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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-05-26 - Orange Coast Pilot• meapons Treaty t 1 - • .1 • IJCI S~ientists Dis~over Brain Cell 'Rewiring~ ' Tea~her Rips Oii Blouse at Bally~ Fired by Distri~t •• esa f VOL 6$.. HO. UJ, 4 SECTIONS, • JIAGl!S FRIDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 26, 1972 ' DAILY "ILOT Stiff l"Mtfl UC IRVINE SCIENTISTS SHOW BRAIN CELLS REWIRE THEMSELVES Drs. Carl W. Cotman Utft), Gary Lynch, Psychobiologists T~O:-·Ucl Scientist,s Find '!' ' ' --Br-ai'n Cell 'R·tm)iring' '. ._,... ·: . .-; . . '. \· IA ,\ \ • -,. ~, ' · ~ ' • By. GEORGE .~AL c :. .~lyJ.@inellra'"t Dr, l.fll<:ll. t·sf~·· Of·ttie Def)y '1"' Stefl ~--jn tfSs'u~ ftre "sWiled"'"W ith. asdye TwO ,'UC Irvine psycllobiologists a~ that has been used 'for years· in other ~.a ~·profoJ.\Dd ~ver;y',' ~lU'~ "8I'eaS of•research..-the ner:Ve enzyme can y wat.may reverse ttie widely behevea . . rY that dam aged brains cannot readily be seen. ' ver from nerve cell losses. Application of this graphic method to Dr: -Gary Lynch and Dr. Gari W. Cot-establish the presence of ne"".' conn,ectiooS an fevealtd results of 8 16-monlh study between brain cells, replacing the con· "brain damaged rats that was sup-nections that broke . down with the ~ by grants from the Nitional Sci. dama~e Of other cells is the key to the • 'Foundation and the Nationll Instf.. UCLd1sc:overy. Q l()f Mental Health amounting to "We're the I~ people to look Into this ~ a· year. . . structur~ qslng, t.he . stalnin~ technique," 'the : UCI psychobiology profes.!lors (See DISCOVERY, Page I) dlai#u1sed their research at the opening of a hllt-day UCI lridustrtal Associates pro- gr~llhtroduclng busl_ness leaders to the 1<:~ of biological sciences . -· faculty researChers trom Ne:wport Beich iald their findings were based on Q~fwlth ~ rats. ~reeeerchers removed a portion of · corta.of the brain ol each rat. '3/itbin a matter of days," Dr. LYJ!Ch d, a filllng in of the cut ~a can be . .A··~ i "· lJ has ~ been known that brain ceDa ~ tis.rue -cannot duplicate .... Ives as do cells of other body et such as the skin. •'!••er, the Lyncl>-O>tman ttudl., of lndlcald the possibility that undam· celll In otbu _p8rts ol the body -..., 1lgn1~ -called proctsse1 - vt bttn "dramatically" evident ln -le views of brain USSUt. 'nle e pr<>cesse• produce an enzyme Reno's 'Ugly , Ma1i' Expo_s¢t}, RENO, Nev. (UPI} -The UniVeraity or Nevada at Reoo's "U&Jy Man" is also · the · school 1'yUrboblt"1 Wwer to Burt Roynolda. Ed F•lnhandler, the first per.on to win the college's ugly man con- test four years in a row, appears nude In a ful~page photograph Jn the 11Artemlsla," whlcb was releu- <d dlll 1retk. Jl'tlnbandltr I 1 stn~aJ<llly lhl<ldal l'1 a nnall1'1Ck. , • • ~oca1ne, ... , . Big Powers 01( Nuclear Arms Pact MOSCOW (UPI) -President Nixon and Soviet leaders reached agreement to- day on a historic treaty limiting nuclear arms. The treaty was to be signed at II p.m. Moscow time at an all-American dinner Nixon is giving his hosts. \Vhite House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said Nixon would sign for the United S tates, and diplomats told UPI Communist Party General Secretary Leonid I. Brezhnev probably would sign for the Soviet Union. The agreement capped 21h years or negotiations at the strategic arms limita- tion talks (SALT) in Helsink i and Vienna and provided a crowning achievement for Nixon 's summi t talks In Moscow. The treaty covers both offensive and defens ive missiles. It will limit an· tiballistic missiles (ABM ), ban building more launching silos for intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBM), freeze the number of ICBMs at the present figure , and allow no new construction of missile- launching submarines. The United States has 1,0M land-based ICBMs; 41 missile ·carrying submarines and two ABM sites under construction . • The , Sovi.et · Upion . ~ . an ~Jimct!e4 1.550 1CBf\.fs; 2S missile-carrying suDs ;f· and the only operational ABM in the• world. Even as the final wording was being worked out, the nations nacbed agr~ ment on ye t another accord, this one to set up a Soviet-American commission to. develop trade and business and economic relations. The trade agreement, Jess than Nixon hoped ror, was preceded during the week- long talks by the si'gnlng of five other pacts, covering joint efforts on disease, pollution, space, scieoce and "rules of the sea." Ziegler said that Nixon and the ruling Soviet troika -Brezhnev, Premier Alex· ei N. Kosygin and President Nikolai V. Podgorny -met in the Kremlin for two: hours this afternoon. "They dl!c1wed International problems and. completed . the final agreement on strategic arms limitation," Ziegter said. The two chief anns negotiators, U.S. ambassador Gerard C. Smith and Soviet First Deputy Foreign Minister Vladimir S. ~menov, Dew togeLher In a U.S. air tranoport plan< from Helalnld to Moscow for the ceremony. President and Mrs. Nixon entertain Soviet leaders at a banquet that bu rout bttl and baked Alaska on the menu ind (S.. AGREEMENT, Pace l) J •. ' .Joins Company U.S. Agents Von Braun Quits Aid in Wild NASA Position WASHINGTON (U PI) -Dr. Wernher von Braun, German-born rocket expert who directed development of the rocket that sent Americans to the moon, retired from the space agen cy today. An announcement of his retirement issued by the Nationa l Aeronautics and Space Adminislration said that Von Braun wouJd join Fairchild Industries as corporate vice president for engineering and development, effective July 1. Von Braun was serving as deputy associate adminii:;trator at the time of his resignation. Before that, he was director of the Marshall Space Flight Center in Alabama f9r 10 years, heading the team that ~veloped the world's most powerful rocket. the Saturn V which propelled Apollo's moon-landing missions. Dr. James C. Fletcher, NASA ad· min istrator, said "all of us in NASA will I NS ECT, FOSSIL ENTRIES NIXED SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A bill as.king tt)a t the· California dog-face butterfly be declared the official state insect has been defeated by an Assembly committee. The Governmental Organization Com- rq,ittee also turned down Thursd ay a n:ieasure to ha ve the Fremontia Fremonti n8med the official state fossil. ' miss the daily stimulation of his presence, but we are confident that we will continue to have the benefit o( his in· spiration and counsel in the continuing exploration and use of space." Von Brau n, 60. who was instrumental in developing the V2 bombs that German y launched against England during World War 11, said he was leaving "with a deep feeling of gratitude for the wonderful and unique opportunities the age'ncy has given me during the last 12 years." He added : "I am leaving with the knowledge that NASA has enough well thought out plans to keep it moving ahead for many years to come, even though some of these may ha ve to be deferred because of budget constraints." His departure comes just a few month.!! before thr. final Apollo moon-landing mission and at a time when the space agency faces increasing pre ssure to cut its spending plans. In the closing months of the war, Von Braun led a group or scientists from Germany's Peenemuende rocket center, to Allied forces in the west and came to the United States, establishing the na· lion's fir st concerted missile program at White..S.nds, N.M. Von BraUn said he was maklng tfie change because he wants to devote his time to help implem«:nt "some space projects I feel are of partlci.Jlar impor· tanct. I think I can do this best in pri· vate industry where the tools of progress are being made." Protest Bared Teaclier's Action Costs Job SANTA CRUZ (AP) - A young woman who ripped oU her blouse at an antiwar protest has found herself stripped of a Job. The Santa Cruz School District Board voted to fire Janice Lee Rogers, 27, from her job as a teacher's aide at Laurel Elementary School. "She went beyond a·proper erpresston of her antiwar feelings."' aaid Dt: • flfark Lewis board president. "It ta not against the law to go bare bosomed, but it gives ' the board no confidence In her ability to work with children." Miss Rogers was put under a cltlzen's arrest by another woman May l l at an antiwar demonstration outside the COWlty jail. The district attorney later dropped charges on grounds no crime was committed. The claim was that she tore off her blouse and di.splayed her breasts In protest or the war . Lewis snld that Miss Rogers was not fired because or the arrest, but be- cause she displayed a "willful fatlW't of good conduct." Mail Chase Dy ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 llM 01111 .. 1191 511ff Intercep ting a hollowed-out book that authorities claim contained a pcund o( pure Colombian cocaine worth up to $150,000, federal agents and Costa Mesa police captured a recipient late Thursday night. The dramatic, cat-and-mouse game In- volving 14 men and two floodUgbt~ar· rying helicopters ended at 10:30 p.m., following a full day of stakeouts and strategy changes. Peter R. Marshal , 27. of Manhattan Beach, was grabbed in the doorway of a corner market at Fairview Road and West \Vilson Street, investigators said. He was arrested on a federal charge, suspicion of narcotics smuggling and whisked off to U.S. Customs head- quarters at Terminal Island for booking. ~1arshal was scheduled f o r a~ ralgnment today be!ore a U.S. com-- missioner in Los Angeles. Costa f\.1esa's Eagle II police helicopter and a larger, louder Hughes 500 chopper manned by customs agents circled the surrounding area with searchlights when pursuers lost Marshal alter the initial package pickup. Officers clai m the parcel w a s recovered from its hiding place beneath Ult• COCAINF;._ Page, Z).,, , .Orange «:Gan Weatber Look for considerable cloudiness Saturday along the Orange Coast, clearing by noon to sunny skies, according to the weatherlady, Highs 65-75. Lows in the SO's. m"SIDE TODi\l' Orattge Coun ty is I.he straw-1 1 berry capital of the 11otion. Gar·_ den Grove .ttagc.s it.s annua:L StrawbtT'1/ Festival honoring thl.s Aremorlt1l wetke"l'ld. Ser ttorv in today's \Veeke11der. L,M , ltr• 1 • .. 11"" tl Ctllltr"ll , (llttlll.. ~ Ctl'lllc1 M Crttl-4 )t DtJftll lffflttt 11 f'tHlwltl ..... ' •Ill-• lt•lf Htttit",,. ,, """ \.tllftrl 1) ,.,. ""' 111.n.N II M111-.1 6 _... ..... Mllllltl •llNh 1t "tlltMI Ntwt • Or•"" c_,., 11 ... , •• ,."'' 11-• lfl'W!t ...... , 11 ·-It »tJ l!ta Mtfttll 1 .. U t ttnl'*' " n,e,,_,, Jt-U .,~""' . .......... liltWf ,,.,. ...... ....... . WHt:Wff lf.)I I • ,Z DAILY PILD1 s 'Legal Feud' Leads to Murder • Ill Courtroom OROVILLE (AP) -A running legal 1'11d has led to a bunt of gunfire In !he courthouSt 1n this Sacramento Valley fannlng community that left an attorney dead, a jud&e and a wit:neu wouadtd. Perry Farmer, "'4, attorney for the p1alnUtfs, died of a bullet wound ln lhe head shortly aner Ute shooting Thursday afternoon. Karolyn Garrick, a plaintiff, was wounded ln the arm and side, ,nd a Judge who happened along was 'A'ounded In the r ight ann . The defendant in the civil suit, Pi11nard 0 . Rutherford, 57, of Oroville, was booked for JnvtsUgatlon ol one count of murder and two ooont1 of attempted murder. 'Ibo lhootlng broke out In Butte County SUper1or COOrt as J'udge Lucian Van- dqritt, a former key member of (iov. Booald Reagan's cabinet, was presiting at a civil l1w5uit trill. Wltneue& said fo~anner was seated at lht counsel table when Rutherford pulled a .3kallber revolver from hls pocket or a briefcase, strode forward from his seat ln t.be audience, and flrfd into the baek or Farmer'• be.ad from a distance of about aix inchts. Then Rutherford ran for the door , Ur~ in& his pbtol, the witnes:lel aaid. 1lbe wltneu on the stand at tht time, Ernest Reynolds, swung a stool at Rulhttlord bot missed, then grabbed b~ pl1tot wrist. He and a deputy abtrUf wrellled Ruthtrlord oot into the haJlway with the piste! still firing, the witne:sses 11id. One bullet struck Mrs. Garrick. break· Ing her right arm and penetrating her right Ode. Anot.her went through the righ t forearm of Judge Jean Morony, who was pa.ssing by. Mrs . Garrick was reported in satisfac· tory cond!Uon. Morony wu treated and relea.sed. "I wouldn't say I was scared," VaJlo degrlft said later. "Scared means di!· Pat Trades Mickey Mouse Fir st Lady Offers Watc1i as Jok e to Factor y Chie f By HELEN THOMAS MOSCOW (UPI) -First Lady Pal Nit· on presented a Mickey Mouse watch to the directo r of Rus sia'.s biggest timepiece fa ctory today and got a lau gh and a silver samovar in return. "I think it.s 1 wonderful factory, l!IPolless and clean," Mrs. Nixon sald. "It's important for 1 watch factory lo be clean. 1 've seen so many happy faces ." Ballet in which a young woman shouted 11Frtedom for Vietnam." "I heard it, but I couldn't understand what she was saying," she said. ''Frece-dommm le> Vietnammmmm !" came the heavily accented cry. "I brought it along to you as a joke,'' Mrs. Nixon told the director of the Mo.!COw watch factory, Dmitri A. Paramonov, who laughed as she banded hbn the watch . "I understand Mickey Mouse Is a favorite in your country as well as in America -I'm sure the works aren't as good. ~frs. Nixon, v.1hose slimness is a sharp contrast with the more buxom Russ ian women, laughed and said her hostesses have been doing their best to fatten her up in Mo.scow. She laid her Krel1\lin household st.aft thinks 1he is too thin and plies her with sweets and pastries of the kind the fac- tory staff served her during a tea break at the end of her visit. It wa s a young redhalred woman sitting in a high golden balcony. She yelled down and to her right at the gilded royal box where President and Mrs. Nixon, Soviet President Nikolai V. Podgorny, Premier Alexei N. Kosygin and Mrs. Brezhnev were .setUing in for the third dreamy act of "Swan Lake." Paramonov gave 11-1rs. Nilon a foot- hlgh silver samovar, the ornate water heaters used to brew tea in Russian hoUJeholds. "It symbolizes that tho.st who are on friendly term s should sit down and have tea together," he said. With Mrs. Nlxon and her party wa s Mrs. Leonid I. Brezhnev, wife of the c.ommu.ntst party general secretary, and the wife of Foreign MJnlster Andrei A. Gromyko. 'The audience gasped. The dimming houselights flared a bit in the gold and red·plusb theater, then darkened . The shado'A'Y figures of Soviet securit)' police moved through the balconies toward the ll001'Ct o! the 1boul. Mrs. Nixon had little to say about an incident Thursday night at the Bobboi 'The Soviets tolerate no such behavior. McGovern Delivers Talk The beam of a portable spatlight stabbed through the darkness up around the roor. "l feel sorry for her," muttered a U.S. Secret Service agent in the audience. At Nixon's High School It was dark again in the theater by now and ballerina Natasha Besmertnova was gliding through Swan ·Lake's climax.· Guests seated nearby said the police lifted the woman and her female com- panion over the backs of their cross·aisle seats, so as not to disturb other in their row, and took them away. From 'Wire Servlcn WHI'M'JER Sen. George S . McGovern chose President Nixon's high school to accuse Nixon of "contradiction and paradox:" for negotiating agreements with Russians in Moscow but falling to reach a peace accord wlth the North Vietnamese in Paris. "If President Nixon can go to Mo.scow and engage in productive talks, then it Rems to me that American represen- tatives tan sit do~"ll in Paris with the representaUves of North Vietnam and engage in the give and lake which ii l!SSentlal U we are to extricate ourselves from the endless and tragic war in Southeast Asia," McGovern said here niursday night. McGovern's comment.! were contained In a campaign speech delivered to a rally at Whlttler High School, where Nixon was graduated iri 1930. McGovern had one of the most ef!.. lhusiastic receptions of his California primary campaign in Whittier. "Since President Nixon decided lo go to Moscow, I decided I'd better go to Whit- lier," McGovern told the packed crowd of about 3,000. "After all," he added , "somebody's got lo look after the old hometown. . "Since he's added the design of football plays t-0 presidential duty," McGovern said, "I thought I'd come here to see !Yhere this whole business btgan." Meanwhile, Hubert H. Humphrey, fighting to survive as a oontencler for the ()emocrati c presidential nomination, reluctantly has shed his "nice guy" im- age to slug It out with old friend McGovern in the primary. Pressed by frustrated campaign aides and admittedly fa cing an "uphUI fight," Humphrey for the first time has made the South Dakota senator the campaign target. sharply criticizing McGovern's proposed welfare refonns and '32.4 billion cut in the defense budget over lhree years. At f\\'O luncheon sessions in Orange DAILY PILOT TM O!"lll(I* Coat DAILY PILOT. 'l(flfl ... left lf. combitled tM Ntwi.Prru. It &!Ubl~ by ltlt Otlnot C..11 PulllWllnt (~~, ..,... nit tdHIDns lrt JIVblilllfolt, MorNllY """""" Frklly, fllf' CO.It Mt11, Nt'WPN1 l ffdl. H11ntinglon ltKllfFounteln VII...,, lltune IHdl, INIMfS1dctl1Nd: Wld $111 C""*'lt/ Stn J11111 Ctpl1!r1no. A 1lngl1 r19ION1I t11llltn 11 111111111'-td S..llltd8V-11111 s ....... ., .. Tha Ptll\C1NI pybllsh!rig p1tlll 11 •I IJCI Writ Iii' Slr•t!, (OJI• Mttt, Clllfom!•, tllM. Rabtrf N. W1td 1'rnld1111 •l'IGI Plltllbhtr J1ck R. Curl1y V•Ct Prt1klent afl'd G@Mr•I MIMgtr Tho11111 k••ril Edllor Thofntf A. Murphin• M•nttlrlg Cdllor C~1rl1t H. laat Ric~•N I'. Nill -'*'IH•nl M11119Jnt Edllotl O"'- eotta Mfta: ,. W•sl lty tll'ffl Ntwp0rl 8•WI: »aJ N11~1 ltul1¥11r1! L1t11n11 8 .. d'I: :m: ,..,.., ... ..._ H""llrtflllll 1 .. ch: 17''3 lttdl loullWf1I left Cltmtnll: al Nlrtll ii C:.f'ftl!l9 ltnl Tot.,._ 1710 64lo4JJ1 c ........ """''' '-I '-41-1171 '""' c. .... ,.,... ...,. • u... ..... 4tl"4421 ,.,.,,., -... Or-.. c-llfy ,,~ 140.iUt COWiYrttM. 1'1J. 0r-.. CMsl ~ .. '-,-."', • 111e t11wt •111ri.., rn111"''""" ..., -tllr at M.-tlHr'l'ltlllf. '*""" _, .. ,~ •llPleut .... , ,..... '""""' ft ""'""'' MllMr. -.. -,--· _,... Ntf •I <• MfM, .......... • w OfTtw -.u """""'' .. .... A.tt ....,,, ..... .,..,,. ......._. ... ~. County Thursday, Including a $100.a·plate hot dog and pa ta to salad fund raiser, Humphrey wamed that ?t.1cGovem's drastic cul! in the military budget would be "dangerou11 to our national selr in- terest," would create massive unemploy· ment, and could "lead to disaster." He repeated the charge later in San Francisco. At the same time, McGovern, also campaigning in the populow: southern part of the state, told a news conference in San Diego that it was "the moat outrageous nonsense and demonstration of gall that I think I've setn" for Humphrey to claim their records on the VJetnam War are identical. He charged that Humphrey, from the t~me he became vice president in 1965 un- til the latter part of his 1968 presidential campaign, was a aupporter of the Johnson administration'.s war policies. StockhoMers 'Toy' Around LOS ANGELES (UPI ) -The toys got in the way of busintss. Mattel Inc., the toymaking giant, put out displays of its new dolls, miniature trucks and planes and ga mes for the inspection, of about 300 persons at the firm'• annual stockholders' meeting Thursday. The stockholders were delighted, and fell to playlng with the merchandise. As the hour grew later, Mattel chairman Elliot Handler pleaded, "Can we please get the meeting started?" He finall y had to say to stockholders, "Stop pl1ylng with the toys and come on in." The woman later was idenlified as ?.firiam Fracassi, wife of Claudio Fracass i, correspondent in li1oscow for the Italian communist newspaper Paese Sera . From Pagel AGREEMENT. •• calls for entertainment by Pianist Van Cliburn and a U.S. Air Force combo called 41The Diplomats." About 100 guests, including both official parties, were invited to the dinner at Spaso flOUJe , the residence of the U.S. Ambassador Joseph D. Beam. The dinner returned Monday's banquet hosted by Soviet leaders. "The Diplomats" a six-member Air Force dance group new in from Wiesbaden. Germany to entertain. The menu included: Chatka crab mousse, similar to king crab; roast filet of beef ; Yorkshire pudding; bouquet of garden vegetables: hearts of palm salad; Pikantnyi cheese and baked Alaska with a cherries jubilee topping. The fare will be served with wines from California, Nixon's home state. Cliburn, who won the international Tchaikovsky piano competition i n Mo.scow in 1958, will begin the after din- ner program with the American and Soviet national anthems. The rest of his program will include Chopin's Ballade in F Minor, Debussy's Reflection on the Water and Scriabin's Etude In D Sharp Minor. The three major networks -NBC, CBS and ABC -all will carry live on TV and radio Nixon's address Sunday to the Russian people. The broadcast is scheduled to being at 10:30 a.m. PDT, and last approximately a hall-hour. 'Last Shootout' Armored Car Story Offered Sunday 'WE WON OUR LAST SHOOTOUT' - In a look at the modem men who ride shotgun on the "strongbox," thls Sunday Special finds their security measures so rigid they even suspect pollce ofOctrs, under certain conditions. It's a story of the armored truck business. ELECTRONIC ZEN -Wl>ether the new Alpha Wave control thtory is a fad or a phony, one guy who teated the braJn machine found lt wasn't ex:otlc enough to handle Ult erotic. THE NAME GAME -To gt! your number all the customer has to do b pay the price of the list ttllera. Selling names and addresses is big bu$lnes.! end Orange C'.ounty's biggest dealer in names Wis IOmt of the ''bow" and "why" tn a YOU Section story. MERLE HAGGARD -Hi1 popularity ls only • notdi or two behind tbel o( country music klna Johnny CUI! Ind Ile hi well on his wa1 lo being 1 millionaire, but Merle Haggard 11:7.1 b1'1 1n unh•PPJ man. Story ls In F1mli, \V"k!y, POLITICS AND HAND GUNS -In a column out ol Storam""°i..~ Hanna wonders If Sl1lrill Pet.I' ,.,..,_ ,... poUlleaUy moUvaled wfltn Ile came out for the <Xltl1wln( Gt IMlnd """· MAYORS' WlVBS -11'1 "Part ll" o( last week 's women's pages profile of Orange Coast city first ladles. This week, wives of the mayors of Costa Mesa, Hun- tington Beach and San Juan Capistrano are featured. ADVICE FROM EINSTEIN Business page feature story telb how Albert Einstein ht:lped Newport Beach grocer 0. W. "Dick" Richard build his 11upennarket. The famed mathtmaUcian gave Ri chard some buslnt!S advice. KmGJITS OF SPEEDWA y -Picture page captures the drama of jousters on 1tee.t steeds at the motorcycle races. REDWOOD CONTROVERSY - Tlmbe.nnen and conse.rvaUonJsts are still cla.shlng over the philosophies involved ln the attempt to preserve trees by se:tttng tl>tm Hide In the lllllduary called Redwood NaUonal Parl:. LEGAL ADVICE -A spec!al YOU Secllon ll<>ry oiler• UPI on how lo avoid belnJ cheated, who to contact If you are and tells about a lawyen' anoclatlon booklet that glw• other tlpo anct.al•PI to take. NOW SHE'S AN AC'l'RESS -cover atory of TV WEEK fe1Jum 9Usaft Dey, ,..,., mt of the "Pulrltlc• Fmill7,• wbo 1ulftld to Id attlJ titer lbe WU .,_ Iha llarriq role. fere:nl things to dlffertnl people. lt was ot>vlo us he was shoo Ung people." Vandegrift, appointed to the bench in 1911 after Strvlng a1 aea"etary of the State Human Re90Urces Agency, said It would be "in.:lpproprlate" to discuss the• shooting fUrther because he would prob- ahly be a witness in Rutherford'• trial It was the second courtroom shooting in California ln le!s than two years. An outburst of gunfire during an at- tempted escape at the Marin County courthouse Aug . 7, 1970, cost the Jives of Superlor Court Judge Harold J. Haley and three other persons. Angela Davis is being tried on murder-kJdnap-con spiracy charges ts a result oft.bat Incident. (Set atory, Page 5). The Orovllle shooting apparently dates back about four years when Ruthtrford, a contract rural postman, and 11-irs. Gar- rick jointly demolished and sal\'agtd a building, acquaintances repomd. At that time, Rutherford filed a suit against Mrs. Garrick over sorne bricks which resulted from Uit salvage, ac· cording to friends. Fanner was Mrs. Garrick's attorney, and he not only won 1he case but also a $1,200 judgr:ment against Rutherford, the frtends said. At that point, Rutberford had Mrs. Red lnfiltratio11 Garrick'• equipment attached -tbll {fto cludtd a tractor, at least two vehicles, and other tools . The current trlll was on Mn. Garrick's wrongrul attachment sWt • I 1 i n 1 t Rutherford. She and her husband, Robert, complained that their equipment was tied up for three years, preventing them froJ:I\ using it productively. Garrick was described by ac- quaintances as a small bus~sman who lives in Ther1nollta, just outside Orovillt. The courtroom was sealed shortly after the shooting to preserve evidence. Pol.Ice. on in.structlons from tbe district attorney, refused to discuss the cue. Missiles Break Kontum Assault l\' fxon Choice George P. Shultz appeared be- fore the Senate Finance Com· mittee for questioning on his nomination as secretary of the treasury. iie ,.,,as quickly con- firmed by a voice vote. FromPnge 1 COC AINE ... an air conditioner in some bushes at 160 W. Wilstln St., where an apartment com- plex is being built. Irate neighbors in surrounding homes -including two trailer parks -flooded police with complaints about the circling helicopters. "We just want them t-0 understand ho1v big a case it was.'' Cosla Mesa Police Detective Capt. Edward G J as go w declared today. The case began to unfold May 17 in Los Angele s, when Pepper. a U.S. customs Department German Shepherd dog beg an sniffing suspiciously at a package mailed from South America. Checking its contents, the pure white drug powder was found packed inside the hollow book. "This was the fir st major shipment discovered by a·heroin and cocaine-detec- ting dog since the trained German Shepherds went into use earlier this year," says Customs Officer Jerome Hollander. Rewrapping lhe package, Cederal agents and postal authorities engineered its delivery Tu esday to t he alleged re- cipient, a Jaime Hedst rom, of 132 W. Wilson St .• Costa Mesa. Investigation of records revealed no such individual known, according to Capt. Glasgow. The Customs agents' helicopter landed behind Costa h-1esa police headquarters at 8 a.m ., Tue sday to prepare for the pickup. ~,.RRID SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. helicopters fir- ing guided electronic missi les broke up a Communist assault on Kontum today , bul ether North Vietnamese infiltrated into the forward conunand posts of the South Vietnamese 22nd Infantry Division on the northern edge or the city. While South Vietnamese defenders bat- tled 500 infiltrators who occupied houses and a school on the southern edge of Kon- tum, another group of sappers seized several buildings in the division oom- pound on the north side and touched off a bizarre battle. A machinegun crew climbed a water tower in the South Vietnamese compound and sprayed machinegun bullets at the defenders below. South Vietnamese tanks shelled the tower -and missed. Finally a U.S. helicopter flew in, knoc ked over the tower with another missile and killed the four machine· gunners. U.S. spokesmen said the American missile-helicopters knocked out at least 10 of the 13 tanks destroyed. at Kontum today, helping the South Vietnamese beat back two assaults on the Kontum airpart. Meanwhile, the U.S. command reported a third day of ~assive air attacks again st Haiphong. The North Vietnamese laun ched new attacks along the defense line above Hue and brought in a force of tanks \Vhich were menacing the 2,000- man U.S. base at Phu Bai, 10 miles south of Hue . A spokesman said the tank force was spotted only five miles from the lightly guarded eastern flank of Phu Bai and that although there was a B52 strike in the area the base was still under threat. On the My Chanh River defense line 22 miles north of Hue, a· force ol.1 ,000 North Vietnamese using tanks launched another major assault along Highway I today but we re beaten back by U.S. air power and South Vietnamese Marines usi11g tiand grenades. The fighting swept to within 30 yards of the South Vietnamese lines, The battle for Kontum was far from Plane Blaze, Crash Kills 4 UPLAND (AP) -Four persons were killed when a single-engine plane caught fire and crashed in the San Bernardino Mountains shortly after it took off from an airport here, authorities said. A sheriff's spokesman said the plane was bound for Provo, Utah, when it crashed Thursday nigtJt at the 5,600-foot tevel near Cucamonga Canyoo, north of Upland. None of the victims were Im- mediately identified. The cause of the fire and crash has not been de- termined, the spokesma11 said. COSTA MESA CAR WASH With the Purchase of CAR WASH and HOT WAX W_.Z.Tt Wane over but the missile-firing American helicopters were making it easier for the defenders. The helicopters were using missile:s: known as "TOWS" for Tube-Launched, • Optically Tracked Wire-guided missiles. They began using them seven weeks ago when brougbt in from West Germany. UPI Correspondent Matt Franjola sald the operator aboard a helicopter guides the missile by keeping the target cen- tered in a telescopic sight. The missile trails lwo wires behind ft like a remote-controlled toy airplane and the operator sends electronic impulses over the wires to guide the missile. From Pagel DISCOVERY • • • Dr. Cotman said. Psychobiology department chairman Dr. James L. McGaugb described the pair's fmdlng as a "profound discovery. No matter what else comes from it, the infonnation adds to our knowledge of the brain," he said. "If all possible implications come to pass , the di.srovery would not only be. profound, but could be classed as phenomenal." Dr. ~fcGaugh said. One future implication or the findings might be in helping humans who have suffered brain damage by accident or ether J1?eans. An example of the significance of the finding might be in controlling memory Joss due to brain damage. If the functions or damaged cells caus- ing memory loss are replaced with ctlll from other part.s of the brain, one effect might be spastlcity, Dr. McGaugb llllf• • gested. Since becoming a spastic is not much of an improvement over suffer ing memory loss, the patient might someday be given nerve process inhibitors to con-. trol which brain cells replace the linkl : that once helped with memory J>f'Oo cessing. "This could be the beginning !or fl· ti on al medicine for brain damage," Dr. McGaugh said. The researchers themselves were more modest about their work, declining to give specilic example of what kinds of function,, might be affected by the new- found brain cell linkups. However, Dr _ Lynch said the-old t~ries of brain damaged likened the bra1.n to a "hard-wired switchboard or computer. "Alter the brain was damaged the wir- ing was thought to be permanently jumbled,'' he said. But, over the past hundreds of years, some brain damage symptoms -such as coma -have not proved to be pennanent . Until now, no one was certain why some patients could return to nonnalcy. $ WITH THIS AD. RIG. Jf.H 99 LIM IT 2 ... CUITOMIR FREE CAR WASH with any Flll·Up An Wit• Top 9uaDty 100% K .. u-Wiiii I M•, S..llrite r-Wlft .,. 511'ttch last, Somt Wiiii D-hoblt Domt , • , wflli 0 •tw wit 5 Styles And M1ny Colon To Choose From We G_..tM YOI A Cl .. C. WASH IN WOOLITE AND COOL WATER Try U1 Y•1 1Ao U1U WIG Ol'l'IR GOOD ONLY 2 WOKS THRU JUHi 15 Ol Wff!LI TNIY WT ,• ' COSTA MESA CAR WASH , • .,.. -n .. ~ ... ...,,. ....,, " .. 2059 HARBOR ILYD., COSTA MUA 645·1030 ' ·. ' '' '·~I • • l Ser told c ThlU': going fight po Ii ti Alx head al th1 the c1 inatio! In t Presii "Ora1 and c by wl "Ca Richa lion .\.\ heing JUch~ "H( (~OUl)li dienct .. \V1.: smil~ Hun Oran~ Anahf SJ 0 The Anah~ unifo~ gloves Sen. prime1 pres id arri ve; lion. The versat finaur' other derco~ The stare ~·asn'~ "It's repliec doonl\ He 1 :;ecuriJ Orang \Yhe1 p.m. E to add 'fown agents Oflt of theri ing lht pin ant Lheir ~ They they Y talked enclo5' Abou chcc kh ('ntr11n1 even ~ Hun1 room. wi th hi Ifs ent1 At 1' his sld bnnds , Ouril Oankec ttoned lunch~ Pres. roat la 'ht: eVt oil a n Afle:r W1llao HUBERT HORATIO HUMPHREY CHATS WITH ADMIRER Mrs. Joseph Ehrenrelch, Candidate at Head Table HUBERT LOOKS HAPPY Beams at Audience • DAILY PILOT :f DAILY l"ILOT l"llelH ltr ftlth•rcl K .. hl.,. PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE WON'T LET 0 RANGE COUNTY GO WITHOUT A FIGHT Sen. Humphrey Makes Emph•tic Point During Appearance in Anaheim Thursday • 0 Humphrey Woos Countians Signatures Gain On, Pot Petition 15 Party Se nator Lauds Democrats at $100 Hot Dog Reception SACRAMENTO (AP) -'The petition campaign aimed at legalizing marijuana in California has collected two-thirds of the needed signatures. Mexicari Families Throw Big Orie By JOHN VALTERZA p.m. Saturday celebrated in Church. with .11 special 1'1ass St. Edwards Catholic ·, By CANDACE PEARSON p.m., he addressed a Town Hall luncheon ot th• 0111Y 1'1111 s1111 and held a press conrerence, appeared at Sen. Hubert l:lumphrey {(}.Minnesota) the reception and then left for San Fran-- told a group of Orange County Democrats cisco from the Orange County Airport by Thwsday that he is "pleased you are ~ ... 4 p.m. going to Jet Orange County go without a ,· He was scheduled to continue his cam· fight this time " and added that he's in paign for the June 6 primary today in San pblitics "for keeps" -win or Jose. Francisco. · About 100 persons gathered at a $10? a Jn his speech Thursday be(ore about head hot dog and potato salad reception 300 persons, Humphrey sharpened his at the Grand Hotel in Anaheim to h~r criticism of another Democratic front the Contender fur the Defflocratic nom-runn"er, Sen. George McGovern (D-South ination for president. Dakota). In _the 1968 e!ection when he ran agal~st He rarely referred to McGovern by President Nixon. Humphrey s a 1 d name and said later he prefers to call ''Orange Count y made the difference" him <lnly "my opponent." and constituted many of the S00,000 votes He charged that McGovern's proposed. by which he Jost. cuts in the deferu>e budget would "en- _"Can yo~ ima~ine what four years of danger the national security" and would Richard Nixon without the threat of elec· threaten "the economic security of work· lion would be?" he asked the crowd after ing families and the economic viability of being introduced by Co n gr es s man the state of California." Richard Hanna ((}.Cypress ). He emphasized the growing strength of "How about Reaga n too'?" <lne Orange Soviet Unl<ln Naval forces and said any c:?ur.ity Democrat yelled from the au· cuts in U.S. production Of ships and dien i::e. . missiles could make the U.S. second best "\Ve'll lake him next," Humphrey -"and I won't settle for that." smil~. He continued his attack on McG<lvem Humphrey spent less than f~ur hours in by deploring the senator's support of a Orange County Thursday. Arriving at the welfare refonn bill now in <Angress Anaheim Convention Center at 12:20 He called f<lr an ••adequate j<lb rePtace-- * * * * * * Secret Service Agents Outnumber Followers? The two doormen at the Grand H<ltel in Anaheim Thursday were s m a r t I y uniformed in gold jackets and white gl oves. Sen. Hubert Humphrey (l)..Minn.), a prime contender for the Democratic presidential nom inati<ln, was scheduled to arrive in minutes for a $100 a head recep-- lion. The younger doorman struck up a con- versation with a nearby reporter and finally stage--whispered, "You see this other doorman -he's really an un- dercover agent." The man in question gave him an icy stare and the young guy sa.id, "Oh I v.·asn't supposed to say that, lvas I." "It's too late now , isn·t it?" the agent replied, turning quickly to C<lntlnue his doorman °job" <l£-the-day. He was only one aspect of the intense security surrounding Humphrey's visit in Orange Co.unty Thursday afternoon. \Vhen Humphrey first arrived at 12:20 p.m. at the Anaheim Convention Center to address the Orange County Forum of Town Hall, at least 35 Secret Service agents were apparent. Of the four cars in his motorcade, three ()f them were filled with agents, all wear· iog the identifying colored triangle lapel pin and wires 1eading from their ears into their coats .. They were also identifiable because they were the only people around who talked into their fists -which actaally enclosed small wireless microphones. About 20 age nts were at the center, checking pre!s credentials and guarding entrances, before llumphrey came with even more. Hun1pbrey's first stop wa s the rest room. Two agenls went into the room with him and seven were stati<lned before Us entrance and exit. At least three agents were always at hi s side 9r nearby, even when he .&book bands at the fund -raising reception. During his speech, Humphrey was f1 anked oh au sides by agents, who que• tioned everyone entering or txitlng the Juncheor(. Press passt5 were judiciously j>\Med to roat lapels 11nd names of those attendll'lg \he events were checked And recbtektd off a master lllt ol reservations. After Georgia eovunor Geo r & e Wall&ce was Mot In • crowd t-n 1'.1aryland, President Nixon ordered a stepup in protection for presidential can. didates. When Wallace was shot at the shopping center, no medical precau_U<lns had been taken. and an ambulance was reportedly slow 1n getting to the scene. A somber note in Humphrey's visibly cheerful campaigning Thursday was an ambulance "waiting" at the far end <lf the convention center parking Jot. Almost hidden by trees, the ambulance was a grim reminder. Its operators sat ready in it with the doors open. Anaheim city plainclothes policemen a~~ watched the areas which Humphrey v1s1ted as did hotel and conventi<ln center security guards in uniform. As soon as Humphrey's took off from the Orange County airport, remaining secret service agents and policemen walked casually away in contrast to the day's tension. Victim 's Mother Breaks Into Sobs On the Stand ST. LOUIS. Mo. (UPI) ' -'The mother of a 17-year-old babysitter broke into sobs at the trial of the man accused of blinding the girl to prevent her from identifying him in a robbery. Mrs. <Alia Chestnut, mother of Wilma Chestr11:1t. broke down Thursday as she was being sworn in lo testify in the trial of Johnnie Lee Brook!, 30, In Circuit Court. "My baby, my baby," she sobbed as she was led from the packed courtroom . After the mother regained her com· po«ure, sbt returned and testified that her daughter mumbled incoherently when .she tried to get her to tell what happened. The prosecuti<ln rested it! case at Uwi conclusion of the morning session. Wtlma Chestnut teJtlfied Wedn..cJay that Brooks choked her until she Jost con-- 1cioumess in an ·apartment where 1he was babysitting for her cousin last September. When she revived, Ille &aid, "I couJdn't see.'' - The key pr09eeution witness, Earl Harper, 16, testified earller that Brook1 told him he broke a drinking glu1 and "stabbed her ciyes cut" so that Miss Chestnut could not idenUly him 11 the -who took a r«ord player and t.po recorder from the apartment ment program," not welfare and was ap-- plauded when he l!lhouted, "Let's talk jobs. let's talk work, let's talk con- struction, let's rebuild our country." At a 10 minute press conference after the lunch, the Minnesota senator ad· milted it was a "risk -to point out the dif· ferences" between McGovern and ·him · because it could be "fuel for th~ Republicans." But he added that he thought any anmosity ·could be "patched up" after the nominating convention because he didn't mean anything "personally." f:.:aler at the reception, he told the crowd "You need someone like me in the White House, I am your friend and I won't forget y<lu." There he emphasized that he brought labor forces and the Democratic party together "where they always shou1d be" and imisted neither President Nizon nor Senator McG<lvern understood the needs of the workers. Secretary or State Edmund G. Brown Jr. said Thursday 131 ,371 signatures have been certified. A total of 325,504 are need~ ed to place the issue on the November ballot. The second petition-circulation period ends June 15. Brown said. With enough signatures. the initiative would permit the voters lo approve -0r dlsawrove the following proposition: "No person 18 or older should be punished criminally or denied any right or privilege becaUse of his planting, cultivaUng, harvesting, drying, proc· esslng, otherwise preparing, transport· ing, possessing or using marijuana." ' Top Marine Remains In Pendleton Hospital CAMP PENDLETON (UP!l -Gen. 01 tf11 D1ll1' Pllll S11tf Pete ~tercado of Dana Point and Pedro Villalpando of San Juan Capistrano each have a daughter who will be 15 on Satur· day. So the dads decided to throw a little get-together at the San Clemente Moose Lodge that night. It'll be a Wh<lpper. An estimated 400 guests -some from as far away as f\1exico City, and Guadalajara ·-will be <ln hand to sing ''Las Mananitas" to Terry Mercado and Dora Villalpando. And the entire event will follow the strictest of Mexican tradition. "It's something like the 'sweet sixtf!en' party for the girls in parts <lf the United States, I guess," said Terry's mother. Jessie, from the top <lf an 18-foot ladder at the lodge late Thursday. "In Mexico it's one of the biggest things in a girl's life.'' It has also been a big thing In the lives of the Mercados and Viilalpandos. Then at 7 p.m. the party w111 start in San Clemente . Even the invitations -200 were sent out and all recipients pledged attendance -follow the Mexican tradition. Essentially they are a five--part paper fan -each segment printed with detailed in£orrru1tion on the festivities .•• Things like the traditional waltz that opens the evening. "Each girl will start by dancing with her father ,'' Mrs. Mercado explained. "then the godfathers will take over and dance for a short time. After that, each: girl's escort will cut in . The companion for f\fiss Mercado will by Lupe Rodriguez: Pedro Llamas ii Miss Villalpando's esC<lrt. More tradition follows tllat waltz as 14 other young couples -"representing a year in the life of each girl", said Mrs. Mercado _,, take their places as well. ,• Following his short talk at the recep-- tion, Humphrey · posed with tlme al· tending for $1S a picture. He traveled by police.escor t ed motorcade to the airport where he board· ed a PSA charter flight to San Francisco. Robert E. Cushman, commandant <lf the Marine Corps, probably will be released some time nezt week from the Naval hospital at Camp Pendleton, a hospital spokesman said Thursday. Cushman, 57, fonner jlepulf director of the Central Intelligence Agency; wa! stricken Tuesday with cellulitis, a tissue innammation in his left leg, while in- specting West Coast bases. "The fathe rs have been looking forward to this for years," f\.lrs . Mercado said.as she slftylg crepe paper from the ' lodge rafters. \Vhat might go down in local annals as the best-attended birthday party in the city's history will start 99lernnly al 3 .. After that there'll be dancing, cake:, •• punch and lots of, other food and thina1 " the rest of the evening." -: , The entire even~ -by tradition aa well He made no campaign statements at the airport. -will be the "gift" of the parents and godparents of each girl. SPECIALS FRIDAY··· SATURDAY··· SUNDAY ONLY! TAKE YOUR PICK ... ALL BRAND NEW! ... 1972 ~IERCUBYS ... MERCUR)' THIS WE~KEN D ONLY $363800 MONTEGO • • • 2 DR. HOT ..•• LOADED , INCLUDING AIR COND. #2H07F592164 MERCURY THIS WEEKEND ONLY MONTEREY • • • 2 DR. HOT .••• LOADED. INCLUDING AIR COND. #2Z6H574-402 ..----MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND SPECIAL!---.. 1972 CAPRI . . . or . . . 1972 CO MET #GAECl\1R63139 #2K31T 542169 '2585°0 HURRY! PRICES GOOD MEMORIAL WEEKEND ONLY! Home Of The New Car .•• "Goldea Touch" . . 1, 11 I , ( I If ' 1' 2ll2S HARBOR Bl VD. COST A MESA • &«J.!511311 Home Of The New Car .•• "Golde n Touch" .- " ' • ' I l j l I ' j f To Lead·-Or Not to Lead GE'ITING' TH~ LEAD OIJT: It It tmelear at this writing whether or not there'U bt any lead tnj<ciod In g810Une l!Old tn Orangt County after the lint of July th1s year. M a matter of fact, thal raJae1 the questkm If there will be any pttro1 eold in this region at all after that date. Ltad, you .... Is DOI put In guoUne to !>old It on th• ground. It la mlud with the fuel for the purpose of making tbe stuff burn right Jn your auto engine. Otherwise, without a few grarrl! of lead per gallon, most auto technicians wi1t agree that current automobile power plants would knoct, ping, 1p.1tter and jlenerally not run very good -U at all. ORANGE COVNTY government , however, pused a law here awhile back that bans the , tnJeciloll of lead Into gasoline on account of It being a principal culprit in caUJlng alr 1>9llution. The petroi.lim' lodustry lnimtdlatelf. cried foul, lirongly 1Uggesting that 1t couldn't come up with a pollution-free substitute for lead' in time to. meet the July l deadline. · Ficed with such a Jaw, the petroleum experts decJared, they m1ght not be abl• to sell g41 in Orp.ng• County at all after the law ·tau. efltct. This didn't seem th bother our Orange County government folks ln the sllgh(eat-. WELL, YOU RA VE to ailmlt there IJ a c<rtatn logic to It. U there lan'I any'fuel ' to run the cars Qn, they can't very well do much polluting. Of course, there ls always the pQSSibil~ ly that being faced with such a crisis, &0mebody wil.1 come up. with a substitute for gasoline. Somt of us used to try that sort of thing during the gaa ratloning days of World War Jl. Lots of guya had their favorite recipes for fake fuel. Mine wu to mi.I three gallons of flam· mable cleaning solvent wltb two gallons of kerosene. To thla, fOU added one quart ol cheap gin and a handful of mothbolls. :tou had to k,.p churnlng the stuff around all the tjnie becaUJO II wouldn't stay mixed too well. THIS MEANT that every tlme you stopped the car for any ~lod .of time, you had to rock 11' vehicle alde-... alde to mix it all up again before ate"'ting a 1tart. Also, there were a couple of other llttle problems. The engine wouldn't st.art if it was cold so you· had to keep at least one jug of real gasoli ne on hand to prime the carburetor. And flnalJy, the stuff knocked, pinged and sputterid In the engine just about as badly arthe: non-leaded gas· that the petrolewn eiperts are so worried about right now. Well, as l said the legality of Orange County's lead ban Jaw l! now in the courts and you never can tell )low It wlll all come out. POSSIBLY THE law wi ll go info effect ond we may see the birth of a new klnd of crime along our fair coastline. You're walking down the street after ~our old bus just quit running in a great knocking catastrophe and some guy in a big black overcoat sidJel'I up to yoo:. He says "Psst!" and opens the coat, reveal· Ing an unmarked two-gallon jug with a cork in the top. "Wanna buy some real gasoline, bud· dy7 "Just came tn on the boat from Los ~ngeles County." Portland Quake Felt PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) -A gentle !arthquake hlt ell!t Portland early Thurs· ~ay. The temblor, which lasted about two minutes and measured between 2.5 end 3 ~n the Richter scale, triggered a barrage of telephone calls to police, firemen, ;adio 1tatlons and newspapers. There was no damage reported. Russian Fasfaions Mrs. Richard Nixon and Mrs. Leonid Brezhnev (to her left) view a show of Soviet fashions. Mrs. Nixon commented that she was sur· prised to see pantsuits in the show. 'l haven't seen them <ln the streets,' she said. Chur~h Verdi~t Murderess Must Attend Services ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - A young woman who pleaded guilty to murder hu been sentenced to go to church each Sun- day for the next 10 years by a judge who admits he skips religk>us services now and again himself. Eartha Lee Griffith, 28, appear:ed be- fore Circuit C.OUrt Judge Claude R. Ed· wards on Thursday and was told she could decide how to 11nend the next 10 years of her life. "l told her she could go to jail for the next 10 years or spend every Sunday through 1982 in a pew," said Edwards. "For the first time since I have known her, she smiled. She chose church." Miss Griffith had pleaded guilty 11-larch Connally: 'Still Democrat' -hut Leans to Nixon WASHINGTON (AP) -Secretary of the Treasury John B. €onnally •ays he thinks he will vote for President Nixon in November, but he still considers hlmselC a Democrat. "Personally, I th ink I'D vote for Nix· on," Connally told a group of reporters. Asked lf he still considers himself a Democrat, Connally replied, ''Oh, yeah.'' "If I ever change l'm going to make an announcerrient about It," he said. "I don't do things in secret despite what some , people say." Connally, who Ms resigned from his Cabinet post, said he has no plans to at· tend either the Democratic or Republican conventions this summer. He said he ac· tually ls betwixt and between in his: philosophical party loyalties. "I don't think l 'm too cloee to George McGovern on too many of his pro- nouncements, but I also don't think I'm too close to a great many Americans I know,'' tie said. Connally agreed, when asked, that the accumulated votes of McGovern, the South Dakota senator, and Alabama Gov. George Wallace in the Democratic presidential nomination race signify a deep discontent in th is country. "People more and more a re articulating their complaints . • • because they don 't get instan~ solutions," he said. Jn response to other questions, Connally said he is not looking for 11nother job In public life, as vice president or secretary of state or in any of the various other capacities for which he has been rwnored to be cansidered when he leaves the Treasurl early next month. He said he has many job offers and ultimately will take one of them. 27 to the second-degree murder of her boyfriend, Eddie Lte Lampkin. Sbe ad· mltted shooting him to death Jn the Orlando home they had shared. "There were tremendOU! extenuating circumstances in her case," Edwards said after the sentencing. "Her boyfriend had earlier beaten her almost to death and had th.i:_eatened her with a weapon." Edward! · said a presentence in-- vestigation showed that she had no prior record, "so after consu1ting with her minister, speaking with her and con- sidering her case at length, I deeided on giving her the option." He stipulated that Miss Griff ith must obtain a high school diploma within the next four years -she has completed the J llh grade. He also ordered her to pay the S2,<XMl in court costs at the rate of $20 a month. Edwards has set mandatory church at. tendance as a probationary term before. ''I feel that association with people who go to church is beneficial whether or not those people are able to convert the pro- bationer to be religious," Edwards said. TV 'Sheriff' Dead DETROIT (AP) -Warren W. Colston, 74, who played the sheriff in the old Loos Ranger radio series, died Wednesday. Colston also played roles in the Gangbusters radio series and ln a number of television shows. • .. ' \ ' ' • Sh.ip Ablaze The Oriental Warrior, a Llber· ian freighter with 104 persons aboard, caught fire and was abandoned by all but the cap- tain and three ·crewmen.· The 100 persons who went over the side were reported rescued by a passing ship. The ship was abandoned 40 miles northeast of Daytona Beach, Fla. Thunderstorms Snap Calm Heaviest Storms Hit Smtes • l.Jt Great Plains Ten1perature• Hltll Ltw l"rtt. Albeny, Clflf ,, • ""'"''· ,,,., .. " .n l!llrrnll'!Ol'll"I· dt1r " " l!IG11!Clfl. ti.1r " .. 111111110, c:111r " " Chaf"lftlon, c:l11r IL .. ... Oliftott1, cloudy " " .n ChkftO. dt1r " .. Cll'llCl,,...11, tlMr " " ci.vt11nd. d11r " " Dl<'tvet", ci.tr u • °" M111111. cllll,Mly .. " 0.fl'"olt, CIHr •• .. Honll"'u, dHr " .. ... Hw,kln, tloudy .. " lndlt!llDOllt. Cltlr .. .. lA1 Vtott. c:IMr " " U!tlt ltort. c:!My " .. Le!,111\lflle, ct11r " " "' Mltml. t lHr " n ""''"'*"· doud'f n .. f,fll\PIJ-11. 1"1111, Cldy • .. HN Tl!'k. d..,. " .. Oktlhonle Clly, peud'f .. .. O!Nt-., dwlr .. .. "" ........ ca.. .. .. .......... deM" ' .. " :::::r-~ .. '. .. .. " " --.. .. :::Ul'::.W:.'~~ .. .. • " flA1IOMt.I wtt.1Mll N1¥KI t0ttC.U1 .. 7A• ll1 •· tt• 7t .r--..'.,.."~"· I , ... r \ ..., ._.._ ''°""" n • S• '-'ke. doufy II '1 . ............. WttN1'41""'-t\tflr " .. • .. - Sky Pirates Troops Storm Airliner With Guns Blazing : !be men sent a .....,.ge to !be companf.s JobanneSburg ornce bUt that It wu "meaningless" end negoUaUons Wert never offered. BLANTYRE, Malawi (UPI) -Malawi """"' 1lrlng llll<IJIDOClull today -a bi)acbd South Alrican Airway• (SM) 7fl )eUtnu 1! QUl.U Ari>ort ml cap. turtd !be two Arab SUJllD"I who W<R Bomb Wracks Plane Over Caribbean MONTEGO BAY, Jamaica (UPI) -A bomb bas punched an eight.inch bole in a rear lavatory of a Chilean (LAN) jetliner whUe it was flying at 31,000 feet over tbs caribbean with 50 persons aboard, caus-- tng It to make a f0<ced landing al Montego Bay, Jamaica. I IN SHORT ••• ' reporl<d!Y p1""1ina to ext«! ..-Y from SOll1ll Alrlcan diamond n>agnatt llmY ()pp<nheln>tr. A pllot at the airport said the Malawi sotdi<n wounded one cl !be bi)a<:kers .. be tried to make a run for It. The other mggered from the pW!e, whk:b the two had hl)acktd tn fllgb! nearly 48 boun before, with bis hands up, the pilot sakl. The ett.aek came at the expiratioo of a 6 a.m. deadline olfldals had 1tt for !be hi· Jacker• 1o aumnder. In Johannesburg, south Afr ican ~..J4inisttt_Bu Schoeman said the men prated the jetliner to eitort money from Oppeimeimer, !be world's ridlest diamond dealer. Schoeman said both men have been detained and at· tempts -kf he made to utradite lbem to South Africa. The troop assault came with the hi· jackers in a position made tenuous by the escape of their ho!tage!, some of whom fled while the aerial pirates were quar· re'lng 'l'buraday. Schoeman said in a statement to the South African Parliament the hijackers wanted to extort rooney from Op- penheimer, chairman of the Anglo- American Mining Co. The minister said Rasla of Rumors Oppenhflmer never became personaqy involved, Schoeman said. The last of the eight-member crew and 58 passengers originally on the flight ar. rived back. in Johannesburg 'nlursday nighl ' Dr. Paul Weinbren, one ot ~ passengers, said lhe last three hostaKlt... escaped-!l<>m the-plane bywriggli•g through !be windshield, droppiDC LI feet to !be ground an4 "rwminc like hell." Weinbren said tht hijackers, ''whofn we called 'Charlie' and 'Z', were both festooned with geliginite." , "The Captain and I spent the whole night trying to reason with the hi- jackers.'' Weinbren said. ' ' C ha r I i e especially kept getting aoss and kept holding e cigarette lighter clooe to fuses on explosives they had." . Weinbren, in a statement on arrival ht Johannesburg, said that at Olle point be soothed the hijacker called Charlie by massaging his neck and givlng him tran· quilizers. None aboard was injured and there wa5 no panic among the 40 passengers bound for Miami and New York, according to Lance Thelweel, Montego Bay represen- tative of Delta Airlines. Thelweel quoted the Boeing 727's pilot, Capt. Carlos Riberelli, as saying that when he felt the explosion and a klU of cabin pr=• he dived the huge jet down to 10,000 feet where be wu able to maintain control. e 3 Lost at See PORTSMDUTII, Va. (UPI) -An et· plosion aboard the Germ.an tanker Zim Tourists Get 3rd Degree In Honduras Hijack Hunt Tokyo killed one crewman and blew two TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras (UPI) - others overboard about 1.20 miles off The face of the middle-age man wearing Cape Henry, the C.Oast Guard said early "eyeglasses looks out from the walls of today. po.st offices, from doors or crossroads The Coast Guard said the 600-foot shl p grocery stores and banana plantation :with a crew of 32 reported that it also cantinas. Beneath the picture it says had an engine room fire and was "rolling 0 Recompensa 50,000 Lempira" - hard" in g!lle-force winds and.high seas. Reward $25,000. A Coast Guard helicopter and plaoe Eastern Air lines has plastered the were conducting a search by flares for poster all over Honduras and part of the missing crewmen. neighboring Guatema1a. It bas caused a rash of rumors throughout this Central e Wallaee Gains American nalion and police have SILVER SPRING, Md. (UPI) -Gov. scrutinized nearly every foreigner. George C. Wallace has shown 1'im· The picture is an artist's conception or mediate improvement and a marked the hijacker or an Eastern Airlines 727 reduction in abdominal pain" following jetliner May 5. The airline is offering the minor surgery to relieve accumulation of reward for information on the man who pus in two areas, hospital authorities seized the plane en route from Allentown, report. Pa., to Miami and oollected $303,IXX> oil Docton, hoping to speed Wall.a<e's the threat to blow up the plane. He recovery, made two incisions to drain m.. parachuted from the plane into the fectiom Thursday, the loth day since be jungles of HondlD'3S. was gunned down by a wouJd.be assusin The hijacking was accomplished much while campaigning for the Democratic tn the style of the almost legendary D. B. presidenUal oomination at •nearby shop--Cooper, who was the first aerial pirate to ping center. bail out of a hijacked aircraft and make Billy Joe Camp, Wallace's press goOO his escape. secretary, said Wallace fed and ·bathed The hijacker of the Eastern plane himself for the first tlme Thursday since diverted it to Dulles -'-;.........+ out.side has been a Ourry or false reports arid rumors. "lf I looked like that face, T might be nervous about all this searching," said one American resident or Hondura s. "The face looks like about any middle-aged man with glasses." "The country ·is full of wild rumors and speculation," said U.S. Embwy press attache Ramon Garces. "And there art at least a couple of unconfinned reports of some Americans being briefly de-- tained." "There was a news report or an American held for questioning in the small town called Copan," Garces said. ''But he was released." The reward is also good in Guatemala, Honduras,'s northern neighbor. Court Decision: Death Happens As Brain Dies the shooting. ,.,... r" • Washington, D.C., where ~ got the RICHMOND, Va . (AP) -A medical e Red Boss Ousted money and the parachutes. opinion that death occurs when the brain MOSOOW (AP) -Speculation in· After a change of planes in New dies even if the heart and other organs creased today that the former Com-Orleans, the hijacker jumped out 'through continue to function has been reinforced munist party chief in the Ukraine, known the rear door of the plane at a low by a jury here in a landmark heart as a rum opponent of better relations altitude and a comparatively slow 200 tramplant suit. ' with the United States, is on his way out miles an hour, just as Cooper bad. "This simply brings the law in line with of the ruling Politburo. The plane's crew said he spoke English medical opinion,'' Dr. David M. Hume Pyotr Shelest, 64, has been replaced as with an accent and told thefh he had six said Thursday after he and three other head of the Ukrainian party's Central months to live because he wu suffering defendants were found innocent by a Law Committee, Tass armounced Thursday. from cancer. and Equity Court jury of causing the Earlier thb week, he bad been named A parachute harness was f0W1d near death of a heart donor. one of nine deputy premiers, a national· the town of San Juan Puebla, Honduras, "l think this is an issue that had to be level but Jess important job. a week after the hijacking. otherwise, it deeided." said Hume. chief of surgery at Sbelest now is the only member of the the Medical College of Virginia Hospital, 1~ember Politburo with a job so low on DAILY PILOT ''and I think it will have an Influence on the party ladder. For this reason, DELIVERY SERVICE the medical communi ty for a Jong time to observers expect him to be dropped from come.'' that central body. Dellvtry of the Dally Piiot William E. Tucker of Richmond the Is guaranteed 1 · t'ff • .• T --Hl'·e Opposed Pam 1 , conlended that his brother. _ ft; Monday..f'rkl•Y: 11 you do not ti..... y,iur Brue O Tu k WAS!IINGTON P'Pli'' by S:JD p.rn., c•ll and y,iw CCI~'/ will e · C er, a 54-year-old Negro (AP} -President Nix· ttt llr"Oll9ht te you. c.11a ,,.. 11k111 1111111 laborer, was alive when his heart was on opposes Beeking a tax increase next 7:xi p.m. removed on May 25, t968, and placed 1·n Year If he I I led but d s 'I rul SafUrdty 1rtd Sllflday: n 't'Oll dO "°' rec:elw s re-e ec , oe n e I:' c°"y by ' •.m. 5411urd1y, .,, • '·"" the chest of a white man, Joseph G. Klett out one 8.!I a substitute for the local prop-llllCl•y, uu trld • coeoy w111 .,. brOvclht to of Orange, Va. Klei! di·_, about a fieek rt t th Whil H you. C.!!l •rt t11t1n unt!I \~ 1.m. i::u e y ax, e e ouse says. later. Instead, presidential assistant John Most or1no• c!~~~~= ........ 6tJ..m1 M~cal witnesses for the defense Ehrlichman told reporters Thursday, NorthWett Hunn11g1011 11wc11 ma 1 n tat n e d that Tucker was Nixon will concentrate on trying to save s.-::::=~~~iiiiti·Mdt: ..... s..u. "neurologically dead" several hours money through cutting out unproductive 11n n.n C.p11tr1no, o.na Point, ~fore _the transplant operation because l:f::ed:e::r.:a:.l .'.:progr~::811\!::::.:•nd::._'.'.''pe".:'.'.nd:m:· !.g·:_ ___ ~=="""'=="'=-='= ... ='-;:::="="~::::' ==··==··="'=-=::'...-his bram showed 00 activity. DeeRWell Ranch in PalmSgrings. One of the Nation's finest investments. When you think of real estate investment, think of DeepWell Ranch and Pal m Springs. You ca n own a superb new condominium or ir:tdividu~ residence ifl that fabled land of Sunshine. Enjoy it as a pennanent home or a desert retreat. It's the easiest way In the world to save money. And the most pleasant! Palm Springs: where sunshine bathes the air year·around. DeepWel l Ranch privacy is maintained wilh a walled security entry. Enjoy swimming and tenfl iS or relax in s1eaming 1herapy pools. All yours wilh-· our work, since building exterior and ground m;aintenance is provided. But hurry! OverSS1/t million worth of DeepWell Ranch homes have already been sold. Only 111 families will be able to enjoy Dei!pWell Ranch Investment Be one of them! 2 & 3 Bedrooms, .Z 8.atht. From $51,950 fff Mmple. DeepWell Ranch A .... 11i 1>t~ltotWlllloa._~_.M.OOO~ Write for complete information Ea$t Pslm ~ Oriote 1.t DeepWdl ltoad P•lm Springs, C..li(omi• 92261 I ---- WICKES FURNITURE A OIVISION OF THE WICKES CORPOllATION WAREHOUSE/SHOWROOM NOW HIRING Our 150,000 sq. ft. furniture/were. hou1e/1howroom will soon be op1n- ln9 In An~~eim end have. employment opportun1t111 for qu•l1fied c1ndi- d1tes for the followin9: e DISPLAY e CUSTOMER SERVICE e DELIVERY MANAGER e SALESMEN IXCULlllT IAINtNas AND COMPANY llNDm -Al'PL Y IN PllSOIJ- 1256 N, Mot••ll .. Ao1•1l11, Calif, ,.,, ..... ~!'f'...,..,11111 c • t• n G L. /ti. Boyd Wl1at Do Sheep Count to Sleep? A&ain am asked if a fli pped penny 13 more apt to came up heads than tails. It is. Comes up heads 50.2 percent of the time. One Professor Edward L. Spitznagel proved that. With 319,02{) C\ipa. The stamping process at the mint is .;uch, he concludes. tha t the tailside is a , smidgeon heavier. That's cne penny only, remember. CAN YOU list all the U.S. presidents from memory? Neithe r can I. ~when-pollsters-asked 11 si1.a ble ssmpling of citizens to do so, a particular seven of the chief execu· lives rl'pealedly failed lo turn up on lhe rosters. Those most forgettable men tA·ere Tyler. Polk, Taylor. Fill· more, PlercP, Buchanan. and one more, can't recall, who'd I miss? TRAT nu me-rous insomniacs count shee p to help th emselves dote off i! not noteworthy. What's noteworthy Is numerous sheep are insomnia cs. too. Their stomachs - each shet>p has four -don 't. work right in just any old position Tht> body has to be upright. Makes the long ni ght's snooze difficult. QUE RIES -Q'. "What proportion of the men and "'omt>n in this country v.·ear bridge!i or dent.ures ?'' A. fvlf'n, 17.2 percent. Women , 50.R percent. Q. "IN Ireland, "'hich outnumber which. the t>.1urphys or the Kellys~" A. The Dublin telephone directory lists six columns of Murphys, fi ve columns of Kellys, that 's all I know. ARGUfttENT continued over where in the Bible it tells a man how to wipe dishes . That'11 Second Kings XXL JJ ; ". , . As a man "'i peth a dish. \V iping it and tuming it upside down." This reference repeatedly has been quoted to v"ives in se;irch of biblical proof that their husbands should help in the kitchen. COST o( a new federal offi ce building generally runs about lJ percent hip:hcr lhtin !he cost of a private office building. Takes ;iboul lwl'l years for privrite indu~try to design and construcl such an edifice. but about five years for the federal govern ment to do so. Can you explain why? HlNTS-The Household Hinls experts advise: I. Shine vour bathroom chrome with rubbin,e: alcnhnl. 2. Bury the old banana peels around your rose bushes. Arid. 3. Count on a dozen ice cubes per guest at your next party. Ai\f AWARE the creator of the first rocking chair was a Cape Cod hired man wilh a knack for whittling. but what was the name of the genius? This query. too. has our re!iearch department ba.fned, so far. Help wanted. Add res.1 mall to L. M. Boyd. P. 0. Box 1875 New· port Btach, Ca lif. 92660. Arizon(J Closing Park Over Rabws PHOENIX. Ariz. (AP \ - Lower Lake Havasu State Park has been ordered closed Exercise Se t BANGKOK IAP! -The Sou theast Asi11 T r e a t y Organization -SEATO -will conduct a lwQoweek military exercise in Thailrind June 14- 17, SEATO he11dquarlers an- nounced. Maj . Gen. James J. Gibbons of the U.S. Army will be exercise director. to camper~ for the Memorial Day .,.;eekend by State Park Oire<:lor Dennis McCa rthy. McCarthy said four or five persons have been bitten by covntes in the area and of· fic.ials believe the animals may he rabid. A vo ildlife survey is being conducted. he said, to conrirm or dispel Ule suspicions. The Arizona Game and f ish Department. State Par k 5 DepartmenL Mohave R n d Yuma County Sheriff's offices and others will enforce the closure, McCarthy said. Fast Ball - Or Curve By Reagan? From Wlrt Strvlct1 Go,·. Ronald Reagan gays he ~ looking fon•,.ard to "watch· Ing \'Ida Blue pilch'' white the debates between Sens . George McGovern and Hubert Humphrey are being te\evi1ed . Reagan urged Qltiforni111 to watch the debates, but added that he will be watchi ng Blue, th&--Oakl;uid Athletics s:W I PE OPLE pitcher who l.!1 returning to ac· tion after a salary dispute. * * * The Duke of Wlnd50r, 77 , re- main! ill In Paris, h i s secretary said, but gave no ln- dlcation that the duke's con- dition was causing alarm. The aide said: ~·The duke isn't v.·ell. He is not in very good shape.'' The ~tary declined to characterize the eeriousness of the duke's condition or give medical de tails of his ailment. * * * Former ~mbly Speaker Jess Unruh says he plans to run for mayor of Los Angeles in 1973. •·Jt is my in1rn1ion al. this point to run," UnnJh said at his Los An51(eles nffice. The unsucce.c;sful 1 9 7 0 l:>emocratic gubernatorial can- dKJate declined to make a fnrm al statement. however. saying "I have not raised all my money yet." * * * The Seni:ite Finance Com- mittee approved ""ilhout op- position Presi dent N i x on ' s nomination of George P. Shultz to succeed John B. Con- na lly as secretary of the treasury. * * * There will be a no t her assassination attempt on a major Democralic candidate. according to prophetess Jeane Dixon. "Who it is. when or where - I cannot tell you," Mrs. Dixon told a Saeramento Union ~porter after ad~lng a ,, luncheon there. * * * Amer ican author J a m e s Ml~bener stormed out of a news co nference in Moscow W protest aga inst whrit he said was frivolous treatment of the Soviet ,Jewish problem dur ing a ~ymposium at the summit press center. "I won 't ~tand for it," Michener shouted. The walkout followed an altercation bet~·een a Jewish American correspondent and Alexander Chakovsky. the Soviet editor of the influential weekl y. magazine L i t e r a r y Gazette. See if you've won this week;1 May 26 through June 1, 1972. 24 12 3 7 6 19 . 10 9 11 FREE l'Jck up a Bingo Cud from 1 pa rticipating Shell dealer today or send a self -1ddrb1ad envelope to Department BFC #1, P.O. Box 279 , Chicago, 4 13 15 17 18 22 5 14 16 23 20 21 25 8 2 llllnol1 60648. Every Sholl Blnao catd la a potential winner. So save your cards-If one doesn't win this week, n could win na>d week. ... 1~­\ ! ..... , I A. a. I p11ffed softknit smo~k dresses How do 1un1ors see Summer? In dresses of sof+, inte rfOc~in~ kni+ short enough so +onned legs meet th o eye. In del i6ously muted blossom p6n+s. All with the od oroble short puff sleeve. Sizes 5-1 3. A. Bili front , cotton.polyester by Down Joy. 18.00. B. Puff s. scoopnock, tie bock in cotton by Down Joy, 18.00. C. Puffs, cuffs. button-Iron! in polyester-cotton, by Confetti Girl. 20.00. Mo il ond phone orders invited. Jun ior World DreS1e• . \ I 'e.. it's at the broadway ANAHllM .&<MN. fuc l14 (7141 JJJ-1121 NEWl'OJIT 47 F•thio11 hlt11d 17t4l •44-1111 HUNTI NG.TON llAC~ 1111 Ed l111•· ...... llVO 171 41 IJJ.Jllt OlANt;.E. Mell •f Or111t• tJOO No . lutff11 St•••f 17141 ''l ·IJt ! CllllteS 100 lo• C.tri+.t Mt ll 121)) 166.&4 1 I SHO, tO A.M. +• •1JD P.M. MONDAY THROUWH f.llDAY. SATUlDAY 10 A.M to• , M. SUNDAY 11 NOON +t l PM, I ' • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE The Price of Poor Pay • ·' ' The number of San Clemente police officers that have left the force in recent months because of poor pay and benefits shot up. lhil week as five top men resig ned. ,• The resignation list shows nine ikilled men leaving since late last year for the same reason. and now one of them has claimed more than $4,000 Cron1 the city in uncompensated overtime he accumulated while on the loc al force. ~ Such events point to a growing <Tisi• In empl oxer· employe relations In the city -all keyed to the city's being in the cellar of the wage and beneCil survey. -. For years, it seems, cily government haH been con· tent to allow Itself to remain at the bottom of the list -even as its cmployes clamored tor equity. • l . •. Now they are leaving in discouragement and those resignations are hurting the capabUity of a Cine police age ncy which has earned the right to help provide :iecurity for our nation's President. .. ~ l But prestige and praise do Jillie to fill the groc- ery cart or pay tbe bills. Realistic, adequate improvements in pay and bene- fits are the logical solution. ' .. •· l Quigley to the Rescue t I I Jrvine city councilman Henry Quigley stepped into the picture just in time to keep lhe Laguna Beach City Council Crom going on record as opposing a large chunk of th e proposed Irvine annexation. The cily fathers were mulling a planning commi11· sion recommendation that a protest be filed with the Local Agency Formation Commission lLAFC) because part of lhe boundary of the proposed 9,600-acre an- nexation would overlap Laguna's sphere of influence in Laguna Canyon. Quigley pointed out that. as a former Lagunan, he Women Have Come a Long, Long Way Dear Gloo1ny Gus (sYDNEY J. HARRIS)' Now that Jrvine is eyeing ocean-· front aMexation between Corona del Mar and Laguna, and already has a land·based Jaycees . \vhen will the cily get its first Sea Scout Base:' Neither the proponents nor the op- ponents of what we loosely call ''Women's Lib" today realize how rar modern women have come -and how far they have had to come from . American common law is derived from the Common Law of England, and only a century ago, the wife was almost the complete chattel of her husband. We find it hard to believe now that. less than 100 years ago, a man could legally support his mistress on tbc- earnings o( his \Vlfe. In his shocking history of s o c i a I refonns (w h at is shocking is the stu- pid ways in which they were resisted by the bulwarks of societyl, E. S. Turner points out that the 19th Century \vile h.1d fewer rights than accorded a \Vife under Roman law ·•and hardly more than had been con- ceded to an African slave before eman- cipation." Published some two decades ago, his book, "Roads to Ruin ," spells out the relationship of the Victorian husband to his wife: "He owned her body, her prop- erty, her savings, her personal je,\•els and her incom e. whether they lived together or se parately. He could deprive her of her assets entirclv as he thought fit, and be co uld do this Whether he were alive or dead." J!is power to disinherit a \vife (of her own goods I was absolute and irrevocable. ONE OF THE FE\V rtfEN of ]lis time to 1peak up against this iniquity, according to Turner, was John Stuart ?\-fill, the -0.1.G. Tll!t lt•lur. rtl~~ "-.rl' ¥1ewe.. net lltc.1W•ll'I' tl'leW 9f llW .,..._ .. ,. l•M ,_ Ht _ ... ,. Gl"m' Gvt. D•ll1' ,.lie!. philosopher and political economist, \\'ho himself openly repudiated his legal rights when he mar:ried. In his tract, "The Sub- jection ()(Women," (1890), he said of the English housewife: "She can acquire TIO property (except for her husband): the instant il becomes hers, even if by inheritance, it becomes ipso facto his ••• 11 she leaves her hus- band, she can take nothing with her. neither her children nor anything which is rightfully her own. If he chooses, he can e<1mpel her to return by law, or by physical foP'{:e: or he may content himsel[ with seizing for his own use anything which she may earn or which may be given to her by her relations ,. \\'HEN mE LONG campaign began on behaJf of the JI.tarried Women·s Property Bill. il was widely attacked as a "vicious principle" that would dissolve the mar· riage bond, and a propasal as lunatic "as perpetual motion or stopping the revolu- tions of the moon." From perusing the press and Parliamentary reports or that period, a visitor from another planet would really imagine that society would be turned upside down i( women were permitted a few legal and financial rights of their own. As I say, one ha~ onl y to read this chapter to recognize how far women have come since then -and how much more remains to be done. Threat to Poppy Sales The Oally Californian El Cajon to1vard the Vietnam War that the pro.s- ped for poppy sales this year is bleak. Once a year as Memorial Day ap- proaches some of the veterans' organiza· UNFORTUNATELY, the contfoversy tions station representatives at shopping over the Vietnam War has done a grea t centers -and other places where people dea l to color attitudes toward militarism congregate -to collect contributions for in general and has distorted U.S. In- disabled war veterans. volvement in past wars. Leftist in-- ln exchange for a fe\v coins or a small tellectuals, anxious to sully the record, bill, they pin a bright red poppy to your view the Vietnam -episode as a mere con- Japel as an indicfllion that you cared tinuation of American imperialism that Rbout the plight of 3.2 million veterans dales back a century or more. So often \Yho returned from the wars with missing has this vicious canard been circulated limbs, lost eyesight and other injuri~s that some people have been conned into which denied them a nonnal life. belieYing that the United Slates alone is responsible for all the international 'THE hfONEY COLLECTED is used to violenct or modem· times. provide for disa bled veterans those items ~1any people. nQt very wisely. allow which government pensions do not cover. their disenchantment with the Vietnam It en~bles volunteer workers to take ln· war to numb their senses forgetting they capac1tated veterans lo p~aces they might 1owe their freedom to t~ veterans both not otherwise go, to visit them ln their . living and dead, who during World War II homes, to care for the orphans and helped defeat the most monstrous villainy widows of servk:emen who dted and to to •· l furnish rehabilitative services to those ever 11': un easbed upon the earth. who live. So hosille has the public mood be<ome Quotes ANO THE MEN who have gOnt orf to war in the 20lh century have done so in every case In response to the aggression ol naijOM lntenl upon annexln1 tbelr neighbors. ' • Whetber this bas alway1 been a wlst policy is debatable, but It ta M cause for turning our backs on the men who su f- fered the miseries or war and Ifill 'iheve the icar1. A nation which forget. the s•erlllcu ol 1ls aoldiers In ballle ~ bOI ' ha•hlg '?l!'°'IY at'OUtld to delend J when daa&er SU""tAtS. understood the concern and of!ered assurance th.at Irvine doesn't want to step on anyone's sphere of influ- ence. His amiable presentation charmed the council Jnto agreeing that representatives of the two cities should sit down and reason together. But what really did the trick WH his reminder that the Irvine council had adopted a tree-protec;tlon ordin· ance as one of its first moves. Now the Laguna Green· bell prop0nenu are eyeing new support from sucb ecol· · ogy-eonscious neighbors. For a Lively Summer In the few brief years of its formal existence, the Laguna Beach city Recreation Department has devel· oped a style all its own, one that befits a commuhity noted for its cultural activities and unique lifestyle. All the usual Rec Department offerings are listed in the new summer brochure, with heavy emphasis on S\vimming and tennis (60 separate classes in each), plus of course plenty or baseball, softball and volleyball. But in addition to these standard offerings, Laguna comes up \\,.ith a few specialties. Swimming fans, for example, can also find instruction in ocean surfing. Dance enthusiasts are offered a selection o( ballet crea- tive dance. jazz or Eastern belly dancing. For the' more se_date, there's macrame and oil painting. Young Colk.s with a yen for the footlight can study ·voice and speech improvement, .or parti_cipate in a youth drama workshop. Even the family pet ts not overlooked: Activity No. 12 ofCers beginning and novice classes in dog obedience. Fees, if any, are modest. There's no excuse for mQp- lng through a lonely, boring summer in Laguna. USS~ s 'l't1t Old Gl0t•y ••• Fly !fie All of tlte Tit1te' Wants Flag Flown 24 Hours a Day To the Editor: J am continuing to encourage citizens to fly our flag 24 hours a day -lighted at night. More and more lighted banners are waving at night in our area. On the eve of our 200th anniversary and with foo1emorial Day this weekend, I ha Ye come up with a new slogan: ''I'm Old Glory "Fly me-All of the time !" Following are excerpts from a Jetter from the commanding general of our state military forces. I believe everyone will be interested in this answer from the military. "THE BILL to revise the wording oC the code and to establish a Flag Com· mission appears to us to be appropriate. The flag, long symbolizing the union or persons with common association, has home its rules of display constituted upon good manners. Some of the rules of good manners are obviously of slight im· portance in themselves, nor is there universal agreement concerning them. Observance of the Flag Code etiquette, as it is known today, is chiefly voluntary. "CHANGES TO the code, as practiced by this state and the others, can only be effected through federal action. \\'hile we concur in your goals, we believe it to be properly the action or dedicated private citizens as yourself rather than the func-- tion of a state. "We most sincerely commend you on your efforts and wish you success."- Robert S. Ford, Col., GS, CALARNG, Administrative Officer. Sacramento. KATHYRN FISHBACK Ballots vs. Bullets To the Editor: Mayor Goldberg's; inflammatory .and irresponsible statements at the last city ~ncil meeting to the effect that he is unable to perceive the difference between the actions of a deranged assassin firing five bullets at a public figure and the actions o( citizens: using the democratic process to recaH an unresponsive elected official, only serve to polarize the com· munily. ~10RE THAN 100 concel1led citizens worked for many hours to give the voters of Laguna Beach an opportunity to sign a petition to recall a councilman who chose not to listen to the people. For a ~period of six weeks, these citizen volunteers do- netect hours· of their time to sit at tables at the supermarkets, and despite bad weather and market harassment, they re- mained until the necessary number or .----B11 George -- Dear Geo rge: What is the best kind of dog to b< absolutely safe around children? MRS. O.l. Dear Mrs. 0.1.: Either ' very fast dog or a very short dog and. preferably, a dog thllt is both short and !Mt. The swirme .. helps the poor dog to gtl away from the sadistic Utue brat. • and the shortness gives hlm op- portwlity to get under the sofa. Of course, a huge fierce dog that growls a lot may be safe around many ol tb< more timid cltlldren but there b always lbe chance one ol Ille kids migbt get bitten. Dear·George: When I WH l'otlllC a nice glrl never klned a 00, until afltt they _.. married. Why can~ tod.r• )'OtU1I people learn lhlal MRS. T. Y. Dear Mh. T. Y.: Gee. I don1 know unlesa 11'1 bo<awe they oo olten don'l bother to set llltlllft4: • MAILBOX Letters from Teaders are welcome. Normally wr iters sho1dd convey their rnessages t11 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to f~t space or eliminate libel is reserved. All let· ters must include signatures and mall· ing address, but flames may be with· held on request if sufficient reason is apparent. Poetr11 will not be pub· lished. signatures -was obtained -3,098 citizens concerned for good government in Laguna signed the petitions; 2.672 11.ames were declared valid (only 2,130 were needed), and the city council set a re:all election for July 25. IT SED1S QuttE easy to see the dif- rerence between the bullets or an assassin and the ballots o{ Laguna Beach voters. On July 25 the voters will indicate by ballot whether or JK>t a councilman should be recalled from office, and if so, which candidate should succeed him. The dog referendum the high-rise in- itiative, and the recclll elect.ion prove that the democratic process is alive and that the voice of the people can be heard even though t:lected officials re(use to listen. Mayor Goldberg seems to neither understand nor approve of democracy in actiori. but does, Jn fact, question the integrity of the serious, law-abiding citi- zens of Laguna Beach who signed the recall petitions. PHYLLIS SWEENEY Filling Lorr'• Seat To the Editor: The decision of Councilman Edward C. Lorr to vacate his seat and his wi!Ung• ness to advance his resignation enabling the city counciJ to terminate the electlon In the light of Planning Commission Chairman Carl E. Johnson Jr's. an- nounced declsion for the seat Js most commendable. Councilman Lorr had un- selfishly and graciously paved the way for the replacement at the shortest time, laving election costs for the taxpayer. Lagunans are most fortunate Jn the chairman's decision. Dedicated to public life. he has devoted the past 10 years to serving tht public welfare by actively supporting such popular causes as the Laguna greenbelt, high-rise limit, popu- lation limit, the deletion of the southern route of the proposed Coast Freeway. etc. -programs vital to the survival ot the character of our community. FEVERISH LAST minute scrambling by inexperienced unknowns aspiring for the office are not incognizant of the fact that there exists a compatible replace-- ment who miponds to the wUl of the ma- jority. To subject the city to the ex- pense of an elect.Jon over the r~ maindtr of the twe>-year term woutd be a farce. The withdrawal by the candi- dates at thb time wtil give Lagunans the Jong needed releaSe from anxiety frus. !ration and further expense, ' Should the uplrant.o persist ln their quest for olllce, Mr. Jolln>on has agrted to a candidate lonim (one) to air lfl4 laoues. A candidate with ll>e ~rlty turn'°"t or wrtt.tn 1/0le or both or wbllt- ever b agreed to through an lnlormal blal!ot by the nglltered quaUlled voters ol t1ie city will lit declared •he l!!ected city GJUnclJman. • ./" SPERO JANISE S9uecru ... Wheels To Ille t.dll4r: . Boyd and Roy Holm on their re-election to the Laguna Beach City Council in which he states, "In each vote they cast on importan t issues, I would like to rt;. mind them that according to ballots cast. for each citizen who voted for them there were two equally irriportant citizens who preferred someone else." Those who may have taken this state- ment as illuminating should be told that there-were a total of 5,345 voters par- ti cipati ng . Thus. for each voter who voted for ~1r. Boyd -2,83-1 -there were only 2.511 who did not and for each voter who voted for Mr. Holm -2,798 -there were only 2,547 who did not. ~IR. \YDTSROOK furthe r stales, '·The ter,dency is always to grease t&e wheel which squeaks most, so eac h COl.incilman must constantly remind himself that the loudest mouths do not necessarily repre- sent the most intelligent thought, nor a consensus of public opinion." I heartil.v agree and perhaps Mr. Westbrook will agree with me that intelligent thought must be based upon fact in order to mani· fest itself in the expression of truth. Even whispered truth will prevail. volume not- withstanding. Perhaps the above fac;ts may tend lo grease Mr. Westbrook 's squeaks and temper his volume. ' WM. W. LEAK 19th Ce11tur!J .'Hhtd To the Editor: After reading U.S. Representative John Schmitz' "re+1clionary utterances one can very well wonder what is this 19th Cen· tury mind housed in a comparatively young body trying to achieve in the 20th Century -and to think that we are on the threshold of the 21 st Century! One can only conclude: What is holding this great (with an even greater poten- tial) nation together is a combination of tremendous public apathy cemented only with money. BORIS BUZAN $153.83 Per Person To the Editor: Eighty million dollars! Where did you ever get the ldea that the hills behind South Laguna are worth '80 million when the assessed valuation of. 707 of these acres (not including about 90 acres or comparatively Oat area) ·is $149,7SO? Since California property is·customarily Absenteeism (PRESS COMMENT~) West Polal, Miss., Times Leider: ••Senator Margaret ChaH Smith of Maine b having trouble wllh ber proposed bill which would give tht boot to all members of ~gre.ss who don't maintain a 60 per· cent voting record. Those who are away from their post.o of duty about half the time are, obvlqus)y, against the proposal. Too bad taxpayers can't vote on that one. When we send repmentativu to the Congreu, we oped. to belrepresented." -Btln1, 1111.., PoNr Coalty Herald : "Recently •e leamed of an editor of a •mal~town Welily .-.paper who .!Ountf hlmsell .diort of material with which to rm the eolurnns, oo he had.his eomposer rel up the Ten Commandment., which were printed , wllbout editorial comment. Aner ll>e' ne'lflP"per was publlshed the editor ...,.fved a lotlA!r. •• follows: •cancel my 111bocrlpllon; you're getting pm:aonal'. • • .!Orne people Jost alwa11 assessed at one· fourth of jts actual value, by my calculat ions the land should actually be worth about f599 ,000. SJ!'iCE WE HAVE 3.894 (1970 c""'"'l people in South Laguna, this would ac. tually work out to $153.8.1 per person - a not impossible figure to raise. consid. cring how our taxes would go up if the hills were bulldozed. flattened and 12.000 to 15,000 people moved in up there. need roads. schools. pumping sta1ions. sewage plants, fire and police protection. Instead of $80 million, let's start think- ing in realistic terms about what actually might be accomplished to keep this area the loYely place it is today. CAROL THOMPSON .Joha1u1se11'• Dls1nissal To the Editor: The Capistrano Unified .School District has had an excellent special ~ucation program. thanks to the dedication of one person, Charles Johannsen. He has been summarily dism issed from his position without any attempt on the part of the board or superintendent to publicly show just cause for this action. M, taxpayers \\'e ha ve a right to question such action and demand that specific charges be made with facts to back I.hem up. A GROUP OF ciUzens, including parents , teachers and interested pro- fessionals. has endeavored. with letters and private meetings, to gain the facts in this case. They have been unable to do so. These people have worked closely with Mr. Johannsen and know that the success of special education in this district ts due almost e1clusively to his efforts. lt Is not in the American tradition to reward aich achievement with ri~missal for no apparent reason. In the best interests o{ our children we feel we mu st raise the following question: 1£ the rewa rd for superior leadership in education in. our district is dismissal. ~hat _does this do to the quality of. educa· t1on m the Capistrano Unified School District? THE PUBLIC BAS a right to know the facts 10 Mr. Johannsen's case. It is our money. These are our children. ~dministrators are public servants with a direct responsibility to the community. We therefore are requesting that th• board of trustees at ill meeting on Mon. day, .June 5, present publicly all the fatU relatmg to the dismissal of fl.1r. Johannsen. For this purpose we are ask· Ing that tbJs subject be placed on the agenda as a "priority item" to be acted upon within the first hour of the June S meeting. Further, we are requesting that our spokesmen be ' permitted to address the board. WILLlAM L. ROBERTSON PHYilLlS J. ROBERTSON O~COAaT DAILY PILOT Robert N. Wrtd, PMblilhcr Thomai Ktetril, Editor Albert W. Batta: E~itorial Page .Cdiktr 1'be1 OO!tori&l Jll.ll:fl or UM! Daf17 Pilot •ttks to Jnfmn end •tlmu· late. radm by Pl"'ltntinc thlt new1119pcr'1 OQjnlol"dl a.nd cam· me~Wy on tO@I~ .ot Interest tnd algNra.n~. bi provldlnf a forum for the txpresdon ot our .....,.. nplnlons, and by prtSmllQi the dJ.\ltne vtewpol"'' at tntornw:is ob-Af'rlrn and IPOitt'llMI ~ toplai: of the day • Friday, May 2B, 1972 J• Ardllbald Calboua, AmbaHaclor jo 'l'Ubla, er.a.. Fruchcaa pluai•• retlremmt t• ~tral• -"The foreign ..,.,loo --lfl4 c:orpuacles going: yoo .., liiw Md alei. Thue .,.. -Joncul,.. to furn, ..., places and poo. pie ... Ulldmtlnd." . --------·----~-_______ _, 8-111 JW pubil!fMd • le!ler from Paul Weotbroot coocra~ ~ -_,,, ~ ....... IUlltr~" .. • I l • ' l i I I -' l ,. .. " . ,•• , • • I ! I l I • I L Angela Davis Case in Reces~; I Final Arguments Next Week · SAN JOSE (UPI) -Angola D a v I 1 • murder-k.idnap-con- spiracy l:r;.J was in recess to- day while at torneys for both sides prepared ror next week's final argu menl.a to the ell- white jury. Judie RIC!uµ-d E. Amason mel wllh. ~.rense and p...,,. ecution attomef!;' ~ his ohamben Tb-•Y to lay the groundworlrforU!raoS!ng orocedures. i.:tl!s Davis' deteme team rested its case Wednesday after ooly three days of testimony by 11 witnesaes. The prosecutor, Albert W. Harris Jr., presented 95 witnesses and 1.CXI piect!$ of evidence in weaving a circumstantial case lo support charges that the If You Knew What We Know About RICOH SINGLEX TLS... • •.. then you'd k1w1v tvhat a great buy this ca1ne ra is. ltlCOM SlfrfGLEX A ~ prked l'l"'h q,..Uly "'"""SLR. Pld.ed Wlll'I INlur•1. 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Offers COY· t r•ge from 27 d•9re•1 to 11 d egre11 with I .I lo l.I time1 th, 111e9nific1tion of • norm•I SOm1n len1, Perfect for the !revel- er 111 1 light, ee1y.fo-c1rry, ea1y·lo·u1e, all p 11rpo1t tel.photo lens. ~·-OTHER ZOOM LENS SPECIAL~~ The ioom i1 more th•n i111t 1 "bi g of 11n111," it c1n b1 • .. beg of tric•1", loo. • Of cour1e, the "bag of l1n111" a1pect of !he Zoom m.8kl~ 11 very useful. You 11n lr•me the 1hot ex1clly Il l you want 11 w1th- oul ch1n9in9 the cem1r1 po1ilien. 45-135 F3.5 55-135 FJ.5 80-200 F3.5 90-230 F4.5 70-235 F4.5 IEG. Jlf.fS IEG. 2l7.50 ltECi. 26•.•s IEG. 244.fS •EG. 24t.t5 239" 188'0 209" 177'0 198" Soligor Automatic Prime Lens Specials Soligor eutom•tic lensas efford the serious photogr1pher • r•r• opportunity to rea li ze the full potential of his. C•mer•.• wh ile enebf. ing him to seve substentielly on the cost of fine optics. 21 28 mm mm F3.8 F2.8 F2.8 mm F2.8 F3.5 F3.5 • mm mm 35 mm 135 135 200 300 mm F5.5 REG. 204.95 136.50 , REG. 129.95 REG. '9.'5 REG. 112.50 REG. 89.95 REG. 139.95 83.95 . 74.95 72.50 57.50 84.95 REG. 144.95 112.50 SOllGOR GUARANTff An Soligor la ns•s •r• fu ll y guerenteed for • period of +hr•• yeers from d•t• of purehe1e. S.. Demon1tr1tion in our Store S.t., Mey 27 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• i CAI"''S CAMERAS i : 1770 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA : PHONE 646.9383 e . : ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 'V11to11chables' Sen . Mervyn Dymally (D·Los Angeles) has in· trod uced a bil l to close a series or tax loop- holes for businessmen and the \Vealthy, saying it's t ime jto tax the un· touchables.' No-fault Law Clears Asse1nbly SACRAh1ENTO (API -A no-fault auto insurance la\1' guaranteeing a 15 percent rate reduction has cleai·ed the . Callfornia As~embl.v on a 47·19 bipartisan \•ote. The vole Thursday ~ent the bill to the Senate, which has six no-rault measures awaiting cotnrtr.ittee action. Twe_nty-two Republicans and 2f) Democrats voted for the proposal by Assembly Jack Fenton. a Montebe ll o Democrat. There 1vere 9 Repub licans and 10 Democrats opposing it. The bill would require in- surance companies lo pa y a n 0 -r a u 11 policyholder for damages rega rdless of who was al fault in an accident. C.Ourt suits would be prO- hibited unl~s there was more than $1 ,000 in me d ica l damages. Supporters -Including the lrysurance Industry -say no- fa utt policies 1vould help .unclog overcrowded courts and speed settlement o ( claims. Opponents -including trial Ja1vyers -claim no-fault policies would boost rates and deny citizens the right to sue tor damages. "Jf there is an undue profit by the insurance companies, then all of us will come back and rectiry the matter," Fen· ton said in noor debate. He said "we do not expect a drastic reduction in premiums from this bill," but he called it . a ste p in the right direction . Assemb lyman John A-filler (0-0akland ), called the bill tbe biggest "boondoggle" he has seen in the six years he has been at the Capitol. 6000 sq. ft. bag reg.· $3.47 ea. /(O~ .2\o\$588 •Balanced Food Formula •'1'roress1onal Grade • Uniform Growth •Easy To ApplJ Pellet• • f'rldaf, Mq 26, 1CJ72 DAILY Pilat' 'f Water Employes Cherry Pi~kin' Season Here BEAUMONT (AP1 -Tbt cherry-picking season h a s opened bi this hamlet in Rlverslde COUnty's Olerry Valley ?i1any ol the orchards Jn the area are open to buyers wr.. wish to pick their own a'OJJt growers said. Sign Agreement SACRAMENTO (AP) Striking employes or the State Water Project signed an agreement early this morning .t~t they would retum to their jobs. i oday whJJe continuing negotiations on a Reagan ad. ministration wage offer, a .stat~ orricjal said. Richard Winn of the State Water Resoun:es Department said deparl~nt d i r e c t o r William Giane lli and Walter Taylor, general manager of the striking employes• group, agreed workers wouldn't be punished for the walkout that Death Jump 'Induced' Police Say begin Moy :12. The two oHl<iall did agrte that the workers would be docked pay for Jhe dayo tbey were not at work, however, WiM said. Ken Cross. a spokesman at C81ifornla State E m p I o y e s AssoclatJon headquarters, saJd the CSEA leadership decided the 11amnesty agreement was impetus to return to work ." C r oss adde~ t h at preliminary results of a strike vote ta ken by CSEA employes showed the majority o f employes were in favor of returning to v.·ork, and the leadership wa., aware or this when it considered whether to accept terms or the amnesty agreement. WIM emphasized that final settlement or the stri~e had not been reached and that ''talks are still conlinuing." The Cali fornia S t a t e Employees' Association said The world's finest Bourbon since 171);' SAN DIEGO fAPJ -An the 1Yritten offer was for in. uncrnployed welder living in a creases of upt o 12.5 percent. $35.000 home near Long Beach The str ike began Monday with w:is jailed arte r his wife ap-demands for raises fro1n 21 to parently plunged to her death 26 percenl. from the Coronado-San Diego The employes say they are Ba." Bridge. that far behind the pay of lt was the first kllQWn death persons doing similar wo rk in Cal from the 240-foot high other public and private proj- bridge,, which was opened in etcs. Gov. Reagan adm its 1970. there is an inequality, but 9' rROOF KHH ut:MV SIRAIGHT BOV RBOH WHISlllY DI SlllltO ANO llOlltlO IV TN[ J.lM[S ll BEAM OISTILUHG CO., ClUIMOIH, I L,lil, KINIVCKY The body of Jewel Hu tch-maintains that no raise can be lngs, 51 . was found Wed nes-granted until the legislature day floating in San Diego Ja~p~pro~ves~~a ~bu=d=g=e=t ~c=on=t•=i=ni=n~g'.:::~~~=~=~~=====~~======:: Bay. Police arrested J ames 1_ the money. Albert Hutchin.gs. 50, early P'•kt Po•Uk11 ,.d~trH1e"''"'' 1'hursday and booked him for investigation of murder. Police detective inspector Michael Sgobba said it ap- peared Mrs. Hutchings had been "induced to jump" from the bridge connecting San Diego and Coro nado. The couple's chil dren in- clude Gary, 22, a son of Mrs. Hutchings by a previous mar- riage; Rusty, 13. and a daughter. ·Dawn, 12. Hutchings lost his job as a welder two week.~ ago, police Capt. Hugh French said. Police Hold Bo y friend 111 Murder SAN DIEGO IAP! -The rormer bo vrriend of a young La Jolla ·...,·rn11a11 was being held in coun ty jail today for investigation of murder in the .stabbing death of the woman's 63-vear-old mother. The body of Madeleine C. Cramer \Va~ found jn her bedroom Tuesday a ft er authorities extinguished a fire y.·hich destroyed the one-story frame house she rented. The corooer's office later reported Mrs. Cramer died of two stab wounds in the abdomen before the blaze started. Police arrested Vernon Cleo Walton Jr. Wed n es d a y , describing him as a 21-year· old self-employed gardener . They .said r.-trs. Cramer's 21- year-0ld daughter. Mary, told them she had dated Walton for 21.-: years but had broken up with him last Oct. JJ. Pelleted Lawn Food SALE! . . . . . . ... PILLITID LAWN FOOD '. 2H~ The Sacred Mosquitoes of California Who wants to bring back typhoid? Or malaria ? Or encephalitis? Only people who love mosquitoes. The sponsors of Proposition No. g ·on·the JUrie·s ballot must Jove mosquitoes-also termites, cockroaches· and sirv8ifi'sh.'88cause Propo- sition No. 9 makes il legal the use or possession of a long list of chemi· cals, including the only effective pesticides for controlling various pests. They mu• hate bees, though. Because the substitute pesticides that could still be used, though far less etfective for many purposes, are death on bees. They're also dangerous to humans.and .pets. If Proposition No. 9 passed, you could be arrasted.for having on your premises a can of insect spray you'd purchased.some time ago if it'happened to contain one of a long list of.s,uddenly illegal.ingredients. A university scientist could be arr~~t~4 for experimenting with any of these banned chemicals in a laboratory research project. What kind of sense does all this make? Like most things about Proposition No. 9. it doesn't make any sense at all. It doesn't make sense to risk the resurgence of epidemic d iseases that have been kept in control for so many years that most of us have virtu21lly forgotten they eYer existed. · It doesn't make sense to risk the destr.u~tion of forests and agri· cultural crops. . ... It doesn't make sense to prohibit scient!~ts ~r.O,rT) exp~rJrnenting to develop new knowledge ln the field of pest control.- It doesn't make sense to forbid the use of the only known effective means of protecting your house from termite infestation • Proposition No. 9 is senseless-and very dangerou s • There's good Jn most religions, and harm in some. The protecte d, "'sacred cows" of Indio have contributed to that country's object pov· erty lor centuries. It would be the heigMo_f folly to yield to lhe lanatlcs who, in their zeaf for a new ''religion," would inflict on all of us 1he "sacred mosquttoes" of California! Vote NO on ProposHlon No. 9 n....,. too many buga In ltl CAUFDRlllllS ABlllSTTHE POLLUTION llllTlllM 870 Market S!rle~ San Francisco, CA 94102 1127 Wlllhlre Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90017 Olt. Eltlll ltl. ltlRAK, ChlllCfl/or•Emtrilut, Un/Ye11ity ot Catff.,,,f•, Ot•lt Co-Chslrm1n 8 DAJLY PlLOT ears Sears Wa ter Softener s 6PM s133 tolOPM - Fully aulomalic water sortencr has 6 -cycle valve. #34 86 Vac With Attachments S24.515 C&nlater vac with com· ho floor, dusting brush. FREE BALLOONS See Srae's The Clown ! -HE AVY DUTY ~DIOR Oil 39¢ Qt. Can Heavy Duty Motor Oil '"" 5 Qt $} to 18 PM Ca~ ~feets or e:i:cttds all new car manufacturer'a w1.r· ranty requirements. CCT '40! Was $89.99 Cassette Stereo IPM tolOPM 4999 Plays st.Preo cassette-!. R@- cords and ptay1 back manu- ally. ,5073 2 Cubic Ft. Decorative Bark E xcellent fo r Landscaping Medium size bag ......... 88 ¢ Mexican Pottery Sale Assorted sizes and colors. Factory seconds. CUT $20 to $90! Refrigerators and Freezers Slightly Damaged, Scratched, As Is ~1~!#; ?"·?°<!",)... Cabinet Hardware Were 29c to $4.98 Cabin Tent ,:,:~M 10 ¢ •uh .. ,, 4997 lo 10 PM Hinges, knOOt. chain pulls, replacement cylinder for nite locks and mu ch more. S79.!n, 9:cl2-ft. lent ;;Jeeps a fam lly of 8. Stakes included. . . ·-·-. • •• !• I HOUR ONLY '• SPECIALS 6to7PM S99.99 Paint Sprayer , , •••• , • , .•• 74.88 '8.99 Sleeping Bag • , .•. , .•• , , , , , . 4.97 Shrinks in small, medium large ••••• 4.88 Sll.98 Door !\1irror •. _ ......••.••• 5.88 $3 .99. 126 Color Film, 12 exp. processing 2.97 Flattering Seamless Bra • , • , • , •.. J.99 St.19, 24.x45-inc h Rug ••••••••• 2 for 1.99 Sl.19, 19x33-i nch Rug •••.•...•. 2 for 99c i\len ·s Short Slet\t' Shirts, S-~1 only .. 5Dc &t en's Flare Jeans ....... _ ..•. 2 for $3 Cl utches, French Purses, Billfolds •••• 88e Boy's Short Slee,·e S"eat Shirls .••••• $1 7 to 8 PM SZ.99 Knee Stripe Panty Hose ...• 3 for $1 $5:99'1\len'.s Reversib le S\\i m\.l'ear ••. , 3.97 Bikinis and Briefs -.. _ ........• 5 for 99c t4 .99 to $9.99 \\'omen's Purses fSho' Dept.) $2 19c lo $2.98 yd. Remnants •• ,,.,. JC' JU!:r inch 1oy's Cotton Cre\v Socks •••.••. 3 prs. iic \"all-to-\\'a ll Bathroom Carpeting .......•..•. 10,...o to 50"'" OFF Rt1ul~r Low Prices ·3. 79, 35 1\·f~t Slide Film, Processi ng .. 2.97 ~lbs. $1.98 Brid,R"e i\1ix, Dipp ed Peanuts, ~1alt Ball s a nd Chocolate Raisins 2 lb . 1.49 .6oy'1 Perma-Press · Shon Sleeve Shirt s -.•........ , ......... 4 for $5 112.17-$17.'9 J.,ealher Shoes with Rubber heel, ,\1e.a 's Sizes 7~·12 ...... w for •1z or fli.f7 pr. 8to9PM $64.95 Se~·ing J\1achine ••••••••.. $44 $9.49 ~tedici ne Cabinet •••.•••••. , . 6. 75 $17.99 Spin Casting Rbd ...••••• , • 3.97 $5.99 Pulsator La\\'n Sprinkler .•••• 2.88 Men's Tie Bars, Tie Tacks , more ••. , SOc $6.99 Men's, Big Boys' J oggers •.• 2 for SJ Sil Student Knit Slacks, sizes 25·32 ..•• 6.97 \\'ood Dttoralor Mirror Frame .•••. 5.88 Bath To\\·els .....•... _ ..•.•.• 2 for 9i<" Separately $8.02 Screwdriver Set , •.. 3.88 $2.60 Light Bulbs assorted sizes .••• , • 88c Boy·s Cotton Knit Shirts, Sizes 8·12 .• , 77c 9to10PM Boy's Walking Shorts1 Sizes 8-12 •••• 2 fo r $3 \\rtnnie the Pooh e Sporls'\\'ear ••••• ~ 97c Boys' Short Sleeve Shirts 6-12 •••••• ·: 97e Women's Fashion Boots •.•••••••• 4.97 $2.49 S\\·ealshirts in S-M· Only. , • , •• , 97¢ \\'omen's Nylon Tricot Gowns •••• 2 for $S Candle Clearance .••• 2 for the Price of 1 Kodak 126 Film -IZ exp . prints ••••• nt $.19.95, !Ox30-lt. Swimmin& Pool • , • 29.9> Assorted Children's Shoes • , , • , • , , , ! !or $3 9-ln . Floor Tile, grty only •••• , • le each USED TIRE S s9 to L'~ tires In assorted sizes. \\-111te-w1.lls and blackwal!s. Wall paper Sale 2 5 o/o ~:,, ~w ""'" Bolh contemporary and tra· cl1tional designs. Popular colors. ~IODEL ITE\l 'i''AS C\lT ~OV.' •1111 14.~ C1. f l. ~idr h1' ""' IT.I C1. F'I. Sidr Rf'fri1f'r1t11r m .ts .... ...... Rrfriarrator "'·" 5!14! I' I ru. FL Sid' b_1· C5tl IS.I Cr.Ft. ~icl, Rf'rrl.c,.ratnr 4!4.H ... Jit.U Rrfri1erator nt.a l lUO I•.! Cu. Fa. Rtlril -r.J11 ll.I Ca. fl. f'ratnr lrrm1krr 43,.tS ... l!9.U Rrfri1tr11or !59.95 11 :te 1;.1 Cu. f'I. R,fri1-"'" U.•C•. f"1 . tr~tnr lr .. makrr 399.95 "' 141.U Rrlrifrrallll'" %39.15 513:0 l.i.1 1'11. fl. 510311 Ztt.5S drli1Sldt Rrfri1•rator :JH,3S ... !69.81 Rrfrtcrr1tor 1U,t5 12;a4 l~.1 Cu. Ft. ~!!3 II.I Cu. Ft . l·p-Rrlri1rr1tor l!M.81 135 :5~.~~ rl1bt Fr,tzer ?!I.IS Cut '30to -~169! Washers and Dryers Slightly Damaged, Scratched, As Is )IODEL ITE.\f "'AS W T :\0 '11 :?!654 Au10 """ G1s Lad~· K,amor' \.1"1shrr "' ... "' ... "' "' :st.9~ Jt5.95 !It. \\"adwr/Drytr $651.95 11a.11 17911 Poriabt, T.!&M G1s \.1"1shrr :21.» SJ0.9S '"· Dl'}rr ZZ4.ti ..... &9lil Electric '"" Kfamlll'"t Dryer li9.9S ...... J It. \.1"11hrr Jtt.ff .. 60604 Eltttrlc ""' C"rll D11·tr, Dr)·fr IU .9S M.i95 1J9. Coppennat ...... "'·" "'" Electric D~·tr "'" Aaln. 149.IS "'·" \\"11btr, i C)·clf lit.JS ...... ""' Electric °"" '''" Portable EIK'trlc %29.H U0.95 °"" 17911 P11rt1blt 149.95 "'·" '"'' W11htr, ! Spttd Gu ?29.t5 '30.95 Dr)tf 211.tS ...... E!ASI Eltctrlc Oryrr, ?191M Wrl11klfGt1•rd 1'9.95 ...... 1116( Lady Ke11more ~·aibtr' lU.11· 20.R 229.11 Iff.U ~t.11 :09.11 "'· In. !6'. ](9, Jll, !19. "'· 11,_ "'· 17t. 159. Eltt. l>rytr, Demo 21151 A11111 W1d11rr, ...... 11\'IO 4'9.90 !PM 2999 to 10 PM ~·· drill: motor develops 3~ HP; 100% ball and nttdle btarinp. Rever· Sible. 1,i-in. Drill Kit IPM to 10 PM 12aa 117.99 kit includes cue. drill bits, paint mixer. '"°"'· H1rd•are Dtpt. Ask About Sears Convenient Credit P lans II Cycle "'·" ...... !JSSt .,ato \.1'1sller. Aolo. Pre Sot.Ji: ZISS. Aul& W11her, IM.15 "'-'' \'ariflr:ir A1itat11r "'·" US.'5 $2.39 Movie Film IPM le It PM Super I movie film. Quy now. ave! Almond Roca * •PM to llPM t.or. eanlsltt. Very good tastin1. "'· "'· "'· Sears Costa Mesa 3333 Bristol St. Phon·e 540-3333 PARK FREE j DAil Y PllOr 0 ears See Srae's The Clown! I Sii v1; .12c! 99~ Pkg. Dish Cloths • I Cl/1' 50%! Sears Swimwear Values we .. 111·"9 $7 $}0 Misses' Muu-Muu's In Lively Prints I P.M.·lOP.M. - Wide arTar of colon and ~les. In misses and women's meS. OP.M.-JOP.M. 497 Sportswear Dept. Long style muu, muu'• in a wide choice of prints. S.,M.,L. and XL. LLa1erie Dept. SA JIE '3 ! Reg. $7 Women's Shawls IP.M..-llP.M. 3 97 Acrylic shawls Jn lively colors and black. Low priced now at Sears! ACftaOry Dept. SA VE '2! Girl's $3.99 Nylon Jacket SP.M.·ltP.M. } 97 Girls' hooded nylon surfer style jacket in colors. Sizes 7·1l. •Clrls' Wear Dept. SA VE '2-'4! Sears $2.98-$5 Sunglasses C P.M.-10 P.M. 99 C o.ly! Choose from a wide selection or ladies sunglasses with wide frames and men's with hand· n1ade wire fram es. Jewelry Dtpt. CV1' 82c-'2! Boy 's Sport Shirts WereSl.7'-Si.99 97c i P .M.-11 P.M. Penna-Prest shirts with short sleeves. Sires 3-6X. Many pat· terns, colors. J11Jants'.ChiJdre11's Dept. CUT'l! Were$1.79 Clingalon Hose Sears Soft Capri Girdle •P.M.-IOP.M. 3 ~I tntra sheer hose in ha.re beige, sunset, more. Many sizes to choose, Hosieiy DtpL •P.>L·lDP.M. 499 823 nylon, 187., spande:s: 1tlrd1e in colors and whi te. One size fits all. Bn-Glrdle Dtpt. IP.lf.·llP.!\f, 57 c 1003 cotton dishcloths in packages or 8, Colorfast. Domestic Dept. Carpeting Buy! Gel 5th. Yd. FREE Choose 4 yds. of carpeting in any style or fabric . including kitchen. indoor-outdoor at Sears regula r low price and 'Gef The 5th. Yd. FREE Were $1.50 to $5 Men's Fashion Ties IP.M..!OP.M.1o,~1 Your choice of stripes, and patterns. Under ltandard width. Meu' Furnishing Dfpl. Were 99¢ to $1. 79 Men's Underwear CP.M.-llP.M. 3 ~r} Choose from T .shirts or briefs in broken sizes. Stock up now at Sears! Me•'• fitntlsbln1 Dtpt. t S4 VE •2.:; $74.95 Occasional Chair . CUT39r-'2! Lace-Trimmings w,.-... 10c ti P,M.·lOP.M. Yd. 1/a·in. to 3-in. wide trims and laces. Some rufflings and me- talics. Low priced! Notioa Dept. Sears SA VE 82c ! $1.59 Terry Cloth Buys CP.M.-lOP.M. 7 7v~. Cotton terry cloth for many uses. In white only. 45-Jn. widths. Yamgdlept. Cut $61 Men's Casual Slacks I P.M.·11 P .M. Wenlll 497 ''" Regular and fl are _ leg style In Penna- Prst fabrics. Mens' slza.. Mtu'Flnhblqo.,L Costa Mesa S.4 VE 69%! $4.97 Tennis Shoe Buys fiP.M.·llP.M. 2 Pn. for s3 or$1.T1Pr, Your choice of women's- children's tennis shoes in many colors. Broken sizes. CUT ~.so-'70! Men's Suit Buys I P.M.-11 P.~t. Sbo<llept. .2 lor 8 100 Your choict o( 1 aod 1 button ~Lyles in many fab- rics. Some wJth 1 pants. Me•'• Dnss Wear ti P.M.·ID P.~f. 49ss Handsome velvet de- corator chairs tn many colon to choose from. Fonlture Otpt. SAVE*32.95! Contemporary Style Sofa-Sleeper Regular $199.9S flandsome modern sofa opens into a full-size bed with. 220-coil inner~ sr.ring mattress. Vectra <Olefin fiber). Reversible cushions. 6P.:M.-11P.M. Sears Corner Studio Group Low Priced! SAVE$40! . CP.M •• ltP.M. Two contemporary 3-m. lounges with r.olyurethane foam mattress•• J 4788 and !oundatioos. Foam filled bol- sters. Sii VE '22! $19 Mallress Sets I P.M. $ 5 ""! -11 P.M. 4 ate S4 VE '93! Deluxe $279.95 Sleep Set IP.M.·llP.M.$186 lhnl!raprlnJt or serdOlillm sleep seu ln kln11be. Multi· colortd, Also Olbtr sizes al 11le pricff. Fvnlt•R Dtpt. Modern Double Studio Lounge Regular $119.95 Reversible seat cushion. Black vinyl IP.M.·JGP.?it. and houndstooth check color com· 79ss bination. Makes 2 single beds or 1 double bed. Ball-ty casters. I..~~' Furniture Otpt. 1' 1'' '·. . ... . . . ' "'"'' .,.. ..,__,\ ' CUT •22 ! Were $79 Bed Ca nopy IP.M.·llP.M.$ 5 7 ' While (N!fl<'h provincial 1t1llftJ. 1'"ull or lwin si.11!1. Matctlin1 pieces al reductd prlcn . • S I f'l;,' 'Ill! $29.95 Maple Rocker IP.M.·llP.M.19ss SplNlle back rocker In Sa~ maple flnQh, Curvtd '""'· 1rp . 3333 Bristol St. Phone 540-3333 PARK FREE • I I ff UAJLY PJLOT For The Recor d A BIG KAME SINCE t925 JJ.J rn11~f OOJl11 Laws on Obtaining Evidence 'Obsolete' Dissolutions Of Ma f'r lage ARTRUll R. VINSEL Of "" Dlltr "11•1 11111 violations of the C01111titutional rlghta of ci1izens by removing ANAHEIM _ A statute the incentive to disregard enected 17 years ago lo pro-lhese rights," he continued. tect cilll.ens from Wegal police Justice Gardner added lt p r 0 c e d u res in evJ-does not serve to punish the dence -accidental or in· offending lawman. tenUonat-b obMlete: and "He as an individual suffers need s overhaul, California no sanction except the fruatra- lawmen were warned Wed· tion or seeing a guilty man go nesday. free because he, the officer, Weare CARPEi AND DBAPERYSpecialists and competitive too! See us today! being," Justice Gardner noc.d. ~ QUALITY He also Mkl it ii Uterally on B'C'('IT SERVI Us way out, but won't be gone We Jlacli: You tJp with tb [irJ a•• "~ION lot iiome time. ~.a "Now I'm sailing In to 1438 SO. MAIN at EDJNGER •SANTA ANA . PHONE 547.3993 l1tttf' .. M•I' • Vtft91'1•1• Vldorl1 M Incl oa.r,11d L. A.r1ll1N1, Htltn VttOfllCt I nd Joel CM1 C•~lt.111, l"t lrlclt M1rl1 '"' litv!Hlrl ·-· •1rMS, MN W, ll'ld 11: .... tll'I" Officers one of the nice thin&s a bout uncharted waters, which l.9 1:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~; growlng old," Justice Gardner quipped. ....... ,,, Lindi l!lltll •lld Jt"'4• "So while drtlting Into senHily, I'll get out my crystal ball, crack open the fortune cookies, dwt off the Ouija Boa rd and make a few "rftlM HOl!tton. Cl-tht tnd Ht nrv J""'t San.lo Ptlrld.I I. tncl "-Id l , ''"'IHI. llllll'lt i.u. '"" "'"""'"" w, Mltdlell, Mtrll C. tlld Mtrltyn (, Alldt tlOll, l.elt t nd JOllll Fourth District Court of Ap-made a mirtale," Justice peals Justice Robert L . Gardner continued. Ofr'ltl. ,,,..rlflt JtM 11'111 l(yrl Keep Guns In Purses Gardner challenged delegates "Or. he added. "to borTow a to the Peace Officers' Assoc ia· classic statement from Justice lion convention in Anaheim to Cardozo, 'the c o n s t a b I e prophecle!." l'rMtrkk ~ Ct rCll J. tNI lloblM M. Stiel. Mt rltM l'tlrlt lt 11111 O ri come up with s o m e blundered.• " The essence of hi5 prediction is that until the State Supreme Court 'a curTent membership changes, the restrictive rule remain in eUect, unJeas the U.S. Supreme Court acts first. '"-Jorin..... l"tlrl<lt Gtl'll tlld l'Yttflt .tltematlvu:. ''Society suffers the sanc-l t•&I' l"uuo. Fr111Cl1 T • ....i Ttrry l. C<trk. P1991' l!Ol!h t nd R-11 Et rl Ttsc:er-. Yoltf'Mll I ncl St lYt dor Grtnd, Vt rnon HH!rY, Jr. tnd thtr"" The colorful Corona del P.1ar tion," he added, because the ANAHEIM -C4n a woman jurist charged the st>ealled criminal is out. Exclusionary Rule now crip--ketp a gun, a peir of pies the court system • Justice Gardner ooted he handcuffs and a polJet badge hampers police work and is and many olhf1' judges. along in her purse and still be detrimental to the public with lawmen and the general ~" l ltckfo<'d, Htrrr Todd ""' WlnllrN "This is the suggestion I make to this group, represen- llng the leadership of state law enforcement-come up wlth some alternative," said Justice Gardner. '"" Bortmt'l'll, Otl'lltl F. tnd Ptlrlaht M. Sttt!Dn, Mt,.,. l . tllCI Tl\aod0tl It. MYCltr, Jtc-HM M, tM K9'1ntll'I 0, Wttladl, Merit Ind !'tut, Ike J-pfi Ptul llUIHt, RtYmond trlll Ctrel (, llrown. Phyll1 Y. tP'ld Mtrlon 0, E111111, ltob9rl E. tlld Mtrlorlt l'. •-· M!cMllt Joa1111t '""' Robert G1rVl'f SchoH!11, El1l111 M1rl1 1nd C1r1t1on JunJor k f-lr, Cl1udln1 E. Ind 0.M\I Mlch1el \ller1, H1rold C1nn1n llld 11111111 A. Wltl1rd, JI.... Purcell •lld ' WJll>Yt' ¥1ncent FIU , N1ncr J. Ind GI.., E. A.111-. Alllfl I . ar.d Ykkl JO 5-e11, Nancw A. 11111 ~rt L. Kahn. ll'hU1ht -Ttrnr Dor1111 llllll'NI MIJ t leroodJ, \lldnrt' June 1ftd GwH ,_ G1ll1Y, E11htr OPhet!1 11111 0 1911 Aut111! II""'~ GiriT11ln II. Ind J_,,. I . s"''"'· Et!MI C1r10n1 Ind 11111\Md •w~ 1111", V11t F. 1nd M1rth1 L. Peuur, "•ltclll1 C. and W1ll1r Ill. ,...,.._, Jl'""'ll Ill. 1Dd J1ftlct N, 0Uebr1I, L-1rdo lr.d Anlonlt M, E111on, Robtrt II!:. 111d Teel. IC. Stnioale'f, .... end WllU1"' H. l oehnl<t, Htllll Otto Ind Miidred Joo~ne H1rv1Y, Arl9111 Ind G1rv Fr1ricl1 Fotltr, Jerry Cll 'f 111<1 Aiko lllotl l onln, Wllll1"' JGS<'!>h and Carol LI "" Wllll1klf', Mlrlerl9 111111 •net 'T1rrJ C1rrolt Osl!J11, f'lldlko •nd, l"r111C1• B111h, p:,..llUI G. l l'lf 1111 L1n9C1on, John J. ll'ld Anni MMle Sltld, M1rlt E, Ind G-H J. WU01m1, IM• D. Incl LIUl1n lrlnk, J11M$ I!. lf'ICI "'''' loll Wllfflotk, Vlrvln!a A, 1M l1nl1mln L. Gtort1, lllel11rd H. 11'1d Judlll'I E. c""1''' c1rol'1'1 Jore• 1nd Wu111 """" Clll-11, M1rl-M. Ind lllW E11n n1 S.U1burv, Sll1H1 M1rl1 100 lllobflrl lr\1'1 C1rmelo, Alblrt A. 1fld Rlchll J. kllftft, V1lorl1 Ind Phlllll Ill , Hd>Dt, Ml<hltl D11n Ind ¥lolt rt1 0. Cheun1rd, Mlc11111 Leon end J1nl(1 J11n Brodlm 1n, !.,grid Ind L""lfd W. 1!11l1rld Ml'f lt Nt llOll, Rootr Kent 11'11 su ... n MlrY l"rlnll, M1rll'fn incl 01<~ Albtrl .. .i1run, P1lrkl1 A11111nd Aoblrt W. Fott1r, Minni• Urllh1 11111 Alber! AndY GMvl1, Sindy LH Ind £ctw1ri;I HOlh "-llthYr>er. Llfl'Y LYlln 11111 M.11111111 D1tm1n. N111CY J. •nd 0u .... k. $mll1y, Chl<'I" Ill. Sr. Incl l llllln l(allllf~ l llNOn. J001n Fr1ncu INMI Gt-on• J1m11 C9111nl. N1ncv J1111 111d S1mu11 M. Mwlohall, John L 11'11 M.lor11 L. Wolllllblr91r, Ell11bllh f, 1nd lllot« H. I c,..o,o, D1rl1 J 1111 11'4 Ch1rtn '"-1 Colllfll. LtnOl'I A. 1fld J11'N1 E. l(un1, Wltll1m Howard Ind Slllrlty ""' POlfl""'• li"1ll'ler L1n1 11111 1Cenn1th Wlldtr Slur!%. l"rtdttl<k M. 111d Miry L ()llOll, Holen M. Ind OIONll M. Vlll1t1111, 111111 M1rlerl1 1nd J11u1 kenn'f, J1rom1 M. 11'1d Ell11blll'I w. l"tlrlltoll'llt, S/111'911 Ind H-1rd T. wooorom1, Crnlhll Ind H'"'' L. MOii• MORI B11t.rM Mey ti Ad1m1, Mlt1111I JoMp/I I nd l lll r'l'I .. , Fr~ll. ll:oullnd M. 1fld WIU P:. Frtndl $tlclll1m, Rlcll1rd P:. 1/ICI HIVI L. Dlldrld;, JOHllll ,.1111 I nd Glr1ldl111 J1c<1ueU111 Cllunch, L1rry Ind Slllrlly Aflll C1111WT11n, G1r1lcl W. 1nd Gwlndotrn C. Budcl11, B-1 11111 1nd Vtrfllfl G. Doml"ll'M:I, ArmlN 11'11 ldw1rd G1or111, k tlY J1111 Ind lll'fmotld Ger1ld E:hrwm, Mirr J1111 ind Herbert B1rn.rd GOOCl~ll. Fr1ncl1 J, Incl Dorl1 M. Kltltr, Jo1nn1 and John W. whose constilutional righls it is public. suspect society now feminine? pays too deafly for its doubtful y be of Jntended to protect. ou t, llY a group "In its present fonn , the benefits derived. California po Ii c e worn e n rule applies to p h y 8 i ca 1 He said the court system who've jwit spent four days in evidence seized in a con· itself is suffering from lack 0£ conference at the Di.meyland aUtutiooally illegal search.'' public faith, support and JU3tice Gardner observed. esteem as a result. Hotel on that very topic. "I have been a J·udge for 3' He noted it covers a broad " "I believe a wo m a n years and never during that area, including wiretaps, con- polktman can do her job very fesslon.s give:n without proper time have the courts been \o\'ell by · rtmafninf totalJy explanation of constitutional more lacking in public respect feminine," said Officer M&J:. rights, a coerced confession or than at the present,'' Justice police observatk>rui made after Gardner charged. ine Mcydn of La Vern e . 1 . He said the legal pro-an lllega detention. "Baalcally, police work bu "Proponents of the rule pr~ re s s ion -jud ge .!I in betn a man'• world but they fesr it ii calculated to deter particular-are swerving away are findine places where 1 from blind acceptance of the Exclusionary Rule when used woman can do a better Job," in defense motions at any Some police departments Villa P ark stage of court procedure. are beghmiqi: to put women in "It has led to a glut of cases .!l(juad cart because they, are tn the courts because of a finding that the P""nce of. Con tract multiplicity or challenges t• woman at 1 fa m i I y methods by which evidence dbturbance can be • tr an· . has b e e n ob tained ... , " quilizer. Assigned Justice Gardner continued. "THE PRESENCE of a He said he and Presiding "For now, 94 is said of a shoc king ph ysiological ex- perience to which s o m e v.·omen are subjected." he ad· ded drolly: ''relax and enjoy it. " Justice Gardner closed what was the final addreiis of the lawmen's convention by telling them ~ State Legislature wiU be interested in reviewing any of their requested sug. gestions. Judge Lae, Wife Agree To Divorce wom.n can ha-a calml~tf· Harbor Judicial District Court •• VILLA PARK -A $540,259 J d E JI W o · k SANTA ANA -An Orange f.J ," .. Ai..1 ~-ie " e" u ge vere . 1c ey S .,..\ ..-.... -JW'' contract for development of th 17 Id tat t County uperior Court judge's Hunt.tr, a letec:Uve wlth the the first phase of Orange agree 50e -yeart-o f s urtu ,e marriage has been dissolved Azusa Police Deparlment and County's Villa Park Dam causcsba kl percen ° co 8 Jess than an hour after his the "'.. pr .. l•--t of the 1 k case c ogs. ua1 reglona Par has been award· J d o· k h t Id wife filed di vorce papers Wom.n P •• c e O!f'··rs 1 1 u ge 1c ey as o "-"!: ed to C.V. Ho der nc. and Gardner half his own court cit ing "irreconcila ble dif. AMocietion of California. Raven Construction Inc. of time is spent polJcing the feren ces." Officer McLain llid, "When Bellflower. police under the old Ex-Judge Kenneth E. Lae a man is flgbtlnc with his wife The 2,300-acre park which clusionary Rule. waived statutony time ior the and a polictwoman appean he adjoins Irvine Park and \•;ill "The basis for the rule is he aring of the petition fil ed wiU be quiet because he be consolidated with the older considered by many to be no ~fonday by Mrs. Mary Ann doe!n't want to be a fool in park in the future to form one longer viable and there should Lae and agreed to an im- her pretence." of the largest regional parks be an exploration or other ap--mediate hearing before Judge ""' J B s· t in California is located on the h ., 1· G d C S · ""!ii'· oa.n • unpeon, 111 a -proac es. Jus ice u ner . pe1rs. tmctive gra.ndmoth« with the west side of Santiago Creek continued. Juage Speirs granted the Los Angeles: Police Dep1rt· mrth of Cowan Heights. ..We would all be Jess than petition and approved the ment, 1aJd1 "] pulled a gun The awarded contract calls intellectually OOnest were we di vision or property get out by once. 'Jbe guy stopped. He for clearing, grading, and con--to deny that the "roust'' still the Laes. Judge Lae was said, 'J saw your partner had a struclion of utility buildings exists ... a small percentage o[ ordered to pay his wife gun but when you pulled a gun and c 0 r P 0 ra t i 0 n yard police officers do abuse the spousal and child !UPPort and I didn 't know what you'd do.' 11 facUities. power they have," he her attorney's fees. The theme of tbe 45th an-Three alternative ttems call-remarked. The final dissolution of the nu al conference this week i.9 ing for construction of a "I would also be the last lo 21>-year marriage will become "The Total Look. 0 The 150 sewage treatment P I .'.l n t • deny the existence of tyran-effective in six months timf. JXllicewomen attending went to drinking fountains and water nical and u n re aso n a b I e Judge Lae, 46, Anaheim, clas.ses in weaponless defense. aupply lines were depleted to judges," Justice G a rd n er was appointed to the Superior charm, voice, beauty, fas hion keep the cost down according quickly added. Court bench April I, 1971 , and other subjects stru11lnt to Ken Sampson, county direc· Judicial authors of the Ex-after three years on the "Image and performance ~ tor of harbors, beaches and clusionary Rule included a Anaheim municipal co u rt provement." parks. prediction that the current bench. Mrs. Lae ha s been situation would occur in 1955 granted custody of the DFl'ECl'IVE RUN T E R Andy's Fun when it was drafted. couple's I4-yea r-0Id daughter, said, 11 Being a policewoman "Nevertheless. •··ause the Teri. 'r t Ask any kid. "Ask Andy" Is ~ means that when you e pu • th higher courts felt there was no There are two other children •·• ~-~"'-to ~ t fun. Ste It Saturdays In e t .. ,. ~ '-'J.UUn::D Ul:'ol • DAILY Pll.OT. mean ingful alternative, the of the marriage: Kathy, 19, night or having guest.a over for Exclusionary Rule came into and Rosemarie, l!. dlnnerandthephonerfnllsyou~l======================:__::::.:::::::::....:..::::_:::::::_;:::::__::::::.:::..:::::.::::::..:::::_~~-1 have to leave. It takes a Jot d love and understanding from your husband." Lick. Amber Ell illl! arid Gltn WIYM Sc1rdln1, Btntdl!!t Fr1nc:1 Incl Jot9ph p,.,, C1rmon1, L'fdl1 1nd P1!1 Gom11 Fo~. Oo111n Ell'n Ind Doug/11 W11t1r Death Notices BA•I L•lll Lt. Murie Hess of the Los Angt!ts County Sheriff's Of· flee, in charge of rthabilita· lion at the women'• jail, 81id . "My husbond II IO proud of my JQb. He helpo me a lot." Olfictr McLain uld, "Thttt is no satisfaction like being a JXllice offlet:r. There isn't a day goes by that you don't help so~ne; It isn't all arrests.'' I • Rot>trt M. 81eb11r. Ag1 N. of "ornon1 Ave., Co111 Miii. 0111 ol d1tlh. MIY 1~. 19n. Survived DY wue, M1d1l1lr>I, of the horne; two d1u1ht1r1, Bc-Dbl1 J11n Pt1M. cnu1a Visit; Mrt. CllarlPnt Non .. m1ktr, Newp.ort Bla<hj IOI!, M1urk1 1'11111/pt, Su"'"'vllt; 11vtn t r1ndchlldr111; I/Irie 1•t~l-9llndCl!lldr111. S1rvlc11, S1l11rdl'f, !l AM, Bell B•OldWl'f ClllGt l, WIT/I lltv. e. ~c11rn101 olllcl1tlnt1. Bi ii 110.dw•r Ml!rlu1rr, Di•ectori N•LION llltY I P1u!lne Ntl,on, «'.Ml AIHdln Dr., Hun1ln1ton B11ch. D1t1 of dtl ll'I. Ml'f ''· 1tn. SurvlYe<l DY hinband, D•. w11111m Ntbon. Slf'Yktt, IOdl'f, F•ld•'f, J PM, Ptelr. F1m11, Colonl1I l'"unertr Homt. SCHONl!K E:Y•l'fn CO. Scho111~. Rt,ldlllt ef Tull!111 lorm11ly ol NtwPOrt !Inell. 01!1 of dtllh. M1~ 7•, Ult. Survl¥e<l 1w h111~1'1d, ltt Schonek; cou1!111 lllobtrt o . Joh11ton. Qi Ntw-t BtlCl'I. Mtmor!11 11rvlce1 wlH be n1ld w ... ntJdlY, M•, ll, J:JCI .. M. II. AM•IWI Pr110y1trlan Chltrth, Nlwl!Ofl Bt~th, F1mll'f 1u11t1l1 lhOll •lll'lln1 lo m~k~ mtmor!•I camdbullon1, pit••• (On· 1r1but1 lo Ille 'mtr!c111 C1nc1r 5oc:leh. •lALTZ BEHGERON FUNER AL HOME Corona del 1'11ar 173.9450 Costa Mesa 64S.ZU4 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa A-Seu LI 1-JW • ~kCORMlCK LAGUNA BEACH idORTUARY 1795 Llcun• Canyon Rd, ,_15 • PACIFIC VIE\\" MElllORIAL PARK Ct.mtt.ery r.tortuary Cllapel 1SOt PacUlc Vin Drlvt Ntwpotl Budl, cautonJa -PEEK ,AMILY COLONIAL F1JNE1W, HOMI!: '.111 Bol11 Aw:. Wal•hl1ttr 111 IAS ~· llfonroAllY tl7MlllJI., 1 llonloci•-DI•• "1 Officer Ruth Nelson, a senior policewoman at Costa Mt!a, who !.s aide to !ht chief , said, "It's not like working in a department store and you stay home if you have 1 sore throat or a li<k child . If you f1tl that way, you shouldn't be on the job." Pinkie Hunter 1 1 u g h e d . ''W1 're the fair MX, but we have more accumulated sick leave than the bJg burly cope. It's being addlcted to the job." MOST OF THE policewomen are assigned to d"k jobs, a!tbough they 1ay they have encountered little male chauvinism or resent- ment of their assignments. A r.w, like o.tedlve Hunter, are assigned to investl1at1v1 duties . short llHY• shirts •BABIES •CHILDREN •ADULTS •No Age Limit •Lim~ to OM Portroif p•r subject. M~itnum two portraih F* family on Spe<ial off tr. • Orovp rote crvoilobfe •Sotitfaction Guorontffd 8xl0 COLOR PORTRAIT SEARS LOW PRICll PWS 501 nLM CHARGE Studio Houn Ooily1 12 NOON to 8 P.M., Sot. 10 A.M. to 61'.M.., Svn. 12NOON to .( P.M. ' Sears IUENA,AtlC lOSCIRtlTOS TOlltANCl INGllWOOD 'AMOfNA COST,,_MUA will and San to ISCO. 4 times a day from Long Beach. or smile away to Sacramento or San Diego. Call your 1ravel agent or PSA and ask about our easy·lo·bear, low fare. PSA gives you• lltt. . ;: COMING SOON TO SANTAANA California's Favorite DO-IT-YOURSELF BUILDING SUPPLY CENTER ''IYIRYTHING FOR THE IUllDU AND HOME OWNlll" THE GllEATEST IAllGAINS ON IAltTH Our beautiful new 100,000 square foot outlet in Santo Ano, will be one of the largest and most modern building supply centers in the notion and will offer the world's kl rgest selection of building mate rials under one roof-over 100,000 builder and do·it-your- self items! "Angels Sells for Less'' beca use of its tremendous pur- ' chasing power, control of its own d istribution facilities. its own import division, and its own wholesale marketing division sup- plying many other retail organiza tions. Y~, you con buy for le ss at ANG ELS, because you o re vitually buyi ng of wholesale. But, if you o re a d~ler, We must insist that you bring your resole permit . ANGELS SELLS FOR LESS WORLD'S LARGEST IETAIL OUTLET FOi •LUMBER •HARDWARE •PLUMBING •PAINT •ELECTRICAL• NURSERY •SMALL APPLIANCES •HOUSEWARES •COMPLETE BUILDING SUPPLIES I A Di•Won or 0.)'lin, lac. 3309 SOUTH IRISTOL, SANTA ANA N ~-BRISTOL •nd MocARTHUR Checlc 1tosui.r Wffkond b ce!als •11 GARDEN GROVE I HUNTINGTON BEACH 12662 CHAPMAN 7800 EDINGER 100 Yds. last of Horbor Bi sel. · One Block Wm .ofllM<h Blvd. I --- ' OPEN MEMORIAL DAY 9T06 25 BIG INSULATED BEVERAGE CUPS Kffp th• bffr cold or the coffff bot. 12 ounce isn't a tiny thing. Packaged to keep them neat and clean. 25 in a batch. .. ' ... . . .. ... · .. : : ..... BAR-B-Q WAGON 711 Thh goes under the briquets that are already under your steaks. Big. big cooking area. multi-position flreboL don't forget to hCIYe lt 'in for the 20.000 mile checkup. . •' 71/cn. FLORAL UMBRELLA 1497 Fringy and floral. Zounds goot (Oh. with the accents again!) Vinyl wipes clean with a damp cloth (that's a Doughboyl1m) - 3/.i IllCH DTl- SIPBON VALVE 391 Code requlrel a Yaln 10 your system doem't back up. (ThoH medical center guya should look Into this.) 'l•"xlO FT. PVC SPRilllLER PIPE Rod•nt• don't like it. never rot1 or rusts. Easy to put together. no threading. just fuH with th• goop. No 1peclal tools needed. INSldERATOR 77 BEYEBSING DISPOSER 49aa R•versing switch 11 automatic. Shhh quiet operation. Staml••• steel. Don't throw thil ad Into the machine •••n U you ml1talr:• it for garbage. BELLFLOWER STORE CLOSED TEMPORARILY DUE TO FIRE Cleared off. Ready to have a barn raising smLWALL KIDDY POOL 511 Swell for the tykes. 15 inches high. 72 inches wide. (Forget about the high dlye, Roacoe. you'll just lay an egg.) SLEEPING BAG 711 full features. Louisey sea.. Means it ha• a top and bottom? Full zip. water repellant outer, flannel inner. and a cartoon. LOMA DELUXE TRASH CD 211 Deluxe means it has a bottom with no hole in it. Did we get these from Oklahoma? No way. Doc: Swanson. ESKIMO EYAPOUTIYE COOLER 24aa I'd hate to see an Eskimo evaporate. Well, if he was overweight maybe a little. But I know he11 never precipitate. Cools 100 square feet (and 3 inches.) , I I ,\ Tbe Prince of the tap tootsies, Takes the ucech and the phooey out of our water, l:ry1tal clear. Goes for 9.99 all around town (ti1 truth. I swear). VALIANT WATER PURIFIER 211 REG. 9.11 DAILY PILOT J l 10 PACK PEPSI-COLA Pepsi Cola hits th~ spot, 7 full ounces. is that a lot? Twice as good for 69c too. Pepsi Cola is the sauce for you. Get plenty. the relatives just called. Advertiaed specials good until the moon don't shine. Which ia next Wednesday at 9 PM. May 31. 