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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-05-23 - Orange Coast PilotI \ I I I eav • Carpenter!'s Bill Man Confesses- Against Freeway W oJDan Posed As Faees New Delay M11rdered Sister .. DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * VO\.. ... MO, 144. I SICTtONJ, • PAHi TUESDAY AFTERNOON, MAY V, 1972 Call. for Help I I Dealt•, PoDution Resembles Nixon, Brezhnev Another UPI T•1"Mll CALLING FOR SUPPORT -An .Army lieutena~t uses his field tele- phone to call in a helicopter while on patrol six miles west of Phu Bai Airfield Ibis week. Heavy Ground Fighting Rages ; Hanoi Area Hit SAIGON (UPI) -Heavy fighting broke out today on three fronts in South Viet- nam and Hanoi Radio re.ported swarms of American planes again bom~ the Hanoi area ln a stepped .up aeria.t (lf- fensive that C<lincided with President Nixon's Moscow summit talks. Heavy ground battles were repor~ed IOUth of the My Chanh River deferuie hne about 20 miles north of Hue. A third day of Communist probing at- tacks on Hue's outer defense llnes end~ al nlghlfall with pockets of. Communist troops still clinging ID a bridgehead on the south bank. f Al besieged An Loe &O miles north o Saigon waves of Communist infantrymen backed by tanks and a 1,700-round artillery barrage struck at paratroope[s a mile south of the clty and managed to Bo y's Report · Spurs Knifi1ig LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Robert Beclc principal of the Louis· Past;ur Junior High School, wu sUibbed lo the back b1 I II-~ eighth grade student, . alltt Beclc sh<>Wed the student b1S progresa report . . B«k ,... in uu.ractory """' dllion lllda1 11 Southern Calllornia Memorial Hospital. The student .... ped. Beck &lid the roport Indicated ;he 1tudent ''needed improvnnmt." stall a relief element two miles south of An Loe for the sixth consecutive day. The third area was the Central Highlands abool 2MI ·miles north ol Saigon. The North Vletname1e ltaged several attacks at Fire Base 41, 12 ml1es north of Pleiku, and knocked out two govenupent . tanks and an. armored personnel carrier. They also shot down an Al Skyraider. Rocket attacks on Kontum Airfield, 15 miles to the north wounded three Americam and·virtually destroyed a Cl30 Hercules transport. Above-..the.-Demilitarized 2.one, the U.S. command dixJosed U.S. air· raids had been stepped up to an average of :US a day for the past five days -the heaviest leVel since the bOmbing cam- paign resumed April 6. There was no U.S. comment on today's attacks. The U.S. command reported spec- tacular attacks against an electrlcaJ traMfonnet staiion northeast of Hanoi on Saturd8y • where fhere Were Several subaoqu.nl uploSionll. A l!>Okfflhan said h supplied power to.a mechiDe tool fac· tory. a tank and lru<k ropelt center and military camps in the Hanoi area. With American plaoes laying more mines In tbe North Vietnamese harbors. figbler·bomben conc<ntraled on lhe railroad! !..cling from China. The bomben slnJck al II nil and ..,hJibway bridges ranglm! from lhose leading from China aoutheastward lo Haool to olhen jull above the DMZ. Five of the malo bridges on a ralf line from Ciina w..,, d<stroytd In one nld and the attackers morned the next ~ to knock cul a •12th. Air Force tpOtesmen uid the raids bod betn ao _..,, the North Vietnamese (Ste VIBTNAM, 1'14• II ' ' Find Agreement MOSCOW (UPI) -P.resident Nixon and Leonid I. Brezhnev held lengthy talks today on the first full day of their summit conference, highlighted by accords on health and pollution and private one-on- one conferences between the two about the issues of war and peace. The leaders first met with full staffs in the l!lth century Catherine Hall for two hours and two minutes, then conferred between themselves for about two more hours. At dusk in the Kremlin's Vladimir Hall, Breznev, the Soviet Communist Party Jeader. clinked his glass with Nixon's in a champagne toast, and throwing his arm around the American President's back, smiled and Jed Nixon out of the room, presumbly for more talks. American spokesmen said the medical pact calls for coordinated research pro- grams on cancer and heart di sease. and exchange of specialists and delegations. It also includes setting up conferences and lectures, exchange of infonnation and teaching each other about their own technical aids and equipment. Conference sources said the an- t.ipollJtion pact was in similar spirit. Nixon was quoted by a White House spokesman. "They are good things lo start with." Hard discussions on the more difficult Issues, like Vietnam and on limiting nuclear arms, rem ained. Vietnam is likely to continue to be a sticking point after the swnm it but the Soviet news agency, Tass; raised flagging Tlie y Libera t,e Cliicks' Chec ks HANFORD (AP! -Members of the National Organization of Women have ''liberated" a sign at a Bank of America branch here they said was derogatory to their ser. The sign, a bank promotion for checks designed for use by women, adverUsed "checb for chicks." "We art not chlctens." uld 1 NOW spokesman. "We are women and people and we expect to he treated thG w1y." Bank ofHclal1 aurrendered the of· fonding &!in. hopes for some kind of SALT agreement here. 'The. su mmitry spirit showed at 6:06 p.m. when the conferees stepped from a winter garden of palm trees into the highdomed while and gold Vladimiar Hall. Nixon and Soviet President Nikolai V. Podgomy led the march. Behind came Brezhnev and for the first time in the summit, the rest of the ruling (Ste SUMMIT, Page %) Carpent,er Bill Against Freeway Delayed Again By L. PETER KRIEG 01 lht O•llf "lltl S"lt An aide to State Sen. Dennis Carpenter IR·Newport Beach ) said l\.1onday his boss still isn't sure whet her or not he'll push legislation to kill the entire Pacific Coast }"ree"·ay. Ir he does, Newport Beach will be in there pushing it. Newport Beach councilmen Monday night hired a lobbyist for the. key months of June and July to plug for any and all legislation designed to do harm to the future of the proposed coastal freeway . They appointed Charles E. "Bud" Porter, an established lobbyist who for nine years has been represenling the city of San Diego in Sacramento and Washington, to carry their message throughout the capital. The action was taken virtually "'ithou t comment by councilmen Monday night after hearing the report on the status of Carpenter's freey,•ay bill in the afternoon. Besides the Carpenter measure, there are, among others, two bill! that could have a direct effect on Newport Beach. One, sponsored by Ass em b I y man Robert Badham (R-Newporl Beach), would kill only the Newport Beach leg or tht route and another , sponsored by As3emblyman Robert Burke (R-Hwr tington Beath) would institute a three-- year moratorium on freeway planning pcndi~ a consultant'• study or the coastal route corrldor. The slow progrw to date o f Carpenter'1 bill, explained administrative aa.slstant l\flchael Neal to councilmen Monday, Is due to the senator'ti desi re to have all the fa ct.I in hand before getting (S.. FREEWAY, P11e %1 0"1 T•ltfllM'- BackS McGotJern Former Sen. Eugene McCa rthy tell s newsman he is formally withdrawing from the Caifor- nia Democratic presidential primary and endorsing Sen. George McGovern. McCarthy indicated that he still will seek the nomination at the conven- tion in Miami. Man Convicted Of Slayin g Coed Gets 10 Years LONDON (U PI ) -No one suspected anything unusual about the couple unt il the husband walked into a police station one day and said he had strangled his wlfe :ind lived for the next six years with her sister who posed as the wife. The plot unfoldtd P..fonday in testi mony at London 's Old Bailey cri min&I court in a murder trial against Staff Sgt. Jan Reed , :14. lie was charged wlth a murder pollcc never suspected until he Walked Into a suburban London police station in Sep- tember and said: "I murdered my wlfe sll years ago. 1 ltra ngled her and threw her body In 1hc rtvcr. I can't take: lt anv more. That's (Set MURDER, Pait I) Recent Case A Costa Mesa housewife and her four screaming children were terrorized early today by a would-be rapist who Invaded their shared bedroom, wearing a gro- tesque nylon stocking mask. The incident in the 2500 block of Orange Avenue occurred exactly two week!: to the hour arter a l"limilar case in which a suspect was captured and is now awaiting a court appearance. The earlier suspect rema.ira in jail, unable to post $10,000 bail peDdl.ng bi.I June I preliminary hearing. orncer Rob Flathers was told by the 33·year-old housewife attacked today that she was awakened at I a.m. by a masked man . Shrieki ng in terror. the woman awakened her four small children who joined the screaming and walling. She said the masked man then turned and fled, (aJJing over a coffee table in the ll ving room on his way out. Costa Mesa police arrested a suspect alleg-edly involved In a similar case May 9. which occurred on the city'1 west side, at Victoria Street and Harbor Boulevard. lnvestigalor1 who questioned him said he apparently wasn't involved In a wave of similar sex assaults on Costa Mesa·1 west side over the past 18 months. The intruder, characterized in that string of break-ins aJ Olarlle the l\lid- night Marauder, often slipped through windows and into bed with women sleep- ing with their children_ We11tller · Hazy sunshine In the afternoon is the forecast for Wednesday along the Orange Coast, with highs of 65 e:tpected at the beaches r~ ing to 75 lnland. Lows $5-60. INSIDE TODA.V Mrs. Nixon hll.t bet1l caugl1t In "crunch" between newsmen and polic1t during her. lraV(l.$ in Moscow. and Mrs. Gromvko is -not happv about ii. Stt storv Page 4. CJ!iler11I• • MllNtl ....... II CU.t11!Ltll ••• "' ............ • Colfll(' .. Of•~ .. CMMY .. (l'M-· " ·-, .. ,, .... ...... " llWll MMl"' 1•11 1•1,.,ill ,.,. • f tt.wklM • • "ltrt1illftlfflt •• ""'"'' .. , .... II(. 1•11 WH-• "4ort1Cll!t ,. WRth W111I " Amt l..llM-" .._ .. , "'"'" 1)-14 MtYI" •• .., ......... • '1 2 DAILY PILQT s T11tsdar, M11 23, 197? Fai.ltcre?-Nyet Moon Blast Ru~sians Eager To Get Results ··1 'Partially Successful' 8y \\'ILLIA~1 L.. RY AN AP S1>t<ll l (errt-flfll 1'hc Soviet rcccpt1(Jn of President ~ix· on. like the ;H.l\'ance Sovlel p;css tre_at· ment or the visit, gives th e 1mpress1on ·tr )."'{ ·:( Fron• J•ctge J SUMMIT ... Soviet Politburo. Nixon and Podgomy led thelr colleagues to op posite sides of the 40.fool table covcrrd \\•ith a crea1n cloth th at draoed to the floo r. Aides laid out bcund copies of the an· Hpollut ion treaty. Podgorny removed a fou ntain pen from an inside coat pocket and signed . Nixon, after a glance at the Russian president. plucked a red pen from a holder on the table and signed for America. After the second part was signed, waiters rushed in with champagne. Brezhnev downed one glass and then got another to clink with Nl1on'1. Nixon left his glass lhree-fourthl full. Brezhnev then put his left arm across Nxion's back and led the President from the room . An American official told UPJ no one on either side of the conference table al this morning's full meeting so much as mentioned the word "Vietnam." This indicated , diplomat ic observers said, that both sides were trying to tiptoe around the subject in order not to hamper progress on other projects. Nixon and Brezhnev und oubtedly will discuss Vietna m -but more privately than in a full plenary session of the sum- mit. Nixon's and Brezhpev's spokesmen both descri bed the morning session in the white and red hall built by I>.eter the Great as "frank and businesslike.'' The Russian spokesman, Director General Leonid I. Zamyatin of the Soviet news agency Tass, said more vital business was afoot. "The people expect an easing of tension, not only between the Soviet Union and the United States but all over the world." he told reporters. A1 Nixon was conducting talks as the first American President to visit Russia since Franklin D. Roosevelt went to Yalta 1n 1945, Pat Nixon went sightsee- ing. (See related story, Page 4). While in Moscow, Nixon hopes to sign a treaty on limiting strategic nuclear weaPons, but as early as last weekend Administration officials began to suggest a hitch developed. Homosexual Ring Preys on Boys, Says NY Aide MINEOLA, N.Y. (UPI) -Six persons have been indicted for activities con- nected with a loosely organized homosex· ual ring which the Nassau County district attorney's office said preyed on young boys. The organization allegedly published a newsletter informing members of the availability of boys in various cities, District Attorney William Cahn said Mon- day. Cahn said the boys often "were bribed, ca joled. and in some cases forced to part icipate.'' Some, Cahn said, were taken on trips to other cities where they were "swapped" for local boys. About BO percent o( the boys ":ere fatherless , Cahn said, and many ""ere "recruited'' by ad u I ls representing then1Selves as members of the "Big Brother" movement. "I want to emphasize that the Big Brother organization had nothing to do with this sordid case, and it has given us its utmost cooperation in our in· vestigation," Cahn said. OUN•£ COAST ST DAILY PILOT Tltt Orln99 Co.It OAILY PILOT, wtlll 'lltllcf'I. b llO"'bil'lfCI t!'lt N•-Prnt, II puDll1'11d II'/ ltit Or1n1• Cwst Pullllshln1t COlllN"~" s~ •M~ ~111oris •rt pub!Wl«I, Mond•y llirowf'I. Fr~a1, IOI' Costa Mu•, f.ltwPOrt IHch, Hun!lr1910n l!IHch/FO\lft!llr! \'•1tty, L....,.,1 Be•ch, lrvlne/S11kUtb1t~ •ncl $111 Cll-mtn1t/ $•n J•1n C~plstrillll, A 1lnol• tfS!IOnll #dlllon Is publill'led Saturd1ys tM SWlflys, Tiie ,,lnc:lpec! publ!Mtll'ISI pllnl I• •t ):IO Wesl 81'/ Street, Cotti Mn1, C1lllornl1, f~. Roltert N. w,,,J f'rnldll'll •nd 'ulliltn« J1elt Jt. Curl1v Vici Presldenl Ind General M1n1Gfr Thol"ll •• ic.,~a Editor Tliom11 A. M11rphin• M1nto!111 IClllor Ch11!11 H. Looi Jllch•rd P. Ni ll A11!1t111t M1nt0'"8 Ed!lor> -Cott• Mn1: 3JO Wtsl ltY Slrnt Nt'NPOrt 11e1ch: lW Nrwpert aourevtnl l •o-e .. e11: m '°'""' A"""' llwntlnQtO!I e .. t11: l 7'7J ftMdl toulev1n1 S.n Clem1n1e: .JOJ Nortll El Qll'll!'IO l' .. I T .. _ 1710 '41-4121 Cl-""".thloo '41·H71 frtll'I C.•1•1 ..,,..,, S..111 of L .... l•dl 4tZ-44:10 ,-,.,,. "trftl Of•-Cffllty C.mll'Ml•rl• ~-1121 ~I, lf11, Or'* COA&t ll'vlJIRlflllllt COlnpeny, No f'ltws s1orlfl, Ul11ur11•, .Ol!otMol INfl., o~ Od1'"1l•ll'IWl'I.. ~In IM'f lie ~ WflhOlll IMC.ill W · ltllslbt .i ~Ith! ..... fllCIOfld f:I••• llOflttt •Id •t CO.le Mftt:, C.llfonllll, 1<11ttcrf•11oft _.,. unit!' DAJ -1111r; -,. nuill u .11 """"'1"' '"""'"' •utrw.tloril UM motlllllf, ' that the Kremlin will go to considerable lengths to prevent any look of failure ror this sum1nit. It seems significant that President Nikolai Podgorny chose this moment lo expand the Moscow litany about the need for better Soviet-American relations. Up to now, the stereotyped sentence has gone : ''Better rel ations with the United Stales are both possible and desirable, but not at the expense of any third coun- try or pe<iple." Podgorny, speaking at a Kremlin din- ner. made it read "not merely good, but friendly relations ." This is a curious time for Soviet leaders to be talking about "friendly" ·1 NEWS ANALYSIS I relations with an American president who has just ordered the mining ol a C.om- munist nation's harbors to prevent the now of Soviet war material to North Vietnam. But Podgomy stressed that the Russian leaders are eager for positive results. They may go to some lengths to get such results. Evidently the men in control won't permit either Vietnam or the Middle Ea st. the two main sources of tension, to damage chances. If they must talk abOut the two areas, they will. That's going to make their allie!I nervous, even though the Russians may be neither willing nor able to concede anything. ll"I T•ltl>llOl9 Not a Bad Break SPACE CENTER. HOU!l<m (AP) -A weapon of war redesigned into an in- strument of science \\'as exploded on tht< moon early today , but scientist~ reporlt•d the experiment was only partially sue· cessfuJ. Scientists at 1he l'>Janned Spacecraft Center sent signals to a mOrtar package left in the Descartes :r.1ountains of the moon by Apollo 16 last month and caused three rocket grenades to be launched. The grenades tocketed away and ex· plocled, sending seismic shock \\·aves through the moon 's surface. A fourth grenade l\'as not fi re•!, however, when instruments on the mor- tar launcher indicated that it changed position. An official said an attitude indicator sho\ved the lallnCher may have pitched upward several degrees after the third rocket grenade Wf1S fired. Because or this, the scientists did . net fire the last grenade. It may be frred later, officials said, if tests show the at- titude indication is false . The three grenades that were fired flew 500, 1,000 and 2,000 feet and then exploded upon impact with the moon 's surface. The fourth grenade is Oesigned to fly up to 5,000 feet before exploding. Explosions of the grenades caused seismic shock waves which were detected by a series of geophooes installed i11 the lunar surface by the Apollo 16 astronauts. 'The shock waves were expected to penetrate to about 500 feet beneath the moon's surface and then bounce back to the geophones. Scientists ·hope to learn more about the substructure of the moon by measuring the velocity, strength and frequency of the shock '"'ave echoes. Vl"I TtlffileM Beller ltle cts? \\1iJlia1n D. Ruc:kelshaus, ad- ministrator of the Environmen· ta! Protection Agency, says .Ford may be barred from sell- ing any 1973 model cars be-- fore October or later because of mistakes made in testing engines for pollution stand· ards. Story, Page 18. From Page 1 FREEWAY ..• his measure moving through th e legislative process. ..... ~e bill is no\v before the legislative counsel." Neal said. "The senator will not submit it, hov1ever, unti l he has time lo meet \Vith the Public Works: .Department to discuss all the implications. Leonid J. Brezhnev, the Communist party general secretary who is running the Sovjet show now, lost no time in hav- ing a first meeting with the President. He may even be braving the meaningful scowls--of party and mil itary con- servatives by displayjng s1.ic_h eagert)ess ... Brezhnev and the Soviet media have built up a lot of hopes in the USSR and abroad that the summit will contribute to eased tensions, however. 'I1le party chief, most likely wants to deliver. A knee-high cast doesn't stop T/Sgt. Gerald Patlerson, stationed at San Antonio's Randolph Air Force Base, Tex:., fr~m en1oymg an out· ing on the beach in Corpus Ch~i~ti: Pat~erson ups. along the i:adre Jsl·and National Seashore on a m1n1bik:e , his Jeg cushioned on a pillow. The grenades are fired \Ylth the pu$h ~f a button at Mi ssion Control here. This sends a signal to ignite the grenade rocket and the device flies away. The grenad", which each cost abo~l $10,000, are equipped with _rsdio trans.mil~ tets and two different length break \Vires. BY ·measuring the time between the parting of the first and .second break wires, .scientists can de termine the velocity of the grenades just after launch. "A big qeustion is ho,\· much oppooition the Public Works Department 'viii give the bill," Neal said. "They carry quite a bit of weight." he l'laid. 0 Their dynamic opposition would be a possible cause lo !mid it for awhile." Neal ~aid the highway official! "have. · the pow~ and the resources" to wage a major battle against the measure. Jn testimony to this probability, one striking feature of Soviet pre-summit publicity has been a tendency to treat Nixon with marked respect and even with an occasional hint of faint praise. Muriel Wants 'To Drop The Apollo 14 astronauts left mortars on tbe moon during their February 1971 lunar visit. Officials have not fired them for rear doing so could destroy the r,..st of the Apollo 14 science station. As a re~ult the Apollo 14 mortar package will not be fired for perhaps years. Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis asked Neal Ir the senator thought he could still get it through with the legislature planning on an adjournment thi s summer. "U.S.A.," the publication of Soviet Americanologist.s, sald last month Nixon had shown more realism than some Americans who still contend that the ideological struggle will continue ca~sing dangerous tension. It SJXlke approvingly of Nixon's view that there are "fairly good opportWlities" for better U.S.-SOviet relations on some specific question!. Leaf lets' Over Cities Officials said the Apollo 16 mortar launcher is not expected to affect the other instruments · in the $20 million science station. "He would not make the effort he has put in unless he thought there was ample time to get it through once it's in· traduced," Neal responded. Neal !!laid Carpenter's talks with the Public Works Department will take place "in the very near future." In Moscow's eyes that was "realistic." Also realistic in the Kremlin view is the idea that the ideological war must go on, whatever improvement may come in government-to-government relations. Brick Tenders Back at Work In Santa Ana Many of the 200 brick tenders who went on strike in Orange County Monday were back at work today after independently signing new contracts with t h e i r employers. A SPokesman for the A FL • C 1 0 Laborers International Union Jn Santa Ana said there was no picketing activity in the county as a result of the strike and that there has been "very little slowdown" in construction activity. Nearly 2,000 brick carriers in Orange, Los Angeles and Kern Counties walked off their jobs Monday after the union failed to reach a new working agreement with the Mason Contractors Association. The tenders are asking for an SS-Cent hourly wage hike over the next two years. Brick carriers now make $6.15 an hour. The union spokesman said there was no way of knowing exactly how many tenders remained on strike today but noted that only those working for members of the mason association re· mained off their jobs. Carriers employed by independent con~ tractors had signed new w o r k i n g agreements under the union's tenns, the sPokesma.n said. By JAN EDWARDS Of Iii. D•llr l"Jlot Stiff "When 1 fly over or drive through these big city areas, J want to drop leaflets -I w;.nt to reach everyone," admits Muriel Humphrey. She spoke Monday to Hubert Humph~ey volunteers at the presidential campaign headquarters in Santa Ana. Actively participating in her sixth na- tional election, she regarded her four scheduled appearances in Long Beach, Santa Ana, Laguna Hills and Los Angeles as "an easy day ." She has campaigned primarily without Sen. Hun1phrey since the Florida primary in March. "I have loved campaigning this year - it has been hard work -there are 23 or 24 primaries this year, whereas in 1960 there were only six." "In this campaign ] have done better, worked harder and in a way I like it bet· ter than any other time," she said. She Officer Hurt Critically SAN DIEGO (AP) - A cor· rections officer was in critical con- dition today alter being doused with gasoline and repeatedly stabbed at a slate conservation camp. Other orficers saw L. R . Marshall, 29. stagger out of a bar- rack's door. bleeding, with a orisoner flaying at him v.·ith a butcher knife. Other prfsoners pulled the at- tacker off Marshall. The gasoline was not set afire. The officer was attacked Monday while investigating a prisoners' sit- down strike in the barracks, of· ricials said. Two Grand Juries Indict Accused Wallace Attacker BA!.TIMORE (UPI) -Federal and Maryland grand juries today indicted Arthur Herman Bremer. a 21-yearo()ld blond busboy and ex.janitor from Milwaukee, on charge1 connected with the May 15 sboollng of Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace. A Maryland grand jury charged Bremer with four counts of attempted murder. One of the counts in the state in- dictment carries a maxlmwn penalty of dealh. Bremer was atTtsted at the scene of the shooting al the Laurel (Md.) Shop. pin& t.enttr, where Wal.lace was am· J>llgnlng lot the prtaidenllal nomination in the Maryland slate Democratic primary election. He was held in $200,000 bond. (See rtlaled atory, Page!). The Indictment wu reWn>ed in U.S. Dlstrlcl Coor! in Baltimore. It cbal'lled Bl'f'm:r \\'Ith v!i::lnting a section or the ' 1988 Civil Rights Acl which prohibit& In- jury or intimidation or persons. .seeking e!Ktlve oflice. Bremer also waa charged with using a dangerous WNpon to assault Special Agent Nicholas J. Zarvoo of the Secret Servlct. A third count of the fede.ral Indictment charged Brtmer with transporting a firearm from Wisconsin through other stalts to Maryland with the intent lo commit a federal feloey -the shooting of Wa!loce. A fourlh couot charged" Bremer with using a fireann in the commlsslon of 11 federal felony in lhe shooting of the I governor. Bremtt IJ being held under intense 1tCUrily 111..-a bomb threat ""' mad• on the Balllmore a>unty jail wbert he Is In solitary confinement. considers her small campaign group ef· ficient and at a "cost u little as any ef- fort" in Humphrey's Democratic primary cam pa ign. Each primary since January has had national focus upon it, she observed, but the up-coming California primary on June 6, worth 271 convention delegates, has constantly loomed in importance. "In two weeks," she reminded the volunteers, "we have the biggest one, the most serious one. Hubert has said it will make or break -it will have full mean- lng if we go oo to Miami or not." "lt'J on the line. We have a very short time to work -I wish we had six weeks," she continued. Her campaign schedules have primari· ly taken Mrs. Humphrey to day care centers, state hospitals, state rehabilita~ tion centers, vocationa l schools, Head Start programs and high schools. The Humphreys opened campaign headquarters Sunday in east Los Angeles and, encircled by security men, mingled with the crowd. Asked if she lived in fear that her husband is a target of snipers, she replied "you do live with it -I don't really think of it." "It takes a great deal out of you," she said in reference to the re'Cent attempt on Sen. George \Vallace's life. She believes it hurts every candidate and every public official when one is the object of an at- tempted assassination. From Pagel MURDER ... why I am here." So far as anyone knew, Reed's wife wa1 alive and well. Her sister. the court was told, had taken her place. Joan Ismail, 33, testified she took her sister Dorothy's name, her passport, her three children and her husband. "I was playing two parts, one as my . sister, one as a wife," i;be testified. "On many occasions I had to be the wife. When friends of Dorothy saw me , I had to be the sister. I had to use her name whenever we went out together and cut myself off from my husband, children and family." Prosecutor Richard Du Cann said Mrs. Ismail once returned to Singapore, where the alleged events happened, to get her own children. Disguised in a wig, he said, she signed adoption papers as the childrens' mother, giving them away, and then signed papers as tier sister taking th~m into her care. Mrs. Ismail testified without emotion, saying Reed fmally crac1ced after she quarreled with him several times over another woman. From Page 1 VIETNAM ••. shifted to barge and ferry traffic to ktep their supply Jines open since President Nixon ordered the rail line 1trikes oa May 9. Navy source! reported earlier that rivers and canais would be mined against such traffic. The command said the missile threat over North Vietnam had been con- siderably reduced and that an average of 12 SAMs a day are fired now as com- pared with more than 30 a day at the beginning of the offensive. Meanwhile, the commander of the U.S. 7th Fleet, which is enforcing the blockade of North Vietnam, said today the mining of Haiphong and other harbors stopped delivery of all war materiel to the Com- munist nation. Vice Adm. Will iam P. Mack said that the U.S. flotill a off North Vietnam has "warned one to the five merchant ships of the mines protecting Haiphong harbor. Some turned back. some turned away.'' Talking to nev.·smen aboard his flagship, Mack said. "No ships are going in or out to our knowledge, and certainly the one claimed by the North Vietnamese to have gone ln or out has not." Buying A New Tract Home? Many people buying homes are under the impression they HAVE to buy carpeting from the home sales center. In the moiority of cases this is not true, .~hough the soles office will try to make you think so. :rho minute the home center tries to upgrade the standard carpet, then you tre free to shop for carpeting. To prevent shopping should constitute restraint of trade. In many coses they will tell you that the carpet oITowance dots not •pply If you buy carpet ouhide. If they feel this legal, HAVE TH EM PUT IT IN WRITING. Ordinarily, we can Hve you a lot of money over what tha,Jiornt ctnler offers. We provide• larger selection -end we usually come up with less yardage, plus • superior instollttion. Al.1DEN'S CARPETS 0 DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 . ' . T11csd~·. May 23, 1972 s DAILY PILOT :J LAFC Battle Seen Over Giant Irvine Annex By JACK BROBACK Of lllt DtUf l'llot S!tlf Proposed annexation of 9,500 acres of Irvine Company properly 10 the new city of Irvine -sc heduled to be heard by the Local Agency Formation Comnlission Wednesday -may trigger another of the battles which have cha racterized LAFC meetings for the past three years. Although Jrvine city officials have asked the commission to delay action on tM annexation, and the accompanying sphere af innuence ma p covering 53,000 acres only members of that body can de- Dr. Gherman Enters Plea Of· l1mocent Dr. E. Mortimer Gherman, Rep. Barry. Goldwater Jr.'s father-in-law. and two associates have pleaded innocent of criminal charges in connection with land transactions. 'I11e charges 'A'ere filed by the district altorllE!y's office in San Bernardino Coun· ly. Dr. Gherman, a prominent Newport Beach busine!sman. ·John A. "Pat" Pat. terson, and James 1'1oreland, all officials of 1'1ountain Lakes De\·elopment Corp., 'A'ere released on $10.000 bail for each Friday. pending a preliminary hearing June 12 in San Bernardino. Dr. Gherman, whose daughter wed the son of U.S. Sen. Barry ~1. Goldwater ~1arch 30. could not be reached im· mediately for con1ment on the charges. Neither Patterson oo r ~1oreland were available, either. Telephones at their office in San Bernard ino have been disconnected. Gherman, Patterson and tiloreland v.·ere charged Thursday with 10 counts of clde if such a delay is in the best lnterestJ of all concerned. Meanwhile, Santa Ana, Laguna Beach, and the San Joaquin Elementary School District have added their protests to the the Laguna Beach Unified Sc hool District annexation of land that lies southeast of the present 18,000..acre city of Irvine. First to attack the move was the Sad· dle back Area Coordinating Council. A study of the proposed lrvlne an· nexation shows a close kinship to Irvine Company-owned lands between UC Irvine , Corona de! Mar, Laguna Beach and the Pacific Ocean. 'Mlis 10,QOO...acre area was at one time practically offered to Newport Beach and Laguna Beach. But observers feel that Laguna's new anti-tugh-rlse law restricting all building to 36 feet in height and Newport 's pen~ ding highri.se ordinance may have changed this. It ts known that the Irvine Company plans several high rise hotel-motel facilities in the coastal area a.s well as thousands of homes. The company agreed to guarantee ac- cess: to the Jlh.-mile stretch of beaches to the public before the county enacted Its Beach Recreation Development zone and applied it to all the unl.ncorporated coastline from Seal Beach to San Clemente. The 10,000-acre property. sloping from the mountains 10 the beaches borders the propo1ed city of Irvine aMexation south of UCJ and extends to Laguna's northerly city limits. Jrvine Company executives supposedly plan to (Jle a ·request with the county Planning Commission for planned com· munity zoning for the property within t'A'O weeks. Staunchly opposing the merger of the 1nland 9,0()().p\us acres to Irvine is the Saddleback Area Coordinating Council which has filed its own "area of concern" map overlapping 3,000 acres of the Irvine proposal. \Vhile the Saddlcback group has no legal standing before the LA F C. representatives will have the right to be heard in full. The central issue is 1,600 acres of land zoned for industrial development east of the El Toro Alarinc Corps Air Station. Saddleback Valley interesls want this to remain unincorporated on the poalbili .. 1y a new city will be formed in the El 1'oro • Mission Viejo ~ Laguna Hills • Laguna Niguel area. Saddleback's area of concern map in· eludes about 64 .000 acres and stretches Cron1 San Juan Caplstrano to Tustin and from the city limits of Lagwia Beach to the eastern foothills bclo1v SaddJeback PC'ak. The city of Lagun3 has pro tested the Jrvine sphere of influence map. It Cll'crlaps some land the beach city covets in the Laguna Canyon area. Santa Ana. a frequent protester of anything concerning the new city, has several law suit appeals pending on the incorpotl!ltiOn and on the famed 938-acre "promist"d land" property south of the ~tarine Corps lfclicopler Air Station and east of Ne\\·port Freeway. The San Joaquin School District seem5 to feel that if the 1,600 acres in dispute between Saddleback interests ;ind Irvine city is annexed to the cit y the zoning might he rhnnged. This 1vould dilute the district's tax base in future years, they. fear. A strong possibility exists that the LAF'C 11·ill heed the reque!l of Ir vine to postp:lne a hen ring on the annexation and sphere map. but this does not preclude some debate \Vednesday. Irvine city officials have requested a two-1veek delay but Richard Turner. ex· ecutive officer of the LAFC. says that if asked he 11,i\I recommend "at least a 3(1. day continuance." He points out that the agenda for the co mmission's June 7 meet· ing is already completed and Is crowded. The commission may legally grant delays in petitions up to 70 days from the date of the first hearing which is Wednes- day. grand lhefl in connect ion with the sale al _ -THE SUN ~WAS AN IMPRESSIVE BACKDROP FOR THIS LONE lots near Big Bear known all: Mounta in ----------------------------,------------------------------- Students Display Creative Arts -------- View Estates. ·rn addition. Gherman and Patterso n \11,.er each charged wit h 40 counts of false and misleading advertisi ng :ind 19 counts each of faillng to adhere to a California Rea l Estate Commission order to stop selling the lot!. Deputy San Bernardino County District Attorney Charles Wolfe said today the charges stemmed from complaints in· itiated by the Reel Estate Commission. He said the corporation alleEt:edly sold 135 lots to persons telling them that utilities had been installed. when they hadn't been. Postmistress Fetc Planned for Ball An inau~ural ball honoring the new members of the San Juan Capistrano City Council and bidding farewell to Postmistress Grace Belardes is planned by the chamber of commerce Friday evening. The 7 p.m. event will be in the El Adobe restaurant and admission will be $8 per person. available bv contacting the chamber at P.O. Box 266, or by cal\ini;:: 493-4919. The theme for the evening will be "Capist rano, \Ve Love You." and , Ric hard Dickey will be master of ceremonies. Appointment Gets OK SACRAftfENTO (AP) -The Senate has confi rmed Gov. Ronald Reagan's ap- pointment of Roy Brophy lo the California State Universities and Colleges Board of Trustees. The 29-3 approval Monday followed by several dnys the swearing-in of the Sacramento developer by the governor. His appointment had been opposed by minority groups. Won1en's Lih- Men Too, l11 vade Tel Aviv Beacl1 TEL A\ IV fAPf -Won1en 's Lib and nten, too -stripped to th~ir s1vimsuits today and continued their fight for a Tel AYiv beach. The dispute involves religion and a stretch of sand on the Mediterranean. The beach was set aside by the City Council for ultra-Orthodox Jev:s who frown on mixed bathing and insist on strict segregation of scantily clad men and v.·omen. Twenty bikini-clad \.\'omen, angry at the restrictions, invaded the beach ft.1onday as religious men and boys basked in the sun. Police ordered them to retreat. A similar group of men infiltrated the beach Sunday v.·hen religious women were splashing in the surf. The men reportedly included actor Assa f Dayan, son of Israer s defense minister. The City Counci l issued an appeal for swimmers to respect the feelings of Orthodox Je1v s. and said the beach restrictions would not be lifted. The pro-- testers vo1ved to continue opposing sex segregation. The beach, one of four inside Tel Aviv, is reserved three days a v.•eek for religious men and three days for women, but is open to the public on the Saturday Sabbath when observant Jews don't go swimming. UPI ,,..,.._,. Pentagon Proteste.r One of more than 17 persons arrested Monday in an abortive march on the Pentagon Is carried off by police. Lawmen. used tear i .. and batons to drive Off the antiwar protesters. See story, Page 4. Rights Debated Bill Recommended in. Louisiarta BATON ROUGE, La. (UP!) - A Loui.!liana Hoose committee has rejected arguments that the women's rig hts amendment would lead to widespread im- morality, sharing of restrooms, and girl3 on the Louisiana State football team . The committee gave !he proposed amendment to the U.S. Constitution a favorable recommendation. A Senate committee did the same thing last wet.k. So many opponent& ol. the amendment showed up the committee had to meet in the House chamber to accommodate all 0£ them. Many of the opponents picketed in the Capitol lobby for t\.\'O weeks. One opponent, Jack Leggett of Baton Rouge, told the committee adoption of the amendment would "open the door for abortions and for men to marry men and women to marry women.,. Babs Minhinnette, v..ilo heads a group called Females Opposed to Equality (FOE ), said "a vote for this is a vote to put sin girls on the LSU football team and a vote to put skirts on legislators." Suspect S lio ·ws -l1i Underwear LE EDS, Engl:ind (UP I J -Last week Arthur J. Abbott, 25, shou'cd up in court \\"Caring only his underclothes. Today. he ca me on like Tarzan -leopard-skin trunks. blue socks :ind nothing else. "It is as a mark or protestation of in· nocence that he appears here today look- ing like Tarzan," said his la1vyer, Bar- rington Black . Abbott is up on house-breaking charges. His appearance last week was in protest against the fact his clothes had been taken for examination . He was offered others, but refused. 111 San Clemente Dozens or booths and other displays iihowing student creative work from San Clemente lligh School will be presented d!ong Avenida Del Mar early next month. lleraldrd as possibly the first edition ot an annual event. the arts and crafts fai r 11.·itl be held June 3 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and items on exhibit also will be offered for sale. Mrs. El Louise Nugent. counselor at the school, is organizing the project in an ~ttempt to show the general public the broad scope of student work on Ute Triton campus. Included in the exhibits will ha ceramics, woodwork, art, sculpture, met~I sculpture, graphics, photography, textile work, sewing, orna m en t a 1 horticult ure, dance, Instrumental and vocal music and cooking. Big Car Luxury at a Low, Low Price! MERCURY #JJ46H17440f Monterey 2-Dr. Hardtop, handsome medium brown with white vinyl roof, W. IV. Tires, Fender s~1rts, Radio, dual rear speakers, complete tinted glass, remote control mirror, deluxe wheel covers, body side moldings and AIR COND I- TIONING, .• $4133 MERCURY Comet 2-Dr. Sedlin, yellow gold, me- tallic W.W. tires, Radio, -Decor group, bumper guards. com plete tinted gl ass ... $2499 Home Of The New Car .• , · "Goldett rouch" .. Orange Cwnt1(1 Family of Fine Cars• ohnson· & son l INCO I. N Mt RCllHY COUGAR CAPR I . 2929 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • 640-5S30 • 2Kl1T14Jl•t Home Of The New Car ••• "Golde11 Touch" " .. ' : J !\ICKY TICKY POIJTIX' Campaign 72 r; ls beginning to heat up and nowhere is it !=more evident these days than in good old v.Orange COunty where even th e 11 Democrats are showing up to drum for t'votes. ~ Only yesterday, for example, Muriel ~Humphrey, wife of the senator from Min- inesola, the former vice president and i:current presidential aspirant, was in our 'region to 1Whip up some enthusiasm for "her husband's Calilornia Primary cam- paign. f\.irs. Humphrey was on hand out on 17th ~treet in Santa Ana for a buffet luncheon for campaign volunteers, foll ow- ed that up with an appearance at Leisure Werld in Laguna llilU( and then made stops in Los Angeles and Long Beach. She called this "one or my easier days," You get the notion you'd hate to see her schedule on a busy outing. ( I RUSSIAN HONOR GUARD STRUTS BEFORE PRESIDENT NIXON Soviet President Nlkol11 Podgorny Joint in Watching Review ' MRS. NIXON JOINS PUPILS IN MOSCOW PHYSICS CLASS 1Students Are Better Disciplined in Russia,' She Says McGovern Goes After Two More United Press InternalJoaal Goorge S. McGovern today went after an East Coast·West Coast sweep in presidential primaries in Rhode liland and Oregon. McGovern \Yasano v c rw helm Ing favorite to win in Oregon and add the state's 34 delegate votes to his leading and growing collection despite tbo I IN SHORT ••• I presence or Sen. Edward ?i1. Kennedy and nine other Democrats on the ballot. McGovern also was given a slight edge for Rhode Island's 22 delegates, although the election was considered a close three way race between McGovern. Edmund S. Muskie and Hubert. H. Humphrey, e Protest (l11nshed DURING HER stay with us, Mrs. Hum· phrey was witty, warm and charming. It i11 difficult to guess exactly how much she did to beef up Hubert's campaign in our area, but she surely did introduce some beef into the effort. Beer soup, that is. This is one of the delightful gimmicks of many Humphrey campaigns in that little cards are passed out carrying the recipe for "Muriel Humphrey's Beef Soup." Nixons 'Served Caviar Et Al Mrs. Gromyko Gets Huffy WASHINGTON (AP) -f\.1orc than 200 snliwar demonstrators have been ar· rested at the Pentagon, but protest organizers failed to muster a cro\vd large enough to disrupt activity at the giant military ()ffice bWlding. The demonstration had been billed as an effort to blockade the complex and prevent workers from enterini;:: but only a few protesters appeared during the nlorning rush hour Monday. SHE EXPLAINS in the introduction on the card, "This is a hearty old family . recipe my father used to make and is my husband's favorite. He likes to tell everyone it gives him vim, vigor and vitality. Serves six .good hearty bowls." MOSCOW (AP) -This was the menu for the official dinner Mon- day night in the Grand Kremlin Palace in honor of President a Mrs. Nixon: Reporters Covering Mr~. Nixon's Visit Scol,ded The CTO\Yd massed outside the building swelled to about 1.000 by noon and about 100 protesters locked arms and moved suddenly to rush the Pentagon steps at mid-afternoon. Officers <ln horseback quashed the drive and routed the re- maining demonstrat()rs. Well , as a columnist who can't even boil water, this is a bit out of place but I can't keep you ladies in suspense any . longer. Here's Muriel's magic recipe for the"ll<f!l~iijnhat ke<ps Hubert going:· Russian pancakes, fresh and red caviar and salmon Venison gammon -smoked venison -baked with fruit Fresh salted cucllmbers Suzdal fish soup Broshchok consomme with salted 1 ¥i lbs. stew beef or chuck and soup bone l tsp. salt i1.z tsp. pepper 2 bay leaves 4 or 5 med. sized carrots, sliced 11.z cup chopped onion 1 cup chopped celery 1 cup chopped cabbage 1 No. 2 can lt.alian style tomatoes I tbsp. Worcestershire sauce l beef bouillon cube Pinch of oregano <1r your preferred spice Cover meat with cold water in heavy three quart kettle. Add salt, pepper and bay leaves. Bring to bubbly stage while preparing vegetables. Turn heat low and add celery, onions, carrots and cabbage. Simmer at least 211.z hours or until meat is very tender. Remove bone and bay leaves. Cut meat into bite sized pieces. Add tomatoes, Worcestershire sauce and bouillon cube. Simmer for ;2 hour longer and serve. Mrs. Humphrey's C<1ncluding advice is, 1'This recipe is especially good for a light supper meal with fruit salad, a glass <1f milk, lots of crackers and dessert. It is Jow in calories but high in food value." Clearly, there has to be something to Humphrey soup. It has now sustained them thrqugh 12 )Xllitical campaigns overall and they are now in their sixth national ca mpaign. You might even get an Orange County Republican to try something that good. COMPUTERms: Robert w. Battin, the first district supervisor from Santa Ana, has fired off letters to his Fountain Valley constituents inviting them to a ~eeting tonight at one of his supprter's homes. In the letter, Battin noted, "I have personally held meetings with local neighborhood groups in Fountain Valley and other parts of Orange County as often as my official duties permit ... " ALL OF THIS may have surprised one of Battin's opponents, Wallace R. "Wally" Davis, who has been claiming J¥i.ttin has avo ided public meetings. 1Except Davis got an invitation himself. ;'Your computer sent me an in- vitation," Davis chortled in a letter of reply. "I want to find out where else YOU1\'e had meetings •.. I haven't heard of one in three and one-hair years. See you there." .May be the most interesting C<1ffee of the current campaign. rusks ~ ~ Sterlet -all Russian stu rgeon - in champagne Roast pheasant Strawberry ice cream Coffee and tea Fruit Petits four Vodka was served with the first course, Georgian white wine with the Sterlet, and Moldavian red wine with the pheasant. Russian cham- pagne accompanied dessert. Belfast Rocked By Bombs; Six Hi1rt Slightly BELFAST (UPI -Bombs exploded in downtown Belfast today, slightly injuring six persons, police said. One bomb inside a car went off beside th e Central Post Office, shattering win- dows over a 50-yard area. Another <lne heavily damaged a stocking factory. A third blast outside the downtown area extensively damaged a factory near the docks this afternoon. Workers were told they had five minutes to get out, but the bomb exploded ·25 minutes after the area was evacuated. No one was hurt. Police said the Post Office blast caused only superficial damage to the bWlding, but that two men and four women, in- cluding a policewoman, had to be treated for minor wounds. In L<lndonderry, women in the Roman Catholic Bogside area sought an agree- ment with the Provisional Wing or the Irish Republican Army (IRA ) to fire only in self-defense. The women, incensed over the Sunday slaying of a British soldier ()n leave from Germany, won a similar pledge from the IRA Official Wing Monday. A Roman Catholic priest meanwhile said today the men who shot three persons sitting in an automobi4e outside his home on Monday apparently made a mistake -they thought the three were police. By HELEN THOMAS MOSCOW (UPI) -Jn a crurn::h of newsmen and Soviet secret police, Mrs. Richard M. Nixon took a ride on Moscow's famous subway today , and the wife of the Soviet foreign minister told persistent newsmen where to get off. "Why don't you ask your questions somewhere else?" MrS. Andrei A. Gromyk~ said at one point. The KGB -the Soviet secret police - took good care of Mrs. Nixon on the afternoOn ride on the Moscow metro. The American first lady quipped that ''you have to be agile to get on that subway," referring to the fast-moving system. Late r, she said, "Yours is the lo veliest subway system in the world," in talking to the metro administrator, Alexander Novochatsky. "Ifs wonderful to get such high praise from you," he said. Mrs. Nixon was caught up in a squeeze <lf Russian security agents, enthusiastic cameramen, reporters and sputfering Soviet ladies during the afternoon ride on the subway, built by Josef V. Stalin as a showpiece of Soviet achievement. Much to Mrs. Gromyko's irritation, reporters asked Mrs. Nixon if she had ever ridden the New York subway. Mrs. Gromy ko demanded, "Why don't you ask your questions somewhere else?" But Mrs. Nixon laughed and replied, "Oh, yes. Many limes." The KGB agents were bent on pro- tecting Mrs. Nixon from the American newsmen as well as from some 50 more Russian and foreign photographers who had a field day filming her in marble.- walled, colored glass-decor stations. Mrs. Nixon earlier in the day helped Mrs. Leonid I. Brezhnev, the Soviet first lady, weather a crowd crush -largely of reporters an d photographers -during a tour of a school where several subjects are taught in English. "l'm going to take care or you," Mrs. Nixon told Victori a Brethnev, who dislikes crowds. She patted M r s , Brezhnev's hand consolingly. Mrs. Brezhnev did say she would like to visit the United States -"if , I'm in· vited." Mrs. Nixon said "of course" when asked if she had invited Mrs. Brezhnev. "! hope she's going to come," Mrs. Nixon said. "I've made some new friends and I want them all to visit." At the end of the tour of the school, Mrs. Gromyko told Mrs. Nixon: "It's very good to have you here. It's good for peace. V.'ords cannot describe how happy I am you are here." It was a busy day for Mrs. Nixon, in- cluding the subway ride followed by tea in the Kremlin's old Czarist family apartments with Mrs. Brezhnev and Mrs. Nikolai Podgorny, wife of the Soviet president. Mrs. ~Nixon, herself a former schoolteacher, said she was impressed at Balmy Weather Persists -~Slfy_ Clear ,_H.umidiLy-Lo.w_Except.in_Centrnl _Belt Temperature• Albany, cl••r An1nt1. CIO\ldy l ll'l'fllnoh•rn. c11tr llll$1on, cle•r l ufltlo. clt•r Ch1r111ton, cloudy Chllr1ott1, cloudy Chltt90, d1tr Clnc:fnn1t!, cl1ar Clevelalld, cltlr OtnY11r, cle1r " " .. " " " " .. " " " .. " • " .. " " ., " " " " ~ •• " ·" •• ... NAllOHAI. WfAl"fl ifh'KI fOllCAll I• 1 PM flf l •J• .. n 30.00 U;les ttlll low h11rnldlly favorlnt m1ny •n•s. E11ctl'f for cool condition• In tt11 Norlhwl31, Ille ntllon r • m a I n e d f>ll.1Sllt'l!ly todttd Into • p11t1rn ol wtrm or mlld tl•Y•llrne tt-m11er1tur•1. Thi -larrlrtt nor. of tl!t weatllllr map Wt• 1 urles ol showers •nd t1!11ndel"storms stre!Chlng from Ml11- ll4!$ol1 1nd th• 0"-~111 fo Oklehomt. Tl'of storm1 product'<! JOme llllJI floodlntt tnd H>'er1I tornedot!s In p1r11 ot Neb<as111. ""' dieG IWIY rnldnilll!I, Shower• alto feU In 11111 110rt111trn RO<kl('' •!'Id 111 SPOii 11!)09 the SOl.l!htrn Alltntle COISI • Tmu>traturts bl!Orl d1w11 ranlltd from 2' 11 E111111t0f\, wro.. 10 n the order in the classrooms. "You flatter me,'' said the teacher, "The students here are alt better reddening and smiling. disciplined than in America,'' she said. In another room, Mrs. Nixon listened In a home economics class she sampled attentively while a teacher explained that a cookie Crom a batch baked in honor of "our children are educated on the basis her visit. of Marxist-Leinist outlook." On the wal\s "Ummm,'' she said. of every classroom hung portraits of both Jn one classroom, a blonde girl Ylith Karl 1\1arx and Vladimir I. Lenin. tightly braided pigtails rose on <:ue and -Mrs. Nixon presenled six new basket-- nervously recited a poem in Russian. balls to the school and then stood on the '.'That was very good," Mrs. Nixon sidelines to watch a boys gym class pl<iy said. a game under the instruction ()f a lady She brought a blush from an English coach. teacher in another class by telling her, ''I've never seen a woman basketball "you speak beautifully." coach before,'' she said. Gov. Wallace Sips Mill{, Shows Continued Progress SILVER SPRING, Md. (UPI) -Gov. George C. Wallace is <1n a milk diet and has stepped up his activlties during con- tinued recuperati()n from an assassina- tion attempt May 15, according to his chief spokesman. Wallace's legs have been paralyzed since the shooting, but on Sunday and Monday he experienced some involuntary movement and some feeling in his legs. Doctors at Holy Cross Hospital issued a statement today saying the condition of Wallace's legs was ''essentially un- changed." "The Governor had a sound night's sleep," the statement said. "Over the past 24 hours, the neurologic status of the lower extremities has been essentially unchanged. 'The bowel activity has shown signs of improvement and the g<ivernor is taking increasing amounts of liquid by mouth. Respiration, cardiac activity, temperature and kidney function remain nonnal. "It is anticipated that the governor will progress with more active physie>-therapy and spend more time out <1f his bed te>- day." Aide Billy Joe Camp told reporters ~1onday that the governor made two telephone calls on Sunday -to his mother and to evangelist Billy Graham - and also watched television. · Camp said the 52·year-old governor, paralyzed from the waist down since the shooting, had moved his toes at least three times in response to sti mulation, twice Sunday and again on Monday. Meanwhile, two anonymous callers claiming to belong to the Ku Klux Klan have threatened to blow up the Ba ltimore County Jail unless authorities stopped protecting the accused assailant of Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace. The FBI said the two callers telephon- ed Baltimore area radio station WKTK- FM. Both said the jail would be destroyed unless authorities placed Arthur H. Bremer, 21, the suspect, outside its walls so the Klan could deal with him itself. Federal and county grand juries today begin deliberating indictments against Bremer. Bremer. blondish former bus· boy from Milwaukee, remained in his 8- by·lO-foot cell at the jail and was not scheduled to appear at either grand jury hearing. e FBI Aide Reworded WASHINGTON . !UPll -J. Edgar Hoover willed virtually all of his $551.500 estate to his long-lime friend. associate FBI .. director Clyde A. Tolson, the \Vashington Post reported today. The bequest included Hoover's $100,000 home in northwest Washington into wliich T()Json already has moved. the Post said . The ailing Tolson, 72, resigned his post shortly after Hoover was found dead in bed three weeks ago, and went into seclusion. The Post said that aside from a rew minor bequests to namesakes and employes. Hoover left to Tolson personal property including oil, gas and mineral ]eases; cash: stocks and OOnds: in- surance, 1;1npaid salary and annual leave, and household effects. e Air Merger Opposed WASHINGTON (AP) -A Civil Aeronautics Board examiner has recom· mended disapproval ()f the proposed merger of Northwest Airlines and Na- tional Airlines. "The real issue here boils down to whether the board is prepared to sanction the disappearance of a healthy and ef-, fectively competitive small trunk line ' from the air transportation scene via the merger route," said examiner Robert L. Park in his recommendation. e Drought Worse11s NEW DELHI (UPI) -In the stale o( • Bihar whole families walk all day in 112-- degree heat carrYing earthen jugs in search of a water hole. Jn the central state of Andhra Pradesh flocks '' , dehydrated blackbirds drop fro fn treetops. India is in the grip of a heat wave that llas produced temperatures of IJS degrees and claimed nearly 400 Jives in the past two weeks. It has left crops withered and claimed untold numbers of game and livestock. The heat continued but 'veathermen saw slight hope in clouds forming over both the Bay of Bengal and the Arabian Sea . Vatican , Experts Hope to Repair Pieta Perfectly VATICAN CITY (UPI) -Vatican restorati<1n experts said today they would try to restore Michelangelo's battered Pieta to an exact likeness of its original state rather than leave any trace of their re Pairs. Sammy Davis Testifies On Horse Racing Deal Prof. Oeoclecio Redig de Campos, citing an aSsessment of the damage after a more careful inspection , said he was confident the work can be done success- fully. "None of us is infallible," he told newsmen. "But I do not see any particular difficulties." Brazilian-born de Campos, director <1( the Vatican museums, assessed the pros- pects for repairing the statue or -Mary cradling the dead Christ in her arms after a Hungarian e'migfant attacked it with hammer Sunday, smashing the MadoMa's left arm and nose and damag· ing an eye. De campos recognized that modern restorat)(ln theories call for the restorer to leave SClme indication of where he has been working, in order that future scholars can tell the restored part from the original. WASHINGTON (AP) -Sammy Davis Jr. wants to play the role of Isaac Murphy in a movie about the great black jockey of the late 1800s. But, in real life, Davis told a House committee Monday, horse racing is the last business he wants to get into. The entertainer told the House Select Committee on Crime how he became in. volved in a New Jersey horse venture with a reputed organized crime figure . The committee is investigating organlzed crime's role in sports. Davis said Gaetano 0 Corky" Vastola, whom he has koown f« four or five years, introduced him to Stewart Siegel. Davis s<Ud he was to lend his name to a Lakewood; N.J., horse farm for an unspecified amount Or stock at $1 a share. Ott Mol1111, clo!Jdy Dltrtll, cle•t Honolulu, M Houlton, clhr l!'ldllfttPOlll. CIHr J9Ckton11IU1, cloudy K111Mt City; clolidy L•s Veo••· c111r· lltttt ftOC:k.-Cloudy l.oult-"'Ut. ct1tr Ml•'tl'• Clfft' MUWllU!I"' dMt Mnolii4t. l'N, dNt Nf'W Orleltll, C111r HewYert. cloudy Oll'ltllo!M Qft', rtf11 .,,,...., .... 1'1111.,,,.,., dfflt " M .. " "'''"' 11 llYllll, r .... 1nc1 K•~ w111, :--------------.., '"· "I signed a leUer of lntent, without ever ooming cl<1se to completing the deal." Davis said, "But the next thing I knew I owed somebody a lot of mone:y for work on the farm and for having bought some horses. I've hever been to the farm in my life." ... ~tdN!' f>l~•tt..r l'Ol"fltftd, Ort,, dOud)' RlctMNM. dWdV 11. t...ut1< dMr s.tl ~ Cltr. dMr .... ,-,..!Kl ... ...,_ ... , ... ,..., W111f11 ........ dWdy • u " .. " .. " .. " .. " " .. .. n " " .. " .. .. .. • " " .. " ., .. " • " " .. " .. .. • .. .. ... " M "' " .... ... ... ·" -Coastal Weatlaer Ftlr tocsty, Lltl'll 11trl1bl1 w!Ms nfgtrt •lld l'l'IOl'nlno IWMlti Mtomlnt -••rly 10 to 20 knolS In tfltrnoon• lod1y •nd Wednud1y. High fodly 11. Coat111 ttmPtrttw.s r1np41 frorn SS to ... lnltl!d iwn,_,.turn r•nOI trom Jt to 15. W•ltl' t11nP1r.tture •2. Sun, /tloott, Tides TVISOAY Stcond hlg-lt ........ ,..i 7:22 P,11\. f,J Stcond low • ·~· ••• ,. 1':~ P.1'11. 1.4 WI OffllDAY ,,,..., hlt1~ .....•....•••• l tM 1.m. SA l'll"lf '" "~ •• ~ ......... f t20 •• m. 0.2 6ecoriii lllJI\ ... -: ••••••• , 1;4$p.rn. S..• Stcond klw , ........... hll2p,m. 1.7 $vn it•.S:4' ... lllo. hhJ;N,.-. Moon Ritt• 4:ltP.m. Stls 2~$ol1.m. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE ~llvtry of the Dally Piiot Is gvara~teed MondaY·Ftlday: If Y1!1 dO flOf '""* \'0111' p.t:per by S:JO p.m .. ttll 1nd mr ~Y wlll bl bt'oUllhf to VOU. C.lit lrt flkM W.111 1:» "'"" .,llll'Uly •rid Svndtt1 ft Y1!1 do "°' rtctlvt .,_ ~ OJ t •.m. Stfllrdey, or • t ,m. S""!lf•Y· cell llld I copy wUI bl btOught to 'r9y-Ctll• 1,. tt~lll. ll!'ltll lt •.m. • • Telephof'leS MOii ~ Col.lofY Afff1 •••••••• fC241 Nortll"'"t Hvn11ntlroll lffdl tnd Wntml111t1r ••••••••.••••••••• i*lnt Utr Clllfttntt, C.pl1rr.t!0 ISft<fl S.11 Jutll Qpltltl1101 Otnl hint. '°""' ·u.-o 'Yt-.....,., ... , 4't-+nt A letter, wrllten by Bill Lowry, pres!· dent <1f Tattersalls, a Kentucky aucti<ln company, and introduced into the com- mittee records, told how Sie3el 8UC.. c<ssfully bid on lour horses last October for 18,800 . "Mr. Siegel .signed tile 1?11r<hoscr acknowledgcmenls as Stewart Siegel, agent, Sammy Davl5 Jr. F a r ms , Ln l,,wood. NJ.," tllt.J~t)er stat«!.. . Tcstimoey showed Siegel reoold ono of lhe horses for $4,?00 and later roturned U'IT ...... IN 'FAST COMPANY' Sammy 01Yi1 Jr. the other IJ!ree to'Ta~llJ, wl!jca \as never reoelved any money lor any ~ the lour. . . ' r; "ln pliin Engl~." Davia uld, '".this guy took • lot ol ~Pia, usi,. m)I>°"'"' ll'• an tmbarrassing position. 'l'Dl just glad I started to feel funay abool the • Shut Oft Wate1• f St1·ikers Promise To Close Project' SACRAMENTO (API Striking state ernployes h:ire vo1ved to shut do1vn the 685. mlle concrete watery,·ay thnt carries Northern California river 1vater to arid Southern Galifornia. The employes slruck the ~2.9 billion California Water PTOJ· ect 1'olonday in 11 1\ age dispute. Bul \Villiam Glannelti , the i;tate waler chief, vo1ved to continue operations .,.. i I h management personnel. The com plex of canals. dains. po11·er plants and pumping stations pumped its first y,·ater over t.h::! Tehachapi Mountains into Southern Californ ia last October. Some strikers y,•ere served 11·ith a restraining order early tod ay ca lling a halt to the strike but strike leaders said it 11·as tco early to tell hu1v they 11·ould react. , The striker:;, men1bcrs or the California State Err.ployes Association. seek raises of 21 to 26 percent in the ir disuptt v.·ith the state Personnel Board and Dcpartn1ent of \Vater Resources. The CSEA general manager. \\'alter \V. Taylor. said J\1on· day that the state is piling up Huins Found surplus nioney, and the water project v.·orkers a re a.d- n1ittedly behind in pay. But the state managers have '·refused to make an offer ." Ironically, the strike came 30 minutes after dov. Ronald Reagan received the nation's highest engineering award for the state Water Project. It was presented by Oscar S. Bray of Lynnfield, Mass .. na- 1 ional president or t h e American Society of Civil Engineers, The $2.9 billion project "best demonstrates the g r e a t e s t engineering :s k i 11 s and represents the greatest con- tribution to civil engineering and to mankind," said Bray. The restarining order \vas issued by Sacramento County Superior Cou rt Judge \Villiam Gallagher. Gianelli rlescribed it as declaring the strike and picketing to be il- Jep:aL Taylor said he had not yet been served \Yith the order. But some of. the workers out on the project. who he said arc "uslng t he i r constitutional r ighl~ to inform the people aboul how badly they 're being treated." have been served. lie said he expected to be ser\'ed later, and would decide v.·hat to do after studying the order and d c I e r m i n i n g '·\vhether it is reasonable." Gianelli said the employes acted despite every indicalion SEOUL t AP 1 -A Korean that they are in line to receive college archeolog1cal 1ean1 has a "substantial equity in- cxcavatcd a housing si1e t"rease." He sairl th e tin1ing is believed to be about 20 .000 critical bec<:1use !he demand years old, near Kongj u. 70 for water has been increasing miles south of Seou l. t h e fast recently because of the ne\\Spaper Shinmun reported. dry weather. ~-'---~~~~~~~, !'AID l'OL. ADV. TO ALL REPUBLICANS Remember: CLAIR BURGENER'S VOTING RECORD 25 or ~ Senaton ALWAYS voted FOR the \ California Housing Coalition . These were ALL THE DEMOCRAT S and FIVE REPUBLICANS, in- cluding BURGENER. (The CHC stan ds for ten· ant's rights, fa ir hou sing, state le asing housin9 -a libera lly oriented group.) Elect FRED GAGE YOUR CONGRESSMAN in the 42nd BURGENER'S NOT YOUR MAN! COMMITTEE TO ELECT FRED GAGE CONGRESSMAN 'O!.'/i Mi11ion A••· e Ot1•n1id1 e 114·722 -1496 UNAN IMOUSLY lHOOllSl!D I Y CALtl'Ofl:NIA llEPUILICAN ASSEMI LY ------ Budget Debate Delayed SACRAMENTO (AP \ -The final round or legislative negotiations on the slate's a!l- time biggest budget is being del ayed. The Sena te's failure to lake action Monday, the same da y the Assembly llcted, has caused the delay. The Assentbly approved a $7.9 billion version of the budget. $269 n1illion more than Gov. Ronald Reagan asked for last Jan. 12. and $97 million more than the Senate ap.. proved last week. Th at's a gap of $52 million less than was separating the l\\'O houses a month ago. All the Senate had to do to s t a r t Se n a t e -Assembly negotiations was lo reject the Assemblv amendments. ·rhe la'\vmakers are aiming for a June 15 deadline in the stale Constit ution for adoption of the budget. ''We have lots commenterl Sen. Collier ((}.Yrcka l, the budget act. of time." llandolph author of '!'he Assembly version. the Senate versiori and Rea·gan 's request are all close to $1 billion more than the current year's budget. All lhree con- lain major increases in spen- ding on education and salaries for state employes. The Assembly \' e r s i o n cleared by only the minimum margin. 54-10. The big issues in fina l negotiations "'ill be h<11r big a raise Lo ~ive local schools. and what lo do about touchy iss ues like the Senate rider to eliminate tuition al the University of California. Reagan proposed a $65 million increase lo J'o c a I schools. The Senate put that at SIOO mill ion. and the Assembly at $165 million . The tuition rider ls a $26.6 million item rejected by !he Senate Finance Committee but arlded with a 22-14 floor vote last week . Reagan has said he opposes abolition of UC's $100 per quarter tuition. and wants tuition imposed at the 19-cam- pus state college system . l\11-:N OVER i\IACJIINES LONDON (API -A street S\\'eeping machine in Heanor. Derbyshire. lost its j ob because four men with brooms and shovels do the y.·ork bet- ter, officials sald . ~~-'-'!~~.~......... _.,fl ---' ' -: •' • ~ . "' ... -~~-·~ %&~Mw.M ~ ---'~ ... -··~~ · ~ ·· ._ 1 .... ONE OF OUR NEIGHBORS ASKED ME WHY WE DID ~~ NOT RECEIVE A PRESIDENTIAL CI TATION FOL· ' ' LOWING MY HU SBAND'S DEA TH . CAN YO U TELL ME WHETHER OR NOT WE SHOLD HAVE RECEIVED SUCH A CITATION? by EUGENE 0. BERG ERON This ch atla11 Is effklally k1111ww as a"'Presldel'ltlal Memarlal Certificate". h h • ,,,.merl- illiiatl•" Mori .. the 1ig11ature af the President af tt.e U11lttd Srotes oltd h award.d ta tile '"It af lr:ifl af dececssed 'f'etera11s discharged u"der ho11oroble ca11ditla1u . .Altholll)h this pr-.ram was 1111afflclally commenced by the kite President lta1111edy 111 1962 ft<w certifi - catn were tuHd untll Co'"Jrns officially h11pleme11t9d the protre111 In July, 1'65. The lftti COMJrns, e•p~nl11g the hith asttt1r1 the Amerlca11 jMOple holtl for those wh o haq "'"" their country 111 tlM .Arnwd Forcn, 011tharlnd that a Presldentlat Me111orlal Certificate af recatnltlon ba awarded, 11po11 requfft, ta 1tllgibl11 sur•lf0r1 of dececnetl 'f'lltllflllll. If yaa ar the "'"ifOr1 at ally deceaHd 'f'etera11, would II•• ta receln a Presldentla l Mame;hll Caf'tlfkata please brh19 ttia vetera11'1 dllchar9e paper• ta loltr-lerteron and we wlH 9" ... • tlte tlet•lh far you. Balt::-Be1•9e1•01i F1111er11l Bo111e COSTA MESA 2 LOCATIONS CORONA de! MAR 646-2424 67l-94SO '"""'' ......... ~ .,· -~ f ~. •. ~'I .1 I , J Guns 'Gone' When ' SAN JOSE CAP ) -Angela Davis exclalmtd ''Oh, no !" u•hen she learned that her guns had probably been used by Jonathan J~ckson in a bloody 1970 co urthouse shooting. says her ronner rpommate. Valerie llrlitchell. who also u~es the S\vahili name Tamu, said Miss Davis learned that the guns were missing the rnoming after the Aug. 7, 1970 !lhooting in \Vhich Jonat han. a judge and lv.-o convicts were killed. Mrs. :P.1ilchel\ was one of six r\\'!(neSSeS Who testified at the A opening of the defense case ~\ i\1onday -each attempting to unlink h-1iss Davis fro m Jonathan Jackson and a courthouse invasio n that ended in shooting. This provided lhe first rlefense account or ~1iss Da vis' 1vhereabouts during t h e critical days before Aug. 7, \11hen the state claims ··he was plotting the courthouse in - vasion .. ~trs. J\•litchell. an articulate black Communist, testified that J\1iss Davis left 111·0 carbines and a Bro1vning automatic pistol in a gun rack at her apartment for use by members of the Che Lumum· ha Club. a group of all-black Communist activists in Los Angeles. J\1iss Davi s moved out of lhe apartment in July, 1970. she said. but she left the gun rack in a closel so that she and other members could use the 1veapons for target prilc- lite. On Saturday, Aug. t. 1970, J\'lrs. Mitchell said Jonathan Jackson came to her apa rt- ment and asked to make copies of some material. She said he r apartment \\'as the hcadquarlers for both the Che Lumumba Club and the Soledad Brothers D e f e n s e Committee and she had a co- pying machine and paper there. J\'lrs. J\1itchell explained that she u'as preparing to lea ve for San Francisco and I e f I Jackson alone in her apart- ment while she \\•as ru nn ing Sailors Set Deptli Murk, Decompress DEFENSE ATTORNEY Leo Brinton, Jr. errands. \Vhcn she reiurne<l, he \Yas gone. A \l"eek later -on Aug. 8, 1970 -J\1rs. J\litchell said f\liss Davis and Franklin Alex- ander. a n1ember of the Che Lumumba Club and no\V the co-<:hairman of the Natlonal United Committee to Free Angela Davis. came to her apartment .. and they seemed lo be quite concerned and ex.- cited." She said lhC'y asked about the guns and .... ·hen they looked in the closet they discovered the three \\'capons· and all the an1munition \Yere n1issinc. ··rraJ'\klin said. 'Oh. ---,' ari"d shook -l\js head, and J\1iss Davis said. 'Oh., no~' " Mrs. Mitchell said l\Iiss Da vis \va:s ho 1 d i n g a newspaper clipping shov.•ing Jonathan holding a carbine. She said Franklin asked \\•hat happened and she explained about leaving Jonathan alone in the apartment on Aug. 1. She said she hadn 't looked into the closet since that lime. Four defense w i I n e s..s e s s11·ore l\l iss Davis \\'as "·ith 1hen1 at the same lime the state contends she was plot- llng with Jonathan. Attorney !\.1arvii:i Slender. the unofficial legal adviser to the Soledad Brothe rs Defense Committee. said he drove !\·liss Davis from San Fran- ci sco to Berkeley about 11 :30 11 .n1. on Aug . 6 11nd dropped her ofr al a pr iva te home. A convict testify ing for the prosecution said he S3\Y f\fiss Davis and Jonathan al the same time in a yello1v van leaving fhe San Q u e n t i n parking lot. Educators Coalesce To Lobby SACRAMENTO (AP I -Top callfomia tdueators h 11 v c formed a coalition fint1nce rtforrn bill through the Legislature this yea r. Organizers or !ht! Educa- tional Congress or California said :P.1onday part or the pressure they will bring on laY!'makers "'ill be t he possibility the organization may work for or against them in the November elections dependjng on how a legislator votes. ) Tutsday, M.t:v 2.3, 1972 Concessionaires A·n opportunity to inv•it in th1 •tquisition of • m•ster concession le•sehold for bo•t rent•ls, two refreshment stands, bicycle r1ntals, plus ancill•ry servic es common to thest cone.el· sions is a v•ila ble to the public in the n•w 207. •Cre Hunfin gion Cenfr•I Ptrk. Full d et.iih 011 obta ining thit ma ster lea5e •re av•il.ble from To1n Severns, Development Coordin1tor City Administrator's Office 520 Pecan, P.O. Box 190 Telephone (714 1 536-5207 The con~ress 1s seeking ap- proval or a bill that v.·ould meet the di ctates of the State Supreme Court 's l·Scrrano"I decision and cut properly tax mummmli;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiimmm~ bills. The Serrano decision last year said local property taxeii for school suppor t un- <.'<ln:iititutionally discriminatt' against children in dislricts 1vith relatively liHle property value. Your home has another The t'Ongress includes thr Association of C a I i f o r n i a Sc h o o l Ad m i nistrators. Association of Ca J i f o r n i a School Dislri cts. Catlforni11 Congress of Parents ond 'Teachers. AFL-CIO Cal iforn ia Federation of Tc a t h r rs . California School B n a rd s Association . Ca I i fo r n 1 a Teachers AssoLiat ion . Classified School E1nploye's Association, Delta K a p p a Gamma teachers honorar y organization. Le a g u e of \Yomen Voters . Los Angeles City Unified School Oistrlt-t Board of Education. American Assoc iation of U n i v e r s i t y Women and United ·reachers ''built-in''= of Los· Angeles. _.,. Organii.ation s suC'h as the League o! \Vomen Voters u·ould not be experted to participate in campaigns for or against individual can· didates because th eir byla1\'S forbid it. it was reported . The congress was created at a "crisis summit conference" called by state schools chief \\'i\son Riles to discuss \\•ays of persuading the Legislature to revamp California 's method of paying for its schools. Some California sch o o I districts are teetering on bankruptcy and others face serious money woes , Riles told an audience of about 70 Money. One o11hP. built-in fea tures nf yo ur home Is the r.q u1ty yo u'v e built up over the years. You can c onver1 that equ+!y +nto Cil$h \'11th an Avco Ho m~ 01.,.ner s l oan. Cash tor anv reason you can thinlt of. And pay 1\ bac~ conven1enlly over a period of years, rather than months like most pers onal loans. It's our business 10 tend money to homeowners. Wh al you do w11h lhe money is your business. HOMEOWNER LOA.NS TO 525,000. Qyer SS.ODO on Reiill E!otate & Per1onal Properly ~AVCO FINANCIA L. SERVICES persons representing 13 educa-500 N. An•heim Blvd., An•heim Sl.5~211 6 tional organizations. Riles told reporters he 250 S. Euclid St., Anilhelm 71 .. 5250 hoped the ne1v organization 1179 H•rbor Blvd ., Cost• Mes• 642.:Ml4 would back iden tical bills by Sen. Stephen Teale (D-Wesl 61 7 w. 17tk St., S;inta An• S4T-44Jl Point) and Assemblyman Dix-2017 s. Miili n St., Siilntiil An• 54f..Jl61 on Arnett (R-Redwood City /. I~~~~ ... ----~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Teale·Dixon bills would I· Impose a state\vide property lax of $2.50 per $100 of assess- ed val uation and would give local schools an additional $340 Nearly Everyone SAN DEIGO (AP \ -Two sailors who set a Navy depth record for divers by sub- merging 945 feet below the ocean surface are Jiving in a decompression 'eh amber aboard the di ving support vessel Elk Ri ver. They eXpet"I to be in the chamber for 10 days. million in state money during L" t l L cJ S . F"l d the first year along with $500 IS ens 0 an crs l.ll t 11 e 111 ~m-ill.ioiniiinipiroipciirtiyitiaxiirciliieir.illlilmiiliiiliiiiiiiiiiii•••iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij Th e two men, made the clive last Saturday off Sa n Clemente Island and spent 30 minutes at the record depth. The divers are Chi e r Boatswain's ~late \Va r re n Ramos Jr., 23. of San Pedro. and PO 7.C. Christopher J . Delucchi. 21. of Fremont. A spokesman at Submarinf' Development Group 1 said Delucchi and Ramos u.~ed 11 ne\V satur ation diving svsten1 V.'hich conditions men on the surface for \vater pressure 35 limes greater belo\v . Al the 94S·foot level. they breathed a mixture of 96 percent helium and ~ percent oxy~en . T110 European civilian div· ers rle;iired the 1.000-foot Jel'el in 1962 but onr nf thrm died in returning to the surface. Her Own Road . i\IEXICO CITY <AP \ -A court ruled thal a wo1nan y.·ho lost part of her ranch proper!~· \\'hen a highway \Va s built nn11· ov.'ns a section of the hig/11r:\y, tr tl1e government doesn't pay her compensation. the judge said, it must return the land to To Hold Up : Coast Route 1 SA.'\' FANC ISCO (APl - The Sierra Club and other con- servationist groups have filed suit to block construction of a SIS nlillion coasta l freeway in l northern San J\1ateo County. Thr club, whi ch filed the ' suit ~fonday in U.S. District I Court. said it opposes the six- !ane freeway because it would require ma ssive cuts -some ' of thtm a~ large as 200 by ' 1,000 feet -in nearby coastal n1ountains. The proposed free1\•ay \vould replace High"'llY 1 bet\·;een , Pacifica and the l-la\f J\1oon Bay Ail'porl . I Named in the action were Transportation Secretary Jon A. Volpe, the Ca I i r or n i a liighway Commission, t he' state Department of Public \Vorks and olher :state and federal officia ls. PARKS ARE FOR PEOPLE LITT LE PEOPLE , BIG PEOPLE, ENERGETIC, TENSE, TIRED PEOPLE PLACES TO PLAY, UNWIND, OR REFLECT ON HIS CREATION. QUIET, SERENE, GREEN. NOISY WITH THE BABB LE OF CHILDREN AT PLAY. Let's Save Something For Ourselves YES ON F,G,H. Cantrlbutla111 te: Cit/lens AdYisory Pa rk lontl Team • •• ner. The sui t alleges federal and ~late defendant!i have ''iolated !hat National En vironn1ental Policy Act hy railing to prepare an environmental Im· p;ict staten1eri[ ~ stereo103FM the sounds of the harbor _ldS~~youve never heard it so good • .. , " •• , . . ' .. • • D ARY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • County Badly Served • All oovtrnment -indeed, tvery ltumar& btnefit and enjoyment, every virtue and every prudent att -11 jounded on corn.promise and barter. -Edniutid Burke Englrsh Staiesman ond Pltitosophtr, 1729·91 Burke pro4uced many pearls of wisdom In his 68 years but this quotation from his speech on conciliation \Vith America 197 years ago seems especially pertinent t.o Orange County's congres sional representation today. Rep. John G. Schmitz (R·TustlnJ, who campaigned in his home district last weekend, showed once more that be has yet to learn that politics is the art of com- promise. Imbued with the rigid negativism of the Birch Society, Schmitz came home to campaign on a record of nothing but failure in his first term in Congress. He has been a representative from Oran~e County but not of its people, especially the Republicans who sent him to \Vashington. Although he is seeking to convey the impressiqn that Nixon's moves in Indochina make him a Nixon man now, the truth is that Schmitz: -Is the only Republican congressman actively lliUJl'" porting Ohio IU!p. John Ashbrook of the radical right in his candidacy against Nixon. -Has opposed, over 22 months, nearly two:thirds of Nixon-proposed legislation. In the current session he has opposed his own party's position 56 percent of the time, and Nixon's position 85 percent of the time. -Has carried the torch of the radical right to the point where he could say of Nixon's trip to Peking that he is only worried the President "will come back from there." Orange County Tax Assessor Andrew Hinshaw. (R· Mission Viejo), campaigning to take the GOP nom1na· Chinese vs. Western 'Healing Art' (SYDNEY J. HARRIS) A medical friend of mine took a trip to the Far East this spring in order to study, among other things, the Chinese art ·of acupuncture, which ls several thousand years old. This ancient Chinese heating teehrtique ts only now begin- ning to arouse Jnter- est in Weste rn med- ical circles. Recent· ly, Vintage Books i,s.. 1ued a paperback edition of Dr. Felix Mann's treatise Oil "'Acupuncture," pu~ Ushed 10 yea rs ago in E nglan d and largely ignored at the time. JN CASE YOU haven't heard about it. acupu ncture Is a method of piercing below the skin with needles into a specific area of the autonomous nervous system. This can not only (its practitioners and Dear Gloo1ny Gus The only place Henry Kissinger hasn 't visited in President Nix0n'! behalf is the moon. \Vatch for him to step out or the Apollo capsule on the next moon landing. -D. E. L. Tlil1 lttl1,1.t11 ttl/tCll r9tdtr1' 'l'ltWJ. Ml 1'1Kt1Wrltf' IMN ti nt. ,,_..,..H r. Sltlld five medicine." Jn the first case, they recognized that many "mental" illnesses may have physical causes and many "physical" ill nesses may have mental causes, treating the whole patient rather than the disease in Isolation. Jn the second case, in ancient China, the patient paid the doctor while he was well, and stopped paying only when he !ell ill. It was the task of the doctor (whom he visited every three or sii months) to keep him well, and for this he paid a fixed fee. \Vhen he took ill, he suspended payments until he was cured or much improved. This seems to make a lot more sense than our curious reversal of the process. patients say) produce anesthesia and the RECENT ADVANCES in psychosomatic aUeviation of symptoms, it can also cure m e d i c j JI. e in the West have many diseases, rar;iging from. migraine brought us much closer to the ancient tleadaches to. arthriti~ and peptic ulcers. ,,. Chinese concept. Freud was among lhe What particularly impressed me about first to break down the ''dualistic" idea Dr. Mann's book is the Chinese approach by demonstrating hO\V profoundly mental to the p~obl~~, of ~i~c?,s~ .. Unlik~ the states may affect the body; and. although West, which 1~ . dual.1su.