tttri&. $18.450. Call 968-4441. CREST REALTY DIVORCE OESPEFµ TE O\\'NER -4 Be:drm, 4 Baths. lam rm v.•/ fpl, fonnl din. like new. Al· sumt VA l">M. Quick pos:s .. 4 UNITS Four 2-·bdrm .. 1 bath apts. "''ith individua.J ra.raaes. All frtl'lhly rtmndt1:lt!d, 'vi th built-in appliance!!. Nl'w landscaping k exterior touches, make this the best buy in l...aguna Beitch. $102.500. room for boat -4 BR, fR, '2 bttlroorn. 2 b11.th. 21h44 t Bu< from bl!11ch. 2 BR. YPRrl), $\7j, fncl . ulil. DR, 2 FP, wtt-bl!lr. self· 646--7949 Business fpl ., fnl'd y11.rd $240/m(I. 3 RR , 2 BA. l!lee kilr.h, v.1/w Winron Rl'1tl F~•lll !P 61>3.Ul 1 BACHELOR, 1 BR, shat clean oven. surprise guage, OpPortunlty 200 Ask for Pat or J im <"rpts, rirps air-o'>nd., l car ,.rpt, priv l'ntl', pool. rt:c B•lbo• P•nln1uli1 · ...1 "" 7 huge splil-JevPl p.11tio, ~ 540--8.'i.'iS. gitr. pnnl. R1(µ)7.9:7, rm. util Y''· 11~··· 5.'i ~- Charm-glo BBQ. ,l'i!ump lte1I £1t1t.. A * LIQUOR LlcensP. OT'8.ngt e $25 \VK k UP-On Of',An e fencing, "'lllPr soffene-r & Gener•! ..RI Co. off s'lll'. "Clean." Costa Mes• M•sa V•rde LnvPly B11 ch -1 Rr. -Rrinms Huntington Be•ch Ogrlen purilit'r. df'Ppest 5.'\7-4Sl(l or 4~~992· S102 50 l Br cottage gll.T JJ)VF.LY 4BR 2BA, Im· 1'.!11iri ~f'n>irP·Pnnl·Ulll Pd." \;=::=:==::;;;;;=::;;;;;I Karaslan wool shag lhniout, Monev to LHn 240 ·· · · · m1tcul11.te home. Avaif mid e C.11!1 675-1!140 e A f I 150 yr(! p111tin, rnLl pet tlk _ , • der. drapes. v.-oven-woods, creage or s• e L Sl.1!':1. UtiJ pd. Lrg BllCh, full .hJnP. ~5. lse" Agent, k mOTI!. Land Incl. S67.950. . 1st TD oans kil h l 0 2 I ~7121 Co1ti1 Mesa By o1vner. 1741 P()rt Sher-GOV'T !And • $5 ac.. \l.'r itt c , r ~p e... --------- LaQUINTA HERMOSA . Olra.n field P l &44-6249 Pri.ncip!ts Land Grant, Bo:ii: ~1 San SJ45. 2 Br hsl', npat lz clean. TM!\-fAC. 3 Br. 2 ba.. apt, WEEKLY·MONTHL y ! Only • ' Bernardino, c. ( 1 e n d 63A % INTEREST gu, )'1"d, pittln . . . rlrps, f'fsh~'shr. f11m rm. E xecutive Suit•s U .S. AFFILIATED REAL. ESTATE I . . ' •!Amp• I 2nd TD Loans NU.VIEW RENTALS r,,,rc. Av'11 l/2\. 5<&-821•. 2DIO Newport Blvd. Brokers Realty I HARBOR \ 1ew Homes-'5 80 ACRES New Mexico nr fi73-40Jll nr 494·324.f! ~ BR MPAA VPrde hm. Av1ul I Co•I• M•s• nr heh. ~panl~h Cnu ritry F.sl1tfe Liv· in2 k 1'J)'lcious Apts. Tt!r- r.11rP'1 pool: sunken gu BBQ. Unbelievable Livinr - Only I BR • FURN. $175 ~ ALL l:TIUTIES PAID I 1190 G!tnnl'yrt SI. bdrms. lrg fam room &. den. . ' · · , 1 Iv 1 $2.f!.1 c 11 s Instant Cash $ 4M-9473 549-0316 1 Unusual DECORATOR (N· ~i;;~alS4~:~-~7PER Low.~9w' 'e"'s'u°""y r•'o?'s;, ~~~o~~~.-s\1~r, cpl ~.1!\24.11rt 5 pm. mo. 11 642·1611 tor your equity. We))<'1;costs. MYSTIC HILLS TERIOR plus All BUrLDER · 1 • • I STUDIOS & 1 BR'S .,J hr. serv. 847-!!507 EXTRAS. Charming used 2~~ ACRES Antf!'!oi>@ Vall~y. Sattler Mt•. Co. ALA R•ntals • 64.S.3900 N•wport Beach 1 • FREE Li n·'·"·' vs Ocean \'it".I" 4 Bdrms .. 2 b11. • U.S . AFFILIATED Ocean vit!w living k dining brick. patio & lire ring only $2fi0. dnwn. Owner 642-2171 54~11 • E l i;idP lnvrly. 2 Br. Pl'IC"I S.'l25 -V!!ry Jg,. 3 Br Penin • FREE _Util1tits Brokers Rea.lty rms. Lge. ll!vel yllJ'd. room "'/n1111.tn! striMPn brt!llkfas! musl sell. 546-.1086. Serving Harbeir 11.r~.11. 21 yrs. g11r. rpt/drp, kicfll. S150. Pt. R!!dtt & nic" . -. 1 • Full Kif,.hPn for pool. XJnl neighborhood. I ~:k~p:t~2~:~ ~~;~er. Commercial MONEY ava.il for Jst a, 2nd ALA R•nt.tl1 • 645-3900 5.125 -1 & loft Ir fnrm rlin I: t;~~~~P~lciLitie! REPOSSESSIQNS closf' tn schools. $49,500, Property 151 loans also purcllast! TDs. CLEAN Bachelor ho u 1 1' . r~. frp\c, 2 dttks, boat • TV A mAid serv avail For lntormation and location • 499-2800 • BAYfRQNT, PIER T Marvin i\fcClur, Rl'Al I r P I (". , . Pr i v . Ya r rl . dip • • , 1 • Phone ~tvic:r. • First ime Offered EstAfP, 1015 s.. J-l i\J St .. slovl'/N'frig. s 105 /mo. $.1f..~ -Np! Shn!'f"s, :'I Br, 21 ot these FHA & VA homes, ~ Charming 5 BR beach home Coast H11')', Corona de! t.iar Oc,.:i.nsiril!. days m-5.'l22, 54~. h:i., bltin.l, nu !h11ir. fi'plr... WEEKLY-MONTHLY coni.KctASAllAN ~ on sandy shore. Exciting 3 CommPr<"1aJ k lfuplex ,,.,.!<. 492-042'4. 2 BR ·1 $140 r d .-i S400.-3 Br. 2 ha. lrplc, hugt SUNNY ACRES ~5t~~ $95,000 Q\rC TD@7~% I , ~gar. · · nc '"" p11t1n. hn111 l'lip ... 2.1i6 Newpt1rl Rl\·ri (4 blks S:. ol &in Diego Frwy I on &111ch, I hlk \\', on Holt lo 16211 P11rk,11ir!P Lane.) 171 41 ~7-.'>441 I SJ45 • $16.'i I 811che!()r t..· 1 BR, patm!l, trpl""'· priv. g ;i r 11. 11: e a. Dividl!d barn k Jots ot clnsel$:. Rec '11111, pnol k ptVll lahle~. ii;~un.11 b11tlv;. Reil Estate 847-9604 ..._-~~ harbor actl()n • choice I \\e Buy 2nd TT'l.lllt Deeds \1·/pano.-Wtr prl. 22211 NU-VIEW RENTALS 5411-!IThft Ln1v R:i.1,.to. BEACH HOUSE .. ~~c1'81',·y·t·d• Or. S\6',""" E . 17th St .. , Co1t1 Met• The IJ"\\rin Co. PIJ\Cl!nh;i AvP 18'· Call btwn 67.1-411~0 or 4!14-.~24.I: I S11.JDIOS It l BR 'S. ROOMS ! BY 0WNER*4 BR. 211 Ba. "-1U "' llll'' T l t I d R.e11\tnr~ 644-6111 1 k 5, f;.16-~120. e FrP~ LinPn~ & Ui\1. Needs work. Appr!li!l!!f'f 111 . $29,500 T d H Br_ Appo1ntmenlt"' """" 11~:~ ~~~·abfew rt!~:; 610 Nt"1JOrl C!!nfrr Dr. 3 BR E1u1!side, rw?\I' <'1111)('1!1. 2 BR/den, 2 h11, N"""P!'Jr! e Phonf' SPrv-Hlrl Pnnl SPP f{lr ynursf"lf: 17301 KE't!l!lf':ln 1.n. ti h!k W. of Stach, 1 hl k N. of Slater). !r42-7~R $33,00J. Pnce $31200. Prin-Quaint home. area; cl('lse In. I t lluo:rt 6 ~ Reolonomlc!, Bkr. s= ,700 Suite 445 NPwport &i!·1H:h pain1, ft!~ yl\I'd. Nn P'll'I Shoi:~. yrly J~f' 111· S250 mo. e 'fV k M11.iri ~rv A"v:i. 1 · l nJ ''7 7716 "-t c. I " I ,......., A\•1111 .lull!' l~t .;4~ . • 1 Clp E'S O Y-"" -, """' 0<0arrt Cf"! !., Hf. to Ct!· B'\' 01>.·ner, 28fl() :sq. fl .. 4 Br.. F;D RfDDLE R E A LT Y e Ch1klrPn & Pf'I !lPrrion 1 RR. Conrin.Pnol. 2 car gar .. nr heh .. jT/i;umml'r. 8151 P11\\•furkpt. 111.11 44~'i. 12-5 prn. Aft:> pm. Mel'lsage Jrplc., p1crure \\i ndo11·. ~f .. \ 21~ 1i11, f::im nn .. nt!W cpl. Oupl•x•s/Unlts 1~ 646-A!lll. Sin1tlPl' <Jr ~amilit-!11 4 BR, 21 - ph-642-2312. 11·asher. 1 Br v.·/ba!h. tge kif. bltns. 2 Cltf gar + sale 162 ll' House1forRent e FOR rent (I: M.le) 3 Br. lnt !l~'. vu, J11pl1t Jev"I. IUeSliBJIU 20 ' AS.SUME FHA LOAN ~1JSSTON REALTY 494--0731 hobt-:-o shop patio &. pool • . Pncl yllni, 840 Gov~rnor. Rent-A·Hous• 979-8430 I sriarkling new arlutt 11.p!.~ I Newport Beach 4 BR condo. crpts. rirp!l. iENTLEMAN'S e.statf', J•t fncd play yd on 11.'l llc, Cul-2-4 plexes. C.M. Sl08,00) Sl85. Call 21J: 211~96.'i6 f'Vl'l'I. 1-'5E. Sp11c. 24()0 sq. tr. 4 Br.! 1 BR furn. SIRS. 2 RR. UppPr-2 holi.~elf to ttfria. Small do11-n. Paymts acrl's, big trees. can be de-sac. 3 blks frm &,.k terms. Grnss S14.340 yr. HoUMS Furni.&hed 300 2 BR, lfttl prage, child??n lit Int. S42'i NB Bick Bay 2 BR furn. S215. tvo.11rh. Dr11f!P~. !!hAi' C'f'J'!!l, leu thAn ttnl. Bier: Eve. (ln:ided 1 lots. each w11h 8.11 y. B'7r °'creasing int. 8-1-2-J hr. Tobin Rlty OK. SHl5 mo. lease. Call Av!. 6126. 642-21'J11. 2 BR unfunt. S190. s2;o yr11.rlv 1,.11~,.. fi.12-.1441. ~2!Mt or 968-0410. II magndicl!nt view, S120,0(Xl. SM.tY.in. OPP.n Sitt/Sun 11-5. M&-.1371-Gen•rfl Ag"nl 642-lTII. Newport Heinhts f'.''· p.11.lin.s. lush for~~ 1el-• \VIN-ra'R RENTALS • PRESTIGE 5 BR, 2 BA, Larry Reynolds. 8.!!JJ !", !AA3 8,11yp:irt \V11.1'. f;.12-M7.l BY 0\l'net: Capo Beach. . • t1ng, carpnrts, g11~ pd. pool . lg lot, crptd. xrra!I, Coat Hwy., 494-1468 Rlfr. I BA)'SHORES. Bay \'1"""'· S.JO.l)OO or tNJcfe tor lot. Call FREE RENTAL· BOOK Piil_it111ide~ l, BR, Sl¥1. Fn,.d, NR Hn11g Ho1'p, l!m 2 hr 114 E. 20th S!., C.M. 5'1R-'lt17 Wf'11:t Newpt'.lrt Rf'.!!:el"\•e nowJ immac. ~42.950. OwnPr. 6402 lmpecc&bll' c<>nf'f. ~ BR. J 5J6..-0346. I've lookf'd at the book 11.nr! hr1ng k11t.~. Cool Bref'Zl'/I. 1tardnr/.,,.·tr pl'! 2 ('mp adlt11 U b 1· bl B Ill I ABBEY REALTY 642-3850 Camille Dr. M&-3031 Open Laguna N igu•I h f l 3 500 °" thf're are SPvr:rlll good Rent·A·Hou1e 979.1430 RPf. s1110. AA.~ai 541_569:i · n • .1•va Y eau u Apt. Unfurn. 365 B. lfPn, P · S9 · '"· Income Property 16' homes ror rent f{)r 11.i>-~ BR 7BA 11 1 VA i .. D ISERF. Gitrden Apl11.. daily. B'i." OWNER -3 Br, 2 &. ~ ... ts-964.i proximiteli· l20ll per month ··-'-St -crpls._1 r::tpel'l5, .drg • mR L.e11.11e-, 2 i;,l(lry, 4 hr. Ariu\111. -no Pf'lll, Flowf'r1 Gener•I JOG t "· h' • B 2 "· I I I ~-1 l""BOR V!E1V OMES ' . .Y•\• f'l\'P 111·.11 1 W 1 t' 2 h hi d • o ""ac .l r. °"· view o, ormer m.,..., vu-. . H 1 Lookinn ,,4,, U "ts Sfop b:-i .,nd browse thru it. N · hnol 225 5.S7·7'1'1. i., 11. tnl', rps . ,.pts. ,.v,.rywh"r". s1r,..11m & --------- fa.m rm . Cose to !iChool~. hom". furn k 11 pp I c, 4 Br .. FR. DR. Palf'rmn on '":I ftl ,-,.,u mi~ht hnd v.•hat You '~ Pllr 11~ s. S · · · A\'11!1 Ii. 1. S~l. 213 /799-61 :t1 \V:i.tf"rfa!I, 45' pool Rt<'. Rm. PANORAMIC parks &: glJ>pg. $32.00J. 8\lltil~blt. t32.200. 49~2. I C'()fnt r. Lustt vctras. o .. -ner. BEAUTIFUL k-okll\i Jor. LOVELY~ RR Hom,. family Santa Ana H•ights ~un~. S2L~ 1·2 Bdrm, I •irn-OCEAN VIEW APTS 962-895S by O<A--ner. ~i6. 644..fi24~. MESA DEL MAR w 1 k & L aPWlng rm., pool rm. Un furn. from tllR. SEE JT : I Chn1ce 011.n11. Pnlnt Loc.1.lion. 1.:;;;;;::;::;;:;::;;:::;;;;::;;:;::;;:::;;;;::;;::;.,....:;::;;:;::;;:::;;;;::;;:;::;;:::;;;::;;;;::;;::::;.;;;::;::;;:::::;::;;;;;;::::::;;;;::;::;;:::::;~ Pnde of o.,,.-nership rondltion a er e $275/ . 'l17-~Ji. HORSE PROPERTY 2000 P.11rsonJ11, 642-.1!670. Br11nd N!!w Luxury Apta. -Extr1 liu-ge Apts. Larae 2 RR. rrpts. drps, g11r11g,.. N,, 3 B!l. 2 RA hou~" on% af'. HOLIDAY PLAZA Cpl,:, Dr~. BH·in. kitchen&. corner lot -Annu11.I in-R!!Alt('lr! pt>ls. 2 !lmllll f'hi lrlrP.n. Sl 4;;. Buill-lnl'I, ~pll'I, rim~. x11.r, OF.LUXE !;; . l AR f , A. Prtvl!fP Piuinll, comf" S7Jl2fl. \\'ill PXl'h&.nge .2790 H1ttbor Blvd 1! Artam!l 2077 \l/1.llACf'. ~. fn('ri yrrl, pllti(). 2 bnx st11.111l. . p.clCl(IU~ . 2-J RF.OROOM 2 BA up to S units. 166.500. -CQ~la J\1r.~11. Cah!. . il<'r[ltf"[lt kiri.•/pet8 wPIC'OmP. furn Apt. 1135· He.11lpd ponl. 6-2 RF:DROOM 1 BA 56.700_ Do"'"· THE REAL BROADWAY hnmf', idea.J if • Amp!,. parkinJr. Adults -OPEN FOR S80 ·Dana Pt. Share 2 Br hJJe you ~·i1nt 11 ant 2 BR no s:mn. no pets 1965 p A ESTATERS INVESTMENT nice ";'"'· AU conveniences dClf!: ~77.Ji . ' NU-VIEW RENTALS . omoni ve., INSPECTION O Reammge Jetta.rs of the DIV. !'>4&-lflOO . , , , ~-' · 671-40:itl nr 494-324A C.M. SUNDAY, MAY 11, .12-5 PM foi;r scrombled wordJ be-S15 . \l•k. Pnv room , a.II • BUDGET 811,.h,,lor nr H u F * $25 PER WEEK * 24471 Alta Vista Or. low to fo"" four .simple words pl'IVll. ~ are11., CdM • • • shop,:, furn , . !\II uti1 inrl SAA. 0 MS urn. or l Up -Poof &> mll.ld 1erv -DAN A POINT I CI . NU-VIEW RENTALS ALA Rent•ls • 64$..3900 Unfum. llO · kilchPn!t •v11ll11.hlP. f'OR INf'ORMAT!nN p B E S i c=:==::C"'""""""~~ / 613-40.'\tl 11r 494-J24A . B•lbo• Penln1ul• MOTEL TAHm 67'.\-R14A gTh-MS() 1 J J2 J j I 4-PI~EX. Costa Mes11.. 2 BR. • HARD ll'l full'!· 2 Br, tnrrl (f'nrnf'r H.11rhnr/Vfrlnri11~ • _ _ _ 1 B•. 11nif1 v.·/g111 bit-Ins & Coron• del Mar yM. l'nt'\ 1111ir. kiri•/Pf't!t Sl.'\I\. BAYF'RONT. Choir.«~ BR. -4 SlYfet.11.utifully fu rn. Coro·na del Mar I Ii retr~·1. Xlnt r~turn tin $.Zl.O _ 2 Br. g-.r. apt, 1 hlk ALA Rent•/1 e 645-3900 BA, pif'r k floa!. Summer 1 RR Pllrk-likf' (r('llJndl ~-,.K,_O,....D..,.P-"."'E,_~1 ;! • JG.WI gross. $49,;,oo,, nn.ly octl'ln Deck Yrly Huntington Beach nr :'1-'"llrly. Furn. or unrurn. Quirt. "'Alk 11111 !!Mps 2 BDRM1'., .'\ baths: trp\c.• Ii I' I j Ai 1 .i x·~ gross cir nw~r S2.'I0-·2 Br 2 ha Mst'• i.J,"vely Own11r. 67.\..~1~. I alfult ovl!r ')!,/11(1 pPf/11 F11nl1111tlc ~tan \11tw! . ---I "/~I'll At CRV for ('&sh '" patio, au.' 1 blk bch . . . *WE have • I11rge Wectinn Townhou1e Unfurn. 335 ~lt'l9ol! ~ & Cnmp.11r,.! 1425 Mnnth. N" Pf'll ,__,__._..J..-1-.J il nP"' l~f. T.D. Pnnclpll'~ on-$Ei00 -2 Br hllf' 11.i blk or 3 and' bedroom homes I.ARCE 1 BR. Clean. SuMy. \\'Ill~ f.~~:n A.R_;,~Jtor I H I K K A I ~ • ly. 642-1467. O<"l!llln. Sl1>116. A~Aii July ... that c1.n be mn''td lnlo Lagun• Hills CAfl!Orl. Nr •ho P'. I &lbol IW.nlf 6~1 l'fS~, ... ..,.,..;,;. ... ,.;..;;.1-i • SU .600 MnUll lncomt NU-VIEW RENTALS :i:::.1~:1-!:'~ly ;~,._0:~ BR.AND N!"w. 3 sn. 2 BA. Sl40/mo. + dtp. ~ El I ;;;===~,.--,=---~ C)'nfQJ hushancf: -r w.nt to 8 Units 673-4030 or 49-4-324.R SHERWOOD RE ALT y , p.t1tki, crptg, rl~ pool. C1.mim, Apt t, C. M , CRARMING 2 Br., crpla, -thank you from the bottom of S79.00'.l. G111rden Grove ~51. tlrp.11, rwnp A: re r rt 1 . r --------Wilker & Loe L•gvn• hach .54MSSS S210/n\n. 714: 8.1.l-1411. LocatM on l'ICf.ansktt eC L E P C I 0 lmy --.• S•J• U 350 Furn. Bachelor A I Br's H-Hid -·' -• • " 17141 54.'>-71:t1 Slflel -l Br dplx w--lc. E'X'ECUTTVE 2 stt1ry 4 BR-Ouple1e11 nturn. -.,. · :iwom """' •cu 0 L "• ;;..;~~-~.:..;___ e1peclally nice. 2110 por1. U>a~. 642-340'!. 1 1 j j j i j I Comp,.f• th. thUt~r. quoted 28 Unit Nr Sh , N\cl"ly turn, r.v, yrl, ~ 81. 3 rar gAr, Din Rm , C d 1 M N t Bl d CM by filling In tit. mllllno words ' op I • f'11.m Rm, '-le. -1~. oron• • ar ewpor v ., • ~RARr Ir clean 4 ft&.1-,. clever 11 3 2 & l BR, 1 BA. n11 Ellla vltw • • • •• ,. ... ,. I ~.-... I YDl.I op rom *P No. W-. Ave. HB. S43l M. 847.3957• $3Xl -Charmin& cottqe In drape1. lW mile from hdl. BR.AND NEW-Avail. In LARGE T BA. apr., nlrel.Y 2~ b<lth walk kt M•ctl. • PJINT NUM4E~Eo1r1 r I' Ii I' I' ,. r I e.rden. Pvt pat, .Yd. 1ml Aval! Junf! 16. t.165. 968-«m June. l-tUft dlx awnl!'t"I fum., pool 1138 mo. lM1 Family prf.ferred. Month" tmEtS • • _ . • • • _ _ • flRAND new de1uxe tripln. pet OK.,. 1 BR, newly df'C. Condo. unit.~l aR. 3 BA. Flrepl11.ce. M!'lflmvla Avt. No. 3 . month. $.190 pr month Ct.d .,~ J j I I j • ml Fordham Dr .• C.M. J235-1"e 2 Br •P' \\1·B&J· StvlrtfMI .. w•h/dry •. bll·lns. J~ tq ft. + 3 ~lO-I Mr. S-llry, li7W.i60. ~::r I I I. I r Blt!r/OW'lltr. ~48 ,w,. cony, xlnt 'r1ew. Walk clbhttlpool. $136/mo yr'1 d~ks \l'fvtew of bay, * HO DEPOSITS .. I CUTE 2 BR apt.. I ba.. IF:_-*J~~~~~~5~~~j~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·l;1;4 ~·~2~8;'t"""~~· ~un:fta.~S.=U~·;·ube~h~. r· ~· ~;_~~~ l1t.19M7 .Piccadilly KB, nr. octM. I.: hills. walk fD bch L.tr nl!\l'lY decor l. 2 Br.~, g&l'll.f"-• l!lundry·prf . .,... U ANSWERS JN CLASSlf.ICATION 900 lxill..,... NU·Vll!W ltENTALS -111'11 A Adem1 , A shoppil\z. 1 yr lae. l4lS. Ba . pool. A ltC uta. ~ mo. Yurl y ..,.. I0-7131 A·D Rl<y 54WlBll m.oil.10 or -QJJU8 all 5 pm. Rtls. ~. 6~. !lil-la.tl. '1111 W. Htli Sr. Ila ... &'f>.ml Avail J ... 1. S©~1A-lG£tf S".·'. Thr. Purzlr. wifh tit• Builf-ln Chuckle ---..... --~ -... . ·--~ ~-, . .,.._ -• - r .. Friday, Mot~ let, 1~72 DAILY PILOT SO ...... • 11...-11 u. .... ,_ Apls.. Buslnees Rental 445 fl'eun4 (frM •dt) 551 ll•bysltttns A.;:p:-:'-· _u_"-:'":-r:-"::· :---365-l·°'Ap:....1._u_n..,1u,..r_n.:__.....;36S.=Ap::::..1:... ::.U.:;n.:;fu::rn:;:.... ___ w::;,;:_ 1.A,pH •• Corona del Mir Newport Beed'! Htwport a.ach Furn. er Unfurn. 370 furn. er Unfum. 270 tt£l'All. •hop avail. a t 'l'hf" ~·1ctory, $17S. nlO, See No. t '°' Info O<' ~9606. f_'O_U_N_D_:-vl-e-. "'ffol-,.-L,,-ie-a-, BARYSJTI'lNG in my home, JOtiNSON!\' GARDF.NING Hf'il, Hunt. Bnch: )'Otlnt l 1hru ~. day/nl!f'/wlmd11. 1 \'ant M•lntt.nance. fl•nlinc dot(, 1-f!Nml)I'". C , rm , l"rw'd yard, ttaa .. xlnl ~~. Cl't'nup:oi !lfi2...2035 Stw-p.: brown ,. ••hi tf' Call •rt 1:l>_pr.tl 642-.111 2._ I SPR~INKLER: R:EPAIR- w/AOm, bl1t'k spo11. Call lt M'A'T'Ul\.E d fl! p , n Ii 1 h 1,, N"W Sy~tPm!I • S46--a~ Cost• M.M Costa Meta ~ WHY PARK NEWPORTER.S STAY HOME ON WEEKENDS. SUMMER RENT.ALS DJO' S hop -1 160 . lM' Ofrlslore S95. 2.l40 N"''P1 81\ld, CM 646-~. S48-ll.'t\1. 111,nti ty. M&-6494: Wkdyr. m\ Mmfo. rtf'fR . Ge I I ....__ loiv1 m-1-,-Ge-~-t'f'nef'd • .:.., hol lunch. n er• Services ON TDI ACRES 1 6 2 BR. Fum, I: Unturn. F'i.ttjllaees I prlv. patJo,. Paola Tennis Contnt'I Bktst 900 Sea Lane, ~dM M4-26U !MacArthur nr Cout Hwy) WOULDN'T YOU? ' ' !l's 111 here for you to enjoy S.turdai~ and Sundays and all week long, loo. $750,000 health spa. 7 swimming pool~. 7 lighted tennis courts, bicycle Lrail s, putting green, shuffleboard. cfoquet. Spacious junior l 's from $164.50 n1onthly, plus l or Z.bedroom plans and 2-story town houses with 2 or 3 bedrooms. All with electric kitchens, private bal cony or patio, carpeting, draperies. Sub- terranean parking, elevators, optional maid service. Gourmet food market, dry c lean er, beauty salon on grounds. See beautifully fur- nisher! models today, g a.m. to 6 p.m. Other times by appointment. .Just north of Fashion lii;land at Jamboree and San .Joaquin Hil ls Roa d. THE EXCITING PALM MESA APTS. FUN IN THE SUN! STORE a.. onk-e Pnr nonl ; .....,.,. ., ... Bolu Chica at Hl!i!, HB. Shf'P., 111!1> rold rtd mix and 545-1067. Hou•Phold fmp1nv,mPnt M6-ll2J otlf' white & r<>ld . Vic, e IN MY HOME, DEPr.NO-A tn 7. ll11nrlyrn•n lncfust-r~i•~I ~R~.-n~,-.~,--45"°·0 lla111u It Gardfon Gmvt-ABLE. H•rbor-8.lk,r I N!a. l lnrioor k. Ou tdoor pa inting. Blvd., G1f'!ien Gr o v f: • 1 e ~416 e I rlf'111i-up k n"P'11N: trnm COSTA MESA. 144() ,, 2AAO Sq fl. CA'BINP:r MAKF.RS- f')fBERGLASS 522-6.161 . roof In llll""n ~~ ca.,..t s.rvic• I ~ --~~~ ~'NO. black 1i rrown cat. OJ"IT) ,iOn.•, p111nlin;, h11uline:. V~ry lhin. VW'. l(l701 S..at'h S'Tf:AM \11.l'Pf>! C\,11.n,ric. 1 rl,11 ning , "'''ll'n! !. p1'1 1rh Bh•d., H.R. SPA<'I! 7n. Hun• pmf,11icio1111I 111 J" w, s I 11.01·k , R"11,o.. n11r•. f'rP!" ""'· tinglon ShorttllH fl,tob ill! pric'!· l 01va rm,o. r'llmplf'tt' I H~w11 ~. &14-i4n nr Oa 111d 2 AR, r RA, -rthl r11 rporr, hltt)i;, pool, w:ilk 1n hl>ach. S200. Nfl !r1nw. 0 Jlf'n ror 1n- fl(N"r'l1t1n SRI &· Siir1, i\1ay ~ ~ 21 , 11-:. pm. l'fomlidt>, 4114 l . Cn11~1 1111.·y, Cdl\1 . Costa N!•s• HARBOR GREENS Minut•s to N•wport lttach Unbelievably large apts. Decorator furnish· ed Huge Pool, jacuzzi, electric built-ins, shag carpets, drapes. sauna At more! ADULTS-NO PETS SINGLES ....•... $145 1 BDRMS. • • . . . .. . $155 2 BDRMS •........ $175 Unfurnished Apt1. Avail•ble From $10 to $1S LESS. Nr. Nwpl J'rwy & S.D. io''rwy 29.11 Gt'A'"t' 1.n. !~.of BakPr, F:. of ~·111 rv1,~· ~. Mil Rf'Pl',.St'Olal111e lht'rP 9 llm-12 noon. (714 f 97~44]4 .,r -79-4711 r ark. :..16-~1156. S.19.9:'1. !161·0612. 1 642-~.i:l. F:t .DERL\·,~111,_ fif'rman .-CARPF:i-LAY l~G-*-l BYM°o-n-,-,-1-l-J-, -,-,.,.-1, 1 ShephPNi, n11,.""fl. ~· ... unrl I C. A. l'Af;~: 1 pl11mb, fenr,. I n • 1 l n ', Ha.rbor Blvd . 11! V1ctor1a, • 6~2-:1070 • <'ll rpPntry, 1ile. RA /MC C .M. 64.'\-48l:t. .1 OHN · ~ C11 rp, l &-U phol ... ff' n "'="=''=· 7~~"--AA='='"· ==--:oOC'-I NEW Ji'OUND ynuna: all vPr 1t.r'y j r I ti 11 n , r ~. F: '(t r~ -T0TAI, SF:RVI(T,.O:: CO. '9rln-:l6,0IJ(l fl'l . fl . 1h·\pMf t'Al "''11 rin11; ('(!ll11r, l1n .Sh11mpnt1 r r ,,. ~rort ·h-Plumbs: Jn,1;11111'.....CAr'J>'ntry l ph . 200 amp. 1tprink. Vic ~11!Ja v,rrle J'(·knnl. I J1:11ant 1."'1il R,1111·ch1n1~1. ~:1,r R"'J)11 ir e 646-IM9 w/r111'JWI nfficf"• ~l:lOI. Of>irr"f"a!IC'l'J & all m lor ~ ·Haull - NP\\'h11ll/Monrovi1, C~f h · hi • 10 1 "II FOUND: Goldf'n Poinr,r &-8 ria '""r• "' 11111111 e ----------Furnished & Unfurnished Telephone (714) 6-44-1900 for rental information. YOU'RE RIGHT- THEY'RE UNDERPRICED ! Tri-Co Realty '4S:06!1 hl,11•·h rnr 11.·h11, 1·11 rpr!~. L<lCAL ~10"'"· h 11 u I i n r , ----r110 '1 (llrl; MAlf'. Vi". NE\\r 4M sq fl , 2 ofr.ii w/hfi:, Margu,rll, A Lark,.pur, 1 ·"'""your nmn,~· h,\ Jll\'h1.11: r l,amJp. F;..:p "n 111! i e F r om $120 to $215 mo . Bachelors e 1 Bdrms 2 Bdrm1 e 3 8drm1 PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS on th11 bay 1561 MESA DR., Costa Mesi 5 blk1. E . of Newport Blvd. 2 toilPl,o. "'/hot Wllf'r. 2 nth 31) n1, PSlr11 1rip,.. \Viii Plf'"l\11 ~11ul,n1. l.rit tii_1i:-k. Rt.s. C<lM. 61.~7 . I Ji rlonrit, :1 ph pwr, parka. nr 1v111.11: 1·n1., '11111112 rrn. :..~-1~4fi. F'OlJND G,rman ~hPphrrrl hall 11· .i, $T ;..o ---------fw,v, 61::1-1417 bl k • < I ,l .• n~' rn1 . .. . YARD.•"''geeleanups . ---------1u· ..-1111 •ra:e pupµy. f'(ltu •h $10 ('h11 1r s:.. l.l ,\ r,., Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 546-9860 576 to 9600 Sq. Ft. Vir1n1ty Vir tor11 & Harbor, 1 '"P· l.~ "hat rouni ,., f\OI RPmovt trP,1t, d'lrl. ivy, 4001 R1rrh, N.B. !>41·50.l2 (~m:.1a M,~1. 64~2'7~. mPlhOO. I c"' \\ork my~lf, It k I p Io & d t f 1 b&r khoe. f l/2 or 2 Full Baths Cost• Mesa l.[11..!itPr ~il~ l..,.rlrnon1~ "-1 1----------· high beAn1 cl!'llinJ:11. large DELUXE li\tin.i:: rnon1 " ~1111 or APARTMENT S \.l"nod hurninr fir1>pl11rr. Air Cone! . Frplc's . 3 Swim· C~nv~nirnt h1undry 11.r"ll min~ Pool111 • Health Spa • o.ff kllrhrn: F:n_f'loscrl pl\· TPnnill Crl!i • GAJne k l!O.!i. 2 ~\v1 mn11ng fl'Y']:<, .. 111.un11.. rrrr,.l'll lf'l n facili-B1lhard R~m. I i.,~. Sffurily J!t1R rd. l Bf.DROO~f Models Open 't il 9 pm. 2700 P eterson Way, CM nr Harbor Blvd & Adams 546-5025 A UTILE GEM! 'Thar 'g thi!I rhir nnP-hPtiroom &J>Artmrnt in nnP of !nwn·~ nirf'~l cnmplrXP!I. Smartly rle-taill'f'I. pri\'lll r : rArprt~ anr! r!rApr.~. Inn. Outsi<l!! - . A ~·rPnl'h ,i:-iirl1Pn 11.•1th puf· lin,i:-2!"f"rn anrl pool. All rnr S!4fi. >"ROM S\6."1 MEDITERRANEAN YILLAG.E 2400 ll11rhnr Rlvrl., C.M. 17141 557-f«l~ RE'NTAL OF FICF. OPF.N 10 A~1 TO 6 PM Park-Llk• Surr ounding QUJET -lJELUXE l , 2 It. 3 BR APTS Prv. palio1 * J-fld Pool!! Nr ~hor'2 * AdulL~ Only Martinique Apts. Jm Sanra Ana Ave,, C.~1'- r . Apt 11.l 646-5542 2 RR , ,.1,111--00 pt-fll-tf'enagPr nk. S14~. TI3 W. Wilson. ~P-4407. Newport Be•ch A~ A.pl• .. b~ Furn. or Unfurn. Newport Beach Preview Showing Luz:ury 11p•rlmf!n ta with O<.V11n 11nd hllrbot 'Y iPw!I. Smo1 I re,. 24 hnur P.1trol1Pd. t'ncl<*d cnmmunily for JJeC1Jrity. .$800,000 rf!creation•l <:0mplpx-. Sin,re1, l. 2 . 11nd 3 bedroom lul'ury unit.1 up lo 2,000 9Q. JL f'ro111 SIM -.11tllM 111e. VO:.iL\M-J'~,1191• .... .... ,._.,_, °""· f)P.l v~~ ON Tiff .. UJfl ,AT NI__,. 1~~ld J . .'idw1L1 ltCamPll"1 901 C~9,,~, L•nt , Newpert &Hie~. C•llft>r"I• '196@ 111'1 .u..,.n FROM $135 A LIFESTYLE FOR THE 70'S Are You tired o( paying out" good n1onPy for lh• san1e: old skimpy Aplll'I• m('nl!I wlth t VPn skimpil!r farilitie,11; and no extras to llf'P&k o f ~ ThPn enjoy the Jl fE'R lyJl!' or !he 70'R ll OAKW O OD GARDEN APAR'f MJo:r-r rs. The re's SI million In l"l!C· r4"a!ion includ ing I a r 2 f!' s"•in1m in.11: pool, ""hirlpool r_,.._ ___ ,,,_.., -~~~~~::O:~~~'... bath5., sa.nd \IOllf'ybl!ll 11nd te nnis court!!, 11. pro 1hop BRAND NEW & pro who off Pr~ fl'PP 2roup AL L UTILmES PAID ]f'gson.~. s flutiful ('lltb· hou.~e 1111. 1P11lth club~ I NEW OF.LUXE M-1 Unil•. l I FOUND: G~1ri1-:-o~hr1tN'l't 1 ldxxt r,r. ill--0101. -~~f}-_iw; __ · ----~-- ph. p<l\11,r. 173.l Monrovl• Vic. l,;ltn Mllr trif't iH.R.J 1 Carpant•r ______ YARD a.. GarA11;e Cleanup. 54:l-314~ $1:\6--9798 t ve11. rAli to idrntity 9fiA...Ul.'l1. >·rre 1!51. 7 ri!'l}'l, Ca.LI ~ Rentals Wanted 460 GIRt~·s blcycle ~&1~11 F:XP. l'11irpPn1Pr '" rin C'l'ln-11n~·timl!, ~g_:;o,ll. I Jrti Oiica &llch, Hunlinrton ,.,.,t,._Pii!in!I, F 1' • n1 I n .II:· G11rd,nin~. Y11rrl & r.Ara,ge ,,.. i YNG UCI Profl"t!IOf &: wlf, B!!ach. Je2-J&41. Jn1,r1n1· I. F:~IPrinr trim CIP&n l'p. Fr~ F:,o.t, '-------...! dt!li rr olrt,r unr l Br, ''P -~-----.. fi46-l ~'i2 hh1'n IHI P fl,1, Rl!ll~. R111,~. M&--l488 II hl'lf'. F:-sil1t C.M./N.B. yrd, GREY cat -no tail. Vi<'. r.xf>.-R-;,,norl;Ji ;\"R~•·ahi n,t~. 420 prf'[ 2iir le Pf'ls. Tet ST!'JO. Brookhur11 I Ad;11m.-H.B. Heating la A ir .. 2-0.. rrpa1N , n111int. Nn jnb ton C nd' ----------1'1':-p rPf1>. 642·5976 tvr!I I . ,.. o 1tioning 50' 2 BR mobile homf'. All I , --1111. P.,11.•. 646-4".!4. ---------- ul'.1, ,,. m1·1-, -.-11lh ol M-,. COLLF:GF: Gr11d "'lli hoUR' rouNO on Rill. l~11nd 11.·hitf' ·------N . ' ' .-,..., .-MINOR homP r<'p11iric. Plum-'w ron1tn1rhnn or AlCl!llUll '-•n 00,.,1 ..... By """k 0• si1 .Yri I: ""*" ()1' do yri wk !lhaggy ft'rn. OOg w/1 hlk bid R · I H; ,.., .. .,.. , •" hin~. 1·1u·Pf'nlt)". pa 1ntin.11: -211. f'.~. llr MmmE'rC'tA monlh' ,..2_-.. 0 p '"-'-'"I<. lor r n1, JunP,.July/Aug. E. ,ar. E:7:>-7739 or 67l-.l764. "'" A. Cond'I' · l't .,... """'' , "'"J"Vi roofing. C111l "'-:i.'i61'l. 1r 1 mn1na, l fl, MuPllPr, W~tmont Collet•. 1971 High st'hool rin1. Costa ----R_ R. Huggins Co. 642·0515 DM W. OCF:ANF"RONT. l.r2. Saltii Allt'bara. 93TOR. Mt>M High School . Mu1>I Cement, Concr•te w; Ne\vport Rl\'<l., N.B. 1 br . .July S150 wk . Aug . .$175 TO l't"nl. or~l 'Br 1 ~ JM l"ty 96&--1031 ...... wk. M~~m. _' _n..:: ·---·~'-· __ J CT.MF.NT WORK, M joh loo • ru rn horn, in N.8. or C.M. FRfF.NDl.Y, Blk G,rman 91111111 . rrasnnahlr . ~°rf"i" Housecle•n1n9 TAKING re.~Prvation!I. 2 BR, 64~ I ollf' block to he11r h. 41!1'.I & llrPa . · · · ~rplhl"rd, r~"'.1 111bt4~ 4 :· !~_"_in\. _.:_i ._siu~ii·i.:. ;.~S-Mil:.. J Dedicated Cleanlns Balboa. 646-£7;-i:l AiVf 's. ~i.::_ .11gunA IRU'. _· :.:_.:.. JOHN'!-\ P!!lioll ,, Rlork * \.\'E 00 F:vF:R YTliT Nr. * l BR horn,. Capo lkh ][ ii14) AIREDALF., An.-to "Dutt'h," "01·1<> Au ... ~.'<OI'. of Van'a I R,,f1r. fN'' ,111. li4fi-21l19 Pali1t.11dell, !urn, bPaut lncd Afinounc«neltfr I male-, Wf'/(l N ewport . 1.a11d M"apiHR C..i\1. 64fi...A14!t MF.SA Cl 54~--·---·---. -• l!an1nr. Carrw.t,1, yd. S:t2;, + ulil, 496--6344 .. ';;;;;;;;;;;;;;'... ...:_ ~·l" PATIO~. \Y11lk11. dr1vp, ln.11IAll 11.•indowll, nnor.11 ,11'. n,.!'id/ Summl!r ri>nht l-J.B-,-_1B-,,-YNG. Rlark m11.I, r11t -Lona I n'"' 111"'"11. "fl ". h~a k, rom'l. 557-6742. 54R-4\11. 1 blk' lo m.'·n heh. & Announcements 500 hair. fnd. rwar Sho1·es Apt rl"n10\"P. '.'»8-8668 for Pi;:t. ---RAY Ir Bf'llCh J1nilrHial. Oii'l111 CovP. CdM . £73-3982 1 SUMMF.R CAMP .Boys iii CdM . 64~200. FUN s:PF.ctAI =-:-~~ir,pit +2 Girl• 7-13. OulRtanding pro-AIRDALF.. melP. l.A~l'Ml mod,1·n brnrhf'll. Sl89. 1'0n1· R•nfals to Share 430 gnnn--Top nolclt •t ar r. Beach, Mon11rch Ray 11hop.-Pl'*""· Pii!lo1> .l(fl'il. 644 ·1'1AA7. Summer' R•ntal1 ('rpl11/wirwlo1vstnnnr~ l!tc.. R,~id/C<in1m 'I. 646-1401. Call Mr·~-f"h illiri~ ~2-21124 ~·urnishM Ava ilable sauna~. in golf d rivin2 THE YENDOME * LRG Df'!uxP 2 RR., 2 RA . S:lO-Oft l ~t Mo'" RPnl, on ra112e-. billiard~. color TV giir. !!ml J)f't ok. Nr. So. YPArl,v IPa.~f'. "'hen you bring thrlff'r. Acth·iUe.• tnP11n 11<4~ Anahrun A\"l'nu, Cn11sr Pl111;ri. :..1~!121. in thi.11 arl . fret' Sund11y brunch,t1:. bar· I •-bl 1 FR>'£' ping rrntPr. '113 :597-*1:i9. YOUNG lady egr 20. hrauly ......-l'lM>nR e ra l!S -M·; ---. --Child Car• I dowll, t'llrfl!"r. flnor~. 1tove11 Opt.r. trainr<'. willhf'~ 10 Bro c h u re. CA FND May 16th v1c. N.R. I &: ovPn.11. 774-ll:t21 . share room with kitch priv'11: CAYUCOS. C11yuco~. Calif. ma!~ black killPn . .U'\-8997. YOUN GSF.T Srhool, Ai''-' 2~. ---~-- ' "'" ~-------O-n 7 D•.Y'· 6AM -7::vl PM . LADY wlllnt,11; hn1Jllf''".l'"1ning or work f()r mom & bo11n1, ...... ,..,. CAT .r. 2 klffPn s • area CdM • ,.... .......... kl "-•. , 50 CoslR Mf:':'la, 54~273.'i 11.~k for ----------St!p11 r11, prn,l{r11n1 fi·IO yrs. 1 """'" nn v.·f"i" Y ..... ius, .... ----102 Bi ·h St 1 nr 0 .C. be--queri, ll ports tourna· New V illa Pedro 3 Rr., 2 RA, f11mily rip ts. No '"''. n · . men!~. ,1c. F'"miliP.~ '-''rlM me pP t~. S!~. l.r SlTh. C11.ll 1t11•pnrt, S. nl P11hufi,s Rel). Custom dPoCOnr.tPd Sin· 2 Br., 2 lull Bii, llhfl&: rrpf I 630-4.llW: $138-11:\5 I'riv. pal\n, blll iarrl rm., gJ,11. 1 & 'l BR'1.--Eurnished Carol. Corona Island, 67:..-0996. Prof. t'"rt.-h'r~. $70 M&--.l70li. ) :;_~~~-F:xp., nwn tr11.ns .. r1rp~. parin, bPa1n C<'il, ~III-VACANT llpnri01Jll hach apl. jar.u7.zi. Nr. UC lrvint'. or Ur:iforn i~h,.d. Low movl!· nr <•ollf'jtr!I ,t, 1>l'Klp.!r, ulil p<I Mgr. 979-8ll/19 in cost.!! And no lea11 r rf!· F'Ml .. w11.n1 to .-hr "' 'I or 1 sg! fml. (25-.'tl) hM"/e.pt. Prrf COM . N.B., 1.Ag vle. Wkdys, 549-3354 Oori1>, 9: 30- ~: 30. ll•l Lost S55 Contractor I JAPANF.~ l.ADV LOS"T: Sml M Gt'l"man ShPp. e • e e e e would likf' lo hot!llf" clean. ha ir clippPd on bck ll'!R. Vir , FATHER & SONS -• 642-R!Wi e Sl.".O. Cal! 979--01,34. BRAND NEW! i~;~·,. Models open daily ---I ADULTS ONLY-PF;T OK " Frnm S!R.5. 2.JJ2 F.liirn A1·r .• C.M. ~.i;;zi.i \IOVf" in ii llo\IAllt"P, th1~ Ad. 1 Br, c:pt, rl rp!i fnNI yrri, OAKWOOD GARDEN ch•l•l~n o.k. m' "'"· ""' OF.LUX >: 2 Bl\ "" mo. 25\!'i F:lrl~n. Sii5-\fi!'i7. 2 R111 h.~. rl11>hwa11hrr, fir,-APARTMENTS Hrbr Blvd •t Mr.rrin1ac.1' Dttoratinr. dn:ign, ca~n-I.ADY wanlR houaecll!lnina N().8.t, 2'101 Hrbr Blvd . try, plumbing, wlrini:. etc. work. Own tn11nirporta.lion. 530 Personals New Villa Cordova Supt'r D"luxe Adult L;v1 n1t , . , pla(·'· privatl! patio. pool. l RR 11pl $11~ $50 Cl,anirll!: 20.l42 Sanla Ana Av. ~7-2125 rlf'p & \\'::ttrr pl'lld. C11 11 af1f1r (Rf"!lort Living for ~93.11. ~twn llpm ii: 10 pm. 4 lf!nttatlons &p .• 25th yr. c 1111 anf!r :\ pm. ~. Mrs. W1l h1m11. J In bus. -l .ir'd & bonded. 'L nd S/13 Cock-a-poo. l:fl a e k R:tS-3545 • scapfng ~'; 645-196], BRAND NEW Of'luxe 11pt!1 • Adu lt.~ Only l . --Crpls/drps, blrn~. '\'ra.rly NEWPORT BEACH 111111,, vie H1 rbnr/Wll.nn, • e e e • • 1 TOP SOIL -540-0097 t:M. An11 • to Ch• r l if:. 1 ROOM Acklition11, F:~li rn111'"· f~llt Dirt, Gratt,. Rntntlll 2 RR i'q11.~. ~In. ,,. i\f.,_ S170 G11i; & Wtr pA irl 2323 E\<lrn Av,.,, C.M. SPACIO US 2 Br. nr shops, !&ase. f'rom S 2 7 5 /mo , 16th & Irvine r~·y.-, O.<".('., &. U.C.f. fl6S. 67"· •911. 645-0SSO 642·1170 !"'48-2814, r,w11rrl. pl1n~ i IA voul ~inaJ, nr 21 M Call ~134. ..,...., Or' · · · ""' a1onry LOST Toy Poo<Mf', maJe, 1fory. L.T. ConJ<ln1rtion. -,,..,-,.,.-------- 64&JJO'.'l'l Huntington S.•ch *~*-~s110-~*~*I,;;;;;=====;;; ;: Br. i1 ; R11. nr"•ly piiin lr.<l Bltins. r-rpt rl rp!<, t'n<·l patio. Nr 11rhl~ & shop'~-ChildrPn .,k, nn Pf'1ll. AAO C'rnlf'r SL, r~'f. h-12·R.140 nr ·5411-~2. ----------1 ON BEACH! F URN. &: UNFURN. 2 BR. From S2i5 ADULTS ONLY 2 BR . 1 RA , <'R rpor1 , lllffry Fumilu~ Available r11 r1I Sl:iO mn. S.¥1. Sl'curity C a r p ets-drapes-<lishwa.~he:r & S.iO. C1i>an1112 f)9pni:at. 1 healed pool-saunag.tennis l'hi1rl OK. :"r FAir'Vif'"' &· rec room-ocean views Arliimi;. M:J--?i205 patio.!-an1ple parkins: ~Lltf;. imn111c-. 1 RR. Security Guards. c,,,,, '"''· "'"'·· "'"''" HUNTINGTON ""'LIPIP nr Pm plnyrrl la11y. J\o PACIFIC prr.11. ~72 l.11 SAlltt. Apl. 2 c.~f . ~ •. 1r-1;,,114_ ~~=~- NF.\llJ.Y DECOR/\1"F.[l Ofc open 10 am-6 pn1 DAfly 1...ll 2 Rr w/¥,llr. S11'1. \\"tr pil, \V ILLIA~f WALTERS CO. 711 OC::F:AN AV~: .. 11.B. (7141 536--1487 21ih rtar~nl ia Nn. A. 11"11 1.,,,.. ........................ . '1riins;:P Nn. A. Dr.11 R1?1"·n l r ~ & ;, •1'rll"1. SEA Al R APTS • Siil 1----------, !.11?. 2 RR. Crpti;:. drp!i, hltns. 2 RR rl"l" a pl, !200 !'fl. ft, 1 '~ 1 hlk N. or Ada m,. off Be11ch h11 . prh• p11 ti'l, Full 2ii.r. Bl vd. 719 Nn. 6 lllica. rrplr. mu.~t hr ~""n . $21)'1 :i36·27% nr 5:1&-7070 m.,. :t23 E. !iith ~1. CM. C11l l l----N :: RP.. pati...,, f'nrl. yii rrl . f"-ir Afl 4 pn1 . :.4~1'771· h<>11ch. parks &. sOOppin~. • :t Rr. 2-~. upJ>('r, Ire. S250 nr i;uh111 it on IPa.'lt'. t'rpl~. r\rp~. Qu irt. Ai1111ts. Ai;:1. fl&l.-144'r1. no pPl~. S200. m l r ... rl1 h~ll1. * 11UNTING-1'0~N~ll-A~R~R~O~l=1n Day~ &1G-Hill1J, R "~ 111 · 1 RR. 2 vr~. olrl . S147.j(). Al! f46-4!l:t1J. h11n:ot. ()42-:t\17, 642-~21} r vrs. Costa Mes• ROOMS for r.nl from f1.l to 'Vell-Designecl Apt.~., S20 WPl'kly. Cle11n, old 1 & 2 BR. w/TrrraCI!"--..fashioner! hott'I, 4 blkii from "rom S140 • S275/mo. bf-11 ch. lV, la.undry, t'lc. , • '--MEDfCAL , dent.al or reej Shag cpts, drp!!, gunas, r,..,. Col oni11.I lnn. 421 8th I . . 1 St .• Hnlgn. Sch. 536-9167. f'slate. SI r •,I visibility. poo . Jacuzz1, enc. gar. Parking. l · at Sl.50 or rom- Q ,;e t Adull livin2 LARGE. be11utlfully Jumi!lh-bin@' inlo 1 11 S2!il. 1no MERRIMAC WOODS Pd 1l~ing room ror adull Oranp a t Rt>dl,ll1rr, C.M. e SPACIOUS e Office Rental DISCOVER. DISCOVERY Firld YOURSEl_,F in Someone Call now • No obligation (TI4) IX>-Ql85 {213) 317-3393 NATJONAlJ_,Y RF:COCNIZED whilf', 1prico1 l"ll rs, Tut.•. M7·1:\11. BRICK, BLOCK & Nam, Todo. Vic. Ralc1m. Arlditic.m• * R.nnod,llnr I STONE WORK . 540-0039 RPward! 64:J-Zl31. Gr.rwick le Son, Llc. Pafntlnt & VEU.OW Schwinn St1nany 67:J..6041 * 54~tl10 Paperhanging Vic. Ocean\llf"W I. I I I I t: J A CK T a u l a. M-Repalr l.l!arue firld. Re)'llard! No mod • ddll >l · 1'f' ., a )'Ml. f'Xp . qoelrtiorul a11kf'CI. M6-36tl. Llc'd. My Way Cn. 547--00.16. REWARD! Lo!ll I f' ma I• roldfon Labrador puppy In Cc«ta Mf"iwt . 968-{).'\52. LOST lrll!h S.ttPr, O~a rollrir. Naml: Reward. ~l'r--4382. rf'J1lal«, Gincer. ---------- Driveways HAWLEY"S Seal Coating; Wralher, ps, ()ii re~l•tant. Stay• blaC'k. 54S--5195. llectrlcal No W.unnir * WALLPA.PER * When YoU e&U "Mai!'' 541-14« 646-lnl • PAJNTING-PAPERTN'r. Interior Ex-t,rinr Lie. Inc. Gu11nu1t~ Call Harrl!ll 64~ lO Day Spf-ri11I. tntPr/Exte:r pa.inting. Llc"d/ln11, Local l'l'fl!. JO Yrs. '"P· Frtt est. Call Chuck. 64~. 425 ,~if'rrimac W14y. CM larfy. Quip! fl l'Pa , priva re l'f1. King .. ard R,111 E 8 t 11 I e , I VACATION bound? Rf'!lpn. ,-,.-,-R-R -f"urn-nc_U_"_/u-,-n, lranr r & ba!h, sun porrh. 642-2722 or 96.'l-:t2Glt ri>!irffl f·ouple will rl't&in Ch1 ldrr>ri's srf'tion. Pool. ~S4ru;l!-li:-9'=.l=. :;,,c=--c-:--o-----2lc GROSS your hon1,, ptlll, li73-94&4. I VOU Supply Thf" Paint Rm1 $140 Up. F.LM GARDF.NS FOR working girl, Qm. Approx 4.000 ~ ft olfic, & 'filVel 540~ ---,--1-------1 P11inl1!d SI ~. C,llinir.11 xtra. 30 ELECfRJCAL WORK. All kincl1. Bic or small Llc'd le Jn!I. F1'H f':at. 546-02JJ. 1----J~ AP'l'!'\_ 177 E. 22nd Sl., C.M. tintnlal bfPakfas1. 8Cl'011 Babysltfint .. .er•9fl "I yr11 f:Xpt.r. Aliio, f'xteriM. b1y •.rea. lnd fir. A/C, At 642-361~. lron1 p11rk &: pool. Turllr N11.·pt Ii. Sain Diego F,..;y in. SET SAIL AL'!\ GARDENrNG 540-704£. Rock. ll'\line, S!2.50 11.'ttk, t,r!lf'rl. a mpll! pr k in g , TAHITI BA'BYsrrrtNG. My homl!. for 1arderiln1 Ii 1 m a l 11 ~.,~,,.,,-d~•7·..,-.-.. -.,.-r-k7.~ha~,-.,7·n-,-. I !ll'l-2469 54.'i-7171. (;ranrl 111 Ma11IPd Sf'hoon,r, Diy~. onl~l·h Exp. 1• "',. sp. 1 landacaplnl' uivlce1, ea.II mobill! 11lnrf!, \linyl, flock. NEW SANDPIPER ~-~~~--~-G rnotn"'r WI '11-N' r. ffle. ,.,~-~a~ .. Th H DELUXE w/h11 , Pvl f'rttr. .,,-,.,w .\ uP.o;J.~ NPPrit'd. .... _ _. ~ ho l 1 .... 54()..5191 e"". S • r v l n i .... i-.,.,.... e 11 n i m II n D"Effi< "P&!:e avaJl8ble $50 ..., y11v "'" m, 1m1.,, ,,.21,2 F..ir!v hird .-prc!Alll-1 BR Redrc. ~u go~d crpl. Walk mo. Will proylde furniture (213) 371-1239 f'nviron:n.nr·. R,110nabll!. DoNewport. CdM, Co1111 Meu, =c~==~·~-..,--~~-1 lrn~1 Sl ~:l. 2 Bl: frnn1 s1_;15 ~ ~hN~rly. 1244 W, Ball>oa at $!'i mo. An~'"'rins: tierviee S4 da,Y. Hot Jun<·h ~ d1y. ver' Shorei, Wellt<'Jlft. PAINTING, tnt. & F.Jd ., }"ur11/Unfurn, Cf>OI color 111-_ ~ '--·~~----=a~va=il~•-bl_•_· -222--F~o"'~'~I -·~·=·~·I L _______ ,]~ Hol dlnl"lf'r & lunch for LANDSCAPTNG. Nl!w Lawns Rf'ait. R • I, r . Wllrk lf'!'iors. pool, J1cu1.zi, nlore. DF:LUXF: hf'droom, lrg priv LarunaBeach.4!M-9466 Lnt and,Ol.nl Mothe'rs wNt havr 111!' Ii. SPt'lnklPrs. R1!1\d'l . ru11.ran'd, Local Rr111, Lir. M>:l Holland Drivr . llun--ho me, foyPr f'nlrall<!f!. ~hsrl! rlri d H 8 Comm. Sl1te LI 1: 'd . Phll--494-8691 . DF.sK irpace available $50 wo nt( ay.· . . area. -;';";<;;;:;;:;;.--;;,,,--,--..,-1111~'°" Bt>11f'h. 8'1_7_-9_59_.i_. _ bR \\•/1 ti!r\llnt. 64&-2042. mo. Will pt'Ovidtt furniture ':•·--------· Adami It Bu~hard. Wardlow ~1--4446. PAINTING • Hone!!t. clan. llUNTJNCTON r. a r fl f' n s ROOMS Sl:i wk up w/ki r. S:lO at SS mo. Am~r"cl11@'rYice Found (free ads) 550 IK"hMI 1rPa, 968--0&13. PROFE!\SlONAL tn-t: wnrk, ruanntff'd work. LlcensM Apt~. I leil al 'Aol~11 Chica. ·wk up Apt~. 2376 Nl!wparl available. 17875 Beach Blvd. 1-----------pruning, trlmmin11:. 1pray-k iniltlred. 6Th-.'i140. Huntingtol" Beach f:4fi-\.1:l~. Cnmr are • SP<' Blvd, CM 548-97:0:0. Tluntlngton Bll"lch. 642--4321 MALE r.111· m ix-turf" bl k f.. CHILO Carf:, C. h t: I 1 t I a n Inc. apl"lnklf':n. Land,oieap-Eh"TER. Compl•te 2 N!lll~!I 1 .<;;?Ar. 2 I.· :t Rr 11pt 5140 1.1r . fB-;:-";~lrW •·Iv.· crpt. 11•'1.:1! ,'<nu'rl! mi~.~ing. f'r. DF:l.UXF:, priv l!:lllJ"AflC't & 1 BAY VIEW OFf'ICES wht, lite i.h'lpt",ot n11 1tidf", lirk homf', Crfo8tivl! play, rrl e l-Ins. rleanup. Cf'OJ"R'e 645893 I story $24(}, 2 itory s."°'1. Pkm l, f')'lt/iirp, hlln~. ktrl~ rirps, hl ln,., ;::llrAgt. 962-8:l78 Sllll-S240. bath, no smokP no. Cn,.ta ()p luxf', 11 ir·1'0rw1itionl'rl Tm'· Vir. nf N,v.-porl Bch .. 1'nt:ion. f'ncd yfl. 18 "'0""4 AL'~ LllndM'aplna. Tr•t:I Neat work. Roy, ~7-13.'\R. n Trvlrlf' Avf'. 54A-1!72A. yrs 1~ wb. 646-8429. CM I "ZD3 ('nll~f' Nil 5 f.l i-iQl'> ~~es fnr 11pp1·~·-~~~~ e LR r.. 2 fl,R Bungalow Apt. MP~11 . 675--0310, 54&-7197. Rf'dt"COl'l'llf'rl. Lido area. r..moval. ~•rd re!Tl()(jl!tlnr. PROF. palnt1ng, 11J,oio mo~. l!¥.lfi MAplP N" 1 h~:z-:un.'\ LR<; 2 hr ,.1udln API Fncl1 yri . <•~rrlrn~. Ii pnol.~. Sllu n11~. 1TU N T 1NcTON-Beach, RralornmiC'S, Bkr. 675-6700 Traill h•uhnir. lot f'IPanup. aecou.~, re-ii, ln1f'r/!"X f,r. ~A --~m. chilrl nk, No Pf'!.-. S\50 \ln1 .l11cu1.zi11. T1!1U1i.11, f rom kHchl!n priVJi:!I, pool, f,male APT. iuitablf! for offlCI!. * * * * * * R~J)l lr ~rlnklf!1"11. 67J-116fl. J .. ic/ln.~. FrH ,lit. &45-71191. 21R~~ A~~11 ,.~ no ;;. 1110. M2-4~9_. --~.,.--~_:_M&--0?..!t only. Sl~1. 11•ef'k. 842--8477. Phclllf' ~rvi~. ponl 2.'\76 * LANDSCAPING * SEMT-R["'TJRED f'ATNTER RAY Mf:AOO\\'!\ APT~ t Bil 111.•nhllP wrrrp1 , flrp.11, APT. Pool/(.ifli> • ~p11rKlu/(. SLEl':PING r.m-Pr,f \Vork-NPwporl Blvrl. C . M . Nt:w 111wn11. Sprlnkln, d,cklll,) n,rds 1W1rk Jll7 \\", Ray St., CM fj.tfi.007'.1 Ohn~. 11.·,.shr r f,, rl!)'Pr. Bun~;iln"·· Pvf. Jlfl !lo. SIJO. inR 11:irl or fl"m. flhKll"nl. s:JO 5'111----975:'1. cll'll2Up, SlltlP. Jic'd. 5.l&-112.'i. 6'11-12<ti ~=--'-~~-1--1-t'-p11t10. Sl:iO. 96~4f> 1111 :.: :tO. nin. 1"' rii.?.hr 11riuti.• ll46· l:Jl3. nw. Pr! f'n!. 91i 2-.117i1. OITICES. S7!9 & Sfi9. WiU PROFESSIONAL 1 1 -P-APER-HUNG.-S"l"O-. - z RR, dPn ... 1' ~ rr A•,111~· -1-. &..... nr('Or111r . K!!ar 111h s1.. 1iiink Trader's Parad1"se .r~p'",.."" a aml!ftinr SerYI"" An.v ["tfl. + "·,..r. ~z.wg drp11• t'rpt1>, "'"""'· t ·'· rv1ne Laguna Beach ~'JNE room Ava il. only ov. ..-!"' 54A-&101 C)r cnll; 21::. ----------1 • ....:;_________ f'm ployPl1 n1An over 30. & !l'hoppin.1:. :148-11~11:_. __ I Fttt F.111. * 646.tl619 PAINTING k P-Af'ERTN r., ;f.12-5277. f"OR L~:ASf: -l Rr, 2 RR .,_C_•_"_•M_.,_,_._64_(,._5689_.__ e Offic•Co1t1 Me1a Ii" nes bp@rt .Japanea~ Gardener 19 yn In Huber 11 1-.l'I. I.ir Ar PARK WEST I ' I I .. , 11(11. "/l(.prc1a1'11 ar v1r 11· 600 AQ. ft. • 646-21~ Complf:ll! Y11rd Sl!rvlet: bon<lPd . Rfofa lur11. G4:l-2l.i6. I RR CArpnrl, pri\'. pa! o. ,.u APARTMENTS G ~ H '15 crrf~ 1' <l rf)!I. All rlr t· n"~I'· Pri\'. r'l~-pool-rlrvt'for lfl "11' ome " MEDICAL rullf', re11dy to JO. !'tte '1ttma t1t•. 645-7624 PROf'. p-a:lnllnr. lnll!r/f'xt~. a<lult!I nnly. Nn r hil(lrrn or Bdrm. Fro2m $l60 prh•. h<>R ch-intrrph, llf'r ur._ *PRIVATE ROOM* ll~il at Rolu C't1lc1, H.B. t t1"meS JIM'S Gardenlna:. ~mplf'll! QuA llty 11.'tlrk. Rr1111. Lir'-t ', 2 Bdrm., B•. I). 'nt'I. R:J\r.. n111tur, S2'1•t""'· ·~i~. . I I • ~ ·i 1 .. 7 1 ·· ·, 2-" 1 • -1· Sl2"/n1n ~\~1 1'' 1 b _, .,_.. .... , awn• ya1-u t'•rf', c e11nup.11. n.• . .,., • 4:>.), :i.4 -'·"' 11 t :1. t" ~· • · · · From $195 1'1dul1s. i\1u.-1 """ to 11p· or 11m ulatory pPrson. Coot! ,. 5-IS.. •• BF.A UTIF'iTl._1_&_2_RR JAAl Parkv~ew. l.;ine prPr1atr 311J:. 5. Coast food, nice cheerful 1urrbund· DP.SK sp&CI!. S4:i month, d I I ' .\862 aft Spm. ! Peintlng, Sign Con1Pmpnrary G11ntrn Apt~. Irvin~. (Jui1! oH II"~'., ~. L.s:igunl\, ing!I. Utilitif'it paict. 11th St. Crwt11 O ars LAWN SERVICE 1---------- Patio!i, frplr.. poo l. Sl~ San Diecc> }"wy at Culver Rd) * Ca.II rt48-4Th3 * MP.1a 548·2750 /64!>-41 51. Cut·P:d1 .. Trlm O,,P'nd•blt 1 A1TRACr1vp; •lgn PAintint 1170. C!ll ll !'tif...'ilRl. f'1,ll ,v,A aft, s, 54.'i-l166 I I. tr~lf'k lr•r,Mna. 2l yr11 1n --cc-cc-T ME FOR * 'PRfVATE ROOM FOR a "'------------------' eo~1A M,11a. M.-...14Sfi. LRG. 2 Rr .. up!l"r .rluplex Laguna Be•ch I F.LOERLV t.AOY, lN THE · uslness Rental 445 BAYrRONT hnm,, l Br A TRADE S9SOO Equtt,v in COMPJ.ETE I.awn A ---- •pl• .. , rir"!I .-unrk-ck. •"· HOME OF 'N RN N•w 1 1 18 Bo ~-k 1 •M-.~· ~-t M-j C11rdtnln1 lo!l'\'i<.-.. Jla11lln1 P l•ster, Patch, Rep•lr ,_ ,, , · ,. • r. 1 Ott ap&Cf now 'A"'" 11, at,...,.-, or A110t"a• -· .. ~~•. iii• ,..,.. .1111' u 10J" _._ 1 J' uo .,_ W"•.1•1111 11rr1. S t 7 5 . *NF:\\' 2 BR-blk lo ~ac.h, ._..,.,....,., &<'e1n-t1p 1m ~ c ' CASH .,,,.,...,..,, '· ins . .2 l0etoUooa In IM M1rt do-Citru11 prop. or .1mall Home for R••I E•l•te. · · • I * PATCll Pt.ASTF:RING ,,.....-,,.,.,.. $110. MON"nl UP .,. ...,,.,.,..e County. l:IOO lo homt, Palm Spring!I:. ).~ c..v-~n. al)Al'll!~ .,.,..,...,.,r All typl'~. t'!'f', P!ltlmAI~&. 'u• '.~•. llpt.t"lllf•ulllr YIPw, $25(1 up. QUICK ~ ~-2 •~~ J I' ~- \fES.A V,.rrifo • nr nf'W IUX· c'~"~-~'~"'~· ~·~ .... =23:_:19_. -~-,.. Studio Apl1. Phone af'T"\tkT, 1!>.00D ~ n . c 0 s TA Rr1ltlnih11m, a..i. 67~1 11 ('.111 Compl,ff' yd Jf'rv-k-1-. Nl'AI CAii ~ llrk'.>1111 2 RR. 2 f!,A, rl!d'l'wRlr, LARGE 2 BR !'lll"lllr hearh. pMI. &lC,..Bi7. ~JES.A-near South Cota! WlU~ trade $12.IXX> f!q. in Ml lot w 't h•H I. CAff' . N I Re11a. "'"'" f'l'lf. M.2-4~ ,.tumbln9 lrpl., 11rtul!•. ~~7~HWl1. Al1/I,, IWJ pt1:1. SIT:l mn. TH ROUGH A A1.11 . Baker •1 Cf'nni..y. o•w S~.IXX> 011!11,I Tr11wl!!:r Lng fkh !or Int varan~ nr NF: W-Jllpflrtf:M' aardrntni ---------- Sml 1 BR. 11p1 w rrpl11, drpA, RMIH"., rpl.~. rlf"J)'l. :i«-2.i:t!I. Summ•r R•ntalt 420 ~~~~Noe"~' Pt ~ "/.1; YAl'hl for ho1111, in N!!v.•port •·'Corn 00111·1 l'.lr ! Ala ir, .-rvlr P. C•ll SAVF: on hnml!. rr"pa.1r11 t"ftt tlnvf', rrfrtr. .1tt'r, Sl.fO. Mesa Verde A • • or land 7211 M1rt',llf' S!, PAl"ll· • ~2619 • "•I .. pl umhin g, ri•lnl, l~ ),dull s. nt.I pt'l~. 642-5t~3. DAI LY Pl LOT 3 Bn, 2 811. So. of llwy., bf'1wH n Gemco .. Woolm . I c II 64b-6811 mounl ...... £.'\4-71&.1 rol L ... n. o,..;wp I. -l-taulln1. ~ 111 11 11 l lo n'. h1UU 1'1t .. Ofo~l..UXE 2 .l l Br, 2/B11i . Cd.\t : 2 81kt to Bir~ Brookhuntt 1t Heil, Qc..-j 11 ' 139-<1372. PATTO or DEN-2 Br. ,net c11 r. $~ up. nfll"lllll ~eh. Atn'H'n. I . $'150 mo. CUJ>llJW:Y ~l. J, Call 8cJb 1 HAVE 20 ar,...a, v•l. 1100,000 l.D'l' wilh---.;11iJllf'Ul 11rio~ RtllllOn&blt ii: it..ll1bl• 2 &, S150. Arlult1. Ofr-. 3095 Ma~ A v e ,, WANT AD Doa V. Fra1*1ln ~'lih.. ~2111. Mt Baker, !or-In prr.atlrt 1trt a Rl\lf'r-atru<'IN! "i'w of O<'HR ".l Fre• ~tlm•lf'I 9'!~ Call $4S.'T3.11. ~lOM. Jtlttltor C'T3-2222 Colla M61. Jldl!. Exrh fnr hnw: or loe min!! in Laa Rr-h. 0vf'r U'.10' EXP. Haw1Uan CardforYr PLUMATNC RF.P AIR No joh IM ~TT\1111 • &42-\121\ • D'ELUXF.' 'J BR. 2 R"'A-. °"rrpl..,..r. "M•kl! R.onm f or D11d-BAY VIEW 2 bedromn, CHOICt. ~nt&l•Shnpt. "' nr-Pf'OSI NPYIJ'f· ~h. Dkk Oay "" Tf'mplf' H.111• Dr. for I Complell! prdf'nln, ~t'f" OIJ~1mrr. ,tr. $111'.l mo. d y • •, , c '' 11." rut th., 642 5678 d~JJ& f enmpletl!ly lurnl~-tief!• l7th .\ N~ 1!.lvli. · Wllll11m Auattn Cn. AA4·!1M.l hrl1tl nr !!7 4A2-1Ji~ KamaJ.11.n l, &l&-46'J~. COLI ,..LUMllNG 5.16-2ft~2 Jl'.B r11.ge .• yl')ur """'h i! CASH • ec1. A\laU June to S@.pt, $751'1 locat~n. Rt11M1n.bl, !'fin•· I WJU_. ("lf'!lln b8ckyarrl ~ l" h•·. M"rvlre. M~US'I f·ut rtt:ulla att j111I a phone with 1 DAIL'( PnhT 1 . pr tnnn1.h. AduU.. nnly C&ll 64.l-0086 bttor11 9AM. er * * * * * * aw~ • &l!llO SllAnt ~f'fllltlt1 ~I ld),. h!"m• rwt11'''. Call ---. ---------------·---r away . 542--567A flA'~'i'rt ,'1. --------11---1-·"-••_n_i._&_15-4.930 __ .____ "4fr9197 rovPr . 1°rl!f' , .. 1 4~5.WC. l ~-N~·' ~ ' \\ "· ' ; h ,, t lih'ld•· \\'(i()(js , .\fi.~~1on Cl IAR.\tlJ. . ~r11.~1de Ii :i g;ird!'n !t'I ' 3 LINES IMES 2 DO LLARS (Any Item Priced $50 Or Less) ' 0 .. • Pi11~)1 Yon1·seli A Pile -oi Pe11nics (Or Eve11 Penny Pinchers Dial Direct for Details 642-5678 Pile Up Profits North County; 540-1220, Toll Free ' DAILY PILOT PENNY PINCHER WANT ADS 1, j I . , . l[Il] I llilJ IC-.._ln1>Io>_-~J[Il)[ )[Il) ~I ~_ ...... ,·~· ![Ill 1:-._ ....... _ .... ;;;llilJ~• f I Remodel & R•petr Ho.;> Wantea, M ' F 710 Htlp Wenttd, M & F 710 Htlp Wonted, M & F 710-ielp Wanted, M ' F 710 Htlp Wanted, M & f 710 Htlp Wantocl. M & F 710 1'IBMODEl.INCi . a<ldllklns. 11atios, prortt pl serviet. Free 1·~1iniat<'S. J'l'k'rCnC<'f. IO<'ttl huilde1·, 1-10 j1.n1., OOS-0067. \IJ~I -------Roofing BABYSITTER, reliable l&dy, DF:NTAI-.ust. exper u rf'. loves children, 4 yr rirl. my cepfiqnist le chairs1d' asst. • REAL ESTATE home Lagu•~ Bch. 125 Call 49G-5nJ. -SALESMEN- \Veek, trans provided or DENTAL Ofc. Oral SurgP1::\' MEN• WOMEN Need 1 •or :! l'X!){'ricnced 1t1ay live-in fret'. ~29-j16G Asst w/:c·ray eXper. Jn\.. imle.i!propli•. lnfi•nli\'e t'Om· d00• m"' o~o'"" ••s ~10 \\le need :l tre'v 1uanagers. Qver 21, Jo •<o.J· • "'-'· ....-• .., • .,., ·• 1 · mi~sion sliding scnlr plan, BEAUT'\' Opr \\/anted.,. Ne"' DENTAL Receptionii•: t.:x. v.•ork a group of boys, getting ne\v cu~-prroon11.hzed 1raining by a • ·r. Cuy ltooflnR. Deal grads "'etcome. Salary or per. Hunt Harbour, (:Ztl ton1frs for the ,Los • .\nge.les 1'i1nes. Can pl'of~11ionaL AL&> will t1·ait1 ll!r<'C"t. I do n1y OY<'n "·ork. cointn. j.10-8888, David. S.IG-0617. earn $200·$300 per \Veek. ! 1H•1v· lic1•nse~~-S111all orliC'f', 1;1~27SO. s.tS-9300. I BEAUTICIANS l.o=E=P~E~N=o~A~BLE°"o-you--ni;-man I· pleasant \\"Otking conditions. ----SpaL't" ror Rent! "'anted full timl" 10 run rr-I Personal intcrvirw -.A!:lk ;"''""/Allere.ions CALL 897 1310 ,,..,.. __ .,. __ -----· __ $30 \Veekly 642-084-1 rantb; for ni.pidly expnniling • fur J\laua~f'r. Alterat ions -642-5845 BEAlJTlCIANS / li t 1 c~mpao;y NC<~< ·" U.S. AFFILIATED . w c en e e, L'•"7 73 • . c . • Brok.,rs neall.• N1·ut, 11ccurat('. 20 years exp. l't"nt booth, make mnre """"""4 · __ _ _______ ~ _ ___ ,,_ ----------·~ S~7-8j()7. £vf'& 968·111~ Stereo Repair money, terms 0 Pen · DESIGNER needs ""pd · Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 STEREO equipn1<'nl rPpa irs, 111n1j1!1•t4• fat.·ili lit.•s ror all 1\11.1kcs & n1oc!c!s -dlS(.'()unt r.1 11'~' .~ !r'ut'k lt•fl'' 1lt'Ck, 1•11•:111 f.· :11!ju~t .!fl.00. !hi!' 11 C'rk :-i\.00 11tf 111 O;i ily Pilol r· t ~1 d f' 1· s iReplat'1HnPnl rw•~dles &• cartridges ~~off). ll.S.A. :-'l!'f't.'O E.,uip . 963-3~33. seamstress .. full tinlt'. Call ;·;;·:~·;;·;;·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-. BEAu·rv Opc.1·ator Jal'I!', 6'ra-7l;x!, ll-4: 30. II 0 u ~ t~KEEPER-l iv~tn. Opcnin11: for '.? bc-!lU11c1an~ DESl{-Cioel'k -3:30 p~11-6::KI ~1'.;11-F'ri 11.~ntls ?fl. :Sta'.·1 11 itl1 follo\1'ln)i!. Snl\\ry + pm M-F & &ti !J.j, i\1alr 11/.S fnr .-:t \\ks. U\\n ro111 m. Paid vacaiion . '!ll p••f'd 1.,1 c , o.2_......,.. trans. !\alary Ofl't'll. lrvHk' · · s, " '" .... , ' ,,.. :r;r.N. ~P?-SiOS bl'nefJts. Apply in person DISTltlBUTOHS \'t'ANTElJ .,_ ' .", , I MANAGEMENT TRAINEES NEEDED IMMEDIATELY! onl,v, Mon1go n1t'ry \Varel Nat'J orie(lted tinn P/tinic HOU SEl ... EEPI'.R ror pv\ &>uuty Salon, lluotington or r 11 Sele .1 · , ho nlf'. P/linu· !.:. F/t1mc-. 1 i\1all,_H.B. 2nd floor. Tues. 1~at~n~. Co~1n1rs~~:n~01~: Call Til--03"]\ • I nu,. to 1hr rapid gro1vth & lhru !Sal • 11ou"1·1·t"F'Pf'I' I \;';•«•· 1ou:i·. l'i~I E. 171h S1.. · C•\<'r $100 a d;iy. !Slu1ti•nts :lr •" ~' • • --. l\'f' in I t>'l.p1111s10n nf our l'Clrp. A Rral t:s~111t> Prolf'!l~ional Real Estalf' , Sall'~nien s, llt'Okfrl\! ·r111' n1Jporlun1ty L~ hi'~ You ar(' 111.•t'tlNI in1mrdiati'ly fnr our rnpidly r>x~ndi ng R <' I, l !!:shill' division. Positivr op- portunily for advancement For.appointment. phollt' Rick Noe~rll'i·. 64;~. ·---Real Est•t• Sal•s I ('os\H .\tlr.~a. 645-211'.!. BEAUTY Open1tor \\'antet!. house11·ivrs fr k. <:au 11141 \\'/1·:1r. J f)('rsun. nutnl'lf'r or pl'L'sti,'!f' posi- 1 C 7 "' Rt>n l F:s1a1r t)I !' 11N"d~ · · ---. --A11ply 1n pt'l'SOll, Jassiquf' 51~\4'1. +; ,';.-!"':;:: llu11-. 111'1' tll'l11 ava1l :"\ohlt'. felev1s1on Repair co·11"'" tO!J •·1 Cam,·'° ----_ _ _ _ --salcsn1rn. \Vt !'OVf'r 1111 ---------'. •·• c.. ' o•,u>>:1'1·. ''.'H,l'F'T <>,··I•'"· 11ou~1-:\vor:K. 1·:-.·"'·ril.'nl....U. ' -D c 1 " -\. .... ,. -,,.. ~ r phaSl'S of rf'al PSl:ttf'. N1· 11 BLAINE'S TV * nvf', o;;ta l\ t>Sa. E:xper. d£>roralor IVPt' f>e r· p:11·1 t1111r. :i ri<iy 11·1•ti\, 011·n 1 ACT NOW! Reauti!ul Jlun1: .Jlarhour. ~1·r1·ic!n•; ,\II Grands [BEAUTY Operator wanled son ror 11.('fivr sto01"e. Xlnl ~~fl ~i:lt-t _ 1 Tollin Realty · S4G·3371 ,\u!hori1.l'd i\tagnavo:it 1rith son1e follnwinr:;. 1'hc ~~--:!:_:·orn_~· 492-22:->'I. _ JJ o USl<l'EF:PEH. !ivr-i11. ,'\i. ~:,po•i· i\,.,._ RECEPTIONIIIT _ fronl of- l\no11 n f(~)l}nc~ty s~a...1:'\13 1 BC'Rllly Pnrlollr, 642-7241. DRESS.\1AKERS Asst. E:x-.('[lr('. of l~~dl<_'r· Ynuni: g11·1 I rice ~irJ In handle pholl(', fil• BOYS · per necess. \\'/drt'::s makinl! _P!:!! c~ GiJ-SllJ.1. . \\'r 11·ould r11l h1•r rr11i11 lmn1 lypini;: anrl saJe1<; 111quiries l'~RA.\.JIC .. ~· Vinyl~ Ti:e. in the Dana Point. San Cle· 01vn tran5p. & Ue avail. 1n1-riefi \\On1an tu llu illl '.'~·1·u1'1' Ana. \VritP Cl:rs:-:ifif'd Ari SALl'SLAOY r.1i1ur~'. l'Xprr1ent.'f' unnc\·· t·~AAry. The. Show Off, 2'J fashion ll>land. N.B. s:ioo Mo + 10-::: ·g?'Oll&. E."<P· I In Hrl' sall"!l. 44 hr '' k. Pd \'&1'. Sit k pa~ .. '<>th er bt'nt'filll. ~t&-110'.l. SALES-fantai>tic fuU 01· p/t 1•ntnin1:s. No ~xµ_ 111"<'. o\'t'r :!1. ~ >-1 pn1. -.. SALESLADY for 11•11•clry .i;tore, fulltime, rl'l.!l rr. quin'd. ~8-3-Wl SAT.UR DAY Interviews PACIFIC MUTUAL Moving To Newpor t Sept•mber 1972 1lnn1Pdi::llP pla1·rm,.11t rnr 11·ork in Lo~ Angl'l":<t< un1il I tinte. of .n1ove. I I A~r-10-14 10 dehvCT paprrs & al1<'rat1on~ .. \1t1st . h~ve IDEA L opportunity lor 11111 r· I' M·r;i11•h for 1h<> ri~ht proplP. for nil~. firn1 in !'. San1a h!!fhl'n, l~a11i~ & f"n1i·y~. me1~1.,. area.ct,~ n1ed-.-for ~p-J I ime busi nrss While L~•ntributing Call Mr. P <tu1son No. J.Q,R i;; Daily PilO'f P.O. Cusloni \\'nrk at Rcasonahlt• f DAILY PILOT .<'mploynll't1t. Rt1's l'Nf<l. to f;,in1ily 1rl(~Hl\t'. \\'rilt• 83 3-9472 Box: l.J60. Costa ~lesa. CaHI . E.xpt-rienc-P in LifP, Ai·c-i1trn1 t:at~-~l~~'IS-7:.'G.'l. _I _._ ~241'.!0 ____ Cd~1 .67~17~:i. ____ Ra\\leii.:h. :106 A1t1·l inP, m2:;. or 1.Jealth lnsura.neP prr frr·1 BOOl\KEEPER, fuU charge DRIVErl parl-lin1e 11u1le, Onklanr!, Ca. 9JU0i __ ~lANICURIST Ptf'TimP xlnt --HF.STAlJRAN~r -- 1 rPri I.Jut nol rss,..1111:il, (\11·· [ ][IT• [ through general 'l f' d g e r . for older 1:ouple, O<'Cflsional --INVEST-IN lo.;-. . l J:\IPl.flY:\lf:NT ' AUENC:\' l'enl opening~ 111'1': 1 Employ~t I+ I 1\tus1 ht' experienced in all , rrip!I to Los Anieles & r r,ln1 __ P~MJn•• .,411,.4~··--l\iana~f'r .... , ........ , OJK'n l ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliim i pha!'l's. Apply betw11 8 A\1 Spl'in~s aM':~. perhaps nthrr YOUR FUTURE :ii AN u F'ACTURTNC. ro1· ..\laitro"fl _ Eu1'0pcan 11 tu :=. P~I. PN'k Family 0<•casionnl h<'lfl. Refcr£>nt'l'S Full or p/timr. I mechanir:il rnginrer 1 u . .. .... .. .. •. . .. .. S8C{t. mo Job Wa nted, Male 700 Fun(•ral 1!01nr. 7S01 . Bol~o \\'ill OI• verified. 1Vr1ll' BE YOUR OWN BOSSI r!r1·P]on s.1ilboal produclion Panlrv !\1an N S2:i.·SZ7. shift AvP.. \.\'es1n1in,;1rr. No Cl:tssirio•d Ad Nn. 4:\0, f)[11Jy Men or Women l inP~. 0<>,!!rf't' rcq·n. Top rmy Panlr·v. \\'on\an · ....• $21. shift r<JlJNG 111;111 sr1•ki11~ po,;1-I I · p lllnt• app 1catio11s. JliJot. P .O. Box 1560. Cosln ,t· x1n·1 futurr'. 1\1al'Gree:or :Ind cook ..•......•• SZJ. shirt 11on :l~ S1>r uri1 y I Bool'•1,.EEPER & g•-cal P.1f'sa., CA !J'.!mG. lease A Yellow Y:ieht Corr. 1631 P\·1eentia, \Vaitcr~ . .-· ........... Seo!£> 1;u:ir•I / Ni~ 1t wa1"hn1an in ,,,_ ll C olficP-Rtrong ft l' co u n I 1<; Earn $700/$800 ~Mo~ T a xi Ca b C~l. --".'.". ; .. '.' .. '. ' .. ' .. ".'.-.. '.'.'.".'.'."'1°1t.~l'··· 1 !Ju~. 0 1111', .Ons!r. s111•. ...., i·t(·. Ni>nl. drpvn~Ja.hlf', f''\·j rf'c ri\•ablt.""payroU &4 Day \Vcek,' NQ rxp. M11:st MATRON $1 .7SHR J)l•iit'ilC'•"I ll·IG.-2C39. lclrphonl' ·exp. Construction hf> ovrr 6' & 11•illing to wnrk. C'itU tor i\ppt E xp. for Rec. Rm. \\'flilrf'ssr!'> -all sh~fls· eGEN'l CLERICAL eSEC'Y·S.TENO eMATH CLERK Interviewing I 9:30 AM·12:30 Pl\1 On Sift Of .Ne1v 'Bld~ -·---back~round desired -E.stal>-O\•Cr ?.:. 5'19-41R6. 546·,131·] In Lrg Apt Complex Food & Cocktail ..... $1.!ia hi' '.11. "11rsc •'an' fc>r nnl"'t•! I 11 I"~,,.~ S2 he I ..... . lishrd t'On1pany-Good fringe f':XEC'UTJVE s r c,. (' t II I' .v Hrs 9 a m -2 pm os,::,;.~,·.~ ............. ,,· I,. dnys. Pi'f'p;IT'l' un"h rl(', JI benf'fils·R. \V. McClellan & 546-5025 I C:asHL'r' ................ : 1• PACIFIC d;i_v l\'k. ti:::-:-7'.::n afl ~.::o. 1-"'\p'rl. Skillf'rl in shorthand, Ask for llcrman B .... Sl s;, tu Soni: lnc-Zi-18-~ill. _ ___,_ -u:>uo•ys ............. · ' I Job 'Yanteo, ,:emaf; 707 I -i ypin~. r IR~l ex" c i , INSURANCF:-Af(;,;cy -G1rl. ~t 1-:c11ANIC-:-min. J-;TIJ. rx-IJlsll\,:t~hl'r .. ·: ..... $1.li:i l1r I MUTUA. l 1----------,-c ! BOOKKEEPER l'alcularor. i'\Prd c·11.r . Kno1i trd~fi or D11·IK Fire & JWr. Arro. l!llh & N1•1vpor1. Ft:•: KEED hel p At homi'~ \\'1• FULL CHARGE CrP.ati \c. indl'~ml~nl. fas! Hon11• o\\'ners rating hrlpful. C.~f. 64:;..J j32. P.Q\' AL SERVICE AGENCY hs vc A i1!r~ • 1\ursc~ • but tht'OUJ:;h, varied h;s. Xlnt opp. ~:1Ja. l'y opt'n .. i\lu . .i 1 1~2:, i\1o--+-1or:~G~v. d ~hi f\, for Rcslauran1 Pcr~nncl NE\VPORT FINANCIAL CTR I I I , • f'o Bu.~v p1"lper1v mnn:i5:'£'mrnt Send re~Ullll' lo IOOK R26. ousr,,;er1lt'rs n1 -· · . .? he i;:00tl typ1sl. Cal1forn1;1 pd vat. ollll'r bcnefl1~. XOl Redhill Avenue 'Cot'tll'r Santa Cn1z &. panions • llomcn1:i.kers ·I l'(l. X_lnt sa.l;iry & benf'flf!I. ~~na Bra~. 92fl.> ... _ _ ln~urancP . lrv1111·. Calif. .!;;irks Phill ips G6, Balboa Bl EsplanndP JV, Cosla ~lf'sa N~1vpor1 Centrr Dr1 Upjohn. :J.1';'~1 . Subnut rt'SUml' & salary re· EX~ECTA.i'IT ~1other lll-t>ds Cill t'rrn Nu11er for intN\\. I '" C'.'l H\\')', NR. ~oi lt> ~O ~i7-2llOO __ _ _ ___ q111rement~ lo P. 0 . Box livr in housek~per-Rm & ---------- \\'ILL do lil<' b0okk<'l"p1ng. JSTO. Nf'\Vpor1 Brach, 9WG3. board-nieals-Pri Rm l'IVl R:C-9180. _ _ 1--.-.-NEEDED--ftl'sfau1·an1 l\p•ll'! . .I.· nth£>r r·!crica1 --------I T Off' G ' J SANDWICH MAKER CARPF.~'1'ER & hOU~\\"Ork 963-1790. WO ice Ir s . du t11·)> In n1y l!Onu• hy hr.. ID'\/1NE PERSONNE SHORT, ORDERS 111i ur 1nu. call P<1 f ~;.1:)...\037 needed i~ lrade for d.~nC't' EXPERlENCED ChA irside I'\. LI \Vom;.n \\•anted 10 work at 1.,, •• ,, IPFSOn;;. Single!! Chah"::1 Club. "-ta! As.s1~ta nt. s r n n 5<o"ICES &Ar"C"' 1rv l\lu:-11 ™'_?jA"r"r"L•lb' 1._10 dr1v1• .., G---~3-U'!;'" LI'W' "'-~"!\... 1 . tunch ··ounter l)reparing 1)'.l'~".'''DAH1.E-l:1d>-to-do ~--------Resunif'. 10 .classified !'1°· l"G ,. 1· 1 • ·\I su11d1\·ichcs. salads,· & short ·11;111~r· ·"iwi..·· "w11 Tr;1ns. · · ""~. r 1Jr e per. · 81 Y 1 0 · .'( ' • -------11rdrrs. 40 Hr wk. No Sat '· "" I r 'RPET Cl H I '" D l pt I Bo l ;6(1 • }-1aJI.)' Exrr:lrn! .~ s:.,. Iii l !'>1.. t ... '' "-1 C t i\1 C 9262\ Pos1!ions Availahll." NE\\'COJ\1ER \VELCOMING: l.1'.!-:!'.;l t. : U\I ..... nr;, ;n ap~;1r:i.nct". os a 1 csa, a -i. nih• or Sµn 11.ork. No split ___ --1 Apoly 17·10 superior AvP., J:'IBERGL\~ 1\lold~rs. ~kill· Acctng/Secretarial Hospitali1y Hoste:~11 .shifts. Clean modern lunch He lp W a nted , M & F 710 _._. cd & unskilled. All 3 shifts. t'OUTil<'r. Apply Lindberg ! c \I Cler ical/Gen, Ofc. I To Call LOCALLY on ne\Y · ~·rcr & 1-'l'f' Posi!ion~ rrsidcnf families bringin:; ---------------·-· -...... I \Ve \vill irA.in. 1631 Placen-Nu1rition. in rear or the Toy \•·<-ounl:i nl -Jr tn SSOO CAR Yf'.~SH HEL~ lia, Costa J\les.'l. 4AA f':. 17th (i11 lrvinr1 ('"°1 ,gif1s S· civic info. Good pay. \\lorld Store on \o\\•er· level . . r,nn Sel'eral po!'llltlns. 4 locat1oru, FOOD & C kt ·1-11T't-642-1470 I Pttimc. Must havt happy So. C:n Plaza Shopping s,•1:·y-Bank ~ ""' :i1etm Car 'r11.sh ~-..o · oc a1 ai rt:'S~. smilr. car, typing ability. :;c.c-·y-Lcgal $6'10 lf11rhor Blvd, Costa ~fe~a & C:\"J>('r. necessary. ISLAND Mgr~. min. :, yrs. ~i17-:;/J9i Centf'r. 111 Cosla 1'lesa.' S('c·y·M11rkcr1ng S600 J;;i'OO Beach 'Blvd. I-fun!. Apply Jn Perspn Only 11 Ai\1 rxf}Pr. S£>rv. s iri tion <rl· NiJRSf~.lol -fl id;;--full-& -P..N"S";i~Y.t-. f"\le shift. LVNs Grn'l 0r;11•1· S500 B ! Alley \Ves1 lendanls clay !.· nitr ~h1h. P!l!imf'. All shiF1s. Call day & t.'Vf' Mhif\. Xlnt frinic Hr1'<'fll "l"~'Pl~t t12:, r 1. --------?106 \\I. Oceanfronl, NB ArL'O l!llh & NPl\['>Clrl. ? ? bnfts. Beverly Manor. Capo .'-·-·•y,Bookkl'••!'V'r 111 ~•oo f1~F.,\~-UP & d£'1ivt'ry boy _ -l.i~.-.110. ,..,, --86 ....... ,---&i:'.r-lj32. ----Bch, 4=--J• . S.·o ··y-Cnn~•r ,\n~dio'inl SG50 f1•ll linic. Aoplv in PfM!O"· fOTOMAT _ -----·-NURSES Aidl's, t' J\. per . ..;;o.;iiiiiiii..,iiioiiOiiiiiiii..., NEWPORT 1 SJ 6'1 hr Hut~n·s. 140 * JANITORIAL, 1 r vi n f'. p/timr• ~-11. J\IP:W Verdr ROBINSON'S Personnel Agency lndu~tri:il \\'ay. Costa l\10;a. DRIVE-THRU l"\"('nino;:s. Aclul1 rouple only. Conv. uo~p. 6111 Ccn!er, Cl\1 B Col LEG~ h h h 1 '" g lad•'•• l 8...,. S2.2:> Hr. 979-39T.t . 1 N e NEWPORT, e 833 Dove r Dr., N ... I -''• or 1~ sc oo ,oun '"" ·gJ ------OVERLCX::h: or Sing r ee-BEACt-1 642-3870 :?irl 11•:inted b" g 1.n n in~ Varied 'hr!t. No stndenls'. Jones Tire Service rtle Oprs tn se1.,. Jr. 1 I 111iri-J11n" ff'r enr!ierl to A!>ply in person on l\1on. Rrq1u1·cs in1mediatcly. E:.:per , Sportsw('ar. fl'\ced 3 F.xpcrl \l)\!1:\'L'iTR,\TOP.. . Jlonit' hab~·~it 2 children, 6 &. 4, for 1'1ay 22nd bhvn 10 & 3 at Tire Servicemen I Call for appt j:i7-J740. {h111•·rs A~SOC'inl 1on. Oran'!r ll•r ~un•TP11r. l'r.-. from 7:1:i FOTOMAT Retail Sa lesme n ---OVERSEAS __ _ r 11\•n11 rtl'sponsi blr 101·1 ~\l lo :::~tP;\l.JMdo"":'F_'::· 201 E . J71h St., C.i\1. S.'ll & Comm. Co. Paid &nr-t.iOREJO'BS THANPEOPLE nr!!Anizini: .~· L'CH>l'din11.1in~ ! ·"mt' f'\P<, oo, i esir"" -----fits Ap p!v in person. :!049 · I I ·1· , :'-''l~T ha1e O\\n transporta· FREE-LANCE \VRITF:R for H··;;boc B.lvd .. Co'"ta !\1esa. All skills & professions I r r I" r r ;i .1101111 ;.u· \VI 1r~.1 I I • • e Jl;ol;e• , .. ,.,. e '·11••r 1'"" ~-clf'si re to J!'h'e the I rave I p u b i r a t on, --• -----,... • v "' " ....., ,_ s u prrvis1ng m11.1nten~nte chiJ,!rrn "''"' undivided Ill· \\'rl!f'. Jn,vrr. Rox 707, . JUNF. 0.PEN. ING CXPf'TISl"!I • Tax bPnrfits mr'racts .~ adn11ni•lt~·1ri.. ., T k I t r .. Fr 'J'r:in.,portnflon tent ion al thP bf'ach or pnt'k Corona rlel tl-lar, Ca. 9262i a ·1~'! app 1ca ions o r ., Pr · · (i:lil,v bu!'ines~. ~lusl ha\·e -----""a 11 re s$ f's. l\'ait<'rs, CALL 541-43~5 111"1.•vious rxpPrir ncf' 0 1· or .1\'hf>rever odyou h& dthey FRY COOI.::-Exp'd., Fu~l bariendrr & c·or kt11.i l ScrviceCuarantced ~1,••. 1;00;;J b.'lck,,.round for rl11e1de to .~pe 1 f! ay. time. Short orrlcr. Apply 1n A .. ''· '-" ,.., l \Vailrrs~r~ Until Pmployment accPplcu ~an1(•. Pl<'aS•' Io r "' 11 rd \\"!"ite. IC'll in<!' us "" iltle person. Seaf;;ire Re !i 1 · · Quiel ·c .. ;,;non Reslaurant OVERSEAS SERVICES l'l'!'ll!nc including: !i>nlary l'f'· aboutd Y?Ursellf & the pay 1\fcFarlden ~-N.R. (tir J1J l-I SI. of the Grcrn 1617 E. 17th St S.A. £uite 3 ,1111remen1~ 10: C::lassific'\'.I you f'Slrt' Pu~ your a~r. pier) tx>rore J pm dally. 1 •01., ... Dao·· p0 ,·,,1. -,d & ho N I .... , .. " n PAl-NTIN, G oc "0 r n Pr a 1 Ad No. -112. Daily Pilo1. ;i,, re•-; ' P nt' o.. o: -Sf'-.-C!1~sifiPd Ad No. 420. Oa.ily FULL . or p/lime. t'Vire -KEYP-UNCHERS-mttintrn:in1·1· in r'X<'ha n;!e P.O. Box J;,t;O Co.•l:• ~lr~:i. P ilot Bos 15li0, Costa J\1esa, <'SIRtbhsh<'<l ..... ~u~l1•16r Brush Needt>d ln1n1edialely. All for ap1. 2J7fi Nr1~-port Blvd. <"11· 9262(i, Calif. 92620. cus omers. "",,....,. · __ _ shilli;. musl havP exper. ~1~it--97.·i:1. --ADVERTISING-:--('~o:-if PV TER 0-pff. GENERAL OFFICE xln'l 1•nrnini;:s. PASTF.-Up Artist, kno1~·!1'<1~e Crcnt opportunity for highly T,,pe/disc oriPn!ed. 2 yrs'. perm, position, 5 h r s a Ca ll Sue of prortuction. (TI4) 831-2131 01011 vated, hil?hly ski lled rxl}f'r aftn ~hilt. \Vrite: day for mature, capa-KELLY GIRL heh\'. \I ~rn & 12 pin . , secretary 10 "'ork into bro:id-bl I · '1 I -~-'b·i·t· f 1 ClassifiPd ad m. 411. cfo e w om a n • yping 83.>-44 PBX Operator for ans'>l·ering rr respons1 11 ie!'> at as· ·i p ·1 po Poe tJ60 k"ll 'd 642 52001 ~1001 Business Crntf'r Or p;ir:ed Ne\vp(lrt Beach nd-D~u Y 1 ot. . . .x . s I s req . • servicr. f ull limt' steady \"t"rtisini: a~rncy, Brnin5. CO!il:J. ~lrsa, Ca. 9'.!626. for appt. Ii-v int·____ "·ork, J3G-SS.lll. 1ni1iatiV<'. &. sh required. Coor.::.C)l;per-. -F-l l i m,.. cEN·L ore-,-;] f' r i,. 9 I LAJ)Y. rnHIUl"Prl, over ;~:1, POR-TRA_l_T __ S_T_U~O~l~O~ l Ca ll 833-1670 Salaty Ope:·n. Apply 23442 El C81'hiering. Fin£> I ad i es night \\"Ork. \\.'aitrcss. Apply ~'lies Person. p/time. Plea!i- .".\L_TE_R-,\T!ONS-. -p" r s 0 n Toro Rr! .. El Tom. clothing store. P£>rm. No f'\'f'nings. The !,la('(". 2000 anl j)('rsonnlity, sales ex per. nt"C'(lft( p:irt 1im£> lilon-Se t. C 0 Up LE:-;-----i\I a i n-phone call!!. Se£> Mgr, Back \V. B11lbo::i , N1•1vpor1 Bi'Bf'h. helpful. !192-3331, ext. 283. !\'fust bP <'XP. in c\nlhing & tenenrr-assi~tant nianager Street. 2£l Fashion Island, LIVE·IN Housckpr / Baby-JO-I P!\I & 2-4 Pt-.1. 111,.118 \l'(':Jr. 673~7R2 I needed for large project ln N.B. sitter, S?.O "'"· Pool. niuch POSTAL C:lrrier!I. iJelh·,..r -------1 Costa Mf'sa. Painting & GTh'ERAL OFFICE: Plush morr. Call Suf', b<'forr 5. Ap t De velopment rep 11 i r hack g round office in Irvine nei'd!i a gi rl R33·14ll, ail 5, !'i1:2-8067. Supervisor neCf'~s:u}'. Sa I a ry + "'Ith your talents & huhhly ---LVN-P-Tli\11-: -- N.r.:. h:t!'f'il 11p1 d<·vl'IOfl('r "'' 11.partment. ?.lon-f<~ri, 9 to 4 personality. Chancr !o .'Id· &· 1• N Ad F!IA pmJ·1·r·ts thruout coun· ..,...~ ~~-~o"" · •. \pl'I'. 1irf;r~ 1 ('S .. ,,,,f.~"1.r;)o."pJ!), vnnce? To S-Uti. Call .)4S--30G1 your own area. Costa l\1r:i;a, Hunt R<"h. F11111 V l y . llousc11·i1·t.'s prefd. 53(1....(}.102. l'RflFE~SlONAL phone soli".'itor • Dana Point, San l!as opening for PART TIME LUNCHEON HOSTESS In Our Marina Room Apply in person l0·5 p.m. #2 f,ashion Isl., N.8, Equal opportuni!y employer ROBINSON'S e NEWPORT e BEACH I lai'I opening for SEAMSTRESS FITTER Full Tim• Apply in pcr;K)n 10·5 p.m. #2 Fashion Isl., N.B. Equa l opportunity t'mployer try re'((.~ supv 10 n111n11~c --Call Nancy f.1ay, J.IG--60:>:i apt. Drsign & ronstruction DEBURRER Coastal A~ency Ormcnte, C'lpisirano :i.rea. Sailmak•r, f /tim• LUHRS BOAT CO. activilif'!'> of numf'ro11s 11.r-2790 Harbor Bl nt Adam.~ ExJ)l'r. in hand & po1vrr tool deburring of precision me· ~·hanical o'Otnponenl ~. GIRL Friday, tu\I or part lime. Loan pkg exp prefer- red. "'rilf' Box 1R4j, Costa rhiterls & t-ontreeiors. Ar· chitf'rlurti l dl'i;ign & con.~lr. rx1> rC'Q'1I i.::ncr.vl~'!r of Fili\ SfM'i'1rirntions & pro· rl'flurr!' 'lt•1<;1rnhlr Po~1tion 9 Hr Day 1~'-''7'~'7• ~~~~-.,-,,,- rrq's 1rr1vt'! to i:upv 1~1 or '1.:i Hour Wenk H A N DY i\1 AN -p I /t!mt 20 projec·t~ in t"Onstr l.ong Profit Sharing maintenanct' & cuslodinl lernt growU1 J"lf:eol!al w/ v.•ork for ..Pvt IChoo1 OfBJ RP''::'M'S!'>i\'e, f'Xpanding ro. THE 962-3.l\3. ~ &ii di'pcndC'nt' on r-cp .. f HELP ! No1\' J.l1rinc ENGINE INSTALLERS l~:.:pe.rirnrrd Onl~ ADP1Y Bch"'ll .II &.· IJ.J :\~I ~Ion. lhru fr1. Only \Vfll'k in your O\vn home. 5(11 29th Slrrf'I, N.B. R<>~t <lea! In arl:'l. Phone si.146.i bchl'Cf'n 9:00 a.m. Salei; '"d 0000. I $200 WK DRAW! -Real Estate Career Cart't'r Orporlunily Nr\v nr exper1cnwl, join the l 11du~triat r.hrmicn.l~ &. pro· Company lhnrs gro11·inp:. II tf'C'tlvt:" roa1i11i:. Industrial, you rlo not h:lve a licensr, marine & architccturnl ap· check on our phcaticinis. Son1e t>nles exper. S49 Al5LO V~·t• & roi·cnt aradl. Checnlcal Assor. of Cnlif. 11bilHy & prrfor1nanf'r. Srnd 1 . 1149 \r, 1Rth s1 . 1,.8umr 1fl Cllls~lfiNi ;1d no. J C CARTER CO l>1uBt be over 21, Apply In Costa l\1i'!.la I Re al Esta te 832-44~2 -~SA"°'L~ESME.~N--.~,1 ,.;0 D:illy Pilnt, P. O. • • • peraon. IUIO S. Bristol, lice n sing Cour se .Mi N('('(f men who are ready to Bo\ 1 ~!60. Costn 1'11rAA. C;i .. 6Tl \V, l71h SL, Col!ta MeBa Santa Ana. i\f A INT EN F: NC E n1an-1 Full salc-s trnining pnr.:ram learn the car bui;ines8 M<l !r.?r:26. 541-342:1 1-IOSTESS & WAITRESS re11re1t or ~('mi /r.•lirrd. -no ~'O.~I. Mnnngf'menl op-aN' wlllln~ lo irain. 'l\1usl APART~fENT 111 a-n 11 ~er . Equtll Oripor'lunlly Employer Experi~~ ovtr 21. $100 per wk. Some jonitorial portuni!u:!I. A!lk fo~ J\lrs. I hn,•c ~ood J>l'n;QIUl.lity, be • Apply m pel'!IOO. "°'""' ck >lu•t I... in ........ 1 Jone"' for lnfbrmn11on at F.xp, rull rlirirr:c n1ana.11:tr ""O · ' " ,.. • """" 812.55$1 inle1-e11h'd in a future, dress for Ill~•' proJl"C1 ln C~IA OF:1'10NSTP.ATORS -cpllll open. Lov•• Bar B Que. heallh. 6-12-90061ft ti pnl. T b n R I \\'Pll.' salesmindcd. Benefits: Jl.fc~n . S:tlarv + 11pnrlmf!nl. (lk, PIT. gd enrn., no exp Bmokhunl Ir Ada.ms. j\tALE. a1tr 18 .ur ovtr ar e ea tors Denio., fl'OUP Ins.. high 1\1on -~·r1, !'I to 4. 1 llf'C, \Vlll,.train. 96S-OCl6.1 4-7 HOSTESS & Wa.ltress. Apply "'flnttd for lhculf1' duties. ~ commissions. Unlimited in-:!llfl"1:N~O pm. jg pe.n;on, Hen r Y, fl Appl)' t'lt 51.h SL. 1·1.B. sf'! 7 i'tel\J 1<:ii1a1c Snle~ ('()Tl'lr. Apply in . Ptf'!llOn, AP1'~~1ANAGERS . Xlnl ~ DENTAL c hl\\r tide aut. Restaurant. 2122 S. E. pm. LARWIN REAL TY UN IV ERS t T •f OW~ pnrt11n1ty. for t sprr. {'t)ltple v.•11.nh!d, llUr,tical cxper, den· Bristol, S.J\. R••stlle Div. of l.nrwin Co. J\.10Bll.F:, 2850 1t11rhor Blvd .. w\!l lf\o: tn v.1.rk. No chlld~n tnl or n1edlcal, de:Airable 1fouiewive1! U&e Jeitiu.re hrs. TIME FOR 2l562 Brooil.huri;t Av., ll.E. Cot.la !'11e11.'l, or pc1$ &12-.1645. b\11 f'Klll'ntial. Apply In to supplement lnromP. Sin. (?l-1) ~-44()!) / 12131 002·3211 -SALESMAN QUICK CASU OPPORTUNITY for two lull ~<:EMllLY Trninct'S; ptrt0n. 400 Ntwport ~ntfn' investment brings aenerooM · l'"l time, r~xl)l-rlcncf'd RMI E'· No t'Xp. f\('(". Bui tnw;I hll\'f' Or. Nn. 306 N.B. or call romniiulon!I Ir entltit1 )"(Ml to •. . THROUGH A l;•tf' -'Ult.!lmt"n, BelltT lhan •OO<I ~ro'•hl & llnj?CC d<<· &J.J.-OGl!l. to ft'l?e traioiog. 64.'l-0852. "' ... ,, ~ 11vt'ro.gt ron11ni~iiion, 1-om· turily. Apply lo ""'"'" DENTAL R""P" budoeu HOUSEKEEPER I cook I DAILY PILOT pt;tty p•id m.ioe me<ll<Ol. bttwn 9 11.m It 3 1un. 2'lfi5 So. txPtr requlrtd. Dental or ald for tnvalkl mother I: Trt!mcndou.11 oppty, for m3n. G~nd. s.A. mediclJ CJ:ptt dffirable .,n. LiVf out, 5 day wk. WANT AD agcment \Ve have IOmC· lltvt aomclhu'I£ )'<lU want ro but oot t"Mf:':ntlal. Apply In UvP cul, S dfly "1'. thing dillerc:nl. ll T Oa.-~lflert 11d11 do It J>('rt0n. 400 Newport C~tcr Sl'.Xlfmo. CAIJ 846-78&1 1ftcr 642·56 78 Drop in •nd !Alk 11 nvM", ...i:, . u ll NOW 6'2-0673. De .. N:!'· ol coll ~ ' pm. • r ~ f',ood Potrntlal l'nll Mrs. Schmidl \\'~STCLIF1'" Penonrwl A.11:ency 3.)'3 Westcllff Dr •• NB MS.2nD . 1"11111 ~irollg .vt ju11i a phone f'All ltWftY • ~78 * l'r~-daily bus tr1.i'nspot1a· lion for work in L.A. un1il move to Ne11·pOrt Sept. '72. ~1 llHST I ISllY S! c L A 5 5 I F D SA\'E f~ASH! 1 -l r-• • • DAIL V PILDl -IJ Buy a Border to Border Bargain Every cla .. sified want ad 1n the DAILY PI LOT dppears 1n every edi tion every day. That means your ad will be seen 1n papers delivered to ho rnes Mt d sold fr om newsracks from bo rd er to border all along the Orange Coast ..