1972. THICK FOAM CHAISE PAD 297 flop it on the chaise and chaise away your blues. Push it up and down and listen td the pssat. BON-BON LOUNGE 991 I call it the banana chair. Only this time we have two bon-bons and one tutti-frultti ,please. Adjusts to any position. and locks. Heavy webbed tube plastic. 5/8 IICH PARTICLE BORTZ • ,"·~Y . • ' t. 197 4x8 :~ .. ~·· ·~ i:i!~ Sheet Who is wild enough to work around the house on a three-day holiday? {Only 99% of us poor husbands.) This board saws and works like wood. without the cost. ~!!il!i!ll~ 1J1 , .. , ___ "'-' -.;i:.c111 t 1 : 20 INCH 3-SPEED FD 991 We ordered. this baby right out of the Troy Donahue Fan Club. Three speeds: "So- so," "Even More So." and "Look at 'er go Lamar." ' ALVOLINf ~TOR OI\. INDY SPECIAL VALVOLINE MOTOR OIL factory fresh. not reclaimed. 1 run this in my '39 LaSalle and the squirrels love it. Andy Granulation uses it in h is Indy Special. c IO"xlO" mACBI J97 Juat fin• for tho•• lntlmate little auppen on the balcony. Everything will be lovely for the two of you, (until your wUe shows up). AMERICD FLIG m wM BUCllf KADE llf U.S.A. TOV BETCHA Listen folks. jokes are good here too. Because to liYe In this country l9 a pNtty good. happy thlng. Jnatoad of "Lo•• II or LOGY• It" and "Change It or LO.. It,''. bOw about '1.o•e it-for a Change .. ? 10 POURD BRIQOl:l'S These go for 1.19 around town and don't forget to put them under the steaks. not on top, Corley. HI heat. llow bumlng. c BAG ' OPEN MEMORIAL DAY 9 TO 6 I ' I z DAILY PILOT • • • or1a Swimwear for. everyone! The styles you want at special buy prices. 299 199 bop'- Popular sport boxer model In your choice of polyester cotton poplin solids or all cotton prints. Men's ·sizes S-M-L-XL; boys' sizes 8 to 18. -Eamily sneakers-- that won't tie up your budget. . ' . . , . • • ' " •' I I . ' . . ' ."· ,' ' . . ' .-' ' ' ' ' Closeout • 88 1 3ss Girts' acrylic bi kini swimsuit$. Great selection of colorful prints. Sizes 7 to 14. 799 Misses' can get in the swim in a 2-piece tunic style suit in a beautiful group of printl ••• assorted fabrics. Juniors' will make a splash In print bikinis ••• choose from acrylics, nytons, morel • JC Penney The values are here every day. . , Shop Sunday. noon to 5 p.m. at the following stores: NEWPORT BEACH, Fashion Isl.nil. HUNTINGTON BEACH, Huntington Center ~OSTA MESA, Harbor Canter. •(CloMd S..nclayJ • ' ' 3-stripe athletic shoes for the entire family. Expanded vinyt uppers, cushion insoles and injection molded rubber soles. Men's, boys', youths' and women's size.s. ' ' ' ' I ,,.- 0 ----' ' ' I ' , I ' , ' ' I ' ' v , ,, I II ,' ,! I ' I ' • ' • .• --I : I 1 f I ' I I I l I I • I - llEA. ANDERSON, Editor • Ann Landers Gets· Job Platform DEAR ANN LANDERS: J work in the personnel office or a small company and am y.·riting in !he hope that you will print my letter before graduation. J have some advice for individuals who \Viii be looking for employment. It is amazing how many people come in here ill-prepared. Here are some suggestions which might make tile difference between getting the job and not getting it. l. Bring something to write with - preferably a pen. If your handwriting iJ poor, print. 2. Answer all qu'estions to the best of your ability. The firm, no matter how large or small, asks questions for a reason. 3. Have your social securily number with you. 4. Jf you are a male, have your selec· tive service number. S. Be able to list the schools you've at- tended (iltarting with eJemerbry) and the dates of attendance. 6. Be prepared to trace your employ- ment record, including begiJlning dates ' and quitting dates, names of employers, location, positions held and salary. 7. Be prepared to list at least three people (besides employers) who will give character rererences. •Know their ad· dresses ar.d telephone numbers. l have been in a position to observe a great deal of embarrassment and disap- pointment because people couldn't meet the simple requirements listed above. The candidate who has to go home and come back with facts and figures is going lo Jose out to one who 118' the in- formation at his fingertips. I've observ- ed, too, Ann, that the person \\-'ho is prepared has an air of confidence that mak es a good first impression - GAINESVILLE DEAR GAINESVILLE: (What aa ap- propriate slgnatnrt!) And now I'd lite to add a suggestion of my own. I'm aware that many capable, bright young people wear their hair long, have beards and drt11 non~tabllshmtnt. J am also aware that lhere art laws forblddinr discrlmination against a job candidate because he bas long hair and a beard. But lf ID employeri doesn't like your 1ooks, the chances of belng hired are abarply rtduced. So If you really want tbe job, don't apply for It trilh a chip oo your shoulder lbe slze of a gangplank. DEAR ANN LANDERS : Jim upset and can't think straight. Just say "go" ... or "don't go.'' A good friend phoned last night to say ahe and her sister had just finished ad· dres.sing the invitations to her wedding. They had miscalculated somehow and were six invitations short. She asked if I would feel hurt if 1 didn 't receive an engraved Jnvitation, but a note instead. I aaid, 0 0f ~rse not." · Now my mother tells me I am crazy -that I sbbuld not go to the wedding because it is plain that my lriend considers me less importarit than the other guests. What do you say? I reaJly want to go, Ann -BON BON. DEAR BON: I say 10. Tbe bride II ob- vloasly ln a spot and sbt Is COllDting on her closest friends to understand. Don't let Hr down. O'.lNFIDENTIAL TO MISERABLE, UNHAPPY AND INSIGNIFICANT: Try to be pleasant and uncomplaining. Thir- teen Is a horrible age for a girl who lw a aill<r II. I proml!e thal life will be brl11hter when you are IS and ahe is lt. BN If drlaldll1 It the "In" lhlq In '9m° croft, U aetda't crowd JOI oat. Liana Ute fadt from Ala Ludert' ~ "Boole and You -For ,._ ... Oaly." Seod J5 ... 1a 11 eoln ... • ..... Mlhlddnatd, aam,..i mvtl1pe it &he DAILY PO..OT wftll your ..... l -- Horsing f ' '. ,:1 L ~. Shear Competition is sliff for flowers for Lido 1sle Woman's Club Hats in Bloom contest that will be part or a luncheon-musical-in- stallation to finish the club year on Tues- day, June 13. Piracy Cllapeaux must be decorated with blossoms grown on the island to qualify for prizes as the most humorous, original ~ and beautiful de signs. ~ ~ Society editors from Orange County • newspapers and Harold Kennedy of Richard's Lido Florists will judge the parade that pr~es an original musical, Suddenly Wt-Are the Establishment, by Pru Holden and Jean Tandowsky. P.1embers and guests also will be en- tertained by another dramatic epispde ot the Dovey Family Saga. As the meeting closes, !\1rs. Earl Hardage will be installed as president with the Mmes. James Loudon, Ray de Mott, Rog~ Brown and Juanita TIUey as vice pruldents. ~ra. Harnaldo.Avlle (laltl and Mrt. A. J. Dovey pir•t• away .. ,,,. choice b'-nt lo• lido Isle Woman's Club h-/ contest . Aroun Pays , ' , , . • • . I '• , ':! • • • $ "' .. ' • • Amid rtd and white country lair decor. spectators and rkten wW arrive for the two-day Peacock Hill National Horse Show starting at a a.m. Saturday. June 3 in the Peacock Hill Riding Club, North Tustln. Leading California riders and cham- pionshi p horses will compete for trophies ln the 9th annual event directed by the Mm es. Richard Marvin, Jr. and W. Scott Biddle. About 50 John Tracy Guild members from _Qrange.-County, dressed in new black and white charro outfits, will bost the sho\v that has raised $102,000 in its first eight years for the clinic's training and education program for dear babies, children and their parents. Frank Jordano of Santa Barbara \vill be manager of the .. B" paint show ap- proved by the faciflc Coast Hunter. Jum- per and Stock Horse Association. He will be assisted by Harry Forbes, !\1alcolm Rossoll~ Don;ithy !\1cClurg and !\·like Lyden \l.'ho will be advised by !\tr. and Mrs. Billy Warne who donated the grounds and facil ities. Saturday's events will find junior riders competing in hunter, saddle and stock seat categories for high point rider honors. silver trophies and ribbons through tenth place. TV star Hobo Kelly \\•ill be on hand lo entertain children during the Saturday morning performance. Sunday's open sbo\V for riders over 18, adult amateurs and professionals will in- clude the follo1ving classes : regular and green working and con!ormation hunters, Taking a cue from the horse, Charge In , Mrs. C. Mich ael Jones, Miss Cindy Graber, Miss Debbie Schmitz and Mrs. Fred Harvey I left to right) prepare for Peacock Hill Horse Show. l 'Booty-f ul' sh<lland and hackney ponies, 3-and S. gaited American saddlebred horses, flno harness horses , open jumpers, paride horses, TeMessee walking horses and western pleasure and stock horses. Sunday afternoon Mrs. J , H. Friedmln, guild president, will escort Mrs. Spencer Tracy and honorary show chainnen. 1\-trs. \Villiam A. Thompson ancJ Mr. and ~1rs. Philip A. Thompson to the center ring to officially welcome patrons, sponsors and spectators. A traditional la"'." party for senior ex- hibitors \Viii close the weekend activities as members and guests congratulate 'vin- ners. t.-trs. Le\vis Schmid is in cl'large of party arrangements. Guild members' families contributt.: substantial tin1e and energy lo\vard the sho\v·s success. Husbands and sons serve as ring cre\v, seating and parking at· tendants 1vhilc daughters arc food booth personnel. ' Their incen tive is the help~ ch ildren receive front the clinic 11•hich offers, vtithout charge, all its faeilities and enlarged stafr through 10 di ff<·rent services. More than 34,000 families i.n the United States and 119 foreign countries have benefited. 1\-lrs. E. C. Lovret , ticket chairman, urges early reservations al the llckfl of· fice staffed by the !\1mes. John Stan ley and Ed\vard Keene. They may be con· tacted by calling 541-5289 or at tht- Republic Federal Savings, 17th and Tustin streets. Santa Ano . !\!rs. Richard Dirrlcq. a 1v a rd s chairn1an, has announced the follo"'ing trophy contributors : Robert Guggenheim J r .. !\1rs. J . HoY11land Paddock, Dr. and !\·Imes. F. J. Claus and Carl R. Bishop; J\1 t'ssrs. and Mines. \V illian1 R. E"·ing. Arthur Le Beau. ti.1arvin Hel sley and Nf'\vport-Ba lboa Savings and Loan and Dean \\'itter Co., Santa Ana . l\1rs. George Briggeman, p a t r o n chairman. has enI~•rugh J. Ritchie, <:harles Sligh Jr., the mes. William A. Thompson. George G nt Hoag 11. W. B. Ellis, Florence King, arry John 11tarch, Alfred B. Payne and Frank Simmons. Others are Judges and !\t m e s . l,a\1Tence Lydick and Ra y mo n d 1'hompson and the :'l.lcssrs. and !\1mes. Charles J. Jones. Frank De Marco Jr., Charles J . Bigelo\1'. .John Richard Bishop, Ernest A. Bryant Ill, \Vi 11 i a rn Frederickson Jr.. Robert Guggen heim, Anthony R. !\1oiso, Henry i\loreno. Ch8rles Vcrmuelen and Anilin"s Nc11•po11 Nursery. Summer Saluted Strumming guitars usually 1 re nssociated with lazy summer evenings, but the Women's Auxiliary of the Orange County Pharmaceutical Association will step up the music for a lively fie sta on. Sunday, June JI. Mrs. A. L. Ram irez is preparing the Mexican menu that will be served in her Santa Ana home starting with a socia l hour at 6 p.m. tor members and husbands. At lef t, the Mmes. Charles Heiney of Costa t.-1esa (left) and Richard Carter, newly elected president and vice presl-- dent of the Auxiliary, choose appropriate decorati ons and music for the party. Proceeds will be donated to Pharmacy Institute, a legislation·tracking agency. Other officers include the Mmes. Richard Tarlton. vice president; Tmy itontgomery and Ron a Id \Vaters, aecretaries, and Peter Perak treasurer. They were installed during a luncheon hosted by Mrs. Anton Lopizich or Costa Mesa. I • - !,. " 14 DAILY PILDT ,. . . .. .. .- •. .. .IMPROMPTU CONCERT -Enjoying the expertise of Jan Rubini. concert violinist who will host a benefit for the Irvine Mas· ter Chorale, are Oeft to right) Mrs. Paul . . Queyrel, Mrs. Rubini and Mrs. Edward W. Schumacher. The Evening of Music is set for Friday, June.9. Benefit Music to Chorale An Evening of Music will take place un· der the stars Friday. June 9, for the bene- fit of the Irvine Master Chorale. Jan Rubini, a famed co ncert violinist, and his ·wife, will open their Dover Shores home. with its pavilion gardens, for the event. Though they have recently moved from Los Angeles, the Rubinis already have be- come vitally interested in the cultural arts of Orange County, including U,.e chorale. The ' Founde(s Support Committee has planned an eVening of music and enter· tainment, and a bountiful a:ourmet buffet dinner. Committee member.! are the Mmes. Edward W. Schumacher, chairman and John F. Porter. Paul J. Queyrel, E. Morcan Quinn, Johnnie R. Betson Jr .• Charles Host· !er and Edward Mayo. Entertaining will be the Rubini's son Alichele, who is a pianist and arranger for Sonny and Cher; George and Bev Kahoulua, ...... _..:.:, Your Horoscope Tomorrow who will present Songs of the Islands, and the Torona Polynesian Dancers. Also performing will he the Al Hall Jazz Trio and former members of the Young Americans, who will sing hit tunes from Broadway 1hows. Included will he Bill Mil· !er, Robin Pearl. Jeff Greenberg, Marla Small, Laurence Gordon, Cameron Quinn and Jim Rawie. The benefit is being given in recognition of the achievements of the chorale during the past season under the direction of Dr. Maurice Alla.rd, and its Ability to accom· plish on a low budget. Members of the chorale's board of direc- tors are Steven Morris, Vina Williams , Den- nis Blanchard, Thomas Moore. Rita Major, Barbera Donaldson, Sister Theresa LaMet- trey, David Melilli. Nancy Eb1on and Clare Connell. Assistant conductor is Jonah Kliewer and manager is Jan Unvert. Aquarius: Accent on Friends SATURDAY MAY 27 by SYDNEY OMARR dlviduals. Be receptive. Work quletly. Toss aside secret fears . TAURUS (April 20-May 20\: LEO (July 23·Aug. 22!: Home. domestic: area -these are hl&hllghted. Money and how f1mlly utUltes budget could be matter of corr troversy. Key is to be diplomatic. You gain if firm in quiet tnanner. Otherwise, out· burst will prove embarrassing. Favorable lunar aspect now coincides with romantic in· terem. creative endeavors. SAGmAJUUS <Nov. 22-- Dec. 21): New deal indicated where home life is concerned. Leo enters picture. You find that what worked in past may now hive to be revised. - -Commur;ty Involved Medical Education Contin .ues lly ALLISON DEERR tH "" ~" , .... lftft Bur1eonln1 medical bowled&t and I n c r t a 1 t d demanda by the consumer for qU11!ty medlc:aJ care have madt continuing m e d l c a I educ1t1on 1 rut Wue, ac- cordin& to Dr. George Lim· bock. Dr. Llmbtck. an assoc:i1te professor of pedi1trlc1, California College of Medicine, told UCI Town and <Awn member• that "1inc:e World War ti there ha1 been 1 rapid lncreaae in the development or health-related kMwledge. "Tht problem wu getting UU!: Wormation from the IOUrct to the consumer." · Today. he esplained, the practicing physician m u s t ketp up with the latest developments to "maintain and improve the quality of pa· th1nl eare." Tbe medical profession has always dtlined standards of July Rite In Offing Judith Ann Lealll! a n d Robert MlchHI S.very, both Newport Beach resident!, plan to marry in July in the Marine Corp11 Air Station Chapel, El Toro. Miss Legan. daughter oI Mr. and Mra. Stanley F. Legan -0f Rochtrter, N.Y .. is a graduate of Tustin High School, <;>range Coast College and California Stlte Colle1e at Fullerton. She WU tl1ted in "Who'll Who in American Colleges and Universitie11." Her fiance i11 the son of Mr11. David B. 'Werner of Santa Ana and RDbert, W. Severy of Mbaoula, 'Mont. He attended Ute American River College, Saeramento and OCC. Egg Code Cracked NEW YORK (UPI) -Atltn- tion e1gheads. The USDA ConJumer Marketing Service 111y1 a character analyst once claimed that a m a n ' s personality could be recognii· ed by the way he liked his e111. The analyst said scrambled eggs IUited the artistic, nervousandpa11 ionate . Omelets were preferred by the 1turdy, reliable and con- servative. And 1wmy-side up eags were cholon by the hippy, healthy and wiat. Edible Bottle Make way for the edible bot- tlt. It'• for soft drinks. reports Dairy Ru:earch Digest. The bottles art made from a ceUuloae-bated protein similar to that used in making artificial cream. The ~es aro b@lng fill@d · by I n American soft drink manufac· turer. This raise:s a question : After you eat the bottle, what do you u1t for a chaser? medical care. he added. N'ow tbt con.turner la deflnina quali- ty health c:are on hi& own terms . CERTIFICATION Sever.al states have legislattd recertification of physici1N1 1t regular intervals, requiring a set amount of continuing medical study for 1 stt amount of time. The California M e d I c: a I Association rf!(luesled a crack at 11e.U~ucation before tht at.ate legislatea such meuure.s. Education for the physician has become an on-going proj- ect. Dr. Limbeck said . He mu.st spend more and more ti.me on his own education. StandarM have changed, he added. Today, the physician must be involved in the real world. in his own practice and in the community hospital "Pre.med. medical a n d postgraduate education must get away from stand·up lec- tures and into doing kinds or learning situations. [ don't think the medical school faculty should pontificate, set all the standards. KAREN JACOBSON Jordans Tell News Mr . and Mr!. H. Wilson Jordan of San Clemente have announced the engagement of her dauihter. Karen Rose Jacobson to Kelly Scott Bowen JI. son of Mr. 11nd Mrs. Kelly Scott Bowen or Riverside. "We mwt find out what the community feel its needs are, not what we feel we should do. Assistance will vary because needs vary," he 11aid. Dr. Limbeck , who is chief of endocrinology and metabolism at the Orange Count y Med ic;t\ Center and chairman of the Continuing Medical Education Committee of the UCI medical faculty, explained the role of the univ ersity ln community health. REAL NEEDS "Tht university has always felt an obligat ion toward ('J}n- tinuing education. Since UC! is a general campus. there are the resources of the rest of the school lo draw upon," hf' said. He cited the case of the in· tensi ve c:are unit for newborns at Children's Hospital of Orange County. With a physician spending half·time with the un it there is a unique learning situation available for physic ians with pediatric specialtie-s, nurses and support staff. The UCI • deparlm~t of engineering Is being involved Jn the project also. USE RESOURCES Another facet i.~ encouraging comrnunily .hospitals a n d simila r facilities to u~e the universily's resources. He ex· plained the medical audit tttchnique in v.•hirh a hnsp1tal researches its trea!ment of a spec:ifie disease and fee ls there must be a more ef· fective method. The problem is referred to the unvi\·ersity, which sets up a program for .them. A referral stt;vlce matches a specialist with !he problem to be solved. Dr. Limbccl · {fels th at the emphasis on .. the 1v ho I e medical educa),ion spectrum will be plaetd on t he residen cy·like program. ''The consumer is addressing him.s tir to the quality of health c:are. The medical professio11 must be responsil'e to the issues." 'C!-~~~"N<Y,i~N""'"'' ~-. To avoid di.!appolntment, prospective brides are reminded to have their wedding storie5 with black and wh ite glossy phot<>- graphs to th• DAILY PILOT Womon 's De- partment one week before the wedding. Pictures received after that time will not be used. For engagement announcements it fs Imperative that the story, also accompanied by a black and white glo1Sy picture, be sub- mitted six weeks or more before the wedding date. U deadline i5 not met, only a story 'vill be used. To help fill requirements on both "''ed~ ding and engagement stories , fonns are av11lable in all of the DAILY PILOT offices. Further questions will be answered by 'Vomen's Section staff member! at 642-4321. Shopping IS FUN at the factory ONI STOP-J J SHOl'S 426 30TH ST. ·::::." ContemporaryFurniture ' I Miss Jacobson , a 1970 Tustin AMi!tance League debutante , is a graduate o! San Clemente High School and now is stu- dying •t Chapman Coil•g•. 11---------"'1 Her fianc:e is 1 graduate of the Unive rsity of Southern California where he affiliated with Sigma Phi Epsilon. An Aug. 12 wedding is being planned in the T u I t I n Presbyterian Church. KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN SATURDAYS IN THE DAILY PILOT montfi end sale Sagittarians are strong on 's e I f . I mprovement. Sagit· tarians have an abundance of ego. plenty of intellectual curiosity. are fond of tra vel. try constantly to educate themselves and to live up lo the motto, "an open road and an open mind." Sagittarius ·harmonius wit h Aqu~rius. :Libra. Aries and Leo. There could be problems w i I h :Gemini. Sag1tLarius shnuld el!- :erc:ise caution in dealing with :Pisces and Virgo. Som e :famous persons born under ;Sagittarius include Wiiliam ·Buckley. Ramsey Clark and :i1aria Callas. Friendship is featured. You do more leughing than In rl!tent p~t. You "let go" and this is beneficial. Sagittarian could play prominent role. Do what comes naturally. Rela:r and have fun . Leave details to others. · VlllGO (Aug. 23·S.pt. 22): Be wary of self-deception, wishfuJ thinking. You want to think the: best of friends . associates. But it Is necessaryr to 11:r1de by perfonnanc:e , not by imagination. Accent now is on rontracts, marriage. joint efforts . CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.1-;::::::::::::::::::::::::::;-j 191: Accent on how you putl c ideas together. You will need cooperation from e1:perienced individual. Don't attempt to do everything yourself. .4 days only friday, may 26th thru wednesdey, may 31st : ARIES (March 21-April 19 ) Your past geems intent on "creeping up" on you. Key now is lo get cooperation from -0ne in poi;ition to aid. lnc:ludes Caocer and Aqu1rtu11 in· GEMINI (May ll·June 20): Aim to ward lop: there is room for you . Know il and 1c:t like you know it. Means display confidence. Get foothold and hold on. One in position of authority looks favorably on your efforts. Strike while the iron is hot. CANCER (June 21-July 221: Good lunar aspect now coin- cides with added knowledge, strengthening of person1l philosophy. Meaningful com- pliment received from op- posite sex. Your v it 111 ty LIBRA IS.pl. 23-0cl. 22 1: Nothing ii apt to occur halfway. You llUIY e1t too much, spend too much, pro- mJae too much. N1turally, moderation should be key. Remember rectnt resolutions. SCORPIO (Ocl. 23-Nov. 21): AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-F•b. 1 l: Too muc:h may bt going out, not enough coming in. Tht accent is on friends . PISCES (Feb. 19-March 201' Lunar cyc:Je hl1h: take ln- itiative. Make new starts in ntw directions. Emphasize orginality. Be independent in thou1ht. action. Leo and Aquarius figure promlnenUy. surges There are ch•DJes -;;;;=-:=:-;;=:-;;;=-==-==-=~=::-o=o-==:-==-=i for th• bollor. r ~mJT11fu!riM.MilftiWLllT-11 -----1-----1 TIM MOR~ON I I ~ I · SALE! ~ l Tfltu Mty 20 : 't s ... rnq1 & 1.,...;,,, ;.a Gtlort! • • • . ' • c.'"-lril'll y • .,, Ftltl'lff 25°/0°110°/o I RON SHY I W .. _ .... M_ I COMl'UTI DINNHS FOi TWO I • TOP SlitLO•"·" •• " •• ,.fis· so • I DOCK0 A0 IOI I MAHI MAHI .._,... I COCKTAIL HOUR JUMBO DRINKS DAILY I , SATURDAY I SUNDo\Y PATIO RUNCM I I CHOIC:I O~ Nm I, M!llffl IAl!CHHOS 51 75 .. .,...._ I J . -· llNDICf ' ... UflMllft lllMCM MIHU a Mi'Nii".: C4U JOOl-AflOlll-141-116' •---------!' lltl W. COAIT M~HWAT-NIWPO.r IUCM ---------- Wint To Solve Your Decor1ting Probl1m1? NIED HELP? COME TO M1ggl Cobb's Interior Decor1ting Workshop 5 2·HOUR WllKL Y SISSIONS '29.95 ~~ 420-Jht St. N...,.,, ._. (• Liff ,.,,1.,.11) Mlk• 11 ...... 11--Cl•-oro Llmli.I PHONE 673-1722 from our own factories to you! spec ial group of slightly imperfect sw1msu1ts from our own factories to youi special group of ~ightly Imperfect .. ·' spring fosf'nons fashion island , open tuesday and fJidav nights sunday 12-5' • • c ( I ( ' . • ' 1 l • • • Money's Worth This Plan How Much Should Franchise You l(eep Saved? Newport Stach -e s i d e n t WIUlam A. Ka r;;es, J r. has opened a Porsche A LI d i dealt.rshlp in Beverly Hills. The Orange Coast College gradu11e j5 president or the firm. He began in the foreign car 5ale11 busines!I in 1964 with Chick lve:rson Volkswagen In Ntwport Beach. Corporation styling center. * * * Incentive Bi• LEROY POPE UPI Bu1IM11 Writer By SYLVIA PORTER Wbtn times are 11s perple1· lng aa now, the Instinct ()f any "economic animal" is to try to hide -whk:h has to be a key explanaUon why today «> many millions of Amtrlcans are saving so e:r.tniordlnarlly high a percentage of their payche<:u. A.uuming you're frightened too, how much money should you llttp in your 1avlngs account? The Rver· age amount of money kept in a reg- ular savings account in a U.S. finan- l'O•T•• cial institu- tion today ls around $1.500. Many major nnancia l institutions woold insist your own reserve in the fonn of "li- quld assets" -cash or its LEGAL NO'nCE NOT tCI: TO Clt1!01TOJIS SUPIJllOlt COUJlT 01' THI STATE 01' CALll'OJlJrtllri P'Oll THI COUNTY ~ OllANO• N•. A·1Ul1 E1l1!! ol ST ... HLEY II. HOFFLUNO, 0.Cfl~l'd. NOTICE 11 HEJll!IY GlllEN lo I~• c-rl'dltofl o! II•• 1bo~t n1mtd dec..,.n! tt11I an N r1on1 h1wl111 cl1lm1 1111111! t111 wkl ll«eclenf 1r• r ... lred to Ht• tll<lm, wllh'IM M<:IUlr'I Vwctl•r1, In ""' offlcl 9' !hi cler• el !Fii •bov• 1nllll-O cour1, or ltl Prt1tnl lh•m. with !Fii ntcH11rv voutl'ltrs. lo tl'lt ullOl<•lt""' 1t lt!t Ol'llet M h:1 1llornty, MlnJ'll ll 1nd Hic~•on, A.1- lorntVI 1t L1w, IJJJ Ll11Co\11 l lV<I .• luitt Nfmber 2tlo, Stnll Morolc1, C1lllernl1. fWhlc1> 11 '"' 1IK• el l>1ulF111• er !hi utldtfllOr>ld 111 1tl m1tt1r1 1111rl1(11fn9 le lt>t tlltll of 11ld Cl«.cll nl, wlt11l11 four """"'"' 11\fr 11\t flfll publlc1I~ ef !1'1!1 11otlr•. DllM Mt v 11, 1t12 lltALPH HOFFLVNO E•tcu!Gr a1 !l'>t W iii "' the -'>ov• 111m1d dece111111 MA•IHALL ANO HICKSON Ator11tv1 11 Law lW lh1col11 •lvll. koltt 1M SWiii Miflldo, C1Uflr1l1 Ttl: ftlSI SM·S71J lfflrMYI fir ••Kii .. Publltll..:1 Orin" Coat! Otllv 'llet, M•v lt, H •lid JUIM 2, '· un 13.11·72 LEGAL· NO'nCE PICTITIOUI IUllN•st NilM• ITilTIM•NT Ti.. 1011ew1111 0otr10•11 ••• 11o1,.. illlllnt11 11: DONll'T STO,.Pli, 'Uil I r-hurl!, Hu11ll'IO!on ltt ch. !llllv Mtrlt Hundltv, 141112 Ntwpe.rf Av1., Tu1l!11, C.._ '1610 1-(ffell M1rl1 Hulldlty, 14IO'J N-Porl Av1 .. Tu11!11, CA '1W Thl1 IM/lllltll 11 IMI"' <-uclM IW 1 Ptrtr>l'l"lh!~. 1111v "'--•tt t-tundltY Htlln M••l• Hundl~v T11!1 ,,.,...,..,, 111...:1 with "'-county Cit!'-9' Or1flff Cou!!N Oii. MI V 10, lt11. t y ,,.,,,,., J. M•dOo~. 09PUIV CllUnlv Cltrll.. PUnl Pub!llMd Or11111 (N II 01111 P llll. Mn 12, It. 2•. 1nd Jun1 2. 1112 \)47·72 LEGAL NO'nCE · "tCTITlOUI •UllNltl NAM• ITAT•Ml"Nf ~. 11111..wt... CO<pOt"•llOll II eolnt IM.ISl111$1 t li: ll•AXTON M.._Nl)l'ACTU ltlNG COM- PANY OF C"'lll'OltNIA, INC., 17ll Monrovlt illvenvt, Cotlt M t I • , C11lfarnl• tH11 llr1~1t111 C1rlblle1n M1nul1cturl1'1 Com111nv, l11c.. !8 Oll•w~•• CO•· -1111!11}, 100 Wtll Tt flfll ll•ffl. Wll.,.._ ln1I011. Otl1w1r1 IH" " Tiii• bu•!11111 11 cONIUC:IM llv I ((W• IOI Ilion. &ltAXTON Nl!LSON, Prt•klt 111 t1111 111temtnl w11 fllld with IM CbJ,.. 1'V (ltr~ Ill Or1nt1 (!lllftl' Oii MIY I. 1112 P17Mll ll'ubll•h...:I O••flff c .. 1t 01lly Piiot, MIV )6, t M JUM ), '• !I, 1t11 13&1·12 LEGAL NOTICE WOTIC• OP INT•NT10N TO •NOAOI IN THI lill• Oil' ALCOHOLIC 1•v1•110•1 fl W......., II Mpv Coroc1r11; Sublet! lo lnu•M.• ol 11>1' llct nN •i>- Plil'd !or. 11011(~ I• P>•••bv 1lv1n !ll•I tl'>t ~lld1rsl1flf"ll 11•....,ll!I '" u ll 11cor.e!lc llever1P11 1! !ht 11••ml1H , oe1crii...I •• fo\IOWS: 625 Wt\! 191h Slrt1t. Co1t1 Ml•t Pur1u1n1 lo 11•ch l111t11!lon, lh' un· flr1112ne11 11 111111v1119 to lht 01111r1m111t 111 Afcol!ollc lltv•••Gt Control '"' l11ue11c1 111 1n tlc:Mo!lc lavtr•M !lc11111 tor ltiHt 1r1mls11 11 1111111w1: °" 5111 •••• Jt rrv L. McCullou1h 11'11v1111 G. MC'Cullouefl Pullll1hf'll Or•nM Cea1t O•lly Piiot, M•v H, Jtn 1~72 LEGAL NOTICE PtCTITIOUI IUStN•ll NAM• I TATIM•NT The totlOwll\9 .,.,_ lrt llell\9 IKl1lnel1 t i : OLD TOWN "'HTIOUE5, '1lG N-Pll•I llvd., COllt Mt1•, tma. 0.111111 lttlllCIJ, llJtl 5tonli:r1u AVI., 1'ou11t1ln Vtl)ev,f,"'· ltrbart H-t lndl. 112'1 lllllllCflll Av1 .. Foun11111 Vtllt~. n10t. Thll bu1fMll 11 bitlM cOllducltll '"" • .. 1rlfllrlhl1. llarb1r1 H-lt•ll>lll TJl\1 1111""""' flied will! tl1• County Cllrt el Ort ,... C"""IV on. M•~ 10, 1972. I Y f11v1rly J . MlltON Oflll,lly CClllllly Cl1rt.. " 111U ll'ubll111ed 0•1n11 Co111 Otllv ll'llol, Mt v \2, lt, 2a, 1n11 J urw 1, 1112 1n.c.n Ll':GAL NOTICE .. ICTITIOUI 1us:r."' NAM• ITAT•M NT Tiit lol"""llll jMFHll II •o1n• bu1l11411 ... . ClllOWN 1 V A l L • V '"lllf.·I CHOOL, 24'f0 L• Piii. Orlv1, l.1191/M Nltutl, (1lllof11J1 1111177 J I() & Jiil .kl\OCll el', Vlllt P1rll, lllC. (llllMbl 415 ltllt SI"'"· l'rtmonl, Ml<l\11111 "9'11 Tl'lil 9'U•l-It btl!lot tOftdllt!M ll'f' t Corptr1tl1111. lv_.11 L. 111"011 Tr111c.ir1r Tl'llt lltltmlf'I "tM 'With flll CIU!ltY (l1<k of Ot'I,... Clllfllv 1111~ Mllv l. lt71. I v 1..,...1¥ J. MMdll1, 081/h' CeuflfV '""· LEGAL NOTICE equivalent -should total three to six months' income. I would uy that your emergen- cy fund could safely bt all low as two months' I n come, however -if yoor own special financisl circum.,tances would backstop thi.1. So in this lale ~1ay, 117?, how much would you keep in an emergency 1a vings fund? Your answer has to rtat on how you r~pond lo 1he follow - ing t rucially revealing ques- tions about your own circumstances. And when you have ;.;lud ied your ow n answers. tht. importance of your fear! about the overall economic outlook will shrink to lheir proper proportions. • How many circumstsnce.'I can you think of in which you might realistically re q u i re large. sums of cash, lilerally at overnight notice? •\Vhat types or unexpected fin ancial emergencies might conceivably and realistically befall you or your family (a disabling accident. job layo ff , big auto repair job)? What sha re of the estimated cost! of 1 u c h eme-rgeocie! would be covered by yo ur other forms of fi- nancial protection? Such as stocks. bonds, mutual !und shares. major medical in- surance. life insurance, other types or insurance, disability and survivor's 'benefit! under Social Security. U.S. saving! bond.1 you might beve stashed away, benefits from your employer? •,What emergency financial help could you realistically ex- pect f r o m parents. other relatives or your employer? \ • Could another non-working member of your family move fairly readily into a paying job -if need be? ' Tf the family bread'l\•inner * * * Tbomas R. Youn1 has been promoted to districl sales manager for First Amerlc1n YOUNG American. He resides Mar. * Title Insur- ance Com- pany. The Scinla An a College grad· uate began his career in customer service two years a g o with First in Corona del * * Babcock Eleclronlc1 has named F'loyd Bryant 11 s general sales manager of the control products group. Bryant is president of lhe Nallonal Association of Relay Manufacturer!. He: j o i n e d Babcock's marketing depart- ment in 1964 and wa!I western regional sales manager prior to his new assignment. He and his wife live in Fountain Valley. * * * James G. Nelson, Laguna Beach has been appointed cor- porate director of design for Glass Contalneri Co rporatiqn of Fullerton. Befort. joining the firm six years ego, Nelson was senior designer at General Motors The CerritO!'J office o f ~ker Bank has named JobD A. Miiier assistant managtr. Formerly on special assign· ment in the Southern Cou nties region, Miller joined Crocker Bt'lnk in 1970. * * * The board or directors or Flr~t CalUornla Co m pa D y have elected Wiiiiam E , McClendon as resident vice president and manager or their Newport Beach office. The investment securilies firm is headquartered in San Francisco . * * * Raymond D. 1\.1yers ha!! been honored by General Telephone for completing 25 years of service with -, t h ' phone com pany , C u rrenlly ~·~ an engineer assigned to the Long Beach office, Myers began his utility l .. 1 carttr as an MYti•• apprentice lineman. He and his wife live in Hun- tington Beach. * * * Ce.ollnela Bank has elected Theodore 8. Kalli a5 regional vice president and manager of the Newport Beach regional office. Kalil began his banking career 19 years ago sis a teller. He joins Centine la Bank after being vice president of loa ns at First Western Bank in Los Angeles. Last DCB Marks End Of Era in Aviation NEW YORK -This story might ht entitled "'F'rom Dishrags lo Riches." But it's really About an alfr.rnatlve to franchising. Sam I). Battl storw>, 32, of SHnta Barbara, and his father, Sam . Sr,, built a ZOO.unit chain of snack restaurant~ called Sambo'.1 rrom .1crat<'h in 14 years. "EverybOOy In t h L mm· pany·s t 'C t c u t i v P 11nd managerial h1mily started out the same-way -washing dishE's -11nd they're all \\•ell off today," said young Bat- tistone. OF COURSE !ht. hArd work started !ht Sambo family members on the road to riches , but what really turned the trick is that alternative to franchising_ The plan raised lhe nece ssarv capital for ex-f Pansion as -rlipidly tts a \ fr~nchising plan does but avoided nlany of the pitfalls of selling franchises. Battistpne said. l-l ere'r; ho1v it works. The company takes and keeps a ha l f -interest in every restaurant. The i n i I i a I capitalization is a I w a y s $100.000. The manager buys a 20 percent interest. but lhe re- maining JO percent is sold to six other n1anagers in tile chain. ··we call it lhe fraction of the action plan." said the younger Ballistone. ' ' I t creates maxirnum motivation throughout the co mp a n y , The company has to stand be- hind every act ion of every m.anagt>r. negotiate the leases. do'the major buying, set po l- icy and so forth . But the in- dividual m a n a g e r 's oir portunities are not limited to making his own restaurant succeed because, after he hl'ls been with us for a while, he \\•ill have 5 percent interests in several otht>r re staurants." should lose his or her job LONG BEACH fAP l -For and v.·ill C<Jnlinue lo be used WllEN A manager is pro- tomorrow -due to a layoff. the OC8 jetliner. No. 55fi was ·widely both in the United h r h I moted to a company ex· merger or ot er development the end 0 l e ine. States and •broad. Manufac-· h II h" 20 I e<:ulrve, e se s 1s percen -how long would it probably The 556t h DG8 jet. buiH at r 1 h stake in his oriuinal restaurant bf! before he or she could find the McDonnell-Dou•las plant lu re o s-pare parts or t e " he I ·11 t. r to the new mana~er. •1e re-• comparable job In his or r hert. has been sold to Scan· panes w1 con 1nue or years. tains his 5 percent stake!! in field of trainlAg? dinavian Airlines Systems. Jt But the DC8, although tinan-other unit'.'! of the Sambo chain • Ho\v big a financial is lhe last DC8 to be built. cially successful for the-ai r-and probably buys some more. neste~g in cash do you need to Since the first DCB.I.as built lines, was a sometimes bum-"~e of our managers fetl fi.nantially secure? nearly t5 years ago. sales or py ride for its manufacturer, h Do I A. rt c t have fractions or the action in • Are You preparing for the aircrafl have totaled more t e ug as 1rcra o. nc., d r Sa t M · as many as 16 reslaur11nts ," big-ticket ex .... nses .111 n than $'.2 billion. There are o n a onica. •· ' t h 1 Do I said Battistone. The fact that purchases in the monlh.1 aht.ed now 48 DCB users _ airlines, n t e ear Y 1960s, ug as h d h I b f six other m.11nagers in the -e.g .• a down payment oo a charter companies and private a uge osses ecause o t 0 d I t chain 011•n pieces or his house thi! fall , a new baby ctlmpan ies _ in 28 C<Juntries. cos verruns on eve opmen th. J I ed t · of the aircraft. restaurant as well as the 1-' year, a ong P ann ri p 1'he four-engine DCB in-parent compan.v produces • t E · ti t It may also have con-o urope, a maJor. ou ay 0 troduced jet travel on a major powerful inrentive to each go into business for yourself? scale. Previous airrraft were tributed. along with the twi n- Something truly bij!'.? the OCG and DC7. the last or jet DC9. to a cash crisis for manager lo do \.\'ell. Do t ns th ... Douglas which resulled in its "It also makes us a highly no a wer ese qu lhe m a j o r piston-propeller tions lightly ! For tht. amount airliners built. merger with ~fcOonnell Com-co-operative famil y," he said. you really need a5 an . h DC8 h pany of St. Louis. At the same time. because emtrgency reserve will de--Replacing t e are I e The company won't 5 a y the parent firm has all the d 11 ·d ed wide-bodied jets the. whether the overan Ix:3 pro-real corporate responsibility, pen on your we ron!H er McDonnell-Douglas DCtO. the he he d h d" · · r appraisal of each -and each kb gram "'as profita ble. t a ac es over 1v1s1on o Is designed to bring out vital Boeing 747 and the Loe ttd Jn the past year, the DC8 a rights and responsibilities that poinl!I about your basic posi-LIOll. month has come off the Long have caused lroubles for some tion and personality. The DCB has been a Beach assembly line, fir.1t franchise operation! are If you are. say, a young cou-_m_o_n_e_y_m_a_k_e_r _f_o_r_1h_e_1_ir_li_n_., __ ,_t_arted ___ i_n_F_eb_r_u_a_ry __ 1_9_57_. __ •_vo_i_ded_. _______ _ ple with no children , a modest income, a healthy attitude: toward life and its challenges, a~ little as $500 in a regular savings account might not be an unrealistically low r..1AX · IMUM. This would be par1icularly so if you ha1•e other safe financial resources (such as affluent parent:!) upon whom lo call when and as eS!ential. Even if you are not this carefree. $1 ,000 lo $1.500 might well be your top limi t to keep In cash in a financ>a l in- stitution at thi.1 time. But ii you are older, have. major responsibilities. have recurrent fears about your vulnerability in the t vent of unanticipated adverse: news. your maximum might be si-.: months' income and even more in assets in the most li- quid of all form!!. The key point that must not be undere:o1timated at any time i.1 that your e:mergency 'cash reserve -whatever i t s amount or wherever you deposit it -Is precisely what its name implies . It is a protection against un- foreseeable financi.al emergen- cies. ft should be no more and It ~Id be no 1.,. than that. VNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK SOUTH COAST PLAZA IRANCH NOW OPIN SATURDAYS 9 t1 1 P.M. MON.-THUU. IM P.W. PllDAn IM ,.M. f714f ....... , '· '--" .. , s.. c_. -c-.. _ PRE-SUMMER Fully Gu•r•nfMd Fully R .. Conditioned USED ORGANS Wt'rt IVlf·lloKt .. 111 trl4l1t-ll ...,.,..,_ 111111 .. ill •19-" _ .. tM"' ' •. .,...,, .,.,.,. ..... ·-~..-..l!Mtitl llf"lcft, ... """.... • • ' llfr'" """ tNrfllltllll / HAMMOND SPINET OR!OAN HAMMOND D!l.UXI MtMttllr, Wft 11,lfS.", -SPINET OR!OAN $995 °"·-$1495 SJ,111.01 ..... ••ly HAMMOND HAMMOND CONSOU SPINET OR!OAN Wlllll Aull. ,hytll!n, ••• AND Sl'EAKH CJ 11.m.• -W1!111t, .. 14 51495 ;;:;:;:.. $1595 ..... 1y wu•uma USLll SPEAKERS DELUXE SPINIT Wt ClfTY I Ct ..... 11 lllecttel Otlc1 ., .,.,., ... ... -......... Lltill -·-11.1"-'I -c-............ ., ., ll!Mft, S1695 ::-.·:...-·. $199 WURLITZER WURLITZER CONSOLE OR!OAN THEATH SPINIT -It. -.,, ....... - s2595 ~~~·-51495 _..., AU. PIANOS aUAIANTtll 11 TU. ... ,.., .. 1111 '"' ..... SOUTH COAST PLAZA COSTA MESA THOMAS srJNET $599 LOWREY SPINET $1249 KIMIALL CONSOLE $1195 CONN Sl'INET $399 3400 BRISTOL ST.-PH. 540-2830 'Sucker Money' Can Be Avoided Olds, Buick Recall Set For Defect NEW YORK I UPI I -Had television repa ir tr a u ma lately? Or car repair blue.1? If you haven't had one of th()~e: common con.'lllmer aliments, perhaps you've been !f'mpterl and burned by one of those "ab.'l()lutely free" offen1 of merchandl:st? ()r b t e n strangled fin11nci8tly by 1 w11r- N1nty loophole?" "'ha! happens lo ronsumt.rl lll<'ludes a kit rnore. Tile near- ly incredible fart of 11. sptOOer's lift. tiw!'le days is that son1e a u t h or i t i " i; f'Sll mat~ S.10 of evtry $100 the DETROIT (UPI\ _ The averai.:e C'Qni;umer spend!! is wasted as "suck!'r money." owner.1 o r approxima1ely 22.000 cu rrent -model Buicks Sen . Philip 1-larl. ( [).Wts. l, d Old b.1 he' t'Stimatts that niuch is lost in an smo 1 e! are 1ng noiified of a possible steering lhe An1erican n1arketplace. linkage defecl which could ~~~rp~~~~:.h u~~~ut~i1~~~ u~ result in a dri ver being unable neres~a ry surcharges or ju!'.t to steer his car, General Motors ha s announcrd. plain fraud . Ci-.1 ssiid no accid('nts hnve THt-:Ht-:'S MUCH a pt>rson been reported as a resul t of a should know lo a1·oid the drain poorly fitted steerin~ arm on the purse and wallet. 'l\'hich is part of lhf' linka.li(t lJnfor1t111ate!y, most or 1od11:-·"s connectinj!'. the front \\'heels ronsu1nerit le11rned oolh ing with the steering sy!'tern . about 'l\'ise .shopping in high The "Where to hrn tor help" 1eetion coven com- plaints ln the r o 11 ow I n I cattgorle1: mail , food and . drugs, 11dvertl,,lng, appliances, t111tomoblles, airlines, mone)' n1alters. pro(eMiiooal Hrvlces. ANOTHER. attUon adviset 1vrlllng to your congressman and senator, a~king tttem to ketp you Informed of spendlnC legislallon to protect the con· .1umer. In the l.'On1plain rng depart- 1nent, 1t Ls reo>mme:nded , you rall !ht actlon line n f ntwspape:r" and the iu·tion dt>pa rtme:nls of radio .1t11tions lo a11n t~ 11ripeR. When all elst lfuls or you want lo Add 1 li!llf' <'lout to your complaint ~nd hope for f~!lf. 11ction, write In VirRini a Knauer, Office ol <.:onsumer Affair~. New Ex· Kulive Office 8 u i 1 d i n g. Washington. 0 .C. ?0506. Loss ]{<·rorted At Royal Inns Affected models at'!' 1972 St•hool. i-:l'en 1r the\· had, mu c:h Hoyal Inn~ nf America Inc. Oldsmobile 88's and 98's and of whsit had btien learnf!d hi;is reported • first quarter the Buick Electra 125 and ~·ould be' obsolete by now. lo!ls of $Sl ,306. or 3 cent.!! • Riviera niodels. New Jlyps, for example. grow share. comp11red to 1 prnfit of The rompany said lhf're is right fro n1 the wreckage of thP $311, 171, or 18 cents a share, old one!I sn1ashed by consumer for the like quarter a year the possibility of a loose fit in protection agen<:ies. ago. the assembl.v or the steering ··Exactly e\'erything" thal • Total income for the quarter relay rod which rould cnuse wist> consu n1er should know is this yea r was $338 ,899 COM· the relciv rod stud to brt-11k , · itllowinu. the steerinu liiik:ige \\'h8l lhE' A1nt>rican As.'iOCia-pared to $815,955 la"t year. " " lion or Univt'rsity \\!omen had -to separate and the dri ver in rnind ivheu it st;irted put· would be unable to steer. ting together ii! "(:uide ·for (~M spokesmtn said !h is the Re:o1ponslhle Con:o1umer.'' separation is "1nost apt lo oc-ll'.~ out now _ a 11nn1 12-page cur during low speed ('(lr· hi th nerin" or in pnrkin" lvn. newsleller·s tylt pan1p et ,nt fl "' ,...... really sttm:c1 to lttl all, 1n- AUTO INSURANCE ANY RISK ANY TIME 638-1282 rl11t ho1t in• oqlf'a( J maneuvers where llf"f'l'inR: cludi.nR where to 5?0 for help systen1 loads are the highest" li~w~he~n~~~o'~'"~"~e~bee~~n~g~y~p~(l1!~d~·-~-==~~:~====~~ 'The 14.000 Oldsrriobllcs "'tre produced in tl-1arch Rnrl April at Lansing. Mich .. t1nd the 8.000 affected Buicks also were pro- duced in those months at the Flint, Mich .. plant. The rar~I will be inspected end the parts replaced without cost In !ht owners if necessary, GM said. Earnings Up At Swedlow Swedlow Inc. of Garden Grove reported Inc re as td sales and improved earnings for the fourth quarter and fiscal yea r ended March 31. Net earning:j for the fourt h quarter rose to $285,000, or 28 cents per share. comparer! with a loss or $391,000, or 39 cents per share. in the oor· responding period klRt year. Sales increased to $5,534.000 from $3 ,n3,000, a gain of 47 percent. \ I I See by Today's Want Ads e A Sf AR PLRt'OR.M· ANCE: Th1t'1 th\1 0 1wu G•laxy :U" ltl speed bike. lf'1 In exttllent eondltton. e A LIVELY 101:.A, "'1e. a.round on thla '70 Kaw1- u.ki 90. It bu WI')' loW mlh1:1 and 11 Jn snat eon· dltion. • RICHNESS \1 drlvlns tht. 'U Sedan de Ville Cad.ii· lac. Bea.id~• belns com· fort.able, It hu leathe:r, all power and new tll'f!1. 01lfy Coast~ Soutlz.erri Q.ffers · 63 Guaranteed Certificates ·Saturday Service ·The Insiders Club The Insiders Club: A new way to beat inflation . Its member ship card permits you to buy nearly every- thing you need .fro m !he finest closed·door show- rooms at s ubsfantiat sav· ings -appliances. furni- ture, ster'eo equipmen t, sportin g goods. draperies and n1uctl, much more. You can even buy cars at the j'l leet" pri ce and rnobite homes and motor- cycles 8l subst~ntial sav- ings. The Insiders Club Effective Annual Earnings 5.00%-5.1 3% Passbook. No Minimum. 5.75%-5.92% One Year Certificate $1 ,000 M1n11nurn. 6.00%-6.18% Two lo Five Year ~rlificales $5,000 Minimurn. Up 1o 90 da ys !os!; of i11!Prest on a1nounls will1(l1.'lwn before m.lturi!y (111 all ..:ert1tic;ite acLounts.. a lso provides big di s- counts on tickets lo sport- ing a nd e ntertai nm ent even ls , •• plus a whole lrst ol free services: sale deposit boxes, money or- ders, travelers checks, and notary services. Mcnlbership reQuire- 1n1>11l for savers -S2,500 111ininium balance. Coast borrowers now r!C"Pive as- sociate memherships en- titling them to all outside referr!I services. A5k obout joining •t any Coast office. MAIN Of"rtCI: 9tM & Hiii, l0&A1ipltl• '23-JlS1 Other offlus WIUHlltli 1t G!itAMMlRCY ll'l.AC.b 3933 Wll!lhlrt Blvd~ L.A.• SU.126S ' LA. CIVIC ClNT[Jt: 2nd L B1o.t<fw1y • 626-1102 HUNTINGTON l!ACH: 91 Huntlr-\ton C.nt•r • 111'4) 897. 047 SANTll MONICA: 7111 WilSt1J1e Blvd •• J93.074& SAN PE0"0: loth & Pacific • 631·2341 Wl:ST COVINA: r.11 sth1nd Sl'lo11pln1ctr.•331·2201 l"ANOll:AMA CITY; 861 6 V11rt Nuys l!llVd. • 192·1171 TAll:lANA: 18751 Ventur11 lllvd.•145-1614 LONG aCACH; Jrd & locust • '437·7481 [ilST LOS ANQll.Ea: 11th &. Soto • 2fi6-4510 01AM0NO •Alt! 378 01111'1"\0M lll11r llltvd. • 171<1) 59S.752S Daily Hours-I AM to 4 N Opt1n S.turd•p - 9AMtolrM ((xc•ot CIVIC C.nl1rJ .. 1 ---, -· -. ' .. .~.Wf'•1i.....,.-G ' t • j -~ -.,. OVER' THE .COUNTER ,, . ' ' -· ·I '\' '1. I ' •· . NAID Ll,11 .. ._, Tllur•r. Mar 25, 19n . . .. .'. .. . .~ . . 'f COMPLEIBNEW YORK STOCK UST - 1r -ThtirSHay:s1 Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock ·Excliange _List_~ Market Flirts \Vith 19172 High NEW YORK (AP)-Th• stock mark~! manaa!d another n1ifow gain today. as the Dow JQnes 1ndus- trtal average nirted with a new 1972 clostng high Trading was moderate Monte Gordon . analyst and partner al Sarter1us & Co called It 1-"low pro- f de" market ' Everything 1s very quiet," he said ket's barely stirring " 'The mar· ...... ·-· ,-~~~~~~~~~~ lftoM.I Mltll l-a.ta C-.. ·= .. ... .. .. ' "' •• .. " • " ti: " ff " .~ " '" " ... ... ... "" ,, .. -, .. -tt• .... •• u .. -,,.. Ir. " ... !I\• '"' ~­... ''" .II ID'• I] 11~1 "' " ' ., ". Jl'o ••• "" .. '" -•• .. :::: ... • .. ~ "" .. " "" 11'• ::. ·~ r.:i .... ~­•• ~· "'' " "" '" .... •• Wol'fltl 1 • ; ••iwrlw 1 lot W•,lld' I IO Wo111 Ill .IO •• ... • J P}s Complete Closing Prices-A1nerica11 Stock Exchange List ..... ... 1Mt J M~ l -Cine Cllt. 5•191 111,1 llrlft.I M19't l.B CltM Cllt 11111 Mitt IMI I Mlt• le• Cl9q Cllt 'lF. ... Ir.: '"' •• , • t ' • t ' ( ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • , ' ' ' ' f ' I • ' ' I ' ' ' ' ' ' I ' ' ' ' ' ' ! • • ' ' • OAJl Y PJL.OT Frid.,, May 26, 1971 ·~· LEGAL NOTICI \ •• , ... •: ~· LEGAL NOTICB LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NC11'1CE LEGAL NOTICB l r·atta~ ~m ~-·---I~ It, M. C.ltl ..... ft... c i.nr I). .. Oil.-·-•OTte• °", .... "' ... "'.,,' •• , ... .._. IOICTITICMll IUSIN••s lllCTITIOl,ll a1n1wass UJ _.UV rnT-•a C NAM& I TATIMINT ..... ,.. ITAT&MalolT I q HICIMCT• JNU.-1 Ifft! a I 0 ..,_ °"""' Oii JllM IJ \fl'> ti II OI t'<t9c:' A M 7 ... t&I owl"' --It °""' ktt!Mtl lilt' tellowlnt PfflON t I llelnt "' LEGAi> NC11'1CE IOICTITIOIJl •IHINlll !NAMIE ITATRM.NT lot-,.. ..... , ... 11 ..... 11u11 ..... , .. DAIL V PILOT 'Q IOICTITIOUI IUtllealS MAM• ITATaMINT '*"""I"' _..,. 1' .,i.,. "'-'tJMa 11 Ill Wl'Sll' f LD Uo1'1AM (OMIOANY lllAN(l+O Ml.'A .. 1111...CHOOl 1" lflO'I' Skv "•II (11"<19 .. 0 fOll ..... lf'"I lftll llrw r, C.11 M-e.P lr1G1Cltr 0 1.-Lll'M!I .... NH111 fl I t c.t 0.._._ Aplt "&ICIN(Tr tHl•I .. .._. ...,., .wkt ..,,..,lie, i. Stc:\11'"' 11 tul •11 •• IHDfrt:NOINT (Affl lNG JUll ... I c """"""' ""'" t!Wlleu .. 1JllO 14lfl ,. "°''"' IOI~· ... ~ "''' Tllllf 1-•Mt («flPI "•· 111 H Wt'JTl'llLD-WALNUT COMl'ANY ". I Ml A"•~ ' •• c;,, .. 11 Orovt (!¥\ f M l.twil ltt11 I""** I' S111r.... ... Cklbllo!J:u lelJ r1tt111l1tw L9'. lrellfWl1' $1111• A...a 111 !ht C l'r ol l M'I TaD l'AllTHl"lllSHlfl 11901 111¥ Or1 .... t C8lillllr (I lor.it I v M (t '°'"II ,,.... Ito.N I tff11 Wo\11 t kl Dtvt~I CetnlOtl\Y llC J1~ L JUI SCMOI If VllL1 •11'\ lllC. ( _,. M I! T1~1"' Dtt11 Jlldw o1' C H&U:ltl 11111 IM..-r 1 H Ot \tlt l:Ho Cit..... Slllt of Ct lntn • tlCVlllTY 1'1 k C rfi. 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( t ~ ( M HlllJt Gii ato , .. ,-,, • ( Oolll••~.,-.~ _.,. lfo $t W tlll cit111tn1ctltn If ll\t lo lu'" no COl>V ol NOllCE thl C••lt MKI Cl Uttnlt •Ult (Otlt Mttl (II 1'trnlA n•t1 I "ll:lCINCT SS .. tll Cv• k J M~ d• (;,";; ...., ln1t>tctO C A Httlt I Ot m COHTllACT NO I U o 9 1111 o wlllcll '"''I f(! tor t<O don ttl 0 1"1 1111'01 ttt 1714) ltl ltt 5"Jo J~•';.;-:,:t•:, Ctl t Cllul<t Siii ,.0 nt p i ce le Utt• lttl dtMt II C 1 k a J Ml dt ••o ,,rt~ Judfl L M Gt~d o Dtm IOQHLANOI AVfNU• MtY I UIJ "' !ht all Ct of Ill IU><dt r Allor"tT lot" A•mlnlll ti 14 At1or111r Ill" 11..cvler Ju on c I P 1 lllO V 11 l Go No !I l'lllECIH'CT Sl..JU 1 " ' ( • 0-V 9 H1 Cllll It• tµNIMISI ON MAIN ol 0 11101 Coon!\' Ct o n 1 It 11nt c Pub ll!fd 0 1n1e (0111 fl• ~ Pl OI Pub thtd 0 1nt# C'ot1I D• Y ,.lie! Tn 1 bulllltlt la IN f1t1 fl\lldVC l'1f bY e 1~.,_ II l l Sc vo•• lttp l'n Ill .. •tt T bt. llt•liitl\Ct c. ~ I( N (• I I. 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''' (,., Jonei ltp Publk '"«k T1>1 Con1 ucllon or Con! 1cr w HE NZ E• 1 11 , •• ,, , on ct < , "' .. ..... of l'u .. ( ·~ L. ,. t II No 1 17 H ~I\ lt\(11 ... ,, ... ~ ., 11\IM II on NOTICE s tlE llE I V G VEN TH.\T M•WllOltT-MliSA UN ll'llO l'lCTITIOUI •Ui1NllS , ldt lfOI l•v,ldt 0 .. ltlCIN(T "*' •trt&ll IP ~ ... IOl•h• "'". IPOUf l'MM wori 1 lLE N SU~A"IC £ t nd lllVSf COM SCHOOL OISTlllCl' NAMI STATIMINT t '*I"'" &J N CWl,. lltl>tm ltff Pol .,. "l•<t P• k Nr"9'1 C•vMIDUle 0 Wllll• llt• 1111 110 11 ,,_n " .,, 1 1 •rid dticrlDM PANY , co•POl"t on 1, du r •ubll rurod Htlkt 111¥111111 l lt1 11>• !el ow!111 p• ,.,. I• c101n1 bu1l,...1 J udlf M l &tckrr lttO ol1tll PIB NIWM I Or SILVllAOO <I lht p 1111 orDI 111 t ''"Ml It"-' T uoltt undtl 0 O•lcl ol T \II d• .cl ... pr NOTICE IS H£1tE&Y G VEN 11'11 lh• •1 ( tril M W ltl I e llep IMOitCIC M G ,ll UI lllt! P'ltf(INCT .,. ... , 1 •rid uw•c I <I lolll on t • II\ lllt ofl <• ot t 1,., t •t<u tel by EllWlN A I OI d OI Ecluct l on Df tllt Ntwport M•1I .!.P C I. SPAN LAUNOJIY I. Cit It J 0 Co o• • lltP Judo• It G Wtllt II.., .. trl 111 .,. Kt C-lly C111ter 21M1 lov 1 E"' lltt 1110 l l 1 Sou"' L•~ Sr ft M"VSHUNO Jll t nd CAROL A Un fl ld kl-' Olot Id Pl 0 • ...,. C""n V CLEANERS 11 J N1 .. _I AV I l'lMIJ il'ub VIM 0!"1"--COltt 01 ly l'Uot MI V l• Ind Ju111 l t 1• lt11 IJU.1> LEGAL NOTICE P'lllCINCT Jl ... J I Cll k I' Vtr f o..... Sltvt l«i (tllYllfl ltd S111l1 Al'I Ct lllor" 1 '"lllcll clOCur'Mnlo M.lV!HUND llu•b•nd t nd w 1 11 (I lo •\'I .. 1 tct VI •ti td II di UP D Ntwon 1'111rn C1l I f'olUlll P l <t Ht~tl lltt1611'1CI J!1 V I C t fk L Crow It.. l"INclOI' M V Gt,,,,,,. 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Mtll Ct l 1 HAMI ITATIMINT ln-'8 L T H ... lt v Ille> Po lh1t l'lttt l luffl lllHH'Y 1'1l VIiii ( t rk I A tmllh Olm llertltll "''°'lo ltld Dll"I p Df le• clrl'" btntllc 1 V rttor<ltcl .A1tr! 1 116, 11 Ill loc•ltd II US1 l'l1c1"tl1 Avt ""' C•" t Tll ' ""' nttl 11 btl111 clllcl11c1tc1 bv '" 'flll to -". _,. 1111n, t rl dol"f Jufft F S Ltwldt VI lttt Cit Ori Cieri M f: G ~I tit• 1!'11 1Kllon1 Ind IPl<:Hlcll 0111 tor lhf ilrvmenl l"4 17104 11 book 1930 p1g1 41] Mtt• (11 for11!1 t i '"111<11 flrnt II d tllcli Ind" du• bu1 nlfl•l t• Clttk I( l HI Yll lllP llOH<lll' 8 A Hid !'I lllP TUSTIM lllll,,.. cllKf btd lmlrl'Y...,111! tn !tlfl'd ot Olt < 1 llKord• I" ht Ott<• o1 M '" II bt P~bl < V -ntd trld ••cl !or El ll•r M WiO <~ Pal MO IOA Nl ING ASSOCl,t.TfS tJG1 C •ti H S Wll • 1111 Judtt A I Cn¥ llllt C°"I u i De>cumHll& •l'ld Conti 11< loll 11...,orcltr ol O init Cov11ty C• llornl1 OPTtC.\L 11.1: ... 0£11 11>' I •It"''"' I •d '" ~ 1'• (OUl\1¥ Dullt P Cotti Mttl "ltlCIHCT Sl ... 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II Gt rfll'lff lltf 0 1lrl<J l\•1 11c1rl1lllld lht prtYll Int I~ ••I whlcll btt •mt dut Mt rl> lt11 e>evablt te> 1110 ordfor"' llo NPWP<>l'"I Mtll1 HOTICf TO C1t•01TOltS ~Vt :•v.,IY J MlddO• °""1llY (OUrol't Judie ,..._ ~ Sov II Jlte> S.O ''''"' d lll:d Jlld•• ! M W '011 Jlt• r1 I ol --cl em w1011 ot 1ht Iott I v n i nd • t ,vbionuenl n111 1mr11, ot Un I'd Scl'loo D' c A Po to n •11<• IUl'Ell Oii COUllT OP TM• C t rk 0 It Hvcl!i.on •tti l~•IM'Cior & "''" M°""" r"" Ceril D J WlllOA.0D-'""k l'ltll 1W11rk 1lobtotlorm111 o bt p M PI t lld n '''' Mtluncl~ll OOeoncim~bt eqv •d• l>t dte olono STAl!OF CALfl'OltN.lt'Olll C t k M II I( f II Ot m Judlt J S l vrtt Mo 1 t• ( ert Ill: Mt OUt:I 1"' •t <1111 led n II>• SDUti.t 11 Ct lorn11 htrflelc t •dV•Ml'd bV blnt nc 1 v In nt 0 1 <I " ne tvt ot 11 Iv t lo THI COUNTY 01' Oltit.NOE PltlCIHC Sl.fff r C ' k l I W •M ltte llllll(INCT 1I UJ.l ~ltlll" l•bor A1rHt'notlf llltd In 1111 of "'•" t nl ol F 1 tn111 tllC• TMt: ium ot t n e In o sue'!! <Oii 1r lt>o lu I '" Nt ,t. 11tU Pa ... ,..,. l(nlQlll ltt1dlt'IC9 C erll A I( V at'l'll" Olm '0'1"' 11••r• Elll CIVbllcllllt '''ll 1c•pltll1A1soc.1tdGt<1t1ICDn 1cor1 , .. ,90 l\t•Olort tdVlll<td bY htfll .. 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Htwklns Otrn CoPI• of Ult llfl' I orev1 110 r1 • ol rttl llll lt llAlt No bidder may wJ lld &W 111 b d for I NOT (,£ 1.$ HEllf8 Y G VEfll ID 1nel----~~~---------J~d1r C M Ev1n1 lttp ni~clor II T OI -II.ti ( trk V J Mout 111., Pt< d '"' '"llOll tt dtltrm ntd br tlle 1h1 b~ 11•0n Ml tel lllt undt I Oiied PO! loci cl fO V tlvt: (o~ davt I "' Ill• < td 11 1 of 1111 tl!O~t 111rn1d dt rtdtn IOICTITIOUI IUSIN•ll (llrll J l F,,.,. t tltll JudOI M l &Kkt r atfl (ti C S Gri n Otm 0 &lrlc.t I t °" I t II lt II M Pl P ICt p t11nt lltlr>e! cl1 y ulldtt svcl\ Ottd or di t tr "' 11\e ooen ne tnt t of t>t • p• ton• l!iv no ( • "'' aO• ni llO NAMI •TATIMINT ( t ~ & (. t 1t11n1n Ot.., C t • I .\ I( rilwood •to IOll!CINCT TI.WI Of b!.111...,1 lo '"II 11111 Allio C Hk lllltd l uot h11 txocultd 1nd dt Vt td o 11 d The 801 d <>I Edurt 011 ° Ille Ntwpo I ,~ d dKtdtn 1 t ..,_U ..:! to f o th""" Tl>I fofk.wl,,_ "''""' 1 • lloJl\9 .. 11.lCINCT S) 1 .. I ( 1 k H A Schull II' Otm f'OI "9 "'•<I lVilrl!t lll"iiltll<t l•l•l l11u ... 11111,,_I Cl for<> I Al fQul tcl lly du V 1pllOl1111td Tru11M f wr ITtll Mtt• Un t el Schoo OI• rt l•f VII nt '" 1' "'' n1<•Ut y voucll• 1 In k• oll co bull111u •t Poll llf .. ICt I IWI I • ., dlllCI 4.i61 .... c1MCT1 nm I OtYtl"Mtlr• Av• SKI"" in' ol 11>• L•bor Codi Ill• c ... 0.<11111 on 6f o,r.u t •11d Otmtl\(f lo r o~I to elocl •11v 0 • bd• '"d "" 111 Ill• cit i; ot '"' t l!OYt I I\ !ltd (O\I t or • s I( •flu AMtalCA"' '"'"' ICON St•111o<t 0 tr11<lor to ""'°"' ,~. (Ofl\fl(I ht t lor I• S•I• •!Jd "'' dt1>111l1" .. nit ti d du y .,,.. n«tUI y AC<•e> tnt ~.st bid •!Ill 0 0 " ... ~, ll'ltln w ti\ Ill• nereu a ~ T•OL JOlt l•1t Ce.ti H l ltwtY I le J T S ..,.1 I 0.1'1" 1'11!0nt ,.1t t • K "I ltnldlll<I l7GI "-""' M 0 f,,..rt rt 111111 •w1rdeel lt!tU llOtl f CODY tllt rtof II tie!\ ""n tel T uiltt auc~ Oted of Trust t lld '"' V• t nY Info me ty or lrrt0u I lty I YOllCht 1 o Ill• vndl 11ned 1 11>1 oll Ct Ce>rOllt dt Mt Cl I t'HlJ /1111< C II (llCll lttD Pa.r! A~ JUC1t 0 J McCltUtl\d II:'~ 101>1!• a l do(umt nl1 t VldtllC"" ob t1!on11nv bdl'"Kt Vtd 11t 11t Atornt v P1u H1"n1 I t Etl! L1t11 Goult 470 M11uerlN A111, (\Hitt~ W ( He ntt lltl lllJ)PCIOI' F J $ IOhl ll II.. Cit k I. J ltld'#lll •• , Pr .... ljl ftf lhl t -ind -l>I f I mto Mtllrtcl !hl rlbY t lld 1\11 d« 1 td 11\d Oiied Mt v 11 1'7l H 11 S rfft Cotlt Mtlt (I larn 1 tt'17 C11r11n1 dtl Mt r Cl lorn 1 c!11 0 ... W•ACI lttD J\H!Ot II G I(....... C rrk. J ICt f\I ••• "'*••ldlff'IYIUlll(l rltt1ol .. 10t1ll1lllt 1k1<'1 lltr•b~ cit<•• •• IUtn• ••<U ld Nl!Wf'OR,TMESA UNFll!O wnl(I\. "'II•(• 0 bvl llHI o/ 11\t I('""""'~ Nl<!lftlll<I 167 ltlll'll!lt il'l:ICINCT U-!n I Clot M J f' Oii RtP Pursu•nl lo Ste 1"10' fJI lht E -Cl!fln paid lor •11r '"Orkl119 llrnt ...,,.., t1>1n tlOhl lhtrtt>¥ lmmld 11tlV c!Ut 1rld PIV•bt 111d SCHOOL O!STll CT undt , t nod n 1 Intl or1 Pitt n l\f lo ,t.vt L-llldo Ci llft1lnl1 i-oi 111 ,. K t ,,,..,...1 Rrtldtllet 11U C trl J A 5nvcll llt• <!Nit -• '" I Ill Ill lltl'lll'lf "ten 111" houri dur 1111 111~ -ct t ndl d•~ wfl• • 111• , •CJtcl 111<1 dOtt hor obv t tel la el Or1n0t Covnty ht et 1 • ot 11 cl cltctd111t w tlll n tour 1111 11tttl11111 11 <-U<ltd oy 1 Gt,,.•tl ! 11 bol l!!lvll l'll:ICINCT 111n I tlw!t• e•tclncll Ou1l llld \loltrt 111111 VOit wc:ll work 11 rlQulr..S 111 C•HI ol ••I t c1u1t tllt t 1111 p oPt ty ta bt iold !ti Ct lorn I montn• 1 t !l>t I •I Pllbt e•t °" of 11 1 ,., M '"" l~l&fC 0 C 0 Jllvn• 11;.,, Pa Ill P 8(t Sr.Dl'ltl\1 •tt10llltl lt07 b¥ lbt"'I Volt lllllel It Yett II !tit 0t o<d ntry """"'11..-C I$ ctll1td by t rt llOOd 11t 1 ¥ tl'lt ot>!!i>t 0111 1ocured lllt tbV lly Do o I>• Ha ~tV Flth•r 110 c• L!OTA GOULO Jud" I( H Cool< lltD 11~t0Ct ! ti,: £ II# lt•fl ~!:ti h lllN 1tr1r llf Voltft O<'I tllcfloll M cll<'lt;ltr II lie nr pr-Ir l ricl douOlt Ot .cl M1y 1 1911 PIJrckel.lno AVW Oa1tU M&v ) t n Tl> 1 , lltmt nl '"II I I'd '"Ill I ... C°""'"' c f!'k I( l M..-.. Olm , ••••• c s .-..n1 llmt .... Sund•Y !IV H Vttl •eo•l lloll<l1y1 to Oii.PH.\ WOOOMAN .. .1 I 00 E l lAllETH M Flt 5W: ~ c . k ,, Or1nt• C&u~l'f "" Mt y II ( f/11 ~ H J-1 Otm "" lttD f'llR(INCT I N y 0 Mil I I 0 ,.Ubl lhtd or ..... (Diii 01 1, p !Cl Putll....., O••nfl• , ... ,, Ot ly ,. ot E••e11 •• ot II\• w or 1~• ltn .. t•CtNCT h 111-1 ~ • ~ ~ t Hf":'.,,,::: Olm i'~~HA Hllll ~ .... -L::..• ~=y C:t:tnl I V D~~ MtY S t It ,6 ltll 1 'O 11 M1y 71 1911 Jr.d June t ltll IJI• n Abo¥o n~mod d•fldtnl P..~ ~I P o<t J,,...., ltfll<l"'CI )61 TM ,.;.CINCT Q-Jrt-1 Jl.l74 Tl>t'*M" ¥1,.. OIY i nd O!tlttm11 DtJ ----,.AUl A HAHNit. G 1fll! c~~•lw J •to '"'' nv '"'"' "''"""°" c'"t.,. 1 -.116 ll"DYlclecl tur~r th•t 1111 P•Y !or LEGAi~ NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE •1• I!••• 111~ tirnr J~-;,uoJ A C "' :''1.eo , •1lll1D11 W S•llf• l•l"lllr1 Or Jl-371 1";'7,'~ '!". '-", •Ohl llO\lt'" d•Y lhlll 1111 ~=··1~::~f:~•ler11I• "''' C •r-I( f J-I 0 ,,., n•e>tc!Ot" J c WI '"'' 1t11 CAl'llll.lNO l•ACH no •I ,,..,. -Dolllfl tll OD) mort HOTIC• OI' 'fltUSTlf j SALi NOTICf INVITINli 810S All h I ,. oc Pub '"" O •11111 Ce.ti D• IV May 1t )t lnd JUM 2 t 1t11 "''" "'"' 1321 JS c t '1< M ~ J'"niit ••• Jlldtt A a Av...,1 a"' fll.Ul "''" lourf117m1n rll• !or Ille cr1tt or T 0 N• H-ttl I' NOi ct h ntrroy 11l•1r1 11111 1111' IOlr<i ol p-::i•:_r ~== •,0,11 Ot lV ,. 101 LEGAL NOTICE ".l'lCINCT 11 HJ.I C t<l 0 t Wtl btooi 1t1' DANA POINT _.l"\t• 111Y'Ol•td l'HA IJ.SlllS! T Ul t•s ol ~ Coed Cornmvnlty Co 1'91 MIV i, n It u ltl l 1171 11;1----------------P~tl 119 p •e• W1hon ltttldtllm ,,.,, (ltrl c l Polttr "" 41 2tt It 111•11 bt milldttorY u-. •n• Con-On ,,I 1 lt11 •l 11 00 I I'll 0 . ct o• 0 lllM (""'"'' C1UIM11l1 .. "' 1----------------1 STATIMINT 0 .. AllAHDOHM•NT o• Sttino t O ,llllCINCT ti Jll-1 11 "'' tr.clor lo"'"°"' 1 <l"lrKI 111w1rlltd •Ml HERIT.A'i!: MORTGAGE COM .. ANY 11 r..cot¥t 111" ttkl1 up le 11 00 1 m Mon·! UllE o• "ICTITIOUS tUSIN•Ss MA.Ml lni.,..f'l! t e w11..., """ ,.0 11 ... p '" 51 Mld11••• (.Jlurctl 1:23' IL TOIO u-. •rw &ull<Glllr1ctw vnd., him lo 1>1y 1 1 nd nd 1 1 10 Ottd el d•v JOll>t U 1911 • Ill• Pvrcl\11ln1 LEGAL NOTICE lf'it 1ouowl111 "''°" "'' """""'td flle Jul!Qt l l "'~ Pto ,.,, fie v -Or ilf ¥11 not 111• !h.ln !ht ••kl _.: lltd rt1•1 !ti T'~',~ ¥1c1 '~ • ;'r'f1 11 1,,. ••t cur!d om of i~ld Khoot <lltlrl<I 1Kt1td •I u11 el 1111 lldltlton tv1l11111 11111'11 Of. c '"°"' M ll D bu. ate> n1HCt11' 0 I( Or ... llltt d.,)O) .. ilbortn -~""""' Ind mteh1nk;1 '"' • OYtm r IJIO Ad1m1 AYtllUI (DI . M••• hnl'l•uttr M1rlf11 •• IW Ntw-1 c tl'i L ( Mr(lt 11~ .... JUllOI M p c umlty .. .., •Mltll!Alo .,.,. tm'!OV.11'1 bv "'-In '"' ••Kulion el !ht by Cll• It • t Grovr• Jr l llCI CJlllh . 111 c . lo<n I •I ..... ch I "'' llld b dt ""H bl NOTIC• 1'0 ca1c11ro111 ltvltv•' C11 ' Miii C1tuor"1' .,.,7 'l.fCINCT IJ .. l .... I , 1 • ~ D W Ou "" ,Dfl" Q.11J tenlrtcl :fhe .,.n11¥ for I• u11 !I <lln G ovt r •nd rt<Dfclt(I Novtmlltr 1I U6I 1>ub klY OP111td t nd rtiw;J Io r IU,lltlOll COU aT dP TN• Tiit f1ctllloi.r1 bl/I Ml nl!nl rt-ttrrM i. P!)llll!Q p e • Vt n Evtf'Y 11111 dllltt 3130 c ,,.. E I Jd'lnlll' Dt"l IOUTN u.tuNA .............. 1t11 I II IPKll" In Std on 111J II bOOli: _,._ Pllt :>06 6f Oft <I•• llecordt p ll 0 G II. A MMA&LE f'LA NETAR UM IT.AT![ 0, CALl,.OltNIA l'dll ,.,..,,, .... , ''"' Ill Ju111 • 1•11 I" Ille !tlv f w A~t IOltl(INCf SJ-•1 *-116 fl tllt L.lbor Cod.. n l~t olloc;t ol tilt lllei:ordtr ol Ortnot PROJECTOR 'JM"t: COUNTY OIO OltANQI. Ccunry .t Orl "Gt I IOK .,.. M A 1 k n.on lllllCI P&I! "" P' I CI f'I 111 HI I ~ Mtr SAN CLIM•MTa Tiit CofttrKIOf tllall »V I 1v1I I nd (aunty C .. tlforn 1 W I Jfll It publ ( auc A btdl tit 1o tit 1<1 1ccord111ct '"II> HI A mot Olltllhtuttr 5.tltt Corp I C• llvmll J~dtt O J M"" • 0.,,, V 111 Dr 412•• tUbllll'""' Jll¥m1t11h kl tlrh .. orkm111 ton to hJGhtlt blcldtf !or <II/I flll¥tblt ti tf'ie 1111truc ion1 t l'l(I Colld tlon1 l lld £1t1tt ol JOSEPHINE ATWATlll: co l'Ol'llltln S30CJ Alh•Mbtl AYtnul lea Cltrll. N 'I Ove \I om Rlf !~•IM<lor M M Tllornll Oitm SAH JUAN CA,ISTUH8 ntilidtd 10 lllt<vl• "'' _... 11 1ucll 1"" 6f 1111 In r ... lul money or tr.. S1>Klllc1t ont w!<ldl 1rt 110W .,. fUo 11\!1 Ot<•••NI ""'' tt Ci lllotllll t60)2 C" t l ,,, Jo~!~" O""' J udtt l H Yt d 1111 .... J!J ~~ '~ t~bl1nct 1t11m1nl1 '-1' ~b11:'1G~~r:il l~Jl!: .. ~~~· 01 31j.ElllJ~~~ m1v bt tei:ur..i 111 lrtt ollk t Pl "' NOTIC:E IS HERESY GIVEN lo 11\t Tiii• 1>111IM11 w11 COllCl...Clld 1w 1 ,.,._ ,. •c NCf II >llf 1 C.trk H l l!!u •• lltP T AIUCO II IPPI <•11 t <O Itel • H l cr11! 11¥d Sullt 615 lnolt .. ood Pv C'!!•• 11g Altlll 6f II d l <llool •• lcl <Id tori el l\f tbov• "'"'"' ••rldtnt llC<"lll"" ft rtillo P ~t• Sf!'"' Illa lhllct UV Cit•• I o lliMl)o • .,, .so.otl N r11l11l<11 1erMrno11t1 flltd '"th ll\t Ct !or" 1 •It r gl'r! 11 1 100 fnttft•I COii Etch bicldtr mull 1ubm I 1111 Ill II I It d I 11111 •II ptr1on1 htv "9 ti• m1 Otft Ml\li.tf Stitt (llr"I ol k L Joi .. AULAlll HO COSTA MllA OIH>llrtm .... r Of llldu1trl1I ti• 11 ORI n I < vtvtd lo illd "°'" llt lt bv I Urtdtr 11 d ctlllft 1 d'lt c:k cerllllt'f d<tek or bid 1111 lltl lri. 11 I d d t < t d t 11 I •rid C 0 fft"'11Ulf 1~.!.t~; ' A ~ M• 1111111 ••• "l:lli(IN(T s-t•2 l "?In cerd•nc• "'"' SKI Ill 117l 1 ot Ill• l•bo OHCI II II\• prDPtrlv I !vt ltd 111 lrtt Cevn cit!' I bond mldt PIJlll t lo '"' ordt r at • I r..iu ,.., ... I • lhtln .. "' 11\t '°<111dttlt Jvdtt D w ~"' ~ lt•o l'ol 111 P •ct ''"""1>111 llltl dtlltt n 2lli Codi ly 01 0 t no• Judi< ,1 Olitrlct ol Orinll lht Coetl Commu" rr Coll~ 0 1 rlcl M<tn1ry vOU<llt 1 " "" 01t (r ol 1111 l'h 1 1!1llm1<1t w11 11..i '"ti\ 11\t Cl)l,lfto C\fo I "" • J~ "'~ •• , un ""''UI ' n 'JOI AMMUOO 11 di KINI to lht 1rovl1 Olll lrt County Htrbor In II d Cou11ly Ind Stitt 11111 d of T UI HI n I" •m<lltllt llol ... < t • .., 1111 •Dovt fll!llltd <CIU I ... le Iv (tr\: II °"'"II County an MtJ e C"'-t ! J Cl< k " Rtt 1m .. Ol1t M I $1ocldl '11 Own NllWl'Olll llACH 51cilont 1171..1 •nd 1777 • Pl lilt Lt bor dtKt btd 11 tll111 llw 1>t (tnl U'!l.J of !t11 •utn b d 11 "'""' tlltrn wt!tl the N <tUlry 1111 ,.lll!C NCT Sl Jtl I Jvdt• M f: Ht11111 Na II IY S)..313 (~ <tnutlllfltl !ht lflle>lo\<mtnl of I f>. Al ll\•I <t rlt" ltlld , lut t"'ll ll\ ttlt 1 9UI t"ltt 11111 tl>t blcldtr wl I t11l1 I" I voudlffl lo '"" ""°'" 11\11d 11 11(1 Pt t IAlllO HOLLl'Y •.lollll & WILLI.ID ,.0 , r <o n"t In dt"Ct 1111 C 1r• I' S 0 Sii•• °'"' U-lJ' pri ,.tlees bv "" Cl"lri c Of or i ny •ub 51, 1 01 Ct l kiri' 1 County el' Or•lltt ht o Ol>Cllfd conlrt cl 11 !ht t •m• h Avt 1111• L1tu111 •••di C1 llo<nl1 '1651 All11 HI A"ll O Cltri J C tilt DI<"> l'AUllolttNO <1111lrtcttr Utldll" lllm llf${f\btd 11 lot-• 1w1 01(! to h"' n !llt 9vtnl ol l1l 11rt lo '"hlcll 11 lllt> p l <t ol bul MU ot 11\t fll W"I 1111'111 llrlfi S11Ht )IM t .,. ( • •h o IOltl(IHCT Joi M1 I ~1 S«l1on lllJ.J 11 l mtl'llltcl rltlu H tilt Lal 1 T let U06 91y Vltw HIOMI ttllor nlo tu<ll {Onlrl<I !tit ptoc,..ii ~ 11110t t OMO 11 ,1 m1lltrJ Hrll" nt to L11 A...i.., C..lller"lt "'" Jue • J • I( .... , .v •tP llol!lllt' Plll(t O•Yh "" dt<K• :IOIJ! !..I 71) '°"' l(ID!' ..... tubc,,,.rr11;tor ""llloV"' "'"I Th ... II 111-" "" • Mi it r«ord the d'IHk .. ' bt lot It led 0 n "'• ,,,. lllt ••II. ~f •• d .,...,.11, '"'"' n ''"" )IJ« c ~ 0 L ' ...., D"" c~''"' s •1v1iv11w trldatn1tt1 Ill •n7 •pe>rt"llcttblt I< td n llODk 17 ..... It 6f MlKt lll lllOU1 el' • borld "" '" IUtn !ht tol .... bt "'°" 111 I tt "" I ,., 11\11:111<11 ... el rll!t c • • J o..... l11•11Kler r c ... I ".... JS.16) Wl'llllGA to ll'PIY to tlM le.111 .... MAPI n h• "" (t 6f llte CCIU"IY ror1tl td Id 111d K1-dll rl<I "" c• .. lt .. CI CT J J 'I Jodtlo T M Otvlt l)lm OIAMONO orlffl1!cHhlp cc>m,.,llttt ntlrnl lllt ollt Of llHor<lf DI otld O t lllt (C>Ullll' No bld<lt m•v "llld I '" II I bid II' I Dtltd Mtv lJ lt1t "f .., V , GrVllr o1'11fdfflf.t C ,,.., C l Tu1 ltote Jf-41)( lht P\IO!lc '"Ol'il Ottltc1 111111 wflle'!! Id cornm<>n dt tcr 11119" JOOlll le>l'U<t Pf' loci ol la.rly I"' l•J) d1y1 1r1tr lllf, MAo1'JOo1' I l WICHMANN ) ;.t -1 • C trlc W 0 I( lllt Olm Jf.tl(lt "'" S"lt t lhl ·-•l'lll<t "°lll """' Im n Av' 151nle Ant ) Ct l lor"ll H107 dt !t H f !Of" 11\t _,. llt thtrtol E•tcurr • trl lllt WI t ol t" re M C ~ t ~~IVI 0.00 l'l:IC HtT 14 tll I llOltTM llVIMI !I'll! trtOI for I Cll"llll<11t .. I PP ""' !~ •I) Thi 8"rd ot Tful!Ht r.,t v11 ll'lt 1111 lbeYt lllrned dlctcl"'I Jlll"~e. ~ l ~ !'I'd 11..,. l'ollllll 1111(1, llY VltW Sctwilll un JMlf7 111• Ci r! f1c•I• .. i t .... 1 • "" 1110 of S81!1 ••It .. II bt m•dt bu! wllllolrl C>l'lvlle• ol rtlt <llllf t llV Ind •II blcll It "lll•M M w l(OXIN c_ • • J r • l)om Ord'lll'd O, Y..!el '"""""let! 11 IDU "'""''" 111•1 '" If bt c...-en•n or '"' r1111v 1xort 11 et m1tl ..i lo '"tlvt '"" Ir tOU 11 I ti or I" m ,.,,.. ""'''" ( ~ ..,. II I , •dutl" ... lnt.-<IOo' V It Si ert llN lil llM Uttd 111 !ht M IMmt llCt of 1111 COii! t el '°' dint I t , Potl•U °" °'" en-formtl It,!" 1nV II d or In !tit llldd llf Lt-• l&ffdl Clnltrll!I fUSI "l(lNfT ! 1._1 J\llllff F F Molo,..1n N6 11rl'r • 1e7 Tiit llllo of l!HM'tnlkn to IDUrnl't'mt n ln cumb inrt• 0 P•Y 1~I blll nct dut on NOllMAN t: WATSON 11111 ... 1US p~I no p Cr""• .,,, Mt Ii Oii Cltr~ M • Got.-111-. •!Cit llUCh (•W .to.II nor bt l•.u. "'"' -lo lh• ., ...:Ip• •um al 1111 111111 tKurtd by SKtf l e• d or Tr111ltt1 Att-Y tor ••-•rl• k"OO i f E• b utt fir ( 1rt I W lld'lrtf "-•• • 110 ffw IU..t 11 d O•td 10 w T 11t1177 11 '"ti\ 1"11re1t 0.,.n JuM 11 i.n 1 I 00 • "' Publl1lltd 0 11191 ca~nt Otl ¥ ll'lklt l"Y'K 0 w Kevi n ilttl f'llllCIH(T U...,_1 lllVIMI A )Vlltn Ulll"'tlo¥m1"t 1,. lht 1r11 ot r om ,f,u1u1t I 191\ 11 I" 11Ld !\Ole '""°' Pub1 lhtd Ort "ot Co11I 01111 '°lo! Mt.¥ It )I trllll Junt 2, • 1t1J 1211 11 Judi• G SPll tlrP l'oll "' ll'l1c1 ... cllfl >1t1 I'll ".422 aw•'''' tw "" lotllt 1,. tntlctllll• v dtd t (h 8nc• 1 •ny ulldtr fh<' "'"'' Mtv 21 11\d Jun1 I ltlJ lln n11_..::;_.:_;_.:..:_.:_c_c._::..;.:__c:.__..::; ..... cork J v l(fv•~ 11.t• c vllloM att W 1Jtll St "-42t CCll'l)tnH1N ~11 ••ctldld '" ,.,.r11tt Pl o1 •• d Oted ••• '"' 111 11\d 1111>1n•e1:1c:::...::::.::::,,,..::;::..;:_:..::; _____ _ C 1 ~ ,. St~ 1100 nuitc'lor I o A"'™"tOtl a.,, IANTA AMA IS"' I" tht '° dll'I 1rler 10 ''" rtfl\/111 o1 l~t T,u1 eo i l'ld ol '" rru~h c 11 NI LEGAL NOTICI! "llECINCT U 1111 Judll E M Tl'IOl'ft"6fl 11911' "'3lJ for" Clf_llflc.ltt .,.. bY 1tld Ottd .. C "9 p •ct It ry 111 dll\Cf "57 C t'i V 0 MOOdY .... lllVllADO I '<¥lit" ..... llUtnbtr of t ll!lr111titt t In Tht bf"f <t ry ul'ldtr •• d ~Id tw ----;:o;;;:::::c=-:::::C:-:;::;-:70;:---l----;:;-::::c:;c=--;,;c::::c::=-ccc:--CI. Pl s c trW v lllufl'lb. °""' '°'°'' tr1lnJnt Ill tllt ••• ••""'1i • rt t!o 6f rtlMI" of • b t•<h or cl1f1u I 111 ,~. Nl:W,.OlllT Mt:SA UHll'llO su•11:10• (OUIT 01' TMI I •r>f(IO 0 M &e"fV ••P It v1•v11w TUmN -lo flvt or ell ,,, ""' "'"' td tlltrfby l\ert tofg . ICMOOL 0 STllllCT ITATI 01' CALll'OltNIA .. o. J UdQt N I( H df /l brlr'ld ll:tt 11 icJ0 ( Wlllll tht l rtcll llll lhow 11\tl I Is t~«Ultd l lld dt lvtrtd to llll ulldl •lo111d NOiiet RYIH11t 11<111 THI COUNTY 01' OltAHGI 'er~ ll J I(""" Otm IOlllClN(T II us 1 O.ltd !ti I llffl .. , ti Mtv ft72 , .. •CllllO .i lttll 1/10 ~, l ' mtm ... r •-n °'1;11 I Ion ol 0.11111! 11'\d Ot NOTICE IS HE!llEIY G VEN lh•I lht ... "72141 C t"I 11 l ~-, •t• .. ol 11'1 p l<t McClllt/\I " Rtsldll'IH OAVIO 0 MIT(HCO(I( btrll'll11 lflrDUtl\ '"-tnl Ct tllle> t 1 111111 mi nd for St t tnd '"rlt1111 ""llCt ol 1!!11tfd el Ed11<1r Oii ol tl\1 Ht .. pnrl Mtt f NOTICI 01' HIAlllNG 01' f'ITITION ll'llEC NCl u JU I 2241 C111vc" 0 ... l1tr1r "' Vottrt °" 111 11\llUll bnl• • ,, ... dt., IOCI v br11tll l lld ol • «II"" lo <•Ult Ill• -VII I eel Scllool D '"<I ... 0 '""' (DU"'' 1'0111 "ltOIAT• 01' Will AND PD l•o II t rt Ellbl dt Ttl • ,.r~ n11W(IDI' 0 I! T1yi11r Olm Or11191 Ceu""' (I Uor11!1 .. urill• • olltd IO ltll II d ·r-rtv lo (•I IM"I• w111 r..c•!vt lf•l•d II di UP Ill COOl(tL ANO LIT"flltl TISTAMIN Cu&l>oulf 1\iltl P l (t°"t AYI Ju0ot JG Ai)I ... l)lm t v a J Mtlltlot D wt\1<1 lt1t C111tr1dor IH'OY lltl otlhlYi•dobltllnlll 11'1dl .. tr•1lltr OR 11 00AM °"111•121\tl•OI Ju"I t it• TAlllY ln'lltCID M L 0 on D•"' c .,i v l •owdlll Dtm Of"""' t Yldlll'ICt tl\11 "' tmploy1 reo ••• I'll Ftbr\11 v 2 1tl1 ,,.,. unllt rt ltllild <IUJkl ll'lt elllct ol •• d l choltl Oht lei loc• td. E1 .m of JUHf COMSTOCI( Ole•••"" JudOP ,l V N•w• k °"" C 1 i ~ MC(•ut~I" 11• "1l!lil .... Or111t1 Co.tit 01 ly "lot &PC>l'fflll<H Ott 1 I of Ill•~\ t <h on •n tlld NI ct orb ttt ll 11'\d Df 11ttk111 In bf IJ7 )t K i ni I Avtllul (OI I Mtlt NOTlCI lS HlllEIY GtVEN lfltl Clt't G W Mtilt No l"i rty Mt Y lt 2' ltn IHJ.n 111111111 1vtr111 Df ""' ltn 1"111 ""' ,,.. rtc11rdtd 11 book. tNt ..... 1112 of 111d Ct IOl"'ll i 11 .midi u,.,, 11ld bld1 w II Ill fdl1r A Ht 11111 hu Hiid M t n t HI c t ~ w E'"""' 0@<>'1 ,.OllTN llVIMI prent Ct t1 t llht lournt1mH1. Oii < 1 llKD ell 11ubl < V OPlntd tlld •t•d tor I I" for "rob•lt Df Wttl •l'ld Codie I t/ld PlfC NCT SJ n .. , ,.rtlCINCT M ..... 1 LEGAL NOTICE Tiii COnl•fClor I& t<Wtrtcl to m•~· Otlt Mlv 1 un Tti1Yl1!on Olllrlttu!lo11 s .' t."" 111\111\Ct cil L•ll•r• T•• 1me11l•r1 0 P•I l'ol ~II p .,. s .... , Ile•"""' 41111 110 "I Pll CI El Tora M&r Ill Sdlocll contr1b\ll Of\I. 11 f'Und• •1!1bl!"'" lor !tit HllltltAGI! MOlllTGAGl' ""-*' Hlllthl• t ltf'lltnl• v Sc..-! tlolllr rt/t<f'llCI ,. -do I m1111 kl " ~ • Rd 9 1 T ebuco lld PICTIT!OUI &UllNISI tc1mlr>l t1r1tlon of 1PPr111tlcH#i • orotr1r111 COMl'AHY All bld1 1 t to bt 111 1«¥donc:1 '""" f'Urhr tt<lkultr1 Mid tlltl "'' I mt '"d f111 rt r A J S'"H1 ""' llll>tciOI' E S Arneffl 11... llllAMI iTATRMaMT 1f ht ""' O't'I '"t1l•rt'f 11111rlllll<tt •• It u lt TrU11tt (""" t ORI I <111rVc1 I o"1 11'\d Pit<t ot ... , "' Ill• otme 1111 llttl\ Jtl LEGAL NOTICE ,,,m l'ub lllllC Or11111 Co.to! Dtl"r 'ltM M•t 11 I ). I nd JuM t U11 lUJ..11 LEGAL NC11'1CE NOTICI 01' PU&LIC M•ArtlN• NOT CE 15 H!JIEIY G V!!:N 11111 1 llUI> c f'it1rl111 '"II bt ll•ld by h City CouMfl el' 1111 CU\' ol C11t1 Miii 111 Ju111 S 1t11 .et t111 lltvr OI e )0 1m or It ooon t11 ... 11fl•r 11 !tit m1t11r ""'" M 1\11 d 111 1~1 CtvMll C1>1mlllr el !flt Clt-t HI 11 F1 r Orlvt (GI• Mtll Ct llor11 • Ot1 1111 '9llO'W'ln1 "tllltn tw d'ltlltl n IOlll lllJ:Ol'f• ll'ITITION I: n11 btlnt 1t1t Hiit"" el Cai • M••• '""""' w 1i.r 0 1trlcl 77 l't r 0 lvt C11!1 M•ll fer Pl 1nl11l11n lo r11on1 p 11111rl¥ ~llM It tne llClttllwtst <etnt r ol P• llldll Ito•• I nd Rid H ,t.v111ut I om Ml IO (I NOTICE rs F!J llTHEll G VEN l~I 11 II d I mt I nd p •<• •~v •!Ill ' " IOlll 11tt ttltd rn1v ,...,,. t nd bt ll11rd tw "' c ty Cnunc o1 1111 c h or Cot'• Mu• nA lllt l-.. 1111" II '7 1 f_IL(fN P PH NNfY Cll'r C •r~ el' tll~ City 91 Cotlt Mtlt Pub! Miff Or•rio• Cnf1I 01 tv ,. ti M1y 1' lt1t llU 11 LEGAL NOTICE J .: r c I Gvlltl Otm Jlldlt 0 D s ... tit Otf" fotlowll'll .. rttn 11 tfol'"I Mintll lourl\ty1'7l"" " tllV '"''"''k••blt lrldt .... •oo~r G Oull'""'" 5tlf( I CtllMI wt.k it •• -... I It ·~ IOf' Jllflf • 1tn ., t lO • ... '" 1111 C. , J 0 Ptirion llote c •. , 1 , , ... , "' ltllt "" en 1udi <011tr1c11 tl'ld 11 """' Con1 t CIOl"I ,,-••·-t 1111 Dlf!c• ot "'' ,.urd'l11ln~..,t 1t1 11 d court _,,, Pl 0 111•rtmt 11t J of 111d court c 6 ~ /,,\ l Ct lvt Dt m c :;~ D Ii! w tdfn '" II CASA OE MAHANA 20102 ti. w llfl , ... oulll < ......... 1111 .,. M•k "' llKll -..... , lllS ..... khool Olllr ti 1111 111-ctn•ft A¥111U1 " 11111 Civic c ....... , O,IVt WHt Ill .... ,;,: 1----,.c.c,c,.=,-o,c.-:,c,c,c.c,o,c.c.,o,---- .. ~ .. c1NCT h H t' .. lllfCINCT1 Ml lfl' l lrdl '"''' A<1• C• "7117 cbnl lbl.rUMi ~Vbt ll'lld NtwDl'"f H1r1>ot Ntwt P•ISJ C111tt M.,. Ct lllornl• IT 6f ''"1' An• C•, tor"1• su .. •••011 COUllT 01' TH• PO IM P!I Ct •• 'd 1111 dtllt.:I 4'07 1'1!111111 'l•Ct ,. .. 11cn1rd ltu dlllCI ...... fl WODd-111102 I w • •<" Tiit Cor!trt (!Dr •'Ill l l\V tullcl"l••Clflf (Ol'llbll\M .. 1111 o. Iv II tot NllWflorf EK/I blddl<" ""'" lullmll I bid dlMll I Otltcl ""' n lfl STATI 01' CALllOOllHIA l'Olt ~ ... ~ I\ Or um Wl<kllll•• Lii II ''"" Alie "'°' u"61r l\Jlfl sl<iM '°"""'" .. "' ~ r t ... (,. C1!1fof"lll1 M1y '' lf 26 1tn rn tllt form of • {lrllll" or <•lfl. I w f St JOHM TMI COUMTY 01' Ol:AMOE l11.1~C G' I J Ot~ t "CG ltt• lntlltdl!r J M 1>rltc:lltrd ltH Tit 1 ll\llllllU II btllll COl'lductld II t ... r ....... t1 6f S1t:llon1 1111 S 111<1 1111 •In 111711 <llf'Clt ti" 1 bid bond tllut !ti I YI H CHI! Cou"IY (lftl: 11 .. .I 7llll Jud M y Jd'onson ... Judtl F Su vl n 11.. llMI ¥111\1t l ¥ I ll !tit t!T'le>lovml!'llt Pl ••P tnl Ctl lj ... l ti -t moul'll ol tllt blilll "'-CU.ION OUNN ANO ClllUTCMlll Eililt of MINI S POOL! O~ti...i c I k 0 l 1(1111 "" ( rt; s IC il'tckl\1m Ill•• I!""'" Wood•Oll lnlormt lloll rtllllvt ,, 'P"'"'' (fl)\ 0 D•••blt It lllt orlle or 11'1• N __ , .....,,, ""-'"' ,, "-i.OTICI 15 H•JI flY GIVEN lo "" C!<o • r JI"" to~ .... ci!r-E F H ! •tt1 Tltlt tl•l-1 '""' """' .... COurtf• lltlldlrdl '""' Klled\l t i '"" olhtr ,.. LEGAL NOTICE Uni! Id $ct>oo4 Dhiri(! "' P1•tormt nc:• ., w !!It"' A ,,.....,_ ''"""' •I '"' l l!OVI nlmtd d-c"""' !CIN(T JJ,,. I llVUll eu1 '"'""" m1¥ bt ob111ntd , om "" lend "''Y bt r@qulttd ,, '""cl IC•t!IOll ol J• 11...-t c ...... or ""'" .. :! ri , •<• Fettmi n 1t11 dlflel 1n1 ftllCINCT 1,.,.,.1 Cl•A. llf °''1191 c.vniy °" Die u itn Ol•ll(I°!.,«'"' rllllu11r •I 111111 on1 •x clll<lo 114'11 "" 0 111 kl w. tti• t v•nt 01 '' 1u • to ,N~1«1<n•'"",..•nc1111H"lll1 '2UI :r~ '!c"'..:;•,h:v~:.,~:!.imi1"~~~"':.,:: , ' ' ' M -· ··~ l y A/11111t I ic......-°""1tY l;-ly lllt /1.4.,, 1t,1tor Df APPfttlll<ttlllfll Sin MOTlCI Of' Oll'AULT ANO t111tr 111 o ltH:ll at11lr1ci lllt "Pr«•td1 tf "' '' --'1' ~· • I l'olll,.. l(I (........ I (lork Fr111<ltu C•lllor11!1 ... 'om "" Olvl •L•CTION TO llll UNO•lll ''"' (l\Kk .. 1 bt tori•'"' OI' I", ... of • Al-Yt ,., """'~ _, '"' nf«••••• YCIUchll"'I In '"'-'fl<• ~r;;t;;'0M t ~ .~ "":,e 1111 .. ~::,.:y":" l(WYMc09f\tld ... • 1•7" llon llf AWtnllCllf\I' Slll'ld1rdi Ind Ill o••o 0" TIUST bond "'' fun IUtn "'' 1(11 .. 1' bt PUllll•"""' Or•1'19" '°''' 0• ly I' lot ,ot "'' = "'~ •bo•:. ""'!lee! Ct\lrl otf' Clr r• J c Hi rrod iltt~ J\ldOt J ,., G •n" Ottll "vb !hid Orll\lt C1111t Dilly "1(11 IH'111<ll olllc•-. T s 11, tin lll'tl'lttd 11 111d Schoel Dl1!rl<I Pl Or111Qt Mt ¥ It :IO » lttl lll! It v00U:11:,, to !hi u~ilfontd trtt,, ;:•= cr1 ~ o J Con• lltt C t k $ I( fttltr-ll•ll MIV 1) It 7I INI J\1111 1 lt7t 113>-1' NOTICE 15 HEll:,EIY CIVf:N th1I 111• TJ\t loll0'# 11t1 cotv o1 NOTIC E Ill• Ctv"IV Drlv1 Siil 1 12 N..,.._, ll11c11 C• lor,.le pttFC NCT 1-.ue.1 c t 1 • " 0 H• " De"" LEGAL NO~CE M11Utto11 N 01111 W•t•r o ,,, ct .. rei:• "' or11rn11 ot w111c11 .. 11 P!ltd fo< '"'' d Oii Ne lllMtr """ w!!l'w:I •w 111 1:1111 klr • LEGAL NO'l1CE '2'60 WI\ ~n , 111, 111.:• 11 1>u•IM n .,, II~ ,.., p •Cf Cort Itel dl!'lltt 10.u ftll:ICIHCT ...... I 11 IU.lt<I bkl1 •• 11'!1 "''Ct ... &O'I'. s t/1' I" lh• ofllct ol 11\t r•<O di ~I , ... roc1 el tor1¥ !Iv• !('I! -IVI ••I• '"' --------1111 u!ldtlllt "!d I\ • I ''"'" ' " 111111"' 5 v All t 0 Pollfllt p ICt S tV•lll lttl lllllOI Utn E"Oll'ltl llllO •ll 5tvlll lYOtl Siflt<ll S•nt• Or111tt "Count¥ (ti forl\11 I 11"1 IO VOii di ' ltl lor ht -11 '" the 90I NOTICI 0 .. l'UILIC NIAllllN• lo II\• Kii t of 11111 ii•C"""" w ~ n l(IVr l"l~rt ~ M M Corl llto CMrboure SI L•GAL NOTICI An1 C1lll11r11l1 t,Jp ta lltt llour Pl 10 OD ln•lmucll 11 •n •••M 11•1111<'1 el tllt II t to Tiit I"" d .ot Educotlon or 11'• N,wl>fl' 11,.0111• TNIE CITY COUNCIL ll'lllfllllt ttltr Ille I ,If O\lbl c•llOA ti 111 I Jud • I!_ p Ttb•I o'"' ,,,.,,.cttl, I J 51t\lt!'1 -· MIW .. OltT..M•IA UNllOllD "M on JUfll I 1'1' II .. l\l(h I mt 1/ld ltld lru1t "oPt<ly •"-• yfttl .... y h•Vt M••• Un lltd 5<1\oo 0 II t .,. V•! 11• 01' THI ""'er ( f ~ r • Wllll •• , Judot M T 81e:f'itk ... SCHOOL OllTllll(T • •<• llltV w !I bt oublldy -ntd •Ml '" "'' tll r .. '"' I Ut" I •• , •• p &-t M lo rt l•(I '"v or ~ b dt • ..., "" CITY o• 'OIJNTAIH VALLIV Oll ttd MAY ' '" (. .<I c T '"'" °'"' (\erlo Cl • w Idell lllH Mltkt llll'lll11t llft ••d •• d lltltd b ti 111111 bl lo !~• Cffd rl<jfl nt et.,. y ll((tpl !llt llWl!I lh<I •!Ill ~ NOTIC! s tif:lll!:IY GIVEN Ill on cu al! llOWl.N '"" M NI wooo l'll:[Cl"CT SJ )II I Clerk A SI> ,,,.,.ou Cl"" NOTICI. II M!l:f&Y G Vl!N "'" .... don• of Ill• ll!lb le .. ork ... tlnbtlll't TITLE INSUlll!ANCE ANO TllUST WI~, •11• lnlo<m• ty Of I "". 11• 111 luttd•v Ju ... I 1tn •• 00 , M .. lf'i9 (O-f)lf (UIO I or "'' Wiii of "" ,o nQ P Il l W Miii 1't• fl"ft ilOf ,ltlCtH(T Jt•S.1 l111rd el lduc1!11111 ol lht Ntwl'Ort M"11 dtKtlbtd Ind ortt Id I" tllt 11 d lltO U-COM,..A,NY 11 Trusltl llmtr W Htl1111 Ir<~ b ~ /:' ":t It!? Cou11c:I (111m bl I C V H• 10700 S I • 1biwt n1m1'1f t t tHtn • ,..,. IOolllr<I f' l(t C1l 1tr11IJ Homt' JDl)2 Un !ltd k"-I Ohl ct o1 0<111M Ct>ullh' lion Ttvll .. S1 t Oftlct • 1 t r O Niii l!O Av.,•ut Jou111t " Vt 1tY Ct t lor11l1 lht WAI.LACI •1tOWN 8 CIAIH l~Sftc or I I W ""' f>lm Wt 11ul ,_,,. C1lll""'l1 w 11 1K tl¥t i.tl Id .i..tt u• lo E1cll bid .,, 11r-1t 11111! bt "'1d• ou HOTIC! IS t-t£1lEIY GIVEN THAT ~~llri 't~:~CTU Clry Coun.c "' I llolrl t IUb t l>r1 l>I o" IU Dlvtr Or •t s ... 11 11 Ju~ r L G l 1>11 I Oll'll 1,.s-ltlr M V Ch,il1! Ito II OI AM Ot1 lllt 12111 d17 It Junt lt11 11 tn4 tvlWnlttld Oii I lotll'I 10 bt OOttlMd 11 TITLE )NS!JlllANCE end T•UST COM ot O ( 1¥ "'' lo lti'Wlnt lltw-1 l11Cll (t ft64t Cit k ,. W Ch r I '""n o1't• Jud~• V 111 o-Rtt 1'111 otflct o1 MIC Sclltol Oltll'hl! lo<lltd lht lf!ICI ot '9.lt 11111_,llllO olJ South l'AMY 1 ,_.,1>11r1llon 11 t ut¥ tub1 llYI"" I; I/~::: CIUll ,,1 "UOllc HH AOl 141 tUf Cit \ 0 w c11r• II•• Cl'lri I( l J 1coll• Ill:• •' 10 ' ,1K .... ,. "'-Cott• MIU l'tOfl '""' ,,,. •• ""' Ctlllor11l1 IKll Trll,tN ~·r . Dftld"' Trurt dt ttd ..... • , , ... z-c11•1111 HI -I' Id bl' J • Alter ........... c .... Klll,., Pitre NCT U-Ut , '""' r IC MCN•bll ..... C1Jl/rtr11l1 If ""' ell I""' Mid ltldl •II bt bid M ,,,.op(lol•I ln\lll bt I CCOITlCllll NI lly ' n" •lltcuttd bV EllW N A I Y Oorltll¥ HI VIV IVll Mol!ll• ., •• II ,,,_ "'"""" ty ''"'" llubll!Nd Orlf\01 CMlt ll•llY •not Pol! n, .. '"' Ht rbor v i ... kllool '°' .... (INCT , ..... 1 IOllll I< v llPllltd •lld ''" fllr • <•thllt'' <1111:.k "'t lltck {!rl I @d b~ • MAU!MUNO J lt •I'd (,t.llOL ... ,. 111 ~ell~~ ... A•c1 •,u. o1:"iv ,. lo• Cl C1W11merd 1! lo •1 ''°° ti "" MIV .. n It 1' lfn ,, ... 11 9e dtn od ...... ••• ,orn... I'll« Celel>Y Ckttlhl!Jll »11 ~ .... ,_,,,. I« "'••t rtuAd r.-ltll btnll 11". bklcllr I bond'"' '" MAUSHVNO 1tu1btlnd tf\d .. 11. •• u ' 'irn l '1t :-:.n IJ1S... IC1Utltt 11t ctrlllf" ot 8uth• d •lld Ellft I"~·~ et J H Mt DOtl• klutll Men .... ,., VI-S<lloot 1mov"I "" less "''" IO'!lo et 1111 .... .,.,,., Tru11or le ll'Cur• (trttl" ob II ""' In Mt y • •l'ld -,. .,._,IY "'"" ... J ,, 1((11 •• 1t ;1111,. N c ~•~tori llt• MOider M A P• ... k Otno Al hld1 •• to "' fl\ I CCl!rdl ll<t .. 1tll of"" bit or ol 11\t 111t1 •fl'IOllll l tor .... (n flVO of OltPHA WOOOM•N ... oow ., dlK I bt<I l'IO'"t 11'fd 1tly •• A,. 1J7 C •rk w A M.,. I lltil JudOt o w l'1ut O.m Condit°"' In 1r r 11 <t1en 1 •lld "''' .. 1 1 K <tpt 1 tortlrtc and "'""' 11tntt1<11rv rtcorttd •1111•• •• I" LEGAL NOnCE Oii 01 1-------:-,:::::------- C ~ M I( GI rick lltl (lf'i; a .. ..llCe(.i ltlll S11t:lrlct llorlt wtilcll l tl ,,.... Oii lllo " Pl ¥1b 1 ra 1114' on!tl or n II• liver ol 111• 11 umtlll rio 1'JXIS In 110C11i ttJ0 ptOf •1) • lint (l\111t1 Ht -Fl •d lw Jd'll\ a Ill• .. l!f:( N(T JS-Jil).I C '"' I) J ~rr Ill,. t111 oflk t II I'll "11•cti1tl111 Altllt 6f ti d MOul Oii Nfflltl W•ll O 11 lei (•<1' 111rn DI 01! c ti lltcord1 In tilt 011 Ct or lllt NOTICI TO Clll!'OITOltl 0 link A s..,.. o r•tOll• l•llP• fY •1tnl IU~·.~'f011 'gouc::0.•i0·,· •• f_o Uni p •e• .. klty llltl Oll\(t "" ,.rtl(INCT t ...... I ICl'lto! Ol•l•lct ltJ7 ,14<.tllllt Av-· llld or ,,_Al \l>IU bt ... fd •ricl eel llOCOt'11et' Of °'"'" c -'" Cl lo<n. Nt A 1tl6J tlll IOllll I d.t ,, Ht Wttl ol Pt 1 C I dlt ,o 1119 ,,..,, Jol'ct •ttlft!ICt IJHf Colli '°""" Cl l1oml1 ti tllt ollicl 6f "'' Dl1lro<t ti w btfort fllcludf111 -1111 1 tcw 111 or1M 1111 l\im l v....,lor Cevn of 111• St1t1 of C1 11111'11 • I ooU•u ' lrOl'll .Iii &1 l<ull¥t l l v ltl ITA'rl OI' CALll'OllNIA llOI: '"'"tier E s ..... -... 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J\IM .. lfn n1-.n Ml¥ H .... Jullf 1 Int 1m.n M.t';' J ,, If u tm Ull " M.IY ts.. 11111 Jl#'lt ... '" lf7J IM'l n Mt'I,., ''" '1''" M•'I " u. 11111 JUM t .. 1WI Ul1"1 LEGAL NOTICE • .... j._ •• • '• , ., .· J ' I I .. -I . r '•' '··' ~ '. r ..... • • Ft'ld17, Mil,)' 26, 1972 '· ' BATTERED RON STANDER GETS A KISS FROM WIFE DARLENE. :Rigby Bounces ' ,Back to 2nd " :tl:fter Falling ... ' ,_ • By LAURIE BECKLUND Of 11Wi DfllY PllM tl•ff • After 1ustaining a near-injurious fall trom the uneven bars. pigtailed Cathy -~gby dropped to second place behind ·surrel)I lt:adcr Linda Methen y in thP. JiOmen's Olympic gymnastic trials al ~ng Beach Auditorium Thursd&y. ·,The 1!168 Olympian caught her le~ on the bar '>'1hile riismouot ing and received a tb\v 8.JS to Miss Metht:ny's 9.7 on lhe oompulsory eYt'nl. -MiM Rigby, of Los Alam itos, slid into a tie for fourth place but recovered after a zprit~like performance in noor exercise. She scored a 9.7 in the event to tie Miss Metheny and Roxanne for tht thus far highest score of I he meet, which Misll Metheny and fourth·place Miss Pierce e1rned on the b<lrs. The girls Are AmonR the same six v.•ho have kept the lead 1hroughout rhe 1wo- day C1Jmpulsories. The others ar:e Joan Moore, Kim Chact: and Cleo Ann Carver. Six girls and an alternAte will bfo selected to compete In the summt:r Olympi cs in Munich. Kyle Gayner, a student al TtWinkle School in Cosla Mesa , rema ins in 28th spot after receiving her highest score of the trials. a 9.0 in noor exercise. The fin&I judging 1vill be madt: today l!lnd Saturday when the top 30 U.S. gym· nasts vie for lop scores In optional events af Long Beach Arena . Tonight 111 7 :~ they vie 1n free exercisf' and on the beam. repe11ting those events Saturd&y night at 7:30. SR!un:lay at 1 :JO !hey perform in the ''aul! and on !he uneven parallel bars. <vmlTl~fl•• ''"' •ioM (Dml'Jl•D•Y ..... "" Ill '"' U S. w-11·1 Gvm11•1tlc1 Olvmolt: lrl•I" 1 Lilld• Mt!llPllY MclClnltv YMCA Cllt"'tl•ltll Ill. 16,CO. 1. Ct!hy Rl91tv. l~• q l.~ci. SCATS. IJ.00 l, Po••nnp "l•rc,, Mf''" Tt111S. Jtllt'tvlll~. MrJ., 7,,IJ, I, l(fm C~~f. Rlvlft• •••ell. Fl•., lhcrH!lon O•~•rlm!nl, 1•.J!. S, A11n Mf'Ort , Plllt~!plll1 Mll11> '"!!••· 10.10 ~.Cleo C1,....er. Sttllle. YMCA. IJ.o!O. 1. &d•I• C.l•~v•l. Ullll•vlnr Gvm Ch/ti, IJ . .,, I. N1nt'f l~•r., Mr_IClnltV YMCA . 13 J5. •. IC•ortn Slll>l;ll"'•n. !ao•lll•rn C&ron..c:tlcvl Gvm Clutl 1l JO. 10 Oeltltlt Miit Dtnv!'I' Scl'\Onl of Gv1T1nt1tlc1 n.oo. Flexibility Key To LA Attack HOUSTON -The Los Angeles Dodl{ers 11 nd Houslnn A.~!rns. currently embroiltd In a fi,::ht for first pl11rP In the National League \Ve.~1 and both boasting sue· ctssful yout h movemrnt~. collide tonight 011 TV Tt>Hlgl1t Chai111el I I al. 5::10 In the first of a four·game series at !he Houston Astrodomr. IO Sent to Jail 100 Spectators Injured • In Spain Soccer Riot BARCELONA . Spain fAP ) -A soccer match between the Glasgow Rangers and Moscow Dynamo. won by the Scottish club , 3-2, ended in rioting in which 10 spectators were jailed and over 100 others, inc luding policemf'n were injured . After the Sco!s '>''on the Wednesday night match, to clinch the ~:uropean Cup of Cup Winn<'rs , hundred s of Pnthusiaslic Scots poured out onto lhe playinjl field. Spanish police then used their clubs to try lo control the crowd. The Spanish news agency Cl FRA sa id 97 persons received minor inju ries in the brawl. while police source!'! said '3 policemen had been injured and JO Scots arrested. An estimated 4,000 Scots had journeyed here for the internalional mat.ch. The Soviet news agency Ta s s , mcan"•hile . reported that Soviet soccer officials would demand a replay of the game . contending "The match was essen- tially broken up by drunken Scouish fans \vhen Dynamo was close to vict ory." John Mains. lord provost of Glasgow. congr&tulated the Rangers on their vic- tory and crilicized !he •·shameful and disgraceful" behavior of 11 •·mirfority" of Ranger fans. One of the Glasgow fans . ho"·ever. crificiztd the Barce lona police for their actions in trying lo quell the disturbance. ·'There was B lot or singing and shouting." said Billy Deans, a farm worker. '"Then the Spanish police drew their batons and chased us for our lives. I ran as fa st as I could to get out of the "'ay. They made the fi rst move. They "·ere the cause of everything ." The Spanish fore ign minis!ry Thursday rxpressed •·surpr ise and disgust'' over the incident to the British Embassy in ~1;idrid. No formal protest has yet been made to the Britis h government, but one is reportedly being considered. EX-WESTMINSTER ACE ON ALL-WAC DENVER ~ former Westminster High star Edd ie Bane has been accorded a first team berth on the AU-Western Athletic Conference ~outhern division baseball team . Bane. a pitcher. helped Arizona State University to a 56-3 record this past season. Shortstop Alan Bann ister and outriclder Bump "'ills were also accorded first team berths for Ariz.ona State. Bannister is ~n ex-Kt:nnedy Hig h stand- out while Wills is 1he son of Los Angt:les Dodgers shortstop Maury Wills. -r' .l"•· 11 ~ l Joe Begins Vacation ,· \ ~ After Slicing Up 1 Riva · OMAHA (AP ) -Heavyweight cham• pion Joe Frazier proved Thursday night he al30 deserved the nickname "Butcher" just as much as Battered and vanquished challengt:r Ron Stander. The unbe aten f'razier retained his world title by stopping a game , but bloodied Stander in a bout ffiilwill go In- to the record books as a fifth-round knockout. After an even first round. Frazier bat· tered the 27-year-old unranked Stander. who was dubbed !he "Bluffs Butcher."' with a savage body attack and turned his face into a bloody ma sk. "~fe was surely a game puncher ," of· fered the unscar'red Frazier after his fo urth successful titl e defense. The vic- tory boosted his pro record . to 29--0 in· eluding 25 knockout l'ictories. Stander. a local favorite from nearby Council Bluffs, Iowa, came out ag- gressively and slugged with the champion on even terms in the opening round. Referee Zach Clayton of Philadelphia, who su mmoned the doctor that stopped the fight. and the two judges called the firs t round even, but thereafter Frazier·s iipeed told. 'l'he champion began to score ht:avily to the body in the second round, blood ied Stander in the third and then reeled him a couple of times in a slugfest fourth round. "Those cuts '>''ere gelling deeper and deeper. there was no doubt about st.o~ ping ii,'' said ring doctor Jack ~wis of Omaha. "1'here w11s no objection from the Stander corner." Afterwards Lewis use d 17 sti!ches to close four wounds on Slander's fa ce and the challenger also suffered _a broken nose. "I am sorry I lei a lot of people down ." said the weeping Standt:r afterwards. His right eye was puffed shut. "I did my best. but Frazier is the greatest," said Stander. who now is 23-2-1 in his pro career. It was the first time he was stopped by a knockout. Frazier. 28. paid high praise to his beaten foe, who had been a 10-1 un- derdog. "His strength surprised me.'' said Frazier. who seemed to work up only a sligh t sweat. "He wa s a very tough o~ ponenl. I thought he was stronger than George (Chuvalo) or Oscar (Bonave na ).'' Th e champion. who came out of a job in a Philadelphia packing plant in 1961 to seek his fortune in the ring, said he was pleased with the effort. "I needed this kind of work." sa id Frazier. "! was more pleased with this effort tha n what I did against Daniels.·• Frazie r stopped unr;inked Terry Daniels in four rounds Jan. 15. A crowd of 9.863 turned out for the first 1itle fight in Nebraska's 105-year history and often urged Stander on with chants of "Go Big Ron." The gross gate was $242.978. Frazier was to receive 40 percent of the live gate after taxes and Stander 20 percent. Th e champion received. a $150,000 guarantee from TVS , which telecast the bout on a 150-station nt:twork. "I was going to try to get him, take the fight to him, but it didn't work out that '>''ay," bemoaned Stander. who had said he stood a SG-50 chance. "He got. some fine shots in ," said f'razier. ''Bot I make all fellows fight my type of fight and that's what it came down to." Frazier said his future plans are very indefinite, although it has been reported he has signed for 1 bout in September. ''Me and tht title are going for a long rest on my plantation." said Frazier with • IOJlilt...'.'.Dn..not.l(oing-lo-ju!t-1it and· watch it, but I am tired of all the hassle right now. "If we fight we want a bout with o~ol the top ten ranked tighter•." -~ Both Frazier and m1n1ger-tr1iner ~ cey Durham skirted the iasue ofi I rematch against former ch 1 m p ti¥ a Muhammad AIL "The fint 1uy that comu up with a ~-1 million offer wilt get-a-fi1ht ."' said Durham referring to a possible rematch., .l Angels 10 Games Baek f 1 Ryan Tries to Stop KC After Halos Halted, 5-2 l It has been a down year in Orange cbunty . Attendance is down , the team is down and the general managt:r is downcast. Only 4,032 patrons came to Anaheim Stadium Thursday night to watch the California Angels inaugurate a n eight-game home stand. Those who did saw the Angels drop a 5--2 verdict to Kansas City's Royals. It was California's sixth loS!'l in seven games and pushed the Angels ten games under .500 and ten A119el.r Slate MAY 1• .-,nq• I Y,, l(f~lfl Cllv MIY l1 All9tll Yt. l(f"UI City M•Y 711 A"'elt ~1. 1(1""' cur MJV 1t .-, .... ., "'· Chlt•oa (2/ M~Y lO Ancitll "'· C~ie19a 7; SS ti·"'· 7:" "·"'· S:.U "·"'· S:U o.m. 1:SS o.m. ''" ~-"'· Mtv JI AIKI''' v1. Cl>ltlllO games behind the Chicago Whitt Soi, divisiOnal luders in the American League Weit. The mini-crowd was the smallest ever at Anaheim Stadium . built In 1966. After 18 dates, Angels attendance Is off 93,888. "Naturally I'm disappointed but not discouraged," said Angels g e n e r a I manager Harry Dallon. "If the tt:am im- proves. so will atlendance. ·· The same two clubs continue their four- game series tonight with hard -throwing Nolan Ryan, 2-4, working for California IC1nN11 (fly UI Ctlit.r1tlt !U P11ell. u 0111. el Scll1l11bl11m, rt Pl"ltllt, 11 Roj11, Jb SCMlftl, lb M1vb9rry, 1~ 1Clr~t111tdc•. c 5oll!tor11, ~ A.N,l$0n, I) •~rllrW ••rllr111 • 1 o 1 Ala,...r, :tb ' 1 l e •eoo&trry.cf J1oe •11ll(01'1).!I •0 28 • o o e 11.0!lv•r. 11t • o o e •O l1McMull..,.lfl Oil 4221Stft11t.,,,,fl •010 J11G C&rt11"11.1.u 4000 10101Cu•nyer,t 1 000 • o o 1 II Mov, p 1 o O o OOGOD'Brie",ph 1000 FOiier".~ 0000 lltf\11.1)1\ 1000 E,Fhhtr, ti 0 0 0 0 Tot~I· 31 ' I J Tol•I• n ' ' I 1(1ni.el Cl!y llG 11!11 101 -! c,111or11+11 000 001 001 -1 E -R. MfV !. Otl -ICft11111 City I. lOI -K111WJ City 6, C1llhlnilf !, 11 -Seh1f11blu..,, Alamt•. Mt'fberty, l(ooco. IHI -5d•••I Ol. SF - P~lt-. Spl•tti>rtl (W,4-J) II.Net"°" R.MIY ~ l,0.fl Fottet E.Fl1her" IP M Ill ER I• SO 1 !111! 1 1 0 I 0 I .! 3 1 1 3 l 1 0 1 l I I I 2 0 St v1 -A. NellOll Ill Hl!P -by Fos~ !Otl1I. WP -St11ittortl PS -l(us11'fi'r. 'Tlmt -i:N. Al-tend1nc:1 -,,,Jl. against KC's Jim Rooker, 2·0. Rudy May. the Angels' slarl.er Thlir.s .. day night who i5 now 0-4 , C1Jntributed-·to his own downfall by committing two, i(' rors on one play in the first iru\iilf, leadin& to a pair of unearned Kansas ~ ruru. "~- May fumbled Freddie Palek's leadef{ grounder and then threw the ball awoY' with 'Patelc taking second . Pitek sc°"'" on a double by Richie Schieoblum and t,._ latter SC{)red on a single by Cookie Roifis.· Paul Schaars first home run of , the season made ii 3--0 in the second and WiJI.'. ning pitcher Paul Splittorff, 4-3 , drove'il an unearned run with a ground ball in-:tbt sevenlh. The run was put in scoring p11si· tion on a passed b&ll charged to Anielc. catcher Art Kusnyer. 1<1~1 ' . '· Posey Poised .'::~· For Indy 500;';~'.f Race on Radio~.- or~c:a,1 area resident Sam P;;,;• __!!ld-°32 other dri vers will bid for the ~ll annual Indianapolis 500 racing croWll' Saturday. ·, ·~ .. Posey, a San Ju1n Capistrano "residtJjt, will start from the third row. .'· The eve nt can be heard over r&dio $1J~' tion KBIG (740), begiMina at 8:30 p.Jh .. ·. "•l 1 , .. ,- ATLANTA -Ric hie Karl, w~ greatest claim to fame l5 a pair ,-p~. Alaska amateur ch1mpionships. firect ,, 66 for a surprising finit ·round lead Thur1· day in the SJJ(),000 Atlii!nta golf claS!lic. At 67 are Dave Hill, Ken Still. Brr\, Yancey and Bob Lu11n . Kl!:rmit ZaNeyf Lou Graham and former champion Tom· my Aaron were at 158 in the closeW bunched field. : _/- Masters champion Jack Nickl11us need· ed 35 putts en route to a 70. South Afrioei Gary Player could man1ge only a 71. ~ • ~ SAN DIEGO -E1·Santa An& High sti;:: Isaac CUrtis said Thursday he may HY" for the Olympics this summer 11 ~i' sprinter. delaying his first and only f09.i~, ball season at San Diego State. · •· Curtis, who was involved in an eligib~~ ' ly furor with the National Cotlegjite~ Athletic Association before his !ranslif< from the University of Califo~ breezed to a 10.3 victory in the 100 metera in a dual meet Wednead&y with Swi!'ll runners. "I'd like to make Ute Olympic team ," said Curtis. adding , "I guess I'd probably ha ve to miss a game or two" of the toot· ball season. "' G~NEVA, N.Y. -Bernice Gera, who (or Sil years haa battled to become p~ fessional baseball's fint woman umpiflt will 1tart calling 'l!:m as sh1 11ees ~~ June 23. ,,# The Geneva Senaton1 said Thursday t'h. Queens housewife Is expected to officbf~ al the Auburn-Geneva game on that daf@ the opening of the New Y o r k : PeMsylvania Baseball League sea'son. .. , , ·' French Open .':: Tennis Result§·'' Tonight it's Al Do'>'·ning 12-21 for the Dodgers on the mound 8R:Ainst San Diego transplant Dave Roberts (2-2 f in a battle of lefthande rs . LYMAN BOSTOCK SCORES AS UCl 'S TERRY STUPY WAITS FDR A BELATED THROW IN NCAA PLAYOFFS THURSDAY. Dodgers mana~er \\'all Alston appears ln have innumerablP op11ons A\"1tilable to him due to !he vast \'trsafility of his playe~. Youth, !he c11tch'>'·ord of Al stnn's eorp!, !ells the tale, Bill Bu kner. Bobby Valen-- t1ne. Sle\'e Garvey and Bill Rus.o;ell halle bttn the kl!:)' men Jn rectnl games. Pi!ein"'·hlle such veterans •s Jim Lefe- bvre. Maury Wilt!! and Wes Parker 11re e&ialnly not rel'd)' to accept bench jobs. The above four young Infielders have ll"''itchtd poslOons frequently but have shown they can hit the ball, too. Yalen- tlne ls batting .346, tops on the squad. and Russell is at .337. Ganey'• .273 Includes a .slow start and Buckner Js the only one wJth 1 lt&J-th1n-spedacul1r mark, .250. Houston pllchen hove llbown In their last five a:1me1, lboulh, that they can 1.... bot bau. no Altro hurlers IT• ~ off five ....,i.te same victories b1thtlrllltlall. Anteaters Nine Faces Uphi·ll Battle By HOWARD L. HANDY 01 f1'11 Dllfr )1i.1 Sl•H NORTHRllJGE -An Inju ry-plagued UC Irvine pitching at.aft ha1 Gary • Wheelock: (9-4) on the mound today against Chapman COiiege in second n:iu,nd, action of the NCAA Western Rtg1onol baseboll loumamenl being staged at San Fernando Valley State Coll•ge. A Jou for thf AnteAter1 today will elimlnate them from further contention In the tournamr>t while 1 victory brlnp lbem.bock for a lhlrd 1am1 Saturday. Jerry Maru, hard·tbrowlna freshman right-hander. suffered a freak back In- jury Wodnesday night jumping on a 1t1ge ln Cr11w!ord Hall and was in bed Thurs· d11y. Tom Dodd. starter agAinst Valley State Thursday. pit.thee! well for five Innings 11ifter seeing limited duty this year with a broken finger, but was the vlcUm (lf a porous defense 1nd a grftnd 11!11m homer as lhe hosl Matadors c1ere1ted UC!, 10-1 . San Fernando closed out first day ac· Uon with a 2-4 record after defeating Puget Sound earlier In the day, ~. Chap- man Coll'&• or Onnge delealtd Cll Stale !Hayword ), ~ in the other lint day coolest. Pugel Sound and HJyward met earlier today with the loser eliminated. Dodd gave up one questionable hil to lh• game's leadoll balltr, then settled down lo retire the Matadon without another safety for the first five innings In a scoreless deadlock. In the shrth, a leodoll triple lllll bortly e11<aped °"' diving allempl or right Helder Rick Peters opened the flood goles and before lh• Inning "'" ended, four une1rned runs on 1 grand slam homer by Marty P'reidman 1a•e ValltY Stile a "fl l<1d. UCI tru.at,ened repealtdly bot couldn't get • run across lllltil lhe bottom of the sixth when Dan Coronado .•in&led aid Terry Slupy doublod . S'VtC lltl UC ll"rlfll tll ••rllrtll ; .. {llrM -111nvH'"1 u J I I t Mollllfl, ci ' I t h18Ctr, "'" • J 1 • l)'l!IM, ... s • 0 Hollllwrf, lb • 1 1 t (O,_..HG, tb 4 J I M=lf llllMfllf'IOfl,111 4 10 M l ,rtll0t.$tt.IPY.t '11 Lllllw,• •IJ•M..,._.,,, 'It oi.t,Jb J111sclltfti,rt • 01 -11111H, c: 4 I t I Sl*'ICI. If • I I "•lrlllm111, n J I t I P•ltt'I, rf.•• • I t MUI..-, O .) e I I f.lodd, 0 t t 0 le¥ftW, • I t I I Cl-i.1111, • I I I bfnllll, oP1 I I I fotei, • 1' te tf Tllflt It I I '""~ ..... • • • $4!'1 , """* Y$(. .. IN Cit -It ltl j UC,,,._,,.. D 111 IOO -I I __ - -I l l h 0 • ci 1! 1: IJ ~· r. ft ft ill • fa " It 1" w le ql al bl ht " Wt th m IP ' sil .. sp r• ho ' 1 ... Co Sa• s~ alii ne· 'i coi y~ wa lu~ tlli ...... ,. ,, • ._. l I ~ .. ) i I I ( I ! s ·' ,. .. " DAIL y ,!LOT II CIF Spike Finals Set Tonight Eight Records In Jeopardy At Spikef est • NORWALK -Fourteen athletes and a lone rllay teiµn will be putting it on the line 1or the Orange Coast area ill tonilJl'• CIF S.ulherrl Section track: •nd field finals al Cerritos College. In the varsity division. lhere.'s Newport Harbor'• Terry Albritton and Huntin1ton Beach's oTony Ciarelli in lhe ~hot put: Marina's Gene Taylor and Newport's Matt ·H~tl in the 180 low hurdles; and Costa Me:sa'I" Doug AtacLean in the: two mile. Also vying for state: berth.. in the varsi- ty --catqory will be are1 .11thlete:s Rick Desmet of Mesa ln the 220 : Edison 's Dave Powell ln the 120 high.5 : and MWion Viejo mUer Ed ·Radermacher. Newpott rs mile relay quartet of Gary Litten, KJng Humann. Grlf Amies 11nd Hogsett wilf be going after a slate meet apot and will try to lower its 3· 19.5 besl • Bee survivors from this are:a are high jum~ Doug ~artln of Mater Dei and Mire Cbarre:n of Corona del Mar, along with t..acuna Beach 660 entrant Josh Briallt. Areas Cees competing ar' high jumpera: K@n Conner of Estancia and Doug C.se of Laguna, Marina ahotputler J01h Rico aoc! Mater Dtl'• Chrlo Martin in the 100. But btl for 1 varsity win ia Albritton, who'll problbly have: to stretch out his 116- •~ llfttime best tn order to fe:nd off the challt.nge of Crtspi's Randy Cro.~ 18'7· 6\t. Albritton lo the deftndlni CIF-SS champ. Accordtd outside chance:s ot victory are: Taylor and .Radtrmacher. Marina's Taylor has ail 18.8 windy best (11.9 legal) in the lows but he's eon· fronted there by Palo Ve:rd1'1 Daniel Jonea (11.5). Hoaaett has clocked 19.0 but , has lbe tniama of never havin.a btalen Taylor. Radermacher. mt1nwhllt, has htt 4:14.2 foor four laps. yet In a 1tr1teglc race stands 1n outside chance of ups«t· ting the field. Mater Dtl's Doug Marlin {Ml fii; ro- favored with San Bernardino's Claude: Chumley (6-7 ) in the Bee high jump \i.'hlle Estancia leaper Conne:r (5-2~• l enjoys lh11t sole distinction in the: Ctt11. Martin's brother, Chris. finished 11 non· qualifying fourth in the Cee 100 In the se:m!s but was put lnlo the finals after a film re.view proved him to be third. NORWALK -Eight mMt roenMs four of the:m in the varsity dlviaian could be in serious jeopardy wbtn the CJP' Snuthem Section track 1nd field" finals take place at Ctnitos Collea« tonffhl. First r;e:Jrl event 1ets und• W1171t S:U while the lnitlal runninc event [r-allttd for 7:45. The middle dlstan« and distance. races holrl the most promise of 1eelna ntw records. • •ti.. ti_:, - Lions Boast Success l:!D Uphill Battle NBA All-star s May Be Fined Senta Monicit junior Curtis Beck (R:S.1.8 st.a86nal hestl 11e:t a mttt record of 8:59.2 in last "'tek'1 aemlflnal11 at Cer• rilos and tht bettering of that 1tandatd ii assured. although Betk may n o t nece:ssarity be the one to do It again . . Recievihg Gem In Maddocks For Diahlos' Radermacher After Triumph Jn the race with the Viking junlor are Lompoc 11th grader. Terry Wllllam.s 18:57.21. defending champ. Gordon IMf.15 nf Upla nd j8:54 .4 in the 1971 st111te mtttl a.nd Santa Ana 's Marc Gtnet (1:5.1.4) for starters. The latter has bern pl1gued by painful fool blisters as of J111te but may be in good enough shape to pull out a vic- tory. By ftOGJ.~R CARLSON 01 ~ 01f/y '" .. 11•!1 Westminster High's football team s have never .been koown for possessing a conservative 1offense -with special emp~a~is paid lt\_e forward ~ss the usual C_ll!t~m. _ , 1'fierefore. wJ(en coach Bill Bos.well si~-~_he '~ got his 'besl pass receiver irl his IJ ars as coach of the perennially tough lii rtJ, one gets the impression h~'s got a ~em. . · ·H~s Gary Maddocks, a ·fe llow who con- toGM!ed the opposition last year in the Ml!tvtng dei;iartmenl and is a 'good bet feto' All-Sunset League and county honors 11!·111> 1•11. ·Maddocks .is following in his brother's footttep! at Westminster. where Walt wa,,. named most valuable on · the 1970 tffm. I :~ary plays with a great deal of family priilt. behind him." says Boswell, "he wants to e1cel and prove himself a col- le1e calibre athlete." His S..I, lM-pound 11ize camoulfages bis ciuickness and overall speed. But it's his ability to maneuver after catching the ba.11 that ill hil forte. "Gary may be the best Je·ve-ever had her~ His moves after he catches the ball are ,:fantastic. If we get the ball to him we 're liable to. make a fe"I yards," a~ds the Lions mentor. C~ently Maddocks and the rest or his ma,.s are engaged in the busines.s of 1pring eractice. , l41ddocks. ha~ spent most of his time sinc;e November concentrating on weighls <Viii: assorted exercises _geared .to his specl•lly: . blJd. aside trom bis ,duties al split re'celver he '11 be counte:d. on to fill some hol~at strong ufety OCcasionally. othtr end of the· ipa.c;sing tandem IYll "be Dan Accomando. "We'll do .our share of throwing." underplays Boswell. "With that kind of talent We'll use \I. We ~t have a lot Of 10 fiJit !peed oft our ttitn. If you can't rµn, for touchdowns ~tf'h1ve to throw for them .·• · ,, .. ~~hriel to Appear .+;t Newport Beach itoman Gabriel. star quarterback of the ..A Rams. will apptar at J . C. Penney Co., Fashion Island, ~ewport Be:ach. Saturday to help kick off Penney's SPQJ1ing.Goods CarnWal. Roman will sign alitvgraphs from -noon to 2·p.m. in Pen- nty'1 Sporting Good t pept. lower level. Gjbriel had anott•r fine year in 1971. cofn(>leting 180 of 352 passes for 2.2.38 y~ and 17 TDs. ,His interception rate w;a)! lht! second lowest in the: league. and h(!~D J>ISS total v.1as only one fewl!r t.Hih John Brodie, th.e. division leader. By PHIL ROSS 01 lflll DfllY l'llOt Stitt Marina High's JosS has been Mission Viejo's gain. Ed Hadermacher, one of the better prep middle distance: runners on the current Southland track. and field $Cene for Mission .Viejo's Diab\Os with a 4: 14.2 best for the mile, attended Marina as a freshman. Nov.·. as a Diablo senior, he's entered in · tonight's CtF Southern Section mile derbx. where he'll be vying for a berth in next week's state: finals at Oroville (five trorTI the CJF-SS quanry for the state meetJ. However~ it was a landmark decision Radermacher maide at the beginning of his frosh year at Matina which made him a premier miler and probably kept him from becoming only a mediocre football playei. '' . ' .. , • • y • ~ •I • .. ED R)i.DERMACHER -;<'!. Baseball Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE AMEitiCAN LEAGUE 1f;ast llfvf•lo•. . . Ea1t DlvlsMn , -' .w L Pct. Gil W L Pct. GB -New· York u 9 .743 ci..eland I! 12 .600 Pllt1burgb 20 11 .606 5 ~eliJcago . 1\ 16 .515 8 ,,f4on_lreaJ. , • 16 19 . ' .%7 10 J1l111>delphi1 ' 15 19 .441 1011 Dt!trolt 17 14 .548 !\\ Baltimore 16 15 .516 211 New York 14 I! .4!7 4 Boston II 18 .371 611 Milwaukee 10 18 .357 7 st~ Louit , . -13 Zl .361 1311 ... Weit DJvt1lon Recalls the native: of southern Bavaria ln \\'est Germany, "cross country was an alternative to football in my freshman year. ~ "There were a lot of papers to fill out for football and by the time I had turned them all in, the first cut for football had already been made. So, it was too late to try out !or the team . "Then 1 saw all these guys running around with the cross country team and decided to give it a try . And I never thought I'd m8ke it as far as I have because I was only running the 880 i11 the: 2:20s find 30s the year before in the eighth grade." At any rate, Radermacher transferred to Mission Viejo after his frosh year and began a gradual osmosis which has culminated in his most recent successes. But none of it was easy, according to Radermacher's cross country a n d dist!Tlce coach. Gene Gurule, himself a 4:08 miler in his collegiate days at San Jose Stale College. .... Say& Gurule. "Ed has a Im. of ·desire, which wasn 't the case iR his sophomore year. He ran 2:03.7 (880). 4:39 (mile.i·and 10:15 (two mile )and we didn't figure he had it in him then because he had· a tendency to sneak off from prac· tice. ''Ed's turning point was the summer between his soph and junior years. He started working out hardtr and began to shov.• his dedication. We look the group on a high Sierras camping trip that summer and got in some work up there." The maturing process which overcame Radermacher thrusted him from a con· fused. fl ippant sophomore into an ag· gressive team leader the pasl two years -in track as well as cross country. His most gratifying improvements came two years in a row at the Arcadia Invitational meet. Last year. Radermacher came to Arcadia with a 4:28 lifetime: best and , although he didn't place in the top _five. came away with a 4:22.8 clocking for the four-lapper. Then. in what turned out to be a dream prep mile v.·i th nine runners under 4:1 9. the Diablo ace cut his 1972 and personal best from 4:.21.6 to 4:14.2 at the Arcadia spikefest two months ago . "In both cases,.. Gurule says. "Ed Area Calendar ,rlCllY (M1y 11\ lrtt~ -C.IF t1n111 tt cerr1to1 ! o.rn.l. Gvmna111c1 -LA Cllv·CIF !Qytntr11 S1cllo11 '"'et ,, ucu 7:llCIJ 1'111,." l"'l'" 1!111~1· -JC 1t1!t llM I 1 Fruno S!tte, NCAA 1111\IOfft UCll. Trtdc -St111 J11f1IW.Coll1111t llnfl1 I! M!llttdo. T_-..., IM1y •l Golf -C.IF IKlloMI ... m HM>rt1trn1nt •• ltflll1n1h cc. w•11ne11r IM•Y JI) TMl'il -CIF AMA fln.11. GO!I -VCI I • lfolan !nvllt tlontl. fflll .... Y IJt,tM 11 Gotl -UC.I • Tro11n'lnvll1!IOMI. DEAN LEWIS 1972 TOYOTA CARINA WITH FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING s7200 ru MONTH Houston 23 12 .6S7 -Dodier( 21 15 :MJ ~ 2lh: Clnclnn•U 18 17 .514 5 Chicago Minnesot.a Oaklond Tetis Kansas City All(tlO- West Division 21 10 19 11 19 II t5 19 13 t9 1.2 22 .!77 .6.13 .633 .441 .406 .3.\3 Iii I Ill 7'h 8\\ 10\\ $94.70 Total Down -$72.00 Total Monthly Payment. •W20 fer 'orty llght Mot. 0.forrM - sssSb.001ca1h -12194.70 .,,. 12.76 en approvM crtdlt. Atlanta 14 20 Sin Qle:ao !l ·22 San Frane1sco 13 u ,,..,,,.,.,., 1t'tnt1tt It. Louis '· ·Jlttttitl,.... ' '°'''"' Vtck I. ClllUto. ), Jl IMlll'ltll .. °""' •• """ ldllltllll~ • ' .412 ~II .!Di ~ .333 12 , ' 1 l...,.'I Glfllft ' ··~11'"111 l~lly 0-4) 11 Clllu.ti f"l~'91 ).J tr il'tu~ ,.1) · · • •• il'lllltdtlJ!llt !(t •llon ~I 11 ~lttlburt~ llrMtl J•I) llltlll , .. ,t.an ~rfllCltce !Mtric!wil l·'I al A!C.nl• (-.t-4 , ... ~ """' .. . ... ~Sin 01"" tNorn'l•n •·'J •I C!"'CIMlll l !Nell!\ s.11. •ltttl ' • ' DtlffH1 (Dewnhw ,.ti t i HeutlOll (lttbt'll f·fl, .. • t'llltll NfW •Ytni lkt Yff 71) 11 It. L0\111 !""1H Ml. --flletlf . 'f'll.tlNtl''t l....ti- ,_,,_ VII'\ 2. C lt'ltlt~ I MUw .. llkn t, Drll'flll a lo$i.n i, l1lll!'nl!rt I M1ntlltoll ,, Ttw11 1 ICt flUll City J. A11tth 2 Only 11rn,1 1>Cllf'dyleod T~tl''t Otmtl (lllCtOO (Wl!ltlll ).)) ~I O~~ltnd (Hctl+tm1n 1•'1, """' "lllWtuttt Utttott '·•! 11 IOfloft fC11lt ).4\, nl11>t °'f''lllll (TlmmenT•tn 7..4) .t Ntw VII"\ !ICtltldl ,.,). ri1t111 Ciowelll'lll ~WllCOJI •·U 1t ltl!linor• (C1111l•1 1.Jl nltlll T11111 !lh•l+1nlu1tk t.flJ 'ti MlllMMl'll l l f1'1tY"I Wl. nlthl 1(1n~1 C!l'I' (ltotkt' f ·f) ti• Ant•lt !ltYtll t"4), """' . . ,., . . PE~N LE·WIS ·~:1•66 H~R1101 n.vi> .. cosrA MEsA · · . . S.rvlci ando•Partt for All ll!lportad Caro · · MMtrn' llOdy Shop lnr All Caro -. . •. ' " 646-9303 . • <lr&llf• Co11!1ty'1 Lara~ ~d . Most Modem Toyota anct Vol'l'O Dealt!r ··•' 'llYftll~ DILtVllf IPICtALllTI • '" . ' . ... 1972 VOLVO 142 SEDAN WITH FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING s9900 rll MONTH $117.46 Total Dtwn -Deferl'94 $6057.4'. Caih Prfc• $4246.27 IMI. T & L/A,I 1S.J6 en 1pp. crMlt 1972 TOYOTA MK 11 STATION WAGON WITH FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING s9aoo l'IR MONTH - wasn 't pushed hard before t,he Arcadia meet and being a night meet also had a gre:at de1l to do with his improvement. •·f knew that when he ran a 4:25 nn El Modena 's track in a dual meet that he'd have no proble:m getting under 4:20." Even though he was engrossed in preparation for the: Sunkist indoor meet at the Los Ange les Sports Arena last winter, Radermacher was able to win the DiablO!' intrasquad di!:fathlon com- petition with such marks as a S.-8 high jump and 18-2 long jump. Along with his middle distance ac- complishments (including a 1:53 880 1, Radermacher also high jumped and ran a regular leg on the Diablos· 3:27.9 mile relay quartet this spring. clocking a 50.2 in the latter. Having younger runners like ri.1ark and Ken Hower, Chuck Giddens and Mark Can R i a no around ha s helped Il adermarher and vice versa and it paid nff in the "Diablos winning the Crestview League cro~ country title last fall and in producing four oth'r sUb-4:40 milers. Rade:rmacher has lived in Southern California since he was five years old but still has to complete papers to become a naturalized American citizen . Both he and his coaches f e e I Radermacher is very capable or becom· ing a sub-four minute miler by his soph year in college. ··My biggest influence ha!' been .Jim Ryu n. "he says. "I read his book and like the dedication in the way he !rains. I think I have the pot.e:ntia\ to put it all together and I figure my best event will be the: mile." UNIONDALE.N Y. fAPI -"Th~N•· tional B111skelball Association Pl en1:1 AS.!lociation has de<'ided thal If an~ ne ls suspended or fined . <ill the players will quil,'' said burly Bob Lanier of the Detroit r:is.to1's. "That's probably true," said Dave DeBusschere of the New York Knick.!I, ''but l don·t knov.· !hat for a complete ract. But that "''nuld be the logical thing lo say. If they su."ipend one nr us , they might as well suspend ;i ll of us " They made their comments Thursday night. afler !ht NRA All:Stars. playtnR under the lhreat of fines nr suspensions from Con11nissiont>r Walter .!. Ken ned y. had o\'C'rron1e a 19-point deficit and edgrd the American Basketball As.~oci11tion'11 best players 100.104 at the Nasi:;au Coliseum . Kennedy had stronJ:\~' v.•arned the NRA pla yers that thr.v 11·nul d ht. suhjrct to finei:;, the n1 inimurn or \1•hirh would hf. the amount they receiyed for play)OR 1n the game. f'or beating the ABA for the second year in B row. the NBA pl11.yer11 earned a total of $33,000, or $J,OOO per player. NIA 000 . ' . ··~ t ).j ' .. J,~, . ' ' A,chllHld Ch•"1t>e,laln (l~r~ Gnoddcll H&vlltel H~.....i.;1.,1 L~~ler LOY~ ltnber!)on Sll•1 ' J.r l 1-l ' " ' " ' " . " ' .. . " lJ !'lu•v 6 !'lr~w" is 08"1e11 I Ervl~V p Fre~m~n o G!!tn0r• I~ 1•!•1 10 Jon~• 14 Slmo,011 l T11<1m1""' .'II lO·ll 1116 " " Wi•t lOIAI\ Jt ll 16 JS 1·1 11 O·O ) ~·O l l·• 1) • 1 1• 0 ~ I• •• • " ' s '' n J l · l ' ' "5 n 11 Jl.]1 !O• n -11,. Jl -10• Jn addlliCln In the Above-mentioned eiaht·lap entrants. other good posslblllti111s for hlJlh placr.s inclu.de Sunny HIJl1' J im Salcido \9 :04), Aviation·s Harold Kettlnt \9:06.51 and Costa Me11'1 Doug Macl.ean ll:Oll.I J. The mile record of 4:0AJi (by Westminster's Carl Trentadut. in 'A.'\) could also be lowered , with North Tor· ranee junior Barrie Williams ~4 :08.7) and Garden (.rove's ~1ark Schilling (4:09.9) show ing tht brst chances there. Lompoc junior Alvin C.ilmore had the f1'stest SPmis tin'e of 4:13.1. ~ The 880 is expected to be a d()gfi l arnoo,i.: S11n1a Ana's Robert Harre I j 1 :5l.~1. Buena Park's Tom KovaclCh f\:52.21. r.lendora'!I Rill Heinzen 11:52.!), and Hucneme's Jnh'n Bradford (1 :52\f). Thr rt<'orc1 is !:SI.I .' :: · !l;irrell is unbeaten thi~ yf'ar -·I rrrorcl he Rl!::o boasts in the 440. where he al!io has thr. fayorite 's role nff his 47.~ best. · • ~ Too. the Santa Anan anchor5 a mile relay quartet which ha,; i. 3:16.8 top mark, well within rearh of the 3: 16.4 meet i;t andard. A hot shot put due:! ii; on tap betwtt,Ji ci~frnd ing titlist Te:rry Albrittan · Pf Newpor! Harhnr lfi&-9 1'2) and Cre!pi'l Rand y Crnsll, the national prep leader a1 67-1\112 who topped Albritton in the: 5e:mis, 64-71't 10 fi.l·4' •· In the tram race. Sanla Ana Is favored~ with Harrell. Genet. sprinte:r Clancy Edwards and a swift 440 relay combo to go with the mile baton aroup. .· ·" .. ln)'OUf Puss)'cats? t wind up wittl analle)'Cat. The Pus~ycat. The or•ngc- 1wee1 .aour thee mixes up ~ 1.s quick as• c•I. 81rttnder'1 ln5tan1 Pussyc11 Mix ind . ~. .. . ' .. Early Times mike i1 purr-feet. A~k for lnstJnt Pussyc11t Mi.t j l your favorite: food or liquor 1tore. To ~t 4 Pussyc11 slu!ts.• ~end $2 .93 to : Early Timu Pw5yc1t GltJSeS, P.O. Bo-' 377, Maple Plaln, Minn. S5JS9 . 'Oft'et •UJ• eti1J •bef't ~~btllttd WM ot.17, Quarts NOW~ ' .. .. .. ·- " ... .c .. .r • " --. I " ... .. -· .. ,•" .. ·" . .... -. . -. .. ... ' • . . . DAIL V PILOT : ;9 .. - • /\: . • .FUNNY CAR DRIVER GENE SNOW CHECKS OUT HIS HEMI ENGINE. Snow Man at Top of List In Funny Car Dr,ag Racing By PHIL ROSS Of tile O•Uv l'lltl Iliff Children wait for t h e snowman each winter to bring them ample material for throwing snowballs a n d frolicking in the powdery stuff. In drag racinJ!" fans also a~ait the Snow Man. But in- stead of bringing a white sheet of ice. this Snow Man means a few thou sand extra witnesses in the crowd when he shows up in his Dodge fun 11y car powered by Keith Black Strok- er Hemi engine. One of those occasions is thi s Sunday night al Orange County Internat ion al Raceway, when the $13.000 Hang Ten Funny Car 500 race welcomes Fort Worth's Gene Soow and several other funny car notables. Snow, 31, is someone special though. Having been a professional funny car specialist for !he last six years /with 6 years apprenticeship in stocks and super stocks prior to I hat 1, the art iculate Texan has ac- cumulated so man y cham- pionships that he has to look at a lengthy list to oome them all. Of those most near and dear to his heart have been famong other s 1 s eve ral Win- ternationals crowns, 11 spring· nationals championship and a pair of successive American Hot Rod Association I AHRA J titles . Snow so impressed drag racing experts that a number of s p e c i a l t y pu blications honored him with driver of the yea r honors in 1970 and '71. after he had copped "'hat amounted lo the world cham- pionshi p of funn y car racing. In 1971 , Sno w's racing gross- !'d him a $276.000 total take. which he had to split "'ilh his pit crew, engine builder and chassis manufacturer. "lt"s a team effort an the way in winning," he admits. "I've had a good relationship "'ilh Keith Black (the engine builder and supplier of special parts 1 and I've seen no reason to change. "I've also been very fortunate in that I've ex- perienced no real bip; disa p- pointment. I guess this hap- pens by staying on lop and coming up "'ifh quicker and belier things. This way, you're bound to make progress." Confi dentially, OC IR 's quar1rr·mile surface is one or Snow 's favorite locales for burning and screeching do"·n the runwa y. He says. •·the very best track I've run on is L<lng Beach (Lion sl with Oran~e County second as far as the track itself is conc erned. But Orange County is the nicest overall facility by far . Long Beach just has a little better traction for a guy who likes to get a lot of traction like I do." Weather conditions can also pose problems at various strips throughout the country, yet Snow says, "generally speakin_g, I koow most of the tracks I run on pret!y well and I can compensate for this. At some track~. you don't feel anything until you step rrom behind some covering and the wind almost knocks you over." Snow has come a long wa y since 1966, when he was one of the first practil ioners of the revolutionary funny car idea. Splitting his time back then between Plymooths a n d Dodges, the Fort Worth resi- dent turned a low elapsed time of 8.80 seco nds and burned to a 159 mph top speed. By comparison. at h i s present rate Snow averages 6.60 and 220 mph while his bests are 6.54 and 227 mph . At OCIR, the Texan has clocked 224 mph and 6.62 seconds. • Although he won't be com· peting Sunday nighl. Don (the Sna ke / Prudhomme of Granada Hills has given the fort Worth driv er his most anxious moments. Says Sno"'· "the most con· sistent hard runner I've had to race against has been Prudhomme. He's jusl fit for winning. He burned an engine to beat me in a race at York. Pa. (where Snow owns a small Corona del Mar Bags auto mainteoance facility I and "'as willing to concede an en_gine to win a race. But now I know about hin1 ." Loop Iron Man T h A former sludent at the rop yr Uni versity of Texas . at Arl- ington. where he studied elec- trical e n g i nee r 1 n g and Corona del Mar High 's Sea Kings ha1·e captured the Irvine Leag1i1e Iron ~1 a n froph,v for the third straight .vear rotlo wing the annexation of lC':iµue tilles in varsity tr;:ick <1n:I 1rnnls. varsity competition on 1 y . me rchandising. Snow figu re s, Corona's title teams included "I can go on as long .as I have football. wal er polo a n d the initiati ve and thinking to basketball along with the do so." aforementioned track and ten-Therefore. drag ri!cing buffs nis . may still see a lot more of th e Other le11gue titles were sOOw f\.fan . earned by Costa Mesa <Cross Dragster Offers Opinions Funny ca r king Gene Snow · can talk with you on a variety of affa irs regardjng his chief livelihood -drag racing. In reference to the constant gate battle waged among the three lar~est drag racing arms -the Nationa l. American and lnterootiona\ hot rod associatio ns ( A.K.A. Ni-IRA , AHRA and JHRA ) - Snow offers. "the separate groupings are better r 0 r everyone, including t he drivers. "The competition between the different organizations is good because a monopoly makes things poorer in almost anything. Anyway, these organizations like tn outdo each other, so they're con- sequently trying to make the situation better because of this." \Vith the advent of women drivers. Snow. a bachelor hasn't been really affected one way or the other. He notes. "being single in my business is easier than being married because you're gone 90 percent of the time. "As for the women drivers. I don't have any particular bore against them but if they're ready for what hap- pens. that's fine. A lot or the guys have everything lo lose and nothing to gain so they 're naturally afraid . I ha ven't been beaten by a woman driver anyhow ." Speed and quickness are two primary subjects always in- teresting good d r i v er s , especially Soow. He sa y!. "guys are pushing cars to the edge all !he lime. There 's just no lirnit : it's kind of like infinity. No matter how quick or fast a car goes. it will always be able to do better because there are so many gu ys using their brains lo- day." Gene Snow is one of those . The ~a Kings "·on the prize v.·1th fl9 pcllnts. outdistancing runnr.·up Fountain Valley (40) b~· 19 po1n1s. Rounrtin~ out thr bt1lanre are Los Al:in1itos 13ll 1. Edison 136 1, Cos1;i ~les;i (33 12!. Eslrinci;i t1J 1, Santri 1\na Valle~ 12i1iJ rinrt ri1agnolia (24 1. country}, Estancia (golfl, Los Alamitos 1 baseball. swi mming a n d co-championship in basketball 1 and F' o u n I a i n Valley (wrestl ing). • Jim ~1cFaul. Craig Collon and Andy Thurm we r e h0norecf with Rustler of the ''ear awards Wednesday night ri! Golden West College's spri ng sports banquet. Owsley, Meyer Nab Golf Championships Points are a11•ardcd for Deep Sea Fish Report f.1cfaul received his award for gymnastics. Colton was a star performer for the swim· ming team and Thurm was the top Golden West tennis player. The baseball and track teams will be honored Tues- day. Here's a !isl of the awards: Gy,....11t1cs "ustttr QI Ille t1e11r -Ji"' Mc~1ut1 C•pt1Jn. Din O'Neil. ••• ~··'°"•1 ioW •VP.r ... : Jlfl\ C.'l'Of'H Pi ~\. S!A!e Mft1 Low liloo.il'ld : $1tVI ltobttllori !1 411!. Swlrnrnl111 l!u1!!H <1t ,,,. veer -Cr111 Colto"l ~\OSI lmptOW~i ,_,., Ek:Pt; (IPlll~: 11°'1 Mcl"tyre/ Oill1!1lldlllll lwll"I,,.,...: 1(1v1" wm11m•. '''"'" Jtu1llw Of ll'lt Ytlr -llMIY T""rm1 C1Pl1I"; kf lrt'I Ol'lllOOCI. • Dana Carter or Huntington Beach will ht among the fa vorites a.s 40 drive.rs com- pete In tnnlght'1 national mldg,t racing association 7$- lap three~uarter midget race 11 Trojan Speedway In South Gttte. S111ly O"•sley of Rancho S::in Jo;iquin and Kathleen f.1cv~r of Big Can.von Country Club have joined the ran~s nf Orange Coast Women"s r.olf Club after shooting a fnur round 343. A 15·handicapper. Mrs. ~1eyer outscored Deane He\perin. wh o turn ed in a :154 . Bobbie Cox won the chem· pionship flight low net award by tabulatin~ a 308. Due to rain. 1011' ncl prizt.s for the succeeding four flii;:hts Wt're given on the b;isi:o; of 1$- hole totals. The winncr:o; "'ere : J11ne t Hooten 1185 1. f.la=-1n' Poyas ~ 1001. r.aby R11 itry i 186 l and f\.1i ckey Rf'n·Nick I 1851. Miss 0\1.•stey, a new member of the Rancho San Joaquin Women's Golf Club. shot 11 three-day 275 to defeat run· nm1p Ftrn Sproul i281) ft1r the championship. Virginia Ide to0k tht 101' net award in the championship night. She shot • not 2.17. Carolyn W11lbrid~e took the low gross award in th! first night arter posting A 297. J•Bn Cottam was second with a 2\lfi. Marge Tha tcher (320\ and Jo Asher (322 ) shot the \oll't~t total scores in the second flight. Low scorers in the lhird flight were Shirley Wcl1el 13 11 ) and Vivian Troutman 1331 l. El Niguel Tn a special two.flay e\'enl of Pinehurst -A form of Scotch Ball -Edith Carpentrr and Evelyn Conant teamed ur to win top honors at tne El NiJ?:uel Country Club 11fi11ir . Midge Moyer and Frankie Blair also shot a '2.Jl to He up second flight honors with Gallina Dive.I and h-11 11 i e Johnson. 1'116alon Viejo Jean Metcalf and MadeUne Stanley teAmt:d up to win the latest best bl>ll of partn<rs event , 11 Mieion VI e Jo Wt1me.n '1 Golr Club. The twosome shot a net &3. four strokea ahead of ru~ nersup Edna Leonard and Nadine Mau . • FVGal Spru·ldes In Meet Orange Coast swimmers Shirley BabashoU of Fountain Valley and Valerie Lee of M ission Viejo took first places In their evenls at 1he fir~l an- nual Clf girls' s w i m preliminaries al Millikan High School in Long Beach Thurs- da v. Miss Babashoff. an Olympic hopeful , clocked a 1:57.5 in the 200 free and a 4:09.6 in the 400 free to win the two events she entered. Miss Lee took her first in the 100 butlerfly with a 1 :02.4. She placed second lo the Founlain Valley sophomore in the 400 free. Huntington Beach swimmer Maureen Taylor q u a I i f i e d third with a 26. I an1ong 13 heats of CJ F Finals hopefuls in the 50 free. She also qualified sixth in the 200 individu al medley. The finals and consolation finals will be held at Beverl y Hills High School starting at 7:30 p.m. tonight. 10f m..il•Y rel11 -1. Footl'llll !l:J.l.SI. J. Sunny HUl1 O :S,.01. 3. A•c•di• CJ·Ol.t l. I. Oo• P~tllos CJ;02.9l. S. llolllng HIU1 (J:Ol.O>. 6. Cnr•n• dtl Mir U:lM.ll. :KHI lrtt -1. 81b11llolf 1'1111nl1ln \1111•• l:Sl.S. J. St•ICl'ltn IFoe!l'lllll l :OS.l . J Moo•• (Los Al10S) 2:0S . .S. I. $mall-(Western) 2:06.0. S. Gr«• (Covl.,t) 1:01.S. 6. Smt ll <L-elt) 2:01.1 JI ''" -L L1111 Utollino Hl!lsl 1.s.2. 2. H1•1 (Trovl ?S.6, J, Tlylor (Hun· lln1ton f111cll) 16.1. •. Ntll ...,., (El Monttl 16.J. 5. SMr•d•• tSunnv H!ll•I 26.J. I. f rldV (footnllll JI.I. 2111 Ind. med••• -1. Whit•~•• (FOOll'llttl J:ll.,, 2. liubb1rt (All'l1m· br1J l.11.I. ] Woods (Sunny Hitlsl J;ll,1 1. Mclnlvre (1!1ncho Al1mitosl J;lO.I. S. Lewi• 1S1n M1rlnal J::n.I. I. T•vlor (liuntintlan ltlC~l 1:2J.I. lM fly -1.· lH IMl11•111 Vitia) 1:11.4. 2. D. Shr11dtr (Sunny liills) !1 :02.tl. J. JospPh (R1mon1) 1:01.•. •. Paskin tl!I w11 ..... 1 l:OS.O. J. Shenon INelO 1:01.2. 1. c. snr10.r csunnv 1-111111 1 ·os s. ' lllf lrH -I. Neilson fl!I Monte) S7.2. ?. H1lh1w1y (Covin•) Sl.l. C•mllbell !Uol1ndl Sl.6. ~. Motln•ro (W1rre") 1:00,J. !. !tit) !IKkW!!h ((dMI I nd M1C1nlolh (S~n M~rcos) 1;00.6. JOO b1ck -1. Hullb~tl (Aln1mbr1l J,11'.•. 2 Gretn (Foornlll) l :OS.7. 1. P"bi• Ulollinu Hill•I l:IMI 1. • Lewio (Si n M1rino 1:01.l . .S. lluvld1 lDos Pu~lol! 1:011.S. 6. Mo•tl>DUH 10os Pueblo1l 1.oe.o. 4GCI Ir•• -1. 811»1hall (1'01in11;n V.il••I 4:0t.6. 1. LN tMl11lon VleloJ ':11.t . l. T1ylor (Valley Cnrhrl1n) ~. 19.I. " Smallwood !Wt1!ernl ''ll·'· s. s rieuon (NoUJ ':JI.!. 1. srr•cr11n 1Footnilll 4:2!.I. 100 brt11t -l . Notklo!I tAr<~<lll l 1:10.J. 2. H•YI (Troy) l :ll.1. ], Woodl (Sunn¥ Hlll<I •·u 0, 4. Gul••SI (Fullerronl 1:1•.S. !. Mcln!Vre \ll•ncno A!11mi!ost 1,n .1. '· cnenell CS1nt1 61r~rl l 1:1i.•. 4" ''" re!1y -1. FoolnlU O:S9.0l l . Covln1 ll:OJ.4). 3. Rollln11 Hills (o:OJ.I ). '· Arc•d·• (•:01.J). s. 511n Marcos l':CJl.11. I. lllvt rslde Poly fi:U.11, Art• c ..... 11rio~ l'l1ct WlnMn 'OD mt<lley reley -liun!lnt!on 8e1cl• (9!h) 1:06.•. ~-••~• -!l«kwltn fCdMl (l!hl 16.9, 011e Cliurrtlnt1on eeacnf (trh) 21.1. 100-"v -Fresorikt /Huntlng1on 11~1cnl 1:10 1. (1711'1). 100-trH -Wt•~· ICdMI notnl 1 ;01.S. !OO.b1ck -!i:tith1rd (Min ion VltloJ 112tnJ 1,0t.•. Edison, MV Gals Honored Edison High School's GAA president Ramona Bofill was given the SJOO G A A scholarship at the club's an- nual banquet Tuesday night. Miss Boflll. a se nior who plans to attend Orange Coast College. shared the organiza- tion's high points award with Cindy Richmond. Meanw hile , McCullough, a junior a t Mission Viejo High School, wa s named cu ts t a n d in g athlete of the year at the school's GAA awards banquet. Tonia Hedrick was voted the most inspirational senior athlete by her classmafes while Claudia Maroz was given both the high points and service awards. • UNIROYAL ZETA 40M ST££' Radial Tire Guaranteed 401 000 Miles A Whole new dri•ing experience. 75"/. MORE HAZARD PROTECTION • 20 '"/. MORE CAR CONTROL• 12 "/. BEITER TRACTION • "than canventianol 78 seri es bias ply tries. 40,000 .Mil( GUAIANTll tt,,.. Mo'I 1ot II•• 0,.10010 1!0!0d •" !ho oidt•oll {M•l~o~ .. "'1 •t Ii•• foilo for ••Y '"'°" •l~tr r~o• .. ;11f•I 01>.,o or colln•••, J"O•• choriorod Z••o Molot w;ll t i•• ~·• o "•Oil 0101••• ti•• P•"h"" or • ~·" Z•I• llrt •I '""'' trpo or roooit P•"'1"'" or "' <h""" ~odll will •Q••I oti~o ''" po;d "'"lllpllod ~v 1>"1<••••1• el ""''d .. i1001• .,. .. did ••I •~tolo, Croda .. 111 bo oooli.• •10••" tho lo!• G•o•o~o .. d ..... ~<1<• l••lio•ol Gd1••'"''"t bo•• •H'"';'"a1io1 •<l•OI P"'"t). DHlor ,.., Mid ,.,oil <h0<1• fw ,.,.,,., ho """'''"' io 1op!1<1•t '!'"