~ in .it~ a~1tltud~, he was a thoroughgoing materialist Chinese med1c1~e is mo~1st1c. This hiinse\f, his techniques borro1ved (un· means that wh1l~ we continue to look consciously) from the Eastern approach upon body and mind, matter an? .energy, to the "unitary'' nature of man as body· as separate a~d opposed . entJt1~s, the ·mind composite. Chinese (following the ancient Ytn and . Yang principle) regard all things as .How far . acupun~ture as a tech~i~ue Inter-related and part of a basic cosmic ~di ~ake inroads into \Vest~rn mcd1 c1ne harmony is st11J a matter of speculation : but the · vitalistic and dynamic philosophy of the IT IS NOTABLE THAT thousands of Chinese "healing art" is bound to make a years ago, the Chinese practiced both deep imprint upon all the younger prac- "psychosomalic medicine" and "preven-litioners of preventive medicine. A Way to Cool T'eenager Things a columnist might never kno'v if be didn't open his mall: One way to cool a teenager when he gets too persnickety, is point out to him that, according to one legal delinition, anyone under 21 years of age is an infant. Communications scientists estimate the average penion can make as many as 7 O o . o O o different meaningful gestures through body move- ments and facial vo- cabulary. Speaking of lan· guages, Francis Sa· con, Elizabethan public official and essayist Who is persistently btlieved by some to be the real author of Shake- 1pe.are'1 ptay, didn"t have much belief In lhe durability of hi s native tongue. lie translattd some of ltis essays into Lalin because he doubted they would :rurvlve If printed only In Eng\tsh. WEIL, SOMEONI; at last has gone to the trouble of figuring what a anall's pace really ll. A snail, according Lo the Nit· tional GfJOCraphlc Society, roars along at a speed of .000033 mU.. an hour. On lhe rt(llrn trip, II he hu got wba1'""r he wanted, be may alow down _,,bat. No UM In wurtnc oul hll motor'"""" Aller all. 11 ooly pnerala l~llloalh of ooe ..... ..,...,1n......,. Somo -do hi."' -1\'rdinarf oppellla, don't tbeyl A thin!Y .camel, • ( HAL BOYLE ) for example, can gulp down 25 gallons of wa.ter In a few minutes . ..And a kiUer whale may swallo w as many as 24 whole seals, still struggling. in a single meal. QUOTABLE NOTABLES: "There will always be about the sa me percentage of people capable of real love, and there will always be about the same percentage of people who aren 't." -John Galsworthy. Dinner talk : Time and place change the menu. \Ve speak loday or a full. course meal as one ranging from soup Lo nuts. In ancient Rome the term was •'from eggs to apples." Sign in a Broadway shop: "Thi:ii is the last going out of business sale this month." DIREFUL: II you lhlnk \he human situation Is hopeless todBy, you might be consoled to know that someone alwayiii has considered man being in this plight in every age and period of history. In the 18th century, religious reformer John Cllv\n wrote Jn hts D<dlcalion of the· Chrl!lian Religion : "It LI evident to aO who can ,.., lhat Ute world Is Inundated w\lh more than RD ocun of evl\J; that It ls overrun with numerous destructive f)Ula; lhat tvecythlng. ls last vtrg\ni to ruin. IO that we musl altoieth<r cJupalr ol human allalrs." tion from Schmitz June 6, underscores a telling point about Schmitz' record in Washington. Hinshaw has said that in his visits to \Vashington he has found that "Schmitz has no rapport wlth govern· ment officials," and this would hurt the county's chances of receiving government contracts. projects or services. Campaigning h,ere last week, Schmitz talked glibly about the many things over \Vhich he has no influence -the war, the President's flOlicies toward Russia and China, the U.N. But be had little to say about his voting record or what he's done for Orange County, because that would have proved highly embarrassing to him. Congressmen skilled in the give-and·take or poll· tics can get the job done for their districts. But Orange County. with but one exception, has Jacked this kind of representation for many years. Schmitz has worsened this unfortunate situation. It's time Orange County Republicans awakened to the fact they simply are not represented in Washington. And that, on the contrary, their representative supports neither the party program nor its leader in the White I louse. Mason···'Man of the Year' William R. Mason, the civil engineer \Vho rose to lhe presidency of the Irvine Company in seven years. is widely known as a leader in the imaginative transi· tion of the Irvine Ranch to planned urban development. ' I • : . : . ·-.. ,. .f : • · .. ~: ... ·-....· .. · '· . ... ' " ' . . .. ' • ' I ~ ·. ·; ... : .. ~ :--.· .. \Vhat is less \Veil known is the great scope of his leadership in educational, humanitarian, youth and civic causes. Mason has given generously of his energies to the betterment of Orange County and its residents. The "Man of the Year11 honor bestowed upon him by the Orange County Press Club is well-earned. 'Don't look at me . , . l don't mak e people shoot each otbert I only make it easier for them t o use a gun than. to drive ·an autom obile!' Befot•e Leaving f 01• Raissia ••• Presi-dent Received Striking Cou·nsel WASfilNGTON -President Nixon took with him to his talks In Moscow a penetrating piece of admonitory caution and advice. It is that to the Kremlin rulers ''negotiations'' have a profowidly dir· ferent meaning than they do in the \Vest. The Soviets view ne- gotiations as another strategic weapo'!, and not as a means or reaching an un· derstanding for bet· ter relations and mu- tual benefits. The exact text o( this striking counsel. as conveyed to the Preside11t, is a! follows: "Negotiation is viewed by the Soviet as a weapon like a warship in the Mediter· ranean or a strategic missile. Their aim in talking is not to get an agreement based on mutual concessions in order to lower tensions and reach more under- standing relationships. When the Soviets lalk to the United. States they have -0ne of two objectives in mind: "TO ASCERTAIN what the United States is going lo do and to let the Americans know up to a certain point what they are thinking and planning; or to gain a positive advantage by using lhe weapon of negotiations. ''The Russians have reached what they regard as a state of strategic nuclear parity with the United States. This basically st.able relationship provides I.hem with an umbrella under which they can pursue a number of probes designed to expand Soviet political, military and economic influence and power all over the world and weaken the position of the United States. "It must be constantly kept in mind that negotiation is merely one of the weapons the Russians are employing in these probes. together with other v.·eapons such as economic and political penetration and straight mi 1 it a r y moves.'' THIS STERN GUIDANCE is one of the highlights of a study prepared by the Senate Subcommittee on National Securi· ty and International Operations, and (ROBERT S. ALLEN) carefully read by the President as part of his "homework" in preparation for his eventlul trip to Moseow. Titled ''The Impact of the Changing Power Balance." the relatively brief 17· page docun1ent was compiled at the ln- stigation of Sen. Henry Jackson, 0-Wash., chairman, Although published as an of· ticial document, it has gone virtually un- noticed -but not in high quarters in the U.S. and abroad. It was one of the first authoritative studies read by the President on the r~commendatlon of Dr. Henry Kissinger. his personal foreign affairs adviser. The most penetrating and informative part of the document is in the form of a series of explicit questions and answers that go to the heart of basic Russian policy and methods. THIS REVEALING catechism makes forcefully clear the grave underlying risks the President 1s taking in negotiating with the Soviet. Says Senator Jackson somberly in a foreword : "Today, the Soviets can be confident or overall nuclear equality wilh the United States; they are even ahead of us in some nuclear weaJX!ns areas. They can also count on a growing capacity to project naval forces and other elements of their military power into key parts of the world. Given this situation . it is only pru- dent to assume that Soviet leadership will he more vigorous in the assertion of what it regards as Soviet interests; it will be bolder in trying to advance them. and adopt a harder bargaining position in negotiation. "Such a stance can introduce new elements of danger and turbulence into international affairs.'' DIRECJ'L Y REI/\'FORQNG this blunt warning are the following key questions and answers: Q: "Does this mean ~tosrow is not in· !crested in a Jive-and·let·li\'e ac- commodation with lhe United States?" A: "Soviet leaders are in an ex· pansionist mood. They have resumed a political offensive which they initiated u1 1966 but had to postpone because of the 1'-1iddle East war in 1!>67 and the Czechoslovak crisis In 1968. They fe('J that the Soviet Union is th<' up and t'Om· ing power. and that thr U.S. has pa~sed lhe peak or its pov•er." Q: ·•\Viii they take risks to nudge history ?"' A: "Yes. They seen1 to th ink that in general terms the threshold of risk has moved in their favor vis-a-vis the United States. They have not changed their basic policy of the past 20 years about not risk· ing nuclear war with America." Q: ''DOES TH AT MEAN there ls now a greater danger of confrontations between the super powers?'' A: ''Yes -in local situations where vital American interests are not clearly al stake. The United States will find itself increasingly under greater challenge in local situations -such as the ~1iddle East. In these situations, the Russians will be willing to use their military forces lo achieve two objectives: first. to ~trrngthen the Soviet political and military posilions in a certain area : SE!C· ond. lo keep lhe Unlted Sta tes out of lhat area." Q: "\Vhat is !hr explanation for the Soviet's behavior in the ~tiddle East - first their acceptance of the American plan for a cease-fire and negotiation. and then their immed iat e violation of the cease-fire agreement ?'' A: "TJllS IS AN excellen t exan1ple of th e Soviet's concept of negotiation -the use of diplomatic means together \Vith military and economic means to pursue their aim . F'irst. a cease-fire would re- liE!ve military pressure 011 their Arab c!i· ents and give the latter a breathing space lo rebuild their defenses and morale. Sec· and, the Russians had been attempting for some time to deploy an integrated air defense system right up to the Suez Cana l. In a cease-fire they saw an oppor· !unity to move up their SAti.-t-2 and SAM-3 surface-(o-air missiles and train cre,.,·s und<'r much easier conditions than prevailed when they were under constant Israeli air attack. The Russians never believed that the lr acceptance of a cease-. fire ruled out the possibility of their ('heating by moving their air defenses right up to the Canal." Q: "Did the Russian s rtally believe !hey could get a1A·ay with cheating and still keep negotiations going?'' A: "Yes. They probably thought that the United States would not regard the Soviet cease·fire "iolation as sufficiently important to jeopardize the political discussions." Q. '"ARE THE political a11d economie negotiations the Russians are conducting in Europe intended to stabilize the 1itua- lion between Eastern and Western Eu. rope?" A: •·No. \Vhat the Russians are doing i:ii to mount a new political offensive which lhry hope '~lill enable them to move. perhaps very slowly and in very 1mal1 steps. toward their basic political aim to become the predominant power in all of Europe." Q: ."DOES ALL \l!IS mean that for the Russians the era of negotiations is merely a continuation of the cold war by other means?" A! "Yes. For them the cold v.•ar goeJ on, less polemical, less crude but in some ways more active, and more subtle than it was in the 19~5. \Ve are not in an era of negotiations in Europe or anywhere else. What we are in is an era in which lhe Soviet thinks it is more \vorthwhile for them to be politically active all over the world than to have a sort of stalemate." Q: :·s~ould .the U.S. continue talking or negotiating with Russia?'' A: ''T~ere is 110 dange.r In talking with the R:uss1ans on any subject at any time. The 1n1portant thing to do is to listen more than to talk, and to make it clear that there is a point beyond which the U.S. is not prepared to make any con-- cessions. There is absolutely no sense v.·hen negotiating with the Russians, to make any concessions or offer con· cessions in order to improve the at- mosphere. ''This only convinces them that the donor 1s on weak grounds and lead! them to pocket the concessions and demand niore ." Handgun Control Support May Gain Gov. George C. \Vallace is the 10th m11 n seeking or holding office of President to ht"' an assassin-·s rarg·et, and the fifth. to survive the attack. In nine of the 10 cases. including that of Wallace. the \\·eapon used was a haodgun . Thus, the assault on the Alabruna governor miiy well give fresh impetus to attempts to strengthen existing gun-control Ja..-.·s. tt won't be easy. The assassinations or Mart in Luther King and Robert F. Ken· nedy in 1968 led to passage of the Omnibus Crime control and Safe Streets Act and the Gun Control Act, which pro- hlbited the mail-order or other interstate: purchase of firearms and ammun!Uon to persons who did not live in lhe dealer's state. But Intensive lobbJing by lhe N;i- tional Rifle Association caused delet ion or a provision requ iring national registration of every firearm and li censi ng of every gun owner. Exp<ritnce ha!! shown tblt the 1168 Jegl.l\atloo Is t11ily clrcumvonted. For onmple, tbe )mportatlon of the cheap anul>n<lted pistols and rt•o\vera knon u ''Sit~ nJabl 1peclala" b P"" b!blled. But the Jaw lallcd to prohibit the Importation ol lheir parla. Al a resull, earl Baul noted In Saturday Review, EDITORI AL RE SEARCH "Enterprising former importers have been assembllng Saturday night speci11ls here using parts from abroad and cheap local labor ... y,·orking in makeshift fac· torie!i such as converted garages and even ll church ." TllE BAN AGAINST interstate mail- order sale of firearms has been sidCstepped by the shipping of _gun!!: between licensed 'dealers In dlffert?nt statt?s. A person need only place an order locally and wait for the weapon to arrive at the dealer for pickup. 1t Is estimated that eight out or 10 handguns in such cities as Boston and New York came from other areas. Inadequate gun controls have made tha United Slates a nation under arms. There wert an estimated 24 mlllloo hanclguna In piiva\e bands tn JIM. •ccordin& lo • ropoi:t prepared by the N1tioNI Com- mlasloa on Ille causes and Prevention ol Violence. An addllloaal 2.5 million are being manufactured domestically or im- porl.ed every year. One new handgun is sold In the United States every 13 seconds. and used handguns are being traded al the rate of two a minute. The National Rifle Assoc i a 11 on nevertheless feels that existing gun-con· trol IPglslalion is unduly restrictive. An editorial in the April issue of the NRA magazine. Tht? American Rifleman, pro- claimt?d lhat "this is the year'' lo replace the Gun Control Act of 1968 with a Jaw "aimed at controlling crimin als rather than harassing gun owners." It termed the law 11 "legal failure and a social in· d~cnc)'." 1\1AR\.LANIJ, TUE state where Governor Wallace was gunned down, rcccnf.Jy enacted a firearms control Jaw despite the bitter opposition of the gun clubs. The measure restricts the wearing or transporting of handguns but does not require registration of riUes and handguns kept in the home or place of business. Wallace'•. aUq:ed a.uallant bought his .33 caliber revolver tn M\twaukee. It took courage for Maryland Gov. Marvin Manciel to pro-gun cootrol Jeglslatton. Fonner s.n. J-ph D. Tydlnp (l).Md.) was defeated fot re- <lecUon Jn 1170, In part because he wu one of the leaders or the fight for federal controls two years earlier. But now the gun control forces may 1ain aome new recruits. Wallace supporters generally oppose any restriction in the right to bear arms. The attack on the governor may cause some of them to have second thoughts. OllANOI COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. lVttd, Publi&hcr ThomCl8 Kttvil, Editor Albcrt·\V. Boe.es Editorial Pauc 'Editor The editorial PARe of the Dally Pilot 1eek~ to Inform •ncl •Um u. 11u1t readers by prPJent1n1 thla nC\l.'lp&l:icr'1 01>inlon1 tnd corn. rnl:!nt11.ry on t.oplca of lnternt and aianlttcanc:e, by provldlnr • rorum for Ule u:prnaion of our ~ oPlniona. and b.Y Pl"'*tnUnr the dfvene \•lewpolntJ ol lnfonntd ob. lerYt1"I ard IPOkrtmtn an topics er the c11t. Tuesday, May 23, 1971 ( ' - ~~ '' Touching • with Winsto n's finer flavor Winston's real , rich, satisfying taste makes any occasion a little more pleasurable. Because Winston always tastes good , like a cigarette should. . . Warning , The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to You r Health. (, 1 fl I 11.J . lll,llOlDI l Ol•tCO COii •Alll, Wllll!OM·I Ol l II. II C ' KING, 20 mg."tar', 1.4 mg. nicotine, BOX, 20 mg.''tar", 1.3 mg. nicotine, av. per cigarene, FTC Report APR. '72. .. • ) " •. l • ' ' , . I , 8 DAILY PILOT L. ff.Boyd Tl1ese Tl1erapists Really Function ll is full n1:1me Is unkno~·n. But he walked with fl lltTI»· And \' 1rltcd at the racetrack. And his compal$0J1 '1Jew hln1 only as <.:harley. If a horse went lame, ' ~y )VQ¢d not say so out loud. That might upset the o4 . R~rr· stitiou!: bunch. the track boys. Rather. they rl!lr@rre. to said horse in !heir own code. calling him a "Ph11rl~y." 1'h is was how. say the wofd scholars. a muscle strieln first came lo be identified as a t•hartey horse . THAT land animal known to be the best swlmn113r of atJ is the <'lcph<1nl. 01''LY states without ter1nitcs. it's said. are ~lainc. North Dakota and Alaska . \\rHY did the Scots outla11· golf for n1ore than 100 years" They did th al. AS TO Tiit-~ n<in1e of that hor.-;c.· ordained a prtest .' Jl v.·as lncitatus. lloman Emperor Caligula v.•as the old boy Y.•ho S3\\' fit lo elevate the animal -~ · in such a manner. Abot,tt A.D. 10. •lncilatus sll!lpl lil an ivory manger and drank 111ine from a gold buokel. Some horse IN LOS ANGELES. J"n1 told. a few experienced wcm· rn 11011' advertise their oldest profession by direct rnall In which they refer to themselves as "functiona l l~~r~l1l1.'' THERE are !hose experts. you know, who ~t!I Insist for flavor 's sa ke beer should always bf' drun k Jrect/y from 1he cont1:11ncr. never poured into a glass. IT llAS been just 297 years -what"s new RP<111ey? - since 30 young men were arrested in 11•hat became Con- necticut lor 111earing their hair too long. LOVER -\Vrolc Miquel de Carvantes: "RequlreQ in every good lover ... the v.·hole alphabet ... !lree1hte1 Bountiful. Constant, Dutiful. Easy. Faithful, GaJlahl Hon- orable. lngenous, Just. Kind. Loyal. ?-.1ild, Noble, ptfll!liDU~. Prudent. QuicJ. Rich, Secret, !rue. Undcrstandln1, Val- iant. \Vise ... Young and Zealous ." Q. ··1101\• much waler can an elcphcinl hold in ll '1 trunk?"' A. Ahout n gallon and a half. Q. ··WHAT gan1e have tile n1os1 books been wrill en aboUr.··· • A. Chess. no doubt nf JI. QUEENIE By Phil lnterla -"lie'• very •hy. It's a 111Jsl8FY how M ••I this fir 11 !he busjnesa." · lJnf!a~ Tow1i Sets La;t Reu1ito1i Chrllllf• ldt"'t "49•11'r lirfl~t The lllll~*~l#ho!ll• lgwn of UJl<las, "Iii lr8 J(#nt 1n ,11r1 Y•Ar o 1\f' \y l!tf::ien1 Nl1on, 10111 il4! ~ lit 111! t,y. nlofl ind homecomln1 on Mi!J 29. fl@11ldent11 of Uncaa, in nort~~tn O~lit~ama . unde'r µrealdential ~lrecllve to the Oorpt pf Eti.lneers hRve until bee. 81 lo liY~f!\J!I~' the ~0111· -Jj!~nlly oolhhjal!IY to Jji•k• way for the • 16 rn ltllon J<i1w ---------·· ... _....._.- • • HAMI St t11tl It Wiii M111"t Yt11 'TU lt't ttllt" ........ . r 'I I "Get me out of here. -· l can make you rich and strong. Strong and rich." ' 1 .i . I Theater Notes 'Kate,' 'Ernest' Opening San 0 u 4 llm•• I day from Long Beech. Or smil e sway lo Sscr~menlo Qf San Diego. Catt . your travel •aertt~ or PSA and ask about our easy-to-bear, low fa re. NA 9'"' JOU•. Hft: WHAT DOES -f,G,H. M-EAN? A BALLOT PROPOSITION FOR YOU JUNE 6TH. PERHAPS A LAST CHANCE TO KEEP SELECT PARTS OF THE CITY FOR THE ENJOYMENT OF EVERY RESIDENT. -12 RECREATIONAL PARK FACILITIES -3 VIEW SITES OF HARBOR AND CITY -SO MILES OF BICYCLE TRAILS ALL AT LESS THAN J~ A DAY PER FAMILY FOR THE AVERAGE HOMEOWNER IN THE CITY. Let's Save Something For Ourselves Contributions to: Citii1n1 Advisory Park Bond T ••m 6in9tr Pa9t, Chtirm an, 424 St. Andrews Rd., N.8, "BREATHTAKIHG!" --. "BRILLIAHT !" :!\... -Tt.1NtwYorl!W ""TREATS EVERT WAYE L.mE , A SOUl IAOTHEJI~ -Pl.A~BO~ E~slic ~~ a ANTHONY SCHOOLS HARIOR CfNTfR 1l00 Hifblr C1"1er Co1I., Mtll , C1MfClr"i1 Pb. 17141 t7f·2JSJ 1111 5. l rN khllnl 11. _.,"lhtim, C•I. tuo• l"h. 17141 77,·5100 E OWAROS HARBOR (.~;.2 ""'~' 1"0 " ••l'G• \T '" ~"' ... e111 G~NE HACKMAN 201~ Cl.NJLf!Y.f()X PflSlNlS THE FRENCH it• CONNECTION ",.,.:! POSln'.11. y I.HOS 1\JfS.OAf Plu1-1e,i.,,,0 "''"'••., """'fl'OIA CllAlfll~ "JHI: A l~ACI OOYlllT" •N ~iHll H-.11 "COOL KANO LUltl" .. ,. "fht (tn, lrHllllMI" 1 J?"..,,...,,.,. ................. ..,SllR::il:Z:~Frottt Page 8 TONIGHT'S TVIDGHLIGHTS KHJ ,D 7:30 -"Dayton's Devils." An ex-Air Force 0!!1cer trains a group of specialists to pull off a $1.5 million robbery at a SAC base. Rory Cal· houn, La1rue Kazan. ~ , KTLA 0 8:00 -Angels baseball. The Ana· ~~ he1m nine takes on the Oakland Athletics. ~ CBS IO 8:30 -Campaign '72. CBS News cov· '1 ~rs the Oregon primary election. Walter Cronkite iJ 1s anchor man. ~ AB C 0 9:00 :-:-"The Astronaut." A comedy of ~1xed-up identities involving an astronaut re- turning from Mars. J ackie Cooper Monte Mark· ham, Robert Lansing, Susan Clark.' ~ THEATE'R NOTES I Robert Mendoza, Colleen Doherty, Stephen Osborn, Ted Grandke, Charles B a u g h , George Berg, Mary Crowell, Carol liale and Phil Sprague. The comic farce plays Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 for three weekends at the Muckenthaler Center, 11 9 Buena Vista Drive, Fullerton. Reservations 528-1973. son is directing . Don Tuche heads the c~st as Commander Bucher w h 11 e Pi1ichael Owens, Ron a Id Boussom, \Villia m Brady and Ellen Ketchum play major roles in the huge cast. Performances are given at 8 o'clock at the Third Step Theater, 1827 Nev,rport Blvd., Costa l\1esa. 14 Also playing in Cos ta Mesa •· ,J ' South Coas t Repertory's Is the Civic Playhouse's com· brilliant production of edy "l\1y Sister Eileen," "Pueblo." a dramatization by heading into its se<:ond ol Stanley R. Greenberg or North three \.>:eekcnds at the Com- Korea's capture of the U.S. munity Center auditorium on spy ship, resumes \\1ednesday the 0 range Co u n t y NBC 0 9:30 -"Nichols." Sheriff Nichols at-, ~ night and continues Fairgrounds. Pali Tambellini tempts to keep the peace when his larcenous uncle 1; through Sunday. h1artin Ben-is directing. ' f, Zachariah comes to town with a small fortune and r 1 -~·iimmiiimiiimiimaiiiiiiiiiiiii~I ~t two ex-convicts hot on his heels. I ~GFW l'l'A.1::::7.t!ililZlnQlm :; i >Sl=CW7?',;Q.n:;=t t :;;w~ Tuesday Evening MAY 23 1:0011111 ",.. Jerry Dunphy 0 UllC NIWI Tom Snyder 0 Tht II( V1llty fJ Nm; 8entl. Scl!ubeck fJ @ Wiid Wild Will @)NIC Nm ID The FUnbtonn CD I D111111 el J111nll (fi) Zeom! m Hod1epod11 LtQt mmm• ... Cill·•'l"'"1 ... ES T1 It A1111e1u1ctl (52)1h"' -• ' l :JO fJ Mtvlt: (C) (Ml) "MNlpn" Concl. (dr1) '68--Rlthard Wldm11k. Henry Fond1, ln1t1 Slevens. Cl) CBS fkln Willer Cron~t1 ~ Natien1I C'°lflPblc m"'dr Crilllth-ID NlllOJ •ltd the l'fofmlf @ Book ltlt fE) A ConYtrutlH WIUI lt1 Mii- "'' m TttlSllre QJ Crm Acm t11) Qtllt• Cllltl lit.I Celdtll m.....,.._ .... (SZJ .......,. DUol Mintz 1:55 0 Ptlltltll ,._,. 1'°'tJCIJ am-a1u1u.. Old: @ Trutll If Con~HllCG man .... O Wllat's MJ u.r m I LIYI LllCJ m I Dm11 tf Jutnll OJ) £d!Xltlnt I Jbtle1 fD Hlthayo11 Klttiletn Hllchad m Uni PletllLI H •I Caal1t Q) Kid T11k 7:30 0 Cl) Cleft ClmttbtO (R) S1111tr B1rb1r1 Edtn 1nct comediln Dom Oelui$1 1unt. 0 m PtndtrtM "Thi flttl hoplt of Muddy Cree•" (R) Fri1ht111td ci· tittns flee IOWft incl luvt Ben r..n. wri1ht lo prottcl 1 p1l1011er 111lnS1 I 11n1. 0 Spitrb Olllltllp Tu m ol Kans- •• CitJ Chiefs (ten Dawson, Wllllt Llnier, Otis T1)'1or) com pelt 111lnsf th• te1m ol !ht LA Rlrnt ~ltnn D1vi1, Honn Vin aroc.iln, Tom fears). e rnm m"' "" ""' ~Home b the Strrel" (R) (I) I Dr11m ti Je1nnle 0 Mllllo n $ Mowit: (C) (nr) "D.tJ- toa's Devils" (1us) '68-Rol}' Cal· 1:001J Cl) Hiwii Flvt.O (R) McG1rr11t dlxovers 1 criminal 1in1 hij1ckin1 1irurro sh ipmenu whi!t invtsti11t· Int !he death of 1n 1irport.1tt1Jrity undercowr 11ent. o CIH1J m .... ,, "' w""' (C) ('90) "TffAstnn1ut"' (R} (sci·li) '71-1acki1 Cooper, Mont• Merk· him, Robert Lal'ISina. Sus1n C111t.. Richard Anderson. A youn1 wom111 fills In love with her 1stro111ut-hus· bind 1U over 11ain when he return• from Ameriu's first missio n lo Mars, only to le11n he's not really htr hus~nd. ti) LI Criad1 liltt Cri14I Cl) Tiit Ylr,inl11 GI:)Novtl1 ,.JO u !Ii m J11H1 51nitr .. Nldl· tis "Zlch1ri1h" (R) Sheriff Nichols 1ttempts to keep tile puc1 whe11 Ills l•runous uncl• comes to lowft with 1 sm1U fortune ind two U.(On• vlets hot on his heels. O Ntn Wlldl .John Fullmer CD Nns Hucti Willilms ()j) lllQ Jounul ttJ TlM fon,tl S.11 (R) ll)Awrrtur1 (52) ladq Fn• Holtywootl P•r\ Tht Nursrry Slakes. lO:«l 11 Cil c. .... (R) Theodore Blkel , 1uests Jn th• rote ot 1 wineirowtr wllo hn been tlle victim of 1 se1la of mishaps. u ..... , (all ...... -· Uft" (dtl) 'U-Richard H1rri1. m Ntn Pete Miller, Ken .lone1 man ... ~-ol"'W"l (R) I!) Ftttinl Melltlne {5Z) la Leytndl le llfo•lt 10:30O1£TUIR P1111us Robert Brown returns in this undenr1ter 1cfv1nlurt series, 1s C.rtu Primus, 1 11ob1I undemter troub1tshooltt, '1he Blick Hole" Toni Hayden is pulled by 1 powerful whirlpool into 1 sub- t1rr11111n c1vern on the oce1n'1 floor. O Nen Gtorie Putnam fJ (I) 00 aJ llbrau Wtlbf, M.D. Hit Is So Soon TN! I Am Don• For, I Wonder Wl\11 I Wis Be111n FOi'" (R) In 1n 1ttempt la 1uu11e !heir 11iel fol1owinr lhl ctealh of their b1br, 1 youn1 muple be<::ome lo1t1r pa11nts af 1nolher boy. Ill S.1 Dilfa h11111111 l!lliftCosbyS.0. fD lthl11d Hie lifttJ IE LI Sltlnlca m c.n" th• wur: 9 Flt•: "l.u Mlser1bles" {SZ) Condencil Cu lp1bl• houn. L1!nie Kuan. 11:00 O ([}III Nen ®)i lrf¢1A() AfrlCI P1rt IV Con· O @l mllm duslon of 1 looll: 11 modem Afri· u 's strug!e in tile 1fl tm'lllb of the 0 0111 Skp ikJand ~lonla1 111. m Td " Cor111q111nm m Ho1111'1 Htna 1!J M.-M: "'Mlill Streit to lf'DICI. CE) Drttntt w(' (n>m) ·s~Ta11ul1h B1nkhe1d, @ n. fersyte Sip Helen Hqes. tT:I Cumnt Eftnts (U) ..._.., (R) !jg ... ..., ""' EI!) Cotr'..ejm Coram 11:30 IJ (j) CBS Litt Movie: (C) "TM (52) Motil: {2111) "'Slrnbeny Eltnorj1111}' Se1111111" (com) '69-- l ltnc:e" (com) '41-Jemu C.lfltJ, David Niven, Frye Ounaw1y, Al1n Al· Rill H1rwort~. d1, Midey Rooney, !ad Carter. Hil1rlous comed1 It! In the Pacific 1:00 O Ctlilomll Anpll lneb1Q An· durlni World w1r II. pis vs. 01kt1nd Athlellcs CJ ®) m JohlllJ C.DH P1ul Wil• (J) D Crltl ff Al1111 "Hbtol}' Of Hi ms i unts. Artl•n" • 1J Mme: (C) "A l et111 hr Mln ID Alldy lrtffltll lllow QllOt" (dt11) '67 -Forti111 film Q) Ol\'ld fmt Sf'IOW dubbed Jn En,tlsh. IE LI Cm llq1C11 @ M11'1111I Ditton CiJ Cle~ Ct•pbtll D (I) ED Nm a:') Ell.tdon Ct1lrll m Te Td Ille Tratll 1:30 IJ Ci) Ct111pilp '1Z Covtr111 of !2:11 D (])@ fiDJlkLCmtt_G_IOfP the Oreron pr\m1ry election with Cllfin fnd Unul1 Andreu ruest W1U1r C1on•lt1 •• 1neh01111111. O Mowlr. "Olnp"ut!' T1M7 Uw:" 0 9 m NK AcllH Pl.,._,. (dr1) '42 -John G11fltld, N1ncy "A nm• tor IUl!lnl('' (R) GIOll' c. Coltm111. Scott Stirs 11 • U.S. N1vr 1ull· CD Morit: (C) "Mr. l1tperiull" 1111r111t Cl~llln who finds It dlfficull {tom) 'Sl-lini Turner, &io Pfnz•. to 10 on •1Mln1 durinc th• last dlJS d World WIT II. Mithltl P11U 1lxi 1:001J (I) l1J flna stirs. O CIJ(JJ (l)OB ... ,,,_ ... pert r.ovtr111 ol th1 Ol'qon primary election. ID Mlfl Crtrlill sar.. Sclltduled ruetts 1r1 J.P. Mer11n, Geor11 Bum, Jlmtt lrolln, I.I. Kini . mllll"'- t:lO 11 M..-: '"Qiu Dolr (tuml '51 -YIC!of M1tu11, Sluart Whlt1111n, B""""'""" O CIJ -m Al-ll!pt Slltw: "'hty W111't h- llM M'" (C) "Miii t1 Frbc:t llJ," "flqt Y1M )I THJt" S"'9I ....,. (rom) '41 -Dortltlly Wednesday u ... r, "" "'"· l""fJ (C) "All MJ Cir!" (com) '!!I-. DXYfiMf MOVifS Sl!!rlty MIClilnt, Dnld ftivtn. GI..._... If till Weddlt(' Cdr1) l:OO at (C) --C:.lll 1'llla Ill Pfl(' 'Sl-£thtl Wat1n, Jullt Hams. ' (dr1) '$$-V111 H1!1ift. l:JO B "lllt Jleflt b l'9n" (m) '3'- t.lO 0 "Ille LldJ P'P Otr' (In) '52-~ W1YM. DorMt1 McKay. Linda Oame11, St1pl'l111 McMally. J:OO ([) (C) "t~t Dllay a.wr9 Cond. 10:00 Cl) "To Ir, TWs My ...,,. (mus) (drl) '61 -N1!1llt Wood, Chrl• '49-0DMll aConnot'. "* Ph1111t11tr. lO:JO 0 -J111l C.11••1" (ital 'SS-Qj ._If LM" P11t I (dn) '47 Robert llftDA. CQ ...... .. -lltlllriwe Htpburt. , ........... F.O WARD S V1ne1u RM1r1v1 Gltnd~ J1ck1on "MARY, OUEEN OF SCOTS,. "'WUT HERING HEIGHTS" Exclu1lvt Or111g1 County Reserved Stl l E1191ttment Nornln1rect for t Ac1demv Aw1rd1t "F IDOLEll OH THE 11001"" Ac1d1rny AWlrd Wlnlltt Jane Fond• "!(LUTE" Utl 1111 "SUMMER OF '42" (RI "CHATO'S LAND'' 6 "DOC" St1rri"11 F1v1 Dun1w1r "MAP.I< OF THE Ol!VtL" "Ll!T'S SCAllE JESJICA TO DEATH" "SWEOUH FLY GllU.S" "' "SWEET I OOY OF D£10 RAH " An incredible ldYenlure ••• Iha I journeys beyond imaginalion I n511cznt s!~~~~2~: AT BOTH CINEMAS STARS: :~t U TID lGJ 11 A It ROR c1~~1:~2 ··•······ ~ "! •: '1111~~0 .. ~' .•• ., .•• f,t !-11''1' IDWARDS CINIMA (OflA Mb.A JN.Ull TIM HAS A PET RAmESNAKE, WHEN TIM GETS MAD· STANLEY GETS DEADLY! . .. IN MISSION Vl~JO • EDWARDS CINEMA VIEJO ~l" Otf(';I) ""y &T L ~ ·~r Iv•~''" 810 ~1~( . . . en"'' ,.., I T lll CAllTllllll l l'lll • NEWPOfltT 8EACH • 6'•· 760 • • • Debra Ensign and Diana Spencer head the cast, with Gene Benedict, Barb a r a Garlich, Jack Murray and Alan Hart In supporting roles. Perronnances are Fridays a11d Saturdays at 8:30; reserva· lions 834·5303. Tu..i.,., May 23, 1972 Ana Community Players. Lee Howin tgon directs the show, while Del Rosso plays the leading role. DAIL V PILOT f "'CABARET' IS GLITTERINGLY BRILLIANT. IT DESERVES TO BE A CLASSIC." Russ J\.1arlin, Susan O'Con- nell, Laura Black, Richard Gordon and Janice Urban also are reatured in the production at the Players Theater, 530 N. * Ross St., Santa Ana . Reserva-WH1td1yt:6:M, l :IS, ll:U ,_m, s.111. I Su11. l :JI, J1U,•=•· t :ll, 111• "Catch Me If You Can" rolls l-,=ti=o"='=~=='·=2=188=. ===== into Its second weekend at the Huntington Beach Pl ayhouse with Alex Koba in the direc- tor's chair. John Loughman. Merrell Ann Haddan and Martin Fuchs head the Hunt- ington Beach cast. Tiii attl l'llm.,.. Surtint Evtrl BALBOA THEATRE 673-4048 Hank Sorkin, Dave Gilmore. Jean Greischeimer and GeQrge Ralph complete the company at the playhouse , 2110 Main St., Huntington Beach, where performances are given at 8:30 Fridays and Saturdays. Reservations 536- 8861. Joe Del Rosso's original co me dy·drama "Swinging Singles" closes out its three· weekend run with f i n a I performances Friday a n d Saturday at 8: 30 for tbe Santa ~do ~·EAar-11•­.. hW-UM k1--OI:. M1'1 ENDS TONIGHT Jon1n Cob11r1 "THE CAREY TREATMENT" AIH "THE FRENCH CONNECTION" Starts Wednesday EXCLUSIVE Chorlto• HMtOlll YT.tte Mln1leMX •• INDS TONIGHT "SWEDISH FLY GIRLS" "SWEET BODY OF DEBORAH" "'lbelJttle~ Cll<IW•cti'<Ttl f!IMSNl.$lJolT< ~ • llOllllT l •AllMT'I NlllltJl..'TICH NAflOl<Al, Gll<l ... L PICTUl.U JUI.AS( Al10 R oNMooDY·JAcKWILD l!il '°' COLOR Columbia PicturtS BARGAIN MATINEE Wedrlesday, 1 p.m. FREE REFRESHMENTS Ad•lts SJ .OO: Child 75 '"al "HOSPITAL" "It" <MIO-••" sr1r• Soulld R tltlt 1C111 -· 11 ...... , .... _.,. .... '-·-ei, ...... 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Oiam.Sllm l '' 1~ If 11\k H•rnl1!9r I 01br1 Gr 1 'l 111 Leo•I l 6 61 1 IC nn.., _,., p -1 01 Sh pl 2 4 1tf~ 2f'li tt'h-'\ HtrrlJln!~ I OllOUP S~C Pace Fd 12 Stjl 11 'lt«h~ 1"a i~ ?""'o 72 :,..i.+ 'lo 01'sh!:'l 1 -J l·~ 1•1\ lfli-\\"'''''co \ • ' SMl",l,.ll:ION FD lhocll C Pl! t9n '!• 411 41.i I "'" ., T l o 0 FIELD REPS MANUFACTURING AND OXEROXING 0 ANSWERING SERVICE 0 DESK SP ACE ~f.OS -ioue. tl D SECRETARIAL SERVIC E ~ 0 BOOKKEEPING 0 MIMEOGRAPHING DLA. llNES 0 TELEGRAMS, TWX, OC[UMENT TRANSMISSION 0 MAILING llSTS COMMUNICATIONS SERVICE BUREAU 5 lh's "'co•UTI CO.tlMllMCAflONI A1 ,~ co .......... IRVINE·AIRPORT INDUSTRIAL COMPUX AMERICAN SECURITY BANK lln Organization l Organiutional Office 505 North Arrowhead, Suite 305 S an Bernardino, California ~240 I Phone {714) 884~7 I NOTICE Ameri can Sec:ur1ty Bonk is now receiving applications for common stock. for su bscriptions Origina l Issue 150,000 sha res Subscr iption Price $I 0.00 per share application, phone or meil For bn offerin g circular and the office by contact 11.oberl 8. While, Jr. Pre sident BOARD OF DIRECTORS J, Robert W11t, M.D Robert B. White, Jr. lllng S. Wong Vlrgll L. Luke J1me1 M. Mc:CrJrre Kenneth E. 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'1 !llil!.!J;,ijn.J a1~ '70: !t~ 1' 1~ '' 1 "''' JS ·~ t.11 ff.~ ~i ,: :r., '{" a "' M1 1 :r11 "'' ~ f!l:/<11 ti 1~!~ ,:5l~~ .. 1 i~ If~ \ J;;.42~ 1l:. ·:. ~~ 1'. ~ 'i';f. s~ '1 ";;l JfW..Z J - Monday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List Momentum Dips On Stock Market NEW YORK (AP)--Stock market prices moved moderately higher today but the upward momentum of the past two sessions apparently had subSJded ~':f.l"i..1 i ~(:loi ..:,~ c!: a:w;,~ • '~.. '° :i: ~ ~,. 1 I Td l:'.,lf 1 ll -0 !1'\1'11 \F. "l.o~• '11 Ill o I :JO fl'~ l ~ ~~ll\,i ORW\l'I I u~~l, 1 ~ lffJI Fot••' ~t!PS 74 "~ .. rrvHi;I j l>ff'r'f'Hpl p :,~ ~ rritMlll 1 •••0 " .:: i71.1 K~:.1 ;~ 'lint .20 S•ln Ntt nt l:? .iJ0 ll0'4 60'!. 60111 + \• I ::: l i: I' . "' 27 2~• 2, 2, -\' !d l tO(I 201 1031'1 102 102!\lo I lo 2 70 2120 '' " '' +1 Id Pr $lee! 1n 2,v, nv, n 't-1\1 Id P ~d M '79 21 '8>-enWll. eo 306 :Ml 79 19~o-~, Ian e~ AO II 2 ~t 21 1'• S• el 80 7l so.. 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'• " " I ,12 DAILY P1LOT For The TUHd'O', M'O' 2), 1972 Faces of Iron Fail to Crack By JO OIMN • Of 11M DAILY PILOT Slaff WITH SIURLEY CIUSHOLM: One or the more inter· esting aspects of covering, a politician's talk is observing all the preparations for his or her visit. When presidential candidate Shirley Chisholm spoke at UCJ Friday, the scene has predictably fascinating and the game of trying to figure out ho\V many U.S. Secret Service men there were. was extremely challenging. P rison Weakness A dmitred ANAHEThf -California'• chief correctional officer has frankly admitted here that his state prison system h a d '1oversold the idea 0 r rehabilitation. "But," Department of Cor· reclion.s Director Raymond Procunier told the California Peace Officers Association convention, Monday, • • y o u have to remember that the reasons behind our admitted error were mainly financial." , Envoy Pla11J8 Co ast Visit The UC Irvine Model Unllod Nations Club and the UN Association Coastline Chapter will host New Zealand Consul General ?.1cLeod P. Chapman ln I public program at 8 p.m. Thursday in the ~tesa Court Gold Room at UCI. The program will Include a presentatlnri by 10 U C [ students who represented New Zealand during the annual Western states Model UN tield in Seattle in April. UCI Town and Gown plans a reception to follow the pro- gram. Both events are ()ptn to the public without charge. Record UCI's Crawford Hall was "tight· """-==;;o::;:::,""""c:fi'1:-1:;1han a drum" with guards wan-t: dering around or standing at speci- Procunier said the cor- rectional system had had to boost the idea of rehabilitation because it had been unable to obtain the funds necessary for any expansion or amendment of the prison system. SPECIAL EDUCATION SUMMER SCHOOL lllllllVklu1ll1N ICl!atllnf l•r tM SLOW LEARNl!R, ARTISTIC, N•U· ROLOGl(ALLY HANDICAP'P'ED •1111 OTHERS wlTll s,+c:lll .... !111"11 ,~ .... .. Dissolutions Of Marriage Death Notices CARLETTO Cherin C•rlirllo. RH1dll11t of Hunllngton 8~i11..1IJ d•I• of de•lh. Mil'/ 22, 1972. $ur- Vo•~.J by wi1•, Mllry; thrtt O.ug.01ler1. A.._.,1 HllrHtlllet', Janel Oa11l1 '"" loilcn 8 , ; two bro:,herl. S..lv•lorl ¥1d A.ngt-to '-· .eao; two 1htetl. Miiii• C.rletio •od F .. , l:arvso; five 9f•l!Ckhildrm." Rosary, ¥. •• .-w1cU1y, •:30 PM, Peek ffmily Col· Ciilo-i Funer•I Hom.. Requl~ Mau, Tllunday, t :lD AM, Sf. BoM11irnlur• C.ll'IOl!c Chureh, HunHngton 8ffd!. Di- rected by PHii. F1mlly Coloni.i F-r•I "-· HIGHOUCMECK Fr1nio; W, Hlghcluch«k. Rnldtnl ol Hunt111111on BeilCl'I; d•1• of ckall'I. May 21, 1971. Survived b¥ •11.·wlfe, Evtlyn Ptl.,.. HlghduchKk; daughl•rs. Sally PhllUps, La Vel"ne Biker, Ruth 8rvtwoker; f1111r a r1nd<Jllldrtf'!. A_.ry, Tue!.d1y, 1:'10 PM, Olld1y Bro!lien Chapel. Requiem MHs, Wednesday, f AM, SS Simon & Jllde C1fl'lollc Church. lnlerme<11, West Newf<ln Cemerery, W"I Newton, PllNl$yl1111nl1. Olldey 8rolhen Mom.11ry, 11911 8each lllvd.. Hvnllnvton Bnch, Ul-ml, 01- rei:1ora. l lTTI.ETOM Robert E. llttl,IOl'I. 1121 low1 St., Cosf1 Me$.1. Dotlt of death, .V..y 21, ltn. SW· •lvcd bY wtl1, Ellen1 '°"• MArll. of P~llOl"lrN City; d.lughters, Ml"l-Mlch&tl Unt'trwood. c;.l'den G~; Miu Robin u1 :1~ton. Co;!& Miu; -trandd!Jld. Srrvlces, Thund1y, 1 PM, P.te:Uic Vl- ChOP'I. 1nf()rmenl, Pecill< Vltw MerrtoT· lal P1rk. Paclllc Vl-Moriv.ry, Olrlt(- 1~ • ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCL!FF MORTUARY 1%'1 E. l'llb St., Costa M,.. &46-4881 • BALTZ BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del rtlar '73-9450 Costa Mesa 546-%4%4 • _B_ELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Casta M~a LI 1-3133 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACll •dORnJARY 179$ Laguna Canyon Rd. j-15 • PACIFIC VIE\\' ~IEMORIAL PARK Ctmetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 PaciOc View Drive Newpolt Buch. CalUonlia ~ PEEK f AMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 'llJl llolA Aw. ,. ............ -s • SMlTllS' MORTUARY Jnlllollllt. Bllllllqilla _. AIM fic doors, wearing both business suits and Orange County Sherill's He urged top l evel Junior Art on Display uniforms~ DAILY PILOT 11•11 P'hOtl f lNffT SUMM l l SCHOOL (llttff It!" Iha lPll<!l1 d1Hd Junto \Hh II July ill~ TaANSPOkTATION PIOYIDID I knew there were Sheriff's De· partment representatives, Govern- ment µcret servicemen and Shir- ley Chisho1m s t a f f members on duty, but to tell which was which was another matter. SOME WERE WEARING tiny enameled pins, others bad on while and black round buttons and some had no Jdentifying badges. Some men had earphones which were attached to small radio units concealed under their coats. discussions between the na· lion's lawmen, judges, parole authorities and prison officers in a move to detennine the deterrents to be applied to future convicted felons \\'ho might not be eligible for rehabilitation programs. Judges screen art entries from students of more than 31 school districts at St. Ann's Parish Hall in Santa Ana for 1972 Festival of Arts. Checking over some of the top dra\vings are Bernie Jones, are specialist Mrs. ?t1arge Skelton of .the Laguna Beach Junior Art Gallery an Mary Jane Haden, a judge. KENWOOD PRIVATE SCHOOL 155 Se. Wel•ltt ,A11•iwlll SJJ.JJIO My reporter's curiosity got the best of me. so I ask- ed one of the radi~arrying men just how many secret service men were around. It was like trying to talk to the guard at Queen Elizabeth's castle when it is changing, or getting an answer from a brick wall. INSTEAD, HE ASKED me what kind of notes I had written in my notebook. After Mrs. Chisholm's talk I went backstage to the room where she was to meet the press, and there was another contingent of guards. Procunier said the state's minimum security facilities will soon be a thing of the past with only "medtum a n d closed" prisons remaining open to cater to a declining prison population. Prison Experiments Ripped by Justice ANAHEIM -California is district attorney for Los moving too fast in too many Angeles County, is a member experimental programs with of a task force \~rhich recently too few facilities and too few examined conditions spawning technique5 being applied to the Now ••.• Plastic Cream Invention For Artificial Teeth Artificial Teeth Nner felt So llalunl Before Now, for the fint time, sclenceoffen a plastic cream that holds dent urn as ne\·er before-forms nn elastic mem- brane !hat /rtlPs hold llitm 111 thr 11a/111a/ li,u11ts of yor4r 1111111111. It's a unique discovery called Frxoo1n111• that has revolutioaised denture wearing. It lets you bite bankr, chew bet .. ter. eat more naturally. F1xoo!:N'f liuts for hours. Rnilits moi1ture. DentUttS that lit are eucntial to health. See your dentist rerufarly. Get easy-to-uee F1XODE.Nt Denture Adhesive Cream. \Vhile waiting, I tried to engage one in cOO\'ersation about Mrs. Chisholm's political beliefs, her autobiography and her speech that night. "Our biggest problems will come with deciding who is to be confined to prison ," he said . "Obviously. we have to confine the most 'dangerous criminals and the b i g operators of the crime world whose confinement o f t e n means the end of many smaller operations. problein of crime control, an Citlifornia's mounting crime ap9fl!ate court justice warned rate. !====================== the state's lawmen here Mon-"\Ve found that we tack the TRIS WAS ONE man who was not interested in dis- cussing politics. He also declined to talk about where he was from and how he happened to be there, but question- ed me· about what kind of press car~ 1 had. So, I decided these men of stone wouldn 't ·crack a bit and my only recourse would be to call UCI Monday and get the facts. I found that the men with the enameled pins were Secret Service men , those with the black and while but- tons were UCI students and staff. and those with no badges or buttons were Chisholm staff members. Unit Names Attorney day. kind of skill and knowledge in "The public says t h e the behavioral sciences that criminaJ justice system would allow us to contemplate doesn't protect them and the any further experimental pro- public is absolutely right," grams," Compton said. "And Justice Lynn Compton of the we have also found that the Second District Court of Ap-sheer volume of criminal peals ·told members of the caseloads with their inevitable California Peace 0 ff ice rs high percentage of p J e a Association. bargaining does very little to For Ad·vertisin.g in Out 'N' About Pho1ie Norm Stanl.ey 642-4321 PRE.SIDENT NIXON should be told his Secret Service men are doing a good job of keeping quiet. Or is it that I'm doing a lousy job of reporting be- cause I couldn't get a quote? SANTA ANA -Lawrence Kirk, a Santa Ana attorney and resident of Mission Viejo has been named to t h e Orange County Civic Center Commission. Kirk, a former county plan- ning commissioner represent- ing the first supevisorial district, replaces M a u r i c e Cladman, a member of the civic center agency for the past four years. Cladman was gerrymandered out of the first district in last fall's re- districting. "The public also v.•ants help us sort out the tangle of retribution," Compton said.r~lllOtl~~ntij'nig~ciriimiie.ii"iiiliiiiiiiiiiii.~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;~~ "lt is quick to point out that punishment is neither certain nor severe and it isn't particularly interested in talk about secondary deterrents and experimental programs devised for offenders woo may soon be back before the same court." A BIG NAME SINCE 1925 UCI Library Will Add Americana Collection Compton, a fonner assistant JLlV~•1~r00111~ We are CARPET AND DRAPERY Specialists and compe titive too! See us today! The UC Irvine library will be the repos itory for a. 3,500- item collection of Western Americana assembled by a county newsman, historian and author. building, a new room will B z ·k E ' ~ nUALJTY house the 11nusua1 collection ac xperience .vesackYouupw1ththeB't'ST '\BEBVI""' that curator Roger Berry of [, u.. the UCI library staff will IELIOTION sh:;.~'::~ •. a library director, Program Scheduled 1438 so. MAI N al EDING ER. SANTA ANA. PHONE 547.3993 UCI librarian John E. Smith said the Don Meadows col- lection of books, pamphlets, b r ochures , programs, handbills, railroad timetables, newsclippings and o t h e r materials of the past was purchased with a grant from the office of the UC president. said the collection includes one ljf~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ of the finest private libraries The department of French View," and Frederick Case ofr on Baja California and is rich and Italian at UC Irvine will the University of Toronto. In fal1, 1973. when tbe ad· ministration offices move out or the UCI library into a new Boy Vying For Busiest U.S. Youth in materials on Orange Coun-present a day-long program on speaking on "Revolt and ty. "Aime Cesaire: F r e n c h Ideology in the Works of Aime The second book be1ieved to Literature and the Black Ex· Cesaire." have been published about peMence" Thursday. Presentations in the af- Califomia is one of the iterns Aime Cesaire, black writer ternoon session, set for 1 p.m. in the Meadows collection. The from the West Indies who was to 3 p.m. in Room 151 of rare book wa.s published in associated with surrealism in Humanities Hall, will be given Mannheim, Germany in 1772. Paris, is the author of poems by Guy Levilain of Saint Cloud A three-volume .set in in which black and European State College, speaking on Spanish, "Noticias de I a cultures are conlrontcd and of "The Crisis of Cesairism California," written by Jesui t plays which deal with political through 'The Tragedy of King priest Miguel Venegas in 1757, and revolutionary issues. He is Christophe' and 'A Season In is another of the Meadows also a political leader in his the Congo.' " and Michel treasures. native Martinique. Benamou of UC San Diego, Born in Indiana in 1897, Cesaire's poet r y and with "Imagery in Cesaire's Meadows came to Orange . theater, as well as cultural Theatre." County in 1903 when his father problems raised by his works, The evening s e 5 5 I 0 n , went to work for the Orange will be discussed by six pro-· Post newspaper. fessors in three sessions. The scheduled for 7 p.m. to 9 p.rn. He worked as a reporter and sessJons are open to the public in Room 174 of the Computer p LA c ENT t A _ Dan later as an educator until without charge. Science Building, will feature Mcl.oon, 15, sophomore class retirement in 1960. Speakers for the f i r s t discussions by Renee Riese president at Valencia High Other donations by Meadows session, scheduled from 10 Hubert of UCI on "Cesaire, a &hoot · Pl r · 1ry· to the UCI library have in· a.m. to noon in Room 178 of Modern French Poet," and .. 10 acen ia, i.s mg J ded th f H be Er'1c Sellin of Te m P I • for the title of the busiest c u e papers o Ray Bill-Humanities all , will youth in the U.S. in June. ingsley of Santa Ana -an ar-F..dward Jones of Morehouse University on "Aime Cesaire, Dan wiU go to Cape Kennedy ray of some 3,000. items dating College, whose subject is the Metamorphosis of the June J7 for 8 week-long space 1i"l;;;r;;;om;;;;;t~h;;;e;;;l;;;880s;;;;;;;to;;;;;ti..;;;;1;;92;;;°';;;;· --·-·Afm~';;;•_;Ce;;;;sa~ir~e~,;;;;;ia~n.iO;;;v;;;er;;;a;;;ll;;;;;;;;P;;;oe;;;t;;;.';;;' ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-II leadership conference as the fl representative of California high school student.!. The con- fab is sponsored by the Hugh O'Brien Youth Foundation. On June 24 the Placentia youth will join in the National Forensic Ltague'.s mork con- gress at Winston-5alem, N.C -McLoon has-been-elect8" student body vice prtsiden• for the next school year. He will be the first sophomore ever to take part in the forensic league's mock con- gress. He previously qualified for the state finals in three divisions of debate and speech. LET'S BE FRIENllY If )'OU hive hl'W neighbors or know ot anyone moving to our area, please tell us 80 thlt ~'e Jna)' ~Xll'nd a lrt"""lr .... -and J..Jp lh<m to.......,. acqu&lnted In their -.......... nc11- MU174 The View Is Priceless ONCE YOU MIGHT HAVE STOOD ON ANY KNOLL ~ND THE VIL~GEJ_PR~D __ _ -MAGNIFICENT AT YOUR FEET GLISTfNING IN THE SUNSHINE SPARKLING IN THE EVENING DARKNESS. IT'S ALMOST GONE, THA'r CHANCE. OISC!llED IY PLASTfR, IEAM, AND FENCEPOSTS. IF MAN WERE AN EAGLE HE MIGHT VIEW IT EVEN TOMORROW. GllAVITY IOUND, WE'D 1mn SAVE IT WHILE WE CAN. Let's Save Something For Ourself es . YES ON r,G,H. Contributions fo : Citizen s Ad.,isory P•rk Bond T 11 m &int•r P•91, Chairmen, 442.-Sf. And rews Rd., Npf. Bch. Drily Coast ~ Soutlz,erri Qffers · 63 Guaranteed Certificates ·Saturday Service ·The Insiders Club The Insiders Cl ub: A new way to eat rnnafion. 11s-~ membership card permits you to buy nearly every· thing you (leed from the finest closed-door show- rooffis at substantial sav- ings -appliances, furni· ture, stereo equipment, sporting goods, draperies and mUch, much more. You can. even buy cars at the "fleet" price and mobile homes and motor· cycles et substantial sav .. Ings. The Insiders Club Effective Annual Earnings 5.00%·5.13% Passbool<. No Minimum. 5.75%·5.92% One Year Certificate $1,000 Minimum. 6.00%·6.18% Two to Five Year Certificates $5,000 Minimum. Up to 90 days loss of interest on amounts withdrawn before maturity on an certificate accounts. also provides big dis· counts on tickets to sport· ing--and-entertainment- events ••• plus a whole list of free s~rviCes: safe deposit boxes, money or· ders, travelers checks, and notary services. Membership require .. ment for savers -$2,500 minimum balance. Coasi borrowers now receive as- sociate membe·rships en.. titling them to all outside referral services. Ask abo11t joining at any Coast omce. MAIN omce; 9th & Hill, Los Anple& • 01351 Clther olflcts WILSHIRE tt GRAMMIJK:T P1.ACD 3933 Wllshlre Blvtf., LI.• 388-1265 LA. CN IC CENTER: 2nd & Broadway• 626-l lOJ HUNTINGTON 11.lCH: 91 Huntington Center• (714) 897·1047 SANTA MONICA: 718 Wilshire lllYO. • J93..074& SAN ,EDIK>: 10\h & Pac Ille • 131-2341 WEST COYINA: Eastland Shopp Inf Qr,• S3l-22Qf 'ANORAMA cm: 8616 Van Nuys Blvd.• 892·1171 TARZA NAi 18751 Ventura EllVd. • S4Sfe14 lONG 8 0.CH: Jrd & Locust• 437-7481 tAST LOI ANCWS: 8lh & Som • 266-4510 DIAMOND IA.It: 328 Diamond Bar Blvd • (714) 595-7&2!> • D1hy Hours-I AM to4PM Open SabJ"'oys-9AMto1 PM (Olcept Civic Centt'1 1 A PRIZE OF COURTS Billie Jean Joins Clientele By MARIAN CIIBISTY \Vhen world·famow: termis fashion designer Teddy Tinllng was 1:;: and suf. fering from a severe case of bronchial asthma, his mother paid her ailing son a high compliment. It was 1919. in Nice, in a rented villa on a Sunday afternoon. Mama, who visited her Teddy bear only on the sabbath agreed to tea at his bedside punctuated with an out·loud reading of a newspaper account about sbocking SUzanne Lenglen, the French tennis star who had ditched corsets, stays and petticoats for what was described as .. a flimsy slip.'' Teddy: "It was a fanta:stic scandal that stirred my childish brain and beeame the seed of my madness for tennis fashions," says Teddy who is now 61 , 6Yl feet tall, and successful enough to tell-it-like-it-is about the greats and not-so-greats for whom he creates tennis fashions at $225 an outfit. Empress Farah Diba of Persia: "I made her knicker jumpsuits. I'm told her husband thought it was a bit pro- gres~ive. But at least there's no modesty problem.'' Italy's tennis champ, Maria Nasueli: ''I made her tennis ouUits from nude nylon. Vf!'l'Y sexy. You know how these Lati~ are." Gussie f\1oran and her famous lace pan- ties? 'RIGHTEOUS SHOCK' "When f!ussie played at Wimbledon, Hazel Wightman called me aside and ex· pressed righteous shock at the im- pertinence. She delivered the it's-forbid- den-speech in the sweet sort of hypocritical way Establishment speaks." Aborigine star EvoMe Goolagong from Australia : "These people are very superstitious. I made her a 'mini tennis dress with six sliLs and put the astrologica l sign of Leo on each .slit. Good luck and all that. That girl has a primitive grace that can't be articulated." Sen Francisco's Rome "Oesals who is under five r..4 chunky ahd r!portedly difficult to please: "Madame, I tell myself people don't have defects. Only characteristics." King-size Teddy -who speaks of tennis Tennis champs wear either knit frilled shift with hot pants or basic costume by Teddy Tinling. as a spectacle rather than a sport - created the tennis ,getups for the Women's Professional VJrginla Slims Tournament which toured 18 cities coast to coast. What he wants everyone to notice is that, at last. he's doing the court clothes of Billie Jean King whom he ha s admired from afar for 11 years. "Designing her .asl)~M is an ego thing," he says frankly. "I despise not being asked by a tennis star to create her fashions. In my heart I think of it as a rejection.'' SPARKS FLY When you're a tennis designer with definite ideas coming into contact with an e~otistical "star'' with equally firm Ideas -the sparks are apt to fly. Teddy recently had a "do" with Dinah Shore about putting back zippers in costwnes. Dinab·type women don 't want to muss their coiffure. Teddy: "To me, back zippers can go to helI. When a player bends over to hit the ball, it's like having another spine." And so the saga of Teddy Tinling and his tennis fashions continues. The aristocratic English ladies of uncertain age -say 75-plus -still have him create their tennis outiits, even if it's more for show than for the game. Teddy says that's the age they inherit their jewe1s whlch, when left in safe- deposit boxes. are forgotten -or, 1f Jeft on bureaus, art apt to1 be stolen. ' 0 Wbat I do for ·these dear soub," he ' says, "is make the nec.k.line·roundto take necklaces and I put a pocket on the skirt because the ladies get tired quickly and are revitalized with mints.'" I. .::..-... ' ..---Combing Through Histor~-· CttmtlM le'-M111!W ..._. ,_ A collection wblch started out of necessity has becomelan lnlerestlng hobby as well as the basis of lectures and soon·to-be the ·bas!J of a.book by Mrs. Margaret Herllby .of Marblehead, Mass. Sjle atarled collect· Ing combs for her· daughter because she'd never let her cul ber hair. Interest grew as she searched for rare finds on her world travels and researching tile topic bas been her lnsplnUon for writing a book. ·, BEA ANDERSON, Editor T"ICl•"t, M•r n. 1m "'" 11 Drinking Tested Ideas Questioned DEAR ANN LANDERS: Occasionally you print a Do-it-yourself Test. 1 ran into a good one last week. A friend sent it. I was resentful at first, but now I realize he was trying to tell me me something. Please print it. THE 0 Aft.I J IN TROUBL£11 TEST 1. Alcohol ls an addictive drug. -True or False 2. As few as two drinks a day can lead to alcoholism. -True or False 3. The attitude of a drinker is as im· portant as the amount he drinks. -True or False 4. Some people can handle a quart a day and li ve a normal life . ._ True or False 5. Moderate drinking will eventually cause physical damage. -True or False 6. Most older people should cut back on alcohol. -True or False 7. Women can't hold thelr liquor as well as men. -True or False 8. ·vodka and gin do not produce hang- overs. -True or False 9. Drinking on an empty stomach makes you drunker. -True or False 10. A person who drinq only wine or beer will not bttome an alcoholic. - True or False 11. A person who ls dnink behaves more like his real self. -True or Filse 12. The ideal arrangement for an alcoholic ls to set his limit at one or two drinks rather than try ror tctal abstinence. He wlll then feel as If he Is in control or himself and Jess deprived. - True or False The answtrs are as follows: 1. True. Alcohol Is an addictive drut. 2. True. For some people. Dul the real question Is not how much ia: person druw, but how mU<:h h• depends on n. J, True. Too many people lail to recognize the importance of their attitude toward drinking. This is what separates the social drinker from the alcoholic. When drinking becomes part of a person's life style he is in trouble. 4. False. flea vy drinkers, no matter ho\v normal they seem, are not norm al. Some people can hold a great deal of alcohol and not show it, but they can't fool their internal organs. 5. False. Moderate drinking will prob- a.bly. cause no damage, even over a lifetime. The problem lies in the in- - ~ ~ .. ~ \ J· ,, / ... terpretation of the word "moderate." 6. True. A heavy drinker who Is past 35 won't be able to handle alcohol as well over the next 35 years -U he lasts that long. 7. True . \Vomen generally v.•eigh Jes.t than men. The less a per~n weighs, the more quickly his body I.! affected by al cohol. 8. Fal se. This is a lot of mnlarky. 9. True. Food cushions the effect of alc<:1hol by slowing down the rate at "'hich It is absorbed by the body, : 10. False. See statement In response to 1 Number 8. 1 t I. False, Alcoh'll releases the In-, hibltlons and exposes the · unguarded, 1 primitive man. This does not mean tt b t his "rul" self, but rather his unclvilhed, crude setr. • 12, False. An 1lcohollc should not have e\'en one drop of alcohol. -DAILY READER Set commenU from ·Orange Coun11 authorities, Pag~ 14. ' OAILV PILOT Your Horosc ope Tomorrow Capricorn: Prestige Rises WOMIM'I WOii: SllH t ,. :It Ult •· C••tl Hwy. C•r9111 Otl Mir 67)-mt ,, I • Parted Curtain Offers Glimpse WEDNESDAY MAY 24 By SYDNEY OMA RR Donna, of North Bergen, N.J ., enters the fray about Leo. declaring, "I am going with a Leo and have bttn for several months. He is the nicest, 11105t consider a t e person I have ever met. But, aga in, my father is a Leo and he is a thick-headed, very tactless man. My boyfriend, I admit, is a fast worker, but we love each other deeply and have a wonderful relationship, I am a Taurus. The good Leos I know definitely do out- number the others." ARIES (March 21-April 19): You may be "tied down" with technicalities. legal and otherwise. Key now is to be thorough , patient and mature. Don't attempt to skip essen· llals. Mate, partner nttd9 - and deserves -more at- tention. Act accordingly. TAURUS (AprU 20-May 20): Health, work, basic services tend to dominate. Obt&n hint from Aries message. Dependents, pets need your eervlces. Get basic chclres out of way early, Then do some travel and vacation planning. Dental checkup may be re- quired. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Children, love, schools, in- vestments -these a r e spotlighted You will be busy, but home base will offer greatest attracti(Jn. Know it and also know grass is not necessarily greener elsev.•here. Taurus and Libra are in pic- tiqe. CANCER (June 21·July 22): Face issues squarely. Means don't attempt to fool others - or yourself. Perfe<:t tech- Alcoholism Test Proof Debated Editor's Note: Two Orange County au· thorities on the treatment of alcoholism dis- agree with two answers given in the "Am I In Trouble" test. nlques. Trim [at from budget. Sharpen sense (Jf direction . Kno"' where you are going and why . Pisces now can aid. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ): Get solid commitment f r o m neighbor, rtlative. You will be on the move. You need assurance that y(Jur affairs will be properly handled. Carelessness now result!: in loss. Know it and take pro- tecli\'e measures. Fun is on agenda. VffiGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ): Finish project. Get rid of burden. Stop wasting money. Earning capacity is greater than mi ght be imagined. Aries can lead the way. Be reeeptive v.·ithout being dominated. Cvllect what you need. Strns economy. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Lunar cycle high ; take in- itiative. Make new et.arts. See people. Ask questions. Stress independence, (Jrlginality. PerS()nal magnetism is ac· cented. Y(Ju are likely to get your way. Key is to know what you want. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Inner feelings domlnate. You are apt to be reflective and to react in subjective manner. Refuse to be dominated by rooods. New areas of interest are available. Open yourself to experience. Come alive. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21) Social life ac- celerates. Routine is changed, CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Reward due for efforts. Ft1turin9 Drti••t • Coth • Suit& Gow1" -l'onh 11ll, Special honor is indicated. Leo perkl"9 l>thllld ,iorr. and Aquarius are in picture.,,.~~~~i;iii;iii:ii~t...-.; DIAMOND REMOUNTING CMperate in special, civic @ project. Prestige r is es . Professional associate pays meaningful compliment. Y111r 11m will IM 11...-r, .. _ Utr ••. W• lllVt t it vnllml!M ttllecllen ,, 1lyle1. AQUARIUS (Jan. 21).Feb. 18): Journey is spotlighted. Far-au'ay places intrigu e. Foreign language dictionary \li'ould be helpful. Look beyond the immediate. Travel folders ,.,,_ 11vln91 tn ll'llV!lll"'I' wllll tllll Id. HOND~ JEWElti! ...... ""'• '''" .. ,. '. 25 Ye•n Exp1ritnc• can aid in bringing plans into ADAMS at l l OOl HURST focus. Open lines (J[ com-HUNTIN ~TON 11.ACH munication. t•l·ll1J PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): -~iiiiiiii~iiio.iiiiiiii~~ Ccincern with hidden matters Do n Your Child Ntecl is indicated, Dig deep. Reject SUMMER SCHOOL the superf1c1al. Make con- ciliatory gesture to family member. Financial disagree- ment can be resolved. Joint Enroll NOW in the best efforts succeed. Be coopers-P:•OM OHE OP' THIE OLDIEfT .. I AIOHT.l!ST AATID SCHOOLI live. IF TODAY IS Y 0 U R CALL NOW BIRTHDAY you are restless , 774·1052 artistic, have unusual voice. Fairmont Prlvat• School Forces currently are scat· 15S7 w. Mobl•, A11ehlll• tered. Relationship may be un-h c•llfft ln1lln der pressure Jn June, y(JU willj~.,..,..,...... .,..,..,.~ know which way to go. Vitality will Teturn. You make emo- tional comeback. To nM out mot• tbollt your-rt •net tilralovr, O«ltr Sydney Om1rr'1 »- .,.,. booklf,t, "'TM Trulh About Atlra1~.'' ?;~ blrtlld•I• 11\d 75 Ctnlt la Omtrr l!lookltt, t110 DAILY PILOT, l!lOll 321l. Gttn<t Ctfllfll Sl•tlon, N- York, NY. 10017. Mrs. Richard M. Nixon may become privy, during her visit to Moscow, to some closely guarded Soviet s'ecrets -the personalities and private Ii v es of the Kremlin's women. Included are Elena Podgorny, Victoria Brezhnev, Ludmila Gvishiani, the daughter of Premier Alexei N~ Ko sygin, and Culture Minister Yekatcrina Furtseva. On Question 5, Marceline Tamayo, psychia· tric social worker with Orange County Com .. munity Health Services said, "Any social drinking causes some physical damage, how· ever negligible it n1ay be.. Alcohol is a poi .. son and destroys cells." Dr. ~fax Schneider added, "There is no body system that is not negatively affected." Leave details to othere. View1-==~~~~~~=--1 picture as a whole. Intellectual curiosity abounds . Another ~ ...... .... ~~!.~~· ..... July Ceremony Lagunans Tell News LES LIE WINN Rites Set In July St. f\.1atth :::w's Lutheran Church, Irvine will be the set- ting for the July 1 wedding or Beverly Sue Jesse and Jiarry Richard Shuptrine of Irvine. The future brit!e is the dau ghter of fo.1r. and Mrs. James 1. Jesse of Yucca Valley. She attended schools in Whittier. ller fiance, son of Mrs. llar- ry A. Shuptrine of Lijohia, Mich., studied at the Universi· ty of Michigan. Mr. and Mrs. R. J . Winn or Laguna Beach have announced the engagement of t h e i r daughter. Leslie Winn to George F. Dames. son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dames Sr. of Medford. Ore. A July 29 wedding is being planned in the Community Presbyterian C h u r c h (Jf Laguna Beach. Miss Winn is a graduate of Tustin l!igh School and cur- rently is a student at Paclfic Christian Ccillege. Long Beach. Her fiance ls a graduate or Medford High School and earned a BS in graphic design at the University of Oregon \vhere he '"-'as a member of Theta Chi fraternity. He played varsity football and played with the San Fran- cisco 49ers for two seasons. He also was a defensive line coach for Stanford University and the University of Southern California. Fitting Advice \Vhen shopping for dresses keep in mind that a size 10 under one label may ap- proximate a size eight in another. Different manufac· turers hRve different ways of sizing their products. And you? You may be two sizes in- stead (Jf one. You may be nar- row at the top and broader at the bottom. For that reason, don't ask for what's your size when buying a drese , says the Internati(Jna! Ladies Garment W(Jrker 's Union. "Ask to be fitted,'' is the advice. Cheese Of The Week! RYE KASE Rogulor 20c 0N 99 · 1.19 LB. O FF It> w offtr tood M•y 23 thru Moy 21 (otin9 thit toity cht••• food It • unl11u• ••P•rlonct in •n•c~• •Ml ••IMlwichtt. It'• lllrt • "c.h•••• on rv•" without th• br••d! You 'll It. dolightt .. with th• 1t1tv fl1•or. Comt in •nd fttl• llofort you buy, Saglttarian f l g u r e s pr(Jm-~ inently. Questions you .,k FRANCJS-Summer Fun beg-ins , \\'Ith SUfi..1i\1ER CLOTliES from Sentence Lifted On Juries In response to Question 7. Dr. Schneider said, "There are no real physiological differ· ences, especially when weights are the same. Women alcoholics we treat are usually in worse shape physically because they have been drinking surreptitiously longer." will be answered. Travel Tip When traveling, remember to tote a quantity (Jf y(Jut favorite mild detergent. You'll use it to keep your lingerie clean -the hand-wash way. BATON ROUGE (UPll - Amid warnings that such ac· lion would undermine the "wisdom and chivalry" 0 r Louisiana law, the State House of Representatives has passed a bill repealing laws which prohibit women from jury service. Laugh' s on Humorist When Tables Turned The bill's author, State Rep. Jo.seph Accardo of LaPlace, said Friday that under present law a woman in Louisaina cannot serve on a criminal or civil jury unless she filed a notice of her intention t(J do so. Accardo said the result has been very few women serving on juries in the state. The bill passed 97-11 , but not "'ithout opposition. By ERMA BOMBECK There's no doubt abclut it. Doctors finally are coming in- to their (JWn. They are the darlings of the talk shows, the heroes of television and the most sought-after guests at cocktails parties everywhere. The other night I lu cked out and found myself seated next to my doctor at a dinner. "How much free advice do you figure you've given out t(Jnight?" I chided. AT WIT'S END "! tell them even though it is a cocktail party, I take my work quite seriously and would not presume to offer a diagnosis on a simple in- terview. I then invite them to come over to a corner and take their clothes off for a full professional examination.'' knocked three 1trok .. off my game." 41Jncredibte," I said. "By the way," he said, "'aa a newspaper humorist, aren't you going to say anything fun- ny all night?" "Sure," I said, "take two aspirins and call me in the morning." "Is that supposed to be fun- ny?" he said. "You thought ao when you charged me •10 for it last April." Chief spokesman for op- ponents of the measure was State Rep. Mike Thompson of Lafayette, who said U:luisiana was wise and chivalrous in ex- cluding women from jury du- ty. "Every professions! gets it." he emiled good -naturedly. "I mean how many homes without a piano does Liberace get invited to?" "But how do you survive?'' I asked. "People must drive you crazy with their symptoms." "You sound flip," I said,1-----------1 Thompson said that besider the question (Jf chivalry, there was also a problem of prac· tlcality. "If my wife h11d to serve on a jury, r \\'ouldn't be able to stay home and change diapers for six months," he said. Bra Fitting When trying on a new bra, che<:k for flt. Be sure it stays close to your body, that there are no gaps between the cup!. Jf the breasts are forced toward the sides or center the cup Is too small. "First," he said, "I divide them . I tell them I'm strictly an Ob-Gyn man. That weeds out all of the men. I re-route them to a party where an urologist is h(JJdlng court or to a theater where I know an in· temist is in attendance. "Then, I divide the women. I listen to the hysterical ones first. The ones who have just read a Reader's Digest story which gave them three months to Jive. J always reassure them you lose something in the condematlon." "What about the others?" ''but It must bug you to dispense all that free medical advice all the time." "Not at all," he griMed. "After the w(Jmen have fled, I too circulate among t b e guests. Tonight alone, I have saved $550 in professional fees. "That CPA over there gave me two new deductions I hadn't even considered, the attorney in the comer advised me on my partnershjp, tht educator trying to eat hi!: salad told me wha t to do about my son's reading problem and that professional goller at the end of the lable just A Good Question? "WHAT GOoD ARE WCHIS, PARKS, FlllNDS, AND THE EXCIT!MINT OF A TOWN CENT!R AND THI INDIPINDINCE THAT COMIS WITH GROWING UP IF YOU HAVE TON DRIYIN MRYWHEIE IN A CAR IY A PARINT WHO WISHIS HI WERE DOING SOMITHING ELSE7" THE IOY IS RIGHT, YOU KNOW. AND SO HI MOUNTS HIS llKI TO EXPLORE HIS WORLD. IUT DON 'T YOU WISH THI WHEELS THAT TURNID NSIDI THE WHHLS HI TURNS WIRE ONLY llCYCLI WHMS7 For Safety's Sake YES F,G,H. Contributions to: Citi1ens Advisory P•r~ Bond T ••rn 6tn9er P•9e, Ch1irm1n, 424 St. Andrews Rel., Npt . llch. .. • -- Holly. Cllt:h a 1pertl1 trom U.. mom lng 11111. Hold U.. m1glo ol 1.Wdln b/Hn. K11plhoff momontt111vt. T/lrlro ,..,,. tor 1 '".u,,,. Wfth•dllll!Otld ....,.,,,..,, rlnfl trom o,.,.,. "-· South Co11t l'/111 erittol •t tht S111 01091 hy . ~•tf• Me•• 140.tO'' '\,,ORR J FINE STATIONERY SPECIAL OfFEl MONOGRAMMED NORS SAYE 15% 211J l.CIASI .. ,llll'Af 115-1111 ClllU Ill I Al ·CMftllfl T PAlllll TlIE RED BAU:OON ... ~TP •, '"• ..... .i.11,1.11.n, ..... , d.ll<lrc•'• ol••• I••"• 0••1i.t ... Huntington Harbour (llll 84~1616 TOl\'D & Country Orange (710 551.9595 TIME FOR OUR CURL-COAXING cur· Join th e sun-and-fun club with a haircut just made fo r a carefree Summ er. Our special cutting method brings out every hidden ripple in your hair. By Mast~r Stylists: Curl-CO.Xing Cut• $4.2S 1620 NEW Ma e ARTH UR BLVD. HARBOR VIEW SHOPPI NG CENTER San Joa quin Hills Ro•d •t Naw M•cArthur Ope n Mon.-S•t., Tues. & Thurs, Ev•'• ly Appointment . Phona 644-8040 INDIVIDUAL EYE LASHES APPLIED EXPERTLY CALL FOR AN AP~OINTMENT DICK TRACY TUMILEWEEDS MUTI AND JEFF FIGMENTS NANCY ·~E COMPROMISED HIS No£)RAUTV ANO MIS MQt..IESTY AND TMIS BECAME A DISEASE. YOU SHOULDN'T 0E IN SWIMMING- YOU ·HAVE A COL>l> IN nlE HEAD~-' · FO" "£l£~[Tttrnl.lY, MAY 23, 1'7?· I DAIL y CROSSWORD •••• , •. A. POW!• I ACl'OSS l lll'k!c languagt 'Jot 10 Brtwt!'.l l)l'lln 14 Full ol llft U-Wolft: Flcllonll dtltcl\vt l!i Sw111 genus 17"--• r:::J~ 11 Miid Dllh l' Stan t~slrhn 20 Flight of sttps 22 Wrong In oplnloo 24 Ttlrptlont .... 26 MO$l shopwom 27 Scr11mt4 Jl Cht111lc1! t ulllx JZ U.K. lllClllttMf "'" 3l Ships,' r1;glrtp J5 Acmr ll Sttp cf • IMldtr I J' A1PtCtl 40 -elf fortf 41 Timt periods: I Abbr. 4Z Ft1llv1!s 41 On tdg• 44 Wis In sessiort 4SNtl~ 47 Counttrftlt: Obs. Sl Strttch rfptlttd!y 52 Painted 54 COYtrtd with thin lll)'ff 5S Move arCU1d SIJ lnlt11t: Abbr. til EUmlnltt 62 Prt1tnt lorc1lul cist lol rw II battle site: 2 wonls M Alllbullt'lct ac;,11sory lo5 Look with dlfnculty t.6 F•: l'rtfir 1o1~1r.a11 DOWN l R\1$11., news 2 :r.:.,tlty: 2 wards ) Actrfls -Sinatra -1 Staying cit• of 5 -btans: Menu llflll lo Along with 1 Cifoll\) workl11g IO!lttlltt a Gold IKt. bl1ld , Oel01111td o111l11111s I 2 t ) ' 10 State of mt's spirits 11 Samt 12 Rich soutees 13 IU¥« of .,,,, ... 21 Egyptim , ... 2l '"'"" -2S Conctmtd With law 27 SP'f!lhtly • 21 "Now Is the _ .. 2' Haslfns 30 Prclu't transftr: lntcrm11 }4 f,(ffk 1ulhor 35 Sino«- ·~~ )lo Eitel f~ 1 "'" 37 Btoty • 39 Ont btllf'llng .till •ust bt, •LISI bt 40 "I cainot -• --'.':3 -4!. H11¥Y wind 413 Highrst -14 Couity of ...... .lilt Golf holt -17 Estlbllsll: 2 -· '18 HlbUullt -19 "MY'J, and _ .. 50 Frtnell hllal fntomt · 53 Pt111t 1111d '" cooking 5S Grow fatJgutd 5" Pill'ldlst 51 SI)' "No" ltO l'td1I digit ME DfCIOID TO "SllOOT IT OllT"Wml TN! POUa AND ME GOT Klll.50. PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH PERKINS Tuesd•1. May 2.J, 1972 o•:cv PILOT 15 ly Dick Moores ly Cliester Gould GASOLINE ALLEY DID 'l'l:>UR V!RV &UU.f"i UIC!.LV. u.w t<.ILL MV ENR>ACIM!NT FATM!R? IS MY t----.-'\.IYJSINl!SS • • By Tom K. Ryan SALLY BANANAS By Charles lanotti -------. ---------. .---------, You~rfVJ!l& t~:n-ef\lTiON J'("WDCl{Tj TiMeOJT/ Pef<Q-~~~ WORLD/ ~ Dv / J ~!"""'' By Al Smith fA1ilER!: by Ernie Bushmiller LATER f; • ~( !l Ii Ji "' MOON MULLINS ........ , YIPE ! YIPE! . ANIMAL CRACKERS AU. R1611Ti E'IW.'BGW. Ill ~ FE-.1 MllJUl1:01 1HE 11 fll!:ST6l"Q)pa<~ • $\1CXJ\.O BE ARRIV~e ieE § Ai Oli: ~l.CJJ!'e l'l!ESERVE. ~, ~ " .;' .,..,,_,,,, __ ., ... .,. ... ,- By Charles M. Schub A NEW llAB'( 811CmlER?!! ~ I JUST 60T Rl~1 Of' lllE OLD ONE! •• By Harold Le Dom: IT'S 'EXACTLY 1:10! I'LL BET HE DOfSN'T VA'f(;f MOllE TKAM THREE MINUTES ONE WAY OR THE OTHEA. ••. DAY AFTER: DAY! OKAY, LET'S GO TO THE CAA! LOOK, WILL YOU Pl.IA$~ TELL ME WHAT'S 601NG OH! HAVE "YOU SUDDENLY TURNED Pllt.IVATE EYE 1 Oll!.14mON? ~Ai, By MeD FOi> ~E LAST TIME', SCRATCH·- 'fou CAN'T PLAY WITH LASSIE! -By Ferd Johnson , By Ro9er lollen THE GIRLS " . ·" '1Q ~1' "l'd be a natural la Congress -all tlte tblng1 I'm alway1 llYID& I'm 1olng to do tbat J ne vtt 1et arou.ad to." DENNIS THE MENACE FOR INSTANcE, MAilCI-'? A>~ INST•NCE, t HAVE ,.o TRICAT 'YOU DEC!NTLY. -I RtAU..Y CAN1T 9E B01'MEREP WITH ~U.. THAT. 1. By John Miies I ) I I • JC DAIL V PILOT Laguna Pro Sho ots 65, Tops Jacobs Rick Divel, en assistant pro at El Niguel Country Club In Laguna Niguel, 11hatttred that club's course record With a blistering 65 Monday in second round play o( lht: U.S. Open quaJUlcatlorts staged at three Southland courses. Forty-nine players qualified for final qualifications at the Olympic Club course in San Francisco June 5-fi with winners there qualifying for tht U.S. Open at Pe~ ble Beach later in the month. Divel fired his seven-under score to go with a morning round or 72 for a 137 total t.o top 16 qualifiers at El Niguel. Touring pro Tommy Jacobs of La COsla qualified second at 143. Other area golfers qualifying at El .Ni~uel Monday included amateur Ken Kribel of Laguna Beach (77-70-147); Ray Carrosco of Fountain Valley (73-75-148); and Art Deak of San Clemente (74- 7~150). San Francisco 49ers quarterback John Brodie Jed first round ptay at Kennedy Park course in Northern CaJJfornia with an even par 72. Ul'I T•leltfte,. ~ PARIS -With the -i8 top players not slated to compete until the third round, the French Open tennis tournament got WILLIE DAVIS WINS A RAC E TO FIRST FROM THE GIANTS' ED GOODSON , SAM McDOW ELL. off to a quiet start Monday. · Two Americans, Brian Gottfried of Fort Lauderdale, Fla. and Mona Schallau of Iowa City, Iowa were among the flrst- round victors. Gottfried came from behind to defeat Bernard Montrenaud of France U, 6-4, 6-0, 9-7 and Miss Schallau edged Mrs. Anna Maria Pinto Bravo of Ar.oentina U, 6-2, 9-7. Four American! were beaten. Ian Fletcher of Australia defeated Steve Turner of New York 4-6. 6-0, 6-4, 6-3 : Antonio Zugarelll of Italy edged Jim McManus of Berkeley, 6-4, 3-6, 6-3, 6-a, 6- 3: Jean-PBUI Mayer o! France wh.ipped Jim Osborne of Salt Lake City 8-6, 7-5, 6- 4. ~ TUBBERGEN, The Netherlands -One l!lpectator was killed and five others were injured Monday when South African dr iver Mike Grant lost control of his automobile and crashed into the stands at lhe International motor races here. "Grant, 24, also was injured in the crash aod was treated at a nearby hospital. Race officials later said he was in satisfactory condition. ~ ATLANTA -Bemle "Boom Boom" Geoffrion, one of the National Hockey League's all-time greats during a 14- season career with the Montreal Cana- dlens , was named the head coach o[ Atlanta's NHL expansion team Monday. ~ WASHINGTON -Three unearned runs without a hit in the eighth inning lifted the Baltimore Orioles to a 5-2 exhibition victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates at RFK StadJwn Monday night. The game, witnessed by a crowd of 38,445, was the fi rst of two scheduled for the nation's capital, left without a major lea gue team when the Washington Senators moved to Texas following the 1971 season. ~ DENVER -Mike Mihalas, a 29-year- old former Wllllam and Mary College 11thlete, was found shot to death on a Denver street Sunday. Detectives said hls wallet was empty and robbery was con- sidered a possible motive. Mihalas was shot once In the chest, ap- parently by a small-caliber weapon, police reported . A passerby found the OOdy lying on a sidewalk. Detectives said they haven't been able to determine why Mlhalas. of Norfolk, \1a .. was in Denver or where he was 5tayil'lg. Mihalas was a starting guard on William and t.Ia ry's football team in his senior year in 1966. Big Al Upset Despite Being Top Shotputter BAKF.RSFIELD (AP) -Massive Al Feuerbach remains unbeaten and the faV1lrite to win the Olympic Gold Medal in the shot yet the former Emporia State giant Is de~. "It's depressing not to throw fa rther than that ," he said Saturday night after winning the shot at the Bakersfield Track Classic with a toss of 67 feet ~'"2 inches. "Of course. I haven 't really been train· lng tately and I did put some pressure on myself by declaring I'd break the world record three Wetks ago but from now on l'm just going to go out and throw." More Bad Ne ws: Blue May Hurl . Again st Halos OAKLAND (.o\P) -As if the California Angels don 't have enoug h problems already, they may have to face Vida Blue of the Oakland A's tonight. · _, 1'\e Apgels got a quick glance at the Oakland piti;:hing ace Monday night wtien he wanned up briefly in the bullpen while Jim "Catfish" Hun ter was beating the Angels 6-3. Manager Dick Williams of the A's said Blue will pitch an inning either tonight or Wednesday. He is scheduled to make his first start of the season Sunday against On Tl' T onight Channe l 5 a t 8 lhe Chicago White Sox. Blue did not sign his contract until a month after the season started , causing a delay in his pitching debut. "Hunter pitched his first complete game of the season in picking up his third vic- tory against two defeats. He struck out eight, walked one and alllowed seven hits. "I had my best stuff of the A's season," Hunter said. "I threw fast balls 75 percent of the time and was getting the pitches where I wanted." One of Hunter's few mi stakes came in the ninth inning when rookie Lee Stanton hit a two-run homer, his third of the season. "It just wouldn't be my kind of game if t didn't give up at least one homer,'' Hunter said. The only othe r Angels run came in the first inning on a pair of singles by Mickey Rivers and Vada Pinson, followed by a double steal. California might not have scored had it not been for a mental error by Hunter. He was supposed to cul off the throw to second on the double steal but missed the sign. The A's took advantage of the wildnes5 or three California pitchers and t~e power of Reggie Jackson. Angels pitchers gave up 12 walks in- cluding seven by starter and loser Nolan Ryan. 2-4. Jackson settled the Issue with a three-run homer off Ryan to highllght a five-run seventh inning for the A's. Jt was Jackson's fifth homer of the season and gives him 20 runs batted in. J ackson snapped a persona l slump with a double in addition to his homer. He struck out his first two times at bat, giv- ing him 12 in 21 trips to the plate. John Odom , 2-1, will pitch for Oakland tonight against Rick Clark , 3-4. 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An~ncr -14.111 Meet Nitro Nellie Mother Vies 0 1i Drag Ci rcuit -_ f.i\RY., lnd. (AP)-k bright-red race ·car sped across the quifrler-mile asphalt track in seven seconds and parachuted to a stop. . . The car's fibergla ss OOdy is raised from the front, and a slender, limber body tv.•1sts and bends itself from within the aluminum-sided cockpit. . . Flashing a _wid€, friendly smile to the pit ere\'.' is Nitro Nellie, only black, female dr 1ver of fuel-1njected, single-A Funny Cars in the United Stat.es, SheJ s also Mrs. Otis Gains, Gary, a 31-year-old mother of four whose off-track career.is billing supervisor at an Army Ammunition plant. Her husband, an employe o! U.S. Steel's Gary Works, is the chief mechanic and designer of her car, The Conqueror, a 1,900-pound vehicle of fiberglass molded into the shape of a 1971 Dodge Challenger. . M:s. Gains has been racing for only 18 months. "I just tried it one day and liked 1l so I've stayed with it," said the Lawrenceville, Ill., nalive. "Besides Olis is interested in cars and we like to do things together. ' "We are just getting established on the circuit," said Nellie. whose nickname "Nitro" comes from the nitromethane fu el used to propel The Conqueror. "We haven 't won yet. but we haven't done too badly," she added. "Everybody has treated us beautifully. The funn y thing is that people come down into the pit area to make sure Nitro Nellie is a v.·oman . Many don't believe it at first. J.'or the moment, she is driving "funny cars," although she hopes to be racing •'rails" sometime next year. "Funny cars are doorless, unibody vehicles of fiberg lass that burn highly vola· lile fuel mixtures. They have disc brakes in the rear, and a parachute to help in the braking. "Rails are Jong, needlenosed drag racers with room in the back only for the driver and the engine." The Gains own their $18,000 dragster "but it took a lot of hard work, baby.'' said Nell ie. "This is really an expensive hobby and we have the onl y sell-supporting race car on the circuit," she said. The Gains have paid for everything involved in Nellie's racing, from the asphalt- gripping tires to the uniforms mandated for the driver and pit crew. And Nellie's asbestos firesuit-wliform alone cost nearly $5011 Uftl T•i.Mtt Never Give llp Pedro Morales of Puerto Rico found himself on the outside looking in -or up -after being tossed out of the ring by Pampero Firpo oC Argentjna. However, Morales climbed back into the New York ring and won the match. W e'r e on the Way With 3 Over LA, Sa ys Ex -box Boy Bv ROGER CA RL.SON • Of tll• D•U'f PU•I St~H LOS ANGELES -For a fellow \\'ho had been the idol of the high school cam- pus just a few short weeks prior with his exploits in four major sports it must have see med incredible to be cashing $35 paychecks for a week's toil as a box boy in a super mart. Add a wife and child as dependents for $· '5 II "'· 5,15 p.m. II:)) p,m, a 19-year-old under those circumstances and you have the predicament that faced Bobby Lee Bonds in 1965. one of the finest athletes in Riverside Poly High history. He's making considerably more these days as a member of the San Francisco Giants, the club which outlasted the ~ Angeles Dodgers Monday night, 9-3, before %3,086 at Dodger Stadium. The loss dropped Los Angeles a game behind Houston in the National League West, but the win did little to get the Giants out of last place in the division. "We're not dead yet ," Bonds told the DAILY PILOT, "we just haven't been getting the breaks up to now. "We get a leadofr triple and then three straight line drive outs." There were no triples for San Fran· cisco 11onday, just home runs. Four of them to be precise. with ex-USC star Dave Kingman's pair of circuit clouts leading the way. His first was a grand slammer with Bonds aboard in the third, and his solo ,. job in the sixth sn,apped a 6-all situation. Bonds likens the Giants ' plight to his own current batting situation . "I've gotten off to a poor start, but I can't really pinpoint the problem. I've hit the ball -but it just seems like it has been right at someone." ~1onday he beat out an Infield tapper in the first frame and even tually stored, then walked twi ce in the third stanza. Later he lined lo short with two run- ners aboard and nied out. ''This was a good game to v.