• a ll the way from Seal Beach to San Clemente You Get It All • • • Huntington Beacla Fountain Valley Costa Mesa Newport Beaclt Laguna Beacla • Irvi11e Sa•lclleback Smr Cleme11te Capistrano (Plus the daily newsrack edition J For One Price With A • I • I Classified Ad Phone 642-5678 YOU CAN CHARGE IT, TOO m II t • -. ,~· - it.I D~lY PILOT [ .____ ..... _, .. _ •. ~![II] I •aa '1 alp WonNd, M & F 710 Help Wentod. M & F 710 Help WenNd, M & F 710 Appllence1 S.am1tre11, f/tlme Ml 29th St!"fft, N .t\ SECRET ARIES E•rn Your Pay The Kelly Gld W•Y One T1m1:, Parr Timi'! Or. AU TI1,. Ttme Jutt Set _J(ef f'J gi,.f Th.en Pick Th,. Hour~. D11y•. Len£1b Of Employrnent That F111. \'our NC",.ds You'll \llnrk Fnr Us On Our Payroll ln Our Custom~~· Offices, \\re'll PIM A Work Sc:h~ull! Tn Suit Vn11 On~ Thal Is TallnrPd To '\'our Ab1hty Yoor Tim"" Yoor Transpnr!ation C..U Or VWt PUTFORM Comm'! Bank Exp. Des'd CENTINELA BANK NEWPORT BEACH R91ion•I Offict Call !.tr. E . fl.lanritlnca (714) 646-7121 . Eqe.al Oppor. Employer Secretary Union Bank Has t unique opp:lrtunity for Or11nce County Sall"!! Di- r,.rtor ~·ill intervie"' ef Grand Hotel. Suite •809. i F'rPt>dn1an \V11:y. Anahf'im r acros~ from Disn,.ylandl SATURDAY: QUICK CASH 11 :00 t .m. •nd 2:30 p.m. SUNDAY: THROUGH A 11 :00e.m.•nd2:30p.m. An Equal Opp!'lrlunity DAILY PILOT Pu! 11 hi~~~~::~ in ~ur W D "hu('kl'". Call Cl11.ssiliert ANT A I Ll"vis. srll tholl! baubll"~ lnr fi42-3671:, COAST'S leading \ F'ATHER'S DAY. &rl. Sirr mnnc. Orthn Kine:. Lk 1'111. Sl2.i. Ret11il Sl2'>. 7fl'l .Ja rnr.c., CM. Apt R 12-' Sun. suilr, II' deNJr. llOfll. rnrk- fail !hi I.; l11mr thl. Xlnt rnlld. s:ni. 96.1·:1~22. ·. l!§J I - ' ]~ l ____ -_ _,][§J r l~ ... _"'·-~l~l ;;;f ;;;M-~~i 126 Pianos/Organ• 126 112 Mlacellaneou1 Ill Pianos/Organs , _______ _ * HIGHEST CASH PAID * SfERFX>S 1972 Gt>rrard "QuipP"d with lull 1tzt prot••t1 l on11.I 'h ange>r , AM/t'MtMPX * Clearance Sale'* f'f'N'i\'l"r, I e 11 It d ll!t aui;JM'nlllion 11Pf'11ken, tllJJP. rleck Ii: M11.dphone plug in jark.'1. Wu left uocla1mt'd. Br11url 11ew in box t. gu11r1111tttd. Origin11ll.v pri"" f'd 11.t S279.9.'). T11ke QV,.r 1or $00 ca!lh or ttmall 1J11yn1t"ntA. I." y II "'II y °"Pllrtmenl. 714/8.ll\-WJL Of nvl"r Jtll')('kl"li !r$1rlt0-1n,1;, e ORGANS e OrMa OinNI L,nwn>y Holiday Ralrh1:1 n Dix I lan1rMnd M.1 S14!1 I"" COAST MUSIC r,..r ynur 1,i3M: Si:u.nr11-0in· 110lt.,·U prljtht.'1-r. r111 ntl.i;, li42·2'i-"ifi ij~.,~. ~117AM=M·Oso-_-r~.-,,~..,-,-.-.;'1 Jtr1ni;: mi~~. S1 .~. 25 prrl11li w Lr.~11,.. $1.495 , r'ONN ThP11 t,.r. Sl,l4!l H<immnnrl (JlnMIH. Tllnl\1AS' fttll •"fln!l. S I .~ 25 f)Pflal11 lrnni $1 ,li!l~ \\'UP.l. plll v~ 11 .. mn. Sl ,144 • 64~9 * -~---rr11 in to ht' thin .. ' . F' UC H ~TAS-F"F.:RNS-MfSC, 50 largf' can-SOr--Sl. 291 FM 23rd Sh"f'f'I. Crn;fa Ml"AA • I 120 I ~('n'f'fi you 11·f'll It pm\'idl'11 hQuN: nf pl~1111url!, fl UN!:! On nn wAlk, !o 1060 Gl,.nn- r yr"" St ., LffR'UnA 8,.arh. No i:l.11~-wh11IM>l"V~r. ll<'Cf'p!e:rl. 124 2-rRIOEN rll"<'. nln1l11 tnra Sf,O. P11. 1.rrlrtf!'n 10 kf';.i ~"· Arlrl mllchi"'" SIOO. 'AA Al'fdo.x hookk ,.f'p l nr mitchltlf' & IAbli-. Coil SIJOO, !111!11 s.~. &4>-747'l. IBM bt<:Uttri ~ltf'T'. mortflrn type tfyll!. U!W!d 1 monlh -5'48-l414 STEEL traY ntfice ~k • ~'fcilfl!r. lit" • ro" ~ eonn .. s10. 67>JJJR. 126 • PIANOS • , 1 f\u p1ann~. Nn ahOrt eu11,, C11.bll" Buni;:-aln" S:'·~ I s:~qg R11ld"'·in m11kf' Spin~! S49:1 <Xll 'l,0 1.fUSIC CO. \V,.tlf'r Cnn~l"' S]971 1()fj Nn. ~ai n. S' A, C.ranrl• rrom $69.'i ~i-llAAl * • Sinr,.. 1~11 K1mhall J-'r. prov. ----------1 $1.f!l~ RAl.OYllN Spil'lr'1 p 1a11n . Granrl R11nk TPnll-- 1·rarlP!1 \4/,.lrnm,. ' '· 1 hr11!l!l 1n!llrlf'. w11l111.11 finiM, I ~Int rood~. 496-27(1. COAST MUSIC r Store, R:tst•ur•nt, B•r 132 A. CONVfNl£Hf ~PPINC AND S£WtNG CU1ot: FOii THE CAL ON THE CO. lfb;;t)(i;; For •n ad in Wom•n'• World C•ll M•ry Beth 642·5671, ext 330 Croc:het Charm 7451 . F:a ... y, thrifty tn mi.kl" - arl<I-a ~"' nll'M'IE"rn tm1l'h. i Gi\'e 11 Wrnnn\ rharm with c.rilip ~prP11rl 11Jlr! rur· t11 in-CJ"O('hf'tl'rl ol 14" s1rips in p1nf'apple d""i211, lrhf'll", mflAA. Pat. 7~1 : cmchPI d iN'ClioM, use rolton. SF:VENTY·f1l't: 1·t:NT!il for ~arh pa!1rirn -11tfrt 2:'i rPnt~ tor Paf'h p11l1rrn lnr Air M11il -'!00 Siwri11l Hanr!l- in~: nthPrwise thirrl-ch1.c..c d,.livrry will lllkf' thrrP "''""k' or n1orl!. Send tn A!irr flmnk' thP DAn~Y Pll..OT, IO:'i, Nrrdlrrr11fl Dep1., lklx 16.1, Old ChPl~r11 I !'t11linn. NP\V Yn!'k, N.Y. J{)Oll. rrint S11rnP. AttrlN"''· Zlr. r Allt't n Sumlw:r. N E F: DJ~EC RA FT'72'. Crnrhr!. knit , etc. f'r,,,. di!'l'('tiOnll. :ilr .NF.\\'! lrullanl ;\lt1rr11ntr. &~ii', f;irw;y knnll'I. !)At· trrn11. SJ. I 1:.t...-:r Ari 11t R a I r p \ 11 ) f'rfW'hf'f -owr l6 dt'liEru! fn make. SI. ln!!lllnl ~hl!I lf'am hy pit-ru~~! 11. Otmptf'ff' ln!lfanf tllrt ftnnk • m<lT'I! rh11n HJ1 glrt.l, -.$1 . Clomplete· Alrh•" ftMlt - 11. II ,fllf,Y Ru.a ~11 -:.()r. ~-I'll 1:1 Prise Af(han11. 50<'. M11111"nm Qu lU J\nnk I - Exactly Ri9ht! \ ~I j ~I . I , • ' • ' ' ' " 11 0 F:XACTl.Y !he r r i B p' nl"lllly nonrh11lant outf1! Yl'ltl want r\'ery rl11 y nf 11\Jmmf'r! Nipfl"rl """i"'I jarkl"t rtnuhl'-11 lhr "gn" pnwer ol pri~~ t:ICP~~. rnntrrl P11ttrrn !IW: NF:W Mt~sr~· SizP• f'l. 10, 12, 14. Iii. Ill. Si1.r 12 !hu!ll Ml rlrr~~ takf'li 2 l/R yarf111 fiO. lrl('h. ~Jo~\'J:NTl'·f''l\'11: f";t;NTI' ffJI' r111'h p11Hrrn -atlrl 2!i t·rnt.• fnr r11rh p11tetrn fnr Air Mall 1111rl SpN-1111 1!11nrll· ir1i:; nthrrwi~I' thin1-rl11s!l rlf>llvrry .,., ill litk.! thrl"f' wrrk• nr nmrP, S4>rnf tn ~f11ri11n ~1 ... r11n, the r>ATL Y PH.O'r, 4~2. P11!1crn Drpt., Zt2 "r,.~t l~lh SI., N,..,.,. Ynrk, N.Y. 10011. Prml SA~rt:. AODRt:.."'-~ w i J h. 7.rr. ~17.t: and ~TVJ.p; NllMRl>;R. SF:F. MORF: Sf'lrln it ..A.,l\lfllll lltlr! rhoo,_I! Onl" pAlll'rn fN>f' fl'l'Jm new Sprln1t-!-\!Jn1mflr Clt11klt. AU till>f'~ Only 50r . INSTANT Sf:WINr. BOOK ,_,.,..., 101'.h•Y, Wr1r lnl'!Wlrrew. 11. INSTANT t'ASHION SOOK llundM't111 e I faAllinn l.11rlJ1. ST. 5:;u.,. fnr Tnday'• 1Jvh1c -De1 i9ner1 Summer ts l><Au!Uul ..,t&n• 50<:. Sa pie Salo I NSTANT FASHION JSAT & SUNM _ 1 BOOK -tlul"ll1~1 o f ~ •Y '""2 r lo bb 10 m1n~pm iL\h " c · SI. 21111 fir M~rlne Ave Sen nr;; (Ill'! 81Uff. Blry the "" r~11nd ""' •tull ······r··· ti n , . ~h. '· Ing w. '"' inJ! ing '•Y •• " ..... ~ -..... ·--- Otll V PILOT iJi [ ;.,. "You J[I .__I __ ... __ ;;;.JlEJ~~ [ ...::0i:.¢w 101 11•-' j[ij l.__r ____ ~j[iJ=rli '. I 3 Lines, 2 T imes, $2.00 ·---··- 0og __ • _______ as._ _B_o•..,''"'',,.· _R_•_n1.,.1_c_h_•_,.._·r_t01_1c_•_rnoe""'_,_'..,•.,.s._1_,e_f.,.R_e_nt_m_1T::--ro-:-l:::l•.,.r°'s,::oT::-r-:o• ... •_•,..l ..._-Kl-1 Autot, Imported POODLP:·p11p. f'pm SAhnrin -.-_--_ 970Autos,. Imported 970 Autos, tmPorlpd 970 Autos, Im por ted 970 "'"'' ""'"" h<1m• Wid>llv "u RE B n ED G"m'" II Av E 8 0 A T-W 1 t. L CAMPER COMBO • ARISTOCRATS aHt'tl. &ts..-0355 6. 5 -• 14 4 -Shnrthll lr. no PAPf'r'l. s~. !MVEi:rulsln 'T2 Villa (.~rande Tnn•f'l1f' • NEW •• ':>.!.rsu.~ .. , HONDAS GALORE• Arnie. '1 1 x "rt L 11 b • G" rm • n S'.port ti&hln& JC Cabover camper, 1lef'p11 4, Al l u •v-•TU\ 1 ~ • . shnnMir puJM!, Sin. GrP11t I ~!Wltl &44-mt !IO M"Ytta u1Mt 1195 .It up TEST DRIVE THE ~11XEO Pt.IPPlf'S, In l'flt"rl . \l.ilh kirhi & for htltf. I B <-II -. 11!n1•t , rf'fr-r, 1111.i nle1.~ 11r rl. \YOiisHA.M TRATl..ER SALES NEW • HONDA hom~. 6 ll'ks old. full~ !l62-t792. a.ts, -7117 ovrrhrad <'Ahlnf'l11, ui>ii;:h~ %709 W 17th S COUPEI "'"'anM . Goorf "' 1 k i rt 11 • NOvicF: Cla!~f'll _all br~s Ml!ST 'I'll -will """"Pl •ny ~~1~hll, ;;;,:~~~ ::~~~,~~ Se.11ta Ana ' (714)';~~2595 1' • · 64&-fil ?'l. N"'w 11tart, M11n. M11 y 1~., rPll :L ort'f'r. 2$' f~nt1eawir, powrr itf'f'rina;, P"l"'"'t \VEEKEND &l"! 17' v.•ilh KITTENS: l t'11ff' or.:1ng" 1:J() pm ,\-V.'f'd , Mlly \7 ~ 1Mt1rrl V< f'Str1111 . B11rk'lw hn1k"ll, rarfl(I. 11,.lux" l"llh, ln11Pt, !lif'tp!I ii 11~. \~' m11I"~. rt manx, l ·y,·/nn r m. \111r1incN!!ll KPnn~I~. ll•inr he11, knnl m"tPr, h,..!111. Mllvy rtuiy •Prini;:ll, !hl')rk3. 11IHpa fi Sll~. M,.. ~a t11il. 67:\-800.1. ~fi-/"IAA!I. rac1n11: hlk11, ~ matn11, l ·Jih1. , •5763561• •II this for only CAmpttr S11lf'11. ~"lfi H11orbor, 6 YF.AR old !. a b r I rl I\ r LARRADOn R" I re l v f' r ' Gf'M8. Splnnllkl'r .l ...... r. S4295 {'()!ll,11 i\tl'llJI 646-4002. Rl'fTil"vf'r. tr111ntc1 for hun-AKC, t'f't:11. qut.lity tiurpie!I. Boat immac. Grt11r lan11!y 16' Arilllnt'rat LAl'lfl Ct1m· !tllg. 642-i:'i24 ,.v,.1 ____ I \11.tl 557-6219 Alt J pm. Hll\'f' rlay llR1lor, r11oring, 67~0961, _,.. 111.x I !ir . m11.nd,.r prrl,.rl m nd, tlf'cl. KITTENS hon~broktn h'tt P.hnrs. iZt.li !ll!6-6m. BILL BARRY hrk1t, S1100. fi46..:l7M. to 11 ..........t hnmf'. ' f)(i II -•i· I 130' YA"'L "NiN!" S2,:'iXJ. 17' , e;.,..,... £ 111.nn 1111.r A"ll~n11 . T . rl •~ ll' ~ Sh11111t11. 1:r SJC. \-)()....0"2~ L' T • 1• $1 t't!Jlln ~pef,' nnllt. Ponti'•-GMC Cam \\' I ~ 'I , no " ~.1 rry 11"11. : ,, pm.. ~r !"f'n~ulfl wftrtr J."100. 17, C11.t ... • per 1 ll lf'r, 1..,.,1 11, 101 f'I, 5 UTILF. kiltPns net'd gnot1 ti~~ Pl'f tP<:~on. Mar11nrr,.st It. trlr. Makt-nftf'r 20, Vlk-Fiat S79!i. !14~9ft.')4 homf's, malr~ l fem.ales . i l..:f'11nrt11. ~&-roAA. in~ "Sharp'' $1,JOO. ~&-4990 •1111 si . "' S.A. f \1•v.) Auto Serv iee:-P~.-,~,-.~,.=, 64ft-l098 11rt .1 pm. j SRF.t.OR GP-rm11.r. Shephl"'t'rl I "'trkrl,.,·~. 2000 F., Jar S1 .. San1,..· An11 FREE F'Pm.1tle Collie tn J{ennPI h<'I.~ hro;i utilul pu ps 12' p11·~r ,.,.., t·w / rrlt·Rlu $11-lOOO fr1~nrlly homr hy ni. Norclir. Terms. 1 t . 1 . . · '&'I ~·nrc1 251'1 ~ T Truck . . ":17-4~11 I Ill/\.~ ' ""'" f'f'S r I g II: I n t'' ffl.1 • (" bo V.' . S47-2.l!l1 l _·'-· · honm i·11.na. ,..tr. ~hock w 1 11 . 1·f'r "'1lw11.v'1 FREE Kill Pn!'-B to\ c k OREDIF>:NCF. Cl11~' let st,11rt :;;1ul.,, Pl'l'"f,,r1. Re11.t1 Hohie~. c~mPf'r unit. 4 -"~If. R/.H ftma)rA • 11. wk.~ Id \\"rrl ,\111.1• ZI. in N.B. Jrvin,. $700. 64&-lllM. :'\Jnr rond. M,00) mi. S\995. ~47-4!l!IO o . 11rr~, Open lo 1111! tings 5 ! AUS.C\TE 111.·.wnrlri Ch111T1pi<'ln • MIWl.'.!Jf;. Goodyp11r fllf'n1~. 1111 111.f'X, D=cA~R7L~IN~G=--,m-callhlk~. "'hi I inn J. ,,_ f}lrlrr 546-49'2'1 'fRAVELODGF: • .'.! mAlll<t . 6~ F'ORn ·~T Ca.mPf'r i<11v price11. U.S. lutly m11111:11, H &56 Spl'ri11I. In rni'~. 10' C11.Nlvt>r ,. A · -frm11!t pup_p~·. ~ mn, ha~ ,1111 I orses 111'1 .i:r11r, 0 s11il11 .. trl. $2000. '-r11gt>r m.-rl!'llll rrnm C11mprr, rf'l'rig, hf-Alrr I. Sl:i ~:i II" •· 1'4 = shoill. 962-.l lO-I , l' ,10 ,1 k A !'ti N " 111. lllTl\"lf\R: snnn. L ,, ~.0 .,084 · .... IJ"1',.f'r.~ ,, ... , pr. . ) ". ' · "llC'. . PPY 1 y. 11ni:rr Wrl,;h fi.4~. ""11"· .... ..-.,.., • 14" lnrly mag11 lor Pintn It UNIVERSITY OLOS,MOBILE -GMC TRUCKS.HONDA 2150 HARBOR, COST 11 MESA -540-9640 "W• Are Newer S.tltRM Uittll Y eu ,1.,." 970 7 Mn s hr1tUL m11rkN\ s;,oo. firm. ll.unn1ng brt>rl. I Cycles, B lltes, Vf'gll. S.S. '1poke -rinln Trucks 962 Autos, Imported GtrmAn Sh~phrrtl , fl'malf", ~9---0f;l f! J.1' CAI-Cat fully f'uipPM'.I; f""' t.. \' 1 ---------- 1 r. ri Scooters u *'It" o' iTl11rf tirf'.( + '65 Docl l T ALFA RO .. EO II l sh<ll~. &i2~ <"'R 1 •-1 "'-• n n """ P". s 4 o o . "'hf'.-111. Alt "''"'' t-m 9e V4. on "" ----. I r'' '*'":;;" or ...... I': ,,,.y PhonP-557-751.C 11ft S m "' PURERREl"I Siam"~" fern.J.lt M11rr. i:ood jumptor ptTlllPtt!. P 1970 llnnd11..CR 750, 2400 mi. S22.50, 1950 Nf'wport, Co1111 I V-~, Aulnm11.rfr 1r11 11.~ .• rarho ---__,.,,........._ · 1o.·kflii y~. ,. · '71 ALFA & ~ Su1mf'sP K1fll"n!I. 1 "45-40.1.lt. ___ 11 1r1 ns:, lui;:.11;a.i::P r11rk. r-.tf'AA, f.45-.15.'t4 , 1 11.nd hl'lillrr. 1S<Ui2fi.11, * * 9AA--2:124 I J:l' f' AT A~ A rt AN <'U,.rnn1 PXhllll!tl, 11175, 1!170 Cadilla~artit 1959 I $1199 -K~l'~l"~!E~.N~'~S---0~,,.-R!ark & Ot'W! 1 f1hrri;:l11.~!f tull f'flVPr. Hnnda.{:O 11;., 20.\1 n1i, pt"rf T · 1 1 CLEARANCE l•gec 642-411,, 'l ! -3 8 ''. tl -.......... I[·* I ~t;:::.';· •xt"" t..iil"I' .... '°' • """'".'.' Im. ;.1&-879.S. ";;:.~;· nn Mike McCarthy * -l"V".~· -. MarlM C-quipmef!t . IC.. 110 ·""" · 71 J.TONnA-C L lOO. F.'ns: Air Cnnrlltionin11: Unll 210 yr. ('(INl. hrn l'.nrki\('IOO 2fi' R ... ctn)'.: Sloop, Nf'f'rl1t 11. ju.~r o/h1111\rrl hy Jfnnrla 12'12 Sn. ll.n~"' ~f. SAnt ... An,q Rtcreational Vehicle SALE * rl I hnmf' 111 Mml'cH\.o'1 priv11.lf' dr11\rr. fi.fako> nrrrr. !-m56 542-ll"» Center "'ho OH "' " rami Y &. MIAA General -mvP. CA.II ~7:t'i6. 71AI' rifwk. in tr11d" for u~. Cl\H A~!rE"'', Uni\·f'r1ity Park, C''OR . ~F:Afl! & The 1972 '~ Are H0e rel l.Jlril'!tl !V\Viflg!I. Ev.-r On All J\-1nrlf'I~! Thi~ is the PART Cnlli1"/~hf'ph4'rri pup. SCRAM LETS ;:1 p111. f.4~~!Wl. Trv inP. ll l§J 11!14-l:t1h MrF'AOf)EN p~·. IPmlll" frff! to I'.:~ • ' TARTAN, inM, 5 ~1t il11. l~l'i lrn1i1111 71 ChnpJlf'r. O mi. AulwlwMt f' n, :'!:>1-:.!4;,ll hOmf'. ~~9771!1. ANSWERS '1'!H'~ .. l'QPhL ..... ktint rnrlf'trr, ::::,n.11;, !fn'J nn nu t'llg. ~111;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~·~-;;~ --,6-5 lnt'I-.. Scout--\\'E"f'kf'nrl To Buy Yetl!r Nt1\I ;i c-n ... rpt ... 1r., purch lgr .,.,.~, Ira"" rnr 11fl'p vsn AUil ,qt ; Fre• Kitten5-6 Wka. twm1 , S9;,oo. 491-7723. 1:-.lnt mr111 1 ~>4&-4Hi.1. G I o ~, 'l'' . . eneral 950 'H'u'""'lfT1 rl1N"'c'''T'o"N1"B"'E.,A. c1'H"· c AST ""\I ""' .... ·~' Rirrric -rnkNf -1"h,11ki -14' f'lhPl;:l11~, '' D" rt'•, 72 Su7.uk1 .l\av;:rgf'. 4'll) mi. Jt---------- 15 C'll. fl. Drep fr.,,.,,,., F'r<•P Pot1ro -CliECJ< ROOK rt ... rron !la il. Rr rl /,, ~:hile. mn11. Cost $16oo, ull $700. NOTTCE, are ybu h11 ving I <n anyn"' whn "'""ii. 610 Cyni"I h"'Mnrl' ··1 •·•nl Sl'll '4"11'8, 64>-1968 "" 5411-7471. cr•dil pmbl•n" !or lock pt CHRYSLER·PLYUQUTH I IMP.ORTS · I Tustin. NR 5411-~.¥.l:'i. In lh11nk ynu lron1 '"" tv.nnm " 1o.•k11d!t. HONDA (1,.l:.7 K.1, Onr r r • t'I 1 t, re j>O!l~f'~llion~. m. Rlark PtmAlf' kiltPn nf niy f'llF:CK AMI-:." ROAT rARTNF.R NJ.:'F:OF:n 'N'tw r. :\SO"I n1i. l.1kr llE'\I. rl\vnrrPr;'!' I c"n itl'I )nu 1 ll'k5> oJri, In good hnme. 14' Gl..AsPAR. fibt.rgl11.s~. EriCS(l!f .'l')' I~. hilly equip-coorl. $.17:1. ll.l8-212fl. hnA~ nn a .U!!rd car. Jf,66\ Be11ch Rtvtl., JI.A, 1000-1200 \V, rarilir C.~1 H11')'. • " h4:...02'1tl • "*'"·ly pa \ntrrl. \\'nvt.~hifllrl , Jlf"'l, rRN" It rrui!l.e. Diese.I ·n 1, rf'ntnn .175 fi.fX. Imml'.c. ~mec '1'1 Y9 11"'Y 9un7, but W*' !'140--5164 e 1142-06.11 NPwpnrl Rf'Arh Li l 11 f.·l:l-0-100 1 -!1.IPl'rtna 81 c11hlf'11. Only rnginr. 67:\.-0497 '"'· II lo • <t.ty~ 11 -F'RF.'E killl'~. tn>P tfnJ.•. Extr.11~. l)p.J>f'nrh1hlr. k ~ 1 ..... ~~-9 ·12 Rl.AZ"R ,~ v • ,,,,_ Alf• Romeo Sl9:i. 673-0:\.1.i S,11t le Sun 'Iii e 67,'291• w"'-' ""'"' l"r ........ ....-..... i. · .r, ' . ·~' . ' " fr,.,. wnr'N'i. :n172 Rirch ~1.. RA LBOA al w/tnlil~r. ,,,_ trAnl!\ 4 v.-ht fir, Air mnfi, 5'.n1~ Ana H!:l!I. :..t~7.Q79. 1 noon. G,..0011. othf'r oritinn~. '69 Yamaha 1~ CC $.Vl. Dune Buggies •56 r/h, 1·M 1o.·/wht 1·r mnl'llhlP ADORABLE, ril11.yru1 ki11;;M 1 ~'i hfort:I""'·"-lri-hull. ""IV 71 ....... 96-fi."12'!1 5411<1107 '71 0 B tofl. Spit!? rlf'Vf'r brrn rl11wn. 7 v.·k~ 11lrl--box tniirlNI hlark. fflllrl ., gr,.111 r11r fi~h k 11ki. COLUMBIA 21> 11 ft fi p111. une uggy Ln mi'i;. Olo.•nf'r mu~t ""I\, il""Y anrl 1o.t1 ill' !Yl!'l---0524 . S-19!1. MR-ll'.l7:t 11.lr 4. fi.1ark JI ~luxl". =--=c-~~1 will t11ke ]tl~.(. f'\•1 pry. '70 Mnnfl.11, :t'JI) CR v.·ith Rig ""iinP, new lnp, run 1·11r. 67 .. •:t5.'i ( ht1 and Suppliet llH Pets, Gener•I ISO BANTAf!.t l'hick!I, ~II rotors $1. "11. DUCKS ' ('.0.C\- LTNG~ 2612 ~. F.. MP~" nr. c.,, 1s2 SJ AME SE Stalpolnt $10. n. C&Jl 11 fter 64&-?7JIT. COMrl.F.TE YACHT MATNT. ~7.~7 L-1 , • , suv-. .. _ .,. · • . =~--~-~~~~I .,.. mf' rac , ,,,.., or U'QI Tak,. trade nr 1m1ll &wn J~ull f'IP.-'lnini:. 50c pPr fl. 21\' Slfl()p, Atnmir 4 irrhrrl . oNf'r. !i.)7-AA'\fi. u·ill fin,qnr,. Pvl Pt 1q4:i. Monthly !"ll!P.11, 67>-8772 XI 1 h SI 4 N -y .. ." i; llPf'. ·."'Pit • · "W 'AA Rutt11m-EI Rantliln ?;00, ETP1. 546-117:\6 11.ll 10 11.m. WANTEO: Rnwiosi: Mry, !il.l1.tl11. Rkr. S\.1()1'). fi7:i-.ll990. xl nt l'l'lnrl, nu motor. S625. 494-Mll. ritwo1'11;l11!il.~. 12' tn 16 '. 20· Vi kin.it Slmp. C.11hio, ~11-1610 1 'o~.=s-. ~,=,-. -M-.-,-,-ty-,.-.-. -X-1-.N-T 1!H-50!IO or 5.16-!!AAS. hr11u1 -nn 11~ 4•• ~,. 1• ~.. " ~. ,......4'11 '68 Triumph 500, Cu,.tom. CONO. Many xtr111. Pri/pty. Boats/Marine _lfi ·'>-l.1'\4. Ne•1· rngine . $750. Bf'~t nffP'r. &n-5522. Equi p . 904 CAL 7-2.f. :vlu.,I ul! lhi.'I * 64:l-4«72 • Ofr tlw <l\lne hua;gy _ 5 Ou!lvlarri 1notnr~. J.Ji,, hp, 2-."lhp. !-7hr. 1-!0hp frrtm S."..~S100. Alt likf> otw 327 \I,!, \\'il!lfln, Sr Nn. 29. IJ)RSl'F:R tr11ps hnlh r.f'w I. u~ + 11H othf'l' l!.rtflll. 64~2.190 !If '1~·5Zl.'), ~·ef'k. M11kf" off Pr. J:'llJ Honda in xln't rond. $170. 9'1MM pifiton!I, 74MM SPG -. -~-~kr. 64:l--022l C11.lt al!f'r 5::l0 PM, c111nk -brand ol'w -962-:1219 12 All'nllro~"' Sloop. Xlnr W:-2454. Trucks 961 ronrl., <'<Imp.It r r f i 1 1 e d U~F:o lll'11dcr for 750 flnnd11.1---------- v. /Mmplr "'111111· 644--042:.. Chrom" in gnnrt •h,.Pf'. 20.'13 • 6 7 Ford f.100 21 ' Vrnrurf' Golclt>rW>yf', ('.M. On TrRilPr, nt11ny >:Ira,.. ·i;g YamRhR l'.!'l Enclum Lon.it tw>d, V-~. 3-~JW"l'rl tr11n11- mi,11;~inn. radin, h t A I e r, {V44449 1. Auto leasing 964 Try our lf'ate l!!XJ>erf• ror S..Yina1 .. Satisfaction • Ser- vice. WE LEASE ALL POPULAR 1972 MAh:F..o;; AT COMPETJ. TIVF: RA'rES, CaH Malcolm Rtld fol' lurlho!>r df'la.il,. THEODORE ROBINS FORD ~ llarbot' Blvd. NO\\' ON DISPLAY SAies Parts Bo<l.v Shop COAST IMPORTS l 000.J200 W. Coast Ilv.·y. Ne1vport Beach 64:.!-040G AUSTIN AMERICA '68 Au111in Aml'ric11, r11dia.J11. Xlnl cood. CAii 96&-374~. Nf"rtl a "Pad"? Pia~"" ad! Call 642-56711 BMW \'1su 011r rn>u' llnmt: & ROY CARVER, Inc. ~4 ..:. ] 1th l'I. fl\StA 1\!~~,11 :Hi'-4441 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS BMW IMMEDIATE .DELIVERY ~F'F: l ~ AF>fll 'T O verseJi• De livery CRE VIER MOTORS :!(18 \\', ]:-t ~!. S~n!A BJS.3171 An. 970 W ....... p u! your ne me up :n li9ht1! If you'r11 a cu1tomar of our~. you C•n be 1ur• of " d•el 011 .t c .. r th11 t w itl gi"e you m ile, •nd mil111 of 1a.!i ,f11 c t ory pf!rform11 nc.f!. w.· .... b uilt our reput11 t ion oo plaa1in9 p11opl1 for ye•r1 •t S ill M 11~ey. '•4 VOLVO P1100$ \rvu1 c...,,.. I ft"'"'r ~· ... "'"' o• """~ ... ~,1~ l"l•fll'1 (OTo; .. 11 $1499 '69 TO YOTA (n,flno (,,. , ,,., Olo\ f"M V l~i!I. If ~lu•, 1"""'1 llVll~O ( 11'.0,0 t $999 '•I YW SfOAN LI. bl.,., •ul1> .fl! • 111lc• •n~· O*'f Ct<I oHorn IVWS37 l). $899 '71 ICAWAS,t,llfl )VI " ""Iv \OI• "'lrt ,, ~""'II' ~ ~I~~~ g;nr>•t1• S699 '6~ YW SIOAN ~•fl"fl""'"! '""'"!>')''"'"'" (•r ,.,. 11 . ~uy h 1 ~119•)1, $699 '71 TOYOTA. l•'ll'l (•V"@" noro:tm". •l•, W•rr ... """' r ... pl•c'" lfl tfll• O<!t (lloQOSW). ' $3699 All lew "'lleetJ•. f11lly •"•r•11tff4. Ju11 Like N•• 10°/o OH List P rice-Demonstrator Sale Choo1• Your Modl'l-Co1or-l,11lpfftlflt-To""' 3 STAf!.1ESF. rt1rPhriorl kil· tl'r'I.•. F'e:ma.lt!I. 6 V.'Pf'k!f old Sl5 "111rh. 979.2120. Boats, Power-Sl950. }o;vf'. 546.-~72 v.'/txtr1111. "F:XN-1 Cond. JIOAJE C11t. 14·. 2 !l.f't!I 11,11\1; 12."!0 &16-611.1 Drilly, Perfect condition v.oo1-~.~.,,07.Y-am-oh.,...-•~2'll=E=--"<l~u-m- 6<16·6722. $1399 Mike McCarthy Costa Mesa 642-{XIJ0 1 _~-'-~-~--~~-~~---~~~-~~.;...,-~~~~~- &54 YORKSHIRE TPrrit-r pup- ptt#. 4 m11I@'~. airM by 0-l. S..hy B!lincl1t. 497-1684 1.fl 6,Jll, STLK\' Ttrrif'r pnp1t, 4 mat""· ~nnt1, AKC. C11 ll afll'r 4 pm. R.~1149. * IRISH ~111'r Pu~ AKC, Ch,11,mp StN' .. ~upl'rb Jine:r, t;ho1o.·)J'.lf"I . ~291. AK!; ~IAll' F\;oi~~t houncl·ll v.11:.J • 11.ll 1hot11. 8f',11ut. S7j, 962-.11~1 . StL'cV~ER=-"""'-ccl-, -,-.,-P-PY- 1\1i1Jr, $20. 642-l~IA or :..1'~~:'1 ,.vr~. AKC ~al"'. Sih·Pr Tny Poo- dle:, 8 1o.·prk11 lllrf. S:.0. • R.'(()..-5AA'f * l-~G~e-rm_a_n Sheph-.-,~d,- 11.42-:11&1 -G~o7ld7e-n-·Retri'_e_vo-,-,­ AKC • 6.17-MR."I rRISH .~HPr pupit. Amr rir11on fif'lrf RPi. ~l~IP /ron1AIP'. Shnt!!. Rf'111~n11bl,. f.7'.\-(l(Jlti. FOR Sii.if' nr rl'lurn 11( lillrr· tuJl gmwn frm. St . Rrrn~rri. ~ "frhilrlrf'n . fi-12-446!'1. SHELTTES lmini11. CoJlif>ll f AKC rP~i,l rr,.n !l mn. m11I,. F'f'm. 1 m11lf'. ~9-M4". AKCnogi,lf'rrrl 9 mn. ma1P toy poorlll!'. f'..nin11: n\'f'r~r"' • belt t1ffpr. 1197-11.41 :.. ACK Silky T"rriPr fl!lfl' • M1.IP k ftm. $hn1V qu11hty. &#-~. tt2:i.11Yr. fr • Af'Gl-fAN "r~u-p•,-,~h-,n-1· pion 11lred. t :".1 i n • Schn1.uzP.r pup11. 64a--1200. PURE hrM ChlhnAhua male puppy. s~. 642-411111 or ;...'\.4-.Wt!i ,..,.,,, * * AOORARLF. nart\4'hunt1 pupPlfo,, 11 1o.·k11 nl<I, h~11Hhy. $3,'; f'Arh. ~f.-411:.1 . :ll' F'A IRLJNF:R: l'thclc:, 11-vn ~rf"\I.·, P11T'1:'hi1M"rl nu 'SR, 1 nnr. v.·"'ll m11.inr ., ~trn rl,11vi1111 v.·/nu 9' GIAs.~hnppf'r & 6 hp .Jr»in.c:on. Onr 1o.·ill ~ll rnr 1,.,.~ lh11n !i11t r .... vinii: munfTy. Bu~. 673-6760 Hm. :'14R-TI16 ---.====~ * 32' CHRIS CRAFT* 1~2. R.v 01o.·nPr. Sl ""Pll 6. Xrrsu inrl: &uto-piln1, nu1in, n1rtnnmAtir-hPAlf & mnrr. RrAI Mn\'f'r "'l h•:in Zl':l f'h,.1•11. J\-1u~t Srr! Be~I r1ffrr! R11.ck R11y. 64fi.flfl01. 22' Cu~tom Fitlf'rgl,11~.; Sport lillhl'r.. Ar11nrl ""'"' Cnmp11'11'1)' equipPf'li . Mu~! ,C\11,.rilif't • S9.lt"l\, OM~ Cost S1'2.00l. 646-fi.'\4( 20 ' 1.0, h11llt fnr 11N Rhnrf' fi~h in>t. in .,;..,..,,.r 1111 "lip .(I, R11y,ir!P Vilill.R". Npt Brh. f)p111i\.c nn hnP.f or ca.H M7i-2.\J4. $2.1~. ----------1.1' \\1half'r. l.1 hp. Jnhn.'Wln. i\.1nlrierl !frat~ Sh n c k tr11 ilrr. S1250. Rl .... :l150 or f;7.1.-(14f;7. 17' ROSTON \VhalPr 100 h.p. NP\I.' hnrtnm p11 int k wirin51, m111i.v .-:.:tr/I.(, m11kf' nlff'r. Art nr .Tim. li7~ tir St.11tl"r9lt, i/n. 150 hp l'.-11tr('. 11/s rarlio, 1np It sklf" rurtain•, llr. S.l,200. :.1.lt-Hi2ti. . Iii' GIR!'iA outholl.ri1, rnmpJ 1o.i lh 7;, hp J(Yhn!lfl'ln, top It ~irlf'. rurla.in11, h11it l,11nk, tip tr111ilf'r. XtrA,, 646-4656. 21· C11.b ln Cn1i.(¥'r, 4. ry1. fir~y. In v.•atF'I" Iv n1nnin!l. $11.'lO/ttftPr. *> 4 5 -1} I 5 8, fi46-19fill f'VMI /, u·knrl.~. 1;,· Birch Cr11(t rlnr11oply w/1- HP .Johol!fln, Tr11olle:r. $750. rh. 96,11-Qt'l<t .11r1 ;,. MU~ ,.,.11 Alllrirt 10· i'llnn &-14' trlr. Brl!h x!n! <:find. M1tkf' nfr. 51'!7-'i594. 1~· CAlifnrnl,11 : ink out M"rr rruiM"r, S.<i, w/Nlvf'r, trlr, 11fflfl f'~~h. 91\2-lfiOR, 19' PA clfi<' Cu!'ltnm CC, COCKER Pup~. AKC. OlAm· ,Jnhn!lftn 1:., h.1tif r11nk hr1cl, pkln llnr. hlk. 2 m"J~,., 1 hunk11, trlr. $Zti0. ~$'..~ Im. c,11 llSZ-""'· 1 _ 1 -=;;-,~~~=7.. -,..----:W' Olh!n CruiitPr ~Ip~ ~­ DEER t11~ f'h1h11111hu11 f'llP-1 F'ull~· e'lulp(l"rl . r:ikt. MV.'. pit,, 9 "·k• olrl. rr.;. 96~1?.ll All fi m ~101. '. p . I If:' Gl,11&pAr. 6.'\ hp Merrnry nib, 4 yni old, fully tquip. MMIJ~. ~'/tx1ra!I, r.x.vl "ntltl. LUDERS 16 lli' Sloop. Xlnl $500. 646-611.l R-'lciflg Rtcorrl, Xlnt S...ils, Truck C•nter ~8-0844 SCHTANWDI~~ 5 S~,F:EOI R'l'":_." J55.'il'l 8#11.rh B!vrl., -,,.,c-=...,-=-.,...----·I r •.. ·1 -r.Xf'(' N"lnv . W . C,11l-C,11f 12' ral,11marRn, LlKE NF:W. Sll:i. 673-71 ~ fl.94.1116 t.~tmi nstfC'r 1191_1141 v.·/~ail • little u11f'rl. Mobile Hom•• 935 --------- '29''· ""'11'1"1-"21· '71 Ford Pickup Ii' C11tan1Ar11n, R11inbow No. SUNSET MOTORS Ii X1nt l'On<I. RiN> :o.11.tlA NE'IV J.11' F.lrlnrarln MfNI F'-100 •.1 Tnn. \'II, 11111nm111ir. ~rr11i1rr.~19S. 61:>-4t7:i. MOTOrt 110Mt:. ~·ully R('I/ 131511!11/I. 20· """• "'"1'· ""· ... rl. ' "'""'"""· ""'20'· HUNTINGTON BEACH !'L(, fx!i k"'°I, 6 HP mtr . $699S $2400. ~39-J790. Cnmpl('IP !1nr nl foJ r>nr.1trln CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH l9Tl, 20' + En"n•d•, lully cam"""· '""·''' mo"n" • riggrd. be111u1 int, w/trtr' 5th whl"rl lrai!rr. en,11:, S2!!00., an 6 pm, 496·.1z:ifi 1972 SIJ RVEYOR 20' KITE 726 W/Trlr MOTOR. HOt-.1F: $7,4% J<:xr. ('l)ncl,, S750. 646-5100 Roof Air. ~ fully ~t"lf r·nn· Boats,. Slips/Docks 910 Lainrri. •2001 . rhoOP 64.'J.Jifi77 lf.661 RPA('h Rtvd .• Jf.8, 5'40·.'ilfi1 • 1142-0631 Fo,d'6l-F.100 PU/VI 4 .~p. 1.nnj!' bf>fi. OvrrlnAfl~. 1!ll'lfi2'L. $10!¥.J. Jim Slemon1 Import• WANTED Moorin.roo B11ltv.11 l11l11nrl for 1m11.ll boar. 673-1~. J97fl H.11rhnr Alvrl • Cn.(/11. ~lr,(;i 2201 Sn, ,\.1a in, ~anla An;i ~-~------~15.'l?-5241 Oprn Sun. * Slip Avail-Nr l ido • 673-&1:ill • SAIL BOAT SLIPS NP11•pnrl RrR1'h 5411-225.1 r.HOTCE dip~ in nPW Marina for 30-70 fl. tv.111!11. 67.l-6606. l~imit 20', 11.rm11~ fmm NPwpor1 l!ll"nfi· s1 .1:> P"r ft. 67!i-5:Dli: 111:69:\-~19'1 Motor Homes 940 13631 flarbor, Garden Grovt 1 Blk. So. nt G.G. Frwy. f)$-233.l '69 Chev. C-30 1 Tnn f<LAT Bt.:D. Uf', Aulo !r~ns .. r11dio 111nd hf'a!l"r. (.~'\17CI. $2688 Mike McCarthy GMC TRUCKS COR. 9EACH l MrF'Al"IOF:N Autos W•nted 961 WE buy 11!1 ma.kE"1 or cltan used 1por!s can, pa.id for or not Please drive ln for h"f'e appral,.al. NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. Coa..'t l-lwy.1 Nf'wport Beach 642-9405 WE PAY TOP CASH Jor USed C8.f'I I; truckJ, J\llC call u1 f'11' trte ••ttmates. GROTH CHEVROLET AJk for Sales MA.na1ft' 111211 B~ach Blvd, Huntin&ton Bl!!ach 14T.fiOB7 KI 9-3.\U \VF. PAY 1'0P D()Ll.AR ron TOP USED CARS Ir y1Jur rAr h1 extr11. cte11.n, Ut U~ fin:!. AAUF:R RUICK 2925 J-l11rhor Bl vrl. l.o.~111 M*'~" 979-2500 TEST DRIVE THE MIDAS MINI MOTOR HOME JM.PORTS W AN'J'l:D Oranae <:oontte1 TQP $ E UYER BILL MAXEY TOYOTA '70 Dod9e 1/4. Ton-""" "'"" Btvd. V-R, 4·8Pf'erl, R-H., ZfiJJOO H. Be11ch. P", 847-.35.'iS I mill'~. RAlllrtC'I" o( flll'tory NF.EOF:n: 1~ up-Cht"v. ~ I Dislr1bu!f't'I by T p U k "-' I w11.rT11nfy. 1710Cl.fl. on .• true . nnuy !'YO y I Campers, S•I•/ R•nt 920 Ken Craft PrOOurt' $2SSS l\r roinplr1" V6. ~n1"JI hf>t'I . 1 Ton ,,400,, CREVIER MOTORS Rr11!10n11hte &1Mi1AA 111 208 w. "' s1. s.n1a An• Mike McCarthy '""· '72 GMC PrO::UP, long brr!. 835-3171 \\-,1-LL-B=u-y_yo_u-,-,-ar-p-•l"d~l,-or 1 !IMlvy rfuty gprin~' ,.nrl PACJ-:-ARRO\\',, CHINOOK GMC TRUCKS or not. C11ll R,11lph Gordon 'hr'N"kll, ,11utnm11!tc fran~ .. All 1 b rl o · 1 CO ~ -"" E. "---H "400" V-.11, Priwtr ~ff'triris:. prlrp , • IMMEDIATE OE· Mr fAOOEN Newport Bf'•ch. • np r11n ~ . • 1,11coun R. BP.AO! &. I vi.,._,;JVU -....., ........o• wy. I ~-!Y.illxlf.5 \ti rty titl'll, .t111'1( L!VF_;R't'. . WE...~ ~11 H n 1 R , MrNSTf:R 1 Aufot, Imported 970 "'" '"'Y 0 ' ' . BEACH CITY DODGE "'~ 1.,,. '11 ·2''° 11'1')', lilt ~·hPPI, RA:rUI\, ALFA ROMEO 11:11 ugn, Suprr Cuitnni 1111 M tt~TTARY Qodgp rinw .. r 4Y,,' An&:l'lu.• full Al'll f'Oll-16.'l.\l Rrarh Rtlulf'Vlll.l'd w111ton, '57-1 too p.11, 4 x 4 I f,qined Cllb nvl'r l'Anlprr, llu11tin11:tnn fk,11 ch ~:....10~0 \'8, f750, !inn, Ana Romeo '72- ,irepii 6, Shnu·rr, t•ull ~·1u1h 17141 !>4(1.26f,O ,.,,_.._~,.. To11.i. 1101rl'"" T'"'· ""' •1 -*~M~a-rv~1•0~Pea-r-ce_* __ 1TRUCK -Hiiiman •romm ... 1 2000 Cl'llrt W11!f'r, f.lf'C'ftir Rut11.n1'. Vt.n. 1962 1217 !'ti. Rf!~~ St. Rl'ft:r, Rl'edy fnr !hrs.t lnn11: &lnla An11 !"l-12--.ll:rJ wttkt-nrl trip, tn 'h" mnun· Motor Homes 1-'lln_., ~<'. GE.I AWA\' NOW. f•51()9Th1 INo. lO~l Buy lhi1 l'I $6995 ... tu & lie. Bill BARRY + Sales • Rentals 558-3222 ·g1 ronn v;r\ i::~; f'.noi1 tnt.,rior, Call 54M!rn a11k tor LH. NOW IN-STOCK For lmmedl•t• Delfvery ln&t•nt Credit BANK FINANCING COAST IMPORTS 1972 HORNET x Now Availa ble With Air Condition ing "THE SEXY AMERICA N" * 1972 SPORT ABOUT WAGON $AVE SAVE ON THE ONLY COMPACT FAMILY WAGON MADE IN THI U.S.A. * 1'-'CLuor.c; OUR Buyer Protection Plan LIMITE D NUMBER OF GREMLINS AVAILABLE WI TH lltR CO ND ITIO NING AS STANDARD EQUIPMENT '64 ~?~~ ... ·0 '· $ 19 s I '70 FORD LTD $2795 Lo .. , 1,,...i ,.,;i••o•, 'fr•"•, 'J.,v Low bot•fl<t "' s ,, MllM, v,.y (loan C..•, rowff' jQ,actl ml. \OtflAlllV •v•JI. 'J I, $tff<"'4 !OSNlfJ I Auro l••m . ..,,. (O<"ft , r ow•• $tot•lnt • IOllJIQ) '68 MALIBU $1695 I '71 ;~~~.i:t , .. , $149 5 v •. Aulfl l••n•, ,.o,.., 'J~.lnt\ •Ir l t•flfl llt'". l"ICOfl C.ot1<!1 !V ho '68 r::~:~~~ ,. ... $109 5 I '70 Amb•11ador $2895 l ow~~• t•" !!-olon;~ nr I ~· "'·~"Iii~ w•"•"'V <•r ""1•v ~~ool, Ab CQf>"lihGl'\1\0, .... Utf, (ft\C!(\' - I - ......_[ ___ ....... __,!§] IL.__ ...... _ ... _ .... ___,)§JI It___,, .. _ .... _ ••• _, Autos, lmpon'N t70 Autos, lmponed ,~~~~~~~~~~~,~~~/ 1r~1 : 1 M ..... -1~1.__I _-·-_-_,!~ 1 ._ ..... 1~1 r~;; ...... ;; ....... ~1§J~1 970 Autot, Im-...... 9701•-------rt·• 970 -----~-----Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported ~70 Autos, lmpo _. _....;.._....;.. __ _ DATSUN Autos, Imported 970 AutOI, Imported' 1--;..__:_ ___ _ 970 CORTINA MAZDA PEUGEOT DATSUN DATSUN FERRARI BMW CITROEN "69 8\f"' lfll1. lmrna"11!io1r lo\! 011. Slll'll. \\I I .,.,.,,c Sl"Nl J1nrk •tr• 1i!Ct~ I '68 Cortina Wagon ' .,. n""'" r .u. wit• ,,,.., -------- 1 SC'hf'll Cami)"!'. (jood contt . 'li9 OATI\UN $10 Wa.:on IUJ:-rERRARI :JM GT :2 plu11. 2 --------I A"tnrn1111•·, run~ ,.,1r11 Jtf'IOfl. $1ii0. fWf)..28?16 art 6:30. G.t.kf' l'11rk, nf''ol' u~~-$1199 1 'Jl 240 Z J970 -Y"llf>w -t'11t'/•1r, ( OVER * PEUGEOT * Citroen Sports Maser•ti 1 ~·('\1."J;.i• S.'ifJ."1 .71 [lllL"un pil'kup-new tir;; or°""' otfi-T. 96A-fi09'l. AM/f"J\t Excel Cflrlf!. 16.fOO Uran:::,. Cnunt> ~11rl'JUIU'lr r~ HUNTINGTON BEACH •. c•ri·a•. -~ -~ --m I I es • pr J p 1 y 100 ROTARYS ill ~lfM•k Immed iate Delivery • /l!J 1n1 ........ s2.m. <Nn . r~) -,69 BMW 2000 sOd-. r. "' ,. '67 D11l!tun 1fi00: • dr !Odn, I 4 11pd rllr rfltl11ry yP.l!()y, plu-.}'I 714-516-41144 • !or r ...... Ml " . u r ,, p I" il. 11 ~li-:l6:l\ I 2111)(1 ront1. S·t95. l1rn1 . I blk. inlrrior, m11 .. Whl' .. 11, -~~~~~--FRIT': \VARRF..N'S Sport Car Center ·•ORA:-.:Gr·: CO U NTY 'S R\I\\ l'iY.! \96!t.-.io:1ll'r r. An1 f'rl1, 111r. ln11 n1ilPlll:;f. Xlnt mnl1. Ii~~ 17.")i. ~il~'S1~rnons I mpo'h CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH t ~~II-~f:lO I J.l•nt & rl"11r gu11rrl 11, low n11. ·~ Jo"l'rr11ri. :lt\.i c·r. 2 + 'l. QUICK CASH .~7 Dalgun 1600 4 rloor JIH'ri!il'P! ETllMS. :i.44-R736 111h1Pr, AM/f'M, 1t1r, full t.!ll Sn )111 1n .. '-"r1ta. ,\r'.11 I . -• • s~~ I llfl lO am 494.6$lll JWl•rJ IW'W ,\.11,.hPhn, 711: All J'lf'\l' ~!"ORT TRUCI\ .$2195* I l~ARr.F.:S'r ~~··i-.i.212 nr.,.11 Siui. )f,fil'il Rr11.·li Bl~n:. ILR. THROUGH A llHlflnt~llr ~\""' 111 ""· ........ _. --· 67~10 l"llrly 1norn tnJi:. --:~4n.~11i4 • lM~ flfi.11 546·••711 "·'k rnr 1.1nt111. 1967 DATSUN pick up · , 7111-E. 1<.1 ~t .. S.A. M7-il764 Autos, Imported 970 DAILY PILOT ,69 081111111 5j0~4-11P<t~· "'-'/cAmptr shell. Excel FIAT • WANT AD pAln1 " l il"f'JI, 39,000 mlleA, Cond. .Rotary Powered Auto'S: lmPort9d-970 PORSCHE Trade Up I --------~~ s100. lll.l-9359. J 557-844J /557-.4217 Brand New 4 Donr s11111(ln \.\"agon roRSCllE, 1111e '66, 9-l'l, 5 ~ ' $2995* ~jlfi, AM/r~I. Sl111te «rAy. ;A:";;' .. ;;;;;';;;u;; .. ;;;;;d;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;990;;;;;;A;;;;;ut;;o;;1,;;;;U;;IOd;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;990;;;;;;A;;;ut;;;;;o;;;1,;;;;U;;sed;;;;;;;;;;;;·;;;;;;;;990;;;;;;J 72 Fiat 128 1111111111 ., s..i.900. 6 1 ~_:'I J l 9 Su m,.,.,~rtime i1 the r i9ht time lo put your~elf in it better auto- mobile, G•rden Grove Oat,un h•s jutf lhfl c.it r for you •Ome· where on o'Ur ler9e lo t. The 'election i, 9re11t •nd the pr ices •re ri9hl. Stop in tod•y •nd 9et the deel you've been wa itin9 BUICK SALE AMAZING DISCOUNTS for. '68 PORSCHE '"Gold -'"•""' $3372 ' C•IMflth•. IWJU7721 '56 T -BIRD ...,,, ""''"'· lllAS'41 $~772 '70 YW DUHi IUGGY L•• Ml~-L .. • Hw. $1472 '71 DATSUN '"2 w.., -"'' ------"-10069001 -- '64 SUNBEAM '1.°:G70I I Cloo•! $372 '69 DATSUN.~~~~:,....'""'"' $1072 '70 DATSUN ' ... lflUGYI .. ~., $1172 '71 CAPRI c~~'." .... "'"'" $2472 '69 DATSUN ... ,,. ........ HH, 4 1plf. 1191AFW I $1072 '70 LANDCRUISER '"":!::.~;';' $2472 166 vw IUS. I ,_..,. lft fSYU9701 14JIAYGI '71 DATSUN "00 ,, .... c,.., 4 .,.. 1•s•m1 $1172 $1572 '69 DATSUN.~~~~:..... IHOCAYI $1172 '66 DATSUN .. ~~~'"",,.,,, $972 I NEW 1972 BUICK ELECTRA 225 HARDTOP SEDAN < $1296 60 OFF WINDOW STICKER PRICE fr2H491752 NEW_J 972._.BllfCK_CENIURIDN HARDTOP .SEDAN. s1064°5 , OFF WINDOW STICKER PRICE .;,2C115109 "HEW 1972 BUICK LE SABRE HARDTOP SEDAN s92405 OFF WINDOW STICK.ER PRICE 1' 2C 117 486 .. NEW 1972 BUICK SKYLARK CUSTOM HARDTOP SEDAN s7 4505 OFF WINDOW STICKER PRICE :22120697 YOU'LL ALWAYS SAVE MORE AT Step Up To Luxury • • • • Excellent selectio11 of preYiously o\vned Mark Ill's and Contillentals 1970 MARK III Exc<>plin1101l_y Cleo n! f\1E'<l ium green n1ctallic \\'•dark ivy & land;H1 roof. Luxury equjpped including full power. clln1;:i te control air, individual adjusting power front seats, tilt ~·heel. 8 lrark stere'o f l~ AKLf1. SALE! OUTSTANDING GROUP OF CHOICE CARS! 1969 Contin ental MA.R IC Ill i;,.;1111r1(u l 111"fl111n1 h11 1,. n1l'tAll1r 111rh IPlfl \hPr Hllf'rtnr k "h11P \Ht,.VI tnp. t,;1·.-ry f\'lrll l'nnr,.n·,qhJ,. 1nrl A:'ll r11du1 1•'!1h ~·t'rPn 01~ rl"f'k Anrl rn11se control cln,·e. 1 Y~Tll 14 • $4675 1968 Lincoln 4 DOOR Liit'll l-l ue f1n1•ti \1 !lh darl.: lilut 11nyl tor Full f"'""r 0fll'I f;ir ft\ry air . (\\'.TB· J2i' $2375 1969 Ca<l illac FLEETWOOD 4 OR. Er~uhf11I rllrln\' hlArk fini~h \\'ith blark 1"111hf'r 1111,..rin-r And \1in.vl !(Ip. A one o"·npr car rhAI IH1s nnlv i=nn• .39.000 mi. Pricf'd for quirk ~11lr. ·1Z:'\'\'9801 $3950 19611 (hevrolet CAPRICI'. 2 DR . HARDTOft Full p!'11·pr, fi.r;lflry air rood .. includint radio 11·1 th fAr-fflr,v sfrrPfl f8pt' deck. Also hits rr•11~,. r-nnlrnl. t\\'XE665J $1775 1969 Lincoln CONTININTAL 4 DR . \\.'htlf' .. ,.,,.rinr u;th bl11.rk 1 .. 11.ther and 1·inyl tnp. F'ull priw,.r. t1lr rnnd. 11nd vac· uum JockinJ< itroup. Ne11.r wholesale. 1X'\'Z458l. F'nll rrlr-P $3275 1969 Chevrole t CAM.ARO VI ll·If'd1un1 grten finish, po"'"' steerin&. 1.uto. trans .. only e:nn,. 27.noo milts. $2250 CO,IE I~ A-'D SEE OUR YAS'f SE LECTIONS OF TOP QUALITY CARS! Rome Of Th' Ne.-Car . , . "Gehleoo Touch" son Llfl;r(lt' 2112$ HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA .. • .~'6830 Home Of The New car . , , "60"'-· re11e•" ' ' of 1)r ~rl11.n. i\il n T <1 R P\f'•: 21.~/li~-77:11 1h1y,. TRENrrs F:mnnn1y C'11r ol 1 ----T-ARGA the year J •17Atl$t6661B1, • J'lnl'~n ·i in1·h1de l11·pn~... '68 911 $ 1988 !lll11!r ta.>i:, t1P11ll'r rn•p Pr ~ sprl'rl, 1ur 111nt1., mac l'lplll'ln~. 11 hrr1~. '111~1 itrll. Buying + IA.'( k ltr B h Huntington eac 1in11~"· ~~"'·~rlt. Bill BARRY MAZDA 15-, .. :~~ :,.c;:;'.c,!;~,:,~1:."". Pontiac·GMC-F iat Da~s S.".9·9560, 11ft 5 - 1\,1 Sr.,, S.A. "-·"'·' 17~~1 RPar·h Rtl'rl. -r, .. • R.\.':.:IE>-'i. 20(WJ E. ]•t Sr .. SAnr11. ·An11. Hunt1n£1nn JW111·h ----:-:"c_1-,"-._-.-,,,~.,~,-- :i~. HlOO ~12 liliW\ ___ _ ~--~1 ·;..i nooF S2.ll(Vl. Fi•t '71-128 2 o,, I ROTARY'S .... """ """· !lAA-<1'2 Th,. rar ~lr. ~·Prr11n rlr11·P~. Immediate Delivery PORriiF:-~14---.71:Xiirt': ~;~,J:J.700 m1lr~. l!illDTCJ I HUNJINCJON ·BEACH ' 1~.0011 nH, Rl1111p11nk! r11.rlio, I 11pp .1:1,>up. t •1250. G13-01rM. Jim Slemons Imports NM,~Tn~ Pl .-.,, -POH:-:C.'llf:,--;;11 p;r,lnr, 2201 S, M111n, Sanla /\1111. .. LUR Bl :J57.~"242 Orwn Sun. r1•ld! •'llJ.:. ;\lust Sell: $!1~ * lii:Wi"i4:1 * 17331 BEACH BLVD. HUNTINGTON BEACH Brand New 1972 Fiat -124 SP"<'iAI. AutomAtir. y.·11rtnry EquipJM"l'I. 1•124810572351, $2285 + ta.>i: t.. l1r. Bill BARRY Ponti•c·GMC-Campers Fiat t 2 Mll•!o~1n 01 W••no• Pnone 842•6'366 fl~f SL 111 S.A. }·r.1·v.1 200J E. J,t si ., &i.nta 0 Antt '50 USED MERCEDES '''"""" I. ON DISPL.AY NOW 'ff.I FIAT ~;.,(} S ·n . I fi7 1'.lrr.·NIC's 2505 ~ t1r. · . . Pl Pr. X n1 I \'\'R0!'7 $'l 'l1• t'Qnd red ski r k I 1 .............. , •. ;i AM ·i-M. 'SOOOi hst a c01,.• '65 Mf'l't'rfles :no sl"d rXGR7:l !lfiS....TIO:i • 1 · ·· ·· ···· .......... '.'. $1 ,575 '70 ,\1rrcf"<if'_~ 300 S.f.:.L. l!lli7 ~l() Spo1t Cnuflf.'. I.ow Lu\tH'V ~"n mil,..~. Xln1 1·onrl. Radio LeaSe N~w Mercedes Ah11r1h <'Ani k f':\'hAu~t. I $llS M Sh75 * ."t~ll-20ft1 HOUSE . oF . !~PORTS ·"9 fTAT .124, $1750. nr bfosr fi?Ji2 ~1anrhrstJ»1, RuPni. Pk nff~r. 523-72.'lO 'lO S<ln!A AnA F!""''y. !li!l.1140 ·---•tl!j i1t-:-n11 rr11n~."";1!11£~. :-.fn~t ~H-t if'f l i1~ n1111·~·1f'ri. exc r-ond S~'!f.ilfolr. fi7:wt!Hi. 'fio PQRSC'llF. lfilllhCi, m1111 . t"flnri, 40,fKXl 1nilf'~ nn ""i· $161\0. ~94-:11111, Rnn . RENAULT Renault Demo Sale Semi Annual ·oemonstrator Clearance Sale This Weekend Unbeatable Prices AL L 1972 MODELS IN STOCK FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY INSTANT CREDIT APPROVAL BANK FINANCING COAST IMPORTS 11000·1:!00 \V, P:ir-1fi,. C~t. Hwy. ;-.,1r1vpnrl BP::tr-h • i14J ~2.fl406 ==~· Renault Sal•s & Service First Showing USA KARMANN GHIA Test Drive :\1GR '63 ne11· paint, ~e111~. TAl'ii al ~. 'f',tr::i.s. Xlnt conn. Jim Slemons Ren•ult l!Wi.'t Kh11nTI11 nn Ghia 6!"1.000 milf',;. C'.oorl mnctitinn SC-JO. or hf..'.I nfff'r. Bi.y Shn1·p P11rk, F31. 112 \Vf'..,I Co11 ... r Hwy. Sfi!"11l. R1&-~1121. 2201 s. Ma in ss1.s2c2 ~9cccu""1c.:c:.K:::...,c=-A~s=H~. --RENA UL TS • 6&-' 69-'70-'71 THROUGH A ,.,.m .. ,,,.oo '" """"'"· A good want ad 1s a i:ood DAIL y l'ILOT J im Siemon• Imports WANT AD 2311 S. Main, S,,.nrA Ana .,..--,--o~..,.----c:~ I ~i::i7 .. '>242 Opi>n ~un. 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 invP!lllment Autos, Used OVER 50 CADILLACS AND LUXURY CARS TO CHOOSE FROM o., Mlectlo11 of Cedll1eu 1, euttto11dl ... Wt co11'1 t•-111Mr whetl -··• !NH ••lo te ef,., 111cll • '"''l•fy ef •rclti .. Ilk•""• l'lodelt to owr c111te_,,, F.., e 4ro1t1etlcoll't 41"-'"' deol e11 e1c.,tle11ot1., cl1t111 Codll-. l Llr•wry •wtet, ... S•ltMt Meters, ... ,_.lldtH fer e••r 10 '""'· SpfflollJhtt 111 lu1ury outomoblln. CHECK THESE O.UTSTANDING WEEKEND PRICES '72 EL DORADO CPE . l/lityl tip. Mot"-r htttrl•r, fltCt • .Mr, tllt & tole whHI, ,,.,.. rod11 l ,.,. ftc:ll , ·~"' ........ __ ,, $8295 '"' l.ck1, tTu11ll loc.k, & It'• ll1r• .... -Two To Chaos• From- 1'72 ELDORAOO CAlllOLfT le11 th•n 1,000 miles 6L47S2Q4:.!59!'19 '71 SED. DEV. lHMd wlttl .cc"'· IKl••tl"' feet. elr, ............ AM&•M $5595 '94fo, lleet I.ck l .-. S..W #6IJ4t191J1722 '70 SEDAN DEV. Foct. olr, p.cldoll tep, loc.kt & •tc . Hn 0111., JJ,DDO 1Wiln. Lk. J2tlKS tllt ""'"'· 'Ille., $4495 '69 CONVERTIBLE l1t1urif1I c•r ht1IH & eut. Foct ... ,, tllt "t!HI, 'llloer lock1. Hot e11ly 12.Dot ~""· ·-$3695 .... tt .... Lie. • 4521Xl '65 CPE . DEV. 0 ,1,1 .. r ... e\OtMf c•. Met. f.ct. elr. lk. ~ N9Y1 JJ $1295 Lar9e Selection Of Late Model Cadillacs To Choose From. YllY LlllUL lllNANCIN• WITH Tl•MS UP' TO 41 MONTHS &It W/,;1lJg11& SUNSET MOTO.RS Cadillacs-Fina luiury Cars-Mo!or Hom11 1970 HARBOR BLVD., COST A MESA 645-6677 -. • ' I s ( ! c 7 ' ------, ___ . . . • -i ~ ' ' OAJL Y PILOT <llJ 1§1 1§],I __ A"_"'°_'s._1e ~1~: .__I _''"_''"_"1e__,J~:._1 _Au_,.,.,,._s._1e ~J§J I I Autos, Imported 970 Autos# Import.cl 970 P,.utot, Used 990 Autos, UMtd 990 I A~s, \J1ed '90 Autos, tJstd 990 ---'"-----1 SAAB VOLKSWAGEN BUICK CADILLAC CADILLAC CADILLAC CAMARO CHEVROLET ~~~.~o~o~~r!TN!'.13 °'1, ,;6~ V-:;1!~9zum '67 Buick Spec ial i 166 Coupe De Ville 1 ' ....,69 El Dorado 9 I l\O :?~ C~MdA~o, I nao~. ''~.;:::'"~~ ..... 1,, '64 Impala 4 Dr HT You Try Harder e Sll!l!i.00. 1 ' ~~ 'ra 10• tit er, 1 trans.., lactory air, a rt&J I W• At Coast Jim Slemons Imports Station Wagon f ull f>C'" rr. !ac:tor.r air. hlllc:k I F;u!l P™'tr . la.C'ton• 1.1r cond, \'U:)J rool. bucket u-ats (961. i;t'nl, O.l~EA . V8, 1uromar1..-, rad1ri, h.-afPr, Id . ••1 S fll<'!ory 11 1r, 1uiomat1t. r"'l\'f'-r Vl"\l top 11 black inttrior. At'1 F;\t 1ter~. 1•in)l top. YOUR ONLY A \BI. $2295. Tommy Ay~s $1599 pc'l"'f'r !'l('r rtn.t 10Pr64-i l. Wou Like To Boast .. ~ .. 11.1111n, San ta AM I ., Ch 1 946 s c stttnn11: ~ bra~~. lu,1:~ai;e i~<;F'76"i 1 SlJ!l5. IYPX30:P. S.~~~. FACTO "\' t vro t t, ' O&St 1149!> "We Sold The Most I" ''" "242 Of>"" Suo. HUNTINGTON BEACH n H"'· lAJOro• B ••ch • PHO'E M;->'99 · N BEAC . As of ~iareh ~. l9i2 \\'p \\'rrt V\V '70 \\',.ctphll lia C:llmpPr :~~~j,1~~:111ill~;:~,~~;;; 1 HUNTINGTON , BEACH , , 1 AUTHORIZED 49~:;744 ~16 'l'l67, ~llRACLE ~IAZDA HUNTJNGJQ , H No.J in !he NA.l!On (In ~·arl 11 1th rnr 1,,p, Xln1 CV'nrl TPrrv f\u1rk ·rh t.. \\;ii t I CADllLAC ,. "AMARO c I ~ 21~ H1rbnr Bl1·rl. lb< \\·o'.ld" •Jo "!1" 1°' th• '4.IOO '"'1"· '"'1 oow !><!2 llrrnim<rn" R;~,h ;.,,;..i;·,;~ CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH CHRYSLER·PLYMOUTH ~ I ~;,,' N"d ,~;~' ~ 1~ ': 0"'"-21.'.'·' I CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH SAAR SONNET :-pnrt~ car. ColE>nu1n n11~1• rrrit t..· ~tovr .. 67 n ht> 1 --1-1 DEALER Mri~1 tire s750 c>r otf,.r f '68 Impala Custom . \\'e \\'ant 10 he t1rirl 11 111 be Priv11t,. ph . :.1~:'1123. 1"1"ra llu! J.:O.~" n I 1~1 6 h 81 ·d 11 8 Lara:est 1election ot Cad1I-I 1 f\'o l hv Junr Jst Tl'sldrive . . · po11l'r /..· xtra~. $lai~. P11 ]!;lil)l Beach B!i•rl H B. • t ac \ · • lac1 1n Or&n&f! Cowity. W:-l\..li8 Jfi,61 81-.,ch R!l'i1 118. · · · flll Blir.. ~1nl mnd .. nr11• Ptv. 5.i2-71l0 I ~-J164 • 11:41 Oh..11 Sales-Le11.sini. Look for our CHEVELLE 12 dM1' harti!l'r Radio. heater. ~ll~IM • ~-17 Oli1 1 a Sonnert 1od11y and SPe \lhy lirr~. Pni;:. JU~t cnrn plrir!.i· · jj0.;,\4'1 e fl2 l'lll11 full """<e ads ei·ery \\"f'd nl{'lre """''" buv ''""' ("'' ·~ Ri1·1r r11. hill ['llll'. air. '69 Cpe Dev1·11. ,,.. l""'""I" ~tPPl'\nt:. lnrtC'rv /lllr, •-" • ''"·' gnnp thri1. :-.111~1 ~M l. sm:. & Friday for our sprr 1a ls. I \\'ft 'f\7 $ '.."1; '71 Vega th11n l!.ny othrr dealer in So Utn<lau lnp. A\1 /~'\I r11rl lo l~AD!LL \C 6~ ("pe Df' \"tllt f tlll l"'""l" & filcton.· 1ur, N b C d'll i;~ ,...f 11 • n 1 "I e \tl'i'I r "'111 1· 1-~ . FIPJ! nlfrr or t r a 1t r . a ers a I ac ' '-1"1'",. ~ ._.r l:l)'HTl['I Ton1n1v ,\1 rr .. l\\e1•1'f'llf't ,'\lfi !lntr hh;irk . .llllfl!l\dtjr tr•ns , C&W . 1n1. R<>sl nffrr. ~~1--"J.~2 Ln n1ilP~. :-.Int c on rl . ){!t1• inilr~. e\tri shan.. " .. r r " . COAST ~li-'i:"l!l. CADILLAC A:'-1/f ;\\ s!Pr{'I') 8 track, fu ll YOYOSO. ,,, 2600 HARBOR BL., ~a~~~· h:~a"k!:· ~11~,. l~~;;h !_ (h2~a~~ th.'"._. l.ai:una I ~~~; he.airr, S006 nulr:1. '6.l V\\". C11mpPr 7,rrm ;\!1. "" r11T. S''l'l"i. l>T'>-Mfi'l i3699 I ;,~n.!'11~0STAO~~S~11nd11.'.' l11nrlau rnp $12:ifl. j.IS-77:.1. °'-".iir. 4,,..,.n~~l'i-996_7.__ • lliOO c.c. rt>huil t f'ngrnl:. l\'"11' I PHO!\'F 6•r ·799 ,., Ol.D but ~till COOD' 'fil I 52199 Paint <nod Mnrlifl<ln llf.50. '71 El. DORADO, 11•hr, lRn· '60 C'pe Df>Vtl1P-\'r11t' Clnn. · ~ :J-;> j 'fj. Cadi!lar-Sedan DeVille CHEVROLET Fllf1Nf , 64:i "M"I I 'llRACLE 'IAZ.OA ChPI')' \\,,:.;on 11·11h 1':;1 IMPORTS or ·of1t'r ~:)...-O(Wl after 6 rlau tnp, lt hr, All PXtl"as: !l)IL~I gfP lo appr1>r1i11r · • · l.cladM. Best offf'r, dlr., ---"O'.,-,-----:O.\!HACLE \IAZDA r rn. Sfi .<t:--0. 11,000 n11. f.-1 . .._2';nf; I ~1"11. or nffr.r S3il-lfi66 Afl 6 21.iO H11t'lV>r Blvd. 857--02'2·'. -· t'nt:ine -!'lit\~ i;:rvvl . (',no.if ~'!'ii llar~r Rh·d. 0, ,,,,, .. _ Cni;.1a Mr~..._ 7 CLFAN l961i Ch<.''"' II 1111...:,,11 1,•rl r l'\'11l 111·r( ;...,.,.rl~ h··•rl -• "' "~ I -('o~la \It"~" 'fiJ V\\' hu~ rf'h11 ,,ni;;:. ~ri!l 'fi.') Carl Cp. rlf'\ltllr 1A 1111 i;.,, CA MARO '11th Au· I nll'ner. '.\lus1 l'PlL t;A(kf>! SIOO i;;:>-1.i J', ,.,,,, .~· 1000-1200 \\I, r;ir1ffr (gt. /111•y. ~U-".rr. dhlP t>,. rl -s l 2 50 . n""' tlff'(, BP11.utiful Conrl. /1 Ciirl Co11 pe Df'V1Ue, b\uc '69 C,!l)lpe rl1>\11llf', bm11·n. ~~Oil fii\fi-477~. 11k1·11rl~ I '6 7 IMPALA SS Ne"·pnrt Br1tf'h l71 11 6~2-M06 J)111·1rl R1l-6 12S; dA,l''i 673---0:16~ $1200. li l'.r().l:i.lfi. " 11 ht 1111. lf>['I f1tlll I Or1c1na l O\\'flPr ExCP! cond. • ·-,0 C•m'-. ,,.. '"'"· -,c7~C-h,-,-,y~4 -,~,.-. ~1-.. ~,-. -1°"' .:--;{)\.-1-.~i;,-,. -,,-.-.-1,1 1~ f'Vf'~. '71 Carl Sf>.rl d,. \'ill~. Xl nr t''1 U1pt. P1·t. pty. ;yj0-0616 · · _,, '· 4· n11T. n1us! ~Pl\, Sacn1rce ! Sl!'lO take~ 1!. 1~ S-l u 'g'' e l'drk·l111!r rl I S? '¥.!-54µ·1 ..... 0 • •• -\'<, i111tnn1111 1r. !A.•·tnry air, SAAB SALE All Ne w SAAB's Are Always Special Priced At Coast Instant Credit " rn1•·,.1· ~!l"PrLnt:. vinyl roof, J96f\ ';"V R112. Sl!nrn .... r cond. ~-uuy euip'd, 1'.1832 ri;i~~. ;,:<:fi-2:iJ 7 Pi·e/ii k nrl~. 'S? CrP;im Puff Cad f'(lllPf'i S2'.l.:ll.67:rl2:\X + Ctll 968-45.'Yl "'" ~l;ii;" Ong. {'11<1"1¥r -$.\:00. hu<k l'l t.,.ar.~i TR A201JSl295 A.\f/f '.\1 flHho, nu l lrP~. Glnuce~t,.r, llR. 91'2-lWl l!lli5 Cadlll11c deV!.llr, r1:r,.J. Orii;:. !mmAr Ln mi. '.\l u~! 'fi7 CA;\!ARO SS, V-8, auto. '64 Impala Suptr S(Y'T1 &ll-8\14. Tomn1y Ayr"~ Che-vmler , 946 Xlnr ninnrng cont!. $950. Ti'lrn unusen 1rPm~ into quic k (Y!n<i, 1111 (Y'1•·er, atr. SI.HJ!. sPr Bf'sl nfff"r I 8 k e s. !n mi, 1·1n~l top, xtra!, best Sacriftrt , mu~t ~t'!l. rllr. '.\'A>ri a "?a'1'"• Placl!. 11 n Ad ' S. Coa~l Hiv) , Laguna Bank Financ ing Immediate Delivery ... Factory Trained Experts In Service, Pans, Sales Overseas Delivery 64f...4991 11l tPr 6 pni. r 11sh, c11ll fi12-';1)7.R I f1rn1. filfi-~i. · Gia-t.172 11ft j P'.\f I f'ffr Silcrif. a-~1. gg7 0724. j Call 1'42-ili._7_·'~---~ 8PA rh. 4!).1 TI44 ~~Fi ~1. '6." V\V Knm hi !l PAs.~. Autos, U1ed 990 Autos, Used 990 i Autos, Used 990 , Auto1, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 ! Autos, Used 990 1 Autos, U1ed 990 Rrhurl! eni;::111e. brakes. Rool ' ------------------------·---------------------- COAST IMPORTS 1000·1200 \I'. PRcilir C~t. H11j'. Ne11.'JXlrt Br.:irh 1714 1 642.f)<lf\6 SUNBEAM '65 SUNBEAM AlpinP • Ex-~I Cnnd -Orlit'. O"•nior - $67~. 644--l"ffi2 Ask !or P11cld.1· TOYOTA r1t1k. RarliAl!I $1700 f!rn1 . 67~711.¥1. '70 V '~" -Chromf' 1\'hf'eis-$1350. Trade f o r olrlf'r trut:!s_ e,ank v.•tll fin. $1000 ~4112. WANTED \'\\' B ill! nr Bug, running or not , prrfpr11hty nnt. 548·5.l!lO. 196R VW bug. Rlldio, lo mllf'!I. Mai;: 1vherl'1, CLF:AN. I nwn1>r pn/pty, $1 19.'i. !lfi2-ll:iil. 'fi!l \"\V Cnnl'. A u In, Rilri liPilt .R.<1rl1al~. n111"•· L1kP. ne1\ • Sl.l.iO. fiTJ-;.~1. ---=--==-,--·11 V\\' Rug. AM/F;\1 slerPO, 11nriersP11 J, humpe r guards. 12.!'WYI ml. Still unrirr v.·ar- ranty . Mini. SlR:'-{) !l.1().7116 '72 TOYOTA l!lAA VW Rni:: 52019 Eng1n .. in f.:;){rP\ c{'l.,rf, 4 !ipttd tran.c. Dix A~t radio. !\"PW BrAkf's. M u~I ~11. He11ter, d('frosteri::, tinted S!!OO. R42-711J glass. \\"hire V.'11.11 lirr~. '61 V\\' Bug-xlnt oonrl, rebtl Pop-out r1>ar v.indnw!I . Vi n~ I Pnc. nu tirt'I( clutrh I:. trim. Cal"('ll'!s. Front diS<' ~~ner;i1nr. $~()() 642-fl74R. brakes. Rl"rlining buckl!t + '!iii V\\' RUr. + r.eJI KF. 20-3007R.':i. ~ml~ -TOYOTA Xl.NT CONDITION. SiOO. 54,;...44;,!'l 'fi:-0 Bu~. 1•rpterl. panrlPri, 1600 ~:11£. r.rl cnnrl. S 11 2 5. fi1~5116. 1966 H·11 rtv>r, C.fll. 64fi.!l?ll.1 ·~ \"\V hull, ntf'I. hhrP, xlnt Mnrl., nri,i::. n111·n .. r. s1n::.a or hP~t nffrr. 5.11i·R452. '69 Toyota 2 Door Blu1> .hni11h, ~ 11pl'N'I. ra dio. heater. 17.VZ.~lfl1. S795. HUNTINGTON BEACH ' CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 166fil 8P!!.Ch 8 1\'fl., !I R. 54fl.~1\6~ • ~·12-06.'.ll '70 TOYOTA STATION WAGON New cyir trade in. 4 speed. radio, k hea!tt. 748BZU. $1495 Santa Ane Toyota Set"\1ce dPpt. open 7:311 11m 'ti.I 9 pm fl1t1ndRy thru Fri- d11~. PHONE 54~2512 (17 \\', \\'amrr. Santi\ AnA '65 TOYOTA CROWN SEDAN fmmaculaTe. S~. f\'o CA.~h nl'f'f1Prl. HUNTINGTON SA•ES '.\f\rl"'""Y Cil.I', CilhL on 8f'11ch. Niuth of Bnl~l'l R'.17-0224 rut!l ll •r,uis ~,. m•t•n Toyot;i. & Jaguar fleAlrr Authorize<! ~ales & Service 1~70 V\V Ru~. Orig OwN>r. ~1U.t! ~II thi.• WHkend. S219'.'i. "42-17711 l!lf\.11 VW S,u11n>ba.C'k, rlP11n, r.:i(i1n. """' "/V.' tiI'f'!i, S147i fi41--4.17 I. * 'fi:'i V\V RUS -crpt'ing, pan,.\f'rl, l:IVI f" n g i n e. $7:;ll hi>,d nffrr. :i.57-212i. '70 V\V ~rl11n. Excf'llent (."f)n - dition. M;iny F:xtr11s $1600 or ~r(V'f nffrr. 5~11-17!il. 196J Bus HiOO engine, Tf>p ~hAI""'. $1175 (';i ll fi7~1-5114' • ·i;7 \7\\' FASTBACK + $1,0:;ll. (:]Pan. GfYX'I Mnrl. ;).l!l-:,.;10 11f!Pr fi p,m. -.AA V\\" ~t11tit1n \Viu:on. GnM i"flrvi it1nn. C\r!l.n~ $92~. • !lli2-.11'?'2 ·~1'"1 ""°'le-' ""sup;r-h~;-A~\t /f'\i. ~!Prrn n111lt1-rlrx, radin. Sl .l>:.'l. ~.1-12S:~. '70 S-QUAREBAC K- l!lir k. r/h $1711:.: A.19·1l:'l.01'i '70 lamprr. nu eni;:., radif> & f'Xlr::i~· ~tu~t J'l'P: '.\1AKE o~-r r-:r~ · fi 12-.191~. --t.JVw~C~o-nv-.~$~5o"oc- fi14 -0ll:i6 V\\" Fa.~1h11rk -1!'1fi8 F.x,.PI (l)nr!. S1rr..n nr kr~t nffrr. %.l-.1.1-14 VOLVO 900 S. Cn~st Hi;;h1\'AY lAgun11. Br;ich 540-'.l Jnol----------- Toyot• '70 Coron• 4 Dr. 1972 VOLVO Stirk. RArl & hr11!. Onl,v 2Q,7()fl mi1Ps 1ll'MRN;.;1 S!l95.00. Leas• Today at Jim Slemons Imports Be1t Rates 2201 S. ;\11un, San1a AnA $18.74 Per Mo. .;;:,i.;)242 Orwn !'un. O.A.C. Af.1/F~·I, Auto. tran1., El70 Tnyof;i '.\1111rk ft gfa!inn 11•11gon . Allin t'nln~. 11 1r ('find., $1.!l:.o. 5-lf>...TI.lQ. ·70 Tnyo!A Coron11 . lm- m;icul"'t'" mnrl1t1nn. Bf'!;t of- ler. cllr. 1197-ll'Z24. disc br11kP.~. 36 mn. For Leasing or buying '69 TO\.OTA 2 dr. Strl , nnly l~ H11.rbnr, C.flt 1>46-931\.1 J4.00'1 m•l". Xl"1 rorn1. '67 VOLVO 122S R.ld1n S!'M. i:.44.;1611< 'it COROLLA lff(I ()p lux,.. :Z rll'IOr, 4 ~r ... ,.rl ••• ~ 0~'""~· Radial~. Af\1/FM, $1625. Jnr11I r11r t\IC.J;>."l.J) $\l9;i. Call 847-~. Tommy Ayre~ Chtvmle-t, 946 S. C1J11~t H"'Y·· LA.guna Bt11ch, 494-7744 $46-9961. TRIUMPH '65 Triumph Roadster WINY wh~ls, 4 I Pf'P.d fRF"W· 283 ) • Sli9.'i . HUNTINGTON BEACH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 16661 ~AC'h Blvri .. 11.B. St0-5164 • S42-06.11 Autos, Uted 990 AMERICAN American Moton ...,Gremlins ·VHorn.ts VM1t1dors VJevellns VAmbastedors lluJ:e stock ol '7l'1 &: '72'1 BiCJ,BiCJ SavinCJS Harbor American Homt ot Convtftient *TRIUMPHS* 'Tl C•OSEOUT · P.,.,..oni. SPl'ITiltES AS UlW A! Sml 196t Harbor Blvd, GT-4 SAVE $500 Cost• Mo.. 646-4261 mm: WARREN'S BUICK Sport Car Center1 ___ ...,. __ ORANGE COUNTY'S ·70 Buick Rivie-a. Flllli LARGtsT l~td. AC. pwr. ~futt se.11. 710 E. 111, S.A. 547...()764 Be!t offeT Aft 6, 673-7382. Why Don-'.t YOU Shop Where ONLY Quality .. Cars Are Advertised At Fair Prices .. NO GIMMICKS NO JUNK All Our Advertised Cars Carry our Reputation And Warranty! BUY .WHERE · YOU ARE TREATED :TOMER BEFORE AND AFTER LIKE YOU A CUS· BUY! '72 VEGA COUPE lHe +e~beci l ~Oil! ..,,1,,, R•m •i,,i11q f•t•orv ""''''" Iv, •Yi o, he111 ., rtd•o. SI.ow room fr11~. ( !4!· EL TI $2399 '70 CAPRICE 'Or . S1d111. 27.091 r-1il1,. Sur 1rio• c~•. ~"• vo~y l ro~f. P.S , P.B .. A u !~. +.1n1., 1l1t. 11•h & won· dow1 , tH• w!..,,I, >M FM ••d•o. SoJth • ,.;ti t•'· H~1 l~tlor y """"""''I'· $3099 '6B CAMARO V8. C ou111. Vi.,vl •ool. v1ll ow <er. bl ~e ~ 1.,,,,_ iror, pQw1r 1l eero11g. ·~d,o. c11.,1ole, buc~el ''~'" iu· ptr 11it1. l YCM l•O l $1999 '66 FORD FALCON llUTURA Cp1. v.1, r•d •o, <t ulo. lrt!11 . Sh•rp. I TEZ4 7 J I $999 '67 INTN'L TRAVEL.A.LL C l11 11, !TYP I bS ~ $1999 '72 MALIBU COUP[ 11 ,000 ,..;!, 1,.,1. t••. l.igli rubb1t, "inyl •oof, ~ufo, tr1n1 .. ''" eto"d " oow1• 1t1ednq. R1in.a.i11 in;i ftelory "'1rr111ty. 115'· OCK l $3599 '7 0 IMPALA l D.. H••d 1~o. Au'o. "'~' , '''· redio, nowe• 1t11ri119 . power brt ~11 . N•ce ce•. low, lo"" D•iee. ! ~llSAKS 1 $2099 '65 MALIBU V.8. Co1., pow1t 1l11rr 119, 1uio h1~1 .. •1dio, Nit t <••· lllPB283 ) $999 '71 MERCURY COMET COUP'E v ... yl '""'· "" (.011d ' pow- ,, 1.le•""ll· •u'o. ''•"•·· •e-1•0. b cyl, 14,0JO "'.!11. £11>4 l~•'P t1•. 1!21 · DK J l l h;, ;, <t 1~1r11 buy. $2599 '71 GMC l/1·TON ' W'lo~t O••"! I" ••oro W"~ d!lu~t 1-1v~•t•• C:•..,Dfc•, 11 fl!! • 16 J 110•~·10 .. ,.,,b~'. ll•d•?, ' Spd, c ~"'Oe• \!)"(Il l IUHlf"· 1 Of'. fl(IWO• jlff""g, ..eTflpnQ ~!Cir, 1l\119M I, Will Sall Without Camp•r' Will Trade '71 VEGA MATCHIAC!r:: COUP[ $1899 '70 CHEVY llLAll ' Dr. Sede11. V.8, 1uto. '''"'·• power 1+eering. 4•• tol!d , low low p·i~e. !02 1A0A ) !we1•1nd on· r, 1 $1899 '72 PINTO COUPE "" co.,d .. '-111-I • r1d•o. '""'lo ... mi!e1. (481ELU 1 s~ •. p. $2499 '71 MERCURY CAl"RI C111 . ~ 111d .• 1 b,000 "'1dt1. •1dio. '1.11 l 11•c1 cir. l I b21SX! $2199 '69 DODGE POWE• WAGON V I, ' wo-... 1 O"~". 04d ?. ' 1'~n """' ""OU"'~ llll"'"' ••i>;I o'• d·l~•n ll•e~~ WI"'~ 4 10'1 I<~"" 11.&d•", P••l"'(I •~• !l~ld w•ld!• wl•I! 7 !! ~l~t 'n'"' "9d, wou1~ c~~vt., ·~ 11lc~ul!, IM-1"9 ~un• 1~ f~ce t it t" co->c1••~. 1 P11on. $2999 '71 CAMARO COUl'l Auto. tre111., oower 1+••t· 1119. 1ir c.ond, Suotr l uy. IO~OECll $3099 '69 CORVm.E Sti119r1y Cll•· v.1. pow1t window\, 4 U)d , lilt w~eel. Pll'"''' 1l1e ri"9· AM 'J:./.I r1d i11, 22 .000 0111 ow111r t l •t ful tMi111. llt· "'tininq f1clory w1rr111fy, 157 1AEH I WILL TRADE '71 FORD COUNTIY llDA,.. 10 P111. W1;en, Lu99191 r8ck. •i1 eo11d., powtt tle~•i ng, powe r hr1 ~11, I ulo. + .... , •• IUPt •b COll· dilio11. (b640VX ) $3799 '71 BUICK LI SAIRI COUl"I ? D• h1•dlop. "i"yl •oaf. powe• 1l11ri"9· DO"''' b•tk11. 1ulo. 1•1111 , ••· dio. "'' tond. T~i, '' • f:.,, c•• '"d • while of ~ buv. IF25671 $2999 '67 PONTIAC LEMANS COUPI IYCR060I $1099 2828 HARBOR BL VD. COSTA MESA \ -EXAMPLE Of OUR f AIR PRICES - '70 Ch•YJ Vt 'fon Pickup. 6 cyl., 4 1pd, radio, cu1tom .c1b, low mlle1. (5tk 27U) $1799 '61 Ford •;. Ton Pickup. 4 wh"I drlvt, 4 spd., locking huba. $2799 super ior truck. Radio. Hu rry, (P27JS ) Will TRAD .. '71 El Camino. V-1, 3 Spd., R•dlo. l lkt ll r1nd Ntw. 15,000 mllt1, (76l2JS) $2799 '67 l!I Ctm!no. V-1. 1uto. tr•nJ., vlnyl roof, •Ir cond., powtr $899 tt•erlng, radio. Mtchenlr.1 1pecl1I. •• IJ IV21602) '70 El Cimino. V-t, Dow•r 1teerlng, •Ir cond., •uto. tr•na., r1dlo, pow•r br•k••· superior condit ion. (717900) '69 GMC % Ton Vin. Low mlles, rear gle1s, only J,lgh rubber, ttlck 1hltt. (3l1~lAI '6t Dodge Y, Ton Vin. 10.IJ" W.9. V·I. 1uto, trans, r1dlo. (54121Cl fWeek el'KI only} $3199 $2299 $1999 45 TRUCKS IN STOCK! TRUCKS-PICKUPS-VANS-EL CAMINOS Shop where the selection is -V·B's, 6 cyh., auto. trans., 4 speeds. Some with air & power stffrinCJ • CUSTOM CABS -ALL NICE WITH GOOD MILES '61 •ord Plcku,. 4 whMf d'1,., 1t0<k. Ex<1ll1ot WILL TRADE cond. Locking hub1. (Stk P27J4 ) '61 Chtvy SutiH.lrb1n C1 rry1ll. l•cond INt, 4 1pd., 3SO <u. In. $2299 V..,, radio, cu1tom <•It. IUJNrlor t ruck. (P2731 ) , • • • • . l i • • ~ J - ' . . . • • . . NICEST SELECTION · IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA BRAND NEW OLDS CUTLASS Power steering, tinted glass, w~w, __ air conditioning, tJ.Jiio, radio. 5u.: per stock wheels. ( = 131 077) BRAND NEW '72 OLDS 98 Coupe. Power windows, power !.fee ring & disc brakes, air condi· $ tioning, tilt steering wheel, rear se-at speakers and many more lux-- ury features, (481005). SEE THE OFFICIAL INDIANAPOLIS 500 PACE CAR -THE ALL NEW HURST OLDS . ' --'.. . . ,.' ' . . .,_ ' 52 • • • ORANGE . COUNTY'S 8 ~::0 '72 GMC % TON P.U. ' LEADING HONDA DEALER I • WITH CAB OVER CAMPER Sleeps 6, has ~ink, ,tove, ic a 9 9 5 box, a utomatic tr""'mi\\•on. ,.,. THIS s4 dio, h~a li;or, power sle~rir.g, power bra ke~. factory air con· WEEKEND diiionin9. !510296 ) YOU'LL SA VE A BUSHEL OF . BUCKS ON THESE ~. OUTSTANDING USED CAR . VALUES!! HURRY! ~ '68 FORD CONVERTIBLE '66 CAD. COUPE DE VILLE '65 OLDS 442 '67 BUICK ELECTRA $1099 Fu!! power ,quippotd, r~tlorv ,,, $1695 Avlo1¥11l1t !t1n!l"liH1 011, 11d10 5895 4 dr. H,T, Fu ll power, l1c lory $1595 L;k 1 new, '" conditioning, vj11yl 100/. Jl ,000 mil e1. fWZ~429 1 con~ilioning, !SHB004l 111d Mealer. fZl!W62td. l UDU004 I . '70 HONDA CAR '69 TOYOTA '67 BUICK SKYLARK '69 TORONADO $855 $995 4 door li11rdlop. Air t ondi!ion· $1395 $2595 lledio, he11ltr, Au+,.,,..,i;~. R11die1 & healt" •~g. "'"VI re.,( ""''"''' •teerinq Full po...,~r. l1clcirv 1ir, 4 speed. ( ]]68001 I I l2BXE! & br1k11, !UrK77S) vi~yl rcicf. 1YO M74?l '66 TORONADO '72 PINTO '65 CHEVROLET '66 PONTIAC GTO P.&H, oower 1le1 ring & br1lc&1. $1195 4,000 milei. ,\u!o,..,1,e. tad•o $1995 1 door. Aul1'm•lit "'"'"'"I'""· $695 4 1p!~d iren""''llion , •1<"i 10 a nd $895 1ulom1iic, factory air. (066AZHI 111d li11ter. (141ErX ! radio ~nd h11ter, {WYY212) healer, vinvl rool. IVLVll6l. '66 PLYMOUTH FURY '69 DATSUN SEDAN '69 VOLKSWAGEN BUG I '70 MAVERICK R•do '"'"' , . ., .. d $1095 .:, ""'"''"'"' "'" '"' ,,.,. $1495 l Door liardtop. Aulomaf•( $599 lr1n1mi11ion. redici and ~eater . <4 -d~o'. 4-;peed. rad:o & ~'''~" 5795 (ZBT!98 ) ;:.-"': ''· l I 16AN L). ITRH776l, \. -' . -!YCUS8'1 ·\~9i "' " ' ' • f ,J • ... WE LEASE ALL POPULAR MAKE CARS AND TRUCKS ~~~o~~~'~;;o,~e~t~ p:~~ 1~0~!!.~~~er b"kes, v;nyl roof , factory $ 7 9 MO, air conditioning. !Oil ) · .1 I -l • I 1 . • • -·· , SUPER SAVINGS I • DEMONSTRATOR '72 ·GRAND PRIX 2 Dr. Cpe. VB, auto., factory •ir, P.S., P-disc brak•s, P-windows1 AM-FM stereo, WSW, vinyl roof, tilt whHI, etc. (2K57TAl250151 Stk. JOH · $4926 95 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY NEW '72 VENTURA II Cpe.. •uto. +r•n1., fully f•c+ory equipped, r•cHo. ".""~~·;;:-Stk .. uo,. 12Y27DY2LI 13840278441 s2973 44 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY NEW '72 CATALINA · 2 DOOR H.T. P.S., P-disc br•kes, r•dio, WSW, ~ ladory air condHionin 9, looded, · .l2657R2C3J65J51 Stk, I 175 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY $4199 72 DAVE ROSS ·----- 1969 Mere. ........ 4 tMt 1tlll.n .....,, ... T, "Y/, '1. AMl"M ITW•, llMl!I, '(t21fMllOl'°9l ................. U1. $2999 1971 T·Bircl .W'1ftop (Jiii,, loadtd, PIS, "fW CVln'ti top, AM/P'M SM.... I IJQ ... IDD12JI llCtlly lltn .. , .. ••1'11 l.11• $4699 '69 Chevrolet .... ,... c ... H.T. Cpe. l'ull poww, fKlory 1lr, vlnyl top. (VOLOSO) ICIH'f s.ttntM aet1M tDU $1899 '66 Ford Van 1.140 E.~ £, Autio Trltti, Rffr '67 Thunderbird '·-f111l rio-r, f1ctory 1lr, vlnvl top, •X«l11nt condlficH'I, (7..+ • CXW) $1399 '69 Yolvo 1445 s.cs.. Allfll. Trem., Air COftll., or- lfilwl I 1WMr. (ZSDllSJ $2299 • ·~· ftdlo. to .... , .... .. ., '"""'..,.· ..... ...,.. .... DrM It, .,..,... ..,., It. '"flMJ'N) .. _ V4, l t#te. t ... M., ~ 1tMr· ""'· .............. wflltirw•~ ti...1, vinyl llltwltf". lffflF· 1170SJ) ICtlly hwMI• ll1t1ll 1111' $1699 '71 Buick BecM LI•ltecf (t,rSI. 211. L06dtd, 11111 powtr, fKtory 1lr, vinyl roof, llOHI pwr, U.lts, AM/FM ,,.,_., lie., etc, (llOOONl IC1ltr SW,9111" 11111111 Uls.I $4399 1969 Olds IMlhl •• 4 dr. H.T. l'ull ..,,...,., fK- IOry 1tr, "5.!I lflllln1, 'llf'lyt top. ( 'f lllA2'9 I _K.t!!Y.__....... 1tm11 u. $2399 '67 Pontiac Lt.M-H.T.e,_. VI, 1111om111c, r.e'lo, l\t1t.r, POwer t lttrlnt, t.cf!N'y 1lr. fUQJllJI $1199 c ..... &yin H.T. ~. VI, l lll'OIMtk,. ...,_.. l lttrlnig, -IM"lkft, IK!twy l lr, 'llflyl lop, tilt wllMI, low "'lle191. fYSHGI) IC11ty ~1..i 11;"11 .,... $2299 -· . . ......... ·-.... --...... • DAILY PILOT Cf' 1969 Olds Co"-I. HT C:,.. '69 Bonneville • Of". H1'1110P, P'utl Pa-r, FKIOfV Air (ond., Vlnyl 1°". (OfflL") ICILL '( SUOOllTID lllTAIL tlM' $1899 '69 VW Bug • Sod., llt1dio, HMllr. (11· l'0114<17l ICELLV SUGO•STt:O lllETAIL 1nu $999 '70 Catalina • Dr. hln:llOfl, ,.IS. ,./I , F IC• 1..-y Air, Vlnyl top. 11'13'0CIOU'n) ic,11., s..,...1t111 111111u mu $2199 '69 Toyota Lnd Cr•l.., 4 W1Mll 0<1Yt, 6 cyl, frH $2699 '65 lntematlonal s. ... ' Whitt °"'"''· ~rdlap. u. Mil-. (AHZnn 1971 Gremlin .,., ... c..,. Stldt $11111, rfdto, hHtt r. e..,.. klm 1111.,lor • rKI<. KtllY 5119fftlt• lltl•ll lutf 2 Pintos 11tun1b1Mrt 1..cl 1 Doo<". ' splld '"" iutom1tk 1v1llfibll. E"" (WllWJ '67 Plymouth •UIT Ill AutG. w1nt .. p0w1r ""· t tMt1"111, 1\r conll. iUJlllll. $1099 '68 Pontiac ~TO HT CPI., Auto. Tt1nt., '°OW- t r ~t..,.lno. F1ctory Air Cond., VlllVI TOP. (WOM• JU) $1799 ADVllT151D N:ICIS ffNCTlft THIU MAT lllT 2480 Harbor Blvd. at Fair Drive COSTA MESA Ph. 546-8017 l'h MILE SOUTH OF THE SAN DIEGO FWY. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 8:30 AM TO 10:00 PM SUN. 11 AM TO t PM I -.. -I§] I ,,,,.,M... l§J I ,_..... 1§1 I· -.. -I~ I -·-1§11 -·-1§11 .......... !§JI .......... l§l I -·~-l§l CAPRICE WAGON 1S6i 9 passenger --'62 CHEVY SS 327. Maga, great transportation. izT5. '36-8117 '67 CHEV Impala -Auto tra.mi/PS/Excel Corid. ~- 147-6736 aft 6 p.m. CHEV. '65 tmpela. SS 321-2 dr. PSJAC/r-h. Auto tnru -Oean -$600. 833-1109 COMET 1961 COMET $175. S<8-1&37 CONTINENTAL ·n Continental Mark III Loaded. one owner, private party. TI4: m-1554. CORVAIR * '63 OODGE Dart. Xlnt COl')- d;tion Good """· S19S. BEAUTIFUL! 64HJ68!l 1965 MUSTANG 2+2. This FORD car is immacu.l&t~. with a new V .S engine, new paint --------1 job, (done by a Ford deal· 197'l FORD Ga.laxie SOO Sta. er). Fu11y equlpp!d with 4- Wgn, grey/gold me'lallic, speed transmiuioa and tach AJC, power. cruile-0-matic, air conditioned. mq wbetlJ. 400 RV eng. phone Teny 11'1 the popular fatback bctwn 8 am & 5 pm 54G-147l. model anO it a btautifvl S900 firm. '89 LTD, 2 dr .. V-3, auto. ""''··po-•l•<r lng, 638°1132 powf'r brakes, air cond., I"'""""""'""""""""" vinyl top. Best offer, dlr. '65 Must.an&: 897-0724. $388 '63 FORD Ga.1 XL 4 Dr. No CUh Nttdtd hrdtp . steerina. brak es, air. HUNTINGTON SALES xlnt cond. $4.Th. 963-3089 aft 15086 Beach Blvd. 6. Midway City, Calif. '70 Ford Station Wagon Fair-on Beach, South of Bol.sa lane 500. 71,IXXl miles, 3 year 897-0224 warranty avail. ~Priced '66 Militant. 6 eyl, l spd, to aell! 962-1687. R/H, pxl tires -" brakes. '55 Font Wag., % Cam, T-10, ~ean inside Ir out. S750 1964 CON V. Make offer. 179:J6 4 qx:t., rebll. eng., bll Firm. Ph. 646-472l. Aspentree Unlvtnity Park, hc11ds, air shocks, U95. '66 Mu1tane • Orlr owner 6 Irvine. 645-3323. cyl. auto. tranA-rad/heaL .::...c::;.,,6"3"'C"'O'°R"'V"'A'J"R,---'70 Blue Maverick, fact air, 64.0X> mi. 5725 ~tust sell- 5100 Firm. ~792 ~ tires, tlnt@d rtua. well -&U--0219----~~-- .62 Cotvair Monza cftred for, $1800. 549-1362. 1966 ld uatana:. Orig. Owner. $100. 54M710 '67 Font LTD. full po'>'-'el', ~_' M:.: r~l~~· air. stereo, _tmmac cond! CORVmE IJ'OO. Ono ow"' 4!11-7081 . .... MUsrANG 219, auto, '61 Corvette -327, 4 11p, Customittd m1g11-wide ova.I.I, hollty, aft 3 • 34""'985. Im• PIS. Very Gd. Cond sr;i0. '65 F'ord Co. Sedan. 502-7896 macula!e cond. Must sell,1 -~~=====- dl,, .,,..,... OLDSMOBILE JEEPS '68 Fury 1112 Dr HT •• CORVETTE . 477 rut.back. New tirr, map ~~ $2950. 165 Mesa Dr., CM ~, t42-79IO '6a Jeep Waaoneer. 4 WO 6 cyL Auto-trans. Pwr, SIB. V8', automatic, air cand, ..e..LoUl'r.. S"B.6522.-ndio., ..beller. po9ief ste.er- :. COUGAR UNC:OLN. Ing, ...... M>l<H (WSN· nil. "'95 . • D61 COUGAR :In. 2 bbl, ... 1uto tram.. 1o miles, vlayl .,.,. Xlnt cnnd. $1450. Call m--3370. aftlr 5 p m • • CAU._"""_u_"""_._' -"' -u.. HUNTllGTON BEACH ewnin& fer an appotntmmt "' ...... °' u.. -CllRYSl.£1"1.YMOUTH llll6 Lincoln ~tale , O).:lm. ........~ 16161 llndl Blvd., R.B. !. 'IT Oou&•r -PIS, P/B, '95 Contfnmtal SleD -*"5164 e M2-Gi.11 • t11.to .. alr. 1 owner. Very f'uD P""ft' Needl -. : &ood oond. lf4...JM7 tvff, wen. . i sn-CM '67 Tot Ol:ado --======--11'dl JX1fl'S' a fadary air, low ; OOUCAll ''7. P/S. P/B, MAYEllCK nUln, low -• Imm. • aJr. cond. t owner. Xlnl . ---------,...-1 XXE3llB. :: oond. ll,llO. '7l-1671i. '111 Ma-. RIR, low ml. $16'9 r DODGE Xlnt oond. $1!100. PHONE K>ml !S-T125 HAL GREEN'S I 4 ~~~~~~o.;,, l __ MD __ c_U_R_Y __ , ~~ ~ Joodtd. ti..... :Jl,l(IO ml. 00 Mmury Cooopr XR.7 -a M ... Ltlllln W..W Sp.clal (VQC-Bl"' et Ill~~ SEIL-'QI Olds 4 Dr., auto, !WI, t151 , Tok< c1..,. .., « t INC S!GlO:.~"'°· NI tln!H sJaJa, air. Coid 113SO. ~ alt 10 am ewm. pwr plus. ~ Ph: ~2561. '112 DodtO lllat .....,.. ''4 5"'111 °""" Callml< ''5 Olds Laxury Sed. 1-d. v.,, dteA C4 tJno. lionllQp, ...., p/~ rlll. lmmaallolo. llHt oller, dlr. 12151o11er. Mf.%111. io ,...... .... 1111-1S11 m.-. 1 '66 Olds DeHa 88 4 Door Hardtop. V!, auto- matic. a.it cood. R.a.cUo, heat- er. power stttrin&. power brlkes, power windows, tilt whttl ITBE995) $895. HUNTINGTOH BEACH CHRYSLER-Pl YlllUTH lfi661 Beach Blvd., H.B. 54().51&4 • 842-0631 '65 Spert Fairlan. Radio, heater, automatic tran!., factory air, 1 owner. 015E1'V. $699 PHONE 645-5199 !\ollRACLE MAZDA 2150 Harbor Blvd. Costa M,,.. '68 Cutlass Supreme 2 Dr H. Top. dlr. fact air. k> mi, IXJ.POOlJ. Talc:e small down. Will finance Pvt. Pty . C.aD 546-8136 aft 10 am 49Ul1L "10 Torunado, xl.n't cond. Full pwr ~p. Lo mi's. Vin. top. AC atereo, am/tm &: tape dk, S3750. Phone Jlm Gray, Days 540-9892, Eves ~- '66 OLDS F-85 Holiday CJ>e, auto tr'&nl .. R&H., air, extra sharp! sm. Pvt party. 0..,. 67.J..«i55, f: v f: •• &M 5585 PLYMOUTH 'iii Plymouth CU I l 0 m &blrtJ&n I .pus. wteon-V- a, AT, _.,. -· '°""" bn.kd, air. 8Ht of- ter, dlr. 8!17~- PONT1AC 'QI C'l'O Big ....... vln1I .... _,. air, la<tory mai wbl!ell (with locb) :n.ooo mn... Mu-X. dra. Beautiful mod.. moo « belt otter. GS-1256. '61 FlREBIRD, auto trans, ili -. llh!t oond. Call alt I p.a.. fll..l1M or »7-«m '111 FlRElllllll Fopri~ lillt -·-553 IS)J Small can AREN'T lor ••erJW ! ~(( ))) ' J111t thole who ' want to saw mone1 ! We're not su99estin9 that every· body buy one of our cars ..• just those of you who like comfortable, dependable transportation that will save you money every mile you drive. If you 're one of these people, see Harbor Volkswagen today. OPEN SUNDAY • Now is the season! We have over 20 VW recreational vehicles & busses in stock. Plus over 150 new .& used VW's. '72 HONDA MOTORCYCLE 175 .•... S54t '70 OPEL GT ................... $2095' '70 DATSUN PICKUP TRUCK •.••... $1750 '61 VW BUG . $299 . . ................ . N£E6 WORIC. (FYHlff). '68 FIAT SPIDER ................. $1011 '65 KARMANN GHIA ............. $1081 MID• Ill_., ('..onaillon, Nrw Too. (XEY 4711). Brl;ht lted w/(tlld lnt...IOr. '69 OPEL KADET ................. $695 '65 VW SC?UAREBACK ............ S79t • S1ii9M:, .... , (lLM 17J), Nno Ptllll.' "*6. (ltFff71) '68 VW BU.G .................... ffff '70 VW CUSTOM SUNDIAL CAMPER S2lll GrNI • _......_ (W AYll. Tlllt ........ 9111'f '68 VW KOMBI BUS ............. '. Sl 795 '65 VW VAN .................... $1011 OW!t•ulff .... lloe. rlodio iWXL*l. l-<•llMt ....... '*"""'"-(XCV Im '68 VW FASTBACK ............... $1295 ')O PORSCHE 914 ................ l2ill '.,,...., l lr Gllllll., lil!.1 --IXCI02ll • ''''' ""' ..._..a. ,..,., tsr.-iow, i.w 111t1e1. WMQN ..-11t <:m ann '68 MG MIDGET ................. $995 '68 DODGE VAN ............... $2195 '70 DATSUN 510 ................ $1281 '63 VW IUG .............. , ..... $591 .AM/,M., 4 tp:I., _,.,.,.. .. ~ ..._h 1"1U"I ~ ~ '64 VW VAN .................... $999 '71 DODGl COLT WAGON ...... S21U '62 CORVAIR VAN CAMPER ...•••. $699 '68 FORD GALAXIE ............. ST395 ltl«!ftltY ,..... .... (Ol(A II.ti I DMI' M..T. Al*., 1'..S.. lfw, .. ~ lftO 1"1 I ( 48 DAILY PILOT Friday, M.J¥ 19, l'f/1 • CADILLAC NINETEEN . SEVENTY-TWO EXECUTIVE CAR SALE BUY OR LEASE 19-12 -1972· Coupe De Ville PURCHASE PRICE Sedan De Ville PURCHASE PRICE Full Power equjpment. vinyl roof, leather & tapestry interior, white wall tires, AM/FM, soft ray glass, 6 wa.v seat. door ~ards. climate control air, tilt tele. wheel, bumper impact strips. etc. (232 744 ). Full power equipment, vinyl roof, leather & tapestry interior, white side wall tires, AM/FM, soft ray glass, 6 way seat. door guards, climate control air . condi· tioning, tilt tele. wheel, bumper impact strips, etc. (232744). ~ L'EASE A 1972 COUPE DE VILLE LEASE A 1972 SEDAN DE VIILE FulJ power equipment, vinyl roof. leather & taPestry interior,-whitewall tires, AMiFM . soft ray glass, 6 way seat, door guards, climate control air conditioning, tilt-tele. wheel, bumper strips, etc. (45 17 ). 1''ull power equipment, vinyl roof, leather & tapestry interior, white wall tires, AM/FM, soft ray glass, 6 way seat, door 'guards, climate control air conditioning, tilt-tele. wheel, bumper impact strips. etc. (3500). ONLY $165 A MONTH ·24 MONTH OPEN END ONLY s170 A MONTH 24 MONTH OPEN END Largest Selecti~n of Late Model CADILLACS in Orange County 1963's to 1971.'s '71 Eldorado Full pov.•cr, factory air cond .. tele·tllt whe€'1, stel'eo door lock.!!, vinyl top, leather interior. AM/FM multiplex. Shows meticulous cart! throughout. {4037761 '71 Sedan DeVille Beaut.. Firemlst finish, power, tapestry & leather intrrlor, Cull power, factory alr cond .. vinyl to1J, door locks, AM /FM rndio. \VS\V tiN"s, very lo\v milcng:C'. fl66CHB) '70 Sedan De Ville Full (JO\VC'r, factory air, AM /FM stereo muHi· plrx, tilt-t<"lc v.