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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-05-30 - Orange Coast PilotI ' ' . -' . . r I 7 ~California 9S Ban .Stands· --· ;:-r.::=- • • . --. - Caspers De~lares Nod~ Bea~h Caper Pendleton Jetport In South Laguna C • •A1· ~ a1npa1gn 1ve Lands 7 • ID Jail • TUES DAY AFTE RNOON , MAY 30, 1972 VOL. 'L HO. 1n. J IECTIOHS, JO r AGES ex1co \ . ..,.. ' -'· .. . . ' Jail Wi11g Taken Over U.S. Agents Chase Six Australia Attraction Dancer Kerrv Duncan, 23, is quite an attraction. both on and off the stage. Jl ere She 1nakes the scene at Camp Cove, Australia. New Hearing· on Airport At ·Pen dleton Announced Bv JACK BROBACK M ,._ D•ltr .... Sttft Orange County Board of -Supervisors Q\alnnan Ronald Caspers, rebUffed Fri~ day by San Diego CoUnly of!iclall 911 his pntposal to establ~h a joint International airport at Camp Pendleton, to&u' &n• oounced another meeting will be held on the subject In July. Ca•pus uid he 'll'OU!d await the rttuK ol the Southern Calllomia Mlictatlon o1 Go"'"1mentl (SCI.Cl Tft.~11 airport 1tt*!y WhJcb ii DOW el· peded to be av1.U1ble sometime In JWJ. •At tbll Umt, Yt will try ogain lo piD- poiDt • Ill< lot • reatonal airport bostd • i on the SCAG report 11ndlngs," Caspers said. ._ He added, ''Thill time. U>e ~tarines will be invited u well as San Diego County officials and tlie JDeetlng .. 111 be held .In oranae Cowlly. "We are diJcouragtd -dov.'n but not out," Caspera admitted. ''If we find that locating an in- l<rnallonal· airport lo th~ are• Is too ~ a political Uern we: may suggest that Washlnilon tae over and ari>ltrarlly deil&Dal< a lite." CUpm had led an Orange County delept.lan Wliidi met with San 01eao lllee CASPERS, Pqe IJ I 100 N .J. l 11111ates Hold Hostages; Several l 11 jured . PATERSON, N.J. (AP) -More than 100 inmates seized control of the max- imum security wing at Passaic County jail today, holding hostages while negotiating with authorities. Seven hostages, including the v;arden. v.·ere freed within t..,.·o hours of the out- break, but an undetermined number still were being held. Jail officials would not comment on the number of hostages still inside. \Varden Jack DeYoung, nurse Carol Vanderlinda and two guards who suffered st ab wounds in a melee with inm3tes were freed by the rebell ious prisoners after about an hour. The giJards. John Bozzoli and Jack Donohue, were hospitalized. Just before noon, three o th c r 7 Nudes Pi1iclied 011 Beacli Scuids Of Soutli Lag u11a hostages. Lt. Thomas Oliver and guard., convicted murderer, from the second Walter Dobrolowski and Rodney Leone, noor to another part af the jail when the were freed . Dobrolowski had a tooth trouble began. knocked out, and was treated at St. The Inmates managed to overpower the Jo~eph's Hospital. Leone was hospitalized guards, seize their keys and release ap- v.•ith a punctured chest and abdomen. proximately 110 prisoners the spokesman Authorities were Inside the priso11 said. negotiating with the prisoners, but there The spokesman said the convicted was no report of progress and no word on murderer, who was awaiting sentencing , what demands may have been made by threatened to walk out of the jail usi ng the prisoners. one or the hostages as a human shield. City police armed with shotguns and The spokesman said some prisoners were tear gas surrounded the jail In the center arn1ed with homemude knives. of this city of 120,000. A spokesman l!aid It was not immediately known how !he the officers "'ere to stand by while the other guards were taken captive. negotiations continu~.-µi&ide. fAe.P..r.Moq Mayor Arthur Dwyer. Police Chief A Passaic County sheriff'! spoKt~mt{dy ·· Jarntt·kanrian and Sheriff Frank Daven- said Bozzoli, Donohue and another guard port negollaled with the prisoners inside \Vere escorting three inmates, including a the three-story jail. Supreme Court Rejects Death P en<ilty Hearing WASHINGTON (A P) -The Suprerne le.sting the constitutionality of the death Court today rejected an appeal by penalty. California to review a state Supreme The California court held 6 to 1 on Feb. Armed Men EL CENTIIO IAP) -U.S. border patrol agents shot a man to death and chased a half-dozen others Into Mexico after suspected marijuana smuggler• opened rire from behln4 a deaerl bush. An estimated 35 pistol shots peppered three Jeeps but missed the three officers on routine patrol midway between El Centro and Yuma , Ariz., Monday night. At abou t the same lime, two men were arrested beside two parked cars a half· mile away near Jnter.11tate 8 for In· vestigation. Henry FelchUn, chief border patrol agent, said about 300 pounds or man. juana were confiscated from the sandy shoolinti: site several hundred ynrds from li1exico. The agents said iieveral of the mtn fired automatic pistols. A shot fired hy agC!nt Jlarold Slocum ap1i;1rently killed the n1an. "Thet.e guys each had a bag (of mari· juana) J'd gueu they were carryi ng to a <.'1lntact man on Ulla aide," Felchlln said,. Seven beachgoers who provided a memorable ~1emorlal Day for onlookers at a South Laguna Beach by allegedly capering nude on the sands \Vere quickly gathered up '2nd c(Svefed ·up b'y Oran'ie County Sherilf's officers . ::.~r/~islon, .~~'l'l!,\PJ, jh_.$,. I\. e t .t !\..;-f!.l~~~~"l!,i:~ll:!~~lllf;w'!r 414fSdf e-1(· The six men and one woman found a change or clothing walting for them ai Orangi: Cou nty Jail. All seven w('re bocke:1 on charges of indecent ex posure. Among the seven roundl'd up by deputies in resPonse to c1tlls from ir.:te apartment d\\·ellers in the area v.·ere ?i.1ichael Frederick Ben\\·ay, 22. of 31568 lst St., South Laguna and Kenric Carlyle Brown, 19, of 125 High Drive, Laguna Beach. Also jailed on allege.lions that they suO-: bathed nude and swam nude in tbe Tablt, Rock beach area were Anna Christine Stockton, 20, of Mecca. Calif.: George Timothy Byers. 29. and David Kett6 ~foore, 23. both of Malibu and Dale Ed\\·ant ~tatlock. 37. and Richard JoseJti Herold, 40, both or Los Angeles. ~· . ,. Golden Gate Suici de SAN FRANCISCO (UPl l -A 3%-year- old woman has become the 448th known sulclde from Golden Gale Bridge. ,,,. Cout Guard reaivered tht body ol a woman tentatively identified f r o m papen In a pur,. as Kothleen Clancey of OU!Aod. She jumped from the span Sun- day nlgbL ' , The hir,h court is considering whether violates the state Constitution. to abolish capital punishment acros1 the The action spared the lives of 102 men land as being in violation..o( lb\ federal and 5 women who make up the 'natlon's Constitution. · ·· · largest debth row populatk>n, incl udinJit The justices gave no reaS<Jn for Sirhan Sirhan, the a~sa~sin -0r former declining unanimous ly to add Ca lllorn ia'1 U.S. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, and mass appeal to Its docket. murderer Charles ~fanson. Still before the court. for an e1pected California's petition for review, filed ruling next month, are other appeals March 31 by Evelle J. Youn~tr, the state Room for Two 01i Bea rskin? SANTA MONICA <UPI) -Move over Burt Reynolds (lf there's room on the btankin). The Sanu Manka C o 1 I e g e yearbook. to-be luuad.W~ . wlll Include a· (ulf color nude male ttntvfold, according to its tdltor, Sozanoe Yanok. She said &he con- ceived thf Idea of a tum·the-tabla cenle.rfold, but Cos m o po I it an Magatlne beat her into print with actnr Burt ReynoJdJ. The subJld? Peter Gowland. a succe:..ufut photographer wbo speciallzn In pictures ol aude women. ' attorney general, called the decision "an urueemly rU3h to judgment" while the death penally Issue was pending before the U.S. Suprtme Court . Younger contended that tilt ''Atate: ground " asserted by the Calif:>rn la court, 1 provision In the Califomia ConstiluUon, was "palpably transparent'' and that the rulln, consequtntly should be reviewed bl' the U.S. court. The California ()>nstJtullon prohibll! "cn.ie:I· or unusual plnllhment'' while the , ,{1~111~41r~blb· '81"'°"''"' ' unusual punl.tbn\ew.'"'JlttluSe lhe Cal· ilomta <'OUtt IOllld' -tho' doath penalty both cruel and unuauel, Younger argued, It wu really Interpreting the Ith Amend· ment to tht U,S. Constltulton. In seeking a htarln:r, the state 1!10 orgued tbat the decision viOlolt<I the rights or C11ilornl1!'!1 by "usurping the legla\ltlve funct.lon ." Younier 11ld tht t "by abolishing the death penally the court bl!! enected Ill per&Ona! views into (See PENALTY, Pace II ! Jrs going to remain Jl-0-T !or '.. at least the ~Jt several days ac-" cord ing to the weatherlady, with temperature• ranging from the ' 70's at the beach to the 90's Inland. ~ Lo~·s in lhe eo•a. INS IDE TODAY lit a te st of 1urvlool. :ZO Mor-~ n1011 /arr1i/iu in Pulu Alto ha~ l.w11uH Living for th.,.te we1k1 unly on th.e good• 1hat were ~ itortd in thrfr ho111t s wl1 1n thet1 ' wrrt told-urltlt no odvcmu no- . tk:e-o/ .. ,.iM ~Wlfl. wllicl• f.J spon10i''ld bV the 'clAfrch . Ste sturu on Page 18. L,M, ··~· 1 (llif1"111• •• 11 Clltdll"' UJ 1 (.11' •If~ ,._,. C,m·n It Cr•·wt111 u Dr•tll ""' "Cft 11 a11:1wkl ""' • t'~ltr!llr'MWI I """ lt:t .... ,. flio!tf!U 1•11 ....... ~ 14 ' ,.,.......... 11 Miii .. lr<'ICt ,, Mel""" • Moihl•• ,,.,.... ,. .. ,,_. ·-4 Ot"l"" ~ tt '-'• , .. 1, tttv. Mllt\ttt 1•11 T•lt\'tt'.M I ™'"'' • '"""' . ._. ........ w ........... . I ' r ~ OAJI v Pll l)l _ ~ -' T11t\d•:t. M;ay lO. 1(171. . 'Tired' Nixon Flie·s to Iran En Rou1e Home TEJtRAt\ <UPI• -President Nixon, fi.tonument. a tower ing tdllict completed tired rrom Intensive summlt ta lks that last yeer 10 mark the 2,500tb anniveraary produced a pledge of An1er!can.Rus~lan of the Per!llan monarchy. cooper.lion to prevent a nu c I ea r Thty mayor of Tehran, Gholam Reza hcil~auJt. ended a nine-day trip to lh& Nik~y. j'.l'l"e&l!nttd !\i:<an a ,olden key to -Sovttt Union-today •nd fl~w-w T-ehr.aa •. -the Clt.y and-gave-& smallu reproduction. for an overnight visit. to ~1rs. '.\'i xon. The NJ1ona then prtr The President "'ill spt.nd 21 hours in ceffled \(1 Sa;idabad Palact. tilt prc~lden· this k'ey Perslon Gull naticin. then fly to-tbil J(uc:.t hou~c . l'oland for a da y ~fore returning to Nir.un and th e Shah arranged two \\'a shlugton ·rhursdny nlght. i;:es11ion~ of talks totoifing four hours dur· \\11en Nixon's jct i the Spirit or '76, 1n~ the l're~idcnt's stopover. landed at Tehran'• Mehrabad airport, he The purpoR of r-.:lxon'1 vl1it to TelV'an, ar'lll Mr1. Nixon were greeted by the shah U.S. sources a:ald, was to auure JranJan Dnd the empress of Iran. leadfl'r11 -01 continued American 1upport tn from Kiev, the 10-Centw'its-<>ld capital of goala to which both nattons subscr l~ at !he Ukraine. ending h1J historic journey the c.onclwion of the Moscow talks t.1on- to the Soviet Union. day: An agreement to limit straltgie nuclea r But he Look time out to ahake handa weapons _ plus the recognillon that ~ilh a .doun Soviet citizens in 1 crowd of "there ls no alternative to CQnducting -300 w.Wcb..saw.JUm oft at.Kle.v,...l'be-crowd--thelr ·mutual -relatfone-on-the ha~i~ o "'av~ Soviet and American fiaga. ptaceful co-exlstence'' -\\'ere the rnaln During NJxon'8 visit, Soviet citizens successes at Moscow. i;a w .hhn on tel~vi.sion several times -in-But the big issues that threaten pe ace. eluding once 1n an unu.isual speech to the Vietnam and the Middle East con- them by the President Sunday night -fllcts. apparentl v were left undisturbed. and considerable pre~s atteotion was There was no evidence of any specific ac· giv~n to hia visit _and the aummlt lion by the two superpowen lo defuse achievements. them. 'J'.1t jo.int pledge "lo d-0 thei r utmo8t 10 Security was extremely tight for Nixon avoid military confrontations and prevent and hiJ wife in the Sovie t Union and it protection of the U.S. party out of con- cern about recent gumtlla activities. The flight from K.Jev took three houn. l3 mlnutes. with arr1val in Tehran al 5:30 a.m. CPIYl'J. The President emerged from the plane into-the-bright Nnshine, just-ahead of his wlle. They paused momentarily ond \vaved, then descended the steps . Nixo n wore a dark single-breasted suit. ~!rs. Nixon \\'ore a light-colored out/it and carried a shiny black purse. ficlals to his guests. thto two. tirls "'hlte d:re.sus presented flowas to Mr Nilon. QI Waving crowd! applauded and thl., heads of state took the dail for a 21-IUft salute which boomed out during the ·playing of the~u..s .. aod Iranian oatk>n.a't anlhems. Nixon then inspected an honor guard . , The joint peace pledge ln t.loscom~ cro\•:ned summit meetings that productd eight treaties or agreements, Including L pact to limit nuclear arms. ,. The Nixons Oew from Moscow to Kiev Mondav. Their activities in Kiev included rollo"'·ing lhe colorf ul airport ftlcom--the Per11lan Gulf ·region where unrest oc.. -t~ ceremort)\-lhe N»t&n& were Wiktn-b.y.-·-cur-Jed amonQ:--t0me of.Iran~a neighbOrL- n1otorcade lo the Sh.Phyad Aryaniehr Nixon looked tired aJ he left Rwsla .the-.outbreak . .of-nuclear war'!...waa con---waa·mueh·-t·~me-when-lbey~aN'i~-in- At the foot of the airliner steps, they were met by the shah in a civil;.an suit and the empress. "'ho wore a summer dress and a fl oppy white hat which she clutched with one hand to keep it from blow-ing·~away;----·· a banq'uet, a wreath·lay lng ceremony at the Ukrainian Tomb of tht Unknown · Soldiel',-and ~a . tour of--lbe. 900-.ye.ar.old. ~ cathedral of St. Sophia. tained in a set of principles -nonbinding Tehran. lranian ofUcials ordered heavy The shah introduced government of- . . McGovern to Strike Back . T (>niglit' s TV Debate ·Co nsi'il,ered Most Important LOS ANi:ELES ctlPn -Put ,on the de fensive hy •lubert JI. llun1phrey's broad jtlnck on hi! mllltary. tar and \\'elrare plan.o;, (;eorge S. McGovc1·n !Oday nttempt'J lo exploit llumphrey's support l'lf t,lie Vietnam Wi:ir when t'hey clash in Al'nlbcr trlev islon debn te tonight. The senator!!, ltiidlng contenders for the Democratlc Pre.,ldenlinl nomlnatlon, ctJnejder tonight 's ry deh.atc, their t1ec- 011d, the most importan t of the three ,;chedulcd in tticlr b&Ule for the 271 delecate,s at stake in the C41ifornla primary Ju ne 6. The two will appear on NBC't "Meet the Press" at e:30 p.m. PDT but the hour·l o11g lht~rvlc"' prouran1 will not be 1>hown In Cnllfornia until 9:30 p.m., prime vlttwJng tin1c. qfher11ly rtgardfld as a ~raw, perh1pi1 with a slight edp,c to Hun1phrey. the first. deba te ·sundoy was seen by fewer than 10 per cent of the regt!tered DemQCr•llc voter!!, according to media speclall.5ts. 'J'he third deba te is next Sunday. Admittedly startled. by llumpbrey's at - lnr.k, McGovern J\.1onday went on hi.o; o\vn offensive and chose as his tar.'(et Jlumphrey's elain1 that th eir record! were the same on the Vietnam Wo r. Spea king to the California ·Federation of Teachers in San Oieg(), McGovern said "Senator llumphrey mode what I regard as one of the most .shocking 11tatemei:its that I've heard since I've been in polit ic1J,' ,~hen he 1aid 'George McGo vern and 1 have the ume record on the "'ar in Vitt· nam.' "ls there nnyone in this room \\'ho does not regard that as utter non.isense?" ho asked, visibly ange red. He Hid Humphrey Wiil "poalng u ·a i;onvert to pe1.1ce and I don't intend to Jet him get away wit h it.'' . Cru~er in Upper Bay Sinlis; Damage $75,000 A. ~1.root cabin cruiser tied up near Sparkler, Sp-arks ~aid he lost a 31).foot North Sta'r Be'Bch nflt•r a weekend Jn cruiser he sa id could be described only as (~al11jlna mysteriously sank to the b()tlom "a character bont." of Upptir Ne~~r~ Bay somelinte Monda y '1\Ve never cUd fi nd out \\'hy tha,t one nll{hf. . sank ,'' SparkJ said. The "SpJ'rkler," ·owned by Gerold E. Sparks' Chris Craft was one ()f four Sporks, Stt'7 Morn ing Star Lone and boats reporttid sinking over the ~temorlal valued at $120.000. was berthed at a dock Oay v.•eekend. accordi ng to Sgt. Dean . ()fl SparkS' properly. Corvcll of the county •1arbor Patrol. The Officials of the Orange County Harbor three other boots were , 3Uccessfully l Ji~trict and Insurance ndjusl()rs were In-puinpcd out. , c~tlr.atlng the cause of the mishap this Jnorntnp,. ~ . ~ S1>arks .diSCQ.l/~~td bis boat. in. wa~ef1 ~P.. "A ho~e ·broke ()r .what ever,t'; l!aid to Lhe ~ab!n µpon . .aw_a~enlng thia,morn10&. S ·1 k "·ho said "it's like losing <lilt o( :ionie time berore 1 o c~ock. . tlP"1 5 ·~1 ,, lforbor patrolmen iin1d they sped to the IC ~nl !l:'L.:..____..__. __ ~ ·'· 'I d d' I ~·-I I e~ IN.bJ'ks haf tort a-·-flC8DI to. m-.e. sure 01 an \es.I IU"I: It 8 e 5 . "Y ,ver~ not leaking into the boiy. No such bo:lt :tl«lockl'iid~. leak s were found. Seven ycars • !:~· s~rlly after ~Uylng A salvage crew was working this morn - -Fro11I Page 1 CASPERS ... Counl y offlcials ()O the airport que~tlon FrldAy at the ROyal !tin In San Olego. San Diego ()ffk:i als, however. were cool lo the Ornnge County proposal lo locate :in internot\()nl\I jct ai rport on the U.S. J\larine Cnrps' C3mp r cndlf'l on rAni;ie . No Marine repreliente tl ves attended the 11•,'()-o('OUnlv !('SSiOll . s~1n Diego SupC'rVi$Or \\.Hlian1 A. (;raven sum1ned U(> lhe joiol 1nectlng this ,.,.11y : ''Orange Co111ity 11•en1s an airport on its doorstt:ps but not in Its ho usr. They ''amr here for us to sol \'e their problems f<1" lht>n1." San Diego officials seen1 to be pointing 1n()re toward de\'elopment of an ai rport ut 15 poss.iWe sites .but none of the.se ln- l'lude tbe C1uh;> Pendlett1n rnnge. One orr~hore nlrporl supgestlon under atudy b)' San Diego olficials ~·ould be at Jrn-:vriRI B<'och In !he ex1ren1r southwe~t , .... ~ ........ r Snn Pievo C1111nl1·. OlAMel COAST " DAILY PliOT 1"11t (lt•nQ• (0•1l OA ILY PILOT, "'1111 wll~l'I ing to raiae the boat so that the cause of the sinkin'g could be determined. ' One ()fficlal guessed the boat may have gone dO\\'n becau se o( 8 leaking exhaust system but he stressed that was ()nly a ~ueas. Sparks figure s the boat can be sajvaged but said. "!II decorating and fu rnishing 1vill have to be redone." One estim ate of the cost of repair was near $75,000. San Francisco Man F ot1nd Dead Off Salt Creek Oranize County Sheriff's off icers ~re "'()l'ldnf:! with SAn Francisco police today in a bid to rt'l rnce the fi nal hourll of a n1an \\'hos1' rully c1Ql hed body 'was found fl ontini: off Oan:i Jl()illl. Coro11t1r's ()fficers identified the m11n as f\talcolm Storev, 53, of San Francisco. Thry are todA~; altempllng to notify the d!'ad mnn's nf'xt of kin. SherUf'C ?leputtes said the body. · floa ting about one mile off Salt Creek Beach. \rns spotted by y:ichlsnH1n Bert !lodge of Tariann . llodge kept contact . \)'itb ~h~ i?PdY mull Orange County . U•rMr Patrol fl(li cer1 arrived at the ' S('('TI(', ' · ..... Officers sttid 1ht body was ful\i~ed :ind 1ppe11red to have beetr 1n t.Qe -wattt . for seve ral days. .., .• ·. ~. • He also caJled the prima ry "a co nte!!t between the old politics and the new" and cautioned the teachers that Humphrey ad\'OCates more money for a wide range of domestic programs without spell ing ou~ the specillcs. McGovern spent a rtlatlvely leisurely day, including several hours or lounging by the hotel swimming pool (see picture ()n .Page 4), v;hile Humphrey v.·orked the norther part of the state in a heetic tour ()f Fresno. Sacramento, San Jou. and S,n Francisco. Jn Sacramentt:>1 a man carrying a ri fle two blocks from where Humphrey was holding an outdoor rally was "detained" at the request of the Secret Serv ice. tie .,.,.as not arrested and there V.'as no in- dication of a connection bet"·een his presence near the rally site and Hum. phrey's appearance. Hu mphrey urged a cro\vd in San Jose to tune in on today's debate and declared "'let me tell you SClmething, friends, we're on tilt movt." In rapid auccenlon, with time out only for lravel, •tumphrey spoke at a labor bre-akfast, sipped wine with an 81 -year· old Italian immigrant, addressed a Mex- lc11n.AmeZ.lcan audience. and briefly l11 lked with the Service £mployes Inter· na ti()nal l lnion . At all points, he attacked 1'1cGovern 's .record . , "Humphrey ()r 1t1cGovern -it ls the di fference between having a job and look· ing for work," he told the !:lervlce emoloye1 union in San Francisco. "I'm alanned Bnd disturbed when a Dt;mocr!ilt is willing to· admit that his pro- gr am! will force working fam ilies to he jobless for a year." Humphrey said. "TI, is is callo.µs l. This b wrong." He added. "Senator McGovern seems more willing to provide Californians with compensation for belni:t thrown out of '''~k .ll.s ~ resul~ of bis ~roposals tha~, he ls antiow: to provide people with 10bs whlc6 brlng"clJgnity arid decency to tl\elr lives." Fro111 Page 1 PENALTY ... law over the will of a protesting public.'' Proponents oC capital punis hm ent, in- cluding Gov. Ronald Reagan, followed the de cision up by backing an amendment to the state Constitution s p e c i f I c a 11 y authorizing the death penalty. The move fa iled in-the Californi a Senate in early ~tay. }IO\Vcver, there is a dr ive to reinstate the death penalty in ca1uorn ia through an lntiaUve meMure. The Calltomia case dlrectly involved Robert P. Anderson, 34, who was under death senteRce f()r the 19&5 murder of a San Dlea:o shopkeeper. tn San Francisco Y<lungtr said the Supreme Court's action "was neilher surprising nor disappointing." He ~aid the court acted as tt usually does ''·hen a state court claims it Is bas· ing il s deeision on the sta te consti tution. "The lmpcirtant thing OOweve r, is that the validity of the death penalty -under the federal C"Onst ltution -still is before the U.S. Supreme Court. It ahould be handlni: do\\11 its deci!ion in 1 few 'veeks," Younger s8id. He said his office '1'111 stand by and ,1•ait until the court rule• on 1be caStS before it. "If the court uphold> thf d .. th penalty; then ii will be valid in 49 states and Un· constitutional ·only in California. That will put the i19we tquartly up to Uie people in Jbis 1t.te 9n whether tQey want to restore capita.I ~ment,'' he said. i1 t M<.oinN lllt Nt..,.1.Prfh, 11 Wlll/ll!(d Ill' l llt Oftn;t (NII PWll1lll"11 (OrtlHl!Y. Stc:ii· • •tlf )dll""I 41'1 ll\lllll1hf11, M"'l•UY tll•Ovf'I _ (dd(t. IDt CD1!t Mt1•, Nt,.Mrl ••ttll, 1-!U>l!lrogt(lll 6•tcll1F-ttTn V•ll•v. LIOvr>• 6~••· ''~"'''~IOl!ltll>fc• t'ICI $1n Cle,...nl•I ~·" J¥1fl C"rtl1tf1ne /ll. 1lnt lt tf'O IO"t l t<'l>tlti'! " 11u1111111td U •urilt rt 111<1 i..,1ch v1. 1111 ,.,nt1!t'I wo1o1t1l"1 1111n1 ,. 11 JJO Wt•I lltl' ,:a.1r .. l, (01lt Mtll , (tllletll)I , t :itM. ll ob1rt N. w ,,d 1'1 t110•~I •'!Cl r.,Dll•fllt J1t k 11.. Cu•!•~ Office1·'s Reply to Naked 'V'ttt Pt•llOfnl •..0 CtM•.i M•nttt• Tko11111 l(,,.,;i llifll.- lko11111 A. M 111p~i11• MtMt litt f llli., Ch6flts H. Looi ll:;c},.,4 r. Nill AMltt•~• M•n11I ... ldl"'t ........ C!!'S1t M11•1 U1 W.11 t •y ~''"' N ...... tl ltt<l'll »» Nt_,..,I •wlt.,tl'll ltt1111t &1•tt1 : tn ,..,..,, ,..,"""' M..tlflt"tft l ffd11 1N'S IHtll •oul•v••• Mft C"-fe! m N"11\ I I OM ..... llMI , ......... ,,,., &4l.4lll C'-"'ff ... .,, ..... &41·1111 ,_,_ CMllll Al'Ht ...,.. tf ....... l .. dl .,, .... ,. ,,_ .._. ~ <-..ty C--.wtlet .... , ... ~lfM. l trt, °'"~ (M ii Pt;bl!tf'llllf ~"!¥. Nf """"' ,,.,._,, ltlutlft lllM. -~· ""'"" flt .....,.,!umtft~ """"' •t .. ~ •""'-' #'Mltl ... ,,..... .. ""'""'' .,...., lft(9lllll UI• ,.,.., ltttt .t (Mlt ~ Cl ...... lt. ~ W c.t"lff M ... ........,..i w -'' u~1.s. -•1'1>1 fl'lllft#y ..._,_..,,u ~. • • • Lady: You're U11der Ar1·est \Vh11t do you ~Y to a n11ked lad)' who s11~·s to you : "'f love you Dtnnla?" · "You're under Arrest." is ••hat N&\li'J>Of'I Btach Police Offlctr Gt;w: ~RI told • buxQm lass doing her own ·Ladt (l(idiv11 act -illn~ horse -in the 400 block ol C.tallna Drive saturday. "T•I• m• to Jail .'' •h• allejltdly told him, before alltgedly ch•n!ln~ htr mind. ''TaW Mt to --fn-Y ~enli1t, '' lhe then .•lltaedly dtcl&rtd, accordlt>(! tO Ills ar- mt r.port. ()/II= Stn<ttl .. 1d !lit 11:)/llMltl 1!0".\ .. · -it'm ~··hb'r~ rtslditits dalmed-ha<! ti.... ..... "' ....... ,.., and· down tll<! IU..t lllhored Up her clotbt1.J1nd dresttd, 11 ordu..S • H~ 1n1ua111 1nt1ted btr on 10tplclon ol -. lndectnt exJJ05urt1 afte r \l'hich s h e rtpor1edly claimed she \\'as on an LSD trip i nd began hlngbQ: her head on the s~lly st.rttn 1nsldt·lbe police car. Once ht reached btadqu1rten with his prisoner, Patrolman Stntcal said he became worried abOat..ti"·en tryin& to take her out ol tht squad ciq. Gl \'tlt permlssloe by his pa t r o I supervillcr. Ollictr -.I summ<1ned a poll19 ma1ron and drove the amstt< dlrectry 13 Orange Coilllll' J1U. She was book«! n... Ult facility on M piclon ol dn&& inloiiotflon lnsttad of Che orl81nal lndectnt ~ charge. "I love you DeMlti°'the declored. Ollktr Stntcal dtp&!Ud • --,# ' IJl'I Ttlff>IMI• 'Youngest 'Gradiaate' . ..,. ' . Little Patricia Ayn TordeUa slept through mos t of the University q!_ .. Sci:anton's ·24th annual con1mencement exercises on the back of her~·father, David who received his. ba,chelo r of science degree. Pa· tricia 's mo mmy was ill, and rl addy took over the babysitting chores. Car Rolls Down Cliff, Rider Dies in Crash A 17-year~ld Long Beach boy became Orange County's fifth lraffic fatality over the Memori al Day weekend Monday when lhe car in 'vhich he was riding left Ortega 1-ligh\.\'ay 15 m i I e s east of San J u a 11 Capistrano and rolled do\vn a IOO·foot cli ff. Randy Adams \VAS one ()f three passengers in a ca r driven by Steve Poll etier, 18, ()f Anaheini. Polletier is reported in guarded condition at Mission Comm11n itv }lo~njf?! t0fi"•'. Others injured were Adams' sister, Tamira, 18, and Michael Harrison, 19, of c;arden Grove. They were treated and released. Highway patrolmen said the accident occurred u·hen Polletler swerved to miss an oncoming car y,·hile attempt ing to paSll a lin e of other cars on a blind c u r v e ;:1bot1t 15 miles north of San Juan Capistrano. Orange County fire and rescue un its spent more than an hour bringing the four victim-. un the sti>en cli''· Patrol Mum' On Accident Of Officer By JOHN VALTERZA Of "" OtltV PJlel Iliff Californ ia Highway Patrol officials to-- day slapped a tight lid ()f secrecy on the circumstances surrounding the freak trash of a San Clemente police ca r and a &mall pickup truck last v.·eekend which claimed the life of a Long Beach teenager. The spectacular col\isi()n wh ic h took place late Frida y afternoon severely in• jured four persons and caused fatal in- juries to 16-yenr--old Jeff Briel. He suc- cumbed to severe head and in ternal in· juries I.ate Sunday night in Minion Com· munity Hospital. Oftlcia lly, the Highway Patrol takes charge of the investiga tion in crashes in· volving municipal )XlliCe vehicles, and local officials by custom are forbidden to comment qn details. But S)Xlkesmen for the CHP in Santa Ana today said they had "no in· f()rmati()n" ()0 the tragedy. The collision took place at 4 p.m. Fri· day as patrolman Gary Adams 1J11Wered a c811 relating tO a car being drtven in erratic fashion along South El Camino Real. As the patrolman began accelerating near Calle Dolor-ts the small domestic pickup laden with weekend vacation gear and several cases of beer, pulled into traffic anc:. the patrol ear slammed into the'{O•r of the tru'*,jlh!cll:!~. Neither the siren oor the red' warn1n1 lights on lhe unit .,.,. operating al tbO time. • • Briet 11pperent1y'wa11 sitting on top of the load 1n the rear of the pickup whea the crash sent the truck skidding more than 100 feet down the roadway. Several occupants were thrown out after the lzn.. pact. Briet, who received emergency ~int 1id at the scene from a physician who was passing by, underwent surgery im- mediately after the crash. His three com· panions suffered painful, but less severe injuries. They were Mike Ball'ter, William Schutz and Dan Cross, all 18 and all from Long Beach. Adams , who earlier this year joined the local force, suffered a cut to his left eye, but ()lherwlse was unhurt. His patrol Car was a total J()ss. Because of the silence by the CHP it has not been determined who was at the wheel ()f the pickup. Jt is kntiwn, however, that the investigation into the crash i~ continuing and insurance in- vestigatbr1 representing the City of San Clemente were conferring this mom1D1 , with local police ofCiclals. The fatal crash marked the first traffic Cleath on clt v streets In nearly two ywa. NO GAP HERE! O.ur carpet installations are so smooth that you can lie assured of the finest seams anywhere. ', _J, We hand sew our seams from the back with a crou-stitch, and then reinforce with latex to prevent them from ever ·· coming open. This takes a little longer, but is infinitely superior to taped seams. The best installers in the county are performinq for ALDEN'S, trained by us to install the right way! To be sure that the carpetinq you choose won't have gaps where the seams ere, ma ke sure that ALDEN'S do .. the job. ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Placelltie A••· COSTA MU.A 646-4838 ' t TOUGH CLIMB -Tom Forrester. 17, Capistrano Beach, is a blur of 1notion in picture below as he crests top of Third Street hill in Laguna Beach. There \\"ere 55 entries in the competition ~tonday sponsored by the Laguna Beach Jaycees. 'rhe club raised funds to support its bicycle safety progra1n. ·rhe steep hill is about a 30 degree grade. ll is 175 feet long and on a \\'et day can defeat 1nost cars. Dirt y Feet Give Awa.y D~rty Filni TALLAllASSF.E, Fla. (AP l -lt':-i tll.SY lo spot a poor-quality pornographic movie. according to Asst. Atty. Gen. Ray ?lhlrky . "The model 's ft'et are dirty ." ~larky calls himstlf Florida 's '''.\lr. Porn " and "Chief Smut Nut.'' rlor1da Al· ty. Gen. Robert Shevin says ~larky -li:n0\.\'S • .-more il:iouf -pomogiapby ~ anybody in the Southeast." As the state's legn l expert on ille I se~ine!is. J\larky is the man the sta e·s palice forces c31l for advice \\'hen they \l'Rnl lo i"aid a ~ut shop or a nui v1c houst. And he says tht job has its dr111\'baCk~. .\ ne\1·spaper rc1><»·ted lhnt ht ~;;l! 1hrough 11\o sh0\\1ings of 1 filn1 t.:a llcd •·Titillating Tex" before deciding polit'c 1..:ou\d close the theater. Not so. said l\1arky. "Once \\'as enough., to make the judg· rnent. he said. ' But people still believe ht' sat through an encore. ·•t can't go any\1'here "'ithoul people saying. 'You like those dirty n1ovies. don't you? You see them t"·icc.' '' Marky .said he reads hnvd books or views allegedly pornographic movies about once a month to advise police and prMecutors if the material is legally obscene. I-le iaid hls biggest problcn1 1s \1·\\h i oven:ealous policemen. "I ha.Ye ipsisted you have got lo use \'try delicate tools and very nefarious methods," he said. "You go in 1here and got a book :ind you haYe a nice. quiet trial. You don't go !Y.'eeping in there \Vith the trucks. the buses and the cameras and seize everythin~. '' Zip Code A1·ea s Although all Irvine residents may no~,, use an Irvine mailing address, the city .still is divided into t\.\'O zip code areas. Residents of the ne1\' cilv who live north of the San DieRo Free\.\;ay will con- tinue lo use the 92705 zip code in their return addrel!scs. This :illo\.\'S mail being sent to them Lo be handled by the Santil Ana !\1ain Post Office, even though the address reads "Irvine, 92703. '• The remainder of the new. city I<: serviced through tbe Town Center postal branch. Residents of the city "'ho livt" south or the San Diego Freeway in the communities or Turtle Roek. 1 n .d University Par.k should use f~yine, 02664 in their return. address. as they have in the pasl. •• lu.sur. tto JO .. 11?7? s DAIL V PI LOT • --· • Bi9 Stores •• ~ ' 80 Shops Signed For Laguna Hills "l .; < •I Four majw departtnent stores and about ao ~pecialty shop! are btini: planned in tl\e t.aguna Hills ~fall. !ht llrst ph11.se of \rhich \\'ill be l'Olnplcttd ut fall. 197:1, Roosmoor Corporalion and Ernest \\'. Hahn. Int'., joint developers, bar<' tln11ou11ctd. The Broadway deparlment slor(', Buf- fun~s· ant! Star~. Roebucrand t"o : are three of the four major concerns already signed for the $30 million shnpping t'Ol11· plex. The Fourth will be announct'd lalcr, a Rossmoor spoke.sman s:lid. Located et l~e lnterset•tio n o( thr Soin Djego Fret\1·•'." and El 'Poro R~ad . !ht 80. A<.Tt sitt' borders Lt1surt \\'orld anct the Ho1 vurd J-lugli es Fin£ls ~Dntud,e l1i Van cou ver \'ANCOLJ Vl-:l\. l:S.l'. 1l'PI) -1101\':11·11 llughes. the topic of altnos! every l'On- \'Crsation hrre in l\lort'h. has all but bct'11 forgotten by rc.~iden\$ of th is \\'est Coast city 11 \\'eeks Rltrr his surprise arri\~I. About the only prrson no1v sho\\·ing in · lerest in his continued stay arc Canadian immigration dl'parlmrnt officials and e:<.- cculives at the B11yshore Inn. \1·here Hughes pays an cstl1nated $~.200.a·\Ye~k renl . Press aides senl from Los Angele~ to Lle\d reporters' que stions during !hi! early st1lges of thr bill ionaire's vi~il long since huve rclurned homl", lt"avinJ: the "'llll of secrecy 11round Hughrs int:1et . In a telephone news confercncl" Jan. 1 \Vilh aeven An1eric<1n nl'\.\'sn,t-n, liughes s:lid he planned to rcleast a r<'ct"n1 photogrnph to qun:oih \\'i ld 11pecul:.1tio11 about his appearanct". No picturt ha s been forthcoming. Neither has there been any indication he planned to en! his life of seclusion . a \\·l11 h pc expressed both during his ne\\'.s conference and in talks \1·ith Nic::iraguon Presidcnl Anastasio SomozH before flying here. llughcs is in Can~da on a three-monlh vi sitor's visa and the immigration depanmcnt tmis1s he will have to appear in ptrSon It Its office to make application to hatve the visa extended. "lt'.s up lo l\1r. Hughes," ~aid Lyall Ha\.\•kin!, Pacific regional director or im· migration. "IC he wants lo make ar-rarui~e'iits to get an cxten!ion, he1l have to come dowu here Hkc anybody else. Saddlt•batk Conunu1ulv llO$p1lal1 now un-1 der 1.'0nStruction. " The Arra bting l'On$11'u<'ted hy ltahn. tn!'. 1:; pHrt of a taratr l:tO-acre tratt ~ont>d "rrGionnl t.·on1mert·iRI." \Vhlch <'\'Cntu itlly t·ould rent•h n1or~ than on• rnillion squ11.re ftet of leasl4 blt ~pal~. The ·nosslllWr.0 \1 ntd t.Ag\ina 1rn18 mall bi plilnned to fr11 turc a S1lHn1~h motif In it:t 900,000 <"limn tt·('()nl rolltd 11quart f~L Tht S~r~ and IJufiutns' departn1ent Storts llnd 111ore lhMn hall of the SO ihoP' wil l h& 111cl11d<'d il\'.lhl lirsl ph11.se. N.·ht'<lulrd fOt' ptn:llie h\'11 art' lhf ll ro.'l.tl11·111 nnd lhr rtsl 11f !ht' !UlHlller .~hop . .;. i-·lnal co111plction dnl<' hit~ not been ,S('f. Thf f\Hlll l!self ••\I~ re111ur~ Spoin l~h t i l(I...~. tlt~11·1'rs, lrtts ii.nd a lari;::t f':Chlbilio11 .i1rec for arts and <:rnl!s lihO\.\'!'i 1tnd Jlt'nsonal tnttrtnlnn1ents. llo11.~111oor tnv isions thc mall as st"rv\nJ: La gun:.i llllls, t<:I Toro, Sot1th Lagunoi, L:igt1na Nii:,'\11'!, Lagunn 8f'nrh. 011nll l'oin t. l'npistrano Rench. [rvinr, &in Ju:1n Cnpis!rnno and Snn Cltn1ente. l'hr $6 rn 11linn Senr:i store, 11! :!1 4,W sqt11u·r fett. \1 ill include a J:Rrden •hori 11nd .. 20·cur t.:11pacit)' autu ctntcr in 1ct- d11ion tu ils rt•gular 1ne1·chnnd !se It \.\'Ill be the 27th Sear~ i>tore in Lo i:-. An~t1~s·Oran~t County area. Hulfums' 1\·i ll be a 50,000 ~quart fl)l.11. t"'().lev<'l fashion store, lhc 10th In Southtl'n California. 1·hr 3~nrl Bro<1d"·;,iy In Caliror11l11· Ncrad<1·Ar izona v.•llJ ha.Vt thrtr \evrls 111 the mall con1pltx. Architects for the mall only 11re Burke, Kober, Nicholals and Arehuleta of Lo!! Angeles . Exclusive lea~ing agent lor the cen!tr I~ Cold\vel\. Hanker and Co. Chan1bcr Guide Eclitor Retained ~1~. LU!'Y Carr ha~ bet"n rcta\Tit"d 'ror !he sN:ontl str11ighl year to coordin•t~ prorlucllon or lhc South Coast l>irectorv or tht> San Clementt> Chamber o( Com· 1nel'l't', !\lrs. Curr \Viii bt;ir lhe tlllt ot ad- \ rrl is1n~ rnanagcr lor the pubticatl<.tn \.\'hich wilt bejil'ln producUon 1'hur~day lro1n olfite.'f at 1321 Clll1 VaUe, araid chitmber manag&" Jtobort,..£van:i. , Mr~. June !\·lann 111!!0 will be pa rt of the directory 111arr, 1ervlnt as head or white· page U!!tlnR11. Tht publication Is dlstrlbuled free t~ South Col'l!t resident!! each February and ~ervP.:. as a rund-rai1tng pro)Ccl.•by th• ch8mbcr. Tl1ir{l St1'eet Bil{e Climl1 Initiated by Lagu11ct JC s Vacation Time ... Wagon Time A cheering cro1vd turned out ?o.londay for ""hat the Laguna Beach Jaycees pro1nise n·ill be their '·first annu.iil" Third Street Bike Climb. The unique holiday event found 55 dilig ent cyclists tackling the 175-foot <:oursc up the 30 percent grade on lhe do1\fntov.11 Laguna thoroughfare. Winner John Houston, 30. of Corona del l\lar. zoomed up the incline in a record 9,397 seconds to capture the first place trophy for the fastest group in five divisions, men's 18 years and over. tfouston bested Fred Davis. 31. of Stan· Ion. U.S. champion in the 4,()00.meter bike run, who made the course in 10.859 seconds. \\'inner of the \Vomen's open division was Janet Fiorcll. 29, of Laguna Beach. \\'ith a time of 22.7 seconds. Runner-up Sharon Almadore . 20, of Balboa Island. didn't finish the course. but was a\\'arded the second-place trophy as a consolation priu. Ty,·o trophies for each divisi on "ere donated by the Laguna Beach Cyclery. Tom Forrester, 17, of Capistrano Beach, \.\'On the high school division with a time o( 10.55 seconds "'ilh Chris Smith. 15. of Laguna Beach, close behind at 11.4 seconds. Jn the 5th and 6th grade division, Tom Harrison, 8, of Cos ta ~!esa, \Vas declared \\'inner \\'ith a time of 27.9 seconds. Run· ner·UP Shane !\tc~·lillion. 11. of Laguna Beach took 123.4 seconds to ncgouate the hill. T\\o young cousins from 1::1 Toro, Rocky Archer and Dan ~lcKinley, both JJ. placed first and second in the junior high division v.ilh times of 13.7 and 15.2 seconds, respectively. ' The Sandpiper Bar tean1 walked off "'ilh the Y1agon pull first place trophy \1·it h a time of 10.007 seconds. closely follo11·e<1 by the Su;pmer <Jf '42 Bar \\'i th a titne of 10.5 secorids. Fi\'e 1vagon·pullcrs and one rider (11olunteer George Seeman in both cases) et>mprised the learns. A Jaycee entry in the division. using a desk chair lvith casters, 11as disqualified after crashing at the finish line. P.losl of the participants \.\'t:rc from the Laguna area and coastal cities. but one Pasadena cyclist. "'ho just happened to be riding through to\.\TI \.\'ith a group of friends , took time out to try his luck on the hill and made it safely to the top, though not \.\'ilh a 1tinning time. Entry fees for the event, along with proceeds from the sale or refreshments to onlookers, will be used to 11upport the Jaycees' Bike Sa fety Program. Triple W eddi11g Honios exual Girl$ Marr y in State SACRAMENTO (API -Six young homoseiual .,·omen from Reno. Ne\' .. ha,·e been married here in a t r i p I e ceremony. The "·eddings v.·ere held in the '-fetropolitan Communlty Chun:h. vdth all the bouqurt.5. rings. rice-lhrowing and othtr feal ures of traditional ceremonies. The three t.'Ol1ple:. said they cbost California because holll0$eXUtil mar· riages arc not recognized in Nevada. ~ Homose1ual marriages h8ve no official rtatus in Ctdifomia. either, thou;:h bom03e1uals' 11tomey1 have argued that ~ the state's Family Law Act does not 1pecify that a marriage must uolte a man and 1 woTMn. "This marrlqe ls aaDctloned by the church and by God/' eiplalned on• &irl "1lo ployod Ibo rolt of brJdtcroom. "With thil, n fed "' can ftmclion u • lamil1 un it and as a unit in the ga y com· munity." She told a reporter her bride has a son by a prel'ious marriage, and they do not Upect to adopt any more children because raising one is enou!{h of a task . \\!bile the participants talked freel y, they did not allow photos. Nor did t~y rC\IU.I their ruimt11 because of pos.i;ible repercussiOM in t.'Onnecilon "·Ith their emoloyment. •·we hlde it VU)' well,'' sald one ... ,,., don't go around with signs.·· One bride explained tMt "Our families know •nd 1ccept It, 1nd that's all that's lmpor .. nt. I think If• about 11111<! tho ltral11tt world undtratandl what's ltap- peulng and 11:cept1 it." The Rev. JOltph H. Gilbert . who of· ficiated, said "ma)'be someday this will bf rttWI Jn the 10elll depanment n1hc,r than lhe editarlal dtpottment " Colony Park .. • , .. II<' CONTI NEN1'AL HLJ ILT A S1'ATIO N WAGON. COLONY P ARI( WOLJW BE IT! Colony Park. oilers the ne'v look of luxury in station wagons for 1972. Long the leader in tht :itation "'agon fiel d . , . ~ee ror yourself the rnost magnificent collection of better \Vagon ldeas under one roof ..• ·rest drive one today .•• Montego. . •'· Villager "Car Of The Year" ABSOLUTELY BEAUTIFUL IN A ~'TATION WAGON .•• 'fllE HO'ITEST ~'TYLING ON THE ROAD TODAY I e GREAT S ELECTIO~ e ,.\LL Wl'fl-1 . .\IH CONDITIONING 262' HARBOR BLVD ., COSTA MESA • 540-5l30 -........ ..,..._ ... ._,, ·-· \ ' -1 4 DAILY l'lLOl ..... i-'\. c ... ting,~J wtch T•m arph1ne Beach Season On Us Again ON THE BEACH' Sine• lhlo long Memorial Day weekend found us blttsed with the bt1t )Dltble weather alorig this bat of all potJJlble coatt1. I'm convinced thlt our real aeuon It now upon u1. Alao. lf the weather im'l enou p:h, the hilh level of aand in the family bathtub 11 enougtl to convince me thlt beach days are Indeed with ua once again. Additionally , the long weekend proved that a lot of tourlrll art also wlth u1. P1<lflc Cout Highway waa Juat one Joni thin parkln1 lot. There were a tot ol different way1 you could have spent your hotlday , Jf you liked drtvlna: aomeplace you fought the afortmtntloned tralllc. if you liked the 1horellnt, you then battled your way acrooo tht highway to lhe beach. ONCE THERE, you had tht chalet ol either dancing around In the hot 11nd or d1nclng around in the frla:ld water. Somebody forgot to ttll tht ocHn ~mperatuna about the hoUd1y. Jf you aelected the ocean water over the hot sand, you then found you had other visitor• be1lde1 ju1t the tourist folk. Wt had Jtllyll1h. Thoua1nd1 of lhtm. Those paky little flo1ter1 must hive h•d a field day with wall·to-well ne1h all 1et up out there In the 1urf Just for the ·If.Ing· lnj. · * NOT £VERVBODY, however, 1pent lhtlr holiday here on the Oranae Coa1t. Take akydlver .Norman J~. Cuttler of San- ta Ana, for example. (,'uttler launched himaelf b1to the air down at Elalnore and m1n1ged to mts1 hi• landing mark by contlder1ble m1r1ln. Jle ended up dang- lina from aome hl1h voltage electrical power Jlne1, with the Unea anappln~ 1nd popptnc 1p1rk1 above his head. Finally cut himself loose. Ju1t a little dlver1ion for the hollday . * AN ESTIMATED 12,500 folk1 ahowtd up yesterday at Jnl1nd Orange County's 1rvlne t.ke. Unofficial e1tlmate1 Indicate they 1rrlved there in tome 3,000 motor cart. JI my m1th ltn't hazy on th11 d1y- aftf!', that 11uggttt1 about four folks per. That'a a better averap th11 they run on the Santa Ana Freeway on regular work daya. * WHIL£ SOME went to lakes or ocean, others headed for the h\111. One of the more novel dlverslon1 along thi1 line developed In Laguna Beach where the J unlor Chamber of Commtrct llrld il11 first AMUal Third Slrtct Bicycle Hill Climb. Ont look and you can clearly tell thnt l.aguna'1 Thlrd Stretl Hill was Imported from Snn Francisco. It's 50 steep mo1 t folkt won't even drive up the thing. But the blcycliat.s had 1 field day. They 1pent all afternoon pedaling past an ele c· lronlc timer to aec who could negotiate the hlll the fastci1t. THIRTY·YEAJl.old John Huston of Corona del Mar. who was once A Pan Am Games competitor. set a record time pedaling up the 1rade In 9.!97 seconds. lie also hnd runs of 9.751 nnd 9.081 secondJ. Toward the end , Laguna J11ycee Prtsl· dent Bill Wooc:l11 ro1tn 8 foot race up th e 111· c\lne against Bob lies. Ilea won in 12.~1 seconds which was raster than a Jot of the bikes pedaled It. So thert you 1u1ve lt folks . along our beaches, bays, hlUs and byways. It just proves peoplt' will do 8 whole lot ar things on a holiday that they wouldn't even think about In• regular w~k. Fetuses Nu1nher Niue PHll.ADEIPH!A (UPI) -An unldtntl- r1~! !JO.year-old \\'OITil!n. Who had tlkf!n fcmlit y drugs for ~11rly four year!, prematurely aborted nine stillborn fetu!I· C! at lht> Univer!!ity or )'enftrylvania H09Pi!al J\.tondnv, Hospital officials said the woman, who hnd a normat baby three yrnrs ago, had betn taking \\'hat they called "a human mt'!nopauM] ROO· adotropin,'' a druR marketed eo1nmer- cially uncler sever1I nl!mes. lllt14J1, Mt1 l0, 1972 Extortion Try Bubonic Plague Threat Unveiled CRYSTAL BAY, Nev. IUPI) -A pluah caaino 1111 threatened with the 1pread of bubon1c pl.ague bacteria by an ex- torllon!Jt trying to bluff h!J way to a II mlllton jackpot. 'l't1l1 of 1 pharmaceutical vi~ left at tbe cutno filled to uncover a.ny aigns of tht deedly dl.atlte, knOWn 11 "the bl~ck death" in medieval time1. IN SHORT ••• I • Washoe County sheriffs deputies disclosed the extortion attempt Monday .after the Cal·Neva l.odge wa11 aearched thoroughly wilhout uncovering further \'la ls. A small bo'l was found on the gift counter of the lodge Sunday reading , "At· tention manag« -urgent e n d dangerou1." II 1ald the packap:e con- tained a vial of the bubonic bacteria. The extortionist left lnatructlona for delivering the $1 million and made 1 subsequent telephone call . The money was placed 11 directed In a stolen car parked near the culno and drlven to a spot two mlle1 1way. e Bridge Domn~d WASHINGTON (AP) -The Army Corp1 o{ Enalnet:rt aays the West Virginia dam that collapsed 1 a 1 t February, killln~ et lea11t IJB Pfl'IOM. wu doomed from the start. A Senate subcommittee ope111 hearings today an the dlNlter. ~e f;nglnee rs releaffl:d a report Mon· day 1aylng the dam ~'11hould never have be::: ~~~".. . The report spread the blame for the disarter efnong the U.S. Bureau or Mines, the Stare or' Wttt Virginia, and the Buf- falo Coal Co. which built the structure. All three, the report aaid. appear to have legal reapon9lbllltles over the aafe con· structlon and Inspection of a dam . Said the Corps report : ''The conaequent 'let·George-do-it' attitude resulted in tragedy." e %,100 E"acuated CHARLESTON. Ill. I UPI\ -About 2,100 peN10n1 in cast-central llllnols were evacuated Monday when a derailed tank car of a PeM Central freight tra in Hnt bright orange cloudl of fuming nitric acid over the area. Twelve pertona, all complaining of a bumlni:t aenaatlon In their throat and Juna:s from lnhaltUon of acid fumes, w«e treated at Charleston C o m m u n l t y H03pltal ind released. The evacuation Jested eight houri. Colu County civil defenae director Mark Buaekrus warned all those persons who might have been exposed to the fwnes to conault a phyaician. "People may not have been burned by the gas itself," Busekrus said. "They may have been exposed and not know it and come down Ill 24 or 48 hours later." The alarm was sounded after 22 cars of the 80-car train, eastbound from St. Louil'! to New York State, derailed about eight miles ea1t of here, near the vUlage of Ashmore. Tbe evacuation alert covered a 40..~uare mile area between Ashmore and the town or Oakland. The tank car, loaded with more than 15,000 p:allons of liquid nitric acid, overturned and ruptured, 11ending about MISS. Crnah Siie A h.ellcopter carrying \\1orkmen to Jobs on an offshore oil rig In south Louisiana swan1plands cr8'hed and killed all JI men aboard. Ten of the victims were cmployes of the Penrod Drill- ing Co. of Lafayette, La. 90 percent of jlJJ load aloi'li the right-<if· way and into a nearby wheat field. e Wnllaee lmpro.,e• SILVER SPRING, Md. (AP! -Gov. George C. Wallace Is lmprcvtng alowly, hi1 doctort 88)', end bu his choice of tbe hospital menu. The Alabama chief executive's ab- dominal wound. doctors a t t e n d i n g Wallace &Elld In a dally medical briefing Monday, 11how1 lesa dralnage or abscesJ dally. They said the governor'a condition con- tinued to improve 1lowly and gradually. Charles Snider, Wellace '1 nat ional campaign officer . said the governor's aon, George Jr., 20, would go along with him to appeal !or votes in the California and New Mexico primaries. Snider qooted Wallace a11 saying the governor wishes that Americans will qui ckly forget that he has been shot. e D11ke S11ccumb• PARIS (UPI! -The flag-draped body of the Duke of Windsor lay on view to a few close friends In his rented Pari! mansion today and the duches1 for whom he gave up his throne was reported too overcome to fly to England with the body on Wednesday. The duke, who reigned as King Edward VIII !or 327 days in 1936, died early Sun- day at the age of 77. 1be came of death was not announced, but it was believed to have been cancer or the throat. The duchtsJ, the twice-Oivarced former Walli1 Warfield Simpson of Baltimore, remained Jn 1eclution in their mansion, a~ ~ Buckingham Palace spokesman said tn London her strain waa so great that sht would be unable to accompany the body when it is flown to England Wednesday but hoped to fly over on Fri- day. Thousands Watch As Kite Flier Falls to Death WASHINGTON (AP) -"I think we have a problem," the public address an- nouncer said as Robert Kennedy of Escondido, plummeted from the sky. Thousands <>:f spectators at Transpo 72, the international transportetion ex- position, watched Monday as the 26-year- old klte filer fell lo his death. A member of the A111trallan Birdman Team, Kenned y was killed when he IO!t control of his kite at an a!Utude of about 500 feet. He was being pulled into the air at the time by a speeding automobile. "He was in a steep climb when all of a sudden a gust of wind hit him or something," said Jack Wallace, 31, of Leesburg, Va., who witnessed the ac- cident. "His feet suddenly flipped over the kite :ind he landed back on top of it. He yelled. 'Oh, no.' and you could see him kick ing and fighting as the kite wrapped around him. As it folded up, he fell straight to the ground, just like a stone." Kennedy landed in a grassy area at the north end of the runwax..away from the ~pectators' stand but within view or thousands. A public: address announcer was pro- moting Kennedy's daring when the kite colla)l.'ed. Mark Slips Away 011 Ba11ana Split HONOLULU (UPI ) -The world 's big· gcst banana split is nothing but a memory, About 50 persons f\.fonday built a 268- foot split with 5,000 sc<>ops of ict cream, 500 bananas, 15 gallons of whtpped cream cherries and chopped nuts. Th.ey made the gastronomical delight in a rain gutter lined with wax paper. The ingredients had been donated by 1n Jee cream parlor. A crOwd or 4,000 persons stood in the p11rklng Jot during the work and cheered wl!dty when it was discovered lhe split beat a prevlous reeord or 160 feet. The onlookers were invited to sample th• dtllgbL Wllhin mlnutts, It"" gone. _Needles Hits 103 Degrees TrmperafNrea "llft lt• """'· A~y. tlW " " A-...1 •• ~ • • • • ,nft{,,........,, t!My " .. ~ cl.wy .. " e.Mai.. r-111 " '" ~ ..... t'llllldl' " .. ,p O.rtttt.. ('°'"9f ~ " QI!(~ tkM.ldr " " " Ctlw:h•u•rottl , tal11 " " •• ettwt..w. tlCMfV .. " .. °"""". tlCIYll'Y " •• 0. Me!Mt, tttoudJ " " ... Ott"91l, tall\ .. .. . .. .....,Ill.,_ (IOl#d'( " " ..,.ftol\, Clfft " " 1111111 .... llOft .. tlc!Wr " .. ... lteilllat co,, t'loud\t " .. lM :"r. .. ,..., ... .. Uttlt tell. c!Mt .. .. . .. L.9'11tllll... r.!11 .. .. "' -·-.. " ...,.-..,,1111 " .. •• ,... .... ,, Jltlll, , .. ., .. " ... ---.. .. ..... v.r •• ....,, " .. ---·"•.OIV. "'"' .. • .II =-=-.. .. ,., •• • ::=; ...... "" " "" ...... ·:~ .. .. n ... " ~ ""W1•11e•tCIJ!OCAJI • ,.... (ft,°"'' " lillj(,.,,.., dNfr " .. .. ... ...... dNI' ., " '611 Ltl.• C!f'f. tfNf • u Sll'I Fnn<J-. tlOUdy " #t $ .. ttll, CIOUdy 7) .SI W111'1ll!Q~ cloudy 1t .. V.S. Summa.,, NEW YORI( !V"1l -Tiit illellttl ~tlf\lrt r.ciorted Monclty bl' I~ "*"'""' WN1t!er $trvlc• IMt hHlll'IQ ~lttll;t Mid H1wall w11 10.J 4"•-t i et'!:'~ WH J1 ft9rfft t i Cool• OH Sen. George McGovern cools off in pool at his Los Angeles hotel after returning from a short campaign trip to San Diego. An incensed McGovern charged it was "utter non- sense" for Hubert Humphrey to claim they have identical records on the Vietnam war. FTC Challenges 'Sugar in Raw' Claims in Ads WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) challenged as false today advertisements: claiming that "Sugar in the Raw" is organically grown, unpi:.oces1~ and m_pre nutritious than refliled sugar. Robert Pitofsky, director of the n'C's Bureau of Consumer Protection, said the case was the first in an investigation of advertising claims for "health foods!' Many such products have g a i n e d pcipularily because of pub I 1 c ap- prehensions about chemical pesticides, fertilizers and food additives. "We get a Jot of complaints about advertising of various kinds of health foods," Pitofsky told UPI. "We're looking at others too ." The ITC said Cumberland Packing Corp. of New York City, producer of "Sugar in the Raw ,'' had agreed to stop the allegedly false ads without admitting guilt. The FTC did not dispute "Sugar in the Raw" claims that it waa unrefined and Jacked chemicals and preservatives; but it 1aid that mt1de no difference nutri- tionally. OK, Lads; Check Lottery Numbers WASHINGTON <UPI) -Men with Jot· tery numbers up to 50 will be called up beginning in July, !he Selective Service System said today. The draft quota for July will be 7 ,200 men, a figure which draft officials say could raise to 9,000 in August The calls fOl' the rest of the year after August will average about 8,800 per month in order to meet the 50,000-man draft pool which Defense Secretary Mel vin R. Laird said would be needed this year. Selective Service official s said that no one could yet predict the highest lottery number likely to be called this year. MadGun1nan 11 Hit in Shooting Spree RALEIGH, N.C. (UPI ) -In lhe middl• ol Lut w .. k, Harvey Gl•nn McLeod talked with hil new boss about the future and a new lease on Hie. On Monday, Mc· Leod. hunched down btween parked can, ldUed three penons and wounded elgbt more in a suburba11 parking lot. Then, with polict sirens wailing In his ears, he put the .22-caliber rifle barrel in his mouth and killed himsell. Stn. B. Everett Jordan (0-N.C.), cam. palgn.ing tor S&tW'day's Oe:mocrJtic runoff election. was at the North Hills shopping center in an upper middle-class white neighborhood. Second!; before the 11hooting began he walked inside a building. Two women with whom Jordan had been talking were shot. one fatall y. Jordan 's ptt3' secretary, Wesley Hayden, was critically wounded. Authorities cUscounted any possibility of an assassination attempt on Jordan, who had changed his schedule at the last minute to include the shopping center. Relatives and friends of McLeod, 22, a black janitor, could give no explanation for his actions. Some said McLeod, who grew up in a shabby neighborhood and began accumulating a police record at 14, seemed content for the first time in hls life. La st Wednesday night. he asked his new employer, principal William Hooker of Broughton High SChool, aw.it in- surance and relimnent proertrM, "'He said lie f•lt at last ht'bad llOmtlhlng ao- ing for him,'' Hooker sald. However, a neighbor of ?tfcLeod'I parents said McLeod talked with his mother Monday morning and sbe sakt later he told her he wasn't going to talk to anybody anymore.'' 1.frs. Willie :t.-lcLeod said htr son used to have "blackouts," but hadn't had any for two years . She said school officials bad _tried tQ_ge_!.her _tQ. t~ke him to _Duke Uni"ersity for teats in 1962. but she refus- ed to sign the necessary papers because ''I didn't wanl them to mess with his brain." f\.fcLeod walked into a hardware store late ?\1onday morning and bought a .22 caliber Marlin carbi1e for SS4 and three boxes of ammunition. He lied about his police record, whi ch included two assault convictions, a larceny charge and a trespassing ca se . "He was his usual self ••. nice and quiet," siad the hardware cashier, Mrs. Rosa Rand, who had known McLeod all hls life. The 6-foot-5. I80-poW1d McLeod thert drove across RaJeigh to the City's largest shopping center and got between two cart in a parking lot. He began lihootlng 1t ••anything that moved." Police said he fired 14 shots v•ithin two minutes. He had to reload ()DCe since the rifle bad a lG-sbot capacity. 'Cease-fire' Ignored; 2 Killed in N. Ireland BELF AS'l'i Northern Ireland (UPO - Gunfire kiUed two men in Northern Ireland early today despite a ce&¥-fire declared by one wing of the Irish Republican Army (IRA). A British soldier and at least four gunmen were in- jured in a flurry of sniper attacks. An army spokesman said Leonard McAteer, 23, was shot to death and another man was wounded i n Ballynastreach, County Down. T b e spokesman said ft was not known what prompted the shooting. Gunfire roared in Mlllfields Road, 1 street !inking the Roman atholic Lower Falls and Protestant Sh a n k i I I neighborhoods,· less than three hours after the IRA 's Marxilt-oriented Official wing declared an immediate cease-fire in Northern Ireland. However, the more militant Provisional wing or the IRA re- jected the truce. Brill.sh paratroopers in an army polt . 200 yards away from Millfields Road 1earched the street or abandoned, crumbling houses and found the bullet· riddled body of a man in the gutter, an army spokesman said. The two killings raised to 350 the fatali- ty in almost three years of battling between Calholics, Protestants, British DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Oellvtry of tJie Oa!ly Piiot Is guaranteed MOllll'•Y·l"rld•'I": II you do not ll•v. Your P-'OClt by 5:30 p.m., <•II •nd your copy will to.-ttnMJDl'll to you. C•ll• 1r1 t1k1n unlll 1:30 p.m. S1lurll•I' ll'ld Si.111df\I : II yw do not r1<:1lv. vour copl' b'I" f 1.m. Sl!urd11'. ar a •.m. Sunday, call and a copy will be brOUQlll to rov. Calli art taken unUI 10 1.m. Telephones Mesi Oru1011 COUl'lll' Ar••• ........ '42>-021 NorTl'lwe11 Huntington a11ct1 and Wt1tmln11ar ................. l*IHt Ian ci.m..-.,., C1plttr1no e1ac11, S•n Jutn Ctpli1r1no, Oana Point, S011tn Lao11M, Laoun1 N lo~l ... 4"'4121 (~ti• hltllcll Adl'Wf!Mment) forces ,;md the IRA. lrb'rl&st 1imultaneously with the Officl'1 IRA's cease-lire announcement Monday night, snipers fired on a British patrol lured into the Catholic Ardoyne distridt by a small bomb blast and seriously wounded ()ne soldier, the a rm t spokesman said. An extended series of gun battles followed in the Ardoyne, known as a 1tronghold of the t rue e·rej ect in g Provisional wing of the IRA. Army spokesmen said as many as four gunmen were hit by British patrols, which fired back in 25 separate shooting incidents. There were no army casualties. The Official wing, bowing to growing Catholic pressure for peace, aceu~ the Provisionals of driving Ulster toward "sectarian civil war" with bombing and shooting attacks. ' The Provisionals, who earlier bad denied reports they planned a truce of their own, made clear their war or bombs and bullets to unite mainly Proles:tanl Ulster wlth the Catholic Irish Republic will go on. "Nothing will change," a Provisjonal spokesman said. He said the Provisionals insist that any truce musl be on their terms - withdrawal of British rorces from Northern Ireland, release o( all political prisoners and amnesty for all wanted men. Reaction to the orficial's cease-fire declaration ranged from outright skep- ticism from militant Protestant leaders to wary hope from British officials and to joy from pro-peace Catholic figures. William Craig, leader of the militant ~rot~stant Ulster Vanguard Movement. d1srrussed the Official's action as "unim· portant" and "a ploy to gain favor in Londonderry," where the Official's "ex· ecution" of a Catholic soldier home ort leave spurred the peace drive a week ago. What Does F,G,H Mean? A BALLOT CHOICE FOR YOU ON JUNE 6TH. YOUR CHANCE TO SPEAK ON COMMUNITY DIRECTION * TO PROVIDE SAFE P.LA Y AREAS AND BIKE TRAILS FOR KIDS * TO SALVAGE THE INSPIRATIONAL VIEWS ACROSS THE BAY AND CITY * TO HOLD A PART OF THE COMMUNITY FOR RESTFUL ACTIVITY * TO CONTROL THE DENSITY BY PROVIDING OPEN SPACES * TO ADD BEAUTY AND CHARM IN PEDESTRIAN WALKWAYS * TO SAYE SOMETHING FOR OURSELVES ALL FOR LISS THAN 3c A DAY FOR THE AVERAGE FAMILY. Green Survival -PARKS, VISTAS BICYCLE TRAILS ,. . . .. "He I"" u..e hi• tore .21 and !rs. au hen esl ar.t at two the Ues •• ng y .. ~ed nts. ing th• ard and ' bad of bl nl blic? nal any m ica1 ted fire •p- ers to anl ent, m· in 'ex - on eek k ' -. .. In Davis Trial Prosecution Calls Rebuttal Witness SAN JOSE -Angela Davi>' m u r d e r ~ kidoa p-consplracy trial entered its 14th and perilaps final week today, with tM prosecution calling a rebuttal wlt.neM be.fore final arguments to the all-white jury. Prosecutor Albert \V. Harris Jr., said l\1onday he would put "at least one rebuttal witness" on the stand to disprove defense testlmony. He did not el aborate. The trial was recessed Thursday for the I o n g l\Iemorial Day weekend. The defense rested its case in lhrtt days of te!limony in "·hich 11 ptr50ns were celled. 1iliss Davis, 28, cocounsel In her cast, presented opening argumen'.s and may make the defense's closing statement to the jury of seven women and five men. The jurors could begin deliberating by the end Of lhf Wttk. Several or the d efense \vitnesses placed the fonner UCLA philosophy instructor in Southern California at the tin1e of the Marin County shootings of Aug. 7. 1970. The slate, whlch concluded its case alter calling 95 witnesses and presentlni 200 pieces of evidence, has dlarged ?.IW Davis supplied tM guns u9ed in the k.id- napings and resultant shootings in which a judge and four others died. Defense witnesses incfuded a former Los Angeles room- mate of Miss Davis who tes- tified tha1 some of the guns registered to Miss Davis and found at the shooting sctne \\'ere taken without permission from a gun r ack in their apartment, presumably by Jonathan Jackson. Jackson. 17, a close friend ot 1'1iss Davis and brother of George Jackson. was killed in the gunbattle along with l\\'O convicts he freed from the courtroom of Judge Harold Haley, who also was killed. The state introduced "love letters" written to George Jackson by l\fus Davis and sai d her passion for the "Soledad Brother" led her lo help plot the San Rafael kid- napings in an effort to use hostages to gain his release from prison. (1"1111 ~tltlc1t A~IJ F, I H means Bicycle Trails C111trlllutllM If: Clllltnl Aftlllltt'Y P•rtl l tf!CI T""' Gl"'tr l"lff, CflalnM11, 424 St. AMI,.... ltd., N.....,-1 l1•cll Crash Kills 2 LA Men, Ht11·ts Wives WARNER SPRINGS (AP\ - A single-engine light plane crashed shortly after takeof f from an airstrip in this San Diego County hamlet. killing l\\'O Los Angeles area men and leaving their wives hospitaliz· ed in serious condition. Authorities identified the victims Monday as Dale De Hart, 43 ; Diane De Harl. 40: Harry Fitzsimmons, 44; Gwen Fitzsimmons, 42. They said De llart \Yas the pilot and owner of the plane. Man Booked On,DrugRap KANSAS CITY iAPI -A 37-year-old Inglewood man was charged Y<'ith po!a.c;ession of cocaine after receivini:i a locked fishing tackle box Sun- day at the MuniciJ?al Air Termihat Ii.ere. Airline officials had become suspicious and ordered the bo x opened after James Eugene Lewis went to claim it. Le\\·is "·as released on $5 .000 bond after being charged with possessing about one ounce of the restricted drug . A woman with Lewis was not arresetd. A preliminary hearing has been set for next Thursday. Or7Jy Coast~ Soutll,erii Qffers • 63Guaranteed Certificates ·Saturday Service ·The Insiders Club Art Llnkletter The Insiders Club: A new way to beat inflation. Its membership card perm its you to buy nearly every· thing you need from the finest closed-door show· rooms at substantial sav· ings -appliances, furni- ture, stereo equipment, sporting goods, draperies and much, much more. You can even buy cars at the "fleet'' price and moblle homes and motor· cycles at substantial sav· ings. The Insiders Club Effective Annual Earnings 5.00%·5.13% Passbook. No Minimum. 5.75%-5.92% One Year Certificate $1,000 Minimum, 6.00%·6,18% Two to Five Year Certificates $5,000 Minimum. Up lo 90 days loss of interest on amounts withdrawn before maturity oo all certi ficate accounts. also provides big dis- counts on tickets to spcrt· ing and entertainment events .•. plus a whole list of free serv ices; safe deposit boxes, money or- ders, travelers checks, and notary services. Membership require- ment for savers -$2,500 minimum balance. Coast borroo,·'lers nov1 receive as- sociate memberships en· titling the m to all 'outside referral s ervices. Ask about joining at any Coast office. MAINOmCE:: 9th & Hill, lcxi At!leles • 623-1351 Olher offices WILSHIRE at GRAM MERCY rt.ACE: 3933 Wilsh!re Btvcl., l .A, • 388·1265 L.A. CIVIC CENnR: 2nd &. Broadway• 62&.1102 HUNTINGTON BEACH: 91 Huntir11ton Center• (714 ) 697-1047 SANTA MONICA: 71S Wilshire Blvd.• 393-0746 SAN PEDRO: lOlh & Pacific • 831·2341 WEST COVINA: Eastland Sll<Jppin1 Qr.• 331·2201 PANORAMA CITY: 8616 Van Nvys Blvd.• 892·1171 TARZANA: 18751 Ventura Blvd.• 345-8614 LONG BU CH: Jrd & Locust · 437·7481 EAST LOS ANGn.ES: 81h /, SOto • 206-4510 OIAMONO BAR: 32B Diamond s.ir Blvd.• (7J4J 595-752S O.ily Hours-9 AM to4 PM Open Slturdays - 9AMtolPM (t:xcept Civic Center) Memorial Day Coliseum Show Seen by 10,000 comedian Ted Wri&ht. 1ctor Cesar Romero and L o s Angeles 1'fa)'or Sam Yorty. Temperatur<S In lbe IOo made sort drinks m o r e DA.IL'( ,U.Oi GERHAl.D LANG'S SAUSAGE HAUS -HAM- U TA.IL STOHS ---)700 I. c .. r H5tti_., 1 UJ S. lf .. •a.nt. Attekl• C.r-.. M• -67).f OIO us.2••1 LOS ANGELES (AP) -The nalion 's largest Memorial Day ceremony dttw 10.000 people to the Los Angeles Collseum for a relued, cheerful obser\•ance. prt\·alent than Junet.s butl~~~;;;..~---"""'-"""~~~~:'."'.'::'."~':'.':'.="."'"-----------' many PO\Y.J\OA groups l"•W ... 1111<11 A•~""'•"'..,11 The o bservance ¥.'as dedicated to the servicemen imprisoned or missing in Jndochina. Bands played to the cheers of children picnicking on the grass used in fall as a football field. 51 Jeeps carried celebrities as well as prisoner- of-\\•ar famJlles. a Marine Corps jet lean\ flew O\'er in the lraditionaJ "missing man'' format ion and applause filled the 'afttrnoon and evening air for more than five hours. Comedienne ~tartha Rase. a veteran of Bob H o p e ' s Chrishnas tours overseas, was grand marshal of a parade ln the 100.tro-seat stadium. The Tenth Cavalry "Buffalo Soldiers" Color Guard rode horse back before l\liss Raye's car and lhen followed one car for each of the 50 states. 111e \•ehicles each carried a wife or relative of a man missi ng in action or prisoner of war in Indochina. Some or those in attendance \\·ere actor Sebastian Cabot. singer Jimmy Witherspoon, pru-licipated in the activities. J ust ou t.side the stadium. VIV A -Voices in Vllal America -sold tht ramlliar copper braeeJets with tbe name of a prisoner engraved. Five military bands and numerous olher acts kept the crowd tapping feet until tht ceremonie9 came lo a close ¥.'ith an ecumenical prayer by seven clergymen. "This is a great middl&-of· the road movement," said Debbi Lager. one of the organiztrs of the event "\Ye want those men returned home to their families. so no ma tter what a p e r s on 's political belief, If he's here t~ day. he's doing the rlght thing ." Veterans organilations. the county board of supervisors and the Coliseum Comml.ss.ion helped put the show on. Elsewhere I n California, there were more somber ob se r v an c e s at many cemeteries. including Forest Lawn and the veteran s cemetery ln West Los Angeles. Man Who Put Up Bond Seel{s Concert Permit FRESNO (AP) -The man \\'ho used part of his farm lo free Angela Davis on bail is facing official complications in his effort to use another part for a foor-day music festival. Court officials readily ac- cepted Rodger McAfee's deed for 405 acres as guarantee fOf" :P..1iss Da vis' bond in February. That act. fo llowed b y McAfee's espousal of non- violent "humanitarian com- munism" brought the 33-year- old fanner national publicity . Fresoo County officials are looking more cautiously at the music c on c ert , whk:h developed during McAfee's su dden fame through a liaison with Dr. Robert S. Pritchard of Syracuse, N.Y., operator of New World Festival Concerts. Normal processing of the pennit application rtcelvtd Friday will take about 90 days -delaying final action until late August -said associate planner Rick Allen. Scheduling public hearings before both the planning com· mission and boa rd o f supervisors will use up much of the time, he said. The hearings could b e lengthy because o f con- troversy looally over McAlee 's views and concern over music festivals In lliht cf death.. ol two other large concerts held in California. But Pritchard &ays this con- ctrt will offer serious music and thus won't be likely to at. tract troublemakers. H e estim ated the fes tival pat· terned after one he held In Wuhington, D.C., in 1989 will gro!S 12.5 million ir 25,000 per80ns attend each day at '25 apiece u expected. Although the pennlt haa ju..t been roquested, Prltd>ord'a staff says the aile 11 being prepared and "eveiytblng la going fine." McMee says the festival will provide funds to make the down payment on a 30,~acre ranch for an agricultural cooperative he ktnned for 25 minority famlliea. His own 1,100.acre aprud 17 miles west of here already wa.s n.in as a cooperative with the farm's workers, McAfe:e said. However, be leased out the dairy herd to gtve him time for a speaking tour after the first rush Of publicity. McAiee said he and hls wife also applied for Communllt party memberlhip but were turned down because "they !eared I would try to shake things up." TWO COLORED MOTION PICTURES OF J. KRISHNAllURTI AT LAGUNA BEACH lllGH SCHOOL I~ lH[ A\JD1l011.1\JM • IU PAIUC AVr.Hllr. LAC.llHA •UCH AT t •OO PM, DOOlt.I ~ l >J9 TH IS WOltLD ltl.MOW'MtD PHILOSOnlU, AUTHOlt AfmTtAC'Hlll, U1 Ufl'PYllWID IH TH[ nuu IY HUS TOM SMITH, PltOFUJOll: Of"P'tl1t.OtOnf'I' AT MA.UACHU•tm IH!TITVTtor TU'.HHOlO(.Y tlll.Lf.), AND I Y ouvu HUHKJN, AtLIQOUl IDITOll or l lllTISH IJ.OADCA!TI~ cOMrAll1' (I.I.,. '~,,,t,.,.,.Y111pwi•·1~ "'"1 fo• IN l,.lf,'c!ial io ,,.... ,;,.,.u.• -Ml-•··'"I ADMISSION FREE NO DONATIONS Would you vote to Stop all Truck and Freight _ Train Transportation In California? You certainly wouldn't If you happen to be one of the 1,000,000 Californians who work dlroclly In tho tranjportatlon lnduatryl You'd Jose your job with in a low days aller election. And If you th ink about It for a mlnule or two, you ,.allze thtt no matter what you do for a living, you'd be In s erious trouble • Businesses of all kinds wou ld no longer be able to market their producls. Farm crops would rot In the fields and on the trees. Unemployment would rea ch stagge ring proportions. You wouldn't be able to provide yourself and your family with Ille basic necessities of Jifel Nobody In hla right mind would\'Ote "ye•'.' on such a stupid, Vfctoua propoaal. Yet that'a what you're being asked to do whon you go to the poll• on June 6 to vote on Propoeltlon No. a-t~ PolluUon lnlUatlv., Down In the fine print, Proposition No, 9 contain• ·~ Innocent~ sounding provision llmlllng tho conlent ol aullur In diesel fuel 10ld for use In Internal combustion engines In CalJrorna lo .035 par cerlt. The limit now In effect la .5 per cent-14 times aa muohl The very small amount of diesel fuel now available that would meet this ridiculous requirement 11 lnsutrlclent eve n to fill the needs of public transit buses, which run on the loweat aullur contsnt diesel now In production. If Proposition No, 9 should pass, lhe next day the great msJorlly of trucks and diesel-powered freight locomotives would have to atop runnlng-becauaa there would be no "legal" fuel available to operale them I It would take an undetermined period of time-two yeara?-sbc yeara?-nobody knows tor sure, before rennerlea could be edspled al enormous expense to produce diesel fuel In the qusntlly needed to meet our transportation needs. Knowing the lacta, nobody In hla right mind would vole for Propoal• Uon No. 9. LOSINQ YOUR JOB WONT SOLVE POU.UTIONI And voting tor Proposition No. 9 won'l IOlvt pollution. The Tecfl. nical Advisory Committee of the Air Resourcea Board of Ctllfornla report& that even If the aullur content of diesel fuel required by Prop- oalllon No. 9 could be achieved, It would reduce aulfur-clloxldo emla- alona In Los Angeles County by only three-tenths of one percenll What a price you 're being asked to pay to accomplish virtually nothing! Vote NO on Proposition No. 9 CIUFORIHINS AGAINST THE POLLUTION INITIATIVE 870 Markel Street, San Francisco, CA 94102 1127 Wiishire Boulevard, Loa Angale1, CA 90017 MYRON W. DOORNBOS, P1e1/dent, So1.1thern Council of Con1srv1tlon Cfubl Co-Ch1lrm1n Challenge the News Quiz ... on Saturday's Family Page ALL STORES at FASHION ISLAND OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 9:30 • DAR.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Coa st al Clinic Nee ded Methadone hydrochloride is an organic compound used I.a an analgesic to reduce or eliminate pain and in treating heroin addiction. 114 efficacy ln the case of dope addicts is that 11$ use in plat:i or heroin permits them to return to normal living, Including holding jobs and supporting the ir families. For the addict denied this transfer, it means robbing and burglarizing -yes, even murdering, if necessary -to fol the money to·support the expensive heroin habit. While some argue that the addict should kick the habit completely and not use the methadone crutch, that position is quite unrealistic, Ridding the syste1n of the heroin craving, once it is firmly established, is simply beyond the powers of many hard drug users, based on present treatment techniques and limited treat- ment facilities. llecognizing this fact of life, Orange County has establkhed a methadone maintenance program with a cllnlc"Jn Santa Ana under the direction of Saul Stolz- bergrJd, -d th 1· · - ' lzberg recenUy opene ano er c 1n1c 1n unmcor· pora 04 county territory adjace nt to Newport Beach and Costa Mesa and near Hoag Memorial Hospital. One of four regional clinics to be set up, it! purpose is to make methadone more readily available to addicts in the coastal area. ~ The action has drawn criticism from Newport Beach Police Chief B. James Glavas and Sgt. Leo Kon- kel, hiad.of the police narcotics squad. They fear a local clinic.would be a magnet for addicu. While Konkel says there are fewer than 10 known addicts in Newport Beach at present, It could well be that Stolzberg has better informaUon. National statis- tics indicate that for every addict known to authont1es there are two unidentified addicts-Clo•• to 30 addicts Hypocris y Nurtures Pornography (SYDNEY J: HARRIS) Stran1ely enough, I think that the rise of nuditt on the stage will soon apell the death of j>omography. Familiarity may not always breed contempt, but It cer· talnly breeds lndlfference. When the gymnaatlc pooslb!Ute1 of the naked body no lqer compel our 1t- tentlon1 tbtn the vut anent Tint& for pornography wm 1brlbk-to that aad small band ol bnpotenta and ktnkles who are Incapable of normal sexual arousal and must indulae In mu. lurbator)' lantasies. Scme Y9tl ago, In revlewlng a new play from New York, I mentioned how startled I wu whll'I the leading adress descended a 1talrc11e and strode out to center it.age covered with nothing but workmen's com· pensation. AFTE R A FEW riiinutes. however, I reported, nobody at all in the audience noticed her nudity. She could have been draped in a Mother Hubbard for all we cared: it was the character, the dialog. the plot, we were involved in, and her private parts had 110 public Interest. This 11 what happen•, of course, in nudlat camps and ~olonies, or In cultures where men and ~wmen ordinarily bathe together in the nu4e. It is more than ac- cldenttl, I am ciivlnced, that In such countries as Japan, where bisexual bathing is customary, the Incidence of rape is only a fraction of its frightening rate In the puritanical U.S. IN A B~NT Boalysis o ( Dear Gl oomy Gus IA>! Angeles County Sheri!! Pltchess says circulating petitions for the death penalty is "a labor of love." Thal '.s sick -sick - sick! ' -P.O. T~ll ft•lu... rlfle<h reMtf'I' YltWI:, Mt M<I HarllY rllt.. '" "'' -IH"r. I_,.. .-"' ,...,. .. •Mmr oin. o.11r ''"'· pornography written for the London Times Literary Supplement earlier this year, Ma sud R. Khan concludes that "Lbe trouble with ~aphy ta not that It Is again.rt God 1 law but against nature's · law In IO !ar 111t'1ubve'1J ti,.. gro1ith o! the: lruman adult into adfhood. '' Not moral 1lrictures, but a psychically healthier and more open society, will reduce pornography to the pathological fringe. LaW3, crusades, preachments, all these an Ineffectual so long as we penlst in the Manichean heresy of separating something called "the body" from something else called "the mind" or •ihe soul." Man Js a unitary being, and if the bodily part remains a dark and "dirty" secret, it i.s only to be e1pected that millions of nonnal per.sons will join the stunted and the sickly to learn something more about this secret. ACTON ONCE SAID that tilt only cure for bad democracy is more democracy, not leas. In much the same way, the only cure for pornography is not more pornography per .se, but more freedom or thought and expression and instruction, In an open, easy, whole.some (and ultimately pious) attitude toward the body and its functiorui. It i.s not social permissiveness - whatever that means -that encourages promiscuity or perversion; it is social hypocrisy and social repression that create a market for all the ugly and self- defeating forms of pornography. Not stifling, but fresh air, can drive it out. Gunther's Last Book Billa bongs and coolibahs; bandicoots and wallaroot. A Gallup Poll reports that more than 5 million .\fnerlcans would like to move to Australia -enough to nlse Its populallon by'40 per cent. If only a fraction of those' make it, and take "John Gunther's Inside Australia" along, th~ book will be a grtat 1uccess. Those of u.s who elect not to emigrate will find this a typical Gunthtr "lnslde,'' on Austrnlla, New Zealand, New Guinea, all of it authoritative, crisp, colorful and ob- jectlv•. The old co~ent·travtler who began the "lnlkt;;ries with "Europe"'' In 1936, visited theae regioDJ In t969-70, He observed and Interviewed widely, not knowing ht waa riddled with cancer. While writing tbe book he became tmnlnally ill and died In June , 1970, at •• HIS PUBLISHER IUrDed the project ovr:r to Wllllam H. Fort>il, a former cor. ,_.tent and editor for T I m e mopzlne, who worked clooely with Guotber11 widow on the notes and who ttti ated Gunlhet'1 journey• for his own c(lon:vatlcm. Tbut, "John Guntl>tr'1 ~ Austnlll," completed and edited b)' Wllllalll H. Forbis (&rper le Row; ~O). Empbult II oe Austtalll, major cltl., w autbocl, deteril, the Groat Banier JIMf. Yao -the underpopulation, •WllJ -Ille dtlel, the atautrlni 5 wlltre, for 1n111-. one Rodi lllp! "lat Re!lellle W• for " ..... • _( THE BOOKMAN ) Then New Zealand, !<country cousln" to relatively sophisticated Australia, very British, reserved. insular, physically spectacular .. And New Guinea, the book's most exotic .section with I~ nam es out of World War 11 history -Rabaul, Port Moresby, the Bismarck Archipelago. There are hundreds of native dialects here (37 major ones) which hinder New Guinea '1 chances of becoming In- dependent -although Australia, the aut~ show ln thia impartial analyals - bu been very slow in allowing it to evolve a.s a naUon. FLORA. FAUNA, polltie!, politicians, ways of life, statistics on beer drinking, racial problems (restrk:tlon on im· migration), the prospect of Australia becomiq a J'l!publlc with I non-Briilsb European, the llOl1 of immigrant.I as president: a big kaleldoocope of a book In the Gunther tradition.- The 1uthon conclude1 In thiJ aplrlted eumlnlUoo of rqiooi llill Uttie k119"'1 to -Amertcanl, the! these are places llhen democracy manacea to function mare efll!dlvely than In moot of tilt mt ol the 11obe. In the operation of his own country, the 1vtrage Australian or Nt:" 7.eatandtr llUJ feels the! be bu at Jeu\ a tlender llrlP 00 the baadle ol 1111 OWll lote. ·' 'llr!LLIAM HOGA" are now under treatment at the Harbor Area clinic. Eventually it will serve 150. Konkel is correct in asserting there bas been good street enforcement by the patrol division. But with all due credit to the police, Stolzberg, with his map pin~ pointing the locations of Orange County heroin. ~sers, likely is more current about the need for a clm1c lo-- cated near coastal addicts. Making the treatment center relatively convenient to the P"rsons tragically hung up. .on bero.ln and l!'r- iously wanting to return to normal living jncreases the prospects of success. Otherwise, the ~eak will charac· teristic of the addict is likely to prevail -wlth all that can ·mean in habit-supporting crime. The coastal clinic and its personnel -four full- time mental bealth workers, a full-time nurse, two part· time nurses and a part-time psychiatrist-deserve ap- proval and •upporL Public's Right to Know It's budget-making time -the annual headache season for elected and appointed officials. It's also the time when the temptation to conduct the public's business in private runs highest among city councilmen, county supervisors and school board mem· be rs. A reminder to these and other public servants is therefore in order: The Ralph M. Brown anti-govern- ment secrecy Act was passed to provide for public de- cisions openly arrived at. Penalties are set for violation. ~~,_,.., Playing games with the public's right to know the public's busine53, especially when tax dollars are in· volved, is not to be toJerated in California. Even plead· ing good intentions does not change the fact that it is IJlegal -and it is b~d government. ~WE ~EFE~ TO THOSE AS THE 'FINAL SOLUTION:.~ Thousands in Di rect V i olat io11 of Law . . Foreign . Students Take Illicit Jobs WASHING TON -Thousands of foreign students are holding jobs throughout the country in direct violation of the law and regulations under which they were ad· mitted to attend colleges and other schools here. With unemploy· ment persisting at more than 5 percent, this exteruiive illicit job "raiding'' im· mediately adversely affects a consider- able number of U.S. Wlemployed, partic· ularly Vietnam vet· erans and yauths. Immlgralkm officials and members of ~gress are belitg - deluged with complainta on this score. Under the Immigration and Naturalization Act, there are m restric. tions on the number of foreign students who can come to this country for school- ing. They are free to do so without na. t\onal, racial or any other quota's an two explicit conditions: _ (1) They must have the means to sui:r port themselves; (2) they are barred from taking "gainful employment" of any kind. FROM THE INCREASING volume or protests and other evidence, it is jn.. disputable that large numbers of foreign students are flouting the Jaw and depriv· ing American citizens or much-needed jobs. Offlcials of the Immigration and Naturalization Service are well aware of this growing lawlessness. To a limited ex· tent they have been cracking down -as shown by the fact that last year 2,280 alien students were ordered to leave. That i! an increase of around 15 per- cent over the 1,902 evicted in 1970, and even more over the 1,803 in 1969, Authorities admit this ls a small pro- portion of the number violating the pro- hibition against gainful employment. But Immigration officials contend they are (ROBERT S. ALLEN) unable to cope effectively with this widespread illegal practice because Congress has not voted fwids for an ade· quate enforcement staff. THAT ARGUMENJ' is sternly rejected by Rep. William Scherle (R-Iowa), member of the powerful Appropriations Committee -now deliberating budget requests for. l50afing welfare cosls aOO unemployment comperisation. The outspoken tegiilator strongly im- plies that responsible officials failed to clearly present the facts to Congress and make a convincing case to meet this situation. Sche.rle pointedly noted that, while the number of students admitted in 1971 (94,035) was less than the 98,179 in 1970, there were far more complaints about these students holding illegal jobs. "Wilh unemployment hovering around 6 percent nationally," says Scherle, "and our returning Vietnam veterans and high school, vocational and college graduates having difficulty finding employment, it is doubly necessary for us to take care of our own citizens first. Large-scale job- snatching by aliens admitted solely a5 students cannot be tolerated. ~ •• "NO ONE IS 'AGAINST foreign students coming .U: . our country to broaden their education. But we cannot permit them to take advantage of our economy to support themselves while they are here getting' the benefils of our educational system. To allow that is not only illegal but grossly unfair to many thousands of Araericaos urgently in need of jobs ." Scherle is di.9Cl!S.!i'tig with immigra· tion and other authorities what can im· mediately and forcefully be done to ef· fecti vety deal with this g r o w I n g backstage problem. He is bluntly telling them : .. I intend to leave no stone unturned to :Insure that vigorous action is taken to compel foreign students not only to abide by our laws, but to stop Wringing on our economy. If they can 't support their studies in thls country. then they don't belong here. That is the condition on ·which they were admitted; they know that full well; and they have to abide by it. If they can't or won't, then they must leave." TO UNDERSCORE his demand for more stringent enforcement of the law and regulations affecting f o re I g n students, Rep. Scherle has compiled a long list of violations. While in some areas these illegalities have been publicly noted, nationally this situation has gone virtually unpublicized. That is one o( the curious aspects of the problem. While much is sa id and written about the persistent high rate of unemployment. the most vociferous declaimers (politicos scrambling furious- ly for office) are complelely silent about the thousands of foreign students illegally holding jobs. Following are a few graphic instances of this evidence assembled by Scberle: NEW YORK: The Immigration and Naturalization Service office here has records indicating that in the last five years around 14,000 foreign students came to the metropolis professedly to go to school but never registered at any school or attended any classes. Not only are hundreds of these aliens "gainfully employed," · but a large number of others are on welfare and various other public benefit rolls. Thi5 Federal office admits to having received around 50,000 complaints about these il· legal activities. DETROIT: A number of students from India were taken into custody by Im- migration officials for holding illegal jobs. Some or these violators have been deported and others ordered to leave. Around 500 Indian studentl are in the Detroit area and there are numerous complaints about their flouting of the law. Labor unions have been particularly iiate about this. However, internationally-minded liber· tarians protested the crackdown on the Indian law violators, claiming it was due to the U.S. goveinment.'s dilferencu with DelW over the war with Pakistan. To which Deputy Immigration Director A. G. Salturellt retorted: 11Tbese peo~e violated the law, and they did so knowingly and flagrantly. They took jobs without g e t t i n g permission and committed other of. fense!. There is a lot of local pressure on us from unions and community groups because of the unemployment situation. We are not only checking up on Indian students hut on students from at least 28 other countries." SRIKUMAR PODDAR, a naturalized U.S. citizen of Indian elf.racUon who heads a so-called educational subscrlptior1 service in Lansing, Mich., admits that ii· legal employment among IncUan studentJ is widespread. "There is no doubt," he said, ''that about 90 percent of the Indian students attending the Detroit Institute of Technology are working. These stir dents borrowed heavily from families and friends to come to America to rtudy and they ran out of funds." West Coast Immigration officials ha ve information indicating that in the past year around 1,200 teenage.aliens changed their status from visitors to students and many of them are holding jobs. Of the 94,035 foreign students admitted to the U.S. last year, the largest number came from Asian countriu (31,723 -5,683 from India). Europe was second with 12.450 ; South America next with 11,216. African countries sent 4,083 students. The Dangerous Thing About Jokes A while back the New York State Com- missioner of Hurilan Rlghti; Jack M. Sable, cited an "alarming rise" in hannful humor directed at certain mi- nority groups -Poles, Greeks, Puerto Rlcsns, Italians, black, etc. Sable warned that hi.a agency waa ready to "proceed against offenders n under the intldi.9-.,;.. cMmlnatlon Jaw." ~ He added that hb i. office has penalized (tf. ~ offenders with stiff penalties in t he put. Sable charac- terized the retailers of such elhn" Jokes ~ "wlllw bt Insensitive." The comml&sioner was entering into strange area when he undertook to teU people the kinds of Jokes they can tell. Jokes "" no laughinlJ matter. One of the few lhlogs about jokes whld! can be IA!d De.Ir George : I have bee.n nadlng your column for more thu 10 yoarw which, I illl"S, proves thet I sort of enjoy fl But what n 70U drivln~ at? , , CURIOUS· Dear Curious : Stay tuned for the surirtae eadlng. Tbat'a the '"Y I k~7 ruderahifb:; .. I never let 1111'"°"1 Whal I'm about. l --. -.•. ·i 1 OHA:Rli'S McCABE with some certainty 1ls that jokes are always about importailt matters. These important mdttets usually center about things that thre4~n. 