•in, but we really didn't make the breaks . You have 10 get your share of breaks if you 're going to win in this ga~e. . "But if anyone can bring out the best in us it's the Dodgers. Two more over LA and \\'e'll be on our way;" says Bonds. Bonds spurred numerous c o 11 t g e scholarship offers lo follO\V in his brother's footsteps to football glory. "The Gi ants' $5 ,000 bonus looked mighty good to me. Sometimes my checks we re as little as $22 a week," says the Giants leadoff hitt er. Tremendous speed and power make him perhaps the toughest leadoff hitter anywhere. Last year he finished with 33 home runs and 26 stolen bases. To date he has five homers and 2.1 rbi, second only to Kingman's club-leading 10 homers and 31 rbi. The jury is stiil out on the prospect of the Giants overcoming the IO-game lead Houston and Los Angeles have been en- joying. But one thing seems certain, Bonds has seen his last '35 pay day. Tonight manager Walter Alston's DtR:igers counter v.·ith Don Sutton (S-0) agoinsL John Cumberland (1).3) • Siii Pr•nclK• !f) UI ,.~ .. I•• II) Bonds, rf Futn!ll, lb Arl'Klld, 211 Good1(11t, lb Kl,,gm1n, JtJ SPtl•r, 11 •l<endtrJOO, cl 8 .Wlllloms. 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The feeling here Is that athletes carry an extra responsibility for conduct, sportsmanship and neat g r o o m i n g --------WHITE ~H -------- fastest time of the %.4 semifinalists. The flr1t three in each of tbrtt bea ts moved on to the finals. UnfortL1J1atel y, lbe three with faster times we~ all In bis beat, and Erie missed being: lo lhe championship race by a tenth of a second. Fagans was telephoned to stt if Olson might be added to the finals. But lbe CIF boss points oat that there is no rule or provision which wou ld allow him to do IO. He points out that there are otben who jnst mJssed qualifying by a whl1ker and to let one extra man advance without having properly qualified would opea the flood gates. De's right. There could be DO jnsUflc•· tlon to let in oae boy without letting all the other fourth place rlnlsber1 advance. As re«ntly as Moaday a lad from 1'1ayfalr High mls1ed qualifying tOr the 1tate meet discus compelltlon by a mere two Inches. Surely his disappointment rivals that of Olson. eL11n1 wiuTa The thing Is, be missed qoallfyln( because they are looked upon by many to through head-<tn competition. Olson did set an example of leadership. not. Therefore, I believe that boj'5"" ·should Under the present system of qualifying, continue to look like boys. Fagans' bands are tied. Maybe someday the semJflnalist!: in lhe ISO, mJle and two Hairstyle for men has .admittedly mile 1\"ill all go Jn one race aod tbta tlM changed in recent yea rs and I don't feel best nine wUI move to the final~. that boys have to wear it SO short that As In the Olympics or any other level of they look like recruits in the Afrika competition. lbtre are always bitter Ko rps. disappointments. But It shouidn't be. to the other ex-Recall the 195' U.S. Olympic team treme, either -flowing shoulder length, trials In the 400 Intermediate bunOet llllbrushed, often looking like a mop wbere Notre Dame's Aubrey Lewls bid a that's just been through a hurricane. berth on the team clinched coming off the Mirroring Yul Brynner Is obviously not flnal turn . going to make a boy tougher in his But be subsequently hlt a hurdle, fell, chosen sport. Allowing him to look like and bis dream of four yean lay sprawled nature boy won't do much for him, out wl lh him oa the Collseam track. either. Everyone knew be was good enough to be Let him be comfortable and in style. on the team. But for heaven's sake, let's have him Yet he hadn't qualified in the pretcrtb- clearly distinguishable as being of the ed manner and tb erefort had reached Use .male gender! -eiMJOtlhTUne. * At d~ply dis1ppohltln1 at It may be tbat Estancia IDJb't Erk Olson did 1'0t qlllllfy for the CIF traet ftnal1 Friday night, you at Ieut have to ad.mire CIF cemml11loner Ke11 Fagan• for mat. talnlng: nits. That 11. Olson missed qaallfytq: for the fin.a.Ii in lhe llt. Be ran l:U.J -fourtb * * The batUe of the sexes was won by the male beast Monda y as NancyDunkJe, the tal•nted, tough competitor from Connelly School in Anaheim, lost 22-11, 22-16 and 26-21 to the guy who writes this column. A few unlucky mis1e1 by the f-1 Miss Dunkle aod a few lucky shota by youra truly was the dlfftr,nce in the final out- come 11 Huntington Beacb High. * * * Ftuerbach, 1''ho has thrown 70-31 ~ this year to become history'•~ 70-footer. Is prood•st of his l•al> of beating world ncord holder Randy Mat.on In •lght 1traltht meets this year and or throwing O ffft or more Jn alx ol his last ..... fneell. Nobody Thinks I Can Fight--Stander In case you haven't noUced, cheek the surprise leade:r1 In three of the four ma- jor league dlvbions. The Chicago White Sox._ O.veland In- dians and Houston Astro1 are aettlng pace and you can bet tht Laa Vegu oddsmJkers are going to take a bath u those stondlnp hold al the end ol tbe stuon. 11But that'• why this la IO upsttting," uld tho &-loot-I, 2fG.pounder. "I know I •an 1•t thlt world record but maybe I've bem puUJni II\'> much ~ on m1self. From now on, ltil all d_ownhlll lo the Olympic lrlall. "Flnt l'm takln& two ,...ks off lo 1':,.~ for 1 J... t mett In Los thal tho Olympic trlall. I woo 'I pncllct rm colac lo f"I Ibo -ld-""""1 11111 tlmt but I'm reedy. Jr--will be &imlDI 111 M1U..11 fl.Jlt """""- • • OMAHA (AP) -lle avywel1ht challenger Ron Stander gol In lome verbal counttrpuncbes at the press A1on· day at lbe conclusion of his workout. ··r am down to the point where I •'I' tired of selling myself," said the unrank· ed fighter who will meel champion Joe F"zi<r here Thursday In a IS.round bout lbat will be carried naUooally by TV. "It doesn' matter what I say, yoo'l!.go out and write what )'OtJ want ," SUnder fired at a group or about 15 writers al his camp. Stander, a resident of cross-river Coun- cil Bliiffs, Iowa, S)lld ht bas betn In- censed at what he called "the et!l!!lem writers'' ever since be came back from a thret-)"eok l(alning ~n in Balton. "I lllktd to W. one Boston writer for about sO Jntmltest'' he. said. .. And I answmd qu .. tlons from the heart. Then I ))Ut him oo foe a1*rt 10 minut ... "So what comes out tn the column the next day -only stuf! that was 1n the last 10 minutes." Tbe writers In attendance, ma111 fftlm the east and making their Ont ap- pear;nce at Slander's camp, then toot up 1ht battle. One questioned why Stander gave fllp- panl alm'·ers. much in the style of ex· chrunploo Muhammad Ali. "I &ol lo have food .... llners," be retorted, "nobody thinks I can fljJht." Stander mixed In .. put-on" answers with the serious all through the Interview. Even alter manager Dick Noland. warned, "C'mon, Ron.ale, be atralgbt with them." 'Ille 212-poundcr wbo ha1 I ...,.,..i ol ZS. 1-t was a.11ked ll he had evu been knocked dowu. "Yd>, onct tbo police knocked me out with a n1gb1 1tick," joked Stander. And in>nlcalty, tho other leader (NY MeO) ls running aw.,. In hrUtle ctia11. The lat< GU Hodges told this column last August ht 1•11 his Mets could 111111 win their division, daplto belnc nine' games out of first place at that late cta&e. Now it'• the Meta In a nfnaway ju.rt a few months alter a heart •tllck tm.4 Hodfes. G yi11nasti cs Trials Stt This Week .LONG BEACH _ Calhy Rigby or Los Alamitos "''ill be the focus or altenllon in the ll:S. w o. men '.~ gymnastics trials this week at the Long Bea~h Arena and Long Beach Auditorium. Competition is slated to be~in \Vednesday and stretch da ily through Saturday. The meet begins with ty,·o ~ays of compulsory e1ercises in squads at 1:30 and 7-30 pm \\'ednesday and Thur~ay · at the auditorium and concludes wit~ two days or optional ex- ercises at I: 30 and 7: 30 Friday \ and Saturday at the arena. ' r.1iss Rigby, a 100-pound blonde . placed 16th in the 1968 Olyn1pics at MexiCQ City for the ~sl·ever fini sh by an ~merican woman in Olympic circles and has since gone on lo \1•in international gold med- 11ls in meets all over the U.S. and Europe. She competes for the host ' · SCATS (Southern California !'cro Team l contingenl, which 1s co·sponsoring the 1neet, along wit h the U.S. Olympic Con1mi lter. In addition to the Los Alamilas Culie._ an area girl .. .;!I:.~ ....... ,.,,,...,,~.,.,.,_ -14 year-old Kyle Gavner of ~ , · Costa r.1esc. -is iilso a ' ' mainstay for coach Bud ~far- quelle's SCATS. An l!ighth grader a t Te\Vinkle Intl!rmediatf! School, P.tiss Gayner \\'BS 17th in the \1·omen·s semifinals earlier in UCI TRAINER WOODY WOODROW TAPES FROSH STAR ROD SPENCE'S ANKLn. the year in lndjana and thus qualified for a berth in lhe Long Beach event. Although she competes in several ever.ts. Miss Gayner's best event is lhe balance beam. where she racked up' a near-perfect, 9.6 score in a dual: meet against a Japanese leani last year at Ca l State (Fu llerton ). At Long Beach, 25 qualifiers from v a r i o u s preliminary meets y,·i ll bid for !he six berths "·hich \\'ill be open to U S. \l'omcn gymnasts for the Olympics in ~1 u n i c h . Germany. Olym pic medals "'ill be a11·arded for overall scoring , in addition to the four individual events -the aforementioned balance beam. uneven bars. long horse vault and floor ex- ercises. All routines will be set lo music. Tickets are priced at $2 and SI for the compulsories phase of the trials and at $4 and $2 for the arena port ion of the schedule, with students ad- mitted for half those prices. Ducats will be sold only through the arena box offi ce And further information may ~ obtained by calling (213) 437-2771 . Ar ea Places 2 i11 Discus • Exacta Is Main Iten1 ' At Los Al The ''Nightly Double'' is out. being replaced by the popular S2 exacta for the 79·night qun rter horse racing season that opens Wednesday, June 7 at Los Alamitos Race Course. Pres ident Frank Vessels, Jr .. announced today . Originally. the nightly dou· ble -Ctlmmonly known at other tracks as the daily dou· ble -\\'as conducted on the first and second races al Los Alami tos. But wit h the $2 exacta on the first race proving more successful at tht tw o Southland harness meetings - Wesrern Harness, Inc.. and Southern California Racin g Assn. -Los Alamitos has decided to go with that form of \vagering. The Orange County tr11ck ~viii contin ue its policy of stag- ing $5 exacta wagering on the sixth and ninth races each e\'ening, providing racing fans y,;jth three exaeta races. UCI's Hand)' Mein Works A~ Voluntary Doc, Coach By HOWARD L. HANDY "Coach Adams overheard "Coach Adams is a Of IM 0•11~ "Hot Sti ff my remark and asked me to taskmaster at physica l con- A few sunno\\'er seeds and a volunteer for the job. \\'hen I ditioning. so the kids don ·t dusty band-aid are hardly the looked at the first aid kit and hurt easily. \Vith conditioni ng tools to start a job as a college sa1v what y,·as lacking, J as the key. if they do get a baseball trainer. \"Olunteered on the spot.'" minor hurt. they're in such Bui \vhen such trainers are F'or the past three seaso11s. good shape they heal fast.·· at a premium and are unpaid the 45-year-old telephone Ctlm-\lloody says opposing tean1s for their ser\•ices, !his is often pany veteran has spent most usually get more attention lhe case. of his free time with the UCI froni him than the UC! squad . Unlike hi~h school football team and has arranged his "':\lost of the teams don'I teams which have doctors or \'acation d<>ys lo accoinmodate have a trainer. so I help them school nurses in attendance or road trips. out "'hen they need it." · th r h II He 'll be on hand at San 111 e case o t e co ege A powcrf uiiy·lluilt six-footer, h b I · Fernando Valley S la I e teams w ere an am u ance 1s Woody didn·t play much also on standby. baseball is College. beginning Thursday baseball as a youngster in almost a forgotten sport. when the team opens play in Canada where ice hockey and One ma n who changed all the NCAA Western Regional curling preva il. that al UC Irvine is W. C. tournament. But when Anaheim Stadium "Woody" Woodro1v. He has In th ree years, \Voody has "'as being constructed in 1965. d h A ' , seen more than 140 of UCl's se rve as I e ntea ers he was PT&T"s engineer on a trainer for each of the three 147 games and outside of cable project that provided the Uc! h f. Id d Adams, has probably seen seasons as 1e e a ne\v facility with necessary team. more or the school's games comn1unica tions lines. Ever And It's alt for the good of than any other person. The si nce. he's been an en- !he team wit h Woody serving Anteaters \i·ill take a 3l·l7·l thusiastic base ball fan. strictly on a vol unteer basis a~ record into the pl ayoffs this It's a fam ilv affair for the a valua ble, unpaid assistant to year. Woodrows wiih son Ke vi n h G Ad "\\'e've been fortunate at coac ary ams. serving as !he team bat boy fortunately. he has a job UC!." \Voody says. "There and "''ife Shirley working as a "'1th the Pacific Telephone ha ve been no major injuries -secretary in the a t h J e t i c I I just a couple of di slocated Company as a p ant oreman department at UC I. F • h R in the firm 's office at 31 1 E. knees. some broken fin gers. And when the call to play IS epo1·t Balboa in Newport Beach. cleat cuts and bruises. ball is sounded. this is one of NOR\Vr\LK -Two Orange '"When UCl's team first the mosl enthusiastic trios in Coast area athletes qualified OANA WHAJtl' --o 1n111n: 1J1 came into e1istence three F J attendance. for next week's state finals in 11·;~A'i? ::l~~'~ ,2 1,..1,,1: ,10 •oe1t years ago ... Woody r ecalls, "I Lions e le t furthermore. that lrainer's Oroville by placing in the to p cod. 1 <ow cod, '' c1uco b1u. ~ was watching pr acticl! one day kit for the Anteaters has long fi ve of the CIF Southern Sec· ~~~~~1;.t:~~: ;.~~ :,"~~~,~~.~ 11111· when a kid got hurl. \Vestminster lligh"s go I f since dispensed with sunflower lion discus fi nals at Cerritos Hfw,.0 1111 IAtt'• L111tHntl -n "! S&\V that they di dn't ha\'e team will be feted with a seeds and \Voody has a bag of "·II M d • .,o.,r,, l5 b•s•, , wt111 r se1 btu. iu · nd f I · d b t " r· ·d 1 . ....._. ege on ay. rock <Od. io•wrv'• lldilll'I _ 21 a trainer 11 et 1t \Vas loo sports awar s an q u e up-to'\.late 1rsl-a1 supp 1es to Earning the right lo make 11"01•rs: ss c•llc• b1,1, » ro<• cod. n bad a college tea m couldn't Wednesday night at Seacliff treat on-lhe-spot injuries on m1ckertl, 1 b1r•1cuc11. lhe trip north \\'ere Corona de! SAN 01Eoo IM11111c1,.1 ,1., _ ,,_ afford one, not spea king to Country Club. the field of play. r.tar's Howard Rouster, fourth '"qlers: 15 vellow1~u. '° b•rr1cud1. ll anyone in particular," he Activity gets under way at 7 A far cry from that early J Whi~t •~e b111. 117 c111co 111~1. 'i at 164-9; and Ne 1v p ort bo1u10. 3; h11111u1. •so roc:k <ocl. adds. o'clock. beginning. Harbo r's Terry Albritton, filth 1-------=--=--::c:. ____ .=:.::._ _________ :.::._...:.::.::._ ____ -;: _____________ _ with a 162-1 1 best toss. 1 Camarillo's Fred Huston. who set the CIF meet record of 182-3 lt1st se11son . took a runneru p spot Monday at 169-6 behind Monte Vista's Fritz Coffm:in, 1vho sailed the plat- ter 172-7. Junior ?.1arcus Gor- dien of Claremont \\·as third at 168-5 1?. Girls Given GAAAward s -Baseball Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE A ~fERJCAN LEAGUE Eart Division East Divi.!llon w L Pct. GB w L Pct. Ne\v York 25 7 .781 Cleveland 17 10 .630 Pittsburgh 18 1,? .600 6 Detroit 16 12 .571 Chicago 15 15 .500 9 Baltimore IS 13 .536 Philadelphia IS 11 .169 IO Ne\V York 12 15 .444 ~1ontreal 14 19 .424 1111 Boston ~ 11 .346 St. Louis 12 21 .3'4 131/l l\1Hwauke e 8 17 .320 \Vest Division GB II\ 21h s 111 8 DEAN LEWIS 1972 TOYOTA CARINA Yil TH FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING $1200 PER MONTH CAA president Ann Po\vis \\'a.~ given lhe GAA $50 Houston scholar.o;hip at Estancia fllgh DOdger~ 20 12 .625 20 H .588 lVest Division Chicago 19 10 . 655 $t4.7D T•t•I Dow" -$72.DO Tot•I Monthly P•yment. •31520 for Forty Eight Mot. Deferred - $3550.00/C•ih -$27t4.7D Al'R 12.76 on approvff crtdlt. School Girl~' Athletic Associa· Cincinnati fion a\varOs banquet heHf "a"4·-<an-Die,...---- 18 15 .545 2·~ Knott's Chicken House f\.1on· Allanta day night. San f'ranciSC-O 1'19-.441_fi_ 12 20 .375 R Girl-<if-the-year awards £or ti u t standing sportmanship, skill and sl!rvice were ac- cepted by Sonjia lanelli, Juli' Rabi. Debbie Kruse and Chris- ty Blanc at the annua l evl!nt. Girl 11 ...,_ •••r1 lrn~ma" -1onll1 ltn.HI SOMometrt -Jul~ R1lll. luf'llcr -Deblll, KrllJf. Hftlor -(hFltl~ l l•r• OAA•ld•tllfl~i1: ,ti,.., Powis. 0·11~11111111'11 l~wl(t: 0..1!'1.,., Hwm111 Mttl V1h11Dlt Pll ,lt: llP:tlMlll: tr•~hmlft -~f'lllJ Hymtft. M)lll>omcr1 -Lllll1ft Heop~lr\. IYftltr -S\ltl t r1<lle•. 1t~OI' -(1ro1 12 i,I .324 IO'i .Mlndl Y'I ll:IWlll l.\Ofl!real· 6, Phllt<lflp~l1 I HOUSlon J. St~ Oleto 0 .s ... l"r1nciKO •• LH All .. ltt I Only •tmn l(hedUI" ' Oak land 13 10 "'nnnesola 11 n Texas 15 16 Kansas City 12 18 Angel5 II 20 M..,d1y•s Jl1wt1• Chk110 7. T~-11 '· H 111111119, 01kl1M 6, C1llflr1111 l Only 11rnts K1'1!'du1fd TMI J'I Cifll'lts .6'13 ' , .601 1" .484 s .400 7y, .355 ' C1llffr11l1 (FO!ll!r 0-1) •I Ollctlnd IOclom 2·11 . nfehl Mln,...IOlt IK .. 1 4-11 •I 1(1n••• Cllv 10 •- 1·11. ~l-111 C~~"o C81hns--r1 S-41 ti T•xl s !Go9oltwi.kl :i.n, ftltM MUw1ukee ILOf'lbO'"t 1·11 t ! O•lro11 (Co1tm1~ ._,,, f'llt M Clew l1nd (Perrt ,.JI f l Ntw Yort (Slo!Utmvrt +JI, n!•~1 ••llll'nort IM(NlllJ 11.J) II &11JIO!'I 1s ;tbt•I ).J!, ~•hi ......... 'r""---------------------------~--~ ,_,.. 1l1111tt -Outnll• H•m1n, II f oullltt -Dt!ll)lt Krutt 11111 J1ntt Maody. , .. If ...u,.,.1 trt>•llm•~ -Slftfl HtftltJ. _.._, -lllllt~ H1:1111llm . 1111'11111' -1119 •rl<ltn, 1tntw -Ct rol lltobbllll. 1 .. MI OtllOI• Ull1r. Ytllt YM!t1 lrfthm•~ -Lvnn A<11m1. '~"' -(l...W ll!l-n. 111111M -G111111Yn All.1111. ,,1110r -llf',,.. w..i. DEAN LEWIS 1966 HARIOR ILVD., COSTA MESA 646-9303 ltfrllltlllll )lnflt• -Jllftnt ltllltl, 011M G111CMnt1. "°"'"1'' -SfltUev S.nokt tnd P1rts for All Imported C1r1 lfflodl •rid J•nl• MOOllJ, 1972 VOtVO 142 SEDAN WITH FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING PER MONTH $11 7.46 Total Down -Dtfarrf'd $6057 .46. Ca1h '9rlce $4246.27 Incl. T & L/APR 15.36 on app. credit 1972 TOYOTA MK 11 STATION WAGON WITH FACTORY Al R CONDI TIONING $ftsoo PU 7 MONTH .. n••ll; 111lftm•n -L•MI AIMl'nt. Moder n lody Shop for All C1r1 ~· -0t11t111 e11rtN11.d,1,1111.,,. $147.IS Total Down/Stl.ff Total ;,.:~ ICru ... t111lor -rltty Orange County's Lareest •nd l.fost Modem Toyota and Volvo Dealer Mo"thlf rymt. for ''"' rt1ht CltU Mltfl htlltt1 fftlllllltll -,.Ill Month1. Ooftrr.. S41U.$.l A,Jt l lursda.y, Mot,)· 23, 1972 Marina's Voro110 3rd Grid Seas on Awaits Line Ace By PIOL ROSS 01 ll1t 01l1J· "lltl lll!t Nick Vorono was a part of championship rootbnll learns In successive years as a linebacker.guard for the eighth grade tea1n at l·lunt1nglon Beach's Stacy School and in the san1t capacity a yea r later on ~larina Jligh 's SunSi'l League titlisl Bee gridiron squad. But, one diadem \vhich hns eluded Vorono-one which hr and his teammates "'Ould cherish the most-is the varsi- ty crown in the rugged Sunset circuit · A 5-9, 180 poundt>r, Vorono lettered on ~larina ·s varsity the past two sessions undero coach Leon \Vheeler and "'ill be perhaps the 1nost rx · perienced Vi king \vhen !hf· 1972 campaign rolls around 111 September. In his role as right defrn.~1vr linebacker, Vorono t•x petls tu be called upon to flo sun1r defensive signa l calling hut will ha \'e to pace his .ctefensi\'r antics to a degree sincr he'll also be doublini.i as an 01 - fensive right guard. "As a lea rn ," he confides . "we want to \\'in lhe league championship. Jn the la:r::t ll\·11 years, things wert" said and !hen sometiml!s lhey didn 't happen the wa y !h<'y \\•rre ~upposed lo. "This time . Yi e fee l \Yr ha vr lo pro ve ourselves fir s1 ;ind then see 1vhat happens ·• Although there arf' ~0111£• standout individual griddcrs in the current Vike ~pring·drills fin~luding Vorono ). · 11 's \Vheeler's philosophy that a few superstars a football team doesn't make. Vorono concurs with his coach"s thinking: "\ve think we'll have more team unil _v th is t.in1e because everyone i~ equal and there are no sta rs ·· As for himselr, the 17·year-I old seni or says. "my in- dh idual goals would bf' 1t1 make the all·league. all-coun- ty. all·CIF' type teams . preferably as a linebacker. "I hope to play at the "'eight 1180 ) I'm al now. It gives n1e better mobil ity and qui ckness I got up to about 207 a month ago after playing last year al 205 bu t a diet got me back down." ' NICK VORONO t:;11t·~s bet~aUSl' of the st'ason \1·r 11er(• havin,1: 1 ~arina Ptld· f'd up ill 2·7• t111d beca11sr nf psychologk:<il s111ff likt' thr \1·c1ght I "·as c;irrying. ·• hr says ··The "·eight didn·t make 1n1• c1uick enough for playing linebacker so 1 11•as put al defensil't> end and laektc But Thc•re·s more a<:l1on on defcnsl' at lint'backer bccausr ~·uu g1·t to 1nf11cl stune p;iin inslt'ad oT just 1-ct·t·iv1 ng ii Iii.a• you do 011 offens1•." •Road Test • Drain&. Rel1ll Fluid • Remove Pan • \1 1sual Inspection • Adius t Bands &: l inkage • New Pan Gasket • Cleo11 S11mp & Setff'n. ''Condlllon 'ermltrln,," I nte1na tional / Coa SI· IO· Coa st @~an TRANSMISSION DAILY PILOr • { Dana Hills ' Ne w Coach Is Nes por Dana Hills lligh has rilled ll!ii baseball coachlna job with the st'leclion of San Clement• junlor varsity coach Denni s Ncspor. llis position ~·a5 confirmed At thr board of trustee~ n1ecling Monday night and principal \Vall Spencer coinrd Nespor ns. "An example of \1•ha1 I 1h1nk a coach should Ix' .. The 24-yt·11r-<11d Nespor guid· rd 1ht• San Clen1cntr junior 1 <1r:'lly to !hr Cres1v1cw l..eagul' rha1up1onship with a 10-4 n1ark and his 1ea1n \\'ll!I 1~.7 01·eral\. i\es1>0r "'as the alhl elr of 1hc· yc<1 r 111 1968 111 Cal Poly i P111nona 1 and ll'ns an Al!· CCAA selection as an out· fielde r in hi s Junior and se nior )l':lf~. ll 1s l'.oaching back~round In· <·ludt•s one .vear as \'arsit y a.~ststant al Snn (;nhrieJ H i~h befort' taking 1hr. S <t n Clf'mcnte JV posl lhL.!1 year. Eag l e~ 'ro a~t ~prin g !S ports ~:stancia fligh School wlll honor Its spring s p o r I ~ athletes toni ght with a sports a1rards banquel. Included in thr festivilie~ art' the presentation of captain ;incl 111ost \'al uilblc for ~ach sµorl 11 get.~ utuler way al 6:30 In !ht' school cafrtt'ria. COSTA MESA 1934 Newport Blvd. 645-7570 SANTA ANA Ii' 6. Fl'>I St. LONc; l l ACH ))() E. Prc lllc COl•1 Hwv. SU·IJJI WHlnlllll 110~1 W~l!tlor 8•vd DOWNEY •H-0021 121-1 L1kewood 81v<I, .N•·Uif MON . THRU FRI. 8 to 6 e SAT. 8 to 3 In 1971. several factors con· tributed to Vorono's occasional inability to do exactly what he wanted to on the gridiron. "Last year I was down_I __ :_ ....... ---""" ... ----..... """"""""""""""""""""""""~!_-_ Seagram's 7Crown. It's America's whiskey. In America, 7 Crown outsells the leading Canad ian and Scotch con1bined. And for a very good reason: the taste. It's uniquely and consislcntly &mooth. --.. Tast.e 7Crown yourself. It's lhe only way you'l I be able to unclcr- 2tand its popularity . Tatlc the best of America. Sly Scapn's 11111 .. Sin. s5n 4/& Ot. ' • ' ~~'"'r~.i~~:~·~111.,,~~1;, OVIUIAI DI LIYllY IPICIALllTI 12.61 (JtT7fttO -Mlt1 Oft .,,_ 1~1w -c11d1t00b!M. 11o---------------------------------;'~'"":;11~·--------·~T1.:.:;'":::.J'I--------------------------------~-~--• • J 3 DAILY PILOT Ford Faces IJ1C:TITl~I aUllNIJI I l•fU ,l(TltlOU'S •USUCllS HA.Ml ITATIMINT "UILIC NOTICI ,~ITICH.11 I UIUllll Ht.Ml ITATl.Mllft l'l(TITIOUt IUllNlll Tiit '911owl11t ""'°" I• fe!M Wt!M.ll Tiit Co11nly ot O•ll•ff .,.111 """" •tltlK't 11.uM JTATIMllllT T t.i ••• *""-N.f.MI ITATl.WNT u ; m1nl o1 tn. "'"'Latini GtrM•I U tt.JUty ellf Threat Lt:GAL N0'11CE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NO'l1CE LEGAL N<mCE T1'1i1 s.otwktt "'* 11 ,_119 WllMp ,,,,.:.,., .,~.,.. "''°"' •rt T1w tellowi"' ~ •rt eol11t WHOLl?SALIO AU1'0 IOOY, 2lNV1 Mldlc11 M11P•1Cllt1 l111ur1nc:t tO~llNI u : L ... IC e 0 • 0 v I L l I l A N 0 illo.otllWll ... H1•00t lllWI . CHI• M.lUi. SMClfk•llon1 wtt1N119 "" cow• ... ,.. P'l!llT ll'OINl JUNCTION, Jlt A...,, ASSOCIATEI. ltl'G c..m ... i.i.. l.,.., J & A. l!NTl!fl,fl1Sf1, IUU M1rrh1 JI""" Kow1•CI WllMll. 31tt Cork •ulr1tY1i n11 wlu bl 1v1U1ti. M1' '' DI' LI f_Jftloll&, kn (*"-ill , c •. tun Hi.ont1111119n h"1!. C.IJI, AM Drlv1. ~ Altll'IU ... O ~frllr .. t• l 1n1. C••ll Mtll lnaufllKI A41f'lft!1t•6to-r. Jl tl'lt l • ..... , .. ,., 1.._ fl-N. nlOl All•11 lt9"tl f . N", tt1Q Ctll'IWldH lMt, tl7t7 Tlllt WtlMit ll bllnt <Oi'IOllClH ~ i n M(Ltlt. wlU r1l11M !ht 1C1.t!Ut1!1om I& fl,, ...... -S..11 .Ju.it (.ulalr1111o Ce, H"""'lftto"" ••• , (lllf. J•mH E .... 1rtl 0'0owolil. IU\2 Mtrll'll h1olwlo1MI. -t ftPt ltft!llllVll If l11fttllltd t1U1 Al'YlllCI H, Trlvldl, W12 ,.......,., 1!1 AM Drlvt , l11 AltmllOI, C1 90720 JAME$ H. WILSON 111~l1t 11 tM Purdl11lne OtHtltl'lln Tiii• 111,ttl-h Ml .. ~Mitl W '" ,_, Ci llr. Anft l" O'°"""', IUIJ Mlfll'll """ Tnlt ollllMtnt Pilla w!lll tl'le COllll!v l t1llcll"11 loc~H 11 l :JI» SOI/flt Grind IMll"'it..11. I JM\lt Ori llt1t m Cillot ltlC.I Drlv1, l• Al1mltot. (1, 90120 Clelk o1 Or1nt1 CO!IMV Oii: Ml ¥ It, 1t1J. AVtfl<,lt. S.alll1 An1. To '73 'Model Cars \\rAS•lfNGTON fUPI I Tht Prolection Agenc y said !hat Ford 111a,1• be barred froni stltlng an,v 1973 rnodel ears befort October or I a l t r beciiusc ol mlsta kts rnade Hl le!.11ng Its: engines to see 1r they 1neet 19i3 polluuon stand· nrds. Pord said it~ sales (Jf n1odels uc:uaJly begin in September. nf'I\' late M.rMrtt lrt11t tl\orNM V!iti , llll Clemt ft!t.'C.IK. Tllll ti.11111111 11 tl<ld11t1• lty 111 11n1n• 11 llttrl' J. ll1•11t1n, D11111!y COi.iniy NATH.A~ A, CHEllltY Tiil• •II'"""'' 1111111 •"" "" Cil.llllY Thi• bvtllllU I• 1111111 C'*"lflr;fM .., • c:or-•IN .. -1.ri.r. ..... , "'•n I Cit•-Pu•C~tl ltlf A9tM Clwt If Ort -C...,nry .,.; M1't t:l. lt1J, l.lmlllll ll'l•lftt•Mll,, ... rl111rMll1, , 1111'9U PUOll,1110 Or111t1 Cotll Dlll't ll'l!el, ........... ,, J MlchlloL c.vtw c .... n.. ....,, • N.. SlllWd; """" lH D ()erifwll .. u~!l111f'd Ort nt• Cot1! DtlfJ' ll'llOI, MIY JJ. 30. 1f1J 1:u,.1, New• tests, \\•h lch tak• at lt.Slin11 program w ill have to Clltt. • T1111 11111m1nl 11i.11 11111'1'1 '"' countv Tiii• '''"'"'.,. "''' 11"°' wltn iiw '"'"' M•Y u. 30. •net Jun• 1. ll. un l»:1·12 • " ,17n1 C~• 11 0r-C.U"1r on: A..-U •· itn. 1y c•1rk If Or111111 c...,nrr .,. Mt"t n , r a-GAL NOTICE leaS'l four months 10 conduct . start aney,• Crom scratch. '"'Ulhld o''"" c ... , c111w "'"''' ,., ••v.,iv '· ""'''""'· .,...,,., co..i11t't 1t1t. n•« ~ y,•iH be required before F ord M•r 1'· ,,, ,., ,,.,. '"'.,." 1''' 1"1·12 i;i.n:. ,.11 .. 1 11011•T "· •uNNITT, Attv. 1111cT1T1ous •uttN11s ••• 1u1 can market 811" 1973 cars t..'ta d• rd• • '1•ged LEGAL N011CE ll'llblllf\ld 011n11 C11st 0.l•v ll'llot. NII C1lll9r1111 A-NAMI ITATIMIHT HOTICI TO (lllDITO•• ' ' ~ 11 I ._, M•t t. 1,, n, :llO. 1912 1211.,, 1111111 011e, c1. ttut T~1 1011ow1111 1>tr1ot1 It dGln1 •u•l111u 1u11'11t101t cou•T Oii' TN• William O. Ruckelsha us, EPA \YAc"'li<GTO" IUPt i _ ,,,,., ••: IT.t.T•,,•u'"','v"o'•"•"•"•!o•a• THI administrator, said. ..in 1' ,un11i111.i OP•fl.ft co.a11 o.auv ,.llgf, 11:1,1ay·s RAG$, 1011 El c1rnlnt, Co111 " " Nolin" a dr~malic incre ase in '1cTtTious •VltN•t• LEGAL NOTICE M1v ~" u. ~·nc1 J11111 '· 1t12 ut .. n Mt11. c1m. tt•H H•. A·n 11• He said Ford engineers D MAM• ITAT•MINl lluDr E sn111, "' Co•on1do Or .. CCII• E1•1•t gl EllHEST ,_ LA ~OSfE , •h• made more maintenance im· n1otorcye\t ratalilies. I he TM fonow1,,. H rion 11 oohtt llutlneu ••11 St>t LEGAL NOTICE M•••· c1111. ''''' known '' e. J. LA 1tosEE. oec11111d. Tr ansporlatlon Department •• : NOTICI TO ClllOl1'01tS l MI 1M11ln1u h be•n1 conctucted 81 '" NOTICE u H!ll f;l!IY GIVl!N It t~• provements than EPA permits TME JAYIS COMl".t.NY, 21" s. IUll'llllOI COUllT o• TM• lncllvjdutl, er.alto•• of '"'' •DOvt ftf!l'lt:d c1Kldt"1 '" testing its 1973 engines Th propose<f neiv safety standards W.l'l'liww si., S•111• "'"'· c..nt. nnJ 1TAT• OP. CAllll'OltMIA ..,01 , 1w.. 1tunv E. s~ 11 '"''' 111 P••J.Ott• ~•~tftt c111m~ 1111n11 1~. "' · e that would require safety '''"" A. Gl"Hn, :tt.u •d•l'lo lil'MI, TH• COUNTY o, OltAMO• l'ICTITtous aus11o11s1 Ttilt 1t11tm1n1 t11..i "'11~ 1111 CouM~ 11•d dtctoenr ,,, •Mtulrlld 10 111t ""'"· test results are t here fo re in· C1ttt Miu. Collf. "'21 Ni. A·"1.1» tort.Ml lfATIMINT c11rk 11 0 •1ne1 coun •r on. A••ll ~•. 1"1• wilt! "" l>fft H1rr wiuc11111. In 1t1o offlc• helmets 10 meet specific fll!i M ln1u 11 M!ni co11C111etM '' '" E11111 GI fl O•E1tT OLIVE• •••••· TM 1o11ow1111 ,.,,111., 11 llolnt llu1ln•n I v l•v••ly J, M•ddoa. Dl..utv C0t.tnty 01 me <le•ti. oft~• 1oov• •ntllltd tour1, .,, vahd, he said, and 1he lenirthy 1nc11v1cru11. " c11rk u, '" ·-, ''6 performance levels . JAMI!\ A. C'illffN J111 •• O.C••IH. ''' . 1<1101 '° "''''"' tMm. w ...... u 1r '"f . . f h Thll Ml ltmelll fllld with 1111 Cl\lf'lh• NOflCE IS HEflE•Y GIVEN It fM IM,.E•1AL TV . •tS Gl...,MYft , C 1 p It Pll t v11t1clltr1. 10 !ht u~!t"f<I 11 ll'lt ot'llc1 •~ ax1mum protect1on o t e Cllrll of 0,1,,., C1Untv 111: Miy 12, un. c,..,,,.,., of 111t •tiove fllmH 11.t«d•nt Lisun• e11c11. c;t1i11t~11. ll'Ybt!1htd P••n•t 011 ' " 11,.~1] o1 "''' 1norn1Y: 110NA LD H. ll'llENNEll LEGAL NOTICE t 1· I J t I · c 1 11111 111 "'""' h1vlnt cl1lm1 H11111t tl'lt wetlNnt Fl1m.,, 1101 Neri!\ Mttrlfln M1Y 2. t, lf, 2l. !t/2 ll$ Wt" l~lrd Str11t, S1n11 An1. mo orcyc IS S ex reme Y 1m-IY ••v•rtv J. MlllNx, DlfilrY °"" r 11Jd d1otld•"' ,,, r1111ll"ld ,., 1111 tlllr!'I. t.1111, Full•rt ..... c1llt0f11!•. c111w1111 n 101, whlcl'I 11 "'' •11e1 ti portant in order lo decreast Cltrlt. ,.11711 w1111 1111 """''l'Y v111d'lert, In ""-olllt• Tl'll1 11V1lri11• h cond11cllld DY 1 l lml!M LEGAL NOTICE t1u•ln1n o1 '"'' 11M1r111nec1 In 111 m1tter. potential deaths and serious "'"'1111~ or111t1 c"'' o.u ... P'llfll. : 111:,:.1:;: .. "' 111t ·~.!'! •n.,,ui11c1 (IUrt, or '''IM<'lhlp. .",',,':,111:~~. '°m,";11:.1!:t1:, ~11,111\:,~:i0:1rr"1 M1y 1• tl lO •ntl J111>1 t 1'72 117 .. 71 ltl'\, .. ,." ~lltrw WOLFGANG FISCMEll NOTICI! 01< TltUITte:·1 IALI ..,. Winner of Contest injuries resulting from head ' ' ' ' voumni, to ""' 1111deraJ1r1M 11 I'll• oltlct T1111 ,,1,.'"1n1 wi .1 lllld w1111 "'' ceun. "-''" Ne. 7 , 14,. tlcn of rhl1 nollct. injuries." said Douglas Toms LEGAL NOTICE r:moh« •• ':!:"1~1::.:~H :.~:~:.~~: ~nCl•rk d Or1n11 County Oii A1rll 21. T.S, Nt. n.0101 Otltd v'::~: !~·l1:'!oit1 t. f h' h I ff' f t Ctllftmll 92611, whkJo l• tl'lt olt<t If C,S MC. FINANCIAL SE RVICES, INC Admlnl.irt lrl• Of llll na 1ona I~ way ra IC sa e Y 11u,111,,1 ot Ills 1.1ndtfllf lllld 1., •II m•t!•rt NOllM•N •· l•lll'•ll 11 ouiv 101>01n1eo Truiiet under '~' E•"'' 01 lht administrator 14'tf ... rt1lnln1 to mt 1'111t GI 11ld Oecld•nl tJl Wtll Wllltllrt lollowl~I d••crll>H de1d gf ltUll Wll.L •bllv t ntml'd ctoeed,nl • . be SU,.lllOlt cou•T 01' TN• wlll'lln fgur mcnll't• '""Ill• llraj Plllll k •: llltlll•rflll, C:•llltl'ftll SELL AT PUI LIC AUCTION TO lHE llONAl.D N. ll'fll!NHl!ll Toms said lhal tween 1965 STATI 011' CAlllllO•Hll. l'Ofl llor+ o! 1'1'111 nollc•. TtllOMlll ,,..,,.. HIGHEST l!llOOER FOii CAS H (OI Vtb lt Ill WM! TJtlrtl •"••I and 1970 there was an 82 per· TH• COUNTY 011 OltAHel' D11ec1 A11tll lJ, ,,,,, "111:11 1t 11m1 ol ••I• ln t1w1u1 MontY er 1n1 sinl• All• ci UIGrft l• t1101 Full of Lutefish From Wirt Services An Englishman de feated the Vikings' d escendants a t the world lutefis h eating cha1n - 11ions hlp 1n Poulsbo. Wash. Bill Whitney. 49, of English descent, put away 4~. pounds or the lye-cured codfish to d efeat 14 Norwegian opponents at Poulsbo·s annual Viking F est Saturday. The town is 99 percent Norwegian, people 11'ho con- sider lutefish their prime d elicacy. \llhitney, the c ham· pion lulefish eater, is married to a Norwegian. * Or. f\fargaret Mead believes newly enfranchised 18 to 20- y ear-old voters will be in .a "strong position" in November l<J d~ide t)le future direction of Iha couo[r y. In an article directed to the I PEOPLE new vote rs in the June issue or Redbook magazine. the noted anthropologist said, ' • Yo u belong to the generation lhal has called Into q uestion our w hole way or doing things. Y ou m ay meel the challenge by s etting ne1v s tyles -0f participation. But no -0ne knows." She urged youth.no'f10]0in a political party "just because it seems natural lo accepl -or m ore likely . oppose - t he pailtic.111 ideas or your fan1ily" or others. ' • ' Nt, 1.7Ut1 CDNNlf I , TUltNElt J>yDll1~td O••lllt CG11I Dlll't P'llO!, Unlltd $t1t,1I t i! rlollt, tl!le 1nd ln1t11U 1'lll,llllll.' 1110 Jll·IJJI c ent inc rease In motorcycle o•o•• TO SHOW cauu ON AP'• AC1mlnt1tr1trl• 01 111e E1t1 t1 of M•v 23. i nd Junt '· u. ltn lJ21·71 cllftvort el to •~o now h11d Dv 11 und!r ••Id Attttn•Y j., Allmlnl•trtltll regislrations and a S4 percent '"-ICAllON o, CNAH•• 01' NAM•. lht ti.o... n1mld "'"~"' Died or Trull In lh• p10.,.r1v h1•••n1f!t1 "'ubll1hed Ort"9• co11t D1 llr 11'!101. . , 1n IM 111ttltr ol 11'\t Appllcitlor+ ol ANTON OUMH.t.ltT LEGAL NOTICE d1Krlbe<I: M n XI <Id June-. 13 1'1' l"J.)1 inc rease In m 0 t 0 r c y c I e ltONALO KEHNETM Wll(fl !NT fOf UtJI INdt &l\lllvtrll TlllUSTOR: Mlle' H. MOO•• •rod ·~ • . • . fa talitie5, 70 to 90 percent -0£ "''""' el N•""•· ~ri'"'.=ru Clll..,llll tmJ NOTICI 0, SALi e~:~·;F~crA~~r·r~u~~·':.~t;: w~:;.,. LEGAL NOTICE Which resuJlet:f £rOm head in Whtrttl ltDNALO I: EN NETH Allll'l\IW .... Allmlnl1trttrlv N'otlct !1 htll'llW 1lv1n PUrtu•nl 1o lfC• N nr, 1 CGrPOtlllOn • WIKltENf h11 fl!lld Ml1 Hllllfln wltll lht ll'Ublltl'ltll OrinH CGtll DiHt ll'llot, llor\• lOn 1nd J012 d ltlo ClvU Codt of Ill• •tc11tdtd Nov1"1ber ,,, 19'1 ll 1n1!r. juries. cttrk GF 11111 Courl for 11rrnlHloro to MIW 2, t , If, 2,, lt7' ll4J.7t Sltlt ot C1!1POfnl1 lllt uncttr1ltned NG. lUtJ in boi>11 ·~· c1tt •tl of OIU<ltl lllSO~~~~lHUT~~N T::· i:~;. COUN• cl11ntt hit ntmt l1om •Ot.Al.-0 l(EH· C'iltEGOllY li.E l(ESKEY wl!I Mil t! 1tecord.1 In !~t OltlCt OI tllt lltcorlltr ol A Cit. 0 , THI CITY 0 , l'OUNTAIH NETM WIKltENT 11 OAVID llONALO LEGAL NOTICE 111bllc 111cllon, 11 MJ 11'1rk Or .. NO, Mt, Ori ntt Coutlfy; ••Id ctHll of irut! YAlll:Y, CAt.l•OllNIA, OICU.lllNO '"'eov Ref1••1ation• K!NT ; now 111tr110rt . coi11 M•11. C1llf0fnl1, 11 12 :00 -. on creic•ID•s 1~, tollow!ni prOPtrtv' ''' •"Te:NTION TO VACA Tl Hr•· l 'I' " IT 15 HElll!::llY OltDElllEO t!ltl I ll !Ill 1nd cl1y GI J11111, .,,,, 1111 follow11>11 Lot Ill Trier S.tl In !I'll Cl!r of " Jltl'IOllt llllt rtlllld ill tht m11!1r tlflr•••ld MOTICI TO Cll.IDITOlll dttcrlbld pr(ljlllrly, to-wll; Coal• M.;., IS lhown on I mlP fKGfCI· TIONS 0' ... STltelT IAS•Ml'NT SACRAMENTO {A~) IPINttf •! D1Nrlmt11t J 111 Ju111 'f7, 1f 7:1 Ne, A 7D11 lollowlne dtKrlbtd Pr-rty, to>w!I: lld In look l ll P•I•• 1,, 11, It. 1f, lO, l.OCATl!D IN TRACT NO. N.M AND State Insurance Commissioner 11 t:JO o c:Jock 1.11'1. GI ••Id <111r, •nd mi n su-• c111tt""" v ... GI mo1vrcn1t 1,10. M•t• o1 •nd 11 ct mltcell•neoua mtp ••<ord.1 01 11n1No THI Tl"111 ANO ll'LACI •01t . h d D B 'led tnd tl'ltrl ~ c1uu , If 1ny lllrf 111\11, lt1!1 tf CeHfwRll fir lflll PMiot(tdt, ICIWtltllf JOO (Mt tl'I HI!. 0,1,,91 Countr, Ct lltornil , ll'UtllC HIA•INO TNlfllON. RIC ar S , Brger unve1 a ""'' 11ld INllCltlott IOI' dlt nlNI •f 1111111 CltlnlY flf Or1-, MGICN" NO. l.D. NO l(Al<·IOff. l lctllM SU Trivt rJe Drive, Cc!ll Mttt, WHEREAS, !ht C1lllornl1 Go¥1•1'1mf"I 4f>.paae set Of regulaliOnS SllOUld llflll bl t ri nttll. Esttri , ol CHAltl.!S lEli MAltTIN No. !Sl1tl) t~t'52, CtllF. Ctllto•nlt (If t 1treH 1dd•tn or com· COdt , ~Ktlottl IXIO I! ltfl .. know11 II I~• " IT IS FUltTME• OllDEltEO llt1t I SEAM.At.:, Dlc111td. S Id ol II I I I lfl I h bl! Slrl'l!I V1c1Ucn AU cl ltfl, •ro¥16e1 tor aimed at making sure disabil· COPY o1 11111 1rc11r 10 1110W ,,u .. bl No•k• 11 tttr1bY elvtn to 1ttt cr1c111or.1 1i.11' 11 11~~ ~~:;.:;~~~:'"'': ~ .. v ~: ::,,~r! 1;•,t1v:n ,1• 1~ f1~~~PI~~""': 1111 proo:1<111r1 w111r1tv 1111 c11v m•v · · d · · · oublllhld Jn the C1111 Mitt Ollly ll'llet, • el lht 1bov1 ntmlld dtclld1111 11111 111 1, bile 11tmi n!/ t nd Uy lhlnf s1urance a vert1S1ng IS 11.wspiptr ot 1t1>1r1t clrc111111on. 111Dlltll· :-r:,ns 1 l'ltvlnt er r ims 111~11111 ~ I~!~ :=~~11~1 ~·':pi':::"!: ,:~111 cosll ol ~~,c~;.-,:::,~i::~ Ulldtr ••id Dltd of vt~H~:E:s. rn: Cllv prttt~H1 PCllttl•\ l ru U . ed In Or1n1t Counl'/', OtlCt • wttlt fw 'Ill•: ,.;,,:;i., ':,.••in ~ dlic: ol Ditld ffll.1 '221111 c11y d Miv. 1tn. Tr1.111, Dv rt•~ ol Weich or dtf1ult In 1 publk 11se"""' 111d rl•hl ol w1y ..,, Among other things. the new 1°"o'A~~c~~~~' ~"J';i, "''Clerk GI'"" •bllvt 'en!lllNI court, 01 Gr_, L" K,1ktv 1ne c11 n1111on1 s..cu1td .1h1reD Y. ¥''et •nd hlo11w~ ourpoM1 loc~t";' /" . d . ' ' ,, Pf•Nnl ll'lttn Wlllt .... ftK•.IJ•l'Y Publlthtd Or•ntt CotJI D•llV .. 1101. l\ertlolor• tXKU!f'll I nd dth\lfftd 1G ,~. r1c1 Ho. SIJO. • ., mor• P•rl (\,I ., v rules say insurance a s must Harmon G, Sco~lll• vouclwrs to 111, ulldtnltntd ,1 th• 0111,, M1v ?l . ltn IJJt.n 11"'11rs11ned , wrl1t1n Otc11r11ion oi df.Jcrlbtt! 111 111• '•••l d.a.1<•11>.tlon •ll•c~.a include exceptions. reductions ~:'~:io':' ~'::.n of eu•kt, wHll1m1 11111 sortnsen, '" oe~1ulr 111c1 01m1nd fer S11e. 111C1 wrlntt1 h~rtto ind lncorJI0(1!tc1 llt r••" •• Exhibit · · · • N INLY & IOOeH' Soutlt Ollvt, ~t1He 1000. le1 An9ele1. LEGAL NOTICE nOl"t or bre•tll and gt t!Kllon to c1u1e A, •rod and JtmitatJOn8 tn CQVefa g e l~ Cl k C I Otl W ti Cl llhll'nlt llQOH whfeft is In! pl1ct of l lhs UndPrsl111e<1 lo 1tll sl id PrOPSdy lo W H E Ill E A S, pOr!lon' ol U 1d ' 1 v.t.nl '~:lflrlll"; ,J;tJ lhl.1!1>1t1 Gi Ille 11~r11ene.:1 111 .all rn1111rs u ll1ty ••id Qbli111ion" 1nd tllere1trer Ille oubllc 111ttl'lt nt ••• unn1<•111.., fto• rl-------------.,1~·~.1117111 ·.,.7..,71 11rl1lnlnt to lht 11111• OI n ld de t•dtnl, PlCTITIOl.IS IUSINl'I$ 1111dtr.1iened c•u1K1 w ;d notic' Cl br1>1<n prtll'nl or Gro1t,ctlv1 ut• boc1u11 01 t .t.~M fw p !Ill wltllfll IOI.Ir manlh• 1r1tr fllt 11••1 P11Dllc1· NAMI: STATIMllolf an<I of t lecllon tG bl llKorcltd F•cru•rv n1w l••tl l1~CIUI 1nd ll'lt 1v1ll1b!lllV 9' ~ CONSUMER • ',~,·: .. 0 ' ,.-"', 0,.,, ll'Uet !IOl'I ol 11111 noll<t. Tl>t tot10wlr19 IHll""1 111 dol"9 •. lt72 11 ln1tr. No. (\2( In llook 9'90 ••vt suillbl, •lltrn11e 1a1em1n1 !or 1!rttf •lld 11 rtn 1 ' ' Dl lld APrll 2i, 1971. buslneu 111: lt1. cl .11id OllJCl1I Jtecorch. l'li911w1r purPCH1 within 11kl 1r1c1. Mav '· l4. t3, JO, ltn !20(.n Lllllt n M11lne ~tlmin C.lEN·CANNON tNTEllNAT!ONAL, Si ld tale will b<e mid,, bl/I witl!OY! NOW, THEllEFOltE, lE IT ltt'• LEGAL NOTICE E•ttu!rl1 cl lh• Wiii 152 \li1 Undme, N11•porl l!le•cll, Call!. co~enan! or warron!lr. ••Prtu or i'"Plltd. SOLVED b'I' !ht Cl!y CouMll of 1111 City 11 01 ••l<I dttldtnl llu11t• 0. Bruce, 15~ Vlt Undone, 1tt1rdlnt title, P<n•til!on. fl< tll• Fcynteln \ltllty tll1I It 111e11 hOld 1 ..uDl!c lurkt, WUllt'"t Intl StrtnMn Newporl Bt•Cll, C1!lf. cumbrlMl l, to PIY !he '''"'lnll'IG P•ln· httrint fer purpGlt• Ill con1ldl•I~• when fhey refer to dollar '---------------tut 11. ouv1, s11. IOOI Jg1111 R. Mct111o111, 70J f.venlno C1n· cl1111 1um 01 "'' nc11(1) 1ecu r'c1 bY said whttlle• IQ v1<1te tt>e 111ovr·dt"irlbed ,IC1'1Tl01.11 tUllHlll lll A11ttl11, CtUIDr11l1 ftllC VOii lld.1 COfQ"I cltl Mi r Ottd Cl T1u11, wl!~ inlrrlll ti In 11ld ootllons of 1 putlllc t111m1nl. St ld lltlr• amounts a nd benefits. HAM• ITATl:MIN1' AlllrMVI for l!lttulrl• Wllll1m N. Sllt!IUck, 10 HlrDOr llll nd, no1e PfOvlOl'<I, ~dvanc,1, II 1nv, unoer !ht !ng •hill be ntld In tht Council Cllt mblrt, B a g • I r I Thi lollcwlnq P#rtOn 11 llOln• bu1lnt11 ll'll:UIY, Ntwoorl Bt•cll 1t•ms GI ,,,ti o~eci or Tru11, tee1. Clll•~,. (l!y Htll. '°"'° $t111r .t.v1nut, FGUlllllilt r er 5 regu a ions a SO 11; PubUs11ec1 or111ee COit! D1il1 Piiot. Thi• bu 1intn Is 1>eln1 ccnducreo Dr 1 and tJ!Pt n•ts ci the T•u•tte •I'd er 1n1 V•ll•V· en l11t1d1y, Jun1 •· 1t1:1, 11 1:00 say walling or probationary REEF, 110 w. l.,h st .. co,11 M111 M1y '· t , "· 2J, 1tn 1u1.12 Limited P~r1n1r1hlp. 1rusts cre1•ee1 br stld OtMI ot T•u•t. o.rn .• or 11 1oon t11er1tt11r 11 .,,, •t•llCI• periods be£o Flnlty G. l1vtrld91, J» An1Mlm LEGAL N I USTER 0. llR UC£ Seid Ille will bl htlcl or+ MGrod•Y. Junt permit.•. re coverage goes •tvd .. Al\llltlm. 1----====c.:.cO:T::IC::E:___ Thil ""''"'"' fllMI with l~t CGun!v 16, !911,t,I11 :00 AM I I #it olllct ol T. o. l!IE IT FUR lHElll RESOLVED 1'hlt ftlt into effec t must be disclosed. T1111 bu1ln1u I• bol111 ctne111ctld '' 1n ricTITtOUI IUSINISI Cler k ot Or1n11 co11111Y ort: M•, 1•. 1•n. servlte CamP1nr. lUnk of ,t,mtr;,, cn1 C1t rk 1n111 <l ust ,, to be ..u•llWl"!f He issued the regulations in lndlvlc1111r. NAMI' ITATIMINT lh 1111v J. e1•1•1tn, O.p111r Counir Tow,,., One c ;ty 110\llt v••d w111. Suite •n tll• Or1n11 CM1t 011IY ll'Uot FINU.Y G, a!VElllDGE Th toll I I dot tt I Clt rk. 1110 Or11191, C;illlornlt '2'61. NtwJPI Pt r durlnt lht two tUC:Cttt lYt res ponse lo complaints about This 1t11om1nt t!ltG with !ht coun!y 11: 1 ow "1 P••tcn • 111 111 nen 1<11n1 Dtfl: Mt Y •· 1tn. w1>tki. prlo-r to ..,, llt1r!n1 1nd thtll h 'j J • d '( 1· · Cllrk Of Ort ntt COU11h Ol'I Mty ll, 1t11 GOLDIN F!NANCl.t.l CO.. llln ll'ubll1hlld Or1n11 COlll Dilly Pilot, C.S,M,C. FINANCI AL t11rtller tt~.lt nollct ol tht !ltl'lt ind 111<• OSp! a Jn emOI Y po ICleS, Br l1v1rlY J, M1ddoJ!, DtPUIY C&un!Y t ettll l !\ICI .. Huntlft-10fl l!ltl(h, Cillf, M1Y n, JO, •nd Junt •• 13, Hn llA0-1' ~Elt\llCES, tNC, of h11rlr111 lo be Cl<>:Uld 111 t i l•11t thrt• Barg er said in a news release. c1trk. s111,,,, ""· Ct rd•n. 1090 NtwPG<t '' ••Id Tru••tt. 01tt11 ''°"' "'' tint 01 "'' e11tmen• ,,o. ll'lnM a1v,., Niw,...1, Ct lil. f,EGAL NOTICE llY f D. SERVICE POtlld lo bl v•cllfll. Publlth<!d Or1t111t CMll DtllY Pllol Tlll1 lhlllfttu 11 bolne (Gncluctlld bJ •n COMPANY, ""''"' P,t,SSEO ANO ADOPTEO •• ~ ""· Cite1 Co te t M•v 16, 13 • .JO. Ind JUl'll ,, 1'17 12U.1J 1nclllfldUll, "'' J111lc1 l . Coll<l iou•nl<I 111'11ul1• rntellnt ef "'' Clrt • 11 JftP SHIRLEY A. CA.l!DEN l'tCTITtO UJ I USIHllS A11l111nt Secr111n• Cou,.dl t1111 lhl d~v DI Ml rdl. 1'12. ASillNGT LE on Tiii I c NAMI STATaMINT 101:11 [dw1rd E JU\I W I ON (UPI) -GAL N CE • l!t!..,.,t~I llllld w 1~ 111• cufth T/\f follcwln1 11•1or+ 1, doillll ll<Jsfn1u PuDli1hed Ortn11t Cot st Dtilt 1'1101, M1vor Th J · E Cl1rk t i Or111g1 C011nty on: M1y 12. itn. ,,. e 01nt conomic Com-"" 111\llflV J. MtdOG•. OllU!W (gylll¥ .1PSA INSV••NCE lRUSl, }Jl 5 M•r 1'. 73. 30. lt12 l11l·12 ~~!;~~:Colt mittee of Congress accused 1111cT1T1ous ausiNrs• Ct.rk. ,171" N~POrt 111vd .• NfW1'o<I 11e1t11. c1111. LEGAL NOTICE c1,.,. c i.rk the Price Commission of Th• io1i!"J':o 1 P!~:.!'~~:!, ,,,.1111,H Pub!llMd O••n•e C1;1J1 0111r Pll0t, '2~""'' Nueini, l9f York!.w" l".. ~b~~~,:>F 0~A~l:~:~~A :11 s howing contempt for the con-11: MI Y 1'. 21, JG, •nd June '· lt72 1173-71 CCIII Mt••· C1ll f. NOTICE 01< TllUSTl!l'1 SALi CITY OF ,OU NTAIN VALLEY I • • Tiil• D111lnt11 Is btin1 conducttd '" t n T.5. Nt. n"'°4J sumer while catering I o JACK MIS HL 11 11 .t.nocit ttt, •» · LEGAL NOTICE 1n111v1c11111 0n Junt n. 1'11. 11 1e:oo A.M .. Fedtt11 '· MAllV E. COLE , cuy Cl••k .. ti!• b • . !C!ll St., CGlll Mell, Ct llf, f'JU1 TfiOMAS NUGl!!N l NtllGnll MGr!tlOt Auocfeticn t i dulJ 10. Cllv ol Fount1;n Vl llty, C1ll ltrnl1, 'o us1ness eJt:ecut1ves. J.ck Mllhltr, .:!' 1, 101~ St., Co1t1 l<ICTITIOUS llUllNl!:SS Tl'lis '''""""' 111'° wllJ't '"' Counry POln!•d lr1.1sttt un dt• 1..,; PU•su•nl 10 ~1r1by cerrllr 11111 1111 •0•1tol1111 llllttol~· Democrats who make up the Meii, Cell/, "'27 HAM• ITATIMaNT clerk o1 orinee cwn•v '"' Mi ., 19, itn. Coed of T•uu c11!td M1v 11. nxi. recGrd· 11on wts reoul•••• lniroduc..., to 11\1 C!1v Thl1 b111tfttll I• bllnt co11c1uctlld by t n J 11 0 t C 1 HI Mir ,. 1'70 •• ln~t Ne 1no1 ln Council 11 111 Adlournld ll•tvl1r l'nffl!ne majority of the commlttee lndlvid111t Tiie tellowlnt "'"°" 11 doln1 busll'ltlH ~rerkB•!tY • •••11•n, •1111 " oun' 1>oo1i: 931)], ;,VI 1J7, 01 o11;ci11 ·•ecGrc1'1 in ~ttd 011 t~t 1111 d•r 01 M1rc11, 1t n , •NI issued a rePort saying "t0 JACK MISHLEll •• , THE LE tSUlt!TT!S, Cf·D .t.vtnldt . •111t7 lh' Gffkf of ·~· C1111nlv R'COldtr (If Wl l •I ,.Id mHlln• rttYlt•IV p111td •ntl date. the same staff wh1'ch has Thi1 it1temen1 111..i wlth int cou11;{ s1~1111, l1111"' Hlll1, C11Jtorn11 tJtJJ P11blls~td 0•1~ C011t Dtllr "'11e1, Orin•• counrv. s111e GI Ctlll11tnl1. iooprf'd b~ '"'• lgllowl"' vo'.'· '° wll: Cltrk ol Or1net CO!lnlY on: Mty 1'. lf • AUt M. ven Loo~broc-. ~ D MIV 11 lO t rld J1.11>1 I lJ U l2 lllf.1! Wi ll SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO AVES. COUNCILMEN. H 1 r1 • r, llefd plenty Of (>'me for pr>'VaJe ,",,,,•,tvtl'IV .!. Mt ddox , 0111UIJ Cc11ntr • ' ' ' ' HIGHE ST ll!OOEJI FOJI CASH (PaYlble HclllllCltn, Jt1t!, 5~tn~m1n, Scott Av1n!d1 ~tvlll1, l1tun1 HIU1, Ct l!f. ti llmt or 111f !n l•wful !l'IOfttY cl ll'lt NAYES' COUNC ILMEN : N- conversalion with bu.!'liness ex-''"'' '71" LEGAL NOTICE unltid s111eu ,, •h• ~or111 1ron1 •ntr111Ce .r.&SENT : COUNCILMEN: ,.._ t, k. . . Publl1htd O••ntt COISI 0111¥ •lie!. Thl1 bu1ln11.1 It clN'lducltd br i n lft· lo !ht Ortntt Ct111nty Covr tr.oust loo:i!lld Miry I!. Cot~ eCU IVe.5 see Ing price In· Ml'I' U, lJ, JO, i nd J~nt '· 1t72 1,1S·72 dlvldut l 8All HU el 100 Civic Center Drive Weit !formtr1¥ City C!1rk * creases has had no time for Alt• M. v•n LootDrock l'•Cf1T1ous 1u11N1ss w, 11~ s1 , In ,11, car 01 s1n11 Ani , lllHll tT a ,. LEGAL NOTICE Tl'lll •1•!ftl'ltn! w11 llltd wlll'I "'' Coun. NAMI ITATIMINT Ct tlPornl• 111 rlt M, 111i. 1ne1 1n•tr111 c..,. lEGAl. Ol'IC•tll'T10 N flO• THI AIAlf. GUil TY -Longtime fludson C ounty fN .J.1 D emocratic boss J ohn V. Kenny. 80, is \Vheel· ed up s tairs of federal courthouse in Newark \Vhere he p I e a d e d guilty to filing false in come tax returns for ye a r s 1964 lhroogh 1969. l·Ie faces max i- mum s entence of 18 years in prison and $30,000 fine . Actress H elen ll11ye.!'l and c<Jnsum ers. tv Cltrk of Or1n11 CooJfttv 1n Mt Y 11, Th• 1011owlng """"' ••• •ol"g vt~td 10 t nd r>0w h•ld br a u11dt• ••Id DONMINT DP ll'OltTIONS 0" IWllT· Producer Hele n G. Bonfll.!! •·I've always been , big fan "This contempt for the con· 1'12· Jlt·OC bu1ineu 1.1: °'""of Trust in 1110 "'o"r"' s1ty11ee1 In t.l!A" '"""IT AllD w1NTl1tOflllN ,, . DRAHG£ COUNTY ACOUSTICS. l~n 11ld CGunty t lld St1te dtJ.Ct!btd t s: Clll:ClE WITH IN THE l01'S IN lll:ACf were awarded St. Genesius of the Peace Corp.5."' Eisele. sumer. it adcled, "creates the ~lcTiTious •UllNl'ls 11'1nu 1. Ht11>tri1n, s1nt• An1. c 1111orn11 Lot l' GI Trict NG. UM. In th• cur Gr HO N• g old medals jn Rome fnr ~I. sa id. "It j,<; one of the mo~! impression that members of r~e 101.!.fn~1~~~~~=1~, •u•l11t1n ll'1.1Dllll'ttd Dr•119• Co••1 0111" "11"1' Tntoctort 11· S.ttenni .. u22 S Cc111 Mt11. 11 per M1p recorded In '"'~'" ~rllon• ot 111.i c"l•ift t•M'"';.f ,. nd ' d d' 1. l th the Price Comm>'."s>'on m ay be 11; Mi r 1•. 1J. XI, •nd Jun••· un 11tJ.n H11per11n, S1nt1 An1, C1lll't!rn11 1 eoc11 tCI. p,,, 1. Mlic111111tous Mtl'I. ln •Ad rlohl·of""'•Y '°' !!•Mi ,,,., ~l.,.wiy <JUISla 1ng e 1ca ion O e pr-0ductive and most beneficial ~ MY THltlE SONS JANlTOJtt.t.l. ltlS Thtcdc•t G, S1111nnl, Jiiii N. low-ti 111e o111c1 01 "'' CGYMv Reco•d•• of PU•PO~i 11 er.ni~~ to th• C•tr 111 F0t.in• pro1notion of Christian prin· · l more interested in good rel.a w1n1ce. co111 M111. c1111. LEGAL NOTICE L•~•. 5'"11 An•. Ct!lf11tnl• ••ld cooJnty. t1 in v111e¥ bv cittd reco•dtd 111 Bool. 1133 c::iples in the acling pro-~~~~lions our governmen tions w ith the business com~ JOhn T. L111 Jr., u1s w1111c1, C01t1 Ult Jtn o,";~"~ !~~~~~i11!°:1."'· ••l1io1, ..r.ot. d•~~•'n,'1~~e1 i!d:~:~s o:~, o~~~ ~~=~~ :,•i:, '~°"'~1v01~1:C:!:.:~c;~r!~e11h"c~~;; Cession." munily than in really holding • .r~11b.,C~llf. 1 111· """' Id i. t u1'1111011: COUlt1' O• TNI Thi• Du•lri1•s 11 bl1111 cDnductt d bJ • described 1t>ovt 1, PurPCrrf'd to bt: m Call1orn11. IYlr>O wunrn loll 1 to 1 1.,'. Tl'e medals. named for 'he EjseJc. WhO Will retire a S 3 h INl~V~dull~ nt1i 1 •Ill c II(! )' I n STATI Of' CALll<O•NIA •OR Pirtner•l'llp. (,nltr S!rttt, C0111 M11~. CIHIGrni1. clu•!vt, alld " to n l11Clu!lvt Ill In Tr Cl COion.i from the A'·r f orce Ju. down t e price lhC COnSUmer Jot-n T. ltl t Jr, THI COUNTY 01' O•ANGI TlltoclCrt G. Stt11nnl T~t undtr~l1nect Tru>!l"l' discl&ilf'I any No. l!lO. iecoratd In B-190. P•oet i'tt f " . Ne A~•s• Thl1 111ltmt nl llllld will\ lllt Countv ll1b1tl1Y tor 1nv lncorreclnt sl ol tne 1lrttl 7 inclu,Jve of M••ct lllr'llCWI MI O 1 111 PP:!~~l~in~y <J Sa~~!or~~s;~~= ly I after 2{) .vears' servi 1 chee. pays. ci!~' J'~~'::j='fEE:x ::.: M~: ... t 1~~;,~ N~~~E.t.,.O:oi::~:~';.C)o:i~u::T~~TJ~: i~tr~•~•r?;·~~· ~~~~.on~,~~; '(G~',,'~ :::'.':r:o!~ n!~~j~. 'ommon de1111n1tion, 11 ~!~: :, ·:~111;1r'~~: .. 11::~~~~· ~~,.~; church ofll the 50th anniversary !\aid he thought about <an Poultry Cl1ecl~ ~i1r:."'•rJ, • · · Pit ' ,',:,, ;~~1~TE~ THOMAS F. HE:Rfl lNG. ~~~~EN. sTO•KE ._ ow1H co~·:~an~·~~ ;~:1r1~. '::::~ •• ~ .~1;~11:':i'. •nt11;;1~:.a1 ~~~111::••t0,11 D•I"' ,11 •• f .1 d j' th Peace Corps When he be " Oecti•f'll ATTO•HEYS AT LAW rt;erdl"o totlt , PGSlenoon. or tn· MI Y tl Jn ltn •• l l 0 1 s e.s 1gna JOO as e na-planning for his future after \VASHINGTON (AP! -The Publltfled Or1n11t COi .ii Dillt ll'llGt. HOTlci IS HEkEllY GIVEN I'll I Ult N. ,,...,...,y, Nt. Jll cum~r•nt••· IO NY 11\t r•m1lnln11 *"';". . ' l .. ,, tional church £or Romarr the military. He will take o Al!riculture 0 e pa rt me n t M•Y 1•. 23, lO end Ju111 '· 1'11 12.-.12 SEcu11:1rv PACIFIC NATIONAL 8AN: S•l'll• "~'' c1111or1111 f'Jltt dpal sum GI 11>t 110te1 i..curtd bv ••id LEGAL NOTICE Catholic Americans in Rome. ver LE • cori>0r1!lon, 11 El!tcutor, h11 tue.i Tel: tll·lJtJ Oeed DI Tr1111. 10.wll: sn .m .11. w1111 In· * !he $29.000·a·year job in mid-adopted inspection regulations GAL NOTICE Mtr•ln 1 •trl!IO!'I for Order APPOlntlnir 1117111 !erest therton. 11 111cv!e1f'd In 1•ld notti.1-------------- h I I I h p I GE•AlD WILSON 11 t 11 b1 1I1ut 1 "'ublhhed Or1n111 Co111 Dilly Piia!, ~dv1rten, U 1n~. undt• the ''''"• of 11id II I SOLUTION NO, 7'41 June \\' j (' On lern1Jna Cave lo Carry OU! I e OU try aAll: JtU Titltmi nlll'Y Trusl"' (befor• dltlrlbu· Mir t, II, 1J, JO, 1917 11ot·n Oetd of Trull, 1te5, cll1••e1 1rod t Xltft1e1 A •ISOlU1'tON 0, THt: CITY COUN• Th(' 1973 S hower or Sta rs from lhe Air Force. Product s Inspection Act. NOTICE TO CltlDtTOll:S tloftl, In •lttl of '"'' de1leneled 1•111tet. cl lllt Ttulltt Ind of .... lrUJlt Clll 1HI Cll o• TNl ClfY Oji ll'OUHTAIN b r'( f SI J d Cl 'Id ' pd d I · SU~lfllOll COURT OP THI SECU RITY PACIFIC HATIONAL 8ANI(, LEGAL NOTICE by 11ld Oted ol Tr1111. VALlfY Dl'ClAll:ING I 1'S IN• cne I or . u e 11 ren s * The u ale regu 1tions, SfATt! 0111 CAll,OllHIA lllOk • COfPO•l llO!'I, flrlGlnt llY ntmtd ill !he ''" Tn. blllellclarv 11nd.ar 11;d Oted Gt TENTION TO VACATI " .. OflTION OP R esearc h H ospital in Memphis which become effective on Ju· THI COUNTY D, ORANGE Wl!I Ind Tt1t1m1nt GI THOMAS F. Hl!!lt · PtCTITIOUS IUllNlll Tr11J1 herttDIOlt executed •nd dt11Yf•~ ~N Dt':INIGfi I ASl!MINT lOC.t.Teo .,, be h di' d b t Actress Susan Jlampsh ire, ' Nt. A·JU» RING. dtCll Jtd, r1ltrtnc1 to which I.I HAMI JTATIMt!Nf lo flit 1111de•1lgned I wrllltn DKl1r•!le11 fl! ACT HO. ''°' AND SITTING \\'] ea Lne y COUn ry fhe w ife or f"rcnch movie ly 15, \\ere proposed a year Etlllt DI lESfElt F. lANDElll'.S, m1dt /or furtlltr J11rt!c11!1r1. 1nd 11111 tllt T~t followllll Ptrton Is dOllll bu1ln4n OtF1ult 1/>d Dtm1nd Hor Seit , 1nd • wril· THI TIMI' ANO ll'l.AC I 1'011 ll'UILIC music star Johnny Cash. and ago but were held open for oe,1111c1. 1tme i nd •••c' 01 h11r1n1 1111 ••Mt h~• 11: 11n Nolle• o1 c e11un 1nd EIN.!lc" to s111 HEA111NG THl!ltlON. hi If J C d h director P ierre Craniere. has ' . NOTICE IS HEREBY CtVEN t1 !hi been 11'1 for June,, 1t'2, •l t :3D '·"'··In DIVE RSIFIE O OE:VELOP'E RS COM· Tl'lf undtr'll1nR c1111..i ttld Nollet of WHEREAS. tn, Cl lllcrnlt GO\llrnm111t S Vi C, une a rter. an I C pubhc comment until October, crHllor1 ot lh• 1bov1 111mM diced•"' 1111 ccurlroom 01 01G~rfll'len1 No. l 01 PAN Y. 1,113 ci mbrldtt Lint , H1.1n• 011au11 tnd Eledlon 10 Sou to be rtccrd. Codt. 5«!1ooi1JOOO 11 trq., known•• 1111 Clilrter Family. lost an expected b;iby. Besides updating regulations 11111 •II ""on1 h1wln1 cltlms •t1ln111111 11td court, 11 100 Civic cen11r Or1v1 llnttcn eeich, c1111. td In 1111 cou111y wllt•1 th• re11 11rOQ1rry Public S1rvlc1 Et11m1n1t v1c1tlon L1w, A Spokesman for lh(' :12· llld dltfdlnl 1r1 r"ulr1d to flifl !Mm, Wttl, In l~t CllY cl S1nl1 .t.n1, C1IUornj1, Robert E. Noe, 1971l C1mbrld11 l t ne, It loc11td, P~b~ldt1 for lht P•octdurs wlltr11ty lht Enterta;ner Donny Thomas. Id M. H h ' 'd on s tandar d s and prodecures w1111 !~e 11ect 9'1•v V<1uch1t1, In rh1 of1:ce 01tlld M•v '· 1t11. l-lu"ll"•!Gn aeicl'I, c1111. 011,: M•v 1. itn. c.tv 'EAY v1c1tt •Public ttMmtnt: •lld rounde r of the hospital in 1962. year-o iss amps ire sai for poultry the rules also <m1>JI 01 111. clerk ot th• 1bovt 1n11111M1 cGU•t. o• WILLIAM E st JOHN. Tnis bu iintts ;1 blino conductHI by 1n FEOEllAL N.liTtON.t.L WH llEA3. "'' c11v P••w.,11v llD"''''• s he left Queen Charlotte"s • .,,..~ 10 or111n1 lllom, w1111 Ille ttK1111ry Co1111ty Clt rk Lnd!vlduir MOlll':TGAGE A~SOCIATION 1 puDllc 1e11m1nt 1<11 11orm 11r11,. SQid !he lineup alS<J \.\'Ould in-Sa out a crackdown on plants vOtKhen, to 1111 11nd1r111nM t t 1111 o111c1 llAL,.M 1. tMtTH •11' lt~blrl E. Not ., ••rd Trt1srtt. purpes~s 1oc1tt<t 111 Tr•n NG. 7'°"· •• I d ' \Y Ne t Hospital turday after a h · l o1 hi' Atrorne"t: J.t.COll H. 'Ell TE. 1 ~'/0 DAVID M. OA•lAND TMs 111,.,....tn! Plied with !hf CGunly ~r I rent 11111cg MOr• p1r11cultrly dt Krlbtd' 111 lht 1 .. ,, CU e Singer ayne W (JD. lh -cl t Sh d W ere I n S p e (' 0 r S are E•l1 Ch1pm1n Av111u1, Dr1n", C1lllornlt UM C11111111 Ot!Yt Cltrk of DrlnVI CGUnh on: MIY $, 1tl1. Aul~orlied Sl;n1!ur1 dlltrlol lo" llltChtd 11'1flo '""' I,,. The behefit is held each ree ay say e 3 n "a ssaulted. inllmidated or in· tl"', whlcl'I 1, tllt 111c& 01 t11111nt1s 1>1 ,,._,.,, 111dl, c1111. tuu 11, llevtrrv J . Melldo~. O@u•Y cwn•y 10171 corper1ted htr11" 11 E•Mblt "A"; •rod t · 'd 'th th D \.raniere have a 20.m-0nth-0ld ,, . "'' und111lenld 1 .. 111 ll'lt tt1r1 Ptrt11111ns T1r: 1114) ..,..,,_ Clerk Puolis~td OrAno• C01sr Oa llv Pile! WHEREAS. i1lc1 PUDllc 1t11mtn1 11 11.,. y ear o co1nc1 c "'I e an· son. lerfered \\'tlh \\•hile perform-tg "'' ,,,,,, o1 t11t 11:d d1crcr1111, w11111n Attor111r-,.r: E•1tut1r i nti J>tliflllltr · ,11sti M•Y 1,, 11, x. 19;2 1212.,] Mc1n 1r, •or P''""' o-r •r0'.1...cllvt 111, ny T ho111as fi1emphis goU lrll? their duties 1wr '"""ths •fttr '"' tlrst 1111DUci llon ol ll'uDlllhtd Or•n91 co111 c1ity ll'ilol, P1.1bli111M orenv• cots! 0111r Pt1c1. t1ec1111• ••o,..rr, on w111ct1 tho d•1lft111 tournan\cnl. also a hosp''lal fi-1iss 1-lamp~hire pla.vcd 1he · lhl1 nollce. M1Y ii, 11, 21, 1tn 1m.n ""•v t, ii, 11. JO. 1972 1211.11 LEGAL NOTICE 1••HT1tftl rs 100:11.0 11 btlnii crev1~ ,, In s uc h cases. the Jaw 011.a Aor11 1s. 1t1). rtsldt111111 •root1tv1 rund·raising e vent. role of f /uer in the tele\'ision per1nits U1r government to !:~~~1~-;_~,!0!1~ht Z.:.~~'~llJ. LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE TO c1teo1To11:1 11::fc:'LvE~ ~re,:, Eci..,0c~~;11 J~ ~r * serial "The F orsytc Saga... \\'ilhhold federal inspection '"" 1bove namH 11ecec1en1 '"'''''' ''"'' •• '"' NG. A ,,,., tv of Fw n111n v.11,, 1h•• 11 ,,.,11 h•ld , A t D t;• L·I f * · , JA(OS N ll'E tlTE l'IC1'1TIOUS SUllNESS Si.rpsrlflt COi.ir! II 11'111 S!ftt ol C1lifl>l'ftl1 llubl.c ~'~''"'for 1U•po1~ ol' contl<llrlnt S r u nauf onn r . r. See, ~erv1ce:; from the plants unlll 101 1 . c~1,1111" Avet1u• IT.t.TI o• CAllP'OllNIA POfl NAMI ITATIMIENT lor !tit' C011nty 01 or1npe. wllet~tr to ~•c•t• !ht dttc•lbld public command-module pil<Jt or the Cecll Day • Lt"'ist p 0 (? I the matter is settled. Or1n11, C1llltrlll1 ~ Tloll COUNTY 01' OltANOI Tiie follow!nt NflCl'I Is do!n1 bU:Slnt1t E:tlltt ~' FllEO MADISON. Oet.e111H1. "'~'"'nl . St l!I Mtrlt1t •h•ll Dt ht ld 1., 1'11: ~ Nt. A·7'111 11: Nollce •! noreb~ 1iven to cr~1tor1 nl Ille Council C111..,Dtri. City Ht!!, 1t100 Apollo 7 :;pace flight. is in laureate of England for £our A"-V ,.,. Adfl'lllllllftltr HOT1CI 01< HIA•INO 01< ,ITITION NEVES ENTEltll'ltlSf:!, 1'11J C•m· ·~· IDovt n1'"rd deetdent lhtl •II ~!tier AVeftUf, Fou"llln Vl llt'f, tll Tuts• training to become Peace years, d ied Mor¥1ay .at lhc age Bioyei• IJp#oe#d Publl!lltd o.,.,., co11t 0111v ,1io1. 11'011: '1to1AT1 0111 Wilt. AND •o• br1c1" L.1111, Hun11n11on lle11;Jo. periot11 111vln1 tl1lm1 e11ln11 lh• 111c1 d1r. Ju"''· 1t11. 11 t:oo '·'"··or ,, 90011 Mtv J, '· "· 23, 1t'! 11•n llTTl'll T•tTAMIN1'AllY lll'Obtl! E, NOi. 1t1t) C1mb1ldtt line, dtcldt nt •r• reau!ttd lo fllt 11\tm, wlln thart•lter t • t~e 1etnd• Hrll'lllS. Corps director in Thailand. (Jf 58. -Elllft Ill CONCETTA EVANG!llSTA, Hun!lntt"" ee1c11. the 11ec•1.1••¥ \lflUClltro, '" Ille clflce of ll E If FURTHER llESOlVEO ftl•I "'' ---'--------------------------LAKELAND. Fla. ( UPJ) -LEGAL N"""CE Dtc1111d. This W1lne1.1 I• H int Cflllducttd ~ ... t n 1111 Cltrk of the •bllv• 1ntl!IH c11t1t1. or Cl1~ Cltrk '"''fl ct u1e II re ll<' ~ublllhl\f A A I t h I d via NOTICE rs HEkl!•V GIVEN 11111 Individual. IQ preM11I l~!m wllll !ht 1111c:1111ry '" lllt Or111e1 Cot .II 01llY J>llct 'Want a bolonay sandwich, or a couple·of peanut b\itter and jelly sandwiches? 0. some cup- colce1? Cookies? My father pocked my lunch." • " n ppea S COUr 85 J'U e Mt rtutl'lil CtllcchlG h•t llltd lltrtln I Roblfl IE. Noe \llMIChtrl lo ll'lt 1111dersl9ntd If 1'1'11 otllc1 NtWIPIOI• durlnt l~t lWo 1ucc111lv1 Iha! the purchaser Of 8 TieW l'ICTITIOUI IUllNllS llllllon l9f" ,robllt of Wiii 1nd for Lil· T~l1 1!1!1mt11! 1/IM with lllt COllnlv ol F. l,t,W•ENCE Pl.Ofl(I N. ll(llt Wt•kl prier to lh1 lll1rlnf 1nd llletr b 'I h h · hit NAMI S1'.t.TIMINT tt•• Tt111m11111ry lo Pt!lllor>er rtltrenc:t Clerk Ill Or1no1 County on: Mev !, 1971. PIOfl•tr lltvd., H-11~. c~ur .• which Is lvrt~er (l .. 1<! Notice of 1111 time •nd l'IUfOmO I e aS I e rig 0 eJC• The lol!Owi~t lllftol'll l ft dclllt It Wlllch II mlld1 tor furlh4r 11rtlC11l1r1, llV 11\ltrlr J. Mltldc•. Ot!l)Ul\I C1111n1v !hf pl•Ct Cf buSine11 or the Undtrsl1nld Jn ~lltl of hf1rlne le bl CO.ltd 111 ti ltlll !)('{'( t ht' Car 10 perform prO~ • Int o 1 • l rld 11111 lhi !ltl'lt Ind Pll(I GI llttrlnt l~t Cltrk. Ill !l'ltlllri ptrlelnlno IC 1~1 et!tll ol ttld lh•ff Ill Plltfl 1lon11 !ht llnt cf t~ d d b ut JACO·;· FOil M.t.tlt, 20-U Wtlt(lltf s~m• h11 bl1n It! lor Mer l(I, lt7'l, If , ,UIN dtctdtn1, wllllin !cu~ 1'1"011!h' 111tr' lllt t llell'!tnl ~r1it01td lo bf VICllld. crly :in llS represente Y 0 , Suitt ltd NIWllflrl ll••<h Ctl!f t .:IO 1.m., lft Ills c011ttroorn ol Dl~•rt· PuDt.1h1d 011ntt Co•1I 0111, P'lltlt. 11•11 •uDl1t1tlon of 1t1r1 "cl1ct, PAS~ED AND ADOP'T EO 1t 1 rlflll•• the dealer . J'Gt.n • Weintr Jr uoD c 11i,i.1 ll'ltnl Ne. l ol ••Id c11t1rt, 11 70() CIYt< M1v t. 11. 2l. 30. 1tn 1no.n D•l•d M•v it, 1971. m111!n11 ol lht c11, ccu .. c11thli1nd 111.,. 0, 2 d , • S ll'I T1.1tt1ft Ct llf ' ·• Ct nlfr DllY' Weil, In ff!• CllY ol S1nl1 Ct rol l.oront J•ynt, Mt v, lt7?. The n D1str1ct tale Court Ccllttn 0. W1.n1r, Jr .. 1l032 c111,111 All•. C1llfornl1. LEOAL NOTICE •nd DonRld J~n "'•dhGn A! Holllndtn -0r Appcr1ls re\'ersed 11 lower ,.,., Tu110n. c1111. O•ttd Mtt 1i . 1'11. E1ecuior' ol lht w111 ,, M1ror · Tl'llt lhlsll'lfft It Mint <fll'lllUC1ff •Y I W. E. S! JOHN, N01'1C.I IHVITINC) llDS or ~•Id d,Ctdl~!. TTEST : COUrt jUd$tment Jn ravor Of Jllnl Ttnn1ncr ll'trtfttrthl,, CO\mlY Cltr-Nolle r 1, ~tr•bY fl¥tn !Iii! 1~1 eoird ol P'. \#WltfNCe ,lOTKIH "".~ry f . Celt Chrysler Credit C-Orp,, Brooks· T~l• ;,:;:.,,~~,w~z:r ;,~;~ lht '°""" !:'::!': .~·L:CAllTIN Tru•IHs o1 "'' Coesl corn""'n1~ co11t~ ~-::!:.:.11C:~1r~lwd. ;.;;,~11~\ CAll,OltNIA 1 ~fassey Dodge Inc., of Tampa. c1tn ot 0t-•nt11 c11t1n1Y .-.: A••ll ,., ltn. ~:',,A::!! A;: .... !~~~ 111 ~~;r!~' ~.~;;"':icr~"';;'· t~•1;~~~1·~.~.~ Att1f'111v ''" 11ecu1t" c~uNTT OF 0111'.ANOI!! In and the Chrysler Corp IY '"'''1' J. M1«1o1t. DtllulY c11111ty 1' 1. 111,J .:....nn n.u••ll•Y· Jur111 1, 1,n, it tilt Purc11111"' , •. ..,."' c Y OF ll'OUNtA IN VALLIY 1 . Cltrk, 1 · a.Pl Of llld ICl'lool dltlrl 1 foctttd 11 Publlat!tcl Or1111s COIJI Oil~ •llot, I, MAlllY IE. COL!, ct. hlrH'I' C:tl"lifV The purchaser R onald \Y. 1111• ArtwMY "'1 '"l!itf!otr 1,,. • Ad•mi A"'""'' i~t• Ml•• M•Y 2J. JO, ind J"""-. u, 1•n 11J.l·n "'-' 1 1rft 111e citv c11rt of tilt ,1,., Of Rehurek char•ed thot the car .,'"',111 11td, ,., 0.;.1 ..... ,, ... COttt 0•1tv ,,',..'",',· 111:~•11!~ 2~'~;1~• '°'0 0111 " "~~ c111torn11. 11 Whltlt 11~ 111cr bkl' wru bf LEGAL NOTICE ::"'.Z~l!.. v~~", ''"!'~ ~·' 1"" ,.,...., .... ' . . " . l' ' ' ..,, •• ' lllbllcly -lltd •llCI rtlld lo'; AISOll:TED '"'"'"' nfnlduc:ld lo began giving him trouble TRANSMITTING !"LANT EQUIPMENT • 11ld CIUlldl II U1 llff11l1r nllllllla ~ .. s hortly after ht purchllsed it LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE CHANNt:l 50 1011111c1, T•1nJml111011 Lt111 .,.0 ,1,, 10 c111 0 1To11:1 :111~ ~=•~'" ot Mtv, 1•11. 1nt1 """'' ,, . SJ1lll'll, IN1dl Tr1tun1lt1llM'I l l111 SYtlOm, tori. A·n76" .,. r""'llfll' ••Piii 11M1 He sa id It had a malfllJlC.-• su,111101111 cou•T o• TMI H.-w OI' Mldlflld ,n11ro1•i•r,, H•r11"1t11lt s~ .. r1or cwr1 o1.,.,. s1111 .. c1nrorn11 ~~r' '~~~1ewc1~:.:•· i. w11: t . I g a 'r cond'tl'oner n o'I lllOTIC:I TO c:••DITOlll STATI 01" C:.t.Lll'OIHIA ll'O• FlttOl'lt. lo• ftl• CounrY of DllAHQE Holllnd . • Alll••'. ..11111, ton n I I • II I . su•1111011 COUIT o• 1'MI '"' COUNTY o,-OIANOI AM btcl1 ••• to "' tn tcairdtMI wit!! '"'" ol CHA.LIS. Al I IE II: T • ..,. SVllllM. lcott burning engine. r r 0 n I . end ST•T• 0, CAlll'-OS MI& ll'Olt Nt. A·ntm !ht '"'''uctlon1 •lld Condlflortl I nd Hlf ll'M.t.N, •ltq kllOWn •• CHAlll llS A. ~:~!E~~. '~&i~::.~~:l ....... lb It ... Ind faulty br.k.s Ttll COUNfY OP Ou.M•• NOTICI 01' Ml.t.ll:INO 0111 ll'ITITIOH S1Kllk lliOlll wnlcl! •rt NIW .., fill t llCI Hl!!IVMH, tllCI fl C. /<. HIEltMAN, Miry·< C II N: Norlt ,, ra Nt. A·Jl•t.1 f'O lt ,ltOIAfl 011' WILL AND ,Oil "''' bl llCllr.d Ill "'' oHl<t Of "'' DKtlllll • ' and lh•I he had taken it back lbl1l1 Ill HAll:lll;Y JOMNiON. DKtl•H. l.ITTl'lll;I lltTAMIHTAiY Pu'""•lnt Altnl &1 1,1,ld t<hool dl1trlel. Nlfk• ·,. lltrt bY t l\1111 to u tcllton of City '1.",'., •• , f · • NOTlt:E IS Hlll•Y O~VfN It 1111 ltlllt ot l"lllllTZ SCHHAUDT, 0.. IEKll blddtt' mull wbrnll with 1111 bid t Ille 1bc!Vf 111m"1 ctececttnt 11111 111 I. JI. number o Umes £or repa1Ni. <""'tlflr• 111 11'111 111ctw 111.,.... 1Mct111nt coe..,. t11htr,·1 ~Kit. ur1111t11 cntct, "' bid· _..,... 11,.,1,,. t1itm• 11111111 1111 i•ld 011A1~~ti •At•M•NT IN --------------flhtl I ll Pl'-111¥1111 dllmt llllftlt lttt ,..OT1CE IS Hllll•Y GIVIN tt'!l t JIM IMl"I flOIW ,,,.., .. PIYlbll to 1trt tr61t If clKMlllt ert f~ to tiff """"""wft!I fh T 1110, 7Mt LEGAL NOTlCE w!d •raownt-t~lrw tt fl1" """'· ••trl1'1 ht1 fHhl htriir11 • 111tffr111 for lht CN1t CGmrnunltr Collff• 0111r1ct tt1t lltc:tt••,., v1t1chtr1, In "'' "'1kl tf 11 ,otlltl'I ol • ..._•wtClt M ""'8/lt, t ---------------lwltll 11'1• "IC:IUtf'Y "'°""''"· '" ti!•''"'' "'Diii'• II Wltr I nd ,.... l.•tt•rt ... rel tf TtwtotJ 111 '" •mount 11111 .... Ille Cltrit olf "'' 10.V• .-.1:11H (0\111, OP :;·:= ~cl:~o: .. -Dlrt11ct l"IC'nl1DUI IPJSl"ISI el l!lt Clf'•k (If th•'" .. tr!lllloill cwrt • ., T1•l1mtnl1ry ,, H UllOt\fl" '""""""' It """ flw "'""' U"il "' lilt Stlm •If ........ ""' ''""' Wlfll !hi M'UUlfY Otofl. O··-~ Clll;;:·· IN« MAMI nATIMIHT ,, llf'l'4'hf ,,...'"' """'"" IM N,....,.., wlllCll "midi"' turtl'tlr ••'l'tkvl•"" •M • flltl'lllfM """'"" ....... Wltl tntor ltltO Wllldlllr .. n,... vMtnlgntd ., 1111efllc•1"1111111 Tr•d ,.. 1il0ol. I .. trilltl 't0Ucht1'1. ,. lttt U!lllfrtltftN II '"° !!Mt ..... !ffrlt Ind 11ltc• GI ltMl'l!lf ~ tllt ......... (11111''" " llM '""" If" •otl llT M . l.. IAK.111:, J!O Wtll BJ. J • "'M1~"' lfl ... TM fol1owl1W ..,_art de!11t butlMSf M1111ot 11\ld .. Suitt 301, (Ith Mtll, Mfl'M hit betft Ml IOf' MtV 31. ltr.I, l'I •Wll'IHO tit lllm. I~ 1t!t twnt ol fllkir• .. lllfWt &!rMI, lutt. Sfl, Les An1Ntlt1, rlCO:::: ... :""C: ""c:':lt:':: Mfl"r ··= Clllf, ,,.,., which 11 "" •t•C• .. tiu11,. •• t i)O .,11'1 .. I" !I'll caurt1llOl'll of DIHrt• ....... lftlO lllch COl'llrKI, ~ proclH• .. (:1l"°"'le ,.,~ 'Nfll(h it ~ '11(1 ol n ef !d .. ~.wllft " ' Ullltr SlOCICrQ~ri FUNDING Co.,''°° &I !fl.I Ullder:tll!llld f11 111 m111::~~f· '"'"t Ne, ) Of ltlef court, 1t JOG C'lvl(' tht <J\Kll wlll N Jorll11H, tr lf'I 11\t u .. flUf ltm.I If tl'lt U!Mltf'•lln.cl lft 111 fl'll'lttn .::,1..:111 followl! tllllntftl ... lne w. ll'Hfl cf wy, Ht. J, Ntwllelrf !tin!"' 10 Ptl ttllfl ., .. ,.. '· C'll'lltr Ori.,. Wh•. In "" (I~ ti ltrli. ol • Deol)!ll, tllt fllU 11.11'1'1 flltt'tel •Ill .. Mrlll~ll· It 1111 ,,,, .. ol ••Id docfotl1111, ... lllfllllf ,, I 11111111 .,.. "" ... , II " •••di• C•ll . w1111111 fOllf' l'l'!Cfllllt •"-' tllt ftrtt "1flt •· A.111, C1lllornl1. lor'ltltM It .. w Wioif llflli'kl, j,l/lftl~ ltUr "*""' tft*r-11'tt ""' Mlle.lo thl t l'ltlf tf 1111 ~ "' JttnOt P'ttlltll ludett'. 1)111 Ollvt st .. llOll flf lfrtl1 ,..,IQ, O.tlll M1f 11, ttn. No bllkltr m1v w111111rnt 1'111 •1• fllr 1 tlon tf 11111 llOff«, l+<tf -2t l MN J -"'""' " Nulllff'llllfl IMdl. Ct lll. DllH MtJ .. tm. W, (.Sf JOH"', -loll 1" lott'MI .... 1'61 ...... "'"' I'll Dllld ""'' "· tm. M • -" ltlf'ltl 1• Tlllt butlntM ii NJl'll COllCfllCtl'd br •n Hlll'Y oo.crwln Joh111111 Ctuntv Cltrt dlll titt lor' lfl4: 011fftJno fhtrtof, Fr.II A. Of'<ktr ~··~'!111 ""' Ml111 til "'9 ~ tf IMl'ltclortl, EitW!cw ol thl Wfll of •U•T'OM. eAUlOIN, Tho ... 111 tf Trv•!Ms , ... ,.... .,. EJ10Ct1lor of !tie wrn ..... ..,,,,P\Ntl ~ "' "" *'""• ... JtlllOI I', TUClrfl" 11111-.V. llllM<il ~I TMOMSOll .... lflLSOll erl¥1 .... If rt1ectt"" lllf l1W( 111 111111 Ill' If Miii dlctdll'!I fll.lllff ti ftlt llllffWfftt •rtor 9f .... ThlJ ''''""'"' """ wtllt "'' ~"" lt ... 1 ... ••••11 ~-.. llft!Mo . Jo Wlln 111'1' ,,,....,1.,,,,,1 ., fft. •o•••T M. \.. ....... lltrl Tl! llltllCt lft I fllV!Mt•'9r'tJ .,.. Cllrtl ti°''""' c.,,,.., •:Mn It, itn. I"' tll'l1lw ...... ,.,, .. t• ........................ ,...., '°'"'''"It• tn ~,.., Mii. Iii 1111 lfHI.... "'W"I tlr:!lt ., .. '"' m llen " ""' MU111oitt CWtwr ti "" _.. '' lev1:rly J, Mlddok, OtJrlli'I' C111111Y Cttfl ...._ C'fJf, ..... Wtlltfflf, Cllllltt'tlll NOltMAM !. WATSON la ........... C..IH. •tc WHf ... ll'ttt flf I'-fllf1IMonl __., ti' Cltrt. T1f: fft4J --'nil U11) ....... llCtv. toorll ti Trt111tn .. ...,_,. fw 1-UCVW 1111 -tftWltf eu•rttf ti *'*'-.. 1.,.. ,,,,,. Anw.n _, l lt9aMr ... ,..,_,. flWI "-'1~ OMll l JVM I, tm · 11:tl 1.111. H~ a'lfl .S '°'1lfl, ••llf'I 11 Wat!. •vtlflll'lllf °''"" CHtl Dtltr P'llot. ...""" .,.. , ... , ~ltt lliltl, llWlhfltll On• C..11 Daif1 ll'llot. 11'\IMIWct °"'"" C:.11 0111' I'll... ,.......,.... Or•-C-1 Oalty llilflt, l"VMlll'ltdl OrtMt CotM Dttfr ~ Mir , .. u. • ,,.,. Jllllt .. ''" , .. ,, ,,.. " ....... "" UN.n MIT Mo ''· ... 1'11 lltWI Mtir p, .. Im 1-.n ,,.,, n. .... """ .. u. 1rn ,.,,.,, Ml, Jl, '°" ltn 1111.,; t Everyone Hes • Something That Someone Elie Wants G1n1r1I Tuud11, Mq 23, Im Genr ral DAILY PILOT .if You Cen Sell It, Find It, Trade It With 11 Went Ad l;;;;G.•.•.••.•.1._._._._._._G._o•.•.r;•.l._._;;;;;._._;;;;/~G::;on~o:r:•~l'.'"""""'.~~~_::G:•~n:•~r•:I~~~~~-Gen.ral ' __ *_*_* __ *_*_*I,,. TAYLOR CO. BUILDERS CLOSE OUT OPEN DAILY 1.5 TUES. thru SUN. 1915 BAYSIDE DRIVE Corona del.ti1ar. This like ne\v bavfront home faces extra wide beach with priVacy 11?alore. Guest moorinl! avail. for good sized boat.. '.J'his 3 BR &: family rm . home indicates Qual- ity & elegance throughout. Priced at $169,000. JUST LISTED-Corona del Mar Only I blk. to Ocean Blvd. Handy to Bi£ Corona Beach 4 BR., 3 bath home or could be used as 2 bdrm., 2 bath home plus 2 BH., I bath guest apt. Price $79,950. -SANDPOINTE- FOUR BEDROOM AJI wrapped up in this nice TWO STORY 4 bedroom, 3 bath. HUGE RUMPUS ROOM that will take a pool table, builtin kitchen, large yard will accommodate your 30 foot boat, and a spacious feeling prevails thru- out. VA, NO Down .. .. .. .. . . ... $39,900. -HARBOR VIEW HOME- SOMERSET MODEL FEE HARBOR VIEW HOMES Adorable l\otonaco model! Beautiful landscap- ing. Sharp 3 Bdrm. & formal dining. Private rear yard \vith fruit trees. $49,500 EXCLUSIVE LINDA ISLE-$250,000 Bayfront beauty \Vith 5 BR, family rm, game room & 4 bath + po\vder rm. You must see this prestige home \\1hic h includes a multi· tude of custon1 features. Very luxurious, ''Our 27th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hilla Road NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-49 10 General Convenirnt parking-easy to br a "DROP-l1'l'" at Bay & Beach RC'al!y 675-3000 Stretch-out and live in this two story 5 bed- room. 3 bath, FAMILY ROOM. DINING ROOM. Builtin kitch en. fireplace. NEW CAR· PETS and DRAPES plus so many extras you have to see it to really appreciate it. $72,500 . PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT m BAY & BLACl-I RE ALTY " m \II ,,~(, '•t •All¢1 Al!& '"Cl''" General SHARP FOUR BEDROOM DON'T MI S..~ THIS BRAND NE\V LISTING! Located in • iood Costa Me~a location near South Coast Plaza. It's tastefully decoratl"d and priced to .wll lll $29,95(). ALL TERMS AVAILABLE, TOO~ ~COATS . " W WALLACE · REALTORS -546-4141- (0pen Ev1nin91) CUL-DE-SAC Room for boat, block wall fence, well kept yard. The 4 bedroom house is e\ft'n bet- trr. $31,450. Red Carpet Realtors. 546-3640. G1n1r•I General Newport West \\'alk to the beAch from this super 3 bedroon1 home \vith a large separate F R . FcatW'Cll tree s t u d d c d private patio on an oversiz· ed co~r lot "'ith storage for your boat loo. Spotlesidy main ta ined \vilh upgrad~I c·arpr-ting and lush landscaping. Only $33,500. Call 842-2535 No\.\'! \82. 'THE REAL ESTATERS . . f" •, ':" ' ~ ..... Save Money Now 3 Bedrooms, 114 bath!'!, laun- dry room, many upgrades, lip.top shape. Yard needs work so house Is priced it.o gave you SSS. Only $.ll,500. Red Carpet Rrallor 1. 546-8640. CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX 3 BR. & den, 3 bath studio apts. Walk to beach, shops. schools. 10% Down. Owner will carry 2nd. $79,500. Front unit for rent, $395. Lavera Burns HUNTINGTON HARBOUR 4 BR 3 Ba ., lam, form. din .. 2-sty .... $54.800 4 BR 3 Ba., super custom. "BEST" .$68,000 3 BR 3 Ba. waterfront w /dock ...... $87,500 Expert in area! See these. AJ Fink -CORONA DEL MAR-11 Linda Isle Drive Completely furn . 5 Bdrm., 41h bath home. SOUTH OF THE HIGHWAY Lge. waterfront living rm. with flo or to .ceii. Apartment under construction-.--M"afetlle---ma_r~e-frpic:-J:'ot 111al ~inln.si:-rm·., ""family rm:-;- changes you want NO\V. 3 Bedrooms, 2 maids rm., Pier & slip. . . . ..... $195,000. baths. builtin kitchen with VIEW OF JET- TY. FRONT HOUSE -also has 3 Bedrooms, 2 baths, builtin kitchen, dining area, fire- place. Now is the time to buy . . . . . $79,500 TWO TRIPLEXES -CORONA DEL MAR- Buitt in range and oven, dishwasher and disposal. carpets and drapes. 2 Units have 2 bedrooms, 1 bath: 1 Unit has 2 bedrooms, l l/2 baths w /fireplace. Each unit has 2 car· ~orts , maintenance free yard and pool privi- eges. .. .. .. .. .. . .. .. . .. .. Each $79.500. FOUR BEDROOMS -CLOSE TO BEACH- Short distance to beach and golf course. FAMILY ROOM. used brick fireplace, 2 baths. builtin kitchen, close to shopping, schools, Jr. College & freeway. Try your VA or conventional . . . . . . . . . . . . $31,500. ~ .H A.S.Soc.U.ru REALTORS 644-7270 2821 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. _G_'"°~'-•-'--~~--1 -G-•_•_••-ol~~~-~~ DREAM HOME It's Better Than $27,000. It Looks And 3 bedroom,, 2 bau,., lamHy That's Better Than room. fireplace, double gar· The Oth age. shake shingle root and er Way For Complete Information On All Homet & Lota, Please C•ll: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 B•yside Dr .. Suite I, N.B. 675-6161 General COMMODc;>RE RD BAYCREST ' Over 2000 sq. ft. or lu>:ury in l a 3 bedroom, 21,~ bath, fami-1 ly and dining acea. Bonus of a sparkling pool and lo\v maintenance 75'x110' yard. All the usual Baycrest features. Full price $64,950 ci.nd an assumable loan of approximately $50,000, Just listed -hurry. Call w at 54()...1151 (Open Eves. l .~.' HERITAGE REALTORS THE BLUFFS $35,900 Must scr lhi5 Jo~Jy f'nd unit overlooking beautiful green belt? Large living room. Formal dine or casual ll.~ you prefer. :I Bedrooms. Close to tennis courts and pool . \Valk to schools. flurry -Call 645-0303. IORl.\I I. Ol\O\ ' .. R£Al lOR~ Gen•r•t WANT TO SELL? Jr you \\'ill allow us lo ex- plain how marketable your property is, if we arranli(e fo1· it to sell V.A., you 1vill see this is the way lo get action. We are a subsidiary of Calirornia's large&! V.A. broker. Call 675-7225. COLWELL PROPERTIES. INC. REALTORS GO INVEST· YOUNG MAN In this rare opportunity. 4 choice 2 bedroom individual home!'! on large Jot - Be au tilully landscaped. Jo:ach \vith private patio~. Convenien! location. near :;chool!'! and shopping center. Jo~ir~t I ime f)ffered only $62,750 or split $31.350. Call for sho~·ing. 673-8550. \D THE REAL "'-ESTATERS ,, . ' ' POOL 4 BEDRM.- $23,900. No Down 4 bedrooms, 2 separate baths, builtln dream kit- • 2 Story • Tiled roof A UlllllVUl OOMl • 3 bedrooms e 3 bathrooms e F•mily room • Dining room NEW LISTING -Oppol'lunity for a a hecl- room, on the golf course. in in1maculale con- d1t1on . Spl it level floor plan \Vith formal din- ing, bea\1liful appointn1ents. n1any extras and an endless vie\\'. Presented at $69,950. I• Fireplace • Sh•g Carpet1 I • Concrete Driveway • Block Wall Fine• • $40,250 -10•1. down e HURRY Ill PHONE UNIQUE HOMES MESA \IEROL 546-59'0 REAL TOR, MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE. 1 832-5792 ... ~ 0, 979-2113 associated BROKERS -REAL TORS 2025 W Botboo 673-366) GOVERNMENT REPOSSESSION Just released 1-:astside co~ta l\1esa. home \\'i th 3 bd1·rn.~ .. plus den, brick firrphtt:f', 5hag crpts, bltin k1lche n. 2 baths. Huge lot \v ilh tll"tarh- ed 3 car garage·\vith plunt· bing, Priced at $25,0CX>. and asking only $1000. do\.\'n. Call us Immediately -\<.:on'I last a week. 54&-5880 f0pcn 1'\'<'S. I ·, s ~ HERITAGE . . REALTORS • BY OWNER OPEN HOUSE Sot. & Sun., 11.J 2422 S. R•n• Dr .. S.A. (S. ol \Vamer, \V. of Bristol) 3 BR., 2 Ba!h, fireplace, sep. dining rn1., :service area in- side, 2 1·ar garage, Built-ins, veJ~·et drapes in master bed· room, \v/w carpets, sprink· lers in fl"onL Just repainted insidl'. Close lo all 1Chool11 and minutes from So. Coast Plaza & major shoppi ng. $28, 750. Submit all terms. Owner will pay ALL closing costs. r~or more information, call 838-5261 before 3 pm. ··, HERITAGE . . REALTORS NEWPORT BEACH Cn51om duplex, N r w po r l JslRnri .... Thi.!i i11 a beaut. \\•ell-kept property . Lot11 of DUPLEX pride in °"'nt'rship. Owl"l('r 'I I-BLOCK lo OCEAN &: J.ho~ "'ill carry lst T.O. loan \Vllh pin£; -:>1lnt Toe, 3 BR. 2 bli, no loan costs. Olfered at UPJWl' & 2 BR., den & 2 ha. .~2,000. 1 lo\.\·er. BH .Jns. Carpetin1: CORBIN c.ompl<'!rly turn, -PRICED • at S62 .. ill0. MARTIN "C"R!:h~~AS EALTORS ••• 66 224 \\'. CoaAI llwy !>48-5527 _R ______ -_7_2 Newporl Beach Eve. 545-564.1 ROSE COTIAGE I-iii 2 BR. hom• "'" N•w""' LINDA ISLE ll' '"h I'. '~"'' kil. BAYFRONT "'/brkfsl. rm. $22,!m. POOL NEWPORT BEACH Ideal home in prime llarhor Highland!'!. 4 spacious BR, ram. rm .. 2~' ba. Kitchc-n bltn!'!, cpt/rlrps & 11 sparkl- ing hld. pool. $44.ro'.I. CALL e '46·2414 ~~ Ntar Ntwport Pett Oftlrt It Rarely Happens NO DOWN NO COSTS The o\vners want out! 4 bedroom, 2 bath home on a good residential 1 tr ee t. PriCP. only $27,?so and owner m11y pay all YoUT costs. Call 8'17-6010 for In fonnation, Today! '-O T f-!f: RE A!. ·"'-ESTAT!:l<'; READY FOR SUMMER , great residentlal location. Around "GO JUMP IN l\lodel home nel'ds some care. bu!, ''Oh, \vhat a bar- gain ." Submit all terms. Call 545-8424 (Open Eves. I * EXPERIENCEO * This baf"iain is )'OUr!'! for 11 THE LAKE'' chen. "Lovely patio. Enjoy .==:==:z-=:-=:-=z-z--=-: •.h• pool. 540-l7l0 LIDO ISLE But "·e have Just li11tetl !he pcrfrct combination -A spacious, charming home \\"1th 11 view that is truly une>:ce!Jed anywhC!re • l"our bcdroom11, 3 bath.ti, F'amlty Room, Large p1'0ft'!sio11ally landscaped yard with space for pool. S79.~ Ca 11 673-A550 for a viewine ap-- poinlment. Ir,:>/ THE REAL \'."'\{ ESTATERS The welcome mat is out! Sparkling bright. newly decor. & carpeted; 3 BR.. lge . family rm. In Bayshores, private bay beaches. $46,950. Mary Harvey IRVINE TERRACE SCOOPI Just listed this charmer & it won't last long! 3 BR .. 2 ba's .. formal DR, spacious fem. rm. w/loads o! bit-ins. Cozy patio. $59,750. M. C. Buie BAYCREST BARGAIN Enjoy family life to the fullest. DesijZned with Mother in mind. Quiet street. 4 BR., family & dining. Room !or pool. $72,500. Mary Lou Marion BEST BUY . EASTBLUFF 3 BR., 2 ba. charmine home, on cul de sar. Prof. decor. & Iandscapinj!:. Move-in cond. \Von 'l last at this price! $41 ,900. Harriett Davies VACANT LOTS . BAYCREST I. Leeward -fee lot. $29.500. Owner will trade for home to $100.000. 2. Huge lot on Galaxy: area of fine homes. $45,000. Eugene Vreeland CAMEO SHORES !. OCEANFRONT 4 BR.. 5'h ba.: sauna, pool. $340,000 2. Jetty view, pool , 6 BR, 51h ha .. library, playroom. $229,000. Carol Tatum 65' ON BAYFRONT Choice loc. on peninsula. Sandy beach plus pier & float !or larRe boat . Stately ualio en· tran<e to this lovely 6 BR., 4 balh home. $350 ,000. Edie Olson BAYSHORES Top corner location. 2·Sty. 4 BR. 3 Ba. prof. dee. home. Lge. mstr. suite on 2nd level w/ dressing rm . & study. Home surrounded by lovely lawn & trees. m,~. Kathryn Raulston ~ CcllchrJ1I, ..... "4-2'10 ......... 550 NIWPORT CENTIR DR., N.B. little work and Jots of . cnthu&iasm, 3 bedroom!'! 2 Beautiful 4 be~room home cm b th Se 1 ' cul·de-11ac racing lake. Large ~ 11· par.a e car 1arage family room. Upgraded car-TARBELL SALESWOMAN NEEDED \V1lh Jong driveway for boat 1 d 11 1.1 N "· 1 .1 Onl 1.12 500 ALL pe an oor 1 e. ever .,.,en or rat er. y , 1. ·" · 0 I $33 ~ Pho BEAUTIFUL POOL TERMS. Call 842.-2535. ;~: n Y •"""· ne lr-.maculate home , 3 bedrooms, hardwood noors, 1eparatr. laundry r o o m . Owner reAdy to move . Red 1.05 THE REAL \'"\l ESTATERS ' ()j f 'I u•. r II • f'M -STOP- '-0 THE REAL '"'-ESTATERS ' I " ' I , • Carpel Rr.altor11. 546-8640. JUST LISTED COLLEGE PARK G'°o~n~o~r."1 ______ Gen1r1I Investors can stop looking ;;,.;;.;;.;.;..;.. ______________ _ AREA Call 11.~ quick about this de· lightfuJ :'I Br .. 2 Ba. homt' \vith heavy shake roof, new copper plumbing and hard- for that perfect 4-plex hrcause '"e have ii. 3 blocka lo beach. e>:c<.'llent corr dilion. 3 yrs old. Call for an appt. to st>e. C WA Ll<I H & llf ""ood Ooot11.. It has a big Realtors 641>-7711 yard for the kids .11nd close-2043 \Vestcliff Drive In location for ,;hopping M n· Open 'til 9 P~t '''";'""· $.Jl ,,50. c.'' I $2 500 G y I 673-8:,SO. , ets ou n I No Qualifying Huge Poal A:i;sunte a 7'i~ VA loan on Eastside Dollhouse ih;, ''"''°"' ' b<droom \.\'ith a super large pool. So t h'!an it sparkles, 3 bedroom. 2 bath. new gold shag carpet. rich warm paneling and b e aut i ful landscaping -plu3 gate and area for your boal or camf)f'r. J ust Hstl"d lor i 127,!00. C w,11 1<1 1111 111 Reallor11 646--7711 2043 We11tclllf Drive OJ>tn 'Ill 9 P~1 Low maintenance, beaulifu1 land~aping. large quiet corner lot and private fen- cing. You'll feel like living In !he country side. Hurry?! Call 842.-2.535 NO\\'! :o THE Rl :AL \"'-ESTATERS , ., ' ATIENTION INVESTORS . I r ixer upper. Unbellnable STEPS TO BEACH mes.~ . lots of work. Do 11 3 BR. 2-aty. Rectntly decor, your&eJf &nd rtap the neat new carp. Open bf!am I hal'Vtsl. VA rtpoue11lon in ce:ils; l&f'le paUo, $33,900. "as 1s" co n d i t I o n • CAYWOOD REAL TY Thou Mm!~ under market * 54f.1290 tt val"'. ean Red ea.,,.1 P.e'altota tor Wormation. SUPER CLEAN Pool home .!th 3 bedroona, 2 ·bath, ma.ny extru, in Mesa Vmte tor only SlS.500. Rfd Carpel R.ealtor1 . 546-8640. -· MESA VERDE 3 Bedrnom 2 b&th. tree lined Cul-de-Sac tip top condltlon thruout. f"or ult' by OWTM!t'. 