•herl, t.')ec. door locks, t"•ill.c:ht sentinel, vinyl top. tapestry & Leather inter-. ior trin1. One ownrr car that shoW!i excep. tional care. {5.19AGK) '69 Sedan DeVille Full pov.·cr, factory nir co nd itioning, vinyl top, lC'athcr intcric)r. f)fl\\Tr scats, tilt \Vhecl. AM / FM strrco radio, pn11•cr rloor locks, t wilight sentinel. fXSR166'J '67 Coupe DeVille Vinyl top, Leather intl'rior, ruu pcl\VCi, faclt•ry nir conditioning:, A~l/F~I mdio, tilt tclr \vhccl. IUJ1"J!i29) Po1ve r door Jocks, stereo. '69 Coupe DeVille tknutiful Firc1nist finish, vinyl top, plush full lrnthcr intf'rior. all possible llO'''cr extras, t ilt·tt'lt' sl.et'ring:, stcrro, door Jocks, t1vi light srntinel, nc1v whltl' side wall tires, local (l) o\vncr, less than '.l3.000 miles. Sold & serviced by us. (scr. 2337.f>Jl SALE PRICE SALE PRICE SALE PRICE SALE PRICE SALE PRICE SALE PRICED '70 Mercedes 280 SEL Sedan. Very low nlilcagc. Exc1uisilc Tobacco Brow n finish with natural full leath- er interior, JX>WCr steering. brakes, electric windo,vs, factory air conditinnin~. Afil /Fl\1 stereo multiplex. Absolutely showroom fresh throughout. f538CEil '71 Porsche 911 T Sunroof 91 lS suspension, 5 speed transmission, AM/ <FM radio, mag 1vheels. Absolutely spotless condition. (767DSL) '67 Mercedes 250 S Sedan Exquisite sand bcigr v"ith full leather inter· ior. auto. trans., J)ll11·cr stf.>cring, power disc brakes, AM /Fl\f radio, radial 1vhitc side wall tires, local (1) 01vncr beauty that sho1vs im· peccable care inside and out. (TWJ978l '69 Olds Delta 88 Custom 4 Dr. 1-Iardtsp. Vinyl top, bc-autiful tapestry interior, f-nctory nir cond., full 1>0"·er, 455 engine, ll'!';S thnn 27,000 miles, most de- luxe extras. (ZNL914 I '69 Buick Riviera Powt'r steering, power brakes. auto. trans .. radio, astro ventilation with heater. tilt wheel, full vinyl interior, "''SW tires. An exceptional buy. (XYD654) '69 Buick Skylark 18,m miles, Beautiful gold \V/\vhitc top, gold tapestry interior, V-8, auto. trans., power steering, power brakes, radio, heater, white sid(' walls, local ( 1 l owner, impeccable cond. 1756DLNl SALE PRICE $6999 '\ SALE PRICE SALE PRICE SALE PRICE SALE PRICE SALE PRICED '71 Coupe De Ville Very low mileage on this showroom fresh gem, factory alt cond., full power, vinyl top, full leather interior, AJ..1'/FM stereo multlp.lex. tilt-tele steering,. polver door tocks, twilight sentinel, absolutely beautiful. (338DFA) '70 Eldorado Looks & runs like the day first sold! Full power, fnctory air cond., teJe.tilt steering, door locks, cruisf' control, vinyl top, full leath· er interior. (019AGC). N~· W8W tires. '70 Coupe De Ville Factory air cond., full leather Interior, ill/ FM stereo multiplex, tilt-telescopic steering, pcllver door locks, twilight sentinel, new white side Y.-alls, local (1) owner beauty that looks like the day It was delivered new. (546ASI) f917BEJ) (124074) 3 to choose from. '68 Sedan De Ville Convert. Factory air cond., cloth & leather in· tt'rior, run powrr~ tilt·tele steering, stereo AM/FM multiplex, local Cl) owner. Sold & serviced by us. {WOK861 ) '63 Coupe DeVille Factory air conditioning, cloth & leather in· terior, all power, tilt & telescopic steering, AM /FM, automatic cruise co ntrol, most all dlx. extras. (llMTil) '"70 Sedan DeVille Vinyl top, leather interior, full power, factory air cond., tilt-tele steering, power door locks, AM/FM stereo multiplex, twilight sentinel, Vogue premium tires, less than 27,000 m.lles, local (1) owner. Sold &: serviced by u11. (231· BEL) YOUR ONLY FACTORY AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEALER SERVING THE ORANGE COAST HARBOR AREA ... NABERS LEASING LEASE DIRECT · lmmecflat• D•llvery • Ex<ellenr S.1.nlon . ' ,;. ... ' ;1CkUp and Delivery ~ . J:,... Loan Cart Whlle L.a1e Car S.VkM fffr and on ... holf ocres of total authorbecl c:odNloc lacllltle1 de•l-4 to better ••II encl _,,Ice Cadillac automoblle1. 10 (work 1tolb) ....,i ,4, f~ory 'trolned technlclan1. SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU MAY 22. 1972 NABERS 2600 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 540-9100 SAi.ES DEPARTMENT OPEN 8:30 AM to 9:00 PM Mon. thro Fri. • 9:00 AM to 6:00 PM SaL and Sun. SALE PllCE SALE PRICE SALE PRICE SALE PRICE SALE PRICE SALE PRICED I I I 1 '71 COLT 2-DOOR HARDTOP IMMEDIATE DELIVERY -.. -· '71 VEGA 2-DOOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY -·-. .. ' .,,. _ _. '71 PINTO RUNABOUT. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY --. DAILY l"llOT .qi .~,!?,~DOWN $39 A MONTH ~~~l~s $199 DOWN $39 A MONTH ~~:~s $199 DOWN $39 A MONTH FOR 36 MOllTHS ~~~;~~l~~,~~~~ $12 8 8 :~;~~:·::::~~"= .,011 '"''· dPlu•• cr1di1 for 36 ma1. D1furti w~tl co•ffl. (Oro.,... · pym1. price f l 60l ind. IOl & mwlduiu• ~ h.>11 lac!<>-FUU l1ton", ANNUAi. l'lRClN!A.G[ ry ~"'pM. oasccv. PllCI RATE l l.7S %. MIS llOH. "'"•$128 119';,•~o.,,.o.139 1• vW!yl lllt.<"iof. rodo(I, ~ lm.pymt, ird. kll. llCMH htottr, wh11ewoll & oll corryF.g d'IClrgtt on Gpp<". llrt\. ,..,y1 rvol. H-8 crMil for 36 mos. Dtftrrtd lu•t whttl COVUI pyml. ,.. ... s 1603 ""'· Jal .. ~ . lull loc1ory fUU Ii<"'"· AHNJA1. PEICEHT.t.Gf tql.tipped. lllODZlt rt Kl u.n I l.1S"' .... ~ ....... ,, $1288 intttoor. 4 !.Pftd 11ooi- miuioll + full loc:klt'I equ!P"td. 9•i>CfD. ~l~~••lololdn.pym1 $J'I·• IOfl:ll IN. pymt, ind, tu. le:'",. & all <lll'l"i!AJ c'*'tet on ..,, crtdol lot 36 mos. Ot ftrrtd fUll pyml,prl(t S1603ind tot& PllCl lo<MI._. MMJAL PfRCENTAGI RA![ 11.15"1., '71 . cf.ORD-- 500 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY $199 DOWN $36 A MONTH FOR 3,6 MONTHS $199 i• tolol dn. pyml. S3b ii & olf canving diorg•I °" appr. utdit lor 311 ma1. Dt!e,.ed pymr. pri<t S 149~ mcl. la• & $118 8 •" ~. "'"'· nl. "" l<m• S 199 11 rotol di!. pymr. $60 ;, tolol mo. pym1 incl. lo•. I it en11 & all f<IH1 ing c horg t • on opp<. ueclit for ~ ma1. Otftf'ft'd J)ymt pntt S7359 n:t. hU & loc:tn ... .l.NtlU.l.l P[R([N. V:I • o~lo. 1tan1~ l<Ktory I fUll lo<erts1. ANNUM PERC(Nl.1.GE Oll',radoo,lwar".923 CIE l"ltlCl RA.1£11.70"~ AG NTIME '70 FORD STATION WAGON Custom 500 V-8, oulR-· trans., power steering, ra- dio, heoter. 404 BES $1188 FULL l"RICE s199 DOWN $36 A MONTH ~~:~Hs S 199 11 101~ dn. l'fml. $36 11 tolof rro. pyrnr. iro<l. 1111<. l1<..,1t & all carryWj cha11jt1 111 appr. crtri11 for ~ 1110L o.ftmd ppll.pricl S 1495 incl. 10• & hC:ffl\t. ANNUAt PERCEN· IAGE RATE 1110". '70 CHEV. STATION WAGON 9 Poss., V-1!, auto. Irons .. power stffriog/bfckes, wh i- lewclls. 781A\IA $1488 S 1n i~ 11111:11 drr. pymt, 146 i1 total ""°·j(mt. n:I. Ill• & lit. & o11 carrying d111rg11 on appr. cr1d1r !or 36 m1~. 01l.,1mr.pric1 855 ind. le• & lie. ANNUAt 'ERCENTAGE R>t( 11.0I". '71 FORDSTATIONWAGON V-8, oulo."1rans ... power steering, radio, heoler. Y37789 $1588 fUUl"llCE '70 MAVERICK 2-Door NOVA, oulo. trans., rod io, heater, $888 ZKC407. Auto. Irons., ra di o, heate r, whee l $9 8 8 covers. Oelux.e chrome moldings. 517ARI FULL PRICE '70 DATSUN 510 4 Dr. Sedan 4 speed, buck el seals radio, heeler, $ 7 8 8 472ELT. FULL PRICE '66 TOYOTA Corona 4 Dr. DELUXE 4 Dr. Sedon outo. tnrns., ra· $ 2 8 8 dio, heater. SLWS14. FULL PRICE FULL PRICI '68 PONTIAC Le Mans COUPE, Radio, heafer, wheel covers. $6 8 8 Plus much much more. WTF584 FULL PRICE '66 MUSTANG 2-Door Radio, heater, bucket sects, mog $488 wheels. SVT336 FULL PRICE '68 CHEV. Malibu 2 Dr. Har top '68 CAD. El Dora $6 8 8 V·B, outo lroos .. foclory oor 0 $1988 V-8, rod io, heater, deluxe wheel covers, vinyl interior and hos much, much more. 1428QG. WE APPRECIATE YOUR BUSINESS , ~onditioning, full p~wer includ- ing power steering, power brokes, power windows, pow- er seols, rodio, heater, tinted loss, landau to , WWM209 IMMEDIATE DELIVEIY 4 Speed trans., ra- dio, heo1tr, bvckel ieots. full vinyl inte- rior. 3211 ELF ,_Bl!AND NEW '72 CHALLENGER 2-DOOR HARDTOP V1nvl trw.i. hue<" \ecti. ,..,, chrome bumpw ~uard'-dt>ol horn1. i.,,tty lactory l'qi.Jt>pt'd. M7lCZBJ~9417 FULL PRICE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ....... $199DOWN S 199 ii ~tol <in_ p~ml. $1' •I 10101 mo pyml. •, ;"'1.""'"'""''""'"'"''."'"·'"$84 A MONTH FOR 36 ,6ppr. crtilot for Jb mo1. Otl. pym!. pr.Cl M '$3223 inc:I. to• g lii:eRSI. AHl«.IAL p(R(fK. OHTHS IAGtRAt£1133'!;.. CIBTOll f 111 IT COUITl:S? SH AND DRIVE THI FAMOUS YAMPIRI YAN LARGEST SELECTION OF VANS ON THE WEST COAST BRAND '72 CHARGER NEW Lood11f •illl •inrl b1ncll 1tals. hit,., l7'xl4 lirl" wMdltlilW •a1h1r1, ~ir1uion 1i911al1, twit winyl !~llritf', 1111ln !on c111trol 1'1*'1. nwtll-h -· Wl.71CV.166657 '70 FORD Custom 4 Door V-8, ouro. trans., power steering, $9 8 8 heater, much much more 839BEM ~o~~~ ~it~~:~~n~s~:e;; ~=: $1 0 8 8 96577A FULL PRICE '68 DODGE"R/T 2 Dr. Har top V-8, auto. trans .. Power steering, $5 88 bucket seals, console, full factory equipt. XOA259 FULL PRICE '66 OLDS F85 2 Door Radio, heoler, wheel covers. $ 2 8 8 Good lronsportolion. Wll004 '69 CHEV. Sedan V-8, auto. Irons., foctory oir cond., full power. radio ond heoler. YNJ74S . FULL PRICE $988 FULL PRICE p '68 JAVELIN 2-Dr. Hardtop auto. Irons., radio, heater. deluxe $6 8 8 wheel cov ers. Wh ite vin yl bucket seals. Much, much more. XRLSS9 . FULL PRICE '69 DODGE Monaco Hardtop '64 CHEV. Nova Convertible 6 tyl., outo trans .. power steering, whilewall tires, deluxe wheel covers. vinyl interior. PSKS77 $288 .\ I • .~LY PILOT , , BRAND 'NEW '72 MUSTANG s95so+'" Over Dea.!er Cost Incl. prep, get reedy, hold beck, freight. Well Equ;pped #250 BRAND NEW '72 L. T .D. 2 DR. s1491~T&l Over Dealer Cost Incl, prep, 9et r1edy, hold b1ck, fre ight. Well Equ;pped #048 BRAND NEW '72 MAVERICK 51.091s-, ~ \.'> +T&L \ k y p Over Dealer Cost · · -Incl, prep, 9el reed\<, ~old beck, fr~~CJht. Well Equ;pped # 1187 LIASE DIRECT CALL 642-0010 J. MALCOLM REID, MGR. OVER 300 CARS AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE LEASE -ALSOr-- DAILY RENTALS '72 GRAN· TORINO WAGON Herd to fiM u1ed, Full Powtr, 1ir cond., Squire. 1499EHEl '69 OPEL Rallye GM 4 1peed, radio, heeler, low mi!e1. IZBN324 1 '71 MAZOA Rotary Cpe. 4' Spted, red1o, heeler. Good mile1. ( 789CZJl MAKE OFFER '70 PONTIAC GTO s2 ·19& 2 dr. H.T. va. euto., P.S .• R&H, Yinvl roof, eir cond .. good mil11. (3900Tlll " 7t FORO Cu•tom 500 4 dr., VI, R&H, eulo., P.S., 't'inyl roof, ( 135092) '70 V.W. Wagon Fully equipped, Redio and Heiler. Good mile1. l565BBG) • WHY ''ORDER YOURS TODAY?'' WHEN WE OFFER IMMEDIATE ' DELIVERY FROM ONE OF ORANGE COUNTY'S BIGGE$T COURIER INVENTORIES! COURIER PICKUP Jl .~~~;,,: THE SMART LOOKING / ,.. '--~-7-1· , . SMOOTH -.RIDING : WAY TO BE t~:::~~~- , ---. -'Jl .IRIFI Y:! ~~ PINTO WAGOft- 4 PASSENGERS BIG- 60 CUBIC FOOT OF CARGO SPACE. Pl'ICE THEM-YOU' LL LlkE THEM! ' LET US PROVE THAT NO ONE OFFERS A BmER DEAL THAN OURS! -CAMPER SALE! 15 AT SUPER SAVINGS! EXAMPLE DISCOUNT: NEW '72 F253 PICKUP AND NEW 11 FT. CAMPER Pic kup ii Cutt. Styl11 id• with 360-VI, eir cond., euto, frens., r1dio, 1100 G~w pkg., 1pl. 'ust, ceb, boot, limit 1lip edt, T-Gless, 7:50x l6, Aux 25 gal. fu1I f•nk •rid ll'IOrt. Stk. #574, El Dorado Shtwnte Cell'lpar hes ges/tltc. tefrig,, monornatic toiltf, cheteeu renge, color cord dr•pe1, rn•f• frt1111 tc. Stk. #159. Truly dhr. pk9. throu9hout! L;s1 Prict $7770.60 Salo Prke $6171.60 $1600 DISCOUNT - . ' SPECIAL PURCHASE MAVERICK .1PINTO SALE Many To Choase From EXAMPLE : '71 FORD GALAXIE 500 HARDTOPS V-S, t ulo, fr•n1., powtr 1t•trin9, R&H, Air Cond., with vinyl roofi. Good Mil•1, Good color s•l•ttion, Lie. numbtr 1074· BUOJ $2896 OR BEST• OFFERS '69 MUSTANG $1596 Ha rdtop, Good Milts, Radio, Hiatt~. Auto. Tr1n1 ., V-1, !VWTIOOJ '69 DODGE Van A-108, V-S.Auto. Trt n1., R1dio, Healer, Good Mile1, 13867921 '71 PL YMOUTli Crkket 4 1p1tJ, low mil11. Fa ctory •quipped. (206CXJ I 4 apeeclt, 3 •peed• and automatic models. Some with vlnyl roofs. ·--·· --• YOUR PICK e '71 PINTO '70 MAVERICK Good fl'lilt1, fully fectory equipped. R•dio end heeler, exterior decor group. 1142· CCM.I s1495 '67 MUSTANG HT Full Fe cfory Equipptd. Redio, h•el1r, Good Miles. ITWNl79l '64 RAMBLER Classic '4 Dr., 6 cyl., Auto. Tren1., Re dio, He1ttr, Good Miltr. IFYR512l '64 CHEVY Impala HT F1 cfory Equipptd. Good mi/11, !Wl89851 Aadio, Ht11ttr, Auto. Trtns. Chroll'lt Trim, Good Miles, IZCK349) s995 II SALES Dm. I AM TO UM MON • .fll. PARTS-.SERVICE HOURS · 7 AM To 9 PM MON 7 AM To 6 PM TUE·FRI I HOURS IAM TO IPM SAT 11 AM TO I PM SUN . :.. i.-.. t I • • 1t ' BRAND NEW '72 GALAXIE 2 DR. BllAND NEW Gran Torino Sport s1212~Tll Over Dealer c·=os:.-t Incl, prtp, 91t r11dy, hold back, fr,_i9ht. Well Equ;pped #838 D_EMONSTRA TORS We Have Several Low-Mileage, Well Equipped T-Birds • LTD's •-Galaxie-SOO's • Torino's & MustonCJS Thot Have Been Written Back To Way Belo.w Qri9inal Dealer's Cost. .IRST COME, FIRST S~ VEDI. 1972 F100 STYLESIDE PICKUPS $2599 Red io, H••ler, Auto. Shift, low rnilt1, IWVJ940l '67 FORD V-8 '4 Or., Redio, Hpet1r, Auto, Tr1n1., Power Stteting, Good Mile1. CTSR97i11 ',63 CHEVY II 4 door. R1die, ht1f1r, •ufoll'letic, good rnilei. llHZ415 l '63 FALCON Futur1 Hardtop,,,R1d io"Ha1ftr, 'Auto~ T ren1., Good Mila1. COl UlOil ''3 FORD Galaxie Herdfop, Red io, He1t1r, Auto, Trtn1., Power St•erin9, V-8, Good Mil es. IFTUlllJ '65 BUICK Sport Wagon Radio, Ht•fer, Auto. Trens., Air Cond, Good Mil11. !THMi179 l PA1lTS DEPT. ONLY I AM to 1 PM SATURDAYS • I I ! I I 7 I I I I 7 San ·Clemente Ca istrano VOL 65, NO. l~O. 4 SECTION$, 50 PAGES --· ----.. -· , I EOITIO.N ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA --,.---- Today's Final FRIDAY, MAY 19, '1972 TEN CENTS 'Devil Cult' Member Guilty • Ill Grisly Death By TOM BARLEY ot tlle D•lly ,1111 lltlt Christopher "Gypsy" Gibboney pleaded guilty to reduced murder charges Thurs-. day in Orange County Superior Court ac- tion that closes the file on what lawmen regard as the most grisly killing in coun- ty history. Judge William Murray, accepted the plea of guilty to second degree murder from an Oregon youth who was just one week ·past his seventeenth birthday ori Jun! 2, 1970, when he played his part in the rnutllati<m murder of Mission Viejo teacher Florence Nancy Brown. Gibboney was committed to the California Youth Authority (CYA) for an indefinite period. He will be 25 befor1 that sentence is reviewed in any way, prosecutor Jay Moseley said. Gibboney bad been certified for trial as an adult offender. The California Supreme Court iJ scheduled to hear an appeal against that Superior Court decision. The guilty plea Thursday represented a triumph for the District Attorney's Office in the sense that the witness they vitally ne~ed to insure a conviction against Gibboney in the scheduled murder trial absconded more than one month ago. The DAILY PILOT learned long before _..onna Manager Returns Grant -for Water Given No Chance San Clemente City Manager Kenneth tion has made strong bids to the city {or Carr this week said that all chances for a use of municipal sewer and water · fed al d tat Clean-Water systmls to serve the San Onofre Bluffs ma)or er an s e State Park. grant for a $1.l·million sewer interceptor But unless the new interceptor is built, line have failed "once and for all.'' San Clemente would probably be unable Carr reporting to councilmen on a to provide the M!rvice. trip ~ made last week to sacramento Carr said Wedneslay Iha! perhaps In · .. • the next few 1ean' negoUaUom, an s~d that there was absol~e]y no agreement for some auifl.ance from thl chance" that the city would qualify for an state coWd yield funds to help in the rals- 81).percent go~ernmen~ grant for the ing of the $550,000 89 the city's share of badly-needed line i:unn1ng nearly the en-the cost.a. 'P;! length of ~ c~ty. . In the meantime, a new round of >grant But there still ~s the poss1bl~ty that applications will take place -this Ume the city could quahfy for a Housing an~ at the federal level. Urban Development grant of 50 percent, ' he said. Councilmen agreed to allow Carr to ap- ply for that grant, but prospects are still glum. Even if the grant were approved San Clemente would have to scrape up $550,000 as it! share. Carr said that the specifications and description of the line mean that it doesn't flt govenunent criteria for the large grant. One irony ls that one state agency - the water resources control board -has ruled that San Clemente is ineligible, yet denlands made by another state agency make the construction of the interceptor essential. The Department of Parks and Recrea· Clemente Inf ant Dies in Sleep The month-old 90n of a San Clemente couple died in his sleep early today. Efforts bY' a distraught father and re!C\le persoMel to revive. the baby failed. The infant was pronounced dead shortly after darbreak at Mission Com- munity Hospital. Sean Joseph Rlley, the infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald G. Riley, •P' parenUy succumbed in his sleep earlier in the inomlng, polict said. For mer Planner Servi1ig Again In Holmes Seat ' A San Clemente architect who aerved as a planning commissioner in the 1960s has been tapped · to serve again on the panel. Councilmen this week confirmed the appointment of Mel Morgan of 304. Poco Paseo to serve the unexpired term of Art Holmes, who left the commis.slon for the council and mayor's gavel. Morgan, selected from. a field of more than a dozen applicants for the unpaid commissioner's position, originally served on the panel from 1963 to 1967. The new commissioner conducLs an architect's practice in Ontario and is an 11-year resident of San Clemente. He and his wife, Betty, have two aons. He will assume his post on the com· mission at its meeting next Wednesday night, completing the one year remaining in Holmes' term. Councilmen selected Morgan from a field of 13 applicants under a new p~ cedure which includes screening flf resumes and oral• interviews of persons interested in planning posts. Previously, appointments were made quick1y by in· dividual councilmen. Thursday's action that Herman Hendrick Taylor, 19, a member of the gang that butchered Mrs. Brown, 31, El Toro, violated the probation imposed in return for his cooperation in the conviction of gang leader Steven Craig Hurd, 20, and Arthur Craig "Moose" Hulse. Defense attorney Forest DeArmond was never aware of Taylor's absence. lf h~ had been, it is extremely unlikely that he would have allowed his·young c1ient to plead guilty. Taylor fled more than a month ago and is the subject today ' of a statewide search. Chief Deputy District Attorney James Enright said parole violation charges, set aside when Taylor-testified tunH)ff of the san Diego Freeway. hatchet man ln that murder. He Is today for the prosecuUon in the Hurd and Hulse sbe was hu!tled at knlfepoint into an .servlng a life term ln state prison on a trials, will almost certainly be revived lrvlDe orange grove where she was conviction that includes hls role as an a~ when the young transient is apprehended. stabbed to death and portions of 1 her cessory in the Brown kllllng. "You might say we're playing a vital heart devoured in an orgiastic tribute to Hurd w11s found in Superior Court to be card game with our trump card miss-Satan. insane and \\•:ts committed to Atascadero ing," Enrighf said two weeks ago. "If What was left of the teacher was then State Hospital until he regains his sanity. this lnformation ever getf into print we dumped intp the back of her car, driven f\telanie May Daniels, 31, the gang'• can say goodbye to a 'Ctlp-OUt' by Gib-by &aha: metnbers to the Ortega Highway girl member and unofficial trea11urer. honey and to a lot of taxpayers money in near San Juan Capistrano and buried in a was convic ted on accessory charges and the form ot a long trial." shallow grave. sentenced to a mlnim'um of 10 year1 la Gibboney admitted .with his plea Thurs-· MrS. Brown's killing followed by just 24 state priso n. day that he · was one of the drug-using hQw's lht gang's hatchet slaying of Jerry The absent Taylor, who served 1!5 gang of four youttis and one woman who Wayne Carlln, 20, a Santa Ana service mont~ in county ja.ll while testifying dragged Mr!. Brown from her car two statiOn attendanl. against Hurd and Hulse, wtis sentenced to year_s ago as she entered the Sand c_anyo_n _ _LH~se{_.!_9, _G_a_rden_Grove, _w_as_th_e _ live year!. pi:_obation. ' on' ' . ' ARROW POINTS TQ AREA WHEllE BOMB EXP~ODED IN .FOIJll~H :~LOQJt WOMEN··s REsor'ROOM Pent1gon's Mill Entr1nce 11 at Left, River Entr1nce•i1 'l'!--Vppi;r Left ~~~~~~~~~~~ Home Vandalized In San Oemente Vandalism occurring sometime Thurs- day caused heavy damage to the house of a Sborecliffs woman and ils contents, police reported. Mrs. Ruth E. Geary of 27f.'f1. Via Vistosa, called San Clemente polict in the morning hours when she discovered the damage at her residence. Officers said that flower pols and other planters were ruined in the front yard and that furniture, appliances, food and other household items were damaged and strewn throughout the house. An exact amount or dollar 1085 'ln the incident was not immediately determined. Pentagon Bomb Causes Fwod, Destroys Walls WASHil!iGTON ·(AP) -A bomb tx· ploded ln a restroom at the Pentagon early today. blew out two interior walls and sent tons 'of water from broke11ipipes gushing through offices and a shopping concourse. Shortly helm the bomlt exploded, the radical Weatherman o r g a n i z at 1 o n telephoned the Washington Post saying a bomb had been planted In the Pentagon. The Post notified police who callod the. Pentagon -minutes before ·the blast. The Weatherman outfit, whtch alto called New York.newspapers and broacS. cut stations,, 1akl the ·act was 1n response' to,ltepped-Up U.S. operations in Vietnam.and 1n observance of the birth date ·or Ho Chi Minh. Few workefs were in the are11-at the time and officials said this prevented irr jarles. Police alcl«j by a dog apedaliy trained to mi!f out n11}qsi•e1 continued au o:· (See< PENTAGON, Pqe Z) Agnew Calls Supposi~ion Unrealistic .. From Wire Service• WASIUNGTON -Vice President Spiro T. Agnew said today he did not lrnatf whether he would be Prtsldent NlJ:on'1 running mate in November bul added : that it wu "to~y unre.alifUc" to aup-"'"°"' Treasury SoatlfrY John B. Co..U. 1'41'."wouJd be occoptablo. • I 1 ' "I do.n't undentand 00w lll)'llody could ierloualy .believe that a man who 11 registered aa a Democrat In the mlddl1 of May can tum Republican and be ~minated vice pruldent," A&MW aald., Agnew talkecl with reporltr1 ofter making' a ~mlnnte report to Prtsldtnt Nixon on hls Far Eastern visit. RespanWng to questions about b1s run- ntng again for vlce president, Agnew said he had not been asked by the President and would not decide until Invited. He said Ni.J:on was rlghUully delaying a decl!lon to detennlne what running mate would be most helpful to him, and added: ••Mr. CoMally Is just not It." Connally submitted hlJ resignation u Treasury secretary this week. He w11 one of the President'• closest advisers. Agnew aa.ld speculation about Con. nally's chances of being picked by Nb:on as a running mate had been blown out of propOrtion by news media. "It just Isn't in the cards. Any pollllcal pro will telJ you that,'' he said. Agnew said he had answered questions about his own political future many tlmu in the past and -allhough he praited Connally as a capable government of· ficial -he appeared aomewhat nettled by the questioning. Within minute. alter Agnew 1poke, the White How:e announced that t b 1 President'• daughter, Tricia Nixon Cos, -. will participate In a "Salute to Ted Agnew" at a BalUmore theater tonight and deliver a rnesaage from Nixon. On another subject, Agnew 1ald "we are coming out of the wooda" and blun-- tlng the North Vletnameae offmalve. Officers and firemen were summoned to the Riley home at 415 N. Ola Vista at 6:22 a.m. when the parents discovered that the baby was no longer breathing. Family members sald they last saw the baby &ll~e late Thursday night. Land Developers Charged ....... Wea tiler Burglar Gets $684 At Clemente Tavern Soµieone familiar with the lock com· blnaUon to the .safe at a San Clemente bar clean<d the box out o1 1684 In cash, the owners told police 'Mrunday. Employes of the El Camino Room disoofered the loss at noon 111.ursday as they prepared to open for business. Ncil,b1ng but the cash in the safe was takm from the busln"" at 270 S. El Cimino Real, police said. Site Bill Approved • SACRAMENTO (AP) -A bill to ,.t up a 1poclel power plant 1IUng agency has ltCtlved Initial op~val of a Senate com- JniU.. The bill, lnlroductd by Sen. .A1ll'ed E. Alqaill (D&n Jooe), ... IC!- ,.,_, by tbe Committee on Publlc Utllflln and Corporations. It must ltlll be 1Pllf09td by the Finlnce CommlUee ... ,.... ...... lo the -to Door. I Goldwater's Father-i n:..-Law Accused by· DA Prominent Newport Beoch psychiatrist- bus.inessman Dr. E. Mortimer Gherman ls ooe of three men charged Thunday with grand theft and false advertl!lng in oonnectlod with a Big Bear Lake real estate promotion. Dr: Gherman, whose daughter married U.S. Rep, Ban-y M. GoldwaltT Jr. (R·Los Angeles) two months OiO. ii facing 10 grand ·thelt complaints and 51 complaints ol false advertislog brouiht by the San Bernardino COOnty Diltrlct Attorney. The awltchboard at the Balboa Bay Club In Newport Beach where Gherman resides wal under lnstructlon1 to hold all calls to the Gherman apartment thlJ morning. Dr. Ghtnnan ii an oUlctr of tho cor- poration that ncentlf purdwtd the Bay Club and otber BBC lloldlnp io Palm Springs and at catallna. Hf is alto I director ol ffollamon Romes lnc. of Fountain Valley. San Bemonllno Deputy lllltricl A~ ·) tomey Charles Wolfe said the cbaries against Oberman and two others stem from the sale of 135 cabin sites where utillties bad been promi.std, but never ln- stalled. Wolfe said he filed the action upon complaints from buyers who had paid a combined total of II.I million for the lots. Dr. Gherman is chalrman'Of the board or Mountain Lake Developmtnt Corpora- tion, the firm that aold the property and which shatts corporal< offices with International Bay Clubs Inc. which ... quired the Bay Club boldlngs from Jack Wntther la.I year. Dr: Ghuman is secretary·lrtasu.ttr of me, the Balboa Bay Club Inc, lhe 8"Jt\Ol Boy laland Clu)>1 tho Balboa Bay Raaquet Club, tbe Balboa ·Bay Deltrt Clull'lnCI the Bay Club Realty Company, Alao named ln the complaints were John A. upat'' PetterlOll, an officlal of Mountain Lab who works with Dr. Gherman al olfku 1t !Ill Westctill ' ... Drive, and a man Identified Ol)]$ as James Moreland. Each was chargOd With 15 coonts of falat and mlaleedlni .oc1- verti1ing. Wolle said the Cellfornia Deportment of Real Esta!< began' an tnvee11«1Uon ol the »-acre Mountain Lake 'Estates several montht ago after · pun:huers complAlned that utilltlel ·Wttt .not lo- ltalled 11 had been advertiled. · He said the iale ol , the · tots -which averaged about '8,000 each .kl tJtke wu made hetwten 19111 and 19'11. Wolfe uJd P•llerson coollnued to· aell the.Joto artv bl!ln1 10kl .to slop' by the ,rtfl 0Jt4t1 'de~!. . . br, Gherman wllo bas been .a member of the B•lboa 8ay.,qub 1ince 1161, alto was 1t ollt time active Jn Orar«e eou .. ty'1 · plJol m-malnt<llllQ Pf"' ,,.,. for -oddlda. He bas ~-:=1tant In...,,..., "(8eo , Pl(t I) :ti . • ' O,an.1' llflQT ·~ .... CHARGED IN LANO DEAL " N-rt 11Mdt'1 Ghorrntn Look for a wet wffkend along the Orange Coast, with 70 percent chanoe af show•" tOOlglil ind Sa~ urday. The weatherman say1 h!Bhl will he In the upper 50'1 at the beach and IO Inland. INSIDE TODA.Y Uc; lrvint Pini Arll D•an Cl411ton Garri1on directi Cole Porur'1 mU.fical .. KI 11 Mt, Kou." Stoff 10 r f I• r Ge~• Ltld41. wa:tch11 t~ professor put tht ttudrntJ through thejr pace• of the adaptolon of Shok•· 1ptare'1 "Tamina of tht Shrew." Stt toctaV1 Wttktndtr. Muhlal ''"" It H.ltleMI ..... • ..... c_., ,. Jt•lllW'ltllft .. ,, .,.... , ... ,., '' ..... . ... I.Ck Mlifht9 11oll TtltWtNM f1 -........ W111Mr • wt.IN Whtl "' .._.., ...... , .. ,; ..... .... . ........ . - l ·~·:t::::DJ,:l:LV::::Pl:LO=T===s=c===~-:F::-rl:d"~·=-"'-'"'"'-19-:';1_97_2 N0rtl1 Viets Planners Study Noise· Coffee Ri1igs Now Off Shelf JACKSONVllLE, Flo. (AP) - Nuwtll l{ouse Co!!oe Co. oay1 II bu ta.ktn lta new throaway coffe package, Max-Pack, off the market btcause of consumer complalnt.s about coffee pots boOlng over. Edward G. Balance, manager of the Mai:well House plant in Jacksonville, confirmed Thursday that produetlon of the product stopped at his plant and in San Francisco. ,Mu-Pack is a ring-~haped filter which already haa the ccflee ins ide. J'he used places the pack tn the percolator balket, then throws it away after the coffee is pti"ked. From Pagel PENTAGON. • • h1u1tlve search of the sprawling military headquarters complex even as the Pen-' tagon'a 281000 employes showed up for work six hours later. No more bombs were found . The fourth-floor women'• washroom waa demolished -fixtures were aha~ tered, the celling caved ln and a 2~-foot hole bluted through the floor. The force 1--~oHIO...:rplo!ktft-blew·-oul-"huge ·1ectionir·of two, restroom walls, spewing plaster and brick into the corrldors. Mo.st of the damage from the blast was confined to the bathroom area, but shat- tered plumbing sprayed thousands of gallons of water tnto the pas!ageways. The water seeped into ofllces below, caused some damage to the AJr Force Computer Center and lay ankledeep on the shopping concourse three nights down. Despite the problems, Brig. Gen. Daniel James 1aid, "It'• business as uaual today." He said the Pentagon waa operating nonnauy· aside from the cleanup operation. James is Jhe deputy assistant &ecretary of delense for public aflllln. Jn a 1tatemenl, the Pentaa:on aald a du- ty officer of the Federal Protective Service at the Pentagon received a phone call from the Washington police at 12 :53 a..m. reporting a phone tip from a Washington newspaper. • 'nle newspaper reported receiving a call stating a bomb had been planted on the eighth floor of the Pentagon and that it wu to go off during the night. There is no eighth Cloor of the Pentagon, which rilea only five stories. At 12: !9 a.m .. the Air Force security office reported "a loud u:ploalon" on the Pentagon's fourth floor. The f15 m1111on worth of <0mpulen and other data processing equipment were 1hut down for about 7 hours and no data was lost, the Pentagon aaid. During the morning, after the ex- plosion, the Pentagon received an ad- dltionaJ number of bomb threats, which authorities regarded u normal In such an event. The restroom is located on the Pen- tagon'• £.ring, the outermost of five ring•, In lhe five-sided building. The e1ptoelon came sll hours: before stringent new security provisions were to have gone into effect, requlrlng in- spection of 111 packages and briefcases brought into the Pentagon, the world 's largest office building. These restrictions were ordered Tuesday and were to have become effective at 7 a.m. this weekend. James said the water caused some damage to the electrical leads of the Air Force's computers which were im- mediately shut down. Clemente Legion Set For Memorial Day The American Legion has won city permission for the use of sound equip- ment for its aMual Memorial Day prcr gram to be held on the east lawn of the community Clubhouse May 30 in San Clemente. Legionnaire Ralph Hinshaw won 1¥.i ft approval of the 10:30 a.m. program from city councilmen Wednesday. Hinshaw said the hour-long ceremonies would honor the nation's war dead. DAILY PILOT 'TM Or•• C••t DAILY PILOT, wlllt Miki! la eorMIMd '"" Htws·Prtu, k ,..11;11.ii• llV .... Orante (Oelt !"Wllllllnt ('""'*rtf• S-.. rtle C'd1lk>J11, •rt ,.,otbMld, Mtlld•Y lllf'0\1911 Frldef, fO( Co.01 M•tt, hlWPOrt l•Kll, HwlllflllOll •tt<ll/,,_111!1 V•fl•y. ltt\IM •Mdl, t..,.IM/Stclfl•lloldl: n ·S.n C1t,.,.,..11r $tn Jv•n C•o.1'1r-A 1ln1.i. r•olo..11 9dlllM 11 M IW.S S.tw'•.,.. Mf Sund•"" t~ prln<IPll fJllltll llll"f Pl•"I It •I ,. Wtlf .. y Sin.I, CO.II """"• 011'°"'11, f1'M. loHrt H. W1H Pra....,I •ftlll PVOlltlllt J111t -It. Cwl1v Vk• Pfftldtnl 1ftlll ~•I MIMttf' \ . T~•M•• k•••il l clltw Th•"''' A.. ,w,,,w". M•Mtltll EdTNlt Ck11f11 H. t..•1 li1li•ri P. Hill AwltlMt M.n1111i'11 tfli.r. S. Clea1111 ~ ' J05 H•rrii lJ C1ml111 k11I, t267J 0....- C..la ""-': lJt Wif'll &rr '""°' H..,..., 9"<11: UZI .......,. ...,,_,. ~ -..ctir 11tn ~ '""'"-' &....-hlcfl: JtJ ll ... A~ fli11t • ln4J 64MU1 ~A ... ,.1 .. MJ.U71 S. eta I '8 Al .. fl&fMMll '" 'I •. 4fl-44Jt ~ tf1\. ~ c..t ,., 'ht ~.,. ... """ .•• . ......... ... ...,"' ...... " .,_,___... ...,... ,,.., • ••MM• .rw _... ...,. ....... tf Clln'l'llN ---· a....~ ............ QIM ....... Ce..... I t1 tMIWI W Cllf'rW SUI ,..,.111\'1 °" JMll p,11 ,.,...IYI .....,., ......., ......... ""'""""'· Attacl\: Base, Beaten Back SAIGON (UPI) -Five waves of North Vietnamese backed by tanks attacked Kontum today but were beaten b(lck in :in eight.hour battle that involved hand-to. hand fighting on the clty'a defense perimeter and point ·blank use o f howltiers against the onslaught. A near-record 20 wavf'~ of 852 bon1ber~ which dropped 1,800 to 2,000 tons vr bombs helped break up the assault that rnllltary sources In Saigon said could mark the start of the "decisive stage" of the battle for t he Central Highlands 280 miles north of Saigon. Jn the air war, U.S. Navy fight ers reported shoollng down two n1ore M_IGs near Hanoi Thursday. But Hanoi Radio said tv.·o U.S. jets were shot down today over •ra Tinh prov- ince 150 miles above the DMZ in another day of heavy American bombing raids and t,hat the pilots were captured. The U.S. command repQtted the loss o{ 16 U.S. aircraft last week, 10 planes and six helicopters, bringing American losses in the 55-daY:fil_d Communist offens ive to 48 planes and 39 helicopters. U:-5:""air losses were put at 65 dead. 23 V.'Ounded and 84 missing -all since J\1arcb 30. There was new skirmishing around the old imperial city of Hue and South Viet- namese troops sweeping an area 12 miles east of the city said they found 96 bodies today of a 300-man North Vietnamese force caught in the open Thursday by Allied air and artillery. South Vietnamese troops ·also hit Fire Base Checkmate, a mile sout h of Bastogne, and rePorted killing 24 guer· rillas and find ing 33 bodies nearby. Jt was not-clear if they reoccupied the base, 12 milts southwest of Hue. Oh the My Chanh River front line 20 miles north of Hue, a U.S. Cobra helicopter hit a South Vietnamese posi- tion by mistake, wounding two men. South of An Loe, the besieged prov- fnclal capital 60 miles north of Saigon, government troops reported progress in two locations. A relief force flown in by helicpters Thur1day moved ne,arly a mile closer to An Loe but was stiU nearly two miles away. A relief force farther south on High\\·ay 13 also moved forward a mile against heavy op-position. Meanwhile, l Saigon newspapers said President Nguyen Van Thieu ordered court martials for Brig, Gen. Vu Van Glai and 48 of bis subordinates whose 3rd DiviJion was decimated in tbe fight for Quang Tri. Tbe newspaper report!! said the otticers who fled the city would be tried for desertion ln the face of the enemy. Tciday is the 82nd anniversary of the birth of the Jate North Vietnamese leader Ho Chi Minh and both American and South Vietnamese military commanders expected some major Con101unist efforts to mark the event. They thought Hue might be the target, but it was Kontum . The North Vietnam ese I au n c h e d numerous probing attacks in recent days, includlnj: one Thursday that \\·as beaten back a mile or so (rom Kont um with 41 Communists killed. RePortS from the area said an estimated regiment of about 2,900 men at normal strength hit positions of the Viet - namese 44th and S3rd Regiments strung out along a perimeter one to three miles from the city. U.S. ACIJO Spectre gunships nlso joined the fighting and ''·ere credi!C'd ,,·ith knocking out at least one lank about three miles north of Kontum early today. There was no word of sucC'ess of the massive B52 raids but n1ilitary sources in Kontum said 300 North Vietnamese had been killed in one raid earlier this week. First Hearing Wajved I.OS ANGELES (AP) -mcardo Cho· vez-Ort iz, 36. charged v.·ith hijacking a Frontier Airlines jetliner from Ne\Y l\1exi- co to Loo Angeles last April, has \Vaived a preliminary hearing. His case was taken off the court calendar ?itonday until the federal grand jury decides whether to in- dict him. Desi Ar1iaz Jr. To Marry Liza TOKYO (AP~ -AcloMingOI' Desi Amaz Jr. says he and sinser Liza Mlnnelli are engaged and plan to marry soon. Artesia Freeway Test Slwws High Level Arnaz, 19, ls the JOO of actor Dul Arn az and co;neditinr:? Lucille Ball. ti·liss Minnelli is the daughter of producer Vincent Mlnnelll and the late sin1:er Judy Garland. · Orange County planners are showing keen inteerst ln a recent freeway noise test conducted by the state Division of Jllghways on the Artesia Freeway in Buena Park which revealed noise levels up to 85 decibels, equivalent to the roar of a jackhammer. said the stale higbwiy commission ls asking for funds ror such project, 1n a 197~74 state budget. "The state would finance the entire project If fund s become available, but the clly will be lnvlled lo parllclpale llnan· ciall y on a voluntary basis,'' Blocker said. He said the city's participation would give the project a high priority in com- petition with other state hiahway pro-- grams. A-1iss Minnelli, 23, stars in the film version of the musica l "Cabaret." Young Arnaz is in Japan to star · In the titlt' role of a film about the travels of Marco Polo, "Man::o." County planning department aides and the road commission's staff members and the planning commlsalon bave been wrestling with timllar freeway noise prob: Coast Route 'Dead' 2 Hashish lems in the Irvine and El Toro areas v.•here new housing projects are being built adjacent to tbe Santa Ana and San Diego freeways. Road Chief Says No More ' Case Charges Dismissed The Board ot Supervbors recently urged the planning and road department staffs to speed up their studies and com- plete them before many new subdivisions now in the plaMlng stages are developed. F1·eeways in County Area County Road Commissioner T e d McConvllle told board mernben that Environmental pressure groups are benns of dirt and tandscaping could be preventing construction of urgently need-effective in deadening the freeway noise 1 which is caused largely by deisel trucks. ed freeways and other Orange Coun y From \\'ire Ser\'lces d Ted McCo 'lle co nly road He said another solution was acquisition roa ways, nv1 , u PORTLAND, Ore. -Delense attorneys of wider rights.of.way by the state. The commissioner, told businessmen from the have made a hash out or a federal Buena Park tests, conducted at the re-El Toro and Saddleback area Thursday, hashish smuggling case lnvolving three quest of the city council and 158 familes Speaking before a combined meeting o[ defendants, including a pair from the who I~ve along the 2~ mlle stre~ch of the the E1cbange Club of Saddleback Valley Artesia Freeway from Valley View to the , Orange-Goast-----------santa-Ana-Freewarwere-revealed-by..:...._and....the --Saddleback-Valley---Chambe.r_ol Chief U.S. District Cou rt Judge Robert Bob Blocker, assistant state highway Commerce, McConville said that in his C. Belloni dismissed two of three charges engineer. opinion, this pressure meant that no against the men Thursday, agreeing the Noisiest time of the day was during the more freeways would be bullt in Orange peak !raffle hour period from 6 lo 6:30 Counly. government used illegal entrapment p.m., Bloc ker said, with a top decibel This includes the Coast Freeway which measures. reading on the state's sound detection in· McConville said was "dead." He s81d that They pleaded guilty to the third charge. 6truments or 8S and an average reading it looked as if widening and reconstruc- '/'he I .3.1()..pound shipmen~ of drugs was cf 73. tion of existing six-lane freeways would destined to arrive in Vancouve r, B.C., He offered two J>OSSible solutions to the be the only additions to the present aboard a freighter wh ich sailed from city and residents -construction of bar-arterial traffic system. Jlombay, India in January but was riers along the right~t-way ,of earthen The road commissioner said that there diverted. moun~ topped with .masonri'. walls at appeared to be a conflict in the Customs agen ts seized the huge supply r~ hne level o~ plantmg of noise buffers philosophies of the enviroMJentally wl!en the vessel Pocked at fortland, after us1ng fa st gr?Wl!lg trees a~d P.lants. outspoken who on one band desire a arrangements were made for a change In ~Bl.ocker said the barriers, the most er-stabillze<I Orange-County Population of ports of call. fect1ve method, would cost about $700,000 between 2.5 to 3 million by 1980 and en David M. Reddy, 23, of 3380 Street of and added that the., state would not the other wish for high,volume public the Copper Lan.tern, Dana Point; Blake finance the project under existing law transportation. . Bidwell, 26, of 2718 N. Townley Ave.. since the majority of the affected homes "High volwne public transportation Garden Grove, and Brian K. McAdams, were built after the freeway route was would have a dramatic effect on growth of Santa Barbara, were then arrested. adopted. in this area, we could expect, to see it Seizure of a pickup tru ck and small "State fwids are available for noise skyrocket. This area would become trailer in which the hash haul was bidden abatement only to relieve such homes Manhattan-like," McConville said. led to charges o[ illegal importation, that were constructed before freeway He said that due to the bold-up cf con- possession, and conspiracy to import the routes were adopted," the state engineer struction of Orange County freeways, on- drug. added . ramp metering systems will be initiated Judge Belloni granted defense motions _He estimated the cost of tree and shrub in the county this year in the area around to suppres~ the 1,330 po~ds of hashish as planting projects at about $200 000 and Buena Park, and he expected the meter- evidence based on defense contentions of ' ing system to expand throughout the illegal entrapment. county within two or three years. Since the bill of lading specilically said From Page l The ramp metering system already in the truck was to be unloaded in Canada , effect in Los Angeles places stop lights on U.S. Jaws against illegal imPortation and GHERMAN possession of hashish do not apply to the • • case. Reddy, Bidwell and McAdams still face unscheduled sentence hearings -fQr con· spiracy to imPort hashish, The trio agreed to plead guilty to the f.hird count after prolonged negotiation between prosecuting federal attorneys and their defense lawyers. City May Enter Deal for Land Sought by Church The City of San Clemente will act as an agent of sorts in a bid for surplus freeway property which eventually might become part of an open-space area main- tained by Our Lady of Fatima Catholic Church. The land. which flanks the entrance to the church and school belongs to the State of California and wLU be placed on the market soon. The city, by custom, v.1ould have first option ·on the small parcel if it promises the land would be kept as permanent open space. The church, wh:ch also has expressed an interest in the land, needs the props crty to expand its cramped driveway. Previous appeals for state-authorized easements have failed; So councilmen this week agreed to notify the State of California of its in- tention to buy the properly and allow the churc h to maiiltain it. capacities as an e1pert on narcotics and has been active in various 11>elal and medical organiialions for many years. He has been active with Mountain Lake Development Q)rporation since 1965 when he also became a director of Allergan Pharmaceutical. He became a dirtctor of Hallamore Homes in 1971. He Ls alto a director of the American Bo1 Corpora- tion,. an officer of the Inland Press Corporation and in the early 1960! served as president of the Univenal SUrgical Supply Inc. He was a captain in the Canadian Of· fJcers Training Corps In 1935 and served with the U.S. Air Force Rehabilitation Program during World War 11. .. Youth Has Implant STANFORD (AP) -A 19-year-old Thursday became the youngest patient to receive a heart transplant at Stanford University hospital. The hospital said he is in satisfactory condition and it is respecting his request that his name be withheld. Dr. Norman Shumway headed tbe transplant team. City Approves Owner Switch In Tackle Shop A San Clemente couple, who have operated the pier~nd tackle shop in San Clemente for 15 years under a lease with the city ~s week won hearty blessings from councilmen to trailllfer the busines.s to someone else. Mr, and Mrs. Robert Hart, who wrote councilmen this week and 1aJd they planned to retire from busll)ess, won quick permission to transfer the lease to Mr. and Mrs. Mort T. Baker. Bakei:, ari officer with the Los AngeJe.s Police Department, said his wife, a teacher, will both retire·aoon and move to San Clemente. Hart lold <0uncilmen Wednesday that he and his wife "have been extremely choosy about who we might sell to. "But when the · Bakers approached us we knew that they were the onu for the business," he said. The trensfer of the lease will take place officially June I. rhe entrances to the freeways and when traffic volwne on the roadway becomes heavy, cuts oU free acctss to the freeway. Asked by a member of the audience where the people go who can't get on the freeway, McConville shrugged his shoulders and said "they'll just havt to go some other way." 72-day Disput.e Ends; Crestlite Empwyes Back The· 72-day, sometimes violent strike at the Crestlite aggregate products plant in San Clemente is over, plant SJ>Okesrnen said Thursday, and members of the Operating Ehglneen and Teomater1 unions are back on the job. The Jong-lasting labor dispute ended when employes acCepted a company offer of St.70 an hour in wage increases over a four-year contract period. 1 In the first year of the new contract the average raises will be 50 cents an hour, apokesmen said. The walkout, tinged on occasion by minor outbreaks of violence, involved 2:1 workers at the plant at the end of Camino de los Mares, where a special material for concrete production is produced from mined and baked shale. During the strike, nonunion labor was used to keep the operations going and became the source of disputes which at one tlme included p~fttempt to sabotage expensive equipment with a runaway bulldozer. The strike by the operators of the heavy machinery and teamsters who drove the trucks carrying Cresilitt material resulled In cr!Ucal shortagea al· feeling several county construction proj- ects . Those Include Saddlebock Community Hospital and the new Santa Ana city government complei, company officiala: said. Santa Ana Man Dies Of Accident Injury Palrick T. Montgomery, II, of 1412 S. Sycamore St., Santa Ana, died Thunday of injurlf.! suffered Wednesday when bis car went out of control on the southbound off ramp ol the Santa Ana Freeway leading lo the Newport Freeway .. Klgbway Patrol officers said e1ceasiv1 speed was probably resPorulble for tht accident in which two other youth!, both 16, were sllghUy injured. Wltn..,.. pulled the three boys out of the demol- ished car :shortly before it burst into names, offices said. Sunday Special: Citizen ' Volunteer Fi1·e Fighte1·s MEN WHO SERVE -Volunteer firemen are on call 24 hours a day and, though they may find they have to temper-their~ drinking and alter .some other habits, it's a great wa~Jo serve the community ... ''Sunday Special." LINDY FLIES AGAlN -Pholographs and other 1neroorabilia recall a day when men -·not computers -new airplanes. \Vords and pictures remind readers of Cllarlff Lindbergh's landing In Paris - U yean ago to the day. FIRST l.AOJES -Women's pages letture word·and-pholo plctur6 ol the wl•es of lour Orange Coa9t city mayon: ••• foor tint ladies as dJverse 11s their cities. OONGRE.SSlONAL UPSET! -F"ture illuslraled '11th map ol n•wly fonn<d 42nd Coagreulonal Dislrict (l<rrllory In Or•ll&• and Sin Diego counties) lJldloaJlS locrta .. In llttrulcrats and the possibility ol aa lll'O'tln lhe race lhal .,., suJ>llGSed lo be I lboooln. WlLLIAll SAROYAN -One o! c.JJlomla'a but kmwn authors eJ1llalns •hJI tt•s '° IAluab belJll • loner izl 1 world ol Jolntn ... tamU, Wttk!y. C:OMM\Tl'ERS ON CYCLES -Though " the trend ls n long \Yay from matching th e use or bicycles 1n Europe or the Far East, Orange Coast commuters ire beginning to ride bikes to work more th ese days, e:ipecially if it's a short ride or the office has shower facilities. P\)WER & PEOPLE -Eddie Albert, who "'ill emcee a twQshour debate on Proposi tion 9 {nuclenr power plants vs. the ecological balance), is featured in a TV WEEK story thnt previews the show. TRAVEL FEATURES -Two pages of travel stories and photograph,, present ~1unich, scene of the Olymplcl; the ma· jesUc vastness of 8-riUsh Columbia; a caravan In Cork, Ireland; a kosher hotel jn Israel; and an invitation to go in search of the Santa Ana River in the San Bernardino National Forest. • NIXON TO MOSCOW -ColCR' O· fustraUon of the President's Itinerary for his trip lo Mos<0w, which begins tht. weekend. Is coupled •fth •re.port oa cur- rent Russian affaln; 'THE JATI. SHOW' -Bm1 Eckstlne, as emcee of new jazz show, makes the co1·or and "'""' story of lhls w~t'• TV WEEK. ..,,._ CHAP£ll£ • by HERITAGE Com•, tafe an •xcur1ion into loveline1s • • , our wontlerfuhy varied Chap•lle Collection ef Louis xv.styled teble tr•asutet ~y H1rita9e. Th•y hi9hlt9ht • room -artd then somel le 1ure to ••• the low, lon91 beau+lful sofa table •• 1 not lllu&tretecl. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITASE -KARASTAN INTERIORS LAGUNA llACH TORllANCI 23649 HowtherM IMI, NIWPOllT llACH 1727Wostcllff Dr., 642·2050 --T'Tllt tJIJ) ""'"'°"" .......... ' _, .. ,._ll•<f0.--14 .. IUI J.45 lffrth (111! Hwy, 4'4-6511 P,ef 111 t ...,_ .... at AJ1lllJil At._..111 . ' I I I .l_2 DAllY PILOT SC Frldat Mily 19 1972 92% it• 1964 COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK UST NASO Li1ton91 for Thundoy, /Ny 18, 1972 OVER THE COUNTER Inflation Oimh? Nlw 'l'ORK' (\11'11-'onawlnt '"' PtlCfl °" '"' N•• lt!Jl'k S1ock EA<n•IW• ... llaA /'ij Looi{ at B1·azil's ~11111riJI, ltlth l ow un (1111 ~rt -~ lc:.=:.==1r."':c""D!IZ!:::""~•11Jl<l•'"'"'"".,"''"'•-""'"'•E>IAlllMlnL 1 10 -;t A,) roi.. n +J1, =i:l '.E~ ACFlncl 100 16' " U, Qt,-\\ nUt _, I TilfM 01,111l1Uot11 ~11111! 1"\'t ''"' r.I< Nll'1w-lt "'i 1•14,, t.n Hm St SJ l Au119 C1w IO 1' 1• • lJ • 1• • hm5or I WllClll9!1 bY 1119 NI 1 ...... w ~ 40\lo 1'1111111 n,,~ "•1• 11rll• In ~ ll,.. A(mtMI\ ,, ,. J1:i,,, l'\· ll~ l\arlr NY ' (IQtUll AQ5M>CIATtO k:I ~ A t\ji Plotltt w .. ,_ H A•t l !JI ... ., l!>.P t+c! le II 1:i,,, lJ .. ,, !MM Mn I ~Kllftfl•1 01111r1 YE I'd 2J. '""' POPe Ttl 10~ 2 I'" N ~ ,..,, All MllU1 10 n ~ • t4• .-l• nt.M• I IDd are belt Ind otftr1~r10fl C11 l~Yll l!l'i Ir HI( 2' j' t•Un !It '1f~ tl A!Hlreu 60 24 • )f• .l('I •r l•o Md.r Mo! By JOHN CUNNJFt' Al' 8Utll'lll A~•IYll NE\V YORK -llne h:ingup that 1nakes 1 n f I a t 1 o n 10- tolerable far Americans aod Canadians 1s that they con· s ider Jl a n1oral h;sue lnfln· l ion is sin they reel, and no people o[ conscience like to live 1n stn The solution 1t 1s suggested n11ght be to learn to live with 1nflnt1on r:Hher than to con· t 111ue to battle 1t bead onto b1 eak the bonds of AnglCI"" American m o1allty and hy a llttlc Llltin philosophy Let us for example take a t ip f1 om Brazil Now there's a country that kno\\ s 1nfla11on its 92 pe1 cent rate as recently as 1964 making puny by com· pa rison our p1 es ent 4 or 5 per- cent ~~ol..i Oy ovtr 11\t r1Ph Sc 21~t~ ft"u ~:n 1,c,: lli! }" tt1w ~II ;.: +.lt~ Ao,~.",'/ .~~ J.•, ~". j,'._ 2,1:.• ~ II ~:~~1n 1: ~fllet'O>,.°'•'",',' o"> ,',',"•' !:_ fl '"! " - -'51 ... S C N" l -"' ~ ... !\'I ' r•wv .... ,.. \lo ulld Fd 14'4 1 "A•l"8LI pf ? I S'4• i•l· ~1. \~ nm T .. ~lost (Ea1l•rn ryve Pr \) 114 PrOI Goll .. ' v~r El 1' 1'" Altu rf• Co ) 1~ 1 B , ll 1 l~!',Jl ,,,~ "Many countries such as tlm•) Tit• q1>01• .. t 1n111 7~ -C•~ t v. ''" v~r ~p 211\ !"~·Alleen '""-'" n• 1'"'• 11" 1 ••• +-\(o ch:iPd 1 di Israel Brazil Chile and l1:r.t1 ~.~i'...i1n~mH:f100~n1r Jt'! ,Ji;, ~~~s c~, 1~: rg:: ~tiop,O: {~v. 1 ~Air Prd :iv.. 101 •i • •• 1 .,,o.,. 10 ~111E111 11:, U h ' oown °' CDmmh .,,.., II: j2 '.I J3\. P11D-i1hr •W m T1ll'f' Cr11 t !1•<@ -'°" 11' 20 • 19 l lO • io ll f MUw co ruguay a"e dlSCovered the 11on 1nc1 0o no; ""~ F ll'4 !!'A "''"'" 11 2'l t1mN11 ~ 13' J 1~u1u1 11 '• '• • ... 11 11Ml1C• "' I h fH>rfllr!'I Kl~• H••1lon 11\\ "' "''" C&(I S\\ ~ T1'f'IO<" w .... 1 .. '5• A~'-1 " •• " r.. 2',,, ~t l9 II p.....,,m 1 ec nique of readjustable1ra,..Ktlon1 H!_L,,,"' r c 1t 1120 Tf(IH'n P 1.s fff"1•G41s 1 10 ••·la t••· lo 11111 1e1 UP tNOUSTlltALS 11, ... Trl 11\'i 1t •rem 11' 112 j•lcwo A:• l6 AltP ~ I 1' ?100 1CM'. 1011;, 11M.. 11'1<!1:Jt l NW morlgages, wtuch are to be AHD UTIL~Tlli' on 11\0U ~11 ,. Alymd 1114 JO ......... c )[')I Al•tli.• IM\I tll' 4, ' ob ...:i -nt. 11«11.F 1°" d f I Tl\uri.dl\ HoOvtr )1.35 lJ'li A:llM Ptc lWI IT~ Ten Ni' >O !!l'l AllwnoC l1 11) ,) .l.o1) • '}'.>\+ "i{ hrll C••ll repa1 In currency 0 ~qua MIJ 111 /1 Huck Mf T\o 7'111 A:1coe Ee fV. ill!' rerrv D J! Ali>trt)n :16 W 1.11 IJlo ll •-'" Cllrom1 o10 h e d Ask lt11d PPA 21V. 71"" ll:ffC• Cll 33\lo Thill\ r 20\\ I AICln Al IO 2i. 71 2n, 10\o-~. Cl'lroml 111 1 pu1 C as111g powe1 Acuihnt 32.i,. JJb Hurif 1> 1 I Vt Rfll u"I" 2s~ "',, lffi'•~A A ilo •:t. Alco Sid 31 » 1l. 1~1. UI..-"• ChrY1l•r I "'FA Plot 16 21 HY611 C 21'111 21'4 R,Yn 411: '9 » '"" ~ )7 Alcon Lb ,~ 6) Ml'4 S1•1 .)~ ~+1 1<1 Chry1ler Wt 11.!r lndu1 ,_, j Hrs1tr C ~l'i 50!-? A:lc! Fd t~ l TI &nJ t\~ !'" Alt~•n )\<,! i' 1• ~ I• , H ~ !IMti1 I IMI 81.J't ROBOCK w 0 u Id n I t lilblrl 111 l?"" I ~ lm•e Sys TV. •n Ille I Inc 41 \4 nlf oe 16. I l;, AllAML Hd ,. 11 1 110.. II • 111 8tll 1 XI AllcoLnd tll'•llV.h'llh Nucl ,1,lO>.:.Al•tJCj l~\41 111111 51-11~~A l11~11 !Gel •• 111, 11 l1•tll 11G~1 !Solo hmit his ad1ustments t 0 .. ilf(I 8ev ' ;1~ Int Alum 72 ,, Alv•I M 31 " loro Co !Iii•, 39 AlletihLud I ,, 21'• 11~ ,,.,, I" GE '4 • .. llli!'d Eq l'• In !lkW A 1" 1 ~ ll:G&d E• 36'4. l4'4 owte Ml 1'6\ol 111~ Allu LUO~f l 6 oO )tl0 !!fi,.-\:. !'Miii ! fll 1nortgages only Alhtd Tel 13 • , "Int SyCnt 1?1 llJ RoOb Mv 11• 11~ ''" CJ! 5 !'-Alig Pw I Ii) ~ 111. n 11 -'· CIT Flll(I 2 "'kin Geo 2io 1-w. lonk• In 1• 'i 11.., lloblno L Vo '" •n G•sP ti l7•• Allin Gro " » ''' ''' 21"+ ClllitJSv l" All payments 1n the enhre Arn AP••I ?JV. 'l I• so Ull 21b 29\. Rouse co ""' "!Jo remco 2611 ,,._ A11oe1 en 1 10 111 • • "' lo Cl11z.so l Id Am!lus P 25•0 ' ~. l~I Corpn ,,ao th Rowe Fnl lOYi )1'4 r!<o Pro 4'1\o 15 AJkl Mnl '5 31 ~ l7 37'•+" (ll'f' Inv 52 economy YiOUJd be linked to a AmEI Lb ) "t , J&COtts Ff 0\1 o\lo au~! !IOY SN :m rlO•lr I 011 •''i AlldMUll }I 1 IM!o "-1\o 4ol •+ "1 (ll'f' In~ WIJ price index, such as the cost of ~~ ~1~~ ~n: ttit j':~obtlw:1' 1~~ 1J°" !:dW!r 0W 5~~ f~W~~ t~ 1:~ i!l; ~11,?""'od " J ~ • ~~t! ~~+ 1. ~I;~ 1"ifo',,~ llvlng A"" Furn 141':. 1,10 •me1b ll I i\ 1ga .,d, 31~ IJ' fwn 011 c !IO:r.:.. J1'l< 1 1 1 '° 10 :15i , 3,,, JS.I,, f I • Cla,k f I"° •m G\tf 4,S Mlh Jiffy Fdl 1 1V. 11m1nlt 11 ~ ~t0n1 F 1'1 1 ?Oto AllledSI DI • lS~ "'I S)\~ ~1111+ Ill C!~rk Oii liJ S R k I h Am Te.. -~· ""' JoslYll M 2~ ..,,~ 1•n11 An "' ~ Ull M<;Glt '' 10 AIJ(f Supm~r ,3 • S'• l"' ,, ,,,, ' ays oboe 'It st e AMOlkg :1r·ll"~~·1str St 15-hLS:i.o IYOl'I Or ~'IJ.19h ~nllek c )ll,31 Allf1Cn ltl<I •• 1J\• IJ 11i.i.+i...c1:~•EI 2~ h I I i th t Anl'lw1r ••" o ''' of 19\lo )9:U, 1vo >oo " S Bk N"t 1 • 1~• All•Aulo • .;9 71 o 1111 21\'I C> E c ange In re a 1ve pr ces a Ankm 111 ,;-; 5 1 K•lv•r c ,r.· t1V. scA s1rv :11-"li 39\.lo i Env11 ,~. 11 ~ Allltl• P fna J 11 • 11 11 .+ '• c1:;'0• ~~ 7 ~ 1nay 1mprOVer1Sh workers Or Arcs Ectu ~ ~ ,i,;, '(amen 2 73 ~ Sc1ntlln i\o i\11 S Suger S2 ~ AICC• I IO l•S Sl\o 51 U~+1'o CIWll p IO Ardn Myl ••• fl~ ICt•rn Tk 1 \'I 12i. Cher1r n .. vs Ttk L 31 • ll:U, Am•ISU I 60 2 16\. 1'611 1•" c1 ..... 11P Pl 1 renters Or holders of CaSh and Arrow Hr 2• 1,l:i ICetnf Cp 1• 't l•l't ehO!I In •1~~ 41~ Univ Felt 70 ?Olio An•btoe loO SI II o 1. 16 o !' 10 (NA Fiii loO ArYlde 12\lt )2~;,l(etlwod m..3l>oSd Como l ) Up PtnP 11 1 1 Amff&C l'liJ Ii 11• ,l !r. 2/"'ol' (N""' bank depoSJts or pens1onersA$$0 ca11 10 71 VJ K•lf" Ser )6¥.ln.sc-Inc 16\.17.\liV•nct s11 17\0 ll \,.,Af1111 2 &0 ) ..a:''""\:. :O:cc1'11s1 1d~ h ' AU GI LI t l6\'il 16V, IClul .. E llV. •' • ~pit Inn 70 T.I V&n Shell lO ll Am HIS I,,_. )11 loO , fi , )(ll ,, 'o C\!SGPI I It or w oever gets contractual or "'uto Trn :101;, 201' K1v1s Fb 19'4 l'O • c1111os H 1r2 n 'll. v""rran ,. 1, 1s1.7 A HH of 31't '' 111 1!)91, 110 ~t 1 coc~coi 1 6' I I I ,. 81lrd Alo l'h a~, Kil' Cusl ll\'t 12.., rloto I 3'!1. 4 Vol 5h0f 21" 1111. Am Alt Fiii U .u~ .. ••lot-lo CocaBotl '6 sen11con ractua paymen s B1nd111 70 11 KevtP c ,!~-! 1311~1·,•, 'I.'.", :i.. • :io1~wadw111 1s 1; t6'4Am •lrllnfJ 31.S C'I ". •t\'o+ y, c« .. eot1 wl Jn Brazil h UChaplan!l~"'VH E l5'al~!lKln11 El!r • • '.-~~.4$~.W1!dbm 1•~15 AS~ktr 10d ~ 16'• IS<a l~ +•,Co1dwl Onkr , Were S Bnk !lld9_ 311,\ 3,)i,~Kln11 Kul l ~. 11 ? elsmlc 1S41i 16\~W R~•tlt 2'o 1'4A 8rnd 1'9 3~· •'i\, u '3~+1 Col~coln Oii - , l'ayleil _,,,_ _, .. Knt1>f VI ~1 1 41\'a haltr GI 76 , 17 , W;Uh NG 1'"' 1!" • • -Is In effect the .nn'lal rale Or B111wl! F ~\'o ii"" MS 11d 7'o I \• ~~en Up •1'1> 4l • W1rw k Ilia 1'111 A ere.st r ?O IN f3 1, , >> 0 > Co>o•>• > .. 8 kl .. ,,-,, "••'~ K Tel !nil JS;, 17 hel!r co w 11o.:; 1 .. m ldg 25 10 49'r1 4~ 49 1t ~. ColoP of 311 1nflat1on peaked at 92 percent e:un L~b 68 , 63f. L1c1 sr1 1 16 hortw l~~; 1:1) w:!~~ HM; J7;1 J9 ; Am C1n 210 ,~, 30 . "''• 79 •-, Coll&Alk S6 IN TllE FINAL analysis, in1964butsLillaverages2Dlo',l•"•"•'m' '"" t•,L•n<• Jt•.o10 ~Sm1Th• T 11'il;1,.._we1>1111:. 5<~ s,.,AC•nPT I'~ 11 n~ 1J"1 1S\._ ,cou n 11~.,., d JS 35~~ Lan• Ca ~ 1 ~.I~ Snip T11ls 1,1 111 Wgl Well ?I'l l:)()~ A,.,. Cerr ' l6 ) • )\o 1~-!1 Colonl,tl St I the question IS pose , 1sn I 1t 25 percent e r1c11r 1v. 1,, Lars Ind l', J~ Sonoco P 11t "''• wtidrru µ, S'• A CnM 1 16d .i 211.o 11'" 1N•+ 1o can""' 1 60 belt I h n I 0 Bl•cll Hlt 3JV. 3'W4 Lawltt C JI\• lt'• SoC1I W, 13~ 1.;1, Wtllnj M :IM• ,,h Am Cllt ln I 13 22 jl a 11 -to Colt fnG tO er to !Ve wit in a 1 n But •that nation also has eoirue El l'• 110 Le......,. Fr J11, 31.,. SoNE Te• 37"'1 31 1rc1 p1 to.. 9't A~me1s11 '"'° 1tz J31, 2\, J1~+ 1, coni>tA 160 -ih 1 h "h gh I aoou. N• J~:Jo ~--iw-1"" s.-1~ <»v. 1CWo w9oi-M~__..._,~ rl'2-..22lll.....IJ'~.._..4,~~ c.oiu11 p1......, an 0 .'.IVe I -unempoy·groWn0f l -t01t-percen a ere11ca I 2:if"°2\•Lewls BF' Wl,13 Sol1nd C J1~3ll>1W1t Put> 27'to'1y,:m Y•,",, • J06 JI~ JI 31•,+~1 C BS 1•0n me t and COlnpulsoi y con Br1111rs t" '' w Llt>trt'f' H 16•. 11 • s1no Pao uw. 114'o W•IT• F 36 34~ m o !" 1 ' ". 2s , ;51. co1 <.As 1 11 n • • y ear during the past four erown "' 1.1:14 1&v. t/"' Bon 19'• 1~-swo s CP 1)\' 14 w1111m1 1 2' 2•1~ ~00111T ?Cd •l .H t ~ , y 1,_ " c o1 P lcr~re1 t roJs'lTieallv 1snt 1tmerely a Brush wi !I0/•30\0 nccln T 21.11 Swsr Dr11 l'l'~ltV.Wlnl Pli.T 1s1,1ah ~01 lea ts '"' 9> 9"'+ ,co1S Oh 1&4 • years agr owthrate thatprob--euc•t>t lS lS h llonCIS& 18 .ll'•lowEIS~ 111 1Bw4Whc PL! 1<l •Xl~•AOulpF ~d 1 1~, 11'• l?o C(ltrbE l•Ji ch01Ce Of the \esser ev1\? ,>blV 'e•ceedS (hOJ Of any ·.~',,",',' M 12V, 11h Lcblaw 6~, 1 o Pctf4V l • Jwl WIOw l::n 3'1, 31~ ~mEl•c 11• UJ :1 , 11, ;1o.,_ 0 CmE pf 170 ., w 3'/,'°v,Loc!ITt 6'\,6s•, peclr~ ~J6'tVeUo Fri 31.,.31 m f•Pll•f 1 s, i •o .S o CmSc•v •0 These are sorne ideas that .ti other na tion C•1 w1sv 26 16"' oew1 co 1s\, u 1. orl"o G 16 1e'4 Voun• e r 29 :io "'"E•P• pl z ~o 10•, ·o , 10•. cn1wl:d 110 £1m 8rn :>!Vo Jl\li ~·c:r G•• ,,.,I••• t•nadv I '3\li ..,. ~ lero LBbs 9\l 10 ;, A FlnSv I lo '' 16 , la•• 16 , cornea Dr ! proressor 0 r international Brazil, says Hobock, aban--'"°"Ml ~·1 Rn ... 10. 10•~ l(f Rf(ll~ t~1' 16\6 Zlon1 U!h 29\'l lO :G.n8d l5d toe 21'• 77\1 21:v.+ '• CwEd11! 14 d I 112 ll~'h Ma le~! IS ... 76"l. "o" •1• ,..s1 l9J 21~. " 11•--\, CWEdol 1 to business p1 escnte o a doned the "fiction of stable C•nnon e M11r t Frt 2Jh 71\• G ~ •· .-_ A ':..~, 110 11 l2 • n :n 't 1 cwEe1 nwn seminar on 1nflat1on at the H1'"' 11•v. M erowr 8 J.O naners ,,.,-::: &JV"Sers A ~o.;,• 1 ;': 1~ 11.X• ,!?~• , .. 11.,.. ... '• corned 11w1 currency" AdJustment for Cao Ttcll ''• '"' M8"'1 Lno lO\.<o 10>• A Hom , , , "" ""' +2"' comw 011 at Un1ve1 s1ty of Toronto School I C11P1 sew ,~. ''• Mt cmclr ls~~~·~ AmH~o 11 ·o~ i~~1,, 1~~;. •,>,11,+6~. r.wo ll>t 112 OSS in purchasing power has ~:~,\"181~ ~;~ ~~ ~~~~' ''• 391., New York IUPl)-Tne tcllowlno 1111 ~m 1nv .1se1 111 i(i1. iOi-. ,0,,t '• 2~~~\, s""' Of 8us1ness become Jncorporaled Into the CtJ N Gs 11 ;, 121> Mtd•Tr" flWI 91~ show• tM 1lotk1 rllal l\1ve oal"td the ""Mt<llcl 12 1911 "" 'I 15\, &6 + ; t1 Tl rcsso Stefan 11 h C•s NtG1 11~ ''"" Mtr<h 111 'o .;1 "'°" ~nd losr lt•f mo,1 ll11fd on percent A Mfdlcorp l'l'ir 11• .. 10 , 11'•i·1 'c,omPul Sall le pro r I Inking and negOlJallon!I Of Chmp Pl 11lli 23'h Mer!d In 10 JO!:i of cllarnie ~II !hf Ovrr lhtr -Coun1'r 1'11f~e! AMt!Cx I'° 175 19, n ~ 2'? + ' one Mlll1 I R obock o[ Columbia Un1versi I It ll b II Cll11roc• " 11\. 1''4 ~ver Fr 1•V· 15. I CIUC!e<I .,, le NASO AMIC pf s. • 6~"' """ 86 -,• CnnM!o lie! • v1r ua y a uyers, se ers, i'r• u111 15 16 1o11e11d c 1"-,,, Net and ~•cf<lll9• c111nves ''' i11e Amer Motor 61' •'• 811 8\• ... Ccnracc 60 ty JS serious on a ll points and creditors and debtors " ~ •• ,a•.!,' ,", .. "", .. MMI',~-~ 1!' 2~ ''" dlHerenc• between r1si.r11av s 1.,1 1110 AAmNG1 2 :io a. J.,:,•• :l6 :io _~con Ea 1 IO ,. ..., ... ,.. -.... , 1t • l2', oroce Ind lod•r • 1811 bfd prlc~ Am Se•! n 1.i 13 , :n ?l Con•Ed ~• ' tried to per suade the Nixon ~Ii~~ ~ : ~~ M·~ :l~~pOF•b ~~i ,s·~ GAINERS ... 7~Ft 1~ ,Jt ~~ ~r~ ~r~:-~1 ~::e:e10'"~ adm1n1strat10 n tO 11 S ten Clark Ml :KIVI 1'JV. Moll Ga~ ;)611 :M•-1 l"lorm MICll 1'•t '• UP no Am~ Air 10 9) ~ .... lO -1\t C(llOFdpf 4 ., Instead, It has been 'es· Conta1·nc1· ~l:!onc~ ~= 1l't Mob!·~ 1i•ti 11~~ ~ Yftfr.~ i~t c~ lhi 1 14 H: I'~ ~~s,:1 .~ 1n !:: ~~ u~: ;j ~~·~~~ 14 I I I' .. Coca( l• 'I'•""' HO!lul Ct> JO 31 4 Molllocle Elect I to l''o UP 5l AmSTerll l2 ~ ;i, t J5 lS +, c L 1"" treme v cons1s en 1n 1g :vm 5H• 2l'4 l~ 1'1oor• Pr t'h 9 s Te~1n1 Alrl ne • • >4 UP l1t AmT&T 760 t611 '1 • ,, ~ ,1 •+1~ c~•Ncrs1 ;~ hi (mWTI p 21\ol 11t.Moorf Sa 30 ~lo 6Enfrgy Rtlllf 11• V, UP 11SAml&.Tp 4 11• l9 '> Mi • )ii 1 flOrlng m :on Roel( ll 16 rrl$n 3<1'rlo 35, 7 Oeccr Ind 16 12'o 1:;._ VP l'J 0 Arn T& T wt 618 6'• &•, ~-• ,'~•,m o,w ' I I h g e I M k d Ccrl!'nco 2GV. 1'1V. Mortl• I( 2 ., 7't~ 8 Reba wa1h In 4-U ':I UP 11 B Amwair tO l•I lJI>} ll 13 on P ''h 11 pre sen ing IS ar Um n a1• ete Ctoss Co 33\'I 3.111) tel\ M • 'fl )l'o 9 MllChtl E.nDv 11>• 1'1 IJP0 11 4 AW!rpl I o(I 110 11•-. 111: 21 1 !+ \'I Con ?1>1 1 ~ Which he immed1atc[y COn Crutch A: 10\'>Jo>,;,MOIOr Cl SO •Jl 01n!I Computer 1 ~ I• UUo 11!AmtrUll 60 17 16'• IS> l&V+YI Cont!Ar Lit :::vortss '° '°'" Nerdl' D 'V. t 11 ComDuter Imo 71> ~ 11 1 Amelfk Ml• J? 19'• l'i'~· 19i; Cn Ctn 160 c edes is not a ne w one, Dint 1nH 3414~N•rr•"C 1 11~12 wa11eMnvm1 31 1> 3J. Up lOlAMF'IMP 1 1"1 •s • 65 ' 6SI cneanpt fl4 !'!ant Jndust I Jn ] Oenl'f' M 11~ 13 N11 GsOI 11 \'t 111t 13 AU Tech Indus 11..+ 1• UP lOOAmffc 60 "ll\, 37, -'t •Con Coo~r l tobock asks tha t we \1st the ' res c O Dirt gro 260,76u N•I Llb!'f' C'I '9:V.l•Pl'lo1on lricori> i111+1•, uo 9tAMPtnc t.o1 2:is f?t, ts 96•> 1t!cc-1 1•, reasons for thinking inflation 8"" Gen '1 '2 t• N1S.c Re IV. t 1'Taco Bell 1;,, l•'o UP 96Amoe• co 111 1 1:0.:. P-\ cntlCo o•7'• Anaheun announced receipt of Data es l"'i s '"' P•lenl so•1, ,, 1s Prod\effleo In 41'! "' uo 9 7 AmocoP l6 61 a•<i 8,, "'' t'o Conti Coro 1 St' first Order for SELVAC •• >M >> ,2,. 21., N 8 T Cp ''" 1S 17 Morrl• ICllU Sk 2?\11 1'1 UP 9 1 Amrep Corp <• 25 2o > 2o' f o ( Co~O > , IS harmful And lo aid US, he If Decor In 11?': \a~ NEltll GE 1)1\ 17\li lt Canr1d Pr Ind ' V. Uo 9 I Ams!ar l JO lj Jll(,, 3Ho -:n! I~ Con11'ii I 21<1 d h h kl se pressurized containers De•Fb AR 7$,, n,,., NJ N11 G 17~ 11V. '' Pel1tc Ccroln 12 • 1 Uo I• Ast1rpt 16S 1 •7 q •1 !lo Conllnvst 11 e Or er p ac by a na De UXf C x6&i16'P , Nlclll$n F ~SV. •7V. )1 E!b8 System$ ,•• , ... UP 10 •, AmJ!ed In 2 ) :19\• J9 J9 '+ \'i c:~!I Ju Ph p1ov1 es t isc ec 1st T h d 1 ed "•fM• 11111 11-.11.\INwpf! Ph 16~.u~.Xt!l~i+neF•s 10 '"'i ~ u11 e•Amtlrpf toe l lf\.'I" 9; c Mr sld I I k f I ~! C1nT 16/o 11 N[co!el 1n 41V. l)V, 1 GovEm CP :II • • Uo Amltl In 70 JI 7 6•1 1 + \ R G IOna mar eter 0 persona Oellnl St ll J.1 ~t!5tn A "5~i"'Ao'l0ffshcr Lool!I :)()/, ,. Uo t0•Anacond• S2S 11't 21~• jl l?+\~1 c,~,',o",P1,! IT DISCOU A ES private d h h Id __ , I Diam Cri 11 ll 'h Nlel sm e " ~!h 1' Radiant ll'ldu\ Po ~ Uri 3 An(hor Ho 1 l! 331, l1'• 1 + , n tt ..., Savings addstoabalaneeof care an ouseo p1vuUCS,c1ckivci 11 1no No!na co •1~•1l41S ADAFr1e.l 1011: JV< v. uo l lAncor .. t11o 1.1 10 ~.io;~ loU+\,llccn1111 •• Calls ror 250 000 SELVAC n-O!Golrn.i; llli J:r. Notd>tr l' :MVt LOSE•S Ano Cl I~ IQ s~ mo Sl~ 1 Contrl D111 I d f I I d to CO Dlvr• 5d ~n. :n;, NoCr NG 11(. 11"' '' A~chfC J1 63 1 911.191\ It~-,• ConD:f' •~ pay mcn S e !Cl ea s tainers with the first 50 OOO Dixon J 11~1 11 Nws Ent JI ,1 l S1llom11 Assoc 9t.-11. Oft ~ ~ Aoco o.t ,1 90 21,,, 20 ~n;,+: conw 1 9(J econom'c lllefrlclency and Ootv!tl J.1Vtl5\ll NW$ NIG l~H 2Sc ..... redl:P •2 91 -t ,_ Oft 0 3 Aoeoc l1d 1(1;5 lHi 11"-11 .. +,'CoollUll ~ scheduled (or delivery Jn JUJy Oontlds ll lS'-. NoSP Cm 71 ?3 l ~!hnOlls'f' In l'•-\, Off I l AP l CorD JS ,,,,. ?ti: 2t~+ •l Cooo Incl IO social 1njUSl1ce distorts and Oow Jons " .al'a NwP b Sv n:o.:. ?Jl• 4 Pon• Inn Ince> ~,.,_ ~' g:; 1 1 "'•"L 1>1B 10 1 ll't 11.\11 11" • CooPrln pt s The containers are to be filled Oo~!e oe 129'4 ,,,,. Noxen Co •1Vo •l~ s He•Th Teena -,• Ot , , PLolC 106 • 10111 :io•;, 20~+ ... Coop Lab s1 unbalances the lnVeStment Dun Et B 21'4 1t'4 Nuclr Ae 7\1:1 l 'l.t ~ jl11Pi1M~ Wl1 1\.-' on 77 AooPot B 1? 110011).tlt. 1031') 103'1>-l\;i Cooprl 2-511 'tru'ture with hand lotion for a regional ounJdn o 1~'4 1 ..... O•• c10111 3sv. Js:w; 1 ef~fro O:f.:. ~"":: ~ Otf 11 ~~~1~ 1MtJI' "1 10~ 10'10 IO'hf ~ COOPTDf 11Ai test markell g p gram Ourlron 1•'4 11~ ot•n ' "'V• "'" 'A r n1 c lV.-\'t Off 77 A " x30 12 111'4 111:i.r. a, Copelna 60 The popular e\ 11 picture or n ro ~~~~ ~~: 3i\') ~"' g:i~~~~ Lll• l1'Z ll v. 10 ... ~,:,~r oc, .. : 1~.-\• 011 '1 A~~::·~ c ~ 'i ~~ 1~3! ~;I'> v. Copp 11•n~• l f h 1 The SE L VA C c<1nta1ner, El Nuce! 151,1,, 161, o~ FtrrA 111. n 11 Wildl>aum JI< 141.'t-l g:1 6 ! ArcherOnl 1 10 391,. ~~· :iaL ~ lcpw~I I"° n lat io n IS One W ei e peop e which has been Under deve!O~ ~11~·~1\d »~ J4 §\~~~ c: ~\O ur: ll ~~.rr:u~1~~; 11..:: ~ ~: ~' :~fJ1~s EJ"~ 1:~ lf: 1tt: 1itt= ~ c:..:J,, l~ living on hxed incomes such ment s ince 1009 1s being ~""'~'b~i 1rJ~:: ~V': O:~h• R~ ~fV:. .tJ;: \: ~;~111r~~ !!