'as. Their target ts usually. ana irioSfDitterty, that group which is breathing most hotly on our necks. When did you last hear a joke directed against a WASP? I BA VE LONG SINCE given up on con- trolllng what anyone, Including myself, laughs at. Ll~e most of us, I'm a bundle of prejudices; probably more so, since I was brought up in the. slums of New York City, where everybody is inocutattd with prejudice agaln5t any national or radical ifOUP not his own. In my day, our cruelest jibes were di.reeled ag1inst the Italian-Americans. aince they were right on our Irish tails, demanding clamorously their share or the pie. The Popes, both Generoso the lt11lan neW8popot' poblllher, and His Holiness, .w.,.. favored target&. We loved Hem- mlnglNl'a crack about the ltallan arm1- ''unalak:bed la tbeer velocity ol retreat." Nott BA VE I Improved much with qlng. Tile other day I "" an anti-black gra(flto In 1 saloon pub. It wu of such a toWOrtng 11ckneaa that I wW.not prlat II la the paper, I let go "1lh I hwt1 gul• mr. At U. ame time, I was more lhM ll bit ashamed of myself. Yet the ethnic jokes I most often tell these days are dir,ected against the Irish. The inferior Irish, or course; not smart, sane. civilized Celts like myself. I usually get these jokes, some of them pretty damned randy, from another smart, civilized Iristunan -Sean Mooney oC Mooney's Irish Pub. The humor of these Jokes Clften centers around the Jrlsh fondness for potatoes, the o I d e s t stereotype In the book. TIUS IS TRE dangerous thing about Jokes, the stereotype buslne~s. We do not laugh at people btcause of what they are but because of what we have made them out to be. We m11ke caricatures out of those groups which demand things of us. The Jew I~ a smarmy, lhlevlng miser. The Italian Is a libidinous, thieving, spaghetti-bender . The blacks are laiy, thieving, baby factories. The French are stringy, thieving, , .. perverts, etc., etc. The thing au these groups have In com- mon ts they are trying to take our bread away. We rttallale with a wicked weapon, the Joke. We are not then laughing al people as they are; but al what we have forced Uiitm ta become. ln our cruelty, we are cunnlog enough to put the kernel of truth In !he ethnlc cnrlcature whlch male• It laughable to our group, and sympathetic groups. The Irish DO Ute potatoes ; but the1 are alao human belnp. IT MAY BE 'l'RVE, 11 the Jokes olhn lnoisl, that the Africans have jU.11 come down from the trees. lt wasn't so far away in time that all the rest of UJ were up ln the trees too. The worst thing about jokes is that they drain the humanity out of people, so that the joker can feel, for the instant, a very Devil of a fellow. Yet there Is another and healthy .side of laughter, which G. K. Chesterton noted: ''man ls a very comic creature," he said '••and most of the things bt does are CCJm- lc -taUng, for lnstanct. And the moat comic things of all are exactly the things that are the most worth doing -such 1s maklng love.'' OIWIGIC:OAST DAILY PILOT Rob<rt N. W<td, Publlsll<r Thomai Kteoil, Editor Albnl W. Bol<r EditorfCll Page E<Utor _. I· L M. Boyd Sybarites Ifuew The Way to Live Best bait of all lo catch trout is beef kidney. SeCond best, obrlmp. Third, blood bait. Fourth, sunl~h. Fifth, soap, Sudt were the recent findings of the Texas Fishery boys. Maybe so. It's km~. however, that Texas trout have exotic tastes. Among the yankee trout, nothing bests salmon eggs, certainly. NIJr SOON but someday, every man will be bald. So say the sicentists. Matter of evolution. What's intriguing about this intelii· gence is the conviction of a few of these scholars that the bald headed man ot today is maybe a million years before his time. EVER PAN for gold, sir? Fascin· attng pasttime, that. It's the claim of some mineralogists that your chances of striking a fine, vein today are even greater than were the chances of the early California prospectors. Credit better maps. QUERIES -Q. "Do Muscovites send Valentines?,. A. Research reveals they don't. It reveals further than the television newsman Irving R. Levine reported thi.! fas· cinating fact .as foUows: "Rus.sla is red, violets are blue, no Valentine Day, in old Soviet U." Q. L~ than 50 )Jei-cent of our eligible voters go to the polls oq election day. But in most of the western Eu- ropean countries, more than 80 percent turn out. What's thei r secret?" QUEENIE -v-OF '1lC GA.l'.Mr. EXECUTMS ~ A.U.l1MF d By Phil lntarlandl cn.r-~-.,1m. 's-~o w-w..._~ "One of the bigge.st problems we have to contend with in the advertisiDg department is EGO.'' Boys' Life Saving Course Scheduled TutSday, May 30, 1972 DAILY PILOT 'l Hawaii ' Seeks Car Limits HONOLULU (AP) -A new law In Hawail b designed to test whether a state can limit the number of auto.s on It& highways , and perhaps even- tually limit ita population. Gov. John A. Bwns signed a ' measure that would set up a state transportation control commission empowered to recommend limits on the nwn- ber of cars pe.rm,itted in the islands and on the number of airplanes and ship.< which could bring passengers here. The decision on putting the limits into effect "'OUld rest with the legislature. .TUE LEGISLATION was Jn- .spired by massive trarfic snarls which occur daily at rush hours on the major arteries into Honolulu, and the rusting, abandoned vehicles which mar the shoreline. The state has some 420,000 motorists. State Sen. Nadao Yoshinaga, principle that the state lw the «1.000 pusom from the eon-abo<lt 770,000, and 1 t a I o • right to .,. IU power to pro-tinental U1ited S t a t e 1 statlstldo• Robert SchmlU l te<t the safely, health and migrated to Ha~ail last year sa)'l Ille popul1Uon denllty in ' welfare of its residents," he and that 6,000 alien:s. most of the hlgb-rtse area of Oahu'•• them from the Philippines, Mak!ki ls 34,m per square • said. "The situation h a s immigrated to the islands. mile, COJn~ to 25,tM lot. become crltlcal and J feel that Hawaii !us a populaUon of New1 Yai't City. right 1now it takes precedence-..::::.::.:::.:.:=-=-~==::...:::__::...::~:..:.:.-_;_ ____ _ Mvtrtl.,..., over the others.'' IF TltE COURTS rule In favor of thls principle , Yoshlnaga added, it would clear the way for other population control measures. Before it adjourned April 14, the 1972 legislatioo a I so passed a resolution l\sklhg Congress to develop regula· , lions go v e r n i n g interstate Denture Invention For PHple with fonn• _:. tllllk mtmr.-tut ''Uppers'' •nd ''Lowers'' hdps ablorb &.be .&bocb ol bl1in& The nearQ;t thill& to havi.n1 your and cliewin1. own tttth is possible 00.-with 1 Wltll -ru~ mmtF dentUN pla,tic crtam di5CO\Wf th•t act I&--attn may eat. apuk, ~b. wltll ally holds bolh "upptrt" ind littJewonyofdentlltt:SC"OrPll~ "Jowers" 11.s 11evcr before poeaible. One •pplicat ioo mar la•t for lt°1adi11eo11rryc1\Jed FIXODGN~ houn.. Dentures that fit are~ for daily home use (U.S. Pat. ti•l to b'ealth. See your dent11t t3.003,988) and it bat revolu• repl11tl7.GetcnY•tO--weFIXOOSNT t1orwied d«lture "earin1. Fl.XooaNT Dentft Adbe&ivt OUat.. migration so that no state ls1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii overta:r:ed because it has too ll many people. The r.esolution ,, .... Ptlltiul ""'.,......'. was written by Yosbinaga and signed by 22 of the state's 2$ senators. State figures show that who authorized' the bill, said he H 'R' expects this llrst-step effort. to opes ISC F, I •' . ' , .. ~., • be challenged in the courts by Detroit auto manufacturers VENICE (AP) - A ~lilan and other business interests. company has developed a "For one thing, it interfefes secret mixture it hopes may with the right of an individual stop Venice from sinking into to travel between the states.'' its lagoon. An experiment in Yoshlnaga, an influential which the mixture was in- means A. No secret. They vote on Sunday. IF YOUR husband 11Utl carries GI insurance, madam, ask him who his beneficiary is. Statistics show six out of 10 veterans, who hold such policies, fail to change their beneficiaries even thou,iih they change their families. Many name their mothers ,then never get around to name their wives. And the mothers collect, they do. Democrat, said in an in-jected under an island was A life saving course will be tread water for five minutes, terview, reported to have raised the offered this summ er to boys 9 and swim under water for 10 He added that a limit on land 4Mi: Inches, The firm no\v , View Si·tes through 11-years old at Hun· yards. Pre-registration for the cars could be a restraint on in-has been asked to test th e con1r11~1.111e11• ,., cn1.1t111 A•v1..,., perk....,, Tttm tington Beach, Jife guard or-.. ~try~o=uts~ma~y:_be_m_•d_•_b_y_c_all_·_ters~ta~te~tr~ad~e~. ~~~~~,...'.!su~bs~ta~nc~e~i~n~tw:_o_•_re_•_•_of~l!!l!l!!i!llll•llll"llll"llll'llll'llll"llll"llll'llll"llll'~l!!l!'"llll"llll"llll'l!!I!'· ""',.... .... .,...,.,. ... ct. ficials have announced. ing 536-8807. "But I am banking on ~ downtown Venice. · SAVINGS -That about six million school children have savings accounts is now known, al.so. Average bal- ance, $35 per account. NOBODY, NOT even Heywood Hale Broun , knows the · origin of the word "tizzy," I'm told. CITY BUSES In New Zealand have outside racks for baby carriages. That, too, is all right. NOTEWORTHY bunch, the sybarites. They were the citizens of Sybaris, a city on the Gulf of Tarentum seven centuries before Christ. And it was not just the exception but their rule to party every night, sleep until noon, and w.Jrk no more than four hours a day. i.AJud noises in the morning turned them off. So they outlawed roosters, car- penters and squawling youngsters within the city limits. Ad.dress mail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875, New- port Beach, Calif. 92660. 'Open Space' Suit Filed by Group LOS ANGELES (AP) -the Calilorni.a Coast a I E n v i r o n m e n tat-planning Alliance, Oenshaw Neighbors, The six-week course will begin July 5 and culminate in the award of junior life saving certificates to those who suc· cessfully complete it. Instruc- tion will be in water safety, life Saving, and first aid, said Bill Kamer, a state life guard supervisor. "The course will be based on plenty of physical exercise," Kamer said. "We'll be com· peting among ourselves in variOue beach activities, and also competing with lifeguard programs at other beaches.'' C.O.St of enrollment in the course is $10, Kamer said. Qualification tryouts will be held from 9 a.m. to noon on successive Saturdays, June JO and 17, at the Edison High School pool. Each candidate must be able to swim 100 yards with an even stroke, Cafe Owner Sentenced citizens groups are challenging and other environmental SAN JOSE (AP) -The the county's approval of groups to force the county ,to owner of a posh Carmel several m a J o r residential follow its own general plan in restaurant Is to serve 90 days developments in the coastal the mountatoous r e g i o n in jail for evading payment of Santa Mont ca Mountains, between 'h>panga Canyon and $11 ,463 in federal income tax- charging the county is the Ventura County line. es. violating its own Environ-The 1970 plan provided for a Louis E. Zwahlen, 59, mental Development Guide, a "vast majority of land ... to owner of the Le Coq d'Or in preliminary general plan. be retained in open space," Cannel, was sentenced by Carlyle w. Hall Jr., an at-Hall said. U.S. District Court Judge • Wells Fargo Bank wOuld like to save you up fo$100 'Qn your next loan. If you've been considering getting a boat loap,a home improvement loan or a loan for some other purpose (excluding the purchase of an automobile) these special Wells Fargo Bank coupons can ~e you anywhere from $10 io $100 worth of interest. Have a look: COU~VAIJJECHART . The Men y.., BOrrow, The MOie Yan Savel ·~---~·,I; • C..-wfJ~Ji····~ . ' $1.00Jor-$100, .. $100 $100 $109 .:. f,100 $100 $5,pcn ,. $8,ooo $'75 "$ 75 $· 71· $ 71 $71 $ ,., $5,001 .. $5,000 $ 50 $ 50 $ 50 $1,501 !0$5,000 $ 25 For .• " ••••••• 36-. .CllltOS. 60mos. 12 .... l411to1. 96MOs. Note: Coupon has the effect of n!dDcing the inten:sl: yOO pay. For ex.ample, when the amoun t financed is $4,000:00, with'-48 monthly iMtallments or $1 0,.33 each, toLaling $4,959.84, it has ao ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE or 10.'7%. But by using th.is coupon, worth $.SO.DO, your first monthly payment is only $53.33, which lowenyourtotal paymentsto$4,909.84, and reduces your actual ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE to JtM'JW, lD no case will coupon be: honored for moro than amount of lint payment. • ' I I ., I . I I ' . I ·. ·1 torney for the Center for Law The strit specific a I I y Robert F. Peckham to three- ln the Public Interest, filed challenged the county's ap-year imprisonment and five---------------------------+-------.,------------rr--------- suit in Superior Court on proval of several ma j or year probation. behalf of the groups. developments, including one Peckham, however, orderd r , He seeks to stop county which reportedly could sup-that Zwahlen serve three supervisors and planners from port a population of 7,000 months in jail and suspended COUPON VALUE CHART TheMoreYouBoIIOW, The Mon: Yan Savel . • I I I I rezoning land in the largely _pe~r>0~ns;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;t:h;:e;;;h;;;al;;;an;;;c;;e;;o;;f;;th;;e;;;t;;erm;;;;:;· ;:;;;:I undeveloped coastal-mountain ,,,. region until changes can be made in the general plan. Hall told a news conference he filed the suit on behalf of the Malibu Township Council, Boy Scouts Branch Out tHICK STEAKS THIN PRICES LONGHORN: A32oz. Porterhouse 4.95 LUN CHEON SUGGESTIONS , LOS ANGELES (UPI) - ...,.. The Boy Scouts of America and U.S. Bureau of Indian Al· fairs have announced the sign-SOUP'N SAN: Soup or the Day and your choice Ing of a contract for a pr~ of grilled Cheese. or Tuna San .95 gram designed to spread scouting among youth! on In-REUBEN SANDWICH: C?med Beef with dlan reservations. ~ Sauerkraut end Swiss Cheese ~ Under the 14-month pro-. on Russian Rye 1.75 .-: gram, 10 _American. Indian . COCkTAtLS • FINEST WINES ~ 1 .... paraproress1onals will b e llf selected to develop scouting COSTA MESA• 3010 Harbor Blvd. (at Baker) • Phone (714) 549-0319 t programs on several reserva-TOR'~NCE ~Del Amo F•shlon Square (Entrance #5>.• (213) &.42·7339 ·t) lions. === IS IT TRUE THAT SOME FUNERAL HOMES CATER TO FAMILIES OF SPECIFIC RELIGIOUS DENOMINATIONS 7 • by EUGENE 0 . BERGERON It k tne ta..t certel• t....i ..__ ...... • pr1ll1111"'-t ....... el felllllles ef • ,.rtk•I« ,.., .. , .. ,,.., et ef 1fNCHk ..._k MditrffM,,'8tft· .. .....-Fwr-.1 H._. k. .. ..,..,, ... ..-MrlH -4 Mf"NI hnltlUM ef .-y ,.., celer er c....-1. T1Mft h " ... ..,.,,. ,., tM '''"'"' ..,...... a4 sel9C• t• tie h••-' Ill rel1tle111, ..,.cl•ff et t119 tht ef ..... We .. 4-dk ... te ttle CellC..,. dtot eU ..... WI Nrft ...,. tie MnM ...ni1., te tk treditten -4 c ....... *' ttie1t lldl.W ... relltlon ... lefa. If .,.. Mn • ........ -..t feMNI Mt"fk•, plene write et eel. WlleMwiH ........_, 4 .. ..._ wlll tie -wetH I• tlh cele1M. Balt:-Bergeron Funeral Dome COSTA MISA 6462424 ' 2 LOCATIONS CORONA .i MAl 673-MSO whoa,......_, wm .,. honNed tor. $6,001 ....... $100 $100 ·$1110 $100 $100 $100 $4,001 !0$6,000 $ 50 $ 50 $ 50 $ 50 $ 50 $ 50 $5.001 lo $4,000 $31 $31 $ 35 $ 35 $ 35 $2,001 .. $3,000 $ 25 $ 25 $ 25 $ 25 $ 25 ,., ......... 36-. 41 .... '°'""' nmos. M-.120 ... Note: Cotlf'OD bu the effect of rrduciq the interest you pay. For example, wheil . the amoun1 financed i.a Sl,S00.00, with 36 monlhly w1.11.Jlmenta o( $82.47 each • totaling Sl,968,72, it has a.n ANNUAL PERCENTAG F. RATE ol Jl.5J%. But by usin& this coupon, worth SlS.00, your fint monlhly payment ii only $57.47, which lowen your total payments to $2.,943.92, 1od rcdtJCC11 your actual ANNUAL PFJlCENTAGE RATE to J .. ,1%. ln oo cue Mil coupon bc.boao!Jd lor more than amount ol 6nt ptymcnt. . · , . COUPON VALUE CHART 'IbeM=Yw~ TheM=YanSaveJ wlP ... hoo ...... Ion .. • $25 5 $11 10 ,., . . . . . :14- Note: Coupon has the dlcc:t of reduc:fo.t the intmst JOU pay. For eumple, when the amoun1 tin&need i.a $1 ,750.00, with 18 moolhly installmenlll ol SI09.2J each, totalinJ SJ,966.jO, it has an ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE of 15.11"'. But by using this c:oupon, worth SI $.00 yoor flC'll monlhly payment i.a only $94.25, which lowen.yourtotal paymeot.stoit,951.50. and rcduc:esyouractilal~AL PERCENTAGE RATE to 14.l.4%. lo DO ~ will coupon be hOllOrcd for moto thaii amount of firll ptyment. I i - i I r I I I I I .l I I I I I f I aip 111658 coupons nowl I I Tuck them away some safe plaee.Then, when you're ready to applyforyour loan, • bring the appropriate ,coupon to the nearest Wells Fargo Bank. .. r '. Wells Fargo Bank has over 280 otti<:es lhroughout California. Co!;ta M"esa Office: 462 East 17th Slreet, 92627 / Assels over $7 ~lflon/Member F.0.1.ol Olwnpe Goest Pllol-.••. ,, • ' • I ~ Tllf'Sd.ty, Ma~ 30, 1q72 TONIGHT'S TV IDGHLIGHTS KTI'Y m 7:55 -Dodger B3'eball. The Los Angeles Dod gers take on the Giants at San Fran· cisco. , 'Water' Splendid Comedy at Fullerton By TO~t TITUS ot 1t19 D•U1 "llM il•tf Woody Allen 's madcap com- edy satire "Don't Drink the Water" has turned up again ln community theater, this time in the able hands of the ruUerton Footllghters. who ha ve assembled o splendid cast to carry out Allen's wacky machinations behind the Jron Curtain. Overemphuis on lndlvid"'I Poiotable as be warms lo his a fidgety die!, and George chariacteristics demanded by role. Berg does very well u the the script, is carried out wUh 1be catr.rer'r daughter who reaJ ambusador. Rounding relish by a weU~led com-somehow falls for t b i a out the cast are Ciarles pany in one ol the most en-diplomatic nebbi9h ii nicely Baugh, Carol Hale, Mary joyable shows of the fadlng UUrpreted by Colleen Doher· season. ty, 8 beautiful young lady who Crowell and Phil Sprague. k ho p1o he San!ord's set design is quite The picture of a Portl y nows w to em Y r effective, co~idering the American to u r is t, in physical charms. B d nd Aloha h. Walt A•••nheun· er nearly limitations o( the Mucken-trrnu as a s 1rt, _... ABC D 8:30 -"A Lillie Game." A man be- lieves hi s hostile JS.year-old stepson is capable of murder. Ed .Nelson , Dia ne Baker, J~oward Duff. NBC O 8:30 -Opryland USA. Johnny Cash and Tennessee Ern ie Ford arc hosts for this musi· cal-variety special from Nashville. Tenn. Under the capable di rection of Mitch Sanford, thb farcica l fa ble of Cold War chicanery '1 moves at a snappy pace with 1 impressive performances on an enr;emble leve_l. seeking refuge in an American walks off with the production thaler Center theater, aod a embassy with his wife and as the fugitive priest and rug on the tile floor ~f. the daughter after pointing his amateur magician who also stage does wonders for its ap- camera in the wrong direction n a Tr ates the story. pearance. · gh t · t th nd •----~un· er •-·-of t\,A-"Don't Drink the Water" is 1s enou o pain a ousa IU3C:w.:: ~ "'""' ,~ . comic words. And there are raTe actocs who is continually a romp from start to f.ini.9b. It just about that many gurraws "on," no matter who has the continues ror tv.·o more in the Fullerton production. :;potllght. weekends, F T i d a y s and Ted Grandke -nects an.. Saturdays at 8:30. in the CBS fJ 11 :30 -"Trog.'' Joan Crawford slars in this recenUy made science fiction thriller. KTLA 0 11:30 -"The Wedding Night." This 11.935 comedy features Gary Cooper. Tuesday Evening MAY JO 1:aoeaaem11>11tn (l)Jlllltn e 1111 111 ••lier B (I) Wiid WUd Wnl m JM flilrtdoMI Q)lltlCtlbJAow OJl loom! G) Hod1tpodft Lldlt ttJ ~nyRFD ml To It An110u11ud • @ ThrH StoD111 1:3D fJ Movlt: (50) "Whe Wu Th11 LadJ" Ptrt I (com) ·~10111 Cui· tis, Dltn Mtltln, Jtntl Lelah. ()) CIS Newt Wtlltr Cronkl\1 d) flltltntl lffrnphlc: cGI AlllfJ Griffitt! Shew II"'""' tnd the Prtftuor Im Strttealc. Stlllidt11CJ: Ftd tr ""''' ll'l'" ..... mrrwun a 1 ... &cm ai) Qwllll CIN [lb Ca1telll? QJ\'ldWJ ...... • OJ Hltd•htll Elllot M!nlr -Cd Nelson, 011111 Baker, How1rd Dutt, Katy Jurado, M11k Gruntr, CllrislDS1hff Slle1. A min wlla It bttlld ~ hottillty bJ his 13· "'''°" sl•l*>ft beU1m lht boJ up1ble of nwrder. ()) Onl ...,,. --S,.dal m @ nt AMcftet ~Should I N1tlon1I Primary S)'*lem Bt Adopted?"' a Country P'Uct 9:00 O lilly Gr•h•• Cruudt Th• firs! ol thr1 e hour·lon1 cruudt present•· tions from Charlotte, Nor1h Cuolin1. Gueit1 for toni1ht'• p101r1m tr1 s!nrttt M)'rtl1 Hill •fld Rtr Hiid .. b11nd. Ill"""" il) LI Cllad1 1111 C!;i~& Q' Tk Vir&1nl11 lili>""'" ll:lO fJ C!J CIS lt'9 Mt'lir. (C) ''Trt(" l:GO ()) i IHC !l'I TM Music Ptop1t Uti·li) ·7~JOln Cr1wto1d, Mlch1tl l'fQlflfll ol roell muslcl•ns. f11111r· Gou1h. in1 Si•n1. Ctlla10 T11nsit Author· 0 ®J m John"' tlr111• Sched· ii)'. Bot Sctus. cc111, Winter. a,1u. uled fUtlt is Illy Ch1rtes. tiful D17, Sly'"' th• F1mlly Stone 0 Movit: "Wlddin1 Nlfflr Cdra) I P'l"7 .... 11 '35 -G1ry Cooper, Anlll Sten. ta °"' 1,.,,,. D CD Cll 11 llilll Cmtt -...,,. u:00mrmli" _ .... l:lO. -lltl.O 1111 f~"' NUIO' 1MI Htrbtlt Lom 111tll: ts Slrone 12:>0 m Tt Tiii lit TMll Mtlldrtp 1nd htr lnduslr11l1Jt I•· CD C..""7 M.it ffllt, Wllo .ffcome IU'"dl /II I murl« lnvttlltetlon. D 11119 CllllllD-"1 Ull TtllMINI ~ 111d Johnny Cnfl CO'hut 11'111 11111&1C1l·vtrt111 1Ptdll locllilnr 111 lht new S69· ICll tnl1rttll1m1nt teCAtllon ctnttr ""' 1f1t11vtll1, Tll'tn. DtnllJ Tho'"" U II I lfJIClal 111"1 IR. Ciro! I.awn• tM Leellt uwme ,,. - 1:00 CD a a (J) llD •m m111 _ _, • ..,..,,...,. 11,,,* """"• tf F11t1,. tnd -nt ,.,... " ee,ttl11 '"°"' 1:11 D H"""1 l'llni l :IO•-: "OM ftlt I•-· (4rt) '41 -frtdric M•'" M•~ Soott. a Cl) CE II Mn •' tM w .. \: l :JO IJ Mewtt: "WIW " ttM lttei" (C) (IO) •A Utlll C••t" (1~1) '71 (com) '6S-Fr1nklt Av11orl. _/_ "•l'Mr 1t All1m1 · Co111 M"" 1-..J1'2 SHOWTIMlS Sidney Elli.90n enacts the £<= r-M •· th J c t 119 E Pl"N'>rlate menace 1·n a fine ucaen . a er . en er, . outraged New Jersey caterer · ~r· B v st o Fullert with a style shaTply Temlnis-perfonnance: as the secret uena 1 a ri ve, on. cent or Jack E. Leonard : his police captain; Leon Compton ..... delivery is sharp, his timing ls very good as the officious finel y honed, his e f f e c t but accident-prone diplomat; devastating. Equally excellent ;;~Stephe~~n~Osborn~:;;~i.~hll~anou.o~· ~;·~•j l,=i!l:l:d is Muriel White as his raz.oT·1i tongued '<'ife, a beautifully flat counterpoint to Ellison's bom- bastics. Michael 1-lanlon p 1 a y s Allen's self-parody, an acting ambassador with all thumbs and two left feet. Hanlon is difficult to accept at first. as he seems to be imitating Frank Gorshi n doing Kirk Douglas, but his clinched·teeth intensity becomes more (7(\i• 17J4JHi ~~.!~!:~.11~==========~1 ~ l'ICTI.ffS,.,_ I ·~"""""" :x'Y&Zee) Mtll.·l'rl. , , •••••.•••.... ,.. J.t "M •11!1 S~I"' 111..-.. T11yl•r, Mldt.tl C:.I• & s ...... 11 Y•rll Sf! ................... l·l·~'·•·ll "M $1111. • ... .. . .. . .. .... .. . l·J.~,.f "M EXCLUSIVE CHARLTON HESTON YYmE MIMIEUr ---CtNEODME 20 /, ... ~ • .::..·~~.:r "1..---CtNEODMI lf ... "..:-:.r:r:. 'l'"t f.l --' -~· SIAD/UM · I :;1, ~ -nm•r:.-.. - - - -.n• StAOIUM •3 ·.· .. .!l<.. ... .r:Il-~~-----... STAOIUM •4 . ' .-_...IJ ··~· -=-~ Starrlfll ..... ..__ l•dnt'tt ln"ll CMllty • ....,,.. Stet •1111•1 • lrlllllf NMllMttf fW I Aotlttfty AWl'*I "'IDDL•I ON THI llOO'" • "ANDltDMIDA ITltAIN" "kLUTI" • "SUMMla O" '41" ''THE LAST r1CTUI:& S"DW"' • "THll ANDERSON TA,.11'" "SWIDISN 'lY GllU" . ... "'SWEET IDOY DI' CEIOllAK" "HOSPITAL" AUO PU. YING> • NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES Wffllde1ys -l:OD-1:15·10:25 s.t. • S•11. • H1lld.ys - 1:l0..l:45·6:DD·l:15·10:20 p.M. F, <i, H means Parks nwAIMOMIMI 1 ......... ~ ... , .. , ...... ... ••••••••••••••••••• i rQ1:fil®-ifWW~ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • : • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • M·AT All IDWARDS Cl A MAN CANNOT LIVE BY LOVE Al ONE .•. ltl HAftlott SH°""NG C(ff'll JI EDWARDS ~ARBOR (~:.1 .. CONTINUOUS SHOWINGS DAILY 12:30 -3:30 7:00 • 10:00 P.M. WOMEN WON'T LET HIM "A fon1 ""f '"mf'()1 peopltJ h~ "'"'~ dthe<nu• llum•n" •• "'tll •1 • rro~n•nf l>Qll< to:' U 11// .LJ.1/LY I ,11{/L IY ,... __ , .. -... - ·~·,,··-~'•"·''.Po ........ ~"'• •'<• --........... ~.-. ..,, .. -·PLA'Y IT Af,All'I. SAH" #silent running- ,, Vl<JVfMAI. l'lfW.K. ltCHHICOl,.()11• fg! 0 CLIFF POTTS• BRUCE DERN• RON RIFllN 2ndATCINEMAWEST 2. TIM HAS A PU RAmESNAKE, WHEN TIM GETS MAD· STANLEY GETS DEADLY I ~ ~,.."" rav•n -TANLEY;f llDWAltDS lllZAlflH TAYLOR o RICHARD BURTON : ~;,;:it "HAMMERSMITH :~ .................... • DAILY '"-°T Drug Alternatives Sought Mes a Senior Honored ADVl•f11~ Now M•llY ;0 i'R CM& M.,. Hll!h School Se-Stephen Smith, of 1011 PreskUo Drive, Costa Mesa, has been awarded a l'r<sldeni'a Scholarship to al· tend Peppenllne UnlversHy at J.lalibu. The xholanhip 1mounll to FALSE .... 13.200 (!400 per trimester). With M-C.i ':: U.S. Prob es 'No Bust' Policy , Long Range Answe rs Smith is 1he member oi the ,,,., ·~~:!Dl= cauromia ScbolastJc Ftdera· ::~·w!. I loalW1 • •• tlon and rectlved the L.A. hold. You,_._. ~iii Tunes "A'' Student Ward. lie 111t1t1or9at\1'9bb'· twt~ was offtrtd a top academic {!;d~~.g"iarJ:....•-~· scholarship to David Llp!COmb 1111 to ·heal&._ 811 ,.. By CURT!! J. SITOMEll CIWtltlall ki.c. ......... hrvlM SANT A BARBARA -The federal govmuneot II working quietly with Jaw- enfarcement officials and school and community ll"'llJ>S In an effort to find new ways of dealing with drug abusers. The main thrust -particularly wilb marijuana and "soft" drug offendtr1 - Is 1way from Pollet 1"bu$" and jail sentences and toward reha!l.litation. A series of 13 "alternalivei to drug abuse" institutes -sponsored by the U.S. Department of Justice's BW'eau of Narcotlca and Dangerous Drugs (BNDD) -will he held across the country lhrollgh October. The American Public Health Associa- tion and other groups are pressing for removal of all criminal penalties for use and sale of marijuana. Under 1970 federal law, marijuana b clas.slrled with LSD, heroin, and other "hard" drugs in the most dani;lerous group. Possession Is: punishable by up to a year in jail and a $5,000 fine. Sale carries penalties of up to five years In jail and a $15,000 fine. For second convictions, ma1- 1mum penalties often double. However, many federal officials say that removing crimi nal penalties for use of marijuana would offer no real solu· tions to the drug problem. "Right now what we really need is a series of alternatives to drug abuse," says Dr. John Langer, chief of BNDD'a preventive-programs division. "And we also need altemalives to incarceration for you thful offenders," he adds . Interviewed here during a three-day gathering ol police officials, judges, com- Separate Bike Road Proposed by Cranston WASHINGTON (AP ) -Sen. Alan Cranston (0--Callf.) urg- ed that cities and counties be authorized to draw on the federal highway trust fund to build separate roads for blcvcles. He asked a Senate public works subcommlt~ lo ap- pro ve his bicycle transporta. tlon bill, saying it would be "a good, sale and sound in- vestment in the health and transportation need!! of WI all ." Cranston di!IC)os.ed a tabula- tion of replies from 175 California cities and 31 coun- tie s to his questionnaire about bicycle roads. He said officials of 153 cities and 22 countie!I r eported their residents want more con- venient and safer pathways for people to ride bicycles to and from work, and for recreation. About 60 percent. he said, reported lack of local funds for a bicycle-path way system, without federal a!lslstance. Famil11 Clre. .. Cramton sakl at least a third of the !.5 mlilio n bicycles sold last year were purchased by adulta. ''The blcycJe is onct 1ga considered an altematlve fonn of transportation," he said. "!ta use lhould be encouraged by well-paved, wtU-Jighted and well-developed bicycle polha.'' Top Student Wins Honors George A. McCulley or New- port Beach bu been named lo tht ICldemlc dun'• 1111 10< the wtni.r quarter or study at the Nortllnip Wlitut• or Tecbnoqy In Inclewood. McCulley, of 20I Vil Eboll, II studying for a bochelo< or science degree in electronic engineering. He II I l!lel graduate ol Newport Harbor High School. "" Bil Ke•ne -~-.... __ . • "G'NIGHT, MOMMY!" WESTERN ST A TE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF LAW . Of OIANGE COUNTY now 11cc.,tln9 men 11nd women who •re olthor: • •••1 11 wilh 2 ,...,. •I '"''''"'• ffllet• ufflfl ltOIJ •r • ..... 2J .....i ........ •"•' ..... 1 ... ,, ..... , "'· .. 1i.m~ Mlllty n.. ... ""'''-"' •f *"' Ii. ................ ~ ... " The J.D. or lLI. dlO'" un bt ••"*' In A y.•n ef pwl·flrM cluMlc J d 11M1 ptr -'i; 34 hei.tra ptr d •n. A Sp.{lt l ,,..,..,.. el lh,.. d at ... an s.tu«lay II ..... n.W. ffl' ,,,,,., .... ~It. Apply Now for September 7th Day or Evening Classes Wllfl Oii rHONI fOl ffiWOIMATION OI CAT•lOOUf IOO South l rookhun t Anaholm 92104 17141 635-3453 Gt.dllt ... -................ t.tllfonlt. ,,."' hr hMlfMtllft.. f'IOVttlOHAU.'t ACcmmt IT M CAUflOtNU. COMMm9 OF UI 1X*llUHlll MT ,, ''11 , • Smith received the award for his academic performance, potential and netd. College. """""· The award Is offertd by the UnlvtrSlty's Scholarship Com- mittee and can be renewed by maintaining a 3.0 (B) grade point average and satisfactory 1 1 dll>enlhlp. F, I Eagle Scout Terrance L. Jones, 17, was pre- sented the H o n o r Medal for Lifesaving recently from the Boy S c o u t s of America. Jones rescued a man trapped in a burning car in Fullerton in October, 1971. means a ANTHON't SCHOOLS HAllOR C(NTER 1l0f H·rt.r C•nl•r CGlll "'•··· Ct1Ue1nl1 Ph. 1714) '79°JJSJ Green Belts 1111 s .• ,..kl'lllr1! St, AMh•lm, Cll, tU04 Pit. 171 4) 776·5100 Ctnlt1b11!1•111 It: c11111n1 •11v1Mry l"IHI. ..-TM l'lt Glfl.ljtr l'ltt. (hlirm111, 414 St. AMINWI 1111., N•W .. rf -..ctll Clair Burgener has often said tha! Jhere are no shortcuts to high public office. And there aren't. A man must earn it. There have been no shortcuts for State Senator Clair W. Burgener. He deserves our support on June 6 to make him the Republican nominee for the United States Congress from the new Forty-second District. He's earned it. He's earned it during fourteen hard-working years in elected public office. First as City Councilman and Vice Mayor of San Diego, then as a member of the California State Legislature: two successive terms as Assemblyman; followed by two successive terms as State Senator. Clair Burgener's capability was acknowledged by Governor Reagan when he was asked to author the Governor's 1971 Welfare Reform Act. Those who have a deep interest in maintaining our quality of living recognized his ability to get , things done when he prevented off-shore oil drilling along the scenic San Diego coastline and when he made possible the expansion of Torrey Pines State Park. All Californians know of Senator Burgener's bills to promote better quality neighborhood schools. Without busing. The California Peace Officers Association evaluated Clair Burgener's Senate voting record last year. The result: nine key votes for strong law enforcement; none against. Clair·W. Burgener is no love-me-suddenly candidate. He has put in a lot of hard-working years. And there are more to come . He deserves the vote of every Republican on June 6, and every voter in November. He's earned it. Clair W. Burgener United States Congress ' • I ,, .. " . ' •• ; i Finance Briefs ' Japan W ~rriesAbQut Boom in Expor~ •1 JORN ~1'.'JFF retaliate with duties that al'tnaed S1 billion. In 19'! it market! to foreirn com "~ •..i-a..ipe W"Ould raise the prices at reacMd $3.7 billion, and in petition, a Ith o u Ch ttit; r."EW YOR~ -Japan hos · J.apants. imports a!ld 80 1910 it rO.. to $U billion. Japantse orcue that Ille tht kind of problem Ibo Unlfed ollsit . their competitlVe ad-"A!ld "°"· dupite the !act prtunt inabUlly or some States would love to ha ve. J~ ~anta_:e. that •.the ,ytn bas b e e I\ American companies to stll i~ uporls a.re boomint. its ·Amuica.rt e 1 e c: tr.o n l ca revalued. 17 percent In rela-Japan is. a result of their own. ~ el.J>llfl!Wlli.1.utron&. -t11analaeturers II>~• lo n'( tion to ·the-dollar of thetlnlted -faillnl •· Jy Jn its favor. claimed that. the Japanese Statr.r, which is· its. biggest At the moment, an It-mart But for peculiar rea~ri!, were · comperlnJr unfl!rly, ·but mi{ket, the 1911 figure is ex· mission representing Japan·~ Japan's eiport power i3 Ma.k· ~Y •~empt!· to prove such . peeled to be elthtr matched or ! major rel.ail and wholesal~ int some (Jf its trade com.. ac~hons •eneraUy aet: cxc;_,_, 1·n 1~1 . ' org anizations Is tourin11 the. , bocied· dof:n 1n a Ju.nale of ~ 'f'" • peUtor:t and partoen ~P'PY· technlca.llties. White ver the And that presents ~hat may Unite(! States eiplaining: to1 And moentz1nr that this i3 so. reason , the Japanese have.cap-be considered another prob-American busine.!lsmen how to' some Japanese official! are, if tured -Uterally captured 7 1 lem : What to do with all that compete in their country. 1 not unhappy, cenulnely woi;-considera ble part of the con-money. Th J bu · ried. sumer eltttronics sales in the The t.Joraan Cuararitf Trust e apanese sinemnerw --·--United-Staw. AlliloSt all ·hlii-1\ll(tsttathat Japan's el•im-th<t their U.S. coun . ONE FEAJl is t h ._ t transistor radlos, for uample, way out of th.is dilemma may ttrparts are not as espor~ forelcners, especially , t b e are JaP.1ne9t import9. be to begin lendlni more he.av-minded 'as they should be United States, 'trill retaliate In all, the Japanest ~-Uy 19 foreign borrowers in-They note that U • ~ apjn against the Oood of ported to the U.S. market last cludpw foreign eovenunents businessmen ba,·e lone ei ... .roods that thre a m a z i n I year more than '830 rnllliOn o£ and ~nJ,ationaJ deve lopment ported commodities a n 4. RENAULT 17 SPORTS COUPE-New front-wheel drive cou pe call ed "most ex· citing car ever produced" by French auto maker. Japanese are unloading on . radiO!, television stls, tape. ageldes. specialized indll.'ltrial equip--~ e .Lift.on. Lo•• U.S. docl.:s. recorders, stereos aod. other . ·~ men t but not consumer goods.1 LOS ANGELES _ Lltton The United States, for ex-i~. Their 19'1 trade surplus JN . OTH.E~ words, ."Japan, , Since Japan has n_o~ attamecr; l1a High Gea1• ample, is now undertaking an was $1.t billion. . ia trylng ·to offset the .~f~ a ~iandard of livi ng . com•1 lndu!tries Inc .. says . it ~t ~:ttensive study of why Japan of being th weorld's strong~i par~ble ~o _\Vestern European1 $14.23 million in the third LS able to e%J)Orl consumer TllAT TR.4.DE' surplu3 i! not tradin.( nation," says Morga n, nations, .1t lS ar~ed that the1 quarter. electronic product! at ·11.lch a one-year aberration either. "is likely to become an im-market is now r1po for U.S.1 The giant conglomerate ha<i low priceB, and the suspicion ln the early 1960.I _i~ trade portant financ ial center." <:onsumer good!. I Renault 17-A Sporty Coupe By CARL CARSTENSEN 01 "'9 D1flr l"lltt 11111 is that the answer i! subsidies. was actuall.S' balanced equally Some problem. And it will belp them , of.1 reported an $8.I million JO.!ls lt that ia 6'0, thet1 the United between imports and ·e1port1. . It may also comptl Japan to course, to rtlleve 1 very em.,1 for the second quart.er, ended States ~ight .. very w e 11 ' Frctm ·JMS 1o 1961 the surplus more swifUy open up itt own barrassing problem. I Jan. 31. if':;;;::;;;::;;;:::::;;::::;;:;;;:i;;::;;;:;;;;;:;;;;~;;~~~~;:;;:~~~;;;~;;,:;,~~~~~~~,;;~:;;:=;;::::;;::::;;::::;;::::;;::::;,I The current Joss, amounttiig I . ' The Renault 17 sports coupe, recently introduced in ·Southern Cnlllomla, has been heralded as "the most excitini:i; car \te've ever built" by the 74 year old French auto maker. Along. w I t h front-wheel drlve, lhe 17 is °e(lul pped with a 107 horsepower fuel-injected rear "·indO\'fS can be ope ned for additiona l ventilation. The rear third door offers easy ac· cessibility. f ront seats and hea d rests are ca.~ily ad· justable and can be positioned by a simple turn of the dial for any desired angle. Tu·o ad ults can ride in the rear or the 17. * * * enf(ine, four di~c brakes, rack Renault believer this car and pinion steering. floor "'i ll appeal to lhe most avid mounted sy n c h r o m es h sport s car enthusiast transmission a n d a n in-Retail sales by dealers of dependent front suspension Dodge c~rs are up 3.5 percent sys tem. and truck sales are up 137.8 A:it stand ard equlpmen l. !he percent through the first twert' ne:1v •· SP!lfL..J;:pupe Jw.._a __ ty__d_a~ iti J\.1ay compared to t~chomctcr, power \\'indO\\'S, the same period a year ago. it electric clock, tin1 cd gl11ss. was reported by H. 0. l\tit- and 1\1 i c h e I i n steel-belled chell. regional sales m.!l nagcr, radial ti res. Los Angeles Dodge region. Dela il \VO rk and design are Combined car and truck functional and lhe lou\"ered sales or 3.457 set an all time high record for the region with an overall increase of S0.7 per- The Mltda Rotary Engine cent. * * * For lnfol'mA lion on the stock or Toyo Togyo Co. 1.63 . 1.68 Moy 15 Call f:oy narthol ou:''\\ A n e \v 200 mph \"er- sion of I h e DeTomaso Pantera S[lOrts: car 1v a s recently revealed by its or i g i n a t o r . Ale jandro dcTomaso. T11•0 of the nev• cars. called the Pantera GT4. hal'e been entered in the 24 hour LeMans endura nce race which will be run June 10-1 1. Great Pncific Secur11lr·s 17291 J1·vine Blvd .. Tu.s!in j]f -BJ2-8000 Testi tl(?of _'-:.· ilrototypes McCOMBS SECURITIES:-co., INd. STOCKS-MUTUAL FUNDS _:TAX SHELTUS leel hNt. Sy1ullc11tJ...._ '4500 Can1,111 Dr.-Svlte 100 New,ert leec:ti 9J660 1714) 557·2400 F, I H means Beauty t1nlr!t11llon1 11: Cl!l1en1 A'wlwrv "''" •tn~ TNnt Gillttr "'''• Cllt lrm.tn, 4J4 51. Allllr1w1 Ill:,., Nt•P'•I 1 ... ¢11 DAVE ROSS PONTIAC 'S EXCLUSIVE NEW CAR 5 YEAR/50,00QMILE WaRRanty. At No Extra Ch arqe , .. ,., & l•l>ll• o~ ~•• •• Po"'" l,.,n has been procetdini: since January on European circuits and the resulls have been im· pre,she. The GT4 is a race prepared version or t h e regular produclion Pantera ~·hich sells for about $10,000 at ! e I e c I e d Lincoln-Mercury dealerships. DeltveriH since the May 1971 introduction totlit abou.t 364 but sales UU! past March reach 110. Actually. Lincoln- lo.fercury dealers sell all they can get. The engine in the GT4, like the regular Pantera , is a Ford 351..fV but the weight ha:t been lowered to about 2.600 lbs. by removing the air conditioning and power \Vinclow units. Chassis mod ifications in- clude a slablizer bar which can be adjusted for varying track conditions. competition shocks and special spoilers u~ der tht nose cowling to im· prove handling at high speeds. Driving power is by a self- locking five s peed syn- <:hromesh transa:cle. Magnetized Passenger·· , . Unit Tested · ' CHULA VISTA .<AP > - Rohr Industries, Inc. ·ptans'to unveil a futuristic paS~enitz: v ehi c l e 'wh ic h i! pow-. ered cleanly, quietly and . smoothly by magneti!'m, the. fi rm's chairman and chief e:f,·. ecutive olflcer says. ' But F. Raynes said the vthi- cle was successfully 'tested 'at · Rohr's plant here on l\farch 6, 1971, and said engineers have been reCining it ever since. Raynes said the vehicle is the fir3t step in developing a transportation system that could carry passengers up to 2,000 miles an hour. "lt will displace the airplane because of Its lawtr per-m ile seat co.1t, all -we ather capability, drastically lower fuel requirements and its almost sil ent operation," be said. Rohr expects to demonstrate the \"ehicle at an international transportation es h i bit ion which began Saturday in Washi ngton D.C., Raynes said. It wDf carry l? persons at a lime down a 60 foot track. "It ,\·ill be the successor to the cun-ent air transport· system," he predicted . "But it "'on't come tomorrow. lt Is a long s1ep froin our "larch 6 accomplishment to carrying passtngers intercontinental at 2,000 mile." an boor." The car body resl.3 on a set of special guide rails when the electromagnetic power is off, w i t h structural ettensions wrapping under the track.· When the po ,;ie r ls on, the eitensio ns are drawn up to the bottom or the rails by magnetism. thereby puSbinl the c:•r less 1ban an inch off the track. At the same lime, Rayne s said, the electromaanebC c:ur· rtnt can be varied fb such a way as to make the car mo\'e forward or backward along the rail.!. to 4 cents a share, con-1• trasts wit h. a $12.S mi!liOIJ II profit for the same three 1 months a year ago. The com- pany attributed. the thit4- quarter JOM to about $f0 ' million i1t belore-t4X · wri~ oJfs. some or the wrif.e.of!s came fr,Q_m 1iquidat1 nf azia c on s o lidat i n g sever'al divisions. esoHdtln• JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. - Secy. or State James c . 'Kirkpatrick has issued a cease and desist order against the De l E. Webb Realty Co. and Kenneth S. Parker, all ()f Sun City, Ariz. Th.e company and It s agents are cha rted with soliciting t iissouri residents to buy in· terests in rul estate located in Del Webb's Sun q1y, AIU., on a deferred payment basis without ha ving met rer(islr~,­ tion requlrements. or : .tht i 1i!SOUri Uniform Securitl61 Act. I e Spare Sliuttle SAN DIEGO -Vandenberg ; Air Force Ba~ will see the1 same duty as a launch si te in, the space shuttle program as 1 tbe b@Uer-known Cape l\!ri-1 nedy, Fla., says the deputr •d· ministrator ol th& Nabona1 Aeronautics . and S.p a c' Administration.' · Dr. George Low I ol d ne w smen here· that ,) "Ql:l'lerally. Re.nriedy will be 1 used . for those flights in an easterly direction and· Van· denberl( for the h!gh in· clination polar orbits." The sp:ic~ shut tle v:ilt be :is big as a OC.9 and will take off 1 like a rocke t and land like an airplane. Lo w said it ultiriia~ ly "will re place all esistii'tg launch vehicl!!.' e Sale• Dow1& . I CHULA VISTA -Rohr d . . I Industries, In c .. a es1gner l and m an u fa cture r orl transportation s;"Stems, ·ha~, reported a drop in sales and earnings for the nine-month fiscal vear period ·ended April SO, lsTl as compared with. the same period last year. . Rohr said its nine-month sales were $197,480,198. 'a decline of ntarly StO million (or the same per iod' in fiscal year ~0-71. Net earnings fO'r ! this fiscal year'v;ere S3,0lf,i95 1 or 70 cents a shire. Rohr 6'11cl.j as compared with $3,230, •. or 80 cents a sbare for the same period last year. e T.r•n•lt Deal · WINDER. Ga. A • ;assembly plant here will bulld 300 rapid fransit c:ars for the Washington,. D.G. t r a _n si t system If Rohr Industries' J~w J bid of $91.8 mill ion is appro,.-~ I as upected~ a Rohrl sp>ktsman !jaid. George Prytula, e 1 s t er n region mark'etillg manager fOr Rollr Indll!trles of Orula Vista, said th'e ·COmpany's bid is $11 rolllion lower than the second lpwesl bid. 11 approved, the Rola plan\ In Winder would ~mploy, ~ pemns lri>rit 1m to I97f, he said. · ' e Banl<era' Chofee 'LOS ANGELES -,Anck•w J. Sbtp8"1 of Santo~ ..... olected presldeot ol t b r California Banttts Msoclatioh at their annual convenJian, MANUFACmING FIELD REPS I• recenUy. . Shepard, chainnan a n d president of the Es:cban-.:e Barit , succeecb ·John P . Breeden, e.recutive vlc:t presi· d .. l Of W.U. Fargo Bank. OXEROXING 0 ANSWERING SE~VICE Nf.f.OS . 0 DESK SPACE 0 SECRETARJAl SERVICE 0 LA. LINES 0 BOOKICHPING omEGRAMS. iWX, OMIMEOGIAl'HING . ' OCY.l»AENT TRANSMISSKlH 0 MAlllNG LISTS 1'b's _ ,.,..,,. cw.nw: •re..,.. a llVIM•AllPOU INDUllllAL COWUX COMU11ran011S sana lil•u Other otnoers elected w ... : First• vice presldtnt, Nonnan Barker Jr., presldtnt ~I United Gallloml1 ~ AftPIOI; ~ \'let , -·Ole R. Mettler,~ ol Finner• Ii Merc,hinta Bonk ...... -vb 'pnoldeol ol -al Callflimt&. 81,q IJ you .misse~· this · story, you missed one of the year's 'biggies' ~ewnort11 1Jt e6ftlent Jt won a national . awa.rd ' for DAILY PILOT Sportswriter Howard .H.ifttly llNtlen of tho DAILY "ILDT ,..,. elforod their first look It tho L1thlr Metschonuchlr at.ry, •lleve, ,....., it w11 pulillshN on Oct. 30, '1971; Y•u ml1ht f11uro ·it'a worth 1 --on• leolc new !hit It ha1 llNi out 116 other ontrles t. .,.._ :11,.. liest t.ature etery of tho yee..i .. tho""""'' contest •-m.m11e,. .f tho American A,.._ Writers ....i lrNtlca-. A-lotion CIT' ""' 11p tho 1w1i-ft fw tho 111tlon•I win'"'")' 1Hoyortl Honlly I .... tho ether -llen of tho DAILY 'JLOf -'9 llofll .,.., ......................... .., .. , ........... _. of thtto • _ .... IMlc. -y.., -· !mow wh"ll , ,.,.., .. '""" ,. ,1 .. -of ti.-• prig, ' ' I ' • Dt--IMl.l PUT Cqntllates lllllD . lllldy W.. His llla~1rs) I ' 1 I t I I ' i ' l l l i I C7l4) 547.7777 121~) .... .,., ., C<ntnl Clllfomta, Lo4If I ond llt...,,..., Robtrt i;, nancJJco. ·~~~-:-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~--l \ I • J ~ • • ~ ~ q • <i •• I ' ,. ' 'I I ., ' . , •I I i, •I I • , 7 • I I i ' ,, I I I I I 1 I I I l I ' j ' l I l I ~ I ' ' l ' I ' I • .. ·INeREDf ~E'N ·TS . MAl(E ' . . ' ' i' • . - .TH .. E D;l "FFE .. RENCE . ' · ct1.ot'! ' " . •·· ' . ' .. . . :>i-•r the p~,.,· ...,.i;I \\'IS struck in the ~ . . . ... . . ' '. ., e· Awmbly. --·-----. roD-.:ill'vofes • ..,._ ·;• --',., T _.;~ -·--' . . . . . ' ' ,. Recipe F:o1· . . . . ' . VarietJ · . ~ . . (J dash 9f Sydney Harris a pinch of Art Hoppe . . . . a . hint ol ~spke . a la Jack Anderson ' . , . season well with S. 'I'. Haycikawe) . . • • • .. ' .. \ I . ... ' .. -~· . ... Good chefs ·know in -'a ny recipe it's the ingredients that ·count. The DAILY PILOT emphasizes . . the 'home grown~ and local ingredients (letters to the editor, Gloomy Gus, local editorials), -. ' but only tcip quality ingredients are used on the DAILY PILOT'S editorial page, whether local or national. . ' ' Besides · its strong : local emphasis, the DAILY PJLQT . ~erves up a variety of columnists with 'a. wide range of flav (}r. Here· ~re a few of the , diyerse columnists that can be found on the DAILY PILOT'S, editorial . page. (There is no set schedule as local ·material has priority over columnises, but some of the top national columns appear several times .. each week.) ' . . . . ,· ~ . . . . .. : . . . .. ~':bi • Bofit~ : ' .. I. · .· · ' ·· Jaek AnderSi)~ · '' ', .. ' ,. ", , ·;_ ' ' '.. ·, -~ . . -• • ' I . . . .. .U' -~ . • . . . ,. l• ~' •··· · "E'ven just a .ffin.c.ht.~·At l;-loppe is : • '' . Hera's the cdl~,;,~ist 'wh~' · has ' ': .' ·, . · · .b.91!~· spicing up life for so rile of ··the nation's mQst powerful busi- ness and political figures during the past several months . He's the . muckracker I that's his favorite " . •,' . :_ · ' ,' , ICI ''1!4't:p it ·.acfd~ fle~llr1!to your · · ~ ' · ~iiy~s. .readiilg •. ' ·Ari ·,·;,Jthanding ..., · politlcal and soci11l s•tiri1t; Hoppe ift!? ' h.as been . li~ened to .WiU Rogers 11nd Merk Twain., His topic of the day can be anyfhing;; He · reads . through the :pap~r. · ~nt~-:he'. finds ' ' an item he doesn'.t-un·ifeista~d - · · '· t~~·" he explain~ if t~ eve&.~ody, . ' he says. . . . . ' . : ' . . ' -.. ' ' . ' . . :_ •· He combines • s·olld fact · and. bis · own · whimsy to create a unique column on the people and forces ihoping o!Jr w'orld. Art . Hoppe has • 'the· pi11lect solution to :abs~luh1ly every- thing._' he will gleefuUy teH you -a.nd m9lt .. of his' ;·c)l~tions will 0 ppear sooner or later op the DAILY. PIL<:;>T. editoritl page where they will ma!.e delightful readinll • · ' .. · · ,, ',. s. 1. Hayakawa '. . . . " .. An ed itorial page seaso~ed well with the writingsofS. I. Hayaka~11 . ii 11 tasty dish, i~deed. Hii· dis- : · tlndi~e writings ~n higher. educa-. ,. · .. ·tlon·, semantics •!ind · co.mmunica- . tion lldd much .to the ·variety of . . · ffa 'vor.· · , · ·. · · . · · : · . ·. H.e writes abou·f ·the m11chanics of · · · · ' uriderst11nding and l)lisundentand- . inl]; ~~but ways · in which our de- cisions ' about race or war or public policy are shaped by the words we ·use in talking. 'I hope,' says Hayakawa , 'that my column is like a weekly letter to a friend, telling him what's on my mind and why I think it is important.' • His peppery pro,e. clifl be fhu1td :ohen adding to the· reading pleasure packed into the columns of the DAILY PILOT editorial page. • • ; ,• ' . neme for himself) who brok.e, the · .ITT sc11ndal kept his own name . in headlines for wee,ks and was awareled the Pulitzer Prize for his . reporting on administration policies during the lndo-Paki- 1tan war. A, the late Drew Pearson's No. I assistant and inheritor · of tha Pearson column , Anderson leerne·d from the master . muckraker.' He sees himself as 'voice of the voiceless' and 'the man with· the ·x.ray eyes on the secret files.' Nothing and no one is sacred when this hard-hitting columnist seeks e target . Sydney Barris If you think the pen is mightier then 'the s.;.,ord ~ y4u should feel the needle. And Sydnei Harris is just 'the m~n to wield the needle. . · H11 delights in using the sharp • · , ·. point of his 'pen' to deflate. the .. '· · .· pompous and disarm the· stupid . among the people he observes in , ·~ _ h " Id d h' . ' ~.-~• ~ e wor aroun 1m. ;,; <'"-t" . ... Humanity i• his beat. He finds ,,., , , , · · · ·. st9ries to tell and foibles to tell aboul Tri ,•ome of the· most unexpected places. · ... '.,, His column is a tossed salad of idees .. skii~ully ·presented,. small stories artfully told , big stories modestly pfftted end· the human equation masterfully expounded. The H1rrl1 toiK:h is ohen evident on the editorial page of the DAILY Pl.LOT. Sampl; it soon. · . . 'fhey Add ·up ., . ' 'Tasty' Editoria.~ Page in to a the .. ":;. .. ' I • ·I' ' . . . . ' . . . ' . . . -... ' . . . . ... . ' . . . .. ' . ' . ' • • .. .. ,. • • . ' ' ----·--· ... · OM(>:J. ; " •• ' " - -.. .. . ' . ~ ' ,. :1 . • . ' •, ' •" .~ I . ;. -1" !i .. . , "··· I • . •• , .. .. . • • ' • .. - - i l ' l . I ' ' . . • . . . . . . • • . , .· . •' .· •• I J 2 DAILY PILOT For The Record Dissolutions 01 lffarrlfqfe ,lleol Mllr t7 Df•lt. lllllY 8, l _NI MtfY L.. Mc:OouQ•ll, J1mt• l!O..rCI .,..,, 5Nr0fl ~' T!IOl'l'll. 1oiel1" I . enct o.oret 4. I GG11r•1, H•14• I(, •• ••r &1 De Will, OoMlll Kltlli.tft Mid DONIC N•Jt T11tsdif, M11 JO, 1972 At VC lrvitae Bus Service Endures By PATl\ICK BOYLE Of ... GlllW ll'litl Sl1ft in tM:ir registration packell. equipment failures. The bus He espect.1 that a much l.arger service was contracted to the De s pile e q u J pm e n t percentage of the students will Pink Bus Llne or Buena Park breakdowns and a mid-year vote and that tbt issue will and, although Phillips Mled beginning, the student bus pau easily. that young_._d.r..iv e.r s service at UC Jrvlne survived Phillips said a full report on "related wtll to the student the success of the bus Jystem population " "-old • -••s its chlldhood and will probably • u tc: uu.,., this school year will be made owned by the company had grow In size next school year. to the directors of I.he county frequent breakdowns. But not "'ithout a few Transit District al their June 5 After the first f ew growth pains, because, a! yet. meeting. breakdowns, the co mp any DELUXE AIR·CONDITIONED COACHES • AIRPORT BOUND? DIRECT SERVICE To Loa Angeles lnt'I Airport from Ora~e County Airport F, ,, ,• l r J means Conse~ation G•1v, Don1ld Cl'ltr._ 11 Hd lohln.i L<~i·" lt1v1. Edith llld Cllft"Ct W. neath Nutltt• funds have not been found to One problem this year has agreed to keep a spa:-e bus l!\lpoort anv servlc. In the been that the ...-vice has been parked on the campus for use DIRECT • RELIABLE • ECONOMICAL 1972·73 academic year. The ~s~po~ra~d~ic:__ia~t_t~i~m~•:•_bec~~a~u~se~o~r~~in~e~m~e~rg~e:n~c~ie~s:-~:____~~__:__!__::_::::_::::_:_:::___'.::::::::.:::~:_:::::::::::.::::::_:::_~~11'!!1~!!11!1!!11!1!!11!1~!!11!1!!11!1~~!!11!1!!11!1!!!1!!!11!1~~~~~~~~! free service began in .January. 1- C•l~IMt tt: Cllll-.._,lwY 11'1tlt: .... T .. 1'11 Glllflf' , .... ClllllrlMll, •N st, Atldrtwt 11.d~ N1wptrf leldl -.UcHf•ii ---running one-bus on an hourly 11-" ~· euc11,ff', ~ .u. " c.1 ~11'1 route to Corona del Mar u"l'"'!on t.Krl, lj¥i. Of-dMlh t.Mv ' ,~_ ·u•vlvfti "' w 1,, ortve: ~'her, Balboa Island and up through !, Eh1CllilffJ Mtlllt, f'-L llloury, · ~1~1. 1u.v?••·J~""'"" chll.i c.osta Mesa carrylll~ about ii~e'£ f~'C•tl'ttll< c&r'cti.' e~t1 ~~ 1,500 students per week to ... nv '~ v .. 111'11 s1 .... NIW'(, F1mtlr school l"IQ•\'I ~"'~'>d~I f""'llr'""'' ..... °'<! .,..~,.. ' 10 your fa11or111 ct"rlty, lmlltll Mort1;1ry, John Hov, UCI v IC t Olrttlo". OAJl:T r ChrtnCelJOr O.f student affairs. r ".i·•~o·~· " or•t A• 1 o• 73l L ... ~, !laid mone f t ·11 11 . "'""11n11:on 8••~ O•lf 01 d"'" Miw · • Y or nex year \VI 2<i 1•11 'urvlve<i l'l'i' 0.rtl' ~' Ald111•ft •"d be found Slime .... ·here and if J.'1r>e:v D••t; slalltl", ~ , °'''' · l••"'""fn'•. Fl.,r'l(r .nt' ~·"Ton• o .••. ; r.~e~sarv the ad ministration "'"'"'~ •l'ld JIM JIMofrl; 11rtel-· ,-~"!IP••~ .. , •. J~ .m vi-11a" J1•,....,, will orovide financial support Nm• Yoon• .nd ~r•l'I! cor ..... uu, , krv•Ce$ Pf"l'ldirn ~· '~l"•t Morll;lr.. . for the SChOCJJ S blJS llfltil Olher FITlOlllOM_ . I . l'Mm•• F. Flrr11INX>n. 2214 w1sM11t1'"" und1nr,: can be found . """·Cotta Mew. P••1t.t.c!111111 ~Y 11 "I h be f J' 1•n !~rvl•e<I bf w1 ?cl•. '01 c.,,•f t as en so success u , ' .\'lt"';a, Ro1••v, wM rK td Mond•Y I PM H "d "th t II 'I 1ieour11...., M•" w111 cl!.e•;•led tod~ .. : oy sat , a we rea y can Tll<'"1•Y· 10 AM, boll\ •I' St JOlll'I '"' I t It I !"I th -bl . 81p· ~' C•t~"11c c1111..:h. 1nteri-Mfl1, Hoiv e apse un I ere ts pu 1c (rou Cenwtery, 8-111·11,.lfon Fi;""rll transportation to and from tOe t1ome. C0$11 Ml-<", Cfr"'10ft ~t111n e GrH•. t:•,,• Of ~ Snowhl•d campus sponsored by the r.vt, '"lunll1141'on 8HdL 0.11 ol delllll, COllnly ," , " 19n s .. , .. 1,,.~-1';.. wit• M~··" ''" · tM•llle>1 da1191111r, Nortnt L. Gr111ri He addrd that he hns no t!~,,.:~~·v v~~•YFt~~~ 1~~ \'!~Ji~,e';!:il idea ho\v Jon~ that public bus be ~rl<J T11Yr1dl"~ll Smiths Cl>~Pn. service miriht be 1·n -m,·ng ln!Nm(f\I, Ho I emor11! Pltk. . " ..... . smiths Mor1u1rv, 3. ~tort. "This is one of the most ~rothy M. Hell. 2/" ''JC Hiii lll011d. positive services we were ph)e ... :~ D•eoa: torm1r Y of IGYl'll D'•~~-. . ~·r 01 dt8tll, M•r 21, It . sur.111~ ~ to provide this year " Hoy d "<tlll ~r .. •utl• T-1, ol •" o too: ~"" . ' t<vt er11'dcllildr11'1. Gr•'lfllOI servkes ooted, "and I think 1t would be WI'•• lltld IO<l•r· Tue-,dry, lO·j' "'· I I r __ , -l>•c•ntlon c1111ouc Ceme-tltl"y, E Tor11. trag C 0 be Orl.'t:U lo d1scon-f~m1tv ~-··~ lllOM w!sN""' 111 me~e 1· ·1 f I k f f d. " m"""'r111 con1r111v11or11 pi,, .. contrlbtll• 1nue 1 or ac o un 1ng. to !ht Or~n;f. Cf'lll'lty H111rf ,.,i.oci~··..,.,, Th · h II s~ruer l.1;vn• eNCfl MOf't1.1•ry, 01•1t. e v1ee c ance or ex· '0"· '"11TCHcOC1< plained that the se rvice, run- Fnv• s. 1-1nc11e"~k. U:IO '""'''st., Apt, 1. ninn only one bu11 costs about co:111 N.•••· 01111 of 011111 Mlv ?S. nn. ,., ' · S1· ""C<l bY t:1IJl""llrr ln1r111, Mar.,~re1 $6 ()()() per QUarter and that .. I.,.,,.,,.~. of CJ''" M~•= two ' ur11'1dcllHdren1 111'" o•••l11•anc1c11ild r'". there ;ire administrl'ltion and =-e-vlCH, tocl1v, Tuellley, 10 A/\,, B11t1 I d h th t It be cor-·'la d·i M~• c"~r1. 1ri11,~·~•. s u ent opes a can ~~~;,~~on v~~''"~=~ cJ'.i::oikd,1 8,!~:; <':-:nandPd to at lf'.'.l"l hvo buse~ Oorec1~rs. HOW durirl! the next srhool year. If 11ov M. How. "" 1•. nf •» ~-H1r1>er, IW'l bu•cs can be ustd he S~n•~ And. Dn•• ol dfll 1. MIV 21. 1'112. •T • !urvlY,'1 bY wl'"· .O.~•r. F. How; H'"· <'.c• noted service coulrl possiblv M. HOW Jr.1 1l1ltr, Gr•cl Hoal11 lour ' , . . -~•"dtllUdren. krYlc~ will tie htld be provided to University n:.::'.'~8:d 1k11!:ii!drn t~~r.~~-s~1fh; Park and more frequent M~rtuarv, 01••cJl\:.uoiN service might be provided to J11111 P. Mel!Jtln. mJ1 at1eh RoK. Balboa Island where a large C11>l1lr1no B11cll. Dllt ol de1lll, Mav 71, ' . 1•n sur vived '"'' 11ui.,.r."1. s1 ... ,.~ .. , •a"" nu,.....ber of students hve. OovuJ11, "1111flllm1 0enn11. S1nr1 ,l.n1; Th bu -ff l~r<' ~rer'Chlldrlnl r'IOlhtr. fl~fr 1rll1 e S serVICe go( 0 10 a of Lona Df1c111 ti.ro11>er1, c1111ord ano •tart thl• ac•dem•·c year l<or I~ McFArla~. L"nwood; r.l•n • ,, ,.. , l~cFar!ane, Plloenl~r 1ltier1, RU I h lhrounh 0 S6 f)(}Q traoSpo,tat!•On O'Barr, LSnwood1 0~"""" Sc.humec~"'· r, ' 'l urfrn:k .. ervlcr.;, ,,..-C'd"e•d•Y. 1 PM, studv nrant fro'TI the Oranl!'f' P~c.rlc V•tW (l\•fll"f, lnltrm<"r•. P~~11.c t: -Vl1w 11\wmorl•I Perk. P1cltlt vlrw County Transit Dislrirl. \vhich Mofluary, Olre~l@'.I. , N•WH,.lllT \VCI'! matched by $0,000 1n =-ieollen J. Ntwll0'1, Ae<'O 15. nl 111~ , , , Go111• Terr1ce. COi"-1111 ,.,..._ o~ie al Ul"\'ers1lv monJPS. 1111111, Mav ,,, 1tn.._ S•irviv"<I l:>Y "'"t·•1 ·· Th t d t bod I 1"n Mr 1nd Mr$. r-1rlt N-•.-.; IW" C S U en Y VO e ll rolfllr1, C1vld of Sin G1brlel, Paul ·I '1 Id h -N1whnr1. Sin Cl1'"''11t; tlster, Jt·'"~e eat .V Jr ay WOU ave In· N•whnrt, Coron• del M•r: "'"'e'""' creASed Student f<'C!i by $J ~rand!>flrenh, Mr. ond Mrt. E~w1rd Llr$On. Paudeniit Nffl'nlll 11rn.,dai1renh, each year With the money Mr. ln<l Mr1. Jl,ll'lft~•f NewNr!, C1n.t • ' r-.h•t. Gr111111d1 •• will 1>e 11~1d e!lrmarked to suoport the bus. WecH>ttdlY, P.W. ( Vl...W fA...,0!'181 Th d • P•r~. with D•. J Ald•lcn t1lllc1tll\9. IS WOUI brmg In somt ll lll flrOldWIY Mllrl\llF}I, 0irK10!'5. $21 nflO y II' Alco . pE'r ear. Mlud 11. P1teo .• ~r.. a . 01 340 111c1or11 ~ •• ove~'·!m;M =-• .. Cos!• 11\tH~ ff!JJ' ~ th, M•Y ,~ .~· 'r ' ""'"' ~ ....... t~;. 5a"f';:J:~pb,f"~, of -1.;•,-nr.:;,,d, majo Of the" YOleMI (1:0&5 t4ew M•lllto 1 WIT nm •'co ; llYll to 3t5 s11·-rled" the bus ~1uoh1trs, Ru!h r,r!llOl(•rsen . Snl'I Fr ')"· "'"-' c11co; Dorothy Gr m11 . .S•n 01e1101 Ro~le srrvice onlv 27 n<>rcent of the ~en1on, Mls""lrl; M'"vl>elll'. f!U r'lell, Cr•:~ · ' · I" • ,,: sn1r1ev 1n1eu11, Mlnneso111 1wo students voted i'l the election. rothers1 orie ~·~•er; JI 11r,.~d,llll<J•tn t 19 , pre1t-11r1nd,lll!dren. Gr1v11111e 1e•~ltH, A 33 Pl'"Cent voter turnout IS We<l!'>!'WaY. 11 Al/I, 'l/e51m ln•ler · h f Herno•!•I P••k, wan Rev. G. R. Gou11~ required to chanue I e ee (1/;~1~1:,~· e,u Br1odw1.-Morru•rv. strurturr unr+er the student Cn••I•• Mubert P~~T.,~ ,,.n v11 s•n constitution. So the issue did ~6~1:1;n·. ~~~1~~t~~··w?1!'.'d'~,:r:1~1.'1!.: no! pass. ~·"''· c. Aod"eY Pllty, Yori>• L ndn; However Dean (lf Student s 51t-en V'I PIPIY, LO !t1: mother, M••· • ~ 1 d Pietv, L111u~.t oe11ch1 ~rother•, JiT"l Phillips l!Pid another ~an•ufl A. Plelv, Cllul1 111111; W11ttr S. r.c ,., oni.rio; .,1t11rs,_ Mrt. 1rere r"ferenclum will he lakrn on / '.r(l ure. Lo1GUl'la BelCll; Mrl. Ellr"lltll"e -• f · C J··~~"''· Glenda.r• ~rvrce' .,...,, 11~•11 fhf' fT"alter 1n the ;i\l \Vtlh Ir•(' 111l'~dav. todftY. 11 AM, P•cJflc Vll'N b II ! be. -t ! , ! c1,1>e1 1r1erm11,.1, r1c111c View Memo,1a1 a o s 1ng.i1ven 0 s U:ien S f'ar~. Pacific View Morh11 rv. Olreclort. STARCK l or,•I~~ M. Sl1rck. 7]$9 NewPOr! fllY'1 .. cc,M Mesa. Cele ol de,.lh. MIY 75, 1,n, s .. ·vlved bv <11u<;ihier. Edl'lol Jo Reed, of (l'loC~oo; !wo ..i"s. H-'rold lleed ll'ld -lrr..,,~~ Mer1n Jhter~. Edith Jus t o! A\lnnr1olo1; Ernetllne Wll'l~elwlcll, of Pine (.rrt~. (llifornlft. Gr~vo1lde 1er11ic••i Ttlur'>d,>V. JYnt 1, 10 ,.,.,,, '"lftrDCr li es f."•mor;~I Pa•k. 81!!r-8er1111ron FYn111I llomt. Cosl1 Mt$1, Clrf'CIO<t. VAN der SCHANS Juli• H. Vin Oer kll•t11. :11-11 Clnrernont 51 . !rvine. DMe ol 1!11111, MIY 71, 1'n. ~U•Y•Ved bv tl'rtt !IOfll, WIHl1m J .• P•lll "' ''C A!'>cr1 C. Ven de• Sc/\i'n; ~.~:~·'· w11 .. m 5uoftlskl; 1111•r. Helefl ~1oc••hee 11'<1 tlgMH~ gr•ndclllJdren. lleQvltm f,,\dU, \VotJncM11y1 MfY ,l, 10 AM, Our l •<lv Ou~" ~· Anve'it .•!Mlle (M•t•h lnterm~n1. Moly Cro1s t'ITlflerv. 6ftltl; l\unrro•1 Fvn1r1L Homl, Coroni del All.ltr, O•rctlor;, WArtN•ll C!•e1 E. War.,er. Am l9, al ~1-A Avcnid1 M•IOt' '· la~Y~· 11 •. D•t~ cl dfil'''· '""'Y Jt, 1~n. =-1.1rv ~td by wife, Cora A. VI••~~ rwo son.1, Wendftl L Wilr"~" I"'~ · J~l'n A w11rntr. ~<ltll<'n<l 0.>1•: tllter, lime Andlr1ton, SWldtn; lour ' r1ndcllildrt11. F1.1111•1l tMVlc1s, 1Dd.>v. \11\dlY. 2 PM, McCormick LIOU"a ~Ntll Chrl>I'!, wllh Or. L•wr,nc' F. DWl~y. O! l)nlfl'CI M•il\Odl11 Chur·~. ~oun~ HUl1. <>I ltl•llnt. ll'ltlrme"t, _El oro c,mTery. F1ml1Y w111t•l1 m~rro•,,•I cgn1rlbY!lon1 bl! m11d1 111 tlle T~.eodor, f'ryne r:~un~M!ori 191' Wl/dltnw~r1 ~n~ N•jure Pl~n11, ltMlf Tux Ol'd SI., Sun \II ~y, (11•1. ~IJ YAlllH~LL Dr. Don~ld J Yftrn~u. 1111,1<11~! of L~ ~1n1~<1UllO;; /grmtrlY of Cost1 Mew. l.\ent>rr o! fl~· Lc::l~e. HriwPOrl 81 .. , • U•I P•flldo~t "' Newpert BNCh Fhh:no (li;b: tormer mt'T'bl!' ol N'"'Porl p~1t Cesll Mesa lli;w>rd ol RH\IOl'I, 0110 ol de~'"h ~·,.y ii. /911. ~i;ru v1d l!Y wit,, l:U.11nc e V1rMI ; tnl'I, OPn~ld Jr: dauoll!ar. Oru Y1•"1ll 1 one 9r1"dtlllld. Prlvall f1m!ly gr1v11lcle 1trvlce1, Wednnd1V, Noon, H1rbor Rtlt Memor· la! P•n.. AllllMr W11Mm MOf'luary, E'-condldo, Dlrectorl. 6ALTZ BERGERON FUNERAL HOi\1E Corona del l\tur fiil-9450 Cosia 11-lesa 61S.2'14 • BELL BltOAD\\'A'V MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa t\ks1 LI 3-3411 Licensing Will Start 'r.lost dune buggies. trail bikes and mini-bikes used ex- clusivtlv for recreation in Califorriia must be registered ~tnrting July 1. th e State Department or Motor Vehicles said today. The new requirement aJ> plies to vehicles not otherwise lircnsed for sr reet or highway 11se. Permits are $15 for a lwo- year period, $6 of \vhlch will go to the California Department of P11fks nrni RecrP&tion. Local OMV offices will hcgin accepting applications !or off.highway registration by Jun~ JS. UCI College Earns Grant The Co)\egc or J\.1edlclne at l 'C Irvirte h:is recelved a $!1.05~ gi"ant from I h c An1erican l\·led ica l Associa- tion's Education and Research Foundation. ' • , McCORMlc\ LAGUNA BEACH .~ORTUARY 17'5 Laguna Cal)'OD Rd. 491-Nli The grant represents gifts donated by physicians, lhe Woman's Auxiliary, and alum· IN COSTA MESA: ni In California and throughout 1560 W. Ad•ms let Royal Pelm I • PACIFIC VIEi\ MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery ~tortuary Chapel \.___ 2508 Pacific View Drive Newport .Geach. Califorula H4-t7111 • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL llOM.E ,.1 Bol11 A.ft. w .. tmlukr 113-3511 SAUTHS' ~foRTUARY Q1 Mala SL lhutllq1Go -~ - the nation. 279 E. 17th St. let Sent• An• J LET'S BE FRIENDLY I you have ~\\' neighbors or know of anyon<' movinA" to our area, r~t'l!lf!! tell US '° that •>e mt.>' ext~nd a friendly Y.'t lcome and hf>Jp them to becomC? 1cqualnled .ln their ne:w 1urroundinga. St Coast Visitor 4M-GS7' 4~'361 11ar11ar rlsitar ~174 IN FOUNTAIN VALLIY: '1'145 Werner Ave. let Brookhurs.tl 18951 Brookhur•t I et Gerfitld) iN HUNTINIOTON IUCH: 6882 W1rner let Goldtnwestl IN NEWPORT: llOI Newport Ave. (1! list St.I • • ! • ' . • • • • . Ring · Around · Artists' Bench i I t ," ' . &- Mrs. William H. Bruggere p.roves it 'is l possible to reach Robert Hordy's high windowed home . His South Laguna residence won't be shown t o bus riders. Pop! Tbt artl!b' Ht:me and StUCUo Tour that will meander lhrough Lagwia Beach from noon to 5 p.m. Saturday, June 3, will give visitors a chance lo brush up on the latest decoration ideas. Sculpture, paintinp, ceramics. je\\1elry, "·eaving and stitchery utldoubledly will be displayed to best advantage in the working envir<lnmtnll of Ollie Fisher, Ray Friesz, Robert Hardy, Herl Hoff, Barbara Jones, Ni.ck Pasko, Dale Rousey ·ana i-oan-Sliffi't . ---- Afflllates of the Laguna Beach Art ~allery are sponsoring the trek which ·TIU finish at the gallery where tea will be served after 2 p.m. and a docent tour will Je conducted from 4 to s p.m. ,.lrs. W. H. Bruggere. president. has '1&med Mrs. James Thomas, chairman. and h1lss Fern Randolph, co-chairman or the event that will provide proceeds to refurbish the gallery. Jewel tones are to be expected at the Hoff residence and they come from a stained gt~ \Vlndow in the living room. Metal sculpture, woven tapestries and a fine art collection also adorn the Mystic Hill! home that commands ocean and mountain views. The Friesz home in Top of the World houses lucite sculpture, stoneware pots and handsome rugs thllt typify the talents of husband and wife. Two studios. one for printmaking and one for painting and weaving, will be displayed at the Jones location. Nick Pasko will exhibit his famous night seascapes in the Monarch Baf home where bright, cheerful rooms are the !deal setting for the exquisite slit· chery of Joan Short originals. Mrs. L. A. Zima will open her hfonarch Bay home so east can meet west. Jts Japanese bridge. oriental painting on formica and a 200-year-old silk screen painting will provide background for sculpture portraits by, Ollie Fisher whose career spans Santa Barbara to Lagun8. The Hardy-Rousey stop is billed as a ''bonus home for those who don't mind a climb." Ceramic sculpture a n d de<:orative items for architectural or garden settings await those who reach the beautiful wood home with high beam ceilings in South Laguna . Tickets at $2.50 for adults and SI for children may be purchased at the gallery or from Mrs. Bruggere. Use of private cars is recommended but limited bus transportation for $1 will be provided from the gallery at noon and 2:30. Helpi!lg to make arrangements for the tour are George OJMingham and the Mmes. Helen Richman, George H. Carpenter, Gertrude Stokes, John Harris, , , C. SIJW1 Lewi!, ~iva,J Chase, Henry )> ·~ Aldeli , Celeitfne Elltott, Hovey Go>. ,. ~MNn, ~m, Dennis , · Ban ' ·· ~ ~£1ffllir!ey l'hil\lps. Paul · I'~ WeUer. BEA ANDERSON, Editor T11tM11r, ~y M. lt1J ... " Ann Landers . ' Embers Still Hot DEAR ANN LANDERS: This is for the 3S.ycar-ol d znolhcr who confessed that she fell a slir:rht tug of attracti::in for her dau ghter's 18-ye:ir-old boyfriend: No. you're not nut s. honey . Furthermore, I'll bet millions of women wh o read that ccl- umn identified with you -but they \\'ouldn't dare admit it, not even to themselves. Our four daughter s were teenagers at the same time. I had small crushes on several or the boys who came to the hou~e and it was harmless fun . Let 's fa ce it, a \'.'Oman's romantic fantasies are stronger than a man's -and they last longer. By the time a husband approaches his late 30's, the fire has died down and mar- ried sex is prelly routine. What could be more natural than a mother reliving the excitement of young love through her daughter ? I say enjoy your secret thou ghts and have a good laugh at yourself. Of course it's ridiculous. but there is no harm so long as you are the only one who is loughing. -ME. TOO, IN ANCHORAGE DEAR ANC: The trick is to know its ridiculous and to keep It funnyt This is not so easy t.o do If the young boys sense you find them attractive, l\1rs. Robinson. The REAL danger lies In the pos11ihility that a perce pti ve daughter might get the tdea \'OU are competi ng with her. A well- hala;c1.-d, middle-aged woman should be involved in living her own Ille. There is 11ometblng quJte sad about a mother who Is reduced to Ste.kine; vlci.riors thrills by fantasizing about her daughter's boy· friends. DEAR ANN LANDERS : Several days ago a bus hit our car. We had to get two estimates for repairs to saUsfy the In- surance company. After waitln,g a week for my husband to fill out the forms, he finally exploded at the dinnef table and said he hadn't filled out a form In 10 years , haled tG fill out [Grms and was going to ask his boss's secretary to do it for him. I told him It waa a "family" job and· if he didn't want to do It, I'd be happy to. He gave me a curt answer that made tt ..,.itc clear that ht didn't think I had ' ,,. ' enough brains to fill out the form prop- erly. One word led to<0nother and before I knew it we were having a big fight. I have my personal reasons for not wanting my husband tb become involved in any projects with hi! boss's secretary. I told him so -in unmi stakable language. He called me "childish," "insanely jealous" and a few other things. Oo you feel a wire haa the right to pro- tect her marriage against what she con· siders "dangerous · elements?" I'd like your advice. -AMBRIDGE, PA. DEAR AM:-A wife lloe1 indeed !lave the right to protect her marriage qalnst "dangerous elements," but your a~ proacb was not protective, It wa1 destructlvt. The sure W&J to drive a 'usbaod Into the arms of lllKltber "'~man 111 by (a) constantly checking: OR him, (b) bom· barding him wUh aecusadoot, aid ic) letting him bow you don't tnut ll1m worth a darn. A bu.sh.Ind bu a way of UvinJ ap (or down) to a wlfe11 oplaiia of blm. Some men ftgare so 1oq: as tltey have tile aame they ml~ht n well Uve tbe game. and Ibey go altea.d and 1et 1nlt mbchJef Otey never 't\·ouJd bave tboupt of oa their own. CONFIDENTIAL TO HAPPY ATHEIST WHO HAS NEVER SEEN THE INSIDE OF A CHURCH: II you haven't tried it, don't knock tt. Does 1Gmeone yOlilove have• problem with drugs! Send '1 and a self-addrt11ed. long envelope (11 cent& postage) to Ann Landers, Box ~' Chicago, 111. 606Sf for th< booklet, "straliht Dope on Dntfl•." II tells both sides -the ups, downs, lnlldet and outs of drug use . No amnons, no preachln~ , . Make your own decisions. • • Goes t Jeweler Heri Hoff appears caught in the ·web of wrought iron that also frames portions of his living room , balcony and styliied stained glass window . e Eas ·e Dally Pilot Photos by Lee Payne Walled in by his t&lents , llay Frien welcomes visitors lo view his acrylics and lucite. sculpture or handsom e ru gs and s ~·oneware by his wife, Leticia. Their vi ew i~ a panora ma of wild beck country • • -- • . • Soviet Shocke r Pants Not Suitable Cl1rl•tton Science /tfonitor Strvlct MOSCOW -Pantsuils are pll th• roge here lll~lt d1y1, But, It ••ems, they still have their occ1119tiol detractors. On e day thr .. trousered women were de- lalned )Vhln they arrived at the Mosco w com pu lli11 center where they work. Com· rado lv•nov. a mlnlatry official , took away their Identity card1 and sent them home to ch1n1e lholr clothes. "This J•n't a cafe or-a theater," he d~ clared. •:O.e 1hould . ..ion,, w wor'k properly dr111ed. That 11 a ministr y order." Siri1ed that 1uch an order existed, the Jin ~anl lrlo, an .~ogtneer. a laboratory a1i!1t Ind a technlcl1n. look objectlOt\. 11 1 my1elf am the order." replied the oltlclal., "II you don't change your clothes, I'!'.,. !nd you oil and mark yon down r or \·~· ••!tan." . ' one can argue, say the three women In recounllne this story in a letter to the trade.union new1pap1r Trud this v.•eek, that one ~hould be , model\ly and comfortably clad. !!~!. they add, ft 'hould be ','with ta1te." HJn o~r opinion 11 a .pan~suit is becoming to a woman and i11 not wild or of too flash y a colctr, lhere Is no ci'lme in wearing it on the job," they write, ''particularJy since it It ·even more comforta ble to work in 1uch cloth ing." · . Thire'1 no disputing th• olllclal, they lemen.!,. 1lnce he has the ministry on his 1ld1. ·u oteo dlUer, but In any event, "good Your Horoscope Tomorrow . Gemini: Avoid WEONESDA Y K•y Is to be sympalbeilc U-:t.y 3 without becoming ln«ictrtcably •r" · I 'Involved. You will understand. ' By SYDNJY OMAl\11 SAGmAlllUS (Nov. 22· T1un11, •1lthou1h a natural """' SUr flgbter.\alld ii 1 Jover. Some ~. 211: prise element 111 taste ca nnot be inculcated wllh an admini•· tratlve bludgeon." Let the reader be quickly told that such protests are a rarity in the press. In f\1 oscow, certainly, more and more women are sporting fashion able pantsuits, and from all one can gather, they wear them to \vork. In publishing the complaint, Trud ·s edi- tors them!elves .seem incredulous. "A Ban on Pants?" they headline the letter. Extravagance Jnform1lion. A.quarlu1, Leo and Sc:orplo are likely to be Jn- volved. Desires fulfilled in unorthodox manner. To fll'ld ouf mor• 1bOlll vaurulf •nd ••trolOf'I', •Mr !rd...., °""'"'' JO. Pit t bookltf, "Tiit ''11th .l.bOVl J.11ro!"'·" 14<111 blrllld•lt l lWI 7J cc~11 lo Om1r• Soolllt l. Th1 DAILY PILOT. 80• 2240, G•ll'ICI C111!r1r ltlllon, Ntw Yor~. N.Y. Hl(l11, -•t ri;r1tl1ta were born 111 picture· where · nioney, e•" penon1J possessions are eon---rr================i'"-under t ii, -the ,11tur1l second cerned. Take Initiative In rlgn of the zodiac. But Taurus making new start.I, mapp!ng · 11 111ocl1t.d wit h Venw, the original CGneepts and pro- planet Ol love and affection. crams. Don't r11lz friendship T14~111·~1ve, aware of and finances .· what money. me1n1 and can coll~ "'11~ I• need'ld in any ()ftPRICORN (~ 22-Jan. e m e r g t n c y . T ~ u r u r 19.J: UnotU;tp&>x. lip roa~b icts harmonizes with Virgo , bf!t res~'fts . fesSlonat ~prlcom, Pisces and Cancer.· superior~~ not 1atisfJed· with Many Taurdan~ 'marry tho.!!r ·~tetus qu,o. R.eallz~ thl! and 1n- born ' Ul\der' Scor1lln. ll u t · 1Uate dyn~tnh; chftngts. f\-lAny Tauru1 should ellerc!i;c cr1t1· "'ho oppo$Cd yo4 In pni;t arc tlon In cleallng with I.cu And now receplive. Aquarius. Some r ·1 mo us AQUARIUS (Jan. 21).Fcb. per1101~• ~under Tnurus 111· 181; Mesi;age from a r a r t'IU~ Is_ f'onr Rll)' changes plans., \\'hat v.·as ron· Rob('l " thry Khulm1!4. fidtnllal ber omrs p u b I i c Eddie Albttrt Rod ·rehudl kno·.11ledjfe. S3J!llt arlan plays Menuhin . meanlnl{fu\ rcle. SI r c s ~ 1 ARI ES (Morch 21-Aprtl t9 l: Batanct \\'Ork .11nd rec reation . Avoid tllremes. flt Quiet '1t'lthht. Adsf'ers 11re f1rthrnm· Ing, 'if you are rcC'P.r>lil·e. Canctr·hor11 person rnu !d he lnvolvM'I. \Yhat Anpen r:is r.11 obstacle l!I merely a ten1· porary obstruction. te!JRlilil)'. Be Oex iblr. Specinl ' !'nt'tting result s io ravornble drcision. PISCES <Feb. 19-i\larch 20): Friends ni3y uri;.tuc o\'cr credit. money. Take con- servntive CJ>Ur~r. fir 11"·er" of details. )'ou need additiona l TAURUS (Aprll !l).Mav 201 :•---------- Suror\~e due In vacatlon·tra''el area. You may change dlrtc'- tlon. You •rr 011 the mo,.,._ entertalnln,-and be\nQ; er· tertalned. Soclal llffl Is em· pha!llied. Forcts tend to bt' 1;r111ttered. Uav"e details to othtr~. GEMINI IMny JI.June 71\: A''old e1trava.gantf'. Yon c:1n win love but you c11nnot buy It. One close. l,o ron acts in childish mani:ier. Don't com- pound error. la and A.ft111rt111 . are Involved. MoMy dlspolt c1n be ruolved. CANCEll (June 2t.July l2l: Jl~r'le, sKUrlty, partnership and marr~11e -the~ an. , hlt1hllr,hted. Ta~e, noth ing for fl'r,.,nl~. You l111ve to wor k , !YJW for. wbat 1.1 . worthy,·hlle. , ·~rvi:e oI rouµne ocruri; 1'1\tli • 4r"4Jr•tlc tudq~onf.ts . Utr;nllll lqd'l'ira• ire lnvnlvt.I . ., LEO (July .U-A111:!. 21 \: Set· tie ml1under1tandln,11: w i f h • famUY member~ R e 9 l o r e harmony at hom,. Be diplomatic, Mab r,oncllinlnr~· 1e1ture. If raature. ynu .gatn. OU»erw iM. you , create un nettmry friction. Cho1ce ls QYr qwn. Act tCQOrdlnJI)'. VIRGO (A).I(. 1$.Stpt. 221: Fkllncial plclurt may bt 1ll1htly muddled . You l\rt nc1t ···Ing too 'dearly. Tate 1teps a g a I n1 t se I f -deceptlon. Perctlve ptnor.. iltt11Uons a!I they 1c1u1lly exist. Pllffl In- dividual p1,vs pn>mln<nl rol•. LIBRA (Sept. II-Oct. 22)• Joy C1fch I 1pirkf1 from th• momlng 1un. Hold tit• magic ol • 8'1ddan bfffn. KM p thOlt mCHNntl 1f!vt. TM'I,. YCJUl'I lor 1 llt1tlm1 with 1 diamond enga~trlngt10m o,_s/ou om. What appaared sett1"111111y bt•1.~-------­ ,lutl tht opposite. You havt : _. rupotlllblllty """ )'Oil i•t mon ottenUon. ~ dif. ,_ btl"tel! .-,.ilb! and notorlell'· Heed -ti , I -Jontt. Loam rWOI llo- fore ,,,..,,, to e~ ~- SCOR PIO (Oot.13-Nov. llJ:l:=~====:=:I .lnocllle who had )'Oi.t cor.· • Sovtlri Ce••* p111, Ttaced -ettialn Ill~ Kii ltlitol et tht S111 Dftq• '••· fl rnariMr wWch cnat•, c .. t. ,.,,. a4c ~''' • GOub~ "nt.Uoaohlp lo ~ed."---------" y • • Great Suggestions For Father's Day Gifts From flitk•r1 t.r11r.or Ohto " ~ad rl111er1·es 1om111hln1 1pl!cial on hit 1pecl11.J.. dt~'. f,1115 trom I H~~ory P1rrn1 of f)hio.h1ve a ipeclal •r· pt111I f<1t m1>:n. Th11y lik11 Iha Hf'.EF STICK, t1111y i;he11t 11111\ <11ht.r Jood 1p1r.t1ltle~ many p1k1 cont ain. After ~ou mt~!! your c:hnlr.I", IBke H y,·!rh \'OU or \VI! wltl m•ll If D11rJ live1 out-of·lown. Our fr le°ndly clerks \Vlll I S&]l l }OU. TASTY TRIO $9 .98 I I ere t re lhree gl" f1vorile1. Four pound fH·:J-:P STICK, 61/J oz. Smoked Che11111 Bar 111\l • I ot. j1r of our Sweel·Hot Mustard, APPETEASER DELUXE $9.98 nuuer X1u11e Ch1111ft11: Mild Midget Longhorn Goud1, tour Che11111 Spreads, Sharp Chedd1; Ch1111e Spread, Belle Fleur Ch11e11!, blte-Rlze r.r1ck11r1 , B1n1n1 Chlp1, Smoky i nd lmport•d c1nd•,.~. Other Gift Paks on Display For You To Seel ff itkdt1 tc&!!!f. .---&a=-= uth Coa,--st____, Costa Mfta ?laza OPIN DAILY· ,_,,_ O•f'dl 'tit f ,_., PMOlfl '*'"I LOWll C:A•OUSIL MAl.l.-ll llTOL AT Tt!I SA.• 01100 lllWY. nmtcrs rs:•DING ':StfSe STOBES Fo r Tinkerin g Belles r Camp ls Neve·r-never . Land BJ EllMA llOMBECK It ii not loo tarly for mother• t \'tryWbert to begin the se1rth for a good summer camp. • There are . c1mp1 I or chi ldren ge ared toward tennl1, basketball, bueball and foot- ball. There are camps for fat kids, malndju1ted kids. hungry 104" nature k i d 1 and mllltarll1lc kidt. 1 am look.Ina for a camp where there are no organlud aetl vitle1, the food ia fattening and there are no kids! I.am speakinc of cour•.o.f-a Camp for 'f~ed Mothers. I viluolile It u a little cottage ln I clesrln& where tbtre are no nlny days. no ironing boards In the middle of the Uv· Ing room and eight Jet.I of car ten on a large nau by the front door. I don't ut for mucb in lhls WOMl lf'1 WIAa Slltf f It Zf Ull I. (NII Hwy. C.rtM ••t ,.., .,, ..... F11turi11t Dr•11•1 • Co•h • Swlh Gow111 • '•11hulf1 " I Y•11r tll•tft •tcou~t w•lt•ll'I•. MA.11'11 Mllll'ICI 111trf. : ._, '. AT WIT'S END v.·orld. J nev~r ha\'f . I'd just IUc.e a few weelu where I could sJaep in a bed where the alarm clock is on the opposite tJdt . Where I could go lo the liatbroom, ioCk the--a..< llld know lhat wben I look tllrwih the keyhola I wUJ not en. C0W1ttr another eyt, . ~ I .want the phone to png and have it for me •. • J want to walk lnM 1 room and *tt all lhe clrawera cl osed. I want '9 drink a cup oI cof· DIAMOND REMOUNTING ., ... ""' -'" ... -~ f14>r' , •. W• ll•il• M ct1rtctMi11 .i ,,..._ - 1", N vlllp M ~Will ....... NOlll' JEWEll~J 25 y,,,. b r•rf•11c1 ADAMS .. llOOIHUUT HUNTIN•TON llACH t""UIJ fee while it's bot. Or an up my meat and eat some t Imes wbeli l it wit bout blowiDg C1J it and l}allucinate. J wonder what it sharing. wocthl be like to •·alt a(TOI( a Wouldn't it be wild to hive a kltch'.ltt floor and not ha\'e recording of a child "hlnln& your lboe 1Uck to il and saying, .. ,,,.,.,.,. nothlnl Or to si t by and watch to do" and belsi& able to uy, ~tone tlse replace 1be toilet "So wh y don't you run away 11 lndl from home like all the other SSut sp e. kidl ... Or to comb my hair before But mosUy wouldn't It be noon. 1 wonderful to bt eble to rtad Or to lea,·e a roll of adhesive and not be so elhausted that taPt on a table for five \'OU fall aaleep over Bur1 mlriute• and reltll'll and still ReVMlds. havt it there. Who am I kiddin&! Tbtrt! ~etlmes I jOt t~ thinking . aren't any camp. (9r moU>tra. bolf'.'~grut if would be to pick 1 I am stuck with another sum· up y tootbbrusb and ba\'e it {, mer in Nevef'l.ol"1' ~with be •. three kids ' and my husband. Or-to drive a car and not Peter · Pan. All those who have to worry about sud· believe in varicOJe velnt or U, den stops. neck ••• clap your hands! I .i I ' COMPLETE SHOE & LUGGAGE REPAIR RESTYLING •• Robinson's Shoe Repeir U1• Y•ur l{,\,1111011 Ch•rt• Tllirtl LAv•I ,f Elt v•for .. ,, .i I' Enjoy Pmonallud Attention In Semi-Prlvale Fadlities No "lad" diets, dangerou1 drugs or gr~ellng exercise. 1w.winc ....... " ...... ""',.. ......... 9'11 ... .. ,.., tltm .. tell ,.. •t11 ftt ..... " ., "'l'i ,_''"It ftte. Wt #t 91, .. 1 II1'W·n llltl ...... .,. ... Ji .._ .. " ,.., ....... ts ... Mt •• ~tfff. "" !lie .. 11 ... ,.., .,...... It .. •Urt• ""'' ,.. .. 11 ,... ... o The price la right $1.50 o 'j!ml your nllW llgur• ti guarenlttd. In wrtur\;r ''f'1ment ."" ony ~ram ~ $. ~~luilt r.!!llillii] l!!!I!l!lltl Amorin• <' ~ lWJlj iiiii E.pr,11 . FIGURE CONTROL SAi.OMS N1Uon'1 teldlno fi0ut1 control iyat•m Optn Clalty t to•-$tturday I 11 " .. ' •II "' 0 430 Pacific Coast Hllbway, Newport Beacb411one 642-3&38 '' .......... , ..... .., C~I ' I H!I AIM: "Tiit City'~~ It er.ilho'-" t t7.0211 1 ~M, lOM N. Stwtt c..i. !'"'\ ..... 611.aia.1·1 __ c..t~ c·,..... •. o.--.. ti.weft, WI"'"' Let·~ 111 "'I lllWWt1 "* N. Hiltf•• .. ~ Miti deai. S. ....... S.... ...... h•f .... ,..,... o., 1 W'OINll~ wMlf ~I '*"""''~,. eo""1p11it2 --------------~-...J I 1 '---~~~--~---~~--~~....:-~-----~-~~~~-=:.:.::.:.:::::::::~."' " ·~· . ~ " .~ .... • _,, • .,. '°· 1m o:.r• V PILOT Diet Turns Sutton's Career Around Ul6 ANGELES (AP) -Don SUttoo lalllhod at the bldly guh<d baseball hanging from h1J locktr. It •ignlfied that lie had given up a long home run. The "Doo Sutlon Long Ball Award," as presented by his Loa Angele• Dodgers teammates, would have been a bad joke two years ago or even a year ago. The pitcher was shelled for 38 borne runs Jn 1970, somehow surviving with a JS..13 record. He was 1·5 at this time in 1'71, berore "a combination of things" - including 51 diet supplement pills a day -turned his carttr around. Dodgers Try To Curtail Sudden Sam SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Lell hander Sam McDowell, a volunteer in time of need, seeks his second straight victory over the Dodgers when the San Francisco Giants host Lo! Angeles tonight in the tecood game of their series. McDowell, 6-1, will take on Claude ()s. teen, S-1, in a duel of southpaws. The new Giants' ace wW be pitching with on1y two On TV Tonight Channel 11 at B On TV Wednesda" Channel 11 at J days of rest as a last-minute replacement fot Juan Marichal, who has a sprained ankle. ... ''I have two volunteers this week." said Giants' manager Charlie Fo,x following Monday's series-opening 5-2 Dodgers triumph behind Don Sutton and Jim Brewer. "Marichal hurt his ankle fielding a bunt in Atlanta, ao I asked '" voluuteer," Fox explained. "MeDowel1'~d tie'd go Tues- day and Roy B~ant d'offered l<t pitch Wednesday. We need a the help we can get." Sutton, now 7-(1. was touched for an unearned nm on an error and Ed Goodson's single In the first before retir- ing 20 straight batters. Brewer earned his fourth save in the ninth. '.'The big difference was learning how to get my screwball and short curve over the plate last May," said Sutton, who bas won 1' 1amn: in a row. ''Leaming to con- trol tboH pitches ha1 helped becall3< bat· ters can't sit back and wait on my faatball." The Dodgen' right-hander feels it'll be between Los Angeles and Houston for the Western Division pennant in the National League. "The Astros are the club to beat," Sut- ton declared. "We probably have the edge in pitching and have more depth, but Houston probably has more power." It would be dllficutt to convince the Giants, or right-hander Charlie Williams. of the latter. Solo homers by Steve Garvey and Jim Lefebvre and Frank Robimon 's two-run blast produced a >I lead off Williams. "I thought about the trade when t was warming up, but it didn't affect me on the mound," said Williams , ~1. who was acquired in the Willie Mays transaction. Though Marichal's injury will make him miss a pitching turn, the Giants have been comforted by the quick recovery of Willie McCovey from a broken arm. "\Ve'IJ play him when he says he's re.ady," says Fox. "I think I'll be activated real 500n," said McC'ovey. "It only hurts a little when I swing. I'm in the best shape of my career, 'but it will take awhile to get my timing back alter missing alJD031 two months." ln A.,,, fJI S.ft ftroMIK9 nl '''""" '''~"" llusst ll, £ ' I I • krdi, Cf 4 1 0 0 l udintr, lb ' O 2 I F-1-., ,. ' O O t W.O.wl1, U ' 1 I t GoedlOn, 1' ' f 2 I F.ltobln1ori. rf ' I 2 2 ·~ft(O, fir •••• Mote, If ' o t I lt:ln\l!Nfl. JD J e o o l.ot.llvr1, 1& ' I I 1 Speier, n ' O O O Sl>111. c ' O O O M.edor, rf 4 1 I O G1.,,1y, Jti 4 I 1 I Htndilt"ton, If J 0 O O Sutton, I J I 0 I HwtY, c 2 I O t lttwtl", • I o o I C.rrf1t11r1, ' O O I o How•rftl, Pl'I I I I I J.JOll-, p • 0 0 0 c.wnu.,,.., ,. 1 o ' o lltdtr,C 10f0 T11!1lt lS J I ' Tolall l1 2 ' 2 Los Ancit!•~ on 102 ooo -s 1111 Fr1n<:l1<11 IDD 80CI 010 -2 E -llUS!ell, Futntes. i.Oa -LM Anrgll"l l, Sin Fr1ncl1e1 5. JI -M&fdllx. t+Dw•rltl, 311 - Rutttll, w. 01vl1. HR -·Garver Ill, Loftbvrt lll1 F. lloGlflMHI taJ. SB -Bonds, fhrckner. l,.Hlllllll SO S~rtOll (W,1.cl) I ' 1 I 1 J llttwtr 1 I I I 0 0 C.Wllllt"" tL.0.11 J 1 5 5 0 2 ('BrrU1>tr1 J I 0 0 I 2 JJollnlOll l • • • • • '8v1 -lrtwt• 14). Tll'no -!~JI. Attll'ldl<ICI -11.W. SUUoo, 17-IZ last season, ls 7., in 1171 with a 1tingy J.28 earned run avtrqt. He's 21-7 •Ince last May 'l7. The loni ball award, named alter SUt· ton because be was the first recipient last week, bas betn awardtd only one other time -also to Sutton. Bobby Bondi of San Francisco la31ed one of his pitches tor a homer in Los Angeles' 8-5 v~tory ThurJday night. Sut· ton pitched the victory but "it was just one of tbo$e nights where my control was shaky, my slulf wu shaky. I'd throw good for awhile, then bad for awhile, then ' I worse than tbal0 Yet his overall puform1nc:e -in- cluding an elgbl·butlng ..,..hitter -has the 'l7·year-ald Clio, Ala ., natl•• belng recognized as one of the leading pltchens in the major leagues. What did he do to d'laflie'! "What haven't t dooef" be answers. 0 1 really haven't put my finger on any one thing," he e:s:plainl. "A combination of a lot ol things, not the least of whlcb b the addition of two new pitches -a short, hard curve like a allder aod a screwball. I started throwinf them el· fectively last May." Driver· Escapes Shooting l'la11ies Also last &pring, he saw a nutrltlon ex· pe:rt who, "because of the physical strain I put on my body, said J should take these supplements : All the 'B eoinpleits. C, 0 , Jecltbln. wheat genn. kelp, altalfn, calclwn, gelatin ... " What ts lecithin'! "[ don't know, but he recommended It," saJd the f.foot-1 JBS-pounder. ''l take 58 supplen1ents a da y, plus a diet which consists of a lot or protein. very Jittlti foods containing white sugar and very ftw desserts." Sutton also visited a physical ·therapi st lut year and was sold on advice against - "' , • Dick Barker's Brabham BT29 crashes into the side of the Crystal Palace race circuit in London. Bark· er's car spun off the track while he was doing about 100 mph, overturned and burst into flames. He managed to leap cJear and was taken to the hospital with an injured arm. Sports Clipped Shor:t Oly,mpic·s · Head to Resign LAUSANNE,· Swltwland -Avery Brundage, whose insistence on absolute amateurism in the Olympic! ha s made him a controversial sports figure, said Monday be was resigning his post as president of the International Olympic Committee. However. Brundage·s resignation will not take affect until after the upcoming summer games in Munich, Aug. 26-Sept. JO. "For me it is over," tbe M-year-old Brundage said at a news conference at the IOC headquarters here. ''Twenty years is enough for me and perhaps there are some people who \re tired of seeing me." Brundage also announced that pro- Foyt Recovering From Injuries HOUSTON -Race driver A. J. Foyt v.•ill be orr his feet for at least four weeks, doctors at Methodist Hospital here told him after e1amining bis second degree burns and dislocated left ankle. F'oyt ·rt.aped from the car with bis stop on bis 86th 1ap of the lOIHni)e United States Auto Club rat!. SUllclloy at DuQuoin, Ill. Officials said he was leading · by 3S seconds, but apparenUy left the pit too fa st, jerked the fuel hose, spra'fing the fuel In~ the cockpit or his ~ar~ , FO)'I leaded fro mtbe car pith his clothes ablaze and grab~ a 1 fire ex- tinguisher to help put out the flame!. The 37-year-old three-time winner Of the In- dianapolis 500 suffered second degree burns or his face, right arm and right leg. Ue was taken to Marshall Browning Hospital in DuQuoin where his condition was given Monday u 1ooct, and then transferred to Houston. posals made by the various International Olympic federati~s wif:I be taken up after the surilmer games or in other words, after his departure. SlgnificanUy, most of these proposals concern amendments to article 26 of the Olympic regulations which involves amateurism and the acceptance o! money by athletes -something that Brundage has always fought vigorously. ,,,, INGLEWOOD -A California .record Exacta payoff was established Monday at Hollywood Park, when Stymied and Nova Slar finished one-two in the fourth race, returning $8,510.50 for $5 tickets. There were 30 such tickets and there also were five $10 tickets sold on the win- ning combination, numbers three and eleven. The previous California mark was $8,440, set last Aug. 2.5 at Del Mar. Stymied paid $18.69 straight, while Nova Star, a 73-1 shot, returned $75.40 to place. the highest place payoff at Hollf'vood Park since Silky Ho paid $85.40 on July 15, 1970. One of those cashing his $5 exacta was Tony Assinesi, a Pacific Palisades businessman. A member of Hollypark's private turf club, Assinesi said that Nova Star was his "key horse" and that most of his 32 exacta tickets had Nova Star either first or second. ,,,, BALTJrilORE -Huntington Beach'1 Jack Brohamer had two hits in four a~ pearances and drove in the only run. but Cleveland dropped a &.J baseball deci sion to surging Baltimore in the American League East Monday. ,, TOLUCA, h-fexko -With a 3-1 victory over Guatemala, Mexlco'a amateur soccer team today gained the right to compete in the Olym pic Games in Munich in August and September. The Mexicans will share with the United States · the representation of the North American, Central American and Caribbean Federation in the competition in Germany. Results of the pre.-Olympic elimination games gave Mexico 8 points, followed by the United Statel with 7, Guatemala with S and Jamaica with 4. packing his pitching ann in Ice. '"His opinion, and one f 10 along with, is that nature isn't too cruy about a sui.t. den change," he said. "Atta' you pitch, your m1J5cles are wanned up. lltost ol the othtr guys ict down but I jus:t fed that for mystll It 's not the best thing IO 1 don't do Jt.'' sutton's turnaround has enabled hlm to Ret above the .SOO mark in career -.°On'" lost percentagt, n.as. and fulfill the prorni.3e he showed in lW when be bad a 12·12 record and was thfl National League 's rookie pitcher of the year. DON SUTTON Angels Split Pair Manager's Advice Aids MV's Melton Lee Stanton figures he's got it made now. Ten days ago, the California Angels outfielder wa.sn't so sure. lie wa!!I hitting .146 with only thret runs batted In. Today Stanton is hitting .250 and he leads the Angels in rbi with 15. "I know I can do the job if I play tvery day." he said after his 10th inning single ti.fonday night gave the Angels a 3-1 vie· tory over the Chicago White Soi and a l!iplit or their lwlnighl doubleheader at Anaheim Stadium . Chicago won the opener, S-4, on Bill A119el• Slate Mev 30 AnQtll ¥1. (MtlgO M8~ 31 AMt" ¥\ (l\l(IOll Junt I ')~" 0111 J un!' ! AllV!ll It Cl•v~l•ncl 1:5J '·'"· 7:ll 11·"1· ':3S 11.m. hfelton's three-n1n homer in the tighlh. "I was worried \\'hen I wasn't hitting because I want to stay with the Angels,'' Stanton said. "But I never really lost confidence in myselr. \Vhen l got into the lineup in Chicago last week I was determined to stay in." Since getting to play on a regular basis 10 games llgo, Stanton has collected 14 hits In 39 swings, a .359 pace. and has im- proved his average .104 points. lie has hit three homers, five doubles and has driven in 12 rum. He lashed a homer and single and drove in three runs as California built a 4--0 lead for Don Rose in lhe first game. But the Sox came back and won it on the long ball heroics of Dick Allen. Pat Kelly and Mellon. Allen hit hil el&hth homer in the sixth, Kelly. led of! the elgbtb with his first of the year and when Mike Andrews followed with a single, Lloyd All en, recalled earlier in the day from Salt Lake City, replaced Rose for the Angels. Carlos ti.1ay followed with what looked like an inning-ending d o u b I e play grounder to Sandy Alomar but the California second baseman Jtjcked It for an error. Then Melton broke out of an O for 15 slWDP. with hls third homer of the RIMIP towiri it for the Soi. It wa!!I Melton'• f1rlt extra base hit since May 15. ''l wasn't really fighting myself unto about seven days ago," said Melton, who Jives in Mission Viejo. "I met with Qiuck: (Chicago manager Chuck Tanner) just before the game and he told me to atop pressing and relax. "J went up to the plate thinking home run and I v.