29.9.IO. 1~ "°""· ~tm MACNAB IRVINE FINER HOMES EXCITING DOVER SHORES HOME I Graceful and elegant 3 BR . Pool. Breath· taking VIEWS from LR, DR , FR, kitchen & master BR. $I39,900. Laszlo Sharkany ~200. NEWPORT COUNTRY E6TATE $89.900. Nearly one-half acre o! park-like grounds -luxurious custom built 5 BR, FR, DR home. Perfect place !or your chil· dren . Call to see . Al Allison 642-8235. LIVE IT UP Carefree townhouse in University Park Vil· lage Ill. 3 BR , plu s big bonus room for en- tertaining, overlooking park. Near pools and clubhouse. Helen HarUey 642-8235. INDUSTRIAL REAL ESTATE Industrial property leased for approx. $1200 per month. $110.000.Frank Peralta 642-8235. tDI DoftrOrtN 142•12~5 1144 M11Attttur 144•1200 Nftfpott 1Hth,Cl11tornl• 121U SUPER BUY Just rccRr{)f'ted 3 Bedrooms & 3 haths On Via Wazicr,; Sinli(le story home Private Palio l'ormal dining room ThP Best Ruy on Lido, at $63,500 REALTORS SINCE 1944 673-4400 GRACIOUS SPANISH DECOR Jusr look nt this hf'11111Jru1 Spanish :1lylf' home 11nd It will lw your!I! :l bet1Joom11, t~~ bath!!, sunkPn living ruon1, formal dining room and a lari:r tiled family . 11".IOm. ""1any r>:tr11s -rover- r.cf pntio, sprinklf'NI ln 11:11 yards, tinted windowi'I anrl u(JJ:nidtd carpets anrl dt<Jpt'!'I. Th<' 11lr roor \\'ill rrn11nd yOH of old l\1cxico. You musl :«-r for on"Jy $41 ,900. C<11I R-17-6010 Now! VACANT FIXER UPPER 3 Bedroon1 hou!le, Costa htrM. ownrr 11n xlo u1 . S:U,:-,00 l11kt'~ It. Go n ti neighbl"lrl'IOOtl. Quiel. See i\ now! Rt'd Carpel Realtors. '-. 11 • '"I , I rt -2-:-FOURPLEXES Owner \Viii Trade/Sell onf' <'Ir both for Corona del Mar Duple>:. Adjoining pa?'Ct'ls. Separate Trust Deeds. Alt are 1 Bt-droon1, Furnished, 'vlth Patio or Sun Deck. Originally Dl'signed &: Built by Owner-Builder for M&JI:· imum Privacy &: Quiet. S62,230 Each, C111i 646-055.5, Evenings &16·9702. COLWELL PROPERTIES. I.N C REALTORS INVESTORS PARADISE Over one acrf' pa.reel w ith ~ units. Pos..,lble R-4 zonin1. Ideal for additional unil1. Good Costa "-1ea location. Call for dt!tail:.. 546-5!!80 t Open eves. I --.!. HERITAGE REALTORS TRIPLEX Very nlce 3 BR, 2 BA OWna'• unit + 2·2 BR 1 BA. Good Newport H~ights! I locationS51,500. Ocean View! Roy McCardle R••ltor 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. 541-n2• Jvy rlusll;'rf'd hill plus Vil"W hilitr thli'I rharmer! Step down Jiving room. Mu~l\·e firE"placf'. Dining room. Co7.y kno!fy pint-kilchen. Giant rovtrrd patio Hurry -Call 645-0303. · • Spanish Adobe • : $22,950. I OIU\I l 01 \0\ '" R~A LTO'-'". ''No Time For Quibbling" ''ou n1u1t M"e th1~ lm- m11tt1 hUt :I 11lory. '1 l1"1tmo1n , 2 hn •h homP S<ilid built 3 bedroom, double car garage, close to town 4 l'ity park. Priced right Ph: 642--1771 . ~21 i' locr1t<>rl in Fountain V11llry. ~!'"!!!!!'!..,l!l!!""'O!!!!!!'!""' 8""';M land"''';"• ""' COLLEGE PARK 11pnnklerJ. Pr1crd at onl)' S32,9j(), Call 8~7-6010 for Bottlta In lhe pool, what • mot'f' drta1I. meas! Tenant moved out 4' Ir,:)' THE Rl:AL '"-r.~TATl:RS . ' I the owne.r (who livts 1n Palm Sprlnp) ~· "i::et rtd ot that thins~·• Vac11:n1 & ln need of TLC. Could be a ~o EASTSIDE UTILE RANCH co.,. l bed"'°"' 1oomt. 13 actt.. ioned R-2 rot~ llt· Prlvatr, block walled. trff !le nou~,.. oountry tell lnc. •Mdtd be.cky8.rd with bo"'I old fa!h1ont'd front p<lteh, Jilalr . \Von'! la~t at $2.iO,OO. all for $21.~. TJ>ce • look. Rrd C a t p t t R1altor1. ~auty. F ix it &: uvt ..• S28,$» u b. CaJJ DOW ~ R~d Carpet R e • 11 or a , ._>!6-'640 __ . _____ _ , THf" Rf;J\!, R r~~TATERs 1 0 DAILY PILOT Tursd~. t'1ay 23, 1972 _,.,.. I~ I -1·,. I~ [ _ .. ,. I~ I -·u. I~ I -.. -I~ [ _... I~ I -··,. I~ I _... I~ L--~~_'.~~~_· .. __, ~ ~;;;;;;;;;;;;1 ;;;~-~1 ' , ' General Gene ral Uved In A· Uttle / iiiiiiiiiii But Loved A.Lot College Park ' Th\11 single iilory 11ucco. 3 bedroom home ha.A ju.st the 4 ~Jroon1, 2 hnth 1:orner lot Jpact )'OU ~ 81 a price home \Vflllr.r.Qnd., covered you can. ilfford. 2 ap;tridlng p111 lo. ~parate play yard & blthJ, all t:lcetric kitchen, \\'Bll·tO·\\'BIJ thick Mag crptg. carpets and drapt11 1hruout. Dnve by 2Jl7 Rutger• Dr .. Double garag<', OnJy 2~\i Call to lll't in!iidr. )'t8l"5 old and priced al $32, 950 S32.900. r~HA 11.nd er buyer:o; ,~;elcomc. Call C wA ll<lR & l l f Realtort :>45-94!11 2790 Harbor Bh·d. at Allam& ( Open E\'f'll. SOUTH SAN TAANA Newport •• F1irvitw- 6"6-88tl (1nytim1) FHA-VA TERMS I Bcsl 4 Bedroom. 2 Buth In !!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!l!!J!!l!J!!!!!!!!I ,..._,....o .. Remodel<~ KU-VERTERAN'S chen, Gu Ovt'n \\'ith rolis- serie, Plenty ()f P.elini!!hed UNITE Cabinet.c;, Copper Plumhlng, And meet u~ in ttlesa Vrrde 50 Gal. \Vatt'r He11.ter, tQ see this super sharp and Fenct'd Rear Yard. 10 x 24 1·lcan home that "·11J sell on Covered Patio. fo~HA-VA QU! 11'11TlS. Call 546-23\.3 for Terms. S26.00CJ. Call 646-0;x)S. infnrn1atian on time of mret- Evenings 646-9702. Ins. COLUJELl ~ THEREAL ESTATERS QPlN UNTll ~PM Capl1tr1no Beach Fountain Valley Auntln9ton Beach FOR "'' by ow"''-2 """ 1;;;;;;4;;;B;E;;;DiiR~O;;O;:;;;;M;;;;;;;j LARWIN'S rustom l'lomf's. J Art, 2 BA, BEST BUYS Jiv rm, din & l9Jn nn. Bllnil, $46 500 b~k . ,,,., 'P"l drps. paM • SECLUDED HOME ON i<lai>N & ll'alk11.. fncd yd. Xtra J)harp large 4 bedroom. A FARM SIZE LOT $34,000., lt'rms, eall 495-1629. 2~, bath home. Crpts, clrp11 & ON A TREE LINED STREET Corona del Mar walJpaptr t~t. . Plwb 1N A QUIET NBRHOOD ----------I 1nd5Cpg., Spanish tile t'n-A J e\\·t'I of a 3 bedroom wilh LUSK lryv.•1.1y & front .pa!io., form! thlrk almost nt'w shag car· clln rm., Spanish trpl. in ptling, ni:w ('Ti ii')' k kitcti 5 BEDROOMS lam. rnt., 3 car g11 r. Close tJlc and many 1nore "xtras, Thl11 hr11ullftll lllt!~borough lo park & schools. 'rhi.s but belt of an if you "':ant .a model 1~ h\gh -0n a hill \Vil.h hon~f! will 111>11 in a hurry; REALLY hig lot -this is a bt>au t1/ul vi<'w of t\let)'-let_ JI be lo you. Call for ap-i1~ Tren\endou:<i landscaping lhlng. It's brand new, )'-OU po1ntmcnr loduy. and an alley \\'i 1h a boa ! can landscape the pool aizcd I' gatC'. tlur•'Y le> sec it. Only yard ju.~t your own y,•ay. Call SZ7 ,500, 1llage Real Estate * 875-7225. 531·5!00 ( ;::'.'.) 531·5100 LUSCIOUS COLWELL PROPERTIES, INC. REALTORS VACANT & READY • Sh<tJ'fJ 2 Bdrm home * New pain! in &r. out * New plu~h shag Crpt * New draperies * Room for another unit S•l5.~il0. f111J prier *FULLER REAL TY* 546--0814 .•... , •••... Anytime $24,500 4 BEDRM. + POOL! 2 haths, fainily roonl \\'1th Plcgant Swedish fir£"plac-e, 11~ brick hearth. i·ich 1\ood paneling. Great for entertaining. buil!-ln kit· l~ll\lA(1JLATE 4 BEDROO:\I TO\\'"NHOUSE, thick expen- sive shag carpet thruout, formal di11ing room, 2~1 baths and four BIG bt'd· room:<i, 0\\1ncr transferTed -\\"e've got a "Sell it now" pril'e 1.>r $36.500. Call quick IO llet" this. * chen, diswasher. Ne1v shag BIG FAMILIES carpeting. Bkr, 842-2561. \\'ANT TO HEAR A \VI lOP- TARBELL PER'!' Hmv 'boul a whoppin' big 3 beclroom family 1"09m "Sho"•case home'!'" 2400 sq. Huntlllflen hoch *SPECIALS* 124.950. ALL TERMS. 3 BR. 2 Ba, like ntw C'rp!J, drps. d sh w •hr , wateraottener. Selleni bought larger home -rush! 4 BEDRM CONDO. Good k>an assumption. Paymta leu than rent. Gd cond. Crpls, drps, & relrig. Small dn. 1v/1nd. Avail 6-t. FOlIR SEASONS BEAUTY. 4 BR , 4 BA, lg fam rm \\·/ tpl, form! din or dtn. M.· s11me VA 11.>an. Submit cash rJoy,•n. Near Beach. Quick poss, CALI. 847-8507 $30,990! SPANISH Ntwport BHch Income P roperty "' * OCEAN VIEW * Beaut. 3 bdrm., 2 bath home v.·/formal dining A family rm1, Llving nn. hu Jae. 1tone lrplc; nice patio areas; Q:ood neighborhood, close to achool.1. Aali:inr $43,950. BACK BAY CAROLYN COOKE l.t Astor., NORTH ESTATES -5'< th# 3-BDRM. I Jake fronl this -0ld fMhion CONDOMINIUMS cabin. thtn \\'alk to It. Builders closeout , in Valuablelot·S14.99J. beauUtu1 Nev:port Riviera, 3 FA\VNSKJN -LA.ketront J Br master size BRs. (1650 Ml· only $28,.lOO * 499-2800 * ft.) 21,i ba .. floor to ceiling f.i.rql!ace. \\'-1V shag carper \\'t l!pt'rial1~I' in all type11 or lhniout, rustom drapes &. Big Bt'Hr property " dial11v&.E.her. J-J11rry! Ju!t 4 left. YOU O\VN TH E LAND. S26.2JD r .P. 4 bdrm. n1oclels from $28.600 10~ businei;s. fttEMORIAL l)AY RENTALS &>11.utirul nu lisr~/maps Yours fo1· the uking! no.-; 27J Big Bear Lake 7 J 4-86&-348~/ ;is:>-2:>-1f SUPERB Opportunity·O\Vl'ICt dn. 61 ~~ int. Take Irvine to tra~ft'rred-\\"ants .action~ J Snnta Isabel Ave. FollO\V BR, 2 BA ho1nf' on :i\Tystlc the llign.~ to n1odel or call Hill. Asking $43.500. i\Iake _Sa=''~'~O=!li=.""~54~· ~~~5-;H=7·=~ I =r=o~u-=R"·P"L-;E"X'°•-.,~, "i'"'B"c-, 1 Ba, your offer. \V hit a k er PANORAMIC VIEW il'I(' $.>!O/n10. no dn VA. Realtor, 494-443-4. Rtaut. maintained home CRV $J2,00J. Nr OCC. Laguna Niguef 2 Bedrooms I: Jargt family 5.:J1-6JjJ rm. Pool. $64,SOO. Ind I • I P rt 161 BY OWNER -3 Br r 2 Ba. G Will ' UI r1a rope y view lot, former ' model eorge iamson Realtor home, furn &: .a p P 1 c' 548-6.~70 645-1564 available. $32.200. 495-t332. 830-5976. -•---SV-OWNER * Lido Isle Look over our rompetition. \\"c ha1·e & hav~ priced this BAY VIEW homr for a fast sale! Cust. Large double lot, Via Lido bit 4 BR, all xtras. Nr. Nord I: Genoa. Room for 11chls. $4 2,000. Open Sat & pool in huge patio. 2 BR. Sun 12-5. 2212 ).farga,rf't Dr. + conv. den, din. nn. 3 I ~148 or f114J 7J3-0393 ear garagr. S99,500. t:o!l. 32 UNITS Over 2 ac1·es of easy living, garden apartments near Santa Ana Country Club. Schedule shows 15t;li r eturn on 15'lo do11·n. r.tay f'.X· changt'. Listed p r i c e ; $445,000, call our Investment Division, 546-1000. PROPERTIES, INC . REALTORS I I EXTRA VALUE OPEN DAILY 1-S 191.i Cl-IUBASCO. Irvine Terr, 4 BR., family r n1. plus extra ruon1 in ~arage. i_,gf', htd. pool. Vacant. $69.500. f>.lagnolia at Talbert, ft! Don't tell the kids to "gt'! Fountain Vallry lost!" in th is home, it'll take $28•900 you a 11'eek to fincl lhent. See Super sharp home on counll'Y <1uiet cul-de-sac street 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, fam ily room 'vith fireplace, plush deep pile carpeting, dra~s deluxe builtin k i t c he n , dish1v asher . Patio . Sprinklers. \Valk to all schools • near shopping too! Brk 842-£691. ~~~-~~~ I Open Sat. 1:30.5 :30 hoW<IR6 low.on J-. 444 Seville Avt. llH!OlCOtl . B lboa P . . I ' BR • WATERFRONT lii0ii0ii0ii0iiiiii0iiOiiOiiiio-! \Vouk1 you believe 3 GRACIOUS lx'drooms, .1 1 ~ baths, \valnut this horne today! Covered 3416 Via Lido ti75-4J62 I a en1n. po1n . · ELEGANCE paneling, pa1i1.>, beautiful back yard and boa.l 11lora~e 11 r('a on Eastside only 4 BEDROOMS poho, 3 '" g.cage. "'Y HAP.BOP.. VIE\V HILLS • N d G I t I I Roman bath in the n1aster Lusk (Carmel) 4 Br, 2 Ba 1° 0"ni ·1 · f':::;s· ov~,f suit,. and mort'. PricPd right Sf'enic Properties 675-5726 3 BR + fam. & din rms. 45' la m. rm. IG• 'EP•Mrkles! Lot. street to street $69,500 -- 75 Ft. Jot, Jge. home. Street 1610 \V. Coast Hwy .. N.B. TARBELL R-1 f"ef' lot in Ne1vport Shores. Only $20,000. Custom home in BaycrPst. 3 bedrooms, or 2 \Vit h luxur- ious den. lovely living room and dining roon1, gounnet kitchen, breakfast room - roomy, well planned !or pn- .J27,930! \\!ell, lhcrt '~ one available no"" but not for long. Call Red Carpet Rea ltors. 546-86'10. "GINNY" MORRISON RLTR . fam rni, frplc, pool sz Jot: arge ami Y me wi 1 at $42 500 Prine Only, $68,800. 644_0289 P.legant fireplace d e I u x e ' · * b.u!l.tin kitchen, ~ish\vas~er, NEEO A BEOROO Costa Mes• rich 'vood paneling. \V1red 2 M for stereo. Patio. Prime WITH NO Dream Hone '°'',;'". Bkr. 962-1373. MAINTENANCE? 16Ul Bea.en Blvd .. J.Iuntington Beach SPANISH HACIENDA 1600 SQ FT 4 BR-$24,000. to street . , • , .......• $90,000 REALTORS 647-4623 LIDO REAL TY TRANSFER. \\Just s e 11 . 3377 Via Lido, N.B. Harbor Vil"IV Home, 4 br. 2 673-.7300 ba.. island kitchen/family rn1. upgraded cpt throughout, st'll • cleaning oven, 2 brick patios, fee land. $57.COO. 644-4863 BILL GRUNOY RHllor 675-6161 341 Bayside, Np!. Beach * fl'l·l CORNER * \\1ith older house. Prime location. Costa 11-le:<is Corbin-Martin Realtor11 -t tprtaining and happy tilnes. $81,500. -PETE BARRETT Suit 20J, N. Balcony 1500 Ada!llS Av .. C.?<1. OFFERS -3 on, 2 BA. I run1pus !'In., hdwrl !!rs, lg ror Jn! in lla1vaiia11 selling. $32,500. Sp ecial BACJ-IELORS, PUSSY CATS OR SMALL F AMT LY - Now you can buy hl'r lhal come fall in lovp 11·ilh this 1lreani houSf' because this '·"' --. =t-'-"'*""°m-2-b.at" •-·-ho•••• .. · 18884 'Brookhurst, --.......,_, ...... Lots of custom featu1·e:t in-Build . your own eluding ~ORMAL DINING CLOSE TO BEACH Get OOM. iu-~lace • ...crnts_&r. --the -OOn1e-'you 1l'ant on drps, new paint thruout, rP.· Lido Isle. 116 Via l\lentone modeled kitchen. 1 car gar-BARRETT REALTY 642-5200 age and -0versi7.ed so· x li\'fi\fAC. 2 BR .. 2 BA Condo al charming Ca~ Serie~. Crpts. drps, lrplc.. pool. $29,.:.00. By 01rner. TI4: 97!}-147!!. 644.J662 or . 642-898!1 Mountail'I, Oes1rt, Resort -REALTY- 642-5200 SUPERLATIVE CHARM Bus: 557-4130 Res: 540-2286 ESTATE SIZE LOT 11. 4 huge bedrooms, 21,ii lux· It's "~lovr in" clean and urious bath.>:., lots of extra Fountain Va lley only 5 minu!Ps from the roorn. Prt'stigP modrl 11·i1h F'OR sale by o\vnE'r 3 Bdr. 2 beaC'h and all activities. ankle de<'p c&.rpet~ thruout, Ilalh. Shag car~! and $1.000. le11s than "Ne\v" drapcll to n:atch. Huge beautiful landscaping. All cost!S27.950. separai_e lanuly room . builtins Includ ing l r ash Jarwin realty 190' Ior, close to everything. Submi! your terms. Call 84i-12'2l. O\VNER~ustom 3 BR. 3 BA, 2 frplc. form din. 114 Via i\Jentone. $71 ,500. 675-$48 Newpart Heights 174 2 Lots, !!eC'IUded $2.450 i\Ioonridge cabin ~J;l,7;1() Lakeside cabin .5::.'i.000 Call 866·4641 or \\Ti tf'; And a country club almo~­ phere which r ings 11·ith prlde -11 you att thinking about happy family Jiving this is it. ·Righi in Mesa Ve!'de 'vlth ~N'llent schools and convC'nil'.'nt lo markPfJli, Pric~ a t only s:m,V99. Call 546-231.i. 12.00CI S.F. lot at end of cul· de-sac street! $19,500. Also 70' x 135' Corner only $21,500 Submit on tenns 646-7lTI. Trade in that old model on masher. This 11; year old 9f),g-44Q:i A r th_is $49,~ special. Seller muse has been appraised at · ny ime will consider all offers. Call $32,000. That's our price. 5% POOL HOME! Realtors 545-M9lr down plus impou nd s. Call $27,400- 557-5217 or 839-3428 after s:30 or au day Sat. & Sun. No Down O wAll<tR & l EI 2790 Hart10r Blvd. at Adams E Bl ff Op!'n Evc:<i. ast u SEX HAVEN $1,000. DOWN -B-L""U __ F __ F_S_P_L-AZ_A_ trnni<. Coads of decking, heautiful S\1·in1 pool, with ~Jidt', pool equipment & vaeuun1. All e l e rtrl c "A11•arcf'0 built-in kitchen, 17141 Beach Blvd., H.B. NEAR Beach • Elegant 2 BR. din Rm .. crp1s. draprs. dsh/11·sh. enr patio., lrg. beaut. yrd. E:>:cel. Cond. $27,500. 962-2194 .• Mes·• Verde BY OWNER 3 BR. Spanish charmer. Re- i\1 ESA VERDE VALUE: modeled , redecorated. Spacious ne11· 4-bedroom. J. Be&ut. loc. $36,00CI. 645-6193 bath executive 2 ·story days1 673-1658 eves. See any. honle. Filled \\'ith extras. tinie. Formal livini: room 1vith I=-""'""""'"'· -.,--=c,.-~--c fireplac!'. For mal !lining 3 B.R. \a.cant. r.-2 room to roon1. Breakfast n 1.>o k. I b~ild. S29,900, Agent. _ Spenct-r Real Estate, P. O. Box 2828, Big Bear Lake. Calif. BIG Brar Lake front home & guest house on pri. )X'int. F111\·nskin Area. 2 lot~ incl. .5Z>G.COO. Phonf' 17141 846-6371 for in ro & ;tppt. ----~----· Out of State Pr04>. 178 i *4 BEDROOMS* LOW, LOW DOWN ' College Park Beauty. La.rgr bednns .. 2 balh11, huge Iii'· ing room ,,·/fireplacr. Overlooking hf-autih1! yard. Builtins. dbl. gar ., pa1io. CALL ANYTIME , 646-3928 or Eve. 545-3483 Lachenmyer Realtor Gorl.:t'OU~ Ne1vpor l Heights. :'1 1 1 Fantastic Easlside 4 hed-$30,200 bedrooms. 2 baths, aplit room in prime location. For· DOLL HOUSE - 2 BP. .. split lrvel. ~1in'OrS g a I o r P . ma! dinillJ::, hugr rountry level. end \mil, greenbel1, Hillsidf! location. Don't mi.s.~ / size kilchen, raised fir£'· sho11•pla('t'! Newly redec-or . it! Red Carpet Realtors. place, 2 bars & hPavy shake thruout. l.oy,•es t mainl.en- full dining room. King sized /;;;I r;;;v;;i~n•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. bedrooms. Brk. 846--0604. $$$$$$$$ :;46-8640. roof. No1v vacant -besl ance dues k. leasehold. Ex-have JKoen spent in top qual· TARBELL hurry _ S33,500. CALL elusive \\•lth _ ity carpeting. paneling. 11•all- O\VNER n1ust sell. 4 becfrooms. 2 baths. entry hall. natural brick fireplace, beautiful cabinet, 1v or k lhruout, custom featltrel'i, n>al pride of ownership, new shag carpeting, park like ynrcf. $29,X(I. Brk. 540-1720. * LA.RGEST •.•• * yard in to\vn! Corner lot. 3 BR, 2 b;c, lan1. rm .. bltns. Ba:<ieball fir ld, s1vings, picnic 5'15-8424 (Open eves.) SOUTH ~ papers, draperies, paint, COAST REALTORS. _.·::\t-.,. 5824 \V. Edinger, patios, shrubhel)' and much . , \. Huntington Beach morr. Now 1he 01\·ner ha~ *MODEL HOME * :st P .. '/l 1:1 tu .. ff' ""'"TRANSFERRED'" 11 Price rfiluCt'd lo l46.9!'JO. For _,. Q!!Jf COOL IT you and your family enjoy quirk 8a1e -0f last home in " I in your own pool complete a beautiful home then see C1.>untry Club i\1anor -i' -~ rca ty 1vith waterfall. This 3 Bed-this one. 2600 sq. tt . of Jux- Beautiful view ol Santa Ana -:....~-room customized _home fea· ury. 4 bdrn1s., 2~·l ba., 2 C Cl b C d 2414 Vista de\ Oro ountry u . rpts. rp:<i. lures knotty pine bonus firt>places. master bdnn. lndscpd. block \\'all. 6'M in-Newport Beach • room, It \\'On'! last at $34.950. suite is indt!scribable. Th is lt'rest. Open house 5!1. & 644-1133 ANYTIM~ GI Tenni;. is it! $59,500 IncluclinC" land. Sun. 125 _:i:~e Masiers Circle. * ELEGANT * ZERO $$ DOWN ... Country kitchen \l'ith lai'ge I 67j...(IJ44 &l&-1414 family room. F 0 u r 1 h , 3 BR ~lomc on large Jot. ror bt-tlroom & third bath I 1 ~ sale in Gr<int's Pass. Ore-idc~ll.y locatt-d ror u:oe asl I JilobW•Homet ~' gon. 642-1834. n1a1d s <1uarters or guel!1 . 1 Real Estate Want•d IU room. Utility room 11·ith 11••••••••• 11·a11her / dryer ho o k u p . \VA.1'\"TED R-2 property ad· Sprinklers, block wall fen-Mobil• Ham•s jacent to beach. l'\~11·port cing. Juxuriou.~ carpeting & Far Sale 125 Beach to Corona d~l l\lar. drape:<i, dish\1·asher. $38,500. Ha\"e $5000 cash & SSOOO Call 54&-333J. 12xil Mayfiov.·er double ex· Coin Collection as 00\\'n pando. 2 Br., all extru, paymool Al• 6 pm n < BY 0"1-ner. Prime Corner ' ' : adult park. 108 Osprey Ln., 684-4375. Super pool! 2 Sty.-4 Br. F.V. 968-1363 or 642-1186. frplc. lam. nn. crpU;, drps. VACATION Mobile home-in Many extrM 97~2120-Lido \Vaterfron I 5 BR Tri-level, pool size cor· Park-Slttps ~. Sacrifice ner lot. $58,500, principals $1950. 67l-l817. :l'"""""~~!"" ...... ,....,t llrcas.-$3'1,.500. DIVORCE BALBOA BAY PROP. Ph: 540-.'i.->58 or 644-8616. i\lany extras in this delu.'Ce $50 lotal closing cos1s fo (ii d h•11 Fam. Near "'l:>ark. schls, ious appt's., plush carpets. \Va!! to \vall carpets and · , ; '.\IESA Verde -3 Br . 2 Ba & ·:i an., -3· bath condO~ LUXur-vet on large" :! bedroon1. I : -re -·1 only. O.vner. 546--08()7. -~~~2,--"'_.2.-',.2.,:,-~----'-C...---...:.C:..::;:.;:.. __ J ',~ ~'-BR, 2 BA. Jndry Mission Viejo rm, view lot. S15. mo. :\dlts. QUALIFIED buyer dt'sil'ts Canyon Vu hm .,Cdlof. Shore Cliffs or Cam~ Shol"e9. Prine Only. \\'rite Clas.'lified Ad No. '.187. Daily Pi!Clt. f':.O~ Box 1560, Costa li.lesa,. Ca. 92626. this V.A. owned -$26,000 an:oa. ·Biggest mess \\'e0\'f! seen. Bui 3 bedrooms. 2 balh~. you can'! Jose. Sl5S0.00 total down, $182.00 total p;:iymenl. Buy it and save $$$. Red Carpet Realtors. 546-8&10. *DUPLEX.- CORONA DEL li.TAR WaJk to the bP..ach Vacant -$63.500 CHUCK CAROTHERS REAL ESTATE TREASURES 1831 \\"estrliff, N.B. ~5152 BAYFRONT Charming 3 Br , 2 Ba, Condo. Pool, pier & ~lip -$79.~. TED HUBERT & ASSOC. 64TI Via Lido 675-8500 Sell Mlle items nov.'! Call 642-5673 Now! \Vestm .. $11.900. 839-1486. * 642-7491_*_ . POOL-PRIVATE YARO shop p i n g. N f' w J y beaut drapes. The best of drapes. Excellent neighbor· HE redecora!ed & shai;: crp!de. living in th is beautiful home hood. Payments less than U . P k ~LTY . ELOORAOO 2 BR, l \; BA, EXCEPTIONALLY Nice 1 BR lux. cpls, cust. drps. P\-1, 8."40. Sl .650-Term~. v;ell-lndscpd, low mntnce, Call ~a-4530 \VANTED apartment hou~. Orange Co. 10 10 50 units, not more than 12 yr~. oltl- Quirk action! ffardy 21:1: 378-85ll ext. 336, day or nitr. • 3 br 2 ba, fan1 rn1 1\•/sunk- ,.n har, \\ieJ'itrliH Area s.1ci.!XX.I. ca11 675-7~95. 12 x 24 alun1inum nn off 6ituated on a major green-rent. ~vii Aar . t'nler. Irvine bck -Playhouse in back bt'lt. May l\'e show you this. SKY BLUE WATERS 1 a nyhme, 833-0820 covrd patio &: garden \\'alk, !~~~~~~~~~ Back Bay VJE\V of hills a nd UC!. 2 Story. ~amed ceillng -4 Br -Se\\·ing Rrn, frplr. lri; lot - lo1v lax. $38,900. :>1£.-9!J.l6. )'Rrrl. By ov .. ner. 546-3451 MORGAN REAL TY and a great J Bedrooms, 1% BY 01vner • Lovely 3 BR, 673-6641 6751459 bath home. Can all be yollNI lpl., c:or lot, rm for boat, *Lovely 3 BR, frunily r m. for ~27,950.1 It's really a fan· camper 2835 Portola Dr. Lusk. Derorator Interior . fa!'it1c buy. Call 540-8555. 3,1&-1031. ""'"" lod•<Pd· $53.500. By SHERWeeD REAL TY i\JESA VERDE, well kept 4 011·ne r. 644-2341. 18964 Brookhurst, F .V. Balboa Peninsula hr .. 2 ba., fm rm. Lg yd & patio. Lush cpts/drps & Huntington Beach ---------1 more! $48.950 0 IV n r . COUPLE 'S HAVEN Clean. sharp 2 BR. on Point. Cov"d pa!io: din. arra .. No street noisr. $5.1}150. --GEM- 1610 \\'. Coast 111\'Y .. N.B. REAL TORS 642-4623 5.J7-Ri!}.I. MESA DEL MAR A.~sun1able S \~ '.~. Complrtely rrnovated. Top cond. 11any xtra~. Lrg 4 BR, 2 ba,' fam. rin. $36.500. Principals only. 54~l-7&1\5. * ELEGANT BAYFRONT * EASTSIDE. 4 BR, blt-ins, Rt'furbished 19n. Panoramic frplr. fam. rm. ya rd 'ic11·. Nf'1v pier. 8 BR. ;. ea. [ "'·/treE11. Good area. By Courtyard entry. $195.000 owner. S37,00J 675-6611 1\·l11r~hal Realty 67~MGOO PLUSH :1 BR, 2~ BA, large Bay1hores ree room, 11·rt bu. 1ttany cxlres! $34.500, 540-1761. 3 BR., 2 Ba., r!ln rm. <'ll~t. crpt/shutters &: drps. Elec Fountain Vaf11y kit Low Lise. hold. 67i>--084(). --------- 4 BDRM. -$24,950- HEAVY SHAKE ROOF landscape artist's dream come true, lt't'es. colorful shrubs and !11.>'o\'Crs. 2 pullman bathi<. D r I u x e builtin kitchen appliances. dishwasher. Huge Jiving roOm "'ith i n Rpiring fireplace, full dining room Patio. Sprinklers. B k r , 962-,'18'>; TARBELL c I B h BY 0\\'NER. 4 BR., 1 ~.4 BA. ap 1trano eac 1 h soo am. t in. '!: ag rpt~ .• l Hamilton & Brookhur&t, ~q. ft. $31,500. 963-2141 or Jiuntington Bch l)ELUXE 2 Br. bllin ki!, frplc, cptg/drps. close to t'verything. Al pine Real E~late 493-2332, f' v es 496-55.93. <213) 379-£721. . Like to trade'!' Our T'rader'6 Paradise column IA for you! S lines, 5 days for 5 bucks. CLOSE . TO , BEACH 2100 SQ FT S BR-Ol x 2 slory $35,950. PRICE REDUCTION In lh~ heart of Fountain Valley. acros,.~ the street ll'om Mile Sciuare Country Club & Park. Seller has been transferred -reduced $2000. A. VA buyers deligh1! 4 lrg BR, fonnl din nn, :all elec kit , sep. util nn, over- sized 3 car gar, massive firepl, w/upgraded crpts I: drps thruout. Beaut ldscpd \v/concrete block wall &: covered patio. See for your· M!lf $35,500. I' 1llJ ge ReJI EstJ te f'2-4471 I:::) 54MIOl $20,900! SWIM POOL paved sideyard for boat or FREEWAY camper, $29,500. Assumable ~ ORIE Reel Eslete, ,a ,,. NTED 6%.% loan. Ovmer. 837-ll85. Gen11t•I .tWI Low, Low Price 4 BR, 2 BA, lam rm. Jndry ';;;;;;;;;;~;;; NE\VPORT Belt area 3 or 4 br hon1e or to1rnhouse in ex· r.hange for arc stock clear Come see this 4 BR., 2% rm., view, ,;hag cpt. $38,900. I bath, 2200 sq, ft. townhouse, Prin. only. 837-3836. l or only $32,500. (}lvner is I ----'--'--'="'--- Acr1age for sale 150 ~~~~ loan prop. pnif'd. anxious. 1\Iakc offer. c-llnli''l \,lld. - - -.-ll11nll11 r "SINCE 1946" 1st Western Bank Bldg. University Park, Irvine O•ys 552-7000 Nights 4 BR. 3 BA Turtlerock. Buy thru Bkr, $48, 750: thru Q\\'nr $47,400. Tabor Drive. See sign! Laiguna Beach RETREAT Lush, mature landscaping lends privacy & charm to this 2 bdrm., 2 bath family vit'1v home; 2 fireplaces; lge. family room. built-in kitchen are just a fe\v desirable features at $43,950. Newport Beach 40 ACRES l ~~~~~~~~I Oranges, 80 shareJi \\·ater, I ~ ~ Ocean View From high vie1v location near ' ___ ,_""_"'_;'_' _ _,I • Hunter JndUlltrial Park, a _ . AU, Angles multi-million S development. ••••••••••! Tired of looking at ne ighbor's Out of !1.>\\'11 owner say~ _ waUs'!' Cast your eyes on "Sell!'' J v.·ant action Look I Busines' lhe sparkling blue Pacific this over &: n1ake an. offer. Opportunity 200 from any windo\v of this ~~aries -Columbia, --:4.V_A_l_L.;A_B_L_E __ .;.I custom Temple Hi 11 s M1C'h1gan . ifarlborough &. NOW mansion. \Vatch the sun set Gage Canal <East of Io1va behind Catalina Island. Buy Ave. in Riverside\. Bill .a telescoJ)t'. Words can't Fagg. Realtor, 714: 683·4740 describe the beauty, this 3 GOV'T Land • $5 ac. \Vr ite bedroom has it all. Formal Land Grant, Box 5341 San dining room, lush carpets Bernardino, Ca ( s e n d and matching drapes. \Ve stamp) "'ill trade anything you =='=~~---­ have for this $00,00CI cutle. 80 A'CRES, New J\Iexico, nr. You will ~e. Call for .ap. national foresL $61.25 PER pointn1ent. ACRE. $49 l\fo, 968--0047. Large Corporation desir~s n'Sponsible perl!On to di• tribute TENCO (a Division of Coca-Cola) COFFEE PRODUCTS. Can start full or part time 15-10 hr11. per wk.I Company establishrs business Wr dis. tributol"li. 2~) ACRES Antelope Valley, NO SELLING! only $250. (knvn. Owner must sell. 546-3086. Go fishing or spe.nd more Realtors 545--046.5 lime 1vith your favoritt 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams Commercial hobby and let the machine Open Eves. Properf'I 158 age earn you monP.y, CASJi POOL REQUIRED $2498. Secured. First Tim• Offerod HIGHLAND DR. Coast H\\)'. Corona ·del Mar Lii\1ITED OPPORTUN ITY S@\\Qij}.{-~£~S9 VACANT, large upgraded homr. in x:lnt arra, featurts FORMAL DINING area, 2· baths, b\tins, fre6h paint 1n and out, plush carpet, drapes and fireplace. Owner anxious -Submit your tcnns. can 847·1221. Live a lift' of ease in this cozy • attractive home. Genl'row 6i1.ed ~rooms. 2 separate bath'!', all elect~ic builtin kitchen, full dining room. Patio. Gorgeous shRg carpeting, cuslom arapes, Bkr, 962-5566. ' 0 ,I a H Ideal home in prime Harbor 3 Commercial & duplex: \Vrlte 00\V for infomtation. "4 16' Highlands area. 4 Spacious $95.000 O\VC TD@7*~ include phone number. REAL ESTATE BR.. !om. rm.. 2\i bo. RED-BREW 1190 Glenneyre Sl. Kitchen bltins, cpt/drps, l: E. 17th St., Costa Mesa CORPORATION The Puzzle wilh lhe Bui/f.fn Chuckle f. 17141 Bea('h Blvd., H.B. $50. DOWN TARBELL Adams A Magnolia, Huntington Bch , Low, Low Down MlniJrium clol\•n movf'll )'(>U Into this large family rm :? Bdrm, l ~ bath Condo, ho Bd 2 tre hi · ed C me. 3 nns, baths. Full " Y paint · arpelll, price only $28,500. Call now. drapes, washer, dryer , it ~n't liuit' relrlg. ll!.450. Coll 968-#11. REAL ESTATE FAIR CREST REAL TY 1114> 5u.2ss1 REPOSSESSIO.NS ABANDONED. DIRTY & for Information and location CHEAP -Owner wtntl of these FHA .I: VA homes, out! ~ paint A broom, contact _ clean up and rtnt out for KA~AllAN xlra monlbly_incom•-A>-~· ttunabte loan SW. per 494.9473 549-0316 a gpArkling htd. Pool . Top location, low lfown IOOI $44,000. 11.5% Spendable mum HO\\'ard Avenue BEACHFRONT San Matto, Cm nA•"I CALI. '-' 646·1•14 ReatOnomics, Bkr. 675-6700 ... J't'IU Fabulous view, beaut. bfach. 91'\;/" ~ ILLN ESS forcea l&le of aoo- 2 BR, 2 BA, ·gorgf'OUs own-....... Duplexes/Units. ccuful lawnmov..er shop itl )'OW'-<l\\'n apts. Security, REALTY safe 1'2 Costa Mt'sa. ALSO rock ele\'8IOr, pool, gar. $45.000 N••r N1w••rl P•1t Offfe• shop avail. Call DANIA to $S5,00CI. Owner will lease-HARBOR View Homes-5 i.-4 plexes, C.i\f, $108,000 REALTY co. 642~. p u r ch a 1 ~ _ 0 p_ t ton , " '".1-• lrg tom __ • den terms. Gro~s $14.340 yr. 7 t 4 : 4 99-3 011 5 Bk r. , uu.a·.au.., ~ ......... '"' ' 3-'1-2'-3 br. Tobin-"R1ty Business W1nttd 211 213.849-5225.. Unu!ual DF.cORATOR IN· !W6-3JTl. --,-....;,;;;.;:;:.._;:.:;:1 · TERIOR plus all BUILDER · R!At. Ei;tatr Ca 1 u a I t 1 EUERALD IA y E)CTRAS. Cborming uM!d B! o"~•r: Capo S..cb. w•n•,d. TO]> dollar IOI' .. .i ._... btick patio • fl-rin.. $50,00J or tradt for lot. Call atate offl~ Oro-,_ Chann;,,.,. 3 Br • Fam. nn. ,.; ... .... ii:.,~ n.,.i.e ' "ft .. ...ui1n--~ 'v/qualnt g-~-b-·"tost -· ty Salesman It'--•·--Jmmaculate! Ocean 1ide of 111"'"" ' .. -• 11 1V1W·" n\l1 nook. $72,300. By 01t'Mt. Income Property '" continue 111ork. ConOdtnUaJ. Hwy, View. Ideal location. For appt. phone &f4-.6246, 64$-3339 or Write o .. lfied_ $1'5.000. Mut1t see! INVEST Wlaely, b t! au t . Ad No. 450, c/o Daily Pilot. TED HUBERT l ASSOC. BAYFRDNT PIER delux•. brand new. by P.O. Ben !S61), Coot. M .... Mn Via Udo 67H!OO · ' liuild<r, !SJ .... 1.,,.., $65.000 Coli!. ~- BEJICH HOUSE Channing 5 BR hooch"°""' H<h. <21 ~·· Good ' m,$00 on llabdy '"°'"" Exel.Un&. loc&tiona In C..ta Me ... Money lo LHn t411 Quaint home .arta; close fn. harbor action • cholct lfun't rnrto~ B~b •• MONEY avail for lit• 2nd e PRJfHE~=r ~ I' r I' ,. 1· I •ry~~imm ·I I I I I ·1 RHI Etl•tt W-H04 monU>. CLEAN up this <BR. 2~Ba.. Roberts & Co. '62-5511 pit.is Family rm. Being sold ASSUME nlA LOAN by OW11'!r. 131,200. Ap. 4 BR condo, """' drps, prall<d a t $3.1,000. Pr11> ttfT!a. Sm•ll down. Paymts <i]llos only. Aft 5 p)ll WI 1.,. than rtnt. Bier: Eve, Stam ttU's,, fir. lo cell. locale. . Wa:tmlns1er 5.14-2153. lo&ni al.to ~ 1'D&. lrpk., picture window. rel .. 2301 ll&Yllde Dr. 1168,000 21 •Unlf.Hr 5:h0P'9. MANl n McClllN! n..i w .. bu. I Br w/baU>. By Appolntmen< 2 l 3 BR. 2 Ba. q:ll F,1111 Ealsle, 101~ S. Hill St.. MISSION REALTY <!M-4731 'l'td Hubert .61"..a:;oG Are, 'Im. ~ ~t· 341.s957. OC.onaide, <ii>• m~ The b.stetlt dn.w in the WrtL , ,t Dally' P 11 o I C11,,;fltd Ad. - IIARBOR View Homt • 5 Br. Somenet. X&na. fttt land. 544-4911. 115! Port 111orp1 .. BRAND n~w dt'IU.'fe trfpJex, I;;':.'";::--· ;;;49_,2--,,.,,,·=-,.,--i 2281 Fordham, Dr., C...'\f. Dlil1 Pllol W111t Adi ha Bldr/owr>et. 34Mtq e\'n. 'barpin1 plorrt. SCRAM·LETS ANSWDS IN CLASSIFICATION 700 W-2312 !l!.1-29-11 or ll63,Gll0. ~ I • . JOIN THE 'SELLERS CIRCLE' WE'RE SAVING SPACE FOR ••• ~ ~ ~ '· ~ r-a-s ~ ~ ~ If you sell a service and don't advertise in the DAILY PILOT Service Directory, you're doing business the hard way. The Service Directory (classifications 600-699 in the classified ad section daily) gives you an advantage you ge.t through no other advertising medium. It reach· es customers who are ready to buy. Be there when your prospects come into the market looking for the services you have to sell. If your service isn't listed, we'll start a category just for you. Pick up the phone right now and reserve yuur space in the "Sellers Circle" ••• ' Your Direct Line to Directory Results • 642-5678 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED AD DEPARTMENT OAJLY PILOT :fJ .I.___,..._ ..... ___,I~ .__I -_ ... -__,]~ I -for-lr;&l --....r: -. ~ I Ap.,lm<nt• I• R•ot 'i' --~ , --·~ -[ ' --lr.-~ ' Apar1mtn1$fcwRent 9 -'P•rlmtnl$f•Atnt '"'J ~ ___,. '-' .__/ . 11 111ooo"-"~•~l~o ~L-.. ~"~.....;2~il0 H.ou ....... •u•n•1u•,•~ .... •30.5•I H~ou'.:'.:':17••-::-U-n~fu~r-n~.~-30~5l:A~p~l:•·~F~u=m.:.::.·~~~~360~l~A~p~t.~U;;.;_nf~u~rn~.~~~365;;.;.~Ap~t • .....;U~n~lll~m~.~~-:NS~I Huntington lle•ch Bo1lboa lstind Gtnerel Gener•I Rea' Estate Lo1n1 $1,000 TO $15,000 NOWI liOM.t.'OWNERS:. Compan OUR COSTS! \Ye are NOT Mortgage Brokers! Our LOAN GUARANTEE as- sures you of lower rates! Our variety of repayment plans pennlts us to please you personally, NO PREPAYMENT PENALTY Fireside Thrift Co. 2328 Harbor Bl. C, r.tesa 645-lOCO 819 N. Alain, Santa Ana 547-0684 FREEH landlords-Owners We wiU refer tenants to you FREE <ll charge ••• r.tany desirable tenants on our waiting list. ALA Rtnlal1 e 645-3'00 a DREAMY! 1 Br, nr bch V.'/frplc, encl gar, $155, ALA Rental s e 645-3900 e LUXURY -Spat 1 Br. enl'l gar. crpts, drps, siul pets, Sl80. *\\1E have a 11.fiO WecUon * BAOIELOn. APT. * of 3 and 4 bedroom hotnt's Yearly, $175, Incl. util. that can be mo\-ed into \Vh1ton Real Estate 675-3331 almOlt immediately on our Rent-Option plan . Balboa Ptnlnsul• SHER\VOOD R 'E A LT Y . a $25 \VK & UP-On Ocean a 54~8555 Lovely Bach • 1 Br. • RoontS 3 BR 2 BA nr Golden \Vesl r.raid servi<:t"-Pool-Util Pd. & Edinger'. Cr~ts. drps, fncd a Call 6/a-8740 a •ttDDEN VILLAGE APTS. Hom .. Llkt llvl09 Families Welcomel 2 BEDROOM-2 BATH From $159 Carpets · Drapes · Air Conditioned • Enclos- ed patios -lieated Pool • Forced Air Heat • Carport & Storage. 2500 South Silla, Sant• Ant 546-1525 tenter 2 blks IV. o! Bristol, off Warner on Linda Way, south to W. Central) VILLA MARSEILLES ALA Ronl•ls e 645-3900 NEED CASH? $1,000, Or up to $3,0IXl, $10,000 and more. $215 - 2 Br. Tl1 studio, bltns, See Avco Thrift for a Real pool, ocean vie\v, yard. Patio. Vacant -BRAND New Beaut 3 Br 12·1j/1no. Ofc. 8.U.-1103, res. Duplex, fl'pl c, pat1o. steps to 833-3886. ocean. Yrly only $-JOO. mo. LEASE 7/1. J BR. 3 Ba, c96c.2-00_.cc' ~71"---~--~ fornil din rm, cov'd patio, 2 )'EARLY 2 Br. Stovl', refri:;, sty, 2 frplcs, fam rm, pd garage. Beautiful con d . grdn1· & \1·tr, nr bch. Adults, no pels. S 2 00. $375/mo. 962/29l2 673.£244. 673 -8224, SPAC IO US 1 & 2 BEOROOM APT. furnished & Unfurni1hitd Adult Living Estate Loan. Upon ap-$275 -2 Br, hltns, ne\\' crpts, proval, use the money drps, Crplc, bean1s, dbl gar, ho"'eve,·ou like. Also ask yard, patio. 2 blks ocral'\. about r unsecured NU-VIEW RENTALS perso loans. A V C 0 673-4030 or 494·3248 COOL Catalina -$185 -3 Corona del Mer Br home. gar, tncd \V/kid.~. --------- Rent-A-House 979-8430 2 BDR::'ltS., 3 baths: frplc. Irvine Fantas!ic ocean \•!ey,•! $425 1'.Iontb. No pets \VUllam \Vinton Realtor Dish\vasher color coordinated appliances Plush shag carpet • mirrored wardrobe doors- indirect lighting in kitchen • breakfast bar • huge private fenced patio • plush landscap- ing: • brick Bar·be-Ques • large heated pools & lanai. Air conditionin~. TllRlfT. ft£O Ne\vporl Ctr. 1 B1fAND NEW-$495 Dr., Suite 101, Newport 4 Br, 3 Ba. Fam rm. 2 frp!cs. Beach, Pb. 833-3440 Carpets, drapes. Next to 3 BR .. 2 ba., atri, .• $325/335 ?29 1'Iarlne Av<'. 3 BR .. 2ba., fam. rn1 .•. $335 Balboa Island 675-33.'il \VE Ii A VE OTHERS Cl-IAR.i\11NG 2 Br., crpts, drps, range & refrig . Located on oceanside of llwy. Htd. S\vim pool & car po11. Lea St'. &l2-8·100. 3101 So. Bristol St., Santa Ana 557-8200 COLOWELL, BANKER & CO. MANAGING AGENT pool & clubhse. Jfarbor 1st TD Loans view Hom"-613-71'1. LOVELY 2 BR, 1 BA, ne"·ly 6% % INTEREST cptd & dee., pvt patio, 2-car "IJ n ~ 'l J Piii!, A-p-ts.-Furn. 36o APt-:-U;;fum. ...:..,.. ____ _ Cost• Mes• Coron• del Mir 2nd TD Loans 1-:"''.-· ,;...'-'1'.c.t=-1~"'-_,._ .. _._'_'·_1215_ IRVINE Terrace graciously decorated. Family home. 4 BR, 2~i: ba. 2 frplc. patio- Lrg yrd. $600n10. 01vner. 6T:>--3032. -- -'11.rulior LARGE 1 BR -unfurn. "SINCE 1946" Water paid. 7191} hfarigolct ~ 1st \Vestem Bank Bldg. $180. Vac. June 3 -49-1-3661 LARGE 1 BR. Clean. Sunny. Carport. Nr shop11. S1-10/n10, + dep. 998 1':1 Camino, Apt. 1, C. :'It . 5-16--045 I. SHARP &: clean 4 Bedroom. 2~~ bath walk to beach. Family preferred. ~1onth to month. $390 pr month Call r-.rr. Bailey, 673-8550. l.o\,·est rates Orange Co. "WE BUY TD'S" Sattler Mtg. Co • 642·2171 544-0611 $15, ' Private mone~ estate loan. 1t Bkr. 499--2130. [ ) for real Adams, I~ Houses Furnished 300 Costa Mes• $130 -1 Br in 4 plex, child/ pet ok. Avail MW. $175--·Util pd. 1 +' fam rm, yt'd, patio, immac. $275 -Npt Hgts, lrg 2 Br w/ irplc & psychedelic bar. Nicely furn, organ, etc, gar· age & yrd. NU·VIEW RENTALS 673-4030 or 494~3248 Laguna Beach $100 -util pd,' lrg bach + loft beams, patio, etc, $125' ~ Bach nr 'beach, lull kit & carport. $175 -Tiny cottoge in gar- den. Charming! Sml pet ok. $180 -1 Br w/frplc, yrd, gar, nicely furn. 3 blks beach. NU-VIEW RENTALS 673-4030 or 494-3248 Seas & Sands -1 BR, lncd hme. Ocean view. Rent-A-House 979..8430 I Bd, ocean view, I blk Vic- toria Bch, nicely furn. Lg frpl. $235. 642--1272. 2 & 3 BR $150. 'Perm-estab- lished-salariei:I adults, no pets. Ref's. 494-8170. OUTSTANDING bay & ocean vie"" Avail. June 1 for 3 mos. CHff Dr. 2 Br. & den, 2 ba. $400 Mo. Adlt.s Graham Realty 646--2414 HouHs Unfurn. 305 Gener ii FREE RENTAL BOOK There are several good h o m e .s for rent foc approximately $200 p e r month. Sto p by and browSl' thru it. You might find \\"hat ~u·re looking for. C WALi< ER & Lt E Realtors 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams Costa Mesa, Calif. LANDLORDS! \Ve Speclallze in Ne\vpor1 1 BU< from beach, 2 BR, fpl., fncd yard $240/mo. Ask for Pat or Jim 540-855-5. 3 BR, 2 BA, fam rm. Harbor Vie1v, Extra sharp, 1~~ yr old. $425/mo. Pool facil .incl. 644-...1759 eves & "'knds. Universi!y Park, Irvine $210 - 2 Br. gar, apt, 1 blk Days 552-7000 Nights ocean, Deck. Yrly ••• --~ $250 -2 Br. 2 ba hst\ Lovely patio, ttar. 1 blk heh . , . 2 BR., 2 baths •• · · •••• · $300 $600 _ 2 Br hse l *~ blk 3 BR., 2\~ baths • •· · -· · $335 ocean Sips 6 Avai.I July 3 BR., 2 bath' .... 1325/365 NU-VIEW-RENT A LS -3 ibared.,hiii ~;1& ~:~"11:~:~J~: REALTY 642-8520. 1..:.::...:c;.:.;_ ____ _ Li\RGE 1 BR npl., nicrly furn., pool $138 n10. lS.'0;7 111onro\'ia Ave. No. 3 , ~S-5-1"/0. Huntington Beach Cost• Mesa A LITTLE GEM! That's lhill chic one-bedroom apartn1ent in one or to1vn's Univ. Park Center, Irvine HO~IE nr heh ror adult 1 ... ~C~al~l ~A~n~y~U;m;•~•:";-:°'~'°:....,.lwEifi(ii'.Y:NiOi~Hi'V family. 2 Lrg br & den. Lots 11 WEEKLY-MONTHL y of cloSf'ts, lrg patio. Best Laguna &each Executive Suites Costa M•s• nicest complexes. Smartly laQ.UINTA HERMO~A detailrd. privale: carpetl S!1nn1sh Coun.try Estate L•V· and dra()('s, too. Oul11lde .._ ing: & Sprtl,'JOUS J_\pls_. Jcr--a~~h:-garden-wittr-+- ra('cd pool: !"unkt'n ~a!! tin nd I All for RBQ. Unbelievable Living -146g ~n ~ nC:OOi1'6 0 1 or un11s . 1 11 YBR. FURN. $l75 Call l\1rs. Phillips 642-2824 ALL UTILITIES PAJD THE VENDOME crpt. G1l-130·t 2080 N I Bl d $150 -Util pd, 1 Br. SIO\I(', ewpor v • .i BR, fam rm, din rm, 2 ba, Costa Mesa 1845 AnahC'im Av~nut" Harbor Vie\V Monlego. Pool l"<'lrig, lovely ..,deck, ocean 642 2611 1-1 hlks S. of ~an Diego F'N'Y -view • * * $170 -* * rivi!. $450. 833-3894. "205 _: N. End, lrg 2 Br. nice STUDIO_S & 1 BR'S on Beach, l blk \V. on llolt 3 Br, 11,; Bil. ne\1•ly painted C I M • FREE L to 16211 Parkside Lnnc .) os a esa crpts stove d('Ck gar vie\v. • ~ inens Bltin11, crpt/drp!I, encl patio. $255 ..:_ ~a Hi!ls,' 3 Br, a FREE .Utilities 17141 S.17-5'141 Nr echls &-shop'g, Oiildre11 ldl02.50 -1 Br ~Hoge, stovke, 2 Ba, b\1ns, gar, paHo, pool. • Full J{itchen 114'> • 11""' ok, no JM'IS. 880 Center SI.'. rps, gar, patio, sml pet o , NU-VIEW RENTALS e Heated Pool . . . B•c\,•lo-& 1 B~. patios. CM. 642-8340 or 54S-26.112. $145 - 2 Br. in 4 plex, stove, 673 '"'" o• 494_3248 a Laundry F. ac1hhes . " ' • re.frig, cpt/drps, encl patio, :..:.~.:.:.:::_ __ , ____ a TV & maid scrv avail frplc's, priv. gar ll f:: es. NE'iVl~Y DECORATED kids/pets. Newport Beach a Phone Service Divided bnth & lots of Lrg. 2 Rr \\'{1,ar. \\!tr. P(l. $175 -2 + Den, frplc, bltns, ----c\o:r;et:r;. Rl'c hall, p.')OJ & Call hh\'n 1 & 5, 636-1120. gar, yrd, patio. $325 -Very lge 3 Br Penin WEEKLY-MONTHLY pool tahles, sauna bnth~. 217G PlaC'f'ntia No. A •.• $11~ $185 -2 Br, stove, refrig, Pt. Re<lec & nice .. , SUNNY ACRES See for yoursr'1f! 173111 15TI Oran1,e No. A ..•... $13.l. gar, yard, children/pet ok. $325 -l & loft & form din 2376 Ney,•pot·t Blvd K('('l~on Ln. 11 blk \\'. of 2 BR. r-.1~a v er d e $205 -3 Br, E /sirle, stove. rm, h'Plc, 2 decks, boat 5-18-9755 Lo\v Ra!rs Beach, 1 blk N. nr Slater), To\\•nhouSE'. Crpts., drafM'S, reirig, gar, fencd yrd, kids/ slip • • . STIJDIOS & 1 BR'S, ROOMS S.12-78-IS encl. i.:arngr heated pool, pets. $365 -Npt Shore!!, 3 Br, 2 e Free Linens & U!il. _U_P_P_E_R--"t"ro-n"t-'-'--,--8-r-. $1!f.l. 963--401'1. 1215 -3 B•., ,love, •ef·,·g, ba, bltins, nu shag, !epic, •. a Phone Serv-lltd Pool .-... 1 k' I k k & • , , v,•er oo ing a c par 2 BR, clean-no pets-teenager crpts, drps, frplc, gar, fncd $400 -3 Br, 2 ba, frplc, huge • 'IV & Maid Serv Avail bc11ut. enclosed paHo & <lk. $145, TI3 w. \Vilson. patio. patio, boat slip . . . a Children &-pet section pool. Adults, no prts. $159. 548-4407. $245 -Mesa Verde, 3 Br, NU-VIEW RENTALS HOLIDAY PLAZA _:_:135::-_:12t~h_::S:::t.,'536:::C"::26::92::_-__ * LRG Deluxe 2 BR., 2 BA. bltns, new crpts, gar, yard, 673-4030 or 494-3248 DELUXE Spacious 1 BR. 1 ,. 1 t nrl l BR, Condo-Foo, s. car gar., gar. sml pet ok. Nr. Sol x n co · Sngles. Families 2Br $179 furn apt. $135. Heated pool. nr bch., yr/summer. 8151 Coa!lt Plaza. 545-2321. NU-VIEW RENTALS Spit !vi-Vu 4 BR, kids/pets Ample parking, Adults -p kt ("131 '4' •~' ---------01 awtuc e · s. .. ..............w. VACANT 1pac'-·• bach aptl, 6734030 or 494-3248 2 + Den + Swint pool 1lCl pets. 1965 Pomona Ave., ""' e RARE Find! 2 Br, encl kids/pet C.M. Newport Beach nr colleges &: shops, util pd gar, E /side, kids/pets $135. Rent-A-House 979--8430 *--$-25_P_E_R_W_E_E_K. * e \VINTER RENTALS e $130. Call 91'9--0134. -I ALA Rentals e 64.S..3900 J BR, 1% Ba. Steps to Bay & & Up-Pool & maid serv-\\'est Newport Reserve no\v! 1 BR apt $115 S50 Cleanillii Ocean, beaches. Garage. kitchens available. ABBEY REALTY 642--38.10 dep & "'Rter paid. CaU alter a CQzy Cottage lv/!rplc, Adults: no pets. $300 yrly. MOTEL TAHITI BACHELOR apt on Bay -S; G4.>-l9&3. , Npt Hgtll, Fncd yrd, encl 675-8417. (Corner Harbor/Victoria} 200/ A ·1 t SPAC Z & 3 Br apt $140 up gar, kid11/pets. $165. Lido Isle. S mo. val or • k'·': ALA Rentals e 645-3900 LSE. Spac. 2400 sq. ft. 4 Br. $135/MO. ·Dix mob hm 3 months. * 675-8549 Pool, cpt/drp, bllns, li.ui lg lot, $425 NB Back Bay w/screen ,...,rch, con1pl S 1 A • ok. Th-· bed 2 bath .. -•n a n """'" cou .. , No. 5 "0 ~"• '""" room, Av!. 6/26. 642--2681. furn. hid pool. Adlts, M s,Q.,/Q OOW-•u.Ji chariner with large fenced <I S . 2359 N t OE ANIA PLAZA 1996 J\'fap!e No. 1 &12-381 Yard and ga,age. 1210 pe'" Newport Heights pets. eason s, · P I • Blvd 548-6332 1 & 2 BR -Fw'n. & Unfurn. ONE Bdrn1. Adults, no petll month. -----~-nc1-~ I C WALl(lR & LEf Realtors 646-ml 2043 \Ves tcliH Drive Open 'ti! 9 PM a BUDGET Bachelor furn, 'valk to shops, all util inc. SSO. ALA Rentals • 645-3900 e HARD to Beat! 2 Br. fncd yrd, encl gar, kids/pets, 114'1 ALA Rentals • 645-3900 3 Br & fam rm, 1 ba. crpt/cust drp11, cov'd pat v•/bltn bbq, lrg fncd yd. Chlldren &: pets considered. $225 1TICJ, 1st & last. $.')() depos. Avail Imm ed, 64:>-ms. a FOR Lease, 2 story, 4 br, Furn, Bachelor & 1 Br's Pools. carports & other ex-Pool & ulilities i uv.:u. 2W. ba, bltns. drps & cpts. especiilly nice. 2110 tras. Nr. S,A. & Npt Fr.vys. $145-$150. 548-7689. Garage Avail 6/l. S.385. 213/799·6133 From $US up. Adults only, + parking & storage I Newport Blvd., CM. , Townhouse Unfurn. 335 Lagun• Hills no pets. 1402 Fruit St., S.A. I BR w/Den--2 Ba. * SUS * * 543-6620 •. 2 BR. Adult!!, no pet$ Studio Apts., 1 Br. $125. BAY l\1EADO\VS APTS 1 Older adults. No pets Apt. Unfurn. 365 387 \V. Bay SI.. CM 646--0()7l'. 2135 Elden, Mgr. Apt. 6. BRAND Neo.v • 3 BR, 2 BA. patio, crpt~. drps, pool. * NO DEPOSITS * $210/mo. 714: 83.1--1411. Lrg newly decor 2 Br, 2 Ba, ..::::::::=...::..c...::c:.cc:.:.:::::. __ I pool. & rec area. Furn/Unf. Duplexes Unturn. 350 645-5530. 710 \V. 18th sr. DLX 2 Br furn apt, pool, Corona del Mar close to shops. Adult11, no BRAND NE\\'-Avail. in pet<>. From $150. 1 9 41 June, flugc dlx ownE"r's Pomona, CM. unil. 3 BR, 3 BA. Fireplace. 2 & 1 BR apts. Close to all bit-ins. 1800 sq ft. + 3 shopping. Adults. No pets. Blllboa Island * * BEAUTIFUL I & 2 BRi Contemporary Garden Apti NE\V & beautiful 4 BR., 2 Patios, frplc., pool. s1··· baths. SIE:')ls to South bay. $170, Call 546-5163. $55'1 l\fonth. yearly. 2 BR, den, trpl, pri patio: LARGE -hL'(uriou!!I 2 BR. 1 d t d Alt • rps, crp s, re ec. :l, ha. $375 mo,, yearly M8-8301 or coll: 2ll: \VINTON REA L ESTATE 592-Sm. 229 r-.farine Avr. Balboa Island 675-3331 PATIO or OEN-2 Br, 2 Ba, $150. Adul~- Corona del Mir Call f>.lfr73.1l. decks \V/vie\V of bay, lnq: '17912 Rochester, CM . iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ocean. & hills. \Valk to bch TROPICAL POOL-1 BR, & ~hopping. 1 yr lse. $425. furn. Pri. patio. Apt No. 7. DELUXE 2 BR. 2 BA, trplc. Dishy,•asher, etc. $1W mo. -.,, 536-2652 Beach e Corona de! Mar a 3 Bedroom hou$C 20'x30' &. Laguna. Our Rental Ser· garage & laundry house. 910 vice is FREE to You! Try 1 \V. Congre~s St. Open 2 Pi\1- Refs. required. 673-0960. 1~5 E. 18th. 548--1168. 2 Br, 2 Ba, sml patio, nr bch. $1».Nict'ly furnished 2 BR , adults <>nly, no Pe I s· trailer, adulf.s, no pets. 132 $2'li/n10. Yearly. 642-S5ID. \V. Wilson. 645-4530. ~ ON TEN ACRES 1 & 2 BR. apls.. unfurn. Bltn.i, pool. 31'.l E. 17th PL $13."J & $150. 612-9852. Nu-Vlew! ;':..:.PM:::' "-' _:C:::·'::':..· ~~~~= NU-VIEW RENTALS 2 +Den, singlesok. &5BR. 673-4030 <lr 494-32!8 2_BA. for_ families. _ $190 r.tonth. 2 Bedroom. Rent-A-House 979-8430 Newly derorated Inside and 2 BR w/gar,.,$140, fncd yrd out. No Fee. Stl-6691 or \\'{patio. \Vtr pd. 2228 96l--5566. Placentia Ave (B). Call btwn Corona d•I Mar l &: 5, 636-4120, Walk to beach -Sngls, cpla: 4 BR, 3 BA, kids/pels ok. Rtnl•A-Hou1t 979-1430 2 BR, dbl garage, children OK. $18."i mo, lease. Call Agent 642-lnL 3 BR. garage -Children but no pet11. 377 E. 18th St. 642-4163 ($115.) 3 IBR--2 BA--crpb, drapes, ITg yd. Stove avail. W-slde. Near scbls. 1225. 557-7878. 3 BR, Hrth\'d firs, fantily Otl-- ly wl adult male. $250/mo. -Bia. 83()....6000, 540-1720. 3 Bedroom. 2 bath. l'lf'w carpets & drapes. $200. month. Call ~. EASTSIDE 2 BR. good cond. Lovely yard. Prefer older couplt'. $100. S<ls..on~ e,~- Huntington Beach NE\V Hunt1.ngton 8 e a c h , 3,000 sq. ft. 4 Br., 3 b• .• Huntington Beach 1 BR. Flx. Furn. \V/\V shag. Sl<Ann 3 BR 11L Ba-trl Qui':::!. 2188 ?ttaple, C.i\.f. · lV'o · ' .,-;r . ' crp ' Adults drps, gar., fenced yard $180 . ..:.::=::." ______ _ Edward Peters 213 : From "Chri.stma" Neckties" R60·4.127, 10 outgrown Levis -you can ~pll. Furn. 360 :::::;;;....:..;,;,;~~-~~ Gen.rat A Bold New Concept FURNITURE RENTAL 11' Month lo hlonth • 100% Purchase Opllon • \Vlde Selecllon. .Style.COi-O r • 24 Hour Delivery turn "tr8Jlh to cash" In a DAILY PILOT classified ad -call 64l--5678 TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A bonus rm., OlytT1plc si. 517 w 19th CM pciol. $ ( 2 S. 213/430-5667 2756 N. hf;fn SA &4!·3'81 547-0314 ' DAILY PILOT WANT AD 3 BR t'ONDO, 1\1 BA, pools, pa lio, dbl gar, frpl, nr ocean. 962-<mG aft S pm. I BR Condo, pool, cl~hoe. cpt/drps, an applianCf'!!, S150fmo. S48-J4«;. !537~. A COOd 'l''AnC ad 1& I i:otJd inve'ltmtnl 1 OR. lo"urn. & Unlurn. FROM ONLY $175 OCJ::AN QUEEN l8.'l0 E. Otrlln Blvd. tong Beach f2U) 435-584~ Mng'd by Willlam \Vn.Ht-n Co. I I 2 BR. Fum. I Unturn. $170 • 2 chldrn ok. 3 BR, 1% Fireplaces / prlv. patlol. BA, lndry, c r pt Id r p r. Pool.9 T•nnlt*Contnt'l~Bkf5t..-dshWJhr, no .pets. SG-3215.... 900 Sea Lane, i:'dM 644-2611 $15.')..2 BR, util included: (MacArthur nr CoASt Hwyl Mature adults, no kids or CUTE 2 BR apt., 1 ba., garage & lau.ndry-pri. ('n· trancc-$215 mo. Y ea r I y lease. 675-61M Avail June 1. pets. * 642-3375 eves. r Jl 's a breeu .. sell Your Items \\'ith ease, use Daily Pilot Clusified. 642-5677 .. • ,, - • . ; r2~2~D~A.ll·Y~P~ll~O~T~~~~~~~~T~~~,d~oS~,~M~ay~23~,~19~7~2 ~~~~~~ :~·~,~ l~I , I • ... •-•t«• ... ]~ :..I -·'"-"''-~~I ;;8 "';;"" ;;:I~~ l_-..>nd ...... j~ 1-··-J ~, ._ ........... j~1 ~[ ~.,,.,.,~ ..... ~]~[Ill [ J[JJ Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfum. 365 Summer R1n t•l1 420 Rentals Wanted 460 B•bysitting G1n*\ing Ttlevi11on Repa ir Help Wanted. M & F 710 Help Wi nted. M & F 710 1-'-------~ CUSTOD IAN loco.I church. Co5ta Mas• iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii HARBOR GREENS Furnished & Unfurnish.d f,.om $120 t o $21 5 m o Bachelors e t Bdrms 2 Bdrms • 3 Bdrms I Y2 or 2 Full Bath 1 l\1a!;tf·t sii'r bt'dt'OOm!l' 11 I hi.t.:h bc1un ce1Hni.:s. la1'~" Jiv1n~ l'uvm 1•/~:l'< nr \l"ood h11m inc nr,,pJa cf". Convent1•ul Ja11ndry arl'a of[ kilchen. /o'.11f'lnscd !')<I· tios. 2 s1vi mn1ing pools, sauna, J'f'<'l'f'll.t iun fa<:ili· tics. Security i.:unr<I Models Open 'Iii 9 pm. 2700 Pet e rson Way, CM nr Harbor Blvd & Adams 546·5025 AL 'S l..An<bcaplng. 'l'rl'~ * Bt..AlNE'S 1'V * BABYSl1'fElt over :1 0 , .,. hrs. \\'k,."ood benetHs, l remon.L Y&rd rtmod"""1""'. Servicing All Brands bl · o I ~ • ....... '6 rt"ha P, rl·I !'I. 11n ran~ .• pnl· l l p10. 6-t6-TI4'f ask for 'J'tub bautmc, lot cleanup. J\uU)()ri:t.ed htagnavo:t llte hskiitng Mon.·l"ri. 7;:¥}. J)()n. ... Rep&ir sprinkltrs. 6'13-U66. J..:nown for honesty ~ 5:30, :{62 Est.her St,. C.t.l . P . General Services Tile tilS-0016. Data roca1 s1n9 1----------.:...c..:.~--~--o.--E:-.:tra shar p gal nrcded to Bank of America tukc full charge of ;:icrou nt!\ Balboa Branch pa)11hll'. Pny !)\llf', tyJM' ehet·ks, pu11C'h up thr dnta & 614 E. Ba lbo• Blvd. pi'Oi·c~s your 1-csults on an NCR Proof JH.\I !'iy.~t1•1u :; con1 putl'!r. . O St;u•ting sal:ir~· l<J $1rJ(). Stnd Machine perator n•sunie 1u i\l rs. ri1t'Clun-. J.::q>l"·r. Or \rill Train P.O. Bo:1. 1s10, Nf"\1·porr l:qunl OJ>llOI'. J-:111ploy1•r :B~<~a~r~h~, ~~,~~'"~]~. iiiiiiiiiiiiiim l ---SEAUTICIANS ,;, DEBURRER Newport Beach I ;J)'. '..! 1!1l ~lObi~l' 1111"1''· All WANTED JULY 1 HAHY~I'l,'INC. My 11omt". EW 0 ! util. J,, nnlrs ~ulh of ~ti"~· RESPONSIBL E J)a.vs only. t :xp. &: Rl'Sp. PARK N P RT I k·an bord,•r. Hy ~··~k iir I WOR KING COUPLE ttlQthe r wilh f'X. ttli. F'enc-n1onH1. 6 11-!"JJ or ti-1'1--0-llf>. APARTMENTS + -....-' n~·.-·d till•' or h10 t>o;:droom t\l yartl. jo);. ho~&. fttmil)' Ren tals to Share 430 I lious~ ,1·itll J;ui,:t' lrnct>d r11vu·onmenr. Rea."'nuble. Oil the . ba.Y. I Sl!AJU : ;: l'.r. ll0n1,., ll.H.' ~',ur.i (fo: lll't1 Vlo:B~~\VELl .• $-t day. Jto1 lun.::11 $.j day. Luxur1 ap:\f"ft1ll"t1I IJ\1n~ ?V· 1'..:i•i'r)·J/iio•· liwlu.leil. ;; ~1 1 RAINl-.:D d(ll(!!) $1....,. nio,;t. Hoi d.1nl"lf•r. k h1~h for llousehold Improvement CEllAMlC k Vinyl 'f1:e-. crlooku•" the \\·ntcr £"JOY 1 .,, , .. ,1 r V11 " bt•lwi-i·n i'tth & y,,.,0,,-.. tl.1otht'ls \1hu h11 \1 latr A 10 ", H·-'yman h'.l tt"hen, Baths & En!rys.' ... ' \rs UV(•r iJv.v, ·1 I ::i pn1 ' · " · 1' "'"" $7j(),()()O health ~p;1, 7 swim-~~. ·.11 ,1 · , 1. ' -1n1·a1· \~'-Ba)' S1.1 CO!:i1'A \\\Jl'kin; d:1y. 11.B. a r('a. Indoor & Outdoor painting, Cuslom '''ork at Reasonable . . "' ·' uy \\,.ru ,,. A l s •fl I I 11· -•t 111u1& pool/', 7 1ight~1! 1cn·1--.-.. --I i\Jl<SA. !"A~·:li>l l 1 11f1 Ii p.rn . 13111 ,.,. u~1ar(., a, ... 01,1· i:lcan-up 1c repairs fron1 Hates. Glen 548-726:t ni~ t'Ourtll, pl u!! mile!! 01 1 LOOJ\/N(, for ii1rl to ~h:.11·~· ----I !!Chool areu. ~-roof to la\\·n. 839-3898. ~~~~~~~~~~ bif'yrlr• tr:1 il ~. Jiutrinr:. ~huf. j lrun<· i1/11·orku11.; ~irl. 1 111·! :\1,\"f lJJ<l-;d c pt' n t! ~. ; 1l1·IKmr!I t'J'Oqt1et Junior J"f-.• ~· I i·h1ld . ok. ~i1~1-:~'\.1I. \Vk·t ' "" ' t'"f 'f!LE \\'ork. pa i nt i 11 g . ~ ][1• f•) · · · -[ I~ '>'· lll) .,..,m · ., .. ~. lle~nablr Rates. fret> es!. E•ymtnt lrouu ,Sl!~.~ 1nnnthly; :tl~o I I :n1 C11y I" ~hnn• h1u1~·. Al'lllouncements ~ ~·1·nt«I ."t. hot l"n"h. .. .._ Da\·{'. ~""::-98.\2:· ~·~1 ~"~"~· ~"~'~"'.I ~;;.;;;;;~~~ I :tf'r't 21hfodroon1 11l:'l11<; n111J 1 $7'."1/11111. litJi~ S t 1 n ~ r a ,\ I ~,.J.>-!067. 1>-l-\...i~23. :?·S!Oty 1,111·n /1(1"~('<;, F:!ec-, Lill~". IL/:. <':di !ii:l-tJi8. I __c_c:.c_:_______ -- Irk: kitchens, pr!v:11c patios . , , . --Carpet Serv ic• BY Plf o o $ c;. lJ. elecl, Job Wanted, Male 700 (II' bnl('()ll lf"ll. t'<Jl'JN.'li11g, 1lra· Nt:;\\J (JH r Hl'~H·li : bPaut1f11I Announcements 500 J)lumb, fl.'nC(", i tl s t l n s . Space For Rent! pcr lrs. Su1i1crm11e:i.n rinrk-Jf\1i.:1• .~1(11"·',·',' ','.',. :-!,1,",':,i" J'ri. *W t d D d* J_;?111~.·s,c .. a11>C'•·.' & UpEbo!',",ry, ~~d. "."':.':.,·_;,..,,•.ile. BA/MC SCR,AM•LEJS IB30EAWUT"Yktyo-, .. tor 642·0844 in~ 11·1th 1•h;V\l!Ors. Op!loruJl ~'" la 1. , .• r.. · • an e ea '-~ '" " ...... :;...,. <>;>'I ,..~ .. Exper. in hand & po\ver tool maid ~Cl'Vt<:e. Just north ol !:iluin· I txln11 upt, poo l V\VIAJun1i11un 1 1·<111!C th:1t havf" ·l)!'l·~.·hanllPl~I Ji;_,t'I' :-;cd':otch· """'rAL SERVICES CO. ANSWERS Opening for 2 bl'auticians deburring or pi·ec:ision nie· r "'h''"'' 1 •. 1,,,1 .. 1 ·'"·'''"-r· )'.!uu1· Soi ••t'1ar ant~). 1v chanical con1pontnts. .. ,. .~ .. .. .,.., \\'l1h gil'I fr••<", Cnll Jlarotd s1·r1'1"d you 1vt'IJ & provid('c! Dl:'grea.s('rs .t all color Plumbg Jnstall's-Carpentry \\"ilh following. Salary + PC 1111d &i n Jonc111in Tldl:s G42·IXY.i0 6·9 pn1. 11nurs ot plf"asu1'i•. Rt;N'. '..'. 1 . 1 . ,,.1, .. R-a,·r • '"6-l~. romm. Paid vacations. ~ ir~ 11cflf'r:> A· JO m inute " .... .,.. """ 9 llr Day lload. Garagesfo;-R en;--iJS 1 .. l!J!;o C[t·nnf')'l"f' si.. L:i· IJll'nch lor 11 hi ti~ carpets. ril , 1 . 1 Trealy -Salute -Dumpy-bcne[its. Apply in fJ('rson .(j J!otu· \\'rek /111-:\VPUfi'I' DEA('J! ! i.:una Bc•arh. No glass 11·h:i!· organ ~c.re aria Mystic -RUSTY only, l\lont;::on1<"ry \Varel 1• 1 ,14 1~ I Sa\"f" you1· n1on1•y by saving 979-87:,0 1 · l't'O!it Sharini;; ~ l'phonc {714'1 v • '"'IV \\'A~'TED : t:;tra~,. / 11 I' ~_,h·1·•.'I' tt('('Cl'Jlf". d_ 'You may be highly polished lit'll.Uly Saknl. I unt1ng1011 for rt'ntal u1fonna!lt111 ~toJ" <' (' \I ~ K n1<:" i·x1r<c trip!>. \Viii clron All Typing Photocopic!I I i\I JI H B 2nd fl ·r _ ------_ · :ig , · •JI' • '· SU.~1;\oll·:n CAMP Boys & livin." !'Ill . dinin" nn. & } p · -n .. 1. and s!l 1 be RUSTY in spo1s. J a . . • oor, ue~. BRAND NEW 1;.12_r.,;,.,. .. ·re" 1ckup I.:. ..,..-1very !hi·u Sal. __ Girl<; 7-1::. Ou1~1:1ntll11~ pr,.,.. hl\JI ~1: •. A11y rn1. $7 .50. H I' 1\11. nurse care fo1· 11ut,.·11! _ --------- ALL UTI LJTl F.:S rA rD I Office Renta·1 440 l g:1·t1 n1-Top notch ti la t l . I t't)uch $10. Chiur SS. lj )TS. au ing days. Prepare lunch ''h'. 5 E F~ A UT Y 0 P " I' ;1 to r . ~\+rnishi·d Availalilt• f)ESI< ~naC'tl ::il'a.ilabll' S.10 Jtcasonable ralt'S -FnE:r-.:: l'>:p. is 11·ha1 1•nu11ts, not LOCAL /IJovi:s, h 8 u 1 in g, d:iy "'k. 638-7?..11 aft 4:30. Guarantel' + co1nn1lssion THE J. C. CARTER CO. .t"JO-Off Jst !lt11's /{l'll f, .on I mo. \Viii provide furnit11rt Br" c h u r", CA 1\1 PI 1ne1~1. I do \\'Ork myself. l·ltanup. Exp c o 11 e g e Job '!/anted, i=emale 702 646-;7~6.ct=~- l!!!!!!!!!!!!Jlllll!!l!l!!lll!!!!!!!!!!!!il I I I . 2 CA YUCOS, C•yucos, Cal,·r. t;ood rt'f. 331--0101. t d t ' -t k R AO,., BU!LDER0 v 1 c I 'I ~·eru· y r>;1sr, \\' l•'l'I )01.t-uru1~ at SS mo. Ans1,1·eNg service s u en . ...."' nu:., .es. , ' " . 671 \ , 1 th Sf.. os a l• esa DEL UXE in I his acl. avail::iblc. 17875 Beach Blvd. ~MW. STEA~! Carpet Cleaners. 5.14-1846. NBED J:elp at hon1e? \\IP Ncctl 2 ('Xp'd & 2 al)pr~ntices 548-3.421 APARTMENTS 2010'2 Birt·ll Sl lnr O.C'. ffuntin~ton Reach.~~321 ---iiiiiiiiiiiiiii pl'Ofl'sslonal a l Io we tit '{ARD cleanu . have Ai<les • Nul"!l'.~ • 1 foi· <:atpentry, .oonrhng_ & Equal Opportunity Ernploytr Air Cone!. F'rplc's . 3 Swim· airport. s. of l':1lisudes r~rt 1 . I =1~ flrices. 3 avg: rms complete ' garagt." er ·pg 1-lousl'kcepers • Con1-' II a rt!\\" are 1nstallHt1or1 . ;.:..,,..;,;,,.,...,;...,.;,,..,,. ming Poolfii • ~feaHh Spa • 1 Prh" palic. hdlillrd 1·n1.. );.~~~!lt~~A~.I ,'.l~·r~r~I \'~;ihi;·r;~~ Personal~ ~~ _$3_'9_.9.l_. _96_w; __ 72. ~7;7o aU::s;, 1~:·ck;:: pa~ions ~ H~memakcrs -\yc~lsail Corp .. 1626 Placen· DELIVERY boy, canyon Tenni! Crfs • Game & .1.H'U·l.i. :-.r·. 1'(' llVUlf', l'a1'k111i:. 2 111 S!j() <II' l'ltll· . * CARPET LAYING * 8~7-26li6. UpJOhn. 547-GGSt. tia, Co.~~l'Sa. Auto Supply. 843 Broadway. Billiard Roon \, I ~IJ.!1·. !t7~i-:-i:<:S'.' I C p GE 1,.ARD & G Cl \\'ANTED HOUSE\\"OP.J~. BOOKKEEPEH. & gi:rK•raJ Lauuna Beach. l EED!lOO~t ----· I 111111· uiro l al $Z:,o. 1770 . P ersonals 530 * .. ~.;20"10' * aragC' eanup. I aguna 111 1' 11· ·1 1...::::o•:::.c:c.:::c::=-.~~--- 1' A.pts., ()ran!:'l' ;1t ltocll~h'f. C.\I I lHv-f'rt'C' es!, 7 days. Call \Vrd area. -on, UI', 0 l('!'-~J'O!lg a c count s !)Ei\10NSTRATORS -i·pls i''ROrif $16'.'i Furn. or Unfurn . 370 h:111g11 ~1rd H1•1!1 r~ 'I ;, r t' , • F1JLL \' LICENSED * Carpenter anytime 548-JJJl. . Good referenr!'.'s. I' i• c r i v a b I e-payry.>ll . ,r.., ok. P/T, d l'ar n., 11('1 exp MEDITERRANEAN f ll 2?'22 %' ""/"" R I Jr d s . "t r . 493·4496. telephone ('.'(p. Construcl1on . 1v·11 gtr . ""o ....-.::·i ~-1 • ·· ·· _.::_:-~:. or · .\-.,_r.s. ~I ;i~O\\nt:' 111 u . piri ua. ist. Gan:lcning. Yard & Garage B 0 0 KKEEPER. pl-I<'''"· llackg1'0und tlcsirf'd • Ls lab-nee. 1 am. "°""""""' " VILLAGE Costa Mes a 21c GROSS :-;p1r11ual Rl'adings given LARGE OR SMALL E • pm ! 1ly 10 A ~110 P~l A I All T \" k c doo Cll'an Up. Free st. Full chare.e thru financial Ii.shed company-Goot.,..CQngc .".'.~''---------1 "'IJO lla•bor Bl"d .• C." S R I At'ill'O\ 4.000 ~(I fr of/1cc .t.: 1 a • · '11 ' 1' · It vice ~pes vot· : UI rs. R Rat "'" 0 188 1· Cl II DRAPERY CARPET Sales ut • "'-ummer enta S • 1 11 t I I 1 · · Ca.!i. es. u-w-.r ~.·t .. trmo""• 6",'·!...''!166 alt. r, ben~ 1ts-R. 'V. Mc e an & -• · 1. . . 2 1 fl . A 'C Al g1r..,1 o a n1n l'l'S. can pane , tenlOdr . 1n1 s h , ,, -,, u d C714l 557-8020 PALM MESA APTS. Ni.i;v t"&'"s· "'o·" ,~'.. hl'lp vou. framf'. r e pai r s, ctc. Housecle•ning P'.\I . Sons loc-548,:Eill. Exper. ecorator type ~r-RENTAL oJ<~FICE \VP · an 1eg:o 11y ln· ~12 • N El C . Re 1 BOYS '°" .for acth .. e store.~. Xln\ OPEN10AMTOGPril MINLITESTONPT.BC!f. h'rst·cr. <1n1ple prkin g, " . ainino .a 96Z-l~l. Le DUTCH I dra +com 49222i4' --,cc--=~~~~-'--FURN. OR UNF'Un:'f. ~ 1· -,,-,1 Sa u C!cmenll' .,.XI' n-odol'ng . .,b'• 1. t c e_an your Help Wanted M & F 710 Age 10·14 to del1ve pa""rs I\ ni. . .. Lu' , .1· g" 9 .,,, r .. . n.0:111 1 i:.. nc s ~a,-t,. A"·, ,,--"ow• & ' . . ' •-E $700/$800 Mo .... •• .... ".1'J]a_ nedro _ 0 1-1•• .. •bt··-la•,..._-9,,.. · · I ~-J,,.; or 492-!JO:;.t · · ' · · ~ .,.... "'"' ''"' the D p San O orn 9--------J-~-·· ~ """ ...,...., " """' " 1 1-sr ... --_ I -bl s~" · repair s maint. No }Ob too floors.. X1nt 11-0rk. 537-1508. m ana oinr, e-• 1-~amilies Weleon1e huge poof, Jar:1zz1 f'!f'rl hi!-J · ... ~ri"c e ~val" c. ·"'I DISCOVER DISCOVE.1~Y sni. Re~s. &16-42'.?I. -·-·~. _ Ac.co.un!Ant·J r.._._ia..SSQ'.l mente areas. 4 Day 11•et>k. No e.'(p. J\luzl 2 Br., 2 full Ba, i;ha~ crpl/ ins, sh.1:;:-f"rpt~. drpo;, saun1 nio. _ \Vill provid~ furnJt1:1re Find YOURSEL/o" in Sonironc 1\I IN0-1 1 . Dedicated Cle•ning Pro<I. J\1anagl'."r 1o Sl2K -··-oArt-Y PlCOT-~ -tK.>-ovr.r'il'-h'iHing !Q "'()rk·. clrps, patio, ix'nm ecil. i!Hr· i•h" Adu!ls. JK1 111·1s. al$.;~~· A~ve11n~ service Ca ll 1101v • N'> ob\l~11 t ion 1 · \.\'' { 10n1c repairs .. P~1un· * \VE 00 EVERY~~lIN? * F /C Booki.:("('[}f'l' 492-4-120 Over Z::. 549-4186. age1. SJNCJ.P.S " .. , Fmin $1 ~~. ava: n e. Forest Avl',' ('i1 4) S'"j-(iAAj Cll''l 387 3::9~ iu.z . c·a.rpcn!ry . pa1n1Lng . fif>fs. Free esl. &16-28..-.9 Ruver-F.ll•(·. (~<;I::~ CASHI E~R;---· looiiiiiiiiii ... -.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiml F•am SI"'·. 1 BEDP..111 .•••.. l'roa1 1'1 ·1'1 -"-""--""_11 _EP:•ch_. 49-l-9466__ .. N •. 'T.l"NA-1·.·!.\' -~ tw fin~, Cctll 54()...j.)6()_ ---• * EXEC SEC'Y OJ " v i\fF.S \ Cleaning:. Carpels, Sf>r·'y.J\larkrl in.i; S675 Jmn1l'd. Opeuin~. J·:~Pt'l'. ' 2l'.l2 Elden Ave .. C.!IL :! UETI Ri\oL •••• Fron1 S!!ll BAY VIEW OFFIC ES kJo:COGNIZEO Cement, Concret• ,vindoi1·s. floors t>IC'. Rcsid/ 81.'<''y/Rkkpr $650 pref'd. Krrm Rin1a Hartl-E•l itorllli & sllles office. 548-8224 \'~u'rc right. th<"y'r!" hndrr· ])('I\).\•·, air·cond111011L·d /Pl'OBLE:vr P · , C ...... com'!. 557·C?'·lZ. 548-4111. Se<.:'y.Con;;lr/Anaheiln $fi50 v.·arf>, 2\l66 Harbor BJ. C.\l. Ed ucationn l Audlovisual oo. Move ln al101vanCf", lhis ad. prict'<l! 1561 fl.1esa Dr. I Rcdtcol'ated. Lido are;1, .' · · lf"gnancy. on-CE'.\!SNT \VORI~. no job loo Cl k T · liiiiiiiiO...ii.ii ... 0.. ...... ..i,;i Lyceum Produ<'tion~. Inc. (.) blks ft'om Nl'11'porl Blvd.) f:.eu liHllJ!lJi1·s. Bkr. tii:i-6700 fident, ~y~pathelic p_regan· s1nall. reasonable. J'rc-e BAY & Beach Janitorial, f'r ypisr S400 P.O. Dos-Jl2G, Laguna 1Ue81iBJIU 20 ~4G-9SGQ \t'r u't bt 1 11-. -cy eouscling. Aboruon & Eseini. TL Stu!lick, 548.8615. Crpt~/i\·indows/Ooors etc. p NEWPIOART CASUAL LABORERS Beaeh, Ca. !l:'tiJ2 ••• 1 • :-; 1 a e or o icl'. Adoption re!. APCARE. Resid/Comm'I. 646-1401. ersonne gency Urgentl Needed Sparkling new adult apts. e SPA_CIOUS e I Phonr ~t·rviCT'. pool 2.176 642-4436. FUN SPECIAL -FiN'pit + 2. 833 Dover Dr., N.8. y 1. 4 ,. 94 ,.· 6 ,. 25.,',.".,.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'I 1 BR, unfurn ........... $160. \Vell-Dl's1gned AfJls. Ni·irpnrl B!vrl. c. l\1 . 1 niodern benches. $1119. com· CLEANING Specialist: 'Vin-642_3870 • !lluslhave tranr.portation1 ~ 2 BR, 1 bath ............ $IS:i. ] & 2 BR. w/Terraccs. I 7,1!)-975:-i, ALCOI-IOLICS Anonymous. plell'. Patios xtra.. 644$S7. dOY.'S, carpet. floors, stoves.1~.,.,...,...,.,. ... ,...,..,.., & telephonl'. ENGINEER: !llanufacturing, 2 BR 2 bath 1.,..,. From $140 • •2'75/nio. --~ . . ., -. --.-. 1 Phone !'">"12-7217 or \\Tile P. & ovens. 774--0321 . J Interim or mechanit'al 10 develop Jiail. ' •••••••••••• ~u;i. St 1 1 4-" Ot l·!Cf.S, $J9 .~· ~b!J. \\1!1 o Bo" 1·~ Co•ta 'to~~ JOHN'S Patios & Block ADVERTISING Pvl pa!ioi; I b r t t I ia .. cp ' •ps sa 1u1s ·' L-> ~ " ~.. JAPANESE LADY Personnol Serv;ce boat production lines. Dfogree . · · u.~ ores St'· ,. _ · c. · · · u ·' ' 1h~c·(n'al<". N!.!ar 17!h SL. bank · · -· ' · 1\·or k. An asSM. or Var.·s Gr,..at opportunity for highly 'd 'f & I ·1 f llng, carpor1s, !!<IS P<L I pool. Jaru..:z1, e~c!. J:ar. & shopriir•I!. :-><1.~-Sl JS. L1ntlsc:1pin~ C.~I . 1;1::.1-0291 \rould like to house clean. n1oli\·ared, hi,::hly Rkilled 778 '"· 20tJ1, c .rit. i·eq • op p11y . x n u· 114 E. 20!h SL , C.'.\'l . .'118-01 37 Q ,C'I A<IUI! livHI!! ----[ J[ Qj -e 642-89'5 e 642-7523 '1~25'2 him """G""<°' Yocbl Park-Like Surrounding. MERRIMAC WOODS 0 1'/o"ICJo; .'.n Ne\\'J')0~1 l°:l'<l\'h, I Lost and Found PATJOS. On\·e,1'::1ys. Patch LADY i\·an!s houseclf'aning :~rr;~~~~~il~~·~~·~!nt~tb7a~~: ::==:=:=:=:::::l ;c~o~'~I'~· ~16:1 1 Plru ·entiii. CM. QUtET • DELUXJ.; 42J .,fi'lTimnc \\":iy, Ci\1 i a~p1~1: ;'·~ ... ;~!· fl. 2 Hoon1s, -\\"Ork. Lil's. ,FrN' est. Da\'e \\'Ork. Chl'n transportation. paf'f'd Nc\\·fl(lr! Bf'llC'h ad· EXPEP.JEr-;CEIJ Ch:i.irside ---------, Sl.)(J, .ii.-.,.,_.,. {l.JZ-9S'.i2. Ho1\·ard, G1-l-i'123. Clerical D ~ t I A . t I S d 1, 2 & 3 BR APTS I & 2 BR Furn or Unfu rn. -~.-.--:-~----------Ca.II after 3 pm. :HS-0029. \"f'l1isin£ agt>ncy_ Brains, ~-1 · 1 ~sis lln · • en Prv. patios * Hid p0013 Childn:•n 's section. Pool. tH·l-IC~. stlltt"s. <lo1vnl(l\1'n Found (free ads) 550 PATIOS, v.·alks, rl rivc, install -----initiativl'. & sh roouirl'd. Rrsun1,. 10 Classified No. Nr shop'g * Adull s Only $140 Up. F.Ll\1 GARDENS 1 .a~un:1. Ll'nsr. 2IXXI Jo;q fl ., . ' . ne1v Ja"·ns, :<a\1·, break, Landscaping Call 833-1670 •121 , Daily Pilot Bnx 1560, Martl"ni"que Apts. APTS. in E. 2Znd St., C.i\f., Cpts, 1frr1s. Reas. 4S.l-.'l02S. " N D. A I k. Terr 1 er ren1ovC". 54S-866S for f'st. TOP SOIL _ 540-009J GIRL Costa 1.tes.a. Ca 92626. 642-.:'"4'·. Busi'ness Rental AA'= Pr1odlf'-look. ing. Just clipre. d ALTERATIONS. Pe r son Jm Santa Ana Ave., C.i\f. ~ ...,.,~ _..,, wired thin t:ollar. Vi\"'". Contractor Fill Dirt, Grade, Rototill needed part time l\lon.sar. 1',IBERGLA~S Molder!!, •kill· Lov"-L" M b'I H 't I be cd & unskilled, All 3 shifts. -r. Apt 113 . 64G-~i542 1 . "'bl L 0 1 ~' 0 m 1 • "'I NE'V store spacr no111 !cas-Coast l-hl'y, nr. Balboa Bay • • • • • • Masonry '' us exp. in clothing & ' \Ve ,\·ill train. 1631 P!actn- SPACIOUS 2 Br nr shop< "1 ,,Se. e roup_e. . ~1 nr ing-. 2 locations in the' heart Club. N.B. 86g..8j2j. I mens 11·ear. 673-8782 FRIDAY Ila. Co5la i\tesa. , . , st-pt. 1~1. l 1ncldg t:oh•r r 0 C t 1200 FATIIER & SONS -BRICK, BLOC~•n&nn29 A:-.JBITIOUS 'Vom•n to '""'" t .... y s. O.C.C .. & u.c.r. $16j. T\ll &l."~OJ09. o. ran~(' ouny. -10 1 r ouND: Very small femall' Decoraling. design, carpl'n· STONE \rORK. ""'Ml:J "" F/C Call 979--0134. I . 1 .i.~I ~q H, C'OS TA I pup, hrf"y f.· hl k, ~IJi!ht fi..·. lf'ach prof. make-up. Vi- 2 BR d 1 . , I Hunt1ngtor Beach :"11 f·.SA-n1•:ir Sn11!h Coa.~1 lirn r : vi!". Balhoa Pr nin. try, plumbin!i', wiring, etc. Painting & viatl«> \\\>odard Cosn1e1ics. c.x apt, ~200 sq. fl. 1 ;i Plaza. C:1kf'r nt C<"11h1ry_ I ti7:i-S:i6~. 4 gE'TieraLions exp.· 25th yr. Paperhanging Call 812-&149 rot appt. ha. pnv patio. Full ~11r. NEW SANDPIPER linmf"dit1!(' o (· 1· 11 P ;1 n c Y. • , . in hus .• Lic'd & oonded. 1--'-----"-.;;. ___ lc-====~--'-'---1 Bookkeeper frplc, must ht' s<:'en. S:nJ F'O"N·,'AI N VAl.l.F.\'\~N IJ lrinal1• (,rrn1a11 838-3545 20';(. disc. P3""r & han".;"•"· APART'.\IEi\'T 1nanager. ""3 E 1 Early hircl S""Cials-1 llR ' u I "' E>p full •I CREDIT UNION mo .. u; • 8th St. Cl\1. Call ,... h<"t11r,rn c:rrnro S.· \\'ooleo. Shepherd vir. lluntington • e e • e • 1 niobile store vinv!. fiock. ~ · c iarge ~nanager 8X• Aft 4 548-3:"7-f1'0n1 $12\ 2 BR from $1"1.'i I "h l\1 I c•--0 ,6 ' • ror lar~f' proJCCt in Costa pn1. :> :>. I }~uru/Unrurn, cool color ii'-i Brookhurst at H<"rl fk. ~ ores ' ote ~11·ncr n1ust R00:\1 Additions Estima1es .H•·Jo..""H Thl' 11 au gm an 'f o.1 per1"ence prefer· to $700 D ' · idf"nt ify 21~ 217 iOS' ' · 0"'2182 ·' e~:t . .,,1 arv + aparlmf!l1\ an• Point 1rriors. pool, Jacuzzi. inorc. 1·upan('Y St'pt. 1. Call Rob _ -·• · -·•· plans & layout. single ~r 1. <"...,.... • i\fon _ Fri, 9 10 ~· OCEAN vit'\\' Igoe 2 BR. 2 BA, I ~OSI l loltand Drive~ _H.un-'\lish. 516-2131. S.11 Baker. f ND. hl'aUI. fml O:illie story. L.T. Corntruction. PAINTING • Hollt'St. C'!can, 21:l/Jj:-l-3SSO. ' red. ~ill consider A pcrmanc'tlt position 1,1·frur cpts, drps, bltns. Yard -11nglo~ Beach. 847-9,i!l.i. Cosl;1 i\lcsa. \\'t'!l-1.rn irl('d vie. 1'-ountain s.17-1511. guaranteed ,\·ork. Licensed AP'f MANAGERS XI banklRCJ Or ColleC• busy temporary help firm. patio. $!90 TTl(l. 837_3927 flf Newport Beach * * S!ore/Offtc('. t:: I a ss V;i.llf'y area. L<li'Cs children Additions * Remodeling &. irisured. 67:)-5740. poriunit; Ior expe.r. ~tu;ie t • • 1'1fust be able to do P&L'z & B37-Sl7S display f'ase. Do11·nto11·n :,K>-iJ!l:i. Cerwick & Son. Lie. EXTER. Complete 2 coat~. 1 \\'ill ing to iiurk. No children ton experience. financial !latements. Need-- OAKWOOD GARDEN 11.E. 21s.j1 h St. s11:1 per n10. S~IALL dog in p11rkin~ lot at 673-6041 * 549-7170 story $240, 2 .story $300. or pets 642-J&t:"i. ed immediately. Apartments ~136-6007. F'ood Gia nt . Ci\!. Looks like J Ac 1..: Ta u I a ne·Repair Neat '\\'Ork. Roy. 847-1358. S.l.S. TE~fPORARY llll'sot'l Livin.£" for ---sn1all Gcnnan Shep . . Apt Development Ir>.'TERVIEWING SERVICE * GREAT LOCATION 5.J:)..4S2'l. • · remod .• addit. :l(t yrs.. exp. PROF. paint!ng, .also roofs, Supervisor i\l & T 2 Adult.<; Onlyf S1ore ror Leasr on Ncw[)()rt Lic'd. My Way Co. 547-0036. accous ceil 1nler/exter on · ue.~ 9 am· pm 1~2-1 ~. Grand NE\\'PORT BEACH . .• ' -. 'N.B. based ;ipt devl'loJ>('r \\1ed l.hru Fri 9 am-12 pm Santa Ana 541-51-Rl \'rl .. Costa l\1{'sa. Crpt'g. FND fn1l i·aliro kitten vie. Driveways Lic/Jns. Free est. 64a-519t. 11·/FllA prDjccfs !hruout ON '""' Huntington Beach 1=====1 ON BEACH! FURN. & UNFURN. 2 BR. From $265 ADULTS ONLY 16th at Jrv!!ll" $3j(). Call f>-lS-:J.19:t SideJ.;'1111 Ln. ll.B. 893-RJOI, SE1\1l·RETIRED PAINTER country rcq's s upv to SITE OF OUR FRY COOK-Exp'd. Fu 11 I fi.l:HJ~i:il nt· 6·12-~170 ""0 7~" "fl' HAll'LEY'S Se•! C"•t,·ng·, ''."'" Sho•t -·•-A I . r.ETAIL shop avail. at T h<' ''l~r ,)UU " • "" needs \\'Ork manag1> ;i.pf, Df>si.l!n & con· NE\V BUILDING ""' o .... ~-.. PP Yin f'actory. $\iJ. 1110. See No. !J 1 F'!\'D-rna!e-sn1aJJ h r o w n 'Vcather, gas, oil resistant. ~2-125.::; struction activities 0 r person, Seafare Re! t ., for infu or 673-X>06. n11:-; brcl'il . Vic. Pen· S!ayr; black. 5'1:>-519.'i PROF. . nume1'0us arC'hitects & con. PACIFIC MUTUAL i\l cFadden Sq. N.B. (nr painting, inler/exter. pier) before 3 pm daitv. Industrial Rental 4S0 ninsula PoinL 67;:i..3.l84. Electrical Quality \\'Ork. Rea~. Lic'd tractors . Architectural FASHION ISLAND J ~IA N'~ ini!ial ring vie. Saii Ins. 557-7455, 548-2759 aft 5. design & constr, exp req'd. <Corner Santa Cnu; & • Gelco•t Touchup ~~s:~~s~;s~-J~ifJuin Golf C Q u rs c . Ek7!i~~~~; 8;~~~~.d~ No Wamng ~;c~r~:t~~-~g ~ p~ct:~~ Ne11·~rt Cenrer Drive) • Engine Men Furniture Available [ ]~ C a r p ets-drapes.flishwa~htr flenlals ,,ltJ heated pool-saunas-tennis '·;;;;;;;;;;~·:..; rec room-ocean vie11,os 1 patios-ample parkin& Rooms 400 8J:!-17J !. 1 F 1 o•o "21l * WALLPAPER ·* d . bl P . . , e lnst•llation Men security Guards. HUNTINGTON PACIFIC 7U OCEAN AVE .. !J.B. 1n4) s.1G-14s1 Ofc open 10 am·G pin Daily WU.LIAri1 \VALTERS CO. C..:ABTNET ri1Ah'.ERS-ns. ree es . d'N""V • esira e. osiflon rcq ! * F'REE daily bus lranspo" s2.1o s3 H•. E'P. """· FND f J c !l" . .. ... _ you call "J.fac·· I • 20 ~ " OF.LUXE \\'/ha. Pvt f'll lt". J<'JBERGLASS 1 · nl 0 ic v 1 c :7a rdening ...,,..,... trnve 10 supv l;i or proj· talion for "'ork in Los Columbia Yachts Rf'drr. Nu gold crpl. 'Vnlk Nr. Nii·pt Fi..,ry & s.o. Fl'l\Y Br"Qflk hurs! & Slater, F.V. 54&-1444 646-l nl eels in constr. Long tenn Angeles until mO"• 10 New· ~.0 7 1 ,. • Equal Oppor. Employer to heh. Yrly. 1244 \V. Balboa 2'J3 l Grace Ln . .;>....-· -1· __ .<\L'S GARDF..NING * PAINTING-P APERING gro\vth Po lent i a I \\'/Ilg-port, Sept. '72. Blvd, NG. I r1:o. of Baker, E. or f'a11 v ir1v ,\!,\LE Sinn1t"se. vie, Teinp!e for gardening & s ma 11 Intl'rior Exterior gressi,·c, expanding co. Sal "'""!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!! GIRLS 5'9" tnJJ or over, ta' iik U/l Apls, 2376 Ncii·porl ~I ,11n-12 noon l~!-J 11..'. S40-519S eves. Ser v Ing Call Jlarris 642-4558 perforn1ance. Send rc!ttmc i{OUSEKEEPER perimen! in slrenJ?th . Up to 71 1, "79 41 '4 ,~ 4-11 Ne11'Jl0rt. Cdl\J, Costa !lfesa, ;;7=~-_,...7'",..::.'='='I to Classified ad no. 367 c/o L' · * $30 per eve. M2-j641aft6:30 Bh·d. C:\I ll~!l7Yl I · " · ,, or•"" 1 !'LEASE i;.:1v1• rnf> a honi!'.'. 30 Day Special. Inter/Exler . .1 560 1ve·1n or cook for elderly H00'.\1~~-$1 ."i \Vk up \Viki! s:;o • ~ !\.11) Represcnlnlivc there 1 1 1111~. Laguna B ca c h . landscnping services. call Lie. Inc. Guaranteed dependent on exp .. ability & COJ\.IPANIQN. participate in sociology t X· -----I , Dover Shores. \Vl'slclitt. . _, Daily P1 ot, P .O. Box l , lady. S200 mo, 67;')-1932. PM. SEA AIR APTS • $115-DELUXI!:. ri•·iv e ntranr•' & NE\\' 4.000 Sl.J ft. 2 ores w; hi;:. 1 111 an u11clain1ed Jost dog. paint1,ng. • Lic'd/lns. Loew Costa !llesa. Ca. 92626. G ' ·1 •92 ?'1~9 ,. Ct LAi"'\DSCt\PING. New Lav.·ns 1 '" l F 1 0 G UARDS. L 2BRC 1 l l! lxd h, no ~n1okr rs. ('o)~ta _101cls \\/hot11·ater.2 o/h 1 ·•· ......... ~an rm1•nlt• rcs .. u rs.exp. reces . . C LLE F. or high school rg. . rpt.~.1 rps. l ns, ,1 1.7'"310 • "'" 1 .. h k I & Sprinklers. Rcsid 'l. Cal1Chuck,&J5-0809. APARTl'vrENT ri'lanager 1n gi•I ,,,anted heg,·n .. ,·.g PATRO.LMEN lblkN.ofAd•-1•.ofrB"a"ll "esa .. , . ....., ,.rlX-il.r. i oors, "' P P'1·r, par·g, l)I" lost "' C 'I M I I "" "" '" '" -~1 •17 .,.,;, Comn1. State L f c • d, . osta ... csa. aturc cp . or PC>rmanent ass1gnn1ent c M Blvd. 729 No. l l!il'n. i~T rootn &-11~ p~.1 -;:;;-_ !.:,.'?-. 6 1.,.. '' !°J.1l-4l·tG. YOU Supply The Pa.mt. Rms intervieiv call 17141 6..lg...{)700 n1id-Junc (1Jr e::irlierl to · · · · 5.16-2796 or :136·7070 l1'11ner . Also, ~i.-cping i'UOni. NE\\I DELUXE ill-1 Units. :; Los!; f.1::in's dinn1ond rin~, in Painted $15. Ceilings x1ra. 301 ~~--~--~-~ babysit 2 children, 6 & 4, for ;. Lagu;: areas. fu~.1& ~art ----t b 1 • l°"'I" ph. poi\'l'r. 1 7~. '. 1,1onrovi:i Delaney's Sea Shanty Rest. PROFESSIONAL tree work, \TS c.x...,.r. Also exterior ARE you bored to he idle? the summ1>r. Hrs. from 7: 15 ime. em. pay. 1 t 1n!., LRG . 2 BR, t .0 1y 4-pi"".·, 1 ~'~"-"'~· ~'~11 ·_·_,_~~'' .. "-'"-·--= ·' · · .-· ' 11· · · th "-t t • Bonus Pa,·d '' ,,. " ··~ ;l"l.1-.~l ·l.i: R1f.-9i!lS f"\'PS. ur vii·. Senliml'nfnl keep-pruning, trimming, spray· 540-i046. on1f'n JOin f' v1.:s o n\'O A:\I lo 3:.'l0-4 P11. ~ton-Fri · ' c ion. C".rpts. drps, R/O. lriud. rn1 .. Guest Home 415 suke. Rc1va1·d. 644·1816. ing, sprinklers. Landscap-\\'Orlds and change yo ur Some eves too if desired. Apply Suite G -· --;~;.{.Jl44.1cl., child ~k. $13:1. ·*PRIVATE ROOM* 40015~~r:~. ~~ sq.~~-~50-l-2 DIA:v!OND pl'nriant. vi c ing, cleanup. Ceorge 646-5893 C~~!~!,APER H~~!l ::~~-l~>TS j/~op & c~~~· ~fust have' own' transporta~ 52'.l .No. 9r!nd, S.A. for a nibulntory person. Good -Balboa Bny Club. i\lny 1i:. PROFESSIONAL • ..,,,~ tion & desire ro gil'e the If ANDY M AN -p I ft\me 3 BR. pa t!o. ,..11rl. yard. NMtr Re ntals Wanted 460 l G .... Plaster, Patch, Repair Ii.mi! -No discr imination -rhi!dl'l'n yout· undivided at-maintf'nancl' & custodial food. nice cheerful surround· RE\VARD'. ·19 4 -3 l 2 .~. • apJ.nef;I" a1uening Service ·-""'°'"'°"'."'"-,.-~00'.,.. I al . beach, p11 rk~ .t shopping. 540-J"lO F' E 1 fi.$6.-0ilg f'asy to qu ify -For in-tention at the benr.h or park 1\·ork for Pvt school (1-ffi) $2:")() or ~ubmit on least•, in~.s~ ,.. 11 "S A-.~ N 0 N ·Smokinl{ genllcn1f'n 1--'--"-'-· -------rec ~~ · * * PATCH PJ....\STERING forrnation call 9-12 niorn-or irhercvl'r you .~ they 962-3343. Agt. ~-440.l. ' .1 .... -.1:.i... * rll'!'i rf's sl('('pini::-r oo n1. q LD fa~h ioned bro3t'h Sun. Expert Jnpanese Gardener All typt!!. F'N'e t>stimate! ings--and aft 6 p.n1. decide to spend the day. ----.,.,=~----1 2 BD!t~I .. .~huJ:' •-rpt~. & PVT-St'n11 l'vt. r1~1s . for ;u11• l~f".'ll'onabl<". Ii 7 ~1 -0 3 1 0 , Stlv-(ln Drugs llr pkg lot, Complele Yard Sen: ice Call S.1'Hi82.J 846-300:; \V~lf'. telling us a little HELP ! drp~. $1.lO inn. <'hildri•n OK / huln1ory sr, " I ! i 7.,.. n !< • 11'ili8-i7itl!it7j. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiltiiNi.~Bi. ilik i11i·"i'i'li;• i'iil{}-ii27i"'iiii Frl'e estimates, 646-1624 Plumbing Assemblers about yourself & the pay r.lust be over 21, Apply In • NO JX'IS. Call :iSG-:ii6::. ' n1cn/\\·on1en., flal 1neals. 2·t C 0 i\1 PL ET E L..1\\'n. & I·---;;.,-----~ you desire plus your age, pcl'llon. 1180 S. Bristol, __ I hr ~t1prrv1s1on . J.111!ry incl. Gardening service. Hauling SAVE on home repair!!. Free El • addres!!: &. phone No,, lo: Santa Ana... DELUXE 2 Hr. l'::i-lAA . • .-1'1s-5:'2."I. * * * * * * & clean-up. Jim, 548-()4()5. est., plumbing, paint. in-ectron1c C~assif!ed A_d No. 420, Dally -,,=o"STME"s"'s""&'"· °"ll°"'A°'IT=R=.E=S~S-1 Varel. :;:ar. \\'nlk '" bt'h. I -s I a I 1 at lo n s , hauling. p 1 t Bo 1500 c t J\.l '5.16-7029 Nt'1v !lorn<". Lovf'l y Ir~. Jtms. ,.--------------------., EXPER Japane~!" Gardener s»-03-z A bl 1 ~ x · OS a C$a, Experienced over Zl . . I :\ly Sr nior Cl!izens :11'1' Complete yd service. Neat I . ssem ers Calli. 92620. Apply in penon. Hou~ 3 BR. 21u l:JA. 2 CBr ;;::ir., hlllll'JY. 11·f'll fed & <"lt'nn. & Rt:1i1t. Fret' es!. 642-4389 PLUMBING REPAIR COOK. cxpcr. F' It i me . open. Lovet Bar 8 Que. pa1 t0, 2 pools, elo~t" ID i 21 Shnlin1nr s r. 642-!lZiS Trader's Parad1'se No job loo small Sa.lacy ()pAI. Apply 23442 El Brookhurst. Adams. l'M'aeh ~?.JO n ':16-7:':~'' NE '\'-Japanese ~tning 642 ~ · ' ~ 10· .~ '" -$110. !\lONTll UP service. Call * -31~ * 7 NEEDED Toro Rd., El Toro. ll 0 U SEKEF.:PER-live-in I • Sludio Aprs. Phone :strvice, • 64.'i-2619 e COLE PLUMBING COUNTI:."R Vloman, 25 or Mon-Fri \\•knds off. Stari rvint pool. fi.f,_3x,;. I It" nes EX~ H . 24 hr, suvicl". 645-1161 P.C. 'd ovr, drive-in, Costa (11esa. 8128 for 2-3 \\'kS. o.,,, .• .-. av.·aJJArt Gardener Board (~i"'r. fl"<:[ • w PARK WEST APARTMENTS I Bdrm. From $160 2 Bdrm ,. 2 81. From $195 JS83 l'ark\1CW J...ani: lrv1iie. fJust off San Dir.o Fwy at Culver Rd ) Lagun• S.•ch * NE\V 2 B.R·blk to beach, spttlaculA1' view. S250 up. ·~ 1-338.1, 4!M-l339. Mei• Vtrde DELUXE 2 6 3 Sr. l/Ba, t>ncl pr. SW up. Rtnlal Otr. D:. ~lace A '' t' . , ~~G-1034. 2'.ll~ \\'. OCF:,\~fltON'r. Lr~. Con1plete gard~ning service Roofing J\fin. 1 yl', Opt'nings in Call ~ltl--2l~. l-tpm daily. ~8 ary OJX'll• trvint 1 br. J11ly Slj(I 11·k. Aug. $!7j • Kamalnni, 64)....4676. --..;;------·I Annhcim &. Nf'1\·port Bch. COSMETIC DEMO ·"'=""'·==~~~-! \\ k. fi11-~·'.lll7. t I mes \\'ILL I b • T. Guy Roofing. DcaJ Long Tfnn ass,.· nmenJ,s. o-nin" for t'X""r. Demo. H 0 USEKEEPER. hvt·i" I <: ean ack,yard I.: haul n· t I do 'Ol'k .,... "" "~ 1 di '" TAl\.11\G rf"!'rrv.11 1011,. '2 flit. ai\'flY _ also plant ground U'eC' • my oivn "' ' lnll'rviewlnst 37\.S hr work wk. Full coin· care 0 tod f:'r. Youna iirl (Ill(' block 10 twa("h. '1 lst & rovrr, 1--rec p,o;t. 4.%-5..14..'( 64."'r2'i&l. !Wl--!)590. 9 To '1 P!lf Only pany bene.tllii. Salary + pret'd. 67.>-BS:"rl. Balboa. fi·l!H>i.'12 A.\l's. dollars Sewlng/Alter•i'l ons S.T.S. TE.\fPORARY' ("()mn1 ba~eff on Mlr.s. HOUSEKEEPER • Com- l SPRINKLER REPAIR --, --SERVTCE Apply 10.12 & 2-4 panion, llve-in. fo• •I-'· Sun11nf'r 1"l'nlul..,)Br-lBa. N S 1tt *~ ·-'"'"' 1 blk. lo rn11 in tx·h. & -ew-Y. ems Alhtr•fiont -642 .. 5845 1424 .So.-Cr,a.iid..__ MA¥ COMPANY adult Jady. ~. Chi nu Covr. Cd\. ·I. ,,.,'.'",." I JOHNSONS' GARDENING Nta.f, &ctUrate. 20 YflU'S e.xp. Santn Ana :H7-573G So. Cousl Plar.a HOUSEKEEPER. lit• -~ " ...-":>\U' 1 Bil ltepubllc. 3Bti. rorm y 1 M · 1 · .,~~~ u-,·,101, c .•1, "'"'"" an aintcna~, P antmg BABYSITTER, reliable lady. """'),) ' i• for 2 ladle•, Summer Renta ls 420 di n rm. lrg tam. Tl'adr tor l!AVE 8 unit5. C.Plf. S~.00'.l. Ciea.nups 962-2m3 St1reo Rep.air lovts children, -t yr olrl, my Equal Oppor. Employer 67J..31M>• smnllrr 3 BR h:.i mf" /11esa equil:t'. \\'ill 1r:idc vacant e ~ liA Y \lll!,iV 2 lx>rtroom, V1•rrl.{' are11. plus or submit. Gif. ~ening. ~fO\V & STFJUX) t'Qlltpmtnt ttp&.IN. =: ~ .a:~ ':: C 0 l1P L E 1: Mai n-HOUSE.:'1AN -Exp'd fa sJetipz 4 coniplctcly furni!h· r.tr. Black, 56-'1·12,I Agt. Ctlll 642--6560 ge. e!!t. Home A complete fa.cil!Uts for all ·u~in r:::' 52!kil.6G tenance-ua z.tant mMagt'r adult11 couplt on Udo IsJ ed. A\·ail Jur to Sept. Sl5tl ----d Con1 mercial. 64>-5853. makes • m~-'-_ d'·-·nt mdloyYf. -nt~ for larac projtct In Sal• .... 0...-, 6~1tt6• ~ 20 -6 eol. Jtnack & ranrty \VIU. tra r: 1960 Plymo11tll • uuc"' -.vu ,.._~t •it p-• ti '"=,-;:·"'"""~~="-='~~·",.;;_~-I pt 1nonth. Adults only TIME FOR rates: 8 trnck ta-deick,,I...:::!:::...._______ u 111 a " 88· ""n 111 •1 t ~ _,.. n1achlnes. $1ritl0 val. Trlldc 4 dr 8rlvtflt re, rims Jt()O(I, cl , lj .... ~~.!!!..b•5c0k110r~un+d DAILY PILOT agen · u•.,..,"'->V. tor tr<1vrl 1.rlr 20' or btl1cr. 1st'5 oil, ):lnt l nU\~. for 1'111nl ean oi ar usl $8.00, tbii CLASSIPIED ADS ,,.. .. .....,.,....,,. ., .. w h i I l' Elcp'·nJs" .. ,.,,. r1ick-up comper for F'o!'d or Bikr, musJ be ;, hp mini· 9UICK CASH "-etk Sl.00 oU to Daily Pilot rt -t M ~ 9 1 , ,... " rt a d t rs (Rt'fllactm.tnt 821PR31.~. ".,"M, 0""""' '• 0 " WAN J AD runnlJu: , ... , """'!'? Turn anylb int of cq, vol. 51~""" mum. 96.!·995!. THROUGH A nt!<dlc• & ca"""-~ om. FOR ACTION. • • ~ them into •·c•.....,·• --·" 1 DAILY ••••«• ~" ~ PILOT U.S.A. Sler.o E q u Ip • Uk\! to •~do? Our Trad•"• 642-5678 tht'm thn1 Do lly P 11 ot * * * * * * WANT AD Wart-. 119 & ITih St., CALL 642·567B Poradise column ~tor you! Ctu..iried. 642.-.1678. I ~-••••••••••llllJll!!!ll!!!ll!!!ll!!!ll!!!!l!ll!!!!!! CMlA Mrn. SG.-Uf2. 5 lll'lf's. ;; days for :; buckJt. t • --~ T1Mld'1, M<1 23, 1972 DAil v PllOT D [ -l~I -I~[ U.clw•• )~ ~[ ---,' ..... :-=:-v.u --'.].:-=-Si l:::NY::::E::::ST~IN,...._ YOUR FUTURE Help W•ntod, MA F 710 Help W•ni.d, Ma F 710 H•lp Wonted, M & F 710 Help W•ni.d, M & F 710 Furniture 110 M l1colloM«11 111 TV, R•dlo, H IF I, 1---------1·--===----Storoo 136 3 Lin•, 2 Tlrnn, $2.00 F\1U or p/ttme. BE YOUR OWN BOSSI Men or Women ~!AID \Ml?'k in exdwtg~ h apartment. 2376 NnJIQrt Blvrl., CM. 513-9755 PAINTING or sen~ra l m~tcnanaa In ei:cllangt' lot apt. 2376 Newport Blvd. 513-9755. ROBINSON'S • NEWPORT • BEACH SE\VING ll&chlne Oprs. & h.t:Nr,10RE v.'Uhf'r, 3 yrs. GRADUATION S pe c i a I : '"°'"'°""'°"" ___ _,_,_ men tor band \\'Ork. McKJb-olrl. Runs J)f'rf«"I, ~ ro~ Fantulic C&rn.rd Equip-SPEAKER S)'llma, lfUpplr-.; bln Se.lla, M)-.3684, dition $25. t'lrm. llold largt mtnl. ElectrophOnlc bimle damoge to boxtt Jr; packtng SlNCLE needle " ovttlock loo.d, 1 v.'ashlng cycle only corn p one n t • y • t e n1. only. 6" 1-v.•ay to 15" 3-way 4 MOS okl mlx«t German SO.t>h"" l< CoKr., I ....... aood with child. 5t!Mlll alt 6. i\fANICURIST PVJ'ime xlnt loc. PARKING Att..:ndants, full tinie & part timt. Apply in person. Tues blwn 6 It 7 pm. ,~ _, To 14 min, ritllle & spin. Joc·lude1 : 100 w a t 11, air suspension •y a t '-m 5 . opn. """'per. 01.1.1y. p pay, \V sh . ~-~~~~-- SMALL, mb<d Collie, """· l ~' yn. old. Weil trained. 1''rft to zood, home. 6'1>-8277. Pbone 548-4179. Hu openlne Ior LoHo A Yellow Toxl C•b MATRON $1.75 HR SEAMSTRESS FITTER 64tHJ.108, Pra ing time 30 n1ln. A~1/FM/STERl::0/~1FX, 8 50% ol.t l'l'f. l't"lail. 5 Year ivate Party, 968-0833. lrtll'k plu.s full size Gar-guarantee. 892-1191. STOCK ROOM CLERK PAIR Pecan v.'OOd commodl' ra.rd Protciisional Turntnblt, Call for Appt 546-1311 AP for Jlerman IRV1NE PERSQ\INa SERYICES.,AGENCY Test Engr/Eect. to $12K Bu.Yer/Electronics to $12K Exp. for Rec. Rm. In Lrg Apt Complex Hrs 9 am-2 pm 546-5025 MANAGEMENT TRAINEES NEEDED IMMEDIATEL YI HUNGRY TIGER RESTAURANT PaciIJc Coast Jlwy. Newport Deach Ask for Ray PASTE-Up Artis t, l<ncnvled&e or production. (114) 831-2131 betw. 9 am &. 12 pm. Full T ime Apply in perli011 10.S p.m, #2 Fashion Ill, N.B. Equa.I oppor-tUlllty employer SALESMEN 1nventory control exii. \\'est-tables $200. Fr. Prov, su Y ats or .. For boat buUding ro. S:lrne l l all ll f $396 !