£: ~ 011 ~j :~I:~· ~11JJ l~ ~: ~It: J;.:,t \· l~Piird 1?: as pensions, insurance sav· tes ted by more than 4-0 pot en Enerov c 11 , 131, ~1 seen lO )'r 11111 1; c~::11011"' ,O:~T ~·-·~ fil,,' ~ 0 :•""o, '"2 , r 36.1 ~~ n~. 23v1+ (t c,••nt c "'" lngS Or bonds are Slead1Jy EnYlrtc •l.'J '"~Or!' PCm 1Jl't 1~ • ~ _, 19 I OI i rm D 0 21 :JO"I Xllo :IO't..f.-\;, r1n1 O WI t13I CUStOmerS ror dlSpenSIJlg Eo111ly 01 1•~ U\, Ormor>I 12\o 12l.4 1,•, a!!_x1,","c l1d 4,._:: "• Off 4 ' :rmu•PI "• i lO M -''I• M"'-~ C•tclll Fl 17 berng robbed of their purchas-I rle T~ lb 1 tter T P ~ 2j'' "'" "' °""' 011 '"'1Cll ao Jll •?\'ii •1~ •l'l!o+"" crocker 1,,,. )QtlOnS, SkJn Creams, Sham SO CDM 10 lo-\l Yfrl NA 6 h ''o ~ ~if::!'llllR;bi~ l~"": !~ Ott i: :•m~lll: 1 ~ )6 lt'MI )t 3J + \1' Cromo I( I 0 Jng po~er" I I d k d ltllM A 16.V. •Rio zne Cro 11to Miio G<>ld ' 1 '.?'1b 17,,_ ._ Oil ,6 Aro1 om "' l '° 70 ;v C"rou1e Hind do h•rmful poos, ge , 1qu1 ma eup an Fe ceco 1 1• l Pabst er 11v.Yl'I .. ,"', .. , ,11 .. _1111 01", •s •""o1rn1 1 •l ~u:. t l \ .11. crow~u c •I But, he asks " I od ~alrL11e14'41S'4i>1ccar 3''.<.:JS otfCO'""" •.---0 1~111120 1os251,,~,1·····CrownCark h Simi ar pr UC\S •t 81>1tn 3""4 ci1, Pac Lum 3J 33\li 1"I Loo;i oc Cororl" ~:l?-; ' Olf 4 ~ Ash C»I 1 •0 • SI , S1 S '> ~ 11 Crwn ZI 1 :zo res ults have to vccur? \V y Internal pr es 5 u re 15 lit comr 36'h 31,4 Peso erd 1•v• l'* 1s 1111or 01s1111v1 2 -" • :•,•0oc c'",~• ~ s''~ 1i. ""~+ l.'.I C•onlot 4 ro I d I I I ~I W>lf' 1;, 1l'o P~lo Alto 21~' 7.., rv •• •~• SJ"' St -\• CTS C11 4( not ins ea ry to neuraize led b 1 t ·~ea 111c 37 J1\'l•n oco1 i1 ~11 '11 Asll!Sor 110 1 J1 1r :»11:i n •'r+1\CUI 2 1 genera y easomer1c lkkor 26~21.,,1u1 11 • .,. 111~\Bh THE BEST ~sioc Tr1111~ s ~· B''t ~.,.c~m~I~ u f thec'is.l"'s"untuhaolwly? harmful ef membranes. ehmmating the :~kG("~ ~ .. ~: :~~i1~ ~11;, t~ ... :rt~ ~ •l hi! M;! hV.::1, l~~i,, °W"-' necessity of added energy Frank El l 4t M' vi•• C•5t ~· 2;• Readership po 11 s prove !k:~c~:'d3J ,~ tlh ~l" !~Yt-~ 1urt11swr • Says Robock a variety o r d "rl1cll R 73 .... Pav N v ...,.., <V -''Pe ts • ,, one of the AIR j 1 ---"" ulllrH 1 10 sources such as compresse roz FdE "~ 2 1,. P,Hrlu w U,, )J.. anu AllA:c,: °'' 1g ·~ 1~'.<. •""• 1?! , v''°" 1Sd neutrahz1ng techn1ques exist 1 ed ed Funer tt ""' '' 11G~ " ..... world s most popular comic A 1 c V't + '? cvpr1,11 ,.,,.. 1 • gas or iquch vapor as us ~~ti'~~ ~!~~ ~~ ;:r11Hi"'~ if:; !r~ stt1ps Read ft daily ln the ... t~' tnc a;~ ,n 1!~ ,~! 1!14.:j: ~ such as inde x hnked loans on aerosol co1ntainers The n A.urm 11il "'" Petro11e ~ s1Ut DAILY PILOT. !"1,~, 0,•," ',,' '•' •,•,, •~ +111o g:::fu,, 'if "hlch provide fo r r ead SELV C ed on RIEi' •'• 9h Pt111 er-1.1-~1sv.. uom n • ''" " A container l S p r lC Gn sria 1 21'i0 72 ~otn Inc lJt1 14'/o Avco Coro 97V 16 15'• lS"~-1-t't 00.1n1C p l;lj Jus tnlent In !he amo"nl of the I b h AYco Co w•~ so ''\ '"lo •~+ • rt rn "' on a comparab e as1s wit ....-. Avco 01 120 •A ••'• " •A'li"" fl O•nlnd "' loan On !he bas is Or Changes In h f f : __ _. _....... Av1r¥Pd '' ~ J6l, .U\.O ~+ 0.yco 11• ot er orms o pressuru.cu Av~r n1e1 106 13:n 1l tl D<lvc C>t 4'• Prices k Anwt 01 ,,,,_ 1 66 66 66 :): v, Havlin 1 1• A:ttc Oii 61 JS II\) r1:i;. ·~-"" OavPLI I .. •--::;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilij;:~-,1rp•a•c-;a:g:rn~g==:::::--il MUTUAL FUNDS AYon Pd 1 lli 161 uo·~ 111•, 110... ~ Ot'f'lonH ..50 -8 I---OPLi:itB l"" Baba.WU .SS 69 30'o )'r 30''1-f-'• OPlotd 7 'I Engineer Wanted F111~er In .16 7ff ~~'Ho ~~ ~6\0+1" D<IPLpl 110 111<1.;;!C.:::><::t;..,•C <:.::::11:::..::"'"'"'"":>il>J::l!D"'••'20ll<=J'6m••I RektrOU 1n ~ s• ~ ~ s1 Otin w IOd R~llG11s 1 Bf 711 ''1'o 1• 1• -'I• Offre &Co 2 • Age 110 crUerfo" P•rt ... hP B1!G1 pf 4 '1 11'0 fj ~ 65 ~s 0..IP&L 112 time Fob11cot .. ifffl bin and New Ynrk !UPI) Oell11 T IM 9.._.lh!tl F~d 11~1•18 Com lln1172 RltG•l'ofr' 1•n 5"' SA1't s-;;, Ott Mn! 1 10 -Follewlflll 11 a 1!11 1Ve9h ]J to 73 llO IVY Fund 11'9 I 99 SP«ll 39 liJ 'J9 ll J!11nCal Ill 11 '''' 171• 71~~ ~11<1 Ar 50 CClltftYOrl Wrf'-Ad :::t)f2 Dolly 31 bid and 1skeG Orect Co I 70 I 9' Jenu1 Fd 19 3ll 19 lll SECU•ITY FDS nlnoor Pn d I!\• 1 ~\\ l<\lt-1-'I• Ollttc lntn Piiot, lo• 15,0, CMte MeM, ~rle•1 011 Mu!ua1ooa11c~ i11s11l~JHtn ''h '!s , .. Edultr .,. !01R~~ar1PNt:J / ,f ~,11 !~ ... ~~v,Dltton• co Funds 1s qwolld D'/ )re~tl E 11 62 1• 62 Jo1tn1ln 28 5 21 3:S tnv11 I 11 t 9! 8 k OT , 1, ; ~ 0..nn['" ~ C.llf. !2626 ~ NASO Inc DREYFUS Oil' l(l!YSTONI! Ullrl F l 1 " 1l 56 e:,,.1 .~. 0 n !9 •.59'' !9"•-'II ~nn 111 Jlf I --Orv! Fd lJ '5 1• 7• 1111' 81 19 2310 11 SELJCTID FDS e ,.,. ,, •l • •?:i. ,,,. .. "' 0tn11v1R 04 ll~~~~ .......... ~~~ .................... ~·1nun41v M11 11 Drvt L'f' 113310 ot us! el 70 s1 n.a Am s11r io :i.. 11 Jl B!~ ~~ ~ 33 3'l• 3• l' + Vo Otnlslllv 1 ltlt So lncm 1"6 tl us! B• 911100'1 Qop Fd 11S0\9 1J n 1 OSd ',' ,•,• ,•,• >l'I\ Olrtcopt !I l ld .t.sk ltd Cent 11 2t 1u1I Kl 1 26 t OS SPI Shr$ 17 '2 lf 66 e::::j I 1 13 1~...: 1f { 1i1,:; ~ Ol.SOIOlll 10 ---PholDM•triC Custom Tailor and Shirtmaker ., l\..,td1fl l'lu" • 1ooo"mh1.,00pm ~lond•y throu11h S•lurib1 or by Appomlm"1l lbtrdn 211 j11 EATON & ~•t K1 16' llf f•nt!nel 101011119e1thtndP '° lll '1'"-tU• 41:0,:,_. 0.TEdls 1.0 Grw!h 6 99 66 HOWAltD ~•' 51 22 :19 7' Sj enlro,o f 17 85 It «IO • • " Del~ rn lr'IC.Olll t61 505 8•1n Fd 1017111' C-Ull $2 11.0nt SHAlt EHLO GR 11:~:c,:c, ~l 3,_ll/ll1o l7''~l )n~.;.71.0e1 pt l •S 1nsurn i111n:l<I GwtM F 11t1o1t6J cust s3 •n1ou comu •M S!lt 111;11 L 13 1f1 t3,z !:t~~ :mi1~0t1 of 5"1 .t.<lvlser 1" j 51 lncmt 6 00 7 7l C:u1! ~ '911 'to5 Entrpr 7 .s6 116 B• ifc so 2 11'9 1 ~ l7'14r .,... ~x!r ,. 1.t Ae"'a Fd 1 •11 .. SPecll F H'912S6 APOiio 781 $5) Fie! Fd 618 ·~ee:~l~q~ S? ,, •I ~"' '' l.I OlatFln 51 Aluture IS 90 1j 90 Sick Fd ,. so 11 •r Pol1tl 6 tl 6 61 H1rbr 186 '61 Be.ti Fd I 16 •II •F t. ""• •S'!o 1~ 011 ln!I I 10 AGE Fd 6 IS 119 Et>trlld 1' 91 11 31 Knlt tr 7 H I \t Lf(l•t L 6 •1 7 '1 Bee~ 11<1 1l SJ .. Jl 1 5J~ V. Ol1ft'l ~l'lm I AUstlff lJ II 10 t? EOtE So ll Ool 11 l).i Kntr G!h 11 10 12 I• Pate Fd 11 t1 1J S) Stcii:::o 30 lll 3"1\~ 39~ 3'1'1.+ .._ Ol&Shm pt 2 ,.IPlll Fd lS .cl 16 ll EFC MGMT G•P L•rur Fd 11} I 'I SHl!.U:SON FOS " •4 ... -->o 2, ~ O>•S•o• > -Amc<1~ f' 712 111 ''" ~r 10 13 11 10 '•• G"' 1112 12 lS Apor< 29 5131 l'6 o"',K><o"oi ••--" j"·-~ " •v '' -Sf•" '' """ IS• U 14 l'•--1-u, Olc!'Dft" Ci> •m "" 61116t crly r 4,9 Lex .Resh 17JS 119' ln<om 111110 '50-• ,_ 2 2., '''' 21• o>~· .. -"• Am Eqly '"' '" FnG ""' '15 10 'LID-IV Fd ',, 1 51 lllY•ll II n \2 II ,,,,oen ... ,-., • ...+ \:, ....... --AM El!.,ltEIS Ejrel GI l•:!tlli,lLlfe Inly 90l 9171~ Oelll 1760 1760,!!d,,o~>I .... 43 11'• II ~ ll"o..f.-v,01 lorl'O 64 FUHOS EfunTr1?'l_.,. lie Grw 12i 7t? de Fd 110..1110•" >n llO 67 '> 66• 66V.-\/,Olohal EctPI caolll 10 :io 111~ Emerv t11 111 line cao 13 01 1• 22 10MA FUNDS 8:::;,r~co 1 :g 19 21 ~ n•'o "" i "" Ollllnvh Cl lll(om 919101sEn1rr,v ,., 12ts11;~L rrtt Fnd •Sol ~•P shr 1110F''een<1I:.-Pf 1 1t: hjh ~;: 1~"'+~glJJ:::: ~ ·~~l!m 3 "6 9 7'I Eq-u 'f' r t Cl 10 LOOMIS ~" 12 :JO ~ .. 8t<1 Co 1 10 19 tj\.. 4,i,:. •S + 'I• 0 U<l •C IOv ~Pttl 1 6111 61 F&lrlld 11 ~ iil~ SAYLES! 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'1 F1l1!t• '" * "-1.:.c1 01a I 1J"1" 1 " 11 .m I " ~ . "•"' •" .o ------...... ____ .....__.._-....,~.. ll'"ua tl'I 1n 11'1'11'1'1-1 1t.-<1°.f•4Mde'd. .,,.,... Cte" t1 "',.,1 •.r111•1"tl I' ~ ...... l(.J~..QUO~-~---.r , ,, l.i." "' ~ llM , ... 1111"< "-"'"""'""Ible. ral'ltl-1 • " II "" .... Fl f '#ltl , II j j ~1-1 ,. ~1141 So Who's Trading? ' Carol Vogen, a Long Beach State College ~ccre tary, has been chosen Miss World Trade for 1972. The statuesque brunette will serve as the official hostess foLihe....A6th ann11al nb!er.vance-0!....Wo:tltLTrade_ Jy_e~ginning SatfilJID'.. Glass Particles Prompt Recall of Cabbage Jars • WASHINGTON IAP) -The Jo~ood and Drug Administration has announced the recall of abollt 67,000 jars of S&W Sweet-Sour Red Cabbage con- ta m ina t ed with glass partlclu. Ad estimated. 5000 16-oUnce jars remain on store shelves across the nation, the J<'DA I CONSUMER I said, although the recall began in January. S&W Fine Foods or San Francisco began calling back the Jara and stopping a:blpmenl! after a consumer complained he suffered a cut mouth and tongue. The cabbage was manufac- tured by A.wit Nellies Joc ., Clyman, Wis. * * * RIVERSIDE (AP) -A Superior Court judge ha! iss u e d a preliminary in- junction ordering Rath Pack- ing Co. of Waterloo, Iowa, to Jtop selling packages of bacon that weigh less than the marked weight. Judge Elwood Rich also denied the packing company's request that RJverside County officials be prohibited from ordering that such Rath prod- ucts not be sold . The packing company has been under a temporary resttainlng order s inc e February, prohibiting it from selling "shortweight" bacon in the county. * * * WASH£NGTON (UPI) Preuured by angry con- sumers and a "-'Orried in· dustry, lhe Food and Drug Admlni!tratlon has promised a stepped-up program against filth In the nation's 60,000 food plant.. In contrast vdtl1 past assurances that purily of the U.S. food supply was con- tinually improving. FDA Com· missioner Charles C. Edwards acknowledged "there has been a general decline ·in the food Industry's sanitatioh prac.- tices." . , counting Office, Congress' Edwards' statement follow- ed a report by the General Ac- fiscal investigative arm, \\•hich concluded that 40 percent or food processing plants are unsanitary. * * * SACRAMENTO (AP) Three bills putting strict con- trols on public utillty ad- vertising have been shelved by an Assembly committee, but 1 measure requiring utilities to tell customers how to conserve power was unanimously ap- proved by tbe committee. Assembtyffian Ken Meade (D-Oakland) agreed 'Thursday to have the Assembly Com- merce and Public Utilities Committee take under sub- mission his utility advertising bills after it voted 6--0 to send the power conservation bill to the Ways and ·Means COm- mittee. The other me.asUres would outlaw any advertising tha t encourages an increase in consumption of gas or elec- tricity. * * * SACRAMENTO (AP) John T. Kehoe, Gov. Ronald Reagan's legislative secretary, has been named head of the State Department of Consumer Affairs. Reagan appointed Kehoe to replace Donald G. Livingston, ·who recently became director of programs end policy in tbe Reagan administration. Kehoe's job pays $27,SOO per Y'-"· El £'amino Beal BeU Debts See m To Be Sty le l1i America. BY JOHN CUNNIFF AP' l 11llMU A~1lr" NE\V YORK As memories of the G_ r e a t Depression or the 1930s fade, Americans seem to be shed· ding almost all fears and in- hibitions about personal debt. Once, it may be recalled. the goal of millions of families was to pay off the bills. Only then, they felt, could they relax; only then did they feel they were paying !heir own way. But in today's society it is entirely possible for a family to seek debt, to never be out o{ debt and to look forward to an entire lire lived on credit. On gradbating from college, in fact , thou9ands upon thousands of youn~ people are expected to pay off the loa~s their parents took out to fi- nance !heir education. 1s this wrontt? Financially, morally? You'll receive dif- feririg views, but a 'videly held attitude i9 that the burden may look bigger than it really is. The chances are that the youngster will have job stabili- ty and constantly ri!ing in· come, it is argued. In addition he will have many year! in which to finance or even refinance the debt. The changed attitude toward borrowing is shown even more dramatically In housing. The very last source of funds for a depression family was to remortgage the house. Today it i9 a commonplace practice. A study by the Conleren~ Board, a private research organization supported mainly by business. shows that new n1ortgage debt since 1959 has constantly exceeded the value of homes purchased. This means, of course, that families are using their equity for other purposes, 9Uch as educational and medic.al ex· pense!, investment in other assets, vacations, travel, debt consolidation. A bil of California hlltory Is now preserved In front ol Un I. I e d California Bank' a Hlulon Viejo branch. An El Camino , Real bell wu presented to the blnt by Ibo N1Uvo -D1ughlers of ~ Golden Wm It Is 1 replica of the bells Whlcb once marked Ille lClns'• Hlghway from Mexico 1n San Ftandsco. Shown from !ell ara William Weill, bank man1ger; Mn. O!uo F1rrt11, h!storial society; Mrs. Ven Popoy, grand president of N1tive Daughton and Donald Smith, re- oonal vice prukW>t of Unltm dalicornla. • Nixon Pair 'Tough' Sliultz., Wei ribe rge r HeadEco 1iomy Posts l!y STERLING F, GREEN WASIDNGTON (AP)-ln his wrute ffoute iob as director of the Office of Management and Budget, George P. Shultz »0metimes has been called the general manager of the United States. \Vhether his dealgnatlon by President Ni:J:on as the new secretary of the Treasury suc- ceeding John B. Connally b really a promotion, in terms of power and influence, might be queJtioned. At Treasury, he'll be one block removed Crom the seat of power, lraitead of just upstairs. But his responsibilities will be global, economist, a quiet man of instead of merely national. keeh wit and twinkling eye. AND SHULTZ \\'ill bring to One associate contends Shultz the coming monetary and "sitzfleisch" - a German term trade negotiations or the norr-which, when translated very Communl!t world, aimed at roughly, means he is hard·bot- creating a new monetary tomed. He can sit through structure and the dlsmantllng endless hours of wearying of trade barriers, a style that debate and wind up strong and differs \Videly from Connally's clear -minded -and in com- fiamboyal)t and sometimes mand of the situation. h<avy-jiand<d4(¥1• .. -----For-C.&per-M.-Weinberger. Shultz is patient 1 n d who has been deputy director persevering, a scholar and at OMB, the shakeup that Money's Worth What is Job Outlook For New Graduates? By SYLVIA PORTER This month and next, about orie million of~our young men and women wilt graduate from their colleges and universities. The vast majority will want to move directly into jobs - although significant numbers will join the Peace Corps or Vista, will go on to graduate school, will simply take a sab- batical from the world of education for a while. What arc their job prospects? . Still belO\V the job pr1r jections made in the late 1960s for POJl:T•• t h i ! year, but moderately b e t t e r than they were in catas- trophic 1971. Hiring p I ans are up 11 percent, according to the annual tally o f recruiting companies by Dr. Frank S. Endicott, director of placement, Northwestern Uni- versitf. . For engineers with B.S. degrees,. though, hiring plan! are up on1y 5 percent and they are actually down 3 percent for graduates with master's degrees. This is an even grim· mer picture against t h e background of 1971 -when, on average, companies recruiting on college cam- puses cut their hiring in half. • Fairly sharp job increa!es were feported for male college graduates in the fields of ac- counting, sales· marketing, chemistry. But declines were. reported for liberal a r t ! graduates, majors in math and statistics, economics and finance . other surveys of the job pic- ture come up with similar findings. The average number or job offers btlng made by each recruiting company is less than one-third the averaj!e that was made in 1967. reports the College Placement Counc il in Bethlehem, Pa. Jisb openings for collei!t:e graduates wit h bachelor's degrees will be down 2 percent from last year, forecasts the Michigan SI a t e University Placement Bureau. At the start of 1972, the unemploy- ment rate for young men, age 20-24 -which includes recent college graduate! -was near- ly 10 percent, and more than 16 percent for non-whites. Despite t h e widespread belief that the economic up- turn itself \Viii solve the prob- lem -a comment 'made by many or the employers surveyed by Dr. Endicott - this is not likely wiless the ex- pansion becomes dangerously boomy. Much sounder would bt a head-on attack on unemployment in each or the areas where ii i s con- centrated. For this category o [ unemployed, most h e l p r u I wtiuld be an overhaul of the U.S. Employment Service; an urgently needed rnatching of jobseek.ers to job vacancies : a direct increase in the number of higher level and stimulating public service jobs that so desperately need doing. Meanwhile, to end on a positive note, here are some tips on how to approach a pro- spective employer. Do write a brief letter to the personnel office or the com· pany, felling why you are in- terested in working for the company. Enclose a resume ' and a picture. Request an in- terview. Do your homework first on the company, so you are familia r with its products and policies, its general history and ouUook. You don't have to boast about your knovo'ledge ; it'll show through in your let- ter and during your interview. Do deaJ directly with the personnel depa,rtment. Do not antagonize the people who will be deciding on your employ- ment by attempting to bypass them and to enlist tbe help o{ an executive of the company. Similarly, do not ask your pro- fe!!or or dean or college placement officer to intervene unless the company requests recommendations from these sour~s. Do emphasize the special qualifications you have that separate you from other a1>- plicants -fluency in the languages of countries in which the company may have affiliates; a background of travel, 30Ciat work, civic ac- tivities : artistic t a 1 e n t s ; ouutanding abilities in sports, etc. makes him director la a major step upward, and one that will be acclaimed by those who favor old fashioned GOP·style fiscal reporuiJbillty. Weinberger, a 54-year-0ld Californian, is known as a tight man with the ta.1payer's dollar. As top man at OMB be will have a lot more bud11et· squeezing mu.scle. Chances are bright that \\'einberger's name will be much in the news in the ne:rt few months. lie has incurred the wrath of many Congress members in the past two years by impounding and withholding appropriated funds to keep the lid on spend· ing, and he is again due to start squirreling money away. WBI'I'l: HOUSE economist& now fear a resurgence of in- flation in the next half-year, caused partly by b e a v y federal spending delayed from this spring. The anti-inflation strategy was smilingly ex- plained Saturday by chairman Herbert Stein of t b e President's C o u n c 1 J-of Economic Advisers as follows: "We intend to unleash Cap \Veinberger to perform hi! favorite role or cutting back budget outlays." Weinberger, a lawyer, ha! served as California Republican stale chairman and an assemblyman and v .. es generally viev.·ed as a member of the GOP moderate wing. He was serving a! state finance director for Gov. Ronald Reagan when· he -accepted Nix- on's call to Washington in October 1969 to b e c o m e chairman of the Federal Trade Commission. The ·whole somnolent ITC shivered as axman \Vein· berger set to work clearing out deadv.·ood, reorganizing the commission and setting it on its present course as a ma- jor governmental advocate of 1..'0nsumer protection. THE SIX-FOOT, dark-haired San Francisco native, who clailll.'l he i! a frustrated ne"'spaper man, seemed destined to berome Ni.1on's budget boss in 1970. But the old Bureau of the Budget became lhe new OAtB in June of that ye ar, and Nixon called Shultz-then Secretary o f Labor-to it! helm. Wein- berger was named depty, with responsibility for budget-mak- ing but not governmental management. Clir)'Sler, VW Fa ci1ig Mor e Tests LOS ANGELES (UPI) Volk.9\\·agen and C h r y s 1 e r Corp. have been asked to sup- ply more cars for testing because three-quarters of the Volkswagen and 60 percent of the Chrysler vehicles checked failed to mM't e .1 h a us t emission standards. If further testing does not improve Volkswagen's show- ing, "We will have no other way out than to just hold up the sales," A. J. Haagen-Smil, · chairman of the stale Air Resources B o a r d , said Wednesday. No such threat was made agaimt Chrysler. G. C. Hw, chief of the board's vehicle emis!ions con- trol program, said the results of tests on General Motors and Ford vehicles were "pretty good ... but in the case of Chrysle< and VW, we found quite a high number of failures. These are disturbing to us." llagbt11 Ail'We1t ba.s ap- pointed Jack M. SM>opa, a 27- year veteran in the alrllne transportation and travel sales fields, as Southern California district marketing manager. Stoops will be responBlble for coordinating and im- plementing the a i r l i n e 1 ' marketing effort throughout Southern CalUornia. lf David S. Swan, fonner direc- tor for EJarketlng for Great \Vestern "Cilies in Denver, has been appointed dir!<!lor of marketing for the Irvine Compuy. Swan lw also .served in marketing c a pa cities "-'ith Shak- ey's I n c., Great \\'est- SWAH em Sugar DAILY PILOT J J In th.c San1a Ana position. A1ontgomery b e c o m e s .• reg ional sales manager in California. Jf Conllneotal Altllbfl h a ii: named John l>. Phillips as d i r e c t o r -internal audit. Phillip! wa! formerl y head of finance for Blue Plate Foods, a subsidiary of Hunt·Wesson Foods. A 196r Phi Bela Kappa graduate of the University of :P.fissouri, Phillips is married and lives jn Villa Park. lf The Santa Ana office of Dean Witter and Co., ha! named. ADdrew J. Soter as manager. Soter was t h • former vice-president a n d manager or the Long Beach Office of Dean Witter. The Long Beach resident received his bachelor's degree In finance from the University of Connecticut. and Procter and Garn· ble of Cincinnati. He received his master's degree i n marketing from S t a n f o r d if University. He and his \Vife Santti Ana resident L\Ulan residLin..New.potl~Beach,".--.J •. .Jloo\!f:r-has-been-appointed ... administrator of N e w p o r t , ~ 1 Villa resi- Bruce K. Arnold, El Toro, has been awarded a joint pa· tent by the U.S. Patent Office for development or a plastic retention system used with product.. of ITT Cannon Elec· trfc in Santa Ana. Arnold, a n engineering manager ror military and aerospace products at the San- ta Ana division of Interna- tional Telephone and Telegr8ph Corporation, worked \li'ith t w o product design specialists on the patent. He has been with ITT Can- non since 1934. 1 lf 1Dvestor1 DI v e rs i i I e d Services (IDS) has appointed. Jame1 R. Pint divisional sales manager for the Sililta Ana of- fice. Pint has been 1 district manager in the Minneapolis office for two years. He suc- ceeds Charles B. Montgomery J dent center ' I in Newport .,..,._i Beach. l Airs . Hoov· er has been with llealtb· co Convales· cent Hospital C o rporatlon Hoov1Jt for a. year. She is: a member of the San Diego chapter of Eastern Star and the v.·ome~'s aux- iliary or the Phann utical Association of San Oieg . lf B. Lee Karns has been ap- pointed president nf Nturn Psychiatric and H e a I l h Services Inc., of Newport Deach. Kerns was previously tll"• eculive vice president of the Advanced Health Systems. Inc. Prior to that he wa:iii president or a large health care consulting firm. Initial Public Iss ue s Popular in Recove1~ies By S. M. MARSHALL Cllrl1ll•11 Sclt llct M""llor Stt"flCtl One predictable by-product of a stock-market recovery is speculation in initial public of- ferings, or new issues. In fact, the new-issue market tends to exist only during overall bull markets. Obviously, when investors are unloading _ blue chips llke Eastman Kodak, they are not inclined to bu y the initial pub- lic offerings of unknown and untried companies. BUI' IF the overall demand for common stock is great, the new-issue market usu a I J y heats up in response to buying by speculators in quest of fast capital glins. Today, the new- issue market is slzzlln2 again. Stocks with names like Chef Pierre and Datascope are pro- dutjng virtually instant capital gains of SO percent or more. Invt!tors bent on playing the game are besieging thcir brokers to get any amount they can. Individual allotments i n some cases amount to no more than 10 or 20 shares, u brokerage !Irma try to please everybody. Other speculators are snapping the stocks up in the attermarket, driving !heir prices up even farther. THE TROUBLE \Vith the whole phenomenon, or course, is that not all new issues are likely to be good investment• or produce fast gains. \"ery astute trading often is re- quired to take advantage of sharp price fluctuations. Moreover, the hotter the new-issue market gets, the lo~·er the quality of the of. ferings tends to be. Companies that couJd not sell their equity at a multiple of five times earnings a year before are suddenly marketed at 10 tilne3 earnings. Jn Wa9hington , lh• Securities and Exchange Com- mission has been holding public hearings into the new~ Issue situations and it appears likely that new disclosure rules may yet be dra\\·n up governing these offerings. William J. Casey, the SEC's chairman. said recently in a New York speech: "In tne light of what appears now to be a new hot ·lssue boon1. parallel in size to the 1961~ and 1967-89 eras, we may bl forced into taking action for the protection of inl"estor~ even sooner 'than we thought." Casey said it appeared that the difficulties "relate TTY.Ire to imperfti:lions in the distriJru. tion and artennarket tradini: process than in inadequate or inaccurate disclosure in prQ6.o peel USC!." What does it.mean? De.spite the quickening pace of the economic upswing, it mearu that hundreds of thousands of college graduates will bt searching for jobs which do not exist and which will not be created in the near futu~. It means that many who do 1et jobs durin1 this buslnw advance will get them only by iobumping" others with lesser qualifications -which will hardly add hi the· aeneral satisfaction of young Americans with our fconomlc society. Thlt'• tight TIMI BllbOl.Bly Club/ lndlanW.llahasexcuoecttllegato guanlfora little while rongor. ButonlY a llttte while. We wanted to give )'OU 1 chance to keep tabs on our progress.To let )'OU share C ~ affluence_t11atll\JBllCi$.knOWll n r for, lal•u lookll ourotudioo. ~ =-:; _ 10Mlhou001,C\lltomsultes,1nd ---===:! ·lhe i<cli landaclpfng that • -"""°"ndllhem.Weoffer)'OU 11 means a shameful waste of out educated manpower 1t a time when young people with this level of education are deeply needed ln all anas ol our effort hi tmprov• the quality ol Ille. oor arrival In Palm Spring" During oor opening colelntlon on lhe-kend of May 20th. on,loyourtilnniscourllandwatch "World Claao" profeaotonaJ tennis . being exhibited. Danco and dine at our clubhouea.Mewour otymplc size pool and Jaliuni- Goll •ttho championship Indian WolltGqlfClub. To become a pert ol Is co.ill /'M,/lf ll'CliWJ ~ prMlte. CCtpOflte, or joint \'. \ ownerships In addition to ~ ~ member"1ip In the Balboa Bay i Club. guelt prW11-1n « l International clubs, golfing on world famous courses, complete . r-PID properly-•ment,renta1m , ~ holel 11Moel, gate hou11, and ., I ~~ 10CUrityguardt.t24,500tot40,000. =·~f111• ! ii ~ Come see us on May 20th. Th•' ~ iii gatagwrdwillbei:omln1t ._ _____ _::i beck IOOn. BALBOA BAY CWB~INDIAN WELLS ' Saltl llld lnlonnollon Center ' HkihwlY 111 to Bay Club Dr!Ywfl1~f>.2581 Eict.,!48 • ' • I ' And ti certainly means the U.S. eovernm"'t will be looinfl aut ht the collection of hU(e llllOllJlls ol oddltlonal tuea th1l U-)'Olll1I men and ....... would be P<YlnC il they hid jobs pl1ill(I them IJ> proprlale oalariel.,. .. l f . • ' • • t ' .. f i SC DAILY PILOT -Friday's Oosing Prices-Con1plete Nelv York Stock Excha11 ge Li~t " Market Climbs / Sharply Again NEW YORK (AP)-Stock market prices climbed sharply today, extendJng Thursdays rally mto its second day Trading was moderately active 'lbe Dow Jones industrial average lVas up 10 31 today to 961 54 0.k '"" l& O.kll1Pr tt "'"" .1 .. OtcfdPI ll'f 4 Cla.Plpf J..a OccP!pf 11& ~l~ m.:~~ 1 n 011"(91'11 " §::.~ .. tlUL 10 1111 k1 M I Or Jt[kl 1 '! 011• El Co O\ltbord M 1 OUtlet C U Ov1rTrn '° OwtnCF 11 ow..i111 1 _., Olf!'ntl pf '" Oxfrdlnd '° New York Vps and Downs - Pel N-Up n 1 1 f_,lf\Mf '6 UJ ISO 2 Colll11 ll•Glo Ull U' J Al.19*.t 111111 Ull 11 6 • G11tlan I~! "' '\' $ Premier 1,.;cr Ull S • Grumn JSh UO '' 1 COllll A•3i u,11 t 1 t Atciutll c 11 U lltS<twnpfl UI' e I 10 S11teren 10 ~~ 14. \~ :1:11~i.reo.~ ~: :i !~ c."'~~ I '' ••• i ti~-ri " l'n:~r.,-t: ~: A 11 kt1r1ll1 Liii UO 1 i 1 °""" C. lit ~= t. r, v::,. r U• .. I ll C.tlltClt 5o l "'• 'I "''"""' 1-41 U 6. t• Uni• C01'!1¢ Up 6.1 U INNtll 19 ltltt N.i CMI• I Hltfl IAw CIM4I Cllt Dow Jones S.... Htl lfld1 I Hltfl Ltw CIOM Clll IHnrket Trend Com~lete Closing P_rices-A1nerica1LStock_Ex.cbange-List - YORK IUP'l)-Fcllow nq a e Int Amerk 1n $1ock E•ckar>11e Srln Htl llHli) Hlitl' L.w CltM (Ilg lltH Htl (IHh) Hltll L•• C1t11 cna. "" 111~1) .. ·~ " " ~ .. " ., ' ,, " .! ' " " • " " m .. • n : ,, ~ ' ' • ]4 DAILY PILOT Official Just Out Of Step From Wire Service• The Pan-Malaysian Islamic party kicked out a member of ---perllament--becau!le-he-wotrlct not give up ~rforming a Malaysian danee c111Jed the jog et. "No dancing" is the rule for the Moslem party. IJashlm Gera was expelled for vk>lating it in February. He got back in by taking the I PEOPLE pledge, but he was caught swaying to the rhythm again this week. "No," he lold the party. "I Jove the joget and cannot give tt up." * * * Mr1. Thomas K. T\-fattlogly, wife of the Apollo 16 astrooout, has given birth to a 4--pound, 2-ounce boy at Galveston County ( Tex • ) Memorial Hospitat A hospita l spokes man con- firmed the Saturday event this week and said the Mattinglys asked that no public an- nouncement be made . Mrs. Mattingly and the child, Thomas Kenneth Mat- tingly III. were doing well, the l!ipokesman said. * * * Explorer Jacques Co11teau, Boston Bruins hockey star Phil Esposito and the Rev. l1other Waddles, who gained national recognition for work with the poor in Detroit, \Viii be included in The American Academy of Achievement's 1972 Salute to Excellence. Academy founder Briane Blaine Reynolds said the awards will be presented dur- ing a banquet in Sa lt Lake City July 8. There will be am ong 50 men and women cited for ac· complishment. "The whole idea of the academy is to instill a greater awareness than ever before j.hat American as unlimited opportunities for a person to do great thinjls-and b e respected for doing them," Reynolds said. * * * Mrs. Sharon Hughes, widow of former Detroit L i o n s flanker Chuck •Iughes, ha s been awarded $43,250 as set· tlement in her claim for workman's con1pensation after the death ol her husband Oct. 24. Hughes died of a heart at· tack in Tiger Stadium during a game between the Lions and the Chicago Bears. He had just run a pass pattern when he collapsed on the fi eld . * * * A Superior Court judge and Jury In AUanta sentenced a 20- year-old man to death twice. "l suppose they're goi ng to kill him twice." said court-ap- pointed attorney Bill Spruell after the conviction a n d sentence of Timothy Wayne Bramer of Atlanta. al!IO known as Loys Edward Camp. Kramer was found gu ilty of murder. armed robbery and aggravated assault in the holdup ol a a lrenchised fast food ttStaurant Marcil 23. * * * Agriculture secretary Earl L. Bats ahows no slgn of being muzzled In spelling out on farm Issues. . "'The American farmers WllJ have the deep and abiding ttSped and appreciatJon or every American-or l'U know the reuon why," Bull said in WasllingloD 1t a meeting ol 1be Am<r1can Feed Manui.c- turen Asooclllloo. * * * ProsldelC Tllo ol Yugoslavia w!U v1111 the Sovl•t Union In the l1nt halt ol June, Mooc:ow radJo announcod. Tilo lut v!Jlled Moocow lri Aprll 111111. T b e b<lft onnouncement pn no lnfonnotion on 1111> ~It bt dloculltd. 1· ~ Fr id'!), Mq ~9,, 1972 13" TABLE GRILL · Sturdy outdoor grill . you'll take along to beach and pi cnics. Heavy gauge brass f in1~h. OUR REG. PRICE 1.17 · 9c BIG BOY 18" BBQ Ad1ustable grill, wind· .. shield. 3 chrome.p~led 5 9 9 skewers. fold-up.l egs, · · handles. . OUR REG. PRICE 6.97 BUDDY L SMOKER Flip lop hood with sa1ety glass win· 1 99 dow. Motorized spi t, 2 grills. J • • • 1 Oxl O" HIBACHI Here's the ideal g!11f for in timate parties. Ad1ust· 19 9 able grill : woo den han-. dies .and base. Fire box empt ies easily. Cast iron. OUR REG. PRICE 3.99 OUR REG. PRICE 8.97 BARREL SMOKER fully enclosed "fr!o~er hood. ad- 1 99 1u~table and re· movable lire boK. dUR lOW PRICE .. 18 INCH TABLE B·B·Q Table model with 3- position chro me grill, 2 9 9 folding legs and heavy gau ge stee l brazier. OUR REG. PRICE 3.77 14x14 INCH HIBACHI Cast aluminum brazie r; 3djustable gri ll, wood handles and base. Ideal for pa tio or picn ic cookouts .. OUR REG . PRICE'l0.97 799 ' BUDDY·L WAGON B·l·Q fu ll hood wilh i1ass wind.ow.Ad· 2 4 99 JUSiable fire boK, Z &rill s, sp it, OUR REG. 79.97 WHITE FRONT ~--J~-J 1 e ·~~,., PICNIC BOX B·B·Q Use as grill or smoker. Portable, easy lo carry. 3 9 9 Carrying handle & lug. gage latch. OUR REG. PRICE 5.97 BIG BOY 24-IN BBQ Rev olvinf, adjust-r1b!~ ~~~is~~:re: 149 9 hood, wheels. .OUR REG.17.97· BIG BOY SMOKER Removable ana ad- iustable lire b0t. 2 99 Two tine spit forks. Easy-roll wheels. OUR lOW PRICE 1Oxl7 INCH HIBACHI Twin grills ad1ust in- dependently. Cook ham· 419 burgers, ~eep colfee hot -all at once. OUR REG. PRICE 7.97 . BIG BOY DRUXE BBQ 24" barbecue has hood with warm-1 ing oven. Ad just. able grill. OUR REG. 71.97 l 99 DRUXE "SWINGER" Big 24" squa re gri ll with 2 fire 499 height ad 1ust- men ts & pull do wn sm oke r hood. OUR lOW PRICE BUDDY ·L FULL SMOKER OR BIG BOY 24'' GRILL BUDDY-l BARREL BBQ Built-in versatiltty, use open for grill- ing, close d for smoklng. ArJjustable dralt contro l; full length aluminum han- dle; towel bar;•hell. OUR REGULAR PRICE 14J7 -· BBQ WITH ROTISSERIE 2-4" diameter, revolving grill. Semi· circular hood houses rootorized spit with Z tine forks. Big enough to cook it all at once. OUR RUULAR PRICE 17.91 .SIRISTOLST. '"'" ~.!f1 ~ .......... ••••1& I Clllllnlm Son Dlep F'"way ol Bristol . " ! ' ( . ~. ' ........ Lagu11a t Beaeh VO[ 65, NO. 140, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 19, 1972 ' Today's Final iw.y. Stoeks TEN CENTS • . I 1 Recall Election On; Four Candidates Vying Laguna's on again-off again recall election is on again today, with four can- didates vying for the council seat to be vacated by Edward C. Lorr, who says his proffered resignation \\.'ill hold regard less of the recall vote on July 25. A ne'Wcomer to the Art Colony's civic scene was among fhe last-minute filers Thursday. Wayne BagHn, 29-year-old personnel administrator with the Fluor.Corporation, made his speaking debut in the council chamber Wednesday evening, decided after the meeting he should run for office and managed to get hi s papers filed by the Thursday noon deadline. Baglin, a three-year Laguna resident , lives at 2764 Hi ghland Way with his wife, Faye, and their two children, a daughter, Whitney, 2. and a son, Flynn. I, Born and raised in Glendale, he was educated at Glendale College and San Fema'ndo Valle, State College where he received a B.A. in political science in -nn 1965. He served in the U.S. Coast Guard for three years and was stationed at San Juan, Puerto Rico, immediately before coming to Laguna . Commenting on the LoIT recall at the council meeting, Baglfu said Lorr's outspoken stance on controversial issues had sparked his interest. in local govern- ment and, though he frequently disagreed with Lorr, he felt his presence on the council was stimulating and beneficial to the community. Radicals Claim Credit . -. Explosion Rocks Rest Room in Pentagon WASHINGTON (AP) - A bomb ex- ploded in a restroom at the Pentagon early today, blew out two interior walls and sent Ions of v.·ater from broken pipes gushing through offices and a shopping concourse. Shortly before the bomb exploded, the radical Weatherman o r g a n i z at i o n telephoned the Washington Post saying a bomb bad been planted in the Pentagon. The Post notified police who called the Pentagon minutes before the blast. Guilt Plea Made By 'Devil Cultist' In Grisly Killing Christopher "Gypsy" Gibboney pleaded guilty to reduced murder charges 'Thurs· day in Orange County Superior Court ac- tion that closes the file on what lawmen regard as the most grisly killing in coun- ty history. Judge William Murray accepted the plea of guilty to second degree murder from an Oregon youth who was just one week pa st his seventeenth birthday ofi June 2, 1970, when he played his part in the mutilation murder of Mission Viejo teacher Florence Nancy Brown. Gibboney was committed to the California Youth Authority (CYA) for an indefinite period . He will be 25 before that sentence is reviewed in any way, prosecutor Jay Moseley said. Gibboney had been certified for trial as an adult offender. The California Supreme Court is scheduled to hear an appeal against that Superior Court decision. The guilty plea 'Thursday represented a triumph £or the District Attorney's Office in the sense that the witness they vitally needed. to insure a conviction against Gibboney in the scheduled murder trial absconded more than one month ago. ·The DAILY PILOT learned long before Thursday's action that Herman Hendrick Tayletr, 19, a member of the gang that butchered Mrs. Brown, 31, El Toro, violated the probation imposed in return for his cooperation in the conviction of gang leader Steven Craig Hurd, 20, and Arthur Craig ''Moose" Hulse. The Weatherman outfit, which also called New York newspapers and broad· cast Stations, said the act was in response to stepped·up U.S. operations in Vietnam and in observance of the birth date of Ho Chi Minh. Few work~rs were in the area at the time and officials said this prevented in· juries. Police aided by a dog specially trained to sniff out explosives continued an ex· baustive search of the sprawling military headquarters complex even as the Pen· tagon's 28,000 employes showed up for work six· hours later. No more bombs were found. The fourth-floor women's washroom was demolished -fixtures were shat- tered, the ceiling caved in and a 21h.-foot hole blasted through the floor. Tbe force of the explosion blew out huge sections of two restroom walls, spewing plaster and (See PENTAGON, Page I) Recall Effort D~JJ"ifJl Against 2 Trustees By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of ffM D1lfJ Pl .. ! Slaff Reports that definite plans have been made for the recall 0£ Laguna Beach Unified School Di strict trustees Patricia Gillette and Gerald Linke were denied to- day by the president of Concerned Citizens for Schools. "As of now, we have no ·plans to recall either Mrs. GiUette or Mr, Linke," said Dr. Nathan Rynn, a UC .Irvine physics professor, though the possibility of recall had been discussed by his group. The talk of recall of the trustees cropped up anew following this week's board of education meeting when Mrs. Gil.,~tte requ ested that current board pol- icy regarding the contracts of the district superintendent and assistant superin· tendents be changed to comply with a section of the state Education Code. The state code allows local school boards to terminate the contracts of ad· ministrators six months before the ex-pii' n date of the con tract. Presen t pol cy equires a one year notice. bers or Concerned Citizens for Schoo s view this request as a move by Mrs. Gillette, Linke and board president William Thomas to stall action on renewal or the contracts of Superin- tendent William Ullom and Assistant Superintendents Robert Reeves and Charles Hess. Under current policy the board would have to notify the trio that they would not be rehired by July 1. If the board ap- proves Mrs. Gillette's request. action could be delayed until Jan. 1, 1973, six months before the contracts are set to expire. Rynn said his group will continue soliciting support for the three top ad-.. ministrators from members of the com· munity as opposed to recall action. "We hope to be persuasive and show the board that the community is behind Ors. Ullom , Reeves and Hess," Rynn commented . Mrs. Gail Gaston, vice president of the group, said letters are being sent to several hundred persons in the school district today requesting them to write and offer support for Ullom , Reeves and Hess and the innovative programs used in the district. "We owe a real debt or gratitude to Or. Ullom for his five years of work in molding the Laguna Beach schools to the topranking scholastic position we now hold in California state achievement tests," the letter states. "In addition. according to · educators who have visited our internationally recognized innovative schools, we also seem to have the happiest and most motivated school children," it states. "Please do our children a great service toward protecting their educational future in Laguna Beach by letting our ,,. school board know we care," the letter encourages. Tbe letter is signed by Rynn, Mrs. Gaston and Ann Greene. mem- bership chairman for the organization. In requesting the policy change this (See RECALL, Page IJ Land Developers Charged Goldwater's Father-in-Law Accused by l)A Prominent Newport Beach psychiatrist· businessman Dr, E. Mortimer Gherman 1J1 one of three men charged Thursday with grand theft af111 false advertising in connection with a Big Bear Lake real estate promotion. . · Dr. Gherman, whose daughter married U.S. Rep. B<rry M. Goldwater Jr. (R·LoS Angeles) two month.1 ago, is facing 10 grand theft complaints and 59 complaints of lalse advertising brought by the San Bernardino County District Attorney. The swltcllboml at lhe Balboa Bay Club In Newport Buell wbut Gherman ,..Ides was undu Instructions to llold all calla to the Gherman apartment lhi• JDm"llin&-Dr. Gherman ts an orficer of the cor.- pli:atloo that rE<elltl)' purchased lhe Bay Club and other BBC holdings in Palm Springs and at C..talina. He b also a dittctor cf llallamore Homes Inc. of FOUDlaln Valley. San Bunardino Deputy Di.!lrict • Al· torney Charles Wolfe said the charges against Gherman and two others stem from the sale of 13:t cabin sites where utilities had been promised, but never in- atalled. • WoUe aald he filed the action· upon complaint! from buym who had paid a combined total of $1.1 million for the lots. Dr. Gherman 11 chairman of the board of Mountain Lake Development Corpora lion. lhe finn !bat aold the p<Optrly and which shares corpor1te offices with International Bicy Clubs Inc. which ac- quired Ult lljiy Club holdings lrom Jack Wratber list year. ' • , Dr. Gbmnan Is ...,.1ary-treuurer ot me. the Balboe Bay Club Inc., the Balboa Bay Island Club, the Balboa Bay Racquet Qllb, the Balboa Bicy Desert Club and lhe Bay Club Realty Company. Also named in the c:omplaints were John A. ''Pain Peltman, an official of Mountain Late who -b with Dr. Gbmnan II Olllces •l 1517 Welllcllll / .... Drive, aod. a man identifieo only as James Moreland. Each was charged with 15 counta of false and misleading Id· vertising. Wolle said . the C..lifomia Departnwil of Real Estate began an investigation of the 33-acre Mountain Lake Estates several months ago after purchasers complauled that utUitits were not in. stalled ~ h•d been advertised. . lie said the sale of the lots which averaged about $8,000 each in price wu made between 19&9 and IJ71. Wolle .sakl Patteraon continued' to .. u the loU alter being told to atop by the rtal estota dcpru1rn<n\. Dr. Ghemwl ,11o.1w bttn 1 mtmbtt of the Balboa Bay Cillb alnct 1111, also was at one Ume tctiYt In ~ange C.oun- lf• pllol methadbno maintenance pro- gram for heroin addicts. He bas 1cted_•• . .<l!'!'>U!tanl tn numm>us (See GllEllMAl'I, l'wct I) .. • After filing for the election Thursday, Baglin said he felt Lorr has been "a good example of the type of indiv idUai will· ingness to exercise freedom of speech which we should be glad to have in Laguna Beach ." An example on the other end of the political spectrum. be said, would be writer Arnold Hano, "for whom I also have a·great deal of reSpeet." If elected, he said. he would like to look at tach issue individually and not be identified either as a conservative or a liberal. "My decision to run was purely self· motivation." Baglin said. "I ('Ouldn't 8('· cept the idea of someone just \\1\nning the job by default. The citizens should have an opportunity to choose who will !ill such a controversial position." Also filing just before the deadline was Planning Commissioner Laurence "A. Campbell \\'ho, earlier in the morning, had -announced he would not file the D.t.IL V P,11.C:T 11•11 PMf9 THE WINNER AND NEW STUDENT BDOY PRESIDENT Currtnt ASB Head Bill Fith, Josh Bright, Presidtnt .. ltct Laguna ·ffigh Presidency Won On Course Issue Campaigning on a platform to improve curriculum, Josh Bright was elected stu- dent body president of Laguna Beach High School following a daylong election convention Thursday. Bright, 17, a member of both the cross country 'and track teams defeated Thomas Houts and Dan Brotherton. Brlg~t received 312 votes, Hou ts, 106, and Brotherton 67. Serving as Bright's vice president will be Jeff Tensfeldt, who defeated Tom Redwltz and Steve Smith in a run-off election. ·Sheri Andrews ran unopJlosed for secretary of the Associated Student Body, while Anna Dolby, this year's assistant treasurer was automatically made treasurer ror the 1972-73 school year. Following a convention system In· stituted in 1970, students gathered in the high school boys' gym Thursdaylmoming to hear speeches and later vote for can~ didate.s. Election convention trappings -such as hats, .buttons, placards, signs and red, white and blue bunting - were passed out to students and used to decorate the gym. . High school attendance clerk Pat Diercks said final attendance figures had not been compiled for Thursday, but that on ly 50 t.o 60 percent of ·the students showed up, Classes are cancelled for the electior. day. Other winners in the balloting were: -Assistant Treasurer : Julie Smith. -commissioner of Education: Maria Stinnett. -Student Congress President : Paul Klosterman. -commissioner of Publlcity: Karen Jones. -Commissioner or Assemblies: James \Vallacc. • -Commi!lsioner of Social Activilies: Ashley Weber. -Commissioner of Girls Welfare : Lln· da Penney. ~mmissioner ot OrgarU:r.ations and Electi()Jll: Ben Jones ...- Commlssioner of Pep: Teri Anderson. Bank Union Pushed SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -An attempt tO unionize em ployts at the Ban~ of America's workl headquarters here got ~ Thursday:, said f or m e r Plltaburg MIJ'OI" Allred .. AfOnlto. a.. questa for union membership have been recttved from hunilreCls°. oL ~ a o k employtJ hue, said Affinlto. aHomey !or omp!oyet who peUUoned the National Labor RelaUons llolrd fer unlon.electlam at Banlt of Amerlc& braOl'het In Pltlll>urg. papers he took out hfonday since the city ~·ould be spared the cost or an election ii only one <.'1u1didale filed. At that time, l'lanning Commission Chairman Carl E. Johnson Jr. was the one candidate. llo\l.·ever, \\ihen he was advised that English and Beth Leeds, an unsuceessful cand idate in the April council race. were planning to run. Campbell changed hlJ mind once more and filed hls own papers. Mrs. ri1arif' Esslinger, who took out (Ste ELECl10N, Page I) Agnew Calls Suppos~tion ·unrealistic From Wlre Services WASHJ NGTON -Vice President Spiro T. Agnew sa id today he did not kno\f whether he would be President Nixon's running mate in November but added that it was "totally unrealistic" to sup- pcse Treasury ·Secretary John B. Connal~ Jy would be acceptable. '"I don't •ndera\And how anybody could urlously believe that a 111111 who hi registered as a Democrat t.D tbt middle of May can turn Republlc~n and be nointnated vice ptealdent," AgDt111-11ld. • Agnew talked. With reporters after making a 40.mlnute report to Pruldent Nixon on hlJ Far Eastern vL!lt. Respondini to que&tlOlll about bis run- ning agaln for vice president, Agnew said he had not been asked by the President and would not decide until invited. Ile said Nixon was rightfully delaying • decision to det.ennine what running mate would be most helpful to him, and added: "Mr. Connally Is just not it." Connally submitted his resignation as Treasury secretary this week. He was one of the President's closest advisers. Agnew said speculation about Coo- nally's cha nces of being picked by Nixon as a running mate had been blow.n out of propartlon by news media. "It just Isn't in the cards. Any political pro will tell you that," he said. Agnew said he had answered questlon.t about his own political future many times in the past and -although he praiaed Connally as a capable government of· ficial -he appeared somewhat nettled by the questioning . Within minutes after Agnew spoke, the White House announced that the President's daughter. Tricia Nixon Cox. will participate in a "Salute to Ted Agnew" at a Baltimore theater tonight and dellver a mensage from Nixon. On another subject, Agnew said "we are coming out of the woods" and blun- ting the North Viet namese offensive. After emerging from ·Nixon's Oval Of· fice, Agnew said South Vietnam Presi.. dent Nguyen Van Thieu and Gen. Creighton Abrams, the U.S. commander in Vietnam, are confident the South Vie~ namese "will hold." Wea tiler LOOk for a wet weekend along the Orange Coast, with 70 percent chance of showers tonight and Sat- urday. The wcitherman says highs will be in the upper 50's at the beach and 60 inland. INSIDE TODJ\\' ~. UC Trvi~ Fine~•an Clayton Garrl&Ol> Col• Porttr'1 mu1~ . fs s Me, Katt .'' St.a#' writer Gtoro• Ltidal watchta lht proft110,. put the atudenti through . thei1' pacer of the adcptaioii of Shakt· speart's "Tamf11g of tht Shrew. H Stt todat1'• Wttkender. 1 D41LY PILOT LI Beautif yii1g Medians: Subject Is Sycamores 87 BARBARA KREIBICR Of , ... 01llY l'lltl IMH FOR A FEW REFR'ESHING moments Ulil week, tht Laguna Beach City c:ouncil turned its attention from such mundane matt ers as recalls, eleetion codes, traffic signals and waste management to consider some horticultu ra l questions. The subject was sycamores. Item 12 on tht council agenda for the evtning called for council appro\•al of a new planting program for the median islands on Laguna Canyon Road, by the Fe!tival of Arts grounds. The median islands have been a !OUJ'Ce of despair to the city Parks Department and beautification buffs. Attenipts to beautify them with flowering planl' and shrubs have re- peatedly been frustrated by flourishing weeds and the Festlval·goers. "Could we ask what you 're planning to put there now?" queried a resident. "SYCAMORES," rtsponded Mayor Richard Goldberg. "Sycamores and turf. The landscape people feel this wlll be easy to maintain." '1But sycamores are too big -they 'll q>read out all over -loo k at that one by the water company ... " " think the were cho.sen because they do so weU here," said someo~ helpfully. •• ey re iiiafgenou5to"tll"l~-are1--=-ymrknow;-Sycamore -Flats-•.. ~ "ANYWAY" volunteered Chamber of C.Ommerce manage:r Betty Myers, "these are not' th e big kind. They 're from Europe." The connection between Europe and Sycamore Flats was not pursued. . A gentleman who sa id he had "lived v.•ith sycamores for 32 years in Cleveland" thought It was unfortunate to have chosen a tree tha t s~eds _its leaves In winter. "What will the tourists: think?" he asked. "It'll be Just like where they came from ." A woman in tht audience disagreed. "Sycamores are always beautiful -bare.or leafy," she averred. EVERGREEN TREES had been considered, uid Mn. Myers; but the landscape architect had so me reasoo for preferring iycamores. Artist Andy Wing raised his hand. . "Whtn we're all through with the trees, I'd like t.o talk about the grass, ii )'Oii· do!J 't mind," he told Mayor Richan! Ooldbel'll. "I don't mind a bit," said the mayor cheerfully. ''Anyone else for trees? Okay. let's move on to the grass ... " · "I think you should wait to plant the grass,'' said Wing. "If you plant It now,. it will get trampled before it gets started." "AS I UNDERSTAND IT," said the mayor, "they're not planting grass seed. They 're putting in lurf -you know, bit chunks of turf." "Well , before they put It in," said Wing, "I'd like to donate some mulch -l'vt got tons and tons of mulch at my place-you need 90methlng to put In that sick soll to make things grow." 'nle mayor suggested that the city manager make a nott cf the ofter. "YOU'U. HAVE TO pick it up," said Wing. "Maybe we'll just need a few tonS," said lbe manager. A gentleman remarked that he 'd driven by tbt islands only the day be- fore and noticed they "seem to be looking very nice u they are." "That's because they've just been cleaned out for the planting," said Councilman Roy Holm. 11 A couple of weeks ago they looked like ... well ... they looked terrible.'' Tbt plantlng program wu duly adopted, with tho notaUon that all com- mtntl r~ived during .the evening 1hould be passed on to the landscape arehltect end the ' PBJ'ltl Department. RELUCTANTLY, the cowicil turned to the ne::rt agenda item : Streets. re- surfacing. 1.,,-" Sunday Special: Citizen Volunteer Fire Fighters A1EN WHO SERVE -Volunteer firemen are on call 24 hours a day and , though they may find they have to temper their drink ing and alter so me other habits, it's a great way to serve the community ... "Sunday Special." LINDY FLIES AGAIN -Photographs and other memorabilia recall a day when men -not computers -flew airplanes. Words and pictures remind readers of Mason Talks Locked LOS ANCi ELES (AP ) -Negotiations between Southern California brick car· riers and the building loduslry are reported deadlocked as a Monday strike deadline nears. A spokesman for the California Conference of f\fason Con- tractors Association said Thursday th e AFL-CIO Laborers Un ion announced plans to put out picket li~s Afonda y if there is no settlement in contract talks. OIANGI COAST L• DAILY PILOT T"'-Or•"Ot Cot1I CMILY P'ILOT, .i111 Wllldl 11 comb!Nd tll• New1.Prtti, Is 1111bll1Nd ew fllt' Or•"OC' (G,\1t Pub!l1~lnt com~ny, s~ r~i. -'111on1 ••• P\fllll•htrl, MondtY 111rw1111 F<l<11r. tor Cos1t M111, N1wp0rt llttch. Hv,.11<1~""1 8r.tcll/Fou<1ltln Vt!I~, L111un1 Btacll, lr~1n1/S1ddlllbatk tnd s;,, Clt mt "te/ St" Jut<! CtPl11tt rio, A l lflU lt •to!ont l ..ill ~ la pUbi!llltd Sth1rd1y1 tM Sund1y1, ,.,., Pfll>C•Ptl 1111llllJ.1'1!11Q pl1nr II fl JJC Wf.\1 f\~y l!tffl, c;o.11 M n 1, C11lt0tnl1, f1'1'. ll11lt11I N. Wo1~ P'rnldent and P'uOll111.,. J tck It Curley 't'Kt "'ttlfll'll W ~.i MIMtW . Thorn•• ktt•il E<lllOr Thomai A. Murphil'lt Mt"'fll'll &•11'0!' Chtrfu H. IAos RichtN '· N~ll Ml~ M9M0111f llfl*' ............ Offlc. 212 forest AW"afluo M1illllf A4,rotn ,,0 . lo• •I•, 92612 --C:.11 MtM: ill Wtt1 lty StrW N=IMdU UJ3 flltwpOrt•...,...,t,.. Hiii\! 1iM IMdlt 1711S l•dl liOutPHfC J111 C te-: JU Nerti! IJ Cli"""9 11 .. 1 , .. .,.... (7141 641-4JJ1 Cl ....... .U19'tl .... 641 •1111 ............ Alhfl•tdCllll , ..... 7 4f4."'6 ~t. tm, 0,..,.. CMtl ~ CM!'*", Nt ...... """" ... ,.........,, ........ , ,.....,., --~.,...,,."-... ,..., w •• ••uuid wl,,,_. lflklM ,... ....... ,. .. .,,...t .,...... l ....................... C..1,,,,... (411...,.k. .......,. .., lttn'.... ..... -WrJ " MtR U.1S. fl'ltttllltr1 mhlJW\I' _...., ..... """"""". Charles Lindbergh's landing lo Paris - 45 years ago to the day . FIRST LADIES - Women's pages feature word·and-photo pictures of the \fi ves of four Orange Coast city mayors . , . four first ladies as diverse as their cities. CONGRESSIONAL UPSET'? -Feature illustrated with map of newly fonned 42nd Congressional District (territory in Orange and San Diego counties ) indicates increase In Democrats and the J>O.!ISibiHty of an upset in the race that was suppo.!led to be a shoo-in , WILLIAM SAROYAN -One of California's .best kno1\"'fl authors expla ins why it's 59 tough being a loner in a world of joiners ... Family Weekly. COMMUTERS ON CYCLES -Though the trend is a long way from mat ching the use of bicycles In Europe or the Far East, Orange Coast comb'iuters arc beginning to ride bikes to work more these days, especially if it's a short ride or the office has shower facilities. POWER & PEOPLE -Eddie Albert, who will emcee a tw<>-hour debate on Proposition 9 <nuclear power plants vs. the ecological balance), ls featured in a TV WEEK story that previews the show. TRAVEL FEATURES -Two pages of travel stories and photograph3 present Munich, !lcene of the Olympics; th~ ma- jestic vast ness of Briti sh Columbia : a caravan In C.Ork, Ireland : a kosher hotel in Israel: and an invitation to go in search of the Santa Ana River in the San Bernardino Nation al Forest. NIXON TO MOSCOW -Color II· Justratlon of the Presidrnl's itliierary for his trip to Moscow, which begi ns !his weekend. is coupled with a rtporl on cur- rent Ru .!lslan affairs. 'THE JAZZ SHO\V' -Billy Eckstine, as emcee of new jazi show, makes the cover and cover story or this week's 'IV WEEK. Laguna Free Poets Sponsoring l{eacling Fi!teen woman poets under the aegis of the Laguna Beach Free Poets will . prtsent a readlne tonight from a p.m. o'clock to midnight at the Harris House, 421 Park Avt,, La&una B<och. : On Sunday, th< Fr,. Poot& will hold a . In• beach party on 1 prlVlle beach 500 Ylrda north o( A"'9 8-h. Entry ii from Allao. Tlie plrly wlU ruJ\ !ram I p.m. to I p.llh P0ttry Ind maslc will be fe1tured 1t the evtnls. DAILY PILOT Stiff ,lttle DEFENDS PROPOSITION 9 Koupal of People's Lobby Fro111Page I PENTAGON • • • brick into the corridors. Most of the damage from the blast was confined to the bathroOm area, but sllat- tered plumbing sprayed thousands of gallons of water into the passageways. The waler seeped into of(ces below, caused some damage to <the Air Force Qimputer Center and lay ankledeep on the shopping concourse three flights down. Despite the problems, Brig. Gen. Daniel James said, "It's business as usual today." He said the Pentagon was operating nonnally aside from the clean up opera tion. James is the deputy assistant secretary of defense for public affairs. In a statement, the Pentagon said a du- ty officer of the Federal Protective S;ervl ce at the Pentagon received a phone caU from th< Washington police at 12:13 a.m. reP.1Jrling a phone tip from a WashlngCOn newspaper. The newspaper repor\ed recelvlnf a call stating a bomb had been planted on the eighth floor of the Pentagon and that it was to go off during the night. There is no eighth floor of the Pentagon, which riaes only five stories. At 12:59 a.m., the Air Force security office reported "a loud eiplosion" on the Pentagon's fourth floor. The $15 million worth of computers and other data processing equipment were shut down for about 7 hours and no data was lost. the Pentagon said. During the morning, after the ex- plosion, the Pentagon received an ad- ditional number or bomb threats. wh ich authorities rega rded as normal in such an event. The restroom is located on the Pen· tagon's E-ring, th e outermost of five rings, in the five-sided building. The explosion came six: hours before stringent new security provision! were to have gon e into effect, requiring in· spectioil of all packages and briefcases brought into the Pentagon, the world's largest office building. These restrictions were ordered Tuesday and were to have become ~ffectiV&at 7 a.m. lhls weekend. James said the water caused some I damage to the elec trical leads of the Air Force's computers which we re im- mediately shut down. "The Air Force assures me they can function 1vithout them ," and that they ex· pect to have them back in operation shortl y. The computers keep track of data on Air Force logistics and are not involved with military operations in Southeast Asia. the offic ial said. FBl agents sifted through the rubble, looking for clues and James said that un- tll the investigation is completed they v.·erc not ''prepared to say what type or explosive device" was used . Froua J•age I GHERMAN .. capacities as an expert on narcoti cs and has been active in various social and medical organizations for many years. He has been active with Mi untaln Lake Oevelop_ment Corporation since 1965 when he also became a director of Allttgan Pharmaceutical. He became a director of HaJlamore Homes in 1971. He is abo a director of the American Box Corpora- tion, an officer of the Inland Prtss Corporation and in the early 1960s served as pr.,idtnl of tbe Unl ver•al SW'gl<al SUpply Inc. iff..wu a captain in the ~dlan Of· ficera Training COrps In IJ3iiba served with the U.S. Air Forte Reh1blllt1Uon Program during World War II. First Hearing Waived LOS ANGELES (AP) -Rloarcto Cha· v...orth, 31locllal'lled with' bJj1ctlng 1 FrooUer Alrl "~ Imn New Mexl- <0 lo Loa Anl'ela Jut AprU, IJu waived a prolilnlnary lleartn&. ms cm -tabn orl the court calendar Monclo1 Ulllll tbe led en I grind fury decldu "WllttlJu 11> In- dict him.· Aide Def ends Prop. 9 Will Creat,e Jobs, Says 'Lobby' Spokes1nan By CANDACE PEARSON DI Jlle 0.llY l'lltl Si.ft Passage or Propoaltlon 91 ~. Clean Environment Act, on the June 6 ballot will create a lot of jobs -not destroy them -because "we 're asking for a new product -clean air," Ed Koupal, direc- tor of the People's ·Lobby said at UC Jrvioe Thursd ay. Speaking before a group of about 60 students gathered in campus park, Koopal said the Environmental Protec- tion Agency (EPA) llsta one million jobs waiting for those who will help clean up the atmosphere. OpJ>Onenls to the proposition, wh.ich was put on the ballot as an initiative meuure with a half million signature!, have said that i~ succtts would create laYQf£s of workers in construction and n~clear reactor factories and power shortages. "Those scare tactics," Koupal charged, ''are the same as when people were tak· ing the 12 and 13-year..olds out of the sweatshop! in the 19208 and others said it would break the economy." Koupal, who with his wife, Joyce, founde<l the-People'rl;obby;-said-that"it ls now up to the public to do something about the air "which you have to chew before you inhale it" and the water .. which you can almost walk on in the estuaries.'' Stale leg islators \\'On 't act to save the envirorunent, he ct>ntended, because "the boys who give them campaign funds don't want it that way." Basically, the Clean Environment Act would : -Ban off.shore oil drilling but allow present rlga to remain and would allow on-shore slant drilling. . -Phase out leaded fuel by Jan. 1,1976. -Assess Polluters .4 percent of the Laguna· Resident Will Give Talk Laguna Beach resident Mary Mullen, a retlred school principal, will be the featured speaker Saturday at a luncheon mtt!ling of the Orange COast chapter or the National Retired Teachers' Associa- tion. Miss MuUen. vice president of the na· tional association, served as principal of an Alhambra elementary school fronl 1937 until her retirement in 1956. She will speak following 'the 12:30 p.hi. meeting at the Airporter Inn in Newport Beach. The Prange <:.oaat chapter of the association senes reliied teachen and school adminl~tor~ 11vlng in Newport Beach, Laguna Beach and San Clemente. Further in!onnaUon about the luncheon meeting may be obt.alnld from Buena Bartlett at 837·4116. From Pagel RECALL ... week. Mrs. Gillette noted that the state code is used by many school districts and is more "workable." The first reading or the change will be made at the June 7 meeting of the board, with final adoption set for June 2tl. Rynn saJd that while his group has ruled out recall "at the present time," he noted "it might be warranted at a later date'' dependlng on the outcome or the proppsed policy· chaflle and the contract status of Ullom, Reeves and Hess. Both Mrs, Gillette and Linke said today tbey had . "no comment" on any im~ pending 1ecall moves. previous year's groa.' business everyday they are charged with polluting. I( tli.ey stop polluting they would get 75 percent of the money back. -Ban the sale or DDT, DOE, other in- secticides and chemical defollants. -Place a five.year moratorium on the c.:onstruction of nuclear power plants. The latter is one of the most con· troversial sectlons, because opponents say such action would cause power shortages. . Kou pal answered that "there Is a 21 percent power surplus in California now. We will need more power in the fut ure buj not right awa y." fr fr fr •Halt Econ011ay' lie said the five.year pet1od ls necd<'d to study the plants b4..>cause they have had problems. Co1n pletlon or those plants under construction now ur n1anufacture of nuclear parls for export 1vould 1}01 be forb idden. The act also would force reduction tit the sulphur content In diesel luel, a rl'· quiremeot which truckers have said would cause trcn1endous lay-0£!:1. Koupal said, if that is true, they_could get an extenslon from the courts unti l they can comply. Koupal was sponsored by the studl'nt body and an ecology action group, wh ic h plans precinct 11.·alks for proposition nine. Newport Chamber Told Proposition 'Disastrous' If a clean alr proposition on the June 6 this measure is not the co rrect answer,•· ~rim..@O: })allot passes, t_M__ economic Eliott said. results in Callfornia would be di'~'sas""CtC'ro~u~,~. ~"H~e'-sa~i"!d the Sierra Club~hichhadbeen ---{·l--*"- the Newport Harbor Chamber of Com· expected lo jump on the bandwagon. has merce Marine Division wa.a told Thurs-nelthf'r endorsed no rejected the prop-- day. osition. "If approved, Proposition 9 would go "Several ot her responsible conservation into effec t the next day and the economy groups have al ready opposed Proposition of this state would grind to a halt." said 9." he said . "Unless 11.•e defeat it, il could Thomas Eliott, a spokesman for Califor-take years of initiati\'e processes to nians Against Proposition 9. change it again ." Eliott told the chamber members what Eliott said the biggest problem his the proposition would limit. group is having is convinciiig the average "It would put severe restrictions on voter to decide against the measure. diesel fuel, gasoline, oil drilling, and nuclear.power plants," Eliott said. He said the !alter restriction, which would put a five-year moratorium on nuclear plant construction, is self defeating. . "When this state begins having the blackouts and brownouts predicted by 1974, there will be no choice but to beef up the. foasil fuel facilitieJ that are our biggest poUution problem,'' he said. Ellett also said that a restriction which would drasticaUy cut sulphur in diesel fuel could bring to a halt all truck and train traffic in the state. "The damage to retail sales outfits u·ould be incredible if that happened," Eliott said. Eliott stressed that once the proposition Is approved, the legislature's hands are tied . "They cannot weaken tht bill, only strengthen ii," he said. Eliott acknowledged serious pollution problems tn the country but said that they cannot be effectively o r economically solved overnight. "Even the conservation groups realize Peace, Ecology Film at Church The film "Song of the Earth, St. Fran- cis' Message to America on Peace and Ecology" will be presented at 8 p.m. Sun-- day at the Laguna United MethodisJ Church, 21632 Wesley Drive, Laguna Beach . The 22·mlnute· color picture will be taken by producers Rev. Gary· Herbertson and Francis Line to the Envlronlnental Forum in · StoCkholm, SWeden to the United Nations Conference on Human Environment in mJd.June. The film relates to st. Francia' earJy experiences in Italy to present clay prob- lems in America. The public ia invited and there 11 no admission charge. Fro111 Page I ELECTION ... papers just 30 minu tes belore the filing deadline, did not return them lo the clerk's office. Campbell, 41 , lives at 645 Anita St. with his wife, Betty Jane, and their son. Lar- ry. 12. a student at Th u r s t on lntennediate School.