·as determined to hit it hard, even if it didn't go out." ritelton's shot gave rookie Rick Gossage his first major leaa~ wln in the opener and Lloyd Allen suffered hi.s second IOd in two decisions. Eddie Fisher, 2.-2 won 1bie nightcap for California with Terry Forster, 0-1, takla& the loss as the Angels nipped Cl>lcago !or the first time in five meetlngi. . Arter Rich Morales' two-run double off Rudy A-1ay stated the Sox to a 2.0 lead in the fourth Inning, the Angels tied It Jn the sixth on a wait, Alomar's double and Xtn Berry's single. Wilh two out In the tenth, they mounted their winning rally. Vada Pinson and Bob Oliver llntled and Ken McMuUen walked. Stanton then slammed a 1inale to ten to end it. llCOHD •AM• Q 1u9t UI C.tllfltW fl) ••rll"6 1•r1trM W,Wllll11n1, rf • e I O Alofnlr, "• S I I 1 l( .. loy, ' I t e • llHfy, <I J I I t For...,r, ,. • I • I llooco. 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' Relaxed Play Due Brewe~s, Says Crandall MILWAUKEE (APJ -The brightest ray of sunshine in Milwaukee Qiunty Stadium Is Del Crandall, whom tho Milwaukee Bl'f"lfen have selected aa a replacement for field m81l81er Dave Brl1tol. Crandall, 42, caUed up from a managerial post In EvanavUle, Ind., checked In Monday whUe his new club was avenging a weekend of defeat with an 11-3 victory in Boston against the Red Sor. Club president Allan H. SeJig n>Ulled Bristol out or bed Sunday with a pre. dawn announcementthat he wa1 beJn& fired , but denied general manager Frant Lane had applied the pressure. Lane's 10-player winter trade with the lied Sox had not put the Brewers in the winning column, and they had slumped to the American League'a wont record. Bristol had been cenaured by fans for his lineup switches, whJch be pre1mn1bly made In an etfort to find a wlonina com- binaUOo amid Ll:ne's pertonoel altera· lions. Unable to auoclate with a ~•t1nt11 changing roster, rans fell away from the club. Home attendance wu nmnlng 40 percent worae than It was last season. Brillo! displayed surprise at the an- nouncement he received in Boston, but denied he had any grudRel. SellJ denied there was reason Cot any_ "Dave and Frank did disagree on aome matters," Selig 1ald. ''Bui that 1ltuatlon ts not unusual for any general manager and hla managtr." "They had no feud," SeIIJ lntl11ed. Gimeno Ousts Graehner Dllcarding Bristol "w11 not Frank'• declaion. It wu made on the bl1il of talks with all the club olflclaf1 and owners, The final decllkm fell on me." CranclaJl'I popularity II a hous<hold hero for tbt Braves th.ring ~11lwaukee'1 pe:nnant year1 In the 1950s might restore aome t~ket-wlndow health to the ownera' podietbook.I. PARIS (AP)-Andres Glrneoo ol Spain deleated Clark Graebner o( N~w York J. f, ..a, ~7. f.Z, f.1 loday In the fifth round of the French Optn tennll tournament. Glmeno, ,a ooeUme memller ol . tJ>e touring contract proleulonal group, .. tered the quarterfinal round where II< wUI meet the winner d 1 match between Slan Smith of Sea Plntl, s.c., and Fran- tl1tk Pala of Cuchollovakla. Olmeno was seeded No. f and Gr1ebner nth, H1n1kl Solomon or suver srn, Mcl., Is the only other Amett<ao 111n1Ivor in tht men'• quarterfinals. Solomon,-ranked 10th in the United States, came from behind t<t outlast Guillermo Vllu o! ¥1tntlna :H, f.tO , f.Z, M , M in a s.liouri lO-lllinute marothon Monday at 11olsiod'(;al'IOI Illadlum. ile11 face Manuel Oranta of Spain, the No. I aeed in the tourney, in the quarterfinal•. Smltl>. of Sea Pines, S.C., fa ced Frantlset Pala ol Cuchollovatla and Graebnu. of New York, opposed Spain'• Andres Cimeno In nfth.round matches to- day. Smith b seeded tblrd hen, while Craebner is aetded lllh. Solomon. of Rice University. said he made the mistake of. hitting too many balll to Vilas' powerful backhand in the fint two sell. But by the third set he was rd)'ing on high, llOft 1bota to counter VIias' powtr came. . ................ Oltit Mlfw.-•1 itwti., llfft U11r1 11-, toulll ""l(I .. ,, ... l¥ttu~ Gool"'°"', A11tfr1llo, btt! 1(1tbJ Mtl¥U11 •111tr1ti._. •2. w. • ''lllClll .. Ovrr, ''llKJ, liltll Wtndy 0 ¥.,IOl'l,o WtM'l1111fO<I, 0 .C... •J. 1·i, ............. Mfl\WI Or111,... Spoln, 11111 Jilt;oh P l~lf••ll, 11 .. ly. •·2. .. 1 ...... Jin l(odft. (P'd'lol ...... l tt, lletl t1rry l'ttl1l1.,.. ~II ~Wltlllt, M .. , M , '•t•oe.w: ~relty, ,,.. •o Ml! I•~ F .. !Vlw, Au:'r.ht . k l.f. .. 2. 1-L "''' ....... Two Ears a1ad a Tail Arturo Ruiz Lored o jumps lnlo the air after making 1 kill at El Toro de Tijuana bullring Sunday. The bull is lalllng backword immedla~Iy after the klU. The former ..>ll·llar <ale her , who ltfl the MUwau~ Braves Ir. 1N3, baa been managu of the Ev1mvl1Je mlnot~leaaue c.1ub for more than a year. In oontract l<t Brl1tol'1 lron-flll attl- toward eahaUJtlng drllb and cl- tnlning rules, CranclaO radiated bll11 u II< checked In MoncJay. "I don't plan any cha.nge1 in rulu and regulatloots beclute I don't know what the <wT<nt ones ar<," be 111d, addlna ho doesn't even objtd that Sells b ma1n1nc Brbtol'• c:o1chlng 11arr for the rat of !he HltoQ. DAILY fllDT ,...,.,, "" JO, 1'172 Dukie. Freshman Young Vaulter Sets Sights High StlA1'11.E (AP I -Jelf T11lor 1tarted looklna up in tht third &ride and he hasn't lowered hf1 eye1 since. T1ylor, only 18, already h11 cl"red 17 IHI In lhe pole v1ult. The curly ha I r ed Unlver1lty o f Wa1hlftglon freehman, who&e best vault In high M:hoot competition w1t1 JS ft-el , hopes to 11dd 11nother foot before next month'• Olympic lrlA lll. am I going to go.' '' But go he did In the wind and rain of Washlngton'1 flr R outdoor meet to cleair 16-lD and qualify for tht Olymp\.c Tr ial s. Toylor started vaultin1 in lht lhird grade when a· boy across 1he street got a fi bergla1ts pole and set up stt1nth1rds in 1tw front yard. ''Ile was ln junior high." said Tr.iylor. "He was m7 "I'm sure I can do ll If rr iend so I jusl went over 11nd \ everything Is put togethtr s I a rt e d messing <1rounrt. I right on the right day," he llkcd It 11nd have been doing tald. "It 1m1t 1olng to ht easy. it evC'r 1tnce." though -ll'U r"llY be bard ." Taylor credilJ Kirt Bryd,, T1ylor'1 l7·fool leap came In Wa shington 1 e n J t.. r and an Indoor meet where thert Pac:if lc-8 Conference champion wa!'! no wind to help or hinder wllo ha! been hampered hy ill- hlm , K}ell 1.faka.aon of Sweden juric11 thit year, for mut h of 1ald tbj ltCnd!ifiis a blg factor hi." progress. wh~n h.~ l1bt. "tfl»'ld record "f rc31ly ·k>ok up to hin1," of 11-2, and Taylor agrees thnt Taylor soirf. "He'!! a hard ''It'!! really nice to have a worker. and he'!! 11howed me tailwind -It · 1'nake11 the everything hc'!'l learned 1n four helght1 bctlt!r." ~ · , yea.r1 ." " But the ~t~I, partlcul&r · T.ii,Ylor. wt¥>se ro11in prof>.. 1y In the Nofthwe1l. can le.ms are consistency a n d present prot»em1. alter a ·'form, doesn 't jump i n half-doien lndod} meel.!1, "nil workouts when hill vaults of a 1uddcn You're. outdoors aren't going well "becauae and hive to deal.."wlth the en--you're just practi cing your vlronment,'' Tay'frir said. m/11takcs." "Pole vau!Ung l.! really such As ror form he said, I J>IYch e'f'eDt U1at you can ''Whenever I m1ss it's not talk voqr1elf oot of It ao bec.au't 1 don 't have the easy.''. ht added. "II it's heigh.I. t either just hit her ralnJng or IOrtlelhlng, you just (the b.1r) on the way up or hit 1tand there Ind aay. 'No way her on the way down . "I don 't roc k back on the ltk!t ..... " '""' .. Santa Aiaa CC Winners Saddlehack Bid~ · I For Banner Seaso~ \ ,. . By CJIAIG SHEFF CN 1111 o.#r ...... ...., Saddleback c.IJege'I fool· bell leam won 7 ol JD aames ln lfll -but ii .... IOlll<Wbal of 1 diJappoirlting seaaon. The primary ,......, for that wu the fact tbal the Gaucboa bad oe vtl' fi.niabed less than fll'St in their two previous con- ference races. "Wbtn we k>ok bac:.k on It ... tblnk ... bad. pretty 1ood ......, wlill only II aopliomoros ib -teom, but we ftND't utWled becata1e .. dldn1 win the dwl>- ~,.. 11y1 Slddleback looilllll coach 0 e o r I • Hartman. But 1'72 could be a different matter and Hartman 11 tbt f111Jt to admit that hil club will be In the lhict ol lhlngs in lbe well·balanced bfiuion circuit race. "We have the potential to have a very fine ball club. We very definitely will have a bet· ter club than we did · lul year," says the Tei:u native. Saddlebact'1 main stmiglh will be its defense whett the Gauchos are ei:pected to hive more depth than they've bad In. any other seuon. Topping the lilt. of defensive gianla Is 2»pound lineman Rod Cummings, a standout as a frHhman two seasons ago. Cummings injured a knee in the first '71 game and sat out the rest of the c.ampaig:n. He's had surgery since and report· edly Vi in top :shape. All·Am•rican berth .. a punt rttum apeciaJJst for t h e Gaud>ol lut year. Rudy will play at Dnllt University thi! fall. Other t o p fnshroan pr• peels lbat Hortman upects lo lure lo the Saddl•bact cam- pu1 an lintmen Bob Sahdala (lifWlon Vie Jo >, Bob Prut.,;ood (lilis!ion Viejo), Fred Mayrbofer (Foothill). °'8adO (Univenily ) aod B (San Clemente ). in<omlng backs lnclud• q Gary Wood (Mllpm Viejo), fullback Joe ~ .<-Viejo ) and half\oCk Clark Janett (San Cl<Dl<Jlte). Hartman feels that if he can land Wood he wlll have a good bac~.Up quarterback. "He'll have the No. 1 job the follow· IDg Y.eat," says Hartman. "vie're really looking for people at our quick guard and quitj(; tackle spots and the deftdslve secondary is a biS: quetUon mart ~ause "'e lose two at.art.en (Hollne!I and Area Briefs ' . Larry H1mande1) from la1I . ' year. Depth In the dclwive lino-. and Ibo pu&lna ,..,. .,. '"" 11'<1\gths I h a I llaHman llsta, foi 1ht "It dm'plltli , 1 "'We can actuillf start nine · lettermen on defense thia .. · 'year, but t.be.7· weren't an · starters la.st season. The key · tO' the defense is how CUm- mtngs comes 'back. ~ • doa'l 1bink there'• a fiDU b.otDlln .around. . ' "Dulicll bAt 1he J>!>lenUll lo'. 'be as outstanding a quart.er· fback. as. -·t've e.ve r had &nd· I O>a'l ·think you'll fin<I. two btlWlr ·recei vers around th al\ H11.1ptrt and Siyunon:s." ' Hartman is very ~ptimistiC.". about Ul6 com.inc seaMlD, to'. say the least. • ' "We're bop<ful o! 1•ttlng·. quite a few other freshmtn · and hopefully .we'.11 have more . depth than eVer before 111 far as qui.Jity .. We'll 'be I much better club than .. we wue· las1 . year.•• • " OCC's Warren • TopOar~man Other defensive terns in-Charle' W a r re n was lht meet was poatponed 1 ' week because of poor surf. Pro Cage Stal·s Mix pole good enough so I don't , s h oot tttraili(ht up -I 'm 11hooting at the ·bar. F'or thnt reason , I should jump in prac·· lice and I will . but once again pole vaulting is such a psych event you've got to worry Bill Kinl!'annon tleft) and partner Steve Koffler of Easlbluff ca ptured the 14th about just getting off the an nu al ~embcr·guest golf tournament at Santa Ana Country Club last weekend. elude guard Bob Buries and selected 13 the outstandini linebacker Mark Padbury. Burges was a second team AU: oar:sman on the OranP.:e Col'lst Mission Conference selection College crew at Thursd•r UCLA, UC Santa Barbara and .UC . San Diego also com:. .RICJIMONPi Va. (AP) _ ground . Yo\! can't eve n think Kincannon, of the host club, and Koffler of Irvine Coast Country Club, carded .What could be billed es a pro-nbout your problem:· a net 202 to top the field of 72 teams in the 36-hole competition. last season. night's anmW spring banqut . While the defense will be tbe Warren a110 received the JV peted .in the meet.. . l es11lonal • iall1tar buketball Accelerating down the ---~----'-----------------'--------- ~ame will be played hc>re runwa y and plantJna the tip or tonight -'but nobody wJll the pole proptrly are two of know for 11ut-9\Ritil 11ame tin1e the ptoblcm11. bii key to Saddleback'1 auc-.. c~pttln'• award. lloldoo w "'. . ~ \AJnf Bea.cjl finis~«! wllh. ti points whll.• UCSB bad 41, loUowod. I by Uc ·san' DlelO (S!i an<1. UCLA '\ll). . . • who'1 ~1ylns aDd for what Pointing to a bl ackened e1•e. ttnm. Taylor explained lhe im· The geme.' ID which sta r_, portarK'C of phtnling the llp or (rom boch tt.e Notional ond the pole. "I had a late plant. Amerlc11n B1111kt tb:ill A11soc-i:i-my s!eP was way under and I tlons are~l11~ to take p:irt. is i'oulcfn ·1 hang on to lhc polt'. Big I Boosters Club Plans Golf Tour1iey a benefl\ al!a l,r for Rubicon. When I let go it hit me in the Ille 1ntldru1 organir..-tion, and face." · . . lht bralhOhUd' of ve1 cro11 Taylor said he also 'WOrne11 pla)'eriR.tXiiScott of the ADA's . "about .making 11ure you get In Vlrgln\1.,Sa;11lr¥. the pll 'cause I've missed I-tow would yoo like to play a rou11d of golf at Irvine Coast C.:oonlry Club ia the company of Jerry \Vcsl, Fr a n k i c Aval.po. Buddy Ebscn,1 Bill Shanpan. Ja<:k Kramer o( any one Or a nurnber of spoi-ts and . ,"\ ' . entertainment celebrities? . Scott ~ll\T"'co:ich one of the ' {he pit ·Mrore and I broke my teams, wb11t Ptte Ve sce}'. a hip." That happene~ when be sportJ Wqter.., for • ~be-Ne\V Was a junior in high, s~I. York 0.11~1 . •tll-'eonch ' Bit , one thing ~ ~dOesn't the 01~· .. · wor r'/ aboUt are miJOf meets The It .frill be to pick the like the Olytnpics. ; It's al~ passlble ror Orange teams 'J' ·rtnt.c hing players "l°m pretty good under Coast area iiolrers interested against ·pla y r1 \v.ith certai n pressure,'' Taylor S'Oid, "and in participating In the filth an· skills; rer3 "8 of league. I'm getting Blong better.·· _ nual Dig 1 Boosters Club \, H F, I ·means Safety (1Mfrlll9t ... t-1 Cllllffll ......... .., "''"' •ond TMl!I Gln•ff ....... (Mlfltl•ll. .,, St. AIMlrew1 .... N1Wpttl ... (~ celebrity golr tournament to Hoeg Seeks Golf Crown Laguna Beach High 's Mark Hoeg Is the lone Orange Coast area qualifier from th c Orange L.eaglie that will com- pete lo tfie CfF individual championships June S at Chino's Western Hills Country Club. The Artists No. 1 man was the loop's trip medalist in the league ·final s at Imperial Country Club in Brea with a 14 . 1971 WINNERS OF 5 DIVISION CHAMPIONSHIPS FOOTBALL SIGN-UPS bt staged Monday. June l!I with a shotgun start at 12 :30. According to chairman Jack Tobin. a total of 36 celebrities will parlici~ale in the toorna• ment with 108 amateurs as partners 'for the big event. . Also iQ~luded in the list or kriown celebrities are C l~nn Davis. Daryle Lamonica . Dti.le Robertson, Pat Studslill. Jon Arnett, Greg Morris. Rafe r Jotwon. Bobby Hatfield cu1d Bill Shoemaker. Others will be added to the list before the tournament date. Many glamorous priLes have also been attained including a new car for any player fortunate enough to make a hole.in-one during play. As a token award , the p I a y e r closest to the pin 011 a par· three, if no ace is made, \\'ill receive a used car. A myriad of golfing equip- ment including full sets of 'clubs, will be given to top golfers along with door prize lvinners. Non·golfers may gallery the event frtt of charge or view the proceedings on Channel 3, community cablevis ion. G o I f e r s interested .In playing in the event are urged to contact George Woodford at 642--3111 as early as possible. A $50 entry fee includes green fees, an electric cart. diMer and participation in the bi g prize list. Calendal' Tit....., (Mop ., Gelf -Clil' uc!IOMI l'Hrn tovrn1· mtnl t i "tal•n<ll CC. -w.M•• lU Te<lfllt -Clf lln.11. Golf -UCl .r I'll •n lnvH•llof>1t. T1111~y fl.,. II Goll -UCI t i Trofan lnv!l1tlon1I. Pr"9'1' (JMllf 11 Tr•ck -Sltlr rnHt ,, l11 PIUl!'ll, Iii~ IOrovllte 1nri1 runnh'lll 1Ycnt .i •:~.~lr -Oil' MM Nnllrlnelt. '•"''"" fJIJlle ,, frort -$1fh ft'IMI 11 L•1 Pllil'Mt Hllfl torovui.1 !flrit rvnnlftl _. •• 2 ·"·"'·)· "''"' 0011 -OawMY "' NIMA 11 C'Varut fl2 :JD). fltileering Design " Development Sm11l Syst•m• I Equipment eptic•I, mech•nic•I elKttoMIChAftic•I el•ctronic · Dinis-,. Camell Corp. cess next season, the ·offen&lve 'Mflfe Moore was presented unit certainly bu ita stars the Lloyd Smith award honor· coming back -headed by Ing the out!tandlng freshman Grid Clinic Run at UCI By Charge1·s quar6e.rback Bob Dullch and and he also was ~oored as receivers Bob Haupert a n d the freshman captain. . Tom Simmons. The R.J. Fulton scholars~1p staftdouta for Golden West'& RusUe rs were Gary G"atatlan,' John Sil vt r, Joel Baldwin; Bi'ad Baylis. John Mitchell and Bnd Dawber, Ill wtnner:a. Dulich completed 79 or 150 :~~. of $IOO went to Jim passes last season for t.175 yards and t ight touchdowns. Haupert was the lop receiver with 38 catches for 705 yards and sevtn TDs while Slmmons caught 31 passes for 360 yards and thrte touchdowns. The San Diego Chargers football coachine-&tiff will 1 'stage a fourGy din.le at UC Irvine July If.I~ wilh thrie evening sessionS and a con· eluding program S a tu r d a y morning at 9 according to clinic coordinator A1 Irwin of UC!. The first session on Wednes-- day night at 7 will include head coach Harland Svare speaking on overall orgalliza· tion ; Tom Minea on scouting; a n d Rick fl.1cDoweU on training. Thursday e\'ening's session will feature defense with Walt Yowarsky handling line play and Rick Redman t h e linebackers. Friday it will be Forrest Gregg on offensive line play: George Dickson on backfield play; and Ron Waller oo special teams orgaoizaUon. Saturday morning it will be special drill s of the San Diego Chargers' football staff. Freshmen, says Hartman, will pla y a promineiit' role ln lhe backfield and one llty ll>- coming prospect is Beet.footed Aundre Holmes from M1uloa Viejo. He's the brother of Rudy Holmes who was accorded an T., '"'"""'" """°*" Foothlll -frtd Mtl'rt,off'r UvllN tk· llnetNocll•r ji ll:kk JKObr. 1"'91'11--llMbli(tt~ • G•rv 11tobo'f't1 · (••ctltJ. Mit e Mt<:r1y (lac:tle), GleM •r.dll)' lcltl•n•l.-. bKkl. Nlf111on \tl•Jo -G•rv Wc.od 111u 1r l 1rb1 (t), Den 8,....,..n ,.,.lfblctl, Tedd a..YJl'Orl lrvnnlnt1 ti.ck ), Aundr1 Ho~! ':,JE'V.clu, J N Jonis lhifl Kil , on rlw frUMllttl blirt), J rn tnd r""" llnltMICllff\, Jim Dtddlct; OKkll , •.Pll S•hd•I• lt•ctJe), lloD PreslWOoil (tndl. :r,v1r1ltv -Eo c.i1~1.M1rt.,.Nr:t1- c1e ''"'* block} JOlll C •~,I' I I n Iha fbockl, 8111 iUddlt I oD GI" h•lfblclc , Dorn Dtr o l•(kif l, Willi• J•rrn•ri (11itl. Tu111n -s111 n1rnity ClltlftlKll), Niia• S~r1vn ). 5'M rn1ri1 -oftri S.rllltfMri, Pll• s f.,., 1fo.tt,,.f.,. becll), Jost Malat!O!I lllt~J. •• , , y. f11tolfbllck), Cl•rt Jerrett lll•llllKll_ ~.r,... bock), Aotiln 11 • 1 rn o" "~:if.I'' , 11111 Madd'" \ ( • n I t r r lllM .,.,, MiOd Gl1Cornln ldtMlllll .... •.W t •• llt• P1ul10n \ f,,.l!Wln ), Kevin wri.rit I ln.Uclc1r....nd , • M11•r Dal -Jot Knoll (1Kll11J', Mor P1r•"''I• f11ckl•l. • Four Orange Cout area swimmers were accorded ad· diUonal hol'lOl:s in the form of Albion prlies Wednesday nilht by 1he Kaloa Kaplhos Foun. .da.t.ion at Anaheim'• Pearson •Parlt.J Fountain Vall<y High junior Jack Babashol!, Huntington Beach senior Clay Evans, Newport Harbor's Jay Farrer and Costa Mes.a'' MI k e Y.arwood were singled out from the area. Other notable recipients in- cluded CIF Southern S.Cllon commluiooer J. K e n n t t h Fqans, former Corona d<I h1ar High coach D a v e MUiovicb 1now with Gross. moot COllei•l and Foothill High's Tom Dt.Lon1 (a Coria Mea resident). • Golden West COll•I• today shares the western lntercolleg11t.t turfing chanr plonship witb C4 State (Long Beach). 111e two teams tied for the crown reeently at Malibu after in their heats. -• Artists Laud ·1 •· .. . Ba~~nelis ' Nick. Gill~pie was named l!IOil V.iuabl• plill'IJ' of the Laguna Beath lllth baaeball · loam al a special •&atherin( honoririg the '72 contlntent. ., Special award winnera: varsity . . ·:. , Moil Valuable: .NI c I:. GWe,IPle; · Most lmprov«I :" Tom -Crawtord ; eoQpta~~ 'Chilek ·Corwin and Mi t·• 'Mootmin. ~ ·:;. J .... rVaralty Moot V•luib~.:. D • n n 1 Quinn;. CHapt1U,.: M~. "Atendoza aQd . ~ Whltet' Moel Improved; Randy ff..., , niger. , ·. · · Fro1).Sojlli _ Molt ·Valuable!· F1 an k . Wt\ghi; MOst Jm'pr9ved': David Knapp;· Co<:aptainc~· .Andj. cm .. p1<1 iild JoM 1<raf'. "nttr. DIANf.EWIS 1972 TOYOlA CARINA Baseball S·tandinss ' ' ' NA TJONAL LEAGUE Eut Dtvllloo W L Pct. GB New York Pl t!Jbur&h Chicago Mootreal PhJladelphia St Louis Houstvn Dtqers Cincinnati Ailanta San Diego 29 II 24 l4 20 17 17 22 IS 23 IS 25 West Division 24 IS 21 16 21 18 l7 12 San Francisco 16 2S 15 29 MIM4'Y'I ••Miii Cl'llClllO f , NlonW.•I 2 ~nr 'l'orit 1, St. Louis ' fl'ltl90ilr91'1 7..t. PhllMllll'fllll Sol DW1«t S, SM l"rtnctuo t Atltnl• 1, Sen °"" 1 ClncfMetl I, Hlulfln I ,....,... cu- .718 .m 311 .Sit 7 .436 II .110 12 .m 1311 .61$ .600 .5l8 .136 .390 .351 J 7 9 11 \~ SI. Ltul• IGlbton 1·11 11 Chlutci CHlllCll S.1) Pltf'lbllr9ll 111111 S.21 M ~I (TtrrQ 4--2}, l'llehl Plrlll ... pf\11 (Ctf1Mll M) 11 ...., Vet\ 1""1*1 S.0), """' lolri DI ... tNWIMll , 4) M AtllN• Cltfflll Mil, "'"' Clflcl-11 1•1HintN~ 1_.) et Hwtf'Oll (Wilton ,.,,, "'"'' ~ tOllWI S.1\, .. SM Frll'ltlK'I tMc;-Odwrfl ., ,, flltM AlllERICAN LEAGUE Eaot Dtvl•loll W L Pct. GB Ballimoro 20 IS .571· O.trnlt 20 I& • 556 II Cleveland 11 18 .529 Ill New York 18 II .457 4 Botton II 19 .UI 5 Milwaukee JI %l .344 711 Wttl DlvlliOfl Oakland 21 II .618 Minne10tl 21 12 .836 t Chicago 23 II .Ill 211 An&<I• ll 23 .410 10 Tes as II !3 .410 10 Kansas City II 23 .311 II DEAN LEWIS 1t66 HARiot ILVD., COSTA MEIA 646-9903 ~l'TH FACTOltY AIR· CONDITIONiNG Pll ~NTH 1972 VOlYO . 142 SEDAN . WITH l'ACTOR'I' Allt CONDITIONING ., . ' ' • ; • 1117A6 t T~·~ ..:,.-, .. •• _,.., --ttlifUr -.' ~ & ~~ . '·"' :"~ ~~·-\ 1 1912, ltJeTA . fl H " , ST'ATIQt.t,WA4C?fl ·; ~ l'ACT(lltY '. ••r!:"..~om~~ .. .;· , '9800:.~:_'.~; SorYlce· 1rl<I l'9rtl for All l_...N C4n : ,, , ,, .~ 1"3Eht17thStroat Modim looly $""'fer AN ~.s '141.M •''rW _ .... ,...,, S...11 AM Oringe County's Lorfell 111d Most Modern Toyvla 111d VGl•o Dealer Momllll1";Prllt> '* ' •. , (714) 835•7215 WU.llAI DILIYlllT INCIALllTI :r:t"ilr1C"! ~ ____________ _.,.._ ____________________________ .., ____ ......... iiiiiii ........ k ...... ____ .._ .... .._ ... 1 • ' ' •• I • O' • r • > '· Women's . Softball, l . Jla~to~ Sa• CIMllMt Cll 11} W&* Pm 4kftlw I: kill Clwnttlft, l l. VIiia r•rll, ~ II : Vitti Ptrk. 11, Sin t. SNift. ~ l:.n CIMltntt, lO. vui. P&rll. ao.. II : Si ft C~ IS. V1!1.1 Ntti. a. W..aflll..._, {I) (I) h11t1 AM Yt11W SeNor I: Wtt1"11llltlf, 6. hnl1 Aft" Yt1"'1, S. Juntow h w .. tmlmttf'. 4 :s.ant• AM ·~ ...... ~ II: W4'tfrl\IMTtr, 'l S.nt1 AM Y1llft', 6. ... I: Wtmri~ttr, IL S.1'1'11 Ml YMlty, L lo.ti 11: W.tinlJlftw , 7 S.nl1 Al'lll "'""'· l. • ~ Ill: WHtm)tli"l'el'1 t. !.11111 Arw Yllltl'. '· ~ • frodt 11 W•tml11$1.,.. :S,. ~1nt1 A.111 V1IJw, • . . P,_,, II: WH'"'l~tff, 11. Santi "'" VtlltY, t. flrv.11 th Wtstmlfl"tr, 11. S.nt~ ~ V101y,. t . ' flrodl IV: vmtlt'llllS'lt!>, lt. Santi~ v.~.l.' "' . ~• lMtlfltlM IMdl (Cl (J) af MMMI' II~ ): HUt1tl111ton a .. ch 7, l!'I .... ~ 11 : Hunll~Ol'I l•dt. s. £1 Mod ...... 1t Jullltr I! Hunllt1t1en 911cll, lS. Ef -··1· Mlot I: Hunt"-eton 9-h. u. et ......... Junior 111: Hunllft9ftn •Ntn. l. 1ri M"6911&, 4. SOCth. t. Hunlint!Otl lluch, ''· !ti N.t>d..,1 fF~ 1111, I. Fr0$h-$aph, tt: H1111f(l'lf1on INch, IS, E1 Mc.1•111 !Frosh 11), 1. _ PfO!l't I: 11unt11191M IHct., 2, £1 ~··'· • .I. J1111lor IV: Huntlritllln IMC:h, I . rl Moden1 (FfOIM. tV), t . Sin (1-fftfl (2) 01 tJ~ftrllty Jun!<>• I : S.11 Cl1m1t1!1, 11. Ut1lven l· ty Jr·Slr ~ •· Soph I: S111 Ct~!•, 311. Unlftf'llly .ir111 te1m, 1. F•osf't.S«>ll I: Util~rsi!Y, s. S..11 Cltm111t1 Fr1111111 I, 1. Cfttll #1.U 141 !JI sarr11 A111 St11lor I: Cost1 Mew. 3. S1nta An1, •. . Se~lor II: C~ll Mesi, 15. San11 Ana, •• Soi>h. I: to.ta Mr.;1, L Santa A111, •• •• SoPll. It : COiia MtM. 13. S1nfa Ana Girls •1m.111t111 FM111t11l1 Viii., 1111 1•1 adi••• ll"''" ltlct.ar111 {F) IOlf lo P11r1c111 (l!I 11 ... , ~11. 2·11, lrOWll 11"1 Otf. David !El 11·2, H...I. Mol'fdt (I") cfef, S~yd1r,llEI 0-2, /l·I, 11·). . Htll (Fl def. Gom11 (El ft.t. 11;1, E111tt (Fl Iott ho G1k1YIC: (£) 2-(1, 1· 11. l·H. Mead• lP1 lost to Sllddt111t (£) 1·11, 1.11 . 1Lynn (Pl clef. Venn1n1 (E1 11-t. •-11. 11·•· C"'flttflO !Fl lief. DrY'llY!fll IE) 10·11, ·~·· . Giimore CPI def. G. Posey IEJ ll-4, ,, ... lllodri1v1z (Fl lost to M1nu,1oez ll!.l 10.ll, '-11. Lldc11t (Fl ICISf to Grimlt11w ('El ~ ''· ... 11 . .... 'Mlflef' U!.l cwt. l urnelt (El 11·2, n .J. ...... Clofl K-Sll'llltl IF) def. sl...,..tnff M l 1s-11, lH. _L_Gutlft:re1-Nu114l <FJ dtf. ColWlounl t"ll lS.h, .. lJ, 11-1. llfflvtnl1! .. T-.:llodl (Fl dl'f., Gero- ltoml~I (El IS-12, lS.-7. • M1d'lkY·Roll• !fl dl'f. l urlll·l"•ltmlr (El IS-10, t-lS, lJ.t. , H1v1••-51111i.ta1< IFI lost to M•'-¥/111• IE1 (.IS, S-15. _1F1rr1r1-SC11ul!r lf l Cef. Oldll'll n· Tertly (!:) 1S.-), 15-12. ,Cowan-Em11111el !fl Cl'f. Ward· DeL-vc:• (f!) IS-3, l S.1. ' GrundY·Henrv (f) def. L. PQH'Y• TlllloMfl IEI 15-7, lW. Ev1n'""1mmond !Fl def. 1tv111· Mc:Corll'llck (El 15-2, 15-11. I I, ' ; •, B~~;dJ~s , ~Top 10 ,a1sM "" IG •I •ah. AM•JllCAM L•A.U• P1ay1r, Clll.. 0 A• a N ,.ct. a uc11. o ak l2 1:w 711 .tS ..3Jl ~Cr1w, C1• J2 102 14 33 .124 P . K•My, Chi 1' 102 11 13 .31' "1nl1ll1, KC lS 111 n '' .:n1 0 .<AUen, Cl'll ~ 13-1 21 0 .'71 "Jp:uin, C1I ll 123 1• 3' .]17 Yf'ffl'l1n, D•I 1• ff lS :JO .31) a M1v. c~ :w '" tl 3' .su •r1vn, M!11 2S 14 1 2' .110 l ovar. M!n ll "' 2t 3' .3112 M-ll•llt ,D11nc:a11, 01«.19!\d, f ; ll. J IClllOll, Oak· .- l1Jld, t . C1ltl, Detroit, •: D. Alli "' Cl\I· dJDb, •1 I . Conloll1ro, Milw1u1111, t; Ol!"W1n. Mlnl'llSoll, '-•-··"" '~ 8. Allen, O!ICIQO, 31; D1rwl11, Mln- fltttot1, 2'; JI:. JICklOll, Oak11nd, n 1 Ount1n, OllU11M1, 241 C1r1w, Ml11t1..,. '°''' n . ~ Pittllllt9 (I O.CisllMI K.Nt. MlnMmfl, .... ,, 157; lee. ••· f'l!n, 4-1, .toO; f lfWlltl'll, Oakl1nd, •·1, . aoe; l+oltz,.,.1n, 011<!1nd, 1.1, :m ; At.i<9'\dlf', l11tlm0t1, :J.1 , .7501 kllnt, N..,.. Yori!, 3.1, .7.sa; llur11mel1r, kl"''' City, 3.1, ,750 ; P1nfM.r, T1111s, :J.1, .750. NATIONAL t.eAeUI!! ~· c.-• . ... • ..N t!c:t. 'T(fre. SJL ll 1• 20 J5 .ln s-u1n.n • .,.,. !1 l '' 16 S4 .~s M! A11111, Srt. I ,,. J-40 1• .. ~ "4tw:1ev, Chi 36 l 12 n :II .l3' l•· so 3J 111 ... ~ ..JJt Cllllm~t1, .,gh ' ?I 1:it f1 '1 .~ AJ'Ol1vff, "P" , ll 1St 21 n .:m tttu-H. l.A , • 3S 1p.I U :l.f .321 1 ..,, At1 ' ' • 31 'U I 2f .313 T 1n, Cin lf 1'1 li '6 .113 H--in<tmin. S1f1 Pf111th.c.o._ll: Coltllrf; s 0;...,, 1o:·s11rq.111, .,.ttstio'1'fl. '· H Aaron, Att1nt1, I ; Watsoft. Movst.,., t : L. M•'f• Ho.i1!6". I. aoM ••"Id 111 lr1g1T1an. San . Ft1t'ldto1 311 Star· Pll'httunrh, 901 A. oirwr. ,itfl.- , I\, 7'f C1r.te111!, Cllftlfl!< 21: ,, s~" frene!sc:o. 17. J'tkltl"' 14 DMtlllMl • ttiy. N°"'91'1• t1-0, 1.0CICh Svt!Ofl, l AMl!n. 14, ·,.IOO: M1Jtoc:k. M-r y t, S.f, l ,tlllh M4f"IMll, MenlrM , 1.0001 NMpn; c;ni;tMetl, '-'· .U71 ~~·· Slfl ,.,~e. '-'· .trr1 • 11, ~rvfl. f.1,"31 ... 'olfl', Ntw v , 1-1 •. m. ' ' ~ Some Valuable~ f11Gll1 JOll" Shel dealer •. ' I Save this Shell fact sheet. It'll take some of the mystery out of deciding on the right tires the next time you lneedsome. ' i Construction terms made clear-cord materials : explained. ) The sketches will give you a good idea ·of how tire construction can differ. And these are only two of the more popular constructions available. l . l!es tknown and most prevalent is 'the bias ply construction. So named because it has two or more layers ol cords, known as • 'Plies. which are 'placed diag- onally to the tread.(see sketch )-tailors call this position- ing "on the bias''., thus the name. These cord plies can he made ol nylon, rayon, or polyester. . Two examples ol very good bias ply tires are the Shellride" whi ch has 4 plies of nylon eord, and the Shell Premium• 30 whi ch has 4 plies of polyester cord. •Pnimlun;i U a Shell dui,:riofl'on. No iridu'lfry-witU .rland(lrrU ~ilf for ,,rod in; lhe qu11lit11 Qf u,.~ •. 2. This sketch shows a belted bias-ply construction which combines features that 11\ai;iy e:<perts consider best: (a). b.ias'P,~es;' ' and.(b) he1ts,. which a:re ad- , ditiohal plies running the circumference ' of the tire, un- der the tread, giv- ing extra protection against road hazards. And, in addition, reinforcing the tread, making it finner. This kind of construction also reduces · squinn, a major cause of tread wear. Shell has two grades of tires in this category. The new Shell Belted Seventy Eight"', with 2 plies of polyester cord and 2 rayon belts. And the Surer Shen• HP40, which has 2 plies o polyester cord and 2 belts of fiber glass. A rAn-down on fiber materials. J. Rayon is the original man-made fib er used in tire plies, and is still very popular. Helps give a comfortable ride. 2. Nylon is strong, durable and heat- resistant. May have a tendency to "flat spot" (tires flatten out slightlywhen plifked-but the "flat spot" works itself out In driving)< 3. Polyester is the most popular cord material used today. Combines the best features of rayon and nylon. Strong as nylon, but won't "flat spot". 4. Fiber Glau is known for its strength, makes a good belt material because it doeS11't stretch. Very flexible . What construction should you buy? · 1'hat depends on you, your car, your budget, the way you drive, and many other variables. Discuss your needs at length with a good, reputable dealer. There are thousands of them in Shell stations all across the country. And, rem ember these men don't just sell you tires and then forget you. They count on pleasing you so you'll keep coming back Shell dealers count on steady customers. Your Shell dealer has the right tire for you.· Ask hin1 about these four fine tires: • Shellride': 4-ply nylon cord • Shell Belted Seventy Eight'" . 2-ply polyester cord, 2 rayo n belts TMfrode1nurk S11t-ll Oil Con1111111u t • Super Shell' Premium 30: 4-pl y pol yester cord • Super Shell' HP40: 2-ply polyeste r cord , plus 2 liber glass belts. How to .understand the letters and numbers on the sidewall. It's important that you know what all these 111 arkings mean \Vhc11 you're buyinjl replacements-especially if you re not ordering a whole set. The new on es should be the same size ' and have capabilities equal to tlie old ones. B A F The big type gives nam e and size. The small type on the inn er edge gives n1any more specifics. A. This is the brand name-in thi s case, Super Shell HP40. B. This is the size of this particular tire: G70-15. The "G" represents its load carrying capability. (For example : with an air pressure of 24 pounds per square inch, a "G" size tire has a maximum load carrying capacity of 1,380 pounds.) The "70" indicates the series, also called the aspect ratio. This is the ratio of the cross-section height to the width of the tire (this one is 70 percent as high as it is wide.) And, the "15" means it fits a 15-inch rim . (Your Shell dealer can show you a chart that makes all this size nom en- clature even simpler. And, it'll show the right size tire for your car and your kind of driving.) C.Load Range letters rep resent the inflation limits of the particular tire (and replace the old ply rating tenni· nology ). The higher the letter, the higher the safe maximum pressure (and, thus, the hi gher the load the tire can carry). Load Range Maximum Pressure ~ A ··-·-.. ···········-·· 28 p.s.i. B ....... ·-····-·········-32 p.s.I. C .... ·--·'··-·····-..... 36 p.s.i. D.·--·····-··-·-·-····.40 p.s.i. D.This spells out th e load and inflation limits ol the tire. E. This tells you about th e construction -how many plies and belts and the ; SlflE THIS PAGE MTCH FOR AN~ SAIE FROM SIE I STATIONS LAIER TllS WEEK. , . . .. .• material s tl1ey're made of. F. On the other side is the Federal Department of Transportation serial number. A code that tells where, wh en and by whom the tire was made. Sec your Shell dealer if you want to decipher the code . What about 1uarantees? The more you read guarantees, the more you'll realize that they're very much alike. • So a good thing to look for is general and widespread acceptabiltty of your guarantee. If the dealer who issued it is the only one who'll honor it, you're stuck if you have tire trouble when you 're traveling far from home. The advantage of a Shell guar- antee is simpl e: It's honored at thousands of Shell stations all acros- the U.S.A.-evcrywhere Shell tires are sold. , Shell's Tire Guarantee Shell tires are guaranteed throughout the life of the original tread with no limit as to time or mileage: 1. Against all defects in workmanship and materials. 2. Against failure from blow-outs, nonrcpairable punctures, fabric breaks and cuts encountered under nom1al driving conditions . If a Shell passenger tire fails during the first %,'' of tread wear, Shell will replace the tire at no charge. Beyond ?-~::" of weaT, the allow- ance toward a new tire is based on a pro-rata share of the amount of original tread depth still remaining down to ;r,,• (the Department of Transporta- tion classifies a tire as worn out from this point on). Three ways to make your new tires last tonier. First: you should know that wheel balance is vital to the life of a tire. Be sure to have your wheels balanced when you buy new tires. Out-of-balance wheels can create vibrations which arc highly destruc· tivc. The tires wear unevenly. And tl1Cn th ey wear out-before their time. You can also get the sa me sort ol damage from worn-out shock absorbers and faulty suspension systems. Your Shell dea ler can check these potential trouble spots for you. And fix them , ii necessary. When you "re investing in new tires, it makes sense to invest a little more in good service to make sure you get the most out of them. Second: you should always make sure your fron t wheels arc properly ali gned according to the service man ual specifications for your car. If they're not, lots of good tire rub- ber will be scrubbed away need lessly. So have your alignment checked when you buy. It can add thousands of miles to the life of your new tires. TIRES ........ ' ............. ~-- Tl1ird: you shouldundcrsiand why: it's import ant to rotate your tires periodi cally. II you do mostly turnpike drivin g, yo ur rear wheels arc getting the brunt of th e wear. In city driving, front wheels get more we ar because of all the corn ering. So why not distribute the wea r-evenly-simply by having your tires rotated at tho Intervals recommended in your owner's manual? You'll get longer life from your tires if y01J do. Our sketch shows you _ how to do it yourself-this is tho classic "X" rotation. Or have your Shell dealer do the rotation 1· ob for you. Consult your owner's manuo for special instructions. Wamin1: Be cautious about Inflation and load ran1es. There arc three things to he concerned about here: Over-inflation, under- ioflatio~. and unequal lnnation. When a tire is over· inflated, the center of the tread is getting all tho wcnr-whcn under-inflated , the edges get all the wear (see ske tches). Unequal Inflation fron1 tire to tire cat' also cause.uneven response to braking and steering... . , ... •. Over-inflated Under-lnt1atea Verify the nir pressure recnm-· mendation for your tires in.,your owner's manual And stick to!\ Pocket air pressure gauges are a goocl )Vay to check pressure. And it's also a good idea· to make .: sure you' re not exceeding the maximum ·: load your tires should carry. Consult · your manual-or the Load Range Tables at your Shell station. Why you should check tread depth re1ularly. People who make a polnt of measuring their tread depth at regular intervals accomplish two things. They get safety minded-and thu1J11ore ca'u· tlous. And, th~y get a good~aw-.look at their tires from time to time. Any number of trouble spots might be revealed during these lnspectlon1 . So' why don't you get safety minded today? Give your tires !:oj close look or drive in to any Shi station and have a profeulonal ch them for you. It could be the start of a good habit. ' ' ' • ' ' . • l • ' ' ' ' ' ' ~ ~ JtJ DAIL¥ Pll~i rlol(~~r. r. ,., .. J •• ,, • LEGAL N(11'1CE L11GA1. ll011CE ' LfGAL NO'nCE LEGAL NOTICE ,,,,.. Pvbll•lltd Or.1n11• Co11t Dilly Piiot, M1v "· 23, lll, .. ...., Jvn1 •, un l'l'IJ.n LEGAL NOTICE Fami1ies to Live On Stored Goods .... PAJ.O ·ALTO · (AJ>l--· How long could you WI u ,.. .,.... suddenly told ,.. bad to ollt for three .. ,.b solely "' !ood and other supplies 7 o a stockplltd at borne? food ~worldwide-from· regional ·· • · -to needy ducb membm -again In I spirit r .... t, Mormon !omillo. lncludinf dculll ol chtldrfn, have btgun a project htte to see how well they can survive for the nert three weekJ on sooili they stored. ot -c .. u.rtllance and to a.old debllllating tff<dll ' IUCb II SoVermntnl bandoulJ, Bllbop Taylor said. Tb1s means everythtn1 from !ood to light bulb! to bathroom PIJ)<r. UNDER GROUND nilet, no family mtmbtta may 1bop for anything dufinC the thr .. w e e k s, except emergency medlcal supplies. They cannot eat J n restaurants and mutt pack lunches to 1eboo1 and work. After the flt.rt 41 hours, they cannot uoe !ood !tom th<lr freeun. The survival experiment bqan wh<n Biabop Henry Taylor selected JO families at random from 150 families who belong to the Palo Alto S.C..d Ward o! th< Cbureh o! J..u. Christ of the Latter-day Saint!. Ten more families volunteered. No advance notice was given on who Viould be selieted. Biabop Taylor nplalned that u good Mormons, all ward memben 1bodld have stored enough food for one year. In Ille llnal -· the famHles will gatbtr for a potluck supper pooling hornecooked foods from their 1tockpU.s. "Everyone it really en- thusiastic," Bishop Ta y I or believes. "But it'• been easy ao far. It may r«t more in- teresting in two or three weeks." SF Fights Commuter Auto Use By RONALD S. SUPINSKl-- SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - "We are doing everything we can in competition with the car," is the way Dale Luehr· - ing explains efforta under way here to cut down 9n thou morning and evening rush hour traffic jams. Luehring is general manager of the Golden Gate Bridge, Highway and Transportation Di.strict which 111E BISHOP, bis wife and in recent months Ttduced by eight children have volun-hundreds the number or cars leered. An inventory of their carrying commuters to and ··sroTage iiea ii milch Uke tha r -trom the city via the Golden- of the other families : non-Gate Bridge. periahable foods auch u The reduction in autos has powdered milk, 10 y b ea n been accomplished with such formulas for proteins, canned enticements to motorists as fruits, meats and vegetablea, increased and better bus and. grains and other materials for ferry service wilh lower fares, home baking. and free parking at terminals Self-reliance and economic outside the city. independence are impartant to Mormons, who eschew atcohol, tobacco and all o t h e r stimulants. Mormons contribute JO per- cent of their incomes to the church and avoid all debt - even charge accounts -and .!aeh !amliy ia supposed to store a year'• supply of goods. Tho -ia to be prepared 1n cue of crisis such as loss of a job, illness or even some type of civil or natural disaster, Bi!bop Taylor ex- plained. THE CllURCH OPERATES farms, cattle ranches and can· ning plant!, distributing the Two Charge Bond Fraud FRESNO (AP) -Two Southern Californians have filed suit In U.S. Distflct Court here charging securities fraud in the sale of bonds to finance improvements in a foothill subdivision. The !Uit, filed by Mary E. Atkinson and Arthur D. Ridout, Sf:eks $1 million in general damages and $10 mllUon in punitive damages. They contend a prospectus for Millerton Lake P a f k Estates contained misrepre. 11:..-.tation. They purcha19ed 135,000 o! the $1.15 million In bonds issued, the suit 1ay1. No Barriers "IN EVERY way possible," Luehring said, "We are trying to make our bus and ferry service system attractive to lhe commuter. We are flf· fering him a co n venient alternative to hls auto. We are encouraged, thus far, by the results." The G<>lden Gate CC>rridor links San Francisco with the p i c t u resque, mountainowl suburbs to the north. Anoth<r plan ia almed at cutting down auto traffic into the city from the Oakland, Berkeley, East Bay areas to the east, via the San Fran- cisco-Oakland Bay Bridge. On the Oakland Bay Bridge, an eX"j)f!rimental toll-free lane for car pools began several months ago. Now it ls on a regular basis with a token charge of $1 a month for com· muters who travel by car pool -three or more persons per car. The normal fee is 50 cents per round trip. The project is In its first stages but an estimated 4,000 motorists are taking ad - vantage of the toll bargain during t h e experimental period. SINCE THE BRIDGE District took over the com· muter runs from Greyhound to cities north of San Francisco on Jan. 1, vehicle traffic has declined noticeably, according to Luehring. There are approximately 1,000.fewer cars crosaing the Golden Gate Bridge duMng the peak three hours of com- muting in the morning and about 1,200 fewer cars heading north out of the city in the evening. Without buses, an averaf{e of 17,600 vehicle! crossed the bridge into the city between a a.m. and 9 a.m. With the buses and ferry operating, this fell to a low of 18,0U vehicles in February. "We'd still like to get down to the october, 1981 average of 15,700 in the peak commute period." Luehring said Jn an Interview. "Then we have to take orf 500 to 1,000 more vehicles to reaJly see a llgnifi· cant improvement in the trar· fie now ." ONE THING lh•l h<lped dlacouraae auto traffic on the suspension bridge IHI the elimination of oommuwr dlJ. count books which had redue- od the !kent toll to tO cenb. 'l'hese bave been Nplaced b)I "convenience" books whlch 1!10 Cllll be used on the b\llOI and !erry. --boolu pro-vide signillcant savlng.s for bus patron&. Greyhound used ai> pn>Xlmatoly 115 00..S on com- muter rons to P.farln and Sonoma counUes while tho bridge district operates II& at peak boun. Tho 00..S ... 1 4.1 and "are the best we coul( buy" at 147,000 apl..,., IAl•hr· Ing said. Each reclining sut bas a headrest and plenty o! 1110m lo str<tch lop. UPI T....,_ Bridge Anyotae? Tho 3M Company in New York bas come up with a new bridge game based on the computer system -Challenge Bridge. 1-lere a bridge buff examines a master transparent sheet of computer markings. The thousands of dots, printed on the back of each playing card, enable a dealer to distribute tourna· menrhands -qulckly so that players can play Teal tournament hands and compare their results with the experts. Stude11ts Eat Up Caf e's O·ff erings --Clll'ltttlft'1itleiw:. MOll!t.,. Service-- SANTA CRUZ -Soybean spread on pumpkin bread may never be worth a peanut-but· ter·'jelly~ralsin in a sec- ond grader's scale of lunch· box trades. B u t college students at one state universi· ty are asking for second help- ings. 1be Whole Earth Restaurant at UC Santa Cruz was opened in April. 1970, after a student boycott there forced a local hamburger concession t f) close. For the past two years. the restaurant staff -or "family" as they prefer to be called -has been serving cot· tag~e soofOeS and car· rot cakes by the ro<>p potful. Natural foods are t h e featured appetizers, main en· lrees, and desserts at the restaurant, and their appeal is easy to understand, accord ing to Sharon Cad wa 11 ad er. manager and informal head of the kitchen family. •iNATURAL FOODS are basic f<>Od.1 that are already familiar to us -meats, poultry, fish, fruits, vegetables grains, and legumes, among others, 11 she said, "People are becoming more conscLous of their d i e t s nowadays. The need ror these (natural) foods 1!1.'t really quesUoned by anybody. I don't think. The problem and the real cause of our movement 1s quality." Mrs. Cadwallader likes her cooking simple and easy. Instead or overcookin g vegetables~ boiling out the nutrients, and "glopping" them up with starchy gravies or sauces, she steams them gently -until they are "near· crisp." I Nor are meats f~er put to :t high-heat roasting in her kitchen. A longtime devotee o f natural-food cooking, she has tested her inventive recipes for sesame fish and stuffed zucchini on college student! and Santa Cruz residents, and JACluded their favorites in her recently published ' • W h o l • Earth Cook Book" (Hougliton Mifflin Company, Cloth $5.95; spiral $3.95). CO-AUTHOR of the book ii Judi Ohr who is responsible for the bread and de.ssert recipes. Born and raised in a farming community near San Jose, Judi keeps an organic garden et her home in San Juan Bautista , '''here she Jives with her two young children. Recipes are designed for the housewife or young 1nother in· terested in creating good food habits. In addition to suggesting fun ways of looking at old persim· moos or fresh, young egg. eludes advice on b u y i n g plants, Mrs. Cad\vallader in· natural foods. "Organic food would be the optimum," she explains, "but natural foods are good to switch to for now.•• Shop for the basic food, she says. Buy a whole potato In- stead of potato chlps or frozen french fries. If your grocer carries only polished barley, and you want it unhulled, keep after him un· til you see it on the shelves. "The cost for good, basic roods is not high," Mrs. Cadwallader explains, "unless you're going to go crazy and eat everything organic. "EVE RYONE WENT overboard for 'while," !he agrees. ''But now people are leveling back to nocmal again. Sure, you can find natural~ foods stores practlcallv everywhere, but it's just e'.. sensible to sh<lp fflr basic foods in your own supermarket." She says the recipes In the Whole Earth Cook Book are easy to follow and enC<lurage experiments wlth lesser-known foods like soybeana a n d sprouting vegetables. Little equipment is needed, "A good steel knife and a vegetable steamer -maybe even a yogurt blender - would help, but ere not essen· ti al," says Mrs . Cldwallader. The author sees this first book as a beginning, and is at work on e second publication on "small" gardening -grow .. ing salad greeiw and h<rbl. I means Pride '*tttt-.i• feJ atlJ-.... ...,., ... ,. .... '- ....... , .... Cllalr!Nll> ..,. "· ......... ........., .... l I • • • • n e n • • g • n t c ' • t t TUMBLEWEEDS K:E, '«JI.I~ • MUTI AND JER FIGMENTS NANCY YOU KNOW THOSE WATERMEL.ON SEEPS l PL.ANTED e_y ._,M;....:Y__,;-"""'\ HOUSE'?..-W'HAT ABOUT THEM'? I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by •· A. POwn ] .ACROSS 1 Eutnct s•..-c .. :sran11 10-ofEly 14--aboot: Awa•l1111l!!y: 2 words 15 Somtthlng lll\t: Informal lli Srcludtd spot 17 At\ of '"""'"" . 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SO Ntbrnlra c 011111111 i t1 51 Mri:td tr:aWtt 52 Ob)rcl to lormall1 56 Uniting la 11\i1rrlJ9t •D Affettion 'l Equntri.,: 2 WOids M ltm at bU"'f tqulpm!nl '5 Goal '6 Nick Chari.s's •lft li7 SAIK}' 68 ll lllla'ybuts '' Tlke a loot: at:S1-.; DOrN 1 Btatdtd ,...,_ .. 111111 2 In rt11trd to: 2 words 3 II.sh bird 4 Platts of hllr 5 Ylt1dlng """' -~ 'TtH 7 Ftultdmt a -ltld Mtdles , Liberated: Z -10 l'lthout • ,..., 11 lllenu ittm u Solihfy '"'"'""° SuppltlM!lts •ilh •rfort ll Hwl119 dtt\liJl •llh 1111111 stars: Htr. 22 lla:St 1 mldakt 24 Wlttiln lht liw 2S llost 1C1am1 27 Dh1lnLstl:1Z -· 21!<rlnoup 29 MoMtay wirt of D!Mlwlc 31 Vtntl111.ed JZ Siiiy 33 S1l1111Mdtrt . J6 lnltrlot In rink 39 At point of ua. 40 Exlrtm• P'Mlion 44 St\'tfing 46" Having gtt&l """'' 4! Desert a:il.als 4' Ttlltr of fatsdloods. SZ Slllk. htivl1r 53 l lWldtr troi.gtl ~ l.oc•ttd abovt : Prtnx 55 S.tlt 511-oll dlvfnlty 51 CllUdlus:' SU(Cf'liSCI' }9 llllll of Ill.SS .,,.,,,., 'l Thl119: L.w l] l'trckl • GASOLINE AWY DIRECTORS DINNIR?' 1\1! MAD NO MENO ON A Dtl!£CTORS°DINNER. By Tom K. Ryan YOO ONT CUI rr IN SIDW ~l:Z: WrfHOOT Ctl~, llOY! By Al Smith ~E L.IKES "TO CARRY 'EM AL.ONE, M-"AM ! IT'S A WEAKNESS Wl-n-1 ~IM/ GORDO MOON MULLINS By Dale Hale ' ,. O.IC'.! SVE~Bot>Y MOVEOVE~ HBRE'.Now,. ,AN!> I'LL <lET "Tfl./>.T <SJDf' ! by Emie BushmiDer ANIMAL CRACKERS PEANUTS .. :· 11 . , " :.: JUDGE PARKER I H._VE A FEELING THIS OFFICE 15 601NG TO BE 'l'HE B IGGEST BONANZA I YET, LEE! 11155 PEACH HU.0 .. I AM &EAUiJFUl.-. AS A A f~lfND OF \---,.-~'IF~IEND 11E l!<~DS. I OF n<E I OV10E ..:::...'J", @'1 :e1w s, ., WATEK'. l AM "HELTEI: SWORN 0 EVfRY . -ro )11RD wµo PRoru.r c:oMES HE'ia;. THEM. ~ ,, r,: . t c., PERKINS '-'· ~.·''.) !/ -. ~'°' ... , ::V~':;.."';: J (l)..U,, S·~(J Bv Charin M. Schub: ~~~~~~~~ .... I'll SEE YOU 1N A COUPLE OF HOURS! PILE UP THOSE APPOINTMENTS! AM % A )!1RD ? , I I . ; .. : • > ~ ; : ! , l1.~ <" C01Jl(S! YOU'2E A }9i1F!:D ! ><OW C1»'E '<OU 01DN'1" ·KNOV>I? ' , , .... .'II.;>. -.. ly Mell ONE NEV•~ ~HOWS UNTIL A F~IENO T£Ll.S ONE. ly John Mllfs C~IL' ,.ILO'T ly Dick Moons By Gus Arriola By Ferd Johnson .-ray Roger Bollen THE GIRLS "Bul the thing Is, wlly pay to bear • lecture on t.conomr when most of us ca.a bear one every ti\ltnlq Cur notb1D1." DENNIS THE MENACE 'StlriE , l!O')'S , 'll'.JO CAN M EA1' lHEM OFF IF 1HE Y 00 •.• M 1 OOllT 1MINK 1MEV'RJ; AeQJT 10 STAA\PfOE.• ·:.l · Jf DAIL~ PILOT 20 OAIL Y PILOT T~, MIJ JO, !-971 Everyone Hai Something That Someo~e Elie Wants DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS .. You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Wont Ad ·rhe Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results l • ' Goner•I REST ON YOUR LAURELS ... and enjoy the forever view from this beautiful upgraded condo. 2 Bdrms,. 2 baths • plus dr~IJf !<itch. & spacious living r m. En- t.JOY the..manne view from almost anyplace .l.n th, 'P~ .J84,900. 'HARBOR VIEW HILLS This 4, BR. & family rm. home has man y special features incl. $30 Sq. yd. carpet. HSpace a~e" electronic burglar & fire alarm, self-clearung oven, Trashmaster, Kitchen-Aid dishwasher. Vaulted beam cell's .• profess ion- ctl.ly color coordinated. Auto sprinklers & outside floodlights -all of this for $92,950. ' • 2 Story e Tiied roof • 3 bedrooms • 3 bathrooms • Family room e Dining room • Fireplace • Shag Carpets e Concrete Drivew1y • Block Wall Fence • $40,250 • 10°/o down e HURRY Ill 832-5792 or 979-2113 UP WITH CHILDREN \\lh<'re do the Children go in the evenings when 1.fon1 & fJad have friends in? Should you be fortunate enough to own this home, they go up to the Rumpus Room. Down Stairs there is a Fireplace Convenient parking-easy to be a "DROP-IN" at Bay I: Beach Realty • 675 3000 in the sunken Lh'i n_g Room, • Cheery Large K11che, 3 · &inns, 2 Baths. Excellent m BAY & BEA CU REALTY·". m • "'""" H•I .. 101'>• 1111 ~'"(I "''" ,.. Grounds & Patio for Sum. mer Fun. $35,500. Call 646-0555, Evenings 646-9702. COLUJtLL PROPERTIES, INC . REALTORS e BY OWNER OPEN HOUSE Sal. & Sun .. 11-3 2422 S: Rene Dr., S.A. . A U~l()IA: JUtf (S. of \Varner, \V. o( Bristol) 3 BR., 2 Bath, fireplace, sep. F.RAME THIS VIEW and you ca n sell it to dining rm., service area in- the New York Art Museum! Trees, greens, sidl', 2 car garage. Buill-ins, .lakes and the rolling hills of the Mesa Verde velvet drapes in master bed· Country Club. Gorgeous 4 bedroom hill side room, \\'/\v carpets, sprinll:· home. It's clean and vacant. Offered at Jers in front. Just repainted S9!z.~Oo;. inside. Close to all schools 'PHO~I VNlfUI HOMU, MUA YIRDE, 546•5990 and minutes from So. Coast REAL TOR. MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE. Pl•rn & major shopping. $28. 75<1, Submit all tenns, ~ ~ ,· 4."' ~-Owner wiU pay ALL closing costs. For more infonnaUon, call 838-5261 before 3 pm. l~~===========~I fot "ICtion ••• Call · 642-5678 * ~~" CHOICE · , * 5 Bedrooms, 2 Baths 1'Go-e_n_o_r•"'I-"-----. -G-on-er-•"'I "'"" ____ . * Walk to New Park _ 1--..--..,.-------------I *Priced to Sell Fast l~lpl ... lfll"'"'"'' * Only $29,500 * Make your O\Vn termi:; * Vacant + r.1ake Offer .. liili"'WftililiMi...i~I * Call 347-4110 NO"'! I I CHARMING. DELIGHTFUL 3 BR. bayfront beauty w/paneled den. Herd to beat Bay view & price, $165,000. Jim Muller CHARM· PERSONALITY and Comfort WC're uppermost in m ind when this Cape Cod Classic was Built. Offer 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 water and neslled in $100,000 homes for only $42,900. Wo w what a value located on Balboa Peninsula. 2 bedrooms + 1 bedroom. The lot alone was approved for $40,000. Open house Sunday I to 5. Please call today 645-4040. ROMEO AND JULIET Is a beautiful love story and you._willlov.e this extra special.home at a just reduced price of only $29,950, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, fenced yard. Open house Sat. 1-5 and Sun. 12-4. Please call today 645·4040. THE 9UEEN MARY Wouldn't fit in this extra large corner lot and home however it does have a speci?-1 place for your small cabin ctuiser. Great bonus room. 4 bedrooms, 13A baths. Good Costa Mesa location $27,500 mu ch much more. Please call today 645-4040. THE THIEF OF BAGDAD \Vould buy this home and think he has stolen it at this low low price of only $24,950, Joc ate<l in a prime westside area of Costa Mesa. 3 bedrooms, 13/& baths. Builtin color T.V. Open house Sun- day I to 4. Please call today 6'\54040. LITTLE OLD LADY WHO LIVED IN A SHOE She didn't have a car so' she walked to the market. This lovely home is really close to everything and just reduced in price to $28,900. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths and clean as a pin. Open house Sat. 1·5. Please call today. 645-4040. THE FOUR LITTLE PIGS \Vould be interested in building on these four prime view lots. The owner will suQordinate to construction loan. Please call today. 645-4040. RIP YAN WINKLE Coul d sleep in a different bedroom each night. 5 bedrooms, 4 baths, formal dining room. Work out gym, beautiful pool and much much more for the discriminating buyer. $105,950. Please call today 645-4040. P.QN QUIXOTE Lived in this super gi.O,tpome ;ii Mission Viejo,?> divor.~¢}orces a quick sale. 3 bedrrio!riS, 2 baths; fully air conditioned, 11.ar new, Open house Saturday & Sunday 24622 Ladera, Mission Viejo. Call 837-1430. PRINCE CHARMING \Vould have to woo his princess in this park like setting of beauti- ful trees and plantings, & pool. 3 huge bedrooms, 21h baths. New- port Beach. Only $48,500 or submit offer. Please call today 645-4040. We have available a number of fine homes for gracious livin"g. These can be shown only by appointment and only to qualified buyers. Prices range from" $41,500 to $175,000. General ABANDONED 3 + FAMILY ONLY $13,900 OLE COUNTRY GEN! ! Nestled beneath 60 ft shade trees; STAINED GLASS BAY \VJNOOWS h eavy BEAMED CEILINGS, rich "'alnut paneling & walls of cork galore. Enchanting enclosed LANAI plus adobe brick patio, 2 tAR garag1'. Complete with block \\'all fencing. 5 MIN. TO BEACH , seeing is believing call 0011'. {714) 962-5.585. HJRI.\ I J 01.SO~ !i'E"AlTOR.S • THIS IS IT Price reduced $1500. Sell· er must close escrow oii new home. GI, no money do\vn. NO CLOSINd cosrs. Sharp 3-bedroom Rancher, raised fireplace, upgraded shag carpels , euston1 drapes, modern kitch \V/bltin dislnl'shr. Cute home sits on tnl l shade tree lot. S17,500. full price. VILLAGE , REAL ESTATE • 5.11-~00 5:1&-8103 YA TERMS Sparkling 4 bedroom, family room, 10' x 18' screened aluminum lanai, fireplace, full builtins including dish- washer, ne1v Sears vinyl floor in kit & family rm - Offel'ed 1.vith F1!A or oo down VA ll'rms of coun;e. Call 540-1151 fOpcn Eves. 10WNHOUSE Choose one or all three of these fine to1vnhouses rieaf. clubhouse and pool$. Tv.i> 3 bedroom, l\vo story or gor- geous 2 bedroom, single story. All include built-ins, carpels, double garage. Each priced at a low $20,950. Call 540-ll51 (Open Eves.) .~HERITAGE -.• REALTORS HORSE RANCH $51,000 'CAMEO SHORES VIEW ESTATE Nearly ¥.I Ac. view site. Perf. for entertain- ing ; 4 BR., 51h baths. Pool -lge. rooms - cabana ~ fabulou s bar, Call for pictures. $175 ,000. George Grupe ........ ,~ Homelife at i ts Bes t . _ ...... ,"- Formal Dining Roon1, 3 Lo :.., Gorgeous 3 bedroom ranch s!yle home, 7 years old, plus 3 bedroom guest house, cor- rals and stables. Almost 1,~ acre of country living. Privacy is yours! Red Cal"J>('t, Realtors. MG-8640. LIDO ISLE -NEW LISTINGS 1. Cha rm· galore! Sunnv. happy 3 BR., beam cell., beaut. patio, 45' lot. $69,950. 2. lmmac .. remod. 4 BR.; dbl. lot. Sl29.500. 3. Vac. lot 40' St. $53,000. Charlene Whyte EMERALD BAY -$84,SOO Attr. VIEW. 3 BR., den home: low main!.; beamed cathedral cei1's. Under !100 mo. for taxes & dues. Private beach. Bob Yorke OWNER IS AN~JOUS Sharp Carmel model l-Iartmr Vie\v I-Jomes, w /lols of brick. 3 BR.. 2 ba ., fam . & din. rm s. Asking $52,900. Howard Wells ORIGINAL BALBOAN Quaint 4 BR. home w/formal dining rm . I Black N.H. Y. Club, ·between bav & ocean. For those who love trlidiiion, $56,500. Bill Bents REALISTICALLY PRICED Well located townhouse in Univ. Park; 4 BR . fam . rm., 2lf.i ba., nice end unit: walk lo school s. pools. tennis. NOW $34,900. "Chuck" Le,,·is S BEDROOMS -BAY VIEW Gourmet kitc hen. Walking dis!. to bay & ocean. Greet summer house or year •round , for large family . Triana Bergin LIKE NEW BAYFRONT CJJolce Lido Nord 4 BR. plus family rm. home. Perfect for entertainin~. Pler & slip for large boat. Immaculate! Eileen Hud son IT'S .GOOD BECAUSE ••••. Il's Corpn~ .~el Mar ... it's 2 BR. & dining rm., 2 full baths ... it's near beach, bay & stores ... it's fresh & neat Paul Quick OCEAN & BAY VIEW Truly the spot ! Large gracious home on a quiet street in a fine area. Ha s a private up- stairs suite or den & bdrm . Nice yard wilh !!'Iles. $69,000. Bill Comstock Baths. 4; Bedrooms, Family .•.• Roon1, E.:i~!side Cost a •• 1.1es:. FHA-VA !._~rm 11, \\.ti $-13,500. Call 646--0555, Even-.._ ............ ..,.,. . ing,642-ms. -~~~,,. REAL ES 74:iilrE-.~·-- COlUJ ELL· PROPERTIESclNC. ' . REALTORS . ~!!~~~~I .. ·...!-~: :~·~· ·~·~·~·!:;. !:"~~~~,~~~fl~'~l;;=I !:':::(~I]:. :i~:fit~t::: .. !ji car garage, close lo town & • city park. Priced r ight. Pb: FIXER UPPER Jeneral 642-1711. • • General G~neral NEWPORT ISLAND . . . .. -· NEWPORT HEIGHTS Ontv 4 Bdrm., 1* baths; 2-story -;;,,,,;-;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;· ;;;;;;;;;;;;:;··;;:;•;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;;;~~~~--Quiet Tree Lined Street. 2 "' homo. Needs. wo,k, bUI CORBIN. MARTIN REALTORS Large Bedrooms, Focm•I "'21 GREAT location! Ou•ner Dining Room, Fireplace In ~ m•y "°"'id" trode lonall-EXCLUSIVE PRESENTATIONS Living Room, Large Kit-~·11 · associated boot. S.\5,000. chen & Big Service Porch to I Call: 673-3663 673-8086 Eves. CUL o~ SAC CHARM outside Patio. Double Car N ... • h I "Applie pie condition"! Large landscaped Garage PLUS \Vork Area, 8Wport FlllCJ ts. lot, sprinklefed, so you enjoy the pool. The Alley Access, New Siding Ocean View' BROKER5-REALTORS 1025 W Balboa 67J-l66J WOODY COTTAGE Tree lined ~trcet in East.side Costa l\1C's.1. Shingle Roo(, Brick Fireplace in the Fan1ily Room, 2 Bdrn1, Han:l1\'00d Floors, Large. Bal'k y11rd, Alley AcceS1 for Boat Storo.ge. $2.1,500. Call 646-055.J, Evenings &U-7438. COLUJ Ell PROPERTIES, INC. REALTORS :> TRANSFERRED 3 + SEP FAM RM $27,900. 1700 sq fl or customized llv· Ing. 2 baths, hardwood floors, tirepl11.ce, r iclt paool- Jng, formal dining room, all pushbutton APllliWK'f!S SUI> mit. Call 847-1221. house is new thruout, just move into this 3 and Roofing. S35.000. Call 1 1 1 _,, hlll 1 •. bd h Pr. d t II at $44 500 ••• =" E · o:A~ ~-... vy c us er .. .,,. p us view rm. c armer. ice O se , · .,...,,......,., venings .roJ-JOO •. hilite this charmer! Step OPEN 1-5 SAT., SUN., MON. -n living room. Massive 2142 ASTER PL. (EASTRIDGE ESTATES) ::~:;'~!~,:;:,";~c'i°:. (OFF SANTA ANA AVE.) COSTA MESA aw.....i patio. Huny-Call VALLEY VIEW 64>-0303. Large Harbor View home, "Palermo model." 4 lge. bdrms., family rm ., 2 frplcs .. wet bar. Owner has spared. nothing. in decorating this beautiful home. Call to inspect. $62,950. LIVE AT YOUR WORK· COSTA MESA Ideally located, 3 BR. house on C-1 lot with room for paint & body shop or??? Offered for only $27,500! EMERALD BAY Build your own dteam house on this ocean view, vacant Jot. Laguna Beach's most ex- clusive area, behind Jocked gates, 24 hr. guard, ·with access to priv. beach & pool. Offered at $35,000. · CORBIN-MARTIN REALTORS 644-7662 Newport. Corona ct.I Mar -Costa M1sa LOOKING TOWARD -FUTURE?· BUY NOW -A home for a large family l\'ilh 4 LARGE bedrooms. 214 balhs. all I Olli\ I !: Ol\O\ R<.;:,·,1,.; electric, large family dining --3-B~E"'' D__,,""_O~O-M-"' ~could be formal). Lot 79' x 1' 120', large enough for large VIEW pool close to Boy• Club. 423 $ZS·,OOO Francisco. Open Sundl\Y 1-5. Out.standing nlut. Great Jocat:io1!. One of very few smaller horiles with ocean view. This one 1 is In ex- cellent condition. Owners tire anxiow. Red Carpet. Rtalt.ors. 546-$40. IF YOU'RE-TIRED of looki!'lg at ot~peopl's ' desigM ol -""'*""' your own, lbtn lld In General Gentr•f Don't mW this. Ifs a 3 Newport Beiu:~ L·p r g e , bedroom home pr:lct'd to LevtJ, View H om ; a I t t! • sell. Tntly 1. oountry ttl· $23,SOO. Call ~ Even- tlng. big -·· l•'lf" lot, Ing> 545-5887. ' ......- Coldwell, Banker 644-2430 ~ 550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.B. 1TI4:1 Bench Blvd., H.B. *DOVER SHORES* LITTLE RANCH BY OWNER-SA VE /3 acrt, zoned R-2 cutf Iii Gorgeou . ., p-eat entertJt.ln-tie house country setUng me.nt. view home. Pool, f old falhl~ncd front port'h: BR. •II tor 121.9.IO. Talre a look. 3 BA. m500. 64z..s623 Red Carpet Re a 11 or a. Daily Pllot Want Adi have Net'd a "Plld"? Place a.n ¥! !Nupjns ploro. caJJ 6U-5678 * MESA VERDE * WiU trade. 3 BR., 2 baths. Scnf>.ned patio, BBQ. Col'> ner lol $32,500 -All te,m&. BALBOA BAY PROP. * 641-7491 * double iaraJte, ftre-!Ace . 1~:.:"::1 ::~~ 1111'. al...,. tM rfalll place H )'OU want RESULTS! Call 64:t.56'11 • plaee that ad today1 Uke to trade• OUr 1'r*er'• Porodbe column It for you! 5 lines, 5 days for 5 bucb. G1111ral General Charm, Comfort, Value * Irvine Terrace * Let us sho'v you this enchanting home. Atrium entry, spacious living room with fire- place. 3 Large bedrcoms 2 baths, LOVELY DINING ROOM + room to store yo ur trailer or boat ........... • ......... : ... $62,500. APT. UNDER CONSTRUCTION * SOUTH OF THE HIGHWAY *, CORONA del MAR. Make the changes you want NOW. 3 Bedrooms. 2 baths, builtin kitchen, dining area, fireplace. .Now is the time to buy .................... $79,500. HARBOR VIEW HOME * SOMERSET MODEL * Stretch-out and live it\ this two·story 5 bed- ROOM. Builtin kitchen;· fireplace, NEW CAR-I PETS and DRAPES pl s so many extras you have to see it to really · preciate it. Fee Jand. ............................... $72,500. FOUR BEDROOM * SANDPOINTE * All wrapped up in this nice TWO STORY- 3 bath , HUGE RUMPUS ROOM that will take a pool tablec builtin kitchen , large yard will accommodate your 30 foot boat, and a spa· cious feeling prevails thr uout. VA, NO Down: ................................ $39,900. TWO TRIPLEXES * CORONA DEL MAR * , Built in range and oven, dish\va sher and disposal, carpets and drapes. 2 Units hpve 2 bedrooms, 1 bath: 1 Unit has 2 bedrooms, 11h baths w/fire place. Each unit has 2 Car· ports, maintenance free yard and pool privi- leges ...................... Each $79,500. l'l~-S""" . I . fJdlUN4# Ml AmUn> : REALTORS I 644-7270 ' 21111 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR CALIF.\' G,..neral cfl11Ja Q:i/e PRESTIGE WATERttQNT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT 11 Linda Isle Drive , Completely furn. 5 Bdrm., 4'h ba!h home. Lge. waterfront living rm. with floor to cell. marble frplc. Formal dining rm., family rm., maid's rm., Pier & slip ...... -.... $195,000 •. For Complet1 Information On All Homes & lots, Please Call: • l ' BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 1• 341 Bayside Dr., Suite I, N.B. 675-61611 General General MACNAB IRVINE Fl NER HOMES IRVINE TERRACE- LOWEST PRICED 4 BR. Gorgoeus corner, 3 full baths. Easy bicy. i cle ride to ig Corona Beach & Fashion ,~ Island. Designed for California living. $67,500. Tom Quee n 644-6200. j NEW IN BAYCREST ; Warm sunshiny 3 BR's w/extra spaciOUI'' FR, lush gardens. An immaculate homo'l w/cbarnr. $64,950. Magnificent NEW Bayfrcnt Home. Spa LINDA ISLE BEST BUY ~ for 55' yacht + auxiliary craft. 5 BR +· 4'h baths. FR, LR & MBR face lhe spark). ing waters of the Bay. Lg. BR w/wet planned for use as fun & game room o pool table. Dave Cook 642-3285. SUMMER RENTAL Delightful waterfront/pier privlleges. BR, 2 balh. Completely furnished • reason- able rates. Gladys Russell 642-8235. •' 1 IOI--142•12SS llM4 ~ 144•'200 Nt•pcWf .... , C.Hfomll IHU , ' • tll • ,. I I J t ' 1...i.,, • ., 30, 1972 DAILY PILOT DAILY PIUlr J * * * * * * TAYLOR CO. * * HARBOR VIEW HOMES· $49.500 Lucky you to find this beautiful Monaco model. Perfection lbroughout Adult occu- pied. 3 BR & formal DR. Hurry for bis one! CORONA DEL MAR ·owN-YOUR.OWN" On the water! Fantastic view & pride of own- ership bldg. Private marina, pool, jacuzzi & security guard. Adult occupied. 2 Bedrooms. 2 baths. Immaculate! $89,950. ··eXEC!lrlVE FAMILY.HOMEf $9f,500 Largest patio for entertaining in Baycrest area. Elegant pool with bydra·sweep. 4 Bdrms, 31> baths, F.R. & formal D.R. Custom cab, drawers & work bench in attached gar. DOVER SHORES· VIEW · $79.500 Professionally decorated w/luxurious new carpeting & drapes, Like new thruout. 3 BR, FR & study. Immediate possession. Private front courtyard. 3-car garage. ; JUST LISTED COWGE 'pARK AREA Call u• quick about thls ddllhtgul s Br .. 2 Ba. home .,..1th bnvy abaft roof, ~· copper p!un1blne a n d hardwood floon.. It bu a big ya.rd for the kids a.nd close-in location tor aho~ 'ping convenience. $31.9ti0. C>l1 673-8550. R THI: REAL ~ I:STATI:RS TAX SHELTER Would you like FOUR· 3 bed· room units with no vacan- cies'!' Monthly income ts sn1. Price only $62,500. Owner will accept 10% down payment and will help fi· na.nce. Fine k>catlon close to all schools and allopping in the Mesa del Mar area. Save taxes by buying now. --Wt e I -•w. Gonorol ·--CHUCK CAR011!ERS REAL ESTATE·TREASORES WE LOVE OUR OLD SEA·~ARING TOWN Newport .. the romantic ocean life; the salt· sea life .... where you breathe the very breath whales respire! Proud people with pampered houses that possess a romantic & exotic story of its own! C111 de Sac Charm "-le Pie Cond." Larae htndM'aped lot - sprlnk!Uf'd -to you can enjoy the pool! The house ts new thruout, ju.st movf' into this 3 bdnn. eh11.mlft. Prl~ to It'll at $44,SOO. C011BIN- ·MARTIN REALTORS 644-7662 (j)UIET SPOT IN MESA VERDE It }'OU don't v.-ant }'OUI' children playing tag with trallic, this is the JocaUon lot you, Large fenced yard ""Ith patio and play areB. Gre6.t 3 B.R. home with fan· tastic fireplace. You'll find it In f'xcellent condition and only $29,950 Call 00\v for an appointrneni 546-2313. 1~1--~~ j--- Gonor•I -II · Gtntral 180 D VI !=~~~~~= * CORNIR * e91'ff ew CUSTOM, e .. uutu1 3 BR. -on i... For 11te Most NEW HOME '"""" iot "'""'"' tor 11oo1 D di or t.raik.r. F.A. Heat, .trplc., eman "CJ Nt:WPORT IlEAOI UPPER l !i btlh .. ll<avy '"""' ""'' Spar.k>u1 IV&n \Vellr 4 BAY -Pittutttque Cripe quick poocu. A Kood f1nu.. bc-droon1, 3 bath home. Cod \\'Ith brick t"Xter\or, cln(t. Ottered for $21,950. ~rf~t tor araclou1 e~ high bfoa1n ~Ulna1, Ptml\M'l MORGAN REAL TV tertalnlrc a.nd comfortable floor~. Quallf)' buUt 3 67~2: 67J....64.St Uvlng. Skyllt llving rootn btdroo1n 3 bath, family --· · - a1Kl · focmal dinilli: room roon1 and fornlftl dlndt~ 5 BR. • sq,500 \\'Ith sep.a.rutf' ,,.,., hltr. Easy l\lOnt i.il,600. Nt'at ne\(thborhood. 21i Ba. '""' 1n1pqr1e<1 tU• !loon. PETE BARRETT >)'pl. •;n. rm. s .. e1ou11 Ji'amM,y roonl \\ith ti.rt'platt' Olt1CK CAROTllERS al1d ~!ding 11.,. ""°"' -REALTY-REAL ESTATE opening 10 luxurious p11tlo '42.J200 TREASURES with cuatom dtsignf'd 'J>CIN. "::::::::;::::::::::;;::::;::::;::::: lt!\.11 \VNlclltf, N.B. w;...s152 surroundt<d by pro-• POOL·PRIVATEYARD lesslon•U, I• nd ... ped COMMODORE· • , bd ... lamnaw/.wnk· grounds And BfillOLD ti~ RD ,.o Mr, \\'r:iitcllff atta magni!k-ent lSO de Ii: re e $39,900. Call 615-1595. View, Beine held optn i\lo~ BAYCREST d11Y from Ul<>·S:OO Drop by Back Bay in:J Ge.Jaxy. Dover Short'$. Q\'cr 2000 1q, ft. fJf lu.'l(\lry in 1 Cl • "J bt"drOOui, 21~ bath, 111.nil· Vll-~\Y of h !bi and U , .. C. F. Colesworthy ly and dln!ng area. Bonu~ or Story, bean1f'd C't'llinr -4 Br & Co. Realton n !lparkllng pool and 101v • St'\\·lna Rn1, frplc. lrt lot. n1a\ntl't\llnt'f!' 75'x110' )'ttrd. Im\> lax. ~.900. M&-9!WS. Eastblulf Office 64()..(m(l BAysldt> OHi('(' 61:,....19.-.J All the ll!lllal Bnyt'l'('i;I 811ycrett frnturt's. Full prl<'e $f.4,950 [.;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;::;;::;;;;;:;;I Office Open Sel. & Sun.-Clostd Mon. ~C CO:TS ''Our 27th Y11 r'' · W WALLACE WESLEY N. TAYLOR co., Realtors' . REALTORS Wishing all our Super Star (riendly clients & Realtor friends a gusto holiday weekend! Call 646-5152 and we'll show you our select & multiple listinp thnt'U delight you! \0 THI: REAL \"-I:STATERS ' . TAX SHELTER· Executives Only 11nct f'.n asswnahl'" loRn of Huntin9ton Harbor approxln1Rtt.>ly S."\IJ,{XX}, Just hslr.rl. hun-y. ('n.IJ Ill'! nt Comf' honlt• 11t a liiJl' J40-1151 10ptn F,vcs. l prestige addrf.'Ss. Tntly 11 bright, sparklini::: tan1lly home. 4 be<lrooins, 2 bath~. plus a n1astf'r i<:ui!t> that --5 -HERITAGE . . REALTORS GRACIOUS ELEGANCE ru11tom habit' In Jbtycrtllt. 3 llf't\room11, ar 2 with luxur- lou11 dt.n, IC1vely living room t1.nd dining n101n, rounnet kltl·hen, bl~akta~t roc:nn - 1'00111y, well pll'lnntd for •n. trrtn!nlng and happy tlmr:L ISl,SOO. 2111 S•n Jo•quln Hills Ro•d 1 546 4141- ''0verlooklng Big Canyon Country Club'' (Open Ev1ni"11) 1831 WESTCUFF DR., N.B. :... CALLME646•5152ANDSEE ' 8 UNITS \V ill SeU or E.'l(change tor Corona del llfur Duplex. Thel'ie art l.Fourplexe.s on 2 Trust ~Is. All a1't' 1 Bedrom, l Bath with Patio or Sun Dt-ck, Laundry Roon1s, Quel Street, No Vacancies. $62,230. Ca 11 64~. Evenings 646-9702. completely C\lvl'rs the se-"""""'""""'""""...,!!!!P \ NEWJ'qRT CEt.IIEJ!, N.B. 644-4910 * * * * * * Gener11 PHONI UN19UI HOMIS, CORONA DlL MAI. 671-4000 NEW LISTING -Unreal Cape Cod Estate on a sandy beach in Newport. All shingle exter· ior and a remodeled interior that belongs in House Beautiful. 3 bedrooms plus den plus stone fireplaces and exciting views. Bonus: a you-never·know·it's-there 2 bedroom apart· ment that's darling! Just listed at $215,00-0. REALTOR, MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE. ~ "' CHARMING-DELIGHTFUL 3 BR. bayfront beauty w/paneled den. Hard to beat Bay view & price, $165,000. Jim Muller 2 CAPISTRANO ESTATES Horses O.K. Super cust. 5 BR., 50' pool, 11/3 Ac., secluded, 5 yrs. old. $165,000. Also 5 BR .. pool, 3 1/3 Ac., guest hse., barn, hillside view Joe. $147,500. G. Grupe LIDO ISLE -NEW LISTINGS 1. Charm galore! Sunny, happy 3 BR., beam ceil., beaut. patio, 45' lot. $69,950. 2. lmmac., remod. 4 BR.; dbl. lot. $129,500. 3. Vac. lot 40' St. to St. $53,000 Charlene Whyte EMERALD BAY -$84,500 Attr. VIEW, 3 BR., den home; low ma int.; beamed cathedral ceil's. Under $100 mo. for taxes & dues. Private beach. Bob Yorke OWNER IS ANXIOUS Sharp Carmel model Harbor View Homes, w /lots of brick. 3 BR .. 2 ba., lam. & din. rms. Asking $52,900, Howard Wells ORIGINAL BALBOAN Quaint 4 BR. home w /forma l dining rm. 1 Block N.H.Y. Club, between bay & ocean. For those who love tradition, $56,500. Bill Bents REALISTICALLY PRICED Well located townhouse in Univ. Park; 4 BR, tam. rm., 21h ba., nice end unit ; walk to schools, pools, tennis . NOW $34,900. "Chuck" Lewis , 5 BEDROOMS -BAY VIEW Gourmet kitchen. Walking di st. to bay & ocean. Great summer house or year 'r0:und, for large family . Triona Bergin LIKE NEW BAYFRONT Choice Lido Nord 4 BR. plus family nn. home. Perfect for entertaining: Pier & slip for large boat. Immaculate! Eileen Hudson IT'S GOOD BECAUSE ••• It's Corona del Mar ... It's 2 BR. & dining rm 2 full baths .•. It's near beach, bay & sto;es .•. It's fresh & neat. Paul Quick OCEAN & BAY VIEW Truly the spot! Large gracious home on a quiet street in a fine area. Has. a private II!>' stairs suite or den & bdnn. Nice yard wllh trees. $69.000. Bill Comstock • --Coldwell.Iris ......... 644-1430 '550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.I. Lachenmyer Realtor 1 OREGON BOUND You'll Jove this immaculate 5 bedroom Spanish home with beautiful cathedral ceilings • Adobe fireplace • This spacloul home expres.o;es charm happiness Modern electric blt-in kitchen 2Jh baths -In choice convenient location only $48,500. Hurry 613-8550 .. ONLY 3 YEARS OLD-$55,750 Now you can pwn a piece of Harbor View Hills -Corona del Mar's most dynamic growth area, at a new low price. There are 3 spacious bdrms., 2 baths, good quality car· pets & custom drapes. The fenced yard is 72X l 6-0, plenty of room for pool & play area. $55,750. JUST LISTED -Corona del Mar Only 1 blk. to Ocean Blvd. Handy to · Big Corona Beach 4 BR., 3 bath home or could be used as 2 bdrm .. 2 bath home plus 2 BR., 1 bath guest apt. Price $79,950. COLWELL PROPERTIES. INC RE>llLTORS GRACIOUS SPANISH 6ECOR Just look at th ls beaut \ful ·spanlsh style home and it ·will be yours! 3 bedn)(lmll, 1 %. baths, sunken living room, forn1a1 dining room and a large tiled family room. Many extrD.11 covered patio, sprinklers Sn all yl!.l'ds, tinted wlndowa and upgraded carpets and drapes. The tile roof v.•111 re. mind you of old Mexioo. You must see for only $41,900. Call 847-0010 Now! rood floor \\'ith O<'f'Un and channel vlt>w tl'Jn1 bu!rony. Ladles • you n111st Sl'(' the lovely kitchen ch'<'Or. Pritt<! at only $00.~. i;·or n1ore in· formation plC11.$c ca 11 &17...0010. POOL 4 BEDRM· $23,900-NO DOWN tl'l'rns! ~ bt"droon1s, 2 M!parate baths. h u i I t In dream kitchen. l. o v ti l y patio. EJljoy plAyground~. swim pool, 54¢1720. TARBELL 1956 Harbor, CO!lta 1t1e11a Mother's Day Can Be Everyday Get mom out of thnt to small kitchen and let htr roanl at ease In this in1- maculate country 1 I y I f! kitchen with u~ed l.irlck BARGAIN PETE BA~RETT -REALTY- 642·5200 Thh1 ~ bedroom, 2 bnth <'harrnt'r hns b 11 11 t -I n 11 • A~1 /~i\t lnt<"rron1, n t' ,,. sh11,1t carpt't!l, h11$:\' f1'1\Ct'd }'ftrd nnd A ('O\'IJ rt•d llaJ;:stont~ put(() \\·Ith UtJQ. A.Sume a loon \Vlth $2).1 B11lbHi l1l•nd nmnthly pa.yn11•nl.'J fol" only [,;;;;;:;;:::;===~I $3700 dov.11. No 11ualifying, Pritt $25. 700. Rush for this one. Call R-12-253:·1. THE BLUFFS $35,900 Must see this lovely f'nd unit ovl'rlooklng heautlful green belt! l..a111e living room. Formal dine or ea11ual RI )'OU pntltr. 3 Bedroon111. Close to tennis c.'Ourl1 and pool. WA.lk to 1chools. Hun-y -Call 645-0300, I OIU\I I. Ol.\O\ RlAl 10"''~ · Salisbury +..:'' .i '' FINE FAMILY HOMI 2-Story, channlna 3 BR. A den home with frplc., dln- lnr rm., 2 bAtbs; modem kitrhcn, Ot-llgbt'ful, trtt 11hfldl!il llU'ge patio, Ideal for .intf'rtainlug. An xlnt buy at $59.~ -hurry! 2 ON A LOT Sfparl\te homfs; 2-story, S llR., 2 ba. CR<'h. Xln1 cond. &: ioc',, clo11e to bay I:: 11andy bl'ach. }lard to beat at l l!S.IXXI. Salisbury Convenient parking -easy to be a "DROP·IN" at Bay &: Beach Realty IO j THEREAL \"\{ ESTATERS ' f'', •,f• •P~' 675-3•1=== fnplatt and formal <lining -,::--::==-..,."""'="-• room. Good >ehool <H"rlct DOUBLE YOUR 31; MARINE AVE. and , ... to shoppblg. A INCOME BALBOA ISLAl>ID R1· 1!1~ 180 FEET ON real .....,.,n at 139,000. CALL '7U91111 BAY & BEACl-I HJ·:ALTY THE BAY Magnllicent bayfront home in exclusive Bayahores, with pier & alip !or laf'le yachL. 3 Spacious bdrmt. p I u • Please call 546-2313. With this truly fine Income ] "!!!!!!!!!I!!,;,· ,..,.,..l..,m•I ptqpel1Y. Has 4·2 bedroom ENTERTAJNI illUI'• Junlly homes on tarae loi -OK'd room, wet bar, l&J'll! kit· tor S units. 2 story -each chen· with ~ Of counten. home has 111 own y11.rd A f'nclOMd patio ..-lth1 bullUn private patio -.11!ngle gar· B-B-Q. All thfl on two lot1 agea for each home -cpt1 and ~I l ~m + drapes -atovr.1. Immac· home. Tile root 11"' .ntJy, ulate condition -never a llfllconlea-A real CaJllornta \'acanr.y. Only $62.750 -or llJ!r. PEl'.E ~REIT 2 can be po:rchnst>d. CaU REALTY. Cnll 642-5200. io "fHI: RI:AL \....J. ESTATERS '"•~ '~'"'''"··~-· ... TARBELL 2955 Harbor, Costa Mesa 'HAVE A 'O ' THE REAL \~ ESTATERS ' SPLASH IN! Buy thi! 4 bedroom formerliiililj!illiiiiiliill!iillill~ mod•l w;th 11x32 heated & College Park filtered pool and you can have .your own fa~ily 4 Bedroom; 2 baUt corner lot splash-in, Large fa; 1 !J home "w/air-cond., covered area, be d r 0 0 m 1 t 1 patio, st:parall? play yard & carpetrd, garage comp e e Y wall-to--wall thick shag crptg. fini~hed with a separate Drive by 2317 Rutgers Or., utility area. All terms. C?-1! Call to see inside. 847-6010 for more 1n- format;on. Only $36,SOO. $32, 950 \0 THEREAL ·-"'. I:STATERS ' . * MESA VERDE * OWNER MOVING Newport •I Fairview ~Ill Sparkling clean 3 bedrooms, (1nytimt) :z baths, lrg. family rm., 1'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!'!!!'!!'!!!!~ 1 surrounded by beautiful 1~ homes on cul·de·sa• •treet. NO DOWN Newly painted inside & out, to veterans and 5% down or new crpts A-drp!, 2 flrepls.. Fl:IA · tenns avail. Like a builtln11, dbl gar. shake roof, model home this 3-bedroom large yard with patio. 2 bath bea~ty 11 one of a CALL ANY;TIME kind! New carpels, ... 8hly 646-3928 Ev1. 645-4375 painled, all bltln~ and many, Lachenmyer RL·a ltur many e>r:tras, Low malnten• ance yard &: excellent resl· dential area. AIAO may U· sumc 5% % loan -$32,950. ==maz-=-c:-:=-=-=:-:-I Call 545-8424 (Open Eves.) NOW rVA TERMS! Lovely 4. bedroom pool hotn(l priec<I o~y $33 ,!~0. Complete with new paint ln- FRESH AIR COUNTRY $180 i. month will buy thi• cute little four bedroom in one of Huntington Beach'• great neighborhooda. Near good '9Choola, b e a c h e • , parks, showing, freeways • • • even a coup!& of beautiful little lake1 is within walking or bicycling distance. Subject to . 5% IBA Loan • • • this home boasts heavy cedar shake roof, l~ baths, double car garage, fenced yard, built-Ins, Oean & ready to move tnto .. , call 842-2535. Uved In A Uttle But Loved A Lat This 1\ngle 1tory stucco, 3 bedroom home has just the space )'OU need at a price you can aUord. :z 1parkllng baths, all electric kitchen, carpets and drapes thruout. Double garage. Only 2'4 yeat5 old a.nd prlcN at 132.000. FHA and GI buyers welcome. Call 0 ':;,\tl<fH ~ill Realton 54S-9491 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams Open Eves. $2,500 Gets You In No (j)ualifyin9 Hu9e Paol , Assume a 7% VA loan on this gorgeou.s 3 bedroom with a 1upcr large pool. Low malnte~. beautiful landscaping, large quiet corner lot and private fen- cing. You'll tttl like living In the country side. Hurry! I Call 842-2535 Now! ff ", , ', 1 'L I r, servants quarters, formal I •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;, I dining room & large llving room. Large lawn slope11 to the bay. Enclosed pool with jacuu:L Finest location! $&16,!XXJ. REALTORS MODEL HOME Drive by 6062 Rosemont. Prestige area • So/Warner, E/Sprlngdale, Prof. Jndacpd. nr. schl & !Ibo~ ping, 613·8550. Bolboe Pe0 in1.ul• "TOP OF THE WORLD" View lt from the holllle of nlany windows, glorious breathtaking unob11tructed view alway11 at your com- mand. Top it oil with four large bedrooms, 3 bath.11, all electric kitchen and a laml· Jy room with high open beam celling. Spnce for I' 1llage Rea l [stat e 531-5111 ( ::::.1 531·5800 LARGE FAMILY PROBLEMS? Forgrt your problems ln thl11 2 11tory, 5 bedroom, 2 hnth home. Intercom and !ire t' q u I p rn e n t throughoul. Located on quiet tree lined street. Prlced al only $34,500. FHA/VA terrna. Call 841~10. ',D I THE REAL \')<'. ESTATE~S NORTH COSTA MESA $24,500. Can you believe It~ One of a klnd, 3 bedroom 2 bath townhouse. Owner leaving area, very anxlou11. No down VA, low down FllA tt'rm11. Call 546-5880 (Open Eve111.) · · i ~ HERITAGE . . REALTORS large pool In profeulonally \ .., ..... "!"~!"'!'~~~!"" land''"""' YOU'd. Under ~~-v"A.,-C.,..A""N"T::---VACANT LOT \0 THI:: REAL '-"'-I:STATERS ' " ' . . ' . priced at only $79,900. Call OWNER MOVED-submit all 67~ Ior appointment. offeni on thia 1 0 v e 1 y 60 X 300 }lawailan Isle of ParadU!e R•2 home! 3 large bclrms, 2. Ln~I of the big 00011. A11klna; batt111 PLUS a large l''llrrlpUI $24,500 Jn Coit.it M~im. See LOVERS room. It! C•ll 646-1111. GINNY MORRISON PARADISE 551-4130 REALTOR 541).2286 In N<wport Helghla on Ill< REACH FOR * ELEGANTBAYFRONT * Relurbtsl\M 1971. Panon.m1c view. New pier. 8 RR. 5 Ba. Courtyard entry, $195.cm. ManhalJ Realty 6'1>-4«Xl * BAYFRON:r * REDUCED 1\5.IXXI S BR .. 4 Balh11, Pier/Slip Mar11hnll Realty 675-4600 * * OCEANl'"RONT ~ -4 br, 5 ba, elegant 2 •tory, Phone for appt. 673-6$'2. 81y1hor11 3 BR., 2 Ba., dln rm. C!\llit, crpt/shutten Ir drpe. Elec kit Low Lie. hold. 675-<IMO. Coplstrono Be•ch DELUXt: 2 Br, bltln kit, trplc, cptg/drps, clou to everythlns:c. Alplne Reill Eat&te -493-2332, e v e • -496-5.5!13. 1'-ACRE, 4. BR. 2 BA, 2330 •q. u.. cptll, bltn11. h'plc, gar. $39.!IOO. :l6frU Calle Monterey, Ownt>r, TI4: 53!)..-0800. Corona clel M•r bluff with sexy decor. MiJ'.. OON ,....,d walls. piped mu•le In THE M 7 * R-2 * evey room, 1 e par ate Re[lected In the 11himmerln$t Nl<:f' 2 hrlrm. hOme. North of private master .rulte, deck, beauty of your own haeted *' Coast llwy. SPACloul Jtvtra privat~ patio. ~e it and It'll and filtered pool, two rm. w/brtck frpl., blWri light your fire. Red Carpet, go~11 fireplfltf:1, lot• of May we IM!ll your Pf"OP<'rty! hookRhelvt1; twin •l 1 e Realton. 546-8640. v.'OOd paneling tind Buyerswalllnttlorr1·iUde11cc bdrn111. L1e. kltch . bookshelvn. 'T'ht' prevtlg\ou• A lnOOm<" J)t'Optrty, New· w/~ntlog ana. Screened SELL OR LEASE l'lrea of Jlarbor VI e w port, Balboa or Coronu de! 1:11111!. Ohl. aaraae plu11 Excellent duplex in choice Jlome11, Pr!C1!d right at Mar. lll'Ml(.'(' tor boat or lrdtr. Corona dcl Mar location ~J. S.i8.9~. Ju11t call 546-2313. Jlll?llllt': Call Rf'nn Cobb Offered tor $44.~ of Highway. 2 bedroom• CORBIN-MARTIN MORGAN REAL TY cnch. Lower unit 2 batb11. REAL TORS 644-7662 673-6642 '57"'4D \VIW carpets, drape1, blUn TSHORECLIFFS I kitchen , refrigerator, Lllvi•ly l(ar<lf'n t'r.lry to lhfl 11pacM>ua livin1t room. Only --;B"'AYSHO.RES TRIPLEX ru.11111: cl'lnynn It ~1tn vttw $63,500. Lowe_r;I ~· o~!';ant VIEW & POOL Vtry nice 3 BR, 2 BA owntt'11 home. 2 BR., den, 2 bathe. with lcallt'. CIU ..,,......._,, Waterfront CU.'11. home, -4 or 5 unit + 2-2 Bit 1 SA. Good 111hakt, bean11 A uRd brick. bdrm.~. Vl~w from n1oat location. Sr.rloua St!ller Juat ftoduced room•. rr f't. lot, 11paciou.a $S l SOO price Sl0,500. App't. only. '0 THE REA L "-f:ST/\Tf.RS •id< and ""'· new drapes, "UKE A MODEL" , ft'a1 hardwood f1oon. Large Why go through the expense '1Jt with tremendrn.111 covn:ct a new home can incur. patio. Vacant, can be lll· Move tnto a 4 bedroom OWNER murt 1ell 4 specttd anytime. home that's ta ate l u 11 y Y""· R<d. •• 1240.IXXI. • • University Rttlly 8 111 Grundy, Realtor :'IOOl f:. C111. llwy. 613-&.510 341 nayolde, N.B. G7$-6161 Roy McCerdle Rttltor SPECTAC ULAR VI EW Call ~SMO (Open Ev('s.) dtcorA.ted 1.naide an <l •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiii• I bedroom, 2 bath home, family room w:llh tlN1plact b<auH!ully land '' a P • d TIME TO ENJOY very oonv•nle nt lor ..,. .f.0 HERITAGE RE ALTORS ouQ\de. Spam brick SUMMER tertalnlna olf the deluxe plllltm and • brlek pallo. bulltln kllcll<n, dl•hwull<r. !!!!!l!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!'!!~~!l!!!!!!l!!!!!l'P] Pr~ 11.t $32,950. All WESTCUJT -Loi• ol room New plu.11h ca rp,. t In a. SKINNY DIPPN' Tenna. C.U l'low .•. 842-25.15. for • arowtnt f&mily In tilt Complttely .. lni.d IMlde A • I 'O THI: REfi.L '~ ESTATERS -4 tarp btdroom.11 with 3 -=" Ilk all d out, ~,;JJU, r ., c ay TIME """"· !Ari• aell cleanlnr or night. :.40-1120 • poot and IWI al...i piddle BAYFRONT Bellltilul 3 -horn• . ., wltli very priVlllA! ""°'" ""=~~~~~~ lli:al<d in Eutslde Costa STEPS TO BEACH #ea. 2 bathl. dininr room, l BR. 2-lltY. Recently decor • ft.replace. 2 car pnift, ~ neU' new' carp, Open beam 1Halonally landleapinr. s.. C<llo; llU'f• palto. $33.900. lhia one. YOll'U "'""IL 11..i CAYWOOD REAL TY <l&rp<L 11 .. uon. -* 541-12'0 * tennll court. £uy care y11.l"d-on quiet L l 11to1 n Omnntng 3 Br, 2 Ba. Condo. LIM .... ••• ••·• ·· •' .s.g1,~. Pool, pifr J: slip -$19.$00. PETE BARRETT TEO HUBERT A ASSOC. Rr • 3171 Via Udo SlS-3500 -.,..LTY- 6Q...5200 Fut miuJU a.re ju§t a phone ull away. 64l-S678 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. II •--~ 11 1 • BR. NEWPORT WEST 541-n29 "~·~•""·•"'· ' · 2 BA + powder rootn, Uvlng Wnlk to the beft<'h from tht1 "!'!~!!!!l!!I!~!.'!!!'~~ nn, tam rm, din rm. Pror. '""" 3 bedroom home wllh ~FIX IT AN·D-SAVE 11 .. rscnped. P •a c< I u I, a lrrae ~arate 1'~ 1'l . 1«lufled pool, Pr fl: 11tl1 e "'"'""" lrt~ • tu dd. d $22,500 .... hborhood. 111.:.00. by private pa.tio on An oversif.. ownctr, 644-142'.i. ed corner lot wtth atorage In Colla f\feaa, thl1 ! IRVINE Terra<.'f:1TIC~ tor your hOat t()I). Spotles&ly bedroom Mm@ will aavt you mairitalned with uwadt<J mone)'. All tenn1 are "f· d«VralM f11mlly ho!'M'. 4 carp1Lln1 and 1ulh fcred and at S22.500 ACI Br, 2~ Ba. 2trplc, pa1»-tra 1&ndscaptrljl. Only $33,500. fast! Red C.rpct, Jtealtol'I. Yllrd. S550/mo. 0 w n • r Co!1 ~Now! 546-l640. I m.l032_. ____ _ Put a lllUtt "k)Qt" 111 )'Ola' Havt! somethln:;: you want lo lAvlll. •tll thoM. blubltt b' 1tll 1 Oaulfied ad1 do II "hurltR". ~-" O•Mtltd ••II • call NOW fl~ &1l-51111o - --~-~-~-1 • JI DAILY 11LOT LEGAL NO'llCE .... ,... MOTtta TO Cl.IDITO•I W .. l.ICMI t(Mlillt1 DI THI ITAT'e Oft (M.l•Ol•iA ,.._ fMI (.OUflllTT 0' 0 ..... .._...,,m ! "•'• •I ,-AUL A.. •ll•NT, °""""""'' 11011(1: U t+lll!IV C'HVtH i. ll'ie . ·~ ,.. . ., ,,... ....... ,........, _......., '"•l 111 M•-II••! .... ti•lml H•IMf ... \••Cl 0~1 ••• ·-It-.:! 1(1 11111 •'-'· "'·'" ,... 11ttnt••• --·· 111 ,,. Oltlu "' '""(It•~ o1 ~ '"°"'' ~n'" c-1 • ., to •t-nl 11\,m, .. ,11o 11'11 "9C:"Ml"1 •OU(."'"· •o ""' v1'Cl••1!t....., fl yt,. Olf'IC.t 11! 1\N •ltO•~• M(~(N, C'lllllH & "VI \/Ill, UO lo1I (llO-OA A_, O••MI•. (fl<lor11lo JUU, ..,,[do 11 I ... PIO'I ol -IN I• OI 1~ vrw;l•tlhf .... 111 o!I moll••• ,...,,,,.,,,. to '"* 1u.-.. of .. " 11•<~..,r. ,..1,, "' 1• ..,, ..,.,....,,., oltw 1"4 ''"' ""blltol•'"" cf 1"'' t>Of•(O. O•IM ,.....,,~,..., 1, 1n) OO•OT HV rAY~ KUHLMAN f •K vlf•• ()I tt,• #111 OI Int Obo'>t norned d~I .... ,owtN, O•llll H .. lYLVIA tt1 ftlt CM""'" A~•"" O••""' Colllor11•• ,,... 111: t/111 IU.Sltt Att-r1 tor •aonn«• """'''M<I 0••"91' (w!J 01111 l"llol, Mor 1. 11. n. 1t. 1tl1 1n 1.n tEGAL N!fTICE ~•111••llH>ll '°4.llT ·~ TMtf !Tit. Hf 01' (Al.lll'Olll«llo '011 fHI (0UlolTY 0' 01.AMOI AO tJll ClfATIOlll 1.. u.. M•ll~f of Int P•tlr.on •I C.O•OO•l LFE MULi.Eil. P•lillo<>t t. To: Al.ftf!Rf \/Al.I.IN ft v O•d•r nf 11111 Coo.irl VOii 1•t 1'flf!N , H•lf to •o,,..tr ~/~rt 111~ Jv(I" "•••IOlf>11 '" Otcl•rlmtM I OI 111~ •tiow •11ll!lt lf Cnv•1 "" '~ '°'" OIT of JUIT, rtn , •• t ]\ • M cl lllAI O•T ,,...,. •...:I !ti••• lo 'llOw ttv>O. II '"' YOU 11.V,, """V "'• .,..111io-. of Gotooti Le• Mv+i.1 tor 1+>• •ICJO!loll of LttU• Mtri. \11!1111, TW• 1 "''""' "'"""'•r . .riwlo "°' M 11•1<>1to, DAlEO. M~v '· 19n. Vf, I!, SI JOHN, Countw Cltr~ Oy W1J!tr f, Klf!O 0.l>\llT (ltrk Pvbli1Md OrtllQt (o.nl 01111 l>Uct, M1y I, U. 11, l't, ltl) 119"-12 LEGAL NOTICE NOTICI TO ClllOITOlll SVl'll!lllOlll COVIT OP THtf STATS 011' CALlll'OllHIA ll'O• TH' COUlol TY 011' Oii.AHO& Ho. A·lMU , (11111 ol Wl!•l l:Y M. £Llt0ff, D•t••••<I. llOl!Ct IS He A:CllY Gl\l(N to I~ •-IP.OllMI of '"' ·~· ~~m•d (ltC•dfM lh~I •II ptllClll 111¥1~ (11lm1 tO~ln~t !111 ,,,d lltCtoent •rt r1....,lrl'd to Ill• '"""' wnl'I '"' ""''"'' vo..tftf,., In IM oHlct o1 th• cl11ril 01 !Pit '"°"'' tnlltled courl, or to P•t .. nl lh.,.., wUl'I Ille flf«'Ul•Y "OVC'M'I. II) fllt \llllllf'tl'lllod 11 I~ alll(t of t.,.lr 1l!orney, P1111 A. H111n1, Atlo•n..,. al 1.1w, Hlrbor Lew lu!k::lln1, '!t E•tl 1111t t rrMt, eo.re MMI, C1Ulorn1., wro1c11 11 fflt pl1c1 ol l>i.ltJ""I of tlla ut"61r1ltntd 111 111 mall••• Mrl•lnlnfl to lllf ••1•1t fll 11hl dfc.0.f'll, wllll foll!' month• 1Htr fllf tlr,1 Pllbllc.tllOl'I ol thll riol1c•. 01rite1 M4v u, 1rn Wit.LIS Ml!LV!H f LLIOTT \/ERAlEI! ELLIOTT MtDONE\., (O•EMtCUIMI ct 11111 Wiii of I~ ll>OYI '""'W c:t•t eclent PlUL A. MANHA Atltr...., 11 L1w H1rMr L-lullfl~• tU lltt 11llt lltHI (ltll Mall. (1111. Ttlt {110 tu•lfll ,fr.ltlfMYI IOI' C•ltKUllf'I ,.ublllhtd 0.-111111 (0111 Dt1JY Pllol, M1y 1), 7f Ind J\IM S, lJ, \f11 13'1·11 LEGAL NOTICE ll'ICTFT IOVS •USIHlll NAMI STATIMINT Tiit lCllOWllll "'"(U'I 1r1 do1nt ,u,111111 11: LA REMVDA ~AOOLERY. 7'.llS E. to•tl Hltl'lw1v, Coron• dfl M•'· '16,J. O•"ltl JOMllll S11r1!1, f1f) Oownl111 Cir,, WMlrnl,.1!1r, And~ r•tr!ck Rorntro, t1tl Downlnt (Ir,, Wt!llrnln1111. Tl'llt 1Wtl111t1 It blln1 «"duclld bv • G,111r11 11'1rtnlfllllfl. OAN1El. J, 1,ltATT fl>ll tl•lem•"' 111..:r wl!1' th• Coo.m1y c.1•r• of Or1nu1 Cwntv on: M1v 11. 1'11. •v Arlhur Ii:, ICrlftr, D1pury <.nU11ty Ctt•~. .. 11171 l'11bll1hel'I Or1{!t1 C:oa11 01Uy ,.110!. M•v n . "· '"" J11,.,. s, 11, 1tn T:nt·n LEGAL NOTICE ,ICTITIOUI aUllNllt. HAMI •TATIMINT Tiie follow!n• Hr.Ont 111 OCl"'ll bu11n111 11: lKICVTIV( OFFICE. ''7 ~'" Nlc0- 11' Or .• H•wllOl't lt•tll t:IMf. Mr1, P1lrld• J•1n Rt•MIC, ?UI? l'•t•lo Drl'H, Minion \11110, (1lll6r11!1, Mrt. lttlllrt1' M11!t Wt!Jtl, 111SI L.1 1 11111. f twn!Mf> \11!lty, (tlllcrnlt . 1n11 bY1I""' I• blln• c;Dflclw;tltd ~ • n 1111r1I P1rlf'\.lttlll1. 1(11!\rvn M, Wt111I Tiii' 'l•t•m•nl flied wll!I l~ Co<mlv (;ltrll of Ol'tl'l(lt Cou11ly Ol't M1., II. lt1,, t.v ..... ,1., J. MtcfOo)(, Oel>U IV Covn1., (!trk. .. 1174.t Publltl'l•d Or•no• Co•ll D•llr f'lln1, MIY I!, 22, 7t trwl Jun.), lt/1 10Sl ·11 LEGAL NOTICE HOTICI! TO Cllll!01TOll5 SUPllUO• COU•T Oil' THI! STATI 0(1 (ALl,OllNIA '011 TKI COUNTY 01' OflAHOI 1111. A·1JJ:lf t \IM• ol OA\110 CAN EDY (.II.MAN, Otcet•td. NOT ICC 1S HEREBY Gl\IEN lo 1~• ••..clltor~ ol mo •bo,... ntmotd dtc9d•nl tn"t 111 ,,..,on, 111vln1 c11!m1 1c1lnll lht ••Id d1tlf<:l1t<1! ''' '"""'lrtd lo lilt ti'>Hn, w!ln th• n•c•''"''I' vwcil•"· 111 I~• oJHtf OI m. {lt l'll OI t!W 1fW>,... en!IUlf(I tOll•I. er I~ Pft l•ot lh•n,, ..,lfl'itfl f~~ TIN:f JSlty YO\lth•••· lo '"' vo<:ltt1lgMd 11 no '''~ Avtn.,t, l.•11.>nA "'"'"· (Allto•n•• ~'.SI. W!llCll 1, m. plKt ol bu1l ... u of !ht l>f>tlfflit nt<I ln ~II m•'''" "'·111~1,.,.. TO lllf t tllll o1 wi ld Ot<t<ltnl, w!!~ln IOl,lr """''"' ''"'' t!>f 11ri1 ""'bllc111on 01 11111 f'Ol•fl. Ot!t"d "l•v l. 197' MARIA JANE GILMAN t">~11;1fl-of lllf IY•ll OI '"' ·•be•• nMll.cl O«td•nt WILllAM M. Wl\.(OltfN nt Pit* ATtmlt '-"""' aMCPI, (I Ul9t'nll HUI Tfl! 17141 ff••PSf>J .t.ttll'MY Ill' l•ICVltb Pvbli1flt(I OtA"Of Cot,r 01!ty Pilot, M~v '· ·~· 1:. ,., 1•11 1111.n STARS Sydnry On1arr Is ont> uf lhl' \V(11•ld'l\ ~l'C'llt l\slrolo· .:c.rs. Iii.