~~~~~~~~~~ kingii~e DR. furn. $2".JCI. Gradunllon Price $197.4S <Jr [ ]fl sail Corp., 1626 Plu~nlia, A'l hi I S ~ Co.!ita Mesa. Magnavox stcrro & record 1u·n1u niont y payn1ent1 o Fm to You I , ....... player $2<Xl. z Pr. drapts $9.00 · . Plitl ~ ~ .,.., S U P E R V I S 0 I~' S $50. Pr. "·tng chait'll $25 (•;t. USA Slt"t't'O Equip \Varehouse 3 LinH, 2 T lm.s, $2.00 TRAINING! ~ classes !\fink s!ote $100. 644--0322. 179 E. I71h SI. 1)(11v fonning lor Junt'. Call eves & V•eekcnds. Costa !\teu, &15-24·12 Pats, ~ral Shaklee product knnt.1:le1ts<'. -'-..-:_::__:.__:.;_:.:_;::._ __ f~==-;;-=::-:;c--;:;--=::-J 2 Kitten!!, H/\V rtD.I rule. sales methcxls & sucCfss J'\.1 USI' sell cut vel\'el eofa, DOUBLE hibachi S4 . Deror Boxer-lypt"' dog, fl.f, 1~~ yrs. motivation. PIU.!1 kit . SIS velvet hi-back chra. all like na.U kf'g S4. C11.rom gaml.' lo\"C¥ children. To good total. Earn v,<hile learning. nt'"'-~1isc Mt.J.stthold lten11. board $8. Elec~ronlc cannon homf". 6-J-~HO .. ISO ' , 1 II ••o .,53 Call aft 7 pm v.·kdys and tank $3. foy Cadlllac f==~-~--'----- PilYNAH bird, l yr., iood learner, ~ry chat1y, 115. 536-1936 aft 6 ask for Dan. Escrow/Notti I: Oeeda to $675 AccVOcgree ._to $650+ KeypWK.'h Schlng ok to S450 Exe<. Mktng Secy to 1675. Marketing S@cy to $600. Due lo the rapid gtO\vth & expansion of our corp. A number of prestige pos itions are now available. PIZZA Cook1 & DeliYe ry, male over 21, p/tjme. Ap. p!y 16532 Beach Blvd., Hunt. Beach. POSTAL Ca.men. Dfl!t.>er your own area.. Costa l\fe&a, Hunt. Bch., Fntn. V1y. lfouse\\•ives pref'd. SJ0..-0402. Need men who are ready to learn the car business and are willing to traln. Must have good persona.llty, be interested in a future, dress ~·ell, salemtlnded. Benefits: or app . ca .,..,..."" at1ytin'M' v.·knds. 979-1983. ' and long lraUtr SS. JWrk CUTE 8 v.·k. kiftffiS, 2 malrs. NO\\I! coll<'ctlon S4. Bi ke l'IUTit'r striped & blk, 2 fmls blk & SUPERVISORS, s .11 i Ibo a I VELVET lulled sofa, ntvf"r $1. Rooks: b i 0 g rap hi c, "\\'hi ~~ Jlf'r. H..;kbm. To i.'OO(i pnxl. Supervisory ski 11 u!lt'(!, $135; matching love children's, novel~. ~hool horn<'.~. 5-IO-S.llZ:. e-s.sen. Boat bldg exp. not seat SS5: velvet hi-back :nx,._$L Cork 1ht'el $5. 67()-15 * !-'REE Kl'M't-:NS tr req 'd. We will tr a i n . rhair, S85; lanips, $20 ea. trutk tires $2. i\tft\1rri! 6 ,,·ks., ca!iro, blk & v.111. Cats 152 SIA~tESE Sfoalpoint SIO. ea. Call alter 646-2781- klttena 2 pm. Legal Secretaries to $600. ACT NOW! Engineering Secy to $550. Stty/Fashlon Jslal'ld to $55(1, Gen'I Secrelarles to $525. Payroll Bkkpr/NCR lo S550. Accounting Ci~k to $500. Prod. Control Clerk to $433. No Exper. Nee. We wo11ld rather train from scratch for the right people. Girl Friday $500. G@neral Otrlce $400. Call Mr. P a ulson 833-9472 Clerk 'fypists to $425. P/tlme Typl•ll $2.30 hr. P/tlme Gen'I Office $2.88 hr. Free & Fee Positions 488 E . 17th (at Irvine) 0.1 642-1470 INSURANCE Agency Girl . Knowledge or Dwlg 1\n! & Home ovroen rating helpful. Xlnt opp. Salary open. Must be iood typist. California Insurance; Irvine', Calif. Call Fern Nutter for inlrvw. 833-9480. JARDINE He.11der Co. needs I-·•-----men -_,,,,..,.,,-e+tttn-g - - fabricating ability. 7 5 6 5 Acacia St., Garden Grove. Jonas Tire Service Requires lmmedlately:'!Exper Ttre.S.rvlcemtn Retell Salesmen Sal.It Comm. Co. Paid Bene- fits. Apply In per"80n, ro49 llarbor Blvd., Collta Me1.11. JUNE OPENING Taking a ppllc.11Uon.s for waitre 1 1e1, ~·a!ten. bartender I: co c k t a 11 waitresses. Quiet Cannon Restaurant MJ44 St. of the Green Lantern, Dana Point. KEYPUNCHERS Nttdtd Imm!dlately. All shllts, must have exper. xln't eamlnp, C•ll Sue KELLY GIRL 133-1441 2061 Business Center Dr Uvl"' l£ASING Agent a: Hostess run &: p/tlme. Call 842--0629 LIDOS m 0 I I fa.5hionable ladit1 shop bu imm. optn. ings for 3 salesgirls. Exp, perf. but not nee. • MUST lrAVE TOP RETA I L PERSONALITY e Full fringe benefits, Pay open. Call collect 213-795-5821.. LITE dutirs in Costa. Mesa trailer for elderly lady. Call 494-3136 LOOKING FOR A MOVING EXPERIENCE? MECHANICS Aggres.siYe Transportation Co. need& guc>d Diesel mechanics. FULL & PT /TIME We are flex ible on hours. Call l\1on.·Fl'I. IO am-3 pm <n4l 83>-Jm 1.fECHANIC, exper. OwTJ tools. Busy shop. Apply in persun. 1747 Anaheim, C.M. e MedicaJ Attendant _ App_ly_jn Person 4000 Hilaria \\'ay r.-•ewport Villa, Newport Bch. :f.Irs. Iloover * 642·5861 $-125 Mo + 10o/o, Grvyd 1hift, pd vac, other benefits. Jacki Phillips fiti, Balboa Bl & Cst li\1-'Y, NB. NEW FACTORY EXPANSION $51)1.$650 Per Mo Full T ime Young men·mechanical app- titude htlpful. but no! req'd. MU6l be 19 or over. Able to start -v."Ol'k immed., If aceepted. For job in- fonnahon - Call Tuts. ! am-1 pm n6-85s1 ••NEEDED Two Offlco Girls Must be 2S ud able to drivt -APPLY - 186 E. 16th SI., C.M. NE\VCOMER WELCOMING ; Hospitality Ho1tl"U To Call LOCAILY on nt'"' resident families bringing gl.fts .l civic info. Good pay- P/tlme. Must ha\'e ha.ppy smile, car, typlnr ability. 547-3095. NURSES RN relief.. E.'Cper. Aide1. Bayview Conv. Hosp., 2055 Thurin. C.Pif. 540-5600. h'URSES Aides full & Pt/time. All shift!. Call IHZ..2410. NURSES Aides , ex.per. p/lim~ !-lL ?-.fesa Verde Conv. Hosp. 661 Center, CM OVERSEAS MORE JOBS ntAN PEOPLE AD Bkills & profegsions • Hlgher wages e l.Dwer expenses e Tax benefits PROFESSIONAL p ho n e solic1f0r .. Dana Point, San Clemente, Capistrano area.. Wmic in Your own home. Best deal In area. Phone 835-1465 between 9:00 a .m. and noon. QUICK Order Fry Cook. Steady employment. Mesa Lanes, 1703 Superior, N.B. Real Estate Career New or experienced, join the Company that'a growing. If you do not have a license, clieck on our $49 Real Estate Dt'mo., group ins., high commissions. Unlimited in· rome. Apply in Peraon. UNIVERSITY' OLDS. :f.10BlL~. 2850 JI arbor Blvd., Costa 1.1e.'ia. SALES MANAGER Nee<led for Aqua Products. Phone Mr_ l\loJTison at 542-5613 SALE~Fantastic full or p/I earnings. No exp. nee. over 21. 968-0063 5-7 pm. ROBINSON'S • NEWPORT • BEACH Has opening for ?.lacGregor-Y.11cht Corp, 538-6381 Encyclopedias $2 ea ch . 96.J.-tXX> 1631 Placentia, Of. SOFA 8' &. lovl..,0 •1, never • ~""• "'h••lba•TOW ·~ l\IALE lllmala,y1L11, 2 yrs. old cheap to good h o m e , &16-4171. ...... ....... .. .. .. -l•V· KfITE-::'\S, 7 ~·k.s old Darling Telephone Sales u9t'd. Both Sl40. Sewing ato-837s. lfgrrs. one longhair, oil(' machlne $25. Pri. ply. -*"7""-A"""u"'c=T""1o=N-=-*-:-I •lw'1. Call L'••"n, .,, ... ,,, Office su pplies -We ~·ill 968-7910. '"' -"v-T1 train. Irvine Indu11trial Park. Call Louis Bisbat, 979-2311. ROLL-TOP DESK • 646-9583 * Flne F'urnlture F'UZZ't" Love j kiri ens) 7 "·ks SILKY Terrier-pups., .t &. Appllance11 !Mi~e nnd \1·h11t» hlal'k nnd ma.Jes, i;hot1, AKC. CaU TELEPllONE Sale1. Top a..mmisslons and bonus. Ap. ply 1n person between 9.00 and 12:00 noon at ~ Bolsa Avenue, Midway City. TIRE SERV. MEN Apply Yowig & Lane Tire1, 1596 Newport Blvd., C.M. Expe-r. prt>f'd, full benefits w/paid vacations. TRAIN AT $700 Per Month Auctions 1'"'rlday, 7:30 p.m. \\)lite. Cflll Lin1lu , 546-4475<. after-4 pm. 83&-114'9. 1'11.ENQ[ Provincial dining w· d . A I' B coo·· H -· I I ~-rman Shepherd• I bl 6 h · Cu 1 d 1n y s uc ion arn :~ ou ..... !I nef< RJ'R<' vw a e, c airs. s om pa ·I Int t I , II d 842-3164 847-349S 2075~~ Newport, C1'1 64f1-8686 YBI!. ~ -s ... o O\e, :-i Behind Tony's Bldg ?-.1a!'I shots .. >l:>-4J:z'J. SHELTIES Cminia. CoUies) Garage Sale 812 EXTENSION and s TE p I-'llEE malf" kitten-AKC ttgis. Champ 1ired. GARAG E Sale: Lots o[ LADDERS, all ~ize~ \\'OOD Housebroken J l''em, 1 male. 5-49--0MO. fumiture & appliances. ONLY PriCt> reducl"d for Laguna Niguel --19"".>-j7!K) COCKER Spanif'I, ~bred, tools, ga5 dryer, gas BBQ, QUJCK SALE U12 So. Ross S)!ALL black dog, fem 11lt\ 6 wks okt 1 male ~ft. Buff. other items to numerous lo St, San!a Ana. 5(2.3l2(l. spayed, 9 mos old. Xlnt $45. 968-8532. lis1. Starts l\1~n. May 22nd. NAUI Sanctioned s cub a \\'/small ehildttn. &14--6148 SIL.KY Terrier p u P 1 , Rear ot 614 Iris, Corona del classes. Fountain Valley 8 ~·10, old Blk Labrador, adorab~. AKC. clulm,pion 1.Iar. Recreation. $ 3 5 , Ph. Malf". Puppy shots. Free to quality, 1 wO. 847--3498.. GARAGE Salt': Baby furn., 96Z.242-l /545-2626 aft. ~;30 good home. 644-099-1. TOY Wh ite Poodle puppies, 1 area rug, dinette, lamps, & pm. }'REE kitten1, 111 .And bo x m~. 1 hm.11Je, AKC ...... mi~. 19322 \\'orchester Ln, • lf.B. Sat & Sun ll 10 S. M1scellaneou1 trainffi~ Cail after 5 pm, All shots. $25 ea. 545-4400_ Licensing Course Full IRlea training program -no cost. Management op- p:>rtunities, Mk for Mn. Jones for Wonnation at --s42-S581.----· . -1---12 I Cosmetic \\'ith LEADING LIFE INS. CO. $15,000 Potential Jst year. Income rontlnur1 to grow \viU1 renC\\•al account. Oppty ot""""illllelitne created by expansion program. Call Mr. Freu ndt 644-5600 ·--------._Wanta -r--HO AA:--LABRADOR Retreiver, -- Household Goods 114 FREE lluffy kitl1:>""'"· ,:..1 •uc · a1 · · Tarbell Realtors Sales Women *w d D d* . .., ~ IU\. • J't'gl!I. qu lty puJ>p»H. ~1AGNAVOX S!ereo Ii k e ante ea Bucknell Road, Cbsta Mesa. Ca.II 567~ &ft J pm. Haw new, A .. 'OCado green 8' Mlfa. Al uminun1 cans that 1:ave 1~55~7~·306:~3_. ~--~--"'°"· REAL ESTATE -SALESMEN- Neeit 1 or 2 experienced salespeople. lncmtive com· mission sliding scale plan, Pftl'S()nalized training by a professional ALSO will train new licensees. Small office, pleuant working conditions. Personal Interview -Ask for Manager. U.S. AFFILIATEO Broken ReaJty 847-8507, Eves 968-1178 Experienced TYPIST 2005 Paloma Dr., O:lsla served you well:r& provided ~1ALE German Shep/pup DOBIE Pups, AKC ~· A Mesa. llOurs of pleasure. RUN!!! Retriever -Landlady llJYfi blaciu", Xlnl Ol&mp Hne, lot Apply in norsoi-i 10.5 p.m. J I 815 to 1060 Glenneyre St., La· out! 146t) W. \VHSl';ln, CT\1. ahow or pet $15. up 551-5717 Occidental Life, N. B. .. ~ ewe ry gun1t Bench. No glass \Yh11t-J1iiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iii;jjif Equ#~ ~~i:ni~l.~~p~~yer l\fany openings with local Wedding is Off! soc.vcr accepted, ..,~ ... !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•I companies. Interesting long \Vedding ring 1et for u.le! Pl1no1/0r91n1 SALESMAN-want to earn tenn positions avail. im-1\4'0 bands &: rolitaire jn l----------$1~15,00J first year? SeU-mediately. Top Pay! tiffany setting. Diamond is * Clearance ing to business &. pro-S.J.S. TEl\fPORARY ~) carat. Have bill of imle Sale * fessional people on est. SERVICE from Dahnken's in Costa. lead1. Intern'! group of 1424 So. Grand fl.fesa. SAVE about $11)(1. Co's. 2 "·ks training in San!Jk>Ana ao17-5736 Call 546-STIO aft 6 pm & Chicago. Exp. pd. S8X) mo. TYPIST $500 u·eekends. Guar. to start. Xlnt fringe & \Viii train on l\ITST. Xln't JUST returned from China & nitirement benef.ils. Only benelit1. Local area. Call India. Have 10,00J cts. gen- career minded nef'd apply. Zena, 956-1000, Cal Fair Em-uine slar ruby rough, l Oc For personal interview, ~fr. ployment Agency, 905 No. per ct. Genuine QUMse Ja.covides 535--6255, 5-7 P!\1. Euclid, Suite A, Anaheim. jade spray brooch. Cost ifA). Of over stocked trade-ins. •ORGANS• 0rcoa Choro Lowrey Holiday Baldwin Dix llammond litl Gulbransen console For an ad In Women's World Coll M•ry Both 642-5'71, oxt 330 ROBINSON'S • NEWPORT • BEACH I -"-'"'-"~Th~""=· ~=---I UPHOLSTERY Seamm-ess Sell $15. 673-38Xl. SALESMAN Trainee. Apply Johansen & I ·D~!AM~~O~N~D--w-«l'"°'d'°in-g-°"& 25 pedals w/Le1lie S1,-i9j Jtammond Con!Olet 25 peda.11 fi'om $1,695 To Size 48! Hu opening for Exper1tnced LUNCHEON WAITRESS Daily For Our Marina Room Apply In person 10.5 p.m. •2 Fashion 111., N.B. EquaJ opportunity employer Real Estate Professional Real Estate 'S:a.inmen Ir: broken! The opportwiity ls here! You are needed immediately for our rapidly expanding R e a I Estate divl1lon. Positive op. portunily for advancement. For appointment phone Rick Roegner. Good Potential Olristensen, 898 W. 16th engagmlent ring. Ha .. -e ap- C.1111 Mrs. Schmidt {Comer 16th &. Monrovia) praisaJ $375. $100. cash. Dia- • PIANOS• Cable Bungalow $395 Baldwin make Spinet $495 WESTClJFF N.B. 548-74&1". mond cocktail ring, cost \Veber CoMOle $795 Personnel Agency WAITRESS for coffee shop, $1250. Sell $425. cash. Grands from $695 20C WestcllU Dr., NB over 21. Exper. Apply in 615-4111. Kimball Fr. prov, 645-2770 person, Mesa Lanes, 1703 Salt1girl1 Superior Ave., C.M. Excel Opportunity -for top WHERE'S HAZEL? salesgirls. Must have good OiV<>rced executive with boy fashion background. Refer· 10 and girl 8 nef'ds mature Pnces requested. Apply live-in begiMing Sept, 1 mornings Tues-Sat. Apropos. when ne\v home in Irvine Is ~#27 Tou'lJ & Country -completed, Pvt. room, bath, Orange. patio. 6-day week: room, $j00 Mo + 109'0 gro111f. Exp. board plus salary. Mr. in tire saln:. 44 hr ~·k. Pd Sellers, 540-0141 day 1 , \'ac. Sick pay, oth e r "83="'°73"'77,.-'~"'..,'-· -,,~--,--,­ benefiU. 546-ll03. WOMAN for p/time book. SALESLADY for jev.·elry keeping, 5 days, ledger store, fulltim.e, re1J re-posting, AIR. misc. record quired. 548-340'1. keeping~-Must . be ~ w/num.,.,rs. lrv1ne Otlice S.amstre11, f/time Supplies, 1807 Newport BJ., 501 29th Street, N.B. C.l\f. Machinery 816 Grand Bank Term• - $1,495 OXYGEN -Acetylene -Trades \Velcome welding and cutting outfit. COAST MUSIC $79.95. AC ARC \\'elder. 225 Newport Blvd. a t H&rbor amP1. $95 827-3040. Costa A1H8. 642-28Sl M~~;,"'c-.~u~.-noou--.---=8"11'1 Open SUnday ~ s pm Sl'EREOS GOULD MUSIC CO. PRESENTS LARRY ROOU 1972 Gerrard equipped with full size professional ch anger, AMlF'?-.1/MPX Premiering the 1pectaculor receiver, sea J ed air New Conn Organs suspension speaken;, tape Sunday, June 4, 2:30 pm dtt.k Ir: headpfxlne plug in at Ebell Club of Santa Ana jacks. Was left unclaimed. 625 French Street Brand new in box &: Free admiuion gua.rantet'd. Originally prlc-prizes, fun. ed at $279.95. Take ove.r for * * * * * Secretary WOMAN to live in Chri!ti.11n illlll~mEf!JLIJ / ror combination field S8les le home, must drive. aol&-2624, quality rontrol departments. 646-6565. $90 cuh or small payments. A~r. Roou conduclB \\'Ot'kshop Lay a way Department. 1n our store lD am ~fonday, 714/893-0501. June 5. FREE DOUBLE hibachi $4. Decor Call for re1ervation Real Est•t• Sales Real Esla le Ole needs salesmen. We cover all phases ol real estate. Nr BeauUfUl Hunt. Harbour. Typing 70. Shorthand 90. WOMAN, tl('al, energetic, Pleue apply: Gullon In-motel maid '\\'Ork. Lnguna dustr ies. 1644 \Vhiftier, Costa Bch. re90l'L 4!).1-1196 Me!a. YOUNG MAN to Auist nail keg $4. Carom game GOULD MUS IC CO. board $8. Electronic cannon 2045 No. Main, S.A. and tank $3. Toy Cadlllac 547-0681 * * Since 1911 and long trailer SS. Rock col-1--~===~==- Mom·Daughl'er We "are moving our l•mllr, of ISO to Now· port n Sept. You've prob•bly '"" our ex· citing now building going up In F11hlon Island. Wt even have FREE buHs to L.A. until we move. You'll enjoy our lnexpen•· Ive c•f•terl• & fr iendly atmosphere. Won't you join us now? • Frtt Transportation CALL 541-434S Service Guaranteed Until employment accepted OVERSEAS SERVICES 1617 E. 17th st S.A. SUite 3 Tobin Realty 846-3371 SECRETARY/Oflice l\fgr., Maintenance Ma n , corporate' o I f ice:; recep. tioni.!lt dutie!; good ihrthnd; must be neat, afflcient fast, aC'CUillte typist, able to & reliable. $1.75 hour. edit & compose. $700/Mo. Call 546.5025. lecMoo $4. Bike carri" $1. * HIGHEST CASH Books: Bi o graph ic, The ROBINSON'S • NEWPORT • BEACH Hu oppening for Janitors Full Tim• Apply In per90n lD-S p.m, •2 Fa11hlon Isl., N.B. EqusJ opportunity emplo)'tr" childnm's, nov•1', 10hool PAID * Call Lois, ~78!Kl, Newport XLNT ()ppor. Nat'l Co~rn Center. hu openings for mute SECRETARY: \\'oold )11'.lU salmnen in C.M. !16Z-0416. Zic-$L Cork 11twt $5. 670-15 truck tire $2. Jl.1edkal tqAau 13 ... 1"4.1 Eocyclopediu 12 , "h . COAST MUSIC 907 4 Large "'heelbarrow $20. For your piano: Spinets-Con· Sa£S , Wear lacy ponchos awr 5-1(4376. 10les-Uprlght1-Grands. 34-4 panta aklrt.1, swlm suits. like to "-ork for one of the really big firms with big cempany bent'lits & a cha.nee to advance? $480. Call Nancy l\lay, 54Q...ro55 Coa sta.l Agency 2790 ltaibor-Bl . .11t Adams SF.cR.ETAR'f/Girl Friday: creatiw, xlnt t y p i 1 t. BOOKSHELVES and 2 642-2856 Twice pretty all 8t'uam! S;'11ALL DESKS w itable for *PIANOS*ORGANS* f_. ""'1" .."f1T -.: Crochet mom-daughter or ' IA.1 extra storage .space In your Going Out For Bu•lness "'I '''""'; ..... 1114\1 ..... 11i.ttE'1' pineapple poncho!!: or V ·~• So n-St "-aJlh• -' knlttlnr worsted. Pattem •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiim I garage. UL' • ,,,.,_, ., <:K"a~ qU 'T • paiceS • lt'rv, Santa Ana. 542-JW Kawai-Steinway-Baldwin, etc J_usr 2 _~w~ PARTS .-7465: one 1iz.e tHa child S.1D; __ =~===-.----1 Pia er Pianos a 1tolll whip up Oi11 msp cooler in one ab.e fill adult.I l~lS in-MEM·BERSHIP-1n .a JE"adtng Y an hour or tv•o And &at.'e duded. N.B. Pvt. sociaJ club for Rentals , , • \Ve Buy • Sell doll , It' rf r ARMOIRE, Oak table, I p O Bo 296 Co Daily 1~ Eve1/Sun 12·5 an. s pe t.ct or Sl:VENTY-PIVI: CEN'T8 ha•-b u • d Me, · ' x • !la , wann weather in carefree for each .. •ttem _ add - - Antiq ... IOO \VE NEED: DAILY PILOT '!!!!!!!!~~~"!"~~!!!!!"I psycological office. Apply RESTAURANT (213) 597-2405 c u .. , u e., re1s.r, Me!a, Ca. 92626. FIELDS PIANOS blendi ..-~ desk, misc. s:»-&199 WANTED OLD TREADLE Costa Mesa C714> &45-3250 Prinied Pattern 9074: NEW ~~!~:~r.:,ac;:~e;ran: • Soc'y-Stono Openings av811. now: Type 50, lite 1ttno. Type 60, Steno 90 e General Cl1rlc1I rtfath or Enallth beck- K?'Ollnd nttt11. Ofc. exptr. pref'd. Jr. le Sr. OpeninJ:s Aval!, • St•li1t1 .. 1 Clerk Varied A Interrstlng Optnl1111 For Good Math aptitude. Some Exper. I: lite typlr\s neceu. INTERVIEWING Mon a TU•• ! am·2 pm Wtd thru Fri 9 am·12 pm ON SITE OF OUR NE:W BUILDING P/ "'FIC MUTUAL ION ISLAND ' ~nta CM.I& A ... rl Center Drtvr) * J.rt.E."E d1Jly b111 trnn~ ta tkm for work tn Lea Anat.le• until move to Ntw· port. S.pl. "12. ORANGE COAST'S leading Marketplace ' EI.\IPLOYMENT AGENCY AA.st. Mgr .......... $650. mo. Asst. Mgr .......... $160. \\'k. Master Chef ...... $1100. mo. 2nd cook ......... · .. $25 1h ltt FTy Cook """ """ .12. hr. Pantry Woman. .... $21. 11hltt Pantry Ma.n •••••••• $21. 1hltt Fast food Mgr •• over 21 .................. $t0. Ill(). Walters .....•..•••..••. Sea.le \~'&itre1aes (All Shltts) Food&: Coc.k1a.11 .... $1.65 "hr. lfostes1es ••.•.••.••••. 12. hr. Cuhler ............... 12. hr. Cashier A Desk Cleric .. ··• .......... ·$19.65 shirt Busboys · 18 Ii: uver.$1.65 hr. FEE ROYAL SERVICE AGENCY P'Clr Re1t11.un.nt Ptmnnf.'t 3001 Redhill Averm E!planade JV, Costa Me&a &iile 210 SG7-2a'.XI kN1 day I: l!'l.'t lhlft. LVN1 day Ir eve ahlf't. Xlnt trll'lge bntte. Beverly Manor, Cap:> Bch,196-6781., qUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD UNIQUE c I aw -footed SE\VTNG MACHINE & OLD KIMBALL l!Jline t plarn with Women's Size1 34, 36. 38, 40, Ins; e>lherwl11e third-class SECRETARY Receptionist • bathtub• •~ •-Al,. I~' V O ~ -· '·nch .~ I $"'~ • J.3.,;J .... ;i..., ICTR LA. o.u-o.,..,,. lK • m .......... C'O or, fi,N, 42, 44. 46, 411. Size JG (bust delivery will take three :!. ~s~~l~. ::~:ma 1-;"-"-"'~'..,"'-doo_,_•._4M-...;,_74;,;32::.·--1 SOF'A-Bed, good condition, M2-J492 40) la.keg 2~~ yards 45-inch. weeks or more. Send to Appliances I02 $25. 1.tatchin( chair f1 5. ~E Buy grand pianos· 8EVENTY·FlVE CENTA Aliff Brooks the DAILY SERVICA Sta. Atttndant, &12-8599 Arter 5 PM PENNY 0\'.'SLE'l 892-3314 for ear.h p&ttem -11dd 25 PILOT, 105, Needlecraft f/lime evf!. shift. Neat 1n REF1UGERATORS, wash-10., Craflsman Radial Arm 11352 Ek>ach Blvd., Stanton centir f?r each pattern for Dept., Box l63. Old CheiM-A •wearance. Exper. only. ~~~r!;r~ ~eu~r:: MW w/sand & A.C'ttSS., used BABY GRAND PIANO Alr-11'fa1l and Special Hand!· Station. New York, N.Y. ~~;lyrtlt'C:~~~w;e:~o &$.7820. 5 hrs.1D>. IW2-7958. Ebon~ini~h-.:t~nd. :~~;VC!~the~·lillll! t!:ro: ~~~ ,,.1:':r.N::i!~ Ne11i-port Bl., C.M. ~IA Y'l'AG repairman hu A.B. DICK !\10DEL 33J "'t'ek! or more. Send to NEEDLE CR A f' T "12! SERVICE Station &ttendant "'"lllhen; $35. to $100. Ca.n Top Cond. $495. 2 man~]~~~ 0 n d . MP!aLOTl'ian ~ .. l~rtipn, 1 the D~Y Crochet, knit, etc, Free p/tlmt, ews & wknd.s. Ex-dell\-er w/1 yr. iuarn. 642--8983 • .j;' a tern uvpl.. dlrtcUon.111. 50e pf!t' only. Neat in ap-839--177!. -,.•""•-•-,1"1·=ET~su=1=r,.-*~*-·I 1acrlfice. $395. 675-5252. 23l West 18th St., Ntw NEW! ln1tanl J\facrarne. pe:arant't'. Apply mornings ELF.CTRIC washer Ir Dryer. Full length. MWit Kil $20 PRIVATE PARTY WANTS York, N.Y. lOOll. Print &tic, fancy knott, pel- only, 2S90 Ne\\l>Orl Bl vd.. \Vhitt. excrUent condition. 234 C Flcnwr St. TO BUY PIANO FOR NA..\IE, ADDRESS w Ith terM. $1. C.M. PrlVlte party m,.2500 or Costa l\lev CASH. 835--2178. ZlP, !ttE and STYLE t:.u:r Art of 0 •Ir p In SERVICE Statkln. Need 2 979-7245 ask for C&1ey. Sportinn Goods 130 ?."IDflJI:R. Crorhet -O\'f!r 26 dt~1am 1o It's in lo be thin. • • • • SEE MORE Sp r Ing ntakt-. SI. part liinf" E'vt It: Wknd Men REFRlG. 2 dr/bottom lreez· The Diet \Vork.ahop Way 2 BACK pllCka _ almO!lt new Fft1lhlont And choo8e <ll"lf' j rn-ttu~ CJO<'hf'I Boo t ~ Neal. Apply ln peraon er -~rr11inghou.se. Cop-f or ln lormatlon 5,.11-510;> 1 Chevron Stallon, 604 So. -$~ each. Call JtU -pattern ree from new lrarn by p1ctu~s· P:lfterns. Coal! Hwy., La(. &h. ~';'7 .• alt 5 • 11 2l-·~~LECTR 81C FANS &J.l.«>47. Slzpl'in1g-OnSu1m~ CataJ.,.. All , 1,1. .uu So, Ross t., Sant& Ann TV Radio HIF I I fll Y ;ivc. ·on1plf'te 1n11tanl Gift lklolt SERVICE Station sa1esm1n OVER 200 washers, dryers, 542-3120 ' ' ' 1NSJ'A.NT SEWING BOOK -mo rT 1h.11n too glltt. -$1. A: lubt man. Top pay, trinie J'lffrigerJtori trcnn $39.95. CARPET SALE Stereo 136 ll!W todf.y, wear tornonow. 0.111p~te Atsba.n Book - bltncfits ·experience prefer-545--071Kl. $2.83 per yd., shag ru.Jn STEREO SI. ~ $1. red. F'Ull or part time. Shell nuGtDAffiE -2 dr. rt.frig By Carpet Layer * 5'10--2086 Complrt~ .l)'!ltems, 20 to 40% msrANT FASH I 0 N IC Jiffy R111 Boob -50c. Station, 17th A lrv\ne, N.B. fretitr. Good <bnd. $70. FOR •-•-• Bea·• -w 6.8" off res:. retnll. Speaker IY•· BOOr hloK ,-Jfllnlhda of Book GI u l'rbe Af1...._ SERVICE Sis. Island Mtn, 613-2295. -'~ " 10ms, 3S Jo ~7' oft r<f. 88 n •cti. $1. >le. P/tl-· --Jw~•-AllO --~~~--Class SildinR" 0 on r, I ~"' IV I 1 ~allt Book t -IS -ttema. """'• ~·"' JUJWll. • R t W h /D Co I 11 ,~ 1"'2 re!al •""" estm ns er '' W h 11 • El• ha •·" •t• -f/tlme daylnite men. Arco, •n 11 e r a ry1r1 mp <'tt' ktt 5. ;r•-"" . · , 1 8'92-79S2 p n,_, ()\"fr· ~. 19th Ii Newport. c.M. $2. \\'k. f'ull main I. -<o:i;;...,,;ycc .. MJ;h:-'RR'i,g>i(.,!t1;,";-· 1-~·~,··:.c .. :,.1~1;"~1~m~n~•~t•1~r.c.';C~~l ·I runnlq your tlmH? Turn )luat1wn q.1h 8ooll 1 • * 639-12J2 * For Sn.le t tr RCA 2>" Co or °""° e !Mm Into "CASH" ~ ~rl 1 ;i(' •. S~!~_!JCEh StA. Lubep man. Lllce lo u..•e• OUr ~ .. r'& 979-7'2SS TV, p.·l\>f'I bASf'. \\"11.lnut th.em lhru Dally r 11 o r I Qullt1 fM r-.,•1 U•ltls .. •• ou~ aw UJ>tr", ay + u 11• <"11hin•t. S255. 642~.C. Classlfled. 642-6678.. 15 beaulJtul ... lltrN. IA.. r.omm Al"l.."O 19th Ii Paradlsl" column 11 tor you! 0 u Pllol o ,.,__, · .-_.. ,;,..,,.;...,_c_M_. _ 5 11,..o, ~d,,., for; butks. i.d.' ;.~ .... ~ •0 11 1h, oM ,1un eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee•I • • Tuesday, May 23, iqn Pfl•IM-I~ I 1~"t"" ][i] I T.._ .. t .. · llil '~'-""'_"""·~l~I ~[ ;;; ........ ;;; .. ~!~§] I .,........ I~ 1~~-t ..... _ .... ~ j\uto Service, Ptrt1 '49 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, 1.lstd Dogs 154 C1mper1, S•le/Rent 920 Dant' puppies -S wkl ~ Show Qu ali t y. Br1ndle/la"'n. Alt 6 - 979-0120. OBEDIENCE Class to start \\~ed May 24. in N.B. Trvlne area. Open to till dogs 5 mo's le older 546-4928 '6.5 Ford 250 %. T, Truck \\'/8~!i' Cnbovtr \\'ci tway'.1 cam1)er unit. -4 speed. R/.1-1 Xlnt com:I. 54,IXXI mi. $1995. 548--0316. Cycles, 8 1lc11, Scooters ~--------1970 HONDA 175 ea•illac,.','.::;:'m1 .. ion 1959 AUSTIN AMERICA OPR R<dio Air Conditioning Unit Ul2 So. Ross St. Santa Ana 512-3120 Autos lot Sala I~ '68 Awl.in America, radltl.I~. Xlnt cond. Call 968-3743. BMW IMMEDIATE DELIVERY auto, $4"5. '70 Opel GT, super clean, lo nil, nu brkl & Batt. $2100. 834-2718 (Joe) 544-1281. PEUGEOT * PEUGEOT * VOLKSWAGEN CA MARO '66 VW Bus. Orig. owner. ** '67 Camaro Convertible. Spectally reblt. ere. 1500 to Xlnt cond. $100:). Call aft 5 lfiOO Tuned exhaust, Holley pm. 64Z..~. 2 throat cub. Pouche d~t. CHEVROLET New fmt whl. beanng, ne1v Seat covers. Mahog.1--~,---M--~.--· bumpers-paneling. Many We re ov1ng oth<r extras, 67>-3998 alt 6 * • 2 Silkic!, male & feml., Silver.blue, tiny. DaJmallon, 5 tnos. old male. AU Al\:C. 646--0142. BEAUTJJ.'U L purebred GL'rman Shepherd PuP!Jies. $20. 847-9847. Stref't or trail bike. Good D B , & Al low as $2.299. (No. S&G) <:ond. \.l·itll low mileage. une uggie5 t56 FRIT'": WARREN'S 1970 V\V \Vestphali.a camper. $.,,.Call J,Jnda, 546-4478. '7 1 Dune Buggy Sport Car Center Pop top, new 9x12·· USED BICYCLES e ORANGE COUNTY 'S Coleman Oasis tent, ney,· AU types, large S('lections Big engine, new top, tun car. SEE US AilOUT LARGEST ~~:· 1~~:A:~ ~:~ :;: pm. FOR A DEAL SEE US ~~ PEEKAPOOS, 6 wks., & female. $15. ench. f>t6..6069 male • 642-tm Take trade or small down Overseas Delivery TIO E. 1st St., S.A. 54?~ parts. $2850. 546-1919. Honda 100, 2800 mi. will llnanee Pvt Pty (943-CREVIER MOTORS PORSCHE 1968 VW s.,. 2100 HarbOr Bl., C.f\1. 645-0466 $300. 1r 536-7382 E'l'P). 54&-8736 all JO am. 21»' \V. J:i;t St .. :'Mt& Ana CHEVY348engine,tri·pO'IVer. •o• oo a3•317J · Engine in Excel Cond. _, OLD Eng. Shpdg, pups. Ch. sire. Show/pet. Palpated. Reas. 837-9736. '68 Bullaro.El Bandito 300, 'l::>"t"<>Oll. ~ '68 911 TARGA New Brakes. Must Sell. % cam, solids, ciu'ome viuve xlnt cond, nu n1otor. $625. FIBERGLASS dune buggy Vi.sit our ncv• 1home! $900. 842-7113 covers. Bell housing, clutch, "J0-1610 5 speed, air cond.. mag p-·ure plate & 3-s.-d w ee s. us se . uy1ng '65 VW Camper w/'67 eng. trans., including stnrter, aU J' body & pan. All dials $150. & h J M t ll B · "-~- GOLDEN Retrievers, AKC. males, 6 wks. CH. line. $1 50. Only 2 left. 838-0834. '68 Triun1ph 500, Custom. • 645-l 725 • house. 826-5024. Roof rack, gd tires. R/Jt $lOO, Phone 642-7&18 before Ne\V engine. $750. Trucks 962 '70 Porsch-e~9~ll~T~-Pvt pty. Eves & Sun 646-3464 4 p.m. * 642-8472 • -;-'-;cc.,----;o.---,~.,-w ' M • Sterro, ~1ags, Private Party, '68 BUG Xlnt cond new ·-·7 p · 1ru c 6 1972 Yamaha 125 Tu!C e r:e o' VI n ROY CARVER I . .. ;) IC p hevy Ne\v . g , nc:. Day• 839-9560, alt 5 -Un•. <ng. j<IBt romplele~ pain!, clu-m, mags. am/Im PerleC't Cond. $j25 or 234 E. 17th St. 833·3155. gone thru. l\Iust sell. $99;,. ste1"M raclio, brks & Offer. 673-3379 -FOR A DEAL Costa l\Iesa 546-4444 '61 ROADSTER, ne"'' 1750 cc Best oiler or trade • schocks, radiator, Custo1n 856 11 yr. old Bay thoroughbred Mare -$715. Gt'ntle-Tack avail. Call Snt. & Sun. 830-18·17. BOY'S Huffy Stingray ·SEE US ·ii~~ Br-.1\V, 2002 (sa.nie as eng, trans, brakes. tires, 847-6j59, mat & seats, pipf's & muf. E.xce!l('nt condition !!25. ""'at• top •t $ 1 5 O o c 7 000 Ml fl Call 64"' A""-" '1'1! 10,000 miles. yellO\V, "'" ~. · "c. · '65 V\V. amper . . on ers. ,,... • ..,.,. ==c-•-,64~2"l022=-•--.,--/ ~ #')ll_J__ _ still under fuU faC't warr. &i5-6888, eves 548-6146. 1600 c.c. rebuilt E'ngine. New '64 l\lALIBU SS, v .s nev• HONDA sr...350, custom I~ AM/FM stereo, perfectly '60 PORSCHE 1600-S, mint paint good condition $1650. tires & brake!. Stereo. I~ paint. ext. forks, extra 2100 Harbor Bl., C.M. maintainf'd by Roy Carver. cond, 40,000 miles on eng. or ofter 545--0041 after 6 Clean $:i50 or best of!er. Bolts-"' -Equlprnont chrome. 675-6950 eves. 645-0466 $3550. Firm. Save almost $1600. 594-3041, Ron. p.m. 536-4844. Kokusai J(}sp. Excel '68 cr-..1c %T, cabin chassis, $l00 over new one. 642-7315· 'li6 PORSOIE 911 .i,7F'-uvwlli-Us;;,.;-,-;c~a~m;;;-;p~e:C,;!CC:'.;LA~SS:;;.1c~19"10"7M'°o-nt,..e"°'C'°ru"'·1-0, Cond. Sold for $1.50 new-auto, dual wheels, PIS, air Bl\1:W 2002, '69. Si Iver, SUN ROOF $2800 designed by architecutral air, !llereo, elec' wind., now only $100. 548-7557 concl., 6 Michelin Radial fu"\f/FM, air, Io mileage, OR BEST OFFER 968-6192 student. $1500. Call alt 5 bucket seats, orig OWJ')('r, l\10VlNG -must m>ll-10' Mobil a Homes 935 tires, cus. cab $2200 W /9' chrm rings, :dnt cond. I ---R~E~N-A-U~L~T~--t pm. 642-2680. Jo miles. $2828. 673-37~5 insL van body $ 2 9 o o. 675--1736. I '°'·GS"vw'"''b::,:::,-:,::,;:bl;;-t-:c;;n;;g.<s<itm;;l--c°"AP:..;;R;::l~C~E;\~V::A"'G~Oc:N,.:!966~'- 900 Gla5' Ba< boa!. c 0 m SUNSET MOTORS \1:/John~on controls-etc. no New 18' Eldorado ttftNJ motor. $50. 646-8583. t10TOR ffOMF:. Fully self COMPLETE YACHT MATNT. contained. #213207. Hull cleaning. 50c per ft. $6995 Monthly rate!I. 675-8772 Complete line of El Dorado Boa ts/ Marine campers, chassis mounts & -Enulp'!_ 904 5th \vheel trailer. "";;;':.,_;,.;·--"'=~=CJ--11ll?°SURVEYDR -,0' LOBSI'ER traps both new & MOTOR HOME used + all otht'r acces. S7,495 645-2390 or 644·5255. Roof air, & fully gell con- (21 Chris Craft 6's with traru;missions '$495 .. 548-2253 906 18 KFLSON cabin cruiser \\"/trailer. 'l'\vin J ohnson 35 hp o/b. Nl':"wly paln!ed & u~hnlsterecJ, t./s r ndin & many extru. $1 .300 or nearest otfer. 548-1503. tained. # 2001. Phone 645-6677 1970 Hart>Or Blvd. Costa Mesa Motor Homes 940 ·······------ 22' Custom Fiberglass Sport . fisher. Brand ne\V Cnmpletcly equipp('l:I • ?11ust SacriUce • $9850. Orig Cost $12,000. 646·6344. 20' r.o. built for off shore fishing, in water at slip 41, Bayside Village, Npt Sch. Details on boat or call 645-241.t, $2395. Sale or trade 18' CC, elec start, 40 hp eng., many extras 529-4968, 675-6854, Chuck 18' Starcrafl, i/o, 150 hp Mere, r./s radio, top & side curtains, Ur. $ 3, 2 () O, 548-Hi26. 34' Cabin Cruiser, sips 6, Fully equipped. Like new. 962-8130 aft 6 pm. 12' Aluminum Boat w/3 hp J ohnson motor, both xlnt cond. V,00. ~1866. 13' Boston Whaler, 40 hp Johnson, rover & Bimini top. $1100. 54&-1375 alt 5. Boats, Rent/Chart'r 908 65' Schooner "Kelpie'' no\\' avail. for charter. 2 0 Guest-$2'60 Pf'r Day, Larger groups for cocktail part.i('s, etc. Inspect wkdys at Dry Dock Restaurant or phone 548-4192. Eves. 548-5039. HAVE BOAT-\VlLL TRAVEL fishing Cruising 644-8211 909 AUSSIE 18'-\Vorld Champion TRAVELODGE. 3 masts • all gear, sails, frl. $2000. Ne"'' 18' arriving soon. Roger 'Velsh 646-6666. KITE -\Vith dolly. Good cond. Sails by North $600. Days, &lHJ.16, e v e s , 646-5938. COLUMBIA 26 r.1ark II Deluxe. 968-7397 .,.. * INT 14, full racing, tra!>('zr, fl('\V spinnaker, trlr $600. 54g.oo32 Klle • $500 e Good Cond. 333 Grand Canal, B.T. 673·7357 Boats, Slips/Docks 910 CHOICE slips in ne\v Marina for 30-70 ft. boats. 673-6li06. 13631 Harbor, Garden Grove 1 Blk. So. of G.G. Fl"\\)', 63G-2333 *Marvin Pearce* Motor Homes Sales • Rentals 558-3222 1411 S, Village Way, S.A. e NE\V 23' luxury motor homes. Air. Loaded! Best rates possible. Prl pty 968-1397. TEST DRIVE THE MIDAS MINI MOTOR HOME Distributed by Ken Craft Product!'! CREVIER MOTORS 208 \V. 1st St.. Santa Ana 835-3171 PACE·ARRO\V •• CHINOOK All lop brands • , Discount price •. JMJ\IEDIATE DE· LIVERY, , BEACH CITY DODGE 16555 Beach Boulevard lluntington Beach (714) 540-2660 Limit 20', across fmn1 Ne'o'rport Island, $1.75 Pf'r IL 675-5556: 713:693-5191 Boats, Speed & Ski 911 14' SKI OOat 'ia hp Evinrude -1.tatchinR custom trlr. All E.xccl cond. $1295. 962-3433. ALHOA -15' trailer, less than 6,0CXJ mi, 968-3257 "'"" $895. Citatlnn-Lux, model. 21'. 3 pc. bathroom, dual wheels, 3 yrs old. 53&-7166. 642-9006 after 6 pm. '69 BMW 2000 Sad. Renault Sales &'ervice guarr. dble bed -$ l 2 5 o, '57 MILITARY Dodge po""'t>l' Lo mi's. 644-6697 aft s for over a decade in Orange David 833-6428 days 673--0369 9 passenger 846-2059 \vagon, 1 ton pick up .tx4 CITROEN County ~e~v~"';,·=~,--,,,--;;--,;:=o l '"f~~ifiiN~ffAiL with Old• VS. 1750 brm. •-~ 1 0 til 1 '68 VIV Kombi s Pa". CONTINENTAL 492-2558. I:=:-----------.:io:rv • .....,p. pen p.m. C't S t M • Monday Rebuilt ens:ine, brakes. ~f 'TI Continental Mark JII NYLON snap on camper top 1 roen por s a 5erati Jim Slemons Renault rack. Radials $1700 firm. Load-•, on• O"'n'"", p•ivoto for Datsun P/U. Plus Orange County headqUarters """1 So M · S ta A 7834 1:\.1 " •·• ' " ,_ for local & Eur o pean ·~ · am, an na 675-· party. 714: 499-1554. lumber rack. 548-3122. delivery_ _ _ _ _ 1.blk. north nf Warner .67 vw. sun roof, beautiful TRUCK :-flillman (Coffinifr) Jim Slemons Imports Service ·Department-546--4114 +condition, new paint-&-~. -COUG.A .• R>--·+ Van -1962 1212 So. Ross St. 2201 So. Main, Santa Ana Sales Department 557-5242 ~$900~'.:.-~'!':'~~~·==----looiC:oliCiffi'ir-2bhl. San' A 542 3'~ M 1~ COUGAR 302. 2 a oa • -u v 557..5242 Open s,n. SUNBEA VOLVO auto trans .. !o miles, vinyl Ford F-250 Flatbetl, p/s, p/b, DATSUN top. Xlnt cond. $1450. Call air, radio, overloads, over-'65 SUNBEAM Alpine • Ex· 1972 VOLVO 837-3370, after 5 pm , size tires. 646·5718 ask for ---,-7-1-2-4-0-Z---eel Cond .-. Orig Ch\:ner -S30-2GZL Rich. ' $675. 644-0052 Ask for Paddy '67 Econoline. Heavy TOYOTA Least Today at DODGE d Ex I d 4 !pd d!r canary yellow, pliish Best Rates uty. ce, Con . 0 $1200 flrm. 847-944-0 blk. interior. mag wheels, $88.74 Per Mo. '69 M NACO '66 Ford super van. $1000. Imt & rear guards, lO\V mi, 172 TOYOTA O.A.C, A~1/FM, Auto. trans., 4 Dr, II. Top, dlr., fact air, sacrifice! ET8089. 546-8736 $2029 disc brake~. 36 mo. • loaded. Undf'r 26.000 mi. call 592-5705 aft 10 am 494-6811, 4 speed trans. Dlx AM radio. For Leasing or buying Leisure \Vorld Special (VQC· Heater, defrosters, tinted . :OWL tf.llll4• 495). Take clean car or ? RANCH 0 LUMBER rack for Datsun '61 . ER , . new eng, P /U trans. f!I't'S, paint & int. with nylon C'amPf'r cover $500. 645-6.SSS. 548-3122 '11 Ford % T. Pick Up. 3 '67 Datsun 1600: 4 dr Sein, S~ .. 6 CY!· Xlnt ~nd. 19,00) good cond. $495. firm. mis. $Zl95. 646-9'118. 548-1610 '66 Ford Super Van '65 DATSUN Pickup $](){)() • 592-5705 $425 Auto Laa51ng 964 675--2802 or 645-7145 Try our lease experts for Savings • Satlsfaction • Ser- vice, WE LEASE ALL POPULAR FERRARI '69 Ferrari, 36.5 GT, 2 + 2, 1ilver, Al\f/Fl\1, air, full pwr., ney,• Michelin, TI4: 6T:>-6410, early morning. -FIAl 1972 A1AKES AT COMPE:Il. ---------TIVE RATES. Cali ?lfalcolm Reid for further details. THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2000 Harbor Blvd. '69 F1AT 850 Spider: xlnt cond, red, ski r a c k , At-.1/Fr.t $900/bst ofr. 968-7103 JAGUAR Costa Mesa 647.(X)']O XJ6 JAGUAR 'TI, mint cond. Autos Wanted 968 16,000 miles. White w/blk WE b all alt ! cl leather int. All extras. uy m el 0 ean Power, air cond. AM/FM. used sports cars,_ paid for $7800/S75--2625_ or not. Please drive In for free appraisal. '53 XK120 NEWPORT IMPORTS . 3100 \V. Coast t-lwy,, Newport Beach 642-9405 ALFA ROMEO Classic. Fixed head coupe. runs very good. $875. Phone 53t-5033 or 893-2544. 1969 JAGUAR XKE Coupe. Absolutely like new! 6500 rniles. $3,550. Call 644-4767. MAZDA glass. White wall tires. 546-8736 aft 10 am 494-6811. Pop.out rear windows. Vinyl e trim. Carpets. Front disc VOLVO '70 Dodge Custom Sportsman brake.. ll<'<liniog buckel b"', ai' rooo. 8 Cy!., lo seats. KE 2().300785. H bo C M 646-9303 mi's, nu tiN's, xln't cond. 1=966'-'--"-'"'"~·-·--==I $3:nl. 54~152. ;[)Wt Lewi& -TOYOTA 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 '70 TOYOTA STATION WAGON New car trade in, .t speed, radio, & heater, 748BZU. $1495 Santa Ana Toyola Service dept. open 7: 30 am 'til 9 pm Mnnday thru Fri· . .,. PHONE 540-2512 417 \V. \Varner , Santa Ana ~ lltf\'1\s ~,. mtt•n Toyota & Jaguar Dealer Authorized Sales & Service 900 S. Coast Highway Laguna Beach 540-3100 1970 Toyota Mark II station wagon. Auto trans, air cond .. $1,950. ~3139. 'TI COROLLA 1600 Deluxe. P..adials, AM/FM, $1625. Call 847-2.125. · '71 TOYCYfA Corolla Wag. New tires, xln't cond. Just llke new. 673-5507. Autos, Used 990 FORD AMERICAN 1 • American Motars We re Moving ,......Gremlins ,,....,Hornets ,,_.Matadors """Javelins """Ambassadors Huge stock of '71 's & '72'• Bi9-Bi9 Savings Harbor American FOR A DEAL SEE US ~~ 2100 Harbor BL, C.?tl. 645-0466 Hom•p:~~~ni•nt INTERNATIONAL 1969 Ha<bor Blvd. . C t M 646-0261 61 I.H. Travelall, C·lOO, V-8, os a esa 3 spd, R&H powrloc, nu BUICK paint, l500. 67>-5810. MAVERICK '67 Buick Special '70 :P.1averlck 200 cc Eng. ac- Station Wagon cent grp. W/walls AM/FM factory air. automatic, power1 _Ra_d_lo~;J~·-500=. ~546-4~-sn~. __ steering & brake!, luggage MUSTANG rack, local car, one owner, exceptionally nice (UOH688) 1.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;::; Terry Buick 5th & \Valnut. liun1ington Beach 536-6588. 1965 BEAUTIFUL! :r.ruSTANG 2+2. This • YOUR ONLY car i11. Immaculate, with a new V·8 engine, new paint job, Cdone by a Ford deal· er). Fully equipped with 4- speed transmiuion and tach air conditioned, mag wheels, It's the popular fastback model an<i it is beauWul. $900 firm. 63B-1132 OLDSMOBILE Transport11ti0ft I~ --...,.-""--Alfa Romeo Campers, S1l1/R1nt 920 Fantastic: Deal REVERSE lllOry of "Old \\i'oman Md the SWt", more J"OOm than fam ily for CMC Optn Road c:hn.,:ia mounted. 1e1 t ('()nt&h'Cd U.100 FIRM. 213/597-3267 Wttk-t!nd11 or can be setn at 1'1815 Beach Blvd., Hunt. llch.. ,,.,.)<- Good)'tar Bll'm!, all sizes, low prices. U.S. lndy mags, Crager American from $15.95. 1-Tljackers $34.50 pr. 14" Indy mags for Pinto & Vqra, S.S. 4 ipoke -Pinto A V~• off rond t1rt1 + "''hrels. AU bro.ndt fronl $22.50. 1950 Ne\\•port, Costa lifesa.. 645-3554. NO\V ON DISPLAY -1968 280S L While-red int. Low miles. 2 tops·Rcal beauty·pri/pty. $5.500. Dny 547-5832/Eve 846-2'39. Salts Sentfct> ---------Puts Body Shop '65 ~fG, immac co n d . , COAST IMPORTS AM/FM rad., chrm. wlnt 11XX>-12XI W. Crmst Hwy. whls., 2nd owner. $75(). rltwpot1 Be11ch &f.2.0406 644-8475. ~~-,-~~~~~~~- I . .. -... ·-~- 7 ' • ) I I 7 ' l San Clemente Capistrano VO[ 65, NO. 144, 3 SECTIONS, '40 PAGES • EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • • Today's .Fl••I N.Y. Stoeks TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1972 TEN CENTS Planners Face Multi-story Complex .Request A varianct request by the de velopers of 1 five-story, major mOO.ical-<1!fice com· plex across from San Clemente General f1 ospital will be among a whopping list or Jtems faced by San Clemente planning commissioners Wednesday, The Japatul Corporation, which pro- poses to develop ·the land at 669-frl Camino de los l\1ares, has asked that the commission waive the city nlles on 35- foot-high or three-level construction to allow for the new building which would occupy land al the base of a hill. In an application for the variance, spokesmen for the central Orange County ------------ firm point out that that all building wouJd not obstruct views, but instead would capitalize on the wide view of the sea available from the site. The office complex is one of uveral projects proposed for lhe immediate future in a master plan prepared by the Chapman M a n a g e m e n t Corporation which is developing the hospital and ad- jacent acreage. Other projects already approved for the land include a major apartment com- plex featuring groups or four units that will be sold to indlvldual buyers, and cor· porate headquarters buildings downcoast o{ the hospital. Another project also will come before the commission at its 7:30 p.m. meeting. Chapman itanagement head Richard Hallmark has applied for a zone change affecting 629 Los Mares. The change would shih the lot owned by the Forsttr Trust from U-unctassi!ied zoning to C-2 ge11eral commercial, allowing t t. e development of a major restaurant. The 1.7·1'.cre parcel is on the northwest comer of Los Mares and Calle Agua. Other items on the lengthy commission agenda include: -Final approvals capping months of rez Minister Rev. Inlay Lea'ves for Sweden Conference The Rev. Donald Inlay, popular San Clemente minister, l\fonday confirmed reports he would res.ign his post as a trustee for the Capistrano Unified School District -a job he will le.ave for an im- portant church position outside the city. Inlay, pastor of St. Andrews by-the-Sea United Methodist Church, will leave for Sweden soon to represent his church hierarchy at the United Nations en-- vironmentaJ conference in Sweden. "It's sad that I have to leave," Inlay told fellow trustees Monday, "especially since l'Ye only served a year and only Death Sentence Petition Urged By Top Official By RUDI N!EDZIF.LSKI 01 1M Dall)! 'llirt St11f California's second ranking lawman ap- pealed today !or police to devote every possible of!-<luty hour in the next 14 days to gathering voter signatures calling for reinstatement or the death penalty. Chief Assistant Attorney General Herbert L. Ashby's speech to the California Peace Officers' Association convention in Anaheim was an im· promptu departure from the main agenda text. He was substituting for his boss, At· torney General Evelle J. Younger, who couldn't make a scheduled talk at the Disneyland Hotel. Ashby and probably 100 percent of the ranking California lawmen present were appalled by the State Supr~me ~urt's recent ruling that execution 1s un· (See ASHBY, Page%) Services Slated For Aero~pace Chief Robinette now felt that I have gotten my feet ~'et," he said. Inlay was the second trustee to resign his post in recent weks. Veteran board member and former president Dr. Robert Beasley submitted his resignation earlier this month. A special election for two successors will be held Aug. 15 and applications now are being aecepted for candidates lhrougb Ille offlce of Ille county r<glstrar of voters. The deadline ii June ltl. Trustees Monday. did not formally ac- e<pl Inlay'• resignation, but aald Ibey would do so next l\londay. Because of the immediacy of the minister's transfer and trip to Stockholm, Monday was his last b o a r d meeting, Inlay said. The exact title of Inlay's new position has not yet been announced, the minister told his congregation Sunday, but it would be a post he could not possibly tum down, he said. Inlay's trustee area represent.. the northerly porlions of San Clemente, iJl.. eluding Shoreclills and the Pacesetter· llllcre!I colony. Regional Airport Talk Schedu'led in San Diego Friday's meeting between Orange and San Diego CoWlty officials to discuss a proposal for a regional airport at Camp Pendleton has been shifted to San Diego, the office of Supervisor Ronald Caspers annOunced today. The San Diego officials were originally invited to come to Orange CoWlty by Caspers to discusa the matter. Although elected officials from several levels will be present at the 1ession, Caspers' office noted that a representative of the Marine Corps has not been invited. Camp Pendleton officials continue to oppose use of any of the base's 26,000 acres for a public commercial airport. "We want to converse on this at a civilian level first," Tom Fuentes, Caspers' executive as!istanl, said this morning. "Wehn we have a concrete pr~ posal, then we will take it to the Marines and have a chat with them about it." Fuentes said base officials were not being "ignored'' by not being invited to the session and will be kept abreast of Assembly Gro1tp Kills Tax Bills any developments. The session will include the chairman of the San Diego County Board of Supervisors ; the mayor and city coun- cilmen of San Diego ; members of the San Diego Port Aulhority, which hM jurisdic- tion over San Diego Airport; Orange <..:ounty aviation director R o be r t Bresnahan, and Caspers. In addition, Fuentes said represen· tatives of state and national legislatures· will take part in the airport discussion. Both counties have been searching for alternate sites for their respective airports for the past several years. The proposal of using Camp Pendleton to house a regional facility was first in· troduced by William Pereira and Associates in an aviation needs study done for Orange County. The Marine base, one of the largest in the world, stretches along the coast from San Clemente to Oceanside and inland as far as Fallbrook. It is used as the primary training base for the Marine Corps on the west coast. Officials of the two counties had at first proposed· constructing an inland airfield- at the base, but have since been ex· arnining a proposal for a coastal airport, thereby insuring .hat take off and landing patterns would be over the ocean. Of· ficlals say only about 2,500 acres would be needed for a regional international airport. * * * study on two major additions to the cily's zoning code: prov isions calling for the installation and maintenance of landscaping in off-street-parking areas in commercial districts, alld setting up an architectural review board for new com- mercial and industrial projects. -A request from William G. Crouch for a variance to install a drive-through film business at El Camino Plaza, 800 S. EJ Camino Real. -A variance request by David Lindsey fot encroachment into a front-yard set- back l:i make room for an apartment over an existing in-the-bank garage at 204 nev W. l\larquita . -Anothe r variance application. this fro1n Developer Victor D. Kle in who seeks to rxceed the city"s height limits by 16 feet -one n1ore level -on his pr~ posed condominium project on the site \\'here the house built by the city's found er once sat. Klein proposes a major apart· ment co n1plex on land at 423 Granada. The area recently was cleared of a state- ly Spanish house built by Ole Hanson. the founder of San Clemente. The city forbids construction o( over 35 feet high or three level s. -A variance request by Vista del Verde and several Jando~·ners seeking 'j ... permission to ins tall fences and scrtens bel\\'een houses along Camino de los ~tares. Se\'l'n existins residencts are af· reeled by the variance which seek9 technical changrs .in side·yard setback requirements.• -A va riance by Anthony Genzone who seeks no side setback for a propoaed apartment-at 232 West Marquita. Genzone plans a three-story building at the rear of the lot. , -A Use per1nit application by the First Baptist Church for the operation or a k indrr~:i rtrn·I hrough--f ourth-grade school at the ex isling sanctuary at 107 W. Mar- quita. ------ Two Accords Announced; 'War Aired I UP'I Te .... fll CALLING FOR SUPPORT -An Army lieutenant uses his field tele- phone to call in a helicopter while on patrol six miles west of Phu Bai Airfield Ibis week. Heavy Ground Fighting Rages; Hanoi Area Hit SAIGON {UPI ) -Heavy fighting broke out today on three fronts in South Viet· nam and Hanoi Radio reported swarms of American planes again bombed the Hanoi area in a stepped up aerial or· fensive that coincided with President Nixon's Moscow summit talks. Heavy groond batUes were reported south or the My Chanh River defense line about 20 miles north of Hue. A thirc;l d.!lY or C.O~~ist probing l!t· ta cks on Hue's outer defense lines ended at nightfall with pockets of Communist troops still clinging to a bridgehead on the south bank. At besieged An Loe 60 miles north of Saigon waves of Communist infantrymen backed by tanks and a 1,700-roWld artillery barrage struck al paratroopers a mile south or the city and managed to stall a relief element two miles south o[ An Loe for the sixth consecutive day. The third area was the Central Highlands about 280 miles north of Saigon. The North Vietnamese staged several attacks at Fire Base 41, 12 miles north of Pleiku, and knocked. out two goverJ]ment tanks and an armored personnel carrier. They also shot down an Al Skyraider. Rocket attacks on Kontum Airfield, 25 miles to the north wounded three Americans and virtually destroyed a ClSO Hercules transport. f\10SCO\V (UPI) -President Nixon and Lec.nid I. Brezhnev held lengthy talks today on the first full day of their summ it conference, highlighted by accords on health and pollution and private one-on· one conlerences between the two about the issues of war and peace. The leaders first met with full alaf!s in the 19th century Catherine Hall for two hours and two minutes, then conferred between themselves for about two more hours. After signing the two pacts about dusk, Nixon and Brezhnev unexpectedly met for thelr third session of the day. At the end of the second round, the two leaders ~ed I.heir delegations into the Vladimir Hall /or the signings and champagne toasts. 1Then. Brezhnev threw his arm aroond"\ Nixon 's back and the two men left the room by them.selves ror evening lalks. The antipollution pact. &CC-Ording to U.S. spokesmen, calls for : -Cooperation on working out ways or preventing pollution. -Developing new technical processes which do not pollute man's environment. -Sharing their success with other countries. American spokesmen said the medical pact calls for coordinated research pro- grams on cancer and heart disease, and exchange or specialists and delegations. lt also includes setting up conlerences and lectures, exchange of information ' nnd teaching each other 11bout their own technical aids and equipment. Nixon was quoted by a White House spokesman, "They are good things to start with ." Hard discussions on the more difficult Issues, like Vietnam and on Jlmltlng nuclear arms, remained. Vietnam Is likely to continue to be a slicking point after the summit but the Soviet news agency, Tau, rallied flagging hopes for some klnd o! SALT agreement. here. The summitry spirit showed at 6:06 p.m. when the conferees stepped from a winter garden of palm trees into th1 highdomed white and gold Vladlmlar Hall. Nixon and Soviet President Nikolai V. Podgorny led the march. Funeral services for South Coast aerospace executive Floyd E u g e n e Robinette will be held Thursday at 11 a.m. at the Communi ty Christian Church of San Juan Capistrano. The JO.year-old resident of 25222 Brigantine Drive, Dana P~int •. ~as killed Sunday when his handbu1Jt biplane lost power and crashed In the desert west of Victorville. SACRAMENTO (AP! -The ·Assembly Revenue and Taxation · Committee has killed two bills that would have imposed about $132 million more taxes per year on the California petroleum Industry. The author of the bills, Assemblyman John Burton (D-San Francisco), told the committee ?\1onday that tile oil com· panies ."make enough money that they oUght to pay more taxes." Little Hope Held Out Above the Demllitarized Zone, the U.S. command disclosed U.S. air raids had been stepped up to an average of 335 a day for the past five days -the heaviest level since the bombing carri-- paign resumed April&. There was no U.S. comment on today's attacks. The U.S. command reported spec:· tacular attacks against an electrical transformer station northeast of tlanoi on Satirday where there. wert several subsequent explosions. A spokesman said It supplied power to a machine tool fac· tory, a tank and truck repair center and military camp:; in the Hanoi area. Oraage Also killed in the crash was James Herbert Richter, 46, of Pomona. ~1r. Robinette was an engineer with TRW Systems. Inc. alld we.s • com- mercial pilot. tie was also a member of Taildraggers Flying Clab, a direc~ of the YMCA and a deacon or the Com· munlty Christian Church. . .. He was interested In youth Jct1v1ties and frequently arranged tours for young people at the TRW facility east ol Sin Juan Capistrano. . Mr Robinette Is survived by his wife, Reba'· son Ricky, and daughter Lisa af Dana' Point. Other survivors include his mother Mrs. Mary L. Van SChuyver of Los An8eles; a sister, 1.ona Thiede af Ha. cienda Height.; his grandmother, Mn. zena Adams ar Los Angeles and an unclt, Gtne Adams of Big O.ar Lake. Burial will take plae< 1t Rote HUI! Memorial Park In WhitUer tmmedlaftl1 after the 1ervlcu. Funeral 1rrangtments are being m1de by Sbellcr Mortuary In San Clem<nte. One bill would have reduced the 22 per· cent oil depletion allowance to the actual cost of exploration. Thi! other would have imposed a s percent severance tax on oil and gas. Burton criticized I rpokuman (or Gov. Ronald Reagan's Depa.rtm,nt or Finance !or opposfng him, saying Rearan "II °" the side of the oil Industry." City Clerk Screen ~heduJ.ed in Capo . . • Scr..ning wllM>•1ln soon for the pol~ lion of.City Clerk In San Juan Caplotnno. CouncUmen Joob Gammell and Jamu Weatbm were named to a .......... eommltlte to review more thu IO ap- plications !or the approslmatelJ ,11 ,0IJtl. ..,.., job. Applicatiooll 'lllJI llill be accepted unW the end of May. For P end'let;on Airport A Southern califomia regional study or air transportation apparently holds little hope that the U.S. Marines will let go ol part of camp Pendleton for a com· mereial airport. Officials of the Southem C.llfornla Assocl1Uon of Governments (SCAG) which Is about to release the results of • two-year 1tudy almed-..at finding M>lutlons to the grnwing air triVel demand, gave a brief preview to Newport ll<ach coun- cilmen Monda7 lfteri-. "In the JU? 2,000 we project Pendl•ton 11 a r<gjooal alrJ>qrt,• 1ald Wllllom L. llocbnahl, wlttan1. SCAG coordinator, "but fl de.....,_ .., ~ military and the """'° ol eovtJUimemal. noise and Im-pact." The Marines have traditionally opposed rellnquishlng any of the training camp. Dochnahl said the future of Orange County Alreort will depend on the prog· ress made in developing quiet jets. "l( there atlll is a noise problem by 1985, the airport will not be tble to meet Its projected demand of II milllon passengers,"· Dochnahl said. II there Is a quiet engine by that time, 11& .. ld, the airport will be a major short· haul commutu airport. Ho did no! talk specifically aboul how many runwa)'t, or how Iona, would be netded. Oochnahi also said that lhe report pro- _. Ille of El Toro, but again, ht tald. tlpl depends on !he reaponse of tbe military and the enviroruntntal Impact. .~ With American planes laying more mines In thl North Vietnamese harborli, fighter-bombers concentrated on the railroads leading from China . 1'he bombers struck at 14 rail and highway bridge• ranging from those leading from China southeastward to tlanoi to others just above the Ofl.1Z. Five or the main bridges on a rail line from China were de stroyed in ont raid and the attackers returned the next day to knock out a sixth. Air Force spokesmen said the raids had bc!tn '° severe the North Vl!tnameie •hilted to barge and ferry traffic to keep their 1upply llnu open since Prtsidtnt J<llxon ordmd the rail line atrlkt• on May 1, Navy '°""'s noported urlltr thal rlvtra and can&Js would be mined against such tra!Oc. l\'e•tber !lazy sunshine in the afternoon is the forecast for Wednesdey along the Orange Coast, with hlgha or 6S expected at the beaches ris- ing to 75 in.land. Lows 55-al. INSIDE TOD-' 1i Atr.s. Ni:rou ha! b1tm caught 'n "crunch" between newsmeii and police during her travel.I t it Moscato, and /tfrs. Gromuko Is Mt hoppv about it. See ,,.,,, Page 4. Cetlllt11le t CllHll._. 1 .. )4 (Ol'l'llC\ tt Crw_,,. ti OM!tl IMtlffl 11 ...,.,\el ,.... ' .. .,.,..el_•llf ... , .. a(. •11 w.rnc... 14 ... L.MMrt ,, ,..¥* ... • l O•ILY PILOT Chief Hits - Probation 'Overuse' By TOM BARLEY Of Hit Dellr ''"' tt1H lf trial judges arc held responsible for lhe subsequent acts of the convicted crim· nal we would soon see a sharp decline in the number of repeat offenders and the nation's crime rate, 1.4' Angeles Police Chief Edward Davis told California lawmen Monday. "Irresponsible judg es outnumber the other kind," Dav is said. "It's time we did something about adopting a system whereby we cou ld go back to the trial judge and point out what happened when he failed to impose a proper sentence." (See related stories, page 12) Apart from that, Davis said, "we are \he victims of 'yo-yo justice,' with cases tiouncing back from the appellate courts ~n such numbers that the trial court judge lS just inlimidated by the thought that his ruling might be reversed. "He should remember that an alarmed public does not achieve the familiarity with crime inevitable to the judge who may see as many as 1,000 convicted persons a year,'' Davis said. "That's no comfort to the citizen who may have to stand an hour with a gun in his belly while some bandit makes a decision on whether his victim lives or dies," Davis said. "The man on the street ~·ants justice and we're finding that most of our pres- ent day procedures, including wall-to-wall cops, are not giving it to him ." Davis blamed "overuse" of probation and parole program and "loosely ad- •----~m"'rinistered-1.nnovattve-programs-!.4or-the .. mounting fear of crime that is gripping our nation today. • ''.Cities are dying of fear ," the police chief told 300 lawmen at the California Peace Officers Association conference in Anaheim , "Look at New York with its tremendous problems aDd tremendous costs, far worse than ·Los Angeles alt hough our cime rate.bas doubled in the Jast 10 years." Davis warned his audience that the on4 ly remedy "in what is not and never has been a criminal society" is a "just, fair and tough system in which the trial courts must ~ held accountable. "Many crimes are being committed over and over again by the same criminals," Davis said. "Crime rates are going up while state prison sentences are going down and men are finding that the gunmen who held them up last night may be out on the street serving probation the next mom· ing. "Past solutions haven't worked," Davis warned his audience. "We have to be tough and we're being told to be tough in no uncertain terms by communities that are sick of repeated failures in the battle to combat crime." One Week Left For Absentee Voters to File Only one week remains for June 6 primary el ection voters to file for abs~ntee ballots, Orange County Registrar of Voters Dave Hitchcock warned today. Persons who expect to be absent fr om their precinct on June 6 may apply for an Absent Voter Ballot either by maH or in person at the Registrar of Voters office, 1119 E. Chestnut Ave., Santa Ana. Deadline is Tuesday, May 30. If requesting a ballot by mail, the voter must include his residence address his le~al signature. and the reason whY he will be unable to vote in his precinct on June 6. There is a legal out for certain voters llitchcock explained, to apply for a~ absentee ballot after May 30 but it is necessary in such cases for the voters to fill out special affidavit forms at the registrar's office. Anyone with questions on the ballots may phone 834-2244. I OU.NII COAST DAILY PILOT "The 0t•1'191 C•nl DAll't' PILOT, wltn wl'llCll )f comlllntd Ille Ntwt·P•tll, 11 publl"*I _.., the 0••• CO.ti PubliV\1"9 COmP<tf'lr. S•1141· rite f<llllon1 ••• &>UbHlhfll, Mondty thro119ll Friday. tar Co1t1 Mt", N•woort 111(1'1, ~11nt11191on 8tech1Fovnt1ln V•U•r, l•t""" Btl(h, lrvlnV S1ddlt011tk "" 5111 C~-nt1/ $tn J1rln C~pi1tr•no. A :i.ll!Qll riru•O<loll ail!tlol> Ii. Pllb!IU'of<I St!urd1y1 •nlll SllllCl1y1, T/le princlp1I publl1Mn11 Pl•nl II fl JJO Wltl Bay Srt•tl, Cod• Mt"' C1!Horni1, t112•. Fl.ob•rt N. W11d Pr•u1ltfll •no:! Publl1htr J •clt R. Curley Vi(f Prtsidtnl Ind Gentr1i Mtri.vtr Thorn•• K•1lil E.dl!or nom11 A. Murphi11• Ml ntGlnti (ditOf Chlrl11 H. Looi Ric~•rl P, Nill An!1t1n1 MIN91111 Edtlort S.. Cl•-•r. Offk• lOS North El Ct l'l'lifto R11I, 'J672 Ott.tr Offlc .. Cotti Mei.a: JJO Wttl ~'I' SlrMt fllf'WpOr't htcll : »» Ntwi!IM .Ol.l....,11 Hllf'lll"llOll 1e1c11: 1n1s lffd'I aovr.-..,. Uillftt •••t.11: m '°'*'' .&v.rwe T.r.,.. .. C7141 '41.-4111 C:I•.,... Afttrthl11 '42·1171 S.. ClitMtW19 All D1p•1t•1t11 , • ..,.. .. 491.+tJI ~ tm. q,.,. c.... li'\lblltlllllf am1 l*!r. H. new1 1iOl"lft 1n1a1r1ntn1. ed IWltf ft"llllfr er ffytrllfft'Ml'lh 11trt111 INY bf rlll!'ldwld wlfho¥1 ~Mil ,.,. M1IM OI "°'1fil!ll llW!lfl', ~ "'""' ... , ...... ., .. C..ft MtM. (allf9nli.. -....cri,tlM lw u,.,.,, . UM INflff!lft llr IMll lJ.lf ""'41111'1 mlltt.'Y ............. fit.&I "'°'"'""· Tut$dQ', MQ' 23, 1972 Failure?-Nt1et Russians Eager To Get Results By WILLIAM L. RYAN A~ S,.cl•I (fltt-•ttt The Soviet reception of President Nix4 on, lik e the advance Soviet press treat- ment of the visit, gives the impression that the Kremlin will go to considerable. lengths to prevent any look of failure for this summit. It seems significant that President Nikolai Podgorny chose this moment to expand the Moscow litany about the need for bet ter Soviet-American relations. Up to now, the stereotyped sentence has Capo Trustee Steps Down With Blast Resigning trustee Donald Inlay took some parting shots Monday at a new state-mandated shift in guidelines for the Capistrano Unified School District"s pro- gram of teaching English as a second language. The change in state rules might mean the cancellation of a fonnal program at San Juan Elementary School. despite the need for the special education by a large group of Mexican-American youngsters there. lnsttatt,-fhe·di!trict ne~t.,ear-wttl-prolr ably launch the classes at Las Palm.as School in San Clemente and Palisades School in Capistrano Beach. The res.son for the shift, said Supt. Truman Benedict, was the new emphasis on welfare rolls and the stipulation that schools with a large number of students welfare families will receive the em- phasis. Inlay termed the new guidelines ''nonsense," and emphasized that he disapproved of the emphasis on family income to determine eligibility for the program. Benedict pointed out that a state of- ficial recently traveled to the South Coa.!lt to explain the new rules for the stat~ funded program and plug them into the local school district. The superlntepdent related that the of- ficial suggested that San Juan might be ineligible for such a_program. "But there are ways to offer some fonn of the instruction at the school through aeleclive stalling and emphasis in the classroom/' he said. "I leM that lt might result ln a very serious dilutton of the p r o g r a m , especially if more teaching aides are ill" tegrated into regular cl13sroooms," Inlay .said. Benedict had told board members that even in tbe two selected schools students qualifying for the special instruction might r~eive it dming their regular class time and would not move to a se parate room for the instruction. Inlay said he feared that if that pro- cedure were to be launched the special instructors In the program might become teacher's aides, and not empha:iize their appointed tasks. "If we do our sta ffin g carefully at San Juan and the other two schools that won't happen," Benedict said. From Page 1 ASHBY • • • constitutional. "The next two weeks could detennine the future of the death penalty in Califomia, ''Ashby warned the assembled chiefs and high·ranking police officers. His remarks were made in reference to a campaign to put the death penalty on the November ballot as an initiative and allow voters to decide the question. Younger's chief assistant said there is a strong question whether the 527 000 valid signatures required to put it on 1 the ballot can be gathered. Timing between the Supreme Court decision and the groundswell for an in- itiativ~ i.s cruc_ial, Ashby sai~. "This is true, despite widespread sup- port." he added. "The voiding of the death penalty by the state Supreme Court is the most im· portant issue to affect California peace officers in recent years." Ashby em- phasized. "Altorney General Younger bas aS'ked me to ask you," Ashby continued, "to devote every free hour in the next two weeks to obtain signatures for the in· itiative ... "Ensuring that the people of California will have the opportunity to express their will on this mo:it crucial matter," he declared. The chief assistant attorney general appealed to the Jawmen's pride of duty in protecting the public and their own llv"9. "This is an obligaUon which you owe yourselves, your families and your men." Ashby said. He shifted from his main text of a speech dealing with current projecl5 undertaken by Younger In support ol bet- ter state law enforcement. The press conference-style delivery was attended by Orange County District Attorney C.Cll A. Hicks, Sheriff Jam .. Musick, and Newport Beach PollceChlel B. James Glavas ln addition lo olher county lawmen. Chief Olavas ts the state auoclation's new 1972-73 pr .. ldent. Wednesday's program Includes an a~ dress by Fourth Dl1lrict Court of Appells Justice Robert G arclner, the popular jurist from <'Alrona def Mar. He wm dllCllll C.lilomla law and prob- l~ms in the courts. gone: "Better relations with the United State~ are both possible and desirabll". but not at the etpense of any third coun- try or people." Podgorny, speaking al a KremUn din· ner, made it read "not merely good, but friendly relatlons.'' Th.is is a curious time ror Soviet leaders to be talking about "friendly" I NEWS ANALYSIS I relations with an American president who has just ordered the._!R.ining of a Com- mun ist nation's b~ to prevent the flow of soviet war ma terial to North Vietnam. But Podgomy stressed that the Russian leaders are eager for positive resulb:. 'J'hey may go to some lengths to get such results. Evidently the men in control won't permit either Vietnam or the Middle East, the two main sourct.!l of tension, to damage chances. Jf they must talk about the two areas, they will. That's going to make their allie9 nervous, even though the Russians may be neither willing nor able to concede anything. Leonid I. Brezhnev. the Communist party general secretary who is running the Soviet show now, lost no time in hav- ing a first meeting with the President. He may even be braving the meaningful scowls of party and military COil4 -:i;ervat1ves 5Y-·aiSj)l3YingstAch-e'3gemess. - Brezhnev and the Soviet media have built up a lot of hopes in the USSR and abroad that the summit will contribute to eased tensions, however. The party chief, most likely wants to deliver. Trustees Review Budget, Voice Fiscal Concern Grim trustees Monday reviewed the last thtt< portions ol the proposed, ten- tative budget for the capistrano Unified School District, then repeated lbeir long· standing concern over the loss of tax dollars if the U.S. govermnent acquires Laguna Nlguel'a aerospace complex. Committing about 90 minutes Of their special meeting to the maintenance and transportation por\IO!l& ol the district'• $10.5-million budget, trustees found ff\. creases in most areas -due primarily to double aessions relating to the delayed opening ol Dana Hills High School. The new high .!lcbool, itself, also win contribute to significant increases when it opens early next calendar year. Trustees took no action on the budget Monday, but learned that an amended form of the doctunent, a "tentative" budget, will be submitted with a few weeks by Sam Chicas, a s s i st a n t superintendent-busine ss. Because of the demands on district finances and the drain of about $200,000 from the tax revenue if the. North American Rockwell Plant becomes government property, Chicas admitted that the district will have to resort to deficit financing. Trustee Gordon Peterson took the lead in bemoaning the fiscal picture. "We're broke ..• less than broke," he said soberly. "The district looks like it 'viii be spending more than it will make." ''Unfortunately,'' Chic as answered; 1'You're correct." Despite the increases in man Y categories of the budget , Chicas pointed out that the district preventive-main· tenance program will no doubt suffer during the 11ext fisca l year because of lack of finances. The district's entire painting program will probably have to be scrapped u well, he said. Unrestricted reserves, a traditional cushion for tchool districts, also are hard hit ln this year's budget with $110,1174 pro- posed, instead of a more conventional sumor $200,000 or more. Homosexual Ring Preys on Boys, Says NY Aide MINEOLA. N.Y. (UPl) -Six per1<>ns have been indicted for activities con- nected with a loosely organized hom0$ex- ual ring which the Nassau County district attorney'• office 11aid preyed on young 'boys. The organization allegedly published a newalettu informing membert ol the , availability or boys Jn various cities, District Attorney William Cahn &aid Mon- day. cahn 11id the boy1 often "were bribed, cajoled, and ln some ..... for<ed to partlclpate.11 Some, C&hn said, were taken on trips to other cities where they we.re "swapped" ror local boys. About 80 percent ol the boy1 were fatherleu, Cahn said, and many wm !<recruited" by ad u t t 1 representing themselves as members of the ''Big Brother" movement. "l want to empbulze that the Big Brother organlzat100 bad oothln1 to do with thl& tordld cue, and It hu given 1ll Us utmoll coopenltoo ln our 111- vestlgatlon," Cahn aid. I I ' Moon Blast 'Partially Si1ccessf ul' SPACE CE ~'1'ER, Houston (AP) -A wea;>0n of war redesigned into an in· strument or science was exploded on tl1l" 1noon early today. bul :;cientists reporl rd thl" experitnent "'lls only partially suc- cessful. Scientists al the M3nned Spacecraft Center sent sigu<1ls tv a n1orlar packa ge ]('fl in the Descartes 1'1uuntains or the rnuon by Apollo 16 last month and caused three rocket grenades to be launl'hed . The grenades rol'keted a\\·ay and t l · plocled, sending seismil' shock waves through the moon's surface. A rourth grenade was not £irerl, however, when instruments on the mor- tar launcher indicated that it changed position. An official said !In attitude indicator sho\red the launcher may have pitched upward several degrees after the third rocket grenade was fired. Because of this, the scientists did net fire the last grenade. It may be fired l::i!er, ofricials said , if tests show the at- titude indication is false. The three grenades that were fired fiew 500, 1,000 and 2,000 feet and then exploded upon imp act v•ith the moon's surface. 'J'he fourth grenade is designed to fly up to 5,000 feet before exploding. Explosions o[ the grenades caused seisn1ic shock \\'aves n·hich were detected by a series of geophones installed i1 the lunar surface by the Apollo t6 astronauts. The shock waves· were expected to penetrate to about 500 feet beneath the moon's surface and then bounce back to the geophones. Scientists hope to learn -more-ab:lut the .. substruclure ol the.moon ----1...L by measuring the velocity, strength and Not a Bad Break A knee-high cast doesn't stop T/Sgt. Gerald Patlerson, slalioned at ~an Antonio's Randolph Air Force Base, Tex., from enjoying an out· mg on the beach in Corpus Christi. Patterson zips along the Padre 1sland National Seashore on a minibike, his leg cushioned on a pillo\v, Tustin Trustees Exchange Heated Words 011 Budget By JACK CHAPPELL Of Ill• DlllY PJlel Sllff 'Ibunder clouds gathered over the Tustin Union High School District board room Monday night portending stormy days abtad for the district's school budget. Trustees of the district which includes University High School in Irvine and Mission Viejo High School ended up con- tinuing tit June 5 an item setting ratio of students to teachers and counselors; but Church to Hold Rummage Sale An annual rummage sale for Shepherd of the Hills United Church of Christ in Laguna Niguel will be held June 9 and 10 and organizers this week issued an ap- peal for items which could be sold. Hours for the Saturday and Sunday activity will from 1 to 8 p.m. Saturday and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. the following day in the Crown Valley Mall parking lot. Ladies in the church membership are conducting a search for donated items and donors can arrange for special pickup of articles by calling either 495- 4784 or 496-0613. not before sharp words were exhanged between trustees. Trustee Robert Batholomew charged that the stalling pattern of the schools detennined 85 percent of the schools' budgets. "I don't consider the 30.5 (students) to 1 (teacher ) a sacred cow," Bartholomew said . "If we went to a ~t ratio and 500-t r::iUo (of student to counselors) we would .save a half million dollars." he said. Trustee Dickran Boranian, said he thought Bartholomew did not understand about the programing system used in the schools. Boranian said that the ratio "'as an average or all the classes and that if it were increased some classes Ciluld end up with as many as 45 or 50 students to one teacher. ''I do too know what I'm talking about,'' Bartholomew snapped. Dr. William Zogg, district superin- tendent, told the trustees that about 20 percent of the high school classes were by necessity very small. These involved more advanced language classes and others with special requirements. Boranian asked Dr. Zogg what ratio of student to teacher existed at other Orange County schools. Zogg said he thought that of all the districts only Garden Grove might be higher than 30.5 to t and that many districts were below that figure . frequency of the shock wave echoes. The grenades are fired with the push ~r a button at Mission Control here. This sends a signal to ignite the grenade rocket and the device flies away. The grenades, whi ch each cost about $10,000, are equipped with radio transmit· ters and two different length break wir~s. By measuring the time between the parting of the first and second break v.·ires, scientists can determine the velocity of the grenades just after launch. The Apollo 14 astronauts left mortars on the moon during their February 1971 lunar visit. Officials have not fired them for fear doing so could destroy the real of the Apollo 14 science station. As a re!tult the Apollo 14 mortar package will not be fired for perhaps years. Officials said the Apollo lti mortal' launcher is not expected to affect the other instrUments in the $20 mllUon science station. Capistrano Bay Panel Studying Items on Ballot A group of panelists sponsored by the Capistrano Bay area League of women voters ·will examine all the ballot items facing California voters in the June elec4 ti ons. The event will be held Wednesday evening in San Clemente. Three members of the active group will participate in the panel discussion which will begin at 7:30 p.m. in the San Diego Gas and Electric Company auditorium in San Clemente. The panelists are League P1'sident Mrs. Kay Walton, "The Voter,•• newsleter editor Mary Beltran and voter service chairman Lee Steelman. All residents of the community are wel come to attend. The meeting Is a non- partisan gathering geared to public service, league aides said. ~1rs. \Vallon stressed the group does not endorse, oppose, nor evaluate can. didates or issues on ballots. Buyil!g A New Tract Home? Many people buying homos are under tho impression they HAVE to buy carpeting from the homo sale s center. In the majority of coses this is not true, although the sales office will try lo make you think so. The minute the home center tries to upgrade the standard carpet, then you are free to skop for carpeting. To-prevent shopping should constitute restra int of trade. In many cases !hoy wiR tell you that the carpet allowance does not •pply if you buy carpet ounidt. If they feel this legal, HAVE THEM PUT IT IN WRITING. Ordinarily, we can save you • lot of money over what tho home conhlr offers. We provide a forger selection -ind we usually com• up with less y1rdage, plus a 1uperior installation. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave . COSTA ME.SA 646-4838 '' ,1 I ) ''' . I 11""=--------------.i Fron1 Page 8 TOMGHT'S TV IDGHLIGIITS j KHJ 0 7:30 -"Dayton's Devils." An ex-Air Force officer trains a group of specialists to pull oil a $1.5 million robbery at a SAC base. Rory Cal- houn, Lainie Kazan. KTLA 0 8:00 -Angels baseball. The Ana- heim nine takes on the Oakland Athletics. ·: CBS U 8:30 -Campaign '72. CBS News cov- l ~rs the Oregon primary el~ction, Walter Cronki<e 1s anchor man. ~· ABC 0 9:00 -"The Astronaut." A comedy • of mixe~·up identities involving an astronaut re- ~ turnin g from Mars. Jackie Cooper, Monte Mark· 1 ham, Robert Lansing, Susah Clark. .. i~ NBC 0 9:30 -"Nichols." Sheriff Nichols at- tempts to keep the peace when his larcenous uncle Zachariah comes to town with a small fortune and two ex-convicts hot on his heels. •• ~~w ix,o;cr=' Tuesday Evening MAY 23 ~ THEA TElfNOTES Robert t.fendoui. Colleen Doherty, Stephen Osborn, Ted Grandke, Charles B ~ugh , George Berg, ~f.'.lry Crowell, Carol Hale and Phil Sprague. The comjc farce plays Fridays and Saturdays at 8:3() for three weekends at the Muckenthaler Center, 11 9 Buena Vista Drive. Fullerton. ReservationJ 528·1973. -.c, South Coast Repertory's brilliant pr o du ction of "Pueblo," a dramatization by S411lley R. Greenberg al North Korea's capture af the U.S. spy ship, resumes Wednesday night and continues ~hrough Sunday. Martin Ben- son is directlng. Don Tuche heads the <::st as Commander Bucher w h i I e ~lichaci Owen.s, Ron a Id Boussom, \Villiam Brady and Ellen Ketchum play major roles in the huge cast. Performances are given at I o'clock at the Third Step Theater. 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa l\fesa. Also playing in Costa Mesa is the Civic Playhouse's com- edy ''My Sister Eileen,'' heading in to its second o( three weekends at the Com. munil y Center aud itorium on the Ora n g e County Fairgrou nds. Pali Tambelllni is directing. V~nen.1 fl:eclgr1¥1 G!1nd• .11ck11111 .. MAlt'r, OUEEN 01' seors• "'WUTHERING HEIGHn'" _.._ .. --:..r;:;:r, $TADIUM •2 111 ·~ E•clu11.,. Or111g1 C.lt,tnly Re•lrvtd S11t EntllllMnl Horrllnlleod IOr I Ac1d•111r AWl,..11 "FIDDLER ON THI! ROOI'" Acldemr Aw1rd Winn« J1n1 l'Ondl "KLUTE" fRI Ill.I "SUMMER OF 'ft'' (Ill "CHATO'S LANI>'" & "DOC" "MAP.K OF THE DEVIL" "LET'S SCARE JESSICA TO DEATH" "SWEDISH l'L Y GIRLS" ... ''SWEET llODY 01' DE•ORAH" 5:001J l lf Wm Jerry Dunph)' 0 MIC lttw1 Tom Snyder 0 Tiit Iii V1llty t:OO fJ CJ) Kawai flvt.G (R) McC1rrett discoveB 1 criminal rin1 hljtc~n1 aifurro shiprntnh whilt tn.tsti11t· in1 tht d11t11 of 1n 1irport.seeurity unden:ovtr trtnl. o rn@ t::DM• ti .. WMk: (C) (90) -JM Adronlur (R) (ICl·ll) '71-.llckit Cooper, Monte Mark· ham, Robtrt lansint SllSln Cltrk. Rich11d Andmon. A roun1 womM 1-~~::::::::::::::::::::====::::::~:_ falls In kwl with her 1stron111l·hUI· O News Benti, Schubtcll O @ Wli. Wiid Wut 1 -+-~---imi•oc,..... btrtd 111 over 1pin when ht returns from Amerita'1 first mission to M•rs. only to le1m ht's l!Ot r1ally ht1 l m Thi n1ntsto1111 CD I Drl•• If Jeennit !BJ Zoo11! fT:) Hadet'9drt lldp mmm• ... QJ ""'"" RFD E['i) Te II Anno11nctd (SZ) ftlrt1 Stooaes "3ll0M°"': (C) (IG) ...... lpo" Cone/. (dr1) '68-Rlch•rd Widmark. H1nry FQl\dl, ln11r st1vens. Cl) CBS Nns W11t1r Ctonklt1 @) ltation11 '"rrapltl< m ""' '""'~ .... at Jlamr)' lnll th t Pnfmlr <IJi """" ED A Ctnnrutlotl Witll lt1 Kol· ... fDTrusw1 9 '""" Acri• a;) 09t• Clatl (sta ClldHJ m Vldln. " ... Sllotr (SZ) ....._, Oliot .Mintr l:SSOPtlltlal Mml• 7:00 U (IJO I!""'° 9 .. ttMClocl (1) Tnrtll tr Col-.itnm (]) ""'"' G .Whll't MJ UN? QI I LMLKJ ID I Drt•11 tf Junnit Qj) (lluut11111 lbtll11 f.ID KlthlJOll Klthleen Hitchcock fil U111 Pltprbi ti ti C.• IHJ Kid T•lk 7:301J Cl) Glew Cl111pbell (R) Sl111t1 B1rb111 Edtn ind comedl111 Dom Dtluis1 1001. fi) €n hlldtnSI '1h1 Rttl Pt0plt ol Muddy Crtek" (R) Fri1ht1ned cl· tizen1 !let town and lea'lt Ben Clr1· w1l1ht to protect 1 prisoner •11ins1 1 r1n1. O Sports Ch1Tit1111 Te1m of Kins· 11 City Chltf1 (Len Dawson, Willie llnl1r, Otis T1~IOf) compel• •11llUI tht team of th• LA. Rims (Gltnn D1vi1, Norm Van Brocklln, Tom F11u). e mmmn.. ... ...,. "licmt 11 the Slrttl" (R) CIJ I Dr1111 11 Je1nnlt G Mnll<in $ Movie: (C) (2111) "DIJ- ton'1 DtvJlt" (IUS) '61-Rory C.I· husband. &JllCNUl .. CNU a"" Vlr&fllll• Cll)Novtll t:300 0 il'll ... C1mtr 11 NI~ ett "Zaclllrllh" (R)-Shtrllt Nichols 1tt1mpt1 to keep th• p11te when his Llttenous 11nd1 comn to Iowa •ilh 1 smaH fortune and two u.·eon- Yicts hat on his hH1s. O Ntn Wddl John Fullmer Q) Men Hua:b WlU~ms (1j) llld: Jllmal m 1111 '""" "P (RJ Ill A111tw1 (SZ) hdl& ,,_ HollJlfOICI Part The Nurst')' Sbkas. 10:00 II (I) CllllH (R) Thtodofl Biktl aunts in tht role of • wlnerrower who has bun tht Ylctlm ol 1 series of m~ps. e-. (21<) ..,... -LW' (dra) ·~int KlrriL CD""" Pttl Miller, Kin Jones 111-<IJJ-" ...... (R) U!) rlltinf lltJlcaM (52)11.._ .. .- 10-.lO 0 lmllfl ...._ R*rt Brt11m mur111 in this und1nrtltr 1dvt11lurt series, 11 Clrtlr Primus, 1 &lob•I und1rnltr troublWioottr. '1hl Bliek Holt" Toni H1)'(11n b pulled by 1 powerful whirlpool Into 1 sub- ttrr11111n c1wm on !hi ocern·1 ""'· O Jltws Gtortt Putnam D (IJ(iJ Ill"""' Wol>y, M.D. "It Is So Soon Thi! I Am Done for. I Wonder Wiii! I W11 Bt111n For" (R) In 1n 11t1mpt lo 1s.su111 thtlr srilf followin1 thl dt1th of their b1b1, 1 Jl)un1 couple btcomt lostrt parenb ol 1rtother bo)t. Q"j S..1 Diql hMflU m••....,-m llhln4 n. u..s IIJll -la m c.n " "' .... a"''"""'""""'"'" (52) Colldtncia Culp1bl1 houn, Ltinlt Klzan. 11:00 IJ Cl) II) Mtws t1) i IPIZIA'! Alrlca P1rt IV Can· 0 Oj m Jim ctu5ion ol 1 look 1t modem Alri· c1's stru.r1!1 In th• 1lterm1th ol the IJ OM Step llyond co!anl1I tr•. m Trwtll 1r Conaq111neu m Hoc1n'1 lfcfHI 1!J M.tfM: "Mii• StrHI " lrollJ.. ID D11fllel WIJ" (rom) '53-T11lul1h B1nkh11d, tlj) Tl11 fotJFtt S111 Helen H17es. ED Cumnt ['ltnll (52) ~ (R) 9;CountrJ ~ GI'i) Conwjert Como• 11:30 fJ (I) cas Litt Mftll: (C) .,... (SZ) Movie: {Zhr) .,b1wbiny htl"lor•111ry $1111_.. (com) '69- Blondt" (com) '41-.James C11n1J, Dr.id Niven, F17t Ounany, Alan Al· Ritt Hl)'W'Or1h. 41, Micki)' Rooney, Jxlt Clrter. l:DO 0 .,,,...,. Anat• ..... oft M· 1111 n . O.kltnd Alhlctica CIJ 0 '"'° " ..... "H""'1 ol Azth'n" Hlllr1o111 comedy Mt In thl P1clf1e dllrirll Work! Wt1 II. o o m--p,.1wu. ll•ms lll'Sb. IJ IMil: (C) "A l.elus hr Mill ai AndJ Cr1f'ftlfl Show Quon" (dn) '67 -Fon l111 film ID Dftld Fmt SlllW dubbed In Cnt!lsll. €D LI Cw l•rrld• {j) M1nflll Dlllo1 @l Cltn C.unpbelt 0 I]) GD,.,.. Sl) lltldon C.11tr1l ml• Tel lfM TnrD 1:30 B ()) Co11p1I~ 71 Co'ltrtp ol U:OO D (I) Cil m Did: Cntft Ceo1p th1 Or1,on pnm11)' ·lllC!iol -wl~ trt1in"llfd-Unfill And11ss rvest. Wtlter Cronkltt IS 1nchorm1n. 0 Mowlt: "Di1rmus1J THJ Uw" 0 tm) m JllC Actl111 PllJfliOvM (drt) '42 -Jolin Gtrlltld, Nt!K'f' ~A Time for KHlln1" (R) Gt0fll C. Colemen. Scott Sllfl IS I U.S. Nny Sub· m Mewll: ('C) "'lllf, llflptriW•" marine e1pt1ln who flnd1 11 dilflcuH (rwn) '51-l.llll Turnti, [zlo Pint•. lo 10 on kiltln1 durin1 !ht Int dlJl ,, ~1r 11. M1c111t1 ,.na 1i. 1:00 11 rn a.., ~· D . __ ... 