· fl-"' ... lolOd ~ohl<lo co•dotlooo °'"'' bo P<OOO<ly °'''"."''"" oo~ lnM ""•v1ht lo fot lrt• '·000 IO!tl• 1•101:.,., ••d <~O<~·~Po lor •1l .. 1• ,.,,, .. .C UNIROYAL ZETA 30M INTER STll' Tire Guaranteed 30,000 Miles 72 •/. MORE HAZARD PROTECTION ' 55 'j, MORE DURABlE AT HIGH SPEECS 0 20'/. MOR E MILEAGE' 'thon convenlionol bio s belt ed tireJ, E 78-14 $)645 ~;fA~ "•• v·,, $1.31 fod. h . Tu." F78·; 4 .•• $37.45 G78·14 •• $39.45 H78·14 ••. $42.45 G78·15 •• $39.45 H71· 15 ••. $42.45 J78· 15 •••. $45.45 sr••' RADIALS FOR IMPORTED CARS! !UNIROYAL ZETA GUARANTEE NOT APPLICABLE! In tests by two of Eur. TUBELESS snn BELTED BLACKWALL ope's leading motor ma· , ... lo,11<•• Sl1• ,,,,. 1.c1 .. ,,. 1555Rl2 6.00-12 $28.45 $1.45 gazines, !he Uniroyal 14 5SR13 5.50· 13 $26.45 $1.38 Steel Radial won first 15SSR1 3 5.60-1 J $30,45 $1.53 165SRl3 6.00-13 $31.45 $1.76 plaet' ratings against 175SR13 6.50-13 $32.00 $1.99 165SR14 6.45-14 $32.45 $1.79 other manufacturers of 175SRl4 6.95-1.4 $33.00 $2.00 155SR15 5,60-15 $34.00 $1.70 fabric and steel radials. 165SRl5 6.00.15 $37.45 $1.95 ' FRONT-END • I * SPIN IALA;;c;-;.-1 ALIGNMENT -·S~@ I WHEEL t , .. I BALANCE I 1,1 ~ I I ~ .I ~ . ~) I I I .. • ' • I~ ~~-·-. 1-fj\ I , I O.r ••J>Ott ., .. h..,l<t •~lvo! <nN•, At Owr l••t)"lll.y I.•• :'t' !Includes Weig hts) I c•,.btt , ... 1. olld , ..... , .. -••• Reg. $3.00 fe<!vr•; ..... 111091 utHifl .. lie••, oJl"tf aUT i f., $7.tS e-cll I IM t!•l"" ... ,:,.,.e••. Gtttht zoc FOR $200 I Most $555 American 4111 for only (In fAMCIUS UA. Miocl(J ONLY ea, · 1 $1.50 111. V•lu• rlU INIJA~l.AflONI COUPON 0000 UWlll #.~1 'I. 1t72 -------------COVfOH GOOO UNTll M~T 11, ltn (OU"°"' 0000 VWlll MAT ,1. Jm - ANAHEIM B961 Brookhurs l ............. 635·1170 WESTM INSTER 7135 Westminst" Blvd •... 893-3521 • GARDIN GROVE 8601 Weslminsler Blvd ... 193.3595 • • HAWAIIAN GARDENS 11973 Carson St ... 165-0227 HUNTINGTON BEACH 19411 Beach Blvd ... 536-7571 ;• •• SANTA ANA 11 S N. Harbor ........•... 839-3700 ,•-;; SANTA ANA 1211 W. Wuner Av~ ...... 541).1646 ' TUSTIN 131 E. Ill Street ....... _ ...... 544-9"1 ·; COSTA M!SA· .:· N!WPDRT llACH 322 !. 171h St ......... 642-4131 CORONA 836 W. 61h Str1tt ............ 73$4G10 IAH CLL\\EHTE 927 N. El Comino R11I , , , 492.5sq USE YOUR MAJOR CRlDIT CARD Ol'IN DAl.Y 1-7 • IATUADAY a.a first introduced I~~ {'!!I! t!Cll' & TIGER PAW,. • . I l • ( ( t • f ' I r " I I h ( I• • .~ ,, ' ' ' ,, ' ,, " ~ I . ' ' · . t r1:1•.Y. f.~ • .)' lf). 1'J7Z DAil V PILOT ff i Hollda/ Weekend ;- Bahm Y dcliters Cr~ise to Dana National s,,stem • The Bahia Corinthian Ya cht Clu~ will celebrate Memorial Day weekend \11ilh a cruise to Ilana Point Sa!urday, Sunday and t.1onday. AU types of boats are invited to participate including s a i 11 power, auxili~ and outboard. Computer ~oosts Boat Firm Sales A San Diego-based firm 111 Th~ mRslf'r e o m p u I e r using a complete computer re~ponds immediately wilh a system ~'hich store1' llstll or listi nJ: of JO bruits mn~t closely vessels for s11le by rf'l(ion on a n11uchini;: the bu y er ' a national basis. prcfe ren<"t . Dean sAid !hf' firm plans to cheeter trunks tU1I W!STCLtFF PLAZA St keeper 142·7081 The firm ill called M11.rin'r e1pand the system In ineludt ''acht Sales Systems. Inc., and aircraft in tht near future. is classed .11s 11. compultrized' _:::.=..::::..::.::::..:=::..:.::::..::_~----------­ communications ser\'ice for boat owners and brokers. The three-day cruise will in· elude the cub's first predicted log race for power boats on Saturday. Skippers may start an y time they wish but must turn in their scaled prediction and observer's recorded times i bernre <I p.m. at the Oana Po int raft-up in the West ··There are about nine million boais in the Unit~ Slates,'' .says Ron Dean, pre11i- dent of ?i1YSS. ..and 11~ proximately one third or thest change hands every yea r. 11 n1akes good business sense In use the speed and information storage capacity of com puter!!! to help the right buye r and the r_ight boat get together at thr righl price. 57 Enter Regatta at San Diego ThP San 01ei.:.n Y11 r.h t Clu h is !'pnn,.nrin': 1n;i 1or Jrvel class rr";i1 t:i this \1C"krnd for !he Qu;1r1cr·Ton. ll:ilf To11, Three- Qt1:1rtrr Ton and One Ton cl."'"~if 1cali1·n<;. Fifi\' f;f'I en bo<1ts have f'ntcrCd in tht' four categoriei:;. There 11·111 be one race each d ~I' Saturda~. Sunday and !llrinda\'. 'F'h·p· Mato;; :ire h~ted from tht" r\c11 \)()rt !lart>nr <1rea . They arr Gt'ori:e Tooby of fl.·e"·pnrt Jl,11·hor Yach! r~ub in An1£1r 1ra J:1nr. Onc-Tnn: ~al .rr~trin. NHYr. De Cnrc, Jl;ilf Ton . \\ rh~h1 and Fricker. Hi1111 i11~1nn H8rbor Yacht Club, f ;Jhil1. f)nc-Tnn: Jim ~1oorc. South SIHn·c Sad in;: Cl ub. Sc· qu n1·:i . Three Qua t"ler 1'nn, an rl Andv Ro~e an d P~tCt S,..hoonm :1kcr. Balbn;i Ya cht Club. Hobo 11. llalf·Ton. Basin. B. J . Ursin, capta in or 1he club's JXlwer boat fleet .will be ahoard the escort boat Ursa fl1ajor. lea\'ing lhe BCYC d~s at JO a.m. for a ren· dPzvous in front of the Co11st Gu;ird station at 11 a.m. St1turday. RCYC mrmbers have been invi ted lo use the facilitie~ or KITE IN FLIGHT -The sporty 12-foot Kite wm be the vehicle of 1 proposed Flight of the Kiles which will replace the once colorful Flight of the Snow· birds on Newport Harbor. Initial Kite race i:s scheduled for June 16. ParHdpaling brokers ;n. for Summer quire via computer terminals in their ofrices on behalf of ·- the nrw Oana Po int Yacht N n"h dor;n~ the;r stay" the ewport Harbor Event \Ve:r;t Ra.~in. ---..!!'----------=---..::....::....:.=~ -~'··::!;~. 00'~r~~:::~~.Wh~~ -= Pleated & Cuffed matched by tyl" of vessel aod .!! ID : - On Sundav, dinghy races '"i\I be held ci.t 1 p.m. with any size boa t eligible . Fleet Capt. Jack Johnson said any sail co m hi n a ti on could be used-from bedsheets to spin- f(ites Replace Snowbirds prict', the broker thrn conlacls ._ ::S • 1hr bo..11 o,1·ner for rurther cc. Jeans negotiation11. ..,,. MYSS is a boat listing -• - service only. They do not own E with A> boats or rtceive: com n1issions :S :; nakers. Newport Harbo r will soon have a modern version ol the famed Fl i g h t of the Snowbirds . A sudden-death race to be kno"·n as the flight of the Kile s is scheduled to be sailed Sund11y, July lfi. according to Jack Barnett. manAger of the Newport Harbor Cha mber of Al ~.30 p.m. Sunday an unusu;:il "beer can relay" race \\'ill be held. usin~ only m.:inuR!ly prnpe!lerl ho<it s-no si7.e rcslrirt inn, but no motors nr s:iils al1011'ed. One can of hrcr must be con s ume d bcf11•een the first and seeond m:irk <1nrl the cmpl y ca n turned in for ecological reasons before rc!urning to the raft-up. Last Pvent of the day Yiill 15e .COm mer<!i!. a barbecue with boat-hopping For nea rly four decades the and socializing. Flight or the Snowbird.c;, a race involving the colorful 12- 1orsa1 ... De'" expla;ned. <" The Lo ye red LOOK ~ sponsor the event as it did the are usually easy to right and Boat owners desirin~ to st>ll _ ·~ Snowbird classic. keep sailing. will register the ir craft "'ilh U-Q nd ~ .All yacht club!!! in the The Kite is a 12.foot MYSS. i n c \ u d i n g boat -,. Harbor will cooperate in put-5..-;nc!ltions. 5 ....... i111 ""ui"--Clunky Shoes ;;:-. t. th t Th fiberglass catboat wit h a 5·foot ,.,.._.. ......... '"'1 ,... ._ _ ing on e even · e mcnt and price. The lisling fee d ::a Newport Harbor Yacht Club beani. It was designed by is Sia ror 90 days. -- will serve as the scene of the C11rter Pyle and originally Chartt'r nlcmber M Y SS ..,. ,., after-party and trophy presen-produced by Newpo rt Boat.o;. brokers are loc11ted in 12 ma-.S.. ~ Wllion. The firm was recenll y bought jor marin11s alnng the Atlan1ic • ~ Rarnett said il is anlicipaled out by Lance and Craig and PaCific .i;eaboa rd:r; and ln ,,,,,,,. ti!,, ~ that the Flight of the Kite.-. McCabe who are now pro-thP Gu U and Grl'at LRkf's ¥ • "'ill draw as many 85 300 ducing the boat!!. under the areas. ' ~6 65 Fashion Island .\..' boats for·the ·intial sailing. firm name Lancran, 526 E. Brokers pay a minim11I /. N t B h ~ The Kite is not as colorful II~ Alton , Santa Ana . !lervict" charge per inquiry. .,,Y ewpor eac ~ the old Snowbird but is 8 hot-There have been more than For example, thr. broker ma y // .111 644-6500 ~"Q r r-:-_ ~ fool catboats. was one of the 'fl major small-boat spectacles ·w k d C [ d ( on Newport Harboc. drawing : ee ·en a en ar ~ ~r.~~~.~om thro,gho"t ter performer and le&l!I s111ble. 1.200 kites bu ilt and the inquire on behalf or a ~/ J IJ \\ It is not uncommon for the greatest number of Lhem are customer indicating boa t Y ,· W n e > boats to flip ma breeze but 1 _:;~n~t~he'...':N~ew~po~r~t~ar~e~•:· ____ ~sl"!"':'~~~;c~a~H~on~s~•~n~d~p~r~ic~e~r~a~ng~e~.'.::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:==:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:::::: Lido Isle's Nite Flites Set Ma,, 30 Fvlln11·ing arc h11!hhgh rs of ,,.,,.;.ht1ng a{'ll V!l1es in Southern CaQfnrnll'I lhis 11PekPnd : Nf'll'J)(lrl · ll:tlho a ltALUOA YA CHT CLt:R-;..tl'rnorial l)ay Regal- ia. S:1TUrdav :ind S1u1da7. DAl!I A \0 RI NTH I AN 'YA(!IT CLCB-Dnna Point Cnii~l'. Lo\ Anllrles-1..nni: Be::irh AL AMITOS BAY YACHT r1.t·R-:'llnmori<1l D.:iv Rerat- 1.:i. S1turday. Sunday and '.\lrip•J;iy, L.OS ANGELES YACHT Se nior ~ahots Rye Na tionals .. 1'if' B:11boa Bav Senior !"atinr F!Prt 1ri1\ uie Balboa 'Ya,ht Cluh·s '.\ll'mnrial D;i y Rr8?.t'a as thn flN'I cham- pinfi~h1 p :ind el1m1nat1ons l0r thr:n at ion a l championsh ip re ~t!a. F!lt?Pt director !l>l!lt Allione ~a1C! the f1r~t 10 fi nishers in lh& re!!JtT:i 11·ould qualify for lhC: national championships to bf": hPld ;it Lido isle Yacht c1~01 sta rting June 25. ('iJftst 11l ~r f'ftl flf!I" (~o,,(lf•~O!f cm-:n~11 1""dV Ll'1~! "d'Mble "''"rl, n·~~! ~nc mor~lno ~o•rf! b'(nm""' "'"" IO snu!~w,sl 8 lo:> 16 f~o!' In .11!••"• "'I toa~y •nd S•1 u•~I.,. ''·o~ !r•u 1 II c;~,··1 1·..,~~•.1tu'"1 '""~' lrom s• 1, l'i lnlen~ 1~""''"8!urt1 renoe lrom SI! lo 10 W•l•t lfmp1reh"~ ~1 So11, '''''''''· Tides S•cil~cl h·Qh Sf(.on" IG·N IT4orn. J6 1 ~Pm. 1 9 SATUltDAY F"\I ~·Qr> ~or\! l~w S"C•~~ h•on Sf~nd low ' F ''I ~·Qk JO"'' ''"' 5ed>nn rl9h s~r.Mc1 •- SUNDAY s·,.. ltlttt 1 •J" "'· M06'1 ltl-.t 1Ol11.m. •Sl •m. J • l v ...... -0 • IJopm !7 1 10pm_ 1 0 I0'3 11 m J i I .Di e m ·06 •:·1pm, JI 1•tpm 1 2 Stll T:~ ii.m. St!• •:1! a m. ... In its early years the Flight CLUB-Cal-40 J\:itional Chnm-drew more than 200 boats, but pionship Reg;itta. Saturday a few yea rs BRO the race was and Sunday. abandoned because no mnre Santa ft1nnirll Bay lh:'!n 50 boats could be PA CIF'J C ~·I AR I N F.RS mustered from the dying YACHT CLU~uter Islands class. • rare. Marina del Rey l!l The new race will involve B<ilboa Yacht Club, started the currentl y popular Ki~ Lido Isle Yacht Club will today. Class. another cat. r i Ill g e d begin its Summer Nile Flites KIN(; HARBOR YACHT si ngle-hander that had its May 30 and continue to Aug. •-· · N t IS. The Nile Flites consist of CLUR-Viclnry Class Tnvita-1~g1nn1ngs on e w po r Harbor three series or evening races tionfll Rega t!a . Saturday and Th · 1 11 th inside the bay over 8 three Sunday. e new r11ce wi l fn ow e San Oiego same format as the Flight of months period . SAN DIEGO y A c HT the Sno wbirds. I! will 'be a The June series will be held CLUB-Lauren Series. Cal-2-0, sin.Rle race s1artlng n~~r the on Tuesday.'! starting May 30 Sunday; Richard Hu ss I) 0 g Balboa Pa vilion and !raver~-and continuing June 6, 13-20- Troph.v r a r e . Columbia-25. ing a five-mile course through 27. The July series will be sail- Sunday. the norlh and south Lido chan-ed July 11-18-2.'i. and the o c EA N s J D E y ACHT nels and thence back to the August Serie111 will be Aug. 1·8· CLUB-..~oring Series. outside finish line. 15 . classr" su-••v The same trophies will be Classes el i ~ i b I e to · · · ,,_ "... · used. Mrs . Joe Beek. w1'do•• of · · I CO Ro N A Do y ~ c II T part1ripale are lnternat1ona -c L u B _ s a n Diego to the late Joseph A. Beek, 470, Finn. Hobie C;it. Sabot A, Oceanside Cruise. Saturday. father of the Flighl of B and C, F'l ipper. Mon- Nnrth & Island Snowbirds. has rededicated all togomery-'10, Kite A and 8 . SANTA BARBARA YACHT of the Snowbird trophies over and Lido l~A and 8. Other CLUR-~1f"morial Da y Regal· to the Kite Class. Th e classes may be established ta. Sunday; Holl ister Race.1 __ c_h_am_be_r_o_f_C<J_m_m_e_cc_e_w_i_ll _w_;t_h_t_hr_ee_o_r_m_or_e_e_n_t_r;_e•_·_, Monday. ANA CAPA YACHT CLUB-Anacapa Island Race, Sa turday. Trophy Slated For Ton Title The North A1nerican Yacht Racing Union is establishing a permanent trophy for an an - nual One Ton Championship. The award is be i n g established in fur therance of NAYRU's sponsorshi p of level class racing which includes the Sopranioo and Trina trophies for half-ton and qunrter·ton r~cing. The lda J,e"·is Ya rht Club of Newport . R.I. will conduct the inilial mat ch for lhe One Ton match in Scplcmbcr. HALLI DAY'S The Purists Choice Halllday's Button Down Sho"'n hPre our classic 1tr1p1n& on t fine pcly- ""ter cotton fabric "'hich is completely dur.able prt"f':.S. DAVE ROSS PONTIAC'S ' EXCLUSIVE NEW CAR J.£11l lld.ay'1 also fl!11.tures th!! more basic colourlnp of "'li lt .. , blu!' &: m11.ize oxfords. 5 YEAR/50,000 MILE WaRRanty At No Extra Charge P•rh & l •tlor o~ CM rr P o,.. .. 1, ••~ T.allor!'d with precision from lht sofUy roUa:l col· lar to th!' ba.n-el cu ff . DRiii SHIRTI ,ROM $10. MEN'S TRADITIONAL CLOTHING 17tfl a. llVIHI AVI -WISTC:l.I" ,LAU NIWPOIT llACH -PM. MM,t2 Ho•": IO·l-Mo11. & 11tM. 1 .. t . ' i ... • ., . The fastest moving thing in the desert is a beetle. The gr ueling desert 15 the OOme ground for ofi-f he·rood ro"ng. And thol's where Volks· wagen·powered racers are right at home. This yea r. we 've dec ided to celebro1e our good fort une in olf·the·rood racing with the Bo1a Champion SE. It's a l1m1ted production Super Beetle with special lectures. Like silver metol!!c poin t. And special sport wheels. And a special plaque and certd1ca!e. And lots more. If you're wondering why we're so excited abour off.the-rood ra cing. 1usl look at lhe results. The first 23 cars to f1 n1sh !he '72 Min t 400 were Volkswagens o r Volkswogen- powe red. In the ·71 Bo10 500 they look hrst and second place over oil. And •n lhe '71 Mex"on 1,000, !hey look lhe first 8 places '" colegory 3 and second place over o!I. Surpri:.ecJ? You shouldn't be. Not when you understand that o VW engine 1> bu1!t to toke pun1~hn1enl. And because it's air -cooled you never hove to worry oOOut 11 tD1!1ng over. Add oil of !his to the chassis and suspen· s1on system of a VW and you ve got yourself o winner. V..C think !he Bo1a Champion SE 15 a winner too. So come 111 soon ond look over lh1s Special Ed•t1on Beetle And ony other VW tha t catches your eye. They oil hove the heort of o champion. ' ' j HUNTINGTON BEACH Harbour Volkswagen , Inc. 18711 Beach Boulevard 842-4 435 NEWPORT BEA CH Chick Iverson, Inc . 445 E. Coast Hwy. 673-0900 SAN JU AN CAP IS TRAN O Bill Yates, Inc. 328 52 Volle Roo d 499-2 26 1 ~ • - • .• • I 1 , ) ~ •. 1 ·!~2!4~o~~L~Y~"~'M;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~=·=·~~~~·M~~~~~.1=m;;;_ ______________________________________________________________________ -=:------, ~r • • . • • • , . • JC PENN ,EY'S SPORTING GOODS CARNIVAL ~ w. h v I T B I T L G A SPORTING GOODS DEPARTMENT f 1t .a ues oo . 1~ o et et way NEWPoR}0r~~"~MREONLY ' I ' f • ' • ' • • ' • ' ' ' ' ' SHOP MON-FRI 10-9:30 TUES-WED THURS 10-9 SAT 10-6 SUN 12-5 opleplay.. ice,3.88. 488·8 8'x 10'Jodgettnl.8.73oz, cotton drill roof, 6.02 OL cotton drill wahs and tloor.Stands7' at center With 4'6" walls. Fu Uy usable B'x 10' ,floor :space. Has two large side windows for exc81tent ventilation. 1588 10• x 10' dining canopy. Adjustable 9' metal center pole and 4'adjustable 8' comer poles. Roof is heavy duty 7 oz. cotton drill In , avocado and gold. Offers handy, 'protected' living space In camp or backyard. ' . IN PERSON ROMAN GABRIEL APPEARING IN OUR SPORTING GOODS bEPT. SAT. MAY 27 12-2 TO SIGN AUTOGRAPHS Badminton set includes 4 steel shaft rackets, metal poles, net, guy ropes, metal stakes •nd 2 shuttlecocks • Volleyball setincludes7'4" metal poles, ground stakes, net, guy ropes, ball, instructions • Croquet set includes• mallets, 2 stakes, 4 balls, wickets, case and instructions. Tetherball game includes 3section1%• steel pole, ground sleeve tetherball with full length nylon cord. Horseshoe game includes 4 horseshoes, 2 metal· staJ1;es1 instructions. ' ALUMINUM TENNIS RACKET 999 WILSON ® TENNIS BALLS CHAMPIONSHIP YELLOW 1599 JCPenney 3 lb. Dacron9 88 polyester fill sleeping 111 CAN OF THREE 4599 9x9 UMBRELLA nNT 2.40 Orin Top, Sido & Floor Wall Heights' Contor 7' One Screened Window Outside Tie Down Strom F!.p bag with nyton shell. YOUR CHOICE 3498 aaa Wide assortment of our quality lures and terminal tack el. Ideal tor fresh water fishing. Propane Kangaroo Kitchen. Compacr light and easy to carry. Broils, ' grills, bakes, toasts, steams, smokes and pressure cooks. lnchXtes one disposable propane cylinder and smoke chips. Zebco #33 reel. Spring loaded drag, self~ube bearings and stainless steel centershafl Daiwal7350reel. High power retrieve, ball bearing movement and spring loaded drag. Garcia-Mitchell #320 reef. Adjustable drag, ch rome line guide and one-piece bail. PLASTIC GOLF TEES , 29~ HAND FULL PRACTICE GOLF BALLS HIGH IMl'ACT PLASTIC 5~ ea. SUNDAY GOLF BAG ' HEAVY DUTY CANVAS 2866 GOLF ACCESSORIES TOWELS 48 PUTTING CUP ¢ SPIKE BRUSH ETC. EACH UNIROYAL PLUS II GOLF BALLS ORIG. 9, «16 DOZ. NOW 599 DOZ. GOLF CLUB RI.OT IRONS WOODS l'UTTlllS 3.33 4.-4 • 3.88 BRUCE CRAMPTON GOLF SET 3 WOODS, 8 IRONS ONLY 5199 WILSON® GOLF BAGS BLUE VINYL SPECIAL! COLEMAN ® FUEL For Stoves, Heaters, lanterns REG. 99c NOW 88¢ GAL. TENNIS DRESS CLOSE-OUT! GOLF BALL RETRIEVER EJCnNDABLE 1.22 6' POLISHED ALUMINUM BASEBALL GLOVE FOREMOST® TOP GRAIN LEATHER AU 'PURPOSE STRAW SUN HATS PLANTATION STYLE MONO Fil.AMENT 5.99 1 088 FISHING LINE . _7aa 2so '° 99¢ SIZE 10.14 1200 Yards SPOOL • • . ' ' ;=====================::::·'-.----'--..;.,..,.., _ ___, ~---------------"----' '----.,.---'------J JCPenn~y FREE!! e 4 TEES AND BALL MARKER e GOLF MATE e IASEl~LL BAT PENCIL • ' 24 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH CLOSED MEMORIAL DAY MAY 29 BACK PACK SPECrAL i ' ALUMINUM FRAME HEAVY CANVAS • . . . ' • • • I i I • - F~d.11. llq 26, 1972 I STRAWBERRIES AFLOAT I I I I I f i t I ! I i I I I ' I l l ' I I r ' T hree-day Festival Begins in Garden Grove Miss G arden Grove of 1971 rides in tlie annual parad e wi th -her court. 'Thi s ye~r's event starts et .I I 11 .m. Sa turday et Century end Garden Grove boulevards. Count B111e, above left, and hi s orchfffre will play for listening and dancing at Dis- , n1yfand's 11th 1nnual Big Band Festival this wffktnd. Also appearint are Ch1rli1 81rn1t, above, vocalist Fran Warren and Lionel Hampton, left, who hos a two-f inger piano styling. Disneyland Sponsors Big Bands Count Basie, Lionel Hampton, Buddy Morrow and Charlie Barnet, aiong with their orchestras .will perfonn a t .Disneyland's 11th annual Band Festival during the Memorial Day weekend. All four aggregations will pe(form for listening or dancing at different park locations Saturday and Swiday evenings only, May 27·28, from 9p.m.to1 a.m. Rounding ou; this line up is tbe new "Blue Print" organiuilion, who have an UJ>"tempo approach to the big band sound. Count Basie has been the pace.setting 1tylist in the jazz world since 1936. The entire Basie ensemble, with the Count at the keyboard, will be spotlighted on To- morrowland Stage. Just acros~ the promenade on To- morrowland Terrace, Hampton and his Orchestra will electrify Disneyland au· diences with his vast repertoire of songs and dynamic personality. "Hamp" has etched bis n a m e permanently on the music honor rolls with rus recordings of "Flyin' Home," "Hamp's Boogie," and '1 Midnight Sun." Morrow has pioneered hmovations in music ever since he first lifted his now· famous trombone to a microphone to record his most noted musical milestone, .. Night Train.'' Marrow and Company will use' the Golden Horseshoe in Frontierland as thf!tt Big Band Festival '1eadquarters. One or the masters of the, sax, Barnet established his prominence in the jazz music world with a lengthy engagement at the Paramount Hotel in 1932. His most riiemorable numbers include "Cherokee" and "Mainliner." He will play at Plaza Gardens. The Garden Grove StrawbelT) Festival, which honors Orange Count} as the strawberry capital of the na· tiort, begins Saturday. The three-day event, which dre\11 250,000 Jast year, opens with a celebrj. ty breakfast Saturday morning. Tht festival parade begins at 11 a.m. Floats, bands, marching units. clowns, pc>liticians will participate in the festval parade which begins at 11 a.m. The parade route is Garden Grove Boulevard from Century Boule- vard to Gilbert Avenue. The festival grounds at Gardell Grove Park, Magnolia ant Westminster Avenues, will be the site of 35 rides and attractions, thE Redhead Roundup, Diaper Derby, Tin) Tots Royal Court, Twin.Q.Rama, ex· hibits and "the world's largest strawberry shortcake." Gary Mall, Orange County's OJym. pie swimmer who pllplS to participate in the Summer Olympics in Munich, wm be grand marshal of !be parade. He ha$ held world records in every stroke bu t the breaststroke. More than 35 civic organizations are expected to participate,-raising fund! for civic and youth projects . Further information may be receiv- ed by contacting the Garden Grove Chamber of Commerce. Je~ry· · i=erreri ,. festival pres· id ent,-re cei ves II strewberry from Mrs. Sandee Sparks, director, es Miss Gard-en 'Grove Vickie Holder watches. DAIL V PILOT I ... P"'4• .. : . :: . ·. ' -• · . . Last Con~ert Set Design '.: Cleveland Orchestra Performs The Cleveland OI:~a, W a 1 te.r Susskind conducting, wlD;brtn&·down·the curtain on the Ocange C o u n, t 1 Philharmonic Society~ 18th concert season, Wednesday, May 31 fn UCl's Crawford Hall. Beginning at 8:30 p.m., it will conclude the seven concert series. Susskind has chosen Mozart, Symphony No. 35 in D ma· jor, K. 385, "Haffner;'' Hindemith, Symphonic Metamorphoses on Themes of Carl Maria von Weber; Dv9rak, Sym~ phony No. 7 in D minor, Op. 70. The Cleveland Otchestra conducted by the late George Szell was lut included in the Orange County PhilbarmoDic',s 1966 series of concerts. 'The untimely death of George Szell in 1970 left a tremendous void which is now being filled with such musical 'greats' as Susskind, Raf.ael Kubelik, Daniel Barenboim, P i e r r e Boulez, Rafael Fruhbeck de Burgos, Bernard Haitink,., Erich Leins d °"' f_, Eugene Ornundy and Andre Previn. With the exception of Susskind, all of these great musicians have appeared in Orange County as part of t h e philharmonic's p8st seasons. Susskind, conductor and music director of the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra, en~ joys a reputation throughout the world as both conductor aJJ,d pianist. He has bad a very distinguished career, having con· ducted the London Symphony, London Philharmonic. Philharmonia, BBC Orchestra, the Scottish Nation a I Orchestra, Sadler Wells Opera, Glynd& bourne Opera, the Victoria Symphony in Melbourne and the Toronto Symphony, of which he was music director and coo- ductor for nine years. From 1962 until 1968 he was music director and conductor of the Aej>en (Colorado) Summer Music Festival, and assumed the St. Louis past in 1968 where he also conducts the orchestra in July and August for the Mississippi River Festival. Born in Prague, but now a British CON ~l:JCtOR Wilt.,· Sua klnd citizen, he had extensive tralnln& as a pianist, composer and conduct.or at the State Conservatory in Prague. When the German Opera in Prague closed in 1938, Susskind toured for two years as a recitalist and conductor through twenty. six countries, finally malting his home in England. Tfie· C1eveland Orchestra, founded in 1118, ··twi as its pennanent home Severance Hall, which was opened in 1931. The great ensemble has had four musical direclors: Nikolai Sokoloff, Artur Rot:fiJnski, Erich Lelnsdorl and George Sze II. Takes First · In Nationals A Golden West Colleie theater-orla·h>- structor has received a naUonal award. tn scenery design. Robert C. Huber took • first ptace ·tn competition ·sponsored by the United. States Institute for 'lbeater TechmlOI)" .. , The announcement wu made at the i,,. ' stikJte's recent 1m conference in Jan Francisco, It Is believed la' be the ~ time the award has gone to 1·1*-aori ~Gn the west coast. Huber won in the graduate st~ category over 200 entries from colw;.i and universities throughout the nation;' His winning design was for the H\UR'o bold! State College production of F......,. do Arrabal's "The Architect and:;ibi: Emperor of Assyria," and waa part of hit master's degree work. No second or third place award5 wer• made this year, but two graduate 1tudent.s from Blanford University reqlv. ed honorable mention. ' Huber's set, bullt for only $298. ilii<d eight cubic yards of sand and drift~, and literally poured offstage Into the 0iu- dience. nrooghout his research on· JM playwright, the play, CO!l.Wuction of~ model, and building the set, Huber keja a detailed journal ol his thoughts and Idol, and processes used In the project 'l;Jlla made up a large part of his wr~ thesis. Judges in the scenery oompetitlon wire Henry May, of the University ct. Ca!Uornla at Berkeley, Hobert B!oc:Iapan. American Conservatory Theatre; ·and Robert Darling, San FN.neisco Opera.. WEEKENDER INSIDE FEA.TURES Nashvil·l·e Becomes Opryland for $28 Milli'oiJt I FRIDAY, MAY 26, ltn Pl.ticbae1 Butler's, the millionaire producer of the rock opera "Hair/' bas entered into a variety of enter- prises from health food stores to movl~maklng. See page 31. Gulde lo Fun Page 26 Women Comp<>Rn Page 26 Intermlsaion Page lit 'Out 'N' About Page 'll O'Flaherty Page 'll Day of Drum.t; Page 29 Movie Gulde Page 29 In tho Galleries Page 111 By BILL RA WI.INS NASHVIILE, Tenn. (AP) -More than three years ago, the producers of oowitry music's famed Grand Ole Opry began planning a 116-mUlion entertainment complei: to serve as tbt Opry'a new home. In June Opryland U.S.A. will open ' its gateo on 110 ><mgfllled, wooded acres of IUn on the banq ol !be Cumberland River -a oort of rusUc Disneyland which has groWn lo 1 '28- milllon undertaking. It will feature free shows of llvo dlf· rerent kind1 of Amerh:an music. twt> antique trains among Its rides, a children'• 200 with buffalo. cougars and olhet animals in the ir natural set.. ting -but no Grand Ole ()pry, at least for a while. Like a WI waulng the dog, the entl!l'!almnent has moved forWa~ faster than the new Grand w. C".r/ House -and the show will remain, for the time being, In ill presmt •borne, a one-Ume tabernacle in downtown Nashville. To some, this will come as good news. Many ()pry fans fear the flavor of the nation's oldest and 1 most . unrehearsed ntdio &bow will be lost ln the new, $IO.million, 4, 4 o O • se 1 t auditorium now scheduled to open at Opryland In 1874. But Bud Wendell, long·tlme Opry manager, emphatically denies 11111 IJ ... "After all," he aays, "this will be the ()pry's seventh home -and the only one built for the Opry. It dldn'I loae any of lla ilavor when It moved before -and it won't lose any now." The prtsenl Opry House, he aald, wUI be moved brick-by-brick and pew· ~y·pew lo the new site -with the same center stag• llled In the l1l1f &tructute. Ei:cess bricks from the present building, erected in 1892, will (ace the interior' of lhe n e w auditoriwn. Oprytand U.S.A. is counting on the natural draw of the Grand Ole Opry, plus the fact that three different in- terstate highways interchange In Nashville, to bring 1.2 million vlsrtors to the park during Its first year of operation. Present plans call for Oprytand to be open during the summer months, weekends in the fall and spring and, when the Opry joins Opryland, weekends the yea r around. "We've tried to come up with something unique." says Mlke Downs, Opryland m11nagtr, "instead of just another Disneyland. Dls:neywor ld, Six Flags or Sea World." Downs was manager of Sea World, a San Diego attract.Ion, when be was hired late 1n . ' 1969 to lake charge of pl11Ming, building and operating Opryland. There will be nothing 1nimated - everything will be live. Admission will be $5.50 for adults and $3.50 for children. After that, Jive musical entertainment and rides are free, This excludes the Opry Itself, which will re- qulre a separate ticket even after it Ls moved to Opryland~ But it will include live musical performances of countJ'1 music, jatz, folk music, We!lem music lOd contemporary music -all con- sidered distinctly American. At the park, workmen are busily putting the finishing touches on the settings, or towns. that h o n o r America's bread-and:butter music. There's the New Orleans French Quart..-, home of the blu'1 lllld jan. A Dixieland band wUI be playing In the llref:L.t. A country kitcllen t& Iha center ol American Appalachia's hill C<JUrilrl village, which will feature folt music. The Spanish village, where MextUn food will be served, will feature~tbe old~t "country" music ln tbe ,.Ooa -the Mexican lolk mu.olc which originally ,. .. lo the Soulllwtst ""'' American loll< mll!lc WU lo tho~~p­ palachlans. Contemporary music:, w!lloh •tlll feature tJle music of the 11bt.c biod" era, abo bas Its own sectk>n -:jlut there wUI be UtUe or no "hard ~,. A 1kyrlde will take vlsllorl Oiott Opryiand and two antique, stteni- powered trains wUI chug lhrwl!>:lhe area. Though 0pey1anc1 11 he1nc built around the Grand Ole Opey, !he tbetM of the m&S1lv1 pork will be m~ - all music, not just coon:=~ The wild 1nlmall at land wlB provide Nubvlllo wtfh tta - ' • DAILY PILOT Frida,, M17 lb, 1972 ( ••• ·•· ... i( Playboy Bunnies .... ::; Take to Bat •.. •' \ .. ... ·: •• .. : .. < ' . ~ ' The ei ghth annual KMPC-Bunny Game takes place Monda y bel\'veen the games of the Californi a Angel~ t'hi cago \Vhite Sox double·header. Radio station KMPC persona lities Chuck" Race, Jert, and Roger Carroll practice with Bunny Irene, left. and Bun ny Patty, right. The cotton-tailed lovelies are going for their eighth straight win. . ' ~ ~What to Do, Where to Go ~-; :1i:lnglew ood Rodeo Stnrts Tonight , .. ' MAY 26-28 . ~ODEO -Fourth Annual Championshir Rodeo. including :-pver 300 saddle bronc. bareback and bull riders, steer · "Nfesllers and calf roprrs. beg ins al 8 p.m., ti.1ay 2&.:m. at ·lhe Forum, 3900 f\1anche5tcr Blvd., lngle\\·ood.. Tickets, $3.~ i fi .25, at box office and 11ekctron outlets. '; .\IAY 26·28 DRA:\IA -Christnphrr f\·larlo\\·t>·s '"Doclnr F'auslus", staged J>y CalHomia State College <11 F"1.lllrrtnn Theater Depart· Jnent at 8:30 p.n1 .. ~1<1y :.!&-28. in Recital Hall, on campus. :rickets $1.50 students $2 genrral. • ~h1yt7-29 ~ENAJSSAri.·cfo~ FAIHE -10th :innual pleasure Fair and \iprin~t ime f\la rk1~t at the Old Pararnoun t Ranch in Augura , to a.rn. to 6 p.nt ~lay 27-~9. A rctreation of old English Cf>Untryside f;i ir5. Speetal1Jrs ;ire cncnur;iged to wear cos- tum es. Adn1i ssion. $3.50 :idults. $1 children. ' i\IA\' 26 DANCE PRor.RAi\I -(;olden \\'rs! Collcgt:> D;inee Dept. presents ""Helcclinns"' ;it 8 p.1n .. r-.·t;iy 26. in ca~p~s !he11.ter j 5744 Cioldcn \\"rs! St . Huntington Bc;ich. Admiss ion SI. , 1\1.\V26 -.IU:\'E l5 PLA~·F.TAIIIU1\-I SllO\V -Tc~!lma n Plr1nct11.rium prrsents ~·P11lon1i1r of 15fl0 A('" at 7: 15 pm .. each Tucsd11y 11nrf ~hursdi:iy thmuJlh June 15 at Santa Ana College. 15.10 . \V. J,ith St .. Santa Ana. Adm ission 1s free. but reservations JTlUSI be made. Phone 547-9561 , Ext. 314. MA Y ?6-H ORANGE SHOW -571h Na tional Orange Show. lncluding live entertain ment and citrus exhibit!, May 2&-29 in san Bernardino, MAY %7-!S LIPIZZAN -Roy11l Lipizzan Stal.lions or Austria perform an equestrian b a 11 et at 8:15 p.m. May "l1 and 2:30 p.m. May 23, in Shrine auditorium. Jeffe rson and Figueroa Boulevards. Los Angeles. Tickets, $3-$6 at all Mutual and Liberty agencies. MAY 31 S\'MPHONV CONCERT -Cleveland Symphony Orchestra. directed by Walter Susskind, sponsored by Orange County Philharmonic Society. in concert at 8:30 p.m. May 31 in Crawford Hall, UC! campus. For tickets $4.50 Call Phil· harmonic Society, 646-6411. JUNE 2-3 CONCERT -l~aydn's "The Creation." performed by UCJ Chorus. directed by Mau rice Allard. at 8:30 p.m .. June 2·3, in Fine Arts Village Concert Hall, UCJ campus. Admis,,ion. SI At box office. JUNE 4 Rl':NAISSANCE ORAMA -Dr. Richard Lyon And Cal State Long Beach performers pre~nl. "Rena issance Dra- ma -A Performance". sponsored by UCJ E:1tension. at 7 p.m .. June 4. in Humanities HaU Room 1&1, UCI campus. Admissio n. Sl.50. No Sta1·clust £01· Ho11k y Toni{ Cowhori ' .. ~:::By GUV A, fOOOfllNE ~'h;LSA. Okla 1lPI 1 -"l{e ~akes thr rounds of hars and ~11·n, tr.'".1.nf:. to he :i h1ll h1ll y ~:ir ... ~Tho5r nrr I ht lyric~ of ;i .IMnn ie Co(fn1an o( \Vic hila. Kan., whf'n askf'd if that stall'- n1cnt ~·as true. "'You could really call th11.! statf'mrrit the b1111•r·S\\'('l'I trut h. "I t's h;ird to accrpl the f;11·1 )"Ol1 n1ay be ('Onsign"d !o niP(hocrity. and to me it's in1· possible. l >A"ill not acce pt that. ··Rut there are so m11.ny grr111 slnj!:ers in this country -1f only someon e would ·find' thrm ., !untry music ~on~ drp1lting e fru s1 ra11n1: l1fl' of the tertainer not lu cl.y f'nou gh l" h;i\·e '"hit the big tune.·· :::."He'll "ork nll 111~h1. if )'ou "ll trcat hio1 right. 11.nd h11y 1Pm a beer or l\\"O. 50 lr! rhr fionky Tonk Stardust Co\\boy HOVE l,ing for you ." :\ltss Coffman has seen in;iny stn\"i ng singers "' The 50ngs reflect 1 h c "d1~ovrred" by big narne ~e11n1s o! lhe thol)Sands of entertainers. and is :till hi>~ r.·ould-be stars striving lo ing it will happen to her. niake 11 big. so ol!cn falhng The 2.l-veRr-old n at iv e ihort . but ne\'er gi\'ing up the Kansan hits been In the en· i!ream . l<'rlainnt<'nl business two ::"Sometime! In his mind 11 }'t'ars. has Jogged 70,000 miles Ct;t1am un~·\nd.s, >A·here he's and played In a dozen states. ~lied to r11n1e .... Oh, bu! lire "So1nt• of the big en· h :ii on and you'll rind him tc.rtsincrs have t1lkcd lo me S,me, "'ilh R drroam thsl turn· about going lo Nash ville ~out wronc .... " (Tenn.), butt just ha ven't had !·Tha t son~ Is 5ung by a mt1n the ner,·e lo m11ke 1he mo ve ~t male entert&lner1. But yet." she said. lf could be by n girl about the Miu Coffm11n , managed by Jiindreds or fem a I e 'n· Promotlon·News Servlct or iir.ttlntts who work 11 h1rd T-uls11. said her 1vtra1e out-of· ~ ~ve the 11.me dream. t.own ;tiy \\'U 1bollt t•'t You bttter blllev• It," &aid monlhs • • t "! call home as often 11s possible -in f11cl. I probably spe nd a good port ion of ~·hat I m:i:;.e on phone cnll!!:. I really n1is!!: twini,t homr . IRkinp: c11.re of i:i house. cooking me;i\s . being a mother, but still. this is the 'A'AY J make my living and it 's a go0t1 way. ''We're not the fast·llvinlJ. pany-loving kind of j>eople !hat we are often made out to be. "Essentially, 1 think , most of us are in this bu sine.c;s because "'e love to make peo- ple laugh and be ha ppy. Pa11el Examine s System In the mids! of !he htttic race fnr thf! Oemocr1tic presidential nomin11.lion. The Ad \"OCl\te!ll wiU consider Tue!'· dR\". ''1v 30. 'A"hf'lher 8 na· lioiia1 nrin1ary system should be ad rptcd lo pick party nominees fnr tilt While House. Thr debate will be carried al l '-30_p.m. over Channel 21. Proposing replactment of ~tale primaries with a na· tional vote wlll be Rep. Mike McKevltt ir "'110.); James Loeb. 1 re · U.S. am· bawdor 11nd 1 under of the Americans f """mocr1ctlc Action ; Clrirc Townee, • former Rtpu' N1Uonal Committee off" '""" with the Joint Ctnt.r I " Potlticol Studi.,, WashJn&!on, D.C.; t and advocate Howard Miller. Sen. Fred Harris (D-0klit .. ) who dropped out of-the: presidential derby due to lack of funds . will direct the arguments of lhe opponents ll'li a guest advocate. His wit- nesses will be Rep. Morris / Udall ([)..Ariz .) and political activist San Brown. who w8! involved in Sen. Eu g e n e McCarthy'• 1961 race. B~d· ca!ter Chet Huntley will 1p- ~r in a filmed interv iew. I riclWici~ IOOISIDPS f ntl (lfT ~ . "'" ..,,.,,.. \ '°"IM CO•» '\AU. _.. ( .... Mete . 111 •/ S.!ttl '--- • • DatN'!e f'orm R eflected The largest mod e r n dan ce concert of the year, ''Reflections," will be staged by Golden West College students of Mrs. Carol Caniglia to- night at the Co mmunity Theater at 8 p.m. TickeU 1.re 75 cents. Women Composers Music '70 Concert Tonight As part of il1 "Mu1ic for the 70's" 1eries, the IM Angeles Philharmonic , will pre1ent I concert devoted entirely to music by women composers, to take place in UCLA's Royce Hall at 8:30 p.m, tonight. The orchestra will be di,ected by the Philharmonic's alJ8QCiate conductor, Gerhard Samuel. Orchestra ti" by Ms. Lutyens. Ms. Nn rdenstrom's "Elegy for Robert F. Kennedy f o r Orchestra,'' and th e ''Sym- phony in One Movement" by Ms. Warren. Amy Marcy Cheney (Mrs. Bacewicz studied violin and theory at the Warsaw Conservatory. and composition w i I h Nadia Boulanger in P1ris. In l~l she recei,·ed fi"t prize for her 4th String Quartet al the lnternalionsl competition in Liege. Eli1.abeth Lul yens was one of 1he first English composers lo adopt the twelve-tone style. earned her master's degree at the University of ~·linnesota. ""Elesy for Robt'rt F. Ken- nedy for .Orches!ra." written shorlly after Robert Ke~ ntdy's assasination in 1968. >A'as premiered at Dartmouth Callege the follo~·ing year. la ter performed in Califomia anrt in 1!171 recorded by Stutt· g11.rt Radio . Elinor Remick \Varren was born in Los An.c::elcs and has lived there n1ost of her life, She w11s educa tecl at the Westlake School for C1rls and at ~111!s ColleAC, and puhl1shed ' Composers represented in. elude Amy March Cheney lkoown a.s Mrs. H. H. A. Beach) (1867-1944 ), Ruth Crawford Seeger ! 1901 -19~31, Grazyna Bacewicz (1913-1969 ), Eli1.a beth Lutyens (b. 1906), Gladys Norde n.strom (b. 1924, 11nd Elinor Remick Warren (b. 19051. H. H. A. Beach) was the most prominenl American woman composer of her time, best toown today for her more than 150 songs. Her Symphony in E minor (Gaelic J. Op. 32, according to " B a k e r s ' s Blographic·a1 Diction11.ry of Music and Musicians" the firsl symphon ic 'A'Orjt by an America n woman , wa s fir st performed,. -oi n 1896 by the Boston Symphony. She has written prolific11Jty in many forms: her works in- clude m us i c for the b11.llet. chorus . both s.vmpho ny and chamber orchestra. solo music for a variety of in- struments, more than twent y songs .and music for;._,illms and radio productions . her fir st composi ti ons >A'ttill111_...~--11-­ stlll in hi~h school. The program consists of the "Allegro con Fuoco" from Ms. Che.My's Symphony in E minor. Ms. Seeger'• "Andante for Strings ," "C.o ntradi%ione" by Ms. Bacewicz , "Music for Ruth Crawford Seeger was one of the pioneer Ameri c1n composers writing In a con· temporary idiom : she was also ex1remely 1.ctive in col· Jecting American folk music. Polish composer Grazyna Gladys Nordenstrom , wife of the distinguished composer Ernst Krenek. was born in Minnesola , studied al Hamline l'niversitv at St. Paul ("·here she met ·her husband. then a faculty member there ), and The l'Rrillon themes used at the 1\1usic Center Pav11lon \\·ag wrilten for !he Pavihon·s opening by ~1 s. \\'arren. Her ''S ymphony in One f.1nvement " \\·as composed in 1970. on commission from Stanford University. 'Singles' Swings Succes s to Del Ro ss o There were these two guys. Uon program . Then ii dawned Halfway inlo rehearsals, Joe see, and they were shooting on me _ that was my setting had to step into the leadin g the br~e over drink1 at for the play." role when the original acto r about 3 o'clock in the morning. left the production. It turned and the bottle was empty, so lntermtiilon As Del ROMO puts ii, he out to be a wise move, for his the first rellow says to the sec-''ripped right through the first performance reflerts the in· ond , "How about splitting act" and hasn't chani::ed it too sii:iht onl y an author could you rs with me?" so he does, recalls . "I had th e two guys much since. even though the hAve into his ch11.ract('r -and and a few minutes later the Del Rosso is one of the~coun· second guy says, "I'm empty, sharing an apartment, but it Santa Ana production is his ty's strcn~er actors with give me hal f of your drink ." wa s looking like another 'Odd fourth go· r o u n d. Coin· leading roles in "Goodb)'e. and the fi,,t one looks kind Couple.' Then I thought about cidentally, he had just finished Charlie"' and "A Thousand of funn.v, ~ the tecond fel -giving them a black room-his first draft when thr Santa Clowns" behind him. low say. "Why not? I gave mate, and I was on my way ." Ana Players announced their "Swingi ng Singles" is com- you half of mine, did n't I?' Del Rosso took his idea to edy and drama in large and Of such unlikely incidents director Mary Eastman, for contest for an original play to intermittent d os e s . Its are stage plays sometimes in· whom he made his community close the 1971·72 season. characters are almost all v.·ell spired. theater debut four years ago A concert reading before dra>A·n for a first attempt, and Joe Del Rosso, who 1 e in ··Medea ." and she told him, members of his girlfriends its tempo is decidedly un- original comedy "Swinging "Joe. sit down and write It." creative writing class pro-theatrical. You know wi!hou t Singles" winds up a successful But something wa~ missing; duced suggest i 0 n s and bein~ told th<1t 1he author thrtt·Wf!f!kf!nd run for the he didn •t have a setting. criticism. and he reworked ii knn"·s \\'hf'r('of hr "Ti!rs. Santa Ana Community Players "Then a friend of mine asked a second and third time. Rut it "Sure. all !hose <"har11cter! tonight and Saturday. swears me to help her move into wa sn't until •·S w in ging are real.'' the play>A•righ t · that this was how it all began thf! (and hf! named a well-Singles" w11..~ in rehearsal thRl decl11res. And what is more. fnr him . He was one of "the twD known singles apartment com-Del Rosso brouf!ht the tragic you know they're real because guys, and the exch11nge struck plf!x). I went over there a few characters or Healhcr and you've run across I hem him Bll • funny bit for • pla y. times and I was fascinated by Chuck -previously mentioned you rself. That's a mark of "I took that idea and built a the characters and the recrea· but not seen -on st age. success in pla ywr iting. situation around it." helrmiiimCi!ii!'ir.':iii:i::X'ii.=iiliii;Gi:"""""iiii""""iiiine:ii>.ii.:i'1_:.<iim;;;;;iiiiiSmiii;;:::.;::::;::::;=r.:.:iiiiiii1 '4' to Air TopSeries 1 "The Six Wi ves of Henry VIII " And "Eliubeth R" series have been pu rch ased by Ch11nnel 4. and will be aired th is summer following the ma- jor league baRball night lelecasts. The highly accl11imed ''King Henry VIII" series starring Keith Mitchell, will be Aired in its entirety beJ(inning on Mi:>n-_ day. June 12 from 8:30 to 10 p.m. The nther fi ve segments v.•ill be. 5hown at !he same time on June 26, July 3, July 17 and July 31. The si:1 plays In th e ''Elizabeth R" w-iM. starrin~ Glenda Jackson, will be ai~ during prime-time on Aui. 7, Aug. 14. Aug. 21, Auf. 18, Sept. I ind Sept. 4. Both 1•1rd-winning aeriu: were produced by the British Broadcssting Corporation, tnd were aired last year on the Public Bro.dca1ting Syrttm. SOUTH ·SEAS TROPICAL FISH -~-­_ _., ........... ................. e A.UAlllMI . e MAINTINANCI lllYICI e LIYI -H . '"' "·""' '" w. w1LMN. con• ••u (.W "•""""" .... ... .... ~ .. ......._ Mutn'IM•TON MAC• CNllJ!t ti N.... llolCfrY'IJ "" -· REMEMBER SOMEONE ON MEMORIAL DAY! MONDAYr MAY 29TH W1'll H•v1· Flcw1rs By The Thcu1•nds! Cemetery Flowers, Mixed Bouquet!!, Fresh Cut Rcses, Carnations, You Nemt It .. , We'll Have ltl Plan ts cf •It kincl 1 ... profes1icn1lly wrapped to s•y "Thinkin g Of You .'' The best pe rt ... w1 1tll th em et sensible pric:esl You s•ve the "middlemen'' bec:1us1 w1 90 tc the market our1elf, So why not buy your flowers here? A lof cf flori1t1 de! .. -----.----.----.. I WIRE A BOU"UET I MI MOllAL WE!K~N D I I "' o n An Da sP•c tAL I J " ''YHERE I pe y I Fresh Cut ROHs I I Memoriol I ' I " I · VIA FLORAL From 001. Day' · 1 WIRE SERVICE J . ~Wit~";!~,: ~=~-., I -------------1 GIANT SIZE I FIRST 0' THE YEAlt GI ANT SIZE HOW " . Minn.Ola I SMlfALTL-TASTY I Iceberg I I . Tangelos Cal • omatoes Lettuce I I . """6 ,.,. '4' .. Z I I Ge Lb. I I oc Eo. I Lk y. Limit s l •t. 1 Limit 6 L LIMlt 12 l..._ L With Thi• C•t.11"n With Thi• Covpon I =='i;r"---------.. ' COU,ONS IXPIU MAY Jl, 1972 It's e11y wh1n yo11 have ycur p1rtie1 c:etered: C1 ll the'• famous N11 wporl u tt rt rs, thty d1m1nd the b11t. Th1t'' why th~y buy NEWPORT PRODUCE excluiivtly. L & I Peed S«Wlce, AHktfnes, T ust 1n; Sir Phlllps Coterln g, New. po rt; WMtt Hene IM, Newport; LaMlwJtltt c.terlat, Newport. P1 troni1e them I "Or1ng1 Cotmrv'• Ft11t.1t Growtno Product and Flow1r Oroani:aiton• Phon• t7M71S ,, ... ,,. t?l•tt91 ~N~~~~~CE '-----=.,~$ Y1at1 of ProdK<I "Wh<TI qualll~ II Ult Jr"°"' ijow" 0...Ur o/ tho HoUI•" '°"019 l'I UIT IMll',11 . fO• »TU.I.I. I ~ .. ,., . ~ .. • Globe Trotters Eye Munich Sro.y-at-Home_s 'Visit Wunderbar Coast Spot ~rom all indications one city Is the uruversal destination of travelers during the summer of '72. And even those who don't have the resourtes -in time or money -for globe-trotting aay that given half a chance they would head to the same place. The prized August goal is Munich, Germany -host city for the summer games of the XX Olympiad. Out 'N About NORMAN STANLEY Naturally everyone wants to cheer the U.S. athletes on to gold medal victories. sauerbralen, $4.25 -Ii delightful wine mixing had cleared at the Bever\ Hilton But. one.....suspects there's -another-reason__marlnated..beef ser:ved-with--red-cabbage-1tore. All){ift J. Repe tW, Jr., m xmaster for this travel mania . and potato dumpling s. extraordinary at La Brique restaurant in And that is the opportunity to consume And for those with children, the Huntington Beach, emerged triumphant vast quantities of good German food, restaurant offers two menu selections with his "Kool Banana " concoction. beer and wine. reasonabl~ tabbed at $1.95 eac~. They are Repetty 's victory, which resulted in his Alter all. who wouldn't be willing to ~mburger patty, served with French original recipe being declared this years journey a great distance for some of the fries and fresh tomatoes, .and . mea.tballs grand national cocktail, followed a sober better things in life like sauerbraten, in tomato sauce._ serv~ wit~ ri~e pilaf .. five-hour judging session. A small but select wme hst 1s heavily .. , ,, Lowenbrau and Liebfraumilch? weig hted in favor of German vintages. At The . Kool Banana was ~h~en for. the Whether you're going to Munich and $4 per bottle these include Leibfraumilch top prtze from among•92 original recipes the Olympics or not, though, you can Zeller Schwarze Katz, Moselblumchen'. created and mixed by profe~sional undertake a sampling of the food and Bernkasteler Riesling and c r 0 v er bartenders at· the annual test of ~kill and beverage scene right here on the South Nachtarsch. .,___ creativity. The decisi~n W'!_S annou~ed Coast. And thiii weekend. ii you so de'sire. The restaurant's sparse but judicious after a total of 12~ Judges tasted and AU you have to do is drop by the use of decorative ornaments creates a rated each ~f the drinks. Berliner restaurant (which is operated in charming and breezy atmosphere. Which The new drink, combining the flavors conjunction with an equally fine German is very much in keeping with the rollick-of banana, orange, cherry and cream , delicatessenl, Town and Country Center, ing action one is likely to find in the place garnered RepeUy the first prize of $1 ,500 Huntington Beach. on weekends. -p!us designation as a member of the This wunderbar spot serves German Thanks to the fun -loving proprietors, three-man U.S. mixing team that will food as authentic as any you'll find this Oskar and Ingrid Schaumann. there's meet. next year. against Championship sirie of the Alps. Because evidence turned usually a lot of dancing and merriment bartenders from 24 nations of the world . up in every particular during a recent on Friday and Saturday nights tied to During the 1973 biertnial fnternation Saturday night dinner visit. some occasion or even!. Cocktail Competition, conducted by the Served with a choice of soup or salad, The night of our visit, by way of ex-International Bartenders Association, vegetable and coffee, our ultimete entree ample, the crowd was in high spirits Repetty and his "Kool Banana'' \Vil\ go selections were rouladen (beef rolls celebrating a bockbeer festival. Some up against the other national winners and 11tuffed with bacon an donions), $3.65, and fine Bavarian musical groups like the their award-winning drinks . German goulash. $3.10, which netted Astorians or the Edelweiss Trio always Second prize went to John Chop. of tender chunks of beef in a delicious provide the dance .tunes for these affairs. The Berliner restaurant, located at Dale's Secret Harbor restaurant in Los paprika gravy. 18582 Beach Blvd., Town and Country Angeles. for his drink entitled "Midnighl While eminently satisfactory. the Center, Huntington Beach. serves dinner Sun." Third prize winner was Joseph choices weren't easy because we had to nightly, except Monday, from 5 p.m. J\leane~'. Jr .. employed at El Torito bypass such tempting possibilities as con-Lunch is served Monday through Satur• restauc..ant io the_Los Angeles Marina del tinental beeef stroganoff. $.1.50; cordon -d f JI 30 t 2 30 Rey . for his ·.·Chocolate Island". bleu fvea l stuffed with Swiss cheese and ay rom : 0 : · ham), $4.25; and wiener schnitzel, $3.95. r-r--.._'"And: hunter sc hnitzel ! breaded pork I ·et. served with asparagus ) .. SJ.JO; burgermeister's steak (file! mignon), $5.70 ; bratwurst, $2.95; and Kassler r ibspeer (served with German potato 5alad and sauerkraut). $2.95. Nor should any diner ever rule out the Berliner's great house specialty - Kool Bancina A hOt barlenCler frOm Huntil'lgton -:. Beach and his "Kool Banana" walked off with the top honors during the 24th an- nual U.S. Bartenders' Guild cocktail com- petition this week. When the battle clouds of shaking and Nightly Dinner Sitecials SJ.95 f''or interested out 'n' aboutcrs, here is Rcpeuys prize-winning "Kool Banana ' recipe. One (I I oz. Sols Crerrie de Banana ; ~1, oz. Bois Triple Sec; Lfl oz. Trader Vic's Grenadine; one (!) oz. half-and·half cream, and a dash of Frothee. all shaken together with cracked ice and strained in- to a stemmed cocktail glass. TAiiE/J, WHAtE TEMPLE GARDENS 400 MAIN. BALBOA PENINSULA PLENTY OF PARKING a 673-4633 THE BLACK KNIGHT RESTAURANT eptN£S:SRestaurant RICKSHA COCKTAIL Lonchooo & D;,,., Do;ly ~~~~1?E Fri. & Sert. I to I Featuring Exotic Tropical Drinks BUFFET LUNCH 11 :30-1 :30 Monday thru Friday 1500 AC'AMS (•t H•rbor) COSTA MESA 540-1937 540-1923 INTIMATE DINING COCKTAILS • DANCING SEAFOOD BAR ENTERTAINMENT COCKTJ.ILS ENTERTAINMENT Open Daily 10 A.M. to 2 A.M. NOW APPEARING Lunch 11 :30 to l MATT LEWIS & CO. 330 EAST 17TH STREET COSTA MESA 548-7791 RESTAURANT LUNCH e DINNER COCKTA ILS SEA FOOD-STEAKS-PRIME RIB INTERNATIONAL ENTREES FROM $2.15 JILL SAYS: "YOU ONLY HAVE TO TRY IT TO LIKE IT." STEAK AND LOISTER-$5.85 Th• P'•bulout HARRY & JERRY In Th• L•Uftfl DaMlnt Nl9htly from f p.m. luncl-t-Mon. thru Fri. 11 •.m. to 2:)0 p.m. Oinnar-Mon. thru Sat. 5 to 10 p.m. Co"'plimonttry liked Al11k• for ill lirihd•y1 I A1111i .. 1n1rio1 2645 H•bor llYd., Costa M-545-9471 THICK STEAKS THIN PRICES SHORTHORN: A 1~ oz. T·Bone 3.50 LONGHORN: A32oz. Porterhouse 4.95 PRIME-RIB: Finest Beef Roasted 4.45 LUNCH AHD DlllNllll llftYID DAIL T Open 7 Days LUIS MORENO WM D9Y1 : 11 :30 A.M. fo 12:30 h i. ••4 s.t. 11 :30 A.M. to 1 :JO At The Piano Ber Tues, thru Sit. S.•chryt: 4:00-12 MIDNIGHT 9093 E. ADAMS, HUNTINGTON BEACH 962-7911 I 11 Me1nories Frag11iented .. \\'orld's apart or tied together by fragm ented 1nem· orics arr !-~aye Duna\\'ay, \V . B. Brydon ;:ind Verna B!oon1. the three figures \\'ho form the n1ystrr1 ous 1non1ent s of l~arold Pinter's play "Old 1'1mes,'' \vhich opened its \Vest Coa st premiere la.~t n h~h t at lhe ~1ark Taper Forum. Directed by Jeff Blcck- ner, 1t runs through July 9. Unlike Custer, More l11clia11 s Needed • By Terrence O'Flaberty There is something about a white actor in Indian makeup which is very unsettling. Indeed , I am still recovering from the sight of Elvis Presley dressed as a Navajo. Even when the acting is superlative (and how long has it been since you saw a superlative Indian of any col- or? .1 there is something about the sight of greasepaint at the. hairline which jars the sen!es and cries "Max Factor Pan- cromatic 6-A " louder than any Mohaw)< war·whoop. Sunday night PBS's "Masterpiece The ate r' ' presented the . first of "The Last of the Mohicans,'' a generous chunk of American Indian Jore, based on an American novel, performed hy I.he English and filmed in Scotland . It is .R:Oing to he ;i good series . Besides 1hf' onl y way we can see any Amer ican history on TV these days is to buy it from the English. The Indian tribes whith flourii-hed on this conti nfnl 1n lhe 18th Century wcr.e as col- orful as any people ;inywhere on earth. Stories about lhl"m Are hurstin~ .,.,.ith life ~nd ex- citement, but when they hit the screen the magic is often difficult lo sustain, Judging from the first installment. the BBC has been more succes!ful than most. Alista ir Cooke. the urbane River Valley, in the summer guide for the ei ghl·9arf srrics, nF 1757 durinA lh e f''rench and Indian War. It concern/ii two attempted lo snftrn the ~hock daughter!! of 8 British colonel by explaining al the outset: \\'ho !ravel frll m their home in "If it srems ridiculous t.n hear Scotland to \isit thrir father the Indians speak in British stalioned in a v.·ilderness fort. accenlll, remember that they In the best British tradition learned their English from the _the ladies may be fragile lodk,- British soldier! with whom ing but underneath t 11:• they served ." drygoods they are as firm atid A ~ood dodge, howevtr fea rless ;i s any tnan. One ef OXlkf' didn't sound too con-them will fall in love with vinced himself. Unc11s. the la~t wt1rrior of Ui& Bul "The L.ast or the brave Mohican tribe. . PETER WICKERSHAM FottMr L.-d Sl119•r Wltll THE ROAD HOME Mohict1ns" is fl J:rand. roman-The aclini;: Is first-rate as.jt lie novel and it is besl not to nearly alv.•ays is in Britlt~~ examine ;inything too closely made TV history, and the :a!> lest th is TV adaptation fall tors arc al\ ta 1 e n t·e<d apart before our very eyes. "unknowns", another plea~ The slory is set in the ~ludsnn English dramatic custom. :• -1--PUB .. ~:.-;~ZZA . I f 'AllllLY DINING Monday thru Thursday Nig hts MUSTANG Friday and Saturday Nights JAN DENEAU TRIO And Open Jazz Session Sunday Nights • "CLUI 21" Mon.-Frl. 4 to 7 GARGANTUAN DRINKS LAGUNA FLEUR DELI& DANCING NIGHTLY OPEH Sl!!Vl!H OAYS 1460 S. COAST BLVD. LAGUNA BEACH FRt:I PARKING IN REAR ..._ _ _...ft1tA.S' • • t~~\\ Ti)auge ~ GOURMET DINING OYSTER BAR • COCKTAI LS ENTER TAINMENT Tu11d oy th1u S1tu1d1y, l :JO lo l :30 BRANDIE BRANDON DUO Th•rtdoy Fftfll1111 Show 12:11 Open S•ven Do1y1 LUNCH e DINNER e SUNDAY IRUNCH 11 11.111. 4 I'·"'· t:JO •·"'· • 4 p.111. 32802 COAST HWY. (II Crow11 V1lt.y P•rilwfyl LAGUNA NIGUEL NOW OPEN MONDAYS PARTY NIGHT STARTS AT 4:00 P.M. Special Priced Drinks Champa9n• SOc COMPLETE DINNER S2.SO .,. ..... Doncln9 With CLAY CHRISTOPHER & THE CHANGES 8 to 1 p.m. WAYNE GABRIEL h1 tl!t I.owl! .. TuH. thr• s.t, t ta J LES CZIMBER TRIO S11"'9y AftHMOitt kof!I ) ,,M. •1t SUNDAY CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH 11 to 3 LUNCH e DINNER COCKTAILS e DANCING s,,ooNCKSl333 w. COA ST HWY . "" NIWJ'ORT HACH " 642-4298 I HOUSE-DINNER SPECIALTIES ITALIAN STEAK, 8 oz. choice ...................................... 2.05 ITl,AK~0-101 Mu1hroom1, onions, 11epper.<1:. tom11tocs . . . ........... f2.0J Served with IPR~h,.tti. soup or ~alad, garlic bi-tad, STEAMED CLAMS ldra"·n huller! Ser.'ed with .c:11rlic chM>~P hrrad ............... ,. ..... Jt,fS ALL FOOD AND PIZZA TO GO Open D•ily 5 p.m. to 12 a.m. e CloJed Sunday 6450 W. Coast Highway Newport Beach 646-9998 MEADOWLARK COUNTRY CLUB LARK ROOM DINNER SPECIALS Choic:t of Soup or Siled liked Poltlo or IUc:t Pil1f e Gtrlic: l r11cl ''"''''' e D11111t WED.-T op Sirloin Steak THUR.-Prime Rib $2.H $3.10 $2.H $4.35 FRl.-Seefood Newburq SUN.-lobster Ta il INTllTAINMINT -W94floeld-. tt111 Suttdey The Only Ones w .. '"'i., t.tt•m• IUDDY l HELEN-Wed., Thur. & Sun. B111q u1t F1c:lliti11 up to •so P1ople 16712 GIA.HAM AYINUI fAt W•r•rJ ttUNTINGTON 11.ACH 171 41146-1116 (21JJ lfZ·l f'4 4th ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION ,.,.... .... , . .,. ........ wflll ""•'• O...m11n"'' THE BERLINER RESTAURANT 11112 llACH llVD. HUNTINGTON llACH TOWN ANO COUHTllY CINTl:I: A COMPLETE CONTINENT AL DELI SECTION OJlllN "Olt lUN(M MN. I'll,. l.i. -11:• ft t 1• OINNlll ,llOM I f'Jll. ... (..., MeM•r D4H(1Ha TO VAlllOUI Ol•MAN IAHO' '""'' '"' ,..,..,.,, Of'IN IUlllOAYI IANOUIT llA(ll,!Tlll Help us c:elebr'ate• our 4th ANNIVERSARY FRI., MAY 26 OIM AM 0-1 Tt Tiie ASTORIA TRIO From BAVARIA SAT., MAY 27 "' Wiii , .... lt!IM "'- A1t111 .. .,_.,., ( .... ,..,..,, .......,1,.1 ..... 0_., ......... ., .... .,. Yth1.t•1t °""' f'rlr" TMO EDELWEISS TRIO W1• It M-...... l.llt't •ttc-'"-"" llltt ." .... """"'"' "'"'' ,, •1• '·""· C';•ll ,., ""'"'"''"'" .. :-.. , J8 DAILY PILOT MR. HI· TIME'S TASTING NOTES Barbara Star1, Day Pollack Direct& of Drums Barbra Stelsand wlU •tar ln "The Way We Art," ocheduled to be filmed this tummer with Sidney Pollack directing. Chann,el 5 Shows JFK Fil~ The atory la about an unlike- ly Jove and marrla1e of two intensely appealing p e op I e with totally different life A dramatic, g ri p ping portrait of John F. Kennedy will be ahown dur in g Mtmorial Day Weekend on Channel 5. the U.S.. having played lo worldwide audiences who were touched by its statement of , hope and strength. ll' Ni~ ~·_..•Y1 ... "·--~....,;;;;;;:;~ LOUIS MARTINI ZIN· F~NDEL JHI A good buy to say the least. Martini he11 e well de1trved reputation ror pro- ducing fine, red wine11 and !his Zir,fandtl holda up that reputa- tjOn. It h11s a de lighHul nose and the color 111 dark.-The high acid content threw it a little orr balance, but .thl! would be m!iedled by aging. . MIRASSOU ZINFANOEL 11163 A 1tep down for Mirassou. This wille had more of 1 Gamay nose than Zlnfendel . The fla vo r wa~ fruit y, but aga in too much Gpmay fla vor. MiraMou has done an e11:cellent job with their Wines and the 1967 Zinfandel was excellent, but the 1968 was not up to their standard. GOURMET FOODS AND SPIRITS "f1n1>sl MrxicAn f ood in Orange Cn." Ch1rbroil•r-Food lo Go Ro1st Prime Rib ol Be ef Au Jus AMONG 20 SILICT DINNIR INTRllS VINA HA RMER DUO E11f1rt1ini11q Now Mt 'n Ed's mobile ovens speed delicious plpin&·hcit piuts to your door in minutes. "John Ji'. Ktnnedy : Years of Lightning , Daya of Drums," a testimony to one m an 's ageless dreams, will b!: aired Sunday, May 28, and again Monday, May %11. Produced by th! United Stales Information Agtncy 1USIA1, the color feature haa only rtcently been relt ased In George Segal Stars in Film George Segal has b t e n signtd to st.ar in "Lcive in Rlume," 1 romantic contem- por1ry picture which will be fi lmed later thi~ year in Leis Angeles and \1enice. Italy. Paul Matursky will produce and direct. CARLOS ORT A AND HIS BEACH BUMS DANC ING TH UR.·FRl.·SAT.-SUN. HITES JtD1 I. c-t Hi9hwcry C•r••• itel .M ot Jt took an unprecedented r Act of Congress lo get the USIA film released for public showing in this country. George Stevens, Jr,. pro- ducer of filni , I..! !he 35-year- old director of the lntema- tioneJ Motion Picture a n d Television Services of the USIA, 8 r u c e Herschenson directed the film, wrote it, afld composed the haunt l ng background music. Narrated by Academy Award y,·inner Gregory Peck, "Years of Lightning" is more than a reeounting ol history. II v.·115 described by critic Richard Coe (Washington Po~t) as bearing "an emo- tional punch that will make strong men weep." The film has been lauded as an "inspiration" and a vehicle "giving voice to the American aspiration." jJudith CrislJ VIS IT OLD JAPAN ® lJR:\:'\!:E ;131·r1l\fl & Country • li41 ·3303 ·rORR:\i'\C1·:· :.:-1 Or.I An1r1 Fa i.hJ0 n ::>q. • .$-1 2-8677 Fine Italian C11ish1 e Coektalb 2325 E. COAST HIGHWAY 673-8267 Reservations SUNDAY lllUNCH 10 A.M. t• l , . .M, IAN9un FACILITIES J l 7 ,ACIFIC COAST HWY , HUNTI NG-TON IEACH Disciples • In Deniand "/ pron1ile you th e rPt')' B"'' Oriental Dininf11 Kn1u Yee, Owner LU NCH • DINNER• CDCKTAILS OP'EN 7 DAYS A WliK I •OOD TO GO • Sl'(CIAL DISCOUNT I Kant'S Re stauran t Suprrm ,.fy Rtoutiful 142 1(,17th Street (Ntar Grand) Santa An1 • 558-98 \I Real Cantonese f Pod ••t htr• or takt home. Orange County Teen Challe nge is sponsorin g a free concert at 7:29 p.m. Friday, June 2, at El Modena High School stadiu m, Orange, Andrae Crouch and the Disci ples, a black soul group, will appear along \vit h the Chil dren of the Da y, a ga-oup from the Costa Mesa Maranat ha organization. l rwtkfllst ,_, .... ,. Codrllllti 1!111Wt11NMnt Ike FLING W ENTERTAINMENT • 7 NIGHTS A WUK DANCING * HAP HALL DUD Wltfl ~~· WllUt .,. lltl WfD. TH RU SUN. MOJlll. HITll GINI DIVALLI TUI , HITll LARRY UK CONTINENTA L CUIS INE e SEA FOODS CHARCOAL BROILED STEAKS N•w ApPffrlDt NORM PANTO DUO OPEN 7 DAYS 536-J555 Opt111 Delly Mon. tltr11 Frt -11 A.M. r. 2 A.M. o,.. At 4 '·"'· .. k t. a11d Su•. Get the Pizzi with Pizz1z r I 6lmn·fds YOU CAN CLIP US FOR TWO STEAK DINNERS. That's ri ght. Two steak dinners. Specially priced at just $4.95 lor both. Why are we making th is offer? We simply want yo u lo try one of the great steaks we serve. Teriyaki. Marinated in our own special Oriental teriyaki sauce. Dinner include• soup du jou r or fresh garden salad. Choice of potato. Plplnll hot homemede bread: And a grilled pineapple ring. Plus a bottom leos cup of our own apeclal blend coffee. Of courte we w1nt you to meet ou r frien dly people, too, and dine Jn the warm atmo1phere that's become 1 Rigger trademark. 1670 Newport llvd., Costa MtSa 64J.82'3 VOLCANO HOUSE WELCOMES YOU TO OUR NEW Tll{l-TIME Mondoy t1iru Friday, 4 to 6 p.m. HOT HAWAIIAN HORS D'OEUYRES For o Relaxing Interlude , • • THE SOOTHING SOUNDS OF HAVEN WITH HER SONGS AND GUITAR . \ Moniay th'ru Friday -: 4 to 8 p.m. . DINNER HOURS 6 TO 11 P.M. -· . MeYlitt7 Do11't i.t It ... '¥ don . Our cfoulffMI MCtlH •• 1... ..,.,., ilffdfflle "'Ill ,,., ... t9 , ... ,. ,.., ........ 1 And for the laJt laugh rtad Bont r's Ark in tht DAILY PILOT &un d o ~ com.ic1. Hullll'J'Tlpr ~ llke1o hliwyou ... \6 fer dlaa•r (OpeR 7 nithls a week) ler laatll <• fer late .. .,.. • ... __ • .._...fAI :}I ..... Ml .. lJVE MAIHE LOBSTD fer -ktall -:]I I FRESR DAILY FROM m1er-slnd drinks and eompHm1nl1tY "°"' d'otwrts) THE .EAST COAST All 1111jOI' c.r.dlt etnl• DOODP'" h I t• .. RllT,lURANT ungsy ager AND OYSTER IAR C11J for Rutrntions, 17141673·5534 Your Hott' Jt"1 Wobb 353 EHi Coast Hiihwl)' (11 BIY$ho11 Drlvo) In N1wpo<t Btoch USTAUllANT DANCIN• FlANCAll PARIS INN Exclusive But Came As You Art "Dinner Nlghlly 6 to 11 I NTIRTAINMINT IN THI LOUNGE Our Kltcht'n U~ The Dtrec:tlon ot ~ We hope YoU Iry us. And we hope you co mo back often, II means a great deal toillfius. Ira also a great deal tor you. V- 1400 "PALISADES ROAD (Bristol> COSTA MESA 557-7057 CHEF Mil.IQ LE 1'1WIC COCKTAILS e CLOSED MONDAY 101 W. JOlll IT. NIWPOlT HACH '7MIOI ·: ' 1 - j . TV HIGHUGHTS up CBS 8 ~ . p.m. -Friday ni&ht movie, •per Man. This •u•pense dr&ma st&rs Stepb· arue Powers , o .. n Stockwell, James Stacy, Ttna Chen. It lo !be •tory or five university atudenl! who create a computer man. Friday Evening MAY H Saturday Moming MAY t7 1:2Sll DICaw .....,, lloda•• " l;IO D llld ............ Heusl:on hlrot It tM Altredomt. CJ) TY QISIMll '"'ID e.., II\• 111.... ID ........ tll 1:•1-·· 111o111•..., a m~_ ())MW W Wt1t D CJ) ....,.,.L..b.:.. f.I) I Ortl• tf .lta111le m l»p tlt4 Hll lu .. lu Q)I ™'1r Milllfln With.,. • S.111t I MN1•11 \.Ut• 7:JO fJ Duitr'• Tl'Nltoutl ....... ... 011!1 .... b .... Tt II ln1111111c.M 8 C.111,in "•1111 (52) Tiit Tllrtt 11Mp1 O (II ('I) •Nd •u1111r ,l:jQ . Mewl•: "TN 111 '•rllft ., c... 0 Merit: "Tiii l111fltt., Collka" ..,... '15--4 colllctiGll of crim111, (m,9) '5J-..Rlch1rd Grttnt, rnomen!1 from l11turt1 i nd 1hGrt1 O UllC!t ll11n m1dt ht folt 1'47. m lf!lhll l !!P ([J CIS NtWI 18 M•: "Stillt't Clll friN(' t1I lf1M II the 111111 (mys) '54---Louis H1ywtrll. l!J lft1111J 1114 ttN f'rtfmer 1:00 II (]) lup lllllftf (]) Tlll1 WtM D m WIMJ WtNptfi1r E Tlllftr lrfiltittu W-rtll ••• Guest b 1J ,.,.,., 11Nl ftit114s S.n. GIGl'I• MtGMm. II CJ)([) fnly l'll~te. I Tru11N Qt A.M. Mffin: "ltM•llR CJlf" lf'IM Acta 1nll "Otr lllltltlll" (COlll) '36 - "'"Ill Pltlt111 Uuret tlld HI~. 111--.i.--t!Oll lJJ _ ... (U) HMdW11 D Ill ID Ptlll ,111tt11r 7*' II (]) 0 11!1 Nm B ''" '"" e"""'""' D (])l1J ,_"" ('I) Trvttl tr c.-.11111ca 9:00 8 lilltt• lllilb1tten CIJ Dr•rnet D RI m n. JetMM CJ Wh1t'1 MJ URt? 8 llllwll: ~"(com) '0- llJ I Drl1• tf )U1111ll .lid.it Cooper, Otte Kru11r. ill,_ 71 D CIJlll .._ Q;l i IPICW I T1 S.111 A wtiimsltal ((J C.rtw C.nthtf 8r111dtt1.UM111ity 1iadu1t1 student IJ Mtfll: "MatlN W ... R.,. (dr1) lilll tbollt 1 wriltr whose only a:im· 'J7-81tt1 Dtvls, Humphttf 1ot1rt. ~~ Is his turtl1 Sim. • MIVlt: "Jlp1r" (tdv) '55--Chl· ., URI Pll111il Ill 11 C.111M qulU. Birton M1d.J111. a n111: "D.,tlll'• Drril" SI Cl11t .. Su c.u 7;30 8 Clrccra.! "Tht Dandy D1n!sh Cit· 9:JO 8 H.tlr ltlr l uldl CllS'' a llAl m llrritr RMI a KlffrwlH a.111rt• rn Tlj111111: ..,.. • t111 Stut; a Mtwl1: <211r> .... , , .... h Htllf' a CIJ l.Wswln. ld11) '50 -°'"' Alldrtws, Suaan 10:00 II (]) ,...._. aM II•• .... H1yw1rd. a 9 m T• I l illlt ,_.. Cll T• Tin "'' TMtr u rn Cil twlellty '*""' ([1 1 Dru11 1f •1111 10:30 IU (}) Ardlil'1 TY FuRnia II MllllM $ Mlltl: (Dr) .... ,.. D Ml'flt: "'Slidd1 1.tta11t1• (dra) .,u" (dra) 'U -G1111 lllrney, '.58-Mtk1 Connors, .lewtll l1in, W11t1r HU9!011, YIM:tfll: ''lee. G MevM: .. , A• • FMiffM Fr111 1 • CJ) lnpd tllll1 ""t' (dr11) '32--'tul M1111L (fl Wll strMt WtlA: OJ c..,.I Sillfi111 MAM fr) f)t t..rM el hr ThHI IS Mo'lil: "Tllo Clllll: lruktW' II ....... .,.. q) Ill)' U111 C!) T1 h AllNINICllll 11:00 ti (I) S.~ri111 <sr> Mewl•: ... 11,... " u1•"• ,..,_ a .,.,. ""' Wllf uni'" (dr1) '33-Blttt Dawb, P11 ft •11:1 Cttltl ltutlb . O'Brl111, L1wis Sto111. (l) Jtft117 Quest 7:45 m DMpr w,..u, S,.l'll Act1111 "91111 7:SS I""""' ....... IDT EN DRUG CAUSES! L10 O'Mt~. U.l l~"'• !RI * TEEN GROUP EXAMINES 91 llll1t•I .. '"' 1M (RI PARENTAL PRESSURES. G Cll Cll Ill l11t ,..., '"'' CD ... ...-(() llttlHtt ..... s,.dtl Ill lucll1 libr• m "°'"'• Hmn m llhf "-"'" Q)Dml '"""'" U'!OllJJ ""' ... "'"""'" Oil Wnltl11rt-W1t• lit hrin m C.••llt I [llttlti .u.. .. ,,..Ilia (]) i...i.t u. l·!Os~ .. ~~ 9 1.H Tmlitt'1 Ctll • WI' 11.:1 ... ,._, m lJP1Rsion (}) (jJ ~ Tiie '•rtricl,. •••llJ Ql Mowit: "'Siult YtRitft• (drt) ti Mtl'I' Crifli11 Slltw , 'S~tnt ltylor, .MM Hylton. ED (!)) Fil• OdJsur 1ht Ust 9 on11tt WorW ., Vour Guldf,? to Jflovles Hammersmith Is Out Ed It 0,.. Note: Thu motric guidf ts prepared b_u the. filmr committe1 of Harbor Council PT A. Mri. Harry Mtl!or U preridttit mtd Mrs. Bruce Nordland i.t com.mltttt chairman. le i3 intrnded C1f a rtftrtntt ~~ l ~~te{o;ni~~rta~~ft40b~! groupt and will apptar 10ttklt1. Your vitw1 art 1olicittd. Mail them to Mo- vie Guide, care of tht DAILY PILOT. ADULTS Anderson Tape• (R): Sean Connery pOrtraya 1 criminal mastermind planning a heist of luxury apartment aided by electronic devices. At the same time both hoods and police art spying on him with the aid of survelll11nce devices. Cabaret t PG J: Musical set in decadent dayl!I of pre-Nati Germany, starring L I 1 a Mll'ihelli as Engllsh cabaret singer in love with bisexual En1Hsh teacher, ~1 1 c h a e I infidelity, pa 11 Ion and York. rulhtusneu. Tiit FrU<h Couec:Uoo (RI: MATUllE TEENS SUspeme mystery starrin& AND ADULTS Gene Hickman and Fernando Andromeda Straln (PG ): Rey. Brooklyn poltee dettc· Suspensetul story of i:ace tlves move ln on the American again.st time . Scientists In conneetJon to Fr enc h . underground desert lab try to American heroin ring in a isolate rare dl.!ease trans· chase story of violence. port!d to earth from another Frtti the Cat (X): Animated planet. Stars David Wayne . cartoon of se1u11l escapades of Silent Ru.naJ.n.c (PG ): About cat Involved in c a m p u s a future tomorrow where aU revolutloos and pot . poverty-hu been eliminated, The Godfather 1 R l: Film but so too bas all greenery, Live ·Theater version of Mario Puzo novel except for one dome in outer telling of lile and death within space. Suddenly orders come a gangster family . Politics and to abandon it, so Bruce Dern , intrigue, brutality ancl murder the abbot-Uke caretaker who f nf the Mafil1. Sta.rs fl.farlon has grown to love I he. k Brando &nd Al Pacino . greenery, tries to save It and 0 Ab1ence of 1 Cello" The Lido Isle Players open Tuesday and run continuously through Saturday, June 3, at the Lido tsle Clubhouse, 701 Vi11 Lido Soud, Newport Beach, with an 8:30 curtain. Reservations 673-6617. "Kl11 Me, Kate" Cole,.Porter's musical com- edy plays this weekend and Tuesday througtl Satlgday Qf nex t at 8:30 p.m. in the UC Irvine Village The ate r . Rt.serv a lions 833-3617. "Dear Ernel!lt" In its first week of a seven- wetk run, this musical ada~ talion of "The Importance of Being Earnest '' plays Tuesdays through Saturday's at 8:30 p.m. in the Laguna Moulton Playhouse, 6 O 6 Laguna Canyon Road. Laguna Beach . Reservations '494-0743. "~!y Sister Eileen" The Costa M~ Civic Playhouse presenl:S the com- edy tonighl, Saturday and next wetkend at 8:30 p.m. in the Community Center auditorium on the Orange Countr F a i r&rounds. Reservations Hamme.rsmJtb Is Out rR 1: the friendly mac h a n l ca I (d ays ) 83+5303. Eliubeth Taylor and Richard robots. "Catch Me U Vou CU" Burton and Pet.er Ustinov star Skyjacked (PGI: JeaMe Comedy and mystery com-in story ol man who promised Craine, Rosey Grier, Walter bined in this whodunit at the happiness to all who will do Pidgeon, Leslie U g g a m s • Huntington Beach Playhouse, his will . . for good or ev:il. Charlton Heston and Yvette 2110 Main St., Huntington Hospital (PG \: George Scott Mimleux and JAJDes Brolln Beach, playing F'rldayl!I and portrays hard-drinking doctor. all 1Star In drama about hl- Saturdays through June 17 w,po copes with an unsuc-jacking aboard a 707 jet. with an 8:30 curtain. Rese.rva. cessful marriage and the Stanley (PG): Ind ian lions ~8861. emergencies of an un-v e t er an from Vietnam "Pueblo" derstaffed. overcrowded, big returns to his family ln A drama based on the city hospital. Florida, and decides to break seizure of a U.S. Navy ship, Klute (R): Jane Fonda with civilization and live with this West Coast premiere is portrays upiring actress rat t I e s n 1 k e alone in being 1 tag e d Wednel!ldays turned prostitute. Unable to Everglades. Stars C hr I 1 through Sundays at 8 p.m. at establish real relationships she Robinson. South Coast Repertory, t82T regards her business as a * Newport Blvd., C.Osta Mesa. form of a ct in g . Don Tht letttr fmmediateZy Reservations 648-1363. Sutherland ls policeman on after tht title indieates tht "You Can't Take lt With Vou" h~nt for a missing friend in rating given the picture bu Tblll revival of 1 he this murder mystery. . tht Motion Picture CotU. Pulitzer Pri.u-winning Kaul· XY and .z (R): ~hzabeth The Code And Rating pro- man-Hart comedy opens d6t _!a ylor, Michael <::aule and gram may bt found on one Friday for the Irvine eo""m.~:.:";;";;;;";""~h~Yo~r~k~!l~a~r~tn:#.!l~ory~o;,!"".':o~f~l:;h~e,;m~o~l1:;·0~n~p~ic:;tu;;r;;•;;pa;::g~<!~.1 munity Theater. Perform-r SHO IN ances will be given Friday• NOW W G -WED. THRU SUN. >nd Saturdays al A p,m. llODEIM TIIUllE AT ITS FINEST, n i1l1111 !trll11l 1t1ry through June 24 in the Human-ti ••• 11 CJisis ut 1f1i1s t t•• ,,. •• ,, '1ck1r111• 1f 11- ities Hall Playhouse on the UC cleaJ t•U.1 11 tM c•t1rs If WtJIC ,.litlcal "'''" Irvine campus. Reservations 547-n33. "lhH t t11t1Jtlll-prov1kl111. 1111+wr111cll1111 th.,.lrt , , • l"rob1bly tht n1111 lm119'1111t ··•flltt1t1ii Jl•Y' lft !ht l•tl M\lfl'lt •te.1•11 , , , • ," Diiiy l"llU PUEBLO '-~-::: ... · · Jouth [, >ac,t R epertory Co!>to ME"so • 646-1 363 or Mutu~ntu." .. ---=-------==--~---.:::::..===-. ' ' ; li•11k1tr1 t ric•rcl e m•1f1r ch•rgo Lluth'' (G1rm1ny, 1924) EmU Jin· ni111s ltlfs 111 this 1111111 t11s1lt Afternoon ...,.......,. .. 11111o 1bout 111 11in1 11ot1r 6oon'll1n wlKI ......._ ........ ,.- 1 f1thie11 ld111d, 111wporl c111f1r 64-4.5070 h11 been demoted lo w1sh1oern 11· U:OD 8 (f) Tiit M111ktts °"''MMll .... -.1 · tend111l bee.I~ ht can no IOnlft' D QllDM•IW Lupe leMkl 2ridFtATU1£ • tote suitcase•. Ctllc.t,IO Wllltt Sm •I Otkl111d ..... JAMfS COlURN 9'011 11 IJJ CIS f.W., "'"" (C) (Ill) "Jolt• .... "''"" .... ., "THE HONKERS" ""'Pl' Min" CR) {SUS) '71-Stet· IWts AllM" (WIS) '34 -Johll 1-~~~~~~~~~!!!!~iiii~(r~I~) 11111 Pawtrs, Dttn Stoekwtll, J1mu 'l.'ayn1. st1cy, [Ilion Str11t. Tin• Ch!n (!!MM: "lllYlffn Fro111 M111" =---1 8 (}) ({) &) •111111 tZ2 (A) (sci ·fi) '53-tt1le111 Clrtt1. GI TY Mvslcal D CIJ m A•lricl• l111istand I Th1.Vlffala11 O Mnlt: ''1:ellyM ~" Nowtlt (-..ts) 'S5-Rk:htrtl ltsthtrt. t:JG llct!ld Liil GI I IPICiA I W1r ti b4 All Wan fJ {I) (I) 0) TIM 04tl C..pll (R) A hl1IOfJ of Worlll: Wtr I. a 11 """ a Und• w.111. m Awntura 12:30 II ([l , ... Aft n.11 (R) (SZI •1cl111 Frt111 HollJ'ftOll '''* @El f111f1nil f1tct1 10:00 e m "'"' a Rody ind rr1e1111. u CIJ oo m LM AIMrklR .,.. 1:00 • w cu cw""''• m. ,tltinl G Mwle: (211r) "Petllt of lltry" Cl MM: (Cl '°"""' 111 th Trlt- {dra) '57 -Kint Oo111t11, Rllp~ ..... (WIS) ·~Todd M1rtin. M1e~t1. fJ lillril: (C) •A"1 NI lotb" m Ttwi Unttr lf'lltlt11 Sptdll (dr1) '56 -..lrfl Chtndltr, aJl Vl~1tllns m Ultllllltl W1rW ID ... II ti Jlt9I Nicll Carter Cil!I M ltr 40 Ill Cl11t n II Ttrdl (Sl) LI t.a,.lldt dt hlornrt al L111tl II tit l ltntl 111,IO G IJJ ... -'"" (R) (!J Ct-.... a Qov.u, 1:30 ('I) Mob!~ Ho .. """ D C..ri• Mnl11'1 Ttlt lad; CJ Merit: "Cunllpt: Np" (wn) @) Tiit A111ul•t W1rH el llrm!R '57-Joel McCru, MtB Stwtns. I.El I.a Slt.utic.1 m EJl111t!t11Y Nm m 0r. Si•"' Ltt•• m Ml'rit: "''""' "' c • ..ipt" Q!Cmtu11 Th11t11 (dra) '48 -Phyllis C.1¥ert, (S2) Ct11d1ndl Culp1bl1 2:00 B Dust(t Trtohou11 11:00 IJ D (I) im m.m ""'' ())., .. :*Cid•" lliltl••• T1rd" 8 ht 111, lltyonll (mp) '4S---Osklr Homolka. (j) M111htl ~llo1 (]J Elhnlt Feca Jim Gonion 0 Cil m NIWI m Siu! Tflhl m TMll tr Ct1111qutrtttt QI KA lolf "At11nl1 Cl11$1t" m Mtwlt: Hlrt1kl 111 t"' so1111• ... CD •1 Qllltt Mr" (df1) '52-Rtlph Rlcti1rds&n t.JO 8 TM lllltl It OW.r 86h N1v1rrt (!Z) HtN•' (D UllOllll: U..• 11:15. ctMflti 34: "Uni tlfll &b1 J:OO 81\t hM l111tlo~ lllew T1 1T•" D ~ USA tl:JO 8 CIS Litt Mwlt: "llhtt6*r ,_. I """' 1•11111 • (lflJ') '64-M111111t •vt11tf'forl ~ ~: =· a am Jciti11"' c.,,..,. " · 1 8 MHI: "TM .. ,.... tf Attfm• , """: (C') "Slttllll l ulf" (WU) ~ ~ pl'1Mllt$ An ITC Produciicn (111'11) '50 -Vlncll'll Priel Elltn S4-0tlt lcMrtson. ~rn(j)lrJDkl -·w.ibt l:!!,~-1• .. 1·3~ SHIRLEY MacLAINE oo":::. ::::.:.c:<.::.:11 •• ""'"'· 11T.HE POSSESSION - ID '•'"'"''""' Ill-:""',..,-... .. ll*'D -: "llUPt"lw ... --·I ·=!!!!!-1 ~--0F ·1"'EL DELANEVH <•6'1 ''5 -P>mo Dorn, Holm• 1:JI e _,_ V 'Iii . . -. - -· , G "TELL IT ON ·---(drt>--0· * JHE MOUNTAIN" , ••~ '· --• "" """"'-What A N Klnci IM (]) G G Ill """ Of Co ,_!" 8 ll•wlt: .. t11il• l•~•••ity• I...., Is Mlout • ("'Yt) '44-lrtll MICMUl'l'lf, .,,. D :...~ ,,.,,., ..... IMSu""'"-Ci) , ' - , ....... (C) ......... ,. <-4! ;.::·;,.:- ("1) -· .... ~ ... -I'""' -...... -.......... lllr. "Qui • ,_.. ....,, ••Laura Wtllw """..,. '"' -·..,. -... tll.... ....rl:w!NL:t -.. 1-"' I 1--.. .,...., "' .... _ °"",."' -.. n·· Rlnft&a.t Ind GtiN Gricl Wtnt ~ --I ~ ! I : c...11,_-. '--· . 2nd Puture -U.A. South Ce11t Only Mia Parrew -"ROSEMARY'S IAIY" Color (Rl MOW IHOW!Net ... , .... o,.....c....., l•1•11ant1I I \ ;:: AT NEWPORT ;::.:; AT BUENA PARK 1230 330 700 1"00 SUlt.ril"'TNUl.-t 1Jf,.M. ~: !ili!!' ~'ii!!'!!iii!' !ili!!' ~"'i' ~~iiiiiiiiiiii I ll • 'I II • "BRAVO. BRANDO'S 'GODFATHER' .. '' .. • •• r ' "THERE IS DNL Y ONE BRANDO. HE l!I THE BDDFATHER. THE CENTERPIECE OF WHAT PROMISES TO BE THE 'GONE WITH THE WIND' OF GANGSTER MOVIES." ......f'tul D. Zimmermtn. Newsweek '"THE GODFATHER' IS A SPECTACULAR MOVIE, ONE OF THE FINEST GANGSTIR MOVIES EVER MADE. 1rs RARE TO COME OUT OF A 3·HDUR MOVIE AND WANT TO MAKE A U·TURN AND GO IN AND SEE IT ALL OVER AGAIN. BllT THATS EXAcn Y MY FEELING AmR SEEING 'THE GODFATHER'," -Gene Sh1Ut, NBC-TV ' "A TRULY EPIC FILM IN THE BEST CLASSIC SENSE OF THE WORD! EVEN MORE ENGROSSING THAN MARIO PUZO'S BOOK, IF THAT'S POSSIBLE!" -ABC-TV "A MARVELLOUS MOVIE ! A TOUGH , BEAUTIFUL MOVIE!" • ' ~rlday, M1y 2&, 1972 DAILY PILOT .!!i. ••••••••••••••••••• ! tt;:1'1V~1tUMWli • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ~: MAN CANNOT llVE •' BY lOVE ALONE,._ • WOMEN WON'T LET HIM "A fit.i rl!r rnmrdy rroplrd ht• M>me drl!(onui h~man•. 11 "'rJl •1 • p1r.-n1n• pnoch, IV111 T·D.4/l Y ~'ARIETY WEEKDAYS 7 & 9,00 PM. SAT. SUN. & MON. FROM 1 PM. ... ___. ........ ~ .... I " I •• · 0 JO«ro ••-<1'e" .. '"""01.6• ~-., ...... ~ ... .,.,. ... . ••f:LA-r IT A·l3A f,.,, §<I.~" ...... . .... ,,.~~ ... , .. ~ AlJ.Lliltij tu..._·t r.uTf'.Jtri' ll.._,..·cc:c.fm\ J(l)l;'t' lA.O'.~oi~ 4."-SJ dr.f 1-1 i";;.,.;:n '' t..~11 , ... ,T\I\ :. .. w111cznt running .. A Ulo/M!llAI. tllf~lA!f • ftCHHICOl.O~' !gj fCJ CLIFF ,OTTS• BRUCE DERN• •ON Rl,llN nd tHAA 2 TIM HASA PET RATTLE SNAKE, WHEN TIM GETS MAD· STANLEY GETS DEADLY I Ct(MI mn.till'llOll-L l"CTUl•I - TANI.EV~~~ IDWARDS !llZA&!lH TA VlO R •RICHARD BUR!O N • CINEMA "H '0 "'"11• AMMERS MITH IS (I) • w..JIOJ OUT"I .................... \ l • 3 0 DAILY PILOT Terror In the Sky Talent Scout At Theater Inner City Theatre's Monthly Talent Night will hold it.s final show of the spring season Mondtiy at 8:30 p.m. Admission is SJ.SO. Patterned after the famed talent shows at New York's Apollo Theater, Inner City Theatre's Talent NI g ht features asp1r1ng y o u n g singers, dancers , actors and comedians, who compete for cash prizes awarded by a panel of judges. :Ll rfiTID!o)lf \ "EW'OIT IEACH • Oll.S·U~O· Charlton Heston in W ... dsys 1·1:4S-10:l0 P·"'· S.11. & Mott. 2-4°6°1·10 I'·"'· "HOSPITAL" • SUNDAY" "SUNDAY, BLOODY with Peter Finch & Glenda Jackson M1l'b0r " A1Um1 . CtSll Me.-JU.JI~ SHOWTIMES Men.·''" ... 7.9 "M 1-J·J.7-t·tl ,.M l·l·S·l·t ,.M Sun, MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPI.£ Tiit ollittflr.o1 1>1111e ""~ri 1110 inl01!11 ,..,_ l /)OIJI ,,..#o•llllo/,,, ot "'°"If CMftlll IOr rl....,, bf,,..., 'llild<M. ALL "'ll AOlllTilO Gtllffll .t.llllrr"'U """ ~ All "II "OlllTTlO l£.!:!i '''"'"I Gw~ $1/fltlttf . ~ -------------------- ® 10 t1f( Ullllt:I 11 Allltlltl (Mi l!mll 11111'"' lfl"'1f lfl ...... , .••...•.•........••...••• , .. &4··-·--.... -...... _____ _,_ .... • Charlton Heston stars in ''Skyjacked" a timely movie which opens at th e Lido Theater this week. The suspense drama tells of the highjacking aboard at 707 jet liner. Appearing in the film are Rosy Grie r, Jeanne Crain, Walter Pidgeon and Le slie Uggams . "" "UNFLAGGINGLY FUNNY. IT KEEPS THEM ROARING!" ~~;\JTkti~ ;"' "'"'~~~-~~:: o·~oo.. r .. ...~.:. l(~'CS~ . P0c?" ..... 0-..,,.... ......... h_ f .......... v ...... tu.3411 ao I ce.1111 ONLY SHOWING! t 'MOWTOCOMMITMAlllAGI" ,G WINNER OF *THREE* ACADEMY AWARDS "Jiddler on the OpfO overy day 12:00 Noon urt- lil 9:00 P.M. Rostr\'td seots olso l"'Gi!obl• Dt Mufuol, liltr- ty • .A11encie5 ortd WaHich's Mu- sic City. on the~ For SNCltl Arrenvemtnl9 For Grov1>1 of 2S or More Cell Sl7-llt7 Beverlv SPr•V· MATINIU Wed.• Sat.· S.11. 'SHOWING NOW!. TIM HAS A PET ~ATTLESNAME. WHEN TIM • GETS MAD · STANLEY GETS DEADLY! I I In the Galleries I Laguna Exh .ibit.s Members' Work for June Auction LAGUNA BEACH ART GALLERY -307 CIUI Dr .. Laguna Beach. Hour&: 11 :30 a.m.-4 :30 p.m. f\1embers provide art for auction throughout the month of June. Works lnelude ceramia, oils. watercolors, sculpture. A'VCO SAVfNGS AND LOAN -3310 Bristol St., Costa Mesa Oriental water colors by Mrs. Arthur Willianu through June. COSTA ME.5A LIBRARY -566 Center Street , Costa Mesa'. Oils by Mrs. C. T. Sanford through June. DOWNEY SAVINGS AND LOAN -300 E. 17/h SL Costa Mesa. Oils and acrylics by ~1rs. Richard H. Marsh through June. Oils, water~ors. acrylics and ink& by Mrs. Rock Duit· man. Serigraphs by Mrs. Helen A. Prothers through June. MESA VERDE LIBRARY -2969 Mesa Verde Dr .. Costa Mesa. Oils, watercolors and acrylics by f\1rs . Jack L. West. SECURITY PACJFIC BANK -196 E. 17th SL , Costa Mesa. Oils and watercolors by Mrs. William Richardson through June. TRANSAMERICA TITLE CO. -170 E. 17th St .. Costa ~1esa. Oils by Mrs. Robert B. Harlem through June. FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF ORANGE COUNTY -16511 Adams St., Costa Mesa. Oils by ~1r. Lawrence Bubka. through June. GLENDALE FEDERAL SAVINGS -2300 Mesa Verde Or ., Costa Mesa. Oils and rolk art in acrylics by Mrs. David Schonthal through June. CROCKER CITIZENS BANK -2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. Oils by "1rs. Richard f . Ingram lhrough June. OCC ART GALLERY -2701 Fairview Road, Costa ~1esa. Currently on exhibit, paintings, drawings, sculpture and crafts by students. ... pleyl119 People who do ... shouldn't! Cd---· .... SlM>ogor_ &UISS HDUSES 1!!1-~ Show Shirts 7:00 P·"'· S1111doy Mcrtlltff Colttf111101t1 2:00 I'·"'· Amazing companions on an incredible aclventure ... that journeys beyond imagination! "Siient running· •• ...,.Bruce Dem .. Cl iff Potts• Ron Rifkin •Jesse Vint•The Drones ~'!: .. '"'JOAN aAfZ • :::•··"~-.-ET(A SCHICll'flE -~ 0[1'11(, W"51o'~N 6 MIKE C!MltlO 1"11 STEVE flOQtCO -· 00U0U.S TMJMllJLl • -~ ...i<:HAEL Gl'IUSll'OfF • MOCW.fL~,/OOUGl.AJ TIOlNlllA.~~TION r.1•~-~-=-"'<"-1 " ~ llllUAN •TE~··IGl;;r.:C,_= ..... =r-. -.:-.:::"''. . . -..... -~- SCIENCE-FICTION CO-HIT "THI ANDROMIDA ITRAIN" • !Co-hit at Harbor l l ''TNI NHQIS") -lPECIAL HOLl~.A Y '--'==""---' MATINHS AT WALK IN SAT. SUN. ANO MON. ' CHALIJS GALLERIES -1390 S. Coast Hwy.. Laguna Beach. Hours: 11 1.m.-5 p.m. daily. On ethibit through July 3, mlted media by Jean Ames. JACK GLENN GALLERY -283t E. Coast Hwy .. Corona del Mar. Hours : II a.m.·5 p.m. daily. Free standing sculp. lures by Tony Delap and wall pieces by Peter Alexander through June 23. BOWERS MUSEUM -2002 N. Main St. Santa Ana . Hours: Tues . ..Sat. IO a.m.4 :30 p.m .. Sund ay . l-5 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday evenings, 7-9 p.m .. closed Monday. On exhibit through June 25. Torana Art League juried exhibit : through June la-July 14, juried show of paintings by the Orange Art Association members. NEWPORT HARBOR ART MUSEUM -2231 W. Balboa Blvd .. Newport Beach. Hours: noon to 4 p.m. Tues . ..Sun, closed Mon. On exhibit through July 16, "New Art in Orange County" includes the work of 6-8 county artisU. "My First Car" closes Sunday. CAL STATE FULLERTON GALLERY--'100 N. Stale College Blvd .. Fullerton. Hours: Mon .• Fri. from 1 to 4:30 p.m., Sun. I to 4 p.m. Ten steel and aluminum sculptures by ~1ichael Todd, professor of visual arts at UC San Diego, through June 22. Ive Show Storts 7 1'·•- Co11th111e11• Show Set., S11e., Me•. "'"' 2 I'·"'· l'ric .. -.Mii 4 I'·"'·: Adwt;. end J".: Sl .ltt BARGAIN MATINEE Wednesday, 1 p.m. TWO GREAT ADVENTURE FEATURES FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY TO ENJOY Amidst a tushng flood al adVenn.re they learned moreaboul lo...eandcOU'age than mos! peoote do., a !!le!ime NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES -"'"""~ • "l'OSSHSION Of JOEL DEL.ANrY" '" W~dop -':00·1:1 5·10:25 Sot. • S••· • Holldoys - 1 :JO·l :45°6:00·1:15·1 O:ZO I'·'"·· (IAllUll ...... "CllATO'S lAllO" IPfl "••ILH•AllOft• "CAPTAlll A,AClll'" ll'I) L-'-!,_ -·-IJ1·"°10 OtllY tllVl·lll SllOWINfl "GODFATHER" (R) '"·I k t.1:111 ll<M ,._ WO..-'"" ,_ -·-.U·•I'• Slimy Terron Sn•kfl Up0~ s .... ka "'S1AlllllH (l'J) "•t/(olff "llllllT MA If Ill WAii" '"""'!'""· .. -..11oo.1 ..z.z••I lltl' •-IOtk wttkl lo<~'" 5irono.,<tll•a~ O'Nool "WHAT'S UP, OOC1" (II "HOW TO COMMIT MAlllA•l(Pfl "'tO( " II I oM I 11 141 r .ll _ .... . 1 ........ _ Ill· Ult C~lll.ION""SfON MH!MIMl(\I~ "SU JACKED" !PG) •tUSJCiE"" l!ACKM,!Jj PST MOTMS" Pf ___ , ... . "'" ..... ~ ·-U4-llll Oltlf DltVi-111 SllOWlllGI JACltlMON/llJllAU HAlklS "Tiil WAI llTWllM Miii i WOMllt'' tPGJ ~ "MOW SWllt 11 IS" ... _ ....... ..... -. ,~ .. ---11\·ll~Z TWO SCf!N(!.f(llOH HI \ "SlllNT lUNlllNG" !G) Pl!JS/COl.011: "ANDIOMIDA STIAIW' IS) I, "( ... NOY" (I ) l_,,,._ WH tol- llf·llll s. ... i... ,,_., ··-·559-ro2t . i. "6WEET aoov o.- oe:ao11:AH" c1J l. "UST SUMMEI" ll"GJ Ill UNDER 17 MUST IE WITH l"All:ENT Cll:I JACKummotf IMIARAHMRIS Man cannot live by love •lone ... Womenwon'tlelhlml JASON R08AROS ~ ~~~tf A CINEMA ClNl(ll FILMS 'llWTATION WRrtm 8V M£1.VIU[ SHAVU.SOfol ANO OAHNY WOlO • SllGGC:SnD BY n+E WRITIN~ AND 0.AWIN~ Of JAMfS THllllBD • MUSIC IY MARVIN HAMLISCH PIOOUC£0 8Y OAJIJllY ARH<ILD • Dlll[Cl ED BY MfLVlll[ SHAVCLSON TtCMNICOlO .. • l NATIONAi. WtEIAL PICTU RES l rlr.ASE ll'#lVltCllY 1 -. .._,. "HOW SWE£T IT IS" IOW.lltS ClllMA # ' (°"1'1110US MAT II HS 161lf U.t.Wl~AMll. Cti...-. ... ...,. 1t S.A. '"""'· Ol'Mtt • llJ:l.JJ21 . . . ~ Mflliona ire im presario of 'f.!air' has a nine-project schedule including a health food restaurant in Manhallen. SKYJKICED A.i Entr1.nc:~ to Lido Ille Newport Beach• 0A3-8350 The Rolling Stones GIMME .SHELTER ______ .._ __ ..... _ ... _ SURF THlAT~E e 1ZI 5th !t., H111tl1HJl011 ·1Hch Ph. 5J6.9J96 8:00 011d 10:00 loch Nlte ~ .. , ... "'"""" "' #'llMT .... ;;f"PICTVU _, ... .,. ! . IEST u: a1w IC"l'll ef:H..o+d()N - IDTm:a1w~ '"""'"""""' C.O.IJ',IW"'C;NllllS -••i""ocue•O"t ""u"..__ ..... .,_. _ __ ..,,.._, lf."~I ' llll" ..... ....,I M"-I C\-l~ ... - -=-.l M ... flll •--....... 11•~-...... -... ___ "ITtP-....:.O __ .. _.,.._ ... _, .. It-·-·~,~-... ~,, ....... l!J · ' DON'1' Miii TMll '. MUCH JALXIO 'llOUT ,tcniUI NOW SHOWINOI * Frid.,-, M.ty 26, 1972 Michael Butler's Sun Shines on By )VILLIMI GLO\'l:R AP Dru .. Writer NEW YORK !APl -The petiple who made "Hair" 1 Global event are very heavy 1t larce. Before t u r n t n 1 dJscuulon elsewhere, the im- preur!o bretiily summarized that show's acl\le\'e.tnents. To now Into organic food . royal ..------------. polo and the far galactic yon~er. Because that 's the way Michael Butler, grand sachem of the tribe. would have It. "I want set one hlla of nine projects and freeze on them ." asserts the milliona ire en- trepreneur of show bus in,..ss. ".of aJI the inner fam ily I'm the worst 'A'hen it comes to being easil.v di\'ertrd info doing: someth in.11: else ." He couples his far-bruit ed affection for astrolo~ with numerological nle!'t v in pro- gr.!lmm in.11: the future of Mi chael Bu t 1 e r Associates Jnr.. the Joose-firrn core or.1t:anization around which 11atellite clan grou ps revol ve. "There are !o t>e three sets of thret," runs his ex- planation. "Tl"lrPe plays, three motion picturPs and ll"lree miscellantnus. '' 'HAIR' IN LA "Ha ir". one of the world's most exiting mu- sicals, returns to Los An· gtles for a limited five- 'A'eek engagement start- ing ritay 30 at the Aquar- ius Theatre. Los Angeles. Tickets are now on sale al the. bo1 office. Ticke- tron. and all mutual agencies throughout the city. Perf o rm ances for "Hair" a r e scl"leduled Monday through Thurs- day at 8 p.m .. and lhere will be. two evening per- forminces on Fridays and Satu rda ys at 6 p.m. and IQ p.m. Mustachioed Bur.ler filed an impromptu over-RI' report on his activities a few dav'!i a.l(o ~----------' while in town to help celebr:1te the fourth Broadwav an- ni versary of the rock musical that started the whole en- terprise. Cele bration of "Hair" included a Central Park frolic open to the public * date, 35 trou ps in 22 countries have performed in l 4 b1ngu11ges for 2S million spec- tators. "Tht: last time I looked," he says when pres'ied. "the * overall fl:.OS• ,.., ~ million." That daean:t Include aoch col- lateral btnefita as the New York original cast album which has 111pplanted lhe previous sales champion, "My Fair Lady." Butler originally 1ot in- volved with "Hair" in mistaken bellef it h ad something to say ~ b o u t American I n d t a n a . His franchise included preun- tation in this CCJuntry only. When the authors began licensing overseas versions. however , foreign spon11ors gravitated toward the home. company for assistance and advice.· "About a year and a half ago I wu quite down about it all ,'~ admits Butler, "1nd l could hardly listen 111 'The Aie of Aquarius' an ymori. rm comparatively c31Jm " g a 1 n now ." The staff wiurd ha s al re;iriv set Oct. 17 at 7:30 p.m. a~ th~ ultimate date for r h e Broadway premiere or lht' tribe's next theatrical opus . " pace." It is being composC'd by John Phi\llps, guru of "The Mamas and the Papas" and will star his wife. Genevieve \\1aite. "It's quite different from 'Hair.' but is the same genre." Butler defint:s. "Everybody is into the space thing to a greater or lesser dtgree to- da y" ! n t e r t a I nznent wblcn ce.oter1 BuUer Au6cl1t11 in- terest is the sort that seems ireaUy to lnttigue audiences a oppositf ends or the age spectrum , he find1 . "From 'Hair ' "' know the two groups which react the quickest and strongest are kids and the old . The aid freak- out because they Are bfyond hangups. they are getting ready to make tht big trip and realty dig what tht &bow ts about. "That's whv I don't believe In disrespect for elder~. I don't ~·ant lhem to tell me how to -- run my lile, 'but I do -! their -ltnct. "The mlddl•tCed .,. the squares who are hu111 up!' He forecuts "Hair" ha1 at least one more year of tlqe vitality left ln thi1 coontry. Movie rl1bts are belna bkf for now by two major lludlot, but Ule bolls may decide to do it bimstlf as one of the thrH planned films. M08t Immediate on the pr& duction aaenda Is one of tllt mlsceJlaneous ittm.J. On At11. ft ln the erut park ot Enrland 's Windsor Casile and. international polD march is ta be held . ..,'"'" Of'•• C-ty lt..-..1 Sett ............ , CtNFOOMI l l --lll•llf ,., ......... , ....... . '"IDDLI• ON TNI •OOf'" .. .. "'.!"'. -1_;.f •r,:i..:._:L. • ---.. SIAD/UM I 11.~l.~··--=-- ---l • SIAD/UM l ,. _.,,.,.... ----.. StADIUM ·J .. --'J... •tI:_!I . • ----... SIAD/UM d .. -.· ...... "'JI ..------ * "tlLINT auNNINt" , . ".t.HOltOMIOA lTltAIN" "KLUTI" • "IUMMllt OJI 'G" "TNI LAST ,ICTU•I SN6W" • "TNI ANDI.ION T.l,-11" "l\lllDISN JILY tllLI" '"' "fWllT •ODV 0" DllO•AN" \ l • " :: -. " '.· .· ·KEZY's GRAB BAG THAT IS ••• IT HAPPENS ALL DAY LONG * * * I i • ,tJ DAil Y PILOT F~dq. Mq 26, 19n 1972 CHRYSL.E.R PLYMOUTH • Atlas strvice n•ND NEW '72 SATELLITE 2 DR. COUPE •~ . BRAND NEW S . I #RL 21-C2G0 176962 en• · OPEH ALL DAY Memorial Day '69 DODGE GT340 DART 2 DOOR H.T. Automatic, Radio, Heater, Power St•er- ;n9, V;nyl Top. IZRGIHI 51495 I 68 CHRYSLER NEWPORT 4 DOOR VS, automa tic, Jower ste•ring, r•dio, heater, air con . IVVU4551 58 95 '71 DODGE CORONET 4 DR. HARDTOP VI, eutomatic, ·r•dio, he•ter1 power steering & br•kes, whitewall tire1, vinyl roe-I. •ir conditioning. I l29CBH I 52295 .' 69 PLYMOUTH SPORT SA TELLm 2 dr. VI, eutom•tic, radio, heater, power steering, ·wsw, air conditioning, v;nyl roof. IYDM821 I. 511·95 '72 DUSTER $,..;I •VL-29 -828-378137 '70 PLYMOUTH DUSTER VS, automatic , radio, heater, power 1teerin9, vinyl top. I S57 AUK ) 51695 '67 CHRYSLER 4 DOOR SEDAN VS, •utomatic, power steerirHJ & brakes, white side walls, air conditioning . .IVZSS 181 56 95 2 Door Coupe welcomes a d dj,PGrtrnent C:hrysler Co~por:t'!O" all hrcles reqi.-. ion v1 • and warran"'ng servict gardless of w1 Worlr, re. Pllrchased were car Was · Master Ch e h o no r A "' e ' i c a aj'• Bonk. ,Blanche Ar !Carte P ' rnerrc:an E . ress, and 0 . X· . iners Cl11b ••• .. DISCOUNT $ Brougham 2 Dr. H1;dtor,', Brand New· •72 N . 'y , 011 M I I S . ew or1:er • • • . ~nu. •c urer fie er Price • • • Equipped With: Air C~nd1t1on1ng, PowM Steering, Power Disc Br•kes, Power W1~dows, AM.-FM Stereo R1d io, Tinted Glass, Yin I Roof White Wall Tires, etc., •• Ser. •CHZJ .T2C.l&l~27_ • '70 FORD LTD 4 DOOR VS, autom atic, radio, heater power steerin g & brakes, factory air condi-;;il095'• '69 CHEVY CAPRICE 4 DOOR HARDTOP VS, •utomatic, radio, he•ter, power w~if69j''' '70 PLYMOUTH FURY VS, automatic, radio, heater, power steering, factory air cond itioning, white will fires, vinyl top. f 8968EH) 51895 '68 OPEL ST A TION WAGON 4 cylinder engine, radio •nd h•ater. .IVWUl381 5795 ALL PRICIES Pt.US TAX ANO LICENSE ALL PRICES VALID UNTIL SOLO MONDAY, MAY 2tlh • .. . • . . • . . . < .. • • . 1972 EL DORADO 18' MINI HOME • Fully self contained •Sleeps 4 , •Toilet •Shower • Range & Oven •Etc. 1 TON CHASSIS CAMPER SPECIAL • v.s engine , • Auto. trans • Power brakes • Power steerin:g • 12 Ply roted t1r1s • E30GHN69774 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY $ FULL PRICE - •• • • COMPLETE CAMPER PACKAGE :::D '72 FORD F250 3./4 Ton Pickup BRAND NEW IMMEDIATE DR I VERY Ol'T. RATIO REAR AXLE, 800x16.5 8 Pl Y H.D. TIRES, HEATER, DEFROSTER, WEST COAST MIRRORS F-25BRP24929 WITHA '72 ELDORADO CAMPER. 8' DELUXE CAB OYER (#118787) ' FULL PRICE f rlday, M~;-1'1t D.\l1 V PILOT 33 BRAND NEW 1972 NEWPORTER VAN CONVERSION v.s. AUTO .. FACTORY AIR CONO., 6000 GVN 8 pr. tires, pow· er brks. e.tc.. Super Von Comp er if'ltlude s full conversion, sleeps 4, icebox, sink, stove, toiler. room w/porto polli, cor- peling, paneling, spacious ca binets, etc. E24GHM85878 $ FULL PRICE =~ND FORD f 100 PICKUP 1972 BRAND NEW COURIER ~~~K,~~ PERRIS VALLEY SHELL CAMPER BRAND NEW '72 RANCHERO =*peed, 240 cu inch engine, $ irater & defroster ORDER YOURS TODAY BRAND NEW 1972 FORD BRONCO VB, 4 WHEEL DRIVE 2 Skid Plates. $ Swing Away Spore Tire Carrier, Extra Coaling · Radiafor. Aux. Fuel Tank. t UJ5GLN94401 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY. '670PELWGN rodio, htoter, License RPH-789 '67TOYOTA CO I OMA Auto. tram. rod'io. heater. Lic.tmt No. 8348QS '67 DODGE DART GT 2·Door H4t,. V-8, ICll'lebl top. liten~ No. VSM347 '69TOYOTA CIOWMSIDAM Auto. trais~ rodio. heoltr. licenst Ho. ZXV777 with a •4 Speed trans •411 Rear end • 391 0GVW • 60 Amp battery • 35 Amp olt. • 1800 CC Eng. •Vinyl seat • 600x 14 b.pr. tires • Reor leaf speaker * Ind. fr. susp. IF SGTAMA07S41 F11llYl•1ulatH, De .... e l•terior. COMPLETE PACKAGE s299 s599s $ '61 ECONO VAN SUIFEISPICIAL Lkense Ho. OS1234S DOWN PER MD. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 250 CID. AUTO. TRANS. FULLY FACTORY EQUIPPED (2A47l24 2053) IMMEDIATE DELl't'ERY $ :!..I I II llll l llll I I I l I I I I I I Ill I II I I I Ill I I I I I I I I I I Ill I I I Ill ll Ill I Ill I I I I I.!.!: -LEASE!! A NEW 1972 -- FORD LTD at '71 PRICES '117.6S PER MONTH '72 PINTO WAGON $74.74 PER MONTH WEEKEND RENTAL SPECIAL RENT A 1972 FORD PINTO I' 24 MONTH OPEN END llASE" Erom 2 P.M. Friday to 10 A.M. ASK FOR Monday Complete Weekend Only -S 15.95 ... Sc per mile. -= Bill SPERLING OR First 100 Miles FREE = = l'~TE VLAHAKIS = :ill llllllll Ill I lllll I I II I I I I II I I I II I II Ill I II I II I II I I I I I I I lllll I I I I llllrr. '71 PINTO ;: 20001 '70 FORD•••• · $1988 IALAlllHO K>IMAI. V-1. wto lfwll~ llcJ. W, roclto, hM!tr, • ....... 11 •• '"'"" .,, ... ,. ''"'" ... 901M8Z $1888. :-~oo~~~!~~-~--lteering. license 064BV • 2188 $2388 • • JU DAILY PILOT DICK TUCY TUMBLEWEEDS 0 MUTI AND JEFF • YOU, A GENIUS? ~'RE MADI FIGMENTS NANCY Wit.IT, I FORGOT 'OMl!TMING . • WIJds LOUIE? l DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by~ ,_ rowu I PEANUTS ACllOSS l "" .. "" 9 FIOl!Jng en . .,.. 14 l'rlntklig •ldllnt: lnf11r9al 15 ,.........., 11~=1 .. lllflton- 17 God of eull&lrt 11 H1111ltt, fot on1 lt rwt•ol 1 ... 1 20 f'llCI lo b!IY I ClllllJ: Z wonts 22 $ilrtld1 Zl Gradual lt1k 24 History llook ""' IS Wa1ktd with long steps .. 21 Sttllghtlntd .. 32 l(fyboard lll1tnnnt ,, f'llCN!lftl outside: f'reft1 '4 Mountain: Pltfl1 3S Ytnlson ""'" ,. l'lplttnt l7 S.all llflnl ,..__, U.S. h.lrrtorltt "~.::'" • • • " ,, ,. 40Ytt 41 Ttmpcr_,. ctssallons 4l lfO¥ed on -I• 44 Rim lo Baille Sta CS Ft11lnlnt v-·" "u~l:l:' .. 49 ;;:o hlltin,t In 5JH•lt~ 54 Exth~ ••"~ 55 ExctUtn! '6 V!PrJ s1111U MOUlll 57 Ont llftlf ,. lht pill SI hllto's rtlatlve 5t A bttlnnl11g •o Tf'OlltiltSOM pl Ml •l Tl111 periods: DO'IN 1 Utttr f1ll in Z ll:lflcult: l11lonn1I J "Sttp- -1" 4 As11uc •Ind •tns 5 T1t1 MO\lltr Sharl ft"' ' Allft 7-Alllr)': ..... • ' " II ' I Soontr than 9 Ont 1sslst1no In co111111ls11cri of 1 n l111t 10 Ont clothed /rt critlln 11- Uclt ol drtss 11 COl!lfd11n -""""" lZ Twist ski..,. •111: Vat. lJ Posstsslw WMd 21 Stir U A'lftlrt; _.. llfOtt<:Ucri z• Ill«• tht tr1tns ClllM hi ZS As1>1rt;us plft 26 Ol1Ctltlc1I ••• 27 Scrll>tS 28 RtQUl•Uons 2' lHSOl'I llUghl by In IYtnt 30 ExlUl;t I ' " " to 31 HIVlng htm- lspherlCll ror' )) Nat gar ish 34 Summ1111td 31 Eli:qul1lttly ""' )' NtllKl 40 CltlYtd 4Z Colt-: ...., ... COllPCll« 4J Gwt .iiin1~1r 45 Cut 46 Enclom 41 Fill lo do 41 Rotation of duUH 4' Str«lllt 50 Ptrlod of ll•• 51 lcillan rtscrt 5Z Soillts of wit« 5C lfllk IOll'tt It l2 " ' I I !I •• ll JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH ' I I J 1 I • PERKINS . . .. . By Chester Gould GASOLINE ALlfY By Tom K. Ryan SALLY BANANAS By Al Smltfl GORDO MOON MULLINS By Dale Hale by Emie Bushmlller ANIMAL CRACKERS By Charles M. Schulz - By Harold Le DollJ[ I KEEP SEEING PARKER'S IT 'S ALL AS USUAL, YOU'RE RIGHT, TANYA! l PROMISE ••• l 'LL CONFINE ALL MY ENERG IES TO OUR LITTLE RACKIT ! YOU MEAN BUSIN!SS ENTERPRISE, FACE WMEN HE SENTENCED IN TME ME , •. THAT HOLIER-THAN-PAST! ' . STOP TH1MK- ING ABOUT -HIM ! DARLING! By Mel By John Miles By Dick M- By . Gus Arriola By Ferd Johnson .------r WfiAT NOISE, MAMA··? 01-1 •.• ""4·4 IT'S .JUST 50M5 OF lllOS 5 MOTORBI KES GOING BY, l'M SURE'· ' '----,--c~ Ii.~ • t ", ', , I By Roger Bollen *'No, thank you -I'm just enjoylag lftlag them tmpt)'." DENNIS THE MENACE . I • ll 'f '· " '1 1, " • • • • I v -· ( • F'ndly, Mar 26, 1912 DAILY PILOT Everyone Has Something That Someon~ Else Wants DAILY Pll,DT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, find It, Trad& It With a Want Ad ·The Biggest MarkE!tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642·5678 for Fast Results ~I ........ w. l~I -Ir .. I~ .__I -_-=:_.:.;_,]~I.iii ___ .. _-~1~~--iiiiiiiiiiiiiii··- G·· .. ·.·,·.1-----· Gonoral Gener el ' • • * General * * * * * TAYLOR CO. I EXECUTIVE FAMILY HOMEI $99,500 Largest patio for entertaining in Baycrest I area. Elegant pool with hydra.sweep. 4 B<l· , rms, 31-!i baths, F .R. &. formal D.R. Custom ~cab., drawers & work bench in attached gar. . IRVINE TERRACE -$57,500 Choice location! Near Fashion Island. Lo ve-- ly pool & patio. Really sharp 3 BR corner : home. Lge. Palos Verdes stone fireplace. "Our 27th Year'' CUSTOM BUILT BEAUTY Everlastin1 quality ls no aJ. ways exPt.nslve! Hert"'1 a ~·ay lo get aw-.y from tht' "Tract" look. This IP.U.JAC· ULA TE :I bedroom hornf' features living room .... ·l1h richly finished open beam Cl"i!inp and massive curved floor-to-~iling tirepJa~. Load11; of storaa:e cabinets in thl!' detached double gar· agt. It's uniqut and 11ub- stantlal. All yours tor General IAYFRONT CONDOMINIUMS PREVIEW SHOWING THIS WEEKEND ONLY ONE PROBLEM- ONLY 17 LEFT! HURRYI 28 New homes on the bayfront. Complete with boat slips. Xlnt Terms. YOU OWN THE LAND Pacilic Coast Hwy. al Balboa Blvd . NEWPORT BEACH TOWNHOUSES, LTD. 4-401 W. COAST HWY. 675-6820 WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors $28,900. All you neet:J i5 GeMral $1,-445. initial investment. ------------------ IT'S IN COSfA MESA!! 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 ;.•~ General OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1·5 1336 SANTANELLA TERR., Irvine Terr. Spacious 3 BR., 2 ba . home w/formal DR .. · lge. family r m. w/built·in storage. Cheerful patio. $59,750. M. C. Buie DUPLEX IN THE VILLAGE , ... of Corona del ?t1ar. See this 3 BR. & den . cozy frplc., step-down li ving rm .. 2 car gar. Short walk lo schools & shops. $79,500. La- Vera Burns -BAYFRONTS Enjoy view & appreciation. 1. Bayside Dr., 3 BR, den. din. rm .. 31-!i ba. -$165,000. 2. Dover Shores, 5 BR., study, Cam. rm., 41.fa ba., pool, pier & slip -$169,000. Carol Ta· tum BAYSHORES-JUST LISTED Charming home overlooking custom land· scaped gardens & patio. 2 BR .. lge. !iv. rm .• 2 private beaches. Boat facilities. $41 ,500. Mary Harvey HAPPINESS IS GETTING- A good buy in Eastbluff! Beaut. decor. in 3 BR., 2 ba. home. li1ove-in condition. Low main!. yard; on cul de sac. Reduced to $41- 900. Harriett Davies HUNTINGTON HARBOUR 'Waterfront w/deck &. dock & great view of Christiana Bay. 3 BR .. 3 Ba., formal din. rm. '&family rm. You will like this. $87,500. Al •Fink LIDO ISLE 1 T\vo adjoining lots, street to street locati on. Steps to private beach & private clu b. $781 MO. Edie Olson Will TRADE -SHORECLIFF LOT Last avail . large Jot \V/white water view, overlooking jetty. Just steps to beach. Ren- dering & plans available. $150,000. Kathryn Raulston OWNER HAS TO TRADE Wants duplex near ocean in Coron, del Mar, in ex change for neat 3 BR., 2 bath green- belt condominium in The Bluffs. Prlce $51,- 500. Mary Lou Marion GRACIOUS LIVING-LIDO ISLE Beaut. & immac. 4 BR., sep. DR, on large dbl. corner Jot. Great kitch., 2 patios & huge upstairs mstr. suite-sit. room combo. $129,· 500. Gene Vreeland --Coldwell,&.-133-0700 644-2430 ~ 550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.B. COATS & WALLACE REALTORS -...146-4141- {0pon Evonlns•l • IY OWNER OPEN HOUSE Sat. & Sun., 11·3 2422 S. Reno Dr., S.A. CS. ot Warner, W. of Brl!tol) 3 BR., 2 Bath, fireplact, Rp. dining rm., service area in- sidt, 2 car garaie. Built-ins, velvet drapes in master bed· room, w/w carpels, sprlnk· lers in front. J ust repainted insidC". Clos" to alJ schooi.'5 and minutes from So. Coast Plaza &:~ n1ajor shopping. $28, 750. Submit all terms. Owner will pay AU. Closing costs. For more inlonnat.lon, caU 8J8..5261 before 3 pm. BIG 5 l-Iow about a gorreous 2 story corner home with 5 big bed· rooms, 3 baths, uand piano sized living room, dream kilchen t,1,•ith ctramic tile and dill oven. All this and lfs in perfect mndilion with nf'1V paint inside and out. Exctl· lent Mtsa de! Mar location with no down VA or Low down FHA terms. Prict'd only $39,900. Call 546-5880 (Open EVt'I.) . ~. HERITAGE REALTORS SUPERLATIVE CHARM And a country club a.tmos· phere which rings with pride -It you arc thinking about happy family living this is it. Rl&ht in :P.1eta Verde with excellent 1chools and convenient to markt'tJ:. Priced at only $30,999. cau .... 2313. Near Harbor View "BOYS CLUB" , , , between Tustin & Irvin" Streeta - 4 Good size bed· rooms, large livina room, family room, 2% baths, pool ai2e yard. $411,<m. MACNAB IRVINE FINER HOMES NEW IN BAYCREST Warm sunshiny 3 BR's w/extra spacious FR, lush gardens. An immaculate home w/charm. $64,950. LINDA ISLE BEST BUY Magnificent NEW Bay!ront Home. Space £or 55' yacht + auxiliary Craft. 5 BR + 412 baths. FR, LR&. MBR face lhe spark I· ing waters of the Bay. Lg'. BR w/wet bar planned for use as fu n & game room or pool table. Dave Cook 642-8235.0PEN SAT. & SUN. 1-5 p.m. •46 Linda Isle. IRVINE TERRACE- LOWEST PRICED 4 BR. Gorgeous corner. 3 full baths. Easy bicy· cle ride to Big Corona Beach & Fashion Island. Designed for California living. $67 ,500. Tom Queen 644-6200. A PRESTIGE HOME For sale below replacement cost. Beauti· ful like new 4600 sq. ft. home on spectacu· lar Galaxy Drive. Absolute luxury -mar- bl e halls -special indoor pool -air con- ditioned -built to last forever -come & see it -SUNDAY -1337 Galaxy Drive, Dover Shores. $219,500. Barbara Aune 642-8235. RANCH STYLE l'h ACRE PARCELS Sweeping VIEW of Capistrano Valley, mountains, Dana Point Marina. No smog. Horses welcome. Easy access to San Diego Freeway. Each parcel pennits spacious home, pool, barn, corrals & ·rasture. 121,000 -$25,000 per acre. Joe Smith 642-823.5. NEW DOVER SHORES HOME FINAL opportunity to own a new Ivan Wells Galaxy Drive custom home. Choo!e from 5 spectacular new custom homes w I sweeping view of bay & mountains. From $110,200 to $154,500. Furnished model OPEN DAILY 10 a .m. -5 p.m. 2018 Galaxy Drive. LE ROI DE MONTAIGNE Build your castle on huge hilltop lot at ex- clusive Big Canyon Country Club. Barbara Gothard 642-8235. SUMMER RENTAL Delightful waterfront/pier privileges. 2 BR, 2 bath. Completely furnished • reason- able rates. Gladys Russell 642-8235. ADULT FRENCH BAYFRONT Striking Bayfront new home. Combined master suite & sitting room. Upper level enjoys panoramic harbor view from LR, DR, tile deck &. country kitchen. Guest wing w /BR. sitting room w /view deck. Slip. Fee land $251,350. By appt. 675-1935 or 642-8235. General *PALERMO* Harbor Yiew Homes Outstandin.1: VallC"y View A family home which wi doublt in I~ group e~ lrrtalning, 4 4':r. Bdrms. All \vith tht' Italian Riviera lnOuence. Owner bas !ipat'f'd nothing in cost to complt'tt' lhis fine ho1ne .l no1v It has outgrown hln1, Call lo vit"w. 162.950. Waterfi:ont Pier Cu111om duplex, N e w po r t Lo;Jand .••. This Is a l>eaut. wtll·kl'pt property -Lots or pride in ownership. Owner \vill carry l st T .D. loM \Vltb no loan CO!iits, Offet'ftl at $82,000. CORBIN- MARTIN REAL TORS 644-7662 $2,500 Gets You In No 9uallfying Huge Pool A11sume 11. 7% VA Joan on thi.!1 gorgeou.'I J betlroom , v.'ilh a !):Uper large pool. Lcl\v maintcnanC"r, twau1iful lr111d!leo.ping, tari::e quiet 1-orncr lot and privott' ff'n· •·ini::. You'll reel Ii~ living: in the rountry side. Hurcy!? Call 842-2".>35 Now! \-0 THE RF:AL '\."'. ESTATERS . . . Lived In A Uttle But Loved A Lot This slngh.• story stuccc, ] bedroom home tuu just the space yo u need at a price you can afford. 2 sparkling balh~. oll elt"<:tric kitchen, carprls and drapes thruout. Dou Ille garagt', Only 21,~ year11 old and priced at $32,900. l-"HA and CI bu}'f:l'!I wclcomr. Ca.II =',\Al l<I H .v, 111 R.l!aJton 545-9491 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams Open Eves. THAT OLD YEARNING To Design you own homt', is to havt' comfort whert' you desire it. Bedrooms to 1i2e you dt&it'(', Big Bright Kit· chen with a sky light, F'or· mal Dining Room. We offer this llomesite in Newport Beach. Over one hall acre. Exct'llent location. Price just reducl!d to $29,850. Call 646-0555, Evenlng1 545-5817. COLWELL' PROPERTIES. INC REALTORS · THt: RI:A1, ,-,z LSTl\TLH:; . . . Gener•I WE DO WORK HARDER FOR YOU IN SELLING YOUR PROPERTY WE WILL HELP YOU FIND EXACTLY WHAT YOU WANT PLEASE CALL US TODAY· ROW ROW YOUR BOAT Only 100 yds to the \Vll ll•r and nestle1\ in $100,000 hon1cs for on lv $42.900. \\IQ\\' \vhat a valt1c lol'atecl 011 J1:ilboa Peninsula 2 bedrooms -t 1 llf•droorn . 'l'IH.' lot alone \\';IS approved for $40,000. Open house Sund:iy l to 5. Jllc~1:-:c ('all t(lday 645·4040. -ROMEO AND JULIET Is a beautiful love story and you \viii love th is l'X tra special honlc at a just re<.luccll price of only $29 .950, :1 bedroon1s, 2 bnths, fenced ya rd. Open house Sat. 1·5 and Sun. 12·4. Please call today 645-4040. THE 9UEEN MARY \Vouldn't fit in this extra lar(.!c corner lot and home ho\\·evcr it does have a special place for ''our s1 nall cabin l'ruiser. Grea t bo nus room. 4 beclroo111s. 1 :14 bathS. C:ood ('osta f\1csa loc ation S27 ,500 mu ch n1uch n1ore. JlJease call today 645-4040. THE THIEF OF BAGDAD \Vould buy thi.i; home ttnd think he h01 s sto len it at this low ·10,v price of only $21lJJ50, located in a prinlc \vestside area of <;osta Mesa. 3 bedroorn ~. 1:!4 baths. Builtin <.'olor 'l'.V. Open house Su n· day l to 4. J>leasC' l"a ll t.oday 64$-4040. . . LITILE OLD LADY WHO LIVED IN A SHOE She didn't have a car so she walked to the market. This lovely home is reall y close to everything and just reduced in prtce to $28.900. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths and clean as a pin. Open house Sat. 1·5. Please call today. 645·4040. THE FOUR LITILE PIGS Would be interested in building on these four prilne vie\v lots. '!'he owner will subordinate to construction loan . Please call today. 645-4040. RIP VAN WINKLE <:ould sleep in a different bedroo1n each night. s. bedrooms, 4 baths, formal dininl! roon1 . \Vork oul ~yn1, beautiful pool and much much more for the cliscriminating buyer. $105 ,950. Please call today 645-4040. DON 9UIXOTE Lived ln this super great home in Mission Viejo. A divorce forces a quick sale. 3 bedr.ooms. 2 baths, fully air conditioned, n.ear new. Open houoe Saturday &. Sunday 24622 Ladera, Mission Viejo. Call 837·1430. PRINCE CHARMING Would have to woo his princess in this park like setting of beauti· ful trees and plantings, & pool. 3 huge bedroon1s, 2th: baths. New· porl Beach. Only $48,500 or submit ofler. Please call today 645-4040. We hive 1v1ll1ble 1 number of fine home1 for gr1clou1 living, Th••• c1n be shown only by 1ppolntment ind only to qu11lfled buyers. Price• range from $41,500 to $175,000. FIXER-UPPER NEWPORT ISLAND 4 Bdrm., 1 ~ ba!hlf; 2-itnry homt>, Nf'i:dx work, but CRF.AT locallon! Ownt'.r may ron1drlrr frlldt' for .1all• 110111. S.<15,000. !lave mort customt'rs th.an we can M!rvlte in Laguna Beach. Please call "Ski" ORANGE COAST'S BEST (Zairo<hJ<y), aa!H manager, [Irvine 1-b-IM ...... ,,,ca.,,ny IOI Dotv DrWe 142-IZSS lM4llaeAltllllr144•1200 CnJt : G73·Yiii.3 673-8086 t;vtl. for an app't, Our contract SALESMAN •• " worthy "' """ L'Onoidera· lion. r~-D-•_H_y __ P_l~lot--=:--C_l•.,.--•-ifi_ed __ , R.~::~: M•~1i~~551 Gentr•I Gener•I Gener•I . 'r A SUISIDIARY OF COlDWlll, IANKll RIALTORS llYlNl-5 IEDlOOMS i Secluded entry to tonnal Hvi"i' rooro. Formal diz:ling room. \Gafden riourmt"t kJtch<-n. Brukfut bar. S hU&t' ~ ' ant petlo. Priced to sell fa..L Call today! 645-0303. t • THI p~UFf5-$l5, 900 1 !ttuat "11'1'! 1.hlA lovr,ly !'nd unlt overlookin& hU&:e erttnbtlt. Bis: llvtng room. P'ormal dlnt" or casual -.. )'OU. preCu. 3 bed- 1 ~ 2 baths. Walk to ire.de and hi 1d1ooll. Onl,y $3S,91Xl. 1 · Hurey -cell ~ FIUT HOMl7 $11,000 A LOT roR U'M'LE! Perteet •t&rtlf!T' ~ with blc living room. DlnJna ftiom. Cabin k.ltchm. Quie t •trftt. Boat door lhN bade o1 prqe. Walk to abopplna. OOM to beaches. V«Y amaH down to qul.lltitd buytr! ~ ~ PllMI MISA YllDE Executive trl-teve:l on qu.let cul-M--u.c. 1 block to golf coune. Giant llvtng room. Fonnal dine. Sunken !&mlly room. Bright and IUM)' kitchen. 4 bedrooms. 2 patlOI. 3-c::ar pn.ae. Anxious owner ttduced price! Call f&&L Ge-0303. NIWPOlT HllCIHTS-YllWI OCEAN VIEW! Old Newport charm and Ivy clu1tered hlll hilit.e this lovely 3 bedJ SOLD Jlure 1tep down llvlnc room wfth mU1ive brick Jtnlng room. K:no~plntt kttcMn. Hardwood Ooorr ertd "*'Uo. Onlv '7llh can 645--0303. ·-, ··~· SPANISH-NOW $401100 ltuae double door tntry. Spanlsh fittplact In huge llvln( room. Vaulted celJJn1•. Bir Stt'J) down family room. Wet bar. Counnet p..rdcn kitchen. -4 ki111 titt bf!droom1. Park like yon!. Ju.t rtducod ri...n $43,!IOOI Coll qulck. 64S-0303. llYINE TERRACE CORONA DEL ?-.1AR. Mas.~ivr. Palos Vtrdt' .&tone fl~l•c~ plu.1 gor&OOUI Y>ormwood wall~ hillte 1.argt' Uvlnl( rootn. Unique CllVttn llkt' gtonf' walltd den. 3 quten 11Ue btd· roorm. Coiy ehefs kitchen. Tropical yard. Must stt. Call todly -645.()3().1. HARIOR HICOHLANDS Cozy t'nll"y to bis: llvink J'l'){Jm. ?l!&&Alv~ comer firt'placr hi Jlltll huicr family r•i1.1m. For1nal d!nln.1: room. Convl"nlenc1· kltcht'n. 3 la.rat" hr'Clm<lffi•. Laundry room. 2 palloe. Plll'k Uk~ ,rounds. $37,500. CaU at onc»-64$-0303. "0"$$ DOWN-DESPIUTI \VO\\.'! liUKI' livlna room with <'rtt<'kllnrt fl1'f'S'll8~! GQurmrot kitchen. Uullt·ln,, Giant famlly ruom. 4 8Pdr11Qm•. 3 Bftlhs, Prlv11.tt' door entry 7'1uttr •ult(', Only 300 mu. pay. of $244 1 NO DOWN PAYMENT! 7'6 •nn •,.;. ratt'. Own('r rxtrrmcly anxlou.! CALL TODAY!~. 'O TIICREAL '"\. CSTATERS ' '•, '• " I ' associated BROKERS-REAL TO~S 202\ W Oolboo 61 l·J66 ) EXECUTIVES DELIC>HT Country club sltnoi;Jih!:r,. nnd w&y undf'r $60,000! Forma.I llvlni.: r()'lm. lho,~e ¥"1"1rllte fnrn1al d lnlni,: room. Blg dtn. Jo'ully equipped "'cl bar in ~luded family r111Jn 1. Flv~ crown kitchen. 4 QU('('fl 11\ic l)l'(froo1n1. l.Jlundry room. Call now! 645.0JOJ. PAINT I. SAYl-$17,7501 ihht 111 lht-11.xf'r·upf"'r "r 1972 Alu~t. .~,. 111 b,..Jl,.,·r. J>,.rft'{'t 2 l:H'droom '4larll'r chalt't. FHA buyer• ~lcorne. Nf'edA JOlld~ ot ·r1..c. Plef}.I;•· "i/>t' )lou1· .kt•t on the way 1JUt! C&.ll to 1ire· Vif'W. 64.S.0:~(1;1, NEWPORT IAY-C:USTOM Stalntd 1:Ja1 .. t'nlry. S1rp d?Wn to h u~l· eu~lnrrt wnl1 <"d Jly. lnir; ruom with 'lun1rt11lt111r tir .. pl!ll"I', L.llrJ,i1t ft1.mily rnorn '41th AU.. SLATE FLOOR: Rt'tlm C<'llln1t1 c<n:y kltchcn with Wilt· In l1r,..1.kfa1t IRhle 11.nd har. <..1u-n •l;tf'd bed.rtl(llTlt. Intercom. Par k \Ike bnek )'ard. \Valk tu Nt'Y.JJOrl Bo.)'. Offered at $4-1.· 900. Call 64!';-0.103 645 r 0l0l • 22tt HAllO« IOULEVARD , COSTA MESA, CALIF . 92627 • 645 -0303 -1 'J. • • • ' •·:re DAILY PU.PT ... Gen~ rill General NO DOWN . YOUR CHOICE fo veterAtll a11'tS% do~ or Oioolf' one <ir all three of FllA 1erms avail. Like a model home, this 3-bedroom 2 bath beauty' Is one of a ' ' IT'S SO NICE • IN IRVINE TERRACE • Let us show you this enchanting home. Atrium entr.v, spacious living room with fire- place. 3 Large bedrooms 2 baths, LOVELY DINING RQOM + room to store your trailer or boat. $62,500. SOMERSET MODEL {Jele Barrell f<eaft'J pre6efl.l6 CHECK UST FOR BUYERS BAYCREST -4 Bedroom, immaculate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . i&l.500. WESTC.LIFF -4 Bedroom, pool .. $81,500. CLI f:F-.HA llEN~ View !...3.J3edroom $.~7,:;oo~ HARBOR HIGHLANDS -4 Bedrooms. good locale .............................. $47,500. BACK BAY -New custom 3 bedroom $64,600. BALBOA PENINSULA -5 bedrooms on 2 lots, great home ................... $125,000. BAYCREST-CUSTOM elegance 3 bedroom, air cond ........................... , $81 ,500. DOVER SHORES -View. Spacious 4 bed· room ............................... $91,500. LIDO ISLE LOT ................... $31,800. ~ ._I ___ ... _ .. __.!~ J:inJq J,,fe PRESTIGE WATERFRON:r HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 11 Linda Isle Drive Completely furn. 5 Bdrm., 41> bath home. LJ?"e. waterfront livin.l? rm. with fJoor to .ceil. marble frplc.· Formal .dining rm .• famlly 'rm ., maid's rm., Pier & slip .... , ... _ .. _ $195,000 • Linda Isle . Waterfront Ele~ant new 4 bdrm., 411'°' ba. home · with -fami.lv-<11!l. &-lg~game-rm:-Mstr.suite wt marble frplc. & concealed office area. Viaeuum system. Radiant ceil. heal Pier & float: ......................... $255,000. 57 Linda Isle Drive Custom 4 BR., 3¥.i ba. home on Lagoon. Mslr. BR. has silting area & frplc. Waterfront family rm w/conversation pit around the frplc.; lovely garden, Jge. slip ..... $189,500., General ·, • · ··BUILDERS CLOS£ OUT e 2 Story e Til~ ~ e 3 bedroom• e l bolhrooms -e Family room e Dining room e Fireplace · e Shag Corpot1 • Concrete Driveway e Block Woll Fence ·e..$40,2.50--10".4-dowft. e HURRY Ill 832-5792 or 979-2113 CHARMING COUNTRY .. CLUB 2Bx40 POOL , • kind! New carpets, freshly patnt~. all bttftis and ma.ny, many extras. Low mainten· ance yard & excellent rcsi· dential area. AltJO may as- sume 5% r,t. loan -$32,950. Ca.II 54&-8424 (Open Eves.) these fine townhoui>es near clubhouse and. pools •. Twi> 3 bedroom, two story or gor· geous 2 . bedroom, single story, All include built-in!!, carpels, double ga~age. Each priced at a low $20,950. Call 54()...ll!if (Open Eves.) ~;..h>. HERITAGE • HARBOR VIEW HOME • Stretch·out and live in this two story 5 bed· room, 3 bath, FAMILY ROOM , DINING ROOM. Builtin kitchen, fireplace, NEW CAR· PETS and DRAPES plus so many extras you have to see it to rea\Jy ap,1>reciate il Fee land. ............•.................. $12,500. SOUTH OF THE HIGHWAY • CORONA DEL MAR • HARBOR HIGHLANDS -Fresh, neat 4 bed· room .... •. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $39;850. WESTCLIFF -Available immed. 2 Bedroom, den . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $4 7 ,500. TWO ACRE -View estate, split level 5 bed· room, pool, stables .......... call for details. Home on large private loL Professional 1oW inainten-anee · Jii:ndscaping. ~ <bedrooms, step-down family room and formal dinlng. Genuine hardwood Doon, stone fireplace, six yeara old, asswrie 5% loan. $41,950. \Valk to Ali sc11ools and park. Call 842-2535,. o THE REAL \"'\.. ESTA'I'£RS • • . • REALTORS 2 Bedroom, 2 bath, fireplace, picture win· dows. with enclosed side patio, GUEST QUARTERS over the garage. ONLY ONE Office Opon Solvnhty1 & Sundays Gr neral G•neral '-. . BLOCK TO THE BEACH. . ....... $49,900. VERTERAN'S PETE BARRETT REALTY 1605 WHtcliff Dr., N.B. * TRADE * POOL UNITE 642-5200 4 BEDRM.- $23,900 • No Down 4 bedrooms, 2 separate baths, builtin dream kit- chen. Lovely patio. Enjoy the pool. 51()..1720 And meet us in Mesa Verde 10 see this s\,lper sharp and clean home that will sell on out 1erms. Call 546-2313 for information on time of meet- ing. - BACK BAY VIEW • . EASTBLUFF • A TRULY LOVELY home. 4 Bedrooms. 2 baths, FAMILY ROOM, fireplace, builtin kitchen with breakfast area. Custom carpets and drapes. beautiful patio for your enter· taining pleasures ................. $55,900. General General '..-;. ..... ., -~;.;·· LAKE ARROWHEAD Home with· dock and Jake view :....... 4 bdrm, 2 bath, furnished -PRICED at $55,000 -WANT" Newport Beach area home or fn.. come. I ''C" THOMAS . TARBELL: lffp this hondy dlrfttory wltfi ye11 tllll wffli••d • 'jo11 to llo11W-!i11atl ... .411 the loc•IU1 ll1ted below .,. described 111 trffter dlfcllf • ., ...,.l&hHJ eke• wllere 111 today'• DAILY PILOT WANT ADS. Potro• Mowfitt •PM ltotttet for "'-er te n• .... •rtff ti lltt 111cli h1fenttotlff 111 tllb eel••• Hell Md..,, s.t.. .,., & s ... dcry. HOUSES FOR SALE (2 Bedrooms) 207 E. 22nd. Street, Costa Mesa 548,7467 (Sat, Sun, Mon 1-5) (3 Bedrooms) Coast Hwy., N'pl Beach 675-6820 (Sat & Sun 10-Dusk) 2157 E. Ocean (Penin. Pt. l Balboa 673-3663 . (Fri & Sat 1-41 *263 Ocean View (Newport H~gbts). NB 642·8235 (Sat & Sun 1-5) · (3 Bedrooms & Family Rm ar Den) 2030 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) N.B. 646-1550 $110.200 (Daily 10-5) *1623 Tradewinds (Baycresl) N.B. 642-8235 (Sat & s·un 1·5l **324 Morning Siar (Dover Shores) NB · 642-8235 (Set, Sun, Mon 1-5) · 1837 Pt. Kimberlv Pl. (Hbr Vu flms) NB 644-2430 $52.900 (~•m 1-5) **2201 Bayside Dr. Corona del Mar 644-2430 $165.000 (Sun & Mon J.51 1336 Santanella Terr (Irvine Terr.) CdM 644-2430 $59,750 (Sat & Sun 1·5) (4 Bedrooms & Family Rm or Denl 2874 Clubhouse Rd. (Mesa Verde1 C.M. 557·8794 $48.950 (Sat, Sun. Mon 11·6) 11 30 Santiago (Dover Shores) N.B. 642-5200 $91,500 (Sat. Sun. Mon 1·5) 2015 Commodore (Baycrestl N.B. 642-5200 $64,500 (Sat. Sun. Mon 1·51 3ll08 Surfview Ln .. (Harbor Vu Hi s) CdM 644.02~9 $65,000 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 2018 Go•exy Dr. (Dover Shore<) N.B. 646-1550 $154.500 · (Dailv 10-5) 136Q Ge•exy Dr. (Dover Shoresl N.B. 642·8?.35 (Sat & Stm 1·5) ** 1645 Bavside Dr .. Corona del Mar 675·1965 Yachtsman's Cove (Daily) 10R37 La Tera nza. Fountain Valley 1142·2'61 $36.900 (Fri, Sat, Sun 12-5) 17592 Newark Circle, Jrvine 646-7171 ($34,750 Fee) (Sun 1·5) (5 Bedrooms) 8332 Sno\vbird . Huntington Be~ch 557-4130 540·2286 (Sun 1-5) (5 Bedrooms & Family Rm or Den) 1585 Oce.qn Bl vd .. Ralboa Peninsula · 642-5200 $1?5.000 · (Sun 1·5) · 1521 Antlqua (Baycresl) N.B. 642·8235 (Sat & $nn 1·5) **•46 l.inda Isle (Linda Isle) N.B. 642·8235 (Sat & Sun 1·5) **309 Evening Star (Dover Shores) N.H. 642·8235 (Sat & Sun 1-5) . 305 Linda Ave. lllnlboa Penin.) N.B. 644-24!!o $85.000 (Sat & Sun 1·5) (6 Bedrooms & Family Rm or Den) 1924 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) N.B. 646-1550 (Daily 10-5) CONDOMINIUMS ..fOR SALE (2 &-3 'Btdrooms) tt4401 W. Coast Hwy., N'pt !leach 67s.8820 · (Sat & Sun 10-Dusk) WATERFllONT LOTS FOlt SALE **1645 Bayside 1lr. Corona de! Mar 67&-1965 Yachtsman's Cove (Daily) • CORONA DEL MAR • APT. UNDER CONSTRUCTION SOUTH OF '!'HE HIGHWAY. Make the cha~nges you walit NOW. 3-Bedrooms; 2 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 ?f "4t«e-Slldd tfolUN4# ...,_,.,,. REALTORS 644·7270 2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. SPACIOUS BA YFiONT HOME On exclusive Harbor Island Road. with pier & slip for larg.e yacht. A luxurious home with over 4,000 sq. ft., including 5 bedrooms, 41> :baths, banquet size formal dining room, den, separate family room \\'ith bar & fireplace, large bayside terrace. $225,700 PLUSH OCEANFRONT APARTMENT In exclusive Tablerock, LaR;una Beach. 2 Bed- rooms, 2 baths; interesting stone fireplace, surf breaking uat your front door." A luxur- ious adult community .wjth pool, putting green & many recreational extras. $66,500 OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT 2,550 Sq. Ft., with ample parking, carpets, drapes, air-conditioning, central location. Only 30c per square foot per month. HARBOR COMPANY REALTORS Selling Real Estate In Newport Harbor _ "Since 1944'' ., ... ,. TREASURE MAP.' ...... ·----CHUCK CAROTHERS BEALESTATE·TREASURES. WE LOVE OUR OLD SEA·FARING TOWN Newport • the romantic ocean lifei the salt~ sea life ••.• where you breathe the very breath whales respire! Proud people with pampered hquses that possess a romantic & exotic story of its own! _ • Wishing all our Super Star friendly clients & Realtor friends a gusto holiday weekend! Call 646-5152 and we'll show you our select & multiple listings that'll delight you! , 1831 WESTCLIFF DR., N.B.,. • CALLME646·5152ANDSEE ·. ;. ' - General General BEST IN BLUFFS CHOICEST LOCATIONS JUST LISTED, on the Wldest. most pie· turesque flower greenbelt in the· Early Bluffs, this beautifully decorated 3 BR. 21> ba. END UNIT condo has many, many extras • elec. kitch., mirrored wet bar, paneling, bit· in closets in gar., delightfully priv. 40 fl. So. patio w/waterfall. A real buy at $55,500. ON BEAUTIFUL Vista Caudal, this Jge. 2 BR. 2 Ba., sep. din. rm. condo has bay view at the front & rollin~ greenbelt ot the back, Only $45,950. For app't. to see, call 644.(1134, anytime. HELEN B. DOWD REALTOR Cffneral "A WONDERFUL OPEN Fiii/SAT. 1-4 .!!!!!!!!!!"!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!191!!!"!"lG~a"na"r"a~I !!!!!!!!!!"!!!"!!!!'! SIGHT" Ponlnsulo PoMI Greets you aa you enter this 2157 E, Oce1n Blvd. :::::::::::::::. ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;111 gracious home with a dra· 3. BR., ,2 .• ba ... Be~f,. •t¢J?en • matic view from almost w/dining area, ~ • to Scarce 4 Bedroom c II . p k eviry room. All the proper lcively, secluded patio. Newly Colleqe Parli 0 ege ar ;i;:::',\:.".";'.:·. ~!~~ ~~:.:pec1 a ~ecor- • , • but we just got one, and 4 Bedroom, 2 bath corner lot room make this the one and it's a bute. This exlfemely 'home w/air--cond., covered only of its kind on the mar- popular ml;113cl bas 2 pa.tiol, patio, separate play Yard It lret today. Why hesitate and 4 bedrooms, separate laWI· wall·to-waU thick shag crptg. Jose the one opportunity to dry room, brick fireplace, 2 Drive by 23lT Rutgei'I Dr., live tn splendor tor only upgraded b8.ths and bit dbl Call to tee inaldt. $79,900, can 61J.8S50 tor ap- associ ated ORQKFRS-PE~tTORS ?('2~ VI 8t'lb"ti 671·J6bl CHINA COVE, Corona del Mar •.. just a stone's throw to the · beach.~ . yet it's quieter than a loser's locker room. 2·Sty. vie·w home. 3 BR .. 3 bath"s': complefe with elevator from garage to top floor. Loads of storage a oversized 2 car· garage. $98,000 Realtor 224 w. Coast """'Y 548-5521 Newport BeBJ::h Eve. 56-5643 ·vA TERMS Sparkling 4 bedroom, famllY l'tlOm, 10' x 18' screened aluminum. lanai. fireplace, . full builtina including di.ab- . wuber, new Sun vinyl fl001' in. kit ~ fwnily rm - Ottered with FHA or m down VA terms of course. Call 540--1151 IOpen Eves.) CAMEO HIGHLANDS This elegant home-with 3 BR., dining rm. & study has been completely upgraded thru· out. Everything from the expen,sive chan- deliers to the marble frplc., floodlights, spec· ial security locks & elec .. garage door opener, suggests quality. Price reduced for quick sale. Now $73,500. ~, ~,.. HERITAGE Convenient parking-easy to be . . REALTORS 675-3000·, .... ~~ ........ , a "DROP·IN" at Bay & Beach Realty General RAZOR SHARP Cozy and loaded with charm.. Fireplaces in family roQm and living room, Vets no down, non vets $2,"000, down. See it now! General , BEAUTIFUL l)AYFRONT HOME #ll Linda Isle; 5 l!r •. 4.\i J!a. Inc maid's qUal'tef'a_ BeaUtf.. fully fum'd. ·Dock tor Jatge !>Oat $189,500. Owner 613-7743 OPEN SAT ! SUN l -5 · BLUFFS FINEST . * f,IESA VERDE * Light and bright end Unit or:i quiet greenbelt, Ptofe.ssion· Wiii trade. 3 BR., 2 baths. ally decorated in exquisite Scrttned pafio, BBQ. Cor- taste with custom double ner·"10t. $32,500 -All tenli.s. drapes -and quality deep BALBOA BAY PROP. · pile carpeting throughout. * 642·7491 * Three large bedrooms, ele· 1--~----=-- gant formal dining room; $TEI'$ TO BEACH ;~ ::eth:~ ~: ~ =: 3 Bil ~. ~ntly decor, t · 1 ~i:A ~ near new carp. Open beam • COATS · " .i;:pecia -.,.,..,.......,, cells; Wv patio. $33,900. " c. F. Colesworthy CAY-WOOD REAL TY WALLACE & Co. Realtors . * 541-1290 * • . REAJ. TORS· Ea.iblull Offke 640-0020 ===---,.-~- Open Evenings ' BaY,side Ofiice 675-49.10 OWNER must sell. 4 • 9624454 • WATERFRONT i,edromns. 2 baths, entry BALBOA ISLAND Beautifu1 custom remodeled home steps away to beach & bay. 1,8(11) sq. 1t. of lux~ on oversized R-2 · lot. 3 bedrQoms, den + 3 baths. Call for 'appOintment. ,Realtors. ~TIU ~ WestcliU Drive 0..., 'ill 9 PM ROSE C01TAGE 2 BR. home near Newport Heights, Large kit. w /brkfst. rm." $22,900. POOL NEWPORT BEACH Ideal home In prime Harbor Highi8nds. 4 spacious BR. tam. nn.. 2~ -be.. Kitchen 'blins, cptldrpa & •• -. b&l, natural brick tittplace, . $95,500 be'"Hlul cabinet, work thruout; custom features. 3 Bedrrionis (couJd be four) real pride bf ownership, new hi ml$. how;e with one bed· shag , carpeting, park like room cottage in front on the """ channel. Cottage rents for yard, $29,900. Bric. ·544)...l,"" $300 month. New dock ac· lJTILE RANCH cominodal.es boat op· to 39' • /3 acre, zoned Jt..2 cute lit· ·Great patlOs with each house tie house, country setting. tor water side· living. Call old . fas~ioned tront pofc~ 646-n11. ~ all Ior $21,950'.. Take a look. r:·-, THE REAL '{. EST~TERS 7 • May we sell your property? Buyers waiting kif. ri!stdi!hce &: income property, New· port, Balboa or Corona del Mar. Plea11e Call Rena Cobb CORBIN;.MARTIN REAL TORS 644-7662 ·Red· Carpet '_Realtora '~ Back Bay <NORN BAY ·HOME 4 Bil, FR. 2\i Ba. DbL frPlc., wet . bat·Span. HIE' Enlfy " Din. l\m.-Auto. Sprinkler Le. cement pa.tio area. Cul«-s&.c. One owner -W-J.9ri0: 2l92 Bay Farm Pl;, Mesa Dr. to upper Bay Dr. Open house Fri., Sat., Sun., Mon l-5,"Binder rum. !;16.-1150. VIEW of hills and UCI. 2 Story, beamed ceiling -4 Br -~ Rm, frplc, ""lcf- tow lax-138,900. -· lng htd. poo1. 144,000. T1UPL . ..v CALL ,a '46'2414 . l:A 'Balbo!! lll•nd garage. Terrific tree lined $32;950 poinbnent. street close , to all schools and major 'shopping. Price right at $31,000 with FHA · and VA tcnns nvallable. ~ ~~ ' Verynlce38R,284°"""'1 "'LISTEN TO THI!" ' --CIC. -· ·un;r-+··:i:2·BR tB.\. llo04 · --·-· TREES . •••LTY location. . •. Call 546--5880 (Open Eves.) ·-¥t-' HERITAGE REALTORS Newport Loll of them alJ a1oog .the "'" "'"'"' Pu1 '0tt1.. . $51,5QO. . . 0 THE REAL "'\.. EST/\TERS Sulisbury I(,..,, I ! y •t street llugii eac1c1 tald:for REDUCTIO"N .1#2 ., :;:i1..!renl °i;,:,-1-:::'wd! That's right, Wscustom )lull! RoY •mcCord~ RHltor FINE-FAMILY HOMll! Fiirviow Add TL-.Numben ~-•M 950 eau • Bedroom home bu Jost lll4 NeWPGrt Blvd-. CM. 2-Story,. chaimlng 3 Bil. 1" •nw '"'11Jl& Mesa., _,., . .. · .. ··-· '541-772t den hOm.e' With ftp.le., din. 646-1111 4 minutes to the freeways. 6'6-055,51 Evenings 545-5887. been reduced for the second ., ~ int nn., 2 baths; ~ (anytime) 4 minutes to OCC. 9. mlnutet time, Now only $52,995 I: __ kitchen. Delightful, tm to the ocean. 5 nunutes to thls owner wants to move! PRIME 8AYFRONT shadfi:flargc patio, ideal t:,r :'!!!!!!!"!!!"!!!!!!!"!!!"!!!"!!!!!!!O !i!!i!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!/ major shopping, 0 minutes This Newport Beach bnme I! · · xln General to ht.&ge pool in the back includes a family room, am. 1DUPL ~l · ent~. An t buy -1 ~:;;:;;;;;:::;;:;;;:;;:;;;:;;:;;:=:=:=;;;;;;;;":::;;--;;;·;;;;;;;::;;;,_;::;;;~I yard. That'• rlab! -144,950 · ing room I< a sparldlng h••t· ~l~·Ball>o< P~-loc. · $59,500_,:--_.~urry! • •or beau·---CUSTOM 11om.1;::;::=""'=:::::;;;===.;i ~ • filtered~· njua 'nuinv Near· Barbor-entrance. Ter-.... . . I j · " w~ UL • •--" 1 ~ • ~~· .,._ ·rifle VJ.wt PrtV.t•·-' · .l.-ON A LOT •I ' ... itUl~·tac att<el In Ne'fl· tiioae -ys l\OOlftl < mon> features. Cati 646-117,L b«ch. P ier pennltted. Rar<r S.l!"J"ltt hd:n .. ;. 