· A ~Iajor in the U.S. ?\·larine Corps, he will be di scharged June 30, after 25 years of service. Campbell was born in Bartlesville, Okla., was graduated in 1952 from Cen· tral College, Edmund, Okla ., wit h a B.S. degree and, in 1962. was gradua ted from the USC School of Aerospace Safety Engineering. He enlisted in the Marine Corps in 1947, became a pilot and served in Vietnam, wiMlng seven Air Medals and the Bronze Star. C\mtntly he is serving';u a reCrea- tion director for the 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing at El Toro, Santa Ana and Yuma. The campbell family moved to Laguna Beach in 1957 and has lived here since. Since his last return from Vietnam in 1965, Campbell has been acti ve ln youth work in the community, work ing with the Llttle League and Junior All·American football program, Cub Scouts, Boy Scouts and Indian Guides. He was appointed to the planning com- mission in Se ptember. 1971. Beth Leeds, 30, 2699 Solana \Vay. third of the Jast·minute entries in the nevi council/race, placed fifth in a field of six candid,ates in the April municipal elec- tion , With 38.5 votes. A Laguna resident slnde f1941, she works at the Volunteer Post.I Johnson, 50, of 616 Mystic View St. is a 10.ytar resident of , Laguna Beach, a ford\er president of the Civ ic League and a planning commissioner since October l&qg. A chemist, he is employed as 1 senior research . associate with Cheron Oil Field Research Company. CHAPELLE by H ERITAGt Come, ta~e an e1cur1ion into loveliness .. •• our wonderfully varied Ch•pelle CollKtion of Louis XV-styled tabl• treasures by Heritage. They hi9hl i9ht a room -arui then some! le sure to se• the low, long, beautiful sofa table •• • not illustrated. l'ndT"'° __ .!!..-________________ ., DEALE~S FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE -KARASTAN 7td. INTERIORS LAGUNA llACH 345 Nortll Coot! Hwy. 4f4.65Sl _, ......... .,-~ .... uu "•' t , ......... De•• ., .................. . .. TORRANCE 23649 H1wthorn1 llvd. rzu1 na.un °""......., •111 t ,I I • ! I I . ' ,. • •• ' Saddlehaek Today's Final N.Y. Stooks VOL 65, NO. 1'40, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE Q'.)UNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 19, 1972 TEN CENTS • 'Devil Cultist' Pleads Guilty Ill Grisly Death By TOM BARLEY Of IM Otl!Y ,llot Stiff Christopher "Gypsy" Gibboney pleaded guilty to reduced murder charges Thurs- day in Orange County Superior Court ac- tion that closes the file on what lawmen regard as the most grisly killing in coun- ty history. Judge William MuITay accepted the plea of guilty to second degree murder from an Oregon youth who was just one week past his seventeenth birthday on June 2, 1970, when he played hls part ln the mutilation murder of Mission Viejo teacher Florence Nancy Brown. Gibboney was committed to the California Youth Authority (CYA) for an indefinite perlOd. He will be 25 before that sentence is reviewed in any way, prosecuter Jay Moseley said. Gibboney had been certified for trial as an adult offender. The California Supreme CoW't is scheduled to bear an appeal against that Superior court decision. 'Itle guilty plea 'l1!.ursday represented a triumph for the Dis_trict Attorney's Ofiice in the sense that the witness they vitally needed to insure a conviction against Gibboney in the scheduled murder trial abscohded more than one month ago. The DAILY PILOT Jearned long before Thursday 's actii;m that Herman Hendrick Taylor, 191 a member of · the gang that butchered Mrs. Brown, 3J, El Toro. violated the probation imposed in return for his cooperation in the conviction of gang leader Steven Ctaig Hurd, 20, and Arthur Craig "Moose" Hulse. Defense attorney Forest DeArmond was. ~er aware of Taylor's .absence. U he had ~. it is extremely unlikely that he would have allowed his young client to pl~ guilty. Taylor fled more \ban a month ago and ls '·the . subject today of a statewide aearch. ·Chief Deputy District Attorney • James Enright said parole violation charges, set aside when Taylor testified !or the prosecution in the Hurd and Hulse trials, will almost certainly be revi.,·ed when the yoµng transient is apprehended. "You might say we're playing a vital card game with our trump card miss· ing," Enright said two weeks ago. "If this information ever gets into print we can say goodbye to a 'cop-out' by Gib- boney and to a lot of taxpayers money in the fonn .of a long trial." Gibboney admitted with his ptea Thurs- day that he y,·as one of the drug-u sing gang of four youths and one ·woman who dragged ~1rs. Brown from her car two years ago as she entered the Sand C.:n\)'on turn-of£ 0£ the San Diego Freey,·ay. She y,•as bustled at knifepolnt into aft Irvine or!nge grove \vhere she \'IDS stabbed to death and portions of her heart devoured in an orgiastic tribute to lSee 'OEVlL CULT', Page!) -onnally? -Ne-ver!- vP Won't Be Democrat, Says A g new From Wire Services WASlllNGTON -Vice President Spiro T. Agnew said today he did not know whether he would be Pi:_esid~nr Nixon's running mate in NoVernber but"" added that it was "totally unrealistic" to sup- pose Tre~sury Secretary John B. Connal- ly would be acceptable. ., "I don't understand h6w aqybody C!ould seriously beJieve that a man who ls regjstered as a Democrat in the middle of May · can turn Republican aod be nominated vice president," Agnew said. Agnew talked wtth reporters after making a 40-minute report to President Nixon on his Far Eastern visit. Red Light Thief • Responding to questions about hTs run- ning again for vice president, Agnew said he had not been asked by the President and would not decide until Jnvited. He said Nixon was rightfully delaying a decision to determine what running mate would be mMt helpful to him, and added: "Mr. Connally is just not it" CoMally submitted his resignation '-as Treasury secretary this week. He was one of the President's closest advisers. Agnew said speculation about Con- nally's chances of being picked by Nixon as a running mate had been blown out of propartion by news media. "It just isn't in the cards. Any political pro will tell you that," he said. Agnew said he had answered questions about his own political future many times in the past and -although be· praised CIDl.nany as a caj>able government of· ficial -he appeared somewhat nettled by the questioning. • \Vithln minutes after Agne\V spoke, the White House annouhced tha t ' 't h e President 's daughter, Tricia Nixon Cox, will participate in a "Sa lute to Ted Agnew " at a Baltimore theater tonight and deliver a message from Nixon. On another subject, Agne'v s11.id "~·e are com ing out of the woods" and blun- ting the North Vie tnamese offensive. Coast Route 'Dead' Relieves-Irvine . ., . Road c~~f ~ays No 'Mor.e ,I. P"'~Y·.,~.,tSt•H ..... . llliAnHl'"ll1 ·rA.f IL.~..;..: ) \. I '~ . ' '. 'I • fl:".\ .. , ' Guitarists Practke For c Mieert · . .,..~ fi,~··'*;.:.~t··.,..,~'.'¥1-~,,. ~F· '·':'"·· .. ," .. ,,,.,, .,,:~,1 .C Mark Moody, Sandi Sim• and Cathy Smtih.' be-'C!Uln &boo! 'District who will sing .and play at tht struck again Thursday nigbl this time us-rea . -Orange ~·, "red light bandit" reeways m ounty A ginning guitarists in Anita Griffith's class at ~ancbo second annual Spr111g .Music Fes~val May 25 at ing his police car prank to relieve aq San Joaquin Intermediate School in East Irvme, are 7:30 p.m. at the Anahellll Convention.Center. The. Irv-ine. woman of her purse and ttie $110 only three of about 2,000 students in the San Joa· Irvine Company is paying tor the use of the center. in it. McGovern Visits Orange Co11nty In Vote Quest Democratic presidential aspirant Sen. George McGovern (D-South Dakota) wilJ arrive in Orange C.ounty Sunday and is scheduled to take a stroll along the shore llf Upper Newport Bay in Newport Beach. Aides said today that Sen. McGovern will be in the county all Sunday ar~ tetnoon, stopping at a barbecue and a coCktail party in addition to the back bay activities. He will be out stumping in his efforts to get a large chunk of the votes from the state's flve million Democrats in California June .6 primary election. Sunday's activities will begin at 2 p.m. with a barbecue at 11141 Meads Ave. In Orange. The walk along the back by is scheduled for 4:30 p.m. and will begin where Back Bay Drive meets Jamboree Road in Newport Beach. Following the walk with several Orange County environmentalists. Sen. McGovern will appear at a cocktciil party at 6 p.m. at 2874 Boa Vista Drive in Costa Mesa. Donation at the barbecue is $5 and at thi later cocktail hour, $2.50, campaign spokesmen said. $1 Million Expansion ' Under Way by 'Safari' A 350-seat theater, a free-flight aviary and a scenic railroad ride are among $1 million worth or improvements being in· stalled at Lion Country Safari in Laguna Hills, President Harry Shuster has an- nouaced. BegiMiflg its third year of operation in Orange County, the African wildlife preserve will . center the expansion prD- gram in the 30-acre entertainment area adjoining the al'llmal sanctuary, known as the Safari Camp. The air-conditioned theater, built at a cost of $500,000, will open late in June, Shuster said and will feature daily performances of a puppet show, along with educational films and illustration lectures. The aviary, 35 feet high and covering nearly an acre, is adjacent to a 600-seat open air theater, where bird shows are preseot'!d. It will house a variety of ex- otic Afirc8j birds. The new railroad, with open passenger cars hauled by an 1890 v~ntage locomotive, will wind along the Lion Country 41river" for clostHJp viewing of animals in the sanctuary_. Expansion at the animal preserve is not confined to the entertainment area, Shuster noted. Lion Country's animal population explosion continued at a steady pace, with births rece ntly record- ed including two eland, two wallabies, a red lechwe. a zebra, a fringe-eared oryx and two ostric hes. Of special interest to zoologists, he said, were the births of a Hartmann's mountain zebra and a scimitar-horned, oryx, both lisfed as rare and endangered species. . On the expectant list in the animil preserve are two hippos, two giraffes, two brindled gnu, two white-bearded gnu, two biesa oryx, o~e fringe-eared oryi:, two eland, two Persian gazelle, one red. lechwe, two rhino and several lionesses. Land Developers Charged GoUlwate r's Fa tlier-in-Law Accused by DA Prominent Newport Beech psychiatrist- buslnessman Dr. E. Mortiiner Gherman ts ooe of three men charged Thursday with grarxl theft and false· advertising. in ca&ection with a Big Bear Lake real d'.ate promotion. J.)r. Gherman, whos~ daughter married U,S. Rep. Barry M. Goldwater Jr. (R·Los Angeles) tw_o montM ago, is facing 10 grand theft complaints and 59 complaints of faL!e advertising brought by the San Bernardino County District Attorney. The •wltchboard at the Balboa Pay Club in Newport Beach where Gherman resides was under instructions to hold all calls to the Oberman apartment thl.t morning. Dr. Gherman is an officer of the cor~ porailon that recently purchased the Bay Club and other BBC boldlngs In Palm $prlngs and at Catalina. lit is also • director of llallamoro Homn Inc. of Fountain Valley. Ban B<n>ardino Depuly Distrlct At· tomey Chirles Wolle said the charges against Gheim'an and two .others stem from the sale of 135 cabin sites where ufilities bad bee1rpromised, but never" in-- stalled. \l{olfe said he filed the action upon complaints from buyers who had paid a combined total ol 11.1 million for the lots. Dr. Gherman is dlairmao of the board of Mountalll Lake Deyek>pment Corpora- tion, the firm fhat ootd the property and Which sb:art.S corporate office! with International Bay Clubs Inc. which ac- quired the Bay Club .boldlnp from Jack Wrather laoL year. Dr. Ghennan la aecretary-tttuurer or ' me, the Balboa flay Club Inc., the Balboa Bl)' bllnd Club, the Balboa Bay Rocquet Club, the Balb!>o Bay Desert Club and the IlOJ Outi Realty Company. Also named · fn the complaints were John A. '*Pat" Pttttraon, an olilclal of Mourn.in Lake wbo -ka with Dr. Gberman al ollites al 1117 Wt>tc!Uf 't \ ~' .... Drive, and a man Identified only as James Moreland. Each was charged with ts counts ~f raise and misleading ad· vcrtlsing. Wolfe said the C.llfornla Departmenl cf Real Estate began an investigation of the 33-acre Mountain Lake Es1-tes several months ago after purchasers complained that utilltl0s1 were mot iJr stalled as bad been advertised. He said the sale of the Jot. :w~lch averaged about 18,000 each In price wu . made between 1969 and 1'71, WoJfe oa}d P•tter'® continued to sell the lots after being told to stop by the real' eatato departmen~ -1 Dr. Ghennan wbo has been a member of the Balboa Bay Club aln<:e 19", al!O was at one time active ln Orange Coun- ty'8 pilot methadone maintenance pro-aram !or heroin addlc!I. , • Mrs. Ida. Ruth Reynertson, 51, .of 148Sl Jeffrey Road, told sheriff's officers she was on her way home when she Spotted a car with a na~ing red light on top in'her rear view mirror. Mrs. Reynertson, who felt she· had co.mmitted no offense, said she dutifully pulled over near the intersection llf 'Jef- frey and Barranca Road and waited tor the ticket or the lecture or both. · Jnstead she got a lesson that tias ·sher· riff's officers· hunting today for the bandit with a new wrinkle in robbery routines. He grabbed her purse as she reached for it in the rear of the car to produce her driver 's license, ran from her auto and drove off at high speed. Investigators believe the bandit Is the same person who pulled exactly the same kind or theft exactly one month ago in the Tustin area. Movie projectionist !Wbert Hanson told deputies at that time that he pulled over to the side of the road after sPotting the flashing red light in his rear view mirror. Hanson s!Ud he was ·relieved 'of his billfold containing $4.90 by a young bandit who then ordered him to drive off without looking back. Sheriff's officers are seeking Ute aid of police in several county communities in a bid to locate the pseudo patrolmap. Chairman P ermanent SACRAMENTO (A P) -The acting chairman of the State Water Resources Control Board has become. its permanent chairman, repla cing Kercy Mulligan, WOO resig~ under fire last January. OAl\.Y Pti.OT ltd ,..... CHARGED JN LAND DEAL· Newport hath'• Ghorm111. Environmental pressure groups ere preventing construction of urgently need- ed freeways ·and other Orange County · roadways , Ted McCooville, county road commissioner, told businessmen from the El Toro and Saddleback area·Thursday. Speaking before a combined meeting of the Exchange Club of Saddleback Valley and the Saddleback Valley Chamber· of Commerce, McConville sa\d that in his -* * * Officials Put Ears to Ground On Freewa y Noise Orange County planners are showing keen inteerst in a recent freeway noise test conduCted by the state Division of Highways on the Artesia Freeway in Buena Park which revealed noise levels up to 85 decibels, equivalent to the roar of_ a jackhammer. County planning department aides and the · road commission's staf£ members and the planning commission have been wrestling with 1imilar freeway noise prob- Jems in the Irvine. and El Toro areas where new housing projects are being built adjacent to the Santa Ana and San Diego freeways. The Board of Supervisors recently urged the planning and road department staffs to speed up their studies and eom· plete them before many new subdivl1Jons now in the planning stages are developed. County Road Commissioner T e d McConville told board members that benns .or dirt and landscaping could be effective in.deadening the freeway noise which ~s caused largely by dei.M!l trucks. He said another solution was acqu1sltlon or wider rights-of-way by the state. The Buena Park tests, conducltd at the re- quest of the city council and lf>S famlles who live alon' the 2% mile stretcb of the Artesia Freeway from Valley View to the Santa Ana Freeway were revealed by Bob Blocktr, assistant stale highway engineer. NoJSleat time of the day wa1 during the peak traffic hour period from 6 to 6:30 p.in., Blocker said, with a top dedb<I rea.dlng en the state's sound detection in- stnunenla or 85 and an average reading of n. · · He oflered two possible aolution.s to the c~y and resldenls -con.struction o! bar- riers along the right.-cf-way of earthen . mouncla topped with masonry walls at roof ijne level or planting of noise buffers wing fut growing trees and plants~ B)ocker said the barriers, the· most ef· foc(lve method, would COit about• 1700,000 and added that the •tat• ·would nol llnAnce the project under ulstblr law ab~ the majority of the aflected homes were built after Ure freewa y route wu adoplid. "State funds 1te ovallable for llCllSO (S.. NOISE, P ... I) opinion, this pressure , meant that no more freeways would be built in Orange County. This includes the Coast Freeway, which McConvi l\e said was "dead." I-le said that it looked as if widening and reconstruc- tion of existing six-lane freeways would be the only additio ns to the present arterial traffic system. The road commissioner said that there appeared to be a conflict in the philosophies of the environmentally outspoken who on one hand desire a stabilized Orange County Population of between 2.S to 3 million by 1980 and on the other wish for high-volume public transportation. "High volume public transportation woul~ have a dramatic effect on growth In this area, we could expect to see it skyrocket. This area would become Manhattan-like," Mcconvill e said. He said that due to the hold-up of con- struction of Orange County freeways, on- :amp metering systems will be initiated Jn the county this year in th e area around ~uena Park, and he expected the meter- ing system to expand throughout tho county within two or three years. The :amp metering system already in effect 1n Los Angeles places stop lights on (he entrances to the freeways and when traffic volume on the roadway becomes heavy, CUL'I ofl free access to the freeway. Asked by a member or the audience where the people go who. can't get on the freeway, McConville shrugged h i s shoulders and said "they'll Just have to go some other way." Oruge Coast Weather Look for a wet weekend along · the Orange Coas t, with 70 percent chance of showers tonight and Sat- urday. The weatherman says highs will be in the upper SO's at the beach and 60 inland. INS IDE T ODAV UC I rvine Fine Arts Dea n. Clayton GarrUon direct3 Cole Porter's musical "Ki ss Me, Kat e." Staff w·r It er George /,eidal iuatches the professor put the ttudd"ntt through their pacet of the adaptaion of SMkt· ipeare's "Taming of the Sllrew." See todaU'! Weekender. L.M. lt.,11 71 ... 11... ' c.11..,.,.1. ' Cl•ttlfltf •tt C-kl J1 c,.., .. ~ n Dtttll """" '' tllllffl•I ''" I fl!M~n lt-\J ,., .... lllM•• " Hwt\ttft ,, A111 UM'" ll MMJM1 • Mfy+H J1·lt ' .. % DAIL~ PILOT IS f~d'I. "'" 19, 1971 Others OK'd 2 Schools Lack Zone Boundaries Boundary lines have been drawn ror condominiums. each school in the San Joaquin Elemen· -AllMo IEI Toro ): Lake Forest (north tary School District except Cordillera and of ~1ulrlands aod south of Jeronilno/, Del Cerro In the Mission Viejo area: l.aguna North . The attendance boundaries ,were ap--SUttago (Lake Forest /: Lake Forest proved by the board or trustees We<ines· north of Jeronimo, Lakeside Park, day after they deleted the two schools Design I, Rancho Viejo (part will go to ::it the reques t of Superintendent Ralph Gates). (;ates. Olive.wood (El Toro): everything south Gatu said he wanted more lime to of tituirlands and west of El Toro Roat!, study lnfonnatlon presented at Wednes-New World (tract 7311). day's meeting by James Carlin of -Gate• (El Toro): everything north of fl.tisaion Viejo, representing Cordlllera freeway and east of El Toro Road; New School parents in Seville homes. \Vorld (tract 7371 ); Ranch Wood, Rancho Carlin turned in results ()f a poll eif Viejo (part will go lo Santiago). -parenla In hls area. He said most parents Dd Cerro: (Aegean Hill!): all or want thelr children to remain in Aegean Hills and existing Seville from Cordillera and not be moved to Del Cer· Cordillera (this wlll be determined later). ro, as the administration recommend,,. -lrvlDe School and El Cam ino Real He said.their main concern, ho\li·ever, is (sharing Sand Canyon Avenue campus): tbat thelr children remain in one school everything north of San Diego Freeway until thelr own neighborhood school can exei!pt Culverdale and existing Colony· be built. \Yalnut \1illage enrolled ::il Turtlerock but Gates said that if Cordillera children includes new students from Colony- who now attend the school remain, there Walnut Village. could be 1,100 children In the school next -um~erslty Park (~rvine ): all or year and this could pose a problem. University Park including Park West __ He-added. that tbe__scbooLJ.s. ~ apartments. all new Culverdale from new overcrowded and no new children wlll be ----wi.it;t;TAktndefgartcn. i;ent there. The admlnlstratlon l! trying -Turtle Rock (Irvine): all of ~r:tle to bring enrollment down by movlng Rock area, UC!, LTA and existing some of the children t() Del Cerro. students from Culverdale and Colony· Gates said, in detennining Ule boun-Walnut Village. daries, attempts had been made to move -El Toro Marint Sthool: all base hous- children as little as possible and to Ing. reduce enrollment in crowded schools. Whether (.lr not the entire district will "Five new .schools will be opening next be able to have single sessions has not year," he said. "Three will be ready dur· yet been determined. ing the first half of the year and the other two at the end." Boundary areas approved by the board are : -Linda. Vl1t1 (Mlsalon V I e j o ) : everything south of La Paz and east (.lf the freeway; New Seville and Barcelona unit,, one and two. -O'Neill (Mission Vle)o): all oJ Deane llomes exCept Sp8dra; El Donado (units 22 and part ()f 24 ); Barcelona (units three, rour and five); Madrid (summer growth unJt three on); Madrid (part of unit 12); All!O VIiia" -De Portola (Mission Viejo): La Pa:r.: Jlomes north of La Paz; Madrid (unit! one snd two ): Deane Homes on Spadra: El Dorado (units 23 and part or 24 ): El Dorado (units 25, 26, 27 ); Madrid, part of unit 12). -Cordillera (Mission Viejo): F. I Dorado (all existing ); Madrid (all ex· lsllng), bul thls not final. -Valeucla (Capistrano Highlands ): Capistrano Highlands and New World 5.3-mile Stretch Of El Toro Road Said Da11gerous An unimproved 5.3 mile stretch of EJ Toro Road from Trabuco to O'Neill Park has caused more than 150 accidents - five of them involving fatalltles -over a two-year period, Ted McConvllle, Orange County road commissioner said Thurs· day. h1cConville, addressing a meeting or Saddleback area businessmen, said that improvement of the road had been held up by conservationists. "\Ve have had R long series of review ur1d continual conflicts with the.!le peop1e \•1ho are opposing progres!," McCcnville told me1nbers of the Saddleback Valley Chamber of Commerce and the Sad· dleback Valley Exchange Club. Studies of the accidents indicated that rnost "'ere caused by unsafe passing, blind curves and poor roadway. A-1cConvilte said it is a v.·onder more fatalities hn ve not occurred and cited a recent headon wreck of a station wagon full of Girl Scouts as a case in point. The children survived. Accident figures u·ere compiled from Januflry, 1970 lo January. 1972, the period improvement of the road has been held up hy environ111entalisls' objections, McC011ville s11ict OIANGI COAST " Edison Company Begins Facility In El Toro . Area Southern California Edison Company launched a $1 .5 mu41on landscaped substation and utility line undergrounding program in lhe El Toro area Thursday. Robert Beck, Edison division manager. and chairman or the Board of Supervisors Ronald Caspers spoke at the ground breaking ceremonies of the company's new Limestone Substalion on Trabuco Road, just west of Canada Road . Beck said the 3.6 acre site will be a model substatlon made attraclive by earthen berms, topped by rive and IO.. year-old trees and surrounded by ex4 pensive flower beds. All equipment not screened by the landscaping along Ttabuco Road will be protected by decorative block walls, the snanager added. "In addition to construction of the new substation, Edison is starting major undergroundlng and other beautification projects in El Toro," Beck stated. "The existing Moulton substation south of El TOro Road just north · or the San Diego Freeway will be lanscaped soon and undergrounding or transmission Jlnes along El Toro Road between the Freeway and Trabuco Road will begin this sum- mer." Beck praised Caspers for "the great degree of assistance and cooperation provided by his (Caspers') office in the planning of the t.imestone facility and the progressive undergrounding project ." "This project is a fine example of how Industry and local govemment can work together for the betterJTient of our en- vironment," said Caspers. School Board Denies Claim for In juries A claim against the San Joaquin Elementary School District for personal ir.juries has been flenled by lhe Board of Trustees and turned over to their in- surance carrier. The claim for $100,000 u·as made by Victoria Lee Hough of Capistrano Highlands who was hit by a ball thrown allegedly by unsupervised children as she ~·alked past Valencia School. Friends or Mrs. Hough said she suf- fered serious injury to one eye, Ul'I T•t•MN ARROW POINTS TO AREA WHERE BOMB EXPLODED IN FOURTH FLOOR WOMEN'S .Rfil_.ROOM - ~ Pent•gon'I Mill Efttr•nce ililLiTt, RrvirEilfr•nce-li in Upper Left-~ - Deputy DA Doubts Move -On Late Fund Report Developments tumbled over each other today in the (.lOntlnuing story of Orange County's campaign financial report& fia sco. Here's what has happened in rapid fii'e order: -First District supervisorial candidate John W. "Bill'' Hill said he had been told by the county Registrar of Voters that if there were no contributions of $500 or more, no statement need be filed. -An aide to Third District Supervisor \Villiam J. Phillips said simply, "we School Employes May Campaign Employes of the San Joaquin Elemen· tary School District have been given assurance that the board of trustees will permit them to participate in school board campaigns for the new unified districts. The board agreed Wednesday that all employes can participate in campaigns "without repert'l.lssions" as long as elec- tion work takes place during school hours. One employe, George Henry, principal of the El Toro, Marine School, is running for the Mission Viejo Board on a slate with trustee Joseph Peterson Jr. Their campaign manager is trustee Robert Dameron. Trustees Dennis Smith and Preston 11owell are also candidates ()n another slate for the same positions. From Page 1 NOISE. •• ~batement only to relieve such homes that were constructed before freeway routes were adopted," the state engineer added. He estimated the cost of tree and shrub planting projects at about $200,IXJO and said the state highway commission is asking for funds for such projects In a 197J..74 state budget. "The state ~:ould finance the entire project if funds become available, but the city y,·ill be invited to participate flnan· cially ()n a voluntary basis," Blocker said. He said the city's participation would give the project a high priority in com- petition with other slate highway pro- grams. goofed '' in not getting In the list of con. lrl)>utloM by the Wednesday deadline. Phillips filed his list Thursday showing a lolol of $11,500 in contributions. -Deputy District Attorney Michael Capplzzl said there would probably be no criminal action taken against the tardy ()ffice seekers. "The state law is unclear on the subject and I am sure that ac- counts for the confu.sioo," Cappizzi said. Only two of the county's I 2 supervlsorial candidates filed statements before the Wednesday deadline plus a handful of other candidates. First District incumbent Robert Battin and one or hls opponents, Santa Ana attorney William Wenke, reported contributions of $25,659 and $20,800 respectively. Phillips' most active o p po n e n t , Fullerton businessman Ralph Diedrich, said he filed his list with the Secretary of State's office and sent a copy to the court- ty clerk. A county clerk aide said the candldate's list was not received Wednes- day or Thursday. Diedrlch's staff reported a loan of $20,000 lo his drive by himsell and $10,000 from LeRoy Ro.se of Anaheim. They said no single contribu\ion of more than $500 was received or listed . Phillips' list of major contributors in· eludes the Mission Viejo Cvmpany and Richard J. O'Neill's Rancho Mission Vie-- jo, each giving $2,000 ; the CS and E Engineering firm, $1,500 and nine \\'ith donations of $1 ,o<Xl each. These included John Klug and John R. Parker or the Orange Coast area and in- land residents Kenneth carlson, Joseph Drown, William. Kennecott, Da\'id Price. Harry Rinktt, John Toups and Richard Weiser. First District Supervisorial candidate Paul Balch and Thlrd District candidates Steven Zirschky and Salvador Savala said they \\'ere unaware of the le~al re· quirement. .First District candidate Wally Davis of Fountain Valley repeated Hill's staf.e· ment that he had been told that con- tributions under $500 need not be reported. 2 Interchanges Being Planned In El 'Toro Area Two new interchanges along the San Diego Freeway in the El Toro area are · on the drawing boards to help ea.se critical traffic crowding on El Toro Road between Rockfie1'd Road and the freeway. Plans calf for the intersections to be built at the point Canada Road will cross the freeway and at AUcia Parkway. Ted l\1t'Convllle, Orange Cvunty road com- missioner, told Sadd.leback are a businessmen Thursday. He said that traffic counts In the stretch of El Toro road indicated in ex· cess of 25,000 cars per day traveled the road there. Currently the El Toro interehange pro- vides the access to Lake Forest developments and to developed areas south of El Toro road. The two new in- terchanges should greatly improve the traffic condition, McC<>nville said. Short-term improvements in s.ignslUng and double tum Janes could be made to the affected part of El Toro Road, McConville said, but Indicated that the greatest problem was volwne of traffic, ""hich could only be solved by new in- terchanges. $2 00 Worth of Tools Stolen Fro1u ehicle Tools valued at more lhan $200 were stolen Thursday night by burglars who cut through a padlock to break into an Jr\·ine engineer's pickup truck. George Robert Bartlett, 17591 7'-fan- chester Ave. told deputies he left his truck in the roadway outside his home, but locked the vehicle before he entered his residence. Barlett said the lntruders cut the padlock and carrJed away the chest con· taining his tools. He valued the haul at $213. Blast Rips Pentagon; No Injuries ~ WASlf!NGTO:l (AP ) -A bomb ex• plO<led in a restroom Ill the Pentagort early today , blew out t~·o interior 11'alls and sent tons of ~·1tlt!r from broken pipes gushing through offices and a shopping <.'Oncourse. Shortly before the bomb exploded, the' radical \\'eathern1an o r g an i z at i o n telephoned the \Vashington Post saying a bomb had been planted in the Pentagon. , The Post notified police who called tht Pentagon minutes before the blast. The Weatherman outfit, which also ~alled New York newspapers and broad· cast stations. said the act was in response to stepped-up U.S. operations in Vietnam and in observance of the birth date of llo Chi ~Jinh . f'~ew workers v.·ore in the area at the tilne and officials said this prevented in· juries. Police aided by a dog specially trained to sniff out explosi ves continued an ex· haustive search of the sprawling military headquarters comples: even as the Pen- tagon's 28,000 employes _.§l>ewed up for wofk~!ix hmrrs-Jater:-~ more-bomDs-~ \li'ere found. The fourth.floor women's washroom was demolished -fixt ures were shat- tered, the ceiling caved in and a 2'1.z-foot hole blasted through the floor. The force ()f the explosion blew out huge sections of two restroom walls, spewing plaster and brick into the corridors. Most of the damage from the blast was confin.ed to the ~throom area, but shat- tered plumbing sprayed thousands of gallons of water into the passageways. The water seeped into offices below, caused some damage to the Air Foret Computer Center and Jay ankledeep on the shopping concourse three Oightl down. Frotn Page 1 'DEVIL CULT' .•• Satan. What was left of the teacher was then dumped into the back or her car, driven by gang members to the Ortega Highway near San Juan Capistrano and buried in a shallow grave. ?\-frs. Brown's killing followed by just 24 hours the gang's hatchet slaying of Jerry Wayne Carlin, 20, a Santa Ana service station attendant. Hulse, 19, Garden Grove, was tht hatchet man in that murder. He ls today s~rvl.rlg a life term in state prison on a conviction that includes his role as an ac- cessory in the Brown killing. Hurd was found in Superior Court to be Insane and was committed to Atascadero State 1-fospl!al until he regains his sanity. f\1elanie May Daniels, 31, the gang'• girl member and unofficial treasurer, was convicted on accessory charges and sentenced to a minimum of 10 years in stale prison, The absent Taylor, who served 15 months in county jail while testifying against Hurd and Hulse, was sentenced to five years probation. Mason Talks Locked t.os ANGELES (AP) -NegotlatioM between Southern California brick car· riers and the building Industry are reported deadlocked as a Monday strike deadline near!!!. A spokesman for the California Conrerence ()f Mason Con-- tractors Association said Thursday th& AFL-CIO Laborers Union announced plans to put out picket lines Monday it there is no settlement in contract talks. DAILY PILOT T~ Ol'M>OI Coa1t 0.t.ILY P!LOT, wUll wll~ It ro..,b!nfll 1111 NtWl·Prfn, h Wllll5h9CI bY ""' O••not Co"'' Publl1lll119 Comptnv. Stp11· '"' td!Hont '"' INbllllltd, MONby lllrtKtgll F,111•¥· tor (011" Mt11, Nt,..PO•I llP,.cll, .-.unllno•"" ll1<1cll1Foun11ln V"llf'f, t1111.m1 llt~cfl, lrwin11S1dl(ll11Mt~ f.lld Stn Cltm1nt•I 5.~n Ju1n C~DlllftMI. A tinolt f'WOlontl lld!Hon h p11.,llllllCI S1111rd1y1 1nd Svr'ld•Y!i· ,,_. pr!1Klptl p1>111t.ii1no Dl•n• ts 11 llD w.-11 t•1 sr,..t. Col!I M111, (IUIO'ftlf, ,.,., Sunday Special: Citizen "•b,,f N. Wetd "•nldet11 '"' Plltllltlltf' J11li: R. CMrley Vl(f .. 1t•kttt1l Ind G"'f'l'tl Matl,tftr Th•"''' Kte•il E•l"'1" Tit•l'll•• A. Mvrphi~• Mt,..glftg l!tllor Cli•tl11 H. loot Rich1rd P. Ni ll A»IJlll'll M~""t fd!tofl om. .. Olll• MM: J)O W11I • .,. '"'"" N""""1 -..Clu WJ NtwPtrl lo\llt"*l"O Lt9-lffdrl! :m '""' """"' H\ll'lfl1111tw1 lttcft! 17.7J IM(l'I '°"'l"'ttll S.11 CatlNf!te: _. Nttnt 11 (I..., .... 111"1 , ........ (7141 '41 ... JJ1 Cl-WW ~ ...... J.fj71 S. C ..... Al Pepa1Wlfla T•' ,, 111 4fl.44Jt ~·· wn. er.,.. Cllihl .. ~ ............. . ~. lilt ..... ,...,, l"""'r•tltM. 9111,.,... ...""' "' .. ...,,....... ......"' !NJ' ... ~-"'"""' WKaitf ,.,. .,..... .. .,.,..., ...... . l«lflllll dll9 ....... ... •f "',. .WW. ca...... .....,..... .. """"' • f$ ..-....,, llr WM U.IS "*""""' mlOJtry ........... UM -ftllY. Volunteer Fire Fighters f\fEN WllO SERVE -Volunteer firemen are on call 24 hours a day and. lhough they may find thty ha\'e to temper their drinking ind alter some other habits, It's a great wa y to st:rve the community, .. "Sunday Special." LlNOY FLIES AGAIN -Pholographs an.d other memorabilia rttall a day wht'n • men -not computers -flew 11lrplanes. \\1ords and pictures i:emind readers or Charles Linclbergh's !anding In Paris - 45 Y'Rrs ago to the day. FIRST LAOlE.5 -\Vomen's pag's fenture v.·ord·and·photo plctW'es of the "'ives of (our Orange Coast clly mayors •.. four first ladies as dlvene as their cities. CONGRESSIONAL UPSET? -Feature llluslra\ed with map Qf newly ro~ed 42nd Uongresslonal Dl!trlcl (territory In Orange and San Diego counUeaJ lndl.,.tes lncrea,. In Democr111 and the posslbUlty of an upoet In the race that was 1upposod lo be a shoo-Jn. WILLIAM SA ROY AN -One ol C&lUorni1'1 best known 1uthors explalnJ why It's so tough being 1 loner in a world ol joiners , .. Fomlly w .. kly. C::MMl/TERS ON CYCl.f',S -ThollRh . ) the trend ts a long way from matching the use of bicycles in Europe or the Far East, Orange Coast commuters are beginning to ride bikes to work more these days, especially if it's a short ride or tht olfict has shower facilities. POWER & PEOPLE -Eddie Albert, Who will emcee a tw<>-hour debate on ProposlUon 9 (nuclear power plants vs. the ecological baJance), is featured in a TV WEEK story that previews the ahow. TRAVEL FEATURES -Two pages of travel stories and pbotographl present Munkh, tcene of the Olympics; the ma. jesUc vutness ol British Columbia ; 1 caravan in Cork, Ireland i 1 kosher hotel in Israel; and an invltaUon to go in 1earch o[ the Santa An• River In the Sin Bemardlllo NaUonal Fmul NIXON TO M'OSOOW -Coler I~ lustraUoo ol lhe Prealdeot'1 lllntrary for hla trip to MciS<C•r, . which be(lnl llils lftekend, ;, coupled wllh 1 report °" C\11' tt11t Russian alfaln. 'THE JAZZ SHOW' -Bill} 0 E<Ullnt. u •m""' ol new ~m llbow, makea lht CO\ler and t0ver 1toey of this week's TV WEEK. •• • CHAPELLE by H ERITAGt Come, f1~t an ••cur1ion into loveliness ••• o~r wonderfully v1ritd Chapel/a Colltction of Louis XV.styled t•bla fre11urt1 by Htrit19t. Thay hi9hli9ht • room -1ncf then some! 81 sure to 11• the low, lon9, beautiful 1of1 table .. , not illu1tr1tad. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE -KARASTAN ' 7td11111 INTERIORS NIWl'ORT l!ACH LAGUNA BEACH TORRANC! 1727 Wolftllff Dr. 642·2050 345 North Cooll Hwy. 494-4551 236-49 H1wthom1 Bl•d. Ol'IN AIDA? 'Tll t Ulll J1 .. U7t 0,. ...... 'II t ,._Toi -M"' If °'9P -14 .. UU rtakwlaalll ....... 011f11a1 A ........ 1 AID-lfllD r' i ' I f ! u h d s g ti • " It ~ g F It d p •I 0 I ) ' DARY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE New Courts, at Last The Harbor Judicial District Court ended it.s 19- yaar stay in Costa Mesa this "'eek by moving to nev.·ly· completed facil ities near the Orange County Airport in N•wport Beach. of sale. conve nient routes for bic)rcl\sls. Counci1men have received the report and directed city staff to stud¥ its financial implic:atlons. The outstanding materials should be niade avail· to I he planning commission so the 1round"'ork can be integrated into related general plan element.s soon to be unde~·ay. It had been a long "'ail for the no\\' four judges, • lhtlr clerks and hosts or other employes \\1ho had per· formed their duties at the old 18th Street courthouse under unbelieva bly overcrov.'ded condiUon~. The old complex. located just acro ss from l'osta Me.sa Park. oriflinally was ~&nod for t~o judges and a dally volume or 100 people. ,.·et, somehow. ?or the past few yun it was I~ to squeeze In three. then tour jud.ges and 700 more persons. Golfers W ou..l d n't Like It The new lacilits at •201 Jamoo.t. Road will serve lhe peon!• of Irvine "' well a.1 those of the Harbor Area. Although they have only been there since Monda y, the judges report the sp1oous new quarters make a tremendous dilferenca ill the speed and efficiency of handling their cases. Speaking of U.. plMnifte commission and unique cities, the unusual relocalkM\ ol lht clubhouse and hotel proposod by the lrviM Company to be near the first lee of the Rancho San Joaquin Goll Course. warTtnts further studf. And that benem. more than all other considera· tions, is what the Joni ovtrdue moYI to dK"t.ftt court lacUitles Is all about. Although planning co1nmis sionerS approved the re· zoning of the entire University Park community P.lan last \\'eek , they specifically urged the City Council to move the hotel-clubhouse complex from the first t" to another !Ocation, nearer the fifteenth green and six· teenth tee, along University Drive. Bike Trails for Irvine \Vhile the present 18-hole l'Ourse 1nighl be rear· ranged, designs for a 36-hole layout on the othflrwis1 unusable former county dun1p site would be co1nplicat· ed by the 1nove. Tha thoroughly detailed presentation 1nade recent· ly to the Irvi ne City Council on bicyc!e trails is a.n en· couraging sign that the citiz~ns advisory . commit.tees are not only working, but helping make Irvine a unique Normally both the first and tenlh ltts and lht ninth and eighteenth greens for both courses should be "'ithin reasonable walking distance of the clubhouse. --cit ----· ---~ --- ¥The subcommittee of the public highways and transportation• committee put together, in less than the 30 days allowed them. a well-done recommendation for a reasonable, 20-year approach to providing Irvine citi· zens with bikew1ys and se parate trails. Planning co1nrnis~i..QQ.~s ignored.. Utls acct!pted cmir~se-aes1gn principle. Recommendations ranged from an immediate 3.5 mile bikeway costtnc '5,008 to linlt University Part \vith UC Irvine to 1 total, ultimate SO..mile network N- . timated at $500,000 for construction a•d maintenanc. They also passed over the fa ct that a proposed school commissioners !ell \\'Ould be lncompatible with the hotel plan. may never be built. Rather. the San Joaquin District said the Culver Drive at Michelson A\>enue site might someday be sold for commercial development. Thus, the planners proposed clubhouse-hotel s~·1tch 1 creates three potential spot commercial rones. ~·here on ly one had been proposed . . • Prodeeetion Speed-up Ordn-etl U.S. Lags in High Missiles WASHING TON -A speed-up has been <tdered on the production of an air-to-air rfii ssile capable of zeroing In and destrny. i,4g Russia's highe<:t-leve\ combat p\ane!li -:-particula rly the supersonic t.11G·Z3 'fith a criling of 80.000 feet and a speed of around 2.000 rniles an hour. Top operating height flf existing U.S. fdr-to-air missiles is 60,000 feet. ceiling of the F .4 Phantom jet -nH1'!'St «a bat 'Ptane this country oow h11s to the MIG- 23. Significllntly, Is- rael 11lso is vigorous-. ly engaged in devel· oping an ullra-high lfvel air-lo-air mis· slle -with lhe MIC. 23 RS the principal immediate target. Js- r•el's bes! fighter-bomber is the F'-4 . Eerly this year. President Nll:on author- iied the s11le of 48 more of these planes to Israel. which is no"' rt<:elving them al llie rate of four a month. \\'hile the U.S. and Israel are urgently pressing lhe production of ll new air-to- lir missile, they are proceeding in· dependentl y -although lhere is a com· mon motivating cause. THERE HAVE beeo IJ'&Vely d~turbing experiences with lbe NIG-23 in the wpercharged Middle East . On four differflat occulon.s, MlG-2Js tiased in Egypt and Piloted by Russians (ROBERT S. ALLEN) deliberately violated Israeli air space. The Soviets sped over the coastline near Haifa and over Israeli fortified positions deep ift the Sinai Pminsul1. In e\•ery instaOC"C, Israeli Phllntoms sought to inter1.'tpl them -b\Jt. were unable to do so btcall.5e thtir alr--to-alr missiles couldn't reach them . }<'lying at three times the speed of sound. the MIG·23s were too fist for the somewhat sloy.·er Phantoms. A\90, the lattcr·s missiles are unable lo fu~lion in the Olin atmosphere abovt 50,000 fttt. The Soviet planes few at 70,000 to 80.000 feet . For missile s to "lock in" on them at those height~. special ~uidance and other equipment are necessary. Fou r MIG-2.1s are known to be based in Egypt. So far, all are piloted by Russians. There is no indication that Egyptians are be ing trained in their use. 1t10ST OF EG,'P'T"s pilot.~ are limited to Oying MIG -15s and -17s. \Vlth a small number pilolini MIC.21s. The E.g;·ptian air force i.!i notorious for its unusually high rate of losses In cra1hts dut to faulty nying and accidenl5. To spetd up jfevelopment of a new ultra·hi&h level air-to-air missile, both the U.S. and Israel are us ing existing v.•ea(Xlns as the basic missile. I t is using SAM-2 anti-aircraft missile~ captured from the Egyptia ns in the Sinai in the 1967 connicl. Some 30 of these Soviet-mAde missiles were overrun bv Israeli armored spc;irhcad s. The ·missiles and their mobile launchers v.•cre seized intact;' abandoned by the Egypt11ns In ll'letr panicked rout. The SAM·2 and SAM-3 ire the Russians' principal ground-to-1lr anti· aircraft weapons. Hundreds of these AA missiles ire positioned on the Egypli::in side nf the Suez Canal, i:ind around Cairo; Ale11n-- dria, the Aswan Dam and other major potential targets. THE U.S. AlR·To.AIR missile that ia undergni ni rush modification for use above 70.000 feet is around 14 feet in lrn~th. Y.·eighs upward s of 1.000 pounds anrl has it warhcarl or some 200 pounds of high explosi ves. ln iti:it oper11tional tests of the new missile are slated for late this year or early nex t. In Western mili111ry terminology the ~lIC..2.3 is known as the FoxbaL Addendum: The U.S. is al so engaged in devcilopilli a new reconnaissance uttllit1 wit h greatty Improved pictorial aftd CUl•r reporting capibilities. Purp0se of lht new device Lo! lo provide better and faster pie. tures from space than are now poaslble from camera-carrying satellites. Let's Rewrite All History SKAREWE UNlVERSITY -Students ended their \\'eek~ld slt·in and untied Dtan Homer T. Pettibone today after he promised l.o discontinue the University's controversial Whit e Studies Program. The student s. members of a militant group known a!I "The Wasps.'' marched lnto Dean Petti· bone's office seven days ago and pre- sented thfir non-ne- gOtiable demand that the "slan!ed, bigoted 111id highly offen- sive" program be terminated. When Dean Petti· bone objected on the grounds the trad itional White Slud if!s Program was AS old as the university itself, he \\'as tied to his chair. The stu- dent lead er. young Wilfred Wasp. then proceeded to read aloud, for 18 hours at a stretch. all the university.approved texts on While History. HIS VOICE NOW merely a croak. young Wasp had reached lhe beginnings OIANGt COAST DAILY PILOT RoberC N. \\tttd, Publilhcr ThmMI Ktttlil, Editor Albc'rl W. Baftl Edlloriol P411e E~ttor The Pditori-1 pqt of th« OdlY Pil ot 1etkt to Inform and atimu· late readtr1 by preaentina: this newspaJ>t"r"I ot)Won1 and rotn· mentary tt1 topks ot Interest and 1!1nUlt·1nct. bf pro\•ldlnc a foru m for 1h" "~etslon of our ntade:rs' aplnlo: •nd. b)I Jlf""nllni the dlvent · potnu ()f lnformf'd ob- ~ 1 I tpo.kl'tmtn on toplCI of the da)', Fridly, May 19, 1972 ( ) • ART HOPPE of the U.S. involvement in Vietnam when Dean Pettibone finally yielded. ''I can t11ke no mort!" he cried. "You are right. These history texts are 11lanted, bigoted and highly offens ive, by eny fair analysis, to the v.·hhe race ." A triumphllnt young Wasp to 1 d reporters efterw&rd that he had begun his re11dlngs with the history ol ~lex· 1ndN' the Grtat. "And why was he great~" demanded Wasp. "Because he killed and burned and - looted his w11y lhrough Egypt. Asia Minor and lnd ia. 'I'm sorry I got no new worl ds to C{)nquer,' he says. What kind of talk 11 lhat? And from there, these While histories are all downhill. ''LOOK AT THE R0~1ANS. 'Veni . vldi, \'ici,' that's their mono, And .... ·ho knoc k.5 them off ? Attila the Hun. Then we ge_t a couple of centuriC.5 of y.·hile guys going aroupd burning \\'hite g_u ys at the s!sikc. Charlemagne spends 30 yeArs slaughter- int Sl'lON, Lombardi ind S..r•~n•, IO he's 11 t.ero. "Then we eet Into English hiatory . Wh~ do we re.ad about? Wiiiiam lM Con· queror. Thert'1 a namt for you. Richard the Lion-He11rted, who goes olf lO skewer tnfldeil. Henry Vlll, who cub hl1 wlVt! oll short. Then the Encliah kilt a lol of Sp•niard1 and ull ell to u plolt Indio and hail the world . "Who's bi& in ~! Napoleon. who got maybe 1 million people dead. Who's big in G<rmany! P'nderlck the Great. Htm, too. Who'• lril In Ruull? Jvan the Terrible. That'• len'lble. j'LOOK AT THESE Amtrican histories. All they talk •bout ts bow the Whll .. kicked around Ille lodlans. the Mt1ICA111, Ille FUlpino& and l'l!llaved the blacks. wan. noll, 11n• 1111g1tuo. eomiption -1'bo DHdl ltl ''How come lhe whiles are a!ways th.e bad guys? Hitler, Stalin. Mussolini -all "hites. Who assassinated four of our Presidents? Whites . Who dropped the firs! atomic bomb? Whites. ''Talk about slRnted reporting . They don't write up a "'hile unless he's rotten. \\lhy don 't they \\T ile a'1X>ut a d~tnl , pt8~lovln11: 11.·hlte who minds his own business -one .,..·ho 's 1 credit to his race? "11'1 no \\'Onder us v.•hiles. after reading these history lexts, feel inferior." DEAN PEITJRONE. !lilt maua1lna his wrists, Immediately announced the White Sludle1 Pro1ram would be repl•c· ed by Bleck, Yellow and Brown Studle1 Programs. "We "'ill go from the Zulu Kin gs and the ir conquests lo the Mau-Mau,•· he said happily. "from Genghis Kh11n and his hordes to the JapancsP sntak .attRck on Pearl Harbor. rrom Aztf'c human sacrifices to the slaughlcr at the Alamo. "After all," he saicl with 11 scholar~ smile, "we ell havr A lot to leam from the lessons of hisl.ory ." A coalition of singry black. yellow and bro\vn 1tude9ts promptly marched into De11n Pettlbciie's office and tied him u.p. Dear Gl oomy Gus Samt old stnry : r.ot a problem? Sfl up a new government a11ency Whether ifs nteded or not . Thal .. what the Le:aRUe of Womtn Vol.era or the Or11nge Coast -.·ould do in opposing Stnator Carpe.nter'• Cl)R~t.. al prol•ctit>n boll . -P.J.L. n.111 "'"" "''""' ......... "'""""" ... ,.._Wilf !MM .. ""' "' ... ....,. ... 'ew "' -• 01119111• •ut. C•llt 'O•I. Bad Habit: We Denigrat£ Ou,. Neighbors SY DNEY J. HARRIS Up where I spe nd my surnmers. everyone had heard the "Polish )ales·• long before they became famoue, or In· famous. Only up there. they wtrl known as "ltlgian jokes.'' by vlrtut or a li ra• lmmigrAnt Belgian community ll'l'llch provided the bull of thi1 rustic humor. Thus h11!1 it e.ver betn . There. is no rtctlrd of 11ny culture anywhere that did not releRse Ila ho!ltll- ltlea and u.hlbit ita invincible sense of superiority by derid· ing or do"·n-grading some convenient out- group. In the earliest rec· ords of ancient l.reece. rhe Boetians s e r v t d as lhf' •·roles·• or "Belglaniii" for lhe rcsl of r. re e c e: the name ''Boetian·• became almost a syn· Mym f~r "1tuptd.'' fA n d tl'lt nr1t "barblrl1M," of courN,. ~ludtd •II tho11 "babblers" who spoke anything but Greek.) · OR. MARIO PEI. In "The Story ol L11nguage.'' points out th11t the earlitst Slavs called their German nt1!1hbors ''Nemet5" t meaning "mute" or ''dumb"); . contrariwise, tht word ''slaves" eome1 from Sl1vs captured in b111t1e. The 11nclent Chlne.5e destan•ttd as ''southern barbarians" and "ml5erable ones'' the Miao and Moso tribes of South China . Bad h;ibits. and reprehensible behavior, Are invariably ascribed to the people nr.xt door : the most famous ex11mple beini syphilis. which Is called "Fr,nctl disease" in En11land, 8nd .. English d1 sC'a se'' in France. IT "'AS TH~IR neighbor1. the Engliii:h , who made "to Welsh" on "" ob!l,11:1tlon 11n Insult tn the Welsh peoplt ; likew i~. "O\ltch treat" 11nd ''Dutch couri:i~e." llllJ· 1e1tlng th::it Hnl\11nderii: 11re both •lina:y and alcoholic. And to ".Jew down" 1 prlet suagests lhat Chr istians are above such mertanlile hagallng. Amer icans are by no me11ns Immune to lht World 's envy 11;nd contempt. What we c111l s I m p I y a "confidence 1ame'' known tn both the French 11nd tht Italians as "the Amerlcan swlnrlle.'' JN IT AL V, ACCOROlNG to !Jr. Prl, what we call "gate-crashing" or "free-- loading.·· are known as pona1he1l1mn. or acting like Portuguese. The 11ncient Rom ans l'allf'd duplicity "Carthagini~n trustv•orth1nf's~ .. ; and In German, the worrl "Russian '' is synonymou~ with "barbarons," and "Engli.'h education" means flogging . Every country has 1 region (111u11ly tht Soutbtrn p1rt, which I.\ poorest) that tJte: rest or the counlty kJaks down upon, or Jokes about, or uses 1.5 a 1ym bol for atupldlty, la ilneu, dishonesty or 1ulle. tt mm1 as if we are lnc1pabl1 of maln-- llinlni a good opinion of ourt<Jvu wllhout denigrating our nei&hbors. a human hlbit that 2.000 years of Chris- U111ity sums to have had absolutely no effect upon. Quotes 1\'1Ule Slocum, MJ.llbnr., ''II" 11·JotitJ -"Women of the world 1hould 1lways mntntl>er that ••I• and ullent u yl na 'A bl1 man may bt a btr: m.an, but a little man ta au man!'' ' Trustees s·~pport Unification To the Ed itor : As trustees or th' San Joaquin Srhoo1 District we must lake Issue with thf' po11 i· lion of Grat!an Bidart , our mlle&gut . re1111rding !he propo std 11nifl<'nl1nn of local school distritts. tn the general tlccllon on .lu11f' fl, Ymtrt will decide whether to form thrcr. tmlnld I kindergarten throuah 12th ,l{rach: I dlstrlcl1. These would replace the f'X· btin1 re1r-dl1trtct arrangement where three elementary dl~tricts send I hair ., 1tudent1 lo a ~epl\r1ttc hi~h srhonl dl1trlcl. lf A majo rity vole 1~ oht11u1f'd, new dl1trlct~ would tw. rnr1nrd In T1uuln. Irvine and the Saddleback Valley 1La1una HUis, El Torn, Ml11ion Vlojo1. The new di!ltricts would he,11:in nn .lul y I, 1973. following a year of prepiration. WE SUPPORT THE form.lion of .1 Saddlebeck VAllP.y dl.,trict for thrrP reason... First. vnters ln our vallPy cnn exercise IOCRI control nf our ~cho:il district, including its tax 1Jmlt and h:inrl.~. Secondly. under one administration :i ncl board . the new district cRn prnvidr !ax !'iavings And an improved educa tiona l pro- gram wllh., continuity nr curriculum. Dupllc1tkln of services can be avoided, puttln1 more dolh1rs Into the clajsreom. A third rtaiinn is incre11t1cl lnanrlAI 1uppart. School dlt1rlct1 nbl•ln funds from two primary eourcu: local property t.11 e11 and ati.te Aid. Tht1 ~late of California pl'C)vides more funds to "unified" districts than to !ieparate elcmel\tl'r)' end hl1h achoo! dist rict.I. If local voters 11y "1••" oa June 8th, 1pprnxlmetcly ttse,008 addlllonal state 11ld per )'f'At would be 1ranted tn lotRI 11rhool1, retr09cllvt. In thl~ f15cal ytnr. Thls :in. nuel bonu!I would lncre81t tach ~'f'Rr, along with enrollment 11rnwlh, llna11v rtachl ng an estimated $500,000 bonus pt:r year . MR. 8TOART llAS Ck.prc~SPcl 1·nn1·rr n lhAt tht. new dL~lricl's prorwrly t:ix bit sP. would he siffet"trd advf'rsel y hv :i 11rn· poKed city 1nnexatlon. The boundaries nf Uw1: naw 1ch0f)I dl~trlct' were dn1wn with c•rt. a• required by !11w, ln 11.~sure ap- l)f'OJlmately equ111\ !six ' b::isr.ii. The st tehotil dlatrlct boundaric~ 111re ln no WAY affected by change• in city boundar\e1. We appoat tM Irvine city 11nnP.l11tlnn btcaute lt lnv1des the Sarldlt>h111ck V:iHcy 1ph1r1 ol 1nnuenc1, nol beceusf! of any wppo1ed 1dver1e effect on the new 1chool dl1lrlct. We intend to support the new unifiecl di~trlct~. The advant::igts of unH1c11t1on (11r outweigh 11ny nrhulous concern& sd· vanccrl thus r~r. A Saddleback Vn lley un1l1cd 1chool district would insurt" commun1Ly ldt:nl1I)' 1nd l~r111I control 111 our srhool~. The welfare of our chlhirrn 13 sit slakf'. Vote "yes" on Junr 6 fnr unification PRf,STON HOWf,1,1, ~lrrnl)l'r, Roarcf of Trusirt·~ San Joa<11iln School Oistr1 ct DF:NNIS A. SMITH Mtmber, Board of Trullletll San Jo11Quln SchOC'JI Olatrlct CJlalrepractor Re pllu To tllo Edito r: Y• orlnted a lelter IM1Ubo1 . ApriJ Ill from Jean F. Crum, M.D. I.n thl1 letter pt..71 on ..ord.~ 11nd 1h1nl8d aemantla •«• UMd to mlsdirect the re1du. II ll txpteted that A pt'r10n holdinp: the high office of prPs1dcnt of the Olhfornla Medical Associauon v.oold not rPAOrt to writing statemC?nts oul of conll':zl so as to conruse the public. PerMps thf' most cl1111ic trror 1, that of UIUm lnjl that lhe: n'l('d lrAI firofr'..,lOn It the tolf' rtprtMnl1Hl\1t r1f th f' hri.hng arta. Tht.\ Is not thio CA!t. Th,. rhirnprar. tic profeu1on Is not 1 part of m~1r1nt1 and neither II oateopathY. prycbol•CY •r • • MAILBOX 1,elltrJ f1·"m read1r1 art kleleMM. Nortnnll11 1orfter1 1ho_uld conu.11 their 1111111no11 h1 300 word.I or l111. Th• riaht to 0011d1n1• l~tttr1 to fit 1pnc1 or cUtnfttal• ll&el Is 'rs.1ervtd. All ltt- t1r11n111t i11c lurl11igi1111turr.~ anti mo lt· l11u nrlrtr,..~ ... hut 1Hnrir .. '1lflJI b~ wit>t.. lir/tl on rcqu11&t If 1u/ffcftrllt rcaaon 13 ll(lf'Ol'f!nt. Po1tr11 will not bt pub· U.t/\1d. 11pt11melry. 1'he n1edical profession cari-. nnt dtct81' In th05e other br1nche1 of !he healing Arr~. 11R. CRUM SAJO Uu1t "chlropractor1 sire not licensed to give medir11J c11re'' :inrl "are prohib ited hy lsw from presc riblnj:I'. drugii". Tht> fttCll'l Ar' rhlropr11c1ors do nol .'(JVt> 1nrdlcRI care; 1·hl roprllclor~ are 1ice n11rcl hy 49 !'illllel <the M>th la le1l11lalln« nnw ). Before blln1 llctnltd ht C.llforqla chlropr1ctor1 mua\ Piii I three-day exam just as phy1\clan1 do. Re11rdtn1t dru11, chiropractic ad· vnc1te1 mlnlmal drug us1gt, 11nrt then only when 1lllotutely neces111ry. Or. Crum lmpl\1d chiropractors wished to prescribe. They dB not. D;. Crum qu(llct. the HEW comm !tliJ aa dl1count1111 chiropractic. Tb I 1 rv11luatlng p1ncl wsis 11rt up hy ihfl! mrdical syndicRle y.•lth one purpn~,. in mind : defeRt ch lroprsiclic tn Congrrs~. Doe.~ the pobllc rcalt1.c that the mr.<llcal lohby ls the b111gr.~t ~ pt? n <I t r IR \Vn.~hi nj(lon. O.C.? fif'<"Cntly at tht SR!h convention of the AFL-tlC) In Miam i. f•h1ropr11.cllr csi rc w;i11 harked 11nrl th4' AFL-CJO c;J1llrd f1Jr C:nn,11rt:~s ln include It in all federal ht:11lth proiirnma IT WA~ FURTHJ<:R st1 trrl hy Or. Cn1m th!4L "tlmf' wit1llt!d on useles J chlropr1ctlc tre1tmcnt m:iy del11y 1 P•· 1Jent'1 1ee ln1 a qualified phy11c1 ari". On ce 111ln Wfl aef! the tffttt'.11 flf 11elf·8P. pointed but unlnformt:d "1uthori11rl11.n1'' m11kinc •tetements from high pollUcal J'H'ISilion1. f\.fOlll chlropraetlc patients have Rlready btf'n treated by two or mort •·mcdleal 1pec\11lsts" without retulta:. I More th11n 80 percent of my Jlr111ct\r 4 rnmf'" from "riu1illflf'fl phys!C'litns.") Howtvr.r , now In 11J<l1t1on to 1h,. prlm11ry ~~,~~:~~~ !1~1~~,~~~~r~~s pro0n;,e,;,~two l'ln1~ nhu,c 1111 11 rf':i1 problem 11nd the Jnt:ikr or drugs mu~t ht Jlnwrrl whether pr1·srnh<>d or push1•d . If pnrcnlJI under 1h11 rl irf'<'tlnn of thr n1r1J11·:1 I dflCtor ere 1:ik1na 1lrui;:' rnr every l1111r ''bump'' ln thr road I)( ltff', 1110 will llir1r children . Thry hl'Vf' followerl thl' e:t~mpll' wrlll Soclely la touah and C'Opptn1 out la e11ler. if mommy and doddy do ti oo will tbt kid1. DONALD R SCOIT, D.C. 1111 George ---. Dear 0-1e: 'Nhat do I.ht aer\ou1 advice cnl· um.nlsb NJ •hen they meet you fact to raoe~ ART Deir Art · Nothing Thi'!')' alwaya turn thdr back.Inn m,. CONftoE~TtAL TO G E N E llAC:K\1Ai'l 11 .. rotn. of COUrH. \Vhal dill ~ou THINK )'OU v.e,.. look1n1 tar~ - • -- . ~:- ' . ~- • -• • Spec: TUB --. ····-.. .... Ii .. I • :·.u: 'Prices so low we ·i. . . . ·' tBUDGET PULLMAN 3777 Vinyl .by Empire FLO-TEC PUMP ' 397 FLO.TEC CllE . ·11Qpy ·:il7 UllOll· ~ I" ' FONDUE DISH 33c KANE CUTLERY IUSOllTE CORK . n tl ... BRICK PDELS 4'x8' 1ht. 911 MODERN MATERIAL CDOME'JI liWS TlllXS f 77 't'llllllD EMT • menlioa Ila•· :.all (We'd ·be DQt1 U we didn't.) 4 --• • TWO DA! SPECIALS .··:·. ~ ~· I . . · • : s;bem du~g· thn o --.-~~~ > • ' I Both in the storee· aDcl' the · Bi~ Top. '· ' ,. . ....... ' ' ' .. ·' "' SW PORCH CADLE WU SWllG PREMIUM II-LB. SOLID OAK 99c 1777 YALEY . ' BILL BIIDEB DELTA TWllE FAUCET 5 lb. WASHERLESS • 77c 711 PACIFIC FIBRE LARSEN and ROPE n11£•• ., 1 ·SHIEM 21". 09 •• STlllD JIFFY.m 4'x7' GWSPllELS STOUGEm SPECTllALITE 2'd' 1111 4•7 II LANCASTER TAYLOR CIDd ASSOC. • .... TOBCI 2•7 T1JIUIEll IEIJ. FOUllDRl • ---·····1 ....... -.. ii•iiiifiiiii• BOS TOI ROCKER 1211 NORTH AMERICAN con11IT111 . Ui&Y LOCI " . t ~ . ·~' . ;·,lt9s . ..... ~ • OIL PlllTINGS 49! EL CllEAPO GALLERY • SECUIUTY scam 0001 DOUBLE EAGLE 2477 COLUMBIA ~ Q ~ ~. • NAVAL JELLY 8 O&. MUMMY SLEEPING BAG 1177 WENZEL WHEEL- BllBOW 577 COLD TaFllY 2995 • : fF '/W ti4WE " Go.o ll'i\E .FOLK~, S~lt.11 f\MO Tl' YOUJ. ~~'1' "to "lHE. ci~MP~ ~eLH~~ ... ~ NO S &. :i' Ill fl P.C I!! llMIL • 11•·uw with !Ne ltcmd . . ff 95 -DE1Ql.T ~ ' I I i ' • • Huntington Bea~h Fountain Valley Today's Final N.Y. St.eeks VO[ 65, NO. '140, 4 SECflONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 19, 1972 TEN CENTS Valley Asl{s Tax Increase • Ill By JOHN ZALLER Of IM D•lly Piiot S"tt Trustees of the FoWltain Valley School Di.strict have been asked to approve a 27- cf:nt tax increase to meet "the most serious financial crisis in the district's history." The rec<immendation was made by Superintendent Mike Brick Thursday night after he revealed that $345,000 in cuts ·from the current program are not enough to bring nett year's budget into balance. An increase of 27 cents per $100 assess- ed valuation would raise about $285,000, Brick said. nus works out to an increase of about $19.70 in the annual tax bill for the owner of a $30,000 -home. The district's current tax rate is $3.45 per $100 ·assessed valuation . The increase could be enacted by trustees without a public election. It would bring the total operating budget of the district for 1972·73 to $9.05 million, a $400,000 increase over this year. . Bric k stressed that, even with a $400 000 increase in spending, the 1972·73 budget contains drastic decreases in services. "As a low wealth school distric t. v.•e re· ly heavily on state equali zation," Brick saia. ''But the level of state support of our program has been slipping steadily for the past several years. "Our citizens are already paying one of the highest tu rates in the county and we have struggled to keep from asking them to pay any more," Brick said. "But Lhere is no choice." Trustees took no action on Brick's ncommendatlon, but their nactlon left little doubt that they agree with his po.si· lion. "In looking over this budget 1 can see that a Jot of soul searching went into the cuts you have already made," said Trustee Fred Voss. "Thls may not be our 'School final budget, but It's probably prell y close." Other trustees nodded In grim agree- ment. All school dlstricls have the option or raising taxes on a "permissive" basis to cover certain specific iten1s that ha\'e been mandated by slate la\\'. For example, when the st a t e Legislature passed a la\v req1.1iring school districts to increase their teacher retlrr- ment J)'nsion funds, it also allowed them Crisis' to raise local 1nxcs 4.74 cents lo cover the <'OSI . ''Tht> Fountnin Vplley &hool Olstrlct has trndlt1onnlly met such Increased costs \\'ilhin existing hix rat es,'' Bric k said. ''The board has saved up a total' of s.4.8 cents in ptrn1issive tnxes which It could levy on un ltem by ilcn1 ba sl:i: U It so chosc. '' Bril'k h.is no \v reconuncnd cd thnt It ust: lSee l'ERJ\11SSJVE, Pa11e J) -£onnaHy?· ·Never!· VP Won't Be Democrat, Says Agnew •• •, ~• I I • • • • " t OA ILY PILOT 1'11919 llr .llllHI Lllllw From Wire Services WASHINGTON -Vice President Spiro T. Agnew said today he did not know whether he would be Presidmt Nii:on's Tunning mate in November but added that it was "totally unrealistic" to su~ pose Treasury Secretary John B. COnnal- ly would be acceptable. . "l don't understand how anybody could seriously believe that a man who is Tegistered as a Democrat in the middle of May can turn Republlcan and be nominated vice president,'' Agnew said. Agnew talked with reporters after making a ·40-mlnute report to President Nixon on his Far Eastern vi.sit. Elizabeth 2 FIREMEN POUR WATER ON SMOLDERING PEAT BOG NEAR GOLDEN WEST STREET Blue Late Thursday in Hunt gton Beech $t•rtlecf Residents, Attracted the CurioU$ -:f pnears $.qf~, Hunt ,Goes On Peat Bog Blaze Ruins Preserve At Cen.tral Park A three acre fire sent names leaping 40 feet into the twili ght sky Thursday even· ing from a peat bog planned as a nature preserve in the new Huntington Beach Central Park. Firemen believe the fire adjacent to Golden \Yest Street and across from Talbert Lake ma y have been started by children playing with matches. Jt brought some residents of the neighboring Franciscan Fountains tract to the roofs or their homes with garden boses, and attracted a large number of curious motorist s on Golden West Street. "There was no structural damage,'' reported Battalion Chier Ron Beard. "But it's a shame what the fire has done to tfii! bog. "It was a popular place for children to play because of the animals it contained," he said. "I don't know how long it will take to grow back.·• The fire , which was reported at 6: 19 p.m. and took 25 minutes to control, burned over the central part of the peat bog. Firemen noted, however, that since the fire was a fast-moving one, It probably had not killed the many larger trees whis;h are numerous in the area. Firemen spent two hours pouring water Cln the smoking bog. Captain Beard reported there was some danger that the fire might burn for days if it got down to the underlying strata where the peat has begun to solidify into a ce>aJ.Jike substance. Robert M. Nish Rites Saturday· Funeral services for Robert .M. Nish of Huntington Beach hove been set !or 1'30 p.~ Saturday in the Church of the ReCessional, Forest Lawn Mortuary, Gleildale. The 37-year-old formtr teacher at Malina High School was kill-.! in Ireland . 