1:3011--""'<••1'!1 ptrt 1 at tbt Onion ,nrMry -Vid9f Mllwe, .~rt Whitman. t lectlon. a~ ,...,. m ... '""' -!dltdu"' 11 m-ruem lft J.P. Morrt11, GIOfJ' m ...._ se.: ....., .. , ... Bums, .ltmtS ltolln, I.I. Kini. 1M ... (C) "'Mii tit Frbct flil l]JJ 1111 -..... """' , ... " ,..,.. StlD ....., (rom) '41 -Dotolhy Wednesday """"'· loll Holl. 1:001J (C) •AH: MJ llrl" (com) 'St- DAYfiME MOVIES ShlrttJ MK\.tlM, Dl.W MIYen. ·-" ... _,, .. (dll) t:OO m (C) '"Clillt n.. .... PnJ" '5.3-llhel Wllera, Julit H.urll. . <d'•I •5-V" Holl•. 1:30 8 "11111&11 _. (WU! 'lt- t.111 D """ .... "".,,. (fB) '$!-Jl>lol ............ ~. Uodo Dorlltll ~ ..... lldlll). l:tl (I) (C) -...., -Cond. 10:00 ffi 'T• Ir, Dor• 111 .... -<*'I 'f& -lllbllt Wood, ~ ··~ D'eo-.... -. 10:30 9 -Y•ll C 11 1tft (11'1) ._ di "'11111 ff LM" Pitt I (4rl) '47 --(Cl ·-ti _...,.. lltfilr!!, P1d - • ·•V!LA'r IT A\•13A\I~~ SA.M0 " L:~ '~OOOYAllEN bclwive County Run ~1 STARTS MAY 24 .. : .. · ... i 1•"~1~m • An Incredible •dnntur1 ••• thlt journey• be1ond Jm1gln1tlon I TIM HAS A PET RATTLESNAKE, WHEN TIM GETS MAD· STANLEY GETS DEADLY I r .:STAILEY~. ••. WlU MAKE YOUR SKIN CRAWL OiclCBK'.DI STA•TS WED. MAY 24 intm AT IOTH IDWAIDS CINEMAS IN MISSION Vll:JO EDWARDS CINEMA VIEJO ~•'< 01iG~ »•• ,. , •fl/ r ,~ '> 8' . \q 'M111rlon Bnndo ~iii* ll•flll ••• Debra Ensign and Diana Spencer head the cast, with Gene Benedict, Barb a r a Garlich, Jack Murray and Alan Hart in supporting roles. Perfonnancts are Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30: reserva- tions 834-5303. Ana Community Players. Lee Howint gon directs the show, while Del Rosso plays the leading role. Russ ~1artin, Susan O'Con· nell. Laura Black, Richard Gordon and Janice Urban also are featured in the producllon at the Players Theater, 530 N. * Ross St.. Santa Ana. Reserva- "Catch Me If You can" rolls1rt=io=ns=S4==l·2=1=88=·=====::; into its second weekend at the I~ Huntington Beach Playhouse vt'ith Alex Koba in the direc- tor's chair. John Loughman, ~ferrell Ann Haddan and itartin Fuchs head the Hunt· ington Beach cast. l~ank Sork in. Dave Gilmore, Jean Crreischeimer and George Ralph complete the company at the playhouse, 2110 itain St., Huntington Beach, where performances are given at 8:30 Fridays and Saturdays. Reservations 536- 8861. Joe Del Rosso's original comedy-drama "Swinging_ Singles" closes out its three1 weekend run with f i n a I performances Friday a n d Saturday at 8:30 for the Santa ~do ..... tuai .......... ....... .W..W.-.OL....aH- ENDS TONIGHT J•Mn Cobu1111 "THE CAREY TREATMENT" Abo "THE FRENCH CONNECTION" St1rt1 ·Wednesday EXCLUSIVE Charlto• Hest .. Y'l-"9 Ml111l•11a: ,, ENDS TONIGHT "SWEDISH FLY GIRLS" "SWEET BODY OF DEBORAH" @ ~ COlOR Columbia Pictures BARGAIN MATINEE Wednesday, 1 p.m. FREI lEfRESH MINTS Ad•lts $1 .00; Chlld 75¢ l,CH "HOSPITAL" • "ll" i~~ AT NEWPORT "DEALING" "' J---AND "WHERE'S POPPA" R .,,, •. ,, •• -11•-•\0CC_..,... ----~- * DAILY PJL~T D "'CABARET' IS GLITTERINGLY BRILLIANT. IT DESERVES TO BE A CLASSIC." WHildl'f1:':11, t :U, lhU •·"'· S.11. & Sto111. I:•, l :U ... :11, 1111, 111• <@ijpjl "KLUTE" (R) i..---AJID "S1111'UMt ., '42H IRI OPENS WEDNESDAY .MAY 24 \ , OVER THE COUNTER NASO Llshngs for Monday, May 22, 1972 COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK LIST ,,.. 11111 11141•) Hi.ti ln C• Cftt :i1tefhcl) H tn low l•I CM c:11 ... spr 1 ,, " '' t ~••\ .U\\+ • lttO 51,~ 60 C ... rn li'r 2 M ll • 311..o JT'lol t~~f~•','i'" -A•-CIMl11 Mn 1 1t Jl o ~·~•-Ii F ~ ._ __ ,:"."""' _. ol,llbolll I 0 8J II o 7) 1 }O •~ l i CllaM; I tod H jSh $4'i $JI•+ ~> FM ~~o _ _._._ .-~ .,._ A(l'!fl(I llO J 'l'• d <Il l 'Cllt(kr MIU ; JO o ?O't :IO \ ~tHO(O .?0 l .. •:r,!11 on 11101'1 Gto rl'' ~~ Blto O!'ftt 1' ~ :Iii ,.. Liii C d INO:.t t Cp O .. $ttl p.,, 04i •I '"'' ;l~ol 11 • ~ llVldw fn 1 l j !~~:~~ i': !1 lft! u; u::: !! (l'lt lttt 14 ,1 11\o 1Jh 1.si.'!+ .: ~In.%" 1 ~ """""' lilt' NI Am llPrl , '' do " •••· '"' ... ,.,~,.. u,~, '' I , O h 0111 c 111.i 11 , .... t ttr FI :It, lll\o. ft lo Jlr! 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Ht nt H I Of GltOU" SEC P1c1 Fl! 11.5t Tl 1' tndl• l 'g ~; ~ ~ 1~ ~·-' DI! 119~ 4~ U 11 t 11'• 11 ,_ l' ~e en11t 7t FIELD REPS MANUFACTURING AND OXEROXING 0 ANSWERING SERVICE 0 DESK SPACE EEOS '(0\)t\ t( 0 SECRETARIAL SERVICE '/.~c¥. 0 BOOKKEE PING OLA LINES C 0 MIMEOGRAPHING 0 TElEGRAMS, IWX, OC!:UMENT TRANSMISSION 0 MAILING LISTS COMMUNICATIONS snv1a BUREAU "l'OMHDI d .... CNfOMf Al Y-co••._.. IRVINE-AIRPORT INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX (714) 547·7777 (213) 610-9393 AMERICAN SECURITY BANK lln Organilation I Organ,.otionol Office 505 North-Arrowhead, Suite 305 Son Bernord1no, Co/,forn•o 9240 I Phono (714) 88~71 NOTICE American Security Bank 1s now rece1v1n9 appl1cat1ons for sub1cr1pt1ons for common stock. Glrigin1/ Issue 150,000 shores $I 0 00 per 1hore Sub1cript1on Price For •n off1r1n9 circular and application , contact tho office by phone or m1 1L Robert B White, Jr Pr11ldenl IOARD OF DIRECTORS J Robtrt WHt, M.D Robert I. Whit•, Jr Sing S, Wong Virgil L Luke Jt,,,.. M. 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I I -XYZ-~ 1 • 11 11 • t (OI' I 11 t . ·-Yttt lllllU• I• j • , l -• t1rt OSd ~ t • o -"\o '¥'onk 11•<• 1 ? • ,, .. 11 o ... urol I 1' 11• }l~-\~tr 0 ,,,,g J ~ , )'), »l•-'\~tGoPt l • r o , l ,.._ 0 1 ?~ 11\'n(tr (~ !? l't l lt 1.,._ ~ t m Hm ?t q U. 10t"o 1C '• 4Ulo •• ... U lot+.e ' 11 • • • It) II I 11•• II ., I 1 , S o I• ~ 11•t•n ev U 1 U I' I ' ~ oi 1 1r 1 u 1 r1• 1,1,1tl1nc; oo I 1t • '• 1' • l? it • 1' I 16 I Cont.t t1tr Sloa Po si., ._ I• '1 t • >: • r. ~ ··~·1----------------·I 11 11 I +•• A I Sa ,,, ~t.. • • -' mn can les 1!00 ....... "' ~+1 1~ ~l'' ~ ~~ : Vol1tm.e 1100 61 ~ •S • ll .. 1\IJ AMl•lt'-M llCCHANOI U\.I' t 11 • ,,... 1.._.. If U11l1 ... ,,...., hl't-lillltt THE BEST UcodrnibJp po 11 1 prove Peanuts b one ot 1ht> worlds mOJt popular comic flMp11 Ril!Pld U daily In lht DAILY I !LOT 41 I• 1.... Iii-\o A--fir.el llK~ llttl 'i~i .. 1J\o 2t~ !Ii ltoc.• TOttl v"r -t!:l I' !f: l! -• ·-OI !Intl beN &11,. .. :i:============ 1 1 14 ~ IOllll Jt "' "tr -) "' ~ ~ ) .:! DAILY PILOT For Th e Record Dissoluti ons Of Marri age INTl!ltLO<"UTOR'I' DECRl!•S i:nror..i Mtr u Rveb, (11nd11c1 0. tnd A'obfr1 E. Vtn !>cMlndel, Mirr Juli tnd Wllll1m M•rvln TOdd. Loll P1tr!clt and R1ch1rd Douol•.• Ritter. Olivia N. tnci James R Radlkt, Pt1rltlt L. tnd PhllllP E. Vorret!t, Anl1a C •fld Joseph A Lt Mieux, llttte" E1191rie/1 •nii Mire Arlel Ylhl!e, H1rm11n tnd H11tl Arrlell\ 5(hUllJ, P•lrlcl• Lou tJ\d Phll/p . •,ohannon. Vtr,.. Ruth tnd Vern R1r IU(ktr. NtUle tl'l<I l(lrlt Edmcnd YAbrud, Tl\Ottla• M Ind Carol Jttn Ru~o. P1trlc11 tfld Jo\eph M HUI. M11rlM Paur and Etl111Mih Marie l(elrh, Lindt Dftrie Ind G1rv Lr"" Duk••· DlaOI' Ctrol end DK.Ir EU9flll Kint, Ctrol $ylvl1 Ind 11\Dmll• JO~h llor-rv. Gltnn Alvin tnd Pa!rlt la J<Mln C11e1. WlrKheU •fld J01t1lyn ElllM ,.,trrtro, Jtnt L af'ld Pa$0Ull• C 1111111, Jtcq~y;/ Ar111 i nd Jack 11i11rie =h!-!I LCH.ifM tlld C~rl01 Raston ·wMiiY-' .Marr ~elle . ind Jlmll$ Sotief11, BltllCt A. 1fld Leo V, Wltlb, M#lrr A/let Ind Robtrl VNrl -Mffft.Yolendt 0 . ond·ChlirlM oll.-- M'-, "'· Eve!Yn Kar and Bruce Dtn!tl ",'"n"'' 1, Evtlv11 Mte •nd Wllll1m 'fH'I !••d , l nda JNn tnd Jostl'h hhmlll kl1>1>1, Sidra D. and Rlch1rd L. L!flrolh,., n Ctrl 1nd ll1rbar1 Ann a • .,,, w Ulam and Suwn Enltrfll Mfr 11 McCrtcktn, 01rgld A1y and Mary E Ro:>or11, Mlcri.el Ev•rttr 1M RU!11 .. , '"',·11;.c.>n, V1l•r!a Ann tnd Gllbol!rt Al1n Thigpen, JllClllll Mlrll •r>ll Ch•rlts Wvl1er Wtf4, Vlr111lnl1 Patrl(lt 11\d WU!ltm Le•oh Van Ver1t, Dtvld llruct and Pt11tY Jg•n 51illlo00, TMnl Rulh tr\d Tl'lornlS Curll!oohtr Craig, Htr~rt Cllflcin ·i ncl Diana L• l'evre Mark!Mm, Thornt1 H. 100 FJovd w.1Hlct:ge' M~rle •nd c. o. Procror, OY .... tnd GIMll M. C1lcw1ll, lloberl C. 1nd .. 111h1a M. Cltrko. :.andrt G. tnd Wlllltm H. lleui1el, llkhlrd E. Ind L'fl'I.,. M. Shindle, John R1yrnQllCI and Miidred lrtM Ptrrtltl , Shlr(lfl Ann 1nd Rorr Doutl11 GUCklr!, Rflll"" M. Ind J•'""I llovcl R11d, A""lw Angell 1J\d Rtlttl T. Tllon'!SM. Sul•nnt Marie Ind Jlfl'Ml!S Martin C.ordtil, Cltud• R., Jr. 1fld 0oro11>e1 II. T""41y, Ma1 23, l •72 Faces of Iron Fail to Cracli: By JO OLSON 01 lllt OAIL'r' PILOT Sttll WITH SHIRLEY CHISHOLi\I: One of the more inter- esting aspects of covering a politician's talk is observing all the preparations tor his or her visit. \Vhen presidential candidate Shirley Chisholm spoke at UCI Friday, the scene has predictably fascinating and the game of trying to figure out how many U.S. Secret Service men there were. was extremely challenging. UCl's Crawford }!all was "tight- er than a drum" with guards wan-- dering around or standing at speci- fic doors, wearing both business suits and Orange County Sheriff's uniforms. r knew there were Sheriff's l)e. partment representatives. Gove rn- ment secret servicemen and Shir- ley Chisholm s t a f f members on duty, but to tell which was l''hich was another matter. SOME WERE WEARING tiny enameled pins, others had on white and black round buttons and some had no identifying badges. Some men had earphones which were attached to small radio units concealed under their coats. ~1y reporter's curiosity got !he best of me. so I ask- ed one of the radio-carrying men just how many secret service men were around . It "'as like trying to talk to the guard at Queen Elizabeth's castle v.·hen it is changing, or getting an ans.,.:er from a brick \1·all. JNSTEAP, HE ASKED me what kind of notes l had written in my notebook. Alter Mrs. Chisholm 's talk r \l:ent backstage to the rooin where she was to meet the press, and there was -another contingenrllf-gnards. While waiting, I tried to engage one in conversation about Mrs. Chisholm's political beliefs, her autobiography and her speech that night. Tm S WAS ONE man who was not Interested in dis- cussing politics. He also declined to talk about wh,ere he was from and how he happened to be there, but .queslion· eel me about What kind of press card I had. So, I decided these men of stone wouldn't crack a bit and my only recourse would be to call UCI Monday and get" the facts. .. I found that the men with the enameled pins \\·ere Secret Service men, those with the black and \Vhite but- tons were UCI students and staff. and those .,.,·ith no badges or buttons were Chisholm staff members. PRESIDENT 1'.'lXON should be told his Secret Service men are doing a good job or keeping quiet. Or is it that I'm doing a lousy job of reporting be- cause I couldn't get a quote? Pris on Weakness Admit'ted . ANAHEl~t -California's chief correctional officer has frankly admitted here that his state prison system had "oversold the idea 0 r rehabilitation. "But," Department of Cor- rections Director Ravmond Procunier told the California Peace Officers Association convention. Monday, ' •you have to remember that the reasons behiod our admitted error were mainly financial." Procunier said the cor· rectional system had had to boost the idea or rehabilitation because it had been unable to obtain the fund s necessary for any expansion or amendment of the prison syste m. He urged top leve l discussions between the na- tion's lawmen, judges, parole authorities and prison officers in a move to determine the deterrents to be applied to future convicted felons who might not be eligible for rehabilitation programs. Procunier said the state's minimum security facilities will soon be a thing of the past with only "medium a n d closed" p r i so n s remaining open to cater to a declining prison population. "Our biggest problems \\'ill come with deciding who i.s to be confined to prison," he said. "Obviously, we ha ve to confine tM most dangerous criminals and the b i g operators of the crime world whose con\mement or ten means the end of many smaller operations. Unit Names Attorney SAi\"TA ANA -Lav.•rence Kirk, a Santa Ana attorney and resident of ~tission Viejo has been named to t h e Orange County Civic Center Commission. DAILY f'ILOT Iliff f'Mte Junior Art on Display Envoy Plans Coast Vis it The UC Irvine Model Unlled NaUons Club 1nd the UN Association Coastline Chapter will host New Zealand Consul General McLeod P. Chopman tn a public program at B p.m. Thursday in the htesa Court Gold Room at UCI. The program will include a presentatinn by JO UC I students who represented New Zealand during the annual Western states fl;fodcl UN held in Seattle in April. UCI Town and Gown plans a reception to follow the pro- gram. Both events are open to the public \Without charge. SPECIAL EDUCATION SUMMER SCHOOL IMlll'+'i<futlllM Klltol"'9 tor flM ILDW LIARNlll, -.1TISTIC, N•U· ROLOOICALL Y HANOLCAP,lD t lMI OTHERS wlttl HIKlat lttmil'll ,, .. lems. llNUT SU MMl l SCHOOL Claslft tor lh• 1ptc:l1I ckll!I Ju~• 1t111 to Jul1 21111 TRANSPOITATION PlOYIDID Judges screen art entries from students of more than 31 school districts at St. Ann's Parish llall in Santa Ana for 1972 Festival of Arts. Checking over some of the top drawings are Bernie J ones, are specialist Mrs. Marge Skelton of the Laguna Beach Junior Art Gallery an Mary Jane Haden, a judge. KENWOOD PRIVATE SCHOOL 151 Se. Wob11t .A .. MI• IJJ.JJIO Prison Experiments Ripped by Justice ANAHEIM -California is district attorney for Los mov ing too rast in loo many Angeles County, is a member experimental programs with of a task force which recently too few facilities and too few examined conditions spawning techniques being applied to the Now ••.• Plastic Cream Invention For Artificial Teeth ArtificW T eetll Nner felt So llallnl Before Now. rorth' lint tirne, 11Citn«offtn1 a plaslic cuam that holds dentures aa neverbeforc-formsandasticmetn· brane that lllps MUI l/wrt I• th nalrl'nd tiJsun of ::YtntT -.Ji. Jt'1 • unique ditcoverycalled F1xODEN'te that h a1 revo\u tionired denture wearing. Jt Itta you bite hardtt, chew bet· w . eat more naturally. F1xooD.T lull lor houn. Resiltl moilt.Wl!. DentW'tl that fit are eumtial u. health. See your dentist tt.w.rlJ. Get easy-to-ute FtXOOEN'I' Oeotww A dheaive Cream. problem of crime control, an California's mounting crime appellate court justice warned rate. !====================== the state's J.awmen here Mon-"We found · that we lack Uie day. kind of skill and knowledg'e In "The public says t h e the behavioral sciences that criminal justice sys tem would allow us to con~emplate doesn't protect them and the any further experimental pro- public is absolutely right," grams," C.Ompton said. "And Justice Lynn Compton of the we have al.so found that the Second District Court of Ap-sheer volume of criminal peals told members of the caseloads with their lnevitable Cahfomia Peace 0 f f i c e r s high percentage of p 1 e a Association. bargaining does very little to For Advertisi1ig iii Out '.'!Vi · About Phone Norm Sta1i'ley 6424321 "The public also wahts help us sort out the tangle of retribution." C.Ompton said.r~mou~~n-ti~ngiic~r~imiei.ii .. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~;;;;;;;~~f "It is quick to point out that punishment is neither certain • Wllltt, ROH Mir It tnd Ntll Frtnklln •~, ooro111y Mat and Palrkk Anvrl W fr, Carol J. and LtrrY R, w lll•m1. Clifford Nulle! t nd Ruth .... ,.,..._,. __ ,.,..._...,_.._,. __ ,.,..._...,_,...,._..,,.,.../. 'r.••lnt II" Kirk, a fonner county plan~ ning commissioner represent~ ing the first supevisorial district, replaces M a u r i c e Clad.man, a member of the civic center agency for the past four years. Cla dman was gerrymandered out of the first district in last fall 's re- districting. nor severe and ii isn't A BIG NAME SINCE t925 about secondary deterrents . ~ JI particularly interested in talk JJiRTRJml~l~DIC) C.r11, Carol F. •nd Dontld £. Hlr1~1~· Donald Ltvtrll and Allee • .,..,, CM111tlo Ind Jtmtl R .• Jr, flN,_L DECREES .loinltr"tl MIY 12 G1u1hr1n!.J1me1 P. tnd L~oor WlllOfl, l'lll'l<Y AM incl l(aymond "'°''' .JUllffu, Lesltr R. tf'ld Joul!hlne Vloltt Htf!Gt<"°'1, Lorlfll f , 1nd IJfNey R. C111101rs, j•.,,.• N Ind 1<11 Jtan Ct11Pf!ll1M , f'1ir1d 1 Marie Ind Robert .Ant.io Diii, ecmm• E. tnd Cl1rerw:1 W. 1:11oom. b1t1r ~11roo 11\1.J u..•.io Harry Nfc0111, Bro~ld lfld Cn•rltt J. L1esc.1, "'"'ru'41l• ul11"111 1110 WHll'i' :.ummera. Al~ M. 11nu J1me• v. "\"iMr.io, JOI I(. Ind k11.nl1en s :oeootn.am. Jf••tl o. 1nd u<1111 R1r ""'-•PflY, M•C! ... t! I(, Incl Joen J. h ;,..ol, Nlll'l<Y I... 1"0 b"ht I(. V.t••· M.lrr l-10..,n..• '"° J1omei. Loren Burrlllll, l<Mlld ...oor" ''"' l..~u• I "'•w' .. :_ _______ _ u ea-.•• l\u tices ci.ltLliiTlD ClltrlH Ctr1"'"· I(~-'"'''' cl Huntlng!oro Bwil<..01; d111 cf detih, Mty 22, 1911. ~..,,. vlv-<.1 by wll•. Mary; lhf'ft dlll!l;1t1r1, Ar.wd• Htr11oloor. Janel D1vl1 1n<1 tllt11 By~; TWO brother1, Sllvtrorl and A~O Carleno; two •lsltrs, MllUt C1rl11lo and Fltl C1ru&01 llvt 11r1ndchllclr1"' Rowry, Wednetdl'j', f;XI PM, Peek Ftmlly Col· onltl ,.,u111r1I Home. Requiem M•••• Thurtday, f ;XI AM, St. B0118Vtnt11rt CathOUc Churcn. Hunl!rigron Betch. DI· rec!lfll bV Pftk Family Colonl1I Fu111r11 ·-· HICJHDUCHl!CK Frank W. ttlghdu<h«k. R1sldent of ttun!lriglon Beech; d1tt ot de•lh, M1v 21. IJ/2. 5urvlv.ci Dy •~·Wilt, Evtlyn Peters tt111r..:1ucheck• Gaughttr•, senv Phllllp1, La Verne Baker, Ru!h Bru~ker; lour grtndchlldrtn. R:o11ry, Tuesday, 7:JO PM, Diiday Brotller1 Chapel. Rtciultm MIH, WfdneM11y, t AM, SS Simon .. JI/di! C11no1k Cnurcn. Interment, Weit Ntw!Ofl Cemel•rv. Wast Ntwton. Pennsrlvinlt. Dlldl'j' Brothtrl Mor!uary, 17Jol Btach lltvd., Huntln11!on Beoch, •U·171l, DI· reclors. LtnLETON llOblrt E. lltllt!M. 1'2t Iowa SI., Costt Mnt. D•lf ol det!h, M1r 21, 1'12. Sur· vl'ltd DY wli., Ellen; ..an. M1rlc, ol "•nort mt City; daughttrs, Mr1 MtchHt Underwood, c;.rdtn Grove; Min Robin Utlleton. Cost• Mtt.1: -grandchild. SCrvlcn. Thur1<11y, 1 PM, Pacific View Chaptl. lnt~ment, Ptc/Hc Vlew Mfmor· 111 Park. Ptdfh; Vltw Morlutry, DlrK· ·~· ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY ui E. 17th St.. Cost.a l\1csa 646-<888 • 8ALTZ BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona dcl J\lar 673-94.50 Costa Mesa 646-24%4 BELL BI OADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa l\lesa IJHm • l\lcCOR.~DCK LAG UNA BEACH ;JORTUARY 1'1t5 Laguna Canyon Rd. 491-MIS • PACIFIC VIEW l\lEll!ORIAL PARK Cemetery l\fortQIJ'J Chap<I SSOI Pac11c Vlflw Drive Newport Beacb, CaJHol'llla 141-%7111 • PEEK FA!DLY COLONIAL FUNERAL HO!IE ':'Ill Bolla Al"t, We1111lmttr atimS SMJTRS' 1To11TUA11Y lr1 Malo St. ~­- and experimental programs UCI Library Will Add Americana Collection devised for offenders who may soon be back before Ille same . court." Compton, a fonner assistant We are CARPET AND DR.APEllY Specialists and competiti've too! See us today! The UC Irvine library wlll be the repository for a 3,500- ilem collection of Western A -nericana assembled by a county newsman, historian and author. building. a new room will house the unusual collection that curator Roger Berry of the UC I library staff will Black Experience JeBackYouUpwlthth1BEST j 'fi'e'v'~ Program Scheduled 1438 so. MAIN at EDING ER. SANTA ANA .:::!~! UC! librarian John E . Smith sairi the Don Meadows col- lection of books, pamphlets, brochures, p r ograms, handbills, railroad timetables, newsclippings and o t h e r materia1s of the past was purchased with a grant from the office of the UC president. shepherd. Meadows . a library director. said the collection includes one of th e finest private libraries The department of French on Baja California and is rich and Italian at UC Irvine will in materials on Orange Coun-present a day.Jong program on ty. "Aime Cesaire: French View.'' and Frederick Case orlfr~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ the University of Toronto, In fall. 1973. \\'hen the ad- ministration offices move out or the UCI library into a new Boy Vying For Busiest U.S. Youth The second book believed to Literature and the Black Ex- have been pqblished about perienct" Thursday. California is OOe of the items Aime Cesaire, black writer in the ~feadows collection. The from the \Vest Indies who was rare book was published in associated with surrealism in Mannheim. Germany in 1772. Paris, is the author of poems A three-volume set i n in which black and European Spanish. "Nolicias de I a cultures are confronted and or Ca lifor nia." written by Jesuit plays which deal with political priest Miguel Venegas in 1757, and revolutionary issues. He is is another of the Meadows also a political leader in his treasures. native Martinique. Born in Indiana in 1897. Cesaire's poet r y and ?\-1eadows came to Orange theater, as well as cultural County in 1903 when his father problems raised by his works, went to work for the Orange will be discussed by six pro- Post newspaper. fessors in three sessions. The He worked as a reporter and sessions are open to the public speaking on "Revolt and Ideology in tbe Works of Aime Cesaire." Presentations in the af- ternoon session, set for 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. in Room 161 of Humanities Hall, will be given by Guy Levilain of Saint Cloud State College, speaking on "The Crisis ol Cesairism through 'The Tragedy or King Christophe' and 'A Season in the C.Ongo,' " and Michel Benamou of UC San Diego, with "Imagery in Cesaire's Theatre." p LA c ENT J A _ Dan later as an educator until without charge. McLoon, 15, sophomore class retirement in 1960. Speakers for the firs t president at Valencia High Other donations by ~1eadows session, scheduled from 10 S:hool in Placentia, is trying to the UC I library have in-a .m. to noon in Room 178 of for the title or the busiest eluded the papers of Ray Bill· Humanities Hall, will be youth in the U.S. in June. ingsley of Santa Ana -an ar-Edward J ones of Morehouse The evening sess ion , scheduled for 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. in Room 174 of the Computer Science Building, will feature discussions by Renee Riese Hubert of UCI on "Cesaire, a Modern French Poet," and Eric Sellin of Temp l e University on "Aime Cesa.ire, the Metamorphosis of the Dan will go to Cape Kennedy ray of some 3,000 items dating College, whose subject is June 17 for a week-long space from the 1880s to the 1920s. 1'Aime Cesaire, an Overall Poet.·" leadership conference as thel;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii;;;;iiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii;;;;;;;;1 representative of California high school students. The con- fab is sponsored by the Hugh O'Brien Youth Foundation. On June 24 the Placentia you th ,.,.ill join in the National Forensic League's mork con- g1:ess at \Vinston-Salem. N.C. ~Tctoon-hari>een-el~e<f. student body vice president for the next school year. He will be the first sophomore ever to take 1 part in the forensic league's mock ~n­ gress. He previously qualified for the state finals in three di visions of debate and speech. LET'S BE FRIEHDL Y If you hale new nclghbon or know ~yone movtnr: to our area, please tell us :ro that v.·e may extend • friendly \\o'flcome and help them to beeom~ Acquainted In their new IUITO\lndlnp. Su. Coast f ISitor 4M-IS7t 4M-t3'1 lldar Y'ISitl' '4M174 l"•kl ,,.1111c11 AfVerusunonl) The View Is . Priceless ONCE YOU MIGHT HAYE STOOD ON ANY KNOLL A@_!HE Yl! .. ~GEJfl~~ --MAGNIFICENT AT YOUR nn GLISTENING IN THE SUNSHINE SPARKLING IN THE EVENING DARKNESS. IT'S ALMOST GONE, THAT CHANCE, OBSCURED IY PLASTER, IEAM, AND FENCEPOSTS. IF MAN WERE AN EAGLE HE MIGHT VIEW IT EVEN TOMORROW. GRA YITY IOUND, WE'D IETTEI SA VE IT WHILE WE CAN. Let's Save Something For Ourselres YES ON F,G,H. Contributions to: C iti1t ns Ad•is ory Park l ond T ••m Ginger P•g•, Ch1irm1n, 424 St. Andrews Rd., Npf. lch. ! 01/]y Coast &-' SoutJierri Qffors • 63 Guaranteed Certificates ·Saturday Service ·The Insiders Club Art LlnkleUer The Insiders Club: A new way to beat inflation. Its membership card permits you to buy nearly e>Jery- thing you need from the finest closed-door show- rooms at substantial sav- ings -appfiances, furni- ture, stereo equipment, sporting goods, draperies and mUch, much more. You can even buy carS at the 1'1leet" price and mobile homes and motor- cycles at substantial sav- ings. The Insiders Club • Effective Annual Earnings 5.00%-5.13% Passbook. No Minimum. 5.75%-5.92% One Year Cert ificate $1,000 Minimum. 6.00%-6.18% Two lo Fi>Je Year Certificates ~5.000 Minimum. Up to 90 days loss of interest on amounts Withdrawn before maturity on all certificate accounts. also provides big dis- counts on tickets to sport- ing and entertainment events •.• plus a whole list of free services: safe deposit boxes, money or- ders, travelers checks, and notary services. , Membership require~ ment for savers -$2,500 m inimum ~lance. coast borrowers now receive as. sociate memberships en- titling them to all outside r eferral services. Ask about Jo;ning at any Coast office. MAIN OFl'TC[: 9th "Hiii, Los Anretes • ~1351 Other offices WILSHIRE at CRAMMDCT rl.ACD 3933 Wllshlr1 Blvd~ LA.• ~1265 LA. CIVIC CDfTD: 2nd & Bn»dway • 626-1102 HUNTINGTON IEM:Hi 91 Hunllrurton Center• (71-t) 897·1047 SANTA MONICA: 718 Wlllhlre Blvd.• !93-07-t5 SAN r EDROc lOlh Ii Piclflc • 831·2341 WEST COVINA: Eastland Shopplna Ctr •• 331-2201 "ANORAMA CITY: 11616 V11n Nuys BJvd. • 892·1171 TARZANA: 18151 Ventura 81Vd, • 34$9614 lONG I CACH: 3rd & Locust • <t37·7481 EAST LOS ANClllS: 8th & Soto • 2&6-<t510 DJAMOND M R: 328 Diamond Bar Blvd.• (714) 595-7525 0.lly Hour.-tAM to 4 l'M OponS.tunta11 - tAMto l PM (Elccept Civic Clnllf') ' 7 1 • 7 1 . . . . . . •• . . . . . '" .. •• . . Lag1111a Beaeh EDITION '.feday's Flnal N.Y. Stoeks VOL 65, NO. 144, 3 SECTIONS, .4Q PAGES ORA NGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1972 TEN CENTS Trustees Get Scissors Out for 72-73 Budget By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of tlttl D1Hr f01191 S11H The first study session on a balanced $3.6 million preliminary budget for the 1972-73 school year will be held by the Laguna Beach board of education Thurs- day at 7:30 p.m. in the high school cafeteria, 625 Park Ave. Busines· Manager C'harles Hess erased a looming $135;000 deficit' by cuttlng custodial, maintenance conference at- tendance ·and capital Outlay accounts . He is also looking forward to a "four to five percent" increase in the assessed valua.. lion or the district as a source or increas- ed iJJCOu'C. Thr School district will enter next year, he said, without replacing two custodians and one maintenance man who resigned this year .. Jn addition, the district will not cover tuition' or transportation costs to any conferences, except those reim· bursed by federal fubds . No new equip- ment will be purchased except.for the in- structional program, Hess explained. The greatest single problem in bal- ancing the budget, Hess said, was dealing with a $47 ,000 increase in lixed charges such as health and dental insurance for teachers, social security contributions, employe retirement programs and an- nuity funds. "These costs will total $354,198 next year," Hess said. "That's 10 percent of our budget. Either we increase our ex- penditures or drop the benefits to our eri'lployes." He noted that the di!tricl contribution to classified employe (secn!tarie.s, custo- dians, etc.) benefits tota ls nearly 30 per· cent of .each salary paid . For teachers, the district cost runs about eight percent. rez The $47.000 increase, the business manager said. will be covered by in- creasing permissive override taxes. "The increase on ttie tax rate for this alone will be something like live or six cents," Hess predicted. Other permissive tax increases might occur if the board agrees to institute ne'v programs next year for "educable" men· tally retarded CEMR) student! and special "opportunity classes" for youths under the age of 16, who because of behavior problems canno t attend regular classes. The cost to set up opportuni ly nev classes might run five cents on the ta1 rate, said Hess ... while the EMR project would be much less because of stale support. Another new program approved by trustees for nex t year is for aph.:i.sic children , who have trouble understanding words because of brain damage. This pro~ram, Hess noted , will be totally fund- ed by the state. The $3.6 million budf!'.et fiintre, lless stressed. is tentative and the final figure may change as trustees stu d.v the dc;cu- ment. The preliminary budget is some SI00.000 larger than Ibis yea r'• $3.5 null ion docu1nent. lless "''arned that tn1stees will have to take c1cti on next year to restore the cut s made in the custodial and maintenance accounts "unless they want the buildings to ~o do"''n." "The high school plant ls really suf- fering," Hess exp lained. •·And each year we dela y the work -painting, ne'v ligh ting and windows -labor costs keep goini;;: up. "When the facility starts to go down, it also hurts the atmosphere," Hess noted . Realtors Doing Well Two Accords .. .l -·j Announced; Housing Business Jumps ~n Lagu1ia --:-- War Aired Laguna's reallors were smiling Monday after a few facts tossed out by Robert Turner, Realtors Associatio n president, confirmed what ·was suspected - business is good. "For the first four months or this year, we had 271 sales for a total -0f $12,910,000 and an avera ge of $-17.000 per sale,·• Turner told fel1 01Y realtors. This contrasts with sales of $6.3 million for the entire year in 1963, nine years ago. He added that 1963 had been a good year at that time for sales. The average sale tht>n was $28,000. Turner said that 25 percent of the multiple listing sale! are o! properties located in I.Aguna Niguel. He urged the fellow realtors to boost ••quality tourism ." "We can create a community wh ich at- tracts 500 people who spend $100 per day or we can attract 50,000 who spend $1 a day -or bring their lunch," he said. "In lxlth cases, th e total equals $50.000 a day. In the first case, we generate bed tax and sales tax revenues and in the other, the ci ty has nothing but additional expenses," he said. Turner told the rea1 tors that quality tourism can help pay for the Main Beach, gret.nbelts, undergrounding of utilities, support for the schools and more. He emphasized that the town was move Ing from an art to a business community, and that art has become big business. "The struggling artist set.ms to be almost a thing of the past," he said. "OWt buyers are becoming more end more affluent. They are business and professional people who appreciate our natural beauty, our climate, clean air, Carpente r Bill Against Freeway De layed Again By L. PETER KRIEG Of "" Dllllt' l'llot "'" An aide to State Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R-Newport Beach) said Monday his boss still fm1 a;.ire whether or not he 'll pusli legislation to kill the entlre Pacinc Coast Freeway. If he does. Newport Beach will be in th ere pushing it. Newport Beach councilmen Monda y night hired a lobbyist for the key months of June and July to plug for any and all legislation designed to do harm to the luture or the proposed coastal free\\•ay . They appointed Charles E. "Bud'' Porter. an es tablished lobbyist who for nine years has been representing the city of San Diego in Sacramento and Washington, to carry their message throughout the capital. The action was taken virtually without comment by councilmen Manday night after hearing the report on the status of Carpenter's fr eeway bill In the afternoon. Besides the Carpenter measure, there are, among others, two bills that could have a direct effect on Newport Beach. One, spoMOred by As sem b I ym an Rob<rt Badham (R-Newport Beach). would kill only the Newport Beach leg of the route and another, sponsored by Ammblyman Robert Burke (R-Hun- tington Beach) would Institute a three. year moratorlum on frttway planning pending a consultant'& &tucly of the coastal route corridor. 'll>e slow progress to date o f 1:4rpentu'• blTI, nplained adminlJlraUve assistant Michael N,.I to coundlmen Mooday, Is due to the senalcx'• desire to have all tho facts in hand before getting (See FREEWAY, Pip II •• '· and close proximaty to the expanding commercia l, financial and industrial districts of Orange County. "I think I speak for most or the members or our board or r<!altors \\•hen I say we must make a fine distinction between chann and decay. ''We should overcome the fear that a new commercial structure "'ill be ugly and a blight to our village atmosphere. Opposition Cited Other communities around us are doing an excellent job of creating charm and enhancing their environment," he said. Turner said that most people who say they want to keep Laguna as it was in the old days have forgotten much or the old time drawbacks such as driving for miles to pick up well water, cesspools that seeped on the beaches and mud.bound adobe roads. Summer Art Festival Plan Killed in Laguna Laguna Beach's fourth art festival is dead. Gumbiner Development Co mpany which had hoped to hold a "Summer Art Festival" on vacant land at 1550 S. Coast Highway, has withdrawn its application Death Sentence Petition Ur ged By Top Official By RUDI 1'1EDZIEISKI 01 IM D1llt' l'lllt Sti ff California's second ranking 1awman ap- pealed today for Police to devote every possible oft-duty hour in the next 14 days to gathering voter signatures calling for reinstatement of the death penalty. Chief Assistant Attorney General He:bert L. Ashby's speech to the Cali!ornia Peace Officers' Association convention in Anaheim was an im- promptu departure from the main agenda text. He was substituting for his boss, At- torney General Evelle J. Younger, who couJdn 't make a scheduled talk at the Disneyland HoteJ. Ashby and probably 100 percent of the ranklng California lawmen present were appalled by the State Supreme Court's recent ruling that execut ion is un- constitutional. "The next two -weeks cou1d determine the future of the death penalty in (See ASIIBY, Pa1e Z) , "'d ue to opposition from surrounding property O\\'ners and businessmen." "We didn't n!a1ize that there would be that many waves," ~fark Gumbiner, said today. He said that the summer festi val had never been a money-making venture, that he had undertaken it at the urging of artists not exhibiting at the other Laguna festi vals. He said that the matter became overly complex with the "great many things" the city planning commissio n was re-- quiring in advance. "We felt the project wasn't worth spen- ding the time and effort .•. also com- bating the opposition, even though we thought it would be good for the area,·· Gumbiner said. "Jn a business community we should try and get along together. If the people around feel that badly about it, why make waves?" he said. The Summer Art Festival proposal had been denounced by businessmen or the Art Center shopping area at a city plan- ning commission meeting. They charged that the festival would cause economic harm, congestion, and create a more critical parking sh<lrt age in the area. A·s proposed the festival would have hed about 100 artists and draft.c;men displaying behind the Old Carpenter Mart during the festival season. P igeon Causes Chaos LONDON {UPI ) -A pigeon caused chaos Monday in the inner London Crown Court. The bird flew in a wlncfow and dived at barristers and court oficials. It was driven out after an hour. hfOSCO\V (UPI) -President Nixon and Lec.nid 1. Brezhnev held lengthy ta1ks today on the first full day of their summit " conference, highlighted by accords on health and pollution and private one-on- one conferences between the two about the issues of war and peace. Ul'IT....,_ CALLING FOR SUPPORT -An Army lieutenant uses his field tele- phone to call in a helicopter while on patrol six miles west of Phu Ba.i Airfield this week. Heavy Ground Fighting Rages; Ht;inoi Area Hit SAIGON (UPI) -Heavy lighting broke out today on three fronts in South Viet- nam and Hanoi Radio reported swarms of American planes again bombed the Hanoi area in a stepped up aerial of- fensive that coincided with President Nixon's Moscow summit talks. Heavy ground battles were reported south of the A1y Chanh River defense line about 20 miles north of Hue. A third day of Communist probing at- tacks on Hue 's outer defense lines ended at nightfall with pockets of Communist troops still clinging to a bridgehead on the south bank. At besieged An Loe 60 miles north of Saigon waves of CommuTiist lnfantrymen backed by tanks and a 1,700-round artillery barrage struck at paratroopers a mile south of the city and managed to stall a relief element l\\'O miles south of An Loe for the sixth consecutive day. The third area was the Central Highlands about 280 miles north of Saigon. The North Vietnamese staged several attacks at Fire Base 41, 12 miles north of Pleiku, and knocked out two government tanks and an armored personnel carrier. They also shot down an Al Skyraider. Rocket attacks on Kontum Airfield, 25 miles to the north wounded three Americans and virtually destroyed a C130 Hercules transport, Above the Demilitarized ?.one, the U.S. command disclosed U.S. air raids had been stepped up to an average of 335 a day for the past five days -the heaviest level since the bombing cam- paign resumed April 8. There was no U.S. comment on today's attacks. The U.S. command reported 1pec- tacular attacks against an electrical transformer station northeast of Hanoi on Saturday where there were ~everal subsequent explosions. A spokesman !Aid it supplied }>Ower to a machine tool fac- tory. a tank and truck repair center and rt1ilitary camp:; in the Hanoi area. The leaders first met with full staffs tn the 19th century Catherine Hall for two hours and two minutes, then conferred bfolween themselves for aboUt two more hours. • Alter slphig the two pacta lboul dusk, Nixon and Brezhnev unexpectedly met for their third session of the day. At the end of the ieoond round, Iha two leaders i~ their delegations Jnlo the Vladimir Hall for the s.ignings and champagne toasts. Then, Brezhnev threw bis arm around Nixon's back and the two men left the room by themselves for evening talks. The antipollut.ion pact, accordiaf to U.S. spokesmen, calls for : --Cooperation on working out ways of preve1ttlng pollution. -Devefoplng new technical processes whi ch do not pollute man's environment. -Sharing their success with othi!r coontries. American spokesmen said the medical pact calls for coordinated re.search pro. grams on cancer and heart disease, and exchange of specialists and delegations. It al.so includes setting up conferences and lectures, exchange of Information and teaching each other about their own technical aids and equipment. Nixon was quoted by a White House spokesman, "They are good things to start with." Hard discussions on the more difficult ts.sues, like Vietnam and on limiting nuclear arms, remained. Vietnam is Jikely to continue to be a slicking point after the summit but the Soviet news agency, Tass, raised flagging hopes for some kind of SALT agreement here. The summitry spirit showed at 8:08 p.m. when the conferees stepped from a winter garden of palm trees into the highdomed white and gold Vladimiar Hall. Nixon and Soviet President Nikolai V. Podgorny led the march. Behind came Brt1lmev and for the first time in the summit, the t'i!St of the ruling Soviet Politburo. Nixon and Podgomy led their colleagues to opposite sides of the 40-foot table covered with a cream cloth that draped to the floor. Residents Give 'Freely' \Vith American planes laying more mines in the North Vietnamese harbors, fighter-bombers concentrated on the railroads leading from China. The bombers struck at 14 rail and highway bridges ranging from those leading from China southeastward to Hanoi to others just above the DMZ. Five of the main bridges on a rail line from China were destroyed Jn one raid and the attackers returned the next day to knock oot a sixth. Wea.,.er Hazy sunshin• In the altemoon Is the forecast for Wednesday along the Orange Coa!t, with higha of 65 expected at the beaches ris.. Ing to 75 Inland. Lows IMl. City Manag er Praises V olu11teer Assistance Many peraons give money to the city In the form ol ta1tS, but how many people give more money --.sometimes much more -voluntarily? Quiet • few according to La1T)' Rooe, Laguna Be1cb city manager. "Ptople give money to the city for many reuona," Rose said. "We ha•t bid quite &Ubstutial 1lfta to Improve our IW'COl!cs P"'tltllll Ind fire prevention ~am. "Wa hlvo had ams lot lht Im- provement of Heialer Part, for a sanita· tloo &tudy llld for wtl latt lwldi ol policemen and firemen," he sald. The city has rteeived more than $8.000 so fa r thls year and is antlclpating another '2,000 to as.mt the development of the Main Beach Pork. I The llfllt&l gUt hlJ been 15,000 given ~. The 11111Ues1 bas be<n ~. 1lso~~y. Fuod:I rectlved .u llfta art plactd In a spocJal lnl&t and disliuraed according to the wilhea <1( the giver, Rose said. A r~ cont u1111ple bao been the putchast of som e new poUct equipment for the naniotico unit, be Mlcl. .... • ·Gifts to the city cannot. er course, be budgeted for in advance and always come as a windfall to the town. SOmtlimes, money is given on the con- dition that the city match the amount with dollars of Its own. In these cases, money can be taken from the t.own tnasury at the judgment of the city COWl(il, Role 11ld. "Gilt& lo the city are tax deductible. II 11 not alwl)'I 'for thb rtason. however, that people make their gifts. It is because they believe in the purposes lh<y are sup- poi11ng. and ttally want to h<lp," Rose .said. • Air Force !J)Okesmen &ald'the raids had been so severe the North Vietnamese shifted to barge and ferry Lraffic to keep their supply lines open since Pruident Nixon ord~red the rail llne strikes on May 9. Navy sourcts reported earlier that rivers and canais would be mloed against auch ttaffic. The command said lht missile U>reat over North Vietnam 'had been cm. .siderably rtductod and that an average of ll SAMJ a day are fired now u com- pa~ .,ilh mott than 30 1 dly al the beginning or tbe offensive. INSIDE TODA\' Mrs. Nixon hat bttn caught In ••crunch" between newsmen and polict during htr travtll in Mo1cow, and Mrs. Oram ylc.o is Tiot h.app11 about it Ste atoru Paae 4. Ctlltitn.I• I ,._,,... ,_.. .. c-..i-""11 , .. u .. ..... ....,, • ,_,., " ... __ " , __ " _,. ..,, Dt•Ttl MttlHt " ·--1•11 .......... , ... • ·--I •111er111-.. .. ""'"" .. ...... l .. 11 WM-• -" ..,., ....... .. ... ...-. 1J w._,_,.,l ~ ... .. Wd..... ~ .,. ~AJLV PIL01 LB Moon Blast 'Partially ... Successf11l' --SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -A weapcn of war redesigned into an in- strument of science was exploded on the moon early today, but scientists reported tb.e experiment was only partially suc- cessful. Scientists at tbe Manned Spacecraft -,Center sent signals to a mortar package •left in the Descartes ti.lountains of the moon by Apollo 16 last month and caused three rocket grenades f.Q be launched. 1lle grenades rocketed away and ex· ploded, sending seismic shock waves through the moon 's &urface. A fourth grenade was not Hrerl, however, when instruments on the mor· tar launcher indicated that it changed '}>Osition. An official !aid an attitude indicator showed the launcher may have pitched upward several degrees after the third rocket grenade was fir ed. Because of this, the scientists did net fire the last grenade. It may be fired later, officials said, if tests sho\v the al- titude indication is false. Le.aving tor Sweden ' Minister Quits Post as The Rev. Donald Inlay. popular San Clemente minister, Monday conflrmtd reports he would resign his post as a trustee for the Capistrano Vnified School District -a job he will leave for an im· PQrlanl church position outside the city. Inlay, pastor of St. Andrews by·the-Sea United /i.1ethodist Church, will leave for Sv.·eden soon to represent his church hierarchy at the United Natio ns en- vironmenta l conference in Sweden. ''It's sad that I have to leave," lnlay told fellow trustees Monday, "especially sin~ I've only served a year and only now felt that I have gotten my feet wet," lie said. Man Confesses; Woman Replaced Her Dead Sister Trustee Inlay was the second trustee to resign his post in recent weks. Veteran board n1ember and form er president Dr. Robert Beasley submitted his resignation earlier this month. A special election for two successors will bt held Aug. 15 and '$!pplications now are being accepted for candidates through 1he office of the county registrar of voters. The deadline is June 16. Trustees Monday did not formally ac· cept Inlay's resignation, but said they would do so next Monday. Because of the immediacy or the minister's transfer and trip to Stockholm, Monday was his last b o a r 4 meeting, Inlay said. The exact title of Inlay 's new position has not yet been aMOunced, the minister told his congregation Sunday, but it would be a post he could not possibly turn down, be said. Inlay's trustee area represent! the northerly portions of San Clemente, in- cluding Shorecli(fs and the Pacesetter- Hillcrest colony. The three grenades that were fired new 500, 1,000 and 2,000 feet and then exploded LONDON (UP I) -No one suspected Better Jdeas? ' ' William D. Ruckelsbaus, ad· ministrator of the En~ironmen­ tal Protection ~gency, says Ford may be barred from sell· ing any 1973 model cars be- fore October or later because of mistakes made in testing engines for pqJlution stand· ards. Story, Page 18. Chief Hits Probation 'Overuse' By TOM BARLEY 0t lllt Dflllr Plltt Sl1fl Jr trial judges are held respcnsible for the subsequent acts of the convicted crin1· nal we would soon see a sharp decline Jn the number of repeat offenders and the nation's crime rate, Los Angeles Police Chief Ed,vard Davis told California lawmen Monday. ''Irresponsible judges outnumber thr other kind," Davis said. "It's lime we did something about adopting a system whereby we could go back to the trial judge and point out what happened when be failed to impose a proper sentence." (See related 111!ories, page 12) Apart from that, Davis said, 1'we are the victims of 'yo-yo justice,' with cases bouncing back from the appellate courts in such numbers !hat the trial court judge is just intimidated by the thought that his ruling might be reversed. "He should remember that an alanned public does not achieve the familiarity with crime inevita ble !o !he judge '"ho may see as many as I ,000 convicted persons a year,'' Davis said. Tliey Liberate Chicks' Clwcks HANFORD (AP) -Members of the NaUonal Organluilon o I Womtn have 1'llber1ted" a sign at a Bank or America branch here they said was derogatory to their SeK, The sign, a bank promotion for checks designed for u.se by women, advertised "checks for chicks." 1'We art not chickens." said 1 NOW spokesrnan. "We are women and pt'Ople and we cxpecl to be treated th:t; way:· Bank officials surrendered-the or- rending sign. G1·im Trustees Review Budget For District Grim trustees A1onday reviewed the last three portions of the proposed. ten- tative budget for the Capistrano Unified School District. then repealed their long- standing concern <iver the loss of t.1x dollars if !ht> U.S. goven1ment acquires Laguna Niguel's aerospace complex. upon impact with the moon's surface. anything unusual about the couple until The fourth grenade is designed to fly up the husband walked into a police station to 5,000 feet before exploding. one day and said he had strangled bis Explosions of the grenades caused wife and lived for the next six years with seismic shock waves \\ihich were detected her sister who posed as the wife. by a series of geophones installed in the The plot unfolded Monday in testimony Junar surface by the Apollo 16 astronauts. at London's Old Bailey criminal court in The shock waves we~e _expec~<!_ to_a _murder trial against Staff Sgt. Ian ·penetrate-to about 500 feet benea h the Reed, 34. moon's surface and then bounce back to He was charged with a murder police Tustin Trustees Exchange Heated Words on_Budget "That's no comfort lo the citizen y,•ho may have to stand an hour ,1,ith a gun in his belly "'·hile some bandit makes a decision on \rhelher his victim lives or dies." Davis said. "The man on the street wants justice and we're finding that most or our pres~ ent day-procedures, ·including \vall-to-,vall cops, are not giving it to him ." committing about -~ minutes of lhtir special mee!ing to the maintenance and transportation portions of the district's $10.S.-million budget. tru stees found in-- creases in most areas -due prima rily to double sessions relating to the delayed opening of Dana Hilts High School. The new high school, itself, also will contribute to significant increases when it opens early next calendar year. I the geopbclnes. Scienti!'ts hope to learn never suspected until he walked into a more about the substructure of the moon suburban London police station in Sep-- by measuring the velocity, strength and tember and said: frequency of the shock wave echoes. "I murdered my wife six years ago. I The grenades are fired with the push ~t strangled her and threw her body in the a button ·at Mission Control here. This river. I can't take it any more. That's sends a signal t? l~te the grenade why ( am here." rock el and the d~v1c~ flies away· So far as anyone knew, Reed's wife y,•as The grenades. which each . cost abo~t alive and well. Her sister, the court was $10,000, are equipped with radio trans.mil-told, had taken her place. ters and two. different 1.ength break wires. Joan Ismail, 33. testified she took her By measur ing the time between the sister Dorothy's name her passport her parting of the first and secon~ break three children and her 1husband. ' wires, scientists can determine the "I was playing two parts one as my velocity of the grenades just after launch. sister, one as a wife," she t~tified. The Apollo 14 .astron~uts left mort8!s "On many occasions I had to be the on the moon during their Feb~ary 1911 wife When friends of Dorothy saw me l lunar visi t. Officials have not fired them had 'to be th sister I had to use h~r foc fear doing !'! could de~troy the rest of name whenev!r we went out together 8nd the Apollo 14 science station. As a result cut myself off from my husband children the Apollo 14 mortar package will not be d famil ,, 1 fired .r~r perb~ps years. 16 mortar an ProseculOr Richard Du Cann said Mrs. Otf1c1als. said the Apollo Ismail once returned to Singapore where launcher lS not expected to affect the ' her th '·"ruments in the $20 million the all~ged events happened, to get o . er J.IQI • own children. science station. Disguised in a wig, be said, she signed adoption papers as the childrens· mother, giving them away, and then signed papers as her sister taking them into her care. Church to Hold Rummage Sale An annual rummage sale for Shepherd ot the Hills United Church of Christ in Laguna Niguel will be held June 9 and 10 and 9rganizers this week issued an ap- peal for items which could be sold. Hours for the Saturday and Sunday activity will from l to 8 p.m. Saturday and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. the following day in the Crown Valley Mall parking lot. Ladies in the church membership are conducting a search for donated items and donors can arrange for special pickup ()f articles by calling either 495-- 4784 or 496-0613. Students Back Nixon LOS ANGELES (AP) -Sludeot leaders from 10 colleges have announced a drive to support the re~lection (){ President Nixon. Kent Clemence • Uni versity of Southern California student body president and spokesman for the other representatives, said at a news con· ference Monday that a group called Stu· dent Leaders for the President Com~ mittee would seek support for Nixon on the nation's campuses. OIAHGI COAST u DAILY PILOT Tht or."llt COii! Oo\.IL Y PILOT, wll!I wMdl h c:ombl'Md rl!t Htwl·Pr.tJ, i. pubU.iw-d tr( fh9 Or11noe Co111t Publt!hll!D C:ompeny. Stpt• r111e tdllJOl'IS ar" pvbll1llfd, MO!'odtv fl'll"OllQ!t Friday, tor COtl• Mt1•. H~rt e~cf'I, liuntll'IOloll llr11cf'l/Fount11'1 \IJllrf, LtOUl'lll BrlCPI. l,..,,lnr/SHltlleWCk a nd S•l'I CltmM1•7 Str> JUln Ctp11Tr1no. A s inol• rl'!llClll•I l'dltion 11 pubJbhf<I'-S•tun:l•'t'\I alld S\H'lll1y11- Tila ptlnc:lfN;I P11bllihl"'11 pt.nl II 111 U> W.Sf Ill)' Slrttl, cor.i. Mn•, C.li!wnl1, '1•"- Robart N. W11td f'rnldenl' lltld Pllbtllofl• J1ck R. Curf1y Y-l(t Prfillldll'lf •nd C-tl Mln.t;tr Tliolft•• K11Yil .., ... TJ.e"''' A. Murphi111 M.nttlnt t:dlhll" Ch1tlff H. Loos Rich tnl '· Nill Aul1i.nt MltllltlnO ldltort .......... Offkei 2.22 Forttt A•11u11 M1lli11t AJJr~u : ,.o. lox•••· t!612 ...-.~ Cetll Mat: JJD Wnt "Y :Sir"' • ...,..,, l"dll am HtwpOl"t lou!w1rd HUlll~ 8foKfl: 11t7J a.di llloul~lrd Sen Cltnletllt: ,,. Horii\ El (amino AHi Tlf ...... (7141. M2AJZl C .... Hlff An..tltl .. 6.tJ.1671 ~ ....... .., .. , .... : T11r1.,•1• 4f4.t4U ~I, 1tt1, 0Anot COHt hlJllllilt!I' ~f. Ho ,_. tllrift, 1rr111n-.1i-. _.IWSlll men. W ~II Nrtlfl """ .. ~ -~t ..... llW-"' ..... .,.._, ....... ~ d.-.... Nil ml ~II Mftl, Qtlf!Wft& aiiKrl!lllM lirt' urritr P.U _....,, ... •If D.11,, """"'"' """""' .......... IMlllNY. • Mrs. Ismail testified without emotion, saying Reed finally cracked after she quarreled with him several times, over anolher woman. From Page J FREEWAY ... his measure moving through th e legislative process. "The bill is nO\V before the legislative counsel," Neal said. "The senato r will not submit it, however, until he has time to meet with the Public Works Department to discuss all the implications. "A big qeustlon is how much opposition the Public Works Department will give the bill," Neal said. "They carry quite a bit. of weight ," he said. ';Their dynamic opposition would be 2 possible cause to hold It for awhile." Neal said the high\vay officials "hate the power and the resources" to 'vage a major bat!le agains! the measure. Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis asked Neal if the senator thought he could still get it through with the legislature planning on an adjournment this summer. .. He would not make the effort he has put in unless he thought there was ample time to get it through once it's in· troduced," Neal responded. Neal said Carpenter's talks with the Public Works Department will take place "in the very near future." Hopefuls Accept 3rd De.bate Date SACRAMENTO (UPI\ -Sens. Hubert Humphrey and George S. McGovern have accepted an offer rrom NBC ror a third debate. the two Democratic presidential contenders have announctd. The one-hour debate, to be on a special program of "Mttt the Press," will begin al 9:30 p.m. May 30. Announcement of two~otbtr,debates1 on May 28 and June 4, was made earlier by CBS and ABC. Gi1·l Captures Prize on Essay Hillary Cole, a sixth grade Student at El Morro Schctol In Laguna Beach. has won second prize In an essay contest •Ponsored by the Velerans of Foreign Wars' Auxiliary. MJss Col• rtet!lved a ~heck of $10 for h~r essay on "What Doti AmerlcanJsm Mean to Me?" The cont.est included ltudenl1 from Orange and Rlvmlde Counliu. 'lbt student II tile daoshler of Mrs. Gale Kawaklllll ol 17!5 !4guna Canyon Road. • r, By JACK CHAPPELL 01 tM DtllY Pli.t Stiff Thunder clouds gathered over the Tustin Union High School DlsUict board room Monday night portending stormy days ahead for the district's school budget. Trustees of the district which includes University High School in Irvine and Mission Viejo High School ended up con- tinuing til June S an Item setting ratio of &tudent& to teachers and counselors; but not before sharp words were exhanged between trustees. Trustee Robert Batholomew charged that the staffing patrern of the schools delermined as percent of the schools' Converted Bus Set for Laguna Class' Travel Christian education soon will be coming to Laguna Beach school children in a unique package - a big blue converted school bus. The Released Time Christian Educa- tion (RTCE) program has purchased the school bus for $1,750 from a district in the Whlt!ier area and is now busily deciding on the interior furnishing estimated to cost another $600. The bus will ply between El Morro and Aliso Elementary .schools next year. A trailer classroom currently being towed from one school to another will be permanently situated near Top of the World school on nonschool property. Inside the bus, seats will be removed and replaced with benches or desks and !he floor will be carpeted . Students will not be transported by the bus, it will be stationary for instructional purposes. Mrs. Richard Maxwell. president of the RTCE Executive Council , sa id tha t the bus had been \\'ell reconditioned prior to the organization buying it. She thanked Dick Jones of the Laguna Beach Unified School Distri ct transporta· tion office for assisting the group in pick· ing out the bus and acknowledged !he cooperation and assistance of Dr. William Ullo m. district superintend ent. About 150 students will be involved in the RTCE program which by law is held off school property and on a voluntary basis by the !!ludents. The program is ad- ministered by eight Laguna Beach churches. Also involved In tre blll'!I project are Mrs. Duncan Nickle, Jn.structor; Mn. Gil Orr. instructor: Mrs. Gary Peterson, publicity chairman and Dr. Morgan S. Odell, finance chairman. One Week Left For Absentee Voters to File Only one week remains for June I primary elecUon voters to file for absentee ballots, Orange County Registrar of Voters Dave Hitchcock warned today. Persons who expect to be absent from their precinct on June 6 may apply for an Absent Voter Ballot ei ther by mall or In person at the Registrar of Voters office, Jilt E. Che!tnut Ave., Santa Ana. Deadline is Tuemlay, May 30.. If requesUng a ballot by man , the voter must Include Ills residence address, his legal slgnatW'<!, and the rtason why be will be unable to vote In hill precinct on June 6. There ls 1 legal cut for otrt&in voters, Hitchcock uplllntd, to •PP'1 !or an ab&enlee ballot after May 30 but it ls neceauy Ill web cues for lbe voters to fill out rpecial lffldavit fOTllll al the rqtatrar'• ollltt. Anyone with quatlona .., the ballots may phone 834-2244. budgets. "l don't consider the 30,5 (students) to 1 (teacher ) a sacred cow;' Bartholomew said. "If we went to a 35-1 ratio and ~1 ratio (of student to counselors) we would save a haH million dollars," he said. Trustee Dickran Boranian, .safd he thought Bartholome\v did not understand about the programing system used in the schools. Boranian said that the ratio was an average of all the classes and that if it were increased some classes could end up with as many as 45 or 50 students to one teacher. "f do too know what I'm talking about,'' Bartholomew snapped. Dr. William Zogg, district superi~ tendent, told the trustees that about 20 percent of the high school classes were by necessity very small . These involved more advanced language classes and others with special requirements. Boranian asked Dr. Zogg what ratio of student to teacher existed at other Orange County schools. 7.ogg said he thought that of all tbe districts only Gardea Grove might be higher tha n 30.5 to 1 and that many di stricts were be!o\v that figure. Mr. Toad Slated For Morro Show Mr. Toad and Company will be ridi ng wild at the El Morro Elementary School cafetorium Wednesday at 7 p.m. in the student production of "Wind in the Wll- lows" by Kenneth Grahame. The original story by Grahame has been adapted by the school children who created 11 .songs for the production, with the assistance of Deane Bottorf', music director. School musicians perfonn in the production orchestra. The presentation stars Mark Laidlaw as Mr. Toad ; Hillary Cole as Ratty; Jill Robertson as Mole and Jennifer Wilcox- en as Badger. It is directed by Charles Curtis wi!h technical direction by Richard Christensen. Addmission is 25 cents and the public.is invited. From Page I ASHBY ... Trustees took oo .action on the budget Y..1onday. but learned that an amended form of the document. a "tentative'' budget, will be submitted with a few weeks by Sam Chicas, a s s i s t a n t superintendent-business. California," Ashby warned the a5sembled Because of the demands on district chiefs and hi~h-ranking police offi cers. finances and the drain of about $200,000 -His rema rks were made in reference to from th~ tax revenue if the North a campaign to Put the death penalty on American Rockwell Plant become s the November baUot as an initiative and government property. Chicas admitted allow voters to decide the question. that the district ~'iU have to resort to Younger's chief assistant said there is deficit financing. a strong question whether the 527 .OO<I .... Trustee Gordon Peterson took the lead valid signatures required to put it on the in bemoaning the fi scal picture. ballot can be gathered . "We're broke ... less than broke," be Timing between the Supreme Court said soberly. "The district Jooks like it decision and the groundswell for an in-will be spending more than it will make." Hiative is crucial, Ashby said. "Unfortunately," Chic as answered, "This is true, despite widespread sup-"You're correct." port." he added. "The voiding or the death penalty by the state Supreme Court is the most Im- portant issue to affect California peace officers in recent years." Ashby em- pbasiz.ed. "Attorney General Younger has asked me to ask you," Ashby continued, "to devote every free hour in the next two \veeks to obtain signatures for the in- itiative ... .. Ensuring that the people of California ~·ill have the opportuni ty to express their \vilJ on thls most crucial matter," he declared. The chief assistant attorney general appealed to the lawmen's pfide of duty in protecting the public and their <lWn lives. "This is an obligatio n which you owe yourselves, your families and your men.'' Ashby said. He shifted from his main text of a speech dealing with current proj ects undertaken by Younger in support of be.t· ter state law enforcement. The press conference-style delivery wa s attended by Orange County District Attorney c.ecn A. Hicks, Sheriff James Y...tusick, and Newport Beach Police Chief B. James Gla\'as in addition to other county lawmen. Chief Glavas is the state association's nevr1 972-73 president. Wednesday's program includes an ad- dress by Fourth District Court of Appeals Justice Robert Gardner, the popular jurist fro m Corona del Mar. I-le will discuss California law and prol:r lems in the courts. Laguna Federal To Open Office In Laguna ·Hills The Federal Reserve Banlt bas authorized Laguna Federal Savings and Loan Associ ation to .. pen a new branch in Laguna Hills, President Lorna M'tlls has announced. The branch, located at Paseo de Valm- cia and Calle de la Plata, i! expected to open later this year. It will become the third branch location cf the savings firm, which now has heaa-' quarters in Laguna Beach and branches at San Clemente and Laguna Niguel. Announcing the new move, Miss Milli noted that Laguna Federal received Orange County's first federal charter in 1935.;md is now the 250th largest savings and loan association in the United States, having advanced 19 places to attain the position. Providing home financing, principally for single-family homes in the Orange Coast area . is the firm's principal in- vestment interest. Its assets, l\1iss Mills said, have in- creased $7.68 million since the begiMing cf this year, bringing total net assets to $15-0,86-0. 8.11. Buying A New Tract Home? Many people buying homes are under the impression they HAVE to buy carpeting from tho homo sales center. In the majority of cases this is not true, although the ••les office will try lo mate you think so. The minute the home center tries to upgrade the standard carpet, then you are free to shop for carpeting. To prevent shopping should constitute restraint of trade. In many cases they will tell you that the carpet allowance does not apply if you buy carpet outside. If they feel this legal, HAVE THEM PUT IT IN WRITING. Ordinarily, we can save you • lot of money over what the home center offers. We provide • larger selection -and we usueUy comt up with len yardage, P.lus • superior inllall1tion. I ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Plac•lltia Aw•. COSTA MISA 646-4838 .. 7 7 . , Saddlehaek Today's Final ' N.Y. Steeks VOL 65, NO. 144, l SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1972 TEN CENTS Pupil-Teacher Ratio Sparks Board Argument By JACK CHAPPELL 01 1111 Deity P'lt.t lt•tl Thunder clouds gathered over the Tustin Union High School Distr ict board room A!ooday night portending stormy days ahead ror the district's school budget. Trustees of the district which includes University High School in Irvine and fl.1ission Viejo High School ended up con4 tinuing til June 5 an item setting ratio of students to teachers and counselors; but not before sharp words were exhanged between trustees. Trustee Robert Batholomew charged • lhat the staffing p.ittem of the schools determined 85 percent of the schools' budgets. ,; I do11 't consider the 30.5 (students) to 1 (teacher). a sacred cow," Bartholomew said. "If \\'e went lo a 35-1 ratio and 500-1 ratio (of student to counselors ) we would save a half million dollars," be said. Trustee Dickran Boranian , !&id he thought Bartholomew did not understand about the programing system used in the schools. Boranian said that the ratio \Va s an average or all the classes and that if it were increased some classes could end up with as many as 45 or 50 students to one teacher. "I do too know \\'hat l'm talk..ing about," Bartholome\\• snapped. Dr. William Zogg, district superin- tendent, told the trustees that about 20 percent of the high school classes were by necessity very small. These involved more advanced language classes and other! with special requirements. Boranian asked Dr. Z.Ogg what ratio of student to teacher existed at other Orange County schools. Zogg said he thought that or all the districts only Garde• Grove might be 1xon, rez No. 2 Lawman Backs Death Penalty Vote By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI California's second ranking lawman ap. pealed today for police to dc\1ote every ~ible off-duty hour in the next 14 days to gathering voter signatures calling for reinstatement cf the death penalty. Chief Assistant Attorney General Herbert L, Ashby's speech to the Calilornia Peace Officers' Associatkm cuivintion In Anaheim 1'as an im· promptu departure from the main agenda text. He was substituting for hls boss, At· tomey General Evelle J. Younger, who State Rejects Bid for Funding Retarded Project By PAMELA HALLAN Of ttM 01Uy P'll91 Still An appeal by the San Joaquin Elemen- tary School District to reconsider total funding for a trainable men tally retarded facility was turned down Friday by the State Allocations Board. David King, di.rector of fac ilities plan· ning. said the board might have agreed to a comprimise but $40,000 would still have been left for the district to provide. something the board has not yet been willing to do. . King said the di strict will readvertise for bids for the school to be built on the La Paz Intermediate School campus in Mission Viejo. The structure is a modular design and can be built by mid-October if new bids are within the state's approved budget for the project. King said the board will be asked to remove some items from the structure so the bid has a chance of being lower. The district has been told by the county It must provide its own facility for (See APPEAL, Pap !) could n't make a scheduled talk at the Disneyland Hotel. Ashby and probably 100.percent or the rank ing California lawmen present were appalled by the State Supreme Courfs recent ruling tha t execution is un· constitutional. "The ne.1t two weeks could determine the future of the death penalty in California," Ashby warned the assembled chi.eh and high-ranking police officers. His remarks were made Jn reference to a campaign to put the death penaJty on the November ballot as an initiative and allow voters to decide the question. Younger's chief assistant said there is a strong question whether the 527,000 valid signatures required lo put it on the ballot can be gathered. Timing between the Supreme Court decision and the groundswell tor an in- itiative is crucial, Ashby said. "Thill is true, despite widesprea d sup- port," be added. '"nle voiding of the death penalty by the state Supreme Court is the most im- portant issue to affect California peace officers in recent years." Ashby eel-" (See ASHBY, Page I) Irvine Cou.ncil Facing End of Freeze, Rezone Discussion or the May 28 expiration of the building permit freeze and review of the planning commiSllion's revisions in the University Park re1.0ning are items before the Irvine City Council tonight. Councilmen meet at 7:30 o'clock in city hall 4201 Campus Drive, Irvine. The second increment of a building moratoriwn that has been in effect in Irvine since inrorporatkln is due to expire Sunday. Begainning next Monday, should the council not e1tend the freeze, permits ready to be issued by the county building department for construction in Irvine could be issued. During the freeze, only builders proving ecooomic hardship bave had permits freed for issue by a committee of two councilmen and the city manager. Just 55 days ago, the council e1tended the freeze on construction to allow time to draw a master plan of drainage, wall and streetscape Jaws, a master plan of parks and recreation and a service sta-. tion design ordinance. The drainage plan and gas station Jaws are schedu1ed for adoption tonight and an interim wall and slreetscape law ha s been adopted. Only the master plan or parks has not be instituted, thus rar. The planning com· mission has been directed to launch the development ot such a sub-element of an eventual city general plan. planners to be incompatible with the base document. ·Among these suggested restrictions was a medium density limit of six units per acre versus the seven unit limit agreed to by the Irvine Company and a switch of site for a proposed golf course hotel-<:lubhouse CQmplex. The amendments sought by the Irvine Company would have added three public park sites totaling 14 acres and three school sites to the University Park ex- pansion. Population for the completed community was reduced slightly in the projections for the zone revisions. (See COUNCIL, Page %) 4th Candidate Drops From District Race A fourth candidate has withdrawn from the Mission Viejo Unified SchoQI District race. Dora AMe Lee, 24122 La Rosa . El Toro, said she decided to withdraw because of the possibility that she and her family will be moving from the area by April, 1973. Others who have withdrawn from the June 6 race include Denis Duffy, Don McGregor, and Jesse R. Noriega . Sixteen candjdates are still in the race. higher than 30.5 to 1 and that many districts were below that figure. "I don't care about other education districts. This is the Tustin district, run by Tustin people, and paid for by Tustin taxes," Bartholomew declared. Trustees agreed to table the staffing pattern item and discuss the matter at a special meeting. Following their action to establish the new meeting time, Dr. Z.Ogg said that the results of the June 6 unification election would have great impact on the dist ri ct's finances . •·we \viii have an infinitely better idea nev of our finances on June 6, he said. Trustees agreed to keep the June 5 meeting but also meet June 19 in a study session. Trustees also: -Denied an appeal by homeowners of Capistrano Highl ands to orficially oppose the Mathis Ranch Planned Community development at a meeting of the Orange County Planning Commission. Even though the development would put an es timated 5,000 people in 165 acres, and could mean as many as 2000 new students In the district , trustees said that for them to oppose the plan v.·ould be to interfere UP'I Tlt.llM .. CALLING FOR SUPPORT -An Army lieutenant uses his field tel\)" phone to call in a helicopter while on patrol six miles west of Phu Bai Airfield this week. . Heavy Ground .Fighting Rages; Hanoi Area Hit SAIGON (UPI) -Heavy fighting broke out today on three fronts in South Viet- nam and Hanoi Radio reported swarms of American planes again bombed the Hanoi area in a stepped up aerial of- fensive that coincided with President Nixon's Moscow summit talks. Heavy ground battles were reported south of the My Chanh Ri ver defense line about 20 miles north of Hue. A third day of Communist probing at~ tacks on Hue's outer defense lines ended at nightfall with pockets of Communist troops still clinging to a bridgehead on the south bank. At besieged AQ Loe 60 miles north o[ Saigon waves of Communist infantrymen backed by tanks and a 1,700-round artillery barrage struck at paratroopers a mile south of the city and managed to stall a relief element two miles south of An Loe for the sixth consecutive day. The third area l'•S the Central Highlands about 2$1 miles north of Saigon. The North Vietnamese staged several attacks at Fire Base 41, 12 miles north of Pleiku, and knocked out two government tanks and an armored personnel carrier. They also shot down an Al Skyraider. Rocket attackl on Kontum Airfield, 25 miles to the north wounded three Americans and virtually destroyed a Cl30 Hercules transport. Planner Search On; Interviews Begin Wednesday The search for a permanent planning director for the city of Irvine intensifies at 8 a.m. Wednesday when.,_ six-member ••blue ribbon" .screening panel begins in- terviews of six candidate! in city haU. All four items were deemed important to allow the city some de sign controls it otherwise wou1d not have, once the building permit freeze were Jilted . The University Park zone change, in- cluding four conditions added by the plan- ning commission, may well be referred back to the plaMing commissicn. The commissioners suggested revisions to the lrvine Company's 900-plus acre planned community have been said by county Little Hope Held Out Above the Demilitarized Zone, the U.S. command disclosed U.S. air raids had been stepped up to an average of 335 a day for the past five days -the heaviest level since the bombing cam- paign resumed April 6. There was no U.S. comment on today's attac.k5. Irvine Mayor William Fischbach said today the pre-screening body will recom- mend finalist! for final interview by the entire City Countil. Members of the screening body are Mayor Fischbach, Pl•nning Commission Chairman Wayne Clark. City Manager \VllUam Woollett Jr .• County PlaMing Director Fortst Dickuon, Greater Irvine Jndu.striaJ League president Charles C1tminshaw, and UC Irvlnti Chancellor V.nlel G. Aldrich, Jr. ·To dale, the panel Is expected to h> terview six penons for tht planning post. Bec11use all six art prestmtly employed by other cities, including some from out· of·st•te, the mayor said, lhe lrvlne tradl· lion or public lnwviews bas b<eJ l\lspell- dod. Until now • .,..1 by dty olliclal IP' pointmenll bovo.betn.mode by the ....,. ell In public .....ion. ,,_ hllvo Included Woollett's oppoll!tment 11111 lbcoe ol tho 1t....member pl•~ commission. Hinshaw to Discuss Orange County Issues Orange County Aastsaor Andrew J. Hinshaw w!U dil<uss "Problems and lht 0Utlook {or Orange County" at a lunch· eon We<lne&day set by the Greater Irvine lndu•lrlal League (Gl)L). Hinshaw ii ninni111 •aalnSI Rep. John G, Schmlls (It-Tustin) in !he June g primary election seeklnc the Rtpubllcan nod for the asth Congrtsslollll Dlstricl seal. 1bo GIIL I-botllll 11 noon Wednesday In lht Alrpon.,. Inn, 10- conlinC to Esecutivo Secrellry Rink Lefebvre. i For Pendleton Airport A Southern C&lilornla regional study of air transportation apparently holds little hope that the U .$. Marints will lot go ol part or Camp Pendleton for a com- mercial airport. Oflicials of the Southern C.Hromla Asoocialion of Governmenls (SCAG) which is about to release the results of a two-yeat 1tud7 aimed at findJng solullons to the IJ"Owlng air lr1vel demand. gave a brief preview to Newport Beach coun- cilmtn Monday afternoon. ''In the 7tlf 210 we project Pendleton u I rtpmal. llrport," Aid William L. Dodlllhldont SCAG coordlnetor. "but ii on the military •nd the dqree of env!nnmenlll noise and Im- ped." The Marlnes have traditionally opposed relinquishing any or the training cam'p. Dochnahl said the future of Ora111e County Airport "111 depend on lht pn>g· rm made in deveioping quiet jets. "I( there still i! a ooise problem by 1935, lhe airport will not be able to mett lt.s projected cltmand of ll million passenaers, '' Dochnahl said. If there is a quiet engine by that time, he said, the airport will be a major 11horl· haul comnluter airport. He did not talk 1pecilically •bout how many runways, or how loni, would be needed . -lloGhnahl alto saJd that-lba report pro- ,,.... uat of El Ton>. but again. he Aid, lhll . cltpends on lilt mponoe of lhe military and the environmental Impact. !1 ·· The U.S. command repo~ spec- tacular attack! against an electrical transfonner station northeast of Jranoi on Saturday where there were M!Veral 8Ubsequent e1plosions. A spokesman 1aid tt supplied power to a macltlne tool fac- tory, a tank e.nd truck repair center and mlllt.ary cam~ In the Hanoi area. With American plane! layln1 more mlnu in the North Vietnamese harbors. fighter-bombers concentrllted on the railroads leading lrom China. The bombers alruck al 14 rall and highway bridges r1111lng Imm U.O.. leading from China 10Ulheastw1nt to Hanoi to others juJt 1bove the DMZ. Five of the main bridges on 1 rAI! line from China were destroyed In one raid 11111 the attad<ers rtturned lht nm clay to knock "''' - J \Vith free enterprise. -Approve bids to provide as many 1s 20 porlnble classrooms at district schools. at $2 ,500 per clas.s room per year. An estim ated 16 of the mobile units wUI be leased wit h bulk of them to be used al the ~fission Viejo H.igh School. -Approved lists ot graduating students f~. l\lission Viejo University, Tustin, H11lv1ew, Foothill and Evening Hlgb Schools. -Assured the civil rights of di!trlct employes to take part in political ac- tivities (111 their own time. -Set the cal endar for consideration or the district's 1972·1973 budget. Two Accords Announced; War Aired MOSCOW (UPI) -President Ni1on and LeGnid I. Brezhnev held lengthy talks today on the first full day of their summi' conference, highlighted by accords on health and pollution and private one-on· one C<lnferences between the two about the Issues of war and ptace. The leaders first met with lull staffs in Ibo 19th century Catherine Hall for two hours and two minutes, then conferred between themttlves for about two more boura. . Alter signlllg the lwo pacts about dusk, Nixon and Brezhnev unexpectedly met for their third session bf the day, At the end of the second round, the two leaders led their delegaUons fnto the Vladimir Hall frtr the signings and champagne toasts. Then, Brezhnev threw his arm around Nixon 's back and the two men left the room by themselves for evening talks. The antipollution pact, according to U.S. spokesmen, calls for : -Cooperation on working out way& of preventing pollution. -Devetoping new technical processes which do net pollute man's environment. -Sharing their success with other countries. American spokesmen said the medical pact calls for coordinated research pro- grams on cancer and heart disease, and exchange of specialists and delegations. It also include! setting up conferences and lectures, exc hange of Information and teaching each other about their own technical aids and equipment. Nixon wall quoted by a White Houst spokesman, "They are good things to start \vith." Hard discussion! on the more difficult Issues, like Vietnam and on llmitlng nuclear arm!, remained. Vietnam is likely to continue to be a sticking point after the summit but the Soviet news agency, Tass, raised flagging hopes for some kind of SALT agreement here. The summitry spirit show ed at «:OS p.m. when the conferees stepped from a winter garden of palm trees into the highdomed white and gold Vladimiar Hall. Nixon and Soviet President Nikola! V. Podgorny loci lht march. Behind came Brei.hnev and for the first time in the summit, the rest of the ruling Soviet Polltburo. Nixon and Podgorny led their colleague! to opposite sides of the 40.foot table covered with a cream clotb that draped to the floor. l\'e•t•er tfazy sunshine in the afternoon is the forecast for Wednesday along the Orange Coast, with highs or 65 expected at the beaches ris- ing to 75 Inland. Lows !HO. INSIDE TODA. l' Af rs. Nixon haJ ~rn caught in "crunch" btiwten ntwsmvs. and police during htr travels i n Moscow, and Mrs. Gromuko is not happw about it. See itory Pape 4. C1llltntl• I C\11"11941 lt·M Ctmln \I c,. .... ,.. ti Dt1lll '"'k'I 11 ••tetWi• ,.... • IJltttlll-111 •• ,~. 