2-llO!y,I a . n. ....... ., •• , ... et 1to ...... n. c:~ , •• fl'f'· IM Gii do tW lffffhl"t Alld ye• co111..t .__,.., Ulltll Gii lhoWI Ytl• .... tt..."' waot-_ ..,,, .... ,.. ...;...r" !""'! ·1 1 11-.,fl port Beach! Three large bedrooms plu. opprirt"unit)r for home·• · -Ba, 2.i.:.-to:ach. Xlnt ~ Wnlly roomN · floorearpein thted conie toot 1198,5'19:--·. : • & loc'i .-to ""Y " ~ _ .. . a..!""* 646-Tlll IMS WNleUI! Drive 0ot>i 'tit 9 PM throoghout. flW ' .ffi<eph!JJe Webb, Ru! ... · ho!acn. l!ald to beat ¥ ldtch.n" dtnlng ....._.plus --~~==.....,--· ., ... ~··-.Rool Eilili"Co. · l8S;lm . .....,.. J, new pa.int inside. On quiet ue1.... 1 ' cul-dNaC only 2 mtt11111'1 * I UNlTS °* 700 E.. llol-Blvd., ~~ • waUd.ng dlata.nce to IChools. Xlnt lnWMmen~l • 6'T.Wlto. ' Evtt...-1~ only 127,500 -ALL tetml. Owner ww help fi.....,. BAYFRO""' . Call 1142-=. SPARKLING·POOL N L • ·· -• Siilis bury i;,,,1•, THE REAL ESTATERS ,_ ; . ~ ·~ .,,. ~-""~ • "'-;•ri ,1 POOL-PRIVATE YARD e 31"1'2 ba, tam rm w/tunk· "' bv, Wf!tt.clltt area '39,900: ·c.n ·m M . 3 BR. 2.ll;ith ~ _ Clwnili11f 3 Br, l1J«<C..OO. " SJ$ llJAAINE AVE. Space for tmt or ..... .,. Foo~ plrr A allp -t1l1?~ :· BAU!OA ISLAND --FORTIN, i!S4JJJ:OR ' TEil. mmEl\T --~ . • C;A1 L 67Ullt -~ Ev<I. 3411 V1o Lido 115-«iiO . ..,, • " ' . "' . ' 'I l I \ ·~ ' ' :1 ., ~ " ' ' ': !' " • ~ ,. " I 11 ) l • " :1 1· ' J J, .. •. ' ' ' ' I , .. ' : I ' " ' -. - FrldlJ', ~ U..1972 lo lboo ltl•ftd 2 LOTS ~ houM ·on one. S Bay Front. Ilocb. Llttlo 1---------Island, l8R w/ba. Ma.ids Rm. U v Rm £.. W!'I bar up1ta.in:. ~,<m, By appt. Ownl!r. 61l-4045. 8.tlbo.t Ptnln1ul.t BEACH HOME Sparkling 1-BR. & fam. rm . + big BR. & bil. Over dbl. rar. Boar 8P8 Cf . $6.l,950, -GEMMl-- 1610 \V. Coa11t Hwy., N.B. REALTORS ~ + ELEGANT BA YFRONT • Refurb\thPd 1971. P11.noramic vil!w. New pier. 8 BR. 5 Ba. Courtyard f"Mtry, $195,(01. 'Marsha.II Realty 675-4600 * BAVFRONT * REDUCED $15.000 YOUR CHOICE 3 BR, 2 BA or 4 BR, 2 BA. EAch quiet rts, arr.a yet clnse to 1Chools, churches .t- shopptn1, incl 5o, Coa!lt Plaza. NO OWN VA- SMALL OWN FHA Newport ti F1lrvlew 646-1111 (anytime) f 5 BR., 4 B1th1. PiPr!S\ip Marshall Rf'sfty 67~ GRANDPA'S HIDEAWAY Fathl!!r-in-Jaw units, IMoth~­ in-Jaw's unit with wet bar) a.ddl'd up and away from basic 4 bf"droom 2 bath home.. Modem builtin kit· chen, family room And df"tp 1haa: crptg, Loads oJ brick work, hUJf" rover,.d palio and ov~r~ized Joi with room for bo111 &. trailer 1torage. FanlR~tic value at $42,950. CALL 545-8424 !Open pvea.) SOUTH COAST REALTORS. Bay1hor11 J BR., 2 B11., din rm. cusl. ~. crpt/1huttrn a: drps. Elec kit Lllw Lse. hold. 675-0840. Capistrano Beach i \ FOR ule by ownl'r, 2 nPw custom hom,.~. 3 BR, 2 BA, Uv nn, din & f11m rm. Bltns, frplc, shag cp1s1drpJ11, p11.tio * HANDYMAN SPECIAL * • -1111.bs & walks. lnr rl yr!. 1 f S34.000., terms, <"all 496-1629. • • DELUXE 2 Br, bltin kit, , If frplt', t'ptg/drps, close to Co11ta MPsa ba.rgain -for you tixeruppers -5 Stpar· ate J BR hlleR on 300" lot nr. shop!t & schls, CwTent renlll $125-$135 mo. Monry maker fnr buyer who isn't afraid of work. ... l!.'\lerything. Alpine Real ' .. Esta1e 493-2332, e v e 1 496-a.593. ~ ACRE, 4 BR. 2 BA. 23X1 gq. ft., cpts, bl!ra, trplc, 11r. $39.500. 26812 Calle Monlrrty, Owner, TI4 : ~. Coron11 del Mir FOUR STAR REALTY • * 83.S-442'l .. * $1,000. DOWN Fant&.stic Eastside 4 hf'd· room in prime !MaUon, For· ma! dining, huge country SI SENIOR•. ''"' lcil<heo, ... ~.d ru:e-J)11lf'e, 2 barJ il heavy shake Y!'!I, sir, you will love !hi'!. roof. Now vacant -hf>'!.! beollufiful 4 bfflronm home hurry -$~1.500. CALL don,. AO authenrir111ly In the 5'15-R424 (Open f:Vf'!I.) SOUTH flavor or old Sp11in. A'!. sonn COAST REAL1'0RS. u you enter through the 1-C:.:-""'----'=""-'--''--- ma.ss1ve double cloor11 you * MODEL HOME * will 3!art drramin,; about Price rr.ducM lo $46,950. for )'out "casa." Call !iTh-7225. quick a:ale ot last home in COLWELL PROPERTIES. INC REA LTOR S VIEW HOME Country Club Manor Beautifu1 view of Santa Ana Country Club. Crpts, drpl'I, Jndscpd. block wall. 6% in- ll!rTSI. ~n hou~ Sat. & SUn. 125-~ MaJ11tl!M: Circle. Ph: 540--5558 or 644-8616. 630 CMlf'O Highland.I! Dr., 3 MESA V!!rrle -3 Br· 2 Ba & Br., fam. rm., brtakfaJlll Fam. Nl!ar park. sch!ll, Mok, J)An(']M dtn W/wel 1 hop p I nf. Newl y bar. 2 ha . Nicely lndscpd. ftldtterated &: shag crptdl!. Eost Bluff HuntlngMn- BLUFFS PL~ $30,200 LARWIN'S DOU. liOUSE -2 BR., 8p\U l•v.1. '°" ""''· .,...""'"· BEST IUYS showplace! Nf!wly redl!'COr. SECLUDED HOME ON thruout. Lowl!'at mainttn· A FARM S IZE LOT anc:f! dues A leasehold. Ex-ON A TREE LINED stREET cluslve ~·Ith -JN A QUJET NBRHOOD - .-:f-t,,.. Ah·''•"'il or A 3 ~m ~·Ith . ~· 1 It' a mo1t new .,.1r car-C: f ~~\ !?ff petlng, nttw f'ntry A kitch urs j. ,: di• aod maoy mo,. xlt ... l but best ol all If you want a t' •;. rea ly REALLY bir lot -1hi11 is H! ~mendnu! l&ndllcaplng $30,990! SPANISH Supi!!r &harp home on etiuntr)' qultt cul-de-sttc 1treet 4 bl!droomll, 2 baths. lamlly room wil.h rlrepla<"e, plush dttp pile carpet\ni;. drapes deluxe builtin k 11 c. he n, dlshwa1htr. Pat i o, Sprinklers. \\'11lk lo all lll"hool". """r lhOWlna: loo! Bric 842-6691. TARBELL 2414 Villa dl!I Orn and an alley with a boat Newporl Bl!ac-h iatt-. Hurry 10 see it. Only 1611\ Bttach Blvd., 644-U33 ANYTIME $27,500. al larwin. Hunllngton Beach ·~~.,. ~~;.:"'",::t'.,:; Lustlous Executive Special Be.au!. lndscpd. $.53,500. By IMMACULATE 4 BEDROOM for lhlll su11~rb 3 bedmnm o 234 home ne s "" a mong trtt11 wner. 644-1. 'J'.OWNHOUSE, thick l!xpl!n· and shn:l b8. SpMklif\J: qullli· Fountain Valley Sl\'f! shag .. carpet thruout. ty tor fine entertaintn;. formal d1n1n1 room, 2% Lush dttp pil f! carpl!ling $24,500 baths anri four BIG 'oed· wllh custom ma I c. hi n I 4 BEDRM + rooms. Owner transferTt'd drape_s, all p\ectric kitchen • -we've 101 a "SeU ii now·• with a.II the trimming!!, fan· POOL! price of $35,500. CAll llUWin laslic litt'plat'e . Whal a 2 bath!', lllm ily room v.·ith quic-k 10 see thiR, showplace for $39,500! Seller I "I S di h f . I * i.• prepared for CI 11nd !''HA e ega ·we s iri!!p a~e, BIG FAMILIES u~ br1rk hi!!ar1h, rich lt>rml'I, now'11 the time. Call ~'000 paneling, Cl'f'at for WAN~ TO ~EAR A \\IHO_P; e-nterta i nin~. bu l!l-in klt-~ER. How bout a. whopp1n . big 3 bedroom family room chen, d111w11Mer. New 1har "~'--horn ,. .. 2JM Realtors 545-046."i O wALl<LR & ll I c tin'" Bkr 842-2561 ·~nuWC8l!I! e . """sq. ho Bl d Ad arpr. ,.. ' · ft! Don't tell the kids to "R"ef 2790 Har r v · al ama TARBELL Magnolia at Talbert, F'ountaln Valley $28,900 4 BEDROOMS lnRt?" in this homf', it'll take Open EvP!I.. you a. week to find them. Sloe SPANISH HAC I ENDA thia home today! Covered 1600 SQ FT patio, 3 car garage, llf!XY 4 BR-$24,000. Roman bath In thl! mutl!r Lits or custnm f~aturr!I. ln- suitf' lf'!d more. Priced right eluding FORMAL DINING at $42,500. at larwin, ROOM, fireplacf", crpts & * drps,. new p11int thruout, r~ No doy,•n. G.T. terms. lovely NEED A 2 BEDROOM modelffi kitchen, l car ,iU- la.rge family home with WITH NO q:e and OVl!~iztd SO' x l!!lf'gant firt>place de I u x e MAINTENANCE? 190' tor, close to e~rylhing. builtin kitchen, dishwasher, BACHELORS PUSSY CATS SUbmlt )'OW' terms, Call rich wood paneling. Wired OR SMAu.' FAMILY -847-1221, for stl!reo. PAtio. Prime rome !11.!I in love with !his location. Bkr. 962-1.173. 2 bedroom 2 bath toy,•nhous'.. 11'!1. "Move in" t'lean and only S minutf'!! from the TARBELL hearh and all activitieJll. 1TI41 Bl'a.t'h Blvd., H.B. i8884 Bi-ookhursl, $1,000. lf'S!I 'than "Nl!w" POOL HOME! Fountain Valley C'OSI. S27,950. at Jarwin, BY.OWNER,< BR., 1% BA .... ~4-05 Anyfim• · $27,,40~ t•m. <m. •he• '"''·· 1soo * SPECIALS * No Down SQ. ft. $31 ,500. 963-2146 or $24,950. ALL TERMS, J BR, lf!nns. Load11 ot decking, <2131 37!Hi7Zl. 2 Ba, like new apts, dl'J)!, bf'autiful i;wim pool, with BY Owner-Sharp J bdr. 2 ha, d ~ h w 11 hr, w11.tU9Clftl!ner. Rlidf!, pool equipment Ir fam nn, formal din nn. Sf'Uers booa::ht larger home vacuum. All I! le ctr I c. com park & 3 pools, aiisume -rush! "Awarrl" built-in kitchf!n. 6~ GI. $32.500 968--9477. full dining room. King sizt'd GREEN Brook Home, F.V. 4 .( BEORM CONDO. Good bedrooms, Brk, 846-0604. Bdrm., 2 Ba .. family and Joan as..~mption. Paymts dining room. Single 1;tory. less than rent. Gd etind. By owner. 96&-0244. Crpt.s, drps, &: refrig. Small dn, w/2nd . Ava il 6·1. 5 Hr le 3 ba. ~leafed pool. __ TARBELL :..... comer lot. LDvrly ocean 12 x 2f aluminum rm off vit"ws from M'Vl!ral tmll. A bck -PlayhouR In back Ught -': &.iry homP. w '1ot1 of yard. By Owntr. 5t6-3451 5824 W. E dinger, Huntington Beach f'rple In Mastl'r B · R • FOUR. SEASONS BEAt.rrY. $42.<m. 968-236."i Rf! 6 pm. 4 BR, • BA , lg fam rm w/ 4 Br+ Lr g Bonus Room fpl, form! din or den, As-$27, 900 , Convt:nil!nt . lo Fwys, lrg lot. au me VA loan, Submit cuh Lovely 3 BR, 2 BA. HaR rov d Will FllA. $.35.000 847-3957 down, Near Beach. Quick patio & ft>ncd yd w/xtra lrg glAM . priv11t'" btacht:s. lm ORlOLE OR., MESA Askinf $65,!0l · By Owner vtR.fit. NEW j Bl'., dinlnr yt 675-5959 > rm., famlly nn., 2 bath.I, Huntington Beach poss. CAU. 847-8507 kitch I: fan1 nn. Rl!al fine nbrhood nr schl11 A lrg shop- ping &rf!a. Min, $1,400. dn. Pymlll $2.15. Cover~ all. .. • ..., SHORECLIFFS dbl ~If clean ..,ven, upgrad----------. ,..-.;.A ""t~~+-a ' Love~ ga.rden l"nlry on th is M crpts, r.hakf" root. Owner- ru!tic canyon & OCl"l!.n view brokl!r. ~70;)1. ho~. 2 BR., den. 2 b11.thll, 4 BR & POOL-By Owner llhakt:. bPams·k u~M hrick. Sparkling rlt>an. ReAdy ti'> ~'· S@riou!I sl"llrr ju.sf rf'fluctd · 10~ d mov,. m! SJJ,900, ,,, n. pricf' Sl0.500. Apn't. only. 1395 Shannon Ln . HAlecrl!SI. in Your own pool compll!!!e 4 BDRM. -$24,950- HEAVY SHAKE ROOF COOL IT If ill.i~e Re .ii Est1 le 531·5110 I ::::1 531·51H Low, Low Down Univer1ity Reelty OPf'n 12-5. Info. s-ut-2750, land~ape artisl'1 dreAm v.'1th waterfall. Thill 3 BM!- . 3001 E. Csl. Hwy. fiT.l-6510 come truf', tref"R, r olorful room cwitomlzM home ff'A· Minimum down n1oves you B'' Ownl'!r -Lclvt"ly 3 BR, OPEN DAILY 1-S-fpl., cot lnt, rm for boat. shrub!! and no~·ers. 2 turf'll knotty pint'! bonus into this large h1.milY nn ••1 5 CHUBASCO I · puJlman blllh!I. 0 e I u x e room. It •·oo·1 l••t at "'.950. homl!. J Bdrms. 2 bllths. Full .,,, . n ·1nf" Trrr. cRmpl'r 2835 PortolA Dr. " ...... 4 BR., fam ily rm. plus f'Xll'll 546-l03l. builtin kitchen applianc'ell, GI Tenn!!. pric-1! only $28,500. Call now, · , • h d dishwuher. Huge living ZERO $$ DOWN it won't 111.sf ~ room tn garage. ~f'. t . MESA VERDE. well kept < . I ! R I VA r $69500 room with nip r l nrsso total t'losing cog\11 to REAL ESTATE FAI 1 ~~: Pro'"'· 1 · .·~s br .. 2 ba .. fm rm. Le yd &: fittpl11.ceS full dini.n&' room Vet on !•-• 3 bedroom. ·{714 ) 536-2551 ..,.,_~nu:: pert es '" 726 patio. Lush cpts/drps & -.. Pofo. prlnklen. Bk r • Wall lo wall <arpel.• eod REPOSS·ESSIONS IRVINE Te.mice;rrat>ioosly more! $48.950 0 w n r , 962-8865 drapes. Excellent ne1ghbor-dl!coratt'd lamily horrn!'. ~ 557-8794. Br. 21 2 Ba . 2 frplc, plltio-lrg 3 BR v d hood. Payments leas than For information and location •. yard. $;,5()/mo. Owner , 11• b11., nu cpts. T))!i, rl!nt. of these FHA le VA homes, + • 6T.>-n12. lg rov. patio, good W-sidf' SKY BLUE WATERS contar.t - 1-. loc-. Nr. All l!Chools. $26,TJO. H&milton & Brookhunt, and a ~at 3 Bedrooms, 1% KASABIAN ;1 BY Ov.·nPr. 2 BR, 2 Ba. 2 2207 RalPigh. 0 w n er Huntington Bch. bath home, C~n all be }'Ours Real Estate 147-9604 ~. story. OldPr homr. p_., blk 548-9882. Prine only. CLOSE . TO. BEACH for $27,950. 11 s really a fan- -----. ---- Irvine PLUSH PLUS ll THE lilou&I! 'rnE park 111E prtme loc11. t Ion overlooking fu!Un! ttgional park. 2400 ,q, ft, ol luxurlous living\ Lime ~n ah&J:, floa.tln1 11~\rwAy In m-tr. aultf!; beautiful \'i.la tw.ry win- dow. Immaculate, movl!-in mnd. 4 BR .. 21,J M'1., fam~ ly rm. Come & tel! It today. '"/l11li"l il'!ld. ---,'I li·11ll11r '"SINCE 1946" lst Western BarUc Blrla:. Univers11Y Park, lrviM D1y1 552:-7000 N ights PIGGY BANK SPECIAL Ynu m11y 11lrl'11.dy h11ve enough to buy this 3 bdrm., ~ bll. rhanner. Only 1 \i yrs old k pri<"td at Sl l ,500. Cati us for the amoun! of c uh net'Cled to make this youn! ired hill REALTY Univ. Park Centl'r, lrvil"ll! Call Anytime, 833-0R20 Office houl'!I 8 AM to II Pf\{ L1guna Beech BLUEBIRD CANYON Little Beauty in a park ut- ling, ocf'an vu :from deck, 2 BR., ]12 baths, S"•f!diRh frplc.; plan1 for l"xpansion. Lgr, lo!. Rml!.ll prit'e, $.14 ,500 LIVE IN STYLE GROW !N VALUE 3 RR. Rf'rluded, ('USlOm home in old tree area, fanla!l.tic Catalina aunset & l)('ean views, ·1.:orner lrplc., ma~- 1lve beamJ11 &. indirect light- ing in 1111 room~. uniqu,. fountain filll'I the balh luh, formal dining, polishf'd hdwd.. nrs., labor-saving kilch., snack har, laundry. Laguna's he111 buy -tlf!Wer. $.1.5 . 000 . DUPLEX NN.r Paradi5t Cove Beach in So. Laguna. 1 BR. ea<"h, trplc.; ocean vif"1o1'. dbl, x11.r· age, Lge. Jenced yard. $310 Mn. income. S39,950. H illie McCormack Realtor 714: 494-7SS1 EMERALD BAY Outstanding View home In an 11.rea with private beach pools and ~ courts. Beautifully dl"C'Orated, 2 l?e'd· room, l bath homf! v.•ilh 1unken living room and high beamed· t"e!ling!I. Two firP· pl11.ces, ont-in maJ11ter bed· room and on~ in living room. Dining room with wrought iron railing overkioks Jiving room anrl view, All in Im· pe('('abl,. condition. A MUST SEE! $74.500. Jame11 Lomas Real E11ate. 385 North Coast Blvd. 494-1008, ARk for Donna Mnndnr, POOL & VIEW SeauL l bdnn. bomP, high on a corMr lot, which give1 you a view of l>Cfan "-hill!!, with romplete p r iv a c y around your pool. l.ge. lormal dining &: family nnll, with bl-am ceil's, An 1>X<"eptlon11l piere of pro- perty, pri~rl a! $65,000. • 4~2P.OO * BEACH HOUSE $2',500 Qualnt born• area: clo~ In, &.11.m 10f!'i.1'1., fir. to ceil. trplc., pictuni wlnd<lw, rt'f., washtr. 1 Br w/bafh, f\.f!SSJON REALTY 494-0711 BY OWNER -3 Br, 2 BA. vil!W Joi, former model homf', turn k a p'p t c-. •\•a!labll!. $32.500. 49H.t32, A30-5976 DUPLEX, 2 BR .. 1 BA , aumm. 11:ar. 169.500. R.-au•. vif'w, No.. end. 494-4!l0$. No Bia. BY OWNER -3 Br, 2 Ba, \'if!w lot, former mndel home. furn '1 a p p lr-, avaU1ble. $32.XKI. 49.>-4332, ~5976. •Prestige: 4 BM room :\1nclf'I •Sha1. Dra.JM'S, F\rPpllll'f' +Unique Deck & Patin Area •Cu!l'IQm 'ff'RtUrf'!I.; $..\'i,0()0 OwnPr; 24211 IA Hrrmo111l L ido Isle NEW LISTING OPEN SUN !-S 105 VIA NICE Ch11.rming 2·llf)' .. 4 Rl1. 2 hfl. home w 'gardf'n-lypl" fllll!o. Dt-rorate to suit YGUf"!ll"lf. $6."i.000. Wolkor Rulty US-5200 :t.1.16 Vi11 Lido, N'pr BPar h BAY VIEW l..Ati:e double lot, Vi& Lldn Nord & Gf'noa. Room tor pool In hu11:e pt1 Hri. 2 BR. + conv. den, rtin. rm. 3 car g11r11gr, $99.500. -lo™Djra. INOLCOll 3416 Vi11 Lido 675-4562 l BR + ~am. " din nnit 45' Lot, 11tret-t to street $69,500 75 J."I. Jot, !gr . hom,., Strl"el to strePI ............ S90,000 LIDO REAL TV 3377 Via Ll1to. N.B. 673-7300 BA \'F'RONT HOME Pif'r & Slip $149.~JOO KEN BRITTINGHA~t REALTOR 675-0123 OWNER.-Cu~tom 3 BR. J BA, 2 frplc, form rlin. J 14 Via M,.ntone. STI ,500. 67S-4i!MR Mes• Verd• t.fESA VERDE VALUF.: Spa.cioua Tlf'W 4-bl"dmom, .1- barh exet'utive 2 . 1 1 o r y homt . J..il\f'(! ~·ilh e.:d rA1. 1-·ormal living room with Jireplact . For mal <l ining roon1. Breakfast nook. Country kl1chen with large famtly room. F o u r I b bel:iroom & third bath kleally localed for u1e 1111 maid's quartrrs llr guest room. Ulilily room with 'A'a11her I dryer h o o k u p . Sprinkler11, block wall fen- cing, luxuriou• t'ar"pl'fin1t &. drape!!, d ishwasher. $38,500. Call 546-3335. 5 'BR Tri-tevel, pool 1i?f' cor- ne.r lot. $58,500, Princ ip11.!11 nnty. Owner. M6--0907 M l11lon Viejo ELDORADO 2 BR. 11/i BA , Jux. cpl1, cwit. drps. Pvt, 'A'ell-lndl'tcpd. Jnw mnln('.'f', covrd patio & garden w11lk, paved .s.i.deyard Jor boat or campr.r. $29.500. As51.1m1.blf! 6% '"/(\ Joan. 0wf!f'r. 837-11&1. 4 BR, 2 BA, fam nn. Jndry rm., v il!V.', Rhag cpl, $38,900. Prin. only. 837-3&36. Newport Beach FREE RENT FOR I VEAR On all Lf'v111 dlsplAy mndeU. 1000 Villege H ouse (Sl·lno5.5l , akirtinc. air ron· rl111oning. v.•ood dfc.ks. Wai $1 7.100. Nnw $14,500. 1200 VIiiage Houu (~.1~2 1 . 3 1o1'00d deC'k1, 1kirti11i . \\'u $18,900. Now $1:1.500. C'ontrn1 pt1 Communi11r11 24002 Rlrl.ite Roo!P Drive On t.!ouH'ln P11 rkw11.y, •rlj•«nt to l.ei11urf' \\'orl1I) ~nii; Hill!t 11.'IO-TMO NE\li model, 20x51 V1C'f'roy 2 Rr., 2 h11., r lll'J'll"I thro(1g~u1. l".6SO Cnnr.-n1po Comn111n1 l1r.o.; 2400'1 Rirlgf" Rout,. Dru ·,. IOn ,\1nultnn PArk\\111), adJaCf>nt 111 IA"1si.1re \\'nrlt! I Lllguna Hill!' lll)...7900 VACATION l\l(lh1lf' homt-1n L i rio \V111erf r nn t Pll rk-SIPl"fll! 4, ~rr1l1C'P Sl!t:iCI. 673-31117. 19n SllDW Sl'OPPER r 1nta Rlic Rtlyt l Monarch. Si-r It tn b.-lievf" It. 24x6t Pstl() kt!Chf'n, den I: -.~I b11r. r.ont..mJ)I} Communltlnt 24002 Ridgr Root'" Ilrlve tOn ~tnullon r a rlt'w11.y. adj11C'l'nt to ILiSUT'" World1 LAglttlR Hlll11 R-10-7900 F'OR 1&le or trat!e -&y1ir!f! Vlll11JC1" No. il, 2 hath.I!, rarpor1. privR!" p at j o , lirrpl1H't', 2 lll"IOl!I. & 2 rlubhll!"!i, hnAt 11l1pR, Pti. ~'i..lll ·'--~--'10 ]Al\N'I'. ».oc 44. Ariul1 P;1rk 6-12-1AA4 ____ , 2-l"M "'hilltf'r, 2 Rr .. 2 bfl & la m, rm. Sk1rhnio:: ~ 11wn- UlJ:'t1. Sl't up in Nf'w Laguns Hillll A.fl.ult pA.rk. \\'as Sil.DI. Nov.· Sl 1.!fiO. ("nnlf'm pn Cnmmunllir~ U002 Ridi;:<' Rnu le Dr1v 10n Moulton Parkw111y. adja{'fnt l(l l.1"1.•\trf' Wnrlt!) IAR"Una lli!I ~ ll.10-7000 20 x ~l 2BR mohlll" homr !If'! !~~~~~~~~~~~' up 1 hlk tron1 beAt'h. $699:'1. "";_.,,.., I 11-1 .... ,for Siie -~ ;;;-;;;;"';;Uo;;;;~'~' J;!e~tl Newport Heights Newpor t Be.tch Ocean Vi&w From All Angles Tirl"rl nf looking a r nr it::hbnr'1 1o1•all~~ Ca111 ynur t-ye.~ fin lllf' !iparkllng hlue Pacific frnm 11ny \.\'indow of lh15 <"U.~!om Trmple II i 11 s ma n~ion. \\'.ll('h the l!u n SI"! bl'hinr1 C11tali na Island. Huy 11. lelf'soopr.. \Yords can·r rtr~rrihf! the beauty, this 3 Of'droom h1111 ii 1111. Form11l rllninl{ mom. lu.•h t'l!.tp"ls 1111rl m111rhing ·drape.~. \\II" v.'ill trade anything you ha ve for rh \!1. .$60.000 castle . · Ynu will agree. Call, for ap- poinlmf'nl. 0 WALl<lll /1. lll Rf'allnrs 54;;.-0465 2790 Harbor Blvd . at Adams OJ'lf'n F.vt1. * OPEN SAT. 1-S * 2302 REDLANDS DR, l mm11r. J BR .. 2 ba1h1; family nn., hl1 ·ina., incl. llt'lf-l'leaning dhl. nvrn: 2 lrplr:o;, Sidr ga1 r lor hoal s1oragf', S~7.900. Walker Realty 67S-S200 J.T'.6 Vi11. l.1rlo, Npt Bt>!il'h ht TIME OFFERED On i•hoiee c-oriier lot in Ea1t- blufl. J BR. & family nn. Lusk homf'; l!Ome view nf Ol'tlln. (ireat ar~a for chil- drrn. S47.900. OPEN SUN. 1-5 :30 900 ALEPPO ijil: x•ll ·~ 3629 E. Coasr Hv.·y .. CdM * 67S-5930 * * H1rbor V iew Homes lmpre111ivl" 2-ifory Palprmo model w/Commandin&: Vil'w. 4 BR. 3 BA, FR, OR, Dra- matic 28. long Masft-r Suit,. w/priv11.te 1illing room. All Rldr Extras + Lux. &Ul>f'r- der.p wool erpl thruour : BY OWNER 3 BR. Spanish rh/\rmPr. lte- m fl d '" l 1. r! , r"1'1f'rora·ted. 8 f'aut. lor. S.'U;,000. 645-6193 riay11, 673-16&1 l!vts. ~e any· timt . 3 BR. Varant. R·2 room lo builrl. $29.900, Agenl. 67j....(1144 646-7414 LARGE II'!!, R -2 . redl!Cor1tM , nPW crpl. ~ br. $26,850. 325-!>.159 nr MR-6181 . Country Livin9 • PICK YOUR OWN ORANGES 4.h net 11rl'f'" in Rivtndde. Ll!vl!I ,,.•ith lrnnlllll:I" on f\l'O rle.dicatt'd m ad!!.. 512 Valen- ch1. nrAnJ:I" lrrl'~. Al ·l zonr. Av11llahl'" in nne p11.rrl'I nr ~·ill divlrlf'. r nrf'ri 111 $~.noo per a('re. For furth,.r lnfor- m11tion. plr11 ~e i:all GIPnn HA!l.lam w1t h Eckhoff & A11oc., Inc. ~l·l621; Eve,!Wknd11 Call Rlvf"niil1e . 6117-1155 40 ACRES Orange~. 80 llh&rf'11 walfl". .JUgh vil!w Jocalion near Jlunter Inrtu!'ltrl11.I Park, a mulli-mHHon $ df!velopmenl. Out of town ownf!r M)'I "Sell!" I wllJlt ACUon. LOok thill over & make "" otter. Boundaries -C:nlumbta, Michig1'n, M11rlhnrough & Gaxe Can11I ! EA.Ill ot Jowa Avl!. tn Rh•Pr!l.it11"1 , Biii Fai;R". RPa!tnr, 714: 611.'\.4740 80 ACRES, Nf'w Mexico, nr. n11.tionAl Jnrl"!ll. $61.25 PER ACRE. S49 Mo. 96R-0047. 214 ACRES Anl~OJ>I! Valley, only $~. dnwn. Owner mu.Ill sell . ~3086- Ap.trtment1 for ••I• 152 • • Triplex. MP!l!11 Verd•. Si3.fm. Lo rlnwn, rrwnef' wi1l carry 2nt1. 644-500.~ Commerciel Property 151 1' ~~3-~~7~2-l~~~ vie...,.· cB~Y~o"'w"N~E~R~.--"-,--'--B'cR.~2-Be-. 2100 SQ FT t111'ilic buy! Call 540-8500. CLEAN up_ this 4BR._ 21hB11 .. ,.1""-'--=-----'-----Fiun. Rm .. Frpl., 129,500 5 BR DI 2 SHERWeeD REALTY plus F'11m1ly rm. BP1ng J110ld 1. SUPER rluplf'x. Be11.utifully Lclv.· down. 5 4 9-O 26 6 ;, .. ~ .. 0 story 18964 Brookhursf.; F .V. by ow~r. $31.200. Ap-~ redone. Fron! unit-3 br, 2 494-~5. ..,~, ~ · praised 11t $.tl,000. Prin· Cu1tom de<>. rlrape!I., rolorful woven wood11 in kit. & much morf'! Lann Incl. $67,950. By Ov.•nt>r. fi44-6249 0pt'n Housl! 1 10 6 Daily. w~~~.Y'"'~~E .,~E!,~ BAYFRDNT, PIER First T ime Offerd" CMl.st Hwy, Comn11. di'!! Mar 3 Cnmmercial ~ duplex $95,ooo owe TD@7~% •-~I ,. -'-"'-'---------VACANT, 111..rg,. upgraded • • • • • • ci ple-!1 only. Aft 5 pm call ""· "+' • in rm, newly ~1ESA de! Mar, taRll!fully ho · I t r B B redecon:itl"d. Bn1nrl new 2 decontf!lt'.I. 4 BR. 2 BA, new me in x n area, eatur" aycrest eauty 642--2312 b 1 ·-•-k uni! ,, •• -~· FORMAL. DINING arl'.ll, 2. '-.... e, ... ·--··family -m'_G_O_v-·r--o-w_N_E_D_ r. ,..., uac · ~,,... lg fam rm, bltn bbq, air, L.-•"-hit fr h I '-""'·• .,...... '"" ..... u.a., lnll, tll paint n for entertaining I a r g P • J CANYON & ocean view. 3 br, S.14.500. S46-QJ69 and out. _plu!lh carpel, groups. 3 Bednns.. 2~ RepoS!@ssed homel'i. Low den, 2 bll, pool. $78,(XX). EASTSrDE. 4 BR, bit-ins, draPf'!I and t1replAce. 0~'111!r baths try way i n t 0 down. Government J>ll.YI I• ()pf'n houEe, Fri-Mon. 615 frplc, fam. rm. y A rd anxious -Submit your bl!au~fulf'n living r 0 0 m , c!O!ling COllt!'.. Call 968-4441. L Rockford Rd. 67>2200 w/b'f"Pll. Good atta. By ttrms. Call 847-1221. fireplace, hltns. sha.ke roof, * .Crest Realty FIX IT UP jlARBOR VIEW HILLS t.11sk ownt"r. $37.(Xl0675-6611 ~ nice l&rf!:e bar k yard (Ca:n-rw-11 4 Br., 2 &. tam PLUSH 3 BR, 2~ BA, lua:e $51.900 0\l'nPr has moved. OPEN Hou~ Set & Sun. .AG J nn. frpl<".. pool a lot. rec room, wet ba.r. Many CALL ANYTIME Fmnchic:an FountAln hom~. 0 I ,;y - Ov.'M'r S65 000 644-0289 -.... , •~J.:JV\ .,.,..1761 ,., -a or Evo. 67,1127 4 Br .. 3 Ba., 3 l'tl.r xar., lam e,U,11 I/ ' ' e:.:u .,?II . ...,..,......., • ......,.... • 17141 Beach Blvd., II B, -•,. r 1·1 C I d 4 Bdl'J'l1S., 21,\ baths plua dl!n &: library: 2 car gara.gl!! & view make this 3.000 IQ. ft. fAmily home a delight to JiVf' in. $47,CJOO, 1 rm. u 1 • rm. P ' rptl, REAL ESTATE • q· _c_._.,_._M_._ •• _____ MESA VERDE, " br. Betwti-BY owner I •• BI! Au t I f u I lndsep, sprinkling ?'ly!lle m. '. OWNER wants YoU ftt tiff iful Home. WeU kept. MU!'t Se1hury homE'. 4 BR. 2 BA, Financing avall S 4 6' 9 0 0. 1190 GlenMyre I·. anrt make o!Jer on t""" see! S48,950. O.....·ner :;;;7-8794 · ga~n kilt'hen 'A'/bltn!I, Owner. 847-ID\2. 494-!Mn ~9-03l6 . brlm1, coold ~ lhl"ft hM 2 HOUSES un level Jot , good covered pa.tio. cu11:t. cir11pes, NEAR &ach • Eleg11.n1 2 BEACH FRONT '.y,·/cptR, drpl!, bltn11. May nnt11IR. 5' minulf"s to bl!Ach beAul. laod~ping. $33.900.''°======----t BR, din Rm., crplJI, drapes, F11.bulou11 view, bl!!aut. hf-11.ch. ·". usume 6* VA In. $170 mo. or 0. C. Airport. 3l7 E. 31751 1-lopeto~·n Ln, H.B. $20,900! dsh/wsh. enc patio., lrg. 2 BR, 2 BA. gorgeous own- 1:~54~8-~7~27;;:<;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:==.i"';:"';::;· =======-:.;;:~;;;;:;::::;;;:;::::;;;:;:=== SWIM POOL bellut. yrd., Exeel. Cond. yow'.()v.•n apt!. Stcur!ty, 127 500 962 '"n4 ell!Valor. pool . ~Ar. $45,000 ; I..Jw a life of ea~ in this1 ~~·~7· ~~··~~7·~~--1o S."l.i,000. Ov.•ner "''ill lea~-t cmy • attractive home. 3 BR, .1% BA. li:: b1.m rm, purchal!e opt i on, Ger>emus idzed bl!drooms, 2 v.·/corner u~ bric k 111)1r. Bk I I DW .__ 714 :499 -3 005 r., separate batM, all ele.ctrlc liv rm w/ rp c. . otnc:r 22 ~A I 129 500 2\3: 845-5 5. bulltin kitchen. full dininr xtras, ~ n appn , • . room. Patio. Gof'll!OUll Wtg By Owrter. 846-1696 + RIGHT ON + CU"pl!ting, custom drapcR. JMMAC. 1 BR. 2 BA, new A lirll,. dilfrrrnl from 1hat O l60ilCilG6' Jett.t of the ~-..... ronvrnrional horn~. l Bd-foJr•aaaml*d WOl'dl-a. ~ Bkr, 962-SfM. cu51 drpw .i ehftg crpt. Xlnt rm~ .. 2 halh~: rlining rm .. lwi-to ,.,._ foor •• ....n.. neighbarhoorl, 1 mt. 10 Int" nf 11:la111', with ril!<'kl l S©\\QUlA.-LG"B~S" Th• Punl• with the Bui/f.fn Chuckle . •• I 'R A L R E D I bMch. Anx.i<N1! $ll.~-J>Rllo. OtfPred at $44,750. 1 I I I Z: f I 963-497'1. Englund Real Estate . -· • ,. t .. .. • • ' I • Adams I: Magnolia, 0 RAM AT t c s ll burbi.a 31.11 THALIA 4!U-800-1 Huntington Bch Tli-levf'I, 4 BR, $43.~. I T 1 l E E I ! " 1-s'"1'"00'".'""."'M'""o'"v'"e'""1N-: __ ~_1"_•·_3_r_._E_._0_1"'"_· _'"'_· Ch~!!~~~~ r~~ ~. : I 1: I I ,· 1" 't ... ~ .. ~\t" .... ~J) s:~r =·am~' 1:~r ec:!~: TIME FOR ::::; . .1~~~::1:~a~-8~~~n~f f thtnc. 3 BR, 2 'BA, rea.h:rring SJ4."i.OOO. Must ste! I P E Kio R 1 1 bltn tltt RIO, ~·Iv.· crpl11:, TED HURERT A ASSOC. • QUICK CASH "'7l v .. U rin GJS.'500 • • • drpa, u~ br\f'k llrtp\, f A ,)'9 I I' l Bolllren_;tiit._.. h<.pefo. v., ... 1-x1m1o<. AT THE OCEAN . -_ . .,.., I' THROUGH A l largn br, pool, huge 11.m I Y A D S ·~M ,-cftt.'.w. ..~. ' rm . Be••1'd ""'" .. 3,000 _ •. ~ • oq rt ol chann. Nesr b<a<h, 1 I I I I I O "'-'""tho dtocllo ~ t'2-447l ( ::::.J 54~ .. IOJ DAILY PILOT """1'· goll ' morl"'. ,.. :;:,::a .. ~"t~~-. • • • • • • 0 m... __ r..io. j" _ S!)ft.:'JOO, Owner I b~llder. ! PR~~.':s UTIIJS iN I' r I' I' I' c I· 31 ! 4 ~..:!. !!!i:: WAN T AD ;:;:~ ap,.,rruotty-Ownor -• -• • #Jmf' '4'ith pl'lolt. FHA ' rnin!ftn°t'd-Wants aetk'in! 3 10 GET AN!Wlt totaJ "°""' and ftr'lt 'til 1!1-Hill. AJkina M3,5M. ~fak~ of th~ great Lido Park Townhouses. anrl noW we havt> just one h11ing ll'ft. Thi11 sharp 3 bedroom oor· ner location Is pe_rhaJ)I' the tinellt one we h&VI" ever of- fered, Pool, lee IMrl, 11nd beauUtul a:arden areaa m11ke Channing 5 BR be1.rh homl! on undy Rhore. E xcitinii; harhor action choice l()('a]e. 2301 B11ysid1!! Dr. Sl68,0CXJ By Appointm@nt TM Hubert 675-A.'iOO E. 17th St., Cosio Mose Top location, lnw dnwn 11.S'r. Spend11ble return Realonomlc1. Bier. 615-6700 this a ,ittat btiy. Call , • BY OWNER • HUNTINGTON BEACH Snuth sirll" of Warner -near Bola" Chh·11 rom,.r, lJT h'Onta2e x 192'. WPll priced I'll $4~.500. PETF. lfARRETr REALTY, 642-5200 . STh-7225. l.nnk nvPr nur comprlititln. COLWELL PROPERTIES. IN C REALTOR S EASTBLUFF EXECUTIVE ESTATE Un~llevahle h11ll l Crf' w/52 lref'Jll 11urrounding lhf' prtt- tif'!l.I y11.rcl ynu 'll l"vrr """'· 5 BR, 3 BA, 2100 llf1 fl. Wh111t mnrf' can Wf" llayl Buy 1.pp'I only -can 979-IO!liO, ~21 *DUPLEX* Av11IL for shOw\ng Junl" l!tt. 8"1'1 rluplPX buy on the Pf"n· insula. Spar. 2 BR. A: l~BR. Nrwly painterl m.rl111tSI". Blt- inll; pe.rth11ly fum. l<R•· clhl . a:11ra.g,._ Ownt'r anxioul', Of. r .. rrd fnr S.52, '™>. MORGAN REAL TV 673-6642 67S-6459 PANORAMIC VI W 8e.1ut. m11.l"taln.td homf' 2 Bedroom• a: l•l'I• family rm. Pool. $64.500. Gtorg• Wllll omson Re.tltor \\le havl! It have pri~d th ls home for 11 fa~I 11all"! Cu.,t. hit 4 BR, all xtra.o:. Nr. l'Chl8. $42,0CXJ. OpPn Sal & Sun 12-5. 2212 f\tarr:arr l Dr. Mfi..-0148 or (114) 753--0393 coll . HARBOR View Homt'8-!I bdrm!!. lf'Jl' fam room k den. Unusu11l DECORATOR IN- TERIOR plus a.JI BUll..DER EXTRAS. ChArm!ng used brick !N'tiO &: fire ring "''/Quaint ~11.rrlen breakfaRI nnok . $72,500. By Owner. F'nr 11ppt. phone 644-6246. Ba.ycrt!t EXf'C'. Hom f' v.·t rool • $5.l.500. 3 BR, 2 hi!, din rn1, l11m rm, hohby nn, 2 frpcit. Ma.ny exll'llit. Nr UC1 It OCC. By Owner. 181{] lrvinP AvP. 643--3187 = SMALL SHOPPING CENTER IN COST A MESA Good Loc •tion $I Sf ,500 F'ITZMORRIS REALTY CO. 3135 !':. Cna1t •ltghway Corona df'I Mar 673·9010 Condominiums for 1.tl• HO Olnrto. 3 AR . 2 Ba .. Del Piao tin try. Wf'1 hfl.r. Se.II/clean OVf'n, M1rml"f'l't WA.l"dmbe doorR. Cf"nlrRI Mat and 11il r/conrl. Pnnl & ~•fkln arPR . \la 1ntau'lf'lf 18.J'dact.p- lnst &r. 0\'f'f'll iJ:f' dO.JbJ~ lllH1~1t'"· $29.000. Try '9'.m rnw.·n, $161 .20 pt'!" mo. Call BACK BAY · 3 AR CON DO. Jt.17-551 1 Rkr. $26.2.iO. l:khwshr.. frpl., -Du ploxos/Unlts Pvt. pAllo, 2 e11 r JA.r., Awlm pool, f'l t'. 6\,'f. lnt /10~ I l le 162 iio~·n. Agt : 540-flt47. 1----$61-,S-OO ___ _ llARHOR Vil'w Hom"•, 1':~1 111'" SAie: Ry Owntt. Portitlno 4 BR. 3'-'i BA. 71MI rnne. Only. Nl!WJ)Or1 Dupbc aq, fl. Pro( lndtepd, IAnrl 29t h St .. i 8r UP I-down. incl . Prine only. $66.!ffl. Call 642-L\11 nr ~42 . fi.44·5065 1918 Port Brislnl Cir. Secluded 2 br. 2 ha Condo, ''flf'IJ.I AS pin'", lpl , cpt1, drpR, pool, $29.5'XI ownr 979-1418 BY owner--C11.pi11ra.m Reh, $.Yl,000. or trade lor lot. J )'f nld. ~6. Income P roperty 1'6 ~EU.. nr EXCHANGE -14 Unit,, Gd lncom!". WW So up nr tin. 842~7731 A·D Rlty, M&-3169. I l.NSCIAA4Blf AIOV£ LffiEI$ I I I I I I I GI tinanc.1111. MOO. to $tool. 647_5678 BR, l BA home nn ~fy~tic S a & uLETS ANSWEIS N CLAS cniw c"-a. Can now -your off~. W h It a k er '!!J!::...=.c.=..:.:""';..::..:c .... -=.:..:.....;_~~.;....cl.;_..:..=..:::..:SIA~=C~A~n~O~N:_:.•~oo:......1 R~oloo:.;:.:;."1:.:.::&~Ce~._M~2~-5~51~11~~~~~-··~~=·"=M~,4~94-443'~.'---~ 541-6570 '4S-1564 TRANSF'F.R. Must 1e11 . Huhor V1f'W Homf', 4 hr, 2 bR . i1dRnd ki tMM"n llAmlly rm, u prradl!tS cpt Utrot1Rhoul, ttH • <"leanlr'll oven, 2 brick patiol, IH land. ll7,000. - HARBOR Vlf'w llome • S Br. S)mf'niil, Xh'a!t. ltt 111.nrt. G4-4-4Jl1T. 1M3 Port Mlf'l'lle. BY OWNER. 3 Br. Hom;'. POOL. WESTCLIIT AREA. 51M\O!I -$49.!llO. Sen the o1d new •tuft ' • FOR SALE 1-Qj THEREAL ,'"\{ ESTATERS . " -". ' '"" pmt:n 11par1mc-nts JWN' Santa Ana Country Club. Sattl•r Mtg. Co. Schfrdul~ sh0w1 15'%-return 642-2171 546--0611 on l~~ down. May ex-Seivinr Jlarbor atta 21 yrs. chance. Listed .P r i c e : MONEY avail for 111 • 2nd $445,000, call our Investment }(Jans alao purchan TI>t. Division, 546-1600. Maivi11 McClure RPa.1 D THI: RE AL '"'\.. ESTATERS E11tale, lOJS S. Hill SI ., 0!'.'f'11n11idr, days 722-S322, !!VI'S. 492-0424, fG.95•/. WATERFRONT ConvPntional rf'al r11!11.lt loon11. Mr. Art.11m1, bkr. ft.1 1·Hi Int in Newport 6"-14Tl ™' R.\1-9.Ul: ....,..., Only $2),000. $15 ,000 BILL GRUNDY Priv11te 1nonP y for ~al Realtor 675-4161 Pi'!lale loan. Mr. Ailamr, ..341 Bayside, Npt. ~ach Bkr_ ~21,:1Q. or 644-'Z4T1. Molille Home/ Money Wanted 250 Trailer Parks 172 WORKING couple net'd $900. MOBILE home" park in \Viii pay high interest. h J01hua Trtt, Cali(. lor u.if' R.13-5444 or evr1 586-2629. by ownf'r. Undu con- Jb'Uction, 50 unir111. 494-7037 [ 11 ~] aft 5. . Houtn fer Rant _ Mountain, Desert, l~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiiii~ Resort 174 HoUMS Furnished l====-1 BIG BEAR-Corona def Mar 300 BOULDER .BAY . OPEN SAT, SUN, MON :i 'BR, 2 ~· l>Hul1ful horrw. S.6 PM IJ.V. 1111111, ort'llll v w. July/Aug /St-pt. $1<m mo. -CIW,. Driv,., r'IPllr dam. OA.":iiifif't.I auf no. 374, t:lo Waft'f' vif'W. 2 b«lrooms, rx-• Dftlly Pilol, P .O. Box ];,s(), ttllf'fll buy arwt ff"m!S •• • Costa Mf"1q, Cal. 92626. '10,JD>. PETF: BARRE.TT1--------- REALTY. 642·5:m. Costa Mesa 2 Lois, ~ludf'd $2,(j() $1 30 -l Rr In <I pt,x, chlld/ Moonridgr cabin $15,'F.AJ pet ok. AVAi\ now. Lakrside cabin Sl'i.000 $175 -Ulil pd. 1 + fl\m rm, • HARD to Btat! 2 Br, tncrl yrd, encl 1ar, kid&/pet1, Sl<O ALA Rentals e 645-3900 • RARt: ~·inrt! 2 Br, rncl gar, Jo:/1irlr, ki1l!1/prl1 S11'i. ALA Ronl•I• e 645-3900 " BRAND nl!W bf'a ut. :i Br. rtuplex., trpl., p11tio, step!! to ocean, Yrly only '400/mo. 962-5671, 2 BR., 2 balh1 • , .. , ••• , S~ 3 BR., }1Ai balh1 ....... SJ35J ~~~~~~~~~~ :i BR., 2 batha .... S325136.5 !; 1 1 _ 3B~."'.2ba.,f~m.,den •• :OO ~-~~ (i red hrll ~ph. Furn. RF.ALTY -----~-~~-- Uni v. Park Cl'nll'r, Irvine 1G.ioi1Mtiiriaiiliiijiiiii C11ll Anylimr MJ.1.(1820 II • {'07.Y Coll&at! w/lrpll", Offi('" hott~ x AM to 8 rM A Np! llie;ts. f'Mrl yrrl, rncl 1,. .... ..,..,.., ....... ..,...,,..1 gar. kirt11/pr11t. s1&""t. NF:w hortll'. 3 Rn .. 2 b11 .. Bolcl New Concept ALA Rentals e 645-3900 d l 1 dN"p carp., raprt, rp .. Sl<S -2 B<. In< plox, ''"'•· •""""""· .•11'"" Lu""''"" FURNITURE RENTAL r f'fT'l11:, cpt/drps, l'llCI patio, rou nt.ry hvmg. S2'Zi. lit, la.•! kid1 /pel!1. + depMil. ]491il Groveview * M M ... $175-2 + Dl"n, f'?lilc, bltns, (vie. of Culver A W•lnut, onfh to Orl 1.t1 rar, )'Td, J»lliO. off S.A. Fwy.) : :;; =:: Option $185 -2 Br,. slovt', refT'i&, 4 BR. 2586 1q. n. Fam. Rm.· S1yJe-CokJn Jt:•r, yard, children/pet ok. clining • 3 ba. Poollf Trnni& * 24 Hour De11wry $205 -3 Br, E /11idt', 11ovt, rourls In a 44 t1cre park. · ;;::;'•· ''"" l•ncd y,d, >Id•/ 1 ~~; "'.:' .';';'"'~;,. &'j!':,:'' -~ $215 -! Br., •IOVP, rf'fri.1r:, 833-«K.O ,..., .. It. @ ~& --- l'rpls, tlrps, trpli', x-ar, fnt•d BRAND lll"W :i Bil hol.l!lt', on peliu. K"N't'n bf'll & adjfl1•rnt to 511 W, 19th, CM 54!-3481 $'.!45 -MeAa VP'l'd,., l Br, bltns, nPw t•rpl!I, gar, yard, pool. $31~1. G-4.\.-2996. 7756 N. Maln1 SA 547.0:l1 4 xlol <'000. '11JR1LE Hock • en. J Ba. N THE r•c NU-VIEW RENTALS him I dio rm11, romm. 0 Bt.11 ff! 673-40.10 or 494-3241! 1w"tm/lf'nnl•. $410. l'\.1-7167. Legun• a.act. 1 BR. Furn. il lJnfurn. FROM ONLY $175 FREEll OCF:AN QUEF.N Landlord ... Owners Hl?.O £. Ocean Blvd. WP will rt>ff'r tenants lo you Lon.1r: Bf'arh (213) ~'iMS .FREE or charge • , . Many li1'na"d by William WaJters Co. dr11irable tf'nants on our waitinR li1t. Belboa l1land ALA Rentals e 645-39001-------- Call ~t or writr: ynl, patio, immar. 3 Rfodmom houM lO':xl'.l' Si»~r Re11.l bfAlf', P. 0 . $775-Np! lJJl!ll, lrg 2 Br w/ .1t:llrajil'r & lt11undry hnu~. 940 Box 28211, Big Bear 1.Akr, frple l J>llYC-hf'd•lie bAr. \\'. Cnnlt'l"f'll! St. Opt'n 2 PM- "C'' * BAOJELOR APT. * • SPARKLING Vl~w -1 Br. Yff'll.rly, $175, Incl. util. 11trps to bearh, child /pet. Winton Rf'11.l F.~tat~ 675-3111 $150. Cali!. Nierly furn, orR11n , ,.Ir, Jl(lr-p C M fi M, .. . Rul E1t•f• Wanted 114 "lil'r &: yr(I. NU-VIEW RENTALS 1 Brlrm, 2 Bllth, pool, llf'w "'ANTED R-2 propt>rly 110-673.4()?.0 or <l!M-J24R pn int, f'rplll I. rirp!I. $.150 jaet:nt to bt-11.rh Nf'v.·porl ----.,--.,=.,==· mo. tnrludin1t ponl srrviCf'. &ach to C9ron11.0 dt>I ri.1Rr. LANDLORDS! Avail .Ju~ lllt. Call Bob~. H;ave $5(00 c1t~h k S11000 FREE Rt:NTAI~ Sl':RVlCF. ~1<11 . Coin Colltt!X>n as df,v.'n Many dr.o;ir.11.ble fpnanlll on 1 ·2~+~,,.-,-.-,~,,-,~1,..-0,~.-.~,~.~R. payment. Alt 6 pm. 71<1: our "''Riling list. Wf' srrttn. 2 BA for familifo .... 684--tJ'75. SJ)f'('hali1in.1r: in COiia Mf'n, Rent-A-Hou•• t7'-l430 Q Lll~ED b d . N~rt Beach It Hunting· UA · • uyer e5tN'S ron Bf>iu•h, 2 BR w/gar, $140, fncd yrd Canyon Vu hm, CdM. Shore BEACON * 979-2113 v.·/palio. Wtr pd. 2228 Oiff1 or C11.mf'O Sho~1. ----~~~---1 Pl11N"nli11 .Avf' (8 }. Call btwl'l Prinr Only. Writt Ou....,ifiM $275. 2 1 v1u11 ~f'n·Sl111rdp Ir 1 & 5, 6.16-4120. Ad ?-'<>. 31f7, Daily Pilot. l"l"11.n. ·rpl, 11.1r, gu tnl'r P.O. &x 1560, Costa Mesa, lurl. Al(rnt g.;i&-2500. AVAILABLE JurM" ]~. ] BR, D 92626 M"All Vf'rcl .. sn~. Sharp! 5 · · Fountain Valley RR, RRr Harbor, S.125. 'J"'hf!' \\'ANTEO apartmf'nl houws, Doylf' Co. F.v,.s; 3.~~I. On.re~ Cn. 10 to 50 uni111. AVAIL .lune 13th, 4 BR, ~ not mo"' thAn 12 \'f'll. nlrf. RA, nlre y11rd, 10 min to 3 .JJR-2 RA-ctplll', dniJ>f"•. h'r Qu k-k 11.ctKl n! H11.:0y 213: bf'll(•h. Ch\hlrrn/Jlf'I ro~ yd. Slovr. a v11il. \V-1idt-. 3~11 f'XI. 336, day or sirlen>d $.100/rno. 962-.15..lJ. Nl'llr ll('hh1. Sm. 5.'i7-7878. nill'. Laguna Beach :i BR, lfrdwd fin. fam ily on- ly wl adult m11lr. $250/mo . .... , •• ',~·: CO~F:R ~I f' $100 -uril pd, Ira bACh + Bier. lt3C)..6()30, ~ltll. n l . o._,...r '":"'';"' ,--, m Jofl , br11m111, palio, l'l l". location, Cngt~ M q, Sll!0-1 Br w frplr, yrd. aar, Corbi~)lartin Rf'Rllt1n ni('l'ly turn. 3 blk11 brach ..._...., 0 ' 6'U989 NU-VIEW RENTALS NE'9t'PORT BC'h. 11rP11 '.\ 01" 4 67].40JO or 494·:1248 br home or lo\.\•nhou!ll' in rx· l ~-~o--,--o-=~-o­~hanf:" for arc ictock <"lrllr Sf'a~ Ii: $And s -:----l BR, tncd or "°'"" loan prop. pref'd. hmt'. 0rl'an \'lew. 644-6Ti'!J Rent-Ao-House 979-1430 \\'ANTED c-nr housr in No. l RI!, oc.·enn vii'"', I blk Vir· or Ea11t, Oi!r;t.11 fl.lr:rut, J BR. lori11 &b, nk'Ply furn. le tam rm, by ov.l'lf'r only. frpl. SZt'l. 64i.1m. 642-1090 ~z: .. 'ri Newport hach LOVELY 3 BR home, family rm .. M"win.1r: rm., pool rm. bit-in•. SZTh/mo. 837-9517 • 2 BR, crpls, drps, Jllrngf!. No pell!, 2 11mall <"hildl"P'n. $145. ~ Wallatt, M&-M28. :l BR, crpt/drp, fncd ynt mv'd patio, S200/mo. n'4 Natiorlfll . fi7!.-IR27, 67l-(;267 OLD hou!f! on a J 1~ acre - $130. ALA Rental1 • 645-3900 B•lbo• Penfnsula e OCF:ANrRONT -J Br, • $25 WK ll UP-On Oc.1L11 • furn. )'rly 111/ ulil lnl"I S170. Lovrly Bach -1 Br. -Room• ALA Rentals e '45-3900 Maid ••rvice-Pool-U!il Pd. • Call 61>3740 e $150 -UHi pd, l Br. stovr,1---------- ~ftir, Jovtily dttk, ocf!an Corona deJ Mar Vll'W, S2lll-N. End, Jrg 2 Br, nice BACHELOR apt tor 2 quiet rtpts, 1tovr, df'<'k, gar, view. m,.n, cooklnt facll , 2 ba, 2 $25.'i -l..11guna Hill!!, 3 Br, BR"1, 2 priv. entnnce1. 2 Ba, blln~. aar, patto, JJOOJ. Clollf' k. all 11ton!1. 644-1701 NU-VIEW RENTALS LARGE &eh .. 2 biles hie 6T.l·407.0 or 494-.1248 CoronA. l adult, m Pf'll . L•9una H ills S12'i & $1~. Ye t1 r I y. ---------I 642-&.'i2Q. NEW World, 3 Br .. 2 &., nu -------- crpt & rfrp«, pool Ja cll., dbl Costa Mesa Rllr , $230, h~ud. yrd. m1lin t ________ _,.....,,....- & w~. tro-9602. WEEKLY-MONTHLY MH• Verde SUNNY ACRES 2376 Newpor1 Blvd LOVELY 48ft 28A, lmmae 5411.9755 Low Ratr 1 homr. Avail mitl .lul"l4!'. S285 STIJOIOS I-l BR'S, :ROOMS 1st. Agt:nl, 540-7327 • Fre.t! Line.n1 t.. Util. M• · VI · e Plmnf' Serv-Htd Potil 1111on 110 • TV & Mt1id ~rv .Avail NICE 2BR. l\i.b11, Eldorado e Childrf"n il pet aection Homt • on vi•w kit. $250 * SUPER I BR . mo. 837-70031494-9894 Lovrly furniturr. Frigirlaire N•wport Beach 11.pp1'1, tro5t·frff refrl(, . quttn u bed, cpt/drp. $.12.'i -1 A loft A ronn dtn Arfulfi. $15<1. 2220 Elden. rm, frplc, 2 dttk11, boat 646-6.1711 slip,,. ~~~·~~~~=- $.185 -Npt soor,.11, :t Br, 2 HOLIDAY .PLAZA. URGENT ~ll~ "r rtupll'x hy OUTSTANDING bl .4i O<"f'11n ~'11f'r,.... priN-<t r11rh1. CdM . . Y Hi cli11t~·t. 713/4;,i-1614 · '''""'· ~''1111· Ju~ 1 '°" ~ M. hlfi n!I, "u 11ha.a-. frple ••• DELUXE Sp&CIOUI 1 BR. $400 -:i Br, 2 ha, trplc, hu1r furn apt , $1:\5. Healt:fl pool. I patio, bo11.t •lip . . . Ample parking. Adull11 - Dana Point NU-VIEW RENTALS M pets. 1965 Pomona Ave., ,-•• -Cl=IT_S_M_A_N-.-,--p-,-ro-rt-;,-,, 67:\.40.16 or 494-3248 C.M. Bus iness Opportunity II~. C11fl Dr. 'Br.~ Mn, 2 h11 . S400 Mo. Adlts I ~ <.:raham Rralty MG-2414 ~ 1.100 Jslf'-4 BR, 2 BA. 'ii blk Jmn priv hl'ach/club. An- nu11I or by mo. 671--9™· Hous.s Unfurn. 305 200 General Jlll'Ciu<i..O Spani11h V i 11 11 IRVINE Tf'rrac@-gnu:ioosly l BR tum ltPI. Ufil tncld. o\'erlmki"C Dana poi n 1 dttorfltf'<i fimiJy home. 4 Single worlri111' man only, marin1.. Nf'wly dee. l BR. 2 Br, 21i, Ba. 2 trplc, ~tk>-lrt Ref11, 310 Meadowlark Ln, BA. R.l'f~ S600 mo. f99-.212'! Yfll'd S550/mo. own 11 r CM (Oft' Santa Ana .Ave 111 •'ft.,..,.,... 2388) Open Sun M11iy 21, ]. Hunllftllhln ilHeh ·~· 6PM . *WE haw a larp 1tltctlon or 3 and ' bedroom bome1 that ctn be n'IO\'ed Into almost lmmtdlately on our *ent•Optlon plan , SHERWOOD RE ALTY, Sn(IPr. FJ11mllte1 2BT $179 Spll lvl-Vu < BR. kld•lptlo * $25 PER WEEK * 2 + De.n + Swim pool A: Up -Pool A maJd sav - kid~/pd ldteht:n1 avall•bl'-. Rrnl-A-Hoo"' 9'1S-3U) MOTEL TAHm LaQUINTA HERMOSA Spanish Cou ntry E1tAte Liv· Ing " SpAciou1 Apfl. Tf'r- n!'.'f'd pool: sunken ras BBQ. Unbellf'vable Livinr • Only I Bit -FURN. $175 AIL tJTll..JTIES PAID <' blks S. of San Dielfl Fnry on Beach, 1 blk W. on Holt to 1521.l Parkside Lane.) (n4) M7-5441 11~' 1165 81.chelOT &. 1 BR, patios, /rp]c'1, priv. f II r II. J e I . Dividt'd bath A lots ot cJosetS. nte hall, pool '-I J>OPI tables, 11aunia b11thl'>- Sr• for younif!'lf! 17301 Keel110n l.J\. (1 blk W. oi' Beaeh, 1 blk N. tlf Slater). W-7m UPPER front 2 B r • Overloolrinr 111..ke park I lM!aut enclos.i.1 patio I pool. Adult•. no Ptlt. Sl~. or 1 BR. Cum. S135. 1005 17th St. 5.16-2692. * S &Unn. APT, 3 Avallable J une 1.S. MS-0421. Newport Buch e WINTER RF:NT~ e Wf!!t NIP'IVport Resen-e now! ABBF.Y RF.ALTY M2-3850 BACHELOR apt on Ray - Lldo Islf', $200/mo. Aval! for :i month~. * 67S-35C9 Sant• Ana DE ANIA PLAZA 1 .l 2 BR -Furn . .l Unfurn. Pool1, c11..rport1 il otner ex- tras. Nr. S.A. A Npt Frwys. Fmm $115 up. Adult1 only, no pet1. 140'2 Fruit St., S.A. I * 543-6620 * Apt. Unf.,,n. PANORAMIC OCEAN VIEW APTS Choice 0 11.n11. Point Location Brlllld New Luxury Apts. Cpt1, Drpl, Bit-in kit<'.l\tns F.A. Hta.tin1, Private Patios 2-3 BEDROOM, 2 BA 6-2 BEDROOM, 1 BA S710 to S350 244?1 Alta Viii• Or. DANA POINT Call for Appointment sn-11148 Ml-0022 B•lboa lsl•ntt NE\V il bl!auliful 4 BR., 2 baths. Stf!'p1 to South My. I S.~~ontb, yeuly. LARGE -luxuriooa 2 BR. 2 ba. S37S TTK)., yearly WINTON :R.EAL EST ATE 2'29 Marint Aw.. Balboa ltland ' f75...JJ.ll Coron.1 dol Mar ---------SHARP I-elean ' e.dmom, 2~ blltb walk to beacll. Family preftn"f'd. Month ttl month. USO pr month Call Mr. BalltY, ~ 2 BDRMS., 2 batha; fr'ple. Fanta&tic-acean v\twl M25 Month. No Jl@t.I Wllll11m Winton Realktr 229 Marine A~. BalOO. J.tland fiT>llJl BUS:ZNE..C\S OPf'ORTtl/"lrTY 1--------- \\'f'U Ht•hh11hl'd r,.111t1un1n1 FR EE RENTAL BOOK In \'f'I')" bu"ly 1Mm11ni: «rn Thrr" "rf M"v~r11t rJOl'l Irr. Jn11irif' Ii pAI,,.. tJ1n1nJ1:, b nm" 11 for rrnt f!W' •1th lot11 or l):'lril u11r:. ln· 11ppmx\m11trly $100 p e T c:lud6 all fl);furr1 At .-quip, mrinlh. S 1 o p hy JI n ti in pw:1 mndlhon, T11kt' O\'f'r hmvo!it" Ihm II. )'mi mi1thl brio!? lhf! bu11y 11umm~r l1rvl 11>'h11t you',. lookit1.1r: for, 54NSSS 3 BR Condo. $28.' tncl'1 rw\m (Comf'r Harbor/Victoria) pnol, tln!pl .. d•hwahr., p\/t, $13.'i/MQ. Dix mob hm J>Afkl. Aaf , ~ w/11cr~n pnrch, mmpl ---------1 furn, htd pool. Adlts, m CUTE 2 BR apt., l Ba .. 4 Rn-2 BA-2 t<9r R'IJ'lllll". All Westminster prl,. 4 Sf'aflOl'l't, 23!8 Npl 1a.ra.c-A: laundl')"-Jll'i en- W111d. OUtr'f'l't a~ SIR,700. e,.1und R .. 1 E•ta1. m TiiALlA 494-~ ""' Good 8utine1s ~1.llon 7100 Jf1.rtior 81\'d. 1111 Adarn1 Colta ~1f!sa. CalU. ':.1 ~,,:;::!. ~·1~:; --OLA~N"'D:CL,..o==a""o'°'s.,..1 - trilJ •ll inventor)' 6 aub Wt SpedA!lie ln NtwPOrt lat lo sd llNJ'lt. ldtal for Beach • Corona dtJ Atar • ..m tttittdlwoman. No It Laa\IM. Our Jttntll ~ --. llMltr wUI !nln. vice la F1UZ to y.,., Try Ac!-. Inn -ilrlrt. l'lu·Ylnl .,,._"""' 11 aa 61 pm NU·VllW ltlNTALS K.s.t. m.tlXIO at - bhm, c:rptd, dMlpe~. rncJ<:.. AJV<f ~8-Qll trance . $71S /'l'l'M'). Ye a r I y f'Ct yrd I p1tlo. CIOIW to PRIVATE ,,_rty. l br, 2 bll, · 3 leue. 115-6JAI Avail Jurw 1. shop 'r le bdi il .chis. Gltn. ('f)I, ctrp., mtittf'n, P1ntlirw * URGE l BR apt, b1lrll, mar tr.ct. $2M. Children I thruool. Le• yd1 w/brick, 2 cpt1, drpt, •II util pa.id. ~ LARGE l BR -unturn. Pf'I allowed. go..fiB:M ,,_tiotc, J ccw.r"f!d. Walk to ly $ll5; wtth prlv 0t-& $1«1. Water paid. DI~ Matta'*I. -chool A 1h0ps, $ 2 2 5 . Nr. HA.l'tlnr A Hammon. SlJO. Vu:. Junr l -.....i LEAst 7/1. 5 BR, l &. m-XTJ. 548.-1$11 * sc...a~ 2 -1u B ~-"'I •-forml din rm, <0v'd Jltlltio, 2/;-;--'-'.----,.---·1:-=""'.,-,;:;;-=:-:-..;.,= .,.. .. n A, ""'l'M-• -.... •!)'. 2 frpl cs. r.m m . pd Heutet fun\..,. LAJ\CE I BIL 011.11. $.lnnJ. ::J:o. ~ M~ carp:rt. crcf.nr A .. 1r. nr b(h. Unfum. J10 Carport. Nr a hop1 .1 ~==~-~='"'°"~= $.!l>/mo, 962·2912. --------1 11411/rna. + d•p. !IM El UllUSUA). 2 BR. Wolk to J'"B'°'R.,,_,l_,BA~. -.,-, "'Go'""l<le-.,..-n-,W"'ot'""l· I ll•flMt Pt11fft1Ult ~7' Apl. I, C . M • bM.ch; Frple., $lllQ, 411 • Edi-. Crpu. <lrpo, -BAYTROl'IT. Cllol<t & llR. l .L ; r.m1..i, 011'4. yu.t. Piil&. v 1 c • n t. BA. pltr 6 !looL Summer Furn. acholer I I Ir I * CllUT \iiiW • 2 Ill. + SIWmo. Oft. W-110!, -. or ywty, runt or 11111un1. Hpoclally •lco. 2110 ntl<. bl .... ..-. poo1 m.a °""'"'· m-21111. Newpert 91"4., CM. mo .., ~ Gii, - NOW! NEW! 1PILOT PENNY PINCHER erils!IFIED ~DS WITH A NEW-LOW-RATE • 3 LINES l TIMES $. OR LESS e IACH ITEM MUST IE PRICED e e Combined Total of lt1m1 Not To Excaod $50 . e • No Copy Ch1n9H • No Abbrovl11fon1 e • No Commercl1I Firms • , ,CAW 642-5678 ASK FOR YOUR . DAll.;Y PILOT" AD-VISOR :l'ND it..OU MA Yi CHARGE IT! • .... . . .. Are You Letting Cash Slip Through Your Fingers See If You Have ~ny Of These Things A DAILY PILOT WANT-AD Will Sell Fast! 1. Stove 29. Bicycle 57. Eloctrle Train 2. Gult1r 30. Typewriter SI. Kitten 3. l•by Crib 31 . l1r Stools 59. Cl•11le Auto 4. llo<trlt Saw 32. Encytlopocfla 60. CoffH T•blo s. C.mer1 33. Vacuum Cle•n1r 't. Motorcycle 6. W•sher 34. Troplcol Fish •2. Accordion 7. Outbo•nl Motor 35. Hot Rod Equlpm't 63. Skis I . Storoo Sot 36. Fiio C•blnot 64. TV Sot 9. Couch 37. Golf Clubs 65. Workbonth 10. Clarinet 31. Sterling Silver 66. Dl•mond Walth 11. l•frlger1tor 39. V ictorl•n M irror 67. Go.K•rt 12. P ickup Truck 40. Bedroom Set 68. Ironer 13. Sewing Machin• 41 . Slide Projector 69. C1mpin9 Trailer '• 14. Surfbo1rd 42. L1wn Mower 70. Antique Furniture 15. Mathlno Tools 43. Pool T oblo 71. Tape Recorder t 6. Dl1hw11har 44. Tlrff 72. Sollbo•t 17. Puppy 45. Piano 73. Sports Car 18. Cobln CrulMr 46. Fur Coat 74. Mattro11 lox Spp 19. Golf Cort 47. Drapes 75. lnbo1rd Spoeclboat 20. 81rom1ter 41. Linens 76. Shotgun 21. St•mp Collection 49. Horse n. Siddle 22. Dinette Sot 50. Airpl1n1 71. D•rt G1me 23. Ploy Pon 51. Or91n 79. Punching 111 24. Bowling loll 52. Exercycle IO. Biby C1rrla1e 25. W•tor Skit 53. R1ro Books 11. Drums 26. F'rMter 54. Ski Boots 12. Rifle 27. Sullt•M 55. High Choir 13. Doak 21. Cl0<k 56. Celn1 14. SCUBA 0..r These or any other •xtra things around th• house can n tvmed Into cash with a DAILY, PILOT WANT-~D so Don't Just Sit There! • DIAL DIRECT 642-5678 ' -,; . Apt. Unfurn. l6S Apt. Unlllm. HIDDEN VILLAGE APTS. Hom.like Living families Welcomel 2 BEDROOM-2 BATH From $159 Carpets • Drapes · Air Conditioned • Enclos- ed patios · Heated Pool · Forced Air Heat .. Carport & Storage. 2500 5outh S•lt•, Soni• An• 546-1525 (enter 2 blk!ii \V. of Brlstol. off Warner on Linda Way, south to \V, Central) VILLA MARSEILLES SPACIOUS I & 2 BEDROOM APT. Furnithed & Unfurnished Adult Living Dishwa:-;her color coorrlinated applian cei:: • Plush ~hag carpet· mirrored ~·ardrobe doors· indirect lighting in kitchen • breakfast bar • huge private fenced patio • plush landscap- ing -brick Bar·be·Ques • large heated pools & lanai. Air conditioninJ?. 3101 So. Bristol St., Santa Ana 557-8200 COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. MANAGING AGENT Apt. Unturn. 365Apt. Unfurn. 365 Newport Be•ch WHY PARK NEWPORTIRS STAY HOME ON WEEKENDS. WOULDN'T YOU? It's all here for you to enjoy Saturdays and Sundays and all week long, too. $750,000 health spa, 7 swimmin2 pool!!:, 7 lighted tenni!i: courts, bicycle trail!l. putting green, shuffleboard, croquet. Spaciou.~ junior l 's from $164.50 monthly, plus 1 or 2-bedroom plans and 2-story town houses 'vit h 2 or 3 bedrooms. All l''ith electric kitchens. private balcony or patio, carpeting. draperie~. Sub- terranean parking, elevators, optional maid service. Gourmet food market, d ry <·leaner, beauty salon on grounds. See beautifully fur- nished models today. g a.m. to 6 p.m. Other tlmeir; by·appointme.nt. .Just nort h of .Fashion Island at Jamboree and San Joaquin Hills Road. Telephone (714) &44·1900 for rent•I inform11tion. PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS on th• bay DAllY r!LCT It < Aph., Apt.., 400 _:..;:Fu;.rn;;·;.;:•;_r_U~n;.fu;;m;;;;._3;;7.;D_;.F.;:u;_rn.;.·;.•:.r:..:::U;;n;..f..::u;_rn.;. • ..,;.3_7.;..0 I PRTV A TE ti nm,. • ru.rnl.-hPd Costa M.1• SUMMER RENTALS THE EXCITING PALM MESA APTS. FUN IN THE SUN! Minutes to Newport Beach Unbelievably large apt:i;. Decorator !urnish- erl Hu ge Pool, jacuzzi, e le ct rir bu il t-ins, shait carpets, drapes, sauna & more! ADULTS-NO PETS SINGLES ........ $145 1 BDRMS •.•...... $155 2 BDRMS •........ S 175 Unfurnished Apts. Available From $10 to $15 LESS. YOU 'RE RIGHT- THEY'RE UNDERPRICEOI 1561 MESA DR., Costa Mesa 5 blk1. E. of Newport Blvd. 546-9860 Newport Beecft ------1 BRAND NEW ON BEACH! roon1 "·lhs!h. ,;/rir w/out kik'Mn pnvll~'"'· Worlrinc lti.d_v prPl,.rrM. \1iSllOn Vl~ JI'! 11rr11. 5AA·2'11.ll. Bf~nFtooM;"',c,-1-,-,-h-.-.1. pr1v1I. Jl.8. Jira. Call 962-n2u 11 ft 6 ptn ()!' aJl d11y \\ ,.,.kf'rwl. ROOMS Sl ~ wk 1111 ..,,fkit. s:v:i ..,.k up Apt11, n'M N!!wport Bh·rl, C\1. a.41!-!tTh'i, I ' PVT 1'<10111 6' h11. J"\•1 f'n. tr•rl(¥, AISQ, 1lf'!!pin1; smm, llh11!'f' h11. ~18M61t'1.\, I • KITrfl ~:.'IJ pr1\ I, SM mri. 211\1 .\111lf'r !'ii., Cn~tll .\1 1"'1i\. I Call R9l-.\~i0 I Guest Home 415 *PRIVATE ROOM* lrir •mbulatriry J)"r1t1n. Goor ll'IOl1, nice chf'f'rful 1t1rl'tlund 1ng11. * C11ll 54.1:·4Th'I * P VT·.'rml Pvt, rm-frir 11m h11l•triry ,;r, r I ! I 1 '" n, mf'n/wnmf'n. B11t ITI~11!11. ; hr -uperv1~lrin, Lnrlty Inc' ·11A-."i:l2:1. Nl'w J.lnn1•. IJ'11'"1Y !rr;:. Rm,1 My St-nlrir C'itltf'n.~ ,..,.. h11ppy, ~·,II ff'rl 6' rlP•n. 771 Sh11l lrn•r !'I. fi42-97'11 Summer R•ntal1 42 ON'llr1 I'll'\\ l"n ~l'n!lm h111h, kueh~11. Monthly rli 1<t1u11I. ln••hu;ivf' rl'nf, "'ri lt11·hS1nl M•f',\lill•n 9 ~ FURN. le UNFURN. 2 BR. ,.-rom Sl65 ADULTS ONLY Al.!. \JTll.ITI Jo:s PAH i \V11i<>hin u llr., llnnnlul Furnitur~ Av•it11blf' C a r p ets-dr11pe~-rlishw11.~her hf'afed pool-saunu-lennls rec room-OC'l!an views patlo!l-11.mple pll.f"kln1 Security Gu11rd~. HUNTINGTON PACIFIC 711 OCEAN /\VE., 11.B. (7l4l !'.i:'.G-1481 Ole open 10 11.111·6 pin 0 11ily \\'ILLIA!\f \\IAL'l'J·:HS CO. 1''11rn1:o:hf'-rl A1·111h1 bl~ flSX\6 for dl't11il~. $.'II-Off l .~t Mn'11 Rl'nt. <111 SiJ MMERr;nl;1]Rn h11 yr11rJy ll'llSf'; whl'n you hr1ng homf'. Anwlll st. trTim 6 in lh1.~ •rl. CoronA JW1u·h. \VHkly • 20Hl2 R1rrh St (nr 0 ,C. m<>nthly. 61>J7~ f'IH'S • "1rprtrl, !ii. nf P11H1111dt1 Rrt !. \\•knd.11, R.1.'\-95(.() wk-rl11y1t. Prlv .. patio, b~llia~ rm., BA y VJBW 2 bedronr jacuzzi. Nr. UC Irvin~. slttpa 4 eompletf'ly ..tumb: MKr. !l'm-AAS!9 I A II J ._ .,_ r __ . _ _ f'i • v11 une '" ~pt • ..,, l!NFUltN 2 IU{. 'l An 1lu11h•\, pr month. Aflu\1$ 011 bllll\JI, fq1li·, 1111110, Jlh•p.~ ((t llS,:1'111. 67!'>-'l!l:Ul. ll<'l'.'111, '"'IH'I) l•·it~l'-$'/1;1 ---- 1\l<l. Avrii1 .Jiu1f' T. fi7~>-?;!lllfi . Hi\L, I!!. St u1l if'I a ' _ -~ "''/l'l)lltplf'I<' lol. Av1111f .Ju ONLY ONE LEFT! • !Wpt. nr rnnnthly. 6'ffi-5r SEA AIR APTS~$11S-l)~:i,.ux~: l ~n-~.ut. ~ nr 61>l710. Lrg. 2 BR. Crp111. 1lrp11, hlln"'. ( Al)lJl.rS l~Nl.,-Pf.r f\I, LUXURT0t1S nN'llln vk I blk N. ol Arl11n1~ olf Bt>llCh 2 R11lh11, rl 111h\l'll~hl'r, rrpl1·, horn@ :t RR. l t., Sll!h. Ju B!v. 729 No. 6 Uti1•11. prt20\' f4'21 ~ pmlA 561;1.~· Aua. Slrx>/nm. 1''n P" 5.16·2796 "r 5."16·107n · · "1" nll \ · M4-2!l10. __:_c...::._c::_ ___ _ 1Apt ·~·-u_n_fu_rn_. ____ 36_S I Apt. Unturn. 365 Ii Apt1., nM w. Ot-tollnf'mnt. Lr,: B roo khur.~I. rrpt/rlrp~. Furn. or Unfurn. 370 BR Jullf' Sli~Jmn. Ji ' Cost• Me•• Coste Mes• I \\'J D, G/I}, n10. Rl't', ----------1 $l~-:l/1<'k, Aua. $ 11 5 /\I•' i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiii ----------fiu·il . N<1 rwl.,, Sl!ll/rno, Costa Mes• S«-5.Yli. A WINNING 9!l!t-fi1xrz._ ------:::::.::::.:.. _____ i'iR~o;n~1.~1~1tt;;o!sflh;;•;;,;.-44: HARBOR GREENS Furnished & Unfurnished From $120 to $215 mo Bach•lors • 1 Bdrms 2 Bdrm• • l Bdr ms 1 V2 or 2 Full Baths M11~1er Jize bt'droomJ \\'/ hiith beAm ceili n11:~ . .krge lh•lng room \l'/R'll!'I nr wood hurning fireplACP. Conv~ni,.nt l11undry 1.r~11 nff k itchen. Enclosf'd pl\· tiOtl. 2 i1wlmmin11: pnol.•, a11.una. r1>cr1>atinn facili- ti~. Security iuard. Models Open 'Iii 9 pm. 2700 Pet•rson Wey, CM nr Harbor Blvd & Adams 546·5025 DELUXE APARTMENTS Air Con!! • Frplr.'s • 3 Swlm- mlng Pool11 • Hl!'alfh Spa - Tf'nnis Crt1 • Game .l Billiard Rnnm. 1 BEDROOM FROM $165 MEDITERRANEAN VILLAGE 2400 H11rhrtr Rlvrl., C.M. (TI 4J ~7.Rfl2fl RENTAi .. OFFICE OP'EN 10 AM TO 6 PM New Viii• Pedro FamiliH Wf'lcome 2 Br., 2 full Ba. 11h111t crpt/ clrpll, pa.tio, beam ceil, 1ar· aie1. Jo'rom $185. 1131 Eldl'n AvP., C.M, 548-8224 Mov• In &IJ11w11.nr,., lhi.11 11.rl. • fREE Mn'.r; Rf'nl on yr·- U... 2 Br, Mn, frpl, pri p11!ln, r pt /drp. N'o/r. Aft . 1'. !WR-A.1)1 or 7\l: !Bl-5Z11 2 RR~ l~ BA. Ad\lll11, Cllll al\ s pm' 642--0970 tJll' ~ wkndA 2346 SAnt• An11 A v~. 2 Bl llt1'1 .. llh11i:: 1•q1I,, ,\. e Sl'ACIUUS e :.;.;:.;.;;_:._.;;_.;.:_:._:.:..:_ __ COMBINATION clrps. Sl~~J 1110. ('hildr•·11 f)K \\' .. ll-l •r~1~nrrl A1)t~. Sll/\IO•: 1'<'111 .Junf', l"'""'t h Yriur 11parlmPnt in 11 1''rt>11<·h Country gll.rtff>n -y,.t Mllr 11hopping and a ctivitie*-1;,oo ~· fl. nl livin1 -yel f'tllfY to m11.inlain. lmpect'11bl y m111mi~ -yf'I Jlf"TIIOnal And privlllf'. Jn1ide: 2·3 bf'dmom1, 2 b11th111. Outlride: pool, putting, nature. From $195. THE VENDOME 1R45 Anllh('im Avenuf' Call ~fr11. Ph ill lp~ 642-m.4 * * $170 * * J Br, 1% Bil. nf'w}y painted Bl!in!I, ('rpl/drp!I, f'nrl pa.lio. . N<l ri·1~. ('11!1 :.,'l(;..~,;~;:1. 1 ,t. 2 Bl ~. "·rr1·1Ta•·•~. l.111(u11a Bch, hlk 10 ht-h, $' ' ·rom •t•• . 1''7""/mo. 11lnglf' or •·1111>, 21.l -R76-R. 2 Hit Apt. C\O~l'd l(IU"ll):I'. ... ,., ... ., ~. d C'''"I .. ,.. II Shafi: t'pl11, drp11, uun11.!I, Allk lor apl 506, lf'ave M l '-' .,111, 11>«· ·"1" .,. •tTI" Ir pli, No. \VllJ l't'lurn 1:•11. P"l ok. $14~1/m<1. M7-4'!MO. pool, J•cuzzi, f'TICI. 1ar. Q·iief Arlnll li\'.illg 3rd Guy to ah•f'I! hnu: LAK~ P.-k er't'K, uJ)tllair11, ra.r. Couple or •tn&:J'-' t1dll, MERRIMAC WOODS S75/mo. 19072 Stlna:rr no <.fii'ld or Pf'lll, !1.16-3972 CS ,.ff'rrlm111c W11.y, CM r .. ,.,, 11.B. Call 6'13-Q11. 1 & 2 BR lUrn or Unfurn. SHARE ~y l BR hnrr Irvine Childl"l'n's ,f>l"lio11, Pool . 11.B. C11.ll 962-~ •fl I r · PARK WEST APARTMENTS J Bdrm. From $160 2 Bdrm., 2 B•. From $195 l883 P11.rkvif'w l...ane Irvine, (Just off Sll.n Dieio Fwy at CUlver Rd) $140 Up. F.LM GAR DJo:Ns or all d11y Wt'f'kf'l'Nh. APT!'i. lTI E. 22nd St., C.M. WANTI:n r,mllll', f?\-.t"ll 642-3645. Kllllff' h<"111ii;r In lluntinitt• Hunlingtot" Beach Rf>al'h SHll. nm. 9AA-~m 1 NEW SANDPIPER CHRISTIA N ~>m.o .;,,, ·" 10 11l1S11·,. 4 BR horn,. w. Early bird 11perla1. ..... 1 RR llanw. Rf'f11 r.q'rf. 54~1~7'1 I from Sl:O, 2 BR fro1n $1:"~'> Nl-:WPOR'r &"ch: hl-illutl Fu~/Unfurn, cool ~lor in-Jara~ hn1111f' tn 11hlln!, p Nr 11ehl11 I< ahop'g. Children 1----------ok, no JM>hl. 880 Cf'fll"r St.1 CM. 642·'1340 or S411-2682. tf'r1oni, pool, Jac1.11.7.1, mnrf!. It hllth MS.:114..'I 8081 :Hollaod Drlvf', Hun-mom · · · 2 BR, 1 RA, carporl, lrwtry faciL $150 mo. ~-Sfoeurity k $.;(}, C\f'&ninr.:, f)f'po.•il. 1 chH!l OK. Nr f'airview & _,_,_11~~-· _5ot.~5c205_. _· __ _ 2 BR, Mt'l'i11. V~rdl' Towohou.111;:'. Crp111 .. drapt11, f'nrl. g11r11~f' healed pool. $195. 96.l-4021. DELUXE f(J';\'nhouR. 2 BR .• l ·~ ha., carp, rfraJ)f'11. Priv. patio, Encl. gBr. Adull.!I. Sm. prt OK Slt'i5. s.40-7247 UPSTAIRS, 2 hr, •rlult:. only, no SunrlPrk, privlll1e Sl.oti'> ll'l'l. ~~.191. unturn. p ~'". i11r112 ... s r AC. 2 ,_, .1 Br 11p1 S140 up. Pf)()I, cptlfl'll. bltns, kid.11 ok. ZX,11; Cnllff'r;:f' N.,, S 647-70~5 1996 Mapl~ N.,, t 6-0-381 3 i:;MI.., J BR sip! ••/crpl11. dr~, .r;to\IP, N'frit.. gBr. $150, Ad\JllJ11, no pet a , 642-!6.R.1. 1 BR w/Den--2 Ra. 2 RR. Adult~. no pt!# RAY MF:ADOWS APTS 3jl7 w. Ray St., CM 64fi.oon .... RF:A u·11ru1. 1 ,, 2 RR. rnn1t"rl!J)f')rAry l:Arrlf'n Apt~. P111ir>11, frplr.. pool. $1Y..- S1i0. {'11!1 ~.lfi.l. ----* LRt: Deluxe 2 BR .. 2 BA . r11r. 11n1I Pf'I nk. Nr, So. Co11~I Pl11z~. 5'15-23Z1. ---PATIO or DEN-2 Br, 2 R11. Sl:i(). Arlult.!i, C11JJ :J46-7111 . LUX. nr """' 2 Br rlttpl~x. rpt rlrp~. hltn~. pa.tio. lj'll.r. l''P~lrhrr. 1175. ~R-:lfi&i . DELllXf: 2 Rrdroom •pl. Al!Wl 1 J:Wrlrnom . 2'DJI :'\11nf'r, 642--0657 1'1'ACIOlJS 2 Rr, nr 11hnp~. f•·y.. 0 .C.('., I: U.C.I. $165. ('a.II 97'"'°1:\4, 11rLl ... 51DE rluplf'x. I BR.. + !W'p. 11leepln2 nn. C.rp., drillpl'!I, l'rpl , appli11 0CH. Mort" fum. 11v11il. Walk to bf>11ch ,t. 11hop11. S1RO Mo. lllf'L 1111t. 494-3901 Aft g PM, 11.riytimf' wkrnd~. OCEAN rront 2 BR, 2 BA. l.ll.i'Urlll. Roy11l f', po O I , ll:Ofll'.f'l>lllll bl'h /,, Vi<'W. l.f'l!l-1' oplinn. $450 pPI" mn. S%!0 mo. rrerlil on pureh11M! pritt. S49,~JOO. B r o k f' r, 2l:\-M9-:>225 11~~. LARGE, rflOdt'orn 2 BR. nr hlo11ch. A!luH1, nn p!'l111. s11:i1r11n ... ~4-2.1.1~. J.ARr:~RR 1:p1., l'f'frij[' .. .r;lovl', cplrl, ~·I~ in. J175 inc util. 491-J'.}7.R. * NF.W 2 BR . hlk lo hl'11 rh. Spttt11.cular vl'"'" f250 up. 491-11113 or 494.-'nl9 DF.1.-UXE 2 Ir l Br. 2/Ba, "l'ICI R'"r. $155 up. R.nlAI Olr, 3095 M1«: Ave ,, :..i6-1034. GRAND OPENING J .111u rr • P•'I' tmen 1• ..,Ith ~n •nd htorbDr v il'w1. SinnlJ fr1>fl, :Z4. hour potrollll!d, <'nc:"-d CX>fl'lmunlty for ....c11rity. $800.000 r~r,.aUon1 l cnin plf':r, Sin1ln , l , 2 •nd ,'\ bfodroom l11tur1 u nit.I up In 2,000 M(. ll. ,,... tlH ..... 1eS7M - Vt.ti • _,. tlo•, t '° •'"I' .. , ... ,...--.,,._.,,.l ~a~ ftol '!IS -~ A I M'Wf'Olf ''""•Id .I.~~!'-~ tin11:ton BC!'ach. 141-9595. G•r•u•• for Rent 4:"" HUNTINGTON Gard~ n II WANTED: Gllln.it~ Apl11. Hell at Bolaa Chica. ilOrllll:~. C.\-1. or N.8. IWG-132.l Compen" · Srt 642--7!17~ ,, . what you're mi1111ina:. f'r. =~~~-~--­ SlJ>-$240. Office Rent1I 4 e LRG. 2 ~Bungalow Apl , SU PERB nff 1C'P 11ullf'. 5 R·, Gllrdf'n!', 6 pnol11. Sa.unl'11. 2 RA. K il <'hen -11 1 ·1 tlol Ja<'U7.z!11. Tennill, From Co1n pif'lely crptrl. On er · , s1110. ~. rM'r. £1'0Unrl nonr. Amr··· APT. Pool11ide • Spa.riou1 pr kl n11:. 1770 Orana:f', c-· Bun!lalow. Pvt. patl<l. Sl!"JO. '6.1-J261t, ~36--0.101 mo. to riiht arlull11 M6-1 31l. DESK "P•tt available t Lagun• 891'.ch mo. Will pnwtde flJntlh!· at S!'i mo. AAAW~I aenn FOR LEA~E • 2 Br, 2 811., avai111ble. 17f75 Be111r.h Bh sp1 . "'·l11pf!Clat:ul11r view. 11untln.-ton Rf:11ch. 542-t.32 ' Priv. <l~c-pool.f!l,.valor lo MF.D!CAGlf'nt•I rir l'f pnv, hPRch-lnlf'r-ph, M"rurl-e~llllr. ,Ii.tr,.~ r \•i11ihlli 1 ty, "™'L 2ar., mature P11rkin11:. 'Z 111 $Lill or t'l1 illdulllll. Mu11t M"fl' Ii> ·~ bi,,.. intn I 111 S:Nl. 1; pr,.c!llllf' 31744 S. Coll.lit Oran2~ •I ROl"hi-111f'r, ('. Hwy., 5(). l.11.gul'lfl. Kina,11.11.rrl R~•I ~: 1 t 11 I< Newport B••ch ~2212 fir 9fi.1~2AA_. __ FROM $135 A LIFESTYLE FDR THE JO'S Arf' ynu tir"d of p11.yin1t out gc.wld mnnry fo1· the ~"1ne old akimpy "P"rt· mP11 I~ wllh e\'"n •klmplf'r * AIRPORT AREA '* Ad j. Airporll'r HQt1>I. 0.-lu 1-2-1 room 11uilf'11. l.O"'F.~ - RATF.S. 2182 DuPont D ~ room 'I. Al.'J.-2MO. DE.~ l lJlll'.'e a vatlabte S mo. Will provide furnltw al 15 mo. An11werinJt ~-'"I avail11.blf'. 222 Foreat Av Llt~1n11. Rf'11.t'h. 494-9466 f1h ·ll l1le• 11.nd no f'Xtra..~ to BAY VIEWOFFICE~ '/w"k or? Thr11 e n.loy thl! 1 fp.11 lyl,. of lhe 70'r; at l)l'lui.:r, 11ir·1'011rll tlontd OAK \V ( 1 0 f) GARDEN ll,.tlf'Nln1 rf'rl . 1..lrto llN'll, AJ'AP.TM F-;NTS, RP1lonnmlr•, Rkr. 675-671 Thf'rt '1.St ml.Ilion In N!C• APT. 1uit1ble fnr ottlc' rHt.tlon includtnK I• r &: e rho"" · I 23 • 1Wln1mlng pool, ~·hlrlpool MrviOI', pno • batm_ a&nd volleyball l!lnd N""'ixn: Bl vd. C. M tf'nnis i;nurt~. a pro shop !>48-9711. ' pro wh<l off~r• r.r'"~ rroup orncCE=s'-.-1.19--~-$6-9-. -WI-. lr~1nJ1. A btllUllful C'lub-tll'ror11.1P. ~f'ar 17th St. ban nou~,. ha~ 2 hf'lllth rlu~. • 111.11n11•. Indoor 11:olf drlvln.: & 11hopp1n1t. !141l-811A. r11ne;P, bllliar1IJ1, rolor 'TV Off'ICf: 11ulf1>~ rtnwnll)'f. • th~111r·r. 7'rtivitlP• m~11n U..icun11 . Lt'11MO.' Dr> llC1 I 1 frf't $11nl'lilly hrutu·hH., b.llr-c11111, •Ir~. n,.11~. 494-:1a21.. 1 bf'-q11l'11, , por t 1 tnurn•· --_ ---- n1rnl.•. •1C. Mfo:Ol("AI, 11uit~. "'MY to F Cu11ton1 df'Mrall'd: ~In· H,.il at 'Rol$a Caica H.[ R"I'•· 1 .l 2 BR's. f'urni11hPd t m/n10. A46-1J2l. • ,,r Un(uml•hf!d. Lmv mo\""'"' ' J17n . 2 rllldrn ok. J RR, 1'4. ..,, c ..... I' k•nt. H•..,_, In rn1!hl a111'l nn lf',1111~ rl!· Stor•g• 45 RA. Jndry, e r PI /If t P,' '"'~· co1111111111 t'IUO Qulr"'(). Models open ct.Uy RETAii I II -I <'1 0 14.161.:I 1().7 • llM'IJ't a Vll . At 1r! •~'"'"''· "" "'"· "'"321 ~. ----·-·-" DA. KWOOO GARDEN ,.,,,.,.,.. sm. ""'· ... No. I 2 SR. oPpll'r. '1rp11, rrpt'tf Sl:n.-2 BR.. ulll lncludtd. frtr lnM nr fi7l-.!llO!i , ! d!thwt.-, Sl~/mn. 2 2 56 i\111.llll'f' arluH ... hr'! kld1 or ~CJ.Irr ~•mr • l SR Oon'1 1lv@ up th. •hlr Minn. CM M7-Hm pelr, • 642-3.175 fl\lf'.11. Studln. Pnal. CrpU, '1rp!. APARTMENTS "Llitl" ii In cl11.ulfl~d . Sh! 2 BR. 2 BA . 11unkf'n lht nn, l~RG. 2 BR w/rar, Wtr. pt!, hhn~. 1 I~ ll I u n turn . (Rttnrt Uvlnit fM tn $mN' Rfo11u1111? M)..M71 Ba.kf'r No. 0 , 1'174).TT Call htwn 1 Ir 5. R'*-41J'I li tl'l'OUn!. 1~ P\•rtntl.A NEWPORT BEACH to oulrnrwn Ltvi1 -)'(JU ca 11Mt taatnt draw l1' tM Weit SPAC. 2 BR. 1 Ba., Cl"pt1. "'"~· ~&-3682. I 16th ' I rvlne ~ "ft'Uh kl calh"' In Dau,. P1lot W&lt Adi blYe dtapos. melosed ,.,.,.. S.U ld10 1lfml ..,..! Call ~ISO or '42·1170 DAILY Pn.DT cl-1 fr'pl. rrpl/tfr.,_, Slfil'I. 11"11 1 1571 Onnre. Nn. A. $1.\.'l S1fi.'lllt1m. AJ1k •Mui nur Ad11 ll> Onl) 1• rrnm "Chrii tma' Nttktttt ---------------·illililiililiiili·ili~-----iililill• .. µ _?1'orphls~~..!plcn.~!:_--·-lJIO. ~l·W/l. ~ !< ... ! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I • u ll IU.l61' , ~, ..... t ]llJ . ~~=·'..eJ1··-'.";;~::~1~~:.::·,~~~:~ 1[1JJ11. :~,. IDJ 1~1~-~ .. ~ •• ~,[Il)~.rr~ :::: ·1WJr · ' ..... 1 .... Rontol 44.1 f-,,,._......, -J:M £1octrlcol • • Plumbi119 • ' "'p ~oi>IM.'M & F 710 Help W•-· M & F 711 Holp Wontod,-M I F 710 Hol, Won1ff, MI F 710 >lolp WontO.., M,; f 711 STOR~ for l('l!t", 1400 or APRIL lllh, Crtme c:elor ELECTRICAL ~'ORK. All SAVE on ttQrnie repairJ. trff ~ji\.l'i'ftR Re:flQJe, o~r 2n:l Ml:• n. Cpt• 1:. 1\an, fem.a.le dosu tk!:a <Ollar le kind&. Bir or small Lic'd 4 • at.. plwnbln£', paint, in. z. ,.~: thru P'ri. 7.30 to ~,-..-----~ CLERK{TYPIST F~':!'°, driR~-nTRAJNJJ-.. ~E •• 13m. "hr". ~ ·N PffUJ~-PU'8LJC.~R~ATt'4$ n?ady to~. Major shoppinf choke CO ar. v,¥:. 300 IUk lOL Free est. 5tS-OOll. 1t&11atloft1, .. ""-. 5 •• ~ ~-U Sa C J 18" St. CM •-'!"" ......._ ·""'· . ""'" '"11!1. te l'f'nter, n em t! n I e • .... · · ~·-. E\: ECT!\JCtAN, llcrnsed, ~7:?. JIOORk'Jlng., ~fs. $3XI mo. To learn 1..&clie11 Garment Ji.·U~. •1«• .. ..._ ........... &: ..-l""r. ursei IUUI:&. lntt'lllgent, wellim:imed, at· 891J..8.116. Call ~l tractive gal W/f'..xper, l:n 492-M51. YOUNG Mal<e' Sia...,.-cat ~-•-• . ...,,_,.,., Small jobs, rnaint. PWi\IBJ.NG REPAffi · IMmed. openlna:. 362 E11tbt'r 1t * Store/Office, 1:: I a a" Vicinity Orange ~ 23rd St., & repo.!rt. 5-·~. ' No job too •mall St., C.i\!. 646-0616. dltiplay eut. Oo\\·ntO\\'tl Costa Mesa,. ~29-1. G. •rdenlng •. ' * 642-3128 * 8ABYSJTIE~ to five lcvizlg H.13.ZlS-5thSt S17Jpermo. FN .... mal""""'" brown ~=~-5.J6..«1()7. ...-COL:~ PLUMBING care to oi.y 2 rr old girl lhru n1ix breed .-Vic. Pen-AL'S GARUENING 24 hr. servlce. 645-Jl 6l summer. Own tran!l. Balboa * GREAT LOCATION nln!ula Po.int. 675--3™: tcr· :ardenln:z & •m a I I 1>eni11,. 6~ual S101'<' for Lrase on Nt'1vpo11 I ~L-.-,,~-----=-5~.55 landscaping . ~rvlce,, ca1J Remodel & Repair BABYSr?frR l cbUd. 1\ly Blvd.. Costa !\lr1>11. Crpt'g. -----.----M0-5198 ~f!t. Se r v I n: N Cd'f ~-r '! ·home:. Nlg. l1ts. Pa.rt time . $.t'JO. C&.11 :>48-ll!l.1. LOST. 3 le~<tl Adu I t e\l'po11. ' , ....,., a ;, es.a, e e e e e • -----~-s•-\" lcl"f F'ATI!ER k SONS _. , CM·n traru. 642-2-12.0 f en1ale Ca1, llml, ....... 11.1.. uvver ,,.,res, ,yei; 11 • * OFFICE-£00 llQ. It, Al.'IO .,..,. ...., 80 Sq. f t. JNDUSTPJAL gray, Ilea oollat. V I c * NEW LAWNS* Decorattni, des@, carpen-BE~ UT Y 0 p e ~a .' or, SHOP. Costa l\Jesa 64G-2l30. i\Iaf r:olla l.: Ta I be r I . $00 . Siolonot • Seedini. Yard try, plumbiltg, wiring, etc. Guaranlef'·-.+ 'COmm1s:uon. M11rltnn. Of Calif. ll3 l\.la.rine Ave., Bal I~. COUNTER' GIRLS FRY COOKS ~lust be 18 or over Day lc Nite Shift Apply In Pen;on bel\\•een S & JO Ai\f Jack In The Bolo 385 E, l'Jth St. Costa J\felsa No Phone CaJls FlBl."1tGLASS "tol~n. iikill· Ml. nurse care fur pati:'"ut office "'Ori:.~ ;rtr emp}o)l- ed &: unskill~. AU 3 shifts. days. Prtpatt lunch Ptc. 5 mtnt field. Salts orlr:nted. \\'e 11111 train. 1631 Placen-di.>' wk. 63&-733.1 aft -4:30. Salary, PT p<)llition \vi tia, Costa Mesa. MACHINIST, young mAn areat potl!ntial, FOOD .i Cocktail \Vaitress, with Jimltat exp ac<.'eptable, ,.,1 tt:~~~~~~~.ES exper.1 necessary. lf eonscientious and et1.n Uiie i4!)6.663t)· , Apply n Person Only 11 A'.\.i micrometer11. Mu.st havel----.C:..=---- AJJe)' \Vest reliable attendance record. QUICK 0l'der Fry Cook. '100 W. Clce<U1!ronl, NB Apply 1J74 ~n A\'e., Unit Steady '1'1'nployment. Mesa GEL-Coat@r, exper. N~ed J Costa Mesa. Laneii, 1700 Superior, N.B. day shift. Top pay. 1631 Real Estate C11rffr Pla~n1la, OJ. MACHINl~l'.' Ne\V or experienced, join~ -~SJ.14. rernodeUng. Slate Llc'd, 4 gentrations e>."P •• 25th yr. 646-716.1 s:~E c!1c:rn:: H~~. l'~;~~ LOST-:-s~ .. -,",,~1~0,,.-.-.. ~~-.,~.r~ .. 1-:-SM-<8;-;;;-,"~·=--.---=--in bu&. • Lle'd & boJ>dtd. BE Au TY,. Operator-N.B. d<>!! :\I :t Ver~ A ·. 838-3545 , area.. Somf!. foUo'lo'in& pttf'd. 8'6-'1323. ., .. "'"' . ns\\'enl AL'S Limd~aplng. Tree • • • • • • Call 54 • .,~. COUNTER Woman. 2i or ovr, dri.,·e-.in, Costa !le11&. Call .1-W-2164, l-4pm daily. • Gelco.t T ouchup 'J'.UM'flt Lathe Machinist. \Y~I· q,tnpanx tha!,'1 s:ro\\'inl.. JJ • Engine Men mg to ~<7P1 rd:Ponilbility .you do.Jiot..ha\IO • ~lot¥e, • I I II . M -\Vlll train person w/good cbecJc oft our ns • ation en machine llhop backK?Ound ·s4·9· to ''ZorOO''. Reward . ·tt:moval. Yard remodeltni:. ==~~c--~~-~-~ COOK $2.7i-S3 fir. Exp. nee, Also, machine ahop tralne; • lnc_lu1Jrl11I Rental •so 97~1617. 3001 Capri Ln., Trallh hauling, Jot cleru1up. ROIODELING, . additions, BQAT A!&embl@rs, · exp'd COSTA MESA fi1esa Verde:. ·. . . Repair sp.-inklen. 673-U66, PatkPS, prompt service. 71't.'\! only. Apply a.j \V. o. Schock 1440 1· 2M1J Sq ft. Lost: i\fan's a\atnorid 'rihJt. lh 1..ANDSCAPJNC. New Lawns ''P.stimates, rererence)t, local Corp. ~ 1 ~-Gttenvllle, CABINET l\fAh"ERS-Delaney' a Sea Shanf¥ kilt. 4: SprinklerK, Res l d • 1. bul'.lder.~ 1.10 p.m. 968-90f11. loiiSiian.,.1aiiArn>.,.·ii·..;,... ... .,..,. .. F'IDERGLASS or vie. Sentimental keep. Coram. ,, $lalo' • L tic' d ·I ="=,,__~::':..... ____ _ Some exper. ne<:el!I. Apply in person, Love's BBQ, Brookhursl & Adam~. HB COOK, p/time for caterin: • Columble Y acht1 ' Lok-Fast flX'. • Equal Oppor. Employ@r 864 \V. 16 St.. Re11I E1tate GIRL Friday • Lit@ typini. 'N@\1;-port Beactt 642-1700 Licensing Course General oUict: "'Ork. To MAID ,.,'Ork in @xchange lor F'ull sales trainin~ proKftm assist one girl office. 1 blk apartment. 2.176 Ne\\'JlOrt -no '?"f4-~anagement op. Nr. N\vpl t'l"'\\'Y I 8.D. Fnvy !Jake. Reward. 644-1816. S.11-4446. -RpofinJ 29::1 Crace Ln. BLK 1.ohg hair spa)4{J rem PROFESSION'AL1 tree: work, __ ...;. _____ _ So. nf Baker. E. of r·ai1vie\v cat·,.,hile loe on front paw prunfpg, trlmntlng, spray-• T. Guy Roofing. Dtal •,, .l')'f!J Representative there Vk~: Laguna Niguel \V~9t ing, sprlnkJers.r: 'l..a1'1sca~ fllrect. I dq my own '\\>Ork. 9 ain-12 noon. NiN!' Dr. 4!Kr5973. • in(, cleanup. Ceorgl! 646-5893 ~2'180. 548-9'"a90. (7141 9794434 or 879-4TI1 DfA;\fOND ptndant; v j. PROFESSIONAL $eWing/Attir•i'ion1 NE\V DELUXE M-1 Units. 3 Balboa Bay Club, May 18. JaPanese Ganlenina: Service --Al.torotL-I _.c ,. 2 :.--;;-5 ph. power. 1733 Monrovia RE\1/ARD! 494-3323 , Free E!!f, * 646-00Jg 1""' -,,_ 54~145; 836-9793 eves. ~3.310 Neat, acCl.ll'ale. 20 years f!XP· 1 --.....-; • ·, · • " • ' l!'Mpert· Japanetif! G&rde:fler 576-'to KOO $Ci.Ft. LOST: Blk &: tan Mixed Complete Yard Seni<lf! Ster.0 R_ep•lr 4001 Birch, N.B. 541-5032 Shepherd, No tap or ID. FM!: e1tlmate11 646-7624 STEREO eqttipment ~pairs, l\f·l CORNER, 127 x 90 ' V1.c. Gothard le Slater, H.B. COlif ~L f: TE' ~lAn & complete facilities for all "'/bid&. 991 \\'. 19th St., C?-.f ~7.~ndRe P~ ca ll1 'Gardening 11ervlce. Hauling makl!6 & ,model! -diacount ~ nio. 642-3490. • · w · &:'clean-op. :Jim, ~ rates: 8 b-ack tape deck, Rentals W•nted 460 FJ!:M Irish setter pup. 3 mo EXPER Japanf!ae Gardener clean .k adjust SB.00, tbi$ old. Vk:: Dahlia, Cdi\f. \l/hlte Complete yd lltI'Vlce. ·Neat \\leek $1.00 oll. to Daily Pilot W~NTED JU~ Y i RESPONSIBLI! ·' WORKING, ,COMl!l.E need ~e or ttfO, be~m hou!e whh large fenced yard' I for two VEftY WEIL TRAlNED dogsl 1135 most. Vic: between 19th & ·Victoria marking on chest le toes. & Rella. Free: est. 6"2-4389 re iii de rs.. <R~plncement 61"a-n7s. nl'!Mles & cartridge¥ ~ ofll. Bl.ACK & white Cx:kapoo puppy w/nea collar, vie. Monterey It WW. Sol.Jth Lagul"la . .f99..2976, -t99-400J. EXP. Haw&lian Gardener Complete prdenlng servicf! U:S.A. Sle~ E qui P. K.a.malani, ~6. WatthoUSE', 1 9 E. 17th St., Costa l\fesa, i.l;)..2-W2. SPRINKkER ·REPAIR Tolovition RoP•ir ·New Sy&tetns * MG-2i35 ;-fl\Car W. B11y St.) COSTA I ~rvctliM i· (~) '.JQHNSONS' GARDENING * BLAL\'E'S TV * Yard MaiJltenance; P1alitihg Seivicing All Brands ?tIBSA. 548-7881/aU 6 p.m. . ··-. ~ • WANTED ~~·;;;;;;;iiiilj~:;;; ·Cleanups • 962-20l,j Auµi'qrized· i\fagnavox KnO\\!Wfor hanesty 546-4313 Young couple "'ould likf! to Sc'hooli & ____ ....__._._....__ l'f'nt 2 BR unfurnished house Morgan · Secretarial with garage in CM. Up to instructions 515 979-8750 General Strvlc1i · $150 mo. Good ttfs. Both · ·All Typinr· .. Phot.vw..Jes SUPE RVISOR 'S ........ uy• employed. 557.9305 aft 4 PM. TRAINING! Free classes Free Pickup ~ Deliwry N 0 N -Smok1ng aent1eml!n now forml.nr 1Qr .ifunl!. Household lmPnJVement TREE SERVICE • Trimming, Prutling &: Clean- up: ,642-5196 or 842-8442. ;Jpholllo_ry desires !leeplng room .• .Shaltlee produ9' ~Te<Jp, A to Z Handyman Reasonable, 6 7 S -O 3 I O • sales methodi: . .. gucces! Indoor & Outdoor paintlnr. CUSHIOl':l:S, bar &: lurnitul"f! 54S-7197. motivation. Plus kit. $15 clean-Up & Tl!pAin: from upholstet'y. at reas. C"O!t. Continental In te r i ors , total Earn while .Jf!arntng. roor to la\vn. 839-3898. 6-l2-l9CO. ~ For appt. oa1l 543--52SJ TTLE \Vorlt. pa i n I i n g • ,~~~~~~~~~~I l[~···-----·-~.ij!4~ 0N"O~"='-' ~=-~~.,-~ Reasonable Rates. Free est. · ' . I _ GUlTAR, Piano&: Voice i~ Dave, 6-12-98J"'2 Holol·ard [ l[i . z Ji accompanied with musi· 644-7423. . . _ Empfoyment . f' Announcements 50(i cianshiP""&t u n be a t.a b I e BY lit o o • F ; . U. elf!Ct, ;-~-liliiiiililiiiiim;;~~ 1~---------1 prices. $3.50 J>d' hoUf. plurf.tb, f'enct:~lns1Jtts. *Wanted. Dead* I ~n!!!<!!!;M!!!7!-,....,!· !·!!~~~·I ,.,,,e,..,,, 'lue: · BA/l\1c Job . yt~ntO<j, .Molo 700 Aluminum CAMI that have j 1 .'.,an!=· ·,,~.,...' "'='·==o-oo=--1 HIGH School. Studen( for part served you well I provided I ... · · · · ....._ ·•r lfrl TOTAL SERVICES CO. time gardener's h el pf! r • ::u~o!Gf~~~~~ ~~~'. 7 ~;-: r.P .~m~~~laJ~~~ ,·-°"~"'"·~.,.,.."-·'-'"-962-Slil2".~·~-'-' .,-- guna beach. 'No glass what· Job,~enteci", "Fem11le 702 iiOever accepted. · B t;. 'Ul ' H•uflng , _._r._,Y.:..~;.\ .::<'!I.;:;-;.:;~.;:;~·;..;•;..' .:..".;;...' .... ,,_,,, ~"'A"'L...;•,,_1 _ _,._,.,...._ SUlif?tfER CA~tP Boys & "" -J..V\.,, ., eves, h a. u I in g, Bkkpr-Glrl .Fri $600 Unusual Oppor. tor sharp gal. ~Accur. typing, .iii heJpful but not nee.· Life L.H.A. eo. paid. Prot. lhu'Wir. Fun group, Co.' ~ta Fl!e. Also ·Fee Posidonir. • Call Barbar.a Klng 546-0635 NEWPORT ' PERSONNEl.AGENCY 3848 ·Campus Dr., l\'B OOYS' A;i:e l0-I4 10 dellver paperi in the Dana Polnt, Sa.n Cle- m~fe area11. DAILY PILOT 49'1-442'0 BUSBOY.-Over 17. ,\pply aft 6P~t. Dillman'!, 801 E. 3·17-3739 COSMETIC DEMO Opening 101· exper. Demo. 3'11,;. hr "'()rk "'k. Full com· pany benefit!. Salary + t."Omm based on. sales. Apply 10-12 It 2--4 MAY COMPANY So. Coast Plaza ~ Brist()l, C.1\1. Equal Oppor. Employer COUPLE : 1-la in- tenance-usistant manager needed for large project in Costa. Pifesa. Paintini: le rep.air backa:r(lund nf!Ce!S&l'Y. S a l a ry + apartmeit. Mon-Fti, 9 to 4 2131355-JSSO. . Balboa Bl, Balboa. CUSTODIAN, local church, ..;BU:::;SJN=E.:SS:::..;::0p::_.;:=:,..n_i_ly_il_ / 40 hrs. wk, iood bl!neflt.-i, 3 you are an artist or pm-11 pm. ~7147 alik for crallsman: F9r info 67Hn:? Don. D A N c E Jnsb'UCIOr! I C.binet M•~er1 Helper Hostesses ~\/ill train, Singles Custom furniture !hop. Exp'd Ch ·~ rl?q'd. ~tU!t be neat ir. ilert. alet :a.;rw Hrbr Blvd, C.l\I. Jorg~iisen Furn. Co. 786 64.6-5337. Ne1vton \V~y. Qif 645-0010. DISHWASHER CART HANDLER £11.-per. Over 21. Surt Ir. Sir- F /Jlme tor pvt country club loin, 5930 \V:Coast Hwy, NB Jn ~B. Mechanic9.lly inclined D I E TAR Y A i d e & It. }:>efSC>nable. · Dlsh"•asher ~day shtft. 466 Call 644..Q502 . 'Flagship, Park Lido Conv. Betv.·~n 8 Al\I & 2 Pi\f Center. 642-8044. CASHIER DRAPERY installeirex- Jm'ml!d. Opening. Exiitr. per..dependable. Fu11 time, pnf'd. Kenn Rima Hard-good s.:Uary, 492-n5-l. ~ 'll'ate, 2666 Harbor Bl. C:\l. CLERICAL P!)SITIONS * EXEC, SEC'Y Editorial & sales oHice. Educational audio,isual ro. Lyceum Production!, Inc. Interviewing for w0t'k bl Lo! P.O. Box 1226, Laguna Angeles unbl move to New-Beach, Ca. 92652 · • p:irt '72, 'FREE da.i!y bus I ~ transjlortatiot:i provided, I iiiiiiiiiiiiiii=:l=:l=:I; . PACIFIC MUTUAL J.C.· PENNEY CO. Fashion Island Newport Beach e : DEPENDABLE •·• clean. ""· .Exp c o iJ e.• e Girls 7-U. Outstanding pro-... , · BABYSITTING :dudent. t --·ck. 0 -s. gram-Top notch Slaff. -~ .. ., ~ Reasonable rates _ FREE Ha;~~~-~~':Sa 534-IMP. , , , Br oc hur e . CAl\f P YARD. prartt cleanups. PART tipi.e general office. Typing, dictating & other business machineS. Tues, \Ved, Thurs. pre tf' rr ed. Pern1anait • de"pendable • lT yrs experience. \Vest .Orange ,CoUnty. 897-4809. AfJT'llY Monday thru Jo'riday 9-12 pm, corner ·of Sant'l Cruz l Ne\1'J)Ort Center Dr. Requires CAYUCOS, Cayucos. Calli. BABYSITTER 24 Hrs Remove treeJ,: dV't, ivy, 93430. ' Fenct'd·Back Yard, s k,iploa.df!T' ~khoe. • NE£D help at home? \Ve CLER1CAL Ottlce • 'AJf!ft i~ PAINT & ·HARDWARE DEPT. HEAD to beach. lt~ fiE'Xible t' Blvd .. Ci\f. 51~975.> porturudeii. A's.Ii: fo~ Mrs. your needs. {)rei;~ optional Jones for, information at Perm. Ne1vport resident. 842-5581. High sc hool , occ, MANAGEMENT Tarbell Realtors Hou s e wi fe OI\. Call 546-5164. TRAINEES REAL ESTA TE GlllL Friday, M>ig Cooslt. NEEDED -SALESMEN- Sharp. Initiative. Typing. IMMEDIATELY' Rcs .. reh. bkpg. pl"'"· 30 , Need l o' 2 oxpc,ionced Hr. ,.,.k, S3 hr. P.O. Box snlesrieop!c. Incentive t.'Om· 8822. Fountain Valley, 9:?'708. Due fo the rapid gro\vth & mission i>liding scale plan, ----------1 ~'<pansion or our corp. A personalized trainin~ by 1 GRAPH IC ARTS number of pttstige positions professional. ALSO ,vilJ trabl SALESMAN att now available. ne\v licensees. Small o~. Full service platemakPr req's pleagant "'Or'ld~ corl¢ltions. several exper, W~men !or ACT NOW! Bersotial intttvlew -Aide ne\V expanded operatl!>n. for l\f&JV;ger. Background in printing No Exper Nee U.S. AFFILIATED trade or related fiekls. Sfond · · Brokers Realty resume to the ~rf!!I., Hoyt's \Vr V.'Ould rather train from 347-8507, ! \ Ens 968-ll'78 llarbor Engravmi. P.O. Box ICl'atch for the ri"ht I Real Estate ll567, Santa Ana, Calif. 92711 '" peop e. Prof:euiooal Real Estate * GUARDS * C•ll Mr. Paulson ~ SJlemnen &: brokers! 'Jh.e Jmmediatl! f/timl! It p/lime 133-9472 opportunity is here! You aN! position~ available. San nttdrd imm'~t6Jy 'lor our Juan Capistrano & So. La-e l\1edica1 Attenda nt ra19idly c:lpriint 'R e • I guna areas .. Uni1onn. & 1-~Y.<:i!'· Peraof\ .,. , E&tatl! ~.Y!Jiion .. ~~v~tP­ equlp. rum. Fringe benefit!. ~ Hilaria Way portunlly for .a.dvaifcement. Car &. telepbont-ff!q 'd. Newport Villa. NeWport Bch. For.appoinbnentplkJMlUck 533-0650. Apply at 883 S. 11-fnt lloover * 642-5&n Roe.1:ner. _ East . St., AnaJteim. MOTEL Maid p/time for . -- EquafOpportunity l:mplo~r m;ture \\l!ma~. ~ . , GUARDS-Call 53&-~ ~ ~ PATROLMEN e e NEEDED , ' 1 I I I Permanent usignment. C.~f. T'ii.-Office Girli • • Laguna areas. Full & part 1 --=--=~~~~-- lime. Pre'!!· pay. Life ins .. Must hi! 25 am able to drive ~.~.al Estate S11Jt1 Bonus. Pa.id vacation. _ APPLY _ IU!al Estate Ofc ne@ds Apply Suite G 186 E. J&th St C l\f salesmen. \Ve <."Over a.II 523 No. Grand, S.A. _ " ·• · ~ or real estate. Nr NURSES ~utilul Hunt. Harbour . RN rt'lier.. Exper. Airlt-.o:. Tobin Realty 846-33n Huntington Be11ch Bayv~ .. v Conv. llosp., 2055 -RECEPT IONIST-Un ion High School Th · C'M 54l-5690 di~tiict has ooenln" tor urm, . . · SWITCHBOARD. NUR$ES aid for disabled Needed w/pleasant. personaJ. PERSONN~L g • n ti ,.man. 1'1 g ht ily ro, Yach\ing Manuf. 195 ASSISTANT house-keeping duties. Sat .l per \vk, 6 mos -l yr exper Top Pay &: e>r:cellent bent'-Sun only. 673--0951 prefd, some ~ng requir- fit!I, Interested applicants NURSES Mdes. \~x p ~ r. ed. Send hMd~n back- :report for lhe ,.,,ritten teat p/tirm ~U. 1.f@'S&i Verde grd letl1!r to Dailf'Pilot ad at :l:?ll Pi\f on Thurid&Y •. ~J1fosp .. ~ j'.:enfer, CM. #4.18, P .O .• Box 1560, Costa Junf' 1, 1972. Room 136 at . _,,. ' e-... 1.fesa, Calif, 926_26 ".:..· --- tlunlington Beach Hia:h 'OVE-RfEAS • RECORD SALES CLERK School. 1905 ?tfain St., Hunt· M0JtZ'JOBS ntAN PEOPLE Previous Wes expet-. Hair ington Beach, California. An ~.Is le profe&sions ok, mus! ~ neat, corp. • ·~ wages e LO\\•er scientious v.·orker. 6#-5610, ---------1~~ ~ • Tu bl!n~ts F'ri & Sat ()nly . , e ~ Tran~atiolt Huntington BHch ~Al;L 541-4345 [ ]~ * Call 642-1592 * ~.i7~26G(i. • r , , LOVING child ·Catt. ?-1y home, \\'eekdays. 1''t>nced play-y1rd. Agf!! z.;;. 642-9554. C.M. YARD &: Garage Oeanup. Frtt est 7 dUI:. Call anytlme:, 54!-5031. · have-Aides • Nums • tet1i~ent "-·omllll. Int~festlng · HollSe'kpni e Corilpanions work. Must be· g ood Exeellf!nt working oond!, Outstanding benefits Union High School ~""'Guarantel'd di~trict has an oprning for 'Until em~t. ftecepted Bus Traffic •nd Less OVERSEAS SER.VlCES ROBINSON'S e NEWPORT e ;. IEACH n;; * HJLLY LICENSED * Reno\\'ned Hindu Spiritualist. Spiritu1l J'teadlngs given da ily. lO. AM-10 Plif. Advice irfven orl ali maUer1. J can help }'OU. 312 N. El Camino Real San Cle1nenle 49'1-9136 or 492-9034 Gardening. Yard 1 .. Garage C11rpet Service Clean. Up, Free. Est. Reas. Rates. ~34,88 JOHN'S Carpet &: Upholstu:y H Cl~anf!rs. Extrt ou1ecleenlng · Ori-Shampoo tr e e Scotch-Let oUTCR"":' tleih ·~~ guard (Soil Retardant,). carpel!. Al!O; window! & Dt!greasers &. 11.ll color · fl oor!. X1nt v.~rk. 537-1308." brightener! & IO minute Dedicated C_JNnl.vi bleach for lvhite · carpets. ··• Save your money by saving * \l1E 00 Ev.ERYTllING. * me extra trip!!. Will cle"an Ref.s. Fre~ t sl. 649-2839 • · H om emak~rs-Hpjohn w/numlMtr!I. \\'e will train, 547~ l\lacGrticor Yacht Corp. W A N T E D HOUSE\VORI\, I c=l±-,G,-'ll'cP=l=a.i,,--"_ti_a.c.C,o.c.·M.:., ___ I Apply tn Person Laguna. area, ?.fon, Tue, COLLEGE or high school 10 AM-4 Pl\I \Ved. , Good references. girl \"'!J'fed bf!&J nntng 24 Fashion ltl•ncf 493-4496. mld-.JurH! (or . earlier) tc Equal Oppor, Employer JNFANTS.Op.ly _ \\'ould like babysit 2 children. 6 & 4.1or . to sit paft time, ""·ill do lite the summer. Hrs. from 7:15 :-::;~z=~~===: h.skkpg. Need tr.an s. AM-lo 3:30-4 PM. Mon-Fri. ~;>.2489 · · Some evn, too if desired. Must liaiis Owr{ t rans'porta. Experienced CREDIT CHECKER Prevention Programs t611 E. 17th St S.A. ~ilf! 3 SuperviNr. . PARr:-Time. Early A'.\I Top pay, Ex~llent benefit!. dtiU\>erf. ~fust have pick-up ~nterested applicanm re-or van.·&i6-8162. port 'for thf! written test at 9 Af.1 on Saturday, June 3. PIZZA Cook!! & ~livery, 1972 in Room T-59 at Foun· malf! over ZI. p/time. Ap... tain Valley ltigh School. ply 16.)31 Beach'Blvd., Hunt. 17816 Bushard St., Fountain; :cll<'J="'ch.=-co-~-~~­ Valley, Ca1irorni11 . POSTA1t Carriers. Deliver Has opening lor Experienced .. LUNCHEON WAITRESS Daily 1'~or:, Our Marina Room Apply in person 10.5 p.m. •2 Fashion Isl .• N.B. • Equal opporlunily employf!r PlSCOVER DlSCOVERY Find YOURSELF Jn Someone Call no1v • No obligation {714) 8.~ (213) 387-3393 NATlONAU.Y RECOGNIZED Jiving .rm ., 1dlnlng nn. & MES.' Cleaning. Carpe!s, hall $15. Any rm. $7.50, windows, noon etr.~ Resid/ coueh $10. Chair $5. 15 yrs. com'l. 557-674!,, 548-ill.l~ . exp ... i! \Vhat. '?'Ou?~· not BAY & Beach J anitorial. melhcid. I dfj ~ ·~11. ' Crphl/windows/fioon: , etc. HOUSEKEEPER/Cook. \'\'ill lion & de.sitt to ,:ive the livli'-in .. Referenes. Age 35. chil~n }'00? undivided at-· From Argef!tina. 642-3187. tention at t~ b6ach or park HelpWanted.M& F710 or v.·l~re.vf!'r :r.ou & they decide lo s~nd th~ day. ACCOUNTANT-ExpeT. In Writ!!, 1e!ling us ll little municipal'or \Vattt dist. ac· about yoUrseH i lhe pay counting. Must have ability you desire Plus your age, to \\'Ork inck'pendently ·a: -~~t: &: p~ No., to': should be qualified to Classified Ad No: 4», Dally -'UNITED- CALIFORNIA BANK y~r own area. Costa 1\fesa, HOUSEKEEPER lo liv(;l.in &. H¥nt. .Bch.. ~-n~. Vly. help -e,ve r()r 3 girls all in HOuse-.\'1,VeS pref d. 530-0402. schoo(. "" Under 50. Refs. pfilNriN_G Salary open. A·! I na-~fll.fEOi.4.TE OPENINGS - ti()nalilies considered. Call FOR txf>ERIENCED PROBLEM Pregnancy. Con· fidcnt , sympathetie pregan- cy COUSl!lini;. Abortion & AdopHon ref. APCARE. 642-4<.16. AUX>HOLTCS Anonymow:. Phone 542-72.lT or "''lite P. 0 . Boll 1223, C.Os!a l\fesa. Tr11vel 540 SET SAIL TAHITI m Ocea11 Avr. Laguna Beach ;;~5-839:> an 6Pi\l. Good ref. 531--0lGl. ~sld/Comm'I. '46-I~. STEAt'\f Carpet Cleaners, professional at 1 o w·e !I t prices. 3 avg rm! complete 139.95. 962-0012. "H~o=u~s=EK=E=EP=E=R~-.-eo-=-m--1 • ·Stripper I pl•t• m• kar panion, live-in, for single adult lady. 548-33:32. • FoliJar/cutfer oper•tor CLEANING Specialist: Win-at>Sume responsibility -for Pilot Box I560, Costa Me!ll, ::~nC:ri1'.n~oors; stovet ~~counting functions &fter =CaJ~ij-·-·--'-·_:,·~·"-'-''---1 Equal Oppor, Employer INVEST IN References Required ~-initial period of rupe~. Put J"ttl "loo YOUR FUTURE lotartec Printing, 1577 Pla- L nd I Good analytical a b i l I t y • a 1 e t' in yoo.r EXPER Sales\\·oman needed II scap "I Sal de nd Levis. ad.I tf'IOSt baubl~ for 1or Beauty Sup!)ly Sttltt Full or p/tlme. centia, N.B. No phone eall! ---------.aJ'Y, open, pe ent on "bucks". · CaJI Clasai••-.1 please. An iequalopportunity TOP SOI' --7 oxpcr. k qual_ lfi,".alioM. i." . ~ !BeaullcfanJ. Call 54!'>-51BO BE YOUR OWN BOSSI 1oy ,. ' 64 ~, ... ,, ,, emp et. Carpenter LARGE OR SMALL , La\~n ~mova1, -}\ototill Plea~ apply by letter only ;i;i~~i;i'·j;jj·· iiiiliiiiiii~.iorjij-jji'.18lijj"j;· iiiiiiiiii Men or Women -"-=-'="~=~~~--1 All Types \Vork: Cut doors, :--.,.c~~--'--'---ior an application fonn to PROD. CONTROL panf!I, remod@I, 1 in i s.h , Painting &. th~ hfo\Jlton ; Nigu'el \\'&1er * . :* Lean A Yellow htanager for medium size 96~m!961.e,, r~p&l r s , etc. __ P_,•..;P_•_r_h..;ant...;;.i_nt;;..;.· --I District, 272n Alicio ·Creek · * * * * Tixl C•b non-deferute" manufacturing -" . • b• La N' I Cal" •' • CO, Joealed In Irvine:. Farnn-==oc"--~~---1 3J ,o t]i1e. paper lc hanging, nu.,. guna 1gue , 110 CUSTOM_ woodv.wk panelr )Mbite store, vinyl, flock. ADVERTISING ·, . , can for Appl iar with mat'l control & Grand Ill '-1a stl?<l SchoonM', ing. CabiMt5, Gen'I repairs. r;,,7 38., ~ H • 546-lll l scheduling 1hop osing inctn· On!w ~ Cues!~ ~hRrl' COll!S. Ph. Duke 0 a Du r k a. ..... -. .,, ''"" • n rm an G~at opPortunfty for· highly tive system. Report lo v:P. (213) 378-1239 64G-7''98'. 8<&-'.!JS,. motiva1~; highly sldlll'd : Trader's Pat.adise 115.000 . . "-~~ PAI,.,11TNG • Honest, C!@an , secretary to worlc into broad· . Ask for H@nnan Call Bill Harper,. 540-6056 L•gun• Hills Now Jntl!rvie1\•int: BUSBOYS Doy Or N it• Full Or Pf T/mo Apply In Person 24001 Ave De La Carlota Laguna Hills I Al the: El Toro oU ramp S.D. F're('1vay) Found ffrH 11d1) 550 F'.XP. Jternodeling. cabinets. guaranteed \l.'Ork. Lice:n--"' er ·responsibililles af fast-· ,.... ~ ' · ,,.._ • =u \.Ala!ltal Agl!ncy t'OUND AdOrRhl~ m a If! repairs, maint. No job too & insured. 673--5740. • paced· NewJ>Qrt Beach ad· I 1" nes 2790 Harbor at Adams •2o7 Equal Oppor~ Emplcyer Ox:kapoo pup. V I'" in it y mi. Reas. S46-4:?2~. PAL'S Paii;lling . s ·~ r v. vertising agency, Brains',· • , • IRVJNE PERSONNR . · PROFESSION:AL 1i:=::-:-======~ Gilbert SI. and Stanford, Cement, Concrete. Jntcr/Exter, 40 yn '(!xper. iqjtiative. & sh r equired, SERYICESllArc•v-y RESTAURANT &: HOTEL I• d11rden Gro\•e. 53 9-2 8 4 7 -. References.· 540-7i46., , • Call 133-1670 t1" mes "'-"""'-CEME!'.'T \\IORJ{, no job too ' Free &: J.~ef! POi!l\ioni EMPLOYMENT AGENCY after 6 p.m. small. reasonable. Free EritR. Complete 2't'()ar11.·l A~R~~ man a If! r . Immediate Oponlngt AMI. Mgrs. $600 0;>.$700 mo. L40B/Sht>pherd, all black E.stim. H. Stu.nick, 548-8615.• story $240; 2 irtory _SSOO. t ·, .. _! ~ ~ !'1~~ ' dollars Ac-'-f e:--rotllrlal Master-Chet ······•Jl.toomo. m11.le, 6 mo~. North ~fesa N:eat '\''Ork. ~y, 847-J.li:. or ·-fie Pl'OJ..,,;i tn u.ta ..... ._ l ..... f G Of 2nd Cook •••••••.••• $25. Shift Voenj 9794799 JOHN'S Patil?! 4 Block Me1a. Salary: + a.partnu!bt. • • . 1 Clerlu on. c. BroUer litan· .nso to siso wk '· · \\'Ol'k. An assoc. ()f Van's PROF. painthw, also nioi.. ?tfoo , -Fri. 9 to 4. ' 1 , '81 E. 11th <at Irvine) CM l'ry Cbok ....... ,; ••••• ,\$2, hr. FNIS. lon,i-halrtd tigt'J' cat Land!IC8])\ngC.h1. 83.~1 acooua. cell. tnterlexler .. :tj/l5.>-3880.. ."'.'.:"'.'~~~::'-·...; __________ __, '42·1470 P&n lry. Man/Woman..t21 ~!all. Likes ca!'l'I. Vic. Lie/Ins, Free est. .sts..sl.91. ASSISTANT 'BR 'Rtpubllc. 3BA,'fonnl 30' T IS auu. Beautltul 1~:=::==== .... PATIOS. Driveways. Patch _ shift 1 ~•ater & Golden \Vest 11.8. '01'k Lies Free Da PROF. pa.tn'ttn.:i, 1nttt/exttr. din rm, Jri fam. Trade for OXldltion. Trade tw P.U., ,_ F · St7-7864. " · · e!lt. \'e Ouallty v.'Ol'jt. , Reas. IJc'd To. ln.nsP.Ose cuuing tickets, 9111aller 3 BR' ha.me Atesa catnpe:r, trane:r or ! $6500 JANITOR a(t Food MJ:r-Trainl!e F"E.\IALE puppy. N!ddish P~~=-·y.~~ri:~1• ln1. 001-1u;. m-nra aft s. ShZ~~a::!' .ftcCilif. v~ ;;:k. 545-8.i':u Act. value, Ccil!nl 962.-eve. ~.1T~-~=· w~! ~.:::::::::::~&:: brw•n. 11pprox 4 monlh. ... la b--i. x-p. a 1 n t er--Now· SrhooJ 33.'\ !faru' , A·-.. Bal l<. v.·kends. _ Waitl'C89C"a ,.AU Jh!,,. avail. High1ond &: ·Sprlngdalt, 11.8 . ~.~~ f'sf' ....... ' ll'.ach@r. Cu!t. ' palntin:.; Aut() •" St5.!b'.! Equily; v'a1. $37,500 JW Lot, Palm Sprir.R-s7500 Ca.II for APPL Ji"ood ~Cocktail ••• :'ij.~ br. MG-TI7l. &itiess equ ip. 11cd>tis. NiiJ. , 3 BR.' 7 'Ba. M(!il Vorde valu~. 1or local hou• er " JO~· ~G~IN HostMll •.•.•••••••••• •.$2 hr. F'OUND: Long heirnd lfeY Contractor lnas. Wotk iuam. &t&--019. , Me~heo1c. , . homl:'.; Scrttne<t palio. \Vant !! Can add~ Equal opp:ty employer Cuhler , ········, ••••• $2. hr r.:\I -.itth ~~ eyes. Vic. ROOM AddltlQN, Ellimate:19, No Wast1~· , ~·I .fl'dllune for V!ed cv 4 Units Orana:e County. . TlJt-Doyle Co. 1 .... ~!"!~~[lll!!"l!'_,,..~1 euhkr/De!lk Clerk Jtamilton·A Buthard In H.B. plans· II layout. ilnilt ()r• 2 * WALLPAP.i::R * o1, must ha_ve o11·n tools. Broktt·6•2:7491 t ~e.s: 838-6341 INPJ H • Oa. need) ····~····•······••SS abitt ~7676 11tory. t..T. Gbn8'tructfon. ! When')IW ~ ··itac-· -...,., ~~ fRIPLEX. ~lesa ;VCrde. -s.,.-.. -000 ..... "'E"QUIT"-'"y-"',.;:__l•-.... -J= .,::rdfftl A Bulbo,)'l,ll~ ••• u.ssm- ROBINSONS e NEWPORT e · llEACH Jlaa openinp for • FOOD PREPARATION - ,.~or Udo Buffet Exl)(!ril!nee PreJtn'l"d SLEEP SHOP SALESMAN Experienced PBX OPERATOR •NU. female · whli. -J\47-lfil:I. 513-lUI 146-11ll · .2l!IO Harbor 13!., c.M. )5:1,000 val~•. IJG,,000 eq"l.\y. )-.e pn>perty, tot dear fabrleatlnc. abUlly. 15'6 $ ROYAL SERVICE AGENcY wJlarp blk tp0t on badr. AddWons * JltnaodeUns 3' n.y Special. llmr/E:xttt : ."5-0e&6 YRAt>E ·for. ~rty in , houe, Iota. trust dffilt, Acacia St., Garden Gme. For Rtlt&un.nt n.-..-i P/llme -Expe:rlenced Vlcoround Newport Blvd. ol GmoldJ II -Uc. Pt.Jntq. Uc'd/lno. lAl<:ll BABYmTER, lj>Uure r1~ .... ~\ baati or 111 . LfJGAL Soq, ·--SOOl RedbW _;_;;-·~· 2 'Nllt1 A S&iuedl).1 " l$th 646-.1!33. m..GKl '*1 -~ ,ftfl. 30 ,Yn.•ep.:n.e. .... Woman · lll , gooct · htalth. I,'··:~ t **"* '49S-1896 *** ' -Sil.leir:f ~..-., CaUl •E@l:&IMdtlV, Ollfa Mam. FOUND &/24 male G,.al JACK 'l'aulal!Hlepalr Col~Omcl<, 6IMll09. • 'w/ow• bvf,, for 2bo)'l4l93l·f'l>nl1' Coll~ !)rive JdVE lhlltj> 2 -· Cherlo. t lo l U ..i,, &i!W•:UO l5WllOO A111>1T In pcnon ~ p.m. Pyre-. l l mo'i old remod .. ddlt IO,..._ -WALLl'APER HUNG I ~ aloo Ult hou .. ~rl" ...,..,htrt. Sl<>d< bodl'· V1 P<iOICdMHarborVl...,bme ~ ~ • 'in Fllhlon 111., ff,B . .. /~•· ~-In. .,_ CM I ~ • "71, lllow u ~ I 1 , 1"·•1 Tu1Un 1~"ll1 3 lo 'I _;...:...;=-...,...~,-,.--,.[P.llOFESSIDNAL P lio a o EqooJ ol>Portunl\y <lilploylio •-"~ "" · • Llc'd: My IV•• Ood5f7-Qui Reblco ~2419 <~ "'l' 1D •.Pl"-i •••• ··~. "'" err.,,_ nyto · ,_ -•• • LIVE-ln 10 hdp'w/ll!k-A --•Id~ ~ .. Po!n• •·-, ..... 5i1.-...,.um.. ~ m i'"" -• """"'' !<L ..._, r ~ -•·1 bed.. 1·-• '1o1 pre!emd. ·--••• --' -. Drl•-•YJ 'PIOtor ?oldl,'R-.lr • -•11 .,1er,4:"! V'1l q. "'"•,« :M-"" -• DttlnJ: lor eld<tlY lady. Otmeni., a..p1s1nno,.,.._1,.-_____ .,,....,1 PRE<i~ANT d't, Suala)' :i-' ..,.. de.ya. .~ --. • or .ct~. , ~· Alf. 615-12::15, C.R.t Jiiformal ., a. te rt r on t Wllrk In ,your own home. Vaca~ coet money/ ·JJcnc 1101 n-. Vlt. Mal'flUib HAWllliY'S &!el C.Ot!no; * J>A'J'CH, PLASTEJUNp 'l'he. 4&81t<I .. , .. , \]n U., • , ' , hou,.hold, Own lnnlp. Pvt. Besl deol In .,... Pl>otw YoUr -· ~pt.. iloni A..._ FounW. Y a I lty. w .. 111or • ..., oU >Wal>nt • AU l>P'•· rr.. .....,,.1., w .. 1 .. .a lloil1 -Pit• r * · ':* * * * * nn A bl. UberRl t= ~m<. 13:>146:i bot..,. t :OO 0un. bJ4. el<. llmu llaJlr _i.ii;;_1 ~. .!«a_w bl111ct. M,:;.,'l1 11• r A•t ~..fi.ll~ Cl&ttltied Ad. ~·· • r,..,,........,,....;_______________ Pif. va~. J19t'l'r!o. -sgiz;..7516, Ud ---~ '1'-• •·• t"1 • 4 • ~·~·~'-'-~~--~~~--------------~--------------------------------------------------------------'------~ .. / fr~1,~26, 1972 DAILY '1LOT .fJI : • ~~~:·;.~ 1i \ ); ~,.:: ·trqJ J £, ... ,_..... ffiJ 1. ...d ~:.1 11~1 I .. I -'.' 1r§J I . ,~,,., "' ~ 1:t ,·,,~\I . -II~ AL::;:_~!l! , ___ .:.._.J_·_._ .. _· _,111-11 . H.IP'1/~,-f'"&Fi't10 "'1pW.anfeil.M'&l!7'1b HelpWanted,M&F.7l0 Alll"iuM :• . * Gor•lll~. ! .iJ M11 .. 11-1 '"' ii~ ~lkllhlltMMnh'22 --110•.,•.-----=lllll "ROllNSON'S '' N_EWPORT • e · BEACH J·faa opening for 12 l Cosm•ti~ Sa)fl Wom•n Experi1nced Apply ln per:;oa I0-~1 p.m. a a }~aShlon Ls!., N.B. Equal opportui;iity emplO,Yer . . :=::::::. 1 1 RO,INSON'S e NEWPORT e BEACH . !las oppenlns lor Janitors 1~ull Time SALESMEN ~~ . . ',, .. DA.RLING i "'Hkit old flUfl----------..... ~ <-•· $650 UNIQUE •olaw-loottd ,.lYE 'W'Y''LE G"'DUATI~ S1ecl •I· ~~·kttbol<.""' "~ men \\·,.., ~ rea,,.,,., u. Sec'y ~lrl Fri u •"' ,. .... ,. · ~""" v,,. r • -. .fu · ..,. plif!il. \\'t:.37 Hlaf1 land \Vhitt .maJf'-' I ..,,..,_. -u t>..thtubt. 19'.S era. Also 19'>-'> La }~Wt.i <::a.rntrd ~-"'"-w ~ I earn the ear . ..,,_,,._ and Fantastic Qppor. for a:h&.rP paneled dOOnl • .,._143i dy Of di¥linclion llerifices c ·~'"·or •1 ! s.&~21!.l --:---~~g....oro,··-·-·-~~-pr~~!; -.~•mpionshlp:1,. 21..t a.re \\'illing tQ ~ ,Mllflt aaJ iv/admiti. ability, Good her many trcbUfti lriclud· menl. J:.'lectrophonle ham• . KEESHONO f ..• •• ;iu..J"".)WU I """O _....., ... ....r. .... t~h. .__ •NTIQ~ ·,". ant· ..__,. . ("•mp one n t' IY 1 t"ett\i. unv• ..:1..--i--.11 •• w"'"·-' • emd..ie darhn;: .:._ -_ ,._.. .,.....,.. ~~ .. "" JllJ1 le. '"ping_ R.E. land de-~ ,. ... iques, UUUAS, pa.i.nt. •"•'"•:-:-u"' -&.,_.... ,,. ... .., "''P-"""'• .~" "°'"' & l\EESHONO f\JPPJE.t\. ;,.. ·-"' · ... .-....___ v c · J ·'-· , 1.... 1."'·1 ..... ,._ 100 w at t1,. . ~-· .. nc1. 119 -"'1 ·~ """" .... ues""" U1 a .1.'"'"'"""• w~ velopmcnt or legal back· in an.gt'. in::~. e>.\'...,...,,. urn ,..,.·c. as· .... u\K ~·ne.':"'" 1-• Jo\·~. All ~bot!. 1=iO ?!nd &., .4.i-: ', l lema\P.11, I malt', I 1\-ell, selesmhlt(Sff. &.:nefits: around help.tu!. cu. p~ A 1• I02 sorted hoUilehoid ile1n::1 &: Ai\I/1''?.l/:1o'TER.1'X>I~ I -..~~. L'.1l. l'lk.i. <'.a.II ~J t'W~ Demo.. group ··J:ns;· 'high }~el':. Abo Ftt Positions. pp YDCel • po"·er mower, Sat., :i'un. ~ tn.Li.: plu:i; .full iilt G.ar-Office I' itu I . ---- commiuions. U~nlltcd in· Call Barbara Ki.~. f>40.-063j \VESTINGHOUSE \Va~her k Mon. lO a.m to 1 P~t 913 1ud Pro!e~lonal Turntable, E , I um r!f l2~ ~\lAl.L. mi.,cd C~he,-;;r;., SlLJ.;V T(\f.'rltl' pops, 4 con1e. Apply 1n / Ptn'l'iOll-1 NEWPORT I dryer. Can be used a..-t at.a.ck Sandcastle Dr., Cc:irona del U.will.r li~ts .(ru· $.198.:il • , ..... ,. ti~ yrs old. \\"I'll trninNL 111al~. 11h0ts. AKC. Cau ~NJ VER _SIT Y OLDS. I PE RSONN'Et AGENCY or side by side. ~kcd &: Mar. t:1·adiu.tiM Price $191~48 ,or FQJ\. Sale U-~haPf', t'XM.' ~n·1 °' 1.:M'.I h .., n1". -·~~.!-f1~..:,_ &:~~!~-'~· ~c- ?itOBlLF., 2850 ~Dor Blvd., 3S4S Campllll Dr., NB t serriced ~'1th in Jast ::0 :!J FA.\llL\. l~ ~ bi.kC #~I monthly JMl.YD\~b "/-duk, \\•ahiut burl, aria-(~SI _ __;_'~------SH~l • .-lF.!'. (n1 1nla. Co~le!tl Cocta f>lesa. · I days. Lik~ new i.'OOdition, We. E\'el') 1h1ni from cal;t'!t 01;-er ll.Cl(XI, stll s ~ j o, t .ft'l\'\llll" Caliro k>l\I hY.11'. ~K= rt'f.:11'. ChAmp iurr.d. SAl.ESIA/4.N-Secret•ry movirlll', phone 546-12'2-I. to cake plaff!t.1 bro\\·nll!':: to US.\ S;e·eo Eql.l)g \\larehousr (84Xll41 6C4-W!ll. :t • nionth.<1 old, -Rlal'k. Rt'd. ·1 1' l'in. 1 inale. ~40. Good Potenll:i l for co1nbination tltld 1alf!11 t-----cr-oSEOUT SALE-blt')Tfcs. Troop 232 is roJ.~~ ~;~~~4.u R0\"AL stand ro-1::1-. Bi'()i\·11. ,1·hi1t, Call 1>411-426.'I -P-OMERAN.IAN$- Call ?itr~. S(!hn1ldt quallty control departments. Rclrij:el'atoi·s. \\'a.shers. drY· "-'Orh.ing lheir \V&)l lo c.11..mp. .~ typewriter, pit'~ t)'pe: ~ _!!ter.-: ~n. ·-_ _ _il;h",GAA --.J \\7ESTCl.ttF Typing 70, Shol'thand 90. en;, ('()lol' TY"1. Cost + &fl'lr bl'O\l;'Se It. boy&. help l!)'l'.! Ge,i.i'ard m!Jpod \\ith cond. $110. c:;...:z.tSO. f'RRE to :oo<I honlf" lt'n1.1l1• Sll,l..:Y 'fl'ITi~.,-. -.-II p •, Personnel A&eney Please •Apply: .Culton In-10.,;,. T~s ava.11, 1''ircslt1nl1' a :\rl iCOUl help herself. 1 U ~oJ 1 1 -IBM Ex . f , --•. --\\'f'l1naraner, ~ ;.i1-s .. 11t. 1111oi·ahll'. A...:L'. i·h•mpian :!).13 \VeslcliH Dr .. NB durtrias.1'44 \\'bittier, Co!lta :i'tol'e, 646-2«! Sat. May :'7th 10 lo 4. 4030 u all.O p r. e.a-ll OD a 1!-1.:u \\f' tY'Pt"''nitr, Rf'"iSl<'reJ ~1-."HO!I L•ualily 7 iik~ 1147 ~~ G-i5-2TIO M Dorchester, Corona de! :'.l.l.aa· eh an:cr, AM/l!'M/MPX modc1·n type liilyle. Used .. ~ _ ·_ :. _ "' . · · · -.. · · ~· -~ --REFR.IGERATOR6. \va!ih-recei\'el', c ea,I ed ,.U-1 'month. • ~l" l~IT'rEN.S. 7 ,,·k~ old l)a1'11ni: HerHI 156 SALES\VO.\IAN, C'l:pt!r. for SECRETARY -ers, d ·r Yer e, $30 I: up. SAT-iJay '.nth. ~Vis1a aou,,"pt:nsioo aopeal..-en, ta~ Wi-Se:le.:trlr 'G.') nlOdd tigc..i'10. ON' • li')t\g't~ai~-. ont :<pecialty store. ~I at u re • BOSS P!\ YS FEE • C uarantttd le. dtli,'vert'd. C~nter, 1!J1b. I: PIJL't'ntia. det:k I: 'headpboM plus: in • nd .,00 ihort. Call Lulda, .~-t7S. l~".''A""'"· -------1-' ltin1e. Send repllPs to $650 C.\I. 4 Chev)• hub caps &:: 4 Good-\.'O · .,.. · · ------llt. lfl · l'uN'hrf'd A""" 1' 646-78:..~. • httl ja~ \Va.s ,Jeft unclaimed. 8Jl-M24 l''~Y Lo1'e (~\llf'n:-1 7 1\k~ ~\\• l:inJ'M', H:t<'kiiry Pon;) ii~i~>~f~i~ot,a~P.l~~-&,~9,1~ Slciiled, Attractive. All Paid r.IAYTAC l'CpajrmA.n has l~·SlO~in~;-:~~t. ~~~~ Brand new in bo.'C" I: •11n .. /Orpnt' . 126 b<.~K" •nd ivh 1lf'. black and k Qua.i·rer· llor.-1,. l.'11!1 for Benefits Jnclullin,g Dental, \I'll.Shers ss:;. ro SlOO. Can ruarant~. Qri::inaJ!y.prio-r-whltt. Call Linda, ;,41.i--41i8. appt. .J;,:.LS.'1,li. Costa r.1esa, Ca. D2620. Holirlay~ & Vaealions. t~uch $S La.mes l:. 1thades cd at $279:95. Take over for ·-• -----. -0 f ~" 000 delh,er \\'/1 yr. ;uo.rn. 11-1'-B~,'".•·B-·· r,;·$1. * Clnronc• PART Perl!la11 Kille11.~. 1·:-,,._·.,,1·R,_v"t1:;, •.. ,,_.hb-,•" SALESGIRL for Net Shop, in Bea11Li!UI fices. "....,.I , ~ i:•... ...... ..,... $90 sh r mall entot ~· "' '' 839-1778. 1.iome-bakPd --""''"···I'. ca o s P8)'.!" ..,.. \\'caned " box· U·a inf'd. ~larf' . S'.!7.'i. t:entl~Tat·k Lagupa Bch. Over 19 yrs, Cal Fair En1ployment, 905 .......... """ -J, a y •way Department. Sale * ··1 6&-17 clean.cut. Re'>ponsible. Full· l'\o. Euclid, Suite A, Ana· ELECTRIC \\·ashe.1' & D~C'r. MOVL.'lG-Sttle! Lamps, cof. 7~U&5S--050L OI ' ··'"•k d tn.d i __ ..!._:.>_~.' __ • ---!.~1 ~·, _C11ll :-;At . iL ~n. limei Call 49-l-0060 lhi<A'n 9 heinl. A1so Ftt Job!. · \Vhilc. e.xe(!Ucnl cemhtion. fee & drunt tablr, pi" \lin:: ov r """" e e· n!. • DARLING l.Rbi'Rdo1• I Gf'I'· ,..;..,....., "• .\pp\y2 ~n ~_:soo 10·5 fl.in. an1 & 11 an1 ONLY. SERVICE Stat'"n &ttond••t Pri\'S.te party 979-'.!jOO or ba<'k chairs, m irror, chests_·, Al!:TAL ston.ge. cab. on e ORGANS e inan Shepherd pup!I:, 7 \l'k livtstoc_k _____ ISI • Fash11.1n Isl., N.B. -~ -"' " 97!1-7~-t:i ask tor C•sey. wheels $10. :>pc. St .• Ceorfe' Orroa Chol'd tt•9 old, F'l'ee 10 you. ti"6·~~4!1 . • Equal opportunity eniployer Salisgirll p/time, eves & 1vknds. E:\· RE~1llG., ver)' clean, Ii.heir throw ru;s. de c orator dnlms $1 Smaltnfl'iJ. $2l Lowi·eyHoilday st9.J-.-.-'~~-.c i!!ii&L L J-:::\cel Opportupity -·for tori per only. Neat in ap-items .. S8,l, Sun &: ;\Ion, 3099 5 pc. ~ntih •riiod} din. get Baldwin Pix Sj9j ••· PART Shc-phert!/CoJ!l,~ l\'.\N'r~o-Pa~tui'i' forlamf'• .. SACESfr'AN~ror _:;ri-0,ring i;a~sgil'ls. Mu:U ha\'c cood pearan~. Apply mornings in· door. $60. 1130 ~:!,u~~Y7_.·. Club Dr, CM. ~ Tu paper le iootin: llammOnd i\JJ $7-lj female pupp~'. h~ tu :::oou iio1·11t. Appro:<!mal.f'IY 1 )'r I I ,,~ '" -Bl""' \\/e~rminsle.r Ave .......... ~ _., hoaie SS&--9T:J!l "' carpe:t 4i: drapery de'\li'· to fa ion bp.i:k:rounil. Refer-on y, ~"" ·~~ ..,.,,,., -~altrial $'.!:50~ m.U9 l,;ulbn~c canSOlf' • · .4a3-Zti6J. call on builder$. \rill •rain enl'l's · requested. Apflly C.:\I. \\'c.'Siminstcr. _ B k ~TV, s50;5~ ·i=-peda'· "''/Le•H-$1 ,05 -F-R-&£-PERSiA-N-CAT-1-iiilllil•liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil -----FULL len:th mink co&t:~· _. "' , 11 cap11ble Cn1an. Top com-n1oming11; Tu·es-Sat. •27 SERVICE Sta. Atlendant, * • PORTABLE 11·asher f,· latf' chrome PorM"hc \\'heels cond. $350 .. 2. fine ail Jll.in-lJ~~mond Consolf'~ . _ l!~o_s. ol~ --~:G-1~:; [ lltC ~!: mission. all Bob al l'.!1 :!1 To~'ll & Country . Oranix.._ 1/tim' eve. ~h.ift. Neat in dryer, $9J each. Sma 11·/lires,• ·$1:J ea: varioU!l tint;s,4lOO each. Out ,door za pedals f1'0n1 St,69J LONG baireil re m • 1, INts W 800-1771. SA\VYER HO:\IE, matqr'e appearp.nce .. Expcr. only .. Philco Refrig. S7:J. 646--!361. other f,:oodies. cheap. Sat, ps Bar..l>que •pehl\ahl:nt • PIANOS • 011.uchshu(ld, .I mos Qld. to ..,....(.iprMnt TI UE fOR \1·on1an for kit help &: Lile meehahical kno1rledgc. OVER 200 washers, cll')'f'r!, i~"nCt.:_J~~nS,!,1NO .•Bm. ,.~,. ~~31m ci.atcoa.1-$50. Cd~ and Ca.lile·&ngklow • S3.9:i :ood home. 962-ll:il. If.'.: hOusl'kecpin~. Qaytintes. Apply mornings, 2 j 9 0 r.:.'i'rit:crators from ~!).9.j. _.1.;1 00-V'l.ruJ.J !ltf', 96S--6451 Baldwin 1nake Spinet $.4~ -, --,. --: -• 64Q.:.671G. ,., Ne11-porl Bl., C.~t. '.>U--0780. GARAGE Sa!e, most :;ell PAf'iELiNl'.i painted ::roo™ We~ Console $'i!l5 f ~E~ ~Htens: Hf'au_t~ut. General .. OUICK CASH SALES Clerk -European , SERVICE Station. Neer! 2 Rtn_t Wi1sh1r1/0ryer1 ~atnh:t'. ho"'u-~~nld ,/tfea1s & 5/8". 20 ib~l!I. Good for ~a~~·~t ~ 6 [1'01n $655 ~~~~~' or~Ul,qf' I.: \1lut,, SCRAM LETS food mkt. ::28 Glcnnt'yre, part time Eve!:. \Vknd i\len ' $2. \Vk. Full malnt. <' o 1ng. v...t ~,fay -: S to 6, l\idinf shcciin& or wtiat~~. 1.. n..rm....., • 4'. pr v. ---- TH.ROUGH A Lag. Bch. 4M-7766. N~at. Apply in penion *' 639-1202 * Hirbo; Vie1v Homes, 1!!30 CrQncl $J.,t9j INffiEPJO Ion: h11.irttt Llgtr • Che Stati i.il.U So. Port Laui-ent, N.B. (off Sonle 2x4' and l\Iisc. piect'S Bank Terms -i;trlped kittt'Tl. Nerds good · • Sea mstreu, l/t1'm1 ,·ron on, GA< s1ovc. Ex~! cond. ! -bar:~ at $80. for all. · ho C II "'·'" '""''' ANSWERS Coast H1vy Laa Bch "' Ji· ai;:Art:hur Blvd.) 5<19-0036. 1\"1.des \\'elcom"" ·-~-.!_~~-_ ' DAILY PILOT 501 29th Street, N.B. ' " ... . 5'M1 SUNDA -· -COAST MUSIC J.'AT }'luffy h:itten9 Given SERVICE Station sal~man m.-07~t:>l8-l066 ' . Y $-~·1.:;. Gara,e~ &: EXTENSION arid ::;: TE p • , 1 \'acanc1~s00$1 01oney? Rent & 'lube man. Top pay, fringe KENi\lORr~ \\·asher & e:e.c furni,ture aalt .. Bednn. sets, LADDERS, all slies \VOOD C Ne\\'P.t" Bl'Vd. at Ha1~bor 1 a1vay U-tt. Come 'n ~-~rder -Elll~ -Prone-- WAN·T AD your iouse, apt.. store benefit·s . e.'l:peril'nc"' prefer-dres$1::~. paintings, l':te. lS9 ONl..¥: ,,,,,,..... rcducc.td ._fot osta ?i esa S&'.!·2.85 963-22-15. , ~ may -LOADt:O . bldb .. ete. thru a Daily Pilot red. Full or part lhnc. Shf:'IJ dr;·cr Coppertont, $90/both. Afiltord Di'., C4_\l. lCameo QUick S.\tE 1."'1!! So. RosS -~tl ~y·l.2-~ 5 ~~ FOR· Dad's Day. K.lttens, 6 Bett<'I" an e~pty bus rtian C!assillcd Ad. " Station, 17th & lniinc, N.B. 4 yt'!i olcl. ~ stio~). • GOULD. MUSIC CO. \1'h. \\'e&ned &:..trairn,tl_. ma LOADED dnvet'. 11iiiiiiiiilipiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiji' -------&'t.. 'Santa Ana.. 542-31-"0. I' • , SERVJ(i: Sta. r~arnl-;,1;;, f'RiGIDAIRE reirig. '1'~ cu. GArr4.G.E: Sale, 111 ovin 1 ! 'ELEC'fRI~-Sed-$ J,SO. :PRESENTS Princeton, College PK. ~f. FOR W" n~· Gregor alum. ••••••••••••••••••. •• p/tinlC, evc/wknds. Aloo, f1. ~ dt'. S~.i. 6-16-~i:? o1· Beefs. tn irTC~. ch a i r ii ' Butcher .blOck $140 .. or re.u. URRY &OOlf GER.MAN Slephenf puppie11, ~·ar lop boat l\"/18 h.p. f/time day/nite nien. ArL'O, &\.~3~. nui;nerous ntisc i t f!m·s. oiler, Caf PCl . bi. r r i er• P1·em1uing the i:pci:lat:ulor t•annot kttp, frl'e 10 i:oocl E~lnr~1de. ~11 In .'l:lnt shape. l9tlL& Newpgri •. C.:\T. -REJ.~ru.~1ERA0 DeTlroORs.t i"'Dr-:-~~$\JStn,)." Nm>B ·Tustin', '(ct 96.\-~19. , S"nNd::'CtmJ"nne 40rr2~n,_spn• humes. Call LB 49,)....4790. ~K'IJ!OV·IN~~S-<ml a~'>_P_m_-~l _ 1 SERVICE Sta. Lube " ...... uu . . • ,., -1, " • ·""" .rwn-Y-1m1, kiiten11 ~~I I' G -must ioe 1-UI' ?.1'u!>i hav". cxpcr, p~;a:. • 893-0060 • G.!~GE Sale-. Pr i,e e s NE\V bllit' ~.t1oral .~t fuU at E~U Clp.b of Santa Ana homt Glas!I: Bar boat. c 0 m J9th ,_ • ced F ml aofa ·t>ea. "chst-1 I itj'U $150. 615 French Slrf"f'l · \V/JohnflOn 1~ntrol11~tc. no comm. Arco _ , ...:: C•m•r••• ll ! u ture I: ap. A.V.IF'lt at.ievniilt 'Pinto. lf"'tee' &dmi:aioh 54.5-4101. 1 i·~ ,,,. 0~0~ Newport, C.l\I. Equipment IOI pJiances plw;: ·· 100 other $65: Hlrry,'.~ · · prjie.,,• fun. 4-dEAUTJFUL kl'lt~~. mo or. "''·-. """"'--·o,;1"-· --·I SE\VJNG Macli.ine-operator-items. Rt!lU' Or tll.f Iris Ave. -•· · * * . * * • \l't':'aned le boxtrained. 1 Bo.ts~ Mi11r1ne w/ndsa~l. makingT c.xp. Good G~e-~:ax 8~~~: ~~ L ~d~: t;cli\1. ' . Clary .:C.~~(ister Alr. Roou co.nduct.s fre,. "'Ork· l\'k.!, old. 557-683.1 aft 5 pm. E4:1u1p. 9M co it10ns. op pa y. tla $!. sl'd · ANTIQUE Sle!gh'" ~· a nd -97g...72a1 ' ihop In • nur iitol'e 10 iun ~.MALL Tettipoo free In~ l\1ERCURY :.o iu\tl 120 HP Permanent ~~'9Li or 1 '1 ~ •. i·ge.00•· h ~:. ._· 1?~' ~:. good s tuff. 6i34-~·JJOJ E. -Monde.y June 5. Call fur hom•. 'AI•.• d•rl'n• k•"tien. ~,,_ Also ... ,,0 ,_,,_, tiIB-8401 y1' ,u\es 1 ·""..: -'4 • ".w ~Y . Balbqa,, behind piJe ·HIDF,:;~·bed,.'~~"!t_.f..'Ond, $6(!. ti · .-,., ' ,-,,, " IU'""'" For al'I ad in Woman's World .an Jmt'. --· Br.l:?ravf' Av.e., G.G., Bch. & Sl n... ...... r'--r••hl l r • e, •.. res_erva .on.. • &l2-t818: :l34-l8Sj. \1•i ndshie.ld fol' hoal. N ....... SE\VING l\fachine Oprs. & Cha'Pman, Sat.-i\Ion: a. >J'fi":'' ~ .1 "-1" ,-·' f:.OULD MU81C CO. ---· ----~l'!!l-03;;0. me. lo" ""·d ·•·otk. '• loKi"b· -----------·G=A AGE •"'e·, ""bv ."··,,,, Te it.· , 1 em.a. ;.>..)0-3.169 '"'""No Nlai S ,\ t'REB KITTENS Call Mory Beth 642·5671, txl 330 Whirl Out! - • WHIRL 'OUT l ooking \\'Ondcrtul in thi.~ )tlUng, sinooth, aoftly fi.arcd dreSI!. Yooi.l love its kmiplne Oat· wry in airy Dacron-cotton ~end .. Printe:d Pattern 9'271: NEW Half _Sl~es 10~;. ~~=. 141A. 16Y.l. 13~'.i. Size 14t; fbust 371 take~ t1r.: yards GO-inch . ,·U:VEN'l'Y·FIVE OENT~ Zof. ca.ch,, pattern :_ a'.dd A ~nls·-i'or ell.t'h pattern tor Air itlail and S~).11 ijandl· klz; otl~rv.<i.'\e ' third-class "'11very will 'tak<' tlli-e'. t.>t~ks or more. Send to , Marian Martin. the DAILY .PlLOT, ~. Pai.t.em Dept., 232 We11l 18th St., New York, N.Y. 10011. Print MAME. ADDJtl'.$8 "' i t h DP. 811X an!) S'llYLE !WMBElt. •. I, r • ' SSE ritORE S p rint J."'.~hions and rboose one p&Uefli • (rct . fftlm llC\V Sprin:·~n1• •:Cafrtlfti. All tlZ~! Onl~ ;,ck-·, n-fSTA°N'r : SE\VlNC 8001< ~ today, v.-tar tomorrow. il- 1 NS TA N T FASIUON Jiool< • Hund...is o I IUhlori '"'"· $1. .. ""',, .. ftl'pbaJrta" - '""""""',.,.,. _, 'J\lro · 'tiiem ai"to "C\~1'' -lell , i!!I""' lltro 0..111 P ti o t ~I '°"'1tled, w.J61l ' •MS• ' " NE\\' Bell & Ho\veU ~,ilm.Q. ·AK .,.., ~ " iw '"...w · "· '·· · ti WEEKS OLO -··•'ll-Clu-1~ -Crau-.,.-.-- Jl'ffy Crochet bin S:iil~. 540-368.-1. area ru&:;, dinette, lanip~.·& BIUUTIFUL oil pa.inti111:· of 547-0681 ** Sine' t911 " Sou ad supel' 8, $2!Jj com-misc. 193'12 \Voi·chesl~r Ln, Fin.-t, Hotel in H.B. l:u-' well --'•y··~T-IO-N *-• 540-1191 • I\ 1lh transm1S!lion~ ~-• SUPERVISOR.";: s a i Ibo a l plele. :>.iir.2&ii H B •·t • S -~t;:n' a.rt'.3l. $l00. ::aJ.-r...st ~ ~ 1: ;;-2-J."'REE Pcek-A-Pooa, 549:1 s.43-2'25: •·-·• p-• ·~·-<WD-s klll ·-· · -~ ~ unllloS. ~· i.G'N UFfSI ]006 ·· •i ;-1 '1'!'t~ ~ "J Furnitur·e 110 G'RAG'" """'•·. "•a"-' :c. ¥il&_C_TRft. FANS-~ "'\ , .WAS NOi" .hlac,k, fem! I yr, malP 9 Bo•t1. Power ... :•.; ::;• . ...-~·'Jiii.: esFn· F.oal bl~g exp. not ('. L -.. ,.., .. 3 """ ,v Call :,Mg...~3 i;. '·; t;.;..,N ':, req'd. \Ve will tr a In . terestin.,. ·te .,762 Cla' 1212 SG. •Ross!St., Sant. Ana Elee Marfn'(ba . $ 395 $2"1!J mos. · , · · \(:-~ ... ~ -~'· ;••tY.;:J,. MacGregor Yaeht Corp, \VAl..ltl .UT ,1\_iedit-'rranea11 · · • 1 ~· .;,• 1re:-. -54!1.$120 · . lMMAC. 1968 35• Cenco~ ... ._ bedroom s12t v.ith ~eW<ICl!f mont St, I,r--'11'\e. Sat .a:. Si.µi E~ ~lqclc . ~ . . S ~ $190 • 1 · ~ . .,, ~-• "'• r·s eJ(JI. fiberaias.t, onan. : .. ·~.;I\~ • ."I':--'.;..• .. 4 ' J.631 PJacentia. C~1. lattice Wtl?'k. Triple-dr~ 2-1. ri>R Sale ··Brand new fi.'I" urea .n•"!I' S·!lD $UD '"' · }; Mtt:m roo 1: .... .. ()t '1 , .. ~.. • ... . Glas ~ S 75\) $345 ,... tMI ....,._ n1 • ...... wu. · ... ~.•:·,_·,:.;.,. '~ .Telephone Solicitors ">ith.mim:ir. 2 nt:ttt lilanQs, ANOIOR LocJg_e G·a race .a-Sli 1 dlnr : D.o.or., Slei,h !!'Beu.~. • • 1,,., ~ # toqlll)'·)(!w tu.worth $32,9S0. ~: : .•. ~·. · Need· 15 gi:rls immediately, & 'irlgJ.she head bo8 l'4. Sale: '229 '\\lake "Forest Rd, C'ampleitt ki $75; .C!J'l..IU2. Ol'Jpi ll'P · '1000 $500 Wtlf' 0f!ntcrtaln all oflens. " positions in Orange County, /ilassive. Cost $1400 'ne\\\ C.l\I. May 27n• 10 'am to 's BtJM'PElt pobl Uble .• bra~~ neater Com ' ' ~ 950 $550 ™ \V. Coas t 'Hl'"'hway, "" '"' ChUi'ch ·"".:.is .: .. ~ ., soo s·ns . · .. Santa Fe Springs &: N. sell -for S700 or best pm. ,,e;\v. 5 spd bey's ·8qiwiM ~iliei:; ~ S 750 $34.1 (atl IS! _Ne\vport. ~1 '-... Oran~e-County. rearonable-~f!er. U~ 3 PATIO iale-, _429 Bnladwiy, ~-Sf,S-7209, Opeft 1-S W.~days . 18;-;KE:;;;'LSO'"'"N-;-c--a-;b.,-in_c_ru_m'"" Apply by ph bti\n :!·9 pm years. 67~EOO after :.>:30 Costa Alesa. Fri-Sat-Sqn GORGEOUS Antiqu& looki1t1 NEW' "ORT·Ol~ANS HIMALAYAN fcmalr.. ~l'!al w/trallt!.r. Twin Johruion 3."> ilion·~~4i2~~0500/ ~~::~~:~:: or 1• n Y 11 m f! _ ]lany ;oOO ifLm! _no jtink~ =~~';'~~~.;:fl~~· Uf J~ucflQn Pl., N.B. ~~.t.JA~~~~1, ti~~ ~~1~,~~r:l~·I~/~ P•;:~~ ,. GARAGE Sale, Lido IBle,.6.13 .,,,.,. _.., : -~'~S·IS·?O 1 penlan kitten'! and per. ,t.; TELEPI-IONE Sale!. Top DRExtt;; Prov. d r" •~er' Vtil" Lillo Nord. "Corner of i:/AWLEY·;g-Driv~ay· ~al ! .__,_ itlan 11tud servic~. many f'.xtr11s. n .300 OJ' a..mmissions and bonus. Ap.. rnir., bed, nt. stndS'., box & Quito &.Nord .. Sa,t t: Sun. Coll.tin.:. Fl·e-c Est. Stay;s , *~HIGHEST' CASH 89'l-~70 nt'are11;t offC'r. ;,.ig..1fi03. ply In pusor. bef\veen s.oo m11.tl. S:.!iD. Lamp~. pfcs.. -Black. s.&>Gl9i CM. , ., ""·~'""'-'E ""alpolnt ,.,,.-.. eOATl(' K 71 1 0 n k i· • rG and 12:00 noo11 at S~ Bolsa 15~ Temple J-lill, LB SECTIONAL couch I: cooch. . ~wu:-3 .x: """"' . h 3-J . A~uei. Mirh'i'ay C!ty. 49+-~~-·,s Portable di 11 h w a sh e1·. -Ui&D~llCYC-LES-:--;-· PAID. * Sl0.~,N1 .. ·Call -afk!r z pm. :;1~~:;1t ;rthp ohp1""':'.'. - ..., ...... ,...__ ... ..,..., ~=-~-~·· Lamps, misc. &ls..oot3. ' AU· types, lar~e selectiOru 646·2:7 l ; · · ~ com e~ l\1UST sell cut velvet 11elil, ·-• &4'.!·1272 . ' --' ~-with all equip!, '72 traHe.• velvf!t hi·baek Chn,.all ilke Hous1hehf GMCfs. 114 _ __;.. COAST •MUSIC . 3 ~ame~. 'pUreb~ kittens, and tioai liccnr S5c3Q. ne"'·· ?.'Use. household Items. .. ... CARPET 1',0R SALE Fo1• yeui-/pj.&nai: Spinelli-Con-i~ds. 1 wb old. S5 e-ae.h. 830-86,j.'I. ; Travrl ~t.Exp OJ>Pn r t._:; W •• _: ·~·i Protl. r.1anager lo $12K ' \~ , .... '.: • .:'~ "•:-;:j F/C Bcokkttper $751J Call ait 7 pm 1 iokdys, &\fAU..' maple drop le:af by Carpet Layer. Clll·' 1'0les-Upr1ahts-Grands. ~2,120,. ·1-6' w· __ ,---;;-,.--~-~· anytime wknds. 9791--19S.3. dincftte table $51). 2133 • ~576 e 540-208' , ~642-2856 . • '· ~~Kinett-PJte& !7,..,,,Boaw/-, hp Mere I: ' P'·--iona!IJ:' "'"-'-, Fordham Dr. 549-2468. -----,,,r:" 1... llttl """ trfl1ler. r re :ii h J )' ;._ .... , -;..:rv. B~ye:r·El!M:. Open ', • ;...,...~· 1·:... Sec.'y·i\larkctinr: $615 ._. --~ ='""";.,.------•'-= MEM!mftSHI~ .in a l~dinc ~IAfr40S.+oRGAN:t.* ,Pl!.rn~ •. e, '""¥ow, hsbkn, painted. Motor haa tecent Medit. Excel co 1 $75 or Machinery 11t N.B . .Ptt. 110e1al elu.b fpr ('ioint Obf.'F~ .Busine:;!I $10. !JS-S{JOJ major tu~p. $ s 5 o. -',.fit" t •>.i.:. ·•· ,·.,·:..~'. · ... ' Sec'y'Bkkpr to $700 ·,.,. :-·~ ~, Sec'y.Constr/Anaheim $650 · ' Clerk Tl'l"li-1: S-400 best offe~ 225 ,Fn.nktort, . _u.le. P.~:. ~x :296, ~ Best quali_ty ,., prices -serv. Dei• · 154 ~2279. =H~·=B=·=!i36-~7,_267~.'_536-_2l_4l~·~~i OXYGEN _ Acetylene "'_ M?P, ~· 92S6. K&wai:Stein~·BaldWin, etc ,. " Sa-~1,-0-,-,~rad~.---. '. ". ' .; ' ,., You'll rnjoy crorh<'ting tl'!i~ a{rhan -you'll ht' prourl to 11how it as your hatldt"·ork! J iUy-croehet afghan in an unusual modern design - smart in ::: .~h'ades , m u I I ieolors. Rever:dblc, lightweight. Pattern·· 71'.{Xi: directions. I NEWPORT Personnel Agencv 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 642-3170 EARLY Alnencan couCh $35.. \\·eJding 1:.nd ciitting outfi't. **'* \1?ET S01T **· Player ~·~ a:· Roll! Hl~IALAYAN remale. seal 18' CC, elec •lart, 6' Fruit~'OOd cofiee table $19.95. AC ARC v.>elder. }:!~ 1''UI~ lel\gth; ,?flUBt sell S20'; Rent,.Is ., •• '\Ve .Buy.· Se~ pofnt,1 f)rodu~s top kittens, 40 hp eng., many a1rait $45. 2110 !\of~. Mesa amD\. t 95 827-3040. ' · ?34 C Elowert St. ·, Dally 10:6 ··~es/Sun 12-S CTA" re:~istei:'f!d. At 11 0 a:.>9-4968, 675-61154, Chuck Verde. LOGAN' lathe, .4.S" bed, 36 '; 1 Costa Milli.~ · Ji'!ELD'S, P.~ANOS -,, P~1-si1'n kilteM and p,.rsian ls· -CAL!FORN·-1A-l/O ...;: ------------ ----Co.ta Men (1'4) 64].~ t d · \\.,.,, TYPIST $500 2 ORANGE Span i 11 h collets. \\'ood I: metal band MOVTh'G Sale:-3 re'fri~, I JJ --.-.--. _ ... _ 1 u lfl!l'Vtct. 11ki11, rnp, 1'0ver. 1~" than 1 \\'ill train on MTST. A1n't lovt1scats, h1:0 month! old. d\\'. Jn C.'l:ehange tor a 10 ~val t\11'. ~ r.var lamps, BABY ~D PIANO _:_·_. 892-2!1?0 ~ __ . yt1ar nld. Mini •'<lnd. 12890. , brnP.fil'. l.oo:·al ar<'a. Call I Sllii'.I. . • m_iUing machine. 558-T'.:.61. lr,·plant &land, misc. items, EbGny finis~ Xlbt i:ontt. DOHl:MAN PUPS 5'l6-:1 lO~- Zl"nU D5G·1000 Cal Jo~ait' E1n· * .'146--8393 * ~ 968-2S76 ' •$800· '*-&.1635 --------1 • · --ACME ~1 'WELDER • ~ . --Chimp lines * AKC re1. TRANS ~'ERRED-Mu81 ~l plo~·n1ent A1ency, 905 No, CERAi\IIC t'Op table 96"L :x Weltrenic 75 KVA ' ECRU W;ddlng d re••. Cl1lJ11UNSEN * 962-~~ · • 19' C11.b. crutser. Johnson 75, :Enrlitl, Suit<' A, Anaheim. 2!11"\V $'.!:',. Couch 83"L x Used 30 day&. 54s-3414 tonr v.ith ··beautiful' lone· 2 man~ .. ·~. c ? n d · LABRADOR-R ~ t 4! f b1tlt tank. head. trlr. XJnL 1'YPT~. prime l'fkt. speed & 34~f\V $~-Xlnt. 51 0 Mlscellan ...... •i Ill train. Siie lD. Best offer. A.cri.tlc4! .. $395. 9TN252. K · . I. r v ~ T • $nl0 or ? S.t>M36. · al H"-·'1on -r _.,. .,..,,..1.6 poTV ... -... A C,rert!.-qu lily puppies. __ -----~-11ccuracy, -mostly rstat1slic . a.ouU' , "" · -' ,,....,,,.. • •'"'IT,6.TE PARTY. WAn '" Call 557~219 aft 3 pin, Hive JO' TIS ChriN. Immaculatt Nev.• plant in San Juan SOFA 8'., &: lov~at, never "-·• . \V.AS NO\V TltAIN. board and Ward'• TO BUY PIANO FOR iohols ' $6.1'X> °''trade ror P.U. cam- C!apiftrano. lllr. Bo r Ii ,n, used. Both $150 .. Se'6·1ng: Tape D!M:k <2 spd) $100 S 50 I>flux ·~ill&' ?.faehine ~ CA,SH'.;_ ~?5:2273. _.__ SCH·~ Au Z 1il R p-;-"p 1 per, trailer or '!. (Clear) 493--1:>8'.!. machine S25. Pri. pty. 100 \V. Amplfr $275 $ 95 Con\vay Ave.,. CM. 546-1597. VER.Y Fi¥ &ld:zin Grand hsebtokei\, .~~!!'. groom &, __.~'2-1~------- UPllOL:ilERY Seamstre:ss 9G:St7910. ~eo:ra:~ch ::. :: 10"-Craftsman JladilJ'J:iin Plum, perlect co.nil., beaul atud senr. avail. Tf!nnll HOl.JDA y s p E c JAL! Tr:iince. App:Jy, Johansen &: n;• Orie brwn naugh. L'Ouch, U.W w/aand ~ ap?ds., used tone, $13)1). 640-:-ii87. M&-09$9. Fl!lh/Ski, UJ' gla!m Tr1.Jfull, Ch•is!enS<'I>, 898 W. 16th , ..... m•d•. •Int rond. Co"' open 9 to 5 \Vl!!!kdays ' "• ._ .,..,. -=• CT"':----c.·. ••n OB •· ~.. ••80() '"'' .. ~· NEWPORT ORGANS ., rs.•~·~.....,.,. Ebony Parlor Ctl.Jld ·Pi~·ano GER"'N sh-he-:, pops, ~ ~-......... ~ ,..,..l'!I ... SEVmn'-Fn'E CENTS (Corner 16th It itonrovia) I'~, sell $9o·. ,,,.? ""'7. -'~"" -.-•·u fl 6 < =1 .AN -,....,,._,.. 846Prod: · Pl NB \V°A-N T~D • G;oo;y allnewf~lt,xl_n~cond. AKC, Schaustell~r &: Von ~o rr._.!_~----· ior eaCh pattern -add 25 N.B. f1-1B-1·161. BABY·'l'urn .• crib, b11.thinette, · uction '' he.ndmade clo4~. Men. ... * ~~z * •·chen •c~. 71.1·. -·sm aft :l' DIESEL SPORTiiSHER. cents for P.ach paflem for 645-1530 .,.... '"' Am """' .a.i.-. •. nd . 1 H ndl \VATTRESS for L'Offce shop, pla.ypen-car bed-likt' new. women!I to be llOld oft ~ -w;"" buy Grand Pianc:t! II.. . • i'U~tm '11 LUHR.c:;, t"/G, Slip AU' Mall.a SpeC1n a · ,1 v. A 1 · ~" *'•' C·•at D•"a1nond rm· 1, 6.,... _..,, a'l'l DNll:: . _, I over -. c.xper. PP Y 1n Sf5 or bcs1 oUtr. 64:;....,..98. ... iifruntnl. ,.,..~ PENNY OWSLEY · 89i-3314 GREAT n ... 1 .,_ avail. Pvt Pty, "'""W<IV-ing: othern•ise U1i.u-eas.~ pcr~n. ?!Ycsa. Lane!, 1703 TiHany i;etf_inr. $!50. Also ----------Blvd St to . ......,,... puppe.11 -,, ----delivery \\till ta.kl' thtte -R-OLL·TOPOESK-brldl' i, ........,mis matchi•u• GREYmi:nkatole.xlntooM, ~Beach :· •n n wka: _Show Qual tly .ll' -lflG6 OWENS T.!t. \\'C'citS or morf'. Send to SupC'T'ior Ai·e., c.~f. * 646-9583 • ... -. ._ $95. l-pc m~n·.11 Amer. .o.,n 1'f1!m9rlAJ Day -·-· Brindle/fawn. An c -l'MJi~. low h~ • .dip •vail. DAIL\' \VAITRiS.~ 11'e1lding band&. if you wi<rh, T . I • 7 2 ·· ~ M l'I~• Allee Brooks. the }~~CH.-Provincl&°t(ii~ing FOR FREE!~ Bill of sal~ & ounster ugrza~f' " • H'A.\fMONO M·2 Spinet.,."1.1nt 97g..o1~. 17 I 6,,.. n.,,,. PU..OT · 105. Ncccllcrralt ~111111 IX' es:p'1l. Ovrr 2J . C d -n bl 4'4-1728. \."Ond.·.BM~ offer. ~•cur-· :roy Poodle 1.-r-~ .... ~Wh~.~,,-, .. ~40~h-p' o. "' Old Ch I ?olARQUtS RESTAURANT !able, 6 chair!!. ustom pa ituai·anttt-l\·..,..a e • Se:t __ __ _ _ •&.A .. Dept., QUX lv.>, e !Ira I 847 ~4!18 b')1•;ht IU. Cd«t& ~fesa . Call :M 0-V IN G • fur n · vet)> * · 675--7579 *' p ...... Lt!il'!!e or u lt adfl/1!1. .loh.n.~n. rover &. 'Bimini $tal>0'· n. N"'v York. N.Y. 1670 Nt\\·port Bh'd .: l\, -., ... '! • "-' •-ty --··---! ~ "' 7 • "" ·• · · ---·-· · l"'",10 •II 6 ' •'·-•, rea!llln<1:u Hp!. 'l'f'u•&· ~ , Ila•'-, Hlf1', Teacup •l"d , e r v I•,, mp.11100. :...,..13 ::i 111 5. 10011. ~,·nl Nan.,, At1drM,, -------TRU1'fl)LE, bunk. f11·ins, all "" .r.> '"' ~ • ... " "' rr \\'ANTED \Var m' 1:f· ' -~---at6.·e". Dinet!e ~t·tbl!I .... &O SterN 13' ~co. w•N-·rr·o Zip, Pt-ttt-r11 Ntt111ber. fection:ate "'1)trJan to cani in one, v.'/maU.rse5"ll. Xlnt l'~R~ZER, uprilht .S 8 0 . forth. 548-4.840. _ ~-__ ___ ""' Nl!:EDLECRArr '72! Cro-for 3. well-mannered girU:;, ~nd., wht. $100. 4!12-S069. Sl iding' &IU!I dOor l2xl $105. SPEAJ(E)t ayateml!. •11bippiilJ "**~otD-"ENGLISH Sl-IE'F.P Packet or l4imllnr Bay bcMat. chet\ ,knit, etc .• F[ee airec· a~L"ll 10, 9 &. 6, in my CorMa OIINESE Orie:ntal rugs, U\11. tr1:lle• 5d' W/CQV. $'75. l\tuS"r sielt Retria/tttt!'Zer. d~·to 'Mxel .c: packina dOf, female, 4 mos. 673-1it1 tiohs,1 5'.> cents.' del ?itar home 5 tnornlngt • 9xl2 $125. 8x10 S1 5 O. Shotrun 12 I· R@mm. auto. $al), Aritiqued BR set. S10l. only. 1'':1-v.'l.y to 13" 3-wa.t Call 557-48-U after 6 P~ a..t1, Rent/Chert'r - NEW! lnnant l\lacrame. \\'ttk. 8 Al\Y to 12: 30. Own Betlutlf'ul eond. 836--1238. 360. Con._,le tv/ate:reo Sl'l5. U' p h ii l e hr • $ 2 $' air suspension • y • t e m • • WEL,gf CorKl Pin brook· Buie, fancy knOts. patttrM. . Pl tit 23-lj Cala:att Dr CM Lamp•-'tat I •<'· 719~~ &l' Sc.hoont.r "Kt:lpW" no'lll' $1 ~aqut'°!1;;rk:>:~:n,"' : P.!OVING. 100" !!Ofa . Nearly 5.l7-2Sli0. l\lar\a'Old,.Cd'.\I. 673-tb96. .~.:~.~:-~1·:i1~:: S Year A~--~~~!tcm. avail. ror charter. 2 0 ' Art r 'I lrpl Cr• !I a "~ · · ~!\I'. Soft bl~/gtten tones. --.--:--. ----NAUl' Sl,nelioned-.-r-U bi ,, .. ----Cuea1-S2GO Per Day. Llrltl' ~11.,.;,·~!. o'IC; :!> •di!Bi~. !I to salary <le~lred 1o Cln!sified 644-2681. 35" Gas Range $-45. Dryer cl••••·.··' t."..,.•ntaln ValI•u STl!tl!O SltELTIES. i Wk&, AKC. '"""U"• for L'OCktall ...... ,.., "'" Ad No, 3611 r lo Dally Pilot, -___.:. ---$:-J. Sm 1.pt rtlrlJ $40. __.., C'v... "J a> 411'' be tlfuJ ..... ,.., _.. rl'll\ke. SI. P.O. Bo'I: 1360, Costa Me1.'l. LOVELY couch, 90" long Datsun lutnQl':r r-.i.ck $3j, 220 'Rl!!ct'Ca.titlri s 3 5 , Pl\. c.nr'rnpi~te 811"'•1 m8~r ' klo '' lU · ni..• jA'-" C'lc. Tni!pee.1. wkdy111 at 1>ly 111 .. 111.nt Crochl<t ftook -Ca 9........ Gold Hol)8Ack labi'l'c. "'alnul n-· ·~': .~. l r !162-24:i4/~26!?5 a(1 , S:30 n res. l'e Al .• pea ti· II)'• ;ive-WU [)(\Ck Re11tauranl or phone .L . I p fl ' .IU41t· o.1ojer .....,. •ul! l' f,: f' ..,. t SQ•' ' If rl'!& l1•arn '1.J)' p1cturc-8 • ems. anns. llkf' rM:w Sll!> -;,t;...&H)S ,.~. 2 d 111• pm. 1trTIJ:, ,.., & •" o • flUSH Settu pU~ Ame-rlcan MS-C1"2'. livl':s. s.J~. ... \\'0?.fAN. neat, f!fll'JltClll'. ".,;.. r, t'Opf)(!r, -'· II l"...... W ·-in te:r "'I Id .;i.o, 1 La G s 1 112 •ru.o 0o · 1;. -1 · -_, · "~1 a. · """' ""'"" !9 ., "t Rest. J\taie/tt.-maJf'. H:~ ... ~-·-oAT·WtLL. "ompl.io 111~a11t <lln iw.1.: mole! mnld 1vork. guoa -•r•1• • • ~-ntlneilta --.!!,--'-··• _. Mlscellano-Av Wtl4tn 1•"!•r a"t.'IAI!•• ... 1 .. '/190 ~ -.. • 6 " -·--··-~ ·w..;iw··. __ ,_ .. _·~·-:.. ·_: ·~· .::...""~·--,th>l~•n _. TRAVEi~ -more thon 100 atns....; $}. Bch. rt:!IOrt. 494-1196 RO"ND ,..1001 tbl . ••"<n' EOOKSHEL.V_ES .1.rvt .1 121 -•u •• fl N S:\tAU ESKS bl f .. . OAVJD l.ANSJN~; i:ruta, OlJJ En:. Sbpitl\ pups. Ch. SpaM th1binf crutstrw Compfet• Afchu Bo.er -:. \VORKINC 1nothtr WtnU ... -4 chn., Dbl dreAttr · • O IUJta e or • l'lll.lni m•dt-~lor lo1·rner slrt. Sll'OWL$16\. Palpated. &IG-9000 fill mi fl. ' . · . nli,.ble \\'O~ or mat\11'1" "''fmin'OI' • match. the:st. txlra ~toi-a:e, apace \n )'Ott? p We Cost $400.l II R 137 91 :a It .1ur1 llMf ~· -SO R:lrl ror J cipld. ~nn pqs. c 0 n t em P 0 r a r y uphoL aara:::t. 1~12 So. fl:o.w St., *W•fttff. Dtttel* . res nt'.~ ' u , .. ~_:"Ob";;· ;;e';;:"AiCC:'l!hm~~·..;S.==.!1:._l ____ ..,~:I ctilti.. Call aft 5:31jt ._.7. , rocker, CaJar chest. vac. Santa Ana. 5f2..31J) Aluminum ·cw that have $1000. ~---GOLDEN Retrleyera. AKC. ~ .. •I It 1'111• .1.ri-1 YOUNG "'N'te r:,hl , .,,w/Attach. Now Im 1111> ~CED lo &I. It n.rn,_ ··.Sl5. -ed )'OU w•µ l ~ded $SllO. St......,.AMl>'MIMPX malea, 1-wlwCH. llne. $ISO. P.cAT No. :m. Xl•L Tr!r. -·-· ""' "' ~• llUN 10 1pkro. Gorrord. &' walnut Only 2 IOI\. &3M&\4. LoU Ol llOnle. Nonb Salls, - W a -16 -t.ll!l'M.l Maln.t.nance M • ",. dine frple., MU(h else. All ~ Kl Sin,te W 115 bourt Of ,..ruu.re.. ! t l cab. Siie. $195. 96).1511. Uk• ~ ~•·1 ~., -·~, IN! to apprecl $ 3 2 5 o 111 ...,... ~ muit loo -tfflcloftt, Exc<I. tond. lneiqJeNI•~. All dun. Cd eond. ' dw< io lD60 Gle1111.,... ·st., La-w ~~ ~ .. ~ lli--.i. ' 3331 Maryland Clrclt, OI. 11 .. 1 fil• 115, '191 Seott Pl, -lle'tch. 'No ""' ""9l· &iLOR 1'V l•'i. !I" TV $29. Poradltle col•mn Is fot)'Oa! -~=.,,.,....,.,,.-..,--·! --llllltl -I -& rolloblo. J.1.15 hour; Oii New Hampohlre In M"a OJ. • ....... •ocepled, J!i'• porl. wls .. •d $39. All 5 Ii..,., 5'days Jar & flllcl:s, * INT 11, f\Jll ~ ~ta.,.. TodaJ:• tni"l Coll S46-'SG2S. . , Vent• N. g~n C.UIPING i..,.t 9'xtl' P,, a1,uw:nm boot . motion xl!lt t'Ood. 5.ll·l!!ll. "Mak• r.oom For . Doti--· -"CJIMAlcet. -ls beautltul pattmtS. 50' Xl.N1' Opper. Nat I C'A>nCf'J'll Put • lithe ·•toor'· tn your 12l Yamaha Endim> $$51). ptmitt 'lootare wt.nlt:d fill" ~~ J11Pney1-R-;;\i d Y ~· • • c I c a" out the trlr $4i00. 5'&0932 r't!lllll. -bis oper!llll$ fur l'01JU Levis -ICll thlw M~ Jor U' Sailboat ~ trlr $.\iO. CB v\e\\i.J\c, Call N f' 'A' p ti T t. ~r hou11e, apt.. ~tlire g:fl r ,., .your truli b CASH Kltii e .s3Ql1 e Goqd ~," Nltim(!f'I In C.~1. 962--041!! "buckA", Call Clusiti.d radtn 1'1t!.~n£f!'r 11 16.i Haibor 0\1mher f'lf Com• bid:., 'ti:-. thl'\I 1 D&llY PUot "'lh 1 DAU.Y Pn.oT m Cnnl Canal. IJ.. O\rne..,\.t..u"' ~i.~ __._ ~. ...,s,.""*'_·~--~----.,.. ~-"'~.... ~1rw1 -'" r-'""' •'1 m:n:i? • r 1 ~ , ................... . • ' ~ I [ -~;!... i~I --!rill ~ lfil f' -. ..... l~l I: .......... l§J I -··,,l§J '•[ iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ ---• _ ... _ I~ ....... S.11 tOt Cyc&et, liQa, Scooters Trucks Aute Servin, Part• '49 Hl t2S -.,....,.,..-..,.... __ _ '67 Econo!into, Heavy Autos,• lmpertod 970 970 I Aul .. , Imported 970 Autoi, Imported DATSUN DATSUN 970 Au!G1, Imported FIAT I Autos, rmpof'ttid • WOO 14 No.~ lnCludinJ -~"' l'luty. Exetl. Cond. traller. Xlnt cond + tr..e 1960 BSA aoldaar. ChOpptd. trntt.:i St200 flml. 847-9440 membenhip to Newport'• N!bul.Jt en&ine. nev.<eil Jo hnest \'aeht Oub. 557~ '!f'J~~ ',lot FORD Pi<:k·up F-100 ALFA ROMEO Atta Romeo '72- 2000 BMW IMMEDIATE OEL IVERY 19fi7 n111~un rtoar111:rrr 16('() D_A_T_S_UN--,-.. -.-.. -.• -.. -.-M-,-., I ---,61--F-l-at-1-24---I '-~ ('fH1d, Low blue book. ~ll. immac., air rontl., mag :-;port c~. Rllffio, heatu, 4 ~36-7.'\.'i.1. 11·hls .. fa{'t xtrv;, 492·1512, s~r1. W'l'~l. Low tow fl ATSUN 1969 4 rlr IW"ll, 11uro, FERRA.RI 00\\·n E·Z t!'rmA. trah:r;. Lti mi. Rt-11ut rond. $12" .. .._... ts (J ~ f1!lfil) 292 "na:. Make otter --... 846-4391· 1.965 Triumph 650 '46-70M •lier S. * AOUA CAT + ~mi-cMppt<t. G<nrly,.ar e 1,.m11, 111J •11r11. X1n't Cond. !I.Jake Otter 968-1~ l!'.lw pr1ce1. U.S. Jrll'ly m11a:-.. • '-Kl CHEV. PICK-UP * 846-M:)l 1,.,,~~~~-=--~1 Crag11r AmPric11n !'Mm Xlnl lwty. S400 1 NOW r ri ply. ~1 .295. 962.-W.10. l '69 t'f'rrl ri, 36.'i GT. 2 + 2, PH ONE 645-5799 ===-------l·n Sw.uJo 500 ec. Xlnt ooM., $1S.9s. HtJackf'r.• S.l~ ~ pr. • C111l : m~33Jl * / IN STOCK '67 Da tsun 1600: 4 dr f.tin iilvl'r, AM/t'~t. a!r, full l\flRACLE MAZDA C'.oorl ronfi. $450/bsl ofr. p11·r., ne w :-.1ichel in, '114 : 7150 Harbnr Blvd. FLIPPER unainkabJj! 8 ' &.11 (IM.i. itottd 2 mo. $600. 14" Indy maa1 lor Pint'> &-1954 f'ord ~' ton truck. Jtum For I mmecfl1te libuilHI ra cer. $250. Vuy 1'°''°'94-"3"19"3'"."'='"==o=--,.-~-I Vega. S.S. ' 11pt.1ke -Pinrn wl'!I . S200. 246 Vif.jn, Laiuna I Oelfv•ry SEE t;S ABOUT Over•••• Dtliv•rv CREVIER MOTORS :-..1R-l610. 67:>-6410, f'lriy morning. Coata Meu. I00'1 C(lnd. 644-2S4t BMW '89, R·»-US Xlnt eond. Ii: V11J1:1 ntt Marl tir~11 + &a('I!, ln1t•nt Credit 1 'SA""'BOT=~-w~/,-a~il,-.-,~,~,,-.-,-l Sf)Ow book. 1750 Mt wh~rl11. All brAnrt.~ tmm A I l In ,~.. BANK FINANCING Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Im ported 970 I Autos, Imported trW tor Ka)'!lk. ::nl32 Port otter, leA.vm. cntl")'. 675-8679 S22.50. L%11 Nr1<.1Y1r1, CttstA u 0 eas 9 -COAST 2ll8 \.\'. l~t St · ~Anta Ana CLr, H.B. 96Uii7'5. }35 Honda &rambler. 1967. Meu . 645-.'\SM. -~--S_J>llTl_c--cc-- l]D'"'cc.,,-, "M"'~"';"=,."'~"!t"""~:~;~y~ .. ~il~ ... ---,-.1 :::.~~'. :· :."'l~~~.~~~ .. ~ ... ~ .... ~~~l~§l~~ITry oor ~~~ for IMPORTS I \'isit ou~r nr\\' home! 83&-9351 Boats, Sllp1/Doc:ks 910 Exctl cond. ~25. Savina:a .. Satis.factio11 • Ser· 1 I BOAT Up w 28' -Ma.rtUS '70 Kawasaki soo Mark nr. Dune Buggie• •S6 ~cei.E.AsE ALL POPULAR 1000-1.2M w. Paclf'ic Cit Hu'Y. ROY CARVER, Inc. Ave. Channel, $40. month. Tra.cle for car or $795. 30001----'"'------I 1912 MAKES AT COMPETI-Newport 'Bl!Ach <7l4 ) 642-0406 1 234 E. 17th St. 1 573.-25TI. ml. new. 847-7724. '71 Dune Buggy TIVE RATES. * '71 ALFA * Co<!• "'" 545444< OIOJCE 1llps in new Marina "TO Honda CB350. New tlre1 Call Malcclm Reid for •·r1~, de'-il• ·n1, B\f\V 2002 fyim i-11,; for 25-7U fl. boat&. &: chain. Excel Ctind. $450. Bii engine, nrw top, fun t'llr. "1 '"" "" .&. •72 10 OOJ .. 11 ' THEOOORE * CLEARANCE * I . m""· Y• ow, 673-6thi. 54~2026. Take trade or small flown still unrtfl'r f;ict \\ ;i r r. SAIL BOAT SLIPS MOTORCTO..E 50 cc. NO ;~P •~n:c:m~~io (94.l· ROBINS FORD A.\1/F'.'lf srer.-n. prrlrctly Newport &:ach 548·2253 p111k. 1511. 76914 W. Xlth, CM . '""•U · am ~Harbor Blvd. * SALE * m11in111infl'rt. $3:i00 f i rm. -u Pl t A ,.,.....,.. Cmit& Mesa M2-00Hl SI!~·• ;ilmn.~t $HXXl. over Boats, Speed & Ski 911 "11 11.etn 1ll v~. ' . I .68 BultllccrEI Bandito YiO. Trucks 962 Autos W1nted 968 The 1972,1 Ar• Htr•I nrw. 642-7.ll:l. H''""SKJ""""bo&_t_75,,,_h,_p_E_"_inru_d_el ~:'1s""10"". ' nu motor. ~75. '69 CHEVY C30 1 l.Ara'es1 5.'lvena:• .Ever On BMW 2002, '69. Si I If f' r, t -ton WE buy all makes ot clean All Model•! Thi11 is the AM/F'M, air, Jn mile1111e. I -Matt:hinr custom trlr. All uRd sports can, paid for h · 1 d Ex~• _ _. •1•t '"n .... -.1...t 1•... \Veekrnc! To Buy Your New c rm rim!, x nt ron · ~ eoiu ........ ~. 962-3433. ....,. ~· -.. or not. Pit•~ drive in for 67-ll'" 4000 miles. S375. $2688 tree apprallal. Alla it: .J-"'" 573-4223 COAST ---=clT=R=oE~N - 1972 Yamaha 125 MX na1 btotf. 4 spttd, R&H, I Perfeet Cond. s;m or (38J17C I, Citroen Sports Maserati ---- one.. '7:1-3379 M1'ke McCarthy IMPORTS °''"" cmmry hoaoouart•n ' C1mper1, S.le/Rent 920 NORTON 750 cc fnr lncal & Europe 11 n Make ofter call GMC T S 3100 W. Cout Hv..-y., dr tivery. ''Discount .. 54fr95ll + RUCK Nl!WJ'll'lrt 84!a.ch 1000-1200 \V, Pacific Csl. H"''Y· Jim Slemons Imports COR. BEACH &-. 642-9405 N R h TI <2 ..... ,.., :?201 &:!. t.111.in, Sanr11. Ana Campers'' mNl biW, folds for C&lT)'ina McFADDEN ewpnrt f!ac f 4J 6 ~ ~7.....3242 Open Sun. Havaava Four Star Tra· with case, SllO. Zebra mini 894-1336 111 .24;,o WE PAY TOP Alfa Romeo v•tte, Amert&0._ Cabov•rs. ~~·~· Both in A-1 rord. .,8 FOOT BOX" CASH DATSUN Some Sl!:U .Cmita.ined Alto .-44JJ. . BeauWul New c.om~r tent Mot•r Homu 940 72 GMC ~ Ton, 250 El\Jlnf!, 'Jl 240 Z camper will fit ~ ton, doses · Low & Uppu Mid, SlabiJ-down izer, Leal SJ1rin11. Heavy LOOK~· ";b ~':· ';.::,:.! SUNSET MOTORS °"" ""°"'" H.a"" o,ry b UMd can I. trucks, 1'l9f Call U1 for free fft1ml tea. GROTH CHEVROLET '4 spd dlr c11n11.ry .Y"llow, plush blk. intrrior, m11g \\'hM!l~. trn1 k r,.11r gu11rrl,11. ]tn\· mi, 11:ir ririt',.! F,TllM!I. 546·~736 Tra-de-Up Summertim• j5 the right time to put your1elf in • better 1u+o• mobil e. G1rd•n Grov• Datsun his ju1t the car for you som•· where on our large lot. The sel•c;tion is gre1t end the prices ire right. Stop in tod1y end get the d•1 I you've been w•iting for. '68 PORSCHE '" "0 " - 1 " 011 "' $3372 Co11dftlo11. IWJU7721 '68 EL CAMINO ·~~;~::~.· $1672 120JGIQ.J '68 BUICK LE SABRE 4.~';. $1272 '71 DATSUN Air Ce1td. IYHFIO'I l40Z MOfS -Lile New 1006900) '64 SUNBEAM ~; .. ,,,, Ctoo•t $3772 $372 '69 DATSUN .• ~~~~~ .... IXTH'2'1 $1072 '70 DATSUN , ••. '"""'' ....,,, $1172 .'71 CAPRI c~;::r:~ •. ""'"' $2472 '69 DATSUN .. ,,. .. •·•·· ""· 4 1pd. 1191.AFWI $1072 Travette Villa Grande, Ntw -U' Eldorado MJNJ Clutch, aaUit, Gold w/blar k Stove, Ret.fer, Sleep,o; <I, only MOTOR HOME. Fully 1elf vinyl tnp, Will Handle light 920 Jba., Sl!r • S763,'i6. contained. •213207, Cab.over-Camper, Seri a J $795 Completo 1~':: El Dorado • 5 13.199. $2895 Alk for Sales M&nlfel' tm1 Beach Blvd. Huntinfton Beach NOW ON DISPLAY "" 10 'm 4'4-61'11. '70 LANDCRUISER 4 w::;,~:';' $2472 ~~ . Bnd~= ~'72-8-IG-5-fo-s=E~DA~N~ 1· ------------"•"_ •• _ .. _, __ _ BILL BARRY c'""]l<rl: chu•i• mouni. • BILL BARRY 5th whtel trailer. Sfl-60S7 Kl 9-3331 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP USED CARS Pontlac-GMC-C•mpero Fl•t llst St. et S.A. Fwy.l 2XlO E. 1st St., Santa Ana 558-10'.XI p""" 645-6577 l97D Harbor Blvd., Co8ta M~a "Camper Special" '72 GMC 4' Ton Plcktip, 350 V-8, Stabillltr. Heavy Duty Shocks, 4 Spd, Hl!Avy Duty Sprinfa, Gauaf!s. Power Diac Brake&. Heavy Duty CoollnJ. Heavy Duty Generator, Best 13631 Harbor, Garden Gmvt Buy In town (Ser 510744), 1 B1k. So. ol G.G. Fnry. BILL BARRY *~harce* Pontlac-GMC-Campers Flat flit St. at S.A. f'wy. J 2000 E . 1st St., Santa Ana 5.18-1000 '65 DODGE ~ ton S1199 If your car ii extra clean, see us tlrlt. BAUER BUICK 2925 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mt!lll. 979-2500 Pidrup, v.s. 4 ...... 154626.1) IMPORTS WANTED Orange Countiea TOP i BUYER Bll.L MAXEY TOYOTA 1883l. Beaeb Blvd. R&.H , ff. Beach. Ph. M7-A555 Mike McCarthy Truck Center lS.\50 Beach Blvd., Weatm !nater WIIL Buy your car paid for or not. Call Ra1ph Gordon 673-0900 -445 E. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach. COAST IMPORTS I " 1000.1200 w. Coast Hwy. 4 on. 411prl, rl lr, 1011 lllllf'l'ljZP. '66 vw IUS. I POIM!Mlff $1172 Newport Beach 642-0406 R11dio. h<"at,.r ! •:t.l799.it ~ 111• ISYU,701 AUDI '70 Aud i • speed, radio, he11ttt, 19,000 true miles, lDSCJQ. Low down E·Z 1,.rm,11. S234!1 full prit'r . Will finanrr P\1. pty, M6·8736 a!t 11 11 m 494·6.'ll 1. * ·n DATSUN P.U. • '71 DATSUN 1100 ,, ... , c,.., 4 s,cl. 19S4ml $1572 '69 DATSUN.