~ 1;0lV nln i,.; Ollf' ot tJ1c DAILY PILOT'S ~at frntur1·<:. r,.; ..... ..it .....w.,1 t..t • .,,.,.., ••••• It -.. , .... 4fte4 MC.f'ID. °'· If .,, ..... ................... - ,..11 .... , .. '""'' Alld L\cn rtOd BOfl<r'• Ark i. 1M DillLY I'll.OT 5 W"®N C'Ot!llCI. ' FAME·-LESS FACES ·- NATHAN MIU.EA HflfNl.~fflf I '"" . :oer.,r '·~ ,.· Think You Don't Know Them? - ·- You probaby don't recognize 1 single n1me or face in this group and yet, if you're one of the DAILY PILOT'S very .well informed editorial pago rooders, ii is this talented teem of writers which helps you keep informed. They write the Editori- al Research Reports. Though their own names don't appe1 r on tho articles which are published under the Editorial Research Reports heading , these are the real pros -diggers who go after all the baclround facts which put today's top issues into perspective -without thought of seel ing the fame that goes with the name when you 'r. 1 national columnist. They're Your INfORMERS Yos, they could bo your "informers." It's featuros lilo Editorial Res11rch Reports whi~h male the DAILY PILOT much moro than just the most im portant hometown newspaper available to residents along "tho Orange Coast. The DAILY PILOT is the total pachgo, ft makes whatever happens in the world "loc:1I nows" and delivers it daily right to your homo. lot this team of dedi- cated "informers" help you k"p informed. Road Editorial Research Reporlt on tftt editorial page -and all tho other informative special footures in other parts of tho DAILY PILOT • J,, o· A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 -s 6 7 8 6 4 2 -5 6 7 8 '· 2! OAILY PILOT f 1...;;·;;·;; .. -;;;;::;~e;;J:l ;'~~·~,·~·;;, ;;;;B•~I [ ---1~1 ---l~I _ .. ,. .. 1tH~untt~~.,.~·~·~·~ .. ~·~"'~::--l~l"~1""iP°liiiiiiiitiG I Coron• dol Mir Coot• -,....,, .... von.., I· STOP DREAMING I~ MEMORIAL DAY NODOWNTOVETS * 4 IR CUSTOM * -lPECIALS-• START LIVING 3 BR., 2 bl. Quiet c:omer. HOME IN PRESTIGE Thl~ nt'a.r~ocw homt> will CANT SEU YOUR HOME? This ad could be about )'CUI' Mme ii II ~'L'I l151ed wun ta. \Vr wou!d C"XJX)se il lO 11w local m.·u·ket lh.m.Ch our membcrshtp Jn ~vt'Pal multiplt• i;ioQrtht, 11nd our ('Ombined sa1'-tol't"t' lron1 all of our olhc:t'R 'A'OO)d ""·ork p11rt1cularly hard Jor )W. 'J1)e commi1111on you \\owld pay us when your home iw.ll.• ""'OUld probably be one of tbt mt "buys" you wUl t"Vtr n"Jflke! CA1l tii>722S. Soal'PMlt-Ntar~.li AREA. Cathtdral ctillnas. NEED SIX turn on a.nybody'1 pit· ~. l3to!o00. """"' ~ lrm. rm w/littt>I, "''"'' BEDROOMS 1 · t"---• •• 1yppat•~ 1nav1na 1... auu GEM Wi.e thruout, all tlf'c kitch. Large home, lafSe bedrooms. spotle/1$, Three Btdl'Of.lll\11, 1610 W. Cout Hwy., N..B. $41,500. Drive by 9961 aJ!kirtJ $38,900. Small home den, fn.rni!y room Md REALTORS 642-4623 Wnthaven. btdroom!, ukinc $29,500. separale dining room . \Valk OPEN HOUSE HOMEIUYERS Both available no down VA to tehOOU. pools, parks, te"· Quahly 3 BR Rancho Men REAL TY " 2951 or luw down nlA tmm. nis. etc. In Univtnity Parle "°""' on aw. lot. Ill BA. 53J..mo SJI· EASTERN CHARM at 1$.900. Cal 6<&-1J71. FAm Rm, F.P.'• in I: out. BY Qwnu.Sbatp 3 bdr, 2 ba, Home1>lck for a ffil brick $31.~. ti% VA, By OYo'ntt. tam nn, lonnal din nn, hoUJe! Formal dinina 905 Uard PL 9'J9...74l2 com park'= 3 pool1, a.stwne room! 1..arxf" living room ti% Gr. $.12.500 968--9477. and a separate parlor?' AJ1 COLWELL lm ORIOLE DR.. MESA VERDE. NEW 3 Br •• dinq nn., tam.Uy rm,, 2 betbs, dbl aell clean own, upgrad- ed crpl•, Hhakf' nx>f. Owntr· broker. ~7051. PROPERTIES. INC REALTORS NO FIXING-Top Cond. 4 Br, bl& &epr muter muitt. huge =-;cc:----,;-;;;;;--.,,-;;--;; I llv nn. deep shag crpt all BY Ov.·ner. 2 BR, 2 Ba, 2-room•. New paint, vinyl stO'I')'. Older home, 1% blic floort, watt'r toftener, MW 10 ocean. Has v i t" w. 673-2I41/5J2..ll95. fixtures, brick patio, plant· en I: bbq. $36,500, Pho n e :lUPEft duplex. BeautlluUy 54.>-7885. redone. Front \lnit·3 br, 2 I ~:-;;;;-=:::::::-;:--;;:::::-:~ e BY owner in Mfta d1l l>a.. lrpl, din rm, newly red<'coratcd. Brand new 2 tfar -3 br, 2 ba. 1~ J1Q ft Shake roof. Xlnt cond. Can br. 1 ha back unit. 644-8034. aasume GI loon. $34,250. Broadmoor Beauty Foe appt call "'°510ll. 'fhi.~ IX'autiluJ 4 bedroom home is con ven ie n 11 y located close lo schools and shopping, and ownership en.- ti tles you to a private swim club. Thill 1$ a most unique floor plan t hat you. will · lovt! Call 675-72'25. COLWELL PROPERTIE S. INC REALTORS Dream House BESI' Collete Park buy - Ope'li wknd!. Sharp 3 br. Ui down. $31,950. 293 D:>wling Green Or. BY Owner • Lovely 3 BR, fpl., cor lot, rm for boat. camper 2335 Portola Dr. 546-11131. 3 BR, 1 % ba,, mi cpts, drpa, lg cov. patio, good \V-1ide loc. Nr. all &etiools. $26. 750. 2207 Raleigh. O \V n e r 548-9882. Prine only. EASTSIDE, 4 BR, blt-ins, lrplc, tam. nn. y a r d w/trees. Good atta. By owner. $37,(0J6T>$ill Special MESA VERDF;. 4 hr, Beaut. Now You can buy her that tful Home. Well kept. Must dream house because this: ill see! $48,950. Ownr 557-8794 ii.• huge bedrooms, 21h lu.'1:-Eait Bluff uridu11 bo.llur, lots of t>xtra _"""°'"'°"'"'°''.""'.~".':,-,,-room. Prestige model with BLUFFS PLAZA ankle deep carpets thruout, • ..,. 200 h H -· • drapc1t, to mate • Uge DOLL HOUSE -2 BR., split ~pa.rate family room • level, end unit, gttenbelt, Trade ln that old model on thi11 $49,500 special. Seller showplace! Newly redecor. thruout. Lownt mainter>-will consider all off~. Call ance dues &: leasehold. Ex· C WALl<ER & LH Reultors ~9191 2790 l-larbor Blvd. at Adams Open Eve:r:. YOUR CHOICE 3 BR, 2 BA or 4 BR, 2 BA. Each quiet res. area yet c1ose lo schools, C"hurches &: shopping, incl So. Coast Plaza. NO DWN VA- e lusive with - UJ.4 Vista del Oro Newport Beach 1'44-llll ANYTIME OPEN SAT. 1-5 429 VISTA FLORA SMALL OWN Fl-IA Beaut. 3 BR., 3 ha. condo; I immae. thrnout. All rooms Newport speckn1s:. Glass end. frplc., at I Y.'l't bar; luxurious carp. & Fairview 646-8811 drapes. Tinted window&. 1':lec. garage door opener. Everything I:. more than you ever dreamed about in (1nytim1} this beautiful seftins: on the I """'""'""'!!!!""'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!:"" greenbelt. 1 · . MORGAN REAL TY MESA VERDE VALUE 673-6642 675-6459 Spncioua NEW 4-bedroom, :J.. balh executive 2 ·a lory *Lovely 3 BR, family rm, home. Filled with extras. Lusk. Derorator interior. r·ormal livin~ room \vith Beaut. 1nd&cpd. $53,500. By fireplace. Formal dining Owner. 644-2341. 644-0032. room. Brellkfast nook · Fount1ln V•llay Counlry kitchen with large I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;; fan1ily rocnn. F o Ur I h VETERANS i>alroom & third bath ideally located for use as maid's quarters or guest roon1. Ulili!y room \vlth washer I <lryer hookup. Sprinklers, block wall fen. clng, luxurklus carpeting & drapes, dishwll!iher. $38,500. 1658 Utah Circle. Call GREEN Brno• Home. F.V •• ,.,._ in tM back ,an111 .:=c=u=T;::E;;A~N~D-C:::O:::IY~-1 Bdrm., 2 Ba., Wnily and Localed in H u n t I n IC to n This 2 bdrm, 2 be. home We dinlnr room. Sitwle atory. Beach and only $33.950. has a dl'l'I, 2 frplCI,, By owner. 96$.-0244. CLOSE TO 'f.HE cathlMral beam <.~ilinp, 5 Br 1; 3 be.. Heated pool. BEACH AND SO 0 0 0 "'el bar; }ow nialntenlll'ICf' Frple In MA!it'r B . R. INEXPENSl.VE landscaping Y:ith spri~el'll $42,000. 968-2365 all 6 pm. \Vhen you ate lhi!!: rtally & a nice ('(lmt>r location. All sharp 3 bedroom home you onl $35 !OJ 4 Br + Lr1 Bonus Room won't bdll!'Ve the price. for Y , Convtnient to _>W,•. lrg lot. Pro!uslona!ly '""''"l"d , .. · .. re· d h1·11 1 Will FHA • .$35,000 847-3957 _...., nl .,, = y ... u, 0 Y _..,,,l'N. BY OWNER. 4 BR .. 1% BA. CALI.. 540-8555 tam. rm. aha• cpt .. , IJIOO SHERWeeo REALTY eq. It. $31,500. 963-2146 ur 18964 Brookhursl. F.V. REALTY (213) 37M71L Univ. Park Center, lrvine WANT A POOL HOME' BUY LIKE RENT C.all Aoyt;m•, 833:-0m 4 Br, 2 Ba, crpls, drps. cov CJ, $1. Iota!. cash rwefled 10 1 '::1ol11~;,lo~ho~"~"~'~"'~'~to~8=PM= patio, Owner 96&-1219. purt'hase this harp 4 bedrm 1 , a. ch Ranchero w/l ,650 sq ft. SIX BEDROOMS Huntlnatan I fea!uring brick firepl, rear A fam ily home that ""ill LA.WIN'S pat10, w/w crpts & dri>s. M 'n ewry way Ideally loc on a qU iet st., pleMe om 1 t ,. al. BEST Buys . ,_ to .....,..., . & Balroom arrangemen .... e j"'t nunud ~~putg 10< ohildr<o· "''"""'It '- * schl.s. $26,900. full price. . ' 1 te · " ~'.per mo. incl'i; all. tion ~ar poo ' .nnis LUSCIOUS ...... VILLAGE bicycle_ pall~. p~v1~ ~e IMMACULATE 4 BEDR001'! REAL ESTATE recrrat1on; be&ut1ful ~~1011 TOWNHOUSE, I.hick expen. s.n-J.SOO 54&-SIOJ & decking for ~:..ntertamuig. 11ive lhag carpet thruout, A nal buy at $.io.oo>, fonn al dining room, 2% OWNER anxious. Elegant ba ths and four BIG bed· Spanish dellign. 4 bedrooms, rooms. Own1r transferrf'd hU&e family room, Spanish -we'v1 got a "Sell it now" lll'Chways, Elegant entry price of $35,500. cau larwin hall. Xtra i;lorage areu. quick to aee ·this. Brk, $28.500, 962-1373. * OWNER leaving. Swim pool BIG FAMILIES with Lift-0-Matic pool ired hill REALTY Uni~.· Park Center, Irvine' Calh Anytiml',8J3..0820 Oftice hours 8A.1\f to 8 PM WANT TO HEAR A WHOP· cover, delightful patio nnd PER! How 'bout a whoppin' yard. 4 Bedrooms, fam.ilyl~===~~~:.::~=: bil 3 bedroom family room roon1, den, large rooms A RARE FIND "Showcue home!'" 2«IO Sq. thruout, Brk. $ 31' 0 0 0 • I-Story. 4 Btllm , 3 ba .. ! cai ft! Don't tell the kids to "gel ~2-1S61. gar. Bep.utilul · Broaclmoor, Jost!" m this~. it'll taktlo-WN=~E~R-d-.-, .. -,-.~,.-.-S~p-an-,-is7h1 Turtle Rock.Decorator )'OU• week to tlnd them. See Archel!, beautifully de&ign!!d drapes. Xlnt Joe. \1;a.lki.ng this home today! Covered home, step doWn living dist. lo elt'm. A: high school. patio, 3 car garage, sexy room, 4 bedrooms, den, A r.rusr SEE AT $48,750 Roman bath In the muter family room famous garden INCLUDING 11lE LAND. .Wte and matt, ~ced right kitchen. Bric. ; 3 3 , 7 5 0 , •t $42,500, •t larwm. M&-0604 NEED A :i*BEDROOM ""1"'E"'P.::;:o::s""'sE"'s"'s"'1o=N•s1 "! 111b,., \·lit!. WITH NO For infonnatlon and location MAINTENANCE? ol ti..,. FHA & VA horn.,, - - -'llP1illur BACHELORS, PUSSY CATS contact -"SfNCE 19-16'' OR SMALi, FAMILY -KASABIAN 1st W"tem Baok Bldg. come taU in love with this R I E t t 847•9604 Univen;ity Park, Irvine 2 bedroom 2 bath townhouse. •• 1 • • Days 552·7000 Nights 11·1 .. Mov~ m"' ct•an and H"'NESTLY only 5 mulutes from the v beach and all acttvlties. where elae can you find a 3 3 BR.,~ ba., atrium $325~ $1,000. leu than "New" BR. l~ BA condo, incl 3 BR., :Iba., lam. rm,•·~ cost. $27,950. at 1arwin. wahr, ciryr, ttfrlg, crpts, \VE HAVE OTHERS 9l5Ma A.n)'time drps! Abo featutts bltin * SPECIALS * elec RIO. FA ht, u""1 brick $24 950 AIL Tm.MS 3 Blt, tirepl. '·Vacant, xlnt loc. 2 Ba,· like new Cll'(;, drp1, $700. down incl all costs. d 1hw1 hr , wat1rsottener. PAYJ11tl less than ttnt. "ll11li"l 11•lld . Sellers bought larger home If "SINCE 1946" -rush! l&t Wellem Bank Bldg. -·-1""'4471 ( :::J 546-1103 University Parle, Irvine ---'l ~1·11l l 11 r 4 BEDRM CONDO. Good Days 552·7000 Nights Joan a1sumption. Paymt1 Bf OWNER. 4 BR., 2 t::thS, leu than rent. Gc1 cond. fam rm. frplc, ~tc. 3 yrs BY owner 3 BR, fum rm. Opta, drpe, A r~tri&'. Small new. Walle to Edi!on High, Plan l, Broadn100r Turtle dn. w/2nd. Avail 6-1. Elementary schls. & ocean. Rock. <h\'11 the I and. Children newr livid he~. 833-2798 FOUR SEASONS BEAUTY. 5% down. $35.950. m;1 1-~S~C~A~R~C~Ec---- 4 BR, 4 BA, lg tam rm w/ Sand Dollar Ln. 714 -A H • • T • 1 h• • fpl, fOnn1 din or den. As-5.Ji....3392 s en s ff sume VA loan. SUbrnit cuh · ntE moot llOUght alter Door down.. Near Bf'a(h. Quick GOV'T. OWNED plan in University Park! poss. Repossessed homes. Lo\\' The dramatic "La salle. ·• CALL 847-8507 down. Government pays C o m P letely redecorated closing costs. Call 968-4441. thruout. 2..iOO Sq. ft. or good * Crest Realty t•mlly i;vin,, 10 st"" 1rom th€' major greenbelt! 01~ fered at 144 ,9 50 OPEN House Sat It. Sun. Franciscan Fountain homt>. INCLUDING THE LAND! 4 Br., 3 Be., 3 car gar., fam An incomparable value! COOL OFF NOWI rm. ulil. rm. Cpt. d"''· 5 BR + POOL lnd8ct>. sprinkling >")'stem. 546-333.'i. 5°/o DOWN in the heart of Fountain Valley acl'Ol!s the street from Mile Square Chuntry Club & park. Seller haa been transftJTed. 4 lrT BR's, formal din rm, all elec kitch, ttp. util rm, oversized. 3 pr & a r, massive 1~ upgraded crpts & d1'Pftlruout. Beaut ldscpd w/concttte block \l.·aJJ A: covd pa.tio. Sec 1.or yourself. $35,500. $J7,900. Flnancingavail $46,900. Laf'ie home in :xlnt area. CM•ner. 847-02. I' !62.4471 C =1 MWllJ New w/w shag carpets and NEAR Beach -Beautiful big Jots ot fresh paint, fittplace, BR, din Rm .. crpts, dtapes, all buUtins. HU" .+ low dsh/wsh., enc patio, beaut. "SINCE 1946'' maintenance back yard. ynl. ~rinkl1r. S 2 7, 5 0 II. 1st Western Bank Bldg, Submit. Call 847-1221. 962-7194. University Park, Irvine· MESA VERDEii Delightful 3 BR cul\f! ju~I ,vniting for you! Crackling fireplar.r, new shag carpeting and all this on a quiet stl'1!et 1.~ blk to pMk~ & shopping. Hurry $29,950. I "~!!!'~~~~~~· I c.11 "'-'050 i~~sC~TuERoA~~?c:r1 •llJge R e~!i h:.:tc \ L \ \I II !Ti: IMMAC. 3 BR, 2 BA, new D1ys' , 552·700!j Nights cult drps & sbe.g crpt. XlntiJ!"!!'!!!!!!!~!!'!!!~!!'!!!!!!!!!!ij neighborhood, 1 mi. to Laguna Beaeh ~21 Triplex With Golf Course View Ve.ry neat & clean 2 Bedroom hon1e, 1 BedroOm unit over l?Rl'ngc & another 1 Brclroon1 uni! on ground noor. All likt-St"parate hoosr~. Cornl"r lot. Ideal for l'l'lirtd <".)uplt' w n n t ing ll0\1!11' & inromr. $51.~ Call 6-16-7111 lQ Sff. ~.-0) THE REAL NESTATERS ''I'• "'' >' O PEN-MON-:-f-5- 191 BUOY ST. Oean 3 BR at f11mily rm. Covertd p.\t'io. m.~. --GE:l'lllMi--- 161 w. COAat H\vy., N.n. REAL TORS 617-4623 TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD bellch. Anxious! $31,450. 1nu Beach Blvd., 11.B. 968-4m BY O\VNER -3 Br, 2 Ba, • view lot, fonne.r model low, LOW lloWR SOLD horn•. fom & a p p I o. Why P&Y lhf' addit>onal 6% AD my listings, Need homes available, $32,500. 495--4332. seUers add on lo the priCl!I to Minimum down mows you to advertise and sell, For 830-5976 cover broker·s commission? f · al em · nt 1 --c=~=~===-'I Owner will sell for $31,950. into this large family rm ~ ession • rie ser-BEACH HOUSE home near wne model home. 3 Bdrm&. 2 be.tbs. FuD vice $29 500 which 90Jd for $34,500. by price only $28,500. Call now. Call June Blalr 961-7133 Quaint home ~a: close in. 0 1,, it wun't lut! 15 )Tl in Real Emate Sale• Be l"il' fl -" agent. Home has 4 B., ,; REAL ESTATE FAIR RED CARPET REALTORS am c s., r. to =· BA, dining rm, tr pl c, 9&Z.ml frplc .. picture window, rd.', ('(lvered patio, ,large fenced (714) 5M-2551 washer. 1 Br w/balh. lol w/plenty o! room tor OX· VISIT POLYNESIA "BOAT GATE MISSION REALTY 494-Clll pansion. JOot school• shop. In )'OIU" own back yud. Fish + ALLEY MYSTIC HILLS ping centllr w:lthlJ1 walkinc pond a waterfall. colored \Vhite water view, overlook- diatance. 847-&m. llghU:, luae ln!H. 3 BR, 2 cash down to ea.sy monthly ing city A beach. 4 Bdrml~ OWNER mu11t sell. Aaume BA home W/lrr liv nn, payr_nent. 3 bedrooms + 2 baths; formal dining A S:X SO apr loan, low t.ormal din .na w/Mir-family room. $23,900. family rms. Living nn. ba1 monthly payments., llf'I'! rored walls. Only $25,500. trplc. A tf'rrllic view, Prop. famlly room, tozy den, 4 C1ll June Blair ffl.7133 erty in mint cond., com. bedro~*1ut, used b r I ck 1\ED CARPET REALTOAS Rtalton 988-3371 pletely redecor, 1 year ago. brk, $31.500, 80-6691. 962-mt Euy care landscaping. 0~1n~ .!.':'~ 15 Vacant Honlft $700. MOYE IN 16$.ooo~ 499-2800 * 1 roo;.,, with h a n d 1 o me 3 A C Bedrooms, &ood a.rra, Seller pays all ~lher coats. ---- natural br i c k flttplace, nne '11.ith pools. ntA A. $2nincle\IU')>thint,3BR.2 ~.· ~.,..,..._....... natural wood pane tin a ,, GI tlnancittc, St0Q, to $1000. BA. ftaturts elec bltin de<."<Or&tor "''allpaper, patio, total down and ret 'tU et--RIO, W/W crpts. dtpl, U• ~~ _ Brit $27 900 962-6566. Cf'O'll dOlea. C&ll now -ed brick firtpl, FA ht. Pttlo. *'" ._ ~a...- ' • · 1t•r11 & Co. fO.Ull Vacant-xlnl loc. DUPLEX MEADOW HOME OWNER-.. 3 -11 " ' [ . $32 llll0:4 BR, 3 BA, ,_ lhPa dtn, awns n>Om,' nat\lftl ..;... A drps. Ha 1 wood cablnttl, plctllft '1111> NloM ( f' /\ 1 • I ' ' t Two 1-bdnn. •P"-with ~ ttudio. WalJc to beach 6 !!hopplnc, mtnns zero vacancy. Priced to sen al $44,000. I ,....., . --... will -.. -""'11ral no.r,~~~~~~~~~· tt!i...... S1&lp b OU I<• ~· i:id•:iut ;;:·•hrvallcE --below rood .,.., N... r :r. HI BJcrlrn -llllD,· 9D -. -· eourt """' ..n tor \ ScibooL Only $1141). ""·' ' -· $!2.500. 4 Br lleU> "-· ...,ID OWNER LEAVING4% )'n 1m...cr -Mtlll -.. olam -4 BR, l!l BA, llUn no. . Wiow. By...;.... IU-1917. &Ti ·-11np1, ~ "!e: 11• -Aii1 -w REAL EST .. , Ha"' aomfthlrc yw want t6 ..U! a...tlltld ods do It wtU -call NOW 6C-SSTI. 10,. -· $!3,91JO. ~ I 0 • ,.-,..,___ • CAl!PET REALTOR& lltDll wltb ..... .,. llall1 1ltO u~''S&.m. 9'2-nn. Pilot c..Jllld. MMm. , .. _._m __ ....,...,...~ ...... , • • '11 pit-... "11'· and 'alk ••• arl< '" All I "'I I "" r. or ing " d. m r~ 0 1 ,, • • ' • T...io,, 11'1 JO, 19n DAILY PILOT "'°"""· • .,1',1'72 l~ !.__-_ ... _-_,!~ ~I -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;·-= ' [ ---I~ L:.7~:.~ ~ I -l~j jL~.~~' .. ';·~·f~ ... ·~-~1xs~~Jl~.e~)j![;;1;1 f~~·;--;f::;1~-~-----305-1 125 1 __ ._ _____ lnvutmont ~-~-~ Q HwM1 Unfvrn. M lulon Viejo Ntwpart BNdt FAMILY SIZE 4 8dnns. plus dtn, dinlna: room. bullt-ln kitchen, "A'tth over 3,00) 1q. ft. ol living space, 2 Car &a.np I: fenc- td yan:t "A'lth room lor pooJ. AJJ thlJ A: a vie\\· from CWT)' room, for $49,500. -------..,._Oppertvn.,.... __ ..,lty=_,..=lll--Cotti Mos.o ELDORADO 2 •R. l 'l BA, ILIRBOR VIEW HO>IES .,.,..,. BUDDY~· ..... """" WATERFRONT CANDY SUPPLY ROUl'E Jll~Ul il pct. ,,.,. li.tt. ept.s, cust. drps. P\1, ()pto J{OUl!lt SaUSUn/Non Royal Pal.ms Prll: !Pa.I.rm i~O SEU.JNG L"'\'0\"Et>J £/itdr, full kit. l'l('f', FREEll L•ndlord...OWntrs y,·dJ-lndacpd. 5ow mntDC"e, 18-U Port Owits P 1 Sprites) adults, at Ir ac t R·l Fff lot in N"'Jl'ON l'ART OR i;·uu, TlME $l»l Br. GM Apt, Ful\)' rovrd patlo le p.rden .,.alk, ~lonaco 2 BR, den, J be.th. tum'd. Xlnt in A 001. P100. Shott&. On1)" $31.0Ql. NO\\" available Ui; ~ f 1 Cuport \fr w\ll rrlrr tr1wus iv )'OU rR.EE GI t'lt.A.fv •.. ~la")' 1\t•.:;1n1 hll" IC"nanu M our "''a lt u-c hlll, pawd sideyard tor boat or _B~'-°"-"'-'·-*------"4--0619. Bill GRUNDY County aid surroun.li"' 11~.1S,:1'°""'d. 1· + F .. ti1' rm. RENTAL FINDERS 129500 ··-· bl I ,,. '161 ,. k ~ " 41-' w. '"'CO.STA WUA ta1nper. , • ,_,.uma e BY 0\\'NER.. J Br. HoJ'M, ** KIT 10x7l0 2 BR, conl-Rta tor r. Art'llll. ou mil..\' ·1'\'11 )Wt" t'luplt''(, Nlctb' tu r 11 . 6'•% loan. <Nnrr. 837-ll85. POOL. \\'ESTCLIJT AR.EA. pktely f'u.mis.ht-d. Adu t 1 3_.l Bal'1:1df", l\pr. &a<"h present posit)On. All kx'a· \'rd/patio. Hou•••* Apti. 4 BR. 2 BA, fan1 rn1. lndr)i ~108 -$f9,950. park in Nt:OA'part Beach. FOR SALE !Ions •n" i:ammel'l:'lal or ~Lrg 2 + piycbadtllc * 64.S-Ol 11 * ALA Rtntols e 645.3900 .AO tan nn .• \if"v." i;hag cpl, SJ.',900. Nowpart Ho't•hfl S3000. Call 548-flllO. 111~·1\11')' furnillhrd t>y U.!1. ba r. NiC'f" ftia•urt•s. lde:1I ""'""'-rr« m LAl'"llll'1nl~ PriJt. only. S37-3836.. • Industrial 8&.Y'I. Aln)OSI nt'I\' Qualified Jll"M1011 1~· l 11 roiiplf' ~'r b.it'ht.>l,ir~. .. e Budlf't U.<"htolt)r, tum. &II util in1·lu1~ ~ REAL ESTATE NEWPORT HEIGHTS [ and \\-ell ltasttl • Bld(s. bi--ro1nci dlstrlbuto1· for 1•ur NU-VIEW RENTALS Newport &each l"L'XER UPPER ltul Eai.1.. I ra1 Containing 13 units H rh 1.'And;y fMounds. Almond 67~ or 4~4~ By owner J BR, l BA, 2 'iiiiiii-..iiii!iiiiiiiijiii·~~i[i!! 1 bid&:. $28,000. Sa.le prk'f', Joy, Baby Ruth , But· POOL room• connected to garqt.. l!I f!ach bid(. Call JOhn ar Rtx ff"rflngl'r . Nt>Stle11, P IAnlt'n, LANDLORDS! WE'RE ALA Rental1 e 6'S..J900 • Qu trt Rf't""-1' lhtF U11ch Arnt .:i rd. all ulU ilx· Sllj 1190 Glennt)'Z't St. «M-9473 54Jl.-0316 * LAGUNA BEACll • Landscape arehitttt's dream house. Breathtaking view of ocean, \illagf' a: hill1. Swimming pool, spa, foun.. taln, ~k. fireplt. bencbe!I A: custom scu.Jptured piK"H thruool 3 BR, 2 BA, many rxtras, $62.000, Owcer (n4) 642-6391 or (714)494--7349. JMal bome in prime Harbor Parkin& space for boat. 1..p Acrap for iale 150 ~ltiOO. lnvMm«it Div. ToolSlt' Ho\111, ~· Day. FRF:I:: l:.F~NTAL ~F:H\r"!Ct: BACK• I lot, nr. schools. 646-8714 «I;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. l'ilil k Duels, Rt>t>M's Ptl\n\lt lll&l\I' df'~irnblc 1t·r1:1n1:< on , • 0 Highlands. 4 Spacious BR., 6-'6-lMti, Ask for Dolly. 1• Buttl'r Cup -l\d1·f"rt1M"1! M · our i1All l"J:: lbt. \\"l' ~C"t't'f"tt faro. rm., 2~; baths, 11ep. Country Uving. :-,-. A'u.i.•"' in Costa hlt>&a • FA.\llLY \\'n111r1J-l Br, ALA Rentols e 645-3'00 laundry nn. Kitchtn b11 ns., BY OWNE ~ tionally on TV. rlt"). \\"e .. ,)('(!1..,. •oe. . , E\ I k PICK YOUR OWN nl't' a naticinril rornp.,ny. Nf'l1•port Bt aC'h It lluntin~· · ·f'i)lhH\i.: i« 1h•' ,,11111·, •. •'1" i,:iu 11111/ptl ilk $\.t:1.. cpt/drpa, &: a sparkl ing 3 BR, Spaniah channer. Re-ton ll<'u.-h \1 11h lhl' r 1.·1•p11Pn •'L a 11•'" ALA Rentals e 64S.3900 hea ted pool. Ut.000. mod t' I e d, rtdttorated. ORANGES 32 UNRS \·cry high int'1!llt' potenlJRl. BEACON. * 9"2113 addrt'~io; 11vh11·h 1~ 1·u•h1 n,·\t • You n1usl ha1·r 2-.S hrs. pt>r ,.,... ·· -• :\F"FP~ Lo ." • n THE POINT Beaut. lac. $36,000. ~ I.& --t ··-1n Rlv"-idt'. Over 2 attt'!I or easy li\1ing, tklor to l\\lr l"''1 11111~ .h i· · · r · '1 ~ r. ri11.·\ d""•,67l-l65Bt\'es.Seeany-~ ...... .,;, ....... 11·f'f'k ~fl'll'' tunr h lays or Sti5. 2 plus 1k'n·Sha111 A: tlN'~~\ i.;i1r 11~'(1 ~r1I. k1d.t/p.-t. Exclusi\"f' Balboa Peninsula ._ Lt-\•d "'i th fl'\lntagt' on rn·o garde.n aparlmtnts ne-ar ' f'\'t'!t.) C'h.•an. Frpl, air, gardl'th~r · · SllO Paint. Impressive 4 BR., 3 timf". dedicatl!d roads. 512 Valt'n-Santa Ana Country Club. $1 Tl) REQUrRED ir'li:I. Agi~nt !),j6..2:All). ALA R baths, extra large llv. nn. & 3 BR. Vacant. R-2 room to cia orana:t trffs. Al·l zont'. Schf"dule lhows l5~ return For rn~:'t' infl.'lmu1.tion 11Titr; l---~------1 LAND LOR OS e n t•ls • "4S.lf00 huge l!x40 family rm. build. S29,900, Agent. Available in Ol'lf" pal'C'rl or I on l5';0 down. ll.tay f"X· '"ROlITF. DEPARTi\IENT Fountain Valley • SJ('t-:'if: :l Hr, ~t \'/rr tria. Bea.m ceilings. Mass l v t 6T;)-.(1144 6'1rr"/4l4 will dividf". Pricffi ar S5.000 changt". Listed Price : .... ..., .. p o 13< ,...,... 1'pf/(lr"• 1·h1l1llio;nil ..,,, $.WS,000. call our I.nvesimmt ''0·.., · • · v.; •.>;> AVAIL Jlult' 15th, 4 BR. :' ,..... '" frplc., large patio. Shown by LARGE lot, R-2, per acre, For further in1or-Division, 546-l600. Covin11., C11.lif, 91-;T.? B.-\, tllt'l' yn i'll, 10 111111 1,. \\',• \\"111 :-'rill Ofl11 (.ltir St!~I app't. $79,500. ~rated, new crpt, 3 br. mation, please call GleM ln£'lud(' Phon(' l'\o. ALA Rental1 e 64S-3900 1 * 2llO Chetuu Woy * Open S1t/Sun/M<>n. Ocean Vie"•! Beautl lul 3 BR. 2 bath home with formal dining &: family rooms. Li\'· Ing nn. w/lg1!. l'.rplc. NICE' patio ar~as . Good ntighborhood, close t o schools. $4.2.500. 1.Mi1C'h. Ch1ili t1•11/1it't 1'111· FREE CALL ·t;>. ,4,·2414 $26,850. 82&-5559orMS-&7tl. ~taslam,vith -AVAILA_B_L_E_ ., ~,..,.. ,... .. ~-~~ • 1·:1s11t(' 1~1,,·1.1•1 nr.1·1h'I ' SIC t'l'('d $.:lV\../lllO. ;..,..,-,,._,_...,, 9 ~ San Clemente Eckhoff & Assoc., Inc. 1::111-. ~•U ufil 1111·1 ~lt:fl i' 4dJ141C. 541-3:i21; Eves/\\'kncls Call NOW Lagun• Be•ch RENTAL ALA Rentals e 64S-3900 REALTY LOWEST PRICES JN TO\VN Rivrrside. 687·1155 L.'lr$:l' Corporation dt'sirf"S Ne•r Nr•••rl P••I Offlrr 950 121 850 I ·~~~~ .... ~~....... I d t • I s ce $150-Util J1d. \Jniq111!' J\{u·h. • /':~:Er> f\1nN' rtr10111:· ~ Hr 2 BR 125. . & 3 BR , · ft US rlO pG r••po"''''la ......... ,.," to ri•'•· . · -'" " .. ............ lull kit rh11n. l.t'K ))I'!'' patio. SERVICE ~ tin . 4"Jll/1lr1•<, ki1l•/••·1 BAYfRONT, PIER both w/trplc, pe.tkl, lncd 80 ACRES, New Mexico, nr. For Lease tributr TENCO ta Di\'\sion Vit""· $~'~!. ... yd, xlnt cond. national forest. $61.25 PER 1 1 1 of C0<·n·Colal COF'rEF: Slit}..Ulil J)ll. 1 HH. 111,1\ AL .. 499-2800 .. •~ ~~ """" """" ... ............... c:-- BEACH FRONT F.abulous vie~·. beaut. beach. Charming 5 BR beach home on sandy shore. Exciting harbor action -choice locale. 2.lOl Bayside Dr. $168,000 By Appointment Ted Hubert 61:>-8500 2 BR, 2 BA, gorgeous o~·n--* BY O\\'NER * )'OW'..cwn. apts. Security. Look over our competition. elevator, poo&. gnr. $45.C'OO \Ve have & have priced this to $50,000. OwD!r will lease-borne for a fast sale! CUst. purchase option . blt 4 BR. all xtras. Nr. 714 : 499:3005 Bkr., 5Ch1s. ~.OQO. Open Sat & 713:849-5225. sun 12-a. W Margaret Dr. EMERALD BAY &4&--0148 or (714) 753--0393 ooll. Channing ·J Br + Fam, rm. HARBOR View Home -5 Br. Immaculate! Ocean side of Somerset. Xtras, fee land. H1')', View, Ideal location. 64~917. 1853 Port !lfargate. · $145,000. 1'.tust see! Enjoy Holidliys At Home TED HUBERT & ASSOC. 2 BLOCKS TO BEACH 34TI Via Lido 675-8500 $3&, 950 • · SUPERB Opportunity-Owner -4 Bl'droom 2 Bath, 3 Patio tnuut'erred-\Va.nts action! 3 Newport Home. Breezy, BR, 2 BA home on Mystic Bright Rooms! ~ecor.! HUL Asklnc $43,500. }fake New Lawn! Workshop And your oUer. W h I t a k er BIG Dog Kennel! Private Realtor/<J9.1...4434. Bea.ch, Pools And Teruiis! L•guM Nlgu.J 0....'lX'r 6-42--3246 or 673-3570 305 Prospect, New-port Beach •Prestige 4 Bedroom l\fodf"I PANORAMIC VIEW •Shag. Drapes, Fireplace: Beaut. maintained home •Unique Deck & Patio Area 2 Bedrooms & large family •Cumm Features; $35,00) nn. Pool. $&4.500. • Owntt; 24211 La Hennon George Wllll•mson •495-5935 Rt•ltor ', BY OWNER - 3 Br, 2 Ba, 54M570 645-1564 " view lot, fonner model TRANSFER. !'1-fu.st s e 11 • ! .borne, film I: appJ·c, Harbor Vie'w Home, 4 br, 2 I available. $.12,200. C95-Cm, ha, island k:itchenffamily , 8.'1)....59"16, rm. u pg r ad e d cpt ;:1·L"l"d"o-o-ll~I•______ throughout, self -cleaning oven, 2 brick patios, fee ' COMPLETELY remodeled & land. $57,000. 644-4863 rederor. traditional home. 3 BACK BA y • 3 BR CONDO. Bdrm.1., din. nn., den $26,250. Dsbwshr.. frpl., w/wt bar. Large corner Pvl 1io 2 r swun' • pe. , car ga ., lot, East end. $99,500. pool, etc. 6~i;/i inl/10% ~ loweoa jra. , _do_.,,_._ ... _, --~5-14_1_. ~~ ...&'cw Secluded 2 br, 2 ba Condo, 3416 Via Llclo 675-4562 "neat as pin'', Ip!, cpts, 3 BR + fam. I: din nns. 45• drps, pool, $29,500 ownr Lot, strttt to street $69,5ll0 1 _9_79-_1_4_18 ______ _ is Fl. 1<>1, 1g •. oom" s1 .... t EASTBLUFF to'""'' ............ m.ooo EXECUTIVE ESTATE LIDO REAL TY Unbelievable half acre w/52 3377 Via Lido, N.B. trees surrounding the pret· 67~7300 tiest yard you'll ever see. 5 BA YFRONT HOME BR, J BA, noo sq ft. \Vhat Pier & Slip $1-49,tal more can we say! Buy app't KEN BRITTINGHAl\t only -Call 979-1050, REALTOR 675--0123 OWNER-Custom 3 BR, 3 BA, 2 frplc, fonn din. U4 Via Arentone. $n,soo. 675-e948 es• Verde ' MESA VERDE VALUE: Spacklus new 4-bedroom, 3- bath txecutlve 2 -s I or y home. Fiiled with extras. Formal living room with fln!plact. Formal dining room. Brea~ast nook. Country kitchen \\ith large family room. F o u r t h bedroom & third bath ideally located tor use as maid's quarters er guest room. Utility room with washer I drytt hooku p . Sprinklers, block wall fen. clll(, lu."(UrioUJ carpeting &: drapes, dl~hwuher. $.18,500. Call 546-3335. Ontu~ ~21 ESTATE SIZE LOT 12,000 Sq. Ft. Lot at end of Cul de Sac St. $19,500. Al.so 70' x 135' Comer <1nly $71,500 Submit on tenns. 646-TI7L HARB Vu Hms new & unique custom Palermo 4 BR, 3 BA. DJR, F JR. lge pool. Exquisite extras. $68,000. 6#-0()!, Any day is the BEST DAY to run an ad! Don' 1 delay •. call today 642-!ElS. **"ON ~ii ACRE** ACRE. $491-10. !JGS..00.17. 1-440 Sq' -11n1al o lier PRODUCT~. "' A Rentals e 645-3900 4 BR. nevrer, ocean view, 2~; ACRES Ante!ope Vallty, plu~ shop ...... $l8S. mo. erpts/drpe, IJot>nllL loc. C~\l.I. t ":' '!'ill'.\\' ~ l'.ih·n1, 2 Ba1h~I. l'lf'11 I · 1 «•750 2-2900 Sq" -Sprinklffi-3 Can stari full nr part lin1r $180-E."'\N'pt. 1 Bl\. l'f"!l"-'1' \\l'l'l l )'0 'il' 1,1,,-1-1., ~. poo, amtn1t es, ...,..., • only $25(1, dov•n. Chl•ner ....,.. tluplt·x. ll ll'C'l.~· hU'll. 1-'rrll· " • "' • p111n1. r.rpl1 &: 1ltp11. $..\10 ** 2 ON 1 ** mwt sell. 546-:Kl86. phase-.uv amp. po11·er. tS.10 I~. prr 11·k.) Con1 rnny tuo. !nC'l111lin.t:: pool 9f"rv1l'f' Ne1v - 2 oflices . $435 mo. l'slablishf"s businr:os !or dill· gar & ynrrl. fll1111 y 1!csirnht,.. tl'nnnt~. 2 houses on 1 lot. On ocean lo I 152 NU-VIEW RENTALS A1·ail JutM• 1~1. Ca.LI Bobht, blufl n -· \Valk Apartment1 r 11 e J-..MOO Sq' air cond. ollicf". tribuiors. on our 11·n111nJ: lir;r. -.•. 1141 • V\,..;'.an VIC\\'. , li7"' M\~J\ ol' ·l!»-32 1S .,.,b-• do"·n to beach. $46, 750. 100 amp -3 phase -l ~'.iC' .,_,.,., Thomsen Realty 492-9550 • l'ofOVING -Ntarly tie\\' gross Call Rex or John. . ~O SELLlr\G! S.-ns & Snnrli\ _ 1 nn, f.nrcl n-<57 set up In park ne-11.r 546-1600. Inv. Di\·. ~ fish1n.g ur sj)l'nd mo.N' I hnif". O<'t'an i·iri~·. South Laguna ocean. You can movt' in ttn1e 11·11 h youl· ra1·or1tt' R t-A·H 979-1430 tomorro\\'. Loaded as iocl hobby and let thr mnC'hlne en ouse _ LOOKING FOR A RENTAL??? SAVE TIVO WAYS \\'-D, $13,500. TI4/5.16-7348 age Pam you 1nonr y. CASI! I Rt!. 0t•rn11 vit•11. 1 lolk \11°· l By reduction in price. or ~. REQUIRED $2498. SrcurC'd. 1oria lkh. ni1'l'ly furo. Li.: l.A ll(i1'; 3 BR. :! llA, 1·rptll. So.11111• drnPf'S, prlv yard, 1-:nr. All utll 111.I $250. Oranar Avl'. & 16th 642-0.\1.~. 2· By no saJts commission Commtrcl1I ~L=.=,.=ofo=r=os'°.71.=~='01~7-Q LI~.-UTED OPPORTUNIT\' !rpl. $23S. 6t2-J2i:!. MONARCH BAY Pro-rty 151 Newport Beach \\ (' {\111 \lrlr• You, Too• A picture book 2 story -Liquidating: 14 R·l!R-3 lots. \Vrite no11• lor informl\lion, Colonial home, 6 }TS old. 4 First Time Offered Nt'ar ocean, clean & ready include phone nunibl'r. $94.3(}..Util prl. Bach 11.f Here are just a FEW of our MANY, MANY Avoll•blo xtra large bdrrns. !\faster Coast HY.y, Corona del Mar $6,950 tn. Pos. 1enns 673-1784 RED·BRE\V B1•:tch. Spot!rssly cll'ru1. bdnn sultt' w/frplc oc-CORPOR,\TION A1·nil Yl'11dy. 2 en w/a-ar. $140, fncd yrd \\"/[llll lu. \\'tr pd. 2228 Ph1L'Cntln. Ave IB). Call btwn I 8: ~. &16·41 ~'fl. 3 Commm:ial & duplex Mobile Home/ cupies f'ntire-2nd lloor, 3~!:? ,.;:, , lOOl l loii·flrd i\\'l'llllf' $1";°;1>-Lri.: 2 Bil. ~tohill• llnrnr . BA. i.a-e sunny kit "'/all $95.~ owe TD~7%~• Tralltr Parks 172 Vll'11• nr Bny. Nici• <·ahnnu rentals .. , ... San filntPO, Cn. 94-101 the custon1 xtras. Plus l\IOBILE honle park in Sn1I pel nk. A11n1l \'r11rl.1·. $140-INCL UTILITIES AVA!l..ARLF. .h1nr 1;1 •• 1 'aR, eating a re a overlooking E. 17th St., Costa Mesa Joshua '{rec, Cali!. for sale * BARBER SHOP * NU-VIEW RENTALS Furnished'·) Bedrm'Ou-fo.Trsn Vcn1,. S27.\. Sharp! 5 heated pool. Formal din rm, Top location, low do1vn by owner. Under con-\\'ith 4 "hairs, cnhinets, rix· 673-4030 or 19-1-:t!-IS plex. Huge fenced yard. llrt, Rllr H~rhor, Sl:r1. 'l"1W' liv nn w/frplc & low beam ll.S% Spendable retum struction, ~ units. <IM-2037 fures & 1'.'C]ulpment. Goocl OUTST'ANDING bay & llt"'tt1n Eastside Costa Mesa. I l\iyll' Cl!. l•.\"f"s: 838-6J.tl. ceiling. Fabulous, I us h Rea1onomict, Bkr. 675-6700 aft 6. lease \\'ith 5 year option, viev.•. Avail. June 1 ftir 3 ~ + Dt'n, idni;:lr~ ok. " :S BR, lndscpina-. Separate inviting Condomlnium1 Good location, nr. Sr. n\OI. Cllll Dr. 2 Br. & ilf'n, 2 2 BA lar fon1illcK. guest house \v/wet bar. for sale 160 Mountlln,. Dtstrt, ~iLizens ho~l'. Ch''nt'r leav· bn. $400 ?Ito. Adlls Rent·A·House 97,..1430 Equipt photo dark rm. Com-Resort 174 1ng area. \Viii sell for $4.000. Grnhain Really G~G-241·1 RENTAL FINDERS forta.ble outdoor v.'OOd lanai. Cbndo. 3 BR, 2 Ba .. Del Piso Ca11: 673-3663 968-2505 Eves 3 IlR-2 BA-apts, drape•, Ira Vitw in a beaut l f u I entry, 11·et bar. Self/clean ' LtOO Isll'-4 Bl{ 2 BA, 1 ~ tilk 4JI w. IM. COITA MllA rd. SIO\'e 11.l'ftll. \V .... k)e, gatehouse community. Priv o\-en. h!irrored wardrobe CAROLYN COOKE & Assoc j from priv be8ch/cluh. An-Houses * Apts. Nf'Ar !!chl11. S2'li. :""i.\"/-7878. beach & prlv tennis courtm doors. Central htat and nual or by mo. 673-91 ~i9. * '4>0111 * 3 BR, 1-ln:hvcl nr~. family c~ Price "·as $125,000., now air/cond. Pool I.: tttreation NORTH ESTATES Houses Unfurn. 305 Fttt 10 Wiuilorili ly v.•/ ad11lt 1nnlf". $2JO/mc. $ll9,000., ownt'r. Call days area. l\taintaioed landscap-Set> !he Jake from this old G I Jlkr. SJ04i030, :°l-I0-1730. &11--0i70. Aft 5 Pl\1 & wknds ing & o\'ersiu-double-fashion cabin, then "'8lk to entr• l..OVE.'LY ~.,---,,..--,,-I -499-302'1. garage. S29,00l. Try .$0000 it. Valuable $14,99.'.i. SHOPPING CENTER FREE RENTAL BOOK $1~WITH POOL! 2 ~lilt h;'n1f', rnl n1ily --I~ MObHe HomH For S•I• 125 FREE RENT • FOR I YEAR On Bii Levitt display models. I 000 Vlll1gt Hou10 (Sl-10055), skirtina:, air con. d!Uoning, wood decks. Was $17,100. Now $14,500. 1200 Vlll1gt Houl' (S-10052). 3 ~ l?cks, skirting. Was $18,900. Now $15,500. Contempo Communities 24002 Ridg@ Route Drive On Moult'ln Parkway, adjacent to Leisure World) Laguna. Hills 8.10-7900 l97'l SJ-10\V STOPPER Fantastic Royal Monarch. See it to bel ic\·e it. 2'1x64. Patio kitchen, den & 1t-el bar. Contempo Communiries 24002 Ridge Route Drive (On Moulton Parkl~·ay, adjacent to Leimre WorWl Laguna Hills 830-i!KXJ NEW model, alx51 Viceroy 2 Br., 2 ha, carpet throughout. $8,650 Contempo Communities 24002 Rkl:ge Route Drive (On Moulton Parkway, adjacent to Leisure \.\1orld) Laguna Hilh 8:»-7ro0 2-lxOO \\'hittitr, 2 Br., 2 ba It. fam. rm. Skirting & awn- ings. Set up lJJ New Laguna llills .adult park. \Vas $13,IDJ. Now $11,950. Contempo Communitie1;: 24002 Ridge Route Dri\•e (On Moulton Parkv.·ay, adjacent to Leisure World) Laguna Hills 830-7900 do.,.,'11. $161.a! per mo. Ca.lJ FAWNSKIN FOR LEASE. Bedrm. Built.ins, car· nn., atw1111: i·m .• poo rm. 8.17-55ll Bier. There are several good t d hlld bit-Ins. $2'1'~/mo. 83T-9ITT7. Laketront 3 Br, Only $28,500 2.J stores in NeWport Beach. home !I for rent {or pe I , rapes, c ren, 3 BR, crpt/drp, tncd yrd Ouplexe1/Unlt1 Call Division of Hi1:h"·ay11, npproximately $100 pc l' pet ok I rov'c1 pntlo, $DI/me. m4 1ale 162 Wt Spec\ali21! ln all types of Mr. Hancock, 2l3:6~1A month. Sto p by ancl National. m-uzr, ~1 AnENTION Big Bear Properly & June 1st, 2nd & 5th. from 8 browse thru ii. You might Businesses. to 11 AM only. find what you're looklna: tor. V.A. BUYBlS Beaui,ul New li8ls/maps \Ve have triplexes just listed Youl'fl for the asking ILLNESS forces sale of suc- Ci'!lsrul lawnmowt'r shop In Costa 1-fesa. ALSO l'OC'k shop avail. Cnil DANIA REALTY CO. 642-6560. RENTAL FINDERS 4JI W. 1fttt. COSTA MllA 3 Bedroon1, 2 ha.th, new r.arpe t a A drapes . $200/month. Call: 541-MttO. for sale V.A. for only $65.00 714-866-3484/585-2544 Realtors Hou1e1 * Apt1. D•n1 Point 2790 Hnrlx>r Blvd. RI Adnn1s * 645-0lll * Y'°'A.,..c"1"1r"s"'M~AN'°'s"""-p~ ... -.. ~1.-•• down. You may be eligible 1 ..... .,..,...,.,..,..,.~"'! and not know it. call 2 Uts, secluded $2,450 Cost.a Mesa, CaliJ. J.'rH 10 LntWUor1U l'IOClurled SJ>11n\11h V 11 1 a 6'rrl'-7225. Moonridge cabin $15,7.'.iO SM Spts"T !!is -Hers. Present Costa l'o·Iesa Joe 1 yr. Reas. rent. J.iS-4775; 968-6770. LANDLORDS! overlook Ina Dana Po In t COLWELL PROPERTIES, INC. REALTORS 9e8tiBllll INCOME HOMES NEW DUPLEXES $48,950 NEW TRIPLEXES $67 ,0CJO Now under construction at 151 E. Bay Kt .. Co1;:ta Mesa. Complete July. 642-4905. $61,500 Eslale Sale: By Owner. Pt inc. Only. Newport Ou pix 29th St, 3 Br up & down. Call 642-1331 or 646-0742, CUSfOl\.I built. C r p t s , drapes, bltins. Located on Blulfs, near Dana Point Marina.-$-46,500. 6'12-447-4. BY owner-Capistrano Bch, $50,000. or trade for lot. 1 yr old. 536-0346. Income Property 16' TIRED OF MANAGEMENT? If fighting for yaur rent and trying to satisfy demanding tenants has just about done you in, perhaps you are ready f o r professional management Give us a call and we 'viii explain that Coh\'ell is a full service real estate company. Ca 11 67>-7225. Lakeside cabin $35,000 Call 86G-4641 or write; Spencer Real E1l8.te, P. 0 . Box 2828, Big Bear Lake, Cam. Real E1tat• Exchange 112 HORSE RANCH Busin111 W•nted 210 REAl Estate Casualty "·anted, Top dollar for real f:'!>tate office. Orange Coun.. ty. Sale1man & brokers may continue "·ork. Confidential. 646-8339 or Write Cln.sslflcd Ad No. 450, c/o Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1r,c,o, Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626. Ha.\'e t:ompleete 40 acre11 horse ranch in San Jacinto. Fencing, pnaturea, ir- rigation system, barn, ll.a1Js and modern 2 bedroom house are oil in top con· 1.Mon __ •_Y_l_o_L_oe_n ___ 2_co_ dition. $240,00l clear. Owner can add Costa Mesa rentals ruid multiple zoned lot $50,000 equity. \Vanl~ any type of Orange County in· come property producing spendable. Call 615-7225. COLWELL" PROPERTIES. INC REALTORS Re•I Estate W•nted 184 QUALIF1ED buyer deSirf"S Canyon Vu hm, CdM. Shore QI.ff& or Cameo ShorH. Real E1tate loans $1,000 TO $15,000 NOWI l!OMEOWNERS: Compare OUR COSTS! We are NOT Morlgage Brokers! Our LOAN GUARANTEE llS· sures you of lower rates! Our variety of repayment plans permits us to please you penonally. NO PREPAYll.1ENT PENALTY' Flroslde Thrift Co. 2328 llarbor Bl. C. Mesa 645-IOOO 819 N. Ma.in, Santa Ana 541--0684 Prin<:Only. """a ... m"1 1st TD Loans Ad No. 387, Daily f'ilot. • $145 - 2 BEDRM. En· marina. Newly<~. 3 BR, 2 We Specialize in Newport closed garage. Range/ BA . Rcf,11. $600 mo. •~2128 Beach • Corona del 1"1ar • F td f H I • , "-·-0 R la! •-r oven. enc or tots I unt naton ilNch "" .._ ... ,a. ur. en .x-• O ---------vice is FREE to Yout Try MOVE T DAVI •WE have a larp selection Nu·Vlew! of S and ' bedroom homes NU-VIEW RENTALS lhAt can be mo1·ed Into 673-4030 or -494-3248 almoat lnunedlately on our RENTAL FINDERS R ent-Option pJ a n. °' w. lMt. COPA ..... SHERWOOD R EA LT Y , FREEll Landlords·Owner• HouHs * Apl1. S4N5S5 We will rel~r tenants to >'t>tl * 645-0lll * FREE of chocy:r ••• Mn..ny LEASE 1/1. ~ BR, 3 Ba, desirable tenunls 011 our F,.. .. ~ torml din rm, rov'd paUo, 2 11·aiHng lillt. 1ty, 2 trplc11, fitn1 rm, pd ALA Rtnlels • 645-3900 $175-STUDIO Type 2 ""1or & wlr. nr heh. $190 Month. 2 Bedroom. BR PLUS Den. Swlm· S375/mo. !l62·29l2. Newly decorated Inside and ming Pool. 2 B•ths. Ex· 3 BR, 2 BA, nr, C.Olden West out. No 1'~ec. 842-w.Jt or ctllent locatlonl & EtJJnJt!r. Crpt., drpt, fncd 962-5500. ynNL Pnllo. Va c ant , Corona del Mar $21~2 DR siudio nr, bltn $2-l:l/mo. Ofc. 833-1103, res. 83."J..38A6. RENTAL FINDERS Nf:w llunllnelon Ueach, ,::rpt11, drp11, palio, view 3 000 ~ It 4 B 3 b 4JI W, 1'*-COSTA WUA ' ,,.,. • r., ll., pool. bonu11 rm.. Olympic sz. $27:1-2 Br. ,11tove, rcfrlg, new Hou1n * Apts. pool. $ 1 2 5. 21.J/4.»-5667 crpt11, drps, bltns, fr11J c. * 645-0111 * f've1. Gnr, yard, patio. 2 blk1 1 i...i~ ... f1oc "'Lnn&.tll l'N"o"w°'1:-:3°'1"°1r-.-,"'L""'Pa-,-cS,-an<l....,." ~an. F'rplc, pnllo, l>llri11, wlw $300-3 Br upr, 11.ll <'lri-, neiv ~hUK cnbana clb Walk I s~ing, balconr· l hlk big NEWPORT HEIGHTS Ocea'n. rteni or 0P11on, $19!1~ Comna. Vie"·· - 2 + BAR. Complete-r1..'W~T511 . R.1111t1umtef", 11.B. $100-Cuslorn bl!, ;\ Br, 2 Rn. If. furnished Air condl· frplc llf'am11 gar ynrtl t eel G ·t f . l Ur, 2 ba, bltns, drpi1, w/w NU:VIEW. RE.NTALS • on s' hr•,• I or swing· <'f171, fncd, dhl a-arnge. Nr . 1ng ac eor ·It• -•-1· t £7.~ or 49+~48 111.1 .,...,,, c en er, P.O. Box 1500, Costa l.!esa, G3A % INTEREST-4 RR. cam rm. 1hn ti'1, 2 ha, Cs. 9262.6. Jiarbor View Montcgo. Pool lb:pnlnlf'fl. $2:".0. 962·4.191 . COOL Catalina -Siii~ -J Br h0n1e, ~o.r. fncd w/kld1. Rent·A-House '79-1430 WANTED apartrneot ""'"'" 2nd TD Loans priv. 1450. 833-38>1. RENTAL FINDERS Orange Co. 10 to 50 units, 3 BR, 2 BA, lam rm. Jlarbor 4JI w. 1'711, COSTA MUA not more than 12 yrs. old. l.J;iwest rnlta Orangt Co. View, Extra iiNU'p. 1 1~ yr HOUSH* Apts. I Bit Condo, pool, 1":lbh11e., $@\\~}A-~'B~S9 Quick action! ltardy 213: "WE BUY TD'S" I old. $<125/mo. PilOI tac!l * 64.S.Olll * rptfllf"J')I!, ell ,11pplln11Cf'11, 37&-8511 ext. 331.i, day or incl. &H-1759 cvt'.~ & "'kndli. $l~iO/n10. !>~11()~,. 537-~84. nllc. Sattler Mtg. Co, c,,,~,_frcc 10 ~J,1-~~co==-~~--- 642·2171 546-0611 W11lk to bcn~h -Sng!~. cpls '"" 3 All. NOO, 1~~ DA, pool•, COLWELL The Punle with the Built-In Chuckle I DOOERI! . I I t I . Ewr notice how Cupid lov"' .---.,.,-,-..,.,-.,....,,.....,,--., lo ploy wilh -? I H o K R E T I s-~9 ' 1 r 111 1 ~n~ . .t:.~sr. ., UNSC11AM81! lffiUS 10 I GET ANSWEI SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIRCA TION 400 PROPERTIES, INC. • ~1·1 COR.i'lER * Serving Harbor area. 21 yr11. 4 Jlfl 3 RA kllls/f"'I" nk, pat io, dhl t!'llr. frpl, nr \V ilh older house. Primf! Rent-'A-Ho~se 979.8430 21STORY -S BEOR~, _!X:"nn. ~2--09!16 al! :; pm. REALTORS · IOC'a tion, Costa 1-fesa l\tONEY avail for lst & 2nd 2 Vi Bath Home. Fam1-3 nr. crpls, 1lrp!, bllns, fncd. Corbt~Mar!ln Reallont loans also purc.hasc TDi;. Cotta Mt•• ly room, + dining 1t1u111u•, $2(jl) t.." ,. fop t. * 6 UNITS* 1N EASTBLun~ G42-89S9 "!'1-larvin ML'Cil!rf" Rral ---------·I h 6U-7G62 or Estate, 1015 s. llill SL, S16:i-2 Ult,]~, BA In duplt>X room. Ne•r sc, 0011 & 9!13-zt12 or11.fl 2 346-f.OOI. NEWPORT Sch area 3 or 4 Octanside, _day.I! 122-5.122, bltn11, Knr, yrd. f'ttlo. Beach I $375 1nclude1 Irvine m.&o\e 0 br home or tbwnhouse in 1 ex· evn. 492-04.24. $175-2 + Oen w/trplc tn gardener. j.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;.I • • cha.rip for OTC stock c ear tr:lpltx. Bltns, 1ar, yrd low I I'd 9Q..95•;; 2 Jtrt., 2 both1 ......... $300 - 1''3 1 CL& or oa.n prop. prt . • patio. · 3 HR 211 bath "'" 644-6779 Conventional real etilllle StR.r,...2 B bi WE IIAVE 11·1£ ·• s ·••••·• ..,..... ••Unit Nr S"-'• '°'"' ~1r Adami!' bkr r . stove. re g, 3 Ult., 2 bethJ .... $32S/3Gl ... -'""" •' URGD-'TI ll&e or duplex by · " · · · Jrplc, 1ar. yard. Oiild/nnl 2 A: 3 BR, 2 Ba. 1231 Ellls ovmer or priced righL CdM 644-7477 or 833-9303. pc1. LOWEST FEE I· 3 Bill., 2 ba., laedm., <k>hn •. S400 Avt', RB. $G) ~f. 847-3$7• Hi di.strict. 21.Jf45T-3:i14 $15,000 $M!).Lge 3 Br, gar, yanl . •11 FOUR.PLEX ·ell 2 Br, l Ba, I ~~~~~~~~~ Privote money for ,.., pallo, chll ... n ··"""""· THE BEST SERVICE I I .. : r I inc $51U/mo, no d,p VA .!; t~tate lt)An. Mr. Adams, S24B-ft1eu Verde 2 Br Studio . CRV $52,000. Nr OCC. I[.] Dkr. 4.99·1130. or 6«-7411. bltns, cwt. rpts/drp1, low.-1tt-:At.TV !»7.-6151 F~ ly patio, l&raRt Ir pool. Try Us-You'U 1..ike U1! Univ. rark Center, lrvloe BRAND new delwce biplt'X.1 ~;mmmm;m;;;;;~ l~ S24.'"1-h1e1111. Vm.le 3 Br, 1% Call Anytlll\1.' ~ 2293 Fordh3m Dr., C.M.. ! "°'*' lorl'w!t 1'lt Ba. Family Hom(:, Beau!. Cllllc• hour• 8 AM to I PM' Btdrlowntr. 543-6148 eves. Buslne11 I ~iiiiiiiiijiiiijiiijiiiiiji.~iii eo1nrl ! BEACON RENTALS C)ppor!Vftfty 2llO 11 JOO 131().lrvlO< 3 Br, 2 Bo, f1'111c. lndu1tri1I Property 168 -------HoUMS Furnished bltn11. Crpr11, drps, pr, fncd .U3 W. 19th StrMt OPPORnTNITY to cper:at"' d lo 1 u"" ta * M·l CORNER * O'WJl busine:-. established Cost• Mu.a yar ' Jlfll ' poo ' ~pe Wllll older howle. Prtmt' ok. klcttkln, Costa, !-ftsa rouft •rvic.lnc ~ sta· Stl5. CLEA." 2 hr dupltx. NU-VIEW RENTALS Uon1. Fantastic pottnllal. Cmbln.~l.artln ltealton $-100> rtqUired, 111 c 1 u ft "~ J'laUo, garagt. 1 child. 1i7J...4010 or 494-3248 6"-7662 or 64U9S9 mer c h 1 11 d t 1 e . Trurk \\'·llick. ~3135. Irv ltoorn, 3 Br, :l RA. p111lo, A eood want Id ii a lood ava.llablt. Call 21J: 284-Ml~ \\lllle Et~ptianl Otm~·A·Llnl' RRQ. fnr-"1, l"pll. dbl r:ar , l.n"l.-erbMnt or 237-7779. Oa~!fl«I 1d. S7r.~ A\•1111 .lun.-1 M"-~\'ft, Cotti Mes• * 64~111 * Nl-:W l11.11ne. J BR., 2 b&., dct"p rarp., d,..pe10 frpl., 11ir"<.'Ontl., bit.nil. Luxurloul toor11.ry llvlnls. ~ lat, \&It + dl!'pc.otlt. 1Gl Gnwcvtew (vlr. or CUiver A Walaut,. ! ofl S.A. li'"wy) --,.-+.,~,_---o-i ~tt'd 1 "Pad"I Place an ad! Call &IW6111 ----- [ ..... .., ... frvlne 4 Bil, 2.'86 1q. ft. ta.m. Rm .. dln!nr. · ; ba. Pool. Tcnnlt couru in a 44 a.a. pvk. S390. iitr month. C43l)J d.I>~ • A~k tor Jack. S3J-().j5(l f!'\'t!I. l\'£\V 3 Br, 2 Ba, patk>, tncl be.le yn.I. Comm s .... 'lm pool , cll>hle, S310 k1. 6#-Wfi&. L .. v,,. &each Sl~J BR (h1ecr ear, Stove-. rttria. yard, kid.r./J)f!t Ok. I $1~Utll pd. I MR UPPf!r deck, OCl!'an v ~"·· $17~rto. Did 1 Br apt, auw .. rt"fi~, t'pt/drpa, , beaut Vil!'W, ~No.--end. l Br. O\'rt :::ar, new t'!'pt11, (.lrp11, b.ilC'Ony \'lt'Y>. $22:'>-1:.1 Tvro-4 BR Den 2 BA, Rlr/cohd. bltn11. frplc. pr, nice J&tlltn. S*tio. ChlJd~n i?tlS ok. S1"l>-2 Br, l"• Ha •Pt. AX! ft. lron1 (l(;ran. Healttf POol Ii. Dcl~t". ~LlfVuna JflUtf ,3 ,Br, 2 e.... bltn'o:, air/(~' Crpts, drpli, a•r. ~ l)OOt. C.'hlld/pet o'.<. fll• NU-VIEW RENTAL$ (/I' 49~i248 l•gun• Hills NE'\V'World, 3 Br., 2-~11.., nu crpt & drps, pool fA~K .. rib! rat. J230. Jntlud. yrd: ma.Int ' .wJ.cJ30..9GQ2.._ _~- • J br. 2 bl:, same m . IA"flllt' S300 mo or tell $34,950. 01 ... ner. ~.31!!2. Newport, hi1ch,. S21JO...\\'f'11tclltf-Lrg 2 Br, 2 Ba :ipt w/frplc, !llO\ C', ~frig. ''Pill. drps. palio, nict! Sml pt'I ok. S~I +-Loft .+ FormR.I tlln rm. t.rpll., ~am:,, deck!, Yr ! 1111p. I $f00...1 Br. lrplc, huie-patio, ::a· boftt iili[!. --S4~ ":;f'8fii. nn + IOTmAI din rm, 2 &. hll.n~. crrt~. clrp!!, frpl<". car, yard, patio, pool. NU-VIEW RENTALS ~~_:>_ otf .,.l 494-~ lflVJNE Te~clously 1lt'C!Orflt"d fom1J,. home. 4 Br. 21; Ba. '1 frplc, palkrlri ~·11n"I S;).50/mo. O \\' n er 67:;...-0300. snq-lf'i1. J; •• -.-m"'11i'°'r_.~zftr---s!T9 Spit lvl-Vu 4 BR. kidll/pets 2 + Oen + S\\·in1 pool \ ~ ' kid.i/fl<'f 1::t'nt-A-~IOU!W' 97!J-.8.\.'l0 4 BR, 2 Ba, avail 7ll. S1?J. mo. incld pool pri\'llf'~ll 64.i-1:'5 e.tf'tl OEUGllTF1Ul. llomr llll:t T1vnh~ •P'· Nr11r Ccl'f 11\gh Sc!lf°I: 644-5-lj() L."E or Opt. Spnc 2400 sq. fl. 4 BR. $425. 2104 Donni~ Rd, :-..1.B. Av! 6/26. 642-2i)SJ, 3 BR Ccnd(l, $28.j incl'• .il'1'in1 pool, firrp~. <l~hv.'&hr .. pvt. p11tlo. A(1, 6.\~ -j Houn1fum.er Unfum. 310 l•lboe Penlnaule I B..\YFRONT. Choict 5 BR. • SA. plf'r & Ooat. Sun1n1er or )'early. Furn or unfurn. Ch\'ll(r, 673-Jlll!J. iCondominlYtnl Un furn. Huntington hach 320 ~ BR. 2 S.. rrprs, drp!f. palJo. all 11ppl111n~1<. pool & tf'nni;oi roun~. $210. ;>1;rr.wJ. Townhouse Unfurn. 335 Huntington Beech 3 BR. 21; BA. 2 car aar., pa1io, 2 pool1, clo.~ tn btach, S2.JO mo. 336-1382 Duplexes Unfurn. JSO Corona de! Mu 6ft.\\1> NE\\'-~\\-all. in J ttllC. Huge dl'< (l\\'r!O''i; 11n1t. 3 Br.. 3 6A. Fireplact. bit-in~. 1SOO sq ft. + J d~cks "'f\'k\'\\' of bll~·. OC'f'lln, & hillk \\'alk to bch k ~hopping. l ;i.i· !St". S'25. Rf'fS, N'qUir°M, 673-0960. ~Br. 2 &. sml Pfi.lio, nr lx'h, 1d111!11: only, no JI r 1 g. ~Imo. Yf'11rly. 6-42-8.5.al. Coat• MeH ,, M*q, Mq l'I, 1912 • Y1u'r1 loold111 for•• •11Grtm1nt. You know how much you want to pay. And just about where you want to live. 2.J OAILV PILOT 'l . ,_._._ ..... ~ [ ...,.-...... lft]fill-.. -· ......... j [ ...,.:.~ .. 1r~1 [ ._.. ... -_1~~! ~~'-!!~--. ... ~~~--~~~~---~:,~~"!""~-~ .,..... , ' oi l Apt&. Furn. Apt. Unfum. :NSApt. Unlllm. 3'.! APt. Unlum. 3'.! Furn. or Unfvm. 211 , • j General I iiliiiiiiijiiiiiiiiii 1 ~iioliiiiiiiiiiiiiii 0-ol fl 1 ,_ iiiiiiiiil2 Bedroom, New Colon!Jl. HIDOEN VILLAGE APTS. Ftnplace, blo-tn.. Clo,. to Cosfl MIM e SPACIOU5 e \\'t!ll·Ota!gned Apt,. lold New Concept Hom.Llko Llvlne Boy'• ctub & Girl '• Club. F•mlllM Wolcomol 11s;. $13-2SS1. ] I: 2 BR. l\'ffttncet. From 1140 • smJmo. Sbag cptll, drps, aunu, poof, jaC"uz:d, rncl pr. ' FURNITURE ROOAL 2 BEDROOM-2 llATH From $159 "' ~lonth 10 hfonth * 100-;t. Purcha.se Option I * \Y~ &!J.ectlon- Styl.e.color. j * U flour Oellver:f •'w•fAl 1 517 w. 19th, 01 548-3'!1 11".'6 N, Mairi. SA 547-0314 ON THE-BEA-CH!- Caroeta • DraDes • Air Conditioned . Endo .. ed patios • Heated Pool • Fon:ed Air Hut • Carport & Storage. 2500 South S.!to, S.n!1 Ano 5-46-1525 tenter 2 blks W. of Bristol, off Warner on • Linda Way, south to W. Central) VILLA MARSEILLES SPACIOUS I & 2 BEDROOM APT. Fumlshtd & Unfurnished Adult Llvlne 1 BR w/Oe•2 Ba. 2 ER. .Adu11a, no pets BAY ilEAOO\VS APTS 3S7 W, &y St., CM 646-007: SPAC. 2, BR, 2 Ba., crpla, drapes, enclosed &araae. $160. mo. 557-WAJ. Huntlntfon Buch ON BEACH! Q ,ct AduJt llvin: MERRIMAC WOODS 42j •• u.Trlmac Wty, 01 Summer Rentals ,.., PALM MESA APTS. AUNlfI'ES TO l'!'T. 8Cll. FUR.~. OR UNrol!N. Unbelievably Jarce a,ptL. huge pool, Jaeuni elect bit. inl, aha& t'l'pts, drps, AW19 I rur.N. A UNFURN. etc. Atlulta, m pet&. -2 BR. Ffoin ·ms-SINGLES ; •••• From 1US -:- ADULTS ONLY 1 DEDP.M •••• , , .f'roin $1t0 f'umlturt Available 2 Cl.'DRM ••••• From Sl.60 -I Your problem rs picking from among dozens •.. hundreds .•• of available aparlments. Like the ones on th ese pages. 1 BR. Furn. & Unlutn. FROM ONLY $175 OCEAN QUEEN 1830 E. Oc1!an Blvd. Dishwasher -color coordinated appllanc" • Plush shag carpet. mirrored wardrobe doors· indirect lighting in kitchen • breakfast bar • huge private fenced patio .. plush landscap- ing • brick Bar-be-Ques • large heated pools & lanai. Air conditioninJ?. 3101 So. Bristol St., S1nt1 An1 5S7·1200 C a r p tt&<inpe!l-dishwaslw:r You're rl::;ht, they'r. aftttell. ~.~I ht!ated pooloflaunaa-tennls priced! 1561 Mesa Dr. I ttc room.ocean vlewt <S blb from Ne\\1JC)l1 llJ~) paUow.mple pa.rkin1 M&-9860 , Stturlty Guards. Your solvtioa? Com,.rt. MJlke a 11st. (Or use ours ... it's very complete .) Compare price. Location. Features . Everything . Then make a smart decrsion. Rent where you get the C(lOstfor you r money. (After all, why accept hamburger fhen you can have steak for the same price?) One more ••1111tion ••• Start your comparison by visiting our plac e. Park West Apartments in Irvine. Our apartments rent for $160 to $250 a month. We have a great location. And all th e features anyone ha s ever thought of pulling in an apartment development. P•rk w11t. In Irvine. Compa re everyplace else with our place. ·------- i CHECK LIST t 1. Ten~l~·c9urts x (wlth,lights) 2. Volleyball court ,)( 3. Basketball courts ')C., '4. Handball courts ')( !s. Champio~sl]i~ Golf Course )( • {a.SJ:QfS the,*'"t) . 6. FOur swimming poo ls )<. • . . 7. Plus Jr. Qlymplc pool )(. 8. Plus childrens wading pool ... 9. Three therapeutic whlrlbath pools )( 10. Health Spa " 11 . Weightlifting room x 12. Biiiiard room x 13. T.V.-room x 14. Cerdroom x 15. Social room x (catering available) 16. Fireside lounge x 17. Teen room x 18. Art classes x Bridge lessons x Yoga classes x Stitching lessons x (all practically free) x 19. All-electric bu ilt-ins 20. Wall-to-wall carpets 21 .• Fully draped x 22. Family sections )< with "Tot lots" 23. Separate Adult sections )(. 24. Laundry services x 25. Night-time security . x 26. Responsive mainlenance )C 27. Air Conditioning x 28. l awns and open space x 29. Neighborhood shopping x (2 minute walk) 30. University (5 minute ~rive) x 31 . Elementary and High schools )( (5 minutes) . - Long Beach (213) 435-58(5 t.fng'd by \Villiam Wallen Co. COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. HUNTINGTON PACIFIC HunllngtOf' Buch MANAGING A<;ENT NEW SANDPIPER Balbo• Penln1ula Apts. Furn. 360 Apt. Unfurn. I • $25 \VK &: UP-Ori Ocean • -H----B--~---36S Til OCF..A!i AVE .. H.B. tn4l £6-1487 Lovt!.ly Bach _ 1 Br. _ Rooms unfington eaQ"I I PiJald service·Pool-UW Pd. BACHELOR APT. , • Call 675-8740 • $100 Mo. 646-2687 Have something }'OU want to Newport Beach sell? Classifled ads do Jt ---------\\·ell -call NO\Y 642--5678. e WINTER RENTALS e Corona del Mar West Newport Reserve now! ABBEY REALTY 642-3850 BAOU:WR apt Jor 2.quiet BACHELOR '&pt Oii Bay - mf'n, cooking facil, 2 ba, 2 Lido Isle, $200/mo, Avail tor BR'.11, 2 priv. entrance.11. 3 months. * 675-8549 Close to all i;tores. 644-TIOl S1nt" An1 LARGE Bach.. 2 blks big ~.~-----~ Corona. 1 adult, no pets. $125 &: $155. Yearly. 642-8520. 1 I.GE deluxe nn v.·lbatb. No cooking. Close to beach. ].tature adult. $100 mo. 61>-7483. DE ANZA PLAZA 1 & 2 BR Furn. & Unfum. Pool.11, carports & other ex- tras. Nr. S.A. & Npt Frwya. From $115 up. Adults only, no pets. 1402 Fruit St., S.A. * 54:\--fi620 • --Apt. Unfurn. * $30 WEEK & UP * Co•ona dol Ma. I e Studio! J BR.AQY_ __ -= • TV & l\1aid Service Avail - ~ 1 • Phone Service-Htd Pool ~·v 1 • Chlldrf!n & Pet section .0... -• I Low Monthly Rates -15 2376 Ne\\'JlOrl Blvd, CM 548--9755 or 64>3967 ON 1'EN AalES 1 Thia Ad Worth $5 on Rent 1 A 2 BR. Tum. A Untum. I HOLIDAY PLAZA Fluplaces I prlv, pot!ot. DELUXE Spacious l BR. Pools Tenni. C.OOtnt'I Bkfst. furn apt. $135. He.ated pool. 900 Sea Lane, UlM &u-.2GJ.1 Ample parking. Adults _ IMncArthur nr Co.1 st Hv.•y) no pets. 1965 Pomona Ave., C.1\1. *$2S PER-WEEK* & Up -Pool &: mnid aerv - kitchens available. l\10TEL TAHITI (C.Omer Harlx>r/Vicloria) $13.itMO. Dix mob hm I v.·/screen porch, comp! furn, htd pool. Adlts, no peti;;. 4 St!a~n'11, 2359 Npt Blvd 548-6332 * rus • Studio Apts., 1 Br. $125. Older adults. No pets 2135 Elden, Mgr. Apr . 6. * NO DEPOSITS_*_ Lrg newly decor 1 or 2 BR., pool & rec area. 645-5530. 710. w. 18th St. ONE Bdrm. Adults, no pets, Pool & utilities included. $145-$150. 548-7689. Garage + parking & storage DLX 2 Br furn apt, pool, clo~ to shops. Adults. no pets. From $150. 1 9 4 1 Pomona, or. Furn. Bachelor & 1 Br's especially nice. 2110 Newport Blvd., CM. 2 & 1 BR apts. Close lo all shopping. Adults. No ~ts. Tnq: l7'!JI.~ Rochester, Of. TROPICAL POOL-1 BR. furn. Pri. patio. Apt No. 7. 145 E. 18th. 5'18-U68. SIIARP -& cle3n 4-Bt.,.diooni: 2\2 bath walk to beach. Family prcoferred. Mon!h to month. $390 pr month Call ~tr. Bailey, 673-85.iO. 2 BOW.IS., 2 baths; frplc. Fanla.stic ocean vie\\·! $42.:i Month. No ~Is \Villi11.m Winton Re:iltOr 229 Marine Ave. Balboa Island 675--3331 CUTE 2 BR apt., l Ba., garoge & laundry-pri en- trance· $215/nio, Yt' a r I y lease. 67~188 Avail Jun~]. * GREAT VIEW -2 BR. * Frplc, blfns, gundecks, pool $210 up. 644-6344, 6T>J53.3. Coste Mes• 2 BR, 2 BA, sunkt!n !iv rm, frpl, crpt/drps. $160. 1251 Baker No. D, 5.i7-30:!7 PATIO or DEN-2 Br, 2 Ba, $150. Adults. Call 546-7"..31. !BR, garage, yanl, cpl~. drps $1 30. mo. Avail 1st of June 3i6 E. 16th St. DELUXE 2 BR; ~ BA. b·plc. Dishwasher, etc. $180 mo. 536-2W2 *-.--$f70--. * 3 Br, 11,~ Ba, ne\\•ly painled Bllins, crptldrps, encl patio. Nr schls & shop'g, Children ok, no pets, 880 Centf'r St., CM. 642-8340 or 548-26.<12. Costa Meaa A FEELING ... Ofc open 10 ant-6 pm Dall)' \VILLIAit \VALTERS CO. Rooms 400 A new way of adult living. PARK WEST _ PRJVATB Home -Furnished ---APARTMENTS room ,\)/bath. ·••for "'/Dut FAIRWAY VILLA~ I Bdrm. From $160 kitchen privilegei1. working ,. APARTMENTS 2 Bdrm., 2 Ba. lady preferred. 1\1Wion Vie-· : I 1:1122 Santa Ana AVf'. 546.s:?lS lSS::F~:l~vi!~\~~ jo area. 586·2918. _ BEDROO'.\t w /k ltche n Ul""'SliB nu 0 0 "'"'""· (J"'' ott p,; .. u. H.B. arft. C>ll ~ "" !I'll -. San Oiezo Fwy at O:tlver P.dl , , Sparkling neu• aduJt apts. 962-r;;a, an 6 pm or all day · /~., ·weel(end. ' 1 BR, unfurn. •••••••••• $181. Lagun. Beach •·' 2 BR. I bolh ............ $185. SCRAM LETS ' . ' ' 2 BR,:bntb ............ iim. PARK NEWPORT • ·' Pvt. patios, lush forest wl-1 :;10~ ~:r~~.'_2~~~i~_i_:; ~:~~~~Ts ANSWERS Park-Like Surround1nn L• , 1 1 1. Y i\lrasly -i\fag1c -i\lothel • txlll"'/ apar mt"n !Ying OV· i\I l\ TCl!ES QUll<:'f . DELUXE erlooking the ,rater. IO:njoy -. othrr -: 1 IA . 1 2 &. 3 BH. AP'Tii 1.,. 000 1 altb 1 . t .. ver notice ho\.\' Cupid I • . t.....,, it spa, sw1n1· 1-· I ·'lh 'IATCH~"' Prv. patios • Htd Pools ming pools, 7 li;hl~ tf!.n-.... t's top ay "1 " ~. • r\r !'iho:·~ * AdulAI!! Only ni.s c."OUl1S, plU! miles of Lcl\·ely fu1TI, Br. Pri. enl. . :. I Martinique pts. bicycle trails, puttin;._ shn~· &. ba.1V. gar, fr~g. Suitable \':. l7TI Santa A?la Ave., c.~t. ftcboard. C?'OqUf!f. Juruor l • f()l' bus, man. 64:H354. ~ ..•. I t.fgr. Apt. 113 64().5.542 from Sl&t.50 n1onthly; also 1 l\'Oi\fAN will rent a ft~·tri and 2-bedroom pl&Jl! and room to retired lady, HonJe r :.. { $170 -2 chldl'n ok. 3 BR, 1~4 BA, lnd11', t:rpt/dr ps, dSll\VShr. no pell;. :'>i5-3Z15. $LX>-2 BR, util included. ~lature arlults, no kids-or pcls. * &12-3375 eves. 2-~lol1:' tov.1t1 bo··<;f!ll;. Elec-priv. Incl. car port. '' tr1c kitchens, private patio:; s37_5452. i ~ · l or balconies. carpeting, dra· • ' • peries. SubterTanean park· ROO~IS $la wk up \\'/klt. SW - .: lng with elevaton. Optional \\'k up Apts, 2306 Newport • ! maid service. Just north of Bh·d, 01 S48--9f;:i:5. I F'ashlon Island at Jamb:lr-PHlVATE bath J: entranct f A PRECIOUS FEW ee a.oo San Joaquin Hills S1j/mo. 11.B. area nf!ar 0 \'1 tan enjoy Fain,·ay Villa adult Road. Bookhurst &: A d a m 1 . living -one of thosf! small N£\VPDT:T BBAO.J 968-2067. elegant complexe:;. kno\\'11 Telf!.phone ffi4) 644-1900 PVT ~ '1 for unmatched management for rental infonnation room & ba... Pvt en-•. , and impeccable detail. Just OC'EA.i'l front 2 BR 2 BA lrhao<eb. Al~~ ~:Jllllg room, ..... --~. , • 11 are a. ~,,.~. -no\v there are two 3 bedroom Laguna R.oyalf', po o J , • . • apartments available -with gorgeou! bch &. viey,-, LcR se * KITCHEN pnvl, SGO mo. ( all those desirable extras option. $450 per n10. sz-~ 2161 ~JI~~ St., Costa r.tna. ' ' I -pool, patio, fireplaCt'!, mo. credit on purchase Call 893-5li0 I laundry, wa.lk·inclosels,1!11 price. $49,500. Broker. LO\'EL\' roont, private , baths -v.·e could go on, but 2:13-849-5225 714--49S-300j. homt, employed gentleman. come and see. * NE\V 2 BR . blk to hfoach. S65fmo. * ~1713 FAIRWAY VILLA APARTMENTS Spectacular view. $UI up. Room &. Bo•rd 405 493-3383 or 49-l-2339 ~-~------i\'A.'lTED: Femalt!. colleae ·• Mesa Verde student for summer in f!X- 20122 Santa Ana Ave. 546-6215 DELUXE 2 & 3 Br. 2/Ba. C'hange for daily c:are of boy .. DELUXE encl gar. $J55 up. P.ental & girl 11ges ll & 13 + 11alary APARTMENTS Ofc. ?.095 iract!. Ave., or SiO. 01'11 room Air Cond -})"pie's • 3 Swlm· 5i6-1Q3..I. w It e It Phone, sewtna: · p J Health s machine, desk & t)'pewrlttt. ., . NICE 1 & 2 BR Trailt!rs, $80 & up. l\I~ture adults, child ok. No pets. 642-1265. niing 00 s • pa -,N_•w_:..,po_rt_lll;....•_c_h;.... __ 1 v.•knds tree. i1ust havt own r. • 1 Tennis Crts • Game I: 1 • car. Non-smoku. 644-2005 : ~~~ c:,,~:~~11.2 ~~;: Bilt1ard Room. BRAND NEW Walk to beach. Evts Ii l BEDROOM AIL UTIUTIES PATD aft 6 pm. / patio. Encl, gar. Adults. L~RO'! $165 LRG. 1 Bedroom apt. Nt!W CTJl~ &: draPf!s. Very quiet. $145 Incl uW. 642-7968. r :• Furnished Availablt!. ' Sm. pet Of\ $16.). ~72-17 MEDITERRANEAN $50--QU 1st Mo's Rent, on Guest Hom• 415 , : 1 , UPSTAIRS. 2 br, unfurn, l l LRG nicely furn. 1 B~ Ariul!s only, no pets. VILLAG~ r:8t'J; =~~·when you_ b~ *PRIVATE ROOM* I gar. Quiet. Adults. No pets, Sundeck, prlv:i.te garage. 2100 1Tarbor Blvd., C.~11, 20I02 Bitch St (nr O.C. for am~ulatory pusotl. Cood:1-t . 2452 Elden Ave. ~2768. $14.i mo. 545--'1391. fil4J S5i ...so20 airport. S. of Pallsadts Rd ). ~OOd. nice cheerlul surround--I SPAC. 2 & 3 Br apt $1'10 up. RENTAL OFFICE Pr' ti bill' rd mg:;:. Huntington 6e1C'h OPEN lD • '! TO 6 P'f iv .. pa o, lA . nn., * Call 548-4""'~ * / ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o / Pool. cpt/drp, bllns, kids ~· .. JacUZl.J. Nr. UC Jrvme. 1oi.:. LeQUINTA HERMOSA ~Coll~ No. s &12-i03S New Viii• Pedro itgr. 979-8889 ~ummw Rentela 421 • ISpa.nlab Country Estate Liv-1996 ~tn11lc No. 1 642-3813 Famllll's \\'elcomt!. SEACLJFF ].fanor -1 BR LAGUNA BEAOI ing &: Spaciow Apts. Ter-U fum. J6S 2 Br., 2 full Ba. &ha~ crpt/ Studio, Pool. Crpts, drps, 7U Octanrr'.ont fon the sand) I raced pool: sunken gas Apt. n drps, patio, beam eeil, gar-bltns. l 15 0 I u n turn. Lu.i: 2 Br a: 2 & J ...,..,. I I ages. .. $165/f'urn. Ask about our . . ' ~M -BBQ. Unbelif!vable Livng -Costa Mesa From SJ.8.5. dlKount. ·1525 Plactntia \\k, Jul~ I:. Aug. $;AX1 "'k. ' ' ' ' Oruy I iimmmiiiiiimmmi ! 2332 Eld A C •r Avt!. 548-:m2. Also 1 Br, l Ba, June $150 1 BR. FURN. $175 11 en ''e., ·" · ...,.k. July&: Aug s250 "'k. AIL UTil.JTIES PAID I 548-8224 1 "-2 BR. API'S. 436 A:&tf! -2 Br hoUS1e quiet 1.: .. , D11rlt:< unturn. $150. :J BJ':, huj'r. Bltin !110\'(' k rrfri,. • rrpls. drapt"~ -nr\\' paint. Open, 2037 C Anaheim A\·r . 32. Freeways x I £4 blks s . of San Diego Frwy on Beach, 1 blk W. on Holt to 16211 Parks.ide Lane.) CTI4l 847-5441 HARBOR GREENS Movf! In nUO\\'ance, this ad. In Eastbluff. From $185, fen«~, J u111'!. $UO 11·k, JuJY ':. ; ** Bl:AUTIFUL 1 & 2 BR. • '75-IOit 0 &. Aur $'.CA) "'k. (7J4) i 1 ·: • 647-5013. l..ARGF. :? BR. n t .,.. l y piunt4"!. prb d I s p .. 1t-wshcr/dr)'tr book-up. .;ar. $13.i..~l. ~ BR., ~rp. ~. blt.ns. ! rrf'ric. c.....,.. pfU3 ston.tt. Sli'O i\lo. 6$,j...Jr~ Huntlntrlvn - SH.\RP. S BR. tJ, Ba. ctJ>fd. d .......... l<ntt<I ,..,..."'°. td-.'Vd Ptten J 13 : -· Newpo<t - BRAND new bout. l , Br. <luplPx., ..,,. ......... -to I °"'""' YriJ' only !Wmo. -· • ' W h I t t 'fle-pb.sntl"" """° nirmllW )Wt homt.? Tum thtm ln10 "CASI.I'" -1en !Mm lhN DIU, Plltl Cl.I-. IU-M1I. (t minute} • • Furnlshtd & Unfumltlotd Contemporary Garden A_pts. a , . 494--0198. . t Patkl<. frpk .. pool: 11s:;. -. a.& OCEANFRONT :J J liO. Call S.l&-516.3. 2 BR. elf-an wftJ-fum. -rt ' 1 From $120 to $215 mo * LRG Deluxe 2 BR., 2 BA. U~'l 2 BR. 2.Ba duplex, $100/v.1t. 1~~~ \V. Ocean-.. .. "'--L....•--$1~ 1' l1B65R.' -1•-, ~· sml pet -• Nr r -bltins, frplc, patiO, steps to front, NB. Alt. Iii<>-,°"' .... , DM:I~--• ,... ...., Bachetora e 1 Bdrm1 •-· Ul\o • ON. ocean. Yearly leue-$775 eve1 m ~ ...... .., • I trplc's, prtv. 1 a rages . Coast Plaza. 5'5-2l21. mo. Avail June L 67S-3906. rr"'jjn.if'rii-i'~R;;;;;'~:;-c;o:nc=I Div\Md bath & lots ol 2 Bdrma • 3 Bcfrma 0 su., l'a.c.n. rental 3 BR nm * FREE Mo'• Ront oo YI"• NLY ONE LEFT! ·-· :l)I cto..i.. Rec hall. pool l I 1 ~ or 2 Full S.ths 1 2 B de ~ home . ...,,.... 1L '-B'" n-,, pool tables, sauna bath~. s-e._ r, n. .. ..,, pri DELUXE 2 BR--$185 Corona Beach. Wffkl. ,.• See fo ~It 17301 i'lfaster size btdrooml w/ pello, cpl/drp, ~. Aft. ADULTS ONLY-PET OK monthly. 675-.ti'l3 rv~ V J<ttl90n r Ln. Cl bik W. of high btam c:e.Uin~_largt: I 5. S.IS-83ll or 213: 592-5227 2 Baths, dishwasher, frpJc, wknds, 833-$60 wk-da.yi. Of"' Beach, J bile N. Of Slater). ~-:f =-. wfj~Ja:!~ 2 Br, Mesa Verde Townhou11e prlv pa,Uo, pool 557-212$, BAY VIEW 2 bedroom; '.':" • MJ..7848 Convenient laundry 11.rN. I crpts, drps, encl. gar, heat-2>342 Santa Ant Avf!. •1«1>11 4 cornplettly fm'nbb· off kitchen. Enclosed f)I· ed pool. $18S. 963-4m. YEARLY -1 BDRAT. ed. Avail June to ~ $1;ii0 CK CASH Uos. 2 •~immJna ~ls. 2 BR. Uppn', drps, ctpt'd Nt!ll:r ha)' & _~· $170 pr mGnth. Adults od.Y Ou I laUM. rttreation facill. dsh-.·hr. SlSS/mo. 2 2 S6 ~7<>1.::i aatnt. 6'i3-49:?0.. ' ' -· . . ' . U... S.CUrlty ru&nl ,1. ~r n• 1-&~ • " •~ ...... , ....,i-~ "t"'a., BAL IL Studio t 1 THROUGH A 1 Modols Open 'Iii 9 pm. SPACJOUS 2 Bl'. nr ~ Furn. or Unfur1L 270 w/oomplete kit. Avail;: .. _:.._! DAILY PILOT ~rPH~;.:; -:f:J·,CM :;;J~·~i;-_ • u.c.L $Je,;. Co1to Me.. ~.Se~~· m.•on '•' Acf•mt SML. l BR apt wfCl'l>fl. 1 A 2 mt J\zrn Clf Unturn. zm \V. ~I. J..rw 1 1 '~,~t. W NT AD <hi><. slow. ret.i... pr. Clllldn!n'1 ll<Cllon. ""'11. BR '""" 11'13/rno. Jal 1 , , A 545-5025 $140'-Adulr., no P" .. 1140 Up, EL.\! GARDENS $llC!l•1'. A,. 1175/wk: ••I 6U-D8S APrS. 1n E. 211111 si.. c.x. ~. ., • jtjlt 5671 LRG. I BR "/gar. Wtr. fld. '°4G. It's o trem. Mil _JW< •. ;Ht. "'~ HOUSE Hunnrwr Watdt ma llil Orang•. No. A.. iw Sfll the old atuD BIQ' 1lw ltans '4rlth ...., ue DIJIJ 'j • OPEN ROUSE ""'""""-Call blwn l ~ 5. §36-4'"' .... otnll .• I llot a..ulod. f0.«71. " ~~~~~~~.....:....;.....~~;..;,;;..;.......;..;.~- j) I I• ' ' I ,., I ' " :-r , ,I ' ' .. ' I I I ,. '~I :· j . ' •-1 ' ·~ 7 ' . '.' '' I :, I • I . ·I ' u . I l . I • • 'I I ' ' . " ' ' I I ·1 : I ' ' . i ' ' . I .I t • ' I .. ' 'I ' ' -1 . ' . I ;1 ~:... 1~,~J. mi"'""'lliii" -· b~l~~ I !! ...... jgj 1--~ I~ [ -..... J~ I ,, ".... I[)}] I , • ...iw.IUC: , ~-.......... .tu, a ... u. 11P7161 ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~;J mor1ltlltols , 411 .. .,.,,..,,-. 5111 -~• Ttltvt-11 .. lr HolpWonhd., M&P710 r.a...,w•it e DIPINO~ILI e - 'bcpt. 2 '~· ~..::: ":: :*Wllllfff Deacl* BABYSl'M'll<G P==: .;:!: :...i~~ ~ w)l&ilboat. Ava.U aft mid-AlQ!lncn. CUI that bavt 1 ~ft' aru tni. &pr:b:llden. I.1ndlc9~ AulhOrtzfd Mapavo.x. Jop>o. ~.~ ~)'OU ...n " ... vid<d s 4'. 4 I 4 s .... ciuNq> c-..-TrM S."'lce V~t ... Rontols GS boun ol pJ....... RUNl!J 8ABYSl'M1NG In D\Y home. PROFESStONAL , -to 1L160 ~ St., La· iw.,...,., eo.ta Mtta 1 r-~•--s. t TRIE SEllVICE BIG ""• • • •• v• * IWM. Beach. No 11ass ••hat· 60-038.f. &pantie ....-~06 rv ce ... .,..-u~ Ml'U\.L area. Free Est. * M6-0619 Trlmmlnc, Pnmlrw A Cleu- 2 1fY 3 Bf ·ce.Bln,, camplete toevtt accepted. BABYSl'IT!R. " Jirs Expert Japanese Gardener ~ 6'2..st96 or NU4"2. kl~~ ~ ...... w0.k. Abo 'i'JM>U:fl CAMP BoYI It F..-1 lll<k Yard Compl<t< Yard Servi« ;Jpholdory ~;.Raitt.: ~ Girb 7-U. OUtatanding pro. *' Call "2·1592 * Fftt est!Q\atf'I, ~1Ut -,-=_,-,,_,_..,...- Rt_t•lst .. ~ ...... OJ ~ = ~t;~;x Ld~ child Care. ~ty COMPLETE Lawn It ~~~· ~f !~m:~ SH ~ .BfJ:, hoU9e on Brochure. CAMP Mme. WffkdtY•· Fenced Ga.rdtntne .mce. llau1l111 Contint'ntal lnl erlor1, lml lite ."'!'fl or:.1 wo'rk-'C4 Y'1JfY'"" r ... n..-cam, !! !].,; YC.•Mr d • A1t1" 2.-5. A clean.up. Jim,, 5C8-Gf05. $U-l900. · iril Summer 1 • ............. """'Y"..._ _._..... • _ .!.o . ' . DN'· 93bJ. C _.. S.-I.. . GEN. Gardenln&. Mow ~ v• "'"' a;;:;;;; 1.,.... . .... ~ Free est Home .t 1 GR.On m • d<velopm•nt ..l · • , IX'OUP meets for I Sat. ~Cl-IN'S Carpet .t Uphollttr)' Commercial. '45-5855. a.m.'s, begin June 3 . Cleo an er s. !: x tr a EXP. Hawaiian Gardener fQ a¥re ~ •Pl in lQc. on bCb. w/iwne. · o.k_. 673--5601, -:Cuy . ni ghaJw hoU&e, S mo.19071 S t l ntray Lane. ·ff-B. Ci.11 673-6578. SH4RE LoVtl, 3. BR. bomo • H.B., C&lj ~7531. all ~. Pll> or~-d1y "''ttkends. TED-f~e, l23:~J to house irl Hunttng1on $100. mo. 961-5791 , v.·oman w/child . BR J>Qm• with Jl!!a,req'~· Sl.>rl31'l Gal.tip, lot Ront · 411 AV AIL June lgt, 1 dbl glll'.',llre S40 mo. 212 Lillian Pl., C.!lt. 646-3524. Off.lee Rontol 440 Gestalt B~Enertetic .t Ort-Shampoo tree Sootcbo Complete prde:ntng service se.iiitivity -:A. a i e II e i I guard {llOU Retudarrtrl. -Kam111nf; 6£-467&. fl•IP W•ntecL M. F-J'IO ttchniques Will 6e URd. Dqreasen I: all color SPRINKLER REPAIR JobW•nteci,Female702 Counseling Center~. bWt!nen I: 10 minute New Systems * 546-2535 . bltach for. white carpel.I. ,_, ______ , --P .. IONll J Ft.JU.Y LICENSED * ReDownal.·HindU Splritualiltr ·~tual Readings riven daj,Jy. 10 Mit·lO PM. Adv~ gi~en 011 all matters. I can help you. Save )'OUI' money by aaviqg JOHNSONS' GARDENING me extra tripe. WW cJtian Ymi ~falntenance, Plantinc living rm., dlnifll nn. &: Cleanupa 962--~ hall $1 5. Any rm. $7.50, General S.rvlca1 couch i 10. Chair $5. 15 yrs. exp. ls what counts, not method. I do '1.'0rk myself, -Good ret. MJ..-0101 • STEAM Carpet .-Cleanen. professi<>nal 1t Io \Ve s I pMces. l ave rma eomple~ $39.!E. 962--0671. ~ Work. Pa i nting. Reuonable Rates. Free est. DaV1!', 00-9852 Ho 1v a rd 6#-7423. BY Moose• Lt, elect, plumb, fence, Inst Ins . carpentry, tile. BA/1\IC card. 552-8949. TOTAL SERVICES 00. ' 31.Z N, El Camino Real San Clemente 49l-913G or 49Z-9034 FIND YOURSELF LARGE OR SMALL Plumb( Inatall'~ntry COi.LEGE air!. 19. Uve-in child care, Avail .Tune 10. Expt-1'. Sr. !if~ ta\l'e'r S'\l'T'n techr tutor. Type. Rf't f\lrn & req'd. 1n4) 79J..5228, {2131 9~1890. NEED help at home'? \\'e have Aides • Nunes • Jlow;ekprs • Con1panions e 11 o in cmakers-Upjohn 5--11-6681. \\!ILL babysit and/or gi\·r: ~&inning Eng:. r l d i n g lessons to 1 child, 5 days a \\'k. Trans pt'Ovided. Rra:,. 675-0792. All Ty W k cut door Elec Repair e 646-1809 SUPERB omtt auite. j Rm. IN SOMEONE EL.SE. pes or : 8' I \V A N T E 0 llOUSEWORK, DISC.OVER J>EU1el, rllllodel, tin i1 h, Hau_J~-__ _ , ........ ~ 1 Tu 3 ·Ba. Kitc·benett-e, --. . -tttmc; rep·..-trs, etc. ...._ .... ,. area. i\on·,~ e, Completely crpld On oor DISCOVERY LOCAL Mows. hauling , \\led. Good reft'rences. · · n11••• ·~' 2131"-"""'" 96Z-l96l. 493 '496 n6', around floor. Ample ~ .>a•·,),};J,) cleanup. Exp colleg e"=-=~,,,,~·---~-~ ~--,_ ~--CM :x.L"".: CUSTOM woodwotk pa.nel--·-·· "'-I ; ., • ...,_15. 11v .., ..... ,.e, · PROBL.l,;.M Pre&nancy. Con-atudent. Lll: u~ """''" PART time general offiCt' 96J..•¥• ••• ·~· ti in;. Cablnetl. Gfn'l repairs. ... .. ~ ... .,. _,_ d ,_. Sa rd .,,_,, ~ fident. syrnpatbe c ptttano Pb. Duke D 1 DurIr:1 , ...,......ID'lll. ,w,... esu..u on tu ay o!:'{kWllllPI-~~~ ... ~ cy OOUR~ A~ ~7598. YARD, garage" cleanups. ~I 6=: Experienced. ---. ............ ,r.w--.u•W"W Adoption Remove ~. dirt. ivy,,"======~~~ at SS rm. ~ ll!"Ylce fi.U.-4436. F.XP · Rencdeling, cablneta, s k i p Io ad er , backhoe. ' HOUSEKEEPER/Cook. WW avaUable.-tms Beach 91"1 ALCX>~=H~O~u=cs""-Am,--nym--OUJ.-repain, ~~0 job too 847-2666. llve-in. ReferenH. Age 3.i HUlttnetOD Beach. SC-4m Phone 542-7217 ar \vrlte P. 1111. Reu. . y=ARD=-,&~G,..,...,--"'CJ"e-.. -UJI-. From Argentina. 64~ . !Ill: ICAL, dental or ~real O. l3ox l2ZJ. Costa Mesa. Cement, Cencrete Frtt est. 1 da)'a. Call Jobs Wanted, M & F 704 est te. Street vi.!libility. Trovol r.aA ..... anytime, 548-5031. Paflcl.ng. 2 it St.30 or mm--CDIENT \VORK, no job 100 RET. cpl. pt't'sently enip. bine· into 1 at 125(). 1770 ---=------1mail. i-eallOnable. Free Gardening. Yard Ii Garage d . i SET SAIL E tim 11 Stuflick 548 8615 Clean Up. Free Est. ~SU'f' ad 1 apt. manage-Orana:e' at Rochester, C.i\1'. 5 · • · • ' • • men! in llB, Cl\t, NB or sur-TAHITI Bl k Reas. Rates. 646-3488 l\in2aard Real ·Est ate , JOHN'S PaUos Ii oc rounding al"('as. Exp! 213- 6-i2-2222 "r 963-3.268. Grand llI h1'asted Schooner, \vorlc. An aasoc. of Var.'s Housecle•nlng .. 32 "' Cttw le Guests sbB.N! ccslll. • -""d · c M "'"029! ,,.,~ 13· * AlRPORT . AREA * .1..-ttu scapmg .1 • o.>o>-(213' 371-1239 Let DUTCH cl"n your Holp Wontod, M & F 710 Adj. Alrpcrter Hotel. Of'lu.x~ ~~~~·~~~~:·~I PATIOS. Drivewa,y1. Patch carpets. Also, window• &- 1-W room 1.ulte1. LOWEST wotlc.: Lies. Flft est. Dave floon. Xlnt work. 5!7-1508. ACOJUNTANT·Exper. Jn RAJrEs. 2'1!2 DuPont Dr., I l[S) 642-'852. Howard, 644--7423. -""I ,, Cl I munlclJ*} or water dlst. ac-L ~• -•• ·-~-D-c•t-Hnng "'°"'· O>hr'-· .-, -PATIOS, ...... clrlve, lnltall countlnc. Mu11t have ability _ . w.._ * WE DO EVERYmING * D~ lp.tt" avallable S50 new , lawm, ·aw, break, Ref.I. Free est. 646-28l9 · to Y.'Ork Independently & mo •. WJU. prwtde turnttart ~ 541--M for nL should bf! qual\lled to at "5 mo. ~ aervtct feund (free Ms; ·550 Contraj;for BAY & Beach Janitorial. assum& responalbllity tcr avalleb&e. 22'J Fart1t Avi. 1----------Crlitl/window11/fioon etc. accounting lunc!!oM alter Appllconts (9) ELECTRONIC ASSEMBLERS loolr.kMpot P/C CPA l'tnn. tAoll Call Lorraine \\'ESTWFf' ...,.._,..,..., 2>'3 \Vestclllf Dr., NB -177t IOYS .Aao lOrol.C 1a dtl1Wr papen In the Dona Point, San Cit- mente areas. DAILY PILOT - l'-w an •d In Wom1n11 Werld Coll Mory leth '42.$671, ••I UO To Sin 48! BUmC>Y...Qver 17. Apply afl 6P:\I, DUlnian'a, 801 E. To $2.75 Per Hour -=e.~1~"""="'~·-B~•'-"°"~·~--i CAREERS: Nor job5, but lone· tt'rnt ~r vpots ln P , C. E XfMrience SOLDERERS To $2.75 Per Hour Cableing, Harness & WIRE WRAP To SJ Per Hour E xperience with Gardner Denver wire gun. TECHNICIAN & TRAINEES $3.50 Per Hour Up integrated circuits. INSPECTOR To Sl.25 Per Hour E xperienced as lnspec· tor & P.C. •11embly. 11lfiZ1Ugt'n1f'nt, englntt1·ir11t, sa.lf's l: a1..-counUna for the professional. C r e a t c~ PortUnilies. F)o(ltn S10,CXXJ. Cu..ll Doll Jackl!On, b-M>-e:m, eoa.~'"' Agency, 2, 9 0 Jlarbor Bl at Adams, No. 201, C:\I. CASHll!ll lnunf'd. Opening. Expu. pret'd. Kerm Rlnia Hard· \rare. 2666 llafbor Bl, 01. CLERK/STENO ;\Inrkel1ng r-q><>r desirablf". Outlf'S inc:lud~; typil"\i" ::11les orderl'I, quot.:1.lion~. c-or· rcspondenct' &· o ! h fl r f docun1enl5, nu1.intain file.11 ll' tor onlct'!I, quoits, Sf'Aled ll<'l'"\'l("r doc11n1f'n1!1. Like sllo1·thand -df.'liirable but oot necess. ': : I " ii '' '• : I I i I I " " ' Apply In pttson ~11CROOATA CORP • ~4-E. Youna-St.I S.A • Equal Opportunity Employr-r 9028 OOLLEGE student, full thnf' StZ!S summt:r, para tlmf'. durinic 34"'8 school, at Shtll Slfl\lon on \\'hip up raj, c a s u a I bt~c-h In Laruna. NO lcnA ,..,r11glf'll for play, patio, hair & must bf' 18. 494-9003. ..1fl" • pxilsldc. Controller '-· 11TMi .... '''""'T-~l1dl' your leM I nto Construction $11K "'f fnstuon's llt'\YP!ll, ln1t1U1t l \\'ol'k in 'corp. ufcs or Jun::: I CrOChC'1 \Vi•dgif'I. u~ rt.If <':o1tnb. land df'\•Mopmt-nl ro. \~'h.lll"o!'~'!'l<'t •'tll h•r -y111·n t 7:i pcrce11l tll)'on, ~ nou· brnnchin.i: ont into no\lung 10: frl'11htor or ll)Or<' l'•'n'f'nt ('Ol!On l for fhellf' other stalf'I &. HA\\'Aii. l\lu~t f111lterin1; lo lht' fact-. Zip In-:-11u1'tly "eiu\<111". Pallnrn have practlcnl ii corp. c:<-to lhi~ prinrf'K.~ f'ai;:l\y Inn 7~; 1itt'11 S, M. L lncludM. per. In constn1ctio11. Bring tJvcrhcH.d p11IU.,E1111y tu s<'1,·! or M!ncl miume. ca 11 Prlntt'I Patt('rn 0028: Nt.;W c;»uick-No Starns 557....fil.22, Abigail Ab b 0 t \\1omen'11 Slzt'1 34, 36, 38, 40, PetsonflC!l Agency, 230 \V. 41, 44, 46n ·I~. Size :t.6 bust Warner, SUite :m, S.A. 40) 3 ydt. f>.in.; yd. 33-ln. --~-,,-----con!r. CLERICAL OfJ'Jce -Alert in- telligent '''oman. InteresanJ.: -~C~i~r-c~lt-~C""ci-.,.-- v.·ol'k. ~Just l>e good r-l.n9lna Beach. 494-Mi& FOUfl,'O adorable ma I e e e • e • e Resld/Comm'l, 646-1401. initW period of supervi!~ion. -BAY VIEW OFFICES Cockapoo pup. Vicin i t Y FATHER Ir: SONS -CLEANING Specialist: Win-Good analytical ab i Ii t y., Gilbert St. and Stanford, 0ecora1; .... , design, carpen. dolvs, C'""'"'t, floors. stoves Salary open, deJ>('nclrnl on SALESWOMAN $800 Per Mo J w/numbcrK. \Ve will train. ~fncCregor YKehl CC)rp. 1631 Plnet•n!la, C.1'1. Deluxe, air-conditioned Garden Grove. :il 9 -:? 8 4 7 -~ -~ i' R,• -· plumb!-,~.. •le • o'""'· 17• .. ~. f'~""'r. l· qua 1fic11tion .... i=uecotated. Lido ar~a. after 6 p.n1. '"'7• ... , w1n ' • .. " ~· ,.. Realonomic.-., Bkr. 675-6700 1,,=~""'-~~-~~ 4 a:enerations exp. -25th yr. l•ndscaplng J>Jear.e 11.pply by le1ler only t'ND. Gennan Shepherd fml. in bus .• 1.Jc'd Ir: bonded. lor an application forn1 10 ANTIQUE Row-Suit. for Black ti: tan 83&-3687. -'"=~"' the ~1oulton Nigurl \Var!'r •·-Rv "' ·1 2376 -TOP SOIL--7 '""'"• ,.a;.., a.uon e c. . ---------e e e e e e Di11trict, 27281 Ali!IO Crttk Newport Blvd, CM 54~9'75S lost 555 =ROO=""-.""'••"'•-----=~~'tl,--.,-Lawn Removal. Rototill Rd., Laguna Niguel. CaHf. 64= .......... l\t AUW.....,.., -mates, -· . P•inting &. OFFICES. S3J 4 $69. \VW Male.white w/oranie spots plans IE ~~t,. sirJale or 2 Pa.,.rh•nting * Accnt/Controller d-t U"-J1thSt ....... "X•\10\Y ~ rhintstone collar, •tory. L.T. CbnatrucUon. ·----------Career nncition lo-····"····· ......... ra e: .m:a..-•• UA<>A Lost in Mesa Verde area-847-b-U. 1 · ,....¥ • uau.• .\ eoppfri&. ·54W11J. 1 -,.,..,,.,,--,.-,=-,=-PA I H TING-InmioNX"mi-OOief bccountant w/mfrna omCE sUltes, downtown on 5125 • Reward • 919-8519. Additions * Remodeline or • Reasonable Prlces-20 background 9 ~me know'! 1 _., <ttVVt Reward! lost black German Gerwlck &-Son, Llc. Yr s · e' x P ir r len~Free of computerized nccounling. Laauna. t-"'!'l\H• lflV<' 8Cf ft. Shepherd (female w/recent gn....(,(Hl * 549-2170 estimates. 646-4986. A real challeng~ppor to Cpu, cirpl. "'"· *73028. . l vi· . • Person1ble poised & mature pers,on. STENO CtERK · • J - $500-$525 Goocl Personality COLLEGE or hi11h ~rhool ~rl wMI~ he&i11ning · mid-Junn (or earlier) lo babysit 2 children, 6 & <I, for lht 11ummer. flr11. rrom 7: 15 A!l.f to 3: J0..4 PA-1. ?.torr Some ev~s. too, il desin<c:I-'"' -ritost1\&.'9«! ·own tran11porta, tion. &. desire to &Ive the chOdren ~ur undivided at. tentlon at the beach or park 11urgery c: Harbor & D I 0 2Q% disc. paper & hang•·-, become controUer. !lfEDICAL wite, r<ady to ...... r Y ways ..... . .. -Adams) 546-8757 -642-8131 mobile store, vinyl, tlock. Service Center Agency phone voice for mark•t· H27eu51 at ~~sa.1323Caica, H.B. DIAMOND pendant, v i c HAWLEY'S Seal Coating; 547-5846 The H s n gm an 4262 Campus Dr. NB & or wherever you &. they <leci<le lo spend the dny. \V!'itc, telling u11 a llttlr. about your~lt &: the pay you de1lre plus your a.re, address I: phone No., lo: $ mo. ~ ' Balboa Bay Club, May 18. Weather, aas, oil re11istant. 846-2182. Suite 8--f :>57-2711 ing d•partment. Jolly Ottlce/1tore $60, to $250. Apt. REWARD! 4 9 4 -3 3 2 8, Stays black. 545--5195. PAINTING ~ Honest, clean, "im!IHl:•::l1':::"m:Schal:::::l::rre 1 ':;:::m:c I English boss,. above $IBS: New drps, crpts. 54()..3510. ElectrlClll guarani~ \\'O'rk. Llcensed ----=---,, 224 ~St Hunt. Bch. 673-178{ 1.0~·. Bl• .. tan Mix·~ .rt insured. 675--5740. ' .:>.i x "" = """LECTRICAL 'VORK All Aceounting Clericnl Buolnot1 RontoJ 44! Sh herd N I ~ . P RUTH R .L.-e'Jl • o tags or D. kindl.BlgorsmallUc'da-PAL'S ainting S erv . YAN AGENCY srofu 1; W!a.le, ·1400 0~ Vic. Gothard I; Slater, H.B. lnll. Frff eat, 546-0711 lntcr/Elrter, <10 yrs cxper. 1792 Newport. CAI 646-4~ If found please ca 11, References. 5aCJ..70.W. 17931 Beach, HB 8j7...SS17 ml aq. 1t.. Cpl.!I &. •tan. 0 •7 2203 R-··"'d ELECTRICIAN, !i«nsed, J •. to •1·~ ho · .... -• .... · -~-.. Small job · EXTER. Complete 2 coats, 1 reap KO· ,. ....,.,r 11 pping FE•! I . h bouu'-'"\.I· s, mamt. ACCOUNTANT: Thi.a l'l{'W cen~r. San CI emf! n t e, • · n 11 setter pUp. 3 mo &. rtpa.ln. ~ story $240, 2 story $.'llO. •O'l-"5T okt. Vic: Dahlia, Cdrtf White 1.,,,-7-,.,..------Neat v;ork. Roy, 847-1358. firm needs bright young ""Y' ' rnarl:ing on chest &: toes. Gardenin1 man to assist controller. ** \ StDre/OOice, a I ass 675-7178. PROF. paintifJ&', inter/exter. Ideal for lhe person just out display case. Dov.-ntown AL'S GARDENING Quality work. Reai. Llc'd or colletc \\ith no l'Xper, H. · 218-Sth St. s,tlS per mo: DOBERMAN Pincher, blk & for ga.rdenina' A: 1 m a11 IM. 557-74.SS, ~2ia9 aft 5. Fine local co. Start $650. -rust, 7 mos old, vie Sunset landsc1plng serv!"• call No Was""" · ... ,. Call Jean Brmi:n, 540-6005, Beach area. R.e\v. 592-J:lOT. 540-5198 eves. Ser v t n I * W0A)'OllLL~~.E,!}__'-Jc, Couatl Ag•ncy, 2 7 go * 0 lC&600 sq. ft. Also Newport. CdM, Costa Mesa, • Wile """"' .-.... so ~. Ft. INDUSTRIAL $1.tL Blk Ct>ckapoo-wht spot Dov Sho W tclift }farbor Bl at Adams, No. SlIOP. Costa 1'fet& 646-2130. on chest, Vic Victoria St. er res, e1 • Sfl..lut 6'6.lnl a>7, CM. ,_sr_o_l\~E-&_o_!!~lc-,-,o-r-,..,.-,-:' Reward. ~9288. 646--0728. *NEW LAWNS * 30 Day Special Inter/Deter ADVERTISING Bo' Chica at H.'.l, JIB. Sl\~ ·Fem white poodle. Sod -Stolons· 5'edin&". Yard "•inting. Llc'd/!n!I. Local G mod lln stat Li 'd -rent opportunity for highly 846-' \Vearing collar & leash. re e I:· e c · refK. 30 Yrs. exp. Free eat. motivated, highly skillrd Vic : Victoria, C11'. .GC-2420. 534-4AZ1. Call Chuck, 6f5.-0809. ••-· 1 "" to~ d Ind I.I.I R.nt.I ••A sectt ...... ,. OW\'.111\ In Ul'U8 . ~OSTA Ml!SA·--DAILY .PILOT -'.;;!,.!t~.:l1:;,,.J,;~~ C:~i,~PER H~~~ ~,;,;";';:~~,,~,:;,'','~: '"". 28.!0 Sq fl. CWSIFIED ADS T""" hauling, lot cl'8nup. Plostor, Potch, Ropolr ..... ,,,.,. aaency, BM1in8, CIB!NET MAKERS-FOR ACTION Ropair IP'inlcl•n. 673-1166. initiative. ~ oh ....,uirod, I' FIBERGLASS .. ' • ' Houae Huntinc? \Utdl Ibo * PATOI PLASl'ERING Coll 13~1670 Nr. rJ,wpt Frwy & S.D. Frwy CALL 642·5678 OP!:N HOUSE <»tumn. All typos.}'...,...,,.. .. , ~ 2931 Grace Ln. Call M0-'825 APARTMENT ma n a i er . Exp, full chaip managrr tor larie project in Costa J.'fe1a. Salary + apartment. Mon -Frt, 9 to 4, 2131355--3880. !So. at.Bake<, E. ol Fairview * Plumblng \l '*' Roprua1tatM-. * * * * * 9 ara-12 noon. m1) ""'4<34 or S'IM111 12.0ii ·SQ FT, aU or put, 11th tit. in Costa Melfl.. 8c ptr iplq It. Wareliouse VUlato'. 543'5551. Ni\v:D:ELUXE M-1 U~ib. 3 ph. ~\\·er. 1733 Monrovia SG-ll.45: ~ 'ves. 5~6 to HOO Sq, Ft. IOOl lllrcll, N.B. · SU.5032 ~f.t COJILNER, 127x90 ' v.·/bldf· 991 W. 19th St., 01 sax> mo. 64~. · Stor1!•. • • • 455 REI'~ shop avalh at 1be Fact~r7y. $175. mo. See No. 9 for t&IO or fl).6606, Trader's Paradise TRIPLEX, Mna Vm!e, 153.000 valu•, $18,000 'CJUlty • TRADE tor propertr in Fallbrook/Vilta arta. 61~006S 1931 tonf A Coupo. Ori"' aeywb.,.. Stock body. VS w/m blower. M.000 Invest· ed. '!Yade Jot late model car or caU.1c. 66-lQ'.19. ' * * lines times dollars ft.2 i.o1, Palm.!prina1, $1500 value, tar local hOule or !f Can add. The Doyle Co, Eve11: 838-6341 ~45.000. EQIJJTY in leawd income pnpll'ty, for cleu houst1; k>tl, tnW dffd1, boat1 or Tf! *** tn-1896 *** llt\VE lhup 2 bodzoom, Jd>l Cat Ha.rbor View hme Want Tustin foothQLs 3 to 4 ~.. I.up tot Pl'f-fured. Ag<. ~1225. C.!ll. '5J.lll T llalhtld dwnp (money maker) -.tT thol1 Oatbt<!, I« camper. ·52 \IT P.U. 1ftde for amauer ve- hicle -or prloUnr tqU!p. ele-2923. * SAVE on home repairs_ Flft e1t., plumbing, paint, fn. 1tal1at ion1, baullna. 839-<372. PLUl\'fBING REPAIR No job too small * 642-31.28 * COLE PLUMBING 24 ht, service. ~1181 Remodel & Ropolr REMODELING, addiUoTU1, pe.tiol, prompt servict. Free Htimates, refeftl1Ce1, local builder, 1.10 p.m. 968--9067. -· • T. Guy Roollna. DW Direct. I do my own "°"'· -21!0.SCHiOO. Sew ... / Alfero-.... ... -D ESICNER-European lnll")(!d, 20 yrs. exp., MW in Hoprtl-B,.dl. 9fl8.<l73!1. Allorotlen1 -64WMS Neat, aocurate. 2J )'U1'I ezp. Storoo llopolt ASSISTANT To tra.napose cutting ticket11. Shipping dept , "''-'· M•rianne of C•lif. 333 l\larinc AV<'., B:il Is. BANK TEl:.LER: Bea.uty, brains &: talent win thi..! fun 1pot. Plush bank needs your exper. Good .futu~ & great bols. S44B. Call Unda Ray, ~. Coo.eta! Aeency, 2790 Harbor Bl at Adams . No. 207, CM. BABYSnTER, malurc -woman la good health w/own tr&N., for 2 boys 4 A 5, alto Ille housework. 6:4:; am to 4 pm.$ day1 v.•k. 557-1779 after 4:30 pn1 wk- da)'I. BEAUTICJAI\'S needt\1 fnr bull)' lbop. n .63 hr or 30~'r comm. Pd vac. Ca I I S4Hll9. B EAUT Y O pirr ator. Guarantee + commladon. 61&-11111 STEREO equipment repairs, BE Au Ty ()pttator-N.B. complete 1.acilitle1 tor all &l"fa. Some follow\na pref'd. ..U... •• ~II · dllCOUnt Call 543-8520. rates: tracii; tape deck, rltu A adjuat SA.00, thlJ BOAT Auemblen, tirp'd WHk 11.j[Q oil to Doll> P1Jo1 only. Appl> II W. D. Schock r11.d-ers. (Replaotment Corp. 3JJ2 L CNnWillt, ~ .. It canrldpo ll •Ul. l-:::San_io_Ano._,,----.,--1 U.&A. Slenio E q 1 I p . It's a tnnr. MO )Wf ENGINE LATHE OPERATOR With Own Tools $3.40 Per Hour Days, SHANK BALANCING OPERATOR $3.25 Per Hoar Must hav• 1 year IX· perience. _ t.lany Other Po!llion! Too Numerous To List. Both Permanent & Tempor•ry NO FEES PACIFIC PERSONNEL SERVICES 112 Ho. Tower Union B•nk Squ•re O r•nt•· C•llfornl• 547-6446 ""' Few R.achel Mcty ClassllM?d Ad No. 420, Oajly PUot Box 1560, Costa Mell, Calif. 92631.' CLERK/TYPIST To l('am LadlH Garment l\ffg. Marianne ef C•llf. 33.1 Afartne Ave., Bal Ill. COOK ' Good Position With Xln't ~ Company. Muat Jiavc Dinner l-f\lU5" Exper . No Phone Interviews Coll For Appt 67S.U74 -=~~~~~~~~~/ \\'rap your•elf In luxury. -Use mohair or novelty yarn. Crochet circle C9.Pf in easy Some expcr, nect1111. Apply ap~der cJesia:n. Tos11 over tn per.on, Love'1 BBQ, htad and 11houldert or W<.'ar Drookhunt le Adami, l!B in l!l'r• wlth dttuy clothes. COOK, p/tlme for catering Po.!. 1033: bne 11tzc Dl5 8·14, service. other 11lit Jtra>, both ln- COOK 547-5739' cludert. Con1trucUon QUALITY -CONTROL A ntw cd"mpany just formed by Amerlea.'1 leading developer o f reeldenlinJ l'Omm un ltle1 11 now AIAflh)I lta operation In Ora.nee County. It hu developed 411 exciting new concept in fac· toJ}'·b ullt modular hOwltna:. \\'c have an Immediate open· ing for a.n individual with at least 3 yenr1 rectnt rdated CJCpt'r, In the conJtructk>n tradt'. Thb1 ex~'" mUlt ln- clbde duties of a quality JMUrancci natW""& ' wlU prefcrrably be ln the lac· 1ory·buil1 houstna lndu.:try. \\'e oft'r an a ltra c t lv• .1tartlnK u.lary In addition to a llberll pa.ckaae of btnttll&. Picue Call For Appt. Ed Fuller OMNI HOUSING SYSTEMS, IN C. 17822 CUltittt lrvlne lndut. Cumpllx Santa Ana 17111 m-TlllG N..n • :.r::a11+ PW: u 181 8EVmTY·nvE CENTI tor tach pattem .... add 25 cent. for irach pattern tor Air A-fail and Speclal J-landl· Ina:; otherwise llilrd-clap deli\'try will t.ice tlitff weed w mort. SeQd &o Alice BrooQ. the DAILY PILOT 100, Nttdltcra.ft Dept., Bo" 163, Old Chel1en Statlon, New · York, N.Y. 1001J. Print N•me, AddrNll, Zip, Pattflm Nmnber. NEEDLECRAli"J' 'T2! Cro- chet, knit, etc. Free dlrec:· Uonlf, 50 r,enlll, Nf:.1\'! Jn11tant Manrame. Baile, fancy knot•, pallt nis. It. E.UJ Art Of 'lalrpln Urito ehd -o-1er 26 dtstiN to mAke. Sl. ln•tant Croehl't Book - learn by plcturu! Pattcrn1. 11. Compt<ta ._ .. 0111 - -raon than loO al!la. -IL Complol• "---II. 11 .11n1 Ror 8oi)k1 -50 Ct'nts . Boat" tf u ..,.,.. ..,,w .. 50 ce>IL q.111 Book I -16 Jlliltlml. 50 ctnta. ~ta.-n Qt:UI .... t -so ffilll. Qolltt fw 'hdeJ't U\'lnt -15 beaUtlful patltms. 5(1 cenlll, · · w h I t e £lep111nu" 0Ytt- runntn1 )'OUr hc>t!Mt Tutti U1itm tnto "CA.Sii" -Mii tl\fm thnl Dlllly P 11 o I 9135 51Z!S Su n b ctr m.qtrtckt ONE J\11\fN PATT~RN~PART fno 11cnmsl) tor lhls sprlahtly \vrup 1klmmtrl \Vhlp lt up !n tullp.hrlfht cottofll or bl~nt'J1 !or vacation, part!"f, pltn~, trlp11. Printed Pa11er11 9.1.l."1: NEW ChUdren'• Slue Z. 4, 6, t. Size 6 1akes 7/8 yard 60- lnch. llEVl!ll'l'Y·n\'1: °"',.. tor ea.ch pauem -add 25 cenll klr each iittteru tor Ai.. Mall ~ ~PecteJ llaodl· Ing; otherwfM t11h;d-4::lau dellveey will !aka lhrff week• or tnoN, Snwl to ?tfarlan M&ttln, the DAILY PILOT, 4t2, l'at.ttm 'Dept., 232 We•t 18ih St., New York, N.Y ... 10011. Print · NA.ME, A.ODaas w Ith ZIP, 8IZll 'and 8'D'LE NUMBER. SEE ~fOftf!! ~p t In I ra1hlont and choote qne pattern he from MW Sprlna-summer CataJ..or. All 1lie~! Only 50c. INSTAl\'T SEWING BOOK M'IY today, wear tomorrow. 'IJ. I NSTANT lo~ASIUON BOOK -llundred1 o f fnahlon faoll. Sl. TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5171 ••••••••••••••••••• * * w...-. 11' i:. 11th st., 11"11• --· -Oa111 Coola llfoa, 11)-3"1. Riot O.ud--· ------------------ • ' • I 1 l .Zt DAILY ,!LOT l[Il] I · 0• , -ml I .....,.... 1[11] [ ~.., ••• Holp Wonted M & F 71D ,;Ho;;lp;W;;;on;t;od~.~M~&~F;7~10 Help Wonted, M & , 110 l[Il]I ...._ __ ,_,, .. __,l[Il] I l[Il] I l[Il] I l[Il] I f::qll; I L1Q1111 -J1 ...... , ..... ][Il] H.lp We-, M & I' 711 Holp Went..i, M & '710 Help W•nttd, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M & F 710 Help W•ntod, M ' F 710 Help Wentod, M & F 710 D A N C E Irwl.Ncton I , \ I . ~';"'~ ;·~: .:.~: REAL ESTATE ROBINSON'S Secretory to4650 ply In"""'"' M•. Mik., -SALESMEN-e NEWPORT • T•P s kills. Mitnr Jlotlruu \\1Il traln, S1nalrs JIOUSEKEEPER wanttd, lo live In.. Then att just two Chalet l9Ci3 fllW Blv<l C.Al or Uai with a home In Irvine DISLIKE Restaurant, 209 Pa Im, Need 1 (Ir 2 experienced BEACH background , helpful. lual Balboa. Mon 2!J It Tut• 30 ha\'l' :11 In t appe&ranct. 1_ ..... _5337=~·=~==~-·' Tf'ITQoe. Our prr:1ent DISHWASHER couplf", who tiavr .bl'tn with CONSTRUCTION \Vt. are now a;taJt!na our new I ('Qn1pa,nit• faciUly l!'J)iateti In tbe pr«luction of fact01')" bulld m0ilulnr houslrta. Our exlt:Una: backlup; enablt>fl ufl to otter Ptrmanent p:iiitions ao lhoaie who h•ve r~nl t X· perit'ncf" in the folio"' Inn named Inda: AGENCIES? Exper. Ovtt 21. SUrt Ii Sir-UJJ ror S~' yral'I, arr rr1urn- lo!n, 5930 \V. Cot!lt Ill\')', !\'B Ing to En.itland to retirt end DENTAL chaln!tle a~t. E;. ol June. Oc<:uional c.ooking, betw~n 4 & 6. sa.le1peopl1·. JncenUve com-Beuullful <lfc. IE locat.iin. miuK:in slldln& scale plan, Hill oppenlllg 101 .Fee t'llirllAl!O r~ Jbbt LVN -PtrU.tE peraonnlized training by .1 &: Exper, NW'llf'I Aldca. professional AL.SO will train NEWPORT Before you decide you panded dutle• ror v,rl'lf'rt1.I vt>ry lltUr entenalnlni;;, ju11 11 r. th · · ge~ral houst·work & Jlghl dislike •II ef us read 1 ~~;,fng i e ilbui~ ~~1~~~1;k lnundry. JI you happen to further • • • w/peoolr 1 muat. 962-3319. have a huaband who is good Jani.tors p 1 A nL· Call s.t~I nf'lv Jicensee11. SmaU office, ersonne SI• ""' iiiiiiiii ... iiiiiiii ... iiiiiiij pleaaant working condUion!I. 833 Dover Dr., N.Jl. DllAPERY I n• ta l l~e' •"· 1 at gardening, \l.'r'd like to Anothf!I' ~1 .. mor1al Oay ii! here and lrs t!mr 10 tell all , ol our clients wha1 ha• bttn 1 happening ln lhc paal year. MARKETING Penonal interview -A"' Full Time 642-3870 1 fDt l\fanilger. YES..\\'' hone1tly do have about J'.ll'l CWTtnt jobs <IP"" 1 lrJ Orange CounJ.,y Now. " talk lo him too. There art iier-deper\dable. Full time, comtortahle Jiving quarters. I uood lllliary, 492-2251. Adequatr for a couplr. SECRETARY U.S. AFFILIATED Apply in pe.-son 1~5 p.m. s E c 11 ETA RY' B<Olltilul Broken Realty '12 Fashion Isl, NB. nilXll'rn office\ frlflqdly 847·&507, Eve& 968-1178 Equal opJX!tlunily employer co11urken. Gt-e:ll chaJ¥:e to PAINTER$ ELECTRIOANS PWlol0£RS I Please phOn~ 6'46-3963 ESCROW CLERK y,·e~·kda.y11 tor appoln1rntnt. for marketing manager sml!I e_!ectronitll 1lnn Irvine Indus. Complex. Real ~-tote advatK-e lo executi\·l' Jtvcl. of La SALES.\1A.!'l -· ror gro11·ing Gro"'''"' co. Start $j00. Ill. Profl'JJslonal Real E ... ate t • d ~-d··•·-to "•• YES-\\''" ronform to !he State of Callfornla Lawii & ihe-&POC. t m pJ O)' rn en 1 afttnelts standards n I J.'/tlme or P/tlfne HNI HAIR s!ylist \lo'/clientcle Career Oppor. In So. Coo111 I Station avail. 10~;,. Ask for Finl v.e 1vilh you LOVE and TifANK YOU for your eon- 1tant support and the refer. ral8 you've iwnt to u:s. You Plaza. Nonnan 673--~30 f'.'H noucn 1 rtN1S11 CARPENTERS l clhiea. Call .\lllls Oxlry llOUSEKE. EPER . t2l31 6i6-0l:"~ for ollf' f:quit Oppor. Emplo)·~r ~raon.. '-1ust havt car. Live 1n. Pri room &. bath. !'lluat be an organizer \vith good !lk.llhi. U you'rr sharp " y,•e.lJ groomed. I YF.S-\\'11 cit:> g1vf' you ii copy ol our ll'e :tebfd\IJe & P•Y· mf'tU tttm1 prior to Dllinz nut an applk:Hllon. \V!!'U [XPElt·Snh?li"'Oman needed 673·90.'tl for Beauty Supply Store ~1"1o"u"s"E"K"E"E"P"E"Rc---.,C~o-m· (Beautklanl. Call :t-b-5180 panion, live.in, fof' single or 616-2Sl6. adull lady. 54S..33.i2. "'''II be pleased to know we are 100'/ii fee paid by the Call -.131 For lnten dew Appl Static PO\\'er, Inc. DRY \VAIL MILi. 11.-~ Plea.If' Apply In Ptraon ll aiu· ' pm abo a!ve YotJ th!~ in-EXECUTIVE SECRETARY: iOrmallon on the pho~. Shape ourftt.iture clllca. This * Inspector to $550 , lop architect nH.ds your ?>!In. 2 yrs exp Small coni· skllllt It talent to run folliL-e pan~'l'lts-electro'nlc. Some &: handle cllc11tl1. $700. f're background receivipg. company, and we n1lghl add the only Ol\C tn Orange County. A Subsidiary ot The Gates Rubber Company Oi\fNI HOUSING SYS!q.18, INC. 17822 Glllettlo St. , Paid. AlllO }~ce Jobi;. Call Servi~ Center Agl"ncy Equal Oppor. Employtr By choice, wr. still "wk by Irvine lndlll. Con1r11ex Santa Ab., Ca!H. YES-\Ve do 1t1V.-llOme te~t! to help ;YOu detern1 lne .tfhll I you're be11t JJUlted tor. Y~We handlr all typi'!I of en1ployment fl'om factory Jlelen 'Hayes, 5 '4 o-6 o 5 5, 4262 Campus Dr., NB C.Oa11ia1 J\gency, 2 7 9 0 Suite B-4 5..'i7-27ll lfarbor B.I at Adanis. No. l Helen Schalfer appointment in order to !