1~11 11W11c• 1.i ""-LlaoMt'I ll -.. ' "' J DAIL~ PILOT b F1~ee Passes - ()n PinkBus •v For Poste1~ .. ., _.Free summer passes on the Pink Bus au top awards In a contest to provide a poster heralding the lrvlne summer recreation program registra llon period June 3 to 19. Brian Clark. Irvine rec re at i on coordinator, said today the contest Is open to Irvine youths In grades one to 12. Entries on paper or poster board measuring 18 by 24 inches, dra"'" or painted in any media, shouJd include the cegistration dates and highlight the pr<r crams offered lo persons of au aces. 11iree general themes are su~ffied for ~test entrits: summer fun in Irvine, rlde the Pink 8U8 for summer fun and Uie teen center is "the place." . Entries are due in city hall by 5 p.m. Tuesday. Winners in grade groups l to 3, 4-to 6, 7 and 8, and high school will be an· nounced by Mayor William Fischbach at 91 a.m. on June 3 during registration for tbe summer programs to be held that day in University Park Shopping Center. · Winning posters will be p I a c e d throughout the city to remind citizt;DS to 'egister for the summer programs which begin on June 19. Further information about the contest ts available frorn Carol Condon at 833- !193 or Sharon Sircello, 552-3482. From Page l ASHBY ... phasized. "Attorney General Younger has asked me to ask you ," Ashby continued, "to -devote every ftM holD' in the next two weeks to obtain signatures for the in· ltlative ... "Ensuring that the people or California will have the opportunity to express their will on this most crucial matter," he declared. The chief assistant attorney general appealed to the lawmen 's pride or duty in protecting the pubUc and their own lives. "This is an obligation which you owe yourselves, your ramilies and your men." Ashby said. He shilled from his maih tezt of a speech dealing with current projects undertaken by Younger in support of bet· ter state law enforcement. The pres.s conference-style delivery was attended by Orange County District Attorney Cecil A. Hicks,'Sheriff James Musick, and Newport Beach Police Chier B. James Glavas in addition to other county lawmen. Chief Glavas Is the state association's new 1972-73 president. Wednesday'11 program includes an ad· dress by Fourlh District court of Appeals Justice Robert Gardner, the popular jurist from Corona del Mar. He will discUss Catifomia law and prob- lems in the court:s. From Pagel They Liberate Chicks' Cliecks HANFORD (AP ) -Memben of the National Or11nJ<11Uon of Women have "liberated" a sign at a Bank of America branch here they aald WIS dol'Olalory lo lhefr .... The sign, a bank promotion for chocks designed lor use by women, adverti.std "check.s for chicks ." "We art" oot chickens," said a NOW spokesman. "We a.re wom en and people and we expect to ht! treated th~ Wily." Dank officials surrendered the of. rend ing sign. Grim Trustees Review Budget For District Grim trustees Monday reviewed tht last three portions of t.he proposed, ten· tative budget for the Capistrano Unified School District, then repeated their long· standing concern c;ver the loss of lax: dollars if the U.S. government acquires Laguna Niguel's aerospace complex. Committing about 00 minutes of their special meeting to the maintenance and transportation portions of the district'a: $1Q.5-million budget. trustees found in- creases in most areas -due primarily to double sessions relating to the delayed opening of Dana Hills High School. The new high school, itself, also will contribute to significant increases when it opens early ne.zt calendar year. Trustees took no action on the budget Monday, but learned that an amended fOrm of the document, a "tentative" budget, will be submitted with a few weeks by Sam Chicas, assistant superintendent·business. Becaw:e of the demands on district finances and the draln of about $200,000 from the tax revenue if the North American Rockwell Plant b e c o m e s government property, Chicas admitted that the district will have to resort to deficit financing. Trustee Gordon Peterson took the lead in bemoaning the fiscal picture. "We're broke ... less than broke," he said soberly. "The district looks like it will be spending more than it will make." "Unfortt.mately," Chic aa answered, 0 You're correct." Despite the increases In m a n y categories of the budget, Chicas pointed out that the district preventlve-mal.n· tenance program will no doubt suffer during the ~xt fiscal year because of lack of finances. The district's entire painting program wlll probably bave UI be scrapped as well, he said. Unrestricted reserves, a traditional cushion for school districts, also are hard hit in this year's budget with $110,174 pro- posed, instead of a more conventional sum of U00,000 or mDre. Chwf H its Probation 'Overuse' By TOM BARLEY Of Ill• Giiii)' ftUlt Sti ll lf trial judges are h~ld responsible for the subsequent acts of the convicted crltn- 11al we would soon see a sharp decline In the number o( repeat offenders and the nation's crime rate, Los Angeles Police Chief Edward Davis told California lay,·men Monday. ''Irresponsible judges ou tnumber tilt other kind," Davis said. "It 's time we did !!!Omething about adopting a system whereby we could go back to the trial judge and point out what happened when he failed to impose a proper sentence.'' (See related stories, page 12) Apart from that, Davis said, "we are the victims of 'yo-yo justice,' with cas es bouncing back from the .appellate courts in such numbers th.at the trial court judge is just intimidated by the thought that his ruling might be reversed. "fie should remember that an alarmed public does not achieve the familiarity with crime inevitable to the judge \vho may see as many as 1,000 convicted persons a year," Davis said. "That 's no comfort to the citizen Y/ho may have to stand an hour with a gun in his belly while some band.it makes a decision on whether his victim lives or dies." Davis said. "The man on the street wants justice and we're finding that most of our pres· ent day procedures, including wall-to-wall cops, are not giving it to him." Davis blamed ''overuse" of probation and parole program and "loosely ad· ministered innovative programs" for the "mounting fear of crime that is gripping our nation today. "Cities are dying of fear,'' the police chief told 300 lawmen at the California Peace Officers Association conference in Anaheim. "Look at New York with its tremendous problems and tremendou s costs, far worse than Los Angeles although our cime rate has doubled in the last 10 years." Davis warned his audience that the on· Iy remedy "in what is not and never has been a crimlnal society" is a "just, fair and tough system in which the trial courts must be hel d accountable. ''Many crimes are being committed over and over again by the same criminals," Davis said. ''Crime rates are going up while state prison 3elltenets are going down and men are finding that the gunmen who held them up tut night may be out on the street serving probation the next morn· ing. . "Past aolutions haven't worked," Davis warned his audience. "We have to be tough and we're being told to be tough in no uncertain terms by communities that are sick of repeated failures in the battle to combat crime.'' COUNCIL. • • Other matters facing council con· lideration tonight include: Regional Airport Talk -Two final tract maps providing 151· single family home lots in Turtle Rock. One park site has been set aside by the developer, Richard B. Smith. -An appeal of the planning com· mission's denial of the Ayres Const~ tion C.Ompany's zone change allowing residential development of a parcel near Yale and Bryan Avenues in central Irvine. The property is now zoned agricultural . -Adoption o[ a law and resolution set· ting up the city's personnel system. Last of Quints Dies NORTHAMPTON, England (UPI) The last of the quintuplets born 17 days ago to Susan Furlow died today. He was a boy, Marc. Three of Mrs. Furlow'& babies, born six weeks prematurely, died within 48 hours. The fourth lived a wttk. OUN•I COAST 1$ DAILY PILOT 'TIMOr•• CN11 DAILY l"tLOl, wllll wlllc."+ ff nrnbllltd tfltl N-.P'l'flt. it pUb!I~ by "'• 0••119• CNll PVbtlSl'tllltl COmPfnr. S•IM· r•te. eo:1111on1 .,.. siubll1P!N, Mond1r t11rou'lf'I F "ll•Y· lot' Cesl• MHI , NIWPOrl llKI!, Hunrlngle'I, l 11tll/F011n!lln V11Lley, l"9Wlll lle1cf\, tr~int/Saddl•b.tck •nd Stn Cltmenl<tl $ttt Jutn C1011rr1ne. A t1nt1le reqlOtltl td!tlell 1' D<.lbil•"td SlllUtd~)'t n Sundin. f~<t prlnc l1NI D<.lbllslllnt pl•nl 11 11! )» W~1I 811 SlrMI, Cetl1 Mftl, C1lltvmlt, t1'7t. Ro~.rt N. w •• d l"rnidlftt lfld "1ottlllcr J1clc It. C11rl•v V.cc Prttl!Hflt 1111f Gtnttai MaM§lf Th•'"'' Kt tvif Edllor Thofll•• A. Mur,hin• MU'9'llllltl t:cll!Ot Cli11l1• H. L••• llllc:.h1N P. Nt ll .... ll11t11 MIN""' Ed!,_. -Cotti Me.t: lJI Wt1I l•y Strwt Nl'WPW1 llK,,I .SW Ntwport '°""'"""' '-'tllNI •~: m '"""' ,.,,_ Hllfll .... twl 111-Kll : 11111 IMdl toulf11trll Slit Cll'/Mllft: ~ 1r1ort11 r.1 Q'"lrlit. J11t.1 T.t ..... (7141 '4J.4JJI CJ•lfSM A'""11hlf '42·t671 S.. C......_ Al Dtpwt_.,, T• ....... 4'2-44H ~ --""' --·--.. . ~. "" ... ....... "'-'•lltllt.. 9'"WW lfltJIW r .._,.~ -.-. _, .. ,....,...~ ......... .... ., .............. . ..... ~ ....... -ttc.t•Mttt. Coll--· .. -..... ......,, ....... a.t• ......,,, _.,.., .............. .......,.. SchedulRd in San Diego Friday's meeting between Orange and San Diego County officials to discuss a proposal for a regional airport at Camp Pendleton has been shifted to San Diego, the office of Supervisor Ronald Caspers announced today. The San Diego officials were originally Invited to come to Orange County by Caspers to discuss the matter. Although elected officials from se veral levels will be present at the session, Caspers' office noted that a representative of the i1arine Corps has not been invited. Camp Pendleton officials continue to oppose use or any of the base's 26 ,000 acres for a public commercial airport. "We want to converse on this at a civilian level first,., Tom Fuentes, Caspers' executive assistant, stiid this morning. "Wehn we have a CQncrete pro- posal , then we will take it to the Marines and have a chat wllh them about It." Fuentes said base officials were not being "ignored" by not being invited to From Pagel APPEAL ... trainable mentally retarded students this year. The district has entered i n to agreements with neighboring districts to provide hou sing for their retarded students a! well but as yet has nowhere to house them. Superintendent Ralph Gates told the board that the county is willing to house the students until August, will let them bke the month of September off, but a school must be rtady by October. He added that he feels sure the county will not throw out the students ir 1 new facility is not yet completed but other ar-- rAngements are being studied. The board has not yet approved funding lhe .ochool or any part of It wllh district fund!. Board Chairman Grallan Bldart has said he wllJ not vote for one penny of dlstrld funds lo be sptnt on the facility. 'l'lustee Preston Howtll ,.1(( recently that as • last rtaort he would be wllling to uk lhe business and lndUJtrlal com- munity ti they might be wllllt11 lo donate IJ*lfic IWns lo the TMR facility, for H· 1mplo, a kildlen, But lhls ...Wd onl1 be done In lho OVtnl there Wll llO poa~billty of a majority ol lho board wllJlll to fund tho facilit y wltll distrld money and 111 otbtr sourcu weor~ exhausted. I the session and will be kept abreast or any developments. The session will include the chairman of the San Diego County Board 0£ Supervi sors; the mayor and city coun- cilmen of San Diego ; members or the San Diego Port Authority, which has jurisdic· lion over San Diego Airport: Orange tounty aviation director Ro be r l Bresnahan, and Caspers. In addition, Fuentes said represen· tatives of state and national legislatures will take part in the airport di scussion. Both counties have been searching for alternate sites for their respective airports for the past several years. The P• oposal <Jf using Camp Pendleton to house a regional facility was first in- troduced by William Pereira and Associates in an aviation needs study done for Orange County. The Marine base, one of the largest in the world, stretches along the coast from San Clemente to Oceanside and inland as far as Fallbrook. It is used as the. primary training base for the Marine Corps on the west coast. Officials of the two counties had at first proposed constn1ctlng an inland airfield at the base, but h::ive since been ex· amining a proposal for a coastal airport, !hereby insuring .hat take off and landing patterns Y.'OUld be over the ocean. 0(· ficials say only about 2.500 acres would be needed for a regional international airport. Irvine District Candidates Meet Three Paront, end Frlonds OrganlU- llona (PFFO) In Irvine are comblnln1 to sponaor a meeting of the candidates for Irvine UnUled School Distrld tonight at 7:30 o'clock In U:le multi-purpose room at University H11b School. Atl l7 candidates have been Invited lo 11ppear. The three school organizations - Turtlerock Elementary School, Unlvorsl- ty P1rk Elemen~ School and Universl· ty High -decided a major candldatn' meeting "°uld be belt. Sbirlty Palley, pmldonl of Unlvonity High PFFO, uld . '"l'bere are too many l?'Dlll ones," abe added. The public Is Invited . . I UPI l•IWM"' Beiter Ideas? William D. Ruckelshaus, ad· ministrator of the Environmen· tal Protection Agency, says Ford may be barred from sell· ing any 1973 model cars be- fore October or later because of mistakes made in testing engines for pollution stand- ards. Story, Page 18. U.S. Signal Fires Three Grenades For Moon Tes t SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -A weapon of war redesigned into an iJloo strument of science was exp1'cJed on the moon early today. but scientists reported the experiment wa s only partially suc· cessfuJ. Scientists: at the Manned Spacecraft Center sent signals to a mortar pa ckage left in the Descartes Mountains or the fuoon by Apollo 16 la st month and caused three rocket grenades to be launched . The grenades rocketed away and ex· plodcd, sending seismic shock waves through the moon's surface. A fourth grenade was not fire1f, however, when instruments on the mor· tar launcher indicated lhat it changed position. An official said an attitqde indicator showed the launcher may have pitched upward several degrees after the third rocket grenade was fired. 13 UCI Students Will he Honor Society Members Thirteen UC Irvine-California College of l\1edicine students Yo'iil be made members of Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society at the chapter's annual banquet Wednesday night in Grand Hotel at Anaheim. More than 100 area physicians will hear Dr. John R. Hogness, president of the Nati onal Acapemy of Sciences. Institute of P.1edicine, discuss the institute's role as "A Conscience {or American P..!edicine.'' The UCI-CCM students to be honored Wednesday are: From Irvine: Robert K. h-1asters, I 131 Verano Place; John T. Morrison, 1213 Verano Place; John D. Noonan, 704 Verano Place; Claire ~f. Targoff, 2933 Verano Place, and Thomas J. Garite , 2513 Verano Place. From Newport Beach: Russell J . Mer· ritt, 5405 Seashore Drive, and Harold L. Schick, 111 38th St. From Santa Ana: Ronald Axtell. and Ronald L. Kaufman. From Long Beach: Ri chard J. Kramer. From Tuslln: Ross R. Sedler. From Orange: Jevelyn A. Yonchar. From Garden Gro\'e: Mark H. El lis. Leaving t or Sweden Minister Quits Post as 1'he Rev. Donald Inlay. popular San Clemente minister, Monday confirmed reports he would resign his 1>0st us a trustee for the Capistrano Unified School District·-a job he will leave ror an int· portant church p0silion outside the city. Inlay, pastor of St. AndreYo'S by-the-Sea United Melhodisl Church, \Viii leave for !)1veden soon to represent his C'hurch Drunk Driver Safety Grant Receives Nod A $1 .5 million tra£fic safety grant to the Orange County Department of Mental •lealth for a project designed to solve the problem of drinking drivers has been ap.. proved, Gov. Ronald Reaga,n said A1on· dav. The program \Viii be administered by the governor's office or trarnc safety and fi nanced by Federal llighy,·ay Safely Act fu nds. It is the first project of its kind to be developed on a county"·ide basis in California. Jack Bishop of the local mental health department y,·ill be in charge of the pro· gran1 which was given tentative approval by the Board of Supervisors two weeks ago. TI1ey will vote on the completed plan next week. Bishop said ~oday the project should be In operation by Sept. I and will iriclude a 24-hour hotline for drinking drivers over w~ch they could receive counseling and make arrangements for a safe ride home by taxi. if necessary. Involved in the program l\'ill be city police department traffic agencies . the co urts. educators and public and private alcpholic rehabilitati on groups such a!!I Alcoholics Anonymous and that organiza. lion's Halfway houses. Irvine Citizen Advisory Group s Schedule Meets Highlighting meetings of Irvine citizen advisory committees this: week are the environmental quality group's continued hearings on the Campus Drive extension and a housing shortage recommendation being considered by the housing com- mittee. The third meeting devoted to the am· pus Drive issue is planned by the en- vironmental qual ity committee at its meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in room 142 of the physical sciences building at UC Irvine. Housing comm ittee mem ber;; \•:ill con- sider a draft of a recommend ation to the City Council regarding the shortage of housing in Irvine during their meeting at 7:30 ,P.m. \Vednesday in the Interfaith Lounre, Town Center, 4201 Campus Drive. Other committees meeting Wednesday are youth opportunities, at 7:30 p.m. in Univ ersity Community A 1 soc i at i o n clu ~house, 4530 Sandburg \Vay, and the public safety committee, 7:30 p.m. in city hall, 4201 Campus Dri\'e. The charter committee will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in University High School. All Irvi ne advisory committee meetings are open to tile public. Trustee fl ier.archy at the United Nations tn· vironmenJal conference 111 Sweden. "It's s1id thilt I ha ve to leave," lnla;,i told fellow tr uslct!!'i Mondoiy . "especially since l'\'e only :;er\•cd a yt!nr and only no1v felt that I have goll cn 1ny feet wet ,'' he said. lnl:iy \\•as lhe seco nd lrustee lo resign his !)()Isl \11 rt'l'Cllt v.·eks. Vett'ran bo<l rd 1nc1nlx'r :inri rorn1cr presidt'nl Dr. Hubtrl lie~:;ley i;ubn1itlt•cl !us resignation earlier this n1onth. A :special election for two sucteSt;Or!t will be held Aug. 15 and applications no1~ are being aceepted for candidate~ through the arfice or the county registrar of voters. The deadline i~ Jun! Ill. Trustees t.1onda y did not formally I C· t'ept lnlay's resignation. but said they. would do so next A-1onday. Because ()f the immediacy of the minister's transfer and trip to Stockholm. Monday was his last board meeting, Inlay soid . The exact title of lnlay's new po:!:ition has not yet been announ ced, the minister told his congregation Sunday, but it would be a post he could not possibly turn do1\·n. he said . lnlay's trustee tirea represents the northerl y portions of San Clemente, in- cluding Shorecliffs and the Pacesetter· Hillcrest colony. 3 Anti-abortion Bills by Burke Snagged by Unit From Wlre Services Three anti-abortion bills sponsored by Assemblyman Robert Burke (R·Hun• lington·Beach) have run ~into stiff o~ position from the Assembly Health Com· mittee. One or the three. \ras rejected by tht!: con1mittee. another has been amended and the third v.·as ordered rewritten Mon· day. Burke's rejttted bill would have outlawed abortions for girls under 11 v.·ithout parental consent. He claims somt hO!pltals have turned into "abortion mills" and that there .are widespread abuses of the state'• 19S7 Therapeutic Aboruons Act. Burke's second measure would have. limited other abortions, based on his assumption of abuses. The committee amende.d it to authorize .a study to determine if auch abuses do ex ist. A third bill. to set up abortion counsel· Ing, \1•as ordered re-written. A second hearing on both bills will be held July I. All three bills were opposed by a 1vide variety of population control and welfare groups. They were supported b y California Right to Life and other anti· abort ion organizations. Burke said statistics of the state Publi~ Hea lth Department show that I 7 California hospitals perform 40 percent of all abortions. "That one statistic alone , it seems to me, is evidence there are abor· tion mills, when you have 17 hospitals out of the thousands in California performing that many abortions." Nix on to N a111e Judge WASHINGTON (AP ) -Th• While House said l\1onday that President Nixon will name J. Clifford Wallace of La Mesa as a member of the U.S. 9th Circuit Couri of Appeals. Wallace, a federal district judge for Southern Callforniti, will suc· ceed Judge James it Carter, who retired in September. Buying A New Tract Home? • Ma ny people buying home s are under tho impression they HA VE to buy carpetin g from t ho home sales center, In the majority of cases th is is not true, alt ho ugh the salas office will t ry to ma ke you think so. The minute the homo cente r trios to upgrade the standard carpel, then you are fre1 lo shop for carpe ting . To proven! shopping should constitute restraint of trade. In many cues th1y wiH tell you that th e car pet allowance does not lpply if yo u buy carpel outside. If they fool this lega l, HAV E THEM PUT IT IN WRITING. O rdinarily, we can sav1 you • lot of money over what th1 homo cenlor off1 n. We provide a larger selection -and we usuaUy com' up with leu yardage, plus • superior installation. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Avt. COSTA MI S.A 646:-4838 • 7 7 Hnn1ingion Bea~lt Fo11niain Valley . , vor. 65, NO. 144, 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' < • , • Today's Final N.Y. Stocks TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1972 TEN CENTS p • ice, Adn1ini·strator Disagree on Staffing By TERRY COVILLE Of lfte Oallf l"Uet Still Huntington Beach police officials feel their department is 50 percent un- derstaffed for a beach city, but City Administrator David Rowlands doesn't believe manpower statistics are a valid measure of ix>lice power. Both points were made Monday night during a city council study session on the proposed 1972-73 city budget. A large part of the two-hour study * * * Policemen To Adopt Dog Corps A two-day caolne corps will become a part of the Huntington Beach Police D:partment this summer. City councilmen agreed Monday night that $7,070 is a chea p price to pay for two German shepherds, their training and the training of two dog handlers. Police officials asked permission to buy the dogs no'A-, because the man who trains them. Henry Frihs. will be leaving Southern Ca liforni a for Washington. "He's the only trainer in thi s area I would recommend," Police Chief Earle Robitaille told councilmen. ' ' H e personally selects the dogs in Germany, then trai"-; them here." The do;;:; c· ·Id be used to : catch store burglars, sr ff marijuana. find lost children, catch fleeing criminals, control surly crowds, and find bombs, the police chief said. Capt. Michael Burkenfie1d, the man who will be in charge of the canine corps program, aa.id today the two police dog1 may not be trained for all ot those ac .. tivlties, but they could be. City Administrator David Rowlands praised the potential of the canine corps as a "tremendous boost to manpower." A police dog could check the Broadway Department store for a burglar ~n less than an hour, while it mi ght take four police officers four hours, Robitaille said. "If one dog is worth se ven men. we sh~uld get more dogs," 9Wpped Coun- cilman Donald Shipley. ·· "If \\'e could only teach them to drive.'' added Mark Porter, chairman of the city planning commission. Burkenfield said the two trainers would be picked from the patrol ranks. The dogs will live with their trainer!. "These dogs have to be one-man pets.'' be explained. "They won't work with two handlers." Frills has agreed to train the dogs and their handlers for four weeks in Hun- tington Beach. Burkenfield said he hopes the canine corps will be operational by J uly 15. Local police ha ve previously used dogs from Garden Grove and \Vestminster in tracking down burglars and robbers. Robitaille said it was the ex- perience with those dogs that convinced him Huntington Beach needed its own corps. Brick Tenders Back at Work In Santa Ana l\fany or the 200 brick tenders who went on strike in Orange County Monday were back at work today after independently signing new contracts with ·their employers. A spokesma n for the A FL -CI 0 Laborers International Union in Santa Ana said there was no picketing activity in the county as a result of the strike and that there has been "very little- slowdown" in construction activity. Nearly 2,000 brick carriers in Orange. Los Angeles and Kern CounLes walked off their jobs Monday after the union failed to reach a new working agreement wUh the Mason Contractors Association. The tenders are asking for an 85-«nt hourly wage hike over the next two yetrs. Brick carriers now make $6.15 an hour. The union spokesman sald there was no way of knowing exactly how many tend ers remained on strike today but noted that only those working for mtmbers of the mason association re-- molned off their jobs. carriers employed by Independent con· tractors hod signed neW' w o r k l n g agreements under the ullion'• terms, the apokesman eaJd. Last of Quints Dies NORTllAMPl'ON, En1land (UPI) - Tho 11!1 ol tho quintuplets born 17 di)'I 1go to SUJ11n FurloW died today:-lle wu 1 boy, Man:. Tbr,. of Mrs. Furlow'• babt .. , born sis wttlcJ promaturely, died within 41 houn. Tho fourth lived 1 wO<k. session was spent on cuts made by Ro\\'lands in police department requests. Police Chief Earle Robitaille had asked for 34 new people in his department, but in balancing the city's $13.7 million budget, Rowlands recommends an in· crease of only four. "Right now we're o.t 50 percent of the force of any other coastal city and the figure could drop lower," Robitaille told councilmen. "However, it's wrong to say the needs ol one city are the same as another," Rowlands interjected. "Our p o I I c e helicopters boos t manpower, and we don't have the same problems some other coast cities have." "Through innovation, combination and mutual aid pacts we can reduce our personnel needs," the adafinistrator ex- plained. •JJ'd like to gradually beel up the fo rce when our long-range plans are outlined." Robitaille said several innovations have already increased police efficiency, such as the 10-plan (working four days, 10 hours each day ), but be said he isn't sure how much farther his department could go on innovation. Both Rowlands and Robitaille pointed out that Huntington Beach had a two per- cent decrease in the crime rate from 1970 to '1971, while it was rising in other cities. Some ideas Rowlands believes will ex- pand police effii::iency include the use of two police dogs, more helicopter use and the addition of three secretaries to write reports for police officer1. "We plan to in.stall a system whereby officers put their reports on tape. The girls will type the reports from the tapes," Rowlands said. "ln effect, this will give us eight more partolmen in the field, because they \\'on't loose time writing report!.'' Robitaille said the department may also begin photographing accidents from the air, which '''ou ld cut down the tbne spent by officers dMwing diagrams. Councilman Henry Duke commented : •;\\'e've got good enforcement now. What makes good enforcement? If the police departnlent needs more money to bring about belie r safety, I'm for it." Ro .... ·\ands did suggest that he'd like to see $80.000 added to the budget for six new patrolmen. but the money would have to con1e from one of the 10 new reven~ue sources he listed for councilmen. Councilmen made no decision on the police or other portions of the budget, and few comments . were made. r .~:1 !~·-~··-}~~ Low Flying ! Plane Hits "-- ur1 , .. ,.._.i. PRESIDENT NIXON WITH SOVIET CHIEFS (FROM LEFT) ALEXEI N. KOSYGIN, LEONID I. BREZHNEV AND NIKOLAI V. PODGORNY Nixon, Brezhnev 01( Accord·s Leaders Agree to Health, P-0llution Pacts MOSCOW (UPI) -Pr<!sldent Nixon and Leonid I. Brei:hnev held lengthy talks today on the first full day of their summit conference, highlighted by accords on health and pollution and private one-on- one conferences between the two about the issues of war and peace. The leaders first met with full staffs in the 19th century Catherine Hall for two hours and two minutes, then conferred between themselves for about two more hours. Afler signing the t .... ·o pacts about dusk, Nixon and Brezhnev unexpectedly met for their third session or the day. At the end of the second round, the two leaders ied their delegations into the Vladimir Hall for the signings and champagne toasts. Then, Brezhnev threw his arm around Nixon's back and the two men left the Man Confesses; Woman Replaced Her Dead Sister LONDON (UPI) -No one suspected anything unusual about the couple until the husband wal ked Into a police station one day and said he bad strangled his wife and Uved for the next six years with her sister who po3ed as the wife. The plot unfolded Monday in testimony at London's Old Bailey criminal court in a murder trial against Staff Sgt. Ian Reed, 34. He was charged with a murder police never suspected until he walked into a suburba n London police station in Se~ tember and said: "I murdered my wife six years ago . I strangled her and threw her body in the river. I ca n't take it any more. That's \\'hY I am here." So far as anyone knew, Reed 's wife was alive and well. Her sister, the court was told, had taken her place. Joan Ismail, 33 , testified she took her sister Dorothy's name, her passport, her three children and her husband. "I was playing two parts, one as my aister, one as a wife," 1be testified. "On many occasions I had to be the wife. When friends of Dorothy aaw me , I had to be the sister. I had to use her name whenever we went oot together and cut myself off from my husband, chlldrtn and family." ~ecutor Richard Du Cann said Mrs. Ismail once returned to Singapore, where the alleged events happened, lo got her own children. DlsguiRd In a wig, be uld, 1he tlll!led adoption papen 11 the chlldrem' mother, f(lvlng them .... ,. ond then llgnt<h f)lpel'I u bor -llti111 !ham IDlo ber care. Mrs. !mllJI tati!led without emotfoo, 1113tilc Reed linolly crocked Iller she quarffied wit~ bJm l<\'Ual llma o .. r another woman. room by themselves for evening talks. Tbe antipollution pact, according to U.S. spo kesmen, calls for : --Cooperation on working out ways of preventing pollution. -Developing new technica l processes which do not pollute man's environment. -Sharing thei r success with other count ries. American spokesmen said the medical pact calls for coordinated research pro- grams on cancer and heart disease, and exchange of speciali sts and delegations. It also includes setting up conferences and lectures, exchange of inlormation and teaching each other about their own technical aids and equi pment. Nixon was quoted by a \Vhite House spokesman. "They are good things to start with." Hard discussions on the more difficult issues, like Vietnam and on limiting nuclear arms, remained. Vietnam is likely to continue to be a sticking point after the summit but the Soviet news agency, Tass, raised flagging hop€!s for some kirid of SALT agreemen t here. The summitry spirit showed at 6:06 p.m. when the conferees stepped from a winter garden of palm trees into the highdomed white and gold Vlsd.imiar Hall. Nixon and Soviet President Nikolai V. Podgorny led the march. Behind came Brezhnev and for the first time in the summit, the rest of the ruling Soviet Politburo. Nixon and Podgorny led their colleagues to opposite sides of the 40.foot table covered with a cream clolh that draped to the floor. Aides laid out bound copies of the an- tipollution treaty. Podgorny removed a Heavy Fighting Reported On Three S. Viet Fronts SAIGON (UPI ) -Heavy lighting broke out today on three fronts in South Viet· nam and Hanoi Radio reported swarms of American planes again bombed the Haooi area in a step ped up aerial of· fensive that coincided with President Nixon's Moscow summit talks. Heavy ground battles were reported south of the My Chanh River defense line about 20 miles north of Hue. A third day or Communist probi ng at- tacks on Hue's outer defense lines ended at nightfall with pockets of Communist troops still clinging to a bridgehead on the south bank. At besieged An Loe 60 miles north or Saigon waves of Communist infantrymen backed by tanks and a I. 700.round . ' artillery barrage struck at paratroopers a mile south of the city and managed to stall a relief element two miles south of An Loe for the sixth consecutive day. The third area was the Central Highlands about 280 miles north of Saigon. The North Vietnamese staged seve ral attacks at Fire Bue 41 , 12 miles north of Pleiku, and knocked out two government tanks and an armored personnel carrier. -They also shot down an Al Skyraider. Rocket attacks on Kontum Airfield. 25 miles to the north wounded three Americans and virtually destroyed a Cl30 Hercules transport. Above the Demilitarized Zone, the (See VIETNAM, Page %) Payi11g Oil Debt 'Ma t11e y for a Day' Raffle Slated Huntington Beach Councilman Jerry Matney, who still O'A'es $1 ,600 on his suc· cessful council campaign ln the April election, ls selling raffle tickets on himself. ''Raffle, your o'vn public servant -for a day. Jerry ~1atney to do whatever yo u require (u long as It's legal)" the tickets say. "We planned the rafne tickets to spark interest ln a game night at the ~1oose Lodge,0 Matney erpJalned. "The raUle tlcltels oro soiling lil<I ho! cakes." 'llcketa COit Utr,. for $1 . and the lucky winner will be named June I at !he Moo,. Hall, llunlinlton Beach. Procee4s from tho ra!Oo and the game night will 10 toward paying elf Matney·s camPlilJI debt. "It's really fun . I'm getting a klck out of lhtst'' Matney said. . Some ticke t holders are already mnk· Ing phi.nt for Matney 's time, If they win. He's been told he'll wlod up washing acrr plucking weeds, cleaning ovens - and 'eouncilman Ted Martlett said he'd put Matney to work In his gas station. Another man want.I Jerry to help him plant olive trees in the desert. A woman says he'll have to shoot the C.Olorado River rapids with her in a rubber rafl '1That beats planting olive trees, I think," Matney quipped. Tlckela are being oo)d arouad town by ?t1atney's campaign supporters. He ad~ mlts It m1y be a unique opportunity fo r the public to buy a politiciao on the open mark el fountain pen from an inside coat pocket and signed. Nixon, after a glan ce at the Russian president, plucked a red pen from a holder on the table and signed for America. After the second part was signed, waiters rushed in with champagne. Brezhnev downed one glass and then got another to clink with Nixon 's. Nixon left his glass three-fourths full. Brezhnev then put his left arm across Nxlon 's back and led the President from the room. An American official told UPI no one on eithe r side of the conference table at thi1 morning's full meeting IO much as mentioned the word "Vietnam." This indicated, diplomatic observers said , that both sides were trying to tJptoe around the subject in order not to (Set SUMMIT, Page 21 Carpenter Bill Against Freeway Delayed Again By L. PETER KRIEG 01 1M OeJIJ "Jiit lfaff An aide to State Sen. DeMls Ctlrpenter (R·Newport Beach) aaid Monday his boss still isn 't sure whether or not he'll push legislation to kill the enUre Pacific Coast Freeway. If be does, Newport Beach will be in there pushing It. Newport Beach councilmen Monday night hired a lobby ist for ihe key months of June and July to plug for any and all legislation designed to do hann to the future of the proposed coastal freeway . They appointed Charles E. "Bud'' Porter, an established lobbyist who for nine years has been representing the city of San Diego in Sacramento and Washington , to carry thtlr message throughout the capital. The action was taken virtually without comment by councilmen Monday flight after hearing the report on the status of Carpenter'• freeway bill In the afternoon. Besides the Carpenter measure, there sre, among other1, two bills that could have a direct effect on Newport Beach. One, sponsored by Ass em b I y man Robert Badham (R·Newport Beach). would kill only the Newport Beach leg or the roule and another, sponsored by Assemblyman Robert. Burke (R-Hun· tington Beach) would lnslitute a three- ycnr moratorium on frec\vay plaMing. pending 1 consultant'• study of the coastal route corridor. The slow progress lo date o r Carpenter's bill, expla ined administrative assistant Michael Neal to councllm•n Monday, Is due to the senator's desire to have all the lacta In hand before (tttlng hi& measure movtng through t b • legislaUvo process. "Tho blll Is now before the lecbloUvo CSte FREt'W AY, Pait t) .~ • Four Wires A low-nylng cessna 150 aJrplane severed four high tension wires and clipped the top of a 30-foot tree before making an emergency landing Monday afternoon al Meadowlark Airport in Hun- tingtotl Beach. The pilot of the aircraft. Thomas Gary Robinson, 18, Fullerton, and h is passenger Richard Campos, 18, also of Fullerton, \\'ere not injured as. Robinson brought the plane to a safe landing on the airport property about 50 yards west of the runway. According to a Federal Avialion Ad- ministration spokesn1an the plane's propeller. which severed the 'A'ires, was damaged along \\'ith the left \Ving \\'hich struck by the loose \\'ires. Robinson and Campos were flying from f·uuerto n Municipa) Airport. They "'ere making their approach to Meadowlark over homes on Heil Avenue between Del Mar Lane and Graham Street at 4: 55 p.m. when the plane 'Struck the wire1 and made the landing. Units from tho Huntington Beach Police and tire Departments and the Edison Company were sent to the scene to prevent passing persens from running into the high tension wires which had fallen in the alley behind the homes. Wayne Wiley, of 5152 Heil Ave .. said he was driving Jn the alley when the plane hit the wires. "Everything exploded into white hiss ing noises around the plane when it struck the wires." said Wiley. Residents of the area sald that all power in their homes was cut off when the wires were severed. The FAA spokesman there ls no maxi· mum height at which the pilots are re-- quired to make their app roach to the airport. He also said the incident is being investigated by his agency. Two weeks ago another single engine craft crash landed in a field after taking off from Meadowlark. The three passengers including a 5-year-old girl reportedly were uninjured. Valley Pistol Range Open on Weekends Fountain Valley Police Chief Charles W. Michaelis has announced that the city's Police Pistol Range will no longer be open on Sunday for public use. Michaelis said that minimal public us1 of the range on Sundays and the need for the rangemaster to perform additional maintenance were the reasons for the SUnday closing. Island Quake Felt ROCKVILLE, Md. (AP ) -An earth- quake measured at 6.9 on the Richter Scale occurred Mondaf afternoon in tht Tonga Islan ds region o the South ~acific. Orange Weather lfazy sunshine in the afternoon is the forecast for Wednesday along the Orange Coast, with htghs: of 65 expected at the beaches ris- ing to 75 inland. Lows $5-«I, 11\oSIDE TODA l' Mrs. Nizon has been caught In "crunch" bttween newrnten 011d police during her irave'3 in Mo.scow, and Mrs. Grom11ko is not happ11 about it. See 1toru Pag1 4. C•Hft,_lt I Cll•tlOH ,...,. (fft'llu If CNotwtN 11 Dttlll M"'"9 11 1,;w1a1 ,.... ' l•tfrt .. illfMllll a.t ~ 1a.11 ...... ,. " ~ 11 -.. f Mlllvll l'"vM1 II MlfilM1 ..... 4 °""" (fflltt 11 SNttt '"" ll'kll Marllth 1•11 Ttinl.... t TIM•.W. M Wtlt!ltr I Wfllh •• ,,. '' ::;:r,:.:...,. 11-1: , !"'~ OAILY PIL01 " Pendleton Airport Set For Airing Friday's meeting between Orange and San Diego County officials to discuss a proposal for a regional airport at c.am p Pendleton has been shifted to San Diego, the office of Supervisor Ronald Caspers aMOunced today. 'l'he San Diego officials were originally invited to come to Orange County by Caspers to discuss the matter. Althou~h elected officials from seve ral levels will be present at thE session. Caspers' off!ce noted that a re presentative of the tiilarine Corps has not been invited. Camp Pendleton officials continue to oppose use of any of the base's 26,000 ac~ for a public commercial airport. "We want to converse on this at a civilian level first ," Tom Fuentes, CUpers' executive assistant, said this morning. "Wehn we have a concrete pro· po.1&1 then we will take it to the Marines and have a chat with them about ii." Fuentes said base officials were not being "ignored" by not being invited to the session and will be kept abreast of any developments. , . The session will include the chairman af the San Diego County Board of Supervisors; the mayor and city coun- cilmen of San Diego ; members of the S~ Diego Port Authority, which has jurisdic- tion over San Diego Airport; Orange (;ounty aviation director R o be r t Bresnahan, and Caspers. In addition, Fuentes said represen- tatives of state and national legislatures will take part in the airport discussion. Both counties have been searching for alternate sites for their respective ' airports for the past several years. The p:oposa l of using Camp Pendleton . to house a regional racility was first 1n- troduced by William Pereira and Associates In an aviation needs ztudy done for Orange County. ••. ,J,,, "'" 23. 1972 UPI Tl~ CALLING FOR SUPPORT -An Army lieutenant uses his field tele· phone to call in a helicopter while on patrol six miles west of Phu Bai Airfield th is week. UCI Gays' Complaint Fails; Film Returned An injunction complaint agaigst Orange County Sheriff James Musick and District Attorney Cecil Hicks sought by the UCI Gay Students Union was dismiss- ed Monday by U.S. District Court Judge Jesse Curtis in U:is Angeles. on the campus. Police and sheriff's deputies were in- formed that the controversial film was indeed pornographic and on March 9 they were anned with a search warrant signed by a municipal court judge. The Marine base, one or tbe Jargest in the world, stretches along the coast from San Clemente to Oceanside and inland as far as Fallbrook. It is used as the primary training base for the Marine Corps on the west coast. But Judge Curtis returned the con• -troversial film which had been the crux The law enforcement officers seized the film before a gathering of about 350 persons. Officials of the two counties had at first proposed constructing an inland airfield at the base, but have since been ex- amining a proposal for a coastal a~rt. thereby insuring .hat take off and landing patterns would be over the ocean. Of- ficials say only about 2,500 acres would be needed for a regional international airport. Public Hearing On Chino Hills Airport Unlikely Another public hearing on the Chino Hills airport proposal will probably not be held, a Federal Aviation Administration 1pokesman said today. Third District Supervisor William Phillips had requested the hearing in con- nection with his proposed 17,000-acre wilderness preserve in the same area which lies north of Yorba Linda and east of Brea. If Phillips' project is finally ap- proved it would eliminate the airport idea . Chino 11ills Airport Complex Inc. has been working on plans for the com- mercial jet airport for more than t~o years. It would cover some 2,500 acres in the rolling hills and canyons north of Yorba Linda and south of Prado Dam. Last Feb. 3. the FAA held a public bearing on the air space impact of the proposed facility . But the Placentia meeting turned into an environmental and land use attack by officials and resi dents of the area. FAA official Jack Chevalier said today that the agency is concerned only with the question of air space use in Southern California and that other agencies handle environmental and la nd use problems. The Chino Hills airport promoters ha ve submitted scaled down plans to the federal agency and Chevalier said a decision on the space impact of the new plans will be probably be announced in mid-June. OIANGI COAST HI DAILY PILOT "nit Oranve Co•it DAIL y PILOT wlih wl'l id 1 ;, com~i"rd '"' NtwS-Pr1u. ii Pl.lb!/~ ly tht Or•roge CIU!st PulllWl1"9 Comp•ny. Stsie· r•t1 tdlllol'ls •r• p1,1blffi'llcl, Mand1y thro1>9h Frld•y, lor Coll• MtM. Ntwl)Of'I Bttdl. Hvnll"fllon lnch/FOU!lt•lll V1lliry, L-oun• •11eh, frvln1/Saddl11NC11; "1111 '-" Cltmen!•f S•n Ju1n C1pi11r111C1. A 1i11Ql1 rt9'°n•I edf1IO" ii pUblblltd Saturday• lrw:I $~nd1yi,. Tiii prln<'!~I pybU11>1no Pl•nl fl II ))I) W"I 81~ $1roti, Cost• Me11, Collfllrnlit, tl62f, II.vb.rt N, W1•d Pr•1klent 11111 P\lbll1her ;.,~ R. C11rl1v I/kt Prukl1111 11'14 Gtntr•I M1n1;e1 lhom•t Kttvil E4ilor lltoll'l•t A. Murphin• Me111tl1111 Edltw Ch•tltt H. L.01 Jlic.li•~ P. Nall AAJll111t MlfltOl1111 Edlton T 1rry Co•llle Wttl Or•• Cellntv Edllor Hori._ IMdi Office 17175 le1th lo11f1vard M•lllng A44rt11 : P.O. I•• 790, 92•41 0t0o< Offkn Uovnt ... di. m For111 A"'"" Cos1• Meu: JlO W.11 81y Slrftl NIWPW'f l•ccll: 23» NtWPOrl kult¥9rd itl'I Ci.ntl'llt: XIS Norlll El C1111l110 11:111 ,., .... C7141 '42-4121 C'-HiH A'"'111ffit 642·117t Ptt• HW91 Ck-1 ... c...,..,, C•nt-ltln 141-UJt C'Wtl'..,.I, tf12. °'"* CO...I fl'vOfl.itFnt ~-,... ..... '""!ft. 1111111,.llMI, ....... fNtlw ., ~¥t11'lt.-..r!tt ,..,.In ...., ... ~ 9'ftlllut .... , ..... ......... ..,., .... ._. ....., c• ......., ..W .t Cnt1 MN. co•Mlk. ~-W umtr tttt .......,.., .,. NU G.1J "*""'"' lllfllt.,., .....,.,.. GM "*""""· I of the dispute to the gay libbers. . The suit by the UCI group was filed after the seizure of a fl im entilled "Seven in a Barn" by campus police and sheriff 's deputies at the UCI Science Building March 9. The university administration had previously issued a directive ordering that no "pornographic" film s be shown 3 Anti-abortion Bills hy Burke Snagged by Unit From Wire Services Three anti-abortion bills sponsored by Assemblyman Robert Burke (R-Hun- tington Beach)-have r:.in into stiff op- position from the Assembly Health Com· mittee. One or the three was rejected by the committee, another has been amended and the third was ordered re\vritten Mon- day. Burke's rejected bill \11ould have outlawed abortions for girls under 18 \Vithoul parental consent. He claims some hospitals have turned into "abortion mills" and that there are widespread abuses of the state's 1967 Therapeutic Abortions Act. Burke's second measure would have lin1ited other abortions, based on his assumption of abuses. The committee amended it to authorize a study to t:etermine if such abuses do exist. A third bill. to set up abortion counsel· fng, \\las ordered re·written. A second hearing on both bills \\'iii be held July J. Judge Curtis issued an order a week ago that the film be brought to his court based on charges contained in the Gay Students Union injunction request. Orange County Deputy District At- torney Orett.a Sears argued Monday t~t there was no showing in the complaint that officers had harassed the Gay Students in the past or would in the future. Judge Curtis held that the search and seizure of the film was legal. He also ruled that there was no wrongdoing on either the part of the officers or Hicks and dismissed a civil rights damage ac- tion sought by the Gay Students Union. From Page J FREEWAY ... counsel," Neal saiC. "The senator will not submit it, however, unlil he has time to meet with the Public Works Department to discuss all the implications. "A big qeustion is how much opposition the Public Works Department will give the bill," Neal said. "They carry quite a bit of weight," he said. "Their dynamic opposit ion would be a possible cause to hold it for awhile." Nea l said the highway officials "have the power and the resources" to wage a major battle against the measure. Mayor Donald A. MclMis asked Neal if the senator thought he could still get It through with the legislature planning on an adjournment this summer. "He would not make the effort he has put in unless he thought there was ample time to get it through once it's in- troduced," Neal responded. Neal said Carpenter's talks with the Public Works Department will take place "in the very near future ." 1' alley's 1;' olunteers .,, Honored as volunteers or the year. In the Fountain Valley School Disbict are these eight women cited at an awards luncheon Monday • From le!l 1rront row) are: Elizabeth Eguchi, Judy ~amp, Dede Napoli and Ann Olmstead; back row: Jean Caycrafl, Penny McKeough, Doris Smith and Shiela .Mendelsohn. '· J'N•Po:geJ VIETNAM •.• .. U.S. command disclosed U.S. air raids had bttn stepped up to an average of 335 a day tor the past live days -the heaviest leveJ alnce the bombing cam- paign l'<Sllll1ed April I. Tbert was no U.S. comment on today's attacks. The U.S. command reported spec- tacular attacks against an electrlcaJ trandonner atation northeast ol Hanoi on Saturday where there were several subsequent explosions. A spokesman said It supplied power to a machine tool fac- tory, a tank and truck repair center and military camp::i in the Hanoi area. With American planes laying more mines in the North Vietnamese harbors, fighter-bombers concentrated on the railroads leading from €hina. The bombers struck at 14 rail and highway bridges ranging from those leading from China southeastward to Hanoi to others just above the Dt\.1Z. Five of the main bridges on a rail line from China were destroyed in one raid and the attackers returned the nert day to knock out a sixth. Air Force spokesmen said the raids had been so severe the North Vietnamese shifted to barge and ferry traffic to ketp their supply lines open since President Ni.Ion ordered the rail line strikes oo May 9. Navy sourc~s reported e~lier • that rivers and canaJ.S would be mined against such traffic. The command sajd the missile threat over North Vietnam had been con- siderably reduced and that an average or 12 SAMs a day are fired now as com· pared with more than 30 a dly at the beginning of the offensive. Meanwhile, the commander of the U.S. 'Ith Fleet, which is enforcing the blockade of North Vietnam, said today the mining of Haiphong and other harbors stopped delivery of all war materiel to the Com- munist nation. Vice Adm. William P. Mack said that the U.S. flotilla off North Vietnam has .,warned one to the five merchant ships of the mines protecting Ha!phong harbor. Some turned back, some turned away." Talking to newsmen aboard ~i!I flagship, Mack sajd. "No ships are gomg in or out to our knowledge, and.certainly the one claimed by the North Vietnamese to have gone in or out has not." He referred to .._ claim by North Viet- namese officials that the East German freighter Friedep sailed through the minefield into HaJpbong last week. The Pentagon Monday also denied a report that the Soviet freighter Zeya .ran the Haiphong minefield after the mines bad become activated. Failure?-Nyet Russians Eager To Get Results By WILLIA~t L. RYAN damage chances. If they must talk 1bout ..,, SHCl•I ''"'""""' !he two areas, they will. . The SOviet reception of President Nix-That's going to make tbeit allies on, like the advance Soviet press tre.ot-nervous, even though the Russians tna.v ment of the visit, gives the 1mpress1on be neither willing nor able lo concede that the Kremlln will go to cons!derable anything. . Jengths to prevent any look of faliurc for Leonid I. Brezhnev, the Commu~1sl this swnmit. . _ part~ ;.eneral secrt!ary who, Is r,unnmi.: It seems significant tllat President the Sovie t show now. lost no t1m~ 1n hav- Nikolai Podgorny chose this moment lo ing a fir st n1eeti11g \\'~th the Pres1de1,1t. H<' expand the ~1oscow litany about the need 111.:i.y even be braving the .. mearungful for better Soviet-American relations. 'sco \vls or party and m1lttary con- Up to now. the stereotyped sentence has scrvatives by displaying such eag~rness. gone: "Better relations with the ~nited Brezhnev and the So~iet media have States are both possible and des1rallle, built up a lot or hopes 1n the USSR and but not at the expense or any third coun-abroad th.'.lt the surnmit will contribut~ lo try or people." cased ~ensions, however .. The party ch1er. Podgorny, speaking at a Kremlin din-most llkely wants to deliver. ner, made it read "not merely good, bul friendly relations." . This is a curious time for Soviet leaders to be talking about "friendly" I NEWS ANALYSIS I relations with an American president v.•ho has just ordered the mining of a Cont· munist nation's harbors to prevent the flow of Soviet war material to North Vietnam . But Podgomy stressed that the Russian leaders are eager for positive results. They may go to some lengths to get such results. Evidently the men in control won't permit either Vietnam or the ~ddle East the two main sources of tension, to • From Pagel SUMMIT .•• hamper progress on other projects. Nixon and Brezhnev undoUbtedly will discuss Vietnam -but more privately than in a full plenary session of the sun1· mil. Nixon's and Brezhnev's spokesmen both described the morning session in the white and red hall built by Peter the Great as "frank and businesslike." Drunk Driver Safety Grant Receives Nod A $1.5 r.t illion lraffic safety grant to the Orange County Department of fl.lental 11ealth for a project designed to solve the problem of drinking drivers has been ap- proved, Gov. Ronald Reagan said Mon- day. The program will be administered by the governor's office of traUic zafety and financed by Federal Highway Safety Act funds. It is the first project of its kind to be develoPed on a countyWl~e basis in California. Jack Bishop of the local mental health department will be in charge of the pro- gram which was given tentative approval by the Board of Supervisors two weeks ago. They wi ll vote on the completed plan next week. Bishop said today the project should be in operation by Sept. 1 and will include a 24-hour hotline !or drinking drivers over which they could receive counseling and make arrangements ror a safe ride home by taxi, if necessary. A report from Singapore Monday quoted the captain of the l,2QO.ton ship as say ing he left Haiphong May 13 -two days afte r the mines became lethal - and his shi pping agent reportedly cor- roborated the report from the ship'• log. The Russian spokesman. Director General Leonid I. Zamyatin of the Soviet . news agency Tass, said more vital business was afoot. Involved in the program will be city police department tral£ic agencies, the courts, educators and public and private alcoholic rehabilitation groups such u Alcoholics Anonymous and that organiza- tion's Halrway houses. Man Convicted Of Slaying Coed Gets 10 Years CORVALLTS, Ore. (AP) -Marlowe James Buchanan has received a ma:1- imum 10-year s e ntence on a manslaughter charge for the stabbing death of an Oregon State University coed. Circuit Judge Richard Mengler ordered the 17-year-old defendant turned over to the Oregon Corrections Division, which will decide if the Lake Oswego, Ore., honors student will ser_ve his sentence at the state penitentiary or the Oregon State Corre<:tional Institute. Buchanan had been found guilty of manslaughter Thursday in a nonjury trial heard by Judge Mengler. He had been accused in the death of Nancy Diane Wyckoff, an 18-year-old stu· dent from Glendale. The victim was found dying in her dormitory room on tht" OSU campus Feb 8. Buchanan heard the sentence without noticeable emotion . When asked if he had anything to say, he replied, "No, your honor." "The people expect an easing of tension, not only between the Soviet Union and the United States but all over the world," he told reporters. As Nixon was conducting talks as the first American President to visit Russia since Franklin D. Roosevelt went to Yalta in 1945, Pat Nixon went aigbtsee.. ing. (See related.story, Page 4). While in Moscow, Nixon hopes to sign a treatY on limiting strategic nuclear weapons, but as earJy as last weekend Administration officials began to suggest a hitch developed . In Helsinki today, sources at the Strategic Arms Limitation talks (SALT) said there \vas little possibility that an agreement could be reached before the end or the summit. Today's gatherings opened with smiles and handshakes, more relaxed than a- proper but protocol-chilly reception given Nixon Monday at his airport arrival for the nine-day visit to Russia. Today, under a gray and blue sky, the American flag new for the first time in history over the Kremlin's golden onion domes. The announcement by spokesmen that the two leaders would closet themselves in the marble and malachite splendor emphasized Brezlmev's more than equal status \vith his colleagues in the Kremlin, ruling Troika trio -Premier Alexei N. Kosygin and President Nikolai V. Podgomy. Bishop said he hopes to have lhe head- quarters in Westminster near the West Comty Judicial District municipal courtz, "to make it more convenient for those persons referred to the project by judges." He anticipates a staff of about 35 persons. The mental health department official said nationwide statistics show that about half or all traffic fatalities involve drink· ing drivers. Edison to Give Spring Concert The Edison High School concert and symphonic bands will present their third annual Spring Concert at 8 p.m. Wed- nesday in the Huntington Beach High School auditorium. Gary McJilton, Edison band h1structor will conduct the 130 music students in overtures from "West Side Story," "Fid- dler on the Roof," and "Hello Dolly!' Tickets, $1 for adults and 75 cents for students. are available from the financial office, members of the band and at the door. Profits from the concert will be used to replace uniforms for the Edi 1 on marching band. Buying A New Tract Home? Many people buying homes are under the impression thoy HAVE to buy carpeting from the homo sales center. In the majority of cases this is not true, .~hough tho sales office will try lo make you think so. The minute the home center tr ies to upgrado the standard carpet, then you are free to shop for ca r.peting. To prevent shopping should constitute restraint of trade. " In many cases !hoy will tell you that the carpet allowance does not apply if you buy carpet outside. If they feel this leg al, HAVE THEM PUT IT IN WRITING. • OrdinarOy, wt c1n sevt you o lot of money over what tho homo center offen. We provide• larger soloctlon -and we usu1lly com~ •p with leu yardogt, plu s 1 superior init1ll1tion. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 l'lac•ntla Ave. COSTA MISA 646-4838 • • Tuesday, May 2.3, 1972 H DAILY PILOT f Big Push for Death Penalty Urged[ Chief Hits Probation 'Overuse' By TOM BARLEY 01 lltl DallJ' l"lltl Stiff Ir trial judges are held responsib le for the subsequent acts of the convicted crlm4 nal we would soon see a sharp decline in the number or repeat orfenders and the nation's crime rate, Los Angeles Police Chie! Edward Davis told California lawmen Monday. "Irresponsible judges outnumber the other kind,'' Davi.!! said. ''It's time we did something about adopting a system whereby we could go back to the trial judge and point out what happened when he failed to impose a proper sentence." (See related stories, page 12) P~l!O ~v O•rr•I B•U"'"'' Obtaining Signatures Emphasized Ll y ltUDI N1ED7.IELSKI 01 !~• D•llY ,!let Slit! Cnllfornia 's s1•cond ranking la\\'man ap- pratrd today f<'r police to d~\·ote every possible off-oi:luty hour in the next 14 days 10 g;i thl·r1ng \litrr signatures cn\Jing for reins!ntl'ment of the death penalty. Chief Assis tant Attornev General Jlerbert L Ashby's speei:h to the Calirornia J'eacr Officers' Associatien convention in Anahe im was an im· promptu departure from the main agenda text. He \V as substituting for his boss, At· tor ney Genrrri l Evellc J. Younger. who couldn 't 1nake a scheduled talk at tht Disneyland llotel. Apart from that, Davis said, "we are the victims of 'yo-yo j~tice,' with cases bo uncing back from the appellate courts in such nwnbers that the trial court judge is just intimidated by the thought that his ruling might be reversed. THE SUN WAS AN IMPRESSIVE BACKDROP FOR THIS LONE SURFER WHO WAS PHOTOGRAPHED AT SCOTCHMAN 'S COVE Ashby and probably JOO percent of the rrinking California lawmen pre sent were :1pp11lled by the State Supreme Court'J recen t ru li ng that execution is un- l'Unslitut iona!. "He should remember that an alarmed public does not achieve tht famUiari ty with crime inevitable to the judge \Vho may see as many as 1,000 convicted persoru a year," Davis said. "That'• no comfort to the citizen who may have to stand an hour with a gun ill his belly while 21ome bandit makes a decis ion· on whether hls victim lives or dies," Davis said. "The man on the street want! justice Md we're finding that most of oar pres- ent day procedures, including wall-to-wall cops. are not giving it to him." Davis blamed "overuse" or probation and parole program and "l003ely ad- ministered innovative programs'' for the "mounting fear of crime that is gripping our nation toda y. "Cities are dying of !ear," the police chief told 300 lawmen at the California Peace Officers Auociation conference in Anaheim. "Look at New York with its lremendous problems and tremendous costs , far wone than Los Angeles although our crime rate has doubled in the last 10 years. Davis warned his audience that the on- ly remedy "in what is not and never has been a criminal society" is a "just, fair and tough system in which the trial courts must be held aCCOWllable. "Many crimts an being committed over and over again by the same criminals," Davis said. "Crime rates are going up while state prison sentences are golng down and men are find ing that the gunmen who held them up last night may be out on the strett serving probation the next morn- ing. "Past solutions haven't worked," Davis warned his audience. "We have to be tough and we're being told to be tough in no uncertain terms by communities that are sick of repeated failures in the battle to co mbat crimt ." Pigeon Causes Chaos LONDON (UP!) -A pigeon caused chaos Monday In the Inner London Crown Court. The bird flew in a window and dived at barristers and court oflclals. It was driven out alter an hour. One Week Left For Absentee Voters to File Only one week remains for June 6 primary election voters to file for absentee ballots, Orange C o u n t y Registrar of Voters Dave Ritch e-0ek warned today. Persons who expect to be absent from the ir precinct on June 6 may apply for an Absent Voter Ballot either by mail or in person at the Regis trar of Voters office, 1119 E. Chestnut Ave., Santa Ana. Deadline is Tuesday, May 30. Jr requesting a ballot by mail, the voter must include his residence address, his legal signature, and the reason why he will be Wlable to vote in bis precinct on June 6. Officer Hurt Critically SAN DIEGO CAP) -A cor· rections officer was in critica l con- dltlon today after being doused with gasoli ne and repeatedly stabbed at a state conservation camp. Other offic ers saw L. R . Marshall, 29, stagger out of a bar- rack's door. bleeding. wit h a prisoner flaying at him "''ith a butcher knife. Other prt'soners pulled the at.- lacker off Marshall. The gasoline wa s not set afire. The officer was attacked Monday whJle investigating a prisoners' sit· doy,•n strike in the barracks, o!· ricials said. Irvine Annex Proposal May Spur Agency Fight By JACK BROBACK 01 I~• O.llr ,lie! l l•ff Proposed annexation of 9,500 acres of Irvine Company property to the new city of Irvine -scheduled to be heard by the Local Agtncy Formation Commission Wednesday -may trigger another of the battles which have characterized LAFC mettlngs for the past three years. Although Irvine city officials have asked the commisSlon to delay action on the annexation, and the accompanying 11phere of lnfluence map covering 53,000 acres only members of that body can de- cide If such a delay is In the be.st interests of all concerned. Mtanwhile, Santa Ana, Laguna Beach, and the Sa n J~quln Elementary SChool District have added their prote1t1 to the the Laguna Beach Unified School District annerallon of 18nd that lies southeast or the present 18,000-acre city of Irvine. First to attack the mbve was the Sad- dleback Area Coordinating Council. A study of the proposed Irvine an- nexation shows a cloae kinship to Irvine Company-owntd lands betwten U C Jrvlne, Corona del Mar, Laguna Beach and the Pacific Ocean. This 10,CK»-acre area was at one tune practically offered to Newport Beach and Latuna Beach. But observers fetl that J..aiuna'1 new anU'hlgh-rise law rtstrlcllng all building to 36 feet In bel1ht and Newport'• ptn- dln& hl1hrlse ordinance m1y have cban4cd lhls. It 1s known that the Trvine Company plans several high rise hottl·motcl facilities in the coastal area as well as thouunda of homfj. The compal!JI qr,.d to guarant .. ac- Ced to Ch< 1\Hnlle stretch of beache1 to the public before th< COtlllty enacted Its Beach Recreation Development ...., and appllld It to an th< llJ\lncorporated coe•UI"' from St1I Btacb to San Clemente. The 10,000-acre property. sloping from the mountains to the beaches borders the proposed city of Irvine annexation south of UCI and extends to Laguna's northerly city Umits. Irvine Company executives suppooedly plan to file a request with the county Planning Commission for planned com· munity zoning fCll' the property within two weeks. Staunchly opposing the merger of the inland 9,00().plus acres to Irvine is the Saddleback Area Coord inating Council \Vhich has filed Jts own "area of concern" map overlapping 3,000 acres of the Irvine proposal. While the Saddleback group has no legal standing before the L A F C, representatives will have the right to be heard in full. The central issue is 1,600 acres or land zoned for industrial development cast of the El Toro Marine Corpa Air Station. Saddleback Valley interests want this to remain unincorporated on the pos1iblll- ty a new city will be formed in the El Toro • Mission Viejo • Laguna Hills • Laguna Niguel area. Saddleback's area of concern map In- cludes about 64,000 acres and stretches from San Juan Capi1trano to Tustin and from the city llmlts of Laguna Btach to the eastern loolhllb below Saddleback Peak. The city or Laguna has protested th• Irvine sphere of lnflutnce map. It overlaps some land the beach city covets in the Laguna Canyon area. Santa Ana, a frtqutnt proltster of anything concerning the new city, has several law suit appeab pending on the Incorporation and on tht famed 931-acre "promlled land" property IOUth of the Marine Corpa Hellcopttr Air StaUon and wt of Newport Freeway. Mrs. Humphrey Hits )rail Ca1ididate's Wife Addresses Volunteers i1i County By JAN EDWARDS 01 ltlt D•ll• l'llol Sl•tf ''Whtn I fly over or drive through these big city are('ls, 1 Wdnt to drop leaflets -I wont to reach everyone," a:imits Muriel Humphrey. She spoke l\.1onday to Hubert llumphrey volunteers at the presidential campaign headquarters in Santa Ana. Actively participating in her sixth na- tional election, she regarded her four scheduled appearances in Lon g Beach, Santa Ana, Laguna Hills and Los Angeles as "an easy day." She has campaigned primarily without Sen. Hur.1phrey since the Florida primary in March. "I have loved campaigning thi5 year - it has been hard work -there are 23 or 24 primaries this yur, whereas in 1960 there were only six." "Jn this campaign J have done better, worked harder and in a way I like it bet- ter than any other time,'' she said. She considers her small campaign group ef- ficient and at a "cost as little as any ef· fort" in Humphrey's Democratic primary campaign. Each primary since January has had national focus upon it, she observed, but the up-coming California primary on June 6, worth 271 convention delegates, has constantly loomed in importance. · "In two weeks," she reminded the volunteers. "we have the biggest one, the most serious one. Hu bert has said it will make or break -it will have run mean· ing if \\'e go on to ~1iami or not." "It'..:; on the line. We have a very short time to work -I wish we had six weeks," she continued. Her campaign schedules have primari· ly taken Mrs. Humphrey to day care centers, state hospitals, state rehabiUta- tion centers, vocational schools, Head Start programs and hlgb schools. The Humphreys opened campaign headquarters Sunday jn east Los Angeles and. encircled by se~:urity n1<'n, mingled with the cro\Yd. Asked if she lived in fear that her husband is a target of snipers, she replied "you tlo live "'ith 11 -J don 't really think of ii." "It takes a greal cleat oul or you,'' .she said in rererence to the recent attempt on Sen. Ceorgc \Vallare·s IHe. She believes il hurls every c;indidatr and l'vcry publ ic official \vhcn one is !he object of an at- tempted assassina1ion . r or r.turie l l~umph rey, "1hc fc:l r is there, you are ;nvarc of it just as you arc or the dangers on a rrcc\v;;iy. Jr you stay hon1e, you cannot live , you cannot expand YOl1rselr, but you ca n l:ike pr~C:lul ions."' Asked aboul the series of facc·lO-face televised debates hetwcen llu111phrey and Sen. George ,.1'1cCove rn which are planned for May 28 and J une 4, she re- plied, "l hope the debates will take pla ce." \\'hat does Mrs. llumphrey think of the Nixons' trip to Moscow? "J think this is very important. I wish we were there." .. The next l""'O weeks could dettnninc ltll' ruturc of the death penalty in C;1l1fornia. ·• Ashby warned the assembled chicrs and high-ranking police officers. His remarks we.re made in refertnee to a campaign to put the death penalty on the Nove mber ballot as an iniliative and allow voters to decide the question. You nger's chief assistant said there Is a strong que stion whether the 527 ,000 valid s!gnatures required to put it on the ballot can be gathered. Timing between the Supreme Court decision and the groundswell for an in· itiative is crucial. Ashby said . "Th is is true. despite widespread sup- port." he added. "The voiding or the death penalty by the !ilale Supreme Court is the most im- portant issue to affect California peace uflit'l'rs 111 recent years." Ashby em· 1>haliizcd. .. Attorney General Younp;er has asked 111e to ask you," Ashhy continued, "to <lcvote every free hour in the nex t two \Veeks to obtain signatures for the in· 1tiati\·c .. _ '·Ensuring thal the people of California will have the opportunity to express their will on this most crucial matter,'' he declared. The chief assistant attorney general appealed to the lawmen's pride of duty in protecting the public and their own lives. "Thls· is q J>-Ugation which you owe your selves, your families and your mtn." Ashby said. Big Car Lui'ury at a Low, Low Price! MERCURY •2246H574402 Monterey 2-Dr. Hardtop, ~andsome_ medium brown with white vinyl roof, \V.\V. Tires, Fender s~1rts, Radio, dual rear speakers, complete tinted glass , remote control mirror, deluxe wheel covers, body side 1noldings and AIR CONDI· TIONfNG ••• $4133 MERCURY Comet 2-Dr. Sedan, yellow gold, me- tallic, W.W. tires, Radio. Decor group, bumper guards, complete tinted glass ... $2499 Rome Of The New Car .• , "GoUea Touch" .\ ohnson & son 111\;CUL "J ME RCLJHY COU(;AI! CAPRI 2626 HARBOR BLVD~ COSTA MESA • 540-5630 I ' 21Cl 1Ti4216t llomo Ol The New Car • , , ''Golde" Toucla" ' 4 DAILY PILOT 5 • I • ~ I ~ with Tom ..-phine ~ : l\latY TICKY POLITIX: campaign 71 Jb beginning to heat up and nowhere ls 1L ,~ore evident these days than in good old ;uranae County where even th e .Dtmocrata are showing up to drum for votes. Only yesterday, for example, 11-furiel Humphrey, wife of the senator from Min· nesota, the former vice president and current presidential aspirant, was in our region to whip up some enthusiasm for her husband's California Primary cam- paign. Mrs .. Humphrey was on hand out on 17th Street in Santa Ana for a buffet luncheon (or campaign volunteers , follow· ed that up with an appearance at Leisure 'Vorld in Laguna Hills and then made stops in L.os Angeles and Long Beach. She called this "one of my easier days." . . You get the notion you'd hate to see her schedule on a busy outing. DURING HER stay with us, 1\-frs. Hum· phrey was witty, v.·arm and charming. It Tunday, May 2'. 19n RUSSIAN HONOR 'GUARD STRUTS BEFORE PRESIDENT NIXON Sov!et President Nikol1i Podgorny Joins in W•tchJng Review MRS. NIXON JOINS PUPILS IN MOSCOW PHYSICS CLASS 'Students Are Better Disci plined In Ru ssia,' She Says McGover n Goes After Tw o More United Press loternational George S. McGovern today we11t aft~r an East Coast-West Coast sweep m presidential primaries in Rhode Island and Oregon. McGovern was ano v e rw helming fa vorite to win in Oregon and add the state's 34 delegate votes lo his leadin~ and growing collection despite the I IN SHORT ••• I presence of Sen. Edward ?.·I. Kennedy and nine other Democrats on the ballot. McGovern also was given a slight edge for Rhode Island's 22 delegates, although the election was considered a close three way race between McGovern, Edmwid S. Muskie and Hubeit H. Humphrey. • P r o test Quashed is difficult to gue.!IS exactly how much she did to beef up Hubert's campaign In our area, but she surely did introduce some beef into the effort. Beef soup, that is. This is one of the delightful gimmicks of many Humphrey campaigns in that little ~ cards are passed out carrying the recipe Nixons Se rved Cavinr Et Al Mrs. Gromyko Gets Huffy WASHINGTON (AP) -More than 200 antiwar demonstrators have been ar· rested at the Pentagon, but protest organizers failed to muster a crowd large enough to disrupt activity at the giant military office building. The demon stration had been billed as an effort to blockade the complex and prevent workers from' entering but only a few protesters appeared during the morning rush hour Monday. for "Muriel Humphrey's Beef Soup." SHE EXPLAINS in the introduction on the card, "This is a hearty old family recipe my fat.her used to make and is my husband's favorite. He likes to tell everyone it gives him vim, vigor and vitality. Serves six good hearty bowls." MOSCOW (AP) -This was the menu for the official dinner Mon- day night in . the _Grand Kremlin Palace in honor of President a Mrs. Nixon: \ Reporters Coveri ng Mr s. Nixon's Visit Scold(d The crowd massed outside the building swelled to about 1,000 by noon and about 100 protesters locked arms and moved suddenly to rush the Pentagon steps at mid-afternoon. Officers on horseback quashed the drive and routed the re. maining demonstrators. Well, as a columnist who can't even boil waier, this is a bit out of place but I can't keep you Jadies in suspense .any longer. Here's Muri(!l's magic reeipe !or the beef soup that keeps Hubert going: I 'h lbs. stew beef or chuck and soup bone · ' I tsp. salt 1' tsp. pepper 2 bay leaves 4 ot;i·med. sized carrots, sliced %:-cup chopped onion l cup chopped celery 1 cup chopped cabbage 1 No. 2 can Italian style tomatoes 1 tbsp. Worcestershire sauce 1 beef bouillon cube Pinch of oregano or your preferred spice Cover meat with cold water in heavy three quart kettle. Add salt, pepper and bay leaves. Bring to bubbly stage while preparing vegetables. Turn heat low and add celery, onions, carrots and cabbage. Simmer at least 2lf.t hours or until meat is very tender. Remove bone and bay leaves. Cut meat into bite sized pieces. Add tomatoes, Worcestershire sauce and bouillon cube. Simmer for 11.z hour longer and serve. Mrs. Humphrey's concluding ~dvlce is, "'This recipe is especially good for a light supper meal with fruit salad, a glass of milk, lots of crackers and dessert. lt is low in calories but high in food value." Clearly, ·there bas to be something to Humphrey soup. It has now .sustained them through 12 political campaigns overall and they are now in their sixth national campaign. You might even get an Orange County Republican to try something that good. COMPUTERms: Robert w. Battin, the first district supervisor from Santa Ana, has fired off letters to his Fountain Valley constituents Inviting them to a meeting tonight at one of his supprter's homes. In the letter, Battin noted , "I have personally held meetings with local neighborhood groups in Fountain Valley and other parts of Orange County as often as my official duties pennJt •.. " ALL OF THIS m11iy have surprised one of Battln's opponents, Wallace R. "Wally" Davis, who has been claiming Battin has avoided public meetings. Except Davis got an invitation himself. "Your computer sent me an in· vitation," Davis chortled in a Jetter of reply. "I want to find out where else you've had meetings ... I haven't heard of one in three and one-half years. See you there." May be the most interesting coffee of the current campaign. Russian pancakes, fresh and red caviar and salmon Venison gannnon -smoked venison -baked with fruit Fresh salted cucuiribers Suzdal fish soup Broshcbok consomme with salted rusks Sterlet -all Russian sturgeon - in champagne Roast pheasant Strawberry ice cream Coffee and tea Fruit Petits four Vodka was served with the first course, Georgian white wine with the Sterlet, and Moldavian red wine with the pheasant. Russian cham· pagne accompanied dessert. Belfast Rocked By Bomhs; Six Hurt Slightly BELFAST (UPI -Bombs exploded in downtown BeUast today, slightly injuring six persons, police said. One bomb inside a car went off beside the Central Post Office, shattering win· dows over a SO.yard area. Another one heavily damaged a stocking factory. A third blast outside the downtown area extensively damaged a factory near the docks this afternoon. Workers were told they had five minutes to get out, but the bomb exploded 2;5 minutes after the area was evacuated. No one was hurt. Police said the Post Office blast caused only superficial damage ta the building, but that twa men and four women, in· eluding a policewoman, had to be treated for minor wounds. In Londonderry, wamen In the Roman Catholic Bogside area sought an agree. mcnt with the Provisional Wing of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) to fire only in self-defense. The women, incensed over the Sunday, slaying of a British :soldier on leave from Germany, won a similar pledge from the IRA Official Wing Monday. A Roman catholic priest meanwhile said today the men wha shot three persons sitting in an automobile outside his home on Monday apparently made a mistake -lhey thought the three were police. By BELEN THOMAS MOSCOW (UPI) . -In a crunch or newsmen and Soviet secret poUce; Mrs. Richard M. NI.Ion took a ride on Moscow's famous subway today, Md the wife of the Soviet foreign minister. told persistent newsmen where to get off. . . "Why don't you ask your questions somewhere else?" Mrs. Andrei A. Gromyko said at one pOint. The KGB -the Soviet secret police - took good care of Mrs. Nixon on the afternoon ride on the Moscow metro. The American first lady quipped that "you have ta be agile to get on that subway," referring to the fast-moving system. Later, she said, "Yours is the loveliest subway system in the world," in talking to the metro administrator, Alexander Novochatsky. "It's wonderful to get such high praise from you," he said. Mrs. Nixon was caught up in a squeeze of Russian security agents, enthusiastie cameramen, reporters and sputtering Soviet ladies durin'g the afternoon ride on the subway, built by Josef V. Stalin as a showpiece of Soviet achievement Much to Mrs. Gromyko's irritation, reporters asked Mrs. Nixon if she had eve r ridden t~ New York subway. Mrs. Gromyko demanded, "Why don't you ask your questions somewhere else?'' But Mrs. Nixon laughed and replied, "Oh, yes. Many times." The KGB agents were bent on pro. tecting Mrs. Nixon from the American newsmen as well as from some 50 more Russian and foreign photographers who had a field day filming her ln marble· walled, colored glass-decor stations. Mrs. Nixon earlier in the day helped Mrs. Leonid I. Brezhnev, the Soviet first lady, weather a crowd crush -largely of reporters and photographers .-during a tour of a school where several subjects are taught In English. "I'm going to take care of you," Mrs. Nixon told Victoria Brezhnev, who dislikes crowds. She patted Mr 1 • Brezhnev's hand consolingly. Mrs. Brezhnev did aay she would like to visit the United States -"if I'm in· Vited." Mrs. Nixon said 11of course" when asked if she had invited Mrs. Brezhnev'. "I hope she's going to come," Mrs. Nixon said. "I've made some new friends and I want them all to visit." At the end of the tour of the school, Mrs. Gromyko told Mrs. Nixon : "It's very good to have you here. It's good for peace. Ylords cannot describe how happy I am you are here." It was a busy day for Mrs. Nixon ill* eluding the subway ride followed by' tea bt the Kremlin's old Czarist family apartments wlth Mrs. Brezhnev and Mrs Nikolai Podgorny, wife of the Soviei president. Mrs. Nixon, herself a f o rm e r schoolteacher, Yid she was impressed at Balmy Weather Pers~sts -Sky Cle ar, Humidit y Low Except • in Tempera t ures "''" Low ,l'tt, " " .. " " " " .. " " " .. .. " .. .. " .. " .. " .. " .. 