~~~~~ .... I HllCAVl $1172 '66 DATSUN .. ,.,... . .... ,er fSer. ~JOJ'I $972 $2099 PHONE 6-4:t.57!l9 12.!XXl mi, ~P mirror . .!llPp humpPr, mag. "'hl.!1. Dk I h!ur. Priv, Ply. S1750. Firm. 5.11 ·~1117. ·--------------------~lfRACL.E MAZOA '71 240-7.. n/s m:ifV! !.· r11rl, 2150 H11.rbnr Blvd. I Jae 11!r, 1 ""'llf'r. f'.l(C'f'I mn<l . Co,11111 P.1 "~11 S4.RM. SA! t., Sun, &ll--OQJ I AUSTIN AMERICA I w'"''''' ''' '· '69 D::tt~un Wjn. 510 hn;:i:l!.i:~ 'GR Au11tin Amerir..11, 1utn, r11.ck, Sh11rp! $1100. or ~t. r11di"l,11. Xlnt cond. $495. oft. 646--73'.l). Cltil ~l74l, ~H-.,-,-,.-m-o~th~i,-,-yoo--w-.,-t-t-o I , $3195 Pontl•e-GMC·Fl•t !ht St. at S.A. F'wy.) 3X>O E. Jst St .. Santa Ana 5.\8.1000 Motor Homes Sales • Rentals 558·3222 '94-1336 894-:1341 WANTED: '63-'70 Merced~ Benz 281) SL. Lnw mileage. Will pay cad!. 67l-5927 Fut re.11ulta: att jwl a phone M!ll! Cla"!fitd a.rls rlo it call 11way • Ml-5678 j wt!! -ca.ll NOW 6-42-56j8. I !,,,.,..,....,;.., ............ ~!!!!"""!!!!ii'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~;;;;;!!!!~!'!;~;;;;;; Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Fantastic Deal REVERSE story of "Old Woman a.nd the Shoe'', more room than family for GMC Open Road challs mounted. sf! I t c:ontainf!rl $4,700 FIRM. 213/597-3267 l(ll S. Village Way, S.A. TEST DRIVE THE MIDAS MINI MOTOR HOME Distributt.d by Ken CrAtt Pmdurts CREVIER MOTORS week-end& or can be aeen at , 17175 BeAch Bllld. Hunt 208 Y.. 1st St., Santa Ana Ford f -250 flatbed, pi s, plb, Bch .. wttk days. ' 135-3171 ti ir, radio, ovf'rloads, over· 1~~~-~~----PACE-ARROW CHINOOK •izt tirt11. 646·57111 aak for '65 Ford 250 14. T. Truck ' • . Rich w/llJ,2 " cabover Westv.•ay's All top bra.nd11 •• D11count ==-;;--,,,,,---=-- camper unit. 4 speed. R/.H price . , lMMEDfATE DE· TRUCK · Hillm11n fCommer) Xlnt cond. 54,000 mi. $1995. LIVERY . . Van -1962 1212 So. Ross St. 5'8-0.l!S BEACH CITY DODGE Sant& Aoo 5'1--J~ BEAUTIFUL new Landau colrir coordinated f1bforgl11.ss 16555 Beach. Boul~ard shells for Import truck'!I, Huntington Beach !.295. Mes11 Campt.r Salt~. 1n41 540-2660 Xl.36 Harbor. C.J\.1., 64&-4002. CRUJSAIRE Motor Home on '66 FORD ~ ron trurk '"/'~ ford :n:t. 9 mos new, V-i, Galaxie camJ)l!r unit. 67.000 :iuto, ps/t1.ir cond. AM/FM mi duaJ b;,11 k g11s tn~. sft!r<"O t11pt, toilet, e\\'Tllna:. Many xtr11~. A1nt cond. hitch, 11,000 ml. $5500. 64&-7575 or 548-3797. 675-2911i. I ==~~~-~~ '70 Dodge Custom Spnrtsm.11 n MOTOR Hom~ Rental -why Order Canceled "2" -'72 "Jimmyf ' 4 Wheel Drivf', ~ Spd, Auto Trtins, V-~. I "''llh Air Fully Equ!pped, All Seatll, Must Stll, IS~ 515372 • 515532) Call Today l~t CtllT\t b~sis, Other 4 Whl'tl drive Vehicles In !-l«k. BILL BARRY bus. air C'tlntl. ~ Cy! .. lo Invest $15.000" 'Rent OUT! -F lat·GMC-Pontiac mi's. nu fl!'f'!l, x-ln't conrl. 1Mwf'r k completely equip. 11 s 1 s A ~. l st r. a .. ~ "1'· sm. :>4~132. Pf'd. Av11il. mo,o;f dates no11.· 2000 E. 1st St .. Sant• Ana '~ Cabover. ~'. ~Just Stt to 'ti! Sept. 5"1~2Mti 5.'J.11.tnnn appt?c1a!e. ~.d for 11; ton NEW luxury 27' Winn<"barn. 1967 Chevy ~ ton tn.tck. P.U. $49:>. :-.1~7.11!>. AIT ronrl. sl.~ps ti. S270 ""'k PIS, radkl. aood shaJ>f'. 1969 VW c11mptr·"''/l'.llP up, plus 8c. • mllf'. ~70 011ys. 548-8491. ev~ 67~72.T.I. AM/FM, Ex"l Cond . $2200. MAXl-Ood .. Vao '71, com--,--70 DODGE 3( ton Call 495-5471. plete faclory conversion , 74 ·n V\\' Pop Top Ca.mper. air, •II poY.·er. 494-38'!M . ISOOO ml. "" .,.,,ty, mint Tralltrs, Tr•vol 945 $2588 cond. Sac. $3350. <194-.\42.1. Cycles, Bikes, Scooters 925 e ARISTOCRATS e NEW!'ORTS e AUTO-MATES 1970 HONDA 175 Also, st.verAJ usl"d S395 A: up . t?ORSHAM TRAILER SALES Xlnt cond. 3,300 miles. Street 2709 W l?t.h St:rttt or tr11il bike $400. CA!! Lindo\, Santa Ana. · 1nc1 531-~ 546-4.78. Pickup, v.g, 4 1pet<I, R.&H . <nD.f.:i..11. Mike McCarthy Rtcreatlonal Vehicle Cent•r MOTO GUZZI 1970 SELF contAlned TR.AVE!.. COR. BEACH l '150cc. 3,500 mi's. Fairing SAddlebq'1. Any !'!"!Is. offer. TitAJLER L<I~ fl. in mint MrFADDEN conchtkni wit.h ex t r A 1 , 59<1-1336 531-2450 Ken. 67Mi060. HONDA SL 100 1970 vef)' low mUe&ge 1trf'<"t or dirt. Blue $225. "9-<>530. Re11dy to use. 4S4-M~ .-.n :I pm . NIMROD tent trailer. stove. sink. icebox. !lt.tP5 ~. C.ban11. Likt nt'I-\• $1100. '67 FORD F-100 $1399 BOY'S Huffy Stinqa.v 642-7578. IAna bftd. V-8, 3 speed, R'-H. Excellent cond imn $25. 1911·2-I ' "Prowler" Traw.l (V44449), l="='e""W-00~=-22_,_•----,,,.-,-1 ,.,.u.~. s.ir-mnuinM . •ir Mike McCarthy 1971 YAMAHA Endum. Xlnl. conchtioned. F.A. beat. Hot CoDd. $600 or beat on~. Wlltf'. Hitch. All ~1r Like 543-9525. ntW! 5f5.-45ll aJI g, OMC TRUCKS C()R, BEACH A '611 )'AMARA 2&I Citation·Lux. model. n·. 3 pc. Md'AOOEN Blf Btu + Clea.n! bethf'l'IOm". du11.l whttl11, 3 wm"MIN$TER S29;\ ., 961-83)2 yn old _ 538-TI~. A93-!J.16 / S.U-24\0 Hond• 100, 2IOO ml. Auto ~"Ice, P•rta H9 Ford ·~ FIDO PU /VI S300 . ., 536-7382 TIRE CLIARANCE 4 spct. Una bod. °""loads. kAWASAKI ·n Muh Ill. 500 Save up f() 50% on lllvtntory 19?6'L.· Sl09.'i. cc, te'l!Ufl UM, mu. Undtr aale. rtrestont Store. Jim Slemons Imports •'&n". S875. M7..su4. '46-U44. 22>1 So. ~ratn, Santa An• 10 KAWASAKI 90, Xlnt cond. Codillac Parts l!l.59 l.17-5212 Open .Sun. Vtiy low mlJft. $22S. c..io. Tranlmiulon '52 Fool P.U. I.up bod. + Ma-4.m + Radio Netds IOIM work. SJ.!), or DAWES Glluy 24" 1D -Alt CondlllMilli UnJt b•lt .itor. w.<>29L liOle.. Xlnt corld:tdon, UXI. 1ZlJ So. Rots St. Salltl 4n1 Nffd a "P&d"? Plaot &ti Ill! _., Call --.. su..wo Call M.1-11171 • 990 S_tep Up To Luxury • • • • Excellent selection of previously o'vned Mark Ill's and Continentals 1.970 MARK III Exceptionally Clean! Medium green metall ic IV/dark ivy & landau roof_ Luxury equipped Including luil power. climate control air. individual adjusting pov.,er front seats, tilt y,·heel , 8 track stereo {128- AKU I. SALE! OUTSTANDING GROUP OF CHOICE CARS! 1970 CadiJlac II. DORADO Immaculate. Emertild mist metallic/ blaek 1.And.au & matchint Leather in~ terior. Luxury equipped. Full pou'er Incl. 6 ""'ay seat, lill-tele whef'\, AM·FM stereo. po"•er dl'lnr l~ks .l much mort.. (~lAKJ ) $5275 1968 Lincoln 4 0000 Licht blue finish with dark blue vinyl top. Full power and faC"to ry air. (WJ!I· 12'rJ. See and drh•f' tod11~. $2375 1969 Cadillac FLEETWOOD 4 Dlt. Beautiful eboriy bl11ck finish u1th black !f!l.ther interior a.nd vinyl top. A on@ owner ear that .has only gonf! 39.000 mi. Pric td for qu ic~ salP. fZN\7980) $3 950 1970 International TRAVE\.ALL Air eondJUoning. Beautiful cnppertone metallic "'ith \vhite top. VB, automatic, R&:H, po\vl!'r ~teertni 4 brAkes. Vacation 1pttla.J. 14fi.iAGB1 Sale Price I \ 1969 Lincoln CONTINlNTAI. 4 Dlt. \Vhitl' exterior urlth black leatht.r a.nd vinyl top. run powf!r, a.ir cond and vac· uum locking gmup. Near wholeu.le. tXYZ453). Full ririrt $3275 1969 Chevrolet CAMARO 350 VB. 1tick shift. Attraetive aold mtst finish ul\th blaek bu~ki!'t 1eat11 and con- sole. Power .. ti-<"rin1t, r11dio, heater. CYSY668 l $1875 COME IN AND SEE OUR VAST SELECTIONS OF TOP QUALITY CARS! Rome Of The New Cu .•• "Geldett rouela" "Ora rigt C;untv'} Familt1 of Pb1t Cars" ohnson ' & son ) :"J( I l j r~ ,\~I I : ( I 11: \ ! /\I J: I 28211 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 0 540-5830 I Home Of The New Car . • • "Gold-Touela" f70 . ' -..... Frid.IJ', MIJ' 2•. 1972 DAILY PILOT Q ------- ~ ..... _ ...... _l~I. ............ l§J I Auto1ttrl* !~1 1 ...... l _-_,,,_-_J§J .__f --·_,,, ... _l§J 1.-.... •I~ r _ ...... 1§11 1~1 ;;1 ;;;-;;; ..... ;;;1~§1 Autos, Imported 970 A•lot, Imported '70 Autos, lmpomd 970 A•tos, Imported 970 Autoe. l-1!Mf 970 Autos, lmpomd 970 Autos, lmport..i 970 HONDAS GALORE! PEUGEOT PORSCHE TEST DRIVE THE NEW HONDA * '67 PEUGEOT 'G6POJtSCHE 9ll Radio/healer. $1 100 or belt SUN ROOF S28CO COUPE! offer. * CaJJ 548·3643 OR BEST OFFER 968--6192 PORSCHE 11957 l'onch•. Top o>ndttJon. Comple'tely restored. '68 PORSCHE 912 Tqa, tt * call 6734593 * ,.110 • ., "'b" '"• • ,,.,,.,I RENAULT new top, tuntd exhau11.1 am/fm, immac. $ 4 5 o o · Rtnault Salts & S.rvlct 499-l631. I tor over a decade Jn Oranae 19n PORSCH E 914-4 Ap-County ,,.. __ ,,... ___ "":"_...,. ____ .,....,..!"'I pearartt Group, AM/nt Sen•. Dept. O~n til 8 p.m. Ho-N;;.iA SE-DANS -.tereo.-Btln(-trans.femd. 1'10nd U $3400. tn4l !4H362. I Jim Sl•mons Ron&ult $1639 A~DC~J.~:~•:;r,,, '70 Porsche 911T 2'lll So. Ma in, Santa Ana PULL MCT. IQUlptlD Stueo Map Private Party 1 hlk. Dllrth of \\'amE"r Days1 m.9:5so, aft 5 ~ Strvice De~nt 546--U.14 ___ ,.... ________ ,.... __ .__; 8J3.:l155. Sales Departml'!nt 557-5242 UNIVERSITY '66-912 N••· '""'" Ex"I. R-15 ~1ags, Goorl !tres. i\lust .wlL $2875. 67>8110. All ntw '72 Renault RENAULT R1n1ult Demo S•lt Semi Annual Demonstrator Cleuance Sale This Weekend Unbeatable Prices All 1971 MODELS IN STOCK FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY INSTAlj.T-C-l!EDIT APPROVAL BANK FINANCING COAST IMPORTS OLDSMOBILE-GM.C TRUCKS-HONDA '63 PORSCHE Con\1 "'b!t Spart Coupe 1000-1200 \IJ. Pacific Csi. Hwy. 2850 HARBOR, COSTA MESA -540-9640 engi~. Call Dr. Cassidy Immediate Delivery Newport Bl'!1ch ln4J 642-0406 "W• Ar• N • .,., Set11ft9d U11fll T•11 Are.. 548-9319 Choice of Colors ··white Elepha11t5 " owr- l!!!!!!!!'!!l!!~~~~·!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!llPut a little "loot' 1n your FJRST SHO\VING USA running your house '.' Tum I: Levis·-sell those bauhle,11 for TEST DRIVE t~m into "CASH " • sell JAGUAR MAZDA '"huck.<1 ". Call Oassitled Jim Slemons Renault them tl\ru Daily P i I ot ----------------1 642-5678. 2201 S. Main 557-5242 Classified. 642-5678. SAAi SAAB SALE All New SAAi'• A,.. Always Special Priced At CNtt ln1t1nt CrMit Bank Financing lmmedlete Dellvery Factory Tr1lntd Ex~rt1 In S.rvlct, P1rt1, Sales Ovtruas O.l l~ery C6A:S-T- IMPORTS 1000.121'.K) \\'.Pacific Cst. Hwy. Ne\l•port Beach cntl 642-0406 TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642°5678 SAAB SUNIEAM SAAi SONNETT 111 '66 SUNBEA.\I Alp,,,. • u " e ~You're No. 3 • $.'15 or oHtt. St-e at lCOO You Try Hardtr e ~11cArtitur, S.A. a.fUr -4:30 We At Coast or ~all Xi7-Jffl, ask tor Would like To lloest "'"'" Apt. 49· "We Sold TM Mostl " TOYOTA /&.1o1March3,1972 We Were --=--·---No. 3 in the Nation (In Faet '72 TOYOTA U,e \Vorld!} In Sales for the $2029 TOYOTA '69 COROLLA 2 DR. Extra nice! 4 1petod, rad10, heatl!r. (ZVZ519) 5795. HUNTINGTON BEACH CHRYSLER-Pl YMOUTH SAAB SONNET Sports Car. 4 lpttd trans. O!x A..\i radio. We Want to be and \\'1ll be Heattr, detrostus, tinted 16fi61 Be11C'h Blvd .. H.B. No. 1 by June bt. Test drive glass. \Vhite wall tires. M0-5164 e M2.Q6.11 a Sonnett today and &t'e v.·hy Po~t ttar wi.ndo'l.·s . .Y]ny --------1 ln6r'e J)e(lpla buy-from Coast trun. Carpets. Front disc ~ 11 -• than ..,, oth.r dulu ln So. br&ku. Rocllnlnt buck.i lf,.\S Caill. aeats. KE 20-300785. lll. ltln COAST 1\• .. • l•n.:1 Toyo/a & Jaguar O.al.r l/ljyf.NA W10 1 Authorized Salt'~ & Service IMPOR TS -TOYOTA 900 S. Coo•! Highway • 1966 ""'""'· c .M. 646-930.l I ~~0~~1 ,0 ,':;:: 1 1000-12)) W. P11.eltie -Cl1. H11'Y. ' 'W h It e Elephants" o~r-1 4 Dr. Auto Tr~s. Air Cori1, Newport Beach (n4l 642·0406 running your hous~? Turn Radio. 1 01,1,•n"'r 16S2DJA ~ • • w h It e Eleptiants" Ov!'r· I them into "CASH" -sell I $1995 ruhninl your house~ Turn them thru Daily Pilo t Jim Sl1mon1 Imports them lrllo "CASH" _. ,,u Classitit'd'. 642-5678. I 2:111 S. 1.18.Ul , Santa Ana thein thru Daily P 11 o t Sell ldle items now! call 557·~242 OpPn Sun. Classified . &12--5678. 642-5678 Now! Sell the old stuff XKE 4.2 co u P (! ROT ARY'S Air/Cond. \\'ire ~'ht>tols _ Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990Auto1, UMd 990Autos, Used Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used AM /FM • Wh ile w/blk in· 111\mediett Otlivtry · 1"1°'' Ex<>I. C 0 n d ' ff UNTJNGJON BEACH 644-1S07. '.i."I XKJZO Classic. F1xt>d hr;iri Mu~. nins ''t'T)' gnod. S!i75. Phone 531-5033 or 893-2.'Wt .".'.,. '· ~ 17331 BEACH BLVD. liUNTINGTON BEACH ' : .,,,, \ "'" ~·" "n'' "" ' 842·6666 1969 JAGUAR XKE Coupe. ~---==== Absolutely like new! 6500 mil es. $3,550. Call 644-4767. MAZDA HUNTINGTON BEACH MAZDA HAS OVER 100 ROTARY CARS IN STOCK • ROTARY RX2 $2488 '71 USID IJ211LUJ • IMMEDIATE · DELIY!RY I 'ROTAR·Y WAGONS • PICKUPS e Largest Trad•in Allow1ncts Given • E-Z Financ ing Available, Lo. On. & Mo. Pymts. • t.1 AZOA HiOO, 5 months olrl, 1st class shapt>. (;()ing to Europe-. 612-7020 •ft 6. MERCEDES BENZ SO~USEti MERCEDES ON DISPLAY NOW Le11t Ntw Merctdt1 $118.71 Monthly HOUSE OF IMPORTS 6862 Ma.nche,ter, Buena Pk ~·7250 on 5'nta Ana Fnvy. Whitl'!-i:td int, Low mi!l'!s. 2 topi-ijeal beauty-priJ pt)'. $550(N Day ~7-5&12/Eve &46-Jt· . '71 SMan. nellI' ~""" 4300 mi S5000 firm. Private par- ty, 49-1-4829. MG NGB-GT-1967 New clutch· Rl'!blt transmission $1500. Call 540-6600. Ext. 3lf. AftPr 5 call 624-7567. 1968 ~IGB-GT \Vh/lik int. O/D. \\'irf! v.·hf>els. Xlnt rond1IH')O 673-7045. >1G-TD 0RSS1C, whilt, xlnt cond. $lj()(}, or besl ofter. 6Ta-0360. OPEL HUNTINGTON BEACH -------·10 Opt-I GT. super ele.n, lo MAZDA mi, nu brks & Batt. $7100. 834-2718 (Joe) 544-1281. PEUGEOT 17331 BEACH BLVD. l/1 Mii• South of Worner * PEUGEOT * 842-6666 CALL 642·5678 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS As lnY.' u $2.29:1. fNo. 5545) FRIT": WARREN'S Sport Cor Center e ORANGE COUNT Y'S LAJl.GEST no E. lJt St., S.A. 547~64 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 ' . Exclusive IMPORT AUTO SHOW Premiering the Newest lerl'aris al I ~ewport 3Jmport~ ON OISP!AY ~ 246 Spit Convwtibll Nnt .._...,. M UJ , • ~ GTC4 Th r., -1 Ht/1 ''" 1111 &lff • lqltM 365 Spidel Convertible '""""' ....... ..,., "1lt • ~ 24' CoUpe GT Jh ... ~ ktwrl .... SH these Fantamp Autas al j}ewport Jmport~ 3100 W. COAST HIWAY NEWPORT IEACH 642-9405 540-1764 Why Don't YOU Shop Where ONLY Quality Cars Are Advertised At Fair Prices · NO GIMMICKS NO JUNK All Our Advertised Cars Carry our -Reputation And Warranty! BUY WHERE YOU ARE TREATED LIKE TOMER BEFORE AND AFTER YOU A CUS· BUY! OPEN ALL DAY MEMORIAL DAY! -EXAMPLE OF OUR FAIR PRICES - '68 FORD 3/• TON PICKUP 4 whHI drlYe, 4 .,.,., Locking hulK, $2 799 superior truck. Radio. Hurry, !1'27151 WILL TRADE '72 VEGA COUPI CH•fclib•t~l 4061 mil••· R•tn1inlnt f•ctory w1rr111 ty, •uto. tr1n•,, ' r•dio. Show rooll't fr•sli. 1141· ELTI $2399 '72 MAUIU COUPI 11 ,000 111il• fr••" t•'· liit h rubb•r, vi11vl roof, •ulo. fr•fll., •Ir coMt., pow•r •fMrlnt • lt•m•lnint f1cfory w1rr•11fv. fist. OCKI $3$99 '68 Rambler AMP:ICAN f door. R1dlo, h11l1r, 1ufo1t11tlc trtrumiuio11. IS771XCJ $899 '61 .Impala CONYIRTllLI R&H, •ulo., powH tff•r- ing, •ufo1t11fic, •Ir conJ ., pow•t wi11dow1. I 1 l49A) $1299 '71 EL CAMINO V-1, l Spd., Redlo. Llkt lltand Ntw, 15,000 mlln. !7632351 $27991-~~~~~~~--~~~......1~.-70-lm-~-~~ '69 SCOUT '70 IMl'ALA '69 CHEVY II CUSTOM COUPI '67 EL CAMINO PICKUP 2 . Ot. H1rJto,. "vto. NOYA COUPI R&H 1 • , p•wt• 'tt t1119, I U• frtn1., 1it, r•4ie, powtr Re8 io, 6 cylind•r, •ulo-to1t1 i fic, '•clory •ir, ¥inyl v.a, auto. trans., yfnyl roof, afr coittl., pewer 11..tng, radio. M•d•nda spechtl, ft Is (V21602l $899 4 wli1tl driv1. Sh •rp lot~· 1119 hub1. ('27411 1t.tdn9, power br1kt1 . h ' • • f f p roof. I ow111r cir, ri9 t Nice c11. Low, low price. "'' 1c, ¥1ny roo • retty I l } f465AK5J Cit. <LG?441 J' 1t1il119t. , 740 '70 EL CAMINO $1899 $2099 $ V-1, powtr lttorlng, air c.od., -; traM., . $3199 1399 $2599 radio, power brokn, suporlor coo41"°"" ·(787fOGJ 1"-------~-------~--------1--------1 '71 FORD '69 GMC 3/4 TON VAN low mllft, rear 9lau, only high $2299 rubber, stick shl~. Ul143AJ 48 TRUCKS IN STOCK! CUSTOM CABS -ALL NICE WITH GOOD MILES '61 llONCO Pickup. 4 wheel drive. Loe.king hull1, 1th:k, VI-Nice. (P27J4) $2099 '61 Chevy Sulturb.ln C1rry1ll. IN.OM ..... 4 .,..., sso cu. In. $2299 V-1, radle, cu1tem c1ll, 1vperlor truck. ('27JI) '68 CAMARO VI , Coupt. Vinyl roof, v•llow ''" bl1ck lnl1r· io1, pow1r 1'tt•in9, r1dio, con1ol1, bucktt 111ft, 1u· p1r nic1. !YCMl .. 0) $1999 '66 FORD PALCON PUTUU Cp1. \I.I, r1cl io, •ufo. tr•n1. Sh1r1t. ITU41JI $999 Y.1, Auto. Tr1n1., Pow1r St11rint, k•di•, Super Cle1 n, l TYP 165 I $1999 2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA • '65 MALIBU v.a, Cpt .. pow1r 1l1trin9, •Ulo lr•n1., r1dio. Nict c••· fil:Pl21ll $999 '66 MUSTANG COUPI Vt, 1ulotn•lic, JIOWlr 1l11rin9, r•dl•, 1uperi or condition. ITUOZI I I $1099 4 W!!HI Drlv. ,lckull Will! 011\1111 Hunl••• C•"'ffr, U 00 .: 14.S llotellon rullbl'. lttdlo, 4 Sjlf, C•"'jlll' •lll(!f l Jutll'!!I• •IOll, llOwtr ''""'"'' ..01k1ng 11ktr, flSMtHl. Wll s.11 WltlMot Cem!M' WIN TNdt '72 PINTO COUPI Air ctnd., 4 1pd., r1dio, low low mll11. (411!LUI Sll 11p. $2499 '71 MERCURY c ... ,., Cpe. 4 1pd., 16,000 1T1il11, 11.Jio. Re•I 11ic1 c11. fl051TNI $1699 $2999 COUNTRY SIDAN 10 P111. W1gon, lug919e r1ek, 1ir c6nd., powtr 1t1tri119, pow1r brtk11, 1uio. tf1111., 1upt rb con• dilio11. 166 .. DVXI $3799 '71 BUICK LI SAlllll COUPI 2 Or. h1rdtop • .,.jnyl root_ pow•r tlt•ri119. p6WM' br1k11, 1ulo, fr1n1., 'I· dio, 1it cond. Th it it • fin• cir 111d • wh1 l1 of • buy. f PZ167) k1d10, llick sh!ffl Good eon8!tio11. Nice c••· fTPV, 795) $999 I ' '· i '· ' ' r f ' I - i GIGANTIC HOLIDAY WEEKEND DISCOUNTS l ' ' ' '72 , OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME AIR CONDITIONING VS, automatic, radio, heater, power steering, power brakes, factory air conditioning, vinyl roof, tinted 9lass, front bumper guards. USED-LOW MILEAGE (102765) $ NEW '72 CUSTOM CRUISER WAGON AIR CONDmONING Automatic, radio, heater, power steer· ing, power disc \,rakes, factory air conditioning, roof rack, power toil got• wi'ndow, white wall tires. '#523693 . . s • NEW '72 OLDS DELTA 88 AIR CONDITIONING Hardtop coupe. VB, .automatic, radio, heater, power steering, power disc brakes, factory air conditioning, white wall tires. ;# 121759 $ NEW '72 OLDSMOBILE 98 I AIR CONDITIONING $ Coupe. Power windows -power steer .. ing &: disc brakes1 air conditioning, tilt 1teerin9 wheel, rear seat speakers and many more luxury features. [#481005 1 ::: 0 '72 <iMC % TON .P.U~ WITH CAB OVER CAMPER , .. , . I i ' . . • ' • ' ' . . . ' ' ' ' . ' . ' • • • • • • • • • • . • • • • I I • ' • ~ : • ' . . . ,; .i . , J ~ • ! ~ • '70 PONTIAC WAGON c,,,r;.,, ,,;;,, '"'"· .,,,_ 52995 m1tic, pow1r st11rin9 & br1k11, 1ir conditioning, whif1 1id1 wilt flt••· 131610R) '69 BUICK SKYLARK 2 ;,, H.T. VI . "tomoH<. ,.;;,, s2095 h11f1r, pow1r 1f11rin9, vinyl reef, f1ctory 1ir conditioning. !ZDH216 ) ' t ·'66 ·''C , ; :COUPE DE VILLE '69 OLDS 98 2 door H.T. , '67 .UICK ELE,CTRA f oll ,,.,. oq o;.,,;, fo<to"I ,;, 51695 c.ondifi oning. 15HIOO-il Full pow••, f11cJory air, vi nyl roof, tilt t1l1 wh11I, AM /FM 1f1r10 with t1p1 pl1y1r. IYEX - 161 I 52595 ' ;,, H.T. foll ,,.,., '"'"' s1595 1lr cciid itionin9 , •iny/ roof • !UDU004 l '69 TOYOTA A1,1 tom1tic, R1d io l h11t1r. f I 12BXEl 5995 '67 BUICK SKYLARK '69TORONADO 4 door h1rdfep. Air condition· ing, vinyl roof, pow1r 1f11rin9 I br1~11. IUPK775 l 51395 ,o;, ~~ .. , '"'"' .;,. vinyl roof. !'rQM7491 , '-I . WE LEASi ALL PO'PULA~ MAKE CARS AND TRUCKS ~~~.~~.~~~;•,~•~: p:~~' •~•~!!.~~! .. brokos, v;nyl roof, focfory ·~7 9· MO • air conditioning. I 61 l I · ' · . . • • ·---J -t-· --.... ._ ___ -..--_..___ . - I ' • ' '69 'l'o~ Crown · $1299. Ablolute tap of 'I'a)oota Une. Vuy clean, 6 cyl. Sedan YQC412 See It · You'll buy ff, BILL BAXEY TOYOrA 18881 Beach Blvd. H. Beach Ph. 847-3555 '70 TOYOTA WAGON $1495 SANTA ANA TOYOTA Servi~l)ept open 7:30 am 'til 9 pm M~Fri. 540-5212. 417 W. '69 Toyota CoroBa $1299. Artie White sedan, tulfY equipped inc. ail cond., auto trans. YCT637. Blll Maxe) Toyota Huntington Beach 841·8555. TRIUMPH *TRIUMPHS* •71' CLOSEOUT '66 vw Sl'A. WAG. SPITF1RES AS LOW AS$2399 R/H. GOOD. CONDITION. GT-4 SAVE $500 $900. 962-3822 FRIT'l WAR.HEN 'S '°''68,,.--°"V"OLKSl"'°"=•°"'A"'G°'EN=o-, -good-C Sport Car Center """''"""· auto. aean. Be" ORANGE COUNTY'S otter! 536-4273. LARGEST '68 . VW • Auto/good no 1:, b:t, S.A. 5'1-m&f mechanical cond. N@eds '64 Spitlitt. ""'' medlanl<aI body woric. $>15. 6f4-li999. cond. Clean. ~tusf: seB. '65 Bus, crpted, paneled. 1600 MS-73~l Eng. Gd coM. $11 2 5 . '71 GT6 Triumph Showroom fresh, only 12,000 mile!!, 354DZP, Low down E-Z terms. $2499 " PHONE 64>-Sl!l!l . HAL GREEN'·S ~1IRACLE MAZDA 2150 Harbor Blvd. CostaMaa VOLKSWAGEN '67 VW Bug , 4 Si>d. Like New, CtJR0807) $1095 Amlrlcen Mollor9 ,. 547-5126 6~5116. '62 WHITE BUG. Xlnt cond. $525. Call after 6 pm; '57-9831. 1963 Bus ltiOO engine, Top Shape! $1175 call 675.5116 '63 VW Bus wl'fil reblt eng. Good cord. Call After 5 pm, 6'llMS&I. '61 VW New tltt1 Ii upholstery Runs we 11 , 640-2381. * '" VW KOMll * S<0-9032: ~ 1234 So. Main St. Santa Ana '69 VW Bug. AM-FM, extras, """' good cond. $ll50. '66 V\V Bus. Orig. <l'Arntr. 642-5919 after 6 P~. Specially reblt. eng. 1500 to 1968 vw Squa:rebeck. dean, 1000 Tuned exhaui;f, Holley radio, new w/w tim. $1475. 2 throat catb. Porsche dist. 644--4374. New frnt whl. bearing, new -------- "''' roven. Ma h og. VOLVO bumpen-panelin&. M any ~~· exuas, 675-3998 alt 6 --1-97_2_V-OL_V_O _ . -... 'ridaf, M., 26, 1972 =~-~~ftr~Slll~__.~~~ ~I ·~;_~·:-~J§]~l;;;;_ ..... _ ....... :~1§]~· ;.[ _.,. .. _ ...... _. ~1§1~1 ONLY Pll.O!>. 45 " 990 Autos, Usea 990 "BilL \VJ-Un.JOO.ES" SUNSET, ltlOTORS PLYMOUTH '68 Fury 1112 llr HT VS, automatic, air cond, radio, hMttr, power tlee't'- l ""'"""===--,-...,--1 lng. : Power bi°akea CWSN· Ward ·S.Lee YOUR ONLY JEEPS '57 Pickup Chevy 6 New paint, chrm, mags, am/fm FACTORY stereo rad~. brk! &:, ~ .. -JEEP_,.-W-ag-o-,...-,_-4-wbl-. --·B"Mustang Conv. Radio, heater, aut~ matic trans., OVE804. Low do\vn -EZ Terms. $499 PHONE 64.5-5799 liAL GREEN'S AflRACLE A1.AZOA 2150 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa '66 MUSTANG GT conv., tonneau, m«b. xlnt, sl. body damage. $450 !inn. 49+-320'1. OLDSMOBILE '66 JET STAR H. T. Cpe. Full Power, Alr Conditioning, Clean! Low miles (\VXY- 498) $995. Tommy Ayres Chevrolet; 946 S. Coast l-fwy., Laguna Beach. 494-7744 / 546-9967. AUTHORIZED shocks, rad1at~r, Custom drive, R&.H, excellent rond., CADILLAC mat & ,. ......... " mu!-)ea""1g town. Must Sell. '68 Cutlass Supreme DEALER , flel"S. Call 64&-4205. . 'Make ·otr. '644-2033. 613-3891. Lari:est aeleclion ot C&d.il· 6~..c~hevy wago~ith 283 '64 Scout, 4 wheel drive. Dl1a1 2 Dr H. Top, dlr. fact alr, lacs in Orange County. e''."i'ne -~ 5~· . gas tanks -positraction, ofl lo ml, (XIPOOl l. Take small SaJea-Leasing. Look for our wt~ av, alGoodtire~~srlahe-ad road tires. Very good cond. down. Will finance Pvt. Pty. 720\. $995. HUNTINGTON BEACH CHRYSLER.fLYMDUTH 16661 Beach mvd., 11.a ~5164 • SC-0631 1100. PONTIAC '68 ~Big engine, vleyl top, factory air, factory mag wheels (with locks} 37 ,DUO . miles, Max-X. tires. BcaU.tifUl cond. $1500 or best otter. 82&1256. 196l TE.\1PESI' Le Mans Cohvert. New rubber, bat- tery, ignition wlrln&", plugs & tlmin'g chain. Good trans. $22-3. 548-2163. ·66 Pontiac T e mpe s t, overhead l'Bm. nu hrks, mUff, & t3.ii pipe-. 47,000 n1i, 1 onr. $600. Ca ll aft 5 646-4598. '69 Pontiac, 6 cyl, 4 IlR., <;'ustom Sports:, stand.trans., p/s. $1200. 5-15--0921 aft 5 pm. '64 Pontiac \V~n. Air. Full pll\ver. Luggage rnck. Xlnt cond. $650. 6jZ..1321. RAMBLER full page ads every Wed. ga ..... e · ~ u .. .,.po $900. 551-2975. Call 546-8TJ6 aft 10 am • Fl'lday fo• 0'"' specials. cu. $85. 61:>-JJ4> ...... A '"'-61!U Large Selec:tt"on of wkond•. KARMANN GHIA "'"j~·,,_· =-....,.-~ ~ Nabers Musr ll • .,. Chevy '68 010• F-as, good mech. ·Station Wagons !ii Cadillac: wagon . .:;,000 mi. Good car. KARM~ Ghlda ,_'!°· gm -,oond.~tite!:,:?'·~!!:. ~72k '62·'69 6 cyl. $400 ca.sh. Take over oonv., ,. ........... con , .ut:low bk. cv-. ...,,,,, or uur::r. v•.r.>J . Example· 2600 HARBOR BL., payment. S350 Call aft 6 .$1300, oUer, leaving entry. µI' 27lh1St, Npl Beach. · ,69 A . b. d W COST A lifESA • 675-8679 m ass a or agon 540.9100 Open Sunday pm. 6~TI98 · 1960 Olds 2 DR. J~dtp. Ba.lance of 5 yr 50,000 mile -·59 El Dorado CLASSIC 1910 Mon" Carlo, LINCOLN R':::":ii ~:5· wan-avalI$.2C419•5an c ... air, stereo, elec wind:, buck" ... ,~ ""• own.,, •68 Continental 4 Dr '61 o.11a 88. "'"' "'"•· Good lo miles. $2828. 673-3745 tires. PIS, P/B. air rood., Full power, factory air cond. AMJ}"M stereo, vinyl top. (YPX303). $3005. 1963 Corvair.~ Full Power, factory air, vinyl HUNTINGTON BEACH Runs good, $195 -1600BSIJ $229> . . . . Call >36-42!16 . . . HUNTINGTON e~•cH ' 1968 • OIEVY Mali~ xlnt !" . auto trans. 644-4792. 9UICK CASH THROUGH A ~- WardS.Lee 196l AMBASSADOR CPE. · Air, pow.r .....,,..._ ,.._ ltrciht, •.to111otlc trPL, ,.., .•. ,,..,. -·· .... .• ... $1695 eknt .. M ... -u.. YWT656 ONLT : 1970 AMX CPE. 'llils c•r h • clouk. -for tM dlcrimln•tl11t bwpt. ••• ' ....... ..... $2497 Llc •. 6t4DFJ'i 1970 P'L YMOUTH Satellite Wag. All, Po...,, Ai.to. A •ocotlo•·.,.c.lal. $2.597 Lie. 7MllC _ 1970 VW BUG 4 1peed -A.M/FM rodlo. Ton 111 colof. h '"•Y IM tM ::: ..... $1247 1964 CHEVROLET Malibu SS Cpe. Air, powet, •ltte. A peffftt MC•IMI ..... Uc. D9Sl0f $747 1965 AMBASSADOR 990 CPE. AT, Air. r.s .. r.1 .. v.1. Two toM. INMICISfJ 1971 GREMLIN $495 2 Dr. s.daa. J. spd. fl•.., SyM. 170·'14 rolled wlll~ Set· IM ··-· ....... •Kk. $1695 l ow mlleat•· lf4'CQaJ • 1970 TOYOTA Corollo Ope. 4 lfHI., air colHI., lMlo. 147lll11 $11-47 1969 CHEVY lmpola Cpe. ' - AT. P.S. lhl1 11 • flk• cot. IZZA74JI $1547 1969 AMERICAN 2-DR. ' cyl., olr clMHI., 11119 wltti wtllt9 tel'• A 11lcowcoadcor. tSt\. ::z117AI SALE GOOD 1'HlU MONDAY IT'S CHANGI TIMI AT $84.7 HARBOR AMERICAN, INC. 547-5826 llM So. Main St. ~ta Ana- American Motors • ;zuca.n 1969 Harbor Boulevard Cost• Mo11, c111r .. 91!06· P~I ;(ji4) )46'til' CHRYSLER.fLYMOUTH =·~~~~ !il<• CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DAl.~Y PILOT '63 Rambl.,, 4 DR Sedan ....... """""""""""""""""'! 16661 Beach Blvd., H.a '55 Chevy Hardtop Coupe. WANT AD 15,000 mil.rs on new engine. ~ Cl if' d Ad 540-5164 . 842-0631 $100 .. he<tou... 16661BeachBlvd., H.B. Xlnt c<>pd. $215.., ""'of. Da1'ly Pilot ass 1e s iliiJiiJiiiiiTiiiiiiii'JI~~~·~-~~~·~· ,_..~I 541).5164 • 842-0631 642-567B '"· 551-~. 970 '63 CHEVY Im-4. dr, xint Autos, lmporlocl 970 Autos, lmportocl '70 A-, \llllpo•tocl · 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, lmporto4 running oond. "" tires,Jr-----------=====.;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;imi;;;i;;;i;i;iiii:;;ii;i;:;;i;i;;ii=;;;;;;;i;;i;;i;i;;i;;;i,i;i;;i;iii;;i;i;;;i;;;;;;;;i;i;;;i;i;;i;;;;;;;i;;-;;i;;;;;;;;J $350. "4:>-2988. '69 CHEVY van. •VB, " ton. crpted-paneied. $18 0 0. 673-3926. '65 CHEV Impala. 2 dr HT, · V-8, ·auto, ps/pb, $550. 646-5643; 545-1~10 AU """"'· ••tailed, """ COUGAR ' clean. $00). fmn. (213) _..._. ___ ....;. __ ,11 Jost tboae who want to save money ! '64 VW Bus. $899. Very clean, orig. 2 tone green paint. lltll'l')' far this on!!. NSU561. ~592-~1~6'6=: ==~~~ 1968 COUGAR 3.12, 2 bbl, '69 EL DORAOO for sale by auto trails., lo ,miles, vinyl single owner. Low mileage, top. Xlnt cond. $1450. Call Lease Tocl•y •t excellent cond. All extra.z. 837-3370, after 5 pm. We're not suggesting that every- body ~uy one of our cars ..• just those· of you who like comfortable, dependeb.le transportation that will save you money every . mile you drive. If you're one of t~ese people, see Harbor VolkswagenJ~day. BILL l\l·AXEY TOYC1f A 18881 Beach mvd. H. Beach Ph. 847--3$5 1970 VW Westphalia camper. Pop top, new 9x12'' Colema n Oasis tent, new tires, AMIFM radio, new bait, tuneup &: many new parts. $2850. 546-1919. ·n Ye.How Sqbck, bkk vinyl int., A rt1 / F ~t , Best R•te1 675-4818 after 4 p.m. 830-2621. $18.74 Per Mo. '68 Sedan deVille -Leather -COUGAR '68, l,irm $1095. O.A.C. AM/FM, Auto. trans., all pv.T., new tires. All ex-Air, ps, auto, Company car. disc brakes. 36 mo. tras. Sharp! lo.lust sell. 47,000 mi. Day. 71 .. : For Leasing or buying s~. ph: 645-2475. 892--8316, 213: 431~. l·CAD~o-c.~69c--=O>~n-v-,rt>~.~bl~•.-cto-w·l---------ll mu ... like new, all extra.. DODGE $3800. ~3-0083. 1-------~-11 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 '68 VOLVO 142S · P~lli's, lug rack, 25.000 Automatlc,.AM/FM, low, low miles. $2195. 67H774 aft fi mlles. (\VAJ<64o} $1495. .;:';... Bug-showroom con-HUNTINGTON BEACH '62 CAD. Sedan O.Ville. XInt '69 MONACO cond. Orig. uphols. $493. 4 Dr, H. Top, dlr., fact air, 644-2'l17. loaded. Under 26,000 ml. '6.l Cad saJan deVWe. Sllver Leisure \Vorld SpeclaJ CVQC· wlblk vinyl top, fully equip, 495}. Take clean car or 1 lo miles. Mint co n d • 54fi.81'36 aft 10 am 494-681.l 496-2812. 1969 Dodge 01arger origina] dltion Nu tires. Must tell today! $13&1. 8 3 9-9 5 60. Motor · Hom,e Dealer. Can Finance. 1968 VW Sundial camper, eng. recently reblt by VW qency. Priced~ttduoed .for b'rl!lled sale-, $19!). ~1061 White Elepbant Dlm""A-Line Oassfi~ ad. I. • CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH CA MARO co nd ition . Perfect me.chanlcal IJl!i. bo<!Y sharp. , . Will trade for good.. older •• 67 Cam11ro Convertible. small convertible car n ,295. Xlnt cond. $l<m. Call aft 5 549-0530. lli6fi1 Beach Blvd., H.B. , pm. 642-~. I, ·68~Dod~g-,""""oa_rt_co_nv_ert>"""'·b""Ie-.11 50-5164 • 842-0631 , 68 CAM.AftQ.. air, auto, Black top, red body & white VOLVO P-1800 S, $1500. 4 spd P/B, PIS, Uff. Rally leather interior. PIS. Real + O.D. Oean. 5 3 91 Sport. 557-3".m. foxie! Great for grad. Ke ri 11 worth, Huntington It'• a brtta~ MD your 1 962-8301. Beach, near Graham .l Items wtth eue, u.e DAILYI--------·11 Warner. PUot Oa.ssi!ild. 642--5678. FORD "BILL \\'HITI.IDGES" SUNSET MOTORS ORANGE Co.tlNTY LOCATION '71 Country Squire Station w...., 9 pauenger atatioa wagon. Power •leering, power brakes, air conditioning, rWUo, heater, tuaia1e rack. Low mileage, loeal 1 owner, near new. 356EHR. $l79S Phono645-46n 1970 Harbor Blvd. c·o11.-Mou '15 Country Sqv Sill Wsn. med>anl&i. opo<laJ I $300/bct -"""' l :!Ot.nMr.lO pm 548-2.11.4. ·~ Gal lOO 2 0.. h~ p/1, p/b, lac aJi'. l. -r. $1!00. 6#--07S.I a/I 5,"' -k•nd.. ·oo roi\li litAt1on w ..... good tn:ru:Portation $150. 648-2!'!4. OP'IN SUNDAY Now is the season!· We have over 20 VW recreational & busses in stock. . Plus over lSO new & used VW's. vehicles '72 HONDA MOTORCYCLE 175 .••.. $s.i; Lett fl'lln -mil•-btOhltely dllrry. {IEG OXI) '71 VW S(i)UAREBACK ..... ; .' .: .. ,._lttl 4 apeed, wsw, Rt.H. l!'llr!N Dl...e, Jvsl 111t1 riew. Wftllend lpec:i.1. IN7ClllT ' . '70 DATSUN P.ICKUP TR\ICK ........ f,flo Chr°""' wtlHls, r1d'-lllc1 new. (IQ IHL) . '61 VW BUG ............ • • ...... ,$249 NEED WO"K. (F'l'HJS,), '68 FIAT SPIDER .. : .. : ........... ·S101f $/IOw "oom c.oiidlllOft, Hew .T!'!'. IJC~'I" Q ). lrlQtlt Jlllll W/llladl lntwlot. '65 KARMANN GHIA .............. ._9n Or1nt:11. Rl'dlo, HH!er, F•ciOr't' Rtbulll Ent:1IM L TrlnL SM 1!-IWIClllll ciareci?1- '69 OPEL KADEt : ....•.......••... $691 4 Speed, Rtdlo. !lLH 27Jl. ~ , '65 VW S(i)UAREBACK , , •.•• : ..•.. 1$799 Newpilll,·•1PMC1. IRFFJ11) .-. . '7!> VW. CUST~~ $U~ND.IAL CAMPER.SJ711 Grffl fOf WMlo:trldt. INS Av.11. Tlllt WHllff.7eoly • I -' '66 .PORSCHE912 ..... · .....••. -• ,$2'91 1 *.~' ~MI FM, mel1tllc ril\tti;: '{kid rlOflt.,(Z,-.02~1 , i '63 VW PANEL BUS .......•••••• ,s Oil llml<•lnPtl'. bctn.t and. UWtr'tlCI wWINt. CKDCNt) -. -... -·-. '68 VW KOMBI BUS .............. S17fl 0¥erl'lluled "'9lnt. rldlt. IWXLltl). '68 DODGE VAN .' ••• •-·., .'._, •.• VI, 1vt.., W Mii IWFHJO"). '68 VW FASTBACK .............. ·Sl29t ••"""-•II-cond., !JU-· CXCI02JI· , r '63 VW BUG ...................•. RebuHI tl'lllti&. Oooo Jlirlllfll a Md'f. CUii i411, Tllll."*111111 4'11.,, '67 OPEL WAGON ................ ·S611 ...... f"ICJle, llHtw. ,E.Mtl'erll :Ind cir. IT'l'U3:21 '69 CAMARO 396 SS ......••.•.. ·$1991 ~ ,.,..., P.a .. lnltt, ll:t.H! tllvtr wlll!Mk lnt•rlor. o<THOISJ _ '71 DODGE COLT WAGON •. · ••.. ' Show 100ll'I .CO<'ldlllon. f .-i, rlldlo {MOl,1. ' '62 CORVAIR VAN CAMPER •...... ·~699 ltecarltty rewlll q!4i.,. (GICA 1111 .' '6'' FORD .GALAXIE .. "··· .......... ·t 2otor1H:T,AV1t.,f'.l.,·ID•,lllwtl'ICll9:(WIGl11), •. • I ' • ' 4• DAILY r!LOT • " CADILLAC NINETEEN SEVENTY-TWO EXECUTIVE CAR SALE IUY OR LEASE 1972 Coupe De Ville PURCHASE PRICE Full power r,quip1nenl, vinyl roor, full lealher interior, beauti· $ 6 8 2 4 fut Firemiat finish. Stereo w/tape deck. tilt & tele8Copic 1leeri11~, door locks, Jight monitor group, light aentinel, w11w tir~, :o1oft ny gl41!8, 6 way seat, door gµa rd1, bumper impart :'llripi'-, rtr. Very low mileage (Ser. 205026) LEASE A 1972 COUPE DE VILLE Full power equipment, vinyl roof, leather & tapestry interior, whitewall tires, Mf/fl.1, soft ray gla~, 6 way eeat. door guards, climate control llir conditioning, tilt-tele. wheel, bumper strip!, etc. (#569). ONLY. $175 A MONTH 1972 24 MONTH :OPEN END ' Sedan De Ville PURCHASE PRICE Full power equipment. vinyl roof, leather &: tapestry interior, while aide wall tires, .Af.1/FA-1, 1oft ray glass, 6 \\'ay seat, door guards, climate control air conditioning, tilt tele. \\·heel, bumper 1tripo, etc. (232744). LEASE A 1972 SEDAN DE VILLE Full power equipmen~ Tinyl roof, 1cat11er & tape!try interior, \\0hile wall tirea, Ml/f1'1, ~ofl ray :;lass, • 6 way 1eat., door guar&, climate control air conditioning, tih·tele. v.·heel, bumper impact !trip~, etc. (3500). ONLY $170 A MONTH . 24 MONTH OPEN END MONTH END SALE Buy With Co11fldenco LARGEST SELECTION OF LATE MODEL CADILLACS & OTHER QUALITY tARS in 1 Orange County-1963's thru 1971's a PAISINOll '72 FLEETWOOD UMOUllNI $9500 Dual factory ai r condition ing, executive black with luxurious tapestry interior. Full power including tilt &: teleacopic 1teering, door locks. trunk lock, auto. crui&e control, dual steering controls, light sentinel. light dimmer, lamp monitor, bumper impact stripe, opera lampe, euto. level control, etc., etc. Extrew:ly low, low mileage. (Ser. #119791) SALE PRICE '71 EL DORADO $6888 Full power, factory air cond., telt>tilt wheel, s~reo, door loch. vinyl lop, leather interior. AM/fl.1 multiplex. Show! meticulous care through· o"L (403776) SALE PRICE '71 COUPE DE VILLE $5777 Very low mileage on this showroom fresh gem, factory air conditioning, full power, vin·yl top, full leather interior, AM/FM stereo multiplex, 1ilt·tele steering, power door lock!, twilight .entinel, aheolutely beauti· SALE PRICE fol. (338DNI).-- '70 EL DORADO $5222 Lookii &: runs like the day fint sold! Full power, factory air cond., tele-tilt steering, door locb, cruise control, vinyl top, full leather inter. New wsw tires. (019AGC). SALE PRICE '70 COUPE DE VILLE ON\Y io,ooo M.UI $4555 Factory air cond .. full leather interior, AM/fltf, tilt-telC111Copic 1teering. power cloor locb, white side walls. vinyl top, local beauty that looks lil:e the day it was delivered new. (71 4AKX) SALE PRICE '70 SEDAN DE VILLE $4 1 1 1 Full po~·er, factory air, Alrf/FM at.ereo multiplex, tilt•tele wheel, elec. door lock!., twilight aentinei viny] top, tapestry & leather interior trim. One owner car that shows exceptional care. (539AGK) SALE PRICE '69 SEDAN DE VILLE $3555 Full power, factory air conditioning, vinyl top, leather interior, power seats. tilt wheel, AM/FM stereo radio, power door locb, twilight aen· tin,I. (XSRI66) SALE PRICE '67 COUPE DE VILLE $2 1 ,1 1 Vinyl top, leather interior, full power, factory air conditioning, Ali1/fl1. radio, tilt tele wheel, po¥.·er door loch, stereo. lt1u1t be seen & driven lo fully appreciate. (UJH529). SALE PRICE '63 COUPE DE VILLE $999 Factory air conditioning, cloth & leather interior, all power, tilt & teleacopic steering, AM/FM, automatic cruile control, mMt all deluxe ~'''"'" (llM771) SALE PRICE '70 Mercedes '71 Buick Riviera ~1111 SEL Sed••· v • ..., low .,;Jeop. f:t· $7222 Lu1orlo .. hud•o' ,..•P• •ith fo•lor1 $4999 ~ul•he Tob&<co 8""•• finiob 11h.h oatQral lull k athnr lnt .. for, ro ... •• f!•••i••· •Ir oo•d., lull ,..,.., liodQdl•• doer Jo<i.., hroln, ol...,1rle .,lodowo, /•<10..., air coo• •l•rl lop, lilt •h••I. 11t«o rnolliplor. ~.,~,.Jn1, AM/fM """"" mohlpln. Abw· 11ro10 """"· -n w1r .. i., etc., ece. Vo.., lu1olr 1howmo 01 trroh t.hrnu,bo•t. 1"11, low •II•• (1G7CPM) ~:.lHC£1) I.AU PllCI IALI PllCI '69 Olds Delta 88 167 Mercedes 250 S Sedan Cu11011 ·1 d""'' h"'dlllp, •i•JI top, bond• $2666 .!"11loh1 ......... 111111 hr.ll la-1.rr, $3555 fol '"PIOU'J lo1erior. fo<10..., •ii' eead., ··"'· l ..... i/M": •tooriaf. ,.. ... •i..n l•ll ,. ....... Q ••rla<. inl th•• ~7.000 •nt-, AY Y ndki, "'1ol ••h• oldo 11.U 11... i.e.! Mooty WI Vo•o Im· .,;JH, -I dolur• nttM. (ZNLtlt) , .. ui. .,,. 1...i.s. m o•t. (TWJ'71J IALI PllCI IALI PllCI '71 Ford LTD ,._ '69 Buick Skylark MILll fkoollf11I IQOl>oDI folio•, 1 door hord· $3444 L•1•rlo., ~ Mhlwrt,.oo•,. wil.ll 1-$2666 •op oo•I>" w!th bloot •i•rl '"I'· block th•• Lt,aoa kul ..U... otll.l A- '"P•lrJ ilitorior, i..,....., o!r, rcr•H tteo• c.i• wttb n1i. ..,,. r .. 11..., olr ..... , loJ. ,.wu dloe l>,..l .. , VI, ooi.. 1 .. 00., ,. ... , 1IMl1'lf • l1ut .. , \'I *"I·· ••to. RAK, •ow., obtonlg1d 1 fio•I-!MW• oo<. ''"'"·• n dio, ••tor, -• .... Olihol .. Id t:UllU) IAU PllCI lo-trr lu..Wr. (lWDLN) IAU NICI YOUR ONLY FACTORY AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEALER NABERS LEASING -LEASE DIRECT . '"'.''!'edlctM Delivery • Excellent Selection •-Pldcup and Dellvory ,f,_ ""'" C-WhDe I.MMC.. Senked ,_ ............ .,_of_..-.... CloOIM .flldll!IN ........... tw --..U - ....... -... -........ 10 , _ _,, _.. .. ,~•••owl 11•aldm1. SERVING THE ORANGE COAST HARBOR AREA Sale Priers J.:fft'Ctivc Thru ~fa:r Jl, 19i2 NABERS 2600 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 540-9100 • SALES DEPARTMENT OPEN 8:30 AM to 9:00 PM Moo. thru Fri. • 9:00 AM to 6:00 PM Sat. and SWL ' • . \ '71 COLT 2-DOOR HARDTOP IMMEDIATE DELIVERY . ~,!?.2.DOWN $39 A MONTH ~~~:~s MISSIOH, <Ullom $12 8 11"1 i1 lorol dn. pyml. 139 ti .....,. ,.,,.,..,.., <odio. 1o1ci1 1111.nm•. ;...;1. 111 .. 1ic1t1 .. h,eoiu, "'h11twoll & 1111 cmryinf;j <"°'911 °" (lll(lr. 11"" ,.,y1root,0... 8· crHil for 36 11101. Dtltrr•d luxe whttl COYl!I pyml. prtt S 1603 inti. tou & .; . lull fociory FUU lie"'''· ANNUAL Pllt(EHTAC( ~'Pfltd. 360DlK. I'll(( I.Alt 11.75 % l'l1dlJ, 1111 26, 1972 '71 PINTO IMMEDIATE DELIVERY DAILY I'll.OT 47 $199 DOWN $39 A MONTH FOR 31 I OITMS ,,,,,. ............ $12 8 8 ..i1t1<or, 4 lpYd !ran ... moll.On • lull !O(!Ory ~~td.94b(f0. l 199,.101ttM.p,...1.sl~, "'"" rno p....t iltl.11a. l.-tnl4! & all <Ol'l'""iJ <""1••"" _.. otdl! tor l • mo1. Dtltrrtd ftll l pymt ~ro<tl160lilll! 111•& l'lt(( 1.-t"W ANNUAL l'llt((MTACf R.1.!l 111~' •. '72 DODGE POLARA ' 7 'COLT WAGON BRAND NEW! FULL PRICE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY WAG NTIME '10 FORD STATION WAGON Custom 500 V-8, OUIO. $1188 trans., power steering. ra- dio, heater. 404 BES Mileage 72.238 FUU PllCI 5199 DOWN 536 A MONTH ~~~~Hs l 199 if. 1o!al di\. pymt. $36 ii ta!GI mo. pyml. inti. to._ lic..,w l all tarryinoj thorg01 an app< o:TH111 for 36 mot. Dtlwrld pyml. pritt S 1 49~ inti. tai & !iuost. ANHUAl PfllCfH. JAGEllATI 11.70%. '70 CHEV. STATION WAGON 9 Poss., V-8, outo. trons .• power steering/brokts, whi- tewalls. 781AVA Mileage 75, 175 $1388 fULl PllCI 5199 DOWN 542 A MONTH~0oRN~~s en IMMIDIATl DlLIYll Y 4' Sp1td trans., ra· dio, heol•, bucktt MOil, 1\111 vinyl intit- rinr. 326 Elf, mi- lt<19t 17,254 BRAND NEW '72 CHALLENGER 2-DOOR HARDTO P V1nyl lfim. bllc~ft ltll!I, •-thrllrnt ~K OUQ11h, clo.<ij Ntt-n~ ~l!y lol:IOl'y eq.iipp.cl. Ji1JCZl339'77 FULL PRICE IMMEDIATE DHIVIRY $199DOWN $199 ii !!Ital d<l. p~m1. ll' !1 tokll mo. P1rnt. iMl.<oo.1~'""''"""'"'''"'"'"$84 A MONTH FOR36 appr. Utd1I for l6 m111. D~f. pymt pqCf $3t23 intt. ta• & loctnw. ANNUM PfllCH~· MONTHS lAGEllA1£ll.lJ'lo, BRAND NEW • ORDlo~~~uRs '72 DODGE TRUCK . looded wilh vinyl blnl:h seol1, hlctt1r, E71.111 4 tirti. wiN15hitld wtii.htfi. dirtc:tion 1ignal1, f1.1ll vi11yl iflt~ much mur;h lnl)l'I. Order Youn Today. --- $2288~. $199DOWN FACTORY COLOR OF YOUI CHOICEI j 199 t' ID!oll M. fyllll. S,J ft Nii.I "'II pym! appr. """'t hw 3' _,_ l>t4«rM •t""· ,rct $73 A MONTH FOR 36 "''·"'·'"'""''""''''"'''"'"'" MOMlHS s1111 n1. 1o~' 11ttnt•. NMW. m<EK-TAG1 •Afl 10.(16 ~ s I" ii tatoldrl.""". 141111 ""9 ..,.."""-Kl. Ill• & Iii:. I. al t.,-ying chorgn an "!'P".u.di1 for l6 mot. Del. poyml. pric1 S1711 n1. tax & Iii:. ANMJAl PfltClHl'AGI llATf 11.17'°• Mileage 53,0531 '71 FORD STATION WAGON OPEN wo1h1ri. dlrtctitn iftnoh, tun •1nyl inl1rior, tmiu itn ctnt1el lf!IMl,llM:hmuch_.. W\.21CU.1"652 V-8. oulo. trons .. power steering, radio, heater. Y37789. M;leoge 56,232 $1488 MEMORIAL DAY . 2288~ · "·· $199 DOW $73 MONTH~~~:~s FUU PllCI 5199 DOWN s45 A MONTH ~~~~~s $ 1" ii lotol dn. p,...t. S'S ii IOtol l'l'IO. py!ftl ind. IO._ lit..,H & oU <onyinoj ChinJel on appr. uedi! for 36 mos. Oell<Tld p"f!lll. prict Sl llt inti. NJ & lil:tnSt. ANNUAl l'ERCIN'JAG( RATE 11.41 % V-8, auto. trans ., factory o;r, ro· $118 8 dio, heater. 923CIE Mileage 53,053. FULL PRICE '70 DATSUN 510 4 Dr. Sedan 4 speed, bucket seats radio, heater, $7 8 8 472ELT. FULL PRICE '66 TOYOTA Corona 4 Dr. DELUXE 4 Dr. Sedan oulo. trans .. ro-$ 2 8 8· dio, heater, SLW5 14. FULL PRICE '68 CHEV. Malibu 2 Dr. Har top V-8, radio, heater. deluxe wheel covers, vinyl inlerjor and hos much, much more. 142BQG. Mileage 85,600 $688 FULL PllCE WE APPRECIATE YOUR BUSINESS '70 MAVERICK 2-Door Aulo. trans., radio, heater, wheel $9 8 8 covers. Deluxe chrome moldings. 517lRI, M;IOO!le 67, 154 FULL PRICE '68 PONTIAC Le Mans COUPE, Radio, heater, wheel covers. $ 6 8 8 Plus much rnoch more . WTF 584, Mi- leage 67,609 FULL PRICE '66 MUSTANG 2-Door Radio, healer, bucket se ats, mag s43 8 wheels. SVT336 FULL PRICE :~p~r ~~t~~~9.~~.!. Irons , power steering, bucket secits, console $ 5 8 8 dlxe. wheel covers. GT082 Mileoge 70,478. L P ICE I S ltt ii IOMll dn ovm•. $13 h to!lll mo P'f!lll lncl. la•. lic101f & all <arryint cho11e1 OA 01>9' Cftdol IO< 36 mtn. Othirttd pfm! pricl $2127 md. lo• & ltct11't. ANMLIAl Pfl!CU+. TA.GI RAH 10.06"• '70 FORD Custom 4 Door V-8, auto. Irons., power steering, $9 8 8 heoter, much much more 8398EM, Mileoge 38,989 FULL PRICE '69 CHEV. NOVA, Auto. trans .. rod;o, heater ZKC407. $ 8 8 8 M;leogo 49,342 FULL PRICE '66 OLDS F85 2 Door Radio, heater, wheel covers. $2 8 8 Good transportation. W1L004. Mileage 69,869 '69 CHEV. Sedan V-8, auto. trans .. faclory air cond., lull power, rodio and heater. YNJ745. M;leoge 44,720 FULL PllCE $988 FUU PRICE CORONA DELUXE, auto. trans .. rod;o, $ 2 8 8 heater, bucket s1ots FULL PllCI '68 JAVELIN 2-Dr. Hardtop aufo. trans., radio, heater. deluxe $6 8 8 wheel covers. Whit• vinyl bu ck et seats. Muc·h, much more. XRL559. ' M;leoge 64,376 FULL PRICE '66 MUSTANG 6 cylinder, radio. heater. Mileage $48 8 79,331 V-8, oulo ., power steering, power windows & seats, factory air. looded P08 598 51 ,219 • UU·PllCE r l J t ! ' ' l • • ! • • . . . • . . . • • • . . • • . ' ' • ' • . l • • ~ • • • • • ~ • • . • • I • • • • .. ' . BRAND NEW '72 MUSTANG s95 so.,ll Over Dealer Cost l~cl. prep, 9•t rt1dy, loielcl Ilic•, fr1_i9~t. Woll Equipped #250 . . BRAND NIW '72 MAVERICK : -'+> s1091.~ll 4: J !~Over 'DMler ' Cost 1,.1, P"P• t•l·H•'~• ho" b"'- "W!(i Equipped # 1117 LEASE DIRECT CALL 642-0010 J. MALCOLM REID, MGR. OVER 300 CARS AVAJl:AILE FOR IMMEDIATE LEASE --.ALSO-- DAIL Y RENTALS '72 GRAN TORINO WAGON H•rci to find u1od, Full Po-r, •ir conci., Sq uire. l499EHEI '69 OPEL Rallyo GM 4 1p1od, r•dio, ho•f•r, low milt1. IZBN l 241 ~AKE OF~E ", '70 CHEVY Nomad W•gon s19 g· 5 Full f•cfory Equipptd. R•ci io, H••f•r, Low Mii••· 16291 EVI "69 v.w. W1g0n Rt dio, h•eftr, .. •P•.ttl, •ir cond itioning. Good mil••· IZCKl 761 '71 FORO Custom 500 '4 dr., VI, RIH, 1uto., P.S., vinyl roof. 11 35092) '64 FORD F-100 $1896 , ... WHY ''ORDER YOURS TODAY?'' ;· WHEN WE OFFER IM.MEDIATE DELIVERY FROM ONE OF ORANGE COUNTY'S BIGGEST COURIER INVENTORIES! COURIER PICKUP fl~~~·.:>'": THE SMART LOOKING ,,-· ~~ . 7 f~f · SM=~HT:1-:ENG t~=z:; __ . .,,_._ .~ THRIFTY! ~~~ · PINTO WAGON 4 PASSENGERS BIG- 60 CUBIC FOOT OF CARGO SPACE. PRJCE THEM-YOU'LL LIKE .THEM! . LET US PROVE THAT NO ONE OFFERS A BETTER DEAL THAN OURS! CAMPER SALE! 15 AT SUPER SAVINGS! EXAMPLE DISCOUNT: NEW '72 F253 PICKUP AND NEW 11 FT. CAMPER Plcliwp 11 Cutt. $tyletitl1 with 360-VI, 1ir contl., 01110. tr1111., r.4lo, 1100 &....., pi1., 1pt. cu1t, c•IJ, I.Mt, U111it •Iii" ••I•, T-61•1 .. 7150.16, Aua 25 ••'· fu•I t•11lc •H 111oro. Stlf. #574. El Dor•clo Sh•w11•• C•111por h•1 t••/eloc, rofti9,. lllOllOll'l•tic toilet, ch•foe11 r•1190, color cord dr•po1, m• .. tro1M1 tc. Stf.'#159, Truly dla. pi1. throutho11tl $1600 DISCOUNT list Price $m0.60 Solo Price $6171.60 SPECIAL PURCHASE MAVERICK-PINTO SALE Many To Choose From EXAMPLE: '71 FORD GALAXIE 500 HARDTOPS Y-1, 1uto. tr•111., power 1t.1ri1t9, RIH, Air Concl., with vi11yl roof1, Gootl Milt•, 6oocl color 1•ltetio11. Lie. 11umbor 1074· IUOI $2896 OR BEST OFFERS 069 C-600. Tll T CAB 24' St.lei . V-1, 4 1pcl .. 2 1pd. exle, 9ooci mil••· 124556E J HARD TO FI ND USED. '69 DOOGE Van A-101, V-1, A11to. Tr.111., R•dio, Heet.r, 6•o4 Milt1. 13167921 71 PLYMOUTH Cricket MAkE OFFER 4 ,,... .. 3 1peed1 and automatic mod1l1. Some with ylnyl roofs, " e YOUR PICK e '71 PINTO Good milo1, fu lly f•rlory equipped. Rtclio •11d ho•for, txhrior ... cor 9roup. lt42 •. ccs'1495 ·. 165 FORD G1l1xie 500 4 Joor. R.Jio, ht•ftr, •uto., P.S., VI, •ir cortcUtio11i119, Good mil••· CNKY357 1 '64 RAMBLER Classic 4 Dr., 6 cvl., Auto. l r•111., R•dlo, He•t•r, Good Mil11. IFYl5121 '70 MAVERICK R1dio, H•1f•r, Auto. Tr1n1. Chrome TriM, Good Mil11. ' IZCKl4fl s395 s595 . With c•mp•r. sag& ', '4 1ptocf, low 1ni111. 2 0 dr. H.~ •. R~H. •uto., powor 1t1•rir'l9;' '68 DODGE Polaro '119 6 Good mile1. f71SBZl l F•ctory eq11lpped. 1206CXJJ e1r condrt1or11ng, VI. Goocl milo1. IUCVI 191 • . 2060' Harbor BRAND NEW Gran Torino Sport s1212?TH.' Over Dealer Cost Incl. pr•p, 91f r11dy, hold ll1c:k, fr1_l9~t. · Woll Equipped #838 DEMONSTRAJORS We Have Several Low-Mileage, . Well Equipped T-Birds. LTD's Galaxie SOO's • Torino's & M1stangi J!Hit. .. Hav• .. teen Written· Back Ta · Way Below Original Dealer's Cost. r• • -..--' ... ·" , 'IRST COME, FIRST SAVED! . . , 1972 F100 STYLESIDE PICKUPS $2599 OPL Amb••••cior. V-1, R1clio, H••t•r, Power St••rin9, Air Conci., Viny l Roof, Low Mil••· I SYS 11 l I '67 FORO V-8 4 Or., R•dlo, He•t•r, Auto. l rt111., ll'ow•r St••tin9, Good Mil••· ITSR9761 '63 CHEVY II 4 Joor. R•dio, h••fer, •utom•lic, good mi101. I IHZ4151 '69 FORD Wogon VI, r•Jio, •••tor, 1ufoM1fic, pow•r 1ft•ti119, •ir concl itioni ng, good milt11. IYPSJO l l '63 FORD G1laxio H•rcltop, R•dio, H1•tor, Auto. Trt1n1 .• Power Ste•rlnt. V-1, &ootl Mil•1. (fTUllt l '64 CHEVY lmpola HT F•ctory Eq uipp1J. Good mil••· CWI B91 5) .sag& • $696 , '596 SALB DEPT. llOUIS IAM'IOtPMMOll.oftL I All fO, I PIUAT - llAll'IOIPM-.I PARTS-SIRYICE HOUIS 7 AM To t PM MON 7 At,t To 6 PM 1UEFll I PARTS DEPT. ONLY I AM te 1 PM SAJUIDAYS 'I I . ' -. f( • • ' • • -. - San fle111ente Capistrano VOL 65, NO. 147, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA --------------• ' -' Today's Flnal N.Y. Stoeks FRlDAY, MAY 26, ·1972 TEN CENTS Candidate 'Attacks' Foe • Ill Eruption at Meet By PAMELA llALl.AN Dt MM Dlll'f ,1111 Slaff A venomous attack laced with threats' ot violence launched by Fred Gage of Ocearu1i4e on (ellow candidate Claire Burgener of Sy.n Diego erupted Thursday during a meet ing of the 4 2 n d Congrwional District Republican can- didates in San Clemente. -"I would like tQ take him out in the alley with the rest of the garbage and thrash him," said Gage. "God have mercy oo this country if a man like thi!: is allowed to bold public office." Gage, visibly enraged, was referring to an alleged smear campaign agaill!t him which he said Burgener ;'was either con· ducting or condoning concerning an in· cident that occured 20 years ago. It in- volved the death of Gage's 3-year-0ld son and Gage claimed tbe smear hints that he and his wift' had been negligent and contributed to the child's death. (Burgener, who was not present during Gages' bizarre speech, later quieUy denied the allegations.) How could you ellow anyone to release such a thing?" Gage bellowed to the absent Burgener. "l swear on my dead son's soul I will work against you. You are unfit as a human being; ruthlessly vicious. You have hurt my wife in a despicable way." Before stalking out of the meeting and leaving a shocked, stunned audience, Gage vowed he would "never again share a platform" with his opponent. Answering a question about the alleged smear , Burgener later said that a seven or eight-page 'background sheet" on Gage had been sent to his staff ''ul\90licited" from a persor: in Los Angeles who had prepared it for use dW'- ing Gage's campaign against Los Angeles Supervisor Warren Dorn four years ago. "I would never use such a thing ,'' said Burgener. Before making his emotional outburst, Gage had laid the audlenee that he Is the "anti-busing" candidate and bas opposed busing all over the United States. But he said busing isn't the real issue. Government control is. lie said that if the government can determine lf a school is not ethnically anQ. raciaJly balanced, it is just one short slep~Or them to sa y tht same about a neighborhood. He urged the audience to look at , Burgener's voting record , claiming that his opponent voted uc ear ccor Two Perish In Freeway Collisions A man and a woman were killed early today in a spectacular four-car pileup on the Santa Ana freeway near Jeffrey Road 1n Irvine. Five others were injured, four seriously, in the series of crashes et 2:30 a..m. Dead are Mrs. Bobbie Jean Gilliam, 26, Maywood, and Elmo Collett, $7, Lolli Beach. Mrs. Gilliam was driving Mrth on the !tteway and swerved into a dilcl! to avoid hitting a car stalled 1lde1Jay1 on two ""°thbound lanes. She got out of her cor and was struck by a third vehicle which had crashed Into the stalled auto, ac- cording to Highway Patrol officers. Collett, a passenger in the stalled car, was killed when the third vehicle,driven by Leroy Freeberg, 63, of T u s t I n, mnashed into it and then hurtled toward Mr!!. Gilliam, traffic investigators sald. The stalled car was driven by Mrs. Barbara Joan Lau, 35, of 15742 Hum. 11\ingbird Lane, Huntington Beach. A fourth car smashed into the pileup, Highway -Patrol officers reported. The driver, Antonio Palm.a, 31, Poway, was only sUg1itly injured . Suffering from serious injuries at Tustln community Hospital are Freeberg and Mr!!. Lau, es well as Mrs. Billye Sepchich, 45, and Mrs. Mildred Sepchich, 52, both of Long Beach. They were passengers in Mrs. Gilliam's car, which was struck by the bounding vehicle as it lay in the ditch alongside the freeway. Proposed Eatery Hit by Review Board at Marina Da'na Point Harbor Review Board members rejected Thursday exterior drawings of a restaurant for not con· f6rming to the nautical theme of the pro- p6sed Mariner 's Village Specialty Sboi>' ping Complex. Schematic, or first-draft , plans of the Red Onion Specialty Restaurant called for stucco walls, timber arches, mission tile and an over-all Spanish style. In agreement that the specialty theme and most of the criteria under the restaurant's lease te.rJDJ had been met, the review board approved plam with the: condition the exterkl r is changed to con- form to' the nautical style. The restaurant will be at the water's edge and will share its land parcel with a shopping arcade. On nearby parcels, other restaurants and specialty shops are Planned. And an Embarcadero Marina of dry 00.1 atorage, boot launching facilities ll1d • llool sales ~ planned for the dtveloi>' ment. Scaffolding Stolen From Building Site ScaUolding valued •I l860 wu ltolen 'lbunday night from L Son Juin C.pbtrano COt18INclloo Ille, Oronge Coualy llherif/'1 officm uid. _ Deputies aid the lleavy pipbig and plankl Wtn takM from l bulkll"I site Oii Calle A<cofdance. 'Jbe loll WU iepo<1ed by officllla of the Weaelyn Conl1ructlon .C.mpuy. Joins Company Von Brau·n Quits NASA Position WASmNGTON (UPI) -Qr. Wernher von Braun, Gennan-born rocket expert who directed development of the rocket that sen t Americans to the moon, retired from tilt space agency today. An announcement of his retirement ls.rued by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration said that Von Btaan would join PiJrcblld Industries u -ote:rteo · ..... ··~ and developmeol, ellecUve July L Vea.__.. Braun wu aerving at deputy aSIOcl4e ·adnilni.<ltator •I the time of his resignit!oo, Befoce that, be was flrector of the Officials Gaze At Pendl.eton As Fie'ld Site By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of ttM IMlltJ !"Utt Sl•ff An international airport somewhere on Csmp Pendelton property may be the OD· Iy reasonable long-range solution to Southern California's air traffic problems -despite what the U.S. Marine Corps might think about it. That is the feeling of several prominent Orange COuntt officials concerning the main topic of meetings he1d today in San Diego on airport and air traffic planning. Orange Copnty Board of Supervisors Chairman Ronald Caspers called the meeting with his San Diego couiiterpart and representatives of state and federal govemmenl "At this point, the intent is to sit down and evaluate current and future air transportation needs in the two counties," said Tom Fuentes, a Caspers aide. The number one topic of discussion will probably be the feastbility of using a 2,500-acre p a r c e I of land in Camp Pendleton as a jetport serving both coun- ties. The Marine commandant of the base, Maj . Gen. Herman· Poggemier, recently released a statement opposing any type of jel airport on the base because of possible adverse effects on training. The Marines are also upset because they were not Invited to today's meeting. 1The meellng was designed for civilian authorlties to discuss the possibilities," (S.. JETPORT, Page I) Marshall Space Flight Center in Alabama for 10 years, heading the team that developed the world's most powerful rocket , the Saturn V which propelled Apollo's moon-landing missions. Dr. James C. Fletcher, NASA ad· ministrator. said 11all of us in NASA will mis.! the · daily stinµllation of his ~nee bul we are -~~t that ,... wiu-..dil. ... 1o ·1iavo-~t •I Illa 1111 .. lralion and ....,..r Iii Ille ~·"'·""" p . ~ ~ e.xploraUon and use of space. Von Braun, 60, wbo was i tat In developq the VJ -~Illy launched Jcalllal EniJand ®rlnt World War 0, said ht WU Jeavfnl •1.wtth a deep feeling of IJ'ltltude f0< tbe wonderful and uniqUe opJXlrtunities the agency has given me during the last It years." He added: "I am leaving with the knowledge that NASA has enough well thought out plans to keep It moving ahead !or many years to come, even though some of these riiay have to be deferred because of budget constraints." IDs departure comes just a few months before tM. final Apollo moon-landing mission and at a time when the space agency faces increasing pressure lo cut its spending plans. City Official's Brother Kill.ed In, Plane Cra.sh A plane crash late Thursday in lhe foothills above Upland has claimed the life of the brother of Mrs. Mary De Moss, secretary to San Clemente Mayor Art Holmes and a city clerk's aide. The victim, one or four found ln the wreckage of a light plane near Cucamonga Peak, was Joseph Warner of Monrovia, a captain with the Los Angeles County Fire Department. One of the Warner children also was: in- litally reported among t.he victims of the burning crash. Authorities said that Warner and three others in the light plane had left Cable Airport In Upland for a fllgbt to Provo, Utah, where they were to attend com- mencement rites at Brigham Young University. · Funeral services are pending at Stone Funeral Home in Upland. , DAll,.V PILfY: bitt UC IRVINE S<;flNTIStS SHOW BRAIN CILLS REWIRE THEMSI VIS Ors. Carl W. Colmtn (left), Gary Lynch, P1ychoblologl1t1 Two UCI Scientist,s Find Brain Cell 'Rewiring' By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 1'111 D•llY Piiat Slaff Two UC Irvine psycbobiologlsts an- nounced a "profound discovery" Thurs· day that may reverse the widely believed theory that damaged brain:; cannot recover from nerve cell losses. Dr. Gary Lynch and Dr. Carl W, Cot- man revealed result!! of a ts.month study of brain damaged rats that was sup- ported by grants from the National Sci· ence Foundation and the National Insti- tute of Menlal Health amounting to $45.000 a year. The ucr psychobiology professors discussed.their research at the opening of a half-day UCI Industrial Associates pro.- gram introducing business leader!! to the school of biological sciences. The facult y researchers from Newport Beach said their findings were based on work with 20 rats. UCI researchers removed a portion or the cortex ar the braln of each rat. "Within a matter of days," Dr. Lynch said, a filling in of the cut area can be observed. It has long been known that brain cells -nerve tissue -cannot duplicate themselves as do cells of other body tissues such as the skin. However, the Lynch-Cotman studies of rats indicates the possibility that widam· aged ·cells in ot her parts of the body send out new signals -called processes - have been .. dramatically" evident In miscroacopic views of brain tissue. The nerve processes produce an enzyme acetyl-chollnestrase. Dr. Lynch said. When tissues are "stained" with a dye that has been used for years In other areas of research, the nerve enzyme. can readily be seen . Application of this graphic method to establish the presence of new connections between brain cells, replacing the con· nections that broke dowo with the damage of other cells is the key to the UCI discovery. "\Ve're the first people to look Into this structure using the staining technique," Dr. COtman said. Psychobiology department chairman Dr. James L. McGaugh deacrlbed the pair's finding as a "profound discovery. No matter what else comes from it, the infonnation adds to our knowledge of the brain," he said. "If all possible tmpllcatlons come to pass, the discovery would not only be profound, but could ·be classed as phmomenal," Dr. McGaugh &aid. Those Were the Days • • • One future implication cf the find ings might be in helping humans who have suffered brain damage by actident or other means. .M example of the. significance of the finding might be in controlling memory loss due to brain damage. Wartime Cookbook Realls Pa.st Memorial Day If the funct ions of damaged cells caus- ing memory loss are replaced with cells from other partl of the brain, one effect might be 1pastlclly, Dr. McGaugh 1ug· gested. Since bec0m1ng a spastic is not much of an Improvement over sufftring memory 1.,,, tile paUent might someday be given nerve proceu lnhlbltors to con- trol which brain cells replace the links that once helped with memory pro- ocsslng. By JACK t'llAPPELL fighting for his country, ll1d f0< his girl .,. "" o.u., '"" ,..,. • and mom and all the rest of those corny Memories lie duaty on forgotten lhlngs. sbelve1. Memories are there of a simpler Crayon scrlbbled flyleaf• tell or mop. time -a Ume where a battle l...t meant pets, tow·headed ll1d dlrty·llngered osk· a nation lost, a time whtn no tnemy lng, "when'• Daddy romlng home?'' could find solace in America's 41 stalff, Arilcl" on caoniul harken to a tlmt a time of a aimp1er war. when marketing meant buying whatever Mernorlu nturn on day1 llke Mtmotial happened to be lo U.t day and then Doy, or Ibey can be roosted \IMUll'OC'.' flgur!Jli out dlnntt. Meals were planned llngly by tllumhlng through a dappled by red stars and black stan. cootbciok a "Wartime Supplemtal" ,on Sugar rationing meant com syrup In food rollonflle atlll llact In the coater. the a-11 for suprlt11 berry pie and 'Ibo oidCOCik-talb ol "Unclt Stm's 1ugarte.s double boiler frosting. Food Ruin," "Pointers on Point Jla. Mvlce In the old Good llou!ekeeplng tloolng," "Canleell Wort," "Ooffto hook II 1Ull 1ooct. evm today when stntchera," and "SU&ir Sa•era," but it 'j0vtt1hert" lJ spelled "Vietnam" and opeakl of more than j1llt that. people going without meat are usually on It speab of a llllJI oil lo a ...,, macrobiotic die\!. Prlce-pe.-.pound ts I today's rationing system. "Meat has gone to war -gone to feed our armed forces and allies," observe• the cook book. .. Although here's enough left to keep our diets sound, we must leam to make more frequent UR ol the Jeu famJll ar cuts as well aa such variety meats 11 liver, heart, kidney, tongue, oxtalta. pig '1 knuckles, etc.," it says. To back up the contention that !UCh . variety meat could be yumrhy, recipes for "Heart Meat Cakes," "Flora'• OxtaU Soop,11 "Spanish Liver with UntA Beans" and "Deviled Kidneys with Rice" are of~ fered. AJ for stretching rart Item• like butter, several recipes are offertd for butter tSee COOK BOOK, Page I) ''Thia oould be the beglnnl1111 for ra- tional medicine for braln damage," Dr. McGaugh said. 1be researchtr1 them1elves were more modest about their work. decllnlng to 1ive 1peclllc example ol what kinds o1 fllnctlo!ll might bt affec!ltd by tht ..... found brain ctll linkups. However, Dr. Lynch said the old lheorl" of brain damaged likened the brain to a "hard·wired 1wllchboard or computer. .· • for busing, ror venereal disease edueat\on without parental consent. and for f•ir housing lav:s. Burgener began his remarks with an apology to candidate Norma n Ream or San Clement~ for an advertising sloga11 ~·hich hints that Burgener's op-ponents art not credible. He cited his -20 years'· strvice to the Republican partv and his 10 ytars as 1 (See ATl'ACK, Page %) ears U.S. Russia Set to Ink Agreement MOSCOW (UPI) -President Nixon and Soviet leaders reached agreement to-- day on a historic treaty limiting nuclear arms . The treaty was to be signed at 11 p.m. h-tosco\v time at the Kremlin following an all-American dinner Nixon is giving his hosts . White !louse Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said Nixon would sign for the United States, and diplomata told UPI Communist Party General Secretary Leonid I. Brezhnev probably would lliJ1 for the Sovlet'Unlon. The agretmebl ca~ped 2\i yw-a ol. negoUaUon1 at the 1tr1tegJc anm llmJta. lion talka (SALT) In H1"1nkf aod ViOMI and provided a crownlna tchlevement /or Nixon 's summJt talk.e In Moecow. The treaty covers both offensive and defen.,ive missiles. It will limit an- liba!Jlsllc missiles (ABM ), ban building 1norc launching silos for intercontinental balllstlc missiles (ICBM ), freeze the number of ICBMa at ihe present figure, and allow no new construction of m.J.ulle-- launching submarines. The United States has 1,054 land-baaed ICBMs; 41 missile -carrying 1ubmarinea and two ABM sites under construction. The Soviet Union has an estimated 1,550 ICBMs; 25 mlsslJe-carrylng aubs; and the anly operational ABM in the world. Even as the final wording was being worked out, the nations reached agree- ment on yet another accord , thiJ one to set up a Soviet-American commission to develop trade and business and economic relations. The trade agreement, less than Ni1on hoped for, was preceded during the week· long talks by the signing of five other pacts, covering jolnt efforts on disease, pollutlon, !!pace, science and "rules of the sea." Ziegler said that Nixon and the rullng Soviet troika -Brezhnev, Premier Alex- ei N. Kosygtn and President Nikolai V. Podgorny -met in the Kremlin for two hours thi!: afternoon. "They discussed international problema and completed the final agreement on strategic anm limilation," Ziegler aaid. The two chief arms negotiators, U.S. ambassador Gerard C. Sm.Ith and Soviet First Deputy Foreign MlnJJter Vladlmlr S. Semenov, new together In a U.S. air tran1port plane from Helsinki to Moscow for the ceremony. Weather Look tor considerable cloudinesa Saturday along the Oranse Cout, clearing by noon to sunny ·atlu. •ccording to the weatherlady. High.I 6>75. Low1 tn the 50'1. INSIDE TODAY Orange Countv f.t the 1traw- b•1T11 copitai of the nation. Gor- den Grove 1tage1 its annual Strawb•rrv Feotlool honormo this Memorial weekend. See story fn toda~'• Weekender. L.M. hYf 1 ....., n <•1"'""41 f <••111f~ ,.... C-ICt 14 ._. .. '*"' .......... " .. ,,.,.. ,... . ,....._ ,.,, '"''°'' 14 AMIL ...... 11 ,., .......... tt .... _ . ,...,. ""'' • f D/.JLY PllCl SC Helicopter Guns Break SAJGON (UPI) -US. hthcopters fir· Ing suided eltctronic missiles broke up a Communist 11110tult on Kootum today, but othe:r North Vletnameie Infiltrated Into t~ forward eommand posti of the SOUth Vletu.mt:te 22nd Infantry Division on the northern tdae of the city. Whlle South Vlttn1me1e defendtrll bat. I 500 lnhltralors who OCC\I 1ed houMI 1nJ 1 IC lln I to!Jl rn e iie o on. tum, another group of 11;ippers ~lztd 1ever1I bulldlng1 in the division com- pound on the north 1Jde and touched off a blurrt battle. A machinegun crew climbed a water tower In the South VlrlnamtM compound ind sprayed machlnegun bullets at the defender• below. South Vlttname1e tankJ 1helled the tower -and mlased . Finally 1 U.!'i, helicopter new in. knocked over the tower with another mluUe and killed lhe lour machfne-- gunnert. U.S. sPokeamen ~ald the American ml111ile-helloopter1 knocked out at least 10 of the IJ lank1 c.lcatroyed at Kontwn toduy, helping the South Vietnamese beat back two aMault" on the Kontum airport. Me1111nwhlle, the U.S. rommand reported 1 third day of m .. 11ve air attacks against Halphon1. The North Vietnamese launched new attacQ alone the deftnse line above llue And brou~ht In a force of links which werf! monaclng the 2,000- man U.S. base at Phu Bal, 10 miles south of llue. A spokesman 1rtld the tank force wu spotted only five miles from the lightly gunrded eastern flank of Phu Bal and thnt althou,qh there w111 a B52 strike In the oren the bnse was 1tlll under threat. On th• My Chanh River defen8t llne 21 miles north of Hue, a force ol 1,000 North Vietnamese using tank1 11unchcd another major assault along Highway I today but were beaten back by U.S. air power Rnd South Vletnnme1e Marines using hand arenades. The fighting swept to within 30 y1rd1 of· the South Vleln1mese Une1. Fron• Page l ATTACK ... :elate leglslator as qunllficalions for of· lie~. He dl1cu11ed Oovernor R on a Id Reagan's welfare reronn bill, of which be was the author, and s11ld ht was proud thll deaplte a m1Jorlly of Democrats In both howes, 70 perctnt Of the bill WU adopted. Burgener added he bas always sup- ported President Nixon and will continue to do so, "but th1t doet not mean com· pllnnce with ever.)' l11uc." Norman Ream of San Clemente and Gay Lewll of San Diego both !pOke on l111ue11. ReAm IAld he wa1 disturbed with "our oonnlulve aoeloty," the courll and '"·treasonous remarks" being m11de. He s1ld he 11 opposed In busing out11lde of one 's own 11chool d\JJtrlct, but believe~ ~very child should receive a aood educa· lion. . ~ The Snn Clemenle cRndld11te said he f11V()r8 the death pt'n11lty 11.nd would in- trodure lcgls latlon lo give the death penally to hard narcotics pwhers who 11re "committing m11as murder." l~r 1t1ild he 1upport1 law rnforcement •genclc1, a 11lronA mllltnry. consolidation or some feder11il al(enclr11 to avoid duplication or eftorl11 And snve tax n\oney, and the use of the dlrtct Income tax (without loopholes) to provide revenue. Mrs. Gny Le\\•ls d\11cw1ed t he numerous problems awaiting a 1c>lullon In \Ynahlngton which sht would addrtss htr tAlcnls, Including the! nAtional debt, un-- fn lr 1>rnctk-es In the judlcl11ry, soclnl :sr.rurlty probllln1s, untmploy1nent and hidden tAx,s. She sn!d she support'd the womtn's rl1'hl1 nn1endmt'nt but belltves It to be 11nn~·s.~nry J)('('11use \\'on1en nre pr1r vtctrd lor in the Constitution. "Thr pre1u11blr to the constitution dOl'sn 't say '\\'e tht men .. .' it says '\\'c lhr people .. .' \Ve already have l'qu:il ri11.ht~. but they 1tt not en!orctd." DAILY PILOT llwl O••ntt Ctnl DAil Y l"ILOT, •1111 .... ictl h C .... blflH I~ Ht"''l•l""lt, It "'91llMll ..., I~ O••no• (&11! l'.iblll~""' (O"IHl'lf, $.,.. •••• •O•I""'• llt ~l•lltd, M•l'llllf ............ f •01111. "' C.•ot1 Mt11, Ht-' 8tt('llo, ttu.,11 .. ,,..., "'"'~ rwn111n V11!t y, L•o-flM<:~. lr~IM ~llllolltb•o.' troll Stll C"'"-'411 S111 J~111 (1~1,,, • .,. A 1l11t lt '"-I ~lliOlt !I l)Ubl;•~M $t!\lfl•V• 1"11 S""'41Y't. Iii• 111111(!.ll -111~"'9 ,11"1 1, ot )JI! Wtll ""' Str·"I, CM!t Mt-.&, Cl l•IOl"<I, t~, tltb11I N W11J ,.,,,_.,..,, tM '11t1H1"9< J 1 1~ It, Cw111., Viet l'lft~ll'll aM 0-•tl M•M91< Thtl'lt1 ktt•11 101..., Th'"''' A, M111t11hi11t MltMtlfll l:liltr a.,, •. H. l••• a;, ..... P. N,11 M11t1o1111 M.IM911'19 ll•*' s.c--JOI Ntttl1 ll C:•Ml111t ltt l, fJ61t --C.lt MIM~ 1" ""'' ltf '"" "'=~,-....... ....._... ,.._~I INIJ l9"ti ...,.._. u..it .... I m ,. ..... ~-- ftl 1t •• •n•• .a--4111 c.--.. .............. ,. S... C' 111 A.I e.,alQMlt Ts! c'••• 4tlo44H ~ tftl. 0r .... CM•! ...... .._ .... ~ ....... ,.., ... """'"~ ........ ---.. .,......,......,,... lillnll! "I•' .. , ................. ~ ... ...... ~ ...... . --=·· .. --CllllFNI&. 9 m .., ..... D,fJ ~-_,.Ill.II ,._NO ....... .... -tt..a ...... • ' • DAILY ,ILOT lttll l'JMlt Readied For Kilt• RDbert Ellert sprays pot with glaze to ready it for San Clemente High School student art! and crafts fair that will ~ held June 3 along Avenlda Del Mar in San Clemente. Student worll' will be displayed in sidewalk booths. From Page l JETPORT SOUGHT ... F'uentes said . "After lhat , we will take ii up with the Marines ." "lt was not 1 matter of excluding them from the meeting at all," Fuentes said. As for the ~1arines' criticism of thr airport ldta, most Orange County or- flelals feel it Is out of place. "J don't know how they can take a :tland one way or another until we can come up with some kind of proposal ,'' said County Airport Director Robert Bresnahan. "Their crltlclam Is premature 1\nce we haven't even pinpointed a site or anything.'' he added. C:Uper1 and other county officials feel that the Pendletqn Idea Is beat for all concerned. There has been recent 1pecuJation thnt a parcel about fuur miles north ot Oceanside between the free\v11y 11nd tht ocean Is being studied . It would fall within the Cnmp Pendleton bounds. Newport Beach Mayor Donald ~1clnnis, whose city has leveled a number blasts at the Orange County Airport f1 cllltle1, is all for the Ca1np Pendleton airport site. •·1 hope they made the grade at these meetings ." he said. "This may be the on-- ly solution to our airport problems in both counties. "I am really buoyed by the action that has been taken," he added. ~1clnnis mirrored. the comments or the other officials with regard to the ~1arlnes. "ll would be ilJ.timed to bring them In befort we can get some good common ground at the mettlnp," he 11ld. Concerning the Marines' crlticlsm, Mclnnla said, "From my e1perlence with them, anytime anyone talks about using military installation land, their anawer is not Just 'no' but 'hell no'." Sftn Diego of!lciil.11 had no comment about today's meetings other than they knew generally what they were about. "We have 't even seen an agenda for the meeting , but i! they want to talk about airport locations, we have a\readr, done about 200 studies on the subfect , ' said a spokesman for San Diego supervisors. Protest Bared Teaclier 's Actio1i Costs Job SANTA CRUZ (AP) -A young women who ripped off her blouse at an anU"·ar protest has found herself stripped of a job. The Santa Crur. School District Bonrd voted to fire Janice Lee Rogers, 27, from her job as a teacher'• alde at Laurel Elementary School. "She went beyond a proper expression o! her antiwar feelings ,'' said Dr. 11-fArk Lewis, bo11rd president . ''It is not against the law to go bare bo!Omed, but it gives the board no confidence in her abllity to work with children ." Miss Rogers WAS put under a clliien's afTest by another \voman Atay 11 at an antiwar demonstraUon outsldt the county Jail. The district attorney later dropped charges on grounds no crime ,~·ns committed. The claim was thnl ahe tore off ht>r blouse and displayed her breasts in protest of the war. Lewis snld th~t ~flu Rog,rs \\'as not fired. because of the arrest, but be-- cause she dlsp lnycd a ""·UHul failure of good conduct." 'Last Shootout' Armored Cai.· Story Offered Sunday 'WE WON OUR I.AST SHOOTOUT' - Jn a look at the n1odern men \\'ho ride shotgun an the "stro~box," this Sund:iy Sptrlal rtnds their security meRsurcs so rigid thty t\'<'n suspect police offieers. undtr ctrt1;\n rondlllons. It's a story or the: 11rnX1rtd lrurk hu~lnes,,. El.ECTRONtC 7.~:N -ll'hethe< th< ~w AJpha \\11,·e control thtory is a fad or a phony. ont guy \\'ho tested the brain machlne found it "'asn 't ttotlc enou&h to handle the erotir. ..... ntE NA..'fE GAi\tE -To Rel your numbu au the customu ha.s to do Is piy the pric< ol the ll•t ,.litrs. S.Ulng names and llddmlt> b b\i buslntss end Orang• C.OUnty's bi&gtJt dealt r In names tells ,.... ol the "how" and "wey" In a YOU Section atory, MERLE HAGGARD -Ilia popitar11)' b only a notch or two beblncl that ol country m11Stc killl Jollnny Cash and he ls wtll on bb .._,lo bollll a mllUooalrt, bul Morlt Haggan! ,. llt'1 an unll1ppy man. Story is In Famflv Wetkb·. 1'01.ITICS AND HAND GUNS -In a rolumn 001 of Sacramento, Plul Hanna """'"' u -Ptttr Pltchtss .... politically motlvaltd ,.!Joo he ..,,,. oot for •h< oottawtna al hand runs. M.\ \'ORS ll'Tl'ES -It's "Part 11" o1 • ll.\i;t \\'tel(s u·omtn's pages profile of Orange Coast city first ladies. This \\'tek. 11·h·es or the mnyors of Costa ~1esa, Hun- tington Beach and San Juan Capistrblo are featured . AOl'tCE FROM EINSTEIN Business page fealure story trlls how Albert Einstein helped N<'wporl Beach grocer O. W. "Dick" Richard build bis suptrmarkel The lamed mathtmltklan g'l.l\.'IC Rich.af'd some business ad\'ict. KNIGHTS OF SPEEDWA y -Ptctura page captures the dram> of jousttn oo stt<I l1<tds at the motorcycle races. REDWOOD CONTROVERSY- Timbennto and coosuvalloDlsb .,. still clashing O\'tt the phllosophltJ lnvol\'td In 11>e auempt w ix-n·• tmo by .. rnng tbtm aside In the saoctuary called Red•'OOd NaUooal Park. LEGAL ADVICE -A special YOU Stctloo story olltn Ups on how to avoid ti.inc cl>t&ted, wbo to contact ~ >"" .,. and tells abocrt a lawym' woclatlon booklet that c!YU ather Ups and 1t•P1 to ID•. ~ow SKE'S AN ACl'RESS -eo,.,,. >tory of TV WEEK leatum &i5AD llo)t. )Ulng star "' the .. Plrtrldp l'amlll' ... """ loamed to Id ani1 &flu slit .... fl!,..., the ruortinl role. 2 Wowaded Attorney Killed In Court 'Feud' OROVILl.E (AP) - A running legal feud ha1 Jed to a burst of gunfire In the courthouse in this Sacramento Valley farming community that left an attorney dead, a judge and a witness wounded. Perry Farmer, -«. attorney for the plaintiffs, died or a bulltt /wound in the head shortly after tbe shoo ing Thursday afternoon. Karolyn Garrick, a plaintiff, wu wounded in the arm and side, and a judge who happened akmg was wounded in the right ann. · The defendant in the civil suit, ~1inard O. Rutherford, 57, of Oroville, WI! booked 'Contamination' Feared in Water Due to Seepage Orange County's waler supply faces contamination if septic tanks used by residents in a Santa Ana Canyon mobile home park are: not immediately con- trolled, the Orange County Wli.ter District has claimed in a Riverside Co u n t y Superior Court lawsuit. Naming the state \Yater Resources Control Board as defendants, Orange Count y Water District lawyers cla im that the mobile home park, operated by Conlemporary ?\1obile Home Corporation, daily pumps 50,000 gallons of sewage into !ieplic tanks and then releases the waste into subservice water fields. The Jawrult claims that a wide area around the park is already highly mineralized as the resuJt of the tanks. And it pointi-b'llt that -se·e page: downstream into heavily populated coun- ty areas is daily adding to the increasing mineral content of water u.sed in those areas. Operators of the park have argued that the slate hoard relaxed its sewage con· trol regulations last March to the point that limitations on mineral content were no longer required. New re,qulations drafted at that lime concentrnled on forcing the operators to control had hardness of the discharged water before releasing it inlo subservice storage areas. Orange: County Water District lawyers now want that March decision reversed. They also want the Riverside court to order the stale agency to insist on en· vlronmental impact statements being submitted ~Y any future potential user of non·sewage}systems. 11 io alie1ed ln the !Jlwsuit that the state agency Ignores the effect of sewage dslchargc on downstream users of Orange County Water DiBtrict water. Stale officials have prtviously limited the preparation of impact statements to governmental agencies involved in proj· ects calling for non-sewage facilities. NG date has yet been scheduled for 1 hearing into the dispute. Infant Lunetta Boy Succumbs John Neil Lunetta, infant son or 1.Ir. and Mrs. Nell G. Lunetta of 31401 Galano Way, San Juan Capistrano. died at South C',oasl C',ommunity Hospital Wednesday evening. Services for the newborn infant were sc heduled for this afternoon at Ascension Cemetery in El Toro. Besides hs parents, the baby leaves a brother. Frank: six sisters, Eileen. Ursula , Juliet, Frances, Katherine and ,_1ary, all of the home, and grandparents, Juliet Archer and Mr. and Mrs. Walter T. Roney. or San Diego. Lesneski Mortuary of San Clemente was in eharge ol arringements. for lnvesLigatlon of one count of murder and two counts of attempted murder. The shooting broke out in Butte County Superior C',ourl as Judg<' Lucian Van· degrift, a former key member of Gov . Ronald Reagan's cabinet, was presiding at a civil lawsuit !rial. Witnesses said Farmer was seated at the counsel table when Rutherford pulled a .33-caliber revolver from his pocket or a briefcase, strode forw ard from his seat in the audience, and fired into tbe back of Farmer's bead from a distance of about six inches. Then Rutherford ran for the door, fir- ing his pistol, the witnesses said. . The witness on the stand at the t1me, Ernest Reynolds, swung a stool al llutherford but missed, then grabbed his pistol wrist. He and a deputy sheriff wrestled Rutherford out into the hallway wit h the pistol still firing, the witnesses said. One bullet struck Mr s. Uarrick. break· Ing her right arm and penetrating her right side. Another went through the right forearm of Judge Jean Morony, whr> wa s passing by. Mrs. Garrick wu reported in satisfac- tory condition. Morony wu treated and released. "I wouldn't say I was scared," Van- degrift said later. "Scared means dif- ferent things to different people. It wa s obvious he was shooting people." Vandegrift, appointed to the bench in 1971 after serving as secrelary of the Slate Human Resources Agency, said it would be "inappropriate" to discuss the shooting further because lie would pro~ ably be a witness in Rutherford's tMal. It was the second courtroom shooting in California in less than two years. An outburst o{ gunfire during an at- tempted escape at the Marin County courthouse Aug. 7, 19701 cost the Jives of Superior Court Judge Harold J. Haley · and three other persons. Angela Davis is being tried on murder-kidnap-(onsplracy charges as a result of that incident. (See story, Page 5). The Oroville shooting apparently dates back about four years when Rutherford, a contract rural postman, and 111rs. Gar- rick jointly demolished and salvaged a building. acquaintances reported. At that time. Rutherford filed a suit against 1'frs. Garrick over some bricks which resulted from the salvage, ac- cording to friends. Fanner was Mrs. Garrick's attorney, and he not only won the case but also a $1 ,200 judgement against Rutherford, the: friends said. Firemen Battle Flames; 3 Hit By Thrown Rocks Santa Ana flremen not only battled flames In a $50,000 plumbing supply house fire Thursday evening, but also had to dodge rocks hurled. by youthful spec- tators. , Firemen said today that the fire was of Incendiary origin. Three firemen were hit by rocks thrown by onlookers. One fireman was struck In tlle e:ye and taken to a nearby hospital. He waa treated and released. PJ;istic pipe, garbage disposal units, plumbing fixtures and two .,;ervlce trucks were destroyed In the bla~ at B and D Plumbing Company, Z202 W. 5th St. Battalion Chief Ray Bachtelle said 30 firemen fought the blaze for more than a half hour to bring it under control. Towerirtg billows of black smoke at· tracted a crowd of 300 to 500 people in the area. Santa Ana police said one 8-year-old boy was taken into custody when he was caught throwing a rock at the flremen. He was later released to his parenb. 0 ~ COSTA MESA CAR WASH Antidrug ~rogram Scheduled A special concert by "The Children cl the Day" singing group at San Clement• lllgh School Saturday will launch a new drug abuse program along the ~utl\ Coast "'hich will include a hotline, speaker's bureau, job plaCi!ment program and other activities. Saturday's 7:30 p.m. event will be held in Triton Center, al!d ~lso will include 20- minute rap sessions belwet-n the audience and two San Clemente Polict Department narcotics detectives. Bob Urmstrom, the drug program director of Teen Challenge, also will ap- pear at the free concert. along with local church pastors. Dick Brocius, local director of the new program named "Alert", said the rally and concert will outline a "complete, Christian-centered drug-prevention and rehabilitation program along the South Coast." Teams or volunteers \viii be on 24-hour call to accept hotline calls through a new number -493-LOVE. Brocius stressed that all callers will be protected by anonymity if they relate their problems through the hotline. "The teams we will have: on duty wiU. be able lo use citizen's band radio durin( emergencies," he explained, "and can provide confidential counseling when· needed." The new service. expanding to job!, rehabilitation and even half-wa y houses, will serve the areas of San Clemente: • Dana Point. Capistrano Beach, Laguna Beach. Laguna Niguel, South Laguna, San Juan and Mission Viejo. Former addicts and drug 11sers who now are involved. in the leadership of the program would be those who will staff the various services offered in the Alert system. From Pagel COOKBOOK • • • spreads. One blends in unflavored gelatin end evaporated milk \Yith butter to dou- ble the amount of spread, while another recommends mixing in sour cream or bottled milk for half again as much spread. Bacon or sausage dri9ping1 were to be med for sauteing and lard or vegetable shortening for cakes and cookies. Recipes not only told Rosie the Riveter what to cook, but also advised on matters of national defense such as saving waste fat and returning It to the: butcher. "By doing this you are adding to the nallon'I supply of glycerine so much needed ln making ei:pJosives.'' "Tin and steel ore scarce and cans are made of steel plated with tin," the sup. plemcnt says. Patriotic homemakers were urged to remove the ends and squash cans flat for return to the salvage point, perhaps !or rebirth as a tank or jeep. • That wa! a war that touched everyone's life -not like Vietnam which could go practically UMoticed except for the vexing headlines. It was a time ~·hen worry was pervasive: and a time of extremes with joy 'vild and impetuous, and sorrow bot~ tomles!. It was also a tlme or unity with everyone and everything -even a lowly cook book -aimed at wiMing. Fihn Executive Dies PALM SPRINGS (AP) -Michael C, Levee, 81, pioneer film executive and fonner president of tht Academy of Mo- tion Picture Arts and Sciences, died \Vednesday. Levee had been senior exe- cutive of Paramount Pictures: vice presi4 dnt of United Studios, predecessor of Samuel GoldYi')'n Sludioe; and vice prest. dent and business manager of First National Studios, where Warner BJ'Olb.. ers now stands. MEMORIAL ~y SPECIAL WITH THIS AD. Ladles With the HI. 2'.'5 Purch111e of $ 99 CAR WASH end HOT WAX LIMJT 2 ... CUSTOMD. or FREE CAR WASH with any Flll·Up Al Wlta Tap 9 olJr lot,_ •K•ahh1 -I M-, SlrpriM Y-Wlh · · • Streta .... S... d D1Uacl.tal1 Dw ... wM •MW wit Co'--T ~' ~-Wa IM•IH TM A Claoa C. 5 Styles And Muy '-' '"" o ...... ,. ~"' T lh y 1 • ~ lhll ~rA.s:H tN WOOUTE AND COOL WATER ~ .. .,., WIG Ofllll MIOD ONL T 2 wms THRU JUNI 11 OR WKR.I THIT LAST COSTA MESA CAR WASH t•--n ..... •-'""' 2059 HAUOR ILYD., COSTA MISA 645·1030 ,... ..... ___ - Di..ILV ,JLOT OVER THE COUNTER NASO lbtlnp fer Thu....Uy, May 25, 1971 1 ...................................................................................... 1 ........ l '' AC:lll.,. e -·. 5TO(te$ INZMf~!;IALI A"' .--• .,.. J•~" f "" I•« w :w f'<t ""'4" c Po " .&Cf"~• :.. ...,. .. ~ ""~~· TllS ...... "~ •IJl'IM• Jt I I , ~ • Ah I ~ .... Mlfl VI A.• (q _..., «I !i ,,_.., '.r. Al'! '""'"' 1nz '"' ~~ •t I I. 1 " ·:ri~.. ,, " wrv ~· a !~ ::....~~· D 1r1 b • ' !Jtl.'j ,v.,,,.,,,, "!, 111111: :: .f.;: ~ ~§.. !.f!7'f!I cl,1 '4 ~ ._ Dr "' ~ flltl~ ~ Jl-i f'• """'''•I (1 -led .... _;.:ff:,,;. 4,.-..,., ... ti ""*"' JI ~.'., SI \41 l' $~~ \.t ~ 1'/: "J, '1"' Atlf!.11.I It: (OU,.ter e1 .. J.,1 to Al• lnc11n "" .\\ ~~ 4At _ ~ 'I'"" "" lt\>t ca111Ji11 ~ .~ "" .(IC: 'IJ: II ' A•1,1l,,1 I l :f't_~ _....., 11:.1.:.: 4l!ll='L!d ;1.1...; 1;~ ~.~.r.~; ~·~ :~ :~:~ t ~l\i' ~-~ ,:::f,'' 1" " ~. 11" ~ .t~ :J:'J';,. ~~ 11,,,...1 T"'-' tl.OO!t· !::'~" ,,,. r" Mrt "t l!t1ri::" Tll '4 l c..,.1 ~'r.?ij 'l!'.,..,, ~' ?t1. \1 .t.lrct IOd '"'"l do f'IOt ..,chlClt •1 • ,., s"' "':J"!"' l HYI 1, \o c...-1"' ,,. l r... '''" cir ''• f'' • J 1""11"'' ' , •• ,.' .... ,t~ ...... 1( AU .. "" "'" ....... f; f l {Ott ..... I"' G11' 11'-1 .. 411"1'111" It - OQwfl Ot COl'\l'lllt• Al"" Gto ~ ! .. •1te llt 14~ fV! &, f l i t U lo crhllOI M '-,,, ttM(I ,, ..... ili!t Gtl I I~ ""I ''°"' '"" do l'of .,,.. Atrt.l 11 ! '• "" G\ll l '""' -... , ... '°"' tit~ J ll" Trice ,,, 4'6 M\.ot .. , ........ 111 •Nr-.M 1c111111 ""'Ir ~ .,. n . •~ '" 21~ 11'.•Y c11,1 11• "J'" •• wrt """ !''"''' 1 ~ ", 41wtee u ~-...... 1tr1,.i1cll0ft1. , ,..., Li. •1 61" 1•ltd Alt \o '"lo l(ty1" C \ "-1 1o t i ,..,,. •1 111.t rftltv !ft 1J1 o '''" Allltfltfl l6 ....... rt"" 11'• Kine l ltr l'• llo t hlfllC 11'1 11 '"'"''oc' 1!'4 13" 1,1(111 Al .., t l'IM E i 1'1 Kl"\ K..+ I '• 1111 -r. •\1 d 1-l1t Jl''t ,, .... AICo Sid J.1 l"k f ldw 14') IJ', KN Ind 1'1 ''" P\t tlr Jr,,. t ilt .,..,_, JI' l t 4 1116 Al<on l o M '!1'tl JI' lF: S.•1 I(.,...,. VI J\' 1111 i..llr • Jl\o 'I"' V" McOH lll'loo lil"I ,141,1., lClol 1" tu J 'I' II[ T .. !Mf ~ "-U !\of"' 11'. Ill Ul\llfk C Jl ,,. tk!ft Cit I 'I li~ LKI ~!! " '"''t'b T 111.t I "I t Nf , ... 11 '11""'l ,.,, ir~ h'.: ~:: 1\ol E::' 1 :r· ll' n.:c.'n~, 'lr ~ 8 ;::. o"' II· ::~u4 ''? lit Drm )jl1 3t t''" I Ho ~ oCI W• tt'' 1At U ,~ L ~ ... ~ Alie lvo.t l Stocks in Insurance h1cllr 1tt 1tl 1wltr Jt\o ~i',J r.i 3'11 Unlv F.;1 11\0 ff\.'I. Allt '1'w I «I l1ct k/1 "'" l4\1 -¥ ~-jJ .. ,.,. '\ "Civil l \1 WI • ..... ~, •• •11111 G•t II -fl '~ n"' L•'•r.· •• I f'\ ~·"" c Jllt\6 'I .... V•r>e• s" t11· 1 \I. •ltld (~ 1 :tO Ad 0 A . !Ioctl> NIJ )t1; l~) I' 1 '' 1414 lf'ld P•• II .. 1 "'" Sl>(k ! n\ .t.11~ M"t •J van ce n ce gai l~~l !~ il~ 1,~~ ti5:~d~ i'~ il .. ~· .81: 11 .. !i~ ~~:J~ ... 1'~ ri~ ::~!~~.,:~ II WI lO t l"' Cl!• u .. H10 K•••Y ~ i!" Wttdbm 11o1 1)14> •111"41!1 1,IO U( ''" OOl•w .t~ ' •-..c1r1 Jf\\ &.,, •1•"-'• !"" •Uf Ju.,... !Ufl~IY '~ OCIHI ~'l Jttz 1•"'9 G lt'• 4'4 •rw t lot .r.1111 (II .IM By LEROV POPE Jay Cushman of Wh ite Weld !1 'W,ft l':, n't;! ...,.o:;•G~~ ,,:11'.t, ff,, ~"1f1!" 1: ;j f ... w,'"',, t!~ ,,'",,"' .1.11,•vi. •• u,1 IMI-wrtw & r. .d h , part!-·' I .... 9,,. 1'11 1, ,,.,.l •l rv ti.. 11 ,.,. ,.. ,.. ,....,, \\ """'' ' '"" ....u. Sil e II r..-war y ·-Mt ,,. 1 .... ""-ll(ltl ~n-. ltJI lt•ll• ... ff1, §1.<i =~ :t' ': .... J l Altlll , • N~w YORK o · . , '""""' • ""''" '" 111.1 Ji, l'k,. .11! 31 ,.,,,. , w ' ~.. .~ ....... isu 1 ·~ •.c.. -nee agaln bulhsh now on the flr! and .. 10.v. ltO"t M i~·· l;l •••k"' 111o0 '°'t w:i~,,,.c" !; ~ Amb1c 10 . -ift!Urance !!ilOCks are ln the Cti •fell ''' .I\\ M111 L"" ~ '1 !frll" St ll U • Wt ll!>t M 1o1 J.,. ""'''~' 1 "f> • W II S casualty companits although ,1,.,, s-'t' n• Mc c ... a ,, ~11 '''"' 111 '• ••'• Wt•c~I ~• 10 ,...., " E• .i J AO .~ a treet limelight. '' '"' A I"' l<t M~u•v ubs.c " _tliil !" W••• Mil ii"' ,,, "'"' M" , .. h I .c_ I" I k I do lrtl "" ... ,l~ Mtdc... 2 " .... 11141 ,.. 1.,.. I \\Wt! ~ ... b • u·· ... H" •• l\.ot and thOSt of fire and casualty pretty well. "But," he 1aid, "I l~.H·~~ 1 1•Jll ~~~::~ft I: ~ ~~'" !s;r~ S: If'" 11rl! ..il~:n;'kJ Ir.! .1<' ~;i.~:.1•11';'~ Both tht lile company &hares e erptt !i uft'! ue I OC. s o 1•1 H 91 1 1 '"Mat!lt•n H\At ffl.T Svotr fl xl•\i lt\4 w .. u, Fd ,, .. 1~ ""' .r.1. ,m ll1 nc1 A n• tt'~ Mi•y•r '' if 114 1b ~rod I• •14 l1c ~Lt ~'\ to\t ._ l 'nd J" .-companies advanced notably think the fine performance of "t' uni 1.111o 1st1 M did c ''• ''• T•ll~ C•• '" ''" w1dw E11 J" ,...., " •<It 1 '!(I • th r· f ~ I• Ir d°" ""' M ~II• In i\o'I l'-T1mo1i lJ4 1J6 Vtl!I ,,, 11 ... JJ~I AM lllll ,JJ in e 1rst our months of the the AUred Best life stock indei ~~1• Ste 15,.1 "1'' ~lnr~, r l,"' ~'• ~::~~ ~ 1',; t1:' v1e:11t,e: :;~: ~~ ""' c•~ , 10 ... year. The Alfrfd M. Beet life ill the first four month! of this :::~ 8 : ~~~ ~~ :~1~ ~:~ J'~ ~~ Tt1ot1 1t1 ''"' l1'1 fc.,1 lit" r11' "" :;•t.:! 1~ stock index, which includes . 1.,~ M' 11•1 Jl...., Jh~" t~ ~' G "CnM '·Mt multiline giar.ts such as A~Lna . year .,...as due in DO small part \l"'""c o p,. 1" MOb1 G v ,'! .. ,1.~ alner• & Losers !:::c~r111"1.M1 aw C •• 2H1 1•lo Motul • ;'.: d":: AMCS• l \.t the Travelers and Conn!!Cticut to the inCJUJiOn in it Of !tVtraJ ~;;."l' 1~: ·,;,, ~~ "":~: s! n-. ii H-Yerk IU•U-Tl'll foll-lftt jl1l AmCy•n 1 ... Gener.I d d d '" b. uJ•a:-~ . .. ~ ""' ,.t, o•rlln ... IJi 11\6wJ ,,.. lltckl IN! M Y• 1111\td .......... 0 111111 I , a vance aroun i1U 1g m UlWe companies. 6ll oct ,,. jl; "• 1e l" ,1 .. mott •114 1011 the ,...., 111.-et1 _c..,1 1ooi.1r1 ·* points Dl'lllC6 H !di M ll 'A cl Cl'tlnlt ""' ll'tl 0Ytr-ti.<11m1tr mirtll A Ov1! .1M . •O.• Ct ... 1... tor ~ .... j .. lllfli.d bY !ht HA.SO. .r.Ou\ •' .IMI Ingurana: stocks ha ve auf-THE BEST La• s•-k Ind•• •Ul(l't It 1 'to ," a••fll llll 14 N1! Ind H•Ctl'llltt c1>1n111 ••• ti!• Aml!llK I,,, u ~ ·• ~'''"'I lm tl\.t •••-. 1•'4 l '-'I d!fft•fftt• _e.,. Ytlt.,.•Uv'i 1•11 -'II ""' l!u•o•t ad vance mueb more '"'' M 1 '• 13 .r Llbiy 1111 n·• ••1wR11 .1. ~11111 t\.\ fered along with the rest or did tnl Intl I Yi'°" ,, GIO U"" 11 price Inf 16dlY"t ,,,, i.ld ••k t. ... l'l..Sy 1.10 the market in May ·but not sharply than the Bist Fire and :r,. g~ ~ ~ .. ~~· '!'"'": J: 't.,. '! ~:~:~::ir '~ , •1o0 t ,:; ~: j11 I:~~~~., ' , .~1·al"ts ;. the field say "ey Ca!ualty Index ho\\'l!Vtr ytM 1r l'"' !'"' w "" G 11.,, ,.., 1 H•• t~ '""u•'• '" I u. 1:3 Am Hel1 "marly as much. Therefore, ~ • GM 'f''l 100 H c~ " 1•" suv!' 1Cln1 11 !•t l4 u, ·o "'tn '' 1 ,..t"''" .,, "' 1..11 ' " K~• Ill 6'°' l~ N Htl 1,h 1719 5 ~e~r(l>lmJI 1fl)4 ll ~= 11,t A He>m• 1.11 ~r are hopeful th_at resumption of C~shman based ~ls en-1\~ 1~~ l, ff,,. ~wl,~~11 'F !!l-T : t s:.r1~~w..,,~; l! 1 .. '"" u11 i 11:~ !;::~~ .i~ • the historical upward ••Ira! or thu.s1asm for t h e fire and IYl(t I 7(1 70~ N COltl I" ~· '~ • Mi•'• Mon .... ~·' "' Vt 1 l "MtcHcl lJ •. ii'tsutan·ce stocks at last has casualty group on the fact 11111 11• J1 v, .u .... N11111n • .ith ~ 1a 1omou11• 1..... 1•, .. " u. 1&' AMticx 1 . .00 ' ~I Ctn lA•.li 11 Nltlllfl A ttli S(t•;, t N F (otl'Cl'I" 11''+ 11 .. Ut I . A. MedlCO•O h · h I m C" 11 11>-') trlDllld Co ~"' lt~1 11 tlKrtdH Int 1\1.1+ ... Vf t .1 .I.MIC •I I'·• begun t ese oomparues ave won c1t1v c1 u" 11•, Ncrd1tr n•,. '! Stt•lt H s~ .10 tt\lo .i. '"' u1 te .t..m111r M!'ff . ' d th t l ll"ll( 1 2•1 HllCr NG • 1'' l>!l'J 1 jllt•tY Convr 'p t I Ut 1.f AmNGI · many rate mcrea11es an a vr1 sd ij" ll~ Nw1 Ent ltl.T ,,.,, l• flfeom Cc•• i 1 uo ,., .1.m s.11 . IN SPITE of their adm itted in an increasing number of ~~et ~:t ~:t N:'l. ~·~ ~li' ii-. 1! i~~~=·· .. ,~~' t ~ H: 1:: !'t~r. 1] ;" volat~lity as compared ~·ilh in-!itales they now can put rate w 1j~, n ... ~'~~:;ti ,~ ~'l • l~ ~!~"'",u~~ tt t ,:i ~: ~·~ ::::ss:.:; :'° -dustriala and utili[ies, in· inereases in er f e ct im-.;:•1,0, }~,,,, "i.1'/' ~ 'c uJ' 15,. Jffi1 ;: ~,·.a~r~ 1~~ ,?~! :: tl:, J:~ ~i::\l:f1I ~}; aurance stoc•· may have mediately when they file them vnlt 11 o 15.., '' 11n Or "'"" ,.,, ti 1111nr 11"1 ••c ,.,..., ~ u '·' ""' I' 7 ~ U . . . . 11rlfon 141'; "" flJh l tl l l l 111 fl! W11'1erJ_flr-111 11 .i. Uo 6.1 AmT T • I nude more nest •us m· u.a with state wurance off1c1als cOl't•b llV.3• 11..., M x1''""'"tts1v1no• .G1d » 11' v. ,,1.1.mra.r w1 ~ · d · ~\IC Sv• !\'t I"" l'errA 11""' 1!'' 1 It T lv11...,1 • '" Vt •.1 A"'W11r .llO pe.st 75 yura than any &ecuri-wtea of having to get prior 1 Nucfl 1'"' 1 "' 1111r ct> 20 ! ,... l tt.11ur• G•0\111 1 + .... v. •.1 .r. """ ot ,,, ... , consent. Of course, the state 11;;,"'~d 3i~ ll(t y';'ll°'. ~ j''-' i •.i. LosR111s ............ 60 ~,, sroup. 'their .. _a!peclaliJts rr· . I nd th I If ~ .. c Ill• lJ\41 0111 ltd :~ ~i~ 1 ~·~"-'"II H -11... I 1··1 ·~t''I' '°' Cfa.il'ft . There ire Jnany eX• 0 ICla S CID !IUSpt t • n• l'l'ltS 011 75'1/o. 2"' •t Sy" ~""' 13"°" i _br'l'f.g CJ0~: ,, = 1:z ti 1f· ~"' •c "'' . .o f r ' st f C!OIS"' rat•• " they CO""lder l'ltrtY C lltG 1.1 1• l>Cm v; 1'li 1 lu,ler Natl' C11 ? -"" 101 11'1 AM l>1e µ, amp es 0 LDVI! rne.nta 0 !!;\! ""' u '"' nvJrtc Jl•.-, J.IYJ [""°"' lolo !~'Ao $ ht G11•ti IS.lo 1~ 1" ,., AM•tcP . .. ,-Ol 50 ;. •--··ance them too k.t .. b Gult~ n1 1~ 1~ ''' T • 'A 20l4 , G•cYt P••i• ,11_ ,... If ,: .1.mo•• , 4U uuu .... ~w ..... . •lg l tc ' .,. NA ;m ~ 1 A\11 l""r.•lr I ,....._ '• • I Amreo Ccr• ••-Jcs ru••;•• to "",000 Or I Com l~ 1 lilt 'j'' ,1 I N1t MNI 11 Jy ~ "' •. , A.rn.t!l r l.10 ...,.. •w--e ....,v l~tn A 'fil I tli11 r t r111or"' M•~h ....._ '" 1· Amil• Pf 61 ' -,OOQ jf held fOr A d-en Ctocc ll m' •cc1r V. 10 AGC llld\I trl, 1~ ... ·1 •m1t.cl I" 1 ........, u<. '• r l.1'• 1 1 ~•t Lj'" l4 •l't 11 Coml111 fr>e., IG \\ · •mttl In .20 )'earS Of !i(), p tt 1'$1 ~"1111 16"' j ~ li't5o rd 11 1¥1 11 W1r1~-Ille l -1, i A~1ceno1 -But ••e insurance stocks aC""e er l!t wri't ~n ~~ ~==1 °If~ 1~ l':: u Ms fdlc.i !nv1t -... ii .... 11(1\&1' Hon:' w """ 'I 0 " ' • "' l"~ 11 1undL•1, ID 1 -1"' 1.J llCOff -II ~(ft nc •11.f. • ~ tu 'l oO .. 1 ;'• !! Gc1011' C~(lt l! -1\;o 1 • .1 ",~ "~c',· I nooaked out in 1964 and ~·ere "'1 cit._.. 21 ... 2Jl.'i ''"'' • , ,, Mtrldl1n .11<1 -" H '' c1c '°-'Otl Gfnl ~ V. SllAi •'flll C/I fl'•"" l Y Oltl (&mp fO 11\-.. fl ... AOCD II •I rather dorm!nt since then un-Tells '71 '''"t CP ~ JE ~·~ H v 1i>• 1;j"' 11 ~•l•d ... ,,,,.;ic ,,_ .,., , ,:1 "111<" 11d tiJ Pr1nk Et ~ll•io l"' PHrltl •l1, 6 19 htl'Wd OlvSv l'-*-•ii ff 6 AP L CcrD · late in 1971. ~:1'1\c~,11~ lli~: 3 ·~ ::~.~.;'~ •1,1.~ fyl~ ~ 1a1 DY•""'1c ,,,_ i. 11 ':1 '•"l"i •"•' !'or a tll1l' e · 1969 · I ked , 1 , 11 M111""'1 E1.c:1 J\li-v. 11 • co D . 1 lJl 1n 00 u •• >t •'' 'I'' '!' M& L.~ ~ !' llt•tttrom .., n _ 1 i{ n s:1 •oc111a Ml • ·r the . ht h s l Lo ~•lbrt~ ! v. l "' • troltl ~' II l Kvlllmtn ·~ ,,._ "' n 5 AA.A Sv ' I s 1 y m1g rl!sume t e1r r,1rtl~k 1•·· ''"' "'"' •o ~uv. • T•n•DD•t p~1 iv,_... ,,. 11 1., Art111N I• Up, ... rd cour"". But they were a .. ., SS .-" ,1,,,1 ... '~"' 14''> Photn lnc I f\~ 11•,," llldUll FUllCD I'•-\1 " ., Ar(l>lrDnl 1 ., -'<= .._,,., un Rl&:tl ·~~ t •i, Pie Nl'IY lt ' > J~ll1 · .I.relit EnlD clobbered by the 1970 market ~ ~h•!• 11 J1"" Plnkrtn 11;" 13"" HEW YOAIC !Ull'll -Thi 10 moit Ariz Pl 1.~ lid •• Am . p t t 1!1'~1 w ,1:: ll;2 )~•• t":i \i.~ ~ f~tl111 1tocks tr•d!!f 011 1~1 0 C m1•t11 !~1!~' 'ilnoi I e even u1ough the earnings er1can a c e s e e r, a Mid .,-11 ,,.. Pcrtr Mlt i!"' ~ 11••d•v '' •vo.;~t1-bv l7/'1~1ilf c .... "'"'cc 111 1 ind sales of the lile companies Ne"'J>Ort Beach had a net loss ;!t, ~.c.: 1::.: ~1~ ~~r: In~: n ... l~~ Ink O•IJ'! ADA 111,100 l "" 1t -2 !"l'lll'ti: ~~ continued to t dU d f ~ t'.' " • 1 1(1.l,i "«•• •11••"'411111 c. 101.JOO 1 -1• J 5-1 • ....... ~"'t 1 .li.t. grows ea y an o '212,344 after extraordinary ~Mt ·~ 14;: 1,:; P;:r'°Go1~ , ,,... HN tllt 1n11 · 111300 *' w't "" lf'C111, 0 the flre and ca11UJlty com -cred1··-net or a•pLicable I"-'" A<tY •11'~ """ Pro11 c 1p ff ff"' '•ru• 011 1'· ! /111.\ 2lh " AO~ · t0 ..,, r ,,. '~"' ,, 1'' '" '"bS NM \'t \.t N'' (DI'• 10, 1~ 11,,,. 11.'t .1.' I elr:.i . 1 . panles broke out of a period of come taxes or 4 ctnts a G1111 1nts1 1,,. 1._ ''N c i r "' 2v. unr'"' F41 C• "· '"' JOl.'t.+-""' ... ~i"o 1 110 I , G'f'rody •"' l>t ~llbli~r ,\Ii '""' LlflofrtV MMI '3,1 17\'l 1i 4-\\ A h.IOol 1 Ill . eevera years of big un-!!ihare on revenues 0 f H.el1 ""t 3,11o 35 Pur1~1c ,1 tt\11 No c .... 1 .1.1r1 ,,,JOD '"" 1¥1.... A:ioc 1,; • ckrwr · J ' HtrNr It 13\fo 11 PMI" C•P I'' !"" Tl!l111v Intl S...llOO 13'4 ll'lo-" Al D•~G ,;; -" itllll osses. $19.399.646, for the year ended ~:~:~" ~~ ;, i:~~~ c ~•'"' l '"' NA.so v&1u"'' 1~.u.i.D· '"'"''llC:t A.uolr• 1.)(1 J)ec. 61. Hlllft Lm U '.'i 461.'i it;vmd 1J.;•i, lst1, 7N; dtcllllts Ml; llllC~l"lld \'1.1; Toll !:~~1 T~l1c:d1 IN·UR"'CE Stock M k t I r .. ded HllYW 1'rl •11 lf\Ai ltl!M '!c 17'111 1"" l .063. All I I. 4d ~ l\.l'\ ar e Ntt oss or u1e year en ~Ori 1 ... 111u 21t~ U" 111etn • •iAi 1'1 .1.11 1vl 1.1 Service of Santa Barbara, Dec. 31. 1970 was $2.173,196 or H~·· M' 'f" ~ i:t1t u£: m'.:. ir~ KIDS LOVE !~~tof'd," Calif .. reporting on 215 leading 36 cents a share on revenues ~~,,~:· lt ,,. ,,:: F~ n .• f,"' ::111:cc:~1·:t ~locks for the first four of $13,914.843, of which discon-~~!:!,cc sn.:. ~?i I~:,, '(f ij~~ 11 r,5 UNCLE LEN :~o·,/IC'~I; months of this year. says 116 tinued operations . net of lp-,·~:·~~t ,tt:,..., :~~ r. ,,, SATURDAYS IN :v'-" 011' advanced and 32 were un-plicable taxes accounted for 1~1 "'lll'l'l 2311111~1" !\ebb Mv 1-. 1111 ... ~:"' t:': · b od hil b • In lkW A JI,.,. f'1' lcllln,. l lOIJ fi"' •vco Ce wr: c ang w e 68 ad declines. $1 779,872 or 29 cents a 11hare. '"' !VCnt "' 1.1.1 ltovw co ""' "' THE DAILY PILOT •vca 01 i. ~-· t tin thin h ' . . . . lonl!' In I~ 1114 !\owt ~"' P,''°' •,4 ,.,.....,,,.111 .1 ~· "'n:: in eres g I was t at Thi! housing d 1 v 1 s 1 o n 11 ,, un 211• 2N I""' si ov w ,,., .1.vn11 o d th. d I'-• ti th . I I car•n ~ 2* r lf'ld Gr ll n 1• •v(lfl~g \.u ec u...., were ny, on e reported a profit for the year. .1.11.c: u 61 order of I to lS percent, while A m er i can Pacesetter. t•~wu ·!I the prices of insurance stocks Southern California 1 and 11:~:;.ri:i :10 that gained for the most part developer and re!idential MUTUAL FUNDS ::~:1• l.~ !Purled 25 to more than 100 builder, al90 manufa~tures ;:~~;. 01"1 percent in this period. Elect r 0 • Mech an 1c a I. A~1tc1Nv l T d N wto . I k h . I d I t . l"1t•T• 2·1 e e n, msurance s oc mec anica a n e ec ron1c ••btro11 11 &pecialist of Eastman Dillon components through l ts l:~?t ~~ .~ trnioo Securitie!!i Corp., said he subsidiary. American Elec--~:ifowr.:~. ~uri:: s:r:: ~ 1i,; lf ~ .:,~,, ,~ ~tr:~~ Ji r~i:.1 ~ .. Ry t a:~~,:' /:J •ee1·'' .... insurancestockswill tr ... fFull rt cl bld •nd llktdm\let~ ?•.•!16'51.., Fund I'·~· cu•1TY, I : l"•IMllfi 1' i. "ft' orucs we., o t on. ro•lc•• en Mlllv" rect c1 1.11 t 2t J111111 'Ill 1 u 1u11y '· 1 J.11 •U1C~L 11 ~eep riloving ahead because ll'uftll• i• •~td •v MflCJ ,1·j' n.l' JM111 111> '· '10. ' ""'11 f·" l 01 "''""'~ L w1 "' HA 0 11'1( rt)lf] E I II J6'1nsl1' lf" 1t VllrJ " I .4'0 1 OI 8t•l1r L ll the insurance business is unaf---ll:Yl"UI II' ICRYSTOHI. ilLICll:D ,01: 1•y11ltC1 $0 Thllr141Yj M•Y U, ~yf Fiii 1 61 " tf l'" 11 If l1 10 21 ""' S~r \0 .. 11 " tt•ln11 .,, fected by international prob-N f l '" '"'' Lv , "10 11 y1t ' 20" 216' D•.r> Fd 11os1t 1i e .. t ,a 1 11 I b h ' 0 au t aid AMI • l/ICl'l't ·"Ill u1t I •2•10U Spl S~ro 1 1•1ttt&eiFd •I• ems or y t e more senou! • •~d" 2 i1 1 » ll' ~t 1 .11 . u11 1e1 • '° t l' 1•n11n11 lj· 111 ''Itek"' .2~ bl r •• d t ' ,. 1•A.l..TY: •. to ~ Ill! IO '·'f I 1 f n1•J' " I .u It"' KIO~O :: pro ems _o u:1e omes 1c rw1~ 1.oe 1.1.l How• D1 Y\t I' l" l'·" SHA•RMLD G•~ , e"'h" · ncom .1.61 J • ~tin i<d 1j·.IO 11.j1 v•! 2 1.tt ) 1' Jo""" .1 I! ! It ltt<~ c -. economy. Pla E d •~•u•" i-1.56 1 _, wth F .IO 10 1 u1t l 10.1! 11.1• n•••• 111 • ~ 1111,,,Pr JOI! Arthur ~tillon an in-n ye A.~VIHr .l'O " "C"'t i1 l ,li Ull ' '·l 1.t1 ltt Fd •lf I" itlOl!'I i.20 • 6.rt~I Fd 11 ,7$ 11.1• !"•ell F 11,71 l?.I PO!IO •. 1 ··ri H••br l.tJ ,,. 11a~H ~· de-ndenl 1·nsurance 5 to c k li.l1J111r1 16.~ 1' . .1j •ck Fd t111" 11 Pol1r1 '·" 1· Lr•• L '·" 1.n 11 1-1n · ,.~ •GE Fd 1. 1.1 iV:'*'d 1,.09 \,,tl(nlckr '·1 ·1 "'I '8 10 11 11 '1 : ... ,co ''° gpecialist. points out that the AN .1.!111111 w. u." 1e s, 11 M ll M l<nkr G111 11. 1 . ,,.. •. 1s ,.. l"D5: 8 .,,..,. 1·~ S FRANCISCO (AP) -Aloh1 Fii 1J 71 11 11 C MGM O••: Len• ~d I. 1 . Apprc 1t.71 11.11 9 111111• 11 ~ . price-earnings ra tios of many Th C 1. r . 5 •nF 1.11 )II ~"'" Gr 10 .1111 t?L•• Grt~ l'· 1 ·~ 1r>eom 11,11 ,0.s, I c , ,11 . e J 1 or n 1 a tale ,1,,,. ,. 11 11 12.11 f111y "' '·ft l·~ t•• A.~ 1. it . lnYr•• 11 13 11.'1 :""'.~1 ;,.., · good insurance companie.s are Automobile A&soc:iation, which~ :7aR\·l' '" 117!1 "'Gl 1!.11 \,:" 11r;v 1~•~ l:ot ~: lra, ~1:11 l:·~~ lf:C 8!,..~u~~ .1.i': at what most investors would . 700 000 cars in 'u" s: uvn Tri 'l" '' Grw 1.•1 • 1 s10MA ll'VNOS• ~ ~ ,11 COnsl.der hargai'n levels, 14 10 insures . c10111 10.§ "fi m1•1 .• , 1 1! lllC c11 u.n ''·'' C•• Sh• 11 ""11.u ,:;h 's,v11 1 ,g Northern California has urged J!l(.om '· 10. "'~1,Y IJ n l~.1 l!lf -"r' '-"' . . '"v n.6' l .11 I"' J '"" sl 16 times thls year's indicated .1. 1 ·t' th · 11~~~~"" ,g., ,! 11 J:~~1d F ,f·?: h :i :?rJ11 ~~~'1ur ,:·*1 ! ·ff 1•e11 Dk• . c1 1zens o wr1 e e Ir toe• ··n io·01 ,,., l u'• 10 n 10 n c1"'d 71.0 l1.t mnh 11 u 1 : .. Ir~~ 1"~1.,·"f earnings. legislators in support of no-1om Gr111 ,.M •·a 'i ·~11 1.01 c.,, DY ,.1.11.1. 1 1a.G• n. 1 1 .11 ltock\Jit 1, Am !nvil 6~ t JI' D ILITY MUtt111 15.IM II. " GlflF lS,,1 1 .7, ... fault insurance as proposed in ...... Mut !· 1 . o ou,, Lo10 "''' w11 1"" ,.1113., 1"'8,"1 1~, o "'VIN~ TOWN? AmM• Gr 1. 1r111 f•b • tt 11 t1 .1.1rn11 131 l !1 w In• G '·"' ·' Pblll, -w Senate Bill 40. !"CHOI C•r,1 •• i.1 151 .16 ...,,, IUJ l d . ' ""' 1... 1J 11 1')! 8:1:;"'c~ .~,, IOV•• !~'I •·110.w Bnd dtb t1.i.U.t3l!'ctr1 t.IO IO. I DOll'T LIAV5 YOUI HOMI!' UN,llDT!CTID RENT AH ULTllA.tDNlt BURGLAR ALARM SYSTEM At a news conference last ~'""1 I·• '!·ff " 1 tc •· Lut~'" ,, tt 1i" _,.1. I No GI : ei:tMo1 '1~; • . nd 11''1 .ti I •t• 1· 7 M11n1 t.11 I .11 (Of'\ 'd i • 'U . week, Richard V. Patton, vice rwth 11.tt 11: u1• l . 11.1tl M•tnc u o~ 11 J 01."11 tt 1. J l"'dr,z 1;~ . I , lllCGl"I 11 Yt rll . lt .tJ M1n11•~ j 'J ' q "'""" fi t or• ' • president Of the aaSOCiat On S Vlnlu• 11: Ii :~ u"" 1 lt.!l Mkt G""' '1t J.Jt !' Fr Gr I. f ff ...... ,.,',"'I 1,", · · b 'd WI N1t1 &·12 , 11rl!n 1 . 11. MA.IS CO : ! '' Int 1,. 1CI. · mter-tnaurance ureau, 111 siren .lO . •'"" ' 'n '1 F•~•"' 1" t 1t 1~•e srr 1 . 'M &ottlE'&r I.If SB 40. introduced by Sen. :w· ' ·25 1" ,~rnlc1•1..29 5'" n ~"':i1 ", 1i ~ 11 l: Z!"?:""j·"" J.1 ~ =~~m 1 ; Alrr•' SOOg (0.Lo! -'•"'•eJes ) HOUGHTON : ', DOll:AMS: MAS l"NCI.: .ltm.. :ll 1.ll &riff• 1.llll• t:U , n.1'6 1 FU!'ld A 1.tl t..tt l'I 0Y1' •H Jll Mil IJ :n l•~ "!' v I lt.llrl1My 110 was preferred by the .usocia-'u"" a I·~~ J·" ~/" 1n111 '·'° • •1 "''8 11s111 " sT1 N •o• 'o•: 1.i, ""•Of , CA.' L FOi IHFOll:MATIDN on 0 our LC G•h l ·•1 1 1tt,,d Vf , ;g 1'.!lf 1tet ,. • ,. I IDC:-l ... 17.ill l fo.6Ht lt ' NI lnttall•tlfll Cllt~ tt· ver f other blllJ under l'::"-~d !:JI t'i11 \/~ "" 'i:ll t~ =~O lt ~ a .. a 1:~'/i' \'1·.fi {;·:T lrlt~tt .JM • con.!iiderato'on ttKM 1 o 1 ,.,~, l 11hfr 116t u s s 01tov1>· M ..yH1 Of t SEA COAST . •Y•tc ~· . , .N TOltl• .\lld ..... IM ''I ·-I fi • 11 ll•OC-GI .'1 ·•ARM SY$TIMS He 1aid none of the bDll IYl'lt: •' . 1: a" 1i ·1n If f d 11• ., 111(0"' ;' '!"8•UllGI l.1t I'll ttC1' HI 1 , 1 , 1 rl 11'111 ! I ... If Gr,, I ' I J SM,..11 1 I 01 8•11wn C.... D1¥1111!1Df •ttc.t11 1 .. ""1""" 11tands a chance to pass,"~""' l ·ji'!· M,. . 1 .11 u0 ... !' 1 11 1J1 TtCl'I"' i·r. !.1tarG•°"' 1•1 1 .. 1 Pl.c •• 11-'••I• -lr"lt• K 1 . 1'j ulll 1 . II.ti vo... n 11 O'1J r. \Yrtt•• "' i .,, n '' '' ,. -however, unless there ii ln-•~•"• '· • N11 '· . M.ui Sftr• n !:11 1 M• "' 1 ·\ n n 11,~,.,·: ft. M244M eel . onc1''1; t·" . ~ s11rr t· . J MM!I r,. J ~' I 1 r,tch•r 11 11.tt l~~~~~~~~~~~~~creu~~~pu~b~hc~1~u~ppo~rt~.~~~I~' ..,. ',:12 ' ... 1' t.1 • .r.;R•• ,,,. · ~1'T 1si~ ¥011, 1 • ~~";f G J: 1· :~r 1 .~ ~IC lilJlo 1 l'll"C lC ti 11 a Towtr ( 1 . 8udd CC1"1P ....,, ~·~ 1'2.911 ofld Sr J JI J. 1•1n Ct• t. 1 luoUCI ti J ~" . ~y "· '!'i;: . "·t" '"'" ''l • .. .... "·' ' '"'" ... "' 'd , )f. ,. w.1 r u ""' s1• 1 1 1. ixto• H lj· 'I· lul ,,. 1 JG v SM _ 1. ' 11e11 11 If ft lllCDIYI ! M f·ft Jil" ~f' "ff lwlow1W .IO Full Ma ;ntenance -~~~ 11 ~1·1· 111'11:'..\,' " • i~:,•· .:·1';.,~ :~" 1· l· ......... -,, "' ,~ ,. l,. , . c~ff'ffit:"'Jti tM =~l G.t, i11 J ~ ¥~1~~ ],-.1. 1 :'1 In 1: 0 '""" 't' "· ... ' ' '"" •. ' .. " .... ....... ""'' ... '" For Only " . . v• Gw, i . 1 ,.._,Oft 1f ·ri 'u 111 '"" 1 J~·" vr-r9N ... $5 21 MONTHLY ::•~•;" 'i" 't· r; 1~ . ' ·a·=~ ,!jJ ,:, ~~~~'i. l'·~"·"I':;',::"' 'II '' ,,.. '!· I c' i!BJ .. l2 I Ntw W141 11 ' 'II Ctlf •r. l lltl'I Vnrwr ml. , 1 , \ V 1H(1' lolldllt t 111'1 21 tll !f\~t 1~• t ~· "' !\ ' '" l't'lr u ••ll f f UMITID ': "" 1 llOt(t ,, ~~~e~.0~~~r0~~0:"~e.~ i~~, ~:~11. ti~,, !i:Hll:I! ;/if •111 1!U 1!:1 ~"::""l! l.1'.!1t: g~e':: cury 1972 mod.ell and for only ~' 1'·~ : 0\ l~:lf l!:ft It~~~ 1 ;~11: ~ I 1,:ut!1111>11 ":'i:' lJ\ additional $5.21 per" mo. nt-• I~ '.to Wiii l t t»l ~ . •.11C1,..•U M ·" th d ~· · "' l·n ~ '"" '""f·' ""'"1° ' · 'i·f "~" '·" yo6 can enjoy ..... e I V&n• c I " ,., 11 ,~ 1ti 1 . Uft :'ift ' 1 , 11•rw • out xclUJ•-lull -I M: OU' 11 : Tm• 'l"' "I" f II. 11 (.1:1' ~~ -., tqff e ·~"' NI IN 11-"u·· AMI ,-....... o c s. 1 °'II\ Gy ltM ll •• ,·" " I car mtJnU'n&nee leMe ~ e]. i! l:U . ·~·"'! 1 :i;:n ~:i,.-~.., n1 ,,.1 v=U1~R LIM'~'C-!: tr~·:: pusobllly tailored ?lb . , , J,1.11t f6r"f(IU.. ~ i6ii ""~" ' ,..., ,ff,'f: ..,.., rt!1" ·• :°~ngi?Pow~ i:% )~·4:i.~:lt lf: ; .... 11J~naw·IM-..r:.,~u 1;. ~: 't"'.~,.~.~ r '\i, -~ 1 \1. r1 •D 1!1• c.,oi,ri .» .... ''"'II· l ·':l! ... -;~ n~· i (;;; ·1:' '" ;:.!, ·:: ~ILYl>.Cllll'A_•_ ~ 1f:U,. • -,t_1t :~'i11aJr 1•, It , n'l' ·~i;c..: _v ·:J~, e :~ti l~~" ff !tU iJO"' tg ~~ c'} t ,. L 1r-;r; 't~ 1t1I ~~ lg 1.11 ::M· ~ ~, . ~ I,~" ~ i ~ ~1~~ :ie~1~(1.1. :'~n:u ~~ .. q~ -.~i ~":"I .M .• : • .,g.~~ ~ ~ttijl' ~-;:::. ;i.j ;~ ::_~ :~ ,. ,, I I '4 i ~", lts it = . i1u.c H; i:: • If-l:r . .:" ,~, ~"::". ~~It . M: n Jfi ~ .!m:.:: .. t 1'l,.!1. •I? ~ •• ~111~·~~11 ,! • • t1.f1 IL'1 ~":'°I.II i·E ~ 1 "" l'~ lit~= I ~ • COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK UST • • FrUW.y, 1111.1~· lb, J.'112 This Plan How Much Should Franchise 'Sucker Money' Can Be Avoided You l(eep Saved? Newport Rf'at:h ~ ~ s i d e n t Wllllam A. Kar~t'~, Jr. has opened a l1or11<·h4! A u di dealership In fleverly JOiis. The Orange Coa!lt Colle11te Rradu111e i!I president of the firm. lie began ln the foreig n c·:i r !lale1 busine!l!I 1n 1964 with Chirk Iverson Volkswagen in Newport Stach. Corporation st yling cenler. * * * The Cerritos -0ffJce of Crocker Bank has named John A. MUlt;r assista nt manager. formerly on special assign- ment in the Southern Countie!I region . Miller joined Crocker Bank in 1970. Incentive Ry LEROY POPE UP l Business Wrlttr NEW YORK (UPI J -Had television repair tr• urn a Jalely? Or car rtpair blue~? If you haven 't had one or those common consumer ailments, perhap! you've been tempted and burned by one or those •·abs<ilutely free" offqs of merchandise? Or been strangled financially by a war- ranly loophole? The: "Where to turn for help " section covers com· plaint s in the: f o 11 ow In I categories: mail, food and . drugs, advertising, appl iances, autonmbiles, airlines, money matters, professional services. By SVLVIA PORTER When Umn are a., perpler· Ing•• now, the in..•tinct of any "economic 1nlm11'' i1 to try to hide -which h11s t-0 be a key e:rplan.aUon why tnd1y JO many mlllinn1 ol Americans lrt saving ~ e1tr11ordinarHy high a percentaae 9f th~l r paycheck&. Assum ing you're frighterw!d too , how much mone y 11hould you keep in you r aavinR! account? The aver· age amount of mnney kepi In a re11:- ular saving11 ACCOl.lfll in a U.S. firu1n-"O•T•• cial institu- tion 1oday Is a round Sl.500. M1ny ma jor flnancial lnMltutlons would in11lst your own rtse:rve In the form of "\\. qukl asstts" -c111 h or JU LEGAL NOTICE MOTICI TO ClltlDtTO•I SU ,.llUOll COUIT 01' TMI CTATI Ojll CALl,.OllNIA l'Oll TMI COUNTY 01' OIANOI Me. A-n•7 l tt•lf ol ITAMLfY 11. HOl",LUNO, D<>c: •• Uld. MOTICI ti HEl l!I Y GIVEN 1o IM t •M ltor1 ol ~ •toow• n1m.o d«-nl th-4 11! ""on' l't1wl119 ct1lfft1 •t•ln•I It!• 11\" •-nl ••• r*'lulraci to II._ tl\em. ....... II•• nl'C:•Hl•Y VOU(IW••, In .... ofllc• 1;1 1111 cll•k ol ,,.. 1b0v• 1n1l1110 coun, or lo ~•tMnl """'' will! ,,.. ""c•••••Y ~oven .. ,, lo "'• \lndt"I"""' •• 1111 olt~ o• 11:1 •llorMy, M~•th•ll • ..., Hl(-IOl'I, Al· t(ll"nt YI 1! l 1w, 11" Lincoln lllvO , ~ullt N111r1bl1 JCO. S1nt1 MO!lltt, C1lllOl'nl1, ""'Id! 11 1111 1tlltl ol Du1I011t cil 11•1 11ndtrolt"'" "' 111 ,...11..-1 p1rt1l11l11g lo Ill• 11lt11 ol 111(1 d«.e-nl, wllllln tour Mtln!lll 1f'ltr !hf llt1! pvtlll~I ..... o4 !hit .... 1c1. 01!M M•Y 17. 1•n lllALPM MOl'FL,VNO l llK Ulor ol !hi Wiii of lht 111<w1 n1m10 Ot<e<l•M MAalMALL ANO MICKIOH Al•HYI 11 L1w II.If LIMllll llf •. 1111!1 IN t111t1 Mt11lt1, c1u,.r1111 '1'"1h lt!O IM·tNt "'""""' ,., l•ffllltf" iJvllll1n.d Or1n11 CNll Dtllv ,.llot. M.., It, 2• 1"41 June J, f, ttn 1~1 ·12 LEGAL NOTICE ,ICTITIOUI IUllN•tt HAM• ITAT•M•HT Tht lollllwl,.. "''°"' ••• olo!n1 lll/1lntH I" DONUT ST0,.1'£, t 14'1 a rool<hurn, Mu,.l!nt l<ln lt1tll. a ltlf Mlflt Hundlry, 1001 NtwPOrl A111 .• Tu1ll11, CA '1610 Htltn M1rl1 Mundl1y, lolt07 H_,..,,1 Av1., Tutlln, CA f1'ICI TMt llutlnt" 11 bolnt <-llCl.0 ltY I ,.,,,,.,..,,,,,., l illy Mt r .. H11nclltY Ht llll M9rl1 H1111dloy Thl1 11111m1nl 111.0 with 11'1• Cou11ty Cllll"lt of Ori"" (loU"IY on : MI Y 10, 1f 7t. ·~ ltYtrtY J. MtOOo~, 0fll1JI¥ CIHlnty l l•rll. 1'17711 l'ubllll\fd Otlntt CNl1 D•!t, ,./lo!, MtY 11, 1t. 1•. i nd Jun• ), 1t1J 1)41·7t LEGAL NOTICE ,l(TITIOUI IUllHltl NAMI tTAT•M•NT Tht lollowlnt corioor•llon It dOlllO llu1lnft1 11: l•AllTON MANUliACTUl!INO COM• l'ANY 01' (ALll'0"NIA, INC , JIU MOll,OYll Avtnllt, Co111 M ••• ' C.111~rnl1 t Mt1 ar1•l1111 C1 rlbltf>1n M1n11l1c111rl n1 Com111nv •• IM . ,, Dl!l\Ol fl tO<· oor1U1111I, 100 Wot! T1nlh SlrH t, W!lm- lnt lOll. Dflt Wl'I ltJlt Tiii• Mlntu 11 c<>nd11cl"ll bY I (Of· tort tlllll. l•AJCTON HILSON. "'l•lelt!nl 11111 tlllltfYltnl w11 Iliac! wlln •~• Coun· IY Clttk or .,,.,,.., Cou"'' on M1y 1. 11n ,.nm liublllhld Or1n11 Co11I 011!y Pllol. MIY H, '"" J1111t 1, t. 11, 11'1 1ll1·7t LEGAL NOTJ Cr. llOTICI 0" IHTIHTIOM TO •N~" IN THI IALI O" ALCO'" ••VlllAllll to Wllom It Mt• Ca11c1r11: lublte:t lo l11111nc1 1)1 tnt llt•w t lllfCI for, notltf I• f\ffl l>Y tlY•n If\ und.,llt ntd IHOD01tl lo ••II Ol(Q i..v1r111H 1t tllt pr1ml111, dlllct,b•~ fe llow•: ttS W11I 1'1~ Slrtl-t . Co,11 M••o ,.urt111n1 lo 1uc11 lnllnllon. thl un ffrllOfttd !1 1pplyll'IQ to 1111 D1p1rlmtnl al li.lcohollc a1Vf'r111 Con!rfl.I for 111111nc1 01 1n 1k:llllnllc bl111,111 11c1n11 lo, lfl111 1r1ml111 11 tnllow1• On 5•1• lt•r J.,rv t... McCulloutll Pnyllh G MtCullout h l'ublllhH Or11111 Cotll 0 1lty "llDI. M111 1', 1t7' 1:1111-IJ LEGAL NOTICE fllCTITIOUI IUltN•tl HAMI ITATllMllHT Tl'll 10llowln1 Pfrtlllll t rt 111>1111 butlfll'IJ 11: OLD TOWN AN TIOHE S, Jl$0 Ntw..ort l 1¥'CI , (oJlt M•11, tMM. o.nnl1 llltlndl. 11111 s10 ... cr1u "vt .. ,ounltl" Vt ll••· •11" a11bAr1 H-illtlll<ll . 11191 JIOlll(rl 'I Av1., l'OUn!Mln Vfll••, t UOI , Tiil! ltu!lntn 11 bolf\f tonOIJ<IH bY • f'tttntrshlD. a1rb1r1 HOD• lltllldl r1111 1t•t""''"' 111.0 ""''" t~• cou~rv (Ill"-°' Ort nlt COu .. IY on M~Y !O. ""· I V ltV9tlV J. M10do• Ool!UIY CO<lrlly (•t•k, I' 1'1H llutlll"'" Qrtn•t Cot1! C•ll• Polol, M1v It, It, :M, t lld JllM 1. 1•'1 lll•·ll LEGAL NOTICE l'ICTITIOUI IUSIN•IS NAMI ITAT•M•HT ,.~. lollOw!M """" 11 doln• ltuotn•u ••: CltOWH V I. L l I Y PllE·SC••OOL. UH!! La 1'11!1 Ortw, L•tunt N•t uf l, C1lltornl1 ""11 J.ck &. JIU Sdlool llf '11111 Ptr-. l"t. lllllriei•l ••3 lltlt llrHt. Frtrnonr, Mi(111•on ft •l1 fn.1 buJln•n 11 llllll'lf (Otldu<lf'd Dv I COtllOrt!IO" Iv~~ l •1•i. frto1ur1r ff'il• ,1.1.....n1 lllM wllf'I ttw Cwntv Cltf\ o1 O•tr•M CwtltV Oii: May J, 1111. 1¥ llt..,I• J . Mt.SOW, 0.Vl'r Covntv (llfl. l'llW l'ullll"'td O•t nff Cot1I 0.11\r l'llot. ,, .... J !) It , •• "" ""'" LEGAL NOTICE equivalent -&hould total thret t.o iiil months' Income. I would aay thet your emergen- cy fund could ufely be 111 low 1u1 two fll(lnth~' i n c om e, howevtr -if your own sptt!a l financial c1rcum11!..'lnce11 would b"ekstop this. * * * Thoma• R. Younc has been promoted lo dJstrict sales manager fnr F'.lr1I Amtrlcan * * * NE\V YORK -This slory ml~ht be entitled "From Di!ihrags to Jliches." But it's re111ly about an alternative to franchising . Sam D. Battistone, 32 . of Sa nta Barbara, and his father, Sam, Sr , built a 200-unit chain of snack restaurants called Sa mbo "s from scratch in 14 years. ANOTHER section advises writing to your congressman and senator, asking them to keep you informed of spending legislation lo prvtect t.he con- sumer. So in th111 late Ma y, 1972, how much would you keep in an emergency 1aving!I fund? Your answer hat to rt3t on how you respond to The follow · lng crucially revealing ques- tions about yoor own clrcumstance!I. And when you ha ve :;tudied your ow n 11nswer11. the imp<irtance of your fearll about the overall ecooomie outlook will shrin k to their proper proportion!!. • How many circun1stan<'el'I ca n you think of in which you ntight realistically r e q u I re large 1ums of cash, Hterally at overnight notice ? • YOUHO American. He re!lides Mar. Title Insur· ance Com- pany. The Santa Ana College grad- uate began hls career in c·ustomcr Rl'rvice two yr.ars a go wl!h 1'' l rs t in Corona del The bo8rd of directon of F'lr1t California Co m p 1 n y have elected William E . l\1cClendon as resident \'ICe president and manager of their Newport Beach office. The investment securities firm is headquartered in San Franci!M:o. * * * Ray mond 0. l\1yer1 ha!t been honored by General Teltphone for completing 25 years ot scryice v.•ith t h e phone company. "Everybody in I ht. com- pany's t t e c u t i ..:-e and manageria l family started out !he same way -washing dishes -11nd they're all \\'ell off today," said young Bat- tistone. OF COURSE the hard work slar!ed the Sambo fa mily mernbers on lhe road to riches but what really turned the tr ick i.~ that alternative to franchising . The plan raisl'd the necessary capital for e.x- pansion a:<1 rapidly as a franchising plan does but avoided many of the pitfalls of selling franchises, Battistone said . Olds , Buick Recall Set For Defect \\'hat happens to ronsumer1 Includes a lot 1nore. The near- ly incredible fact of a spender's life these da\'S is that some au t ho r i i i es estimated 5.10 of every $100 the DETROIT (UPI 1 _ The average consumer spend!I is owners 0 f approximately wasted as '"sucker money." 22,000 current-model Buicks Sen. Philip Ila rt. j [).\Vis, I, and Oldsmobites are being estimates that much is Jost in not ifi ed of a possi hle steering the American marketpl-ace, linkage defect which could lost through such things as result in a driver being unable overpricing, underquality, un- to steer• his car, General necessary surcharges or just f\.1otors has announced. plain fraud. In the rompla ining depart· ment, it is recommended, you call the action line 0 r newspapers and the action departments of radk> stations to aim the gripes. When all • else fails or vou want to ad C a Jillie c\OtJt tO your complaint and hope for fa st action, writ• to Viri;:ln ia Knauer, Office of Consumer Affairs. New Ex· ecutive Office Bu i Id in g , Washington , D.C. 20506. * * * Babcock Electronlc1 has named Floyd Bryant a 1 general sales manager of tbe control products group. GM said no accidents have TllERE"S MUCH a person been reported as a result of a should know to avoid the drain poorly fitted steering arm on the purse and wallet. \\'hich is part of the linkage Unfortunately, most of today 's connecting the front wheels consumers learned nothing with the steering system. about wise shopping in high Loss Reported At Royal Inns •what types of unexpected financia l emergenc ies might conceivably end realistically befall you or your family fa disabling accidenl, job layoff. big auto repair job)? Bryant is president of the National Association of Relay Manufnclurer!I. He j o i n e d Babcock 's marketing depart- ment in 1964 and was western reglonal sa le!I manager prior lo his new a.uignmenL He and hi~ wife live in Fountain Valley. C u rrently an engineer assigned to the Lo ng Beach office, Myers began h i s utility ~fere's how it works. The company takes and kttps a h a I r -i n t e re s t in every restaurant. The i n i t i a 1 capitalization 1s a I w a y s $100,000. The manager buys a 20 percent interest, but the re- maining 30 percent is sold to six other 1nanagcrs in the chain. Affected models are 1972 school. Even H they bad. much Royal Inns of America Inc.". Oldsmobile 88's and 9R's and of what had been learned has reported a first quarter the Buick r:lectra 225 ;ind would be obsolete by now. loss of $51.306. or 3 ~nts a Ri viera models. Ne1i.' gyps, for example, grow share. compared to • profit of carttr as an MY "' apprentice lineman . Wh11t 1hare of the estimated costs of s u c b emergencies would be covered by you r olher form!I fJf fi- n11nci;d protection? Such a!I !llOCk!i, bonds, mutual fund .!!hares. niajor medi cal in- surance, life insurance. other types or in.1;urance. disa bility and survivor's benefits under Social Security, U.S. savings bond.!l you might have stashed a"way, benelits Crom your employer? He and his wife Jive in Hun- tington Beach. * * * The co ni pany said there is right fron1 the wreckage or the $333,171, or 18 cents a shace, the possi bility or a loose fit in old ones smashed by consumer for the like quarter a year the assen1bl.v or the steering protection agenries. ago . C.:enllnela Rank ha~ elected Theodore R. Kalil as regional vire president and manager of the Newport Beach regional office. relay rod which could c~Htse "Exactly everything" I.bat a Total income for the quarter !he relay rod stud lo break , v.·ist consumer should kno\v is this vear was $338,899 com· * * * James G. Nel110n, Laguna Beach has been appointed cor- porate director of design for 'Gla11 Containers Corporation of Fullerton. "We call it the fraction of the action plan."' said the younger Battistone. ' '_I t crrates 1naximu1n motivation throughout the co m pa n y . The co'rnpany ha s to stand be- hind every action of every manngt>r. nego1iate the leases, do the n1ajor buying, set pol- icy and so forth . But the in- dividual m a n a g e r 's op- portunities are not limiled to making his own restaurant succeed heeause . after hr. has been with us for a while. he \\•ill ha\·c 5 percent in!f'rests in several other restaurants .. , what th .. American A~"'"""ia-n,.r-' to $815 955 last year allo1ving !he steering: li11kage .. ~ F 1:\.1 ' • to separate and the dri ver lion or University \Vomen had liiiiti'9!ti~!!9P.99.i~ill would be unable to steer. in mind when it started put-I ' ANY RISK ANY TIME 638-1282 ri1tt"hart Ins. a9l'r1cy • Whal emergency financial help cou ld you realistically ez- pecl fro m parents, other rel11tives or yfJur employer? Before joining the firm six yea rs ago, Nelson was senio r designer at General Molor:i KalH-began his banking career 19 years ago as a 1 teller. He joins Cenlinela Bank after being vice pre sident or loans at F'i rst Western Bank in Los Angeles. Last DCB Marks End GM spokesm~n sa id this ling together it:i "Guide for separa'tion is "inost apt to oc-the Responsible Consumer:·· cur during low speed cor.· It's ou t now -a slim 12-pagr nering or in parking l_vpe new sletter-style pamphlet. that maneuvers where sl<:!erin~ rea lly seems to tell all, in-sy~lem· loads are the highest." eluding 'v.·here, to go for help The 1 t 000 Oldsmob ii es \vere -·~·h~e~n~y~otiil ii·,~eiibee;,;n,.;iig~yp~pediiiiii. iiiiiiiiii;;i~i;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ produced in March and Aprill l 1 Jll I f"11clhJ. qarden qrorll' • Could another non-working member nf your fa mily move f11irly readily into a p11ying job -if need be ? • If tbe family breadwinner Of Era in Aviation should lose his or her job I.ONG BF.AC!! ( AP l -F'or and will continue to be used tomorrow -due to a layoff, the DCB i"etliner. No. 556 \\'as 'd \\'llEN A manager is pro-w1 el y both in the United merger or other development the end of the line. mOlt.'<I to a company ex- -how Jong would ii ~obably States and abroad. Manufac-ecutive, he sells his 20 percent r The 5561b OC8 jet. built at be before he or she could find the McDonnell-Doui.:las plant lure of .spare parts for the stake in his original restaurant 11 oomparable job in his or her here, has been sold to Scan-planes will continue for years. to the new manager. lie re- field of training? dlnavi11 n Airlin es Systeins. It But tbe OCB. although finan -tains his 5 percent stakes in at Lan sing, Mich., and the B.000 affected Buicks also \\'erf' p~o­ duced in those mon1hs al the Flint. Mich .. plant. The cars will be inspected anrl the parts I replaced without cost lo the owners if nece ssary. Gi\1 said. Earnings Up At Swedlow • lfow tig I financial ls the last OC8 to be built. cially successful for the air-other uni1s of the Sambo chain nestc11:g in cash do you need to Since the fir st DCB wa!l built -Jines. was a sometimes bum-and probably buys some more. Swedlow Inc. of Garden fttl rlnanciaUy secure? nearly 15 years ago, sale!! or .J>Y_ ride for it~ manufacturer, "Some or our 1nanagers Grove reported increased • Are you prep11rlng for the aircraft have totaled more the Douglas Aircraft co. Inc., have fra ctions or the action in sales and improved earnings big-ticket expen.'!e!I a nd than $4.2 bi llion. There are of Santa Monica . as many as 16 restaurants." for the fourth quarter and purchases in the months ahea d now 48 DCB users _ airlines . In the early 1960s. Douglas said Battistone. The fact that fiscal yea r ended March 31. -e.g., a down payment on 11 charter companies an<t private had huge losses because of six other managers in the Net earnings for the fourth house th is fall. a new baby companies _ in 2B coun tries. cost overruns on development chain O\\'n pit<'es of his quarter rose to $235,000, or 28 th is year, a long planned trip 'l'hc four-engine OCB in-of the aircraft. restaurant as wet! as the cents per share, compared to Europe, a major outlav tn lroduced jet trn vel on 8 major }I may also . have c~n-parent company produces a with a loss of $39\,000, or 3!1 go into busines:S for your~elf? .scale. Previous aircraft were ~ributed, along \\'Ith th_e. twin-powerful incentive lo each cents per share, in the cor- Something truly bi~? the OCG and DC7. lh• last of Jet DC9, to . a cash cr1s1.' I.or manager lo do \\'ell. responding period la st year. Do h Do I h h lied "JI J k h' hi Sales increased to $5,534.000 oot ans\\·er I tse ques-the m 11 j 0 r piston -propeller ug as "".' 1c rcsu 1n its a so ma es us a ig y tions Hghlly! For the 11m0l1nt airliners built . merger w1tb l\1~Donnell Com-co-oprrative fan1i!y," he said. from $.1,773,000, a ga in of 47 you really need 11!1 an . panv of St. Louis. At the same time. becausc 1 frper~~ce;;;;;nl~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ emergeocy reserve will de-_Replac!nR lh_f' OCR are the The co1np;1ny v.•on't s a y lhe parent firm has all the II pend on your well consider('{! \\'tde-bodted Jets the whether the vveri'.lll DCB pro-rf'al corporate responsibility, 11ppra isal of earh -and each Mc1?onnell-Dougla!I IX::IO . the gram was profitable. the headaches over di vision of 1.c: designed to brin~ out vital Boeing 747 and the Lockheed l n the past year. lhf' OC8 a rights and responsibilities that I See by Today's Want Ads e A ST AR PJ::RFORM- A..~CE : That's this Dawes Galaxy 24" 10 ·~ bike. It's in excelltnt c:ond!tion. e A WVJ::LY 101-:A, ride a.round on this '10 Kav.,a- 1&.ki 90. It ha1 very low milts and i5 In great c:on- dition. e RICHNJ::SS jg driving this "68 ~an de Ville Cadil- lac. Beside11 btln1 com- fortable. it has leather, all pov.•er and new tire1, points about your ba~ic posi· LIOJ I. month has con1e off the l.ong ha,·e caused troubles for some !il'n and personality. Tht IX::B has be<'n a Beach ;issembly lint, first franchise operations are \f ~·ou are. s.11y, 8 young cou-__ m_o_n_•J_'m_o_kc_r_f_oc_1_h_e_a_i_r_nn_•_s __ s_ta_r_le_d __ in __ F_e~b~r-"a~r~y-~t~9S~7~. -'~'~·o~id~e~d~·-------­, \\•ilh no children, a modest 1 Oi,Jy Coast {!fa Soutlz.erif. Qffers ·tnr. a healthy 11ltilude ··rl life 11nd it~ Challenge~. 1tle AS $SOO in e regul11 r inR,~ accnunt might not he ;in unrealiiitirally low MAX- li\1UM. This \\'ould be p11rticularly so ir ynu ha ve olher saff' fin11ncia l resnurce:s (such 11!1 affluent parents ) upon 'vhom to Nill when 11nd 11s essential. Even if v0t1 art' not this carerrf't', $1 :000 to $1.500 might ""'"ll be yt1u r top limi t In keep in ca~h in a rinanctal in- stiluli{)n al thi~ lin1r. But if ynu are oldrr. hR~·t. 1najor responsibilitiPc:. h11\'C recurrent ftars ahout yn11r v11tner11hilH v in ihe rvt>nl of unanticipntfd ad\"er.~e news, your maximum n1ight be six months' inrorne 11nd r vrn more in t1.s.c:ets in the mo.~! 11- quid of all forms . The key poinl thi:il 111usl not ht underestimated at an y time i5 rh11t your emergency cash reserve -whatever I I s amount or wherever ynu deposit ii -Is prteisely what Its nanlt im plies. It is a prott'dion ag.ahat un- forf>Sttable financial emergen- rie~. It should be no more aod \I should be no Jes., than that . VN ITED STATES NAT IONAL BA N K SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH PRE-SUMMER W1'n ll¥tr·11Klto1 .., lr ..... 111 •rt•n1, •M tlln• •llowl le -... """' •• ' pv'll •-telol!t "" tlKl·r-•ltn ,,1c • ., ""' ,.~, • • . """'" lllllY ...... 1 ... 1 Fully Guaranteed Fully R•Conditioned USED ORGANS LOWREY sr!NET $1249 KIM.All CONSOLE CONN 5'1NfT • 63 Guaranteed Certificates ·Saturday Service ·The Insiders Club Art linkll\llrr The Insiders Club: A new way to beat inflation. Its membership card permi ts you to buy nearly every- thing you need from tile finest closed·door show- rooms at substantial sav- ings -appliances, furni- ture, stereo equipmen t, sporting goods, draperies and much, much more. .Etfectlve. ,A.nnual ----rarn1n gs 5.00%·5.!3% Passbook. No Minimum . 5.75%-5.92% One Year Certificate $1,000 Minimum. 6 .00%-6.18% Two 10.liive Year Certificates $5,000 Minimu1n. Up lo 90 days toss of inte rest on amounts withdrawn before rnaturil y on all r.:er tilica te accounts. also provides big d i s~ counts on tickets to sport~ ing and entertainment events .•. plus a whole list of free services: safe dC'posit boxes, money or· ders, travelers checks, and notary services. MAINOFTICE:: 9th & Hill, Los An11ru. f.i23-13Sl Oth'r o!l ices Wlt..SHlflE..t GltAMMvtCY l'l.ACD 3933 Wilshire Blvd ., LA,• 388-1265 L A. CIVIC C!NTVt: :>nd & Broac1w1y • 62~1102 HUNTINGTON •EACH: 91 Hunlif'l10n Ctnter • 171 .. ) 897-1047 SANTA MONICA: 7 J 8 Wilshire Blvd,• 393-(1746 SAN f'EDFJO: 10th & Pacitlc • 831-2341 WIEST COVINA: Cast!and Shopp Ina ctr.• SJl-2201 .. ANORAMA Cll'Yi 8~16 Vnn NU}'I Blvd.• 192-1171 TAltZANA: 18751 Ven!ul'I Blvd.• 34.5-8614 lONQ IEACH: Jrd & Locust • 437-7481 EAST LOS ANGILlS: Blh & SOto • 266-4510 DIAMOND MR: J~ Oi1rnond Bar 81¥d. • (114) 595-752S O.ily Hours-I AM to .4 PM Open S.tu<doys- 9AMto1 PM IEJQ;cot Civic C.nt•r) • ' ' ' ' . ! NOW OP'tN • You can even buy cars at the "fleet" price and mobile homes and motor- cycles at substantial sav· ings. The Insiders Club Membership require~ ment for savers -$2,500 minimum balance. Coast borrO'Ners now receive as- sociate memberships en- titling them to all outside referral services. Ask about joining at any Coast off ice. SATURDAYS 9 ta 1 P.M. MON.•THUIS. 1 .. 1 P'.M, Nit.us 10·• P.11. t1141 14 .. UIJ, U.1194 Mt ... c... ...-. c .... w ... ...... Vlff """ .......... H. M. STOLTE r AU. PIANOS eUAIAMTlll II TH. .... 1.111 .... .,.. 11.-. SOUTH COAST PLAZA COSTA MESA 3400 BRISTOL ST.-PH. 540-2830 • 1 I • • r •td'1 Mu zi. nn SC OA!LV ,ILOT J7 I Friday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List Stocks Sluggish Before Holiday NEW YORK IAP) - The stock market on the eve of the long ~l em or1a l Day \\eekendt was v1r· tually unchanged for the session today Trading \\as moderat e Bra dbury K Thurlow at tribut ed the ma rket s dullness to the th ree day "'eekend s approach t think a lot of investors started the holiday he com1nented Oak l"d 6 OC:cdP, 11~ O((ldPI e>I l i'pl Jj,(I "'" ~ pl 111 Ed 1 J.I O!I E •f lto Ol>E "' ,..,. Oi!leCE 1 18 l'll< GE_pl 90 OlleNG 111 0111\CMD II Omerlc •It OnP de\ ~ OI' Rck 1 l'() 81,~~Ct, l t"vftp! C. 6S OwpTn 60 Owt/\C F 1~ Owr~ •G Owe11 ! e>! • Own!! o• • 0Jlrdlnd 611 GAtNIERS Li i Ntl l1 • .. ' • ll • .. l"'il illo -+ " 11 -+ 1\t •to t ~ 11•. 1" ".. J,. ll~i t•, 1• ... 1 4'\• ... ~ "" i'" "" . 