1ast month while on a sabbatical leave from hlJ teaching post. Nlsh's family , which lives in Glendale, haa suggesled that be be honored through contributions lo tbe recenlly established Robert MolU'oe Nish Af e mo r 1 a 1 SchotarshJp Fund for an outstanding 1tu- deol ol English ot Marlna High S<bOOl. Nish is survived by his mother, Laura, two brothers and a sister. Chairman Permanent SACRAMENTO (AP) -The eotlog chairman of Ille Slat. Wll!tr - Conlrol Boud has bt<ome lta --cholnnan, r<placing Kerry Mulligan, who r<alpcd -fire last JUllOIY, Fountain--V alley's School Trans£ er Appeal Rejected By CANDACE PEARSON 01 flHo O•ltr rllft Stiff The Orange County Board of Education Thursday denied 4-1 a request by the Fountain Valley School District that 400 acres be transferred to it from the Garden Grove School District. The 400 acres, bounded by Euclid Street, Warner and Talbert Avenues and the Santa Ana Ri ver, is within the Cit y of Foontain Valley. Garden Grove school officials objected to the transfer petition, which reportedly was signed by 85 percent o( the registered voters in the area, saying it would hurt their district economically. The property involved is assessed at $2.6 miJliQn and has two sites the Garden Grove district has set aside for future schools. Residents in the area objected that their children were being bused to four different schools and that families \Vere being split. Reacting to the decision Thursday night, the Fountain Valley School Board instructed its staff to contact the state Legislature for further efforts to "serve the parents" ln the area. Fountain Valley Trustee William Crane said the "only question I have to discuss with the Garden Grove officials is . how much of their school ctistrict lyi ng within Fowitain Valley city boundaries could better be served by our district." Fountain Valley made the transfer re- quest last November and in April the Orange County Committee on School District Organization recommended ii, though recogni zing that it could a!fect the economics of the Garden Gro ve district. In den ying the transfer, county board members told officia ls of the two school districts that they should "get together" and work out a common solution. County board member Don Jordan , of Garden Grove sa id tt.at, while the residence s and small development in the area took up only 20 acres, Fountain Valley was asking for 400 acres of poten· tiall y more valuable land. He was joined by the county board member Crom Huntington Beach, lloger Anderson, in asking for more coopera· lion. Anderson said he thought it was "degrading to both school districts to speculate on the num ber of minority students and to throw racial issues back and forth." Dr. David Paynter, super intendent of Garden Grove Unified, had said that los· ing that area would upset the raci al balance at nearby Los Amigos lligh !See TRANSFER, Page I) LONDON (AP) -The Queen Ellzabtlh 2 and her 2,350 }>81sengeft end crew members beaded acros9 the Atlantic toward Europe on schedule today. ap- parently safe despite a bomb threat demanding $350,000 ransome. But a precautionary search of the ship con- tinued. "We're okay, we're fine," a young woman in the crew report ed . "Everyone's drinking and dancing as usual, and J don't think there's any danger." The ship's owners reported she was "on time and flat out." Victor Matthews, chairman of Cunard , told a news conference today that he fel\ it safe to a!.!lume the 65,000.ton liner car· ried no bomhs. British Army bomb disposal expert.! parachuted in the Atlantic Thursday did not find the six bombs an anonymous telephone caller in New York said had been planted aboard. Matthews disclosed that Cunard paid over $S50,000 ransom money to the FBI -who, he said, em· bargoed all further information on what happened to the money. Cunard spokesman William North said In New York, however, that no rall.50m had been paid to the ertortionlst or ex· tortionlsts. • The ransom was demanded Wednesday by an anonymous caller who told Cunard's New York office the liner car· ried six bombs -and two accomplices ready to detonate them. La.nd Developers Charged GoWwater's Fatlier-i1i-Law Accused by DA Prominent Newport Beech psychiatrist· utilities had been promised, but ne ver.in· businessman Dr. E. MOrtlmer Gherman stalled. is one of three men charged Thursday Wolfe said be filed the action upon with grand th'eft and false: advertising.fin oomplaints from buyers who had paid a connection with 1 Big Bear Lake real combined total of $1.1 miJHon for the lots. estate promotion. Dr. Gherman is chairman of the board Or. Oberman, whose daughter married of ~1ountain Lake Development Corpora· U.S. Rep. Barry M. Goldwater Jr. tR·Los: lion, the firm that sold the property and Angeles) two months ago, iJ fa cing 10 · which ~hares corporate oflices v1ith grand \heft complaints and 59 complaints. International Bay Clubs ,Inc. which ac- ol !alae ldverti1ing brought by Ille San qulr-.1 Ille Bay Club boldm(l,S from Jack Bernardino County Diltrlct Attorney. Wralher Im year. 1be switebboard at the Balboa Bay Dr. Ghennan is secretary-treasurer of Club in Newport Beach wbtre Gherman !BC, tbe Balboa Bay Club Inc., the resides was under inltructlons to hold all Balboa Bay Island Club, tht Balboa Bay calb to lbe Gbcrman apartment lhl• RacqUtt Club. the Balboa Bay Desert morniag. Club and the Bay Club Realty Company. Dr. Gherman b aa offictr Clf the car-Also named In the complaintt: were poration that rfceDUJ purcbaaed the Bay JOO.n A. ''Pal" Patterson, an offtclal of Club and olllS BBC bold1Dg1 ln Palm Mo~ntaln Lake who worlu wilh Dr. Sprin(l,S and at Catalina. . Gherman at omce1 at 1117 Wutcllfl He ls allo a dlrtdar of 1la1Jamore Drive, and a man identi fieo onJy as Romes lac. ol JPounialn V1Uey. Jam .. Moreland. Each was charged with San Bemanlino °'!July Oiatrict Al· ts counts of lal!t and misleading Id· l«ney aiari.. Wolle 11fd lbe chart" 'Ortising. ogainst Gbtnnall lfttl ''"' otbcn lltm Wolfe said tbe C.Ulomll Dtpartment from lbe lllo ol Ill 01blo llt.. wi-ol Rw Estate bepn an ln•,.tlgaUon ol • ' the :U.acn! Mountain Lake Estates several months ago after purchasers complained that utlllties were not in- stalled as had been advertlsed . He said the Mle of the lots wh ich averaged about '8,000 each in price wa1 made betwetn i96t and 1971. Wolle &aid Patterson continued to sell lbe lots after be ing told to stop by the real est.alt: department. Dr:. Gherman who has been a member ol the Balboa bay Club 11nct 1164, also was at one time active in Oranae Coun-- ty'• pilot melhadone malnttJwl<e pro- gram for heroln •dc!leta. He bas acted .u OOl)sultant In J'Almff'OUI capacities 11 an erpert on narcotic. and has been active In vartous .eoclal and medical organizations for many yon. He lw beea active wtlh lbuntaln· Lato Development Corporation •Inc• IA\ whtn he alto became 1 dlrtdor ol Allorgan Phann1ceutlcal. He btctime 1 dlrector of llaJlamore llome1 in 1t71. He ls allo a dlrt<:tor of Ille Amtrlcan Bos CorPor .. tloa, an officer or lbe Inland Prw !See Gl!El\11IAN, Pqe I) • Responding to questions about his run· ning again for vice prtsldent, Agnew said he had not been 11sked by the President and would not decide until invited. He salCI Nixon WAS righUully delaying a decision to determine what running mate would be most helpful to him, and added : "Mr. Con nally is just not itJ' Connally submi(ted his resignation as Treasury secretary this week. He was ooe of the President's closest advisers. Agnew said' speculation about Con- nally's chances of being picked by Nixon as a running mate had been bl own out or proportion by news media . "It just isn't in the cards. Any polltical Radicals Blamed pM wlll tell you that ," he said . Agnew said he had 1u1s1vered questions about his own politica l future many times Jn the past and -.although hll pralaed CoMally as a. capable Rovermrient of· flclal -h~ appeared somewhat nettled by the questioning. ,Within minutes after ,Agnew 11poke, the White !louse announced that ' th t l'residen\'s daughter, Tr icia Nixon Cox, will participate In a "Salute to Ted Agnew" at a Baltimore theater tonight and deliver a message from Nixon. On another subject. Agnew said "we are coming out of the woods" and blul\4 ting the North Vietnamese offensive. P~p.tagon~J.astBlows Out Restroom's Interior Wall WASIUNGTON CAP) -A bomb ex· ploded. In a restroom at the Pentagon early today, blew out two interior walls and sent tons or water from broken pipes gushing through 0Ulce11 and a shopping concourae. Shortly before the bomb exploded, the radical Weatherman o r a a n i z at I o n telephoned the Washington Post saying a bomb had been planted in the Pentagon. The Post notUled police who called the Pentagon minutes before the blast. . The Weatherman outfit, which atsO called New York newspapers and broad· cast stations, said the act was In response to stepped-up U.S. operations in Vietnam and In observance of the birth dato ol Ho Chi Minh. President Payf Hospit.al Visit To Gov. Wallace SILVER SPRING. Md. (UP!) -Presl· dent Nixon paid a 40--minute visit to George C. Wallace in his hospital room today and described the partially paralyzed Alabama governor as "ace high" -detennlned to overcome his disability. Nixon made the unannounced visit to Holy CroS3 Hospital on his way to the White House from Camp David, Md., and on the eve or Nixon's departure for 1um- mit talk s In Moscow. He said Wallace -blJ eyes flashing with vigor -"wished me well." The latest hospital bulletin on Wallace'!! condition contained nothing encouraging about the possibility he might regain any feeling from the waist down. He has been paralyzed In his legs and Jower ertremltles alnce an assassination attempt Monday. But Nixon said Wallace was "very alert and in good spirits." He told reporters, "He has aom1 1trlou1 problems ahead. The bullets affected h~ body but not his spirit. He has the will to live. He will make It ... Mentally he 11 very alert . Ills heart Is strong." The President 1poke with rmotk>n with reporters of hll lmpresslons of Wallace's v~or. 'His eyes nashtd. He's In fine spirits and he will be able to lead a UHful Ille." Doctor1 who attended Wallace as well u others who followed the course of his recovery from Monday's ahootlng at a lhot>olnf <tater In nearby Laurel, Md., lndfcited the odds are 1g1inst W11laa's w1~ again -and dlmlal!hlng dally 11 be t!oli not have any reeling. The bullel that caused lhe paralysis mt.r<d Wall1ce'1 spinal Cini! Ind II 1UU lhett. Doctora. on ~frA. Wallace'a detllk:tn, dedded not to try to rm>OVe It during • O•H>our operalloa tbe night ol lhc ~-. • • Few workert were In the area 1t th• time and ornclals 1nld this prevented in· juries. Police aided by a dog specloJJy trained to snlf! out e1ploslves continued nn ex· haustive search of the sprawling mllltary headquarters complex even as the Pen~ tagon's 28,000 employes 8howed up for work six houri later. No more bomb• we re found. The fourth-floor women's washroom was demollshed -fixtures were shat· tered. the ceillng caved In and a 2%-!oot hole blasted through the floor. 'Ilie force of the explosion blew out huge sectlons of two restroom walls, si>ewlng plaster and brick Into the corridors. Most of the damage from the blast wa1 confined to the bathroom area, but shat· tered plumbing 1prayed thousands or gallons of water Into the passageways. The water seeped Into offices below, caused some dama ge to the Air Force Computt?r Center and lay nnktedeep on the shopping concourse three flights down . Despite the problems, Brig. (;t n. Daniel James said, "lt'a bu11lnes1 a.' usual today." He said the Pentagon was operating normally aside from the cleanup operation. James is the deputy assistant secretary or defen se for public affairs. ln a statement. the PtntaRon l!lllid n du· ty officer of the r~eder1JI Protective Service at the Pentagon received a phone call from the Washington police at 12 :53 a.m. reporting a phone tip from a Washlngton newspaper. Orange Coalt Weather Look for a wet weekend along !he Orange Co:111t, with 70 perctnt ch'ance of shower1 tonight and Snt- urday. The weatherman says highs wi ll be In the upper SO'a 1t the beach and 60 Inland. I NSI DE TOD/\ l' UC l n.hne Fiti c A rU Dean Clllyton Carrison dirtc!s Cole Porter's mUJical "K f 11 Mt , Katt." St.afj w r f t t r Gtor(lt Ltfdal watcht1 tht pr-ofe11or pu t the 1tude-ntt through .their pact• of the adaptalon of Shakt · 1ptare'1 ''Tam ing of the Shrtw." St e todau'• Wetkmder. L • .M. Mrf n IM!IN t Ctllftf'Mt t CM116lllH Jt,Jt (tMkt • c,........ al °""' Mtlk.. 1t ....n.t ,,_ • "IMllc• 11•1) I'« t11t ttun It liltf'M(-17 .,...~ " -. ..... "'" Mlltt;.i l'•llllt It fftlltooltl fftwl 4 °'"" '-"' '' .""""*"" 1$<'1 l•Pfl• ,_.... II ~· , .... . ti.di~ 1 .. ,, T' .... IMll ., T'Mtt'" .,.,. ···""' . WllHot .... tt ""-" ..... ,,.,, ---. . ......, .. • ~ DAILY PILOT " Frid~. M11 19, 19n Aide Def ends Prop. 9 Newport's -~ofC Hears Cost FU.see Candidates Give Will Create Jobs , Says 'Lobby' Spokesman Uy CANDACE PEARSON Ot 1111 OlllY 1'1191 Stefl Passage of PrtlJXlSllion 9, the Clean Environment Ac t. on the Jllne 6 ballot will create a lot of jobs -not destroy them -because "we're asking for a new produ l'I -clean ai r," Ed Koupa l, direc- tor of ttie People's Lobby said at UC Jr\•ine Thursday. Speaking before a group of about 60 i;tudents gathered in campus park , Koupal said the Environmental Protec- tion Agency (EPA > list! one million jobs waiting for those who will help clean up the atmosphere. Opponents to the proposition, which ~·as put on the ballot as an initiative measure ·with a half million signitures. have said that its succeSJ would create layoffs of worker• Jn construction and nuclear reactor factoriea and pov..•er shortages. "Those scare tactics," Koupal charged, "are the same as when people were tak· Ing the 12 and 13-yeat~ld.! out of the sweat.shops in the 1920s and others said it would break the economy." Koupal, who with his wife, Joyce, DAILY l'ILDT 11111 1'1111'1' CHARGED Iii LAND DEAL Newport Beach's Ghtrman From Page 1 GHERMAN .. Corporation and in the early 1960s served as president of the Universal Surgical Supply Inc. He was a captain In the Canad.l::in Of· ficers Training Corps In 193~ and served with the U.S. Air Force Rehabilitation Prog ram during World War II. From Page 1 TRANSFER. • • School by decreasing Ule potential number of white students. There are about 142 school children in the area pro(Xlfled for transfer. Parents, headed by Vicki Stangle and Bart Sn1ith, said they want a neighborflOod school In the Fountain Valley district to promote '4a sell!e of identity with the community." Pa ynter argued that Garden Grove would open Northcutt Elementary School across \Varner Avenue in September and that most!iif not all of the area's children could go f ere. Some might st.Ill be buiied. Fountain Valley ofrlclals said that they have .schools nearby to Vt'hich most of the children could \11alk. The only dissenting vote was cast by Dr. Dale Rall ison of Santa Ana ,.,.ho ga ve no rea son. DAILY PILOT 'Tkt Or•not (Gii! DAILY PILOT With w!.lth 11 combl11fd lht N,w1.P•t1,, 11 publ•~fttd by 1111 0••1101 (o~u l'uDll~ft!nQ CGmo1ny, $tlM· ••I~ ~;11on1 •"f 1Nbll11!fd, MGlld•Y !llrOllQll F nd~V. lor (0111 M111, N~wl?l)•I llr1cll, l·+vnH11Qlou 6rttlllFa~nl1ln V~llty, L1gu~.t lltJtft. l•••nt151ddl1ll1ck 1r.d S111 ctemtM~/ ~~n Jutn Ctpltrru10. A 1111911 •l'QiCn;,I rdll•Cln " Publlthtd $11u<dl'fl Ind S~tv1. Tiit pt1nc lp1I l>Ubll1lll111 pl1nt i1 •1 JJIO w,11 ll1y J!rHI, Co1!1 Mnl, C1lllar11l1, f1t'6. lloD1rl N, W,,,. l'rt1lcl1M Ind Pu~lltll'f Jt tlr: A. C ur!1v Vi<' P1111d"'I t rill Gtntrtl Mfn•~tr Tho1T1•1 K .. .,ir Editor Thom11 A. Murphint >MlloaOll'IV ldl!llt Ch1rl11 H, L..01 •ich1,J I'. Nill AMiitlnl Mlft1Q"'9 EdllO•I T1rrv Co•illt Wtil Ortllft C-tr Editor H•llflltf'•• a..ci. Offk.e 171 75 1111.h 10111•···· • M1if1111 Jt.J4r1111 l'.O. 1111 790, •2•41 Otti.r Offlc .. ~ •Hct1· m ,...,,,,A""""' c .. 1a Mftll1 llD w"' ••r '""'' Ntwpo<I h tdl! JJU Polt*WI a.,i19¥1'11 $fn Cltmlf'llt~ ~5 Norlll II C11.,lno lte.1 Tel.,.eM C7141 642-4JJ1 C'-tlfW A4"rtftl111 6'41·1•71 Jlmii ...,_ Or•-.. c_,., C.-lt ... l40·1UI Joundecl lhe People's Lobby, '8ld lhol It 13 now up to the public lo do something aboul the air "which you have to chew bt!fore you inhale it" and the water "which you can almost walk on in the estuaries." • State legislators won 't a('t to snvc th e enviro11mc11t. he contended , because "the boys who give thern ca1npaign funds don 't want it that way.'' Basically. the Clean Environment Act would : -Ban off.shore oil drilling but al101v present rigs to rem11:in and would allow on·shore slant drilling . -Phase out leaded fuel by Jan. 1,1976. -Assess polluters .4 percent of the previous year 's gross business everyday they are charged with polluting. If they stop pollul ing they would get 75 percent of the money back . -Ban the sale of boT. ODE, other in· secticides and chemical defoliants. -Place a five-year moratorium on the construction of nuclear power plants, The latter is one of the most con· troversial sections, because opponents say such action would cause power shortages. Kgupal answered that "there is a 21 percent power surplus in California now. We wilJ need more power in the future but ~right away." He saia-UJe"~fiVe.yi?ar pf:fiOOIS fieeCed to study the plants because they have had problems. Completion or those plants under construct ion now or manufacture of nuclear parts for export would not be forbidden. The act also would force reduction of the sulphur content in diesel fuel, a re- quirement which truckers have said would cause tremendous Jay-offs. tt.oupal said, if that is true, they could get an extension from the courts until they can comply. Koupa1 was sponsored by the student body and an ecology 11:ction group. whi ch plans precinct walks for proposition nine. DAILY PILOT Sl•ff Plltl9 DEFENDS PROPOSITION. 9 Koupal of ·P.ap11'1 Lobby Multistory Apartment ' Bid Eyed in Huntington Private de veloper! are see k rn g permission to build a 14-16 story con- dominium apartment complex in llun· tin,gton Beach overlooking the Paciric Ocean. A spokesma n for a Newport Beach firm asked the city this week to alter its C·3 (commercial) zone to allow some types of residential construction. City planning commissioners have authorized. the planning staff to prepare a code amendment allowing high rise, high density in C·3 zones. The condominium Is proposed by Orange Coast Specialties of Newport Beach and .Balboa Properties of San Diego. If allowed., it would be bu Ut on the in· land side of Paclfic Coast HighWay, between Ninth and Tenth streets. Oscar Ta ylor, in a letter to the plan- ning commission, said that when the prop- erty ~·as originally purchased, such proj- ects as the proposed condominium were allowed in C-3 zones. The C-3 is the only construction zone in Santa Ana Man Dies Of Accident Injury Patrick T, Montgomery, 18, of 1422 S. Sycamore St., Santa Ana. died Thursda y of injuries suffered Wednesday when his car went Out of control on the southbound off ramp of the Santa Ana Freeway leading to the Newport Freeway. Highway Patrol officers said excesslve speed was probably responsible for the accident in wh ich two other youths, bot.h 16. \vere sllghtly Injured . Witnes.ses pulled the three boys out of the demol· ished car shortly before it burst into fh1mes, offices said . lluntington Beach which allows high rise slructures. but according to the current building code, that is limited to com- mercial uses. "Apparently, the U!e for condominium was ruled out for some reason or other ln the past without my knowledge," Taylor wrote. "This ia the type of projeCt that most everyone in Huntington Beach bas forsetn for this property and it would be in the best interest of all concemtd for it to go ahead.11 The proposed condominium would be the old town lot section of the com· munity. which planners say should be developed with high density apartments. Planning commissioners voted 5--0 lo have the staff write a possible change for the C-3 code. No specific date has been set for further consideration of the proj- ect. Coffee Rings Now Off Shelf JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) - Maxwell House Coffee Co. says it has taken its new throaway coffe package, Max-Pack, oU the market because of consumer complalnta about coffee pots boiling over. Edward G. Balance, manager of the Maxwell lfouse plant in Jacksonville, confirmed Thursday that production of the product stopped at his plant and in San Francisco. J\.1ax·Pack is a ring·shaped filter which already has the coffee inside. The used· places the pack in the percolator basket, then throws it away after the coffee is pe1 ked. Sunday Special: Citizen Voluntee1· Fi1·e Figl1ters • f\.lEN \VHO SERVE -Volunteer firemen are on call 24 hours a day and . though they may rind they have to temper their drinklng and alter .some other habits , it's a great 'i''ay to ser\'e the community ... ''Sunday Special.'' LINDY FLIES AGAIN -Photographs and other memorabilia recall a day when 1ncn -not computers -new airplanes. \Vords and pictures rem ind readers of Charles Lindbergh's landing in Parls - 45 years ago to the day. f'FIHST LADIES -Women 's pages feature word·and·photo pictures of the wives or four Orange Coast city mayors ... four first ladles u dlverae a.s their clues. CONGRESSIONAL UPSET? -Feature illustrated with map of f!CWly Conned 42nd Congressional OlJtrlct (territory In Orange and San Diogo counties) Indicates increase in Democrala and lhe poulbll!ty of an upset In the race that was aupposed 10 be a sh!»"in. WILLIAM SAROYAN -One o! the trend Is a long \Vay from matching the use of bicycles in Europt or the Far East. Orange Coast commuters are beginning to ride bikes to ~·ork more tht'Sl' days, especially ·It It's a short ride or the ofrice has shower facilities. POWER & PEOPLE -Eddie Albert. who wlll emcee a two-hour debate on Proposition 9 (n uclear power plants v1. the tt0loglcal balance), Is featured in a TV \VEEK story that previews I.he show. TRAVEL FEATURES '-'Two P•B•• of travel stories and photo,,.phs pretent Munlch, scene of the ~pies: the ma· josllc vaslnel! of BrlUsh Columbia: 1 caravan in COrk, Ireland; a kosher hotel In lsrsel ; snd an invitation to go In search or the santa Ana Rlvu Jn tht San Bernardino National ForetL NIXON TO MOSCOW -Color 11- luslratlon of the .President's Itinerary for hb trip lo Moscow, wblcb l>flll~• th~ waekend, Is coupled wllh>I ~ on our- rent Russian aftaln. c..t••· 1'11. °''"" Qetl ll'lllllllfl ... (911"1'1fty, ffo Mwl ltlflft, lllvttrll~ .. ,,.,lei "'4111tf' fit lod..nlttmel'lll Jiil'•~ rnt'I' lie ""'afllctil win.vi '"'"' ,.,. ft'I~ 9' Cff')'r)tflt twllfl". '"*"' CieH, _,.,.. Hill el Ct.ti ,MHI, ('Mfferflle. ...,_,i.ti.n tf' <•"It' U.&I llnC'lll'fflfto1 ..,. !NH U.IJ """"'IY1 l'l'IUJI.,, ....... SUI fNl'llfli'f, Californl1'1 beat known authors explains why It's so tough being 1 loner in a world of joiners . , • r'amlly Wetklt . '!'HE JA'Cf, SHO)ll'-Bf!lj !lcklllnt, 11 emcee of ..... ju:I abow, tnaket tbt COYtr and cover atory of th.11 wed:'• 'IV WEEK. . COMMUTERS ON CYCl..ES -Though '9' Blast U a clean air proposltlon on tht June 6 primary baUot passes, the economic results in California~ would be disastrous, the Newport Harbor Chamber of Com- merce Marine Division was told Thurs· day. "If approved, Proposition 9 wouJd go Into effect the nert day and the economy of this state would grind to a halt ," said Thomu Eliott, a spokesman for Califor- nians Again!! Proposition I. Eliott told the chamber members what the proposition would limit. "lt would put severe restrictions on diesel fuel, 1asoline, oil drilling, 2nd nuclear power plan ta," Eliott said, He said the latter restriction, which would put a five-year moratorium on nuclear plant construction, is self defeating. ''When thill state begins having the blackouts and brownouts predicted by 1174, there will be no cbolce but to beef up the fmsll fuel facilities that are our blgg'iit jiOUUlliiO problem,•·Jie Uld. Eliott also said that a reatrlctlon which would drutlcally cut sulphur In dleJel fuel could bring to a bait all truck and train traffic in the state. HThe damage to retail Illes ouUJts would be Incredible ll that happened," Eliott said. Eliott atresaed that once the proposition ls approved, the legWi.ture's bands are tied. "They cannot weaken the bill, onJy strengthen lt," he aald. Ellolt acknol'(leclgecl serious pollution proble1111 In the countzy but said that they cannot be effectively o r economically solved overnight. "Even the coruiervation groups realize this measure is not the correct answer," Ellott said. He said the Sierra Club, which had been expected to jump on the bandwagon, has neither endoned no rejected the pro~ osillon. "Se¥1:raJ other responsible conservation groups\have alrudy opposed Proposition 9," be •id. "Unless we defeat it, it could take years of initiative processes to change it again." Ellolt said the biggeat problem hi• group is having ia convincing the average voter to decide aga!mt the me8!Ul'e. Joy Rider Takes Plane to Visalia From Huntington, A young, long·haired pilot rented a light plane at Meadowlark Airport, Huntington Beach, Thursday night to practice his ta keoffs and landln&s for an hour. "He took off and Jul! kepl going," Robe.rt Martin, an employe at Bassee Flight Service, said this morning . The runaway pilot finally brought the rented Cessna 150 to rest, in the mlddle of Hlghway " near Visalia. · "They said he jumped out of the plane and ran across a vineyard and got away," Martin explained. Police now have the undamaged Bassee plane at a small airport in Vis alia. It was traced to Meadowlark becau:ie local of· ficlals reported it stolen in the Federal Avbollon Agency .. The plane will be relurnecl, but Martin said the Pilot skipped out wllhout paying for hi1 hour's rental. Filing Excuses Developments tum bled over each other today In the continuing Story of Orange County's can1paign financial reports fiasco. Here's ·what has happened in rapid fire order : -First District supervisorial candidate John W. "Bill" Hill said he had been told by the county Registrar of Voters that if there were no contrlbutio!l! of $500 or more, no statement need be filed. -An aide to Third District Supervisor William J. Phillips said simply, "we goofed" in not getting in the list of con- tributions by the Wednesday deadline. Phillips filed his list Thursday showing a total ol $14,500 in contributions. -Deputy District Attorney Michael Cappizzi said there would probably be no criminal 11:ction taken against the tardy office seekers. "The state Jaw is unclear on the rub ject and I am sure that ae- counb for the confusion,'' Cappizzi &aid. Only two of the county's 1 2 supervisorial candidates filed statements before the Wednesday deadline plus a -From Pqe-1 - PERMISSIVE • • • 27 centa of these permissive tues. "We've made hundreds of cuts throughout the budget," Brick said. "In many areas we're actually apend.ing less, and in all areas we're spending well below what we feel is necessary. "In everything from the new music t~acher we need for our two new schools ti}. a 20 perctnt cut in waterl.ng the lawn, we've made cuts. An4 if y,ou know how brown our lawn Is already: you know the ·state we're in," Brick said. Among increa9ed costs,· Brick listed : -Paying merit and ste p increases coir tained in elisting teacher contracts will cost the district '282,000 next year. More than 60 percent of the district's budget goes to teacher ialariu, making even small increases large in terms of dollars, Brlck noted. -The premium on existing in!Urance wW go up 147,000. -State required improvements in dl!ablllty coverage for non-teachers will cost an additional $23,000. -The district currently sends many of Its handicapped chidren to neighboring districts for special care. These costs are then billed-to the·dlstrlct, and notice has been given for a $27 ,000 increase for next year. -Many fixed costs such as paper, elec- tricity, water, am maintenance gupplles go up by small amounts. In making $345,000 cuts to of£set some or thsse increases, Brick said he had virtually cut out all preventive main- tenance and put a lid on hiring of even necessary personnel . / Frustrated at hearing the long list or cutbacks, Trustee Voss at one point in· terrupted Brick to say: 0 'Look, we're faced with gradual deterioration of our educational program on one 1ide, and gradual deterioration of our physical plant on the other. A'nd the matter is not even in our hands. It's In Sacramento's hands, "I wonder how long lt'a going to take the Legl.!lature to obey the Ca1ifomia Supreme court decision and pass some sort of equa1ization of school 11upport. That's the on1y way we're going to get out of this mess," Vms said. . Fountain Valley spends $584 per year per child, third lowest in the county. The highest la the Sea1 Beach School Distrlct, which spend! 1llghtly more than $1 ,000 per child. bAndful of other candidates. Fi rst District incumbent Robert Battin .and one or his opponents. Santa Ana .uttorney William Wenke, reported contributions or $25,659 and $20,800 respectively. Phillip!' n10til active op po n t: n t , Fullerton bl!sinessman Ralph Diedrich. said he filed his Hst with the Secretary of State's office and aent a copy lo the coun- ty clerk. A county clerk aide ~aid the candidate's list was not received Wednes· ·day or Thursday. Diedrich's sta ff reported 11: lo.an of $20,000 to his drive by himself and $10,000 from LeRoy Rose of Anaheim . They said no liingle contribution or more than $500 was received or listed. Phillips' lisl of major contributo rs In- cludes the Mission Viejo Company and Richard J. O'Neill's Rancho ~tission Vie- jo, each giving $2,000; the CS and E Engineering finn, $1,500 and nine with donations of $1,000 each. · These included. J ohn Klug and John R. Parker of the Orange Coast area and in· land residents Kenneth Carlson, Joseph Drown, William Kennecott, David Price, Harry Rinker, John Toups and Ri chard Weiier. ..,... - First District Supervisorial candidate Paul Balch and Third District candidates Steven Zirschky and Salvador Savala said they were unaware of the legal re- quirement. First District candidate Wally Davis of Fountain Va11ey repeated Hill's stat!'- ment that he had been told that con· tributions under $500 need not be reported. 5.3-mile Stretch Of El Toro Road Said Dangerous An unimproved 5.3 mile stretch of EI Toro Road from Trabuco to O'Neill Park has caused more than 150 acr:idenls - five of them involving fatalities -over 1 two-year period, Ted McC-On ville, Orange . . County road commissioner said Thurs-- day. ?i1cC-Onville, addressing a meeting of Saddleback area businessmen, said that improvemenl of the road had been held up by conservationists. "\Ve have had a long series of review and continual conflicts with these people who are opposing progress," McConvillt told members o( the Saddleback Valley Chamber of Commerce and the Sado dleback Valley Exchange Club. Studies of the acr:idents indicated that most were caused by unsafe passing, blind curves and poor roadway, McConville said it is a wonder more fatalities have not occurred and cited a recent headon wreck of a station \\Pagon full of Girl Scouts as a case in point. The chlldren survived. Accident figures \Vere compiled from January, 1970 to January, 1972, the period improvement of the road ha.s been held up by environmentalists' objections, McC-Onvllle said. Finance Firn1 Robbed An armed robber held up employes of Budget Finance Company, 2035 N. Main St., Santa Ana, Thursday, afternoon and <=1ped with 1434. The bandit ordered employes to Jay on the floor as he escaped through a rear door of the office, police reported.. CHAPELLE by HERITAGE' Come, take an excursion into lovelines1 ••. our wonderfully varied Chap•ll• Collection of loui1 XV-1tyl•d table trea1ur•• by Heritage. Th •y highlight 1 room -aftd then 1om•I Be sur• to ••• fh• low, lon9, beautiful 10fa ta~I• •• , not Illustrated. DEALERS FOR: l:IENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE -KARASTAN 'ltd11111 NIWPOllT llAClf 1717 Waatdlfl Dr. 642-2050 _ ..... ,'Ill., INTEltlOltS LAGUNA BEACH W North Coott Hwy. 494-4551 _, .......... " ___ , ... Pr1f ' n 1' ....... D 'I • Ac ill'llllla il.fD-NJll TORRANCE 23649 Howthorno Blvd. 11121 ua.nn --.,. 1 t l l t , I I ' c c I ' I 1 Ir lo Y• f rr "' It rr •f (e ( th r~ ho " rr1da~ M•Y l q:~· ..;1.:.97_;:2 _____ _.cH-'----•-AJ_l _Y_P_ll_O_l._:<.3 •catch-22~· Author Beturns to County ' DAIL y PILOT sr111 PM .. BACK ON PARADE GROUNO- Catch·22's Heller By ARTHUR II. VINSEL Ot 1M DaUr Pllft Staff Onetime bombardier and novelist Joseph Heller came back to the old Santa Ana Army Air Base Thursday, 30 years and three wars later. lie didn 't rea>gniz.e the place. Eucalyptus trees still tine what \\'as the old airfield's main parade growxl. ~'here the seeds of destruction -he new 60 missions over France and Italy -and the seeds of Heller's crealivily \lo"ete planted . The !onner B·2S crewman began observing the military system and men at war !or material to writ· "Catch·22," a biting, SBtirical book, l\'hile stationed here. He spoke in the Orange Coast College Forum, on the old parade ground site. Somebody in the audience mentioned after his provocative, tl\'0-bour talk sponsored by the OCC student body that Heller frequentl y referred to the base in his novel . "Th<'y've closed it doy,·n, haven 't they?" he said. "This is it!" was the reply. l-leller criticized President Nixon's power in guiding America's role in Southeast Asia warefare during a blend of social and political comment illustrated by '•Catch-22'' readings, plus offhand humor. He began his novel -a moral and rather existential study of a bomber squadron in wartime -in 1953, during the S<rCalled era of brlnkmanship -drp1om11ty. Red Ligl1t Tl1ief Relieves lrvi11c W oma11 of P1u·se Orange County 's "red light bandit" struck again Thursday night this time us- ing his IX>lice car prank to relieve an Irvine "'01nan of her purse and the $110 in ii. 1\lrs. Ida Ruth Reynertson .. 51 . of 14851 .Jeffrev Road. told sheriff's officers :-he \\·as oi1 h(·r 1vay honlr \l'hcn She spotted a car ~ith a· flashing red light on top in her rear vie w mirror. Mrs. Reynertson, who felt she had committed no offense, said she dutifully pulled over near the intersection of J ef· frey and Barranca Road and waited for the ti cket or the lecture or both. Instead she got a lesson that has sher· riff's offi cers hunting today for the bandit with a new wrinkle in robbery routines. He grabbed her purse as s~e reached for it in the rear of the car to produce her drjver's license, ran from her auto and drove off at high speed. Investigators believe the bandit is the same person who pulled exactly the same kind of theft exactly one month ago in the Tustin area. l\1ovie projectionist Robert Hanson told deputies at that time that he pulled over to the side of the road after spotting the flashing red light in his rear view mirror. llanson said he \Vas relieved of his billfold containing $490 by a young bandit "-'ho then ordered him to drive oft wit hout looking back. Sheriff's officers are seeking the aid of police in several county communities in a bid to locate the pseudo patrolman. Bank Union Pushed SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -An attempt to unionize employes at the Bank o{ America's world headquarters here got underway Thursday, said former Pittsburg Mayor Alfred Affinito. Re· quests for union membership have been received from hundreds of b a n k cmployes here, said Affinito. attorney for employes \•:ho petitioned the National Labor Relations Board for union elections ;it Bank of America branches 1n Pittsburg . Desi Ar1iaz Jr. To Marry Liza TOKYO (AP) -Actor-singer Desi Amaz Jr. says he and singer Liza MiMelli are engaged and plan to marry soon. Arnaz, 19, is the son of actor Desi Arnaz and co;netlienr.e Lucille Ball. Miss MiMeUi is the daughter oC producer Vincent l\{innelli and the late singer Judy Garland. Miss Minnelli. 23, stars in the film version of the musical "Cabaret." Young Arna i is in Japan to star in the title rol e of a film about the travels of J\.farco Polo, "Marco." ·'\Vhen there is war in Ute air, people begin to evolve a morality of their own," J~eller told about 400 in the audience. ''This is true not just from the Jert ... but from the right as well ." "Nobody in America is very satisfied with the government we've bet>n get· ting," Heller added, likening himself to his "Catch--22" protagonist Yossarian, also a bombardier. "f'm afraid ... " Yossarian told his commanding officer. "Lots of men lire afraid . , . it's nothing to be ashamed of," the major said. "I'm not ashamed. I'm just afr<:id," Yossarian told him. l-leller told the audience he isn't ashained to say he's :ifraid either. "l'n1 afraid o[ the "'ar in Asia," lieller said, adding that the power of any American President -not just Richard Nixon -should be more limited by Congress. · He said no nation on earth, free or dic- tatorial, gives one single man more authority to make war. l-IeUer compared his fears of the cur· rent ~ituation to those capsulized in Hasliisli Smuggle Cliarges Cleared On, Coast Pair From Wire Serviees PORTLAND, Ore. -Defense attorney:-; have made a hash out of a federal hashish smuggling case involving three defendants, including a pair from the Orange Coast. , Chief U.S. District Court Judge Robert C. Belloni dismissed two of three charges against the men Thursday, agreeing the government used illegal entrapment measures. They pleaded guilty to the third charge. The 1,330-pound shipmen! of drugs was destined to arrive in Vanc6u ver, B.C., aboard a freighter whi ch sailed from Bombay, India in January but l\'as diverted. Customs agents seized the huge supply when the vessel docked at Portlar1d, after arrangements were made for a change in ports of call. David M. Reddy, 23, of 3380 Street or the Copper Lantern, Dana Point, Blake Bidwell, 26, of 2718 N. Townley Ave., Garden Grove, and Brian K. McAdams, of Sanla Barbara, were then arrested. Seizure of a pickup truck and small trailer in which the ha sh haul was hidden led to charges of illegal importation, possession, and conspiracy to import the drug. Judge Belloni granted defense motions to suppres~ the 1,330 pounds of hashish as evidence based on defense contentions of illegal entrapment. Since the bill of lading specifically said tt:e truck was to be unloaded in Canada, U.S. laws against illegal importation and possession of hashish do not apply to the case. Reddy, Bidwell and McAdams still fa ce unscheduled sentence hearings for con- spiracy to import hashish. '.file trio agreed to plead guilty to the third count after prolonged negotiation between prosecuting federal attorneys and their defense lawyers. 3~000 Frogs Vie Lawmen Get Jump on Troublemakers ANGELS CAMP !UPI ) -About 3,000 frogs. 70,00l persons and 200 law en-- forcement officers .are prepared for this year's ve!'iion of the century-old Jumping t"rog Jubilee in CalRvaras C'.ounty. Each ye:ir this tiny gold rush com- munity swells with visitors and the 197L r.vent was so marred by violence that local citizens petitioned to end the contest made famous by a r.tark Twain short Bomb Hoax Romantic PAVIA. Jlaly (UP!) -Jlaly baJ plenty •f bomb hoaxes, but this one was dif· ferent. Police charged 16-year-old Claudio llaltel Tbunday wilh Jelephonlng a bomb threat to a girls school so a 14-year old rhum ol hls cou1d meet his girl friend two hour5 early. story. Frogs of all shapes and size:S, owned by Political leaders and peasants, compete for cash priaes in the international event. A $1,200 prize awaits any jwnpcr that betters the world record jump of 19 reet a ~I inch., ,.t In 1916. A l300 prize goes to the w!nn<r of Sunday'o grand final jump. The county sheriff's department has augmenled ilt 20-man force wllh 50 of· r;.,.,. from other .,,.,,.and Jbe Angtll Gamp Police 1Jepart111<nt of three O(· fictrs ha! hired M olt.<futy policemen from San JOH. The Coonly Fair, which apomors Jhe event, hired 50 private &eCUrlty guards and the Csllfornll Hlgbway Patrol plans to be on hand. Last Y'ar one person died, more thin 100 w're Injured and 6l tme arrested ln dlsorden;. "Catcb-22," In wblch a man's life and fate \\·ere threatened as much by his le.ad,r's \\'hims as by the enemy. He sakl he certaio.ly isn "t alone. "This country's ideological unity beiau to fall apart in the mid..SOS," lleller ~kt. ''And no one has put it back together.'' The author and play"Tight suggested no leader has really tried. Questioned about . why he wrote the lx>ok that made him famous, Heller ex· plained he simply wanted to becom' a famous novelist. He was writing advertising copy for Look Magazine in 1953 when the book was started. N. Vietnamese Beaten Bacl{ From Kontun1 SAIGON (UPI) -Five waves of North Vietnamese backed by tanks attacked Kontum today but were beaten back in an eight.hour battle that involved hand-to- hand fighting on the city's defense perimeter and point-blank use of howitzers against the onsiaught. A· near.record 20 wavea of B52 bombers ~hicll.. dt:opped_J,80ll.Jo-1,llOO-lons-ol- bombs helped break up the assault that military sources in Saigon said could mark the start of the "decisive stage" of lhe battle for the Central Highlands 280 miles north of Saigon. In the air war, U.S. Navy fighters reported shooting down two more MIGs near Hanoi Thursday. But Hanoi Radio said two U.S. jets were shot down today over Ha Tinh prov· ince 150 miles above the DMZ in another day of heavy American bombing raid! and that the pilots were captured. The U.S. command reported the loss of 16 U;S. aircraft last l\'eek. 10 plane! and six helicopters, bringing American losses in the 55-day-old Communist offensive to 48 planes and 39 helicopters. U.S. air losses Were put at 65 dead. 23 wounded and 84 missing -all since ~1atch 30. There was new skirmishing around the old imperial city of Hue and South Viet· narnese troops sweeping an area 12 miles east of the city said they found 96 bodies today of a ~man North Vietnamese force caught in the open Thursday by Allied air and artillery. South Vietnamese troops also hit Fire Base Checkmate. a mile south of Bastogne, and reported killing 24 guer- rillas and finding 33 bodies nearby. It was not clear if they reoccupied the base, 12 miles southwest of Hue. On the My Chanh River front line 20 mile• north of Hue, a U.S. Cobra helicopter hit a South Vietnamese posi- tion by mistake, wounding two men. South of An Loe the besieged prov- incial capkat ,a mi.lea north of Saigqn1 government troops rePorted progress in two locations. ideal "And Cotch-22 was lht be.st novel t rould think to write," ~said. "No"· th.at you 're a famous novtllst. \'l'Ould ~ou rWl lo'r Prt:sidut? asked so- n1eone in the crowd. "No. Presidf!nts have a bad rt'put11· tion." he replied , adding that he w<>uldn't want to disgrace his children. Questioned further, Helk>r said his book Ii not Mti·war as !!Ut·h, but servtd mf're- ly to show thf hwnor and tragedy that war weaves through men's lives, like stitches in a Y..'Ound. "I liked it very much" he said of Direr-- tor Mike Nichols' fihn based on the book. Cornelia Speaks • "·hich has k>St $\U.7 million to dale. "I had noth1ni: to do \\'ilh it," hr ;idded or the scrip I. lleller said the movie j'Cntch·22" 'ol.'11~ lu1rd·hitting ~ind far 1nore-testin1011ial lo U~ rt!Rhty or \\":lr than the frothy boy• n1t.-ets·girl post·\Vorlct \Var 11 ro111Nhes t.h.'lt 1'\'0lvcd un1nt"d \a tel v :1f\er1\•:1rd. lie highhghted 1he oct rre~rntat1on b~· rending a scene fron1 his 11c1~·Jy-;idaplt'd "Catch·22" st:ige play with six Sj>Cf'C'h Bnd drama students. They 1ocludl'd l{1~·h c;olsQn . Te:·ry Sidell. San1 Clnuder, l,~nn JlumphrPy :inrl Albe.rt Arvill a, :ill of Custit ~'fcsa, pht.'I Gov .. George Wallace's \vife, Cornelia, talks to reporters outside Walter Reed Ar1ny Hospital under th.c \vatchful eye of a fcdcrill ageht. Mrs. \Vallace. had been vi siting Secret Service :1genl Nick Zarbos, wounded with the governor in l\.1onday's assassinati o11 at- tempt. $1 Million Expansion Under Way by 'Safari' A 35().seat theater, a free-flight aviary and a scenic railroad ride are among $1 million. worth of ,J,nJ.provements being in· stalled at Lion cOuntry Safari ln Laguna Hills, President Harry Shuster has an· nounced. Beginning its third year of operation in Orange County, the African Wildlife preserve will center the expansion pro- gram in the 30-acre entertainment area ~djoining the animal sanctuary, known as the Safari Camp. The air-conditioned theater, built at a cost of $500,000, will open late in June, Shuster said and will feature dflily performances of a puppet show, along with educational fllm!t a nd illustration lectures. Ua\"id Aayhi. of Hunlin)lkin Beach. Ollf "'01nu n faculty n1t>mber 11sked lleller to autograph a (.'Opy of his book at the f"On('lusion. ooth1g she worked in thr i\lui11 PX ::it lht' old Santa Ana Arn1y Air U:ist·. ··r 1n sure I sa "· you on the parade ground .. ·• she said, then lllustt.ated ho1f An1er1crins of that tr1:1 have ad vanced, although the U.S. is still Involved In • forei~n "'Cir. "Oh. I'd ralhl'r no!,'' sht> S<lid 1\•hen • n~·11 s1n:in asked if she "'ould give her 11:11l1t". "1'1111eathu1g 11011'." she explainef.. • Devil Ct.It Yot1th File~ G11iltv Plea •' lly Tf)~\ 11:\lll~t-'.Y Of !IH O•olr Pllfl St•ll l'h1·1stuphrr •·(;ypsy'' <:1bbonry plc<idcd ~u11t.,v lo r'C'dutrcl rnurdcr rharE:es Thu rs. 1!:1y in l)r:inge Viunty Superior Court ac- tio n lh:lt i.'IOscs the file fln "'hal lawmrn r1•gard :1s thr 11111.~t grisly killing in l'Oun· ly hi story. Judge \Vill i:un f\lurrn y urcepted the J!li.'a_ Qf ~i.Uy w second dc&r~ murdec frorn <in llrl'go11 youth who wns just one "'N:'k pnst his sevcntet-nth birthd:iy on .June 2. 1970, when he pluyccl his part in the nlutll:ilu1n nlurd1~r of f\'hss ion Viejo tenrht·r Vlurt'IH'(' Nancy Urown. C.ibbonl'Y \V:IS ronllnilted to thr <'uliforn1a Youlh 1\uthor1lv tC VA ) for an ir1dc·fi111\c p1•riod. Hr. "'til be 25 before that :-;cnll'lli'e 1:: reviewed in .uny way, prosecutor .lay r..lost!lf'y said. l;ibbon1•y J1i"!d bern certified for lrial ci.ii: .:1n ;1dult oft'cndrr. 1'hr California Supreme Court is scheduled to hear an .uppc41.I against that Superior Court decision. ' Th<' guilty plt•:1 Thursd;1y r11presf'ntrct :. lr1urnph for the Distriet Attorney's OffiC'1' in the sen~t· lha t the wltnC'S!; they l'il ally needed lo 111.s ure a 1·onvil'tion ag11inst c:ihbonr y in the scheduled nlurdcr trial ;1 bscondcd n1ore than one month ago. The DA ILY PILOT learned long before Thursday's action that llcrman l-lendrick 'fay lor, J91 a member of the gang thnL butchered l\frs. Brown, 31, El Toro, violaled the probation imposed in return for his cooperation in the conviction of gang leader Steven Cra ig 11urd, 20, and Arthur Craig "'Moose" Hulse. Defense attorney lt'orest DeAnnond w:is never aware or Taylor 's absence. It he had bc<'n. it is extremely unlikely that he would have allowed his YOWlg client to plead guilt y. Taylor fled more than a month ago and Is the subject\ today ol. a statewide search. Chief Deputy District Attorney James Enright said parole violation rharges, set aside when Taylor testU\ed for the prosec ution in the Hurd and Hulse trials, wlll atmol!t certainly be revived \vhen the young transient is apprehended. GRADUATION GIFT ... 1600, 2000, 2600 V-6 Best Selection of the Year , •.. on the "ltnporl t:ar of the Year" Drive one ho1ne or <J.~k about our .. , -EUROPEAN ORDER PLAN llome 01 The New Car .•• "Gold~ .. Toucla" Hey! You Folks oing lQ Europe this year, We can arrange for your new CAPRI to he waiting there f r you and save S S S, too! ~ .. 1fh(liHI 2828 HARBOR Bl.VD~ COSTA MESA • 540-5830 ' Jlomc Of The' New Car ••• ••Golden ]'ouch'' ./ DAILY PILOT Accord Seen f 01~ U.S., Soviet • Rain, Rai11 Go Away ... WEATHER WATCHING DEPT. -This Missile Nixon Holds Secret Meet With Russian· Curbs, Space Flight morning's weather report sugaested that WASHI NG TON (AP I -A• •d· tt might be a toudi da mp out today on ministration sources report a U.S.-Soviet thJs the best of .all possible coasts. ~lrategic-anns-control accord virtually When you get this kind of a prediction ready for announcement, President Nixon tn the middle of May, you have a ten· is moving into a final rou nd of con· ferences prior to departure Saturday for dency to blame it on so1nething other his Moscow summit talks. than stralght precipitation from the An unusual secret session with the heavens. You might tell your visiting Soviet ambassador to the United States Aunt Maude Crom the East that it's really preceded Nixon's planned meeting today just •Pl'•Y from heavy surf. Or perhaps with congresSional leaders and with Vice you tell her it is actually early morning President Spiro T. Agnew. just back from a Far East tour that included a Vietnam tog that just aot too high and thus leaked. visit. There are, in fact, .all k.ind:s of e1cuses Accompanied by presidential adviser by which you can avoid calling Jt rain. l~enry Ki!singer, Soviet Ambassador , Antoliy F. Dob~1_11n flew by htllcopler <-----THB-WEATHSRMAN, of--eour11e,-is -mfhe wu-oour1 "ThUHdif fo tile seclud. muc~ more crass about the whole thing. ed Camp David, Md., retreat where Nix· He blurted rl1ht out today 1n suggesting on had been since Tuesday preparing for that there eilated a 40 percent chance of his talks beginn~ng Monday with Soviet . leaders. Dobrynm and Nl1on conferred ram 1howers and a 50 percent chance for about an hour on 'Thursday, Whlte that wet atulf would get dumped au over Hoose Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler us tonight. AJI or th.ii , he insisted, would said in disclosing the trip after Dobrynin settle down to just plain cloudiness for and Kissinger flew back to Washington. Saturday. . Ziegler wouldn't divulge _what wa! 'nll1 weather news came as no surprise discussed, but the mountamtop con- to me whatsoever. Yau see, J've been ference was believed to have included the having this trouble with the window-move~e~t toward an agreement to chec k winder on the driver's side of my car. At lhe m1~!le ra.ce. . fir1t Jt jtllt 1etpied to be a ll tUe sticky. . ~dm1011tratwn ~ces said they an- Later it only wanted to wind the window t1c1pate a strategtc-arms-conlrol accord about' h•lf way up and had to be helped \viii 00 ready fo r announcement during the rest of the way with pulling, tugging Nixon's eight-d_a~ ~viet. visit. aod certain weJJ-choseh words. · MeanwhJle, 1t was disclosed that the AU. DURING lhia ordeal, I ~ept a weather-eye skyward and noted with some •pprehenaion the gathering of clouds. Or at least it seemed like clouds. Yesterday I wound the window up tight and vowed I'd Just leave it there. The clouds went away for awhile. Then, abruptly and without the slightest warn- ing, the window fell down inside the door all by itself. Honest. Carefully, I beg.an winding on the winder to tum It back into place. It came up, Excfpt now it was sideways. Honest. The front end of the window came up fine but the back end was still down inalde the door. The window listed, sort of like the sinking 0£ the Titanic. LAST,NJGHT after work J decided that two superpowers are ready to sign an agreement on a joint 1nanned space fligh t during the President's visit to Mosco\V next -n•eek. In ad dition, there are reports the Russians have solved the problem which killed three cosmonauts last yea r and are ready to launch their second Sal yut space station. Possibly while Nixon is in the Soviet Union. U.S. space sources say s e v e r a I preliminary meetings with Soviet experts on the joint space venture have been very successful and that barring political changes, both sides are ready to an- nounce a go-ahead. U P' 1 T ""'""'- NOT FOR THE FAINT OF H!ART-POKER PLAYERS IN VEGAS ACTION From Left, 'Amarillo Sllm'; duler, 'Texas' Doyle', 'Pug' Pearson "'Sli111~ Wins Whole Thing Texa1i Cleaus Out Foes for Poker Title, $60,000 LAS VEGAS (AP) -Thomas AusLin "Amarillo Slim" Preston, whose $10,000 gam bling !!take had ' dwindled to $1,700 won the "world se ries of poker" and $60,000 today. Preston. of Amarillo, Tex., was the survivor in a 22-hour contest tha t started with eight higtl-stakes poker players. The win was his first in four tries. Preston cleaned out his remaining op- ponent, Walter Clyde "Pug" Pearson of Nashville, Tenn., with a full house after eight hours of play. Pug had been playine a tight "grind'' game, whittling Slim's pile down with '600: and $1,CKX> hands. · "I never have nothing in my hand ex- cept when there's real money on the "J got a piece of Slim and a piece of Pug too," he said. "Whichever one loses -Jimmy the Greek wins." The players' stakes were put up by backers who collect a percentage if their man wins. The game they played wu ''Hold-em,'' variation of sevencard stud. ~·o cards are dealt face down to each player, five are dealt fa ce-Up in the center and the best five-card hand wins. •Public Deception' 1 must do 10mething to get that window straightened out. Carefully, I began to jockey the window winder back and forth._ up and down . It made funny noises. lt dldn 't 1eem to be doing anyth ing else. Sudde'nly there was a loud clack followed by a thump as the window disappeartd totally within the bowels of the car door / NothJng would coax it back up again. It was buried there permanently. Young Boys Shot In New Ireland T er1·or Outbreak · table," draw led Slim. Witnesses Accuse Media Of Staging News Events Disgusted, I got out. slammed the car door and grimaced at the tinkle and clat- ter of all the parts rattling around therein. Then I not.iced something else. It wu raining. ~1Y DEAR AUTO is 00'>'' parked out nn lhe lot. The open \\'indow is cove red with a greasy old shower curt ain. held do-n•n agai nst the elements by a brick on the roof. It has dran·n some curious glances froin my as sociates. I may get somej.hing more than curioUs glances from them if J don't get it flied pretty quickly now. Tomorrow is the co1npany picnic, you lite. iUEASLE S FELL BEAUTY QUEEN SPOKANE. \Vash. (U PI) -Charlene Du pper , ~1iss Spokane for 1972, probabl.v \vi ii not be able to partici patfl in this \\'eekend's annu.:il Lilac Festival parade end celebrati on. ~1iss Dupper, a lee1cher at Post Falls, Idaho, came do\vn wi th !ht measle~. "An occupational h11zzird,'' she :said. BELFAST (AP) -British lroops early today rotled ·an attmpt to tnlarge ·an Irish Republican Army strOnghold in London derry. a Protestant teenager -n•as shot and killed in BeUast, and inmates led by IRA men rioted in a Dublin prison for six hours during the night. <:uerrillas in Lon d on d c r r y com- monclecred a i rane ThW'sday and planted JO.foot steel beams in Williams Street, the main entrance to the Bogside's district where the IRA rules unchecked. Then they cemented the beams into the roadway, strunc a steel hawser acroas the street and swung :iteel sheets into place as baniers. But army bulldozers smashed down the barrlcades early today, and British head- quarters reported only "minimal op- position" from the guerrillns and lhe 35.000 Catholi cs living in the district. In Belfast, a JS-year-old Protestant boy \\·as killed Thursday by guerri lla snipers \1·ho opened fire from a Catholic sLronghold.His wu the 331st rrported in lhrce years of communal violence in Northern Ireland. T\ro ot her 15-year-old boys believed lo be Catholics v.•ere wounded by gunm en fi ring from 1 speeding car on Springfield Road. in a Catholic se<:lion. Police dt- 1·lined lo speculate. ho~·ever, whether it \\'as Protestant revenge. "I just can't get that Texas boy to be\ Into me when J got him," Pug com- plained with a sigh. During most of the game the black $100 chtpe moved back and forth aci"oas the table in a void of studied silence. Eight players. each stak ed to $1 0,000, began the series with an agreement to play until one player remained with $80.000 and everyone else -n·as bro ke. When play broke up for thrfc hours rest early Thursday one or the three re- maining players Adrian "Texas Dolly" Doyle, dropped out, saying he fell dizzy and nauseous. The other t'wo could have split his $20,000 holdings under the rules but shrugged it off. "He'a a good old boy," said Slim. "l don't take no stake J didn 't wln." One of those who benefltted was Jimmy "The Greek" Snyder, the oddll·maker. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Delivery of the Daily Pfl ot Is guar.antetd ""°"41tv-Fr1Hr: H Y'V do Ml l'l•Y• )"0111' p,eper DY S:)O "·""·• C11ll •lld wur coP'f wfll " bl'O\lll'lf ID '(OU, Ctlll ere ltktn untll 1:.lO p.m. Satvro1y •I'll:! Surld•Y: tf "°"' do Nlt •..:.Iv. ............ COOY' Dy ' e.m. Slilllf'CSly • .,. I •·"'• Sund1y, Cl tl I nd I copy wlU ~ bnlugM to vou. C•ll~ i re lt kfn unlil 10 l .!'tl, Telephones Most 0••1'19• County "'''' , •.•.... ••2·4.111 HG<1 ftwu1 Huntlngron BHCll •lld Wti tmlnfltr ............... l*'lut s.,, cre~nte, C1plstr1110 11e1ch, Stn Juttt C.pi.,rt oo. O.nt Point, SQu!h L111un.. L111un1 Niau.I .. ~,, •• .,. WASHINGTON (AP) -Pickled sea animals, kids drinking "pop wine," sales or dynamite, and a governor's special speech fer a late-arriving film crew figure in a House probe into the degree of staged TV news. These are examples of 'ft'hat awom ,.,.itnesses described Thursday as public decep tions in telecast news. All but one of the nine persons ap- pearing under oath berore the House Commerce Committee Thursday t.:ilked about the Columbia Broadcasting System and the CBS-owned Los Angeles station, KNXT The other ~·itness, Loren Colwell. security agent for the Los Angeles city school districts, complained about the way an American Broadcasting Co. crt\v from KABC, Loo Angeles, covered a stu· dent protest in 1970. Past and present CBS or KNXT cameramen and S0W1dmen were among the chier witnesses. The name of CBS correspondent Terry Drinkwater came up Nixon Official Sa ys NY Times 'Enemy Conduit' It's Good Day Across U.S. WASHf NGTON (UPI) - A spokesman for the Nixon Administration has accused The Ne\v York Times of "being a conduit of enen1y propaganda to the AmerlcBI\ people" in two recent reports on the Viet· nam \Var. KeMeth W. Clawson, deputy director of White House communications, said that he based his charge on 'I1le Times' publication of a report 1J'hursday by cor- respondent Anthony Lewis in Haiphong and another Sunday by Benjamin Welles. Fetv Hea ·vy Sliotvers, Tliunderswrms Reported ...... T~ cll•M• o1 •II" '' " "11:'"' a member or the newsruiper's bureau In '°"'''" •"'II S.1ure11l. tllt Htrlon•l • . ,... we1~ Ser'lk 1 wht oc11y, \\!ash1ng1on. '"I -le--tl wJU 90 "°"'" lo J.000 Cl 'd f h' I I t ''" " n.e moun•elr\s s.1urc11¥. awson sa1 a copy o 1s s a emen ,~~~~ ~11th!~1~1~:'j~ '= -n·as made available to the Times. The ";~.~:3~1", '~ntT:1 c1t':tr::o.., , ,,..11 paper hzid no immediate response . . :,y~·i,~,,.. 2!1' ,r;: •l:$"'"!'7r;; In his , s1ory. Lew~ refM?Med that c1¥1c ~·""' Ii':,_. 111M1 ., . • o1 North V1etn•me.se uid mmes U.S . .nT::~.h =·· /:..l°' ~t$ will alrcralt dropped tnto Haipbcng harbor ''11:.4: s;;...:.~; St. ~:~e bting rendered .~ea and thlt .., TH• .UioclATIO .... ,, 1nde.peDdent sources support~ claims .,'1: .. .:.t:'~";"':t~'"c.:' :f:! that an East Gennan fz:eitbttr bad •M ...,. ... ,.,....,-""•• .......... entered the port slnoe the mmes. wen ac-~nb~ '="''w.~': :~ tivated hfay Jt. r!!!!!;~ ~ ·~··~~~ft11; The newspaper printed a rtatemeat to 1!0-.i; :.r 91: -,.,_ that e!lect by a PtalqCll spokesman, •••!°"&: :; Kii . t"*•,..~ "tM nmes 1tooped to bad journallsm in connection with a 1970 dynamite. buying story and a 1971 program about the popularity of so-called "pop wine" among the young 1n California. A CBS spokeaman said news-sta,ing practices are against network policy, and added Drlnb.-water has been suspended by CBS news for six months without pay for the dynamite and wine stories. Stanley Haberlach, of Portland, Ore .. a dynamite distributor, said a purchase se- quence filmed at his store and carried on the CBS Evening Ne\fS with Walter Cronkite "w•s strictly staged throughout the whole lhing." CBS soundman Floyd Jack Reynolds agreed. Big Truck 'Fireball'; Kills Two PITl'SBURGll (UPli -A lractor trailer truck loaded with 40 tons of lteel lost it! trakes and cut a quarter mile path of burning wrecll:age 1 I on C Pittsburgh's main lhoroughfare , killlnf two persons and flinting can into the 111' "like pieces of paper." Another 10 were injured ..00 at least 3' cars were damaged. Motorists acattettd along the road to get out of the Wl'f o( I IN SHORT ••• I the fiery truck traveling at an estimated 80 miles per hour Thursday. Tbe truck apparently lost itJ brakes near the Wilkinsburg exit on the PeM Lincoln Parkway, state poUce said. Tbe: truck burst into flames when it 1truck: tM first car and picked up speed aa it raced down the hill attempting to weave in and out of the crowded traffic. Spy Slain by Son LEWISBURG , Pa. (UPii -A former -Arrn r-sergeant serving a ~year term-- for conspiring to give secrets to th• Russians has been stabbed to death b1 his son who vis ited him at the federal penitentiary. Robert Lee Johnson. 56 . was brought into the prison's open vWti.ng quarters to see his son for the first time in year!. prison officials said. As he entered the room , hls son, a Vietnam War veteran, lunged at his father with a kniCe, stabbinC him in lhe chest. Johnson died an hour later in the emergency room at Geisinger Medical Center. __ Robert L. Jr., 22, Greenwood, Jnd., ns disarmed immediately by prison guarda. Jetll11er Cradaes FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (UPI) - An Eastern Airlines jetliner landing in a rains torm has crashed an~ burned but alJ 10 persons aboard escaped tbe shattered fuselage ahead or the flames. One stewardess sul/ered a broken vertebra and two other crewmen entered a hospital for observation. None ol. the passengers was hurt. The pl ane's tail section broke off the main fu selage on impact with the ground. The six passengers and four crewmen escaped through front emergency ulsta. V.N. Cut Voted WASWNGTON (AP) -The House bu apJr(>ved a $13.2-million cut in the United States' payment to the United Nations. The cut , if upheld by the Senate and approved by President Nixon , means U.. lJnited States will pay only 25 percent ot the total operating costs or the U.N. dur· ing the year beginning July 1. The U.S.•· mount for the current fiscal year i.! 31.S percent of the world body's bud1et. In approving the measure by voice vot• Thursday, the House ignored a Jut. minute plea by Secretary of State \\'illiam P. Rogers to restore the funds. l'lag Conviction ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) -The Mi .. nesota Supreme Court today upheld thl conviction of a youth charged with dtfac. ing the American nag by painting. white peace symbol over the stars. In a 4.3 decision, the court rejected • contention that the defendant was employing a symbolic freedom of 1peecb protected by the First Amendment. The court ruling means that 1bomu L. Clift on, 21 , 'of Minneapolis faces either a $100 fine or 30 days in j ail. ·~ ._.,, N"" '"llflo Jerry w. P'rledhelm. But aawson uld 5t'11~~''= ':t '·"-M~ ~ when IL pubUabed • Iona: irmpotl.llble ••:-· °'· -., propqanda line lndk:allog lhert is lhip =TJ!.'S"'lq':.11 .':'ft movement In • and out of RaipbonJ Like B•napi,, Dtl111pt" lrPIW11t.-1'0IO(AS1 e ,..,<..... !tol/l"fHI C•Hlttnlt •"" !llurllftr....._t ....., _, """"""""' -h•rbor." (COO.Stal 1un11nar, n n d '"The truth,'' he uid. .. .,.~ wort}! a tWol data Opf)<or todey on si~le parqraol! , •• bl 1 lft"Y al mo ny l'GQ• 9.) -IDcl>oa.~· Top story ol an 1bandoned Chicago building bis c:oll aJl"!d, sho•·e,.. Inf debm on H•en Cll'I or a wedding party wailing at lllCJ\'litht. One )'Oung Woman WIS killed and 10 othen hurt, Offidl l! Hid tbt buil dlnF c:oU1psed from age. • I od .. ed be ho ,. .s • • • I • . . . . . • • • • • DAILY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE Share School Bu ses? The city of Huntington Be;ch u1i.U soon explore lhe •bared use of school buses for a municipal transporta· tlon sys tem. The idea is not nove l -Neu•port Beach and Cos ta Mesa have been inve:;figating the same th ing -but it does have con siderable merit. Such a shared bus system co uld : -Create a more efficient use of expensive. tdle school buses. -Provide a definite J:!Ublic service to 11nio'r clti· 1en1. youths and carless hou~sewives. -Reduce oom1 ol the traffic con1esUon at the be1cht1 and m'1or 1hoppin1 center~. · Of course It has tome drawbacks . The ayslem must be d1al1n1d 1round school schedul11, And It will have to serve enough !orations. often enough to make it con· venient, or few will use it. lt mia:ht also cost the city &ome money, at fir!l. But in 1 city that features very lltll1 public tran!· portation. the idea miJht work. Everyone. hoi.vever. should Ii•• It a full , lair ch1nce , beuuse it likely wUI take quite a limo lo build public 1waronou end accept· a nee. Bi-lingual, Bi-cultural The United States is ofte n said t.o be a melting pot of many cultures and many peoples. But this doesn't apply to everyone. In pockets throughout the country are many minority groups which cherish their native traditions _and ~t_to ru-eserve tb~m. __ Among these are the 110 Mexican-American fam· Uies of Colonia Juarez in Fountain Valley. Though many have the money to· leave-, they prefer to remain. Thi• d"lre b perfectly leg!Umate, but It dOe• pre- ~enl a special problem to local public schools. I! the ~fexican·American children are taught only English, they tend not to learn well, end they aro abo in effect • • i;onden1ned lo illiteracy in their native lon1ues. And if taught only Spanish, they can't cop• with tho main· S1feam Engllsh·speaking society. The Fountain Valley School Oi.c;trlrt h111a: 1net this problem by sta rting -wi th the va luable help or a size· able federal grant -a program to trarh J\lexiran·Am· ericans flu ency in both language!. Thi ~ bi·li n1:ual, bi· C'Ultural approach. \1.·hich includes non J\lexican·Ameri· can children as well . i!i an admirable effort to con1e to IJ'lps with the problom. , Botl1 Sides Deserve Credit Whenever a lar11 aroup of paren ts gal hen In quo" tion school officials on a controversial issue invol \•ing the~r chi ldren, it·~ almost au~omaticaJly an ~xplniive sit· uat1on. The meeting ca n easily degenerate 1n ln a bitter and "''asteful shouting match with one fa lse or unsure step from either side. Such a potentially cxrlosiv<' rneeting v.·as held last \\'eek in the Ocean \'iew School District, v.1here 1 group of hard working. dedicated parents has been fig'htlng the district's all-year school plans for more than tv"o months. About 120 parents sho\ved up for tht some.U ml!s heated four-a nd·a·half·hour question and anB\ver 11e~alon "'.ith school offici.a!s. There \\1ere some l1ru1c~ on both s1d~s. Sch?f>l off1 c1als \Vere guilty of transrarent de· laying tactics \vhen they took more th an one and a half ho.urs_to_.Qlrui_e the..n1ecting j nto the. que1tlon~ana,11erin1 • phase. And some parents Jike\vise d isplayed poor man• ners v.·ith remarks made out of t urn fro n1 the floor. B~t all in all. the meeting v.•enl sn1ooth ty. Credit r~r this .must go lo parents who attended with a gen· uine desire to become better informed, and to Ken Me · be.rg •. the Oce~n. View official who did a tremendously fa ir JOb of cha1r1ng the long meeting. H Prod'Uetlon Speed-up Ordered B a d Habit: U .S~ Lags in ~ig~ Missiles WASHING TON -A speed-up has bee n «dered en the producticn cf an air-to-air 1nissile capable cf zercing In and destroy· Jiig Russia·s highest-level combat planes + particularly the su personic MTG-23 •ith a ceiling of 80.000 feet and a speed 'J( around 2.000 miles an hour. Top operating height of existing U.S. air-to-air missi le s is 60,000 feet. ceiling of t:t>t F-4 Phantom jet -nearest et1mbat ql1ne thi~ country now has to ttle MJG- 13. Significan11y. Is- rael also is vigorous- ly engaged in devel- Qping ,11n ultra-high level air-to-air mis- ille -with the MIG· 23 as the principal Immediate targf'I. ts· rael's best fighter-bomber is the F-4. Early this year. President Nixon aut hor· i:iecl the sale of 48 more of these planes to Itrael. v.