11 " .. .. " " " .. " .. " : .. " .. .. .. .. " .. .. " ~ •• " M " " .. .. .. .. " " .. " " .. .. a .. .. • .. .. .. M M .. ·" ,. ... ·-~ ... .. ... f MAtH)NA& WIAIMll SllVl(f IOltCAll N 7 ,M l l f S•t••n 3000 Central, Belt J the order in the classrooms. "The students here are all better disciplined than in America,'' she said. In a home economics class she sampled a cookie from a batch baked in honor of her :visit. "Ummm,'' she said. In ope classroom, a blonde girl.. with tightly braided pigtails rose-'On cue and nervously recited a poem in Russian. "That was very good," Mrs. Nixon said. She brought a blush from an English teacher in another class by telling her, "you speak beautifully.'' "You flatter me," said the teacher, reddening and smiling. In another room, Mrs. Nixon listened attentively while a teacher exPlained that "our children are educated on the basis of Marxist·Leinist outlook." On the walls of every classrporn hung portraits of both Karl Marx and Vladimir I. Lenin. Mrs. Nixon presented siX new basket· balls to the school and then stood on the sidelines to watch a boys gym-class play a game under the instruction of a lady coach. "I've never seen a woman coach before," she said. basketball Gov. Wallace Sips Milk, Shows Continued Progress SILVER SPRING, Md. (UPI) -Gov. George C. Wallace is on a milk diet and has stepped up his aclivilies during con- tinued recuperation from an assassina· tion attempt May 15, according to his chief spokesman. Wallace's legs have been paralyzed since the shooting, but on Sunday and Monday he experienced some involuntary movement and some feeling in his legs. Doctors at Holy Cross Hospital issued a statement today saying the condition of Wallace 's legs was "essentially un· changed." "The Governor had a sound night's sleep," the statement said. "Over the past 24 hours, the neurologic status of the lower extremities has been essentially unchanged. The bowel activity has shown signs of improvement and the governor is taking increasing amounts of liquid by mouth. Respiration, cardiac activity, temperatW'e and kidney function remain nonnal. "It is anticipated that the governor will progress with more active physio-therapy and spend more time out or his bed to- day." 1 Aide Billy Joe camp told reporters Monday that the governor made two telephone calls on Sunday -to his mother and to evangelist Billy Graham - and also watched television. Camp said the 52-year-old governor, paralyzed from the waist down since the shooting , had moved his toes at least three times in response to stimulation, twice Sunday and again on Monday. Meanwhile. two anonymous callers claiming lo belong to the Ku Klux Klan have threatened to blow up the Baltimore County Jail unless authorities stopped protecting the accused assailant of Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace. The FBI said the two callers telephon· ed Baltimore area radio station WKTK· FM. Both said the jail would be destroyed unless 11uthorities placed Arthur H. Bremer, 21, the suspect, outside its walls so the Klan could deal with him itself. Federal and county grand juries today begin deliberating indictments against Bremer. Bremer, blondish former bus- boy from Milwaukee, remained in his 8- by-10-foot cell at the jail and was not scheduled to appear at either grand jury hearing. e FBI Aide Rewarde d WASHINGTON (UPI) -J. Edgar Hoover willed virtually all of his $551,500 estate to .his Jong-time friend,· associate FBI director Clyde A. Tolson, tbe Washington Post reported today. The bequest included Hoover 's $100,000 home in northwest Washington into which Tolson already has moved, the Post said: .. The ailing Tolson, 72, resigned his post~ shortly after Hoover was found dead in : bed three weeks ago, and went into ! seclusion. The Post said that aside from a few f minor bequests to namesakes and ~ employes, Hoover left to Tolson personal I property including oil, gas and mineral I leases; cash: stocks and bonds; in· surance, unpaid salary and annual leave, I and household effects. · e Air Merger O""sed WA~HINGTON° ~(AP) ..: 'A Civil I Aeronautics Board examiner has recom· 1 mended disapproval of the proposed merger of Northwest Ail'lines and Na.-t tional Airlines. ( "The real issue here boils down to ! whether the board is prepared to sanction the disappearance of a healthy and ef· j fectively competitive small trunk li11e i from the air transportation scene vja the i merger route,,. said examiner Robert L. i Park in his recommendation. : ! e Drot1ght Worset•• ~ NEW DELHI (UPI) -In the state of ~ Bihar whole families v.1alk all day in 112· \ degree heat carrying earthen jugs in \ search o[ a water hole. In the ceOtral ll state of Andhra Pradesh flocks 1\ dehydrated blackbirds drop fr o tn treetops. India is in the grip of a heat wave that J has produced temperatures of 135 degrees and claimed nearly 400 lives in: the past two weeks. It has left crops withered and claimed untold numbers of : game and livestock. ' The heat continued but weathermem saw slight hope ·in clouds forming over both the Bay of Bengal and the Arabian &a. Vat ican Experts Hope to Repair Pieta Perfectl y VATICAN CITY (UPI) -Vatican restoration experts said today they would try to re.store Michelangelo's battered Pieta to an exact likeness of its original state rather than leave any trace of their repairs. Sammy Davis Testifies On Horse Racing Deal Prof. Deoclecio Redig de "Campos, citing an assessment of the damage after a more careful inspection, said he was confident the work can be done success· fully. "None of us Is Infallible," he told newsmen. "But J' do not see any particular difficulties." Brazilian.f:>orn de Campos, director of the Vatican museums, assessed the pros· pects for repairing the statue of ?.1ary cradling the dead Christ in her arms after a Hungarian emigrant attacked it with hammer Snnday, smashing the Madonna's left arm and nose and damag- ing an eye. I De campos recognlied that modern restoration tbeo.ries call for the restorer to leave some indication of where be has been working, In ord.,. that future ocholm can tell the restored part from the original . D/.\ILT PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Delf\itry of the Dall~ Pilot Is guaranteed Mtndly.F'tlday: II ~ do nal II.Iv. \oolw Pljlft bV J:)O p,M., ctU •lld l'OIJF copy WUI be ltnlvllll fO )'OU. C.11' ert ttt'" W!lll 1rl0 p,m. ' *M ltnlr;1 h JDlil cit ftOt ....iv. '°"' ... ' .. m. 11!\lrlUY, ., • •m. •r. un .,,. • atr -.;111 M lll'OllOllt " • ..-. Celt. M tttlffl lll!fll It e,fft. Tt- =~~~:=·· ... .,.~ •111111 W.trll .......................... .. .... '"""""· C.lll•trwle ...... s.-.. J..-r...i.wen.. .,..,. .....,.._ """' ~ &......,. "~ .... ., ..... j WASHINGTON (AP) -Sammy Davis Jr. wanta to play the role of Isaac Murphy in a movie about the great black jockey ol the late lllOOs. But, in real life, Davis told a House committee Monday, horse racing is the Jast business he wants to get into. The entertainer told the House Select Committee on Crime how he became in. volved in a New Jersey horse venture with a reputed organized crime figw:e. The committee is investigating organized crime's role in Sj)Jrts. Davis said Gaetano "C«ky" Vastola, whom he has known for four or five years, introduced him to Stewart Siegel. Davis said he was to lend his name to a Lekewood, N.J., horse farm for an unspecified amount of stock at $1 a s/lart. "I signed a letter ol Intent. without ever coming clooe ·1o ocimpletlng tho deal," Davis said . "But the nezt tltiog I ltnew I owed somebody a lot of money for work on Ute lann and for havlog bought :!Orne horus . I've hever been to the farm In my life. '1 A letter, written by Bill Lowry, pres!· dent of Tatter.salls, a KentuCky auction company, and introduced JntG the coma mlttee reccrdJ, told bow Sl•gel suc- cesslully bid on lmir horses last October f<r '8,800. "Mr. Siegel •lined tbe pun:hlser a.eknowleclgemeots e Stenrt Siegel, agent , Sarmny Davis . Jr. ' F a rm 5 , i..1·1wood, N:J .. " die lotter stated • ~mony showed Slegel l'fSOld one of the horse5 for fl. 700 encl later retum.d u,,.,......,. IN 'FAST COMPANY' Sammy Divis Jr. ' I ., Orange Coast EDITION Today's Fbaal N.Y. Stoeka ORANGE COU NTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1972 N TEN CENTS aspers Raps County Aides' Tideland Claim Or1111e County &arc! of Supervisors irman Ronald W. Caspers today lharply criticized 'two county department !leads for issuing a report alleging that the county controls tidelands surrounding the private community of Harbor Island ID Newport Beach. Caspers, himseU a Newport Beach resi· lent, asserted that the report claiming DOUnty control or the tidelands was m.. complete and lacked .legal research. He suggested the whole Harbor Island Issue be referred to County Counsel Adrian Kuyper for the "much needed legal research." His fellow board members agreed unanimously. The report claiming county tidelands control around the private island com· munity in Newport Harbor had been issued earlier this week by KeMelh Sampson's Harbor, Beacbes and Parks DAILY ,.ILOT PIMtt ff Rldl11"11 K .... ltf' GEOLOGIST SAYS GROINS LIKE THIS ONE WON'T DO JOB Council Seeks Study of Underwater RMf1 for W11t Newport Geologist Urges 'Reef' To Halt Beach Erosion The groins -existing and planned - along West Newport \Viii make the area look like the beaches of Miami and will put an end to all surfing there, a geologist told Newport Beach city coun- cilmen Monday. George P. Zebal, who said he's put In J riiore than 1,000 hours studying the prob-· CoaaC Wenther Hazy sunshine in the .aftemQOR. Js the forecast for Wednesday : along the Orange Coast, with highs of 65 expected at the beaches r~ ing to 75 inland. 1.-0ws 55-$J. INSIDE TODA l:' • Af'ft. Nl:ton 1ui1 bern caught i· in "CT11nch" between newsmen. : and p0Uce during her trcUtll " in /tfoscot.11, and /tfrs. Grom.,ko is not l1app11 about it. See story Page 4. ' tern or sand movement ln Newport Beach, said the answer to the problem is a network of submarine reefs stretching west from the Newporl Pier, not more groins. "You'd need groins every two blocks from 32nd to 50th Streets to adequately take care of the 'J>I'Oblem," he said, "and lhey'd have to be double the length they are now. "It would end up like the Miami·type treatment, looking up the beach would be like the teeth of a comb if you use the groin system," Zebal safd. Zebal told councilmen he has submitted a 100-page propo$af tO the U.S.° Army Corps of Engineers detailing hi.s undu- water reef system and councilmen told Zebal they'd do what lhey c:an In O'I' t~at it gets consideration. Zebe.J offer~ no cost estimates for his plan. · ' Marine Salety D~ector Robert, Betd said he · has a meeflni with corps representatives scheduled June I. Zebal made his presentation after councilmen h!!:ard Reed explain the history of the sand erosion problem and the Army'• current plans to continue bulldin( more groinJ and moving more und. Zebal aald sandhaul.s rrom BIU>Qa1 iand the mouth.of the Sant& Ana lllwr ~ <OOllnue .lo be nectauy even 'fNbe t11tte ~dCllll6nal groins now planned are b>- alalled. He oalcl undhault WOllld be - eel unUI groins are put In rvery 421 reel. Newport Beach's share of tbe on-eotnR mul!HnllUon dollar beach prottclloll plan bu been _.. than aJ111ndred tbouland (S.. GllOINS, Pqe I ) Department and Stanley Krause's Real Property Services Department. "I am disturbed that two department heads have dropped this involved lssue In here today," Caspers declarecl. "If they do something like this again, they'll be prematurely retired," Caspers threatened. At issue is whether the city of Newport Beach or the county of Orange has legal control of state-owned tidelands sur- Sides rounding ~!arbor Island. The new report Issued by Sampson and Krause asserted that the weUands were actually under county control and the city should not have leased the tidelands to Harbor Island's private property owners as they did in a 1943 agreement. County authorities have taken new eerial surveys which they believe show a number of improvements of island prop- enies, including half of a swimming pool built two years ago, encroach lnto county tidelands. The other alleged encroaching develop- ments consist largely of walkways, patios and landscaping. The pool, owned by Marshall i1organ, or I! Harbor Island , is split down the middle by the me-an high tide line which determines the inland limits of tidelands. Harbor Island residents led by spokesman John Macnab, former presi- dent of the }farbor Island Community Association. said ~1ooday the owners ha ve retained legal counsel and will e~eavor lo protect their improvements. Encr:oachmen.ts on county , city and state tidelands 1s a oontinuing one in the Newport llarbor area. Property O\Yners in West Newport, Balboa Island and Balboa Pen insula hive erected fences. done landscape and built patk>S on land which i3 legally controlled by government. Agree to Agree U.S., Soviets 'Certain' of Nuclear Pact Soon ~10SCOW (UPI) -Soviet and Ameri~ can sources .said today they were virtu- ally certain that a U.S.-Soviet ag reement to limit both offensive and defensive strategic nuclear weapons would be signed Friday at 1he Kremlin. Official sOurces from both sides made . the prediction shortly after President Nixon and the Soviet Communist Party general secretary, Leonid J. Brezhnev. held an afternoon session devoted en· tirely to the subject of Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT). American officials said that in addition to placing a ceiling °" numbers of de· !ensive antiballistic missiles (ABMS) Caspers Ired By Dostal's ' Jet Stance By JACK BROBACK or ...., D1nr ,.,.., stiff Newport Beech's solution to the Orange County Airport noise problems got sharp criticim from Board of Supervisors Chai.nnan Ronald W. Caspers of Newport Beach today. Commenting on a request by the Newport City Council that supervisors re- quire airlines using the airport and the federal and state governments to be responsible for noise and nuisance damages, Caspers said : "It shows again that attorneys have more ways to screw things up than anyone else. We (supervisors) are do in g everything we can do to help the situation and we don't need this kind or sniping. "I suggest that Mr. Dostal (City Coun- cilman Milan Dostal, en attorney) and the others devote themselves to more constructive things." In a letter to the board, Newport coun· cilmen had urged that the supervisors take action to avoid being responsible for millions or dollars in alleged property damages caused by jet aircraft flights in and ~t of the airport. The letter listed cities in which residents had been banned by jet noise and pollution as Newpo rt Beach, Costa ~lesa, Tustin, Orange, Santa Ana and Villa Park. C:Ouncilman Dostal said two weeks ego his proposal was based on a state Supreme C:Ourt decision \Vhich ruled that residents near Santa Monica Municipal Airport could file damage suits against the owner, the city of Santa Monica for "nuisance damages." Previously. suits filed against airport operation Including the up to $100 million worth from Newport Beach residents were based on the lega l principle of in- verse condemnation. Attorneys define Inverse condem na- tion as loss of property va lues as the result of activities by outside sources, like jet planes. Argument Heated On Fire Station Newport Beach fire officials still want to get rid o[ tbe Balboa Island fire station. Newport Beach city councilmen stUl want to keep it. Cuess who'll win. "I ha\•e roo:immended deleting this station -although not this year/' newly appointed Fire Chief Leo Love iold coun- cilmen Monday. "It won't happen In the next four years," vowed newly elected Councllman Paul H,. Ry,ckcll, whooe ttrm L< for four 1ean. He lives on Balboa Island. Chief Love -.red the COU11cll that allbough the lillY tlrehome on Marine Avenue b now con11dtred a satellite to the Newport Center fire station, the chan&e b only an admlnlatrattve one and does not arred tbe orrvlce provided. Thm lo no captain assigned to the station ..... that could be deployed by each country, the agreement wpuld contain a limitation on numbers of nuclear armed submar· ines and long.range bombers. The Soviet news agency Tass earlier had given the strongest hint so far that a SALT agreeinent could come oot of the summit talks . The leaders. first met with full staffs in the 19th century Catherine Hall for two hours and two minutes, then conferred between themselves for about two more hours. After signi1g the two pacts about dusk, President Nixon and Brezhnev un. expectedly met for thelr third session. Glavas Critical At the end of the second round, the two leaders ied their delegations into the Vladimir Hall for the signings and champa pe toasts. Then, Bruhnev threw his arm around Nixon's back and the two men ]eft the room by themselves for evening talks. The antlpollulion pact, according to U.S. spokesmen, calls for: -Cooperation on working out ways of preventing pollution. -Developing new technical processts which dG not pollute man's environment. -Sharing their success with other countries. American spokesmen said the medical pact calls £or coordinated research p~ grams on cancer and heart disease, and exchange of speclallsts and delegaUons. It also includes setting up co~ and lectures, exchange pf Jnf · and teaching each other about wn. technical aids and equipment. Nixon was quoted by a 'Vhlte House spokesman, "They are good things to start with .'' Hard discussion.! on the more dlUicult Issues, like Vietnam and on limiting nuclear arms, remained. The summitry apirit showed at 8:06 p.m. when the conferees stepped from a (See Sm.11\.UT, Pa1e Z) Methadone Vnit Asked Carpenter Not Sm·e of Stand On Freeway ' I l To · Report. tn Council · By L. PETER KRIEG Of tlle 01llr Plltt lltH Newport Beach councilmen Monday asked for bi-monthly reports from the Orange Cotn1ty Department of Mental Health on th¢_ new metnadone clinic it has established near Hoag Memorial Hos- pital. Councilmen heard Dr. E. Klatte, coun- ty directo r of mental health, explain the program du ring a study session. They had received a stro1g report from Po- lice Chier B. James Glaves, criticizing the local clin ic . Glaves, among other things, said the clinic, located at 1441 Stzperior Avenue, would attract heroin users to • city that Councilmen Okay Library Branch Plan, Estimate O\•erriding major concerns of library trustees, Newport Beach councilmen Monday night authorized formation of a plan and a cost estimate for creation of a branch li brary in West Newport. Even though five library board mem- bers we re present and oppa!ed expansion of the branch library concept, council· men voted 5 to 2, to e.stablbh a store- front llbrary "to serve the children of the area.'' Opposed were councilmen Carl Kymla and Richard Croul. Kymla said approval wou1d trigger similar requests from other areas, such as Newport Heights, which be represents and Ha rbor View Hills. Croul said he thought the council should listen to the people It appoint.I to run the libraries. There are now three branch libraries in Newport Beach. Library trustees have long endoraed construction of a central library for the city, insisting a singular facility could provide quality service to the people. West Newport homeowners said the main service they are concerned with is the ability of their children to have access to a library. "If they want to get their children there they can drive them there," ~ plied P.1rs. Helen Coffee, a trustee. Board members abo aatd they were cona!med about the lncr'ase tn opera- tional cost~ with the creetlon of a fourth brarx:h , pointing out they are under in- 1truc1k>m from tht City Coun<U to m1in- tain the J•present level of· 1ervlce'' for the city. Roard Oialrmon Th om 11 ~lately pointed out that tile library property tax l~ now more than ti cents and there Is • J~nt llmtt in the charter. He indlc>ted he was doubtful the new branch could be operated within that lbnit. Mrs. Margo Skllllng, ,.prtsentatlve or the West Newport Beach Improvement A.uoclattonl.~ld the 'la die! DOI 10 up ,..,.. the llUM branch Wal 0-4 1'l4 · IS.. UBIWIY, Pip 11 l does not have a problem with heroin addicts. Klatte told councilmen the clinic "i! nothing that should concel'Jl you. "Addicts do not come to this cli nie to get into the program," he saJd. "They apply centrally at the maln offlct in Santa Ana." ''They start here only after they are screened," he said, noting that they come for treatment between 6 and 10 a.m. an$f then at other times for group therapy sessions. "The program has proved successful elsewhere," Dr. Klatte aaid, ".!tl1dle11 have shown significant decreases in thefts." Dr. Ktatte said while there are 25 patients at the Harbor Area cUnlc now, there will be 150 wlgned to it when it Is in full operation. He said this clinic is desigJted to !tfve the coastal area from Huntington Beach to San Clement e. Councilman Milan Dostal noted that the council had been told the city of Newport Beach does not have a problem with her-oin addicts. "We have one from Newpart Beach aow, and nine on the waiting list," Dr. Klatte said, "in addition, we have two from Costa Mesa now and lf 1on the waiting list. "That's 28, 28 who have come to us. I IS.. METHADONE, Pare I) An aide to State Sen. Dennis Clrpenter fR-Newport Beach) said Monday his boss still isn't sure whether or not he'll push legislation to kill the entire Pacific Coast J.~reeway. If he does, lj.ewport Beach will ht ln there pushing it. Newport Beach councilmen Monday night hired a lobbyist for the key months of June and July to plug for any and all legislation designed to do hann tG the fu ture of the propased coastal freeway . They appointed Charles E. "Bud" Porter, an established lobbyist who for nine years has been representing the city of San Ole'go in Sacramento and \Vashlngton, to carry their message throughout the capital. The action was taken virtually without comment by councllmen Monday night after hearing the report on the status of Carpenter's freeway bill In the afternoon. Besides the Carpenter measure, there are, among othen, two bills that could have a direct. effect on Newport Beach. One, sponsored by Assemblyman Robert Badham (R·Newport Beach), Y•ould kill only the Newport Beach leg of the route and another, sponsored by Assemblyman Robert Burke CR-Hun- tington Beach) would institute a three. year moratorium on freeway planntna (See FREEWAY, Page%) Newport Council Action Here in brief are the major actions taken by Newport Beach city council-m~ Monday: COASTAL FBEEW.\Y -Hired a lobbyl!t !or June and July al 1600 per month, to push antJ.freeway mea!lures pending In Sacramento.' EMPLOYE BENEFITS -Ordered a detailed analylis of the $1 1 million that go for fringe btnd lU. · · BEACH PROTECTION -Aaked city ofllclal1 to dettrmine the best way to get U.S. Army Corps of Eng~een to look at geologist George Zebal'.1 sug. gestlon th at a network or underwater reefs would do a better job of presen· lng West Newport beaches lhM groins. CANNERY AREA -Extended tough off.11treet parking requirements for manufacturing zones pe.nding adoptkm of a mini.master plan for the area. BOOKS -Said U..y want lo tlsabli!h a branch library In w .. t Newport derpttt unanlmou.o obje<:tlons ol city library U;u>tres. ca!led for cost estimates on the projed •• HOLDING TANKS -Adopted an ordinance paraUellng recent county leg- , b!JIUon. It calls !or holding tanlu on boat. and pumpout !aclllUu at 1n1rlnaL ON.sTREET PARKING -lntrodU«d and .. t for public hearing June 12 an ordinance banning overnight parking of C011\ma"Clal vtblcles w1th more thtlll two ulcs or more than 20 feet in length. GC)l.P 001/RSE -Told planning commlui...,. lo take lllOther look at propoaed 101! coom near tip or Upper Newport Bay. PAJll' PLAm -Adopted lnlrrlm partl! plan that call• !or a dottn neigh- bor-parka IJld a network of bicycle trails tbtooghout city. .o. " ' From Page J GROINS ••. dollan. Mor• than $l1 ,000 is budg•lPd lot the upcoming file&! y•ar. Z.bol uld bis submerged ...is, which l'<'OUld be nve feet below the aurtact at lT\OID low, low tide, would COii roughly o.,..l<lurllt what the complete ll'oln l)'Sttm woUld cost. He explitlned why W~t Newport has a sand erosion problem. "Erosive currents are gcnerllted by maintained becaWJe of the .... ·ay the waves strike the beach," he $11id. "In &Jboa and in West Nciwport by the rivet the waves strike pe rpendicular, but between those Points they strike the shore at a JS-20 degree angle. "'lblJ spawns along-11lfore currents," he iaid, "that are northtrly In the sumn1er and southerly In the winter." 1.ebal explained that the northerly cur· r ents are erosive in nature while the IOUtherly currents actually tend to build up und. "There are tremendous volumts of sand carried," he a~lld. "Unfortunately, the northerly swells overbalance the southerly swells, and the reault is erosion." Zebal 1ald the once popular belief thAt the Newport submarine canyon off the Newport Pier ta 1 undtrap ia untrue. 7.ebal said any 1olutlon to the problem should conform to three criteria. "It should minimize the interference with the beauty and recrealional utlliia· tion of the beach and the surf. "It should have maximum safety con· siderallons. "And it abould be cost-effective,'' he aaid. He said Vr1th the submerged reefs, the swells would break where the reefs are located, a couple of hundred feet out. He said the series of ieefs would be about 16 feet wide, and while they would be submerged only five feet at low tide:, would be down 32 feet at high tide. 13 UCI Students Will be Honor Society ~elllhers Thirteen UC Irvine-California College of Medicine students will be made members of AJpha Omega Alpha Honor Medical Society at the chapter's annual banqu•t Wedneeday night In Grand Hotel at Anaheim. More than 100 area physicians will bear Dr. John R. Hognes.s, president of the National Academy of Sciencea, Iru:tltute o! Medicine, discuss the lnstltute's role as "A Conscience for American Medicine." The UCI.CCM students to be honored Wednesday are: FTom Irvine: Robert K. Masters, 1131 Verano Place; John T. Morrison, 1213 Verano Place ; John D. Noonan, 704 Verano Place: Claire M. Targoff, 2933 Verano Place, and Thomas J. Garite, 2513 Verano Place. From Newport Beach: Russe11 J. Mer· ritt, 5405 Se.ashore Drive, and Harold L. &hick, 111 38th St. From Santa Ana : Ronald Axtell, and Ronald L. Kaufman. From Loq Beach: Richard J. Kramer. From Tutin: Ross R. Sedler. From Oran1e: Jevelyn A. Yonchar. From Garden Grove: Mark H. Ellis. From Page 1 FREEWAY ... pending a con.sultant's study of the coastal route corridor. The alow progress to date o f Carpenter's bill, explained administrative assistant Michael Neal to councilmen Monday, i.s due to the senator's desire to have all the facts in hand before getting hls measure movtng through th e legislative process. "The bill is now before the legislative courl.!lel," Neal saiC. "The senator will not submit it, however, until he has time to meet with the Publle Works Department to discuss all the lmpllcalions. "A big qeustlon is how much opposition the PuDlic Works Department will give the bill," Neal said. "They carry quite a bit of weight," he sai d. "Their dynamic opposition \\•ould be a possible cause to bold it for awhile." O•ANGI COAST • DAILY PILOT The Of"lnot Coat! DAILY PILOT, wllh whlclt Is utnttlMd th• N•Wf·Pr•i•, It 111.1bll.rtrd b'i' b Of•llM CMSI ,.,.111/llnf (OmP811f, $IP'- "'' .. lllon1 •r• PltbllN!ld, MOllCltY thl'O\IOlt f rld•f• tor Cost1 Mts•, N1wport 8fft tl. H11t1!1neton 9t8'11/Fwni.in V•ll•r. Uoun• 9Hldt, ll'VlntlS8ddltNdl ft $•fl C*'*1l1/ S.1'1 JUll'I C8PltTr8M A sl1111t• rtOlon.81 ••llllM Is publhl!ld lltvrcll'i"> •nd SUll!Mys. Tfle prllKJINI publi1hlnt ,~nt 11 81 l)Q Wnl II}' Slr'tll, Colll M1M, C.Hton'llt, "62'. Rob1rt N. W•td Prnldtnt •nd PWll.,,.,. J1tlt R. C11rl•v Vk:I ,,..ld1t1l ll'ICI o.twr11 MIM;tf' lliom1t Kte'l'il (cfllOt Tiio11111 A. Murphine M1n.1gln1 £41tor L. P1ttr Kri•1 H""'1 •1.m City itdllof N"J*f .._. OffJu )JJJ N1wport lo11l1'1'1r4 M1m111 AdJren: ,.0. ••• 1175, t166J .,_ Offk• C.11 "'-': Ja Wn1 llr ttt.,s ...,.... e-": m Hnlt .lwnw ....... .,,..., lffal: ,,.,, 1.-ct1 aovttY.,. SM oemtnt.: JU Horltl l!I Cimino ll•I Toi.,._ t7141 MMJll a ....... ..,_,,., 6414471 °""9'M• 1t71. Ortllfl CNll ,._.,.,..,,. ~. Ht Mwt tw~ Ohnlf"ltloM. ..... .-Ntl'W or Wwolrtl"'""'"" ilff'•ln """ • ••ldliCld .................. ~ .. .,..........,. --.. er.... ...... •Id .. c.M• Mew,. = ~ffM 1W Utt!# SUS ... .,.,. ... ,. ,...,,., "'"""' I .... INllilllf'f. Heavy Fighting Rages Salvo Fired At Schmitz American Warplanes Hammer Hanoi Sites By Hinshaw SAIGON (UPI) -Heavy tl(litln1 broke out today oo tlu'te lroall In South Viet- nam end Honol Radio reportod twarma of American planes again bombed the 1-tanoi area In a stepped up aerial of· fenslve that eolnclded with President .. Nilon'1 U-oummlt lllU, Ho1vy ground battlri WtN rtpOrled .outh of th• My Cbanh River dtltllM Une about 20 miles north of Hue. A third day or Communist probing at· tacks on Hue's outer dcreme lines ended Caspers Announces Regional Airport Plan Meet Set in San Diego Friday's meeting between Orange and San Diego County orflcials to discuss a proposal for a regional airport at Camp Pendleton haa bet9i fihifted to San DJego, the office of Supervisor Ronald Caspers announced today. 1'hc San Diego officials were originally invited to come to Orange County by Caspers to discuss the matter. A1though elected officials from several levels will be present at the session, Caspers' office noted that a representative of the Marine Corps has not bten invited. Camp Pendleton offlclals continue to oppose use of any of the base's 26,000 acres for a public commfrcial airport. "We want to converse on this at a civilian level first," Tom Fuentes, Caspers' executive assistant, said this morning. "Wehn we have a concrete pro- posal, then we will lake it to the Marines and have a chat with them about it." Fuentes said base officials were not being "ignored" by not being invited to the session and will be kept abreast of any developi;nents. The session will include the chainnan of the San Diego County Board ot Supervisors; the mayor and city coun- cilmen of San Diego; members of the San Diego Port Authority, which has jurlsdlc· lion over San Diego 'Airport; Orange tounty aviation director Robert Bresnahan, and Caapers. In addition, Fuentes said represen- tat.ives of state and national legislatures will take part in the airport discussion. Both counties have been searching for alternate sites for their respective airports for the past several years. The p. oposal of using Camp Pendleton to house a regional facility was first in- troduced by William Pereira and Associates in an aviation needs study done for Orange County. * * * Hopes Fading For Airfield At Pendleton A Southern California regional study or air transportation apparently holds little hope that the U.S. Marines will let go of part of Camp Pendleton for a com· mercial airport. Officials of the Southern California Association of Governments (SCAG) Y:hich is about to release the results o( a two-year study aimed at finding solutions to the growing air travel demand, gave a brief preview to Newport Beach coun· cilmcn Monday afternoon. "in the year 2,000 we project Pendleton as a regional airport." said William L. Dochnahl, assistant SCAG coordinator. ''but it depends on the military and the degree of environmental noise and im· pact." The Marines have traditionally opposed relinquishing any of the training camp. Dochnahl said the future of Orange County Airport wlll depend on !he prog- ress made in developing quiet jets. "U there still is a noise problem by 1985, the airport will not be able to meet its projected demand of 11 million passengers," Dochnahl said. If there is a quiet engine by that time, he said, the airport will be a major short- haul commuter airport. He did not talk specifically about how many runways, or how Jong, would be needed. Dochnahl allo said that the report pro- poses wie of El Toro. but agaln, he said, that depends on the response of the military and the environmental impact. The Marine base, one of the largest h1 the world , 11tretches along the coast from San Clemente to Oceanside and Inland a1 far as Fallbrook. It is used as the primary training t'-se for the Marine Corps on the west eoast. Officials of the two counties h11d at first proposed constructing an inland airfield at the base, but have since been ex· amining a proposal for a coastal airport , thereby insuring that take oil and landing patterns would be over the ocean. Of· flclals say only about 2,500 acrl'S would be needed for a rl'gional international airport. From Pagel SUMMIT ... winter garden of palm trees into the highdomed white and gold Vladimiar Hall. Nixon and Soviet President Nikolai v~ Podgomy led the march. Behind came Brezhnev-and for the flnt time in the summit, the rest of the ru11ng Soviet Politburo. Nixon and Podgorny led their colleagues to opposite sidea of the 40.foot table covered with a cream cloth that draped to the floor. Aides laid out bound copies of the an- tipollution treaty. Podgorny removed a fountain pen from an inside coat pocket and signed. Nixon, after a glance at the Russian president, plucked a red pen from a holder on the table and signed for America. After the second part was signed, waiters rushed in with champagne. Brezhnev downed one glass and then got another to clink with Nixon's. Nixon left his glass three-fourths full. Brezhnev then put hi• left arm across Nxlon's back and led the President from the room . An American official told UPI no one on either side of the conference table at this morning's full meeting so much as mentioned the word "Vietnam." This indicated, diplomatic observers said, that both sides were trying to tiptoe around the subject in order not to hamper progress on other projects. NiJ:on and Brezhnev undoubtedly will discuss Vietnam -but more privately than in a full plenary session of the 1wn· mit. Nixon's and Brezhnev's spokesmen both described the morning session in the white and red hall built by Peter the Great as "frank and businesslike." The Russian spokesman, Director General Leonid J. Zamyatin of the Soviet news agency Tan, said more vital business was afoot. "The people expect an easing of tension, not only between the Soviet Union and the United States but all over the world," he told reporters. As Nixon was conducting talU u the first American President to visil RWJsia since Franklin D. Roosevelt went to Yalta in 1945, Pat Nixon went sightsee- ing. (See related story, Page 4), While in Moscow, Nixon hopes to sign a treaty on limiting strategic nuclear weapons, but as early as last weekend Administration officials began to suggest a hitch developed. In Helsinki today, sources at the Strategic Arms Limitation talks (SALT) said there was little possibilrty that an agreement could be reached before the end of the summit. Today's gatherings opened with smiles and handshakes, more relaxed than a proper but protocol-chilly reception given Nixon Monday at his airport arrival for the nine-day visit to Russia. Today, under a gray and blue sky, the American flag flew for lhe firet time in history over the Krem1in's golden onion domes. OCC Gets National Award For Teaching Techniques Orange Coast College baa been named one of the top 50 colleges and universities nati onwide by the Salgo-Noren Fou°"' dation . Priased for it$ "superior teaching tedm.iques" by tbe foundation, Orange CoaJt Colleg• II the lim two-year college to receive the distinction. Other schools named along with OCC for the awards last week were Harvard University, Stanford u n t 11er1 i t y, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Marqu•ile Unlvenlty, Pun!ue University and the UnlVl!Tllty of Maine. '"1t !hr ... y•ar award wu given to OCC through !he elforu of CharleJ Thomas, an ollldal wfth Jmoeo Marine, CoslA M .... Jensen Marino ii one of I h • 1Uboidltr16 of !he Bllll<W Puni. Corporation, of Groenwioll, Connecticut, whose chalnnan or tho board, Nl<"Olas ~t Salgo, foundPd !he Salgo-Noren Foun- dation in 1954. nte foundation, according ta OCC President Robert Moore, was organlzed "for the pw-pose of recognizing high quailty toachlng." The outatandlng teacher from each of the wlnnlng campuses wlll rtetlvt a plaque and a 11,500 grant. OCC 1tudenll wlll vol• for their choice In 1 1p<dal •lectlon Jwi• 7 . "Some people might <"Onslder Ibis 1 ~tty contest, but believe mt, It isn't," •Id OCC Dean of Stud•nt /Jlaln Joeepll R. Kroll . "Studenil easlly nc:ocnJu oul!Wldlng lnstrud<ln, end you can bet a deserving teachtt will win." Other local subtldluiel of !ht Ban(Or Punla Corpon!lon ere Balboa Motor Homee, Com Me!a: ~ Yochll, C<ltta Mua, and !ht Luln Company, Ooota MOSI. • ' at nllhUall with poet•!! of Communist troopt .rtW cllnsfn1 to a bridgehead on the eouth bank. Al besiea:ed An Loe SO miles north af Saigon waves of COmmunist infantrymen backed by tanks and • 1,700.round artillery barrage struck at paratroopers a mile south of the city and managed to stall a relief element two miles south of An Loe for the slxtb consecutive day. The third area was the Central Hlgh1ands about 280 miles north of Saigon. 'The North Vietnamese staged several attacks at Fire Baae 41, 12 mUes north of Pleiku, and knocked out two government tanks and an armored personnel carrier. They also shot down an Al Skyraidtr. Rocket attacU on Kontum Alrfield, 2S milea to the north wounded three Amerlcall.!I and virtually destroyed a C130 Hercules transport. Above the Demilitarized Z.One, the U.S. commend disclooPd U.S. air raids had been stepped up to an average of 335 a day for the past five days -the heaviest level alnce the bombing cafn-. paign resumed·April &. There was no U.S. comment on today's attacks. The U.S. command reported spec- tacular attackl a1aillst an electrical transfonner station northeast of Hanoi on Saturday where there were several subsequent explosions. A spokesman .said it supplied power to a machine tool fac- tory, a tank and truck repalr center and military camps in the Hanoi area. With American planes laying more ~nes in the North Vietnamese harbors, f1ghter-bomber1 concentrated on tho railroads leading from China. Th• bombers struck at 14 rail end highway bridges ranging from those leading from Cb1na aoutbeastward to Hanoi to others just above the DMZ. Five of tbe main bridges on a rail Une froni China were destroyed in one raid and the attacken retW'lled the next day to knock out a .si%tb. From Pagel LIBRARY ... said "this one will cost about one half eent." Mrs. Skilling al.!o noted that UC JT'llne ls developing "the finest central iibrary in Orange C.Ounty." She said people may use it by joining the Friends of the LJ. brary for $10 a year. She also cited the concern about residents who must compete wt'th ~ mer traffic to get to hranCh libraries. Councilmen cited a cooperative library plan with the school 1ystem now in operation at E1stbluff School and en· couraged explnslon of that concept. Councilmen were warned however, that additional branches b r o u g h t a diminution in quality. "You're merely duplicating books, you're adding to the cost not the quallty," said Mrs. Hancock Banning III, a former trustee. "There ia no question Newport Beach libraries are inadequate by any stand- ards," Mrs. Banning said. Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis w ho represents West Newport said "even a small number of books would be a boon to the children." Trustees indicated lhey would 1upport a branch library within the budgetary limitations but stressed the need for development of a long range plan to build a central library, somewhere in Newport Beach. Michael Johnson, West New po r t association president, submJtted petitions bearing 200 signatures supP«f,ing the branch and obaerved, "We want lo pro- vide some services while our kids are growing up." By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of tllt DlllY Plltt Staff Orange County Assessor Andrew J. Hinshaw, a candidate Jor the 39lh Congresaional District seat now held by Rep. John Schmitz (R·Tustln) again to- day critleized his opponent ror deserting both Pre:sident Nixon and the Republican party. "Alter a president bas annoWl«d his foreign policy, a congresman should not crltlclze it openly even if be has deep feelings against it~" Hinshaw told 100 s_tudents from three civics classes at Newport Harbor High School. "But Schmitz, who claims to be a Republican, has done· just that -and very harshly, too:" he added. Hinshaw also said it is ludicrous for SchmJtz to bill himself as "a statesmn.n." "You don 't proclaim yourself a statesman arter only 22 months in C.Oncren," Hinshaw said. "I think the best definition I ever found of a •atatuman• ls 'a dead polltlclan' and that II what I'm hoping my campaign will do to Schmitz," be added. Hinshaw also told the students that if elected, be would do all he could to change the current seniority system in Congres.s. "I think you have to have some kind of eligibility system but these older men should not he In 1udl k•y positions In Congress," Hin,shaw said. "At the same time, we don't want freshman cong'reismen in the key spots either," be said. "'111ere has to be some means of determining mlnimwn House membersbJp in order to become eligible for top committee jobs." During a question. and answer 1eS11ion after Hinshaw's talk, the students: ex· pressed their concern over representation ·and other issues. Regarding representation, Hinshaw reiterated that once a policy has been an- nounced, congressmen should outwardly abide by It. ' 4'I think it ls the duty of a represen- tative to express privately to the Presi~ dent any negative feelings the con- stituents of his district might have,'' he said. "But once that policy has been pro- claimed, the rest or the world shou1d see our representatives standing behind it, at least openly," he said. Hinshaw al.!o said !hat ll he ii electPd, he would arrange regular meetings with key constituents from all walks of life to determine feelings of the voters. From Pagel METHADONE .•. hesitate to guess how many have not asked," he said. Dr. Klatte cited national statistics that claim for every one known addict, there are two unknowa addicts. "If that's true, we're talking about 30 in Newport Beach," he said. Newport Beach nartot.lca squad chief Sgt. Leo Konkel, In a report to Chief Glavas, said there are no m~ than 10 known heroin users in au Of Newport Beach. He recommends against the clinic say. Ing lhet patlenta of the cllnlc hanging around in the area would attract others who are ualng heroin. Dr. Klatte tnvltPd councll ocrutlny, ••Y· Ing that U any problems develop he would welcome suggestions. He also said that the phyaicaJ 1pace available at the Santa Ana cllnJc pre- cludes any additional expansion there. Dr. Klatte said the clinic also provides day care treatment for emotionally dis- turbed persons. DAILY PILOT S11fl PMll ASSESSES OPPONENT Hinshaw at Harbor High Police Probing . ,. Exotic Looting At Newport Home A burglar who could have tuned in on an electronic garage door opener's fre- quency has looted a Newport Beach home of $1,260 in valuables, including a brain wave synchronizer machine and a Civil War souvenir sword. f',,orporatlon Presldent Lee H. Garl· lngton reported the burglary at 1930 Porl Lockslelgh Place, which he ls selling to move to Long Beach on Monday. Garlington .said the . loss included the delicate, $750 brain wave device, the sliver antique sword and scabbard, plus Jess exotic items stored in the garage. Police checked but could find no sign of forced entry and noted workmen and painters preparing the house for its new owners would have wiped out any other evidence. They suggested aomeone coold have triggered the automatic garage door, which sometimes happens accidentally. Cigarette Fire Hits Apartment A predawn fire blamed on a cigarette smoldering in a couch caused $2,500 damage to a Newport Beach apartment Monday before its owner was awakened by smelling smoke. Jnvestlgators said L. J. Anderson, of 400 Newport Center Drlve, managed to Jug one section of the sofa outside wbil1 firemen from the nearby Newport Center Station raced to the scene. Smoke damage to other furnishings at the Granville Apartments unlt corr- tributecl to the $2 ,500 loss in addition to destruction of the C1JUCh. Buying A New Tract Home? Meny people buying homts ere under the impression they HAVE to buy corpeting from the homo salos center. In the m1jority of cases this is not true, although tho soles office will try to make you think so. Tho minute the home center trits to upgrade the st1nderd carpet, then you ire free to shop for carpeting. To prevent shopping should constitute roslreint of tr1do. In meny cues they win tell you th1t the carpe.t 1llowance does not apply if you buy carpet outside. If they feel this logal, HAVE THEM PUT IT IN WRITING. Ordinerily, wt can SIVt you a lot of money over what tho homo center offers. We provide a luger 1tloctlon -and we usually com~ up with loss y1rda90, plu1 • 1uporior instaDation. ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Plactntla Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4138 r 7 7 .. -.. Orange Coast Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks • • VOL 65, NO. 1'44, 3 SECTIONS, ~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1972 c TEN CENTS Sides Agree to Agree ! t U.S., Sovwts 'Certain' of Nuclear Pact Soon MOSCOW (UPI) -Soviet and AmerJ. tan sources said today they were virtu- ally certain that a U.S.-Sovlet agreement to limit both offensive and defensive 1trategic nuclear weapons would be signed Friday at the Kremlin. Offlciat sources from both sides made the predlctlon shortly after President Nixon alld the Soviet Communist Party general secretary, Leonid I. Brezhnev. field an afternoon session devoted en- tirely to the subject of Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT). American officials said that in addition to placing a ceiling 0111 numbers of de- fensil'e antlballlstlc missiles (ABMS) Moon Blasts Touched Off ,With Signal SPACE CENTER. Houston (AP) -A weapon oC war redesigned into an in- strument of science was exploded on the moon early today, but scientists reported the e1periment was onJy partially suc- cessruJ. Scientisl3 at the li.1aMed Spacecraft Cenih!r sent signals to a mortar package left In the Descartes Mountain,, or the moon by Apollo 16 last month and caused three rocket grenades to be launched. The grenades rocketed away and ex· ploc!ed, sending seismic shock waves through the moon 's surface. A foarth grenade was not fifflt, however, when instruments on the mor- tar launcher indicated that it changed position. An official said an attitude indicator showed the launcher may have pitchfid upw~ lfYeral delrtt.1 after the third rocket grenade wa1 fired. 11e<a111e of th!>, ~ acienti1t" did not l~e ·the last IJ'<n&de. It may he fired later, officials said, U tests ~ the al· titude indication Js false. The three grenades that were fired Oew 500, 1,000 and 2,000 feet and then exploded upon impact with the moon's surface. The fourth grenade is designed to fly up to 5,000 feet before exploding. Explosions of the grenades caused seismic shock waves which were detected by a. series or geophones installed ill the lunar surface by the Apollo 16 astronauts. The shock waves were expect!d to penetrate to about 500 feet beneath the moon's .surface and then bounce back to the geophones. Scientists hope to learn more about the substructure of the moon by measuring the velocity, strength and frequency of the shock wave echoes. The grenades are· fired with the push ~f a button at Mission Control here. TIUs sends a signal to ignite the grenade rocket and the device flies away. The grenades, which each cost about $10,000, are equipped with radio lransmil- ters and two different length break wires. By measuring the time between the parting or the first and second break wires, scientists can determine the velocity or the grenades just after launch. The Apollo 14 astronauts left mortars en the moon during the ir February t9i1 lunar vi.sit. Officials have not fired them for fear doing so could destroy the rPst of the Apollo 14 science station. As a re!.ult the Apollo 14 mortar package will not be fired ror perhaps years. Officials said the Apollo 16 mortar launcher is not erpected to affect the other instruments in the .f20 milllon science statkln. Island Quake ..,elt ROCKVILLE, Md. (AP) -An earth· quake measured at 6.9 on the Richter Stale occurred Monday afternoon in the Tonga Islands region of the South Pacific. ; Orange Coast Weailler Hazy sunshine ln the afternoon Js the forecast ror Wednuday along the Orange Coast, with highs or 65 expected al tl1< beaches rts. inl to 75 inland. Lows !HO. INSWE TODAY Mrs. Nizon hal bem caught in "crunch" bet!Dtsn newsmen and police durlno her tn1v11$ in Afoscow, and ~frs. Gromvko iJ ,J-0, hOPPM about it. Stt •torv Page 4. C•NJllW1N • .......... ~--.. ·--i.M -·-• ..... II ...... CWllf'r " ·--II '""' , .. ,, -·-" SMdl ....... IM1 ... la,, ... • f-' . ...,.. .. _. .. _ ... .. ... _ ... , w-• ........ M --.. Alll LI...,. " ........... ,~ ....... .. --. . I that could be deployed by each country, the agreement would cootaJn a limitation on numbers of nuclear armed submar- ines and Jong-rU1ge bombers. The Soviet news agency Tass earlier had given the .strongest hint so far that a SALT agreement could come oot of the summit talks. The leaders first met with full staffs in the 19th century Catherine Hall ror two hours and two minutes, then conferred between themselves for about two more hours. After signing the two pacts about dusk, President Nixon and Brezhnev un- expectedly met for their third session. Fairview Park At the end of the second round, the two leaders !ed their delegations into the Vladimir Hall for the signings and champagne toasts. Then, Brezhnev threw his arm around Ni:ion's back and the two men left the room by themselves for evening talks. The antipollution pact, according to U.S. spokesmen, calls for: -Cooperation on working out ways of preventing pollution. -Developing new technical processes which do not pollute man 's environment. -Sharing their success with other countries. Am erican spokesmen said the medical Acquisition Ultimatum 'Firm' Says State Aide Lawrence R. Robinson, 1tate directot of general services, has refused to withdraw his ultimatum demanding that 'Costa Mesa have plans to buy the Fairview Park property by JWle 2 or witness its disposal through trade or auc· tion. ln a letter to Mayor Jack Hammett, Robinson indicated it would be impossible to grant another JO.day delay on the ac- quisition issue. Costa :P.tesa hopes to convert the 257- acre state surplus parcel into a regional park, but has so far been unable to !ind the $4 million required for purchase. On June 2, the State Public Work• Board will cmslder trld!nl a If.acre por- tion of ,the land to a Squaw Valley deVe},oper unleas Q>slll Men declare• itself ready to buy. Under the proposed trade agreement, the Wllliam Newsom Development Com- pany would give up its conca:slons at the Squaw Valley ski resort in e:ichange for the Costa Mesa property. Newsom, although reportedly reluctant to agree to the trade, has indicated he would build apartments en the parcel sought for salvation as a park area. Costa Mt!a officials, however, have made it plain they would not rezone the land to allow Ne\vsome's development. Currently, the land is zoned for in· stitutional and recreational use. But, Robinson warned, if Costa ri.1esa should refuse appropriate zoning for Newsom if he gets the land, "it will be necessary to seek an appropriate legislative remedy." Explaining his adamant s t a n c e , Robinson said, "the program of the department or general services is to return all of the surplus state property back to the tax roll s as soon as possible so taxpayers as a whole may benefit from this asset. "If the land exchange with 11r. Newsom is not consummated, and i( the city of Costa Mesa ·is unable to fund ~he acquisition. the property will be made available for sale through bids to the general public." Mayor Hammett said today that he has drafted a "benign" return letter to Rol:inson which explains Costa Mesa's firiancial problems. He said a contingent of Costa Mesa or4 ficials would make a personal ap- pearance at the June 2 Sacramento meeting to request another delay from the state Public Works Board. Methadone Unit Asked To Report to Council Newport Beach councilmen Monday asked for bi·monthly reports from the Orange County Department of Mental Health oo the new methadone clinic it has established near Hoag Memorial Hos- pital. Councilmen heard Dr. E. Klatte, coun- ty director of mental health, e:iplain the program during a study session. They had received a stroJ1g report from Po- lice Chief B. James Glaves, criticizing the local clinic . Glaves, among other things, said the clinic, located at 1441 Superior Avenue, would attract heroin users to a city that does not have a problem with heroin addicts. Klatte told councilmen the clinic "is nothing that should conceni you. asked ," he said. Dr. Klatte ·cited national statistics that claim for every one known addict . there are two unkno\'i·n addicts. "If that's true, we're talking about JO in Newport Bea ch," he said. Newport Beach narcotics. sq uad chief Sgt. Leo Konkel, in a report to Chier Glavas, said tQere are no more than 10 known heroin users in all of Newport Beach. He recommends against the clinic say· Ing that patients of the clinic hanging around in the area would attract others who are using heroin. Dr. JUatte invited council scrutiny, say- ing that if any problems develop he would welcome suggestions. He also said that the physical space available at the Santa Ana clinic pre· eludes any additional expansion there. Dr.,Klatte said the clinic also provides day care treatment for emotionally dis- turbed persons. pact calls ror coordinated research pro- grams on cancer and heart ·disease, and exchange of speciali.st.s and delegations. It also includes se tting up conferences and lectures, exchange of infonnatlon and teaching each other about their own technical aids and equipment. Nixon \Vas quoted by a White House .spok~If1an. "They are good things to start \Vith. '' 1 ~ ' tlllil Hard discussions on the more difficult issues, like Vietnam and on limiting nuclear arms, remained. The summitry spirit showed at 6:06 p.m. when the conferees stepped from a (See SUP.BUT, Page Z) Heavier War Action Seen On 3 Fronts ·SAIGON (UPI) -Heavy fighting broke out today on three fronts in South Viet- nam and Hanoi Radio reported swarms or American planes again bombed the Hanoi area in a stepped up aerial of· fensive that coincided with President Nixon's Moscow summit talks. Heavy ground battles were reported south of the My Chanh River defense line about 20 miles north of Hue. A third day or Communist probing at· tacks on Hue's outer defense lines end!d at nightfall with pockets of Communist troops still clinging to a bridgehead on the south bank. Al besieged An Loe 60 miles north o( Saigon waves of Communist infantrymen backed by tankl and a 1,700..round artillery barrage .struck at paratroopers a mile south of the city and managed to stall a relief element two miles south of An Loe for the sixth consecutive day. The third area was the Central Highlands about 280 miles north of Saigon. The North Vietnamese staged several attacks at Fire Base 41, 12 miles north ol Pleiku, and knocked out two government tanks and an armored personnel carrier. They also shot down an Al Skyraider. Rocket attacks on Kontum Airfield, 25 miles to the north wounded three Americans and virtually destroyed a C130 Hercules transport. Above· the Demilitarized Zone, the U.S. command disclosed U.S. air raids had been stepped up to an average of 335 a day for the past five days -the heaviest level since the bombing cam· paign resumed April 8. There was no U.S. comment on today's attacks. The U .s. command reported spec- tacular altacR's against an electrical transformer station northeast of Hanoi on Saturday where there were several subsequent explosions. A spokesman said it supplied power to a machine tool fac- tory, a tank and truck repair center and fl"lilitary campt: in the Hanoi area. With American planes laying more mines in the North Vietnamese harbors, fighter-bombers concentrated on the railroads leading rrom China. The bombers struck at 14 rail and highway bridges ranging from those leading from China southeastward to Hanoi to others just above the DMZ. Five of the main bridges on a rail line from China were destroyed in one raid and the attackers returned the next day to knock out a sixth . ' I ' • 1. tt··· • ' r Ul'I Tt'"llflw Not a Bad Break A knee-high casl doe sn't stop T/Sgt. Gerald Patterson, stationed at San AJ\lonio'• Randolph Air fo~ce Base, Tex., !rom enjoying an out· ing on the bea'ch in CorpU.s . ChriSti. Patterson zi ps along the Padre Island Nalional Se'!Slior,e on a minibike, his leg cush ioned on a pillow. Carpenter Said Unsure Whether to Fight Route By L. PETER KRIEG 01 tltt O•HY f'l .. I ll•ff An aide to State Sen. Dennis carpenter (R·Newport Beach) sakl lft>nday his bos.s still i&n't sure whether or not he'll push legislation to kill the entire Pacific Coast Freeway. IC he does. Newport Beach wiU be in there pushing ii. Newport Beach councilmen Monday night hired a lobbyist for the key months of June and July to plug for any and all legislation designed to do harm to the future of the proposed coastal freeway . They appointed Charles E. "Bud" Porter, an established lobbyist who for nine years has been representing the city of San Diego in Sacramento and Washington, to carry their message throughout the capital. The action was taken virtually without comment by councilmen Monday night after hearing the report on the status or Michigan OKs Rights LANSING, Mich (UPI) -Michigan Monday became the 18.l.h state to ratify the proposed amendment to the U.S. Constitution which would p r o h I b it discrimination based on sex. The all -male State Senate passed It on a voice vote. The ~louse gave approva l Thursday. Carpenter's freeway bill in the afternoon. Besides the Carpenter measure, there are, among olhers, two bills that could have a direct effect on Newport Beach. One , sponsored by A s s em bl y man Robert Badham CR-Newport Beach), would kili only the Newport Beach leg of the route and another, spomored by Assemblyman Robert Burke (R·Hun- tington Beach) would institute 1 three- year moratorium on freeway planning pend ing a consultant's st udy of the coastal route corridor. The slo\v progress lo date o f Carpenter's bill, explained administrative assistant Michael Neal to councilmen Monday, is due to the senator's desire to have all the facts in han d before getting his measure moving through t h e legislative process. "The bill is now before the legislative counsel," Neal saiC. "The senator will not submit it, however, until he has time to meet with the Public Work.s Department to discuss all the lmp!Jcatlon.s. "A big qeustion is how much opposition the Public Works Department will give the bill," Nea l said. "They carry quite a bit or weight,'' he said. ''Their dynamic opposition would be a possible cawie to hold it for awhile." "Addicts do not come to this clinic to get into the program,'' he said. "They apply centrally at lhe main office in Santa Ana." "They start here only afte r they are screened ,'' he said, noting that they rome for treatment between 6 and JO a.'m. and then at other times for group therapy sessions. Russ Anxious for Results Neal said the highway offlcial.s "have the power and the resources" to wage a major battle against the measure. Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis asked Neal If the senator thought he could still get It through with the legislature planning on an adjournment thls summer. "The program has proved auccessful elsewhere," Dr. Klatte said, "11tudles have: shown significant decreases in thefts." Dr. Klatte saki •hile there are 25 patients at the Harbor Area clinic now . there will be 150 assigned to It when U is in full operation. He said this clinic i• designed to serve the coastal area from Huntington Beach to San Clemente. Councilman Milan Dostal noted that the COUDcll hid been told' the city of Newport -dolt not hive a problem with hu-dn a4dlct1, "We !lave oae fnla> Newport Beach .ow, and nine oo. the wattln1 lilt," Dr • Klatte Uld, "In addltloo, ... have two llvm CosU M,.. now and 11 ce tht W1lt!ng llst. baitate to ''"'"' llow moey blve nol Soviets Wa11t to Avoid Sig11s of Failure at Su m1nit By wtLLIA~f L. RYAN Af' SHCltl C•n'9-ndtnl The Soviet reception of President Nix· on, like the advance Soviet press treat· ment of the visit. gives the impression that the Kremlin will go to considerabk! lengths to prevent any look or fa ilure ror This summit. It seems significant that Pre5ident Nikolai Podgorny chose thl5 moment to expand the Moscow litany about the need for better Soviet-American relations. Up to now, the: stereotyped sentence has gone: "Better relations with the United States Ir< botb possible and desirable, but not al the npenoe ol any third coun· try or people:• Podg<rDy, speaking at • Kr('flllln din- tltf, made it read "not merely good. but friendly re.lat ions. 1' This is • curious time ror Soviet leaders to be talking about "friendly '' relations with an American president who has just ordered the mining of a Com· munlst nation's harbors to prevent the flow of Soviet war material to North Vietnam. But Podgomy Jtresstd that the Russian leaders are eager for positive result&. I NEWS ANALYSIS 1 I They may 10 to some lengths to get such results. Evidently the mtn In control won't permit either Vietnam or the Mkldl• East . the two main sourcu of tension, to damage chances. I! they must tal~ •'!WI the two areas, they will. l That's going to make their allies nervous, even though the Russians may be neither willing nor able to concede anything. Leonid I. Brezhnev, the Communist party general secretary who Is running the Sovlet show now, lost no time ln hav- ing a first meeting with the President. He may even be braving the meaningful scowls of party and military con· servatives by dlsplaylng st.ch eagerness . Brezhnev and the Soviet med la have built up a lot of hopes In the USSR and abroad that the summit w\11 contribute to eased tensions, however. The party chief, most likely wants to deliver. In te1Umony to thl1 probability, one striking feature of Soviet pre-summit publlcity has been a tendency to treat Nixon with marked respect and even with 1n occulonal hint of lalnl praise . "He would not make the effort he has put in unle!is he tho111ht there was ample lime to get it through once !l's In- troduced," Neal responded. Neal said Carpenter'• talks with the Public Works Department will take pl1ct "in the very near future." Cupboard Was Bare- Rent Cash Not There One young tenant on Costa li.1esa ·, Shalimar Drive "'l?nt to the cupboard for the rent mQn~y Monday, but -1lke Old Mother Hubbard -when he got !here, he found il wa.s bare . • DouglH H. Smit!\, of '171 ShallmW Drive, told police In rtporting tho • burglary thal he and hb two nommatea , ,.ved up $140, hiding It In l1lt cookie Jar. Nothing wa.s taken but the cookie at'1 contents, police said. • •• ' I --- OAILY ~lLOT C Tutsdoy, M'1 2'. 1972 ---'----....'.C Mesa J11truder Man Terro·rizes Woman, 4 Kids A Costa Mesa housewife and her four .creaming children were terrorized early today by a would-be rapist who lnv11ded their shared bedroom, wearing a gro- teaque nylon stocking mask. Tbe incident tn the 2$00 block of Orange Avenue occurred exactly two weeks to the hour after a similar case in which a suspect was captured and is now awaiting a court appearance. Tbe earlier auspect remains in jail. unable to post $10,000 bail pending hill June 1 preliminary bearing. Caspers Irked By Dostal's Jet Stance By JACK BROBACK Of "'-DlllY Pllet SllH Newport Beach's solution to the Orange County Airport noise problem! got sherp criticism from Board or Supervisors Chairman Ronald W. Caspers of Newport Beach today. Commenting on a request by the Newport City Council that supervisors re- quire airlines u.sing the airport and the federal and state govemmenta to be responsible fOJ' noise and nuisance damages, caspers said: "It shows again ttiat attorneys have more ways to screw thiDgs up than anyone else. We (supervisors) are doing everything we can do to. help the situation and we don't need this kind of sniping. "! !Uggest lhat Mr. Dostal (Clty Coun- cilman Milan Dostal, en attorney) and the others devote themselves to more constructive things." In a letter to the board, Newport coun· cilmen had urged that the supervisors take action to avoid being responsible for millions of dollars in alleged property damages caused by jet aircraft flights in and out of the alrporl. 1be letter listed cities in which residents had been banned by jet noise and pollution as Newport Beach, Costa Mesa, Tustin, Orange, Santa Ana and VIiia Park. · CounclhnanJ)ostal said t"'·o weeks ago his proposal 'vns based on a state Supreme Court decision which ruled that residents near Santa Monica Municipal Airport could file damage suits against the awner, the city of Santa Monica for "nuisance damije.s." Hit-run Bm·glar Ba1·ely Escapes; With $500 Loot A hil-and·run burglar barely escaped pursuers at a Costa rt1esa motel Monday. He fled with about $500 in loot including a Brazil, Ind., visitor's suit containing airline tickets home . Jack L. Thomas had just left Room 159 at the Costa Mesa Inn. 3205 J.larbor Blvd ., and was in the affice 'vith manager Doreen Batz when someone broke into the unit. An antiburglar buzzer sounded, in- dicating someone was in Room 159, tampering with the color television set. Police said Mrs. Batz and Thomas ran out af the affice. but were too late to thwart the burglary in the large Vaga. bond Inns Inc .. development. They saw a smali foreign sedan speed oul of the parking lot. A young man driv- ing fitted the description of one Thomas had seen shortly before in the hall outside his room. Loss included the television set and Thomas' United and Allegheny airlines' tickets to Chicago and Indianapolis. The tickets were in the pocket af his suit. OIANGI COAST CM DAILY PILOT Tiit Orftl'l\'I• Co.>I! OAll'I' PILOT, •lift wt!kl\ b combll'ltd 1~ N•lln·f'reoai. 11 1"11111~11 ltY Ill• °'""Vt' (0.11 l'Vblblllllf C0mciotny, t.-. r•lt fdlllon• •r. Jlllbll'1'1«1, Mondt)' l'hf"OV\11'1 r r1d1y. YW COil• Mn•. N-port llMCll, H1,1r>llng1Go> ll'9Cl'l/Four>lllll V•ll•v. l•Olll'ltl llo••cfl. •rvlllt><1$1001.t11tt Mid $.,. ci.fM!'ltt/ S•r> J11•!1 Oplltr1iw. A 1111;1" rwo!Ol\tl f'O •lt0n 1_, w11Usl'lrd $atllf'd•ra tnd 511....:1111. l~t (!"lt!(to,ol OUDllthfroo pl1"t 11· •I JJll Wftl f!•r StrMt, Cot!• M"•• an'°"';'• •:iut. ll:ob•rf N. w.,J "'"klel'lt •nd P\IDll"1tr Jttk Jt . C11rl1y Yl<e Pr.-ldWil al!4 OfMnl MlnlOtr' lkom•• K1 ... il Editor lholl'lll A. M11rplrll111 M1nqi1no l:dltor Ch•rl•1 H. Loos A!ch1rJ P. N11J Aultltnt MM!ltlne Ultwa e ......... Office .JJ O Witt l1y Str11t Mt1 ln11t A44,..tti P.O. lo• I llO, t26J6 ...... -.. "'"""°" t..cflt JU> N......-1 lwlfV.._ l.,_ a..dl: JI) ,:.,..., ... """"' .. Ul'llifltl«I llffdl: 17'1t IMtll llO\l,4'Y1•4' $111 Clll'Mftll! _, '""" El Ct..,lnt II.Ml Tt1-1nu u1 .. u1 0-"*' Ab.rt P 1 Ml·1671 ~t. 1t11,. ~ CMtf htllllfllf!e c.n.in,'. W. ,.... ,,.,..._ lftvlfl'tll1111, ......... 111tl• ., ~ ... fNf "' ,. """""' _,.... lfllC'9I ,..... '"'' ..... 94 a,pfliflt ..... . ...... cMll .......... ,, c.11 ,..... Otll...,._ ..,_,.,. w antw'" UM _.,.., -Miii A.II ,....,._, "'""""" ............ .,..,,.,., • Officer Rob F1athen was told by the 33-year-old housewife attacked today that she was awakened at J a.m. by a masked man. Shrieking In terror, the woman awakened her rour small chitdmt who joined the screaming and wailing . She said the masked man then turned and fled, faJllng over a coffee table in the Jiving room on his way aut. Costa Mesa police arrested a auspect allegedly involved in a similar case May 9, which occurred on the city's west side, at Victoria Street and Harbor Boulevard. Investigators who questioned him 1aid he apparenUy wasn't involved in a wave of similar sex assaults an Costa Mesa'a west side over the past 18 months. The intruder, characterized in that string at bre.ak·lnl as Charlie the Mld· night Marauder, often slipped through windows and into bed with women lleep- lng with their children. Officer Flathers said the woman who reported today's assault W81 badly shaken but otherwise uninjured. He stUd red marks on her face in· dicated she 'bad been slapped around repeatedly. From Page I SUMMIT ... winter garden of palm trees into the bighdomed white and gold Vladlmlar Hall. Nixon and Soviet President Nikolai V. Podgorny led the march. Behind came Brezhnev and for the first time in the summit, the rest of the ruling Soviet Politburo. Nixon and Podgorny led their colleagues to opposite aides of the 46-foot table cOvered with a cre'am cloth that draped to the floor. Aides laid out bound copies af the an· Upollution treaty. Podgomy removed a fountain pen from an inside coat pocket and signed. Nixon, after a glance at the Russian president, plucked a red pen from a balder on the table and signed for America. After the second part was signed, waiter• rushed in with champagne. Brezhnev downed one glass and then got another to clink with Nixon's. Nixon left his ~lass three-rourths full. Brezhnev then put his left arm across Nxion's back and led the President from the room. An American a(ficial _told UPI no ane on either side af the conference table at this morning's full meeting so much as mentioned the word 0 Vietnam." This indicated, diplomatic observers said, that both sides were trying to tiptoe around the subject in order not to hamper progress on other projeets. Nixon and Brezlmev undoubtedly will discuss Vietnam -but more privately than in a full plenary session of the sum· mil. Nixon's and Brezhnev'• spokesmen both described the morning session in the white and red hall built by Peter U1e Great as "frank and businesslike." The Russian spoke3man, Director General Leonid I. Zamyatin of the Soviet news agency TaSll, said more vital business was ~t. "The people expect an easing of tension, not only between the Soviet Union and the United States but all over the world," he told reporters. As Nixon was conducting talks as the first American President to visit Russia since Franklin D. Roosevelt went to Yalta in 1945, Pat Nixon went sightsee- ing. (See related story, Page 4). \Vhile in Mosco\v, Nixon hopes to sign a treaty on limiting strategic nuclear weapons, but as early as last weekend Adminlstralion afficials began to .suggest a hitch developed. Liglitning Hits Twice-St1tdent Hurt i11 Crasli Tolufale Leafoli is either a lucky or an unlucky young Samoan, depending on how you look at it. The Costa h-1esa High School student barely escaped death three months ago \\'hen a car careening out of control ran him do\\·n. inflicting critical injuries. Ii<' \\'as hospitalized with head and in- ft'rnal injuries for several weeks, while the unconscious motorist, a Norco man \\•ho had suffered an epileptic seirure, \\'as exan1ined and released. Still convalescing. Leafoli, 17, of 117 E. 23rd St., Costa Mesa, was slightly in- jured again Monday arternoon in a Ntwport Beach traffic collision. Police investigating the accident an Jrvine Avenue .at Holiday Road said the youth complained af pain but didn't re- quire hospitalization. He was riding in a car driwn by a m.11.le relative, LautasJ Gasu. 34, also of 167 E. 23rd St., •OOthbound on Irvl .. A~ue. The vehicle was hit on the right front ~ide by a car pulling out eastbound on HoUda.y Rood from a stop algn, ac- cording to accident reports. Driver John D. Ciparont, .32. of 319 Diamond A\•e .. BaJboa Island. was not cited. but investigation continues. Friends said after you"i Ltafoll's DW'- fatal ordeal earlitr this year that It was the third traffic accldont to 1trib the large Samoan clan. A female rt1au .. WU falllly injured I 1••r qo tn Hunll!lllon Beach whtn rtruct by a car, they noled. ' I ' 'I •. , .•.. • Ul'I Ttlt'PllGIO Ho Hum Salvo Fired At Schmitz By Hinshaw .. By WILLIAM SCilllEJl!ER Of tll9 O.llY P111t stall Orange C.Ounty Assessor Andrew J. Hinshaw. a candidate for the 39th. Congressional District seat now held by Rep. John Schmitz (R-Tustin ) again t<r day criticized bis opponent ror deserting both President Nixon and the Republican party. "After a president has announced his foreign policy, a congressman should not criticize it openly even if he has deep feelings against it,'' Hinshaw told 100 students from three civics classes at Newport Harbor High School. "But Schmitz, who claims to be a Republican, has done just that -and very harshJy, too," be added. Hinshaw also said it is ludicrous for Schmitz to bill himself as "a statesman." "You don't proclaim yourself a statesman after only 22 months in Congress," Hinshaw said. "I think the best definition I ever round of a 'statesman' is 'a dead politician' and that is what I'm hoping my campaign will do to Schmitz," he added. Hinshaw also told the students that if elected, he would do all he could to change the current seniority system in Congress. DAIL 'I' PILOT Slllf Pai .. ASSESSES OPPONENT Hinshaw at Harbor High U.S. Crossboard Checker Championship match between Bobby Mar- tin Oeft) of Chicago and Kenneth Grover, Tabolab, Wash., drew l~ss than capacity crowd ·as the two exhausted players finished their 32nd game in Seattle. The pair decided to call it quits and split the $1,500 purse. The match lasted a week earlier this month. Martin and Grover each won five g~mes and there were 22 draws. "I think you have to have some kind of eligibility system but these o1der men should not be in such key positions in Congress," Hinshaw said. "At the same time, we don't want freshman congressmen in the key S]X>ls either," he said. "There has to be some means of determining minimum House membership in order to become eligible for top committee jobs." nounced, congressmen should autwan:Uy abide -by it. "I think it is lhe duly of a represen- tative to express privately to the Presi· dent any negative feelings the con· stituents of his district might have," he said. "But once that policy bas been P* claimed, the r<"st or the world should see our representatives standing behind it, at least openly," he said. OCC Gets National Award During a question and answer session a!ter Hinshaw's talk, the students ex· pressed tbejr concern over represeQtation and other issues. · • Hin.shaw also said that if he is elected, he would arrange regular meetings with key constituents from all walks of life to determine feelings of the voters. For Teaching Techniques Regarding representation, Hinshaw reiterated that ance a policy has been ao- * * * * * * Carraway Says Hinshaw Orange Coast C.Ollege has been named one of the top 50 colleges and universities nationwide by the Salgo-Noren Foun- dation. Hartelius Panel Delays Hearings Due to Illness By TOM BARLEY Of 1111 D1Hv Pli.t Sltff LOS ANGELES -A State Board of Medical Examiners hearing into allega- tions of moral tw-pitude and un· professional conduct against Dr. Ebbe Hartelius of Costa Mesa and El Toro was delayed here today with the serious HI· ness of a committee member's wife. Dr. Clarence Halburg of Redlands ad- vised his colleagues an the four-physician panel that his wife was admitted into the intensive care unit of a local hospital ear. ly this morning with what may be a cor· onary condition. Halburg stated, however, that he may be able to resume his committee duties later today. This is the third three.day session since the Rartelius hearings open- ed here last November. Key state witness Reba Vaughn. scheduled to return to the witness stand today to resume her testimany against her former paramour, was ardered to return to the .litearing room this af· ternoon. Mrs. Vaughn has testified that Hartelius, 50, introduced her to drugs and fostered her habit to the point that she was committed to state prison in late 1968 as a narcotics addict. Mrs. Vaughn, 31, has also testified that Hartelius is the father of her 7-year-Old son, Jerry Vaughn, and that he repea~ ly beat her and perfonned abortions on her while he shared her home at 687 W. Wilson St., COsta Mesa. The shapely blonde. dressed today in 1 \\'hite mini-skirt, Navy blue midi top and calf length white boots, now lives in Long Beach. Both defense attorney M 1 t thew Kurilich and 'Deputy Attorney General Jeffrey \\1ohlner objected todAy to the resumption of the hearing without the presence of Dr. Halburg. State hearing officer E. F. deVilbiss was reminded that Halburg's elimination from the committee would reduce the panel to its minimum quorum of three physicians. The hearing apened last November with five physicians an the panel but Dr. Andrew Turnbull of Newport Beach wu unable to continue beyond the flrst Ufte.. day seMion. "We would rather wilt for Dr. Halbul'g to return and have . four physicians alternately dellberaUng on the grave charges filed against my client," Kurllicb said. Official's Son Held CANBERRA (AP) -Pollet at Sydney airporl tod&y detained the YOU"i IOn of India's d<puty high commissioner to Australia antr ftndl!li about nine pounds of WhJab vallled at 1$,400 In the youth's luuaie-A spokesman at Ille Indlon l!Jlh Commlsston In Cinlltrl'I COll1irmed that the youth Is the tO-ytlt'-<>ld aon of llepuly High Commlssioner Jyotlnnoy B&nia. Priased for its "superior teaching techniques" by the foundation. Orange Coast College is the first tw~year college to receive the distinction. Other schools named along with OCC for the awards last week were Harvard University, Stanford U n i v e r s i t y , Massachusetts lruttitute al Technology, Marquette University, Purdue University and the University af Maine. The three-year award was given to OCC through the efforts af Charles Thomas, an official \l'ith Jensen Afarine, Costa Mesa. Jtnsen Marine is ooe of t h e subsidiaries or the Bangor Punta Corporation, of Greenwich, Connecticut, whose chainnan of the board, Nicolas M. Salgo, founded the Salgo-Noren Foun- dation in 1954. The foundatian, according to OCC President Robert Moore, was organized "for the purpose af recognizing high quality teaching." The outstanding teacher from each of the winning campuses will receive a plaque and a $1,500 grant. OCC students \v iii vate for their choice in a special election June 7. "Some people might consider this a popularity contest, but believe me, it isn't," said OCC Dean of Student Affairs Joseph R. Kroll. "Students easily recognize autstanding instructors, and you can bet a deserving teacher will win ." Other local subsidiaries of the Bangor Punta Corporatian are Balboa h-iotor Homes, Costa Mesa; Ranger Yachts, Costa ~1esa, and the Luhrs Company, Costa Mesa. In Race to Aid Sch.mitz Republican Congressional candidate Earl Carraway of El Toro this rooming charged that one of his opponents, Andrew Hinshaw, was in the race to in· sure the victory of incUmbent Rep. John Schmitz (R·Tustin). Speaking 00 a handfu1 af students at the Orange Coast College auditorium, the 41· year-0ld candidate claimed Hinshaw was persuaded to run by Democrats. Th.is was done. Garraway charged, so that Schmitz could "-'in and continue to undercut Republican support of President Nixon in Orange County, thereby helping insure a Democratic victory in November. "flinshaw is not a runner." Carraway said prior to his scheduled talk. "'He has ne ver had any money and never had any support. He was put in by the Democrats so that Schmitz would get nominated." "This race right here can decide \\'ho is the President of the U.S., who is elected in November," Carraway said later in bis off.thHUff speech. "As a Republican, I don't want a Democratic president." Carraway said that Nixon·s 1968 victory was almost completely dependent upon his victory in Orange County. His 160,000 vote margin here enabled the President to carry California, Carraway noted, and the California electoral votes won him the election. lf Schmitz can take support from Nixon with his support of Rep. John Ashbrook (R-Ohio), who has declered a candidacy for the Presidency, Carraway claims Nixon could lose Orange County and thus the election. Carraway made reference to his im- promptu appearance at the college Fri· day during a Schmltz speech. During that speech. Carraway entered the auditorium and began passing oot his campaign literature. He was escorted out by Costa Mesa police. "I in no way meant to be offensive to anyone," Carraway noted of his ap. pearance on the campus then. "I would much rather be classified as undignified," he added, "than to be classified as disloyal." Carraway claimed that Schmitz is being disloyal to the President with his support af Ashbrook. Carraway also alleged that Schmits was dis1oyal in his recent revelation of a private talk between himself and Vice President Spiro Agnew. Schmitz claimed that Agnew told him in a confidential conver.98lian that his criticism of Presi· dent Nixon helped counterbalance ~beral advice. "That conversation was privileged" Carraway noted, "and because ht reve81. ed it. he is losing support of his own peo-. pie. Money and death would not drag it out of an hooorable man but to John Schmitz, getting elected 'is more im· portant than honor and loyalty." Buying A New Tract Home? I Many people buying homes are under the impression they HA VE to buy carpeting from the home sales center. In the majority of ceses this is not true, although the seles office will try to make you think so. The minute the home center tries to upgrade the standard carpet, then you ore free to shop fo r ca rpe ting. To prevent shoppin g should constitute restraint of trade. In many coses they will tell you that the carpet allowa nce does not apply if you buy carpet outside. If they feel this legal, HA VE THEM PUT IT IN WRITING. Ordinarily, we con 11vo you • lot of monoy over whet tho homa center offers. We ptovide • larger selection -and we usuaHy come up with less y1rd19•, plus 1 superior instanetior.. ALDEN'S . CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Plac1ntla Ave. COSTA MESA 646 ... 3. '