1r~ 1v. 11~ I\ '°'~ +1 1'11 11 • + \lo JC~ +1i. u ' +2 .. 11'-+1 .. '" l'' ~ ~= ,,., " Sffi •I- u .. ,.'~1 ! Ftcte~.'1:'91" ti: l~ J lerAvo'°l~ Uo 11.1 • (IV1 Cr lllf llo IG.t S l VO Cltl'O "> '!" ~tel Pitt Mii UD121hlll"'1'° UIJ t<I I oMJ11 o101 Uri t I t C•ll•llfl Mlfl Uo It 10 PllllMllf 2 tO "' ! 11 Ltfl v.1111"' U• I' lll!Qtl -~~ Uo ! lSWlllCoi Uo 14 Clloc:k" Uo j S J l illr°"" Sii uo ' 1• PnllMotof ' Uri • 111 ~h1'1r NV 1 Up t 4 II 11.tlll'IO l• it: l It NIKL!fl 'II u: • , u'·us~ll ;.; Vo • A pt l\'t Uo J.t A.1 lec!Ptlllf 3 Uo J. )j A1!'1 $Ind «I U• J tlUSir-.. I\ rw 1' ork Jr. ,'1ost Active 11 MOST i11v1 ltOCW.S Gvtt 0, VOit( I ~ I -'""''-' IJ _, P111 A W A 1!0C't:1 •t Dfl tllt '°"" Y91'11 T '1<0: fll(lltntt , ~i Cltw Ci.t. ':t1 ll11•tr ft.l(l'll~ 'I tl"' -~ elrcl!lld 1"11 ,, ,, il -~ ,..,~, "' '"" l '4 + ,,,. O!llrol 011 Ctt l Iii ~· + " " A>• Viot $t -•, Ill Air Lill Ht ,..... + W """' ,,..,. illl "~:!!! l!ta Do10 I ones Sii.. Ntl Clllll\ I Hitl l t • C..._ Cl't .. ,• v~ ~" •~·~ V("A Co •~ vt:.t. rr •~ '., '" ' . " ,, " ' ' "' " ' ' "' ' " /llerket Trf!11d ,. h,,. I• • -\.o ""NV Tllllll"M•, ""l'j''' fliO U » .!it!oo JI"' AifYt""n n t n• W t ti 1 , ' w., -~ t.+ I<. OK•IMS W. tot Wfl'fl't t Jd 1t 1'1.o. •1-,, ,... -~ Ml »O W•11 11 Al• 11 lt"O 16\t 11 It ftlt l I»' 11)11 W1l tflC 1 lO J J\t 1'. t'-t W• l'.c I.., I? n 11 lt l o Pri.t , t11Yr'Mt1 WU11 "° I «I ll Ulo U "'-\t tiOv•"C"" IJI Of W1Ul\t>l 4 "O 10" }.'l\o )ol • lS\o I l Of(I.... •It ... Wt~I, (I M l J,}\o ll ll • UM ... ,.... -?tCI w. I!! ftl I IO .. ) .. }l o )l~l 'lOt 11" !flWll~•( Ill IH 1" ..... ,.,,_ ... p t i ,., "' ~ W1vt"~ I ~ ' ~) } .... :n + ·~-----'-'--------1=::!'~\ J:? 1 a 30'-. ?f1o '° -... ,. Wtr••Pf ~.: ~ '• • 1• 1 1• •~.. $t in Ntl W"'-"' ~~ 1'11111 WP!-,S"ti w• n n n1,.__ , IW• I Nltfl , .. t it•• er., ..... ~:_'!"' JJ ,., ~ Jll ~ • ... ..... 1 ·~ I >'-71 "'1' \I~ !"!: l l l ' lw"-pl •! 1) )IY, :Wt lll ' V'tl Coro .. , I H • ·-• ~" • w •>• J , ?1 tYo l~ Vu ~llM I~ I H • :It H o • "'"-,.,.... .00 ' lr\.o 11 1 1,,, VWllt Un d <O U t !l\o 1)4 ~ i...IW" 1C or, ~ I] ~ 1 Ui. u.,_ \4 \\"-t(' D ( ) 9 1 1' fl -W W-Wll(e1 M s '' .I ... ~ • I.I~~ l ~,i!i XI ,,w.ri.o~111 _)ll)o tJ•,17 ~'~•(• .,,.. 1 o 1 • ~lo l'l Wt(llDI 1 10 lO "~ )I -. ""' I'< '~ tn ,. 111• "' ,. •w llt 1 ~ I I) XI••} lo~~ell:~• j~ JI " .. ' ~ .: ,: w:c, "" I O 1 , 11 o II W '"'' Ce :. " ~ ; ""--, Wt ·~ I l'O.o I. •) • •I of W t~ , "9 Ill• llu• fO t i U• l\. 2•1 oW ("" Kl W 'M .. 1, , , _.,,.w o • 1 l'O •'o • '• f ur "" ., •• " >fwnn•NO• 1 l 1 '' ,.Wt l\9 Lt l>• ,., ,. ,.. -. WHI f'OOll II ~ O, 0> Yt•fl' 4 '° "'~ ,,,, w:rn1co J 11 :J n o 'l • ,wocf'~ $ l\'••Me>I 1 , J )4 )I 1 Joi ,.., .. 1w rn " ti -V V-W• nC.m U l'I• "'• "-loo 41\.o • \/ow\\W .» '-Wt Croe>I . ..i t.) loJ l WM r~ •• 111 ,~ .. j • ~-11 • n o i ,,, n . I~ JI • JI'"' W Co II 11 I • \"'IC! ~ ~ IA 1'1• w:::-L IJO II •• ' • w"""" Ml 11'-~ o W•r>eS..: I 1 ~>«I ~. '"" "' 110 W llG 1 10 JJ 1 11• I W•" "™' l• • J • w!1 .. s 1 to 1 ••• ·~ •, 1• , ..., Q • r l• '' 1. '•' ..--.w.11w 1.0 1J' n n .. .,.,.,.1,, .o 11 t11 s• 1• -1 "• • "• J n l 1 1 '' • I W • G It J 11 II• I • '' '' '''' 11 ' n:v " l•i ' ~ • ~ • • • ,, " . ' " l•SO •t I '0 100 I /'(! 10 100 I J )! o 1 I I 1 'o'.lrl" \Jn Pl S t t > I I \• n n l• ,. lt. •• •• d • lJ . l . l )(1011 ·~~t c,; 1;: .;.,•,; ,~·· '1v ... ~ri ;. " . " .. •m " " ' ., •• "" '" " • ~:~>.llt c': ,; 11 ',: 11 l•.C.o " •• W• 1 F , I) M il~o 11>, 4 :lt•f>lfl (~II ' v ft 1 " ,", 1,1 • J, "f?\ /{'' t Ca-o 1we1•11 lOd 11-13-•• '""" t 1a Wfl<OF" S 2i 14 o l\o ... l u /\ "" 11 _,,,_ '" • . ' . " . ... l' IJ ' '. ~- • l • ,, ., ., .. •1 I' l1•o l ,. ""' 0 • d • \ u ,_1, '" ' ' -" ,,~ . JJ\l .... " -" -,._ Complete Closing Prices-A1nerican Stoel\: Exchange List Sti.1 Nt! 111111) Hl9ll LOW (1011 Cllg "" tnd1 I '" H t h Low CIOll (!If _, 6 !! ~ F W ~M 1 d l lJ 1' • JO J ll JU l! F !Cllf'l'PI ! 10t ]1 30 1 J\l 1-1 'I tl. tll F Sh" trlp I ) • 11 o 6 • 0 o Fl~oo tn~us 11 9 o 9 o ~ ,:1• ,: 1 ~lo~O. 15.!ius 1~ l~' 1J : 1! 1o FIAC•o~I ''I~ l a • I • F Otifr led 0 7:µ.. 'll )6 4 r. u~e Jon J 'll 11 21l, 1 9 0 I 107 I ;._7 • F •T ~f "' ll 25 li~o l ' 11 lo o FOO< 0 S 6 O\t 9 1 • I ' ·-• Fo d C•n 2~ tlO tl •l. 1 0. : • 0 = ~ ~~· f; L"b l~ .J i~1: ?{~: 9 6 5 , 1~ , Fo~ San >l 16 • 1 •I ~ ~ , !J"': 3!., -~ ~r~n:Mf" 1~ 71 ~? o !~ l:M '• 6 1 7 1+• Fr•n-sN &O ~ Jr•o JI "" '" "" , ... (11111 ) ! 11 l'O o 1(1 o+ 1 fr6111fM a! i! I! 1 l!'lk ,• l • fl.tt!jlO In n ,1, '> •ht U. Fr6nU 111<1 I~ 15 L~l~y R~ll n :1 '/. ~ 1 ', ... ~"'" ~·,:~11 1~de~ 1 .i ! ; : LAole>n "" !~ ~ l J -oFron!rr A r 16j 12' 11.,, LtO.t S~Mn ", '•"·' '•' •• Jl Ir •• Fr111 Ar WI ] I. l \1 l• M•u l6 ' t • -0 G-LA~ Wl!Od 0 l< 1' 1• G•brlel Intl 1• 13-.., l l 'o 1l 1-LIP!Wll 10.0 11 lll 1 1 1+\1GAtn n 21 49 II 160 1• -1Ltfo118 I'd s, ,a,~ •,,', i C.a berA Ce> I t • 9 • 'ol-•LC. ,t. 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' G ~Ill F soe 1 s 79\o ?• 19 L ti-v L•O 11 9 9 • Q 1-G ,on S QIP\ 17 7• 13'-7) ._ l A " 10 11 11 • 11 i > G ~n!Yo •G 64 9 S 91 9 I ll L yLl " ' '71~ 18 1• I OGbe nc l '/o 1~'o 7 • 'aL (On A •1 I > lo I >! Gou<1nq C1> 1•ll •l 1 -\•LOdQt She> l ll o 33> JJ-\ Ge <>C~ P IS I I I > LIM'hm"' )1 14 11 • J ,.,_ J1•0 G n G Y 11 S I•• ''• I•-> Loew~Th wl \ 11 l 3 t-G enm o st 11 1 o 1 -t\lo L~ • c ., 11 6~ l6l• 6' + 1'I G obr-SetUr I 7l Jl 'll l G S 7 Sh l S•o S-tGouce• E SIS S U~l-l•L~Be::.s :: lS n. I .. 1\.\1-\1 Glu<.ltn Co ' 1 • 1'o 1•t-.... LlV Cp ..... 16 l?V. l? ll Gol<lb • J6 1~ 9'1-o 9 • •i.~ V. Lurrtlv E n ' ' '•'• •, •,•,•• ?S •+ Golden H...,, I 19 • 1' • 1"9 _ ,It , ~~n co 0 \l 1+ :0.:. Good LS La 16 13 11 o .--.,, '-•·~ 16 6 io, 6 6"-'nG-WY nc S4 l't l'• l""I-"' 11 7"4 11 1•• Gotll!St }Cl u P o 1\lo 11>-.. M•cody(h t6 1'1.'. 1•>4 1•1/o-' GO<lilUPt> IQ a 7S 7• 1•\• 0 Me PSv 1 XI 1 J•~ l1> J.._ 'Go cine t •J 111>(, 1 1 11'4t1«M• orv R<I ', ",(t 113 •, 11'/t ... \ Gr~ n~f 5'o 711 S9 , 59 59~ 1 M1mMr! 11 ' J 't+ \'o Grind Auto I 20'!1! 70 I ?O .. £ ... M1noQ O" • 1i 5"'t ~ ,_,s.i. + Gran It!' Mo 16 I {o 1 • l\<o t. Monoel $!r• JO l'()fll 411 • ..:..... ~ Gr•ssVG 10 t 10 "t 11 10 \;, MtnQOOO tO 10 10"0 !O'lt 10 1 Groy MlgCe> 1 11 o 17\oi 11Vt+ \o M•n• Tr SO 1 l ~ A Grt,t.m Ind JS 1l'o !h 1:i;;+i-.M1 .. 1><>n M 1 Ula l~'t )2l,_ 1~ G I Bos Pe ?l 1... 1 1 M• ln<lq Mn 76 llA l' 11/.i Gt L•k~• (h 11 •''< •,lo t'.• M" k COl\trt 3 I I l G•ScottSup • '"'. M" .. r, ... nd ,.2 s 't s • s 1.f-W G renmn •k 10 '9 18 1 11' -\; M.t •h.tl Jnd s s 5 G'Hv !Od 1 1 .. 11 1.,,.-1,Mtstnd •0 SQ ltio 16 16 .. + \' Glilf T 16:> S 111,1, 11 • 11-. Mt1ne l Old 1 11 11 t \ G~vnc 10t> 1 ,, 1. 1 -l•M••e• n J 71!'.4 201' 10'• Gii Co ti 1f '6 o "'!'• "'-t, Mt RM Dl<I U ,.. 1 1'1>--'o Gtll"•!•I 90 4 11 t I a 11 o-\ Moul8 Q 10 18 5 •• s G~C J7o 7 I? 11 ~ 11-. ;.M<(O V w n lS• ls Ht •Curn n"us S l J\'O l>t McC w• o1 1111> 11 > l 1 \lo G~C En• o lS 1 o 1 1 w 1 McCu OU I 1 '°""' 0 10 G T I Co D 70 lh J 1 l .. 1 0 McDono 10 67 11. 10. 11 Gu .. d nd~I 11• 130 114 11'r,,-1 ' MclCePll !JO I• 0\ • ' • Cue u n "' 96 ~• 41 43 > 1 i:,i~:.:'FwC•: 1 360 15~ l6 +1o G .,dM w 11 9 4 Ba 9 11 3 J \ l I l S-12 C.uft d' Stl J 11:14 ~ 1•'4= Med"!' Id JS l•~• l• J~ -~• Go,~ """ n 11 19 , 19 19 \-~• Me<JcoJw A 1 •• • • -c.u <>d ""' 107 6 • 6 6 o o,1 Mt<tenco 11 •• 1 a"t 'IGu c~n 10 171 2lo1'11.o r'"11ow .. Gn11 6 H• I• l••I GurM 16~ 18 17 110 1 ~ '•""•',0m'<-1~~ 1 1 ~ , l~ 11 -.. Gu :. 0 w a 2 • 1 ,.._ , v .., s 6'0 6 6•+ 'Go•,, •• , Men" o 1..1 ' •• J~ ~" ' l..., 3 l~ -\Me <I ,11 n 17 3 1 .. 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U laltr t\o !, t-1' •I .,.,It IM t t-. 4 4 • P!( (.t1 Pttl I 11 'I 11 I }ll'Wti(Cll' !\ SI 11" f, ~ -~ P E ~! 1 ~ M 1•• 1'11 lfVtfo hJfllin,.r J ltl 1 >I •'$\ ~1r-\t~G£~if')' _, ,_ llllll'r 111t1 1~ JO 't 0 " GI, • :tt 1?._! ll ~ 1,1.. ~ KA.Jwr nd 11 1: !"" • • I ~ ... eg@~ :: l ... ''• -"' ic'tl ~ ,. ... • • ••• ' """"" " ll 2' "'" "1\io·~+ ,, ~:.:~ 'l w' I 1)\1 '"' t \14 "t ,.(Hfl'l•I 1 )0 11 t' "" s It t ,,.., ,_,.~ ~ lltc Ll•f •Ila f 71'\ 1 • 1 ,:r,~:.-: 1 ~ r ift 1•~ St\ ,..,,l ltt ( Ll•f •14 l!J Il l :I'' 11'•1 *"'•llMl'I• w! ")f" ,.., ,...~• l\11.,NW I ~ 'I - • ' • ' •' '"' I, I 'Ir ,.., Pl-I 11 t 1:" ':"" '!"-i. ~E~? ~! ,1l i: ·1" 1~t ~;mkr,~~ J 111.,, !!'l l,i ... t I( Wfl _n J 1)\Y lJ) lJV, "•II (or• n 11"' .. ,....._ " '" l'•lom-•r '" I I ' Pt!OMt IOd I I .. 1 \• , t' I :• ..... 1151 11'<-1 ,~ ,r· 1f'• t .. Amer ~a•• ,.:;~'-':' tl: ~~ l;~ \i~ ~.::. • JO /tlott Artl1'e ;:~~'r:;" a 1 ""' ! .:.. ': Nl"\lf Vl'tllL IU"O -T .... 10 ~It~! I'• -W'I' k J -. l'o !('(~I !rt~ Df1 tl!o" ArM~k111 5!0(-ft• ~· II • '1~ ~l'o 1~ 1J~ !lilhl E•tl\fM" rtllt•• \•lti Cl-(M ;::.:;.; i~ JI 70'a ~ 101 ... \.o N V Ti,.,_.. U Ulfl 11'l ' • P.UP• " )0 lj J"loo JI o i \o • Tole ... "" C11 t l,l!/JJ !t'~ • l'UoGd G i 11 • 11 .. ' I ••• O•HI ffll t 1 • '1lt ,,., -I ·~ ·~ 1~:1, 1 ~111,.i."' ~I! "'' /\ EM I~ f 1 ~ l't~ ·~ r l 1 ll't .0 ' jtothlllte!OI JI' f' .. I\ , ...... II Mi ,, .,,.... 1,... ,...._ 'l j?'r· "'' • Jr. -1 ... ...,. r ~ ··i r: 11 ~t tt II ~··' ~ 11 ;;~ ~ I l~ l J\l I !"II I~ ,._ ~ "·~'""' 111J I, U 1• ti -""""' «I "" Hltll lfw CIOll CftO ... .. ,,~ L•• ''-'' c~t , •.. .. " . ' ' .. " •• " ~ I '" '" ' "' " • • " • .. Finance B1iefs e Sult Wltlulre LOS ANGEU!S -G1mt Corp an 1\rcraft t!Dgi msnuJatturu , II.YI No r t Am•rlc" RockW<Q h 1 withdra wn 1 Superior Cell 1ull chugln1 G1mlt lalltd produce ~ let tn!llMI G atTttl. a 1Ubl_i6tfy SllJlll Companlee °'. An&•I , 11Jd the COl1\PI uncell<d • contr~ for ~ rtll ATP l IUrbolaa tnClnta la l'l«lh Amet\canla &abrtllner ,.. I F1idly, M.y lb, !9i z M01W11'• Worth · This Plan 'Sucker Money' Can Be AvoUkd How Much Should Franchise You l\.eep Saved? Newporl BeacJ1 ~ r. s I d t n t "'llll1m A. Karae11, Jr. has opened a Porsche A u d I dealer11hip In Beverly Hills. The Orange Coast College .:raduate Is pre11ldent of the firm . He began in the forrign car sales business in 1964 v.·ith Chick Iverson Volkswagen in Newport Beach. Corporation slyling centtr. * * * The Cerritos olflce o f Crocker Bank has named J&b n A. Mlllt.r assistant miinager. Formerly on spec ial assign- ment in the Southern Counties region. Miller joined Crocker Bank tn 1970. Incentive By l .~ROY !'OPE UP I Business Writer NE W YORK (UPl1 -Had ltlevision repair t r a u m a lately? Or car repair blues? If you haven't had one of 1hose common consumer aliments, perhaps you 've bttn lempted and burned by one of those ''absOlulely free'' offers or merchandise? Or been sLrangled financially by a war· ranty loophole? The "Where to tum for help" ~Hon covers com· plaints in the f ollowl n& categories: mail, food and , drugs, 11dverti.5ing, appliances, automobiles, ajr)inn, money matters, proleuional services. By SYLVIA PORTER When tlmet ere as perplex- ing as now, the in.."inct of any· "economic 1nlm11I" is to try to hidt -which haa to be a key explanation why today 90 many mllHons ol Amerit11ns an aaving 80 extraordina rily high a percentage of llle ir paycheck .. Asaumlng you're frightened too, how much money Rhould you keep in your aavings account ~ The avtr- agf! amount of mone y kept in A reg· ular savings ac:count in a U .S. finan· l'OllT•• cia l instllu· tlon loday h1 11 r o u n d fl ,500. Many major financial IMtitutions would insist your own rtserve In the form of "Ii· qukt assets" -caMI or IU LEGAL NOTICE JfOTIC• TO Cll•DtTOlll IU,•lltOll COUllT OP' TN• ITAT• Oflt CALl .. OllNIA "011 TNI COUNTY 011' OllANO• IM. A•ntl1 1!1111• ti STANLEY II , HOFl'l.UNO, CH<»~. HOTtCIE IS HEllllY GIVEN le IJlt t •t'Cll lor1 of Ina •llov• ... m..i dtc..,.nl tr11I 111 H•-h1 vlnt d •lm1 •1111'111 IJlt 1116 ote.o.nr ''' •-lrl>d 10 Ille \Mm. wl"t ti.. ne<tn1rv """'th••t. In JM olflc• CA ~ cteril ol IM •-• otnl!lted cOu<I. « It pff"n! lhrrn, w!lh IM M Ctll•tl' Vllo.ICl\.,I, lo IM und11•I•...., •I lh• o!llt • fl 11:1 l llMOWl', M1rtt11U •nd Hick•""• Al· IM .... ¥1 11 LIW, 17,1 Ll...;nln l lYd .. ~vii• Numblor toCI, 11nl1 MO!llc1. C•!lfotP1l1, Miich 11 lt>e PllCI of buliMU OI !ht .,,..,tfgntd '" •II m1tt1•• p1Jrl1lnlng to tn• e1t111 of u ld dKld•nl. wllllh1 four fl'ICNlllll •lttt #It lltll ,ultllcltlM "' lfllt "ltllc•. O.led Mil' 11, 1t7' llAL,H HOFP'LUND 1!11rolor pf lhl Wiii of th1 1bow "'..,.., dfct'Cl•rtl MAlllHALL AND MICKlON Atwn..,. II Lt'fl' 1111 LlllCet" 11"111. 1111!1 .. t11111 MMk1, C1nr.rlll1 Ttf1 UUJ JM-J7tS AH-rs fw l11c11ter "111111-htd Or1n11 Cotll 0111., ,1101, M1y It. 26 1116 J..,,.. 1, t, 1tn 1)11·7' LEGAL NOTICE ,.ICTITIOUS I US I N•IS NAMI STAT•M•NT 1'111 lttllo'tlllnt H fMlftl 1r1 del ne lio:11lnen 11: OOHUT STOP'P'E, !14.i lrtol!l'll.H'll, H11ntlnelorl 811cl'I. l fllr Mll'll H11ndl1Y, 1'8C1 Nl~rl Av1 .. Tu1l1t1. CA f26ff Hi t.ft M1rl1 H11ndl1v, 14t02 HllWPll!'I AYt., T1111111, CA tMIO Tlllt IM.flllllH It 1111111 C-llCfed k ti flt1rm..111111. l tuy Mtrlt H11rtdlt., H1I"' M1rl1 Hundll., Tl'llt 1t1tt"'otn' 111M wl!ri ,,,. C°"'n1., c1u~ 111 or.,.. CDlll!t'I' "": ""''" 10. un. l y ltYtr1¥ J, M1ddoll, Otpul., Count'/' t in . ,.17111 '11bll1hlll Or1rt1• Co.111 D•ltr P'llol, ""'" n. u. 11. 11'6 J11111 2. itn 1 2~1.12 LEGAL NOTICE tl'ICTITIOUI BUllN•ll NAMa ITATIMINT TM IG11owlrii CO'llO'l llOfl II dolrtt M lnt11 11: lllAJICTON MANUfl'A CTUlllNG COM· "ANY' 0 1' CALll'OttN!A, INC., H U Monrovlt Aven111, Ct1!1 M I • I , C11t1arnl1 t )I]) lr111l11rt C1rlbM1n M1nul1ct11•lrtt Cem11ny,, Inc . 11 O.lewu1 CO<· -l llOP!I. 100 Wtll T1ntll ltr,,.1, Wiim· l11tt0ft, 0.11w1•t ltl" Tl'llt bulllllll II condllcted 11¥ I cor· -•llllrt. BllAXTON NllLM>N, "''"lllt"t f l'llt 1l1lfl'rl•nl Wi t lllt'CI wlll'I Ill• Coun· tr Cltrk or Ortnt• Countv on MtY l. 1971 11'11MS llubllllltd Or1nt1 COlll Diii~ l"llo!. MIY ft, tl\CI J11M !. t , 11, 1'11 1)11.)2 LEGAL NCYrlCE llOTIC• O" INT•NTION TO 111<1 ~. IN TNI IALI Oii ALCO' BIVlllAG•I fD Wl'loll'I II M11 (.,,,c1rn: Sllblecl In lttutnc• ol lh• li<frt• •11.0 tor, ,,.11c1 II ntrtbJ 1lv•n 1~ u"61!'1l•MC1 PfOillllfl to itU oleo bfv••11111 1t lfll prl"'l111. Oltcr,btu fellow•: 62S W•1I 1'11'1 51•ffl. Cotti Mt•I Purwent lfl 1ud1 ln1trttlt1n, !hr un· ••r.r11ntd If 11>P1Ylt111 ffl lh• Dtplr!rntnl ol Alccl'lotlc B1w•1•• Carttrol fGr !11u1nc1 of 111 t lcllllollc b1v1r111 flctn11 lo• lflf" •remlHt 11 lollow1: 0'1 Sil• lltt• Jt,.Y L. McCullCKJt h PllJIU• 0 MC'Cullou1h P11blldlt'CI Or1rt1t Coe1t 01Uy Pllfl!, MtY "· nn U•~·71 LEGAL NCYTICE -----,ICTlflOUI BUllN•ll NAM• I TATllM•NT Thi IO!lowln1 "'IOtl' ••I doln1 bu1lnl'n 11: OLO TOWN ANTIOVES, )J.5(1 l<lrwpert 8 1Yd , Ct1l1 Me11, 11.11. o....n:• R•lndl, 111'1 S•ortK•••• ""', tl'tu .. 11111 Vt ll•Y, '11" lt1r1N1r1 H""' ll;t!"61. 11111 StonKrtlt Ave .. Foun11ln v.il•r, 11101. 11'111 bu1lnt11 11 l)toln1 cortd11C!M "" I ,.,,, ...... 1 •. 111rlNl•1 Hoo• lltlrldl T111• tt11'm•nl fli.d ""''" '"' Courtly C!t rl ol °''"'' (OllrtlJ .,,, Ml~ 10, 111'. l y llwrly J. MlddO• Otputy Ctu11ly C••rk. ,. 111JJ l"u&l!thtd 0<1n1• Co11! Otll~ llllo!. Mi r u. It, ,., I ncl J\IM' ,, Hn 11J•-1' l.EGAL NOTICE 'ICTITIDUI BUl lN•Jt NAMI ITATaMllNT 'Th• 16111wlN ... ,..,.. 11 6tllnt b.nln111 ... CltOWN V AL l. I Y '•!.·1Ci-t00L. 1'1'11 LI ,11!1 Orhot, L1111nt N11u1I, C1lllflr~l1 "'11 JI(~ I. Jiii Sdlotl of \11111 llt••• Int. (1111..,l•l 41j s111e Slrfft, Frr~1. Midllten #llJ f~.1 1tu1•n•n i. IMll'lf C-UCtftl by I Ctr11tr1r1.,,,, lv3~ L llllOlt l1tt•11•1• T/"11 11•1•""'°"' lllN wt111 "" C'°""I" ('"' 61 Ot a"" Cwnt~ "": Ml • J, ltU I r 111-1, J , MlddN, o.vfr (°"'lt!Y C!l'<l . 'USU P\ltlhtllfd Ort "" (Oii! Delff' ,11111. M1w I 17 it. '•· l'lt ll•1·n LEGAL NOTICE equivalent -should total three to 1h1 months' incomt.. I would say tha t your emergen- cy fund could 'afely be as low as two monlh!!' i n c om e , however -if your own special financial circumstances would backstop this. * * * Tbomaa R. Youn& has been pr()moled lo di!Jtrict sales manager for Flr11t A.mt rlcaa Tille Insur- * * * NEW YO RK -This story might be entitled "From Dishrags to Riches." Rut it's really about an alternative to franchising . Sa rn D. Battistone, 32, of Santa Barbara. and his father, Sam , Sr , bu ltt a 2~unit chain ()f snack restau rants called Sambo's from scratch in 14 yea rs. ANOTHER section adviwi writing to your congressman and senator, asking them l.O keep you in formed of spendin&: legislation to prottct the con- sumer. So in this late May, 1972, how much would you keep in an emergency 1avings fund~ Your answer hilt to m l on how you respond lo !he follow- ing crucially revealing ques- tion! a b o u l your o w n circumstances. And when you have :itudied your ow n answers, the importance of your fear!! alx>ut the overall economic outlook will shrink to their pr<lper proportions. • How many circumstances can you think of in wh ich you might realistically re q u i re large sums of cash, literally al overnight not ice? .YOUNG Am erican. He resides Mar. ance Com- pany. The Santa Ana College grad- uate began his career in <'U!itomer service two years a go wit h First in Corona del The OOard of directors of first Callfomla C o m p a n y ha vt elected Wiiiiam E . Tt1cCJendon as resident vice president and manager of their Ne~rt Beach offi ce. The · vestment securities firm is adquarlered in San Francisco. * * * Raymond 0. flfyers has been honored by General Teltphone for con1pleting 25 ¥Cars o[ service with t he phone company. "Everybody in th t con1. pan y's e ~ ,. c u t i ,. e and managerial family started out the same way -\\'ashing dishes -and they're all \\.'ell off today," said young Bat· tistont'. OF COU RSE the hard work started the Sambo fam ily members on the road to riches but what really turned the trick is that alternati ve to franchising . 1'he plan raised lhe necessary capital for ex- pansion a~ rapidly as a franchisi ng plan does but avoided many of the pitfalls of selling franchises. Battistone said. Olds, Buick Reccdl Set For Defect DETROIT (UPll -The owners o r approximately 22,000 current-model Buicks and Oldsmobiles ttre being not ified ur a possible steering linkage defect which could result in a dri ver being una ble lo steer his car, General h1otors has announced. What happens to consumtrs includes a lot more. 'The near~ Jy incredible fact of a spel'lder's life these da ys is that some author i ties estimated $30 or e\'ery $100 the average consumer spends is wasted as ''sucker money." Sen. Philip lfarl. ( O.Wis. \, estimates that much is lost in the A1nerit·an marketplace, lost through such things as overpricing, und~rquality, un- necessa ry surcharges or just plain fraud. In the complaining depart· ment , it is recommended, you call the action line o f newspapers and the action departmenls or radki stations to aim the gripes. When all else fails or you want to add a little clout to your complaint • and hope for fast action, writ• lo Virginia Knauer, Office of Comumer Affairs, New Ei:· ecutive Office 8 u i Id in g . Washington, D.C. 2:0506. * * * Babcotk f~lectronlcs has named Floyd Bryant as general sales manager of the control products group. C u rrently ~iJ-111!11 an engineer as&gned to thE -Long Beach office. (;M s:1id no accidents have TllERE·s MUCH a person been repo rted as a rt>sult of a should know to avoid Uie drain poorly fitted steering arm on the purse end wallet. which is part of the linkage Unfortunatel y. most ()f today's connecting lht> front wheels consumers learned nothing with the steering sys tem. about wise shopping in high Loss Reported At lloyal Inns •What types of unexpectf'd rinancial emergencies mijtht conceivably end realistically befall you or your famil y ta disabling accident. job layorf, big auto repair job )? Bryant is presidenl of the National Association o! Relay Manufacturers . He j o i n e d Babcock 's marketing depart- ment in 1964 and ~·as western regional sales manager prior lo his new a.'ISignmen t. He and hi~ wife live in Fountain Valley Myers began h is utility ( Here's hciw it works. The company lakes and keeps a half -in t ere s t in every restaurant. The i n i t i a I capitaliza tion is a I wa y s $100.000. The manager ftu ys a 20 percent int erest, but the re- maining 30 percent is w ld to six <>thcr 1nanagers in the cha in. Affected models are J9n school. Even if they had, much Royal lnM of America Ioc. Oldsmobile 88's and 98's and of what had been learned has reported 1 first quartu the Buic k Ele<'tra Z25 and would be obsolete by now. Joss of $51.306. or 3 cents a Riviera models. f\;e~' gyps, for example, grow share, compared kl 1 profit of career as an • MYn• apprentice lineman. • Wh11t sh a re or the estimated t.'OSts or tu c h emergencies woold be co vered by your other form! or fi- nl'lncia l protection ? Such R.'l alock!!, bond!!, mutual fund ahares. major medical in· aurance. life insu rance, other types ()f insurance, disability and 11urV'ivor'11 benefits under Social Securlly, U.S. savings OOnds you might ha ve stashed away, benefits from you r employer? He and his wife Ji ve in Hu n- tington Beach. * * * The cornpany sa id there is right from the wreckage ()f the $333,171, or IS cents a share, the possi bility of a loose fit in old one!! smashed by consumer for the like quarter a year the assembl.v of the steering protection agencies. ago. Ct:nllnela Hank has elected Theodore 8 . Ka lil as regional vice president and manager of the Newport Beach regiona l office. relay rod which could ca use "Exactly everything" that a Total income for the quarter the relay rod stud lo break. '~1ise consumer should kno'o\.' is this \'ear was SJ38,l99 com- alloivinJ! the steering linkage what the America n Associa· pared to $815,955 last year. * * * James G. Nelson, Laguna Beach has been appointed cor· pc>rate director of design for Glass Conlalners Corporallon of Fullerton. "\Ile ctt!I it lhe fraction of the aclion plan." said the younger Battistone. ' ' I t creates maximum molh'ation throughout the co m pa n y • The co1npany has to stand be- hind every act ion of every manager. negotiate the leases, do the rnajor buying. set pvl· icy ttnd so forth . But the in- dividual manag er's op- porlunitics are not lim ited lo making his own restaurant succeed bccn use, alter he has been with us f<>r a while, he v.•ill h:ive 5 percent in!eres ls in srver11 I <>I her restaurants." l.o separate and the driver lion of University Won1en had ------------ would be unable 10 steer. in minj:l when it started put· • Whal emergell<'y financial help could you realistically ex· peel r r o m parents , other relatives or your employer? Before joining rhe firm six years ago, Nelson was senior desigtler at Genera l Molors Kalil began hls banki ng career 19 years ago as a 1 teller. He joins Centinela Bank after being vice president of loans at First Western Bank in Los Angeles. Last DCB Marks End CM sp<ikesmen said thi s ling together its ''Guide tor separation is "most apt to OC· the Responsible Consumer.'· cur during \ow speed cor-It's out now -a slin1 12·pagt> neri ng or In parking type Jle\vsletter-style pamphlet that maneu vers where sl~ring rea lly seems to !ell all. in· system loads are the highest." eluding where to go for help The 14. 000 Oldsmobiles \vere -.·.· hiieiin~yiiouiiii· v~eiibeeiiiin-:ig~y pii(l<diiiiii. iiiiiiiiiiioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ produced in March and April II • Could another oon-working member of your family move fairly readily in to a paying job -if need be? • If the family breadwinner Of Era in Aviation shou ld lose his or her job I.ONG BEACH I AP I -For and will continue to be used tomorrow -due to a layoff, the DC8 jetliner. No. 556 "''as widely both in the United WHEN A manager is pro-- merger or other de velopment the end of the line. States and abroad. Manufac-molcd lo ;i company ex- -hciw long woold it probably The SS6t h DCB jet. built at ecutive. he sells his 20 percent be btfort he or she could find the ~fcOonnell·Douglas plant lure of spare parts for the stake in his original restaurant a comparable job in his or her here, has been sold to Scan· planes will continue for years. to the new manager. lle re- field of t.ralniog? dinavi11n Airlines Sy.~te1ns. It But the DCB. although finan-tains his 5 percent stakes in at Lansing. Mich .. and the B.000 affected Buicks al so wr rf' p,.o- duced in I hose monl hs at th e Flfnl. Mich., plant The cars 1 will be inspeC'ted and !he parts/ replaced without cost lo !he owners if ne«ssary. Gi\f said. Earnings Up At Swedlow • . llow big • finRncial is the Ja~t DC8 to be built. cially successruJ for the air-other unit s or the Sambo chain . h d __ , 1· and probably buys son1e more. Swedlow Inc. or Garden nestee;g 1n cas o you neeu to Since the fir st DC8 was built 1nes. was a some!ime'.'I bum- feel financially secure? nearly 15 years ago, sales of py rid~ for its manufacturer, "Some or our 1nanagers Grove reported i ncrea s ed • Are you prepl'!rlng for lhe aircraft have totaled more the Douglas Aircra ft co. Inc., have fractions or the action in sales and improved earnings big·ticket expenses and than $4.2 billion. There are of Santa Monica . as many as 16 restaurants." for the fourth quarter and purchases in the months ahead now 48 DCB users _ airlines. In the early 1960s, Douglas said Battistone. The fact that fiscal year ended ~1arch 31. -e.g., a down payment on a charier companies and private had huge losses because or six other managers in the Net earnings for the-fourth house this fall, a new baby companies _ in 2B countries. cost overruns on development chai n <l\\'n pieces of his quarter rose to $285,000, or 28!' this year. " Jong planned trip h ()f the aircraft. restaurant as well as the ce nts per shar<'. compared E T c four·engine DCB in-It 1 h parent compaov. produces a with a loss of $39 1,000. or 39 to urope, a major oullay to lroduced jet tra vel on a major may a so ave co n-go into business for yourself? seals'. Previous aircraft were tributed. along with 1he twin· p<l\\'Crfu l incentive to each cents per share. in the C()r- Something truly bii.t? the 1x:6 and DC7. the last of jet DC9. to a cash crisis for manager lo do \\•ell. resp<inding pcriOO last year. Do not ansv.1er these ques-h . Douglas ~'hich resulted in its "It also makes us a hi ghly Sales increased to $5,534.000 t e ma Jo r piston·propeller 'th M Do 11 . !rom $3,773,000, a gain of 47 tions lightly! For the amount airliners built. nierger w1 c nne Com· co-opcr:t!i ve la1n1ty," he said. you really need as a n pany of St. Louis. At the same time. because ~per~c~e~n~I.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ emergency re!ltrve will dt· Heplacing the DCB are the 1'he company won't say the parent firm has all the rr pend on your well considcrt'd "'ide-hodied jets the whe1her the overall OC8 pro--real corporate responsibilit y, appraisal of each -and each McDon nell -Douglas OCIO. the gram was profitable. the headaches over division of is designed to brin~ out ''ita l Bf)f'ing 147 and the Lockheed in the past year. the DCB a rights and responsibilities that I See by Today's Want Ads e A STAR PERFORM- Ai'ICE: That'a thia Dawn Ga.laxy 2-4" 10 aPffd bike. It'a in ex~llmt condltim. e A U VBL Y ID~. rtde around on thia '70 Ka..,&· aaki 90. It has \'e:ry '°"""' miln; a.nd is: in great con· dition. e RICHN~ i11 dnving this 'M &!clan de ViUe cadil- lac. BH:idt• brine com- fortablt, it ha• leather, all ~>er a.nd MW ti~•. LIO! I. lh h p<iints about your bas,ic p<isi-mon as come off the Long ha ve caused troub les for some li"n and personalit y. The DC8 has been 11 Beach ttssem blv lint'. first franchi se ope rations a re 1r you are, say, a young ('(Ill -moneym:iker for lhe airlines started in Fe.bruary 1957. tt \'Oided. · · \\'ilh no children, a modest. ----------------------'-----'---------- 01/f y Coast {/f.J Soutlz.erii Qffers 1mr. a healthy altitude "d life and il.!i challenges. ltle as $500 in a regular ings accounl mijilht not be ;u 1 unreali.!ilir.ally low MAX- 1~1UM . This would be particularly !I(! if you have other safe financial resources (such 11s 11rfluent parenls ) UJXln whom to <.'811 when end as es.~ntial . Even ir you are not thls cttrelree, $1.000 to $1,500 might wtll be your top limit to keep In cash in a linanctal in- sliluti<ln 111 this lin1e. But if vou are older, have 1najor n'!sponsibi li1 ies. hit\'e recurrent fears about your \'11tnerahililv in the t>Vtnl of unant ici ptt ttd adverse new~. your maximum migh1 be sh: months' income and even more in esseU in lhe most Ji. quid of all forms. The key polnl that must not ~,underestimated al any time is that your emergell<'y cash reserve whatever l t .!I Amount or wherever you dPposit ii -Is precisely wh11t its name implies. It is a prota:.iion against un- foreseettble financ~l emer~en· cies. It should be oo more and ii should be no less thin that. lJN ITED STATES NAT IONAL BANK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH PRE-SUMMER Fully Gu•rant•ed Fully R•Conditiontd USED ORGANS w,·,. ..,., .. ,llclr., "' ,,.,.,. .,.. ... ., '"" .. ~ tli..vl 19 _.,. ""'" , , • ytU'U 1,prtcltl• 1!11 11tdr·rH11etltn "lttt. '"' ,.m,m .. , , , , ""1"t1 flllly ....... 1 ... 1 / HAMMOND SPINET ORGAN HAMMOND DELUXE MllltfHty, "'' Jl,:m.M. ~tW SPINET ORGAN $995 on, ... $1495 Sl,liS.01 ..... ,, HAMMOND HAMMOND CONSOLE SPINET ORGAN W/111 lwlt. rflyl!IM, ••t AND Sl'fAKEI Cl 11.'7t.• ....... W•l••t. Ml4 s1495 -fH $1595 SJ,700,tl ..... 1y LOWREY SPINET 51249 WURLITZER LESLIE SPEAKERS DELUXE SPINET WI U"f I Cffl![Oltlt Mltdltl! Otlct ti """· ..,., " -•N '"" l.n ll• ...,...,,_ ILUJ.11 Mw c-i. ..,. a .. , "'' ti -.""'. $1695 '"' •ll JIMll .. " ·~-. l"tk ... h·-.. , $199 KIMIALL CONSOLE 51195 WUILITZEl WUILlllll CONSOLE OIGAN ....... h.tJI ... _ THU.TRI SPINET CONN $PINET • 63Guaranteed Certificates ·Saturday Service ·The Insiders Club Art llnklf"llo>r The Insiders Club: A new way to beat inflation. It s n1en1bership card permits you to buy nea rly every. thing you need from the finest closed-door show- rooms at substant ial sav- ings -appliances, furni- t ure, stereo equipment, sporting goods, draperfes and much, much more. Effective Annual Earnings 5.00%-5.13% Passbook. No Minimum. 5.75%-5.92% One Year Cerllficate $1 ,000 Minimum. 6 .00%-6.18% Two 10.Five Year Cert ificates $5,000 Minimum. Up lo 90 days loss <lf interest ort amounls wilfldrawn before maturity <ln a!! cerlificale accounts. also provides big dis - counts on tickets to sport- ing a nd entertainment even ls .•• plus a whole list of free services: safe deposit boxes, money or· ders, travelers checks, and notary services. MAIN OfTIC(: 9th & H•I~ Los Anlelu • 623-13Sl Other otrcn WILSHIR[ tit i:RAMMDtCT P'LACb 3933 Wil~irt lllvd~ LA • 388-12&5 LA. CIVIC CIEN'TOlt: 2n<I & Broadwa)' • 626-1102 HUNTINGTON aCACH: 91 Hunc.,,.ion Center• 1714) 897·1047 SANTA MONICA: 7111 Wilshire lllVd.•393.074' SAN~O~ 10th & Pac.Ilic • 831·2341 WEST COVINA: [astl11nd Shoppifll' Qr,• 331-z?Ot l'ANORAMA cm: 8fjl6 V11ri NU)'S 111\!d. • '92·11n TAltlANA: 18751 Venlura lltwJ. • 34541614 lONG •EACH: 3rd £. lOCU1t • 437-7481 [AST LOS ANGO.Q: 11th ' Sotb. ~10 DIAMONO UR: 3211 Diamond .., llhrd • 1714) 595-7525 . Do'J Houn-9 AM lD 4 P11 Opens......,._ 9AMto1 .... (£Jlol!p1 c~ c.enttl') . • I • .. HOW O•IN s2595 ~~·-51495 ........ 5399 You can even buy cars at the "fleet" price and mobile homes and motor- cycles at substantial sav- ings. The Insiders Club Membership require- ment for savers -$2,500 minimum balance. Coast borrowers now receive as- sociate memberships en- lilling them to all outside referral services. Ask abouf joining at any Coast office. · SATURDAYS 9 to 1 P.M. MON.•THUIS. It.I ft.M. Niii.US lt.• P.M. (714) .... 1211. lacetH 111 .... c... ,._, c... .. .. ...... Yin ...... ....... All PIANOt •UAIAHTllO 11 YIS. ,.,.. '"""' 11 ,. ......... SOUTH COAST PLAZA COSTA MESA 3400 IRISTOL ST.-PH. 540-2830 • ~ .... -----• • -·-----*-·-~- I ( f•ld,_, M.., 16 1972 SC O~ILY PILOT JI l Friday's Oosing Prices-Complete Nelv Y orl\. Stock Exchange List Stocks Sluggish Before Holiday NEW YORK (AP) -The slock market on the eve of the Jon g ~1emor1al Day weekend, \Vas VU"· tually unchanged for the session today Trading \Vas moderate Bradbury K Thurlow attributed the m~rket s dullness to the three day weekend s approach I think a lot of investors started the holiday early he commented Nab ,to 2 10 N1 c0 Ch tl Nt•co Sc '° N1ltiu1C 4 NI .. I M• NII /Av 52d N8 Ct n '' N Cn 111 I 1 N1 Ct!M 1(1 N Chi"' l N C IVL 10 Nt 0 ll I 'IO NO• of ' NI Fu~ ' ll• ~.. ,0 NI Gyp I 05 N '"!om Pd N• ll'Cl\J1 Na 11>18 NP n I GB N1 Stv6I NI St"" IS Nt Sit 6~ NtlS ff! 1 '> Ntt Tt~ 11G N UnE 45d N1tom1• lS Nephm1 IO Ne~ Pw I JO N..,..t><! 11'1 NE'IQE 1 6? NE1l f 236 Newl'l•ll lO Nwmn ! Of Nwmnor t NVl1on O d NYSEG 1 ti t.i VJ[p I IO NVSEo! J N 1gMn O N•Mlll ltO N 1M11r J e1 NJ11 Sl'I 9'<! N ndust NL T Cn JOO Norfo kWs i Nor nC JO!! l+orrlsl 1 1'.14 N• Co. &O NA Ml 10d NArr Ph I NCA Ill!, I.Ml ~All of 4->. t+llllkof JS N'*91 UI 'It NoC..,Gs 60 11.b cen 111 I Not Ga ~ tll c. ..... 1 tO tJln l'S lD Mo~G• 760 Ne Col ! to Not G1>I If! NoS Pw 10 NUPp J&O No~Pol 4 GI Norlhg1" 'lor ~rnrC Nv A, l! t.'w ll~n 1 •0 "'"'' ~ ?~ "'"'' I"" w rlw n ~ ! ~·~ j7(l "1.W1!1n1>1C J NwMul 15<1 No«sl ~r 7 70 "°°""'\I w "'°''"'0 , ~ t.'c Sm2k ~~~l! 1,:r 01~ Ind 6 OccdPI 121) O«ldPI of ' ' ,., . " I" . ·~ O!'I E •I ! '° Ol>E ~I •u Okl11GE 1 21 Ole GEPf Ill Ql<.~NG 114 01 nCO'O II 8rl ' " •• • Rck'r I 11) 01~ EiC<> J OC.lb<> ti M nweC6~ °"efTrn 60 °"'enc~ 1• Owfn IO OIOe-i I al 4 O..m '"' • OJI dlnd 6(1 1>c E ol i Pl'Glnd 1 44 em t Ind Pemol llC P 111; GI l\.;I PrOOR11 10 PvSco / 1 PSE&C. 12 PS£G1>I f 61 PSEGo o10 P'SEC.ot 1 • PvS l<ld 6 Put>S pf ) P'S naot 1 OI PSNi-11 l6f Pub ckr I' Put bo 1• PUii RC 4) :~i~~ .. ~ ~ Pu t•CP 14 Pu ol• r If " 1$~~ ' • .. ' ll hltll Ntl IMi.J Mlell Ltw C .... C'tlt Dow Jo11es Stitt N.t O••• I Nltfri Lt• CltM Cllt . ' ' " " • ' ,. • " • " • • ' • ' .. "' '"' ' ' • • ' • •• .. •I ' " ,, .. ' vc •" Vt•ll n Vtndn v F en v ~ ... .,., v n re VIC ~r>e V• F •< V~f r V•f P! V•E I' VtEI p VIE nl " .. ~ " ' . '" ~ .. ·~ "' "' "' ' .. " " "' " 110 1'I " . 1\0 t J ~•$0 ·~ I t~ M ~ I Ni 1~1 I 00 Ill ,., I ' ~ " . ~­.. ·~ '" /lfarket Trend " • .. " " .. " ' " -ICY!- '" . ' "'-r . 11..., .. JI JJ ' . " •J 41\ •• Jl • "'' ,, l• " " ' " ". " • • •ll,,, "' J ·-1, )11,,.~I I "' j)~\ •• J,J\jo .... ~ -' j1 -• I.._., Complete Qosing Prices-A1nerican Stoel\. Exchange List S•'91 thd1 I '" Hftll Low (1011 C~g St t'I Ht! t11d1 l H gh Low Clo1t Cllg -- I• t$ Ntl (lid• I Hltll LIW Ci.ti Cl!t ' I >' . " ' ' . ' ' . ~l 101 I • ' I~ •• " ' . ' . M l• II Ntl llld1 I Mltll Ltw Cle1t Cllf. It f't ~ti (Ml I H I~ Ltw Cl9M Cite, Fii1ance e Sult WltlMlr• LOS ANGE~ES -Gam C<lrp an alraan togi m1nufacturtr. a,1 Nor ' Amer1c1r: ~ell ha withdrawn 1 &Jptrlor Cour suit charging Garrett !llled P<Oduc• 300 J<t ut;lna. Garrell 1 sublddlln Signal C<mipant.. ,tl.- An&•lu Nld tho compa canctll<d JI conlrt.ct-1« Gil' roll ATF s \ur1lolan =Iii J:i..«1ll Amtrican'• a. - • .. Jf DAILY M~l !Jldi;I. 1!'1 l6. 1172 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE U:GAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL N011CE LEGAL NOTIC! Jildftel ,, Ml•llY OIVIN .... , ., P'l:ICIN(T J'l:J D-1 1>tlCI MCT1 ..,.,,, Cltrll. #,. .. 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L. •· HOii, It.,, JIHltf, H, IC. ll111!'1f'fl. 0"'" Jueltt, 11. $, C1r1,..1n, °""· 1_,or, W L Sl'91• llt. (lt•k, M I( M~r1,, a 11. (II••. W. tc1'1Vm1U>tr, 1111.. !11tP1da•. l J , 011 .... Ot"' lfllttelor, l . M. l ur,..,, .... Clorto. II, C. Mcl1111'•f, 11:... Clff'k, II A, Gllblf!. 0-. C!t•li , It. M. MC(11t, °""· .) ...... , S, Kt lt. ll# (lt •to, N ~ 'o•!t•, "-111· Clttk, I! L "••lit•. fl:tp J.,,,ff, a A MoMlt!I , ~I '•rt'I' J.,,,ff, L. I!. Mt rlt.t, DIM Cltrlr. I. a. Wl!llt"'L ltto. (llt'k, H, I , ll'Olft .. rtr, lff. Cltrli, IC. I!. ""· O.m. (ltrlr, W I' Tl(•t., 0tM l'lllCIH(T :H·Mi·I ••ICONCT II.... Cit ••· '. S. l •-n, Dom '''"· O. , . ,,,.-•, '"· "lllCIHCT: •l*I l'lllCINCT: U@·I l'ltlCINCT! Jl·lU·I Clrtrt. 1 M Tit111t. ,,..,.,, "0111 .. , l'l•c•. 11t,,..,. •1111...ce. Xll11 1 • · Cl,~ ..... Cit•-· E J, 1o.;l/twt, It•. Cltrlt., v. M. Grr~: Olm. "olllno "l•c•. HtnMll khctctl. llt ...... l'olllnt •lttt . <••lflll ll.t1lOtM.1, 2'r1 'olllllf l'!t ct. L11c1t.ri1•Gt llHNMl!Cf, 1'6 n lCJlllCT 11·Ml·I C~tlKt' lt"' "oltlno ll'ltct. l'lro•ldf< It,., .,._,... l'llClllC'T: tl·Ml·I "lll'CINCT1 41·111-1 LI (,."'· '•lrwt¥ "1· E '°'" St. ••llfle •!Ke. Melo!• It'°' I 7 kflotl, t1'G llllf>I(~> $.I ........... Ht •t rl'I' l•llt MOOllllll ,kwy •oin ... l'IKt, lltood<lt llllid,ntt , "'3I f'olflnt l'lttt, Th.... Alt!'! ll'f !11Ult(10•, M. C. (11<111. .... l"IOl<IOl'o W, L. Ettll•l'I. 1111. l'IK>fCIO•. 0. M. l11tk~t•dl, It"' l'lfl<ii .\w J"""· I/, A ~or1yf!>e. lttt l"1HC'IOr, ... "" 5dlt•tr. 0.... ,,1..,1.,..,1 C!u~w. JO I. l i ltndt Or. )Vdff, M. '· "1trlt , a... JLlll .. , M. A. HtrllOfl, D1m. Judff, M. T, CoMt. Ot"'· I-•· M f fOcld, lltP Cltrt. '· •. l11111dt•1, o-. JLlllrt. • I , A'l'ttL ..... lf'\t1tcl0t, • G. llr.ot1t. Dtm. llltPOelOI'· J (. Wt•d, lltr. Ct.,lt., H. I . Soal, ltte>. Cl1rlt.. l , R. Cts!no, 0.,.,, Cl•••, C E. 1(1•. ltP J ...... I A ltlltrl ll•• CMrl , f M (-·· Ito. Cieri , J N Ot lty, lllO J..... • T I D J C E " a Cltrtl. H Mt ¥t t , ltff. Cltrk, 0. I. SN H , ltff, Clttlt., M l. S"wdt r, .... < ........ ,_ ..... · l'lllCIHCT tt4't.1 • (!erk, G '· Olt "llll', o..... 1• · J 1~ a•. "" ""''· · · tltrM!I. ti "lll(INCT1 41·141•1 ,lll'Cl llCT1 12 ... ·I "llCINCT: ll·IN·I (lttlt.'. I(: M. ,,;:,:;,, lt1. ,6111"9 "1Mt. lttnl!I""' 11.l'fdotfl(I, '4tl "lt:IClllCT1 11-W•I Clerk, II;. W. Goo6tlt. 11•· C!i rlt., (, W, l!l'ldllll\t~. Offl'I. l'ofllllf •lttt, MUI llt1l!Mntl, 117 ....... •01111111 "11c1, 111 So. 11111111 (llurcJI, l'op1"'il Plt tt. Mllf'lt Yl1!1 k~. '90 HICllltCT ,, .. ,., Ctllllltl• O•lllt '°'II"' •lt ct . Cll/llf>ollM t, 21112 ~~~,l~Cf~· ;,1::•1•· Ne "'""" ;:~c.~c,~· .!.~~· 11111· ••rctlon• UI Htll'llllOll St. MOlltt Vl1t1 .... , ~Mlflt ,lttt . Maltlt llM I 1 $c;Not, tno IM.-1'0•· M L ICt""''°"' Ho tim Mo\lllOll 111_.,, 'olll"'t l ll(t, c ... 1111~ klloel, t5tJl l'Ollln1 f'lt (I. llttid ltt1I~, Ul'2'2 lt1Utede<, K, L Miil. 1110. I~, A, G. Cllrltl..,fO'I, It••· 1 ... ,,..ctor. 0 . I , MtcOont ld, 11.rl. ''lldl AW J"""' v. C. Vt>e"•· lt tt 1111-tor, N, l . Mvtr1. lt11. Corelll ltrt Or. Lt Mormou Allt JudM, 0 , '· lttff, D...... JIHIM. J , I , I Uf'MY. 1111. Juott, J, A, J1clM11. Ot,.., ,_..,, G M 1...,..1, °""' (lttk, M, £. lltnttl. 0..... J.,,,ff, I(, N. M'ftrt. a11. tnlMClor, M, L. Mt ... '1Ck~, Ht "'"°" lnlHclor, O. M. Mc.A lllt!Or, lt:fl, Cllf'll, I , M. O'DOl'lnlll. Na 1'1/1y C!tnl, D. IC, ltu''' .... Clerk. M. J. MtCt 'flly, Dom, Jf."9M. c., °"""''· °"" Clt ri". L. M K•"'· 0•"'· Cllt'k. 0 ••. lltk:I. DIM. Jud••· G T, ,,,,,.,Ml. ,,,, JuelM. E. M, ""'· c.... Clt!'k ••• J, l'lrl, Dem. c,"',,',·,,•,·," ••• .. ·, .. , Wt lkt r, °""· Cl•••· l. M. c;,, ....... °'"'· C,_ D A """*"'" ltt• l'lllClllCT tt441-1 Cltrl, 0 . M lltlt, 0.-. Plll!CIHCT: •·142·1. : 1 ' •1t1CIHCT: 11·111·1 4 ;;.;: ,: L. Alftvtu.f. lttl. l'olllnt ,ll (t , Gllltr Offlct kl'IOll. 21 1'1 "llClll(T: M·U.-1 Cltrk, J. I . NOltll•. •••· Clt rk, I.. M, Stlllhmtn, 11'1'• "0Uln1 "ll Cf, Vt! F11r11111 Wirt, l ut. l'olll1111 •l1c1, Htl,,... lt1t ldtJ'let, 2Sl1 "olllno Pl•t•· L1t11• 1t:t1ldtrio, lit Tlot '"'"'"'-Lt M "olllno l'IK t . Cl11Moou.. l, 1411' (IVI!. I L. Kor~ll, o..... Clt rk, I!. S. Cerdt r, lt;t,, (»!., 141 AYI. MlrtMtr. l'tlrwt'f Or. Mtllt'I Cir. l'llCINCT Jl• ... 1 lllt•l'clor, J (, ICt nnedY· OIM. Mllolll-•1t.wy. f'llCIHCT; 41·•1·1 "lllCINCTi ._•Ht.I 1 11«1 M J Milt! ltt t l"tPl(lor 11 I' Mtlntt o.tm •olll"91 Pl1<t. KIUICk lt .. ltt"Ct . 1414 J''"· •• ' .. ,,,1,,,,, •••· llllNt!o•. A '· ''"''"' lte. l'olll"I "l1c1, Moblll 1t11tdtll(.f, 2'10! l'oll!llf "lt c1, Ml1111I Flr11t1, ,101(1 J~·~ ~ M s'ttie lllt ' JIHIH .. M Ytnllt•*! llr~ ln1Pf'Cter. 5, L l -. llrt. T A "' C1rr1111 O•. .t.tlcl• 'kw• ""'''· · · ' • ' ' · 1 · · Juo11. I!. 5, 11•"' .. •· D1M, -·" Yt CltrV, L F•tltt1, 0..... JlHI ... It:. ,, It'"'"· 0.M I M G • • (lt •k, J. Tl/ttlt, lltl. (llrk. J. A. $11 Olfy, Otm. '''''· '· M. '""· 0•• ll\llltetor J L 1Cl11lck o.... ' 0 • ' I ' • lll·U!l (!I•. II. , Hobttl, .... nt1tclor, . UlfttU, ••• Cl• k " • w ... o-• • ' ' Ci.on:, J, l . l'tlt . °""'· ltrk, . , tld . No ffl'f JUGO•,'· •• Yo• ""·Vt, ltt. J""lf, I!. II. Morrow. !loll. (ltf'l, I. l . Wtrl, 11111. >•'•c'ONC·,•· ,,-·1 •"'"· (ltrk. J. I . Jt tll!lnt, llt•, Jucllt. J. M. lflltlf, ltt •lllCIHCT J1•U1·1 Cl11k, '-'· l Mtl!, lfll. "'' ,lllCINCT ! •ttJ.1 : """'' O•ICl•CT·. •>•OU·' ' •-H " "-•• '" C CT Cltrk, M, ,, •,-. '''' (!t rk, I . G. C:ot1rlem11'Cfle, lttl. Of > 'II Pl I Cl • '' •• .. , ·..,-,., · ,.., ..._. • · "0111111 l'lt (I, altk .. ltw lttlidf<lltt , nil •Ill Ill 1 Jl.J"•I '-'"' l'olllnt Pl1<t, Ptnlllll llt1'411fKt, I I "I ICt , DYi II 11....,M., '7T Polllno 1>11cr, flltrl'd lltlldl"Ct, l'-'.I Clttk, M. V 01 ..... •11. Moklftt ftl Otlvt ,,11 1.,, "•~• Clllbl'l-•ti 1, 1'"2 Ct llt Clt rk, G L. Clltvt •t. °'"' Clt •k, M. °'· T,,omoto11 lltll. ,., M 11 Ct.,lt t $1 Hl<IMCT lll ttf I .,.. "ltlClNCT i '1·)0f·1 l'lllClNCT : .... 11 .. I "· i rou 1• ' S1nt1 C1t rt (Ir. . . '"••K'""· M, fl, ltlcJ!. ..... A•ll O<O 'allln• ,,_,, v'" .,,,,,_.. ···-,Glllng •t•<•· \. .. Uf'll Hill• MOO!!• 1 .. 1pKlot'. o. A OHli.•'· ll•P· lntllfCtor. "· •. lu""""'· ""'· l111oecto•. w. Hltltd. ""'· ·•olllr'!ll f'llCI, I' V Mollllt Ill ClllllllOUM, Judff, , C. &11k11i.¥. 1.,, lll,ltelft , A. Ac•t•l, .,, -. ,..,.. ,.. v• J o G F W1!1tl 11111 Jultt It M ltrMll ltr• • M " • ""T ... " .... llolll ""'WOOd ltd •1rlr, lOt02 Cotti Hwy. IJ II, ' ' ' ' Cl 'M, , 'c-• o' ' Juel11, H, '-• o,., tp. " (fe•lr, G .•. MllfOlft. ""· Jlil••· It, l . Ml(l'ld~•"· ""'· ,.,,. Cit k • Cec•er "'" •••• . ... ""'' '''" Cl k M c p t I "'' lfll,Jl!IClor. H w. •hlrll, Otm. Cl•r•· (, w Wltkt •. o..... c1···· M. Nori. o.... lf'llOIClll•. P. A. s... .... In•-···· I!. c . llhlntlotrt. •••. cs.!'1r: L.' M, ..... • ... u. •••. Cltrll. '· 11: H•r11ho•11. °'""· Cl:k: M'. J: .::,:·o ....... Judfl, G A, Shirk, D1111, "lt:ICIHCT H·U•l C t•k, 11. G. Lo111. Ot"'. Julft, J A. VI!!, 0.M. Ju~fl, I!. ll. Btnki, 111 ,.l.CI NCTt 4'·10·1 "lllCINCT: H.tJJ-1 "111.CINCTi Sl·l"·I Clorlr, I. X (lttt. 111•. l'a!llnl "l•c•. Lehmkuhl lttt!Clt"CI , 10111 ,llCINCT : M-l71•1 Cltrk. J, E. lltYHd Dt Volo, O•m. Cltrl!, '· S. Sltt11111, 11111. l'o!ll"I Piece, Co• ltttldt n<1. U! AYI. l'ol!lnt Pli tt. Llndbtrtih 5cM>ol. 22D I!:. 'olllnl l'!tct. Flri Sti!lo" t toO ltktr (ltrtl.. I . JC . (IHI• 11:111, Aoui !I< Ltl'> ,,,,,., '''''' ,,, ..... ,, I -• > Clerk, (. NL Hoerrlt, llltP (ltr~, A. (, lt lth~f'dlllf', 11111. 1)rd St "' "'""' ' '""" .,. !MlltALO S•V ,lllCINCT: 4'->0l-1 Vt-re. ' Allt. ···~INCT JI.,... ln~tor .•. flt ... phl!!, °""· Sl'f!llt lnlC>f(!lll'. v. M Co•. Olm. IMPtClor. A. I!. IC'l'll. "''· ln tPKIO•. I. l Ch l •t u1111. It:••· Petllnt Plfft, Ht•l>I• Mui !11¥1 kl\eol, Juoiot. I . 5. MenlOfl, ..... lnoNCIOt. L. It, Mtltlh, ltt•. l'll:ICtNCT: IJ..121·1 P11Hln1 Pl1c1. Crow11 Vell1y Scl!llO!, Juciff, 9 , I . Otib•OW, 11••· Judtt. M. I . Kt1fpt1, Dem. Juelit. A. I . Cll,lttl.'lrf, Otr11. ll!Ml lll'llt VMt Cllrlr, M. S. LllJ, Otm. Jlldtf, M. A. llOYI•· 11,,, "o!ll111 "ltct , I t Morra klloot, 1611 W. 2tm Crow11 Vllll'f ,Jrw'I', Clltli, L. M M09•l,.1, ltP. Clerk. E. L. Wtlktr, 1111. Clerk, J A, Hobbi, lllio. lllU>OCfW, W, A, MC(\lbttln. Ill . Cltrl, I . J. L•"''"'' a 1,, Cllrk, "'· I . l("""H", O.m. ..C.1>111 H,,,.,, lftlHClor, 5. A. K1mp1r, 1111. (Itri, S. •tell, fl111 . Cltrk, I!. L. Sht w. Olm, Cltrk, G, A, lltnnell, II••· M H , O. "· 'e<ll•r, llll. •llCIMCT Jt.)tt.1 (ltrlr. W S. '°''''' °"1". ln111«tOI', $. S Ou 11111, 111. Judtt, J, E. L1Vlot11, 1111, ,lllCllllCT: 11·,11·1 l'lll(INCT1 U_.,.·1 "ltlCINCT r Sl·lft.l (lerir, O. t . l uYl ll , ltll. "°''!"' l'l1et, l(lnt llttldtnc., 05'1 •lllCJMCT: ,..,,,,1 Judff, S, C. Perolrt , °'"'· (ltrk, I . I. Mc(;ul nMn, 0trl'I, Pollfnt l'lt ct . 1•¥ Cllll V!ll1~ Potllnt Pll (I, MU1m 11.tlldtnct, )lit "•ll!ftl f'lt tf, $l"l t UI lttll'911t1, 3(12! '""'~"· P. Tllemtl, 11.,. YellOWtlO"' OrlYI 'olllno "ll(t, ,,,1, ltlt!ltl Cl!u•dl, Clrrk. C. J. Croul, •to. Cltrk, J. M, Ott1wty, lff. CIUMllllM· 2112 MOll!I Vl•tt. C1111tl,..ntt l A"'t• e 51 >II ..-ll'l41t•I lntH(for. S. G. Ht l-. It••· l">I u-.. •t-f'••O•>• Clt•k, H. Otlt 1. Dem. ...ICIN(T: 4'-UJ.l S C , " ' tn1P1Ctor. A. 5. Coffmtn, 111. tbb · S O -· I S ..... ""' ,...,,.,, ~· l'lllCINCT: U·1 11·1 'otu.,, 'lt ct . ll•Pt\1! (h\lrcJI, l21U lntlll<tfl<', · ,.,.,.,, It. J·-,, I , Frek••• Dt..,, ln1PK.10•. 0. J. •••-· ffl'I, ·-..... Ult9 ll11!dtMt. 111} J\ltllf, . . Ol•"'(lnll. · 1• .. -•o•. M I( MUltt , OOm. J O>• C E Mo~>• ... -• J"" I • S>k•••• O.• Cltrk H A IC! It ~ •oiMno "llCt, f""rl ld ••¥ l"lrMI.. Craw11 Vt llt1' "kwy. U ' • · ' • Clerlt., L. A. '•ullt.ntr, OtM. vu9t, • · ' '"" .......... Aw ' ',· O ftl · tit. Juel1t, It. l . Mt rlll. fltl. !Ion, WQ2 lmtritd Or JniHCla•, M, L. Plllll!Pt, lff. Clt rk, M. O\lff, Dtm. (I k J M I 1 O Cl trk, 0 . M. l!:Oton, lltP lf'lltlNdtr, M. I Olt!t. Dt-. Clttlr, l .• ltmf)l'd, 0-. Clt•k. A. E JOlltt. ll tl I Cieri , L. G. l(rtmt•. It ta. 1' ' ' ' '111 ' 1'1" C!trk. V. I . lolt!ltcy, lllP.. J..._ L. T, 11'.ellfl", II•-"lllCllMCT HolJl.I (li rk. G O. WCOl:l•• lltP, 111Httor, I(, M, llobtr11, ltl. Judi•• I.. L. Otn!Of" Otm, O Tl"O P•ICINCT1 SI.at.I ,.l'CIHCT: J)·1'l·l ... 0 ... ' • > p JU01t, I . II. S'fltn, lltP. C!ttlt., M. L. OeltrMIY. lltP. SAN JUAN CAP S l'o!lln• Pltct. Wttlt llttldtntt, 21tl ,,,,1_ •I•<<· F-l>O"•> 1 ••• , •• ,, C • • • o ,.r,, 0!11111 ltC•, lol\llll Towl!~l \l ltl . •lllCIHCT. Jt·J:ll·I Clt rk, I . S. ''"'· llt•. Cltrk, J. N, Wt •tt lef'ld, ltto. l'lllCINCT: '9·117·1 51nt1 A"t AYt , ... U" '"" ~ '"' ,CltftC. L H. Lt"'"""" Dim. Cl\lbllo\IMr, t'6lJ Cornw•ll O"vl l o!tln1 "'"''· "•«11.,!1r ltt1ldtnef, C!t rll , C A, 1(11100. RN, ,lllCINCT1 4'-Jll·I il'ollin• ll'l•at. Stn Jut n kheol, JIM! l~ctOI'. c. c. Mt !!l"fly, lttp, ,,'°'.,,',i~'."o'. ',', , •. ,,, '''· , •• c••T ,,.,., llllHtfor. It. M Woodlltm. o • .,,, UI'" •·'···-•• "ICINCT •• , •• ' • ''' '' •I• • 1• -... , ' I • ' ' • - - ... ~--ri 11 11 TIW J , 0 --... "'" : _.. .,. • ,,, Kt, tl'IJ H ''"'"' El t ll'l l'IO ''w' ,, , Judtr. ~. I . ortnt..,, lle1. J·-H. N. M. '"''· '"· "· ...,.... ' ti tll(t. udff, • UllO. """' rn1•tela•. NI, If Hl11id1. •••. Polllllf "!t(t, FOO!t llt1ld111<11, 7• Viti• •r111 O•. ln11«tor. II. L t •• ••. (!«k. J. M, L~nd. °""'· uu "'"" If. Cle•i. M. 5. ltlit r. llt• Judit. M, J, Conld. 0..... E"'trtld llt~ tnttte!or, E. G Allirnt. ""· Judoe, IC. 5. Tl'lor<'l11, 11111. Cle•k. I. E. Tt vlot, o..... Cltrk. H. P. 1,...,,..,, °""'· ,..,.._,I A.fSfl'IOllJ, Dem. (llrk. S. Wfledhtm, Ot,.., Cl«k, J l lolOU•lt "· o.,,. l"lll«fl>r, ~. 11. Hei!lt, It•. Judtt. c . I . Alktftl, 11111. Clerk, M. E. 5ttP~tntOll. 11.t•· 'lllCINCT: 11.fll·I Cll•k. f . J, Poto,.11, ltt•. J ...... A. f. I t Ckt l, Diii\. l"lllCIHCT Jl.J51·1 Cletk, J "· No•ttt •I, lle11. J110••· IC, M, Atl!'lltronf , llUt, Cl1rk, L. M. 51nd1trum, flt1. Clt rk. J . H. MllMt . Oton. 'atll"O Pl1<t , Ot~ llHl~111c1, 2711 ,ltlCIJitCT : ll·ltt•l ~= i.H;~i; .. ,,," "°.'1~~~ ,:,~'i..,!~~:·;1. ,,.,,,,.., '1r11t•· ::1~~111ci11,~:11•·~1ubJl(!t!lf '· 2'11J ~::::: ~.'A~· :::,~~··.~':"· ~~~·c.,~vc,~· J.;;t~··· "''· :~~~"'~l~,.~'i~t~ .. •t1•0tll(t. llm iri~:.':*.~.~~·: o. O•~. •t•. "°_!~:,_,Pl!~:· co11r '°"" cot. ll~ Hl(lll(1' »4'6-I lt1•11<1Gr, I . I'. W1llf¥, .... M0111!et1 l'Wwy. LA•UNA l•ACM l'fllll"O Pleet , Lh>(l«l(of! l.ttldtnct, Oro •t. Judie, C. (;. Ct •H nle•. 0.m. ln1P1Clor, I!!. C Tur"''· Otm. JlJdl'· C. 4 , Wodffll. Mo''""' l"tot<lor, C. J Stvt nl. OtM. f'lt:ICINC'T: 44-11'·1 2310 Wllldmlll ln. l"•Pl<tor, C. G. C•"'°""' .I'll. (ltr111, J . C. llarmt ... °"'"'· Judtt. E. ll1tr1mtn. 0.... ht~': L:.:.ICI. (-1YI-ld!llel, 1I0'2 CCO/ttk, c" •' W",e111, 1111. Ju111, 0. I'. G\llUl1um, 11111 Polllnt il'ltCt, Tll urttor1 l~ter tcJ'IOOJ, ln111e<!or, C. L. Ll,1111\CO!I, 1111. JU011, I . P'. Mtrhl•t. 0.,.., (lerto, (. A. M011llri p, lllti>, (lfrk, M, A. Kltl!bt" CtM. ·~·I.. ........ .... frlt, ' ..... IP. Clt rt. v . I!. Nuler, .... 1!00 "•r• ,...... JlHI••· c .•. Llppl.-cott, ..... Cie•k. o. H, Ltutm111. "'"· •111c1NCT< S2-af·I (1 ... k. fr . L. e roHWl(k, Dtl'l'I. I WI 0tm "lll(INCT ft.Jl1·1 Clt ik. L M Dlltrl)l(k, °""'· lntPICllll', 1. J. l1rru1. 11:9'. Clttk, A. 11. Gr1...i. Ill•. Clt•k, D. L. Ml'l~fll, It.I•· "olllnt •Itel , linkt¥ II. ,ltlCINCT1 lt·lt >-1 J IMI, M. . • ...,. . •01llflf il'l1c1. ltntne Moli!l1 "•rk .. 111c111CT1 .U·»l Jud••· •• JohlllOll, o..... Cl1rk, s. llldHkl, ••. .. •• CINCT: 4t-J21·1 ''""' SI. ttldenee. 611 ... 111,,. "t•ct . M1•k11>1Jry lletJHnc:t. ~~:: D~ cw."":.::imr:-.'".~. ClubllOu•. IJ3'1 lrllll«l'll/•11 It, 'oulno l'ltt t. Clu~oow J, '3122 AWi. (lt rk, I. Looldon, lltp. "lt:l'CINCT: 4'-Jl7·1 •0Uln1 "ltct. Ch t•mi k 1tuldt:11t.i, l"Ut«lor, a. J , St nk..,, °""'' 221) Cot111t D•, f'iil(NKT' •tN-I 111.,.c!fl', I, 0 . l(lrdlorf. 1111, St Ylll l Cltrk, D. W. 01l1r. 11.••· f'olllnt "!tee, Ltlgl'i "••hltllCll. lM12 lllll Av1. LOI AMll llt Jllelft, 1. '· Slt11tr110t1, Ol<TI. ln!IOICl&r, "· I. C11-r1n, 111-. ,. .. 11,,1 f'i.tt. ltf\No It•~• fl'n Judtt, M, IE. l lcktltt, D.,,., lntlltCIOI', V, M111,.!ng, 1t:111. l'lllCIHCT: 44-1U·1 l"t HOll Dr. ln111Klor, "· I. 0. Mtrt, ..... Cl ... k, 11. M. Thlllll',...,, llto. JLlllgo, M. "· Gtn1l1r, Ito • .. ,... (h'IC.. Cltrlt., M. M. (htld1, lttO. Judt•• H. II. "'""""' lt:tp. POll!flf "lt t•. l rtd.,,iw l1:11ldt1Kt, J1t lnu11ctor, J, C-Ltl111'; Dtm. Judtt, M. £, lctlro, ll.e11. Ci.•k, O. C. Li 11111, No llt•l'I' Cltrk, J, M, C1vo1111~. llff. Clttk, T, L. V1n Lut. °""· C' _ H , M , O c111,111 O" Judtt. H. H. ltllh, Otm. Clt rk, It. E. l uthh1lm, II••· "lllCINCT: JJ.4ollol Cttrlt.. V. E. Mltl1r, Dtm. •-· P • .t.. I ll'•· Dtm. •••CINC' t• ""1 1'~• ' ... or• 1• tm. o • Cl o 0 l o• ••o o•ICINC' 11 0,..0 • .,._. "lPKl>Or, T. T, l1w1t11. Clftl'I, Clt rk, "· W, l!tt!trd111, ••· fl' · · tllfm "' • •,olllng ..i1<t , ''· J"<"I-H>OI C"·c• ' ' Jl.ICIM. L. M. Ott.tr, ... f'olll"O ,Itel, Lomb Multi "ur-, CA,llTlt&HO Sl&CM ' o•l<O•CT -"'-I .,.. "'" '"" "' • II ' II T Cl .. '- , " T-~·-O>m JUdft, '" I!. l •wltJI, Ot"'• Clerk, A. M, Crt11m1n, IP. : ...,_.. 1964 OIOnlt Avt OI "' ,ltct, •I tr OWPI U M., ... • ,....., ... ,, . School. JOU! Yor\IOWft ....... ,lllCIN(Tt 11·111·1 c11ni, IL I.. l'l•I'" -··· ,.ICIHCT: 4"'J1'·1 Polllnt l'ttc•. Mott!!• Hem• "•o-•nl I I T T sC11oo1 nr w. Wlllllf' $1. Clt'I( M. L ~t. .... ' lnlJll(tar, T. L llnfltcM11, 0-~ "olllng "F1c1. •tllMdtl Scheal, 2MU Clltk. f . M. C1\11n11~. AMtr. Ind. "oltfftl •11et. S11¥dtr lltsldenet, 14002 Club~lt. SMll 51•.' J,u•n (rllk Ill. ;:.-::,o;., JOhnson , o.:: lltlt. ln,P1Cl11r. 5. 'T . Otto, 11:111. f'llClllCT »tff·I • I Ol'l'I Judff, !. !. 1 1~•· lltP. Vlt 5tcrt"'•"lll ,lt:ICIHCT: 41-111·1 l1 Mtrmotl AYr, !"u>Klor, M. Htll I • 11· Cl!rk, s. J. 8!1dtflf'lorltr, lln" JUOot, A. L. Brow", 11111. "411111'11 ,._ Ct••1••• .... ,,... ce. (ltrk. M. M1n11ln'l1n. •••. !111Hct11r. A. "' 'o"•'· "'"' "olllnt l'l•ce, WOOllttrd rHldtMt, 1te llllHCtor. M. II . '".,.,"· .... Judi•· M, o. IC1nn11N. ""· Cltrlr. I!. McT•-· lltP. C1•'·· 0 . L Amps, Ot m. tJOJ _,..,,,_ A"I~, I O Cltrk, (, J, Y1t11. llt•, Jud11, A, M. St11h•. Otm. L.Oroll St, J11d11. G. II, MllcJ11U, lltP. Clerk. N, F, Jtc.kson, °'"'· "lt:•CINCT: tt.-41·1 (lt•k, M. (, S~rtw1buf'f, 0..,.,, ·--, H. D_. ~ '• """· Pll:IC~HCT *l.U"l (l1rll , '· H St11N, OtM tnsote!or, C. M. Woo!f11'11, 1111. Clt rk, A. l . '•tl'ICll, 11111. Clerk, 0 . L. Gllltllt. DtM. p~m,,. •1tct , Ptllli rlno ~........ '°" "ltlCINCT1 Jt.111·1 J ,M.JM_. '":.:_ t•, ,olt!ftt "ltct. Mllll'I' ltttldtMt, 21N2 Cl«li, A. M. f t nnv.011. lltt , J""te. W. F, llflbb, Otm. Clt•k, L, L. Andtr1on. 11111. "ltlCINCT! tt.J31.1 W. "•ult rlno Allt . """""' l'olll!lil Pleet , lt1NI TIWt•I, l ut. Off., (lltt(. ... • • ._.... Octfn\11 ..... LIM ,lt:ICINCT< *116-1 C!t•k. I . L. Ht •llew. lie.. ,lt:ICtHCT: .. .t21·1 Polllnl Plt ct, Fot1lt r khool, 1»01 lnU>lclor, I. M. H•ltk. lltP. ~ W, ltlh SI. (:::c J. M, Aeltllel'e. Dim. tn1oec:1.,.., C. ~. ilidt mt. II••· '0111"1 Plttt . Strrt Jdloo!. 2'U' VIC· Clerk, B. J, Coi. DIM. Jlolll no •11ce, Wright ltttldtnet, l1113 C1mlM 0.1 A'flo<I, JudM, v. H frown, lltll. l~tP&tl.,.., M. A, Scht!llltl. II.••· 11'11 PICT ·-~ I' kftool tcwJI J\ldH . W, C. L•mbfrt, °'"'· IOl'lt Sl'fd. ,lllCINCT: 41-llt-1 11~ .t.111, ln111ecta1, A. H. Corntr, lllf, (lttlr, J, Ton1!1.,, Ot..,. Judtt. 0 , M, _,_tll. Ot "'· "41illt'lf ~.Lt OYt r • (fl1k. M. M, Mlt'll'f, llt•. l11t1tefor, V, I! Mt rlaw, Dern, 'allln• Pl1c1, LI"°" lt:t1101~. 2" lnu>Ktor. J. S. ilik!"•· Otrri. Judtt, O. V, Gtllt, Dtm. Cltrk, M. E. fHfttlt , 1tP11. Cltrk, J . c; Ptu!t'f, Olm. ('lllftw ~. Cl ... k, T, l . MtUfY, ltl. Jullltt. L. It. Mlck,.,111. OtM. W1w1 SI. JU!lft . I. J. Ammt1Js, Dtm. Clt rk, O. M. G1ulltn, llto. "lllCIHCT: Jl ... 2"1 Clerk, H, llt1c>;, D...,, f!lllMlltW, "· A. o ........ Nut~ •• .,. •lllClll(T »·UJ-1 Cltrk. J, 1'. LOl'ltOftCI, Ot"'. lnl.fltCte<, W, M. Lt • .. "· Dtm. Clltk, f . K. St Clt lr, llto. C!trk. I'. A. Mtvi, 11:1(1. l olllr11 Plt tt . IClllybtoolit kMot l!!J "ltlCINCT < fl·lt7·1 J~ I, M. C)Mrft', .... ,ollll'I l'l1co • .W:C01u1 lltllffnct, t21H Cltrlt., 5. I Coo,..w, Dtm JudH, V, L L1r1011, °""'· Clitll, M. M. Elmclf't. ltep. "lll(IN(T: 't-lJt·I IC lll'l'llroolte Ln. ' P111t1n1 Pllf!Ct. Plt yP0'1 Mo. "k. Cltril, I . I' . .....,.,, 0tom C11!1tr1"0 Lt ,,, ,llCIHCT: ll·U.1·1 Clark, O. L. Hodnlck, Oem. ,lll'CINCT1 41.m .1 Polllnt Pltct . Vt lll ¥ Mobllt tit. l'IUttelor, J, It. Mtum•vt r. 0tm Clutlft11 • t0> W 11111 5I. Cltrtlf V. M , Mlf'elMr, DI,.,, lnllltClor, C. J McCourt, Dtrll. 'olll"ll Pltct , VnltM Mtlhodl1t Cllu1cl\, Cltrk. I!, O. Kt1dl1m, lttet. "ol!l... Pl1c1. Alloo SCll(IOt, flJ.12 Clu!llM!ult , ,6000 Avt . AerONtl1o. Judit. J, D. Ellfll.,,, Olm. ' ln1P1ctor . E . M, ltot!•· 11111. Pit:IClllCT ._, J""''· J . L. A1vt r11, 0em 21C02 Ct mll!fl f tlrtllt l'lllCIHCT: 4'1-ltl.I Wtilev Or. l"ll!KIOI'. M. A. Hei1, Atll. Cl«t. ll. C. Ho1..,1n, ltoo, Juelvt. 0. V, •!'llt1ttff, llto. •olll"' "'•'· ,,_,, llt11dllltt . 1291 Cltrk, M. A. l(tV1l1l!k. OtM. l~IHf"IO•· l . (;. llt!(ti. lleo. "alll"I "'•<•· LtfUftt •••dt H it~ lft'll«!Ot'. t. l u•111, °""· Jud ••· I . s ...... o...... (ltf'k, c. "· M1nor1. ltHI. (It ••· I!. F. L....,.. ... ,11. o ..... Tyttf' (Jrclt Cltrk. If. G. lll'fllOlds, llflP, Judft , L. J lttltl\, lteo. Schllot, 115 "•rlr AYt. JIHl1t, H, It. 1(1eoo1r. llt•. Cl1rto. A. C. Lewll. llff, 'lllCIN CT : Jt...,._1 Ci.11r, V. M. l1blll, llltp. 1.....c!or. J . M .• ,..,,,, Oem. "lllClllCT tt·J11·1 Clilrk, M. M. Slrallt r. Dtm1• l"ioector, V. A. Lt nidt\I, lltt. C!«k. I. $. tt1n,,.nbtr1, lttfl, Clt rk, L. 5. Kltlll"· Oem. "otllne Pleet . Ktlly ltttielenct, JUI "lllCINCT : t2·1fl.I J"'°"' I , J. l'lllk!w. •••. ...111 ... l'IK t . CLoclf•l1er lt11\6tll0, 9'al Cltr~. c .... ••••b•ook, llt•. JUIG•. L. lrtll nd ••• ,. Cl1rk . 0 . L. Andl•Mll, •••. ""ICINCT: ... ,...1 YtUowt~ Or. "otltrit "l•c•, •orf<k lltsldtfoct, 174 Clltlt, .t.. L JMlll'"· 0.... Sii....,. Strt nd Drlw1 1'1 1116 Cltrk, 11. A, M••tflt ll, 111111. •lllCINCT1 "'42•1 ,olllnt l'ltct , t1n1 ltn!dtf!CI, JllU triiol(t.,.., M, It. Kent, lltP. AlbtlrMi Or. Ci.k, M, M.. G'lllllM, Ofm, ln"9<1or, C. M. St lJl'lltrt. It-.. lltl(tNCT 1 •111.1 Clerk, A, C. Ml1'!11, 11.t•. ,.olllnt "11<1, ltln ltttlO-. ~ Vie MtclOll"'· t Judi•, J. J, Kelly, lie•. llltl>l'Clor, H , If. '•tttrllne, °*'"· PlllCINCT ..... 1 JIHltt, .\, 1'. w .. tLtr, lltl, h l!lftf "lttl . lt:untlt lllt1elll'lt1, UQ2 l'lllCIHCT1 4'-1M-1 V1r.111"11t1 •t'f. l"lfl«ler', I . l •• .,o, lt:ite. Cll•k, S. I!. Lh•dwlt!. It". JudH. It, A. M•W, llto. "'°"' .. "Itel' Tt ...... (,otll, lclloal. t 101 Cltrt., A, M, Goodm1n. Itel . C1..,1no 11 Molino 'olllr'!ll f'l1c1, Flrt Sl•l\oll 2, 1IJ Attlt lntHCIOI', I'. A. l1i.1. M• "'"" Jud1t. c;. J, Qullll•ftt , 1111. Cl1rlr, M, E. Dlt!rk.11, lltll. Cltrk, N, "· l 1.1tft1n11'1, llt•. llfNlllf'I Dr!.... (!IA;, A.. f , MeNtY. lt:1r !nittefO•, 11 . I, J t Mll-. 111,, $1, Jul11, G. M. "'1(1, 11111. Clerk, M. L. t11b•lcl•I• °""' llllCINCT: fJ~l Cllt'k, f . F, Mtf'll,,., Otn'I. f~, I . M. Getk.1111, at1. Lt.•UH.t. MILLS Jloldle. J, M. C•osbr. °""'· ll'llPICllll', L. S. ClllllOll, ••fl, Ct1rl!:, II. NL •rice. 1111, Clerk, J . G. 0!111....,, ()tn'I, ,olllnt •11ee. ·-Sdlllol 11:151 •1tlCINCTi 12·1fl.I i~t1.~·v~~~· :~~~"'~T~co~'c~~ .. J, UIH ,..,. ~1::': :: 1:11.' ,~7:;.~rttr,;;8,"t'. ~i.',~~· i: :: ~,"i:_~:: :!!: Clerk, "· "· at~·~~1"o':' :~;~"~!~e•~f.~·~,, c 111bl\0011. l0201 In~"':~ :."'i. Mt rrl10n. , PO:,V;:,,,';i~"'i.111~1 ""clt Ml klleel. ml Cltrlr..f V. H, Melll'. ..... $e\IUll l'lllCIN(T: ... 1,t·l Cllf'k, C. A. l/•n laenen, 11111. f'•ICIH(T< IJ·S.I Ol/11>111! lld. Judtt. f . M, llusbw, "''· Ille!. lnallf)(!o•'. S. It, Kile~. Itta. PttlclfllCT ..... 1 t 111t11Klor'. a . lttH, Otm. ,olll"' "Itel. McM+t~ltl lt:ttldfl'lot, "lllCIMCT: 41-IJl·I f'ollllll "llKt . Lt Ptl Sdlool, U1$1 lnu•ecfor, L, J, llae•k . Dtm. Clerk, A. M.-ltolf, 0trl'I J\ld,t , I . J. MtrU.tll, lteo. Piii(• '*'• W•nlltW HUrM kllool, fl 1 JllCIH . M. A. ••llP• Otm, $111t Ctllt Otl Sol P11lfl111 Pl1<t. Gordon lt:11tl•rict, "3 l'rleltrt or . Judlt, J, I!. Gowlr, 11111· C!ttk, M. E. L1,.,ltln, Dtm. Cltrk, It , S. Col'ltn, Olm. ,.::. ~:'L~l l-.ilmmt•. •••· Cltrl!:. N. H, Tv11r, lttp. 1111t11cror. It, IC. Mc.Mlcllttl, Dt11t MY•ll• St. lnu•eclllr. c. J, ltbcoc;k, Olm. Cl1rll. O. A. l owmt n. Mo f'•/1y •1tlCIHCT: J!..fQ-1 Cletk. H. l. O• .. tnr, Mo "trtr '"'"' A, I , Ttfttlll, °""'· Clorlr, t . M. arlt f'll, lt:tP. Juelt1, C. A. Lff, 1t111. l~1111Ctor, I!. 5111rr11, Otm. Judi•· S. Ktrn, 11111. C1trll, G. J , Woll, Atp. "otllnf Pl1c1. Most Vt•dl Llbf'tf'f l'lllCINCT1 l1·tlll·I It: ,ltlCIN(T: ll·tu·1 Ctork, II. M. Sit<•· Otm. Juo'D•. I!. Sturm, o..... Clt•k. '· L. Fthst. 111,, Tlt.t.auco "6ll Mttt virelt or .. l!tst. ' •om,.. P11cr. Wiiton $dlool. !IOI W. Cllf't. C. l , OIOll'le!I, It: el, "oiling "1t<'I. Glul>llouM J, 2411% Moul!Oft Cltrk, I . C. Miii, llto. Cltrk, G. M. Hunlt, 1111. Clt rk, S. M. C1rr. o..... ,l.ICINCT: 11.ftl·I lnsDtcllt'. V, $, Mlllt r. llto, Wl!Mlft It. 41.ltrt... J , '· GruttlOfl, ... l'lr""', DANA •OIHT Clerk, l . (. Slmpto11, •111. ,lllCINCT: 41·lll·1 '"""' Pl1c1, T,.11\JCO khollt. Trtbuco JIHl1e, I . J, M(Klm, Oe-. !niptCtot, I. Oii~. Oe"'. :::.,cr1<1:1:c~=-~t ••"' c iubl!ollit. 101tt 1~~io1. •· f'. Nt rbot. "'"· f'llCIMCT! 0 ·1tt-1 ,lt:ICINCT1 l'-lft·l "•111nt Pltce. scn1111 lleJldtnco, W'2 c11., 11e1. c11rk. s. M, wor111n, 01;;;, Jud••· C. A. Cii io, oern. •• ._,rn Drlvt JIJll .. , M, 1, l'tltll , lltt l'otl!n1 "l•ct , Dtnt khoo1, 2420 lt •olllno Pl•(t , St. C1lll1rlP111 Churcl'I, !'ilinc:!t ro Or. ln1~tOI', l . Jump. O.m. Cltr111, 11 'T, M1tcJ1, lt:tp. Clt•k. G. Clt•k, Otm. Ill•=•· D. G. ain••ll, o.m. (llrk, F. M. (ri wlorl , 0...,, (1"9111 Dr. lGO T""ole T1,,11:1 INPtCter. £, S. lomhtrd, lltl. Judi•· H. I!. Lt Mlltf't. 11... ,lllCINCT L lt...._I Cltrk, 0 . E. Glllei11le, 11.t•. JJ;;;. M. A. Altlllo•ll. ltt•. C!trll, G. G. Grl~lt, Otm. ln11t1Ctor, E. J , Sftl .. J, ltet>. lnJPlclor, M. I(, lnltrlt ... !, Dtf!t. Jlldlt. 111, L. 1"11111, •111. Clf'l'k , F. I. eurd1!11. 01111. l'11Uln1 Pltct . Mi r! ltetldtncl, nof "alCtNCT; 12·Ml ·1 (It!'-. I M ~lfnd, II••· "lllCINCT' •"4•1 Judlt. It:, E. Klert1111, llff, JUOH , H. l . Tllbln, Dem. Clt1'11, fl. W. ll1lr11, lttp. citn, M. M. Gr1t11m, 11111. Ml11tr 51. Potl!n• Piece, lil t!kt llU!d111Ct , UM Cltrlt.. M. I'. ~tll!CO. °""'· "olllng •Itel , Cl\1"'°"11 1, 1t2» Ctllt Cltrk, l . c; Tnem11. Ctm, Cltrli;, M. W, lltnlrlft, 1111>. Cltrll. L. E. ThorM, Dim. ,ll:ICIN(T1 ....,.1 ln1PKJ.,.., M, I(, Mellen, lllP. Ott;O<O Allt. ,.ltlHCT :P•!tl·I A•IOOfl Cllrt., J M. Mui•, Otm. Cl•rk, I!. 8, McOi!wt U, 1111. ,lllCIHCT: 474»-1 "°Ill"' "l1c1, Kotll llt1ldtfln, !%1,1 Jlldtt. J. C. l~l'ldl. No N rl'I', !ntN<lor, Y. E Ht rtlit, llt•, ,111111'11 "ltct, ~"'l"I (~! CIUbl\1U1t, l"llltClo•, H $. •ettt. lt:tl . ,lllCINCT• ll·UJ·l ,lt:ICI NCT: ""·lti·I l'olllnt PLK •· Stdclltbtck Coll111, 2IOOO Alt\ltlt Or. C!1rl, 0. It. Heft. o.tll. JL/dlf, G. II. Oll,,.r, °'"'· ltti)\ l roollhurll 51 Judff, C. E. Ot•el\, Dtm. "elllnt "l•<t , $"'1111 llt 1ldtl!(t, JJ&'I Polllnt PltCt, Pt,,1111'1 ltet!dt nct, 3113 Mt •t Utrltl •kwv. !MPtCllll', F. J. Kosle, No ''""' Cltrll, M. l. lollllbtrd, Otm. Cltrk, J, I!. Mrnt. AtP. '""tdor, 1 . L. S,ICl!t•. ltH. Cit•~. E. c;, Hitt, 11111. M1l1tt Or. A!lt Lttunt l i'lf, lft!Pf(lor, M. It. GunderlOll, Otm. Jutlte. J . J. 0111tul. ()em. l'lllCIHCT: lt..fJl·l Cltrk, S. L, Cl(ll, lt11. 0 t -tor O J 5 11~ Otm !nl(l.CIOr, (, L. l'•rfl11!, .... J ""oo, O, A. l ulol1, ltt•. C~k. A. I . Oolll ltt. lllo. Polllftf Pl1ct. MtH Vt •" 5 .. -••• "'° "alCINCT : n ·MJ·I Jud .. , lol., J Huei'91· -(l••to, M I(, Wt•lltr, lllO. 11 ' "' ' ' Judft, H. J, Mt son, fllP ci.'n.. M, A. Crown, II•. Clo••• ... J . Arthur. Otm. N. Mtlt Vt rde Or. l!l!I, ..,_,, Polt\1111 Plf(t. Methr)cllfl Chllr~. ll'Ot Cltrll. '·"" MO'!! ..... Olm. •••C1llCT: »Zlll·l Judi•· T. 5 s ... u~. lt:e•. y IW ll•k• SI Clfl"J. M E 11-n, °'"' l'ollln• l'ltCI , Clubllol/M 3. nan Aw. Cltrlr. '· M, 511t~. Dt"' Cltrk. V. l. ltelUntt•. 0..... Clerk. V !. Mlt'•lt . Otnl. tAV I fn11tefer, (, I . Slt'fl nl, a to, ' · .... cutcT it·Ml•I ..... 111. Cltrli. II M, v ... 0Yk•. •••. Cltrk, F II . l1rnet. ..... l'lllCINCT• 41.JlJ..I l'ltl(IHCT: 11 .. Mol J""•· H. J. Clblls, .... lftll)l(IOI', M. 0 "'" Dor•"· .... ... II '' ' ... C'"ll Cklbftoll11, •lllCINCT : O·Jtt.I ,.IClNCT: ta-1)4.1 "otllne l"lttt. "lllffl lttsldtntt , !5031 Polllllf "l1ct , Cr1rM1 ltnldfn«, 2611 Cllfk, K. M. 5wl!Jfl'. Of"', Judtt, I. l . l ullrt11. Dtm. fltl K l· t tnu•ector. T ' Owf"'' ltto, ,,,,1•0 '''''· ••• > '' k J <••Ir M K '''It. 11-t l'1 Allt "lt A,,. J-H " A I I I. " ltttldl l\Ct . tSltl olllnt Pftet. Ful..,rt ltttldtne:t, ll.Sl SN!lrt Ln. lttdltndl Or. er • . M. W'rttt, Dim. ' • • • ·~· lr11H<tlli', I', .\. Cllrlt'°"'''-· 1t:111. • • · mi u f , ep, W1S1tiorM Or, S1n11 Crur SI. llltoeCI.,.., L. A. Mllclltlt, lt:tp. lt11P9(10t', M, J, C•1M, Dtm. •lllCIHCT: tt~·l Clt rk. M. L, D1ut~tr1'1', 111. J""", a , f t udrli, .... Cltrk. I f . Am1!u!1. llt•. 1"sote!or, J V llild. °'"'· ln111et!OI'. H, 11 . 'ulmtf, 0Mt, JJ.Jdot . S. K. Alrnt1Uhl, 1111. J ua.e, '· H. Shl•ltr . Otm. "ol!ln1 Piece, ,lch1 lltsldtftc:t. INO HIWl'Oll:T tl&CH Cltr1l, 0, J Arth!JI', O.m Cllrli. 0 . $, J -t. llto.. Jlldo1, D. D I Ofll\lrt nt, II••· Jud ... E. I!. C1,..,11Ht!I, lt:t1. Cltrk, N. G. P1110t11, ll•p, Cltrk, H. E. Moor, lltp. Orlolt Or. •lllCIHCT : JM6<1·1 c.r..-. J , O Ht,.,l!'llf<ll.lf!, Otfol. l'lllCIHCT< •Ht·I Cltrk, c . "· Trlbotfl, °'"'· Clerlt.. "· M. IC ltll~t. Otll'I. Cl•rlr; G. II. a.tiH!. lllO. (lerlr, N, T, 'lt ntttn, 1110. l"IPIC~. I!. l •10tt, Ottn. PoUlllf Pltc.t , G11•1 1t11ldtrlft, a. ... ICll•CT tt•U..1 'oiling l'IKt, Clubhot!tt ), 231122 ...... (l•rk. J H, Wr!t ht, 1111, Clltk, M. I!, Shtrr¥, 11111. ••ICINCT1 11.J!l.1 •lllCINCT: 11.-..1 J1H111, Y, M. Tktr, ltw, VIII• 'lll•t l'ollll\I l'IKI. 0•111 lltlldtnt.I. ...., St•lllt l'lllCIH(Ti 41-lt\·1 f'ltlCIH(.T: '4·1U.I ,l)llln1 l'ltct . MllllOll v .11e Mith Poll!"' "'•ct . Ltudtl'NUtf'I ... ~. Clt rk, c ..... om ....... 11... ,.,,pe(l.,.., M, M. Gt •••· Olm. Vtltl'dt 0 ,1.,.1, l~10Kt~•. k !.. Gublt•. 11,.. 'Olll"t •ltet . llollt•fl llet.ldtlltl, l»C '&llln• Pltct, Pert1fl ne l u1l11tn C)I. knool J.502J Chrltt"'ll O•. llO I!. 22f'ld St. Cltrlr. l. P, WIMlfY, •e1, JLldg1, C. A. PtlcJI, I.••· ln..-ctor, V, l , SOOfl. 0.M. Jud ... G, '· 5"'ttt\, 1111J, Oct1" Hltl Ot. fl<t. 426 W'ffl Pl lnt1eclor, M, It MclC"l'~" jl:ff, !n1111>ttor, L, I/. ll~LJlh, ltff, "lllCINCT: 12.., .. 1 Clt rk, J, Cott. °"""· J-• l . s. H••lt •lt<!. 0.... C.lt rk .•• Goklft •b. tit "' 1"10eCI.,.., M. J llobfrh, It••· l"IPl(tor, ... I! ,,,.ubo~. Dim. 11111••· •. A. Wtrll"'•"· II••· Jud11 t. s. IC. Ancltrtan. Qom. Pam ... "t•ct. lllttrlc Scllool 1t7J Clt•k. II . L •••••• o ..... Clttk, M, G. OllltrtOll. Otm. Clt rk , G. O. D11rtl", 111. J!Hllt. J, N. Goth1,,., I N . '""'''' I . 5. C111ublln. lttfl Cli •k, J. J. Adtml. Olm Cle•lr, I . lb~. llltp, ft!ttrl< Or, ' 'ltlC!NCT: .,_..,.1 Clt•k. I . St1.1•t •, Otm. •lllCINC'Tt ll·Ul·l Clt•l, •• G. Co!llnt. o...... Cl1,lt., E. M. Oem,.,t •. lttP. Cltrll, w, c.. lelt•eft, Ot,..,, Cll•k, D. I. Weil, lleo. IP'llNC"''· G. L. Ct.,,,..., ltte Polllno Pl1c1, $tu(kt v lt:ttldtna, 1Jlll PlllCINCT llt·f .... 1 f'olllno •1t(t , ClubMIJM '· 1•»2 Ct11• Cit••· J, It:. Kt rvtr, O.m. C!tt•. E. M. Cutt.• "''· .... CINCT: •7..U..I .... c•NCT! 11-Ml·I JIHltl, G. s. Ch•-·"· O«n. ' v ;. M•rl"• ' II' •' '°"' ltt•ldtllC.f , ll'Ot l rtlfl" ,ltlCtNCT1 41·ttJ·l "lt:ICJNCT: '4"Ul·1 1'11111'\11 l'lttt V!elo Scllllol, 1,712 VII Polll~t Pltct, Tiit A II & 'I"' t" 11 Cltrk, L, A. Otnltli. Otm, lftltlH10t. J . M. Sluck111, D«n. Ill t t tf, !~t11-r:!o•. J P Q9n nev. ltP. ,oll ln1 l'l•ct , Mllll11n ltt1fOlft(t , Ulll Polllnt Pli tt. 51. Mtf'f'I C~urcll, tie Grt ndt ' Cl\lblil• .. lJI E. 20th If, Cttrk, J, J. llll~. llt,. Jueltt , fl, A. l•uckt v. Dtm. Adlll'll A111 Judtt. '· •. Melk1. J1:11. Yt cht Or ••rll AYt . It 1111*'""· V, M. L1ndry. No ~11y f'll:ICIHCT: n .. M-1 Cl1rk, A. G ... llta. '"'°""''" v I ~. Olm. Clf<'• A II Thort>er11on llr• 1n,.11:1or J M l t lldoll oom l"Mltelo" J, W. Wirt~. 1111. lntlltcie•. E. 5 l ut••••· 11' 1·-••· &, F. Li nd,.,. 11111. Pollln• Piece, lotM!on 1t:11id111ee. lll Clerk. J. I . ltr!Ol'I. llto. Juelff. It. •in . OeM C 0' M ,· " ' ' , o. ,· . . ' . Judt t. E. I AIMOfd, fll:to JIJdtt. I . I A_, llteo. ,-,,,,, <. '· W•>•orw••· ltet. M1>11le Vf1!1 "'"'· •lll'CINCT: IJ~t·l Cl.' •••.• M''' ••. 0-. It' . , . '"'"' "''" "· Jud11, . 9, Mll!111n, lttt. <••• M D D•·-•• '" O p .. W"' ,.ICIN(T! .U·t••·I Cit ••· N, A. Hlcn1n1. °""'· Cltrk. I!. y Web!lff, Otm. ' . . '"" ' . Clt rk, J , II:. WOlldwt rel. "''· ftlPICter. v. lotldon. lie•. oltlno Pit~•. !111011 llMldtl'ICI, u Cltl'k. I . L. Mlt lNn, m. "Nllnti "lect , C:l\lllhOIJlt I. llUJ Ct llt Clt rk, c H. 1,11.,111111, lllP, Cltrlt.. M, Wtktllt ld, lt:to. Cieri<, II. C. A!liwle, lttll. COSTA MllA Juelff, '· A. Smllh, Dim. le1con l!!t ¥ l'ltlCINCT t2•trl1·1 OO•<l•<T OO -· 0 PllCIM(Ti .. •Ut·1 SAN CLIMIHTI ••OCl•CT•. n ... l·I Clerk. V. L. PtrlMl, lle-P. lnlHCtor, L. (. Corb•t!. llt• . ... rt.... •Lice. Wt ll llttldtnr.1, .,., Ar1gon t 'OT ' ""ICINCT .. H2"1 ' " •.. ,,, .. Drl\lt lll~Ct.,.., A. It , l!Mt •I. ll.r1. ,6llln1 "''''· '••k•• ltt1ldtnc:1 • .woar Polling f'l tc1. H••<llm Hon" •11t1,,.u : . 111 P"'ll"9 llltct. ,lrt Slt tlon '· "' l1•k, •. L. MorrllCtft, ·~· J11d1t. P. 0. H•~··· Rta. , J ' •· • >I D 0,.1c,, -1 0,,,.~.,.,, "· ,oltlnf •ttct , St1!11bl1 IHldlfltl, ,_,,,., ''· ,lllCIN(T1 12.0S1·1 C!trll, V. M. !1111111. 1t11. ·~· ( .•. Wt !!, °'"' JLlllOI, . ,,,... IP tlftr r. .,... ... w .... ec Ot C•lllcNI ..... ' -'' 0 N W H , O•-,.,_,0, E • O ' • lft l...Ctllf, (, IC. Tltcllnt f, lltt. • ' ,,.-o-, O. o I <-, "'·-. olllnl l'llCI, Ht rbor Girls C!llbl'IM., Clt rll, I, I, 01wl1<Jn, lttP. Jveflf, (, M. ,.,le,.(11'1, .,...,., It • · • flll\9 • '"" "' ..,.,. • · • l "'I .,., tt. lftt~tlt' I IE ICtmnltf It.II _., ~ u_.. ,,_,. 0105 ' "" > --,, • w M w ' -J •• • • Sm,. 0 Jllltt. v. J, lit•••· """· . • . ' . , ...... c . '· ,, ....... 11. Itta. .... ....... A.... lllCIHCT< u .. n .1 (tff\, L M J1llf1't, .,...... tr • . • •t · ..,...,,, u t. • • • 111'1 Cl 0 • J\ldtt Ii J Ste!t1blt Detft "" I -· > SI 1.. • > 'I' >I N • H •·-·--• (ltrtl, M L C•lte<I, ""'· f'lt:ICJN(T: .U·W ·I Cll•k· fl , ''" Ar1v11M, Ctm. t r · f , l . Hov,., ta-C! n.' H ' F. Cl d i: ' (111'111. E. M. O\llt111'11 , lt:I'· 111 ,,.., · to • IP. 0 ftl ie1. '"""°" Ir.....-..,,_. ll'lt:l(IH(T »,Hf.I l'ollllll l'llcl, (l~M 1, ttnt C:.111 Clt r-, 0 . A. F1rk11, 1t11. Clerk , V, W, Scllrt..,m, ltto. t ' . , 811 y, "'O.,.. Clerk, L C. Hru1t. 1111>. Juel1t. A, I . Grt lll..,, ltt1. t«I lrvlnt Av• •• • I L TO•O •1tlCINCT: 41-1•1 Cltrk, I . J . t nldl(I, · Ol•CONCT·, l>-I Ctlrlt., H. J. NI-, lttp. ln1Pfetor. H, M l °'!tod, 11••· l o!llftl •11c1. ""'"'' lt:Hlllltn(f. " "'"°" .... CIHCT· @U).I Cl"" J • M I • kotl~ Qrtw lnJlllClt•'. v. • ..,. •. It:••· ... IClllCTI •t ... J-1 ·=!1 .. :,::;·· Or~~lllt:rtll ClllJr~. '"• llot!!1111 ,,;(,, l'lr1! (hrl"ltft Cl!Ur(ll, '&!,,","",.~·.~ ~~. LI l/!fNI ltllldt!'>(I, .... c.,..cT:' '2~~1· lllP. ~r:.·~· ~ .. ~· F~:-::~· =.· l"IMCIW, • 11 An111fl. Ht._,,.,, Judfe, J, G. Sm!fll, 0•"'· f'otfl~t Pltet . Alt lr llttldlllCI. ~ I••-•-. I . I . 1,,,,., '''· 102 N, ""'· 0.. L• Estrt l!t , ,,...,.... "' l'ollt11o >io<o c-"'" II < I 0 ''''' > M ,_,,, '" J-. '. l ... I.~, •• --. co-•. •· J . '''''· '"· ltu..,blt D•. "' I ·-•.. M I I ' 1 .. ,--,, '· H. o.t l• Vlfllt, llff, ' "• • t r r. • · · M -• • ,_ """TI ., J""ll, (, A, llf'I". .... n...,.,.,., . · fl!l'Wft, II'. " .,...,., IMt>telOr I J MuMr It.. l'lllCINCT · JM1J I (ltr •• 0 , 0 MOHm1n, °""· Cltrto , M. 0 . l tl'ldlt, ..... tn1Ptetar, 0, l Tulllt . It••· JUO" A l 5t llmt " llt' J""''· M. A. 511t w. lt:ff. ' ' . ' ' . ' I • .. .. " J ' I (ltf'k, J , C. G!IOIM", fl:t•. Cl · , · ' · CO-•. O. l ... , .... •, lttt. JudH, E. I', 'T lrUUll, °""'· '11111.,t •11ct , Lido "''k ClullhotJM, 71J i ltrk, , , '""' "' f'lllCINCTi ·Hl-1 udff, · A, Adt •. .... c--' r c• I • • t •k, I! F 1"1 111, Dfm, "" "'"""' ,,.-J M <<•-• '" LI'° ' -O> •• c'.--1-O C 11 C"-I l y ' ,.. ~. · • "1 1"' ... . . '''''· G. J. Jonn1I011, °""· .,,., ' · """ ' · 1' ~ ' ,., M · ,,.. •olllnt l'l.ce, Ct11blloll" I, lUl2 I I ""'~• • fntt . 11. l'lt:ICIHCT! .... 111·1 C!t rll, It L. l rwt nt, Ill'· ol•CONCT: lt ..... I Cltrlt. H. L. You,,., ltll'. flllPt'Clor, fl'. M. Crlum111, O.m, f'tollll'lll f'IKI, """" L!b•t f'f, SChoef, A••IO" (leMr;, II . Mlflt r, lttl. "°'""' "l (I , $hUll.,. ltit!OlllOI, 11# •lll!CINCT: IJ.llol·1 -"lllC1NCT1 J, ..... 1 ). JUOot V Sn1n,_ Oern 1tfll Htnllnf l tM 1nl111Cll", M, l Vo•, lt11. l'llfCIN(f< 42 ..... ·I fllllCrttt Or, f'o lll... Plt(f, l t CfY llttlllllfla, 2010 "olllnt "ltCf, lt tM lttslllf'CI, _, •1111"' Plt CI, Whlttllt" k "°°t, 1111) Cl"k: 11: W. Mt•~lll'ltt,' lllp. lflN>llCf'or, M, 1. """~· DtfP>. Juo ... I/, L lt•llt "t, ••• f'!ll!lne ,lt ct, G1tu Stl'>oo!, J3'&J l.1,.. lftlMC'Or, W. A Mcetrttlw, O..... Ctllt LoJ Al1m111. "•l"'tr S!, O Wl'llnler Aw, Cltrk, M H1!t, DIM . .JUfM, V. J Sfl'llll'I, Olf'l'I Clt•k. O. M 1t111u1tr. Ot..,, dl1\lftw A\lt. JUO", I . M. Hi mHl!lrt, 1111', lnlMC!or. E. L-Ll<f¥, 11111. llllOIC11t'· I . ,._ Wiii~. ""'· l"IOOCIOI", I . L. Ttlllolt. lltep, l'lllCINCT: JM14·1 ("'11, M, " Miii, Dom C'>"· '' > ·-·-. '"· l~ll>ttl(lt, J "'o"""•· 11... Cl J·-•o ' V •>••-••P J llltt M G ll•OWl'I. °""· J·-I l :ti!' 0 > o .... _ •• ...... ttl. M. 0-1.,.,et1. llto. "" · · · .... · Cl•-·' M,· E.· ,, ... ,,-, Oln'I. """' . . • '°"· ~ ol llno lttt. Commu"'"' C:tNrdl. t l1 (ltrif, •· I'. Klngllllif'Y • .,...TI. f'lt:ICINCT: jt.3 7.1 JIJGll• J, "· Mtl,,OCllM•o. °""· (111'11 , J M. Gt lllOC:li;,. lt:tc. Cllf'll, "· A. G•ln11tU. llt•. ,,,;.;, A. L. H"i •di,;, 0.m. Clttlt., A. 5. l<lul1 , °""'· . fl~Hotro.t AYf ... ircu1CT »411·1 .Ool!l"I "'•ct , Cl\lol'>ot!M I, 1® C•ll• Cll•~. J Ii. O'Ooft ... U, •••. ,ltfCINCT< 4'1-141·1 (lfrll, 0 I . Wood. °""· •••CIHCT: J2 ...... I Cltrlr. M. 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"'"""' ..... i..c.r~.•. "· """'.... =c • .ti· :::r· ... ... ,_ ~~ ,,,.., • """" .... ... ,.. .. ':".:""' ,.... 0. M. (Mrtlr, °"""' ~ 'O. M.. '-• .... .... ,,_., CllY l>lf'fl. -......... --(-t.'pL,C............ ,.-, ·"'="-~~W.L-,,__, ~M.·-.-' "---~~ ·-~ ,..___ a-. --. '· &. _...-.. e. ~ ~ .. a;,,.,,,...... t tC r1 l•Nlle .... , ' • . ,,, ........ ·--........ • • . -. Lag1111a Beaeh -· Today's Flaal N.Y. Stoeks L 65, NO. 147, '4 SECTIONS, 48 .PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 26, 1972 TEN CENTS andida-te 'Attacks·' Foe • Ill Eruption at Meet By PAMELA BALLAN Of .. IMlllJ ,.li.t Sllft A venomous attack laced wtlb ttireats , violence launched by Fred Gage of eanslde on fellow candidate Claire urgener of San Diego erupted Thursday uring a meeting of the 4 2nd ngre.ssional District Republican can- idates in San Clemente. "I would like to take him out in the alley with the rest or the garbage and thrash him," said Gage. "God have He's Ousted From Be.droom The lady who called the Laguna Beach Police Department late Thursday night to a1!1k for help in evicting a fellow playing possum in her bedroom closet wasn't kidding. Officer Terry Temple ,hastened to the scene at 443 Ashton Drive, where Silvia Arday explained her dog had brought the viSltor (a real possum) into the house. It made a beeline for the closet and refused to budge, she said. Armed with his trusty snake snare, a device used ror rounding up roaming rattlesnakes, Temple lassoed the possum, transported it to the wooded hills nearby and released it (presumably with a warning about trespassihg in la- jies' bedroom closets). Trees, Shrubs Sought for Park -bagunans who wou)d-like ---t o memorialize loved ones in a manner that will benefit future citlzens are invited to donate "living memorial1" for the plant· Ing program in Main Beach Park, Volunteer Post Director Lyn Davis siid today. · "We received a beautiful plant for use In the park program in memory of the late Mr. William Tangeman,'' said Miss Davis, "and perhaps others would like to make this gesture." Interested donors may obtain a list of trees and shrubs proposed for the permanent park from the Volunteer Post, or !rom the city Parks Department or at the Main lifeguard tower. Plants donated now will be used to beautlly the park area during the sum· mer and later moved to the pennanent facility. Masters Pageant I . TicketS Gone , Setting a new record, Laguna's 1972 Pageant of ,the Masters is completely sold out for the six-week season, Festival of Arts publicist Sally Reeve revealed today. Last year, the "BOid out" ajgn went up a monlh before: opening day. This year. tbe last available ticket was sold almost two months before the July 14 opening. However, Mra. Reeve said, would.tie pageant viewers may be lucky enough to pick up cancelled reservations if they check with the Festival olfice from time to time. 1be bo1 office now is closed until the season opens , when tickets that have not been picked up will be placed on sale half an hour befort curtain time each .evening. ChiJdren Unhiirt As Qrr Rolls Off mercy on this country If a man Uke this is allowed to hold public ofCict." Gage, visibly enraged, was referring to an alleged smear campaign against hlm which be said Burgener "was either con- ducting or condoning concern1ng an in- cident that occured 20 yea'°' aa:o. It in- volved the death of Gage's 3-year-old son and Gage claimed the smear hints that he and Ilia wife had been negllgent and contributed to the child 's death. (Burgener, who was not present during Gages' bizartt speech, later quieily denied the allegations. l How could you allow anyone to release such a thing!" Gage bellowed to the absent Burgener. "I swear on my dead son's soul I wUJ work against you. You are unfit as a human being; rulhlessly vicious. You have hurt my wife in a despicable way." Before stalking out of the meeting and leaving a shocked, stUMed audience, Gage vowed be would "never again share a platform" with his opponent. Answering a question about the alleged smear. Burgener later said that a seven or eight-page 'background sheet" on Gage had been sent to his staff "unsolicited" from a persor. in Los Angeles who had prepared it for use dul'- ing Gage's campaign against Los Angeles Supervisor Warrtn Dorn four years ago. "I would never use such a thing,'' said Burgener. Before ·making his emotional outburst. Gage had told the audience that he ls the .. anti-busing" candidate and has opposed busing all over the United States. But he said busing Isn't tht rtAI issut. r.overnment control ls. lte said that ir the goverrunent can determine it a school ls not ethnically and racially balanced , it ls just one short step for them . to say the same about a nelgllborhood. He urged the audience to look at 8urgrner's voling rt.'Cord, claiming that his opj)Qnent V(lted ror busing. for vrnereal disease tduc1Uon without parrutnl consent, and ror rair housing IR\\'s. Bur)l('nrr lM'gan his rl!mnrks with an apoloRY lo <"anclldale Nonnon Ream of San Clt'ttlt'nh• for an aclvrrt islng slogan wh lth hints thnt llurgener's opponenLt nre not crl'<llblr.. tit ritt'd his 2tt yenrs' srrvlee tri the Republil'l'HI partv and hi.~ 10 years os " tSee ATTA.CK, rage J) ccor ears .Joitis Cmnpany - Von Braun Quits NASA Position WASHINGTON (UPI) -Dr. Wernher von Braun, German-born rocket er.pert who directed development of the rocket that sent Americans to the moon, retired from the space agency today. An announcement of his retirement issued by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration 11aid that Von Braun would join Fairchild lndustrie1 as corporate vice pre.aidenJ for engineering and doveloppieri!, ~ July I. . Von Braun WU • ""1nl II deputy associate admini'ltrator at the time of his resignation. Before that, he was director of the a.1arshall Space Flight Center in Alabama for IO years, heading the team that developed the world's most powerful rocket, the Salum V which propelled Apollo's moon-landing missions. Dr. James C. Fletcher, ·NASA ad- ministrator said "all.of us in NASA wlll miss the · daily atimulaUon of hi.s ~~~t we are , ••U..t wUI...., .to.Ila" ft~o • ,_ l]>iratlon iDd • ' '· 11 I · and f'...t:."" " exp oration ~ o ~· ~1 .. ~ ------,-- U.S. Russia Set to Ink Agreement MOSCOW (UPI) -Pr .. ldent Nixon And Soviet leaders reached agreement to- day on a historic treaty lhnlllng nuclear anns. The treaty was tq be 'lined al It p.m. MMcow time at tht Krt!mlln followlng 11n all-A1nerlcan dinn er Nixon Is Giving his hosts. White !louse Preas S«:rclary ltonald l., Ziegler sai d Nlr.on would 1l1n for lht< United States, and diplomats told Ul'l Communisl Party General Socret11.ry 1 };Aonld I. Bre:thnev prollabljo """1d 1lan • Jor the Soviet Union. '. The all'eement capped 21> years o! ; • 11t1otlollon1 II the •t=arllll Umlto-s lion t4lts (SALT) In Jfe and Vltnna and provfdld a crownlqa 1clrJevement tor Nlxon'.1-Nnmlt WbJn. -·· Lqguna B~ach -Memoriiil-Day Speaker Named Von Braun. eo,liwho m ~ tn dovelopltll~ bolilbo ~I Gtftnony launched;·! diirlnc World War ll1 ta' he-~ ''with I deep feeling ot groU-for-the wonderful ind unique opportunities the agency baa given me during the last 12 years." He a4ded : "I am leaving with the knowledge that NASA bas enough well thought out plans to keep it moving ahead for many years to CMle, even though some of these may have to be deferred because of budget constraints." T~o UCI Scientists Find The treaty coven both oll•nafve ond defensive mlullet. It wUJ Umlt an· llballllllc mlHlles (AllMl. ban btllldlng more launching silos for Intercontinental ballistic mlulle1 (ICBM), freer.e the number of ICBMs nt the present figure, and allow no new co111trucllon of m.Juile- launchfng submarines. Gordon R. Elliott, director of the U.S. Veteran,, Administration Regional Office in Los Angeles, largest VA ofOce in the country, will be principal speaker at Memorial Day services in Laguna Beach a.tonday. His departure comes ju.st a few months before UH! fmal ApoUo moon-landing mission and at a time when the space agency faces increaaing pressure to cut its spending plans. Brain Cell 'Rewiring' The traditional rites at the Memorial Shaft near the nag pole at Heisler Parle will begin at 11 a.m., following a half· hour concert by the Laguna Beach High School Band under direction of Fred Stoufer. Boy Scout Troop 35 will lead the pledge of allegiance, the invocation will be delivered by Dr. Albert A. Hjerpe of the Community Presbyterian Church and the benediction by the Rev. Michael Allen of the First Christian Church. The names of SO local organizations will be read as their representatives place floral tributes at lhe base of the shaft and. a salute by a firing squad from the U.S. Marine Corps Air Station, El Toro, will end the program. The armual event is ~sponsored by American Legion Post 222 and Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 5868. Speaker Elliot~ who .....,uy wb-•p- poioted state ch.airman of the Jobs for VeU.rans task forte by Gov. Ronald ~gan, has served a.s a VA regional director In New Mexico, Pennsylvania, the Philippines, Europe and Northern Calilomia. The Loa Angeles office he now heads serves more than 2.5 million veteran,, and their fam.iUes living in S o u t b er n Cellfornia and Soutbem Nevida. In the closing months of the war, Von Braun led a group of scientists from Gennany's Peenemuende rocket center, to Allied forces in the west and came to the United States, establishing the na· lion's first concerted missile program at White Sands, N.M. Von Braun said he was making the change because he wants to devote his time to help implement "some space projects J feet are of particular impor- tance. I think I can do this best in pri- vate industry where the tools of progress are being made." Republican Forum Will Elect Officers The newly formed South C o a s t Republican Forum, serving communities from Irvine to Laguna Niguel, will elect officers during a meeting set for B 1.m. Saturday in the Slcyroom ol the Airporter Inn. Mra. Edith Hindley of the state and county GOP centraJ committeea will discuss the purpose of Republican clubs in the community. 1ickets at $2.50 each may be reserved by calling 1133-115> before Wednesday. By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 tlM 0.11, l'llet ll•ff Two UC Irvine psychobiologists an- nounced a ••profound discovery" Thurs· day that may reverse the widely believed theory that damaged brains cannot recover from nerve cell losses. Dr. Gary Lynch and Dr. Carl \V. Cot- man revea led results of a 16-month study of brain damaged rats that was sup. ported by grants from the National Sci· ence lloundation and the National Insli· lute or Mental Health amounting to $45.000 a year. The UCI psychobiology professors discussed their research at the opening of a half-day UCJ Industrial Associates pr~ gram introduclng business leaders to the school of biological sciences. The faculty reaearcbers from Newport Beach said their findings were based on work with 2.0 rats. UCI researchers removed a portion or the cortex of the brain ol each rat. "Wit.bin a matter of day1 ," Dr. Lynch said, a filling in of the cut area can be observed. It has long been known that brain cells -nerve tissue -cannot duplicate themselves as do cells of other body tlsstles 1uch as the &kin. However, the Lynch-Cotman studies of rats indicates the possibility that undam~ aged cell& in other parts of the body send Those Were the Days • • • Wartime Cookbook Realls Past. Memorial, Day • By JAClt CHAPPELL f.isblill& for his .... try. and f0< his girl . °' ""' °""' '"" ,,.,. and mom aod all the rest of those coruy Manories lie durty .., foraotta> 11$gl. shelves. Memories ore Ihm of a simpler Crayon 1Crlbbled fl71eaf1 U.D of mop- lime -a time where a ba!Ue loll lllWll pell, tow-headed and dirty-fingered alk· • llllloo loot, a time when 110 eoemy .Jo(, "when'• Daddy coming~?" coUld find aolooe In America' 1 41 stota, Artlclea "" cannlag harUn to a time a time of• alqler war. w11en marketing' nlelnt buJina whattv<r I ~ _,,on cloy1 W.e lk-111 happened to be ill that day and then lllJ, .,, ~ .., Ila rousted ~ naunni out dlmltr.-Meal• "ue plonned ~ ,,, -. thioap • .._, ,,, ..... star• and_ ..... --• "Wartime Sapplemmt" an Sugar flltlooli1g nltaDI """ '1"IP lh Jood,..tlanlltld,-lntllt....,. , .. ~loo suprleal..., pl& ad ,,.;old~ -ol"Ulde ...... • -'• doolitt beUer lrnllDJ. Food RUies," ''PofnlAon 111 1'vln!-ii&. • A4'lce ID tbJ· old 9CJOd -~lnl lillnlnl." "Conlon Woit," ''Cdlee book la still good, nen todly !l!len _...,.,, .. ond "&lpr Savers," but It "Omlhero" la ..,.iled "Vietnam" llld opeUI of -. a.. )lot UW. poopl&l°'Oc wtdloGI -'-ulUOlly on 11 lpeUs of a llllD oil to O war, mocn>blotlc did&. Pric&iior__.t ls . - today's rationing 1)'1Um. "Mui bu gone to war -gone to feed •ou r armed rorces and alllel," oblervu tho cook book. "Although here'• """'"' left to keep Olll' dietJ aoand, we mUlt learn to Dll.M mono r,...._ -of the Jal familiar cut. u well 11 such vllitty meat.I u Uvtt, l!Urt, kldney, tongue, oltall&, pig'• kn&fctles. etc;," It says. I Tt 'i.*I' up tho contention thtt -\farle!Y'-1' .....id be yummy, roclpa for"'ll .. rt M"t Cam," "Flora's O.tall Soup," ··~tah l.Jver Willi Uma fJaU'• and "De¥1* KldntYI with Rl<o" aro of. fend. Al for atm<bJna tln'lie!m liko baller. aevual redpea an oflmd for butltr CS. COOK 1100K, hp I) out new signals -called processes - have been 4'dramatlcally" evident In mlscroscopic view& of brain tissue. The nerve processes • produce an enzyme acetyl-ehollnertrase, Dr. Lynch said. When tissues are ~·stained" with a dye that has been used for years in other areas of research, the nerve enzyme can readily be seen. Application of thlt graphic method to establish the presence of new connections between brain cells, rep lacing the con- nections that broke down with the damage of other cell11 11 the key to the UCI dl1COvery. "We're the first people to look into this structure using the staining technique," Dr. Cotman said. P1ychobiology department chairman Dr. James L. McGauc;h described the palr'1 finding as a "profound discovery. No matter what else comes from It, the lnfonnatlon adds to our knowledge of the brain," he said. "ff all possible lmpUcatims come to pass, the discoYery would not only be profound, but could be classed as phenomenal ," Dr. McGaugh said. One future implication of the findings might be in helping humans who have 1uflered brain damage by accident or ether mean1. Ao example of the 11ignlncance of the finding mlght be 1n controlling memory loss due to brain damage. lf the functions of damaged cells ·caug.. Ing memory k>11 are replaced with cells Crom other partl of the brain, one effect might be 1pastlcliy, Dr. McGaugh IUI· ge1ted. Since becoming a spastic iJ not much of an improvement over 1uffering memory loss, the patient might 50med.ay bt: given nerVe proctll Inhibitors to con- trol which brain cells l'fPl.ace the links that once helped wllh mem0<y pro- cessing. "This could be tl>e heglnnlng for ra- Uonal me:Uclne for train \lamage," Dr. Mc<laugh &ald. The researcbtr1 thmllelve1 wtf1 more modell about their work, declining to J(lve 1peclfl< nample of what klndl of functlona mlgl!t be al/oded by ~ oew· found brain cell linkups. HoWever. Dr. L71'Ch 111d the old theorlea ol bniln domopd likened the lx'aln to • "ltord.wlred '"il<hboatd or compulAor. "'Aft« ttv bl'atn wu damaged the wir· lllll Wll lllou8bt to be pennanenUy jumbled," he llld. Bat. .... the pt1t -of )'t&l'I, aome brain dama1e 1J111ploml -IUCb aa coma -ha" not-.pnwod to be pet1111MT1l. Untnoow,90-•IS....W. lllee DISOOVEllf, 1'111 l) The United States ha1 1,0$4 land-baaed ICBMs ; 41 mlsalle ·carrying 1ubmarlnt3 and two ABM slte1 under eonatrµctlon. The Sovlel Union hns an le11llmated 1,550 ICBMs; 25 mlsslle-carrylng 1ubt: and the only operational ABM Jn the world. Even a1 the final wording wa1 beinl worked out, the nations reached agree- ment on yet another accord, thlt one to 1et up a Soviet-American commlulon to develop trade and butlnets and economic relations. The trade agreement, lesa than Nixon hoped for, was preceded during the week· long talks by the signing of five other paclll. covering joint t!fforl! on dlstue, pollution, space, science and "C'\.lle1 of tbe 1ca." Ziegler aald that Nixon and the rullni Soviet troika -Brezhnev, Premier Alex· el N. Kooyain and PreJldent Nikolai v. l'odgorny -met in tht Kremlin for two hours this afternoon. "They dllCUSoed international problem! and completed the final agreement on strategic arms limitation," Ziegler 1ald. The two chief 1nru negotiators, U.S. ambassador Oerard C. Smith and Soviet First Deputy Foreign Minister Vladimir S. Sernenov, flew toaether In a U.S. air transport plane from Jlel1lnkl to MOICOw for the ceremony. President and Mn. Nixon entertain CS.. AGREEMENT, P11e fl ...... 'tt'e•t•er Look for considerable cloudlna1 Saturday alonK the Or1111e Cout, clearing by noon to tunny 1kJtt, according to the weatherlady. HJghl 65-7$. Lowa In the 50's. INSIDE TOD.\ Y Orawqe Countu fl tht strcno- bt"'ll cap1WJ of the natlmi. Car- dtn Grove 1tag11 ftl annual Strawberrw F11tit1al honoring thfl Mnnorlol wte~. Set •toru In todau'• We1k1ndlr. ........ , .... ,, Jll•l*'-1 ..... • .._._,. . ............ ,,.. kMI P4'1w It ~-,...::: ,_ .. -... ·-. ., ........... , ... --. ·-.... _I DAJLf PILOI LB Lewd Act Protest Bared Enforcing Stepped Up Teaclier's Action Costs Job SANTA CRUZ (AP) -A ycuor woman who ripped all ber blouJe at aa anUwar prottlt hu found IMntl/ llrtppod fJI a job. The Santa Cruz School Dl1tricl Board voted to fire Janice Lft Rosen. 77, rrom her job a_, a teacher 's aide at Laurel Elementary School. :·s~~ wen t btyond a proptr expreu ion of her antiwar feelings," said Dr. Mark l...ewll, board president. ••Jt 11 not against Ole law to go bare bosomed , but Jt gives the board no confidence In her ability to work with children." TI>trt'1 no 11campalan." "no crush," but 1..qu!Vl Beach police will 1tep up e~ forcement or lewd conduct laws pro- hibJtlna public solicitation and flagrant act1. Miu Rogers wall put under a cltlun's arrest by another woman May 11 at an antiwar dtrnonstratlon oul!lde the county jalJ. The district attemey later dropped ch11rge1 on grounds no crime wa!I committed. So 11id Laauna Btnch Police Cllltf Josepb Kelly Thursdly 1n rtsponse to _quutJnn. reprdlrie e v1rtl r e c e n t plalnsclolhtl arrests by Laguna Beach o1r1cm . Tht claim waa that 1he tore oU ber blouse and displayed_ her breasts in prote st of the war. Lew is said that "1iu Rogen wu not llrtd becauu of the arrert, but be- cause she displayed a "Willful faUure or good conduct." The lncreated concern on the part of police 1ulhorltltJ came u a ruult vf cltlztn complalntJ to the dt partment and 1 1peelal ob11erv1Uon period made to detennlne Ir the clty 1hould take action, the chler SAld. Councilman Holm Says .. We determlntd that ba.'Jf!d on oblerv• tlonl~• problem dld exist," Ktlly said. He 11ld that tht main tmphaaiJ of the department would continue to bt in narcotlc1 enforcement, but that he had received 1 letter from 1 man whose home overlooks the llelsler Park area. The cit izen comr,l11tned of btach act!vltles between ma e~. Main Beach Park 'Firm' Four arre11t~ ror lewd conduct were made or the lleh1ler Park area last week by Laguna Beach plalncl<l thes officers who claimed they were aoliclted 1n the park by other male1. Another arrut wu made Wednesday 1t the Little Shrimp, 1305 S. Coast lll1hw•r when an Orange County 1'-farsha sakt he was asktd to engage in lewd act.a by a male there. Legun1 Stach detectlvea made the arreet at the bar. Detective s,t. Nell Purctll, said the code dealing with lt"fl and dlsorderly conduct llpeclflcally proh iblt.oi such public 110llclteUona. The Main Beach Park seems assured, City C:Ouncllman Roy llolm told a meeting or Laguna Beach Civic League direct.ors Thursday night. ''Virtually oothing that can happen will matt It not a reality," J~olm told the League which has worked llnct. the early 19803 for the park. llolm recounted the park'• history, through two fajJing general obligation bond proposals -majorlty votes were received in the elections, but oot the nectsaary l~thirda -to the point when Ole city purcha.sed the land on a lea.se- blck arrangement. He aald that In the mid·1960a, the city had pused up the chance to buy the land because it felt that the price of $13 per front foot was exorbitant. The park when finally purchased cost almost $3 million. ?resent pl ans call ror the park to be landscaped by the Laguna firm of Lang and Wood. Holm aald the only structures on the property woold be the lifeguard headquarters and towtr and a concession !!It.and. A time-lapse film produced by the city planning department 11howed the demoli· lion of the old buildings on the Main Beach parkland. The film compressed Ole two-week job into about four minutes or frenzied activity. The term "publle" refers to all areaa open to the public and may include privately owned busineasea where the public is Invited lo congrega te. he &aid. Clllc! Kelly aald that with the demoli· lion or lhe main beach homosexUal haunta, other areaa have been adopted u: £atherlng placea. "Picture yoursell as a tourJat and unsu1pectlngly going into a place like th1t. Whit kind or picture would that give you of L1guna. I don 't think that any Laguna citizen deserves that," Kelly aald. Atwrney Killed, Judge Wounded at Courthouse "When we get Into an are:l where Jt's fi11rant and open tile~ I think we're get· ting into an area that requJres some police attentllon," he .said. Lila Zall Sets Classes for SF Ula Zell. artistic dlre<:tor of the Laguna Beach Civic Ballet, will journey to San Francisco In June to conduct a 11erl11 of master claSMI for memben of the San Francisco Ballet, oldeat pro- fessional ballf!:t company ln the country. The lnvltaUon to MW Zall from tile distinguished San 1Franclsco dance group w., described 1s "an honor for the Laguna company" by ger>eral dlrect.or Douglu Ree ve. He noted, however, lhat three da~a trained by Miu Zall In the Laguna Civic Ballet now are members of the San Fran. cllco group ~her tralnJna: method! have been teated in the Bay city. She formerly was 11 soloist with the ?.fordkln Bollet and the original Ballet Ruue de 1.tonte Carlo. lier week.Ion~ series er cl1111ses in Sa n Franci3co will begin June &. From Pawe I AGREEMENT ... Soviet ltadera al a banquet that has roast bffr and baked Alaska on the menu and calls ror rntertainment by Pianist Van Cliburn and 11 U.S. Air Force conlbc> called "The Diplomats." Abc>ut too guest1, includlna both official parties. were Invited to the dinner at Spaso House. the rrsldence of the U.S. Ambassador Jacob D. Beam. The dinner rrturntd Monday's banquet hosted by Scvlet leaders. OUNelCOAn .. DAILY PILOT ~ °"'"" C.Uf E».llY "II.OT, wtlfl ""'"" I.• C11t!\111~ 1i.. H.-.n.~reu. .. ,...allllltd .., tile OrMM (NII ""'*1 ... 11'!1 c-111nr. ~· r•tt .Ol!loM •r. p;blla'*I., ,..,.,,..,. tfrl,.,.,. Ffl41y, tor C011' Mn•, N-..rt IMdl, Hunlll!llWI BrKlll,""1i.lrt Vlllty. l.10\ll'lt OtlCll, l,..,.IM/Seddl-..ct tlld S~ C'ltmtn'9/ S1°' J11111 C1p111r-. A •lnel• """"'' f'dllloft 11 PVb!l111.i """_. • .,. -""' Sllnd•V1· Ill' ptlf'lcll>fl PVl>llilllnl llilnl b t i llG ""-'1 n•v st'"'· '°''' M...,. c1Hl'Oml•, ""'- ., ... ,. N. Wet4 ~,.i.i.,. '"" itwli.Jttr J ecl: R. Cvrfty V~t ,.,._lowil Mil 0--•I IMMttf Th•m•• K•e,il .. , .. 1li•Mtl A. Mlff",h1"Jlt ~ ... f:•ltor Cheri•• H. L••• Rich•"' t . Nill -'-ti'-" M._.lllt 1-1"'1 ---2JJ: Hr•tt ""'""' M•ln•t .U4rt111 P.O. lu .. 6. t2612 --C.11 .. _: -..... , ...... H=lhtdrlt 1W N""'*1 .... .,., HIOlll '-a..cfl~ ll'llt ~ ........ .,. ~ .. J ........ ,~ ... , Tllq' ere tn4J '41AJJI C~ A'-1' ... MJ.1671 Lat-.... All • ., l ' .. : fellf' 1 e 4ff."'6 ~. Oft. 0....... CM" ,,_.....,. ~-....... ·~ """"'"--"""""'' """"" er •••Its• 1,. ..,.. .. , .................... ... ....... ~ ..... . ..... c.tm ............. Cilllll """"' ~ 11·1 .,. .... "' ~ ... _..,, " --., ... ~ . ..., 1 n ei'iw .... ....,,,,. OROVILLE (AP) -A running legal feud has led to a burat of gunfire In the courthouse In this Sacramento Valley farming community that Jert an attorney dead, a judge and a witness wounded. Perry Farmer, 4f , attorney for the plaintiffs, died of 1 bullet wound in the head shortly alter the shooting Thursday afternoon. Karolyn Garrick, a pl1lntllf, was wounded in the arm and skit:, and a judge who happened along wu wounded in the right ann. The defendant ln the civil suit, Minard O. Rulherford, 17, of Oroville, wu booked for investigation of one count ol murder and two counts of attempted murder. The shooting broke out Jn Butte County Superior Court N Judie Luclan Van- degrUt. a form.er key member or Gov. Ronald Reagan 's cabinet, was presiding at a civil lawsuit trial. Witnesses said Farmer w&!I seated at the coWlstl table when Rutherford pulled a .31-eaJlber revolver from his pocket or a briefcase, strode forward rrom his .seat in the audience, and fired into the back of Farmer's head from a distance of about si1. inches. Then Rutherford ran for the door, fir.. Ing hla pistol, the witnesses oald. The witness on the aland at the time, Ernest Reynolds, swung a stool at Rutherford but mined, then grabbed hil pistol wrist. He and a deputy 1herift wrestled Rutherford out into the hallway with the pistol sUJJ firing, the witnesses said. One bullet struck Mrs. Garrick, break· Ing her rt1ht ann and penetrating her right side. Another went through the tight forearm of Judge Jean Morony, who wis paasing by. Mrs. Garrick wu reported ln 1atlsf1c-- tory condition. Morony wu treated and released. "I wouldn't say I was scared," Van. degrlft said Jater. "Scared means dlf· ferent things to difrerent people. It was ebvlous he was shooting people.'' Vandegrift, appointed to the bench in 1971 alter serving as secretary Of trie State Human Resources Agency, said it would be "inappropriate" to di!cuss the shooting further because he would prob- ably be a wJtness in Rutherford's trial. It was the second courtroom shooting in California in less than two years. From Page I DISCOVERY • • • why some patients could return to normal cy. "It now seems that a rewiring of the brain can take place," Dr. Lynch said. Ongoing stages of the research will at· tempt to determine if the brain cell rewiriog will help or hinder the brain damaged rat. Other researchers may consider the discovery a base for further research with humans. For Cotman and Lynch, however. one next step wUI be to determine what beha vior effects result from the brain cell rem0\'91 and how behavior follow ing the new cell Jinks compares with pre- brain damage activity. Thus far, the UCJ research has shov.'ll that the new nerve effects are penn~J.. "Results imply that the brain pcsse!\Ses an amazing and heretofore unsuspected capability for reorganization after brain damage . "It Is not known wheUler the reorganization is detrimental or beneficial to the rt<:Overy of brain func· tions ." they said. Dr. McGaugh noted the research was supported largely by the federal grants wilh "damn little'' money coming from the University Regents. Nevertheless, the meager research grants ha\'e prov ided enough to move Ule research forward and provide learning eiperiences for 10 graduate and u~ dergraduate students who participated in the study. 'Last Shootout' Armored Car Story Offered Sun~ay 'WE WON OUR LAST SllOOTOtrr' - Jn a Jook 1t the modem men who rkle shotgun on the "strongbo<," this Sunday Special finds their fitC'Urlty measures 80 rigid they even suspect police ofrlcers, under ctrtAln ~ndltlons. It's 1 story of the armortd truck busi ness. ELECTRONIC ZEN -Whether th< new Alpha Wave control thtory is 1 fltd or 1 phonv, one guy who tested the br1in machine lound it v.·asn"I e1otJc tnOUgb to handle the erotic. TilE NAME GAME -To get your number all the customer haJ to do ii PIY th< pr!« of the list xlltrs. Sellin( name.s and addre,... la big bu•lntsa t.nd Orange County'a biggest dealer in namn teUa '°'1'le of the "how" and "why" ln I YOU Section story. . MERLE HAGGAllD -lfla -1arity Is only a notch or two behind that of country mU!lc .in, Johnny Cub and be ii wt:ll on hls way to being 1 mllllonlltt, but Merle Hqpnf AYI he's an unhappy man. Slot)• ls ID Jl'amUy IVttkl.\I. POLITICS AND HAND GUNS -In a column out of Slc:fameoto, Phil llama -U -"-<er PltcbOll WU pollUcally motJrated when hi came wt fer Iha Wtlawlttl of band fU11S. MAYORS' ~ -R's "Part JI" fJI • last week's women's pages profile of Orange Coast city first ladies. This week, v.·ives of the mayors of Costa 1'-1esa, Hun. tington Beach and San Juan Cap istrano are featured. ADVICE FROM EINSTEIN Buslntss page ft1ture story ttlls ho\v Albert Eins tein helped Newport Beach grocer O. \V. "Dick" Richard build his supermarket The famed ma the mati cian ga\'e Richard 90me busintM advice. KN!GRTS Of' SPEEDWAY -Picturt pa,ge captures the drama of jousters on stett steeds at the motorcycle races. REDWOOD CONTROVERSY - Timbumen and conservaUonists are stW clashing over tbe phUosophles Involved In the attempt to pmttl'e tms by ,.ttlng them aside In the sanctuary called Rodwood NaUantl Part. LEGAL ADVICE -A apeclal YOU Sectlon sklry otters tipl on bow to avoid belll( chuted, .,ho to oontact U )'OU are Ind tells about I llW)'ml 1ssoc.:l&Uon bookie! that 11, ... otber Ups and steps to take • NOW SHE'S AN ACl'llESS -C.vtr story of TV WEE!( featum Susan Doy, )--of tho "Partridgt Ji'amfly," wllo '"""* fe ad G0J.T after &be WU 11, ... illo llllrriltr .. • Antidrug Program Scheduled A special concert by "The Children or the Day" 1inging group at San Clemente Jllgh School Saturday will launch a new drug abuse program along the South Coaat which wUI include ~ botllne. speaker's bureau, job placement program and Jither activities. Saturday's 7:30 p.m. eve nt will be held ln Triton Center, and also will include 20- mlnute rap sess ions between the audience and two San Clemente Police Department narcotics detectives. &b Urmstrom, the drug program director or Teen Challenge, also will ap. pear at the free coocert, along with local church paston. Dick Brocius, local director of the new program named "Alert", said the rally and concert will outline a "complete, Christian-centered drug-prevention and , rehabilitation program along the South Coast." Teams of volunteers will be on 24-hour call to accept hotline calls through a new num ber -493-LOVE. Brocius stressed that all callers will be protected by anonymity if they relate their problems through the hotline. "The teams we will have on duty wlll be able to use citizen's band radio during emergencies," he _explained, "and can provide confidential counseling when needed." The new service, expanding to jobs, rehabilitation and even half-way houses, \viii serve the arras of San Clemente. Dana Point, Capistrano Beach. Laguna Beach, Laguna Niguel, South Laguna, San Juan and Mission Viejo. Former addicts and drug users who now are involved in the leadership of the program would be those who will staff the var ious services offered in the Alert system. From Page I ATTACK ... state legislator as qualifications for of· lice. He discussed C-overnor R o n a I d Reagan's welfare re!orm bill, of which he was the author, and said he was proud that despite a majority of Democrals in both houses, 70 percent or the bill was adopted. Burgener added he has always sup. ported Presidqit Nixon and will continue to do so, "but that does not mean com· pllance with every Issue." Norman Ream or San Clemente and Gay Lewis of San Diego both spoke on issues. Ream said be wa1 disturbed wilh "our permissJve society," the courts and "treasonous remarks'' being made . He said he is opposed to busing outside of one's own school -district, but believes every child should receive a good educa- tion. The San Clemente candidate said he favors the death penalty and would in- troduce legislation to give the death penalty to hard narcotics pushers who are "committing mass murder." He said he supports law enforcement agencies, a strong military. consolidation of some federal agencies to avoid duplication of efferls and sav e tax money, and the use of the direct income t.ax (without loopholes) to provide revenue. Mrs. Gay Lew is discussed the numerous problems awaiting a solution in Washington whlch she would address her talent!, including the national debt , un. fair practices in the judiciary, social security problems, unemployment and hidden taxes. She said she supported the women's rights amendment but believe s it to be. unneceo;sary because women are pro- \•lded for in the Constitution. "Th e preamble to the constitution doesn't say '\Ve the men ... ' it says '\Ve the people .. .' We already have equal rights, but they are not enlorced." $3,680,341 Laguna Trustees Receive Budget By FREDERICK SCUOEMEHL district employes. 01 ni. D•nr ,, • ..,, Stiff for tlJlOlpJe, Hess pcw1led out, the A tentative $3,680,341 budget balanced district now pays 5.S perctnt or tilth with a +cent tax increase was presented classified ~secretaries, cuslodians, ttc.) to trustees of the Laguna Beach Uoified employes salary to social ~ity. "B)' School District Tuesday night 1980, I've been told by rthable ~rct.s, Tru~tees r«eived the .balanced Jxad&d_ ~~ will jump to 10 perceot. · said with .htt)e comment durmg the two-hour S ifi of the budget question~ meeting and are expect~ to hold a ·see-pee IC ~~ • .1 . ood study session on the financial pro-by trustees 10Ciudeu. gram in mid-June. Business manager Cnarles Hess based the budget for the ltn-13 fl!Cll year on a l percent increase 1n the assessed. valua· lion or all property wlthia the scboo1 district. Deep cuts were made in many areas not directly related to in-tbe- classroo m instruction, such as main- tenance of buildings and conference at· lendance accounts". "There's a lot of pressure for money," Hess told trustees. "It was our intent to balance the bud get. offe ring the same educatio nal prog ram without raising tax· es excessively." A four-cent increase would amount to $4 a year on a $40,000 home. The actual amount of a tax Increase b still shrouded in a question mark, Hm indicated, until final figures arrive from the co unty assessor's office on the exact percent increase in the asses.!ed valua· lion of the school district. • "We would hope the assessed valuation goes up three or lour percent," Hess co mmented. "That's equivalent to $60,000 fof our program. With more income than we see right now we might be able to balance the final budget without an in- crease in the tax rate, or we might be , able to restore some of the cuts and even look at 1owering the tax rate." Included in the tentative budget is money for an "educable" mentally retarded (EMR J program at the high school level, which might be deleted if lrwtees decided not to offer the pro- gram. It would bring in about $17,000 in state money and involve an expenditure or $3.000 of local money. Another program which may or may not be offered next year ill "opporturuty classes" for students under 11 years of age who cannot attend regular classes because of behavior problems. Hess noted that one ot the major prob- lems in balancing the tentative docu· ment was grappling with a $47,000 in- crease in fixed charges for retirement. medical and dental and annuity plans for From Pqe I COOKB OOK ••• spreads. Ooe blends in unflavored gelatin and evaporated milk with butter to dou- ble the amount er spread, while another reco mmends mixing 1n sour cream or bottled milk for hair again as much spr ead. Bacon or sausage dr!~pings were to be used tor sautelng and lard or vegetable shortening for cakes and cookies. Recipes not only teld Rosie the Riveter what to cook, but also advi!ed on matters of national defense such as saving waste fat and returning it to the butcher. "By doing this you are adding to the nation's supply or glycerine so much needed in making explosives." "Tin and steel are scarce and cans are made of steel plated with tin," the sup. plement says. Patriotic homemal<ers were urged lo remove the ends and squash cans nat for return to the salva1e point, perhaps for rebirth as a tank or jeep. That wa s a war that touched everyone 's life -not like Vietnam which could go practically Wlllllliced u:cept for the vexing headllnes. It was a time when worry was pervasive and a time of extremes with joy v.·iid and impetuous, and 10rrow bot· tomless. It was a}S() a time of unity with everyone and everything -even a lowly cook book -aimed at winning. Third College's S. . 'Bad' ituatw1i Iii San Diego SAN DIEGO (AP) -The controversial Third College at the University of California at San Diego was In turmoil tO.. day after a r<1pid frre series of events In which the provost resigned, seven black professors requested transfers and a stu· dent group rejected new colle&e regultl· lions pro_.r by the chancellor. : "We've g:ot to get this situation f!" solved IO<ll or natnl c.ollege is going to go down the drain." OlanceUor William D. McElroy said 'l'hursday. Dr. JO!eph Watson, the only provost Third College has had since opening in 1970. turned in his resignation Thursday. P.fcElroy rejected it and sakt he would at· tempt to talk the 32-year-old black into staying on. Third College. with 33 faculty members and 360 students, is devoted primarily to integrating ethnic studies into a single educational JW'(>g:ram and to giving students the skills they will need to im- prove Ille in their home communities. The enrollment Ls 31 percent black, 3% percent Mexican-Americlll, 20 ,percent Anglo, I percent A.!fan.Amt:rlcan and 2 percent Indian. For the past month a group of students and teachers has demanded that Watson resign because he exercised too much power over enrollment and faculty ap- pointment.!. But the provost said in an· interview it was the chancellor's newly proposed regulations that prompted his resigna- tion, rather than the recent controveray. The rules "suggest ambiguity on the administration's part on whether it is' committed to having Third College as a tolid educational institution," he said. McEfroy'a ...gu!atlons would enlarge tbe p......,. <ollege student-faculty board' of directcn from tlx m.mbtn to lt, which Watson approves of, but instead of having vote power over the board as oow. the prOY06't would have to refei disageementJ lo the chancel.Jor's office.· • 1st Woman Head.· Named to Laguna Civic League · 1'-trs. Anthony Demetriades became the fU"St woman president of the Laguna Beach Civic League during eleetion ol. new officen 1bursday night. Other officers are Joseph O'Sullivan, fll"St vice-president ; Jon Brand, second vice-president; Stanley HI et a I a , secretary; Merritt Trease, treasurer. Mn:. Dtmetriades: of 1'15 Temple Hilla Drive succeeds Brand as president of the civic group. ' Outgoing directors Roy \V. llolm and Anthony Demetrialdes were elected honorary lite directors. Holm, an .. year member of the league was praised by fellow direetors for bis role in acquirins the Main Beach park. · Nita Cannan, a loog·time Laguna rtSI· dent, received the league'• 1972 honorary life memben:hip. COSTA MESA CAR WASH WITH THIS AD. MEMORIAL DAY SPECIAL Ladies With the H•.H .H Purchase of $ 99 CAil WASH and HOT WAX LIMIT 2 ... CUSTOMll or FREE CAR WASH with any Flll·Up St11tct a... S--Wltlt D1r1 t ... ,, 0... •• , w1111 • ... wit Al Wits r., 91111fr 100,. •••"''" Wltll I ...., s.,.too Y-Wlr. ••• 5 Slvl11 And Meoy Colon To Choot1 r..., We lwwwWIN TN A Clooo C:. WAsa IN wooim AND COOL WATER . '" u. T•'IJIU Utlf w.. Offll1 .000 ONLY 2 wan THIU JUNI 11 OI WHU THIT LAST COSTA MESA CAR WASH CAcna,,_ fta•• .. 1.W. ,_,., 2019 11.UIOR ILVD., COSTA MESA 641-1030 j l • --1r-.-.,,, ..... Saddlehaek. Today'B Flaal N.Y. Stoek• 65, NO. 147, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 26', l9n TEN CENTS ounty Airport Impact Study Termed 'W-eak' By I. PETER KRIEG ot IM DtlllY l'llllt St•tf port Beach luu just open! $42,000 an Orange County Airport impact and the city's mayM arxl city · ger an less than thrilled with what got. study, released Thursday, telb the d lhat Newport Beach hu an m.. rable noise problem and that it should for joint c::ivilian-military use of El Marine Corps Air Station to relieve and air pollut.ion problems locally. "I'm not terribly Impressed," Mayor aid A. MclMls said this morning. I haven't had a chance to read the le report -it's got some good in- ation and it's going to be useful - Arms but some of the conclw.ions are a little weak." be said. ''The recommendations they came up with. you and 1 coo.ld have thought up QUrStlves U we sat down and talked for about 30 minutes," viewed City Manager Robert L. WyM. "It falls short in a number of areas," Wynn said. "It's recommendations could have been more explicit." One of those recommendations sug· gested the city get together to work out "an environmental sensitivity plan" with the Orange County Airport Land Use Commission. "Whoever wrote the report doesn 't understand what the Airport Land Use Commission is," said Mclnnis, who is chairman of that panel. The ALUC iJ charged with niling on proposed land use plans in the vicinity of the airport. The report recommends the city establish policies and programs to work with the commission that "might involve the development of 'an en- vironmental sensitivity plan' for all areas within the 'impact footprint' oC Orang'e County Airport. "Such. a cooperative program .could establish impact limits for the entire sub- ject area," tbe report said. "I'm going to read it again to try to un- derstand what the writer's point was,•• ~lclnnis said, "But l don't like getting a report like that. It makes you go back and lry lo find out what the writer ls trying to tell me," Mcinnis added. Mcinnis pointed out that many recom· mendatlons made have been either talked about or tried already. "That study was initiated two years aa:o," be noted. "It was a little long in a:ettlng here." The mayor also zeroed in on the El Toro recommendation. "That's got problems with it," Mcinnis said. "El Toro's use on an interim basis is something that the city has felt for a long time should be actively pursued. "All the studies that have aime along indicate exactly the same thing, saying Accord Reached the ultimale solution should be somewhere else," he continued. Both the nmyor and city manager aifeed the report does: contain some useful data and Mcinnis said It will be especially ustful to the 900 Newport Beach homeowners "'ho have filed noise limit suits agalnst the county. "The report bas some good lnlonnation that tends to verify what the people have been saying all along," Mcinnis said. "We've a very untenable poslllon al the upper end ot town -but that's nothing the people didn't already know. But It Is nice to be able to back it up with this data." Wynn agreed the report ''ls good in term~ O( dcSC'riblfli thf-Situation With raw datn. "Ilut I \vas hoping It rould bt• ntorr specific on thing!! lh:lt l'Oulcl bt donf' to ntake the airport more rtnnputible,'' Wynn sold. '-1clnnls said he intends lo discuss tht report and "'hnt to do "'Ith 11 al the next metUng of city councihncn June 12, saying lhc city v.•ill make !he report availnble lo nil con('(!rned 11:1rlll'S. The tWO-)'t'D r study. prcpnr1•d by the Arcadia consulting flml or \Vilsey lhun, \li'AS Intended to be the l'lly's rt•sponse tG an airport nel'ds study preparro for Or11.ngt Counly by the ltulph ~t. Parsons Company. Okay on Historic Pact Follnws Lengthy Talks MOSCOW (UPI} -President Nixon and Soviet leaders reached agreement to- ~y on a bistoric treaty limiting nuclear arms. The treaty was to be signed at 11 p.m. Moscow tiine at the Kremllii following an all-American dinner Nixon is giving · hosts. White House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said Nixon would sign for the United States, and diplomats told UPI Communist Party General Secretary Leonid I. Brezhnev probably would sign Tlir ee Re;oning lflSIWS Uqder 'S ubmission' -Orange County planning llalf people ai4lng Jbe Jrvlne Planning Commlsli911 came to the rescue Tbutlday night with a means or avoiding immediate con- akleration of three rezonings that would have allowed a doubling of tbe city's population. Planner Dave Culbertson of the collllty staff suggested the city "take under sub- mission" three rezonings involving nearly 900 acres of the city. The parce1s, all in central Irvine, in- tl\lde two .so-called window area prop- • erties of land not owned by the Irvine Company. Ponderosa Homes and Presley Development Company are aakinJ: rezon.. in,g from agriculture to residenUaf a total of 430 acres. The third parcel is the Irvine Com- pany's 409-acre Walnut Village East. The three ret0nings wouJd, if approved as submitted, provide for homes for more than 14,000 persons. Planning commissioners unanimously supported a motion by c.ommissioners Frank Hunt and Mn. Ellen Freund that the city take the zone change requests er submission wttil the city has a general plan. The move provides for a monthly review of each reques~ by city staff following the acbeduled adoption in S.ptember of a "policy plan" governing development in central Irvine. I Other parcels might be reviewed sooner, Hurd said, "whenever the plan- ning staff can provide standards by which the planning commissio11 might review the zonings.'• , ,Wistant City Attorney John Murphy described the submission action as being equivalent to tabling. He noted the hear· lngs !cbeduled foT 'l'huTsday's meeting might have been opened to be conti~ to a date certain for later consideration. Planning commissiOners opted not lo hear the developers pitch on each plan, 'rhursday night. 1'1anning advisu Ed Haworth lllli• gested it would be helpful u planning Nll had aome id<a ol the com- missioners• mction lo tho proposed rezoninls. It was g.....Uy ogretd deve!Dpmi (See RESCUE, Pip I) Vials Stolen rom Laguna Doctor YW. containing blgbly potent nu<otlcs ~ llolen 'l'hundly night from the Cll' ol a._ 111111-. Orqe c.unty lberlfl'• depullel l&ld, loclQ. DT. William Jaba Sdlalf. mt ~ de Vlleocla told d<pltiel lhll -. -Into hll Cll' .. the portlol lot ol medical bOlldlnc II thll --ID taU 'flab " morP>Ine ll!d Domonl -lilt ............. Depltia ... wwlJoC -·-....--.in thelr~el tllec:ase. for the Soviet Union. The agreement capped 21h: years of negotiations at the strategic arms limita- tion talks (SALT) in Helsinki and Vienna and provided a crowning achievement for Nixon's summit talks in Moscow. The treaty covers both offensive and defensive missiles. It will limit an- tiballistic missiles (ABl\-1), ban building more lallllching silos for intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBM ), freeze the number of ICBMs at the present figure, and allow no iiew construction of missile- launching submarines. The United States has 1,054 land.based ICBMs ; 41 missile -carrying submarines and two ABM sites under constrtiction. The Soviet Union has an estimated 1,550 ICBMs: 15 missile-carrying subs: and the only operational AB1'1 in the world. Even as the final wording was being v.·orked out. the nations reached agree- ment on yet another accord, this one to set up a Soviet-American commission to develop trade and business and economic Protest Bared Teacher'~ Acti~n CostS 'fof> SANTA CRtJ; (AP) -A young woman 1'ho ripped oil her blouse al an anUwar protat bu found hmell stripped of • Job. -. -Tbe.santa..CJ:uz School Di>trlct Board voted.to.Jln.J anke Lee Ro(ers, 2'1, from her job as a teacher'• aide at Laurel EJemtntary School. "She went beyond a proper expression of her antiwar feelings," said Dr. Mark Lewis, board president. "It is not against the law to go bare bo.90med, but it gives the board no confidence in her ability to work with children." Mi!! Rogers was put under a citizen's arrest by another woman May Jl at an antiwar demonstration outside the county jail. The district attorney later dropped charges on grounds no crime was committed. The claim was that she lore off her blouse and displayed her breasts in protest of the war. Lewis said that Miss Rogen: was not fired because of the arrest, but beo. cause she displayed a "willful failure of good conduct." Rocket Expert Von Braun Will Leave Space Agency WASHll'iGTON (UPI) -Dr. Wernher von Braun, German-born rocket expert who directed development of the rocket that sent Americans to the moon , retired from the space agency today. An announcement of his retirement Issued by the National Aeronautics and Space Adml.nirtration said that Von Braun would join Fairchild Industries u corporate vi<e pttSident for engineering and development, effective :i\iiy I. Von Braun was aerving as deputy Tustin Cyclist Held by Police Following Chase associate adminLc;trator at the lime or his resignati on. Before that, he was director of the Marshall Space Flight Center in Alabama for 10 years, heading the team that developed the world's most powerful rocket. the Saturn V which propelled Apollo's moon.landing missions. Dr. James C. Fletcher, NASA ad. ministrator said ''all of us in NASA will miss the daily stimulation of hil presence, but we are confident that we will continue to have the benefit of his hr aplratlon and counsel in the continuing exploration and use of apace." Von Braun, 60, who was instrumental in developing the V2 bombs !hat Germany launched against England during World War JI, sald be was leaving "with a deep feeling of gratitude for the wonderful and unique opportunities the agency has given me during the last 12 years." relations. The trade agreement, less than Nixon hoped for; was preceded during the weik- long talks by the signing of five other pacts, covering joint efforts on disease, pollution, space, science and "rules of the 1ea." Ziegler said that Nixon and the ruling Soviet troika -Brezhnev, Premier Alex· ei N. Kosygin and President Nikolai V. Podgorny -met in the Kremlin for tv;o boura this afternoon. Four·car Wreck IQIJ..'2i~erSIJlJi 1 a;r . . ( . 5 Others Hurt A man and a woman were killed eatly today In a spectacular four-car pileup on the Santa Ana freeway near Jeffrty Road in Irvine. Five others were Injured, four seriously, in the series of crashes et 2:30 a.m. Dead are Mrs. Bobbie Jean Gilliam, 28, Maywood, and Elmo Collett, 57, Long Beach. Mrs. Gilliam was driving north on the freeway and 1Werved Jnto a ditch to 1void. hitting a car stalled sideways on two northbound Janea, She got out of her car and was at.ruck by a third vehicle wblch had crashed into the stalled auto. ac-- cording to Highway Patrol officers. Collett, a passenger in the stalled car, was killed when the third vehicle, driven by Leroy Freeberg, 63, of Tu 1 tin, smashed into it aM:t then hurtled toward Mrs. Gilliam, traffic investigaton said. The stalled car was driven by Mrs. Barbara Joan Lau, 35, of 15742 Hum.- minghird Lane, Huntington Be.a.ch. A fourth car smashed Into the pileup, Highway Patrol office.rs reported. The driver, Antonlo Palm.a, 31, Poway, was only •lightly injured. Suffering from aerious Injuries at Tustin Community Hospital are Freeberg and Mrs. Leu , &ll well as Mrs. Billye Sepchich, 45, and Mrs. Mildred Sepchich, 52, both ol Long Beach. They were pagsena:era iD Mrs. Gilliam's car, which wu: rt.ruck by the bounding vehicle as it lay in the ditch alongside the freeway. OAll.'I" PIL.OT l ltff ,.,.. UC IRVINE SCIENTISTS SHOW" Bl:N CELLS REWIRli THEMSELVES . "'°. ul W'. Qj .. J!lf~ry Lynch, Psychoblologltll ' . Two VC1 Scientists Find Brain Cell 'Rewiring' By GEORGE LEIDAL Of tM O.lty ,lltl l'9ff Two UC Irvine psychoblologlstl an- nounced a "profound discovery" Thurs· day that may reverse the widely believed theory that damaged brains caMOt recover from nerve cell losses. Dr. Gary Lynch and Dr. Carl W. Col- leisure World Guar d Names 3 In Assault Case Three men who allegedly attempted to nm down a security guard at Laguna Hills Leisure World were booked Into Orange County Jail Thursday night on charges of assault with a deadly weapon. Awaiting court action are Jame1 Arthur Hawkins, 2(896 Spadra Lane, and Thomas James Conroy, ·28525 Eapaltar Drive, both 19 and both of Mlsslon Viejo and William Arthur Ray, 19, or 25301 Erlct0n Way, Laguna Hills. Security officer William Fre.ncla Bealer told Ol'ange County aheriff'1 ofllcen the trio deliberately tried to run hlm down a1 they drove at higb &peed put hll tatthouse. Lt!Jure World security guanl1 11ld !he three young men had beerordered to halt • within the complex grounda, but had refuted to do so. man revealed results or o 16-month study of brain damaged rats th ot was sup. ported by grants from the National Sc .. ence Foundation and thf Notional Jnat'- tute of Mental l1calth omountlna: lo $4$.000 a year. The UCI psychoblology professor• discussed their restarch at the opening of a half-day UCI Industrial Associates pro- gram Introducing business leaders to the school of bk>loglcal sclenets. The faculty reatarchers from Newport Beach aald their llndlnaa were bued oa work with 20 rats. HCI researchers removed a portion or the cortex: of the brain of each. rat. "Within a matter of day11 ," Dr. Lynch !See DISCOVERY, Page %) Republican Forum Will Elect Officers The newly formed South C G a ~ t Republican Forum, serving communltlea from Irvine to Laguna Nijuel, will elect ofUcera during a mtttlng 1et for 8 a.m. Saturday In the Si:yroom of the Airporter Inn. Mra. Edith Hindley of tht •tale and county COP ctntral committees "Ill dlsctw the purpose of Republican clubs in the communUy. Tickets 1t $2.50 each may be resttvtd by colling 833-1156 before Wednesday. Coalt A Tustin motorcyclist was captured by Newport Beach police 1bunctay night after an llO-mil~-bour chase in which be slopped, 1ped off, slopped again, then remmed a 1quad car In • third alleged escape try. Those · Were the Days • • • 1t'eadter Look for considerable cloudlnen Saturday 1long the Ol'ange C.ast, clearing by noon to sunny skies, actordtng to the wealhtrlady. Hl&ho ~7l. Low1 In !he IO'I. Richan! J. Ranslem, 23, of 14112 Westfall Road, 'WBS booked OD suspicion of ~ unc1 .. the influence ol llcobol or drugs. Patrolm<n Gr<g Hein and Walt Jlund. qulll aald they spotted a lpeed .. 'cyclist on Newport Boulevard at 32nd Street aboUt 9:20 p.m., and gave chue. Accelent.lng1 they pursued the •thicle ""' Tbe """"" °'"""" -•bout a balf·mlle. u be IPed lbrougb traffic, ~ spotted him pulled off to Iba rilbt DtJOW .. Old Neopart -ri SlllP!I ri&IJI on an -n>ad, the ~tan dainud R•••lem ac- tolamtd ...... -halU!d u .., -llill -"" i...-aad --..... (lliJt.,..... !lit ........ ... ~ u.. ... 1p1cl .,. ,, • ---. lllrikinl Iba -and llalliJJI ·-tjda. illmlp•lo tile pallce car was miner. Wartime Cookbook Recalls Past Memo rinl Day By JACK CllAPPELL Of .. O.lty ....... , ... Memories lie dusty on fOl'gottm shelves. Memories are there of 1 almpler lhne -a time where a batUt Jost meant 1 nation Jost, a ti.me whtn no enemy c:wJd find solao< in Amer1ca'1 41 stales, a lime or a aimpter war. Memcries l'Otum on da11 like Mm1oriaJ Day, or they can be roulted ~ Ungl1 by lhumblnl Urough a illJ!llled cookbool: a "Wartime SllP!>lemmt" an -nllonllll 1Ull ll1ldt 1n·the Cftlla'. ne old~ !alb o1 ~unc1e Sam'• J'ond llales," •pq ........ I'*\ Ra. tloaiaL" ''Ccllenl Walt," "c.llee Slrcl<lw:n,•• 1!111 ''algor Smro," 1lat It ..... " --I""~( fl llpOh al a man ill! I, • war, .- fighting for his country, and foe his girl and mom and Ill the Tut ol thole c:orey things. Crayon ICl'lbbled flyl .. rs tell of mop- petJ, tow·headed and dtrty-rma:ered ask· lng, "•hen'• o.ddy comlng home? .. Arlicla oa C&Mlng horken lo a time •hen marUllnc mun! bu)'in& wbatev« happened to he In !hot day and then Qgurtni out dinner. Meals were planned by Ted llar1 and black llan. S11JPr nt1oolng munt corn ~ In. tbe -for ·--berry po and qlrleu double balkr froslin(. AdT!Qe In tbe old Good ~ boot b llU1 '°""; .... ....,, """" "Orntbeft" it .,.r:w ··Vietnam,. - pea,11 ..... wllhout 111t1I are. u1U11JJ '"' macrobloCIO d1eU. ~ II , today's 'rationing. syttem. "Meat hu gone to war -eone to feed our armed foJUJ and allies,'' obHrvts the cook book. "Althollj)I htre'• enou&h left to brp our dleta tOUnd. we must leam to make more h-tquent -of tbe lea l1m!llar cWI u well u Mach variety meatt u liver, hurt, kldnty, toniue. ollaill, pla'• knuckles, etc.," It 11y1 . To bock up the contmtlon !hot 1111<h vlirlely mal <OUld be )'\lllllllY, ndpu for "Helrt Mat Cakes," •if1or1'1 Oxt.111 ionp,• ...,.I ... !Mr wtlh 1.11111 Beool" ad "DnllO.MCldae)'I wttli Rlce" an ol- lmd. Al lor lllret<Hqi ,.. ,len!il Ilk-. oe•ml ndpes "" , ill4red lor 1luller · (S.OO«IOOK, .... I) INSI DE TODAY Orange Countu 11 tht 1traw- bt"11 capital o/ lhe ntJflon. Gar· <Un Grout 1ta{Jt1 Its annual Stra1Dbtt'f\I Pt1tfPOl this Memor- ial !Dftk.,,d. Stt 1t"'11 In !Oda~'• Wtt.lt'ndlr. L..M. ..,. ' _.., .. (......... 1 ~ »-: <-.. .,.... ....... ,. ......i.t ..... • ,...... 1•11 -11 I W _._. u .............. " aui... ' -.... ' ( I z oAJn PILco_r __ 1s T·ests Slww Big Gains In Joaquin By PAMELA HALI.AN Of .. DttllY .. 