\.11. nurse care for ptttl"nt days. Prepare lunch Plc. 5 day "'k. 638-7333 aft '4: 30. '°'· o1. I r.c BOOKl<J>:F.PER. Salary 1 INTERIOR o(X'n. Call 8.~2·6744 San or DECORATOR F.qual Oppor, Eniployer , lo admlnlstratlve, lraloot to i••·-----1 ·••P<•·- both your tlme & our11. e e NEEDED Two Office Girls CASUAL LABORERS I . U YES-ltyou're 1·urrt*nlly rgelltly Needed •mptoyed """ app11,.1~, Mon btwn 10:00 A/.1 & 12:00. Exper. required. Sal. • \Ve are expandini again and 1'1BERGLASS Moldetll, sklll· comm. Full co. benc.1ill!. 40 ~ & unskilled. All J sh!flll. llr \lo"k. Apply 10 it's ID exciting. La.uttl Shev.• !\tust bl! 25 and able to drive -APPLY- 186 E . 16th St., C.P.f. NEW FACTORY EXPANSION e Mutt hav' tranr.portatlon Is kept totally confidenllaJ. We will train. 1631 Place~ l Apply 10-12 & 2-4 ll tdepbo1M1.' Interim Ptrsonnel S.rvfce n! W. 20th, C.M. 642-!m 54tl-2592 C.Om:trucUon YES--We have both appHcart Ii tmployer paid fee posl· tiona. Ila, Colla M.... I MAY COMPANY GF.:1.,-0)afcr, txper. Needed day !!hlft. Top pay. ]631 Placentia, C'.\1. YES-Our coun~lorli 11. r e Girl }'riday rully eXpf'r. I.: each ha'i over J hr'! per day, in Cl\.l 2 yrs or exper. in en agency.' :'48·11!0 So. Coast Plaza 3333 Bristol, C.J\I. Equal Oppor. Employf'r INVEST IN YOUR FUTURE Full or pl tin1e. has registered and been ac· crpted by Sacramento and ls l)[)\V 1\·orking "'ilh female placement'!. She ;, OS l\\'O yean can only i;ay shr·.s th,. niCt?st person l'vP ever $51)8.$650 Pu Mo Full Time Young men-mectianieal a~ FIELD SUPERINTENDENT YES-We wlll work w/you unUJ you havf' a. job you're fully satillfied with. GENF:TtAL 0F·0,.~1c~>~::~w~.,~1<1 you likr an exritin;• sla1·1 in the fihn lndu~lry·~ Enjoy their· plush ottiCt~ In 1l1e hvin!'.! Complex. To $600. Call Nancy May, 540-6055, COBJJtal Agency, 2 1 9 0 Jlarbor m al Adams, No. BE YQUR OWN BOSSI Men or Women kno11'n. titude helpful, but not req'd. !\lust be 19 or over. Able lo slnrt \\'Ork immed .. if aC<'epte<I. r or job in· formation -. 1 Call Tues. 9a.m-lpm ,., YES-lfg· an cm p Io '/'e e i; m.atkl:'l! NO.We do not make )'OU \l.'lit ,'°'=·~c.,•~I·~-~-~~ in our ottlct' for hours. GIRL Friday, Mk!i Coru;lt, Sharp. Jnltlatlve. Typln~. Reseurch, bkpg. pluses. 30 Lease A Yell ow Taxi Cab can tor Appt 546·1311 Ask for Htrman A new company jWlt formed by America'• l et.d i n e devek>ptr 1lof residential ' oommunltlet ii now 1tafflng Its oprraUon in Orange Count,y. It hu dewloped an excltln& MW concept Jn rac· tol')'·bullt modular housing. NO-We do no! demand any payrnenl unlll your first p1ycheck. !Ir. \l.'k. $3 hr. P.O. Box j iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiia llS22, Fountain Valley. 92708. \Ve have an lmmedl11.te open· Ina: for a qualified lndlvkJual to UtWne rnpon."llbllity for the tlnal inltallAtion & OYttall finlM of our borne~ on 1ltt . Candklate& must have at leaat 5 yell'I recent ..UW U plll' • '"' twWlli. be thoroughly tamlll"f wlth all construction trades. We otJ'r an •t tra ctlve stt.rtlng u lary In addllkln to a liberal pack11ee of beneftta. Pleue call Jor • p- polnbnent .. Ed Fuller ' NO-\\'c do not try 10 talk )'OU into a job you don'r y,•1nt. NO-\\'r. don't send you on Jol>g )'OU'rT. not qualitird for. \\'e doo'l have to. NOW·\Von't you 1tlvr. OUR AGENCY A CHANCE'! Lltttd below art a tew jobs in your area. Recept. $500 1'~EE. Neer San Clem. l\fu11l rype :ii>, meet & greet visitors. OMNI !IOUSING SYSTEM~ INC. 17822 GUlette J1vlne lndu1. Comples San .. Ano 'G I 11 Fri. .$525 (7141 979.-7400 .FEE. Litt :sh or i<.peed \1Titini. \Vork ror 5 f'flgineen in lronl ofc. ~latun eat. good typing. Gen'I Office Decor•ting to $450 \\1ork in det..'l'.ltaling dept. of bea<"h cJry hon1c building ro. Lo!~ or pub. contact & fun as you \l'Ork' w/new home ownen. Oppor. to a<l- \·nnce in· thill Jine firm. Top benellts. CAii 5 51 -6 t 2 l , Abigail Abbot Per!IOnnel Agency, 230 W. \Var~r. Suite~. S.A GAL FRIDA'"'Y~-- Loco! Call LoJTain"" WESI'CLIFF Pe~nnel Aiency 20-il \Vestclift Dr., NB 64;)..21i0 JIAIRDRESSER.-Comm. or rent spatt. ntE JIAl~I. 282 Forest, Lag B. -'494-56i7. l!ELP 1\·anted. Exp. aid. AU shifts. 847·3515 Nw'''" COU PLE : !'lfal~ lenan~azslatant man111gtr needed for l&rgf' project in Costa J\ftllR. Pnlnting & r e p ai r b a tkirounrl nece.'li;ary. SA 1 a ry • Bkkpr $650 oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ;:;:,~~~.Mon-Fri, 9 lo 4 Draftmna.n FREE. NICI? quiet boss in S.A. for tull charge gal "''ho can go thru Un. ltmts. Gen'I Ofc $510 FREE. No i.:h. I Gal ore. j 'fypr, pho~:c;. etc. J\fust bc-j l·urrcr o~ntcrl. llMNE PERSONNEL SER.VICES "AGft.JCY FN'.:-& Fee POJJil ions Test Engr/Elrr to $12l< Buyer/El<'C!ro11ics to $12K E'scro\lo's/No!es/Dctd.~ Exec. rin,1gn Sec'y Acctna;/Degree req'd to 1675 $67~ to $650+ ExEt. Secretary to SGJO Secretary to $600 Engr. Secretary $.).10 Payroll Bkkpt/NCR lo $550 Acctng Clerk 10 $j(l() IBl\.f Composer/Ex-per Open Rt!eept/Gen. Ole to S51)j Travel Agt/exper lo $!i00 + 488 E. lith (at livine) C:O.l 642-1470 lNSURANCE A(ency Gh·J. Kno\l.·ledge of Dwelling fire & llome O\\'ners rating helpful. Xlnt opp. Salary open, ~1ust be good typist. California Insurance : Irvine, Calif. Call Fern Nut., lt-'r for intrvw. 8l3-9480. KEYPUNCH I 776-8551 We now have a new assistan~ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii• Karen Oshorl'I<', a student at Travel Agt·Exp Open Prod. Manager to $12K Colde~st Collegt', "'ho F/C Bookkeeper $750 \Vall doing a reaeareh paper Buyer-Elec. Open Sce·y·Marketing $675 on pt"rsonnel agencies. She See'y/Bkkpr to $700 called. us for Information Sec'y.Constr/Anaheim $65(1 Clerk Typist $400 and Laurel invital her in to Laguna.Dana Pt Arra learn about agcncit~. \\le F/C Bkkpt·.\>Itgr MOO like<! Mor !IO much thal \\'C Acctng Clerk S500 &>cretary s:ioo asked her ir •he \\·ould join Receptionis1 S'150 us. Karen just piped up and NEWPORT Personnel AgenCy told m~ to say she \l.·ag l 833 D D N B over r., .. miracle>. Anyho\Y, we called '42:·3170 •·our local heaven" and had her sent down. Flash!!! Gunther l{lause 1..-omes in once a month and ill helping us In our tx· pansion. \Ve att lea.ming lo u·ork ~fARTER, N 0 T HARDER, and \Ve're SUN!' th.inking big. Ber.,·een he and Jlrn Newman (Patt Seminar) we are aU getting there together. [ Rosa, (Exerntivf' A~·cring Service) Ill still lVith us and, Office No F~ J\IAKE HAY \VlllLE OTIJERS Pl.A Y • Gals Friday e Keypunch Oprs • Switchboard Opr1 • Secretaries • Typists \Ve need the above skills for vacation relief .&: varioull Mort !:. long I e r m 8.Sllignments. +°f:._I 2100.Poot o.. 1 ·(Jm ,,., ... w.1m (Behind Airportrr Inn) PART Time. Early Al\.t delivery. l\1usl have pick·up or van. 646-8162. or coutsC'. Lori Gregg still JlJZZA Cooks & Delivery, keeps our books. ARCHITECTURAL DRAFTSMAN I Exec. Sec'y $650 SPLl'f. J\lulll have corp. law f'c:epr. Tremendous firn1 :J.igul'e? male over 21, p/lime. Ap. ply 16532 Beach Blvd., Hunt. D•y Shift Beach. A tll?\\' <.v1npanl' just formed by An1l'ri~a'!I Ir a rl in i de\·elo(lf'r o f l't'fiirlt'ntii\/ communili~ i& now ~larfhig ils Gpt'rt1.lion in Ot:lnJ!e Counly. II hru1 developt'd 1U1 exclti~ new concept in rnc- y,·/xln't ~nefits for rorp. Oftlct't Variety $500 NEGO. l Gal ofc moving to Trvlnt area. li lust be RI· tract., unencun1bf'rcd & type "'· tory·bullt modulM hou1dng. Construction U,50 I FR.EE. A1ust be F/C thn1 \Ve hRv• immt'fl\11tt' open-stml1 le must havt ronstr lnis for qu11.lif1td arrhilt'C-f"Xpet. tuntl dnft.!lmC"n "'Ith at leflsl 4-5 yl!11.r.!I cun~nt t.lll· I S , $600 perlt'.nce 1vorklnR \V I t h K Y If your math's in gaod condition, we can use you. Good typing & In· surance · experi· ence helpful, but n o t necessary. Apply now for: • Figure Clerk lntercstlng.openings for Jr. k Sr. ~kills. Av•il•ble Now • . 6 1'1onlhs actual "'Ork expt"r. / Wt JJeem to bf! like tht Cob-POSTAL Carriers. Deliver on eithe k h your ov.'ll area. Costa i1eaa, r a . eypunc · bier \\'ilh "Holes Jn liill Hunt Bch · Fntn VI keytape or kf'Y disc device. · · ., . · y. Shoes." If any or you know Housewives preJ' d. 5J0...0402. ALSO of anyone that loves the PROFESSIONAL RESTAURANT & 1-IOTEL personnel p I a c e m e n t EMPLOY1.1ENT AGENCY busiooss and \'.'OU.Id like to Assl. l\tgrs. $600 to $700 mo. ~laster Chef ....•.. $1100 mo. join us, do lel Ull kno"' or 2nd Cook ...•....... $2j. shift a.sk he or she to caJI. It's a Broiler l-.fan. $150 to $160 v.il:. D•y shift until moYe to Newport in September then swing sh ift 4-12 PM. School !mining necPss. S:ime work exper. helpful. IN'TERVIE\\'ING 1'11e~ & \Ve<l 9am-2pn1 Thurs & Fri 9am-12pm ON !'ITE or OUR NE\V BUILDING }Ty O>ok ............. 12. Ju-. rll!\V busil\t'ss v.-orld out Trainee Cook , ..... $2·$3 hr. there and the more heeds to l'~ast Food ?.lgr'I'rainee figure it out, the better. Q\•er n .......... '.$400. mo. \Vallers .....•.• · •.••. ,.Scale \Vaitresaes ... All shifts avail. Food It Cocktail • ••• $1.65 hr. i\fiss CORD automobile Is a 1-lollless • · • ·• •· ..••••••• $2 hr. Cashier · • •..••••. · • .•.• $2 hr •• ca.rpe • ra,,_... Cd1U Jlayr Ftt. Ftt Jobs .._;ruMt. Salesmen & broken! The call on builde1·s. \\'ill train Call Jean Bro"''"· 54040,i.:;, opportunity is here! You are capable man. Top com· Coastal Agency, J 7 9 O needed immedlatrly for our mission. Cail Bob a.t (2131 llarbor Bl at Adams. No. rapidly expanding Re a I 86()..7777 '"'! c•1 "'· • :OU,,,, ' ~late. division. Positive op. SALESMEN portun1ty for advancement. N d 1 ad 10 SECRETARY $ fo,or appointment phone Rick ee n1en v.· io are re Y • BOSS PAYS fo'EE • .,__ learn the car business ancl $650 ,.....,gnl'r. , M are willing to traii: ust Skillf'd, Attrac:llvf", Al11.,aid have good. perronality, be Benefits Including ~ntal, interested 1n. a future, dr_e!IB lloUdays & Vacation.'!. "1:11:iiffil:1!~1 well, sa.lesmtnded_. Benefi_ts: Beautiful OUice11. 95941XXJ. ·.:1 Demo.. group ins., high Cal Fair Empl0y1nen 905 ~~ ...... •I comn1issions. Unlimittd in· No Euclid Suite A !Ana- come. Apply in Person. hei~. Also' Fee Jo~ UNIVERS I TY OLDS ..:.:l;. ~·IOBILE, 2850 J-Iarbor Blvd.. Seamstress, f/tlm'e Costa ~Jesa. 501 29th Street, N.a. Re•I Esti1te S•les Real Estate Ofc needs llnlesmen. \\'e cover all phai;e11 of real e111a1e. Nr SALES represcntativr for SERVICE Station atte&l&nt Beautiful Hun!. Harbour. local firm in Capo Valley p/time. rves &: \vkndi El<· Tobin Realty 846·3371 area. Exper. helpful but \viii per only. Neat in ·~ RF.CEPTTO~IST: Your y,•in· tl'ain. Salary + con1m. Car pearan~. Apply mo . lngs nin:; personality nets this & full company benefits. An only. 2J~ Nc\\'JlOtl ~vd .. fabulous opponunlty. Some equal opportunily employer. ~C~··~M~. =,-c,,.--=-!:-c·I typing neede?. l\.luch public l'~or intervie"' call 494-8:i9.i SEl~VICE Sta .. AllerJlan.t, contact. & ntiee ho&!. Sl4!. SALESWOMEN, manager, f/lJme e\le. shin. Neft .1n Call Linda Ray, 540-6055, gift shops in Newport & appearance. Exper. flnly. Coastal Agency, 2 7 9 O Costa 1'.Iesa. Full or paM Lite mechanlr~ ~· Harbor BJ at Adams, No. lime. Interviews Tues May Apply mornings, ~ $ 9 0 a>7, 01. 30, 5-7 pm, Galleon Gifts, Ne"·port Bl., C.M. ~· RECEPTIONIST: Do you South Coast Plaza. CM or SERVICE Station Ill an like lo meet tilt public? phone 838-3814 aft 8 pm. & lube man. Top paY~nae ~gin your career with this SALES\\'O~JAN, exper. for benelil~ · experle~ Wfu. f:ne firm by ~reeling their Sflt'Cialty store. ~f 8 tu re red .. Full or part h_me(~U client.~ \\'ilh a sn1ile. Call F/lime. Send replies to S!alLon, 17th & Irv1nt, ,.B. Nancy !'ltay, 5 4 0-6 O 5 5, Classified ad no. 369 c/o STATIC t Coastal Agency, 2 7 9 O Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Harbol' Bl 11.f Adams, No. Costa ~fella.· ca. 92626. 207, Cti1. Salesgirl-,---! ( RECEPTIONIST ' Excel Opportunity -for top POWER, INC. ' • SWITCHBOARD salesgirls. Mus:t have good Needed w/pleasant personal· fashion background. Refer- Newport Be•ch: ily for Yachting Manuf. $95 ences requested. Apply per wk, 6 mos • 1 yr ex per mornings Tues· Sat. • 27 Has The Followinc1 . OpportunltMa Town &: Country -Orange. prefd, some typing requlr-1-==""'====="~ ed. Send handwritten back· SALES OPPORTUNITY! ' f l TEST ENGR-SUIW. 5 Yrs. ex-per. In elttbiinio grd letter to Daily Pilot ad CONCERNED ABOUT . ' . •418, P.O. Box 1560. Costa ECOLOGY prod•.ction test. ~tu.st hr ex· per. in \\'rltinJ!: &' foilao.ring test procedures, mwl ,trou· ble shoot compl.ei system!!. operate all kinda of <elec- tronic lest equipment. iome J\1esa, Calif. 9:626. Expanding company necdJJ 5 · -salespeople \l.'ho a r e Recep.t. Gen. Ole $476.67 Ground noor opportunity. . \V~tk 1n very pleasant N.B. NITA BRIDGES 830-3939 offices of \\'t'll kno\\·n co. Public contact & intt1"esti~l:SA=L"'E"sc=1'°R~L"'1o","N","1"s"h-op-.~io variely. Top Beneli!s. Call Laguna Beh. Over 19 yN, Jicld exper. req'd. J :i.i7~122. Ab igail Ab bo 1 clean-cut. Responsible. 1''ull· NS E O Personnel Agency, m w time. Call 494-miO btwn 9 I P CT R-:111 \Var~r, SUilt' ~. S.A. . am & ll am ONLY. RECEIVING :1 Exper. w/formed nilttal. Recept. M•ture $400 SA\VYER HOM~. matutt mechanical parts & 41!c. Rai.st:' in JO days. This Costa ""Oman ~°: ki t hel? & tronlc components. R~a Me~ co. is looking for a =~pl g, Daytimes. understanding or d e i• i I gracious mature t y p e · drawings, spec!., color :'(l!Xfe person who Y.'OUld Jove to & fundamental t t! a t la g . y,·elcon1c their clients, han· SECRETARY So1ne in-procc&s & dielf:>si· die pholl('s, clc. ln their lion ex(X'r. desirable.. 11 lovely lobby. Top .benefits. Call s.;;1~m. Abigail Abhor $579 to $705 Per Mo. Pe:TSOnncl Agency, 230 \V. \Varner, Suite 209, S.A. " ELECTRIC/MECft l•9un• H ills Nov.• Interviewing BUSBOYS Day Or Nite Full o, P /Time Apply In Person 24001 Ave De La Carlota Laguna lillls (At !he El Toro oU ramp S.D. Freeway) E'.qual Oppor. Employer --._ ---- ROBINSON'S e NEWPORT e BEACH l las opening tor Experienced LUNCHEON WAl1'RESS Daily For Our Marina Room ! -CITY OF- NEWPORT BEACH ASSEMBLER I i Al least 1 yr exper. P.C. board. P.C. assem t 1Y. touch·up, I'M'.Wk & tf!j,;ir. Requil"f's grdduation from 1't High School ~ 3 yrs of re-BUYER Ii c en I r It 1 me pa Id Exper. in producLion lilp stenographic exper; Ability lolype huyine: of el~ic: to type 50 l\'.p.m. &: to take components. Inventoqj 4 dictation at 100 w.p.m. For mat'I control backgrl)und application & infonnation helpful. "•1 contact Personnel O!fice, ~ , 3300 Ne"·port BI v d.. For lntervie\v Ap I Ne\lo·port Beach. 9 2 6 6 0. C11ll 546-4731 ,. 673-6633 .... By June 8th, •1. 1972. Slntie Po11•cr lne.>1• A Subsidiary of tti-'1 Gates Rubber Com)>t,Py Secretary UNION BANK Equal Has a Unique Opportunity For An Experienced Jl:ll:ll:ll SECRETARY STENO CLER I For The Manager Ocean View ~ Of Our Office School District.: She must have good sh .t: $536 Per M ~· typing llkill.!! & e n j o Y Perforn1 a var1ely of ' meeting people. lseC!J"'t!tarial duties. Please Apply Jn P~rson ;,o w.p.m. Sh ~ w Tuesday thru Friday Yrs clerical r.xpe. To Teresa \Valali plicalions must be 610 Ne\lo·port CC'tlter Dr Pet90nl\CI Commiss' Newport Beach 79i2 \Varner Hu Equal Oppor. Employer Beach by Ju~ 9th. • Secretaries • Typists •Trainee Equal Oppor. Em SEWING Machine w/sall making e.'fp, rondl!lons. Top PL'Tmanent &1-e.Je,·allon3, noor plans. etc. FREE. flfusl ha\'f" hE'l'IVY sh Wi!h Npt'<:lal eniphasis In & typlnit tor divi$ion 1ngr. the el't'n~ (If 11iurn bin&' I Off H:lrhor So. $.A. electrk·nl tlrt11ilini;:-. Courtesy Personnel Agency • G•n'l Clerical Varied Openings includf', fil· ing, tuping & !.-ood Cf'.llll· munication )(kill!<:. PACIFIC MUTUAL 1'"ASHION ISLAND <Corner ~nta Cruz A~ Nr\\'port Cent~r Dri\'fl brat!! But, \\'t' stlll lo\.-e her. Cashier /Desk Clerk Jot I.: J\ft. ~1atthe\\'S {\\'\th .•••••••• · ..••.••• $19.65 11hlfl Unlo 76) •· f 1 hlul 1. Busboys 18 It over •. $1.65 hr. n ·~r at L'Cet FEE ApJ)ly In person 11).5 p.m. •2 Fashion Isl., N.B, Equal oppqrtunlty employer Assemblers VOLT Instant Personnel 646-8401 anytime. SEWING Machine men for hand \\"O rk. Temporary Servi1··~ bin Salls, S.10-3684. · \\If' ol!t'.r an 11111r11<1ive starti111 Wnry in acldllion to • llber11.t park:u:c of benefita. Please Call for Appointment. J1ett Joiner OAfNI tlOUSlr\G SYSTEMS, INC. 1i822 Ctllf'tt,. (JNint TndUI. Complt'.'() Sltnta Anl 17141 911-llDO Equal ()ppm-. - TIME F61 QUICK CASH THlOUGH A DAl.Y PILOT WANT AD '4W671 ' I Sullr :i07 Al Chapman & l>IMC'hf:'ltrr, Oni.ngc ( 7141 63"6050 (7141 1354461 Al&o ••• U631E,Artnla.Ann!e. (2131 '14-3W JNTERVIE\\.Jl\'G Tues & \\'ct! 91n1-1pm Thurs & Fri 9an1-l2p1n ON SITE OF OUR N£\Y Bttn.J)JNG PACIFIC MUTUAL J.~ASlllON JSLAl\"'D <Corner Santa Cruz .l * FREE dally b \I s transportation for v.'Orlc tn Lor Allg('!.es WlW mo\'O to Nt\\'pOrt, Stpt. '72. l.JVE-Jn to he.Ip v.·/hskpng A s.ittlng ror elderly lady. Jnfonn1l 1vaterfront houSt".hold. Ov.11 traMp. Pvt. rm & ba. Llbc.rnJ tree rtm.. Pd. \'IC. $150 mo. 592--2546. Nc\\-port Ctnlt'r Ori''') LEGAL Stty, must ""P· Salary open.. t rnEE daily bu s Cherie, 9 10 12 trtMportnOon for .,,-ork in MG--09.;o. LO@ Angetes un1 U mo'~ 10 1---------- Ne\l.'J)Orl. Sep!. 'i2. LOAN UndenTlttr traintt. Nev.,,on Beach llnanci&J i~ Don't 1tlve . up the ahlp! 1tllution needs f!'O!tl&J'I w:ilh "Ult" It ln tl&$11lfjtd, Ship SIL or bankinr baclcatound. to S!'ON Re.sulls! ~ Salary open. R•wme lo From "O\rbtmas Ntcktie.t" CJ-.ltltd ad No. fl3. DaDy 10 oo-Levfl _ ,... can PUQj, P.O. Sox l!ill, Otota turn ••t:ruh to c:uh" tn a Mesa. DAILY PIL(7f' cloal!1td ed f'u1 ...Wta .,. )Ull a ptm» • caJI -Oil! •W111 • - ' uppen haw a pet name for ROY AL SERVICE AGENCY For Restaurl'lnt Personnel her, but the PILOT \\'On't 3001 Redhill Avenue print il. SO.OOO, has been another fUU, eJtciting, rewanlinf: year. \Vlth .spttlal thanks to each It evet)'Ol'IC of you for htlpln& us learn and arow .. LOYE to you aU Esplanade rv, Costa l\fcsa Suite 210 557-2800 PROFESSIONAL p b o n e soild!Or • Dana Polnt. San Clemente, Capiltrano area. WIJl"k ln )'OU? own home. Btst deal in area.. Phone 835-1465 betwten 9: 00 a.m. tnd nooo. Re•I bt•lo c.,..., New « experienced, Join the Company !bl.l's l1'0Wlna. U you cb DOt baw a Uceo., checlt .. ""' ROBINSONS e NEWPORT e BEACH It., npenlno for FOOD PREPARftTION ' •'or Udo BuUit E.'f Ptrienct Preftmd SLEEP SHOP SALESMAN E>tperil!ncM· ' PBX OPERATOR P ltllne -E>tf.>UIU!Ced 2Nltrs6 Sa~ 3M8 Campus Dr., Suite 106 SUNDA y Sehl T , Newport Beach 547-4741. d·-1 1. eac E,.,, .. 1 n...-E ""'"'m na t0ns. • o;=:":=-=:vz~ r. mployer Dance Tchrl tall da ii Host/}lostcss' A wa.i * Secr•lory $SSO Sale• Reps & Yoga ~~>I Sh ~90. type 60+ Some exp. ton ...t. in engineering or technical SINGLES CHA background helpful. 1963 llarbor Blvd, Fl'\l Paid/ Also Fee Joba ~ Service Center Agency SUP=i;ER=:,vtscl="rts,'=-'-1 ~, 426'2 Camp11t Dr., NB prod. ~ Suite !H 557-mt e11en. Boat bida Helen Schatter ttq'd. We wW -MacGrt>pr Y•lchi'fltx-p,j Sec'y Mkt"' to $675 1631 Pla«•lle CM. • I H • • • ave .fOUr own o.c. tn um 'I'ELEPHONJ; top Oigbt Irvine area r.leo-ctnnnl1lakml and =~ !,.~no~~= W tn ptt-. bet"*' \Wrk on own. Top btflf'.Db. and U:Q) nooD •\=:'.'"JI. Call 557"122, Abi(tll Abbot A....,., ~ Pttl6nM1 J.&>e.ncy, 230 \\'. w ....... $111• llOO, 5.A, "'· .).j. 90 'o. nt X, J> gs .,, '" ' • II • ;, , • 2 ' DAILY PILDT 2; .. _,, M01 2'1, nn llAll.V "LOI ::3 ~~~~~·-·~~l[IJJ~I~ .. ~-~ ... ~I~~~ '~I ~. ,~, .. ~~~~! .__ _ .. ·-··_,,Jl~ l~-~ ... ~-~l ~~',!! ~--~,.=~-~i~~I -=-r..::-~ ... ~l~~, ..... M~I f':umiture 111 .............. l!.-........... ,&:n.Ld ii Pl•nos/Ortl•ni IH Dot• 154 UDO II Mo, 31:1,1 lrid--... S.il ... T1l1plioM Solicitors Need U &:irlS immediately, pOOtioQs in Ortna:e c.owity, Santa Fe Sprinp &: N, Orange County. SOFA 8' le loveeat, never Ull'Cb-Both $l!IO. ~·Ina ~machine .J2j. Pri. pty. 968-7910. STERE05 *PIANOS*°RGANS* ""'"' Xlnt cond + Im '!12 CUSl'ON S1ooo r beam, Goi.na Out l 'or BU&lueu KBIALAYA.iV ftm&lt. iltal mtmbership CO Newport'• l'l~r&Lu1 O'Wt' wood , 197:! Genvd equipped \1.'ltb full si:e profe11 t onal c b upr, AM/FM/MPX receiver. 1 e a 1 e d &Ir ~ spe:aken, tape deck 4: head_phooe plq in jacks. Was left unclalmed. Brand new iD box t: ...,..teed, Or1elnllbl prlOr @<I at $219.95. Tale over tor $90 cash or' small paymentL J, a y a w a y Department. n"893r-050L Btst qullity • prica .. .en. point. produC'ts top kittens, nev.'tst .I: filwlt Y•cht Club. 11~ $, kaded w/utru Ka~·Bakhrin. etc CFA f'fl~. A I s 0 $2250. M&-4391. incl. motoftmld di~ey. Just P't4,ytr Pt.ama A Rolls ~rsian kittens and Ptrsian P-CAT No. 277. Xlnt. Trlr. IUl'Yl)'9d at $15,<m. "place-- Apply by ph bh\'11 2-9 pm r.ton·Fri (213) 863-0300/ (TI 4\ \ S:S,,..3058 5 Pc. wicker den/patio aet. Re-upholstered, re--painted. Best otter. SU-7286. Rtntala ••• \Ve 8'0' .. .sen stud tel"Vict. Lots of storaae, North s.u1, mtnt cost. <>w1'wr Ltavtna; Oail,y 10-' Evtt/SUn lUi 89l-2970 see to apptte: i l 2 5 o , for llawa.U. will sacJ!clcc FIELD'S PIANOS JRlSH aen.er pupa, AKC. .l24--0865. for $3,500. BAnk tio&nclnt, Costa Mesa (n4> 645-lti> "GIA.NT'' eokkn fa\\·n I. * L\'T 14, tull racina. ~-Stt at DAM Poirf 11 2 TYPIST $500 \\'ill Train on MI'ST. Xln't benefit!. Local area. Call Zena, 95&-lln), Cal Fair Em· ployment Agency, 9Cl> No. Euclid, SUite A, Anaheim. TYPIST, prime. req. speed le arcurac)', mostly statisUcal. New pl&nt in San Juan Capistrano. Mr. Bo r Ii n, '193-4S81: GULBRANSEN brindk!:, ffivet black. Very trapeu, ne'\Y spinnaker, Mariri.a all \\'ftkwnd. Slip 2 manual. good co n d • reas. 968-0590. trlr $600. $49--0932 c...16 on JsJMd • I d " . G•raee Sale MOVING -Fantastic Garagf! sale. Rare items -Antique decorator it.ems. New dbl bed $el. Duncan Phyfe din- ing Rt and buffet, 1'1cClain J.io\\'tt le edgu. Garden items. Statue, p o t I e d planli, bika !or parts. Furn., rug•, glai5\\o'ar& clothes, solid d o o r • , sur{boards, games, e t c . 20132 Imperial Cove Lane llB 96Z.. 71>97 Sat to Mon. GARAGE Sale': Baby furn .• area rug, dinette, lamps, & misc. 19322 Worchester Ln, H.B. Sat le SUn ll to 5. !&l'.l'itice. $J9j. 67i>-52S2. (nfil&C-6391; £TI4J~7349. GOLDEN !Utriewrs, AKC, "Make Room For Dacf. PRIV.ATE PARTY WANTS TO BUY PIANO FOR CASH, 83&-27111. males, 6 wkl. Of. line. Si;.G. d )'' ', • c I ea n out the Only 2 left. 838-0SM. aara.a;e •• your truh 11 CASlf VENTURE Cat Catamaran, cost $891. r xcf'llf'nt .$650. Schock Sii.bot, p.xl PANELING painted IJ'OOwd 5/8" 20 shetlll. Good for s.id inl: shfflin& or \\'hatever. Some 2x4 and '.\tisc. piect.'I bargain at $80. for all. 549--0530. KEESHONO PUPPIES with • DAILY PILOT \Ve buy Grand Pianos PENNY O\VSLEY 892...J.n4 Ul52 Beach Blvd. Stanton Open :.temortat Day AKC, J 1emale&. 1 male, 6 Classlled ad. S95. ~2381 . "':b. Call 833--3531 ews I '""'ut-,_o-s.-U~Nd---~990= Autos. Used OJ,DE~-~f'dl,pu~.Ch,,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii UPHOLSI'ERY Seamstress Trainee. Apply Johansen & Chri•tenSt"n, 898 \V. 16th (Comer 16th It Monrovia) N.B. S4S-746l. WANTED i.lce_ns~ La nd Salesm•n \\'e Offer • Fully vested contract • 25% commission • Comm. paid by Trustee • 2h Acre Subdivisions • White reports M.H. Cook. &: A51lOC.·. 673-7374 WOMAN. neat, energetic, niotel maid work. Laguna · Bch. ttsort. 494-1196 WORKING mother wants rcliatlle v.·oman or mature girl for 1 child. Penn pos. Call aft 5:30 968-8637. YOUNG MAN to Anis! Maintena nce Ma n , must b1 neat, 1ffici1nt & reliable. $1 .75 hour. c.11 54&r5D25, XLNT Oppor. Na1'I Concern has openings for route salesmen in C.l\t. 962--0416. Chrome Porsche whl1, 5~Z x 15J S1S ett. lisa.bold Items, models, ,i:nany more. 1 Pl\1 to 5 PM; 319 Cedar St. NB 642-0031. Jewelry 115 J E \V E L R Y • ba.nkruptcy stock. Must aelL ~75% oil Variety of international set· t1np. PreclouE atones. Avail -on diatre.u .aa1L ~'15%1. 2 Antique woman's dia- mond rings, $99. & $55. 1 blue diamond, 14 K $350. (213) 592-3217. Machinery "' OXYGEN -Acetylene - weldin&: and cutting outfit. $79.95. AC ARC v.'dder . 22) amj;t1. $95 827-3040. Miscellaneous 111 STEREO: Unelaimed TICKTOCKER THRIFT SHOP EAST Remodeling Sale. Everythlnf must go. Starla: Tues, May XI, 120 E. 19tb St. C.M. BOOKSHELVF.S and 2 SMALL DESKS suitable for extra storage space in your garage. 1212 So. Ron St., Santa Ana. 542-3120 EXTENSION and ST E P LADDERS, all sizes WOOD ONLY Price ttducal for QUICK SALE 1212 So. Ross St., Santa Ana, 547-3120. NE\V blue floral print full sofa bed. Cost $m«ll $a). AM/FM ste~ for Pinto. 165. Harry 673-7799 ELECTRIC FANS 1212 So, RDu St., Santa Ana 5'2r311'l USED BICYCLES All types, large selections • 642-1272. A.B. DICK MODEL 320 Top Cond. $495. 6'U983 TV, Radio, ttlFI, Stor'oo 1972 CLOSEOUT sale. on Zenith It RCA TV's in full swing. Lowest prices of the year on all '72 models. Full Rlection if you buy now! Priced below I h e dis- rounters & \\•ith 3 yr picture tubf' & l yr parts &: service: 2j.. color 1..'0IUOles from $425. 19" ChromocoJor or LX-100 $399. 18" color portables S2!.i9. ABC Color TV. 9021 Atlanla, Hun- tington ~ch, 96S-3329. \\'e quote phone prices. PVT ply -a pair of ne1v \Vharfdale speakers, sold $303, take $ll5 cash. Also ne\v blank cassette tapes, sold $55/doz.. take $12/doz. 534-1148. 5' l\1otorola console stereo Ml/FM radio. $75. Xlni mnd. 548·2941. SPEAKER system/I, !hipping damage ro boxes & packing only. 6" 1-\\·ay to 15" J.way Miscellaneous air suspension s y 1tem1 . WantR 120 50% (lU rei. retail. 5 Year ----------.guarantee. 892-U9L sire. Show/pet. P.Jpatcd, Reu. 837-9736. "lJKE a teddy bear" i\ia1e, NO&'Wt!fian Elk Hound - Husky combinaUon, 12 wits old. $50. 962-8118. LABRADOR R e tre i v e.r, AKC, ftlil. quality poppies. Call 557-6219 aft 3 pm. Have !hota, SC"HNAUZER pups, hsebroken, mots, 1room " sttid serv. avail. Tenna 846-11639. GREAT Dane \\'kS -Sho\V Brindle/la Yin. 979-01~. puppie~ -5 Quali ty. All • 1t* OLD ENGLISH SHEEP ·c)Oi !fnWe, 4 mo1. Call 557-4848 after ti pm Horn • 15' BEAUT. Purebred Arab $ho\v Horse, Hackney Pony & Quarter Ho~. CaU for appt. ~7. 13 yr, old Ray thoroughbred Mare • $275. Gentle-Tack avail. Call Sat. le Sun. m-4847, Boats/ Morino Equip, layaway, Garrud • speed *Wanted Dead* STEREO ]~ changer, air suspension Complete syilems, 20 to 401/f MERCURY 50 and 120 HP ~ speakers \vith mu J ti p I e Aluminwn cans that have oU rea. r etail. Speaker sys-Props. Also WTn P ·a.round ----··--~~~ 1 c r 0 s s -o v e r network, served you \veil & provided terns. 35 to 50% oU reg. windshield for boat. New • A1'f/FM/MPX radio and hours of pleuqre. RUN!!! retail. 7804 Wesbninster l -'>1_9--0530~·~,~~=-,,,,-:c-- ,- 800 tape deck. Still brand ne\Y, to 1060 Glenneyre St., La-Ave., Westminster. 892-7952. (2) Chris Craft 6's Originally $419.97, pa.y off guna Beach. No glas1 what· GARRARD stereo, wired tor 'vHh tranamiuiona UNIQUE •law-looted small balan"e ,.., 1'19788 or soever accepted. .,,,~ "'"' """'" '" ._ "' ,.~ . TV; dark woad, a\'OCado ..,;;>J .,..o-.. .w.l ba!hlubs, 1925 era. Also 1925 payments of $8.25 monthly. CHARACTER boat motk>n velvet inserts. Like new. panf!led doors. 494-74.!2. U S A .5tett0 Equip. picture: footage wanted for •""" ~u .... .., .. 1:. ~t1,Pewer -"''-'-===~--1 7 s ~· ~ a1•., pm. ANTIQUES 'Warehouse, 179 E. 1 th t., viewing. Call Newpo rt· l7' BOSTON Whaler 100 hp in Garage. ti73-36!lS eoSta -MHa. 645-2442. Harlxlr Oamber of Com-COLOR TV $95. 21'' TV $29. nu boUom paint & wriring, \VAS No\v merce 61~ 19" port. w/stand $39. All nian .. xtras. make otr. Art OVER 200 wuhen, dryen, lnt d 557 3993 'v T•, ~ ~--k !2 spd) 1100 I 50 Muslcal lnatrum•nt• m •'••""•"··-·,··· iiiiii I Or Jim 67f>--0500/67S-8m. J"{;1rii:;:erators from $.~!l.9.i """' ~ 54.>-0780. 100 \V, Ampl!r $275 $ 95 FENDER Speaker box. 2.Jj" 41 FT. Chris Craft lri-cabin R.nt W •• hers/Oryirs Dry copy mach $275 $ 50 J 8 LS. Sl50 ]{I dbl. plank mabog. beauty! Wood Piao er $750 $330 1 ·=· ~·-· _· ~~-" ·~~_9.'., ____ 1 ~--'-"_'_"_v_""_~ Comp. reccnd .. loaded wilh $2. Wk. Full main!. .,...,....,, . 6J9.l202 open 9 to 5 \Vttkdays extras. $24,000. Priv. ply. * * NEWPORT ORGANS Office Furniture/ 3 Linn, 2 Times, $2.00 213: 435-2962 213:471-7493 REFRIGERATOR, 2 Dr. S46 Production Pl., NB Equip. 124 16, \Viiard w/flJ hp Mere A: ~u~~~; b-45-1 530 sr. Bernard, t:eniale. 3 trailer. Boat fre s hly *, Au'l'TIQ· N *-months old. AKC. All lhota. To a qua.li~~ home. Btaut palnted. Motor has recent .~pPli~~.·· I02 WESTINGHOUSE Washer & dryer. Can be med aa stack or side by side. Checked & serviced with in last 30 days. Like new condition, moving, phooe. 546-1224. 1'lA Y1' AG repairman has washers $35. to $100. Can deliver wn yr. ilJBm. 839-1778. ELECI'RIC washer & Dryer. \Vhite. excellent condition. Private party 979-2500 or 97~7245 ask for Casey. REFRIG., very clean, shell in door, $60. 71 3 O W es tm i n st er Ave . Westminster. Furniture 810 QUEEN size hide-a-bed, $110. 5 dra"·cr chest, SU. 1\pt. stove, $35. Naugahyde chair & ottoman, $35. 64>2749. TABLE, ped/wht, 4 bh\Ck 'chrll, $75. Buffet-wa!dut while top, $65. Hanging lamp-l\1ed style. $40. 557-8820 Sofa 8' Loveseat, never used. Both S150. Sewing mach. $25. Pri pty. 968-1910. 4 PIECE sectional · bei~ · Dark \\"ood coffee !bl-all In excel cond. See to 11.p. G ialf!. 64Z..262ii. e something you wtlflt to sell? Classified ads do it well -call NOW 642-5678. 940 ._ ~-_......._ 534--a&l marked kittens. S wks-box majoT ~p. S'S 5·0 . r. F.Bto-Furniture lr::==°""';,;_;,'-,.;=..-i:-" le outaide 'trained. Long ()r ~2279. · • Applla"--'fBM tlec. eiec.' "fYPiWrlter, shrt hai .. uo t1111., o~ .. .1.ui., .::.::..::=-,-..,~"°'~__,,,., • '"'"'" ' .... ~. ~. 18° CAUFORNIA 1/0 with xlnt . rond, pri pty: $350, W Au'ctiod. ru; FriA"day,t•7:30 p9.m. 962-416'1. GERMAN Shepherd puppies, skis, top, cover. Lesa than 1 an y s uc ton arn """=""'----~-,,I canoot keep. free to iood year old. Mint eond. $2895. mISH Setter pup, male, 12 ho -"790 :m5\I N--, CM 646-8686 mes. ~ · 546-5107. ,.w.,...•• v:ks, shots. lbow qU&). Hunt ~'-:'="'o::-~,.,,,,==:-:: Behind Tony's Bldg Mat'I Bch ~· 4 BEAUTIFUL kit I e ns, 30' T/S Chri!. Immaculate *~ Carat Diamond ring. "·eaned & box trained, 7 $6500 or trade for P.U. cam- Tiffany setting. $250. Al!IO Pianos/Or91n1 126 ,.,,ks old. 557-6833 aft 5 pm. per, traill'r or ?. (C:learJ bride le groom's matching * Clearance 1 Female Calico Iona: hair. 962-4283. "·edcling bands • if you "'ish. 3 months old. Black, Red, =13~' -Bo=-..,,,_n-,Wh=-a71•"r-, -40;;;-r;:h~p FOR FREE!! Bill of sale & Sale * Brown, \vhite, Call 646-4268 Johnton, cover &: Bimlni guarantee-available • Set Of over stocked trade-ina. after 2 p.01. top. $1100. 546-1315 aft 5. bought in Costa Mesa. Call • ORGANS e 72 ~K1=1=·1"·EN"-=s-~1-gr_e_y-~'""'1""n"'uJJy°"' 27' flybridge Cruis1r 546-5TIO aft 6 & "'knds. Orcoa Chord $149 cinnamon & w h i t e . Loaded with extras. $5500. Pool tbl 4 yes old,marble lDwrey Holidoy $495 640848. Call """""' (n4l 493,4988 bed, ~mpire 8 model, by B~dwln Db' $595 ~~~~~~~~~~I Fisher 8' 4" by 4' 9". Tn· 1-tammond Z..13 $745 ; Jl\1MAC. 1968 35' Concorde eludes balls. 8 cues, wall GulbranSen con!IOle I ][~) FB exp. liberglass, onan, dbl blk ht . 25 ---'1.1. w/Le1lie $1,495 P'tt1" SuppMttt stem room & shower, racks, e wroug iron u--~Co . roomy·klw hrs-worth $32,950. overhead lamps. Orig $875. .....,,uuond moles I ;mmmmmiiii;;~~ Will entertain all otrera. Now,. $4?(1, 646-1270 aft 7 pm. 2J pedab from $1,695 [I 2500 w. Coaat Hi.a"hway, .... t e PIANOS e Cats 152 Z..ICLANE 2 hp awn Cable Bungalow $395 ',;N;,:ewpor::;:;:.,'·""',--,,;:---::::;r::= mower $150. Mcl.ane him t\ HThlALAYAN female, seal r ·18 KELSON ••b•·n .. -·iser edg •« »•th ll 1 Baldwin make Splnet $495 prod kl -"• er ..,.,, uv cxce en . Weber Console $795 point, uces top t~ w/trailer. Twin Johnt0n 35 Ni agar a cyclo--massage, G-·ds lrom 1695 tens, CFA r egistered. Also hp o/b. Nf:'Wly palnled & like new $65 548-2381 ·-· perslan kltteru1 and per-. · Kimball Fr. prov, s ian stud service. upholstered, a/s radio &· POOL table, antique J>lyle, Grand Sl,ol9S 892•2970 many extras. $1 ,300 or 4:<8 slate. $325. Will deliver Bank T-s _ nearest ·ouer. 54&-1503. o.,.. o 2 ~•11 SIA!\1ESE Sealpoint kittens tree. o.><>-0lO · Trade~ Welcom~ $10. t--a. Call after 2 pm. Boat1, Rent/Chart'r 908 CARPET FOR SALE COAST MUSIC 644>Z781. by Carpet Layer. call Newport Blvd. at Harlxlr 154 • 5'i6-5145 • 540-2086 Costa. J.Iesa 642.2851 Dogs ~----~--~ MEMBERSHIP' in 1. )ta.ding Open SUnday 12 to 5 pm St. &mud. Fem. 1 yr N.B. Pvt'. 90Clal club for GOULD MUSIC CO, Rough roaL 963-3731 ' sale. P.O. Box 296, Costa PRESENTS $75 or best offer Mesa, Ca. 92626. LARRY ROOU \VELSH Corgi Pinbrook- 1 Couch $65, chr .l ottoman Premiering the spectaculor A.KC -1 male/3 fem. $35, drum set $25, Perl New Conn Organs 546-4928. cond. 675-5577. Sunda.y, June 4, 2:30 pm Motor Homes 940 at Ebell Club of Santa Ana 625 French St.rfft SHELTIES, 6 wkl!, beautiful. - 968-7056 AKC, 65' Schoi>ntr "Kelpie" now avail. for charter. 2 0 Guest-$260 Per Day. Lar&er groups for cock1ail parties, · etc. !Mpeet wkdy1 at Dry Dock Restaurant or phone · 548-4192. Eve!. 548-i039. GUNS accepted in tn.de Pt'ntax Yalhka S . L . R . , enlarger S15, slide proj. lakes both 35 le 2%.. 7752 Belgrave Ave., G.G., Bch. I: Che.pm.an, Sat.~Mon. BRAND NEW Free admission prizes, Jun. • * * * * IRISH Setter pupt1. American Field Reg. Male/female. ShoU. $85/$90, 673-00SS aft 6. Sell the old stuff. Buy the new 1tutt HAVE BOAT -WILL TRAVEL '72 CHEVY VAN Travco Family W~gon Great for weekend cimping tind fainTiy fun, 'Sleeps fo ur, Has fli p dinette, c:-arp-.t, - dual batteries with swit~h but ane stove, ice box, tw o large slider win dows (#MIOBj Holiday Special --~--· 55554°2 DANMA -R ' MOTOR HOMES ' SALES -SIRVICE -RINTAL 13'01 HARBOit, GAROEN GROVE NPI 11 G, G, Oatsun 939,7000 l\1r. Roou conducta (ttt work- lhop in our ttore 10 am Monday June 5. Ca11 for reservation. GOULD MUSIC CO. 2045 No, l\lain, S.A. 547.-06& * 1r Since 19ll *AnENTION * ORGAN BU FFS ! WAS NOW E1ec Marimba S 395 $275 Eloc-Glock I 2ro 1!90 Oreb Bell• $ 210 $110 Sleigh Bells $ 750 $.145 e>rean Harp $1000 $500 Theater C.ons $ 950 $550 O.urch eons s 550 sm Spinet organ S 750 $345 Open 9-5 \\'eekd~ N~WPORT ORGANS SIS Prodll<:tian Pl., N.B. 645, I S)D CX)RRAI,f)onia or borM' $» to 125. mo, No feedJna, -* HIGHEST CASH PAID* COAST MU SIC r ... ,...,_,~ IOJu-Upc!lhlirGrandL so,- Sport filhinc Cruising 646-9000 644-8211 Autos, Imported 970Autos, lmportod All '72 Models • SAVE • 52399 SUND NIW '71 SrlTfil! 970 WE'RE MOVING UNBEATABLE PRICES UNBEATABLE SAVINGS EVERY CAR MUST GO BY JUNE 10 '64 OOOG E 6 $895 ,ickup 1Nt -477t) Ut!llty l•x '69 DODGE POLARA $695 '4'40 E11g. IDK-41Lt12l-4 56lJI '63 ~~'EVY BELAIR $395 IJMH11ll $365 '63 DOOGE SEO, · \I.I. ft1d i1, H11!1r, Aut1. • T1111 .• (tlf~-4lll · '67 '70 $565 ~~y~.~~~~.~.-~~odio, $1094 H••f1t, Aul• Tt•111., ,ow11 Si••ti119, Pow•r lr1k11, H1w DOOGE CORONET Air co11d., 1uto. lr1,.1. fWK-4 1F711922 71 l P1 i11t l111id1 111d Out. I PK-41KOOl2'40•ll I 65 ~~.L',~.~.~ ~-~:::,W•g, $595 '72 OUNE BUGGY IDLRt'4lS > "62 FORD Econo V•n • N11 P•l11t, lu , r .... 11 .. , 1s!201s 1 '16· ·2· ,. ·EcONOLINE · .\IAH. $\lv•r-Purp\11 ri11 Stri p••· llio611ll} '62 '64 '56 '67 '67 '67 '67 '65 ECONOLINE Picku p, S"•tp Rid, Util ity l oit !OAR1•7l ECONOLINE Wl11dow \1111. l lu• I l lu1 I Wh it1. 1r1 1t66J T2BIRO AT, PW, Nu C"rome. L111d1u I NSUl l •I CAO, Cpo, D•Vlll1 Y1llow w/l lk L111d1 u, Full Power, Low Mil11 IKNNI Ol l CADILLAC pow1r, l11!"1t, oir, L111d 1u. IO l lAEKI CAOILLAC S1il 111 D1 Villi 4 Dr, I Ju1 w/Whll1 l o11d1u IUPK-4701 CADILLAC S1il 111 D1\lllle. Full pow1r, •ir co11dilioni11,. l lu w/lo11d1u, !XWTt7tl CADILLAC S1d111 De Ville INWS71t ! $995 $1295 $11'.45 '795 $1095' $1995 $1995 '1895 $1795 $1745 $1095 .,6. 7· ~!?.'~~~,~. . '1795 'Y,•ll•w Fi11i•"· S"•rp IVArJOl) '66 ·''64 ~~~!~~~~ '"" ..... , $109·5 Air. ISZH4lll ECONOLINE Pi<~up $895 lh1e. I Nt5077 I I 66 'f~o~"V•n $1698 '62 '65 '64 '63 '62 '56 ECONOLINE $1295 VAN. l o.,tifol ,..,, fi,;,,, p11teled rv9. I L-455]') ECONOLIN E VAN. Curt1i111, rut . • Mutt 111. 111:62754 1 !CONOLINE Pickup FORO W•gon Shorp, Full ,ow1r, Air C•H· IFM$iltl . IMPALA 4 Dr., Auto. Tr1111 .. Air Conil. ILVf.Sltl MERCURY COUPI Auto. Tr•"''·· Nie• C11. 1,lU-4561 '1495 $895 $365 $395 $299 '69 l'L YMOUT H 4-Dr, Auto, Tr1fi1., Air, N11 ••l11f, llK41ftAl2-41f l) $1090 ~~ 2100 HARBOR I LVO. COSTA MI SA ' .. DAILY PILOT 28 DAIL V PILOT I ~ I~ I ...::-~ 1~1 1 1""-'""" ~ .___[ ,_,-_ .. 1oo_)[i] I ~"4'"""" '~'I''--___ ,,, .... ___,,~ I _.,_ 1§],._I ;;;A"";;; ...... ;;:;]§1~~,1 '-A;;;""";;;"".,:1§1~-: 11oor., sllp.,BOCL. $18 1 1_ _ loafs, Sall tOt * • SLIP for largt bout 36-40 Campers, Sale/Rent 920 Cycles, Blkei, ;M:;;::;:RR;;w-;:rnn:;;;"°n;;,l!°"=ne:'..!B~ug'.!!1·::'"!....-.....:"":: True.ks "2 Aut04, Import.ct '70 Autos, Imported'• 17' IJWEOISJI •""1>· si .. ,.... ft. Atta-blwn """'°" • '65 ,..,,. 2jO "' T. r..... Scool•rt '15 PACE-ARROW •• Ot!NOOK '71 D B --.. 8-AN_K_REPO ____ .. __ ALFA ROMEO DATSUN Jnbo&td 4 Nf!W M-111. $5000. Jt>ll)'. 673--6100. w/81.~' Cttbovrr Wrnwny'11 --------All top brands ' • D*°'1nt une uggy 1969 Dodie 300 aluminum AvtTf ti'fs.-8900. SA1LBO~T SLfPS ca.ml)f'r un i!. 4 'pr.ti!. R/.H CO". ·p~ ~ENDARE'°'aui• n. price ' · IMMEDIATE DE· Ju.rniture van. 8'x12'x7'. Full -v ----x 000 I "' ~· YU' LIVERY .. ' Bia: engine, new top, fun car. Alfa Romeo '72 w' UONG """"'· Cabin. N""llOrt Jlndl "11i-:/25.1 In! rood. >I, m . $1995. Top end, bot•-and BEACH CITY DODGE all do o,..nlog ,.., doon. Good -'71 240 z Beau11ruJ t-nndltlon S1200. 548--0.116. ..,,., Take trade or •m wn cond. Call opening rear 4!M.41i96 or 675-3334. Bo•t•, s-td & Ski fll l'Rl'b$, new clutch. wHI fin~ Pvt Pty (943-2000 -'70 Dotlge Cll.llom Sport11mbn f{urt'! tx(-eJlent. SZO E'TP). 546-8736 alt 10 am. doors. Good cond. Call 4 ipd dlr canaryyelloW, pJ Botts, Sflp1/0ock1 910 13' 6ollton Whaler, 40 hp hw, alr cond. 8 Cyt . lo &lfl...9076. uk for Tom. ~un~~':r~nBoi:1:;:ro 494-6811. Robert PQpe US National Jol' ·-n, ,,1 __ ,1111 , •lar>, m1'ii:, nu 11rP~. xln't 1..'tlnd. --1 =-~----~9= Bank-1843 Newport C1i1, ""'' . "" ., • $.U)). ~,1~1J2. 1970 HONDA 175 1714) MO-~ Trucks 62 64G-329L blk. interior, maa .,: C"'1 · Now I S 0 ""' & .... ....,.w, low N T CK sacritk•! E'J'8(189. 516- CHOICE •llp1 ln l)fw Marina tor ~10 it. butJIA. VllnHOn lilt traller. Many .'<lnt cond, 3,300.mllei. Slrf!t~t __ .c:.:::....:.==--l-=_,.,=-,"":'o'.-:-- xtmJ. N .. w "70. si .. ...,, 0.11, r11o1 wani """ have "'"'"bike s<00. c.u u"'" *Marvin Pearce* '67 FORD F· 100 llf.H Ford ,. t9n truck. Runs For Immediate 673.oaMI. Autot, Imported "'ell, $200. 2~6 Viejo, Laguna Delivery Beach. Instant Credit Auto LoHlnn 964 BANK FINANCING 841111 offer. 675-.~. / tiargatn1 galore. _ 546-4478. t7o Auto•. Imported 970 Au1v-1mpor1od 970 -Moro GUZZI 1910 Motor Homes $1399 lrade Up Summertime is the right tim1 to put yourself in • better a uto· moblle. G•rden Grove Oetsun he• just the car for you som•· where on our l1r91 lot. The 1el1ction is great end the prices ere right. Stop in today and get the deal you've been waifing lo" " '68 PORSCHE"' •·1•-11'" 1 '"" $3372 Co1ulltle•, IWJU7721 '68 EL CAMINO A~~·i:-:· $1672 120J~lel) '68 BUICK LE SABRE 4.~';. $1272 Air Co11d. IYHF1091 '71 DATSUN .... M ... -... Ntw ID06t001 $3772 '&.. SUNBEAM "tr: ... 11 Cl•••• $372 '69 DATSlplN .-:~~~!',... IXTHt241 $1072 '70 DATSUN ' ... lfl6AGYllh•••' $1172 '71 CAPRI c:~~ .. 1ott1YP1 $2472 '69 DATSUN ............ HI( 4 1p4. I ltlAPWI $1072 70 LANDCRUISER • w~-;:.~~;" j2472 . 14l1AYGJ '66 YW IUS. I ,_,.., I• 11VUt70) '71 DATSUN "00 " ... ~ c, ... , , 41p4. ftl41ZTI $1172 $1572 '69 DATSUN.-:~~~~ ....... OCAVI $1172 '66 DATSUN ........ IHll1Nf thr. #JOJtJ $972 'J'"J(k:r·, 3,500 mi'a. }'alrlnJ 11addleh11.g1. Any rea.s. oUer. Ken, 67Hi060. HONDA SL JOO 1970 very low Sales • Rentals 558°3222 mileagr 111.rf'i't or dlrl. Blue 1411 S, V!Uage \Vay, S.A. sm. 5'9--0'>''°· TEST DRIVE Honda loo, 2800 mi, THE MIDAS MINI 1.100. • '16-7382 MOTOR HOME '11 SUzuki 500 cc. Xlnt cone!., Distributed by all orJg. 1tortd 2 mo. $600. Ken Craft Products 4>~319'. CREVIER MOTORS • i\fnil-'O . '611 . :-l60 c.c. 208 W. ls! SI., Santa Ana Excel co nd. $42.l. 135-3171' 8.18-!r.,51 1 • Nl':\V 23' Luxucy M..H_. Long bed, V·8, 3 speed, R&H, (V#l.4!1). Mike McCarthy GMC TRUCKS . con. BEACH & McFADDEN WFSI'MINS"I'ER 893-1336 531·2450 '65 DODGE ~ ton $1199 'jO Ka1vasa ki ril(} rvtark 111. rental. Air, loaded! Best Trade for t•ar or l 795. 3000 ra1e1 po11ible. Pvt Pty. Pickup, V-8, 4 speed, R&ll, mi. new. &17-7724. I =""'~13_97_·~~~--(54626-11 . '" nu1t.co-E1 Baodilo 360, Trollor1, Trovol 945 Mike McCarthy Xlnl cond, nu motor. $575. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I 548-1610. .=-c~~~-1971 Su7.uk i 185. 4000 mi le!!. SJ7j, 673-4228 TWO 100 cc Yamaha11, 3 blke truilt r. ~lit J'.iller, 132:9 San· liB.JrO, N.B. NEW 1971 19' with rear dual v.•heels. Special at 11195 SCOTTS CAMPERS m _N. l:lnbor Blvj:I. Santa ~na Truck Center l5550 Beach Blvd., Westminster 894·1336 894·3341 TRUCK · Jllllman (Commer) Van • 1962 1212 So. Ross St. Santa Ana ~2-3l:D Motor Homes '64 Ford F-500, l ~t tons, dual 940 e ARISTOCRATS whls. 8xl2 van body. New --------e NEWPORTS eng, l2195. Bkr 646-3242. • AUT().MATES 1967 Chevy 1~ ton truck ~~ra~ ~ PIS, radio, 'good 8hape'. 2709 W. 17th Street Days, 548-8491, eve 673-7259. ----·----COAST 4 DR, 4 spd. dl'i_ low 1)1ile Radio, heat!" (#33 $2'34.9 full priet", \Vilt tinan ILEASINGj pvt. ply, 546-8736 ait n Try our itiase expert.I for IM PORTS '~ Wgn, 510 Savings • Satisfaclloo • Ser· N.ck, Sharp! $1100. • .. --"~ vice. ol"r. 646-7320. WE LEASE ALL POPULAR 1000.1200 \V. Pacific Cst. lf"''Y· • 1972 l\1AKES AT COMPETI· Newport Beach (TI4) 642,0406 1967 Datsun Roadster 1 11VE RATES. I Alfa Romeo Good cood. lh.v blue book. r Call Malcolm Reld for 1=53&-~73753~·~~=~--I further der11ils. ·n~s 240Z. ()rg/Blk inter, 1 THEODORE 14,000 n1i 's, air/mags. lm-' ROBINS FORD mac. $4450 firm . 645-4940. ' atOO Harbor Blvd. '67 Datsun 1600: 4 dr Sdn • COila 11esa 642·0010 Good rond. $450/bst .tr. Autos Wanted 968 WE buy all makes of clean used sports cars, paid for or not. Please drive in for free appraisal. NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. Coast H\vy., Newport Beach 642·9405 WE PAY"TOP CASH 548-1610. '70 DATSUN p.u. NO\V ON DISPLAY Air/cond. Sheil camper. Sa.Jell Servfce Lo mileage. 979-8738 PartCoAST JMP~'Ti11op D~TS~N 240, .$4.444. Must \ sell, unmac .. air cond., mq 1000.1200 \V. Coast 1-hvy. whls., fact xt.ras, 492--2512. I Newport Beach 642-0406 AUDI FERRARI AUSTIN AMERICA 'G9 Ferrari. ""' GT,.• + '· ' silver, AM /Flit, air, full . '68 Austin America a ! P\Yr., ne\V Michelin, n•:' 'I radials. Xlnt cond'. ~9~'. 675-6410, early morning. Call ~3743 .. JAGUAR BMW ''BILL WHITLIDGES'' Santa Ana 111•1 531.2595 '69 CHM C30 l ton FOR rent. 17~~· sell cont. b used can I trucks, tiat IMMEDIATE DELIVERY SUNSET MOTORS · 1 Taking summer reserva· $2688 tall ua f~ frff Htimates. ORANGE <X>UNTY .~' q <loos. 962-78118 alt.r Su"d•y. GROTH CHEVROLET 0 LOCATION 13631 Harbor, Carden Grove Auto Service, Parts 949 Flat bt'd, 4 speed, R&H, '71 XJ6 1 Blk. So. ot G.G. Frv.-y. (383l 7CJ. Aak Jor Sa.Jes Manaa:er Sedan. Full luxµry ~uil~l,ljj 636-2333 , m. m Mike McCarthy = s.ao• Blvd. SEE us ABOUT 1oo1utliog air. rni1y • • ~S~U~N~S~E..::T;.: M_O_T_O_R_S. o '·!~' . . ~ ' ' M'l-~uotlnatoo Be~b 9-33ll OvertHI Delivery piec.. Low mil•aa• ' ' Now JS' Eldorado MINI r ~rurr'I!'\" Ge~~-!:A~~K&S WE PAY TOP DOLLAR i,R~_v:.~~ M~~~~! '691~'2 XKE '1 MOTOR llOl\fE. Fully !!CU ~· McFADDEN FOR TOP USED CARS 135-3171 l-'On!ainf'rl. #21.1207, Goodyear. , Blema, all sizes, onA.1.,, 531 ... A~" It your car is extra clean, 1---,,,.,,-=:::.:.:.:. ___ f Automatic trans, factory air, ) $6995 ,__ u S 1 ..... a.rs ,},;Q Qt;N Visit our 1ic!1v home! AM/FM Tadio, wire Wheels,· 1 • ww prices. : • n...,. mags, ~~===-,,..,.:;::.= sec us first. I Compl<'I~ line or El Dorado Crager American from '70 DODGE % tOR BAUER BUlC!{ 0 only 22,000 miles, Local l , : <"llmpers, chassis mounts &: $15.95. Hijackers $34.50 pr. 2925 Harbor Blvd. owner car. YRA821. 5!h wheel trRlle:r. _J4" .Indy matJ fq_r Pinto le $2588 Costa 1i1esa ~79~ $3995 / Phone 64.'J..li677 Vega. S.S. 4 spoke -Pinto IMPORTS w ANTED '64 XKE ~ 1970 HRrbor Blvd., A Vega otf road tires + o c · ROY CARVER, Inc. Cpe, 4 speed, wire wheel&, Costa !\fcsa wheels. All brands from Pickup. V·8, 4 speed. R&lf, ~g~ B~~ 234 E. l?th St. beautiful 1 0\1ner car with CRUISAIRE Ii1otor Homf' on $2'2.50, l950 Newport, Costa <7I04M3f>. BJLL Iif.AXEY TOYOTA Costa Mesa 546-4444 only 34,000 actual miles. Focd 300. 9 mo• new, V-8. Me... 645-3554. 1ke McCarthy 18881 S.och Blvd. '11 " BMW ~2 ( PCT843. auto, ps/Rir cond, AM/flf Cadillac Partg 1959 H. Beach. p~ 8-17-8555 s ~ same 8.!;i I t I il I · Tr '72) J0,000 miles, yellow.' s erl'O ape, o e , a\vn1ng, ansmlssion Recreational Vehicle WIU. Buy your car paid for still under fact wa r r . Phone 645.6677 -::~16 ll,OOO mi. $5500. Radio Center or not. Call Ralph Gordon A~f/FM stereo, perfectly 1970 Harbor Blvd. , . Alr Conditioning Unit COR. BEAcir & ........ """" -•A~ E. Co"' H-. . --· 1~· So R St Sa 1 Ana u1.>'1T.IW ....., .. J ma1nt.a1oi=. $3500 t i rm. Cosio Mos• \1 r.10TOR Hon1C' Rental -wt\y au · oss · n a McFADDEN Newport Beach. , . $lS 542--ll.20 Save almos.t SIOOO. over 1969 JAGUAR XKE. .Coupe invest ,000? Rent o~ -894-1336 531·2450 9 642-731 ' ho • rmiJiini91~~ Aulol Import~ 70 new. a. Ab t 1 ty I"-' : s \v<'r completely fllllip-It's a breezl' .. sell your ' -so u e lA1:' new! j' ped. Avail. most dalel! now ilenu with eue, u~ Daily cnROEN miles. $3,550. Call 6#-4767. 'Ill Sept. 54S,2886 Pilot Claulti«t. 642-5677. ALFA ROMEO . lll;;;11;;--,XKE=o-c-,_=-, -=cc-.-.-,-•. L j Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Citroen Sports Maserati Air/Cond. Wire Wheels -f Orange County headquarters AM/FM • \Vhite w/blk m. for local &: Eu ro Pe an terior. Excel. Con d-. ~ $2495 d<'live.ry. &14-1807. Small can AREN'T lor everyone! * '71 ALFA * * CLEARANCE * * SALE * Jim Slemons Imports l---7.,53~XKl20=~--.J 2201 So. Main, Santa Ana Cl . Fix·" ,_ d 557-5242 Open Sun. ass1c. eu ,,.,.a_ coupe. =~::.,,...~--"':::;:..=I runa very good. ~a. Pboae ·n 24(1..Z, o/s mags & rad. 531-5033 or 893-2544. t )J; Just tbotle who want to save mone1 ! We're not suggesting that every- body buy one of 'our cars •.. just those of you who like comfortable, dependable transportation that will save you money every mile you drive. If you're one of these people, see Harbor Volkswagen today. OPEN SUNDAY Now is the season! We have over 20 VW recreati~nal & buss'es in stock. Plus over 150 new & used VW's. vehicles ___ ... -,, ------- •72 HOflDA MOTORCYCLE 175 ..... $549 ·~1 VW SQUARE8ACK ............ $1995 l .,_J """JOO h'lll1 ..... bsol11tely ~-ry. «81EG ll)O) ' •llftd, W1W, RlH, m1r"'-bl.,., Jutt 1!11.t ..,...,. Wttil"'° $Pf(ltl, CN1Cll l '70 DATSUN PICKUP TRUCK ....... $1750 '61 VW BUG ..................... $249 C~roni. ""'"~· t,lic!IO-lflt ntW. ('41 8Hl) HEEO WOA;I(. (f'YHU•I. '65 KARMANN GHIA .............. $988 Ortll(lt, Radio, H .. ltr, P't <tory A"""llt IEntin<e & TrtM. SN 9'f 1~i.t.1 fJlll 1001 '68 FIAT SPIDER .................. $1088 ~""w ll DO"' (.'Ott!l!t•Ol'l, f.I•• t oo, ()lEY 4%0 1. er1911t Atd w/11'-cile !n~rlor. . ' 69 OPR KADET .................. $695 '65 VW SQUAREBACK ............. $799 ! Ntw ~Ill!, ( '"""· Clll:FF,111 ------'70 VW CUSTOM SUNDIAL CAMPER $2788 G~t fW ..,........, .. (AS AVH. Tflft ........ Mly '66 PORSCHE 912 ................ $2688 -----------'68 VW KOMBI BUS .............. $1795 '63 VW PANEL BUS .............. $1088 <IWt.,1<1\tlcr •"l!•l't. rMI~ •\\Xll .. '. ~l<lmlltf, IEttt~I t'll'ld.. l ......... ~ llCDC:Mfl '68 VW FASTBACK ............... $1295 '68 DODGE YAN ....... ' ........ $2195 • t.OHll, •I• ,_, lill't "'w, I );(l(o;J\V ..:':_c-'c_"'::::'"c_:'"'.:...:.-::::'_:l ... :::_::N::::"1C:). ____________ _ ·~7 OPEL WAGON ................ $688 • ..,...... ,,,.,o.i.te itr, 1.-c-1"""1 N .. u 11vun1 '63 VW BUG ..................... $595 lttou•n MgirN. Goad •lrrt & body. 1111' .-1. Tiiis ....... WllY, --I -------------------- '69 CAMARO 396 SS ............. $1995 '71 !)ODGE COLT WAGON ....... $21B8 • .,...., ti'..l-.,,...._It&~ I~ • l>l.>o:' "'~<tr ~11.IHc..bl $110w -~tt;..,,, t "*°'· t .. ill !WDltl'I, '62 CORVAIR VAN CAMPER ........ $699 '68 FORD GALAXIE .............. $1395 .__...., ...-,i1t ....... COit.' 11t 1 J OW M.T • ......_Ill.I....._, H ll'ljla. twt.G 111} • • Ford '65 Floo PU /VI fat air, 1 01\'lll'r, ex('el cond. KARMANN GHIA '. The 1972's Are Here! S.:1.000. Sat & Sun, &M--015.1, . ..i 4 spd, Long bed. Overloads. 19062L. $1005. Largest Savings Ever On \\'eekdays alt 5. ' All tlodels! This is the --~-----KARMANN Ghia '10,. g:rii " k ' T B y N QUICK CASH conv., good cond, below bk, Jim Slemons Imports 2201 So. Main, Santa Ana 557·5242 Open Sun. * '·10 CHEV. PICK-UP • Xlnt body. $400 "" "'" 0 uy our cw Sl300/ottor, l•avt"" entry Alla ·c'' OAST THROUGH A :;:~N Ghia ·10. "'" .• DAIL y PILOT conv., good '°""· below bit; IMPORTS WANT AD !:~,;::;~: entry, I * Call: 6!>-3331 • Put a little "loot' in )'OOr I Levis • sell tho9e baubles for "bucks". Call Classified 642-5678. 1000-1200 IV. Paclfk Cs!. Hwy. 642°5678 Ne\\'Jl(lrt Beach (714) 642~ .,-.,..-~-""7"~-c= Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 ~iiiiiiiiii• miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~I DEAN LEWIS Jili:ljt.flltffi•lQ;( ~AKKIVIR!ARY 16 YEARS OF VOLUME TOYOTA & VOLVO SALES!! It's our Birthday-But we're 9ivin9 all the GIFTS!! • . DISCOUNTS! DISCOUNTS! DISCOUNTS! No Bicycles, No Gimmicks! Just Plain C'ash Savings! Hundreds of '72 Toyotas & .'72 Volvos and Select Used Cars To Choose Ftom $AVE AS NEVER BEFORE. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY. OPEN MEMORIAL DAY. PHONE 946-9308 D ·EAN LEWIS IMPORTS ORAM6£ COUNTY'S BIGGEST TDYOTA-YllYD DEAi El 19'6 HARBOR BLVD:, COSTA MESA ~6-9303 I • HUNTINGTON BEACH MAZDA · ' •v , HAS OVER 100 ROTARY CARS. IJt STOCK I • ROTARY RX2 ~48J ?1 USID fl211LUI • IMMEDIATE . ' DELIVERY ROTARY WAGONS • PICKUPS • L•fllOll Trod•ln Allowoncn G1_,· • E·Z Flnoncint Av•ll•W•. J Lo. Dn, & Mo. ,.,. • • HUNTINGTON IEAC au''''- ' ' ! I l • I ' ·i i ) ' I l t l • ·: . ' I ) ' ' l • .I I : ' i ' ' ' I l I ' ~ I ' ' ~· DA!LV PILDT ,29 ~~~~~~M~o~•d~111~·~M_AJ!tt~,~191~2~~~~~~!!!!!!~!!!DAl!!!!!!!lV PILDT JIJS !§JI.__ __ --.. -~-~-l§J.11~1:·_ ....... :-:1§1:~ ,I.._ _A>A .. _ ... w.;;;;J;;;~ r _ ...... I~ l ... ~._-_ ... _w.__,l l~l I ""'"''* l§J ;;;;I __ ... _ .. .:l~§J I Ao ....... ' ,_ ~ m~~ m~u~ m~~ ~~~ oo, lmpo<ltd 170 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported i~-MAZ--DA--POR~S-CH-E--1 -TOYO.TA 970 Autos, 970 Autos, Imported ROTARY'S lmrnodlot. O.llvory HUNTlNGTON BEACH '70 Por1cht 911 T Steroo, t.111.is, Private PaJ'ly, °""' 1139-!r.OO, o.Jt • -8.13·3155. RENAULT ' '70 MERCEDES 2SO SEL Sedan. Very lo\\' mileage, Exquisite Tobat{'I) bro\\!\ finish with natural fu!l leather interior, /l()\\'l'r ·:otleering, brakes, electric 1Yin<lows, factory air 1..'0ndlt- ioning. AM·F1'f stereo multi- plrx. AbMlutely shO\\'toom lresh Uiroughout. l538C'l!:l) $7555 ~ Nabers U Cadillcc 2600 .IIARBOR BL., C.'OSTA MESA $43-9100 Open Sunday lOUSED MERCEDES ON DISPLAY NOW Lease New Mercedes $118171 Monthly t!OUSE OF IMPORTS 1862 !ITanchester, Buena Pk l!3-7250 on Santa Ana F1l\·y. Or.in9e County's . L.J1 gesf ~t'IPction Nf'w & u~cd Mer~ed ~·!. Benz .Jim Slemons ·lmps1 W.1rner & ·Main"St . .l S.1nt.:> Ana 546-4114 -·i9 Jl.1BZ 250 sed stlck, R/H, Lo mi., lmmac, 116\\.' f'nginf'. }>/pty. $4700 even. 675-6644. ~19'8-280-SL • \Vhilc·rcd int. Lo1v n1ill'c;, 2 jops-Real ~.uty-pri I ply. $~. Day 547-58,12/Evr 846·2439, MG 19SS ~IGB-GT Wh/blk b/D. \Vire wheels. condition 673-7q45. . MGB int. Xlnt ']2 :\!GB-GT. A~t/FJ\1 st, ~Ire 1vhls. OY<'rdrive. B~sf f.ll<:'f takes. &10--0019 aft 6 m ' * PEUGEOT * ~J fo\v as S2,299. <No. :&15) FRIT-; WARREN'S Spart Car Center e ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST no E. 1st St., S.A. 547--0764 PORSCHE 1957 Por!<che. Top rondition. Cymple"le:y res1orcd~ , * Call 6i3-Sj9'.l * ----'TI 911 T. l\fct. blue, Fully Renault Demo Sale Semi Annual Demonstrator Clearance S•le This Weekend Unboolablo Prices ALL 1972 MODELS IN STOCK FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY INSTANT CREDIT APPROVAL BANK FINANCING COAST IMPORTS 1000-1200 \V. Pacific Cst. flwy. Ne1vporl Bc>ach 1714) 642·0406 Ren-aUlt Sales & Service for over a decade in Orange County Seri•._ D<'pt, Open til 8 p.n1. ~Ionday J in1 S!e1no11s Renault 2201 So. ~Iain, Santa Ana l blk . not·th of Warner Servi<'e ·Departn1ent 546-4114 Sales Depnrtn1e11t S57-5242 R-15 All new '72 Renault Sport Coupe Immediate Delivery Choice of Colors 1''1RST S!IO\VING USA TEST DRIVE Jim Slemons Renault 22DI S. Main 557-5242 SAAB 1'171 SAAB 99E. fll<'I Inject. $2700. or' best ofJer. Like new. 64&-:3546.' SUNBEAM '66 SUNBEA'.\.1 Alpine • as is • $95 or offer. See at 1000 MacArthur, S.A. arter 4:30 or call 5.17-3498, ask for Curry, Ap1. 49. TOYOTA ---'72 TOYOTA $2029 4 speed trans. Dix Aloi radio. lleater, d<'frosters, tinted glass. \\lhite 11:all tirel'i. Pop.out rear windows. Vinyl trim. Carpet.<J. Front disc brakes .• _llcclinill( _ bucket seats. h."E 20-300785'. ;t)WlltW -TOYOTA 1%6 Harbor. C.M. &;tra nice! ~ sJ)('«I, radio, hr:itr>r. rZV"l51!!) $7!:5. HUNTINGTON BEACH CHRYSLER-Pl YMOUTH 1G661 Bf'ach Blvd., 11.B. 54(}.5164 • 842-0631 loa(led; mags, A !\I IF J\f --------- sterro, special f! x h a u s I system. Only 1 mech. & in X.lnt. cond. Days til.3)~9440 ex 261. Nites & '\l.'k~nds 6i!'r~"i5S. 11'1!1 tn R'r\UiS ~"meters Toyota & Jaguar Dealer Authorized Sale!! & Service Vacancies cost mO!'ey! Rent 900 S. Coast Highway your houi:e. a.pl., store ' Laguna Beach 540-3100 bldg., etc. thru a Daily Pilot ror that Jtem unoer SSO. Clas~ified Ad. try the Penny Pincher Autos, Used 990 Autos, UHO '69 To)ltlta cro11.·n Sl299. Absolute top of Toyota llnr. Very clt>an, 6 cyl. Stclan \'QC472 &>l' It • \'011 ·11 buy it. BILL BAXEY TOYOTA lS&Sl Stach Blvd. H. &:tch Ph. 847-8500 '70 TOYOTA WAGON- $1495 SANTA ANA TOYOTA Service Dept, open 7:30 am '1il 9 pni l\Ion.f'rl. 540·5212. 417 \V, \Vanier, Santa Ana , '69 Toyota Corona $1299. Artie \\'hitc sctjan. /ully f'quipped ill('. air rond., auto trans. YCT637. Bill Alaxl'y Tuyo1a llta1tington Bc>ach S1'i·S555. -. -Toyota '71-Corona ·I Dr. Anto Trans, Air Cond, Radio, 1 ownp1· ~6S2DJAl, $1995 J im Slemons Imports 2201 S. i\lnin, Sun1a J\na 5.)7·5242 Open Sun. 'fill Toyota Corona SH!Y.l. Gas Eoonom.v and 101\' pd~. 01·ig. Rudy rc<l finish \VFN1S2. DILL BAXE Y TOYOTA 18881 B~h Bl\'d, ff. Reach Ph. Sli-8555 1967 TOYOTA Corona . .i-t)j. •standard shift. Engine netm rebuilt. S325 or bt>sl offrr. Call uft 7 pm, or \\·eekcnds any!ime, 979-1496 ask for Denn!~. '71 TOYOTA Corolla \\lag. Nc1v tires, xln't cond. Just likl' new. 673-5507. TRIUMPH- *TRIUMPHS* '71 CLOSEOUT SPTTFTRES AS li'l\V AS $2199 GT-6 SAVE $500 FRITZ \VARREN'S Sport Car Center ORANGE COU NT Y'S _ LARGESf TIO E. 1st, S.A. 5-17-0764 VOLKSWAGEN -BUICK--CAMARO CONTINENTAL FORD OLDSMOllLE 'ti-I VW BUJ. S899. Very t'lean, (lr!g. 1 !Ont' cittn paint. lturry for · this one. NSU561. BILL i\IAXF:Y 1'0YO'l'A lS.SSl lk11.ch Ulvd. H. Brach Ph. 8~7-SM3 1970 V\\I \\'estphttlia c:un]X'r. f'op lop, llf'I\' !} X j '.,? ' ' Co!t'1nan Oa:1\s tent, tXl\1' t!l'l'S, ,\'.\J/F.,I ra.d10, new bat!, tunf'up & n1:u\)' nc1v pnrts. 32.'1..Xl. :-,.JG-1819. 100.S V\V Sl:1uarf'bark, clf'an, r:u!lo. new 11•/w tirc.'S. Slf]j, 6-W-lJi~. ----------'71 V\\' BUS -$2400. or best offrr. X!nt conr!. 6-lfi-06.1-1 (Sat & \\•krlys) or 400-J!HS (Sunday) '65 Bus, l'l'pted, paneled, re- blt, 1600 Eng. \\'\de Ovals. Gd t·ond. $112.i 675-~UG. 'B9 V\V bus. !ladio, he-U!l'l". runs 11"<'11. good til'f'S. Sl.1j() or tws1 o(fel'. S".:.3-1016 ---• '63 \1\V e {:ood {~111di!ion $WO. Gi:i-771:~ '67 VV.' Squ:i.reback. mileagt.'. $1,100. J.i.lli·.'.1039 '~ V\V Bug Lo1v Good C'Ondillo11, rlean. $750 * 540--3023 '63 V\V-bug Gooc1-eonchtion $12j, 5-15-4147, 276 Prin- 1011. C,f, '6Gc, ~V\\=' ~,'f~A~.~\~V7AGoo-. - 1!/11. GOOD CONDITION. $900. 952-3822 -------------'liS VOLl(S\VAGEN, J!:OOd condttlon, auto, Clean. Best offer! rJ36-4273. ·~~-~ '62 \\11-IJTE BUG. Xlnt cond. S525. Call after 6 pm; 5j7-9S31. -~~-~­'G:: V\V Bus 11•/'G7 rrUlt cn1:. Good cond. Call after 5 pn1, 6i~~. VOLVO 1972 VOLVO Lease Today at Best Rates '69 IUICK '70 CAMARO '71 eo"""'"141 Mm 111 I ~ijii]ij!ijiTjjifiiij;ii l<w:utt<t, ~ O\\'ntr, prh•nte SKYLARK 350 vs.' ,......i, radio, b.n1tr. ""'"'· m, 499.1r.s1. ll,7l2 Ml LES vlnyl roof, buekOI ..... j961. AVlll. Sl295. Tonucy ..,...... COUGAR lial'tltup <.'UrJ~. B<:aut1tul Otevrolet, 946 S. Coast 1---------- t;0ld with whllle V8top, l.'Ol•I Hwy.. Lftlu.IUl B t & c b . 1968 C'OUGAR 302. 2 bbl, tapestry intt>r or. • luto.. 494-7144/548-9987. auto trans .. lo n11li:o1, vinyl 1)1.l\\'l'r slN>ri11g & hrl\kt'.s,f--=~--~--~ lUp, Xlrit cond. $Jell. Call l'adi\l, hi:ater, \\'S\V t1tts:, ** '67 Cam:n'\'l Con\'l"rllblr. XI I --• 11~ Call -• • 837-1310, after 5 pm . (l.l{'ttl 1 O\\nt·r . tu1peccable • n .......... i. ........,, ~1 o t'Ond. \ 75601...'I 1. pn1. 642-2680. 8JG..262J. $2666 '6.1 CAMARO. •\c, auto, DODGE P/B, PIS. R&ll, J?o.lly "'"""' Nabers U Cadillac :l600 HARBOR l3L., OOST A hJESA ~10·9100 Open Sunday '68 BUICK RIVIERA, luU po\\'f~'. Ill,, rlelln t 01vnr cnr. $200), Pri p1y. 5'J7-89GS. CADILLAC 5"°'" '3l-J089. .,, MONACO CHEVROLET I DI', II. Top, dk., fn<t air, ijijiTii~~ I toadrd, Un1ltr 26,000 nil. ~ L•is~ \Vorlc1 ~Pf'Cl"I (VQC· 4951. Ta.Ice rleart ct\l' or 1 546-8736 a.fl 10 11,nt 494..&'lll . 1969 Dndgf' ClllU'l'.f'r orii(ilu1.l conclitlon. Perff'('I n1ethnnlro.I and body 1h/\rp. \\'ill trl\de tor good older lllltnll ronvrrtlble car St,29.). ~s.-0.\30. F'ORD Fah·lane '70. t.D·o11 nlllta~. LM.dtd. X I n t • $18:,,0, 962-lSM alttr !'11nd11.>. JAVELIN 'SN SST 2 dr. hrd1p, 1\11·, t1.1110. V-!, PIS. P/B, llk11 Nt11'. Sl 1~. Hkr 646-32"2. ---JEEPS 'Gli JEt:I' \\'111ronrtr, 4 "Ill. 1\l'l\'r, It&\\, j"'\N'\10•111 l~uid ., ltn\'lll,i: 1n1l'n. ~lu~t S.'IL J\htkt1 Qlr. (l.l+.:tOlt fi~:i-:1~~\, YOUR ONLY FACTORY AUTHORIZED -~--:c==.--~------PORD '&I &-·out,~ \\'htf"I dt'i\'f', lluul CADILLAC 2 doo1· hal'<ltop. Rndto, heot", DEALER po"'t'r stet1ring, factory nlr, La11;cst aelection ot Cadil· Mt:tJ'a clean. \VBJ267 $1295. lacs In OranI:e County. Tomnly A,yrcs Chevrolet, 946 SaJcs-Leasingo. Look for our S. Coast lh1·y., LRguna full page ads every \Vrd. Beach, 4!M-7744/M6·9967. & F'rlday for our ~pecials. I -=-=-==~~~=~ '67 IMPALA SS 111.11 lnnk~ • p.•~l!rnr1 1011, ,,ff ,71 fORD LTD ri11!,(\ lit~~. Vrry KOOtl ro111! $Im. w1-..u1:1. Jl.T. coupe. Fh1.wl rss nuto-LINC_O_L_N __ _ n1obllr. 18,000 tnl\fls. 1 C)\\'U• u. Sunburst yello\v \\'lth black vinyl •op ,. btook '68 Continental 4 Or lnpestry Interior. \18, auto- n111.tle, powtr .~tf'erlng • dl~c brakf'5, R&ll, "'hire '.l.'RU !Ires, 1.nd nf t'QUl'~e file· tory air c o n d I t I o n I n Q'. (231115), Full Po\\•11r, f11rhll')' nlr, v!nyl l'OOI IGOOB."ll $22'J.\ HUNTINGTON BEACH '69 OLDS DELTA 81 CUstOM 4 l>1·. 11.T. Vinyl ll'lp, beu11llf\1I 11\Pf"lllry h1tcrl(l1', C1u·1111-y Rir l1lt1d., full '"'" 1•r, 4.\'J f'liJ;lnt. LPd lh!IO :?1.000 n1\h11. ?>lu.t ~lt:hm • 1•>.trus. (ZNL.91"1 $2666 • Nabers Cadlllac lGOO lt;\RHOR Ut..., CX>STA i\(f:!'\A, ~1·1()..9100 Op.-11 S1tn•lny '66' JEf STAR-H.T.-Cpe. l,'Hl\ l'nwt•r, Alr C'unl11l11•11111~1. Cl1•nn! l.il1\' n1llt>• t\1 XY · 41):\1 Sfr.K1. T•ill11Hy 1\1n·~ t'l n'\'t\11!•1, !l·lli S. Con,1 !h11 ., L111:1111u llriu•l1 . 4!).1 ii4•1r :~11;.!)!)lil, ;Bf Cutlass-Supreme ~ llr II. Top, tllr. r,u•! 11 !1' k1 nil, OOPOOt l. 'l'nkt' !(1n:l11 1!1>1\'I\, \Vlll flllllll('" l'\'I, l'!,1'. Cn\I 5"6-8i36 Aft 10 •111 491·fi$\1. PLY=M"'""'o"""u=TH -----'68 Fury UI 2 Or HT vi;, uuton111t1r, nlr 1·nn11. ~ Nabers vs. auton1atlc, fartory air, !iii Cadlllac 1101vr~s et'ring, vinyl roof, 2600 IIARBOn BL., buck<' rats <TRA201 I $1 295 . COSTA l\IESA Toin 'l'1•s Chevrolet, 946 540-9100 Open Sunday S. Coasr ~hey.. Ln.gunn $3444 CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH I '"" 1 "" ""''''" '"""" """" 1t1i.;, pc:11\'rr brukrs ~\l':'iN -6-9-----Bench, 4!14-7744/rAQ.9967. ' El Dorado la70 No'" SS Co""'· :!50 vi. Fu!! po\.\·er, fac!ory air rond, Ar--1/F!it stereo, vh1yl top. IYPX303). $3995, HUNTINGTON BEACH CHRYSLER-Pl YMDUTH Aulon1alic .. lrans., factory gauges & TAC!\, Burket &>ats. Vinyl top. Power Disc Brakf'S. S1075. 5.1 1-l:!JR. '61 Chevy \\'agon 11·lth 1S.1 f'nginl' -runs goo<!, Cool! \\'i<ll' ovol ti1,•s. Needs IH~11<! gasket. Good tra:1sport11tion c11r. $~j. G7:>-13-IJ cvc>s t.. 16661 BeRch Blvd .. ll.B. k I 5'W-S1S4 • 842-063l 11• en< s. ==j~~~i1rJ .. fjiif!~I CLASSIC 1970 i\1onte cnrlo, fl eir, stereo, c!ec 1vlnd., bucket scat ~. nrii:; O\\'tw'r, Jo 111llcs. S2S28. 673-37·C1 .Q. Cadillac g Nabers 2600 1-fARJlOR BL., COSTA MESA f..10·9100 <>1)('n Sund11y -----"Hll.L \VllITl,fl)('l·'S" SUNSET MOTORS OllANGE CO\INT\' LCX'AT!O'N · J '71 Country Squl'r. Station W1gon 9 pas!'lengt>I' ~tn!l<in 11·n~or1. Po1vl'r ~l,.l'rinr.:· · Poll'l'r brakes, nir ('OIUJiliQn!ne;, lli661 ArAi·h llh"I .. II.I:. 54-0.~116.a • s.1~ 11"::::1 ·r.~ Coutlnrno1J, ~ll1'f'l' \\'/hlk inter. l.n11flt•1t. ~h111t St'll ln1 · lllf'd. ~42-:171.f. _._ MAVERICK ·n MAVF~ntcl\, Uij.: c. A1n- .. ~n1. p/11, p/h, nir, trln1 Pfl':kngc, :.GOO Jl\I. $219:i Cir l>C'sl <>r!f"r. ~11()...tr~I. MG-SJ5."i MUSTANG BEAUTIFUL! 71111, $~1 . HUNTINGTON BEACH CHRYSLER·Pl YMOUTH Jt;;;(;J L1f>m·h OIY•I .. 11.U. ~ Jl).jJU<I • ~·l'J.OO:l I '64 Spllflre. Xlnl mechaniciil rond. Clean. il1nst sell . 646-7320. $88.74 Per Mo. ----------0 .A.C. A?lt /1'~M. Auto. trlUl9., 1963 Corvnir. P.uns good, $19j Call 536-12!Mi -=~ rAdio. h(lntcr, luJ:~;u:r> rack. lil1Y mileage, lorn\ I O\\'ner, near nc1v. ::56F.1 Ut, $3795 1!llb J\1USTANC 2+2. Thl8 car 18 hntHnt·ulnll', 1vllh ,1 nt>w v.g ci11l(lne, new plllut joh, (done by n f'111·,J denl· l'I'), F"ully P.ilUIJlpl'i l with 4. 11pe1•d lron.~n1is~lon nnrl tach Air con<Ullonr!I, n111g \\'l11'f'l11. ll'.<: •he poJlulri r fn11thn ck n1odrl onli it i~ lx'nutlrul. $900 llrn1. VOLKSWAGEN diwh,alrn•,3G mo. ---------· For Leasing or buying 'GS Cl-IEV lmpnla, 2 dr HT, V-8, autQ, p5/pb, SJ:"iO. 646-5643; 50-1010 Phone 645-6677 1970 Harbar Blvd. 'fl~ CTO (-{I~ t<n,;:uH'. vh1yl top, lnr,tory 111r, fnct11ry JllllSI' wlwr'l1 !1v11l1 /(J('klll 37,000 011\rit, ?.l11 x X. 1irr11. llf•nutUul 1•f'ltul. $1r,oo or \.itl~t ofter. 82ti-.1256, V\V 1900 CC e 133 hp e 3100 1ni on ne\\· enc::. Bit hy G('ne Berg. Fiberglass hoods & fenders -Goodyear & l\1ags. Pri n\\'ner. ~lake reas. of- ff'r. 673-3512. '68 VW Fast Back excel. cond. light blue black inter. Jesg than 100 MUes on new engl'1e $1,150 PriY. party 645-o5073. • '67 'f\Y Bus .. camper designed by arrhitec11tral sludent. $1500. Call aft 5 pm. ~42-2680. '64 V\V BUS, '66 rehll cng., semi-camper, romp! o'haul- ed. New paint, ti re 11, 644-1486 '70 V\V temper, v.·/pop top. Excel eonrt 2,100 m i , AM/1'7wt. S279:i. or offer . ~123. --------' 70 V\V CA:\1PEP.., nt'\\' cng .. til"es, ~hocks, c.'<:tras. $2490. &12-3945. '611 V\V bug Need cash. J\1ust sell. Good cond $895. or best offer. 847-6i'l59. '67 V\Y, aun roof, be11u1 iful condition. new paint & Ures, $:)()(). 492-3878. 1968 V\V • like new. Best oiler this \\'eek. Att. 4 • 673-2618 lfr..ve something you \Vant to 1966 Harbor. C.1.1. fi46·9.10'.l 'Gf VOLVOl42S- 1971 CADILLAC C 0 u p.c '68 Sport Van Deluxe, long DeVille I mm a cu I ate ~ \\'B, xtra !«!al, Mu1t Sell, Loudell! 1.i.000 mi t cs, .Ma.ke Ofr. Bkr &46-32U. Original ov.:ner. J\fu.~t ~ell '62 Chev 2-dr HT. Impala. th.ls 1veekcnd $6500. Phone New ttan1. R&H, Zin!. 847-6178. cond. $299. 642-4850. Co1ta Mesa --------,.--,,-'67 Gal 500 2 ch· ht, vi~. p/b, fnc nir, 1 owt1f'r. $000. 61-'-0753 aft 5 or \\'orkrnds. ~7 Ford LTO:-tull pow;;;, air, .steno, lmmnc t'<>nd! $1200. One owner. -494-7081. 638-1132 azz __ ~~;..., :xa . ezs 16661 Bench Blvd., 1-1.B, 54().jJ64 • 842-0631 '66 Volvvo Sta \Vgn; reblt eng, -4 imcJ, roof racks, Sacrifice SS85. Bkr 646-3242. '69 EL DORADO lor gale by sing!e o\vncr. Low mileage, t>Xt":cllt"nl cond. All extras. 675-4818 after 4 p.m. 990. CAD '69 Convrrtih~ -~-------m iles, like ne1v, all E'Xtras. AMERICAN 13800. 673-<Xls:i. ·-----Autos, Used ,-6.j-Cad "'.ti~J(."Villf'. sflver American Motors 11·/blk vinyl Ion. rul!y <'QUijl, ......,Gremlins ,....,Hornets lo miles. '.\lint con d , J"Matadors ...-Javelins 49C.-2812. "'Ambassadors Hu~e sto::-k ot ·11·11 & '72's Bi9-Bi9 Savings Harbor American 1-lome of Convenient Payments 1969 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 646-0261 QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT OLDSMOllLI THE Important Difference! TIIIS WE ARE SHIEW YOUR MEANS TfIAT ONLY AUTHORIZED CADILLAC FACTORY DEALERSflfP Four end one-half acres of total euthorixed Cadillac facilities designed to better sell and service Cadillac automobiles . 80 (work stalls} end 45 factory trained technicians. Selection of late model CADILLACS Largest and other Luxury cars in Orange County! sell? Classilied ads do II Turn unuFe<l item~ in1o quick WANT AD well • call NO\V 642-5578. cash, call &12-fXi78 ---------~. --------Autos, Usect 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 '71 Coupe D1Vllle '71 Eldorado 56888 55777 GARDEN GROVE LINCOLN MERCURY SAYS: Full "°"'''· !4C'O•Y al; cond., 1~1~·1111 wt\'°'t, •'~'"° door lf.>clc~, vln~I '°"' l~<>!lltr ln!edor. Al/I/FM m11lllplt•. J.how1 mflkuiout ~'• 111ro111111cu,11. l'°l17M. SAL! PRIC! Vtry low inlltll~• on 1111, tllllw•tom lrooh 111m, 14(!0•~ -Ir tOnd., 11111 Pf,w••, vll'lyl ton, full 1 .. lllf r l•·•trio•. AM/FM t!trtO m.ull!,!tr, Iii! !•It 1tr11, l)Owtf ~ IDc~I, lW!. 11nrl<.t1, ~htol•(!?l'I' IN•u!lllJll 1lff01'AI s SAL! PRICI ''S T 0 P S H 0 P P I NG'' ® F~EE BALLOONS @DRAWINGS @MORIE ~1!'.tlS JUST RONEST DOLLAR $A YINGS ON ALL NIW AND USID CARS NEW MONTERY STA WAGON 72 LINCOLN CONT DEMO 1~1 o,•. o" ,,.,...i, •·~ "'""''" l'f~• t0••. -clo>(. b•. 2dt.le<l'Wtflll!,...W&""'--.,.,(t'ltrOl,till..tletC. ~ • "''"''".'•""""''l'o<•o.•.r....-.•<y'":l9 ~9.&-,"'6'f ' .... tl ,.,..«~I ~<.l,'l"'"''""·P-••>·101"',_.,.f"""' ~ r · "'"' "'~"'"""'" .... ~. ~~ Orl9. Liit l•IJllf'f•• Ori'). lltt Sele p•I•• --..::__ . ~§.41 $,20 s4494 S8202~ s6,545 NO HAGGLE!! NO HASSLEt! ANY 1972 COUGAR ANY 1972 COMET $100 OVER DEALER COST <:~~~::. ... ". > IJClUDlMG I S492U •eu a.AC• & .._. ....,, GRE ELE OF CAP PRI OPEN MEMORIAL DAY •• ' ,.'71. MARK ·111 $7272 J SERVICE DEPARTMENT OPEN All DAY SATURDAY STARTING MAY lSTH '71 Sedan DeVllle llt1 u1. F lrtmitl fln!ill, flelwt•, l~r>tll•Y I. lttlhtr Interior, hltl po..,.r, ltrl••I t lr ,....,., vln'f'I ter>, dOOr lodt~, AMI FNI r'H:lto, WIW ll•M, •• ,,. ...... mu .. fOt, (l~CllSJ '70 Sedan D1VIU1 ,utl p&wtr, f4CIO"Y llf, AM/f /li. 1ltFM IY'Ull!PllY, !lll·lf!t Wfltt!, tit(, CIGO<' ll;c;b, rwi!IQhl .. nll~I, vlnyt to p, lfPl'\lrV & LMlher l11t,•lcl• lrlm, Or .. o·,..,.,.r car lfltl tntw1 n c.oti....I ''''· (S39AGIO '69 Sedan De VIiie '70 Eldorado LOott a. ,,,,,,. like "'' llfy fl•ol '41111 1 F1o•t oowor, flC.,.ry t i• cond .. !lit· l>I! o•ttrillQ, dotr 1Klt1, ('<,.l•t (- ltOI, ..-!~yl "'· 11111 lttltler ~ttrlor. I t~Al'l( I, Ntw wtW t!r-. SAL! PRICE 54111 SALE PRICE 53555 SAL! PRICI 55222 SAL! PRICI NABERS '61 Stdan DeVllle '63 Coupe DeVllle '70 Coupe D1Vllle v1 .. y1 1~11. d•ltl & ''*'""' lfll•tlt•. lvll ~ >'t•, l•c•ory •Ir, NJ..,M, lllO*•• IJOM l~-1, •vtotn411t. 1eU •llt•M. aG.CW)f) "'"''· Lou! 1 ..... ,.., ••• .,,_.. ty !:>9•vllh1I UHAll'Xi 54222 ' . SALi PRICE s2 '.+I SAL! rllCE 5999 SAU PRICE SALE PRICE 2600 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 540-9100 .. • '. ... . . . --.. Schools and Instructions TbiA variety of fine ICbooh could introduce you to· a new tomor:row. .. . For .further lnlormtlion r09tr~i"9 "-' Dtily Pllof School• a nd ln1truction Oir•ctory • <·t . ~., ·'< . -··· ' ... .~4.. ' " CALL 642-5671, EXT. 325 Anna's 1re-Sc~ol · 4 •J# I < Kindergorten, ht & 2nd Grtcfe REGISTER NOW ·For Summer SeSsion Ag$ 2 thru· 2nd Grode .. . Children discover great things ·. · ~ -~;;; :lra ~el J~tj at our school .. Themselves. ~·· worth training for ' Our school. Early Achievement Center. Unlike most pre-schools, we do more than keep llltle hands busy. We keep lillle minds busy. With science. Math. Language. Art. •TRAVEL • ADVANCEMENT • SECURITY . ' •• Social Studies. -.·,' Things like that ·:,. Impressed? Don't be. ' ~ It's not what we teach that's -so special. ;; It's the special way we teach. · We encourage children to discuss things. · q-ouch things. Act out thing!. So they will better know their capabilities. And themselves. (Which is just aboul the grealesl lesson of all.) Ok, like to discover more about us? ' i AIRLINE SCHOOLS PACIFIC Leai'h Hdw You Ca~ Qtral!fy '.Cail 543-6655 Call or write for our free brochure. Or drop by our Sunflower school. 610 E. 17th St., Stnlt Ant Computer Reservations Training For Quali· fied Graduates At Los Angeles International Airport. We're open year 'round. • .. _ So parents can come_)n anytime. And children can be enrolled anytime. ~~~1 SMALL ll/ WORLD ( :,/ff! PRE-SCHOOL NOW OPEN AGES 2 THRU 6 Open All Veer 6:l0 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. FULL AND 'la DAY· STATE LICENSED CREATIVE EDUCATIONAL & PLAY PROGRAMS HOT LUNCH & TWO SNACKS CERTIFICATED TEACHERS DAY OR EVENING 549-3877 NIW IAltTHOUAICI SA,I IUILDINI 2950 McClintock Way, Costa Mesa 1W c.r-r ot IP• a Fe1m.w 71 .. ' . f .. : .• ........ l .. , ..... ·--CHOOSE.A;~ PROFEBBIC AL • ,......,... nn,, t.l..1c1 .. CAREER/-: .... '.\.._.~ e IMtttetcy Mftlft91 fed.le• •.ar• Tedlllc'-· · ' lVJrn~ -W®~rn~ VJl. · ... e M ... 111 ..,.,..._ilt BY A RECENT ACQUISITION Of NEWPORT BUSI· NESS SCHOOL, CALIFOllNIA PROFESSIONAL COL.; LEGE NOW OFFERS: . ,.,,,.., ...... Httlllt e SllertlH1114 • l.ef-1 s.c,. .. ,,. ,,., .... DAY AND EVENING CLASSES ENROLL NOW FOR SPRING SEMESTER California Professional College':-'. . ' 1801 NEWPO.RT BLvP.,, ~05TA.-,li\E$~ .~A).lf~ 714/f',i5·2'P r.:,. ·• • > • ., St.._,..,_... Pl-liw41ate.........., ~ o....i • o..-.., ............. .,,,_... ~., Wrtt.fw,... ~ll•t:: ..... -·Interested In '· •· ' GERHARD KOHN SCHOOL & llfmC · 11¥ELOPllJIT · CEllTER. , 1102 Elllt Avt, Hunt. llffch 541' Abboyfltld, Lont lletch SUMMER SCHOOL PROGRAMS: Day S<:bool 1'r .. S<hool Sensory·Motor Training Remedial Reading Developmental Reading Study SkiUs & College Techniques Speed Reading . Academic College &· Achievement Program for Addltlontl Information Call: 1714') 962°3343 ' ( 21 l l 597•2405 G,rhard ,J(ohn PhD LlctA,ed ~y~otogtn Director A GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY : !Joto't •~•Y T~ Bou "·. Bt Oneill (Why Let Someone Else Decide What You're Worth?) ' . ' Special' Supervfsor Training Classes • No\v Being Offered! \Ve Will Train You FREE To Become A Supervisor 'Vith A Company That Offers "Tomorrows Products For The Con- cerned Of Today." THE SHAKLEE CORPOR· ATION .••. WE . WILL TRAIN YOU TO BECOME A SHAKLEE. SUPERVISOR &: 1. Set your O\vn goals & achieve the1n. 2. Earn a free car every 2 years 3. Organize your o\vn sales group. 4. :EnJ~y a !:.~t:~M~ur·ement:· For Appointmint Call 548-5253 DO IT NOW! • References: Dunn Ir: Bradstreet, Better BW!ne!li Bureau, B of A, Direct Selling Association. '~· . '"i' ~· ,....Q<. "'RftP.it ~ ·at.Utes Fliibt Scbool & Flyir.z Club . J.EQN TO FLY ,!?a,.. 1-.. ·-1 * FAA APPRQVED Course fnclucln: , * 35 Houri f light time in C•1sne I 50's with 20 houri dual instruction. Club membership. l Month'1 free dues. ln'dividu•I instruction, tailored to YOUR ability. TO AIRCRAFT AVAILAILE AT LOWUT um IN ORANGE COUNTY Learn to fly now - -•nd have fun I * Fly Mexico & Can•d• * Specfal Rates for Commercial or Instrument Students. For Colnpleit Dettll• Ctll1_NOW 673°0313 D Daily Pilol Classified Ads for Action ••• Call 642-5678 .,, ~ . ~ .... -...... .t1 .. ~ ' ooc · ·~ OBEDIENCE SCHOOL 1 .. ·· .. ;,A REAL ESTATE CARffR? ; . •. ( " I' .1, ' ·Prepare For. 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' • . • t t , ' ' ' , . , .,j . • ' .. - • DAILY PILOT BEST llYS c L A s 5 I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 ' 7 ' . SAYE CASH! l • • • 1 • San (;Je1ne·J1te Capistrano VOL. 65, NO. 151 , 2 SECTIONS, JO PAGES , • ~ -' EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA .. ~ ..., • Today's .Final N.Y. Stoeks TUESDAY, MAY JO, 1972 · TEN CENTS • ecrec on IS 6 Others Flee 'Pot' Suspect . Shot to Death EL CENTRO (AP) -U.S. border patrol agents shot a man to death and chased a half..Uozen others into Mexico after suspected marijuana smugglers opened fire from behind a desert bush. An estimated 35 pistol shots peppered three Jeeps but missed the three officers on routine patrol midw;i:v between El Centro and Yuma, Ariz., hfonday nisht. ' At about the same time, two men were arrested bc::.ide two parked cars a half- mlle awPy near Jnt~rstate S for in- vestigation .• Henrv Fclchlin, chief border patrol agent, • s'aid 3bout 300 pounds of mari- j11ana v.•ere confisc".ted from the sandy shootin~ site several hundred yards from Mexico. 'The agents said seve ral of the men fired autf ntalic pistols. A shot fi•"fd by agent Haro!d Slocum appa rently killed the man. ''These guys each had a bag (of mari- juana~ I'd guess they were carrying to a contact man on this side," Felchlin said. The Califoll)ia Highy,•ay Pat r o 1 , Imperial County sheriff's deputies and an Small Trimaran Seized at Datta For Marijuana U.S. customs agents stalking a small trimaran all the y,·ay from the U.S.-Mex- ican border finally boarded the craft at Dana Harbor Monday and seized 30 kilos of marijuana. The agents arrested George Arnold Dei1lmar Jr .. 29, of Santa Barbara and Gail Lynn Ru$, 18, of Hawaii and chz.rged both with conspiracy to smuggle marijuana. The arrest took place ab o a r rt Dehlmar's 24.foot s a i Ibo at • which authorities as!;ert was heading north from an undisclosed point in Mexico. The incident took place at about 2 p.m. at the harlx>r and climaxed a weekend of surveillance which assertedly began in water off San Diego. The small craft apparently spent the n,i,ght at the harbor and began heading m·t to sea ~1onday afternoon, sources said. Customs agent Don Watson said that he and fell~nv officers a8ked h a r b o r patrolmen to intercept the ves11e\ and bring it to a dock. After that took ~lace. Wa~on said. the agents moved in to make the arrests. ; The illicit weed weighed a">out 70 pounds and was valued at about $6,000 on the street market. Escaping Man Shot SOLEDAD CAP) A Soledad Pr~on in· n:ate in a brief bid for freedom "'as shot a~d slightly wounded Sunday ni.:tht, prison officials reported. A prison apokesman said Rick Nelson. 23. serving five years·to-life on~a Los Angeles Count:v conv.iction of sale of marijuana, got about 1 'h miles from the wall. He said Nelson suffered a shotgun pellet in the hip as he crawled over a fence. ' army helicopter 01 from 1ndio joined in tracking the men to Me1.ico, where judicial police from xicali took up the search. The dead man appeareCI to be Mexican or a Mexican·American· without iden- tification and about 25 to 30 years old, Felchlin said. The two being questioned in El Centro were not immediately identified. -c-~ Su:1~ren1e Court Rejects Deatli Pe1ialty Hearing \VASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court today rejected an appeal by California to review a state Supreme Court' decision ouU8wing the d e a t h penalty. The high court is considering whether to abolish capital punishment acroas the land'111tbeing~.1n ·vto1ation of ·lb• federal' °'1'<tj,luliOIJ. ' . Tbff .)U.\11~• JIVO ,ft!_. r~•llOll for declining unammousl/\;, add Caul.rnia's appeal to ils docket. Still before the court, for en e1pected ruling next month, are other appeals testing the constitutionality of the death penalty. The California court held 6 to 1 on Feb. ti that the death penalty "may no longer be exacted" in that state because it violates the state Cllnstitution. The action spared the lives of 102 men and S women who make up the nation's largest death row population, Including Sirhan 'Sirhan, the assassin of former U.S. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, and mass murderer Charles 11.fanaon. Callfornia's petition for revitw, filed fllarch 31 by Evelle J. Younger, the state attorney general, called the decision "an \lnseemly rush to judgment'' while the death penalty issue was pending before the U.S. Supreme Court. Blaze Destroys Expensive Home In Dana Point A fast-moving blaze destroyed an e:t· pensive Dana Point house over the weekend and inflicted minor injuries to three occupants of the dwelling. County fire officials listed $4S,000 in damage to the house of Mr. and Mrs. Keith Lilhtner at 25266 Brigantine Drive. The blaze erupted at 7 a.m. Saturday moriflng as the Lightner family and their house guests slept. Lightner and two of bis guests, Dr. and Mrs. James Sumwalt of Tucson, suffered minor burns and light cuts during their eScape from I.be house. The blaze, app.irently caused by a faulty motor on a gas heater, routed se ven persons in all from the house. • DAILY ,1LOT Sltll ,~ot. DEBRIS AND SLEEPING BAG LITTER SCENE OF FATAL SAN CLEMENTE COLLISION FRIDAY J•ff Briet, 16, Long Beachr Dled •••Result of lnjurt.1 In Cr11h With Police Cir ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ " . ' ,, . '" .,,~ii.', lnm4te~ Co~trol .. -AutD"Plunges· 0~Cliff.; N.J. Jail Wing; · Hostages Held Passenger Dies in Crash PATERSON, N.J. (AP) -More than 100 inmates seized control or the max- jmum security wing , a~ Passaic County jail today, holding hostages while negotiating with authorities. Seven hostages, including the warden, were Ireed within ty,.·o hours of the out. break. but an undetermined number still \\'ere being held. Jail officials ~·ould not comment on the number of hostages still inside. \Varden Jack DeYoung, nurse Carol Vanderlinda and two guards who suffered stab wounds in a melee with inmates were freed by the rebellious prisoners aftet about an hour. The guards, John Bozzoli and Jack Donohue, were hospitalized. Just before noon, three o the r hostages, Lt. Thon;as Oliver and guards \Valter Dobrolowski and Rodney Leone, were freed. Dobrolowski had a tooth knocked out, and was treated at St. Joseph's Hospital. Leone was hospitalized with a punctured chest and abdomen. . Authorl~ies were inside the prison negotiating with the prisoners, but there was no report of progress and no word on wha~ demands may have been made by the prisoners. City police armed with shotguns and tear gas surrounded the jail in the center of this city of 120,000. A spokesman said the o[fioers were to stand by while the negotiations continued inside the prison. A Passaic County sheriff's spokesman said Bozzoli, Dono~ue and another guard were escorting three inmates, including a convicted murderer. from the second floor to another part or the jail when the trouble began. A 17·year-old Long Beach boy became Orange County 's fifth traffic fatality over the Memorial Day weekend Monday when the car in which he was riding left Ortega High"'ay 15 m i I es east of San Juan Capistrano and roiled down a 100-foot cliff. Randy Adams was one of three passengers in a car dr.i:men by Steve Polletier, 18. of Anaheim . Polletier is reported in guarded condit ion at MlssiOn Community Hospital today. Others injured were Adams' sister, T2mira, 18, ::ind Michael Harrison. 19, of Garden Grove. They were treated and released . Hi a:hway patrolmen said the accident occurred \Vhen Polletier swerved to miss an oncoming car while 2ttemoting to pass a line of other cars on a blind c u r v e abou t 15 miles north of San Juan Capistrano. Orange County fire and rescue units spent more than an hour bringing the rour victims up the steep cliff. Josep h Britt, 15, of Long Beach. died Sunday in ~1ission Community Hospital of injuries received in a crash with a San Cle1nente police patrol car Friday in San Clemente. Two other persons died in holiday mishaps. Robert E . Reedy, 28, of I2l4 Di~ney Way . Anaheim . was killed when his car fell on him \Yhilc he was making repairs at his home and Rex Martindale, 20 months, drowned in the family swimming pool at 10222 Jennrich Ave., Garden Grove. The five traffic death.! contrasted with Orange County's almost per rec t 1.iertlorlal Day \veekend record in which only one person lost his life in the past three years. Heat, Jellyfish, Wind Cause Busy Beach Day Unusually warm temperatures, an onslaught of jelly!ish and one day of "absolutely freaky winds" added up to the busiest Memorial Day weekend on rec::ird tilong the South·Coast. Th'>usands of beachgoers nocked lo S::>u!i1 Coast beaches and large numbers of boaters used ne\'i facilities at Dana Harbor during the three-day holiday. no serious mishaps 'were reported. San Clemente Lifeguard Capt. Phil Stubbs said that the absence of he~vy surf kept the beachgoers out of trouble during the three days. The crowds were the heaviest on memory for f\.1emorlal Day but actual numbers were not logged according to a new depart:nent po/icy. Airport Me~ting Planned First aid calls were numerow: as the wecl<end ended Monday in San Clemente as the greatest jellyfish Invasion of the year dotted swimming waters. · Sunday prdved the busiest day at Dana, where severe winds howled across the marina after appearing without warning during the early afternoon. "It would be safe to sriy that the crowds 'vere mode.-ate to heavy all weekend." he said. The \vinds proved to be the m o s t curious of the 'veekend events. At Dana }!arbor and Dohen.v Stale Park Beach Sunday the gales literally blew picnic equipment from table tops and sent clouds 9! saf\d blowing and slinging bare ~acks. Caspers to Try Again ·for Camp Pendleton Facility Bv JACK BROBACK • • Of tM DlllY , .... St.ff Orange C.unty Board of Supervisors Chairm•n Ronald caspen, rebuffed Fri· day by san D!ego Orunty official• on his proposal to establish • Joint lnt.,,,.uonal airport al Camp Pernlletpn, today an- nounctd anolher metUng will be held on tho subjed in July. Caspen said he woold await the release of t&. Southern Calllomla Association of Governmt1ttl (SCAG) regional airport study w!lkb 11 now u· pected to be 1val11ble tO>metlmt In JuJy. "Al that dme, we will try again lo pin- point a •Ii• for a regional airport-based on the SCAG report fUldlngs,'' Caspers aald. ' ' He added, "This time, the Marines "Will Ii, lnvlled as well as San Di<go County offl~lals and ~he meeting will be held in Orange County. "We ·Are dJscotU"aged -do\vn but not tut1 .. Ca1plr1 &dmill.ed. "If we-' find that locating an h> ternatl<>nal airport in Ibis area is too ho! a polij,ical ltem we may suggest that Wasbblglon take over and arbitrarily dtsignate a sJte." Caspers had fed an Onioge Coon\)' dtlegalloo wblch met with S.. Diego County olllclab .., the Airport qaes)loa Friday at the Royal Inn In San Dlet!o. San Dl<10 officials, boWever, were cool lo the Orange County pcoponl lo locale an tnlernallonal Jet airport on the U.S. Marine Corps' Camp Pendleton range. No.Marine reprtsentallves attended the tw<><:0unty session. San Diego Superv\sor \Villiam A. Ctaven summed up the joint ineetlng tltis ·Wa:J: ;10ranae County wants an airport tin Its doorsteps but not in Its house. Th<'Y came here for us to solve their problems for tbem ." , San Diogo official1 seem lo be polnling more toYfard developgient ol an airpo :·t •I 15 possible &ltes but none oC these in· elude the Cam' Pendleton range. One-<1ffsbort aJrport su,rgution under study by S11n Diego OIOCiab would be at lmperieJ Beach tn the extreme soutbwCJt corntr of San Diego Coullly. ~ " ~- Several ·vessels capsized and others slammed .UJto rocks at the harbor. but despite the scramble in the 4().knot blow, polf Clubs 'Scored' From San J nan Hills Golf clubs valuerl at $38ll were stolen during the weekend from the San Ju.an J~ills Count~v Ch·"i In ~an Jua'l Capistrano, Orange County Sheriff's of· flrf!'rs said. Deputle:s •·ho responded to the burglar &larm srid intruders smasht.d the glass door of the pro shop wllh a &tee! bar and remov~ 12 Ben Hogan clubs from lhe ahop's display rack. Other articles of v11lue were left untouched, they 1aid. I v Yet in 58.n.Clet:nente. al the same lime, no wind blew at' all. 11Jt \Val &bloiuttlf' freaky ," said Stl'bbs. ' . • . . "Shortly afltr-.Dt.~· •m/Jorted lhe gale. ho\vcver, the .Wi~'lf ,"l.,;j&tfe Ind we got It in San Clerhe.nle. I from" the com plcte opposite dlr'cctlon. ,.J ' Golden Gate Suicide SAN FRANCISCO (UPI\ -A ili-ytar· old woman has become the 44!1th known suicide from Golden Gate Bridge. The Coast Guard rtce'IVfred the body or a \'iol1);an tentatively ldentlfled f r o m papen In a purse as Kail>letn Clancey of Oafdand. She jumped !rom the span Swr day night. Patrol Mum 011 Accident Of Officer By JOHN VALTERZA Of Ille Dtllr '11'1 Stitt California Highway Patrol officials t~ clay slapped a tight lid of secrecy on the circumstances surrounding the frea k crash of a San Clemente police car and a sntall pickup truck las! weekend whicll claimed the life of a Long Beach tee nager. The speetacular collision which took place late Friday afternoon seV~rtly in- jurf4 four persons and caused fatal ~ -!ll!.its-to 16.year-Old Jtff Driet. He suo- cumbed to severe head ind internal in- juries late Sunday night in Mis!ion Com· munity Hospital. · · Officially. the High\vay Patrol takes charge of the investigation in crashes in~ volving municipal police vehicles, and local officials by custom are forbidden to C<lmment on detalls. But spokesmen for the CHP in Santa Ana today said they had "no in- formation" on the tr&gedy. The collision took place at 4 p.m. Frl~ day as patrolman Gary Adams answered (See PATROL, Page!) * * * State's Traffic Deaih Toll New Holiday Record From Wire Servkel Seventy-eight persons were killed on California highways during the Memorial Day weekend, a record for the holiday in the state, the California Highway· Patrol reported today. The total also was the mqst in the nation. Boosted by single accident11 that killed six persons Monday n i g h t in San Bernardino Count.v and five persons near Marysville, the toll eclipsed the 63 set in. 1968. This yea r's holiday count ran from I p.m. Friday to midnight Monday - a 3'•· day period. The 1968 record was set over 4¥, days. Last year 48 persons were killed over Memorial Day weekend. The six-fatality accident was on a mountain road near Lytle Creek, a bead- on collision between two cars each car· rying four persons. The five-fatality accident was on California 99 about 17 miles south of Yuba City, also a head-on crash of two cars. Nationwide, automobile traffic during the Memorial Day weekend took S&:i lives. The National Safet y Council estimated 530 to 630 persons would die. A United Press International count ol accidental deaths in the holiday period showed: Traffic ~ Drownings 151 Planes 17 Other 77 Total &10 0r .. ,. Weatller It's going to rtmain H-0-T for at least the next several days ac. cording to the weather1ady, with temperatures ranging from the 70's at the beach ,14 tbe OO'a Inland. Lows in the &O's. INSIDE TODAY In a test of survival, 20 Mor· 111011 jamilie1 tn Palo Alto have begun Living for three we«ks u11ly on the good& ihat wert stored in their ll.on1es wh1n thttJ were told-wit1• 110 advance· no- tice-oj the exptriment whiclt it spotuored by tM cliurch. Sn story on. Page 18. L.M .• .,.. CtlllO'l'nlt Clllt~lltf VI , .... If~ Conte• ,,.._,.. l>Hlfl Mfll<H SiflMrltl , ... l11l9'1fllll!Mflf '"IM lltc#f ""··-- ' • , . " ' .... " .. .. • • " ..... .. AMI L....,_ .. M-. "' ...,let .. -• MtrJat '"* M ...... , ...... • _ _, .. '""" ,.,, "-" .......... 1•11 ·-. -• -• ............... 1.)lf Wwtll...... • • .. ' . ... ·-. ---'> ' r • . -. ._ ('1111 v Pll C~ ::i.. Tllff<Uiy, M1y 30, ll1 l ---------------- 'Tired' Nixon Flie·s ·to Iran En Route Home -. -. . -. TE II RAN I UPI) -• fresldtnt Nil on, tired from lntenalve summit talks that produced a pled;:e oL Amerlc1n-Ru11l1n cooperatioft tO treV~nt a nu c I ell r holocaust. ·ended;;a ntne·d:1y trip to the Soviet Union today ·ti'nd new to Tehran for an overnight visit. The Prealdent will spend 21 hours ln lhls key Per1ian GuU nation, then fly to Poland for a day before returning to \\1ashington Thursday niRht. When Nixon's jet. the Spirit of '76, landed at Tehran's ~1ehrabad airport . he and Mrs. Nixon were greeted by the shah and the empress of Iran. Following the colorful airport we lcom- ing ceremony, t~e Nlxons were taken by motorcade to the Shahyod Aryamehr HHH Claslt Monument, a towering edifice completed last ye1r to mark the 2,500!.h annlvenary ol the Per1lan monarchy. They mayor of Tehran, Gholam Fttz.a N1kpa1~ prfatnted Nixon a golden key to the city and gave B smaller reproduction to Mrs. Nixon. 'rhe Nixons then pro- ceeded to Saadabad Palace, the preslden. tial guest house. Nixon and the Shah arranged l'o\'O sessions of talks totaling four hours dur- ing the President's stopover. The purpose of Nixon's visit to Tehran, U.S. sourca aaid, was to assure Iranian ' leaders Of continued American SUpJ)9rt i[I the Persian Gulf region ,,_.here Ullreat OC· curred amona: .so me of Iran's neigh bors. Nixon looked tired u he left RUJsia . ' 'On Defensive' I.OS ANGELES (UPI) -Put on the defensive by Hu bert II. Humphrey's hroad attack on his military, tax and welfare plal\8, George S. McGovern today :ittempts to exploit Hwnphrey's support of the Vietnam War when they clash in 11 nother televi11lon debate tonight. 'Mic senators , leading contenders for the Democratic presldentlol nomination, consider tonight's TV debate .. their sec- ond, the mG.!lt important of the thrtt scheduled in their battle for the 2fl delegate~ .at stake tn the California primary June 6 .. The two will appear on NBC's "Meet the Press" at 6:30 p.m. PDT but the hoi.lr·long Interview program wi ll not be shown In Cali fornia untll 9:30 p.m., prirhe vie"A-·ing time. Generally regarded as a draw, perhaps with a a:llght.~ge to H11mphrey, the. first Volunteers Win · : Interfaith Unit Service A wards Thirteen vnlunteers Serviceman's • Center ha ve won award~ tiCrVie!. ser\·lng lnterfaith In San Clemente for distinguished Center President Joseph Could pre· ~entf9 awards to Susan Howse, Ki ren DuVal. Muine Ryan, Irene Robbins and Dora Reese for each having logged 250 hours as junior hostesses at the non- profit .center. Other awards went to staff members Ed Furfey, ~1rs. HUbert Kiesl-:.er, Joe Llamas, Virgin ia Kohout and ~s Put! nam, a charter member of the ctnter. Marine'~ \Vives Club sponsor Mrs. Gloria Senik and Mary Flsch. another volunteer, also were cited. The cen ter's secretary, Beverly Flem- ing, rcceiv~d a service award. The center, which operates 1 busy sthedule of activities for servicemen , is completely funded through donations. Rabies Clinic Se t For Ca nines Tonight A vaccination clinic wil! be open tonight from 7 to 8·30 o'clock in San Juan Capistr11no. The rabies' shots for dogs will be ad. ministered at San Juan School by Dr. 