·hich is now reci!iving them at the rate of rour a month. While the U.S. and Israel art urgently pressing the productio n of a new air-to.. air missile. they are proceeding in· dt(M!ndently -although there is a com- mon motivating cause. THERE HAVE beefi Cl'IVely dist urbing e;rperiences with the MlG-23 in lhe :riiperchargecl Middle F.u:t. · On four different· occesions. M1G-23s tia sed in Egypt and pilot«l by Russians (ROBERTS. All.EN) deliberately viola ted lsraf'Ji air space. The Soviels sped ovf'r the coastline near Hai fa and o\·e r Israeli fortified positions deep In the Sinai Penlnsula . In every inslaoce. llr1e.ll Phantoms sought to Intercept them -but were unable to do s& because thelr 1lr·lo-1ir missil es couldn't reach them. Fl ying at lhrf'e times the speed of sound. the ~IG-11s were loo fist Tor the somewhat slower Phantoms. Also, the latter's missiles are unable to functloo In the thin atmosphere above M.000 feet. The Soviet planes few at 70.000 to R0,000 feet . For missiles to "lock in" on them at those height s, speci11I p:uldance and other equipment are necessary. Four J\11G-21s are known to be based in Egypt. So far. al! are piloted by Ru ssians. There is no indication that Egyptians are being tr<i:ined in their use. ~1 0ST OF' l::GYrr·s pilots are limited lo flying MI G·l5s and -17s. With a small number piloti.nJ MIG-1111. The E1Ypti1n air force is notorious for it.I unu&u1lly high rate of losses In cr1sht1 dut to faulty flying and accident.a. To speed up development of 1 new ultra·hlah level air-to-air missile, both the U.S. and Israe! are using ex1shng weapons as the basic missile . It is using SAM·2 anti-aircraft missiles raptured from the Egyptians in the Sinai in the 1967 conflict. Some 3a of these Soviet-made missiles were overrun by Israeli armored spearheads. The missiles and their mobile launchers v.·ere seized inlact; abandoned by the Egyptians in Jheir pan icked rout. The SAM·2 and SAM·3 1r1B the Russians' principal ground·l~•lr inti· aircraft weapons. Hundred s of these AA missilf!~ art positioned on the Egyptian side flf the Suez C.nal. and 11round C1lro, Alexan· dria . the Asv.•an Dam and other major polentii'I targets. THE U.S. AIR·TO..A.IR mis~lle that is undergoing ru sh modiricalion for use above 70.000 feel is around 14 feet in length. weighs upwa rds of 1.000 pounds and ha s a warhead of some 200 pounds of high explosives. Initial operational tesls of the new missile are slated for late this year or early next. tn Western military terminology the Mf\r21 is known as the F'oxbat. Addendum : The U.S. is also engaged in developing a new reconn11l1s1nce .11telllte with greally imprO\'ed pictorial &nd Other reporting cap11bilities. Purpose of the new device I! to provide better ind f1ater pic- tures from spare than ar1 now po11ible from camera-ca rrying saUllite! . Let's Rewrite All History SKARE\\'E UNIVERSITY -Students ended their ~·eek-old sit-in and un tied Dean Homer T. Pettibone today after he promised to discont inue the linivPrsil~ .. s controvergial \\1hite Studies Program, The students. members of a mi litant group kno~·n as "The Wasps," marched into Dean Petti· bone's office seven days ago and pre- sented their non-ne- gotiable demand that I.he "slanted. bigoted and highly offen· 1ive" program be ~ te:nninatf'<l . When Dean PeftJ. homo objected on the grounds the traditional White Studies Program w~u1 a~ old a!! the university Itself, he v.·o:is tied lo his chair. The ~lu­ dent leadPr. young \1/itrred Wa~p. then proceeded to read aloud, for 18 hours ar a 11trt-tch. all the un iver!ity-approved texts on \\'hile Hi story. HIS VOICE NOW merely ! croak. young Wasp had reached the beginnings DAILY PILOT Robert N. 1\'ecd, Pu~lt&h tr Tho'"M k'ttl'1/, £ditor Alber t \V. Ba ttJ Edriorio.J re,. id1tor Tht editorial pap or tht O.lly Pilot stock& to Inform •nd ,umu· l•t~ rt•dtn by ptf'MnUnc this ne"A·1p1pPfs o!)inil'IN and cotn· me:ntAry on topla. or tflterf'lt a.nd ti1niflc11nC'f>. by prlWldlftr 11 forum fM lN' ·~!f)n rif aur n!ldt r1' opinion•. and by,, pt't"t#'n!lnr tttt d1,·ersct , ... wpolnl.$ of lnformtd ob· 1en•tn and JpO~n on topics of the clay, Frid_,, May 11, 1972 ( • ART HOPPE ) of I.he U.S. involvement in Vietna m v.·hen DPan Peltibone fin ally yielded . "1 can take no more !" he cried . "You are right. These history texu are alanted. bigoted and highly ofrensivt, by any fa ir analysis, to the white race.'' A triumph1n1 young Wisp I old reporlf'ra afterward that he had begun his readings with the history of Alex- ander the Great . "And why was he great ?'' demanded Yi1asp. "Because he killed ind burned and looted his way through Eg}•pt , Asia Minor and India. ·rm sorry I got no new worlds lo conquer .' he says. \\Iha! kind of talk is that" And from there, these Wh ite historic! are all dov.•nhill. ''LOOK AT THE RO~IA~S. 'Veni. vldi. vici,' that's the ir motto. And y,·ho knocks them off? Attila rhe Hun Then y,•e: get a couple o( cenluries of v.·hile guy! going around burning v.·hite guys at the stake. Cha rlemagne spends 30 ye1rs alaughttr· lnl S11on1, lbtnbardl' and Saracens . so he'g a hero. "Then we get int o English history. Who do we read about ? William the Con- queror. There'11 11 name for ynu. Rlch1rd thf' Llon·Hearted. who a:nes ~ to R1wer inridtls. Henry VIII . who cull hll trive!I off •hort. Then !ht Engll•h kill a lot nl Spani•nl• and aalt ofl 10 utllolt lndla and half the world. "Who 's bll Jn f'n"'"! Napoleon. who got maybe 1 mHllon peo ple de.ad. Who·~ bi' In Gen'llall.)'? Frt<terl~k lhe Great . Him, too. Who'1 bll in RU11ia? Ivan the Terrible. Th1t'1 lerTible. ''LOOK AT TIIESE American hlstor1u. AU they u lk about 11 how the Whlt" lddied around the tndtans. the Mtticans. the FUiplnoo IDd .,,.laved the blacks. wan. rlou. 1trike1, 11nastm. corrvp1ion -~·ho need! 11? "Ho\\.· come lhe whites are always lhe bad guys? Hitler. Stalin. Musso!Jni -all "'hites. \1lho assassinated four of our Pre11idents? \llh.ites. Who dropped the first atom ic bomb? Whites. .. Talk about slanted repnr1 1ng. They don't u· r i t c ur a "'hile unleSli he ·s ro tten. Why don 't they v.Tile about a decenl , peace-loving white v.•ho minds his own business -cne who's 1 credit to his race? "lt'g no wonder ui; whiles. 1tte.r reading thete history texts, fee l inferior." DEAN PElTIBONE. still ma&..,1;tn1 his ·wrif1ts, Immediately announced the White Studies Program would be repl•c· ed by Bl~k, Yellow and Brown Studies Programs. "\\'e will go from 1he Zulu Kings 11nd thrir conquesls lo the Mau-~111u," he said h;ippily ... Prom Genghis Khan and his hordes to the Japa nese snc11k a!tack on Peart Harbor. from Azt cr human sacrifices to rhe slaughter al thr Alamo. "After all," he said with 11 scholArly smile. "we all have 11 101 10 learn from the lessons of history." A coalition of angry black. yellow and brO'A'n students wompUy marched into Dean Pettibooe·s offic~ a.nd tied him up. Dear Gloomy Gus Same old sto~·: Got & problem? Set up a new government 11gency whether if1 needed or Ml. That's what the League cf Women Vottrs of the Oritnge C<la!lt would do in opposing Senator Car~nter's <'O~~t­ al proletUon bill ·-P J .L. 1'1'11t ln""1 ""Kn .......... V..Wtr, llOt llkfOKMI,., IMw 11 lt1t lltWU_, ltf'll flW H1 -•• Ito-., .. ,, Dtll'r "IWl ; .W~ De nigra ~e Our Ne ighbors (SYDNEY J. HARRIS) Up where J spend my iUmmerli, everyone had heard the "P,olish jnkes" long before thfly became famou1 , or in· l•mous. Only up there. they we.re known •11 "Belg\11n jokes," by virtue or a l1rft immigra nt Retgian community which provided the butt of th is rustic humor. Thus h11s it eve r been. There i.~ no record of 1ny culture anywhere that did not release Its hostll· hies ~nd exhibit Its invinribl<' sense of superiori1y by derid- ing or down-grading some convenient out. group. In the e.:irliest rec· ord.'i of anci ent r.rrccc. !he Boetians served as I hP "Poles" or "Belgians" f o r l~e rPSI of G r e e c e; the name "Roelian" became almoot a &yn· onym for "stupid.'' f A n d lhe fir11t "b1rblrlans ." of C'OUrse. Included all those "babblers" who spoke an ythin1 but Greek ./ DR. MARIO PET. in "The Story of Llnguage." points out that the earlie st Slavs called their German neighbors ''NP.mets" (meaning "mute'' or ''dumb'' t; contrar iwi~e. the word 1'slaves" co mes from Slavs c1ptured in bait!<', The ancient Chinese desi p:naled a11 "southern harbanans'' and "miserable nnrs '' the Miao and Moso tribes of South China. Bad habits, and re prehensible bf'havior. arP invariably ascribed to the peop\P nrxt door : the most famous example being syphilis. which is called "French disease·· 1n EnR:land, and "Englis h disease'' in France. IT WAS THEIR neighbors. the J<:ng lish, who mAd e "to Weigh" on an obligation an ln~ult lo the Welsh people: likewise, "Oulch treat" and "Dutch courR:ge," sug· ge1tlng that Hollanders are both 1tin1y and alco holic. And In "Jew down" 1 prtc1 1u1gesl! that Christians are above such mercantile haggl ing. Amer icans 11re by no mean3 immune to the wor!d '.c; envy and contempl. Wh.1t we call s i m pl y a "confidence game" known to bo!h !he F'rench and lhe Italians as ''the A.mcr1can swindle ," IN ITAL\', ACCC>RIJJNf. tn f)r. Pei, v.•h:il ""'f r.:ill "RAle·crashing" or "free· loading ... .:ire knny,·n as pnrto1hesi1mn. or acting like rort11guese. The ancient Romans called duplicity .. Carthaginian lrustv.·orth1ness"; and in German. the word · Rus~1an ·· is synonymous witb "b;irbarou'i ... and "English education'' meanJ f1011:11in1t . Every country has a region 1uaually lht Soulhtrn part. which i' pt1nrest I that the rest of IM country looks down upon, flr JoJces about , or u11t1 11s 1 symbol for 1tupfdity, lazlntss. dlattontsly or CUllt. It Items 11s if wr art' incapable of m1 1n- t1tnlng 8 good opinion of ourse lves wllhnut den1Rralhlg our ne1ghbor1. 1 humen ha bit th•t 2,000 years of Chris· U1nlly 1eem1 to hive hid 1b1olutely no effect upon. Quotes Wiilie Slocum . ~Ullbr1e. 411011 e-r·Jtrdi:ty -"""omen of the wnrld should alwav~ remtmber th• sage and aallent 11yi.ni 'A bl& min ma y be a bli m.tn, but 1 Uttle min la all mJn ! ·• , .............. ' . . • Protesters Lack Sense of History To the Editor: The Secret ar\•-General of the United Nation11. Kurt ·Waldheim, his publlrly ronceded !hat North Vietnam invaded South Vietn;im. Othcr art!clrs rrport th11t lhls invasion has the iu pport of 3,000 So- viet technicians. with the greatest selec- llvt placement of milit,11ry hardware since World War II. So, like the "biR lit> -put down ('!vii w1r'' I n v a s Ion or Cz.cchoslov1kia , Hung1ry, etc .. we hive further lmmut11ble evidence of the• suc· ct11ful paycllc>-pnlitica l warfare of these 1111re11or nations. 8TRANGt:, TH~ short memories nf the~e Illogical prote1ter1 -nr lheir 11p. parent lack of knowledg e or lhe satanic violation of lhe U.N.-Geneva Conrerence by Hanoi , of their signed agreemen\ to the ma intenance t>f the: DMZ betwf'en North and South Vietnam . Even as late as 1968, Hanoi promised President Johnson ttia1 , if we would slop the bomb- ing of North Vietnam , they would stop all offensKie artion at the DMZ and permil aeri al reconnaissance by unarmed aircraft to assure the U.S. aaainat their taking offensive action against South V\1Btn1m. Even with all th is evidence of their ruthl1a1, degener1te, repul1ive, lttndistt and diabolfc 1ctlon~ -why then, are thf!re no prote1t1lion! 1gains1 Lhese n1111nt acts nf warfare -alona with lhelr oomplelely outragenus d1'r11ard of the conventions of International Red Cros• on the treatment of our Prisoners of War! IS IT BECAUSE .50 many or our 50- called Demncratir leaders such as Mu11kie. McGQvern . Kennedy, Humphr('y, F'u!bright. Tunney and Hartke (presumed intellectual~ 1, by not speaking out a11:ainst these altacks, create an attitude by {)Ur superficial malcontenL'I that OUR COUN· TRY IS t\LWAYS WRONr. And we shoulff accept lhe humility or rlefeaL by even a mi~ Communi1tic nation. In 1sH11ln~ these re~retlahle develop- ment1 , I belle ve this Is wh y •o many 1tudent• prefer lo march 1 n d dtmon1tr1te on behalf of the enem y In· 1te1d or provld ln1 evidence of their loyalty Ill their own country and the very frredom1 that arr. denied the citiiens of the11 mcr11ly bankrupt enem y cou ntril!.8 who would nol be 111lowed to protest for on, mlnutr. without bein R: jailed nr.worse. One thlng for sure, they have never read thP book "T~le or ~ Whistling Shrimp .. by Vladimir B. Griniorr. I Al.Sf) ~'I ND it !'ilr~nJt,. that ~OT o:-;t: of lhe 127 membtr!i nf th,. United Nation.'! -who 1u-<;eptf'd nvrr Sill! hitlion 1n \J.S. AID fund~ ~1nce l!M!;--h.11~ raised ,11 vo1r.e in lhlll 11\PR~l invasion ol South Vietnam b.,. !he Norlh V1etn,11meze O'w'nmuniit~. On,. more rea!"on why the U.S. should iPl out of the Ir1endlus and useless Unlle<i N1llnn1 ! - AL N. SEARES Clllroprart or Repllea To tM Edllor: You orillttd ,11 IMter IM1ilbnx. AprJJ 2~l from Jean F_ Crum, M.O. 1,n 1h1a ltlltr pl1)'I on wordl!l i nd •l•nttd 1tm1nt lc:s wtr, uatd lo mls<Hrect the readu. II 11 11pected th11t 1 Pf'raon hotdl na 1tw-hlah office or prf'~irlrnt of the CatUorniit Merlk:11I A11.~l!t1on 14·ould no1 rmrt ro 14·rillna st Atcrn,..nL, oui of context so as 10 confuse !he puhhr p,.rhaP-' thfl: mosl cla53\c ('rror 111 1ruu of 1uumina: 1~1 in~ mt<hcal prnf P!l!1on I~ Ike sol,. reprt~c,.nt.11!iv,. or !h,. ht111ina aru Thl.s Is nnl lhr ra~r Thi' ch1rnprae- tlc proft\.•irin 11 rvtl " part ol m,.-f1r1ni- and nellher 11 o&teopath y. PfllCholflgy or opt.OmWy. The medlcil profession ctn· l\1AILBOX L1tttr1 from r1arl1rs nrt io1lc01tW. Nnrm11lh,1 writ1r1 1houLd conwu th.1ir tn1,•0011 tn 300 worrli or l1111. Th.• rloht tn cond1n11 litter• ta fit tpatl or 1/lminnt1 llb1l 11 reserved. All let- t1r1 muat ~ncludt 1lpnnture.1 and fn(Jil· inn adrl.rt11~ but nnmr.,. n1n11 b~ IDith• htld ott r1q1L1tt If sufficir.-nt reaso" is n.ppartnt. Pot!T"JI will not b1 pub· Lllh1d. not dictate to thooe other branche1: o( the heallng artll . OR. CRUM SAID that "chlropr1etor1 are not licensed lo give medl~81 c1trf!'' Anri "are prohibited by 11w from prescrihin.r drugs". The r.1cls Ire: rhiropractors do nol filive m~ica l 'care ; chiropr~clor~ are Jiccns('d by 49 1tate1 I the Mth ls IP.alslallng now ). Before belna Jicenled In C•lifcrnla c:hlrcprac1or1 mult p1aa 1 thriBt-dl)' exam just aa phy1ldan1 do. nt11rdln1 dru11. chiropractic 1d· vnc11te1 mlnlm1l drug usa~. 11nd then only when •blolutely necessary. Dr. Crum lmplled chlropractor,11 wished to prescribe. They do not. O;-, Crtlm quroteA the H&W commltteJ 11 dlscountln• chiropractic. Th I a ~vitluatinjt panel w1+11 i;r.t up by the mf'dical 1yndic11te with onP purpose in mind : rlereat chiropr:ict1r 1n Cnngress. !">or.~ the puhlic rraJiif' rh:ii lhf': med lc.111 f()hby ill the bfggr.~t ~ pend e. r I• Wash ington . D.C.? RPcrn!ly at th,. $6th ronven tlon or the AFL-CIO in Ml1ml, chiropr;ictic carp w,11,11 hack~d 11nd thl!I Af'L-CIO called for Cnrigrf!:s lo inc lude it In All federal health program s , IT WAS f'U~THER •lattd by Or. Crum that ''timt wasttd on uaelesr chlropr•etlc treatment m1y d~l 11y a pa· tlent'• 1eeln& • qu1 llfled phrslcian". O~ce 11aln we 11tt lhe errec1s o 8'll·•Po pou'l!ed but un informed "1uthnritari1n1•• mnk ins 1111temcn1.• from hiirh Polltlcaf Po~itions. MOlll chlroprstctic p111icnfJJ hlv1 alrt1dy been tre.11IPl'I by two or nmr11 ''medical specl,11li.~ts '' w1thou1 rf!IUlta'. (More than 80 percent of m)' pro11ctlce come~ frnn1 "Qu:i lificrf phy11iclan~." J However. n1Jw in Aoldition to tht prtm11ry complaint the p11t 1cn1 hA~ onr or two iat ro11:~nlc 1 doctor cau~rrl i prohlemJJ. f)rufil ~htlSI' IS a rral prt>blem 11111 thtt intakP of drug~ mu.•t he slowrd whether prrllrr1bed or pu1ht'd. If pare.nta under rhP rlirrctil'ln of thr mM1c.:1I doc!.« 1rt1 t:ik1n11: riruiis for evt!ry Iii!!,. "bump" In t~e road of hfe. AO will lht1r children . They have followtd the ex11mplt well! Society ta touaJ> and eoppin1 out ls ea1Jer. Jf momm y ind daddy do It ao wJJI the kids. OONA~D R. SC01'1', D.C. B11 Geor9e --·· Dur a.nr1e: What do Ute aerlbua ad vlc1 col· UlllnlOU SIJ "11en they meet )'GQ fBce: lo face! MT Dear At1 . No1h1n1~ Thay alw1y1 turn lhtit b8c.lu on mt. CONl"IDENTIAL Tl) G E E HArK,\1,\i\' Heroin. ol coune. Wbol did lou THINK vou ...,.. lookJn1 for , • • • t. I I .. I " . .. ·. I .. ~·~ • .. • ':\C • • fJUDGET PULLMAlf 3777 Vinyl by Empire FL~TEC PDP 397 FLO-TEC ' CllE 1mm , . ..., ' .1677: . ' 'llCIOlf • .. • FONDUE DISH 33c llNECUnERY ..-~ • .-r I • 4'x8' 11>1. 9aa NODERll MATERIAL CBBOME'I cws TIBLES f 77 TllElfD ENT. . •. n•n -·,,·. ·,. -..... ... (We'd ·l?e 'nuts ,if we ~n't.). · rwo -·oar sPECl1L·s. · - ' -. • ' . - Friday, May l<J, l<J72 DAILY PILOT 7 MAY20-21 SATURDAY 12 to 9 P.M . SUNDAY 12 to 6 P .. M. • ,1a11•u1 . . . ''S. Rl""JI '!> ... ,.~. ... ' I , • .. . . C.ISITI Pl'i'Io matl FOi BOOK ' -· SCllEDIED llf 15777 GENERAL ALUM1N11Jf PRODS. ·hJZ SLD CUDLE WU PREMIUM 11-LB. 99c YALEY ... , BILL BIDER TWllE 5 lb. 77c PACIFIC nBRE ,cmdROPE -· .... ,.. -..111.1 , sr:~· IDI*- STlllED GWS PllELS SPECTRALITE 2'x4' 497 LAii CASTER P•UE TOBCI 2'7 TUlll!ll " ' ' ... • ~IU."I 'D•M, ,,.., A LU 'lA. POOL CARETAKER 11788 WORLD llfD. PORCH SWIIG SOLIDOll 1777 MILTON KANE IBIUTBOS CIUDEUD mum . . 33~:FT. a'PATTEIUli ITAllLJRI DELTA FAUCET WASHERLESS 7ea LARSEN ' ·n11 ILU• .. lliiiA ' . •. • 21V QlrCl\llDCX9. JIFFY.FIT 4'x7' STOUCEm 11aa CIS ll.llUllTI LOC SET 1997 111.L PCURDll'r . ' .• ' ,. • IUTOIE B&TBFU 677 BOSTOI RDCKER 12aa NORTH AMERICAN OIL PlllTIIGS 4•! EL CllEAPO GALLERY . SECURITY SCBEEI DOOi DOUILE.EAGLE 2477 COt~IA BIDJIL 1••uw • with&.. 1tcmd ·. ·9f95 .,,. DEWALT lflYIL JELLY 8 01. 67c WOODHILL CHEM. MUMMY SLEEPING BAG 1177 WENZEL WHEEL- BUROW 577 COLD TU'FllY 2995 ' F \{ fllJ ttA'<IE " G'MO fllo\E FOLK~ S._..U.li f\N~ T&f vou-. ~A1' "tO "M&. C~llMPJj /\Ill&. K~ltt'tlll, NO S L. ~11\fl'PC!! · .. \ .. .. . -. ~ ... "" .... _.,. ......... ..., .. -. • • . Orange Coa·st Today's Fl•el N.Y. Stoeks VOL 65, NO. 140, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 19, 1972 N TEN CENTS Chief Gla·vas Leads Attack on Methadone Unit The establishment of a methadone clinic for the treatment of heroin addicts Near Hoag ?i.temorial Hospital today drew criticism from Newport Beach Police Chief B. James Glavas. "The experience which law en- forcement agencies have bad with these cUnics in the county lhus far has not been one to inspire confidence in their ad· mlnb:tration," Glavas said. Sgt. Leo Konkel, bead or t h e department's narcotics squad, said the clinic will attract heroin addicts to the Newport Beach area . "Establishment of a methadone clinic • -now Tough A Question In Newport By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of lfl•-Dtrtr ''"' ST•tf Newport Beach planning commis-· 1ioners want to ~et tough on building and pojlulation density in the city, but they are not quite sure how tough they want to be. Commissioners Thursday n i g h t scheduled a public hearing for June 15 on a prq(losed interim ordinance which would' cut current density limits in hall. But a nwnber or commissioners already have made it clear they feel the orttlnance is too strict. "Maybe we can come up with 60llleth.ing in between after t h i s ordinance is put up for further discussion," l8id Commissioner William Agee. The prqposed Interim ordinance, which WQ\114 !if 111. ~~until tJ>e clly'a ~ pllil ;Jr comj{e!Od, 'iiould eat the lkior area retto tbroogb the etty to 1111 percent e1f 'the bulldable lot area, llid Cart N'""-ldv-pllnnln( dlrictor. ' (~ IJENl1'1 Y, Paff Z>- McGovern Visits Orange County In Vote Quest Democratic presldentlal aspirant Sen. George McGovern (ll-South Dakota) will arrive 1n Orange County Sunday and is scheduled to take a stroll along the shore or Upper Newport Bay In Newport Beach. Aides said today that Sen. McGoveril. will be in the county all Sunday al· ternoon, stopping at a barbecue and a cocktail party in addition to the back bay activities. He will be out stumping in his efforts to gel a large chunk of the votes from the state's five m.lllion Democrats in California June I primary electiori. SUnday's actlvttlet will begin at 2 p.m. with a blrbecue at 11141 Meads Ave. In Orange. The walk along the back by is scheduled for 4,30 p.m. and will begin where Back Bay Drive meets Jamboree Road in Newport Beach. Following the walk with several Orange C o u n t y e n v i r onmentalists, Sen. McGovern will appear at a cocktail party at 6 p.m. at 2874 &a Vista Drive in Costa Mesa. Donation at the barbecue is 15 and at lho later cocktail hour, $2.50, campaign 1pokesmen said. • in the area could encQUJ'18e paUents and J)Ottnti{ll patients to live in 'the area ," Konkel said. He1said there are fewer than 10 known add.lets ln Newport Beach to- day. The statement was lite.rally laughed at by Saul Stolzberg, director or the county's Methadone Maintenance program, which now operatea a clinic in Santa Ana. 'If you're wonderi!lg why I'm laughing," Stolzberg said, "I've liot,6pih · map in my office that locatei.JnOwn users, that's why." Konkel did not mean bis statement 23 a joke. • I . TOSfED OUT Condi~• C.ri'iway ';Over the past nine years Newport Beach police have arrested 27 persons for heroin violations (an average of three per year). Currently I am aware of only one heroin addict in our community and would estimate that there are less than 19 persons using heroin in Newport Beach." Konkel said that Is due to three things. -"Good street ·enforcement by the Patrol Division. _•istrong emphasis of identification of suspecti and tlte suppression or heroin.by the Narcotics'sectlon. -Heroin users tend to congregate in . . • o,.'r&.Y-PU .. OT 1..ft.r Mtt' ON CAMPAIGN TRAIL COil9ronilt1n Schmit• Carraway Ousted at OCC During Talk. by Schmitz By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of 1M Dflllr PllM lllff U.S. Rep. John G. Schmitz (R·Tustin) appeared at Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa this morning to discuss narcotics and "lhe debauchery of our currency" before a mixed audience of liberals and conservatives. The one-and-a-half hoW' presentation by the 39th District congressman; an avowed member of Ult John Birch Society; was not interrupted by student prolestors as had been feared, but by Schmitz' pOlitical challenger, Earl H. carraway, who was thrown out of the college auditorium. Carraway strode in midway during Schmits' address and began to distribut~ his campaign literature, a c cu s i n g Schmitz: of being "disloyal to the Presi- dent of the United States." Asked to Jeave by Dean of Students Joe Kroll, the 41-year~ld mortgage banker from Tustin refused until two Costa Mesa police officers ushered him out the door. Seemingly unperturbed by the incidtint and occasional heckles from the au- dlence, Schmitz accused the People's Republic or China or being the world 's main supplier of heroin. "They have one million acres under production .as part of ' an official pro-- gram," the congressman claimed. He said the Mainland Chinese earn $800 million annually Crom their poppy fields and quoted Chou En-Lai .as saying 1hat the best part of the narcotics production was reserved for U.S. troops. Ohe student la ter approached the rostrum and handed Schmitz .,. card which read, "We don't use dru gs like smack (heroin) because when you're stoned, you can't carry on a revolution ." It was singed · "Che." Turning to the nation's fiscal problems. Schmitz blasted politicians who "believe they can vote themselves into plenty, rather than working for it." He said the government is feeding "printing press money " into the economic system and blamed deficit spending lk the primary source of in· nation . President Nixon's revenue sharing pr~ (See SCllMln, Page Z) Land Developers Charged Goldwater's Father-i1i-La·w Accused by DA Prominent Newport Beach paychiatri.st- busineslman Dr. E. Mortimer Gherman " one of three men charged Thursday with grand thtit and false advertising in Connedlon with a Big Bear Lake real estate promoUon. · Dr. Gbenn>,11. wOO.e daughter married U.S. Rep. Borr)' M. Goldwater Jr. (R-Los Angeles) two months ago, ii facing 10 grond theft complainll and !I complainll o! fa1'e advertising broUgbt by the San Bernardino County District Attorney. The switchboard at the Balboa Bay Club In Newport Beas:'h where Gherman resides was under lrt:!trucUons to bold all calls to the Ghertnan apartm<nt thl.s morning . Dr. Gherman Is an o!licu or the COi'· porotion that rewilly purdlased the Bay Club and other BBC boldlnp la P,abn Springs and. al' Catallnl. H• ii llJo 1 diree:tor ol Uallamore Bome1 IJ>c. or Fountain Valley. • San llenllrdiDo Deputy Diltrlct At- tomey Charles WoHe said lhe charges agaiMt Ghennan and two others stem from the sale ol 135 .cabin sites where utillUts bad been promised, but never in· •tailed. Wolle· .. Id ·he IUed lho ac\lon upon complalnta from buyen wbo bad paid a combined total of $1.1 million for the lots. Dr. Gherman Is cbalmwl of lho board of Mountain Lake Development ·Corpora- tion, the flnn that >Old the property and which aharta corJ>()nlte olfices '1\th International Bay Clubs Inc. which ac- qu~ed the Bay Qub boldings from Jack Wrather Jut year. Dr. Gherman ts llflCl't!lary·trtasurer of me, the Balboa Bay Club Inc.. the Balboa BaJ illand Club, the Balboa Bay Racqut\ Clq. i Ille . Balboa' Bli1 Desert Club•llfli a..'llay Qotb llealty Compan)'o Alto Dlmed in tbt complaints were John A. up,r• Pattenon, an ofl\cW or Mounloh! Lab wbo -with Dr. Ghorman al olllm 11 1117 Wutdlff ... Drive, aod a man ldenUfiea on1y as James Moreland. Each was charged with 15 counts of false and misleading ad· vertising. Wolfe said the CaWorula Department of R~al Estate began an investigation of the 33-acre Mountain Lake Estates several months ago after purchasers complained that utUlUes were not in- 1talled·U bid been advertised. He said the aale or the Iota which overaged about 18.000 each In price wu made between 1969 ind 1971. Wolfe said Patter>on continued to sell the lots after being told to stop by the real est.le department. ...,. Dr, Gbtrman.._ who has been a member or the Balboo ~ay Club slnte 1164, •ltQ WU ~~.3'l~llt<)raoge ~ 11· ..... ~~~ gram for heroin ~'l · Ile b:as acted ai -Conau1llnt ID numerous capacitle> u an UJ>tri on n"""'1c. and (Set Gll£RAWi, Pt(f 2) close proximity of each other so as to be close to their potential suppliers. The absence of heroin addicts usually create! a further absence." City ~1anager Robert L. Wynn said this morning he intends lo bring the matter up before city comicilmen "1onday af- ternoon. The clinic, which lechnically is in un in- corporated county tenitory at 1441 Superior Avenue, is across the· street · from the city limits. It opened last week. Stolzberg' thls · momini said he had been meeting · wtlh Costa Mesa Police . Chief_ Roger Neth during planning stages but had not contacted Newport Beach police. "Until the day before yesterday I thought the area only affected Costa r.1esa ," Stolzberg maintained. He said, on the other hand, Newport Beach poliee never contacted him. either. "I didn't even get a telephone call before they flied that report." he claimed . Konkel was adamant in his fears over the clinic, however. "Asswnlng lhat all of th ese new patient residents would remain clean -although such an assumption Js likely invalid - but asserting the best conditions, we can expect an influx of patient associates Y!'ho '"'ill be contributing both to the increase of heroin in the area and the increase of crimes by \vhich addicts support their habits." Konkel said. Stolzberg said there are less than 31> patients under treatment at the Harbor Area clinic no\v, but aaia it was establish· ed there "to get close to the patients.'' It is staffed by four full ·time mental health '"'orkers, a full·time nurse, two partptime nurses and a part·time psychiatrist. Conriilly? Never! VP Won't Be Democrat, Says Agnew From Wire IServlca W AS!l!N_G.TON -Vk:e President Spiro T. Agnew said today. be did not know whether he would tie President Nixon's TWlning mate in November but added that it was "totally unrealistic" to sup- pose Treasury Secretary John B. CoMal- ly would be acceptable. "I don't understand how anybody could seriously believe that a man who is registered as a Democrat in the middle or May can tum Republican and be Campaign Reports Case Contiaues :.. , :. ., Developments tumbled Over each other today Jn lhe continuing story ol Orange County's campoign financial reports fla sco. Here'• what has.happened in .rapid fire order: -First District supervisorial Wxtidate John W. "Bill" ~ill said he had been told by the county Registrar of Voters that if there wel'e ·no contributions of $500 or mare , no statement need be filed . -An aide to Third District Supervisor William J . Phillips said simply, "we goOfed'' in not getUng in the ,list of 'con- tributions by the Wednesday deadline. Phillips riled his list Thursday· e:bowiiig a total of $14,500 in contribution!. -Deputy District Attorney Michael Cappizzi said there would probably be no criminal action taken against · the tardy office seekers. "The state law is unclear on the subject and I am sure that ac· counts for the oonfusion," Cappizzi said. Only two of the county's l 2 supervisorlal candidates filed statements before the Wednesday deadline plus a handful of other candidates. First District incwnbent Rober1 Battin and one of his opponents, Santa Ana attorney William Wenke, reported contributions of $25,659 and $20,800 respectivel y. Phill ips' most active opp one n t , Fullerton businessman Ralph Diedrich, Said he filed his list with the Secretary of state's office and sent a copy to the coun- ly clerk. A oounty clerk aide said the candidate's list was not received Wednes- day or Thursday. Diedrich's staff reported a loan of $20,000 to his drive by him,.lf and $10,000 from LeRoy Rose of Anaheim. They said no single contribution of (See MONEY, Pa1e 2) ,· llf;ri""'-' ' CHARCHD IN LA ~ Newport a..ch'1 ~ .I >i ' nominated vice presh!ent, •• Agnew said. Agnew talked with reporters after making a 40-minute report to President Ni.Jton on his Far Eastern "Yisit. ResPonding to questions about his run- ning again for vice presideni. Agnew said he had ilot been asked by the President and y,·ould not decide until in vited. He said Nixon was rightfully delaying a decision to determine what running mate would be most helpful to him. and added : "f.-tr. Connally is just not it." Action Delayed CoMally submitted his realgnatlon as Treasury secretary thJs wed. He was one of the President's flosest advlsera. Agnew sa id speculation about Con. nally's chances ol being picked by Nixon a~ a r11nning mat~ had been b!QWD out ol. proPortion by news media . "It just isn't in the cards. Any poUtleal pro '"'ill tell you that," he said. Agnew said he had answered questions about his own political fu ture many times !See AGNEW, Page I) Harbor Cities Await .,.,., ,, j 7 F R . nxac.i.. reeway .. · oute By L. PETEit KIUEG Of tl'lt 0.llt Plttt llfff Newport Beach and Costa Mesa wil l have to wait another month to find out where the Newport Freeway will align and what effect it might have oo a planned West Newport condomlniwn.-- C.Sllfornia Highway colllDli!sioners, after deliberating more than an hour and one-half, Thursday decided to delay their decislbn whether or not to condemn land in Newport Beach for the freeway terminus . The land In question ls the potential site of the 444-Unit Robert H. Grant con- dominium project. Grant officials at- tended the meeting and said the proposed Road Chief Sees No More Routes In County Area Environmental pressure groups are preventing construction of urgently need- ed freeways and other Orange County roadways, Ted McConville, county road commissioner, 1old businessmen from (he El Toro and Saddleback area Thursday. Speaking before a combined meeting of the Exchange Club of Saddleback Valley and the Saddleback Valley Chamber or Commerce, McConville said that in hi! opinion, this pressure meant that no more freeways would be built in Orange County. This includes the Coast Freeway, which McConville said was "dead." He said that It looked as if widening and reconstruc. tion of existing six-lane freeways would be the only addition& to the present arterial traffic system. The road commissioner said that there appeared to be a conflict in the philosophies of the environmentally outspoken who on one hand desire a stabilized Orange County Population of between 2.5 to 3 million by 1980 and on the other wish for high-volume public transportation. . "High volume public transportation would ha"Ye a dramatic effect on growth In thls area, we could upect to see it skyrocket. This area would become Manhatta.n-.11ke," McConvllle said. He said that due to the hold·up of con· ttructktn of Orange County freeways, or>- ramp metering ayslems will be Initialed in the county this year ln the area around Bueno Park, and he upected the meter• Ing system to expand throughout the county within two or three year3. The ramp meteri ng system already In effect ln Los Ang eles places stop lights on Cbe Sances to the freew11ys·and when traf~ volume an the roadway becomes heavy, cuta or: free access to th• lr<ewsy. MIMil ~ 1 m.mber of the audience •here lhi people go who a n't get oo the lreewlJ, McConville lhrugged h I a ahouklon and laid "tbo)''ll Just hava to ;o...,,.otberwa7.• ,- • I condemnation would wipe out their plan& Newport Beach pla n DI n g com- miasloners Thursday night delayed ·~ proval of a firwl map for the tract until some definitive action is taken by the state. Newport Beach City Manager Robert L. WyM, who also attended the meeting Jn Redding, said this morning he thought the delay was a good thing. "I got the feeling that ll they had voted then, the decision would have been to condemn the land," he said. "As it stands, we have 30 days to rework our position and confront them again at their meeting in Sacramento next month," Wynn said. Wynn said 'Newport Beach wants a definition or the exact line of the freeway corridor as a guide for further develop. ment in bluff top area. "While we have always bad a con'ldor route, the exact lines of freeway develo~ ment have never been dellned," he said, "we are hoping that the delay will also gi ve the commission a chance to redefine the lines and tell us exa ctly where they are." ~~nn said at least one highway com- m1ss1oner, Vernon Christina of Santa Clara, thought the state should acquire nothing more in Newport Beach bllt rather concentrate on other areas of need. State Public Works Director James A. Moe supported the condemnation action, Wynn said. "Moe said that U the state doesn't pr~ ceed now and we go ahead wtth our (See FREEWAY, P11e I) ........ Cout Weather Look ror a wet weekend along the Orange Coast, wilh 70 percent chance of showen tonight and Sat· urday. The weatherman says highs will be in tbe upper 50'1 at the beach and 60 inland. INSIDE TODAY UC Irvine Ffnt Artl Dtan CLa11ton Garrl$on dirt ctl Cole Porter11 mu..rical "K f 11 Me, Kate.n St4/f torittr Gtorge Lei<W l wotchtJ the -pre1/t1JOr put tht students thr~h their pa<:U of tht adaptaion •! Shok" .t~are'1 "Taming ot Chi Shrr10 ... See toda11'1 \Veektndtr. L.M. StYll n ~llllf ' C1Hi.rftll J Cltt•!llH »Jt c ... 1(1 n (Mt•-r4 II ~-Ntllctt M llllUWl•I P•H I ·-· f 11•1 l. ...... ""9 tc...ii 11 -" ,... .. ....,.. tJ Ml.I.... • -n.., I J %"'......;.OA!=l 't"c..:.;Pl,::LO;_cT ___ N County Eyes Auto Noises On Freeway Oranae County pltiinntrs are showing k~ lnteerst in 1 recent rreeway noise test conducted by the state Division of Hig bwaya on the Artesia Freeway in Buena Park which revealed noise levels up to as declbe:ls, equivalent to the roar of a jackhammer. County planning department aides and the road commission's stall members atid the planning commission have been \vrestling with 1lmilar freeway nol.se prob- lems jn the IrvJne and El Toro areas where new housing projects are being built adjt1cent to the Santa Ana and San Diego freeways. The Board of Supervisors recently urged the planning and road department .staffs to 1peed up their at udltt and com· plete them before many new subdlvlllons now Jn the planning 11tages nre developed. County Road Com missioner Te d McConville told board members that berms or dirt and landscaping could be effective in deadening the freeway noise whi ch Is caused largely by deisel truck~. ~ Ke·sal(i..another--solutton~W11:s-11cquisi lk>n flf wider rights-of-way by the state. The Buena Park teats, conducted at the re- quest of the city council and 158 familes who live along the 2;, mile 11tretch ol the Artesla Freeway from Valley View to the Santa Ana Freeway were revealed by Bob Blocker, assistant state highway enjineer. From Page l DENSITY •.. "Thia would be a stvere reatrictlon on density since now they can build to 200 or 300 percent, dependJng on the ione," Neuhausen said. He said thet, lf adopted, the ordlnance would not only put strict limits on the aize and type of buildings which could be constructed, but would also cut the population considerably. "Overall, if the ordinance is adopted. we would see a reduction in West Newport, old Corona del Mar, Balboa Island and the Peninsula of more than 2,000 people," he said. "This reduction would be reached at the point when building under the new code had been finished." "If we cont inue w!Ut current zoning rtgulations. the population in those areas would. grow by 6,000 durlns tbe same lime span," Neuhausen added . The density issue waa brought to a head before the planners after a request v.·as made by the city council that the commlsaion schedule public hearings on a new R-11h zone strictly for Balboa Island . "Actually, the R·J i,.\i zone la a misnomer," said Newhausen. t Seen Creating Jobs Lobby Direcwr Favors Environment Proposition By CANDACE PIWl.!lON 0t 11N1 D•., l"lln Sltft Pwag• ol Proposition 9, tile Clean EnvJronme:nt Act. on the June I ballot will ('reate a lot of jobs -not destroy them -because "we 're ;isking for a new J>roduct -clean air," Ed Koupal. direc- tor of the Pe<>ple's Lobby sa id at UC Irvine Thurscbiy. speaking before a group of about 60 students gathered in campus park, Koupal aald lhe Environmental Protec- Uon Agency (EPA) list.a one million jobs waiting for those who will help clean up the atmosphere. Opponents te the proposltlon , which was put on the ballot as t111 initiative Fron• Page 1 SCHMITZ ... gra m will onJy cause the country to go further into the red, he alleged. "Whal it really is is deficit sharing.'' During a lengthy questio n and answer period the Tustin .Republican defended his votes in Congress and briefly vutlined measure with a half mWloo atinaturet, have &aid that llJ succ•u ...Wd create layof[J of workol-1 In COMtruction al1d nuclear reactor factorJu and power shortages. "Those scare tactJcs.'' Koup1l charged, ''are the same as when people were tak- lllg the 12 and 13-year-old.s out of t~ swe atshops in the 1920s and others said 1t would break the economy." Koupal , who with his wile, Joyce, founded the People'• Lobby, aald that it is now up to the public 19 do aomethJng about the air "wblch you have to chew before you inhale it" and the water "which you can almost walk on in the estuaries." Bomb Causes Flood, Loss In Pentagon his views on the following subjects: \VASHINGTO."l (AP ) -A bomb tx· Vietnam -"It ls immoral to go to war ploded in e restroom at lbe Pentagon unless YOl:I plan on wlnning. Th~ r:1les early today, blew out two interior walls we're playing by in Southeast Asia ls a and sent tons vf water from broken pipes meal(rinder war." · h ff' ~ -Id LNI---_ "' l'V'lri nr ln· gushing lhroug o JCes and a .shopping ,.-_,es en . ~--'---S.UPa<Y LL r--~~ -0 , -----ciples, not people. When J'm suppartl~g cone urse. John Ashbrook, I'm doing it for his pr1n-Shortly before the bomb exploded, the: clples. He comes closer to my ~n-radical Weatherman o rgan i :z at ion servative principles than anyone else. ' telephoned the Washington Post saying a John Birch Society -"Yes. I am a . member. If you don't know I'm a bomb had bee~ planted 1n the Pentagon. member of the John Birch Society, you 'fhe Post notified police who called the haven't read the DAILY PILOT." Pentagon minutes before the blast. United Nations -"It's a bluep rint for The \'Yeatherman outfit which also a one-world socialist system ." I d N y k ' b Vic~Presldeney -"J would not accept .ca le C~ or n~w_spapers and roa~- the nomination to run with Gov. \Vallace cast stations. said the act w.as ~n as his vice president. He is a Democrat r~spon.se to st~pped-up U.S. operations in and I'm a Republican . I'm a pilot, but not Vietnam and m ~bservance of the birth a Kamikaze " date of Ho Chi Minh. · . ft.Jal Lal .:_ "Why do we have 'such _Few work~r~ were In ~he area at t~e selective indi gnation when in the heat or ~1m.e and off1cials saJd this prevented in-- warfare such thihgs are done?' No one Juries. · talks ab6ut the Long Night of Knives ~t j'ol.lce"tided by ~ dog specially trained Hue or the crucifixion of the Catholic to sniff out explos1ves continued an ex· priests ." haustive search of the sprawling military Bombing -"The North Vietnamese headquarters complex even as the Peo- use a dredge to clear the silt from tagon's. 28,000 employes showed up for Haiphong Harbor. One humane 500-pound work six hours later. No more bombs bomb on that dredge barge would were found. humanely close that harbor." The fourth-floor women's washroom Soviet Jewry -"I'm sympathetic to was demollshed -fixtures were ahal· anyone who wants to get out of the tered, the ceiling caved in and a 2-'h-foot Russian shackles. I do not distingu ish hole blasted through the floor. The force between oppressed people under com-of the explosion blew out huge sections of munlsm ." lv.'o restroom walls, spewing pluter and Schmlt:z spent his entire day in Costa brick into the corridors. 111esa today, including appearances at a coffe e reception, the Costa Mes a Chamber of Commerce Legislative Com·. mJttee luncheon, the Bethel Towers. At 6 p.m. he will speak at the Orange County Booster Club meeting scheduled for the Newporter Inn. On the program with Schmitz are congressman Leslie Arends. Illinois, and Ag r i cu I tu re Sec retary Earl L. Butz. FrotRPfllleJ MONEY ... more thaii $500 was received or listed. Vietnam Protest Slated Saturday ' At Air Facility · - A group or UC Irvine students against the Vietnazn..War plan to join an antiwar parade on Saturday -Armed Forces Day -beginning at 11 ·a.m. at Redhill and Warner A venues in Sant.I Ana. From Pagel GHERMAN .. A UC! student 1pOkesman Thursday c-alled on students to "come to . the march, end !be war, and get our mon<y from Vietnam back here to help the en-has been active in various aocial and virorunent." ~edica1 organizations for many years. . . . He has been active with M'>untain Lake ~fter orgaruzmg at the . Manne Corp.t Development COrporation since 1965 when hehcopt« ba.se off Redhill, the llW'(h · . will procted to Mem<rial Park at Flower he also bec~e a d1ttctor of. Allergan Street and Warner Avenue in Santa Ana. Pharmaceutical. He became a director of Hallamore Homes in 1971 . He is also a director of the American Box corpora- tion, an officer of the Inland Press Corporation and In !be '81'ly 1960s served as president of the Universal Surgical Guerilla theater and antiwar speakers are scheduled there. The anti·"Arm~ Forces Day Parade" b not being planned by the UC! group, but by the. Movement for a Democratic Military, Orange Oounty Anll·lmperlalilt Organl:zatioh and Vietnam Veteran& Agaimt the War, a nationwide organiza· ti on. Supply Inc. . He was a• eaplall\ In the Clanadlan or- ficers Training (.orps in 1935 and served with the U.S. Air Force Rehabilitation Program during World War II. Planne1·s 01{ Policy On Garages Hamilton Wins Captain's Bars In Newport PD Richard Hamilton, a nine-year veteran with the Newport Beach Poli~ depart- ment, has become the youngest, ca p. tain in department history, He ls 30. The promotion of HamJlton and two other officers was announ ced Thursday by Police Chief B. J ames Giavas. Glavas also promoted Wayne CoMolly and Anthony Villa to sergeant. "In its purest fonn, it would mean one full unit could be built on the lot and one unit exactly half the floor area of the big one could be built on top, for 1 total of ISO percent of the lot area," he said. Neuhausen explained that most Balboa Island residents who were con· tacted by Councilman Paul Ryckoff said they would be willing to accept th is restriction since it would allow them lo build one full unit and anot her on top which would be 85 percent of that size. The final stop for Schmitz will be a 7 p.m. buffet supper at the home of ri1r. and Mrs. Eugene Bergeron, 2885 Europa Drive, Costa Mesa. From Pagel Phillips' list of major contributors in- cludes the Mission Viejo Company and Richard J. O'Neill's Rancho Mission Vie- jo, each giving $2,000; the CS and E Engineering firm, $1,500 !nd nine with donations of $1,000 each. These included John Klug and John R. Parker of the Orange Coast area and in- land residents Kenneth Carlson, Joseph Drown, William Kennecott, David Price, Harry Rinker, John Toups and Richard \Yeiser. Veterans who want to participate in the march are being uked to wear all or part of their uniforms. UCI antiwar spokesmen said about 3,000 people from aU over the county are expected at the march. Other prot.sts against !be Increased U.S. war Involvement are being planned in Long Beach and Torrance. AGNEW ... In the past and -although he praised Connally as a capable government -of- ficial -be appeared somewhat nettled by the questioning. Hamilton will command the depart- ment's administrative division, succeed. - lng Capt. Louis Harris, who recently took vve-r the patrol division replacing James c.. Parker, v.'ho resigned to become chief of police in Reno, Nev. "Currently, they can build to 200 per- cent of the bulldable lot area .'' Neuhausen said , "so this form of a R-l~i 1,one "'ould only be a reduction of 15 per· t:ent." Agee said lt would be a waste of effort for the commission to approve the R·l'-Ai ?.one as it is currently understood. "I "'ould be more in favore of a pure R- 111 and tight floor area restrictions on lhe second unit." he said. Commissioner Gordon Glass agreed \vlth Agee's interpretation. "l think that second unlt should be limited lo something like 800 squa re feet -like a bachelor apartment." he said. Neuhausen said today that the max· 1mum noor area ratio that currently ex- ists anyv.·here on the Island is about 181 percent. OltANGI COAST H DAILY PILOT T1'lt Or't"te C0111! OA ILY PILOT, ¥<lU'I ¥<1'1k~ h comlliltiftl ltM Nt"'l·P<~'i, 11 111.1Dli1lltd br fl'lt Of'•"'Ot CO.ti P111blblll119 C11mNnr. s~. nit t0Ulon1 a rt Pllbllal'ttd, MllMl•Y l1'1r.lu<i11 l'rldir, tor Co1r1 Mtu, ..,..,..p0,r Bt•<l'I, "111'1!1"9toft llt.cl'l/F111,m11ln VIiify, l~Ol.ln" •H()I, 1....,;,../$.lddlt~tk el'ld San c1...,.n1t/ a.n J .... l't CtDll lrlN A 1!11Qle ffil>Qn~I tialllln h PllOhlhft s.1un11n MOCll -S1.1na1~~. The "'1nei.,.I l'Ubllll'lll'lt plfnl I' .i llC WfJI .. , $1rnl, Coala Mtu, C11ir11r11l1, 1?•16. Rolll•rt N. W,M Prt1kll'fll ·~ PllDIW!tr J it~ R. Curlty Vk:t "'""ldtnl ..... C-r•I Mtn~tr Thoin•1 k••,.lf failor , 1\o'"'' A. Murp~int .._,..,.,, Edllw L '' t.r-tcritt ~ loMCll Chy r'.dl!W ......,.,. .... O"'- JJJJ N•....,.,. leel•v•Nf M.m .. Mtl,..u: P.O. a.. 1111, t2llJ 0.....- c.ll .-...: ,,. --.., ,.~ ~~:m,._,,.,......, ............ """11: 11VS .... ...,,,,..,. a.. ~; J1$ ~ El C."""'° ..._I Toi.,._ 171'1 '42 .. lll QaaJflM Afse:1 f11 64J..U71 a.'....... "11, Or.., c...r f'lllllltMlllll ~. ... ..... ..,,.,., .......... ...... --...,,.. ... .,,.,, ........... ........ ..., .................... ..c:illl ,.. ...... .., ......... . --=-·--Qll ,... •• .., urrltr a.u ......,, ..... D.U ~ll'I MIU..., ., ............. . FREEWAY ... development the state could Jose another $1 million," Wynn said. While there is no freeway agreement authoritjng the closing of any city streets signed by the city, the state docs have an adopted alignmen t for the route. But it projects an interchange with the pro- posed Pacific Coast Freeway which has a fut ure considered cloudy at best. First District Supervisorial candidate Paul Balch and Third District candidates Steven Zirschky and Salvador Savala said I.hey were unaware or the legal re· (!U irement. F'irst District candidate Wally Davis of Fountain Valley repeated HUJ's atate- ment that he had been told that con- tributions under $500 need not be reported. Sunday Special: Citizen Volunteer Fire Fighters MEN WHO SERVE -Volunteer firemen are on call 24 hours a day and, though they may find they have to temper their drinking and alter some <>ther habits, it's a great way to serve the community ... "Sunday Special.'' LINDY FLIES AGAIN -~holographs and other memorabilia recall a day when n1cn -not computers -new airplanes. \'fords and pictures remind readers of Charles Lindbergh's landing in Paris - •5 years ago to the day, FfRST LADIES -\Vomen's pages feature word-and·photo pictures of the 1\'ives of four Orange Coast ci!y mayors ... four first ladirs as diverse tis their cit ies. CONGRESSIONAL UPSET? -Featurt. Illustrated with m:ip of newly fonned 42nd Congressional District (territory in Orange and San Diego co unt ies) indic11te11 inC'rease In Democrats and the po sslhlllty of an UJ>.'tl in the race that wns supposed to be R shoo-in. WILLIAM SAROYAN -On< or California's best known authors explains "'hy It's so tough being a loner in• world ol Joiners ... Family Weekly. COMMUTERS ON CYCLES -Though the trend Is a Jong way from matching the USt of bicycles In Europe or the Far East, Orange Coast commuters are beginning to ride bikes to work more lhtsc days, especially If It's a short ride or the ollice has shower facWtles . POWER I< PEOPLE -Eddie Albert, who wilt emcee a twc>-hout debate on ProposltJon I (!luclear power plants ••· lbe =teal i.Jance), ts !eatuttd In a TV · story lbal previews !be show. TRAVEL FEATURES -Two pages of ltavtl stories and pholo117aplul prastnt Mun Ith. seen. or lhe Ol)'l!lplcs; the ms- jestic vastness of British Columbia ; a carava n in Cork, Ireland ; a kosher hotel in Israel: and an invitation to go in search of the Santa Ana River in the San Bernardino National Forest. NlXON TO MOSCOW -Color ii· Justration of the President's itinerary for his trip to Moscow, which begins this weekend, is coupled with a report.on cur- rent Russia n affairs. 'THE JAZZ SHOW' -Billy Eckstln•, as emcee of new jazz show, makes the cover and cover story or this week's 'IV WEEK. Coast Man, Gets Ter111 for Fight A man who broke a Newport Beach police officer's nose in a scufOe at the Beach Ball bar bas been sentfJIC<d to njne months in Oranae County Jan. Superior Court Judge F r a n k Domeplcbinl suspended the atate pr!IOD term he could have impoled on Ronald· Lee N•wstalet, 12, ol 111• W. Ocean Front, Newport Beach, and ploced him on five years probation. · Newstalfl' had earlier betn !oWld gullly by a llll'l' In Judi• Domenlchln!'s courtn>om ol altacklna Olll<tr Lee &berlt Jr. latl July 27 whlle ihe olll"" W&I ln ... tJcalJna & dillarbonce al the ..... Newstater wu llnal!y 11Jbdlltd.and Ill" ..,ted wl\tJl lllOlhtr officer came to !be aid of lh• lnluttd Roberil, •'-uniform WIS SO drenched With blood it WU unsalvagtable. Cabinet Post Filled SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronald Reagan has promoted the author of bis highly successful Medl..Qtl relonns to a cabinet post as secretary of the Human Rela"on.s Agency. Dr. Earl W. Brion received the appointment 'lbursday. He replaces James M. Hall, who resigned to bec&me en executive with MCA, Inc., a Unlvfl'IB! City entertainment firm. • \Vlthin minutes after Agnew spoke, the White House announced that t h e President's daughter, Tricia Nixon Cox, will participate in a "Salute to Ted Agnew" at a Baltimore theater tonight and deliver a message from Ni.Ion. On another subject, Agnew uid "we are coming out of the woods" and blun- ting the North Vietnamese offensive. Connolly, 31. who jo.ined the depart. ment in 1966 after three years with the Los Angeies Police Department, Will con- tinue his duties as watch commander in the patrol division. Villa, 27. a six-year veteran, had bee• in the detective division, but his new post will make him a field supervisor for the patrol division. Hamilton, a Costa Mesa resident, is married and has one daughter. Connolly, also of Costa Mesa, ls mar· ried and has three children. Villa, a rt!ldent of HuJ'Jtington Beach. is married and has a son . /' CHAPELLE by H ERITAGt Come , take an excursion into lo velineis • , • our wonderfully varied Chape ll • Collection of loui' XV-1tylecl table fr•asuret hy Heritage. They highlight • room -end then some! le sur• to s•• iha low, long, he1utiful 1ofe teble , ·• , not illustrated. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE KARAS TAN 7ttJ11111 INTERIORS TORRANCE LAGUNA BEACH JU·Notth Cent Hwy. '""'6551 23649 Hawthorne 81.,f. 12111 17 .. Un o,_,....., '111 t -T·--.. -~ 14 .. !Ut Pre• .. ,e .. .__ t•11a1 As ' 0'1 AID-frelll • I y • t II • • y d y ' t • • • DAD,y PJLOl' EDITORIAL PAGE Lower Budget, but • ? • • • • • The m1jor city capital Improvement projects Ne\.,. port Beach plans to accomplish next year don't shape up as anythin& exciting. Before city co un cilmen is a $1.8 mtlhon capital ~udget -the lowest in the last five years. It co ntain! little rnore than routine hou sekeeping chores. Fro m all appearances. it 's designed to keep ttiings from lallln1 apart rather than to Improve or expand on anythln1 Wt already have . The blJlesl expenditure propoud la '223,000 f111 street and alley seallnr and resurfectnc. about half cl what Public Worka Dfreclor Joseph T. Devlin re com· mended. There are no storm drain projects and little money 1$1~.000) budgeted tor unltuy aewer1 -lo refurbish a pump station. The ci ty's deteriorating \Valer mains tlhey or igin· ally \Vert built nf non·re i nfor~td CQncrttel are 101r,1 In get only no,ooo worth or work .•• the city's long·rao1e main replace"'ent proaram. \Vh lc-h admittedly rould U-'fl three or four times that amount, will fall rartl1er behind. . The biggest road project ro be paid for by tax pay· ers 1~ the extension of Universi ty Drive from MacArthur BouJe vard to Jamboree Road -$100,000 for Newport Beach's share." City Manager Robert L. Wynn has projected there will be aome $390.000 unappropriated in the capital im· provement fund -if the city gets around to selling the dump property -that could be used for a variety of ~r:oject~. , _ _ ~---_ _ • __ Wit n the poli tics of the ma tter being what they are. however , !Ui&estions that the bu\k of this mifht fin d its way ln te a braneh llbrary for \Vt.!t Niwport re not being denied around City H~ll . There is nothlnl It Ill t1rm1rked for park 1cqul· sition (and \'ery li ttle for park lmpro\'ements or bike trails) apparently because the city is hoplnc fo r pas.sage of the park bond issues June 6. AlJ in 111. I.he capital projects budaet . a~ presented, is likely to prn~oke littll' controversy \\·hen it comes Up for p11bl1c hearing on .June 12. It is very minimal. But it d oes raise the nagging riuestion of \Vh ether the ctty is keeping abreast of its needs adequat.el\', It is CISj' to postpone countless unglamorous se'-''er, waler or dra ina1e prnjet:t1,.far uample. But if they ret pul off once toa of11n , U\lrt ran be so me very ex· pea!lvt crises to dtal "1th, Odds Were Agoinst Him Abo ut !'ix months ago, someborl y came up "'Ith lhe idea of tacking a second story on ·lo the ba.dl,v over· ~Nl\\'ded Ne"•port Beach police. !l:tatlon to give the mtin Ill tin so1ne temporary breathing room \\•hile the city C'Ouncilme n try to figure out hol\' to build a \vhole ne1v police station . At that tirne ('ity hianage r Bob \\lvnn predictt'd that the simple. shell-type stl'uctu re 1vouid be ready in six months. And the cily ha ll cynics brightened 'and figured maybe he had figured out a ne1v way to beat the system, and the odds. But then came some delay by the council -which is normal. Then \vhen the bids came in last month th e lowest was a 'vhopping 30 percent above the estimate :--~§0: Qor ma}._SQ_ .twQ... \\'eeks ago the bid~. we.re __r.e- Jected by the counc1J and the process of seeking bids starts all over again -"·hich is par for the course. The time lag that seems to be buiJt into all govern· tnental processes. and having any kind of construction project. public or private. com pleted on the specified date are a tough combination to beat. N Produc~ion Speed-up Ordered Bad Habit: .We Denigrate Our Neighbors U.S. Lags in -High Missiles -. \\'ASHING TON -A speed-up ha s been ~dered on !he production of an air·to-air tnissi\e capable of zeroi ng in and destroy· ing Ru ssia's highesl·le'-'el combat plane~ -pa rticularly the supersonic M-IG-23 with a ceiling of 80.000 feet and a speed of around 2.000 n1 iles an hou r. ' Top OJ)(!raling heig ht of existin~ U.S. air-to-air missiles is 60,000 feet. ceiling of the F·4 Phantom jet -nearest combat plane this rountry nov.• has to the MI G- 2J. Significanlly. J,s.. rael also is vigorou.'° ly engaged in devel- oping an ultra-high level air-t o-air mis- file -wilh the MIG- 23 as the principal lltlmediate tsrget. Is· rael's bes t fighter-bomber ls the F-4. Early thi!I year. President Nixon author- ized the sate of 48 more of these planes to Israel. 'Ahich is no\v receiving them at the rllre of rour a mon!h. \Vhile the U.S. tind Israel are urgently pressing the production of a new air-to- air missile, they are proceeding in· dependentl y -although there is a com· mon mot ivating cause. THl!:RE HAVE been gr1vel.y di sturbing experirnce.~ with the MlG-23 in the supercharged Middle East. On four different occulona, MIG-23s based in Egypt and piklttd by Russians (ROBERT S. ALLEN) de libe rately violated Israeli air space. The Soviets sped over the coastline near Haifa and ov('r Israeli rort iried positions deep in the Sinai l,cninsula. In every in stance. lsratli Phanlorns soug ht to intercept them -but were unable to do so because their air-lo-air missiles couldn't reach them. · Flying at three times the speed of sound. lhe MIG-23s wert too fist for the somewhat slower Phantom s. Also , the latter's missiles are unable to function in the thin atmosphere above I0,000 fttl. The Soviet plane!! few at ?0,000 to ~0.000 feet. For missiles to "lock in " on them at those he ights, special gu idance and other equipment are necessary. Four MJG-2Js are known to be based in Egypt. So far. all arc piloted by Russians. There is no indic ation that Egyp tia ns are being trained int.heir use. l\fOST OF EGYPT's pilots are limited to fl yi ng r..1IG·!Ss and -17s. With a small number pilolinR MI G-11 1. The Egyptian air force is notorious for its unusually high rate Gf loss's In cra!lhes due to fault y flying and accidents. To speed up development of a ntw ultra·hlgh level air-to.air mis!lile, both the U.S. and Israel are using existing \.\'e apons as the basic missile. 1t is using SAM-2 anti-aircraft missiles captured from the Egyptians in the Sinai in the 1967 contllct. • Some 30 or these Soviet-m;ide missiles 'A'ere overrun by Israeli armored spearheads. The 1ni ssiles and their Jnobilc launchers were seized intact; abandoned by the Egyptians in their panicked rout. The SAM-2 and SAM·3 are the Russians' principal ground-to-air anti· aircraft weapons. Hundreds of these AA n1issiles are positioned on the Egypli11n side of the Suez Canal, and around Calro. Alflia:an- dria. the AS\\'an Dam and oth er major potential targets. THE U.~. Alft..TO-AJR mi!l!lile thst Is undergoing rush modification for use above 70.000 feet is aro und 14 feet in length, weighs upwards of 1.000 pounds and has a warhead of some 200 pounds of high explosives. Initial operational tests or the new missile are slated ror late this year or early next. In \Vestern milita ry term inology the J\IIG-23 is known as the Foxbat. Addendum : The U.S. is alsn engaged in de\•elnping a new reronn11lss1nce 11telllt1 with greatly improved pictorial and nther reporting capabilities. Purpo!!e of the new d!!v ice i! to provide better and f11ter pie· tures from space than are now po11lble Crom camera-carrying satellites. SYD-'1EY J . HARRIS Up \\•here I spend nly summers, el'eryone had heard the "Polish jakcs·• long bc>fore th ey became fan1ous, or in- famous. Only up there. lhey were known a!I "8elgi1.n jokes." by virtue of a larae immigrant Belgian community which provided the butt of this rustic humor. Thus has il ever been. There is no record or any culture · anywherl! that did no1 relca !le Its hostll- llieflJ 111nl'l exhibit it!! in vinrihle sense of superiority by aerirl· ing or dov.n.grading some convenient out. group. In lhe earlies t rec- ords of ancient r.r<'ece. the Boetians s erv ed as the "Poles'' or "Belgians'' for the resl of G re e c e: the name "Boetian'' became almost a syn- onym for "stupid." IA n d the firat ''b1trharian!I." of course. included all tho"e "babblers" who spoke anyt hlna but Grtek.) Let's Rewrite All History OR. Pt1ARIO Pt:J. in ''The Story of l.11 ngua Re." points out that the etir'lif'st 8l1v5 c11lled their German n'lghbors "Nemef11'' (meaning "mute'' or ''dumb "): con trariwise, the wo r d 1'sl aves " comes from Sla vs captured in battle, The ancient Chinese desig nated as ''southern barbarians'' and "miserable ones" the Miao and Moso tribes of Soulh China . SKAREWE UNIVERSITY -Siudenll • ended the ir week-old sit-in and untied Dean Homer T. Pettibone today after he promised lo di!icont inue the University's controversi11 l \\'hite Studie!I Program. The sludenls. members of a militant sroup knn\\'n as "The Wasps ," marched lllto Dean Petti- bone's office !!even d11ys ago and pr~ aented !heir non-ne. gotiable dcm1nd that the "slanted , bigoted and highly offen· Aive'' program be terminated. When Dean Petti· bone objected on the ground~ the trad.itlnnAl White Studies Pro(l;ram \Va!I as old as the university Itself, he: u·as tied to his chair. The stu- dent leader. young Wilfred Wasp. then proceederl to read aloud. for 18 hours at a stretch. all the unive rsity-approved texts en \\1hite Hi!itory. HTS \'OICE NO\V merely 8 croak, young 'i1lasp had reached the beginnings OIANOI CO.t.IT DAILY PILOT Robert N. \Vttd, Publisher Tho"1a.s Keevil, Editor A.ll~crt W. Bo tta Edllorlol l'egt l dllor The editorlll Pll,. or 1hl' Dlllty Pilot 1N!:k1 to lnlorm &nt1 ~l.imu· latr ~•df'r1 by prr1en11n r thi& nev.·sp11Pf!t'1 o,,lniont 11rld com· mrntary on lnplcs "I ln trn~&t and 1l1n!flc•F1et:. by prov dlni: • forum for th, e11:prra11on l'lf eur rtadt'rs' optnlon1, •nd by prHl'nU nJ the dh·mr vt~·point-1 or rnrormfd ob· 1trYtn ud 1pokt1mtn on toplca ol th• di)', Friday, May ID, 1872 • ( ' ART HOPPE ) of !hr U.S. involveml'nl in Vieln<tm \\•hen Df'an Pet tibone finally yielded . ''I can take no more! .. he cried. "You are right. These history t'1t1 are slanl ed, bigoted and highly orfcnslvC!, by any fair an11lysis, to the white race." A triumphlnt young Waap lo l d rtport1r1 1rte.rward that h1 had begun his rtadlnga with the hl1lory ot Alex· andet tht Great. "And why was he greal?" demanded Wasp . "Because he killed and burned and looted his way through Egypt , Asia Minor and India . 'I'm sorry I got no new worlds lo conquer,' he i;ays. Whal. kind of talk Is tha t? And from there, these \\rtllte histories are all downhill. · "LOOK AT Tlfl': ROl\1A NS. 'Veni. vidi. vlci.' th111 's th<'.r mollo . And who knocks them off? AUil ;i the Hun. Then we get a couple of ctnt urics of white !IUY!I going around burninl'!: \.\'hite guys at the st11ke. ChRrlemagne &pends 30 yea r!! slaughter· tn1 Salon•, Lbmbards and Sar11cens, so he's a hero. "Then we gel Into English hlat&ry. Who do we read about! Willillft the Con· queror .. There's a 111m1 ltw you. RleMrd the Lion·Hearttd , who goe1 llff to alrewer infidels. Henry VJJI, who cuts hl1 wi ves off short. Then the English kill a Joi or Spanlu<lo •nd u lJ off to uplolt Jndla ind half the world. "Who'• big In l'Nll•:•! N1poleon . who got maybe t1 million people dead. Who's big In Genn11ny? Frederick the Grc;it. .ilJm, too. Who'a big in Russia! Ivan the Terrible. That'1 terrible. "LOOK AT TIIES E American historie3, All they tAlk aboilt Ii bo'" lb• Whites kic.ked around OM lndlan.s. the Merica.ns, the Filipinos and enslaved the bl&Cks, .. an, rtoll, atrlhl, 1ancstm, aimiptton -wM t1eed1 tt ! ''How co1ne the "'hlles are alwa ys the bad guys? Hiller. Stalin, Mussolini -all white!!. Who assassina!ed four of our Presidents? \li'hites. Who dfopped the first atomic bomh? \Vhites. "Ta lk about slanted reporting. They don 't \\' r i I c up a \\'hite unless he's roucn. \\'hy don't they \vri1e about a dt:cent, pcace-!ov1ng "·hite v.·ho minds his own business -ooe \.\·ho '1 1 credit to his r11ce? "ll's no \.\'onder us "''hites , after reading these history texts , feel inferior ." DEAN PEITIBONI!.:. atill m1saa1tn1 his wrists, imm ediately announced the Wh!tr Studies Program would be rep\ac· ed by Black, Yellow and Brown Stui:fles Programs. "\\'e \.\-'ill go from the Zulu Kings and !heir conquests to th e Mau-Mau ," he said happily. "From C:enghis Kh an and his hordf's lo the Japanese sn(':ik attack on Pearl ~!arbor. F'rom Aztec humtin sarrificcs to the slaughter at the Alamo. "After au,·• he said with a scholarly smile. "we all ha ve a !ot to learn from the lessons of history." A coalition of angry black. yello w and bro\.\·n students promptly marched lnto Dean Pettibone's office 1nd tltd him up. Dear Gloomy Gus Sa me fJld slory, Gol a problem? Set up a new government age.ncy whelht!r It'" needf'rl nr not. Th111'1 what the League nf Wnmcn Voters of the Orange Coast "'Ould dlJ ln f)pposing Senator Carpenler 's coast.. al protection bill. -P.J.L. Tiii• ftt!V,. retttcn r.1ttl't' •ltWt. "'' llttlMtl'll'r '""' •• "'' -·-· ..... t•wt Ml ...,. It OMefrlr •u .. O.HY '11111. Bad habits, and reprehensible behavillr. are invariably ascribed to the people next door : the most fa mous example be in~ svphilis. which is called "French di sease" in Eogland. and "Engli!ih di sea.~e" in France. IT WA~ T11EIR nl'i~hbor,!;. thr En~lish. who m11 de "lo \Vcl~h .. on .=in oblig11lion t1n in.•ull lo the We lsh ~ople : li kewise, "Oulch treat" and "Dutch courage," sua· gesting that Hollanders are both slinay 11nd alcoholic. And to "Jew down .. a prlct 1uagests that Christians are above !IUCh mercantile haggling. Americans are by no means immune tn lhl! world's envy and contempt. What ~e cnJI s i m p 1 y a "confidence game" kn own to both the French and the Italians as 1·the American swindle .'' JN 11ALY , ACCORDING ln Dr. Pel, what v.