11 .. f.1111 Children in lhe third through eighth grades ln the S~n Joaquin F;lementary School District Jlre making great strides In readlns and l1nguage accordin11 lo re· cent ttat ruults. Tom Perrle. test coordlnritor, presented results of the Call!omla Test or Dll!lc Skills to trustees or the district \Ved- nesday during a Jtudy session at l.a Paz Intermediate School in Mission Viejo. Children "'ere tested in three areas: reading, language and arilhmetlr . Perrle presenttd several sets of tigures to the board comparing district result.. with test publishers' control group results and another 11et of rlgures comparing last year's scores with those obtained this year. Reading 8COre1 showed marked im- provement in all three 1ixlh gcades test· td In both vocabulary and c<1mprehen· 1lon. Jn e~ery grade rhlldren were shown lo be achieving above their pub- ll1hen' expectations ror children at their grade level. Language !kllls also ~howed im· provement but wtte not as good a111 the reading scores. Perrie said spelling and punctuation were shown to be weak in some grade• but it wu discovered that these areas were not stressed in text- books. ArithmeUc scoru were the weakest of the three 1rea11 tested. Perrle said th is is a 1tatewide trend and is the result of mort emph1!1l1 belng placed on reading in rtCent year1. "Where drops occur In acore1 we are pointing them out to teachers and giving them suggeatlons on how to correct them In addJtlqn to locating children with apeclflc problems," said Perrle. "We are also plaMlng ln·servii:e prQ· gram1 to assist teacher• In finding ways to introduce more apelllng words Into the curriculum," he 1ald. One problem with the spelllng texts w111 the limited number of words introduced. Many words ap- pearing on tests do not appear In the text- book. Pttrie said he could not pinpoint the exact reason why children are doing bet- ter. "I auume teachers are doing a bet- ter job," "" 11id. Dilcusslng often.quoted test scores comparing San Joaquin with other dl.atrlcts in the county, Perr le said published scorts are often misleading because many districts are within a frac- tion of 1 percent of each other. From Page 1 COOKBOOK • • • 11pread!, One blends In unflavored gelatin and evaporated milk with butter to dou- ble the amount of spread, while another recommends mixing in sour cream or bottled milk for half again as much spread. Bacon or sausage dri!'pings were to be used for sauleing and lard or vegetable shortening for ca kes and cookies. Rec ipes not only told Rosie the Riveter what to cook, but el.so advised on matters or national derense such as saving waste fat and returning It to the butcher. "By doing this you are adding to the nation 's supply of glycerine so much needed in making explosives." "Tin and steel are scarct and cans are made of steel plated with tin," the sup- plement says. Patriotic homemakers were urged to remove the ends and squash cans Oat for return to the salvage point, perhaps for rebirth as a tank or jeep. That was a war that touched evrryone 's lift -not like Vietnam which could go prnctica ll.v unnoticed except for the vexing headlines. It was a time when worry was pervasive and 11 time of extremes wit h joy \Vild and impetuous, and so rrow bot· tomless. It was al.so a time or unity with everyone and e~·erything -even a lowly cook book -aimed at winning. OlANGI COAST " DAILY PILOT Tll• Or•llO• Cotll OAllV ,.ll01, wltll wtll("' I\ ~~l~ !ti. NtW\0PrtH, 11 PUbll .... tld by tl'lt O•lllOt (61111 1'11bll1lllftt Coml)Sny. S$<1· r•I• lldllloflt •t• P1,1bll•IWll. Mond1y thtOUOll l'tld•,, for Co11n Mttl, MtWDOrl 8f•Cll, l:IYnllllOlwl Bt•C~IF"ll"T•ln V.tllt V, LtQ'lln• INCh. lr~in,'S10dl•bock 1<\d S•n ''*""•"I'' S.11 Juu• (1plUr1<10. !>. 11111111 rf;laft•I "'lllon 11 Wflll,lll'CI :..1~1d•V• """ :.vnd•vi. '~ prlncj~· P11bU111111C1 PIAM ,., •t )JI! W~·· 8•f Stret!, (0\11 MtMI, C1t;rarn11, •161'. Reitrf N, Weed 1'1r11d1M 1nct r1,~h\l\I'• J1c .. I . C u1l1y V\(ol ,.,.IDM.,,t Incl ~r1! MIMtf:r Tht'"11 k11vil EISl'°' Tho"'•' A. Murphi11e MtNtlillf li..ilOt CMr!tt H. LtoJ llticha rJ P. N•tl h.tlalllH MtllafllW E'llwl .,_ ~lo M11111: ,. Wt't l ty S"""1 """"°'' 11«'1~ lJ.1) N""llOrt hflnlN L ......... INdl: m lllert" A"'""" ""'"''"'"" h•<ll~ 1"1j ... ell.....,.,,. '" Cit~: la Mtnfl 11 C.lftho. llt:Mt T.t ...... f7141 '41--411\ O.ulRetil A......,.d .. 141·S671 1-C.__ Al Dtfi .. •llt1i 1•1••••• 4f2-44JO C""'ftl'll. lf'7l. ~ . Qffl """'"°""" ~... . "Y· N1 """' •llrih, hlrtt~ terltl fMttw ... lfwrfl""""1t ..... IN., Ill r•Miwttllll ti'l"*'f _... . ..,... .,....... ., CIJli'Yl'llN ........ ~a...::':' ...... °"''"'-· -~ ... ., ....,,..,. Q,U :11'~~· .. "'911 U..11 .....,.., ffllllttrv ... Q.il _.,.,.,. ( Red Infiltration Missiles. Break Kontum Assault SAIGON JUPi) -U.S. helicopters llr- lng guided electronic rni5siles broke up a Communist ai;sault on Konturn today, but other North Vietnan1ese 1nfiltr1.1ted into the forward commund 1>0sts of the South Vietnamese 22.nd Infantry Oivislon on the .northern edge or the city. While Sol.1th Vittnamtse c:k>fenderli bat· tled 500 infiltrators who occupied houses anU a school on the southern edge of Kon· tum, another group of sappers seized several buildings in the division com· pound on the north side and touched off a bizarre battle. A machinegun crew climbed a water tower in the South Vietnamese compound and sprayed machinegun bullets at the defenders below. South Vietnamese tanks shelled the tower -and mis.std. Fin.ally a U.S. hcl icopttr flew In , knocked over the tower with another missile and killed the four machine· gunners. U.S. spokesmen said the American missile-helicopters knocked out at least JO of the 13 tanks destroyed at Kontum today. helping the South Vietnamese beat back two assaults on lhe Kontum airport . Meanwhile, the U.S. command reported a lhir d d"Y of massive alr attacks agai nst liaiphong. The North Vietnamese launched new att acks along the defense line abOvt Hue and brought in a lorce of tanks whii::h were menacing the 2,00(),. 1nan U.S. base at Phu Dai, 10 mile$ south or Hue. A spokesman said the tank force was sPQlted only five miles from the lightly ~uardC!d eastern flank or Phu Bai and that although there was a BS2 strike in the area the base was still under threat. On the My Chanh River defense line 21 miles north of Hue, a force or 1,000 North Vietnamese using tanks launched another major assaul t along Highway l today but were beaten back by U.S. air power and South Vietnamese Marines usi11g hand grenades. The fighting swept to within 30 yards of the South Vietnamese lines. The battle for Kontum was far from over but the missile-firing American helicopters were making it easier for the defenders . The helicopte rs were using missiles known as "TOWS" for Tube-Launched, Optica lly Tracked Wire-guided missiles. They began using them seven weeks ago \vhen brought in from West Germany. UPI Correspondent 11att Franjola said the operator aboard a helicopter guides the missile by keeping the target cen· tered in a telescopic sight. R11 ssia11 Tot A young Soviet face peers cu riously at th e A me r i c a n photographer taking his pic- tures in a c r o w d moving around the busy Kremlin. The child wears the Communist hammer and sickle symbol on his cap. Z Wounded Attorney Killed In Court 'Feud' OROVILLE (AP) -A running legal feud has led to a burst of gunfire in the courthouse in th is Saeramenkl Valley farming community that left an attorney de:ad, a judge and a witneu wounded. Perry Farmer, 44. attorney for the plaintiffs, died o.f a bullet wound in the head shorlly after the shooting Thursday afternoon. Karolyn Garrick, a plaintiff, was wounded in the ann and side, and a judge who happened along was wounded in the right .arm. The defendant ln the civil suit, l\finard 0 , Rutherford, 57, of Oroville, was booked !or investigation of one count of murder and two counts of attempted murder. The shooting broke out in Butte County Superior Court as Judge Lucian Van- degrift, a former key member of Gov. Ronald Reagan's cabinet, was presiding at a civil lawsuit trial. Witnesses said Fanner was seated at the co1,Jnsel table when Rutherford pulled a .38-caliber revolver from his pocket ar a briefcase, strode forward from his seat in the audience, and fired into the back of Farmer's head from a distance of about six inches. Then Rutherford ran for the door, fir- ing his pistol, the witnesses said. ~ "I wouldD't 11y J was 1cartd," Van- d,grlft saJd later. "Scared means dif- ferent things to different people. It was obvious he was shooting pe0ple." Vandegrifl , appointed to the bench iJl.. 1971 after serving u aecretary of Ute State Human Reaources Agency, said..lt \!Ould be--''inappropriate" lo di,,cuss ~ shooting further because he would prob- ably be a witness in Rutherford 's tria l. Jt was the second courtrwm shooti.pg in California in less than two years. An outburst of gunfire during an ft· t'mpted escape at the Marin Couoly C<lurtbouse Aug. 7, 1970, cost the lives ol. Superior Court Judge Harold J . HallJll and three other persons. Angela Davis iJ being tried on murder·kidnap-eonspiracy charges as a result of that incident. (See story, Page 5). The Oroville shooting apparently dates back about lour year& when Rutherf~. a contract rural postman, and Mrs. GSJ-.. rick jointly demolished and salvaged a building, acquaintances reported. At that time, Rutherford filed a suit against Mrs. Garrick over some bricks which res ulted from the salvage, ac-- cording to friends . ~ Farmer was Mrs. Garrick 's attOr~. and he not only won the case bul al ;a Sl,200 judgement against Rutherford, e fr iends said. Al that point, Rutherford had l-1r s. Pat Trades Mickey Mouse 1'he witness on the stand at the time, Ernest Reynolds , swung a stool at Rutherford but missed, then grabbed his pistol wrist. He and a deputy sheriff wrestled Rutherford out into the haJlway with the pistol still firing, the witnesses said. One bullet struck l\.trs. Garrick, break· ing her right arm affif penetra.ting her right side. Another went through the right forearm of Judge Jean Morony, who was pass lng by. Garrick's equipment atlached -th is in- cluded a tractcr, al least two veh icles, and other tOOU. 'Contamination' Feared in Water. Due to Seepage First Lady Offers Watch as Joke to Factory Chief By HELEN THOMAS MOSCOW (UPl) -First Lady Pat Nix- on presented a Mickey Mou.se watch to the director of Ru ssia's biggest limeplece fa ctory today and got a laugh and a silver samovar in return. "I brought it along to you as a joke," Mrs. Nixon told the director of the Moscow watch factory, Dmitri A. Paramonov, who laughed as she handed him the watch. "I understand Mickey Mouse is a favorite in your country as welt 1111 in America -I'm sure the works aren't as good. Paramonov gave Mrs. Nixon a foot- high silver samovar, the ornate water heaters used to brew tea in Russian households. "It symbolizes that those who are on friendJy term1 should sit down and hive tea together," he said. "l think lts a wonderful factory , spotless and clean." »1rs. Nixon said. "It's important for a watch factory to be clean. I've seen so many happy faces." Mrs. Nixon, whose slimness is a sharp contrast with the more buxom Ru ssian women , laughed and said her hostesses ha ve been doing their best to fatten her up in Moscow. She said her Kremlin household staff thinks she is too thin and plies her with sweets and pastries of the kind the fac· tory staff served her during a tea break at the end of her visit. With ~1rs. Nixon and her party was Mrs. Leonid I. Brezhnev. wife of the Comm uni.st party general secretary, and the wife of Foreign :a.linister Andrei A. Gromyko. Mrs. Nixon had 1ittle to say about an In cident Thursday night at the Bolshoi Ballet in which a young woman shouted "Freedom for Vietnam." From Pagel DISCOVERY ... said. a filling in of the cut area can be abserved . Jt has Jong been known that brain cells -nerve !issue -cannot dup licate themselves as do cells of other body tissues such .as the skin. Hov.·c\1er, lhe l.ynch·Cotman studies of rats indicates the possibility that u:idam- aged cells in other parts of the body send out new signals -called processes - have been "dr::imatically" e\'ident in miscroscopic views of brain tissue. The nerve processes produce an enzyme acetyl-cholinestrase. Dr . Lynch said. \\1hcn tissues arc "stained" \l'ith a dye that has been used for years in other areas of research, the nerve enzyme can readily be seen. Application of this graphic method tq establish the presence or new connections between brain cells, rc11lncing the con· nections that broke dov.•n v.·ith the damage of ()thcr cells is the key to the UCI discovery. "We're the first people to look into thi s structure using the staining technique," Dr. Cotman said. Psychobiology department chainnan Dr. James L. ~1cGaugh described the pair's finding as a "profound discovery. No matter what else comes from it, the inlonnation adds to our knowledge of the brain," he said. "If all possible implications come to pass, the discovery would not only be profound, but could be classed as phenomenal," Dr. 1'.IcGaugh said. One future implication of the findings migh t be in helping humans who have suffered brain damage by accident or ather means. An example of the signlficance or the finding might be in controlling memory loss due to brain damage. if the functions of damaged cells caus- ing memory loss are replaced with cells fron1 other parts of the brain, one effect might be spasticity, Dr. McGaugh sug· gcsted . Since becoming a spastic is not much of an improvement over suffe ring memory loss, the patient mighl someday be given nerve process inhibitors to con· trol which brain cells replace the links that once helped with memory pre>- cessing. "'rhis C{)Uld be the beginning for ra· tlonal medicine for brain damage.'' Or. McGaugh said. 'Last Shootout' Armored Car Story Offered Sunday I '\\'E \VON OUR 1.AST SllOOTOtrr' - In a look at the n1oder11 1ucn 1vho ride ~hotgun on the "strongbox.'' I hi s Sunday Special finds their security n1casures so rigid they even suspec t police offietrs. under certnin C<lnditions. It's a story o( tM armored truck business. ELECTRONIC ZEN -Whelher the ~ Alpha Wave control theory is R fad or a phony, one guy who tested the brain machine found It v.·asn't exotic El!OUgh to handle the e:rotic. THE NAME GAME -'To gel your number all the tustomer has to do Js pey tht price of the list i;eller11. Selling names and addreSM!s Is big business and Orange County 's biggtst deRler in names tells JOme of the ''how" and "why'' in a YOU Section story. MERLE HAGGARD -His popularily ls only a notch or two behind that of country music king Johnny CAS11 and he Is well on hl!I way to being a mllllonairt. bot Merle Hauard sa)'I he's an 1lllhappy man. Story b in Famlly Wttltly. POLl'TICS AND HAND GUNS -In a column out· ol Sl<ramenlO,_ Phil Hanno woocltrt u Sherill Peler r il....,. was poUtkaUy J.'DO(ivafed whto Ito <lime out 141' the •llnlnc "' ---1\!AVORS' WIVES -11'1 "Part Il" o1 • last "'eek"$ ,.,,omen's pages pronle of Orange Coasl city first ladles. Th is \\'eek. \l•ives of the ma yors or Costa ~1es3 , Hun- tington Beach and S.1n Juan Cifpistraoo are featured. ADVICE FROM EINSTEIN Business page feature story tells how Albe.rt Einstein helped Newpor t Beach grocer 0 . W. "Dick" Richard build his supermarket. The famed mathematician gave Richard so me busintss advice. KNIGHTS OF SPEEDWAY -Piclure page captures the drama of jousters on sleet steeds at the motorcycle racts. REDWOOD CONT ROVE RS Y - Timbtrmen and conservationi5ts are still clashing ovtr the philosophies invo\vtd in the nttempt to prtserve trees by setting them asid4; in the sanctuary called &dwood National Park. LEGAL ADVICE -A •pecial YOU ·Stet.ion story orfers Ups on ho'v to avoid bejng cheated, who to contact U you are and te.U11 Jbout a lawyers' 11ssocia tion booklet that gives o)ber tips and lleps to lake. NOW SHE'S AN ACTRESS -Cover atory of 'TV WEEK feat.,. &isan Dey, )'OUl18 Illar of lhe "Partridge Family," 'l!ho leamtd to act only after •he •11 tP""' Ille lltrrina role . • . ''I heard it, bul I couldn 't understand what she was saying," she said. "Freee-dommm to Vietnammmmm!'' came the heavily ~cccnted cry. It was a young redhaired woman sitting in a high golden balcony. She yelled dow n and to her right at the gilded royal box whe re President and f\-1rs. Nixon. Soviet ])resident Nikolai V. Podgorny, Premier Alexei N. Kosygin and' f\.1rs. Brezhnev were settling in tor the third dreamy act of "Swan Lake." The audience gasped. The dimming houselights Oared a bit in the gold and red-plush theater, then da rkened. The shadowy figures of Soviet security police moved through the balC{)nies toward the source of the shout. The Soviets tolerate no such behavior . The beam of a portable spotlight stabbed through the darkness up around the roof. "I reel so rry for her," muttered a U.S. Secret Service agent in the audience. It was dark again in the theater by now and ballerina Natasha Besmertnova was gliding through Swan Lake's cUmax. Guests seated nearby said the police lifted the woman and her rem3Ie-Com· panion over the backs of their cross-aisle seats, so as not lo disturb other in their row, and took them away. The woman later was identified as tliriam Fracassi. wife of Claudio Fracassl. correspondent in 1foscow for the Italian communist newspaper Peese Sera. Rabbit Show Slated In Irvine Saturday The Irvine Star Reachers 4-H Club will host a countywide rabbit shO\','ing and judging set for 9 a.m. to I p.m. Saturday on the UC Irvine farm near Culver and Campus Drives in Irvi ne. Coordinator Scottie Moser of the East Orange Ranchcros club said 4 -H 1ncn1bers from 30 county clubs will bring 1hcir prize rabbits to Irvine. The day's activities across Campus Drive from the University Fire Station, are open to parents anC: children in· · terested in joining a 4-H club. Mrs. Garrick was reported in satisfac· tory condition. Morony was treated and released. From Page 1 RESCUE... .... might work with the citizens C{)mtnittees to keep pace with the formulation of the city's policy plan that will affect their developments. Further, planning commissioners said they v .. ooJd react in writing to the zoning propos als to form the reaction base Haworth said was necessary. Dave King, facilities planner for the San Joaquin Elementary District noted tha t delay on the Walnut Vlllage East project might threaten the status or two schools being planned for the central Irvine area. James Taylor of the Irvine Compeny noted the land development firm has thus far contributed $35,000 ln planning money ror the elementary school expected to be built in the proposed planned community or nearly 9,000 people. King noted the elementary school was in drawing stages and an intermediate school to be built along side was scheduled to go to bid soon. Commissioner Hurd said the threat to the schools situation was the "precise reason" for his JO.day review and recom- mendation suggtstion in the "take under submission" delaying action. In other ma tters considered Thursday, C{)mmissioners approved plans for en ex· tension of the University Park Shopping Center pending a study of circulation and parkin g within the total neighborhood center. The ac tion will allow construction of a drug store, hardware store and small shops complex adjacent to the Alpha Beta Market at CUiver Drive and Michelson Avenue in University Park. Commissioners also amended the minutes of the previous meeting to reflect more accurately their action on the proposed hotel for University Park. The corrected language leaves the pre>- posed golf C{)Ufse clubhouse where it is and moves only tile fJroposed hotel 8nd Its related uses, away from CUlver Drive. With the Purchase of CAR WASH and HOT WAX W•Z.1tWuHc • Orange County's water supply faces: contaminatio n if septic tanks used by' residents in a Santa Ana Canyon rnobl1i!' home park are not immediately con- trolled, the Orange County Wa ter District' has claimed in a Riverside C o u n t y. Superior Court lawsuit. Naming the slate Water Resource~ Control Board as defendants, Orauie, County Water District lawyers claim that the mobile home park. operated by C.Ontemporary Mobile Home Corporatlon. daily pumps 50,000 gallons of sewage m1.0· septic tanb and then releases th! wuti into subservice water fields. 'The lawsuit claims that a wide art.I around the park is already highly mineralized as the result of the tam And it points out that s e e p a g t downstream into hea vily populated coun- ty areas is daily adding to the increasing mineral content of water used in tbo4e areas. • Operators of the park have argued thai the state board relaxed its sewage con· trol regulations last March to the point that limitations on mineral content wets; no longer required. :- New regulations drafted at that time concentrated on forcing the operators lo control had hardness of the discharged water before releasing it into subservJc( storage areas. -·· Orange County Water District Jawym· now want that March decision reversed.; They also want the Riverside court . to order the slate agency to Insist an &." vironmenlal impact statements being. submitted by any future potential user Of non-sewage systems. It is aJleged in the lawsuit that the. state agency ignores the effect or sewage dsicharge on downstream users of Oran ge Coun ty Water District water. State officials have previously limited' Ute preparation of impact statements to• governmental agencies involved in pro). eels calling for non-sewage facilities. No date has yet been scheduled for a hearing into the dispute. $ WITH THIS AD. HG. 2,.'5 99 LIMIT 2 ... CUITOMIR ··: ... , or FREE CAR WASH with any Fill·Up Sfretdl ... , Somt Witt. Dttadl .. 11 Dolftt • • • wftti •MW wit All Wits Top q.llty 100°4 ........ Wlllt I M-. Slr!wlM y-Wife ••• 5 Styles And Many Colon To Choose From Wt GwwtH Y• A Ct.. C. WASH IN WOOUTE AND COOL WATER Try U1 Yoo'• Ullo Uall WIG Ol'fO GOOD ONLY 2 WllllS THIU JUNI 15 01 WHILI THIY LAST COSTA MESA CAR WASH IA.,_,,_ n11"-........... , 2059 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MUA M5·1030 DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Delay Is The Local Agency Formation Commission (LAFCI evidently agrees with Irvine's good neighbor policy. This week lhe city-county body which rules on city bounda· rtes agreed to delay consideration of Irvine's 53,000-acre sphere of influence and u;s00-acre annexation proposals until July 27. Irvine o!liclals sought the delay to allow time for the new city to sit down with the growing number of cities and school districts which seem to have obJeC· lions to the plan. Ttrdate-offictat-negatJ:ve reaction to the project.ed Irvine growth has been filed with the LAFC by the city of Santa Ana. Newport Beach has indicated minor con~ cern. Others voicing concern have been the Sadd.le~~clc Area Coordinating Council, the Laguna Beach Unified and San Joaquin Elementary school districts, and the cities of Orange and Laguna Beach: . . The delay is warranted. The discussions Irvine pro- poses with its neighbors demonstrates the new city's in· tention to be a friendly neighbor despite its strong de- sire to insure a geod balance of industrial-commercial lo residential property in the growing city. Quigley to tl1e Rescue Jrvine city councilman Henry Quigley stepped i~to the picture just in time to keep the ~guna Beach City CoUncil from going on record as opposing a large chunk of the pro{losed lrvine annexation. The CJty fathers were mulling a plan!ling c~mmis­ sion recommendation that a protest be filed with the Local Agency Formation Commission {LAFC) because part of the boundary of the ~roposed 9,~00-acre a!l· nexation would overlap Lagunas sphere of influence 1n Laguna Canyon. . Quigley pointed out that, as a former Lagunan. he Women. Have Come a Long; Long Way SYDNEY J. HARRIS Neither the proponents nor the ' OJ> ponents of what we loosely call "\Vomen's Lib'' today realize how far modern women have come -and how far they have had to come from. , American common law is derived from the Common LaW of England, and only a century ago, the wife was almost ~he complete chattel of her hu6band. We find it hard to believe now that , Jess than 100 ~ year1 ago, a man could legally support his mistress on the earnings or his \Vire. In his shocking history of socia l refonns (w ha t is shocking is the stu· pid ways in lvhich they were resisted by the bul"'arks or sOcietyl. E. S. Turner points out that lhe 19th Century lvife had fewer rights than accorded a wife under Roman Jaw "and hardly more than had been con- ctded to an African slave before eman- cipation." Published some two decades ago, his book. "Roads to Ruin," spells out the relationship of the Victorian husband to his wife: "He owned her body, her pr~ erty, her savings, her personal je\\•els .and her income, whether they lived together or separatel.v. He could deprive Iler of her as sets entirely as fie thought fit. and be could do this whether be were 21lve or dead.'' His power !o disinherit a wilt! (of her own goods) was absolute and irrevocable. ONE OF TllE FEW l\1EN of his time to ~peak up against this iniquity, according to Turner, was John Stuart Mill, the Dear Gloomy Gus Now that Irvine is eyeing ocean- front annexation between Corona del Mar and Laguna, and already has a land-based Jaycees, when will the city get its first Sea Scout Base? -D.l.G. Tllit lttlwrt rttlKIS rtNtrs' w1t1q, net ft.tttlUrltJ lhls.t ti lf'l.9 --., ... r, SIM ,_ "' H IVI " GlotmY Gws. Dilly ~lltt. philosopher and political economist, who himself openly repudiated his legal rig:ht s when he married. In his tract, "The Sub- jectioo of Women," (1890), he said of the English housewife: "She can acquire no property (except _for her husband); the instant it becomes hers, even if by inheritance, it becomes jpso facto his .•. If she leaves her hus- band, she can take nothing with her, neither her children nor anything which js rightfully her own. If he chooses. he can compel her to return by law, or by physic~I force : or he may content himself \Vith seiz.ing for his own use anything lvhich she may earn or which may be given to her by her reJations .. \\'HEN TIIE LONG campaign began on behalf (If the Married Women's Property Bill, it was widely attacked as a "vicious principle" that would dissolve the mar· riage bond, and a propasal as lunatic "as perpetual motion or stopping the revolu- tions of the moon.'' From perusing the press and Parliamentary reP,Orts (If that period, a visitor from another planet would really lmagine that society would be turned upside down if women were permitted a few legal and financial rights of their own. As I say, one has only to read this chapter to recognize how far women have come since then -and how nwch more remains to be done. Threat to Poppy Sales Tbe Dally Californian El CajOD Once a year as Memorial Day ap- proache-s some of the veterans' organiz.a· lions station representatives at shopping centers -and other places where people congregate -to collect contributions for dlsabled war veterans. ln exchange for a few coins or a small bill, they pin a bright red poppy to your Jape! as an indication that you cared about the plight of 3.2 million veterans who returned from the wars with missing limbs, lost eyesight and other injuries which denied them a normal life. THE MONEY COLLECTED is used lo provide for disabled veterans those items wh1ch government pensions do not cover. lt enables volunt~ workers to take hr capacitated veterarui to places lhey might not otherwise go, to visit them in their homes, to care for the orphans and widows ol servicemen who died and to furnish rehabDltatlve wvices to those who Jive. So hosUle bu the public mood. become Quotes John Archibald Cl-a, Am!JnlllldOt to 'hnbla1 t.x·Sa• Fra1cbcla pllanlag retirement to Callfon111a -"The forclgn te:M'lct keeps the corpuscles going ; you .U..y alive and alert. There are new iangugto to learn, new placu and peo. pie to underltand.'' to\vard the Vietnam War that the pr06· peel for poppy sales this year 1s bleak. UNFORTUNATELY, the, controversy over the Vietnam War has done a great deal to color attitudes toward militarism in general and has distorted U.S. in- votveffient in past wars. Leftist in- tellectuals, anxious to sully the record, view the Vietnam .epi.sode as a mere con- tinuation o! American imperialism that dates back a century or more. So often has this \licious canard 'been circulated that some people have been conned into believing that the United States alone is responilible for all the international violence of modem time!. Many people, not very wisely. allow their disenchantment with the V\etnam War to iiumb their senses, forgetting they owe their freedom to the veltnlns. both living and dead, who during World War II he'lped deJeat the most monstrous villa.toy ever to be unlea.ohed upon lhe earth. AND 111E MEN who have gone off to war in the 20th century have done ao in every case in response to tht aggression or nations intent upon annexing their neighbors. r , Whether this has alway1 been 1 wise policy Ii debatable, but It Is no caUJe lor tumtng our becks on the ..me'n who 1uf- fered the miseries of war and 1UJJ have the scars. · A n•tlOn which rorgeta tho 11crillce1 of ltl soldiers In batUe rlskJ not having anybody ll'Olllld to def ind it wbelJ danger strikes. Warranted understood the concern and orfered assurance that Irvine doesn't want to step on anyone's !Sphere o.f influ· ence. His amiable presentation charmed the council into agreelng that representatives of the two cities should sit down and reason together. But what really did the trick was his reminder that the Irvine council had adopted a tre .. protection ordin· ance as one of its first moves. Now the Laguna Green· belt proP?nents are !Yeing new support from such ecol· __ ogy-conscious neighbors. End of the Freeze On Tuesday morning, the city of Irvine will for the first time since incorporation, allow building and grad· ing permits to be issued. With the expiration of the building freeze, devel- opers who have worked their \vay through the required red tape necessary to obtain the written greenlight for construction will get it. Irvine Councilmen expressed little concern this week over the expiration of the freeze. Most suggested it should be allowed to lapse. Since the freeze was initiated last December, the clty has taken giant steps toward providing protections against the rampant spurt of construction that was feared. A city manager has been hired. A planning com· mission is appointed and functioning. A planning di· rector will soon be on board. A development preview commission is creating building design standards. Finally, a host of citizen advisory committees have begun their contributions to the new 1city's future. The freeze will not be missed. , USS~ • .. ... 0l'1n Old Glory ••• Fly Me All of tlae Tinae' Wants Flag Flown 24 Hours a Day To the Editor: I am continuing to encourage citizens to Oy our nag 24 hours a day -lighted at night. More and more lighted banners are waving at night in our area. On the eve of our 200th anniversary and with A1emorial Day this weekend, I have come up with a new slogan : "I'm Old Glory "Fly me-All of the time!" Following are excerpts from a letter from the commanding general or our state military forces. I believe everyone will be interested in this answer from the military. "THE Bll.L to revise the wording of the code and to establish a Fla1 Com· mission appears to m to be appropriate. The flag, long symbolizing the union of persons with common association, has borne its rules of display consUtuted upon good manners. Some of the rules of good manners are obviously of slight im· portance in themselves, nor is there universal agreement concerning them. Observance of the Flag Code etiquette, as it is known today, is chiefly voluntary. "CHANGES TO the code, as practiced by this state and the others: can only be effected through federal action. While we concur in your goals, we believe it to be properly the action of dedicated private citizens as yourself rather than the func- tion of a state. "We most sincerely commend you on your efforts and wish you success." - Robert S. Ford, Col., GS, CALARNG, Administrative Officer. Sacramento. KA TIIYRN Fl Sii BACK Dowell'• Behavior To the Editor: As a concerned parent who regularly at· tends the San Joaquin School Board meetings, I would like to comment on Trustee Preston Howell's behavior at these meetings. It is common knowledge that the Rev. [ MAILBOX J Letters from readers are welcomt. Normally writers should convey their me.ssages i'll 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to fit :tpace or eliminate libel is reserved. All let· ters must include signatures and mail- in.g address, but names may be with- Jield on reqiust if sufficient reason is apparent. Poetry will not be pulr lished. ?\fr. Howell takes a dim view of the public's viewpoint unless _'it directly parallela his own. He has often berated audience participation, once to the extent of walking out of a meeting, and on another occasion, stopping the meeting to scold the audience for whispering. AT THE l\.fA Y 3 meeting, he again spoke in a disparaging manner to a local mother whose question was totally in order. At the close of the meeting, two ladies in attendance spoke to Mr. Howell and politely requested an apology for his curt remarks. His reaction was again negative, and with the second woman, he burst into a vocal tirade. Before he had finished , he had made derogatory remarks about several parents, two school board candidates, a local politi- cian, and a local priest. I AM POSITIVE that Mr. Howell is sin· cere in his belief that only he is fit to decide what is best for our children, and that parents should be seen but not heard. But I fear that in his sincerity he cannot begin to realize how biased and nonobjective he appears. Mr. Howell speaks cf feeling pressured. Perhaps the pressure of dealing with the public has become too difficult for him. A trustee needs to be fair-minded and ob- jective and at all costs must avoid the ' juvenile bchavlor of name calling. THE GOOD SCHOO~ Committee has chosen the Rev. Mr. Howell as one of their slate ror the upcoming June elec- tion. One has to question this choice. If they sanction this type o[ behavior in a. co-member, can we then expect more or the same ir the "Team for the 70's" is c\ect~d ? MRS. R. HARO • Agitntors' To the Editor : The San Joaquin school board is to be commended for rejecting the attempt to attack Trustee Preston Howell at the liOard ., .. Ung on.May.t7. The few people who called for his "censure" were tiying to get "their way" at any price. · . We need to support board men:ibers like Howell who didn't allow himsel[ to be stampeded by a small group of agitators! ED DROLLINGER Bet1ciema the Lbae• To the Editor : The letter (Mailboll , f\.tay 19), from San Joaquin trustees Dennis Smith aild Prest.on Howell completely confounds l"l)e. On Wednesday night, Mr. Smith and Mr. Howell joined the other Saddleback residents on the board in vollng to oppoSe the proposed Irvine city annexation on the grounds that it would have an ad· verse effect on the "future school children in the Saddleback Valley." At the meeting previous to that one, they a~ pointed Dave King, a district employe who receives his salary from thl!i taxes paid by all district residents, including Irvine residents , to represent their views at the annexatioo hearing this week. IMMEDIATELY following the news or the Wednesday decision, we were able to read the following from Mr-. Smith and Mr. Howell : "These school district boun- darles are In no way affected by changes in city boundaries. We oppose the Irvine city al'Ulexatlon because It Invades the Saddleback Valley sphere of inOuencc, nol bec<1use of any supposed ad\lerse ef· feel on the new school district." The gentlemen are writing in support of unifi cation on Jlme 6. What they say between the lines is even more eloquent than the ir stated support o'n the issue. WllEN TRUSTEES feel that is.sues .,. fecting their place or residence. but not the children they are elected to serve , should decide tbe.ir vote on an issue - should indeed cause tbem to direct employe time In fighting such an Larue, then it is indeed tlinc for local con~. 'l'bere is,aqo!Mr lmplJcatlon to al\,thls. '11le ilSjlt . orr rO)dence .... been' un· fortunately lnterjec!ed Into the Irvin• trustee campaign. Ail:y candidate' who bases his or her appeal on residence, and any voter. who tees ttiat u the Important qualification, .ts , raising the po:islblUty that trustees might serve one area over another. Those who are elected must serve all the children and all the people. SHARON SIRCELLO Slhlth a11.i Bowell To the Editor: I am writing tn reSJ>Ollle to the letter from Dennis Smith and Prtlton Howell (Mallbox, May 19), I wholeheartedly agree wltll tbem )hal the need to vole yes on unification J11ne f i• moot Important. Upon ruci1ng their Jetter, I feel that we 1n Irvine ce' add another reason· for votlng Ye1 on June L WE DESPERATELY need npmen- lallon on a adlool board. Both men lllat.d that the Saddleback area needa • unified system. they .then sign their letter with the tltle: member, board of trultee1, San Joaquin Sch.01 District. Once qaln they ~:ve made Jt quite evident that they dO not represent nor care about the educa- tion or our children in lrv1nt.. MARlLYNV~ Nixon Knows What Russia Is After SAL.ZBUH.G, AUSTRIA -President Nl1on's trip to Russia would not ordinarl· ly be thought of under existing cirrumstances as a sentimental journey, but f<ir him it has many of those aspects. He was eager to have some of those who accompanied him to the Soviet Union in 1959 make this trip, nearly 13 years later. as a symbol of the continuity or what he deems to be a sustained and sincere effort to es-- tabllsh with Russia a working relatl()nship for \Vorld peace. 'Mlis attitude on Nixon's part seems to some to be i~ sistent with his polit· ical career based ln the beginning, and for many years, on anU-COmmunism. NIXON FIND5 N 0 lnconsisl<!ncy whatSMver. He is still anU.COmmunlst In tho sense that he abhors the political •)'Siem and he opposed, ""th force when necessary, the expansion of Communism Internationally. But ho rtcogni.es the Soviet Union-as• a JI01ffl'ful ,.ilooal and international lore. whldt must be dealt with realistically. What constilul<s realism Is the prob- lem. It seems wholly contradictory that the Improvement ol relsllons should go forward while tho Soviet Union and tho United Statu are in what amounta to armed coofroDtaU.. In io many plaees in (RICHARD WilSON") lhe world. The contradiction becomes greater with the reallzatlon that what Russia is ac- tually seeking ls the neutralization of American nuclear power in the name of "equality," t.ht withdrawal of American forces from Europe, and decreasing American lnnuence in Asia, the MJddte East. the Mediterranean and the Indian Ocean. / SOME OF THE foregoing, in fact, Is probably part of an historical trend which cannot be reversed. Nixon's concr:m ha5 to he that in adjusting to this trend, the soft spots left by Amr:rica'& lowered pro- me do not become th< seed bed for the unreslralned growth of Soviet world power. In lhe long run, that may be a oon- tradlctJon which can only be rtt0lved1 or at least suspended, by tho thrut of the use of force or its actual use. 'Ibis threat has been a major tlement of Amttican po)lcy !or decadeo. Olien, wh<n It bas bMn hoped that force would no longer be necessary, there have been compelling reasons (or thJs last resort. as in the case or mining and bombing or North Vietnam. No pos~World War II President ha• been able to tJ<•pe lllCh declslonl. and most of those dtclslona -all of them without major uceptiao -bavo been on the side of force or the threat of Corer: aa a last resort. TO PUT TIIE BEST FACE on It, Nixon ts seeking arrangements enabling him and subsequent President.a to escape the necessity of the choice between action and no action, force or no force, either of which can have tragic con.sequences. A great deal has rested , and still rests, on Soviet reaction to American action to protect its interests, and, so far atJeast, Nixon's judgment has been sound . So he goes to Moscow In a mood not quite so happy as he would like, and in different circumstances than he an· ticipated, but as a man resuming where he left off In 1959. Then he was merely a Vice President with an anti·Communlst record and under suspicion of using Moscow as a backdrop for his own political ambitions. And so It actually tumtd out, with Nlxon-for-Presi· dent blllboards In. llil60 showing him shak· ing his linger In Nikita.Khrushchev's race during the famed "kllcben debate." • Hlll TRIP THEN had • broader purpose, however, and It was to feel out the ground ror • proapective trip by President Ellenhower. The trlp was planned and rell through over the U·2 ln- cidenL No~ It 11 Nl1on, not Eisenhower. who Is the Dnt American Preildent to visit the Soviet Union. and this adds another d .. ment which makes the Mo!K'OW trlp a oentlmenlal journey. lleturolng to Poland LI ln tho wne cat.gory. Aller his departure In t959 from the lcU, rormal • atmosphere of Moscow, Nixon went to Warsaw for an unexpected popular rectp... lion. People turned out lpGntaneously to throw flowers on hla limousine. These moods cannot be recaptured, but what was Impossible In 1959, •n ongoing and steadily improving rel1Uonshlp1 may now be resumed In spite of the adverse circumstances of um. Nixon's overturel to China hove •no doubt provided aome leverage, but even without that added pressure Nixon and the Sovlet leaden have found their own rea.aons ftr rel6- ju.stment of relation!. OIANGI COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Wttd, P~lb1ier Thoma.i KtttrCt, Editor Alb1;:rt W. Batc1 EdUorial Page Edilor The f'.dltorlal pqe oC It. Dllt1 Pilot al!f:ka to intorm and atJmu-late r"Ndtra by prettntJns t.hlil newapaper"• GP.nlons and com- mttnWy on toplt11 of lntA2mt and alrnlfict.ntt. b,. provkilq a tOl'llm ror the exprH&IOQ ot our l'ftda.rs' oDCnlorw, and by prMenllnr Ole diverse vlewpolnta ot lnfotTDf'd ob- tf:l"ltrl and -apoknmtn (IO '°'*' oC the dl.y. Frlday, May 2&, 1972 L.,M.Boyd ,. Wl1at Do Sheep Count to Sleep? A111in 111m asked If 1 fl lpped penny ill more 1pt to come up hf.iatl• thlln t11l11. Jt 11. f'..ome1 up he1d11 50.2 percent fl the Ume. One Proft'IMf Edward l .. Spll.m11&el proved thJil . Wllh 311,020 f1Jp1. The 1t11mpln1 proceu at the mint i ~ 1u<'.h, he conclude1, that the tall1lde 11 a 1mldgeon he11!:itr. Th1t'1 tne ptnny only, remember. CAN YOU ll1t 111 the U.S. pre1idenl.s fru1n memory7 Neither ca n I. Whm poll•trr11 asked 11 1ltRble Nmpllna of citl:z.t.n!'I ln do 80, a p1rtlcul1r ~ven nf the chief execu· Uvet repea tedly f1iled ltl turn up nn the rMter1. 'nlnM! most forJ!;tllable mtn were Tyler, Polk , Taylor. Fiii- more, PlerCf'. Buchanan , and one more, can't rttall, who'd I mi~'I? THAT numernu!'I inMmni1c1 count sheep 10 help lhf'm11elve1 dn1..f' off ilt not not.toworth y. Wh.:i t'11 noteworthy is num~rnu11 11hN>p are Jnsomniacii. too . Thrir 1lom11ch11 - tArh 1he.-p h.a11 four -don 't wnrk r1~h1 in ju11t 11ny nld Po~llion . The body tuu1 to bt upright. M;ike11 the Jonj! nlght'1 11noou difficult. QUfi:RrJo:S -Q. "Whal prnportion flf lhe n1en and wom,.n In lhlt country w{'ar brlrlKf!lf nr tftnlurr.~?" A. Mt:n, 17.2 pt'rcr.nt. Wnml'n, 50.R percent. Q. "JN Jreh1nd, wh iC'h nutnum~r which, !he Murphy1 or the Kel1J1?" A. The Dublin trlcphnnf' directory \i !tls 11ix columns of Murphy•, five ca&umnl!I of Ktlly11, thal'l!I all J know. ARGUMENT continued over whf'!rf'! In the Bihle it tells a man how to wipe rlilfhe11. Th11l'11 Sf'rnnd Kina:11 XX!. 13: " ... Aa 11 man wipclh .11 rfi11h. Wipi ng It 11nd tumln11: it ~ Up&il'h!: down." 'J'hl!f reftrence reptatf'dly h1111 ~n quoted lo wlvr.• In llPArr h or bihllrAJ proof !hat th<'ir hu sbRnds should ht.Ip in the kitchen. CO$T or A new ferler11 I office buildin11: grncrRlty run11 ;ihoul 35 percenl higher lhan the C'05l nf .11 pr !v11Le office bulldlna. T1ke1 about twn ye11rs for private indu11try to de1ign 1nrl con,trucl such 11n tdlfice. but about five ye11r1 for the feder11I govern ment lo do IM'I. Can you e1ph1ln why? HINTS-Thi! llou liehold Hinh1 experts 11dvi~: I. Shine your h11thronm ehrome with nibbing 11IC'Qhol. 2. Rury the old ban AnA pet1l11 11round your ro.!le bushe11. Anrt. 3. Co unt on a do7.en Ice cuhe11 per gue11t 1t your nc1t pRrly. AM AWARE the creator or the firsl rocking-chair WAii a Ca pe Cod hired m11n wll.h a knack for whlttllng, but whit w111 the name of the genius? Thili query. too, haa: our rUt:1rch department baffled. to far. Help want~. ,, Addrt&.1 mnll to L. M. Bo¢, P. 0. Box 1875 Ntw· , port B•tu:ll, Calif. 92660. A'rizona Closing • Park Over Rabies '• ·" PHOENIX. Ariz. (AP\ - · Lower Lake H1v11u State Park haa been ordered clo1ed Exercise Set BANGKOK IAP l -Th• Soulhea~t Asia T r t a I y Organization -SEATO -wlll C"ondu<'t 111 two-wN"k military .. e1ucl.!lt In Th11i111nd June 14- , 17 . SEATO ht11dqu111rlt r1t an· nnoncM. Maj . Gen. Jemti. J. Glbbon11 of the U.S. Army wlll be e.xtrcist dlrttlnr. lo c11mper.11 ror the Memori11l 011y Wf'tkend by State Park OiN!<"fo r Dt:nnl1 McCarthy. McCarthy s11ld rnur or fl"e pt"rMJns h11 vio bten blltt>n by ('(IVOl('!'I in !ht. llrta Ind of· fiCiRl11 btlirve the ani mal.!! may be r11bid. A u·il':'tl1fe ~urvey iii hf ing C"oridurttcl. ht> ~aid. In confi rm or dl11prl th<' suspicion11. The Ari7.on11 C.11me 11nd Fl11 h O..p11rt mrn1. St11le r arks Oep11rlmtnl. Moh11ve 11 n d Yuma County Sht>riff'!'I officts and other!! will enforce the closure, McC11rthy 1aid. Fast Ball - Or Curve By Reagan? Yrnm Wirt Str .. lut ·Gnv. Rnnald Rt-•••• !ll)'S he \1 lookln11 forward In "watch- inA: Vld• Bl°" pitch'' while the debates bit.tween f1en11. Georgt Mc\.nvern and Huht.rt Humphrry 11re bein11: ti-liovh1el'f. Reagan urged Qil1fornla tn l't':llch the debate11. hut added Hutt he will be witching Blue. the Oakl1nd Athlet1N1 st.:ir I PEOPLE pitcher who is returning to ac· t1on after a 11-3\ary dispute. - * * * The l>uke of WlndMr , 77, re- m11in., ill in P11r 1!I:, h Is M>r.rrtary ~:urt, hut 11:;:1ve no ln - dic:;ition that the duke'.' con- dition w1111 cau.~i ng11larm . The alde aai d: ''The duke isn't well. fie l,. not in very good shape." The tecrelary dPClined to char11rterize the Reriouimu<i of the duke's condition °"' give med ical detaila of his ai\menl. * * * Fnrmrr A"-'>l'mbly Speaker Jt511 Unruh MY! he plans to run for m,11yor of Loa Ant:eles in 1!173. "ll ill: n1y inlrnlinn al this pnint tn run," Unruh sa id at hi~ Im Angele!! nf flce. 1'he un.~ur.cesi;ful 1 9 7 0 nemocralic gubcmatorial c111n- did11le decllned t.n make a formi1f slat.ement. however. i;11y in2 "J ha ve not r.aised all .my money yet." * * * The Sf.:nilte f"inil n<:1' Com- miltef! apprnved without op- po!!ltion Prei;ldent N 1 x.o n 's nomlnali<ln ()f George P. Shultz lo 8Ucceed John B. Con· nally as aecrelary of the treasury. * * * 1'here will be 11 no l h er RS$3ASin;ition attempt on a ma }or Democratic CAndldate. according to propheteu Jeane Olxnn. "Who it i11, when or where - 1 c111nnot !A:'\1 you," Mr~. Di1on t<lld 11 Sacramento Union N!porter 11fter 1ddrealna: a luncheon there. * * * America n 11ul00r .I am e 1 Mlrhener 11lormed out of a nt>w~ conference In Moscow to prote~t llji!11insl what he u id "'All frivolou11 tre;itment of the Sovif>t .Jew ish prohlem during 11 11ympnsium at the summit prei;s cenlf'r. "I wnn'I r:tand for It," Michentr i;houled . The wR1kou t followed an 11 1lerr11rtnn bttwtion a Jewish Amtrican rorrMpondent and Ale1ander Chakov!iky. the Soviet t'dltor ()f the influential weekl.v nlfl!(8Zine LI t tr a r y Gaz<'llt. See If you've won this week:. May26throughJune1, 1972.' 24 12 3 7 6 19 10 9 11 FREE Pick up 1 Bingo Card !mm 1 pertlclpetlng Shell dHlor tod1y Orltnd I ttlf,tddrtHfd -IOl>9 to Department BFC :ti, P. 0. Bole 278, Chicago, • 4 13 15 17 18 22 5 14 16 23 20 21 25 8 2 ' llllnola 60648. E.,.ry Sht/18/llQO C.rd 11 a poi.nt/al wlnMr. So .. .,. l'OUt Wl!Ht llMI ®-n't win !ft/a -.I'.. ~could wfn nttt WNk. I A. 8. I p11ffed softknit s1no~k dresses How do juniors see Summer? In dresses of soft, interfoc~ing ' In;+ short enough so tenned legs meet the eye. In Cleliciously muted blossom prints. All with the edore ble short puff sleeve . Sizes 5· 13 . A. Bio front . cotton-polyester by Down Joy. 18 .00. B. Puffs , scoopneck, tie bed in cotton by Down J oy . 18.00. C. Puffs , cuffs , button -front in polyester-cotton. by Confetti Girl. 20.00. Me il end phone orders inv ited. Jun ior World Dresses. DAI LY •ILllT If \ I c. it!'s at the broadway ANAHEIM ~ M. hclF4 ,,,,, aaa.1 111 NIWPOIT HUNTINGTON llACH OU.NGE. Mill et °''"'t' ClllrTOS 47 F11h le11 !111114 7777 E41119er A ... 111111 lJOO Ne. T'"ti" Str .. t JOO lot~ M.tll (71 4) 64-4°1212 1714 1 t•t.JJ)I 171 4) Hl-I JI I !llJI 1'°""11 SHO, 10 A.M, .. t :JO ,,M, MONDAY TH~OUliH F-1.IDAY. SATUAOAY 10 A.M. ft 6 ,.M, SUNDAY 12 NOON ft l ,.M . J • I ~I ~I I I I I I I • Hontinleton Beaeh Fountain ' Valley N.Y. Steeb VOL 65, NO. 147, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 26, 1972 TEN CENTS Judge Rejects Petition on Parking Project By TERRY COVILLE Of tM O./ly Pllll SteH A Superior Court judge has refused to place on the ballot an initiative petition directed against t h e city-sponsored downtown parking project in Huntington Beach. Judge Lester Van Tatenhove ruled Wednesday that the initiative petition would not be legal, even if voters in a general election approved it. The petition sought to restrict the city's ability to use tax-funds to build a civic parking lot as part of the Top of the Pier plan in the downtown area. City councilmen had refused to place the initiative on the April 11 ballot even though It had signatures from more than 10 percent of the city's registered voters. City Attorney Don Bonfa ha(l advised counclimen the petition was not a legal referendum issue because it sought to Protest Bared T eacher's A ction Costs }ob SANTA CRUZ (AP) - A young woman who ripped off her blouse at an antiwar protest has found herself stripped of a job. The Santa Cruz School District Board voted to fire Janice Lee Rogers, 27, from her job as a teacher's aide at Laurel Elementary School. "She went beyond a proper expression of her antiwar feelings ," said Dr. Mark Lewis, board president. "It is not against the law to go bare bosomed, but it gives the board no confidence in her ability to work w· children." Miss Rogers was put under a citizen's arrest by 8Mtfler woman May 11 at an antiwar demonstration outside the county jail. The district attorney later dropped charges on grounds no crime was committed. The claim was that she tore off her blouse and displayed her breasts in protest1 of the war. Lewis said that Miss Rogers was not fired because of the arrest, but be· cause she displayed a "wilHul failure of goOO. conduct.'' County Lead Ban Goe s On July I Despite Ruling Orange County's new ordinance ban- nlng the sale of leaded gasoline will go in- to effect July l despite a Superior Court ruling invalidating it, County Counsel Adrian Kuyper said today. The Fourth District Appellate Court in San Bernardino has set Sept. 6 for an ap- peal hearing on Judge James F. Judge's ruling April 21 in which he said the coun· ty could not regulate the lead content of gasoline because such regulation was a legal function of the state Air Resources Boan!. But the appeal court, in addition to set· ting the Sept. 6 hearing, issued a tem- porary restraining order invalidating Judge Judge's ruling until the appeal hearing is concluded. The appeal court decision was issued Thursday by Justice Stephen Tamura, who once was county counsel for Orange County. The new law limits the lead content in gasoline to three grams a gallon begin· ning July I and becomes progressively stricter for the next three years. By July l, 1974, aJI regular grade gasoline must contain only traces of the anti-knock in- gredient and this same restriction applies to premium gasoline on July 1, 1975. Despite the court ruling, Orange Coun· ty Air PoUution Control Officer William Fitchen said today he did not foresee any probletru1 enfon:in( the restrictive law. "Most ga!Ollne sold In the county now contains less than three grams per gallon of lead," he stated. '10ur trouble will begin next year when the limit drops to two grams per gallon." Fitchen said his department has the necessary rquipment to measure the lead content and random tests would be made in service stations throughout the county begi nning July 1. SUperviJor1 laat October b not the first such law in the U.S. as stated by its pro- ponents at that time. "New York City, the state or Maryland and several other government agencies throughout the nation have similar laws and I have been informed that oo en· forcement problems of a serious nature have been encountered," the air pollution control officer said. Fitcben explained that ga90line weighs six pounds per gallon and there are 435.59 grams in each pound. "So the reduction is really minimal," he concluded. Deputy County Counsel John Powell Pointed out today that Judge Judge's decision stating that the state air resources board was the only agency with (See LEAD BAN, Page I) Stockholders 'Toy' Around LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The toys got in the way of business. Mattd Inc., the toymaklng giant, put out dlsplays of its new dolls, mlnlature trucks ml planes and f!:ames for the inspection, of about 300 persons: al the flnn'I 8MU8l stockholders' meeting Thursday. The stockholders were delighted. and fell to playing with the merchandise. As the hour grew later, Mattel chairman Elliot Handler pleaded. "can we please get the meeting started?" He finally had to say to stockholders, "Stop playing with the toys and come on 10." control an administrative act. the signing of bond agreements, rather than a legislative act. Van Tatenhove upheld Sonia's opinion Wednesday. The suit was filed by Richard Belyea, an unsuccessful candiadte for city COWlCil in the April ll eleotion. It was filed prior to the council election. Bob Terry, a downtown auto dealer, had collected signatures on the petition. Helicopter Guns Break Red T·roops SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. heliC<lplers f~· ing guided electronic missiles broke up a Communist assault on Kon tum today, but other North Vietnamese infiltrated into the forward command posts of the South Vietnamese 22nd Infantry Division on the northern edge of the city. \Vhile South Vietnamese defenders bat· tied 500 i.nfiltrators·who occupied houses and a school on the southern edge of Kon--· tum, another arqup ot uppers Ri>ed llV'f'1. bulldlo&~ la .lllll>!llli•ion c@!!!!lic pound Oii the liortli lldi 'liiid '!Oucboil Oii I bizarre battle. A machinegun crew climbed a water tower In the-South Vletnameae compound and spraytd mlchlnefun bullets ai the defenders bt1ow. South Vietnamese tankl shelled the tower - and missed. Finally a U.S. helicopter new In. knocked over the tower with another missile and killed the four machJne· gunners. U.S. spokesmen said the American missile-helicopters knocked out at least 10 of the 13 tanks destroyed at Kontwn today, helping the South Vietnamese beat back two assaults on the Kontum airport. Meanwhile, the U.S. command reported a trurd day of massive air attacks against Haiphong. The North Vietnamese launched new attacks along the defense line above Hue and brought ln a force of tanks wbicll were menacing the %,CJOO.. man U.S. base at Phu Bai, 10 miles south of Hue. A spokesman said the tank force was spotted only five miles from the ligbUy guarded eastern flank of Phu Bal and that although there waa a B52 strike in the area the base was still under threat. On the My Chanh River defense line 22 miles north of Hue, a force of 1,000 North Vietnamese using tanks Jawiched another major assault along Highway 1 today but were beaten back by U.S. air power and South Vietnamese Marines usillg hand grenades. 1be fighting swept to within 30 yards of the South Vietnamese linel. The battle for Kontum waa far from over but the missile-firing American helicopters were making It easier for the defenders. The helicopters were using missiles known as "TOWS" for Tube-Launched, Optically Tracked Wire-guided missUea. They began using them seven wee.kl ago when brought in from West Germany. UP! Correspondent Matt Franjola 11ld the operator aboard a helicopter guides the missile by keeping the target cen- tered in a telescopic sight. The missile trails two wires behind tt like a remote-controlled toy airplane and the operator sends electronic lmpulaes over the wires to guide the mlaslle. 11e, and other property owners have bat· Lied city plans to · clear five blocks along Pacific Coast Highway for a major park· ing f1c!Uty to spur reclevtlupment. While Van Tatenhove's decision clear9 the legal path for the parking project, mo.st councllmen have said publicly they will not support a five-block parking lol. City Administrator David Rowland s said today be has not thoroughly explored the possible uses of a parking authority downtown, but agreed the five-block con- ctpt dotsn't "loot very lively.'' Councilman Jerry ~1atn'y ~I been worklni with some ot the private pro~ erty owners ln an ertort to 1et a m.Jor reconstruction project under w a y downtown. 11e opposed the Initiative petition on lht grounds It might hindrr city effor!J to ccor United States I hi t N UI U.IAN IC I M 41 MtUtll · CAllYINO lUlh\AllNU 6 72 h\IUltU ltlhl Russia ,,., ·-·-- 42 hltUltl · CA.llYINO lUIMAltNU 65b MllltLU t AND u.nD OfflNllVI MtUttU 1,054 ICBMS 1, 600 ICBMS ANT I BALLISTIC MISSILES (ABMS ) ltlU MtUIUl ll1H MIHI LU .•. ·2 ····/• 2~ ~, . . ·"..... ' l • ~ ,., ... 200-· ., NUCLIAR ARMS l'ACT LIMm ABMs TO 200 ~K - . When Signed, At,........,, Wiii Brint ,,,,.,. C:...tNI ·T•lkt 19 Ind Stat'e Panel Recommends Coastline Protection SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronald Reagan'• coastal study group released a 67-page report today which urges adoJ>o tion of new state regulations to limit development along Calilomla'1 1,087·mlle coast. But the governor's study recommends restricting the coastline control• to a strip or land 400 feet wide or lt11 along the coast -instead of the 3,000.foot-wlde tone recominended In leglslatlve prb-- posals. Reagan'• report also recommends that a state coastal resourcet board 1bould "have responsibility for entorclng con- fonnity to use and developmental criteria" but does not spell out the powers of memberohlp of the llllte boanl. The authority and makeup of proposed new coaaillne preservatk>n ageoclel hive been the key issue in battles ln the Leglalature the pan three years over coastltne piolectlon plans. ColllttVatlonlsti want In give public memben majority control on .coutlinl P rincipal Appointed Mrs. Mary Coe, principal of Glen View School ln Huntinglott Beach, wu named Thurlday as a consult.ant to the Statewide THk Force on Early Childhood Education. · The announcement was made Jn t.o1 Anpte1 by Slate 5uperlnl<ndent of Pub- lic Instruction Wilton Riles: boards while bu1lneu lnterutt ind local government ofOclall want to &Ive tna· jorlly control to ropmeniaU•a ol local government. The R .. 110 report cltlalla problema or a deterlonting environment, lnldequate recreatlon facUIUe1, poor rtgulaUon of coastel developmenla end the Iola of open space land. It recommemla Iha! lndu1trlal and commercial projects which can be located away Crom the coast without e1· cenJve e1la coat be banned from the lhorellne. Different cost fonnul11 were propolld. with hulldln1 bani propoNd unle11 <Ml are more than doubled in IOtne c1te1. "Our coutal r ........ art limited and they muat be J)fOl<Cled," lleqan pld In a statement acoornpanyln1 the report. ''The study propooea l\lldollne.I for _ achieving an equlteblt balance between conaervallon and development that wlll proloct the public _ .. Deputy Director Edward Ehl<rl or the Department of N1vi11tlon and Octon Development, which directed the thr ... year study, said the report leaves II up In the Legislature In d«lde the makeup -.r Ille control board and to decide If II should have veto power over local plar>- ning decl1iont. Ile oald the ~ of lhe lludy wu to define the acope of coutlJ devtlopmtnt problems, not to recommend specific legisbtlon. The air pallution control officer added , 111 do not anticipate any serious problems In future years either. I am certain the oil companies will cooperate and have been Informed that they are now working on the problem or reducing the lead con- tent of guoline." Fitchen added that the ordinance adopted by tho County Boan! of UCI Profs Reveal Brain Research No T~ash Day For Holiday Tbm will be no trub collec:llom lllldt In Huntington &.ch ao Mon- "-'• Mtmorial Doy, ~ In city olllclals. llfsldtnll --•• nonnally picked up on Mmday. will hive to wall untll lhe!r nm rtaUlot colledloft day. The hollday wlD nol alfed tram "°IJeclicm In l!'ounlala Vlllry which -ahr~ mada Oil ,... day, Wedaacl11 ml '111aradoJ. By GEORGE LEIDAL ot .. Daltr 1'1111 ..... Two UC Irvine psychoblologisla 11>- nounc<d • ·~found di!<overy" 'nlur1- "-1' lbol may revme the widely believed theory that damaged brains wmot ttCOYer from nerve cell Jouu. Dr. Guy Lynch ml Dr. Carl W. Cot. DWI rewaled mulla ol I 11-monlh tludJ ol -dama(ed -lbot ..... - porlOd ltJ -Item the Nallonal lid-...,. l!'Clllldstion and the Natlcul liwt~ tale " --_.,. In fU.000 I fut. 'Ille UQ ..,..._...,, ..-. tlitcu-lhelr .......... the_.,. ol a hall4af UCI ~ Aatodata pro- llTl"' illlroduclni buJlnaa leadm .. the school of hlologlcal lclftlCes. 'lbe facolty re11e1ttbers from Newport Beocb aald their fiodln&s were bued .on work wiUi 20 rats. UCI res<archm ranavod a portion of the t'Ortn of the brain of. each rat. "Within I matttt of d.ly1," Dr. Lynch said, a flllln& In of the cut area can be Obsmed. ' 1111111 lalt( been -.11iat brain etlil -"'"" U.... -wmot duplicate 11 .. oe1 ... 11 do collt ef othor body II-.. -• the '"'· -. ... the Lyllcl>Colman -· ol --· the .,-nlJ tltat -......... oilier parts ol tho body - olll -tlpall -callod ---hive bes "dnmaUcally" nkleat ln -, .. I , • • • tstabHsh son1t type ()r ni o d I r I 1 d n1unlcipa\ p11rklng ln ('Onj unctlon wtlh prlvalt dt'\'to\opmt11t. Ro\vland5 ~1ud there Is no speclClc plan of ac.tiun 011 tht city's part at thls Ume for downto~·n rf'd,velopn1ent. The new 11d1nlni!llrator lool\: his pMt In lt1le Ftbn1ar)' nnd has been busy with the flscnl budgtt. lit said he hns not nilly studied the downtown problem )'CL . ears U.S. Ru ss ia Set to Ink Agreement _ MOSCOW (UPI) -Pr .. ldent Nlzon and Soviet leaden reached Rgreement to- day on • historic trenly limiting nucleor or1ns. The tre11ty wn1 to ht idgned 1't 11 p.m. ?i.1osco\Y tln1e at the Krem\ln rollowlng tin ull·Amerlcan dinner Nixon lJ ctvln& his hmill. White ilouae Prtllll Sccrt•tary RonAld L . Ziegler said Nlxon would sign for thn Unltcd StatM · and dlplomnt1 told UPl Communist Party c:enernl Secret111 l,eonld I. Bretbnev probably would 1l1n !or tho Soviet Un~ • " The agreement capped l\4o yeare or aeaotl1ti0n1 at the 1trate1le arms Umlla· !Ion talu (SALT) In Heltlnkl and Vienna and provided a crownlna achievement for Nl1on '1 .,mmlt talks In Moocow • The lrlialY ....,. both ofltnaf" lllCI delanalvt mlattl• U wlll lb= tlbaJJlltlc llllllllH CABMJ, biuL more lauachln1 allot lor lnlerconUnen ballistic ml111le1 (ICBM), fr.... tho number of ICBMI at the prea:ent fJcurt, and allow no nw con1trucUon of mJulJe. launchlng 1ubmarJne1 .. Tho Unlled StatH baa 1,064 land-bated JCBMa; 4J ml111le • carryln1 submarine• and two ABM sites under construrtlon. The Soviet Union has an estimated I .MO lCBMI; 25 mtulle-carrylnl auba; ind tho aoly operational ABM In the world. Even u the fln1l wordln1 wu botni worked out, the naUons rtacbed lcr'ff- meot on yet another accord, thlt one to aet up a Sovlet·Amerlcan commlulon to clovelop traclo and hullnell and eoonomlc relatlona. The trade alll'ffmenl, leu ti1an Nlsoe hoped for, was preceded durtn1 the_.._ long talu by the stgnln1 of five other pact.I, covering Jolnt effortl on dileue, pollution, space, •clcnce and "rule• of the aea .'' Ziegler uld that Nixon end the rullnr Soviet troika -lirez.hnev, Premier Alex .. el N. Kotyaln and President Nikolai v. Podaorny -met In lhe Kremlin for two houri thll afttrn00n. "'Ibey dlscuued International problem• and completed the final agreement on stral<lk arma UmltetJon." Zle1ilr Mid.- Tho two chief anna ne1otbton. U.S. ambauador Gerard C. Smith and Soviet Finl Deputy Forel111 Mlnfll<r Vltdlmlr s . Semenov, new totether In • U.S. air traMport plane from Helllnki to Molcow for the ceremony. President and Mra. Nixon entertain (lift AGREEMENT, 1111 I) ....... .......... Look for consldtrabil eloudloeM Saturdtr •Ion& the Oranst Coaat, cltarlna; by noon to amny tklet, acconililg to the weatberl.od)'. IDliU 11&-7'. Lowa In lhe IO'L INSIDE TODAY Orangt Countr b lit• llnHl>- b•l'TJI e<>p/tal o/ lhe natl<m. C.r· dtn Cr1J11t •f.OOt• it.t annual Struwl>tr;rv Pe11 lvol thil Jfttn0r~ lal "'""'""-Su •torr II• todo(1 Wttktndtr. ..... -_.., ---, u , -= c,_,,. It ..... ........ !!'!llNI r... • l"lliMU ... , *"UUfl f4 .......... '' ::.:--': -.... t --.. --. ....... c..t ,, ....... ~ ~ ........... ti -... ........... .... , ,........ . -.... =-...: = ..... -Pa .. 9 DAILY PILOT H Fron1 P•g~ J DISCOVERY • • • ... from 6lbtt parts or the brain. ont tfftcl might bt spaJtlclty, Dr. McC•u1h IUI· jested. S1nct becomlna a 1pa1tic it oot mllCh oi an lmprovemtnt over sufftring mtmOry Jou, the patltnt might someday be glvtn nerve proces.s inhibitors to coo. trol whlrh br.11.ln cells replace the links lhat once helped with memory pro- r:essi ng. "This could be the beginning for ra· tlonal medicine for brain damage," Or. Mc(laugh said. The r~senrchers thcm~elves were more modtsl .about the ir work, cle<.:lininJt lo s;lve specific:! example of what kinds flf functions might be affected hy the new· found brain cell linkups. llowever, Dr. Lynch said the old theories of brain damagtd likened the brain to a "hard·wired switchboard or computer. "After the brain w11 damaged the wir· ing was thought to be pennanenlly jumbled," he 1.t1.ld. o.ltlY PILOT 11111 IOltflM But, over the pa1t hundreds of years. some bra.in damage aymptom!i -such as coma -have DOt proved to be ~nnaneot. Until now, no one was certain why some patlenl.J could return to normalcy. UC IRVINE SCIENTISTS SHOW BRAIN CELLS REWIRE THEMSELVES Ors. C1rl W. Cotm1n (left), G1ry Lynch, P1ychobiologl1t1 "It now seenu that a rew iring ()f the brain can t.ake place." Dr. Lynch sa id. Ongoing stages or the research wlll at- tempt to determine ir the brain cell rewiring will help or hinder the brain damaged rat. Other re!ltarchers may consider the dJ.scovery a base for further research with humans. For· Cotman and Lynch, however, one next step will be to determ ine what behavior eUect1 result from the brain cell removal and how behavior following the new cell Jinks compares with pre- brain damage activity. Thus far, the UCI research has shown that the new nerve effects a re pennanent. "Result.I imply that the brain possesses an amazing and heretofore unsuspected capabillty for reorganization after brain damage. "It is not known whethtr the reorganization is detrimental or beneficial to the recovery o! brain lune· tlons," they said. Dr. McGaugh noted the research was suppor ted largely -by the federal grants with "damn little" money coming from the University Regents . Nevertheless, the meager research grants have provided enough to move the research forward and provide learning experiences for 10 graduate oind un- dergraduate students who participated in the study. Germany Bomb Suspect Sought BONN (UPI) -Police are seeking a youn1 woman wearing go\d.trlmmed glasses tn connection with the bombing which kllled three American servicemen at the U.S. Anny'• European head- quarter• In Jieldelberg. ChanceUor Wiiiy Brandt summoned top 11ecurlty ornclals for a report on the l~ cldent and Its possible ties with a wave of bomb attacks through West Germany the past two weeks. Four U.S. servicemen -Including three in Wednesday's bombing at the headquarters -have died as a result of the explosions and at least two dozen other persons have been injured. Did,1i't Promise A Rose Garden A Balboa youth who allegedly main· talned a nourishing marijuan11 11:arden on the counly dump was booked into Orange County Jail Thursday for cultivating the llllcit weed. Sheriff's officers said six potted plants assertedly lended by Eric Constantin Shayne, 19, of 117 F.. Bay Ave .. Newport Beach, at the county 's Coyo te Canyon disposal site pro ved to be marijuana. Deputies moved in to arrest Shayne after the plants and a cache of gardening Implements were disr.overed by Irvine Ranch Sl'curily guards. OIAN•I COAST •• DAILY PILOT ,.,., Or•no• COl\I OAIL y l"llOT wliti wflk h 11 comolnN !!'le NIWl•Pfftl, 11 Pllbllllll'd llY lh• Or111111 c"" P11Dtlthl1111 ComPll!Y. S.N· rtl1 ftlllom 1•1 pllbll11!t0, M0n¢toy fl'lrwo,. P'rld1r, tor Co.11 M111, Ntwpotl '"<"• Hunlf110IOll t'.tel!IFoun111., \111i.v, L1911n1 819'11, lrvL111/Suldlebtck 1r.d Sin <:lf:mtnlt/ !iln J111n (Apl1!'1no. A sl~~lf r-iilOMI Mlllclll I• p..b!J•h<ld S1!11rllll'l' 11fllf S11r!dtl'l', Thi prlntlp1! 1!Ybll1hlnQ lll~nl I\ 111 JJO W~d •• , iTl'HI, COii• M•M, Ctl!!n•n••, •Ul6. Roh1rt N. W11d t'rttkl1111 Ind P11Dll111,r J1ck R, C11rl1y Vlei l"fllkl«il 11'111 Ot"'rll MIMprr lhom1t K11wil Ed!IOI' Tl101t11t A. 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Soviet Watchmaker Get s Mou se Watch From Pat By Ht:Lt:N THOMAS MOSCOW {UPI ) - First Lady Pat Ni x- on presented a P.1ickey J\1ouse watch to the director of Russia's biggest timepiece factory toda y and got a laugh and a silver samovar in return. "I brought it along to you as a joke." P.1rs. Nixon told the director fl{ the Moscow watch factory. Dmitri A. Paramonov, who laughed as she handed hin1 the watch. "J understand Mi ckey Mouse is a favorite in your country as well as in America -I'm sure the works aren't as good. Paramonov gave Mrs. Nixfln a foo l· high silver san1ovar. the orn ate wa tr.r heaters used to brew tea in Russian .households. '' /l symbolizes that those 1o11ho arc on friendl y tcnns should sit down and have tea together," he sa id . "I think its a "'ondcrfu l fa ctory, spotless and clean," !\1rs. Nixon sairl. "It's important for a watch fac tory to be clean. I've seen so man y happy faces." ,._trs. Nixon. whose slimness is a sharp contrast "'ith the more bux om Russian ·tr -:. {:r From Pagel AGREEMENT. •• Soviet leaders at a banquet that has roast beef and baked Alaska on the menu and calls for entertainment by Pianist Van Cliburn and a U.S. Air Force combo called "The Dlplomats." About 100 guests. including both offlcl11I parties. were invited to the dinner at Spaso House, the residence of the U.S. Ambassador Jacob D. Beam. The dinner returned Monday's banquet hosted by Soviet leaders. "The Dlplo1nats" a six-n1en1bcr Air Force dance group rte\v in fron1 \Vlcsbaden. Gcr1nnny lo entertain. The menu included: Chatka crab mousse, similar lo king l1'llb : roast fil et of beef : Yflrkshire pudding : bouquet of garden vegetables : hearts or palm salad: Pikantnyl cheese and baked Alaska with a cherrles jubilee topping. The fare will be served "'ilh \\"ines from California, Nixon's home slate. Cliburn , who wor. the International Tchaikovsky piano competition i n Moscow in 1958, will begin the after din· ner program \vith th e Americ;in an d Soviet national 11nthems. The rest of his progran1 will include Chopin's Ballade in F Minor, J)cbus~y·s Reflrction on the Wntcr and Scriabin's Elude in D Sharp Minor. The three major netw orks -NBC, CBS and ABC -all \l'ill carry live on TV and radio Nixon 's address Sunday to the Russian people. The broadcast is schedu led to being at 10;30 a.m. PDT. and last approximately a haU·hour. women, laughed and said her hostesses have been doing their best to fatte n her up in Moscow. She said her Kremli n hou sehold staff thinks sbe is too thin and plies her with sweets and pastr ies of the kind the fac- tory .starr served her du ring a tea break al the end of her visit. \Vith r.1rs. Nixon and her party was ~1rs. Leonid 1. Brezhnev, wife o{ the Comm unist party general secretary, and the wife of Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko. r.1rs. Ni xon had little to say about an incident Thursday night at the Bolshoi Ballet in which a young woman shouted ''Freedom for Vietnam." "I heard it, hut I couldn't understand \1•hat she was saying ," she said . ''frcec-dommm to Vietnammmmm !" t·ame the heavily accented cry. It was a young redhalred woman sitting in a high golden balcony. She yelled down and to her right at the gilded rflyal box where Presi dent and r.lrs. Nixon. Sov iet President Nikolai V. Podgorny, Premier Alexei N. Kosygin and Mrs. Brezhnev were setlling in 1or the third dreamy act of "Swan Lake." The audience gasped. The dimming houselights flared a bit in the gold and red-plush theater, then darkened. . 1'hc shadowy figures of S<iviet security police moved through the baJconies toward the source of the shout. The Soviets tolerate no such behavior. The beam of a portable spotlight stabbed through the darkness up around the roof. ''I feel sorry for her," muttered a U.S. Secret Service agent in the audience. lt was dark again in the theater by no'" and ballerina Natasha Besmertnova wa s gliding thi:_ough S.wan Lake's clim~x, Guests seated nearby said the pohce lifted the woman and her female com- panion over the backs or their cr9ss-aisle seats. so as not to disturb other in their row. and too k them away. The woman later was identified a! f..liriam F'racassi, wife of Claudio Fracassi. co rrespondent ln Moscow for the Italian communist newspaper P8ese Sera. Mexican Boy, 14, Drowns at Motel A 14-year-0ld boy from l\texico with a group of visiting Catholic stud en ts drowned Thursday evening in an Ana · helm motel pool, the Orange Counly co ro'ner's office reported . Alfonso Tapia of ?-.1ex ico City \\'SS found unconscious at the bottorn of Hyatt llou se pool, 1700 S. Harbor Blvd .. and \vas dead on arrival at the Orange County l\1edica l Center. the coroner sajd. Anaheim police said a group of boys. all teenagers, were being chaperflned by a priest on a visit to Disneyland. 'Last Shootout' Armored Car Story Offered Sunday 'WF,; WON OUR LAST SHOOTOUT' - In :i look ill the niodcrn n1en who rich~ shotgun on the "strongbox." I his Sunday Specinl find s their securit.y measures so rigid they t'\'en suspect police office rs. under certuin conditions. It's ~ story of the armored truck hu~iness. ELECTRONIC Zl~N -\\'hether the new Alpha \Vave control theory Is a f.id or a phony, one guy who tested lhe brain machine found it wasn 't exotic enough to handle the erotic. TIIE NA~1E GA~1 F. -To jltt you r numbtt all the customer has to do is poy tht prtce or the list sellrrs. Selling names and addresses t!I bl~ busines.s and Orange C<>unty's biggest dtaler In names tells some of the "how'' and "why" In a YOU Section story. MERLE HAGGARD -His popularity Is only a notch or two behlnd that of coontry mu.sic king Johnny cash end he Is well on his way to be.Ing.a milliona ire, but hferle Haggard saya hill al) unhappy man. Story Is In Fomlly \Vteltly. POLITICS AND HANO GUNS -In 1 oolumn out ci Sacramtnto, Phil }fllMa wonders ii Sh•rtlf P•ter Pitcltess was politically motivated when he came out ror the outlawing of h>nd guns. MAYOllS' WIVES -It" "Part 11" of last \Veek 's women 's pages profile of Oran ge Co11st city first ladies. 1'his v.·~k. \Vives of the ma yors or Cost:l !\1esa. Hun· lington Beach and San Juan Capistrrino nr(' featured. ADVI CE FROM EINS'l'EIN Business page feature story tells how Albert Einstein helped Newport Be<ich grocer 0. \V. "Dick'' Richard build his supermarket. The famed mathematician gave Richard some bu!:lness advice. KNIGHTS OF SPEEDWAY -Picture page Captures the drama or jousters on steel steeds at the motorcycle races. REDWOOD CONTROVERSY - Timbfrmen and conservationists are still clashing over the philosophies Involved In the attempt to preserve tl't'es by setting them aside In the sanctuary called Redwood National Park. _ LEG AL ADVI CE -A special YOU S«-Uon story offers tips on how to avoid belng cheated, who to contact If you are and tells about a lawyers' association booklet that gi\•es other Ups and steps to lake . NOW SHE'S AN ACTRESS -Cover story of TV WEEK featun:s Susan Dey, yoimg star of the "Partr~e Family." who learned to act only alt.r •he was 1tv"' the llaning n>lt. Cocaine Intercepted· $150,000 Cache, Suspect Nabbed in Mesa By ARTR\Jll R. VINSEL 01 .. 0.11'1 Pl• Sl1H Tn tercepting a hollowed-OUt book that authorities claim contained a pound of pure Colombian cocaine worth up to $150,000, federal agents and COsta Mesa police captured a recipient late Thursday night. The dramatic, c.at-and-mouse game in- volving 14 men and two fioodlight-car· rylng helicopters ended at 10 :30 p.m., following a full day or stakeouts and strategy changes. Peter R. ~1arshal , 27, of P.fanhattan Beach. was grabbed in the doorway of a corner market at Fairview Road and \Vest Wilson Street. investigators said. He was arrested on a federal charge, suspicion flf narcotics smuggling and v.•hisked off to U.S. Customs head- quarters at Terminal lslaod. for booking. Marshal was scheduled for ar· raignment today before a U.S. com· JTiissloner in Los Angeles. Costa Mesa's Eagle II police helicopte!" and a larger, louder Hughe11 500 chopper manned by customs agents circled the surrounding area with searchlights when pursuers lost Marshal after the initial package pickup. , Officers claim the parcel w a s recovered from its hlding place beneath atl air conditioner in some bushes at 160 W. Wilson St., where an apartment' com- plex is being built. Irate neighbors in surrounding homes -including two trailer parks -flooded police with rflmp\a ints about the circling helicopters. "We just want them to understand how big a case it was ," Costa Mesa Police Detective Capt Edward G J as g ow <leclared today. The case began to untold A-fay 17 ln Los Angeles, when Pepper, a U.S. Customs. Department German Shepherd dog began sniffing suspiciously at a package mailed from South America. - Clleck1ng Its contents, the pure white drug powder was found packed inside the hollow book. ·"This was the first major shipment discovered by a heroin and cocaine-detec· ting dog since the traines! GerTnan Shepherds "'cnt into use earlier this year," says Customs Officer Jerome fl oUander. Rewrapping the package, federal agents and postal authorities engineered its delivery Tuesday to the alleged re- cipient, a Jaime Hedstrom, of 132 W. \Vil.son St., Qista Mesa . Investigation of records revealed no such individual known. aceording to Capt. Glasgow. The customs agents' helicopter landed behind Costa Mesa )Xllice headquarters at 8 a.m., Tue sday to prepare for the pickup. No one was home in the trailer listed, as the postman dropped the package in the mailbox. Investiga tors -a total of eight federal agents and six local narcotics detectives -then assigned a stakeout team to watch the box but no recipient showed up. The mailman then returned for the parcel and left a note to pick jt up at the main post office. No one showed up to be grabbed by agents staked out at the Adams Avenue Reno's 'Ugly Man' Exposed RENO, Nev. (UPI) -The University of Nevada at Reno's ''Ugly Man" is also the school yearbook's answer to Burt Reynolds. Ed Feinhandler, the first person to win the college's ugly man coo. te st four years in a row, appears nude in a full-page photograph in the "Artemisia," which was releas· ed thss week. Feinhandler I s strategically shielded by a small rock . headquarters, but later in the day a caller identifying himself as Jaime Hedstrom asked that it be re-delivered. The suspect allegedly picked up the package about 10: 15 p.m. and darted into the darkened construction area with agents shadowing him from behind. Investigators said they lost him, at \\'hich time the helicopters moved in witb their powerful .searchlights. "They reaJly lit up the place," Capt. Glasgow remarked. A few minutes later, the arrestee - minus parcel post package -was spotted crossing Fairview Road toward the nearby Tic Toe Market where he was taken into custody. Investigators theorized there is on Ja.lme Hedstrom and the Aloha Trailer Park addres.!I was simply being used a.s a pickup polnt by smugglers Involved. Tbe cocaine seized was 100 percent pure and could be cut down with mllll; · sugar into perhaJ># 20,000 doses for Illicit street sale, Customs D e p a r t m e n t ' • Hollander said today. Costa Mesa police said today they believed the bulk shipment would be: worth about $85,CKX> before cut down to 10 or 12 percent purity for ind.lvidual dosages. Local narcotics detectives participating In the major seizure included Bob Lefl4 nert, Nonn Kutch, Gary Webster, Dick De.Francisco, Don Casey and J im Blaylock. Rocket Expert Von Braun Will Leave Space Agency WASHINGTON (UPI) -Dr. Wernher von Braun, German-born rock.et expert who directed development of the rocket that sent Americans to the moon, retired from the space 8geney today. An announcement CJf his retirement issued by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration said that Von Braun would join Fairchild Industries as corporate vice president for engineering and development, effective July J. Von Braun was serving as deputy associate adminio:;trator at the Ume of his resignation. Before that, he was director of the Marshall Space Flight ~ter in Alabama for 10 years, heading the team that developed the world's most JXlWerful rocket, the Saturn V which propelled Apollo's moon-landing missions. Appellate Court Keeps 'Porno' Film iii Vaults An appellate court today froze more than $500,000 worth of what Westminster Police Chief Walter Scott says is hard core pornography in his po 1 ice department's vaults pending a hearing Sept. 6 fln an appeal filed by the district attorney's office. The ruling by the Fourth District Coor! of Appeal means th&t Frederick and Kay Loar of Huntingtfln Beach will have to wait four more moot.his for the release - if the appeal is denied -of sex films and movies ruled by a jury to be non· pornographic. Police Chief Sc<>lt was found in con- tempt of court last week for refusing to honor the post-trial order of Superior Court Judge Robert L. Corfman to sUITender the 20,500 movies and 30,000 photographs seized from the Loars' "Pete Vflss Showcase" warehouse in \l/estminster May 25, 1971. The district attorney 's appeal against Scott's contempt conviction is scheduled to be heard in the same appellate court June 6. Loar, 34, and his wife, 31, both of 4062 Humboldt St., were cleared by a jury in Judge Corfman's courtroom of charges of conspiracy to distribute o b s c e n e material. Judge Corfman granted their request for the release of materials confiscated by Westminster police. But the I.oars came back to his courtroom after Scott refused to hand over the materials. Judge Corfman last week fflund Scott "clearly guilty of a willful violation of my court order.'' But the judge made it clear in inviting the District Attorney's Office to appeal lo his decision that he would welcome a rul· ing by a higher court on a case that is believed to be without precedent. With the Purchase of CAR WASH and HOT WAX W_. 2.1' Wu He Dr. James C. Fletcher, NASA 1d- ministrator said "all of us In NASA will miss the , daily stimulation of hls presence, but we are conndent that we will continue to have the benefit of his in- spiration and counsel in the continuing exploration and use of space." Von Braun, 60, who v.•as instrumental in developing the V2 bombs that Germany launched against England during World War ll, said he was leaving "with a deep feeling of gratitude fflr the wonderful .and unique opportunltit! the agency has given me during the last 12 years." He added: "I am leaving with the knowledge that NASA has enough w~l thought out plans to keep it moving ahead for many years to come, even though some of these may have to be deferred because of budget constraints.'' His departure comes just _a few mon~s before thP. final Apollo moon·land1ng mission and at a time when the spaCJ: agency faces increasing pressure to cu,C its spending plans. In the closing months of the war, Von Braun led a group of scientists from Germany's Peenemuende rocket center, to Allied forces in the west and came to the United States, establishing the na· lion's first concerted missile program at White Sands, N.M. Von Braun said he was making tht change because he wants to devote his time to help implement "some space projects I feel are of particular impor• tance. I think I can do thi.s best in pri· vale industry where the tools of progre.ss are being made.'' 'Hot Nuts Bill' Gains Approval SACRAMENTO (AP) -A hat nuts bill has cleared the Assembly, with hot pop- corn going along as a rider. The bill, passed 56-5 Thursday, would exempt those two hot fOO<b: from the hot foods sales tax. But the tax still would be charged on hot nuts and popcorn sold in ball parks, theaters or other places where admission fees are charged. The bill was introduced so that hot null could compete effectively with cold nuts, which are not subject to the hot food tar, explained the author, Assemblyman John Quimby (D-Rialto). From Pagel LEAD BAN ... power to regulate lead in gasoline Is just the opposite to an opinion by Attorney General Evelle Younger which stated that the state board did not have such power. Younger said local air )Xlllution control districts are the only agencies which could adopt such rules. WITH THIS AD. RIG. 2f.'5 99 LIMIT 2 ... CUITOMIR or FREE CAR WASH with any Flll·Up An wi91 r., 91C111y 100•1. K••k•loo Wl,. I M .. , Stwprise r-Wll• ••• Stretcll .... Seate Wftll DtNc•llllltt DMlt •• • wlttl •new wit 5 Sty! .. And Mony Colon To Choou From We GT-U 1'y• ~n°"u~ CJ-11 C.. \VASH IN WOOLITE AND COOL WATER ry I Oii 11• I WIG OfHR GOOD ONLY 2 W1US THRU JUNI 15 01 WHILE THEY LAST COSTA MESA CAR WASH - ,._ - n • ..i ........ "'"' 2059 ~IOR BLVD., ·COSTA MESA 645·1030 • ' . • . ' ( I I t ( I 1 t ' • ' ~ ' t I i ' \ f t I s t I I . r t j c t • r ' I • ' f, ~ a I s s • b r t s u s ' ' J I ~ s ~ • t • I ' I . i I I '''°''' •11 26. 1972 H DAJlY I'll.OT I Behind Scenes~ an A1nbulance Waited The t-.·o doormen al tht Grana Hotel in Anaheim 'l'hunday were s m a r I I y uniformed in gold jackets and white gloves. Sen. Hubert Humphrey (D-1'-iinn.). a prime contender for the Democratic presidential nomin11llon, was.scheduled to arrive in minutes for a $100 a head recep- tion . The younger doorman struck up a con- versation with 1 nearby r!porter and finally stage-whispered, "You see this other doorman -he 's really an un- dercover agent." The man In qutstion 1ave hlm an Icy stare and the young aay said, "Oh I wasn 't supposed to say lhlt. wl! 1." ··1rs too late now, isn't It!" the agent replied, turning quickly to continue bis doorman "job" of-the-day. He was only Orte aspect of the intense security surrounding Humphrey's vlslt in Orange County Thursday afternoon . When Humphrey !!Ht arrived at IJ,20 p.m. at the Anaheim Convention Center to address the Orange County Forum or Town Hall, at least 35 Secret Service HUBERT HORATIO HUMPHREY CHATS WITH AOMIRER Mr1. Joseph Ehrenrelch, C1ndld1te 1t Heid T1ble Eating for ·Country Older Wars Recalled , In Patriotic Cookbook By JACK CHAPPELL 01 tM OtU~ Pli.t Sti ff ri.1emories lie dusty on forgotten shelves. ?.1emories are there of a simpler time -a time where a batt~ lost meant a nation 1Jost. a time w~ no en.my could find solace in America's •s states, a lime of a simpler war. . Memories return on days like Memorial · Day, or they can be rousted unsuspec- til}gly by thumbing through a dappled cookbook a "Wartime Supplement" on food rationing still stuck in the center. TI1e old cookbook talks of "Uncle Sam's Food Rules," "Pointers on Point Ra- tioning," "Canteen \Vork ," "Coffee Stretchers," and "Sugar Savers," but it speaks of more than just that. It spe11ks of a man off to a war. fi&hting for his country, and for his girl and mom and all the rest of those corny things. Crayon scribbled nyleafs tell of mop- pets , tow·headtd and dirty-fingered ask· ing, "when's Daddy coming home?" Articles on canning harken to a time when marketing meant buying whatever happened to be in that day and then figuring out dinner. Meals were planned by red stars and black stars. Sugar rationing meant corn syrup in the sweets for sugarless berry pie and sugarless double boiler frosting. Advice in the old Good Housekeeping book is still good, even today when "Overthere" is spelled "Vietnam" and people i;!Oing without meat are usually on macrobiotic diets. Price-per-pound is today's rationing system. "Meat has gone to war -gone to feed our armed forces and allies," observes the cook book. "Although here's enough left to keep our diets sound, we must learn to make more frequent use of the Jess familiar cuts as well as such varifity meats BS liver, heart, kidney, tongue, oxtail:s, pig's knuckles, etc.," It says. To back up the contenUon that such variety meat could be yummy, recipes for "Heart Meat Cakes," "Flora's Oxtail Soup," "Spanish Liver with Lima Beans" and "Deviled Kidneys with Rice" are of. fcr ed . As for stretching rare Items like buller, several recipes are offered for butter sp reads. One blends in unflavored gelatin and evaporated milk with butter to dou- ble the amount or spread, while another recommends mixing in sour cream or bottled milk for half again as much spread. Bacon or saus age dri::opings were to be used for sauteing and lard or vegetable shortening for cakes and cookies. Recipes not only told Rosie the Riveter what to cook, but also advl.sed on matte.rs Top Marine Remains In Pendleton Hospital CAMP PE~DLETON (UPI) -Gtn. Robert E. Cushman, comm&ndan t or the l.l arlne Corps, probably will be released some time next week from the Naval hospital at Camp Pendleton, a bospltal 1pokesman 1ald Thursday. Cl.Ishman, 57, fonner deputy director 01 the Central Intelligence Aseney. ""' stneun Tuesday with etlluliUs, a tlJauo lnnamm,atlon lo hil ldt leg, while in- specllnc West Coast bases. or national defense such as saving waste fat and returning it to the butcher. "By dotng this you are adding to the nation's supply of glycerine so much needed in making explosives.'' "Tln and steel are scarce and cans are made of steel plated with tin," the sup- plement says. Patriotic homemakers were urged to remove the ends and squash cans flat for return to the salvage point, perhaps !or rebirth as a tank or jeep. That was a war that touched everyone's life -not like Vietnam which could go practically unnoticed except for the vexing headlines. It was a time when worry was pervasive and a lime of extrem es with joy wild and impetuous, and sorrow bot- tomless. It was also a time of unity with everyone and everything -even a lowly cook book -aimed at winning. 'Contamination' Feared in Water Due to Seepage Orange County's water supply faces contamination if septic tanks used by residents in a Santa Ana Canyon mobile home park are not immediatelv con- trolled, the Orange County Water District has claimed in a Riverside C o u n t y Soperior Court lawsuit. Naming the state \Vater Resourcts Control Board as defendants, Orange County Water Di.strict lawyers claim thnt the mobile home park, operated by Contemporary Mobile Home C.Orporation, daily pumps 50,000 gallons or sewage into septic tanks and then releases the waste into subservice water fields. The lawsuit claims that a ~de area around the park is alrelltly highly mineralized as the result of the tanks. And it points out that see p a g e downstream into heavily pooulated coun- ty areas is daily .adding to the inc reasing mineral content or water used in those areas. Operators of the park have argued that the state board relaxed ils sewage con- trol regulations last March to the point that limitations on mineral content were no longer required. New regulations drafted at that lime conctntrated on forcing the operators to control bad hardness or the dlaclw-ged water belore rtleasing it Into sub.service storage areas. Orange County Water District lawyers now want that March decision reversed. They also want the Riverside court to order the state ageocy to built on en- vlronmtntal impact 1tatements belng submitted by any future potential \lier of non-atw&ge systems. lt is alleged in the lawsuit that the state agency igoores the erfect or sewage dslcharge on downstream users of Orange County Water Dlatrlct water. State officials have previously limited lhe preparation or Impact staltmenta to tlOVt'lllllental agencl'" Involved In proJ-ecta calling for noo·1<wqe l1cllltl<1. No date 1w yet bttn acheduled for a hearing into the dispute. .agents \\'ett apparent. Of the four cars in tua motorcade , three of them were fiUed with agenls, all \\·ear-. ing the identifying colored trianglt-lapel pin and wires lea~ from their ean into 1.belr coats. They were also identifia ble because they were the only people around who talked into their lists -which actually enclosed small wireless microphones. About 20 agents were at the center. checking prw credeotial! and lllaniln& HUBERT LOOKS HAPPY Be1m1 1t Audience eotnnces, befort Humphrty came wttb even more. Humphrey's first stop "''as ~ mt room. Two agents went Into the room with him and seven were statloned before ila entrance and exit. At leas& three agents were always at h1a side or ntarby, even when he shook hands at the fund-raising recepUon. Durtnc Ills speech, Humphroy WBll nanktd on all sides by agents, who ques- tioned tvuyone entering or ailing Ille luncheon. PrO!s puses were judiciously pinned to coat l1pel! and oam<1 of those 1ttending the. events were chKked and recbecktd off a mu ter list of reservations. After Alabama Gov. G e o r I e Wallaee was shot in a crowd In "taryland, Presklent Nlxon ordered a $tepup in protection for presldenUal can. didatelll. When Wallace wa1 shot at the shopping center, no medJcal precauUons had been taken and an ambulance was reportedly slow in 1etUng to the scene. A somber note· 1n Humpbrty's Vl!ibly cheerful campiignlng 11lursday was an ambulance ''wllUna" et the far end of the convenUon cent er parll:lna lot. Ahnost hidden by lrtts. lhe ambula.nce wu a grln1 reminder. Its operaton Sil read y Ul It with the doorS open. Anahelm clly plalntlothes policemen also walehed the areas which Humphrty visited as did hotel and convention center security guards ln uniform. As soon as llumphrty's took off from the Orange County airport, rernalnln~ St('rtt servlct agents 1:1nd policemen walked casually away In contrast to tho day's lt.nslon. DAILY PILOT PlltlH .-, ·~ JtMllMr PRESIDENTIAL CANOIOATE WON'T LET ORANGE COUNTY GO WITHOUT A FIGHT San. Humphrey Mikes Emphatic Po in t D urlng Appe1r1nce in Anaheim Thur1d1y Humphrey Fiery • Ill Orange County By CANDACE PEARSON 01 tt11 D•llY Pilolt Sltff . Sen, Hubert Humphrey CD-Minnesota) told a group of Orange County Democrats Thursday that he is "pleased you are not going to let Orange County go without a fight this time" and added that he's in politics "for keeps" -win or lose. About 100 persons gathered at a $100 a bead hot dog and potakl salad reception at the Grand Hotel in Anaheim to hear the contender for the Democratic nom· ination for president. In the 1961! election when he ran agalnst President Nixon, Humphrey s a I d "Orange County made the difrerence" and constituted many of the 500,000 votes by which he lost. "Can you imagine what fou r years or Richard Nixon without the threat of elec- tion would be?" he asked the crowd after being introduced by C o n g re s s m a n Richard Hanna (0-Cypress). "How about Reagan too?" one Orange County Democrat yelled from the au· dience. "We'll take him next," Humphrey smiled. lfumphrey spent less than four hours in Orange County Thursday. Arriving at the Anahei m Convention Center at 12:20 p.m .. he SddrCssed a Town I !all luncheon and held a press conference. appeared at the reception and then left for San Fran- cisco from the Orange County Airport by 4 p.m. •le was scheduled to continue his cam~ pa ign for the June 6 pri1nary today in San Francisco. in his speech Thursday before about 300 persons, Humphrey sharpened his crJtlcLsm of another Dtmocr1tlc !ront SPECIALS runner. Sen . Geori::e McGovern (0-South Dakota ). lie rarely referred to McGovern by name and said later he prefers to call him only "my opponent ." ltc charged that t-.1cGovcrn 's proposed cuts in the defense budget would "en- danger the national security" and would threaten "the economic security of work- ing families and the economlc viability of the state of California." He conUnued hls attack on McGovern by deploring the tellltor'a 1Upport al • welrare reform blll noiv I'! eo-., FRIDAY ... SATURDAY··· SUNDAY ONLY! TAKE YOUR PICK ... ALL BRAND NEW! ... 1972 ~IERCURYS ... MERCUR)T THIS WEEKEND ONLY $368800 MONTEGO • • • 2 DR. HOT .... LOADED, INCLUDING A IR COND. #2H07F59216<l MERCURY THIS WEEKEND ONLY MONTEREY • • • 2 DR. HOT •••• LOADED, INCl::UDING AIR COND. #2Z6H574402 ... ---MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND SPECIAL?---.. COMET 1972 CAPRI 1972 or • • • • • • #GAECMR63139 •2K31T 542169 HURRY! PRICES GOOD MEMORIAL WEEKEND ONLY! Home Of The New Car .• , "Golden Touch" ' 2llZIS llAJlllOR BLVD, COSTA MESA • 540·5830 Home Of The New Car .• , "Golde11 '.l'oueh" • .f DAIL V PILOT • wlfh To• hiae To Lead Or GETTING THE LEAD OUT' It Is unclear at thl1 writing whether or not tht:rt'll be any lead injected In gasoline M>ld In Orange County alter the first of July thJ1 year. AJ a matttr of fact, that ralse11 the qutatlon If there wlll be any potrol 110ld In thll region at all after that date. Lead, you aee, ill not put in gaaollne to hold lt on the ground. It 11 mixed with the fuel lor lhe purpooe ol making the stuff burn right In your auto engine. Otherwise, without a few gram• of lead per gallon, mo11t auto technicians will agree that current automobile power planll would knock, ping, •Pllller and aenerally not run very good -If at all. ORANGE COUNTY covernment, however, pa.ued a law here awhile back that bani lhe lnJ«tlon or lead Into gasollnt on account of it being 1 principal culprit in causing alr pollution. The petroleum Industry lmmtdlately cried foul, strongly 1ug1e1tlng that It couldn't come up with a polluUon·free 1ubttltute for lead In time to meet the July 1 deadline. Faced wltb 1Ut:h a Jaw , the petroleum experts declared, they might not be able to 84!11 gaa In Or11nge County at all aft.tr the law takes effect. Thl11 dldh't seem to bother our Orange County government folks In the slightest. WELL, YOU llAVE to admit there Is a certain logic to It. JI there Isn't any fuel to run the car1 on, they can't very well do much polluting. Of course, there hi always the possibili- ty that being facro with such a crisis. somebody wlll come up wllh a substitute for gasoline. Some of us used to try that 10rt of thing during the gas rallonlng day1 of World War If. Lots of guys had their favorite rtelpes for fake fuel. Mlne was to mix three gallons of flam- mable cleaning solvent with two gallons or kel'Oftene. To th.la:, you added one quart of cheap gin and a handful of mothballs. :Vou had to keep churning the stuff around all the time btcaU!e it wouldn't 1tay mixed too well. TlU8 MEANT that every lime you stopped the car for any pertod of time, )'OU had to rock the vehicle slde-to-1lde to mix It all up agoln btfore atemptlng a 1tart. Also, there were a couple of other little problems. The engine wouldn't start Ir It was cold .so you had to keep et least one ju~ of real gesollne on hand to prime the carburetor. And flnt1lly, the stuff knocked , pinged and sputtered In the engine just about es badly as the non.leaded gas that the petroleum experts are S-O worried about right now. Well. as I snld th~ legality of OranRe County's lend ban lnw Is now in the couru end you never con tell how It will all come out. POSSIBLY TllE lalv wlll go Into effect nod we may see the birth of a new kind or crime along our fair coastline. You're walking down tha street 11fter your old bu" just quit running In a great knocking catastrophe and aome guy in 1 big block overcoat aldles up to you. fie soys "P11st!" and opens the coat, reveal· lnR an unmarked two-gallon jug with 1 C1"1rk In the top. "Wannn buy some real gasoline, bud· dy? "Just ennui In on the bont from l.os i\ngeles County." Portland Quake Felt PORTLAND, or.. (UPI) -A gentle ~arlhquake hit east Portland early Thurs- dn y. 'l'hc te1nblor , which lasted about two minutes nnd measured btlwttn 2.5 and 3 )n the ltichtcr l'irale, triggered .. barrage or telephonl' c.:all:i1 lo poJIC'C, fll1!mtn, radio r;tallon~ 11nd ne\vspa~rs. There A'as no d11mage rcP<!_rted. Russian Fashions Mrs. Richard Nixon and Mr" Leonid Brezhnev (to her left) view a sh6w or Soviet fashJons. Mrs. Nixon commented that she was 1ur· prised to see pantsuits in the show. 'I haven't seen them on the streets,' she said. Chur~h · Verdi~1 Murderess Must Attend Services ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) -A young woman who pleaded guilty to murder has been sentenced to go to church each Su~ day for the next 10 years by 1 judge who admits he skips religious services now and again himself. Eartha Lee Griffith, 28, appeared be- fore Circuit Court Judge Claude R. Ed- wards on Thursday and was told .she could decide how to spend the ne xt 10 years of her life. "I told her r;he could go to jail for the next 10 years or spend every Sunday through 1982 In a pew," said Edwards. "For the first time !inc~ I have known her. she smiled. She chose church." Miu Griffith had pleaded guilty March Connally: 'Still Democrat' -hut Leans to Nixon WASHINGTON (AP) -Secret1ry ol the Treasury John B. COnnally says he thinks he will vote for Pre11ldcnt Nixon Jn November, but he still considers himself a Democrat. "Personally, I th ink I'll vote for Nix· on," Connally told a group of reporters. Asked If he stlll considers himself a Democrat, Connally replied, "Oh, yeah ." "If I ever change rm going to make an announcement about it." he said. "l don't do things in r;ecret despite what some people say." Connally, who has resigned from his Cabinet post. r;aid he has no plans to at· tend either the Democratic or Republican conventions this summer. lie said he ac- tually ts betwixt and between In his philosophical party loyalties. ''I don't think I'm too cloee to George ~fcGovern on too n1any of his pro- nouncements, but I als6 don't th ink l'm too close to I\ great many Americans I know," he said. Connnlly agreed. when nsked. that the accumulated votes of McGovern, the South Dakota senator, end Alabama Gov. George \Yallacc In the Democratic presidential nomination race signify a deep discontent In lhts country. "People more and more a re nrticulnt ing their comploinls because they don't get instanl solutions,'' he sai d, In response too~\ Connally s11id he is not Jookilig -.fOr-~OOll'ier job in public life. as vice president or secretary or state or In any of the various other capacities for wh.lch he has been rumortd to be considel'NI when he leaves the Treasu~ early next month. He 11tud he has many job offers and ultimately will take one of them. 'rt to the second-degree murder of her boyfriend, Eddie Lee Lampkln. She ad- mitted !hooting h1m to death In tile Orlando home they had shared. "There were tremendous extenuating circumstances In her case," Edwards said after the sentencing. "Her boyfriend had earlier beaten her almost to death and had threatened her with. a weapon." Edwards · said a presei1tence in· vcstigation showed that she had no prior record, "so arter consulting with her minister, speaking with her and con· sidering her case at length, I decided on giving her the option." He stipulated that Miss Grlffith must obtain a high school diploma within the next four years -she has completed the 11th grade. He also ordered her to pay the $2 ,000 in court costs at tbe rate of $20 a month. Edwarda hag set mandatory church at. tendance as a probaUonary term before. "l feel that association with people who go to church is bene(iclal whether or not those people are able to convert the pro- bationer to be religious," Edwards said. TV 'Sheriff' Dead DETROIT (AP ) -Warren W. Colston, 74, who played the sherill tn the old Looo Ranger radio series, died Wednesday. Colston also played roles in the Gangbusters radio series and In a number of television shows. ••• I Sl1lp Ablaze The Oriental \Varrior. a Liber· ian freighter with 104 persons aboard, caugbt fire and was abandoned by all but the cap- tain and three crewmen. The 100 persons who went over the side were reported rescued by a passing ship. The ship was abandoned 40 miles northeast o( Daytona Beach, Fla. Thunderstorms Snap Calm I lleaviest Sto rms Hit Stnws • lll Great Plain.s Temperat11re• ,lli.nf, clHr All1nt1. c:IMr llot'-c:hlr avn11o. t iff• CMo!WtfM. dttt --CNufe, dNr Clncl-tl. ,._ Otwl...... dMr o.n-.~ °" Mel-. tlovd) Oefnll'I, clffr HIMl\lll, dHr ......... tfoWi'f ........... h.dfff" Lit 'Wt9to riMt utttt .... fkM.lfy LOlll•'llli., dHr M~ff'lf• <tMt Ml~ ... ctwd'f ,..,., ..... ,..., rift .,_.,..,.clMr ,."""""' Clly. ...., --,. ••••• ,1 .... -~­'"_, . ..., ---·--...... ••dMit ... .__ .. .. u .. .. n " • " ~ " " ,, " " .. 11 " u M .. " •• M .. " .. " .. ~ " .. " .. " .. .. ,, n • • .. n t .. .. .. .. q .. .. .. a :: " • .. • • .. ·" "' .. • "'UIOtlll W1•T1Ut Mn>KI tOtlC,,t1_,14• 111 a. tP~ 1t .r-...;.;'"~" I , ... llOIMa•-----. ..... limil- ~,.~:. j Sky Pirates Troops Storm Airliner With Guns Blazing BLANTYRE, Malawi (UPll -Malawi troop! firing rnachinfl!um today stormed a hijacked South AlrlWI Alnn11 (SAAJ m jetliner at Chileka Airport and cap- tured the two Arab gunmen who were Bomb Wracks Plane Over Caribbean MONTEGO BAY, Jamaica (UPI) -A bomb has punched an eight-lncb hol• in a rear lavatory of a Chilean (LAN) jeUiner while it was flying at 31,000 feet over the Caribbean with 50 persom aboard, caus· tng It to meke a forced landing al Montego Bay, Jamaica. IN SHORT ••• I reportedly i>r.i..mr to mort money 1rom Soutb African d'8mond magnate 1fm7 Oppenheimer. A pilot at the airport aald the Malawi soldiers wounded one of. the hijackers as he tried to make a nm fw it. The other staggered from the plane, wblch the two had hijacked in lllght nearly 41 boon before, with his bands up, the pilot aaid. The attack came at the Hpiratlon of a 6 a.m. deadline o!ficials bad aet for the hi- jackers to l!WTender. In Johannuburg, South A f r i c..a..n_ Transport Minister Ben Schoeman said the men pirated the jellJner to extort money from Oppemeim«, the world's richest diamond deal«. Scboeman said botb men have been detained end at- tempts would be made to ulradite them to South Africa. The troop assault came with the hi- jackers tn a position made tenuous by the escape of their hostages, some of whom fled while the aerial pirates were quar- re1in.g Thursday. Schoeman said fn a llatement to the South African Parliament the hijackers wanted to ex(ort money from Op- penheimer, chairman ol the Anglo- American MlniDg Co. The miniater said Rash of Rumors the meo aent a message to the company's Johannesburg OffJCt but that it Wd .. muningles.s" end negotiations we.re never offered. Oppenheimer never became personally involved, Schoeman aald. 'Ibe Last of the eight-member crew and sa passengers originally on the flight at• rived back in Johannesburg Thursday night, Dr. Paul Weinbreo, one of U'C passengers, said-the last three hostages escaped Crom the plane by wrilil!Jing through the windViield, dropplnc IS feet to the ground and "numlng like bell." Weinbren said the hijackers, "whom we called 'Charlie' and •z•, were both festooned with geliginite." "Tbe Captain and I spent the whol• night trying to reason with the hi· \jackers," Weiobren .said. ''Cbe-rlie especially k<pt getting "'°'' arid • kepi holding a cigarette llghter close to fuses on explosives they had." Weinbren, in a at.atement on arrival tn Johannesburg, --said that at one point he soothed the hijacker called Charlie bf ma.Maging his neck and giving him tran· quilizen. None aboard was Injured and there was no panic among the 40 passengers bound !or Mlami and New Yock, according to Lance Thelwetl, M'ontego Bay represen- tative of Delta Airlines. Thelweel quoted theJ Boeing 727'1 pl.lot, Capt. Carlos Riberelli, u saying that when he felt the explosion and a loa of cabin pressure he dived the huge jet down to 10,CXX> feet where he was able to maintain control. e 3 Lo•t at Sea PORTSMOUTH, Va. (UPI) -An ex- plosion aboard the German tanker Zlm Tourists Get 3rd Degree In Honduras Hijack Hunt Tokyo killed one crewman and blew two TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras (UPI) - others overboard about 120 miles off The face of the middle-age man wearing Cape Henry, the C>ast Guard laid early eyeglasses looks out from the walls of today. pest office!, from doors of crossroads The Coast Guard said the 6CJO..foot ship Grocery stores and banana plantation with a crew of 32 reported that it also cantiruls. Beneath the plctW'e Jt says had an engine room fire and was "rolling "Recompensa 50,000 Lempira" - hard" in gale-force winds and high r;eas. Reward ~.000. A Coast Guard helicopter and plane Eastern Air lines bas plastered the were conducting a search by flares for poster ell over Honduras and part of the missing crewmen. neighboring Guatemala. It has caused a • Wallac-Gain· • r ash of rumors throughout th~ Central .:::: American natiOn and police have SILVER SPRING, Md. (UPI) -Gov. scrutinized nearly every foreigner. George C. Wallace has shown "im-The picture is an arti.'!lt's conception of mediate improvement and a marked the hijacker of an Eastern Airlines 127 reduction in abdominal pain" following jetliner May 5. The airline i.! offering the minor surgery to relieve accumulation of reward for information on the man who pus in 'two areas, hospital authorities seized the plane en route from Allentown, report. Pa., to Miami and collected $303,000 on Doctors, hoping to speed Wallace'• the threat to blow 'up the plane. He recovery, made two incisions to drain in-parachuted from the plane into the fections Thursday, the 10th day since he jWJgles of Honduras. was gunned down by a would-be assassin The bJjacking was accomplished niUch while campaigning for the Democratic in the style of the almost legendary D. B. presidential nomination at a nearby shop-Cooper, who was the first aerial pirate to ping center. bail out of a hijacked aircraft and make Billy Joe Camp, Wallaee111 press good Jlls e.scape. secretary, said Wallace fed and bathed The hijacker of the Eastern plane has been a Ourry of false reports and nonors. "If I looked like that face, I might be nervous about all this searching," said one American resident of Honduras. "The face looks like about any middle-aged man with glasses." "The COWlt.ry is full or wild rumors and speculation," said U.S. Embassy press attache Ramon Garces . "And there art at least a couple of unconfirmed reports of some Americans being brieny d~ tained." "There was a news report of aa American held for questioning in the small town called Copan," Garces Wd. 0 But be was released." The reward ls also good in Guatemal~ Honduras, 's northern neighbor. Court Decision: Death Happe1is As Brain Dies himself for the first time Thursday since diverted it to Dulles .t.;......-. outsl .. d• the BhootJng. nu!"''-" Washington, D.C., where be got the RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -A medical e Reel Bo•• Ousted money and the parachutes. opinion that death occurs when the breln MOSCOW (AP) -Speculation m. After a change of plane.s in New dies even if the heart and other organs creased today that the former Com-Orleans, the hljacker jumped out through continue to function has been reinforced munist party chief in the Ukraine, known the rear door of the plane at a low by a jury here in a landmark heart as a nnn opponent of better relations altitude and a amparaUvely slow 200 transplant suit. with the United States, is on his way out mlles an hour, just as Cooper had. "This simply brings the Jaw in line with of the ruling Politburo. The plane's crew said he apoke English medical opinion," Dr: David M. Hurne Pyotr Shelest, 64, has been replaced as with an accent and told them he had six said Thursday after he and three other head of the Ukrainian party's Central months to live because he was suffering defendants were found innocent by a Law Committee, Tass announced Thursday. from cancer. and Equity Court jury of causing the Earlier this week, he had been named A parachute harness was found near death of a heart donor. one of nine deputy premiers, a national· the town of San Juan Puebla, Honduras, "I think this is an issue that had to be level but less important job. a week after the hijacking. Otherwise, it decided," said Hume, chief of surgery at Shelest now is the only member of the the Medical College of Virginia Hospital, l~member Politburo with a job so low on DAILY PILOT •'and I think it will have an innuence on the party ladder. For this reason, DELIVERY SERVICE the medical community for a long time to observers expect him to be dropped from come." that central body. Delivery of the Dally Piiot William E. Tucker of Richmond, the Is guaranteed plaintiff, contended that his brother, e Ta% Bike Opposed MOl'ldlly..Prldlv: " "°" 11o net hlv. ,,_ Bruce O. Tucker, a 54-year-old Negro WASHINGTON (AP) Pr ,__ by S:JO p.m., Ctll •nd yo11r copy wUI -esident Nii:-" °""'91'11 .. )IOI.I. c.111 .,.. te11:1n wn111 laborer, was alive when his heart was on opposes seeking a tax increase next 7 '30 p.m. removed on May 26, 1968, and placed In ·r h · 1 ted but d 't ruJ s.tvnMy •nd 111n111y: 1r )'Oii c1o "°' ~~ year 1 e is re-e ec . oesn e your copy llY , 1.m. s.1urdly, or 1 '·'"· the chest of a white man, Joseph G. Klett out one as a substitute for the loeaJ prop-~lfiu~:,:~k~n'~11w~~1 :em. t>r0uoh1 to of Orange, Va. Klett died about a week erty tax, the White House says. later. Instead, presidential assistant John Ttltphonts Med.lea! witnesses for Jhe defense Ehrl. h '·Id port Tb·-"· Most 0r1no1 c°""tv Art•• •••.••.. Ml-Un 1c man w re ers wO!!Uily, Northwest Huntinoton tll<h main ta in e d that Tucker was Nixon will concentrate on trying to save s.'n~:::~•;..;rn·iiMdi;····· a.u:11 ''net1roJogically dead" several hours money through cutting out unproductive s.. J1111n ~",_· o.n1 "-Int, before the transplant operation bea.use federal Progr•-• and -ndi loulll L.lllun&,. UllUl'll Nlllutl .... eMal L:-1.::::::~::.:!:.:-:::·~~~·~::::n~g::_, ___ __!::=====~=====~~=~breln sbowed no activl_ty_. __ De~RWell Ranch in Palm Sgrings. One of the Nation's finest investments. When you think of real estateinvestme-nt, think of Deep Well Ranch and Palm Springs. You ct1n own a superb new condominium or individual residence in that fabled land of Sunshine. Enjoy it ;is a pennanent home or .a desert re1re11t. It's the e;asi est way in the world to s;i;ve money. And the most pleasa.ntl P.alm Springs: where $Unshine b.lthes the air year-.around. Deep Well Ranch privacy is maintained with a walled security entry. Enjoy swimming and tennis ot relax in steaming therapy pools. All yours with- out work, since building exterior and ground m1intenana is provided. But hurry I Over S51/1 million worth of OeepWen Ranch homes hive al~aidy been sold. Only 111 f,amllies will be able to enjoy DeepWeU Ranch Investment Be one of them! 2 & 3 Bedrooms1 2 B1ths. From $51,,SO ftt limpte. DeepWeU Ranch A .......... ~-N.000 = I •a Write fOf complde Information £.t~t Palm Can~ DrM .tt Dttp\Y~I ROid r.1lm Sprinp. C..hfornia !2261 • • WICKES FURNITURE A DIVISION OF THE WICICIES COll.POllATION WARElfOUSE/S~ll.OOM NOW HIRING Our 150,000 sq. ft, furniture/wire. hou1•/1howroom will soon b• op•n~ in9 in An•~•im end hev• employment opportunities for qualified candi- do1t•s for the following: • e DISPLAY e CUSTDMER SERVICE e DELIVERY MANAGER e SALESMEN UC1UlllT WNINM ANO COMPANY lllflPfl'J -Nf'LT IN PUSON- 1256 M, MotHll .. belool•, Call!. -. ..... ~ .......... 1 l I l I ~ • I l . • ! • • . • . • • -~ ---- • DAILY PIIA)T EDITORIAL PAGE Blame the If trustees of lbe Foun!Ain Valley School District approve a 27-ttnt tax Increase -as they have been asked by !heir superintendent to do - it would be dil· ficult to lau!t them for not resi!ting too vigorously. In the first place, the amount of money they spend from local taxes per pupil already Is second loweSI hi the county. And further. as a low wealth school dis· trict, they have been prodding the Legislature al most ~ month\l• to do somethiJlg about equalization of school supporf. In this connection they have written letters. r~ ttsolutions, and published articles in numerous ed~ational journals. But to no Bvail. The Legislature not only has failed to move on equalization, but has required school districts to pr<r vide more P.mploye benefits and to fund them from local taxes. Fo!' Fountain Valley -which already has one of the ·highest tax rates in the county -this inaction and irresponsibiljty by the state has been d~vastating. ~ere is no way ot.i.t -bigb taxes must be raised even higher. Even the proposed 27 cent increase is not enough to maintain the present progr.am levels. Taxpayers who are upset about this should direct their feelings at their state legislators, however, not local school officials. Revenue Possibilities ' Ne'v City Administrator David Rowlands has now prepared his first budget for Huntington Beach. He n1anaged to balance it at about $13.7 million, but had to sacrifice some $700,000 in programs requested by var· iou~ city departments. In tht past, such sacrifices have raised tremendo~s cries of 111guish from the various departments. This year, bOl"!IVtr the new administrator has things \Veil in hand. He car~fully noted to city councilmen that he'd Women Have Come a Long, Long Way · (sYDNEY J. HARRIS) Neither the proponenls nor thr op- ponents of \\'bat we loosely call "'\Vomeo's Lib" today realize how far modern women have come -and how far they bave bad to come £rom. American common law is derived from the Common Law of England, and only a century ago, :he wire was almost the complete chattel or her husband. We find it hard ta believe now that , less than 100 years ago, a man could legally support his mistress on the earnings or his \'life. In his shocking history of socia l reforms (what is shocking is the stu· pid ways in \\'hich they were resisted by the buhvarks of iociely), E. S. Turner points out that the 19th Century wife had fewer rights lhan accorded a \Vife under Roman law ''and hardly more than had been con- ceded to an African slave before eman· cipation." Published some two decades ago, his book, "Roads to Ruin .'' spells out the relaLioruhip of the Victorian husband. to his wife : "He owned her body, her pr~ erty, her savings, her personal je\\•els and her income. whether they Jived together or separately. He could deprive her of her assets entirely as he thought fit, ud be could de thi s whether be were alive or dead." His power to disinherit a wire (of her own goods) was absolute and irrevocable. ONE OF THE FEW "1EN 0£ hi s time lo speak up against this iniquity. according io Turner. was John Stuart !\fill, the Dear Gloomy Gus Don't the promoters of that ridicu - lous and vicious Proposition 9 re- alize they belie their clean environ. ment pretentions by tempting lit- terbugs when they inundate people in parking lots 'vi.th their untruthful handbills? -B.E.A. Thi• 11 .. vre r1ll1d 1 r1td1r1' vi.wt, .,.1 n1t1i11rlly tll•M .. 1119 M WlPIPtr. Stnd ~•vr '" '"v' i. Glotmy Gvs. O•ltr 1'1111. philosopher and political ee-0nomisl. who himsel( openly repudiated his legal rights when he married. In his tract, "The Sub- jection of \Vom en," (189(>), he said of the English housewife: ,. 11She can acquire no pro~rty (except for her husband): the instant it becomes hers. eve n if by inheritance, it becomes ipso facto his .•. [f she leaves her hus- band. she can take nothing with her. neilher her children nor anything which is rightfully he r own. If he chooses. he can compel her to return by law, or by physical force: or he may content himself \\'ith seizing for his own use anything "''hich she may earn or which ma y be given to her by her relations " \VHEN THE LONG campaign began on behalf o( the t\i1arried Women 's Property Bill, it was widely attacked as a "vicious principle" that would dissolve the mar· riage bond, and a proposal as lunatic "as perpetual motion or slopping the revolu· tions of the moon.'' From perusing the press and Parliamentary reports of that period, a visitor from another planet would really imagine that society would be turned upside down if women were permitted a few legal and financia l rights of their own. As I say, one has only lo read this chapter to recognize how far women have come since then -and how much more remains to be done. Threat to Poppy Sales The Daily Califo mien El Cajon Once a year as Memorial Day ap- proaches some of the veterans' organiza- tions station representatives at shopping centers -and other pJaces where people congregate -to collect contributions for disabled "War veterans. tn exchange for a few coins or a small bill, they pin a bright red poppy lo your lapel as an indication that you cared about the plight of 3.2 million veterans who returned from the wars with missing limbs, lost eyesight and other injuries 1"hlch denied them a oonnaJ life. 111E MONEY ()()U.ECl'ED is u!ed to provide for disabled veterans t~ items which government pensions do not cover. It enables volunteer workers to take in- ~t.ed ..itraM to places they might otherwise go, to visit them in their es, io care for tht orphans and widows ot ICl'Tlcemen wbo dJed and to lt1n1bh rehlbflitative oervlre! to those who live. So hootile has the public mood becOme Quotes toward the Vietnam War that the pros· pect for poppy sales this year is bleak. UNFORnTNATELY, the controversy over the Vietnam War has done at great deal to color attitudes toward militarism in general and has dis~ U.S. in- volvement in past wars. Leftist in- tellectuals, anxious to sully the record, view tbe Vietnam episode as a mere con- tinuation of American imperialism that dates back a century or more. So often bas this vicious canard beeD circulated that some people have been COllned into believing that lhe United Stales alone is responsible for all the lntematk>oal vlolooce of mOOem times. Many people. not very wisely, allow their disencll8Jllmeot 1ritb the ·Vietnam War to numb their senses, forgetting they owe their freedom to the veterans, both living and dead. wbo during World War ll helped defeat the most monstroui villalny ever to be unleashed upoo the earth. AND THE MEN who have gone oll to war !n the 20UI caJtcry'bave done so in every cue in response to the 1ggrtaion o( nations intmt Upo\ anneiin& thdr nei&bborJ. v Wbttber this bu atn11 been a wise pollcy Is doballble, but U It, DO caase for lumlnil ,our bocks on the Jlle1I wbo 1ul- fmd IM miJeria of war and still bsve tbe ICIJ'I. ' A nation whldl for1ell the soaifxu ol its llOldien in baWo rllU nat bayq • anybody aroond to defend It -dang<!' stril;ea. LegisI·ature like to Ott lbese programs put back into the budg.~ if councilmen want to raise more revenue. Rowland s also listed JO possible new revenue sources, all or any combination of which could be used. He has painted a very clear picture of what councilmen can do. The three biggest potential revenue raisers are: A threewcent increase in the utility tu which would bring In $864.000; , .. installation of the trash collection lee which would offset the $660.000 cost of this service and a 2.5-cent increase in the oil tax, earning an additional $415,750. Now, it's up to councilmen to deeide "''hich, if any. increase they want The trash fee and the oil ta:< probably will get the most consideration. Cttltural Arts Week For some reason. there seemed to be a lack of spirit in this year's Fountain Valley Cultural Arts \Veek. The Cultural Arts Week Is a yearly event in which the city's civic groups and schools combine their talents to schedule a calendar of art, drama, music and other community events. This year the schools continued to present fine pro- grams such as the "Old West Days" at Fulton Elemen· tary School and a literature festival at Moiola Elemen~ tary School. Aside from the efforts by the schools, though, there seemed to be a lack of enthusiasm in the rest of the scheduling. a.1issing was the pioneer picnic of last year where families from throughout lhe city gathered to share good company, food and entertainment. It is to be hoped the interest of Fountain Valley citizens in this community event is not \vaning and plan- ning problems can be overcome for next year. USS~ H PASSPORT 'I'••• Old Glory ••• Fly Me All of the Tit1ae~ Wants Fla,g Flown 24 Ho·urs a Day To the Editor: I am continuing to mcourage citizens to ny our flag 24 hours a day -lighted at night. More and more lighted banners are waving at night in our area. On the eve of our 200th anniversary and with Memorial Day this weekend, I havt come up with a new slogan : ·'I'm Old Glory "Fly me -All or the time!" r~ollowing are excerpts from a letter lrom the commanding general of our state military forces. I believe everyone will be interested in this answer from the military. "TIIE BILL to revise the v.·ording of the code and to establish a Flag Com· mission appears to us to be appropriate. The flag, long symbolizing the union of person3 with common association, has borne its rules of display constituted upon good maMers. Some of the rules of good manners are obviowly of slight im~ portance in themselves, nor is there unive rsal agreement concerning them. Observance of the Flag Code etiquette, as ( __ MA_I_LB_o_x __ ·) Letters from readers are welcome. NornUJlly writers should convey their me;ssaoes iii 300 words or less. The Tight to condense letters to fit space or eliminate Libel is reserved. All let- ters must include signatures and mail· -ing address, but names may be toith· held on request if suffiCit'nt reason is apparent. Poetru wilt not be pub- lished. it is known today, ls chiefly voluntary. "CHANGES TO the code, IS practiced by this state and the others, can only be effected through federal action. While we concur in your goals, we believe it to be properly the action of dedicated private citizens as yourself rather than the func- tion of a state. "We most sincerely commend you on yoUr efforts and "''ish you success."- Robert S. Ford, Col., GS, CALARNG, Administrative Officer, Sacrnmento. KATHYRN FISHBACK 191h Ce11t11r11 "lhul 1'o the Editor: After reading U.S. ltepresentativr Johri Sch1nitz' reactionary utterances one cnn very well wonder what 15 this 19th Cen- tury mind housed In a comparativtly young body trying to achieve in Ule 20th Century -and to think that we are on the threshold of the 21st Century! One can on1y conclude: What is holding this greet (with an even greater poten- tial) nation together 11 a comblnaUon or tre mendous pubUc apathy cemented only with money. BORIS BUZAN Less Than Bunaan To the Edito<: Perhaps we ha ve come to a point in tlnie v.·hen far too many bomba have fallen, loo many prc<:lou1 llvu snatched uway. both 11\, Indochina and on tM 11treel!t of America . that we kno-.t aur ;:u lll 1though we won't admit it) and •r• afraid to r:tase droppinR bombs and fl,.. ln11. lht. i;uns les~ w,. hf' the victims - Hnd, ju~tlflably. \VllETHER WJTll bombs or gun!, l ht1icvt: our own problem beaan when w1: dec1dr:d to pul a different prk>rlty on theo llvc!t or :t0me men than we do on other11. We muat not continue to harm othera and mlslrcat people, and not expect relall11· tion. All lite 11 aacred, but it aeema. the 'P"'t few yeara, loo 1111ny pecplt '.havl been deemed or ~reed to be aomolhln11 less than hun1an. llow do we "uncondllJon" that tecment or our American society that ha1 been lhorooghly Indoctrinated to' sdllere to tho more usly, abnormal and vtoltnt methoda: as solutions to our problems? BERNICE WELSH Nixon Knows What Russia Is After SALZBURG, AUSTRIA -President Nixon 's trip to Rus sia would not ord inari· ly be thought of under existing circumstances as a sentimental journey, but for him it has many o( those aspects. He was eager to have some of those who accompanied him to the Soviet Union in 1959 make this trip, nearly 13 years later. as a symbol or the continuity of \Vhat he deems to be a sustained and sincere effort to es- tablish with Russia a working relationship for world peace. This attitude on Nixon's part seems to some to be incon- sistent with his polit- ical career based in the beginnirig. and for many years, on anti.Communism. NIXON FINDS . N 0 inco11Jistency whatsoever. He is still anti.Communi st in the sense. that he abhor! the political 1ystem and he opposed. with force when necessary, the expansion of Communism internationally .• But he recognize& the Soviet Union as a powerful national and international force which must be dealt with realistically. What constitutes realism is the prob- lfm. It seems wholly contrad1ctory that the improvement of relallotU should go forward while the Soviet Union and the United States are ln what amounts to anned confrontation in so many places In the world. The contradiction become• greater with the realiz.aUon that what Rua11a ii IC· tually seeking Is the neutrall.iatton of American nuclear power in the oame of "equality," the withdrawal or American forces from Europe, and dtcnasing Ame:rlean infiuence in Aila, the Mkldle East, the Mediterranean and the Indian Ocean. 50ME OF mg foregoing , in fact , Is probably pm ol an historical trend which cannot be reversed. Ni.Ion'• ooneem has to be lh>t in adjusting to tblt !Tend, lb< aoft spota lelt by America'• lowmd pn> file do DOI l>oocJlnt the ....t bed for the unrutralned ~ tf loYlet WO<ld power. la the long l'WI, that msy be 1 coo- tradldlon wblch C8Jl onlJ be rs>l•ed, OI' st lealll IOSpended, by the U....1 ol the .. of force "' Its actual .... 