'Thomes Schauwecker. Sponsored by the school's Parent- Teacher League, the clinic will be held in conjunction with the Count v of Orange. Veterinary Public 11call h Division . Ob.HG! COAST DAILY PILOT debate Sunday was seen by fewer than 10 percent of the registered Democratic voters, according to media apeclall.sts. The third debate is nezt Sunday. Admittedly slarUed by Humphrey's at• tack, McGovern Monday went on his own offensive and choae a.s his target llumphrey'S claim that their records were the same on the Vietnam War. Speaking to ·the CaHfornia Federation (){ Teachers in San Dlego, McGovern said "Senator Humphrey made what I regard as one of the most shocking statem,nts that I've heard since I've been in pclitic:i, when· he said 'George McGovern and l have the same record'On the war 1n Vie~ nam.' "Is there anyone Jn this room who doe! not regard that as utter nonsenst?" he asked, visibly angered. . He said Hwnphrey was "posing as a convert to peace and I don't intend to let him get away with it." He also called the primary "a contest betw.een the old politics and the new" .and cautioned .the teachers that Humphrey advocates more money for a wide range of domestic programs without spell ing ou t the. specifics. Scui Juan Fiesta . . Officers Chosen Mac "-lcOoWe\I ha s been re-elected president of the San Juan Capistrano Fiesta AsJ!a<:lation. Other officers elected for the 1972;'73 calendar yea r include : Tom Davis, vice .pre11ident;~.Ted &ofisman, treasm"er ; Bill · Peryer, recordini:: sec retary: Ginny Davis. corresponding secretary; Arlene . Skiles, ways, and means: Tom Winget, parade 'chairman; Jetta Lennon, membership chairman, and Do t t i e Sheahan. publicity. Plans are being made for a "Swallows Nest Fest" dinner-dance to be held at the Mission Viejo Country Club Salurday. JUne 24. Da ncing will be to the music of the Ronnie Brown Trio. Tickets are $6 per person and reserva- tions can be made by calling Diane Schmidl at 497-1771. 3 Clemente Kids Win Film Award Three San Clemente lligh School studenls hal'e \\'On a"•ards for films they produced end entered in the California Studenl Fi lm Festil'al. Bob Eilert won first place for a fil m called ''Spin \Vheel Spin." John f'o wler placed second for a film called ''The Pier.'' Dave Le Bnn \Vas given an honorable mention for a film called "Nat ure." The film festi val, held at the Anaheim Convention Center this year. originated in San Clemente in 196S. It is now slate-wide and is held by the Department of Educa- tion. from Kltv, th e 11).(:enturles-uld cepital of the Ukr aine. eod.lng his hlstcirlc journey to the Soviet Union. But hi took Uma out to lba_ke hand.Ii with a dozen Sovlet citizens 111 a crowd of 300 which saw hlrn off ut Klev. The cro\~:d wav('{f Soviet and American flags. During Nixon 's visit. Soviet citizens sa:w hlrn on television several times -in· eluding once in an unusual spee<"h to them by the President Sum.lay night - and considerable press att en tion "·as given to his visi t and the summi t achievements. The joint pledge "to do their utmost to avoid military confront ations and prevent the outbreak of nuclear war" was l'on- talned in a set of principles -nonllinding goals to v.ih!ch both nations subscribed at the conch.11lon of the Moscow 1alk.s Mon· d1y. • An agrffment to Umlt strategiC' nuclear weapoM -plllJ Ule recognition that "there Is no alternative to conducting the ir mutual relations on the basis or peaceful Co-t!KW.encti" -were the main successes at Mosoow. But the big issues that threaten peace, the Victnan1 and the Middle East con- fl icts. apparently were left undisturbed. There "·as no evidence of any specific ac- lion by the two superpowers to defuse them. Security was extremely tight. for Nixon and his wife in the Soviet Union and it wa s n1uch lhe sa1ne when they arrived in Tetu·an. Iranian oUicials ordered heavy ~youngest -Graduate' Little Patricia Ayn Tordella slept tbro,ugb rnOsl' of the .University of Scranton's 84th annual comm encement exercises on the back of h er father, David \vho received his bachelo r of science degree. Pa- tricia's mommy was ill, and daddy to6k over the babysi tting chores. h1dependence Day Picnic ToGoOffWitl1BigBoom The bulk of the sights and sounds of Independence Day fireworks in San Clemenle will be experienced at local beaches. but Vista Bahia Park will pro- vide some noisy celebration as "'ell, members of the Veteran's Fireworks Commitlee promised thi s week. The booms will come from an af. ternoon turkey shoot and a larr.e flreanns demonstration by members of thP Sa n Clemente Police Department. The park activities. which amount to a traditional 41h of Julv pirnic, all arc sponsored by the committee and the San Clemente Elks' Lodge. guns, riot gl\flS and other weapons. The entire day's activities will lead up to the annual [ree fireworks display from the end of the municipal pier -an event which attracts tens Of thousands of onlookers. Donations arc needed to help pay for the display wh ich will be larger this year than last. Conrad said. Financial help of any amount Is wel come and can be sent to the com· mittee. Box 299. S<in Clemente. protection of the U.S. party out of con- cern about recent euerrW1 acUvlUtt. The flight !rom Kiev took three houri. 33 rnlnutes. with arrival in Tthran at 5:30 a.n1. (PO'fJ . The President emerged from the plane into the bright sunshlne, just ahead of his wife. They paused momentarily and "'avcd, then descended the steps. Nixon wore a dark single-breasted sult. 1t1rs. Nixon wore a light-colored outfit and carried a shiny black purse. At the foot of the airliner steps, they were met by the shah in a civilian suit and the empress, who wore a summer dress and a floppy white hat which she clutched with one Wand to keep 1t from blowing away . The shah introduced government of· Thieu Flies To Beseiged Area, Talks SAIGON (UPI) -South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu flew today to the embattled cities of Kontum and 11ue to show his confidence in the South Vietnamese defenders. He declarerl the siege of Kontum broken but the thunder or artillery crashing down nearby belied his words. The Thieu visit came as the U.S. com- mand reported that U.S. Navy ai r strikes against a railway yard at Haiphong left . it engu1£ed in names. The Uong Bi railyards , 10 miles north of Haiphong, handle most of the raU traffic from China into the Hanoi area. Rear Adm . Hoard E. Creer. com~ mander of Carrier Dlvlsion 3 or the U.S. 7th Fleet, told UP I Correspondent Arthur Higbee today that continuation of the air offensive would make it impossible for North Vietnam to keep up its offensive in the South. He said the North Vietnamese proba bly had enough supplies in the pipeline to continue for a few weeks but "if we c<1n· tinue to close that port (Haiphong) and the railroads that come in from China, then there i1o't any way for North Viet- nam to continue for an extended period lhe type.of olfenllive Ibey have goilli." The raids on the Uong Bl complex were the liz:Jt since President Nlxbn orde~ tbe resumption or air rtrlkes agi!Mt North Vietnam April 6. Expert Disarms San -Francisco Consulate Bomb SAN FRANCISCO (UPll -A bomb ex· pert has disarmed 14 sticks of dynamite hooked to a timing device at the door or the Portuguese Consulate just before they were set to explode. "\Vhoever it was sure knew what he was doing," said a police bomb squad of- ficer. He said it would have "pretty much leveled " the three-story stucco building "'hi ch is one block from the Iranian Consulate, wrecked by a bomb blast seven months ago. Police evacuated Consulate-General Jose Alve! and six servants Monday from the building. The consul's family was in Portugal. ficlals to his guests, lhtn two 'lrls In white drtsaes presented nowen to Mrs. NL<on. Waving crowds applauded and the heads of slate took the dais for a 21-gun salute wh ich boomed out durinf{ the playing of the U.S. and Iranian national anthems. Nl1on tht:n inspected an honor l(Uard. The joint peace pledge in MosCO\f cro\vned summit meetings that produced eight treaties or agreemenls, Including a pact to limit nuclear arms. . The Nixons flew from ~1oscow to Kiev 1t1onday. Their activities in Kiev included a banquet. a wreath-laying ceremony at the Ukrainian Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, and A tour of the 900-year-0\d cathedral or St. Sophia. Fro11J Page 1 PATROL ... a call rela ting to a car be ing driven ln erratic fashion along South El Camino Real. Aa the patrolman began accelerating near Calle Dolores the .small domestic pickup laden with v.·eekend vacation gear and several cases of beer, pulled inlo traffic anG the patrol car slammed Into the rear of the truck at high spetd. Neither the siren nor the red warning lights on the unit \Vere operating at the time. Briel <ipparently 1vas sitting on top nf the load in the rear of the pickup when the crash sent the truck skidding more than ioo ·teet down the roadway. Several occupants \vere ~thrown out after th e im· pact. Briel, who received emergency first aid at the scene from a physician who was passing by, underwent surgery Im. mediately after the crash. His three com- panions suffered painful, but less severe injuries. They were Mike Baxter, William Schutz and Dan Cross, all 16 and all from Long Beach. Adams, who earlier this year joined the local force, suffered a cut to his left eye, but otherwise was unhurt. His patrol car was a total Joss. Because of the si\enct by the CllP it has not been determined who was at lhe wheel of the pickup. It is kno\\1n, however, that the investigation Into the crash is continuing and insurance in- vestigators representing tl}e City of San Clemente were conferring this morning with local police officials. The fatal crash marked the first traflic death on city streets in nearly l\\'O years. College to Host • ,, Area Seniors Saddleback C.Ollege will host students from six high schools at a special get-ac- quainted "Amigos Night" Thursday. Invitations have been extended to graduating seniors at the .six high schools 91·ithln the college district: Footh ill , l.aguna Beach. ~fission Viejo, San Cle111ente, Tustin and University. The .seniors and their parents 1vill be Invited lo browse around the campus, ask questions about curriculum and meet the faculty betv;ee 7:30 and 9 p.m. Evening classes at the college will be in session for students to visit. Refreshments will be served by airline stewardess majors at the college. College officials noted that graduating seniors are eligible lo attend the college summer classes which commence July a or fall classes which begin September 18. There is no tuition charge at the school ; the only costs to students are hooks, supplies and l~ associated stu- dent body membershi p fee. Students may ma jor in a course of study for transfer to a 4-year institution or study in the l·year certificated or 2·year occupational pro- grams. The city's newly rebuilt skeet and trap range open to the public will be dedicated. along with a patriotic program· spo nsored by veterans and a chicken din- ner presented by the Lions Club. Don Conrad, spokesman for the pn>- gram. said the patriotic program will NO GAP HERE! start at 2 p.m. ·. , At I p.m. lhe firearms de'monstration w\11 take place with firing o( submachine. Ou r carpet installations ere so smooth assured of. the finest seams anywhere. that you can 1)11 lllt O<ll'Mlt Ct n! OAILY P ILOT. wltll M'llCll h comt>!nrd !ht N1w1·P•tn , ii pVDll-"'911 b'f 11>4' Ot'l "ll' (OJSI l"ublitlll"9 C'"""'llY· S.,,.. r111 ll'dl!l.in1 111 ~ll1fltG, MOl'llll' 111~11 Fdtlt•. tor Cot!• Mt,1, N1wpe1rt l 11cl'I, H11n!lngton 8 1.t<lllF°""!lln Vt llry. l1gvna llttcfl, l/"\lint1Sldellt!Md. ~ Stn Cltmr.,111 ~'" Juffl (tp!1!r1ne. A 1!11919 r191011tl Cruiser in Upper Bay We hand sew ou r seams from the back with .a crou-stitcli, and th en reinforce with latex to prevent them from ever coming op en. This takes a little longer. but is infinite ly superior to .+aped seem s. • l'dllio" ;, llVlllll.Md $.elyrOIVI ... 1YnO•r1. Tiit pdncl"I pullH11'lf't Plt nl 11 t i J)I) Wtll l•Y Jlrttt, Cotta Miu. c1111orn1t, fh n . 11.olterf N. w,,J Pttl.0 ... 1 tnd PvOllVltr J1clr II. C11rl 1v \li<t f'ft l.,fl'I llld GtMrt l MIMSltr Tllom11 Kt t•il EColor Thom•1 A. M11rphin1 ,,...,...1,.. l!dil .. Ch1rl1 1 H. Loo i 111,Jr.11d P. Nill A11l1tant Mt,...il!Q E0110r1 S.. Cl•IMIM Offlc• JOI Nert+. ll C1111it10 11 11!, ,l,71 OIW Oflk., Cetll Mew: Ulf Wttl lty Strtt! H"""" lffdl: UU HtwPO<I I Olllt•t fO "llll'llitlif ..... ltttll: 17111 IHUI IOutt•t td L~ 1uc11: m ,.,..., ,._ , .. .,.... C714J '42-4121 CleulnM A~ 641·S671 m c.....,. All o.,.,. .. m : , ........ 4f Jo442t C4"'tltfll1, lftl. Or•l'lft C••H ,_,II~ ..... C-.-r, Ht ,._.. ttwlft Uhlt"•tlll'la, .. '"'"'' """" ., Mwrf'lt_.. ~·ii. IN1 ... ,.WW-M wlfhW! tMClel "' M9'1111 .. C911'1"1'illlt -· ,....... ti... ,_,.,. !1111111 tt Colli Mft.I, Ctll*"'111•• ._..,Wt1e11 IW Clftltr .1~~ ~I .. ~ U.lJ -llllY1 ~.,..,... ............ ,,, ..... fMo. .. -... r . Sinks; Damage $75,000 A 57-foot cabin cruiser tied up nc11r North Star Beach after a weekend in Cata lina mysteriously sank to lhe bottom or Upper Ne1\'J)Ol't Bay sometitnt MOnday night. The "Sp11rkler." o"·ncd by Gerald E. Sparks, 507 1tlomlng Star Lane and "alucd at $120.000. was btrthed at 1 dock on Sparks' property. Officials of the Ortnge CoUJ1ty Harbor District and lnsµrinse 11djustoi:s wert ln- l'citlg1t inrt the couoc of th< mlohaa tlll• morning. •, "A hose breke or "·hatever,'1 said Seai;ks,.who ,.Id •·11·~ like losln1 one of -Uit ll'!llly.Y • • "', . : • -:~ ' , -~ I& t!>J! -nd tJiie Sparks bar~ a boatoti!ocb!dr. ~· • • Seoi!tl't~ -.p;r_lllortly after blt)olnt "k~~. SP'l):t said ht lost l "-t cnillcrtie Ald.eot•d.l>e ducrlbotl Olll1 u ·""'• tharacttt boat.~· · "\\'~)>'VI' did O!lll out why that Ol\O 11nk.' Sparkl Slid . Sparks' Chris Craft w~s one or four boats reported sinking over the Memorial Day weekend, according to Sgt. Dean Carvell of the county Harbor Patrol. The thrt>e -other boa.ts were successfully pumped' out. Sparks discovered his boat in water up to the cabin upon awakeni ng this morning some tlme before 7 o'clock. Harbor patrOlmtn said they sped to the !'!Cene to make 1ure oll and diesel fuel were not Jeaktni in to the bay. No such . l<!>kj "'"' fb1ihd. A Salvage New wns workini: this morn· lrti to raise lilt 'boat so th•t the cause or the sinking co~ be determined. ~One official ~!ltd the boat may have gone down b~ of a leak.Ing exhaust syttmi .but he .,...ed that was only a guess, · Sp~k! fil!IJl'tStlie boalblfbe salv1ged but slljl. "all lfecoratlq lDil l\lrntshing wtll have to be redone ... One estlmat. or the cost of r<palr wos nvar f7S1000. ' The be st installers in the county are performing for ALDEN'S, t rained by us to in stall th e right way! To be sure t hat th e carpeti ng you choo se won 't have 9e p1 where the seams ere, make sure that ALDEN 'S does t he job. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Plac•lltla Ave. COST A MllA 646-4131 DAILY PILOT SC RENAULT 17 SPORTS COUPE-New front·wheel drive coupe called "most ex·· <:1ting car ever produced" by French auto maker. lta High Geat• Renault 17-A Sporty Coupe By CARL CARSTENSEN 01 JM Datb ~lltf 5111f The Renault 17 sports coupe, recently introduced 10 Southern California, has been heralded as "the most exciting car we've ever built" by the 74 year old French auto maker. Along w i th fronl ·wheel drive, the 17 1s equipped with a 107 horsepower fuel-in1ected engine, !our disc brakes, rack and pinion steering, floor mounted sy nchromes h transmission a n d an in· dependent front suspension system. As standard equipment. the new S!XJrl coupe has a tachometer. power "'indo\\S, electric clock. tinted glass. and ~I i c h e I i n steel-belted ,radial tires. Det<\il work and de1;;ign are functional and the lou vered Mlzd1 The Rotary En9ine For information on the stock ot Toyo T ogyo Co. 1.63·1.68 M1y IS Call Roy BartholonH~\V Great Pacific Securihts 17291 lrvmc Blvd., Tustin 714 -832-8000 rear \\•indO\"l'S can be opened for additional ventilation. The rear third door offers easy ac· cessib1\Jty. Front seats and head rests are easily ad· justable and can be positioned by a simple turn of the dial ror any desired angle. Two adults can ride 1n the rear or the 17 * * * Renault believes this car \\'Ill appeal to the most a~id sports car enthusiast. Rel.ail sale3 by dealers of Dodge cars are up 3.5 percent and truck sales are up 137 8 percent through the first twen- ty days in May compared to the same period a year ago, it was reported by H. D. Afit· chell, regional sales manager, Los Angeles Dodge region. Combined car and truck sales of 3,457 set an all time high record for the region v ... 1th an overall increase of 50.7 per· cent. * * * A n e w 200 mph ver- sion of t h e DeTomaso Pantera sports car w a s rccenlly revealed by 1 t s orig 1 n at or . Ale1andro deTomaso. Two or the nt\V cars, called the Pantera GT4, have been entered in the 24 hour LeP.lans endurance race which will be run June 11)·11. Tel'ttng or four prototypes McCOMBS SECURITIES CO., INC. STOCKS-MUTUAL FUNDS-TAX SHELTERS lHI lst•te Sy1dic•tl•a 4511 C•ntpus Dt-sult9 100 New,•rt hec• '2160 ( 114 } l$il·i2'iOiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1 F, I H means Beauty COll!nDl.lfiOM If: Cllil-A•wiStry PIA. ••nd THM ••1111r P111, Qltlrmto, 414 SI, A.-.r1w1 ••·· H1W"'9rl •Mt~ DAV! ROSS PONTIAC S EXCLUSIYE NEW CAR 5 YEAR/50,000 MILE WaRRanty At No E xlra Charge P•r11 a. l>Qu or ~~I"• Pow•• l••'" has been proceeding since: January on European circuits and the results have been im- pressive. The GT4 is a race prepared version of t h e regular production Pantera which sells for about $10,000 at s e I e c t e d Lincoln.Mercury dealerships. Deliveries since the i\Iay 1971 introduction total about 364 but sales this past ilarch reach 110. Actually, Lincoln- Mercury dealers sell all they can get. The engine m the GT4, like the regular Pantera. i~ a Ford 351-fV but the weight has be-en lowered to about 2.f:lOO lbs. by removing the air et1ndition1ng and powtr window units. Chassis modification!! in· elude a stablizer bar which can be adjusted for varying track conditions. competition shocks and special spoile.rs un· der the nose cowling to im· prove handlmg at high spttds. Driving power is by a self· Jocking live s p e e d syn· chromesh transaxle. Magnetized Passengel' Unit Tested CHULA VISTA (AP) .Rohr Industries, Inc. plans to unveil a futuristic passenger vehicle which is pow. ered cleanly, quietly and smoothly by magnetism. the firm's chairman and chief ex· ecutive orficer says. But F. Raynes said the .vehi· cle was successfully tested at Rohr's plant here on March 6, 1971, and said engineers have been refining 1t ever since. Rayne s said the vehicle is the first step in devtloping a transportatwn sys tem that could carry passengers up to 2,000 miles an hour. "It will displace the airplane because of its lower per-mile seat cost, all·weat'her capability, drastically Jower foel requirements and · its almost silent operation," he said. Rohr expects to demonstrate the vehicle at an internatklnal transportation ex hi b_i t j on which began Saturday in \Vashington D.C., Raynes said. Jt will carry 12 person.'J at a time dOl\1l a 60 root track. "It will be the successor to the current air transport system," he predicted. "But it won't come tomorrow. It is a tong step from our March 6 accomphshment to carrying passengers intercontinental at 2,000 miles an hour." The car body rests on a set of special guide rails when the electromagnetic power is off. w i t h structural e:rlensions wrapping under the track. \Vhen the p o w e r is on, the extensions are drawn up to the bottom of the rails by magnetism, thereby pushing the car less than an inch orr the track. At the sam e time, Raynes said, the ele<::tromagnetic cur· rent can bt: varied in such a wa y as to make the car movt' for\\·ard or backward along the rails. MANUFACTUBllG AND FIELD REPS 0XEROXING 0 ANSWERING SERVICE QDESK SPACE EEOS tl 0 SECRET AAIAL SERVlCE D BOOKKW'ING OLA. LINES D TElEGRAMS, iWX, DOCUMENT TRANSMISSION D MJMEOGRAl'HING 0 IMlllHG LISTS 1'.b's , COUUlllCATIOIS SllYICI mEAU ~ .............. ,,,_. .... llVl,.·AIU'OlT lteUSftlAL COMPUX (71 4) 147·7717 (21S) 6to.tSfS • COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK LIST S•ltt(l>OI) ti•tl'I LOW Lt$! 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Co 10cl 1t lit • 11'• ll~o r 'i CIT f'IR<I 1 Allt9hlUd I 28 11\o HI' 2t\~-141 CllltoSv l 70 I Allt L\Xlpf 3 I :11-. :rf.1.4 l9'\;ff-'~ Clt11$o l.tld I Allf Pw 1 ..0 Xl~l 11 1\\o 7l:U.-r •1 Co1v Inv 52 Alletl Gr, 41 !l ,,,, ,, 26 -'• C11v Inv WIS All·d Cl\ 1 lO .341 311 t 301, 30lt-P1 Cllv Inv Pl 1 Alld i,(nt .oS 16 oil~• 47\1 01\1-1\ City Store~ AlldMllls .JJ ] 1910 IVlo 191.1 Clork E 140 ;.lldl'rod U 11 21i-'o 19''• 10•<+ ~ C11r1t 011 •O Jlllll'(IP!lllf J I J2',: ~)\~ Sl 1-t-I CleV(llf l tlJ A111..:IS! l 0() U1 JS'~ JJ'1 35\'>-.. C10~1EI 2.711 All•t<:ISI "' • 21~ ss•' SS SSYt (l~~E pt 1 • ., All!! Swpm-1 .i 510 51• '\•-'• Cloro~ Co t ~ Aiiis Cll !Cd lC4 U U\l 11'>-'• Ch11tr f> ,90 AllrAulo 01 I 11'o 11•0 ?l:U-\\ Clu1ttP pl ! Alohl p 1~1' lG l6h '"' u•._ ''o CNA Fon SG Alc.o. 1 10 Jil 5!j ~ S.'1~+ '11 CNA pf I 1• Finance Briefs e Litton Loss LOS ANGELES -Am11s~ 1., 13 11 '• ?!~+ ,v,, C0.$1 St (h Litton Ambac S-' n 1•w I!,,. 16 .. C.iSGpf 1 1t Amerac 11~ ' 26''' 2jl• ,,,. . toc:1Co1 1 •' Industr1"e• Joe. ays "t I t A e 1 , '° 3 ~ •s •$ Coc•Bo11 l• 8 1 OS Am~:, Ue 3olO 54~, .U'l' s.il'o+ I' 0 Col owl tlnKr $14 23 million In the thi"rd A Hss pt 31.. 11 Hfl• 111•1. 11'°"+' Colecoln t:i1 Am Alt Flit 11 a!o 41'? ~\ti-I Cp!glle I'' I Am Atr1111e• 110 •9% "' ••v.+ v. co1H" pf 3•, quar er "'8•ker 1c4 li t)'• is,. 11,,.-'• ~:l1f;.A1~1d~ Tb I "' tlrnd 2 2t l•l 0111> .IA •IV.-1;. e giant cong omerate had A ere•' 1 n l~ 11~. 1),,. 71,..+ ,. ~111o•u11 Sr 1 d " II Am 81dr 15 ?3 "'~ '"" '''l'o-1{'• oUn••t 1 60 repor te an .,,, 8 m1 ion loss Am c1n 2 20 15' »<• 3111, )014.-~• l011 Ind t0 , "' c1n Pl '', ' ,,,~ 16"• ?61o+ ·~ c!/:F.:'i,i I ,If for the second quarter, ended 1,m cem •· '3 r • ,,,., n._ ~c a s 1 .,~ AC nMll~d 3227'o 11, 11~1-CllSprefl Jan 31 Am \"•In 1 1<1 ?h• n:lt ,,..,_ 1' Cot G •~ 111 • • Am( So I 4Q )l ll il'' .l2'h-~I 1 A C' I ~ ...., 8' \, •>'~I'> ol Plclurp~ The current loss. amounting ,.::::cV:n i;! iJ7 .w.:. u1, :;6..,,_ ~. 01s Oh 1,1, t h A 0 1 1!11 1 r ?!'• 1J'" 2S'o-i~ Ccmo E 1 o o 4 cents a s are. con· AD·~irl 104 ,0 61~1 , .,. •2't.+1~. cme pl 11G t I "th $t• 6 II' A Dull 18d \1 t 'l t•• tt.__ •o Cm Sqlv ii) ras s WI a .:.. m1 1onADulpf ·1-1.i , lJ\o lj'"' 11't +i0 Cmwe11 ,~o Profit for the same three AmEtt~ 1 r. s1~ 2r .. 2 211<o-v. cemEd Pr ? Am exp0t1 lll j"'1 I i -\\ ~wE!ll>f I •~ months a ~ear ago The c?m-~~I;~:' 1 ~~ iltt lhi 1~ •• ln.+ ~' c:~gprn~~~ pany attributed the third· A Fin pf 1''> t ':.ct 19 lt 19 ComEd 8wt A Gn8~ W IJ 77'4 111, 11\?-Vt Comw OU 41 quarttr loss to about $40 A Gn ins · ..12 S1l 11 10·, 21 cwonr.i1 1 12 ·u· . bef t . A Gn pf I Ii) 11 3·~ 31~. 31~--""' Comsat S6 mi ion 1n ore· ax: write· Am Hols 06 19 l"ll\ n'• lj'~ • comoutr sci II Som I th ••• If A Homt l IT t~ 'OS'• 10•'• lO Comput Solt 0 S, e 0 e Wfl~-0 S A Hornf pl 1 1 151 , 151'2 1s1i,,-1~, Cone Miiis I came from liquidating and ·.~",1:.~ .?~ :ioo 4&'~ "6 ~& -"' c ... nMta •!d ,., ,.. ,.,., ll 1~ 11110 101~ . Conr•cC .O consolidating severaJAMtd ld tJ 1n '' "~~a+ ~.c~ne d 110 • "' 1'\~ coro 11 21'• t"i 11'•-'• C0t>1E<1 pl s d1v1s1ons AM•tCx l o «1 :_IC'1 2t'·• '9\.-'•ConEpt ''5 • AM!C pf 5•, 1 19'• n io '9(,+1'1 Con\ Fd '" Amer Mo!o~ 1it-1 1'.i !'' ''• Conl"dpf •', • Soll·-1t1"11g AmNG5 2.;a 76 'J.P• 36'• 14-l•t ·~ Ccn Frat WI '-' Arn Stu ,11 ,~, 1,1.,L '"',,I ~,~,,;-2\0 Con Le1~1n11 C Ty M A S~\! 120 • ,, • • ConsNG 195 JEFFERSON I , O. -AmS Air JO 6~ 57'• Sl'o s:n.+I conim Pw 1 S I St J C Am Slf\d 'i> .1U ll\1 111• 11'• • ConP pf '16 ecy. o ate ames Am~1dpf "'• s>• 59 s, sa\~-·~ ,,.,., ,,, A S!erll 52 •~ :il~• JS J.S'M " ~ Kirkpatrickhas1ssuedacease1,;::1 r 2l11 th'O a ~1,, 4~-·· conHA•r L" A rtTpf o ti? 3t 5''• ~-\·CnCtn 1~ and desist order against the,,:::; T&t "" ,11 111 ,,~ 1'4-·~Con Copoer Del W bb R It C d AmWelr 60 11 1:;•, IJ'fl rl\~t~~C0t>llCor11 1 E. e ea y o. an ,.,, wrr f' ,,~ y;;o.1 it:• ,,,.,. ,,,.. ~. c1111c1> p111• K th S P• k JI f S AWlrP 1 '3 JlOOO 2.~. 21 :01 ~. C Cool8 7\> enne . oi!.f er. a o un "m••cn 111 7 15,, 1sh 15,, "• C0t>r111 1 2111 Cl.ly •ri"z Amt!e~ 401 67 19'• ll"'t 1t;,i ~. ((>n!lnvs1 1l • n · l,MF lncp 1 2JA il'" .. 1. !i\.io l'r. ronl,\I., 5]!1 The company and its agents Am'," •, && l'"• ~1·, 1 '' conri 011 11. h I d th I• . , AM Int t 101 91\7 97 t1V. l C"onl O•l 1>f 1 are c ar e w1 so 1c1t1ng Am11(0P is ' r-~ • 1 -•,t Cn Stet! ~o 'I · "d t l b · Am?•~ Cr> r2 ,.,,. 7•, 7'h co~! t•I ~4 J> JSSOUrl reSI en S () UY In-Al'flrno Ccro 22 ?1~1 ?l"1 1t + '!. ~on1rl Oita terests 10 real estate located ~::::~:~~1 1 ~ ; ~ •• .:i;~· ~;,. + '• c~~~~01 ,•~ 1n Del \Vebb's Sun City, Ariz .. ~~i~rln1" 2i lf 1:;; :ir:~ 3:Y:+ \~ ~:~ Pnd l8 d I d Payment b's·s !\n~ecmda 1 1 2J • ?CJ'" 'II'• Coo11rln "' .S on a e erre 1 .-.n,horHo 1 , :;11, s2'" r,1,~1 '•Coop L•b 51 without having met 'recristra· ,•~,~,,· 1 ,ti!~ • 1~·11 1111, 10 r-\o co~c·T 26" "> " .., 31 5~'• ~ ~\,_ •\ Collflnrl 60 tion requirements of the A111ch•C :;1 " 11>, 11•• 11•f'r.-' C'.0~11 R•n~P • . , Aoco 011 ii 11 Zl't 27~• 27'o+ "• Cocw!t1 11!1 i'i.11ssouri Un1forn1 Securities Aot'o \ld 1211 11\;; 10>. 11 -•\corn G ,,_~ A PL Coro 11!t 2•"• 11"• 1•''• . Couolr.i t5d Act. APL o!S so 1 111,1, 1••,; 11\~-~. C"oNI•• c 0,.... AooPot e n t10 1G5 105 1~5 Cnx llrd JG ., A1:111lled ll<J U 11\1 11 11 • CPCln!I 1'10 • Space S~ttle AAA s, 1 ·1 1t 11'01, 1u 1~•1h-1 ,,1,,eco 10 Artlll:i i U 19 t!lo Ul'o-''ii (;Cr4dlt r:," I' SAN DJEGO -ndenberg ~:~~ro~nt! !~ ;i'• ~~~! ~i~t ~~ f~~!'I( 1 i~ Air Force Base ill see the ~il~n';so 'r. ~ 1~1~ 1~, 'l:~:-v.. cr~u•e H•n<I same duty as a launch site in !~~~0 ~N°~ 1r: ~;~ ~~~: ~!~!= :': ~~:~~11 ~~'~ the space shuttle program as A,•,o,"!~ ' .. ·n 'i :'IO'i :l'l :n ~ ~. crwn zt '10 ... '~ 50! ~ J9 ,. -I Cro~Z1>f • 10 the betler·known Cape Ken-~~~(~~" 1 ~ n ;81, ~8 ~~~ + ~i ~J:~oa~" ;; nedy. Fla .. says the deputy ad· ~;~:~01rc11 ,~ x~;~ ~t~: ~!;! ~,~:!:. ~~ f~~n"'1"0,~: m1nistrator of the National ''~·001 240 1 sr. YI'• so•:-1.cur11ti 1•'11 .-.~,~( E!r!w • 1·, 11 , ,,,.._ •,, Cv•t•tl'Nr fl Aeronautics and Sp a c e •• D!vr; 1" 91 5""• ~··· ~,.,..._ '' c,,u~rH , ~o . . • As~o or l'lO •o.,.,.. 31• m +i-Adm1n1slrllhon. Alll!cnt 2C<1 11 1.,? 12 • ., •_ •' C~clo,1>< .JStt d A.t lcMr 1 lid •• "'" ,.,,, ?T<. ~ (ypru1 1.\1 I Dr. George Lo\v lol ~;:f;v~1 ~·o .~; ~i'• ;}'' ;r·~11, D•mon c,, new s men here that."' R ~htf,. 1 ,,s 61,~ ,,.,.. '"'-,, r>a~R1v~r [" "Ge.nerall)'. Kennedi• will 'be A,,",,'..~~:.'", 1•• '''' .,,, 4~'•-11 °~n•C1> i ~~ "w 11 10J 101 101 -1 01rt In SC9 used for t'"Ase flights in an "',,'"•' ,.,'",', •4 '::.. ''' '" 01r11nc1111 1 ""' " 116 13'~ ii 11 -,~ Davco 1 1• t asterly direction and Van· A,•,•,.!!!, •.~~·. " •~ •'l~ 1rt+ •· oavhn r ~· ""' "" ,. 111 U, P,, O~Y!nnH '~ ~nberg for the high In· Avco Coro 1~9 16 15'• 15" oavPLf , '6 • I b"l " Avt:O Co wh l6 "• •'' •V.-+ ·~ OPLptd 1 IS clmabon po ar or 1 s "v(o 01 3.10 1• 4S'o •'II~ •1.,_ •, 0,,~ w .Oii Tb. Spa ce Shuttle will be as ~~~~~Pd o1: ,, 36" :ii 15 -'' Oette &co' l . d ·1 II /Vntfl cl l~'-"'J U1' ir· i.sn:.72i· O!-I P&L 1.11 b1g a! a DC-9 an WI J take 0 ,._vn1lln .,1 1 "' 27'~ ,,,~ 211,.,_ 1?, P!I Mn! l 10 ... Pri I l5 SS 11~" 11~11, 1'~'/•-l•, Delta Ar 'A like a rocket and land like an · .... ~ 0.1 ,, 11 11 1n, 11 _ '• o•uec 1~1 ... • I Lo "d t It" I -• •-Otnen1 Cc all'p ane . w sa1 1 u 1ma e-81bl.W•! •s •2 "'• " n\~-~\ D•11n•1" ·'' ly "w'1ll rtplace all ex1shng •,•,l•,•,0','• ',! '4 "'~• ,~,.., :11 -1'" Oen"''" pf 1 , " • 5'~' s~•~ ':A",_ \i> Dennv~ll Go launch vehicles.' !,•,•0><,•,•, '•~ ,., n•" 1•~· n•~-''• 0·~1~p11 1 ~ 1100 '~"' 65'1 ,,1<.+ '• Der!<o 1>f fl ll•nCal I :U I ?I ,,,~ 18 .\-D1Solol~ oO • S I D llanoo• Pl'! •7 15 14'• 1( >--''o De!Edl~ l •0 a es OtVll l\8norP ol ' I 1n:. 7n, M ~-+ \~ o,1e ~f 7 ~· CHULA VISTA Rohr ~~~~"{~",J i~ ~:; ;~:,,: ,~':-) DttEpf s , Industries, • !larbe•Ool •• 01 o1.3 i• '''•'-·~ D•l<'!rCo 1• Inc a designer 11~r1 r 11 ll 1-JI'. l~, 3•1, ._ '• o.~1 F'" s1 ' I 81!lc In <{I I I'~ 11'o AAI.+ 1~ 0 11 In!! 1 llO and manufacturer o Bu•!'\ oStt i. l ''' 11 . ll''--"•Dl1ms11m 1 I h Rltf"~ pf I IQ 1,,,,,.. 16'~ 1&i.i-t 'I. OlaSh"' 1>1 l tran sportation svs ems. as 1~111 lod i~ lrs ·~ 41" •"!:>·-'~'-011~111>1 1 20 d d ·. I nd 1u1rhL •1 3'~ t s 60'• 40\o-4'~ 01c11p~n Co reporte a rop 1n sa es a 'hxt~r L •1 ,1, ..,,, ""' i1•.-~, 01~bo1d .4C<l . I th . • onth a1~u~c, ,<,(t 3 1r .. 12l1 l:Mk OIGlor1c 60 earnings or e n1n -m Btar.11<>s '' 1 ,,,, ~1'· 'n•-'• 0 .01111 E<to1 fiscal year period ended April ,11~•,!d 111',' ''' '' •4~. ~ + ~. ri1u,n~11 4{l •• '" ~ ~'1' SI !i>'l:o-'• Diiion( ~Oc 30 1972 as compared with the "'''ono .io ,,~ n·~ 01iw •"'~-t Vo oi::nv'N .109 , !UothA lil• :>O ?l'~ '3''• ;J'• 0!11ton 11'!( same period last year. •ie•coPt SC• ~1 10~. u~. ''" • Du111~,, 10 Rohr said its nine·month R:!~ik .~o!i° ~5 1Z' ~t 1~-'• oiversifd In e,u&Hlt ..60 ,1 ,.~ 6f 69'1,_ ~· OlvMI 1 :lid sale~ were $197,480,198, a t\•m11co "' 11 11•, 1n'• 20'f-''*' orP~r •o d I I I •M ·11· llendfx I'° 61 '' ~ • ...,,_ll~ Oomt~,\n ID ec 1ne o near y .,.,... m1 ion lendlx "' 3 A n•,2 n"• 111~ . DomF'd Sid I h "od · I I '" C!I 1 10 1'l •S '''"' 40•1 '>tlnluJ 05<1 or t e same per1 1n 1sca 81nCPpf 1'· 1100 ,3,, 1'·~ ,,v,,_1 • OOt'l"tllY « 7"71 N l · I 8tnC1>I 4 30 31104 HI'/"' l<l<I 1-1 Dorl'C" 3? year ,,-. e earnings or RenC1>1>t •'~ 11/J .si~~ sa•i, ~v..--1•, Ocrr onv~r th. fi I e $3 018 855 8en1uet !n l~ 610 N S"I-\'ii Oors•~c 16 IS ISC8 year Y:er . , lier~... Ph~ ,,, '"• 11 111, ..... ~~ Oovf•CP 19 or 70 cents a share. Rohr said, s~~~s,t~n 1!! n1 jr·· sr.~ 5~.1 :~ W'iir:'" 1~csg as compared \Vith $3 280 969 or 111c1c o~r ' 4-1 "'• tn. tt -1'~ or1v c 1 '° ' .t~lr Jn <J 1 7"'• '''• :n·• Or1•!~r 1 ;o 80 cents a share for the same ~!1•'1-•hln 1 '' n ,, 2111 11·~ . n,,, ~' 1 :/!} • 'llockH'I •; lt'.J 17'• 16-. 1 .,,_ ~• Dres1tr 111 2 period last year. ~~'l,~.,,:"8,~ ,~ tl ,.., 1~~ 1?:'!= Y: 01•~·1 i ~" eoaTno c io ''I ?l'. ""' 721,+ 111 g~~~l~tC~ .J • T .. otl•lt Deol 11~1~e \• '5 ''~ 10'• 1~ l3~-t-~•Ouk! cf 1 10 a !lond lndu• ~s •'• ''• •·~ . G A ~ookl.lo 171 ~ 2t'I ,,., '°'·-''"o"'","c',~, \V1NDER. a n 5ordtn 170 71 "'• ,, •• 2''0-.... UP ~n !lort 'Wr I' l7i U't J '• 3~:;,)-t-"'-OuPn~t 2..,_d assembly plant here. will bulid eorm1n~ 1~ 11 ,,, 7'i n1 DuPn ,,, ,., 300 "d l l f th a r ·.1 ed ? u '11 J~i is:-~ ~~ _.. '1< DuP11 of ) rap1 ran s1 car~ or e soo1f'.rl 111 JllO 11$0.., 113 11r;,.,. .,.., Ouqnt l 1 '' W h. t D c t a '. 111out!U Inc .s l•'• 16111 16'o+ '• Oval pf l'o 8.S Ing 00, • f n I !1r1nltf lk 1).ol lt 4i 11'1 181'0-·~ Ovmo fllt:lu1 1ystem 1f Rohr Industries' low ar1gos 1 XI• 1s 5•'1'1 5J'• sn.-•\ 0v~1m1{ C1> . Brit M.'/ 110 :JI? "'' 6G'• .n .... '• b!do(S91 .6m1llion1sapproved 11r11MvP' 1 '•>'•t •l'• 43'~+1'' ea,1, PT '' led R h 8ro1Ptt lid T~S I•'• lofl'I 14\~ •o Eai.coC -~ as expec , a o r e,.,.dH11f 1 's .s11• ~,. st>,~+ •., I'"''" Air aid •d"A'HI .. 2 ] ')', ,, 47 + ''• .,, Git ~ ~JXlkesman s . 8,;_k GI .... n .s• V\f• ,. 2f'lo--l\lo 1st v11 1',• G Pryl I t e u o l n 1 2:P'o n•'I 2:iu _ •Kod l,04• eorge .ua, eas ern 8~0:n 'com n 10,,~ l~)'I 1<1\\t'• •tone;·~ regi on markeh~g man1ag•c~~o1r :;~s~ ~~ ll ~ ~~ ~~+ :1; I~~~~: Mio Rohr lndustnes o nu. a !lrFtrrt. t 4 10;5 31lto ~. rt~-'• i ekd NC ·~ Vista, said the company's bid l~'E" l·.~ ~1 ~~ ~r,~ W.+ ~! ~i11inG ''~ is •11 million lower than the 8..,,.;1(1 comi:i 11 in:i 11•0 1th-·~ e1ec1 "''oc <f , !lucklel l~d .S 114 ,., "' El 01!1 $y1 stcond lowest bid. 1u1 p,, 1;3 • tl'o lJ\\i ",._ 1. F.1"' 1~4,..,. R h I eu1ov~\'/ '° ~ 1Y-li 15 1~i \I II i.•1mo 1>f If appro'lied, the o r pant 1111~~ 111n-o i:~ 1:. n ·• 11' .~ '• 1i1n t.1111 In Winder ~ould employ 200 =~~l'1.,"' ,'~£ 1~ il-~ n~: n~~:~~ ~:.~1(;; rl ptrSOrul from 1973 to )976, he ,•,11;1NN,o1 1jf l~~ ,.,: 1•: l'o-'I rr•vAir S? , -• ~ • fm•rvln ;a said 811r~C 10 11 3710 l'; • "' •,. • emhrl 1 '"° • t;ur•OllJ •• l l! 111'' 11l1' 1•3 ,_,,~ E/,\I L! Ol!cl 8u1h unf,, ' I,• 1 ~ • l~" "m~D~ 1 '1 e Ba11flers' Choice C•IJOi CP 1~ -1; ~-, -., , ••"-·~ f::iB::f ~~ LOS,ANGELES -Andre'v~:::;;: ~3 !: 1l 1~i 'r·. '• t:;::1~;"1G:~ J. Shepard of Santa Rosa "·as ~:U~ ... ~1~,~~ ~ i~~ 1 1 ! ,f . .= :; t~:7;ho~1 .. ~ elected pres1dtnt Ao( -;-t ~ e ~:::;:\•, ;1 !1 ~! ~:': ~.1;_ , ~:l~1n ,t. California Banktrs ssociabon C•n 11rw •o 1• •'• 1 1\o + •1. ~t1uG•t 21.1 at their annU"DI convention, ~!~.j~e 1 ~ ; ~~., 1~:: ~1 .:. :; ~j~Lr} 1~ recently. <::i~~ ••.: ~ !l:: ~; ~ ~+ .'.'. ~!~:I~ 118 Sht:Dard chainnat'I and S,,DOC:o-1'' 11 ',,',•, '7 ''" ••• F.111•r1,. 'l" • (1rllilfl Mt f 11 7J1• 1~vl_Cj• • prtsldent of 1be: Exchane:e C•rC•t.Of'I $ 1'0 IQ ,. ~~ .. -·~~ '""'I~, ''° Bank, sueteed.~ John P. €:~o~P[' 1'!: 11: it,,; ~~! ''1'T ~ti ~!~l1 o ·~ -Breeden, eiecutlve \·ice presi· ~e:;r1~~ ~ 1,~ ","' ... • .::~~ ~ '+11; !,,""'.'' dent of Wells Fargo Bank. ~.,J; ~ if ,.,i1 ~~: ~ ·~ ~~:· $! Other offioen elected wert: 111~t ·,lb 3;'1 'j:'~· •• \~, '.&t ... · '• ~:l;f~ '.\~" First vice presldent. J'{orman c't'~ t cor'! 5'1 i'>-·~ "•t•~" C I Cr~ ~I 7 !?•, l h • •11~1 r ,'( Barker Jr., president of t• ·'' i t tt•i ~ » • .,, ,,.m11v' ·"' 1 l 11 ~ ; '° • ·~ ,,rslf'el •~ Uillted C&lifornia Bank, Los • 1nm "° 11 {' '·' ~'-"\"~· 'N"' ,iin • 1 d •-'A .1 lfflt!:l C'J'YSI -:.-'• F1r1~Mt ·~ nnge es; secon vu.;:e pre:w· •r.1~d 1 fl s t'' )i •• '• ~"'!l<''' .·~ dent, Ole R. Mettler, president ,r~'11s j ~ lr: 1 • •-'~ ,,:~'~! l ~ of Farmers It ?.terchanta Bank ·~ 1E l ~ ~ l;i: ~} 1 ?1·, -l• ~:;~~:,., ~ of Ctntra1 CaWomla. Lodi ·, :n1 f:"' '~' ..:~ ~ • -0'.+ '' "r!f'l'.11 ':-o M" :r• I l 1r~ 1Po-~\ ''' '"'n Ill and treasurer, Robert L. •rt , •t 21 • lft• ,,,.,_ 1\ fl'Mt1•1t 1 ~ Sheran. ttnior vi« prtSident ~111.1'°'.ti 11: l1" ~a lf+,ll ~~ I B ' ( C.lil · Sa t•.P1•• l'O ll ~ •1 jl 1$· ·~,.,...,Co ,10 o an. o onu1, n 11wl>•" li>C u l.'. r ~ a1 lt l'lbr•ttrtt .JO StlU .... UHls.J Hl•h Ll'W CIMI (q. ~···-·~ .O••-!'t ff '!..= t: _, ,.~ .. ••-.. I f'raIJCU,00. G111'ii9~"1 1 r :.,~ :1~: l!j~• ii.':-1 ~~U~~· ; ;: • Drug Alternatives S~~ght • U.S. Probes 'No Bust' Policy, Long Range Answers By CIJRTl!l J. SITOMER awtttt.• lci.c. MIMflr hrvlc• SANTA BARBARA -The federal government i8 working quietly with law- enforcement offictab and l('bool and communJty JfOUps in an effort to find new ways of dealing with drug abusers. 11ie main thrust -particularly with mo.rtjuana and "soft" drug offenders - !s away from police "busts" and jail aentences and toward reha bili tation. A series of 13 "alternatives to drug abuse" lnstJtutes -spJnsored by the U.S. Department of Justice's Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs (BNDD) -will be held acroas the country through October. The American Public Heallh Assoc ia- tion and other groups are pressing for removal of all criJ.ninal penaltle,, for use and sale of marijuana. Under 1970 federal law. marijuana is clasalfied with LSD, heroin. and other "hard" drugs in the most danp,erous group. munlty drog·program oumaprs, and -Prison olllclall should maintain educators, Dr. Langer 1aid "punitive clote llalson with commwtity-based pro- metbod11" have only proved to be grams to aid a-offenders in readapting ltopgaps lo tht drug prob Im. to society. Thls now is being done with "The loog-term answer is to teach peo-some dtgree of success in Fairfa1, Va ., pie about the effects of chemicals on the and SeatUe. body," the federal ofllclal holds. "We -Juvenile-probation departmenl.5 must condition yowiptm from preochool should conduct aemlnars !or youthful to que11tion tht whoieaom.enesa of drug abuaer11 and their familie s. Some chemicals on thf'mselvea -whether they pilot wort is under way in this area in eat them, breathe them, or put them In sacramento, and San Diego. their veins." -School drug-informaUon curricula Conferee. bert -trying to hammer for students and parents should be based out new strategies for drug-abule pnven-on "honesty, openness, and credibility." tlon -offered theae guidelines : In North Dakota, parents of preschool -Police should adopt "no bust" youngsters are included in such orlen- poUcies for drug users -parUcularly t.ation. And Jn Southern CaJlfornla 's youthful lint offenders. 'l1lls would Orange County, the Junior League and enable tho.st seeking btJp to aet it other civic groups are working with without fear of legal reprlaals. parent8 in drug-abuse education. Cooperative arrangements of tlt1I tort -Drug Jnformation should be in· between I aw .enforcement and corporated into special progra ms. Users community-help groups already ai.!lt 1n should not be made to feel isolated from such places as Qieyenne, Wyo., and others. Rockville, Md. -School& should atress sporl.5, cultural ., Hero Honored Eagle Scout Terrance L. Jones. 17, was pre- sented the H o n o r ~1cdal for Lifesaving recently from the Boy S c o u t s of America. Jones rescued a man trapped in a burning car in Fullerton ju October, 1971. .• DAILY PILOT 9 ADVlllflSIMINT Mesa Senior Honored Now Manyw- Coeta Mesa Hiih School Senior Stephen Smith, or 1011 Presidio Drive, Costa Mesa, has been award ed a President's Scholarship to at- tend Pepperdlne University at Malibu. Smith received the award for his academic performance, potential and need. The award is offered by the University 's Scholarship Com· mittee and can be renewed by maintaining a 3.0 (B) grade point average and satisfactory/ citizenship. a ANTHONY SCHOOLS HARIOR CENTIR 2>00 H.·l'tlor C•nltr .COiii Mts., C1Hlor11i1 Pb. 1714) t79·235J 1111 S. lrooltll~rsl SI, An1h11m, Cl l. fU04 Ph. 17141 776·5800 Th• scholarship amounl.5 to l FALSE TEETH 13,200 !'400 per trimester). With More Comfort Sm.Ith is the member or the Tht1 ~oow • d11otutt ~ ...... -. Fed help. FASTEETB• Powder ._ C&J.Uorrua Scholastic era· dentllf'ft • 1ot1J91", fltmfll', 1t.e&dH!t tion and received the L.A. hold. You fed more eocntortabl•;.: • Tim "A" stud l Ward He e•t m0111 naturally. Wb7 worry! VOi' es en · . FASTEETH D•nture Adhnive was offered a top academic Powder. Dentlll't9 that fit are .-n• scholarshlp to David LlpsC<lmb ti al to health. See your den.tit& College. nruJuly. F, I H means <ireen Belts conlrill~Uons 10: Clt11t11• Ad~IMty f'•rll l olld Tum Ginger P1g1, Ch1irm1n, 4M 51, AndN•I lld., H.,.pert aMdl Possesaion is punishable by up to a year in jail and a '5,000 fine. Sale carries penalties of up to five yeara in jall and a Sl5,000 fine . For second convictions1 max- imum penalties often double. -Judge.!I should divert users away awareneas, and development of artistic from the courts into preindlctment pro-talents as alternatives to drug use. 1---------------=--------------------- baUon counseling. Sucb a program was -Youth coordlnating: councils. should OCM ll03FM However, many federal officials uy that removing criminal penaltlea for use of marijuana wou ld offer no real aolu· tions to the drug problem . ''Right now what we really need is a serle.s of alternati ves to drug abuse ," says Dr. John Langer, chief of BNDD's preventive-programs division. "And we also need alternatives to incarceration for youthful offenders," he adds. Initiated by Judie J. Sidney Hollman ol be developed on the comunity level -..f _.r 'V'1 ste~eo the Superior QM.lrt of Pennsylvania. with all age~ies working with young peer ~ A ' Judge Hollman defen prosecution of an pie pooling their eflorl.5 to combat drug admitted user pendJni completion ol I abuse. Bismarck, N.D., lw met with the SOUlldS Of the harbor treatment program .. And rehabilitation aome aucceas along these Unes. _r result.. in upunglng of the court record. -Widespread anti-drug media cam- "We're trying to humanize the court," paigna -including use of "underground" th! jurist e~l.ainl. "J've bandied about newapapers -should be launched to 3,800 cases In this way in the Wt 1;, counteract a pro-drug advertising thrust. years. Sixty percent were drug-lnvoJved. -Community worken should serve as And the resulta are ruaonably good. 11ombudsmen" With the police and other Rearrests -recidivism -in dru11 are agencie s for those aeeklng Jielp in con-Interviewed here during a three-day gathering of pollce officials, judges, com-very low," Judge Hoffman aays. querlng a drug habit. 1~--'----'----=---;:_---,..----'-------------------~-----~----- Separate Bike Road Proposed by Cranston WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Alan Cranston . (0-Calll.) urg- ed that cities and counties be authorized to draw on the federal highway trust fund to build separate roads f o r bicycles. He asked a Senate pubtlc workJ subcommittee to ap- prove hls bicycle transporta- tion bill, .saying It would be "a good, safe and sound in- vestment In the health and transportation needs of us all." Cranston disclosed a tabula· Uon of replies from 175 California cities and 31 coun- ties lo his questionnaire about bicycle roads. He aaid officials of 163 cities and 22 counties reported their residents want more con- venient and safer pathways for people to ride bicycles to and from ~'Ork, and for recreation. About 80 percent, he sald, reported lack of local funds for a bicycle-pathway system, without federal assistance. Famll11 Circus Cranoton said al lwt a third ol the 8.5 million blcyclea sold last year were purchased by adult!. "The bicycle ;., once again considered an alternative form of tramportatlon," he aald. "'Ila use should be encouraged by well-paved, well-llghted and well-developed bicycle paths." Top Student Wins 'Honors George A. McCulley ol New- port Beach hu been named to the academic dean'a Jlst for the winter quart.er of atudy at the Northrup Inatltute of Technology In lnilewood. McCulley, of 204 Via Eboll, Is studying for a bachelor of science degree in electronic engineering. He is a 1962 graduate of Newport Herbor High School. bfl Bil Keane C> "G'NIGHT, MOMMY!" WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF LAW OF ORANGE COUNTY now .1cc.,tln9 men .1nd wernen whe •rt eithet": • ..,., 11 with ' r-•" •f 1u.,i.w. ~u.,, trffltt 11011 •• • ..... 21 ..... ..... •"'"'""' "' .,,.,..,.. ~­..... ,.., .. 1WNtt ..,_ 141111 ... i...1 •f ...... Ii. ... "•'"""ft" ...... " Tiit J.D. 01 u.1. '"'" '"" bt •Hned 111 .c .,...,. of p.,..lffM ~ ....... 3 <111110 p!lt -·· 3·.C hovr1 ptf d 11t. A -SpKl•I "'°"'''"" of "'"' tlllMI Ol'I kluo'dlf 11 ..... n.bl. for flrtl·)'9tr -~~ Apply Now for September 7th Day or Evening Classes 800 South lrookhunt Anahtim 92804 17141 635-3453 Gt ....... -•lltlill "' •• "'-c.11~. S1ti. .., •-in.1i- PIO\'INOMAU.r ~ tf 1NI ~ COMM.,,. °'Ml GlfM l•IS MT l, lf12. •~~-_:'*!rr~ao~,.!..!,..~"""""~~!....~.....,~ ' • .. • Clair Burgener has often said that there are no shortcuts to high public office. And there aren't. A man must earn it. There have been no shortcuts for State Senator Clair W. Burgener. He deserves our • support on June 6 to make him the Republican nominee for the United States Congress from the new Forty-second District. He's earned it. He's earned it during fourteen hard-working years in elected public office. First as City Councilman and Vice Mayor of San Diego, then as a member of the California State Legislature: two successive terms as Assemblyman; followed by two successive terms as State Senator. Clair Burgener's capability was acknowledged by Governor Reagan when he was asked to author the Governor's 1971 Welfare Reform Act. ' Those who have a deep interest in maintaining our quality of living recognized his ability to get things done when he prevented off-shore oil drilling along the scenic San Diego coastline and when he made possible the expansion of Torrey Pines State Park. All Californians know of Senator Burgener's bills to promote better quality neighborhood schools. Without busing. ' The California Peace Officers Association evaluated Clair Burgener's Senate voting rec.ord last year. The result: nine key votes for strong law enforcement; none against. • Clair W. Burgener is no love-me-suddenly candidate. He has put in a lot of hard-working years. And there are more to come. \;-- He deserves the vote of every Republican on June 6, and every voter in November. He's earned it. • • • ·'«. ... ~ -. Clair W. Burgener United States Congress t f ft ;i t . . 11- I • •• • • ,. l r t ot .. ~-. ' • •I ' ' "' 9 • " " ,,. ,,,.... . . -.. . · ' • TL1tsday May ,0, l lJ72 SC DAIL y PILOT JI Tuestlay·s Clc sir1g Priee~-C·Ju11lllcte N{''\V Yoi'~-.. ' ' After Eai·ly Gaiii ~ ' " ' NEW YORK lf\P) -Blue rh1p stork pr1rc< lost all of an early gain and slipped fracti ona lly lower 1n toda y's n1ode1 ate trading They added th:il so ine do\1 n\1ard adJ11st111en t \vas to be experted follo\11ng thl' rerent ~hai p !:.'l1ll:5 which sent the Do1v Jones average of 30 industrial storks Jhead some 46 points 1n less than 3 11 eeks NI Cn of I , N ; :::~ , n N1 Ch~m 11 '" -1\1 ~Q l-IMO l!ll l'(J t.D •rro, NllFuel l I• N I Gen 7l N!I Gvp l OS ~ 1 lorn r<J N~tl frd ! ~p1,:~BI 10; Ni! Ser~ •a NI S1and I) J\i~ Sl~r • 11 N~ Ste~I 1 • ,,, " . . " '> " ' " "' " " ' " • ' " " ., "' " • " " " " " " " " ' ' .. I~" ' , ' " I~~. 19111 1 c•. ' Low Cto • ,, ' '· , ,. , ' " ' ' ' S ~'e' Cha1 I Net ~~ r V~I ' H 9~ Low Clo1t C~q , 1 " " J .; , ~I \[ ' " " , " ' 66 19 ' '• ' ' . 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' " " ' ., " 7' • '• • UOO P~(CP U I P Co"' Un~~tel '" Un1onf-nl 61 Unlnve1t 10 l.JnSt'ro:t 7l'1 Un1M1 IT,M Un M!o "'5 '" '"-~ p,_ .. ' '' , " . "' ,, " 1v • v ... ,, ,. ' " -'" '. <I0'1o-" . ,.,._ ,., UnAlrPd .10 un11,11cr, o~ '• Unf<r1rw:1 wt UnCclr !d l/n Ocll~r}t Lin Fooa, In Utd Nair Cu Ut1"1 I Cp , t \JnPOY lie_, VS Ctr 1 1~ '~us I'll! .. (" US!..ill:! r.id ' US Lsoll: wt US Nd 11~ '• US li1dlu"' U5 Rl!v ! l6 US llodu<ln l.JSll:uR 51,1 17 • 1 I'. , ' "" ' -,,, .. ~ ' 3'•-'" " . ' ~ •• t- '" ,,, us Smelt WI 1Jnl1e~ (or11 , IJn !roa~ CJ> '1. Unlvl Clo1r tJnlv Cont 11 '• \irlJBll! wt1 URS !v11m, Ural! S9r 1a ., y,, •r " ' . ' ! ,,. tilt., I ~ f '-cl'" ., " . ' ' ' THE BEST '1 , I 1 • '°'' 1110-• " • I • t \• 1Jl, 1~ ' '. 11••-'• ,_, • • ~·· "' 5"'-• •• 11 )---• .11 I, I• •I •t 11 ·-1, 11~-"' ~. '" ,.~. ' ''•-"! '~ • ' I ,+ • llh> {1 1~·· ll -' 1') •• 11 .,. ,. !1\~ " . •• ., .. _ 1 '" IJ.1..._ ~. pnll1 prove 'rr 1nut ~ Is Ollt' of tht \\Orld !I mD<lt pnru.la.r CQf!'!IC Jlr1p~ P.rn rt It d&ll.Y In the [>AIL Y. PtLOT. ... I 1 . . J 2 DAILY PILOT For The Record Tut~J. May 30, }q72 • At VC Irvine Bus Service Endures 6y PATRICK BOYLE 01 lllt OtllY PU., Srtll in lbelr registration packets. equipment failures.,. The bus He expects that a much larger service was contracted to the .. -... ·l)f·ss·ofutf· · · ......... P.~-~.P i 1 .~ •. -~ . .9 ~ J. P ~-~. ~ .. ~ ... ~~~e!!!~~.~-~,-~~~.~~~~!~~s .. ~~~~~ .... ~~~~~us ~!~e .or Buena Park . O'RS. breakdowns and a mid -year vole and that the issue will an<f, allliougli 'Pniffii)S-· 1tfte<! -f)f Marriage beginning. the student bus pass easily, t~t the young drivers service at UC Irvine survived PhilHps said a full report on ' related well to the student o .v11, 1111v :.·i:-~ ~:.:1L. its childhood and will probnbly th~ success of the _bus Jy11tem population," the old b,1ses M~~u, J1rne1 ecrw1rd •nct Sh1ron . . this school year wall be made owned by the company had ,.~''· He1111 e •nd CH-or" A grow tn size next school year. to the d1rector1 of the county frequent breakdowns. g°"~'~· HI ~• K.' •nd •~v s. · But nol without a rew Transit District at their June 5 After the first few •N,":I"· eon.,. K•"'1"11 •rod oon1ic1 growth pains. because. as yet, meeting. breakdowns, the c o m p a n y Clr•v. Don•ld c:111r1n 11 1nd s111ron funds have not been found to One problem this year has agreed to keep a spare bus tiivc~1'f.,11~ •rod ci•rencf w. suoport any service in the Deen that the service has been parked on the campus for use Dentl1 Notkes ---aUCH5E• PoD<!tt M, Bucl\:1r. Ape 44, ot 301 M~ln S• , Huntl1>11!0t1 811th. Dote of d•11!1\, Mlv 71 197 . 'u•v'v"'t l!Y v•''r, l'•iv•; • .. ,,,,., Htlen I, Bucllwr; brotri.r, Ern.11. Ro1~rv, 1~'11·~1. l<~M'ft\>, t r>M, STill~I r:,~p•! Pt'<lul~ M~~I Wr,.~t·~•v . t ~I' ~~ Simon & Judo C11h0!1c Chv•cll. 8ur1111 11 ~t• bY lt>t UnTle<I $tattt NllVY. F1mllv '''0"'''' ,...~•rl'I ,,,., ..... _. ~ .. --··'o lo your !1vor!11 cn1r!ly, Sml11\I Morlu1ry, OlreC!Ort. CART r~rl•l<11>l•er K 01r! 1-qe 1. o! llJ L~kl SI., Hunllnoton Beoch. 01tt ol dt11!1\ M•v 19. un. Survive<! nv'p11re,,·•· Plcn11r~ ~"d Nancy 01rl; 1l11fr, R e~t• O&r!; "'ondo•ren!~. f'lttO••• en~ 1,'•rlon1 (),.,., Ktflfltlli ond Jeon JenWft; qrtll• 1>•11'ldiarent•, Jarn~• llM Vivien Jen·~n: Alm~ You111 1nd F•enk Cornt"ll111. 5trvlcti pelldlr~ '• ~-"~· Mo•!uerv. FttlOlllON Thnmtl F, Flt1glr>00n. ~21' We•lilnor"n Jwe., \°'" M"1•. D•te1 of <!e1!h. Mr.v ?I, 1 ... n. urYIY"'<! flY WI "' ZOii, o! Co•·· M~:a. Jlo11 rv, w~s rfcltl!'!I Monc!IY t PM. f'rno:eM 1\1« -~ cel'!b-~tt" •'l<I•.,, 1'ue'\f~Y. l~ AM, DOlll a! ~I. John 1he fl ~· ~t rotr·~llc c~u•·h 1n!~•m•M H"lv Crc:• Cemeterv. 111111-B•ro~ron Funrr•I Home. coue Me" n1··c1or1. Qllffll John f Gr•~r. A.o-l! GI pin• !.'>Cl·~~l·d flriv e. Hun!lncl'on 8•~ch. Onie of <tt•'"· I' v ?~. 197" !>""'''>tt~ ,., "il• M• ·' ·~ (M1!1le)/ d1voh11r. Nortne l. Gr.er; b·o •·•r. We•lt~ C••••· 1·vo •i•I'"· !!•'"• /'c~d'Y t"<I Elh•I G·•~r. ~~rvlc•< w'!I I>-~~Id Tllu••d~v. 11 AM. s..,11~s C~•n•!. Mi,rme"'. Holl•w<l<I~ 1:~morl1I Per~. !>ml!h~ lliortu1rv. Olrtclor •. M ~Ll Oorothy M. Hill, ?119 Crtwn Miii Aond. ~ .. , O·~• rorn;e•lv of L•11•1no\ 6t~rh. C.~:t or tlt111\, M•, 21, 197', Survived bv •'1u11t>:rr, •ull~ Tnw!, ~I ~"~ 011~0 ; ~~11 llv• t••ndchlldren, Gr1vt•lde •frvlces we•e neld t~iov, Tow(lry. l0·13 A/.\. Jl.•cen•lon C1tholic ceme11ry, e1 Toro. Fomllv •u~w·I• '"°'' wlshlnt to m~r.~ memorial co11'rl1>urion1 pleas• co.,ulbult lo Ill~ OrArr~ Cr•mtv M~•rl A~10<'";""· 51\tlftr L.111un1 Beach Morlutr,, OlrK. I ors. HITCH(OCK F~•P s. H l!cllcrY.~. B1!J ·Cr"''' SI,, A.~1. 1. C:o:!a Mt•• 0111 of de11111 Ml, 15. 1911. S" ' v..O b, l!"uoMor-ln· '''" M1rnArPI Mi •1•c..,.~. of Cos•• Miu: 1 w o Gr•r'l<lchllclren; 11\ref gre1111r1ndchlldrtn. Serv;~1. loclav, TvfKllY. JO AM, 81!1! ---~~.;;: 8i!w ,...M,..:.fr1i:r•p_,~··s;1;i: 8• ·~"'0" FuMral Home, Coron• del i.·.ar. Olrc<:tor1. . •OW Rov M. How. A11e 16, or •~1 S. HarDOr, ~~···~ A11~. U•·~ or ·~~•h. Mav 11, rn. ..,.v:'-"".<I tv wl" /,\~e F. llc·v· •o'1, "r·• . Mow Jr.; 1!•lf r, Grice Holl!; lw• 11r1nLtllfll!ren. Servi<<"• w·11 II• llrlcl W ,o,,.. "· !1 AM, Sn. II< ( •••i>rl. tn••r· m11nt. Good sr"r>h<"rd Ctmettrv. Sml!h1 MQr;uarv, Olr'c , .... N'l'LO"lll Jes~I• P. Meluol11. J.1751 Bt1d1 Ro&d, r 1ni1!r1r.o Brtch. OA!t 01 d~.•!I•, ~1~• ?I . 1qn Survi•1cd t" f!u!".ir"· SI •r"~: :• ,., 001.1:tl111. An~lle!m; DrMf1, S~nra ,t,113; lhrt" vr1r..;cn<1urtn: r·e•11or, Fl·I" 1r:1. or Loni 8~tch: bro!fl~''· Cll!!ord •rd ~~~~~11ne~'Ft~~~1X1 L,'ii;"'cr,:t: R ~1{~ 0'88rr, Lynwood; O••n~~ '!chymac~•'· TYrlack. Service!, Wl(lnt,de,, l PM, f'tc•!lc View Cl'lel>l'I lntt"""~I. P-•lllr View Memorial Park. Ptclllt Vltw Mor!utr,, Dlr..:1oro, Nl!WM,lr.RT 51tPh<"n J . N1w111r1. AH lS. ot 181~ Gole11 Terrtce, CcrOlll dtl Mt•. Deir cl dtllh, M•, ~6. 19n. 5 .. , .. 1v•d bV 1>1Ht"1~. Mr. ~nct Mr1. F.1rlt N-h•rt1 two brolherl, Dtvlct of Sen G11)rlel, PoYI New111r1, San Clernentti s1>1er. J1tn~ Nt>'IN!rt, Caroll• ti., Mnr; m•t1rn1t 9r1ndo1r1nt1, Mr. and Mrs. Edw•rtl L1r10f'I, P1'ltdtn11 p1!rrn1t 11r1nd1M1rtnh. Mr, inti M•s. J lmtS E•r1 N-wnart, 01n1 Point, Grav,.slde strvlr~1 wfll be held Wednesday, 1 PM, P~c!llc VI-Memorlnl P1)•k, wllll Or, Jos0$11 Alt<dth ctllt11ln1. Sell 6rOl'ldWI, Mj~~'a'' Dlre<rcr1, M10d 8: P••CO. ,._,, 81. ot )<l(l V1t1o•I• sr.. to51a M•••· 01111 or de~tll. Mftv ''· 191?, Survived bV four $0"•· ll•vmOJl<I, cl lo~<> Be1c11, P11ul, n! Net1r1•~8: l<erol~. New Mexico l"tl W1!111m Pasco; live dsuoflt•t!, Hu!h (ftrls1otf~r~"· S.·n Fro"· t ltco1 Dnrothv Grim~. San OIP110; Ro•le Jensoo. Mls..ourl: M•vMlle eurn1tt, Cc,I• Mesi: 5hlr1ev l"!tllse, Mlnne~ta; twn bro!IHtt~; -&l•ltr; 31 11r.>nNlll!dren: 19 Qr,11-11r1nocf!lldrtn. Grave•lde i P•vicf!, ~~":.~f"r,iL ~ft;. ~~:. •J.md.nbciu~~ nllida1ln11. 6tll BraOOw•v Morru1rv. Dlrec1ors. PIET'I" (herle\ tiubtrl Pl•h. ?J.lll Vl1 Sin r.11b•itl, l111un1 Hiiis. Oalt ot 11111111. Mav 1~. 19n. Survivtd bv wit,. Ce•ald\nf: !we ,. n" c Roenev Pl•tv. v oroa Lind•: S!~on W, Piety, l oll!&; mo!n~r. Mrs. f.,I ~I p.e1v., L111un11 Beftch: orn!lltr" Samuel A. Plelv. (hull Vi!IA; Wllttf 5. Pie v, OnMrlo. •l•lt rs. Mrs. Irene /.,\cCIY•e, L11gvn1 8e1cn1 Mrs. Eva.,gelone Prov;:,.t. ClrnO<lrl, s~rvke .. were ~•·Ill Tut•d-v, 1ot111v, 11 AM. Pat l!lc Vlew (..o:nel ln1~rment, P~dl1c Vit w Memorial P1rk. P•Cllic View Mnrhoarv, Olrtcl~rs. STAR(I( l.nrraln• H. s11rt~. 135~ N•-.oor1 81vt! Cost• N .f"M>-01l• ol <1c1111. Mav n, 191?: Su,vlvW ~v d•uvh er. f;'o;ln~ Jo Rned. cl Chlcaoo; lwo sens. Harclll Rt..O 11n<1 1~~~'~' /,\rver; •i•!.,~. fdlT~ Ju<I vi /,\l"n~'>Olll : Erne•tlnt Wln~elv,.d>. cf Pine Croce. (11lilornl•. r.r~vr11<1• sP•vl•~<. Thur!dev. Jynf \, 10 AM, H11roor R~t /,,emorlnl f'11r~. 81111-Brroeron Fvnttnl Momc. Cos11 M•••· O<ret1on. VAN ll!r SC MANS Julia HI Ven Oer cll•n'-3141 C111rrmon! !,!,. ''" "'· OMe ol ~e1lt!. MllV ?I, Itri. 511rvovld tiv !ll!ee son•. Wllllarri J., P1ul f, cAd Alt>er1 C V11n d•• Srln~<; '""'""-W:lli11m Suq81S~I; sl1'cr. H•l•n ~!oi:lf!P.; i nti eloflletn 9r11ldthiltlten. Requiem /.,\a1j, We<!roeldav, M11v ll. la AM. Our ( dV Ol•Hn r! An<>tl ; r:~1~nllc Cho.rrh. Mltrmenl, Holy Cron Crmrtrrv. B111!1-l.lrt11~ron Funcr•I Hom t , Coron• Otl Mir. Olrtrtori. WARN llll Cl•rs E. Warner A11e 1~. of Sll·A Avenld1 1~1,orcd, L~gu~~ Hill!, On!• er t1e11!l1, /A~v ~6. l91i. Surylvtd lly wi re, Cor11 A. V/arner1 two ~""" l'l'e"d'll L. W11rner, /i·r~rn; t~~ A \"11rn"r, T~Anvn~ O•~•· ~i<!rr, Hiima Andrruon, 5we<1en1 rour ~·on<!childrcn Funrrai •trY l~t" !Q<!av. i ue~dav. 2 PM, /\\c(ormlc~ L1oun11 Bench (h11Del. will\ Dr . l•wrr n(t F. 1111wltv. 01 Unll"d ~"!-'II~~ ·1 (hur-"•, l 1111un• Hiiis, offlel1!1n11. lnterme..,t, El Toro C~m•r•Y. F1mll~ 1\11.'<lt<I\ l"\•:Y>Od~I ccnlrlOullGns b~ m~de 1o lhf T~.~otlore Ptv~r fr>un<l~llo" tor WllJ!lowr's A~d N•lure Plants, JQ.13J Tudord St .• Sun Vlllfv, Cthl. 913. 'l"AllHfll Or. Don•!<! J, varnrll. Rt•ldtn! of LOS Penes<111llo1; 1ormer1, of Co,IA "''rsa. /\1tmnrr o• El~· lod~t. Nfw1><1rl 1!1.'Aj" 11111 orelldrn! ot Nrv.•perl Bet(M F'lsh n11 Club; IO•ll1<f n1eml>f' or N'l'llQrl e en('I· Co1111 Mf11 8040r<I or llfallo,.. Date al ~ T:~;.hr Ml~ A~n'tll tn. ,.:,,~rlll~n~ r.r w j;;; d~U!IMrr, Dru Vernell; onr 9r~ndcMlld. PriY~lt temllV 9rnvtslde urvlctl, Wt'droeod1y, Noon, Httb<'r Rell Memor- ial Ptr~. Al~•lf' w111on Morr111ry, El· condldC, Olrec1on. IJALTZ BEHGERON FU~EllAf. llOrtfE Coror.a de! ~1ar ti73-94SO Costa l\1tsa G 16·2424 • BELL nttoADWAY MOllTUARY 110 Broad~·ay , C(lsta ~~sa LI 8-3433 McCOMnct LAGUNA BEACH •dORTUARY 1'11$ Laguna Canyon Rd. 4H-9115 • PACIFIC \~El\ MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery l\1ortunry Chapel 35lt Pacific View Drive Newpol'I Beach. C:i!Uonrla '44·1700 PEEK ,MDLV COLONIAL f'IJNERAL llOlllE '111 Bol&I , ... Wtslmlast'1' 111-#111 SMmlS' ifoR1'llARY ll!Malo81. lllalllpl~ ~- 1972·73 academic year. The spora\ic at times because <lf in emergencies. free "ervice heitan in Janua rv, rurning one. bus on an hourly route to Corona del Mar, Balboa Island and uo through Costa Mrsa carrvin{! A.bout 1,500 students per week to school. John llov. UCI vice chancellor of student affairs. sa id money for next ~ar will be fo und somewhere and. if necessary the administration will provide linRncial support for the school's bus until other fundin~ can be found. "II has been so successful ," lloy ~aid, "that vie really can't let it lapse until there is put-lie transportation to and from !he c:imnus sponsored by the co•111ty." lie addPd thnt he has no idea hO\V ln'lf' that public bus servire migh1 be il'I cnming. ''This is one of the most positive Sf'rvirPs \VC \\'ere :oble IQ provide this year,'' Hoy noted. "and I think it wo11ld be tragic to be forced lo discon. ti11ue it for lack o! funding." Tht> vice chancellor ex- plained that the service, ru n· ning only one bu s, costs ahout $0.000 per quarter and that there are administration and student hopes tha( it can be rx~andC'rl to at le<i'!l two buses rlurinq the ne~t srhool year. If Ii\'() buses can 00 used. he noted. sprvire coul rt Possit>ly he provid ed to Urivcrsity Park 11nrt fT'Ore f,·P.quent ~~rvice miqht be providl'd to Balboa !~land , \Yhere a large n11..,ber of students livP. The bus service got off to a .'itart this ac!'ldemic year through a $6 ,000 transpor!ation .'itudy Frant fro ... 1 the Oranp,e County Transit District. which wa s matched by $6,000 in university monies. The student body vote In early Mav would have in· cre:tsed student fees by $.'I eash year, with the moqey earmarked to suoport the bus. This WO\lld bring in some $2 1.000 per yeoBr. ' Alth,.,ugh an overwhelminP: majority of lhe voter!! ll.055 to :l15) sunnnrted the bu~ ,<;crvicc. only 27 !)<',.cent nf ihe students voted in the election . A 33 percent voter turnout i!l required to chnrf!c the fet> strurture un"Pr the s!11dPnt coTJstit11tion. So the issue did not ORS~. l\o\vr ver. Dean rf S!udrnts Jirn Phillips s;iid rinother referenrlum \\•ill te l <"lkPn on !hf' r•ottrr in the fall \\'ith 11"-l' ballo!s being gh·en to stu~enls Licensi11g Will Start Most dune buggies, trail hikes and mini-bikes used ex· c\usivelv for recreation in Califorriia must be registered starling July I. the State Denartment of t\lotor Vehicles said today . The ne\v requirement ap- plies to vehicles not ofher~·lse licen~ed for s1 rcet or high\\'1lY use. Pcrniits are $15 for A f\\'O- year period. $6 (If \1·hich v.·i!I ~r lo the California DepRriment of Park.s :inrl RE!i'rP::tlion. Local OMV offices will begin occepling applications (or off-high,vay registration by June 15. UCI College Earns Gra1it The College of Medicine at l"C Irv ine has received a $9,054 grant from t h e An1cric.:in t\1edi cal Associa· lion's Education nnd Research Foundation . The grant represents gifts donated by physicians. the \\"01nari"s Auxiliary. and Stum-IN ni in California and throughout thr nation. ,. COSTA MESA: 1550 W. Adams lat Royal Palml 279 E. I 7th St. lat Santa Ana I IN FOUNTAIN VALLEY: LET'S BE FRIEND!. Y fl you htvC' rK"\\' 11cighb<lrt or know of 1nyonr movln" to our &rt'a, 1ilca11C tell u• !«'.I thal "'C' may extl!nd a friendly 'A<tlcomc and htlp them to bcc:omr-acqu•lntcd In their nt'W aurroundinp. So. Coast Visitor 4f4.IS1t """'* Hnr Y"JSitor -.0174 9945 W•rnerAvt. (•t Brookhur,t l 11951 Brookhuut l at Garfialdl IN HUNTINGTON llACH: 6182 Warnar l~I Goldanwllil IN NEWPORT: 3101 Newport Ave. let 3ht St.I . . 'I. • • . ' DELUXE AIR·CO~D!llON.ED COACHES AIRPORT BOUND? Dll!ECT SERVICE To Los Angeles lnt'I Airport from Oranee County Airport r..,.. ............. ;'".'' $"' ltlft. ..... LUK>.AJt.tmJ.11~-~~~--·-~"._._.,...~ plua 12 other convenient Cl\Uctren .. 11 1" i.i. RheduletdailJ :~~~;;.T,;;~;;:.«a s~~lt1111y or Chrolllf>1'°'1 Alll9ncan COrp. DIRECT • RELIABLE • ECONOMICAL -.... ,:.,,,. ....... i .. ~ .... . . ._,,,. • F, H _ ..... _, ___ i__ ' m-e ·a ,n·· s-·-------·· --····- (onserv ation Ct11lr~ut1en1 to: Clllt•111 All¥hery Plrll llM TMfll Glflttr Pitt. Cll1lrrr1111, 424 St AMrewl .... H1"""1 a-II .. • I " • \ 1 I I . • ' ' ' . •• ' -· Lag a Beaeh ···-· ····*--·········-*. I VOL 65, NO. 151, 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 30, 1972 Lawman Smells Like A 'Rose' Would a rose by any name smell sweetly after a brush v:ith a skunk? Ask Laguna Beac!l Policeman Paul Rose who Sunday reunited a baby skunk with its family. Officer Rose was called to 39'l IUgh Drive, Laguna Beach, by l\lary Condon who reported a skunk in her yard. She said she had been unable to contact the SPCA. \Vhen Rose arrived at the residence. he approached the :ikunk. It showed no fear . but no antagoni sm either and for a while it Y.'as thought that the animal mi R"hl b!'! a d:imeslicated pet. Nearby a family of skunks \\'a!I found and the errant youngster returned. As for Rose,he emerged smelling -like a rose. Prisoners Seize New Jersey Jail, Free Hostages PATERSON. N.J. (AP ) -"·tore lhiln 100 inmates took hostages and seiud coo- trol of the maximum security wing at Passaic County jail for several hours to-. day, then °n!leased the captives and returned to their cells after officials agreed to discuss grievances . The: Rev. Bill Mason, a Paterson pover- ty agency official, said three remaining hostages were released when prisov. of- ficials agreed to make no physical reprisals against those who staged the revolt. Earlier In the day, the rebell ious in- mates released six other captives, in- cluding the warden. At least four guards l''ete injured in the disturbance. Mason. present at negotiations betv;ieen authorities and inmates inside the prison, said the prisoners' demands "aren't big ones." "They deal with human elements such as hygiene ," !\1ason said. "They want the right to wear underwear and have clean m:-ttress covers ." ~fason said an inmate named Clay Thomas acted as a go-between in the negotiations among the inmates a~d Sheriff Frank Davenport. He said Thomas was instrumental in the set· tlement and that Davenport w a s "courteous and gracious," throughout the talks. Warden Jack DeYoung, nurse Linda Vanderlinda and a guard who suffered stab wounds, Jack 'Donohue, were re- leased after about an hour A second guard wounded in a melee with inmates. John Dozzoli. apparently escaped. Both guards were hospitalized. Just before noon, three o the r hostages. Lt. Thon1as Oliver and guards \Valter Dobrolowski and Rodney Leone, were freed. Dobrolowski had a tooth knocked cut, and v.·as . treated at St. Joseph's flospilal. Leone was hospitalized with a punctured chest and abdomen. City police armed with shotguns and tear gas surrounded the jail in the cent~r of this city cf 120,000. A spokesman said the officers \\'ere to stand by while the negotiaticns continued inside the prison. A Passaic Ccunty sheriff's spokesman said Bou.oli, Donohue and another guard were escorting six inmates, including a convicted murderer, from the second Ooor to another part of the jail when the trouble began. The Inmates managed to overpower the 1uards, seize their keys and release a~ proximately 110 prisoners the spokesman aaid. The spokesman said the convicted murderer, .who was awaiting senteocing, threatened to walk out or the jail using one of the hostages as a hwnan shield. The spokesman said aome prbonen wert armed with homemade knives. Laguna Sleepers Awaken to Fines VlsilOts to Laiunt'• beac'hes lulled to 11 .. p by 1ent1e ,aurf and tirlntling aim may well be awakened by a ahiny bod&• •ll••hed to • Laguna Beech poli<eman. Over the long weekend, 40 ptl'IOlll.were an-eottd for vlola-ilng 1lle city l>w pn> hlblling sleepb!i ovtrnilbl In veblcla or on lhe beacbel. . Molt Ill lhe slftpm ,..... pleQd op Mond1y b<lween 2 and 4 e.m. Wbeu 21 ar· ',...ti wtre ll\lde. SUnday, It mpers ..-armttd ind S.lurdly nine peroons ...,. amoled. 11111 lar the o11..,. ii fU. ena- 'Pot' Suspect Shot to Death EL CENTRO JAP) -U.S. border patrol agents shot a man to death and chased a half-dozen othen Into Mexico after suspected marijuana smugglers opened fire from behind a desert bush. An estimated 35 pistol ~ts peppered three Jeeps but mi~ the three officers on routine patrol midway between El Centro and Yuma, Ariz .• Monday night. At about the same time, two men were arrested beside two parked cars a half- mlle away near Interstate 8 for ln- vtstigation. Henry Felchlin, chlef border patrol agent, said about 300 pounds of mari· juana were confiscated from the sandy shooting site several hundred yards from Mexico. ' The agents said several or the men f:red automatic pistob:. A shot !ired 1>y agent Harold Slocum apparently killed the man. "These guys each had a bag (of mari- juana) I'd guess they were carrying to a contact man on this side,'' Felchlin said. The California Hlghw~y P a tr o 1 , Imperial <;<lunl}',ab<riH'J dtJ>Ulip and .. army btl!Copter j>llofYi\fu1111dlo jolnell'bi tracking the men to MeJ.,\co, where · )IdkPI police from }Wicall look up the aearch. - 1be dead man appeared to be Mexican Charles H. Piety Services Held; Succumbs at 55 Services \\'ere held thi111 morning in Pacific View Chapel for Charles Hube.rt Piety, 23433 Via San Gabriel. Laguna Hills, who died Friday at South Coast Community Hospital. He was 55. Mrs. Piety is survived by his widow. Geraldine; two sons. C. Rodney Piety of Yorba Linda and Steven \Y. Piety of Lolita; his mother, Mrs. Ethel Piety cf Laguna Beach: brothers. Samuel A. Pie- ty of Chula Vista and Walter s. Piety or Ontario; and two sisters, Mrs. Irene lvlcClure or Laguna Beach and im. Evangeline Provost of Glendora. A partner in the ownership of Gill's Li- quor Store in Laguna Beach. he was a native Californian and had lived in the Art Colony for more than 40 years before moving to Laguna Hills eighteen months a~o. The Rev. Richard Reeves officiated at today's service, "'·hich was followed by burial at Pacific View Memorial Park. Planners to Discuss Open Space Element lAguna Beach planning commissioners will meet at 7:30 o'clock tonight in a study se.'Ulion at City Hall . The planners will discuss the Open Space Element of the General Plan, h-1-lA zoning amendments, Woodland Drive area rezoning, strl!tt lighting on Thalia and Glenneyre Street11 and potential development In Bluebird Canyon. or a Mexlcan·American without Iden- tification and about 25 to 30 years old, Felchlin said. The two being questioned in El Centro were oot immediately identified. State's Traffic Death Toll New H oli.day Record From Wirt Services Seventy-eight persons were killed on Catifornia highways during the Memorial Day weekend, a reeord for the holiday in the state, the California High\vay Patrol reported today. The to tal also was the most in the nation. Boosted by single accidents that killed six persons .!\1onday n i g h t in San Bernardino Countv and five persons near Marysville, the toll eclipsed the 63 set in 1968. This year's holiday count ran from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight Monday - a 31/,- ~.P!lflod. 'l'lJO !!HW~ W3' Ill PV~ 4¥, daY•. · Lut yea"t-i8 ~rsons were killed over Meniiirlll Doy W<eienct. . The six-fatallty accident was on a mountain road near Lytle Creek, a head- on collision between two cars each car- rying four persons. The five-fatality accident was on California 99 about 17 miles south of Yuba City, also a bead-on crash of tv.o c.'.l.rs. Nationwide. automobile traffic during the Atemorial Day weekend took 58.l lives. The National Safety Council estimated 530 to 630 persons would die. A United Press Interna tiona l count or accidental deaths in the holiday period showed: Traffic Drownings Planes Other Total 585 151 17 77 830 Huge Crowd Jams Lagu11a' s Beacli Areas on Monday A crush of beachgoers considered by Laguna Beach lifeguards as bigger than anything last summe r hit the Art Colony shoreline Pt.fonday. An estimated 47,000 }:ersons packed local beaches, reported senior lifeguard Bruce Baird. "Most of the guards felt it was bigger than last Fourth of July y,·eekend, which yearly sets the record,'' said Baird. Baird reported that no rescues were made W.onday because or low surf con- ditions. T'Y.'O rescues were made Sunday and none on Saturday. Crowds those two davs were considered "moderate." ~ The department, said Baird, was kept busy enforcing a number or city ordinances and treating stings from jellyfish which are riding in the 60-<legree waters off Laguna. • ev1·ew- • 'Youngest ·Graduate' Little Patricia -.e.yn-Tordella slept th rough mos~ of-the University of Scranton's 84th annual commencement exercises on the back of her father, David who received his bachelor of science degree. Pa- tricia's mommy ·was iU, and daddy took over the babysitting chores. Tl1iet1 Flies to l(ontum, Hue to Spur Viet Troops SAIGON (UPJ) ~ South Vietnamese Prcsidenl Nguyen Van Thieu flew today to the embattled cities or Kontum and H~e ,t.o show his confidence In the South Vietnamese defenders. He declarer' the siege of Kontum hroken but the thunder of artillery crashing down nearby belied his words. The Thieu visit came as the U.S. com- mand reported that U.S. Navy air strikts against a railway yard at Haiphong left it engulfed in flames. The Uon~ Bi railyards. 10 miles north of Haiphong. handle most of the rail traffic from China into the Hanoi area. SS Official Cancels Visit lo Santa Ana The Santa Ana Social Security office has anncunced that the June 6 l..a.!fUnl Beach visit of the social security representative will be cancelled since the city hall council chamber will be in use a'I a polling place for the primary eleeo- tif'.ln en that date. Ne:-:t La~una Beach visit of the representative will be on June 13. Rear Adm. lfoard E. Creer. com- mander of Carrier Division 3 of lhe U.S. 7lh Ji~lcet, •old UPI Correspondent Arthur lligbee today lhat continuation of the air offen:iive would make it impossible fJr North Vietnam to keep up its offensive in the South. He said the North Vietnamese probably had enou'1h supplies in the pipeline to continue for a few weeks but "if we con- tinue to close that port (Haiphong ) and the railroads that come in from China , then there isn't any way for North Viet· nam to cont inue for an extended period the type oto!Jensive they ha ve going." The raids on the Uong Bi complex were the first 5ince President Nixon ordered the resumption of air strikes against North Vietnam April 6. 7 Nudes Pinched On Bea.c1i Sands Of South Laguna Secrecy Clamped on Crash Seven beachgoers \\'hO provided a memorable Memorial Day for onlookers at a South Laguna Beach by allegedly capering nude on the sands were quickly gathered up and .covered up by Orange County Sheriff's ornctrs. Boy Killed By JOllN VALTERU CM .. ~ ,lttt Slitff California IDibw., Ptlnll olrlcials to- d., llJ~ a tighl lid ill ""rttl' on the circumrtonces sunwndlng lhe I Ir.at crash of a San Clemente police car and 1 small plcltup tnldt lut -tend which claimed the llle of a "°"I Btl<h !ttnqer. Tiie spectaculer colllllon whlcll - place Ille Friday alt•-aevertly i... jured lour ....--and .. ,..,r 11ta1 i... )uriet to li'yeer-old Jell Brie!. lie...;. aimbtd to ....... head and Internal "" juries Ille Sunday nfcl!I Ill llJulon Qim. mun117 ill>lp!llL Accide1it Wit1i ClementePolice Car Ofllclally, lhe lrlghway Palr<>I tak" charge of the investigation in cral!hes in- volving municipal police vehicles. and local offidals by custom art forbidden to commVtt on details. But tpa1t...,,.., for the CHP In Santa Ana loday 111d ,tlley had "no in· lormaUoo .. on Ille lr•sedy. '!'be oollilion look pl1<e at 4 p.m. Fri· day u patrolmln Guy Adams answered a call rtlattna to a car beln~ driven In ernlic lublca llorJc South El Camino a.al. Al the .. lroinwl bqM l<Ctlttlling near Calle DoloftS lht an1ll domestic pickup lldeo willl --vac1Uoo 1eor and several cases of betr, pulled into traffle anG the patrol car slammed lnto the rear of the truck at high speed. Neither the ~lren nor the red warning lights on the unit were operating at the tiJJ lC. Brlct apparently was 1ittin1t on ton nr the load ln lhe rear of the pickup wben the crllsh sent the truck sklddlnR more than 100 feet down the roadway . Several occupants were thrown out after the lm- pacl. Brlcl, who rectivtd emtraency first aid at tht scene from a pbysicLan who wu puelng by, unclerw,.l surgery Im· (Ste PATROL, Page 11 l 'M1e six men and one woman found 1 change or clothing walling ror lhtm at Orange County Jail. All 1 seven were booked on charpa, of )odtttnt ei:posure. Among the, '"Ytri, tplUl<l"1 up by depulies in re.-p6grc tf> a.Us from iratt apartment dWelltts In the area were Pt.ilchael Frederick Benway, 22. of 31568 1st St.. South Laguna and Kcnrlc Carlyle Brown, 19, ol J2$ High Drive, Lagun..1 Beach. Also jailed on alleg•li0111 lhat they sun- bathed nude and 1wam nude in the Table Jtock beach area were Anna. Christine Slo<kton, 20, ol Mecca, Cali!.: George Timothy Byers. 29, and David Ktilh Moore, 23, bolh of Malibu and Dale Edward Mal loot, 17, 1nd Richard Joaepb Herold, 40, bolh of Los Anseles. I - Today's .Flllal N.Y. Stoelu ----· ··-· ..... TEN CENTS • 1xe .California Case Not Taken Up \VASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court tod ay rejected an appeal by California to review a state Supreme Court decision outla\\•ing the d ea t h penalty. The high court ts considering whether to abolish capital punishn1ent across the !:ind as being in viola!lon of the federal Constitution . The justices gave no reason for decllnlng Unanimously to add Callfornia01 llippeal to its docket. Still before the court. ~xpected ruling next month. are other appeals testing the constltutlonallty of the death penally. The California court held 6 to I on i.~eb . 18 tha l the death penalty "may no longer be exacted'' in that state because it vio lates the state Constitution. The :iction spared the lives or 102 men end 5 won1en who make up the nation's largest death row population, including Sirhan Sirhan, 1he assassin of former U.S. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, and mau murderer Charles ,.fan.son. California 's petition, for review, f11ed March 31 by Evelle J. 'Younger, the state Attorney general, called the declslon 11m unseemly r\LSh to judgment" while the de1th penalty Jssue wa1 pending before the U.S. Supreme Court. YounHer contended that the "state ground' asserted' by the Calliornla court, a provision in the California ConsUtutlon, was "palpably transparent" and tha t fhe rul!ng consequently should be reviewed by the U.S. c:ourt. Death of Diver Off Laguna Held To Be Drowning Death of a Culver City scuba diver whose body was discovered in watera off Laguna Beach Saturday morning was at· trtbuted to drowning today. Coroner's office investlgaton aaid, however, that further toxologlcel t1tudie1 would be made on the body or Theodore Humphrey Jr., 31. The rei;ults cf those tests will not be available for three to four weeks, a deputy said. Costa Mesa residents Wayne R. \Vatennan and James P. Moultrup found the man's body in about 30 feet of water off Diver 's Cove Saturday morni ng. Police said Humphrey's car had been parked on Cliff Drive since Wednesday. presumably the day he went diving and drow~. Lifeguard Bruce Baird said Jtum· phrey's scuba tank was empty of air when lhe mm. s body wu found. Baird noted that Humphrey was not wearing a llotatlon vest and apparently had been diving alone. Oruge \t'eat•er It's goi ng to remaln H-0-T for at least lhe next several d1ys ae-. cording to the weatherlady, with lemperalurts rangln& from the 10·1 al !he beach lo lhe 90'1 Inland. Lows in lhe 60'1. INSIDE TODi\ V 111 a te1t of 1uroival, 20 Mor· fllOtt fam1lits i1~ Palo Alto have btgun livi ng for thrtt Wftks onl11 on tht good1 that wtrt stored in thtir liomts tolltn lhtll were lold-witJt no advcnce 110- llct-o/ the tzperlment whic~ i" sponsored b11 the church. Ste story on Page 18. LM. .... 7 C'llftrltl• J. 11 c:iu :-i ... U• ' C1atlltl• •tt c-l(• '' c......... tt Dla!ll Klllca 1J b >l9tlf!I '"' t •11ttl'fllllfMl'1 • ,_., HM ._, 1t ''"'.. 1•11 Mltt'etffllll H AMI UoMtn It Mfll In Senk• ,. Mtdft • llMl•tl ....... It N1tlt~ll ..... 4 Or·~" CttMty ti ....... , ... , SPMl MlrlMtt "'" ·-. ..,.. ... *. • ~:"''~~ • \..' •> O.t.ILY +'ILOl Lt:. "' TuUdM, M•J 30, 1~12 'Tired' Nixon Flie·s to Iran En Route Home , TEHRAN (UPI I -J're11dent Nixon, " tired from intenslve summit talks that produced ._ plf'd~ ot An1erican-Russlan t:ooperatioli lo prev~t a nu cl e n r . _ .. .botocault,j.nded ·a Jl.(ne-Oay . ttip tQ .tl~ Soviet Union today and flew to Tehran !or an ovtrnlght vis it. The Pre~idenl will spend 21 hours in lhis key Persian Gulf nation. then. fly to Poland for a day before returning to \Vashington Thursday night. When Nixon's jet, the Spirit of '76, landed at Tehran's J\1ehrabad airport. he nnd Mrs. Nixon were greeted by the shah a!Td the empre5' of Iran . _.Follo"·i.ng the.. colorful air.port \li'eicom· Ing ctremony, the Nlxons were taken by motorcade to the Shahyad Aryamehr HHH Clusla ~ I . , . 1'10nument. a towering edifiee cornp}tted ,. lait year to mark the 2,500th annlvenary of the Persian monan:hy. Tbey mayor of Tehr1n, Ghotam lltu llikia>'; iii;c.sen!Od Ni.Ion.a &QIOeo.uy. to the city and ga Ve a smaller repr<Xluction lo Mrs. Nixon. The Nixon.s then pro- ceeded to Saadabad Pnlact, the presiden- tial guest house. Nixon and the Shah e.rranged tv.·o 11essions of talks totaling four hours dur- ing the President's stopover. The purpose of Nixon's visit to Tehran . U.S. ·sourtes said, was to assure lranian leaders of continued American support in the P.ers.ian Gull regian _where unrest .oc-_. curred among som e of Iran's neighOOrs. Nixon look ed tired as he left Russia from Kiev, Ille 10-cenlurleJ.old capital of the Ultnjne, <ndlq hi.I hlatorlc Journey to the Soviet Union. But be took time out to ahllte handl . wUh.a dozen Soviet e-illienl In a·erowd or. 300 which· saw him off at KJev. The cro"·d waved Soviet and American flags. During Nixon's visit, Soviet citizens ~aw him on televi!ion several times -in- cluding once in an unusual speech to them by the President Sunday night - and considerable press attention was given to his visit and the summit achievements. The jolnt pledge "to do their utmost to avoid mili1a.cy conUontatlona and prevent the outbreak of nuclear war" "'as con- tained in a set of principles -nonbinding Saddleback McGovern Put Plays Host ~on Defensive' LOS ANGELES (UPI! -Put on the defen11ive by 11u!>eft II. Hwnphrey's broad attack on his military, tax and \\'elfare plans, Ge orge S. A-1cGovem t<Xlay attempts to exploit Humphrey's support of the Vietnam \Var 11,·hen they clash in .11.nother television debate tonight. The senators, leading contenders ror the Democratic presidential nomination, consider tonight's TV debate, their sec·· ond. the most important of the three scheduled in their battle for the 271 delegates al stake in the caurornia 11rimary June 6. Thi; 11\'0 will appear on NBC 's "Meet the Press" at 6:30 p.m. PDT biit the hour-long intef,•ieW program will not be shown in California until 9:30 p.m., prime virwing time. Generally regar,ded as a dra,v , perhaps with a slig ht edge ta Humphrey, the first debate Sunda,v was seen by fewer than IO percent of the registered Democratic votefs, according .to ltledla specialists. The fhird Cietiate· Is nexf' Sunday. • • Admittedly startled by Humphrey's at- tack, McGovern Monday went on hls own offensive and chose as his target Humphrey's claim that their records were the same on the Vitftnam War. Speaking to the California Federation of Teachers in San Diego, McGovern said "Senator Humphrey made what I regard as one of the most shocking statements that I'v'e heard Since I've been in pollfics. 'vhen he said 'George McGovern and I h'ave the same record on the war in Viet- nam .' ··is there anyone tn this room who dQU not regard that as utter· nqnse11$e?!' he asked, visibly angered ... DQrothy Hall's Services Held; Former Lagunan Graveside services v.1ere held this morning in Ascension Catholic Cemetery. 1-:1 Toro. for Dorothy 1\1. Hall. widow of the late Andre,.,. S. Hall, founder of Laguna Federal Savings and Loan Association. Mrs. Hall, 71, died Saturday in a con- valescent hospital near San Diego. where she ht1d made her home since moving from Laguna Beach two 'years ago. She is survived by a daughter, Julia TO\\'l of San Diego and by five gr;indchildrcn. A resident of the Art Colony for ~8 years. Mrs. Hall was active in com- munity and civic aff."lirs . serving v.•it h the Red Cross during \Vorld \\l:ir II, as an ac-. tlve member of the Playhouse and a lifetime member of the Laguna Beach Art Association. The family suggests that memorial donations be made to the Orange County 1 • ... .,rt A<1ct(!('i:i tion. OliNGl COAST La DAILY PILOT "Tt .. Or.ingc (NOi DAILY PILOT, wlrh Wl'lit l'I )I t1>mb!"'d lhc New1-Prrn, 11 publilll~ by "'" Or•n11e (0111 Publlihlng c-nv. S~· ••tr editions ~"' p~nlbht'd. Mond•v 111rou11h Frld•v. ,,,,. (011• Me11, Nrwporl lle•cl'I, Hvnlington Bc.itl'l/FC11.m!11n V8llfl'. L1gun• B•ath, lrv1nc/S111dltlback •"" SJn Clrmen!e/ SI,. Ju1n C1pl1tr1no. A 1ln1l1 rf!j!IM•I lldl!\oll I• l)UDllihtd S•!11•dl¥t •lld Su,,.,•ys. Ti. prln<lPll 1111~ll1hlno pl•"! II ., JJO Wnt l•r S!rt CI, C!ll!t Mt•I, C1rltwnl1. •u». kobtrt N. Wit, Pr11lcltnt tna P11bll1htr J•(~ R. Curlew Vk.1 Preisloltnl Ind Grnt"i'•I M.1111~r Tho"''' K11~il Edl!Or lh•m11 A. M11•,hi111 M•Mf\rw Edi"' Ch11rl11 H. Looi kitl<itrd f . Ntll A&1l1IMll Mtn•llnt t•n0t1 i., .. IMclrl OHie• 122 For11t -'"111111 M1 lll11t AJJr111: P.O. 1111 '''· 92611 °"'"' Ollke • CO.ti llliltM: lJll w..t l•y '""" ·~~Hcfl : U)S H.....,..,., ltullYI"' """' ton •e~i ,,.,. aw<l'I f'ovtt¥••• "'" c 11; JI» Htrfll II Ctmlno ltt fl He said Humphrey was "posing u a convert to peace and I don 't intend to let him get ai.l'ay with it." He also called the primary "a contest between the old politics and the new" and cautioned the teachers that Jlumphrey advocates more money for a "'ide range of domestic programs without spelling out the specifics. 1.1cGovem spent a relatively leisurely day, including several hours o[ lounging by the hotel swimming pool (see picture on Page ,4), while Humphrey worked the norther part of the state In a hectic tour of Fresno; Sacramento, San Jose, and San Francisco. In Sacramento, a man carrying a rlne two blocks from whes;e Humphrey was holding an outdoor rally was "detained" at the request of the Secret Service. He was not arrested and there was no in- dication ·of a connection between his presence near the rally site and Hum- pfirey's appearance. Humphrey urged a crowd In San Jose to tune in on toda)1's debate end declared '1let me tell you something, friends, we're on the move." In rapid succession. with tbne oat only tor travel, Humphrey spoke at ·a labor br!akfast, sipped wine wltr. an 81-year· old Italian inun!grant. addresaed a.Mex· ican-American audience. and briefly talked ·.with tbe Service Employe1 Inter· naUonel llnlGD, At ·all points, be atta(ked McGOvem's record. "Hwnphrey or M;cGovem -Jt la:. the dffference betw"tt:n having a job' and loot- ing for work," he told the servlCe employes union in San Francisco. r "I'm alarmed and disturbed wh·en a Democrat is willing to admit that his pro- grams will force working familie1 to be jobless for a year, 'I., Humphre)L said. "ThiS is callous. This is wrong." ~re added, "Senator 1\-lcGovem seems more w,illing to provide Californians with compensation for heing throll'n out -0( \Vork a! a result of his proposals than he is anxious to provide people with jobs whic:h bring dignity and decency to their Ji\•es .. , Holiday Boaters Nearly Swan1p Catalina Island Every cove and anchorage on Catalina Island ,.,.as jammed with boats over the three-da y ~lemorlal Day weekend Catalina Camp & Cove Agency officials said every mooring at Catanna Harbor was taken and that boats were rafted 35 feet deep. There are 75 permanent moor- inl?S at Cat Harbor. Harbor officials at A\'a\on sai d the mooring and anchorage areas were full by Saturday and that OOats were btlng turned away. Largest concentration of boats was at the Isthmus and at White's Cove where every available mooring was occupied and hundreds of boats were anch-0red and rafted in nearby areas, Despite the heavy concentrations of boats there were no mishaps, agency of· ficials said. \Venther conditions '>''ere ideal ~·ilh balmy breezes in the aftemopns and a full moon at night. Sick, Hurt Seal Given Treatment For Pneumonia A founh sick and· injured ·seal found Saturday in Laguna Beach Is undergoing freatment toda y for pneumonia. Lifeguard Bruce Baird said the harbor seal , about'fwo feet in Je:ngth, was fObnd Saturday evening on the beach at Treasure Island by &eachgoers who con· ta~cd the llfegu•rd departmcot. , Ouftrd Jim Stautftr, who hu made a bobby of carini. for ailing :pinnlped1. re.moved the ydUn("ff:al from the buch Tit.,.... f714t 64J ... 1Zt Cl•lflt4 u.mw .. 64Z·W71 Liit ........ Al ..,.,,....,: T11t1,1r1111 4f4..9411 ~I, ltn. Or•"ff CN1t l'vttlttflfllll nr. lift -· llal'\fl, Ulllllr•I~. -t.o.rhl.J home in eo.t ... Atcsa wMfe.he Is : -•l!Oi ... omf9'ill;)nd •.• 1~ ~y. iliM.;&:. Re -..~ to 1"1t1tt1.1o oeal ~~l~.ae•.Jl!iu:. lhla ;!l'~•k. -· . -.:3!1rlbotOG11il'Mil;that lw belched In ':.JAltJDa...dtitliiC=lbf:;.')Mlat wMJI; ~rd . noted. two or tll<tn'were nuiHtt blcli to • i.1 ""'"" ., *'-'"""""'' """"' y M rflll'OdllUd wl"*lt ..-Clef ,..,.. ........ """''""' """"· -O.. ,...... fllllf •I (otl• MfM, (liilllft!M, ~.,_ W ~"'" ~AS .......,.,., .,, ...., 11.11. """"'"' "'u""' 11e111 UM n!lfll'fll'f'. • --·--. h health and rttumed to the ocean. A third animal dial. . -•• --· To 'Amigos' Saddlebaek College will host students from six high schools at a special get-ac· quainted "Amigo,, Night" Thursday. Invitations have been txtendtd to graduating uniors at the six high schools within the college district : Foothill, Laguna Beach, Misslon . Viejo, San Clemente, Tustin and University. The senlon and their parents will be Invited to browse around the campus, ask questions: about curricuJwn and meet the faculty betwee 7:30 and 9 p.m. Evening claBlell at the ct1lleg'e will be in ses!ion for students .to visit. Refreshments will be served by airline :stewardess majors at the college. College officials noted that graduating seniors are eligible to attend the college summer classes which commence July 5 or fall classes which begin September 18. There is no tuition charge at the school; the only co.sts to students are books, . supplies and the associated stu- dent body membership fee. Students may major in a course of study for traruifer to a 4-year institution or study in the 1-year certificated. or 2-year occupational pro- grams. Policemen J>ull Small Doe From Swimming Pool The life ot a small doe was saved early ~tonday by two Laguna Beach policemen who pulled her nearly exhausted from a covered sw~lng poo l. Officers Dave Cleland and Fred Louk \\'enl to a home under construction at 1179 Katella St., Laguna Beach a r t e r being called by-a neighbor "'ho told police "there's something struggling in a pool under cover. The officer first attempted to coax the panicked animal from the pool, hov.·ever, when that failed and it appeared that the deer would drown, they grabbed her by the ears and hefted her out. After shaking the water off. the fr ightened deer.high-tailed it for the safe. ty of the nearby hills. Candidate Forum Slated Thursday In Laguna Beach The o~y scheduled forum for can- didates in the Leguna Beach recall-coun- cil election will be sponsored by the Coordinating Coone.ii Thursday evening in city hall council chambers~ Al 7:30 p.m. tile council will conduct Its regular business meeting with election of officers. The forum will get underway at 8 p.m. City clerk Dorothy Musfelt and city at- torney Tully Seymour will be on hand ta explain the recall ballot and answer que1- tions -On the special July 25 elect.Ion. Candidates, each allotted e i 1 ht minutes' speaking · time, are planning commissioners C!rl Johnson and Larry Ca m p b e 11, Beth Leeds and \Vayne Bagltn. A question and anawer period will follow their presentations. FromPageJ PATROL ... mediately ftrter the cr1n;h, His lhrtt: com· panions 1ufftred painful, but less severe injuries. They were Mike Baxter, \VJl!ia.m Schutz and o .. Crosa, all JI and all from Long Beach. Adams, who farller thls year jolned the loeil force, suffttrtd a cut to hl1 left eye , but otherwise was unhurt. His patrol car WIS a total loss. Because ol ~ allen<e by the CRP it ha1 not been dttennined who was at lhe wltttlo of the pickup. It la !mown. , h0tl01<r, that tile ln•.,tlgatlon Into the .. cr&sh ' 11* contlnulng and insurance ln- veltlgators repr.,tntln4 ~ City ol San Clement• ...... <"OlJfernnc -tijl morning with local polico officials. Tho !ital crHh nllrted the first traffic ct.•lh·on d\1.V..la In nearlf two yem. 1aats to which both nations subacrlbed at protect ion of the U.S. party out ot con- the concJwlon ol the Moacow talU Mon-cem about recent rue.rrill1 actlvltie1. d1y. The flight from Kiev took lhl"ff houri, An agreement to llmlt strategic nuclear 33 minutes. with arrival In Tehran at 5:30 w!!!apons -plus the recognition that a.m. 1POT) . "thtl'Mt .no -.alttrnaUve,.to ..conducting, .. The.Jilresldent .emerged .fron1 the ~an& thclr mutual relations on the basis of into the bright sunshine, just :ihead ol his peaceful c~xistence" -were the main wife. They paused momentarily and successes at Moscow. \Vuved. !hen descended the steps. But the big issues that threaten peace, Ni:iton wore a dark single-breasted suit. the Vietnam and the Middle East con· lilrs. Nixon 1vorc a light-colored outfit fl icts. apparentlv Y:ere left undisturbed. and carried a shiny black purse. There ~·as no evidence of any speci[ic ad. Al the root of the airliner steps, they lion by the two superpowers to defuse were met by the shah Jn a civilian .suit them . and the empress. who wore a summer Security '''as ertremely tight for Nixon dress and a floppy white hat "'hlch she and his wife-in-the Soviet Union .;,nd IL clutched wilh one hand to keep-it from 1vas much the samt when they arrived in blowing away . " Tehran. Iranian officials ordered heavy The shah introduced government or- • . l ,, Wallace Has Stroll Gov. George Wallace ts wheeled do\vn a corridor of Holy Cross " Hospital in Silver Sptlifg, Md., by Mrs. Wallice •and his dahghter Bobby Jo ~arsons {~J&ht). _T?e AJab~ma gov~rnor continues to im- prove. bu~J& ~~m_w~~down, doctors say. See story, Page· 4. . • · , -· ficials to hls g~sts, then two sirl~ In white dre1ses p~ted nowen: to Mr1. NJ.Jon. • 'Vaving crowds applauded and the heads of state took the dais for 11 21-gun . aalute , which·· boomed ~our ·during·· ihfl playing of the U.S. and Iranian national anthems. Nixon then inspected an honor guard. The joint peace pledge in Moscow crowned summit meetings that produced eight treaties or agreements, including a pact to limit nuclear arms. The Nixons new frqm Moscow to KJev Monday. Tbelr activities 1n Kiev included a banquet, a wreath-laying ceremony at lhe Ukrainian -Tomb of-the Unknown Soldier' and a tour or the ~year-aid cathedral of St. SopW.. 60 Classes Scheduled For Tennis Tennis instruction for all age levels - youth. teen and adult -and all levels of tikill from beginning to advanced will be offered in 60 separate classes by the Laguna Beach Recrealion Department this summer . Alex Ott \Viii head the tennis program, assisted ll,y Brad Steer at the high school where tt£re will be -40 classu, and Robert Isbell at Thurston School, teaching an addiUonal 20 classes. The Irvine Bowl Park courts will not be used by the Recreation Department because of heavy public use. R~gistratlon will open at 9 a.m. on June 3 at the Recreation Department, 175 N. Coast High way. Fees will be $5 and $6 for each series of 10 one-hour classes. To assist In registration placement, the Recreation Department has provided the follo\,·ing outline of instruction leve11 : BEGINNERS: Never played before. Instruction "'ill cover four basic strokes. forehand. backhand. serve and \'olley and rules and scorlng. Il\1TER1\tEDl ATE: Beyond beginner but not good at any phase of game. Some time spent on forehand and backhand more on serve and the game or doubles. ADVANCED: Must have a basically sound game. 1'-tost time will be !pent on court positioning \ !Dd game strategy along with advancea_ alrokes. ,' 'rochure1 listing .elm. times. and loca· tlons are availa ble'. 