·p r.:ill "Ji!:Rle-crashing" or "free- loar!i11g ." arc known tis portn2 he~lsmn . nr acting like rortugu esr. The ancient Rom.in ~ (':Jlltd du pJ·r1t.v "C.:irlhaginian 1rur;t\\nrth1ness"; and 1n German, the \\'Ord "Jlu~~lan " is synnnymous wltb "b;irtn<r'ous," and ''English education'' mc11n11 flo11:ging , Every country ha~ a rl'gion 1usu1lly the &lulhern part, which Is poortst J that the res t of the country looks down upon, or joke!! abou t. or use1 as t1 symbol for stupidity, l111lnes.s, dl1konesty or guile. It 111ms as I! we are inc1pable of ma l.,.. taltiln,( t1 good opinio n of ou riielve1 without denl11:r11tin~ our neighbors. 1 hwnan habit thal 2.000 years of Chri,. U1nity 1ttm1 to h1v-e had absolutely no effect upon. Quotes "'llJJe S!otum, MiUbr1e. 4'10" e1°Jocker -"Women of the world should alwaye remmibtr that sage and salient aaylng· 'A big man m1 y be a big m111 , but a little man Is all man !" -~--·· BOOKMAP.KS Protesters Lack Sense of History To the Editor: The Secretarv-r.rnrral nf the United Nations. Kurt ·Waldheim , has publl cly conceded th at North Vietnam invaded Sou1h Vil'lnorn . Other articles r<'por1 !hat lhi!I invasion has the :;;upport 1Jf 3,000 So- vitt technicia ns, with the gceatest selec- ti ve pl acement or military ha rdware ~in<'e World War II. So, like the "big lie -put down civil war" i n v a !I i o n of Cztchoslovakia, Hungary, etc .. we have furlher immutable evidence of the 5UC· ce111ful pl!ycho-poli tical warfare of these •111re11or nation!!. MTRANGE, THE 'Short memories of lhe1J 111011\cal tiorote1ter1 -or their ap. parent lack o[ knowledge of the satanic violation of the U.N.·Geneva Conference: by Hanoi, of their signed agreement to the maintenance of the DMZ bel\.\'PPn North and South Viet nam . Even a11 J11!e as 19fi8. Hanoi proml!lcd Presirlent John!lon that , If .,.,.e \.\'Ould stop th e bomb- ing of North Vietnam, they would stop all o[fensive aclion at the DMZ and pennil aerial reconna issance by unarmed 3ircraft to assure the U.S. against their ta klnR offensiv e 11ction against South Vietnam. Evtn with all this evidtnce of their rulhl e1~. deR enerate, repulsive. fiend ish and diabolic 1cllnn11 -why thtn, are there no prote1t1tlon1 against these fla1rant Reis of w1rfare -1lon11 with I.heir completely outrageous dl1reaard of the conventions of International Red Cm11 on the treatment o! our Prisoners of WarT IS IT BECAUSE so man y of our so- called Democratic leaders such as Musk ie. McGovern, Kennedy; Humphrey. Fulbright. Tunney and Hartke (presumed Intellectua l~ 1, by not speaking out aga in.!il these 11ttRck.~. cre:ite an altitude by llUr !Uperficial malcnntcnls that OUR COUN· TR V IS /\LWA VS \\>'RONG and v.·e should accept the humility of defeat by even a minor Communistic nati :in. 111 a11ses1 lna: these re1i1rcltllble develop.- ments. I believe thl~ 11 why 10 ma11y 1tudenl1 pr efer to ma rch a n d demonstrate oo behalf of the enemy in· 1tead of proYldinli: evidence nf their loy11ty to their own country and lhe very fr1edom1 that are denied the citizens of th11e mora lly bankrupt enemy countrit.s who would not be allowed to protest for fine minute without being jailed "r worse. One thing for sure, they have never rvid the book "Tale of a Whistl ing Shrimp'' by Vladimir "9. Cr!nioff. I Allio l"IND lt stra n~e that NOT ONE of the 127 mrm~r ~ or the United Nations -1vhn arrf'[lled fl\'f'r $1:l3 billion in t,; S. AID fun·!~ s1nre 1:'1·16-has raised a vo1re 1n thi~ illf'~at ln\·:1~1nn of South V1t'tn3m by the North Vietname!le communists. One mnre reason v.·hy the U.S. should .;:ct out of the fr iendle3s and useless United Natlon1 ! AL N. SEARES Clalro,ractor Replies To the Editor : Youf..lnled a ltller IM•ilbox, AprU 26) trom un F. Crum. M.O. Jn lhis letter pl•YI on words And 1lant.ed 1emantlc1 were ulld to miMirect the reader. If is e!fpected that a per~on holdin1 th!-hi1h office of prc.~idrnl or thf> California Medical Association \\•nuld nol resort !o writ ing steLcmcnt!; ou1 of context so a! to confu11e th~ publh· PerM~ the most cl11ssic rrror is lh11! oI •sauminR th11t the medic11l profes~l on 11 lhe sole rtpre1entalfve tlf thP ht11\lng fll'tl, Thia ls not the CA.Se. The chtrnpr-lc· Uc prOfesalon 11 r1ot 1 part ol med1 c1nr lnd neither ta osteopathy, psychology or optometry. 'T11e medJcli proftsslon c1n- MAILBOX I~ttltr1 frrrm rtoders-ore taelc&Mt. NormnUu wriier1 1l1ould convcu their '""'"aoe• fn JOO word• or l•••· TM riolit to cond•na• ltitetl to .fit rpac• or ellmfnntc lfbcl ta reacrvtd. All lti. tcr1 '""'t fnclt,dc 1lgnoture1 am( matt. it1g addr1111 .b~t1 mtJU bt wit"" heltl on f"tqih.tt if lufficient rtaatm l! nptt(lrtnt, Pottr11 will not b1 ~¥b· llthed. not dictate to those other brancbei ol the hea ling Arts. nR. CRUM SA.ID that ''chiropractor1 Arc not licensed to give med ical care'' and "Are prohlb!ttd by law from prt.,criblng drugs". The fact11 Art : chiro practors do not give medicnl care; chiropractor11 are licensed by 49 1tate1 \l h1 50t h l1 le1i1l1t1n1 now ), Before blln1 licensed In California chiropractor• niuat p1111 a thre&-day exam just aa physlcl1n!I do. Re11rdin1 dru1s, chiro practic 1d· voc1te1 minim.al drug us;ge, and then only when 1bsolutely necessary. Dr. Crum lmpUtd chiroprActor1 wished to prescrlbt. Th1y do not. Dr. Crum qu(ltes the HEW commitltJ as dlacounlln& chiropractic. T-1 • evaluating panel was set up by the med ical syndicate wilh one purpo!le in mind : defeat chiropractic In Congress. Dof'., the public realize that the medical lobby 11' the biggei:;t s pen de r ill Wash ington, D.C.? Recently at, the 56th CQnventlon ot the AflrCIO In Miami, chiropractic Cllre wal' backed and the AFL-CIO called for Congre11J1 to include It in all federal hea lth progrRm~. IT WAS fo'UHTHER &IAlt'd by· Dr. Crum that "time wasted on uules1 chlropractlc tre1tmC!nt may delay a pa· llent'a ttielnr 1 qua lified physician". Once 111Jn we see the effects of self-ap. paintrd but uninformed "1uthoritArian1 '' makin r 1lattment11 from high political positions. MOit chlroprJctlc patient• have already betn treated by two or more ''medleal 1pecl11i1L1" without re1ult.1. (More th1tn 80 percent or my pr1cttee c;ome!I from "quallfled phys icians.'') However, now In aJdltlon lo the primary complaint !he patient h11s one or two Iatrogenic {doctor cau1ed1 problems. Dru.i;i AbUsf' ii' 11 rcnl prnbl t>m 11nd the !nt :ikr of drU.':ll mu~! OE" ~lowr('f whether rrr.~rl'i~d or pu~hcd. If p;iorcnls under th"' d1rrctlon or the n1rdicnl doctor are 'l;1k1ni;: rlr11g11 rnr f'\'f'ry lilfl,. "bump" ln the road of hfe, so will their chlldren. Thfly have followed the example well! Society la toua:h ind coppln1 cul la e1sler. If mommy ind daddy do It oo will the i id1. DONALD II. SCOTT, D.C. B11 Georte ---. Out Gtor10: Whit do the serious 1dvice col- umnilta "Yo when U>1y Jnfft you face to face? ART Dear Ari : Nothing . They alwAya tW11 their b.icks on mt. CONFIDENTIAL TO G & N E HACKMAi'l llernln. of courM. What did you THINK you wtrt lookina for ~ • \ • • TIWll YOU llEL BJ BP EB "The Claamp" ~-'~ ~~ Specials Prices so · 1ow we mention them all · ed slow ope '11f•l*4P,M. .............. . , ~ .. ~ . · .. ' ·-• :BUDGET PULLMlll 3777 Vinyl by Empire FLO-TEC PUMP 397 FLO.TEC cm .Tll'FUY LlllP .1·677 . 'flGOK FOIDUE DISH 33c lCANE CUUERY IWOllTE cou ... BBICI PDELS , .... oht. 9aa MODEM NATERillL CDOJD:'I cws TllLES 9'7 • (We'd be nuts if we didn't.) TWO DAY SPECIALS Don't miss them during the show. -·Both 1nllie stores ana-tne --~-- Big Top • CISITI Pino aml FOi BOOM SCREENED JM 15777 GEllEllAL llLUMINU"' >• PRODS. 9112 CIBJI '"'TEJil""IT"'"' wuzn, SW CDDLEWU PllDllUM 11-LB. 99c . YllLEY IMPORT BIKE TIRES 169 ' , ··DORCY BILL BllDER TWllE 5 lb. 77c PAClf1CnBRE and ROPE SMOIE or 'liOLD tm MIBBoBnLE 57:11. BOID STlllED liWS PllELS SPECTllllLITE 2'd' 4'7 LMCAITEII ·--TOICI 2'' tul1l!ll POOL CARETAKER 11788 WORLD IND. PllRT COMPRESSOR ~ UllT 7777 THOMAS IND. POBCB SWllli SOLID Oll 1777 MILTON lCANE IRMSTROlli CBllfDELIER CEILJlliS 33~Q.FT. 3PATTEBNS STAllLlllE DELTA FAUCET WASHERLESS 7ee LARSEN nBE ILIRll SYSTEJI 2777 Olf OVARD COIP. JIFFY.m 4''1tl' STOUCE m 11 88 TAnOR and ASSOC. CIS •IDllJTI LOii SET .. 1997. IEU. FOUlll>ll~ Frid.lr, May 1q, 1972 DAILY PILOT 1 . .......................... . • -SHOW BOOBS I I I I I . I •• I I •••••••••••• . , NUTOIE BATH FD 677 PllE liUI CUllET BOSTOI ROCKER 1288 NORTH AMERICAN COMBDflTIOi EITBY.LOCI .•• oz. . WIJTE ,. · .CLUE . . . 47c ' ' ... .... ..,, SECUBITY SCBEEI DOOR DOUBLE EAGLE ·2477 COLUNBIA . . NAYIL JELLY 8 o:s. WOODHILL CHEM. , ' J • ~ • ,• MUMMY SLEEPING BIG 1177 WENZEL w•ttL- BIBBOW 517 KELLY TOOL COLD nrrDY 2995 JOHN STAMP ·' • / , . • .. -· ..... -··,........-· - Orange Coast J Today's .F1aa1 ' , N.Y. Steeb vor. 65. NO. 140, 4 SECTIONS, so PAGES ORANGE.. COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 19, ·1977 c TEN CENTS Office Seeliers Offer Ex cuses fo r Tardiness Developments tumbled over each other today in the conttnulng story of Orange County's campaign financial reports fiuco. Here'• what bas bappeoed in rapid fire order: -Finl DlsV!ct supervi&orial candidate John W. "Bill" Hill &a.id he had been told by the county Regt.rtrar of Voters that if there were no contributions Clf $500 or more, DO statement need be filed. Wait 'S ee n ' J!O r Ro ule Of Freeway By L PETER KRIEG Of Wit Dllltt' 11'1._,, Sf•ff -An aide to Thl:rd District SUpuvisor William J. Philllpo said simply, "we goofed" in not getUng in the list of con- tributions by. the Wednesday deadline. Phillips filed h1s list Thursday showing a Iola! of fl4,il00 In contributions. -Deputy Dlatrlct Attorney Michael CappiW said there would probably be no crim1naJ action taken against the tardy office seekers. '!The state law is unclear on the .subject and I am sure that ac- co.unt.! for the confu.sioo," Cappizz.i said. Only two of the county's 1 2 supervi.3orial candidates flied statements before tbe Wednesday deadline plus a hand!ul of other candidates. First Dlstrlcl Incumbent Roliert Battin and one or his opponents, Santa Ana altomey William Wenke, reported contributions of '25,659 and $20,800 mpectlvely. .Phillipa' most actJve o p po n e n t , Fullerton businessman RalJXi Diedrich, said he filed !\is list with the Secretary of State's office and sent a .copy to the coun- ty clerk. A county clerk aide said the candidate's list was not received Wednes- day or Thursday. Diedrich's staff reported 1 loan of $21),000 to bis drive by himself and 110,000 from LeRoy Rose of Anaheim. 1bey said no single oontrlbu\lon or more than $500 was received or listed. • Phillips' list. of major contributors in- eludes lbe ~tission Viejo Company and Richard J . O'Neill's Rancho l\lisslon Vie- jo, each giving $2.000; the CS and E Engineering firm. $1.500 and nine with donaUoM of $1,000 each. 'lbe9e Included John Klug and John R. Parker of the Orange Coast arta and in- land residents Kenneth Carlson, Joseph Drown, William Kennecott, David Prict, Harry Rinker, John Toups and Richard Weiser. First District Supervl.sorial candldate Paul Balch and Third Dlllrlct candidalu Steven Zirschky and Salvador Savala said they 'y,·ere unaware of the legal re- quirement. First DlsVlct candidate Wally Davis of Fountain Valley repejlted Hill'• state- ment that he had been told that con- tributions under $500 need not, be reported. .Connally? Never! ~-- VP Won't Be Democrat, S a ys Agnew From Wire Service1 He said Nixon was rightfully delaying a decision to detennlne what rwming mate · would be m..,t belpful to him. and added: "Mr. Connally Is just l!Ot ll" Coonally submllted hll relllgnation u Treasury secretary thla week. Ht wa1 one of tbe·Preoidenl'1 cl(Jl<ll advlafn. White }louse announced that t h e President's daughter, Tricia Nixon. Co:s:. will participate Jn . a "Salute to Ted Agnew" at a Baltimore theater tonight and deliver a message from 'Mron. Newport Beach >nd Costa Mesa will have to wait another month to find out trhere the Newport~ F~w_ay will align and what effect it might have on a planned West Newport condominimn. · WASHINGTON -Vice President Spiro T. Agnew said today be did not koow whether he would be President Nlxon '.1 running mate in November but · added that It was "totally unrealistic" to sup- pose Treasury Secretary.John B. Conna~ · J.y Wbu.Jd be accept.ible. Agnew sa id speculation about Con- nally's chances of being picked by Nixon as a running mate had been blown out of proportion by news media . On an.other subject, Acnew ll1d,_ ..... are coming out of the woods" and bltmo ting the North Vietna mese offenaive. Cali£ornia lllghy,·ay commissioners, after deliberating more than an hour and one.half, Thursday decided to delay their deci sion \Vhether or not to condemn la r¥f in Newport Beach for 'the freeway terminus. The land In question i's the potenti31 site of the 444.-llnit Robert H. Grant con- dominium project. Grant <lfflcials at- tended the meeting and said the proposed condemnation would wipe out their plans. Newport Beach p I a n n I n g com- missioners ·Thursday night delayed ap- proval of a fmal map f<lr the tract until acme deflllitive action 11 taken by the state. Newport BeaclJ City Mllllger Robert I-· W11111; who allO a-the meeting In lleddlq, Aid 11111 morslar llo tllolJl)>t the delay ""' a good thing. "I got the feeling tbat 11 lhey had voted then, tho d<dllon would have been to condelllri the land," he said. . HAI it stand!, we have 30 days to rework our positi on and confront them again at their meeting in Sacramento next month," WyM said. Wynn said Newport Beach wants a definlUon of the exact line of the freeway corridor as a guJde for further develop-- ment in bluff top area. "While we have always had a corridor route, the exact lines of freeway develop- ment have never been defined," be said, (See FREEWAY, Pa1e I) Firm's Carpeting Wasn't Garbage Somebody who may have thought he was saving 120 yards of nylon-wool carpeting from the garbage dump is sought by Costa Mesa police today in connection with 1 $500 grand theft. James D. Ray, of J . Ray Coostruction Company, 188 E. 17th St., reported the rolled rug stolen Thursday. He said the material intended for re- carpeting hi.!I ofCice 001ding bad been removed from another s t r u ct u r e , delivered and lett In the rear parking area for two days. Oflk:er Olano Camarillo said the U· pod spol was In the building'• tnsh bin area. A commercial dlspoeal firm wblch picks up the bull~'• refuse w.,, con- Mllled during the Investigation 'lbu1'3day, but noted they only come on Friday. TI!SSID OUT . ,-~~ I D&lLY PILOT l teft P .... ON CAMPAIGN <TRAIL C., II !!l•'f;lwmi~ . ., 7 l Carraway Ousted at OCC . During Talli: by Schmitz By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of Ill DflfY ''"' 5Mft , U.S. Rep. John G. Schmit. (l\.'l\Jstin) appeared at Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa this morning to discuss narcotics and "t&e debauchery of our currency" before 1 mi:s:ed audience of liberals and conservatives. The one-and-a·balf'bour presentation by the 39th District congiessman, an avowed member of the John Birch Society, was not interrupted by student protesters as had been feared, but by Schmitz' political challenger~ Earl H. Carraway, who was thrown out of the college auditorium. Carraway strode in midway during Schmitz' address and began to distribute his campaign literature, a c c u s i n g Schmitz of being "dis loyal to the Presi- dent of the United States." Asked to leave by Dean of Students Joe Kroll, the 41-year-old mortgage banker from Tustin refused until two Costa Mesa police officers ushered him out the door. Seemingly unperturbed by the Inc ident and occasional beckles from the au- dlence, Scbmlts accused tbe People's Republic of China of bein8 the ,world's main 111pplier of heroin. 11They have one mDUon acres under production .,, part ·of an official pro- gram ," the congressman claimed. He said the Mainland Chinese earn $800 million aMually from their poppy fields and quoted Chou En-Lai as saying that the best part of .the narcotics production was reserved for U.S. troops. One student later approached the rostrum and handed Schmitz a card which read, "We don't we drugs like smack (heroin) because when you'r.e stoned, you can't carry on a revolution." It was singed "Che." Turning to the nation's fiscal problems, SChmitz blasted politic ians who "believe they can vote themselves into plenty, rather than working for it." He said the government is feedin g "printing press money" into the economic system and blamed deficit !pending as the primary source of in· nation. President Nixon's revenue sharing p~ gram will only cause the country to go further into the red, be alleged. "What it really is is deficit sharing." During a lengthy question and answer period tbe Tustin Republican defended his votes in Congress and briefly outlined his views on the following subjects: Vletum -"It Is immoral to go to war (See SCllMITL, P•ge I) Land Developers Charged Goldwater's Father-i n-Law Accused by DA • Prominent Newport Beech psychialrlst- buameuman Dr. E. Mortimer Gbennan la 0ae of three men charJed Thursd>y with gr>nd tbelt and false advertising in comectioD With a Bfc Bea? Lake real utate promotion. Dr. Gherman, w-dauahter married U.S. Rep. Barry M. GoldWater Jr. (JI.Loi Anples ) two monthl ago, la lacing 10 grand theft complalnli and 59 complaiols of false •dvertlalng brought by the San Bemardino County District Allorney. Tho swllchboard at tbe Balboa Bay Club in Newport Beach where GhOrmao resides w .. under lnstructlona to hold all ·~ to tbe Gherman apartment tbia _....,..mg. Dr. Gllerman la an officer of the cor- "PGrlllm> that r•cenlly pan:hutd1he Bay Club and other BBC hOldlngs in Pllm S!rlo(.I and at C.tali!IL Ha ii allO a dittctor of Uallamore u..,,. Inc_ ol FountaJn Valloy. Sn ltnmdloo Dl!paly D!stJ\cl At- tomey Cllarles Woll; laid the charges agalnlt Gherman and lwo otben stem ·lipm the .&ale of 135 cabin slits where utilities had betn promlled, but never !J>. tlalled. Wolle said he filed the action upon complalnto from buym who had paid a .COll>blDed total ol fll mWlon !or the lotl. Dr. Ghennan II chalrnwJ ol'the boorcl of Mountain Like Development Corpora· Uon, the !inn that 10kl the property and which sharu corporate offices with lntenatlollal B>Y Clubs Inc. which ac- quired the s.y Club bol~ from Jack .Wralher last year. . Dr. Gherman ii BeCrttary·trtasure.r of IBC, the Balboa Bay Club Inc., lbe Balboa Bay Jliend Club, the Balboa Bay R&cq..t Club, the Balboa Bay DeRrt Club and tl>e'.811 Clal> Rn!ty Company. Abo' -In -1111 complaints" ..... JGb1 A. "Pit" Paltendn, an officlal of ...,,,.... Lako who -a with Dr. G11sm1D II .me.. at 1117 Walcllll ... · Drive, aDd. a man identi6eo only as J..,.. Moreland. Each was charged With 15 C0UJrta Of false and mi>leadlng ad· .. r11a1ng. Wolle said the Celllorula Department of a..J Estate began an ' lnvatliaUon of the ~acre Mountain Lalce Estates aeveral months ago llttr purchuers complaioed thal otllltJeo ...,.. oot In- stalled .. bad -advtrtiled. He &aid the &ale or the lots which 1veraged about $8,000 each In Price wa1 made between 1961 and 1971. Wolfe said Pa tterlOJI continued to sell the lots after being told to stop by the real estale department. Dr. Gherman~ who fias been a m•mb!r ol the BalbOa oay,Club tlnct 1164, alto was at one time active ln Orange C<Mm-ty'a ~.,.-matnunance pro-, .....,.. for heroin addict>. Re has acted u CIOOJUltant tn nummn1s upecitia u an ell)lrton narcotlca and (Stt GllElllWI, hp II "I don't Uffllerstand how anybody could seriously believe that a man who is registered as a Democrat in the ·middle of l.1ay ca n tufn Republican and be nominated vice president," Agnew said. Agnew talked with reJX>rters after making a 46-minuterepcrt to President Nixon on his Far Eastern visit. RtsJ>Ollding to questions about his run· ning again for vice presid"ent, Agnew said he had not been asked by the President and would not decide until invited. "It jllSt isn't In the cards. Any political pro will tell you that," he said. Agne\V said he had answered questions about his own political future many times in the past and -although he praised Connally as a capable government of- ficial -he appeared somewhat nettled, by the questioning. Within minutes after Agnew spoke, the After emerging from .Nixon's Oval Of .. fl ee. Agnew said South Vietnam i>resJ.. dent Nguyen Van Thieu and Gen. Crt>ij:thton Abrams. the U.S. commander in Vietnam, are confident the South Vlet.- namese "will hold." Agnew said he conferred for two hours with Thieu and de scribed him a1 "relax- ed and confident" and "CUily In command of the situation." •. Liner Sails . Pentagon Bomb Causes On ~cl\~d~ . ,., p 1,..,.,;i..A .· a . . 60o W l' ~ s·iill Uiiliott.bed . wuu, veS111-vys a Uj LONDON (AP) ..:. Th e Queen Elllabeth 2 and her 2;350 passengers ind crew members headed across the 'Atlantic toward Europe on schedule today. ap- parently safe i:lespite a bomb threat demandilig $350,000 ransome. But a precautionary search of th e shi p con- tinued. "We're okay, we're fine,'' a youn g woman in the crew report ed. "Everyone's drinking and dancing as usual, and I don't think there'• any danger." The ship's owners reported she was "on time and flat out.•• • Victor Matthews, chairman of CUnard, told a news conference today that he felt it safe to assume the 65 ,IJOO..ton liner car- ried no bombs. British Arm y bomb disposal experts parachuted in the Atlantic Thursday did not find the six bombs an anonymous telephorle caller In New York said had been planted aboard. Matthews disclosed that Cunard paid over $350,000 ransom money to the FBI -who, he aaid, em- bargoed all further Information orl what happened to the money. Cunard spokesman William North said in New York, however, that no ransom had been paid to the extortionist or ex- tortionists. The ransom was demanded Wednesday by an aoonymous caller who told Cunard's New York office the liner car· ried six bombs -and two accomplices ready to detonate them. ' • eM.T"PfLft • """' CHARGED IN L.l"1> DEAL Newpei-t•IH<h~ • I WASHINGTON (AP) - A bomb ex· ploded in a restroOm at tti. Pentagon early today, blew out two lnttrior· walls ,..and sent tons of water from broken pipes gushing through ofrlces and a shopping concourse. Shortly before the bomb e.tploded, the rad ical Weathennan organ J z a t ion Vi sit to Drug Offender's Home Tri ggers Raid A rou tine vi.!ilt to 1 convicted drug of- fender 's home led Costa Mesa detectives to return with a search warrant early to- day and raid an alleged counterfeit driver's license laboratory. Investigators arrested 11ix persons on multiple charges and seiud material in- cluding photographic equipment , darkroom suppUes and n u m e r o u s California driver's licente forms. Principal suspect picked up about 1 a.m. today was Jef[rey A. Baker, 28,~of 3007 Royce Lane, wh«e the group In- cluding one 17-year-old girl was arrested. Baker was booked on iusplcion of con- spiracy, driver's liei!Me forger y• possession of teargas, possession of mari- juana and being in a place where mari- juana is being u3ee:I. Police said narcotlc1 detectives Bob Lennert and George Webster went to Baker's home Wednesday to serve his registration papers as a convict ed narcotic!! offender. Checking the premises the pair alleged- ly confiscated an illegal spray can llf teargas and obtained ari arrest wa1Tant Jater. Returning to arrest Baker late Thurs· day night, the suspicious raiders called J-farbor Judicial Di.strict Court Judge Calvin P. Schmidt and obtained 1 search watTant for any additional evideoct. A recent law change allows issuance of "a ae#Ch warrant by a judge 24 hours a day uppn verbal evidence offered by pollca when there la no time to aubmit wrtlteucharges. Once Inside, del«tlvet claim they ...Ued marijuana >nd found two diottUes leading to the additional cbe.r1a of i>03seS1lon of marijuana and bdnilpruent where It 11 used . Mfchael L. Llewellyn, 21, and Thomas C. Ekltrum. 13. both of the Royce Lane eddrt11. v.·ere arruted and booked on .U.splcton of conspiracy, driver's Uctnse forgery and marijuana cMrges. Kenneth A. Wlll, 21. of 7310 W. Ocean- front, Newport Beach. Gall I~. FerrucCI, 21, a tnmitnt visitor. and tht juvenile girl wert charged only on marl)uana . -I>etecrtives uid driver'• lice'l\lel they ---made out to oeveral dllferent lndlvlduall. telephoned the Washington Poat Hying a bomb had betD I!llJited hi the l'ellafoa. The Post noUfied pollct who called Ibo Pentogon mlnutea befor. the bl11l. The Weatherman outllt, whlch also called New York new spa per• and broad: cast stallons, said the act was in responae to stepped-up U.S. operations in Vietnam and in observanet! or the birth date of Ho .. Chi Minh. Few workers were in the area at tht time and officials ukl this prevented in- jurlea. Police aided by a dog 1peclally trained to miff out nploslves continued an e1- haustlve search of the 1prawllng mllltlry headquarte:r1 compler even as the Pen- tagon's 28,000 employes showed up for work sir hours later. No more bomb1 were found. The Jourth-noor women's wa shroom was demolished -fixt ures were shat· tered, the ceiling caved in and a 21h-foot hole blasted through the floor . The rorct of the ex plosio n blew out huge sections of two restroom wall!, spewing plaster and brick Into the corridor&. Most of the damage from the blast wat confined to the bathroom area, but 1h1t- tered plumblng aprayed thousands of gallont of water into the pass1geway1. The water seeped into offices below, cauaed IOIJle damage to the Air Force computer Center and lay aniledeep on tbe shopping concoune three filgbll down. Orange Wencher Look ror a wet weekend along the Orange coast, with 70 percent chance of showers tonight and Sat- urday. The weatherman aays highs will be In the upper 50'1 at the beach and 60 inlJuid. INSIDE TODAY UC lnrln4 Fini Arll D<an Clavton Ganilon dir<Cll Col• Porter's mwieol HK ( 11 Ale, KaU." Slaff "r II 1 r G<..-ge .Wkial wtcM1 tM profc11or put the 1tudnzt1· through thtfr pacu of lhe adaplalon of Shokt- speart'• "Taming of the Shrew."' Stt 1oda11'1 Wttktndtr. l .M. kyf JI INllllt t C•llftrftl1 I ci.uu1n .... Cltfllk• n Ctt,iwtnl n a.1111 H•llfft lt l:lllltf'lll ,... • 'IMl!c• ll•IJ ,., rtt .M.,.. tt -" """" u.liw• 'I _ ... -~Mt tNt , • 2 DAILY ~llOl F~llay, Mn 19, 1972 Chief Glavas Leads Attacl{ on Methadone Unit The Ollabllallment o/ a melbadone dllllc for the trutmtnt of h<ro1n addlcta -e., llltroorial lfolpllal today drew critkmn from Newport Beach Police OJ~f B. James Glavas. "The experience "''hich law en· forument qencles have had whh tbtse d1rJa in the county thu!i far has not been one to inspire confidence in their ad- ministration.'' Ghtvas said. Sgt. L<o Konkel. head of the department's narcotics squad. said the clinic wW attract heroin addicts to the Ntwport Beach area. "Eslablltbment of a methadone clinic 1n the are.a could encourage pallt:oll and potential patients to Uve in the area /' Konkel said. He oald there are fewer than 10 known addlcta In Nowport B<ach to- day. The statement was literally laughed at by Saul Stolzbtrg, director or the county's P..1ethadone Maintenance program , whic h now operates a clinic in Santa Ana. 'If you're wonderlng why l'rn laughing," Stolzberg said, ''I've got a pin map in my office that locates kn01tn users, that's why." Konkel did not mean his statement as a Joke. "Over the put olne years Newport Beach police have arrested rJ perlOnl for heroin violations (an average of three per )'llf), Currently 1 am 1war1 of only one htroln addict ln our communJty and \\'oujd estimate that there are less than 1() persons using heroin In Newport Beach." Konkel said that is due to three things. -"Good ttree! enforttment by the Patrol Division. -"Strong emphasis of identification of suspects and the suppression ol heroin by the NarcoUcs section. -Heroin users tend to congregate in •9' Seen Creati11g Jobs Lobby Director Favors Environment Proposition By CANDACE PEARSON Of fM D•llY Pli.t ti•" Passage of Proposition 9, the Clean Environment Act, on the June 6 ballot wiJJ create a lot of jobs -not destroy * * * 'Bait Economy' them -be<:ause •1we're asking for a new product -clean air," Ed Koupal, direc- tor of the People's Lobby said at UC lrvine Thursday. Speaking before a group of about 60 students gathered In campus park, Koupal said the Environmental Protec- tion Agency (EPA) lists one million jobs waiting for those who will help clean up the atmosphere. Opponents to the proposlUon. which was put on the baUot as an initiative measure with a half million signatures, have said that its success would create layoffs ot workers in construction and nuclear reactor factories and power clou pro>in!lly of ••ch otbtr ...... be clooe la their potential 1Uppllen. The absence of hetoln addicts usually creat~ 1 further absence." City Manager Robert L. \Vynn said this momlng he Intends to bring the matter up before city councllmtn Monday af· ternoon. The clinic, wblch teclmlcally Is In unin- corporated county territory at 14.41 Superior Avenue, is acrocs U\e . street from the city Jim.its. It opened !&st week. Stolzberg this morning said be had been meeting wUh Costa Mesa Police dlltl Roctr Nelh during planoillg stages bul had not conlacted Newport Beach police. "Until the day before yesterday I thought the area only afft.-cted"""'Costa Mesa, 11 StoUberg maintained. He .said, on the other band, Newport Beac1rpolice never contacted him, either. "1 didn't ~ven get a tel,pbone call before they filed that report," he claimed. Konkel was adamant In his fears over the clinic, however. "Aasumlng that all of these hew patient residents would remain clean -although iUCb an assumption Is likely Invalid - but asserting the best conditions, we can expect a.n inOux of patient associates who will be contributing both to lhe increase of heroin in .the area and the increa se of crimes by whic h addicts supt)Ort their habits," Konkel said. Stolzberg said th~re are less than 30 patients under treatment at the Harbor Area clinic now, but said It wa! ('Stablish· ed there "to get close to the patients." It is staffed b:i four full-time mental health workers, a full-time nurse, two partplll?lf! nurses and a part-time psychiatri:IL Coast Route 'Dead' Road Chief Says No More Freeways in County Area Envirorunent.a1 pressure groups are ''High volwne public transportation preventing construction of urgently need-\1:ould have a dramatic effect on growth ed freeways and other Orange County in this area, we could expect to see it skyrocket. This area would become roadways, Ted McConville, county road Manhattan-like," McConvil!e said . commissioner, told businessmen from the He said that due to the hold·up of con· El Toro and Sadd.Jeback ar.ea Thursday. struction of Orange County freeways , on. ewport CliamlJer Told Proposition 'Disastrous' -.--shortages .. -----------·-speililng liefore 8coriitiiDed meetrngor-ram1l.,lleteting-eystems-will-be-initiattd · If 1 clean air proposlUon on the June e primary ballot .,....., the economic results in California would be dlJl1trotJJ, the Newport Harbor Chamber of Com- merce Marine Division was told Thurs· day. "If approved, Propoaltlon I would go Into effect the no:t day and the economy of thil 1tate would ,ll'lnd to a halt," said Tbomu ·Eliott, a spokesman for Callfor- nlans Against Propoalllon I. Eliott told the chamber members what the propoallion would limit. "Jt would put severe re1lriction1 on dl.,.I fuel, gaaollne. oil drilling, and nuclear power plants," Eliott said. He said the latter restriction. which would put a five-year moratorium on nuclear plant construction, is self dcleating. "Wben this state begins having lhe Vietnam Protest Slated Sall1rday At Air Facility A group of UC Irvine students aaalnat the Vietnam War plan lo join an antiwar parade on Saturday -Armed Forces Day, -beginning at ll a.m. at Redh ill and Warner Avenues in Santa Ane. A UCJ student spokesman Thursday called on students to "come to the march. end the war. and gtt our money from Vietnam back here to help the en· vlronment." After organizing at the Marine Corps helicopter base off Redhill, the march will proceed to Memorial Park at Flower Street and Warner Avenue in Santa Ana. Guerilla theater and antiwar speakers are scheduled there. The anti-"Armed Fortts Day Parade'' is' not being planned by the UCI group, but by the Movement for a Democratic Military, Orange County Anti-Jmperlallst Organization and Vietnam Vettrans Against the War, a nationwide organiu· tion . Veterans who want to participate in the march ere being asked to wtar all or part of their uniforms. UC( antiwar SJXlkesmen said about 3,000 people from all over the county are expected at the march. other protests again.!f. the increased U.S. war Involvement are being planned in Lon~ Beach nnd 'l'orranre. OU.N•I COAST CM DAILY PILOT TM Of'll'ltt CO.it OAtLY 1'1LOT, wlm Wltjc\ 1, coml>ln.W ""' ,,. • ...,.,.,,,,, " ,.,..,11.,.,... lrt IM Of•llCI• c~11 l"vbll1,.1"0 Como.nr. S.pe· r•te H ltklnl ''' r•ubl!•llfd, MCW'ldtv tlll'Ol/th ,rid1y, 'for (OJI• M"'· NtWPOfl ,.,.ell. Hvn tlnci k>n Ata.:1111'°""''"' V1u,v L1oun1 A••rll, l~ln•l$1ddllll:>ldl; al1CI Si n Cl.enwnl•f $1n JVlfl (lplth"•ne. A •h">OI• rt0lotl•I O'llllio<o !~ IOIAl!ltlllo:l ltilt.lrdl.,. •nd Sunihyi. Tn• (ll'l•tt:l,..t Pllll!ltM•>t ltltnl b 11 UI W!'>! 1!•'1 Srl'ffl, Cotl• M,.., Clllfor"tlll, tn:t. ll:oh•rt N. w,,~ l'r.,.lcknt •nd Pllbl~ J,tk 11:. C1o1r),., V•(' ,., .. loiltnt •rMI Gt<Mnl1 M1n10tr Thom•t IC,,,jl fdli.t" lh•111 •J A. Mvrphl11• MIMllrlt Edilol' c;,,,1,, H. leot "-lch•r4 '· N•ll AullJt.,.,I MMttloll llfl..,_ ' c.... ... Offtt. JJO W•tt l•y Sfof,1t #iil1;1l111 M'r•11: P.O. le• 1160, 92616 --,,...,.,. l#OI: DP ........,, lelll"'9f'f L...-a.di: ID .._I.A~ """'"""" ~: 1~ ~ ............. ~ (.IMlllt!Nl m ....,. 11 ClfnlN lHI 7"-1110 '4J-4U1 Cf1111W Mwt1 I I '41·1611 °"1"'ltlit. tm, ~ Phf P\M--CWn!MflJ. .... ... ...-llnatt'I'*"' .-1_.... """"" r ......,.~ ..,. '""'" .. ••••UC>M ......,. ---· ,.,.. mtutMel ~ ...... MciMf t»lll .. , ... _, .. C.fl ..... Ct~lt. Mtwlllntn '1 ""W d.tl "'°""'i.J .,, 1M11 tJ.11 rMlllfhlY J ""*"" *'llMllMt UM ..,..I'll'• blackouts and brownouts predicted by 1974, there will be no choice but to beef up the fossil fuel facilities that are our biggest pollution problem,n he said. Eliott also said that a restriction which wouJd drastically cut .sulphur jn diesel fuel could bring to a halt all truck and train traffic in the state. "The damage to retail sales outfits would be incredible if that happened," Eliott said. Eliott stressed that once the proposition is approved, the legislature's hands are tied. "They cannot weaken the bill, only strengthen it." he said. "'Eliott acknowledged serious 'pollution problems in the country but said that they cannot be effectively o r economically solved overnight. "Even the c<1nservation groups realize this measure is not the correct answer." Eliott said. •re said thl! Sierra Club, which had been expected to jump on the bandwagon, has neither endorsed no rejected the prop- o~ltlon. "Several other responsible conservation groups have already opposed Proposition 9," he said. "Unlestwe defeat it, it could take years o! initiative processes lo change it agaln." Eliott said the biggest problem his group Is ha ving is convincing the average voter to decide against the measure. Fro111 Page 1 FREEWAY ... "'1:e are hoplng that the delay will also give the commission a chance to redefine the lines and tell us exactly where they are." Wynn said at least one highway com· missioner. Vernon Christina of Santa Clara. thought the state should acquire nolhing more in Ne\\·port Beach but rather concentrate on other areas of need. State Public Works Director James A. "Those scare tactics," Koupal charged, 11are the same as when people wen! tak· Ing the 12 and ta.year-olds out of the sweatshops in the 1920s and others said it would break the economy." KoupaJ, who with his wife, Joyce, rounded the People's Lobby, said that it is now up to the public to do something about the air "which you have to chew before you inhale it" and the water "which you can almost walk on in the estuaries.'' State Jeglslators won't act to save the environme_nt, ~ conte!Wfed, because "the boys who give theln campaign funds don 't want it that way." Basically, the Clean Environment Act would : ' -Ban off.shore oil drilling but allow present rigs to remain and lvould allow on-shore slant drilling. -Phase out leaded fuel by Jan. 1.1976. -Assess polluters .4 percent of the previous year's gross business everyday they are charged with polluting. If they stop polluting they would get 75 percent of the rnoney back. -Ban the sale of DDT, ODE, other in· secticides and chemical defoliants. -Place a five-year moratorium on the construction of nuclear power plants. The latter is one of the most coa. froversial sections, because opponents say such action would cause power shortages. Koupal ans\vered that "there is a 21 percent power surplus in California now. We will need more power in the Mure but not right away." He said the five-year period la needed to study the plants because they have had problems. Completion of those plants under construction now or manufacture of nuclear parts for export would not be forbidden. The act also would force reduction of the sulphur content in diesel fuel , a re- quirement whi ch truckers have said v.•ould cause tremendous lay-offs. Fro111 Page 1 SCHMITZ ... unless you plan on winning. The rules we're playing by in Southeas.t Asia is a n1eatgrinder war." SERVICES HELD TODAY Donald L.J. Smith Donald Smith, Vic tim of MD, Last Rites Held Funeral services were held today for longtime Costa Mesa accountant Donald L. J. Smith, who lived longer as a muscular dystrophy victim than any other ,in county history. The wheelchair patient who died Tues- day fought a 55-year battle against the hereditary disease which causes prog· ressive rnmcle deterioration Jeading to death . He was 68 and the malady was disgnos- ed when be was 13 years old', according to ' < -the OrlUln Collnly MlllClilar Dystrophy Association. Rites for ~tr. Smith were held at 2 p.m. in Westcliff Chapel Mortuary. Survivors include his wife Lois, his mother, Mrs. Marie Smltb cf Ntwport Beach, plus sistes Mrs. Florence Martin, also of Newport Beach, and Mrs. John Norek of Costa Mesa. Finance Fir1n Robbed the Exchange Club of Saddleback Valley in the county this year in the area around Buena Park, and he expected the meter· and the Saddleback . Valle~ Cham~r ~f ing systenl to expand throughout the Commerce, McConville said that 1n hlS county within two or three years. opinion, this pressure meant that no The ramp metering system already in more freeways would be built in Orange effect in Los Angeles places stop lights on County rhe entrances to the freeways and \then . • . traffic volume on the roadway becomes This includes the Coast Freeway, which heavy cuts ofl free access to the McCooville saJd w.~ ''.dead." He said that freew~y. _ it looked aa 1f wiiierung and reeonstruc· Asked by a member of the audience lion of existing six-lane freeways would where the people go who can't get on the be the only additions to the present freeway, McConville shrugged his art.rial traffic sy!lem. shoulders and uid "lhey'll just have to The road commissioner said that there go some other way." · ' apj?fsred to be a conflict in the philosophies of the enviro entally outspoken who on one hand · e a Frona Page ] stabilized Orange County Population between 2.5 to 3 million by 1980 and on HERMAN the other wish for high-volume public • • transportation. Campus Calls Police SAN DEIGO (AP) -An anlhvar demonstration at San Diego State College brought helmeted police on campus to prevent what action President Donald E. Walker felt was the possibility of prop- ert:v damage. The officers and about 200 demonstrators faced off for tin·o and a half hours outside lhe Administration Building Thursday, but there were few problems and no arrests. P o I i c e estimated that 1,500 persons watched the confront.a~\ has been active in various social and medical organizations for many years. He has been active with M 1untain Lake Development Corporation since 1965 when he also became~ a director of Allergan Pharmaceutical. He became a director ol Hallamore Homes in 1971. He is also a director of the American Box Corpora- tion, an officer of the Inland Press Corporation and in the early 1960s served as president of lhe Universal Surgical Supply Inc. Jte was a captain In the Canadian Of- ficers Training Corps in 1935 and served with lhe U.S. Air Force Rehabilitation Program during World War Il. W aterbedtime 'Wally Weirdo' Stretching Out • .,.His name is Wally, he's 19. from Costa \Villiam l\fiddleton. manager of the Mesa. and proud of being weird. Waterbed Warehous~n Garden Grove And this weekend Wally "The Weirdo" \\'here the stunt is being performed. P.1cDonald is attempting one of the wierdest stunts in his weird career_ the Middleton sajd Wall y will not be allow· \vorld's first waterbed sleeping record. ed off the waterbed at any time. An armed robber held up employes of ?ifcDonald, 3024 Grant Ave., stepped on "That's the hard pa11," he said. "And Budget Finance Company, 2035 N. Main !he \vaterbed at noon today and will try we're going to try to entice him cff the St., Santa Ana, Thursday, afternoon and to remain there for the next 48 hours. bed with drinks . women, or whatever." escaped with $434. The bandit ordered "If \Vally can indeed remain on the Wally is a popular voice on Orange employes to lay on the floor as he mattress for 48 hours straight, we will County and Los Angeles radio stations contact the: publishers of the Gulness and last year captured the Orange CouD- escaped through a rear door of the office, World .Book of Records and request ty Advertising Club's best radio com. Moe sUpJXlrled the condemnation action, Wynn said. President Nls:on -"I support prin· ciples. not people. When I'm supporting John Ashbrook, I'm doing it for bls prin- ciples. He comes closer to thy con- servative principles than anyone else." palice reported. authentication ol his feat," s a id mercial of the year award. ~~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~--=-~~~~~- "~1oe said that if the state doesn't pro- ceed now and we go ahead with our development the state could lose another $1 mlllion." Wynn said. While there is no freeway agreement authorizing the closing of any city streets slgned by the city, the state does have an adopted alignment for the route. But it projects an inter change with the pro- posed Pacifii:: Coast Freeway which has a future considered cloudy at best. John Birch Society -"Yes, I am a member. If you don 't know l'm a member of the John Birch Society, you haven't read the DAILY PILOT." UnJted NatloDs -"It's a blueprint for a ov~e-wporld.dsocialist ~ystem1.d" I , ice-res1 ency -' I wou not accept I the nomination to run with Gov. Wallace as bis vice president. He .is a Democrat and I'm a Republican . rm a pilot, but not a Kamikaze." Sunday Special: Citizen Volu11tee1· Fire Fighters ~tEN \VHO SERVE -Volunteer fi re.men are on call 24 hours a day and, though they may find they hrire to temper thelr drinking and altl,'r some ot her habits, it's a great v.·ay to serrr the L'Ommunlty ... "Sunday Special ." LINDY FLIES AGAIN -Photographs and other memorabilia recall a day vd1en men -not computers -· ne\v airplanes. \Vords and pictures remind readers of Charles Lindbergh's landing in Paris - 45 years ago to the day. FIRST LADIES · -Women 's pages feature word-and-photo pictures <Jf the \\'ives of four Orange coast city mayors ... four first ladles as diverse as their cities. CONGRESSIONAL UPSET! -Feature illustra.ted wllh map of newly fonned 42nd Congressional District (territory in Ortn,e and San Diego countlts) indica lt.s lncrtase in Democrall and th possibility of an upstt in the race that was supposed to be • •boo-In. WILLIAM SAROV AN -One of • Callfomla's best known authots explains why It's ao tough be.Ing a loner In a world or joinert •.. Family Wctkly. 1 COMMUTERS ON CYCLES -Though the trend Is a Jong way from matching the use of bicycles ln Europe or the Far East, Orange Coast commuters are beginning lo ride bikes to work more these days, especia\lv U It's a short ride or the office has sho"'tr facilities. POWER & PEOPLE -Eddie Albert. who will emcee a two-hour debate on , Proposition 9 {nuclear pOWer plants vs. the ecological balan.ce), is fe11tured In 1 TV WEEK story that previews the show. TRAVEL FEATURES -Two pages of travel stories and photographs present Munich. scene of the OIJ'mplcs: the m• jestlc vastness of BrltWI Columbia; a caravan In Cork, Ire1andi 1 .-oaher hotel tn Israel: ond an lnv!lilloa to go In seatth of lhe Sanla Ana RIV.. In lhe Sill Bemanllno Na"onal Forolt. NIXON TO MOSOOW -Color Il- lustration of t!>e Presldenl'• lllntrary for h!J trip to Moscow,-wlllch begins lh1I wttkend, Is couoled 1'1111 a nport on cur- ,..,,1 Russian a!lairs. 'TllB JAU. SHOW' -11J11J EcUtloe, as tmcee of new jm abQ•, mates the caver and co.er story of lh1J wtU't TV WEEK. ( DEALERS FOR: HE 1 2 a a • CHAPELLE • by H ERITAGt Come, ta~• an excur1ion inte> lov1line1 1 , • . our wonderfully varied Chapelle Collaction of Louis XV-1tylad table tr1e1ure1 by t4erit191. Thay hi9hli9ht • room -ind then some! Be sura to tte the low, lon9, be1utiful 1of1 table ••• not illu1tr1ted. EU EDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE -KARASTAN INTERIORS LAGUNA BEACH 34.S North Coast Hwy. 494-4551 TORRANCE 23649 Hawthorne Blvd. tJt 11 .... ,., • .,,.. -'ltl • _, .. __ "°'-C:-. -12'1 . ............................. I ••••• , •• Allt-MSID NEWPORT BU.CH 1727 WH!cllfl Drv 642-2050 Ofllf NIU.Y 'TIL t ' ' ., • a D A.RY PU..OT E D JTORIA.L PA.GE Residenc y Requirement ----A new residen cy requirement for Costa Mesa plan· nlng commissioners bu stirred up a great deal of con· lroversy v.1hi ch this v.•eek teetered on the brink of· court action· against the city coun cil. termine v.·hether or not the person la qualified during interv1e\\'S, It would be prudent for the couneU to abaodon th.is requirement rathet tba.n bother Y:itb a court test wh lc h it \vould probably lose. if one is to judge by recent ju dicial decisions liberalizing residency require- ments for most public offices. To insu re a field of \l.1ell·quaJified candidates for Commissioner John Leonhardt 's vaCant seat, Mayor Jack Hammett th is year drafted a ''job description" !or tho ~~~~elude• the roqutremen;s or proved involvement Planning for the Future in civic actlvltles, thorou1h knowlod11 of civic af!ain If Costa Mesa Is Rnlna to be ' better nty than it -and 1 flve·year re!lldency in the clty. b. it• O\Vn citizen!! oulht to be having a strong er voice Hammett '• intent \\'A! admirable and fnrthrl1ht. He tn saying \\'hat they want and when the y ,.,,ant It. \vanted ca ndidates who not only under~tood the com· Such voices ton 1eldom are raised in this rommun· plexities of planning commission work but who also had ity and t'he city council Is long overdue in stirring up the background to ma~ rational decisions. some enthusiasm along these Jines. Although Leonhardt is likely to be reappointed. It Enthusiasm to establish a citizens Cflm mittee which cannot be as~umed the new rules were dratted to keep would set goals for the Ci ty of Costa Mesa 11ppe1rs to him In the plannln& comrnlssion seal In fact, Hammett be on the upswing. searched far and wide for as many qualified tandid1t1s Formation of such a group \\•as one of the key rec· as he could muster. ommendallons last !all by the Cost a Mesa City Charter But the five·year residency requirement does seem Study Committee but no acti on \vas taken in that dlrec- somewhat unreasonable. Mrs. Myra Kirschenba'um, who tion by the city council. threatened to go to court over it, has some good argu· City Manager Fred Sorsabal. however. pointed out ments to back up that contention. lo Costa '.f.1esa·CH.<\.RT members this week that the new· For example. it was possible for her to _enter the ly reorganized council may v.1ell appoint such 1 commit· April 11 city council race and seek a mu ch more respon· tee before August. sible public office than that of planning commissioner. Sorsabal pointed out that there are several areas But since she has I iv e d in Costa Mesa for only 18 of concern in Costa h-1esa -among them 101J.•·incom1 months, she is ineligible to sit on the commission under housing, poverty, cultural improvement. and tran11por- -----ihe-curnn·tTni-e. . ----..----tetion---that the group-may-wis.h-l·o-1*k le.- The contradiction is further illustrated by the fact For the past 18 yea rs Costa ~1esa has ha·d its hands that mo11t Orange County cities do not have such re· full in. providing it s residents \\'ith the basics for any quiremenl.c;. In only a few cases, a one to twc>year res· ne\vly·tncorporated and rapidly·growing ci ty -streets, idency is required. drainage. police and fire service and such. About the only requirements that are necessary ' Some of these energies should no\v be c1iv erted are that candidates be of age and residents of Costa """1'i1to planning for the future. A series of specific, yet Mesa . No others are needed since the council can de-flexible goals would be of great assistance. Produc!tion Speed-up Ordered U.S. Lags in ,H_igh ~issiles \\'ASHING TON -A speed-up has been ordered on the production of an air·te>-air missile capable of zeroing in and destroy· ing Russia's highest-lc\·el combat planes -particularly the superso nic l\11G-23 wit h a ceiling of 80,000 feet and a speed of around 2.000 n1 iles an hour. Top operating height of e:ii;isting U.S. air·to-air missiles is 60,000 feet , ceiling or the F-4 Phantom jet -nearest combat plane this coun try nov.• has to the MIG; 23. Significantly. ls· rael also is vigorous- ly engaged in devel- oping an ultra·high level air·to-air mis· sile -with thir·MJG- 23 as the principal unmediate target. Is- rael's best fighter.bomber is the F-4. Early lhis year, President Ni:ii;on author· ized rhe sale of ~8 more or these planes lo Israel. v.·hich is no"' receiving them at !he r11te nf four a month. While the U.S. and Israel are urgently pressing the production of a new air-to. air missile, they are proceed ing in· dependently -althoug h there is a com· mon motivating cause. THt:RE HA VE been gravely disturbing experiences with the MIG-23 In the supercharged Middle East On four different occasions , MJG-2."ls based in Egypt and piloted by Russians (ROBERT S. ALLEN) dcllberatcly \'io\atcd Israeli air ;;pace. The Sovlels sped over the co;ist\inc near Ha ifa and over Israeli fortified positions deep In the Sinai Peninsula. In every instance, Israeli PhantMls sought to Intercept them -but were unable to do so because their alr·to-air missiles couldn't reach them. Flying at three t imes the speed or gound . the MIG·23s were too flst /or the somewhat slower Phantoms. Al!O, the latter's miss.Hes are wiable to function In the thin atmosphere above 80,000 fMt. 'T'be Soviet planes few lit 70.000 to 80,000 feet. For missiles to "lock in " on them at those heights. special guidance and other equipment are necessary. Four MIG·2Js are known to be based in Egypt. So far . all are pilnted by Russians. There is no indication that Egyptians are being trained in their use. rtfOST OF EGYPT:s pilots are limited to flying MIG·15s and ·17s. With a small number pilotin1 MIG-JI!. The E1yptian air force is notorious for its unusually high rate of losses th craahes due to faulty flying and accidents. To speed up development of a new uUra·bli;h level air-to-air missile, both the ll.S. and Israel are using existi!ig weapons as the basic missil e. ll is usinj!'. SAM·2 an1i·aircraft missiles captured from the Egyptians in the Sinai in the 1967 conflict. Some 30 of these Soviel·m::ide missiles were overrun by Israeli armored spearheads. ·rhe 1nissiles and their mobile launchers were seized intact; abandoned by the Egyptians in their panicked rout. -The SAM·2 and SAl\.t-3 are the Russians' principal ground·to-air anti· aircraft weapons. Hundred s of these AA missiles are positioned on the Egyptian side or the Suez Canal, and llround. CaJrn, Ale1111· dria. the Aswan Dam and other major Potential targets. THE U.~. AlR·TO.AJR missile that i!I undergoinA rush modifi cation for use above 70,000 feet is Rround 14 feet in length. we ighs upwa rds or 1.000 pounds and has a warhead of some 200 pounds o( high explosives. Init ial operational tests of the new missile are sl ated fo r late this year or early next. Jn Western military terminology the J\.1IG-23 is known as the fo'ox bat. Addendum : The U.S. is also engaged in developinf a new reconn1ls1ance satellltf! with grea ly improved pictorial and other reporting capabilities. Purpose of tht new device l.! to provide better and faater p\c. tures from space than are no.w possible from camera·carrying satellitell. Let's Rewrite All History SKARE\VE UNIVERSJ TY -Students ertded their week~!d sit·in a.nd untied Dean Homer T. Pettibone toda y after he promised to discontinuP. the University's controversial \Vhite Studies Program. The students. members of a militant group kno11·n as .. The Wasps," marched lnto Dean Petti- bone's office aeven da ys ago and pre- sented their non-ne - gotiable demand th11t the "slanted . bigoted and hig hly offen· sh•e" program be tenninated . When Dean Petti· bone objected on the (!'.rounds the traditional White Studies Program 11'as a:1 old as the universi ty ' itself, he \\'BS tied 10 his chair .... The s1u· c1ent leader. young \Vilfred Wasp. then proceeded to read aloud, for 18 hours 111 R stretch. al! the univcrsily-approved texts on \\'hite Histo ry. IDS VOICE NO\V merely a croak. young \\'asp had reached the beginni ngs DAILY PILOT Robert N. Wttd, Pttbli.thtr rnowrOJ Krtt.1i/, Editor A!bc;rc \\I, Botea editorial Ptg• 'dilor The cditorltl Plllft or tM Dally Pllol s('eltl to lfttnrm And 1 ~imu· l&tt rt•drr1 bf pr,.~enllng \his n~·spAptr'1 orJ nion1 And com· ml"ntAry on topic• ot lntt"ret:t A.nd 1lr;nlriCanct, by pro\•ld lnt 1 forum for the e11p"'11lnn of Ollr ~1d.,r1' opinionL attd by prestnUnt tM d1\'tl"H vlt\\-,olnt~ or lnfonntd ob- M!rvttt 1nd 1poktsmtn on Loplcs o! lhr da)>. rrlday, May 19, 1972 ( • ART H OPPE J of the U.S. involvement in Vietnam when Dean Pettibone finally yielded. "I can take no more!" he cried. "You are right. These history texts art slanted , bigoted and hish.ly offensive, by 1ny fair analysis, to the white race." A triumphant \young Wa1P to 1 d reporte.r1 attuward that he had begun his readings with the history of Alex· ander tlle Great. "And why was he great?" demanded Wasp. "Because he.killed and bumMI and looted his wa y through Egypt, Asia Minor and lndi11 . 'I'm sorry I got no new "'orlds to conquer.' he says. What kind of talk Is that? And from there, these White histories arc all dov.•nhill. ''LOOK AT THE R01\tANS. 'Veni. vidi, vici.' that's their rr1bl10. And v.·ho knocks them off~ Attila the Hun . Then we gt.I a cou ple o( centuries of v.•hite guys going around burning \vhite guys lit the stake. Charlemagne spends 30 years slaughter· Inc 8aton1, Lombardi and 58racens, 10 he·s a t.ero. "Then we gel intO English hl.ltory. Wl'lo do we read about? WHliam the Con· queror. There's a name for you. Rlchlrd the Llon·Htarted, who goe1 off to 1kewer infidels. Henry VrtJ, who cut.I h.!1 wives off short. Thtn, t'* Ertilish kill 1 lot of , Spani1!<1t Ind 01!1offto11ploll lndi1 Ind hllf the world. "Who's bl1 In Franc.7 Napoleon, who got maybe a million people dead . Who's btg In GermanyT Fnderick the. Great. Him , too. Who's big in Russia? Ivan the Turlble. That'• 1errible. "LOOK AT nfE8£ American hi1toriei. All they talk •bollt la how the Wlllles kicked "'Mind !ht Indians. lbe Mea'fcans, the l"tllplnol and ensland !ht blackl, wan, riotl. otrlht, gl!lpten, comiptloo -who needs It! ''How come the "'hites are always the bad guys? Hitler. Stalin, Mussolini -all y,·hites. Who assassinated four of our Presidents? Whites. Who dropped the first ato mic bomb? Y.'hites. '·Talk about slanted rt'por11ng. They don't write up a n·hite unless he 's rotten. \Vhy don 'l they write about a dt'!cent, peace·lovlng "•h!te who minds hi s own business -one who'a a credit to h!s race? "It's no n·onder us whil es, after rte.ding these history texts, fee l inferior." DEAN PETI'IBONE. still massaging his wrists , immediately announced the White Studies Program would be replac· ed by Black, Yellow and Brown Stud!e!I Programs. "\Ve will go from the Zulu Kings and I heir conquests to the Mau·Mau," he said happily ... f'rom Gt>ni;his Khan and his hordes to the Japanese snea k attack on Pearl Harbor. F'rom Aztec human sacrifices to the !litughtcr ~t the Alamo. "Afler all," he said with a scholarly smile , "V.'e all have a Jot to learn from the lessons of hlsto ry." A coalition of angry black, yellow and brown studenLS pr omptly marched into Dean Pettibone's office and tied him up. Dear Gloomy Gus Same old St.of)': Got 1 problem? Set up a new government ag~ncy l\'hether It's needed or not. That 's what the Leajtue nf Women Voters of the Oranae Co1st wf)Uld do ln opposing Senator Carpen1 er·1 coast. al protoctlon bill . -P.J.L. 1'11111 fMt9,. rtl""C" ,...,..,,, ¥1twt, ""' NtttMl'ltf ftltH ti l1i.t ~twiat...... ltllt ~-"' Ht"11 ho ;....,,, lhra, D1llf 'JMt. c Bad Habit: W ~ Denigrate Our Neighbors SYDNEY J. HARRIS Up where I spend my su ntmers, everyone had heard the "Poli sh jokes'' Jong before they became famous, or in- famous. Only up there. they were known as "Belgian jokes," by virtue of a lar5e immigrant Belgian community which provided the butt of this rusUc humor. Thus has it ever been. There Is no record of an y culture anywhere that dld not release Its hostil- ities find exhibit its invinci ble sense of superiority by derid- ing or dov.·n·grading some convenient oul· group . In the earliest rec- ords of an c ient f:rC'ccc. the Boelians s c r v t d R!J 1he "Poles" or ''Belgians" r 0 r thf' res t of G re e c e: the name "Boetian" bf>came almost a syn· onym for "stupid.'' (A n d the first ''bArbari11ns." of colq'se, Included alt those "babblers" who spoke anything but Greek.) DR. MARIO PE1. in "The Story of Language." points out that the ear' Ii est Sla vs called their German neighbors "Nemets" (meaning "mute" or ''tlum b''): contrariwise, the word ''slaves" come11 from Slavs captured in bRttle. The ancient Chinese desisnated as ".~outhcrn ba rbarians" and "miserable ones'' the Miao and Moso tribes of South China. Bad habits. and reprehcnsihle behavior, are invariably ascribed to the people next door: the most famous example being syphilis. which is called "Frenc h disea se'' in England, and "English disease'' in France. IT WA~ THt:JR neighbors , the Engllsh, who m11de "to Welsh" on an obligation an lnsult lo the Welsh people ; likewise, •·outch treat" and "Dutch courage," aug· gesting that Hollanders are both 1llngy and al coholic. And to "Jew down" a price &uggests that Christians are above 11uch mercantile haggling. Americans are by no means immune to the ,world 's envy and cnntempt. What we rAll ~ i m p I y a ''confidence game" kno11•n lri b:lth the FrcnC'h Rnd the Ital ians as "the American swindle." IN ITALY, ACCORDING to Dr . Pel, "'hat we call "gate·crashin11t'' or "free· Joar;i ng,'' are known as porto11:hct1h1mo , or acting like Portuguese. The ancient Romans ea ll cd duplic ity "Cartha.11:1n1'1 n trus1worth1ncss.,; and in German. the \\'Ord "ll.ussfan " is synt)nymous witb "b:ir!J;:1rous," and "English educt1 tLon'1 mean1 flog.a:in,I(. Every count ry ha s a re gion (u.sualty the Southri.rn part. which Is poorest / that tlle re~t or the country looks down upon, or jokes about, or us's as a tymbol tor stupidity, la1ine1s, diahoncs ty or guile. tt aeems 1s lf we are incapable nl main· talnlng i\ aooct opinion of ourselves without denigrating our neighbors. a human habit that 2.000 year1 of Chrl1· Uanlty 1eems to have had ab1olut1ly oo effect UPon. Quot es \\illie Slocum, Millbrae, 4'10'' e1-jnclt•y -''\\·omen of tht world should alwavs mnember th1t sage and salient u ying 'A bl' man m1y be • big man, but a Uttlt man Is all man '" I I t ) t ( Protest~rs Lack Sense of History To the Editor: The Secretary.r.ener RI of the Uni!E>d Nt1tlons. Kurt \VRldh eim, has publicly conceded that North VietnAm invAdtd South VictnAm . Other :irliclt>s rrpon. that this invasion has the support of 3,000 So· viet technicians, wilh lhe greatest selec- Uve placemenl of military hard\vare since World War II. So. like the ''big lie -put down civil war" i n v a s ion o( Czechoslovakia, Hungary. etc .. we have further immut1ble evidence of the suc- ceaaful PIYCho-pollllcal warfare of these 11rres1or nations . ·STRANGE, THE short memories of the1t illo(lical prote1ter1 -(If their ap- parent lack nf knowledge of the satanic \'lolation of the U.N.-Geneva Conference by Hanoi, of their signed agreement tG the maintenance of the DMZ between North and South Vietnam . Even a!I late as 1968, Hanoi promised Presi de nt Johnson that , if we would stop the bomb- ing of North Vie:tnam, they would stop all offensive action at 'the DMZ Anrl permit aerial rcconnalssa nce by unarmed aircraft to assure the U.S. against their taking offensive action against South Vle tnam . Even with all this ev idence of their ruthless, degenerate, repulsive, fiendish and diabol ic actions -why then, are there no protestations against the11e flagran t acts of warfare -along with their C<lmpletely outrageou1 dl!re1ard of the conventions or International Red Cross on the treatment of our Prisoners of War? JS IT BECAUSE so many of ou r so- called Democratic leaders such as Muskie , McGovern . Kennedy, Humphrey, Fulbright, Tunney and Hartke (presumed Intellectuals ), by not i;ptaking out aga inst these attacks, create an altitude by our superficial malcontenL~ that OUR COUN- TRY JS ALWAYS WRONG and we should accept the hum ility of dereat by even a minor Co mmunistic nation. In a1se11ing these regrettAhle develo~ menl.I , I btlieve thl~ Is why so m•ny 1tudents prefer to march a n d demonstrate nn behalf of the enemy Jn· atead of provid ing evidence or their loyalty to their own country and the very (reedom1 th11t are denied the citizens of thue morall y bankrupt enemy countri!! who would not be allowed to prot est for one mlnute wlthout being jailed or worse. Ont thing for sure, they have never read the book "Ta lc of a Whlsll ing Shrimp ·· by Vlad imir 8 . Grinioff. 1 ALSO f'JND it stranlite th11t NOT ONI-: or the 127 member~ of the United Nations -who acceptf'd O\'rr $138 billio n in US. AJD fund~ i;1nce 1911'>-has r3istd ;i voirl" in this ille~fll in\'1t.li1nn of South \11etnam by the North Virtn;imese Communi't~. One more rea son wh y thr U.S. shou ld grt out of the fr iendless and useless l'nJtc d N1Uon1 ! AL N. SEAl\f;S Cltlropractor R eplies To the Editor: You prlnt.d a lott.r !Mlllbox. April 26) from Jean f . Crum. M.O. In 1hl1 Jetter play1 on words 11nd alanted aemantics ~ were Uled to mh1dlrtct !he reader . It b expected tMt a ptrson holding the h1ah ofrice of president of 1hc California Medical Attsoc13t1on woulrl not resort to ~·ritin1t statemrnt' out o( contt':XI so as to conftl!~ th<' pubhr. Prrhnps the mo.'t ch1si;lc f'rror is rhal of aasumlna 1h11t the mcdic1tl proffsi;ion I! the sole rtprcsenlatlve or !he healing artt.. This 1.s ml the case. The chiroprac· tic profession la not a parl of m-d1c1nr I nd ne 1lher is osteop11lhy, psyc hol'>gy or optcmttry. 1'le medical prof6slo n CilM• MAILBOX J~1ttrr.t fro m t'eader$ are uttlCOlftl, Normouv writer1 should conveu thttr nie.t.tage.t ;,, 300 word.I or te11. Th• right to cond1n1c lrtter1 to fit IJ)OCI or 1llmlnat1 lib1l i..t t't&ervcd. A'IZ ltt-- t1r1 mlilt include 1ignnture1 and mmi.. iiig oddreuJ_;i.ut name& mav b1 wit~ htld Iii rcqw,t If ••//lcl<nt TtoaOft Li opJiartnt. Pottrv tDUl not b1)""1>- l!sh1d. "If" nol dictate to those other branches of the healing arts. OR. CRUM SAID that "chiropractor......_ are not licensed lo give medical care....- and.,. "are prohibited by Jaw from prescri bing drugs". The f1cts are : chiropractors do not give medical care; chiropractors are licensed by 49 slate1 I the 50th l1 legl1l1tlng now). Before bllns licensed tn California cblropractors muat palls a three-day exam just as phy1lci1n1 do. Regard ing dru11. chiropractic ad- vocate• minimal drug usoge, and then only when abaolutely necessary. Dr. Crum lmplled chlropractor1 wished to prescribe. They do not. D•. Crum qu(ltes: the HEW committeJ as dlscountina chiropractic. T h I 1 evaluating panel was set up by the medical syndicate with onf! purpo&e in mind · defeat chiroprRctic 1n Congress. Doe11 the public rea lize that the medical Jobhy ls the biggest ~ pend er i• Washington, D.C.? Recently at the 56ttl C'Onventlon or the AF"J,.CIO In Miami, rhiropractic care was ba ck ed and the AF'L.CIO called !or Congres!i to Include It in all federal health programs. IT WAS FURTHER stated by Dr. Crum lh"t "lime wasted on u1el1s1 chiropractic treatment may delay a pa· tlent'1 1eeln1 a qualified phyalclan", Once a1ain we 1ee the effects of atU·ap. painted but uninformed "authoritarlal\J'' making 1tatements from high politlcal positions. Most chiropractic patients hive already been treated by two or more •·medlc1I 1pec\1Bsts" without re1ult1. •1 More than 80 percent of my practl~ comf''.'i from "qualifier! physici11ns.") However. now In aJdition to the primary complai nt the p11 tlent h11s one or two Iatrogenic (doctor caused / problt':ms . OruJt ;ibuse is a real problem 11nd the ln r:ikc or drugs must bf' slowfrl whether prrscrlbed or pu~hctl. If p11re:nts under thr rl1rrct ion of thr med if'AI doctor 11.r1 tr1k1ng druJ!." for ('very lillle ''bump" in thr. road of life. M> wll\ lhrir chlldren. Thry h1tve followed the example well! S«lety 11 tou1h and copplns out Is easl,r. Tr mommy and daddy do It 10 wlU the kld1. DONALD R. SCOTT, D.C, 811 Geo rge ---, Dear Georae: Whit do the serious ad vice ml· umnl1ta 11y when they meet you race lo ra~? ART De3r Art : Nothlne. They aJwa y1 tum their ~rk~ on mr CONFIDENTIAL TO G E N E ll1\CK1~AN H roln, of cour \\'hat did you THINK )'OU nre lookln1 for? ' ···a·· ·.rated slow Friday. May 19, 1972 DAILY PILOT 7 • • .............................. :; MAY20-21 i ~~.~_:·.l1 -SUUROAY1210ffi. I ·, I SUNDAY 1·2 to 6 P.M. I · -. -: Specials -. -- Prices so .~low we · mention them all • \-He'd .be nuts if we didn't.) --. -two DAY: SPECIALS ' ··~··········----···········J · ·THE 110 .. ·~rERT , .d ·11TiOHAL ' ' I • . , in ·.ftUNTllfGTOI · ·BEAC . . 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"StOfl'S ' Sl!•!Oy 19~1 . ~· a.oo TMDB-111 01' .MT llPllEAQD WBEEL- BUBOW 577 n:LLYTOOL GOLD nFFllY 2995 JOBMST~ ) --~1 I \I l1