'Ibis tllrt1t bu betn I major tiemmt ol Amerlclll poll<y I« -· on... -u bu (RICHARD WILSON) been hoped that force wou1d no longer be necessary, there have been compelling reasons for this last resort, a1 in the case of min1ng and bombing of North Vietnam. No post-World War n President ha1 been able to escape such deci!lons, and most of those decisions - all of them without major except.km -have been on the side of rorce or the threat of force a! a last resort. TO PUT mE BEST F ACJ:: on It, Nixon Is seeking arrangements enabling him and subsequent Presidents to escape the necessity of the choice between action and·no action, force or no rorce, either of which can have tragic conaequences. A great deal has rested, and 1tlll re1ts, on Soviet reaction to American action to protect lt5 interests, and, so fir at least, Nixon's judgment has been sound. So he goes to Moscow Jn a mood not quite so happy u he would like, and In 'fihe Expectation Gap Ne• castle (Pa.) News It's impossible to ntUm to yesterday and it's unreasonable to raise the ex· pectatklns of people with promisea or a better tomorrow which cannot be fulfill· ed . To do lhe latter creates a credibility gap between those who make the prom· ises and th08e who believe the promises will be fulfilled . In addition, there is •n expectation gap. Social observer!! pondering what went wrong In the inflammatory 160s believe too much wa1 promised and too much was not fulfilled . They hope • leason ha1 bttn learned. Herbert J. G1n111, a oociology prof.,.., writing In The New York Times Magazine. noted "when ex· pectatlons heighten, pecpl• become more im9at.ient, more critical of tht:ir society when erpectationa: are not rtallud, and eventually, more active politically." LOOKING AH EAD to the tnd ol the Vietnam war, ltatU 1n e1pectaUon. Professor GIN wanu "there remains the problem ol which and whole <1· pectatlons can be acllitvod, and wi- not." Amona: 10me of the problemt on whkh Vietm.m war ooetl (!OU}d be 1pent are 001urolling pollution, overpopulation. and rkln& medics) and holpltal bills and e1p1ndl_ns welrare progr1m1 -to men- tloa a few. Editor William B. Dlcklnlon Jr. ol Editorial ~ lleporll ..... cesta !hit .. ..,. expectations .,.. belnc crut.ed every day .... YCUll Jl'Olll• "°"" to lranllorm soclet1 -tbal Ibey cu ,.._ at l(e ll w-·1 Ub ba1 turned -... and -Into tlgen ...,,....i to fillit !Gr sband. - and equal pay. Clean water and air are put forward u Jnalienable rlghtl that will be realized in our time ." THE EXPECTATION gap need not be considereki as a fact involving only na- tional issues. Promises of more ffftcient garbage collections and Job development by the mayor, If they are unfulfilled, will make a dent In the credlblllty of his •d· ministration. TM promise or a metropolitan aewage collectlon «yatem by planners ind tlected ornclalt which may sour will add to the fru11tr1.1tlons of those resident! who expect the project to ltave the drawing board for con1tructlon. In lhf reviewing the exptdatlon! of the young . women, and envlronmenllllsta:. Editor Dick.iDJOn writ.a. "Someone la going to be disappointed . The poltti<:1I process Is like! y to remain In the control of the unyoung for some years. Husbands wlll be chauvfnistl when It cornea to the laundry. "POPULATION GROWTH will mal<e htaf'.lway against pollution hard to come by. In their hearts, people stnst tht finllt quality of life, evtn In thete United Stain. But !ht pollttc:at rhetoric o1 1m almost <tl'lllnly will feed npoctatlons rathtr than rt1nforu rt1ll.lrn.1' The same words could be wrltWI about aome of our total asplrstlonl. llltbtr tho luel the expectations of the pooplt, Ioctl offlctals and community lt1den should ltmper tb<lr "°"" •illi resllly. "' -loc proleu« Gant -"Imo . provemeoilo DO loogtt U fll1 Utt Ol!OO wu." And, the dilliclllty mnolDI that tt Is um to lnlUM upeclatloos than ll ls to tum tllom olL different clrcumJtance1 than he .,... tlclpat«I, but 11 a man resumlnc where he Jell off In 1959. Then he WlllJ merely a Vice Pre1kltnt with an antl-Omununlat record and \lnder suspicion of u1Jng MOICow 11 a backdrop for hl o own pollllcal 1mbltloo1. And ao fl actually turned out, with Nixon-ror.-Prt1l• dent blllhoards In lieo showing him tbak· Ing hlo nnger In Nikita Khru5hclleY'l llCI during the famed ''kitchen deblt.e." ms TRIP THEN had I brooder purpose, however. ard It wa1 lo feeJ out the ground f<J[ a protpectlve trtp by President Eiimnhower. The trip wu pl•Med and Jell throu1h over the U.1 In· cldt.nt. Now It Is Nixon. not EIHnhower, who 11 the flr1t American President to Yllit the SOvlet Union, and· thlt add1 anothet t i& ment which makeA the M.otoow trip 1 mitlmental journey. Retumln& to Pol1nd 11 In the 1ame catq:ory. Alter hl11: departure In 1959 from the icily formal atmosphere of Moscow, Nlaon went to Warsaw for an unexpected popular rece~ Uon. People turned out spontaneously to throw flower• on his limousine. Thea~ moods cannot be recaptured, bu& what was Impossible in 1959, an onsolnc nnd llleadlly Improving rel1tlonlhlp , may now be reaumed In ~pile o( the adver1e clrcumstancCJ fJf 19'72. Nixon's overtures to China have no doubt provlded IOme leverage, but even without lhat added prtllure Nixon 'nd the Soviet leeder1 have found their own reuona for fUd. ju1tment of relation1. OlAHGI CO.UT DAILY PILOT Rob(rt N. Wttd, hblisMr ThQmQ l<cc oil, .£dl&.or Alb,rt W. Bot<1 Editorial Pat;c ldUor 11W' edUoriaJ s-.i~ Of UM! Dalb' Piiot attk1 to lntorm e.nd 1tlmd• Late rNdert "1 praentln1 thll IW!Wl~Pf"'• opinSMll &l'ld ~ mtntat)I ol'I topla of lnlntft W •isnl~. by llt'ovidl12il & fGNll for lhlt ~'"' ol. aur ms 1 tff ......... and ,,,. ..-u.s ..... d.l\•ftW •Wwpolnll ot lntomwid ... lttWn and ·~ Oii ..... ..... ..,. Friday, May 26, 1972 L. M. BOJd Wl1at Do Sheep Count to Sleep? Ag11in •m 1•ked 111 flip~d penn y is more apt lo come up ht1d~ than tails. Jt 11. Cornea up head11 50.2 percent • of tM time. One ProftA!.Of' t~dward L. Spltzn11el provtd that. With Jlt.020 fllpe. The 11t1mplng pr~• at the mint 11 •uch, he conclude1, th;it the tail!lide 111 a a~ldgeon hea vitr. Th•t'1 rne penny only, remembt!r. CAN YOU Utt 111 th! U.S. pre11irtents from memol'5''! Netlher can I. When poll11ter11 ask~ a 1lz.ahle 1amplin11: of c11iien:i;: In do 80, a particuh1r iieven nf the chief ell't<:U· ll v~ rtpt11tedly fa iled lo tum up oo the ro11ters. ThnM" most forgeltllhle mf'n werf' Tyler. r nlk, Ta ylrir, f lJ l- more , Pierce. Ruchanan, 11nrt one more, can't re&.all , who 'd I miss'! THAT numerouii: inY1mni.11c!! count ~. 'hecp Lo help th,.m:i1rlvP11 dn7.f! off I!! not nnteworthy. Wh~t'!ll noltworthy ls numerou11 sheep 1rt lnMlmnlac~, too. Th('ir 11tnmRchs - each 11hecp ha~ foUr -dnn't work right in ju1t 11ny old 'poAitlon . The body ha11 tc be upright. Makes the long nlaht'a 1nome dllflcult. Qv t:RJES -Q. "Wh.:il proportion of lhe men and women In th l11 country we111r brl.da:e11 M dentures?" A. Mt;,, 17.2 percent. Wnmf'n , Ml.8 percent. Q, "IN Jrtl11nd, which oulnumhtr whirh1 lht Murphy11 or the Kelly11?'' A. The Dublin telephone directory 1 1.~l~ J1:ix columns of Murphy1, five column11 of Kelly!!, that'1 all I know. ARGUMENT continued ovl!r whf're in lhe Rihll~ 1t ll'll!!: a m111.n how In wiPf" dlshell". Thlil.'l! SM"'Ond Kin11." XXT, l:i: (J " ••• As 1 man wipelh A dish. Wiping Jt and turning it aptldt: dnwn." Thlll" relerence repeatedly hell" hffn quoted ~ to wlVt:JI" In Jl"CRrch or biblical proof that their hu ll"hands should ht!lp In lhe kitchen . COST n( 11 new federRI ofrice bu ilding -generally runs aboul 35 percent higher than the cost of a private office bulldlna. Takes about two year~ for private industry to de1lga and ron1truct !Uch An f'difice. but about five years for the feder1l 1overnment to do ao. Can you explain why? RtNTS-The llnul'lehold Hint~ expert:ri advise: I. Shine your bathroom chrome with ruhbing alcohol. 2. Rur.v the old banan a peela around you r roae bushes. And. 3. Count ."on 1 do7.en Ice cube! per gue!lt at your next party. AM AWARt~ the creator or the firl'll rockin~ chair WI! a Cape Corl hired min with 11 knack for whittling, but 1 whit w11 thP name of the genlu11? Thi:ri query. too. ha! our rese11n::h department baffltd, llO fllr. Help w11nled. Addrti., mail to L. M. Boud. P. 0. Box 1875 Ntw· ~ port Stach, Calif. 92660. Arizona <;losing . Park Over Rabies Fast Ball Or Curve By Reagan? rr1>ro Wire Strvtcn Gov. Rnn1ld fl«•111 SI.fl he 11 looking forward to "watch· Ing Vld11 Blue pitch" while the debate11 between Senc. Georae McCrovem and Hubert Humphrey art beln~ t1>lev\11ed. Re11g11n urged C-elifornia lo watch the debates. hut added that ht w.ill ht. w1tclUnA: Blue. the 011kland Athleueii 11tar I PEOPL E pitcher who l!I returnlng tc ac· lion aftf'!' a Aalary dispute. * * * The f)uke nf Wlnd111r , 77, re.- maim HJ in Pari:ir, h Is Aeeretary !'l.:iid. hut gave no In· dlcatlon thii.t the duke'• con- dition wa11 caull"ing alarm. The aide 11aid: "The duke Isn't well. He l! not in very good shape." The secretary declined tc characterize the M!riousness nf tht duke '" cond ition or give med ical deta ils of hi11 ailment. * * * Formrr A.'i.."'3mhly !'.pP.Rker Je11 Unruh 1u1ys he plans to run for maynr of Loil Angele11 in 197.l "It 111 n1y inlention RI this pnint In n1n." Unn1h aaid at hi11 Lo'.'! Ana:r le111 of fire. The unsuccessful 1 9 7 0 Democratic j."(ubernatorial can· did11te declined tn make a fonnal 11t.11tcment. however . saying •·r hRvt not raised all 4.' my money yet." * * * The Senate Financr Com- mittee apprnved without op- posit ion Pres ident NI x on ' s nomination of GMtge P. Shalt1 to 8UCCterl John B. Con- nally 11s gecrelary of the treasury. * * * . 11ltre will be R not her 8MaMlnAtlon attempt on 1 major Democratic oendldate. according lo prophetess Jeue Dl:a:nn. "Who it ill", when or where - l cannot t~ll yoo," Mrs. Di:a:on told " Sllcramento Union reporter 11fter addressing a luncheon there. * * * ' PHOENIX. Ariz . (AP> - Lower Lake H1vuu State to campt'rl'I for th e Ml'mor iRI D"'Y wPrkenc1 by State rark DiN"Clor Oenni.11 McCarthy. American author J am e 1 Mir-heMr trtnrmed out of a ne11·s conference in MoMX1w to protest a~11insl what he Mid \\·::.~ fr i\'nln11.11 tre11tment of the Snvirl .lr\\·ish prohlem during a l'lympn~iu m et the summit pre~ crnter. · Park h11 been ordtred closed . Exercise Sel BANGKOK 1AP 1 -The Southea11 A1i1 Tr r 1 t y OrgAniullnn -SF.ATO -\\•ill conduct II IW(l-\\'f'Pk miUIA ry erercis, In Thll"lh1nt1 June 14· JT. SEATO ht11riqu11rter11 an· nou.ncf'd . Maj. fien . Jam'" J. Gibbon!! of the U.S. Army wtll be e1err.i~ director . 11.1rCarthy said four nr five . Pf>rsnnl'I tUl\'r Ml"n blltf'n by c-nvn1t's in !he 11rtR 11nd nf· fiCh1ll'I hel ir\'e lhe Anima ls m11y hr rabirt. A \\'1 ~re .ciurvl'y i~ hting condur led. hr said. lo confirm or di.cif)('l lhP i-:u.cipicinns. The Ari1.nna fiamt' anci Fi.~h JH.p11rtmpnl . S111tP PI r k !II Oep11rtn1tnt . Mnha\·e A n d ''um.!I County Sheri ff"~ offices and nthers will enforce the clo..'!urr. h-1cCarthy u id. .. , \\'OTI 'I ii;J;uxt for it," MirherH'r !!:hnuled. l'hp \1•alkn11t followf'd an 11!trrr al ion bel\.\>ecn 11 Jewish Amrrir11n rorrespondent and Alrx::.nOM" Chak(H'sky, the Soviet l'ditor of the influential \.\'eekl y magazine L i t r r a r y Gaieltf'. See If you've won this week .. May 26 through June 1, 1972. 24 12 3 7 6 19 10 9 11 FREE Pick up.11!/ngo Card lrOm I plHtiClpellng Shell dMI., todly Of Hnd I Mlf..odrt•ld -lope to Deplrtmtnt BFC #1, P.O. Box278, Chlclgo. 4 13 15 17 18 22 5 .' 14 16 23 20 21 . 25 8 2 lllil\011 60648. E"'l' Shell Bi~ c.Jd 1J a potential winner. So .... )'11111' ~ O/ltdoesn'llilllt fftlt -.t. II COUid win llt.ll -.1:. • \ ·~ _, (i.O .r. , I A. 8. I p11ffed softknit smock dresses How do ju niors see Summer? In dresses of soft . inferfoclctng kn.+ short enoug h so tonned legs meet the eye . In dekiously muted blossom p6nh. All with the odoroble short puff sleeve. Sizes S-13. "A. Sib I con t, cotton-polyeste c by Down Joy , 18.00. B. Puffs. scoopneck, t ie beet in cotton by Down Joy: 18.00. C. Puffs, cuffs. button-front in polyester-cotton. by Confettf Girl_. 20.00. Mo il end phone orders invited. Junior World Dresses. • DAILY PILOT $ ' I c. it's at the b:roadway lNAHflM NEWPO•T HUNTI~TON lt.ACH ORAN"l. MeP •f O.t11t• 444 N. hc.t'4 '' ,,_.t.i .. 11!1_, 7177 Uitttff A .... v• 2JOO N•. Tv1ti11 Str"t f1f4J IJl .. ltt 171 41 ""1212 (714J lttJJJI 111 4) ttl.IJI I cw nos 100 LK Cem1M M•ll IZIJI IM-04 11 »tCW II A.M ... t ill P.M, MOHDAT THROU&H N.IOAT, SATUlDAT 10 A.M. h 6 P.M. SUNDAY 11 NOON t• I P.M. \ ' --' .• , -• • Orange (;oast Today's Flaal N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 65, NO. '147, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 26, ·1972 N TEN CENTS County Airport Impact Study Termed 'Weak' By L PETER KRIEG Ot Ille Da llY Plitt Iliff Newport Beach has just spent $42,000 for an Orange County Airport impact study and the city's mayor and city manager are less than thrilled with what they got. The study, released Thursday, tells the world that Newport Beach has an in- tolerable noise problem and that it shciuld push for joint civilian-military use of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station to relieve noise and air pollution problems locally. ''I'm not terribly impressed," Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis said this morning. .. 1 haven't had a chance to read the w~le report -it's got some good in- formation and it's going to be useful - IJCI Discovery but some of the concl~ioos are a little weak.," be said .. "The recommendations they came up with, you and I could have thought up ourselves if we sat down and talbd for about 30 minutes," viewed City ?l-1anager Robert L. W)'M. "It falls short in 1 numbtr or art:as," Wynn said. "It's recorrunendations cou1d ·have been more explicit." One of those recommendations sug- gested the city get together to work out "an environmental sensitivity plan" with the Orange County Airport Land Use Commission. "\Vhoever v.TOte the reporl doesn't understand what the Airport. Land Use Commission is," said Mcinnis, ~·ho is I Scientists Find Cells 'Rewired' REVEALS STUQY RESULTS Dr. Carl W. Cotman By GEORGE LEIDAL Of 1t1it DIUy Plllll Sid Two UC Irvine psycbobiologists an-. JlOUDCed a 0 pro[ound diacovery' i ThurS- ~ ::r i:=:-:~ recover from nerve cell loeses. Dr. Gary Lynch ~ Dr. Carl W. Col- man revea1ed raull&GI • 111-_,lh lludJ of brain damqed µii that Wal I Up- porled by ll'intl fnm the N.ttlonal Sc~ enc. Foimclatlon and the Natlonal !Mt~ tote of Menial Heallh amounting w $45.000 a year. The UCI psychobiology professors discussed their research at the opening of a half-day UCI lndusbial Associates pro- gram introducing butiness leader• to the school of biological sciences. The faculty researchers from Newport Beach said their ftndinis were baaed on work with 20 rats. UCI researcberl removed a portion of the cortex or the brain of each rat. "Within a matter of days," Dr. Lynch said, a filling in or the rut area can be observed. It has Jong been tocnm Iha\ brain cells -nerve ti&!lue -cannot duplicate themselves as do cells of other body tissues such as the akin. However, the Lynch-Cotman studies of rats indicates the possibility that u:xtam- aged c<U. In other part., ol the body "'nd out new signals' -called processes - have been "dramatically" evident in miscroscopic views of train tissue. The nerve processes produce an enzyme acetyl-cbolinestrase, Dr. Lynch said. When tissues are "stained" with a dye that has been used for years in other areas or research, the nerve enzyme can readily be seen. Application of this graphic method to establish the ~ GI new connectians betw ... brain cen., repllclng the con- nectiiml '!hat broke down wllh tbe damage ol otber celh II the key IA> the UCI discovery. ''We'R the first people IA> look loto this structure using the stainlng technique,'' Dr. Cotman said. Psychobiology deparlmmt chairman Dr. James L. McGaugh ~bed the pair's findlng as a "profound discovery. No matter what else comes from it, the infonnation adds to our knowledge of the brain," he said. "If all poosihle lmplicatiom come to pass, the discovery would not only be profound, but could be classed 11 phenomenal," Dr. McGaugll said. One luture implication GI the fuxlings might be in helping Jmm.am who have suUer.d brain damage b7 aocldenl or (ilfe DISOOVEIIY, hp I) chainnan of that panel. The ALUC is charged with ruling on proposed land use plans in the vicinity of the airport. The report recommends the city establish polic~s and J)rograms to v.·ork with the commission that "might involve the development cf 'an en- vironmental sensitivity plan' for all areas vdlhin the 'impact toOtprint' of Orange County Airport. '·Such a cooperative program could establish impact limits for the entire su~ ject area," the report said. "I'm going to read it again to try to un· derstand what the writer's point was," t.1clnnis said. "But 1 don't like getting 1 report like that. It makes you go back and try to find out what th~ y.·riter is trying to tell me," Pt1clnni.s added . Mcinnis pointed out that m11ny f'f'COlll· mendations made have been either talked about or tried already. "That study was initiated two years ago," he noted. "It \\'as a little long in getting here." The mayor also zeroed in on tile El Toro recommendation. ''That's got problena with it," J\lclnnL~ said. "El Toro's use on an interim basis is something that the city hns felt for 11 long time should be actively pursued . "All the studies that have come along indicate exactly the same thing, saying _._reemen • Poem and Patriots the ultimate solution should be somewhere else," he continued. Both the mayor and city manager agreed the report does contaln some useful data and Mcinnis uld lt wlU be <'specially useful to 1he 900 Newport Beach homeo\\'tlers \Vho have flied noise limit suits ago.lns.t the cow1ty. "The reJ)Ort has some good lnfonnaUon that tends to verify what the people }\ave been saying nil along," Mcinnis said. ''We've 11 very untennhlt> position at the uppt>r ('nd of town -but that's nothing the people didn 't already kno11•. Dul It Is nic('' to be able to back lt up with this dntn." \Vy1u1 agreed Lhr rrport "hi good In I' DAILY PIL.01' It.,,. ....... Cathy Harber, eighth grade student at Davis Mid· die School in Costa Mesa is flanked by flag·bearing classmates during her recital of •1Tbe .F1ag is Pass- ing By." It was part or a Memorial Day assembly this morning which featured a massed flag demon- stration, orations and music. Cyclist Cauglit Airer 80 MPH Swp-go Chase A Tustin motorcyclist was captured by Newport Beach police Thursday night after an 80-mile-per~ chase in which he slopped, !ped off, •topped again. !hen rammed a squad car in a third alleged escape try. Richard J. Ranslem, 23, of 14131 Westfall Road, was booked on sus:pkion of driving under the influence of alcohol ... drugs. Patrolmen Greg Hein and Walt Rund· quist said they spotted a speeding 'cycllllt on Newport Boulevard at 32nd Street about 9:20 p.m., and gave chase. Accelerating1 they pursued the vehicle over The Arcnes Qve~ss -about a half·mile, as he specttli""""rough traffic, then spotted him pulled olf Io the riglll below an Old Newport Boulevard. Swinging right on an access road, the lnvestigaton claimed R a n 1 I e m ec- celeraled 1pin, then hatted "' they chased him with ....i tig!Jt.s and siren. Venomous Attack Erupts \ Between 42nd Candidates By PAMELA HALLAN Of Hit D•llr Pllift Slfll A venomou.s attack laced with threats of vlolence launched by Fred Gage or Oceanside on fellow candidate Claire Burgener or San Diego erupted Tburlday du1ing a meeting of the 4 2 n d Congressional District Republican can· V 011 Brau1i Quits NASA, Tukes Private' Post WASllINGTON IUPI / -Dr. Wernher von Braun, German-born rocket expert who directed development of the rocket that 1ent Americans lo the moon, reUred from the space agency today. didates In San Clemente. "I would llke to take him out in lhe alley with the re,,i of the a:arba&e and thrash him," sai d Gage. "God have mercy on this country If a man like thll ia allowed to hold public office." Gage, visibly enraged, wa1 referring to an alleged 1mear campaign against him which he said Burgener "was either con- ducting or condoning concerning an in- cident that occured 20 ye1r1 ago. It in· volved. the death of Gage'• J.ytar-old 10n and Gage claimed the 1mear h.lntl that ht' and hUi: wife had been negligent end contributed to the child'• death, (Burgener, who was not prtuht durlnR (;ages' bizarre 1peech, later quleUy denied the allegntloru.) lfow could you allow anyone to release such a thlnj!?" G1ge bellowed to tht absent Burgentr. "I twear on my dead aon'1 soul I will work •C•inlt you. Yoo are unfJt u a humen beln1; ruthleuly vicloo!. You have hurt my wife in 1 deapicable way." Coastal Study Released An IDJlOllDmnent of his retlrement Iuued by the Nallonal Aeronautics and Space Admi.JllJtraUon said that Von Brawi would join Fairchild Industrlt1 u corporate vice president for eng!neerJnc and development, eUe<tivt July L IIelore a!lllklni out ol the meetlnC and leaving • shocked, ltuoned al.ldltnet, Gage vowed he would ••never aptn abate a platform" with bla oppooent. ANwerJng I qua!Joa about the alltged smear. Burgtntr later ll1d tblt 1 MVen or eight-page 'blckcround lheet" orJ Gage hofl be8I aal IA> his staff "wwoUcited" from a penor; tn Loi Angelff who had prepared II I« UM dur· 1,. Ga&e'1 wnpai.,, apl~Lat An&eles &loervllor w..,,. Dom laut yeua ago. : Reagan Panel. Urges State Regul.ati.on.s on Beaches '5ACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. RanOI ~· coastol study ciwp ,._,a '1-ttpOrl loda1 which 11111 ..... tl'a ol -state ngulalions-IA> thliit ~I along Calllllnlia'• l:al7..ine ....... But tho ,...._ •• llndy ..........m mtriedng the coutline canlrols to • *ip of laad 4111 i... -or lea allq Ille amt -lntlad GI tbe J,M Joo4.<rlde -·--In leglllatm pro- I P*ll. ......... report alao ,_,_ ti.& ·-~·---...... "h<ve,:i--tllllJ far ..r•dlii -. ,.,...,. 1o -... ..., .. wdal <r!Mrla" Ila! .. ..t .,.0 GUI the _.of IDl.Jllba.i,o1 Ille .... boon!. '!be aulhoritJ ml maktq> GI !*iljiClled .... coost11ne_._ ,. __ bom lhe '"7 -• holtla in tho Lqlslatun !he pd line , ........ ' I Von Braun wu serving u deputy UJOclate odmlnll<lrawr at the time ol his resignation. Bdore that, he wu director of the Manhall Space FIJgjrt Center In Alabama for IO yean, heading the team llult developed the world's moll powtt!UJ -· the Salum V which propelled Apollo'a moon-landing miuloos. Dr. J11111tt C. f'letctwr, NASA ad- mlnl1tntor said "all of us in NASA ,.UJ mis the dally sllmoWion ol his pr.....,., but we att -t Iha! ,.. will conlimo to have the beftelit ol hll In- sptnllon anlf counoe1 in the c:om1nu1ng esploratlon and uoe ol space." • 111 would never ta auclJ a thln&," iUl BurJ.,..., S.lors maklni Ida amoa.i.1 outburst. G"fe llad told Ifie audloace Illll hf ls the "•~i111" candldale and hu --hulfnc all O'/tr the United SIAl!et. But hf uld hu•lnc llll't the real ...... GovernJ11<11t control la. lit uld llull Uthe (kc ATfAClt, Pap II f • tern1s or descrlblna thr sltu11tlon whh ra1v dntn. "llut I 1\·111 hopintt 11 could be nlot• Spt'<'lfle on things that could be done 10 nlakc tht airport more comJl'1llble,'1 \Vynn suid. f\1cl1111is s:ald he. lntt•nds to dlscu11 the report and \vh11t to do \l'\lh It lit the nrxl meeting uf 1•Uy rOun1·\lnlrn June 12, saylnf{ tht' ("ity will 1n11k~ the report ftVnllnblt• to nll concerned Jlltrllt!!. Thf' l\\'o-yrnr !tudy. prt'Pltr1•d by tht Arcadia consulting rtr1n of \Vll~ey llMIU, '"as lnlt•ndl•d lo 00 the cl ty '1 rrllponse to Rn alrporl needs study pN'pared for OrRnge County by the ltnlph f\1 . l'nrsons Co1npany. teaders Pen A-arms Pact At Summit BUU.ETIN MOSCOW (AP) -rre1ldent Nixon and Soviet le1der1 anvetled lonlabt " 1ur- prlui •areemnt frenla1 t be aumber or land-end •e•·baled ml1dle1 at current 1evel1, i; MOSCOW (AP) -Prt1ldent Nl1on and · Soviet leadero I011ed at the summit 1 .. ., .ciao' a..lllltoric a&J;~enl w curb IJul : 111perpower nuclear mlalle rice, but abfncfoned ellorto to 1111ot1all 1t the - Kremlin 1 broad' trtde 11reem1nt. The first-ever accord w llmll the 1toekplle1 of bolh offen1Jve and defen1fv1 11.tateglc we1p>n1 wu 1grted 111>0n, ipokesmen 1ald, at the elRh!h meellnR ol Nixon 11nd Soviet lenders iilnce he btceme on Monday the flr1t American pre1ldent to se t foot In the Soviet cnpltnl. The two-step aareernent wn1 to be signed efter l're1ldent and Mr1 . .Nixon gave a banquet for the Kremlin'• hler- archy-COmmunial party chief l..eonkt I. Brezhnev, President Nlkolal V. Podgomy and Premier Alexei N. K011ygln. Oetalla of the pact were withheld unlll then. The arma agreement left Y~nam, the Middle East and Europe 111 the crucl1I unsettled International problrm1 to be discuaed In the rem1lnlns three dAy1 of the summit. But the ml11lle curb pnct meant Nixon could return home In 11n electkln y .. r with • major rorelgn policy reathel' In hll hat. U.S. 11poke1man Ronnld L. Zle1ler an- nounced the 1troteglc arm1 !Imitation 11greement after Nixon met for 21,A, hourt In the Kremlin with the top three Soviet leader11. At about the 1ume lime, 1poke.1men di sclosed that the Jeader1 1grHd to establlah • joint U.S.-Sovlet eo1nmtrcl1I comml.s1lon to continue difficult ind complex tradt negollaUona. Thus, the head1 ol the world'• two molt pro1perou1 naUon1 gave up fJI attempt to work out In summit talk.I the detal!J of • compreheruilve packa1e to upend trade and commercial relJtk>ns betwlftl their countrie1. A1 the drive ror aareemtnt on the 1rm11 limitation pact wa1 In lt1 final houri, ID- formantl reported It 1h.ilped up thl1 way : A treaty requlrllll( Senate conflrm1Uon would limit to 300 the number ot IS.. AGREEMENT, P1c1 11 • Wea .. er Look for con11dtrable clou.dlneu Saturday along UWJ Oranae Coast. cl<arln1 by noon Io aunny akltt, •ccordlng to the weathtrlady. Iliglla 116-71. t.owa In the IO'a. INSIDE TOD.\ Y Oran(lt Count11 tt the 1tra• bern; capitol of flt< 11a1fo!I. C.r· dtn Grove 1ccoe1 ftt annual Strawbtrt\I F11tlool thil Mtm0r· UJl weekend. See 1£orr fn todo1111 Wttkender. .......... ' .. .... , ... " -· .. " --• c..llMtlll• , .. __ .. =:' ---01' i: ,,,..._ ,, ·-· -... --" --... ,, -·-• ·-.. ·-, .. ., ·-.... .... _ w -• ... .-. " ---,., ... ......-" --...: -• •••• 'p -.. ••• • I % DAILY PILOI " Frldi.J, MIJ 2ft, 1972 $150,000 Ba11l Helic opter Guns Stop By Me sa Lawmen R ed T·roo ps Cocaine Seized Protest Ba .. e d T eaclier' s Acti.o11 Costs Job I SANTA CRUZ CAP) -A young wwnan who ripped all htr blouse 1t ID anUwar protest has found berseU stripped or a job. The Santa Cruz School District Board voted to fire Janice Lee Rogers. 27, from her job as a teacher's aide at Laurel Elementary School. Pendleton's Field Eyed At Meeting By ARTllUR R. Vl!llSEL 01 """ l'.lt U• r 11e1 S••ll Intercepting a hol.lowtd-out book thal authorities claim contained a fKJund <>I pure Colombian cocaint worth up to Gas Lead Ban On in Spite Of Ruling Orange County'a new <>rdlnance ban- ning the sale of leaded guollnt will go In- to elrect July 1 despite a Superior Court ruUn1 invalidatlna: It, Cow1ty Counse l Adrian Kuyptr aald today. The Fourth Diatrlct Appellate Caurt in San Bernardino haa set Sept. 6 for an ai; peal hearing on Judge James F. Jud ge's rttllnt April 21 in wh ich he sa id the coun.- ly could not regulate the lead content of gasoline because such regulation was a legal function of the state Air Resources Boa rd. But the appeal court , In addition to set· ting the Sept. 6 hearing. issued a. tem· porary restraining order invalidatin~ Judge Judge's ruling until the appeal hearlnc is concluded. The 1ppeal court decision was Issued Thurlday by Justice Stephen Tamura, who once was county counsel for Orange County. The new law limits the lead content in gasaline to three grams a gallon begin- ning July J and becomes progressively !trlcter for the nut three years. By July J, 1974, all regular grade gasoline mu11t contain only traces. ~t the anti-knock in-- grcd lent and this same restriction applies to premium aaaollne on July I, 1975. Despite the ·court ruling, Orange Coun· ty Air Pollutlon Control Ofricer Willia m Fltchen said today he dirt nnt foresee any problems enforcing the rest rictive la"'· "Most gasoline sold in the c<>unly now contains leSJ than three grams per gallon cf lead," he stated . "Our trouble will begin next year when the limit drops to two grams per ga llon." Fltchen said his department has the necessary equipment to measure the lead content and random testa would be made in service stations throughout the county beginning July 1. The air pollution control officer added, ••1 do not anticipate any aerklus problems In future years either. l am certain the oil companies will cooperate and have been informed that they are MW working on the problem or reducing the le1d con- tent of gasoline." Newpo rt Tra sl1 Containers Eyed For Viol ations Trash containers are be ing inspected and will be tagged by Newport Beach col- lectors If found to be violRtlng the city's new .sanitation ~aw, city officials said to- day. Check marks oo red tags indicate the violations. All containers must be water· light. convenltnt to handle Rnd have lids. This practice foll ows the recenl updat· Ing by the city council of the muni cipal refuse collection and community environ- mental .sanitation raw ... Property owner! and tenants Jrr rr- ceivlng an explanatory bn>ehure with water bills, acco rding to J. F. Mynderse. city genernl service director. Key pro- visions of the ne\11 law, col1£'Ction speci. fications and schedules are incl uded in lhe brochurt. tr container vlolaUons are not correct· ed within a reasonable tlme, residents: will recelve a letter urg ing compliance. A letter from the city attorney wiU fol· low should violations ptrslst. ORANal COAST • DAILY PILOT 1'1111 0r-. C0111 D"ll v rlLOT, wll'I wflkll h ~lflfll th. N....,.,.,1:1or.. ;. ~bU ... tO by W.. Orf~ C0•11I PlioDllil'l!riv (On\1M1nf, ~ n t• itdl!~J ••• pUtllitl!tO, MonO•y tl!rovgl'I Fti01y, I~ Cotlt Mttl, M-.iorf ltt<l'I, t-1 .... 11no1on llt"(l'llF~11n!~"' lltUty, L•O\lf\I lt,c.l'I. l•~lti11~adOlrb1'~ •'Ill 3•n Clemttl!cl $1!1 J ... 11 (fPlltt•,,. A ,_ngl1 tl'Qoeritl t<llllon 1, Wbll1llt0 111uro•v• •"4 ~11M•Y•· f ~t 11r!ri(lp.1 I pubt11111nt Jilin! I• •! llO Wfll fl4y )l,ffJ, Co,11 Mtuo, C•lllilrnl8, tJ67t. Roffrt N. We.,J "rnl!l.nl •nf Plllllloll•r J 1c~ It. Curley \I.ct P1e~l!l*lll •llCll o-<11 M•n.tgtt Th ama1 KeeYif 1..1 ..... Thom•• A. M..,,,hi11e MMISlll!I E•ltw L P•t•r Kri•t HfWCIOff hacft Cll't !"tr,_ N•..,.., .._. Offltt )))) Ntwjtort 1Dule•er4 M•ifi111 A4411••: P.O. ltc 1171, '2661 ""°'°"'"' C.te MUI~ SI' Wat ••f Stl"" '-"-a..oi: tt2 ~t A.__ ff¥rlfl!tflM aucti : "'1) IHtll atvlfve"' $a1t C"-te: 20f, Ntr111 II C..'ft'llnt a-.& let ...... C7141 '42..UJl Cl..wlM MMlt ... 641·14.71 ~" "12, °'""' CO..I Jl\IO!llllilfl'lt ~. Mt -......... lllutlnll ..... ..,_'91 .. n.. ., .. -1btmtntt """"' _., .. ~ .. W'flnWI .......... ftllulilll " ~ .... , ...... . ...... <ft .......... lf a.I• .... ~ ...,,._. W CMJW au ,,...,,, "' _. .. , • ....,., MllllWY ............... ""'. • i1so.ooo. federal agent. and Costa Me1a police captured n re<:ipient late Thur~ay night. The dramatic, cat.und·mOUSC Rllme in. volvltig 14 men and .tv.11 floodlight-car· rylng hcllcoptei:y1!'fided at 10:30 p.m., lullow lng a ful l day of stakeouts and strategy changt.s. Peter n. ~lar~hul. 27. or ~lanhattan Beoch. was grabbed in the doorway of a corner market at F:urv1cw Jtoad anti West Wilson Streel, investigators said. lie was arrested on a tcderal charge, suspicion or narcotics smuggling and whisked off to U.S. Customs head· quarters at Terminal Island for booking. Marshal was scheduled f o r ar· ralgrunenl today before a U.S. COm· missioner Jn Los Angeles. Costa Mesa'a Eagle 11 police hellCClpler and a larger, louder Hughes 500 chopptT manned by customs agent.. circled the surrounding area wit h searchlights when pursuers lost Marshal after the initial package pickup. Officers claim the parcel w a s recovered from its hiding place beneath an nir conditioner 1n some bushes at 160 W. WilS<>n St., where an apartment com· plex is being built. Irate neighbors in surrounding hom es -including l\li'O trailer parks -flooded police with complaints about the circling helicopters. "We just want them to understand how big a case it was," Costa Mesa Poli ce Detective Capt. Edward G l a s go w declared today. The case began to unfold May 17 in Los ~eles, when Pepper, a U.S. Customs b.!partment German Shepherd dog began sniffing suspiciously at a package mailed !rom South America. 01~king it.s con tents, the pure white drug powder wu found packed inside the hollow bqok, "This Was the first major shipment discovered by a heroin and coc aine--detec· ting dog , since the trained German Shepherds went lnto use earlier this year," says Customs Officer Jerome fl ollander. Rewrapping the package, federal agent.. and postal authorities engineered its delivery Tuesday to the alleged re- t'iplen t, a Jaime lledstrom, of 132 W. Wilson St., Costa Mesa. lnvestigati<>n or recorda revealed no such indi vidual known, according to Capt. Glasgow. F rom Page I DISCOVE RY • • • other means. An example or the &i&Dillcance or the llnding might be In <·ontrolling mem«y )oss due to brain dama ge. If the functions of damaged cells caus- ing memory loss are replaced with cells from other part! of the brain, <>ne effect might ht spastlclty, Dr. McCaugh sug. gested. Since becoming a spastic is not much or an improvement over suffering memory Joss, the patient might someday be given nerve process inhibitors to con· trol wh ich brain cells replace the links that once helped with memory pro- ccsslng. "This could be the beginning for ra- tional medicine for brain dJmage," Dr. !\icGaugh said. The researchers themselves were more mode st about their work, declining to give specific example of what kinds of functions might be affected by the new- found brain cell linkups. Hov.·ever. Dr. Lynch said the old lheprirs of brain dnmaged likened the br::iin to a "hard-w ired switchboard or co1nputer. "After the bra in was damaged the \Vir· 1ng wa s lhoughl to be permanently jun1blcd.'' he said. Out. over the past hundreds of years. so1ne brain dama ge symptoms -such as co1na -have not proved to be pcrn1anent. Un til nO \\', no one \vas certain \~1hy some patients could return to nor1nalcy . "It now seems that a rewiring of the brain can take place," Dr. Lynch said. SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. heli copters fir· Ing guided electronic mis51ies broke up a Communist assault on Kontum today, but other North Vietnamese infiltrated into the forward command posts or lhe South Vietnamese 22nd Wantry Division on the northern edge or the city. While South Vietnamese defenders bat· tied 500 infiltrators who oc cupied houses an~ a school on the southern edge of Kon· tum, another group or sappers seized ~everal buildings in the divjsion «im· pound on the north aide and touched off J bizarre battle. A machinegun crew climbed a wattr tower in the South Vietnamese compound and sprayed machlnegun bullets at the defenders below. South Vietnamese tank.s shelled the tower -and missed. Finally a U.S. helicopter flew in, knocked over the tower with another missile and killed the four machine-- gunners. U.S. spokesmen said the American misslle-helieopters knocked out at least 10 of the 13 tanks destroyed at Kontum today, helping the South Vie tnamese beat ba ck two assaults on the Kontum airport. Meanwhile, the U.S. command reported a third day of massive air attacks against Ha iphong. The North Vietnamese launched. new attacks aklng the defense line above Hue and brought in a force ol tanks which were menaci ng the 2,000- man U.S. base at Phu Bai, 10 miles south or Hue. A spokesman said the tank force was spotted only .five miles from the lightly guarded eastern flank of Phu Bal and that although there was a B52 strike in the area the base was still under threat. On the My Chanh River defense line 22 miles north or Hue, a force or 1,000 North Vietnamese using tanks launched another major assault along Highway 1 today but were beaten back by U.S. air power and South Vietnamese Marines using hand grenades. The fighting swept to within 30 yards of the South Vietnamese lines. The battle for Kontwn was rar from over but the missile-firing American helieopters were making it easier for the defenders. The helicopters were using missiles known as "TOWS" for Tube--Launched1 Optically Tracked Wir .. guided missiles. They began using them seven weeks ago when brought in from West Germany. UPI Carrespondent Matt Franjola said the operator aboard a helicopter guides the missile by keeping lhe target cen- tered in a telescopic sight. The miss ile tratls two wires behind it like a remote6Controlled toy airplane and the operator sends electronic impulses over the wires to guide the missile. From Pnge J AGREEME NT . • • "She v.·ent beyond a proper expression of h@r antlv.•ar feelings." sa id Dr. Mark Lewis, board president. "lt is not againfl't lht! law to go bare bosomed, but it gives the board no confidence in her ability to work with children." Miss Rogers was put under a cltl7.tn's arrtst by another woman May ll at an antiwar demonstration outsidt th e county ja il. 11le district a1torney later dropped chargts «Jn grounds no criml! was con1mltted .. . The claim w:is that she tore off her blouse and displayed her breasts m prottst or the war. Lewis said thal Miss Rogers was not fired because of the arrest, but be- cause she displayed a ''willful failure of good conduct." Mc Go ve rn Delive rs Talk A t Nixon's Hi g·h School From Wlre Services WHJ'M'IER Sen. George S . McGovern chose President Nixon's high school to accuse Nixon of "contradiction and paradox" for negotiating agreements with Ru ssia ns in Moscow but !ailing to reach a peace accord with the North Vietn amese in Paris. "ff President Nixon can go to f\1oscow and engage in productive talks, then il .seems to me that American represen- tati ves can sit down in Paris with the representatives of North Vietnam and engage in the give and take which is e.!senUal i! we are to extricate ourselves from the endless and tragic war in Southeast Asia," McGovern said here Thursday night. McGovern's comments were conta ined in a campa ign speech delivered to a rally F rom Page I ATTACK •.. government can determine if a school is not ethnically and racially balanced. it ill just one short step for them to say the same about a neighborhood. He urged the audience to look at Burgener's voting record, claiming that his opponent voted for bu sing, for venereal disease education without parental consent, and for fair housing Jaws. Burgener began bis remarks with an apology \o candidate Norman Ream of San Clemente for an advertising slogan which hinta that Burgener's Ol)panents are not credible. He cited his %.() years' service to the Republican party and his 10 years as a state legislator as qualifications for of- fice. He discussed Governor Ron a Id Reagan's welfare reform bill, of which he was the author, and said he was proud that despite a majority of Democrats in both houses, 70 percent of the bill was adopted. Burgener added he has always sup- ported President Nixon and will continue to do so, "but that does not mean com· plia nce with every issue ." at Whittier High School, where Nixon was graduated in 1930. McGovern had one Qf the most en· thusla stlc recept ions or his California prin1ary campaign in Whittier. "Since President Nixon decided to go to Moscow, I decided I'd better go to Whit· tier." McGovern told the packed crowd of about 3,000. "Afler all." he added . 1·somebody's got to look after the old hometown . "Since he's added the design of football plays to presidential duty," McGovern said, •·r thought I'd come here to see where this whole bu!iness began." Meanwhile, Hubert ff. Humphrey, fighting to survive as a contender for the Democratic presidential nomination, reluctantly has shed his "nice guy" im- age to slug it out with old friend McGovern in he primary. (See related story, Page 3). Pressed by fru strated campaign aides and admi ttedly facing an "uphill fight ," llumphrey for the first time has made the South Dakota senator the campaign target, sharpl y criticizing McGovern's proposed welfare reforms and $32.4 billi on cut in the defense budget ovtr three years. Al l\ro luncheon sessions in Orange County Thursday . including a $100.a-plate hot dog aod potato salad fund raiser, J-lumphrey wamed that McGovern's drastic cuts in the military budget would be "dangeroi.a to our national self in· terest," would create massive unemploy· men!, and could "lead to disaster." He repeated the charge later in san Francisco. At the same time, McGovern, also campaigning in the populous southern part or the state, told a news conference in San Diego that it was "the most outrageous nonsense and demonstration of gall that I think I've seen" for llumphrey to claim their records on the Vietnam Wa r are identical. He cha rged that Humphrey, from the time he became vice president in 1965 un- til the latter part of his 1968 presidential campaign, was a supporter of the Johnson administration's war policies. defensive antiballistic missile launchers Norman Ream of San Clemente and Eggs Rescue d; Fire Averted for each nation. These launchers could be Gay Lewis or San Diego both .spoke on divided among two sites. issues. One of the U.S. sites would be nea r Ream said he was disturbed with •·our Grand Forks, N.D., to protect the penn.issive society," the courts and "'-k " be . d H This storu isn't exactly a pot-Minuteman Ill ICBt\-1 launching facility ueasooous remar s tng ma e. e ·J ·d h · d t b · t ·d ( boiler as excitina action goes, but it there. The other U.S. site probably would sai e is oppose o using ou s1 e o e • h J d' 1r· t but bel. shows one function of a fire depart· be around Washington, matching the ones own sc oo lS 1c , 1eves h.ld h Jd · oocJ ed ment in serving citizens. Soviet Galosh system around Moscow. every c 1 s ou receive a g uca· ti "Mrs. Schreagle left a pot of eggs The Russians would build a second site on. boiling on the stove and couldn't elsewhere. The San Clemente candidate said he By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of '" Pelt,-.. u .. lltfl An International airport somewhere ('In Crunp Pendelton propert y may ~ the. Oi'l' ly reasana ble long -rani!e solution ID Southern California's air traffic problem~ -despite what the U.S. Marine Corps mig ht th ink about it. That is !he fe:ellng or several prominent Orange County officials concerning the main topic of meetings he ld today in San Diego on airport and air traffic pla nning. Orange Capnty Board of SopervisoN Chairman Ronald Caspers called the meeting with his San Diego counterpart and representatives of slate and federal government. "At th.is point, the intent is to sit down and evaluate current and future air tr~nsportation needs in the two counties,•• said Tom Fuentes, a Caspers aide. The number one topic of discussion wJU probab ly be the feasibility of using a 2.SOO-acre p a r c e I of land in Camp Pendleton as a jetport serving both coun· ties. The Marine CC1mmandan1 of the base , t\1aj. Gen. Herman Poggemier. recently released a statement oppoi;ing .any type of jet airport on the base because <>f possible adverse eft~ts on training. The t\1arincs are also upset because they were not invited to today's meeting. 'The meeting was designed for civilian authorities to discuss the possibilities,•• Fuentes said. "After that , we wiJI take it up with the l\tarines." · "It was not a matter of excluding them from the meeting at aJl ," Fuentes 5aid. As for the Marines' criticism of the airport idea, most Orange County of· ficials feel it is out of place. "I don 't know how they can take a stand one way or another until we can come up with some kind or proposal.'' said County Airport Director Robert Bresnahan. "Their criticism Is premature since we haven't even pinpointed a site or anything," he added. • Caspers and other county ofricials feel that the Pendleton idea is best for all concerned. There has been recent speculation that a parcel about four miles north or Oceanside between the freeway and tbe ocean is being stqdied . It would fall within the Camp Pendleton bounds. Newport Beach Mayor Donald Mclnni!, whose city has leveled a number blut.s at the Orange County Airport facilities, is all for the Cam p Pendleton airport site. "I hope they made the grade at tbesl meetings," he said. "This may be the on- ly solution to our airport problems iQ both counties. •• "I am really buoyed by the acllon thal has been taken,'' he added. Mcinnis mirrored the comments or the . other officials with regard to the Marines. "It would be ill-timed to bring them in before we can ge t some good common ground at the meetings," he said. Cancerning the Marines' criticism, Mcinnis said. "From my experience with · them, anytime anyone talks about using military installation land, their answer is not just 'oo' but 'hell no'." San Diego officials had no comment about today's meetings other than they knew generally what they were about. "We hav~'t even seen an agenda for the meeting, but if they want to talk about airport locations, we have already done about 200 studles on the subject,'' said a spokesman for San Diego supervisors. r th d th lly d Id · get back home in time to take them The treaty \l.'Ould mean the United avors e ea pena an wou ur t od I · I t• t · t•-d th off.'' says the Thursday Newport H f States would drop its plans for other r uce eg1s a ion 0 give Ill: ea ";. eld or Drugs ABM installations in the West and penalty to hard narcotics pushers who Beach Fire Department log entry. v Mid\vest and build the one near are "com1'1itling mass murder." A truck was dispatched to the W. Washington instead. lie said he supports law enforcement A. Schreag le home at 521 Cliff CHULA VISTA (AP) -Nearly 3,400 A second pa.rt of the accord _ an ex· agencies. a strong military, consolidat ion Drive with all due haste. pounds of marijuana and two Pounds of ( r d I · t ·d "Firemen removed pot of eggs cocaine were confiscated in a house south eculive agreement not requiring Senate o some c era agencies o avo1 rati!ication _would free:ze land· and sea· duplication of efforls and save tax from stove and shut off stove. No of Sin Diego and five persons taken into· based offensi ve missiles at their presen t money, and the use of the direct income damage. No injuries," the log entry custody Wednesday. The five included a levels. tax (without loopholes) to prov ide concluded. 23-year-cld woman arrested at another According to the latest Pentagon 1 _:r'..'.e':v'.:en~U~•:.· ------------===============:!__hous=:e::·:_ __________ _ estimate. the United States has 1.054 land·based offensive missiles. lhe Saviet Union aboul 1,500. 'Last Shootout' Armored COSTA MESA CAR WASH WITH THIS AD. Car Sto ry Offered Sunday 'WE WON OUR LAST SHOOTOUT' - tn a look at the modern men who ride shotgun on 1he "strongbox." this Sunday Special rinds their securit y meA!urcs so rigid they even suspect police officer,, under certain condiUons. It's a 'tory of the armored truck buJ;\nes,,. ELECT RONIC ZEN -Whether Jhe new Alpha Wave control theory Is a fad or a phony, one guy who te:sted the brain machine fuund Jt wasn't e1otlc enough to handle the erotic. THE NAME GAME -To get your number all the customer has to do Is pay the price of the list sellers. Selling namu and addresses Is big buslnHS end Orange Count)·'s biggest dealer in names tells $Orne of the "how'' and "why" in a YOU Section story. MERLE HAGGARD -His popularlly is only a notch or two behind that of <ountry mush: king Johnny Cash and he is wtll on his way to being a mJlllonatr., bl.It Merle Ha.uard 11y1 he's an Wlheppy man. ~ is ID l"llmUy Weeltly. • POLITICS AND HAND GUNS -In a <0lomn out ol 1"1<f._i<r,-PhU lilnna wondm U Shlrlf! hltt Pilch<a wu poUtkally moUvaJod when he Clllll "'I !or !be ouU.wlnc ol bind ...,_ MAYORS' wrns -JI'• ··Part n" Of last week's women's pages prorlle of Orange CoRst city fi rst lad ie:s. This week, \vives of the mayors of Costa Mesa, Huir tington Ae:lch and San Juan Capi strano are featured. ADVICE FROM EINSTEIN Business page feature .story tells how Albert Einstein helped Ne\\'port Bl!ach grocer 0 . W. "Dick" Richard build hls supermarket. The famed malhe.maUclan gave Richard S()me business advlet. KNIGHTS OF SPEEDWAY -Picture page captures the drama of jousters on sleet steeds at tht motorcycle racts. REDWOOD CO NT ROVER SY - Timbtrmen and conservatlonist.s are still clAshlng over the phll osophles ln"olved In !ht attempt to preserve trees by setting them aside in the sanctuary called Redwood National Park . LEGAL ADVICE -A seetlal YOU Section story oilers tips on hi>w to avoid being cheated, who to contact l1 you are and tells about a lawym' asaoc.laUon booklet that glv,. othtr 111" and steps to take. NOW SHE'S AN ACTRESS -Cover story ol TV WEEK luluret Suaan Doy, young ata.r of the upartridgt F·amlly,11 who fumed to acl only 1ller &be wu 11-the lllrrinl! roto. • I With the H4>. 29.U Pu rc hase of $ 99 CAR WASH and HOT WAX LIMIT 2 ... Wm 2.1' Wa He CUSTOMllll " or FREE CAR WASH with any Flll·Up An wi.. Top 9 ..ary 1 00·~ K•olioloo WJlll I M•, s..,.ri.. r-Wll• ••• Stntdl .... S-1 Wllll D-alol1 Dom1 • • • willt ••ow wit 5 Styl•s And Many Colon To Choe•• From We IJ••tH YM A Cl .. C. WASH IN WOOUTE AND COOL WATER Try U1 TH'IJ Uh U1JI Wl4> OJ'Rl •OOD ONLT z wms THlU JUNI u Ol WH!U THIT LAST COSTA MESA CAR WASH IA-flM n-t.. l obloa ,_.I 2019 HAUOR BLVD., COSTA MISA 641·1030 .. ~--~-~--...,,--.-• -' ·-. • • DAD ,Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE - A Gif t t o Ou rselves Newport Beach voters are being asked on June 6 to make a modest investment in the well-being of New· port Beach people ot Ill agei and all walks of life. It is not an investment In government buildings, badly needed though they are. It Is not an investment in parking places lor visitors. It is not an f?vestment that serves a special interest ~p or a Spec.la! area of the community. It is \n4eet;l ~ inyestment lo! a happh;!r, healt.!1ier life for literally every citizen. lt is an investment m a soul1d. balanced program of park a.cquisition ~nd de- velopm{!nt. It will appear on yoar pnmary election bal- lot as Propositions F, G and H. Proposition "F" will make possible the acquisition of the land for 12 parks located throughou.t the cit~. three harbor scenic vista i:iltes, a city-wide bicycle trail system and a pedestrian path~ay syst_em (paseos) con· necting schools, parks, shopping, res1denti8:1 . and t.he ocean areas. All this can be done for $3.5 million (with the help of matching federal-state funds) if ~e. act now With land value appreciating 15% a year, this is a very · good bargain. Proposition "G" will mi:k.e possible the pr~f!lPl con- version of the parksites to c1tiZen use by prov1d10g $2.5 million for site preparation -utilities, ~ass, trees and equipment ranging from playground equ~pment thro~gh facilities for adult and family use. It will also provide construction of the city-wide bicycle and pedestrian trails. Proposition "H" prov~d_es $3 milli on .of f.inance capacity for future acquisition ~r park. historic and scenic sites as they become available. ~t's money t~at \vo uld only be used if and _when the city se~s special opportunities to acquire particularly useful or important si tes. The comprehegsive park program the city is pro- Women Have Come a Lon g, Lon g Way (sYDNEY J. HARRIS) Neit her the proponents nor the op- ponent! of what we loosely call "\Vomen's Lib" today realize how far modern women have come -and how far they have had to come from. American common law is derived from the Common Law of England, and onl y a century ago, the wife was almost th~ complete chattel of her husband. We find it hard to believe now that. less than 100 years ago, a man could legally support his mistress on the earnings o[ his \Vife. In his shocking history of soc ial reforms (what is shocking is the stu- pid ways in ~·hich they \\·ere resisted by the bulvrarks of society\. E. S. Turner points out that the 19th Cenlury wife had fewer rights than aCt:orded a wife under Roman law ·;and hardly more than had been con-- ceded to an African slave before eman· cipation." Published some two decades ago, his book, "Roads to Ruin," spells out the relationship of the Victorian husband to his wife: "He owned her body, her prop- erty, her savings. her personal jewel!'! and her income, whether they lived together or separately. He could deprive her of her assets entirely as he thought fit, and be could do lbi!'I whether be were alive or dead." His power to disinherit a wife (of her own goods) was absolute and irrevocable. ONE OF THE FEW MEN of hls time to speak up against this iniquity, according to Turner, was John Stuart Mill, the Dear Gloomy '• Gus NO'oV that Irvine is eyeing oceafi- front annexation betvreen Corona de! Mar and Laguna, and already has a land·ba~ Jaycees, when \viii the city get its first Sea Scout Base? -D.LG. TM1 f9•!11n rfflKll r11•ft"1' YMWS. Ml flfCllM•11r , ... , ....... -"•Hr. S•"' rtvr "' -w• "' Gloo"'r •v .. Dlllf Pll91. philosopher and political economist, who bin1se\f'openly repudiated his legal rights when he married. ln his tract', "The Sub- jection of \Vomen ,'" (1890), he said of the English housewife: "She can acquire no property (except for her husband): the instant it becomes hers, even if by inheritance, it becomes ipso facto his ... If she leaves her hus· band, she can take nothing with her, neither her children nor anything which is rightfully her own. If he chooses, he can compel her to return by law. or by physical force; or he may content himself with seizjng for his own use anything which she may earn or which ma~. be given to her by her relations ... \VHEN THE LONG campaign began on behalf of the Married Women's Property Bill, it was widely attacked as a "vicious: principle" that would dissolve the mar- riage bond, and a proposal as lunatic "as perpetual motion or stopping the revolu· tions of the moon." From perusing the press and Parliamentary reports of that period, a visitor from another ·plane t would really imag ine that SQCiety would be turned upside down If women were permitted a few legal and financial rights of their own. As I say, one has only to read this chapter to recognize how far women have come since then -and how much more remains to be done. Threa t to Poppy .Sales Tbt Dally Califomiaa El Cajon Once a year as Memorial Day ap- proaches some of the veterans' organiza- tions station representatives at shopping centers -and other places where people congregate: -to collect contributions for disabled war veterans. In exchange for a few coins or a small bill, they pin a bright red poppy to your lapel as an indication that you cared about the plight of 3.2 million veterans who returned from the wars with missing limbs, lost eyesight and other injuries which denied them a nonnal life. THE MONEY COLLECl'ED is us<d to provide for dl!'lahled veterans those items which government pensions do not cover. ll enables volunteer workers to take in- .,capacltated veterana: to placts thty might not otherwise go, to visit them In their mts, to care for the orphans and ldows ol oervi.:.m.n who ditd and to lum~h rehabilitative service.I to those ;who live. 1 So ho>Ule hH the public mood become Quot~ Job Alt~llald Calhou, Am-e. Tullla, u&o Fnndt<:aa plauta1 mlnmeet to CtUlenla -"The lordp ""Ice keeps the corpusclts going : you pta1 alive and alert. There are ·new 1anguag., ta le-,,... plaru ancl Jl<O' pie to undentarul" I ' toward the Vietnam War that the pros- pect for poppy sales thi!'I year ls bleak. UNFORTUNATELY, the cont;roversy over the Vietnam War has done ·a great deal to color attitudes toward militarism in general and has distorted U.S. irr- volvement in past wars. Leftist in- tellectuals. anxious to sully lhe record, view the Vietnam episode as a mere con- tinuation of American imperialism that dates back a century or more. So often has this vicious canard 'been circulated that some people have been conned into believing that the United Statu alone Is responsible for all the International violence or modern times. Many people. not very wJstly. allow their disenchantment wllh the Vietnam War to namb their sensts, forgetting thfy owe their freedom to the veterans. boUJ living and dead, wbo during World War If helped defeat the most monstrous vlllalny ever to be unleashed upon the earth. ANO THE MEN who have gone off to war In the 20th century have done so In every case tn response to lhe aggression ol natlons Intent upon annexing their neighbors. . Whetber tllll has always been a wise policy iJ debatable, but It Is no cause for turning our backs on the men who suf- fered the mlwles of war aod still have the IClrJ. A nation wblch forgets the sacrifices of Ila soldiers In battle risks not having anybody around to dcltnd It wben d...,.. 1trl~es. posing will enhance the attractiveness and value of res- jdential property in every part of the city. The program Is carefully balanced to provide facUJti .. for all. II Is literally a gilt we can give ourselves which, u the slogan goes, will keep on giving back to us for the rest of our lives. The toW price of this fi!t to ow-selves. $11 per year, is:. less than the price o a modest dinner for two at one of Newport Beach's restauran.ts, less than the price of two filths of liquor. little more than the -price of a family trip to the movies The park bonds are a bargain by any measurement. Setting Height Limits Newport Beach planners are wresUing with an In· novative proposal placing all areas ot the city into one of four height limit zones. Limits of 24 feet in most single family and duplex lots (R·l and R·2) are proposed. Heights could go to 50 feet in most commercial zones with a use permit and over 50 feet in certain areas with a use permit. The proposal has problems, among them the danger o~ producing walls of 24-loot single family dwellings in some ~reas, and inhibiting architectural approaches which could provide a more attractive, open appearanre with trade-offs of more height for more space between structures. It is apparent that residents \Vant lo sharply restrict tall buildings along the waterfront, but inland areas zoned for commercial uses are another story. The proposal is the most thoughtful approach to the height 4.mits yet advanced, ansf it still needs some hard studY by the planning commission, but it does give them a good base from which to proceed. .. USS~ N 'l'•n Old Glory ••• Fly Me lJll of the Time' Wants Flag Flown 24 Hours a Day To the Editor: I am continuing to encourage citizens to fly our flag 24 hours a day -lighted at night. More and more lighted banners are waving at night in our area. On the eve of our 2ooth anniversary and with Memorial Day this weekend, l ha ve come up with a new slogan : "I'm Old Glory "Fly me -All of the time!" Following are excerpts from a letler from the commanding general of our state military forces. I believe everyone will be interested in this answer from the military. • "TUE BILL to revise the wording of tile code and to establish a Flag Com~ mission appears to u.s to be appropriate. The flag , long symbolizing the union or persons with common association, has borne its rules of display constituted upon good manners. Some of the rules of good manners are obviously of slight im- portance in themselves, nor is there universal agreement concerning them. Observance of the Flag Code etiquette , as ., [ MAILBOX ) Letters from readeYs are welcomt. Normally writers should convey their messages tn 300 word& 01' less. The right to condense letttrs to fit space or eliminate libel is reseroed. All let· ten must include lignatures and mail· ing address, but names may be with- held on request if sufficient recucm is apparent. Poetry will not be pub- lished. It is known today, Is chiefly voluntary. "CHANGES TO the code, as practiced by this state and the others, can only be effected through federal action. While we concur in your goals, we believe it to be properly the action or dedicated prlv1te citizens as yourself rather than the func- tion or a state. "We most sincerely commend you on your efforts and wish you success."- Robert S. Ford, Col .. GS, CALARNG, Administrative Officer, Sacramento. KATilYRN FISHBACK l lJ lh Ce111.11 r11 ~l htd . 1' the Editor : After reading U.S. Represenlative John SChmitz' reactionary ullerancei; one can vtry well wonder what is this 19th Cen· tury mind housed in a comparatively .young body trying to achieve in the 20th Century -and to thJnk that we are on the threshold of the 21st Century! One can only conclude: What is holding this great (with an even greater poten- tial) nation together is a combination or tremendous public apatby cemented only With money. ' . BORIS DUZAN Le•• Than Bu•nan To the Editor: Perhaps we have come to a point in tlmt when far too mnny bombt hrvt fallen, too many precious Hvea anatched B\\'ay, both In Indochina and on the streets of Amerlcn , that we know our ~uill (though we won't admit 1tl and art afraid to cease dropping bombs and fir. ing lhe guns lest we be the victims - :ind, justifiably. WHt."'TllEI\ WlTll bombs or auns, I believe our nwn problem btgan when we decided to put a dllfertnt priority on the lives of 10me men than we CSo OIJ. ~·· We>-~ ndt continue to harm othel'I and mistreat people, and not expect rttaJla .. tion. All Ure is sacred. but It seema, tht pasl few years, too many people have been deemed ... a"'1'eed to be oomtlhln& less than human. !low do we "uncondltlon" that secment of our America n society that ha!'I been thoroughly indoctrinated lo 'ldhere to tht more ugly, 1bnormal and violent metbodl as solutiona .to our probleins? BERNICE WELSH Nixon Knows What Russia Is After SALZBURG, AUSTRIA -Presiden• Nixon's trip to Rus sia would not ordinari· ly be thought of under existing circumstances as a sentimental journey, but for him it has many of those aspects. lie was eager to have some or those who accompanied him to the Soviet Union in 1959 make this trip, nearly 13 years later, as a symbol of the continuity of what he deems lD be a sustained and sincere effort to es- tablish with Russia a working relatiollllhip for world peace. This attitude on Nixon's part seems to some to be incon- si.stent with his polit· ical career based in the beginning, and for many years, on anU.COmmuni.sm. NIXON FINDS N 0 inconsistency whatsoever. He is sllil antl·Communist in the sense that he abhors the political system and he opposed, with force when necessary, the expansion of Communism internationally. But he r~ize11 the soviet Union as a powerfutkiational and international force which must be dealt with realistically. What constitute! realism Is the prob- lem. It seems wholly contradictory that the improvement or relations should go forward while the Soviet Union and the Uiilted States are in what amounts to armed confrontation in so many places in lhe world. The contradiction becomes greater with the realization that what· Russia is ac-- tually see king Is the neutrallzation of American nuclear power In lhe name of "equality," the withdrawal of American rorces from Europt, and dWea11ing American in nuence Jn Asia, the Mkldle East. the MecUterranean and the Indian Ocean. SOME OF TilE foregoing, In fact , 15 probably part of an hi storical trend which cannot be reversed . Nlr.on's concern has to be that In acljustlng to this trend, tho aolt 1pota left by Amertca's lowered P'°' file do .nol become t~ teed bed for the uirestralned arowtb ol Sovlel world power. In the loog run , that m•y be a l:on- tradlctJon whtch can only be rt10lved, or at lea.s~ auspended, by !he threat ol the UR of force or ltJ actual use. This threat ·bas been a major element ol Amerlc•n policy for decadu. Oft.n, when It bas (RICHARD WILSON J been hoped that force would no longer bt necessary, there have been compelling reasons for this last resort. as in the caae of mining and bombing of North Vletnem. No post-World War U President bas been able to escape such decisions, and most ot those decisions -all ·of ttlem without major e1ception -have been on tbt side' of force or the threat of force u a last resort. TO PUT THE BEST FACE on It, Nixon Is seeking arrangements enabling him and sub!'lequent Presidents to e&cape the necessity of the choice between action and no action, force or oo force , either of which can have tragic coruequences. A great deal has rested, and still resta. on Soviet reactk>n to American action to protect lts interests, and, so far. at least1 Nixon'!'! judgment has been sound. So he goes to Moscow in a mood not qu jte so happy u: he would like, and in T·he Expectation Gap New ClsUe (Pa.) Nnn It's tmpoS!ible to return to yesterday and lt's unreasonable to ralse the ti· pectatlons of people with promises of 1 better tomorrow which cannot })e fulfill· ed. To do the latter creates a credibility gap between those who make the prom- ises and those who believe lhe promlae.s will be fulfilled. ln addition, there 1a an expectation gap. Social observe rs pondering what went wrong in the inrlammatory '60s believe too much was promised and too much waa not fulfilled. They hope a lesson has betn learned . Herbert J. Gana:, a soclology professor writing in The New York Times Magazine, noted "when ex- pccUltlono heighten. people become more impatient, more critical of f:helr society when npectaUons are not realized . and eventually, more active politically." LOOKING AHEAD to the <nd of tlle Vietnam wa r. Jtself an expeetltlon, Professor Gans wam "there remains !he problem of which and "'-... peet,itions can be achieved, 1nd whoM nol" Among aorne or the problems on which Vietnam war costs could be tpf!lnt art controlling pollution, overpopulation, and riJln& medical and hoapltal bills and u:p1odlng welfare programs -to mtrr- tton a feW. FAiior William B. Dickinson Jr. of Edltarlal Raearch Reports •ua· gesta that "new opectatlons are btln& mated everyday ..•. Voungpeeple hope to transform aociety now that they can vote at ale 11. Wornen'• Ub has tumld housewtve.s and aec:retaries into tigers prepared to fight for shared housework and equal pay. Clean water and air are put forward as Inalienable rlghta lhat will be realized in our time." THE EXPECTATION gap need not be considered as a fact involving only na- tional issues. Promises or more efficient garbage collectlon!'I and job development by the mayor, if they are unfulfilled, will make a dent Jn the credlblllty of his ad· ministration. The: promise of a metropolitan sewage collection 1y3tem by planners and elected orficialt which may IOUr will add to the frus:tratiOM of those resident!! who expect the project to leave the drawing board for construction. In the reviewing the upec:tJtlona of the younG. women, and envlronmentallst!, Editor Dlcklnaon wrltea, "Someone is going to be disappointed. The political proC<!AS is likely to rtrnaln in the control or the: unyoung for aome yean. HusbandJ will be chauvinists when II comes to the laundry. "PO PULATION GROWTH wm make hea1way a'galnst pollution bard to COlllfl by. II). their hearts, people stnM the finite qusllty or lite, evtn in these United Stat ... But the polltlcal rhetoric or 1172 almost certainly wm leod u~atloos rather than relnforte rullsm. ' The 11me words could bt written about aome qf our local uplralions.. Rather than fuel the upectatlom of the people, local olllclals and community t.adm ahould t.mper thtlr wordl with reality. AJ 10Clology professor Gans notts .. lm- provemtnt la no longer u easy 11 It once was." And, the dl!Octilty rerMlnl that tt la ...ter to arouse upectatlon1 than It la to tum them off. dirrerent circumstances tbp.n he an- ticipated, but as a man resumlni where be left off In 19611. Then he was merely a Vice President with an antl-C.ot'nmunltt record and under suspicion of using M01Cow u a bukdrop ror his own poliUcal ambitions. And so i* actually turned out, with Nlxon.for-P)'t&i· dent billboard' in 1960 1howing him lbak· Ing hiJ finger In Nikita Klnulbchev'I face during the lamed "kitchen dtba&e. '' UIS TRIP TllEN had a bt'oadtr purpose, however, and It was to feel out the ground for a protpectlve trjp by President Elaenbower. The trip wu planned and fell through over the U·2 In- cident. Now It Is Nlxoa, not Eisenhower, Who Is the first American Pretldent to VJ.alt the Sov,let Unkm, and UliJ adda another ele- ment which makes the Mosoow trip a sentimental journey. Returning ta Poland I!'! In the 1ame category. Alter bla departure In 1151 from the Icily formal atmosphere or Moscow, Nlxon went to Warsaw for an unexpected p:>pular recep- tion. Pe()ple turned out spontaneously to throw Clowers on his limousine. These moods cannot be !'ffapturtd, but "'h11t wa~ Impossible In 1959, an ona:olng and steadily lmprovlng retatlon1hlp, qiay now be returned ln spite of the adveTae clrcum11tancu of Im. Nixon's overturtl to China have no doubt provlded tom• leverage, but even wlttmtt that added P"'•Surt Nlicon and the Soviet le1der1 have round their own re:&JOn!'I for read- juJtmenl of relaUons. ORA.NOi (0.AIT DAILY PILOT Robirt N. \Vttd, Publllht,. Thomtu Kievll, Editor Albert W. Botts £diioriai Pa.oc Editor 1'MI editorial pare of the I>a1't1 Pilot M't!lu to lolmn and 1llrml· late rnckn bf. P"('Mntittl 1'• M"Mpi.pt!l°'I oplnlonl •nd tolfto-mtnt1ry un l6Jics or lnlttftl and aJ1nl!1Cann>, by pro¥ldin1 a tonan for the txpf'Hllon tJI. our re.drrl' -'°"" anc1 .,, .,._,u.. '"' dlvttw .wp.inh ol 1111...,,.. • at'f'\lttl and tpOkntn'n oe ~ ol '"'.s.,. Friday, )lay 26, 1m \ ' • • L. M. Bopd Wl1at Do Sheep Count to Slee p? Again am a1ked if a flipped penny is more..apt to come up head11 than tails. Jt is. C.Omes up head• 50.3 percent ol the time. One Proft!MJr Edward L. Splt211agel proved that. With 319,020 f\11>5. The stamping proce11 at the mint is such, he concludes. that the t.ailside is a smidgeon htavier. Thal'.s lbe pr.MY only, remember. CAN YOU !1st all the U.S. president& from memory! Neither can I. When pollslers asked a sizable sampling of citizens to do I(), a particular seven of the chief e::recu- tiv~ repeatedly fa iled to turn up on the rosters. Those most forgettable men were Tyler. Polk. Taylor. Fill· more, Pierce, Buchanan, and one more, can't recall, who'd I miss! THAT numerous insomniacs count sheep to help themselves doze off is .~ not noteworthy. Wh:it'.~ noteworthy is nume rous 5hetp ire insomniacs. t.no. Their stomachs - ' each 11heep has four -don't y,·ork right in just any old position. The body has to be upright. Makes the Jong nig ht's snooze difficult. QUERIES -Q. "What proportion of the men and women in this country "''ear bridges or dentures?'' A. Men, 17 .2 percent. Women , 50.8 percent. Q. "IN Ireland, wh ich outnumber ..-·hich. the Murphys or the Kelly.Ii?" A. The Dublin telephone directory lists six columns ol Murphys, five columns of Kellys, that's all I know. ARGUAfENT conlinued over where in the Bible it \ells 1 man how to wipe dishes. That's Second Kings XXI, 13 : ~" ... As a man wipelh a dish. Wiping it and turning it ~pside down." This reference repeatedly has been quoted tD wives in search of biblical proof that their husbands should help in the kitchen. •, COST or a new federal orrice building generally runs ~•bout 3S percent higher than the co.!lt of a private oUice , G.llldin&. Takes about two yea r1 for private industry to . ·design and ct1nstruct 11uch an edifice. but about five yeal'! "'for the federal government to do IKI. Can you explain why? , , RJNTS-The Household Hint.~ experl.ol advise: 1. Shine 'your bathroom chrome with rubbing alcohol. 2. Bury the I" old banana peels arou nd your rose bushes. And. 3. Count =on a doun ice cubes per guest at your next party. ., AM AWARE the creator of the fir~t rockin" chair wa.s a cape Cod hired man wilh a knack for whittli ng, but ''Whal wa.!I the name of the genius? This query. too . has ,. our research department baffled, l50 far. Help wanted. • Address mail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875 New· ~poTt Beach, Calif. 92660. Arizona Closing Park Over Rabies :: PHOENIX. Arlz. (APl - Lower Lake Ha vasu State 'fark bas been ordered closed , Exercise Set BANGKOK lAP ) -The ·Southeast Asia Tr e At y Organiiation -SEATO -will -conduct a tw().week mil\tary .. ~xercise in Thailand June 14· l7, SEATO headq uarters an· "nounced . Ma j. Gen. James J. '<iibbons a( the U.S. Army will be exercise direc!or. lo campers for the Memorial Day weekend by State Park Director Dennis McCarth y. McCarthy said four or five persons have been bitten by coyotes in the area and of· ficials believe the an imals may be rabid . A wildlife survey is being conducted. he said, to confirm or dispel the suspicions. The Ari1.ona Game and Fish Department, St.ile Par ks Department. Mohave 11 n d Yuma County Sheriff's offices .end other.!! will enfo rce the closure. McCarthy said. Fas t Ban • Or Curve · By Reagan? l''r~m Wlre Strvice1 Gov. Ronald Re111n uys be i.!I looking forward to "watch- ing Vida Blue pitch'' while the debates between Sens. George McGovern .end Hubert Humphrey are being televised. Reagan urged California to watch the debalf!ll, but added that he wiU bt ••atching Blue. lhe Oakland Athletics star l..__P_EO_P_LE____.r . pitcher who is returning to ac· lion after a salary di.!lpute. * * * The Oukt cf Windsor, 77. re. .mainJ ill in ·Pari~, -his secretary said, but gave no ln· dicatlon that tM duke.'s con- ditJon wa s causing alarm. The aide said : "The duke Isn't well. He Is not In very good shape." The secretary declined to characterize the seriousness of the duke 's condition or give medical detai ls or hi.!1 ailment. * * * f'onncr Assembly Speaker Jess tUnruh says he plans to run lt>r mayor of Loa Angeles in 1973. "It is my in1ention at this point to run ," Unruh aaid at his Los Angeles office. The unsuccessful 1 9 7 0 Democratic gubernatorial can- didate declined to make a formal stal.ement. h6weve.r . saying "T have not r-aised all . my money yet." * * * The Senate Finance Com· mittee approved without OJ>' position President N i x o n ' s nomination of Geor1e P. Shultz to succeed .John B. Con- nally as secretary of the treasury. * * * There will be a no t h er !U$iSSination attempt Ol'I a major Democratic candidate. aceording to prophetes.!I Jeane Dlxn n. ''Who it i~. when or whert - t ca nnot tell you," f\.1t'!:. Dixon told a Sa cramento Union reporter 11rter .eddreMing a luncheon there. * * * America n author J am e 1 Michener stormed out of a news conference i.n Moscowi ta protest against what he Mid "'as frivolous treatment of the Soviet .Jewish problem during a symposium at the summi t press center. "I won't stand for it," ~l ichener shouted. The v;alkout followed an altercation bety,.-een a Jewish American correspondent and Alexander Chakovsky, the Soviet editor or the influential weekly magazine Li t er a r y Gazelle. See If you've won thls week~ May 26 through June 1; 1912 • . 24 12 3 7 6 19 10 9 11 FREE P1dl Ill> 1 Bingo Clld from a piltlclP11lng Shell dealer today oreend &Mlf·lddroued ~10!)9 lo Department BFC #1, P.O. 8ox 279,Cl\tcago, 4 13 15 17 18 22 .5 , ' ' 14 16 23 20 21 • 25 8 2 . . llllnola 60648, Every Shell Singo Clrd i• a ROl•ntl•I winner. So 11v1 >!0111 cards-II on• dot1n't win th/1 · wee/(, It could win next-It. •• " • "\ I • A. e. p11ffed softknit s.qio~k dresses How do juniors see Surnmer? In dresses of soft, interr0c~in9 I knit short en ough so tonned legs meet the eye . In Cleliciously mu)"d blossom prin ts. All with the odorable short puff sleeve. Sizes 5· 13. A. Bili front, colton·polyester by Down Joy, 18.00. B. Puffs, scoopneck, tie beck in co tton by Down Joy , 18.00. C. Puffs, cuffs. button-front in polyester-cotlon. by Confetti Girl, 20.00. M•il •nd phone orderS invited. Junior World Dresses. • ' I . it's at the b:roadway c. ., ... W'Hl lM NIW~o-.r HUNTINGTON IEACH ORANGE . Mtll el Or1119• CEl-ltOS t&""° 1 444 N. fl.t&.111 41 F1,hlo11 hl111i 1111 Edl1191r A•111111 2JOO No. T11ltl11 Str eit 100 lo1 C.1rlt.t M•ll .... I'll~), l il.t1 1f 111 4) 644-1212 171 41 ltZ·JJJI 171 41 •tl·I JI ) 12111 16G-0411 IHOI! ID A.M ... 'JID ,,M, MONDAY THROti"$H fJ.IDAY. SATURDAY 10 A.M . to 6 P.M. SUNDAY' 12 MOON lo 5 r.M. I l • I • \l • l l I , I ------" ' . ,. ~range Coast N.Y. Steeks vor.:. ~. NO. 147, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CA~IFORNIA FRIDAY, MAY 26, ·1972 c TEN CENTS County Airport Impact Stud_J: Terined 'Weak' By L. PETER KRIEG Of .. Diii' Pl_, Sl•tl Newport Beach has just spent $42,llOCI for an Orange County Airport impact study and the city's mayor and city manager are lw than thrilled with what they got. The .study, released Thursday, tell.!I the world that Newport Beach has an in- tolerable noise problem and that it should puah for joint civilian-military use of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station to relieve noise and air pollution problems locally. "I'm not terribly impressed," Mayor Denald A. Mcinnis said this morning. !'l haven't had a chance to read the whole report -it's got some good in- formation and it's going to be useful - $150,000 Haul but some of the conclusions are a little weak," be said. "The recommendations they came up with, you and I could have thought up ourselves if we aat down and talked for about 30 minutes," viewed City Manager Robert L. Wynn. · "It falls Short in a number of areas," Wynn said. "It's recommendations could have been more explicit." One of those recommendations sug- gested the city get together to work out "an environmental sensitivit)r plan" with the Orange County Airport Land Use Commission. "Whoever wrote the report doesn't understand what the Airport Uind Use Commission is." said Mcinnis, who is Cocaine Seized By Mesa Lawmen By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of flM D111Y Pli.t S!trf Intercep~ a hollowed~t book that authoriUea claim contained a pcund or pdre Colomblia ,..,..me -•1 111 •150,llOCI, federal agents and C..ta Mesa police ·--•.wifla41ale 'llnlri!day nJ&hl The dr~atlc, cat....i.mou.. game !Jt. volvlng 14 men and two Ooodllgbt-cll' rying helicopters ended at 10:30 p.m., following a full day of stakeouts and strategy changes. Peter R. Marshal, 27, of Manhattan Beach, was grabbed in the doorway of a corner market at Fairview Road and West Wilson Street, investigators said. He was arrested on a tederal charge, suspicion of narcotics smuggling and whisked off to U.S. Customs head- quarters at Terminal Island for booking. ti1arshal was scheduled for ar- raigrunen t today before a U.S. com- missioner in Los Angeles. C.OSta Mesa's Eagle II police helicopter and a larger, louder Hughes 500 chopper manned by customs agents circled the surrounding area with searchlights when ~rsuers lost Marshal after the initial package pickup. Officers claim the parcel w a s recovered from its hiding place beneath an air conditioner in some bushes at 160 W. Wilson St., where an apartment com- Burglar Puts Foot Into It Whoever broke into a Costa Mesa commercial building through the ceiling Thursday a p p a r e n t 1 y defeated his own purpose. Just about the only item of value to a burglar in the 688 Baker St., caper was a portable television set sitting atop a de sk. The burglar landed on the TV, smashing it. plex is being: built. Irate neighbors in IUl'TQunding homes -including two trailer parb -flooded police with complaints about the circling h'liOOP.tefl, "We JnJt want them to aDderiland how big a case It wu," Costa Mesa Police lldeclive cap~ F.dwM -GIT s 1 ow declared loday. 'Ille cue began to ll!Jfold M•J 17 In Loa (See COCAINE, Pap I) Copter Missil,es Repel Co1nmunist Rusli, 01i Kontum SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. heLicoplers fir· Ing guided electronic misslies broke up a Communist assault on Kontum today, but o.ther North Vietnamese infiltrated into the forward command posts of the South Vietnamese 22nd Infantry Division on the northern edge of the city. \Vhile South Vietnamese defenders bat· tled 500 infiltrators who occupied houses antl a school on the southern edge of Kon- tum, another group Of sappers seized several buildings in the division com- pound on the north side and touched off a bizarre battle. . A machinegun crew climbed a water tower in the South Vietnamese compound and sprayed machi.negun bullets at the defenders below. South Vietnamese tank!: shelled the tower -and missed. Finally a U.S. helicopter flew in, knocked over the tower with another missile and killed the four machine- gunners. U.S. spokesmen said the American missile-belicopter1 knocked out at least 10 of the 13 tank! destroyed at Konturn today, h<lplng th< South Vietnamese beat back two assaults on the Kontum airport. Meanwhile, the U.S. command reported a third day of massive air attacks against Haiphon~. The North VJetnamese (See VIETN.Uf, P11e Z) chainnan of that panel . The ALUC ls charged with ruling on proposed land use plans in the vicinity of the airport. The report recommends the city establish policies and irograms to work with tile commission that "might involve the development ... of 'an en- vironmental sensitivity plan' for all areas within the 'impact footprint' of Orange C...nty Airport. "Such a cooperative program could establish impact limits for the entire sub- ject area," the report said. "I'm going to read it again to try to un- derstand what the writer's point was," 1.1clnnis said. "But I don't like getting a report like that. It makes you go back and try to find out what the writer is trying to tell me," Mclnnis added. Mclnnil pointed out that many recom- mendations made have been either talked about or tried already. "That study was iOitiated two yean ago/' he noted. "It was a little long in getting here." • The mayor also zeroed in On the El Toro recommendation. "That's got problems with it," ticlnnis said. "El Toro's use on an interim basis is somethlng that the city has felt for a long time shouJd be actively punued. "All the studies that have come along indicate exactly the same thing, saying the ultimate l!Ofutlon should be somewhere else," he coatinued. Both the mayor and city manager agr<ed the roport does contain some useful data and Mcinnis said It will be especially useful lo the 900 Newport Beach homeowners who have filed noise limit suits against the county. "The N!port hu some good information that tends to verify what the people have been saying all along," Mcinnis said. "We've a very untenable position at the upper end of town -but that's nothing the people didn 't already know. But It is nice to be able to back it up with this data." \\'YM agreed the r'port "is good ln terms of describing the situation with raw data. "But I \\'as hoping it could be more specific on things that could be done to make the airport more compatible,'' Wynn said. Mcinnis Sllid he intends to discuss the report and what to do with it at the next meeting or city councilmen June 11, saying the city will make the report ~­ available to all concerned parties. The two-year study, prepared by the Arcadia consulting firm or Wilsey Ham, was intended to be the city's response to an airport needs study prepared for Orange County by the Ralph ~I. Parsons Company. reeze nnounce Poetn and Patriots Cathy Harber, eighth grade stlitient .at .Qavis Mid· die School in Costa Mesa is flanked by flag-bearing classmates during her recital .of .~'The Flag is PasS- ing .By." It was 1patt of .. Memorial Day :wemblf this !Dorni~g_w:~ich .featured. a massed f'ag~demon~ stra'lion, -0r-11ons1 and, D;J:D&ic. , 1 County Lead Ban Goes 1 On July I Despite Ruling CofC Sen,ds Out Letters Against Proposition 9 Orange County's new ordinance ban- ning the sale of leaded gasoline will go in- to eflett July I despite a Superior Court fl:Jling invalidating it, County Counsel Adrian Kuyper said today. The Fourth District Appellate Court in San Bernardino has set Sept. 6 for an ap-- peal hearing on Judge James F. Judge's ruling April 21 in which he said the coun- ty could not regulate the lead content of gasoline because such regulation was a legal function or the state Air Resources Boar<!. But the appeal court, in addition to set- ting the Sept. 6 hearing, issued a tem- porary restraining order invalidating Judge Judge's ruling Wltil the appeal hearing is concluded. .A resolution calling for a "no" vote on ptoposilion 9,.the anti-pollution lnlUaUve, has been malled to 850 local bWJinessmen by the Costa Mesa Chamber of Com· merce. The appeal court detision was issued Adopted by unanimous vote March 18 Thursday by Justice Stephen Tamura, who onct was county counsel for Orange during a meeting of the chamber'• board County. of directors, the resolution predicts pas. The new law limits the lead content in sage of the initiative June 6 would gasoline to three grams a gallon begin-"cause needless economic di.!ruptlon and ning July 1 and becomes progressively Joss of jobs." str icter for the next three years. By July Labeling the provisions of Proposition t Observers Term Pact 'A Surprise'-- ~10SCOW (AP} -President NiJon and Soviet leaders unveiled tonight a sur- prise agreement freezing the number of land. and sea-based missiles at current levels. Advance speculaUon lncUcated. the ; ,11Qvlet1 'MlUld be perm!~ to o~e tile American lead in missiles to be · launched from 1ubmarl.Des. But the ao- . eord provides for no catchlng ,up. The first part of the agr<t111ent 11 a ~ · formal treaty, sub)tc! to ratification by .,.. the u .s. senaiei lhl:t ttmtt1 each· wutitlJ' to 1etUng up two defeoslve anU-blW1tJc mlaalle allts -each slit to contsln no more than 100 killer weapon1 aimed at fncomlnlit offensive mi.sslles. President Nlxon signed the agreement Jn Vladimir Hall at the Kremlin. 1'ie signing ceremony came after the Presi- d~t played host to Soviet leaders at a gala dinner. . One of the delensl ve ABM sites will protect ~1oscow and another Washmaton. The United States will go ahead with planes for an ABM Installation at Grand Forks, N.D., abandoning a blueprint for aoother in Montana. The Soviets will be permitted to set up a second ABM site at least 780 miles from Moscow. 'nle agreement affecting offensive missiles wW have a rive-year lifetime - a period during which the two sides will attempt to forge a more permanent tre .. ty. Even so, the treaty covering ABM'I pennlts either country to pull out on the agreement upon six months notice. At the dinner, hold In the U.S. am- bassador's residence, Nixon toasted Soviet leaders with a glass of callfornia wine and r e c a 11 e d Soviet-American cooperation in World War II. Then he said, "We shall demonstrate to the world how these two great peoplefl, the Soviet people and the American ~ pie, work together to build peace, "Every leader of a nation," the Prell• dent said, "wonders at times how he will be remembered in history, but u I have met with the top Soviet leaders .•• I am convinced of thls fact : "We want to be remembered by our deeds, not by the fact that we brought war to the world, bot by the fact that we (S.. AGREEMENT, Page l) \1 I -·Profs Make Breakthrough 1. 1974, all regular grade gasoline must contain only traces or the anti-knock in-as "contradictory, irrational and gredient and this same restriction applies counterproductive," the directors have 'Profound' Brain Discovery by UCI Pair An1wu11ced By GEORGE LEIDAL work with 20 rats. °' ... oai" """ stiff UCI me.archers removed a portltm. ct 4 Two UC Irvine psycbobiologists an-the cortex of the brain of. each rat. ~ a ''JrOfound discovery" Thur., "Within a matter of days," Dr. Lynch Clay that may re•em the widely believed !i,~;.:J.tlllng In of the CO\ area can be tbeorJ that damaged brains cannot It has long been known that brain cells ttcover from nerve ctU losses. _ nerve tis.sue _ cannot dupltcate Dr. Gary Lynch and Dr. cart W. Cot· themselves as do cells of other body man revealed results of a IS.month study Ussue:s such as the skin. of brain damaged rats that was IUJ>o However, the Lynch-Ortman 1tudie1 of ported by grants from the Natlooal Sci-rats lndlcat.. the ~bp!ty that u:idam- tnce Foundation and the Natlooal Inst~ . 111«1 cells In other parts ol the body ltlld 1ute . ,i Mental Health amoonlln( to oil! new alpiajs -callid processei - f45,lllO, 1 ytar. . _ ~ -... , ,.,..matically" e~I IJI Tf... UC! paycbolilology proftssort ,'iilirk~ -~ oMirain II!'"<-~ .dlscuwd their research at tllt operung ol 6lrle' lt'C>Cl!llt~ pl'oduc& ... ~ ~ hafl-day UC! ln<!uatrtlll A&soclllts pro-acetykhollnestrase. Dr. Lynch said. sram tntroduc!na bu>lness leaders to tho When tls3ll<I are "stained" with a dye IChool ol blologlcal sciencts. that has beta used !er years tn other : The faculty reaean:htn from Newport areaa ol .-n:h, the nerve enzyme can Buch said their lindJDJI wm butd on ,..dlly be aeen. . • • Application of this graphic method to establish the presence of new cormectiom between brain cells, replacing tbe con- nection• that broke down with the damage of othtr,.cells ts tbe key to the UCI dl!COvery. "We're the lint people to look Into this structure using the staining technique," Dr. Cotman saJd. ' Psychobiology department chainnan Dr. "James L. McGaugh described lhe .palr's findlng as a ''profound discovery. No matltr what e1'e comn !tom I~ the Information adc!J to our knowledge of the brlin " ho aalcL , · .. : 1f all ~l!J· '.ltnplicat1 ..... , .... 111 ·:~>lltoidilotivery would 00t only be j>ro!Oiirid; ... r--coUlct he c1•1oec1 ii phenomenal," Dr. Mtoauah said. One futuro hnpllc-·of the llndlngs mlght ho in belpi~·~llN who have (8ee DISQ)Vll\Y, .hp I) .,. ' { ,I to premium gasoline on July I, 1975. asked each chamber of commerce Despite the court ruling, Orange Coun-member to work for its deleat. ty Air Pollution Control Officer William AJ evidence ror the in it i at iv e 1 s Fitchen said today he did not foresee any ••unrealistic legaJ requlttments," the problems enforcing the restrictive law. ''Most gasoline sold in the county now directors cited the followingobjectk>nable contains less than three grams per gallon eUecta they believe would occur with Its vi lead," be ·stated. "Our trouble wilt pusage: begin next year when the limit drops to -'The banning of peaticldea without two gi:ams per gallon." Fllcben..aald his departineot hat tho Which agriculture and dlM!ue prevention necessaiy equipment to measure the lead programs could not operalt elllclenUy. content and random tests "Would be made -OUtlawlng of new nuclear electric In ..mce staUons throughout the county power plants for a period of five yean. beglMln( July I. -··· I I ed need The air. pollution control officer added, .iiiuc are cam to be vitally ed. to "I do not anticiJ)8te any serious problent1 meet the demandl for electricity. in future years either. I am certain the -Unworkable, unrtasonable atandarda oU companies will cooperate and have for automobile exha~ emiUiMI With been Informed that they are now working arbitrary · penal Uta baied oo income of on the J>!Ohltm of reducing the lead cot>-offenders without consideration o f tent tl.tu0Une." .. • clrc~s. -' 1 1 , Ftt&liOn added that tile ordinance -Eitablllhment. .t 1eoc1.-eoi•stai»-~1, by the Col!lllY Boan! o! ards wbi\'11 chamber olll<lall conteill SUpervllifn last Oclobtr Is not the tint, 1'lll ww.k 111 hardaltlp .., mWlorJa of low IUCh law .l!r tllo U.S. u staled by its pro-tnOOme and 'mlnor~y Pf. cllliena. poo<nts at ll!at time. -Arbltrvy an4 Unrulll!lc aulphlll' ''Nl•w York City, the ~~ofMar)'l•nd "IJ!lent otandanls for dleael !Uel oll ·~ ind .11tve~l other government agencies ~ ~'create, a ttansportaUOn. (Sol LEAD BAN, J> ... l) c:r!Jil. • . • • Weatller Look for considerable cloudiness Saturday along the Orange Coast, clearing by noon to sunny skies, accordlnl to the weatberlady. HJiJia 15-75. Lo1"1 In the ilO'a. INSIDE TOD~"t' Orange County b tht 1trow- bcrT11 capital of th• nation. Gar- den Grove st.ages ita annual Stmwb•rT!I Festival thu Mrmor· Ml wetktnd. Set .sroru in todor'a WtektndtT. L.M....... t ...... .. c,1.,.,_ , Cl ... 1""9 1M1 c-in ,. Crtt5__,. M °"" ........ ,. = .'" ,. ...,,.,, ~·\ ~ ,., .. ...,.. '' --. -..... MllMI ,__ '' ......... ..... 4 or....(_., ,, ............. ., .• ,, ..... ...,... 11 blil1t »U "'"'Ml ....... ,, """"''*' ' .. , .............. -. -------. ....... »Jill • ' •• :C DAILY ~!LOT c . • DAILY PllDT Stiff Pllllt Angling tor Mermaid Hmwrs Five more contestants have signed up for the June 4 Costa Mesa Fish Fry beauty contest, now in its 27th running. Competing for the title of Mjss Mer· maid are (from left) Susan Powers, 19, Newport Beach; Mar~erite Marsaudon, 19, Costa Mesa; Connie Wiggrns, 18, Huntington Beach; Carol Davis, 17, Costa Mesa, and Kris Miller, 17, Costa Mesa. From Pagel COCAINE ... ~ngclcs, when Peppe,r, a U.S. Customs Department German Shepherd dog be~an sniffing suspiciously at a package mailed from South America. Checking its contents, the pure white drug Powder wu found packed inside the hollow book . "This was the !irst major shipment discovered by a heroin and cocaine.detec- ting dog 11.nce the trained Gennan Shepherds went into use earlier this year," says Customs Officer Jerome Hollander. Rewrapping the package, federal agents and postal authorities engineered 'its delivery Tue9d1y to the alleaed r~ cipient, a Jaime Hedstrom, of 132 W. Wilson St., Costa Mes a. Investigation of re cords revealed no such individual known, according to Capt. Glasgow. The Customs agents' hel)copter landed behind Costa Mesa police headquarters at 8 a.m., Tue sday to prepare for the pickup. No one was home In the traller listed, as the postman dropped the package in the mailbox. Investigators -a total of eight federal agents and six local narcotics detectives -then assigned a stakeout team to watch the box but no recipient showed up. ' The mailman then returned for the parcel and left a note to }>ick it up at the main post office. No one showed up to be grabbed by agents staked out at the Adams Avenue headquarters, but later in the day a caller identifying himself as Jaime Hedstrom asked that it be re-<lellvcred. The suspect allegedly picked up the packa ge about 10: 15 p.m. and dart ed into the darkened construction area wit h ;igents shado\1•ing him rrom behind. Investigators said they lost him, at which time the helicopters moved in wit h their powerful searchli ghts. "They really lit up the place,'' Capt. Glasgow remarked. A few minutes later, the arrestee - minus parcel post package -was spotted crossing Fairview Road toward the nearby Tic Toe Market where he was taken into custody. OIANGI COAST ... DAILY PILOT Tll• Or•ngt C°"1t DAILY PILOT, wllfl wtllcft 11 combined lfle N-1-Prr,.., 11 l>UOll*tl W "'• Or•not COit! P1,1t11,,,,lno COO'Pll*nr. 1911'· •~I• eo11ion, t rf 11VOli11>td, Mondty flll'"Olllh F"d•v. fbr Cos!~ J.ltt• Nt"'"°'' 811'9(11, t<11"Hn,10" lle11ch,FounlA!n V•llt y, L•flun• 8ttcl>, lr~ln•1 S1001-ck ~"' S111 CMl""'"!tl S111 Jut n (IP•llr•nD. A "llVlt <t<glolltl ..ollion ;, pUl>ll,,,fll StlUrdftV' Mid Sund•v1. fh~ pd!'ICIP~I P11bl11flln{I plt "t ;~ .i llCI Wttl B~v S1r"t, Coart Mr,.1, Cthlor1111, tit:it, 11.ohtrf N. Wttd P1..,ldtl'lf •nd PllDlli.llw J,,1i R. Curl1y I/kt Pt•klwtl Ind Genent Mllltttr Thom tt ICttvil l!llflW Tliom11 A. Murphint M1""9lnl Elfllar Chtt!ts H. l101 ll.i,llt"4 ,, Htll ANl1t.n1 M•Mtlnt E41"'" C.te ..... Office JJO W11t lty Shttt Malllt1t Alllldr•11: P.O. lox 1160, 92•2• .............. H1wporl •••efl1 Ull NtwCIO"I Bowl•ve,. LlgUM •Ndl: Jn '"'"' ,l,""""' M111tl"'-* l'.cll~ 1,.1S l11d'I I Wlf\ltrd $111 Cllmtnltt JllS North II CtlT\lnt ill;MI ,_,.,.. .. 17·14f 64Z-4JJI C....,._. A'"'1111 .. MJ.1671 C~I, 1•11.. Or111" Cotll ,.utlltt!tlllf C•mPtrir. No MW\ .iorlft, 111u"r111orit, .. 1 ... 1 fllfltw ., H vOtllltll*ll'I Mttlfl -· ... ~II(.. •lllltul ''*"'' ,..,.. m'-* ef Ulll"'Wlt ~. ~ CIMt "°'''" NN t i C•I• Mou, C.•'*'"le. ..._.,,,.. llf a,.,ltt a.u "'*'"'"'' W ltlllll *111 IMll*IW'1 MllifMY .,.....ll•M llM fMlllllll\'. Trash Collector Gets No Holiday In Costa Mesa Monday will be a holiday for just about all Costa Mesans except the tnsbman. City Manager Fred Sorsabal said trash will be picked up on Memorial Day just like on any other weekday. So if you're on the trashman's regular Monday route, go ahead and set your trash out. City ball, of course, wlU be closed on Monday. Since the regular city council meeting falls due that same day, it hBJ been J>OStpooed to June 5. Before that, however, the council has scheduled a joint study session with the plannlng commluion. The session will take plac~ at 7:39 p.m. Tuesday in the first floor conference room at city hall. On the agenda are 22 Jtems ,including an off.street parklng ordinance for apartments which ha! already passed the first council reading. Fish Fry Fetes 'Seymour,' Ram Televisi on's horror movie ho s I "Seymour" and Rams footballer Marlin ~fcKeever may seem an unlikely pair but they will be teamed up as the top at- tractions June 3 during the annual Costa Mesa Fish Fry Parade. Parade Chairman Cliff Wcsdorf said tllcKeever, the 6'1" 2.35-pound foot ball pro froni Corona del tl1 ar, \Y\11 ride at the• head of the 1,500 entry parade as gra nd rnarshal. Backing up the line backer will be "moviemoghoul" Larry Vincent. the man \•iho hosts the Saturday night Channel 5 horror shows under the n a m e "Seymour." Since Seymour's $25,000 custom horror coach is not yet completed, he will ride In the parade as guest of honor in more pro- saic conveyance, From Page 1 ·VIETNAM ... 'Last Shootout' Armored Car Story Offered Sunday ·WE WON OUR LAST SHOOTOUT' - 1 n a look at the n1odern men who ride shotgun on the "strongbox," thi s Sunday Special finds their security measures so rigid they even suspect police officers. under cert.a.Jn conditions. It's a story of the annored truck business. ELECTRONIC ZEN -Whether tht new Alpha Wave control theory is a fad or a phony, one guy who tested the brain machlne found it wB!D't u:otic tiWUgh to handle the eroUc. TIIE NAME GAME -To get your number aU the customer has to do Is pay the price of the list sellers. Selling names and addresses iJ big businesa •nd Orange C:Ounty's biggest dealer in names tells some of the "how" and "why" In a YOU Section story. MERLE HAGGARD -His popularity 15 only a notch or two behind that or country music king Johnny Cash and he is well on his way to being 1 mllllonatre, but Merle Haggard says he'1 an unhappy man. Story Is In FamUy Weekly. POLITICS AND Hl\ND GUNS - In a column out ol S.ctall\«lto'-Phll Hanna wonders ii Sllerlll Peter· Yllchell wu politically moll•at.d when Jie wne out for the outlawing of hallCl l\ID>. MA YORS WIVES -lt'1 "Part JI" of last week's women's pages profile of Or an ge Coast city first ladles. Th is We<!k, \Vives of the mayors of Costa Mesa, Hun· tington Reach and San Juan CapislraJ10 are featured. ADVICE FROM EINSTEIN Buslness page feature story tells how Albert Einstein helped Newport Beach grocer O. W. "Dick" Richard build his supermarket. The famed mathematician gave Ri chard some business advice. KNIGHTS OF SPEEDWAY -Picture page captures the drama of joustera on steel. steeds at the motorcycle races, REDWOOD CONTROVERSY - Timbennen and conservaUonists are still clashing over the philosophies involved In the attempt to preserve trees by setting !hem aside in the sanctuary called Redwood Nallonal Park. LEGAL ADVICE -A speclal YOU Section story offers Ups on bow to avoi d being cheated, who to contict if you are and tells about a lawyerl' a.ssociaUon booklet that gives other tlp.s and slep.s to take. NOW SHE'S AN ACTRESS -Cover slory ol TV WEEK lealure1 Sulln Dey, )"OWli star of the "Partridge Famlly," wl>o learned to act C1!4' alter aha wu glvon the sllrrlll( role. •• ,.,,.. .. Pnge 1 AGREEMENT • • • µ"- DAILY PllOT lllfl l'Mfll UC IRVJNE SCIENTISTS SHOW BRAIN CELLS REWIRE THEMSELVES Ors. C1rl W. Cotm1n (left), Gary Lynch, P1ychobiol09ist1 ' .From Page 1 BRAIN DISCOVERY • • • suffered brain dnmage by accident or other n1eans. An example of the significance or the finding might be in controlling memory loss due to brain dart'tage. Jf the functions of damaged cells caus· ing memory loss are replaced with cells from other parts of the brain. ORE: effect might be spasticity, Dr. McGaugh sug- gested. Since becoming a 1pastic is not much of an improvement over auflering memory loss, the patient might someday be given nerve proce~ inhibitors to"con- trol which brain cells replace the links that orice helped with memory pro- cessing. · "This could be the beginning for ra- Leadership Home Units Gets Bid For Dump Site lional n1edicine for tuJn damage ." JJr . J\1cGaug h said. The researchers themselves were more n1odcs t about their work. declining to give specific example of what kinds or functions might be affected by the new- found brain cell linkup s. However, Dr. Lynch said the oW theories of brain damaged likened the brain to a 14hard·Wired switchboard or computer. "After the brain was damaged the wlr· ing was thought to be pennanently: jwnbled," he said. But, over the past hundreds of years, some brain damage symptoms -such as coma -have not proved to be permanent. Until now, no one was certain why some patie nts' could return to norn1a!cy. "It now seeins th at a rewiring or the brain can take place,., Dr. Lynch said. Ongoing stages of the resea rch will at: te1npt lo determine if the brain cell' rewiring ·will hel p or hinder the brain damaged rat. Other researchers may consider the discovery a base for fw1her research with· humans. For Cotman and Lynch, however, one next step will be to determine what behavior effects result from the brain cell removal and how behavior following the new cell links compares with pre- brain damage activity. . Thus far, the UCI research has shown that the n~w nerve effects a r e permanent. "Results imply that the brain posseues an amazing and heretofore unsuspected capability for reorganization after brain·' damage. · "It is not known whether the • reorganization is detrimental or · beneficial to the recovery of brain func- tions," they said. Dr. McGaugh noted the research was supported largely by the federal grants with "damn little" money coming from the University Regents. Hospital 'Visitor' Picks Bad Time COSTA MESA CAR WASH WITH THIS AD. Purchase of CAR WASH and HOT WAX $ REG. 29.95 99 LIMIT 2 ... CUITOMIR or FREE CAR WASH with any Fill·Up An wi,. Top 9 .. a1y 100% Kcio .. .i.. W1tlt I M ... S•rprl11 r .. , Wife ••• Stretch lase, Some With Detachallle Dome • • • with • ••• wig 5 StXl•1 And M•ny Colors To Chaos• From Wt Guarontff You A Cltan Car W SH IN WOOUTE AND COOL WATER Try U• Y°"'ll Like Usll Wl!i Ol'HR GOOD ONLY 2 WUKS THRU JUNI 15 OR WHIU THIY LAST COSTA MESA CAR WASH IAUGG from Tlleodort Rolll• "9nll 2059 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 645-1030 • • • DAU,Y Pll.OT EDITORIAL PAGE Par l{ Showdown Ahead ' • I All Costa Mesans who have· been pleading for a_ regional park on the state surplus property behind Es· tancla High School should circle June 2 on their eaten· dars. · • " The day promises to bring a win or lose showdown Ip Sacramento between local park proponents and Gen· er.al Se:hices Director Lawrence R. Robinson who ap. pears bell benl on disposing of the land tor state profit -one way or another. Why is not at all clear. This week he arroga_ntly refused pleas by Costa lesa and Cl5Unty-n!ftcialrto-extencHhe-deadlm0--0!.-an ultimatum which ordered the two governments to c?ugh up $4 million !or the park by June 2 or forget the idea. Since neither the city, aor the county, had su~fi· cient time to formulate financing plans, let alone raise the money, it can only be assumed that the State Pub- lic. Works Board will go ahead wiUt its plans to trade off a 36-acre parcel of the property to the Newsom Development Company of Squaw Valley. . \Villiam Newsom Who owns several profitable con- cessions at the Squa~ Valley ski resort, is repor\edl:Y reluctant to make the trade. But he may be forced into> .accepting it by Ute Public Works Board since .the state is eager to recover its lease on the Olympic Villag~. In that case, Newsom haS made it clear he will seek the "highest and best use" for the Costa Mesa property. And that, he s~y~ is ~partments. . . . Since the property is currently zoned. inst1lut1onal· recreational and Costa Mesa has taken a firm stance on behaU of the park, it is extre~ely unli~ely that, the city council \Vill agree to rezone 1t to mult1pl e family use. That could result· in a stand-off between Costa Mesa and the Public Works Board which might cul· minate in a lawsuit. Jn fact, Robin son this \veek pre· dieted that such action by Costa Mesa would require •·appropriate legislative r.emedy." . . .Threats and ultimatums notw1th stand1ng, Mayor .Women Have Come a Long, Lo ng Way SYDNEY J. HARRIS Neither the proponents nor the op- ponents of what we loosely calt "Women's Lib" today realize how far modern women have come -and how far they have had to come from. American common law is_ derived from the Common Law of England, and only a century ago, the wife was almost the complete chattel of her husband. We find it hard to believe now that, less than 100 • years ago. a man could legally support his mistress on the earnings of his wife. Jn his shocking history of social reronns (what is shocking is the stu· pid ways in which they were resisted by the bul·"'arks of society), E. S. Turner points out that lhe 19th Century wife had fewer rights than accorded a wife ·under Roman law "'and hardly more than had been con- ceded to an African slave before eman- cipation." Published some two decades ago, hi s book, "Roads to Ruin ." spells out the relationship of the Victorian husband .to his wife : "He owned her body. her prop- erty, her savings, her personal jewels and her income. whether they lived together or separately. He could deprive her of her assets entirely as he though t fit. and be could do this whether he were J)lve or dead." His power to disinherit a 'vife {of her own goods) was absolute and irrevocable. ONE OF THE FEW P.tEN of his time to speak up against this iniquity, according to Turner, was John Stuart Mill, the Dear •• Gloomy ·Gus Don't the promoters of that ridicu· lous and vicious Proposit ion 9 re- alize they belie their clean environ- ment pretentions by tempting lit· terbugs when they inundate people in parking lots with their unt ruthful handbills? -B.E.A. This t.•lutt refit<" r .. dio' vle•s, ...t lltcl1Hrl1Y IM.. .r the _IN,_r. Slll'll rovr 111t _. .. t. G ... mr Gus. D1llr Plltt. philoso pher and political economist. who himself openly repu~iated his le"al rights when he married. In his tract, ' The Sub- jection of Women." (1890),Jie said of the English hoil!lewife: "S he can acquire no property (except for her husband); the instant it becomes hers, even if by inheritance, it becbmes ipso facto his ... If she leaves her hug.. band, she can take nothing with her. neithe r her children nor anything which is rightfully her own . If he chooses, he can compel her to return by law, or by physical force ; or he may content himself with seizing for his own use anything which she ma y earn or which may be given to her by her relations .. • • WHEN THE LONG campaign began on behalf of the Married Women's Property Bill, it was widely attacked as a "vicious principle" that would dissolve ttie mar- riage bond, and a proposal as lunatic "as perpetual motion or stopping the revOlu- tions of the moon." From perusing the press and Parliamentary reports of that period. a visitor fr om another planet would really imagine that society would be turned upside down if women were permitted a few legal and financial rights of their own , As I say, one has only to read this chapter to recognize how far women have come since then -and bow much more remains to be done. Threat to Popp y Sales The •Daily Californian El Cajoa Once a year as Memorial Day ap- proaches some ol the veterans' organiza· tions station representatives at shopping centers -and other places where people f.OOgregate -to collect contributions for disabled war veterans. In exchange for a few CQins or a small bJll, they pin a bright red poppy to your lapel as an indication that you cared &bout the plight of 3.2 million veterans who returned from the wars with missing limbs, lost eyesight and other injuries •which denied them a normal life. THE MONEY COLLECTED is used to provide ffR' disabled veterans those it~ms which government pensions do not cover. Jt enables volunteer workers to take in- e1:pacttated veterans to places they might not otherwise. go. to visit them in their homes. to care for_ the orphans and \vidows of urvicemen who died and to furni sh rehabilitative services to those who live. SO hostile bas the public mood becOm• Quotes Jelm Ardilbald Calllomi, Amba-f .. Tanilla, es-San Franciscan planning ~HI to Catllonla -"Tbe lortlgn aervl<t keeps tbe corpuS<lts goi113; you llay alive and alert. There are new la1131J1gn to learn. new plac.s and peoo t>le to undenland." toward Che Vietnam War that the pr0&- pect for poppy sales this year is bleak. UNFORTUNATELY, the C90lroversy over the Vietnam War has 'done ·a great' deal to color attitudes toward militail!lm in general and bas distorted 'U.S. in· volvement in past wars. Leftist in- tellectual s, anxious to sully. the rtcord, view the Vietnam episode as a mere con- tinuation of Afnerican lmperiaU&m that dates back a century or more."So often has this vicious canard been circulilted that some people have been conned into belieYing that the United States •alone is responsible for all · the International violence of modern times. Many people, not very wisel)r,,a:l~OW their disenchantment with the Vleb\IJD. War to numb their senses. forgetting Uiey owe their freedom to the veterans, both Uvtng and dead, who during World War II helped defeat the most monstrous vlllalny .Ver to be unleashed upon the eartll. AND THE MEN wl)o have gone oll to war in the 20th century have done to in every c4se In response to the apression of nations intent upon anneJJDg t.btlr neighbor&. Whether lhi& has always been a !'lie pallcy ii clebatoble, but It ts no cause for 'turning our liocks on the mtn who sul· rered the mJseriea of war and &-till have the. scars. 1 • . A nation wblch forgets the sacrUlce1 of !ta soldiers in battle risks not having inybody-around to deleml it when danger 1lr1kes. Jack Hammett and a contingent of Costa Mesa and coun- ty olflclals will journey to Sacramento June 2 to pre,. ·for a S<klay extension. More time is needed by the two govmiments to develop a park finance plan. The lnsbtence of Robinson and bis Public Works Board on a quick deal on this key pieee of public property is not In the public Interest and urgently needs attention from the governor's office. Ironic Freeway Delay Continuing disagreements over the Pacific Coast Freeway and the terminus of the Newport Freeway has diverted attention from the Corona del Mar Freeway - Ute ~nly local freeway Costa Mesa and Newport Beach seem to agree on. Last week, Robert W. Bowles, the exeeuUve secre- tary ol Ute State Highway Commission, disclosed that it would probably be 1974 or 1g75 before bids for the freeway could be advertised. What this means is that the desirable conneeting link between the Sao Diego Freeway and MacArthur Boulevard will not be constructed until 19711-78, if one allows for the customary one to three-year period of red tape between bid advertisements and actual con· struction. The delay, according to Bowles, is forced by a com· bin ation of engineering difficulties and finance prob- lems. It seems that the commission has more pressing freeway projects to ramrod and also some foundation problems in the quicksand San Diego Creek area. It is ironic that the Corona del Mar Free\vay is the only undisputed local route. Both Newport Beach and Costa Mesa seem to be in favor of it. But though everybody wants it, nobody will get ii -at least not for another four or five years. U5S~ c PASSPORT 'I'm Old Glory ··· .fi'ly Me All of the Time' W a~ts Flag FloWn 24 Hours a Day To the Editor: I am continuing to encourage citizen!! to fly our flag 24 hours a day -lighted at night. More and more lighted banners are waving at night in our area. On the. eve or our 200th anniversary and with Memorial Day this weekend, I ha ve come up with a new slogan ; • "I'm Old Glory "Fly me-All or the time~" Following are excerpts from a lelter from the commanding general of our state military forces. I believe everyone will be interested in this answer from the military. "THE BILL to revise the wording of the code and to establish a Flag Com- mission appears to us to. be appropriate . The flag, long symbolizing the union of persons with common association, ha! borne its rules of display coastituted upon good manners. Some of the rule!! of good manners are obviously of slight im- portance in themselves, nor is there universal agreement CQOcerning them. Observance of the Flag Code etiquette, as [ __ MA_IL_B_o_x __ ) Letter! from reader! are toelcome. Normall11 writers should convey their nitssage1 i'n 300 word3 or less. The right to condense letters to fit spac1 or eliminate libel is reseroed. All let- ters mu.st include signatures and moil- ing adares!, but namts may be wit,.. held on requtst if IUf/iCimt naic.m is apparent. Poetf11 wiU not be pub· Ii.tiled. it is known today, is chiefly voluntary. "CHANGES TO the code, as practiced by this slate and the others, can only be effected through-federil action;While we concur in your goals, we believe it to be properly the action of dedicated private citizens as yourself rather than the func- tion of a state. "We most sincerely commend you on your efforts and wish you success."- llobert S. Ford, Col., GS, CALARNG. Administrative Officer, Sacramento. KATHYRN FISHBACK 19t h Century · .Ulnd To the Editor : After reading U.S. Representative John Schmitz' reactionary utterances one ca n very well wonder what is this 19th Cen* tury mind housed in a com·paratively young body trying to achieve in the 20th Century -and to think that we are on the threshold of the 21st Century! one can only conclµde : What is holding this great (wi th an even greater poten· tial) naUon together is a c:om~inalion of tremendous JNblic apathy cemented only with money. BORIS BUZAN Lf •• Than Human To the Editor: Perhaps we have come to a point in time when far too many bombs have fallen, too many preciou!I lives snatched away, both in Indochina and on the streets of America. that we know our guilt (though we won't admit it) and are afraid to cease dropping ~ and fir- ing the iUflS Jest we be th~ victims - and, justifiabJy. WllETHER WITH bombs or guns, l believe our own problem began when we de<:ided to put a dUferenl priority C\ft lht livea of ;w>J1!e1men than we .do on.op.a. we must not' tontinue to harm.otben,lod mi streat people, and not expect re~ tlon. All life is sacred, but It seem&, 1the past few year,, too many people hive been deemed 0<'d0creed to be aolllllhlnc less than human. How do we "uncondltlon" that N8J11tnt of our American 90eJety that has been Ihoroughly lndOctrlnated to adhlft to Ille more ugly, abnormal and violent methods as solutions to our problems? BERNICE Wl!iLSH Nixon Knows What Russia Is After SALZBURG, AUSTRIA -President Nixon's trip to Russia would not ordinari- ly be thought of under existing circumstances as a sentimental journey, but for him it has many of those aspects. He was ei.ger to have some of those who accompa,nied him to the Soviet Union in 1959 make this trip, nearly 13 years later, as a symbol or the continuity or what he deems to be a sustained and sincere effort to es- tablish with Russia a working relationship for world peace. This attitude on Nixon's part seems to some to be incon- sistent with his polit- ical career based in the beginning, and for many years, on anti-COmmunism. NIXON FINDS N 0 inconsistency whatsoever. He is still anti-Communist in the sense that he abhors the political 1ystem and he opposed, with force when necessary, the expansion of Communism Internationally. But he recognize!! the Soviet Union as a powerful national and international force which must be dealt wi th _realistically, What constitutes realism is the pro~ lem. It seems wf:iolly contradictory that tihe Improvement of relations should go forward while the Soviet Union and--;the Unit.id States are in what amounts to armed confrontation in so many places in the world. The contradiction becomes greater with the realization that what Russia' iJ ac- tually, seeking is the neutra,Vzation or Ameflcan nuclear power in the. name of "e(ruality;" the withdrawal of American force~ from Europe, and decreasing Am'erlcan tnnuence in Asta, the Middle Eost lbt Mediterranean and Ille Indian Ocean. SOME OF mE fortgoing, In fact, It: probably part of an hlstorieal tmJd which cannot be reveraed. Nixon's concern has to be lhat In adjusting to this lrtnd, tbe son l1)10t• lei! by Ameriea'• laJftted pro- me do not become th< &eed11Ied for Ille urreslratned 1rowth al Scwlet world power. In the long nm, lhat may be a con- tradiction which can only be resolved, or al least suspended, by the lhreat or the me of force or Us actual use. This threat hU'been a major tl..,..t of America n palicy ror deades. Olton, when It hll ' (RICHARD WILSON 1 ) been hoped that force would no longer be necessary, the.re have been compelling reasons for this last resort, as in the case of mining and bombing of North Vietnam. No post.World War II President has been able to escape such decisions,' and most of those decisions -all of them · without major exception -have been on the side or force or the threat or force as a last resort. · TO PUT mE BEST FACE on it, Nixon Is seeking arrangements enabling him and !lubsequent Presidents to escape the necessity of the choice between action and no action, force or no force, either or which can. have tragic consequences. A great' deal has rested . and still rests, on Soviet reaction to American action to protect its interests, and. so far at least, Nixon 's judgment has been sound. So he goes to Moscow in a mood not quite so happy as he would like, and in The Expectation Gap New CUtJe (Pa.) Newt ll"s Impossible to rtlurn to ye&lttday and it's unreasonable to raise the ex· pectations of people with promises of a belier tomorrow which cannot be lulflll· ed. To do the latter creates a credibility gap between those who make the prom- ises and those who believe the promises will be fulfilled. In addition, there is an erpectation gap. Social observers pondering what went wrong In the inOammatory '&Os believe too much wa!I promised and too much was not fuliilled. They hope a lesson bas been learned. Herbert J. Gans, a sociology professor writing tn 'I'1e New York Times Magazine, noted j'when ex.. pectat'®s heighten. people become more impatient, more critical of their IOC.iety wbtn expectations are not realized, and eventuany, inore active politically.'' LOOllNG AHEAD to the ml of Ille Vietnam war, tt.ell an expectation, ProfetSOr Gans wams "there remains the problem or whk:h and whole ex· peclatlone can be achieved, and whose not." Among aome ol the problem& cm which Vietnam war cost& C011ld be &pent are controlling pallulion, .Verpopulallon, and rislnc medical and 00..pital bills and ex.pandinr -welfare programs -to· men- tion I ftw. Editor William B. Dickinson Jr. Gf Editorial Re1e1roh Repart& IUg• 1e&11 that "new exptctallons art betn1 cruted evecy day .•.• Young people hope to transtoqn society now that they can vote at ~e ti. Wor.'tn'1 Lib hao turned hou8e'tl1v.S and ,.t; etorits Into llgm prepared • lo fil()lt for ahared hou1t-k and equa1 pay. Clean water and alt are pul lorwanl as Inalienable rights that will be realized in our time." THE EXPECTATION gap need not be con!idered as a fact involving only na- tional j!Jsues. Promises· of more efficient garb11ge collections and job development by the mayor, if they are unfulfilled. will make a dent Jn the credlbUJty of his ad- ministration. The promise of a metropolitan sewage collection system by planne rs and elected officials which m8 y sour will add to the frustrations or those residents who expectthe project to leave the drawing board for construction. ln the reviewing the expectations of the young, women, and environmentalists, Edi tor Dickinson writes, "Someone ia going to be disappointed. The political process ll ltkely to remain In the control of the unyoung for eome years. ffusbands will be chauvtntsta when ll comes to th< Jaundry .. "POPULATION GROWTH will mal<e hea1way against pollution hard to come by. In lheir beam, people sense the llnlle quality or life, even in these United Staits. But tbe polltlcal rh<torlc of tm alnml certainly will feed expectation& rather than reinforce .reaUsm." Tlie same words could be written about some of our local aspirations. Rlither lhan fuel the upectatlon& of th< people, Jocal offlcla1s •nd communlty leaders should temper their word! wllh r.altty. Al sociology prof"'°r <;ans nol .. "im- prG\'tment Js no Jonger as euy as tt once was." And, the difficulty remains th.at It t easier to arou1t txptC!all01ll than It is lo tum lhetn oil. -- different circumstances than' be an- ticipated , but~ a man reauming w~ be left oil In lllS9. Then he was meiefy a Vioe Presldmt with an ,anti-Communist record. and under suspicion of using.MOscow as a backdrop tor his own pollllcal am bitlona. And to It actually turned out, with Nlx0n-for·Prt1\. dent billboards in 1980 showinc him· lhak· Ing his finger in Nikita Kbru1tlcbev'1 face during tbe lamed "kitchen debllt.I' • HIS TRIP THEN had a brMckt purpose, however, and It wa1 1\o feel out the ground for a prospecllve trip 117 President Eisenhower. The , lrlp wa planned and fell through over the U.J 11>- cident. Now It Is Nixon , not Eisenhower, who 11 the first American President to visit Uw Soviet Union, and this add.a another ..... rnent which makes the MoAoow trlp a aentimenlal journey. Returning to Poland is In the aame category. After bil departure In lllff from tbe lclly formal atmosphere of Moscow, Nl1on went to War.saw for an unexpected popular r~ Uon. People 1atiled out spontaneously i. throw flowers on bis llmouslne. These moods cannot be recaptured, but what was impoSsible in 1959, an onaoing and sleadlly inI~roving rcl1tlonshlp, may now be resuni'ed in spite of the adverse circumstances.of 1972. Nlxon11 overtures to China have nO doubt prOVided Som• leverage, but even without that added pressure Nb:on and the Soviet ltadua have found their own reuons for nff.. justment·Ol relltions. ORANG& COAST DAILY PILOT llobrrt I'/. Wt..C, /'NUsher Thomat' KeclJU, Editor Albert W. Boce1 l:ditorlal l'ogc EdltOf TM ~Uotlt1 ~ae of U,e Diil)' Pilot 114tt:ka lo Inform and •tlmu. late rt'ldcrs by pmentJn1 Ullt new1pA~r'• opi:nlont •nd com. l"""'"'-17 on loplQ of tntensl anit ·oce.noe, ~ provldtnr a f~ the t'XP"6110n of. our rtaldtri' f ona. and by ~nUfl&_ thia 1..e v~polnll of int~ ob- •CJ'Ver:t and •pokhmtA Ga toslb: ot the d&y. Friday, May 28, 1972 • • " L. M. Boyd W11at Do Sheep Count to Sleep? Aj:ain am asked lf a flipped penny is more apt to come up head1 than ta.lb. It J1. Comes up headl 50.2 percent ol the time. One Profusor Edward L. Spltmagel proved that. With 31,,020 nips. The stamping procts1 at t.ht mint i1 1uch, he concludes, that the tail.side is a 1m1dgeon heavier. Thal'1 the penny Only, remember. CAN YOU II.st all the U.S. presidents from 1nemory? Nellher can I. When poJlslers asked a aizable umpllng of citizens to do so, a particular 1even of the chief execu. lives repeatedly failed to tum up on the rosters. Those most forgeUable men were Tyler. Polk, Taylor, Fill· more, Pierce. Buchanan. ,a®\ one more, can't recall, who 'd l pniss:\0 THAT numerous insomniacs count sheep t.o help themselvea dor.e off is not noteworthy. What's noteworthy ts numerous sheep are tn10mniac1, tno. Their stomachii - I" each 8~eP has four -don 't work r ight in just any old ' position. The body ha1 to be upright. Makes the long . ' • nlght'11 snooze difficult. QUERIES -Q. "What proportion of the men and women In th is country wear bridges or dentures~'' A. Men, 17.2 percent. Women , 50.8 percent. Q. ''JN Jreland, which outnuml>er wh ich. the fl.1urphy11 or the KeTiy1~" A. The Dublin telephone directory lisls six columns of Murphy•, five columns of Kellys , that'11 all I know. AR.GUMEl'(T' conlinued over where in the Bible ii tel11 a man how to wipe dishe1. Thal'! Second Kings XXI, 13: " .•. A1 a man wipeth a dish. Wiping lt and turning It ; up1ide down." This refe!"f'T'lee repeatedly has been quoted tq wives in search of biblical proof that their husbands should help in the kitchen. COST of a new federal office building generally runs ~ about 35 percent higher than the cost of a private qflice building. Take! about two years for private industry to design and construct such an edifice. but about fi ve yean for the federal 'ovemment to do IJO. Can you explain why! ' ~ RJNTS---The Household Hints experts 11rlvise : I. Shine your bathroom chrome with rubbinR alcoML 2. Rur.v the old banana peel-' around your ro11e bu11he11. And. 3. Count on a dozen Jee cubes ptr guest at your next party. AM A"\\'ARK the creator of the first rockinR chair wa!!I a Cape Cod hired man with a knack for whittling, but what was the name of the genius? This <1uery. too, has our rHoearch department baffled, 80 far. Help wanted. Addre11 mail to L. M. Boud, P. 0. Box 1875 Neto· port Stach, Call/. 92660. Arizona Closing Park Over Rabies PHOENIX~ Ariz. (AP\ - l.Dwer Lake Havaau State Park bu been ordered closed Exercise Set BANGKOK (AP) -The Southeast Asia T r e a I y Organization -SEATO -will conduct s. twe>-week military exercise In Thailand June 14-- 17, SEATO headquarters an· nounced. Maj. Gen. James J. Gibbons of the U.S. Army w!U be ei:ercise dirttlor. to camper~ for the Memorial Day wetkend by State Park Director Denn i11 McCarthy. McCarthy said rour or fivt persons have btt.n bitten by ('()yoles in the area and of- ficials believe the anlma ls may be rabid. A wildl ife l'!urvey Is being ('(}nducted. he said. to confi rm or dispel the suspicions. The Arizona Game and Fish Department, State Parks Department. Moha\'e and Yuma County Sheriff's offices and others will enforce the clomire, McCarthy uld. Fast Ball Or Curve By Reagan? Frorn \\'lrt Servlrtt Go\'. Ronald Re11u aays be ' ls looking forward to "ntch- , Ing Vtda Blue pitch'' while th& debatts between Sens. ~ge McGovern l'n<:I Hubert Humphr,y ere heln11: televised. Reagan urged Califnmia to v.•atch the debates, but added that he will be wi'ltching Blue. the Oakland AthlP!i('S star I PEOPLE pitcher who i! rtturning to ac- tion after a salary di!J)Ute. * * * The Duke of Windsor, 77, re- main.! ill in Paris, h I 11 secretary said, but gave no ln· dication that the duke's con- dition was causing alarm. The aide said: "The duke isn't well. He ls not in very good shape." The .secretary dttlined to characterize the Mriousness of the duke's . cond ition or give medical details of hi11 ailment. * * * Formrr Assembly Speaker Jess Unruh says he plans to run for mayor of Loe: Angeles in 1973. ''It is my intention at this point to run ," Unruh said 1t his Los Angeles office. The UMlJccessful 1970 Democratic guberna!orial can- didate declined to make a ronnal Statement. however. saying ''I ha ve not raised all my money yet.'' * * * The Sen;:ite F'inanre Com· mittee approved without op- poioition President N i x on 's nomination of George P. Shultz: to succeed .John 8. Q'ln- nally a5 secretary of the treasury. * * * There will be another Assa&1ination attempt on I major Democnitic candidate. 11ccording to prophetess Jeue Dixon. ''Who it is, when or where. - 1 cAnnot tell you," Mrs. Oix!'ln to\d a Sacramento Union reporter After addressing A luncheon there. * * * American 11uthor .ram e 1 Michener !tormed out of a news conference in Moscow to protest against what he uid was fri V()lous treatment of the Soviel Jewish problem during a symposium at the summit press cenle-r. "I won't stand for lt," P.1ichener shouted . The walkout followed an 11llercation between a Jewish American correspondent and Ale:11:ander Chakovl!ky, the Soviet ed itor or the influential weekly magazine L I t e r a r y Gazette. See If you've won this week~ May 26 through June 1, 1972. •• ·-· 24 12 3 7 ' 6 19 10 9 11 FREE Pick up 1 Bingo Ctrd from a participating Shell dealer today or Mnd a Nlf·addr1111d -lope lo Department BFC • I, P. 0. Box 279, Chic.go, 4 13 15 17 18 22 151 14 16 23 20 21 25 8 2 lllinoia 60648. Every Shell Blnpo Card Is a poilllflel winner. So,.., your card-it orie dONn't win thl1 WHk. ~could win next-'<. ' ( • • .... Fnday, May~. 1972 DAILY PILOT IJ I puffed softknit smoek dresses How do juniors se e Summer 7 In dresses of soft, interfock1rig kn it short enough so tanned leg~meet tho eye . In deliciously muted blossom prints. All with the odoroble short puff sleeve. Sizes 5-13 . A·. Bib front , cotton-polyesler by Down Joy, 18.00. 8. Pulls , scoopneck, tie bock in cotton by Down Joy, 18.00. C. Puffs, culls, button-front in polyester-cotton , by Confetti Girl, 20.00. Me il en d phone ori:lers invited. Junior World Dresses. • ' I c. it's at the h:roadway ANAMEIM NEWN)R.f HUNTING TO~ IEACH OR.ANG-E, M•ll of Or11191 •44 N. hcl~ •f f:lthlefl l•l•fl' 1111 Ed !n91"r A .... 111;1 ?JOO No. Twttln Str11t 171 4) 111·1121 (7141 644·1212 17141 lfl·llll 171 41 '91·1lll ' ' . 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