8t the Recreation Department and city hall. A·irport Meeting Planned Caspers to Try Again for Camp Pe11dleto11 Facility 8'' JACK BROBACK Of tt.1 D•llY "li.t S1•11 Orange County Board of Supervisors Chairman Ronald Caspers, rebuffed Fri· day by San Diego County -Officials on his proposal to establish a joint international airport at Camp Pendlet.on, today an- nounced another meeting will be held on the subject in July. · Caspers said he would a\va it the release of lhe Southern California Association of Governments {SCAG) regional airport study which is now ex- pected to be available s'lmetime in July_ "At that time, we will try again to pin· point a site for a regional airport based on the SCAG report findings," Caspers said. He added, "This time. the ~farines ·will be invited as well as San Diego County officials and the meeting "'ill be held in Or<1nge County. "Y.le are disco uraged -down but not out." Caspers admitted. "If v.·e find that locating an in- ternatio nal airport in this area is too hot a political item we may sugge.~t that Washington take over and arbitrarily designate a site." Caspers had led an Orange County delegation which met with San Diego County officials on the airport question Friday at the Royal Inn in San Diego. San Diego officials, however, were cool to the Orange County proposal to locate an international jet airport on the U.S. Marine Corps' Camp Pendleton range. No ~Jarine representatives attended the two-county session. San Diego Supervisor William A. Craven summed up the joint meeUng UU. way: "Orange County wants an airport on its doorsteps but not Jn its house. They came here for us to solve their problems for them." San Diego officials seem to be pointing more te>ward development of an airport at 15 possible sites but none of these in- clude the Cam, Pendleton range. One offshore airport sujlgeslion undtr study by San Diego officials would be at Imperial Bench in the extreme southwest corner of San Diego Coun ty. NO GAP HERE! • O ur carpet installations are so smooth . that you can be assured of the finest seams anywhere. We hand sew our ••ems from the back with e cross-stitch, and then reinforce with latex to prevent them from ever coming open. This takes a little longer, but is infinitely •uperior to taped seams. The best in stallers in the county ere performing for ALDEN 'S, trained by us to install the right way! To be sure that the carpeting you choose won't have gaps where the seams are, make sure that ALDEN'S does the job. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Plactntla Avt. COSTA NIUA 646-4131 • ' ' ' ,. • . -. .~. •.: ,. ~ ... . ' Saddlehaek VOL. 65, NO. 15 1, 2 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • TUESDAY, MAY 30, 1972 Schoolman Apologizes In Incident • A formal apology to parents of La Paz Iritermediatc School students 'Yas made today by Superintendent Ralph Gates of the San Joaquin Elen1ent.ary School District ror an incirient that occurred on the campus Friday. Five candidates for the h1ission Viejo Uni '.ied School District participated in the ceremony in \\'hich a Freedom Shrine \vas presented to the schQ::>L The shrine, \vhich is framed copies of documents im· rort..1nt in the nation's history. "'ere a girt from the Saddleback \'alley Ex~ change Club. Gates. in his letter to parents. said he app:·eciatcd the gift but objected t::> the presentation ceremony which con1pletely differed from pasl ceremonies. · He said the five candidates (Chester Briner, .Joseph Peterson Jr., George Henry. Vince !\'IcCu\lough, and Dana Carkey) should not have participated because their name appears on the June 6 ballot, even though he said their remarks pertainzd to the occasion. The Freedom Shrine Program is head· ed by Robert Dameron, Exchange Club member and trustee of the San Joaquin Elementary School District. He is also cam!l3ign manager {or the five can- didates. "I consider it wrong for any outside person to have the oppOrtunity to use our school and students .to promote their own particular interests, further I consider myself personally re.spoosible that this was allowed to happen," said Gates. "I was unable to be present a_nd the school principal was of the opinion that I had given my approval directly to the participants. It was following the ceremony that 1 learned that candidates had attended and participated.'' "Because of my long-held feelin gs that c:hildren are entrusted to us by parents solely to educate them. I can only ask that you will accept my regrets for I believe also that no parent has stronger feelings than I have against any such ac- tivity political or otherwise that would exploit or use students in a school setting to further non-school objectives." Dameron admitted it was a political move to have the five participate. Only one is an Exchange Club member. But he said he found nothing wrong with it. "It g-ave them a chance for more public ex- posure," he said. He said he didn't think it was any more derogatory than having: another slate of candidates go into a school lVhile it is in session to have campaign pictures taken. Bommer Ca1iyon Picnic Slated By Irvine PTA A "Summer is Here'' barbecue picnic in Bommer Canyon is being sponsored June 10 by the Turfle Rock School Parent-TeaCher Association. Turtle Rock PTA president Orin Potter has invited all area residents to come to the non-profit "community gathering." which will feature Irvine Mayor William Fischbach as master of ceremonies. The picnic with deep pit barbecue beef and all the extras will also include the 1971-72 school achievement awards for academics and soorts given by the PTA. "The Red Sky," an Irvine mus~c group, will entertain at the event, which runs from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. All attending are also asked to participate in volleyball, softball , 50-yard dash, sack race and tug-o-war com- petitions. Tickets are $3.50 for adults and $2.50 for children 12-years-old and younger. They can be purchased from the PT A at the Turtle Rock School patio Tuesdays and Fridays from 11 a.m. to 1 p,m. Pony rides and hay rides from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. and free soft drinks will al~ highlight the day. 2 Hold Up Hospital SAN DIEGO (AP) -Police sald two holdup men held lour Sharp Hospital employes at gunpoint in the caabltr11 of,~ flee and escaped with IZ.000 In cuh and mort than $4,000 in negOllablt checU. They also took nonnegoll1bla cbtca Monday .. ~rth about f/11,000, offictn reported. • ~na 6 Others Flee 'Pot' Suspect Shot to Death EL CENTRO IAP) -U.S. border patrol agents shot a man to death and chased a half-dozen others into l'\>texico a flcr suspected marijuana smugglers opened fi re from behind a desert bush. An estimated 35 pistol shots pcppe1·ed three Jeeps but missed the three officers on routine PlJ~Ol m.idway hetween . El. Centro and Yuma, Ariz., ~1onday night. At about the same time, two men \\'ere arrested beside two parked cars a half· mile away near Jnterst.ate 8 for in- y1;:stigation. tlenry Felchlin, ch\et border patrol agent, said about 300 pounds of mari- juana were confiscated from the sandy shooting site several hundred yards from Mexico. The agents said several or the men fired autcmatic pistols. A sbot fired by agent Harold Slocwn apparently killed lhe man. ··These guys each had a bag (of mari· juana) l'd guess they were carrying to a contact man on this side," Felchlin said. Camp Peridl:eto1i Airport Mt!eti'ng Pla1uied-Again B, JACK BROBACK Of th• O•llr "llC!t Sl1tt Orange County Board of Supervisors Chairman Ronald Caspers, rebuffed Fri- day by San Diego County officials on his proposal to establish a joint international airport at Camp Pendleton. today an- nounced another meeting will be held on the subject in July. Caspers said he would au'ait the rel ease or the Southern California Association of Governments (SCAG ) regional airport study which is now ex- pected to be available s1metime in July. "At that time, we will try again to pin- point a site for a regional airport based on the SCAG report findings," Caspers said. He added, "This time, the Marines will be invited as well as San Diego County officials and the meeting will be held in Orange County. "\\'e are discouraged - down but not out," Caspers admitted. "If we find that locating an in· terna tional airport in this area is too hot a political item we may su~rest that Washington take over and arbitrarily desipiate a site." Caspers had Jed an Orange County delegation which met with San Diego County officials on the airport question Friday at the Royal Inn 1n San Diego. San Diego officials, however, were cool to the Orange County proposal to locate an international jet airport on the U.S. Marine Corps' Camp Pendleton range. !io l\tarine representatives attended the two-county session. San Diego Supervisor William A. Craven summed up the joint meeting this ""ay : "Orange County wants an airport on its doorsteps but not in its house. They came here for us to solve their problems for them." The California Highway P a t r o 1 , Im perial County sheriff's deputies and ::in arn1y helicopter pilol from Indio joined in tracking the men to Mexico, where judicial police from Mex icali took \IP the search. The dead man.appeared to be Mexican or a Mexican-American without iden- tification and about 25 to 30 years old, Felchlin said. ~ .• The tvrb being questioned in El Centro \Vere not immediately identified. Prisoners Seize Ne'v Jersey Jail, Free Hostages P~TERSON, N.J. (AP) -!\1ore than 100 inmates took hostages and seized con. trol of the maximum security wing at Passaic County jail for several hours to- day, then released the captives and retW'ned to th;eir c~ afte r officials agreed to dlsCusi gr1l~ces. -.-. , Tut. Rev. Bill Masont a Paterson J>O\'er- ty ag_sncy ofllciaJ, 1ald three remaining hostages were relea.se~ when prison of- ficials agreed to make no physical reprisals against those who staged the revolt. Earlier in the day, the rebellious in- mates released six ""other ca pti ves, in- cluding the warden. At least four guards were injured in the disturbance. \\1ason, present at negotia tions between authorities and jnmates inside the prison, said the prisoners' demands "aren 't big cines." "They deal wi(h human elements such as hygiene," Mason said. "They want the righ t to wear underwear and have clean mattress covers." Mason sai d an inmate named Clay Thomas acted as a go-between in the negotiations among the inmates and Sheriff Frank Davenport. He said Thomas was instrumental in the set4 tlemenl and th at Davenport w a s "courteous and gracious," throughout the talks. \Varden Jack DeYoung, nurse Linda Vanderlinda and a guard who suffered stab wounds, Jack Donohue, were re- leased after about an hour A second guard wounded in a melec with inmates. John Bozzoli, apparently escaped. Both gua rds were hospitalized. Cycle, .2 l\finibikes Stolen Fro111 Garage ' A motorcycle and two minibikes , jointly valued by the O\\'Tler al $525 \\'ere stolen during the \veekend from the J?arage or an Irvine home, Orange County Sheriff's officers sa id. Deputies said the machines, a Kawasaki motorcycle and two Bobcat minibikes, were stolen from the home of Richard Felix B-Ormem<1nn, $ 2 7 1 Bordeaux St., by burglars who unl ocked the garage door during the night. '¥ oungest Gradtiate~ Littl e Patricia Ayn ' TOrdella slept through most of the University of Scranton's 84th annual commencement exercises on the back of her father , Davi d ,who received his bachelor of science degree. Pa· tricia's mommy \vas ill, and daddy toolr"over the babysi tting chore s. Secrecy Sl11·ouds Police Unit Crash in Clemente By JOHN VALTERZA 01 tht Dlllt "1'-1 Sltlf California Highway Patrol officials to-- day slapped a tight lid of secrecy on the circumstances surrounding the freak crash of a San Clemente police car and a small pickup truck last weekend which claimed the life of a Long Beach teenager. The spectacular collision which took place late FriQay afternoon severely in· jured four persons and caused fatal in- juries to 16-year-old J eff Briet. He suc- cumbed to severe head and internal in- juries late Sundiiy night in Mission Com- n1unity Hospital. Officially, the High way Patrol takes charge of the investigation in crashes in* volving municipal police vehi cles, and local ofticials by custom are forbidden to comment cin details. ' But spokesmen £or the ·CHP in Sanla Ana today said they· had "no in- formation" on the trb.gedy. The collision took place at 4 p.m. F'ri- day as patrolman Gary Adams answered a call relating to a car being driven 1n erratic fashion along South El Camino Real. As the patrolman began accelerating near Calle Dolores the small dome stic picl>up laden with weekend vacation gear and 'several cases of beer, pulled into traffic enc. the patrol car slammed into the. rear of the truck at hi gh spetd. (See PATROL, Page Z) San Francisco Man Found Dead Off Salt Creek ' Orange County Sheriff's officers nre working with San Francisco police today in a bid to retrace the flnal hours of a man u'hose fully clothed body was found nOating off Dana Point. Coroner's officers identified the man as Malcolm Storey, 53, of San FrancisCQ. 'They are today attempting to notify the dc~d man's next of kin. Pay Back Tax, Firm Asked Sheriff's deputies said· the body, floating about one mile off Salt Creek Beach, was spotted by yachtsman Bert Hodge or Tarzana. llodge kept contact with the body until Orange. County Harbor Patrol officers arrived at the scene. County Collector Says $5.3 Million l1ivolved ' Orange ~~ty Tax Collector Robert wl!OOut company approval. Citron today il:sked Irvine Company._ l.n assessing the propoert y for 1970. President WUllam R. Mason to pay SS.3 Assessor Andrew J . Hinshaw merged the mllUon in taxes Citron alltges have been entlre 614 acres and said that the conl· delinquent for the past three years on pany was responsible for taxes on the Upper Newport Bay. total. The Back Bay properties In question in· Irvine officials prottsted al the lime elude 458 acres the Irvine Company deed· that mnsh•w"• assessment procedure ig4 ed 14 orange County tn th< long-debated nored !>rt'lous ownerships or the prop. Upper Newport Bay land exchlllgt. I\ in-erty. ThuJ !he company refused to pay eludes J57 acres the county was to any tuts unUI the matter was cleared transler 14 the ranch company. up. The tidtlands swap, however. was To dale, aoc:ordltq: 'o Citron, $3 million cancelled In lfll In a unilattral lldlon by or 57 percent of \ht delinquency is due the orange County Boan! ol Supervisors. \he Newport-Mesa \Unllled School District !rvlne olflclal1 coot<nd \hit the county and the Coast Community College "boofj! cannot cancel tht 1166 exchange District and IL.I mUllon, or 21 pcrctnt , Is _ owed to the city of Newport Beach and various W3ter and Banitalion districts. 11>e blllance, $1.2 million, ls owed the county, according to the tax collector. De"PU!Y County Counsel Clayton Parker s:iid today that the counly Is not rm- powered to take leg~! action to force the company to pay the back t!xes. However. if Irvine should fail lO pay In five ye.vs -and three years have ~ssed to date - the 457 acres could possibly revert to the state of California under Jaw. Parker said the only legal action even alluding to the tax question is a reference in the Jrvlne Company suit filed to force the COWlty to hono'"r the land trade a&ree- ' (Set TAXES, Pap I) • Officers said the. body was full y clothed and appeared to have been In the water £or several days. Pancake. Breakfast ' . ' Schedule(}.' in' Viejo ~ fifth annual Mhsion Viejo Kiwanis Club pancake breakfast will lake place ~unc 3 from 7 to 11 a.m. in La Paz Pliz.i, Mission Viejo. Tickets are $1.25t.-adults, and 75 cents, children. Enttrtainment \Viii be by l b e Mclodylaod Silll!<rl. All proceeds \\ill go lo support local programs ln drug prevention, en- vironment, schools, churches a.nd youth clubs. ; I l Today's Flmd • . - TEN CENTS 1xe California Case Not WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court today rejected an appeal by California to review a state Supreme Court decision outlawing the d e a t b penalty. The high court is considering whether to alJolish capital punishment across the land as being in violation or the federal C:>nstitution . The jusf.ices . gave no reason for declining unanimously to add callfornla'1 appeal to its docket. Still before the: court, for an expect'ed- r4ling next month.· are other appeals testing the constitutionality of the death penalty. The California court held 6 to I on Feb. 18 that the death penalty "ma y no longer be exacted" in that state because It violates the state Constitution. The action spared the Jives of 102 men and 5 won1en who make up the nation's largest death row population, including Sirhan Sirhan, the assassin or former U.S. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, and mas1 murderer Charles Manson. California's peUUon for review, filed 1'1arch 31 by Evelle J. Yciunj'er, Ule state attorney general, called the decision "an unseemly rush to judgm~nt" while the qeath penalty lssue was pending before the U.S. Supreme Court. Younger contended \hat the .. st.ate ground" asserted by the California court, a provision ln,.the Callfornla ConstituUcin, was "palpably transparent" and that the ruling consequently should be reviewed by the U.S. court. Rites Conducted For C. Warner Of Laguna Hills Services were held at 2 p.m. today in McCormick Laguna Beach Chape l fer Claes E. Warner, 587-A Ave. Majorca, Laguna Hills, who dled Friday at the age or 79, A native of Sweden, Mr. Warner had lived in California for 50 years and was a teacher in lhe Los Angeles school system for 40 years before his retirement to Laguna Hills six year ago. He is survived by his wido\v, C.Ora A. \Varner; two sons, Wendell L. Warner of M3dera County. Calif. and John A. Warner of Thousand Oaks, Calif.; a sister, Hilma Andersson of Sweden; and by four grandchildren. Dr. Lawrence F. Hawley of the United ~1elhodist Church, Laguna Hills. of· fic iated at the service, with buriaJ follow· ing at El Toro Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, the family suggests memorial donations to the Theodore Payne Foundation for Wildflowers and Native Plants. 104S9 Tuxlord St., Sun Valley. CalU. 9Ll52. Ora age Weather It's going to remain H-0-T for at least the next several days ac- cording to the weatberlady, with temperatures ranging from the 70's at the beach to the 901s1nland. Lows in the 60'11. ll\S I Ill! TODA. Y In a test of surt>ivat, 20, Mor- ruon fam.ilit3 in Palo Alto laavt beg un livi·ng for three Wttks only 011 the goods that were stored ln thtir l1om1s when ihtll were told-with 110 advance no- tice-of tile e;iperiment which is sporuored by the churc,1. Set story on Page 18. .. l..M, h'!'ll ' Allll U"lllltn u C:•Fikrftl• . " ·M.1111 "' W¥k• " <llKk'M U, ' _.., • Clatllf1M ,..,. M111111t ,.,,.., .. ~:~:.re " ft•fiMW ..... • " Ot..-Ctlllt"t " ~ftlll JMiltft " ,_, , .. ,, ••1iw11t , ... • ,_. MMtleb 1•11 ll'tltrll in!M!ll • ~: • "" 11141 ltutf .. • ''1111"" 1•1• .".... . MoN-" .............. " --4 • --' ~ OAlll PILO I '• T ..wy, May :IC, 19 72 City Pro9ra11i . . .. Sigi;i;up Slated. For Recreation -' . -' Regl11trat1on for classes in the Cily of lrvlnc 's flrlit official sum mer recreation pi·ogram vi'ill take place Saturday at 9 a.m. Al the University P>irk Shopping Center. ~l•ny-of -lhe Aoetr-auppor.tlng programs have been offered at schools in past years, but thiii is tht first offtring devel- ~ by lhe Irvine Ad lJOc ltecrcliltlOO J'rogram Committee. It is headed by Sharon Sirccllo. A J3 registration fee for all Irvin,. residentii Includes an eight-week po ss for the Pink Buli. Although serving only UC Irvine riludenl! during !he year, the bus wlll 1nake stops throu ~h Irvine on a six-day a v.·eek schedule during th e summer. ltesidents can ride to recreation pro- i:trams and to Faahlon Island , and Big canyon beach. The Pink Bus will arri\'e at the ~hop­ ping center Saturday carrying city and recreation 0Uiclal1. · Programs are being offered for age:s four through adult and include a variety of creative arts and sports classes. Swimming inst.ruction wilt be available for younger children at .several com· munlly pools and for older students at University High School. Tennis instruction. lncludlng a tourna- ment in August, will be offered at the Holiday Boaters Nearly Swan1p Catalina Island Every cove and anchorage on Catalina Tsland was jamrried with boats over .the threc--day Memorial Day· weekend. Ca talina Camp & Cove Agency offlclals said.every ntooriu~ at Catalina Harb:ir ""'as takl!ll and thal boat s were rafted ;!fl le"ct deep. There are 7$ permanent moor· inos at Cal Harhor. Jfarbor officials at Avalon s a Id the moorlnjt and ancho rage areas v•ere full by Salurday and that b0a1s were beiNl'. turned a\vay . Larc:cst concentration of boats was at the Isthmus and at White's Cove where every available mooring was occupied and hundreds of boat1 wer, anchored and rafted In he1fby areas. De11plte the ht1vy concentrations or bo11t11 there were no mJahaps, qency of- ficials said. Weather cond itions were ideal wit)l balmy breezes in the afternoon~ and a full moon at night. Cl1arles H. Piety Services -Held; Succttmhs at 55 Services were held this morning in J1aci flc Vi'w Chapt>l Cor Charles llubert Piety, 23433 Via S.in Gabriel, Laguna llill!I, who died Friday at South Coast Community llospital. He was 55. Mrs. Piety ls survived by his w!dO"'· Geraldine ; two 11on11. C. Rodn 'Y Piety of Yorbo Linda Rnd Stcvrn \V . Piety of l.,ollla ; hi s molher, Mrs. Ethel Piety of t~11gunn B~ach; brothers, Samuel A. Pie. ty of Chula Visln and Walter S. Pltty of Ont11rlo : nnd two !liters. Mrs. Irene !\1cClurc or l.agunn Beach and J\.1rs. Evangeline Pro\'O!t of Glrndorn. A 'pnrtner In the oy.•ner!hip of·Gi\1's Li- quor Stort' In Laguna Beach, he "·.is a nntlve Californian nnd hnd llved in the Art Colony for more thnn 40 yenrs before moving to Lagun.a Hills eighteen months .ago. The Re\'. Richard Ree\•es officiated 11t todr~··s servlct. \rhlch w11s follo.,..·cd by bl · .· .. 1 nt Pacific \lle1\' ~Ien1or!nl P:irk. OlAN•I COAST Is DAILY PILOT city's courts at the Racquet Club. Also planned are program!! in sorftiaU, judo and ka rate, jog~ing . biking, hiking ahd backp.:icking, volleyball , gymnastics and !OCCer. Hal O'Neal and Gene Wilkes' Creative Dramatic~ Workshop for cflildrerf age four through teens y.·ilJ be in its seventh year. Jeff Taylor's creative art s workshop for 12-years-old and above is also a repeat . Those art classes will be joined bv 11. crealil'e day camp for children iour through seven years old. Students age eight and above can sign up for a rhythms course which includes instruction in ballet, modern and folk dance . A ba!ic music course Is available for children and a guitar class is offered for ages 10 through adult. There are e:rtra registration fees for each clau. For more Information, complete pro- grams may be had at the Irvine Town Center or call the City HaU at UWMO. Dorothy Hall's Services Held; Former Lagunan Graveside aervlcea were held this morning in Ascension Ca tho lie Cemetery, El Toro\ for Dorothy M. Hall, widow of 1he late Andrew S. Hall, founder of Laguna· Federal Savlnj:s and Loan Association. Mra .. Hall, 71, died Saturday.In a con· valeacent hospital near San Dlea:o, Where she had made her home 11lnee moving fratn Laguna Beach two years ago. She is survived by a da~ghter, Julia Towt of San Diego and by five grAndchlldr~n. A resident of the Art Colony for 48 year!: ~frs. Hall ·was active in com- munity and civic affair!, 1ervlng with the Red Cross during World War It a1an1c- 1lve member of the Playhouse and a lifellme member of the Lapna Beach Art AssociaUon. · The "famlJy suagtsta that memorial donallo~ ~ made. to lhe Oranae County Heart Association. · ••";~ ' ' ' I From Page I TAXES· ••. mCnt which the supervisor~ cancelled unilaterally. The suit is now pending Jn Superior Court and wlll not be heard tor geveral •1ftrmthS; • . • The deputy county counsel said that the con1pany could have brou11:ht legal action to hal'e the property lines correctly , drawn to separate the company's anQ the cbunly"s lands but the company has· not don<> so to date. "Th<>y a.re taking a c:ilculaled risk.'' Parker stated. "Ho\\·cver. lhey may not ha ve to pav taxes and penalties on any of tlx-propeity 1n the Jong run.'' Parker gave an uample: "If your ho1ne and your neighbo r's home we re improperly assessed as one parcel. al- though legally unde r separate owner- ships, you could not be forced to pay the ta:11es unti l the leg11llfy of the assessment was cleared up.'' Citron, in his letter to i\1ason, point.a:· out that, ''In actuality, I am not employed by the county of Orange government but first I an1 employed and answerable to all the tax·paying citizens of this county ,\·ho pay my st1lt1ry , my staff's salati~<; · and the. oµ<:rating <'Xpcnses of my offi<'\'. Secondl y. the county of Ornn~e is only one of 213 different laxini:: agencies for whon1 I collect.'' The lax collector concluded ti is letter to the c:>mpany president by stati ng~ "I an1 not involved in. nnd cannot be a party to, any rontro\'ersy between your company and other s over the legal ownership of the. property. "State la,vs clearly indicate that tne assessor must a.ue,.s pro~rly and once II Is pla ced upnn tht rolls t shall co1Ject the taxfs due." · DAILY PILOT ll1U '"'""' Prize Winner DAILY PILOT photographer Richard Koehler won second place in the spot news category in annual California Press Photographers Association co1n- petltion for this photo, it was announced Saturday. Photo was taken last December as police offi cer held two stolen car suspects at bay with shotgun at El Camino Drive and Mendoza Avenue in Costa Mesa. Suspects subsequently were released \Vhen police learned their car \vas no~ stolen. McGovern to Strike Back To1iight's TV Debate Co1isidered Most ln1portant Los ANGELES (UPI) -Put on the defensive by Hubert H. Humphrey 's broad . att~ck on his military, ta1 and welfare plans, George S. Mc<;;·ovem today attempts to exploit Humphrey 's support of the Vlelnam War when 'they· clash in another television debate tonight. The senators, leading contenders for the Democratic presidential nomination, consider tonight's TV debate, their sec- ond, llie m&t important of the three scheduled in their battle for the 271 delegates at stake in the California primary J..u.ne 6. The two will appear on NBC's "Mett the Press" at 6:30 p.m. PDT but the hour-long Interview program will not be shown in California until 9:30 p.m., prime viewing time. · Generally regarded as a draw, perhaps with a slight edge to Humphrty, the I~st debate Sund1y was 9etn by fewer th11n 10 percent of the registered Democratic voter11 according to media speclaJJ.sta, The third dtbat< is nut Sunday. A4fnitiedly startled by Humphrey's at- tack, McGovern Monday went on his own offensive and chost!l as his target Humphrey's claim that their records Fro11a Page 1 PATROL ... were the same on the Vietnam War. Speaking to the California Federation of Teachers in S11n Dle&o, McGover11 said "Senator Humphrey made what I regard as one of the most shocking statements that f've heard since I've been in politics. when he said 'George McGo\>ern and. I have the same record on the war in Viet- nam .' "ls there anyone in th is room V.'ho does not regard that as utter nonsense ?" he asked, visibly angered. He s.iid Humphrey "·as "posing as t: convert to peace and I don't intend to let him get away with it." He also called !he primary "a contest bet\vcen the old politics and the new" and cautioned the teachers that Humphrey advocates more money for a wide range of domestic programs without spelling out the specifics. McGovern spent a relativtly leisurely ~ay, inCludlng several hours of lounging bf.,11}1;, ~el •'l'i~i pool \~ picture on rage 4), while Humphrey worked the norther part of the state· in .a hecUc tour ot Fresno, Sacramento, San JoaeJ and San Francisco. · Jn Sacramento, a man carrying a rifle two blOcks from where Humphrey "'a! holding e.n outdoor rally was "detal n'ed" at the request of the Secret Service. He \1·as not arrested and there was no lrto" dicati::in of a connection between his presence near the rally site and Hum- phrey's apj>earance. llumphrey urged a crowd in San Jose to tune in on today's debate and declared "let me tell you soinelhing, friends, we 're on the mo ve." In rapid succession, with lime out only fnr travel, Humphrey spoke at a labor breakfast, sipped wine wilt. an 81-year· old Italian immJgranl, addres,,ed a Mex~ ican-American audience, and briefly talked with the Serv ice Employes lnter- nalional llnion. At all points, he attacked McGovern '• fe<:Qfd. • Auto. Pl1inges ·Off Cliff,~ Passenger Dies in Crash A 17·year-old Long Beach boy became Orange County fire and rescue unit! Orange County's fifth traffic fatality over spent more than an hour bringing the the Memorial Day \Veekend ~1onday \\"hen four vlctlms up the steep cliff. Neither the siren nor the red warnln~ the car in y.·hich he \\'RS riding left Ortega Joseph Britt. 15. ot Long Beach. died lights on the unit were operating at the Hlgh\l"ay 15 m i I es east of Sa n Ju a n Sunday In Mission Community Hospital or U Capistrano and rolled dO\\ll a loo-foot injuries rece ived in a crash "·ith a San ~~iet apparently \\·as !'illing on lop oC cliff. Clemente police patrol car Fridoy in San !he load in the rear of the pickup when Randy Adams was one of three Clemente. the crash sent the truck sklddln~ more passengers in § ca r drlven by Steve 1\\'o other persons died in holiday than 100 feet down the roadway. Several Polletier, 18, of Anaheim. Polletier is mishaps. occupants were thrown out arter the i1n-reported in guarded condition at 1'.Iission Robert E. Reedy, 28, of 1234 Disney pact. Community Hospital today. Way, Anaheim, was killed when his car Briel, who received emergency ~irst <1ld Others Injured were Adams' sister. fell on him while he \\'as making repairs at the scene from a physician who was Tamlra, 18, and Michael Harrison, 19, of at his home and Rex Martindale, 20 passing by, underwe nt surgery Im~ Garden Grove. They were treated and months, droy.•ned in the family swimming mediately alter the crash. l1ls three com-released. pool 11t 10222 Jennrich Ave., Garden panlons suffered painful , but less severe flighway patrolmen said the accident Grove. injuries. occurred when Polletier swerved to miss The live traffic deaths contrasted with They were Mike Baxter. William an oncoming car while attempting to pass Orange County"s almost perfect Schutz and Dan Cross, all 16 11nd all Crom a line of other cars on a bllnd curve r.1cmorla l Da y weekend record in which Long Beach. about 15 mUIJS ·north or San Juan orily one person Jost his life in the past r School Fun Scheduled In Irvine 11Somethlng for Everyone,•• a aummer recreation pr<1gram offered by University High School in Irvine, will run from June 19 lo August 11 . Re&istration begins Monday from 3 to S p.m. in room 204 of the hig h achoo! and cootJnu ... lhrough.TbursdJOY. Further reglstratlon times are June 11- 15 from 3 to 5 p.m . and June 10 and June 17, from 9 to 11 a.m. Program director Gary Sise! said lht University lligh School program is 1'designcd to compliment" the recreation classes being offered by the city of Irvine. University High "'ill be used as a teen center ?-.1onday, \Vednesday and Friday evenings with activities inclucUng pool tables and macrame. It is sponsored by the city, I The high school offerings emphasize sports. Swimming classes at the high school pool includ e tiny lots. Mommy and Me Diving, begiMers, intermediatt, ad· vcnced, junior and senior Ufe saving and adult. Recreational S\\imming at the pool will be offered from 2 to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday at 75 centa a day for adults and 35 cents a day for those under 18-ycars-old. ' Slgn-up.s for s'vimming classes wil1 t.:ike place from 9 to 11 a.m. on the Satur· day beforP 1h,. class session (July l, July 15 and July 29). I An open gyn1 with free ph1y and ex· ercise at 25 cents a week will be offered Wednesdays from noon to 2 p.m. Activities for boys ' and girls include beglnnlng golf, summer league ba!lket- ball. nag football , 1ports clinic, weight training; softball, volleyball, modern dance and exerclslng. t1 Adult classes include soft b a I I , volleyball, golf and physical fitness . For more inform11tlon, contact Slsel at University High School or pick up brochures at the 1chool offict, m1 Cam- pus Drive. State's Traffic Deatli Toll N eiv Holiday Record ' From Wlr\~Service1 Seventy-eight 1'CPODI were Jdlle.d on J:al!lornlaJillbw111Jlurllll-1he Mem~ri•l Day weekend, a record for the holiday in the state, th• California Highway Patrol reported today. The total also was tbe most in the nation. Booated by single acciderfts that klllH. six persona Monday n i g h t in S11n Bernardino Count:v and live persona near ~fsrysvtlle, the toll eclipsed the 63 set in 1968. This year's holiday count r11n from t p.m. Friday to midnight Monday -a 3,~. day period. The 1961 record was set over 4Y4 days. Last year 48 persons were killed over Memorial Day wetkend. The six-fatality accident \\'I S on a mountain rond near Lytle Creek, a head- on collision between two can each car- ry ing four persons. The five-fatality accident w11 on Callfomia 99 about 17 miles south of Yuba City, also a head-on crub of two cars. A United Press International count of accidental deaths in the holiday period showed: Traffic Drownings Planes Other Adams. who earlier this year joined ~he Capistrano. three years. loca I !orce. suffered a cut to his left eye, lp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-but otherwise was unhurt. His patrol car Total 135 151 17 77 ISO \Vas a total loss. Because of the silence by the CHP it has not been determined who was at the v;heel of the pickup. It is known, however, that the investigation into the cr11sh is continuing and insurance in· vestigators representing the City of San Clemente "'ere conferring this morning with local police officials. The fatal crash marked the flr!lt tr1fflc death on city streets in nearly t~·o years. NO GAP HERE! r 1'1\t Or•flff C11" DAILY PILOT, wllll wt'I!(~ I• <Dll'l•ll'IH lllt NI""·"''''• I• 9UOlf.ii.d bY rht Orintt C••11 "11bBt~l"11 Compt11V. SIJ!t• r••r f'd,f11!nt 1rt "'11>11•11 .... MondlV 11\fO~ fr ld1~. ter Cotti Mt11. NtWtlO•I 8ftcll, H11t1ll"11•vn fltK~lfOUlll•ln V•llt y, l~OUtl• 81•(11, llwk\t-1,lllflt bofc-•nd Sin (lt,.,.n!tl ~" Ju1n C1p,.1r1M. " 1111011 •t<llontl ..iu ~ " """'"'""" Se1w>t11w, ~ Su11C11v-. r ... p<IMlll'll! 11\fbh•ll•~O p l1111 I\ " ~ W~ll 1•1 SltN•, Co.11 '-'•••. C ~lilDln,., ,,..,._ ll:o~tr l N. W1t1f P•t•~tM Incl PwOh,,.t r Cruiser in Upper Bay Sinks; Damag·e $75,000 Our cerpet installations are so -smooth that you can b'e assured of the finest seams anywhere. We hand sew our seams-from the back with a crou-stitch·, and then reinforce with latex to prevent them from ever com ing open . This takes e littl~ longer, but is infinitely superior to taped seems. J 1c.• 11:, C11rl1v V.U ll'lfl>ll"'I .,,_. (;tMrl l M-t« Thtlll•I x ..... , EiliMI Tl11'1111 A. M11r11hi111 M•11 .. lnf lt!ltor Ch•rf,, H. l ••• •1ch1,_.. P. Nall A.1111,.111 M1n19lrlt EtlWt ........ O.t1 Ml\A! :ut Wttt 11~ Slt-lf1 N ... ,.,l llKll: »Sl Mewpoll hult ... rtl LftllM ... Cll1 nf ......... , AY-""'"lrlf;.., lt•c.11: l,.,S lttCll lfvltwllt S-11 (~1 au~ II tt111 ..... IMI Tel ...... f71.tl '41-4)11 Ct..m.4 ., ... ,1 .. '42·14i11 le• et.•••• Al D1,e ... lh: fet t t I• 4tJo44H ~. ""' 0.-...,. C...tl ......... ~r. ~ ~ ·~ ltllltfl'ltlM\. tlt!Wllit ~ .,. ...,.,, .. .,,_.. ,__ .. , .. ,.,..._ .... -41f!M ~ ...,. ....... ~ 9Mlff. ~ ~ ,...,_,, ,.., et CM .. Mru. ( .......... ~iM .... ''""' sµJ .....,,, If llJlll N.ll MMIM'I .ntWT .............. .......,.,. • -r.: A S7·foot cabin cruiser titd up near North Star Btach aner a weektnd in Catalina myaterlousJy sank to the bottom q! lipper Newport Bay sometime Monday nig ht. The •·sparkler." owned by Ger•ld E. SparkJ, 507 Morning Stor Lllne an4, valued at $JJO.OOO, was berthed .at a docP' on Sparks' properly, Officials of the Orange County llarbor District and Insurance adju5tqr were In· \'tlllgatJng the -0.LW ol the m shap this mOrnlng. :. , ''A ho.\~ broke .vr wh1tenr," 11ht ·trks,...-~ Slid "ll's like loa!nc,one_or ' -~tty. ·:.._ ........ ~-:il~ ~I ~parks~ ~I a .... ~!~~·~~ ~~-Clllµa L" , 11We nem dkt nnd out t.1hy that one ""1... Sl>alb .. 1c1. -:_-_ --·-· Sparks' Chrls Crall \\'IS one of four boal3 reported sinking over tilt' ~tcmorial Day v.•ef'kernl. according lo Sgt. Dean Corvell or the county Harbor Patrol. The three other boats were successfully pumped out. Sparks diacol'trtd hil boat in water up to the cabin upon awakening thi! morning ~me ume before 1 o'clock. Harbor patroknon said they sJ)td to the ~ce.ne to make tUrt oll and diesel fuel ~-!!"< qot leaklnc Jnl4 the bay. No such 1 .. u~ro r~ • ~A salvqe Ctf1J ll'U working this morn- tni lo ralat the·boa1 so that the cause of the stnkhlg could he determined, One, olllclal ll1JOSstd !ht boat may h•v• cone 4own becau.t ol a !taking tltllaust •)'ll•m but he w'tss.d thtl wu onty a IJlllS* • I SWks fi(\ITll lhe i,oai,dii ... lllVl(od but llld. "all clilwau,. 'iild !llrnlJ!IJna 11111 havt to ba ......... One tstlmato of the ootl ol rtpalr ..., ntar '75,0dJ. ii' The best instellers in the county ere performin9 for ALDEN 'S, trained by us to install the ri9ht wey! To be sure that the carpetin9 you .choose won't have 9ep1 where the seams are, moke sure thot ALDEN 'S does the job. ALDEN'S CARP!TS e DRAPES 16'3 Placltlflo Awe • COSTA MlSA 646-41.38 • "l!' : "II·' .. " . 1 '• , 1 -- . Huntington Bea~h • ·Fountain Valley --• ' ,.,, • • OL. 1>5, NO. 151, 2 SECTIO!"'S, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 30, 19n lleaPiBg--R e-jemed Justices Nix Death Penalty R eview 'WASHINGTON (AP\ -The Supreme COur t ·-today· rejected an appeal by :California to review a state Supreme Court decision o"utla\ving the de a th penalty. The 'hl~h court ls e-0nsiderihg whether to abolish capital punishment across the land as being in violation of, the f,ederal ConstiluUon. The justices gave no reason for declining · unanimously to add California's appeal to its docket. Still before the court, for an expected ruling next month , are other appeals testing the constitutionality of the death penalty. The California court held 6 to 1 an Feb. 18 that the death penalty "may no longer be exacted" In that state because it violates the state Collstitution. The action spared the lives of 101 men and 5 women who make up the nation's largest death row population, including Sirhan Slrhan, the assassin of former Newpor' Cr11ise1• Eyed H_untington Boy, 7, Die s 111 Powerboat Accident --. ,.. -. . Bv JOHN ZALLER Of 1119 D1Hr l"l11t Slilff Donald Thornton, lt, of 602 Jana Circle, 'VaJI reJ>Orled ic satisfactory co nd ition t'.>- d1ty • in Good Samaritan Hospital in Phoenix. U.S. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, and mass murderer Charles ~1anson. California's petition for review, fifm< l\tarch 31 by Evelle J, Younger, the slate attorney general, called the decision "an unseemly rush to judgment" while the death penalt y issue was pending, before ~ the U.S. Supreme Court. Younger contended that the "state ground" asserted by the California court, a provision in the California Constitution, (See PENALTY, Page %) Thieu Exhorts s ~ Viet Troops A t Kontuni SAIGON (\JPI ) -.:-South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu new today- to the embattled cities of Kontum artt- Hue to show his confidence in the Sl)uth Vietnamese defenders. Bubbles and Suds ey -- -. ____ ,. -- Tod_IQr!s F la.i --- N.Y. Stoelul TEN CENTS Arizona authorities said today the po\\'er cruiser involved in the denth of a 1-year-0Jd Huntington Beach boy on the Colorado River Saturday is registered to a Ne\Vport Beach marine s u p p I y ope.rater. \'oung Chris Dart, 733 Lake St., wris killed \\'hen the 17-foot alu min um boat in which he was fishing with his grandfather and another boy was rammed by a power cruiser. The operator of the 17-foot boat from \Vh.ich the boys were fishing, Fletcher Dart, 62, of 310 2nd St., Huntingt.on Beach, a city electrical iqspector, \Vas reportedly uninjured. He declare<' the siege of Kontum broken but the thunder of artillery crashing do\vn nearby belied his words. The Thieu visit came as the U.S. conr mand reported that U.S. Navy air strikes against a railway yard at Haiphong left Orange County had Its first hippo birth last week as the 4,000-pound Bubbles at Lion Country Safari beca~~!Jl;iother. Sudsey, weighing in at 80 pounds, appeared after the normal gestation period of eight months. A spokesman for the county attorney's office ·in Yuma County, Ariz., said the cruiSer is registered to Donald A. Payse, owner of Payse Marine Inc., 4229 Birch Street, Newport Beaclt Ho\vever, it was unclear. who was operating the cruiser at the time of triie- accident and efforts today to reach Payse for comment were unsuccessful. The-other -Huntington-Beach -boy .. Yuma County Sheriff's officers said the elder Dart was apparently in the rear part of the fis~ing boat when the power cruiser rammed its right ~ide and then paS!ed over it about 9 p.m. Saturday. No criminal complaints have been Issued, according~ Yuma County Assis-- tanl Altorqey Mike Smith, but the in· \lestlgation Is continuing. ~ big problem Tiiht now ii jurisdic· tioa," said Smith. !~We're oot sure 'vhether the accident took place in Galifom~-or-in--Arizooo~lt1s-real sticky as to which side will handle it." Smith said the power cruiser was located after a motorist stopped a police car on the highway and told police where to 1ook. The motorist de clined to identify himself, Smith said. . ,,.. Smith added that there were reportedly JO passengers in the power cn.llser at the Ex-dis patc her's Rites T oriig 1it In Huritingwn : Catholic funeral rites are set tonight iind Wednesday for a Newport Beach Poijce Department dispatoher killed Fri- day when a car collided with bis .motorcycle at Twenty-Nine Palms. • ti.lne of the accident, and that some of them came forward to volunteer in· formation before the boat was located by police. Rosary for Robert ~f. Buchser, 44, will be at 8 p.m. toni.e;ht in Smith's Mortuary , Huniington Beach, only two blocks from lbe vi..:;.im's home. Requiem Mass for Mr. Buchser is scheduled \Vednesday at 8 a.m. in Sts. Simon and Jude Church , with Father Thomas Schneider officiating. ·A 20-year Navy veteran who retired as , a chief petty officer in 1962, Mr. Buchser will later be buried at sea in a naval ceremony. The fatal accident occurred in the Yue· ca Valley area, V.'here the Buchsers maintained' a vacation hQme, according to famllv sources. Investigators said he was wearing a protective helmet while riding his 1notorcycle, but the crash impact tore it drf, causing: fat.al injuries. Survivors include his wife Olive , of the 'jlome at 8M Main St .. Huntington Beach, ' Jllus him mother, Mrs. Helen I. Buchser, Or East C1eveland . Ohio. and a brother, l<:mest Buchser of Lyndhurst, Ohio. ,., Fcilowillg retirement rrom the Navy. )tr. Buchser joined the Huntington Beach 1'~ire Department as a dispatcher, work· ing there four years. until hired by the 'Scripps Institute of Oceanography in La Jolla. The 12-year Huntington Beach resident Was employed by the Newport B e a ch Police Department for two years and 'vorked the night shift at the time of his death . Relatives have suggested memorial contributions to preferred charities. Room for T wo. 01i Bearskin? The accident took place about 150 feet off the Calllornia shore of the Colorado River about 10 miles north of Parker. A Costa Mesa man, John Helm of 251 E. 19th St:, said he witnessed the e-0llision from his mobile home on the Arizona side of the river where he spent the Memorial Day weekend. "I saw the lights from both boc:ts, but I didn't think they would hit," Helm said. ''Then there was a loud noise , almost an explosion, and then silence. "The cruiser stopped for a time , and then went on," Helm said. Helm said the younger Dart seemed to be dead 'by the time several other boats were able to pull the fishing boat into shore. Services for the boy are pending at Smith Mortuary, Huntington Beach. Holiday Boaters Near ly Swamp Catalina Island Every cove and anchorage on Catalina Island wa s jammed with boats over the three-day Memorial Day weekend. Catalina Camp & Cove Agency officials said every mooring at Catalina Harbor was tai:en and thi.t boats were rafted 35 feet deep. There are 75 pennanent moor- JnJ[s at C8t Harbor. Harbor ofnctals at Avalon said the mooring and anchorage areas were full by .Saturday and that boats were being turned away. Largest concentr•tlon of boats was at the 1sthtnus and at White 's Cove where ev~ a-vailable .noorlng was occupied and hundreds of boats were anchored and rafted in nearby areas. SANT A MONICA (UPI) ~ Move over Burt Reynold! (lf tbe'te'a room on the bearskin ). ,,. Despite the heavy coacentratioos of boats there were no mishaps, agency of· -r.cw. ~-• Weather condiUons 'were ideal wlth bitmx .llreezet: in the afternoons and a f'!P rooon at night. The Santa Monica C o 11 e g e yearboo~. ·to '1e Issued Wedne9day, ' wlll include a foll color nude mat.1 · centerfold, accordiric to tts editor .. Suzanne Yanok. She sal<I she COD- eelved the Idea o! a tun>~bles ' ctnlerlold, but C 0I11) 011011 la D Magazine beat her Into print with actor Burt Reynolds. The aubjed? • Peter Gowland, a -1u1 photographer wllo apod•Hm In. pl<lum ol llldl _,_ .. • .. ~· Concord Disr.upted "CONOO)l'Q, N.C. <UPI)-At iwt 13 ......... ,...,. arrested Monday night on .._,.. ol violaling a duak-~awn curfw lrnpoaed becaue or rock throwing llld llrebomblllllS earlier in, tht weekend. ·APlrt llOm ·U. ,,...ls, IJie nicJil. WU puctllll and tberi. wor• no reporll today "' lncldmll. \ it engulfed in flames .. ,TlM} Uong Bi ~::~;~~:~:rail~t:ur:!~:p~~~ Caspers: Second Hearing . . ' . " ' ' . . ' ~;~t~r]~1!!8!~:~!!,'Due~ii ftehdl'eioh~ Freid·~ Higbee today that.continuation of the air • • ~ffensive would make it impossi!>le for _ North Vietnam to keep up its offensive in By JACK BROBA~ the South. ot Ill• O.llY ''"' t 11ff He said the North Vietnamese probabl y had enough supplies in the pipeline to continue for a few weeks but "if we con. tinue to close that port (Haiphong) and the railroads that come in from China, then there isn't anf-way for North Vi.el· nam to continue for an extended period the type of offensive they have going." The raids on the Uong Bi complex were the first since President Nixon ordered the resumption of air strikes against North Vietnam April 6. They came as the command also repor ted damaging or destroying 16 more key bridges in North Vietnam and as 7th Fleet ships pounded a 260-mile stretch of coastal areas from the Demilitarized 7.one to just south of Haiphong. f\fosl supplies to the South go through a coast· al highway network here. Thieu, dapper in a safari suit and blue peaked cap, flew into Kontum aboard an American-supplied T39 Sabrelincr ex· ecutive jet. He ordered the city held at all costs, pinned a general's star on Col. Ly Tong Ba, e-0mmander of the 23rd Infantry Division at Kontum ; and credited him with "breaking the Communist attack" on the city. His confidence appeared premature. North Vietname se shells landed inside the city half a mile from 23rd Division Headquarters and there was fighting with Communist sappers at three points inside the city. Spokesmen said S o u t h Vietnamese forces killed 176 of the sappers Monday in fights north and south of Kontum 's airfield and inside part of a military camp they overran Sunday. ARYN losses were put at 20 dead and 108 wounded . John Paul Vann, the top U.S. adviser in the Central Highlands, was optimistic. He told UPI reporter Matt Franjola ''the situation couldn't look better," and said be based his on the slow but steady prog- ress or the South Vietnamese in clearing lrOOPJ fr.om Kontum. Orange County Board of Supervisors Chainnan Ronald Caspers, rebuffed Fri· day by San Diego County officials on his proposal to establish a ~olnt international airport at Camp Pendleton, today an· nounced another meeting will be held on the subject in Jul y. caspers said he would await the Woman lnjm·ed In Huntington Gas Explosion Two passersby rescued a badly burned Huntington Beach .woman M'onday morn- ing after a natural gas explosion ripped th:-ough her bungalow at 17012 "A" St. Two men, David Mooney, 23, of Westminster an<J. John Meck, of 17042 "A" SL. pulled Mrs. Ethel Coplan. 89, from her burning home after they heard the explosion at 10:20 a.m., according to the city fire department. They adminlstered emergency first aid to Mrs. Coplan who had suffet.ed critical bums on her legs an.d arms, firemen said. She was then taken lo Orange Coun- ty Medical center by firemen who responded t"o the explosion. Mrs. Coplan w:as resting on her llvlng room couch when she was· badly b~ by a ·nreball that followed the explosion, according to Capt Mike Nevina: of the Hu.ri tington Beach Fire ·Department The explosion·blew out a JO-foot section of the living room at}d shattered all the windows in the house, according to Nevins. · ' ~evins said sil fll'~ department tr1lcks responded to the explosion and put out . a fire in the home's living room. The origin of the explosion ii still ·under in- vestigation.-- release of AssoClation the SCuthcrn Californ ia of Govfn\menta (SCAG) regional airport study which is now ex- pected to be available sometime in July. "At that time, we wftl try again to pin- point a site for a regional airport based on the SCAG report findings1" Caspers said . He added, HTh.ls time, the ?i.farines will be Invited as well as San Diego County offici als and the meeting wlll be held In Orange County. "We are discouraged -down but not out," Casper11 admitted. "If we find that locating an In- ternational -airport in this area is too hot a political item we may suggest that Washington take over and arbitrarily deslgnnte a site." Caspers had led an Orange C.Ounty delegation which , met with San Diego County offklals on the airport question Friday at the Royal Inn in San Diego. San Diego officials, however, were cool to the Orange County proposal to loc"ate an intemation':1l jet alrport on the U.S. Marine Corps' Canip·Pendleton range. No l\farine representatives attended the two-county session. San Diego Supervisor William A. Craven summed up the joint meeting thla way: "Orange county wants an airport on i1' doorsteps but not In its house. They came here ior us to 'IOlve their problemJ fOT" them ." T wins Bqrned in Gas CHINO (AP) -'j'helma Visser told authorities me heard screams and rushed" outside to .find: her 2-year-old twin 110n1 1lUing '1n a pool of flames on Jhe 'ghrace 1 lloor. Sheril!'s depuUes said Arlan aJ\d Jaqod Visser -were critically bum!d over more tban. 70 percent or their boiliet Monday wheJI a clothes drier pilol Uglft lgmled. gasoline that the bo)'s appattnUy eplllelf '.""'i~lly or pourql. \ Candidates Get Warniµg ' ' . ,. ...... ' . ' ' . Huritington Cr acking Down on ·piJlitwal .,g's~'>'•· . By TEl\llY COVll.1,E Donald Shaw. a land..; 1'clmlclli~·lo~ Three oUitr' coun ·.-. •. Kenneth ot "" DallY '11tt st•ff the city, sald the \.amtne letten were Golden, Glen B•Ylboret nd .WUllam HunUngton ll<ach ollicl!ls are cracking sent <flly lo <andlilalel ,.bo "*" alg!IJ C.rlson have all betn ~ aboUl tlleli- down on variou3 candidates in the June 4 in.'lide' the city limlts, but have not J¥)1ted signs and the bond rtquirement. They -=*-~~the-• a-• ' ~be---to--code regulating political •l:!n•-"It's not a bis probleni so far, boil ifla bonda, or city buildlna lns~n will. Warnlng letters bav~ been sent to at a problem,'' Shaw aald ·tod•Y: take down lbtir signs; lout seven candld1tt1 In congrenional, Prior lo tht warnlbl Ietten, onJ1 one One challtllg,r f4 ROliert Balllo'1 Finl mi. and coun!Y tlec~. candidate, Fred M. Nelson, l«king a Supmlsoti~ ...,1, )V,llllce R. Davis, baa All candldai.1 are r~uirtd by city law judgeship In the WHt Orange Counly betn uMd lo ]JOll a'bond for hll •lcM· f4 post a •100 -~re putting up any Judicial District, had P\li.cl-'a •loo bOnd Two cbllltncen In coogru1tonal races pol!Ucal posttrs or sfgns. A special with the city. ·, · • are •1'> cln the ~~· ":'l"ina UaL pmnil musl be securell from the city Another candld6le f<lt J1!ali<, Rlci\ar1l n,., aA: .~II Murray (0.Lo\>I building departmenL before a pollUcal Beacom, posted hil bond afttt receiving Be.pt) who II tiyln4 lo unseat ll S. Rel>· sign larger than all square feet can be • warning, wfiut a '.llilnl Jodie c"1<!1dato, Cr.la 1lo1m0r (R·Lon~ Be11Ch) In · tlie used. Paul lleli, simply tliok Im a1inJ clow1L (flee SIGNS, .... I) ,,.. • Huntington Has Largest Cr9wds In Recent Years The -blggest-Memorlal-Day-beacn---~1 crowds in memory were recorded at ltuntlngton city beaches Monday as near- perf ect weather attracted people from across the Southland. An estimated ~.ooo flocked to Jlun. tlngton city beach, filling It to "near capacity," according to Bill Richardson of the life guard division. "It seems like we usually get fog on Memoriat Day," Richardson eaid. "But Monday was perfect. We had the biggest Memorial Day cro~ anyone can remem- ber." Richardson reJ)orted an additional 41,000 on Sunday ,and 11 .000 on Saturday. There were a total of U rescues, ~S persons treated tor jellyfish stinga:, and 84 cases of Iott ·Children, moat of them Monday. "ft wa3 ao dense that lf 1 chlld wandered 1$. or 20 feet from his parents, be wa1 loat,11 Richardson satd. An estimated 90,000 persons used Hun- tington and Bolsa Chica state beache1 on hoth Saturday and Sunday, o!flclals Nld. There were a total of 25 rescuea reported on the two beaches. - Man Fires a t P oli ce KANSAS CITY, Mo. I UP[) -A !ormot mental pa.tlent distraught by marital problems barricaded himse.Jf In his wife'• house Monday night, rttumed the gun-- fire Of. a neighbor and held police at ba1 for three M.Jr1 before officers flushed him out wilh tearsaa and lie aurrendered. No one waa hurt. 'We•t•er !t's going to remain H-0-T for at least the next several days ac- cording to the weatherlady. with temperatures ranging from the ?O's at the beacl! to the 90's Inland. IAws ln the JIO's. INSIDIJ TOD.4. l' In a te11 of 1•rvlual, 20 Mor· mon jamilft1 in Palo Alto have btQun living for tlttH wetlu O'tllU on tht glX>dJ that Wtft 1iortd fn thtir homes whrii ~ wen told-with no Advance no- tic•-9/ th< 1:p<rim,.1 which ii 1pomortd b11 tht church. Ste lloTl/ on Page IB. \ • :1! OAJl V PILOT " NetD D ean Dr. Lyman \V. Porter, profes· sor oi administration and psy· chology, has been named dean o! the UC Irvine Graduate Sc boo I of Adminisration. Porter moves up from associ· ate dean and succeeds Df. George W. Brown who is re· turning to fuUtime teachi ng. Small Trimaran Seized at Dana For Marijuana U.S. cuStom1 agents !tallc.ing a small trimaran all the way from the U.S.-Mex· ican border finally boarded the craft at Dana Harbor Monday and seized 30 kilos ol marijuana. , The agenll arrested George Arnold Dehlmar lr .. 29, of Santa Barbara and Gall Lynn Rush, 18, of H a w a i I '°nd char1ed both with conspiracy to smuggle marlju•Rf· · Ttfe arre.st took place a b !J a r d Dehlmar'a 24-foot s a i Ibo at , which author ities assert was h!ading north from an undisclosed point In ~1exico. The Incident took place at about 2 p.m. at the harbor and climaxed a weekend of surveillance wh !ch assertedly began in water off San Diego. The small craft apparently spent the night at the harbor and began heading out to sea Monday afternoon, sources sald. CUstom1 agent Don Wat®n said that he .and fellow officers asked h a r b o r patrolmen to intercept the vessel and bring It to a dock. After that took place, Watson said, the &gents moved in to make the arrests. The ilJicJt weed we ighed about 70 pounds and was valued at about $61000 on the street market. T_,, Mt7 JO, 19n Secrecy Shrouds Police Accident By JOHN VALTERZA Of Ill• Dallr ••1t1 *"" California ~lighway Patrol officials l«)- day slapped a tight lid of *rtcy on the circumstances surrounding the freak: era.sh of a San Clemente police car and 1 small p)tiup \rU<:i la•t week~n<l which claimed the life of a Long Beach teenager. Tho •r:ctacular collision whlch took place la e F)'lda)l a(tunoon severtly in- jured four persons and caused fatal in- juries to !&=year-old Jeff Brlet. He suc· cumbed to severe head and internal in- jurlea late Sunday nlght in Mission Con1- munUy HOJpital. • Officially, the Wghway Patrol U.tes charge of the rnvestlgatlon tn crashes in- volvlng municipal police vehiclea, and local offlciala by custom art foibldden to comm~nt on detai111. But 11pokesmen for the CHP in Santa · Ana today eld they had "no Jn. formaUon" on the tr11gedy. The collision took place at 4 p.m. Fri· day as patrobnan Gary Adami answertd a cJ.11 relaUng to a car belna driven In erratic fashlon along South El Camino Roal. AJ the l>Qtrolman began acceltre.Ung near Calle Doloru the llTlllll domesUc pickup laden with weekend vacation gear and several cases of beer, pulled bl.to traffic an~ the patrol car sla~ed into lhe reat of the truck at high opted. Neither the siren nor the red warning lights on the unit were operating at the Ume. Brlet apparently was 111ttlng on top of the Joad in the rear of the pickup when the crash sent the truck 1kldding more than 100 feet down the roadway. Several Expert Disarms San Francisco Consulate Bomb SAN FRANCISCO (UPI J -A bomb tx· pert bas disarmed 14 sticks of dynamite hooked to a timing device at the door of the Portuguese Consulate just before they were set to explode. ' "Whoever it \\'as . sure knew \\'bat he was doing," said a police bomb squad of· ficer. He said it would have "pretty much le\•eled" the three·story stucco' building occupants were thro\vn out after the Im· pact. Briel, v•ho received emergency !irit aid at t.he scene from a phyaiclan who '4'8S passing by, unde,.,.·ent surgery im- mediately after the crawb. 1tls three com- panlona s\lffered painful, but less severe tnJurtes. Th.ey were Mike Bazter, \Villiam Schut1 and Dan Cross, all 16 and all from Loog Beach. , A.i.ma, who earlier thl!I year joined !he local force. suffered a cut to his left eye, but otherwise was unhurt. His patrol car was a total loss. Because of the silence by the CHP it has not been datermintd who was at the wheel of the pickup. It is known, however, that the investigation into the crash is continuing and insurance in- veaUgators representing the City of San Clemente were conferring this morning with local pollce offlcla111. The fatal crash marked the first tra!l!c death on city streets in nearly two yeari;. FAA. Inspector, 3 PiWts Killed In Plane Crash FORT WORTH, Tex. (AP) -Three pllota and an inspector from the Federal AviaUon Administration were killed to- day when a Delta Airllnes OC.9 on train- ing flight craahed and burned at Greater Southwest International Airport. Tarrant .County Medical examiner- Eelik.s Cwozdz said the pilots and the FAA Jn spec tor, the only per!lons abOard, were trapped and died inside the bu.m- ing plane. The names were not released immediately. A public safety officer who witnessed the craah said the plane hit the ground tail first and skidded about half a mile as it burst into names. "The wings "'ere tipping to one side and then the other," said officer David 1i.1cNatt. "Its nose pointed upward as it hit the ground." A long column of smoke boiled up from the plane as fire consumed the aircraft. Delta Airlines officials sakl the plane was on a routine check flight when it crashed shortly after 7 a.m. The DC-9 Is a standard passenger jet that can carry up to 70 passengers on short hauls. Local Bar Backs Grove Attorney For Cow·t Post which is _one bl~k Jrom the Iranian -Consulate, wrecked by a bomb hfas1 '"Riles Says Goal seven months ago. G~en Grove attorney Glen T. Bashore Is the Orange County Bar Association's choice to replace retiring municipal court Judge Celia Baker of Huntington Beach. Bashore topped a poll that produced on· ly 172 votes from more than l,30C eligible county bar members. His 37 votes placed him ahead of the 31 submitted for Deputy District Attorney Richard Beacom and 30 for Laguna Niguel attorney Tom Keenan . Five other candidates were !lupported by county bar members in a poll design· ed to advise the public of the organized bar'• preference in the race for the \Ye!lt Orange County Judicial District seat being vacated by Judge Baker. They included: Huntington Beach at- torney C. \\1illlam Carlson Jr., 26 votes; Westrnlru:ter lawyer Kenneth Golden, 21; deputy public defender James Alfano. 13 ; Paul M. Bell. 9 and Jluntinglon Beach lawyer Fred h-t. Nelson, 5. All eight candidates will • be on the bptlot for the June 6 election. OlAN•I COAST HI DAILY PILOT 'Ttit OrtllOI COl~I OAILY PILOT wlifi which 11 cllfTlblnn ttie N•Wl·Pren, i. 1>11Dlltl'ltd lt'I' tl!1 Or•nu• CD11t P11blbl!lf,o Comp.1ny, S,.p.1. r1t1 itdltl0!11 1r1 P11Dllt1*1, A.\Of!dly 111~1t frld1y, tor ((M.11 Mt'•· N~wp0r1 ll~•ch, HU11lln111on l1Klllfo1111!1ln V1llt y. L~11un1 1-.ch, lrvln1fS1dllltblc-1nd San Cl1.,.,tn!t/ San J111n Ctpl11r1no. A l ln911 rrg1on1! itdlllon 11 wllllsl'ltd Saturdav1 1rw:I S"""•r•· Tiit ,.lftclp,ll OUDllll!lfll pJ1nt II 11 llO Wt•I ••1 '''"'• CO.II Mnl, C1llf'ornl1, f2'2'. R•ll1rf N. W11d l'mlftnt 1..0 Plllll1'11tf J1clr lll. Curl1f Vi« ,..rtskllnl Int Gtntrtl Ml114ttr Tll1m11 K11.,;i ElllMM' Ttiom11 A. Mvr,hi~1 Mllnft'"9 ldh" Cll1rl1i H. L..1• IUcll1rd P. Nill Mthl1n1 M"'"lftt illlltt.1 1,,,., c1 ... n11 W111t ~ c.n1r 111Jor .............. OM&. 11171 l 11clt ••1111.,1'4 MtUi111 Add,11t: P.O. I t• 1t0, 92641 °""' -" Lttunl IHCft' m l'-"nt A'llf!Vt tltll MIM; JXI Witt ••r $1rttl Newpttl IH<Jlc: JW ....... ,., l1111:1YJrt1 If• c1.-i.1 as """' I• ee'"1n1 ••I T.,•••• f7141 64Jo4Jl1 CtwM AMftlllllt 64J·l671 Pf9i9 ...,. ...,. c...Y ci••••'" IMl·l:ut =I,. 1'n, Or... <M•I l'VllllM'l.1119 , )ilt ..._ 1Wln, lllla1r1llelll. """"' ., ~~tt IWffft ...., ............ WflflM ......... ........ ~"""· = ..... __ ...... ,_ , __ .. _.. .......,... W ulritr IUS _,,.., 11¥ ..... U,.IJ Wfllt!WI "'lllfW'r ._ ....... ___ '"' ...-.,.,. Police evacuated ConsulAte-Oeneral Jose Alves and six servants Monday from Reduced Classes the building. The consul'! family \\'as in Portugal. · l'rom Page J PENALTY ... was "palpably trans~rent" and th~t the ruling consequently should be reviewed by the U.S. court. . . The California Con!tltutlon proh1b1ts "cruel or unusual punlahrnent" \lihlle the federal Constitution prohibits "creul and unusual punishments.'' Because the Cal· ifornia court found the death penalty both cruel and unusual, Youn1er argued, it was really interpreting the 8th Amend· ment to the C.S. Constituiton. In seeking a hearing , the slate also argued that the decision violated the rights of Californians by "usurping the legislative function." Younger said that ''by abolishing the death penalty the court has enacted it.oi personal views lnlo Jaw over the will of a protesting public." Proponents of capital punishment, in· cludlng Gov. Ronald Rea gan, followed the decision up by backing an amendment to the state Constitution s p e c if i ca 11 y authorizln_g the death penalty. The move failed in the California Senate in early !\lay. However, there is a drive to reinstate the death.)>enalty in Calilomia through an intiaUve measure . The California case directly fnvolved Robert P. Anderson. 34. who v.·as under dealh sentence for the 1965 murder of 11 San Diego shopkeeper. In San Francisco Younger said the Supl-eme Court's action "y,·as neither surprising nor disoppotnting. '' l!e said the court acted as tt usually does when & state court clalnu !t is baa· ing its decision on the state constUutlon. "The important thing however, iJ that the validity of the death penalty -under lhe federal constitution -still is before •he U.S. Supreme Court It should be handinfi down ils decl.sion in a fe1v v.·eeks, Younger said. He said his office will stand by and \\'ait until the court rules on the cases before it. ·•tr the court upholds the death penalty, then it -.·Ill be vaUd in 49 atilt.a and un- constiluUonal only in Clllfornl1. That wlll put the issue squarely up to the people In this atate en whether thty want to rutore capital punlshmen~" he 11id. Boy .Scoul8 to Join Dads in Car Wash ' .. : · Y...., &y SColls !rom H\JiWllflon lleocli-'l'roop 4511 will join \heir 'dadt In .-~111 CIJ'I it rlboe funds lOT 1IOO[J IC- !:lffiiles ill d>.1 s.1ri1. t ~ Tbt"Dllll •1D be ~ can 111>111 I a.m. lo ' p.m. 11 the llobll aervJc1 ata. lion. Womer Av,.ue and Sprlncdale Stmt •. ,,,. prtco or 1 clean car la 11. ' CORONADO (AP) -California's superintendent of public instruction, Wilson Riles, says he's working on a plan lo r~uce class sizes in kindergarten through the third grade. Speaking to more than 400 delegates at the California Federation of Teachers(AFL-CIO) convention here Sun- day, Riles said his program "'ould make classes more manageable. "I have a feeling we are going to im- prove the situation of education in California, but we will have to work at it," he said. Tweaking Nose Costs Him $265 WO!LONGONG, Australia (UPI) -ft cost high schoot teacher Warwick Allen $265 for tweaking a student's ll06e. A magistrate in \Vollongong, SO mile.s south of Sydney. foond Allen's actlon constituted assault. He ordered A11en to pay $263 in coats and $2 compensation for the student's medica l expenses. Allen. a physical tducation teacher at Corrimal High School, called the lncident "trifilng." and said he had be'tll pro- voked by the boy's insolent atUtude, Walnut Can yon Blaze Burns Off 65 Acres Orange County's first major brush fire cif the season burned over 65 acres Satur- day in Walnut Canyon, tight miles eut of Anaheim. No homes were destroyed although flames came within a few hundred yards Df several dwellinga. ·Orange County Fire Department In- vestigators blamed the blaze on three teena ge youngsters pl1ying with matches. They y;ere questioned and released to their parents. Fleas Cannot HoUI Up Tent • Shoby, Englancl (UPI) -Gales that wrecked a eountry falt at Shoby brought dlwltr to Proltl.!Or Totmlln's Flea Clrcu~. Seven perll>rtnlbg n ... vanbhed wl!en a lent collapsed, lncludlnl .. tar Jununi nu Fu Chow. "Re balancu a plect oI wood a!l!losl twtce b1s wetibt Oil bis It«• and could prove V!l'J'. dll!lcult lo ..,UC.," nld tht pniloaor. · l ., DAILY •ILOT 11111 l'M • DAILY PILOT photographer Richard Koehler won second place in the spot news category in annual California Press Photographers Association com· petition for this photo, it was announced Saturday. Photo was taken last December as police officer held two stolen car suspects at bay with shotgun at El Camino Drive and ~1endoza Avenue in Costa 11-'lesa. Suspects subsequently were released "'hen police learned their car was not stolen. Auto · Plunges Off Cliff, Pass enger Die s iil Crash 7 Nudes Pin clied 01i Beacll Sa1id s Of Soutli Lngu11a A 17-year-old Long Beach boy became Orange County'~ fifth traffic fatality over the Memorial Day weekend Monday when the car in \Vhich he was riding left Ortega lllgh\\'ay 15 mi I es east of San Juan Capistrano and rolled. down. a IQO.foot cllfl. ~ · Randy Adams was one of three San Francisco Man Found Dead Off Salt Creek Orange County Sheriff's DUicers are working with San Francisco police today in a bid to retrace the final hours of a man whose fully clothed body was found floating oU Dana Point. C.Oroner's officers identified the man as ?>.1alcolm _Storey ,.-53 •. of _San Francisco. They are today attempting to notiry the dead man's next of kin. Sheriff's deputies said the body, floating about one mile off Salt Creek Beach , \Vas spotted by yachtsman Bert Hodge of Tarzana. Hodge kept contact ll.'lth the body until Orange County Harbor Patrol officers arrived at lhe scene. Officers said the body was fully clothed and appeared to have been in the '4'&ter for several days. P ancake Breakfas t Se t for Huntington Members of the Golden \Vest Pony League will offer Huntington Be~ch residents "all they can eat" for 75 celits Sunday morl)ing in Lake Park. The pancake breakfast will be held from 7 a.m. to noon. A $5 charge will be the maximum for very large families. Children under three can eat free. Proceeds from the breakfast will help support the league's summer baseball program. passengers in a car driven by Steve Polletier, 18, of Anaheim. Polletier is re1>0r1ed in guarded condition at ~1ission Community Hospital today. Others injured were Adams' sister. Tamira, 18, and Michael Harrison, 19, Df Garden Grove. they were treated 3nd released. .. High .... ·ay patrolmen said the accident occurred v.•hen Polletler S\Verved to miss an oncoming car while attempting to pass a line Df other cars on a blind c u r v e about 15 miles north of San Juan Capistrano. Orange County fire and rescue units spent more than an hour brinliJtg the . four victirn11 up the steep c!Uf. Joseph Britt, 15, of U>ng Beach, di~ Sunday in Mlasion Community Hospital of injuries received in a crash with a San Clemente police patrol car Friday in San Clemente. · Two other persons died in holiday mishaps. Robert E. Reedy, 28, of lZ!t Disney \Vay, Anaheim , was killed when his car -fell on hlrn..whlle be-was making repairs at his home and Rex Martindale, 20 months. drowned In the family swimming pool at 10222 Jennrich Ave ., Garden Grove. The five traffic deaths conlruted with Orange County's almost p e r f e ct Memorial Day weekend record in which only one person Jost his life in the past three years. l'ro111 Page I SIGNS ... 32nd Districl: and Donald Hayhurst (R· Garden Grove) who is seeklng the post held by U.S. Rep. Richard Hanna (0. Anaheim ) in the 34th District. City Clerk Paul Jones said the city code was quite effective In cleaning up campaign JXlSler11 after the April ·11 city council election. "We had one of the cleanest cities around. both during and after the elec- tion," Jones said. Candidates have 10 days to clean up their signs after the election, or they . forfeit the $100 bond. Seven beachgoers who provided a memOrable Memorlal Day for onlookers at a South L..1gunn Beach by allegedly capering nude on the sands were quickly gathered up and covered up by Orange County Sheriff's officers.• The six men and one \\'Oman found a change of clothing waiting for them at Orange County Jail. All seven were booked on charges of indecent exposure. Among the seven rounded up by deputies in resporuie to calls from irate apartment d .... ·ellers in the area were 1>-licbael Frederick Benway, 22, of 31561 1st St., South Laguna and Kenric Carlyle Brown, 19, of 125 !Ugh Drive, Laguna Beach. Also jailed Dn alleg otions that they sun- bathed nude and swam nude in the Table Rock beach area were Anna Christine Stockton, 20, of Mecca, Calif.: George Timothy Byers, 29, and David Keltb Moore, 23, both of Afallbu and Dale E~ward "-fatlock, 37, and Richard Joseph }Jerold, 40, both of Loa Angeles. Howard Huglies Fi11ds Solitude VANCOUVER, B.C. (UP!) -Howard Hughes, the topic of almoat every con· versation here in ~larch. has all but been forgotten by rt!idents of this ·west Coast city 11 weeks after his 11urprlse arrival. About the only person now showing in- terest in his continued stay are Canadian immigration department officials and e1- ecutlves at the Bay.shore Inn. where Hughes pays an estimated $4,200-a-week rent. Press aides sent from Los Angeles to field reporters' question! during the early stages of the billionaire's visit long since have returned home, leaving the wall of secrecy around Hughes intact. ln a telephone news conference Jan. 7 with seven American newsmen, Hughe~ 11aid he planned to release a recent photograph to quash wild speculation about his appearance. No picture baa been forth coming . NO GAP. HERE! Our carpet installations are so smooth that . you can bo auured of th e fin est seams anywhere . We hand sew ou r nams from the back with a c rou -sti~c h, end then re in for ce with lohx to prevent them from •ve r com ing . open. This takes e little longer, but is infinit ely su perior to toped seoma . The bast installer s in the coYnty ere performing for ALDEN'S, t rai ned by us to install the rig.ht wa y! To be sure that the carpeting you c~oo1e won 't ha ve gap1 where th e se&s ere, ma ke sure th at ALDEN 'S does the jo b. J . . ALDEN'S CAR'PiTs · e DRAPES 1 UJ Plactlltla Ave • COST Ii MI SA 64~138 ... H DAILY ,lLOT 'Tired' Nixon Flie:s ·to Iran En Route Home TEHRAN (UPI I -Pr .. ident Nixon, tired from intensive summit talks that praduced a pledge of American-Russian cooperation to prevent a n u.c I e a r holocaust, ended a nlne-day trip to the Soviet Union ~ay and flew 10 Tehran for an overnight visit. Tbe President will spend 21 hours in this k&y Peraian Gulf njtUon, then fly to Poland for ti day before returning to Washln:ton Thum:lay night. \Vh~ Nixon'11..jet,. the SpiriL.of '76:. landed lat Tehran's ~1ebrabad airport, be and Mr;.s. Nbcon were greeted by the shah and t~ empress or Iran. Foijowlng the colorful airport welcom- ing ~emony, the Nt:h were taken by motorca~ to the yad Aryamehr 100 lmnates Control Wing Of NJ Jail PATERSON , N.J. (APJ -i\1ore than 100 inmates took host:iges and sei7.ed con- trol er the ma:ii:imum security wing at Passaic County jail for se\'eral hours t~ day, then released the captive! and returned to their cells after officials a greed to discuss grievances. The Rev. Bill Ptiason, a Paterson pover- ty agency ofilcial, said three remaining hostages v.·ere relea sed when prison or- ficials agreed to make no physical reprisals against those v.·ho stagea the revolt. Earlier in the day, the rebellious in- mates released six other captives, in- cludi.ng the warden. At least lour guards were lnj_ured in the disturbance. ~1ason. pres~nt at negotiations bet .... ·een 1uthorities aM.d inmates inside the prison, "faid the prisoners' deman~ "aren't big ones." "Thev deal with human elements llUCh as. hygiene," Mason said. "They want the right to wear underwear and have clean m:ittress CO\'ers." !\Iason said an irunate named Clay Thon1as acl.cd as a go-bet,\·een in the negatiations among the inmates ~d Sherif( Frank Davenport. He said Thomas "·as instrumental in the set· tlement and that Da\'enport was "courtl'Ous and gracious," th~bout the tall:s. \\"arden Jack DcYoun~. nurse Linda \1anderlinda and a guard who suffered stab wounds, Jack Donohue, V.'ere r~· leased after about an boor A . .second guard V.'ounded in a melec \\'ith inmates, John Boz.zoli, appartntly escaped. Bath guards \\·ere hospitalized. JUllt before noon, three o t h e r hostages. Lt. Thomas Olivtr and guards Walter Dobrolowski and-Rodney Leone, \\'ere !reed. Dobrolowski had a tooth knocked out, and was trtated at St. Joseph's Hospital. Leone \\·as hospitalized 1rifh a punctured chest and abdomen. City police armed \\'ith shotguns .and tear gas surrounded the jail in the center of this city of 120,000. A spokesman said tbe officers \\'ere to stand by while the negotiations continued inside the prison. A Passaic County sht'rilf's spoke3111an said Boz1.oli. Donohue and another guard were escorting six inmates, including a convicted murdtrer, from the second floor to another part of the jail whtn the trouble began. The inmates managed to overpower the guards, seize 1heir key s and release ap- pro~i.mattly 110 prisoners the spokesman .said. The spokesman .said the convicted murderer, "'ho 'vas awaiting sentencing, threatened to \\"&lk out or the jail-using one of the hostages .as a human l!lhield. The spokesman said some prisoriers were armed "'ith homemade knh·es. PClssion Pla1it 'Biu1cli of Hooey' f\'E\V 't"ORK tUPI ) -In a nalion"'ide mailing adrertising its ''Chi n e .s e Ginseng root.'' the manufacturer called it a "secret passion plant from the Orient ' prized by royalists in Oriental harems in virile-making pov.•ers," says the state at~ tomey general's office. Actually. a spokesman for the state agency said, tht only beneficial use of the root was· to reduce cholesterol. and there ":ere cheaper products on the market \l"hi ch did that . The office announced it obtained a court crder against Mui Ching Import· ers Ine., to prevent the company from selling er advertising the root. It offered the pill \"ia niair order at $6.95 ror a four- Vi"tek supply of 30 tablets and $41 for a year. ~iol\Ulllent, a towering edifice compleltd last year to mark the t,500th anni versary of the Persian monarchy. They mayor of Tehran, G~lam Reza Nikpay, prtsentcd Nl1on • golden key to the city and gave a !mailer reproduction to Mrs. Ni:Ion. The Ni:loos then pro- ceeded to Saadabad Palace, the presiden- tial 111'"1 h()\IS<!. Nlson 1od the Shah arranged t~·o sessions r:I. tp.lks totaling lour hours dur. ing Jb~ Pre~e!Jl'.l stopoyer. The pui'J>Olie or Nlxoo's visit to "TebraD, U.S. sources said, was to assure Iranian leadeni cf continued American support in the P,ersian ,Gulf ~egion' where unrest ac- cwTed among som~ of lr'an's neighbor&. Nilan looked tired as he left RUSilia !rem Kiev, the JG-tenturi~d capital of the Ukraine, ending his historic journty to the SovJet Union. But he.took time out to shake hands y,•ith a dozen Soviet citizens in a crowd. of 300 which saw hi.In off at Kiev. 'l'he Cto\.\'d waved Soviet and American 001gs. During Nixon's vi.sit. Soviet citizens saw him on televislon several li.n1es -ill· eluding once in an unusual speech to them by the President Sunday night - and considerable press attention y,·a~ givtn -10 hll vlsrt .. arfd the summ1t achievements. The joint pledge "to do their uhnost to aW>id military oonfrontatk>ns and Wtvenl the outbreak of nuclear war" was con- tained in a set of principlts -nonbinding Wallace Has Sta·oll Gov. George \Vallace is wheeled dO\\iD a corridor of ~Joly Cros/i Hospital in Silver Spring, Md., by Mrs. \Vallace and his daug_htcr Bobby Jo Parsons (right). The Alabama gover nor continues to in1· prove. but is still paralyzed from \\'aist do,vn, doctors say. Sec .story. Page 4. goals to which both nations subscribed at 1he conclusion or the ~toscow talks ti·l-0n- day. An agreen1ent to linlit strat!.'gic nutlear ,,·eapons -plus tht recognition !hat "thCre ·is "no alternatlve to co1Wuclin)! their mutual rt13tlons on the basi!J of peaceful co-txlsten('e" -\\t'rt• the n1ain suc(·i:>sses at ?.1oseow. But the big issues 1hat threaten peace. the \1ietna1n and the liliddle Ea:it con. fl ic ts. apparently \\'tre left undisturbed. There '''as no C\'idence of any spe<:jfic 1c-. tmn· by IJ\c-hvo super~·ers lo defuse lhe ni. SecW'ily v.•ets extremely ti~ht for Nixon and his Y.'ife in the Soviet Union and it was much the same "'hen they arrived in Tehran. Iranian <lfficials ordered heavy protection ot the U.S. party out or c:on· l:trn about rt>Cent )iluerrilla 1t'Uvltit.s. The !light tron1 Kiev look lhl't:e hours. 3:11n1nutes. \1'1th arri\•al in Tehran at 5:30 a.n\. 1Pl.Yl''1. 1'he President tmergtd from the plane into th<' bright sunshine, just ahead of his 11·11e. 1'hey p~usOO u\on\entarily and \1a1·ed . then destcndt-d the .strps. N1xun wore a dark single-brea:1ted .suiL ~lrs. Ni:<on \\'Ore a light-colored outfit and t'arried a shiny black pur~e. A.t !he. fool v( the. airliner steµ.-;, they \\'trt mrt by !he shah in a civilian suit and the tmpress. \rho ~·or<' a sun1mrr dress and a Ooppy ~'hile hat ~·hich she clutched \Vith one hand to ketp it frotn blo~·ing a\ray. Tht .shah introduced c·overnment or- tlclats to his iuests. lhen two girls 11 \\'hlte drt1h1e:1 pre:iented flowers co Mrs. · Nil:on. \\la ving cro1vd:1 applauded and Lh• htads oC state fOOk the dais for 'I 21•gun lfHIUte \Yhlch OOon1ed OU.l dUfing tM playing of the U.S. and Iranian nat'ional anthcrns. f\'lxon then insp&":ttJ nn honor (I.lard. The joint pt>ace pledge in ~tascow fro11'Tlt:d sununit meetings thut produced ei~hf trE>Rlif.~ or AAreem~nt:1. including 1 pM\1 lo limit nuclc~r 11rms. · The Nixons nc\\' fron1 1\lo . .;cow to Kiev !\1onday. Their nc1ivitits in Kiev included <l ba1,1quet . a 11Tealh·l;iyins ceremony at the Ukr111nian Tomb of lht l'nkno11•n Soldier. aud a tour o[ the mycar-old t:alhcdral ol St . Sophia . McGovern to Strike Back To1iiglit' s TY Debate Co 11 siclered Jltl ost I 111portant LOS ANGELES (UPI I -Put on the defensive by Hubei·t !I. Thunphrey'!I broad attack on hi s military. tax and v.·elfare plans. George S. r.1cGovern todiiy attempts to exploit Humphrey's !lUpporL of the Vietna1n \Vat v.·hen they clash 111 another television deb:ite tonight. The scna~ors, leading contenders for the Democratic president ia l oomination, consider tonight's TV debate, their sec- ond. the most important of the three scheduled in their baltle for the 271 delegates at stake in the California primary June ~ 41tt Ttre two \vill appear on NBC's "i\ler1 !he Press" at 6:30 p.m. PfYf but !he ~ll·i.;u1·l!rn ~1-.cn1 a rcl~1t11"t·l.v leisure!.\• day, including se,·eral hour:; of louno;::ini:: hy the hotel s11•in1n1lng pool (see picturr on Pagr 4), \•,hile Humphrey 11·orked lhf' ncrther part of thr stale in a hectic tour of Fresno. Sacr::unento, San J ose, ~nd San Franciscu. In Sacramento. 11. man carrying a ri!le t1ro blocks from "·here Jl umphrey \\'as holding an outdoor rally was ··detained·· at !he requt'.'Sl or lhe Secret Sf'r1·ict. He was not arrested and there "'as no in· dicallon or a connection bet,~·een his pr<'lil'llt'r ntar !ht riillv :;ite and 11un1· phre.1··s appearanct · llumphrey uri:ied a cro\\·d in San .Jo~f" In tun!.! in on today's deb11.te and declared •·\t'.'t tne tell you :;omcthing. friend!(, \Ye're on thf! rnil\"1.'.'' ln rapi1! :iueeessiun. wilh ti1nr out en\\• for tru\'el. llun1phrey spoke al a labo'r breakfast, sipped \l·i11e wilt, an 81 ·ytar- old Jt;ili11.n immigrant. addressed a l\1ei- it·:o1n-A1nerican audit'nct, and briefly talked ~·ith the Sen•icc Employcs ln1cr- national llnion. Al nil pointl. ht a1tacked ~ICGo\'trn's record. hour-long interview program will not be J d 0 J shown in California until 9,30 p.m .. prime u ge ve1•turns ury vie1'•ing tinie. Generally regarded as a dra\\·, perhap.~ with a slight edge to !Jumphrey, the first · ~ debate Sunday \\'as seen by !e\l.'Ct than 111 percent of the re gistered Dtmocratic voters, acl'Ording to media · .si>ecialislii;. 'fhe third debate is next Sunday. Admittedly startled by •rumphrey's at· tack. i\lcGovern J\1onday "'enton his O\\'ll offensive and chose as his target i-lurnphrey's clain1 th nt their records were the same en the Vietnam \Var. Speaking to the California Federc1tion of 'feachers in San Diego, ?-.·lcC'.ovcrn said "Senator Humphrey made what I regard as one of the most shocking stntemcnts that l\•e heard since l 've been in politics. ""hen he said 'George ?-.1cGovern and I ha1•e the same record on the war in Viel· nam.' "Is there anyone in this room "-'ho d~~ not regard that as utter oonsen.se·!"' hi' asked, visibly angered. Ile said Hwnphrey was '·po~1n~ as 1 convert to peace and I don 't intend to lei him get awa.v with it." He also called the priinHry '·a conte!:lt between the old politics and the neW" and cautioned ·the teachers that llumphfcy advocates more 'money for a wide ran~t or domestic programs without spelling cut the specifics. Verdict in Baby Death An Orange Count~· Superior Court judge 11nd lhen commented that Coats had ln today overturned his jury's verclict and his opinion "exploded" at a lime when he reductd the penalty scheduled for bnby 1vas holding the baby aver the hath tub. killer Donald Lee Coals rro1n life im-?-.!any of the multiple i njurie~ found on prisonmtnt to five yea rs to life in state the child were lnfilcttd en that one oc· prison. casion, the judge indicated. Judge Claude \\.J. Owens pointed cut Coats "'as found guilty by a jury last before he cut Coats' con\liction to sec9nd \\fay 2 of the killing cf the infnnt son of degree murder that there was no ?-.Ir!. Edna Mc\\'horler. an IS.year-old evidence of premeditation v.1hen thl"! cock lai l waitress who shnr~ Coats• Garden Grove composer-arranger killed apartinent. !5-month-0ld Chad Bryan r>unAatn on Ma y 28, l9?l, · Physici:u1s wlm exnm ined the body or the infanl ¥aid his :ikull had been !ra< .. . Deputy District Attorn ey Al ~ovick tured t1vice shortly before his dtalb and said he will appeal Judge Oi~·cns' that six ribs healing from previous Irac· decision. lures had been rebroken. Coats. 39, slated today in 'the aen- lcncing session that he had betn the vie· lt Waft: te::itiflcd during the trial that the ti1n of "ri~iculous lies" dUl'ing his trial. child's body wa~ a mass of bruises and 'l'he dapper 1nusician said he had never rhat He had been the victim of repeated been allowed to take a lie detector test or .sexual abuse. submit to examination by psychiatrists at The baby died in the hospital :ihortly any ti"!hnlarlng the murder proceedings . after being found bleeding and un- ljiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiii Judg~_Owens liste~ed .to~~e 11tatc~cnt _ t'ilnscious in ~~ts~ apart~-· 'Pot' Smuggling Suspect Killed Near El Centro EL CENTRO (AP) -U.S. border patrol agents shot a man to death and chased a half-<lozen others into ~texico after suspected marijuana smugglCrs opened fire from behind a desert bush. An estimated 35 pistol shots peppered t~ree Jeeps but missed the three officers oo routine patrol mid"·ay between El Centro and Yuma, Ariz., Monday night. At about the same time, two men were arrested beside two parked cars a half- rr.ile away near Jnterstate I for · in- Vt:stigation. Henry Felchlln, chief border patrol agent, said about 300 pounds of mari- juana were confiscated from the sandy shooting site several hundred yards from Me:ii:ico. The agents said sevtral of the men fired automatic pistols. ·~ abot fnd by agent Har.old Slocum appMently killed the man. "These guys earh had a bag (of mari· j uana) J'd gueu they v.·ere carry'ing to a contact man en th!! sldt," Felrhlin said. The California llighway P a tr o • , Jmperial County ~heriffs deputies and an army helicopter plloi from Indio joined in tracking the min to Mexico, where judicial police fro1n Mexicali took up the search. The dead man appeared to be Mexican or a t.lex.lcan-An1erlcan ~1fthout iden- tification and about 25 to 30 years old, J.'elchlln said. Vacation Time ... Wagon Time Colony Park .. • ...IF CONTINENTAL BUILT A STATIO N WAGON, COLONY PARK WO ULD BE IT! Colony P a rk offers the ne\v look of luxury in station wagons ' for 1972. Long the leader in the station wagon Cield ... see for yourself the most magnificent collection ol better wagon ideas under one root ... Test drive one today ... Montego. •• Villager "Car Of The Y car" Stnte Highway Toll ABSOLUTELY BEA UTIF UL IN A STATION WAGON .•• THE HOTTEST STYLING ON THE ROAD TODA\' I Record, Leads Nation From Wire Ser\ices Sevt!nty-eighl persons v..·ere tiUtd on. California highv.•1ya durin& the Memorial Day weekend, a re<.'Ord for the holiday in the state, lhe Co!Jfornla l!lghway Patrol reported today. The total also was tbe most In th<! nation. • Doo.•ted by alngle 1ccld<nt1 thal tilled alx pemns Mond1y n I 1 b t In ""San &mflrdlno County and live persons uear ~larysvllle, the toll edlpeed the 13 .. 1 In 1961. I Tiiis year'I bollilay count ran !tom I p.m. Friday to midnight Monday-a ~1·,. ~ay period. The 1961 rt<Ord was ut over '~ claya. ' .. Lui yw '8 ptrlOl!S wm killed ovtt t.-femor~ Day weekend. The sil·faWlty 1ccldent was on a ,mountain road near Lytle Creek. a bead· on colUslon 'between iwo cars each car- rying four 'persons. The tlve-fatality accident was on Calllomla It about 17 mil .. south of Yuba CJty, also a bead-on crash of two car a. A United Presa lntemaUonat l'Ount of accldtlllal dealbo in the holiday period allowed : Traffic SI.I Orvwnlnp Ill Planu 17 Olhu r n ToW "° e GRE AT SEL EC TION e ALL WITll AIR CONDITlONING 2628 HARBOR BLVD., COST A M S'-• 540-5830 • l ; . • • • .f DAILV PILOT I Beach Season On Us Agai11 ON THE BEACH : Since this long Memorial Day weekend fou nd us blessed wltl\ the btst poasible weather aJOftg this best of all poulble coasts. I'm convinced that our real season is now upon us. Also, if the weather isn 't enough, the high level of sand in the family bathtub Is enough to convince me that. beach days are indeed with us once again. Additionally~ the long weekend proved that a lot of touriats are also with us. Pacific Coast Highway was just one Jong lhln parking lot. There were a lot of different ways you c:ould have spent YQU r holiday. If you liked drtvln1 someplace, you fought the aforementioned traffic. If y<iu Jlked the ahorelint, you then battled your way acrou the highway t.o the beach. ONCE THERE, you had the choice or eilher dancing around in the hot aand or dancing around in the frigid water. Somebody forgot to tell the ocean temperatures about the holiday. If you selected the ocean water over the hot sand, you then found you had other visitors besides just the tourll!1t folk. We had jellyfish. Thousands of them. Those peaky llttle floaters must have had a fleld day with wall-to-1".all flesh all set up out there in the surf just for the sting· ing. * NOT EVERYBODY, however, spent their holJday here on the Orange Coast. Take tkydlvu Nonnan L. Cuttler of San- ta Ana, for example. CUttler launched hlnueU into the air down at Etsinore and managed to mlaa bis landing mark by I" -considerable margin. He ended up dang- ling from tome hlfh voltage electrical power lines, wJth the lines snapping and popping 1perk1 above his head. Finally cut hlmttlr 1 ..... Just a little diversion for the holiday. * AN ESTIMATED 12,500 folks ahowed up ye1tenl1y at Inland Orange County's Irvine Like. Unoftlcial estimates indicate they arrived there Jn aome 3,000 motor carr. If my math lan't hazy on thla day- alter, that suuem about four folk& per. 'Ibat'a a betteT average thaa they nin on the Santa Ana Freeway on regular work days. * WHILE SOME went to lakes or ocean, others headed for the bUls. One of the more novel diversions along this line developed in Laguna Beach where the Junior Chamber of Commerce held its first IMUal 'lblrd Strut Bicycle Hill Climb. One look and you can clearly tell that Laguna's Third Street Hill was imported from San Francisco. Jt"s so steep most folkt won't even drive up the thing. But the bicyclists bad a field day. They spent all afternoon pedaling past an tlec· tronJc tlmer to see who could negotiate the hill the fastest. THIRTY·YEAJl.old John Huston ol Corona del Mar, who w11 once a Pan Am Games competitor, set a record time pedaling up the grade in t .397 seconds. He also had runs ol 9. 751 and 9.581 oeconds. Toward the end, Laguna Jaycee Presi· dent Biii Woods ran a foot race up the in· cllne against Bob ties. lies won in 12.551 ~s which was faster than a lot of the bikes pedaled it. SO there you have it folks. along our beaches, bays. hills and byways. It just proves people will do a whole lot of things on a holiday that they wouldn't even think about in a regular week. Fetuses Number Nine PHH.ADELPHIA [UPI) -An unidenU· fied, ~year-<>ld woman, who had taken fertility drugs for nearly four years. pttmaturely aborted nine stillborn fetus· es · at the University of Pen11sylvanla Jlorspital 11-fonday. Hospital officials said the woman, who had a normaf babv three years ago. had been taking whit they called •·a human menopausal gort-- 9dotropin,'' a drug marketed rommt'r• dally under se,·eral names. • lursd11, May 30, 1972 Extortion Try Bubonic Plague Threat Unveiled CRYSTAL BAY, Nev. (UPI) -A plush ca11 ino was threatene<.I with the spread of bubonic plague bacttrla by an ex· tortionl3t trying to blurt his way to a $1 mllllon jackpct. Te9tS of a: ph8.rmaceutical vial ll!tt at the casino failed to uncover any signs of the deadly disease, known as "the black dtath" in medieval limes. I IN SHORT ••• I Washoe County sheriff's deputies disclosed the extortion attempt Monday after tbe Cal·Neva Lodge was searched thoroughly without uncovering further vials. A small bot was found on the gift counter of the lodge Sunday reading, "At- tention manager -urgent a n d dangerous." It said the package con- tained a vial of the bubonic bacteria. The extortionist left instructions for delivering the $1 million and made a subsequent telephone call. The money was placed es directed in a stolen car parked near the casino and driven to a spct two miles away. e Bridge Doomed WASHINGTON (AP) -The Army Corps of Engineers says the West Virginia dam that collapsed I as t February, killing at least 118 . pt™>ns, was doomed from the start. A Senate subcommittee opens bearings today on the disaster. ·The Engineers released-a rt port Mon- day saying the dim "should never have been built." The report spread the blame for the disaster emong the U.S. Bureau of Mines, the State of We9t Virginia, and the Buf- falo Coal Co. which built the structu(e. All three, the report said, appear to have legal responslbjllties over tbe l!lafe con- struction and irupection of a dam. Said the Corps report : "The consequent 'let.George-do-it' attitude resulted in tragedy." e 2,IOO Evaruated CHARLESTON, 111. (UP!l -About 2, 100 persons in east~entcal Illinois were evacuated Monday when a derailed tank car of a Penn Central freight train sent bright orange clouds of fuming nitric acid over the area. Twelve persons, all c:omplalning of a burning sensation in their thrQat and lungs from inhalation of acid fumes, were treated at Charleston C o m m u n l t y H~ltAI and released. The evacuation Jested eight hours. Coles County civil defense director Mark Busekrus warned all those persons who might have been exposed to ille fumes to consult a physician. "Pe<iple may not have been burned by the gas itself," Busekrus said. "They may have been expo&ed and not know it ' and come down ill 24 or 48 hours later." The eta.rm was sounded after 22 cars of the 8lkar train, eastbound from St. L<luis to New York State, derailed about eight miles east of here, near the village of Ashmore. The evacuation alert covered a 40-square mile area between Ashmore and the town of Oakland. The tank car, loaded with more than 15,000 gallons of liquid nitric acid, overturned and ruptured, sending about MISS. CrMh Site A helicopter canying \rorkmen to jobs on an offshore oi~ig in south L<>uisiana S\vampl ds crashed and killed all II n aboard. Ten of the yictims were employes of the Penrod Drill· ing Co. of Lafayette, La. 90 percent of it! load al'Ong the right~f­ way and into a nearby whe41t field. e Wallare Improves SlLYEf\ SPR)NG, !>Id .. [AP) -Gov. 'George C. Wallace is improving slowly, his doctors say, and has his choice of the hospital menu. The Alabama chief e.xecutive's ab- dominal wound, doctors e It ending \Vallace sa id in a daily medical briefing Monday, shows less drainage of abscess da ily. They said the governor's condition con· tlnued to improve slowly and gradually. Charles Snider, \Vallace's national campaign officer. said the governor 's son, George Jr., 20, would go along with him to appeal for votes in the California and New ?\1exico primaries. Snider quoted Wallace as saying the governor wishes that Americans will quickly forget that he bas been shot. e Duke Surruml>s PARIS [UP I) -The flag-draped body of the Duke of Windsor lay on view to a few close friends in his rented Paris mansion t.oday and the duchess for whom he gave up his throne was reported too overcome to fly to England with the body on Wednesday. The duke, who reigned as King Edward VIII for 327 days in 1936, died e&r.lf Sun- day at the age of 77. The cause of death was not announced, but it was believed to bave been cancer of the throat. · The duchess, the twice-divorCed former Wallis Warfield Simpson of Baitlmore, remained in seclusion in their mansion, and a Buckingham Palace spokesman Yid in Londoii lier stra~U1 was so ·great ·- that she would be unable to accompany the body wben it is flown io England Wednesday but hoped"to fly ovtt on Fri· day. Tliousands W atcli As Kite Flier Falls to Deatli WASHINGTON (AP) -"I think we have a problem," the public address an· nouncer said as Robert Kennedy of Escondido, plummeted from Uie sky. Thousands of spectators at Transpo 72, the international transportation ex· position, watched Monday as the 26-year- old kite flier fell to his death. A member of the Australian-ittrdman Team, Kennedy w.as killed when he lost control or his kite at an altitude of a1x>ut 500 feet. He was being pulled into the air at the time by a speeding automobile. "He "'as in a steep climb when all of a sudden a gust of wind hit him or something," said Jack Wallace, 31, of Leesburg, Va., who witnessed the ac- cident. "His feet suddenly flipped over the kite and he landed back on top of it. He yelled, 'Oh, no,' and you could see him kicking and fighting as the kite wrapped aro~nd him. As it folded up, he fell straight to the ground, just like a .stone." Kennedy landed in a grassy area et the north end of the runway, away from the spectators' stand but within view of thousands. A public address anoouncer was pro- moting Kennedy's daring when the kite collapsed. Mark Slips Away On Banana Split HONOLULU (UPl)-The world's big· ge st banana split is nothing but a memory. About 50 persons"Monday built a 268- foot split with 5,000 scoops of ice cream, 500 bananas, JS gallons of whipped cream cherries and chopped nu1'. They made the gastronomical delight 1n a rain gutter lined with wa.1 paper. The ingredients had been donated by an ice cream parlor, A cro.,.,·d of 4,000 persons stood tn the parking lot during the work and cheered vi'ildiy when it was discovered the split beat a previous record of 160 feet. 1be onlookers were invited to sample the delight. Within minutes, it was gone. Needles Hits 103 Degrees Ten1perature1 ·"""' ..... l'ttc. MNtiy,c:i-" p Afttnl., C'lovdt' " " ainftl'11tlltm, doudV .. .. ....... _ .. ff lwffllo. r1/11 " .. 0.rMtton. doull'f " .. ... ci..rtott.. ~ ,, .. Olk..., cloufy " ., •• Clrld-~. rtfll " .. ,.., -·-.. .. ... D91\wr, <"-'Y " " .,..,,..._ deud't' ,, " ·" -''" .. " •• MW!lllht.C'9Wr u " --· .. ,, ""'--" .. .. f{IMM O!'(. d.,..,, " .. "-~ diHr ... ,. Ui9t .... ~ • .. ... --" .. .., --" " ......... f'9f11 n .. .. ....... ,..,._ dMt .. ., ... ... Or--._..,, .. • ... Y ... dwfy " .. .. L iW arr. CMf' ,, II R =::-:..:::.: -II •',a "' ,, :::':...,~ ll ... .......... ...,. .. .. . • - • MadGnn1nan 11 Hit • in Shooting Spree RALEIGH, N.C. (UP!) -In the middle of last week, Harvey GleM MtLeod talked with hia new bo6a: about the future and • new lease oo life. On Monday, Mc· 1-, hunched down btweon parked can, killed three per>ons and wounded elgbt more in a suburbaa parking )pt. Then, with police sirens wailing ln his ears, he put the .22-callber rifle barrel in b1s mouth and killed hlmseU. Sen. B. Everett Jordan (0.N.C.-), cam· paignlng for Saturday's Democratic runoff eleclion, was at the North Hills shopping center 1n an upper middle-class white neighborhood . Second! before the ehooting began he walked inside a building. Two women with whom Jordan had been talking were shot, one fatally. surance and retirement programs. "ttt said he felt 11t last he had something 10- ing for him," Hooker sald. • How"'ever. a ne'lghbor or Mc~'I parents said McLeod talked wlth his mother Monday morning and she said later he told her. he wasn't going to talk to anybody anymore." Mrs. Willie McLeod said her son used to have "blackouts," but hadn't had any for two years. She said school o(ficials had tried to g~her to take him to Duk• University for tests in 1962, but she ref us· ed to sign the necessary papers because "I didn't want them to mess witb bis brain.u *' Jordll)l's press secretary, Wesley Hayden, was critically wounded. McLeod walked into a hardware store late A-fonday morning and bought a .2t caliber Marlin carbiae for $54 and three boxes of ammunition. He lied about his police record, \vhich included two assault convictions, a larceny charge and a trespassing case. Cools Ott Sen. George McGovern cools off in pool at his Los Angeles hotel after returning from a short campaign trip to San Diego. An incensed McGovern charged it was "utter non- sense" for Hubert Humphrey to claim they have identical records on the Vietnam war. FTC Challenges 'Sugar in Raw' Oaims in Ads WASHING TON [UPI) -The Federal Trade ConunissiOn (FTC) chailenged as false today advertisements claiming that "Sugar in the-~aw" is organically grown, unprocessed and more nutritious than refined sugar. Robert Pitofsky, director of the FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection, said the case was the first in an investigation of advertising claims for "health foods." Many such products have g a i n e d popularity because of pub l i c ap- prehensions about chemical pesticides, fertilizers and food additives. "We get a lot of complaints about advertising of various kinds of health foods," Pitofsky told UPI. "We're looking at others too." The FTC said Cumberland Packing Corp. of New York City, producer of "Sugar in the Raw," had agreed to stop · the allegedly false ads without admitting guilt . The FT'C did not dispute "Sugar in the Raw'' claims that it was unrefined and lacked chemicals and preservatives; but it said that madr no difference nutri· tionally. OK, Lads; Check Lottery Numbers WASHINGTON (UPI ) -l\len with Jot· tery numbers up to 50 will be called up beginning in July, the Selective Service System said today. The draft quota for July \\:ill be 7,200 men, a figure which draft officials say could raise to 9,000 in August. The calls for the rest of the year after August will average about 8,800 per month in order to meet the 50,00Q..man draft pool which Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird said would be needed this year. Selective Service officials said that no one could yet predict the highest lottery number likely to be called this year. Authorities discounted any possibility of an .assassinaticu attempt on Jordan, who had changed his schedule at the last minute to include the shopping center. Relatives and friends of McLeod, 22, a black janitor, could give no explanation for his actions. Some said McLeod, who grew up in a shabby neighborhood and began accumulating a pollce record at 14, seemed content for the first time in his life. Last Wednesday night, be asked his new employer, principal William Hooker of Broughton High School, about in- "He was his usual self ... nice and quiet," siad the hardware cashier, ~-trs. Rosa R8nd, who bad known McLeod aU his li!e. The <>root·5. 18().pound McLeod the• drove across Raleigh to the city's largest shopping center and got between two cars In a parking lot. He began 1llooting at "anything that moved." Police said he fired 14 shots within two minutes. He had to reload once gince the rifle had a IO.shot capacity, 'Cease-fire' lgrwred; 2 Kilted.·in N. lreland BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UPI) - Gunfire killed two meq Jn Northern Jreland early today despite a cease-fire declared by one wing of the Irish Republican Army (IRA ). A Brltlsh soldier and at least four gunmen were ~ jured in a flurry of :sniper attlcks. An army spckesman said Leonard McAteer, 23, was shot to death and another man was wounded J n Ballynastreach, County Down. T b e spokesman saJd tt was not known what prompted the shooting. Gunfire roared in Mlllflelds Road, a street linking tlle Roman atholic Lower Falls and Protestant Sh a n k 111 neighborhoods, less than three hours after the IRA'• 1'1arxist-oriented Official wing declared an immediate cease-fire in Northern Ireland. However, the rnore militant :i-ovisional wing of the IRA r~ jected the truce. British paratroopers in an army post 200 yards away from Millfields Road searched the street of abandoned, crumbling houses and found the bullet~ ~~~s~ls~~a 8~d~ in the gutt«, an The two killings raised to 350 the fatali- ty in almost three years of battling between Catholics, Protestants, British DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dellvtry of the Dally Pilot Is guaranteed Mondly.Frkl1v: If vou do nl7t ,..ve your oa11er by S::MI p,m., c111 encl ya11r co;iy will be bro11gll1 lo 'flll,I. C•lla 1r1 lak..-i unlll 1:l0 p.m. S1h1!'111y 1nd lunci.y: If ya.u do l!Of tK•lvt J"Ur copy bV t 1.m. Sllurd1y, tr I 4.m. Sul'!d1y, ctll trlll 1 <~PY will be brouttit tt \'l111. c1111 1•1 11k1n untll 10 1.m. Te!ephontl MM.I Or1rig1 CO\lnly Ar111 ........ ta..Qfl Ntr!h-d Hun!lnglon llNdl 1nd Westmlrisler .................. l*lt:tt lln Cllrntnte, C1ptat1111tt llNdl, Sin Jl,/ln Ctpl11r1no, O.n1 Ptll11I, loulh U.111111, LlllMI HJ111tl , .•• .,,...,. forces and the IRA. Almost simultaneously with the-Offlcia,l IRA'• cease-fire aMouncement Monday night, snipers fired on a British patrol lured into the Catholic Ardoyne district by a small bomb blast and St'riOU!ly wounded one soldier, the army spokesman said. An extended series· of gun batUes followed in the Ardoyne, known as a stronghold of the true e-re j ecti n g Provisional wing 1 of the IRA. Army spoke.smen said as many as four gunmen were hit by British patrols, which fired back in 25 separate shooting incidents. There were no army casualties. The Official wing, bowing to growing Catholic pressure for peace, actu.!ed the Provisionals of driving Ul!ter toward "sectarian civil w8r" with bombing and shooting attacks. The Provisionals, who earlier had denied reports they planned a truce or their own, made clear their war of bombs and bullef,s to unite mainly Protestan• Ulster with the Catholic Irish Republic will go on. "Nothing will cbangt','' a Provisional spokesman said. He said the Provisionals insist that any truct must be on their terms - withdrawal of British fortes from Northern Ireland. release of all political prisoners and amnesty for all wanted men. Reaction to the Official's cease-fire declaration ranged. from outright skep- ticism from militant Protestant leaders to WM)' hope from British officials and to joy from pro-peace Catholic figures. William Craig, leader of the militant Protestant Ulster Vanguard Movement. dismissed the Official's action as "unim· portant" and "a ploy to gain favor in LondondefT)','' wllere the Official's "ei:. ecution" of a Catholic soldier home on leave gpurred the peace drive a week ago. What Does F,G,H Mean? A BALLOT CHOICE FOR YQU ON JUNE 6TH. YOUR CHANCE TO SPEAK ON COMMUNITY DIRECTION * TO PROVIDE SAFE PLAY AREAS AND BIKE TRAILS FOR KIDS * TO SALVAGE THE INSPIRATIONAL VIEWS ACROSS THE BAY AND CITY * TO HOLD A PART OF THE COMMUNITY FOR RESTFUL ACTIVITY * TO CONTROL THE DENSrTY BY PROVIDING OPEN SPACES * TO ADD BEAUTY AND CHARM IN PEDESTRIAN WALKWAYS * TO SAVE SOMETHING FOR OURSELVES ALL FOR LESS THAN 3c A DAY FOR THE AVERAGE FAMILY. Green Survival -PARKS, VISTAS BICYCLE TRAILS C.iltens Adwisory P•rlr lotKf T••m &lngtr Pet•+ _..lrmeft, 424 St. Andrew Rd ,,. . lcli. I l T • • • - • ., . Orang~ Coast -·~·----• Teday's ""Final N.Y. Stoek8 ~Ol. 65, NO. 151, 2 SECTIONS, JO PAGES ORANGE CQU"!TY, CALl~NIA. TUE~DA "(, M,A y 30, 1972 N TEN CENTS I Newport Officials Question Airport-St11dy 1be Orange County Airport "impact study" performed for Newport P.-~ach, in a key secUon, claims tf-e average home 1ocreased in value by 176_percent during a six-year period endlng in 1971. City officials this morning questioned · the figure . U this ia: true, it would mean that a 'house worth $40,000 in 1965 was worth fno.ooo 1n 1970. OfliciaJs o{ Wilsey and Ham, the con· au I ting flnn that performed the study, could not defend the figure. ••nie man who dJd that part of the County Asks irmPay .. ack Taxes ·-ange County Tax Collector Robert n to:iay asked Irvine Company sident \Vllliam R. ~1::.son to pay $5.3 lion in taxes Citron alleges have been lnquent for the past three years on ,.er Newp;,rt Bay. 1e Back Bay properties in question in· h:!e 456 acres the Ir·Jinc C::impanv deed- ed to Oran ".e CJunty in the l~n°,.-deba!t:d Up;:er Ne1vp:irt Bay land e:<cilt?nJc. It in· cluc!cs 157 acres the county v.·as to tra11sier to the ranch con1pany. The tidelands s1vap, however. V.'aS cancelled in 1971 in a unilateral action by the Orange County Board of Supervisors. Irvine officials contend that the county board cannot cancel the 1966 exchange Without company approval. In assessing the propoe:rty for 1!70, Assessor Andrew J. Hinshaw merged the entire 614 acres and said that the com· ~Y was respon1ible (ar taxes on the total. ~Irvine officials protested at the time that Hinshaw 's uaeument procedure ig· nored previous ownerships of the prop- erii.y. Thus the company refused to pay ariy taxes unijl the matter was cleared up-To•date, according to Citron, $3 million or 57 percent of the delinquency is due the Newport-?\1esa UnUicd School District and the Coast Communilv College (See TAXES, Page Z) * * * Official Says • 'fracts Mixed, Sorti1ig Needed Irvine Company Vice President Gilbert JN . Fer.1tuson said today the company would like to pay taxes on its Upper 1'\ewpJrt Bay properties but the lanLs h:ive been so comingled \\1ith others that th ev can't be sorted out at this time. The statement came in reply to a plea f'r:im Orange Counly Tax Collector &bert Citron that the ranch company pay $5.3 million in alleged back taxes owed over the past three years on Up~r Newport Bay praperties. ~·ri1r. Cit ron has Indicated in his letter a sympathetic understanding or the com- .PlexiUes involved in the Upper Newport Bay issue," Fergusoo noted. "We very much appreciate his attitude and we certainly understand his position. We regret deeply that QUr involvement with the ·county of Orange in this joint venture which we entered Into at the county'~ request. is yet ti be terminal •' In equity, whlch is n:>w all we seek." ·Ferguson, Irvine vice president of car· Porate communications, explained the alleged delinquent back taxes cited by Cilron encompass levies aqa\nst three kinds of Upper Bay lands. These include county tidelands properties, w h i c h Ferguson said the company never <1wned: foimer company.owned lands which Irvine hasn 't owned since they were tratisferred· l.o-the counly in 1968: and some Irvine land "to which we still have tiUe." "Because the properties are comingled, so are the taxes. We know of no formula available to us to work out a separation for laJ: payment purposes," the company official contended. "Tbe county counStl some years ago. l~Wly, advistd the Boerd o1 *"Ison that tht tai:u as.wssed were viljd due lo the comingllng. The county ~ abo informed all the d1Jtricts U... votved as lo Ille qu~sliooable nature of Ill\ tax. 4'1'he county, of coutlt, received tiUe'to tbe !ormer Irvine Company land l11Jt and citar of all eoCumbl lilCf'J. 1'* deed• c:annot be retumod lo us bJ the county lil<au .. Ille land Is llOW subjtcl lo tax , lllos. II la no lonCtr free ml clelr. "All tbll la but -of the. -that ml bf. rtlOIVed btfcn rea:lnlon GI lbt llpptr Bay land u<hlnge ..,..._ ~ bf, eqult.obly accompllsb<d,"' r.,.,._ ~uded. • • , • study ls no tonger with the company' ti staff assistant J. Patrick: ¥ann of Wilsey and Ham said this morning. "Mucb_of it waa done qu.ite some time ago, digging out the background informa- tion would be quite a problem," Mann said. He said the raw data was furnished by a su~ltant, parley-Gobar of Tustin. "We probably got tbal ott the cenM data," Al Cobar,. a partner ln the eco- nomic ""5llltant !inn, said thi5 morning. "l didn't do I~ somebOdy who works !or me did, bu!. I'd gue.., he took the . . . . • . 1960 and 1970 figures and averaged them out. ..The figure probably includes new COO· struction," he said. The report, however, says: "-The random sampling o( the assessed residential property values in the city from 1965-1970 indicated an a v er ag e growth ol 176 percent per developed parcel." "Well, if you want to argue semantics go ahead ," Cobar said. · The fonner Go bar aide, David Parry, who performed the 6tudy, this morning DAILY ,ILOT ST•fl PIMi. .:DIVERS PREPARE FOR UNDERWATER LOOK AT CRAFT ~ Decks Awash •• Plta1ur1 Boat Settles in Dover Shorts Slip ' Cruiser in Vpfer Bay Sinks; Damage $75 ,000 A 57.foot cabin cruiser tied up near North Star Beach after a \1:cckend in C3•alina mysteriously sank to the bottom of L'pper Newport Bay sometime Monday night. The "Sparkler," owned by Gerald E. Sparks, 507 Morning Star Lane and valu~ at $120,000,_was berthed al a dock on Sparks' property. Officials of lhe Orange ('.aunty Harbor District and Insurance adjustors were in- vestigating the cause of the mishap this morning. "A hose broke or whatever," said sparkl, whp said "it's like losing one of the· flmily." It ij; the !JeCOOO time Sparks has lost a boat at dockside. Seven years ago. shortly after buying Spark)er, Sparks said he 1ost a 30.foot cruiser he said oould be described only as "a character boat." . ,. "We never did find o6t why that one aank," Sparb said. ' Sparks' Chris Craft was one or four boats reported sinking over the ~1emorial Day weekend. according to ~ Sgt. Dean Corvell of the county Harbor Patrol . The three other boats were successfully pumped out. Sparks discove red his boat in \Valer up to the cabin U!>Qn awakening this morning some time before 7 o'clock . Harbor patrolmen said they sped to the scene to make sure oil and diesel fuel were not leriking into the bay. No such leaks were found. A salvage crew us working this mo· 1 ing to raise the OOat so that the cause of tl1e sinking could be determined . One official guessed the boat may have gone down because of a leaking exhaust system but he stressed that was only a guess. Sparks figures the boat can be salvaged but said, "all decorating and furnish ing will have to be redone ." One estimate of the cost of repair was near $75,000. Mo111ent. claimed to have used actual figures ob- tained with a check of the assessor's records, however. He said he took random samplings of 200 homes, 37 of whlch wm in the impact area, to develop the figure. \ Gobar pointed out tnfonnaUon fur- nished for the report was ed!ttd by WU- sey and Ham and he dldr.'t know if that &ectlon waa changed or not. ''I 'll have to talk to them before I can respond more fully," Gobar said. The figure was in the report to com· pare the Increase in assessments with property in the airport "Impact" area. In the "impact" area, actOJ'd.J.ng to the study, prOl)ertle.s had an average growth or j·only 134 percent." That aame $40,000 home. in the lmoact area. would ~worth $94.000, if that figure is true. ..,.. The figures are used to support the re- port's .allegations that varu··· ol property underneath the airport ta~ sone did not appreciate a! much as-other proper· ti~ in Newport Beach. "This 134 percent grow.th repr-:sents a loss of 15 percent when comp.Ired to the 176 percent growth for other parctls,'' the report says. The rtpon contlnue3: "Census data also verifies the fact that property values within the impact area are not consistent with those In the clly of Newport Beach. ''The difft>rence In ren tal payment1 · have a sinlilar disparity," the report con- ttf':is, al!<> pointing out that there is a higher percentage of rental housing with-- in the impact area than elsewhere In the city. 2nd Hearing Du Caspers Sees July Meet on Airport ·By ~ACK BROBACK ot "" DtllY '-"" '"" Orange County Bo~d of Su~visors ehairman Ronald CaspeI'!, rebuffed FTi· day by San Diego County officials Qn his propos al to establish a joijlt international airport at Camp Pendleton, loday an· nounced another meeting wil1 be held on the subject in July. Caspers said he would await the release of the Southern California Association of Governments (SCAG ) regional airport study which Is now ex- pected to be available someti me iii Ju1y. "At that time, we will try again to pin- Sunworshipers J~ -~.e.~P~~,~ Sand~ Wa~r · An estimated 245,009 perJOQB jammed Newport Beach's shoreline. beaches and bays over the three-day Memorial Day weekend as visitors stream~ to l h e Orange Coast to escape inland heat and smog. l'!ewpart city lifeguards, however, re- parted <1nly nine rescuea lo light surf and little riptide activity. The guards were kept busy with 220 first aid cases, M lost children and M6 preventative safety acttorui. Most of the first aJd casts involved treatment of jel1yfl.sh sting1 as the blob- like creaturu invaded the surfiine in heavy numbers. h1eanwhile. Orange County Harbor De- partment spokesmen reported heavy boat traffic over the weekend w h I e h contributed lo 105 different klnds of boat· in!?, accident s. Four boats were reported sinking. and three of them were flUccessfullly pumned out. The fourth. a Sl?.0,000 cabin cruiser helonging to Gerald E. Sparks of New- port Beach. sank. Sevr.ral boat collisions enti 20 over· turned sailboats \fere reported but there were no Jnjurie.s . The Sunset Beach area had on1y 11\x boat tows. no rescues and an unmu1lly quiet weekend , the harbor patrol re- p:>rtcd. Twins Burned in Gas CHINO (AP\ -Thelma Vlmr !old authorilies she heard screams and ru!lhtd outside t.o find her 2-year-old twin sona sitting in a pool of names on the garage floor. Sheriff's deputies said Arlan and Jarrod Visser were crlttcally burned over more than 70 percent of their bodies Monday when a clothes drier pilot light ignited gasoline that the boy1 apparently spilled accidentally or poured. of Truth jiolnt aslle-fiJr • ,.gr.nil ~ blsid' on the SCAG rfpc>rt flndil>l'i: ' ~lpOl'I said. He added, "This tUne , the Marlne1 wilr be invited a~ welJ as San Diego County ofriclals and the meeting will be held· In Orang~ County. · .. "We are discouraged -down but not out," Caspers admitted. "If we find that locating an in- ternational alrport in this area is too hot a political Item we may sugti:est that Washington take over and .arbltra.rily designate -a site." · C.si"!ii had led an Orange C<iwity Decision: Steads . dtlegatlon-which met with San Dlqo C<>unty offlclal1 on the 11rport qu..Uon Friday at the Royal Inn In Sair Diego. San Diego officials, however, were cool tO the Oran~e Courity proposal lo loc;;att ~ an international jet airport on the U.S. ·· Mirlne Corps' Camp Pendlelon range. No ?lfarine representatives attended the two-county ses~lon. Sa1t Diego Supervisor \Vill lam A. Cra\.'ln summed up the joint meetln& this Way: "Orange County wants an airport on its door.steps but not Jn· Its house . TheJ came here for ua to so1ve·their problems for them." ~~!'r:t l}~f~es Appl!fll ' On l)edtn Peooltx /Jqn • • I WASHINGTON (AP) -The supreme C.ourt · today rejected an appeal by California to review a atatb supremo Court decision ouUawlng tlie d e a I h penalty. The hl~h """I la conslolerlng whelhu to abollsh capllal punlshmtnt acrou tbe land as bein'g ln violitk>ri of the federal O:lnstltutlon. · The justlc:e:s gave no reason for declining unanimously lo add C&llfornla's appeal lo llJ. dockel. Still before lhe court, for an upected ruling next month. are other appeal• te1flng the con1Ulutlonallty ol the death penalty. Tho California court htld 8 lo I on Fcb. 18 that the death penally "may no longer be exacted" ·ln that '· state bec1uae it violates the state Con!ltltriilon. The action spared t,ht lives of J02 men and ~ women who make up the nation's I,argest deat1' row population, including Sirhan Sirhan, the assassin of former U.S. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, and mass murderer Charles f\.1anson . CalUomia'a petition ior review, filed March 31 by Evclle J. Younger, the state attorney general, talled the decli,\on "an unseemly ruah to judgment" while the Newport Library Trustees Seek Mayor Meeting Milled Newport Beach Library 'f'rus.. tets, scrambJlna to aave their plan for a modem Central Ubrary, th1I morning voted to ask for a meeting with Mayor Donald A. MclMb lo try again lo 1et their point 11icroes. Councilmen last week erased all mo- mentum for a central library, inJtructlng Clly Manager Robert L. Wynn lo find lundl to create a fourth branch library, this one in West Newport . I deal~ penalty Issue waa ponding be!""' · the U .s. Supr.ame Court. . Younger contended . that the ••state . gound" useriad by the C&llionila courl, · a provision ln the CaWomla Conatltutk>n. was "palpably transparent" .and that the ruUng consequently shoµl d be reviewed by the U.S.' court. · The C&Ufornl.I Constllutlon prohl...a. '1cruel or unus.ual punlahment" whHt ti federal C<>nalllflUon prohlbll.I "creul and unU1ual punl!Jhinents." Be:cauae the CaJ.. lf"'1)1a court found the dulb penalt1 both Cruel and unua:ual, Younger argued. II WU really lnlerprttlng lhe Btb Amend- ment' to the C .S. Conatitulton. In seeking a hearing, the state also argued that the decision violated the rights of callfornlan1 by "Wlurplng the legislative function." Younger 1aid that ''by aboll1hing the death penalty the court has enacted It.a personal views into law <1ver the will of a protesting public." Proponents of capital punishment, in-- eluding Gov. Ronald Reagan, !ollowed the decision up by backing an amendment to the state Coru:Utution s p e c I f i c a 11 y authorizing the death penalty. The move failed In the CaUfornia Senate In early May. However, there Is a drive to rein1tate the death penalty in C&ll!omla through an lnUitlve measure. _ 11Je California case directly involved Robert P. Anderson, 34, who was under death unttnct for the lNS murder of a S:in Diego 1bopteepu. In San Franclaco YOUJ'lltr aaid t.M (See PENALTY, Pase ti ...... Weatlaer It's going to remain H-0-T for at least Lbe oat several days ac~ cording to the ,,..tberlady. with temperatures ranglnc. rrom the 70'1 at the beach IO the to'• lnland. Lows In the I0'1, Holiday Boaters ~~arly Swamp Qitalina Island What Do You Say to Naked Lady? At the Ume, lrUllteet unanlmoualy 1pokt agalnat the propoql. The board this morn~. decided to write Mc1Ml•, formally aakln1 to l!lfft with h1m and other c:ouncllmfn "lo llnd out Uthe central library concept Is dud, or jult·dtlayed." INSIDE 1'00~ Y Erny <'OV< and anchorage OD C&tallna lsland was jammed with boat• over the un..!lly Mtmortal Day Wetkcnd. catalina Camp " eo... A&tll<Y officials &aid • ...,,., -1ng al C&Wlna Harbor WM,~ ... I.bat boats wert rafled'35 feet • 'nlert are 75 permanent moor-mp,at C4t J!Jrbar. 11,iPioC 1dllClait at A .. 100 s a I d the DIDGl'il incl 11m11• ...... ....,,. full bJ latmdaJ and that boalJ were being .tunlldn17. -Llrlt4 Clllletntralion of boatl wu at fbe llthmaa and at White's cove where every a•alllble ,,_1ng wu oct\l]Jled ud hunilredo of boala _.. ancbortd and nlW ii _., _._ • What do you say to a naked lady who says to you: "I love you Dennis?" "You're under arrest." is what Ntwport Beach Police Offictr Ge!!e Senecal told a bUJom lau doing her own Ladv Godlvl act -san.• horse -In the 400 block of C&Lllina Drive Saturday. "'Take ~ lo jail," Ill• allegedly lold him, bofore allqedly changing her mind. "Take me to my-dentist,'' she then alle1edly d<clartd, accordlng lo bis ar- rest report. -Olllcer Sm!<al said th• !>-year-old woman whom nei1hb~rhood rcildents tlalmed had boon lcnocldng on doof• up and down lbt street gathettd u~ her clothes and dr<'9ed, as ordered. He lnttlalb' m1Sled her on IUJ]>iclon or t indecent exposure, att'tr which a h e reportedly claimed 1he was on an LSD lrlp and began banging her h<Jld on the aecwity acretn ins1dt the police car. Once he reached headquarters wltjl his prl1ontr. Patrolman Senecal ••id he became worried about even trytna: to take her out of the squad car. Given pennlulon by hit pat r o I aupervl.Jor, Offk:tr Senecal IWtUnOned 1 police malroll and drove the arrutee directly lo Orange County Jail. She was booktd Into the facilily on auspicion ol drug lnloiicalJon lntlead of the origlnal lnde<tnt -· dlar&t. "I love you Demtll," 1tie declared. Offl<tr Stnecal <kj>orled. .r ' Truotees thla' morning upremd biller d~appointment ovar the council action. rtltmlinl thtlr • point Iha! quailly library -Hn'looa ·ClllllOI ~ acljltved th""'lh a branch Utirary .l)'itm. Couitcllmcll, In ordtrtil& the fund~ atudy. llld they were mon conctrn with -blllty to a branch library for children · ond ,..,.. crlllcal of the lltw· port-Mm-school diltrtct for nol pro- nlln& moT• -· library fac111U.. within ·tlemtntary ldloolo. WYM this moritln« aid ho eal'Odl to have hlt'J\lldy doaJ.,. =Mdnrilo rcllortl -to --tile ... 111lt1 ol tho meotJnc, V Iii lo ban tt. v ' In a teat of runriNJ, .20 Mor· mon famUit1 In Palo Alto have begun living for thrte wetkl on.l~ on tht oootb that tDtft 1tortd fn thtJr hoWll1 wlttn thtv 1Ctrt told-w{th. no advan« no- tice-of Utt etptn ment U1Aft>1 u IPofllor<d bu lhe chvrch. See st•'ll on Pooe ia. L..~. kn 7 c.r..... L tt _ .. ' --._ " Mt ...... 11 = .... : ·-.. ... • ....,.. it ~, .... -' "'"''-' II -.. " ......... .. --. .,_,_, n ...... ,,.,, I ............ 1 ,....... . -' -. =-.:...-.. ~J =--=· • • . . - ' J DAil Y PILOT N T11tlC('1, M11 30, 1972 • ~E ·ntlor·sements Told for F,G,H r Council, Homeowners, Civic Groups Back Proposal ' Supporters of tht proposed Ne\\·port • ~Beach park bonds toda) announced a lbi t • of endorsements representing every aeoeraphic area ·Jn tht city and almost every political fa ction. The •a.t million In bonds will be belore '"·'Votert aa Propositions F, G and H in the :~, primary electlon next Tuesday. ' All seven city councilmen. headed by ~111yor Donald A. McJnnis. and six homeownerM a.uoclatlons ere · among ~. those who 90 j!vhave announced their J_ I UD'>Ofl. .... Homeowners groups include those Ceremonies .Held at Hoag Medical Unit Groundbreaking ceremonies for the \ 1 $250,000 James Irvine ~· o u n d a lion · · Surgical Center at lloag !\1e1norial : ' Hospital took pla ce this morning al the •I . alte just north or the hospital. .. ,',. 'fhe center, funded cornplet4!Jy by a •: grant from the James Jrvine Foundation, , ':··will hou1e three operating rooms. eight ' ~. recovery beda, consultatlcn r o o m , ·~.laboratory and lobby. It is lhe fir.!lt minor surgery clinic in Orange Cou1)1y, said Hoag officials, Ofricllli e1pect the center to save p:i- tients as much as 40 percent of \,he costs f-Or operations not requiring post- operaUve care. Or.-Arthur Thompson, a Hoag staff member who htlped lnltleJe the center repre,.ntlnl Bucon Bay, W11I HIWpOrl, -Ulf Ml!l ll!'tll r11k, B1lboa lallnd, Nowp«I Shoru, Newport Amonc o\her Newport Buch re11denti lleiR"hts and Cor<1na Highlands. In .!Ju pport of the bo nds arr Orange Coun- The Parks, Beachts and Recreation ty Harbor Commissioner F ra n k Commjsslon . the Newport H 1 r b or Robinso n, a leading conservatloniat, Chambtr of Commtrce and the Orange ~farshall Duffield and Allan Reek, presi- C.oast League of Women Voters are also dent of Newport Resldehts Unit ed, the backing the honds. anti·high rise association. The only opposltlon that has surfaced Former ma yors behind the bonds are has con1e fro m three sources -a Ed llirt h and Doreen Marshall. They are Newport Hei&hts property owner aponsor· joined by Les Steffensen. Robert H. Ing an adverti sing campalgri, rtflidents Shelton. Joen Coverdale, Carroll Beek. frorn l\fttrina park. the city-owned tra iler E:arl Hardage, John Macnab, r..1r. and park and 1 grou p of homeov.·ners Jlvlng l\·lrs. Joseph Rosener, Richard Clucas, Newport Cruiser Eyed Coast Boy, 7, l(illed In Powerboat Accident By JOHN ZALLER 01 !ht D1!11 ,1111 lf•fl tion," said Smith. "We're Mt sure whether the accident took place in Californta or in Arizona . It 's real stick y as to which side will handle it." lttr. and Mr1. Coalson Morris, l'\f1 ry All ct. Culver snd John Shea, Also, ~lr!. T. Duncan Sfey,•art, Ray- mond Watson, David Tingler, Claudia Owen. Jackie Heather , BUI Grundy, Ed Haye!, Dunster Creely, Jim \\'ood, John Semple and Dr. Edward J. Miller. The Irvine Company has also fo rmally endorsed the bonds and so have the Donald L. Bren Company. Broad moor Homes of Big Canyon, the Robert H. Grant Corp. and the Do n Koll Co. Propoi;;ltlon F on the bs\lot is for $3.S mi!Hon for acquisition of about .a dozen park sites and nearly 50 miles or bicycle trail rigbt-of-'n:ay. PrOJXlSltion G is for $2.4 million to cover the cost of development or the par ks and playgrounds and bike trails. Proposition H is for an ever. $3 million to create a reserve fund so the city can purchase additional park sites im· mediately when they become available. Th• bond campaign is being directed by the Citltens Park Bond Team, which ia ch.Aired by Mrs. Ginger Page. Expert Disarms San Francisco Consulate Bomb Arizona aut horities sai d today the po-..·er cruiser involved ln the death of a 7·year-old Jluntlngton Beac h boy on the Colorado Rlv tr Saturday Is regi1tertd to a Newport Beach n1arine s u p p I y operator. Young Chr is Dart, 733 Lake St., was kill-,.d when the 17-foo t al uminum boat in which he was fishing with his grandfather and another boy was rammed by a power cruiser. Smith said the power cruiser wss located after a motorl"t atopped 1 police car on the highway and told police wh<!re to look. Th e motor ist declined to identify himself, ~milh said, SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) -A bomb ez- Smith added tha t there were reportedl y pert ha1 disarmed 14 sticks of dynamite 10 passengers in the power cruiser at !he hooked to a timing device at the door of time of the accident . and that some o( thtm came forward to volunteer in· the Portuguese Consulate juat before they formation before the boat was located by were set to explode. p:ilice. "Whoever it was ·sure knew what he The accident took place about 150 feet wB.s doing," said a police bomb squad of• oil .the Callfornla.ahore of the Colorado -Jicer. _ 4 ~ _ oA)t.Y '1LoT '"°" •r •1~,. K"""' River about 10 m~es north ol Parker. , He aald It would have "prolty much BFacll -BDUHfl:::-~ -.. --- I '· " I spoke at today 'll ceremony. . He pralled ·"Newport Beich ror leidlng the nation" In orrerlng ''innovative and Jen exJermlvi'medlcal care.'"-: A spoke sman for lhe county ittomey's office in Yuma County, Ariz., said the cruiser is registered to Donal.d A. Pay.se. Qy,11er ol·Payse Marine Ille'., 4229 Birch S\ret.t., Newport Beach.._ -·-·--HQWevef, -it ·was ti11clear ·who was-- operating the cruiser Qt the time of the accident and efforts today to reach Payse for comment were unsuccessful. A-CostrMesa-man;Jolln'ilelm-.f-25f=·levelta''-'t~l~r• .. story-'\lllltC<>,bl!ll4lllf ·---... ----~~-~--' -·-=--;__ - E. 19th St., !aid ht witnessed the colllslOn ·whlch is one block from the Ir.,Uan This is what traffic was like in southbound lanes of Newport Boule----, from hi~ mobile home on tht Arizona side Consulate, wrecked by a bomb blast vard in Costa ?.1esa as thousands of sun sand and sea worshiper! r' Oth~r 1r1;1un~brtakt~g 8peakerg were A. • ..: V. Jorgen~n. president of Hoag'g Board of Dlrtctors and Mrs. Charle~ H. Janes, , . ml1tant secretary of the James Irvine ,,. Folmdet!C1n. Completion (If the center Is set for thl! !all. , " ~,. Its lnterlor Will be carpeted and air· • · csmdltloned and will be constructed ·of '' , , apllt face concrete and fire-resistant gypium walls. 1 It will be adjacent to the II-story rower '' .addition to the hospital now under con· ,•, etructlon. ... ,, .. I' ;;; Blaze D~tFoys !.-E~pensi_ve Home ' ' , "' In Dana Point A fqt-movipa )Jlar.e, destroyed an tX· pensive Dana Point hou!e over the weekend and inflicted mlnor Injuries to three occupants or the dwtlllng. County flre ornclal! listed '45,000 In rlemo.ge to the house of Mr. and Mr.!1. !'feith l,ightner at 25266 Brigantine IJ.lve. The blaze erupted at 7 a.m. Satur'dJy morlnMJ I! the Lightner family and their hou.!le gue1ts slept. Lightner and two or his gue!ts, Dr. and Mrs. James Sumwalt of Tuc.!lon, suffered minor bum.!I and light cut1 during their escape from the house. The blaie, appllrently caused by a faully motor on a gas heater, routed 1even persons in all from the house. Barry Doing Well WASlllNGTON !UPI ) -Sen. Barry M. Goldwater (R-Arl1.), \Vas operated on Wr removal of his gall bladder. a statement from his office said Sunday. and IS in excellent condition. The statement said the operation took place in Bethesdu Naval Hospital Friday and v.•as "com· pletely succtssful". lt said he \\'Ill con- valesce for 10 dtiys to t\l'O \\'Ce.ks. -OlAN•I COAST • DAILY PILOT Tiit Of'•"" C•••I DAI\, 't '°It.OT, wlll't WMcll hi c:omblllCll TM: HfWS•'°tt U, IS ""bll!Jlccl by , ... Or•"o• CM•• ,..,.l!i~i"9 <:en'IPlllY, .s.,.. nit flllllO""s •r• Mil~. Mt!INY tl'lftlltll frld1y, ,.,. (Mii Nitti, MIWllOrl &.K il, ti11nt! .. 10n &ta<;llll'-11i11 V1U1y, L-01,1111 •H<ll, lr~i.,1 •i1010tll9(l ...,. .Stn CIMoMnlt/ .St ri J"''" C••l.ir1,.. A J•ntllt r191GNI 1c1111t<t k ~,..._, S•Ture•r-1flll .s..,,..,.,,., r~ prlnc'Ptl JIUl)l\llllftf ,i.11t il 11 lJO We$1 l•y l!/ttl, C11.i1 Mtlt, C:1lltorn1l, Jl)}t, Aollt•rt N, W11d "'tJIOt11t ,,,... '°llllWMI' J1c~ R. C11r/1y V.ct ,.,,,;e.,.1 tlld ~rt! M•ntgtt lh'"''' 11'.tt•il l l lltf Tholft•1 "'· Murphi11• MtCJolt lnt ta1i.r l. '•''' 'Krltt Nt•l*I 11«11 (l!y lt1lltr N--·-JJJJ Nt•,•rl l•11lt•1r!I M•lll11t A''r•11i P.O. 101 1111, tJA~J --.. The other lluntington Beach boy, Donald Thornton, 11, of 602 Jana Circle, was reported In satisfactory condition to- day In Good Samaritan Ho!pltal in Phoenil. The operator of the 17-foot boat from which the boys were fishing, Fletcher Dart, 62, of 310 2nd St., Huntington Beach, a city electrical Inspector, was reportedly uninjured. Yuma Co1,1nty Sheriff's officers said the elder Dart was apparently in the rear part of the fishing boat when the po""·er cruiser rammed it.s right side and then passed over it about i p.m. Saturday. No criminal complaints have been bsued1 according to Yuma Coun\y Agsis- tlltlt Attorne'y Mike Smith, but the in- vestigatlon is continulng. "OUr bli probl•m right now ls jurlsdic-, ' I CdM Bicyclist Wins Laguna's 'Uphill' Race A cheering crowd turned out Monday for \\·hat the Laguna Beach Jaycees promise will be their "first aMual'' Third ~treet Bike Climb. ~ The unique holiday event found 55 diligent cyclists tackling the 175--foot course up the 30 percent grade on the dov.11lov:n Laguna thoroughfare . \Vlnner John Houston, 30, of Corona del M11r. zoon1ed up the incline in a record 9.397 seconds to capture the first place trophy for the fastest group In five divi sions, men's l! years and over. Houston bested Fred Davis, 31, of Stsn~ ton, U.S. champion in the 4,'000.me,er bike run . '''ho made the course ln 10.Mt seco nds. Winner of the women 's open division was Janet Floren, 29. of Laguna Beach. y,•ith a time of 22 .7 seconds. Runner-up Sharon Almadore . 20, of Balboa Island, didn 't finish !he course. but \\'BS a\\'arded the second·place trophy as a consolation prize. Two trophies (or each division were donRted by the Laguna Beach Cyclery. Tont Forrester, 17, of C11.pistrano Beach, \\'On the high school dlvlslOfl "'ilh a time of 10.5.5 seconds v.·ith Chris Smith. 15, of Laguna BeRch, close behind at 11.4: seconds. In the 5th an d 6th grade division, Tom flarrison. 8, of Cos ta r..tesn, ,,·as declared \\'inner with· a lime of 27.9 seconds. Run- ner-up Shane McMllUon , 11, of Laguna Beach took 123.f seeonds to ntgoti11te the hill. T'ro young cousins from et Toro, Rocky Archer and Dan McKinley, both · 13, placed first and second in the junior high division '"''Ith times of 13.7 and 15.2 seconds, rcspectlvely, The Sandpiper 81\r team "·alked off \\'Ith the "·agon pull flrtt plact trophy with a time of 10.00? Sf<.'ondl, closely follo"'ed by the Summer of '41 S.r \\'Ith 1 time of 10.5 sttond1. Fh·t \\'&gon·p11ller1 11nd one ridtr (voWntcer George Seeman ln both cases) comprised !he leams. A Jaycee entry In the division, usln1 a desk chair with cns1ers. \\'IS dlsquallfltd aft<r cr1Sh111i at 1be finish lino. Most or the Jl'rlklpants wire from the ,.,.,.... 17141 '4"4lll • t.aauna aroa 'Mll'Coe11al cllfe1. but 'one .~~ A""'"~"' •414111 Puad•na gcllJl,~1\'JlP juat ~Wied to I -"~" "'" .,,_ CM" -•'lit... . l'l!l..C!:.O' , h . ~. "• M'll'\ • ..,.._ Wlwtrtllefit. ":" ~ ..,. f! • ""'~ IQJJI wJt ·'Ir lf'OUP of lllllW'W ""'"" • ...,..,~.,," ~.-..,.. .. ( 11·tQQt-Um;ouLto try..hm tuck Oii :,... .. _,~.:, ::;::r ""'' .. ~ , "'' ~ht . "and"nmlt'ft '•fel 'to Pft 4&oe, ....., c• ~ Nlof W CMt• MN~~ -;bJlOt:db..--~ ......... -·-w -.... -: :J:llli1:1N' Iii (hi eveo~'.7-with ";::.:~., .:=11,..::..~1 fl'lll1i.()' ~-lilt.witn U.:iQe d ~tntl • •• to onlooktrt, wlU be u..d to lllPl'Qft Ille , J1~1· Bl~e Sal•IJ' ~ of the river where he spent the Memorial seven mObth!: sgo. ~ · _ headed through town on Memorial Day Monday. The aim of" most ofn Day weekend. PoUce evacuated Consulate-General .. ot. the n1otorists appeared to be i:,elief fr o m the heat .on Newport · "I saw the lights from both botts, but I Joae Alve1 ind ti% 1ervants Monday from beaches. Photo was taken about 10:30 a.m. between Bay and 19th didn 't think they would hit," Helm said. the bulldlna. The consul'.!1 family was in Streets. "Then there was a loud noise, almost an Portugal. ----------------------~---- explosion. and then silence. "The cruiser stopped for a time , and then went on," Helm said. Helm said the younger Dart !eemed to be dead by the time several other boats \vere able to pull the fishing boat into shore. Services for the boy are pendinC at Smith Mortuary, Huntington Beach. From Pagel TAXES ... District and $1.1 million, or 21 percent, ls owed to the city of Newport Beach and \'arlous \Yater and sanitation districts. The balance, $1.2 million, is owed the county, according to the tax collector. Deputy C.ounty Counsel Clayton Parker said today that the county is not em- powered to take legal action to rorce the company to pay the ba ck taxes. However, i( Irvine should fail to pay in five ye&rs -and three year.!I have pa!lsed to date - the 457 acres could possibly revert to the state of California under law. Parker said the only legal action even alluding to the tax question is a refertnce in the Irvine company suJt filed lb force the county to honor the land trade agree- ment which the supervisors cancelled un\later!'llly. The suit is now pending In Superior C.Ourt and will not be heard tor several months. , The deputy county counsel said that the company could have brought legal action to have the property Jines correcUy drawn to separate the company's and the county's lands but the e-0mpany has not done so to date . "They are taking a calculated riak.'' Parker stated. "However, they may not have to pay taxes and penaltie11 on any of the property in the long run ." Parker gave an example : "If your home and your neighbor's home were improperly aS!e&!ed 1s one parcel , al· though legally under separate owner- ships, you could not be forced to pay the taxes until the legality o( lhe assessment was cleared up." Citron, in his let1er to Ma!Oll~ Points out that, "In actuality, lam not employed by the county of Orange government but rlr.!lt I am employed and aniwerable to 111 the laz-paylng citizens of thla eounly who pay my !alary, my staff'g uhtrl~ ind the oper•Ung e1pense! of my office. Secondly. the coun1y of Oranae i1 only one of 213 dlf!er~nt ta1lng aaencles for whom 1 collect." The tu collector concluded his tetter to the company president llr stating. 111 am not invol ved in, and canoot be a party to. any (Ontroversy between your compan y and other:; O\'eJ' the le1tl ownership of the property. "State laws clearly lndicate that the as5e~sor must assess property And once it is placed upon the rolls I shall collect the ta1es dut." .. Attorney's $400 Boa( Pirated ' Somebodft.:. piroltd 1 Hobtt cal•· maran be -· to onetime Newport S..ch pl••tn •I· commlliloner Rlchlrd lllgbl•. the alloi!l•Y told pOlict Memorial . Day 11-..kt!M.- Thc lf.foil~lllO boat was taton !torn a,_llornr• 'l North Bl¥fnmt and AmeU1y11 (! , Hiabl1 told police ln bla *"nd llitlF "po", • lllible. orfll Ametbl'lt Are., Balboa lsland1 haa pnietl<ed ~ In r,rtnonhlp with his !alhtr C. A. •at10' Hilbl•. • Frot11 Page l PENALTY ... Supreme Court's action "was neither surprlalng nor disappointing." He aaid the court acted 11 it ueually dots when a state court claim• It Is baJo ing Its declelon on the stlte con.ttltutJon. '1The imp:irtant thing however, ii that lhe valldlly of the death penally -under the federaJ constltutJon -still 11 before the U.S. Supreme Court. II aboul~ be handln5 down Ill decillon In a few weeks, Youna:er aaicl. Ht said hl1 office will stand by and waJt until the cOurt rules on the cases before it. "II the court upholcla the d•lh penally, then it will be valid in 49 states and u,,.. constitutional only in California. That will put the issue squarely up to the people in this 11tate on whether they want to restore capital punishment," he said. Cigarette Ban Plea . Gets Snuffed Out LONDON (UPI ) -The British govern- ment has turned down parliament member Laurie Pav1tt'11uggestion it ban the sal& of cigarettes from vending machines which also sell ladies tights. The undersecretary for trade and In- dustry, Anthony Grant, told Pavitt in a writttn reply Monday that whlle reducing smoking might be a good idea the government "sa\v no objection in prin· clple to selllnA: several products from one machine." Death of Diver Off Laguna Held To Be Drowning Death of a Culver City xuba diver whose body was discovered In waters off Laguna Beach Saturday morning wa! at· lrlbuled lo drowning today, c:orooer's office lnvestigators .!laid, however, that further k!Xologlcal atudlt.a , would be made on the body of Theodore Humphrey Jr., 31. The result• of thoae tests will not be aval11blt1 for three to four weeks. a deputy said. Costa Mesa re!ldenta Wayne R. Watennan and James P. Moultrup found the man's body in about 30 feet of water off Diver's Cove Saturday morning. Police said Humphrey's car had been parked on Cliff Drive since WednesdRy. presumably the day he went diving and drowned. Lifeguard Bruce Baird said llum- phre y's scuba tank was empty of air when the mm. s body was found . Baird noted that Humphrey was not wearing a flotatio n vest and apparently had been diving alone. Longest Mustache? TEL AVIV (UPI ) -The newspaper Hs' Aretz Pt1ond1y printed a picture of what it described M the lone:e.!lt tnoustache in Israel. It belongs to I tex· tile worker and has an extended span of two feet. Ex-dispatclier' s Rites T oniglit liJ. Huntington Catholic funeral rites are itt tonight and .Wedne,s4ay for a Newport Beach POiice Department dispatcher killed FT\. dny when a car co!Uded with hit rilotorcycte at Twenty-Nine Palin!. Rosary for ,Robert M. Buehser, 44. V.'ill be at a p.m. tonight in Smith's Mortuary, Huntington Beach. only two blocks from the victim 's home. Requiem fo.1ass for f\1r. Buchser is scheduled \Vednesday at a a.m. in Sts. Simo n and Jude Church, with Father Thomas Schneider o!ficiating. A 20-year Navy veteran who retired as a chief petty officer in 1962, Mr. Buchser v.'ill later be buried at sea in a naval ceremony . The f11tal accident occurred in the Yue~ ca Valley area, where ~e Buchs:ers maintained a vacation home, according to family 50Urce1. Investigators said he y,•as wearing • protective helmet while r!dlng his motorcycle , but the crash impact tort it off, causing fi!;tal 11),jurles. Survivors include hls wife Olive, of lht home at 80t Main St., Huntington Beach, plus him mother, Mr.!1. Heleri I. Buchser, of East Cleveland , Ohio. aod a bt'other, Ernest Buchser of Lyndhurst, Ohio. NO GAP HERE! Our carpet installations are so smooth euured of the fined seams anywhere. that you can b'e We hand sew our seams from the ' back with a cross-stitch" and then reinforce .,.;ith ·latex to prevent them from av.er com in9 open. This takes a little lon9er, but is infinitely superior to taped seams. The best installers in the county are performing ALDEN'S, trained by us to inatall the right way! for To be sure that the carpeting you choose won't have gaps whert the seams are, make aure that ALDEN'S does the job. • ALDE.N'S . CARPET_$, e DRAPIS 1663 · l'lacentla Av1. . , . COSTA MllA 646-4131 • . . ., . . ~ --"' . ,, Orang~ ~oast~"'-' , E OI T IO ~ Tod•.)''• ..... N.Y. StOOks YOL. 65, NO. 1.51, 2 SECTIONS, 3.Q PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFO RNIA TUESDAY, MAY 30, 1972 c TEN CENTS Mesa's Fairvi ew Par I{ p ·1ans Look Brighter By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of lllt O.flr 1"11•1 st1tt Cosla Mesa plans to acquire 257 acres state-owned property as a regional rk were brightened today wilh two an- DQuncements from Sacramento. One was a promise by Lawl'f:nce Robinson, director of aeneral services, to delay for 30 days a controversial trade of a J6..acre parcel to a private development finn. 2nd Jetport r . Meeting Set or Jul y Bv JACK BROBACK Of lllt D1llY ,lltl SllH The other came from the office of Assemblyman Robert H. Burke (R-Hun- ti•frl!toii Beach); ,who said his long-term park'!..,. bill bad clear<d tbe Assembly 'Vays and Means Committee and is bead-eq for--a vote on the Assembly floor. Both actloru strengthen Costa Mesa's desires to turn ·the prope11ty behind Estancia · High School into a wilderness part ,ll)at. would al>o serve surrounding communities. -. Mayor Jack Hammett said _Jtobin.son had agreed to take off the Public Works Board agenda a proposal under which the park proponents cou1d have lost the 36-- ticreS to an apartment project. · The Public Works Board, scheduled to meet this Friday, is considering a leasehold interest trade on the .property t'o the William Newsom Development Company in ex.change for CQncessions held by that firm In Squaw Valley. ange County Board of Supervisor! irman 'If~na1d cls'p:er'i, re'6uf@!: Ffi· ~ - hy-.San~y..<>rnew> cm.lilS-.::: por.al to establish a joint interf!ationq.l rt at Camp Pen41eton, today an- ced another meeting will be held .on,. subject in July. c~soers said he jtiUld await the telc.:i se of the Soi'mtern Ca!Jfomia Ass)~iation of G:::ve:nments (SCAG) regio nal airport study vJhich is TIO\V ex- pcct"'d tote a.\·ailable s'mctime in July. "At that time, we will try again to pin· point a site for a regional airport based (JD the SCAG report findings," Caspers said. He added, "This time, lbe Marines will be invited as well as San Diego County officials and the meeting Will be held in Orange County. "We are discouraged -down_.but not out." Caspers admitted. · !'Jf we. find that locating an ln- ternati~al airport In this area is too hot a politic'! item we may suggest that Washington take over and arbitrarily designate a site." Caspers had led an Orange county delegation which met with San Diego County officials on the airport question Friday at the Royal Inn in San Diego. San Diego officials, however, were cool I'> the Orange County proposal to locate 11.."l !1temational jet airpcrt on the U.S. M 1e Corps' Camp Pendleton range. , l\:J ~1arine representatives attended the twc·:.l!llty session. ·s:.n Diego Super\'isor \Villiam A. Craven summed up the joint.meeting this Way: "O;ange County wants an airnort on its dco~steps but not in its house. They came here for us to solve their problems for them." ~1a··ao~nd ' 11\iis,.Ji=what ltaffic .was'l\)<e in southbqund laQes of Newport Boule· v.jl)°d 1n Costa· Mesa as· tlioUsands of. ~un, san,d and sea' worshipers headed through town· on Memofl'al Day Monda)'.: :The aim of most of the motorists appeared to be relief fr om the heat on Newport beaches. Phi.>to was taken about 10:30 a,m. between Bay and 19th Streets. Secrecy Clamped on Crash • Bo y Killed in By JOHN VAL TERZA Ot tM 1>11/y Pl111t Slllf California Highway Patrol officials to- day slapped a tight lid cf secrecy on the circumstances surrounding the freak crash of a San Oemente {Kllice car and a small pickup truck last v:eekend which claimed the life of a Long Beach teenager. The spectacular collision \\'hich took place late Friday afternoon severely in- jured four persons and caused fatal in· juries to 16-year-old J,elf Briet. He suc- cumbed to severe head and internal in· juries late Sunday night in 1.fission Com· munity Hospital. Officially, the ,Higliway Patrol takes charge of the investigation in crashes in- volvlng municipal police vehicles, and Room for Two Ori Bearskin? SANTA MONICA (UPI) -Move over Burt Reynolds '(if there'• room on the bearskin ). The Santa Monica C o 11 e g e yearbook, to be Issued W!dnesday, will ioclude 'a full color nude male centerfold, according to Ill editor, Suzanne Yanok. Sbe said >he con- ceived the Idea of a ~bles ... 1er10Id, bl\t co 1;. o po lfra n Magnlne beat her 1n1o prtiit wltb actor Burt Reynold&. 1'he aubjict? Peter Gow1'nd, a ~ut photographer "no tptclaliza 1n plctum of oude women. • • .. Accide11t Witli Cl eme11te Police Car ' local ()(Jicials by custom are forbidden to cotriment on det:iils. ' · But sPoktsrnen for U:ie CHP In Santa Ana' today said ttiey had "no in· formation" en the trc.ged y. The colli1ion took place at 4 p.m. Fri- day u patrohnan Gary Adams answered a call relatiri;: to a car being driven in •, erratic ricihion along South El Camino Real. AJ the pattolman began accelerating near Calle Dolores the small domestic pickup l'aden with weekend vacatioh gear and ..several cases of beer, pulled into traftic anc; the patrol Cir slammed into lhe rear of the truck at high s),etd. Neither the siren nor the red warning lights on the, unit were operating at the time. · Dri~t apparenUy. WU' sitting on top or Uie load irl the rear of Uie pickup when the· crash sent the truck skidding more than.100 feet do•'D' 111e. roadway. Several occupants w~re thrown out -.fter the im· pact. ~ • I!fs:cap ing !\~an Shot " sc:?.lDAD (AP) A SOl<dild Prison In· male In '•·briel bid for freOdom w11 ll!ot ... ~ ilJClitly wouilded &md.\y night, prilOlt • officials reporlod. A prison • IPOkelmln said Rlclt Nellon, U, sei<vlng live yunolo-llfe on a Los Angelts c.oonty COIM<tlon ol 111• of marijuana, got about L!i miles frnm the nil He said fitb IOlllnd.a ~ petlet,ln the bip u be cd\MI over a Im. Briet, who received emergency 'irst aid at the scene from a physician who was passing by, underwent surgery im- mediately after the crash. His three com· panions suffered painful~ but Jess severe injuries, 'They were Mike Baxter. William Schutz and Dan Cross, all 16 and all from Long Beach. Adams, who earlier this year joined ~he Joell' force, suffered a cut to his left eye, but otherwise was unhurt. His patrol car was a total Joss. Because of ~ s.ilence by the CHP it has not been determined who was at the wheel of the pickup. It is known, however, that the in vestigation into the crash is continuing and insurance in· vestigators representing the City of San Clemenle were conferring this morning with local ,police officials. The fatal crash marked the first traffic death on city streets in nearly two years. "' Fleas· Ca nnot Hold"Vp Tent Shoby. England (UPI I -Gal .. that wrecked a country fair at Shoby brollj(bl disaster to Professor Tolmlin '• Flea Circus. Seven J*forming Ow vanished ' when • tent coll•P"M. Including IW Juggling flea Fu Chow. "lie boJanc:ea a pltce or wood almoot'twlce bll w•ilbt on bl> leA• and coold prove very difficult lo replt<t," aald.the proltslOI'. Robinson's decision to delay I.he swap 30 days, until Costa Mesa in cooperation with the county has time to negotiate purchase cf the property, came as a surprise to local park prop<>nents. Earlier this month. Robinson indicated that . it would be impossible to grant another delay on the issue. Now, Costa Mesa and county officials will have another month to develop a plan for the outright purchase cl the S4 million property. Local officials, \tho appear to favor a long.tenn tease agreen1ent for the prop- erty rather than ootright purchase, arc backing the bill sponsored by Burke. The legislator from Huntington Beach said his 50-year lease proposal passed the \Vays and ~leans Committee with only one negative vote, that of A.s!lemblyman Eugene Chappie (R..COOI) w~e district ln<'ludes Squaw Valley. Burke llredicts AB 1068 will ret1ch the Assembly floor by next \Vedne11day or Thursday and forems no dlUi<:ulty in lta passage. A strong sh'o\\1\ng of the Durke proposal In the Assembly Is believed by Co!IA ~lcsa city rouncilmen to be a signlfjcant factor "·hich could persuade the P&blic \Vorks Board to back off from its demand for outright purchase cf the Ian$). ,Hearing Rejected Justices Nix Death Penalty Review ' . \VASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme Still before the court, for an expected U.S. Sen. Robert F. Kennel: and mass Court today rejected an appeal by ruling next month. are other appeals murderer Charles Manson. California to . review a state Supreme testing the constitutionality of the death Cali!omla'! petitlcn ior review. filed Court decision ouUawing the death penalty. . itarcti 31 by EveUe J. Younger, the .state · "'j)enalty. ~'~--' • =~ ----Tho.Calllornia.eourt.held. &..1,o.ion.l'e)). .-_at(Omiy.general,.c~decllloo,;,:u_ . _ . ·'f~-hig!1.w•:U1U2nsillerlou!h~.tr ..JBJbat:tJ!t_4eatb~~n~lly::'<n•Y·ll!J-!onser -"!'~ly_rush -to iU<!&m•ol"-"!.!l!l.e-lhe _ to abolish capital punishment across the be exacted" in that state because if death penalty issue waS penaJng before land ~s l?eing in violation of the federal violates the state Constitution. the U.S. S4preme Court. • ~nshtutton. -----···--Ttie action-spared the1iV6'llt·to2 men ~ Younger contendt'd --cmrrrhe-•,..state The justiqes gave no rea,son for and ~ women 1vho ma ke up the nation's ground" asserted by the California court, declining unanimously to add California·s largest death ro1v p0pul11tion, including a provision ln the C:iliforn\a Constltutkln, appeal to its docket. Sirhan Sirhan, the assassin or former (See PENALTY, Page!) Ecology l'icto~y Thieu Exhorts S. Viet Troops At l(ontum ,~.,.(Uj'il;',;. "Soul ;lll;itiameo. Pr~ident,Nguyen V~ Thieu flew today to the embattlii:I citl~s of Kontwn and Hue lo show· hi! confidence In tho SOulh Vietnamese derenders. U.S. Air Quality Level s ~ x~d in D~strict Lawsuit He .declarei' the siege or Kontum broken but the thunder of • artillery crashing down nearby belied his words. The Thieu visit came as the U.S. com- mand reported that U.S. Navy air strikeJ against a railway yard at Haiphong left it efigulfed in flames. The Uong Bi rail~, 10 miles north of Haiphong, han e most of the rail traffic from China into e Han oi area. Rear Adm. Howard E. Greer, com- mander of Carrier Division 3 of the U.S. 7th Fleet, 1old UPJ Con·e!pondent Arthur Higbee today that continuation or the air ortensive would make it impossible for North Vietnam to keep up its offensive in the S::iuth. He said the North Vietnamese probably had enough supplies.-1?r'the pipeline to continue for a few weeks but "if we con- tinue to close that port (llaiphong) and the railroads that come in from China, then there isn't any way for North Viet- nam to continue for an extended period the type of offensive they have going." The raids on the Uong Bi complex were lhe first since President Nixon crdered the resumption of air strikes against North Vietnam April 6. They came as the command also reported damaging or destroying 16 more key bridges in North Vietnam and as 7th fleet ships pounded a 260-mile stretch of coastal areas from the Demililarized Zone 'to just south of Haiphong. Most supplies to the South go thrcugh a coast· al highway network here. Thieu, dapper in a safari suit and blue peaked cap, flew into Kontum aboard an American·supplied T39 Sabreliner eI· ecutive jet. He ordered the city held at all costs. pinned a general's star on Col. Ly Tong Ba . commander of the 23rd Infantry Division at Kontum . and credited hlm !See VIET WAR, Page!) WASllINGTQN (AP) -Environ- mentalll~ 1'!iri a m4Jor vlctor;Y today wh<n .a l~ estabUihed·the i>tlndpte that states may not permit high-quality air to deteriorate even to the level of District Okays 2nd Large Well For Mesa Water Construction Of the second large-- capacity water well has been authorized by Costa Mesa County Water District di rectors. The well , to be located en a school site near Smalley Road and Sunflower Avenue, will be about 600 feet deep and similar in yield to the new Segerstrom Well , according to Alvin Pinkley, a water board director. Unlike the Segerstrom Well on Sunflower Avenue and Fairvlew Road, the new water source will be powered by natural gas. "We wanted to have cne o! each kind, one powered by electricity and the other by gas, in the event we had a natural disaster that shuts ()ff electricity." Pinkley said. "Since it will be gas powered, we will be able to provide water for the fire department in the event that happened." The new well, estimated to cost about $85.000, is partly responsible fer proposed water district budget Increases ot $200,000 in the 1972·73 fiscal year. Other item! which will increase the ex· penditures to $3,047,oOO next year are about $100,000 !or purchase cf water from the Metropolitan Water District and SIS,000 for a 5 ~rcent raise tor water district emplcyes. The budget will be pre nted to the water district board of tru!tees for ap- proval June 15. Surgical Center Ground Brol{en at Hoag Hospital Groundbreaking ceremonies for the $250.000 James Irvine f'" o u n d at ion Surgical Center at lfoag Memorial Hospita~ took place thi! morning at the aiti just north or the hospital. The c~nJer, funded completely by, a grant from the James Irvine Foundation, will house three c~rating rooma, eight recovery beds. consultation r o o m , laboratory and lobby. II b the firs! minor surgtry clinic In Orange County, said Hoag officials, OfficialJ expect the center to save pa· tients as much as 40 percent or the costs for operations not requtrlng polt· ~ratiVe Cftrt. .,,,.__ Arthur Thompson, 1 lloag stall mtmber who h<lped Initial• llie ctnt<r spoke at today's ceremony. He praised "Newpor1 Beach for leading the nation" tn offering "innovative and leM expensive medical care." Other groundbreaklng •peaktt1 wert A. V. JorgeMtn, president ol lloef'I Board cf Directors and Mrs. Charles H. Jones, assistant secretary of the Jame1 Irvine Foundatlon. Completion of the ctnter 11 set for lbll fall. · lb interior will be carpeted and alr· conditioned and will be collllrucltd of gplit face concrtte and firt-resl1tant gypsum walls. It will be adjacent lo tbe ll·llory towtr •ddltlon lo lbe hospital now undtr co .. 1trucijon. federal antipollution standards. U.S. Dlll!'lct Court Judge John H. Pra t endoraed this prlnclple o I "nciti- degradatlon'' In ruling on· a ault brought by the Sierra Club and three other en· vlronment groupa against William D • Ruckelshaus. head of the f e d e r a I Envlrcnmental Protection Agency. He ordered Ruckelshaus to make sure that state plarui for applying federal air· pollution limits include t h I s non· degradation element ; o t h e r w I s e • Ruckelshaus must disapprove the af. fected portions of the state plans and im· pose hi! own reaulatlons. Government lawyers promised an im· mediate appeal, and Pratt delayed the ef· fectiveness cf his order until Wednesday to give them time to file it. Under clean#alr laws or 1967 and 1970, RuckeJsbaus last year put into effect federal standards Umlting the amounts of various common pollutants which may be permitted In the nation 's air. The laws left it up to. each atate to put those limits into effect, and the states have submi tted their plans t o Rucke\shaus. The law required also th11t Ruckelshaus approve or diaapprove these plans by May 31. that ls, Wednesday. He i.s authorized to prescribe plans of his cwn for any state without an ap-. proved plan. The environment groups, however, filed suit last week contending t h a t Ruckelshaus, as a matter of policy, was about to approve plans which would not protect existing clean air. They argued that such protection was intended by Congress when It wrote that the purpo.~e of the law was to protect and enhance air quality. Weadler It's going to remain H-0-T for at lea8t the next several days ac- cording to the weatherlady, with tempe ratures ranging from the 70's at the beach to the to's Inland. Lows In the 60'1. INS lltE TODA.Y In a ttlt of 1urvival, 20 Mor- 1non famiLl.«1 in P(l.to A.Ito have begun l iving for three week• onJu on the good• that were 1tored in thtlr homtt whtn thcU were told-with no ndoonct 110- tice-of the e:rptriment which U 1poNored by tht chvrch. See st.ory on Pnot 1B. MllU-..n 1) -. ~,, .... It ••flMal .... • Ot .... Ctwtlil'I tt .""'' , .. " ........ ,.,. '"" T•W.... I _..., . ·-. ............ , .. ,. ----. -. z O.llLV PILOT c Agl;iculture Fa.ir D1·aws In Junio1·s .. Tl\t IS.acre farm at Costa t-.tc sa lligh School is a plea sant anachronis1n in Orange County where !l(lil lhal once grew beans and peppers Is OO\V c<>vered by housing tracts. ' -• I ~ . But while agricu lture may be on the -dee-line-in many parts-ot-the-eotlnty;-in---·- terest in farming appears to be at an all· lime high with youth even though. ~he future holds litUe pr0$pecl for pract1cmg their new skills -at least not locally. A Future Farmers of Ameri ca "junior fair" at the Costa Mesa school farm Saturday brought out a Oeld of 60 con· teatants who competed in evenls ranging from tract.or driving to l088lng bales of bay. Amid the mooin~ of livestock and 1 cacophony of cackling chickens the students spent the morning laundering lhelr sheep, arranging 'horticullure and mechanics displays , and brushing the C011l5 of their cows to a high luster. Steve Myers, a IS.year-old agriculture student and winner of the Beef Cattle Division , even went so far as to shine the hooves of his prize-winning cow with black boot polish. Sheep were rtufferl uo by lathering them in shampoo and rubbing them dry ~·ith Turkish towels while callle \\.'ere coifed and clipped in a special steel frame, often against their wishes . \\"hen the 150 visitors arrived animals smelled almost as P.ood as they )ooked and \Yere scrutinized by a panel of judges who then awarded trophies to the win- ntrs. _ Q\,'erall winner Jn the live stock divisicm was 16-year-old ].{arya Potter wbo i;ha"ed the seotlight "'ith horticu_Itur_e - -i'···;~;on...,,rnntr Tony Magroo::l7, mana2e- ' •t division winner Mary Ann JonaS'1 16,.lffi.d mech_!n_igl_!IJ~~lon ~iryl~ -~~£ __ Magro, 15. Winners• of individual contests were Ron Jones. 17, tractor driving; Kevin Olswang, IS, meehancal project : Richard Thoma.! and Diane Potter, both 15. hay buckin~; Doug Matranp.a. 14, landscape maintenance ; Ton v ri.1agro, floral display: Julie Final, flower ar· rangirtf; Marv Ann Jonas. project management ; Paul' r..1yers, rcoord book keeping; Mary Ann Jonas. !heep; Kevin Olswang. sheep showmanship: Ste\•e Myers, beef cattle; lifarya Potter, beef cattle showmanship : Ilsa Udras, horse showmanship, and Marya Potter, rmmd· robin livestock . f'rona Page J PENALTY ... wa s "palpably transparent" and th~t the rulin~ consequently should be reviewed by the U.S. court. The E:allfomia Con!Utulion prolllbtts "crµel or unusual punishment" \\'hile the federal Comtltution prohibits "creul and unusual punls bments." Be.cau.!le the Cal· iforlria court fowid the death penalty · both cruel and unusual,' Younger argued , it was really interpreting the !Ith Amend- ment to th e l' .S. Con.stituiton. In seeking a hearing, the state a\s e> argued that the dec islon violated the rights of Californians by "usurping the legislative function." Younger said that "by abolishing the death penalty the court has enacted lls personal views into law over the will of a protesting public." Proponent.!! of capital punishment. in· eluding Go\•. Ronald Reagan, followed the decision up by backlng an amendment to the sta te Constitution spec i r i c a 11 y authorizing the death penalty. The move failed in the California Senate in early !\-lay. However. there is a drive to reinstate the death penalty in California through an intinllve measure. The California case directly involved Robert P. Anderson , 34. "'ho \\'3S under death sentence for lhe 1965 murder of a San Diego shopkeeper. In San Francisco Younger said the Supreme Court's action "\Yas neither surori.~lf''? oor disappolnlin.11:." OU.N•I COAST DAILY PILOT Tiit Or11>0e Co.II OAILY PILOT, wllh wflicll Is comblnd lht Ntwt·Prtu. 11 pub/I"*! ll'W' 1"9 0.•nqt C1W11t Pu!Nlsllln(I CirmHny. StP'• ••tir tc1l1ion1 '" Pllblitllld, Mlll'llltV lhf'OWl'i F"•idt y, (ot Cos" Mat, NtWllOl'f llNtl\, M1111lh19ton 8tttl\/Fount1lft V1111y, Ltpoot 811ch, t,..ln9/St""ll11Mcll t M Sift ClltrMn•t/ Stn J111n Ctpl~lrtrio. A 1lntlf rttloritl tc1UIM 11 Wbllth«I Sth,1rllt Vl t l'ld Sundtys. T"9 prlMINI P11llli1hln(I p!tnl II ,, l3ll) w .. 1 111 Strffl, (M1t Mtu, (l!llor(llt, tltJfo, Ro1'1rt N. w,,, ,.rnillcnt t l'ld Pullllthfl' J1c\ R. C11rl1y Vi<t ,., .. lcltnt •nll ~rt! MfM9'tr Tho"''' K ••• a £di! ... Tholl'!tl A. M11•111hint Mtflttl'"' Edi!Ot Ch•rl11 H. l111 llchtr' P. Nill A11lt11nl MtMtlllf f.GI,.,_ c-. ..... Offke l JO W11t l1y Str11t Mo lllnt "'tlr111: r.O. 111 t l•O, t2•1• ...... o-Ntwllfl'I I~: W> N""1IOl1 l owlt\'t•d LttwM l .. dl: :rtf Ftrtll A'tfnut 1'4Vftl'"'""' ltKllJ T1t'J IMCl'I hvlW-1<11 '-" C~e: XS ...,ti! I.I Ctmlrwl ""' , .. .,..... lll41 '41·•JJI " DAILY "11.DT Sitt! l'lltlt SHARON THOM'AS, 14, SHAMPOOS HER SHEEP In the Midst of Suburbl1, F1rmer1 of the Future Irvine Company Asked To Pay 'Upper Bay' T:ax Orange County Tax Collector Rober t The suit is now pending in Suptrior Citron today asked Irvine Company Court and will not be heard for several months. President William R. ri.lason to pay $5.J million in taxes Cilron alleges have been The deputy county counsel said that the company could have brought legal action delinquent for the past three years on to have the property lines correctly Upper Newport' Bay. drawn to Sj!parate the company's and the The Back Bay properµtH1 stion in· county's lands but the C()mpany has not ~lud_e 456 _a,.rutlb..e lf\'.i~inPan deed·-..--don~ so_!~ d_!te. .... ~ ed to...Qf!nge Coll'llty -11Mhe long-de ated "They are takjng a calculated risk ·• Upper\.}iewport Ba)' land enhanse. tin-Parker stated. "However, they mpy n~t r)~i.-157_,actt!l_the.~to.un1l!-, ~ _JQ._.hsve to pay tax.n.3Ad -penaltieson·any of transfer to the ranch co~18ny. the property in the long run." The tidelands swap, hpwever .. was Parker gave an examp.le: ''If you r cancelled in 1971 In a uni teral act ion by home and you r neighbor's home were th~ Orange County Board of Supervisors. improperly assessed as one parcel, a!. Irvine officials contend that t"' county though legally under separate owner· board cannot cancel the 1966 exchange ships, you could not be forced to pay the without company approval. taxes until the legality of the asaessment Jn assessing the propoerty fo r 1970, was cleared up." As~essor Andrew J. llin~haw merged the Citron, in hls Jetter to Aofason, points out entire 614 acres and said that the com· that "In actuality I am not employed by pany was responsible for taxes OD the the 'county of ~ange govemµient but total. first I am employed and answerable to Irvine officials protested at the lime all the tax-paying ciUzens of this county that Hinshaw's assessment proctdure ig· who pay my salary, my staff's salarir,.s nored previous ownerships of the prop-and the operating expenses of my office: erty, Thus the company refused to pay Secondly. the county of Orange is only any taxes until the matter was cleared one of 213 different taxing agencies for up. ""·hom l collect." To date, according to Citron, $3 million The tax collector concluded his letter to or 57 percent of t~c dellnquency ls due the company presidenL-by stating,· "I am the Newport-1\feaa (Jnified School District not involved in, and cannot be a party to. and the Coast Community Colle~e any co?Jtroversy between your company District and $1.1 million , or 21 percent, is and others over the legal O\\'nership or owed to the city of Newport Beach and the property. various water and sanitation districts. "State laws clearly indicate that the The balance, $1.2 millioni.. i~ owed_ the -~ssessor '!lust assess property and once county according to the lax collector . it Is placed upon the rolls 1 shall collect ' the taxes due." Deputy County Counsel Clayton Parker said today that the county is not em· powered to take legal acllon to force the coinp8ny to pay the back taxes. Ho~·ever, if Irvine should fail to pay in five years -and three years have passed to date - the 457 acres could possibly revert ta.the state of California under law. Parker sail! the only legal action even alluding to the tax question is a reference in the Irvine Con1pany suit filed to force the county to honor the land trade agree- ment which the supervisors cancelled unilaterally. * * * Official Says Tracts Mixed, Sorting Needed Irvine Company Vice President Gilbert \V. Ferguson said today the company would like to pay taxes on its Upper Newport Bay properties but the lands ha\·e been so comingled with others that thev-can't be sorted out 11t this time. The statement came in reply to a plea from Orange County Tax Collector Itoberl Citron that the ranch company pay $5.3 million in alleged back !fixes owed over the past three years on Uppt!r Newport Bay properties. '1~fr. Citron has indicated In his letter a sympathetic understanding or the com· pJexities involved in the Upper,Newport Bay issue," Ferguson noted. '~\Ve very n1uch apprecinle his attlludc 11nd we ccrtainlv understand his position. \Ve regret decJily that our involvement "''ith the county of Orange in this joint venture, which we entered into at the county's request. is yet to be term inal 11 in equity. '''hich is n:i\\' all we seek." Ferguson, Irvine \'ice presld~ cor· porate communications. explain~ the alleged delinquent back taxes cited by Citron encompas! levies against three kind! or Upper Bay lands. These include rounty tidelands properties, w h I c h Ferguson said the comp.any never o"·nt!<l: rormer e;ompany-owncd lands which Irvint hasn't owned 1ince they "''ere transferred to the county .in J968; and Careless 'Thief' Loses Man's Dog A bu rglar who apparently took nothing but left a g-ate open has cost a Costa ~1esa plastics manufacturer Lhe . kli! or his dog, an Afghan hound worth about $1.000 as a registered stud. Andrew Gla.ssell, of 116 Brookline Drive, reported the Monday break-in to Offlcer Michsel Dortt>van, saying some- one removed a bcdroon1 ,vfndow screen to gain entry to his townhouse. lnvestigatloh sho,,ed one neighbor to recall seeing a small child walking ou t of Glassell's resideJ;\te and yard, poLice said. ' The dog was not with the youngster. but was discovered missing when Glassell came home to find the il'.Ste open and evidence that some<>ne had been inside the condominium unit. Machines Jilted At Pizza Parlor A burglar .. \Vho broke In through the ornamental front door window of Sha key's Pizza Parlor in Costa Mesa pried open the cigarette machine, jukebox and player piano Monday, emp- tying them. Manager Alan C. Brodrick reported the burglary at 2285 Newport Blvd., aftec the break-in was discovered by employe Donald P. C-Ol!lns. Officer Bob Arnold said the exact loss \vas undcrtermined and the manager planned lo provide an estim11te after comparing !he machines' income to the Jast Ume they \Vere emptied and tallied. h1esa1i Club's 1st Male Preside1it !liOme lrvlne land "'to which we still have Ed Sawyer of Coata Mesa has broken tiUe." · ~ . eiaht·YtM trnditlon of the city "Because the prpptrtles arc Comiriglat. Recreation 's •. Department's Sen Io r so arc the tax~. ~Ve ·know of nO formula CJtlzenJ Club bf becomin& the Urst male 1CI....,.. A;,..,. .... '4J·llJI c.;,yrlOllt, 1•n. ~ , ... , ~llfll!lf G~nw. Ht MWt J!«ltt, llhrtlnt""', tdltwltt '"''"" tt tllvtrtlMn'tnh JltttM available to us ti).w0rk out 1 separation p~sldent in tilt club's history. • fot~/L.P8~t.POll)Oacs," tbe ;am:J;pany 8.'.twyer repfa~ Mrs. A-fay Buckland 'ctfilc(i! C9¢tQd!!d.:· • · • \ _ -· •. IVM •erved •~·presldenl of the club from I """ IJt ,...,UCll WI.._. .,.:'9t ... "'"""'" .i ~' -· S.C.... CMIJ1 ... ,... .... ti C•ft #ltu, c.antot'Na. ~i.ti. ~ ~,,.., nu """"'"' \¥ rn1lf .,.,. """111~1 ll'llh,...,. *ttfMllilM 11.61 lftll'lfl'l/y, -· • • -~collDIJ·"°Ul!Sd solllb )'Ur&,ajlo. l!IW IO 197%. .• Jrieldaiwi,. ,.ld•lold-lbe •. lloard di .;P.!Jler -.Jub ollicers art MrJ. Emma .::Jlilpel~ Jblt tUibes , .... oMw.r. Hitt, vtc .. pruld.•nl; )ln:ralne Basch!, :::nJ4 "'"JO lM~.!IJIJnt. 'l'lie-eounty sectctary; Harold Iak. trwuror: Mn, trallO'llirormeji au thi~ii\ilcta In-Angeli Pe3tl!U:corrup&idlni sccrelary: •olvtd as to the questionable nature Qf Mra. Florence Smlth, hl!torlan. and Mr1. tile In. • , M1y Buctltnd, puliamt11ltrlao. ' .. .. • ' -· Impact Study Curbed Newport Aitks .Questioning Airport Data The Oran1e County Airport "JmpacL respond more fully," Gobar said. itudy" l)efiormed for Newport Beach, in The figure was In the rtf)Ort to com- a key section, claims the average home pare the increa~ in ~~ssm~~ts with Increased in value by 176 percent during property ,'.n the a.1.rport impael area. a six-year period ending in 197 1, In tbc hnpact area, act'(lrding to the Clty officials this n111irnlng • queslioncd study, properties had an average growth the figure. ~f "onlr 134 percent." That same $40,000 If this is true, lt would medn that a ome. in the impact area. would be worth house worth $4-0,000 in lMS was worth $9~.000 .. If that figure Is true. $110 ooo in I 97{) The f 1a:ures are used to suppart the rt- oif!cials of w'nsey and Ham. the con-port'.! allega1Jons .that values of proper~y suiting firm that performed the study , underneath. the airport take<>ff zone dtd could not defentt"the ngure -n.at ~pp~c1ate .. as much ~ Olher proper· "The man who did thai part or the lies in Newport Beach. ft study is no tonger with the C()mpany," "Tbb IS4 percent srowth represent.! a lou of 15 percent when compared to I " the 171 percent growth for other parce s, the report Slf5. The rt port continues : "Ctnl!US data also verllle1 the fact that property values within the impact ~·rea are not con!lstent with those In the city o! Newport Stach. "The difference in rental payments have a similar disparity," the report con· tends. als'o polnting out that there is a higher percentage or rtntal housing wlth- in-lhe-impact-area thau Ue.\\·bere. i1t the city . staff assistant J. Patrick l\fann of \Vilscy and Ham .said this morning. "Much or It was done quite some time a110, digging out the backjl'ound informa · tion would be qulte a problem," Mann said. Mesa Motorcycle Strikes lie said the raw data was furnished by a sub-consultant, Darley-Gobar of Tustin. "We probably got that off the census data." Al Gobar. a partner in the eco- nomic consultant firm, said thi.~ morning. ''I didn't do it, somebody who \York.! for me did. but I'd auess he took the 1960 and 1970 figures and8Yeraged them cut. ''The figure probably includes new con- s!ru<:Uon," he said. The report. however, says: "The random sampling of the a.sses.sed residential property values in the city from 1~1970 incUeated an ave rage growth of 176 perctnt per dev eloped parctl." "Well, if you want to argue sema~ go ahead." Gobar said. The former Gobar Aide, David Parry. who performed the study, this morning cl aimed to have used actual figures ob- tained with a check of the assessor's records, hOf·ever. Auto, Lands on Its Hood A Costa Mesa motorcyclist who stnick a st'opped car and sailed over lt onto the hood and a bicyclist stnick by a hit-run driver are recoveri ng today. ri.1otorcyclist Kyle L. Kellogg, 19, of 387 W. Bay St, sustained an agonizing laceration and a fractured left leg, police said. Bicycle rider Avedls DiJag Chevogla· nian, 62, of 697 Plumer St., COSta Mesa. sufrered a fractured right shoulder And cuts and bruises. ' Motorist Geraldine J. Wilklns, 39, of 2273 Maple St., Costa MeSI:, told in- vestigators she was halted, slg[lalina for a turn into a shopping center Monday when K"tllogg collided with her car. Memorial 1-lospital, arter the 2 p.m. ac· cident. Bicyclist Chevoglanian W&!'I taken to Hoag Memorial Hospital about two hours later, after he was st ruck by a hit-and· rua motorist. Both victims '>''ere transfer- red lo Orange County Medical Center for treatment. The accident which occurred on Superior Avenue north of Pi:iciflc Coilst Highway in a strip of county territory between Costa ~1esa and Newport Beach was witnessed by at least nine persons. They claimed the woman driver ift... volved In the fek>n v hit-and-run case was seen taking a drifik from a bottle just seconds before ramming Chevoglanian from the rear, . Investigators were told the late model car was weaving erratically. He said he took random samplings or 200 homes, 'J7 of which-were in ihe impact area. to develop the figure. . Oobar pojnted out information fur· nished for the report was edited by Wll- {5ey and Ham and he didr.'t know if that section \Vas changed or not. She said thert waa a crash at tbe rear of the vehicle and suddenly he landed on th~=~; '11d K~UoQ, -southbound -on Harbor Boulevard about 100 yards south of West Wilson Street. passed one car slowing behind the Wilkins vehicle, then changed !anti ag ain and accelerated, demolishing his motorcycle. The witnesses said its-driver-,a-mlddle-- aged woman wearing a wide-brimmed wh ite hat. slowed and glanced back after catapulting the v!~tlm from his elke, then accelerated and fled . "I 'll have to talk to them be.fore I can Fro•n Page 1 VIET WAR. • • with "breaking the Communist attack'' on the city. His confidence appeared premature. Nort h Vietnamese shells landed inside the city half a mile from 23rd Division Headquarters and there was fighting with Communist sappers at three points it11ide the city. Spokesmen said S o u t h Vietnamese forces tilled 176 of the sappers Monday In fight.! north and south of Kontum's airfield and inside part of a military camp they overran Sunday. ARVN losses were put at 20 dead and 108. wounded . John Paul Vann, the top U.S. adviser in the Central Highlands, was optimistic. He told UPI reporter Matt Franjola "the situation couldn 't look better," and said he based hls on the_ slow but steady prog- ress of the South Vietnamese in clearing troops from Kontum. Before Thieu visited Kontum. U.S. B52s, attacking in 19 waves, dumped 1,500 tons or high explosives on Communist troops ringing the city, the second such raid in two days, and raids equalling the record strikes flown around besiged Kh.e S.:inh in early 1968. ' · Thieu flew from Kontum to Hue which was all but sealed off for his visit. F'ight.ing 'Was reported on three sides of Hue, including clashes 31ong the My Cbanh River defenoe line to the north and fighting at two places around Fire Base Bastoi;tne , 12 miles to the west. At Hue, he promoted Col. Bui The Lan to brigadier general. Lan . ~colonel. took over command of the Rangers several weeks aJ!n when Thieu fired Lt. Gen. Le Nguyen Khang. He was taken to nearby Costa Mt1a Both ChB-'log\anian-and· the car driver. who Is being sought for questioning, were northbound whtn the accident occurred. 0 Car Rolls Down Cliff, Rider Dies in Crush • A 17-year-old Long Beach boy becime Orange County's fifth traffic fatallty over the Meihorlal Day Wt41kend Monday when the car' in whi ch he wu ridh\g left Ortega Highway 15 miles east of San Juan Capistrano and rolled down a · 100-foot cli ff. Randy Adams was one of three passengers in a car driven by Steve Polletier, 18. of. Anaheim. Polletier is reported in guarded condition at Mlasion Communlty HO.!lpltal today. Others injuttd were Adams• sister. Tamira, I~, and Michael HarrlJon, 19, of Garden Grove. Th ey "''ere treated and released. 1-lighway patrolmen said the accident occurred when Polletier swerved to miss an oncoming car while attempting to pass a line of other cars on a blind curve about 15 miles north of San Juan Capistrano. Orange County fire and rescue units spent more than an hour brin&ln& the four victims uP, the steep cliff. · Joseph Britt, 15, of Long Beach, died Sunday· in. Mi ssion Community Hospital of injuries received in a crash with a San Clemen te police patrol car Friday, in San Clemente. TWo other persons died In holiday mishaps. Robert E. a..dy, 21, of 1234 Dlall<J Way. Anaheim, was killed when hla car fell on him while he was makJng repairs at his home and Rex Martindale, 20 · months,11.rowned in the family swimming pool at 10222 Jennrich Ave., Garden Grove. The five traffic death.! contra.sled "''ith Orange County's almoat perfect Memorial Dsy weekend record in which only one penon l<Mlt his life in the past three yean. Cigarette Ban Plea Gets Snuffed Out c WNDON (UPI) -The Brill:!h gavem· ment bas turned down parllament mtmber Laurie Pavitt'11uggestlon It ban the salt of cigarettes from vendin& machines which also 11tl1 ladle1 t11hta. The undersecretary for trade ind In- dustry, Anthony Grant, told Pavitt in 1 v.rritten reply Monday that while feducing smOking might be a good ide41 the government "saw no obj~on in prlrto ciple to selli ng several products from one machine." • NO GAP HERE! Our c~rpet installations are so smooth that you can be assured of the fl.nest seams anywhere. We hand sew our seams from the back with e cross-stitch, and then · reinforce with latex to prevent them from ever coming open. This takes a little longer, but is infinitely , superior to taped seams. The best installers in the county are performing for ALDEN'S , tra ined by us to install the right way! To be aure that the ca rpeting you c'.hoose won't have gaps wher.e the seams are , make sure that ALDEN'S does the job. ALDEN'S CARPETS · e DRAPIS 1663 l'lactlltia Ave . •' COSTA ME!.( 646-4838 ' ' •